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Show ,f.r" . i o'! ' ' i i Brigham Man Died Monday ruiicral Held for WriUcn Tcsl Big Bump Recently Not Required A pesky bee was up to its old For Pos tions tricks Wednesday noon, I illlc Bee Guises i hu .L . :f'rvV ?&- s &? r . it a tf-',r- Iches - again causing a big bump, but this time without resorting to its stinger. The little pest was the direct cause of a highway crash between a New. York City resident and a California driver. The accident occurred 252 feet south of Third South on U. S. Highway f 191. ' O - - Henry C. Sommers of New York City was driving south on the highway on his way to California when the unwelcome stranger flew in the open window. He , " jpX . ty ' While some 75 workers lounged around good naturedjy, two pickets WORKERS IDLED tied up progress for a couple of hours Monday morning on the gas installation program in n men were employed. The matter was soon settled 'Brigham City, claiming that and equipment and men went back to their jobs. pulled over to the curb to invite the unwelcome visitor out. When he opened his door, it struck the passing auto driven by Sadie Burruss Nicholson of Riverside, Calif., police reports reveal. ' The culprit buzzed away with no apparent concern over the $425 damage he caused. Officer Byron May cited Sommers for improper opening of his door. non-unio- Eastbound Vehicle Collides With Auto Charles Henry Ewer of 405 North Third West received a failure to yield citation from Officer Byron May Aug. 16 3.40 p m. following an accident at the intersection of Second East and U. S. Highway 91. V. G. Mackie Biggar of Saskatchewan, Canada was driving east at Second East and attempted to turn left to go north on Second East when Ewer, also traveling east, ran into the left side of his car, police Reports indicate Final Tribute Paid to Youth Union stewards from the Ogden- -' Northern Utah Building and Construction Trades council stopped movement of equipment from the storage yard at Forest and First West when they marched across driveway, carrying signs reading, This project is employing FORM PICKET LINE , non-unio- labor. n Merchant Displays His Tax Troubles OMAHA (UP) Druggist M.B. Blackburn has taken his case against the Internal Revenue Service directly to his customers. In his display window, he has placed a toy suitcase designed to hold doll clothes. Below It is a sign: I say its a toy; the Internal Revenue n DINING sell. Blackburn said he had sold more than 1,500 of the doll clothes bags as toys without collecting tax. Then came an IRS audit and Blackburn had to pay the 10 percent tax. 16 ter of John and Betsy Lindbo Godfrey. She was reared and educated in Brigham City, graduating from Box Elder High school in 1941. She married J. Van Tippetts Dec. 24, 1942. They made their home in Salt Lake City until six years ago, when they moved to Henderson. She is survived be her husband; three children, Dee Van Tippetts, Kaylene Tippetts, and Glen Tippetts; two brothers and two sisters: John Godfrey, and Mrs. (Lilly) Bock of Brigham City; and Mrs. Ecil (Clara) Johnson of Ogden. Alfred Lewis Hansen, 77, of Brigham City, died Monday in the Cooley Memorial Hospital. Mr. Hansen was an elder in the Brigham City LDS Second ward. Prior to his illness he was a guard at Hill Air Force Base. He was born Aug. 25, 1879, in Sweden, a' son of Christian C. and Anna Larsen Lundquist. He came to the United States when 12 years of age with his stepmother. They resided in Cache Valley. He later worked as a farmer and stockman and came to Brigham City 13 years ago. On Jan. 23, 1907, he married Lana Rasmussen in the Logan LDS Temple. Surviving are his widow, one daughter, Mrs. Darrel (Lydia) Clark of Africa; three grand- - Family members, friends and relatives turned out en masse for the funeral of James (Jimmy) Moore Jr. held Wednesday at the Corinne LDS ward. by children, two sisters and one brother in Sweden. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 1 p.m. in the Second ward chapel by Bishop Claudius Olsen. Friends may call at the Harold B. Felt Funeral Home this evening, Wednesday, from 7 to 9 p.m. and Thursday prior to the time of services. Burial will be in the Bear River City cemetery. Bish- NON-DRINKER- MUTUAl INSURANCI S AUTO INSURANCE AT REDUCED ftr RATES lformatla CM H. DEE JOHNSON Your Insurance Counselor PHONE 19 or 1242 TracU-l- $28.00 - KELLY . 4 CELEBRITY NYLON J. Earl Johnston sang Concluding speaker was RISK 'REFERRED regular list price Without LIFETIME easy-on-your-budg- SALON COLD CREAU and DRY-SKI$1.25 (reg. $225) ; 12 ox. Now $2.00 SHEER VELVET CLEANSER-ne- w (rg. $4.Q0). 8 oi. alxa. Now $1.00 BY KELLY et deferred pay plan 6 ot. Now CLEANSER-Eac- h: GUARANTEE ... ASK FOR FULL DiTAILI 0 $1.25 down Balance weekly (reg. $2). Hamilton Drug Center FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY Open Sunday 12-- 8 P.M. S&H Green Stamps one-hal- o ROOM FURNITURE BY SCULPTURED BRQNZE METAL DINING GROUP beauty the whole family can enjoy! Bright, elegant, but practical surfaces that stay new Give your living-dinin-g area that smart contemporary look! Only one suite left! A 'S better living for Ancient Egypt and for you today Now At Near Cost! 5 PC. SUITE 51 OS95 SUITE ONE DINING ROOM Micalite Wood-Grai- n Top! Colorful Textured Subtle Brass Sculptured Leg Styling holstery cents Foam Rubber in Chairs! Sculptured Black Metal 5 PIECE , DINING ROOM FURNTURE SUITE Beautiful Chrome Formica Table Top Easily Cleaned Plastic Leather Upholstery Pearl Gray SEE IT TODAY! satin-blac- Ac- HERE'S A DREAM SELECTION FOR PERKING UP YOUR HOME! NEW sculptured design NEW woodgrain micqlite finish NEW form fitting chair backs NEW decorator colors SEE THIS BEAUTIFUL SUITE NOW! NOW Through the years copper continued to serve mankind. It played a vital roll in ONLY 1 DAY SERVICE on rebuilding your OLD MATTRESS PICK UP AND DELIVERY Approximately 7000 years ago an Egyptian developed a primitive smelting process to recover copper. No one knows exactly who he was, where he lived, or when he lived. But this is known about him he was to the rise of civilization because he helped man progress from the stone age to the age of metal. By solving an elementary problem in metal- lurgy, he helped make it possible for copper serve his fellow men. They used the everlasting metal for water pipes, utensils, and for tools. great accomplishments: the telegraph, the telephone, the electric light, and many others. Today, mans oldest metal is still his most modern metal. Copper, produced in Utah by Kennecott, serves in the home, on the farm, in industry, and for the national . defense. im-orta- nt Lustrous inlaid wood grain Micalit top Sparkling n woven Wire Back Chairs Rich nontarnishing brass and taperk ed, leg styling! Its the newest and most gracious . . . truly an inspired furniture design! Nylo-Sara- Up- . By solvmgthe complex production problems of today, Kennecott, like the ancient Egypt-t- o l?.n is serving the c.ause of better living. producing a needed metal. Kennecott Secondly, operations are probenefits the of payrolls, supply viding and tax payments that add to purchases the prosperity of our state. First, it is MERTON MATTRESS CO. 24 East 1st South Phone 27 Kennecott Copper Corporation rA Good Neighbor Helping to Build ( 1957 Dorothy Gray Bishop Henry Norman conducted the services. At the organ for the prelude and postlude was Evelyn Anderson. The family prayer was offered by Red Anderson; invocation by A. V. Smoot. op Henry Norman, followed by a musical selection by Roy and Brigham City. Utah Wednesday, August gl, li eresivalueisecon OF 3 CLEANSING CREAMS On Wednesday approximately Betty Marble. The benediction of Financial was offered by Robert Jones. Industrial Fund, a $78,000,000 in- Dawn Reeder dedicated the vestment company, will receive grave at the Brigham City cem . $721,000 from FIFs 87th consec- etery. utive quarterly dividend, plus a capital gains distribution of $2, 266,000, announced Martin Rasmussen, Brigham City district manager. The FIF dividend payment f will amount to three and cents per share in investment income dividends and eleven cents per share in capital gains. Total assets of Financial Industrial Fund, Inc. on Aug. 12, 1957 were $78,692,845 representing an increase of $18,161,383 asset figure above the year-agof $60,531,462, stated Rasmussen. Sept. f Mrs. Tippetts was born July 26, 1922 at Brigham City, a daugh- In Hospital ' umiR M OF Service insists it is luggage. As luggage, I must collect a 10 per cent luxury tax on every one I On 45,000 shareholders Persons interested in electronics mechanic and a c electronic equipment installer positions may obtain full information and necessary application forms from the Commission Examner-in-charg- e or Civil Service Information representative F. L. Christensen at the Brigham City post office. The positions pay from $1.96 per hour to $2.48 per hour. Applicants in this examination will be rated on extent and quality of experience and education shown on applications. No written test is required. Persons interested In employment in the electronics repair and installation fields should make application at once, according to the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Departments of Air Force. Army and Navy at Ogden. Further information can be obtained from the Regional Director, Tenth U. S. Civil Service Region, Denver, Colo.; or from the board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Departments of Air Force, Army and Navy, 220 Post Office Building, Ogden, Utah. Funeral services were held Aug. 12 at Henderson, Nev., for Mrs. Viola Godfrey Tippetts, who died of injuries sustained in a traffic accident north of Cedar City on Aug. 6. Services were held at the Henderson LDS ward chapel. Interment was in the Mountain View Gardens of Memory at Henderson. NOW! ANNUAL SALE In the i Remarks were given Garden. Damage to Ewer's car came to by Principal Ed. Payne and Floyd $25; Biggars vehicle $110. Carter. A tribute in song was paid to Jimmy by Gaye Anderson and Richard Anderson. Shareholders Receive Dividend, Capital Gain Former Resident . Elder NEWS Box 8 a Better Utah t |