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Show Little misses sought 2510. for own queen pageant Five-year-ol- d are girls primping and preparing for their part in the 1974 Peach Days celebration this year this in the Junior Peach Queen contest. The little queen and her attendants are chosen by drawing each year. Tuesday, Sept. 3 at 7 p.m. at the Community Center is the time for this years drawing. Sally Schroeder, of the Ladies Community club and contest chairman, urges all interested to parents of eligible contact presidents of clubs and organizations to sponsor the little candidates. A contest rule says each girl must be sponsored by a local club or organization. Clubs are restricted to entering two girls each. Entry fee is $2 per child. Girls must be by Oct. 31, said Mrs. Schroeder. Due to a delay in getting letters out to clubs this year, the date for the drawing was set later than usual. Mrs. Schroeder extends apologies for the delay and asks cooperation of parents to get the contest underway. Introduced The girls will be introduced individually the night of the pageant and walk across the stage. The new queen will be crowned by last years queen, Julie Herrod. Later, all girls will appear in a number on the Friday night Peach Queen pageant and ride on a float in the Peach Days parade. I urge all parents or clubs to contact me with their entries as soon as possible, since it seems that with the short summer Peach Days has crept up on us and we need your entries in now, said Mrs. Schroeder. For more information, contact Mrs. Schroeder at 723- - BOX The Community club annually sponsors junior activities associated with Peach Days, including selection of a young marshall and marshallette to lead the junior parade on Sept. 5 before the big Saturday event. This years junior parade will begin at 5:30 p.m., with youngsters planning to participate asked to assemble at the tabernacle beginning at 4:30 p.m. for judging in the various parade categories. Brigham City, Utah Sunday, August 25, 1974 EIDER NEWS, 3 Categories include floats, tricycles, bicycles, walking costumed section, pets, and ponies. Winners will be chosen in each category, and each child participating in the junior parade will receive a ticket good for one ride at the carnival. A marshall and marshallette will be chosen in a contest slated for Sept. 3, at a time and place to he announced by the club. SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS in the Box Elder county stakes honors last week. Other top floats were by the furniture stores of Tremonton, Bear River bank and the! Davis county queen and attendants float. Thiokol Corporation's entry fair paiade brought sweep- - Better cortlrol at BEHS School board reviews traffic recommendations h Bf'c Hder Boaid of Education has received recommendations from the 1 Brighi.m City Traffic Advisory Board for controlling traffic at Box Elder High school The recommendations call for an area for visitor parking south of the main entrain e on Sixth West street, limiting parking to two hours. The cuib there presently has a reserved With school opening for PREPARING FOR SCHOOL Brigham youngsters Monday, Aug. 26, workmen busy themselves by striping traffic control lines. Here they are painting in paiking spaces at Central Elementary school. Congressional candidate opposes freeway route Construction of I 15 through heart of Bear River Valley, rather than along an alternate route to the west has drawn fire fiom a candidate for Congress fiom the First Congressional District. Mi s. Dorothy Clark of Provo, Republican candidate for the House of Representatives, told the News and Journal Friday that construction of the freeway along the proposed route is criminal. She said she is extremely opposed to cutting through the irrigated farm land toward the Idaho line when an alternate route to the west would affect only a few, large, dry land farms. The people of Box Elder county have every right to tell the State Road Commission where they want the freeway, she said One of these day? were going to wake up and find out were unable to feed ourselves because all of our farmland is going to be under asphalt, she added. Agriculture is the lifeblood of this county and running the freeway through the middle of the valley would affect a number of small farmers, as well as remove forever valuable acreage, she pointed out. tho Indians. I would fight to keep the institution open in Brigham City as a member of Congress, she said. Land use planning should come from the lowest possible level the people themselves, said Mrs. Clark. She urged citizens to become familiar with a land use referendum that will be placed before voters this November. School Help Declining enrollments in many school districts, such as Box Elder, and flagrant inflation are putting extreme financial pressures on districts that could be alleviated with federal help, she said. But that help should carry no strings, said Mrs. Clark, in the form of revenue sharing, doing away with such programs as food subsidy and Public Law 874 (impacted aid). This, she said, would do away with uncertainty many districts face in budgeting for federal funds that often are uncertain in sharing would be tempoiaii until federal taxes wi ie rut and states stepped in to ,ke u;i lb slacK and keep tin 'iic-.eat home foi local dis'cu in. me schools. "ti la need iu I, i , . ting units, mhu than .end our money to be laundered n Washington then sent bat k to os, she said. e V, i coming Mis Clark said the revenue oil, ( sign on it that would he painted out. Noi th ot the main entrance, the advisory board recommends that diagonal parking lines be painted by the eity along the west curb to the bieczewny l.Ms'ng soli 1 lines should be painted out tunnim; poralU to the curb, also by the citv. 'I t is ,ir i should be posted with four for BC horsemen Parking environmental and ic Counr ltnun Byron Armstrong other J.ook he council agreed to take another Ar 'I look at a dneftive to the Box Elder County road at Commission lequuing an tie counts s indietiial park on West ore ,i The none name ; ftei isupenor Dairy in 1 ' . . . . stock . inmenca. Join the Payroll Savings Plan. "I in t. 1 M-- - Need your support the Sept. 10 Primaries" NEWELL (TIM) FRANCIS Republican Candidate SHERIFF FOR BOX ELDER COUNTY Paid Political Advertisement - Newell Francis for Sheriff Committee . . Beautifully patterned or cable-knipaired together. Classic vests taking cover under their own cardigans. To wear in so many says. Hand washable Acrylic. Pattered vest, 1055, cardigan, 1495, Cream or dusty blue. Coaleknit vest, 99' cardigans. 79 Camel, dusty blue or dusty pink. Sizes S praised 'SE clerk in the City Court due to extra work load. Councilman Dale Baron reported the city would receive a $10,000 grant to help defray costs of a new ambulance the city ordered a few months ago. The grant came from federal funds given to the state. double-up- . r, VS NOT LIMITED TO CITY LAW ENFORCEMENT me process of building a new plant at the road after site, protested the learning American Greeting Corps plant would be serviced with a 60 foot right of way. 1 he firm asked the council to look into the double standard rules. A No authorized was the hiring of a third 4-- H impact the educational system for two-teach- Continued Fiom Page One) school for its role in giving Indians a helping hand, not a hand out. The school is very valuable in In other matters, the board received notice that all four secondary schools in the district had been accredited. Howell School will soon undergo evaluation for accreditation, which if it passes, would be the first school in the state to do so, it learned. Pai king stall in front of the Seminary should be painted out and the curbing painied vellow. A practice trail course for Club and other horsemen is available for use in Brigham City on Tuesday and Thursday evenings, according to Frank Johnson. The course is located west on Sixth North street. Riders can reach the site by going as f'r weston the street as possible, then turn left and proceed 100 yards. The course will include how to go through a gate on horseback, ride over a bridge, teeter-tottewalk over plastic sheeting, loading and unloading from a trailer, side passing and ground tying. Johnson said all horsemen are welcome. Riding begins at 7 p.m. each of the two nights. study being done by Utah State university has not been combut she said, pleted, preliminary indications are it will not be favorable to the proposed route. This is what land use is all about. The people in Box Elder county should have the right to say how their own land is used, and that includes moving a road to another area if it would adversely affect their economy, said Mrs. Clark. The mother of three grown sons, Mrs. Clark expressed deep regret that the Army Corps of Engineers is studying tiny Box Elder creek for flood control, Lot Concerning the parking lot east of the school, the advisory board recommends stop signs be placed at exits. The signs should also be placed at southeast and northwest coi ners of LDS Seminary parking lot Study Underway An The general school area on Sixth West should have two portable school zone signs and the street on either side of the crosswalk should also be painted designating the zones. The school board, which helped formulate the recommendations be sent to the Brigham City Council, voted to wait two weeks before acting officially on the proposals. Brigham City Council meeting lepl Trail course sef up signs, designating no parking between 8 3 p.m. on school days. Parking would be permitted at all times diagonally on the west side of Sixth West from the breezeway north side to Second South. a.m. and 47 South Main - Brigham City |