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Show Afimifr Bsamamtm&amsiM frnm tfeti Deer And Antelope Loss Flying Inspires Art, Worries Wyoming Professor Decides .BOX ELDER JOURNAL City, Utah Friday. December 23. 1949 A weekly newspaper, published at Brigham City, Utah, successor to Smithfield Sentinel, established Brigham CHEYENNE, Always the Good Provider William M. Long, Editor Charles Claybaugh, Business Manager Published every Friday and entered as Second Class Matter at the post office in Brigham City, Utah, under the act of March 8, 1879. Subscription rate in Box Elder County: $3.00 per year payable in advance; in combination with the Box Elder News, (published Wednesdays) $4 00 per year; $2.00 for 6 months; single copy 5 cents; bination rate com- $5 00. Member United Press, Audit Bureau of Circulations. Utah State Press Association. National Editorial Association. Advertising Representative: National Advertising Service. EiMotiaiU. that a fellow complaining with kids the for Christmas ruining Theyre all this commercialism. They dont care what traditions they spoil just so they can We heard do a few more dollars business. Specifically, he didnt like the idea of bringing Santa Claus to town several weeks Santa ought to be busy before Christmas. Pole North at the making toys these up days, he said. (UP) fair-mind- Probably the most interested spectator at d ward basketball game last the Wednesday was C. M. Peterson of Mantua. Peterson had six grandsons playing in the game, three on each side. His grandsons playing for Second ward were Junior and Russell Rasmussen and DeVaughn Peterson. On the First ward team Jerry, Joe and Bob Valentine, brothers, all call him Granddad. Mr. Peterson, naturally, was neutral ! Honeyville Fifth And Sixth Grades First-Secon- Mrs. Leone Hunsaker, Teacher .sy, an eight-year-ol- (UP) cat of household, Pau The ce EiRa sy the tei elan' e1 The co of Option jiat evei and Z brd Phone your news to Mrs. ulle. am ton of jurn of Receivi Tenn. d o ChrSt of ember kiss Don fcreaiioi Kitty Adopts Squirrel (MEMPHIS, Impre- unde's rr sum, th Coburn. The br Helen B sere M s 727. Glorified in STERLING ed no questions. H 0 L L Y W 0 D D United Press Stall Correspondent HOLLYWOOD Most (UP) dads grin and bear it when their daughters call them old fogies. 'Robert Young sends his sprouts down to the movie house to see him cutting loose with movie queens. An O. (UP) COLUMBUS, Ohio State University student! took a cruise with Task Force Christmas operetta was 61 t A as part of the naval ROTCt presented by the Perry school last summer. program children evening, Wednesday On returning to his ship from December 21, under the direction leave in France, Fred Kirby dis-- ' of the teachers, Principal Jones, covered that he still had the and Eva Young. large key to his room at the There An Impressive Christmas can- - Louvre Hotel in Paris. no on was return address the held was service tag predlellght vious to the presentation of the key, so he kept it. operetta with each child par- - I The other day, as evidence! that he had created an interna-- 1 ticipating. tional Incident, his commanding The theme of the operetta i officer showed the dumbfound-wa- s e the Birth of Christ with Jo- - i Kirby the correspondence Barnard, Nedra Weaver, garding the key which he had Dimension DeOrr Wight and Donna Davis received: letters from the com- as the readers. The piano ac mander of Task Force 61, the j&eautu' companists were Joanne Bar- commandant of the Naval AcadSchroe-der, nard, Judy Davis, Mary emy at Annapolis, and the UnitBeauty la Front, Niel Allen, Karen Quayle ed States ambassador to France. Profile and Back inand Patricia Bott. iMusic back. Kirby sent the key cluded all the Christmas carols found an fy in Nelson was the solo- Mixup Easily Solved ist Tenn. Mrs. (MEMPHIS, (UP) ' 'All children were dressed la J. W. IMcBryde, Sr., had a hunch costume and the stage was when she saw two women with , beautifully decortefl with a dress boxes waiting for a local large star shining down giving department store to open. Learnan effective lighting. ing that both had their feelings Following the operetta, the ruffled by receiving the wrong children enjoyed a party with dresses. Mrs. MdBryle suggestCONVENIENT PAtMBfT arrived ed that perhaps each had the' Jolly Saint Nicholas PLAN ' with his caftdy And mils. Gifts others dress. A quick look were also given by Santa to all proved her right. A dance rounded, out present. the evening with music by the Phone your society news to Jewelry Co. Dan Ross orchestra. The social the Phone 727, or Exclusive Dealers For was under the direction of the to Mrs. Charles KLmber, society Gorham and Wallace Sterling M. I. A. officers. editor. Phone 192. A itendeamfue, when he polishes off meals like you do. The price is high, Cook figures, but hes willing to pay it. The role is a real starring part, and he wants to be absolutely right for it "Im sure Ill be right in one It works, too, he says. They come home convinced the old way, he said. I know darn well man still knows a few things. Ill be hungry. 1 know Im getting kind of t Chird t Britain Recruits Civilians To Learn d Playboy Again At the first opportunity Young latched onto another Park Avenue playboy role, in Crest productions RKO release "Bride for Sale. "It was , like being home again, he observed. "I compete with George Brent, for Claudette Colbert. dancing, drinking champagne, toss off. sophistical ted lines, am- fancy free .and pretty fancy. . Wait 'til my,. daughters see this! But at 42, Young realizes hes growing out of the Park Avenue playboy age. He doesn't expect to stay young forever, and he doesnt want to. "I enjoy playing character -roles, he said. They are much more challenging and much more satisfactory when done right. Eventually, I hope to play a great many. "But 1 hope to play a fewmore playboys, too. I dont want the studios pushing me into old age before my time. - , , HOLLYWOOD Teen(UP) is paying a heavy price for movie stardom. No more double malteds or banana splits. Tommy had lunch with the boss one day. The next day he went on a diet, by command. He ate a steak, said the bug-eyeproducer, Anson Bond, a full order of macaroni and cheese, a combination salad, a double malted milk and a double order of ice cream. Hes supposed to play a ager Tommy Cook d half-starve- Italian. Tommy replies that proves he is half starved. "Mr. Bond just got mad when he got the check, he grinned. Young Cook eats like that all the time, he says. In spite of it, hes a lean, kid with never an ounce of spare fat. He keeps that way playing tennis, a sport in which he has won a few competitive trophies. Biggest Job Yet He also has appeared in about 2,000 radio broadcasts and about 20 motion pictures. Bond gave him his biggest job yet as a homeless Italian street waif In The Vicious Years. Even if Cook's diet doesnt put any fat on him. Bond declared, he wanted him to ease off. Lean rations from now on, and no second helpings or rich desserts. "It Isnt your weight, he said. Youve got to feel hungry to hard-muscle- d M .IP hungry, boy cant have lk a real hungry gleam in his eyes old for playboys, Young says. "Im not trying to pretend that time stopped on my 27th birthday. But I like to play men-abotown. And they sure help keep order around the house. All too soon, Young adds, hell probably be playing . character A-Bo- mb oarts exclusively. And when he saw hlmseU as Shirley Temples griy-haireLONDON papa in one movie, he was half convinced the ' time bomb .were , had come. today, few Some producers thought so how to 0 Christmas Operetta Film Shop By PATRICIA CLARY Stray Hotel Key Causes International Incident Perry School Presents 3 CARI and-Kfcth- Defense WALLACE (UP) Jf an atpm dropped on Britain Britons would know STERLING - , Hun-sake- r, ? temp e protect themselves against the devastating effects "They spotted those silver of the explosion. t streaks and a lot of them were . a few Within however; months, deput there by the makeup Britains home office hopes that partment," he said. "Lionel Bar- several thousand people through rymore and Barry (Fitzgerald al- out the will have been ready were moving over for the trained country in all methods of civil screens newest old man me. defense, including atomic Rilla Hunsaker, Ellen Tolman, Jav Thorsted, Bonnie Orme, Annette Bingham, Gary Betty Dickey, Darwin Bingham, Stuart Dickey, Kayleen Robbins, Sharon Johnson Sherlene Holmes, Luane Hunsaker, Mary Dickey, Paul Hunsaker, Judy Johnson, Linda Hunsaker, Franklin Miller, Erlene Bmghani, Harold Coombs, Paul Orme, Isabelle Johnnie, Shenna Duke, Luthor Glenn, Barbara Bingham, Judy Lee Whitaker. loVeo Teachers College. Miss Creagh, who owns s own plane, says she see patterns from the air spire various designs In ing. She has logged moreJ, 300 hours in the several she has been flying. The flying professor give ,k but of advice: Dont ever absorbed in the patterns of that you countryside where you are. youngsters prepared to climb up on Santas knee in a department store. After standing in line impatiently, the two little brothers finally were next in line to let Saint Nick krtow what they wanted for Christmas. subJust then a lunch-timstitute took the original Santas place, right in front of the boys. Unruffled, they climbed on the second Santas knee, told him what they wanted, and ask- too. Larry Boothe, Lou Dean Dickey, Jimmie Hill, Jean Hughes, Barbara Hunsaker, Dee Hunsaker, Kent Hunsaker, Byron Madsen, Norman Sherwood, Lloyd Thorsted, Donald Miller, Roberta Brasier, Margaret Dickey, Burt Harper, Renoldo Harper, Blaine saker, Karen Hunsaker, Robert Hunsaker, Roger Spackman, Janice Thorsted. Honeyville Third And Fourth Grades Mrs. Orletta Thornely, Teacher . Tex. an airplane ride if you(Pp inspiration to paint a suggests Miss Emma Creaeh professor at East Texas ,lr starry-eye- Well, we dont know. Our personal opinion would be that the kids never had it so The Britons will have to get along with good. By the time theyre big enough to only one pair of eye glasses, it was recentknow anything, theyre pretty apt to have ly announced by their socialist government. figured out that the best way to get what Up to the present every Englishman has they want for Christmas is to locate it in a been entitled to two pair of spectacles and local store, tell their parents or grandparents about it, and let them tell Santa. nearly everybody seemed to want them. It seems this is the first break in their As we recall, we got half-wa- y hep on the national health program of free medical service, free dentistry, and free eye care Santa Claus business when we were in the first grade, maybe a year or two before, but which went into effect last year. The original cost of the British health went right ahead playing the game for sevsevice was estimated at $600,000,000 a eral years after that. year. , The cost has been running at more Bobs new column got launched without than double that figure, and it becomes nefanfare, after several weeks on the type any to curtail it. cessary bank. The title implies that anything, just Care of eyes, in which Britain was far Bob happens to think of to write anything behind American standards, seems to have is appropriate for this column. Theres about bogged down more completely than any a double entendre there, too that Bobs other part of their health scheme. to try to be and just on Under the socialized medicine plan in Eng- going whatever topic he takes up. land, the demand for glasses jumped from five million to ten million and the annual A lot of people are coming down with sore cost from ten million to sixty million dollars. throats these days, it seems. Quite an epiIt is estimated by the better vision insti-tu- e demic. The doctors are busy, and the sulfa that the cost per eye patient in Great and penicillin business is booming. Britain is 60 perceht higher than in the United States. Brigham Citys Christmas lights are this year, it seems like. Isnt it a wonA representative of an American optical derful in on conditions season, though? company recently reported Great Britain brought about under socialBecause of excessive demand, reading glasses are supplied with flat lenses of intoric or meniscus form. No free rimless spectacles are available. It takes about three months to get an appointment for an eye examination. Wholesalers of glasses put each days incoming orders in a sack, tie it up and date it Six or eight weeks latey they get around to opening the Back and start to work on the orders. Neb. OMAHA, COMMERCE, Drift'111 J W aynes a baby I adopted squirrel wJL i she nurses and bathes with Z of four kittens. Two own Consider Little Children, Oh Ye Of Little Faith Spectacle Troubles ized eye care. (UP) Stricter hunting regulations next year appear likely as surveys show that Wyomings deer and antelope suffered far greater losses in last winters blizzards than was believed earlier. The great antelope herds of the Red Desert were almost eliminated. (Lester Bagley, state game and fish commissioner, said the deer and that loss was "excessive the antelope loss was 28 percent, or 16,000 head 60 percent more than early estimates. Had the true story been known last May when the hunting seasons were set, Bagley said, the commission probably would have maintained a stricter control over hunting in the upper Platte area. In 1908. Outside Box Elder County, $3.50 per year, Wyo. PETERS News-Journa- l, civil defense' Already war-timschools have been reopened at Easingwold, in Yorkshire, and, Falfield, near Bristol. Next year! a new school will be launched at Taymouth Castle, in Scote land. At these 6MI instructors are currently training students who in turn will become Instruct schools tvt tors in civil defense precautions against atomic warfare, ordinary bombing and ga&. ' ' W sKIsO?tdJ W Started Recruitment for Britains new1 civil defense force started prov- Recruiting isionally on Nov. 1. i Through- reelings out the country thousands of men and women are expected to volunteer for training for the defour defense corps civil fense corps, auxiliary fire service, national hospital, service reserve and special constabulary. Tt wjjl be war-timall over again for many of those volunteers, who, using the same stirrup pumps and air raid equipment they used against the Ger-mabombs, will be undergoing refresher courses to . prepare them for a possible third World War. ' t New to all are the bomb precau- special anti-atotions the home office, under the direction - of ames Chuter Ede, the home secretary, have drawn up for the benefit of every man, woman and child in Britain. Thousands of printed leaflets giving detailed instruction of the precautions will be dis trib-uteto civil defense headquarters throughout Britain. Instruments Provided Britons will be instructed in the use of instruments which can detect and measure harmful radiations. They will be taught how to discover and decontaminate areas in which atom bombs have fallen. They will be shown personnel contamination meters and an instrument shaped like a fountain pen which Is the gamma dose indicator. The fountain pen instrument probably will be issued to civil defense leaders but it 1s not known whether they will become a civilian issue. First aid, basic fire fighting and basic protection against high explosives and chemical warfare are also Included In the course of instruction, which is Likely to last several months. e The merriest Christmas and the happiest New Year ever is the very best we can wish UN! rt d . our friends, one and all. May the Yuletidc season bring you every joy and happiness. SEASONS FUN Saturday night, the night before Christmas, and everyone a wonderful time at the Dance-Bowdancing to the music of Dan Ross and his orchestra. Dont miss it! FIRST will have l, Holiday Night Monday night, December 26 will be the dance at the Dance-Bowthe glorious way to wind up the Ross orchestra. holiday without a l, two-da- y LAST AND BEST now for table reservations. YOU ARE INVITED let-dow- n. The New Years Eve dance, and a gala affair it will be, Saturday night, Dec. 31. Phone Fun, Only $3 per couple. noise-maker- s. fun FOR ALL |