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Show Univrrs,,l Micro filnlnp U7 Box Salt Lake City, Jen. Utah 53 Mm U Rasmussen And ANNE FREDERICKSON, Wright Tie In Primary Race Complete but unofficial returns from the Tuesday primary disclose a tie vote in Box Elder county on the Democratic ticket r for county commissioner with S. Martin Rasmussen and Sterling Wright each poling 713 votes. No other changes were made from the results tabulated in the Wednesday morning issue of the Box Elder News. A few errors in tabulation plus two distant precints, the returns from which arrived only yesterday morning, brought about the unusual situation. According to County Clerk K. B. Olsen, the commissioners must first canvas the returns from tlje primary vote. If the tie still exists, then the two candidates must appear before the county clerk at a time set by him and the tie will toe broken by lot. Complete unofficial county returns by voting precinct will be found on page 6 of this issue of the Box Elder Journal. On the judicial nominating ballot, Box Elder voters . gave Justice Lester Wade at total of 2,115 while his opponents, Richard J. Hogan and George W. Worthen were gathering 604 and 823 respectively for the ten year supreme court post. For the four year unexpired term, the vote was as follows: Justice F. Henri Henriod 1,345, Will L. Hoyt 651, and Joseph G. Jeppson 1,491. DONNA OMPTON CHOSEN ATTENDANTS Extra Large Crowd Witnesses Impressive Coronation Rites At Box Elder Gymnasium Lovely Patricia Wood, Corinne, is 1952 Peach Queen. The seventeen year old lovely was awarded the coveted title two-yea- VOLUME 45, NUMBER 37 Air-Mind- 8 PAGES Have Treat At Airport Saturday Air minded people who attend Peach Days have a treat in store. At 2 p. m. Saturday a gigantic air show will be held at the Brigham City municipal airport and the sky will be filled with planes from all over Utah. Complete with all the excitement that goes with flying, there will be aerobatics exhibitions and flying contests. Together At Tabernacle, 1 P. M. MIA Institute Scheduled For September Price. ed SLATED HERE NEXT MONDAY t,. Caravan Here Noted Field Consultant Will Speak To Box Elder P.T.A. Workers,. For many years she was asso- . s asRegional sociation convention will be held at Box Elder high school, Monday, September 15, according to Mrs. Lloyd Davis, Brigham City, regional director. It will be under Mrs. Davis direction who is assisted by Mrs. George M. Mason, Mrs. Ronald I. Packer and Mrs. Charles W. Claybaugh, south Box Elder council officers; and Mrs. Roy G. Woodhear, Mrs. Dwight Hansen, Mrs. Leora Eberhard, north Box Elder council officers. Registration of P.T.A. workers will begin at 6.30 oclock in the evening at the high school. Gen eral session will commence at 7 p. m. which will be followed by departmental meetings from 8 to Parent-Teacher- Monday P. M. 9 p. m. Queen Patricia Wood (center), and Attendants crowned at the coronation ball, sponsored by . were . who . the Junior Chamber of Commerce, before a capacity crowd at the Box Elder high school gymnasium last night. The royal trio will reign over all Peach Days festivities Friday Indian Pow Wow Is New Peach Days Feature; Slated Tonight And Saturday Anne Frederickson and Donna Compton and Saturday. All 58 girls were introduced individually at the ball and paraded across a beautifully decorated stage beneath a colorful rainbow. They will ride on the queens float in the Peach Days parade, today and Saturday. Representing the National Con gress of Parents and Teachers will be Miss Dema Kennedy of Chicago, field consultant. Miss Kennedy has a broad background of experience in public and private schools, both as teacher an'd administrator. An Indian Pow Wow will be$- held at Rees Pioneer park to- game which also starts at 8 p. m. It will be presented by staff night and tomorrow night. A new feature for Peach Days, members of the Intermountain which, it is hoped, will become Indian school and students who an annual affair, the Indian have participated In the famous Pow Wow will feature strange Arizona Pow Wow. dances and customs of a numMrs. Clarina Lowry Is directber of American Indian tribes. ing the affair and Phillip Gover It will be presented during the will announce the program and program at iRees Pioneer park tell the significance of the vartonight irf conjunction with the ious ceremoryes. Parade of Drums, beginning at 8 The unusual program should in be especially interesting to the p. m. and Saturday evening conjunction with the baseball youngsters. With the explosion of a torpe- low as Marshall of the Parade, do fired above Brigham City this flanked by Deanna Lichtenstein morning at 11 a. m., Utahs and Carmen Reeder. Miss Utah, Marilyn (Bunny) best parade will start moving down Main street, from Second Reese, just back from compesouth at the tabernacle north to tition in the Miss America paThird north. geant will be next. Special pain convertirade guests An expected crowd of thou- bles will be riding S. Norman Lee, a sands of spectators will line the member of the original Peach streets to watch over 50 colorDays committee and Mrs. Lee, ful floats, many bands and mu- and Mr. and Mrs R. L. Fishburn. sical units and other features Mr. Fishburn is a charter mem Peach Days Hobby Display Will Feature 39 Exhibits In Store Windows Here Those who will show souviners and collections include: Sarah Deanna Lichtenstein, Marble, Mrs. Earl Webb, Miss Kathy Claybaugh and Reed Campbell, Art Entered in art are: Teddy Draper, Ruth Snow, R. H. Larkin, Emma Russell, Deanna MacDonalds art class, Mrs. Hortense Thomas, Janna Montgomery, Louise Moler. Hobbies Entered under hobbies are Emma Loveland, Carl Olsen, Richard Felt, Dolly Rockwood and Darla Rockwood and Albert Mauneen Pimper. Displays Displays will be by the girl, scouts, University Domen, Junior Chamber of Commerce, and l Edison. t, pass. The Junior division, a small sized parade all its own, will lead. It will consist of dozens of floats made by youngsters and children dressed in costumes, decorated bcycles, trikes and pets. The junior parade will lead off with Richard Limb leading as Junior Marshall of the day. Hell be flanked by Ramona Wheat-leand Bonnie Orme. A group of scouts will serve as color guard. Junior Princess Karen SeaDiane shore and attendants, Dummer and Pauline Adkins, will ride a special float in the junior section which was donated by Jack Eisenberg. Following will be the junior princess contestants. Mam section of the parade will be led by Earl Hunsaker in a highway patrol car, followed by a color guard composed of VFW and American Legion members. Dr. George A. Boyce will fol y ber of the Chamber of Commerce-4-an- still holds a membership in the organization. The Hill Field band will follow and after it will be the float carrying the Peach Queen and her attendants. Municipal and military floats will follow, then the civic and service club floats, the church floats and finally the business floats with horses, etc. brniging up the tail end. Fashion Frolic Will Feature All Peach Queen Candidates At Latest styles in ladies and4-menfall and winter clothing will be modeled by a host of Peach queen candidates and male models at the Fashion Frolic at the Intermountaln Indian school auditorium this evening, according to Ole Zundel and Mrs. Hazel Kaiser, chairmen. It begins at 8 p. m. I.I.S. Auditorium s Chairman Zundel reported that arrangements are now complete for the affair, and a large crowd is expected to attend the colorful fashion show.Price is $1.00 per person. In addition to the parade of new styles, Bob and Dotty Brown and their television quartet will Elder countys be featured musicians and will fairest young ladies will model play many numbers during', the and the rest will act as pages, evening. Tickets for the affair may be ushers and etc. Fall and winter clothing will purchased at the door or from be modeled from J. C. Penney any of the participating stores, company, Blocks, Van Engelens, members of the Kindergarten Forsgrens, Zundels and Mode club, the Chamber of Commerce office. ODay. About 40 of Box ciated with the Girl Scouts of America, serving first as executive secretary and later- - us 'in-- structor at the national training ' school in New York." With a bachelors degree from Butler University In Indianapolis and a masters degree from the Bread Loaf school in English, Middlebury College, Vermont. Miss Kennedy has also done special work at Babson Institute, Harvard, DePauw, and the University of Wisconsin. She has had varied and extensive training in the group work field and in community organization. In her work as a field consultant Miss Kennedy reaches all parts of the county and extends service to many of the more than as25,000 local parent-teache- r sociations that make up the national Congress with its . vast membership of over 6,000,000. During her stay in this state she will participate in leadership training conferences and institutes as a part of the service the National Congress extends to all sttae branches. The public is welcome and invited to attend the general session, Mrs. Davis said. Will Speak To P.T.A. Workers Utah's Best Parade Moves Down Brigham Main Street At 11:00 A.M. r Isa-bel- A record crowd witnessed the coronation, preceded by the individual presentation of each contestant beneath a colorful rainbow. The entire affair was sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce, Nand auxiliary, Jay ceettes. The program opened With the presentation of the junior queen, Karen Seashore and her youthful attendants, Diane Dummer and Pauline Adkins. The smallsized queen was crowned by last years junior princess, Anna Lee REGIONAL P.T.A. CONFERENCE Defense Pas-ket- inches tall and a student. Dignitaries introduced includthe three judges, MisS Jewell model, Johnson, professional radio and TV performer; Monday, September 15, is the concert, last day for making application Dr. Avard Fairbanks, dean of of Utah and for 1953 federal crop insurance, fine arts, University Mrs. Dean Peck, professional Box Elder county wheat growCity. ers were notified today by photographer. Salt Lake Jaycee President Bill Davis Donald J. Homer, chairman of introduced the special guests the Box Elder Production and and Boyd Sheffield, chairman of Marketing adminstration. the coronation ball, was master Crop insurance was a life of ceremonies during the presaver for some wheat growers sentation of each contestant and Homer said. in 1952, Any the queen and attendants. farmer wishing to insure his The climatic announcement 1953 wheat production may do came after a full days judging, so by making application at and the attendants stepped onthe Box Elder county PMA of- to the beautifully decorated fice in the Waldron Building, stage with the unusual rainbow overhead. Tremonton. It's time to get together today and tomorrow at 1 p. m. on the tabernacle square when an official "get together" hour is held. The time was especially set aside both days of Peach days to allow old friends and new ones get together. Many former residents come back to -Brigham City for the annual celebration and this is the opportunity to visit them. Free peaches will be given away at the square and at 1 :30 the new 1,000 pipe organ in the 15 tabernacle newly renovated YWMIA and YMMIA of the will be played for the enjoyChurch of Jesus Christ of Latter-Da- y ment of anyone who has not Saints will hold Institute in yet beard it or wish to do so Brigham City on Monday, September 15, at 7 p. m. in the stake again. tabernacle. ; Six stakes will participate in , the annual meeting. Stake board workers and bishoprics from the following stakes are reminded to attend: North and South Bear liver stake, Malad stake, Hyrum fctake and North and South Box Elder stakes. ! General authorities will be A civil defense caravan of ten present to assist stake workers trucks will arrive in Brigham with any problems. ' 1 ; North Box Elder stake superCity Monday afternoon, Septemintendent Howard Call and Pres- ber 15, at 1:30 oclock, promoting ident Nellie Smith are in charge the Alert America" program. of the institute for Brigham City. According to J. D. Gunderson, county civil defense coordinator, ' the trucks will be parked in the Brigham City And area near the Box Elder TaberCorinne Schools nacle and Central school. The caravan is sponsored by the Val To Close Todqy ley Forge foundation, the U. S. The Corinne and Brigham and Utah civil defense councils City schools will be closed all The trucks included in the day today to allow pupils and caravan are the ones used to teachers to enjoy the Peach transport the "Alert America Days celebration. display showing in the Industrial Festivities will start with Arts building at the Utah State the 11:00 o'clock parade, in Fair and are making a tour of which many of the school chilnorthern Utah to arouse interest dren will participate. in the display. In the ever popular hobby display feature of Peach Days, 39 Brigham City and Box Elder county people will exhibit their hobbies in the windows of Brig' ' ham City stores. from which range The hobbies, collections to needlecraft, may be 6een throughout Brigham City, f Needlework J have entered 'People who needlework include the following: Johanna Jorgensen, Abbie Samsel, Mrs. Sadie Marble, Mrs. Clark Nelson, Ann Barlow, Ruth Hirschi, Frank Palbot. Handwork People entered in the handwork division include: Mrs. H. C. Buland Jr., Sylvia Dunn, Mrs. James Marble, Ida Lee, Ira Far-rel- , Carl Madsen, Mrs. Ira Packer and Mrs. Elijah Jensen. Souvenirs and Collections by Baron Woolen Mills, is a brown-ett- e with brown eyes and olive complexion. She is five feet six September 15 Is Last Day For Crop Insurance t's Time To Get Civil two-da- y Peach Days. Queen Patricia, sponsored and crowned by last years queen, Rea Nielsen, at a crowded coronation ball at Box Elder high school gymnasium, last night. (First attendant is another Corinne Miss, Anne Fredrickson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fredrickson, sponsored by the Brown shoe shop, and second atis Donna Compton, tendant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mathew Compton of Brigham City, sponsored by J. Edwin Baird Insurance and Real Estate and Auto Vu theater. The royal trio will reign over Chosen To Reign Out Of Field of 58 Contestants Folks ed BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 12, 1952 all festivities during the The Peach Days parade that will be seen on Main street at 11 a. m., will also roll tomorrow at the same time. Parade Of Drums Featured Tonight At Rees Park A Parade of Drums, led by the Brigham Cty Veterans of Foreign Wars Drum and Bugle corps, will highlight a program at Rees Pioneer park tonight at 8 p. m. that also features an Indian Pow Wow and a gigantic display of fireworks. The Brigham City VFW outfit recently placed fourth in national competition as a unit and some of the individual performers rated firsts and seconds. The Parade of Drums will be a show of drilling and playing ability by several of Utahs top marching musical outfits. And to top the evening off, after the Parade of Drums and the Indian PowWow, a match will be held to $300 worth of fireworks. The colorful explwhirling osions, skyrockets, wheels, etc. will light up the night. Miss Dema Kennedy Of Chicago field consultant, will represent the National Congress of Parents and Teachers at a Regional P.T.A. conference here. . . . ' |