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Show rynp.il'iy.iyiyiijyy yyfr ynyufr-- yj-- if' 'if if'4f f RMHMTiF yy y VTT f lt' " yT'f"rT " JOURNAL, Brigham City, Utah Thursday, April 12, 1962 Local Police THE BOX ELDER Former County Investigate 3 Accidents c k ,if t v - f5 jWtfWi - Ua'-'-- Y 1' - it r Jt : i ' I . r ': ' " s - - , - f r i:- - ' ti - i ' j w - ( - UiH: ' t u' S3Bj&feiMsS( U. i - H' ; , . iuk - 5 '"V rfWTf y y -- .f. x i Y tm V6" , m V t A j tl SfiO 'S' I forest Finns I ' t w it , Arrive Friday THE OLD HOME Wi lfafcinh TOWN caravan tiansporting a million silver dollars to the Seattle Space Age Worlds Fair will be traveling m UlNO - Ht ' A Mil i V.X Caravan to p A " tSKT a Jfi U t Ntwf Of MS YV around City, through Brigham noon on Friday, April 13. The million silver dollars were loaded at the Philadelphia mint Thursday morning, April 5. The of dollars will be 12 days enroute. m . By STANLEY y THE EXHIBIT and caravan are sponsored by the Behlen Manufacturing company, Columbus, Neb. Firm President Walter D. Behlen said arrangements for the display were made through Miss Eva B. Adams, mint director, and the Northwest Historical Medals company of Walla The Pinkerton Walla, Wash. agency is supplying security for the cross country haul and exhibit. The cargo is completely insured by the Hartford group. The Cartwheels are held in special steel boxes with steel grate grate windows. The Traiimobile trailers also are equipped with floodlights and windows to permit public viewing along the route. AT SEATTLE, the display will be housed in one of the sponsors prefabricated steel buildings simi-Iia- r in construction to one which withstood an atomic blast in 1955. Behlen said bank officials esti- mated that it took one man, usabout 18 ing modern methods, days to count the million silver! dollars. They calculated the dollars would reach about 8,800 ft. if it were possible to stack them one on top of another. This would be about 142 stacks as high as the Space Needle, also a feature of the fair. cross-countr- CANO "A. SHES NOT SETTAI& i at VaHEI5place TABLE FOt5 HIM, EITHER" SrANLHyCS0L)NDS LKE B Roth e"oin-la- w talk hei3 our OF A DRESSED didnt VyS turkey! b; r- BACK ROAD FOLKS -- KINFOLKS At ACTION PfAfUBB Torture Device?-- - Not By Any Means investiga- Court Room Junior High Drama Opens Observes Library Week Friday Night AtTremonton world-famou- During the observance, the library and halls have been decorated with posters made in the art classes of Victor Escobar. The theme, Read and Watch Your World Grow, is appropriate at the junior high school, Mrs. Hyer said, since the enrollment there shows a steady growth and the circulation at the library is growing in proportion. In the library is a display featuring a cartoon of Peanuts, the comic strip National Library Week was proclaimed in Utah by Governor George D Clyde for the week of In his proclamation. April Governor Clyde said, Books and libraries are a strong force in maintaining the democratic way of life and supporting American ideals. QUICK HAS Israel Hunsaker, Jr., age 79, passed away at his home in Monday at 9 a. m. after an extended illness. Mr. Hunsaker was born Dec. 19, 1882, in Silver Reef, Washington county, Utah, a son of Israel and Loretta Neeley Hunsaker. THE FAMILY moved to Honey-vill- e in 1886, where he was reared and educated. He was a graduate of Box Elder High school and attended USAC at Logan. He married Rosa Carter on Nov. 28, 1906, in the Logan LDS temple. They made their home at Whites Valley until 1921 when they moved to Tremonton. Mr. Hunsaker was a member of the Bear River stake MIA board , as a from and served counselor in the bishopric of a He Tremonton ward from 1928-3was a member of the Bear River stake high council from 1939-4HE SERVED a term as county commissioner of Box Eider counHe was elected ty from 1928-3mayor of Tremonton and served from 1931-3He was a past member of the Tremonton Lions club. He served as president of the Box Elder County Farm Bureau for a number of years and was chairman of the Box Elder County Rodeo committee for some 20 n, C, .4 - i t a 8 V f t f i' t , i i I , 1926-28- M ONE OF A MILLION: Kathy Battle, 7, of Weaverville, N.C., It one of more than a million living Americans cured of cancer. When only a year old, Kathy was operated on for cancer of the kidney. Today she shares the spotlight on ACS posters with four others cured of cancer. Each of them appears on a different poster but with the same design and message. National Library Week is being observed this week at the Box Elder Junior High school, according to Mrs. Mary Hyer, school hot In 1925 in the sweltering town of Dayton, Tenn , 12 shirt sleeved jurors heard a misdes meanor explode into a trial. Friday and Saturday at the Brigham City Armory, audiences will see a play based on that incomparable legal duel between William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow. The play is Inherit the Wind, which scored a triumphant run of over two years in New Yoik between 1955-5, Eugene Hess and Lee Nelson, both of Brigham City, will be seen in the leading roles of the two Leo Ware, attorneys. clashing Brigham City, will direct the production. He is well known to local of audiences for his production "Promised Valley, which played to capacity audiences last fall in Brigham City. Tickets to the drama are on sale at Bobs Drug or may be obtained at the door. scon's SCRAP BOOK By kE ; iiwMw LEArtft. of The H8ISTM 1RE.E. tv PERSOKlK 'Three wike world li WHITE. SOMpy, UK4 Y'f -- B V 4 m in MOitf CUff'Nq POINTS. .Y' K fWLEH YiMUi.. 'FRMINM. P HChU OFF )H 1 " ' BJkSARE. jM YT. how fHE. And K TjOCSEHECK. v 6HF ,.MS - . iRiMMmq Njk ohe. At the time of his death, Mr. Hunsaker was a director of the Utah Wool Growers Assn. SURVIVING are his widow, Tremonton; a son and a daughter, Neville Hunsaker, Logan; Mrs. LaMar (LuDeane) Benson of the eight grandchildren; following brothers and sisters, Mrs. Helen Allen, Tremonton; Mrs. Orpha Stohl and Mrs. Ara Ensign, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Wallace Miller, (Veda) Seattle, Wash.; Mrs. Irvin (Ruby) Miller, Salinas, Calif.; Horace Hunsaker, Leiand Hunsaker, Logan, and Honeyville. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 1 p. m. in the Tremonton Fourth LDS ward chapel with Bishop Reed Oyler officiating. Friends may call at Rogers Mortuary in Tremonton Wednesday evening from 7 to 9 p. m. and Wednesday from 11 a. m. until services. Interment will be in Honeyville cemetery. SCOTT R. J. f years. WHoRl 4 L OF I YMHa. ROUP UMH FROMTmL SAME. Lf ,tl Hi. 4 fx r. . 15 'Trtt U i. HAS 'THE. AND RESOURCES 4o KNOW-HO- Build A pirmahehi S'AHOH oh frtf.HQOH Bf 1970 ? ES. K0'VhAK 100,000 Acres are devoTed fo CiROWlNq TkEHRMPLE. VRebf fill stei Will Bf cajt whi CHRISTMAS Tk Trees. Selling Rei'mlTne ARE A $50,001,000 c Jl K TmmiftSum. HI GO BIGHAIW THE CAMELS ARE COMING! rU it free chicks with 50 lbs. Pills-bur-y Chick Starteration, April 25 IS LAP.YISTI.D. BUSINESS. 12, 13, and 14. t ik. ip4 FDWARDS PET SUPPLIES South 8th West PA 618 CITY GOSS FOR! THE BUICK CARAVAN HAS ARRIVED! The scrubbabls -- . WALL FINISH Y- V'.ri DRIVE you can t A NEW ADVANCED THRUST 62 W- - 1 11 1- - 4 Deipita any superficial resemblance to an ancient torture device, the above apparatus serves a most useful and painless medical purpose. Called a Scoliometer, it is used to measure deformities of the human trunk and assess breathing difficulties caused by spinal curvature. It was developed through funds provided by the National Foundation-Marcof Dimes to create a Birth Defect Clinical Study Conter at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tenn, .1 h 5$. V At CLAIRS CHEVRON SERVICE PA 97 NORTH MAIN Vern McCoy Clair Cazier COMPLETE ONE-STO- Exhaust Brakes 60 I Steering BENNETTS Electrical Semi-Gos- s -- PLUS- Goes on magically, beautifully, with brush or roller! A tough, finish for walls 'x?y super-washab- Safety Belt Installation, Shock Absorbers and carburator overhaul Complete Tune-U- p Transmission Automatic exchanged at fac cost. tory ALL REMEMBER! WORK WE ARE AN APPROVED STATION INSPECTION le bathrooms whenever you want extra years of service and beauty. Comes in 1,322 in kitchens, Colorizer'colors and white. GUARANTEED i STATE BENNETTS DEALER mrteJjiM F -- ! J: a .t iteil, 4 mJh4 Ml Bennetts Sign - - rw Buick Motor Division and Jack Morris Bulck have a whole fleet of sparkling, brand new 1962 Buicks All licensed, Insured, and or overnight test diive. Even If you are not planning to purchase a car now you owe ready to bring to your home for a half-da- y it to yourself to drive this Ilumpless (Camel) Buick. Call us Well deliver. See why sales are up 132.9. nan 00 mm SEE YOUR NEAREST Look For The idUkuilW . FINISH Standard Oil Products PLUS PLUS PLUS i SERVICE P 550 South Main I Official Dies car-truc- k Million Dollar CAN PREVENT SMOKEY i silver dollars were loaded at the Philadelphia Mint and will be 12 days enroute to Seattle. The money weighs 30 tons and would reach 8,800 feet if stacked one on top of another. The cargo is insured. you &lSt-ONL-Y .. ) MILLION DOLLAR CARAVAN A caiavan transporting a million silver dollars to the Worlds Fair at Seattle will arrive in Brigham City about noon Friday, April 13, enroute to the Fair. The million KBBI n$ ,. - Y police vehicle. Capt. Dell 1 ife who investigated, cited Philps for negligent collision. At 12.15 p. m., cats dnven by Robert Cox Edwards, 616 South Eighth West, and Helen Booth Stoner, 541 South First West, hit at the intersection of Sixth West and Fourth South. Damage was estimated at $100 to the Edwards car and $200 to the other vehicle. A accident at 9 p. m. involved vehicles driven by Nancy Chiyo Sum.da, RFD 2, and An2244 Blain avenue, drew Whyte, Salt Lake City. The mishap occurred at 1060 South Main. Estimated damage to the car was $350 and to the truck, $175. Patrolman Jay M. Herbert cited Whyte for failure to yield ! L VVJ City 4 , t tiaftic accidents on Wednesday, April 4, which caused ptnperty damage estimated at $1,430, repoits show. Cars driven by James William Philps, Hyrum, and Vern Peterson 117 East Second South, collided at 10' 29 a. m at Main and I irst South stieet Estimated damage to the Philps car was $230, and $75 to the other i. 1 X L ,.(' A. i I- , -- ' :,- S , Brigham ted three r ' , f jt Wr s i 13 pippw n&wm T7 I L u BUICK MOTOR DIVISIG; PA 62 11 or PA 35 J |