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Show II f Xlwdi That Notice WILL TAP LAKE IN BOX ELDER COUNTY Advises Treasurer 4var. Plans for a $28 million 2 minerals development operation on the Great Salt Lake In Box Elder and Weber counties was announced Tuesday by an official for one of the two Involved com- panies. Harry D. Feltenstein, Jr., president of Lithium Corporation of America, detailed the plans In an Ogden news co- sug-gest- pro-pert- IN THIS CAPACITY, hmmeeit hr Maas has a Virtually everyone gripe about taxes but Box Elder county citizens who believe their 1967 property valuations are out of line were advised this week to do something about It. comes The admonishment from County Treasurer Glen M. Bennlon who just this week finished sending out an estlmat. ed 20,000 valuation notices. The county officials admits to the possibility of error and s excessive valuations. He that If such Is the case - or believed to be by the owner . that plans should be made to meet with the coun-tcommission when It sits as a board of equalization. nference. The joint venture also Chemsalt corporation, a subsidiary of Salzdetfurth A.G. of Germany. Although processing facl.l are not expected to be comph until late In 1969, constrm solar evaporation! this week unde; began $7,250,000 contract with ' buns and Reed, Salt Lake t and its associates, Ashbury C work on tractors and Chadwick Buchanan, Inc., Los Ang This Is the first phase thiee step program which f a also see plant facilities structei near Little Mount Lake Dsnera Is Bp Weber county. The two companies jointly will construct a$16,750,000pio. ductlon and plant ficllby Lithium a alone plans $4,250,000 plant fni refining Lithium and brom.ue. The lake will be tapped 0 the west side of Fiomontory Point and north of the Southern Pad. flc causeway where the bi lne solution Is heaviest. The water will be pumped via pipeline east across the point ana into a series of solar ponds located on former lake bottom. Location of the ponding system will be southwest of After an evaporative process, mineral residues will be scooped up and trucked to the Little Mountain plants site. Access will be over a roadway constructed by the was placed at 325 persons and the rated annual capacity, under present plans, will be 200,000 tons of potash In the form of potassium sulphate, 100,000 tons of sodium sulphate, 300,000 tons of magnesium chloride, 10,000,000 pounds of lithium chloride and 5,000,000 pounds of bromine. Feltenstein said. The Joint venture has some 80,000 acres of state land under lease In Its operation. Ultimate peak employment Large quantities of salt also will be produced. Production Is expected to be. gin In the first quarter of 1970. Bear Rler Migratory Bird re-fu- com-panie- the attempt to right any Clixie HolmHOPEFUL They dont always grant gren is a contestant in the wrongs. or reductions but do 1967 Box Elder Dairy Prin- abatements to make strive adjustments cess competition. when warranted. It gives the taxpayer an to state his case with the satisfaction of knowing that something can be done. The board of equalization will meet from 10 a.m. to 12 noon and from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the county assessors office (county courthouse) on May 31 and June 1, 6 and 7. BE Princess Quest Nears Cutoff Date PERSONS WHO FAIL to meet Time Is running out In which contestants may enter the 1967 Box Elder Dairy Princess competition. The deadline Is Friday, May 12, with the contest scheduled next Tuesday, May 16, at Box Elder High school. Invited to enter are girls between ages 17 and 25 who are unmarried, according to Winn Zundel, Tremonton, county chairman of the American Dairy association. the event with the ADA Is the Brigham City Rotary club. Application forms aie available at the county agricultural agent offices In Tremonton and Zundell said. Brigham City, Is no There entry fee required. Judging Is based on poise, e personality, beauty, and of dairy foods. Among the first girls to enter Is Cllxle Holmgren, 17. year-oldaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Holmgren of Bear River She was a cheerleader City. at Box Elder High school this year and will graduate on with the board on these dates f forfeit the right to any from errors or excessive valuations, the treasurer said. This means Its importantfor property owners to check their valuation notices instead of just laying them aside and then find-lnout next fall at tax time that a mistake has been made. For some citizens, this could prove quite a chore. The number of notices sent to one per-soranges from one of 167, Bennlon noted. TO MAKE A PROPER Volume 60, Number 19 Brigham City, Utah, 84302, Thursday Morning, May 11, 1967 Local Woman IS Named to n know-ledg- d Le-Ro- y g Bennett Urges Funds United States Commissioner of Indian Affairs Robert L. Bennett will be a principal speaker In the graduation ceremonies this weekend as Intermountain school nears the conclusion of the 1966-6year. Baccalaureate Is scheduled Friday, May 12, at 7:30 p.m. and commencement exercises will be staged Sunday, May 14, beginning at 2 p.m. Both events will be conducted In the auditorium. Bennett Is slated to deliver the commencement address to and girl 275 Navajo boy Liquor Control Commission. She Is Mrs. Edward J. (Rosemary) Heesacker, 190 North Ninth East. r new The group, created by the 1967 Legislature, succeeds the former three-mafulltime commission and will serve on a part-tim- e policy making basis. seven-membe- n ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE new commission members came Tuesday afternoon from Denver, where Gov. Rampton was attend- graduates, largest graduating class in the schools history. ing a convention of the Education Commission of the States. Gov. Rampton was scheduled to meet with the new commissioners in his office In the State Captlol Wednesday afternoon. He asked that the form er commission remain In THE office for 1. OTHER MEMBERS FILM AT INTERMOUNTAIN -- Discussing a film, a portion of which was made at Intermountain school this past week, are Elizabeth Liddell, BIA aide; Edward Schreiber, associate producer; Don Donaghy, sound man, and Producer Geoffrey Selden. OF the commission are Roland J. Ogden; district attorney for the Second Judicial District; John Idas, Salt Lake banker; P.E. Ashton, Provo business, man; Gordon Parker, Dragerton and F. Cline businessman, Rollo, Cedar City, publisher of the Iron County Record, weekly newspaper. W.V. Call, Salt Lake City, currently a member of the State Liquor Control Commission, was also appointed to the new board by the Governor. The commission will select Its own chairman. And-erso- be very difficult to tell the story of the golden spike In a mean, lngful way, he added. Legislation was enacted In the 89th Congress expanding the seven. acre Golden Spike Nation-a- l Historical site Into a 2,176-acrbudget request for fiscal year 1968. area commemorating the The Utah senior senator made completion of the first trans. the request to Sen. Carl Hayden, continental railroad. Chairman of the The replica locomotives were Senate committee on appropproposed after the National riations. The House Approprai-tlon- s Park service was unable to find committee deleted the the original locomotives or sim$326,500 from the Park service ilar equipment of that period. budget request. If funds are deleted In fiscal year 1968, It may be impossible to have the replicas ready for the centennial celebration of the driving of the golden spike, on May 10, 1969 Senator Bennett said. Without the replicas it will Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, Wednesday urged that funds for replica locomotives and tenders for Golden Spike Historic site be retained in the National Park service e full-tim- e IS Is Location Value Up During April The valuation of proposed new building in Brigham City exper-lencea substantial jump dur-lnApril with the total price tag fixed at $51,330, according to a month-ensummary by the city inspection g Missed School in 12 Years d This figure compares with $15,700 recorded In the pre-cedin- month. However, the number of build-lnodds must what the Imagine permits was fewer, six In be for a student to finish 12 as opposed to eight during April years of school with perfect March. attendance, never missing a THE MONTHS total brought day? It must be something like one to $90,280 the estimated value In umpteen thousand or maybe of projects for which permits a zillion. have been Issued this year. A smiling, vivacious Brigham Following Is Information : City girl has done It. At least taken from April building to this point In her senior year. old Cathy Is She Orval F. Paulson, 15 East Davis, daughter of City Council- Fifth North, Interior remodel, man and Mrs, George Bill Davis, lng for lounge, $1,500. 119 South Fourth West. Funk Sign and Neon, 12 South How did she do It? Main, Install single facedplastlc sign, $830 Vern Petersen, 723 Eliason JUST LUCKY, I guess, re. drive, addition to dwelling, piled Cathy. But Its Involved more than $16,000 luck. Ask Mr. Davis who comLewis H. Jones Jr,, 35 West mented that more than once the Forest, erect two. bay car wash family has laid Its plans to ac. and store, $25,000 Miles O. Thompson, 533 South comodate Cathys continued without a miss. Seventh West, erect addition, Shes never had any of the $5,000. William W. Smith, 549 North childhood diseases like mumps, chicken pox or measles and as Main, erect addition and car. for catching cold or the flu: port, $3,000. Ive saved those for the week-end- s g per-mlts- and summer. Cathy figured she might have skein a chance for the after completing sixth grade. The pressures been on since then but not too much. PERFECT ATTENDANCE Cathy Davis, BEHS coed, has never missed a day of school. She will graduate this month. JUST THIS PAST year she almost made a decision to miss school on purpose. It walls when her brother, Clark left from Salt Lake City on an LDS mis- Ion to Germany. But the de. parture time was changed tc early morning before school. Aa might be expected, Cathy (Continued on Page Two) ROBERT L. BENNETT Is the Indian to head the Bureau of Indian Affairs In 97 years and Is a member of the Oneida tribe of Wisconsin. Beginning as a clerk with the Intermountain school was the aids for the BIA, assigned to BIA In Utah, he had been en. location for a new movie this Intermountain. gaged In government service Even the weather was not so for 29 years when appointed to past week. There were no Hollywood bad after a long cold and wet his present post on March 18, 1966. stars on the scene but rather spell. the schools teachers and stu. Bennett, 53, Is a 1931 graduate dents played main rolls. The of Haskell Institute, Lawrence, DISEASES REPORTED plot revolved around programs Kan., and holds a law degree financed by Title I funds of the Brigham City reported two from Southwestern university, strep Infections, one case of Washington, D.C. Elementary and Secondary Fund act. Influenza, one of measles, one A MARINE CORPS veteran The film, a project of the of mumps for the week ending Bureau of Inldan Affairs, may May 5. Box Elder county report of World War II, Bennett has be distributed nationally as a ed three strep Infections and two seen BIA service In Western commerlcal TV production or cases of mumps the same week. (Continued on Page Two) at least so hopes Elizabeth Liddell, assistant to the com. mlssioner of BIA, who was on hand for the filming. first d She Defied The Odds, Hasnt for Movie Edu-catio- n A NEW YORK FIRM, ICA Named to Head Fair Board At Tremonton businessman and rancher, Wayne Sandall, has been appointed president of the Box Elder County Fair board. His selection for the post was announced this week by the county commission. Sandall succeeds David R. Waldron who resigned this past fall. 1 6th Annual Commemoration pre-diete- d Sel-de- com-pany- Including funds, piano studio, data processing course and English as a second language. TALK George D. Durrant will be chief speaker at Intermountain school SETS Golden Spike Is Driven Again Programmes, Ltd , Is handling the color film production under contract to the BIA and will visit other Indian schools at Wahpeton, N.D.; Hopl country In Arizona and In Alaiska before shooting ends. Miss Liddell hopefully The clouds broke and the sun the final product will be shone, at least briefly, Wednesend the ready for showing by day at Promontory Summit as an of June. estimated persons 2,500 We hope its so good that for the 16th annual gathered It to want see everyone will Golden Spike commemoration on all over the she a wet and country, overcast day. stated. The hearty faithful who at the golden spike ICAS FIVE. MAN crew, In. gathered 30 miles west of monument, eluding Producer Geoffrey heard a top Union City, Brigham at Intermountain Pacific official arrived pledge his Thursday evening and spent all to have replica efforts of Friday and Saturday filming locomotives placed at the site. activities and facilities at the John W. Godfrey, assistant Navajo boarding school. They to the president, said Union shot an estimated 3,500 feet of Pacific will lend Its support color film, not to have funds for the two Rating special attention were engines deleted from the In. programs financed by Title I terlor departments approprla-tion- . the electric high-spee- BE OF mountain. Within hours after Sundays rites, the first students will be. gin leaving the campus for their homes on the reservation. Lights, Camera, Action... BC Building DIRECTOR for Indian seminaries of the LDS church, George D. Robert L. BenDurrant, will present the prlncl-pa- l SPEAKER address at Fridays bacca- nett will deliver commencement address at Intermounlaureate. This years graduating class tain rites. brings to 2,624 the total number of vocational and academic stu. dents to graduate from Inter, a transitional period ending July For Replica Engines Graduates Will Hear BIA Official Commission with the 1966 notice, the taxpayer should check the Index A Brigham City housewife and number at the top of the notice mother of three has been This it see to that corresponds. Governor Calvin L. by means the notice Is for the same Rampton to Utahs new State property. Valuations have been raised on many buildings and real estate properties this year In connection with the state tax commissions equalization plan. So a slight Increase Is to be expected. One of the big problems with which his office must contend Is that of property owners mov-lnand not leaving their next address. This often results In May 26. notices being returned and deWINNER IN THE BOX Elder linquent taxes piling up against (Continued on Page Two) the property, Bennlon said. 18 PAGES s be the final anniversary, when well see this site It its present state. Godfrey also paid tribute to the Box Elder Golden Spike as. soclatlon and particularly to Its president, Mrs, Bernice G. per-hap- ON HAND FOR THE damp but festive occasion were the Box Elder High school band and Rockettes, ward members from Promontory who sold re. freshments and a number of dignitaries, Including railroad for efforts In promot. and government represents-tlves- , lng the annual pageant and push, lng for Its recognition. Standing by the colors was a While a chill wind swept over contingent from American the simmlt, coaxing spectators Legion Post 10 In Brigham City, to crowd In close, It failed to rain more than a sprinkle. And AFTER THE CEREMONY, the at precisely 11:40 a.m. as Utah Golden Spike Centennial commission met In the new In. players from Brigham City for the spike driving formation booth to hear Chair, reenactment, the sun emerged man George Christensen of Salt from behind the clouds and Lake City evaluate action of the the entire ceremony. 1967 Utah legislature as It ef. fected the commission. And-erso- spot-lighte- d CITING THE IMPORTANCE REPORT THEFTS of the driving of the golden spike Bill Forrest, 239 North Sixth on May 10, 1869, which linked told Brigham City police THE COOPERATION has this nation's first trans contln. East, that some one had Wednesday been marvelous here. The ental railroad, he said thatU.P. Just stolen a garden hose from his people Just couldnt have been Is currently stockpiling a mile back yard. easier to work with, Miss of early rails for use Liddell exclaimed. National at Golden Thieves took 19 eggs from the Spike chicken coop of E.A. Rohwer, Lending an assist with ar. Historic site. rangements and serving as a Referring to Its pending dev. 120 South Fifth East, Brigham consultant was Donald Morrow, elopment as a national historic City, Brigham City police were education specialist, training place, he exclaimed This may Informed Sunday. feftrja He said the commissions role had been reduced to one of an advisory council to the soon-to-b- formed board of expositions. Alarm was voiced over action of the U.S. House In deloting funds for the replica loco, motives and the commission Indicated It may send represents, tlves to Washington to argue for restoration of the funds before the Senate. |