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Show BOX ELDER JOURNAL, Brigham City, Utah Growing a garden ? meeting can help Thursday, February 20, 1975 How Does Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary Your Garden Grow? This will be the theme of the demonstration to be sponsored by your Box Elder County Nutrition Education committee, to be given on Feb. 21. Harold G. Lindsay, Box Elder County Extension agent will give facts and ideas on the value and cost of growing your own garden, n ideas, and how to care for a garden, whether it be an acre or a foot. mini-garde- A blender vegetable medley will be demonostrated and a nutritious snack added for your taste pleasure. Demonstrations will be as follows: Tremonton, Feb. 21, Bear River Valley Senior Center, 10 a.m. Brigham, Feb. 21, Community Center, 2:30 p.m. Dont forget the USU students will have your 24 hour recalls that they took last month ready to return to you. Be sure to come ! Whether you do or dont plan to plant a garden you will enjoy our program. Gcnoalogica oocioty to moot Friday Electronic repair shop open in BC The next meeting of the Golden Spike chapter of the Utah Genealogical association will be held Friday, Feb. 21, at 7 p.m. at the new branch genealogical library at the LDS South Stake center. All members are urged to attend and anyone else interested in joining will be welcome. "My Favorite Ancestor" is the theme that will be discussed by four members: Camille Thomas, James Miller, Therma Hamilton and Georgia Petersen. A new small appliance repair business has opened up in Brigham City. Richard Crawford has opened the business at 24 North First East in Brigham City. He brings with him 12 years of repair experience. He has been employed at Hill Air Force base and for RCA factory service. His wife, the former Charleen Moody, is a native of Brigham City and the couple moves to this city from Ogden. He will specialize in radio,' stereo, television and tape player repair. He can be reached at or by dropping by his home at 25 723-655- 7 Richard Crawford electronic repair . . North First East. DC boy takos 3rd in contest Mike Brailsford, the Utah Highway Patrol helps Box Elder county dispatcher Arthur indoctrination for Haggen Jr. from the trooper's car. Jensen participated in a ride along' new dispatchers as part of their month-lontraining. Deputy Michael Busby is in the background. LEON JENSEN OF g ! Duties start in month office. One of the female workers will be assigned to help as matron and will share dispatch, clerical and secretarial duties, said the sheriff. Training has begun with the Utah Highway Patrol taking the new employes with them throughout the county as troopers make their routine patrols. Redding said deputies will also take the dispatchers BE dispatchers begin training Five dispatchers, hired under a federal work program, have begun training at the Box Elder County Sheriffs office. Sheriff Arthur Redding said the five, two of whom are paraplegics, were hired through of the department Rehabilitation Department of and Utah Employment Security. The county received a $92,000, Comprehensive th Employment Training act grant Class set in German A class in conversational German will be offered in Box Elder School district's adult around the county. All agencies who will work with the men and women will be given an opporunity to meet with them and participate in training. Redding said the dispatchers will begin duties in about a month. education program locally. The class is scheduled at the consumer education cottage, 339 East Seventh North, in Brigham City. Sessions are set Monday and Thursday evenings from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Anyone interested, please come Monday evening, Feb. 24. Gary Christensen from Box Elder High school will be the instructor," a spokesman said. Persons with questions about the class are invited to contact Shirley Paden any morning at the consumer education cottage, telephone 723-782- 218 mention in the third annual contest. His prize is a parchment certificate. The contest, open to the dealers and children of company employees, called for children to color a cartoon and write a slogan describing how good equipment display benefits the dealer and his local community. Mikes ul ul father, Kent Brailsford, employed at Kent's Amoco SWcEiHEmRIS Chosen by the youth of the 17th ward as Brigham. their sweethearts for the year were Maroni and Priscilla The Bott, who have been married for a total of 58 years. The Botts have seven living children, 39 grandchildren, and 17 and have been active members of the LDS Church through many years. They were honored at the great-grandchildr- OBSCENE? Pogonotrophy is the cultivation of a beard or moustache. 10, of East Second North, Brigham City, has won honorable ward sweetheart ball, with many family members present for the occasion. is in Rental system has 16,000 dealers in 8,000 cities and towns in the United States and Canada, and serves the moving needs of more than six million families evey year. that was made specifically to aid the handicapped find employment, he said. The dispatcher are Jim Wood of Garland, Arthur Haggen Jr., Lawana Kirby, Connie Packer and James Buchannan, all of Brigham City. Wood and Haggen are con- fined to wheelchairs, said Redding, but will easily be able to handle dispatching chores from the new dispatch center in the basement of the sheriff's AND MRS. GEORGE Clark stand proudly beneath decorations at Pioneer Memorial Nursing home. They were chose last week as 'sweethearts' at the home's anMR. nual Valentine's Day party. He's 98, she's 90; they're sweethearts his Violet are and George sweethearts. And residents at Pioneer Memorial Nursing home felt the couple, (Hes 98, shes 90) ought to reign over Valentines Day festivities at the home last week and chose the couple as King and Queen of Hearts. Mr. Clark drove his own car until a few months ago when a physical ailment required him to move into the home to join his wife who also resides there. A retired railroad engineer, they lived in Ogden until his retirement and has lived in Brigham City the past 20 years. He was 75 when he left the railroad, moving to California for a few years, then back to Brigham Clark wife Etecaums Fnirsti auurn sttaumafls IbsMimd warn? dhic Over 12,000 merchants in Utah and Idaho take Check Protection Plus as First Securitys word that your check is good. No other check guarantee card can even come close to that number. Or this one: 127 First Security banks that also honor Check Protection Plus. That 12,000 includes everything from depart ment stores to gas stations, from drug stores to super markets, and many of the major national chain stores that traditionally have accepted no other cards than their own. When you need to write a check, look for this sign. It wont be hard to find. APPLY FOR YOUR CARD NOW Its easy to apply! Just stop by any office of First Security for an application its easy to understand and complete. you have either a First Security checking account or a BankAmericard, youre already halfway to the convenience of Check Protection Plus. If you have a current First Security BankAmericard and checking account, you automatically qualify for a Check Protection Plus card. Just send us your two account numbers. If City. He and Mrs. Clark have been married 40 years. Mr. Clark told residents he was thankful to be here with my dear wife . . . Were happy here together. Mr. Clark is stepfather and Mrs. Clark mother of Brigham Citys Mayor Harold B. Felt, Dr. J. Gordon Felt and Mrs. Earl K. Seegmiller, all of Brigham City. Rirstt Secimirntiy Baiimlk First First Security Bank of Utah. N A Secunty Bank of Idaho. N A. First Security Bank of Bountiful, Utah. N A First Security State Bank. Salt Lake City. Utah First Secunty State Bank ol Springville. Utah First Security Bank of Rock Springs. Wyoming First Security Bank of Logan. Utah. N A. Members F D.l C. J |