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Show UnlvrrErl Micro filnlnp V. H7 Box Suit Lake City Utrh Jau 53 Second B.E Polio STATE HEALTH DEPARTMENT OKs Case Recovering PLAN FOR SEWAGE DISPOSER $240,000 Modern Unit Would Replace Old, Overloaded Septic Tanks Now In Use In Ogden As Box Elder courtlys second polio victim for 1952 makes steady headway at St. Benedicts in Ogden, plans 8 FACES hospital for a thorough polio campaign are under way, during January reports Perc Petersen, county chairman. BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 26, 1952 VOLUME 45, NUMBER 52 Colorful Decorations Add Spirit To Yule Season Here Wire, Nails, Fence Urges Buying Of Brigham City's plans and specifications for construction of a sewage disposal unit have the okey of the State Department of Health, according to the minutes of a recent meeting of the city council. The stamp of approval was on the initial engineering, which requires about a year to accomplish and the project is all set to go when funds are acquired. , The proposed iplant would O cost about $240,000. To raise the cesses are completely different. cham-ica- J money a bond election in Brig- Septictotanks merely add a dhe sewage and then ham City will be necessary. send it on its way. The proposed Sewage disposal is one of the completely dismost difficult problems faced by disposalof unit waste the and turns poses comall Utah larger practically water out. munities and has been the sub- pure Preston, Idaho (has had a ject of much discussion the past plant In operation, since few years. If the unit is adoptin the 1930s and report early ed here, Brigham City will be very satisfactory results. stepping out in the lead in Utah. To finance the unit, Mayor Mayor Lorenzo J. Bott report- Bott said, the people of Brigham ed that the unit will serve all City will have to vote In favor John Bauman, 29, one of the only two county people to con tract the dread disease this year, was reported improving at the Ogden hospital Wednesday, The father of two children, sim-illSupplies of baling wire, nails, Bauman has been under treatand fencing materials may fall ment for a critical case of bulshort of demand during 1953 untype polio which paralyzed less sufficient orders are placed bar now to boost lagging mill out- his trachea for the past week. Wednesday hospital officials put, the iBox Elder County Pro reported that the paralysis was duction and Marketing AdminBauman was talk- of Brigham City, with sewage of a municipal bond of $250,000. istration committee cautioned relieved and for the first time since lines converging at the plant to again ing While no immediate plans for farmers today. be built on the northwest edge putting it up for a vote We have been advised that he was taken to the hospital. have Box Elder county was of town. Its maximum capa been made, It must come up beginning in early .September hitThough the of a for be 15,' by comparatively easy city city would within three years or the money steel mills began reporting emp malady this year, 000 to 25,000, allowing for pien usedi in the first engineering ty space oh their roiling sched mysterious set a has ty of growth in Brigham City survey will toe lost,-- ' ules for bale ties, coiled balling the county committee of 50 cents per person this before the limit is reached In operation a of wire, rtails, woven wire fencing, goal compared to a collection of Brigham Citys population is now the disposal unit would be fernetting and barbed wire," says year, 33 cents per capita in 1952, around 7,000. tilizer. However it is believed Mr. Donald J. Homer, chairman The new plant would replace this would not cover the whole of the committee. This situa- which was under state average. Though polio collections for the old and overload septic cost of operation and tion has grown steadily worse. e in 1952 hit an ' ' tanks now in use. The two pro If orders sufficient to utilize the county of of half $6,400, 'high not are full mill capacities placin the county, it ed very shortly, it is quite pos- which stayed Making A Perfect Christmas hardly made a dent in. the total sible that shortages will occur bill run up in treatment of a next spring and summer. record 35 cases in 1951, iMr. Homer explains that in difference the National order to fill the expanding farm up the of Infantile ParalyFoundation is it needs for these products O almost $12,000 in the sis poured necessary for the mills to operto assure full and comate at or near capacity the year countytreatment for every peraround. This depends upon the plete had the disease. Now extent to which orders on the son who local foundation has mills are sufficient to utilize the the $150 polio in the bank. only available rolling capacity. Relatively a "good year with a low incidence of polio for Box Girls Get , Navajo Elder county it has been, neverXmas Dolls Through theless, the worst in history for --i) the nation as a whole. r 0 Citizens Generosity There have 'been almost . cases this year across the Twenty seven excited black eyed young Navajo girls re- nation, 14,000 more than the N. V. Watkins, 36 West, First North ceived their "first gift from next highest year, 1949. The naSanta Claus Wednesday after tional foundation had to borrow noon at the Intenmountain In- $7,000,000 to provide treatment V F for all cases. dian school. Santa was there personally to Without any large polio bills distribute dolls of ail sizes to the hanging over the countys head ' 12 to 14 year old L.D.S. religion this ' year, as has been the ease , Grace Clawney and Elfe Hawey the past two years, the 1953 . . were two class girls. qf 27 LDS youngsters at I ntermountain-IndiaA plea went out from Mrs. By! campaign will to a measure be school to receive dolls from Santa Claus, donated by rort May and Mrs. LeRoy Deem repaying the people who con" ' , Brigham City people, for the dofi ip last Friday issue tributed $12,000 to our welfare of be 'Bpx Elder Journal. The when we had an epidemic; last However, half of Ml 'monrespbnse, was thrilling the lead- year.collected in the county 6tays ers said today.' ey They spemt alt Tuesday eve- in the county fund for exclusive ning until 4 b. xn. Wednesday use here. Dec. 29, 30 And 31 The other half is used in matching armsand legs and of education course, and, dolls Christmas in dressing the to fill the gap in areas stricken Beta Sigma Phi sororitys finery. during the year, as- nual story telling sessions for be in the city library. Through' the generosity of cit extra hard the 6ixth izens of Brigham City and sur was the case In, Box Elder coun- lyoungsteis through From 1:30 to 2:30 p. in. each 4 grade, will be held December 29, day an hour of stories for rounding areas, ' 31 youngsters ty in 1951.. , contribu30 and 31, according to Mrs. Largely through the will toe 'happy for Vears to come first and second grades March of Iona Cefalo, chairman. They will wrill be tions in previous with a doll ail of her own." given. At 2:30 p. m. stories will toe for 'third And Money, mew doils and used Dimes iscampaigns theout.disease on the way , One dolls were received at the Po- polio fourth graders and at 3:30 boys lice station, at the May home, day it will repose in, the medi- tion, a series of events that fea- and girls of the fifth and sixth, a as a for cal books entertainment small with ture pox top and at the Deem home in Har will be entertained. too far polio donation, have heen slated grades per ward. Special thanks is giv rarity and the day isnt Third Place, Fred Douglas, 53 North, First East Ladies who will tell the storen to those who responded to off, officials of the national in Brigham City. In Brigham foundation report City the Junior Chamber of Com- ies in costumes will include the this call for dolls. This year a grejat advance merce is running the drive with following: was made in battle against polio Wade Ebeling, city chairman. Jimmy, who enlisted August1 Monday: Marian Fredrickson, Will 10 has completed boot trainLocal when thousands of children, inEvery community in the coun- and Diane Harper, 1st hour; ing and is studying radio at cluding many from Provo, Utah, a chairman and Amelia Welling and Iona Cefalo, San Diego. Alan enlisted on completed a test that showed a ty will have serum had been developed that community campaign activities 2nd hour; Erma Jensen and October 10 and upon, completIn 17 Reva Nelson, third hour. curtailed the disease. The ser- will be held. ing boot training soon will reum is not yet ample, tout the A polio dance in conjunction Tuesday: Erma Crompton and port to San, Francisco for elec1st hour; Lola tronics school. v An imposing array of Box ElWith all the proceeds going time will come when Children with a Chuckwagon dinner, sim Ruth Reeder, Ellen take shots for the disease Iliar to the one last year which Weight and Andersen, 2nd der county boxers will meet the for the polio drive, the affair is will as small1 pox. hour, and Selma Weir and Faye do for they just held. be will raised $2300, a to be a of well received in Utah polio expectedi JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UP) top amateurs Here in the county this year Christensen, 3rd hour. benefit .card in Brigham City, event and successful, said SwenC. II. Robinson caught a seven-foocontri toe contacted a for are "We will Wednesday: Darlene Hansen looking every person son. Some of the finest boxers 175 pound tiger shark on Saturday, January 17 at 8 p. m. or indirectly in the bution, such as a steer to be giv and Marvel Young, 1st hour; a test line while fish- in the Box Elder gym, according from Salt Lake City, Ogden and personally Pe Mary Owen and Ruth Jensen, the State Industrial school will drive, Chairman Petersen re, en away at the affair, says to 2nd to Jay Swenson . boat alone. ing in a hour, and Lillian Felt and tersen, we hope this year exchange blows with men from ports. With the drive already in mo have one just as successful. Daines, 3rd hour. Evelyn Tremonton and Brigham City, Plan Fistic Wars For Polio Garland. Local pugilists slated for comTelling Christmas Stories petition include Paul and Dick Chuck Josephson, Whitaker, Ralph Moore, Dallas Jones, Gene Marsh and Ronald Petersen. Also Varge Lowe, Gary Nut-taand, Ted Ramsdell. On the card from the Triple B dub at Tremonton will be Delone Gardner, Monte Bradshaw, Freddie Hess, Bob Roundy, A. Lish and Dale Quinlen, The fellows will be matched in their weights against some other Utah men. . . The fights are sanctioned by the AAU. Material Now ar J rv 0 ' o o G ,V0. o n , k 60,-00- First Place, Won By Mr. and Mrs. T ' -- Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Story Heirs Planned At Library an-O- pre-scho- Second Place, Ronald Packers, lul South, Fifth East City Council Will "Rent" Water To Indian School , . The city council agreed to rent 200 acre feet of Pine View water to the Intermountain Indian school for agricultural and beautification purposes at a recent meeting. The contract, drawn up by City Attorney O. 'Dee Lund, was for one year. to Council members voted repair the storage building" east of the city jail. A special meeting should be called in connection with the gas franchise for Brigham City, the council agreed. A license for the sale of retail beer was granted Dee Glen Smith of Smiths Super Alan And Jimmy Hanline Serve Together In Navy Its been good fortune all the way down the line" for the Hanline brothers, Alan and Jimmy, sons of Mr.- and Mts. Harry Hanline of Brigham City. In the first place they are both home on leave from the navy to make it a perfect Christmas for themselves and parents and they dont have to go back until January 3. And in the second place, they are both stationed at the same naval base, San Diego, California. Good Fortune All The Way Boxers Battlers Tangle With Utah Polio Event On Jan. t, 14-fo- li It's, Dog's Life for Tony But No Dull Moments Tex. HOUSTON, life of Tony, CUP) The three-month-ol- d bulldog rat terrier mixture, is really a dogs life. First he ate half of a poisoned rat before his owner, Mrs. Roy Willette, spotted him and took him to a veterinary to have his stomach pumped out. The next day he ale some glass while licking milk out of a broken milk bottle and went to a veterinary again. d The next day. when his master, Ray, Jr., decided to give Tony a bath, the familys automatic washer was the natural choice. Jay Swenson And John Gable By the time Mrs. Willette . . .chairman and fight director of the amateur him from the washer, Tony boxing card which will be featured in Brigham Citjr aa a , polio was clean but limp. It took artificial respiration to revive him. ' , ' benefit on January 17. -- three-year-ol- Alan (left) And Jimmy Hanline not who only had the luck to be stationed at the same naval base, but also each managfed a leave for Christmas ' at home, together. . . . V v res-cue- d Kristine Anderson And ElvaWestover . . . listen as they hear a Christmas story. The Beta Sigma Phis story hours will be held December 29, 30 and 31 for children through the sixth grade. Left to right; Lola White, Ruth R. Reeder and Ellen Anderson, all who will tell stories ; Kristine Anderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Andersen and Elva Westover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raph West-ove- r . , t |