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Show AUGUST 30, 1952. THE JOURNAL DEAN OF INVENTORS STILL AT IT 3 Health Dept. Issues Warning On Mosquitoes IN LOS ANGELES, Or. Lee Deforest (left), 79, shows his latest Invention to Dr. Robert Milliken of the California Institute of Technology. The inventor's problem was to turn heat Into electricity. This is done by disk is heated to inpumping air out of a metal pot Then a five-incandescence to throw off electrons. This Idea resembles the common vacuum tube for radio invented by Dr. Deforest-I- t would require no outside voltage to accelerate electrons. (International Souvdnhnto) ch Stork Talk r f , f LAYTON Word comes from Waco, Texas, of the arrival of a baby girl bom August 15 at the U. S. Air Force hospital at Waco to Sgt. and Mrs. Rex S. Cunningham. Mrs. Cunningham is the former Patricia Ann Juiner of Ogden. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Shand Cunningham and Mr, and Mrs. Quiner of Ogden. Richard Stevenson is great-grandfath- LAYTON er. THE LIVESTOCK SITUATION MOSQUITO CONTROL that the clearance of meat in coolers this week will be The Buck Fields are only fair. proudly announcing the arrival of At the close of . the week most a 7&i lb. baby girl bom Thursday at the St. Benedict hospital. The cattle quotations are about steady, wee infant has a brother and two although better grades have been on the strong side. Hogs opened sisters at home. higher, but closed on the weak side. Sheep and lambs are steady. SYRACUSE A baby daughter, .their first child was bom on Aug-- ! One load of mostly prime steers ust 16, at a Logan hospital to Mrt scored a top of $36 this week while and Mrs. Sidney Yates of Logan, one load of heavy steers sold at Utah. Mrs. Yates was the former $35.75. Most of the high good and Miss Ardean Waite of yracuse. The choice kinds sold from $32 to $34 new mother and her tiny daughter with commercial grades at $30 to left the hospital last Friday and $32. Medium grade cattle sold in are spending a few weeks at the a wide range with the bulk going home of her parents here. Mr. and at $25 to $28 while some plainer kinds went down to $22. Mrs. Alvin Waite. s LAYTON Proudly announcing of arrival a baby boy bom on the Monday at the Dee hospital in Og-- i den are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wayne Barney. Mrs. Barney is the former Carol Dean Minchey. A load of heifers topped at $33.75 this week while the bulk of better grades sold from $29 to $31. Medium grades sold down from $27 with a few as low as $20. Good I , fat beef cows sold from to $24 with the bulk of medium at $19 to $21. Canners and The George J. LAYTON cutters sold largely from $15 to Ruegg's are proudly announcing the arrival of a son on Wednesday $19. at the t. Benedict hospital in Og--j Top grades of bulls brought $29 den. Mrs. Ruegg will be remem-- f while the bulk went at $24 to $27. bered as the former Beatrice Clow- - Odd head of calves sold up to $33 ard. with the bulk at $26 to $30. A few fleshy feeders sold at $31 but the bulk of, yearlings figured at $24 to $27. Hog prices are ending on the Sponsored by Kaysville weak side. A few butchers sold up Jaycees to $25 but the, bulk went at $24.50 SEPTEMBER 14, 1952 and under. Heavier kinds, light Beginning at 10:00 A. M. lights and medium grades figured HIGHWAY 91 . . . North of at $2i to $23. Sows sold at $19 and under. Kaysville Good slaughter lambs sold in a . . BROWNING AUTOMATIC SHOTGUN TO BE GIVEN limited way at $28.50 with a few old ewes at $8 and under. AWAY $22 kinds TRAP SHOOT kinds of mos- many AUGUST, 1052 Livestock prices Three groups, each conare showing only minor changes quitoes. this week, but the good feeling taining many different species are that existed in the trade in the last commonly identified. Anapheles Transmits malaria; few weeks appears to be wearing Cu-le- x, off. For one thing the meat trade Aedes, transmits yellow fever; transmits encephalitis. has been' slowing down and there All of these have different habare indications -- t KAYSVILLE Encephaliti- ssleeping sickness brain fever is not a specific disease entity. There are several causeative agents viruses which are transmitted by mosquitoes. No specific test for the disease is available. Laboratory tests are only presumptive. If a patient has encephalitis he is always ill. An ill patient should have medical attention. The symptoms are not always clear cut, but a physician should be in attendance for ironically if the illness should be encephalitis medical care is less urgent as no . specific treatment is available. Both wild and domestic birds, serve as a reservoir for the virus. The mosquito normally feed on birds and only occasionally bite man or other animals. An increase in the mosquito population favors a wider dissemination of the virus among birds resulting in an increased number of infective mosquitoes; hence more readily transmitted to man. An unusual increase in the number of mosqu.toes may be followed in a short title by an unusual number of human cases of encephalitis. Due to the incubation period cases continue to develop after the mosquitoes disappear. There are some county fairs and others will take place before the contest in Salt Lake City. Contestants will perform in the state meet in instrumental and vocal music, reading, dancing and dramatics. One 2167 Dwight Waw, of the outstanding contests will be Berkeley 4, California, that of the "Talk Meet, an ex- Berkeley Woman Seeks Help From Residents its, and control measures must consider all factors. There is a scientific approach to mosquito control which considers all that is known to science where they breed, how far they fly and the best way to reduce their numbers. An over-a-ll County abatement program is the most feasible and the least expensive measure of control. "Health is natures greatest gift to man preserve it. Vacancy Exists For Utah Man In West Point August 25, 1952. Dear Residents of Kaysville, Utah: Some time ago I started out to prove that I shook hands with William McKinley, president of the United States, but it is hard to find the proof,In my memory there stands a hayrack in front of the old meeting house in Kaysville. It is decorated in red, white, and blue bunting, and the team to draw it has red, white and blue pompons on the harness. My father, Grandison Raymond, boosted me up into a space on the hayrack beside other small children. We all wore white and I had a bunting sash. We were driven to an open space with bright green grass and as we were lifted off one at a time, each was given an American flag. We formed in line at the head of which stood William McKinley, dressed in a black frock coat. The memory of his kind face, with his eyes looking deeply into mine as we shook hands is yet I cannot find any record of this in the books and Utah papers. I have searched in the library at the University of California. Is there some one in Kaysville who remembers this and can help me prove it. - unfor-getabl- e; Sincerely, MRS. RUTH RAYMOND MYERS. Utah State Fair To Sponsor Talent Contest CITY Utahs hundreds of farm boys and girls will show off their many talents SALT LAKE at Utah State Fair and Industrial temporaneous joust. Winners will go to Seattle, all expenses paid, and will be entertained there on radio and television. Runnersup to the state winners will' be honored and will perform at the state farm bureau convention, which will be held November at Hotel Utah. 20-21-- 22 You'll find it at the... tf you're looking for: Unexcelled study opportunities An outstanding faculty Home state environment A friendly university A balanced study, social and athletic program You'll find all this . . . and much more at your State University Colleges of instruttion include: Engineering Education Medicine Law Mining Fine Arts Business Pharmacy Social Work Nursing and other fields Exposition when top winners from counties vie for trips to Seattle in December in the state talent con- test, which will be held on Farm Bureau Day at the big exposition. According to John Schenk, president of Utah Farm Bureau Federation, the state fair and farm bu- reau are jointly sponsoring the talent contest as a tie-i- n with the National Farm Bureau "talent find UNIVERSITY among rural young men and women. The contest will take place WASHINGTON Senator Arthur on Thursday, September 18. UTAH announced V. Watkins Salt Contests have been run off at City I.UtaH Saturday that he would have one vacancy to fill at the United States Military Academy at West Point .. for the year beginning July, 1953. "Applicants must be 17 and not over 22 as of the date they enter the academy. They must pass the necessary entrance requirements which are very high, he said. Any Utah resident, including those now in military service, as well as those temporarily residing outside the state, is eligible. fit whiskey, too, thoro is good... better. ..and All applicants must apply before October 1st to Senator Waktins in person or by letter addressed to him at his Utah office, 411 Hotel. Successful applicants should be prepared to submit character references as well as scholastic records, he said. Senator Watkins will follow his "Bourbon customary practice of selecting' the principal appointee and three alterKENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBOII WHISKEY nates on the basis of Civil Service examination to be conducted in ISE AlllANQ tuu COMPANY, 10UISVIUE, KENTUCH 5 MOQJ November. (R-Uta- h) i fr Better. Best nn New-hou- se nn m at its "Best |