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Show 1 , a..v r, L 141 PIUHr calt la::e $ 1 w ., JIM J ' i L . CD j v AVl. cm ic.ctah LAYTON, UTAH, TUESDAY, JlLY .0. 21, 1959 33 Chock from Jaycees Used for hoys baseball ... 4 fe1! v;'.;r v ; SI V-.f- i I, ,g c . Farmington Friday, the Hoard of Davis County Commissioners met with Joseph W. McEwan, CP A of the firm of Wood, Child, Mann and Smith, auditors for Davis County, to examine the county audit report for the year, 1958. In the Scone of Examination of the audit, the auditors declared, Our ex amination was conducted on a continuous basis. Fees and other monies collected by the various departments were checked with original sources and traced to the ITummu'ii s minds of cash le- - ;!j 1 S S V- forklift loads tires and other Air Force supplies on a aircraft at Hill AFB, The shipment is part of the 515-2- 0 million worth of air freight moved at Hill each month by commercial air transport. LOAD UP A power LO-GAI- Air Force freight is hauled Economically by commercial R Crash injures Layton Woman Hill Air Force Base There was fident savings to pay the LOa Civil War ad,1ge that went to GAIR budget for almost five Layton Mrs. Frederick Bradthe effect of git thar fustest years. shaw, 12 Ronald Avenue, was Now in its fifth year of operasent to the hospital with a posThe motto with the mostest. has been brought up to date by tion at Hill AFB, LOGAIR has sible broken neck following a two-ca- r crash Saturday at 9 p.m. on AMC logistic experts at Hill AFB grown AMC wide from 14 deliwho are doing business with four very points in 1954 to 80 stations Highway 91 just south of the Real civil air transport companies as of July 1, 1959. In April 1954, Simmons-Wiber- g LOGAIR trans- building. LOGAIR as a means using 11 tabbed of assisting the AF to According to Brian Mottishaw, get it ported 6,099,575 pounds over 368,-63- 7 miles. In April 1959, 11 there fastest with the mostest. investigating officer, the car drivLOGAIR carried en by Mr. Bradshaw, 39, was hit At Hills air freight terminal, and 50 civilian airline pilots take off or 27,989,482 pounds over 2,430,378 in the rear by a car driven by land after power forklifts load miles throughout AMC. Henry Sterling Thornley, 50, of At Hill, LOGAIRs air terminal Clearfield. Both cars were travelor unload their aircraft with Estate manager Alvin D. Smith says an estimated four to five million pounds of air freight, valued at millions of dollars between move in and out of the OOAMA terminal monthly. Heavier and larger equipment, he added, is usually consigned airto Air Force freight-haulincraft, such as damaged aircraft parts, missiles, training aids, simulators and various types of military vehicles. opfreight in a eration, three shifts a day, seven days a week. e comLOGAIR is an mercial contract with the four agencies. At present they are Capitol Airlines, Inc., Nashville, Tenn.; Resort Airlines, Inc., Alameda, Calif.? - Aaxieo Airlines, Inc., Miami, Fla., and Slick Airlines, Inc., Burbank, Calif., all Derforming aerial workhorse activities for AMCs various installations. This civilian operation has proven to be an economical way to haul Air Force freight. Competition keeps prices down and quality and efficiency up. So once each year AMC contracts various commercial lines by means of sealed bids. Using civilian versions of and aircraft, the four carriers furnish airlift of items w'ith resultant reduction in AF inventories and pipeline time. That LOGAIR is doing the job it was designed to do is demonstrated by a report of an AF Spares Study Group which - recently found that: Pipeline needs account for a large portion of spare parts required and reductions in pipeline time drastically lowers spare parts requirements. The utilization of transportation has reduced ZI pipeline time from SO to 8 days and oversea pipeline time from 124 to 32 days. The difference in cost is estimated at about $119 million, or suf- round-the-cloc- k 15-2- 0 AMC-wid- g Art Guild hears Roland Long Layton Roland Long, art instructor and principal of White-side- s school, provided an educational and entertaining evening Art for the Guild. He gave a demonstration on Chalk Talk. He also touched briefly on landscape and portrait painting. Talent is not a required necessity to become an artist, said Mr. Long, but one must have a feeling for art. Mr. Powell, president of the Art Guild, highlighted on the previous meeting and members enrolled in classes. Members and interested artists are reminded that classes began at 8 p.m., Monday, July 20, at the Verdeland Park Recreation Hall, with Mr. Laine T. Raty, Ogden, presiding. 4 Layton-Clearfiel- high-spee- d d your doctors corner Red Measles By Dr. D. Keith Barnes, M.D. infer the antibody litre in Gamma Globulin is extremely low or absent for German Measles. Many physicians question the value of Globulin as a preventive for German Measles. Its main value is psychological. Twenty-fiv- e years ago the practicing physicians had no Gamma Globulin and used, just as effectively, whole blood from some one who had had Red Measles. It is an effective agent in lessening the effects of Red Measles. With the lack of Globulin, available only at intervals in meager amounts, it behooves us to again use whole blood in cases when Globulin is indicated. Red measles occurs every four to five years with regularity. During the intervening years a reservoir of susceptibles is built up for the next succeeding epidemic. Gamma Globulin has proven effective in lessening the severity of the disease when given four to six days following contact. An earlier preventive dose is good for only one exposure (two weeks) and should be given only to infants and delibited preschoolers. It is generally accepted that an attack of German Measles confers but fleeting immunity and the disease may be had more than once, an actual hapHealth Is Natures Greatest pening to many people. Using this as a premise, logic would Gift to Man Preserve It! Family Relations disagreement and, at times, open wrath. Certainty and Consistency must begin at the crib and be 1. Courtesy of life tune duration. 2. Certainty Insecurity m the child is sired by uncertain3. Consistency How often do we see a happy ty of the parent. It is Insecurity family life wrecked on the shoals developed by the child that sires of irritability and fault finding. behavior problems of later years. Behavior problems just dont oc- Nothing develops admiration and cur in families where adults ex- respect as Certainty and Consisarchs Courtesy toward each oth-;tency in handling the child. The three Cs in sound fam- ily relationships: r. Health is Natures Greatest Uncertainty and inconsistency both m word and action, breed Gift to Man Preserve It. ing north. Force of the impact broke the front seat of the Bradshaw car and sent it 400 feet down the highway. Mrs. Bradshaw was taken to the hospital by Moss ambulance. Mr. Thornley was arrested charged with driving under the influence of alcohol. He is out on $300 bail. Motorcycle, bike Crash in Layton Dykes Christensen, Layton of Mr. and Mrs. Evan Christensen, 906 Valeria, is in the Dee Hc.iital suffering from a broken shoulder and head son received at 3:20 p. m. Friday afternoon by the Hill Field West Gate, when the boy, riding a motorcycle at a slow speed had to swerve and skid to keep from hitting a small boy on a bicycle. However, there was a collision, and the small boy received a broken arm. Mr. Christensen i3 now in satisfactory condition. Bicyclist injured Fruit Heights Bobby Elliott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Elliot, Heights, was injured in an automobile-bicycle accident last Wednesday evening about 7 p.m. Bobby was crossing Highway 89, east of his home, on his bicycle when he was struck by a car. He was rushed to St. Benedicts Hospital, suffering with a fractured jaw and a slight concussion. He is expected to return to his home sometime this week. eight-year-ol- d Fruit Gasoline spills Into ditch in Freak mishap Some 1.000 galFarmington lons of gasoline went down the drain into a borrow pit Sunday evening north of Highway 91 near Lagoon. The gasoline drained from a r tank unit of Ruel Call, Afton, Wyoming, driver near the Lagoon overpass by Charles Madsen, 29, Salt Lake City. According to State Troopers George Rees and H. C. Volmar, the heat had buckled the highway. The truck went over the bump in the road. A pump unit attached to the tongue of the tank trailer jarred loose, dropped to the ground, bounced back up and broke castings on a valve under the trailer. Mr. Madsen called out the Farmington Fire Department to standby as there were 4,000 gallons of gule in the tank. While the driver went to Bountiful to borrow an empty tanker into which to transfer the fuel, some 1,090 gallon drained into the ditch. truck-traile- Wanants issued lJ redeemed and supporting voui liens wire scrutinized. Tax rolls and tax sale lecoiris vveie examined as to collections on cur- lent ami delinquent taxes, ubateimni-- , etc. We examined oi accounting records am other support. ng evidence methods and to the extent we deemed appi The accumulated cash surplus in all funds ineieased from $2 n,0!!!l.!i: to $U, 2.369.9.1 during the period under review. According to the cash balances in the various funds were as follows: (See chart below.) Actual expenditures were 2s. us less than I.e 195s leceipts so the Countys accumulated cash balance at the 'beginning of the year was in- ),y that amount. By appropriate formal action the t,u u t appropria- jt(,nSj as appiovid at the beginning of 195s, were increased during the year by $ l!i,5oi). in the The total Receipts repents are listed as: 195s bud195s $M7,955; get aitual leceipts, $'27,127.5.3; ami 1957 actual receipts, $'2.3,292.1(1. Disbursements were: 195S budoeiv ed. Queens crown invites Pretty giris to compete Kaysville Pretty entrants to the Miss Kaysville contest are increasing as the August 11 contest dtavvs ne.uer. The contest is being sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce vulh local business houses acting as sponsors for the individual gills. Everyone knows Utah has the prettiest girls in the vvoild and we think Kaysville has the prettiest in the slate, is the way Hylon Smith, chairman of the contest, summed lip his opinion of the entrants thus far. Girls who are practicing walking in bathing suits, smiling m formals and brushing up on their talent presentations include Sheila Thorderson, daughter of Kaysville will probably have a the Parley Thordersons Evelyn hall for their meetings and daughter of Mr. and cial ev ents by next summer if Mrs. B. O. Brough; Rebecca woik on the new $12,000 continues Ence, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. atolls piesent puce. E. J. Sharon, chairman of the Kendall Ence; Cynthia Flint, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry posts building committee, spi McGlinch; Linda Coulam, daugh- the center is ready for placing ter of the Jesse P. Coulams; conciete blocks and flooring. Jinny Brink, daughter of Mr. Fiooung will be completed wiitv and Mrs. W. A. Brink: Karen in a week and brick masons will Kinsey, daughter of the Alvin begin work on placing the blocks. The building, measuring 32 by Kinseys: Kay Edwards, daughter of the Don Edwards; and 60 feet, is located at 600 West Yvonne Grover, daughter of Mr. and 200 South. It will house a and Mrs. Ralph Grover. kitchen, rest rooms and a genSponsoring business houses in- eral punio.se meeting hall, Mr. clude Howards Conoco; Hey wood Sharon said. Auto Clinic, Signal Service, BowTlie building committee phms mans, Bruces Utoco, Larkins to have the walls up and the roof Lunch, Barnes Bank, and Inland completed by the end of this Printing Co. summer, with all interior and Any girl wishing to enter the fimsiung work scheduled during contest or any business wishing the winter and next slimmer. to sponsor a contestant is asked The Davis County Recreation to contact Hylon Smith. has proposed the Department construction of a roadside park adjacent to the new Legion cenFri. ter, with picnic tables and a fires' There will be no place. Layton swimming this coming Friday because of the holidays. Red Cross Swimming instructions will resume the following FriLayton All former residents of day. It is hoped that swimming lessons will be continued until Sahara Village are invited to atschool starts. tend a reunion at the Central Mrs. Dorothy Weathers anin Clearfield, on Saturday, Park nounced also that the Red Cross would like all instructois of July 25, from 4 p.m. to 9 p in. swimming at Lagoon, to be sure to watch Romper Room at 10 a. m. each morning. There will be a series of films on swimming information for three weeks on Johnny Learns to Swim. ; No swimming Saha ra reunion ti-n- d At an informal Layton meeting last Thursday, Floyd Buckley, Youth Activity Director for the Jaycees, presented a check to Wendall Snow, of City Recreation, in the amount of $ ioT.oo, which wus raised by sponsoring a movie at the llavis Diive Inn, ami will be used to sponsor six Western Boys Baseball teams, and tin oe Babe Ruth teams for tins season. The Jayeees have also paid $"u piior to this for a fian-elnsfor affiliation with the Western Hoy s Association. The Western Boys Baseball teams mid also the Babe Ruth teams me now in the process of selecting the teams to deteimiue who will play the distmt playoffs. The Layton r National team will play Canyon League, Brigham City. The American All- e all-st- All-Sta- e first-han- makes into insight aircraft tick, what young inventor picked up he is going to incorporate into a new ramjet. When the new plans are off 'his drafting board, ynng Elhs will submit them to Hill for eval-- I uation. Possibly this time he will have something that will work. The 'several ideas that Present standing of the Lit- tle Western Boys Baseball Teams have the Clubs of the National League first with nine They are wins, two losses. managed by Floyd Buckley. In the American League the Bees, Jay Simmons, Manager, lead with ten wins, one loss. The Babe Ruth Teams places the Ogden Elks on top with eight wins, one loss, followed by the Layton No. 3 team, with six wins, three losses. Extra work pays off in Cash to liAFB employees llill Air Force Base Fifteen Air Materiel Area emfound out this week that the extia blood, sweat and tears" they put into their daily jobs pays off in recognition and cash dividends. Receiving sustained superior performance certificates and $100 awards were David F. Archeluta, Cleai field, stock handler; Merlin L. Badger, South Weber, warehouseman; Vein D. Bond, Ogden, warehouseman; William M. Carnahan, Clearfield, supply in- Ogden ployees Thomas speclor: D. HunsaKer, supply Honeyville, Thora P. inspector; Humphreys, Hooper, supply clerk; Earl W. Jackson, Terrace, supply inWashington spector; and Leo Reynolds, Ogden, warehouseman. Mar Jean B. DeFriez, Ogden, clerk typist; Velda J. Campbell, and Ogden, Bessie E. Kawaguchi, Layton, Recipient of a $150 award was James W. Ballingham, Ogden, supply officer. Receiving $200 were Margaret R. Walker, Ogden, supply distribution officer, and George C. Wittman, Kays-villof support section chief. get estimates $7S6, 723.17; J95X aitual disbursements, $771,-'15and 1957 actual disbursements', $'7 1.755.S2. Cash surplus for the year was 5; New baseball suits Kaysville An appropriation one hundred dollars has been approved by the KCA organization to buy baseball suits for members of the Kaysville B League team, it has been announced by Harold Galley, president of KCA. Darwin Edwards, manager of the team, said the players will furnish their own caps and stock- listed as: $51 .I'M 3 195S bud-- I get estimate; $55,27s.9N actual cash surplus for 195s; and a deficit of $51, Pl'i. 72 was shown for 1957, The budget estimate of cash balance at the begin- mng of 195$ was $219, 0'4 and was also listed as the actual cash balance at the beginning ings. of the year. The cash balance 'at the In ginning of 1957 was The budget est$270,517.72. imate of the cash balance at the end of the 195s year was $250,-- 5 5.s. with an actual cash balance at the end of the year amounting to $272,569 95. The actual cash balance at the end ' ' Young inventor Submits plan To Air Force Hill Air Force Base If you dont like it that's fine; if you do like it thats fine. Prefaced with these terse words, Ellis Madsen, a Salt Lake City boy sent his enplan for a new type ram-je- t gine to Hill AFB. This week, he and his family, were invited to Hill to discuss the invention with Col. E. B. Gentry, Ogden Air Materiel Area maintenance engineering director. Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gibb R. Madsen, 3325 E. 4090 S., came up with a plan for a ramjet engine which he hoped would revolutionize propulsion systems for supersonic Air Force aircraft and missiles. His idea uses liquid oxygen and a magneto system to heat and expand the air in a ram-je- t to provide the necessary push instead of conventional kerosene-basefuel. The plan, routed to Col. Gentry, was turned over to his engineers. After a detailed analysis, the experts with the slide rules said that the idea showed ingenuity and night woik. But the catch came in the power it turned out; it was so negligible that the engine was impractical. Col. Gentry praised Ellis for his invention and then invited him, his parents and sister Betsy, 8, to tour the aircraft production at lines with a special look-sethe jet engine minor repair shops. There Ellis received a Stars will play the Bountiful National League on a neutral field. These play-off- s will determine which team will get a berth in the district play-of- f at Morgan, August 7. Winners of the district playoffs all over the Western States will then play at Tooele, Utah, later in the season to determine final winneis of the Western Boys Baseball teams. i rv A, 4 V U'tt tiU ai tY-- i k V ' - ' I Base officials said the certificate and cash awards signify ap- predation of OOAMA manage- ment for consistent and work excellence on the part of the employees. Size of the monetary awards is based on the various grades of the workers. m 'wJMk " j 5. e, .... ' f fy -- 11 - 7yi $'- ' "t ft d 'J UirtV- i r VY lA'J ki Courthouse Coverage r " '"w By HETTY C. FISHER The County Commis.'ioners reappointed David Bybee, term on the Davis Val Verda, to serve another three-yea- r County Flanning Board, upon the recommendation of HarMr. old J. Tippetts, County Planning Director-SurveyoBybees new term is scheduled to expire June 30, 1962. The Hoard also approved the reappointment of Daniel Imhoff term. to the Countys Board of Adjustment for a five-yea- r The Davis County Commissioners, Friday, approved an estimated budget for fire control in the unincorporated areas of the County. The total budget of $16,000 is divided in these categories: 55,000 standby fee; 51.700 fire runs; 51,300 for the State Board of Forestry and Fire Control; and 58,000 for the operation of the County Fire Department. $ In celebration of the Utah State holiday, the Davis County Courthouse in Farmington will be dosed all day July 24th. Following the dedication of Davis Countys newest picnic area. Fcrnvvood, locat d east of Layton, the Board of County Commissioners have received a congratulatory httir from IIo",,rd Young--, pUnner for the U. S. Fore-- t Service. Mr. Young praised the Commissioners for their cooperation in the development of the recreation site which will accommodate at least 16 family units. ' s J ' V, , 0 , ionship at a Denver show recently. Mr. Field, Lay-totrainer and judge, was the judge of the horse show in Ogden on July 16 and 17. He will also be one of the judges in the Salt Lake City parade on July 24th. n, well-know- n Davis Sheriffs Posse takes First-priz- A 57,000 operations there. f JOHN BUCK Field is shown astride his Stonewall Glamour when he took the five gaited champ- r. budget was approved by the County Commissioners as the estimated cort of the Countys share of the special service arias for the operation and maintenance of refuse disposal areas in the County. This eslimat- ed budget consists of: $1,500 for wages; $1,000 for equip-- , ment; $1,000 for buildings; and $500 for operation and met with maintenance of the areas. The commi.-sioner- s V. Y. Hailes, of the Wheeler Machine Co. at the site of area to inspect the posthe South Davis refuse sibilities of setting up a sanitary landfill type of disposal , e in Ogden show Lav ton Riding in their new uniforms of brown and gold with the County Sheriffs insignia on sleeve, the Davis County Sheriff's Posse rode to take the Fimt Prize Trophy of ail the riding clubs in the Fa-- I rade at Ogden, piesented before the Ogden Boise Show, July ' 16, 17. The horses, with their new gold colored bridles and breast collars, and their proud owners to ride in the have been 21th paiade, and also to July dull at the Rodeo in the eve-- , ning. Captain of the Davis County is Ivan Flint, Sheriff's Po-- p Other officers are Layton. 1st Clinton, Glen Stoddard, Lyman Freestone, Lieutenant, and Lou Cook, Adjutant. The Boots and Saddle Club, Di illmaster led Wendell by Stafford, also rode in the parade, and will participate in the July 24th Parade at Ogden. Among the Horse Show Winners for the two night performances from Layton was Ivan Flint, who took third place in the Trail Class Competition, Peggy. riding In the Children's Pony Class, First place went to Thunder, owned by V. A, Nalder and Jackie Nalder. Childien's Pleasure The Class' Fourth Place winner was Michelle coped Nalder, by daughter of Mr. and Mr. Vivian' Nalder, Layton. 2nd Lieutenant, f , i |