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Show Page June TIIE JOURNAL 6 News About Folks In Carolyn Marston, club home of leader. KAYSVILLE SCIENCE IN Newly elected officeis for the were: president, De Mr. and Mrs. George F. Darker coming year Ane Lyman; vice president, Hazel spent Sunday in Logan. According to 1st Lt. Ivan Flint of Davis County Sheriffs Posse, some GO members of the Posse will participate in the parade and rodeo, Friday at Malad, Idaho. The first meeting of the YKCs Club was held Tuesday at the 4-- " YOUR LIFE 0 Harvey; secretary, Shirley Lund-bertreasurer, Cyntha Flint; repot ter, Nancy Odd; song leader, Rebbeca Ence; party committee, Ann Duckworth and Karon Walker. Refreshments w'ere served and plans made, to make sandwiches for next weeks meeting. g; H This week has been the busiest I have ever spent in Congress. As a member of the House on Irrigation and Reclamation, I have spent each day participating in executive sessions as we draft a bill to authorize the Upper Colorado River Project. As was the case last session of Congress, the measure is running into heavy opposition from Committee members from the. East and, of course, from Southern California. Sub-committ- EVENTUAL MEETING AT THE SUMMIT ee ECHO PARK As was feared, supporters of the project were faced with a difficult choice. We could either keep Echo Park Dam in the bill and loose the. entire project, or we could delete it and face a fighting chance of getting the measure approved on the floor of the House. Opponents of the project did a complete turnabout and voted to keep Echo Park, hoping thereby to kill the entire measure. CENTRAL UTAH The bill as it now stands includes Central Utah Project which will bring the Wasatch Front in Utah the additional water it needs for growth and development. It also includes the Emery Project in Utah along with Glen Canyon Dam just V , C over the Utah border in Arizona and Flaming Gorge Dam in northeastern Utah. A provision is included ordering an independent gineering study of Echo Park Dam with a deadline date for reporting of December 1958. AMENDMENTS we have been successful by very narrow margins in block- ing crippling amendments to the bill. Our opponents have taken two different tactics in an effort to defeat the project. One method adopted by them is to support any measure that will load the bill. They are trying to make the entire measure so unworkable and costly that it will either be defeated in the House or the President will have to veto it. OTHER ATTACK The other line of attack has been more direct. This has been marked by a series of amendments proposed by Southern California. One amendment a typical one W'ould require the Upper Basin States to guarantee that 12.5 million acre feet of water flows to California annually. This is in direct conflict with the Colorado River Compact which sets the Upper Basin water debt to California, Arizona and Mexico at 8.5 million acre feet an- - A- ' 'VI S v 5 Jv .vx-- V r - 85 x t r . N- V' ,y s. s , f m .V ' v.s yr . v. vx . V I s f s . Xx. ;X 'M . . n s - V. if)w 1 8 . , A Art 1 ar ,OR pin-U- p SSEsSU . Console Rad' Electric Better Si9W0lomp Electric Fry Iron Electric Steom , OUTHE fOR ANNIVtMAW gSSSSSf-H-- ' , S', A Be Modem o. Av gestive process was purely chemical and that emotional disturbances could affect digestion or even stop it. St. Martin lived long after Beaumont died, earning his living from medical schools. Electric Radio Small Radio Stvdy lamp rrtrt N Nature hath appointed the twilight as a bridge, to pass us out of night into day. George Fuller. years, reports the National Safety Council. SSr5r Household Hint Whatever type or color your floors may be, a good general rule for washing them is to use a wrung-osudsy cloth or mop, then wipe speedily with an almost dry mop. Never apply wax to a floor until it is completely dry. For an asphalt tile floor, mop with warm soapsuds and rinse.' For concrete, scour with a stiff brush and hot soapsuds; rinse, flush with a hose if the floor has a drain. ut S' thiv. Nj DAY FOR FATHERS PopPr GRADUATION Cover Electric Bed Electric Hair Dry . Sv IW researchers. Out of St. Martins open wound he made a living test tube. He dangled small bits of food on string Into the hole and hours later withdrew from the stomach what was left, carefully noting what he saw. In seven years Beaumont executed 238 experiments on an often rebellious subject. He proved mans di- ns WsJSSSi ' Better Sight tamp t SmoltRafo Mackinac Island. A U. S. Army physician named William Beaumont was called to treat the wound in the stomach, torn open by close-rang- e firing. Beaumont worked hard but failed to close the wound. Nevertheless, he was able to apply bandages in such a way that the stomach could still do its normal work. A year later the boy needed a cathartic, and Beaumont gave it to him through the hole in the stomach. It worked as well as if it had been given by mouth! With great daring' Beaumont then decided to launch a series of experiments that won him honors as one of medicines greatest II, between 30,000 and 40, 000 per-.sohave been killed on the highways every year for the past 22 Son lamp Iron Electric Steam DyeTondlroner ssass- - & n, With the exception of the gas rationing period during World War lamp Electric Clock. Electric WoterHeaM Electric Dishwasher Electric Bed Covering WtDDlHO THE accident led to a revolution in the knowledge of digestion. In 1822, a young French-CanadiaAlexis St. Martin, was accidentally shot in the chest on ies. ( sj earlier another nually. Another amendment proposed and defeated would have prohibited the Upper Basin States from storing water. HURDLES AHEAD We hope to have the bill out of the House Interior Committee in the near future. It then will have to be approved by the House Rules Committee and then by members of the House. After passage by the House, it will go to a Conference Committee composed of a select group of Senate and House Interior Committee members. This Committee will iron out the differences between the legislation as it passed the Senate and the House and the compromise measure will again be voted upon in both Legislative bod- Av . best-know- To-da- te ss s jSSS The Living Test Tube Accidents sometimes play a curious role in the history of science. The fleck of mold that settled by chance on Sir Alexander Flemings germ culture and opened the door to the discovery of penicillin is one n cases. of the A little more than 100 years BLOCKED &' 9 vv A' S i 18, 1955 iPw mn dti ' |