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Show 8 DAILY HERALD Friday, February 27, 1918 . Santaquin City Organizes New Fire Department SANTAQUIN Santaquin city organized .its first lire department depart-ment Monday evening with Mayor William F. Broadbent in charge. v The following officers were named: Fire Chief Albert McKay; assistant chief, Kathle Tischner; organization c chairman, Walter Morgan; secretary and treasurer, Sam Peery; steward and engineer, Alden Peterson; assistant engineer engi-neer and drill master, Robert La-Rue, La-Rue, Sr.; firemen, Robert LaRue, Jr., Ellis Tuckett, Walter Callaway, Calla-way, Wonlass Callaway, Scherl Peterson, Fred Fuller, and Nick Roberts. Regular meetings will be Jheld Monday e'vening at 7 p. m. The new officers announce a firemen's benefit ball to be held Saturday evening March 6 at the Miners Union hall. Spectacular Fife Brreaks Out In Hollywood WW 11 A Alcohol Problem Discussed by Bosone at Heber HEBER Judge Reva Beck Bosone Bo-sone of the Utah committee on alcohol education was the principal prin-cipal speaker at a meeting Tuesday Tues-day evening in the First , ward chapel to acquaint the public with new trends in the treatment of alcoholics. A large audience was in attendance. attend-ance. Mrs. Emma Wherritt, chairman chair-man of the Wasatch county committee com-mittee conducted the meeting and introduced Judge Bosone. The judge spoke of the alcoholic problems she has encountered during her 11 years on the Salt Lake police court bench and said they no longer try to treat the 'drunk" but now treat the cause tHat makes him drink. , According to Judge Bosone the alcoholic suffers from a disease that is certainly not self-inflicted and which he cannot overcome without help. For helping the victim vic-tim of alcohol to recover and. to educate the general public to a new attitude toward the problem, a five-man board called the Utah state board of alcoholic education has been set up with Thomas Kearns as the chairman. Musical numbers at the opening open-ing of the meeting were presented present-ed by Roy Clyde singing to his own guitar accompaniment and by Terry Jenkins playing a piano solo. i. , ' " 1 - 4. t "Z. t " ' ' .- i- ! n J( "-'' 1 tNEA TtUphuiot Hollywood's worst fire In a decade gutted an entire city block with estimated property loss of more than one million dollars. Fanned by heavy winds, fire apparently broke in Lounsberry & Harris Lumber Co. (above) and residences within a mile radius were showered with sparks that set off minor rooftop con- flazratlons. No loss of lif was renorturi U, S. Makes New Agreement With Mexico for Import of Farm Workers Ogden Mayor Says Conditions Not As Bad As Charged OGDEN, Utah, Feb. 27 (U.R) In a letter to the Ogden city commission, com-mission, Mayor Harman W. Peery yesterday refuted charges of C. N. Woods, Weber county safety council president, that vice abounds ia-Ogden. The mayor wrote, in part, "there is nothing alarming in the moral condition of Ogden at the present time, neither different nor as bad as the padt four years, or for that matter, for the past 40 years?" Woods charged, that while recent re-cent successful raids by sheriff's officers have shown gambling to be prevalent in Ogden, there is a laxness in city police law enforcement. en-forcement. The mayor had said Tuesday that Woods was against him in the election and that now "it looks as if he is just a diehard and can't take it." WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (U.R) The state department has announced an-nounced detailed .terms of a new agreement wijh the Mexican government gov-ernment for import of farm workers.' work-ers.' It replaces 1943 and 1947 agreements, agree-ments, eliminating to a large ex- Only 3 Percent Of Delinquencies Sent Up to Ogden SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 27 (U.R) Only three per cent of the 3,413 cases of juvenile delinquency delin-quency in Utah last year resulted in sentences at the state industrial school for the offenders, according accord-ing to a summary issued today by the state welfae commission. The summary also disclosed that'for the third consecutive year the total number of on-record cases of juvenile delinquency decreased de-creased during the year. The total of such cases in 1946 was 3,537. By offenses, the total for 1947 was broken down to show 2,569 cases of traffic law violations, 817 cases of stealing, 29 cases of armed arm-ed holdups, 174 cases of sex offenses. of-fenses. Only 98 of the offenders drew confinement in the state industrial indus-trial school. U. P. Road Places $12 Million Order For New Rail Cars LAS VEGAS, Nev., Feb. 27 (U.R) -G. F. Ashby, president. Union Pacific railroad, today announced here that the railroad has placed"! orders for 50 new chair cars and 50 new all room sleeping cars of lightweight construction. Total cost, he said, would be about $12,000,000. The Pullman Standard Car Manufacturing company of Chicago Chi-cago has been awarded the chair car contract and the sleeping cars will be built by Budd Co. of Philadelphia. Ashby said delivery is scheduled sched-uled for late 1949. Still Waters Apartment House Owners Protest Gas Co. Order SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 27 (U.R) A Mountain Fuel Supply proposal pro-posal that apartment house owners own-ers and other users in that class install stand-by heating equipment equip-ment using other than gas fuel today had drawn a protest from the Apartment House Association of Utah. Richard F. Harding, executive vice president of the association said such installations would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Jules D. Roberts, vice president ot the Fuel Supply company estimated esti-mated that installation of coal or fuel oil heating plants would cost $1,000 per unit. He said the gas supply is now dwindling but thai increasing demand for gas is tak ing transmission lines. T JUST ARRIVED Sleeping bags. Bed roifs, Tents, Canvas Tarps, Alumnum Canteen Can-teen and mess kit?, Coleman Oas Stoves, PackRolls. Army wooi DianKeis. Just the thin to go campi for your boy with. (BOB'S Army & Navy Store 73 North First West A OA?- !l t L 1 ill, 'V I tent functions of the two governments govern-ments in recruiting and transporting trans-porting Mexican workers. Individual Indi-vidual employers will assume many of these functions. Under the new agreement, U. S. farm operators employing Mexicans Mexi-cans will guarantee them opportunity oppor-tunity for work "for three quarters quar-ters of the work days of the total period" during which individual employment agreements are in effect. A worker will be entitled to wages for that period if the employer fails to offer him the minirnum employment period. The individual agreements with workers will be signed at "points of contact" in Mexico which cannot can-not be south of a coast-to-coast line between Guadalajara and Queretaro. This line was somewhat some-what more southerly than favored favor-ed by some congressmen concerned concern-ed over possible spread of foot and mouth disease. They had endorsed en-dorsed a line between Saltillo and Torreon. The dread cattle disease dis-ease which can be carried by humans centers in southern Mexico. Workers to be brought to the U. S., however, will be subject to physical examination by both Mexican and U. S. health authorities. au-thorities. Costs of transportation to and from Mexico will be paid by em ployers. They may recruit work-i ers for art' initial period of six months with one six-month newal option. They must first tain certification from the United States employment service that U. S. workers are unavailable at prevailing wage scales. Jaexican workers cannot be paid ess than those scales. An initial controversy about how much medical attention the employers should guarantee work ers was resolved by . a provision stating this issuewould be governed gov-erned by "prevailing laws,' customs cus-toms or practices, or, in the absence ab-sence of suchyan accordance with equitable and just principles." One clause of the agreement said workers "will not be subject to social jot economic discrimination discrimina-tion inemployment because of race, color, creed or nationality." Mapleton Quartet Rings' for Patients MAPLETON Several hundred patients of the Utah state hospital enjoyed a program of music presented pre-sented by the Mapleton quartet and other performers Sunday during their regular Sunday school session. The quartet, organized in 1921, was composed of Glen Holley, Carrel Waters, Howard Waters and Leslie Houtz. They were assisted as-sisted in the program by Ralph B. Weight and Will Parry, who have also performed together for many years; Mrs. Lillian Binks, Freeman Free-man Bird of Mapleton and Mrs. J Mary Bird, Springville. j So successful was the program, that a return engagement is scheduled Sunday, March 14 ati the hospital. NO HONOR AMONG THIEVES ATLANTA, Ga! (U.R) Detectives Detec-tives Leo Nahlik and O. T. Jones had difficulty in "cracking" a gang of youths about a series of burglaries until the boys admitted admit-ted they had been stealing from each other. After that, the officers offi-cers said, it was easy to make them talk. County Reports 40 New Cases Of Influenza Forty cases of Influenza report ed from Utah county points other than Provo zoomed the county total of reported new communicable communi-cable disease cases to 55 for the week ending Feb. 20. This Was the total reDorted to th sfnto department of health by local ' health officers. ' Besides the' Influenza, county' points reported four cases of. pneumonia and eight of 'chicken' pox. Provo reported only three ; cases of chicken pox for the week. For the previous week thei county reported a total of 23 new' cases of various types. ' Throughout the entire state. 531 ; cases of notifiable diseases were reported to the state department i of health by physicians and local health officers, for the wee! enaing reo. zu. ror me previous ween mis year, saz cases were re ported and 282 for the corre sponding week last yean Outstanding In this statereport are the thirty-six residertt cases of cancer (all malignamy tumors) reported during the current week, making this the peak cancer week since the disease was first made reportable in December. 1946. In cluding the cases this week, there have been forty-lwo cast report ed since the first of the year. Last year (1947), 553 cases of cancer were reporte Ride 'I m, Cowboy; it t I f ' 1 ., I ' Cattle Industry .Basically Sound , SALT LAKE CITY, Feb." 27, (U.R) The nation's meat supplies may be short In 60 to 90 days to onset on-set current marketing activities, but basically the cattle industry Is sound with no indication of the feared mass liquidation ot beef breeding herds. ? Such . were the comments ' to day of F. E. Mollin, secretary, American National Livestock as sociation. He addressed Utah cattle cat-tle and horse growers inr their 29th annual convention here. . A plea for ever better man agement of ranges by cattlemen was made by Edward ' P. Cliff, assistant regional forester, Ogden. 4 He also urged closer relationship 'between stockmen ' advisory ' m boards and local forestry officiata on mutual problems. He emphaar ized that .; breeding, fencing improvement programs are 53 substitute for good management of ranges. v ' : ' 1 IN THE RACE ' BOISE, Feb. 27 (U.R) -Robert L. Summerfield, Twin Falls, unsuccessful un-successful Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor in' 1949, today put himself in the race fOV the U. S. Democratic senatorial nomination on a contingent basis. Summerfield said . he would seek the nomination "unless . am accepted liberal enters the Aug ust primary." . ' . f u TOWN MARSHAL IN DUTCH GOSHEN, Ind. (U.R) Paul Wright 52, was charged with drunken driving on the complaint Stockman Lloyd McBee, of Fort Worth. Texi isn't trying to bulldoze bull-doze Tiny. The 1 -year-old Hereford midget heifer, walking between nil owner's legs, weighs only 250 pounds. It is the small-st small-st of three midget offspring of registered Herefords, the father being a $17,000 bulL' . We Have FUEL OIL FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY No. 1 No. 2 No. 3 FUEL FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS Katy Turner uses nature's mir-, ror at Cypress Gardens, Fla., to produce this attractive picture oi feflected beauty. McCOARD OIL CO. Phone 1102 FtiR LATE RESULTS ON ALL BASKETBALL GAMES CALL TOPS DRIVE INN . . 2598 II Ira From the cool slopes of the towering, Himalayas comes Darjeeling rarest of all teas to give a wonderful wonder-ful new tang to delicious $ Tree Tea. Try this new flavor sensation." " 71 of constituents of Bristol, where he is town marshal. Th is Tuna is te n d e ly better-flavored . You'll agree the minute you see and taste Star-Kist Tuna. Look at the firm, light meat in the Fancy Solid Pack. Taste itsnne,tendergoodness... Then, you'll discover the difference in tuna! The best -tuna are the'smaller ones. That's why only the small, tender tuna are packed under the Star-Kist label. Buy either solid or rod" Star-Kist Quality it rfie same u iof faff value in produce because. ...Saf)gway brings you fruits and vegetables of guaranteed quality, prices them thepound. With everything measured by weight, there's no need to buy more or less7 than you need to make your purchase come out in even "dozens" or "bunches. There's-no need to take a large head of lettuce or cauliflower if a small one is all fou need. You select the exact amount you want of each item. . .pay only for what Tou get. Less food is wasted, more money is saved. So be sure of full value on every purchase . . . every day. Be $ure . . . shop SAFEWAY. Sweet and Juicy Choice Medium Siie ... Lb. 7 V Sunkist : - .lb. 9C CELERY 2 . . lb. 10c GRAPEFRUITS' lb. 5c tUk lb. ?e DATES 1cl"kt: "-" .. . 15c HEW CABBAGE !:. lb. 5c YAtyL Ib..l2c LEUOriS Zr' ' lb- 9c rTBrz.xir.." lb. 12c AUOCADOS Colovo, The 9 -Vitamin Fruit Lb. WILES Ffcy Cria Wn. DelkioiN Fancy Rem Beauty's Ideal for Baking or Sanca woduct rmacs swwscr to dart makkz tchamgcs Lb. -I u l p 3 L I 1 Safeway prices'-all items low.' In addition, Safowy moots every competitor's "spociol" prices irom by itom, day bjr day, town by town. -. SOAP II UEL II Ooraxo 1 1 DLEAGM Palmolivo Pkg.Soap llsnd While Clssstr Uagic 2 Bars IB.oz.Fig. Lb, Fkg. Qasri 28 33e 27c 13 c DREFT Pkg.Soap II 0L 33 (jCtfpiai Safeway Uattses nnnGnninEr': ........ .44c of more for yoar neat nonoy because.. siionTEnino COFFEE COFFEE JELL WELL sunny DAwn; SPAGHETTI .1 Bk m 1.16 51c 44c 6c 19c 1IM m. . . . all Safeway meats are guaranteed tender and juicy . . . cut "waste-free" before weighing. You get more good-eating meat for your money. POTROAST WeN Trimmed U. S. Good Grade ib. 48' Rib noast ' Standing 7 Inch Cats D.S. Good Gr. Lb. . . Sirloin Steak 5m.o2dod. Smoked Picnics yeai noasi lb. 69c Ib. 42c Ib. 49c D. 8. Co4 QDMt .... Veal Chops K b. boc m sw f ib.oyc Ib. 47c Ib. 49c Ib. 53c Ib. 59c lb. 47c B uutun QMtuir ... Pork Loin Roost Liver Hams Lamb Legs Lainu nwuai a. U. I. lMpMto4 ...... SMra4. WhoU Povl JfaraB ..s. ....... . W.U TrkMi t. Ooad Qnt. pau nEnDY rnEsnrnozcrj risn Fillel Sola .. .. Ib. C5c CedFillel . . Ib. 33c Red Snappsr Fillet Ib.,49s . til; Fillet Haddock Ib. 51c Ilslihcf Steaks lb. &5c Silver Salmon SteeBOc 2 for 15c CEREALS - 25c GnAPEtlUTS'T' 17c KELLOGG'Sr . .. 14c i COCOA 15c ...23c .25c .. -13c ... 15c 3 for 10c t orn.- 5C - 12c 9c lick la MpU Mr. Wriohfa SYnup .... niTZ bread: UAniLLA'TU CAflDYDARSo HOT SAUCE? SAUERKnAUT Northway Prices Effective:' lit our Sprintvtlle. Spanish Fork . . . .,. , Pajraon . Stores and QGQjOoooQ n r 3 J mm i MmAmLTmXmJ1 1 11 J """liliifflLl i . - |