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Show J lun dkronlcie, Hulrsday, KovemW Si, friig ROY NEWS Happy over the safe arrival of a baby daghter, Nov. IS are LaRue and Wendall Hall. This is the first child for the Halls. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Keele of Ddvigway, Utah were weekend guests at the home of Mir. the MisLaneous Club "at her home Thursday evening. Members present enjoyed sewing and Helen Parr was pleasifntly surprised when a birthday cake was lighted in honor. Other members enjoying Keeles sister and brother-in-law- , Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Wood. the occasion were Feola Barton, Hazel Barnes, Jean Hodge and Mr. Keele is postmaster at way add came to attend the Rita Jeffries. dinner which was given in honMr. and Mrs. Duane RickS or of Emma Russell. and daughters, Linda, Paula, Helen Hubbard was pleasant- and Connie visited in Benson, ly surprised on Wednesday eve- Sunday at the home of Mr. ning by a group of friends who Ricks parents, Mr. and Mrs. came to wish her a happy birth- Wallace Ricks. They also enjoyday and brought with them a ed attending sacrament meeting in the Benson ward where girthday cake and ice cream. Missed in Roy mill be Mr. Linda rendered a piano solo. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Wur-sto- n and Mss. Emmett Wiggins and visited in Logan over the family who have moved to their new home in Tooele. weekend. Mrs. Wurston was a guest of a birthday club at the Mr. and Mrs. Art Winters home of her mother, Mrs. Parenjoyed spending the weekend ley Hansen and enjoyed hearing Elko, Nevada. a travelogue of a trip around A happy brthday is wished world by her aunt. Ruby Akin. Frank Powers is recuperating for Kathy Secrist and Gregory Kearl who celebrated their 11th in the hospital after a serious illness. birthday this week. June and Laurel Jones are Harmans Cafe was the set very happy about their first ting for the going away party baby girl born this week. There given for Glenda and Harlax are sir boys In the Jones fam- Hancock by those employees ily. at the Utah General Depot who Latest victims to the chicken have been under Harlans for the past 14Vi years pox are Sandra Gavin and The dinner was given for them Terry Austin. Melba Stevens was hostess to Saturday, Nov. 18 at which sup-erviso- n time they presented Mrs. Han- was in the one-ac- t play festival cock with a lovely corsage and will be represented Monday, Mr. Hancock wdth a pen. Nov. 27, at 8.00 p.ra. at the Recreation Nov. Ward 20, Kanesville Beginning Monday, however, Mr. Hancock began Hall by the Roy 6 Ward. This work at Hill Air Force Base. play is under the direction of a Nov. was Barbara Morris. The cast con15, Wednesday, n sad day in the Park, sists of the following MIA boys for this was the day that John and girls: Gaylene Buttars, and Clair Jeppson, their four Shirley Marilyn Bingham, daughter and their two sons Hughes, Patsy Blodgett, Ricky started packing everything up Anderson, Brent Lemmon and to move from here to their new David Lindley. farm in Idaho, They have livThe past week has been a ed in this area for about four yean and have added much to very busy one for Darlene the community. They were Johnson. She has had four both very active in the LDS children of her sister-in-laChurch. Their latest positions with her while the mother and were of Literature teacjher in fathed have been in Chicago. the Roy 6th Ward Relief So- Also, Darlenes Mother, Mrs. ciety for Char and John was Jessie Miller, has been there the Activity Counselor in the with her while Ross Miller has been in Montana attending to Stake MIA. his ranch. to wanted thank everyThey one who had been so nice to Mrs. Rees H. (LaVon) Johnthem, especially this past while son, 3998 So. 2275 W., Ray, unin helping them get ready to go. derwent surgery at the Dee Their new address is Rt. 1 Memorial Hospital Friday, Nov. 17. To date Mrs. Johnson is Rexburg, Idaho. reported improving The play "Rose Red which 1961 fhifcft Hal-Ver- Plucky Sievie Helps Science Toward Answer to Arthritis r o AFTER HOLIDAY SPECIALS EFFECTIVE UNTIL NOVEMBER 30TH SAVE EVERY DAY 7 DAYS A WEEK - I Famous DUBUQUE Waste No Top Quality-- Canned 6lhs.4w H MJ15 Gold Seal W" fWt q 6 ! - Round Steak 4 Safety Salt Eliminates Traffic Snarls Off r . Svfi I to 3 12 1 K jv Gold Seal "Tender Tested'1 Am ? b hr m I tote t Trimmed rt V r Gold Seal Cl t V I " Prompt and efficient snow and removal with safety salt if it reduces traffic irock salt), bat one hour per storm in the snow belt of United States, i troit: "It is the opinion of this committee that the continued use of rock salt is by far the best V STANDING RIB ROAST Gold Sea! RUMp RQAST T AJi 4 ? procedure and is in the best public interest means a direct annual savings to Substantiating the Detroit enthe publie of an estimated gineers emphasis on traffic safety in winter is the alarming fact This impressive finding is that more than 1,700 persons are based on results of a recent au- killed and 174,000 injured on thoritative survey in New York snowy and icy streets each year. Furthermore, this situation is City and includes the losses involved when winter storms delay drastically affecting the cost of passenger .raffit, ',rukn Ship- auto insurance premiums which ments, refuse collection, fire pro- last year climbed to the fantastic tection, medical service, and figure of 6 billion 800 million dollars, a record increase of 509 utility repairs. In addition, there is the tre- mil'ion from the preceding year. Results are dramatically shown mendous toll of injuries and in New York City records. In the property damage resulting from period from 1930 to winter accidents, costing the nation another estimated one bil- 1936, before salt was used, there was a yearly toll of 21 deaths and lion dollars annually. personal injuries attributed Safety salt is an economical 1,635 one poupd to skidding accidents. In a ten-yeand efficient period after New Yrfrk City of salt will melt 46 pounds of employed salt, the annual averice at 36 degrees Fahrenheit deaths and 736 today its the accepted method of ager fell to nine the greater numdespite combatting winter hazards. More injuries than 2,000,000 tons were used ber of ears and drivers. The importance of ica and last winter alone to protect pe- snow control nationally is indidestrians and passengers. reveal Salt is the most efficient and cated by statistics whichdrive to persons most economical method of ice that 30,000,000 two-thirthe nation's control, as proven by repeated work, is moved ofmotor trucks, by scientific tests. Previously it was freight as and farmers depend on trucks to thought that abrasives such sand and cinders offered a supe- transport 80 per cent of all agrifrom farms rior alternative and better trac- cultural commodities tion for cars, trucks and buses. to initial markets. In addition, when shoppers But modern methods call for 100 per cent use of safety salt find it very difficult to get to 'which penetrates the ice, bores and from the stores, the sale of down to the road surface with a merchandise drops about 60 per corkscrew action, and then un- eent In a city of 2,000,000, this dercuts the frozen mass with loss amounts to approximately brine which melta'the bond be- - $760,000 per day. Added td other tween ice and pavement. . losses resulting from storm deDetroit, long one ef the leaders lays, total losses incurred amount ice field of and pioneers in the to 88 million dollars a year and snow control, has made sev- whereas the cost of snow removal the eral exhaustive studies with and ice control is Only $875,000 following conclusion stated by or about 1 per cent-ithe Engineering Society of Da- - annually, 0. six-ye- ar ar de-ic- er There's a Hat for You 49c Gold Seal mlrnmim Ice I ne POT ROAST V .V ib. S1 .29 Triple- - K Ib. 19c BEEF LIVER Ib. f blood sample to laboratory nurso. Stavia Vardol give For plucky Stevie Vardol, 10, life much of the time is just an unhappy succession tt giving samples of his body to science But Stevie, who would rather be swimming and roller skat-n- g in Minneapolis (if he only could) than spending endless hours in the Childrens Rhou-mat- ic Clinic of the University of Minnesota Medical School, doesn't feel sorry for himself. He knows he is doing a job that must be done: that the doctors appraisal of the tissue samples from his swollen knees, specimens of knee-joifluid, and of his blood may in time prevent m other children the affliction that befell him three painful nt years BEEF RIB BOIL ago. Stevie has juvenile rheumatoid arthritis m the knees, hands, wrists. Throughout the nation, anor their other 30,000 Stevies small sisters also suffer each year from this excruciating disease. With March of Dimes funds, The National Foundation (which made possible development of the Salk polio vaccine) is today supporting the University of Minnesotas Children's Rheumatism Clinic with a research grant. Other arthritis research projects are under way at the Rockefeller Institute, at New York University, the University of Buffalo and at other famed scientific institutions, all financed by the March of Dimes. Additionally, The National Foundation has established arthritis study centers at Columbia University, the University of Rochester (N. Y.), the University of Texas at Dallas and the University of California at San Francisco. The doctors confidently tell Stevie - they will solve the enigma of rheumatoid arthritis m time, and find a preventive, given enough support. But they dont delude this valiant little boy or his puzzled father and mother who ask, despairingly, Why should this happen to us, to Stevie? The medical scientists look him squarely in the eye and say, "We just cant promise well make you well again. But then again, perhaps eventually we will. Stevies stout answer is to roll up his sleeve for another ten cc's of his blood (which contains an abnormal protein, a mark of his disease); or to pull up his tiouser kg to give up another specimen of lubricating fluid from his knee In the laboratory, Stevies blood is compared painstakingly to normal blood in the incessant search for an answer to what is wrong with Stevie and with the other 30,000 children. Perhaps what is wrong is an abnormal development of antibodies. Antibodies are the substance that combat bacteria. Then, samples of the connective tissue around his knees are studied and photographed under the giant electron microscope and compared to normal tissue. Stevie doesnt cry although his doctors say that the pain he suffers at times beggars description. He is not a guinea pig in the full medical sense of the term. But the resolute and uncomplaining bearing of this young gentleman of only 10 is evidence that he knows he is a volunteer of the fight against the nations No. 1 Cnp-pl- cr arthritis which, in one or another form, strikes at 11 million Americans GROUND BEEF 2 lbs. 85c " V ",l MEDIUM NtfPT WISCONSIN M lONO HOR- N- - J Ib. 69c CHEESE Delicious APPLES 2 lbs. 25c POTATOES 'jQ ibs. 33 Rd miss WASHINGTON BAKERY lb- - May,rcsh OLEO Applan PIZZA PIE MAYFRISH NO. 303 29 29' Woy 7 cans APPLE SAUCE $1 O French Lemon Cake Rolls O Old Fashioned Bread 4Loof Cluster NO. TOMATO j 11 Dqte Nut Bread cans Gal. 49c 5 cans $1.00 39 RedArrow 11 FIG BARS TOMATO Vi Donald Duck Frozen ORANGE JUICE 24 OUNCE LI OR SHERBET 1 SOUP SYRUP 29' special 29' doz. Butterflake Rolls ICED MILK CAMPBELL'S 29' 79' umber oc'1 M " 3 $1 jUlCE"",!"' " PINEAPPLE JUICE 1,1 1 PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUI- Iflj A Hats have been important to men since earliest times when barefoot primitives insisted on adequate headcovering. 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