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Show NEW GARBAGE PICKUP SCHEDULE IS ANNOUNCED Miscellaneous bills amounting to $105.19 were aroved for payment at the Wednesday evening ev-ening meeting of the city council. coun-cil. J. S. Noble was aroved a license to operate a meat department depart-ment in connection with Len-daris Len-daris Merc-Representatives Merc-Representatives of the state industrial compensation board will be at the city hall every Thursday and Friday. The new schedule of garbage pick up will be every day except Sunday. Upper Main street to Markham garbage must be set out by not later than 8:15 a.m.; ! Carr Fork, Markham, Freeman. Heglund and Railroad avenue, not later than 10:00 a.m. Any cans set out later than the specified speci-fied times will not be collected until the following day. Please cooperate and help keep Bingham Bing-ham clean. No Sunday collections III BOX ELDER V- ' 0 IB II Vwft X ASPj SUMMIT pAGOm0 I TOOELE 1117 J-f, M 1 WSAKH UINTAH ! Uww' DUCHESNE g JUqB fT CARBON ) I MILLAPD AAOT eMtRY j GRAND I BEAVER piute 9 WAYNE 1 IRON J GARFIELD -Jr I I SAN JUAN WASHINGTON KANE J 3 j The spread of Infantile Paralysis in Utah last year is graphically graph-ically portrayed in the above map. A total of 224 cases for 1945 are listed with the Utah State Department of Health. An addi-tional addi-tional 13 cases not included in the above breakdown were listed as non-resident cases. All but 11 of Utah's 29 counties coun-ties were included in the infantile infan-tile paralysis epidemic which struck the state? last summer, according ac-cording to an official tabulation by the state department of health. A total of 244 cases in which Utah residents were afflicted was noted in the reports from county physicians during the year. In addition, 13 other cases in which non-residents were victims vic-tims of the dreaded disease, also were reported during the year With the 1946 March of Dimes campaign now under way, Senator Sen-ator Ira A. Huggins, of Ogden, Utah chairman of the March of Dimes committee, pointed out that the epidemic last year grew out of only one polio case reported report-ed by January 15th. "To date this year, five new-cases new-cases have been registered in at the polio treatment center in Salt Lake City making it urgent that Utahns give more support to the March of Dimes than ever before," said Mr. Huggins. While 11 counties last year escaped es-caped having an "official" case of polio that is, a case diagnosed diagnos-ed and reported as polio Senator Sena-tor Huggins points out that no section of the state was free of I the disease. While the epidemic j j was centered in the more popu-; I lous areas, the more isolated re- gions also were the scenes of mild epidemics. Counties which were free of 'official" cases were Grand, ! Juab, Kane, Millard, Morgan, Piute, Rich, Daggett, Washing-( Washing-( ton, Wayne, and Beaver. However, Frank S. Emery, j Utah's representative of the Na-tional Na-tional Foundation for Infantile : ; Paralysis, warned that the "of-ficial "of-ficial listing" might not be ac-I ac-I curate on the 1945 total- He ex-1 plained that the after effects of i , mild cases of the disease may j j not make themselves known for j several weeks or months, until ; a depreciation of the use of muscles mus-cles is felt or becomes visible. "Many of these cases will re- quire treatment", said Mr. Em-I Em-I cry. He assured residents that, , through support of the March of Dimes, Utah will continue to 1 take care of its own in the center at Salt Lake City, pointing out i that specialists in polio treatment treat-ment predict that 85 per cent of 1 the patients treated at the center i will leave the hospital with no ; visible after-effects of the disease. |