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Show Volunteer Fireman Gets Lots of Thrills' And Fulfills Obligation to Community MURRAY If Farmer Jones has ten eggs, aends them to a hatchery, he'll have six chicks. Half of them will be roosters, be can throw them away. Guy Leney, who la a Salt Lake county volunteer fireman, la also owner of the Poultry man's Hatchery, Hatch-ery, 4775 South State street, and "father" fo Jno.000 chirks In 1M. destroyed a lot of rooster chicks in it3t because they are too tough to eat and ana rooster for tea hens la plenty. In the chicken family, according to Mr. Laney, tha hens and the rooatera come out half and half, with tha rooatere sometimes an the "up" side. A newly hatched chick, he explained. Is worth from I to 11 cents, depending upon tha season and the market. ' Mr. Laney, a volunteer fireman for the past two ysara, la anothsr who fights firaa "for thrills and to '"aMaaMa.Mia aw s Jim help my neighbor." On November 11, 1937. he boarded the county fire truck when It awung out the driveway and ended up In the hoepital a few mlnutea later after a collision with an automobile. automo-bile. He had aeven broken ribs, a skull fracture and cuts and bruises, and spsnt two weeks In tha hoepital. hoe-pital. Last year Mr. Laney ran cloee behind his "running mate," Bob Gerrard, by answsring mora than 200 fire calls. He believes that fighting flrea aa a volunteer has a number of advantagea: 1. "It'a a relief from monotony." 1 Tha volunteer force, besides being fira fighters, are "all good fellows and good friends." 1. Ha fulfills a community obligation. obli-gation. Mr. Laney la a member of the Salt Lake County Fieh and Game aasociatioa and the Jackson Democratic Demo-cratic league. He Uvea at S4S Rpringvlew drive in Murray and has three children Patricia, t; JoAnn, , and Karen, a. HATCHERY OWNER ANSWERS FIRE BELL Guy Laney aayg It's ' community obligation' |