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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta. Utah, Thurs, May 6. 1954 Pfc Wallace Perkins and his wife, Arlene Perkins, arrived home Sunday with a 12-day leave. They are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lou Perkins and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Losee, and will return to Fort Bliss, Texas on May 15. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Steele and Mrs. Bonnie Maxfield spent the weekend in Garland, Utah, with Mr. and Mrs. Neil Heyborne and sons, who recently moved from Delta there, where Mr. Heyborne is manager of the Tri-State yard. look ct these features: Elastic back Easy-action map fasteners on side 2 front pockets Back pocket Adjustable Adjust-able suspenders Proper leg length Correct Cor-rect fit across thighs Bar tacked at strain points Fly cutout (sixes 3 and up) Son-fcrized Son-fcrized materials maximum shrinkage 1 Sizes 1 to G Stripes $1.49 All Other Colors 1.69 OUR COMPLETE LINE FHM MM FOR GRADUATION I L3 DISCOUNT Come Early For Best Choice Spike "MUSICAL INSANITIES" To Appear in Cedar City THURSDAY, MAY 27 At CSU Fieldhouse Surpasses Horace Heidt Show Clip Coupon and Mail To KIWANIS CLUB, BOX 247, CEDAR CITY. UTAH Please send At (Uairlint Preferred price) Federal Tax Included) Enclosed is check or money Return Tickets To: Van And Pave I.otk Horns j At Noon Wednesday there was a loud crash when Van Warnick, and car going east on 3rd North ! ran into the side of the car driven ! by David Hofhiens, headed north on first West. No bones were broken, but the i Warnick car had a crumpled fen-Uer fen-Uer and the Hofhiens car doesn't j look so good on one side. Deseret Weather Station reports .73 Inches ol moisture moist-ure in the recent storms. atti'ear kiddies' bib overall! by BLUE BELL r.tVarryyrje.y-ga Jones (No. of Tickets) S1.83 2.40 3.63 order for S Lads Win Honor Vith Training As Boy Scouts Gerald C. Woodbury and Monte James Robinson, of Troop 9'J, San-taijuin San-taijuin were among those who received re-ceived awards at the recent Utah National Parks Council annual fellowship meeting and banquet held In East Provo Stake House. They were awarded certificates of merit presented by the National Court of Honor for helping to save life without placing his own life in Jeopardy. Gerald C. Woodbury 15, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Don C. Woodbury, Wood-bury, former Deltans now living at Provo, where Mr. Woodbury is employed with Geneva Steel. Monte James Robinson, age 15 is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Robinson, Rob-inson, of Tooele, and Mr. Robinson Is a machinst at Dugway. Both boys were 14 years old at the time the Incident occurred that merited them the award. An account of the Incident as witnessed witness-ed by Mrs. Don Woodbury follows: 'On the morning of June 5, 1053 about eleven o'clock or therea bouts, the accident occured. The Jack Robinsons live a block and a half away. When the car Garth Robinson was driving gained speed like the wind, I heard the car zip by as I came to my back porch. "It crashed through a barbed wire fence and Into an orchard. We thought it was breaking the trees down, but It was the fence posts snapping off. "When we arrived at the scene a block down the road the other two boys, Monte and Douglas, the two younger of the three brothers, were streaming for help for their brother. He was wrapped up In the six strands of barbed wire, bleeding and unconscious. "At a glance we sensed and knew he was badly hurt. I went for his mother, a doctor and an ambulance. . "While 1 was gone, Grant Johnson John-son and Don Woodbury disentangled disentang-led him from the wire. My husband Don, knew that the boy needed help, fur he ceased to breathe. So he asked these boys for their Boy Scout training. He said 'He needs artificial respiration res-piration now, or he will die,' The boys tried the old method first, then decided it was too diffcult, so they tried the new. Jerry Woodbury, Wood-bury, our son straddled Garth and then Monte, shocked and hurt as he was, pulled at his arms as Jerry pushed. 'When Jerry became tired and I didn't seem to have enough weight his dad, who had observed enough then to learn the method, relieved him. Garth kept swallowing bis ton- Your Doctor Si ays Tht follo,ng is on of m ittiti of artklet written by membert ol the Utah State Medical Auociation and f-'ublnhed in cooperation with your o(al newspaper. Then articles art scheduled to appear ttry other ueek throughout the year in an effort to btttet acquaint you uith problem of health, and dengned to improve the t ell-being of the people of Utah. Family Physician The 1950 American Medical Association As-sociation directory list 150,417 doctors in active private practice. Of these, C4.891 are full time specialists spe-cialists and 95,528 are in general practice with 22,976 out of this last irroup in general practice but iriv-inj? iriv-inj? special attention to one field of practice. Thus from actual numbers, about two-thirds of all practicing physicians physi-cians do not limit themselves to one definite field and are general practitioners. The American Academy of General Gen-eral Tractice was organized in June 1947. It has rapidly become the official spokesman, throughout or-Raniied or-Raniied medicine, for all general practitioners. It defines a general practitioner as a doctor of medicine who des not limit his practice to one field of medicine or surgery. In general about 15 to 25 percent of illnesses require medical specialists special-ists and hospitalization. The remaining re-maining 75 to 85 percent can well and very satisfactorily be handled by the general practitioner and. in a frrcat majoriV of cases, this latter lat-ter group can be adequately cared for in the office of the general practitioner or in the home of the patient. When specialist care is needed is best determined by the general practitioner who is. or should be, in charge of the patient The patient needs the general fractitioner to observe and advise im. to guard his interests at all times, to promote his health and welfare, to examine him rtxularly. to manage his illnesses, to recommend recom-mend special care for him when necessary, to obtain consultation and specialty service when indicated, indi-cated, to preven his illnesses and to preserve his good health. In spite of the rapid social, technical and scientific advances la health irt provemerts. general practitioners still and will continue con-tinue to do 75 percent of the total pediatric care, 75 percent or rrv-re of the obstetric care and 50 perctr.t or more of the surgical care. Gen Delta Square Dance Jamboree Sponsored by the Bo ail Boutl FIRST VARD RECREATION CENTER SATURDAY, MAY 29, 1954 8:00 12:00 p.m. 1. GRAND MARCH 2. IF YOU KNEW SUSIE Newell Day, Fillmore 3. YUCAIPI TWISTER John Eradshaw, Richfield 4. VENUS AND MARS Glen Rawlinson, Delta 5. JAMB A LAY A SQUARE Ivan Lund, Gunnison 6. SHANTY IN OLD SHANTY TOWN .... Bill Baker, St. George 7. GUEST CALLER 8. HURRY, HURRY, HURRY .... Dorothy Bradshaw, Richfield Ten minute break for Refreshments and Specialties EXTRA, CIjOWWORM Round Dance Newell Day, Fillmore 9. OKLAHOMA HILLS Charles Williams, Kanosh 10. END OF THE WORLD .. John Bigler, Indianola 11. SUNFLOWER SQUARE A. L Brady, Fairview 12. CALLER'S CHOICE Drew Whitney, Ogden 13. WHEN YOU'RE SMILING Cloy Hamelwright, Price 14. ALABAMA JUBILEE Newell Day, Fillmore Ten minute break for Refreshments and Specialties 15. TOOT, TOOT, TOOTSIE Rex Christensen, Richfield 1G. WHEN YOU WORE A TULIP Callers' Due Golden Lambert and Cloy Hamelwright, Price 17. OLD FASHIONED GIRL Golden Lambert, Price 18. GUEST CALLER 19. CALLER'S CHOICE La Mont Bennett, Cedar City 20. TOO OLD TO CUT THE MUSTARD Newell Day, Fillmore EXTRA DANCE 1. CHINA TOWN 2. CALIFORNIA HERE I COME 3. DOWN SOUTH MASTERS OF CEREMONIES Newell Day Dr. M. E. Bird Registration of Square Dancers and Callers In First Ward Recreation Hall at 7:00 p.m. Dance Each Wednesday Night With BOOTS AND BOWS Newell Day, Caller gue, and his nose was so swollen he couldn't breathe through it, so Jerry would reach in his mouth and disengage his tongue from his throat. This was hard to do, as he would set his teeth down on Jerry's finger, so we finally found a stick and put between his teeth to hold his jaws open. "The ambulance finally arrived but no doctor or any f.rst aid equipment equip-ment was with it. When they had him breathing steadily they put him in the ambulance. It was so pathetic, but these boys had kept him from dying there. His head injuries were so bad that he died when he reached a Salt Lake Hospital. Hos-pital. "Those Scouting rules and what eral practitioners are carrying, by far. the greatest load In psychiatry and probably also in the fields of gynecology, dermatology and urology. uro-logy. In the broad and basic area of internal medicine, despite the fact that there are more than 12,500 full specialists In this field, no one would seriously dispute that general gen-eral practitioners carry responsibility responsi-bility for most diagnosis and treatment, treat-ment, or that in certain parts of the country, particularly rural, they are virtually 100 percent responsible. responsi-ble. According to the 1950 census. S6.2 percent of the entire population popula-tion of the United States live in places where such conditions prevail. pre-vail. The physician-patient relationship relation-ship is so fundamental to health that everyone should have a personal per-sonal physician. Every physician, Including general gen-eral practitioners, should have access ac-cess to proper facilities and equipment equip-ment Including affiliation with a hospital. Success in the practice of medicine medi-cine is on the basis of competence. The prodigious advances in medicine medi-cine have nut a terrific load on the general practitioner, but he low mortality rates all over the country prove that the general practitioner is Liking that load well. Today's general practitioner is a doctor with a wide variety of experience ex-perience and skills. He must be conversant with countless phases of his patient's problems, and never-ending in his own quest for greater knowledge and experience. His day is never done without its share of reading and reviewing, of study and learning. He must know en whom to call for help on problems his own experience ex-perience does not cover in sufficient suffi-cient depth, to permit hira to render ren-der sound advice to his patient He must have a basic knowledge of medicine in all its branches plus some knowledge of research. He must never let up in his drive to keep posted on new ideas, new ap- rrii..-he tr eiA nrr-iMm rpw an.t fresh slants to medical public re lations and the countless other facets of general practice th.it are constantly coming up and charging. charg-ing. His interest must never be limited. 4 pjtpmI rirj,-t".-npr n-nt h a good team man. because it takes good reamworis to do gwa medicine. medi-cine. This includes teamwork with his fellow gereral practitioner, teamwork with the srwial'st. teamwork team-work with the hoa:tal adrinistra- tamwork with all of h's cat:ert. For obviouslr. if ceneral practice is a eorrpos'te of eTervtfnrg n medicine, it is also a composite of all the peop'e in med cire. r. Pentathlon Goes On Today The winners of the Jr. Pentathlon, Pentath-lon, in both Sr. and Jr. Divisions are taking part In the Divisional meet, held in Beaver, May 5: The boys from here that are rrrkinit O rs T orrx Osihlartftf is inn 01 gum ni? j iv of the Jr. division; Bernell Sharp and Merrill Maxfield. Eddie Lister, winner of the Sr. division; Gary Dutson and Larry I Bradfield. . This Pentathlon is sponsored by the Deseret News, and the winners of the divisional meet will go to Salt Lake City later in May where they will participate in the finals. they had learned proved that this type of training could be invaluable inval-uable to them. With this knowledge know-ledge they had gained confidence that they could save a life if it were posible, through artifical respiration. "If Jerry our son never learned another thing in Scouting, this a-lone a-lone would be worth his being a Scout." FOR BETTER RESULTS ADVERTISE IN THE CHRONICLE Call Phone 3211 DELTA PLUMBING SERVICE n F Hot Water Heaters WcFtinghouse Hot Water Heaters White Hot Water Heaters GE Dish Washers Westinghouse Dish Washers Garbaae Disposals Ail Makes Fairbanks- Morse Pumps nnrk's Pumps Electric Ranges blowers ir Conditioners Srrinkler Systems Plasty Pipe- All Sizes No Rust- No Freeze ?:a Trade-in Value On New Appliances Coll For Prices Ani Iry "-v- Complete DELTA PLUMBING SERVICE Phone 3211 lack Mclone Delta Relay Teams Break State Record At UHSAA Relays, In Provo Meet Monday, May 3. in Provo, the Utah High School Activities Assn. Interscholastic Relay Carnival was held, for both Cl3ss A and the B schools. Three Delta relay teams really did a swell job, and if points were kept, Delta would have "been the top school. There were 10 records broken in the days' event with 7 of them be ing in the A school class, and three in the B. Millard broke two of their old records, Utah High School Medley, and Shuttle relay. Delta broke the Half Mile Relay, in a time of 1:34.0 On the Half Mile relay were Reggie Pearson, Max Black, Gene Vest and Carl Dee Bennett. Delta also won the Mile relay, which consisted of Carl WinGeld, Max Black, Reggie Pearson, and Larry Nielson. Besides these first places the Rabbits took 3 second places, and one tie for second place. On some of the second places, Delta and another school were tied, and Delta lost by decision, or flip. So it looks as if Delta really showed up In this meet, even if the two Salt Lake papers don't think so. MOTHER'S DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS New Shipments TABLE LAMPS FLOOR LAMPS PLATFORM ROCKERS PICTURES MIRRORS WHAT-NOT SHELVES -Select Her Gift Today From - Gift Wrapping- Free Delivery C D E LTfl'S N ryctpBCTfnEfiT sTOBC J' pecmls 1 his Week at . Ashby s "H" FARMALL- Needs a little work. Save by fixing it Yourself : $695 Good Condition 50-T McCormick BALER Completely reconditioned 845 Mod 76 New Holland BALER See it before you buy 895 50-W McCormick Wire Tie BALER, Excellent cond. .. 1545 '52 Plymouth 2 Overdrive TD-6 Crawler Tractor, with Hydraulic system 2600 Keep West Millsrd Dollars En West Millard Trade With the Firms In West Millard RESULTS Interscholastic Relay - Richfield. Millard, Cyprus and Beaver. 8:-16.4. 8:-16.4. Quarter Mile Relay-Millard, Del ta 45:5. Mile Relay-Delta, Wasatch, Lin-ocln, Lin-ocln, Millard. 3:34.0. Sprint Medley- Beaver, Delta, Millard. 1:09.8. Utah High School Medley- Millard, Mill-ard, Richfield, Murray, Beaver. (New record 3:44.3.) .National High School Federation Federat-ion Medley-Lincoln, Delta, Richfield,, Rich-field,, Murray. Half Mile Relay-Delta, Beaver, American Fork, Lincoln New record 1:34.0.) Shuttle Relay- Millard, Beaver, and Delta tied for second, Amer ican Fork. (New record 42:8.) Begional At Hurricane The Regional Track meet will be held in Hurricane this Friday. The winners of this meet will enter en-ter the state meet. First and second sec-ond place winners get their way paid, but third place winners will i have to pay their own way. This I really should be a good ;neet 895 door 995 |