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Show V THE Shoolirai A shooting spree 1 assailants. Migrant Camp in Idaho, became the county's problem. Chief Deputy Curtis Larsen said he was informed that Arosco had to be removed from the hospital Tuesday by . R & R Hardware in Tremonton this week unveiled a new 60 ft. x 26 ft. addition to their store. The addition provides a new entry way from Second West. Housed in the addition is R & R's many lines of western and sports clothing. The new room also allows the store to provide more display of their many lines of boots and footwear. 1 p.m. Larsen approached county commissioners for permission to move the gunshot victim to a county nursing home rather than continue to pay expensive hospital costs. As an illegal alien, Arosco will be turned over to the U. S. Immigration Service as "soon as possible" for deportation to Mexico. Safety was the primary concern of the commissioners. "If he is dangerous in any way, shape or form... or would pose a threat to those around him. ..then I'm concerned, "Commissioner Don Chase said. Cont. from page 1 $25 per year per telephone bill customer." (See letter to the editor on Page 2.) Redding said the complaint was issued because "we had a hell of a lot of complaints from people out there." He cited incidents where residents alleged they were forced off the road to avoid a collision with Brother's plane. In a June newsletter, Brothers claimed he had permission from the county commission to use county roads to land and take off on. In a lettef written June 28 by Commissioner Don Chase, Brothers was told: "We have no record of ever receiving a request from you for such usage and want you to be advised that any such request would be denied should one be made." "Should you continue to use public of roads for the landing and take-of- f aircraft, appropriate criminal action will be taken against you," the letter concluded. Sheriff Redding said he sent two deputies to Grouse Creek to observe Brothers. The pair allegedly have movie film of Brothers' plane taking off and landing on a county road. The criminal summons was served on Brothers in a Brigham City attorney's office a short time after he met with Commissioner Don Chase. The sheriff said he was to have met with Chase and Brothers in his office. Several times before the meeting, he said he informed the commissioner he would use the meeting as ail opportun Larsen said the man shouldn't pose a threat because the bullet lodged near his spine could paralyze him if he ity to serve the summons on Brothers. Brothers met with Commissioner Chase but talked with Redding on the phone and was informed of the summons awaiting him by the sheriff. In 1933 Aldo Leopold became America's first professor of game management, at the University of Wisconsin, and published the textbook, "Game Man- In his October newsletter, the author noted that "Before the meeting, Don Chase sat Art Brothers down and said that as an honorable man, he did not want to take Brothers over to meet the sheriff. It appeared the sheriff was going to use the meeting only to serve a criminal complaint on the telephone j Redding noted this week that a check with the Federal Aeronautics Administration produced a question as to whether Brothers has a legal pilot's,, license. :jl Two of the three men charged with shooting Arosco and murdering a have companion in the shoot-ou- t attorneys. Preliminary hearing in the case has been set later in October. In other county commission action, County Commissioner Chase said he would like information on the number of cases handled by county justices of the peace before voting on a requested pay increase for them. Local JP's requested an increase last week which would take them from $3.50 a case to $5. Commissioner Chase was absent when the request was made. Commissioners Ted Burt and Reed Nielsen said they looked favorably on the request. In another note, Commissioner Burt, who sits as a member of the Great Salt Lake Commission, said proposals to build upstream dams to ease the lake's growth problem, aren't as feasible as he thought. Burt expressed his opinion last week that the dams would be a better solution than pumping water out of the court-appoint- management creed: Game is a crop, which Nature will grow and grow abundantly, provided only we furnish the seed and a suitable environment." snnt.,iMi Jewelry found at Classic Shop. Identify and pay 4 for ad 257-341- mm COME IN AND SEE HOW MUCH 1 1 YUR I OLD TT.V. IS WORTH Call for an appointment today to take advantage of this promotion i i v I but $gC0 Purcha$e of I j(fj j vuM jnttcnyttHt iovuU mm Fire Dept. 25 Yrs. Many other Modols and stylos to choose from MM 40 North Trcsnont 5 She cited a need for wider participation and said CAP isn't understood very well by the public. "We've found that poor people are particularly apathetic to communicate with elected officials," she noted. "...We hope to teach them some skills in communication." She is presently working with a self-hel- p group in Tremonton to velop leadership" which can help other poor people in the area. STOP government control of private property. Vote BRADBURY for County Commissioner. AMERICAN PARTY. mmM ., Page lake into the desert. But Burt said Tuesday, government officials have tightened up on the approvals necessary to construct earthen dams, since the Teton Dam disaster, and it could take "twenty years" to get approval. Even though they don't like the idea, the lake commission, he said.is looking again at the pumping proposal. Another proposal which would also directly affect Box Elder County is to divert more of the Bear River into the bird refuge to increase marshlands. Burt seemed to indicate that upstream dams are not dead yet, as a possibility, saying both pumping and the dams are being pursued. Mrs. Helen Roth, Community Action Agency, reported to county commissioners on efforts to aid the poor in Box Elder County. She thanked commissioners for the use of an. office at the county fairgrounds, Mrs. Roth said the office will be used to house a "clothing bank" for the poor. agement." Leopold's game company." 7, 1976, Victim 'fiflowd moves. After conferring with nursing home officials at Pioneer in Brigham City, commissioners agreed to keep the man until he could be turned over to Immigration. Larsen said he hopes since Arosco is an alien that the immigration service will pick up the bill for hospital and nursing home costs. But the county will pay the tab for prosecuting and defending Arosco's in Tremonton which ended with one death and a second man wounded could end up costing Box Elder County taxpayers a bundle. Victor Arosco has been in the McKay-De- e Hospital in Ogden ever since he was wounded in the shooting which occurred in the Bomb Shelter Cafe in Tremonton. Arosco has a bullet in the head lodged near the spinal cord, which doctors have been unsuccessful in removing. Tuesday, Arosco, an illegal alien who had been living at the Franklin TIMES, October LEADER-GARLAN- Trt monton ,Ufeh phone 257-559- 0 ! |