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Show THTRSDAr, JULY LEHI FREE PRESS, I.FHT. UTAH News About Folks You Know... Mrs. Julia Carlton is visiting in, Mr. ana Mrs. Charles at the bent of !! tn?r, and David Broad- Washington, home of her erandson. Mr. and bent of Sa't Lake City, visited at the Aaron Allred home, Satur Mrs. Grant Haws and children. day Mrs. Bernard Walker and childMrs. L;i May Miller of Salt ren of Orem, visited here last Tuesday, at the home of Mrs. Lake City. as a holiday visitor Walkers mother, Mrs. Shirlef here at the home of her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mangum. Powell. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Tucker and Mr. and Mrs. Glade Russon children, j; lined the group for an (Rhonda Price) and Mr. and Mrs. outing in American Fork canyon, Iao Woffinden (Donna Russon) July 4. to Yellowstone Park motored Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moore and where they enjoyed the holiday week-enbaby son, Kenneth, of . Salt Lake City, were overnight visitors, SunMr. and Mrs. James Beverley day and Monday, with Mrs. in Preston, Alberta Simpson, mother of Mrs. spont last we?k-en- d Idaho, visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Moore, and her grandfather, Don C. Loveridgo. Mr. and Mrs. Don Jack Hurt. Simpson ami family joined the Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Bailey of group for an outing to Pleasant Logan, spent Sunday evening here Grove. with Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Allred, CARD OF THANKS close friends while in Arizona. We wish to express our heartMr. and Mrs. Francis Gahr and felt thanks and gratitude to our five children of Dickinson, North many friends, relatives and neighDakota, are visiting here at the bors who were so thoughtful and home of Mr. Bahr's brother, Mr. kind during the illness and passing of our beloved husband and father and Mrs. William Bahr. Andrew Fjeld. Mrs. Andrew Fjeld and family. Bishop and Mrs. John A. Weston of Laketown, visited here for the Miss Alaina Gardner, daughter celebration at the home of Mr. Weston's daughter, Mr. and Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Gardner of Vernal, spent two weeks here with Russell Innes and family. her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dale Anderson and daugh- Angus Gardner, and the B. H. ter, Rosalie, spent several days Curtis family. Her parents and last week visiting with Mrs. An- brother, Robbie, joined the family derson's mother, Mrs. Mathalida group for the celebration. Phillips. They also visited with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Price of Bishop and Mrs. Hyrum A. Anderson, and other relatives and Southgate, California, visited here the past month at the home of friends. Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Fox. Mr, Georgia, Greg and Vicki Mc- Price is a cousin to Mr. Fox. The Millan were here from Salt Lake group enjoyed several canyon visit with parties. City for a week-en- d their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Clara Clover and son Virgil H. Peterson. Their mother, Mrs. Richard McMillan, rejoined Richard, were Spanish Fork visitors, July 4, at the Don R. Coombs them for the return. home. It was the birthday of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Karren ac- Michael Coombs, now 14. Motor James Beverley to ing through the canyon circle companied Franklin, Idaho, Tuesday, for route, they stopped in Morgan at specialized treatment. Mr. Bever- the home of Mrs. Zina Sherwood. ly is suffering from a foot Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Cox and son, David, of Provo, visited here Mrs. Nina Herron is visiting in briefly on July 4, with Mr. and Arvil Stone," parents of Mrs. Ibapah, Utah, with her sisters, Mrs. and Mrs. Cox. The little boy, now four Mrs. Chloe Parrish Blanche West. Ibapah is her years old, is hospitalized for a throat infection. former home. Broad-Issaqua- h. i FAHY DURFEE HOME AFTER HEART ATTACK Friends of Fahy Durfee, well known former Lehi resident, will be pleased to know that he is now able to walk about, following a serious heart attack. He suffered the attack while employed in Arizona and was taken to the Roosevelt hospital for treatment He was later transferred to the LDS hospital in Salt Lake City. The Durfees are now living in Randlett Mrs. Durfee was employed as a school teacher during the past season. d. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Peet enjoyed READ THE the company of their granddaughter, Miss Patricia Pack of Lindon, who here. spent Lehi ADS- - -- IT PAYS: days Roundup Jimmy and Larry Gregerson of Centerfield, spent last week here with their aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Ashley Nelson. Mrs. Nelson's mother, Mrs. Welcome Jensen and son Billie, of Mayf ield, were here during the celebration. Highlight of their visit was a family dinner at the home of Mrs. Philip Black, also a daughter of Mrs. Jensen, last Tuesday Vbuf? --Thoughts CON1R0U SOUR ACTIONS AND OU Jl SHOULD CONTROLS vbuR M THOUGHTS John Beck, first ow.ier of Saratoga Resort and pioneer of the poultry industry in Utah, built a chicken hatchery at the site and used the running hot water from the springs to heat his incubators. 1WW D Bale Elevator The Fastest and Easiest Way To Handle Bales Complete The weight of this revolutionary new type elevator, Including the motor, is only approximately 115 pounds. Auto Repair Work Official Inspection CLEAR-FIEL- Station MOBILE mm Auto Service why SWOON in "J June?.., Front end alignment and wheel balancing. Motor tune op and complete Automotive Repairs Exxpert body and fender work and painting. GOOD Year tires and batteries Highest prices allowed for your old battery Lawn mowers sharpened and repaired - PHONE AM. FORK FREE PICKUP A DELIVERY Q Q Q Q Q Q milk industry is important. And just as important is the price you pay for milk. m Pete Utah's Milk Study Committee was created during the first ''milk price truce" requested by Governor Lee to find a way to protect farmers and you. They have not succeeded as evidenced by conclusions presented June 17, FOR EXAMPLE: The committee concluded that milk sold in stores in paper cartons should be "pegged" at a quart but that milk sold in glass bottles "should be sold at a price per quart substantially less than that sold in paper cartons" in other words, the glass bottle distributors were left free to lower the price of milk as they see fit. Safeway believes that distributors should be free to give you the lowest possible price on milk. But the committee has left the price free in one instance and fixed it in another. This is discrimination and will cost you money. The evidence before the committee does not justify the committee's actions. What will protect dairy farmers? 20-cen- ts Safeway presented facts to the committee showing the low cost of packaging milk in paper (technically, "fiber") cartons. Safeway presented its full cost and profit figures to the committee and requested similar figures from other bottlers and retailers be made available and public for comparison. This request was " not granted. With no comparative cost figures on "fiber" versus glass available in Utah, Safeway gave the committee data from official audits made by the Bureau of Milk Control, Department of Agriculture, State of California. FIGURES SHOW: Safeway believes that to insure a good, steady supply of have fair prices and those fair prices milk, dairy farmers must must be constant. That's why, it is Safeway's policy (a policy Safeway has never violated) to pay top market prices for milk plus a bonus for quality. Safeway believes that this is in the public interest because when the price farmers get for milk is protected, bottlers and retailers cannot pass the costs of competitive pricing back to the farmer. Safeway presented witnesses to the Milk Study Committee-witnes- ses who testified from experience that where the price paid farmers for milk is protected, price wars do not occur. For when bottlers and retailers cannot pass the costs of com petitive pricing back to the farmers, and die price you pay for milk is not fixed, bottlers and retailers can compete for your business by increasing efficiency and passing the savings in costs on to you. Thus the dairy industry is kept strong and healthy and you get milk at the lowest possible price. ' However the Milk Study Committee made no recommendation to protect the price dairy farmers get for milk. of six milk plants audited by the Supervising Auditor of the Bureau in the San Francisco bay area, the cost of milk in glass exceeded the cost in fiber cartons. 1. In each SAFEWA Y works daily with 2 Despite such evidence, the committee has sought to "fix" the a quart and to store price of milk in paper cartons at permit a free market at prices "substantially less" than the figure for milk sold in glass bottles. for itself In increased Says of Utah's consumers may have to pay txtra for milk to protect a small group of middlemen. Is this a way for you to get milk at the lowest possible price? 885 Safeway Utah employees received $3,541876.37 ia wages aad salaries in 1954. 171 Utahns owa 16,863 shares of stock in Safeway Stores. Safeway purchased the following Utah products ia 1954. Purchases O.I.'s unique reM. aeration system Malt in savings. Five-ye- ar 04 Plus-Val- Pre- lection Plan. Terms to suit yew budget. Packaged AIR CONDITIONING GENERAL ELECTRIC American Fork Phone 607 Miry tor Resale or $ 4,854,630 422.564 $ 1,929,904 68,042 $ 6,784,534 490,606 509 ,262 376,855 886.117 1,333.817 73.637 1,652,945 620,198 1,398.813 42,698 1,050.907 245,709 474,151 312,954 1,482,043 2,732.630 116335 2,703.852 865.907 1.186,453 1,034,343 2,004,986 2.196,799 Safeway does not believe it will. This unjustified fixing of presumably to protect special interests smacks of what has happened in other states where price fixing bureaucracies have been authorized by law. the price of milk And if the price of store milk, alone, is fixed at only per quart too high, it can cost the people of Utah $450,000 a year. That $450,000 could by a lot of additional milk from Utah's Use Outside of Utah Fruit (fresh, canned, frozen) Vegetables (fresh and "need) Fruit & Vegetable Jukes Dairy Products Egcjs 712302 Sugar (beet) Bread & Sweet Goods 721,389 522,943 1,714,718 Other ProckKts Will This Fixing of the Price You Pay for Milk Protect Utah's Dairy Farmers Or You? dairy farmers. GUHTHE'RS livestock and Meat Products Total Purchase af Wo Peodett Purchase for Resale er Use to Utah Flow Quick and eosy liutollatlon. end for thousands of Utahas In fifteen plants audited by an Area Auditor in five other areas, the cost of milk in glass exceeded the cost in fiber cartons in nine of the plants, and in the remaining plants the difference in cost was NEGLIGIBLE. This means that 98 FREE SURVEY. Zufelt Auto Repair Service d. Why? The committee has blandly admitted its action is designed to protect the glass bottle distributors from the competition of paper cartons. Presumably to take the "sting" out of its decision, the committee pointed out that milk sold in glass bottles accounts for only 2 of total volume in Utah. This, makes the decision even more unjustified. believes, Safeway And why lose sales every sum. mer? O-Air Conditioning Phoni for son. J. R. Price, radio operator in the U. S. Navy, who called from Formosa. More unusual still, J. R. announced that he was actually calling on Wednesday and that it was 9:30 a. m. Overseas since April, he is J. R. PRICE TELEPHONES aboard the USS Eldorado, and is FROM FORMOSA An unusual alarm clock awaken- doing welL He expects to return ed Mrs. Roger Price at 6 a. m. to San Diego in August He The telephone call greatly enjoys the news of home Tuesday. which aroused her came from her in the Lehi Free Press, he said. BLAINE KARREN FAMILY HERE FROM LOS ANGELES Here for the fishing season, Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Karren and sons, Terry, Ronald, Jim and Billy, are visiting at the home of Mr. Kar-ren- 's mother, Mr. and Mrs. James Beverley. They plan to return home this week-enJoining in a family party in their honor were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Beverley Earth with her thousand voices and children; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Samuel Coleridge Greenwood, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson praises God. mm parts Abiifi TOTALS WHY 1W5 Greenwood, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Crump, Ogden, and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Robinson and children, of Pleasant Grove The group met in Provo canyon. 20-cen- ts Fred Nakagawa, Owner, Manager PHONE 800 ,W CPU DONALD STONE TAKKES PLANE HOPS WITH CHORAL CROUP "Breakfast in Guam, dinner in Iwo Jimo, supper in Okinawa and bed in Japan, writes CpL Donald Si one, who is touring with an Air Frce singing group, the "Choral-iers.- " are Musical programs presented at each stop. Donald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arvil Stone, is stationed in Korea and serves in an office position. He expects discharge in September. Utah has some 2,000 dairy farmers who produce grade A market milk for Utah's 757,000 consumers (including all the milk Safeway sells). Since milk is essential to health, particularly the health of children, and since there is no substitute for it Utah's THESE the VAL JOHNSON'S TAKE XORTHYVWEST TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Val Johnson and sons, Grant and Martin, spent an eight days' vacation in the Northwest, going from Yellowstone Park through Montana. An interesting experience was the view of the three rivers, Madison, Jefferson and Galliton which converge to form the source of the Missouri. A special celebration is being held there this month, commemorating the 150th anniversary of the discovery of the point by the Lewis and Clark expedition. Motoring 200 miles along the Columbia to Portland, they enjoyed the roses in the city, at their blooming The international rose peak. garden at Portland, one of three in the world, was a highlight. Three large dams were visited, the McNary, Bonneville and the Dalles, which is now under T, SAFEWAY $13,138,405 482,081 $ 7,864,157 IS PUBLISHING $21,00262 THIS STATEMENT Safeway was born in neighboring Idaho. We have a big stako in Utah and a citizen's concern for Utah's well-bein- g. a responsibility to the public, our employees, suppliers, and stockholders to publish the record of our testimony to the Milk Study Committee. Watch for these reports In this newspaper. We believe we have 624 X |