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Show 1! TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1959 Utah County. Utah DAILY HERALD c Around w In Provo Oct. 28 Six-Coun- and About v i :::r:. ' FR 't 4-14- 47 j' A district civil defense meeting for workers from six counties will be held in the South Courtroom, City and County Building, in Provo, Wednesday, Oct. 28, at 7:30 p.m. JMrSi jD. Orlo Allen, chairman for District C, will conduct the meeting in conjunction with the regular Utah County meeting. Mrs. Allen and Mrs. Victor J. Bird will report on the annual National Conference for Women in Washington, D. C. Directors E. Wt Mower and George! McKinney will report on the Eighth Annual Conference of Civil Defense in Houston, Tex. This will be the annu al meeting for District C and a Jnew chairman will be elected and by laws presented for approvaj. (County Commissioner R. Rulon Nlcholes will speak arjid it is anticipated that Leonard Higgins, st!ate director, will be present, according to Thorit C. jHebertson, Utah County Civil De director, ' fense. hn rnnfined to Utah Valley Hospital Mrc fitculla f"l TYnns Vine Where she is receiving treatment for the serious injuries she received in a fall 'at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Roy Davis. Mrs. Rons recently celebrated net 89tn mrtnaay. " ' Elmo Meecham has returned from Los, Angeles, Calif I, where attended funeral services for Charles M. Keeland. Mr. Kee-- i "he land died of a heart attack while on a hunting tri in Utah witht, Mr. Meecham. Mr, Keeland was the father of former Provo Mrs. Louise Meecham. . . resi-den- ! Mrs. Nesta Lauretzen and Mrs. Spencer of Logan and Mrs. vt Francis Hein of Orem were recent dinner guests at the home of vMr. and Mrs. Bert Hcvey in Orem. Mrs. Glen (Beulah) Farnsworth and her sons, Jerry And Darnell, have returned " to Orem where they will make their home. They ? i have been living in Pocatello, Ida. ::; : . . - . . , Morris Rons of Phoenix, Ariz.; is visiting with relatives in the area. He is a house guest of Mr and Mrs. William E. Zobell. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fowles and their children Alan, Terry, and Kevin of Bountiful spent last weekend visiting witht friends and relatives in Utah County. -- . , - - Mrs. John Stewart of Fort Collins, Colo., and a son, Johnny, and daughter, RuthJ visited in Provo over the weekend with her; mother ' r;Mrs. A. J. Fillmore, and two daughters, Kathleen, and Mrs. Dermic '"' Baker, both BYU students.. They enjoyed the Homecoming activities 1 Conservatism Defined by ber; Primary stake board, Evelyn M. Wimmer; Relief Society board Mary Warnick, Mervel Sun derland and Lois Beck; YMMIA, Howard Gordon, secretary, and Evan Street, Ylysse.A. Small and Merlin Shelley, board members YWMIA, Norma C. Healey, acjtivij iv fnnnsplftr and .Trrv R. Pratt' Mary Quilter, Glenna Hansen and ; 1900 members, representing 26.5 Dorothy McFarlane, board mem per cent of the stake membership, bers. the largest to attend an r.October 67th Quorum of Seventies, Glen stake "conference here, was in at- - A, Quilter, president. tendance. Stake President Phil D. Jensen, AMERICAN FORK i- - Three J in opening the conference session, young couples, Jerold and Rutji spoke on the power of powerful M. Schmidt, Gary E. and Joleen thinking." Most of us think power-- G. Meredith, Dale and Pat S. ful thoughts. The tragedy is that Steiner received Master M Men 1 too few of these thoughts are put and Golden Gleaner awards Sun- I into action," he said. day evening in the quarterly eonv Heard from during the confet- ferehce of the MIA of Alpine ti ence were five returned mission-- i Stake held in' the stake" tabernac'xi. aries, Clyde Thomas Adamson, AIMaking the Master M Men was Neal Savage, presiawards Central Atlantic pine Ward, States; Donald Bennett, Third Ward, Gulf dent of the M Men of Alpine l- States; J. Reid .Greenwood, Sixth Stake. Mary O. Quilter, stakb Ward, Western States; George A. Gleaner leader, awarded t n e Ricks, Tenth Ward, Central Ameri- - Golden Gleaner awards. 'can; David M. Sorenson, West Jerold, presently serving as su4 German. perintendent of the Fifth Ward I Other conference speakers in Sunday School, has been active the morning were Madge H. in MIA atheletics, His wife the Tuckett, who with her husband, former Ruth Manwill, is a teachEugene, is rounding out a second er in the ward YWMIA, She has stake mission; Bishop Merlin Lar served as Relief Society organist, ' I sen, Highland Ward, and Mrs. is a 'member of the stake Ladies Chorus and has participated in , Critchlow. VMIA D. road shows and dance fesRoberts and Homer Stanley ); . F. Royle, counselors to President tivals. Gary, former member of the Jensen; addressed the afternoon Ward Sunday School Fifth Lei and F. Priday, stake j! ' meeting. will-has taught Sunday I clerk, spoke briefly on the to serve. Bishop J. Fred School, served as assistant warjd Ingness Scholes, First Ward, was a speak- - clerk, taught Junior M Men, coached the Junior M Men basket er. i Elder Critchlow said in the world ball. His wife, formerly Joleen today there are 900,000,000 people Grant, served as YWMIA coununder Communist control who are selor, editor of the ward paper, a. member of the stake being taught that religion is a and was LadiesShe ind Gary Chorus., superstitious myth. to Salt Lake moved music for the conference City several Special I meetings were selections rendered weeks ago. He is teaching the by the stake Melchizedek priest-hoo- d Young 'Married Class in Central chorus directed by K. J. Park Ward and she is the YWMIA Bird. Mary R. Bailey and Lydia organist. r O. Kirkpatrick are the chorus ' Dale is one of the seven presidents of Seventies in the 286t!h accomoanists. Sustained to new offices were : . Quorum, is a Sunday School' arid Fifth Quorum; of Elders, Junior MIA worker in the Eighth Ward, N. Williamson, president, Paul L. and has served as superintendent Mecham, Ray C. Nelson; Sixth of the YMMIA. He served in the a Mission His wie Quorum, Gary H. Elton, president, Ralph, Myron Teckson and the former Pat Stoker, is now Harris Wilson: Ninth Quor- educational counselor in the ward f Kay Ben" G. Bartholomew, presi- Relief Society. She has served is um, dent. Artemus Holm an; Weldon a Primary, Sunday School and YWMIA teacfier. Pat has ' J. Kitchen and Chester Slade. Stake Sunday School, Delbert Silver Gleaner award. She, too, R. Hales, second assistant, and Is, a member of the Ladies Gareth W. Seastrand, board mem Chorus. AMERICAN FORK "Happiness is the object and design of our existence and will be the end thereof if we pursue the paths that lead to it," stated Elder William J. Critchlow Jr.: assistant to the LDS Council of the Twelve, in address-- j .v. ing the Alpine Stake quarterly conference here Sunday morning. 'A capactiy congregation of over ? : K . i-- -l - i. nually s for several years. The check was' presented by R. G. MacLean of Standard Oil Company of California and was received for the university by Dr. John .T. Bernhard, administrative assistant, to the president. It is part of a total of $185,000 donated this month- by the company to 33! private colleges and independent college associations. The money is for unrestricted grants to supplement Standard's scholarship and research program. The company's overall program of aid to education will amount to more than $1,500,000 in I960.' , . - dents who seek elimination of restrictions governing sanitation 6t raw milk have been, informed by the county board of health that the purpose of the law is to protect health of the consumer. ' 'The group asked for a copy of the existing state law at a re- - upsurge of transmission of Q- fever, a disease similar to pneu monia, tuberculosis, staph and strep infections, mastitis, etc. There has been special concern about contagious diseases since wholesale fuse of 'antibiotics among people and cattle has re sulted in strains of Some members of the group said counted, and meet coliform count they wanted the right to sell raw as provided by state law, and milk after inspecting it them- recommended by U. S. Public selves. Health Service in 1953." A 1959 .amendment to existing Utah law requires that all raw state law early this year, which milk sold be cooled to 50 degrees. permits the sale of raw milk di- Fahrenheit or lower within one rect from cow-ownto customer hour after being taken from the le but not for requires cow and kept at 50 degrees or that production facilities meet lower until sold to the consumer. . Homebuilders Set Membership Meet j er anti-bioti- c- re-sa- Utah County Board .of Health milk is consumed by the meeting last week, discussed' datory continued use of the. Mantou family which produces it, but tuberculosis test for school chil does aipply if the milk is sold to dren. , others. Used as a pilot project among Prior to passage of the 1939 seventh-graderthe kest has amendment to the 1953 law, state been approved by Utah County law prohibiting sale of raw milk Medical Association, and testing did not apply so spf cifically to will be continued j the board de milk hot going through regular cided. trade channels and several in terpretations were argued. Glen Sagers, chief sanitarian, More Comfort Wearing Health Department, said families who want to buy raw milk from herds or a neigh Here It a pleasant way to overcome plate discomfort. FASTEETH. bor's cow, not rigidly inspected loose an Improved powder, sprinkled on u to meet state, federal and coun them upper and lower plates holds more combo that firmer they fel sanitation ty regulations, don't fortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty ., ). realize the hazard. taste or feeling. It's alkaline Does not sour. Checks "plate often called the perfect Milk, odor' (denture breath) Get today at any drug counter. food, provides a perfect medium !(Adv.) for disease to flourish in, unless with state law governing Grade A raw milk. The state law re quires that the raw milk be bojP' lied on the premises where! prl- duced, in sanitary containersT under sanitary conditions, and be labeled "raw milk," It requires also that all of the dairy animals on the premises be free from tuberculosis, brucellosis (undulant fever) and other diseases transmitted' !to humans through milk; that every dairy auimal be identified, and all persons on the premises performing any work in connection with the production, bottling, handling or sale of the milk be free from all communicable disease. The law further! requires that "average bacterial plate count of raw milk sold not exceed 20,000 per c. c. or the average direct General mombership the Utah Valley for meeting Homebuilders Association and elections for officers and directors for 1960 wilj be held Wednesday,- Oct. 28, at ,7 :30 p.m. at Park's Cafe. Reservations can be made by contacting the executive secretary H. Earl Farn-wortOREM These precautions are not The Utah Power and Light Company will be the host for the BOMB INJURED 14 meeting and will provide the Fourteen speaker, D. H. White who will ALGIERS ,(UPI) persons were injured Sunday speak on electric heating and when a terrorist - planted pomb meeting the Medallion exploded in a movie house during a showing of the Marilyn There are more than 4,000 car Monroe picture, "Some Like It Hot." Police Were holding four washes in the United States today; in 1945, there were only 50. Moslem 'suspects. . . man- . , . ' h. resistant bacteria. i s, " i City-Coun- ty FALSE . (non-acid- FAS-TEE- TH i Alpine Stake Sets Record For October Conference -- resi cent meeting with the board of macroscopic count not exceed health precautions are met with, health, and discussed forming a 20,000 per c. c. if individual he said. committee to contact the Utah clumps are counted, or 80,000 per He said the 'health department State Department of Agriculture. c. c. if individual organisms are is concerned lest there be a new A group of Utah Couuty A grant of $3,500 was received by Brigham Young University this week from Standard OU Company of California. The gift has been awarded to BYU an- Confab Set By ROSALIE HALL WILDE . ty Civil Defense UTAH- COUNTY Health Board Explains Law On Sale Of Raw Milk fY' Gets $35,000 From Standard Oil . Ger-man- i ! ' ' DODGE Forum Speaker 24 dashing models! 3 great series! Hardtops, sedans, station wagons, convertibles! 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