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Show Naomi and Dean Rich of American Fork spent the weekend with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edger Sorensen. She IHERY' . . Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Peterto Salt Lake Friday went son where they attended the Temple marriage of their daughter, Loretta and Mr. Gail Grundvig of Price. President Tanner performed the ceremonies. Loretta has served as President Tanner's secretary for the past year and a half. Gail returned recently from a two year IDS mission . The couple will be honored at a reception Saturday evening, November 26th at Emery Ward Cultural Hall. Mrs. Pearl Peterson visited last week in Bountiful at the homes of her two daughters, Erma and Edward Peterson and Arlene and Gordon String-haOn Friday she attended the wedding in Salt Lake for her granddaughter, Loretta Peterson. . . Mr and Mrs. Oran Bund erson of Magna visited a few days with a sister Bertha and Omer Oviatt. . . Mr. and Mrs. Max Simonson and five children of Manti visited with an aunt, Mrs. Verda Broderick and visited with his mother, Mrs. Flossie Simonsen at the Ferron Rest Home. Max is a former resident of Emery. Mrs. Jenel Mortensen enm. Emery County is attending Snow College. Wednesday, November 24, 1971 Weekend guests at the Henningson home were David and Jean Zwahlenand and family of Murray. Mr. and Mrs. Niel Henningson and family of Dragerton were also Le-Gr- and guests. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Henningson have moved to Green-riv- er, Wyoming. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Williams of Salt Lake visited relatives one 'day last week, the Coy Williams and Robert They took Mrs. williams' mother, Mrs. Ella Anderson with them to spend the Thanksgiving holiday. .. Affcon Olsen of Woodscross visited last week with his folks Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Olsen. An-derso- ns. Mr. and Mrs. Randy Lake have moved into the vacant house of Delbert Jensen. Randy has taken over the business of Eldred's Service Station. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Peacock and family of Sandy visited this past week with par- III EVENT OF A MAJOR disaster there are 2500 DISASTER PACKAGED HOSPITALS STRATEGICALLY PREPOSITIONED IN THE U.S. V; treaty of peace is worth exactly the value that one attaches to the character of A those who sign it. Williams, EMERGENCY HOSPITALS IS A COMMUNITY ASSET WHICH CAN BE USED... Kas SEVERAL TREATMENT KAS A SOURCE The Wellington (Ohio) A HOSPITAL SET UP IN A PUBLIC SCHOOL FACTS '" fr V t Holmes Even in Grandpa's time there was something to make you sleep. They called K'AS it work. OF SUPPLY FDR EXISTING HOSPITALS T ? CONTACT YOUR IOCAL CIVIL "T " " ' Mayo G. Wood, --' VtftHf. tertained the widows last Wed- nesday evening. . . Mr. Arthur Anderson suffered a heart attack last Thursday and was taken to the hospital at Price, Utah. A wedding reception will be held Wednesday evening November 24th at the Manti Center Ward Cultural Hall for Nancy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Sorensen (former residents of Emery) and Mr. David Rohn McCune. Mr. and Mrs. LuDean Maxfield spent a couple of days in Salt Lake last week visiting their children, shop- -r ping, and they attended the wedding Friday of their granddaughter, Loretta Peterson. Visitors one day last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Coy Williams were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Thomas of Ferron and Mr. and Mrs. Royal Christensen of Orem. The three ladies are sisters. Mr. and Mrs. Brent Jensen and family of Montrose, Colorado were overnight guests Friday night of parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dermes Jensen enroute to California. Mr. and Mrs. Coy Williams are happy to announce the arrival of a new granddaughter born to their son and wife, Clark, of Clearfield. Mr. and Mrs. Terry Broderick are happy over die arrival of a new great grandson. Happy first time parents are Mr. and Mrs. Steven Christiansen of Bountiful. Christine, daughter of As the State trooper gently lifted the childs broken and lifeless Body from the tangled wreckage of the automobile, he saw an empty liquor bottle, still miraculously intact, beneath the crumpled legs of the dying driver. To the experienced officer, the smell of the mans gasping breath left no doubt that a drinking driver was once again involved in a fatal traffic accident. Unfortunately, the above hypothetical scene is an all too familiar sight to law enforcement officers who patrol the streets and highways of our Nation. According to authorities responsible for traffic safety, drinking drivers cause accidents that kill 25,000 people in our country each year, are involved in 800,000 nonfatal crashes, and inflict property damages estimated in billions of dollars annually. There can be no plausible excuse for such senseless carnage. Could it be that traffic fatalities like rising crime rates are becoming so commonplace Electric Product Manufacturing Up! that the American public is growing insensitive to these tragedies and the conditions which cause them? Are we unaffected by the sight of twisted steel, shattered glass, and bloody, lifeless crash victims? Is the drinking driver, careening along in a speeding vehicle, an accepted part of our daily lives? Regrettably, this is an instance where the right answer, a reluctant yes, is the wrong answer. The volume of shipments for the electrical manufacturing industry is expected to reach $46.9 billion for 1970, an increase of approximately 5 per cent over last year's volume, according to Joseph F. Miller, President of the National Electrical Manufacturers Association, The industry, he added, ex- Apparently, there is no persuasion, short of certain stem punishment, that will keep the drinking driver from behind the steering wheel, and bringing him to justice is no easy matter. Law enforcement officials and prosecutors agree that charges of driving while under the influence of alcohol are the toughest traffic cases to prosecute. Some jurors apparently consider the violation to be an indiscretion, not a crime indeed, a dereliction in. which they themselves may occasionally indulge. In short, the public and legal is unwilling to impose restrictions to control this problem. The question then is how long can the public conscience accept the mounting toll of human lives claimed in accidents caused by drunken drivers. Certainly, more than 25,000 lives annually is a tragic loss to chalk off to indifference. To virtually ignore drunken drivers is to condone them, and the depth of guilt becomes a common shame. self-restrai- nt 0 I believe the problem of the drinking driver should be handled firmly. He should know that detection, prosecution, and punishment will be swift and certain. Whenever the circumstances warrant, lengthy revocation of licenses, maximum fines, and substantial jail sentences should be imposed upon offenders. The rights and safety of the motoring public should not be imperiled by selfish, irresponsible drivers who, while under the influence of alcohol, convert the automobile into a lethal weapon. pects to register further gains in 1971, with shipments of all types of electrical products forecast at a new peak of $48.1 billion. This represents a gain of 2V4 per cent over the industrys 1970 a to t ne (Fla.). STATIONS 4 De-Va- County (Fla.) Advertiser. You can't judge a modern girl by her clothes because there isnt enough evidence. Berdena Shiley, Party Line,. Land O' Lakes I HAT EACH OF THESE Mortensen. ts N. . Bishop and Mrs. Eldred ents, ..... Ki (Reprinted from the FB Law Enforcement Bulletin) |