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Show REFLEX . January 19,' 1961 Ilov Letters to the editor Editorial Too much . This is not a statement in defense of trading stamps. This is a statement in defense of Another freedom. ."We personally hate the little sticky stamps that we' are given, when we purchase groceries or gasoline; from some local merchants. We dont make much a point "of methodi- -j cally saving them to be turned in on valuable merchandise, but we have, on some occasions, done just that. : But we believe that the legislator should hat Interfere offering of the stamps as an added attraction to his customers. Tr We decry the introduction of House- BilJ 44 and a similar .Senate bill In the Utah Legislature Vhlch roposes to eliminate the basic right of freedom of choices by con ' sumers. . witb-mercha- By K. R. Glov.r, D.D.S. when mans natural seems It to Commerce The week of January affiliation so was set aside This been popu21 he invents, deattributes has falter January in honor of the Junior Chamber lar that the St, Louis Plan soon vices to ' extend his abilities to of Commerce throughout the spread to many cities in the perceive. . Microscopes, tele-scopes- , world. This week the world takes country. They realized that this modern communradar, note of the Jaycee Movement is where community leadership ications systems and are and its purpose, "Leadership began. The Jaycees, however, some examples. are eswith affiliated no the longer Training Through-- Community pre pecially useful, in the health proService. The Jaycee movement Chamber of Commerce, only the fessions. Let's see how they work. started back In 1915 in St Louis, aim of civic bettermen is simiWhen an picture is taken lar. There are more than 3,700 Missouri. the rays from the machine act Geissen-biein United States the r chapters At that time Henry like the light entering e called together a St. Louis Junior- Chamber of Cfcmmercf just camera. They penetrate through dancing , group and- - asked the with a quarter million members the tissues and expose the members to form a Young The Jaycee movement has spreau film body on the other side. packet 90 and reached Associanations Civic widely Mens Progressive over territories with 350,000 tion". The name was later chang- and ed to Junior Citizens starting members in more than 4,500 Each year the Layton Jaycees the abbreviation of J.C. In 1918 chapters. sponlor approximately 50 projLayton can be proud of their ects. This year 20 of these the St. Louis Chamber of Coms merce invited the Junior Citi- Jaycees, for the Jaycees of Lay-to- n cf field in the are youth are a driving force in makzens to become affiliated with them as the Junior Chamber of ing this a City of Progress. Activities including baseball programs for youths up to 16 years, 15 nts - . y prej-ject- We also believe that there are other, far more pressing matters to be taken up by the legislature. Waterpollution (particularly of Great Salt Lake), school building needs, juvenile detention difficulties all these are weighty problems to be considered by. the Legislature. . a ' Too much legislation can be a dangerous thing. We beThis is an era when teenage lieve that legislation which would outlaw the right of a terrorism has become so commerchant to offer trading stamps, the right of a consumer monplace that' the American to reject or, accept such stamps, can be just too much. public has virtually built up a shock resistance to vicious murders, rapes, assaults, robberies, and, in fact, the entire spectrum of atrocious crimes committed Your Doctor's Corner by young people. I have Jong felt that the term Teenage terrorism is too commonplace! , . The school nurse as a family advisor By Dr. D. Keith Barnet The school purse has an to act as an advisor (or the health of the family more than any other type of nurse. Compulsory education makes for an unusually Dotential. The nurse will routinely than interview more parents any other member of the faculty. Parents are drawn in on physical. emotional and social problems as they occur. Home visits are the gateway, to enhance the role of the nurse as a health adviser. Perhaps in the future per role will be primarily health large counseling. When an interview is made with the parent at the school, there is -- much more parental motivation to accept guidance than when seen at home. In the ichool more facilities are available (charts, pesters etc.) for iemonstration eL.partlculac points. A visit in the home provides more intangibles' strch-- As family or neighborhood Visits in the home often reveals other siblings who have wt attained normal growth and levelopment The school nurse an be tnost helpful in attaining rela-ion- s. family understanding and acceptance as well as guidance i n for utilizing facilities available correction or treatment. To center ones attention on the school child and neglect the ATTENTION COUNTY total family health is a mistake. The child can not be an Isolated person in the home. Health education of the parent is as necessary as that of the child. Observation of child toward parent or other siblings .will indicate emotional maturity. Recognizing abnormal' behavior during a home visit will be a means cf establishing early . treatment so necessary to good results. Home accidents are one of the leading causes of death. Suggestions for elimination of accident hazards that could be either crippling or fatal is another means of parental health education. Had health been presented to TV audiences with the glamour used for cosmetics or tobacco the problem would be negligible. There are many facets to the role of the nutse as family Her success in. assisting people depends largely on her individual attributes. The most essential is poise, good judgad-vis- ment, a sympathetic approach and a real interest in people. Intergrading medical knowledge with social and psychological understanding will, in the main, solve meet problems. A personality and honest efforts can accomplish wonders. Health is Nature's Greatest Preserve It! I Gift to Man rich ... ALL DAVIS quency" with emphasis upon all of its connotations of youthful prankishness. There must be a line drawn between the mischievous pranks of young people, which may indeed be called juvenile delinquency, and the depraved deeds of teenage bandits which are nothing less than youthful criminality. As a representative of law enforcement, I would like to see the term juvenile delinquency banished forever from our language as a description for vicious acts. Such teenage gangsterism should be labeled for exactly what it is "youthful "juvenile delinquency" Isa misnomer since the depredations of young criminals start at home and can more accurately be attributed to "adult delinquency." At the same time, the brutality of the crimes committed by teenagers certainly pales the pampering, palliative phrase of "juvenile delinquency" which is used today. Daily I ampppalled by news items and reports which come across my desk revealing the disgusting and sordid picture of acts almost too obscene to be attributable to those who are still in the. second ten years of their lives. , are Jaycee Week Layton Jaycees. H. V Marsell, Publicity A- Last summer, for instance, I read news accounts of five youth-fu-ll gangsters between the ages of 15 and 18 who committed some of the most barbaric acts imaginable. Like a snarling wolfpack, the gang attacked two families in a park in a midwestem city. Beating both husbands into insensibility with baseball bats, stabbing them with switchblade knives and robbing them, these vicious thugs then turned upon the two mothers, aged 23 and 27 and., both pregnant, ripped their clothes from their bodies and savagely ravished them while the two. children of one mother aged 3 and I watched, weeping and horrified This shocking tragedy was compounded by the fact that just 12 hours before, a judge had released two of the attackers who had been arrested and charged with auto tampering. His action was taken despite the vigorous protests of the office of the States attorney. The probation officer of one of the pair also protested, to no avail. One of the ringleaders was on probation and another of the pack was a parolee from a State reformatory. Meeting out justice firmly, a righteously indignant judge sentenced four of these thugs to a two concurrent sentences, and the fifth was given one term and one term. He recommended they never b paroled. Surely such bestial actions by teenagers, demanding the harsh punishment they rightfully received, could never fall into the category of the lame, almost flowery terra "Juvenile delinquency. Yet, thero art still among that, Meeting of the Davis County Wildliie Federation WILL BE HELD AT THE LARKIN CAFE In Kaysville 8 P.M. MONDAY NIGHT JANUARY 23, 1861 PROTECT AND PRESERVE YOUR RIGHTS Fast - Action-Positiv- Annual convention Kaysville for the North Davis County Daughters of Utah Pioneers is scheduled for Saturday, January 28, at 2 p.m. at the Clearfield Stake House. Ail members of camps through this area are urged to attend said Mrs. Mary Talbot, president of the organization. Published by INLAND PRINTING CO. Phonet Kaysville 87 Member: NATIONAL EDITORIAL JANUARY ASSOCIATION Natl Adv. Representative Newspaper Advertising Service 333 N. Michigan Avenue Chicago,' 11L Terms of Subscription Man $3.56 Per SSflLES . Evelyn Lund berg j, , Did YowKnow." its x-r- ... ot A seasonable book ... . aa? G e Read this CLEARFIELD Buy Low at Barlows 135 :ndvordde' . .49c - ' ; PUNCH POWDER Tender Juicy StdrKlstTUNA and tor $1.03 TOMATO JUICE, 6 oz. 4c lb. Market TOIdATO JUICE CHUCK STEAKS lb. SWISS STEAKS lb. whole fryers: BEEF lb. 3 , No. Argo .WHITE CORN - GROUND .4 ..2c Sacramento lbs. 303 Autumn Harvest 29 tall can $1oo 10c can 59 Libby's BEETS Diced, Cut, 303 Frying Chicken Paris can ..10c Gold Bar Sliced SMOKED SPARERIBS CLUB STEAKS lb. ib.49J 77 I7c SLICED HALIBUT FRESH ib lb. 69 39 AS SPRING! Can 19c BABO PADS 5 Count Box Also BUTTERF1NGER 29c Good ,'n' Rich CAKEMIXES 6c Count'..... 9c ANTIFREEZE 6c MIXED VEGETABLES. ..5c 80z. Can.: PINEAPPLE DRINK. 29 Oz. Prestone or Zerex No. 10, CHARCOAL $1.59 59c CEREAL BOWLS 8c COFFEE MUGS 8c ; Libby's BABY FOOD and Save Your Choice . . . Stock 5c and Save Up Now and Save . . ; . ONLY ORANGE DRINK, 29 Ozs. MIXED NUTS Pineapple Grapefruit Drink, 29 Oz. AND PEANUTS Overhead. T Ooriyeni. Our Stores Operate Without ent Locatlhfls, Low, Low Prices Add Up to Pleasant Shopping:. PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 DAYS A WEEK! Our Produce Guaranteed FRESH EVERY DAY - Our Produce Sells for LESS EVERY DAY ..29c Bonware PAPER CUPS ' et 10c kaiser foil.::;;:; ..'Household Size Royal Red PEAS & CARROTS Super-Mark- . ...10c BABY RUTH NUGGETS Royal Red JUICE JarTosetPita: 100 Can .17c CATSUP:...,.:...,. Mission ASPARAGUS Can Size Can , . Icy.Waters SHRIMPS ;...29c No. 3 Jar Pi N. BUTTER ..;...88c TOMATOES 303 can He 8 oz. " - 13c Premium 303 RIB STEAKS Vi .12,.Oz Mission FRENCH BEANS 303 39c Derby POTTED MEATS. 15c . Stringbean, lOXJan...' VIENNA SAUSAG- E- RIPE OLIVES PINEAPPLE. No. 2 Can N. Main CLEARFIELD - lb rd!5c Asst. Adr. DELL'S SERVICE 1 Mandarin ORANGES. FRUIT DRINKS. 29 Oz. BARLOW FURNITURE CO. . COFFEE Year Cant Beat a Barlow Deal I $&? y. uttH-wroMiN- Schillings RENT A You - . - (Payable in Advance) Publisher Lloyd E. Anderson Editor Mary Bowring Asst Editor Betty Fisher Vern Woolsey Adv. Mgr. EVERY ROLL REDUCED ' Inuentoru- - DUP convention (Signed) C. KIRK, Sec. of the registered Numbers Miniature license Clearfield is good for the next five bikes are then recorded plates are being purchased in police records and it becomes years The developed film appears as Clearfield for 50 cents Cleara simple matter to determine a negative with dark and .light field youngsters. areas according to its degree of where a particular serial nuns exposure. .The. lighter areA$ become an Invaluable tod in (he ber . originated. received fewer rays and the . L. Higgins Police Officer discovery, prevention and treatdarker areas received more. ment of dental diseases. No estimated that there are appro Since the body tissues absorb dental examination Is, complete imately. . 1,000. bicycles to b or block the passage of the T'.Hllcensed. rays more or less according "to their density br hardness, the softer tissues appear darker and the more dense tissues appear lighter. In a dental examination these facts are very useful. The trainL ed eye can discover jjaoeeesee 'and diseases by a careful study of the picture which are impossible to see by direct vision. For example, a common place for cavities to occur is between the teeth UKA Fathered Modem Firearms where ' one tooth touches neighbor.' These cavities cannot The sportsman in the field '. the police officer be seen by visual examination who must maintain law and order . . . the individual who seeks to protect his home . . , the many times but they appear as soldier in combat . . . each one depends on the film darker areas on the fruits of imagination xt a great American inveneven when they are just begintor. Many say he was a genius.' Certainly the ning to develop. Decay under name John M. Browning has been stamped inold fillings, abscesses, tumors, delibly in history. Guns played such a vital role in the Early West cysts, unerupted teeth, fractures that it is only fitting that the greatest gunsmith and the extent of gum disorders of them aU was born in Ogden in 1855 . . . when are other conditions of the teeth the area now known as the State of Utah was a structures and their surrounding frontier region. Before be.was 14 he had whittled which- must be diagnosed by from wood a breech mechanism for a riflcAt 24 in most cases. the gun which his firs patent was issued Rifle, have be- So you see, became the famous Winchester Single-ShFrom that time on his schievements are legend: the repeating rifle and shotgun. Browning aut; matic rifle (B.A.R.), the machine gun and the) automatic-pisto- l all products of the inventive genius of the Father of Modern Firearms - John. The Arco 1961 Income Tax Browning of Utah. . ; Utah bat a fascinating history in many fields. Guide, for preparing and filing In todays Utah, with its emphiuis on progress, your 1960 tax return is now the United Sates Brewers Foundation works conm available at the Davis County h stantly to assure citizens snef visiton.that pleas-- 1 . ant, orderly conditions prevail Vhcfevff beer and Library. ale are enjoyed. . 9 We wish to call your attention also,' to a new title by Max mvisforr Lerner, The Unfinished Country. UNITED STATES BREWEXS FOUNDATION, This book is the result of ten yqars of the author's examina-ti- n and interpretation of American life V ar The Annual ELECTION OF OFFICERS SAVE school safety; Riata Days, Santa Claus comes to town and projects to support these .activities. Last year me Layton Jaycees won seven State awards in competition with the 48 Jaycee clubs in Utah. In addition they won a national award in competition with 1,000 clubs in their division in the United States. But winning awards is not their aim, but a side product. Their real purpose is to serve the people of Layton City. The Layton Jaycees are proud cf their community and will continue t o serve it in every way they can As Dave Buckley, (Jhairman of Jaycee Week says, "We proud of Layton and proud that we helped make it the fine city that it is". 65-ye- SPORTSMEN BARLOWS us muddlebeaded sentimentalists who would wrap teenage brigands in the protective cocoon of the term "juvenile delin- Bikes being tagged in Clearfield arc useful ys f VT' dentistry is explained In Jaycee Week X-ra- lUIk .ii il'llif Page 2 :: Why |