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Show ; Nursing Home Group Wants County to Build Home Nursing home facilities should by the county Harold Compton Visits but operated by a private cem, the Box Elder county Here from Hollywood Nursing Home committee deciMr. and Mrs. Mathew J. ded in two recent meetings, Jay Oldroyd, chairman, announced Compton have been enjoying a visit from their son, Harold, durthis week. the past week. The committee which first met ingHarold is employed at CBS with a nursing home operator Television in Hollywood. from Weber county interested While here he visited with in establishing a nursing home in the area, was of the opinion family members and friends. He plans to return to Hollythat the county should not wood this evening. operate the nursing home itself, but that It should assume refor construction the possibility of establishing sponsibilities so an adequate building would nursing homes in both the south and north parts of the county. be assured. The committee Invited several However, the committee learned that the Sons of Utah Pioneers LDS stake presidents and clerhad purchased a piece of propgymen In the area to discuss of the Brigham the possibility of construction erty north and operation of a nursing home Young park in Brigham City, be used as hoping that it by a religious denomination, a site for the might home. proposed decided a but that such secular operation might not meet the The possibility of using funds needs of people of other faiths available under the in the area. Actbvas discussed, but the comSeveral sites were suggested mittee will try to Obtain more for the home, among those dis- detailed information concerning cussed were Brigham City, cost before actually petitioning and Garland. There the county commissioners for was also some discussion about1' the building. be constructed Hill-Burto- n QUALITY costs less than you think! OLltlw 22 South Main St. OUR SUMMER SALE I Bear River While on Fishing Trip Jensen E. boy drown- 214 miles about river Bear ed in below Cutler Dam Saturday, while on a fishing trip, with his ' grandfather. of son Russell Don Sherman, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sherman, 365 Adams avenue, Ogden, had been playing in the shallow waters of the river with his two young cousins, Roger Busico, 12, and John Busico, 8, of. Beaver Dam. The boys grandfather, T. C. Sherman of 2957 Jackson avenue, Ogden, called to say it was time to leave. John shouted back that Russell was missA Succumbs on seven-year-ol- d 1 Reorganization Of Writers . Idaho Vacation Joseph Eli Jensen, 77, died of a heart attack Sunday, July 17, while vacationing at Idaho. He was born October 17, 1877, Rex-bur- at Brigham City, a son of Jacob Reorganization of the local chapter of the League of Utah Writers is scheduled for 8 p. m. tonught at the administration building of the Intermountain school. Elder county writers will be assisted in the reorganization by Edward Tuttle, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Mary Knowles, Box the News O O & on a Money Back 4 months for $1.00. 31; Bank FIRST y bo d 5 Elder NEWS Box , Knowles is president of the Og- Journal in this issue. Brigham City, "Utah den Blue Quill chapter. Summer bargain offer to new Wednesday, July 20, 195S The writers organization also subscribers 4 months $1 00. has chapters at Provo, Salt Lake City, and Logan. T)r Carlton Culmsee, USAC, Is WHY NOT GIVE YOUR CAR THE BEST president of the league. WHEN IT COSTS NO MORE TO HAVE Complete CUSTOM SHIRT LAUNDRY MADE FAMILY LAUNDRY Sanitone DRY CLEANING "You Wash " Launderette Service Made of finest quality, beautiful long wearing Chixon. Big vari- CITY BRIGHAM ety of patterns and colors LAUNDERETTE J. ;t( - to , select from. AND attempt to revive the boy was unsuccessful. Requiem mass was held for Russell, Tuesday morning at 10 a. m. in Ogden. t T ham City cemetery. Subscriibe to Read pur special Money Back Mrs. Guarantee offer on the News & DRY CLEANING 22 West , EVERTON MATTRESS Forest PHONE 62 24 CO. East 1st South Phone 27 ?p (Mil's Miry Friends may call at the Mortuary Wednesday evening from 6 to 9 p. m. and Thursday until the hour of the service. Interment will be tp the Brig- ON ALL SUMMER APPAREL Tuttle, Is tirvt vice pres ident of the league and plied by Box Elder County De puty Sheriff Orltn Allen, but the p. m. to 50 Ogden. League Slated and Althea Wright Jensen. A member of the LDS church, he was a High Priest of the 13th ward, Ogden stake. He filled ing. a mission in California In 1902-3- , When Mr. Sherman was unserved on the Box Elder stake able to locate his grandson in Sunday school board, and was the river immediately, he startassistant superintendent of the ed for help. Three boys In the Brigham City Second ward. He area, Kay Bowery LaMar Bowen, was also president of the Elders and Ralph Simons, pf Beaver Dam, waded Into the river to quorum for many years. He married Elizabeth Kelly, help look for the 1?oy. After more April 19, 1905 In the Salt Lake thah .an ihour of searching, Kay City LDS temple. They resided Bowen found the boys body in Brigham City unitul 14 years downstream. Artificial respiration was ap- ago, when they moved to Ogave2226 Eccles to reside at den, ' nue. . Mr. Jensen Is survived by his' widow and the following eons and daughters: Truman E. Jensen, Ray C. Jensen, and Dwane G. Jensen, al'l of Salt Lake City; J. Carlyle Jensen of Rexburg, Idaho; J. Lynn Jensen, Brigham City; Mrs. John W. (Myrtle) Combe, Sitevensville, Mont.; Mrs. Swen (Vera) Pehrson, Mrs. Roy (Mable) Cutler, and Mrs. Earl (Marie) Osborne, of Ogden; 38 and 17 greatgrandchildren grandchildren; a brother, J. C. Jensen of Salt Lake City; and two sisters, Ella Wight and Maggie Lee of Brigham City. Funeral services will be held at Larkin Mortuary, street in Ogden; Thursday at 1 i i 496-24t- h NOW ON SAVE 2 ; CLEARANCE J. Ogden Boy Drowned in Seven-Year-O- ld V' V : m ' ' v.. iriUfi' J' Ijuj V During the first "milk price truer? requested ' by Governor Lee, Utah's MUk yTb Study Committee received testimony on the importance of f protecting dairy farmers. Everyone in Utah k in agreement on this point. i - jr I ft 1 A ! COULD ANY MILK LAW COST YOU MONEY? SAFEWAY ADVISES PROTECTION FOR UTAH'S DAIRY FARMERS n t It h Saeweyi policy (published and in evidence to the committee) to pay dairy farmers top market prices foe milk, plus quality bonuses. This policy has never been violated. However, Safeway policy protects only the dairy farmers selling to Safeway. Other milk bottlers and retailers may not have the same policy oc may not keep to k as strictly as Safeway does. ", That's why It h also Saf sway's policy (published and tvldtnca) to work for laws pr regulations to protect the price all dairy f earners get for their milk. In YES! Testimony was also given the committee to show that where the retail price of milk has been fixed by law, it has. in order to protect inefficient, Inevitably been set tee high marginal middlemen. Mr. Sverre M. Omdahl, Director of the Department of Agriculture of the State of Washington, (himself a dairy farmer) gave the producer myst receive a fair price -similar testimony: or he will shortly be forced out of business but, by the same token, I have always objected to the states setting a price (retail price) which would tend to favor inefficiency. "... If the price you pay for milk Is "fixed" It could prevent Safeway and other efficient retailers from passing thd savings of their efficiency oa to you. For example: At Safeway you buy milk in paper cartons, pay cash for it, and carry it home yourself. Safeway saves money by not handling empty bottles on their return . . . not making hundreds of expensive home deliveries not keeping credit - ARE THERE ANY SUCH LAWS OR REGULATIONS AT PRESENT? , accounts and having no credit losses. i , BfCTOM Theres a warm human story behind the cold figures in our hank statement It tells of a growing number of people buildtng up their savings managing then money in a businesslike way with check- (MO BOAtO AOVMOftY and home- -, being helped to ing accounts improvement through bank loans. It tells of business firms and farmers expanding their facilities and operations with the help of bank credit. The story behind the arithmetic is the true measure of a banks service to its community. ' sfwAff home-ownersh- W W ANDERSON Ptrstdtn! and General Mating Anderson Lumber Cm. H A BENN1NG Amaigamtted Sugar Ca MARRINER A BROWNING t ' " $ Vttt Prtstdmi Browning Aim Ca t'ALA BROWNING Arm Ca Brawnmg STATEMENT OF CONDITION JUNE 30, 1955 t LOUIS BUCHMAN Kennecorf Copper Corporation ALLEN D CHRISTENSEN Prriidmf Utah Cormruction Company Bank of Idaho, N A L T DEE Far VmM Canmng First Sec Bank of Idaho, N A GEORGE S ECCLES Enstdmf MARRINFR 5 ECCLES Chatrmm tf iht Board S S ECCLES ' Combined Statement FIRST SECURITY CORPORATION System of Bonks . RESOURCES 40,054,776.02 46,922,179.96 7,137,088 47 S 94,114,044.45 Cash on Hand and in Banka U. S. Government Securttiea I - Municipal and Other Securities Total Cash aod Securities. Ca J L DRISCOLL AiWml Vah SECURITY BANK Ot UTAH Netionni Atsoetetio RALPH J COMSTOpK Ettnfme Tier ftrWwf Fm Sec FIRST - Loans aod Discount Loans Federally Insured and Guaranteed .... .. Banking Houses Stock in Bank Building Company .. Fixtures and Furniture Stock in Federal Reserve Bank. Other Resources . - 79,905,409.71 20,055,918 63 ' 3,000,000.00 428,845 63 276,00000 96,302 71 S V 148,269.254 63 45364,407.71 1312,166.87 3,000,000 00 1,148,488 52 532,500 00 309,502 97 Vm Prtstdmf by the Secretary of Agriculture. These federal orders and agreements also set minimums below which prices paid dairy farmers may not go. , No (Included am k Deposits Totaling 1494308 O) o Pvemdent Urns t STODDARD Purdsr Railroad Co. ' thousands of Utahns Safeway tRafe employees received $3,541,&76.37 and salaries in 1954. 171 DlaliM own 16,863 shares in wages ef stork in Safeway Stores. commikteew ' WHY SAFfWAT IS PU9USHPFG THIS STATEMENT NOf The committee heard experienced testimony that eral milk marketing law? do net increase the price you pay foe dtiik ia fact, the Milk Study Committee ksetf found that "... such coat is so minimal as not to affect the price of milk oa the retail leveL The federal order does not aet resale prices aod the evidence indicate at does not fnateriajtfeot Mid prirm.". fed- banks J k ARTHUR to the contrary was pmeoeed to the COST YOU MONEY? v B D MOFFAT Urttred end for ttOULD ENFORCING PRODUCER PROTECTION ErARGWRRC FRED E. SMITH SAFEWA Y works daffy with price war back to the producer!, they wU not wage a prolonged retail price war." Prtndmt Prrndemt Ssmpkft Co. farmers will sen more milk. , j Mr. Stuart Russell, who represents some 30 milk producer cooperatives throughout the United States, testified: 1 do not know of any major price war thpt has occurred in any of the areas where federal milk marketing order and agreements are ia full force and effect. Nor do I know of any in states which have effective Kate milk control commission laws that control prices St the producer leveL wvlson McCarthy John ScowcroR A Sons Co. I R SJMPLOT r DO SUCH LAWS WORK? M Sego Milk Products Co. ROBERT H HINCKLEY Fw hendtnf md Dtretfae American Broadcasting Co. FLETCHER SCOWCROFT ... e You are entitled to these savings you help earn them. And you get them from Safeway and other retailers only so long as they are free to compete for your business. Such competition will moan that you con buy moro milk. And Utah dairy ; Today over half of the fluid milk consumed in the United States is marketed under milk price stabilization programs which protect producer prices only, leaving free and fair competition to prevail at consumer levels. This includes the 58 federal order aaarkett aod 5 state pricing programs. P HARTER m Arndtaf oerd Gottral Mgr President Mta Fuel Supply Co . Mr. Russell also explained why these laws work: "The reason is Very simple: If distributors cannot pass the cost of the '' Utah Fire Clay Co. W T NIGHTINGALE v Other ways to protect Utahs dairy farmers also are available. A Federal Milk Marketing Order is onq. 58 federal orders and agreements are now in effect and 10 more are being considered 11,709.157.61 $187,463,095.58 Pmt Sec Bank of Utah, NA H M EMERSON Senior Far Fmt See Bank of Idaho, N A W H HARRIS Dittrior Utah Construction Co. Drrsttar Utah Oil Refining Co - ... , 1 64,617,724.90 111,136,213.07 Mm Sum Implement Co. WILLARD L ECCLES Senior ' f Condensed Stetemem t Ctmsmhan 4 Them is one on the books in Utah right now. !' is Utahs "Milk and Cream Marketing Act. This law is patterned after a California law which has been held constitutional. It provides the power to set minimum oa the prices paid dairy farmers for milk and makes payments below the minimum illegal. If invoked this law would give Utahs daily farmers the protection they need. ... Writ Security Bank of Idaho, National Association First Soturlty Bank of Utah, National Association First Security Bank of Rock Spring, Wyoming Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora tiee A Safeway wo bom la neighboring Idaho. We have Uah and a citizen's concern for Utah's Blake m well-bein- a big g. TTe behave we have a responsibility to the public, our employees, suppliers, and stockholders to publish the record of our Battiswnny to the Milk Stwdy Committee. far Iheaa 5 , |