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Show Thatcher; Mr. and Mr. Lloyd Wood and aon of Fielding; Mr. and Mra. Roy Morgan, Mr. and Mika of Mrs. Morgan Tramonton; Mr. and Mra. Farrell Summera and family, Mr. aad Mra. Blaine Summera of Bothwell. Attending a Regional cub scout meeting held at San Ridge Junior High achool in Roy Saturday from the Tremonton area were Mrs. Della Howard and two sons, Clyde Hawkins, Roberta Fronk, Karen Stokes, Barbara Poulson, Ruth Jensen, Bernice Suzanne Allen, Bowcutt, Larry Chambers, Ray Bolton and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Manning. Mr. and Mrs. E.T. Hoskins of Portage spent Sunday afternoon visiting Mrs. Hoskins sister Mrs. Marelda Flint in Clearfield. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. Var C. Flint in Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Hoskins and family in Ogden. Family Party Mr. and Mrs. David P. Gibbs of Portage were honored at a family dinner party held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nelson in Mantua Saturday. The occasion was Mr. Gibbs 79th birthday anniversary. Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. LaRall Thompson in Thatcher Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. W. Lee Thompson of Garland and Mrs. Lula Didericksen of Thatcher. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hall and family of Salt Lake City visited Mr. and Mrs. John Conley and other relatives in Portage during the weekend. Other visitors at the Conley home were Mr. and Mrs. ElVoid Gibbs of Wendell, Idaho. Miss Carol Macfarlane of Riverside was honored at a bridal shower hosted cousins Debra, by her Denise Dawn, Diane, and Adele Moon of Idaho Falls and Pamela, RaNpe and LeAnn Moon of Ogden held at the home of Mrs. Frank Moon in Ogden. Twenty close freinds and relatives enjoyed an evening of games followed by tasty refreshments. Carol was the recipient of many lovely gifts. She will become the bride of Paul Stephens of Ogden on Nov. 17. A dinner party in compliment to Mrs. Henry Brown of Garland who was observing her birthday anniversary was held at the home of her and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Bengt Jonsson and family in Kaysville Monday evening. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brown and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ogzewalla of Centerville, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ward and family of Ogden, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Brown of Bountiful, Larry son-in-la- and Marla Brown of Salt Lake City, Mr. and Mrs. Dee Brown and family and Henry Brown of Garland. Tuesday Mrs. Brown attended funeral services for her cousin Byron Stallings in Brigham City. Diane Barker of Kaysville spent Thursday visiting her mother Mrs. Miles Roundy in Collinston. Friday evening Mrs. Roundy attended a wedding reception for Mr. and Mrs. Redd (Joan Perkins) Baldwin held in the Wellsville cultural hall. Janilyn Christensen of Bear River City is spending this week with her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capener in Riverside while her mother, Mrs. Kathleen Christensen is receiving medical care in the McKay hospital in Ogden. Dinner guets at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Coombs in Fielding during the week were Eric Coombs and Julie Vance of Logan and Mr. and Mrs. M.E. Hansen of Salt Lake City. Tiffani Love of Midvale has been spending a week with her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Hall in Portage while her parents were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hall in McCook, Nev. Friday visitors at the Hall home were Mr. and Mrs. of Beal George Springville. The small son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Limb of Garland was blessed in Sacrament meeting Sunday and given the name of Brian Rex. Immediately following a pot luck dinner party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Christensen in Tremonton. Other Guests Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Craig Christensen and family, Mrs. Gertrude Howard, Mrs. Leah Petersen and Mrs. LaRae daughters, Dillingham and son, Mrs. Peggy Stanridge and daughters of Salt Lake City, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Evans of Malad, Mr. and Mrs. Don Limb and two daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Evans and sons of Garland, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Iverson of Tremonton. Mr. and Mrs. Wynn Johns and family of Portage spent Sunday visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Edwards in Salt Lake City. Mrs. Johns parents Mr. and Mrs. John J. Williams of Malad have recently been released from the hospital and are visiting at the Edward home. The United States 3.7 million miles of roads carry 17.8 million trucks a yeai hauling 600 million tons ol freight. Area Men Patent Car Safety Unit Leland E. Davis of Brigham City, Fred E. Schneiter of and Howard E. Ogden Jorgensen, Hyrum, were the recipients Sept. 19, 1972, of U.S. Patent No. 3,692,495, entitled "Gas Generator." inflatable Emergency equipment, such as life rafts, must be inflated quickly and automatically. This has commonly been done by apparatus which includes a container of compressed gas which is opened by mechanical or explosive means. However, the compressed-ga- s type of inflation device has certain disadvantages when used with the recently proposed safety cushions for protecting the occupants of an automotive vehicle in the event of a collision. For example, the comp- type of inflation device is relatively bulky and difficult to package neatly in ressed-gas places such as steering columns. High pressure containers of compressed gas are considered a hazard and tend to be unreliable because of the ever-presepossibility of leakage. Moreover, the pressure in them can be increased high by dangerously surrounding temperatures. In contrast, the solid-fugas generator, in which a solid fuel is ignited to produce an inflatable gas, is considered to be a superior source of gas for automotive vehicle safety inflatable cushions. The solid-fugas generator may be provided in a much smaller package than compressed gas; it is reliable for a long period of time; and, if it is relatively insensitive to temperature and shock, it can be considerably safer than the compressed-ga- s type of inflation device. BOX ELDER JOURNAL, Brigham City, Utah Thursday, November 9, 1972 gas generators. solid-fu- - Meets Specifications To provide an Improvement devised a 3Ulii Si- over the prior devices, Davis, Schneiter and Jorgensen have' II ii gas soilid-fu- el generator which, as described in the specifications and drawings of their patent, produces nontoxic gas and has effective cooling means for lowering the gas temperature to a point that is safe for the vehicle occupant. The gas generator of their invention is reliable over long periods of time, nonhazardous ; tJ during prolonged storage, compact in size, easy to replace, and inflates the safety cushion within about of a second after impact. Since the inflated cushion would be a handicap to the vehicle occupant after it has served its purpose, provision is made for deflating it Immediately. a "V i .25 three-hundredt- Davis, Schneiter - . . BLASTOFF! Members of Laver Earls fifth grade class again presented their rocket launchings for students at Bunderson Elementary school this past week. Here an J photographer caught one TWO, ONE rocket just leaving the launching pad. The fifth graders build the rockets annually as part of a science project. N-- and Tff Jorgensen has assigned this patent to Thiokol Chemical corporation. nt The gases, produced by a gas generator, must be nontoxic because of danger of rupture of the inflatable cushion and they must also be cool enough to avoid burning the vehicle occupants. solid-fu- el However, these two important problems the toxicity and temperature of the inflating apparently have gases heretofor received no consideration in designing these lt succeeds in Puerto Rico SAN JUAN IUPI No-fau- Ricos Puerto I government-operate- d auto insurance plan in its first year that this year, its second, the premium dropped from 135 to $24 and benefits were increased. no-fau-lt was so successful Theyre tough Years CHICAGO (UPI1 of fighting them on their home grounds still has not eliminated the mosquito problem, and with good reason : theyre bom tough. The habitats of the worlds 2,500 species of mosquitoes, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica, range from small holes in trees to huge swamps. Many species can withstand severely contaminated water, including the hot, highly alkaline volcanic pools of Uganda. Others can tolerate the digestive enzymes of carnivorous plants and some are bred in saline and brackish pools. One species was found in India breeding in a tank of hydrochloric acid. abulafiori forBox Elder County FAMILY LIFE CONFERENCE the Northern - Planning Richard from Utah Family Life conference are, left, Kimber, director of pupil personnel, Box Elder School district; Jessie Eller, USU extension agent for Box The first train in the United States Dowered by steam traveled from Albany to Schenectady N.Y. on Aug. 8. b1831 r Elder county; LaRene Napoli, Box Elder county family life chairman; Santos Pommier, director, Region 4 PTA, and Jean Barnes, North Box Elder PTA council. Family Life Confab Focus Dada and Youth Making It will theme the Northern Utah Family Life Together conference icheduled Nov. 21 Utah State university. at The conference, involving over 300 teen-ag- e youth along with a representative group of adults from Cache and Box Elder counties, will emphasize the importance of motivation and the father's contribution to the total family, according to Glen O. Jenson, Utah State University Extension specialist in family and child develop- ment Keynote speaker will be Dr. William Rolfe Kerr, assistant to the CM president, university relations, USU. His discussion will be followed by a panel moderated by Jenson and involving boy and girl students, a father, a mother and a religious leader. A will feature Marilyn Vanderbur, former Miss America. She is a well known TV and radio personality highly sought after as a youth speaker. Last year she spoke to over 290,000 youths, Jenson said. Recycling pays NEW YORK (UPI) Citizen recyclers have received more than $6.25 million for the glass bottles they have collected and taken to bottle reclamation centers in the past two years. The Glass Manufacturers Container Institute reported on the second anniversary of the industry's bottle redemption program that about 1.25 billion glass containers were turned over in the two-ye- ar period. Citizens received about a penny a pound for the waste glass. Radials roll YORK 1UPU -Rpassenger tires are rolling towards new records in the U.S. replacement market for passenger cars, says a leading tiremaker. Radials today hold nearly 1U per cent of that market, compared with 6 per cent for all of 1971 and less than 1 per cent for 1967, according to Patrick C. Ross, president ol the B.F. Goodrich tire division. He estimates that in the first five months this year 5.6 million of the 61 million replacement passenger tires shipped in America, including imports, were radial. NEW adial |