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Show 0 JUNE THE JOURNAL Red Cross News Medical History Making Surgery According to Paul Lindeman, chapter chairman of the Davis County Red Cross board, Chester Douse, chief of special services at the new Veterans hospital, Fort Douglas station, will be the guest speaker at the June 10th board meeting which will be held at the Ameiican Legion hall, Bountiful, at s p. m. Special and honored guests will be It .": fund workers who so successfully completed the house to house canvass in the chapter. The following program wall be piesented: Call to order, Paul Lindeman; invocation, Rev. Geo. Dreher; minutes, Mrs. Florence Searle; greetings, Mayor V. T. Rice; financial report, Vernon C. Blown; honor fund workers, E. Dale Peak; activity reports, Mrs. BOSTON, MASS. Nurse Janet MacDonald, of New England Deaconess Hospital, attends Mary Gibbs, left, and Margaret Gibbs, old Siamese twins from Holyoke, Mass. Margaret has undergone medical history making surgery while Mary also was under ether since they have a single circulatory system. Two operating tables were used, covered with a special mattress. 41-ye- ar Beitha L. Muir; operations Beware, Thomas Q. Williams; Veterans Hospital activity, Chester Douse. Mrs. Roy Kilfoyle will be in charge of refreshments. The public is cordially invited to attend. The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II REPR ES ENTATI V E N U RS E VISITS CHAPTER Miss Ann Martin, nursing service repiesentative from the Pacific area office spent Thursday and Friday in the Davis county chapter contacting various key people interested in nursing activity in the chapter. On Thursday, she met with Mrs. C. C. Gardner, home nursing chairman; Mrs. Nona Rich, nurse of disaster services; Mrs. Pauline Gardner, Mrs. Virginia Barton and Mrs. Victor Worsley, home nursing instructor at the home of Mrs. Bertha vice-chairm- an Muir. JUNE BLOOD DRAWINGS Dean Swaner, blood procurement chairman for Davis county Red Cross, states that a blood drawing will be conducted at the Orchard ward amusement hall June 8th, un- der the direction of Orin G. Tib-biassisted by Stanley Gilbert and Don Olsen. Mr. Tibbits states that a house to house canvass will be conducted and contacts will be made with managers of big business in the North Salt Lake area in order to publicize the drawing. It is hoped that 100 or more donors will respond. A staff of eight nurses and one doctor will be present from the International Blood Center and eighteen volunteers from the chapter will assist. Many of the volunteers will be members of the Orchard and Val Verda wards who have recently completed a Red Cross Home Nursing course. Time set for the drawing is June 8th, 3 to 7 p. m. Other drawings scheduled in the chapter are Navy Base, June 4th and Ogden Arsenal June 22nd. Two drawings were held in May, one at the Navy Base and one at the Ogden Arsenal. Thirty-eigchapter volunteers assisted giving a total of 200 hours. When an individual gives blood he does the one thing that no one else can do for him. Human beings are the only source of this wonderful life giving fluid. A pin is given to each person donating. The chapter is proud to report that many persons in the chapter are members of the Gallon Club. Most recent attaining this goal are employees of the Ogden Arsenal, Austin Hill, two gallons and Elyce Bushnell one galon. Each was presented with a special pin for this wonderful service. HOME NURSING COURSES Twenty-fiv- e completed a Home Nursing Course Monday evening. Dr. George A. Spendlove of the State Health Department was guest speaker and discussed Civil Defense, which is the last lesson of the Home Nursing course. Mrs. Victor Worsley has been conducting an afternoon class and an evening class at the chapter office. Home nursing pins were presented to the women who have successfully completed the course. ts ht General view of the state coach leaving Buckingham Palace in rehearsal as they pre British the for Empires great day, June 2, The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. Decoration pared bearing the crown and other royal emblems, pennants and other streamers proclaiming Long live ti Queen bedecked the main streets. LONDON HEARTH ACHES KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY YEARS OLD . 86 PROOF . THE HILL & HILL CO., LOUISYILLE, THE LIVESTOCK SITUATION Livestock trading turned a bit uneven here this week. Cattle prices were from steady to unevenly lower while hog prices staged another upturn. Sheep and lambs were little changed. The cattle markei is showing signs of a wider range of prices with fed cattle holding at relatively high levels while grassers and new crop cattle are working lower. As the week ended only choice fed steers were steady with other kinds .70 cents or more lower. Top heifers were also steady but other kinds sold lower. Cow prices broke .70 cents to $1 and bulls were mostly .70 cents down. Calves and vealers were steady, but there was some weakness in the late trading. One load of choice steers set a new top for the season of .$2.7.10 this week while the bulk of the choice offerings went at $24 to $2.7. More medium kinds sold from $22 to $23 while plainer grades sold in a wide range down from $20 with common offerings under $17. One load of heifers sold at $24 while the bulk of fed kinds went at $20 and better. Quite a few plain heifers sold at $17 and down. Good fat cows sold up to $1S early, but little was able to pass $10.50 late. Most beef cows sold from $13 to $1.7..TO with canners and cutters at $11 to $13 and a few thin canners at $10 and dowTn. Top grades of bulls sold at $20.70 with best vealers at $24.2.7. Stockers and feeders wrere dull. A few yearlings moved at $17 to $10 with fleshy feeders at $21. The hog top hit $27, the highest price in three years. The bulk of the more desirable butchers sold from $25 to $2G.50 with heavier kinds down to $24 and a few light lights at $23. Packing sows sold from $20 to $21. No top grades of lambs were here. A few good grades sold to killers at $22 with feeder lambs moving at $18.30. MAY 1053 Stork Talk KAYSVILLE From the deep South, Durham, North Carolina, comes exciting news of a new son born May 12 to Mr. and Mrs Nick Ludlow. The mother will be remembered as the former Caroline Whitesides, daughter of the Emil Whitesides of Kaysville. The s have another son, just fifteen months old who will be a big help in caring for the new arrival. Other grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ludlow. The daddy of the new arrival is completing medical studies at Durham. Mrs. Whitesides returned Sunday night from a visit with the two grandchildren and their parents. Lud-low- great-grandparen- ts. FULLY AGED 1$4 1953. KAYSVILLE Thrilled with their first child, a son, who arrived Monday night at a Salt Lake hospital, are Mr. and Mrs. Joe Preece. The new mother is the former Norma Buhler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Buhler, Kaysville. Other grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Parry Preece, Farmington; while Mr. and Mrs. Frank Witt, Heber City, are NOW REDUCED IN PRICE! THIS WHISKEY C, 'They said this week's program KY.. would be a real shocker!" NATlONAt SAFCTY JOUNCH KAYSVILLE Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gibson announce the arrival of a son at an Ogden hospital last week. |