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Show UJyA ; V TQftN Ph&e I L' Jalt l LiLxary Lukt. vJitj uu;h P1I2 THECACHE, VALLEY BEAUTY VOL. NO. X LEWISTON, 32 8P UTAH 84320 THUR&, rv "WilDSng MegoU natf Amdl Coumifty Coty Say TT According to separate statements made by Cache County Commission chairman, Todd water pours into an irrigation ditch near Lewiston, foiling FERTILE VALLEY the drought conditions found throughout Utah and making Cache Valley a very rich and productive area. Mormon pioneers began building irrigation systems to bring waters from Citizen Photo mountain creeks immediately after they had planted the seed in their fields. Life-givi- Moisture Slight, But Crops Good Scattered shower and thund- for harvest during the week. Harvest of nonirrigated wheat' is about 35 percent complete, irrigated winter wheat about 20 percent. Spring grain harvest is in progress in earlier areas and about 15 percent of spring wheat harvest is done, 15 percent of oats, and 20 percent of barley. Second cutting alfalfa hay is 33 percent dune and clover-timoth- y and wild hay harvest is in progress. Early potato harvest is in progress. Sweet corn and early peach harvest has started. I.flw ranges are very dry and some high ranges are quite dry. Most livestock continue in fair to good condition. Most counties have started cutting second crop alfalfa with Washington county completed earlier and Wasatch Front erstorm activity was reported from many sections of the State during the past week. Accumulated amounts of moisture were generally light to moderate. The scattered nature of the storms limited their value insofar as relief of drought conditions is concerned. Soil moisture on crop and rangelands is short in northern Utah, very short in central and southern Utah. Average temperatures ranged from near normal to five degrees below, and the soil temperatures at the depth range from the iour-inc- h mid-70- s in Cache Valley to the upper 70s in Salt Lake City, and the mid-90- s in St. George. The weather was favorable counties getting well along while higher elevation counties are just starting. By the end of d of the the week, about second crop had been harvested. Harvest of wild hay and clover-timoth- y hay is in progress except in a few latest areas. Several counties are nearing completion. Thus far, quality of second crop alfalfa, clover-timoth- y hay, and wild hay is good with practically no weather damage during harvest. Pea aphids are numerous in alfalfa in some central and southern' ytah areas fend there has been considerable spraying. Winter wheat harvest made good progress during the past week. By the end of the week about 35 percent of the On Page 5 one-thir- ;i! .!! p.m., some 300 Cache Valley IRMP staff members and residents will be examined free consultants involved include of charge at the Latter-da- y Dr. Robert C. Soderberg, Saints Hospital. D.D.S, project director; Ben H. Because of public response to Davis7 Administrative director the project in other inlermoun-lai- u of the IRMP Oral Cancer areas and in view of the Project; Earl Z. Brown, M.D.; limited amount of time, medical Albert Clarysse, M.D.; Reed professionals and facilities, reSlringham, D.D.S., all of Salt sidents who are interested in Lake City. comexamined should being The two-da- y clinic is one of 36 plete the coupon below and similar clinics scheduled over return it to the Latter-da- y the next three years in Idaho, Saints Hospital by Aug. 14. Utah, Montana, Colorado, NeA committee will review the vada and Wyoming. Overall the couM)iis returned and residents project is to reach 75 selected will be contacted by percent ofdesigned the Intermountain telephone as to the time they Regions and denshould attend the clinic on Aug. tists (overphysicians 2,300). two-ho- 23. About 50 acres on the Hardware Plateau was burned last Wednesday, as a result of a lightening flash. The fire was spotted Tuesday, about 10 p.m., by a Wildlife Resources employe, but it was thought that a rainstorm in the area that night had extinguished the inconseblaze. However, Wednesday afternoon, the blaze was revived by winds whipping the few remaining live coals, and when the resulting blaze was noted, firefighters were sent into the area, including nearly 50 forest quential-looking A reminiscence by Virginia Hanson, librarian of the Cache County Public Library in Logan, will be published in Utah Historical Quarterly in August. The author is a past president of the Cache Valley Chapter of the Society which sponsors monthly lecture meetings on state and local history. A native of Cornish, Miss Hanson tells of teaching school in the 1930s in a small Carbon county coal mining town. Titled I Remember Hiawatha, the article recalls the author's experiences as she meets for the first time persons of many varying cultural and religious backgrounds, samples Greek and Oriental foods, and en- counters alphabets. Miss Hansons memoir is one of four articles which relate the history of the states ethnic strange-lookin- g Persons examined during the clinic will be referred to their local physician is positive cancer signs are detected. During the screening clinic, local practitioners will participate and gain additional experience aimed at helping them effectively detect suspicious ahnormallics. The overall aim of the program, according to Dr. Soderbcrg, is to have practitioners incorporate the latest diagnostic procedures in (heir routine office examinations. Involved in planning (he Logan clinic are local advisory members: Omar committee Budge, M.D.; F, Neal Morten-seM.I).; Dean Smart, M.D.; Steve Hayward, D.D.S.; Thcron Godfrey, Hospital Administrator; Mark J. Wright, Hospital Personnel Manager; Howard Dorst, Chairman. Cancer Society; and Mrs. Vivian Miller, Director Public Health Nurses. Several area students were listed on the honor roll for the spring quarter by Utah State University for achieving a grade point average of 3.5 or e better in their enrollment. Included were Terry G. Simmons of Lewiston, Agriculture; Jean Spackman, Trenton, Business; Arlene Griffin Larson. Trenton, Family life. Richmond students were Ro- bert Kenneth Carlson, Bradley Dee Carlson, Gerardus Fred Riebeck, Engineering; Victor Waynie Carlson, Mary Lu Halverson, Humanities, arts and social sciences; Douglas F. White, Science; Steven Blaine Nielsen, Agriculture; Margaret Mendenhall and Julynn Morin, Education. full-tim- ... j Name: Meets Address: Telephone Number: Age: Please tell your friends about the clinic. The Wildlife Board will meet the Salt Lake office to determine this year's upland game hunting seasons. Season lengths and bag limits for chukar partridge, Hungarian partridge, forest and sage grouse, quail and pheasant will-liset by the board. Opening dates of seasons for the above named birds have been scheduled. The board will also set turkey and cottontail openers. Partridge and grouse hunts begin Sept. 23, while quail and plieasant seasons open Nov. 11. Aug. 16 at This form must be returned to Mr. Thcron Godfrey, Saints Hospital, Logan, the Latter-da- y Administrator, Utah by August 14, 1972. co s groups in the summer issue of the Utah State Historical Societys magazine. Leading off the issue is Utah's Ethnic Minorities: A Survey by Professor Richard O. Ulibarri, director of the Institute of Ethnic Studies at Weber State College. Dr. Ulibarri examines the experiences of five groups Chicanos, Blacks, Japanese, Indians, and Chinese in Utah. These groups account for 3.5 percent of the states population with the Chicanos, who number more than 40,000, being the largest. Significant contributions have been made by each of these groups in the exploration, settlement, and development of the West which in the past have gone largely unrecognized. Dr. Ulibarris article will eventually be published as one chapter in a multi-authcollege textbook on Utah history. Board above shows a preliminary IRMP cancer screening clinic held recently. Also of concern amount of space that provided for parking and the possibility of ing additional propert; adjacent was disci k, Students y y Center, The particular site being considered is a lot 82.5 feet by 297 feet,' and Mr. Chris topher-so- n noted that this property would : be fairly tight for construction of a 4500 square foot structure such as the senior citizens. want. The group is using the USU study of a Logan-Cach- e Senior Citizens Center which the senior citizens have concurred to, to determine the size and kind of building desired. fire fighters from the U.S. Forest Service, the Utah Department of Wildlife Resources and the Cache County Fire Department. An aircraft drop of Phos-Chea fire retardant, was ordered, and the drop made later that evening at 5:15 p.m. by two planes, one carrying 1,003 gallons and the other, 2,000. The planes made several passes over the blaze, sometimes as low as 50 feet from the ground. Extent of damage was limited to sagebrush grazing land. Honor Roll Saints Hospital August 23, 1972 Free examinations for head, neck and oral LIFE SAVER Saints cancer will be given August 23, 1972 at Latter-daHospital by representatives of the Intcrmounluin Regional Medical Program and local physicians and dentists. Picture Chris tophenon and Tony Wegener of Architectural Design West and Bruce King, planner, consulted with the commission on the site study of a proposed Senior. Citizens . Cache Author Is Published HEAD, NECK AND ORAL CANCER SCREENING CLINIC latter-da- meeting has been set up between the county and Logan city later this week for discussion of Oils problem, as well as that of a sanitary land fill. ' In other county business, Jay A final consideration ' there was a lack of expansion and for attrS landscaping, and Mr. pherson asked the comr era about their feelings combining a senior cit center with a multiple purpose building.. In reply, the county noted that they had hoped to do this very thing in a proposed multiple purpose center earlier, 'with specific plans to use the old junior high school grounds. However, this was not compatible with the ideas of the Logan commissioners, who said that senior citizens wanted their own place, and not a combination building. . n, ' lf Forest fire Is Doused nonirri-Continu- Cancer Clinic Is In Offing Physicians, dentists and residents of Cache Valley will combine forces in combatting cancer Aug. 23 by participating in a Head, Neck and Oral Cancer Project at the Latter-da- y Saints Hospital. the project are the Salt Lake City based Intermountain Regional Medical Program (IRMP) and the Latter-da- y Saints Hospital. The programs aim is to reduce the incidences of death from cancer of the head, neck and mouth. proBeginning the two-da- y gram will be a intensive refresher course for local physicians and dentists Aug. 22 at 7 p.m., on the early diagnosis and treatment of head, neck and oral cancers. Lectures and films will be presented. Paticipants will review effective diagnostic and treatment techniques for cancer of the facial skin, lips, tongue, oral mucosa, pharnyx, cervical lymph nodes and thyroid. Emphasis during the session will be on reviewing the latest methods of detecting head and neck cancer at its early, treatable stage. Dr. Robert Sodcrberg, Salt Lake City, director of the IRMP's Head, Neck and Oral Cancer Program, estimates that the nation's present 57 percent survival rate from cancers of the head and neck can be converted to 80 percent with early detection and proper treatment procedures. Throughout the following day Aug. 23, from 8:30 a.in. to 4:30 Weston, and Logan City Mayor Ted S. Perry, both governing bodies are willing to meet together for negotiations cm disbursement of the one-hacent sales tax returned to the county annually. It was noted at a meeting of the . county commission Tuesday that a AUGUST 10, 1972 PREVENTIVE MEASURES The above is a previous IRMP cancer screening clinic. Intermountain Regional Medical Program representatives and local physicians and dentists will give Tree examinations for head, neck and oral cancer August 23 at the IDS Hospital in Logan. . Don Taylor has been named manager of Van PROMOTED Gas in Preston, after working as route salesman, service man and service trainer for 13 years. He assumed his new position --Citizen Photo Tuesday. Manager Mamed In Preston Firm Donald L. Taylor of Cove, a 13 framer Lorraine Povey of year employee of Van Gas in Clifton, and the couple has four Preston, has been named man- children, two of them married. ager of this office and the area He has ben a member of the including Franklin county and Elders Quorum presidency and part of Caribou, Bannock and a member of the Cove ward Cache counties. He has lived in bishopric, and is presently in the Preston area all his life, and the Sunday School presidency. went to work for Van Gas in A veteran of World War II, he August, 1959, after farming in is the holder of two campaign the Stockton area for many battle stars and has a combat years. infantry badge of good conduct Born in Logan and educated medal. He enjoys hunting and in Preston schools, Mr. Taylor fishing. also attended the University of Chuck Terrill of Idaho Falls, Texas and Southern California the regional manager who for specialized training. He made the announcement of Mr. began work as a route salesTaylors appointment, said that man, then later became a the new manager and his wife, service man, and until his who is a former employe of the promotion to manager August 1, company, have done a wonderwas responsible for training ful job in the past, and he is service men. confident that he will continue Mr. Taylor is married to the to do so in the future. Dairy, Livestock Output Raises Utah milk production during June equalled the record high monthly production of 79 million pounds reached in May, reports the Utah Crop and Livestock Reporting Service. Production per cow during June averaged a record high 1,010 pounds from the 78,000 milk cows in the State's herds. The new Utah Department of Agriculture regulations for C Grade milk production has resulted in a slight decrease in milk cow numbers and a large decrease in number of producers selling milk to butter and cheese plants, but no decrease in volume of milk sold to plants. In June, 71 percent of all milk from Utah farms sold to plants was A Grade milk and 29 percent was C Grade for butter and cheese. However, only 48 percent of the A Grade for milk was used to butter, cream cheese, and plants. American cheese production during June 1972, was a record high monthly total while Swiss dropped slightly from the' Cheese May record output. s produced 3,445,000 pounds of American cheese, 59.000 pounds more than in May, and 1,281,000 pounds of Swiss, 22.000 pounds less than in May. All whole milk cheese was up 37.000 pounds to establish a new total. record high monthly Whole milk cheese production for the first half of 1972 was 19 percent larger than a year earlier. Butter production durat 104,000 pounds waa ing down fi percent from May but in Residency Status Clarified Nonresident fishing with resident license" has been entered on a number of citations issued recently by Utah conservation officers who remind resianglers of the dency requirement. two-mon- th purpose of purchasing a wildlife license, a resident is any person who has been domiciled in the State of Utah Fra-th- for 60 consecutive days immediately preseding the purchase of a license and who does not claim residency fra: hunting, fishing or trapping in any other state or country. The Wildlife Resources Code defines domicile as the place where an individual has a true, fixed permanent home ana principal establishment. It is the place in which a man has voluntarily fixed the habitation of himself and family, not for a mere special or temporary purpose, but with the present intention of making a permanent home. fluid purposes. The rest was diverted ice actually One of the owners of the Logan property advised the commissioners that he would be willing to negotiate for a length of this property as a right of way needed for construction of the proposed widening of 14th North, west of Main Street. No concrete agreement was made at this time, however. Utah plan t June ve Continued On Page 5 Hearings Continuing Magistrates court hearings began yesterday in Preston for .remaining members of a group arrested for inciting to riot at the Preston Rodeo grounds Saturday, July 29. One man has been, fined' and placed on probation for his part in the incident. The magistrates clerk noted that all hearings will not be held at this time, aince some defendants have written, asking for later dates. ' |