OCR Text |
Show V January 3, 1974 The Springville Herald Pago Five Chicken Bundle From Freezer-To-Table PILLSBURY'S CAKE MIX LGS. - tli TERI TOWELS JUMBO ROLL DOUBLE LUCK GREEN BEAKS ft $f CAMS d!ii ROYAL GELATIN EV- '.Ki. ft1 J 00 U. FUVORS 303 CANS ASSORTED FLAVORS ROLLS HUE BONNET MARGARINE LIBBY'S CATCHUP PILLSBURY'S INSTANT BREAKFAST RANCH FRESH EGGS r a 7 PKGS. LL ' ji 26-OZ. BOTTLE LARGE AA GRADE 76 ENVELOPES IB LEAN AND MEATY FAMILY PACK COUNTRY STYLE SPARERIBS LEAN AND TENDER lb. SDffi FRYER "A" GRADE LEGS . lb. 79c FRYER "A" GRADE THIGHS . lb. 79c FRYER "A" GRADE WINGS . lb. 39c BARS SLICED BACON BAR S FRANKS 12-OZ. PKG. 89 BONELESS HI TURBOT FILLETS X -1 nib. FISH STICKS & SQUARES lb. 79c T-BON E STEAKS f 4 U.S.D.A. " CHOICE mm BONELESS SIRLOIN STEAK . lb. 51.98 BONELESS DINNER STEAKS lb. $1 .79 SIRLOIN TIP STEAKS lb. $1.69 GROUND BEEF FAMILY PACK 38 BONELESS TOP STE AKSr; lb. $1 .69 SIRLOIN TIP ROAST . lb. $1.59 BONELESS HEEL ROAST lb. $1.19 BIG JOHN PIZZA each 99c GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKE SINGLE LAYER BROWNIES rHOCOLAlb OHIH1 COOKIES . . CHOCOLATE ECLAIRS AND CREAM PUFFS FOR cppiMfiVILLE and OREM each IQc 5 doz. $1.00 COLGATE DENTAL CREAM 5-OZ. TUBE 73c Value BRIGHT SIDE SHAMPOO 1 1 -OZ. BOTTLE 99c Value raj ULTRA BAN 5000 DEODORANT 5-oz. Can 79c Value COLGATE INSTANT SHAVE 1 1 -OZ. CAN 79c VALUE ESEESSSIIES (C3' WILKINSON SWORD STAINLESS STEEL BLADES 5 BLADES 79c VALUE FOR STYLE 1 5-oz. Bottle BABY SHAMPOO VALUE WILKINSON SWORD TRIAL RAZOR WITH BLADE I-1 jll STYLE H A I R SPRAY 13-OZ. CAN 99c Value STYLE SHAMPOO AND CREME RINSE 1 5-OZ. BOTTLE 99c Value STYLE SETTING LO TION 12-OZ. BOTTLE SI. 29 Value MSB oo A bundle of good eafiiiK is yours in this quick to fix chicken dinner. Enjoy a flavorful combination of chicken, potatoes, carrots car-rots and peas laced with a touch of thyme leaves. All of these ingredients, plus the usual salt, pepper and butter seasonings are wrapped and baked together in heavy duty Reynolds Wrap. Prepare and bake this dinner the same day or store in your freezer for a quick freezer-to-table dinner sometime later. Chicken in a Handle may be cooked from the frozen state! It's a handy meal in a bundle for any member of the family to prepare. Chicken in a Itimdle 1 broiler-fryer chicken, cut 1 cup frozen peas in halt 2 large carrots, cut into 1-inch pieces 2 medium potatoes, peeled and quartered Tear two squares of heavy duty Reynolds Wrap about 16 x 18 inches. Arrange chicken, vegetables, seasonings and butter in center of foil, dividing equally. Seal foil. To cook, place on shallow pan and bake in a 375F oven for about 1 hour. If frozen, fro-zen, bake for V2 hours. Gonorrhea A Disease or Just a Dirty Word salt, pepper teaspoon thyme leaves l i cup butter W7 A fr To many people, gonorrhea hap been only a repugnant word-. not a disease. They've always;,, thought of gonorrhea as something some-thing other people catch. Not any more. Whatever the man or woman in the street thinks about this social problem some call it "sex pollution" government authorities au-thorities say that gonorrhea is more common in the United States today than strep throat in fact, more common than any communicable disease except the common cold. Thanks largely to the accent on youth and its new-found independence in-dependence ushered in during the "Swinging Sixties," more than two million Americans a year are contracting the disease. That means a new case every 15 seconds, four per minute, 240 per hour, 5,700 per day. Officials at the Center for Disease Dis-ease Control in Atlanta describe the situation as pandemic, meaning mean-ing that gonorrhea is at the stage of a massive, world-wide epidemic. epi-demic. In the 12 months ended June 30, 1973, the CDC reported 624,371 cases of gonorrhea an increase of nearly nine per cent over the previous 12 months. But these staggering statistics are only the tip of the iceberg. Hundreds Hun-dreds of thousands of cases are not reported to public health authorities. Most of the victims are young people. The incidence of gonorrhea gonor-rhea is highest in the 20 to 24 age group (more than 1,400 per 100,000 as compared with an average rate of about 300 per 100,000 for all age groups). The most rapid rate of increase about 20 per cent per year is taking place in an even younger group, boys and girls 15 to 19. Many factors, social and medical, med-ical, are responsible for the higher high-er incidence of gonorrhea relaxed re-laxed attitudes toward sex in the church, the family, and the public pub-lic generally; changes in sexual behavior and contraceptive practices. prac-tices. Reliance on the "Pill" instead in-stead of the condom has removed some measure of protection against the disease. Here are some of the medical problems: 1. About 80 per cent of the women wom-en and approximately 10 per cent of the men who have gonorrhea, gon-orrhea, do not have .symptoms and so do not seek treatment. Yet they can and do spread the disease to their sexual partners. Moreover, a patient who is cured can easily become be-come reinfected. 2. There is no routine "blood test" for gonorrhea. There are reliable methods for detecting the disease, but as a rale only those patients who suspect sus-pect that they have gonorrhea apply for a test. This means that most of those with no symptoms go undetected. Since the early post-war years, penicillin has been used to cure millions of gonorrhea victims, but today it is necessary neces-sary to use much larger doses than in the beginning. There are two other problems with penicillin: a) A number of patients are allergic to it; b) some strains of the gonorrhea organism are relatively resistant. re-sistant. Still, there are some encouraging encourag-ing developments. Last year, for example, a new antibiotic, Trobi-cin Trobi-cin (spectinomycin) was marketed mar-keted by The Upjohn Company, a leading pharmaceutical firm, exclusively for treatment of gonorrhea. gon-orrhea. One injection of Trobicin produced cures in about 96 per cent of the patients treated in clinical trials, some of whom had not responded to other antibiotics. antibi-otics. Extensive research is underway under-way looking toward development of vaccines which will prevent both gonorrhea and that other member of the venereal disease family, syphilis. An effective vaccine, vac-cine, however, appears to be some years in the future. Although gonorrhea is seldom fatal, it can cause serious physical phys-ical damage to vital reproductive organs if it goes untreated. Fortunately, For-tunately, the disease is fairly easy to cure with drugs now available. So, what to do? Anyone Any-one with the slightest suspicion that he or she may have been exposed ex-posed to gonorrhea should see a physician at once for diagnostic tests. The slight embarrassment this may involve is a small price to pay for future health and well-being. S'VT WARWICK 1'AKISII, BERMUDA A couple walk l.und in hand through the surf as the sun sets on a surf-washed South .Shore bench. Bermuda boasts dozens of hideaways such -as this one, many protected by jagged outcrops of limestone rock and crowned by flowering cacti and Spanish bayonets. i |