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Show March Birthday Party HIE CITIZEN 14, 1968 Held For Girl FRANKLIN Mrs. Marlyn Durrant honored her two year old daughter Angie with a btrthdav nartv Friday eve- nine. Guests were her grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Porter and Mr. and Mrs. Durrant, and her cousins and other relatives in the area. Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Porter were weir children and families, Mr. and Mrs. Claron Porter and children of Roy and Mr. and Mrs. Rex Condie and son of Logan. n Mr. and Mrs. Robie of Ogden were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. n Clyde Porter. Mrs. Rasmus-seis the Porter's daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Farley of Salt Lake City visited last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Doney. Mrs. Judy Daley was hostess to a cosmetic party in her home last week. During the evenine. colors most suitable for her guests' coloring were discussed ana maxe-u- p iacuus were given. Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Packer and Darla ov er the weekend were Mr. ana Mrs. Don Baur and children of Provo. Mrs. Baur is the PApkera' daughter. During the week, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Monte Olsen were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hawkes and children of Paul. A Beeline party was hosted Thursday evening by Mrs. Alan Hampton with Opal Parkinson as demonstrator. After enjoying the fashions, several women were served dessert Or-v- al Ras-musso- increased GRAZING Ralph Roberta points out grazing areas to Ojereyville grazing officials, including Williata Jensen, Cove, president; Fred Jensen, Cove, board member, Elmurtd Oliver son, Franklin, board member; and Wallace Chatterton, Franklin, secretary-treasureThe Citizen Photo d idea-ease- r. Grazing Allotment Up In Local Area Preston District Ranger Ralph Roberts announced today that the grazing permits on the Gherryvllle Cattle Allotment will be increased 33 for the 1968 season. For the past six seasons, tie permittees on the Cherry-vill- e Allotment have been grazing 139 head of cattle from June 11 to Sept 25. Under the old grazing system, they were using 900 acres, or of the usable approximately acres each year. Each half was grazed two years in succession, while the other has received complete rest from grazing for two years. Then the procedure was reversed. This procedure was fine for maintaining and improving range conditions. However, the permittees felt that a lot of good feed was going to ing in 1968, the permittees will graze 186 head, an increase of 47 head, from June 11 to Sept 25. Association President William Jensen, waste. After considerable study and field checking, a new management system was devised. Under the new management system, 1200 acres, or approximately 23 of the usable area will be grazed each year. The new system uses the principles of rest rotation, whereby each pasture is grazed or rested in the following sequence: First year Graze early, for maximum weight gain. Second year Graze late e (after time), to allow the cattle to tramp in the seeds of all plants. Third year Rest from grazing, to allow seedlings to become established and regain the vigor of the plants. The sequence starts over again the fourth year. Start seed-rip- . Secretary-treasur- er Wallace Chatte r t o n, Board Members Fred Jensen, Hazen Gilbert, Edmund and all of the members have been very cooperative in working out this management system. In accepting this increase they have mile of agreed to build barbed-wir- e fence necessary to separate two pastures. The Forest Service will supply the materials. This increase in the permits trial perwill be for a iod. At that time an evaluation will be made to determine the amount of permanent increase justified by the new grazing system. "I am very pleased to make an increase such as this to a fine, cooperative group of men like the Cherryville Association," Ranger Roberts concluded. n, STORE HOURS I 9:30 TO ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 6:00 SOCIABLE CITIZEN Weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Bur nice Ward of Clifton were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Ward of Provo, Mary Ward and fiance, Dick West, of Great Falls, Mont, and Suzanne Moss of West Cobina, Calif. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on Friday, the 12th day of July, 1968, at 10:00 o'clock a.m. of said day, at the offices of STAR COMPANY. 10 West Oneida. Pres ton Idaho, Star Company, as! successor trustee, will sen at public auction to the highest bidder for casn. lawiui money of the United States, payable at time of sale, the following described real property situate in the County of Franklin, State of Idaho, Commencing at a point 49.5 feet East and 130 feet South of the Northwest corner of Section 35, Township 15 South, Range 39 East of the Boise Meridian, running thence South 100 feet, thence East 150 feet, thence North 100 feet, thence West 150 feet to the place of beginning. Such sale will be made witnout warranties or coven ants regarding title, posses- - j sion or encumbrances to satis fy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power 01 sale conferred in a Deed of Trust and Deed of Trust Note executed by Horace E. Hayes and Edna Hayes, husband ana wife, to Prudential Savings and Loan Association, a cor poration, as benefic i a r y, which Deed of Trust was recorded in Book 64 of Mort gages, page 435, under Instrument No. 112778, records of Franklin County, Idaho, and which Deed of Trust nas ocen assigned to East Brooklyn Savings Bank by instrument aonearinfi of record in Frank lin County, Idaho. The default for wmcn saie to be made is the failure of the grantors to pay the installments of monthly 8184.00 per month, lor uie months of November and De cember. 1967, and January. 19MFebruary and March. to-w- it: MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE Sport Shirts Plaids and Plains 1.99 MEN'S MOCK TURTLE NECK POLOS Fashion Colors 199 REDUCED THRU SATURDAY! Plush accent rugs in two Sleeping Bag of our most popular styles 5 LB. Quality Con- Rugged, for Outdoor Use struction V24''x36 REG3.98, NOW 'TROY' Elegant looking all nylon cut loop pile in Greek key design. REG. REG. REG. 5.98 NOW 4.99 10.98 NOW 8.99 4.98, NOW - 999 and 27x48" 36"x60" 3.99 Dacron Balis 24"x36" SCANDIA' All rayon dense, shag pile rug 1 LB. - 6.98 NOW 5.99 27x.48 hnlanro nwinC as of tlllS date on the Deed of Trust Note ennurnrl hv caiH Tlppd Ol J Til SI ; si7 d7i an tnectner wim accrued interest at the rate Ocof 5.25 per annum from tountil paid, tober 1, 1967, exgether with costs and nanens rvf fnrpplnslire and 3 reasonable trustee and attor ney's fee. Dated March lztn, COMPANY, an Idaho corporation By James P. Tasso . law-STA- Warmth Without Weight - Uniform Thickness makes a bold color splashl REG. Tim 199 HOLDEN, HOLDEN KIDWELL By R. Vern Kidwcll n Tm VSHurnll Idaho First Nan. Idaho Falls, Idaho Remember! You Can Charge It At Penney's Would You Allow Your Child To Play With A Loaded Gun? Of course not, because you know that a gun is a dangerous weapon. Yet, if you've left the usual assortment of household cleaning items under your kitchen sink and your child were to swallow one or more your child could die by poisoning. Danger Lurks in the Bathroom A very necessary and harmless event in any child's day could be disastrous. The bathroom is third on the list of the most dangerous places in the home. Nearly one out of every five accidental poisonings takes place here. More than a million poisoning cases occur in the U. S. each year, and about 1500 of these end in death. One-thir- d of these deaths involve children under the age of How High Is Safe? five. Once a child is dizzying heights past the age of diapers he can climb to that many parents believe are beyond the child's ability. Many mothers have found to that their beliefs were wrong. Parents should play it safe and lock up the medicine chest Even adults can make mistakes. How many times have you begun to brush your teeth with the hair cream, or started to shave with aerosol toothpaste, or to spray your hair with then-sorro- w SAC Children Die Every year, approximately half a million children swallow a potentially poisonous substance found in or around their home a product that was not intended to be dangerous but that has turned into a possible killer. Accidental poisonings kill more children every year than all the contagious childhood diseases combined. Toddler Is Often Victim The largest number of poisonings occur in children two to three years of age. Nearly 95 percent of these children "wolf' down the poisons while supposedly under supervision. Small children will swallow almost anything they can get into their mouths; a child's curiosity is all it takes for an accident to happen. According to the American Medical Association, over a a million products available for the home are quarter of potentially poisonous. These chemical products may be broken down into: (1) cosmetics, (2) drugs, (3) pesticides, and (4) household chemicals. The last category includes sanitizing agents, disinfectants and deodorizers, room deodorizer? Danger Lurks in the Bedroom A child considers any room a- place of great intrigue. The bedroom has many places where potential poisons may be hidden. A night table is a favorite place for storing such things as medicines, sleeping pills and vitamins, hair and nail preparations, eye make-ulipstick, 11 creams, deodorants, and perfumes potential hazards. Mothers and grandmothers often leave their where children can get into the innumerable odds and ends. Drugs, when taken discreetly will not harm the person for whom they are intended, but a child, knowing no better, might swallow a whole bottle of pills or share some of the lot with little brothers or sisters, and in large amounts, drugs become poisonous. Even vitamin and iron pills can be harmful; large doses of oil soluble vitamins A and D or iron pills can be poisonous to children. p, Little People Cant Read laundry products (bleaches and bluing powders), metal polishes and cleaners, glass cleaners, fabric cleaners and spot removers, furniture and floor cleaners and polishes, automobile cleaners, antifreeze, adhesives, shoe polishes, and fire extinguishers. Parents must read the labels and be aware of just what it is that they are bringing into the home. There are four categories that denote the toxicity of a pesticide and these are represented by certain signal words: DANGER: The first category and the most lethal is represented by the word "Danger" and has a red skull and crossbones on the label. One dose or exposure to poisons bearing this label can be fatal. WARNING: The word "Warning" on the label means the substance is still extremely poisonA Day in the life of a Child Just an Ordinary Day ous. Products with this label should be handled with extreme care. CAUTION: A "Caution" statement Drop in on any family with children and look around for the dangers in and around their home. Spend a few means that there is still danger of serious poisoning over hours not even a day following an average child on his a short period of time. It could be the same poison as in a package marked "Danger" but in a less concentrated or her travels around the house. Accidental poisonings amount. NO PRECAUTION: The fourth category rebegin in the early morning when two and three year olds quires no signal words; however, the nature of the prostart crawling out of cribs before sleeping parents realize duct and the way it is used may require certain precautionary statements. they are up and about. Arc Furniture Polishes and Waxes Harmless? Danger Lurks in the Cupboard The kitchen is probably the most dangerous room in the house, with the catch-a- ll storage area under the sink the prime target full of cleaning agents, disinfectants, polishes and other sanitizing agents. When a child is allowed to play freely with pots and pans, he feels he can explore other cupboards. Now the fun begins trying to open or pry off covers (to smell and taste and pour). It is easy for the child to make the spray come out of the aerosol can by pushing the top. The fact that mommy uses the spray to clean the stove encourages the child to ask, "Why not be a big help and put it there for her?" The term "Poison" may be misleading at times. The Poison Control Centers list a number of oil preparations as poisonous although they would rarely kill a child or an adult. Children are apt to drink furniture polishes or as the petroleum distillates (kerosene and gasoline) fumes or droplets go down and come up, some may get into the lungs. Any of these in a child's lung can cause oral pneumonia a type that will not respond to antibiotics because there are no bacteria involved. The oil cannot be removed from the lungs and in some cases eventually kills. Bombs Explode Aerosol bombs stored near the heat or in sunlight may explode. The propellant in spray containers for household use is gas under pressure. Gas expands when it is heated and may burst the can and the flying metal and harmful fumes can cause serious injury. Being a Fussy Housekeeper Can Create a Killer Chlorine compounds, such as chlorinated bleaches, mixed with products containing ammonia will give off chlorine gas. The gas can be fatal when breathed. This is rooms particularly true in small, closed, or areas, such as stall showers, where the gas cannot escape. Danger Lurks Outside When garage doors are left open and whose aren't? little children may wander into all kinds of trouble One in ten of every accidental poisoning happens there. The garage is usually the storage place for paints, sol vents, denatured alcohol, pesticides, weed killers (sodium arsenate, one of the most deadly poisons, dangerous for pets and humans), the ant and roach killers (children killer, too), plus assorted remedies for sick plants-spr- ays, liquids, dusts, aerosols. About a fourth of all accidental poisonings involved substances not in their original containers and over a half of these products were not in the place where they belonged. Parents endanger their children when they store a little extra kerosene or gasoline in an empty soda bottle. Children learn to make associations. It should come as no surprise, then, when a child mistakes for a soft drink some of the kerosene someone has poured into a soda bottle. A little gasoline in the lungs could cause the type of pneumonia for which there is no known cure. Lock 'em I'p All pesticides should be under lock and key, and grownups need to be careful when using them. Leaving pesticides lying around the garden while going inside for a drink or to answer the telephone is an invitation to disaster. An adult protects himself, as well as children and pets, by reading and understanding the label before starting to use any chemical. ed Making a Clean Sweep Old and unknown medicines and drugs should be flushed down the toilet or drain and the rinsed containers given to the trash collector so that no one will be tempted to use them again. Old pesticides and pesticide containers should be wrapped securely in many sheets of newspaper and given to the trash collector. Antidotes Nurses and doctors advise parents to keep substances for example, syrup of ipecac to induce vomiting, or a material such as activated charcoal to tie up poisonous substances in the stomach until they can be removed safely. However, "Call the doctor immediately," is a lifesaving rule. Never give an antidote nor induce vomiting unless prescribed by your doctor. If a child has swallowed lye, giving him syrup of ipecac could make matters worse, for the lye would burn not only going down but all the way back up. Use only the doctor's prescription. on hand to use in an emergency, Help Is A Just a Telephone Call Away call to the family doctor, police, or emergency room of the nearest hospital will bring help when a child swallows a potential poison. The doctor will ask the parent, among other things, to read the contents of the bottle from the label. And he may prescribe emergenat-ho- cy measures. Will You Be Guilty of Household Homicide? Switching Containers Poisonous substances are often found out of their original containers bleaching agents in mayonnaise jars, furniture polish in soda bottles, rat poison in saucers all of them containers that a child normally associates with eating and drinking. Is your home a safe place to live in? Don't spend so much time hiding the candy from your child rather hide the poisons you have around in places you think are Don't risk poisoning your child. And speak up the next time you see a friend or neighbor being careless. Only through education and awareness can you ensure the safety of your children. h. & J" successor Attorneys for trustee March Legal No. 1346-P- ub. 1968. 14, 21, 28, April 4, THIS MESSAGE DURING NATIONAL POISON PREVENTION WEEK IS BROUGHT SERVICE BY TO YOU AS A PUBLIC - JOHNSON DRUG STORE PHONE 852-416- 3 PRESTON, DDAHO |