OCR Text |
Show HELPER Cm JOURNAL (Utah) TOIURSnAY, OCTOBER TAGE SIX Francis 53 Schattner ' GUMS by Dr. R. I. " The major cause of tooth loss in adults is not cavities, but periodontal condi tions (diseases of the gums). fT.j Here are on e tins TTtttor healthier gums: JZ4ZJZf l igums Lf WSrJ 0' t- - from 162 i Mas- - out-of-to- ParETnt-Teach- your with spoonful of table salt In warm water is fine to mechanically cleanse the teeth and gums of food particles. However, to remove potentially harmful bacteria in the mouth, a new antiseptic (germ killing) and anesthetic (pain killing) mouthwash called Chloraseptie is now available in drugstores. Found to be mora effective than iodine as an oral germ killer, this medication relieves pain from sore throats aa well as irritations in the mouth. But remember, the most important advice: SEE YOUR your tooth. brush. Place N athe bristles at viJ angle Br. Sehattner against the 45 and gently vibrate towards the teeth. Bleeding gums are a warn lag sign. A dentist should be Consulted. Be careful of tooth-ieand dental floss. Vigorously oread against the guns, they can causa dam age and eventually periodontal dlseasa. A mouthwash should be after brushing. A tea., ki Neighbors Looking Ahead EN SPRING returned home Thursday after spending four days at Kearns where she visited her daughter, Mrs Verona o Belle and (family. Mrs Nedra Haroldson of Blackfoot, Idaho, spent some .time last week visiting her parents, Mr and IMrs Nick Thomas. Visitors Tuesday of last week at the home of Mrs Joan Snow were Elda fflnkins, Doris Luke, Batty Frandsen and Mel Ware of Orangeville. About Vm Health r Blackham 4, Tommy VuksinJck of Provo the long weekend with his My uncle and aunt. iMr and Mrs neighboring Notes of Interest Johnny Haycock and family. . . by Or. Gvorq S. Btnion The Friendly Sewing club was I M ESI G held Thursday evening at the ttUCATION NtOeHAM home of Mrs Gloria Skerl. Sttfcy, ArtAMM Jay and Myrna Rasmusssn and ROWLEY SEIMA By family spent Saturday and Sun day with his mother, Mrs Thel-m- a THE REACH FOR POWER Rasmussen before going on ' The Young Marrieds class was Simms. to Do rover where they will make Everybody wants it, but not was iA fund raising banquet hold Sunday evening at. the their nzw many home,. persons use it well. Very Ward Chapel. The lesson was held Friday at rthe Ward Chapel few wno possess it knows its Prithe of the F. direction urwler Guests Sunday at the home of dangers and pitfalls well presented toy Senator Wallace enough, Mr and Mrs Edward Simons were Dennett. He was accompanied by mary. yet people distrust it most wh':n and Hazel "Mrs Olsen Mr fam and Rex and Mrs Robb daughter his wif?, and son Bdb. A large it belongs to others. It has coripeople were Valene, drove to Moab Thursday Jly of Hiawatha. and magistrates "I'll have one more, please, group of rupted to visit with (Mrs Robert Winn The Primary Family Hour was who havekings No more for her." In attendance. it. Even th'3 'possessed horns returned presented Sunday with all Pri. mighty have ibeen consumed by .Harold and Mary Duke spent and family. They mary children participating. A it. They often beconra. its vie. the weekend in Salt Lake where Saturday. IMrs Eva Hansen and daughter program of the tims, along with the ruled and made (by the White House at they visited "their daughter, Phyll. is Morris and children. in law, Andrea Hansen of Moab partnership was narrated by the oppressed. Democracies are that time. It is no secret that born wh'rn ipeople wrest it from some government officials are the weekend in Salt Lake Peggy Nielson and was emphasized with colored slides. A spec Mr and Mrs Thomas Haycock spent the UEA convention. and dictators to establish ready to shove any sick or cripprinces attending visited Sunday in Provo with ial family scene .was presented popular government. Republics pled industries another step toVuk Nielson Jamie James, DwigM their daughter Mrs Mildred by Mr and Mrs Stanley Snow, try to safeguard it through rep ward nationalization. t' and Kent Burrows were baptised Darrel Cunningham, Kent Bur resentation sinick and family. and free elections. Steel was, and is, an industry as the at confirmed and rows class Dinner guests Sunday and Beth Snow. The Saturday night Citizens of free societies fear it. in trouble. Over a perhome of Mr and Mrs Boyd An- members of the LDS church on es were finally divided Into age This thing is power. It is re iod in which prices were raised derson were his parents, Mr and Sunday. grouros and th? teachers gave lated to money, for one is not 50 per cent, hourly employment Mrs Kenneth Anderson of Pricf jMt and Mrs Hyrum Huntsman final report to the roarents on and Glen and (Betty Anderson, of VictorviUe, Calif, spent the how and v4iy the iparent and long separated from the other. costs rose 68.7 per cent, so that Each seeks the other. This can profits came down 20.7 per cent their daughter Darlene and son weekend here visiting with his teacher should work together to be seen in the tremendous ac on each dollar of sales. Faced Chuck of Carbondale, Colo. Boyd many friends. help the child. of power in the fed (with competition from abroad, and Gien are brothers. Mrs Mae Noyes was a guest IMr and Mrs Alonro Richards cumulation eral government, power which steel needs desperately to invest Vincent Simms of Salt lake Sunday through Tuesday at the spent Thursday in Elmo visiting has accompanied vast outlays at. in modern sister-injahis of plants and new maweekend with Mrs her his the Mrs Erickson home Minnie City spent mother, tax Ben Wharff drove his parents the money. It can be said that chinery. But who wants to lend parents, Mr and Mrs Edward Sarah Rowley. executive branch of our bov to an industry that is not allow. ernment is the world's biraest ed to make profits? The industry business in terms of power and has been operating at little more money involved. (The term bus than half its capacity, and profits iness, however, is hardly atmro- - have been impossible tor some of the companies. Several of tee pnaie xo describe a wve organization which very largest producers have had nearly to pay out more money in divialways operates on deficits.) dends than they earned'. The Big Reach A total "budget aDoroachirur Power Can Ruin U.S. ibillion only begins to tell The attempt of US. Steel to the story of federal power. Other test the market last April, with multijbillion flunds and aid pro- an increase amounting to less grams are in its oare. Some 5.2 than three-tentof a cent per million employees (civilian and .pound, was denounced by " t h e military) are on its payrolls. It Administration as a threat to the maintains 2,263 agencies for con welfare and security of the naducting its programs and scat tion. Steel still faces the same ters billions of dollars all around problems. If it can keep down its the world. It owns real estate costs of making "steel, it can more than 2H times the size of weather the . crisis. But if and Texas. Its debt ceiling apparently when it believes the market knows no limit, having been re justifies it, steel producers ought cently raised to $306 billion to to ask the public, not the gov- permit more borrowing (for more ernment, ' for price relief; ' There This Administration is not one law against business spending. has sent to Congress more than determining the fair prices it 200 requests for action involving will ask. The market determines whether it can do so. . money and credit. With its great spending, lend Congress has given no power ing, and contracting authority, to the executive branch to con the federal government is more trol prices. Yet it reaches for the powerful than any single seg. power to control private industry. ment of business. These powers Bach example of power leads to are feared .generally by business, demands for more, until the ulespecially since that awesome timate in government .power it demonstration of power last Aroril reached in "socialization" or "naduring the steel crisis. That dis- -j tionalization" of industry. Such or lecrerai power involved a goal is not in this nation's best economic pressures and govern- interests and is a sure road to ment orders as well as police decay and ruin. Power, whether power. Was this not the same granted by Congress as assumed reach for power that despots have gradually without legal basis, can take away all freedoms and shown through the centuries J Toward Nationalization? make America no longer a land iVTas it a calculated step toward of opportunity. nationalization of industry, to bring still more power to the central government f As one. reAll Types of views the steel episode, it is difficult to see how that display of HE1 power can be explained except as part of a general reach for power that tends more and more to take industry under the wing of government. The economic Equitable Insurance facts did not justify the decisions spent er ... ten-ye- j w, DENTIST TWICE A YEAR. ar I non-prod- uc hs Pas. IjWite) mmmmsm mfflfB&MBte t. '" w Ws-- - ::Jj eqMP . w , Agency George Patterlck John and Myrtle Wharff home They have spent the past three weeks in Salt Lake visiting sons Pay and Ben and families and an uncle and aunt ACr ad Mrs Ray Mayhew. Phone Sunday. DEAR PELLOW CITIZEN: is a source of pride to us because it factually demonstrates our faith in you, our fellow citizens, and in our great American system of free enterprise. OUR SCHOOLS AND GOVERNMENT: Rio Grande paid 1961 property taxes of $1,189,910.41 in Utah. Of this, .$878,744.75 went directly for school purposes, or enough to educate 2,687 students ($327 per pupil as reported by the Utah State Board of Education). Remainder, $311,165.66 went for state, county and municipal purposes. A significant item, $41,843.13 for roads! This report During 1961, Rio Grande railroad paid a total of $32,625,216 in wages to its employees, community-mind- ed residents of this territory. Its and purchases of materials supplies amounted to $11,754,279. Price ME New Supply Lindy Pent at Journal Office Cement Contracting - Sand (AM Gravel READY-MI- X 7-Day Servioe ; Phones: 96 or GR ME Helper, Utah North Main OUR ECONOMY: fast-grow- ing . spend less when you travel by train, fho Grande revenue per passenger mile was only 2.49 CENTS for the 116,027 , 252 passenger miles required to carry 516,176 passengers during 1961. YOU AND YOUR GOODS: You You for the 5.42 billion in 1961. do better homoj7orlxt Rio Grande revenue per ton mile was only 1.327 ton miles produced in moving 19,622,158 revenue net tons save money when you ship by CENTS Help your tesn-ager- s rail. other form of transportation makes such a direct contribution to the support of your local government and community. Remember, also, that in this age of Indiscriminate subsidy of less efficient forms of transport, your Rio Grande pays its own way, and taxes, too! It moves millions of tons of freight pjii of your way on its privately financed and maintained steel highways. No I Call on us next time you plan a shipment or arrange, a trip. Sincerely, Wilck out DENVER & forth Udt. IM fAtvn Hv (o wior tht lift for which thtfrt prtpffng. RIO GRANDE WESTERN RAILROAD Y- - w00 aaasaraint U ttaav Tate n Bay waMl h1 Mar. cfT jjj THE HELPER JOUMIAl , |