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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1960 Page Three Chairman Named For Bonds Post Lawrence F. Black, manager of Utah operations of U.S. Steel's Columbia Geneva Steel Division, has been appointed State Payroll chairman for 1960, Frederick P. Champ, chairman of the Utah Savings Bonds Committee, has announced. One of Utah's leading indus-trialists, Mr. Black accepted the appointment at a luncheon with Ivy Baker Priest in Salt Lake City this week. Mr. Black has served in many community ac-tivities in Salt Lake City and Provo, including president of the Utah Safety Council for two terms. In his new responsibility he will be calling on business industrial organizations in Utah to encourage them to conduct payroll savings campaigns in the coming three months. Mr. Black has accepted an in-vitation to meet with Under Sec-retary of the Treasury Julius L. Baird at a Treasury-Industr- y meeting in San Francisco April 8. The meeting is under the spon-sorship of Reed O. Hunt, presi-dent of Crown Zellerbach. It will be attended by the heads of major industrial firms from the coast and adjacent areas. Similar meetings are being held in 25 other cities in the U.S. which will be addressed by top-flight Treasury ofiicials. At the San Francisco meeting Mr. Baird will discuss the fiscal, monetary and debt management policies of the government, and explain the need for maintaining the present 15 per cent of the national debt in the hands of savings bonds owners, in which the Payroll Savings Plan plays an extremely important role. Mr. Black will soon appoint members of the committee that will work with him in this un-dertaking. dependence. Weatherbeaten :Think how a mother kangaroo must feel on a rainy day when the kids can't play outside. Drinking Drivers Get-- Blame for Most Accidents It is not the reeling drunk, but the respectable "social" drinker the person rarely, if ever, vis-ibly intoxicated who is the worst killer on American high-ways. This conclusion, based on ac-cident statistics, is reported in a recent Reader's Digest article, "Driver Had Been Drinking," by Paul W, Kearney. More than half of all highway deaths in-volve motorists not listed as "drunken drivers," but given the milder police symbol HBD "Had Been Drinking." A growing body of evidence and opinion indicates, Kearney writes, that medical standards for measuring driver drunken-ness (.15 per cent of alcohol in the blood proves intoxication; from .05 per cent up may sug-gest it) are far too liberal. Driv-ing skill actually begins to slip measurably after more than one drink or at about one fifth the level our courts consider intoxi-cating. Seven world medical authorities said at the Sympo-sium on Alcohol and Road Traf-fic at the University of Indiana in 1958: "A blood alcohol con-centration of .05 per cent will definitely impair the driving ability of some individuals; at a concentration of .10 per cent all individuals are definitely im-paired." The typical drinker reaches the .05 per cent level with two ounces of whiskey taken within an hour. If he takes four more in the next two or three hours, he probably will reach the .15 per cent level. But even at the lower point, a driver will have difficulty in deciding what to do in an emergency involving good judgment. Although hand and food reaction time may still be good, he will take much too long deciding how to react. Also he will develop an insouciant, "so what" attitude. Of 69 drivers killed in New York City in 1957, medical anal-ysis showed that 38 had been drinking. In Westchester County, N. Y., autopsies on 83 drivers in single vehicle accidents those involving just one car and no pedestrians disclosed that 69 per cent had been drinking. A similar test by Delaware State Police showed 80 per cent had been drinking. A simple key to accident pre-vention, Kearney suggests, is for the person who plans to drive later to limit himself to a drink per hour. (It goes without say-ing that any motorist should be a teetotaler on th eroad.) Since the average 150 pound adult will oxidize about two thirds of an ounce of whiskey in an hour, one ounce of whiskey or one bottle of beer per hour is considered safe drinking for people who are going to drive home some time later. Such an intake would hardly register in a chemical test an hour after the last drink. Cancer Association Names Chairman Ira B. Sharp, Salt Lake busi-ness man and real estate opera-tor, has been named chairman of the 1960 crusade against can-cer for the state of Utah, accord-ing to an announcement by W. M. Jones, president of the Utah Division, American Cancer So-ciety. As chairman, Mr. Sharp will head a drive intended to raise $155,000 in Utah for the battle against cancer during April, the month set aside by presidential and gubernatorial proclamation as Cancer Control Month. The money will be raised by general solicitation, with the high point being a house to house campaign about the middle of the month. He said, "A good portion of the money raised in Utah pays us a direct economic dividend. Ex-actly 35 per cent of what is raised here in Utah is allocated for research through the Cancer Society. Then Utah is unique in that at the University of Utah, Utah State University and Brig-ha- m Young University there are primary research projects being conducted under ACS sponsor-ship. These projects result in Utah receiving about $4 back for every $1 it sends to national headquarters for research. The halanrp nf t.hp mnnpv raised is used for education of the gen-eral public as well as the medical profession and for service to the cancer victim with less than 7 per cent being required for fund raising and administrative ex-penses." You Tired, Mother? No Wonder You Should Be Every week the average U. S. mother of three children washes 750 dishes and 400 pieces of silver; handles 250 articles of laundry; makes beds 35 times; shops for, carries, sorts, stores, and cooks 175 pounds of food; and walks 35 miles just in her kitchen! And this is only a small part of what is expected of her. Today, in spite of her many work saving devices, the average American wife and mother suf-fers from "what has been called Homemaker's Fatigue," report Mrs. Zelma B. Miller and Benja-min F. Miller, M.D., in the March issue of Parents' Magazine. In grandmother's day women can-ned most of their own food and sewed their own clothes, washed by hand, pressed with flatirons, beat rugs, scrubbed the wooden floors yet still managed to stay peaceful and relaxed. What then is wrong with women today? The "ordeal of the American woman," according to Prof. Max Lerner, is that "she is bedeviled by to many functions. She leads, simultaneously, a multiplicity of lives, playing at once the role of mother, home manager, host-ess, nurse,' shopper, figure of glamor, supervisor of the chil-dren's schooling and play and level until afternoon or early evening. Fatigue can be lessened by determining your own daily rhythm and planning your hard-est tasks for peak energy period. Part of the solution is also to set your standards at a different level. Don't let the little, undone jobs make you tense or angry. A tidy, well ordered home like the ones you see in the ads is indeed lovely but the price you pay for it may be too high. Sac-rifice excessive neatness for quiet and peace every hour. Lack of planning and poor work habits is another cause of homemaker's fatigue. House-wives should consider what jobs have to do and plan to do them in th most economical way. For example: Researchers know that warking involved in Operation Bcdmaking can be cut to 23 feet instead of the possible 262 feet as a recent survey found one homemaker doing by starting at the head and working around the bed. "If you use your body correctly, have suitable work-surfac- e heights, sit, bend, lift and stretch properly, you can eliminate a tremendous amount of fatigue and nervous tension," the authors suggest. Long range family and home planning help, too, to forestall fatigue. Doctors report that the most tired women patients they encounter are the ones whose children are born very close to- - gether. Before choosing a home location consider two important fatigue inducing factors lone-liness and lack of help. "When we visualize the ideal home a place for children to grow happily where they will be oved and cherished a relaxed mother with a little extra time and energy for herself is the cen-ter of the picture. A tense, worn-ou- t mother has nothing left of herself to give her children and her husband. In such a home everyone suffers emotionally, perhaps even to the point of developing one of the diseases due to stress." trips, culture audience and cul-ture carrier, club woman and often worker or careerist." Fur-thermore, she must do or feels she must do all of these jobs perfectly. Experts agree, however, that it isn't the amount of work a woman does and the number of calorics the expends that make her so bone-tire- d. The normal human body has its cycles, vari-ous hormones, water, salt and dozens of other body substances may vary tremendously during the day. Low blood sugar is espe-cially associated with fatigue; the homemaker will feel far less tired if she maintains a steady blood sugar level during the day. This requires regularly spaced meals plus snacks after periods of hard work." The endocrine glands, too, op-erate at different rates with dif-ferent people during the day. Some people get off to a good early start but their vitality runs down in the afternoon, thers do not reach their highest energy CONSTIPATED? Medical reports show how folks over 35 can establish regularity After 35, irregularity often be-comes a problem. What you need is something that aids nature and helps establish regularity. Such an aid to regularity is the daily use of serutan. Here's medical evidence: A group of men and women took serutan daily under medical supervision. In case after case serutan, taken daily, helped establish regularity. So, for real relief from constipation after 35, try serutan, powder or granular. SJ "Read it Backward" u COLDS Relieve aches and pains of colds with STANBACK Tablets or Powders. Also use as gargle for sore throat due to colds. STAN BACK'S S. A. (Synergistic Action) reduces fever, brings faster, more complete relief. Remember .. .Snap back with STANBACK! ' ' ' I j , , : ()i ! .. . ' i Someone away AT SCHOOL? 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