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Show Page Four The Springville Herald July 20, 1972 R AN C H ROYALE FACIAL TISSUE MEDIUM .'! EG II fg ROYALE I II vf c III LJ I II I II ZHniliUll I w ft btav II r-'w, . ., 1 I II A'l II f V W4WiJ I PESil JUMBO ROLLS fc I 125 COUNT 7 N S LQ ) :-:f (O)r0 W f 0)r0 DOZEN PKGS. Vy Cy ROLLS U S- I r T 1 " UTS IIS : EPULIS BURKS dl GOLD MEDAL I E E T S tgw F (I D 6 E jjgte FLOUR SJT i g BB0W.E MIX ffl 2 fj) Bag ROSE DALE rrt 7 Making their home in Carmicheal, Calif, following their graduation from BYU last month are Mr. and Mrs. R. Bruce Barrett. Mrs. Barrett was the former Tyra Christensen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen D. Christensen. Mr. Barrett's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Barrett reside in Santa Rosa, Calif. Bruce graduated with a B. A. degree in Political Science. His wife received her B. S. degree in Clothing and Textiles. They have a two-year old son, Jeff. a, m Stacy LeAnn Ryan, one year old daughter of Terry and Deanna Ryan of Salt Lake City, who celebrated her birthday at the home of grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Omar M. Hansen while mommy and daddy were welcoming a baby brother the day before Stacy's birthday. .1 1 mm Heather Marie Hill, daughter of Michael and LaRae Diamond Hill, celebrated her first birthday on June 9. -iA Amy Gordon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Brent Gordon of this city will celebrate her very first birthday event on Friday, July 21. A University of Pennsylvania Pennsylva-nia orthopedic research team has successfully used low electric current to heal bone breaks that do not respond to normal treatment. MENTAL HEALTH MATTERS Bertram S. Brown, M.D. Director National Institute of Mental Health Heredity Vs. Environment Whether heredity or environment environ-ment is a major cause of mental disorders has always been a disputed dis-puted and much-debated issue. Much modern scientific viewpoint view-point considers that both inherited inher-ited and environmental factors, in combination, play a cardinal role in mental illnesses. But we still need a great deal more scienific information before be-fore we have the full, and at the same tirjip precise, knowledge knowl-edge that we! need in order to cope adequately with the many-faceted many-faceted problem. A new study, planned to continue con-tinue for five years, will seek important new information on the question of heredity versus environment. Using adoption of children as "an experiment in nature", in which a child derives his genetic traits from one family and is reared in another, Harvard scientists will seek to clarify the respective roles of heredity and environment as causes of "affective disorders." These mental illnesses include mania and depression, which are estimated to afflict from four to eight million Americans to such an extent that they need professional care. A large group of adopted persons in Denmark are to be studied, where previous research re-search on genetic factors in another form of mental illness, schizophrenia, has been done. Over 5,000 adoptees will be screened to find cases of affective affec-tive disorders. Then an equal-sized equal-sized number of non-adopted persons of the same sex, age, and neighborhood will be screened. From 250 to 500 cases of affective disorders are to be selected from the two groups. A "control" group without histories of psychiatric illness will then be selected. This "well" group will contain both adoptees and non-adoptees. Analysis will be made of both the biologic and adoptive parents par-ents of the two groups. Cross comparisons of the ratios of depressive de-pressive illnesses are expected . to make it possible to distinguish distin-guish heredity from environmental environ-mental experiences in the search for the primary cause. Denmark was chosen as the study site because it maintains detailed records of diagnosed cases of mental illness and has a relatively stable population. This provides an unusual but necessary base for this kind of study, which hopefully will answer some of the questions in the old case of heredity versus environment. First Woman Golfer Mary, Queen of Scots, was the first woman golfer. Educated in France, she called the boy who carried her clubs a "cadet," giving the word the French pronunciation. From that came the word "caddie." While on a hunting trip, Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt refused to shoot a small bear. C. K. Berryman, a famous cartoonist, car-toonist, immortalized the incident in-cident and toy bears, then new to the market, soon became known as "Teddy bears." SPRIH6VIUE STORE HOURS: 8 A.M. TILL 10 P.M. EVERY DAY PR0V0-0 R E M 8 A.M. TILL 12 P.M. EVERY DAY AMERICAN FORK 8:00 A.M. TILL 10:00 P.M. EVERY DAY PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 DAYS DYNABURGERS PATTIES CHOPPED CHUNKS m m HI CHUNKS h,,, ZgJ MLSl f BEETS CT UgL O DICED O CUT lP O SHOESTRING IJffiBSSgj ALLEN'sTJpif "SAVE COUPOn""""""1 I jZ ROYAL p ty OAK 4W1 CHARCOAL I fe(f3? ! BRIQUETS III I W BHW .... Y W m m m -r- " PEAR HALVES HARDY'S COARSE WATER SOFTENER SALT BAG FIDDLE FADDLE SNACKS 3pkgs89c PLASTIC 60 Count SPOON and FORKS 39c SWIFT'S VIENNA No. '2 Can SAUSAGE 4 cans 99c REGULAR ASSORTED FUNNY FACE 10 for 49c HOT or COLD DRINK 80 Count 7-oz. size CUPS 49 c SWIFT'S CORNED BEEF Cans' 77c SPUD CHIPS POTATO CHIPS 14-OZ. BAG BETTY CROCKER ASSORTED HAMBURGER HELPERS GOOD ONLY AT ALLEN'S SUPER SAVE MKTS. COUPON EXPIRES JULY 4TH HOLLAND DUTCH --as 1 GALLON ICE m 16-oz. Carton MEADOW GOLD ! COTTAGE CHEESE |