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Show i The ability to discriminate between that which is true and that which is false is one of the last attainments of the human Washington Irving mind.' ITS VP By & Wed., 2:30 p.m. ALL BRAND NEW ORDER TICKETS BY MAIL Send stamped, addressed envelope with remittance to "Holiday On Ice" P.O. Box 2136, Salt Lake City. Mention two choice of dates. include tax and grounds Gate admission: $3.25, $2.75 and $2.25. equipment and set out Friday evening for Joe' Valley, for a weekend of deer hunting. For e many of them it was a one each but hunting experience, of the party had an arrow marked for Mr. Buck. Only two of the arrows, however, one by Boyd Bunnell and the other by Norm Day of Price, found their mark, leaving 16 of the group to The lesson to be learned from the F.H.A. windfalls is that the amount of public funds handled by government should in all cases be reduced to the minimum. No group of men of any party is capable of handling $65 billion a year, without many scandals of this nature. People are not as careful with public funds as with their own. If the F.H.A. appraisers, who established excessive evaluations on which these windfall loans were based, had been handling their own funds or acting for a group of private investors, they would not and could not have made such overvaluations. As usual, government operation of business affairs in this case, has proved to be careless, inefficient and wasteful. The larger the segment of government operated business, the greater will be the amount of inefficiency and waste. The cure is to take government out of business and reduce its functions to the minimum necessary to protect life and property and the few essentials which government can discharge better than individuals or private combinations of individuals. Sept. 16 through Sept. 25 (Rrices TO YOU Howard E. Kershner, L.H.D. UTAH STATE FAIR Nights at 8:30 Matinees Sat, Sun. BUCKHORN BOWMEN There was excitement and thrills among a group of 18 members of the local Buck-ho- rn Bowmen, who geared themselves with ally the necessary first-tim- ROCHESTER. N. Y. This is the season when thousands of parakeets succumb to the lure of outdoors and leave their happy homes mostly through open doors and windows. Most find that life outside is not what they expected, but by then it is often too late to find their way home again. What can be done about this? Several things, according to Buell Culver, executive director of French's Pet Bird Institute. He points out that many parakeets are lost because they ride outdoors unnoticed on the shoulders or heads of their owners. Be sure to check the whereabouts of your pet before you open a door or window, and double check for unscreened doors and windows before allowing your pet to fly around at all. Phone News Items to Journal , Mftrfriri Dominic Bonacci, Butch Tullius, Hollie Sillitoe, Pete Angotti, Clyde Petersen. Ed Leidick, Louis Bunnell, and Barney DeVietti. Louis and Barney took their young sons, Mike and Terry, on the trip to give them a few first hand tips that might come in handy at a later day. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Mower, of Price, were also hunting in the Joe's Valley territory. Aid For Lost Christian Freedom Foundation, Inc. New York 19, N. Y. Fair$3.75, try again this weekend. In addito the successful two, the party included Tony O'Berto, Pete Foderaro, Bill Thomas, Ernest Sillitoe, Frank Whipple, Martell Newberry, Al Swasey, Another precaution, Culver says, is to note the number on the leg band, if your bird is banded. If he isn't, have him banded, or teach him to recite his name and phone number. If your bird does escape, here tre a few ways to retrieve him: 1. Do not chase him or throw things at him. This will frighten him and make him fly farther. 2. Try approaching him with a large mirror. This may intrigue him sufficiently so that he will tliow you to reach him. tt Parakeets Jf J within 3. If he is roosting reach., squirt a gentle spray from a garden hose over his head so spray dampens him. He can't fly well if his feathers are wet. 4. Try placing the bird's cage in the yard with bird seed leading up to it and inside. The bird may return to feed when he becomes hungry. B. Advertise. Many birds, when they tire, swoop down on the first friendly head or shoulder they spy. Many have been recovered through newspaper ads. - - I ' CARDS "IT'S SAFE. Sound management, carefully restricted investments, close government suand deposit pervision, physical safeguards to each insurance up $10,000 for depositor protect the savings I bankl'V I can do all my bank"ITS CONVENIENT once." at ing without "MY FUNDS EARN INTEREST my investing." is "MY BANKER makes me feel at home so helpful." Start saving with us: Experience the many benefits that make more than 69,000,000 Americans agree: "THERE'S NOTHING QUITE LIKE MONEY IN THE BANK!" Were playing cards ever round rather than rectangular? Did they ever have sharp corners? Have the face cards always been divided in the middle so that they're right side up no matter how you hold them Al though most of us think - of playing cards the one as uncihang ing item in this day of ... constant change, our ancestors entertained themselves with a pack somewhat different from the one we use today. Card historians tell us that the Chinese, Persians and Koreans of a thousand years ago were the first card players. The Chinese cards consisted of delicate little ivory tiles resembling dominoes which used the four seasons of the year, instead c! Spades, Hearts, Diamonds and Clubs, as their suits. In neighboring Korea, where according to legend cards may have originated, playing cards were narrow strips of oiled paper about seven and a half inches long and a half inch wide. These Korean decks had ten cards in each of the eight suits men, fish, crows, pheasants, antelopes, stars, rabbits and horses. It was the Persians who first made round cards. These were slender ivory by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Helper State Bank MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM& FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION -- PHONE 5 HELPER, UTAH - OUR FOREFATHERS discs which gracefully pictured the seasons and historical personages and indicated, by means of dots, the numerical denominations. As recently as the 20th Century, some card manu- facturers turned out round cards but they never became popular because card players found them difficult to hold and shuffle. About the 18th Century the general shape and design of the court cards began to approximate the cards we use today with two exceptions: the corners were square and sharp, and the royal figures on the court cards were portraits of prominent figures In medieval courts. The original King and Queen of Hearts, for example, are supposed to have been likenesses of Charlemagne and Queen Isabella of Bavaria respec' tively. Around 1827, the first "double-headecourt cards began to make their appearance and it was also around this .time that manufacturers first began to round-o- ff the sharp corners of the pasteboards to keep them from bending or creasing after extended use. The only major changes made by card manufacturers in modern times have been the Introduction of the Bridge deck, which is a quarter of an inch narrower than the conventional 2hi inch Regular or Poker deck, and finish the creation of a plastic-coate- d to make the cards last longer. The popularity of such games as Auction and Contract Bridge, wherein a player is required to hold and fan out thirteen cards at once, brought about the need for the narrower card. full-leng- th d" For FOB KIOME MEEDS AND All Your Typewriter Ribbons Carbon Papers Account Books Staples and Staplers. JOURNAL OFFICE CENTRAL COMM. COMPLETE STOCK OF PENCILS - PENS - ERASERS - TABLETS - AND SUPPLY CO. RUBBER BANDS Stationery (personal or business) - Invitation Cards and Envelopes - Paper Clips - Carbon Paper - Parcel Post Labels Sales Books - Stickers - Loose Leaf Binders & Paper - Receipt Books Ink - Staples - Staplers - Envelopes - Bookkeeping Supplies For Your Building Needs Better Materials is required to den, have vital questions to de for each youth cide. Tax policies are essential in a factory. No. that will keep the nation's industA major political battle is now starting work no job. so that $12,500 ry in peak condition being waged to determine whethSo, it is obvious that the legis- - the present prosperity can er the Republicans or Democrats in relieving the tax bur- - tinue and even be surpassed. ?et most credit from the voters for next year's prospective tax ... EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME MID OFFICE THE HELPER JOURNAL OFFICE Phone 21 nelper rs, con-lato- cut. Which party can convince the voters that it is entitled to a Preponderant amount of credit? That's what all the verbal fireworks are about. The Republicans are in charge cf the Executive Department and, President Eisenhower, through would recommend tax cuts to Congress. Would this make the Republicans primarily responsible for any tax relief that resulted? The Democrats are in control of Congress which would vote any tax cuts allowed. Would this entitle the Democrats to the major share of credit? All this of course, assumes that there will be tax relief recommended to the next session of Congress by the Eisenhower administration. And practically everyone in Washington expects the administration to recommend lower taxes . . . barring, of course, development of a serious emergency not now foreseen. So, if things turn out this way, the Republicans will argue that the tax reduction will have been recommended by Mr. Eisenhower only after the .budget had been or a brought into balance balance was in sight. They cantend that earlier action . . . while the budget was out of balance . . . would have tended to bring back the inflation that under the fiscal poli cies of the New-Fa- ir Dealers de- stroyed much of the purchasing v .. - ' .; i'V-- W - . 4. MS I 1.1 k .,.., ' .LLS ..r,1,,,r..,tl.'va. THE FEMININE TOUCH as applied by Gloria Freeman, San Francisco singer and dancer, in anticipation of a jackpot at the new and modem Harrah's Club on the south shore of Lake Tahoe. The new Harrah's Club is on Highway 50, Stateline. , toms may be caused by lilac, for-sytand other flowering shrubs and trees. Grass pollens usually appear in the air in Mav and are auite pre valent throughout June, July and art of August Orchard grass, 5 une grass, meadow fescue, giant wild rye and others comprise this series a it one of The following of Individuals bothered by articles written by members of the group. may develop sympgrass pollen Utah State Medical Association and toms when cutting the lawn or published in cooperation with your going through fields in which the local newspaper. These articles are wild grasses are growing. scheduled to appear every other week Weed pollens appear in July, throughout the year in an effort to August and September and are re be"fr oequaint you with problems of sponsible for much of the hay fever health, and designed to improve the encountered in the intermountain area. Particularly bothersome ar Meing of the people of Utah. Kussian thistle (tumbleweed), ragHAY FEVER weed, Mexican fire bush (burning and the various varieties of More than 6,000,000 people in the bush) sage (sagebrush). Also capable of United States suffer annually from causing symptoms are dandelion, hay fever and statistics indicate pigweed (redroot), poverty weed, that the incidence is slowlv but (careless weed), lambs quarters progressively increasing each year, (goose-foot- ), shadscale. and grease This common malady, whose wood. In areas where sugar beets tims have been the subject of many are being raised for seed, the pol- jOKes ana cartoons in me past, is len can cause typical hay fever when the plants are in bloom. wu 0,fff frnm t Tha nn,m. If an individual has nasal fortable symptoms of sneezing, eye throughout the year he mayallergy be al and throat irritation, running nose, lergic to such things as house dust, nasal stuffiness and cough are animal hair and dander, feathers, most, likelv, ,to appear in warm wool, mold spores, foods and even to his own bacteria. This type of hay fever is especially bothersome bothered perennially. since the sufferer can not look forThe term "hay fever" is an un- - ward to relief in any particular fortunate and complete misnomer. season, in such instances trequent As a matter of fact, the malady is "colds" are bothersome and conseldom caused by hay, and fever is stitute one of the commoner comnot at all characteristic of the dis- plaints presented by the patient. order. The term "rose fever" has Actually the symptoms are not due sometimes been used as a synonym to ordinary colds, but are characfor hay fever, although the rose teristic of the perennial nasal alDollen seldom causes trouble. lergy. The causes of hay fever are most The high incidence of hay fever often determined by skin tvsts, alto warm due weather is in largely plant pollens. Pollen grains of var though much information is obtainious kinds are responsible for so ed by the medical history and phymuch hay fever discomfort that it sical examination. Skin tests which would sometimes seem as if their are properly applied and interpreted destiny' is to make people uncom usually point the way to successful fortable. The real function or pol- - treatment by the use of desensitizlen is- - of urse to fertilize the ing serums. These tests also often indicate that certain substances sible the production of seeds and (inhalants, foods and so forth) the propagation of the plant spec- should be avoided or controlled and ies. Some pollens are sticky and very often such measures are exheavy, notably the flower pollen3, tremely helpful in controlling" and depend upon insects for dis- symptoms. Treatment thus directsemination. Such pollens cause ed ordinarily does not cure the very little hay fever, since they are allergy in the sense that Penicillin too heavy to be found in the air in usually cures a Streptococcus sore On the throat, but rather controls the conappreciable quantities. other hand pollen grains of trees, dition. Often this leads to highly, grasses and weeds are light and satisfactory relief of symptoms usually buoyant, which facilitates and a complete alteration in the widespread dissemination by wind; basic allergic condition. While hay fever is quite capable therefore, the pollens of trees, grasses and weeds are present in of causing unpleasant symptoms, large numbers in the atmosphere the principal significance of the and cause a great deal cf hay disorder actually lies in the possibility that the sufferer may defever. In the intermountain region tree velop asthma at a later date. Apof the papollens cause hay fever in the proximately 25 to 40 spring. Such trees as boxelder, tients who have hay fever are maple, Cottonwood and poplar are prone to develop asthma at some the chief offenders, although it is time. Asthma, of course, is a connot unusual for a person to be siderably more severe disorder bothered by the pollens of scrub which affects a vital structure, the oak, juniper, cedar, elm and cer- bronchial tree, and therefore must tain others. On occasions symp be prevented when possible. hia Doctor Your ... Says ... - ' - . . icimiH-every lyciuwi one that at the last session of Congress they tried to get a $20 out for each taxpayer and de pendent. Therefore, they argue. 'Mr. Eisenhower will be a John- and should not be given political credit for an idea Afrom the Demo- craSi The Republicans replay that the Democratic tax proposal, if it had been approved, would have thrown an already unbalanced budget further out of balance by 00,000,0 W annually and that . LlTlll T a.ave ucca aniens """ with fiscal disaster. Then the Republicans add what they hope will be a clinching ar gument. It is this: The budget at last is being .brought into balance only because Eisenhower Administration policies have produced such prosperity that tax money is flowing into the Federal Treasury far beyond expectations. This rosy fiscal situation is responsi- ble for politicians of both parties giving serious thought to who gets the tax relief. Some members of Congress are firmly convinced that lower tax- es for corporations . are essential to encourage industrial expansion essential to meet the nation's future needs. There are others who contend . . . perhaps because corporations can't vote . . : that they should be gouged to the. limit. These Congressmen ignore the fact that taxes necessarily are added to the. price paid by the consumer for the products corporations manufacture. It Is certain that Congress, particularly in an election year,' will give first consideration to tax relief for individual income taxes especially in the lower brackets. Tax relief for the many, rather than for the few, is given priority by most politicians. But there is an economic question involved. It cannot be lorgotten that industry must have venture capital to 'out its expansion program. Arid tax relief for individuals in the middle and higher brackets would divert to the nation's industrial needs part of the money that this group now is paying the ' j carry-- -( - i ' i if i For Iteni FOR SALE ( government. Furnished apart-abl- e, House trailer, mov- - FOR RENT Many .billions of dollars are FOR SALE rooms. PHONE 72 ments conveniences. modern See and HELPER needed each, year to modernize or tioned. Wiley at Chester Thomas expand established businesses and HILLCREST HOTEL & APTS. to create new businesses. A $12,- - Trailer Court, Helper -- Price .. . ... , -Phone highway. Reasonable. 506-furnished .RENT Helper J ' 11 J J ' ;' apartment at Ricci Apts., 16 im- FOR SALE and Property Welb st phone Helper 25-Watch Railroad Authorized Inspectors provements at 335 North 6th ELECTRONICALLY CHECKED ON OUR East, Price, Utah. - rs.' - 1 POPULAR FICTION COOK BOOKS DICTIONARIES CHURCH BOOKS FfVr PAGE 1955 investment provide a job CHAMBLIN, JR. i See the JOURNAL E K (Utah) V 500 By WALTER x WHY? . E L IF THURSDAY, SEPT. 8, .,.. ' lhl.dlla5dut MORE PEOPLE SAVE AT A BANK THAN ANYWHERE ELSE. The tion MMhWr WATCH, REPAIRS registered In the expert servicing of all Swiss and American watches. one sale for Counter. Phone o.8-l- Helper - Phone 166 - Utah Miscellaneous cieger 179-- J. JJ tc J J J J J home with ground. Reasonably Inquire Mrs. John To- Spring Glen, or Phone 2. Helper FOR SALE IV. acres 495-R- ""' Wanted WANTED ' ''''' '' 70-12- 7, Raw- Raw- 1415 J J ' J J Serg-price- d. h, JL 2! Stamp Pad inks A good reliable man the Journal office. to supply Customers with Write leigh Products. leigh's Dept., UT-- 1 23rd St., Denver, Colo. J CARPET CLEANERS RUQ (Oriental and Domestic). Carpet Laying, Rug Bending and lng; ppholstery and Rng Sham-licpoomg; Electrolui Sales anJ Serrice. W. R. Everett 644 N. 2nd East, price, Utah. Phone & FREE ENGRAVING on all purchases VOODY'S JEWELRY new Helper Technician KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS ELGIN, HAMILTON, & SUNBEAM WATCHES TISSOT BULOVA, WYLER ALL POPULAR MAKES ELECTRIC APPLIANCES RONSON LIGHTERS SHEAFFER PENS SHA7ERS '' ..... the He,Pef available at , .',, News Items to Journal |