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Show PROBATE GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES Consult clerk of District Court or the respective signers for further information. Notes of Interest from Neighboring SPRING GLEN THE DISTRICT COVRT OF THE STATE OF UTAH, IN AND FOR CARBON COUNTY In the matter of the Estate of TONY CALLOR, aka ANTONIO CALLOR, aka GIUSEPPE CATO-N- A CALLOR, and being one and the same person, Deceased. I.V by Leah James Mrs Howard Bacon returned borne recently after spending the winter months in California. After enjoying a visit in VanNuyes with Mrs Harold Reed and Mrs Jack Reynolds, Mr and Mrs Rudy Topolovec an children Sandy and Randy brought grandmother home with them. A speedy recovery in wished for Evelyn Marshall who was rushed to the Carbon hospital Thursday for an appendectomy. serious Her condition became when she developed pneumonia. She and her husband Jerry have just recently arrived from texas as Jerry has orders to go to Okinawa. Mr and Mrs Thill Marshall of Salt Lake have been guests at the John Fercick Jr's during Evelyn's illness. of Sait Vaughan Rasmussen Lake visited with his folks Mr and Mrs Lawrence Rasmussen last week. Vaughn was involved in an auto accident recently in Salt Lake but friends were most pleased to hear he was not seriously hurt. Mr and Mrs Alden Newell of Moab visited Saturday at the home of Mr and Mrs Bill Morgan Mr and Mrs JaLy Donahue were hosts to the Young Married class Sunday evening. Ray Walt Price gave the lesson. The attending enjoyed the lesson and the refreshments served at the close of the meeting. Mr and Mrs Stanley Judd were delighted to have brother Thomas Notice To Creditors of the general authorities over Probate No. 2668 the senior Aaronic Priesthood of Estate of Tony Callor, aka An the LDS church as an overnight tonio Callor, aka Giuseppe Categuest Saturday. na Callor, and being one and the Mr and Mrs Dale Cox of Salt same person, deceased. Creditors Lake were welcome guests at claims with vouchwill present the home of Mr and Mrs Robert ers to the undersigned at Helper, Jones over the weekend. or to Stanley V. Litizzetto, Pins and Needles club met at Utah, at Law, 178 South Main the home of Sarah Rowley Sat- Attorney Street, Utah, on or before Helper urday and the girls were given the 7th day of July, 1960 instruction in how to make drawS JOSEPH CALLOR string bags. Executor of the Estate of Tony The teachers of the school and Callor, aka Antonio Callor, aka students should be complimented Giuseppe Catona Callor, and on the exhibits the at presented being one and the same person, scienc efair on Thursday, Parents deceased. who visited found their time well Date of first publication, May spent. John Wharff was .released on 5, 1960. Date of last publication, June 2, 1960. Saturday after almost a month in the Carbon hospital. Friends ' ers of couples . -- and (Neighbors were glad to have him home again. Ibi L.6 GALSi Invitation To Bid The execution of the laws is more important than the making of them. Thomas Jefferson. I Adding Machine Paper, by or case at Journal office. roll, A friendly challenge from Bids will be received 11:00 A.M., May 13, 19&0, on the following f.o.b.,- Price, Utah: ' Req. No. 100 Football Equip ment. Req. No. 102 Football Charging Sled. a proud distiller Carbon College reserves the right to reject any or all bids; or to accept or reject the whole or any part or any bid; or to waive any informality or technicality in any bid in the interest of the College. Only bids giving a firm quotation properly signed, will be accepted. Bid proposals and will be furnished specifications upon request. TED J. JENSEN, Purchasing Agent Date of publication, Thursday, May 5, 1&60. try EE no and j ready ...unless you're to change your brand FOREIGN Here's whyl We've put into Hill and Hill the best of the things fptift: that make Kentucky whiskey great. And we take the important extra step of aging this whiskey at a constant 72 so it is mellowed to perfection. Taste it and you'll make it your own. I I OTUUCMT I BOURBON Hill and Hill 86 proof combines enjoyable lightness with the smooth flavor of authentic Kentucky Straight bourbon. Bill WD Bill CO., lOdSmiE, IWTBCKT, KCHTUCKT JI8AICHT BOURBON WH1SKEY-- 86 by the Purchasing Department of Cartht bon College, Price, Utah, until don't dare JHIIL 0L & PROOF MYSTERY OF INBORN HEART DEFECTS ARE AID The ability to reach into the heart and correct mistakes made by nature has in only very recent years become possible to heait surgeons. With the extraordinary new skills they have developed, they are now bringing hope and tween the heart's lower chambers (ventricles) is called a ven tricular septal defect. A hole in the wall between the upp.H' chambers (auricles or atria) is an atrial (or auricular) sepial defect. If the hole is mall whether between the upper and lower chambers and is located where it does not affect the circulation, surgery may not be necessary. But if it is a large hole, and depending on where it is located, it may cause the blood in the left and right chambers of the heart to mix. This deprives th; body of sufficient oxygenated blood needed for nourishment. The heart may be overworked and become enlarged. Closing up holes in the lower wall (ventricular septal defects) is possible for some patients and not yet possible for others; it depends on the accompanying circumstances. But correction of the defect in the upper wall sewing up the hole or patching it with has been synthetic material done successfully by the surgeon. 4. Narrowing or constriction of health to thousands of children born with heart defects. Why are. infants born with de fective hearts? What causes a crippling injury before birth ? This is a mystery to which many heart researchers are trying to find solutions, with the goal of eventually preventing such malformations before birth. While they study possible causes, surgeons are exploring new ways of correcting the defects. Each year they make further progress. A number of congenital heart defects that once were thought to be hopeless are now opei-able-. According to the Utah Heart Association, the?! are the defects that today are most frequently corrected successfully by surgery: 1. A passagewey between the two major blood vessels leading from the heart, which has remain ed open instead of closing, as it normally should, within a few weeks after the baby is born. The medical term for this defect is patent ductus arteriosus. The the aorta (the heart's major artery which carries blood to the rest of the body), known medically as coarctation cf the aorta. patent ductus connects the pul- Constriction of the aorta may monary artery and the aorta. If mean that certain tissues and the passagewey remains open, organs of the body receive ensome of the child's blood keeps ough blood. The surgeon usually shuttling back and forth between corrects this b ycutting out the his lungs and his heart, without pinched-i- n part of the artery and feeding the rest of the body. Tho sewing the ends together. If the heart has to work harder and, if defective part is sizable, a blood the ductus is large, the child's vessel graft may be used to replace the part removed. growth may be slowed. 5. and 6. To correct this defect, the surNarrowing of a geon closes the ductus by typing heart valve (valvular stenosis). it off and cutting it. If there is One of the blood-floregulating no other congenital malformation, valves of the heart, or an area this operation restores the pa- near ono of the valves, may be constricted. tient's circulation to normal. Narrowing of the 2 and 3. Openings in the inner aortic valve .or of the area near wall of the heart. A wall of tis- it makes it difficult for the heart sue (septum) divides the heart to pump blood to the body. Narinto left and right sides. The left rowing of the pulmonary valve blood or of the area near that valye side receives oxygen-fu- ll from the lungs and pumps it thru may cut down the amount cf the aorta to the body; the right blood going to the lungs for oxyside receives blood from the body gen, robbing the body of oxqgen and pumps it through the pul ated blood and perhaps also strain monary artery to the lungs where ing and enlarging a part of the it picks up fresh oxygen again. A heart. Today patients with aortic sten defect, or hole, in the wall be- w J - If you're a father, you don't have to look into your brief- 8 case for the facts on how much peace is worth to you. The.answer is right r PENS - ERASERS - TABLETS - Help Strengthen America's Peace Power BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS RUBBER BANDS DICTIONARIES THE e LPER rhone GR 71 DEPEND Oil US! JOURNAL OFFIC Ilelpcr, Utah to keep your Depend on family handsomely dressed for school, business and special occasions. We pick up shirts, linens, everything in the laundry bag and do them up with utmost care deliver them sparkling clean. PHONE GR ORDERS TAKEN FOR RUBBER STAMPS PACE THRJE than iHi"i.:iciiL in the summer. ....-- ! you will ger over your morning coffee .until the sun has warmed the water up. Then, find a shallow-baor bank not over a few-feedeep and start fishing. B lazy about ij. slow and easy does it. Under such conditions, I like-ttroll. Got my little Merc 2u out the other day and strapped' it on the bark of my fisHing; fikif f. Then, I idled her down to a pussy cat purr and com- - HELPER CITY LAUNDRY Angelo Georgedes, Proprietor rilONE GR 31 HELPER menced to troll around the edge of a mud bank bristling witii willows. For the first hour (got up too early) I didn't do a thing. But, about the time I had taken my first bite out. of a ham sandwich, the action started. In the willows, I took orappie. A rocky bank produced a couple of walleys and some black bass, and the mouth of a small feeder stream was literally teeming with schooling: white bass. Trolling is particularly effective this time of year because fish are restless and en the move. But, they're hungry an t almost without fear. Although-was fishing in the shallowest of water, tSe gently revolving prop of my Merc didn't scare a thing. I think I bumped one big bass. But it just made him mad enough to hit my lure. So, try fishing the sun warmed shallows. Depending upon local conditions, such waters should produce good fishing more weeks. 01-t- i"tp. ran ot.'-.- Medicine Offers Fine Careers, With Qualified Students Urgently Needed, Official Reports osis may oiter be helped by surgery. Some of those with pulmonary stenosis also may benefit by heart operations. 7. A combination of four heart defects occurs in some patients: a hole in the heart wall between the lower chambers; an aorta in the wrong place instead of ris ing from the left, as it should, it straddles both sides of the heart just above the hole (which causes the mixing of oxygenated with unoxygenated blood and of the body's impoverishment blood supply); a narrowing of the valve, reducing the heart to the lungs; and an enlarged right ventricle (lower chamber of the heart) resulting from the strain of pumping blood through the narrowed valve, so that this part of the heart can't function effectively. Tetralogy cf Fallot is the me dical name for this combination, of defects. Tetralogy means a "group of four". Etienne Fallot, a French phpysician, wrote a book about this condition in 13S5 The blood of those who have tetralogy of Fallot as well as those with certain other heart defects is low in oxygen, and their skin therefore, may have a bluish tinge (cyanosis), which has given rise to the term, "blue baby". Until recently, closed- heart operations were used to help such patients. These opera tions could not eliminate the or iginal malformations but did relieve their effect. Now it has be come possible to cure some part surtients through gery operations enabling the surgeon to work directly within th? machheart while a heart-lun- g ine temporarily takes over the job of circulating the blood. It is that eventually this expected kind of surgery can be used to help most patients with tetralogy of Fallot. Reassuring word from the Utah Heart Assn. is that as progress in heart surgery and research con tinue, a number of defects that cannot be remedied today are likely to become operable in th? One of the most urgent problems now confronting the medical profession and the general public is increasing the number of well-qualif- ied students for the naHarold tion's medical schools, Bowman, executive secretary, of Utah State Medical Assn., reported this week. As a result, there are increasing opportunities for young Utahns seeking to become physicians. Urging prospective high school graduates to carefully appraise the possibilities of a medical career, he pointed out that "the unprecedented population growth means we will need many more trained physicians in a few years to meet our future needs." school 1960 high graduates should contact their school coun selors and advisers for available information on college and medical school requirements, or should talk with local physicians about future plans, the USMA official declared. "The medical profession takes pride in assuming leadership in the recruitment of top students for medical careers," he pointed out. Informational pamphlets giving details on and medi cal college requirements, listings of accredited medical college?, and material on careers and schol arships can be obtained from senior class counselors in most om the Utah high schools, or Utah Medical Assn. 32 So. 3th East, Salt Lake City. The State Medical Assn will also arrange displays and film showings dealing with medical careers for high school, college or civic groups. pre-medi- future. The Association has just issued booklet entitled, "If Your Child Has A Congenital Heart Defect," which is intended to provide general information about problems arising from these conditions. Parents of children with congenital heart defects, physicians, and other professionals who work with such patients may ob- a new tain the booklet from the Utah Heart Assn., at 250 East 1st Soutfi Salt Lake City .11, Utah. COMPLETE LINE OF 31 WE'RE READY TO SERVE YOU OVERALL SERVICE TOO! t later open-hea- 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 SiyJUuuS) There's another Buck Rogers. I learned of this when Mr. Davis wrote me a letter asking about a good spot to do some bass fishing. But, his letter ended up in the Earth Office of Buck Kogers Inc. And, Mr. Davis received this reply: Dear Mr. Davis: "My adjutant has brought to my attention your request for data on the proper locale for vatching black bass; a question which leaves our Intelligence Department at Earth Headquarters somewhat confused. 'We are unfortunately unable to supply you with data on thi8 species. However, there are fossil remains in Wisconsin and Minnesota territory, and our archaeologists are making a .search in the ancient land of Missouri. "But, if you need data on this species anywhere on Mars or Venus, we will endeavor to l)e of further help." Somewhat hurt and a little "shook up", Mr. Davis wrote the following- to his Editor: Dear Editor: "I sent a letter to Buck Rogers in care of your paper asking questions about black toass fishing, and you will note the answer I received. "Does this happen to everyone who inquires about fishing? "I wonder what would happen if I inquired about hunting. "Fun is fun, but I still would like to knvow a god spot to go fishing." Just for the record, Mr. Davis and I are friends again. But, should your correspondence end up in the Chicago Earth Headquarters of this other Rogers feller, don't believe him if he tells you the nearest good bass fishing is on Mars or Venus. Tis Spring Despite the fickle whims of the weather, it's spring at last - and fishin' time. Spring fishing is good if a man stops to think a minute before he starts wearing out.his casting arm. And, as a general n;le, it's smart to do everything flow from the peace. Money for science and education. Money saved by individuals to keep our economy healthy. Every U. S. Savings Bond you buy is a direct investment in America's Peace Power. IN- PENCILS JOURNAL BY BUCK ROGERS pulmonary in your heart. But peace costs money. Money for strength to keep the enough? COMPLETE STOCK OF (Utah) STUDIED BY RESEARCHERS AND SURGEONS Are you buying FOE HOME HEEi HELPER THURSDAY, MAY 5, WO POLICY In an editorial discussing the foreign travels of President Eisenhower and Premier Khrushchev, The Wall Street Journal "We are not saying observes: that ' America's foreign policies are all, above criticism or that n Presidential trip can correct what is wrong. We are merely sayin? that nation, and a political system, is bound to act in character much of the time, and it is there fore inevitable for Eisenhower to radiate good will and Khrushchev ill will. As long as this country act in accordance j cvontinues to ' with its traditions and institutions and the Communists in accordance with theirs, we need not fear unduly that the wrold will be last to slavery." The STERO-PHON- IC AND Priced from Sec, HI-- FI PHONOGRAPHS. $39.95 up Hear and Play the Musical Phenomena CARL'S RECORD SIIOP LaSalle Jlotel Bids. Ilelper, Utah |