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Show PAROWAN TIMES, PAROWAN, UTAH, JANUARY 3, 1956 pane I'AIIOWW TIMES Published and Printed at Parowan, Utah each Thursday Robert D. Mitchell, Publisher ASSOCIAUOI UTAH SIAJF Entered as Second Class Mail Matter in the Post Office at Parowan, Utah, October 27, 1915, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Subscription Rates $2.50 per year in advance Advertising rates upon request larcells Your Heart" Resolutions LICENSED Lead Accidental Death List Affiliated with SECURITY TITLE CO. Good resolutions for 1956 should begin with a determination to let facts, rather than worrisome fears, govern your Office at Caurt Douse, Parowan 3 CEMENT CHIMNEY BLOCKS An amature can build a chimney with this block, cast just the size you want, can be used with or without tile. PRE-CAS- NOTICE geafbal or life-lon- (Non-Mot- (Non-Traffic- ve or ); 10-ye- ar Planning To Move? Parowan, Utah MAI ZETEERLING SALK roil Piano to be GEORGE COLE nmwi Pains in Back, Hips, Lc?, Nervousness, Tiredness? The Cause May Be Nerve Interference. that comes back costs us 3c postage. We're not kicking about the postage particularly, but you didnt get your paper. We have several people who hav moved and didnt leave any forwarding address and as a consequence we cant even mail their paper untill we hear from them. Please help us keep your paper coming to you. Notify us when you change your address. . cases can be helped by prop- McGarry, Beryl, Utah er treatment, especially after early diagnosis. F OB SAL E Home on 1st N. across street from So. Ut. Dairy. Call Marvin Graff, 2638. 2 Parowan Times, Only $2.30 per year An Ordinance ? U c?,d appro f thf ,Cl,ty Treasury from estimated revenue, City Departments hereinafteTseT forth, h Estimated Receipts: General Taxes Dog Taxes Cemetery Fees and Sale of Cemetery Lots Cemetery Fees, Special Assessment Merchants Licenses Rentals, City Building Fines and Forfeitures Revenue Waterworks Revenue State Liquor Control Funds Special Road Fund Receipts Miscellaneous Receipts Total Estimated Receipts Proposed Disbursements: Power Purchases Bond Premiums and Insurance Assessing and Collecting Taxes Miscellaneous Expenses Cemetery Maintenance City Park Maintenance Parowan Reservoir Assessment & Irrigation Exp. Official Salaries Public Health Expenses Public Safety Expenses Public Library Expenses Public Library, Caretaker & Electricity Streets & Sidewalks, Maintenance and Improvements to-w- Hydro-Electr- SSbSS CARTOON TUKS. MFO.THUHS DONALD TOLllT MAUREEN OHARA LADY GODIVA CARTOON NEWS HEALTH FBI. ami SAT. Or. C. F. ISarnnill I HO South .Main Collar CItv, Utah I'lioiio 53 1 IV GEORGE NADER BURT LANCASTER THE Beginning on Saturday, January 21, we will attempt to run a special picture each Saturday for the matinee only. The picture will be selected for its suitability for children, but in most cases it will be equally enjoyed by adults. The picture booked for the matinee on January 21 is COURAGE OF LASSIE. The feature booked for January 28, the next Saturday matinee, is BOYS RANCH. Some of the matinee pictures to follow will be; MY FRIEND FLICKA, THUNDER-HEAGALLANT BESS, HILLS OF HOME. This change in matinee policy will cause a considerable cost increase, so it will be necessary to raise the price on the matinee for children to 20c. Adult price will remain at 50c. These Saturday matinees will include cartoon and serial. If the matinee attendance increases enough it may be possible to reduce the admission price. We hope you will like this new policy and we welcome your comments and suggestions. Looking For a USiD CAR cO 2.500.00 & Maintenance-Labo- r & & PffilgiD Supplies 19.000.- 00 Maintenance-Labo- r KENTUCKIAN As a result of the suggestion of many of our patrons, we are making a change in our matinee policy. ic SEE Supplies 00 350.00' and Bond Primiums 45,600.00 Obligation Bond Payments Waterworks Bond and Interest Recreation Expenses City Building Maintenance Land Purchase Fire Department Expenses Office Supplies and Expenses Social Security and Group Insurance Special Road Projects c Construction Interest Payments of Bank of Iron County Total Proposed Disbursements W. Scott Mitchell Mayor, Parowan City Attest: Verda E. Adams Recorder, Parowan City CERTIFICATE ) State of Utah, MERT MITCHELL IN PAROWAN FOR THE KIND OF DEAL YOU CAN'T TURN DOWN 1951 Merc. RADIO, HEATER COMPLETE 1 NEW TRANSMISSION very clean 951 De Soto 4 door HEATER NEW TIRES Hydro-Electri- ) Parowan Times & MATINEE POLICY at the F I RM AGE THEATER 1.250.00 Each paper LMmmmiu. CIIIHOPIIACTIC farm family. See John Hydro-Electric-Gene- addresses and didn't let us know. NEWS 3 Eves. By Apji. Hydro-Electric-Intere- st Papers that belong to one of you, one that you didnt get because you changed A PRIZE OF GOLD -- 2.90.0.- two or three papers back to us. NIGEL PATRICK repossesSpinet sed in the vacinity of Parowan, assume bal. of contract. For further infirmation, write Hart Bros. Music Co., 46 E. 8th So., Salt Lake City, Utah. Ilrs. 9 -- 5 Audit Pink Lables SUN. ami MON. CHIROPRACTIC Waterworks Operation & Every week the Post Office Theater RICHARD W'lDMARK "NATURES WAY TO 10-ye- ar ve Firmage Combines beauty and economy. on display at our store. HOME BUILDERS SUPPLY self-diagno- 3 T ALUMINUM STORM DOORS attitude toward the heart disTill March 1st, our shop will be open for business Fridays eases, it was suggested by Kent Mitchell Claude B. Duerden of the and Saturdays. However, for Utah Heart Assn. urgent repairs, call 3226 at DISTRIBUTOR OF If you have any doubt any time. about the condition of your Pendletons Shoe Service heart, consult your doctor, Browning said Mr. Duerden. If he finds that there is nothing wrong jVOHTBFBA COAL COAL CAN BE PICKED UP with your heart and circulaImmediate Delivery tion, needless anxiety can be AT THE YARD IN eliminated. If a disorder is revealed, suitable treatment ALSO can be undertaken immedPAROWAN OR DELIVERED iately for th patients benefit. As a prelude to the 1956 Phone 364 1 or 26lJl Heart Fund campaign, which is to be conducted here and FOR PAROWAN AND HAULING in thousands of other c munities throughout Feb., Utah Heart Assn, propi that all citizens place these resolves on their New Years 472 deaths, 39,000 injuries Pig production in Utah, and and an economic loss of $38 fall comspring crops bined, was 85,000 head in 000,000, is the preliminary 1955 compared to 83,000 head figure for Utah in 1955, acin 1954 and 133,000 for the cording to incomplete records 1944-5released by the Utah Safety average, according to USDA reports. Council. Utah's largest pig crop of These totals include all record was produced in 1941 classes of accidental mishaps, when the total spring and fal such as traffic, home occupalist: farrowings accounted for 331 tional, farm, public 1. To learn the facts about 000 pigs. According to presvehicle), and miscellantabulathe heart and its diseases, The final eous ent intentions Utah farmers types. to avoid needless fears and be somewhat will to tion highfarrow about 8,000 expect sows in the spring of 1956, er when the complete Dec. and worriy. 2. To shun in which, if realized, will be an record is available. 11 per cent increase over the' favor of regular heart and economic The injury and 1955 spring farrowings. loss totals are estimates only, health checks by your own In the whole United States due to lack of a satisfactory physician. 3. To guard against excess the 1955 pig crop totaled 95.3 reporting system. But they a million head, an increase of are computed by means of weight, remembering that 10 per cent from the revised formula provided by the Naoverweight overworks your estimate for 1954. The sprng tional Safety Council on the heart. 4. To get the sleep and rest pig crop at 57.3 million head basis of experience. was up 8 per cent and the fall The two leading classes of you need, because rest lightcrop at 37.9 million head was accidental death causes in ens the work your heart has 12 per cent larger than last Utah thid year were traffic to do. 5. To keep fit by exercising year. The number of sows and home 'mishaps,"with 200 moderately and regularly. farrowdng this fall was 11 and 102, respectively. But, remember act your age per cent larger than last year. Myron J. Fulrath, PresidThe number of pigs saved ent of the Utah Safety Coun- and dont try to prove that per litter for the fall crop cil, said, in reviewing the you have the physical stamwas 6.81 pigs is the highest 1955 Utah accident record, ina you had 10 or 20 years on record. It is a bleak and disheart- ago. Strenuous exercise may For the 1956 spring pig ening picture to look back not harm a healthy heart, but crop, reports on breeding in- upon, especially when most the danger is real if your tentions indicate a total of of it could have been ayoid-e- d heart and circulation are not 8,116,000 sows to farrow, 2 by common sense and in good order. 6. To be more alert to the per cent below the number greater public preventative and black as dangers of respiratory infarrowing last spring. If the measures. But intentions for spring farrow- bitter as it was, it could have fections which are more comings materialize and the num- been much worse, except for mon during the winte months, ber of pigs saved per litter the safety efforts exerted by and may place an added strain equals the average, interested groups and indi- on the heart. Prompt medical with an allowance for up- viduals. It also points up the treatment for such infections ward trend, the 1956 spring fact that'what is done to pre- is important, especially for strep throat, which may be pig crop would be 56.0 mil- vent accidents Actually preforeruner of rheumatic the should lion head. A crop of this size vents accidents, and would be 2 per cent smaller serve to Intensify the pre- fever and rheumatic heart than last spring. ventive efforts next year. diseases in childen. , Mr. Duerden pointed out The number of pigs saved The press and other public inthat an hope and optimism are in the fall season of 1955 formation mdia are doing warranted by the this in increasingly 1) is esti(June outstanding service dramatic advances in diagmated at 37, 914,000 head. regard. This is 3.936,000 head or 12 The preliminary tabulation nosis, treatment, prevention, per cent larger than the 1954 of Utahs accident record for and care achieved in recent fall crop and 12 per cent 1955 appears below, with the years as the result of heart that where 1944-5the average, type of accident, deaths, in- research, and and the largest fall pig crop juries and economic loss 'ap- heart disease was once regarded as a sentance of death since 1951, Fall pig numbers pearing in that order: g or invalidism, it is are above last year in all Traffic: 200, 5,00$; $21,000, that some now recagnized 000; Home; 102, 15.300, $3, regions. The number of sows far- 500,000: Occupational; 71, 7, forms of heart disease can be prevented, a few can be rowing in the fall of 1955 is 800, 8,500,000; Public all estimated at 5,569,000 head, Vehicle); 49, 5,540, $2, cured, and that almost 11 or per cent greater than a 800.000: Farm; 17, 2,550. $1, vear ago, and 7 per cent 000.000: Motor Vehicle 000. Total: 472 deaths, 39, the 300 16, 560, $1,000,000; average. injuries, and an economic Miscellaneous; 17, 2,550, $500, loss of $38,300,000. (non-mo-t- A Stowe ABSTRACTERS Coal Traffic Mishaps Pig Crop Going Up In Utah 1956 "Guard ss. ) County of Iron. I, Verda E. Adams, the duly appointed, qualified and acting City Recorder of Parowan City, Iron County and State of Utah, hereby certifies that the above and foregoing Ordinance was passed by the City Council of Parowan City at a special meeting held for that purpose on the 30th day of December, 1955 at 7:30 P. M. IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have hereunto subscribed mv name and affixed the official seal of my office this 30th day of December, 1955. Verda E. Adams Parowan City Recorder (SEAL) 1952 Dodge 4 DOOR HEATER VERY SHARP 1954 Chev i2 Ton Pickup HEATER, VERY CLEAN 1953 Victoria OVERDRIVE RADIO, V RADIO, HEATER REAL CLEAN THORLEY MOTOR COMPANY CEDAR CITY, UTAH |