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Show Benefit Danee tion Ol Machinist Union cosponsored by the Tooele Moose Lodge, and the Tooele Disabled American Veterans are sponsoring a public danee at the Hall on Friday, August 1, 1970 and the proceeds will be given Mrs. Golden to help purchase badly needed items. It is hopeful that any other clubs that care to will join in and help make this event rewarding. Lucky Chamberlain and the Sundown Buddies, a e dunce group will donate the music for the dance. Friday for Fire Victim Smel-tenna- On July 4, 1070. Mrs. Rubv Golden, a fork lilt driver iii building 619 at the Tooele Army Depot underwent major surgery in a Salt Lake hospital. On that same date her house, garage and all her belongings were completely destroyed by fire. Mrs. Golden lost her hushand about two years ago from a heart attack and she lived alone at the time of this misfortune. Population explosion: The Frank Tyger International ssocio- - piling. four-piec- Stork MM SPECIAL STILL It WEST Helps You Fight Inflation 00 Let There Be Light ! The ladies of Patriot, Indiana with a total population of 277 discovered that they PUS needed only 11 lights to brighten the streets of their town. They didnt have the money, according to a spokesman for the Street and Highway Safety Lighting Bureau, and neither did the village treasury. So they gave chicken suppers and held rummage sales and conducted raffles until they raised the funds to buy and install those 11 lights. NATfONWIDK SALKS AND ' SKRVICK WONO.KttriST. PH. SS2-325- 3 TOOELE, UTAH "The motorcycle dealer that will service what he sells!" An opportunist always takes for an answer. D. Robbins now Bib cpUM? SfraEib am? omiaaii Kyi) ,Gl)C0 ff tf-raa- The multitude of bills and proposals for even stronger national consumer legislation should be considered from the standpoint of whether the benefits are worth the cost, a spokesman for the National THE SEARCH FOR HEALTH REPORT With todays spiraling prices, would you like to cut the cost of keeping house by $150 to $300 a year? If you live in an area with hard water, you can effect such savings by having a water conditioner installed, says the Water Conditioning Foundation. Thats because you spend less money on soap and detergents and extend the life of your linens and other washable items. THERES EQUIPMENT available to rid water of unpleasant hardness and tastes, odors, other problems. Hardness, the chief cause of trouble, affects more than four out of five homes in the United States, the Foundation notes. A qualified water conditioning dealer knows the chief problems in his area. He also has the equipto analyze ment and know-hoyour water supply for specific or knows where to problems go to get such help. Then he can guide you in the selection of the proper equipment. These are among the benefits of quality water: 1. Housework becomes easier whether its scrubbing floors doing dishes or washing clothes. 2. CLOTHES and linens come out brighter, and have longer life; 3. Dishes, silverware etc. have more luster; theres none g of the that occurs when water is hard and the soap isnt really entirely rinsed off. 4. Hair is more lustrous and manageable after a shampoo. 5. COFFEE, TEA, vegetables and other food tastes better and even looks better. The modern water conditioner is easy to install and is almost maintenance free. For more information on water problems and how to solve them, write for a booklet titled Quality Water at the Tap. Its available for 50 cents from the Water Conditioning Foundation, 1780 Maple Street, Northfield, Illinois 60093. water-spottin- from Mighty to Mini, Honda has it all. HONDA TRAIL Packaging Bills Held Inflationary Water Conditioner FROM THE NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH KTHESDI, Association of Manufacturers of infection, and large doses Homan Transplants For centuries men have dreamed of replacing diseased organs with healthy new ones. Today that dream is closer than ever to reality, in large part due to research being done in 30 general clinical research centers supported by the National Institutes of Health. Most of the popular attention surrounding organ transplantation has centered around heart transplants. There have now been more than 130 heart transplants performed around the world. While these operations are dramatic, they are only part of the whoie transplant story. To date, 18 Jilferent tissues d and organs have been anus-plante- in huiiY.ns, MARYLAND tacit caus- ing unique proKerns. The most aequcitlv transplanted organ is the Vidnev. More than 3,600 knr.ey have h'-- n pci toi me? world-widKidn y ir;i '.'plantation is a ielau ciy in c; ' erf m d etation that was with long-ter'iv.iv. m v . s 1 ad between identical tv:r-.say, when a donated kidney comes from a living relative, 80 to 90 percent of the recipients live for more than two years. In contrast to the simplicity of the kidney transplant is the liver transplant. This is a complex operation which was first performed in the early 1960s in the clinical research center at the University of Colorado one of 50 such research centers around the Nation. In spite of the difficulties involved, more than 30 liver transplants have been performed, mostly in children, with recipients living up to 14 months. Another transplant pioneered in a clinical research center is This the thymus transplant. gland, about the size of a silver dollar, it necessary for development of the bodys immune system, which helps to ward off infection. Several successful of thymus tissue transplants Oans-plan- ts e. -- . have been performed in infants who were bom without a thymus gland. Each has developed an immune system, survived more than two years, and is still in good health. The biggest problem encountered in most transplants is rejection of the new organ by the bodys immune system. Scientists are using several methods to prevent rejection. The first is the use of drugs that suppress the immune system. Extreme care is needed because the drugs could lower the bodys defenses to all forms said. In a dinner address before can damage the liver. The most promising method of preventing rejection in use today is antilymphocyte globulin (ALG). ALG differs from oiher drugs in that it is a biological material and docs not damage the liver or weaken the bodys defenses against infec-t:eHowever, ALG does not completely prevent rejection, and still must be used in with other powerful drugs. The second method used to get around rejection is tissue typing. Eefote an organ is tiansplnnted, it is tissue typed, r.tich the same v:.y that blood i. typed and matched to a recipient. The tissues of the organ a'e typed and matched to possible recipients to find the beat possible match. looking forward to the day when transplants will be a common means of treatment for damaged organs, clinical research center scientists are investigating organ storage techtransplanniques, tation, and drugs that will prevent rejection of a specific organ while not lowering the bodys defenses to infection. NIHs Division of Research Resources has published a new these adbooklet detailing vances. the Packaging Progress Seminar in Rochester, N.Y., Lloyd Stouffer, committee executive for NAMs Marketing Committee said that these increased costs must in the end be borne by the consumer, thus feeding the fires of infla- n. tion. com-biiati'- .n Industrys compliance with the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act of 1966 has cost hundreds of millions of dollars, yet the critics are calling it a nothing law and are demanding dozens of amendments and other measures drastically restrictive on packaging and marketing, he said. Among the pending bills and proposals cited by Mr. Stouffer were government standards for childhood packaging of thousands of household unit pricing of products; every consumer package; and a new bill that would tax packaging in proportion to the difficulty of disposing of the discarded package. We are all consumers, and we cant help but sympathize with the objectives of much of this legislation. But there is no dodging the fact that we, as consumers, will in the end have to pay the cost, Stouffer cross-speci- consumer-protectio- Write to NIH Feature Service, Bethesda, Md. 20014, for a free copy of Research Advances in Human Transplantation. The Tooele Transcript, Friday, July 31, 1970 Roiarute Dees your say iodized an important In the 20s table salt label or not? There is difference. researchers first Morton Salt Company began distributing the original iodized salt in 1924, the problem subsided. Today as then your family needs to know about iodized table salt, especially if you live in an iodine-deficie- nt area and have no philosophical or medical reasons for avoiding it. It costs no more, tastes and smells no differ-- 1 mail for ent, is just as Direct available as aomww plain salt N. Wacker more peopl $U0 Drive, usg it. On another Chicago 60606 Franklin P. Jones around here? No, replied the owner, but Dental Econotourists are. mics. 505$ (r -I- 1, fm SPECIAL1 Unp Q3G3 (fErfliHUv Quit- - I feel guilty loafing. We ought to be out picketing . . . demonstrating protesting . . . . . . rA In b GOT In a small restaurant in Texas, a traveler ordered two fried eggs and was surprised that he was charged a dollar apiece for them. He asked the Are eggs scarce proprietor, explained. For example, he questioned Illi- Youve reached middle age most of the skill vour barber displays is in diplomacy r IS I c nr IntoDEfl i JL i Next time your man goes off hunting or fishing, do Smokey a little favor. When you cuddle close to say goodbye, whisper softly in your favorite ear; Remember dear, only you can prevent forest fires. Advertising created for the public good coOHc.'v Save. rmrtfrmtttflb 9il!B('D(llrn9Q;Hffilb lrociii(llrroBTntnb very GflDjSMin flfll (jftsann) , when is a ffiWEDSCB whether unit MD, Water, in fact, interesting subject that we take too much for granted. For an illustrated folder about water, just clip this article and the name of your newspaper and send them to me marked Wa- ter Story. It is great for a school theme, too. A fine film, Water, is available to groups through the Modem Talking Picture Service office nearest you or write Modern at 2323 New Hyde Park Road, New Hyde Park, L. I., New York 11040. recommended iodizing table salt to forestall simple goiter, a throat enlargement. After the n pricing actually MEDICINE is a benefit if the retailers If medicine, as we know it costs add a cent or two to the today, is to continue and if we are going to be permitted price of every package. to care for our patients in a manner dictated by our professional judgment and experience, then each of us will have to take the time and trouble to become informed and to become active in these affairs of government which are our affairs. Milford O. Rouse, nois Pharmacist subject of importance, water quality, if your home has soft water or a water conditioner, which is recharged with salt Pellets, you can get clothed very clean by using just plain soap. The soft water and soap return almost entirely to nature with no adverse effect. |