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Show Page October 2, 1951 THE JOURNAL 2 gold Homemakla ouch designed by Trifari of diamond-studde- ers XMAXM'IT abo leceive a will eliminations, lTET! d New' York. Wanted For Sale Employment Lost and Found 0 For Rent or Lease Services Offered 4 Miscellaneous Each of the Is state winners, who will be named from among the top scorers in the individual schools, will receive a $1,500 schoHome-mak- e larship, a s pin and an paid tiip with a teacher from her school to historic American shrines Colonial Wilat Washington, D. liamsburg, Va., and Philadelphia. They will be present when the seHomelection of the maker of Tomorrow' will be announced April 21 at Philadelphia at a banquet featuring the Betty Crocker American Table, a display of the foods famous for the coungulden-jewele- d all-expen- se All Want Ads 10c Per Line Per Issue 75c Minimum Per Issue WANT ADS ACCEPTED any time up to noon Wednesday for insertion in Thursday issue. KEYED and BLIND ads, such as leae name at Reflex, Thone Reflex or Write in Care of Reflex, 25c per insertion additional to regular 10c per line. ARTICLES FOUND and turned in at Reflex office will be advertised one issue only, without cost to finder. Owner may identify and claim upon payment of 50c. While care is taken in handling such lost and found items turned in to The Reflex, no responsibility is accepted for such articles. The publishers reserve the right to edit, revise or reject any or all advertising. In case of error or omission in any advertisment the publishers are liable only to the extent of the ad. Errors should be reported immediatelj. be will taken over the phone, w hen person placing the Want ads ad is listed in telephone directory Scholarship to be Given Contest Winner All-Americ- an try. latest edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica will be awarded to the school repiesented by each state i epresentative. Theie will also be awaids for A set of the of Department Health, Education And Welfare Dill you ever go to the bank and make a deposit by just throwing and your money on the counter luck trust to walking off?-j- ust that the teller would be able to credit your account, and no other, with your deposit? Ridiculous, isn t it? No person in his right mind, you say, would do such a thing. Yet, there are thousands of persons who do exactly' that. Not at the bank, certainly, but in another situation important to themselves and their families. We mean their Social Security Accounts. e All benefits under the and survivors insurance piovisions of the social security act are based on the record of earnings ciedited hen each individual account. you apply for a social security number, an account is set up for you in the central records office in Balti- more. Your number is the key to your account. There may be thousands of persons in the country who have your name, but there is only one person w'ith your social demonstrates in written examina- the intestinal tract in sufficient amounts, may result in a delay in the clotting time of the blood. In this case the bleeding usually awaits the tion the top aptitude for homeyoung woman who will be named making. the Betty Crocker Homemaker of The Homemaker of tomorrow. Tomorrow, who will be the survi- This is the grand prize announc vor of school, state and national an All-Americ- an Dressing Up Plain Fare Stops When vitamin K is given VS The follonmg is one of a series of articles nrittea by members of the Utah State Medical Association and Published in cooperation nith your local newspaper. These articles are scheduled to appear every other neek throughout the year in an effort to better acquaint you nith probelms of health, and designed to improve the n of the People of Utah. ell-bein- g Are Some Persons By ALICE DENHOFF imagination, discreet buns for fine picnic fare. Barbecued lamb chops are use of seasoning and you can transform dull fare into gourmet tasty. For 6 servings, have 6 lamb thick. Comfood. chops, cut 3,4 to V2 c. Hamburger, for instance, can bine in a small saucepan, Vi c. water, tsp. be uninspired even at a picnic cider vinegar, when usually everything is am- each garlic salt and onion salt, tsp. ground cayenne pepper, Vs brosial. tsp. ground black pepper and Garlic Salt tsp. sugar. Heat just to boiling But spice the beef with the point. Arrange lamb chops over a merest whisper of garlic, and hot charcoal grill. Cook until theres nothing better. Best way browned on both sides and cooked to do this is via a shaker of through the center (30 to 40 garlic salt. Just a sprinkle of the min.), turning and basting with5 aromatic white powder and the the warm barbecue sauce at meat is flavored and salted in one min. intervals or when chops appear dry. easy operation. Two other wonderful seasoning Hearty Vegetable Salad A hearty vegetable salad is adjuncts are onion and celery to of true a flavor that suitable for luncheon or supper. salts, with the vegetables themselves, thanks For 6 servings, combine in a mixto modern manufacturing meth- ing bowl, 1 c. each cooked potaods. So, for grilled hamburgers toes, cooked snap beans and that really are good, make use of cooked sliced carrots, 1 tbsp. cider A BIT of 1-- vegetable salts. For 5 servings, shape 1 lb. patground lean beef into ties. Sprinkle both sides with onion salt and garlic salt. Place In a folding wire broiler. Place on hot charcoal grill. Cook until 0 min., turning to brown, brown on both sides. Place a pat of butter on each and serve between hamburger 3-i- n. 15-2- (Copyright, 1951, in. tbsp. salad oil, tbsp. ketchup, tsp. garlic salt, y2 tsp. tsp. powdered dry mustard and Chill Cover. black pepper. ground 2 to 3 hr. Add 2 tbsp. each chopped green pepper and chopped onion, 1 c. sliced celery and 2 tbsp. mayonnaise. Toss lightly. Place on lettuce in a salad bowl. Garnish with chopped fresh parsley and vinegar, paprika. King Features Syndicate, Inc.) Best Results Obtained From Placing Ads and Want Ads In THE REFLEX and JOURNAL 1 old-ag- the young woman scoring the highest in each competing school. She ed by General Mills who will dis- will leceive a golden homemakers more tribute scholarships totalling pin, a Betty Crocker Cook Book than $75,hk in a national search one for her school security account number: You. to find the girl graduating from for helself and And there is only one way that senior high school in 11)55 who librarv. A $5,(o) scholarship All-Americ- j your hard earned wages will get pioperly credited. This is it: when you go to work, show' your employer your social security card. Make sure he makes a record of your name and number, exactly as shown on your card. Don trust to your memory. The number is long, time is fleeting, and its easy to get it mixed up. Your employer is required by law to send in regular reports of your earnings showing your name, and your social security account number. If this information is wrong, your account will be wrong. And if your account is wrong, you and your family may not get all the ocial security benefits you should entitled to. Dont be like the careless bank (epOSjter- Make sure your social ecurjty account is correct, Mr (Jrant s Williams of the alt Lake City Social Security of-t- o j jce jn Davis County, Tues- October 12th, to give aid and (ja assjstance t0 residents of this area oM matqers pertaining to Social Security Old Age and Survivors Insurance. Those who wish to see him should write the Salt Lake City of-- 1 fice, 212 South West Temple Street. 'A meeting time, at a nearby town, can then he arranged. "Bleeders"? Any person may bleed, but in the true sense of the word a bleeder is one of a group of persons who for one reason or another seem to have an exaggerated tendency to bleed. It might be well to say at the outset that there are numerous factors which seem to have a direct bearing on the length of time that any given individual will bleed. For instance, it depends upon (1) the site of the bleeding, (2) the size of the vessels which are involved and (3) whethei or not it is a simple spontaneous type of bleeding from some mucous membrane such as the mouth or from the rectum. Those persons who bleed spontaneously from mucous surfaces or internally are apt to be of the type we are discussing in this group of bleeders. A bleeder is a person, therefore, who has a spontaneous hemorrhage which will continue for a longer period of time than is usually expected. Of the several elements which go to prevent bleeding there are several factors which seem to have a direct bearing upon the degree of bleeding. These are (1) the inorganic chemical constituents of the blood such as calcium and calcium chloriJe; (2) the formed elements of the blood, which are in this case called the platelets; and (3) a group of blood elements, the protein fractions, which must be present in the right proportion to prevent bleeding. Let us, therefore, take up the various diseases of bleeding which stem from these three elements. Only occasionally does the concentration of the chemical substances affect bleeding. Calcium chloride, long thought to be one of the specific elements in bleeding, is receiving less emphasis these days, but it is true that if there is a marked decrease in the of ionizable calcium or simi-a- r ions available in the blood, bleeding may be prolonged. Thus, an adequate amount of calcium and similar elements is necessary to bring about proper blood clotting. A deficiency of Vitamin K. which is normally absorbed from v adequate amount. Vitamin K, a normally present substance, has been prepared synthetically and has been available for 15 years. Among the formed elements of the blood are the platelets. When an abrasion or laceration occurs, the platelets quickly fill the gap in the injured tissue and, by providing a solid mass, obstruct the flow of blood and stop the bleeding. These substances are deficient in certain people who have a disease classified as a platelet deficiency disease. Sometimes it is necessaiy to remove the spleen of such persons to prevent destruction of the platelets and reduce the bleeding tendency. One of the newer drugs, ACTH, tends to cause a remission in the disease. A third important factor of the blood, which is being investigated at the present time, is included in the protein fractions of the blood. Persons with hemophilia have an inherited deficiency of these protein fractions. It is interesting to note that in recent years considerable study has been done on persons who have a tendency to bleed. Although the true hemophiliac bleeds at the slightest provocation or injury and is in danger of his or her life because of this bleeding tendency, there are also partial bleeders who bleed for a prolonged period of time, yet are never in any real danger from this condition. Both groups of bleeders respond to injections of the fractions of the plasma in which they are deficient. Some of these products which help prevent hemophiliac bleeding are now available from special sources capillaries ft - Til ' iif ,1 4 "e'vsPaPer Published in tJie resi(lents of Jke..,nlrest.s County, at Lavton, Utah. matter at Entered as second-clas- s Act of under the Layton, Utah, March S, 1879. Published Ily INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 hEMPER AWO4TI0i UTAH STATf NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Natl Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service 222 No. Michigan Axe. Chicago, 111. Subscription: $1.00 Per Year Payable in Advance. In combination with The Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year, Lloyd E. Anderson Editor i $ Manager Mary B. Bowring News Editor J. V. Woolsey Display Advertising Manager REFLEX and LEADER Fast Action Want Ads Reach Over 6,000 Homes in Davis County For Only . . . m w :k t nI TATTDM JUU HL in this country. Finally, there is a small of persons who suffers from group bleeding tendencies due to qualitative changes in their throughout the body. These persons are said to have purpura, a condition in which hemorrhages occur in the skin and mucous membranes. Such bleeding sometimes responds to treatment with vitamin C. This type of bleeding also be caused by the injection may of chemicals, snake bite, or a marked allergic sensitivity to certain foods or drugs. Those who have a tendency to bleed should consult their physicians in order that the cause of the bleeding may be found and the proper treatment instituted. Bleeding to most people is a very serious sign, but concern should be tempered by the fact that m almost every part of the country there are adequate blood baaks Lo deal with the and that physicians aresituation, aware of the problem. A keenly prompt visit to the family physician is strongly recommended when abnormal bleeding occurs. I |