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Show WEEKLY NEWS JOURNAL, MAY 13, 1976 REFLEX-DAV- IS POPPY DAYS Pinning a poppy on Dee Sanders, Kaysville City Councilman, is Lois Stephens, a member of the American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 82. May 21 and 22 have been proclaimed as Poppy Days in Kaysville. Friday and Saturday, May 21 and 22 have been proclaimed as Poppy Day in Kaysville. ALL OF us will be asked to wear a red memorial poppy. As most of you know, once each year Americans observe y Poppy Day, which is a tribute to our dead and V, volun-T'-tar- disabled service men. By accepting one of these poppies from a member of the American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 82 of Kaysville, you will be aiding the living vic-- ; tims of the past wars while I honoring our dead. THE NATIONS 200th an- niversary is a time to remember how many lives constituted the price paid for our freedom. It is a time to -'-honor all veterans. After world war I, the red poppy recalled to lfbright the ? bloody battle fields many of France and Flanders where i: these flowers grew wild and where many again paid the j 2 high price of freedom. SINCE THE Great War" members of the American Legion Auxiliary have used the poppy as a memorial and as a means by which to raise funds for successful veterans and childrens programs. As all members should be aware, poppy funds are used solely for veterans and families benefits. their The poppies are made in Veterans hospitals throughout the nation by disabled and hospitalized veterans as they have been since the poppy first became a symbol of remembrance, for the war dead. V VOLUNTEERS FROM the American Legion Auxiliary who offer the poppies to the public, unlike the disabled veterans, receive nothing tangible for their work. The American Legion Auxiliary is asking everyone to support Poppy day and consider it a privilege to wear a poppy again this year on Poppy Day. np tf physician A services the Medicare program placed a top limit on reimbursement. For the period beginning July 1, 1975, it was 17.9 percent over what the program paid in 1975. .... ; INADVERTENTLY this had the effect of Medicare paying less for a small number of services after July 1, 1975 than the program was paying in the prior year. A law was passed in 1975 to prevent that reduction from occurring again and to repay on any claim where a decrease had occurred. BY LAW, the amount of difference on a claim for service must be $1 or more before additional payment will be made. Medicare beneficiaries will be getting such checks between now and June 30. The Explanation of Medical Benefits received with the check will read: Because of recent legislation, this additional amount is being approved for services Guest speaker at the Layton of Commerce Chamber breakfast meeting last Thursday, was Jack Nuttal, Chief Safety Engineer for Envirotech Corporation in SLC. THE EXPERT on OSHA (Occupational and Safety Health Act) is a past president of the American Society of Safety Engineers and conducts safety and OSHA seminars throughout the United States. He is also very closely as- sociated with the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness. MR. NUTTAL stressed the importance of accident prevention, saying that he likes to visit high schoolers who are going into industry, previously approved Medicare. by YOU DO not have to contact your Social Security Office to determine if additional payment is due you. The payments will be made automatically to all persons eligible for them. By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE Q. (To Dr. Peale): Our family is having a discussion on where you go after death. Also, when you are cremated, where does your soul go? A. (DR. Peale): I believe that after death we pass as souls to the spiritual realm from which this physical world is sustained and governed. I do not believe that the disposition of a persons body after death, whether by cremation or otherwise, has any particular importance for the soul. The dead body is merely a discarded garment. X I I Peale) : What is the best way to beat insomnia? Q. (To Dr. s A. (DR. Peale) : First check with your doctor for any pos- sible physical reasons for your sleeplessness and the means of correcting them. m I I I CL0SED1SUNDAYS with the need of preventive measures. Stating that individuals are 15 times safer at work than at home, he has observed needless safety hazards such as a many carrying solvent with a lit cigarette in his nranirnit mouth. MR. NUTTAL went on to say that there are three causes of accidents; unsafe acts committed by people, unsafe mechanical condition, and acts of God, with the first being the most common. OSHA on Information record keeping was given explaining the various forms required including the fact that they should be filled out truthfully because employees have the right to review the accident forms. program rather than being administered by the federal government. As long as the state enforces standards at least equal to the federal, that situation will remian. Tom Winegar, Chamber President, told the group that he would obtain the name and address of the local OSHA representative so they could get additional forms, information, booklets and posters. QMliJif (BEGM HU) P033 COUNTRYxSTYL smm fSTiTiTHtilTTl RIBS 1MT03 san die in and ie chemistry particularly students to impress them HE EXPLAINED tnat Utah is one of eighteen states that monitors its own OSHA RUTH STAFFORD PEALE I fiSJCdD Speaking about OSHA at the Layton Chamber of Commerce breakfast meeting last Thursday was Jack Nuttal, chief safety engineer of Envirotech Corp. Aire Vo im Elogitole? If you had a Medicare claim paid after July 1, 1975, you may be eligible to some additional payment on that claim. In order to limit the amount of increase in costs for 03DM2J0G03B0 OSHA TALK that make up your mind that you do not need sleeping pills; if you are depending on the crutch of pills you will only increase Beyond Guos your need for them. (This is not to imply that under certain circumstances a mild sedative prescribed by your doctor is not proper.) 0233313 Try to check your worries and resentments outside your bedroom door and go to bed with positive, relaxing thoughts. You will find some other suggestions in a booklet entitled You Can Relax, a copy of which is on its way to you. Q. (TO Mrs. Peale): My husband and I have a problem concerning parents. We were both brought up by foster parents (not the same ones). After we married, we decided to look up our real parents, whom we had never known. gp 6lCT itfiftlTTTTTTft This is the cause ot the problem, for now they are all elderly and seeking help from sets of parents! Our inclination is to give what we can to our foster parents, who brought us up. Where does our responsibility lie? m (MRS. Peale): To the foster parents, if you have to make a choice. The responsibility of parents does not end but rather begins when they bring children into the A. 5 5 world. i Apparently yours could not accept their duty of care and nurture; it was assumed by others. If you can do $ something for your natural parents, fine, but your chief ioyalty belongs to those who acted as real parents. f i i V 4 NEED AUTO INSURANCE? Get the best, with Fast, Fair, Friendly service from J 1 FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP u f" Of 1 CSSJ i mm I DIXON P. REISBECK 197 No. Main St. Layton, Utah Phone 376-427- 9 V w SEE , ( cesd hem 1 (? rnuMKa , V. |