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Show i b THE SALT LAKE TIMES Page Four THE SALT LAKE TIMES Combined with The Sell Lake Mining 6 Legal No wj Published Every Friday at Salt Lake City, Utah Entered at the postoffice at Salt Lake Gty as second class matter August 23. 1923. under the act of March 8, 1879. 711 South West Temple Telephone EM 64 GLENN BJORNN. Publisher "This publication it not owned or controlled by any party, clan , clique, faction or corporation; Number 33 Volume 44 Where We Stand in Fight Against America's No 1 Killer ( Continued seven and from Page One) percent. To appreciate the significance of this decline, it must be realized that prior to 1950 the cardiovascular death rate had been spiraling up. Surprisingly, the decline was achieved despite a 4.3 per cent increase in the death rate from heart attack among men in this age bracket. But the rate of death from high blood pressure and the heart disease it causes dropped 49.9 per cent, and that from .stroke 25.6 per cent. These dramatic improvements were largely responsible for a net decline of the 7 per cent. Among women of the same age, the decline was even more spectacular a drop of 56 per cent in the death rate associated with high blood pressure, and a decrease of 35 per cent in that from stroke. Probably the largest single factor in this important achievement was our recently discovered and newly- - applied knowledge that; most cases of high blood pressure can be controlled under medical supervision. Mainly, this involves drugs and diet changes. Improved treatment obviously has had a favorable effect on the stroke picture since some strokes occur as a complication of high blood pressure. Additionally, other aspects of the cardiovascular picture have improved thanks to procedures which prevent repeat attacks of rheumatic fever, the use of artery grafts and artificial heart valves, effecdisorders tive methods for combatting such once-fatas bacterial endocarditis. Happily, the decline in the cardiovascular death rate during this decade and a half was not confined to men and women in their prime of life. Over the same period the cardiovascular death rate for those aged 4 declined 35 per cent. For those aged 25-4- 4 it decreased 10 per cent. As a result of these advances, people everywhere acquired not only a new measure of hope but also a new feeling of determination to speed the conquest of heart and blood vessel disease, with their Heart Association serving as the central and spearheading force behind the effort. Moreover, in these 15 years, it has become apparent for the first time that the average man can do certain things to reduce this risk of heart attack. one-ha- lf , Reds Plan Riots Systematically in Many Countries, Including U.S. Violent demonstrations that erupt in many countries, including the United States, usually dont just happen. They are systematically planned by communists, reveals Eugene H. Methvin in a Readers Digest Article of How the Reds Make a Riot. The communists have studied and taught mob manipulation for 60 years. Lenin himself developed mob techniques, which he taught in a clandestine communist school at Longjumeau, France, in 1911. His bold boast: When we have companies of specailly trained worker revolutionaries who have passed long courses of schooling, no police in the world will be able to cope with them. Steps involved include infiltrating agents into strategic organizations, softening up the populace with symbols and slo- - Information Service In Operation By Revenue Service According to Roland V. Wise, District Director of the Utah Internal Revenue Service, the Monday Taxpayer Information Program during the period for filing 1964 Federal income tax returns, is now in effect in newly remodeled facilities. Taxpayers are reminded that the Salt Lake City offices are still located in the Post Office and Court House Building, 4th South and Main Streets. This Monday assistance is also available at local Internal Revenue Service offices throughout the State. Under this plan, Internal Revenue Service employees will answer questions or give information to persons making out income tax returns but they would like to concentrate on Mondays, thus giving better service to taxpayers, and minimizing the cost to IRS. The plan of advising and instructing taxpayers in filling out their own returns will be carried out as in last years program. Mr. Wise states that service will be given gladly and cheerfully, upon either a telephone or a personal contact from a taxpayer, and that returns will be actually prepared for persons who cannot do the job for themselves. While special preparations are being made to give the best service and attention to taxpayers who come in on Mondays, service will be maintained on informaoOo tion counters on other work days (Tuesday through Friday) at the The Louisiane Purchase contained over 500 million Salt Lake City, Ogden and Provo al 5-2- acres and cost the United States approximately $23 offices. Attention is called to the fact million. that the Provo Internal Revenue Service office has moved to new quarters in the Ashton Building, Dont Force Child or concern. A hungry child will eat unless it pays him not to. To Eat Dinner To produce a good eater and a child; the auExpert Advises thors set forth the following Childrens feeding problems rules: are usually caused by an over 1. Breast feed, to begin with, anxious attitude on the part of if you possibly can. There is no the parent and efforts to get belter start. more food into the child than he 2. Dont introduce solids too wants or needs. So write Dr. soon. Frances L. Ilg and Dr. Louise 3. Dont emphasize quantity. Bates Ames in an article in a Most children eat less than their recent issue of American Home, mothers think they should. answering Twenty Questions 4. Dont engage in fighting About Childrens Eating. To prevent such problems, the about quantity, quality, type or article advises parents to give any other aspect of food to be small portions, allow a reason- eaten. 5. Relax. Dont nag. Very few able time for eating, dont insist, dont push and dont show children of economically solvent an extreme amount of interest parents ever starve to death, or well-nourish- ed 140 West 1st North. 4; IS AS SB gans, agitating crowds, and manufacturing martyrs. Reds can be foiled by preventing these steps. Where prevention fails, citizens must overwhelmingly supSalt Lake County Commission port civil authorities and police and a city commissioner agreed to maintain order. conIn Harlem, after the first vio- this week to recommendto the lence flared last summer, civil struction of an addition Hall of Justice and rights leaders called every non- Metropolitan communist organization in the Jail to accommodate needs of Sheriffs community, 69 of them and the Salt Lake County formed the United Harlem Or- Department. The recommendations were ganizations. County CommisWorking closely with police to agreed upon byLarson and City expose the incendiaries, they sioner W. G. Louis E. Holley. distributed thousands of leaflets Commissioner urging people to stay away from a communist called rally. The Salt Lake City Police Departfizzled. ment will get 13 new officers to rally The lesson of the rising glo- be selected from the City Civil bal tide of Red led violence is Service Commission eligible list. one of the oldest lessons of hisThe City Commission, on the is the recommendation of Police Chief tory; eternal vigilance price of liberty, he wrote. Ralph Knudsen, approved employment of the rookie officers to replace officers who have retired or left the service. GRAPEVINE Three Choruses Join With Symphony For Youth Concert Utah Attorney General Phil L. Hansen this week announced plans to familiarize himself and his office with local crime probThe combined choirs of West, lems. He said he would begin Murray, Highland and Hillcrest a series of meetings with local High Schools will join Maurice law enforcement officials FriAbravanel and the Utah Symday. phony Saturday evening at 8:30 Purpose of the meetings, he in the Tabernacle for the first to explore with these annual Salute to Youth Choral said, isthe various crime probpeople Concert. and their them lems confronting Mr. Abravanel has scheduled an outstanding program for Sat- jurisdictions. urdays concert. It begins with The Salt Lake City Commisthe Brahms Academic Festival sion this week c approved a Overture, followed by the beautitbetween the commission ful Faure Requiem which fea- and Marvin H. Strong, band ditures the choruses and JoAnn concerts at Lib10 rector, for Ottley and Marvin Sorensen as erty Park this summer at a total soloists, with Alexander Schrei- cost of $4,235. ner at the Tabernacle Organ. After the intermission the orby chestra will play three dances The first measure approved curthe the Senate Utah during from The Bartered Bride by rent a resolution of was session Smetana and Two Nocturnes: Clouds and Festivals by De- memoriam and condolence to the family of the late Sen. Orval bussy. The final work of the evening Hafen (R., St. George). Sen. who died Oct. 3, 1964, again features the choruses in a Hafen, 12 years in the Legislaserved rousing performance of the Dances from Prince ture. con-tra- Polo-vetsi- an Igor by Borodin. This music, frequently performed in Salt Lake and better known by its popular title of Stranger in Paradise, has never been performed locally with chorus as required by the original score. Saturdays orchestral - choral concert is the brainchild of four local choral directors who wanted pieces andshrdletaoinshrdlucmf to go beyond routine choral pieces and provide their students an opportunity to sing one of the great masterpieces of music with a major orchestra under the baton of internationally acclaimed Maurice Abravanel. The directors are: James Maher, West High; William Johnson, Murray High; Leo Dean, Hillcrset High; and Paul Christensen, Highland High. Tickets for Saturdays concert are on sale at the Symphony Office, 55 West 1st South, at Income tax returns and instructions have already been mailed to taxpayers who are requested to: (1) Read the instructions care- $1.00 for all seats. fully, and follow the instructions line by line in preparing the returns. permit the Service to better utilreassistance is further ize the valuable time of its em(2) If local call the Internal quired, in other important types Revenue office on the telephone ployees of tax work - speeding up legiOgden, (Salt Lake City, timate refunds due taxpayers, and Provo, (3) In the event the telephone pursuing tax dodgers, and colcall does not clear up the diffi- lecting delinquent accounts. culty, come into the Internal Revenue Service office on Mon524-587- the Robert W. Inscore, state military archivist, has resigned from the Utah State Historical He has been credited with organizing graves registration of So-cit- y. some 25,000 veterans buried in Utah. Mr. Inscore has recommended Millard E. Wilde, Springville, as his successor. Sportsmen who received game harvest questionnaires were also urged this week by the Department of Fish and Game to complete the necessary information and return the report cards as quickly as possible. Harvest information compiled from these reports is necessary for the completion of annual hunt summaries which play an important part in the management of Utahs wildlife resource. Utah State University will meet Memphis State University in a home and home football series beginning this fall, it was announced by Frank Buss Williams, USU director of athletics, from Chicago this two-gam- e, week. Williams, who is representing Utah State at the National Collegiate Athletic Association annual convention, reported that contracts have been signed for day. The strip tease seems to be on the games which will be played The program should furnish on Nov. 6, 1965 in Memphis and adequate help to all taxpayers the beaches as well as in on Oct. 7, 1967 in Logan. Both in need of assistance, and should will be afternoon games. 393-582- 4; 374-731- 1). |