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Show Sugar House, Utah Thursday, Feb. 28, 1957 SOUTH EAST INDEPENDENT Page 3 Return From, Las Vegas Week-en-d The Las Vegas atmosphere has beckoned Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Mor-gan Sr., 2490 Olympus Dr., and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brazier, 441 East 3rd South. They will spend the weekend in the colorful Nevada city. The Morgans recently returned from a two-wee- k trip to Los An-geles and San Fransciscot Calif., with some of their friends, the Bryant S. Hinckleys 3595 South 27th East. SOUTH EAST INDEPENDENT 1123 East 2 1 it South Dial IN 7-17- 32 Or HU 5-82- 61 The South Eist Independent U enter-ed as Second Class Matter March 1, 1946. ia Salt Lake Cltr Poit Office under the oct of March 3, 1879. It is published each Thursday morning-- . South East Independent is published by The News Bulletin, lac, snd Sugar House Press, Inc., at 1123 E. Twenty-Firs- t South St.. Sugar House, Utah. Subscription rates are $3.00 per year by mail. Single copy price is ten cents. Publisher ..... Clair King Editor Emma D. King News & Information Adv. HU 5-82- 61 N A T I O N A I EDITORIAL-- I ASSOcfATl"N T bijJiinmiNiini Child Care ... Can care for girls in my home ages 2 to 4; week" days. Call EMpire MEXICO TOUR MEXICO - - - A thrilling three week all expense bus tour leaving Salt Lake September 5th. Only $310. Tour is filling rapidly. Morley Tours, 387 E. 3rd N., Provo, Utah, Tele. FR RESPONSIBLE PERSON Male or female, from this area, wanted to service and collect from large console cigarette machines. No selling. Age not essential. Car, and references and $1,000 to $2,000 investment necessary. Very good returns and only 7 to 12 hours weekly. The best and most pleas-ant way to supplement your in-come. Full time work if you wish. For local interview give full particulars, and phone number. Write: P. O. Box 7019 Minneapolis 11, Minn. Classifieds . . . IRON-RIT- E IRONING Pick-u-p Delivery dial EN 7-1- INCOME TAX SERVICE, very reasonable. Don't be sorry. Call me and I'll come to you. Dial AMherst today, AVON CALLING Housewives! turn your spare time into money by servicing Avon customers. Several southeast territories now available. Phone EL 55147 for interview. HELP WANTED: Female. Day shift at Arctic Circle, 2005 East 33rd South. CEMENT WORK DONE All kinds of cement work, base-ment floors, garage floors, drive ways, patios, sidewalks, and sand-finishi- ng of basement walls (water proofing). Done by a dutch cement worker. Call INgersol 13. " INJRODUCIHG - Canyon Crest Subdivision 22 SPARKLING NEW HOMES 2850 South 3300 East $17,950 & up 3 - 4 BEDROOMS BRICK CONSTRUCTION I 4 - 2 BATHS LARGE KITCHENS DOUBLE CARPORTS GARAGES BASEMENTS FIREPLACE Tri - Levels -- - Ramblers - 2 - Levels OPEN EVERY DAY I '.TIL DARK Best approaches from Wasatch boulevard Try our Terms and Trades MOONEY REAL ESTATE 120 East 9th So. REALTORS DA 25 SOUTHEAST READY MIXED CONCRETE CO. Sand and Gravel Product (Once tried Always used) 6450 Holladay Blvd. GR7-26- 89 OPEN HOUSE Sunday 2 to 6 p.m. 3030 Morgan Dr. (4000 South) M. RAMBLER, 18 ft. Liv Rm. Fireplace, just 4 yrs. old, tile kit. Built-i-n range, Full basement, carport, landscaped. We will sell on Contract only $14,750. Call EM Layton - Harris Realty Co. HU 47 BLUE BLADES IN HANDY DISPENSER Famous Chemist Returns from Trip World Famous Chemist, Dr. Henry Eyring, 1922 East 9th South and dean of the Graduate School of the University of Utah, returned this week from a lengthy trip abroad in the interests of the United States Government The object of the trip was to visit Bel-gium for meetings planning United States participation in the 1958 Brussels Universal and Interna-tional Exhibition. The five month exhibition will take place from May to October of 1958 and many countries will have displays of scientific Information and achieve-ment. Dr. Eyring was appointed to act as chairman of the Advisory Committee In the Molecule Class of the International Science Ex-position which will be a part of the Brussels Exhibition. His ap-pointment came through Howard Cullman of the United States State Department. While enroute Dr. Eyring met with the conference of the Critique on the Application of Medical Re-search in Connection with Air Re-search and Development Com-mand of the UCLA in Los Angeles. Also in New York he conferred with the Post Doctoral Fellowship Board of the National Academy of Sciences. Then he went to Oak Ridge( Tennessee and addressed the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Advisory Committee. He returned to his school duties Monday. Rummage Sale Sponsored For U.N. The Sixth Annual Community Rummage Sale sponsored by the Utah Association for the United Nations will be held March 7, 8 and 9 at 115 South Main Street in Salt Lake City, according to Mrs. Bryce J. Fairbanks and Mr. Obert C. Tanner, en of the event. A new feature of this year's event will be a pre-sal- e auction of special merchandise to be held at the same address from 4 to 6 p.m. on March 6 under the direction of Mrs. A. Q. Howard. Items to be auctioned may be viewed in ad-vance from noon until 4 p.m. L. H, Kirkpatrick, University of Utah librarian and chairman of the Utah Association for the UN, Rolf Peter, son, radio-televisio- n personality, and H. F. Kretchman, Salt Lake Tribune editorial writer, will serve as auctioneers. Although held in Salt Lake City each year, the sale is a statewide project. Rummage is collected by UN chapters in Logan, Ogden and Provo for the event. In the Salt Lake area, some 35 civic groups and women's organizations are participating. Proceeds are used primarily for fostering United Nations interest and understanding among young people. Most important single project is the statewide high school Model UN Assembly held in the spring on the University of Utah campus, an idea begun in Utah three years ago that has since re-ceived much national recognition and is now copied in many states. Editorial . . . What is Junior Achievement?... It is a nation-wid- e, non-profi- t, educational program in which youngsters, 15 to 19, organize and manage their own small scale business enterprises with the guid-ance and counsel of adult advisers drawn from local business and in-dustry. Local business interested in the program are Kennecott, United Air Lines, U. S. Fidelity and Guar-antee, U. S. Steel, Johns-Mansvil- le and others. They have turned such leaders into the unique organiza-tion as Eric C. Aaberg, vice-preside- nt and manager of the Telephone company, J. P. O'Keefe, comptrol-ler of Kennecott, Alvin L. Krieg, public relations director of U. S. Steel. Earl J. Glade is also on the executive committee. These, with others too numerous to mention, are all successful business leaders, from the executive committee and board of directors, and devote a portion of their valuable time to the guidance of ambitious youthful teenagers. Bryon A. Ray, a Sugar House resident is the executive director. The first vice-preside- nt of the American Federation of Labor says of the program (It) . . . "is excellently designed to develop latent faculties of our young people, provide them with practical business experience and aid them when sufficiently experienced to enter business for themselves." And, it would be wonderful to see some of the local labor movements and leaders coming to the fore in this area. Each Junior Achievement com-pany is organized in the fall as a corporate structure with about 15 to 20 youngsters having a board of directors, working force and sales staff. They elect their own officers, select their product, capitalize their business, set up their production lines, plan dis-tribution, advertise, promote and sell, pay themselves wages, decide on commissions, keep books and records, pay rent, meet deprecia-tion, pay taxes, (and dividends if their business is profitable) and liquidate their companies at the end of the program year and issue stockholder reports. Is it any wonder that Reader's Digest in a quote calls Junior Achievement "... one of the most significant developments in prac-tical education today." We want to go on record with the leaders of business, labor, edu-cation, and Parents-Teache- rs as-sociations as endorsing this effec-tive method of developing an un-derstanding of the fundamental philosophy of competitive enter-prise among young people. It is education at its best. Teen-age- rs do not have the feeling of being taught they learn for them-selves out of their personal ex-perience. Here is an investment in Ameri-can Free Enterprise that pays!! NOTICE To Mortgagor by Mortgagee in proceeding to foreclosure and sale. By virtue of a chattel mortgage executed by Credit Finance Plan and Joseph V. Perrie, dated the 17th day of January, 1956 and upon which default has been made and upon which is due $830.23, we will expose for sale at public auction on March 8th, 1957 at 2 p.m. o'clock, at 1063 East 21st South Salt Lake City, Utah, certain property mentioned in said mortgage as follows, to wit: 11952 Ford Station Wagon No. B 2DL 128722 The terms of the sale will be made known on the day of the sale, S. C. WHITNEY, JR. manager Pub. in "S. E. Independent" Feb. 28 and March 7, 1957. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF SALT LAKE COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH HARRY E. WADSWORTTI, Plaintiff, vs. IIARLEY COCHRAN and DORIS V. COCHRAN, Defendants SUMMONS No. 111094 THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon Gordon I. Hyde, Plaintiff s attorney, whose address is 863 First Security Build-ing, Salt Lake City, Utah, an Answer to ihe Complaint within twenty (20) days after service of this Summons upon you. If you fail so to do, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in said Complaint which has been filed with the Clerk and a copy of which is here-to annexed and herewith served upon you. Dated this 2nd day of February, 1957. Gordon I. Hyde Attorney for Plaintiff ' 863 First Security Building Salt Lake City, Utah Pub: dates: February 14, 21, 28 and March 7th. ments and for accommodations and travel facilities in Europe it-self. Yet the professional advice and services of the travel agent add nothing to the cost of the steamship ticket. Jack Thomas Travel Service of 2040 South 11th East joins Mr. Mayper in urging early booking of space to assure best choice of available accommodations. He said that every year many persons who want to go to Europe "miss the boat" because they wait too long to secure their tickets. New Ships ... (Continued from Page 1) nine days of extra vacation. And when you cross the ocean by ship, you arrive rested, relaxed, re-freshed." Commenting on prospects for this year, Mr. Mayper said that so far as ship travel is concerned, in-dications are that 1957 will be another great year for European travel, and urges everyone who is planning a trip to Europe to make arrangements through their travel agent now. Veteran travelers agree that the travel agent is the man to see for answers about pass-ports, currency, baggage require- - NOTICE To Mortgagor by Mortgagee in proceeding to foreclosure and sale. By virtue of a chattel mortgage executed by Miller Finance and William H. Blight, dated the 10th day of July, 1956, and upon which default has been made and upon which is due $674.55, we will ex-pose for sale at public auction on Monday, the 4th day of March, 1957 at 2 p.m. o'clock, at Miller Finance, 373 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, certain property mentioned' in said mort-gage as follows, to wit: 1 53 Studebaker Coupe Motor No. 1028131 Serial No G 921311 The terms of the sale will be made known on the day of the sale. EARL JOHNSON assistant mgr. 21-2- 8 |