OCR Text |
Show SOUTHERN UTAH NEWS,- Kanab, Utah Page Fear b?r ?rmF Public Notice 1959. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ORDINANCE NO. 1960-By Ernest E. House ORDINANCE AMENDING AN Office Land Manager, SECTION 13 44 OF THE REVISBureau of Land Management ED ORDINANCES OF KANAB Salt Lake City, Utah :iTY, 1959, RELATING TO SALARIES UNITED STATES BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY DEPARTMENT OF THE COUNCIL OF KANAB, UTAH: INTERIOR of the ReSection 1 Section BUREAU OF LAND vised Ordinances of Kanab City, MANAGEMENT Utah, 1959, is amended to read as NOTICE OF CONTEST follows Compensation of Mayor To QUINCE K KIMBALL, and Councilmen: KIMBALL, CROSIER KIMThe compensation to be paid to BALL, WILLARD HEAPS, CHARLES C. SKELL, HELEN K each official of the City shall be $150 00 per annum Mayor HASKELL, ALLEN CAMERON, Councilman $100 00 per annum JOSEPH H. HORNE, Contest 84-3The salary of all appointive ofagainst Escalante Placer min-- and employees shall be as and ficers metes mg claim desc. by bounds upon uns. land which established by the City Council will prob be sec. 36, T. 40 S., by resolution (10 641). This ordinance shall R 9 E , sec 31, T. 40 S., R 94 Section 2 E , and sec 19, T. 40 S , R. 10 take effect on the 25th day of January, 1960, and shall be applicaE , SL Mer ; CHARLES C. HASKELL, QUIN- ble to the entire calendar year of CE K KIMBALL, FLORENCE 1960 CARSON MERRILL, HENRY PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF KANAB THOMATHONIHAH GREEN, CITY AND THE MAYOR THEREMAS, ANGLINE S. THOMAS, OF THIS 22ND DAY OF DECEMDOLORES P. ANDERSON, C. GREEN, Contest 9432, BER, 1959 Harman C Steed, Mayor against Escalante No. 1 Placer ATTEST metes desc. claim by mining and bounds upon uns land Lula H Robinson Recorder ) which will prob be sec 30, T. STATE OF UTAH SS ) 40 S , R 9 E , sec 31 T. 40 S , ) R 94 E . and sec. 25, T 4014 S , COUNTY OF KANE R 9 E , SL Mer.; I, LULA H. ROBINSON, City HASKELL ENGINEERING CO., Recorder of Kanab City, Utah, do . Contest 8433, against Escalante that the within and Nos 2, 3, 4, Placer mining clai- hereby certify is a full, true and corforegoing ms desc by metes and bounds rect copy of an ordinance passed upon uns land which will prob at a regular meeting of the Kabe sec 36. T. 404 S , R 9 E., nab City Council on December 22, and secs 1, 2, 3, T. 41 S , R 9 1959, at which a quorum was preE, SL Mer.; all present voting Aye. SAMUEL R NEEL, VENIE B sent, WITNESS my hand and official , FANW. BOWER, NEEL, THOS. seal this 22 day of December, 1959 NIE S NEEL, CARR B. NEEL, L E. RITER. A. II DeNIKE, D Lula H Robinson, Recorder i B. MACKINTOSCH, Contest 84- - (SEAL) 34, against Neel Placer mining claim desc by metes and bounds Published December 24, 1959 upon uns. land which will prob be secs. 3, 10, T 41 S , R 9 E , 1 LA-VO- LES C. 13-4- K. KIMBALL, CHARHASKELL, LAVON ELMER II JORGENSEN, LOLA G. ELDRIDGE, Contest 84- 35, against Hole in the Rock Placer mining claim desc by metes and bounds upon uns land which will prob. be secs 2, 3, T. 41 S R 9 E., SL Mer , according to the latest proposed plan of survey. You, and each of you, your heirs, representatives, and assigns, are hereby notified that the States of America has instituted a contest pursant to 43 CFR 221, and Title 30 USCA, section 40, against those certain mining claims set forth above situate in the County of Kane, State of , ). TROWS SHELTER Is an underground reinforced concrete box 13 by 15 feet with an tunceiling slab A nel connects it to his cellar. The shelter isn't pretty It won't be even after ventilation blowers, a battery radio, food, water, bed-diand other necessities are added But if clouds of radioactive material swirled over the green Wisconsin countryside after a nuclear attack, the shelter would be valuable beyond reckoning of price or effort. It also offers absolute tornado protection as a that these argu- t L ' i - 4. SURVIVAL INSURANCE looks like an ordinary concrete slab at the home of Don S. Trow near Albany, Wis. But beneath the slab is a $1,506 reinforced concrete shelter which the ' I X f j vK A farmer ordered built for himself and bis wife. Trow to Box Home Shelgot the shelter plans by ter, Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization, Battle Creek, Mich. (Wisconsin State Journal Photo' 'vrSM f ji rT: 25 All Gifts Belts ""-- i Jewelry Wliiifffiiir-- HAND MADE U mg? ; DIAMOND GOLD STONE GEM STONE Hand Made & Western BLACK r y s, DOLLS Indian TOYS j NUCLEAR ATTACK on the United States would uation even worse. To meet this problem, rural result in a flood of refugees moving from target civil defense organizations conduct exercises in cities to rural areas. This would overtax all improvised outdoor cooking, using oil drums for living faclliUes.such. as those for cooking. The ovens, tin cans made into cooking utensils, and' probable loss of electricity would make the sit other materials likely to be available after attack. OFF Novelties I L i & with a tornado In 1953 led the Donald L. Anderson family of Toledo, Iowa, to build theirown small shelter adjoining their basement, They estimate that, by doing their own work, they will have only about $50 in the shelter when finished. Here Anderson, his wife Jean, and sons Rick, 13. (lower bunk) and Don G., Ki try the shelter out for size. In addition to serving as a tornado shelter, It would be valuable as protection against radioactive fallout If the nation were attacked. (OCDM Photo) A CLOSE CALL -- f irT v s 1 gttiaJWSweS 8a8SS3'5S3i E1 IWI gagasagg3C .... . WHAT YOU CAN DO TO SURVIVE Residents of rural areas are very likely to survive a nuclear attack on the United Statgs and remain in good health to aid the nation s recovery if they take a few common sense precautions. Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization authorities advise. Among the steps which the national civil defense agency suggests HAND TOOLED PURSES BILLFOLDS fire i OFF 15 ALL SPORTING lX-- . , GUNS HOLSTERS & HOLE IN A HILLSIDE near Davenport, Iowa, running well water, food, and other facilcould mean the survival of veterinarian Dr. J. B. ities. Dr. White based his shelter living on plans White and his family. The hole Is a reinforced furnished without charge to anyone writing Box concrete fallout shelter built adjacent to the Home Shelter, Office of Civil and Defense Mobildoctors home. It is equipped with electricity, ization, Battle Creek, Mich. (OCDM Photo) Ammunition Build a fallout shelter. It doesnt have to be but It should be in a basement or underground. Plans expensive, are available by writing Box Home Shelter, Battle Creek, Mich. Store at least a k supply of food and water, and have such essentials as a battery-operate- d radio and first aid supplies handy. Make advance preparations and learn how to take care of livestock m a fallout area. These and other instructions for protecting humans, animals, houses, food, etc., from radioactive material are contamed in publications issued without charge by OCDM. two-wee- awT" GOODS Fishing Tackle BULLET BELTS NOW Is the TIME TO STOCK UP FOR NEXT FALL 30 days. Dated this 11th day of Decem- ALL SALES CASH FINAL 1959. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA By Ernest E. House Manager, Land Office Bureau of Land Management Salt Lake City, Utah TRADER TEDS Kanab, Utah The Southern Utah Hews Joins With Our ADVERTISERS To Wish You THE SEAS0HS BEST Fat service. Fair settlement of claims. Friendly people who are on your side. You cant buy better protection. Or broader coverage. Or greater peace of mind. And you save money, too! Lower rates because Farmers insures careful drivers. Farmers Auto Insurance AUTO OF LOS ANGELES LIFE FIRE And May Your llcr.3 Be Fuli Of Joy TRUCK I LeRoy P. Judd Midway often P - d December. 31 1959 January 7, 1960 January 14, 1960 January 21, 1960 being at least once a week for P X K bonus. Trow feels PEOPLE 18-in- WE NEED TO REMODEL and ENLARGE A complaint ber ACTUALLY, ask him why he built the shelter, and some express interest m building one themselves. But the matter usually ends there. Trow tells about a doctor acquaintance who asked how he might build a basement fallout shelter. When told, he decided he could get enough fallout protection by stacking up books in his basement as a shelter. Imagine, Trow said, an Intelligent man like a doctor stacking np books for a shelter! Technically, books, hke any item with some mass, would offer some protection against radiation, according to civil defense authorities. But a thickness of books would be needed to provide the same radiation shielding as eight inches of solid concrete blocks or 12 inches of earth, or 30 inches of wood This would take thousands of books, and the means of stacking them into the form of walls and ceiling for a shelter. It couldnt be done m the hour or so of grace which rural areas would have before fallout from a target area reached them. Like life insurance, the survival insurance of a fallout sheh ter cant be taken out after the disaster happens. SALE ,Utah above-describe- ThH?aojfi, ments make good sense. He says, "I Just cant understand why people don't build shelters. Dont they read? Dont they attend civil defense meetings? Or is it just that they dont care? Most families spend the $1,000 cost of a shelter, and much more in a couple of years trading cars, and for luxuries." CLEARANCE KIMBALL, CROSIER KIMBALL, MARY E. KIMBALL. has been filed by the United States of America requesting that said mining claims be invalidated and declared null and void on the charge that: (1) The land involved is nonmineral in character; (2) No discovery of valuable minerals has been made in the mining claims. The contests are pending in the Land Office, Bureau of Land Management, Room 312 Federal Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Unless an answer to the complaint is filed in such office within thirty (30) days after the last date of publication of this Notice, the allegations of the complaint will be taken as confessed and the contests will be decided without a hearing. This Notice will be published on the following dates, to wit: Deceniber 24, 1959 fee if "Theres nothing to budding a shelter So says Don S Trow, a farmer who lives near Albany. Wia He knows He has built one of the few adequate farm fallout shelters in the United States, and the only known one in his own county Trow says nut tear fallout is like the weather everyone talks about it, but no one does anything about It. But Trow did something First he invested a four cent stamp to write to Box Home Shelter at the Ollice of Civil qnd Defense Mo bilization at Battle Creek, Mich to get its Home Shelter booklet (MP-15It contains shelter con struction plans of several types When Trow got his booklet, he ddn't just think about it ,r He sent for a contractor and invested He says $1,500 to have it built he could have built it himself for less than $1,000 had he not been seriously afflicted at the time 13-4- 4 SL Mer.; QUINCE Thursday, Decembef 24, IBM - 80 KANAB, UTAH r , |