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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958 Page Five Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult clerk of district court or the respective signers for further information. NOTICE In the District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. In the Matter of the Voluntary Dissolution of Lang Liquidat-ing Company, Inc., a Utah cor-poration. Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, the 30th day of De-cember, 1958, at 2:30 o'clock P.M., in the court room of the above entitled Court, a hearing will be had on the application of Lang Liquidating Company, Inc., a Utah corporation, for a decree dissolving said corpora-tion. ALVIN KEDDINGTON, Clerk (Seal) By Jacob Weiler Deputy Clerk (11-1- 4 12-1- 2) if Wateisfdilb. fill i KENTUCKY BOURBON '"gfjj s,NCEi8io wSgm 86 Proof --- '56 WATERFIU AND FRAZIER DISTILLERY COMPANY, BARDSTOWnJiKENTUCKY Helps Heal And Clear tehyOMn Bash! Zemo, a doctor's antiseptic, promptly relieves itching, stops scratching and so helps heal and clear surface rashes. Buy Extra Strength Zemo for friQfWOfc stubborn cases! jy! I pT A wonderful fcjr new lightness lu comes to bourbon . . .with 31 glFSISlFlieirSle) srw ess, this Is the lightest, mildest boorboo you Vgfr I j -- tr ever tasted. There's nothing quits Ilka It on tha 1 market! Ask for Dam Charcoal Perfected... tht fp. ip light taste In bourbon! 11 IJ8" IXTRA AOtl - BXTRA VALUE I Jfi t 6 90 j ' 1- t. IOURBON WHISKY DANT DISTILLERS COMPANY. NEW YORX, N. Y. Utah Guard Plans Extensive Program Major General Maxwell Rich, Utah's Adjutant General, is now holding conferences with unit commanders and principal staff officers throughout the state to announce and organize a special activities program for the cur-rent fiscal year. This program is designed to promote and stimulate commu-nity relationships with the Utah National Guard. "It is our de-sire to co-oper- ate with civic leaders in providing maximum utilization of our armories for public use, and to participate in as many community activiteis as possible," General Rich said. The first important event com-ing up is the November 11 Vet-erans Day concert at the LDS Tabernacle featuring the 23rd Army Band. This will be the fourth annual presentation of this type concert. In December, the Bantam bas-- . ketball program is launched. This was introduced on a trial basis in Salt Lake City only last year. It has met with such suc-cess that it is being expanded state wide this year. Guard personnel will again be able to obtain distinctive Na-tional Guard automotive license plates beginning in mid-Decem- -; ber. Amateur boxing matches will beheld throughout the state in January, February, March and April. Final contests will be held at Camp Williams during June Field Training to select Guard entries in the AAU con-tests. The annual Miss Utah National Guard pageant gets under way locally in each Utah city with a National Guard unit during January and February. The last contest to select Miss National Guard will be held in Salt Lake City February 28. Muster Day, the biggest cele-bration of the year for the Utah National Guard, will again be held on Washington's Birthday, February 22nd. This is a nation-wide observance by National Guard units everywhere which originated in Utah a few years ago. It is designed to build the strength of the National Guard and to point dp the state of pre-paredness of the nation's Na-tional Guard. In May the Guard participates with the other Armed Forces in j the observance of Armed Forces I Day on the third Saturday of May. Next June General Rich ex-pects to have upwards of 100 shooters competing in rifle and pistol eimination matches. From this group a rifle and a pistol team will be selected to repre-sent the Utah National Guard at the Camp Perry, Ohio, National Rifle Association matches. The 1959 annual summer field training for all Army units will be conducted at Camp' W. G. Williams, June 7-2- 1. Engineer units will be engaged in field problems outside of Camp Wil-liams allowing room for all Ar-tillery and Special Troop units to attend at the same time. The July 4th Cavalcade at Derks Field in Salt Lake City will be presented again next year. In July, 1958, a crowd of more than 15,000 jamed the sta-dium to observe the event. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION NOTICE is hereby given that the partnership legally existing between Moroni Fox, Sr., and Edward L. McEntee, under the firm name of Bountiful Mattress. Company, whose place of busi-ness has been located at 133 West 2190 South, Salt Lake City, Utah, was dissolved on the first day of October, 1958. All debts due and owing to the partnership are received by T. J. Christian-sen Company, Trustee, Bountiful Mattress Company, Beneficial Life Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, and all demands on the partnership are to be presented to T. J. Christiansen Company for payment. Dated this 14th day of Novem-ber, 1958. MORONI FOX, SR. (11-1- 4) I . Telephone Company Opens New Facility New dial telephone systems costing in excess of $1,900,000 in Cedar City and St. George will be placed in operation mid-night, Nov. 15, according to C. A. Yeates, Provo District Manager for the Mountain States Tele-phone Company. Cedar City will become the hub of telephone communica-tions for Southern Utah when the automatic equipment goes into action. A staff of 55 full time operators will continue to be required to provide informa-tion service and assist in many other ways on local and long distance calls originating in the communities served by the new master exchange. Cedar City will serve as the hoame office for the area couth and west of Beaver as well as Kanab in Utah, and Fredonia, Arizona, and Mes-quit- e, Nevada. It will require only a matter cf seconds to cut the telephone cables serving the present man-ual offices and place in service the new dial equipped plants. Several major service improve-ments have been made in con-junction with the dial conver-- sions. Many party lines have been changed to one family lines and the number of customers re-maining on multi-part- y lines has been substantially reduced. Where practical telephone lines have been moved off the streets. Adequate facilities have been made available to provide indi-vidual line service to all desiring it in Cedar City, St. George and other communities. Long dis-tance lines have been reinforced with additional circuits between frequently called cities in Utah. Democrats to Enjoy GOP Senate Fight Democrats are already smiling in anticipation of the liberal-conservati- ve donnybrook expect-ed to face Republicans in the Senate when the GOP seeks an heir to defeated Senator William Knowland as Republican Senate Leader. Conservatives want either Sen. Bridges of New Hampshire or Everett Dirksen of Illinois. Some are pressing for Goldwater's selection. Liberal Republicans want Case of New Jersey, de-spite his relative lack of senior-ity. Vice President Nixon now is caught in the middle. Case Republicans fear a con-servative, or compromise leader-ship, will dilute the program with which the GOP will have to seek the ' Presidency in 1960. They are already sore, some publicly angry, about President Eisenhower's decision to press for a more conservative legisla-tive program in the next session of Congress when many argue that it was this the voters re-pudiated at the polls. Democrats, already preparing a searching critique of White House foreign policy in January. Whiteman to Lead , Utah Symphony Paul Whiteman, "The King of Pops," comes to Utah for a big concert at the Salt Lake Taber-nacle Saturday night with the Utah Symphony orchestra. Whiteman performed before a packed audience at the Taber-nacle last year and his return engagement conducting the Utah Symphony promises to be even more attractive this year. Fans who heard the first concert are clamoring for this second ap-pearance. For Saturday's concert, the music master will present the program featuring Ferde Grofe's "Grand Canyon Suite." He also will play "Rhapsody in Blue", which has become his trademark over the years. In addition Whiteman will play many other tunes that were written especially for him or tunes that he first introduced, including a medley of tunes he brought back from Europe, con-sisting of "Valencia," "Lime House Blues" and "Parade of the Wooden Soldier." Other tunes will include "Deep Purple," "When Day is Done," "The Night is Young," and many others. - Tickets for the Salt Lake con-cert, are available at the Utah Symphony orchestra at 55 West First South. Tickets may be re- - served by telephone or mail. Mail orders will be filled and returned or tickets will be held at the box office. TB Croup Announces Christmas Seal Sales The 1958 tuberculosis Christ-mas Seal campaign will open November 14 with the mailing of Christmars Seals to over one hundred thousand Utah homes, it was announced by Rolfe Pe-terson, chairman of the event. To protect every family in Utah from TB that's the aim of the Utah Tuberculosis and Health Asosciation as it lays its plans for the traditional fund-raisin- g campaign. "Great progress has been made against TB, but the disease is still striking almost as many of our Utahns as it did 20 years ago," declared Peterson. "We must see to it that no family is forced to suffer the tragic ef-fects of a disease which 'can be prevented." In a personal message to volun-teers throughout Utah who will carry out the campaign, he said, "Proceeds from this year's Seals must do more than maintain our present TB control activities. We must expand our efforts to find all the unknown cases of TB lurking in the state. We must increase our efforts to help ex-T- B patients get back on their feet and stay there. We must ex-pand our educational program so that people of all ages learn how to protect themselves from TB. We must put more money into I medical research to find better ways of fighting TB." |