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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1958 f Page Five The New Big Man On Campus w.jr ' Hi YjiHI& at 506 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah on or before the 2nd day of June, A.D. 1958. TSUTOMU MITSUI, Executor of the Estate of Kenko Mitsui, Deceased. Date of first publication Janu- - ary 24th, A.D. 1958. Mas Yano, Attorney for Executor 506 Judge Building Salt Lake City, Utah (1-2- 4 2-1- 4) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of KENKO MITSUI, De-ceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned 1 upon the following matters, which will be presented to the stockholders for their considera-tion at said meeting: 1. A resolution to amend Ar-ticle VIII of the Articles of In-corporation whereby the par value of the common stock of the corporation shall be changed from a par value of 20 cents ner share to a par value of $1.00 per share, or to a par value that may be agreed upon by the holders of the majority of the common stock voted at said meeting, and that each stockholder be required to turn in to the Secretary of the Company for transfer and exchange the appropriate num-ber of shares of the present stock for the new stock in the ratio which would reflect the par value of the stock agreed upon. 2. To consider and act upon any other business that may properly come before said meet-ing. Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this 23rd day of January, 1958. By Order of the Board of Di-rectors. NATIONAL BEVERAGES, INC. Vera Duncan, Secretary (1-2- 4 2-- 7) . Notice of Special Meeting of the Stockholders of NATIONAL BEVERAGES, INC. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN :hat a special meeting of the stockholders of National Bever-ages, Inc., a Utah corporation, will be held at the hour of 10:00 o'clock A.M. on Monday, Febru-ary 17th, 1958, at the offices of the company at 1030 South Sixth West, Salt Lake City, Utah, for the purpose of voting and acting NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of A. DUANNE STEW-ART, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 175 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, within four months after the date of first publication of this notice. WALKER BANK & TRUST COMPANY, Executor of the Es-tate of A. Duanne Stewart, De- - ; ceased. Date of first publication Janu-ary 24th, A.D. 1958. Ray, Rawlins, Jones & Henderson (1-2- 4 2-1- 4) (to-ll EASED GRAPEVIRIE Mayors of Salt Lake City, Og-de- n and Provo have been asked to appear before the Utah Leg-islative Council committee to present facts on the financial picture in their communities. The committee, the local government finance advisory committee, is examining the municipal money problems to determine if new taxes or higher tax limits are needed by city governments in the state. The committee will meet February 3. South Salt Lake City Judge George H. Searle has submitted his resignation to the South Salt Lake City Council effective im-mediately but will serve until a successor is named. He has al-ready served four years. University of Utah Athletics Director and football coach Jack Curtice has decided to leave the hilltop school to accept a posi-tion as head football coach at Stanford University. A Utah Public Service Com-mission hearing on a proposed bus fare increase in the Salt Lake City area has ended with a recess until March 3. F. W. Michaelsen, former ex-ecutive vice president, Utah Sav-ings and Trust Co., died last week. He was 83. The Salt Lake County Com-mission approved appointment of Evelyn Elaine Wassmer, 130 Vidas Ave., as a comptometer operator in the county assessor's office at a salary of $11 a day. Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult clerk of district court or the respective signers for further information. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of JAMES WELLS, De-ceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 627 Continental Bank Build-ing, Salt Lake City 1, Utah, on or before the 15th day of March, A.D. 1958. MARION L. SNOW, Adminis-trator of the Estate of James Wells, Deceased. Date of first publication Janu-uar- y 10th, A.D. 1958. Robert Murray Stewart, Attorney for Administrator, 627 Continental Bank Building, Salt Lake City 1, Utah (1-1- 0 1) (Jjmocrat Dominated Congress Turns To Nation's Farm Problems total farm production. "That five per cent is just about the amount which produc-tion has been exceeding sales in domestic and foreign markets. But that still leaves unsolved the problem of how to reduce the number of farmers and farms by 40 per cent. "Mr. Benson says he does not favor 'forced migration' off the farms. He says present support and subsidy programs are en-couraging too many farmers to stay on the land when they ought to be seeking employment else-where. He thinks that if those supports and subsidies were re-duced or eliminated many would leave farms voluntarily. "With more than 4,0tf0,000 un-employed city workers, the job of farmers finding work in fac- - tories, mines and other indus-tries might not be an easy one. More probably they would just swell the unemployment relief rolls. Business and professional men in small towns, who depend on farmers for their income, would be hard hit by any mass migra-tion of their customers to the cities. The result could be a gi-gantic wave of bankruptcies over With Congress well under way again attention this week was beginning to shift from guided missiles which appear to be pretty well provided for as far as finances are concerned to the other problems that always face the nation's lawmakers. And as in years past the farm problems still loom large. Republican Agriculture Secre-tary Ezra Taft Benson has spent a few rough days with Congres-sional committees already. One observer of the farm scene, cc(mnist Clinton L. Davidson, s'v UP the problem this way: "With the farm debate getting into full swing in Congress this week the same old problem too much production but with a new twist is emerging as the big issue. "Congressmen from farming areas will talk about it in the cloakrooms, and off the record, but the subject is taboo when it comes to open debate on the floor of either the House of the Senate. "Are there too many farmers? Agriculture Secretary Benson says, openly, that there are. The American Farm Bureau Federa- - the country. The main stumbling block to improving the farm price and over production problem is how to keep the 2,000,000 farms that Benson thinks should be re-moved from production from be-ing absorbed by larger farmers and made even more productive. Benson thinks a "super soil-ban- k" to pay farmers to leave their whole farm idle may be the solution. He is giving the idea a trial run this month in 4 states Illinois, Nebraska, Maine and Tennessee and if it looks good he says he may ask all farmers to make the government an of-fer .to take their farms out of production. Fortunately for his reputation Sherlock Holmes never had to solve the Mystery of the Missing Left Shoe, as posed by a two-year-o- ld who misplaces dad's toe cover just before train time. tion, largest of the farm organi-zations, agrees with him. "Price supports, surplus dis-posal and other farm programs are costing the government in excess of $5 billion a year. The main objectives of those pro-grams has been (1) to keep farm prices from falling and (2) to reduce farm production. They have done neither. The Census Bureau counts farms and the USDA figures that 2,500,000 of those can produce all of the foods and fibers needed to feed and clothe this country well and have some left over to meet all export re-quirements. "The problem of how to do that is not a simple one. It in-volves getting both farmers and farms out of production. USDA studies show that the 2,000,000 "excess" farms make up only six per cent of total land in cultiva-tion and only five per cent of NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of GEORGE H. FEHR, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the office of Backman, Back-ma- n and Clark, 1111 Deseret Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 31st day of May, A.D. 1958. JANIE C. FEHR, Executrix under the Last Will and Testa-ment of George H. Fehr, De-ceased. Date of first publication Janu-ary 24th, A.D. 1958. Backman, Backman & Clark Attorneys (1-2- 4 2-1- 4) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of GEORGE A. WOOT-TON- , Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 1122 Continental Bank Build-ing, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County State of Utah, on or be-fore the 15th day of March, A.D. 1958. KATHERYN Y. WOOTTON, Executrix of the Estate of George A. Wootton, Deceased. Date of first publication Janu-ary 10th, A.D. 1958. Hugo B. Anderson Attorney for Executrix 1122 Continental Bank Bldg. Salt Lake City 1, Utah (1-1- 0 1) Miscellaneous Notices NOTICE Notice is hereby given that a certain Chattel Mortgage dated November 13, 1957, and filed in the Office of the Utah State Tax Commission at the State Capitol Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, and wherein Clyde W. Mecham is mortgagor and the Continental Bank and Trust Company is the mortgagee,. The unpaid balance thereof and the amount claimed to be due at this time is $636.44 and covering the following de-scribed property: 1952 Oldsmo-bil- e 4 door 98, motor number R 18610: will be foreclosed by sale at public auction at 2:00 aM. on Monday. February 3, 1958, at 50 West 3rd South, Salt Lake City, Utah. DATED: January 23, 1958. The Continental Bank & Trust Company of Salt Lake City, Utah G. E. Steffensen, Assistant Vice President (1-2- 4 1) lk Spotlight on the Champion Bourbon! Champion in age ... ft Sl - -- the largest selling 8 year old 'E f : bourbon in Utah , IPt' t Champion in price . . . 3 s your best bourbon buy! jfgftflt- - HI ' ',. s . s v STRAIGHT BOUSWON WHISKEY. I TEAKS 010. 84 PROOF SCKENIEY DISIILURS CO.. H.Y.C. ; 1 ' ! |