OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1960 Page Five MOSS JOINS SCOUT WEEK CELEBRATION Cub Scout Phillip Marriott, Pack 932, Larchmont, Md. does his turn for the 50th Anniversary, Boy Scouts of America, by presenting an emblem to Senator Frank E. Moss, once an Eagle Scout himself. Marine Corps Charts New Enlistment Plan The United States Marine Corps has announced a new enlistment program just suited for young men still in school who will graduate in June. It is called ie 120 day delay program. This program will enable a young man to enlist now and reserve a spot in the Marine Corps and leave any time up to 120 days or after graduation from school. At the present time the Marine Corps offers numerous oppor-tunities in many fine schools, such as aviation, electronics, communications, engineers, duty aboard capitol ships of our fleet and many more. The Marine Corps has over 141 specialist schools that train men for over 450 various jobs. Check with your local recruiter, who is located at 428 South Main St. in the Maurice Building, in Salt Lake City. drawal of said corporation from the State of Utah has been filed in the duly District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah and a hearing thereon, as re-quired by law, will be had on the 31st day of March, 1960, at the hour of 10:30 o'clock A.M., of said day or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, said hearing to be held in the court " room of Division No. 1 of said honorable court in the City and County Building, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, State of Utah. WITNESS the hand of the Clerk and the official seal of said court this 18th day of Feb-ruary, 1960. ALVIN KEDDINGTON, Clerk (Seal) By Jacob Weiler, Deputy Boyden, Tibbals, Staten & Croft Attorneys for Applicant 351 South State Street Salt Lake City, Utah (2-1- 9 3-1- 8) NOTICE OF HEARING UPON APPLICATION FOR WITHDRAWAL OF A FOREIGN CORPORATION No. 124429 In the District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah In the Matter of the Voluntary Withdrawal from the State of Utah of LAND-AI- R, INC., a corporation of the State of Illinois. Notice is hereby given that the application of Land-Ai- r, Inc., a corporation of the State! of Illinois, for voluntary with- - Billboard Blight Menaces Federal Highway System The new federal highway sys-tem will become a 41,000 mile "billboard slum" unless the state legislatures act quickly. Nearly 4,000 miles of the inter-state system have been com-pleted so far at a cost of about a million dollars a mile, and much of the brand new highway has been taken over by the bill board, according to the article, "The Great Billboard Scandal of 1960," by Charles Stevenson in Reader's Digest. More than 50 signs were count-ed on 15 miles of Interstate 35 between Olathe and Kansas City. In California, the number of rural signs has doubled in the decade, desecrating some of the world's loveliest scenery. Even before New York state Route 17 through the Catskills was open a few years ago, workmen were erecting billboard frames along side it, and cutting down state trees to make sure the signs will be visible. Under existing federal law, the government will pay states a bonus of one half of one per cent of the cost of the highways af-fected, if they pass laws allowing no more than two signs per mile within 660 feet of the road. A state must qualify by June 30, 1961, or it cannot collect. So far, only Maryland, Wisconsin, No. Dakota and Connecticut have qualified. The Sacramento Bee reported that a state signboard control was detained in committee to give a billboard lobbyist time to write an amendment. Ohio has passed a tough law in 1958. Last year it was up for minor changes to qualify for the federal bonus; instead a repealer emerged. Iti was vetoed by Gov. DiSalle. In Virginia, the Highway Advertis-ers Association urged farmers to a battle against mile control leg-islation. However, citizens of Maryland have shown how to fight the billboards and win. When a bill was introduced in 1958, garden clubs set up a "telephone chain" which alerted 4,000 members in an hour. Letters poured into the legislature, women hurried to the capital and called on legisla-tors. Each time a vote was taken this process was repeated. The result: Maryland has one of the strongest billboard control laws in the nation. This process can be repeated in any state afflicted with billboard blight. NATIONAL FARMERS UNION PROPERTY AND CASUALTY COMPANY Notice of Annual Stockholders' Meeting: Notice is hereby given that the regular Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the National Farmers Union Property and Casualty Company will be held at the Shirley-Savo- y Hotel, Den-ver, Colorado, at 10:30 A.M., on Tuesday, March 15, 1960. The purpose of the meeting is to determine the general policies to be followed by the Company for the succeeding year, to elect Directors to hold office for the ensuing term of one year and until their successors are elected and qualified, and to transact such other business as may be required in such meeting. James G. Patton, President Harvey R. Solberg, Secretary (2-- 9 3-1- 1) CONSTIPATED? Medical reports show how folks over 35 can establish regularity After 35, irregularity often be-comes a problem. What you need is something that aids nature and helps establish regularity. Such an aid to regularity is the daily use of serutan. Here's medical evidence: A group of men and women took serutan daily under medical supervision. In case after case serutan, taken daily, helped establish regularity. So, for real relief from constipation after 35, try serutan, powder or granular. vf "Read It Backwards" BEABACUE Ease PAINS OF HEADACHE, NEURAL-GIA NEURITIS with STANBACK TABLETS or POWDERS. STANBACK combines several medically proven pain relievers ... The added effectiveness of these MULTIPLE ingredients brings faster, more complete relief, easing anxiety and tension usually accom-panying pain. $ap 'Back --it STAN BACK fcUilil&MX . against any 'iL-VJncitT- 1! preparation I you've ever I C used I ""Vfr Miscellaneous Notices Game Commission Charts Survey On Big Came Herds The annual statewide rides to survey the big game wintering range will soon get under way in several herd areas, the de-parm- ent of fish and game said this week. The department said an invita-tion is again extended for all interested parties to take part in this annual range inventory. A schedule is now being made up listing the survey dates for the state's 62 deer herd winter-ing areas with the rides to be conducted in February, March, and April. Interested groups or individu-als in any part of the state are urged to contact the department field representative in the areas to learn the dattes for the survey of their choice and preparations necessary for participation in the rides. The surveys are conducted on the herd wintering ranges each year to determine deer use and conditions of these ranges. Trend counts of deer numbers are also made at the same time in many of the herd units. Department spokesmen de-scribed the rides as a prime op-portunity for groups to aid in this phase of the game manage-ment program and at the same time have an enjoyable day in the field. Conditions noted and the facts gained during the surveys form an important part of the total information used by the Board of Big Game Control in setting the annual fall hunts. NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION Civil No. 124101 In the District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah SALT LAKE CITY CORPORA-TION for the use of UTAH FIRE CLAY COMPANY, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs BLAINE PERKINS, dba BLAINE PERKINS COM-PANY, JACK C. ALDER and ROBERT R. CHILD, partners, dba ALDER-CHIL- D CON-STRUCTION COMPANY and CENTRAL SURETY AND IN-SURANCE CORPORATION, a corporation, Defendants. To All Laborers and Material-men Who Have Furnished Labor or Material for the Construction of the Water Treatment Plant Designated as Schedule 2, Salt Lake City Corporation, Depart-ments of Water Supply and Water Works, Big Cottonwood Filters: You are hereby notified that Salt Lake City Corporation for the use of Utah Fire Clay Com-pany, a corporation, has com-menced an action in the above entitled Court against Alder-Chil- d Construction Company and Central Surety and Insurance Corporation to recover the rea-sonable value of material fur-nished and used in the construc-tion of the above designated A J . A. A 1 J. I A. waier treaimenx piani ana inai you have the right to intervene in such action and set forth any claim you may have against the said- - Alder-Chil- d Construction Company and Central Surety and Insurance Corporation on account of labor or material fur-nished and used in the construc-tion of the said water treatment plant, and unless you do so inter-vene and set forth such claim on or before the 16th day of May, 1960, you will be forever barred from recovery upon the bond of the said Central Surety and In-surance Corporation covering the construction of the said water treatment plant. van cott, bagley, Cornwall & McCarthy By s Grant Macfarlane, Jr. Attorneys for Plaintiff Suite 300, 65 So. Main St. Salt Lake City, Utah (2-1- 9 3-1- 1) SUMMONS In the District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah J. A. ALDER Plaintiff, vs. LONNIE WILLIAM GLEN Defendant. The State of Utah to the Above Named Defendant: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon F. M. Alder, plaintiff's attorney, whose address is 8 West Center, Provo, Utah, an answer to the complaint within 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 com-plaint which has been filed with the clerk of said Court, and a copy of which is hereto annexed and herewith served upon you. This is an action of Judgment for Damages. F. M. ALDER Attorney for Plaintiff Dated February 15, 1960. 8 West Center Provo, Utah (2-1- 9 3-1- 1) Scientists Say You Need 6 Hours Sleep While sleep needs of indivi-duals vary, the difference is slight and there is scientific evi-dence that everybody needs six hours of sleep. So reports Robert O'Brien in a February Reader's Digest article, "Maybe You Need More Sleep." "All human beings need a minimum of six hours' sleep to be mentally healthy," says Dr. George S. Stevenson of the Na-tional Association for Mental Health. "Most people need more. Those who think they can get along on less are fooling them-selves." O'Brien, a Westport, Conn., writer, quotes Dr. Nathanial L. Kleitman, the nation's foremost authority on sleep: "If we do not get enough sleep, we cannot be fully awake during the day." When not fully awake, we are not in our right minds. Scientists at Walter Reed In-stitute of Research, Washington, D.C., have determined that a brain deprived of sleep will make any sacrifice to get it. After a few hours without sleep, the brain begins to "steal" fleeting seconds of slumber. As sleepless hours increase the lapses become longer, perhaps three or four seconds. In a speeding automo-bile or on a complex job such lapses can spell disaster. Most common result of too little sleep is irritability. Frus-tration may be a major cause of this snappishness, according to Dr. E. J. Murray, a Syracuse University psychologist. Need for sleep is a drive, like hunger. When we go without it, frustra-tion of the drive makes us irrita-ble just as hunger makes diet-ers ill tempered. If you are a chronic stay-up-late- r, you'd better not rely on "one good night" to put you back in shape. Dr. and Mrs. Graydon L. Freeman, Northwest-ern University psychologists, found that at least two full nights are necessary to bounce back from one four hour night. Experiments at Yale University and the University of Utah Col-lege of Medicine confirm the importance of sleep in physical and mental well being. The only reason a great many American families don't own' an elephant is that they have never been offered an elephant for $1 down and $1 a week. ' Commission Plans Saturday Confab A special meeting has been set by the Utah Fish and Game Commission for Feb. 17, at de-partment of fish and game of-fices in Salt Lake City. Major business of the meeting concerns the cases of 16 persons involved in hunting accidents in the past year. As required by law each has been notified to appear before the commission to show cause why their hunting license privileges should not be revoked for five years. The law further requires that action be taken if the accident resulted from care-less or negligent gun handling by the offender. Routine and general policy matters covering department of fish and game operations make up the balance of the agenda for the one day meeting. As always the public is invited to attend. The things most people want to know about are usually none of their business. George Ber-nard Shaw. |