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Show Page Four FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1960 THE SALT LAKE TIMES THE SALT LAKE TIMES ( fc. Combined with The Salt Lake Mining & Legal Nw rearleSS Published Every Friday at Salt Lake City, Utah j , Entered at the postoffice at Salt Lakj Qty as second noepeDuent class matter August 23, 1923 under the act of March 8, KeiVSpaper 711 South West Temple Telephone EM 64 " I GLENN BJORNN, Publisher Subscription Price 13.00 per year in advance "This publication is not ovmed or controlled by any party, cla, clique, faction or corporation." Volume 40 Number 31 on notice. The purpose of being put on notice is two-fol- d: (1) To in-form the individual or others concerned as t o some contem-plated action that concerns their rights, and or (2) to enable them to take whatever steps they deem necessary to protect those rights. As is pretty well known there are various ways of being put on notice. One is by personal serv-ice or direct notice. Another is by posting in a public place, and a third is by actual publication. This last is usually done in a bona fide local newspaper of paid general circulation. With the rapid growth of population and the complexity of modern living, personal serv-ice is not always feasible or is too costly where numbers of peo-ple are concerned. In such cir-cumstances the bona fide news-paper is an effective medium. It is no accident that in thousands of situations, the law provides specifically for this method of giving notice. Series Explains Public Notices , (Continued from page 1) ticular subject over a long time. In 1938 his pamphlet on Public Notice or Service by Publication in History, Law and Procedure was published. An initial series of "Little Chats" appeared in 1941 and a second series in 1943. Both series were published ' by newspapers in Ohio and many other states. Pollard also was author or editor of Ohio Newspapers and the Law (1956), a compilation of Laws of the 48 States defining "newspaper," "open meetings," and "public records" (1957), and Newspaper Laws of Ohio (1937) and Ohio Newspaper and Pub-lication Laws (1954). The "Little Chats" tell inter-esting facts about the importance of public notices, which public officials are required by law to publish in order to fully inform the public of acts, ordinances, rules, sale bids, expenditures, official reports and other acts of government that involve the spending of taxpayers' money in one way or another. They also reveal some of the inside workings of government in a democracy like the United (States where freedom is every-- I body's business. By James E. Pollard Copyright 1960 TO BE PUT ON NOTICE (No. 1 in a Series) Sometimes after a thing has been done, an interested party complains, "But they didn't tell me." If his complaint is justi-fied it may or may not be too late to remedy the matter. In effect, however, the trouble was that he was not given due notice. In the truly democratic coun-tries an important legal prin-ciple is involved in the funda-mental right "to be put on no-tice." This is true for the indi-vidual, as well as for business and other interests and for the community at large. Only the dictator countries restrict or deny this basic right to be put the--L EASED GRAPEVINE v All officers of the Utah High-way Patrol will sacrifice days off, including Christmas Eve,-Christma- s Day and New Year's Eve and New Year's Day to de-vote their full time to protecting Utah's motorists. A suggested state appropria- - ' tion of $32,019,508 for higher education and 10 specific recom-mendations were handed Gov. George D. Clyde this week by the Utah Coordinating Council of Higher Education. The amount is $7,015,662 under the combined budget requests of the institutions and agencies in-volved, said Dr. Lorin Wheel-wright, council chairman. The drive by the Salt Lake County Attorney's office to col-lect approximately $360,000 in unpaid bills owed the Salt Lake General Hospital this week had resulted in collections totaling approximately $10,000, County Attorney Grover A. Giles has announced. The drive started in September. Clyde C. Edmonds, chairman of the Utah Welfare Commission, this week was elected president of Utah Society, Sons of Ameri-can Revolution. Department of fish and game spokesmen this week reminded winter fishermen that the special season now in progress for tak-ing Rocky Mountain whitefish on the Weber River in Davis, Weber, Morgan and Summit will close Dec. 31. With the close of this special season on the Weber, three other major waters, the Logan River, Blacksmith Fork River and the Duchesne River will continue open to this popular winter sport until Feb. 15, 1961. Gayland B. Smith, for the past two and a half years has been district sales manager of the Concrete Masonry Division of the Utah Concrete Pipe Co. of Salt Lake , City, has just been appointed as general manager in charge of production and sales of the new glazed concrete prod-ucts with general offices in Og-de-n, according to Charles Ward, president and general maanger of Utah Concrete Pipe Co. Glazed Concrete Products Co. is a subsidiary of Utah Concrete Pipe Co. A new Salt Lake Ranger Dis-trict office of the Wasatch Na-tional Forest has been estab-lished at 3282 South 13th East, effective immediately. Julian Thomas, district range, will continue to be in charge. For-merly the Salt Lake Ranger Dis-trict office was with the Wasatch Forest headquarters at 430 So. Fourth East. Lack of space at the old office and a location nearer to the work activities of the district prompted the move. James G. Nielsen, fireman ap-prentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Grant S. Nielsen, of 2670 Milo Way, is serving aboard the anti-submari- ne warfare support carier USS Yorktown, undergo-ing overhaul at the Naval Ship-yard, Bremerton, Wash. Demo National Chief Calls Committee For Jan. 21 Meet Senator Henry M. Jackson of the Democratic National Com-mittee announced that he has called a meeting of the commit-tee on Saturday, January 21, at noon in the Mayflower Hotel. The purpose of the meeting is to elect a chairman of the Democratic National Committee and to transact such other busi-ness as may properly come up, Sentaor Jackson said in issuing the call to all committee mem-bers. As previously announced, Sen. Jackson pointed out, "I wish to devote full time to my duties as a senator. Therefore, I submit my resignation as chairman at 12 noon Saturday, January 21." Frank D. Duncombe, yeoman seaman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert F. Duncombe of 956 East 13th South, is serving with the staff of Commander Seventh Fleet aboard the heavy cruiser USS St. Paul operating in the Western Pacific. The Task Ahead for the Democratic Administration We must become the workshop of freedom in part to meet the challenge of communism. For the communists have shifted their principal line of attack from the military to the economic. Where once there were Stalin's soldiers, there are now Khrush-chev's salesmen. To stay ahead of the Soviet Union in the world struggle means that we must stay ahead of the Soviet Union in the economic struggle. We must become the workshop of freedom in part to win and to hold the faith and friendship of the under-develope- d countries now coming into their own in Asia, Latin America and Africa. For what these countries want immediately are the skills and the capital and the economic foundation that only the wealthy countries can supply. If this country does not take the lead in building up the basic economic foundations of the new countries, if this country does not enter the vast markets of the new continents, then the Soviet Union will, and then the Soviet Union will profit in increased power and prestige around the world. Yet even if the Soviet Union did not exist even if there were no underdeveloped countries we would have to build economically. For like it or not, the economy is moving pushed forward by the forces of population growth and technological change. Population growth assures that by 1970, we will have to feed, house and clothe a population of 208 million up 15 per cent from today; find jobs for a labor force of 87 million up nearly 20 per cent from today. Technological change assures that by 1970 we will be able to meet basic economic needs with a far smaller portion of the working force engaged in heavy industry. That will leave scope for a new burst in the standard of living a rise of about 25 percent to a gross national product of $750 billion by 1970, but doing that requires shifting in emphasis from quantity to quality production; from heavy manufacturing to service industries. It requires diversification of product and site; and a vast expan-sion in the new fields of electronics, of space, of research and development. The change in this direction is now in progress. It is because the Republican administration has failed to master the drift, has failed to anticipate the change, has failed to ease the adjustment that there is now so much trouble in our ecoonmy. That is why steel is being turned out at 50 per cent of capacity. That is why there are major pockets of unemployment in every center of heavy industry in Buffalo, in Seattle, in Detroit, in Pittsburgh, in Youngstown. That is why unemploy--8 ment is edging toward the 6 million mark. That is why the economy seems to be sliding into the third recession in six years. Solving all those problems will not be easy, but it can be done. The Democratic Administration must take a giant step in that direction by acting rapidly to free the economy of all the short-sighte- d policies artificially imposed by the Republican administration. THE WORLD'S FINEST BOURBON SINCE 1795 BEAM'S OLYMPIAN in LIGHT H S WEDGE WOOD BLUE. An original j JIM BEAM (86 proof) oenuine. old- - classic design. Contains 6 year old, bb fashioned Kentucky straight bourbon 100 proof Bonded Beam bourbon. whiskey, enjoyed the world over. (All gift packaging at no extra cost) KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKIES DISTILLED AND BOTTLED BY THE JAMES B. BEAM DISTILLING CO., CLERMONT, KENTUCKY just For Today . . . Just for today I will try to live through this day only, and not tackle my whole life problem at once. I can do something for twelve hours that would appall me if I felt that I had to keep it up for a lifetime. nDn A man without decision can never be said to belong to himself; he is as a wave of the sea, or a feather in the air which every breeze blows about as it listeth Foster. oOo The worst place in the world to live is beyond your income. |