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Show Page Four FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1962 THE SALT LAKE TIMES " j I THE SALT LAKE TIMES Otat f Combined with The Salt Lake Mining & Legal New fCflrleSt Published Every Friday at Salt Lake City, Utah , , . Entered at the postoffice at Salt Lake Gty as second llldep60dCnt class matter August 23, 1923 under the act of March 8, leUSpaper yil South West TempIe Telephone EM 64 I J GLENN BJORNN, Publisher "This publication is not owned or controlled by any party, clan, clique, faction or corporation." Volume 42 Number 6 $10,000 Reward for Bank Holdup Killer A reward of $10,000 for infor-mation leading to the capture of one-eye- d Bobby Wilcoxson, 33-ye- ar old gunman, is announced by the Readers Digest which re-counts his career under the title "Most Wanted Criminal Since Dillinger" in its last issue. He is sought for the slaying of Henry Klaus, a bank guard, in the $34,000 hold-u- p of a Lafay-ette National Bank branch in Brooklyn last December 15 and for earlier bank holdups in Buf-falo, N. Y., and Washington, D.C. Persons with information are asked to call the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Wilcoxson has dark brown hair and eyes. His right eye is recognizably artifical. He is five feet nine inches tall, weighs be- - tween 150 and 160, has scars on his left wrist and right forearm. He has a ruddy complexion and speaks Spanish. He likes gam-bling and fast cars. He has been a house painter, a service station attendant, used car salesman and a highly efficient supervisor in the lettuce fields in California, Colorado, Texas and New Mex-ico. He may be hiding with a slen-der 19 year old blonde girl friend Jacqueline Rose, who has pro-nounced burn scars on both up-per arms and on her body; and with Frederick "Bumpy" Nuss-bau- m, 28, stockier than Wilcox-son, with blue eyes, thin light brown hair and a scar caused by removal of a dagger shapped tat-too on his upper left forearm. Nussbaum is an avid chess player can fly a plane and is an expert gunsmith. The Rose woman has a baby son almost a year old. A description of Joseph Cor-bet- t, Colorado kidnap killer in the November 1960 issue of the Digest was credited by the FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover with causing the capture of the fugi-tive a few days later after the issue appeared. A room hung with pictures is a room hung with thoughts. Sir Joshua Reynolds. the-LE- ASED GRAPEVINE V Clarence G. Snider, 2498 Dear-born St., was approved by the Salt Lake City Commission for the position of chief clerk of the City Court and supervisor of the Traffic Violations Bureau. Mr. Snider, presently an em-ploye of the city planning and zoning department, will succeed William Palmer, who will leave office July 15 to enter private business. Personal property taxes on all vehicles, boats and trailers from Jan. 1 through July 6 of this year brought in $2,956,880, an increase over the same period last year, announced Salt Lake County Assesor S. Clifford Cock-ayne. Plans embracing intercommu-nity cooperation in Salt Lake, Davis and Weber counties for benefical use of the Clearfield Naval Supply Depot when the facility is released by the fede-ral government was approved this week by the Salt Lake City Chamber of Commerce. The Salt Lake City Attorney's office this week was instructed, at the request of the city depart-ment of animal control, to revise the city statute controlling re-sponsibility of dog owners for their pets. The revision to eliminate the word "permit" in the offense of having dogs at large would make a dog at large prima facie evi-dence of violation of the statute. Former Utah State Senator P. S. Marthakis returned to Salt Lake City last week after attend-ing graduation ceremonies of his son Peter Jr. at the University of California Law School, Berke-ley, Calif., June 8th. Junior is a former West Side, high school graduate and student body president. He graduated from Columbia University with Bachelor of Science degree three years ago and finished a three year law course at the Univer-sity of California. Sen. Marthakis spent a few days with his brother, George, a retired electrical engineer at Hollywood, Calif. Army National Guard 2nd Lt. Jerold L. Jensen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Moroni L. Jensen, 2940 Fil-mor- e, Salt Lake City, recently completed the 12 week para-chute packing, maintenance and air delivery course at Quarter-master School, Fort Lee, Va. Lt. Jensen received instruction in handling and packing para-chutes, loading and securing air-craft cargo and recovering para-chutes and air delivery equip-ment. He is regularly assigned to the 19th Special Forces Group Head-quarters Co., an Army National Guard unit in Salt Lake City. Army National Guard Sgt. J. L. Cutshaw of 2249 East 2700 So., participated in Exercise Mesa Drive, a joint Army-Ai- r Force training maneuver, at Yakima Wash., Firing center, recently. Cutshaw is a supply sergeant in the llt5h Engineer Battalion's Headquarters Co., an Army Na-tional Guard unit which was re-called to active duty and is now regularly assigned to Fort Lewis, Wash. Utah Girl Scouts Look to Roundup After many months of inten-sive training, the Utah Girl Scout Council will wave goodbye to eight representative Senior Girl Scouts July 16 as they leave by special train to attend a Girl Scout Senior Roundup to be held at Button Bay State Park in Vermont. The campers, 14 to 17 years old, from 50 states of the union and U. S. possessions will be joined by close to 200 Girl Guide Rangers (equivalent to Senior Scouts) from approximately 20 countries, which will go to make up the 10,000 girls and adults converging on the shores of Lake Champlain for this event. The girls will erect a city of 6,000 multicolored tents in the 250 acre area, and the encamp-ment, located approximately 25 miles southwest of Burlington, will be temporarily the sixth largest city in Vermont. The 1962 Roundup is the third to be sponsored by the Girl Scouts, and is the largest event for teenaged girls in the free World. The purpose of this inter-national encampment is to bring together girls of various races, national origins and creeds to share in a rich camping experi-ence and a wide selection of ac-tivities. In preparation for Roundup, the Utah Patrol has been training in fair weather and foul to per-fect its camping skills pitching tents in a high wind, lashing, building tables and benches and cooking out of doors on charcoal burners. The Utah Patrol has adopted the Golden Spike as its symbol and is planning a demonstration to show the driving of the Gold-en Spike as part of its contribu-tion at Roundup. They will also be well supplied with "swaps," (small items representative of the community) to trade with other girls. These swaps include beehives, salt from Great Salt Lake, bits of uranium ore, golden spikes, copper from Bingham Copper mine and anything else pertaining to Utah. We Need More Economics Education (Continued from Page One) school students? Isn't it possible that high school students are capable of understanding much more in various fields of education than they are being exposed to in this period of permissiveness? As scientific knowledge is pushed ever further into areas heretofore murky, it seems that the increased knowledge itself makes possible better organization of that knowledge and its simplification for understanding in principle by all citizens. Perhaps the teaching of the fundamentals of eco-nomics to all high school students, as well as the laying of stronger foundations in the physical sciences at the high school level, is just what is needed to cure the young generation of that bored feeling, or outlook, that we hear so much about. Perhaps, too, citizens who learn the fundamentals of economics in high school will be less easy prey for the promisers of pie in the sky. A sound knowledge of eco-nomics, particularly the economics of free enterprise that has made this country great, could be very important to the future of th eUnited States. What Does the GOP Stand For? "The disagreement between former President Eisen-hower and Gov. Rockefeller over what the Republican party stands for is another dramatic demonstration that it doesn't really stand for anything," Democratic Chair-man John M. Bailey said this week. "Former President Eisenhower, acting in the role of elder statesman, says the Republican party is the party of business. Gov. Rockefeller, facing the practical prob-lem of running for re-electi- on, politely disagrees with Mr. Eisenhower and expresses the wishful thinking that the Republican Party has a broader base," Bailey said. All that this exchange accomplishes is to show that the big circus tent they put up in the Eisenhower pasture wasn't big enough to cover all of the splinter factions which make up the GOP. "It would be healthy to have a public debate between Mr. Eisenhower and Gov. Rockefeller and other Re- - surrendering to the Democratic Party the millions of voters who want a President who leads and a government that is responsive to the needs and aspirations of its citizens. The wrangling Republicans are placing their party in sorry contrast with the Democratic Party, which serves business, working people and the many other diverse groups which make up our population, but which is the servant of none of them." publicans on what the Republican Party stands for but this is not likely to occur. Instead the Republicans will rush to find an area of accommodation their opposi-tion to the programs of President Kennedy. That's the way they can reconcile the conflicting views of such 'typical' Republicans as Rockefeller and Goldwater, both of whom found ways to avoid attending the 'All-Republic- an Conference' at Gettysburg. In fact Sen. Goldwater has issued a bristling attack against the idea of assembling a group of Republicans to try to find something they can all be for. Moreover, the Republican Congressional leadership, which has dedi-cated itself to pure obstruction at the Capitol, has clearly demonstrated its lack of enthusiasm for the project. "Moreover, the Republican accent on the negative is putting its Congressional members on the spot in next fall's elections when they will have to answer to the electo-rate for continued obedience to their orders from Halleck and Dirksen to be against everything and for nothing. If the Republican Party chooses to be the voice of the special interests which oppose the Kennedy programs it cannot be the voice of the broad group of citizens who want positive action to keep American strong and pros-perous. In effect, the present Republican leadership is MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE DELINQUENT NOTICE Riverside Canal Company Principal Place of Business 19 West South Temple Street, Room 760, Salt Lake City, Utah Notice is hereby given that there are delinquent upon the fol-lowing described stock on account of assessments levied in 1959, 1960, 1961 and 1962, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: Name Shares Total Beynon, Del R. & Ruth , V3 $ 4 00 Bock, Peter R. 10 30 00 Bowden, Marvin & Ella y3 2 00 D&RGW Railroad Co. 2.50 15 00 Danzer, Orlo 1 9 00 Gatzmeier, Henry 4.39 36 57 Gygi, Ray & Virgie Fay 2 6 00 Hegerhorst, Henry 2.79 8 37 Keystone Insurance & Investment Co. 80 240 00 Light, Irven 3 3600 Nuttall, Wayne C. & Dorothy 1.5 900 Olsen, James B. & Carol A. y3 4 00 Rogers. Delton F. & Juanita F. 2 00 Stinton, George 1.50 450 Streble, Henry & Emma i3 and in accordance with 400 an order of the Board of Directors of Riverside Canal Company so many shares of each parcel of stock as may be necessary will be sold at public auction on the 31st day of July, 1962 at the hour of 2:00 p.m. at 19 West South Temple Street, Room 760, Salt Lake City, Utah, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon together with the cost of advertising and ex-pense of sale. RIVERSIDE CANAL COMPANY Wm. H. Clawson, Sec.-Trea- s. (7-1- 3 7-2- 7) |