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Show Friday, April 1, 1949 DAILY HERAIJ) One Year to Live; $10,000 To Spend; How Would You Do It? OKLAHOMA CITY. April I (U.R) If you had only one year to live and $10,000, how would you I spend the time and the money? t This it the question a 51-j 51-j year-old Oklahoma City widow asked today. I A retired businesswoman, she vhas worked hard for 17 years to (build up "a modest fortune. Now .she has learned a heart ailment twill probably end her life within a year. - ' rvt worked and sacrificed a "long time for security," she said. "but I haven't had any fun. I never learned . how to spend money." ! She has more than the $10,000. But that's the. amount she picked illegal Notices Probate and I Guardianship Notlcea Consult County Clerk or the Re-apectlve Re-apectlve Signers for Further ln-' ln-' formation. " NOTICE OF APPEAL 'I Notice is hereby given that a meeting of the Board of Adjust-4 Adjust-4 ment will be held Tuesday April f 8, 1949 in the City Auditor's Of- ftee at 8:30 P. M. to hear the fol- lowing appeals. Mr. Lyle Wil- liams is asking permission to ? build a garage to his present ' dwelling, located at 936 East Third North, Provo, Utah. Mr. Jack Littlefield is asking permis-' permis-' aion to build a garage to his home ' at 1049 East Second South, Provo City, Utah. Mr. Thomas J. Nor- ton ii asking permission to build ', three homes on Lots 15 and 16 Block 4, Plat A. Wasatch Gardens Gard-ens Subdivision. Mr. Perry L. 1 Killpack is asking permission to build a home at the rear of his - present home at 688 South Fifth West, Provo City, Utah. All persons interested will be heard at this meeting. IVA J. BENSON, Secretary Board of Adjustment. Published in The Daily Herald 1 April 1, 1949. SUMMONS In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District in and ' for Utah County, State of Utah. ' H. A. APPLEBY, ETHEL M. APPLEBY, VERN R. ROGERS, and MAUDE ROGERS, Plaintiffs Vs. g. I. F ADDIS and all other persons per-sons unknown " claiming any t right, title, estate, or interest in or lien upon the real property prop-erty described in the complaint, adverse -to the plaintiffs' ownership own-ership or clouding the plaintiffs' title thereto,. Defendants THE STATE OF UTAH TO AID DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after ' the service oi tnis summons upon you, if served within the county fat which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days af ter service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you ac-. ac-. cording to the demand of the eomplsint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. This action is brought to quiet the plaintiffs' title to land in ' Utah County, Utah, to-wit: Commencing 100 feet East of the Northwest corner of Block 8, Plat "A," American Fork City Survey of Building Lots; thence East 107.24 feet; thence South 324.72 feet; thence West 207.24 feet; thence North 9.72 feet; thence East 100 feet; thence North 815.00 feet to the place of beginning. be-ginning. Dated: March 3, 1949. 48 North University Avenue, Provo, Utah. SANDGREN & BLACKHAM. Attorneys for Plaintiffs - Published in The Daily Herald, March 18, 25; April 1, 8, 15, 1949. at random - to - give her grim "fling" the flavor she feels her life so far has missed. Travel Is Oat Her married daughter, . living in California, will- be well provided pro-vided for. If death delays its arrival, ar-rival, the $10,000 won't be needed. need-ed. So how to spend it? "The first thing people think of is travel," she said. "But you think, what's the use? i . "Yoirtalk to a preacher and he tells you to give it to the churchj or to some needy people. Maybe I'm selfish, but I can will money lor those purposes. I want to spend it now on myself., I want to plan a way to spend the money so every 'day I will know what I'm going to do that day. "What would you buy If you went on a shopping tour? , New clothes? They don't interest me A new home. A new car? The one I have is in good condition. "I just know somebody, somewhere, some-where, will have a better idea than I have." Yes, she has thought of marrying. marry-ing. Her first husband has been dead since the first World War, and she lives alone with a Pekinese Pek-inese dog. Terribly Lonely "I ani terribly lonely," she con cedes. "But I would want to know someone pretty well before I thought of marrying him." Even if she finds tne rigm man, however, she won't leave her estate to him. He will just help spend the $10,000. With the warning oi ner ueain, the anonymous widow, named Mrs. Heart by the Dally Okiano-man Okiano-man here, has found fate alaying its tricks with fine irony. "I've lost all fear," she said. "I used to be afraid to travel by plane made me ill. But now it doesn t bother me at an. "And another strange thing. 1 play cards sometimes, and I used to lose at poker all the time. Now I'm a consistent winner. I can't lose. If I spend $10 or $15 on a dinner, I win it back. I just tell my friends my luck nas changed." Judy Garland To Get 2nd Divorce HOLLYWOOD. April 1 (U.R) Judv Garland and Director Vln cente Mlnnelli, wna inea 10 worn together and be married too, an nounced their separation Thurs day. The pug-nosed movie queen said she hated to admit it She said she had been trying tor months to keen her second mar riage from hitting the Hollywood skids. They married on June 15, 1945, just a week after her divorce from comooser Dave Rose became final. Later she told everybody she liked having her husband for a boss. "He's one of the hardest work ing people I've ever seen," she said. . ... Judv's daughter. Liza Mmnelli, recently made her screen debut at the age of three, and Judy said if she wants to follow in her mother's footsteps it's all right with her. Adjustments Of Irrigation Area Contracts Ashed '' WASHINGTON, April 1 (U.R) - The Interior department has asked congress to authorize ad justments in six irrigation re payment contracts with water users in Washington, Colorado, Montana, Wyoming and Oregon. The adjustments outlined by the department are necessary because the water users on the six projects have had difficulty making payments under the present contracts. The department said this is chiefly because much of the irrigable ir-rigable land, land productivity and water supply were overestimated overes-timated when the projects were started in the early reclamation days. Geared to Income A new provision included In most of the contract adjustments would permit the annual repayment repay-ment installments for irrigation construction costs to be increased in-creased or decreased according to farm income in the districts and parity. Proposed contract adjustments provide: 1. Water users of the Okan ogan Irrigation district, Okanogan Okan-ogan project, Washington would pay $10,033 annually for 34 years. This could be raised 200 per cent or lowered from $2.25 per acre to 10 cents per acre. 2. The uncompahgre Valley Water Users association, Uncompahgre Un-compahgre project, C olorado would pay $60,000 annually The total cost of irrigation facilities charged to the water users would be reduced from $10,000,-000 $10,000,-000 to $5,957,913 because of reduced re-duced estimates of productive land. 3. Bitter Root Irrigation dis trict, Bitter Root project, Mon tana, would pay $16,665 annual ly which could be varied upward up-ward 200 per cent or downward 15 per cent. 4. Kittitas Reclamation dis trict, Yakima project, Washington, Washing-ton, would pay $111,760 over a period of 88 years. This could be varied 150 per cent, upward and 15 per cent downward. 5. Willwood Irrigation district, Shoshone project, W y o m ing, would pay $27,400 a year for 55 years. This could be lowered to $24,600 per year over a period of 61 years. 6. Shasta View Irrigation district, dis-trict, Klamath project, Oregon, must pay $135,694 for irrigation of 3,991 acres instead of the existing ' requirements for $131,-104 $131,-104 for 3,856 acres. The district would not have to pay $19,059 of penalty charges on past delinquent de-linquent payments. Churchill Sees Protection In A-Bomb (Continued from Page One) country, introduced him, calling him "the greatest living Englishman, Eng-lishman, the finest flowering of leadership and statesmanship that England ever produced.' At the conclusion of his address, Churchill smilingly gave his famed "V sign , to the delight of the audience. President Truman, who had been scheduled to be present, sent his regrets in a letter read to the audience by retiring M. I. T. President Karl T. Comp-ton. Comp-ton. War ef -Nerves Churchill said that in the war of nerves between east and west, ''It ma v rjnt K rvm. m ... -j - .- . v the structure of our civilization which will break something else will break and peace may yei De preserved." "Thirteen men in the Kremlin," Krem-lin," he said, "holding down hundreds of millions of people and aiming at the rule of the world, feel that at all costs they must keep up the barriers. Self-preservation, Self-preservation, not for Russia but for themselves, lies at the root and is the explanation of their sinister and malignant policy... "We are now confronted with something quite as wicked but in some ways more formidable than Hitler ...... these 13 men in the Kremlin have their hierarchy hier-archy and a .church of communist commun-ist adepts, whose missionaries are in every country as a fifth column, awaiting the day when they hope to be absolute masters mas-ters of their fellow-countrymen. :...they have their anti-God. religions ....behind this staids me largest army in me world, in the hands of a government pursuing imperialist expansion, as no czar or kaiser had ever done," Churchill said. Pint U. S. Talk It was his first public speech in the United , States since his address at Fulton, Mo., three years ago in which he coined the phrase "iron curtain" to describe de-scribe the barrier Russia has erected between the communist dominated countries and the rest of the world. i ji s . m. m . unoer ine unpin oi com-i munism all the free nations of the world are being welded together to-gether as they never have been before and never could be,, but for the harsh external pressure to which they are being subjected," sub-jected," he said. Russia Brands Atlantic Treaty 'Aggressive - (Contained from Page One) are directed solely against any renewal of German aggression. They cannot be interpreted as aimed "in any degree" against the United States, Britain or France, it said. . German Aggression Ignored By contrast, the Soviet note said, the Atlantic treaty "absolutely "abso-lutely Ignores the possibility of a repetition of German aggression, aggres-sion, not having consequently as its aim prevention of new German Ger-man aggression., "And, insmuch as, of the great powers which comprised the anti-Hitlerite coalition only the U.S.S.R. is not a party to- this treaty, the North Atlantic treaty must be regarded as .... directed against one of the chief allies of the United States, Britain and France in the late war against the U.S.S.R." Moreover, the. note said, the eastern European treaties arc bilateral bi-lateral while the Atlantic pact is multilateral. The note said the Atlantic treaty undermines the "very DR. ROBERT K. JENKINS Optometrist Has Opened His Office at 197 So. Main Springrville, Utah COMPLETE VISUAL CARE TELEPHONE 510 SPRING VILLE foundations", of the United Na-J tions and violates its charter, ? The Soviets also flatly rejected) the western contention that the treaty came within the UN char-: ter's provisions for' regional de-' fense aggreements and collect-; ive self-defense. UP 5 To develop good meat fowl, chicken-of-tomorrow contests are held among West Virginia's 4-H and Flture Farmers of America members. The development stretches, over 12 weeks, each starting with 100 straight-run chicks or 50 cockerels. C in family meals. "A lot of mines are looking for good shift bosses. boss-es. A fellow who starts working in our metal mines and shows the qualities of leadership lead-ership can work himself into a better-paying j o b without much difficulty" Metal Mining Industry of Utah NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Lawrence A. Johnson, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned ft the office, of W. Dean Loose, attorney at 211 Knight Building, Provo." Utah on or before August $, 1949. RALPH E. JOHNSON Executor Published in The Daily Herald, April 1, 8, 15, 22, 1949. For cookies of spicy goodness, use Schilling fuli-fisvored Cinnamon. Another Schilling spice favorite to. make good things taste even better. Schilling Swift's -Quality Beef, lb. . . . U. S. Inspected Meats IP5i?Ik Eiais(S: Tendef Meat, lb. . . Swift's Sliced Lean, No Rind, lb .. 6U , SHOP AND SAVE AT 17J NORTH FIRST EAST , -Wvr was I . . I il'KKSVAW . - Tk. -X XX 1". -X. &oAithjmjg you. wiM nazci It Pays To Know Your s Meat Man, Who Has a Personal Interest In Your Wants. 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