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Show The MURRAY, Utah, t EACLE LEGAL NOTICES Thursday, Sept. 20, 1962 ir upon mailed or oral request. Bids must be filed in the office of the Utah Municipal League, Newhouse Hotel, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before noon, November 15, 1962. The League reserves the right to reject any bid. UTAH MUNICIPAL LEAGUE LEGAL NOTICES 26th dav of January, A.D. lftG'' BETTY VIOLA CATTEN, Executrix of the Estate of Clarence W. Henry , deceased. JOHN A. HOKICH Attorney for Executrix Date of first publication Sept. 20, A.D. Cubs' Second Shutout Tom McCoy, Executive Director 1902. r45-- u45-l- 4t t LEGAL NOTICE 1955 Lincoln 55LA5076H, Owner Manuel G. and Grace L. Iinnaies. Lienholder Valley State Bank, Highland Drive Branch. Brought in for repairs by Gene Johnson. Will be sold Sept. 29, 1902 for charges against it. Place 2990 W. 3500 45-So. Granger, Utah. NOTICE OF INVITATION TO BID Insurance underwriters qualified to do business in the State of Utah having assets in excess of one million dollars are hereby notified that the Utah Municipal League invites them to submit bids to act as underwriter for the group hospitalization and surgical benefits program of the Utah Municipal League. Bids must be based upon the specifications of the existing League program. Copies of said specifications may be obtained by each bidding underwriter PRIMARY HOME NIGHT SET Murray. A Primary - Home Partnership meeting will be held Sept. 21st, 7:30 p.m., in Murray 7th ward, for parents children and primary officers and teachers. of primary INSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT No. 1 a joint resolution pro- al property, not to exceed posing to amend arti- $2,000 iji value for homes and cle xiii, section 2 of the homesteads, and all household constitution of the furnishings, furniture, and state of utah, relating equipment used exclusively by to Tangible properties the owner thereof at his place exempt from taxation. of abode in maintaining a home it resolved by the Legislature of the State of Utah, two thirds of all members elected to each of the Houses voting in favor thereof: Section 1. It is proposed to amend Article XIII, Section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Utah to read as follows: Section 2. All tangible property in the state, not exempt under the laws of the United States, or under this constitution shall be taxed in proportion to its value to be ascertained as provided by law. The property of the state, counties, cities, towns, school districts, municipal corporations and public libraries, lots with the buildings thereon used exclusively for either religious worship or charitable purposes, and places of burial not held or used for private or corporate benefit, shall be exempt from taxation. Water rights, ditches, canals, reservoirs, power plants, pumping plants, transmission lines, pipes and flumes owned and used by individuals or corporations for irrigating lands within the state owned by such individuals or corporations, or the individual members thereof, shall not be separately taxed as long as they shall be owned and used exclusively for such purposes. Power plants, power transmission lines and other property used for generating and delivering electrical power, a portion of which is used for furnishing power pumping water for purposes on lands in the State of Utah, may be exempted from taxation to the extent that such property is used for such These exemptions purnoses. shall accrue to the benefit of the users of water so pumped under such regulations as the legislature may proribe. The taxes of the indige' noor mav be remitted or abated at such times and in such manner as mav be provided by law. The legislature may provide for the from taxation of exemption homes, homesteads, and person Be -- for himself and family. Property not to exceed $3,000 in value, owned by disabled persons who served in any war in the military service of the United States or of the State of Utah and by the unmarried widows and minor orphans of such disabled persons or of persons who while serving in the military service of the United States or the State of Utah were killed in action or died as a result of such service may be exempted as tjie legislature may provide. The legislature Bhall provide by law for an annual tax sufficient, with other sources of revenue, to defray the estimated ordinary expenses of the state for each fiscal year. For the purpose of paying the state debt, if any there be, the legislature shall provide for levying a tax annually, sufficient to pay the annual interest and to pay the principal of such debt, within twenty years from the final passage of the law creating the debt. Section The secretary of state is directed to submit this proposed amendment to the electors of the State of Utah In the next general election in the manner provided by law. Section 8. If adopted by the electors of this state, this amendment shall take effect the first day of January, J963. I, LAMONT F. TORONTO, Secretary of State of the State of Utah, DO HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of the constitutional amendment proposed by the regular session of the Thirty-Fourt- h Legislature, 1961, as appears of record 2. Judge Cops Spartans Whitewashed By Souih In Inter - Region Tussle Friday Murray. South's husky Cubs chalked up their second victory of the new grid campaign here! Friday afternoon, whitewashing the Murray Spartans, 16 0. A week ago, in similar pattern, the Cubs knocked over Bingham, 17-It was an alert defensive line and the offensive engineering of versatile quarterback Clyde Latta that proved the difference between the two squads. South thwarted almost all Spartan ground-gainin- g efforts and utilized their own opportunities effectively to n win. register the inter-regio- For the second straight week, g Dave Wunderlich, Cub artist, zeroed in on a field goal, rather unusual weapon among the preps these days. He performed the same feat at Bingham's expense. : Friday, it was the opening score of the game and came from 30 yards out. Cub tackle Mike Gold ignited the spurt by curling around a Murray fumble on the South 45. Latta the yisit-or- s then master-minde- d to the stripe, where the surge threatened to die and the talented toe of Wunderlich was successfully pressed into duty. Coach Ray Oliverson's home squad immediately retaliated with its only real threat of the afternoon. With hard - driving Jerry Bowman carving out chunks of yardage, the Spartans fought to the South 10, where they ran out of downs. Which was the story of the first half. The visiting clan cemented the issue in the third canto. Dennis Hall, a sturdy fullback,! lugged the pigskin on alternate plays as the Cubs moved to the Murray 20. Then Latta found Frank Parry on a aerial to which the South end added five yards of running to pay-dir- t. The icing on the cake came for South in the final period, result of a blocked punt on the Murray 35. Pee Allred, who put the block on the kick, scooped up the bouncing oval on the stripe and d Salt Luke. A ing pass from into the conversion wound up the day's It was the first South-Murra- y meeting since 1956. when the Cubs rolled up a 26-victory. A year earlier, Murray had copped the first game in history between the two schools, g. point-makin- 32-- Wun-derlich- e. puy-zon- 0. rd Conclave Changes Slate For Next Week UEA SCHEDULE THE FRIDAY: Bear Rver t Oranite West ot Bingham Highland vs. Hillcrest at Sandy Jordan at East 8outh Cache at Olympus Amercan Fork at Murray Qranger at south at lurks Skyline at Cyprus Provo at Tooele HOW THEY'RE DOING Region Three Team Highland South Oranite East Olympus West Skyline T P'fU. 0 1.000 0 J.000 0 1 0O0 0 lOua L W 2 0 2 O 2 2 J 0 0 J 0 .SUO 1 1 0 0 2 0 .500 .000 PF P 0 40 33 56 31 2 19 0 f) 18 20 20 7 e5 Region Four Binnham Tooele Murray Granger Cyprus Jordan Hillcrest 1 1 1 0 1 0 O 1 1 0 0 0 2 6 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 .500 .600 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 23 7 39 6 4r 2.' 7 1 19 6 3A 3:. 6S 4(i Granite 8 Victor Is 35-1- g Granite Park. In a tussle that was reminiscent l of last year's clash on the same field, Coach Derald Simmons' host Farmers Weber, Frjday night free-scorin- Granite-Bountifu- out-score- d 35-1- The victory was No. 2 of the year for the Granite crew and somewhat soothed rufffled Farmer feathers from last year's surprise 7 tie with the Warriors. If the game resembled the '61 scorefest with Bountiful, it was because it followed the same pattern. In that game, won 5 by Granite, the Far mers were potent on the ground and the losers -- were effective in the air. Friday night's affair had much similarity although the Warriors couldn't muster the same aerial strength. The victors didn't waste time getting up a full head of steam in their first home appearance. Ken Neilsen spurted 28 yards to pay-dir- t in the opening quarter and accurate Dave fJewis booted the first of his five conversions for a 0 margin.. For the fealnnce of the firnt half, the clubs traded with Granite getting the better of the argument. The Farmers punched over three touchdowns in the second qunr-te- r and erased any faint Weber hopes with another tally in the final period. But the Warriors didn't fold under the pressure. They got full mileage from the passing of Steve Bailey and the running of Woody Himelright. It just wasn't enough to span the difference. Husky Nick Garner, quarterback Ken Beck and Mel Bennett all took part in the scoring parade for the winners, who were aided no little bit by the alert play of a sturdy forward wall. Granite's victory evened the recent series with Weber nt two wins and two ties apiece. The Warriors delivered one deadlock In an upset last fall, Granite won 20-- In '60 and Weber was the victor. 14-- 7 in '59 and In '58. The '57 meeting was a 6 6 stalemate. It was Weber's second consecutive loss to a Region Three team. A week ago the Warriors were victims of a ral9 ly which netted Olvmpus a victory. 7-- 35-2- blow-for-blo- w non-leag- Murray the to Dick Dudley provided Jiulne liulldujjs a last-minu- victory here Friday after- noon over visiting Cyprus. Only two minutes remained in the game when the host squad uncorked a touchdown effort that wiped out a lead and kept the records of both teams intact. Judge has yet to lose: the I'irates have i:i-- 7 7-- Cy-pni- Hob Jeppsen sprinted 50 yards to the first Cyprus touchdown of the year in the third quarter of the Friday affair, alter gathering in a pass from Ivan Turpin. Craig Hidd's conversion put the invaders in the lead a position they maintained until the fading minutes. Judge had scored first on a sustained drive with the open ing kickoff. The eleven marched 60 yards and Mike Gallivan punched the tally for the 0 lead, Moments later the Bulldogs threatened again after recovering a Pirate fumble on the Cyprus 20. But Coach Howard Condie's team thwarted the Region Six team and took over the ball on downs. At game's end, Condie expressed himself as "pleased with the defensive performance of the Pirates", but "disappointed" in the weak offensive effort. Judge, fresh from a 14-- 0 win over Lehi and the verdict over Cyprus, launches its bid for the regional title tomorrow (Friday) by entertaining Wasatch. Cyprus will piny host tonight (Thursday) to Skyline in a affair. 7-- THURSDAY: 7-- s" "play-for-keep- e scor-Mik- 10-ya- Murray. The annual UEA convention intervenes in the high school grid schedule next week. Several games will be advanced to Wednesday, Sept. 26th. ' It'll mark the opening of in Regions Three 8 nd Four. Granger, drawing the first-roun- d Rebye In seven-teain my office. gion Four, will go ta Bear Riv-e- r IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I for a game. Binghave hereunte set my hand and ham will be at Murray to pry affixed the Great Seal of the the lid off the new campaign State of Utah, at Salt Lake and Tooele will be at Cyprus. Citv, this 29th day of August, Hillcrest and Jordan, newest 19G2. rivals in the circuit, will meet LAMONT F. TORONTO at Sandy. Secretary of State ' Region Three's games, for the most part, will be played (SEAL) on schedule Friday night. The vital clash will be East's inva2 No. AMENDMENT CONSTITUTIONAL sion of Granite. Both have on the title. A JOINT RESOLUTION TO or damaged by rights of way, eyes Olympus' will test South's AMEND ARTICLE XIII OP and for administrative costs OF necessarily incurred for said contenders for the flag and THE CONSTITUTION Highland will flex its muscles THE STATE OF UTAH BY purposes. THE ADDITION OF SECTION (2) The administration of a against West. Panther fans 13. PROHIBITING EXPENDIdriver education program. regard it as an opportunity to TURE OF REVENUE DEThe enforcement of state "get even". A year ago unbeat(3) GASOLINE. FROM RIVED motor vehicle and traffic laws. en West was shelled 28-- 0 by OTHER MOTOR FUEL AND only loss of the year (4) Tourists and publicity Highland, west-sidHIGHWAY USER TAXES, expense e for the kids. Highbiennium in single any UNRELFOR PURPOSES land went on to win the state of lesser the in of excess not ATED TO HIGHWAY USE, the following: (a) .5 percent crown. d Be it resolved by the Legisla- of the total biennial revenues Skyline draws the ture of the State of I'tah, from motor fuel taxes, or (b) bye. 1W9-i;r,l two -- thirds of all members an amount equal to the biennium. elected to each of the Houses Section 2. The secretary of voting in favor thereof: Section 1. It is proposed to state is directed to submit this amendment to the proposed mend Article XIII of the Conat stitution of the State of Llah electors of the state of Utah next general election in the by the addition of Section 13 the manner provided by law. to read: 1 h Section 3. This amendment 13. The proceeds Section from the impooition of any shall take effect upon approval PARTICIPATING. In F.xcr-Cin- e fee, by the electors of the state. license tax, registration William Tell, an Air Fim BALLS BOWLING driver eduration tax, or other I, LAMONT F. TORONTO, meet bring fighter weapon the to nd related operation State of the Equipment Etpertly chante Secretary of State held near Nellln (NVv I AFH, Kitted at Kay Ohms' of any motor vehicle upon any of Utah. DO HEREBY CERAirman 2c Harry L Willey, TIFY that the foregoing is a public hiRhway in this Mate, ALTA imn,n of Mr. and Mrs. Harry BOWL Jr., the from and the pmcwds full, true and correct copy of U Wlllcy, 1008 Mango Circle. tax on the 266-835- 3 So. Stat constitutional amendment 4770 position of any rri He Is a personnel r lalint. gasoline or other liquid motor proposed by the regular session fuel used Thirty-Fourtfondling such legislaof the vehicle, except for statutory re- ture, 1961 , as appears of record funds and adjustments allowed in my office. CASE ACTUAL thereunder and for costs of IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I cilWlion and administration, have hereunto act my hand and for .hull be uwd exclusively of the follows: affixed ofthe Greatat Seal HISTORY PROVES highway pur)es Salt Lake State I'tnh, Imconstruction. this SiHh day of August, (I) The Citv, provement, repair and mainte- Wi. . THAT PER CENT nance of city streets, county LAMONT r. TORONTO rim 'It, and state highways, Secretary of State but not restricted to payment for property Ukcn for (SEAL) jrri-irati- 55-ya- yet to win. place-Kickin- d Tussle 13-- 7 d scam-pore- Another Falcon tally in the final canto winked out Lancer chances. n dismissing his squad niter the first two games, Ebert wa quick to praise his interior linemen, who he pointed out are doing an outstanding defensive job. They're tackles Tony Mon-anLarry Turpin and Chick McOowan and guards Steve Holmherg. "The end spots," the Lancer mentop commented, "are still unsettled. We're hoping a couple of boys out of the leading candidates for the job will come along in time to give us some strength there." Ebert listed Jerry Palmer, Steve Olson, Jack Bingham, Delbert Viall and Pat Struhs as the better performers at flanker spots. Running backs Eddie Saddler and Gene Warr; blocking back Dan Johnson and quarterback Tom Malm came in for a share g as of the coach's back-pattin- well. Friday's game might have been worse. The visiting Fal- cons had a touchdown nullified by a penalty in the opening half and came very pear punch-ove- r ing over another tally shortly before Interpiission time. , 6-- 7-- In the Tuesday circuit, the championship trophy went to Murray State Bank ond the runnerun to Old Mill. The Bankers also won the sportsmanship award. Terry Bowns T&C Rambler, copped the batting title on a .515 percentage. Clive Hansen, Murray State, earned the individual sportsmanship crown and George Jensen and Ran Wright of the Bankers were lauded as managers of the year. Dick Read, Manny's Tavern, wns named most valuable player and Gary Tnurgood, .Murray State, the outstanding pitcher. Jim Dumas of the Bankers was winner of the "hustle" award and Stewart Pierce, Town & Country, copped the RBI trophy with 22. defi- cit here Friday afternoon to nab a tightly-conteste- d victory from the Granger Lancers, 13-- It was the first meeting of the two schools on the gridiron. Though he expressed disapat not winning, pointment Lancer mentor Carl Ebert was impressed by the improvement of his crew over the Granite game a week earlier. "We have a long way to go yet." he commented, "but our squad is looking better and we feel they'll develop Into a strong ball cub within the next few weeks." The Lancers scored first In the Friday affair ond the tally went into the records as the initial touchdown of the 62 sea - r son. It fame on a sustained drive after the opening kiekoff. Senior back Gene Warr drew cred it for the on a short plunge and Dan Johnson booted the conversion for the Lancer "as seen in Seventeen" 7. fr lwd. It stood up throughout the first half. But Clearfield went to work in the second half with a vengeance, put together a long march culminated by an touchdown and deadlocked the score, lllll CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT No. 3 FRO-- JOINT RESOMTION .SIMS n INf ST IT vi. O TO I AKTI- - AMKNII srrrioN Tl ON ft of the O F T HE rropoi4 amn!mnt to the tlwtori of the it ate ft I'tah at the nrxt trnal r lection in the manwr proviM by LF.G13-I.ATfR- r-- tiion eWtora Mkf.-Op- 'h, h rw ni't If rtnallf and mileage law, it provided fWiion t. The mmtary f it Creeled te eubmit Una !',tj Collected on Your Rodiotor Will t''' Crt .H l?l2. LAMONT T. TORONTO SemUry ef Eute (JEAl) Be Removed. f NEW USED & RECAPPED HOME of DAYTON THOROBREDS WITH THE FAMOUS ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE HBtM MILLER DAYTON TIRE SERVICE 3939 So. State m AM 2-2- FINANCIER DESIGNER SUPPLIER when you call on Anderson Lumber to build a garage for you . . . and you get ONE QUALITY, too . . . the very best a at lowest cost because practical and attractive garage we do the job from design to distinctive overhead door, Just give us a call . . . and let's get startedl YOU GET SERVICE "ONE-STOP- " ...... styled-to-your-ho- 14x20 Garage with concrete slab, fir 'i-in- 210 siding, pound shingles, box cornice, wind brae Ing, fwo windows . . . and choice of modern sectional steel overhead door complete for only ... $19,.31 Per Month FOR FREE ESTIMATES on ony homo improvement project PHONE IN v . 6-86- 09 s LUMBER CO. 2233 South 5th East From experience First Security Bank knows thai nearly every family, like nearly every bank well run business, finds a low-coloan beneficial now and then. Thousands of men and women obtain loans every day. st Do you hav to be a customer to get a loan? No. On the contrary, this advertisement is an invibank loan. tation to anyone who wants a So why pay higher interest when you can get low cost First Security Bank rates ? low-co- to Hie st What security is required? V In Only your signature is needed in many cases. autoan to lilies secured be loans by others, may mobile, your home, stocks, bonds, caih value of life insurance, etc. How quickly can you get a loan? Bank In a very short period of time. 1 irst11..Security ... i males a point ot loan sen ice quuuy ana wuuuui red tape. How long do you have to repay? This is set according to your wiihes and your ibility to repay w ithout strain. How much con you borrow? IS TIRES BUILDER s'' f H t2) r5? en root' ,oc'ay nccc' engines ilcam cleaned. the Summer Bugt that Have 69 7-- A Your Engine Will Run Cooler All Kids Under 12 -F- REE Admission $1.25 Between State and Main Phone HUnter Granger Shopping Center 3626 Mon. 'Til 9 3. it WESTERN BATTERY 13th SOUTH Bonny Lyn Casuals 80 E. rr!i in. Cj law. If alontH by the of thia tat, (hit Uie amendment hU laV ff flmt day of January, I. LAMONT F. TORONTO, th I'f'1" lv1 It U ct fut of the Fiale I of tor ot the Ktt H IK1 HEREBY CERt of tah, f rojmbcre TIFY that the fomrninf ia a two. third Hoowl f ptpd la full, true and eorwt eery tof voting in favcr lhmf: the eonrtilutionul amwidnw-nt hr th rrrular rinll tviinn i. i VI.' rU jirppoH Thirtr-Fourtf of lh wnd Article 01 M Onrfitutin f the iaK lure. 1961, at eprart of record aa folks In tnf offir. fuh t rR-- l The tnrmWe of ftnUnn f. IS WITNESS WHEREOF, I !U UeiMaiur rtave hemmt 11 mv hand and It of the affhpd the '1f "1B IV lt t llX'f'" Mate of l'lh, at tTr tiiitlve term and 110 09 In Citv, ihii sth day of August, STATE OK UTAH. RU.AT. IV5 TO roMI'KNSATION OF MFMUFttS OF THE tr jjj JijJ "?tj $5.95; 12-- v $8.95 Generators - Starters 44?,.jir8 h h BATTERIES Magazine Hand Washable 20-1- I Murrav 6-- v. Separates and Sports-Knit- s 6 lnst-dttc- LEAGUE: Thuruoocl. ed 7 7-- SATURDAY OF INSTFAD NIGHTS, RACES ARE NOW BEING STAGED IN THE DAYTIME ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 23RD AND 30TH. PLAN TO ATTEND AND FASTEST THE WATCH IN UTAH, IN THE RACERS MOTOR POPULAR MOST SPORT IN THE WORLD. PITS OPEN AT 9:00 A.M. ELIMINATIONS AT 1:00 P.M. all-sta- TUESDAY Pitchers: (jury 2100 So. W. DRAG RACES l Susan Laurie 7-- first-roun- 4900 the-yea- public. surged half-tim- e Raceway, Inc. all-st- 13-- 7 Clearfield Granger. Salt Lake of lengthy Murray. citations were handed out here Friday evening at the annual awards banquet of the City Softball Asa'n. teams In addition, for both the Tuesday and Friday night divisions were made Falcons Nip back from a award as a team and Stan Martin of Carpets copped the individual sportsmanship title. Ron Wright earned the officer's trophy; Dob Robinson of Carpets was named manager of r and Jerry Young of valuable Carpets the ino.:t player. Dan-elTripp of West was the outstanding pitcher; Mike Miller of Carpets the most improved player and Don Howard of West the llV.l titlist with 19. A special "old timer's award" was given L. Clark dishing. r teams Selected for the were these players: Awards Many At Softball Fete Friday A list e Granger, In the Friday circuit, Cir-pet.- i, State; Ray Chatwtn, Old M'll. Csrcher Jlni Heusser. Murray State. Inc. won the title wixn (League, Page 6, Col. 7) Oklaml Construction in second. Carpets and West Construction shared the sportsmanship CIS pItself i)fe OS Individual loan vary from several hundred dollars to several thousand. Whot ore your chonces for opprovol? hen ou walk inlo our bank for a loan, you do riot come in asking for a favor. Making loans is pur business. Our bank wants borrowers, further more, we believe we serve Ihc entire community bv making useful loans to all deserving people. This helps build local enterprise, employment and W sound growth. 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