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Show Page Two October SOUTHERN UTAH NEWS, Kanab, Utah 16, 1969 LEGAL NOTICES SOUTHERN UTAH NEWS OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER Marlin B. OF KANE COUNTY, UTAH Brown, Publisher and Editor Published every Thursday at Kanab, Utah matter October 6, 1944 at the post ffioe ia Kanab, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Entered as second-clas- s Subscriptions: $4.00 per year, $2.50 for six months CRIME DETERENT "Nothing can take the place of the home in the rearing and teaching of children and no other success can compensate for failure in the home." David O. McKay This advice from their prophet and president launched some quarter of a million families in The Church of Jesus of Latter-da- y Saints this autumn on their sixth year of the Family Home Evening program. The program was begun in 1963 to teach the precepts of honesty, sobriety, morality, respect for the law, and peace and unity in Mormon homes. FamRecently off the press are the new year's 1969-7ily Home Evening manuals 60,000 of them in English and 32,000 in 16 foreign languages. The manuals contain lesson outlines following this year's theme "Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ." Most of the discussion material focuses on the teachings of the Bible and the Book of Mormon, and prescribes a daily reading course of the Book of Mormon. The entire manual is designed to help young family members discover for themselves without adult lecturing or preaching the various ways faith in Christ can be obtained and nurtured and inscribed into daily lives. For more than a half a century Church leaders have counseled with parents to gather their children around them in weekly home meetings and there teach them the principles of the Gospel. Since the strong emphasis of the past six years, these weekly family gatherings have become councils of free expression to discuss family differences, reach united decisions and plan family projects. With the Family Home Evening, Mormons believe they have part of the answer for the breakdown of parent-yout- h communcation of recent years. One evening each week, all meetings, socials and other activities are replaced with a Family Home Evening. The evening's activities, led by the father, typically consist of group discussion of spiritual and practical subjects, simple recreational activities and refreshments. "My professional activities," wrote a noted psychiatrist, "brings me in contact with many families that have problems. It was most refreshing to receive the Family Home Evening manual and to look over the lesson material it contained. Most of the problems I try to settle for parents and children could be avoided or promptly settled if families could be brought to understand and live at least the first three lessons in this handbook. Inferior feelings, trying to be somebody else other than one's self and failure to believe in repentence, create the background of most of the problems I find in families. The Mormon Church Family Home Evening is the most effective preventative program have seen." (Dr. Carlos Mason.) Elder Mark E. Petersen, a member of the Church's Council of the Twelve Apostles, says: "Surveys and studies made in various parts of the U.S. indicate that 80 per cent of our delinquent children say they had no real family life and that their parents set them a bad example. Lack of reIt is interestligion is characteristic of delinquent families. from a that know to one large American ing police report city showed that 84 per cent of the juvenile criminals in that city had no real family life, no religion and did not attend church." The Family Home Evening over the past few years has demonstrated that it can develop character in parents while teaching and training their children. To a large degree, the family, the Mormons believe, determines a child's place in his community. The goal is to strengthen the family unit, as a means of developing all members and building better citizens. 0 I ADVERTISING BUILDS IMAGE A newspaper advertisment is always more than it api pears to be. Good retail advertising simultaneously serves three purposes. It moves traffic into a store during a given season. Each advertisement helps to build a distinctive image for a store. And advertising should be a constant source of information on new products. The retailer who measures advertisng in terms of sales or produced directly from a single ad is likely to under-us- e e the newspaper. Very often a single advertisement does produce more than is expected in selling the items featured. Although such results are desirable, long range effects are more important to the health of a business. Thus, advertisng which seems to have little immediate effect may be of more value as months and years pass. The large city department stores, which carefully relate advertising effort to sales' volume, recognize the value of long range and immediate results. "What happens to sales from day to day depends largely on what we select to advertise and the prices we set. What happens from month to month, or over a period of years, depends upon the consistency and quality of our advertising," one sales manager says. "The most important thing we've learned, however, is that if we stop advertising the sales curve drops, and that it costs more to regain volume than it costs to sustain it," he added. mis-us- UNITED DEPARTSTATES MENT OF THE INTERIOR, BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT. PUBLIC SALE. Under the provisions of 43 U.S.C. 1171 and 43 CFR 2243, there will be offered to the highest bidder, but at not less than the appraised value, at a public sale to be held 1:00 oclock P.M., local time on Thursday the 13th day of November, 1969, at the LAND OFFICE, Room 8103 Federal Building, 125 South State, Salt Lake City, Utah, the following tracts of land: Description: T. 40 S., R. 7 W., SLM Sec. 13, lots 3, 4, 5, 6; Sec. 14, E2-NE238.43 Acres. Appraised Value, $13,100. Cost of Publication, $75.00. No bid will be accepted for less than the appraised value to which bid there must be added the cost of publication noted above; if the bidder is the petitioner for sale, he will be required to pay such cost less any amount previously deposited toward publication costs. The lands will be sold subject to: Reservation to the United States for ditches and canals, coal, oil and gas. Bids may be made by the principal or his agent, either orally at the sale or by mail. Bids for a parcel must be for all the lands in the parcel. Bids sent by mail will be considered only if received at Utah Land Office, P. O. Box 11505, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84111, prior to 10:00 oclock A.M. on Thursday, November 13, 1969. Bids must be in sealed envelopes accompanied by certified checks, post office money orders, bank drafts, or cashiers checks made payable to the Bureau of Land Management for the amounts of the bids, plus the publication cost shown above. The envelopes d must be marked in the lower Public Sale Bid, comer, Sale Held NoSerial No. The highest vember 13, 1969. bidder at the sale will be required to pay immediately the amount thereof together with the cost of publication. Any adverse claimd land ants of the should file their claims, or objections, with the undersigned on or before the time designated for sale. The Bureau of Land Management has not searched the county records to ascertain the existence of any adverse claims. Any contiguous owner claiming a preference right must assert such right to the undersigned within 30 days commencing on the day after the close of bidding and the announcement of the highest bid received. Within the y period immediately following the end of the preference period, each preference bidder must submit proof that on the last day of the period, he was the owner of whole title in fee of the contiguous land. (43 CFR 2243.14(b)). However, contiguous owners will not be able to assert their preference rights to any parcel for which bids are not received. For reimbursement to owners of authorized improvements on the lands and other requirements, see 43 CFR 2243. The lands described in this notice shall be segregated from all forms of appropriation, including locations under the mining laws, from the date of first publication of this notice. For further information, write the undersigned officer, Bureau of Land Management, Land Office, P. O. Box 11505, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84111. s F. S. KIRK, Chief, Adjudication Branch. Date of first publication Date of last publication 4. left-han- 7, above-describe- y 30-d- NOTICE TO WATER USERS Greene & Weed Investments, Phoenix, Arizona, have filed with the State Engineer App. No. 39591 to appropriate 1.0 Sec.-f- t. of water in Kane County, State of Utah. The water is to be diverted from an well, 250 ft. deep at a point S. 200 ft. E. 50 ft. from the NW Cor. Sec. 36, T43S, R5W, and used from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 for domestic purposes of 80 families in the W2NW'4 Sec. 36, T43S, (85-41- R5W, SLB&M. Protests resisting the granting of this application with reasons therefor must be filed in duplicate with the State Engineer, 442 State Capitol, Salt Lake City, Utah 84114, on or before November 30 NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received by the Kane County School District for the construction of Boiler at Orderville, Room Structure Utah and New Kitchen and Serving Facilities at Kanab, Utah. Proposals may be made for completion of either or both of these projects. All construction will be under the General Con- tract. Bids will be in accordance with plans and specifications prepared' by Paul K. Evans, A.IA., Salt Lake City, Utah, and one set for each school project may be obtained from the office of the Superintendent of the Kane County School District at Kanab, Utah, or from the office of the architect, upon receipt of $25.00 deposit per set, made payable to Paul K. Evans, which deposit will be refunded if a bid is entered, and upon return of such plans and specifications in good condition within ten days of the date set for the bid opening. Those securing plans and specifications and not entering a bid will be charged $15.00 for printing costs. Additional plans and specifications for each school addition can be secured for an additional $25.00 per set, and upon returning complete plans and specifications, in good condition to the architect, a refund of $25.00 per set will be made. Plans and specifications will be available for inspection at the architect's office, 515 East Broadway, Salt Lake City, at the school district office, the Intermountain Contractor office at 436 West 9th South, Salt Lake City, Utah, and the A.G.C. office at 1135 South West Temple, Salt Lake City. Bids will be received at the Kane County School District office in Kanab, until the closing time of 2:30 P. M. Thursday, October 30, 1969, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. Bids received after the closing time will be returned to the bidder unopened. A certified check, bid bond or Cashiers check in the amount of of the bid, five percent made payable to the Kane County School District, shall accompany bid. A statement from a company approved by the board and architect that it will furnish the reand quired Performance-Labo- r Material Payment Bond made out on A.I.A. form A311, to cover performance of the contract and payment of labor and material shall be enclosed with the bid and certified check. The Kane County School District reserves the right to reject any or all bids or to waive any formality or technicality in any bid in the interest of the district (5) Kane County School District S. Kent Carpenter President of the Board Doyle K. Slallow Superintendent of Schools Published in the Southern Utah News, Kanab, Utah, Oct. 2 and 16, 19669. NOTICE TO WATER USERS Malcolm L. Robinson, Glendale, Utah, has filed with the State Engineer App. No. 39560 to appropriate 2.0 sec.-f- t. of water in Kane County, State of Utah. The water is to be diverted from a well ft. deep at a point S. 87 deg. 0.0 min. E. 1230 ft. from the W4 Cor., Sec. 30, T43S, R4W SLB&M and used from Mar. 15 to Nov. 15 for irrigation of 120.0 acs. in ENE4, NE SE14, Sec. 27, T43S, R42W, Lots Siftin' 'n Observin' Sunday before last a group of Hawaiians were entertained and hosted at a western dutch-ove- n dinner in Kanab. There were several people who helped with the project and did a fine job. Id like to mention them here. The reason I want to mention them is because their time was donated, and the proceeds from the affair was applied toward a note at the bank of the Chamber of Commerce. Those unselfishly donating of their time and means were: Norman and Mae Cram and daughter, Sterling and Irene Johnson, Carol Bamson and daughter, Carol Penney, Wendell Bentley, Bob Ramsay, Ted Robinson, Mike Talbot, and I hope no one was missed. Trails End Restaurant furnished and prepared the potatoes, and Chefs Palace furnished and prepared the salad and dressing. Feeding of the group came under the direction of Chefs Palace who has been contracted for the job. Housing of the 50th staters was taken care of by Fred Reese. This note I mentioned has been a thorne in the side of the Chamber for many years. It came to the Chamber from another group and over the years has caused much hard feelings and has resulted in quite a number of inactive Chamber members. This dinner profited a little over $200 and has been turned toward the payment of the note. This together with some other projects have brought the note down to a fairly lower figure, and with any luck at all it will be retired during the present Chamber admins-tratioterm. Im sure all Chamber members are anxious to see it taken care of. Things you can do with your hands: 1. Wring them in dispair. 2. Fold them as if there were nothing to do . . . 3. Clench them in anger . . . 4. PUT THEM TO SOME USEFUL TASK! 190-21- 0 1, 2, 3, and 4 Sec. 30, T43S, R4W SJ B&M. Protests resisting the granting of this application with reasons therefor must be filed in duplicate with the State Engineer, 442 State Capitol, Salt Lake City, Utah 84114 on or before November 29, 1969. Hubert C. Lambert STATE ENGINEER Published in Southern Utah News Kanab, Utah on October 16, 23, and 30, 1969. 30, 1969. Kanab news notes Mark Church arrived back to his base after a cruise off the shores of Africa and South America. He recently passed his second class test. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Anna Ghiglia, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the office of John W. Palmer, attorney at law, 53 North Main Street, St. George, Utah, on or before the 25th day of January, 1970; claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of 5 Utah Code annotated 1953 and with proper verification as required therein. ters for their love and service they have given to the people of the South Ward. Agreed! These ladies do a fine job have done a fine job, and Im sure will continue with gocJ works. to the city park for a cookout. Our bouquet for this week must go to these fine young people who are giving unselfishly of their time. WORDS: You folks sure have things nice. To be capable of respe :t is almost as rare as to be worthy THOUGHTS: Probably owes everybody in town. of It was brought to my attention this week, that counting the present president of the Kanab South Ward Relief Society there are ten living presidents of that organization. They are: Della Crosby, Harriet Judd (served twice), Wilma Meeks, Grand Canyon; Minnie Meeks, Vera Chamberlain, Elva Judd, Ella Crosby, Glennis Board-maZelma Johnson and Wanda Glover. Rachel Woolley made this fact we should known and suggests congratulate and honor these sis- n, it I goofed last week and left an advertisement out of the SUNews. Now this is bad. Ive said before, There is always room for anothwe may leave out some news, but theres always room for an ad. (mercenary bum). Well, anyway last week an ad for a rummage sale sponsored by the Fredonia Community Protestant Church was forgetfully omited. So I want to bring that to your attention, and hope I can get back in the good graces of that fine group. The ad appears this week. Please check it and support this activity. er ad ... Kanab news and current events Mrs. Cathy Chamberlain and daughter Nancy will be visiting the Lloyd Pughs this weekend. She is being transferred to Tucson in her job so thought shed come home for a few days before going so far away. She has been working in Flagstaff. Mrs. Ora Moore is in Kanab family and friends. She is employed at Utah Valley Hospital in Provo. Mr. and Mrs. Nicky Wright left Kanab Thursday for Big Piney Wyoming, to live where Nicky will be employed on a ranch. Patty Wessendorf went to Cedar City Wednesday for an Avon convention. Colleen Rourke and Mrs. Mer- - this week visiting rilyn Church went to Salt Lake last weekend and purchased a new car and did some other shopping, had lunch and came home. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Johnson returned home from conference in Salt Lake and from visiting with several friends and relatives: Mrs. Hannah Ford and family in Clearfield; Alfred Ford and family in Ogden; Mrs. Stella Jones in Logan; then to Challis, Idaho and stayed 10 days with son Thales and family. Thales is principal at the high school in Challis. They were happy to get to sunny Kanab and warm up the temperature in Challis went to four degrees while they were there. City Jerry Marcus rtfUn-- "Wow they won't be v.Vi to do either one.' Tto Troveers Safety Service Cne out of three drivers involved in fatal accidents was under 25 years of age. TRADER DAVE'S 450 East 3rd South Kanab 75-9-- s Frank P. Ghiglia Frank P. Ghiglia, Executor of the estate of Anna Ghiglia, deceased. s Frank P. Ghiglia, Jr. Frank P. Ghiglia, Jr., Executor of the estate of Anna Ghiglia, deceased. Date of first publication: October 16, 1969 Date of last publication: ber 6, 1969 BORDER STORE LIQUORS - WINE BEER Three Miles South of Kanab on Highway 89-- Groceries Saddlery Sporting Goods Indian Rugs and Jewelry Frank and Helen Banks . ar 1969. Hubert C. Lambert STATE ENGINEER Published in Southern Utah News, Kanab, Utah, on Oct 16, 23, and Page Two 16, 1969 . . . Alcoholocaust Young folks of the community did themselves proud last week in a couple of cleanup projects. Ora Nell Judd and her First-YeBeehive girls from the North Ward spent some time Wednesday cleaning up around the Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum and meeting house. They raked around the outside of the building, cleaned up along the ditch bank and when they were through the place looked 100 better. This was a service project for the girls, and they should be commended for their fine work. Another group, from the South Ward, rpent some time the same day at the cemetery on a cleanup project. teen-ag-e Twenty-seve- n girls and boys with their leaders LaRue Chamberlain, Afton Jackson and Jim Skaggs spent an hour or two at the cemetery and really slicked up the weeds. Many people were happily surprised to see their lots cleaned up. Another such project would completely finish up the cemetery. After the clean up they went (85-26- 12-i- October Owners, Managers Novem- New Foot locker Truck Gun Racks G. I. Pistol Belts $ 9.60 1.98 1.25 88 1.00 Red Hunting vests 100 ft. Nylon Rope Electric Sewing Machine New Camp Canteens Thermo Boots Flight Jackets G. I. Gas Cans Ammo Box Canned Heat Stove New 50,000 BTU Floor Furnace Gas Refrigerator Large Gas Kitchen Stove 20.00 3.49 9.49 8.95 6.95 2.49 3.49 69.95 85.00 30.00 DOZENS OF OTHER ITEMS OPEN FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS - B a.n.-- 6 p.m. |