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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1966 Protestant Churches See 1966 As Year of 'Human Disasters' Agriculture Speakers Due for USU Meet With experts forecasting 1966 as a year of mounting famine and other forms of social disaster, U.S. Protestant churches are preparing to meet heavy commitments in the field of over- seas assistance. A total of $17,921,000 will be sought by participating denominations through the annual One Great Hour of Sharing appeal it was announced. Observed each yea rthe week following the 4th Sunday in Lent (March 20 this year), funds rasied by the congregations through the appeal are used for relief and rehabilitation purposes in Asia, Africa, Latin America, the Middle East and limited areas of Europe. Homeless and hungry peoples in human disaster areas will be among the principal recip- Highlighting the tenth annual conference Wednesday, February 16, will be tion agency through which most two prominent speakers from the of the denominations affiliated United States Department of with the National Council of Churches channel their overseas Agriculture. Themed this year to Food aid efforts. the Future, the conference Bulk of the foods were sup- for be held in the Hotel Utah, will plied from government accumu- Salt Lake City. It is sponsored lated stores. Other foods, plus in coseeds and farm equipment were by Utah State University, with leading agriculprovided by CROP, a community operation industrial organizaand tural program of Church World Serv- tions throughout the state. ice. Peoples in 42 countries are The conference is open to the assisted through will be held projects, school feeding pro- public. Registration Mezzanine Floor begingrams, medical aid and various on the reservaa.m. at 9:15 where forms of help. All assistance is ning noon luncheon the tions for may channeled through the indigenous churches of the countries in- also be made. The two speakers, announced volved. Funds realized through One by Dr. Lloyd M. Drury, conferGreat Hour of Sharing will go ence chairman, are Dr. Quentin toward support of individual M. West, acting director, Foreign denominational programs of as- Regional Analysis Division, Ecosistance, and joint projects of aid nomic Research Service and Miss carried on overseas through Trienah Meyers, deputy assistant Church World Service, the World secretary of agriculture, MarketCouncil of Churches and related ing and Consumer Services, food-for-wo- rk ients. During 1965, Church World Service shipped 225,684,376 pounds of food, clothing and materials to needy countries. interdenominational CWS is the relief and rehabilita , Kellogg Foundation Will Grant Half Million to Medical School period, the dent population of over 17,000. W. K. Kellogg Foundation will The four-yeCollege of Medito established in 1942, moved grant a half million dollars cine, the College of Medicine of the last year into a new $16 million Over a five-ye- ar ar University of Utah for services educato enhance its over-ational efforts; to strengthen administration and the Department of Surgery and Preventive Medicine; and also to provide teaching equipment (particularly educational television facilities) to improve medical instruction. The grant, announced today, is one of a series of gifts from the Foundation in recent years to selected schools of medicine for ll Agriculture-Industr- y Medical Center. The Center includes a 200-be- d teaching hospias as academic well tal and research facilities. Funds from USDA. Dr. West will be the luncheon speaker and will discuss World Food Needs. Miss Meyers will be main speaker at the afternoon session which will also include on new a foods and new management. A native of Morgan, Dr. West received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from Utah State in Agricultural Economics. He was awarded the Ph.D. degree from Cornell University in Land Economics and Agricultural Geography. His Ph.D. thesis won the American Farm Economics Association Award for 1951. Dr. West instructed one year at Cornell as a graduate assistant and served with the New York State Commission of Agriculture for one year. He then taught short courses, sponsored by the lecture-demonstrati- on State and Federal governments and generous gifts from corporations and individuals financed the building program. The Kellogg Foundation grant will expand the programming in the Center through support for acaInstitute of Agridemic, administrative and equip- cultural Sciences, for three and ment needs. e years at agricultural the development of La Moline, Peru; in colleges faculty and improved adminiColumbia and Chapingo, strative and teaching resources. at the USDA GraduMexico, and Through a subsidy covering ate School. He joined the USDA salaries over the five-yeperiod, in 1956 as a regional economist the Foundation funds will perin Foreign Agricultural Service. mit strengthening .of the UniDr. West has traveled extenversity of Utah College of Medisively in the Far East and the cine administration, the DepartMiddle East. In 1958 he was U.S. ment of Surgery, and reactivadelegate to the FAO regional tion and strengthening of the Good conference in Tokyo. Grooming Department of Preventive MediMiss Meyers, an expert on concine. Although cats are fastidious sumer and industrial opinion reSixty thousand dollars of the animals and groom themselves search, was named deputy assiswith their tongues, they still reFoundations grant is for educacombtant secretary in 1964. brushing and tion television permitting quireAdaily mere She has conducted and directed grooming. closed circuit viewing of demonassure will a each sleek, market research surveys USDA day ing strations, patient care, and operhandsome coat, shedding prevent 18 years and is a recognized and this amount will and help prevent hair balls. If for ations public be matched by funds from the loose hair is not removed, the cat authority in the field of has also She opinion survey. will swallow it and occasionally federal government. 'consultant to a as other President James C. Fletcher it may form hair balls in his served federal and state agencies and to in expressing the Universitys stomach and digestive tract. when cat grooming your foreign governments. appreciation and commenting on heBegin is a kitten, and he will become A native of Norfolk, Va., Miss of this the unique significance accustomed to the daily routine. Meyers, who in private life is Place the cat on your lap, or if grant said, the Kellogg Foundaher grant pro- you find it easier, place him on a Mrs. Michael Heffter, earned tions Rutat social psychology degree floor where he can move posal to the University of Utah table or as he is brushed. First gers University and spent three will give precise and specific around of the his brush fur years doing public opinion stugrain against support to the growing and to catch loose are dies at the Columbia University There hair. strengthening programs of the some cats with sensitive skins Bureau of Applied Social ReCollege of Medicine. who find brushing against the search. The grant is a tribute to the grain of the fur highly irritating. She has been called upon to calibre of the College of Medi- If your cat is one of these, brush serve as a consultant to the Budcine, its faculty and administra- with the grain only. Then brush get Bureau, the Food and Drug strokes. Oction. It also serves as another downwards in short loose fur from the Administration, the National casionally pull example of the success of the of brush and dispose it where the Academy of Sciences, the Labor College of Medicine has had in cat cannot get to it Brush the and and Interior attracting financing independent entire body until all loose hair is the New York Departments, State Department removed. of state funds. a supereceived She of Health. Use rubber or plastic combs This grant is a direct contribservice award from the Deution to operating costs of the for short hairs. Cats with long rior partment of Agriculture in 1952. hairs require a strong metal comb College of Medicine. or unsnarl tangles. The University of Utah, the to prevent the as at the PuBut oldest state university west of rina Pet Care experts, cats Center know, the Missouri River, was estab- who are groomed daily and fed a e camdiet are seldom lished in 1850. Its the of balls. bothered foot fur the at situated by pus, it Remember, just takes a little Wasatch Mountains overlooking time 364-846Salt Lake City and the valley of care. to give your cat the proper 4 the Great Salt Lake, has a stu Inter-Americ- an one-ha- lf full-tim- Pal-mir- e, ar five-minut- es . will-develop- ed 700-acr- well-balanc- ed if its printing.... dial Page Nine Cancer. Workers Probate Notices Conclude Meeting Volunteer leaders of Utah of The American Cancer Society concluded a two-da- y leadership conference this, week, imbued with the zeal of modern-da- y Crusaders as they girded for the annual April Cancer Crusade. Highlight of the conference for the 150 volunteers was the personal appearance and keynote address by Gregory Peck, National Chairman of the Cancer Crusade. Mr. Peck and his wife participated in various sessions of the conference Tuesday at Hotel Utah and they were honored Tuesday evening at a reception and banquet. Earlier in the day they paid a visit to President and Mrs. David O. McKay. Ralph J. Hill, Utah Crusade Chairman, and Walter M. Jones, President of the American Cancer Society, Utah Division, met the distinguished visitors upon their arrival Tuesday morning at the Salt Lake municipal airport. At noon Mr. Peck addressed a group of 125 Utah business leaders, stressing the importance g of the fight against cancer to the economy of the nation. Business, he asserted, has a great stake in cancer control efforts because of the tragic toll the disease takes of executives and workers alike. Working sessions for the Utah life-savin- volunteers attending the con- ference included instructions on organizing and publicizing a Cancer Crusade at the community level. Emphasis was given to the public education aspects of the drive. With the theme, On With the Show, the conference pointed to the hopeful side, with the spotlite on some 1,400,000 Americans now living who have been cured of cancer. The slogan adopted for the April Crusade is To cure more, give more. The familiar admonition will also be used, Fight cancer with a check-u- p and a check. life-savi- ng Girl Scouts Name NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of BENNETT HARRY JACOBS, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at co Emmett L. Brown, 345 South State Street, Salt Lake City, Utah on or before the 7th day of May, A.D. 1966; claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of Utah Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as re75-9-- 5, quired therein. JULIA VICTORIA JACOBS BECK, Executrix of the Estate of Bennett Harry Jacobs, De- ceased. Date of first publication February 4th, A.D. 1966. Emmett L. Brown, Attorney (2-- 4 2-2- 5) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of GEORGE PERCIVAL KUGHLER, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 574 East 2nd South, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 7th day of May, A.D. 1966; claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of Utah Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as re75-9-- 5, quired therein. WALKER BANK AND TRUST COMPANY, Executor of the Estate of George Percival Kugh-le- r. Deceased. Date of first publication Feb- ruary 4th, A.D. 1966. Mabey, Ronnow, Madsen & Marsden Attorneys at Law 574 East 2nd South Salt Lake City, Utah (2-- 4 2-2- 5) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of JESSIE GRANT REED ALLEN, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 300 Executive Building, 455 East 4th South, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 14th day of May, A.D. 1966. Claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of Utah Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as required 75-9-- 5, therein. JANE REED SCHULZE, Ad- ministratrix of the Estate of Jessie Grant Reed Allen, Deceased. Date of first publication February 11th, A.D. 1966. W. Eldredgc Grant, Jr., . Attorney District Advisor (2-1- The Utah Girl Scout Council has named Miss Evelyn Mary Clark, Ely, as Advisor for District IX. District IX includes both Elko and White Pine Counties, Nev., and is the second largest geographical district in the Council. Miss Clark was born near i, resia Kansas and has been dent of Nevada for three years. She received a B.S. degree in Education from Fort Hays Kansas State College and holds a masters degree from Kansas State Teachers College in Psychology. After graduation she began testing at the elementary level and to the handicapped. One of her first assignments was to hold down the teaching duties at a one room school house in Kansas where every grade but the first, was taught. Her position as an Advisor for the Utah Council will be to assist volunteers in maintaining, managing and developing Girl Scouting within the Eastern Nevada territory in towns such as Wells, Elko, Ely and McGill. Mrs. Clarence Bartley, former Advisor for the Nevada Territory will now be Advisor for District VI, covering all of the southwest part of Utah. In Ely, Miss Clark is active in the Business and Professional Womens Club, does training and office work for the Civil Air Patrol and is a First Aid Instructor for the Red Cross. Lc-ot- 1 3-- 4) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of ETHEL ELIZABETH RATTLE, aka ETHEL E. RATTLE, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 4177 Mathews Way, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 19th day of May, A.D. 1966. Claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of 75-9-- 5, Utah Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as required therein. PAUL S. RATTLE, JR., Executor of the Estate of Ethel Elizabeth Rattle, aka Ethel E. Rattle, Deceased. Date of first publication February 11th. A.D. 1966. Malcolm D. Pike Attorney for Executor (2-1- 1 3-- 4) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of JOHN ERWIN SMITH, also known as JOHN E. SMITH and as J. E .SMITH, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned Executrix at the offices of Matts-so- n & Jackson, 151 North Main, Richfield, Utah, on or before the 14th day of May, A.D. 1966. which claims shall be presented in accordance with the provisions of Section Utah Cede Annotated, 1953, as amended, and with proper verification as rcouired therein. ANNE PROSK BLUHM, Ex75-9-- 5, ecutrix of the Estate of John Erwin Smith, aka John E. Smith and J. E. Smith, Deceased. Date of first publication February 11th, A.D. 1966. (2-1- 1 3-- 4) |