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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1969 Probate Notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of BEATRICE H. LUND-QUISNINA BEATRICE LUNDQUIST, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 7830 South 2200 West, West Jordan, Utah, on or before the 1st day of July, A.D. 1969; claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of Utah Code Annotated, 1953, and with proper verification as required therein. CARL HATFIELD, Executor of the Estate of Beatrice H. Nina Beatrice Lundquist, Lundquist, Deceased. Date of first publication March 28th, A.D. 1969. Glen E. Fuller and Orvel C. Harrison, Attorneys T, a-k-- a NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of GERTRUDE STO-WEL- L ROMNEY, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 1409 Walker Bank Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 30th day of June, A.D. 1969; claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of Utah Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as required therein. 75-9-- 5, 75-9-- 5, a-k- -a ELDON B. ROMNEY JUNIUS S. ROMNEY Executors of the Estate of Gertrude Stowell Romney, Deceased. Date of first publication March 28th, A.D. 1969. Romney & Boyer NOTICE TO CREDITORS Attorneys for Executors ' 1409 Walker Bank Bldg. Estate of ANNIE H. SALMON, Deceased. Salt Lake City, Utah Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned NOTICE TO CREDITORS co Lloyd M. Gerber, Attorney Estate of ADELIA T. HOUGH- at Law, 320 South 3rd East, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 on or beTON, Deceased. fore the 1st day of July, A.D. Creditors will present claims claims must be presented to 1969; the vouchers with undersigned at 201 Executive Bldg., 455 East in accordance with the proviUtah Code An4th South, Salt Lake City, Utah sions of notated and with proper 1953, on or before the 30th day of as verification A.D. 1969. Claims must be required therein. June, DONNA AdministraCHILD, in accordance with presented the provisions of Utah trix of the Estate of Annie H. Code Annotated 1953, and with Salmon, Deceased. of first publication March proper verification as required Date A.D. 1969. 28th, therein. GODDING Lloyd M. Gerber, Attorney CAROL ANN LANDAAL, Executrix of the Estate of Adelia T. Houghton, Deceased. Date of first publication March Airman Douglas J. Hacking, 28th, A.D. 1969. son of Mr. and Mrs. D. R. HackW. Eldredge Grant, Jr., Attorney ing of 1680 Fieldcrest Lane, has been graduated from a U. S. Air TO CREDITORS Force technical school at ShepNOTICE Estate of VICENTE GAVICA, pard AFB, Texas. Deceased. He is a graduate of Hillcrest Creditors will present claims High School. with vouchers to the undersigned at Zions First National Bank, 1 South Main Street, Salt Lake City,- Utah on or before the 2nd day of July, A.D. 1969; claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of Utah Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as rein (3-2- 8 (3-2- 8 4-1- 4-1- 8) 8) 75-9-- 75-9-- 5, 4-1- (3-2- 8 (3-2- 8 - 4-1- 8) Reed C. Christensen Named Supervisor For Fishlake Forest Reed C. Christensen has been named Supervisor of the Fish-lak- e National Forest at Richfield, Utah. For the past year he has served as Multiple Use Coordinator, a position in which he assisted the Deputy Regional Forester in all matters involving multiple use management of National Forest lands within the Intermountain Region. Mr. Christensen replaces former Forest Supervisor Willard R. Fallis, who has been promoted and transferred to the Division of Range Management in the Washington office. Mr. Christensens wide range of experience provides' a fine background for his new responsibilities as Forest Supervisor, said Regional Forester Floyd Iverson in announcing the transfer. His previous assignments have given him opportunities to gain first hand knowledge of the management of all National Forest resources. After several assignments with the Forest Service in Oregon and Washington, Mr. Christensen served as District Ranger at Spanish Fork; as a staff officer on the Sawtooth National Forest in Twin Falls and as a section chief in the Division of Watershed Management in the Ogden Regional Office. if its printing. . . 4 dial 364-846- - Doctor 75-9-- 5, ELIZABETH LYNCH ZIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Executor of the Estate of Vicente Gavica, Deceased. Date of first publication March 28th, A.D. 1969. Samuel King, Attorney (3-2- 8 4-1- 75-9-- 5, therein. WALKER BANK & TRUST Administrator of COMPANY, the Estate of Edna E. Kennemer, Deceased, Date of first publication March nBth, A.D. 1969. Gustin & Gustin Attorneys for Administrator 1610 Walker Bank Building Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 (3-2- 8 4-1- 8) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of ROXANA FARNS- WORTH HASE, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 530 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 on or before the 30th day of June, A.D. 1969; claims must be presented in accordance with the provisions of Utah Code Annotated, 1953, and with proper verification as required therein. CASSIA JANE ROBERTS, Executrix of the Estate of Roxana Farnsworth Hase, Deceased. Date of first publication March 28th, A.D. 1969. Rawlings, Roberts & Black, Attorneys 75-9-- (3-2- 8 4-1- 8) Utah Council of Teachers of English and the International Reading Association are jointly sponsoring three Spring Institutes. The first meeting will be March 29, 1969, Fine Arts Center College of Southern Utah at Cedar City, Utah. Dr. Eugene T. Woolf is local chairman. Lanis the guage and Learning theme. Dr. William R. Slager University of Utah, Dr. John I. McKendrick Brigham Young University, and Mrs. Ila Corry Iron County School District will be the speakers. Registration opens at 8:30 a.m. The first meetings begin at 9:30 a.m. April 26, 1969, the second Institute will be held at Hillcrest High School, 7350 South 900 East, Midvale, Utah. Program participants are Dr. William R. Slager University of Utah, and Mrs. Jewel J. Bindrup State Department of Public Instruction will join in the sympo- sium. Discussion sessions will follow. Mr. Lowell Baberg is local chairman. Miss Pat Gardner is local chairman of the meeting at Utah State University at Logan, Utah, on May 3, 1969. A review and discussion of the results of the Dartmouth Conference will provide material for the meetings. Reigstration fee at each institute is $1.00 for Utah Council of Teachers of English or International Reading Association members or $2.00 which includes membership in one of the state organizations for For additional information call or write the local chairman or a member of the Utah Council of Teachers' of English. ' non-membe- rs. is remarkable what some people will do for publicity, even when most of it is by Laurence M. Hursh, M.D. Consultant, National Dairy Council Send Your Children Back to Class Soon as Possible How soon can Jimmy return to school after an illness? Sooner than most parents think, according to Yale pediatrician Dr. Merrill Baratz. Dr. Baratz believes that children are often kept out of school too long because parent or child exaggerates the illness and prolongs the recovery period. If the acute symptoms are over and the child is without fever, he should go back, says the pediatrician in a recent issue of LADIES HOME JOURNAL. If there is concern that he needs extra rest, extracurricular activities can be skipped. Dr. Baratz suggests the followschedules for ing children who have been sick. These schedules assume close parental observation in case of relapse, the pediatrician states in the JOURNAL. Flu of any variety: a child who seems well for a day or two and has recovered his strength can go back to school even if the accompanying cough has not quite subsided. Measles: a child should stay home four to five days afe the rash appears a total of eight in all. days Rubella (German me's!'' three to five days at home is all that is needed. Chicken Pox: The rec ve child may safely return to s after a week, with or w'1 u scabs. Ear infection or strep Once his temperature is no mal, the convalescent child can keep up his drug schedule and g c school. Boils, pink eye, impetigo, rng-worand pinworm: Contrary to some schools recommendations. Dr. Baratz feels that these ill nesses do not preclude classroom attendance, if the child is responding well to treatment.' back-to-cla- ss m TWO FOR BLUE VITAMIN C 8) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of EDNA E. KENNE-MER- , Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Walker Bank & Trust Company, 175 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, within three months from the date of first publication. Claims must be presented in accordance with Utah the provisions of Code Annotated 1953, and with proper verification as required Council of Teachers Of English Sponsors Institutes It the Kitchen8 quired therein. Pa0 Eleven In this fifth and last column feeding, if they do not get in our series on vitamins, we come to the last of the water-solub- le vitamins and perhaps the vitamin C, ofmost publicized ten referred to by nutritionists as ascorbic acid. Repeated observations of the American diet reveal that this vitamin is not consumed at recommended levels. This is not entirely due to inadequate food choices. According to nutrition .authorities, vitamin C more than any other vitamin tends to be destroyed when we prepare the foods that contain it It is soluble, as we said, in water, thus it can be washed away. Vitamin C Vulnerable It is vulnerable to air, light, and temperature. We need vitamin C to reduce the risk of infection. It is probably the most dramatic of the vitamins in that it prevents scurvy, the curse of sailors for centuries until'it was discovered that fresh fruit on board could prevent it. Scurvy weakens its victims, degenerates skin, causes spongy gums, body tissue hemorrhages, and sometimes causes death. Vitamin C firms the walls of the blood vessels, helps in healing wounds and broken bones. It helps make the cementing materials that hold body cells together. No wonder we need it daily. Nearly all of us get some vitamin C in our food. Thus scurvy is uncommon now in the United States. But infants on formula sup- plementary vitamin C, will eventually get scurvy. This is why your pediatrician prescribes ascorbic acid for your infant in' addition to his milk or formula. Newborn Protected The normal newborn infant has enough ascorbic add stored in his system to prevent scunv for. about five months. Breast fed children normally get enough to protect them until they begin to, eat a variety of other foods. But, as I say, physicians play it safe' by prescribing a vitamin C sup- -' plement because scurvy can so easily develope, especially if other' factors in the young infants life' are not completely ideal. The history of vitamin C is interesting. Not until around 1928 did Hungarian scientists isolate this vitamin; but they didnt reg cognize it as the food element. Vitamin Identified In 1932, Dr. Charles Glen King, now Professor Emeritus of Chem-- ; istry and Assodate Director, Institute of Nutrition Sdence, Columbia University, and a graduate student, William Waugh, isolated vitamin C from lemons and identified it as the factor that had helped sailors stay scurvy-freCitrus fruit or juice for breakfast probably will insure your getting most of the vitamin C you need. Other fruits and vegetables eaten during the day, along with other foods, should then bring you up to recommended levels. ; scurvy-prevent-in- e. Blue lace flower and summer forget-me-nan grown annual flowers that boast blue flowers. Blue is ot and most-desir- two easily the scarcest of all the flower colors. ed That most wanted color is the flower. color of blue n annuals anchusa and blue lace flower. Anchusa accent on the kew) has the common name of summer forget-me-nbecause of the difference in its flowerwhich bloom with the ing time from that of real forget-me-no2 easily-grow- h, ot ts tulips. Blue lace flower is known almost exclusively by its common name because the botanical name, in Latin, is a difficult one to spell and pronounce. It grows best in areas where weather is cool. The seeds should be planted as soon as the ground can be worked. The delicate, heads of blooms will form on plants a foot and a half tall. You can enjoy them either indoors or out. Summer forget-me-nis tolerant of poor soil but needs sun to bloom its best. Plants will flower all summer from seeds sown in spring. The variety Blue Bird is most popular. It has V inch flowers in clusters at the tips of the main stem and each side shoot from it. Each blue bloom is centered with white. The stems are 18 inches long and can be cut for indoor use if cut ends are plunged into water directly after they have been . ot severed. that is it looks good mixer" any other kind of flower. Seedlings transplanted from your seedbed or row can be set in groups in a border to fill in the areas where bulbs .bloomed earlier. Anchusa is a particularly well when grown alongside . |