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Show Page Eleven FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1970 THE SALT LAKE TIMES answer with the Clerk of the Miscellaneous Notices above entitled Court within 20 Powerplant Capacity days after service of this Sum- Now Exceeds mons upon you. If you fail so to SUMMONS do, judgment by default will be 1,000,000 Kilowatts aken against you for the relief Civil No. 34807 A full load test conducted by demanded in said Complaint In the City Court of Salt Lake which has been filed with the the Bureau of Reclamation this City, State of Utah of Court said and a copy week established that the Glen Clerk LARRY N. LONG, dba THE of annexed and Canyon hydroelectric hereto is which power-plaCOPY SERVICE, herewith served upon you. will produce 1,031,000 kiloPlaintiff, This is action divorce. an for watts at the present elevation of VS Dated of 17th this day July, Lake Powell. This capability is DAVID BUCHANAN, 1970. 81.000 kilowatts greater than the Defendant. RAY M. HARDING & The State of Utah to the Above nameplate or total rated capacity BOYD M. FULLMER of the eight generators. The Glen Named Defendant: Attorneys at Law s Boyd M. Fullmer Canyon powerplant is a unit of You are hereby summoned and the Colorado River Storage ProjAttorney for Plaintiff required to serve upon or mail 540 East Fifth South ect in northern Arizona. to Larry N. Long,, Plaintiffs at203 Suite of This year Lake Powell elevaat Utah torney, University Salt Lake City, Utah 84102 tion increased 20 feet over the Union 160 an answer in writcopy of this Summons has previous maximum level and is ing to the complaint and file a mailed to your last known now at been of answer said with the copy elevation 3601 feet above Clerk of the above entitled court address at 124 South 600 East, mean sea level. Present total within 20 days after service of Salt Lake City, Utah. 14,- in is 4 the reservoir storage this summons upon you. If you 257.000 acre-fee- t. According to fail so to do, judgment by default SUMMONS the Bureaus operation plans and will be taken against you for the Civil No. l relief demanded in said comwater assuming plaint which has been filed with In the District Court of Salt years, the Glen Canyon plant the Clerk of said court, and a Lake County, State of Utah capacity will hereafter equal or copy of which is hereto annexed MONA SUE ARTETA, 1,000,000 kilowatts. Buand herewith served upon you. Plaintiff, exceed officials reau stated that loading vs. If your address is unknown to on the Glen Canyon plant is beplaintiff or his attorney, and the MICHAEL ARTETA, Defendant. low the full plant capability, complaint is not attached to this summons, it will be filed within The State of Utah to the Above thereby providing a reserve powNamed Defendant: said 10 days with the clerk of er souce for the areas served by the above court, and you may You are hereby summoned and the Colorado River Storage Projthere obtain a copy. required to serve upon or mail ect. This is an action in contract. to William G. Shelton, plaintiffs Flaming Gorge and Blue Mesa, attorney, at 314 Atlas Building, Dated July 17, 1970. other two major hydroelecthe 84101 an Salt Lake City, Utah LARRY N. LONG comtric to the answer in writing powerplants of the Colorado Attorney for Plaintiff of said an a River Storage Project presently and file copy University of Utah Union plaint of Clerk above the swer with the in operation, also have full rated 160 20 court within entitled days with existing storage. 84112 Salt Lake City, Utah after service of this summons up- capability 7 Their is 127,000 and on you. If you fail so to do, judg- 70.000 capacity kilowatts, respectively. ment by default will be taken of The generation electric powSHERIFFS SALE against you for the relief de- er by the CRSP hydroelectric manded in said complaint, which GARNISHEE EXECUTION will help meet the of Clerk the been filed with has plants 193193 of which a said and demand for power. court, copy In the District Court of the Third is hereto annexed and herewith from Revenues the sale of this Judicial District in and for served upon you. now amounts to which the County of Salt Lake, State power, If your address is unknown to about $25 million of Utah. annually, will or his attorney, and the plaintiff HENRY G..BAGLEY, the storage units and not attached to this pay for Plaintiff, complaint is will be filed within help pay for the participating summons, it against 10 with the clerk of projects, thereby contributing to said days LAURA M. NICHOLD, NOR the above a steady industrial and agriculand court, MAN C. HALL AND AN there obtain a copy. you may tural growth in the Upper Basin. DROMEDA CORPORATION, to obtain a an action This is Defendants divorce. Be careful abou tswimming DAN E. WIXOM and SHARON Defendants Address: C. WIXOM, too soon after eating. A muscle Hotel Garnishees Hogar 126 So. First West cramps might result in your beTo be sold at Sheriffs Sale at Salt Lake City, Utah ing unable to swim and could the County Courthouse in the 1970. Dated 28, be your downfall. July City and County of Salt Lake SHELTON G. WILLIAM State of Utah, on August 11 Attorney for Plaintiff 1970, at 12 oclock noon of saic Nowadays it seems that people 314 Atlas Building make up the upper crust who day that certain piece or parce1 Salt Lake City, Utah of real property situate in Sal' ones who make the top are the (8-- 7 Lake County, State of Utah, dedough. scribed as follows, Commencing 231 feet N THE PUBLISHER THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED and S 65 43 W 204.23 feet from the S V Sec. 3, T 23, R 1 E, Salt Lake Meridian, S 65 43 W 50 feet; N 21 10 W 187 feet; N 65 43 E 106.07 feet; S 4 and 45 E 198.12 feet to the beginning, being part of Lots 31 and 32, Peony Gardens. Purchase price payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this 9th day of July, 1970. DELMAR L. LARSON, Sheriff of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. By Lt. Robert A. Stowe, Deputy Docket No. 37869 If Horace J. Knowlton give Attorney for Plaintiff Date of first publication July nt (7-2- 8-1- 4) D-17- 10 near-norma- 8-- 7) (7-1- ever-increasi- 8-2- 8) to-w- it: ng BLM Advisory Unit To Consider Lands The present and future of public lands in Utah administered by the U. S. Bureau of Land Management will be considered by the BLM Utah State Advisory Board August 10 and 11 in Cedar City. The board includes of representatives stockmen, mining, local government, recreation, wildlife, foestry and watershed, soil conservation, petroleum, and urban interests. Kenneth S. Summers of Monticello is chairman of the board and Robert D. Nielson, BLM state director for Utah, is Sessions will begin August 10 at 1:30 p.m. in the seminar room of the new library building on the Southern Utah State College campus. Topics will include fiscal year 1970 accomplishments and fiscal year 1971 plans of BLM in Utah, recent developments concerning oil shale lands, new national environmental policies as they may relate to lands, and reports from the Department of the Interiors National Advisory Board Council meeting July 27-3At a dinner meeting that evening the state advisory board will discuss the report of the Land Law Review Commission. Advisory board members on August 11 will visit some of the public lands of southwest Utah to learn of developments and impacts that are affecting BLM programs. They will be shown mining operations, reclamation deimproverange velopments, recreation uses, wildlife ments, projects, new townsite developments, and hikhway impacts. It is expected that the board will make recommendations to BLM administrators concerning the bureaus responsibilities, Mr. Nielson said. Members of the board are Paul S. Rattle, Glaron Nelson, Edward n W. Clyde, C. G. Player and K. Barton of Salt Lake City, F. C. Koziol of Bountiful, Glenn McKinnon of Randolph; George Buzianis of Tooele; J. Whitney Floyd of Logan; Thaine Taylor of ; Loa; Leland W. Petersen of J. W. Jordan of Heber City; Stanley McKnight of Minersville; J. E. Worthington of Fountain 30-mem- an. BLM-administer- ed 0. Al-de- 17, 197 (7-1- 7 8-- 7) SUMMONS Civil No. 1023 In the District Court of Salt Lake County, State of Utah GEORGIA BOLINGER WARFEL Plaintiff, vs. ROY W. WARFEL, Defendant. to the Above Utah of The State Named Defendant: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon or mail to plaintiffs attorney, Boyd M. Fullmer at 540 East Fifth South, Suite 203, Salt Lake City, Utah an answer in writing to the Complaint and file a copy of said (And also a few years.) The plain, unfiltered fact Is that people who smoke cigarettes get lung cancer a lot more frequently than non- -' smokers. And lung cancer can finish you. Before your time. We'd rather have you stay alive and in good health. Because even if you do gain a few pounds, you'll have the time to take them off. American Cancer Society Burton Introduced Marketing Bill Rep. Laurence J. Burton, today introduced legisla- R-Ut- ah, tion to market steel imports on a regional basis to set up equal and fair distribution of foreign steel imports. Earlier this year, in testimony before the House Ways and Means Committee, Burton had proposed such a bill as a means of lessening the impact of imported Japanese steel on the West Coast markets. The Utah Congressman called his proposal unique, but said the regional marketing approach would spread steel imports across the entire nation and avoid the existing condition where the coastal and intermountain states are forced to absorb the full economic impact of Japanese imports. Burton explained that imports from Japan showed an excess of nearly 21 percent in 1969 over the voluntary import quota negotiated in 1968. Simple geography enters into this picture very dramatically, he told colleagues in introducing his bill. The West Coast is the closest market to Japan and, consequently, the major portion of their imports are marketed in this area. I do not feel it is fair that one region suffer economically more than any other. Burton noted that the West Coast is also the biggest marketing area for steel produced at the Geneva plant of United States Steel, located near Provo. Hy-rum- BY up you Cigarettes, you might gain a few pounds. Green; Golden Porter of Morgan; Kumen S. Gardner and Ed-vi- n O. Larson of Cedar City; Carlyle Baker of Teasdale; Milo Jensen of Richfield; Kenneth S. Summers and Clem E. Washburn of Monticello; William W. Cunningham of Cisco; Lawrence Au-be- rt of Grand Junction, Colorado; Rex H. Mathis and Orson L. Marsing of Price; A. W. Dick-- : nson of Rock Springs, Wyoming; B. H. Stringham of Vernal; W. Rell Little of Kanab, M. V. Hatch of Panguitch; and Troy Miller of Brigham City. U NEVER FAILS The player piano was vented in September of 1876. Colorado. in- |