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Show Page Ten THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1971 plat of land in Salt Lake Under and by virtue of the proCounty, Utah, which lot is visions of Chapter 1 of Title 38, particularly described as Jtah Code Annotated (1953), Miscellaneous Notices Consult clerk of the District Court or the respective signers for further information. Probate Notices relating to Mechanics Liens, are lereby notified to be and appear before the Honorable Stewart II. Hanson, one of the judges of he above entitled Court, in District Courtroom No. 4, Courts luilding, 240 East Fourth South, Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 4th day of October, 1971, at 9:30 oclock a.m. to then and there exhibit proof of their liens. All liens not so exhibited shall be deemed waived against said property. follows: Consult clerk of the District U. S. Labor Department Court or the respective signers hasThe reported that 4,307 workers for further information. in 375 Utah establishments were Beginning at a point which is East 10 rods along the section line and South 89 59' 36" East 33.55 feet and South 46 56' 30" East NOTICE TO LIEN CLAIMANTS 369.85 feet and South 81 TO APPEAR AND EXHIBIT 23' 30" East 132.89 feet PROOF OF THEIR CLAIMS and North 67 35' 30" East . Civil No. 196575 42.00 feet and South 10 In the District Court of Salt Lake 10' 18" East 272.00 feet from the Northwest comer County, State of Utah H. J. BOETTCHER, BOETof Section 23, Township 2 TCHER & SONS, South, Range 1 East, Salt VAN COTT, BAGLEY, CORNLake Base and Meridian WALL & McCarthy Plaintiff, VS. and running thence North Robert D. Merrill RICHARD P. MAKOFF aka 89 45' 30" West 214.69 Attorney for Defendant Earl RICHARD MAKOFF, COLfeet to the center line of W. England, England LEEN M. MAKOFF, SIDNEY Van Cott Road; thence Electric GIBBS MAKOFF, DANIEL 10-along the center line of 7 L. BERMAN, MAKOFF PROFsaid road Southeasterly IT SHARING PLAN, WAL46.44 feet along the arc of OF TRUSTEES SALE TER E. BURTON PAINTING a 144.85 feet radius curve NOTICE The described propfollowing to the right whose radius COMPANY, EARL W. ENGbe sold will at public aucerty LAND ENGLAND bears South 71 52' 18" tion to the bidder at the ELECTRIC. COFFALL TILE West; thence South 00 14' Salt Lake highest Courthouse, & SUPPLY & ALPINE 30" West 95.00 feet along Salt Lake County City, Utah, on WedBUILDING SUPPLY AND the center line of said October 20, 1971, at the LOOSER CONSTRUCTION, road; thence along the nesday, noon of of hour 12:00 oclock Defendants. center line of said road said day: TO ALL PERSONS HOLDING Southwesterly 89.19 feet Lots 56 and 57, EL REY MECHANICS LIENS UPON along the arc of a 759.58 PARK, according to the ofDEfeet radius curve to the THE HEREINAFTER ficial plat filed in Book J bears SCRIBED REAL PROPERTY right whose radius Plats of at page 83, records North 89 45' 30" West: SITUATED IN SALT LAKE of Lake Salt County, Utah. thence South 89 45' 30" COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH: therefrom the EXCEPTING East 254.74 fe.et; thence All persons holding or claimCOMMENCING following: meandering Northwesterly ing liens upon the following deat the southeasterly corner of line center scribed real property situated in along the of Lot 54, said EL REY Salt Lake County, State of Utah, Big Cottonwood Creek to PARK and running thence a point which bears North to wit: 41 29' 40" East 46.6 North 10 10' 18" West 233.48 A tract of land known as thence feet; Southwesterly feet to the point of Lot No. 3 of VAN COTT 46.6 feet, more or less, to a ' ADDITION, an unrecorded point South 89 49' 10" East 5 feet 6 inches from the point of commencement; thence North 89 49' 10" BAKE A SPIRITED COBBLER West 5 feet 6 inches to the point of COMMENCEMENT. Purchase price payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated: September 22, 1971. ZIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Trustee By Milo Paskett Commercial Loan Officer d-b- -a NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of WALTER NICHOLAS HARLAND, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 340 East Fourth South, Sail Lake City, Utah 84111 on or before the 20th day of December, A.D. 1971; claims must be presented in accordance with the Utah Code provisions of with and Annotated 1953, proper verification as required therein. 75-9-- 5, d-b- -a (9-1- d-b- 1) RICHARD DEAN HARLAND. Administrator of the Estate of Walter Nicholas Harland, Deceased. -a . Date of first publication September 17th, A.D. 1971. Ralph L. Jerman, Attorney Roe, Fowler, Jerman & Dart 340 East Fourth South. Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 (9-1- 7 paid $996,977.00 less than they should have been under the Fair Labor Standards Act in the fiscal year that ended June 30. Wage Hour Compliance Officers of the Departments Employment Standards Administration found that 2,209 workers failed to receive $339,529 due them in premium pay for overtime, at the statutory rate of time and a half for hours worked after 40 hours per work week. Failure to receive the legal minimum wage, now $1.60 an hour, cost $1,943 workers $264,-75Some were shorted in both 1. categories. Violation of the Equal Pay Act which bars discrimination on account of sex, cost 747 workers $381,876, 10-- 8) the report shows. WARTS DISSOLVE AWAY! Warts are caused by viruses. Removed by amazing Compound W! Compound W contains two medicines widely used by . doctors iri treating virus-cause- d warts. A few colorless drops of Compound W, used as directed, can dis- solve away warts in just days. No cutting.no burning, no pain. Remember: warts are caused by viruses moved by pound W. 10-- 8) fast-actin- g Compliance officers found 109 minors illegally employed, in violation of the child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. Donald Drew, area director of the Wage Hour Division in Salt Lake City, said no figures are available on amounts actually recovered by employees. He explained that many employers voluntarily pay the back wages found due and that the Act provides several types of court action in cases where they refuse to do so. re- Com- If its printing... dial 361-846- HOW TO BEAT THOSE RISING PRICES Each month, the Government tells us how much more it is costing us to live. . It does this by announcing changes in the Consumer Pr.lce Index. Commonly inknown as the dex, this is a measure of prices of almost everything people buy, in all parts of the country. It includes food, clothing, automobiles, homes, house furnishings, household supplies, fuel, drugs, recreational and sporting items, fees to doctors and lawyers, rent, repairs, transportation, and the cost of gas, water, and electricity. The index is an average of the price changes in all these areas, including prices that go down as well as those that go up. However, as every housewife knows, prices have been going up much more than down. The index shows, for instance, that last year the typical American family was worse off at the end of the year than at the beginning. For the first time in' nine years, the overall increase in prices was greater than increase in the average family's income. For many American families, this could be another year in which they end up worse off. The index has .been rising at a rate nearly as rapid as last year. But this official index doesnt tell the whole story. While it shows that costs have risen 33 percent over the past ten years, many important areas of excost-of-livin- no bottom crust dough is used as a top crust for fragrant fruits baked in a deep pie dish. Whats more, cobblers can have extra spirit in the filling! Serve a cobbler made with plentiful fresh fruits as a hot dessert to round out your menu. You can make cobblers all winter, with dried and canned and frozen fruits. Any canned fruit pie filling can make a spirited cobbler; heat the mixture to bring out its full flavor, and add rum, Bourbon, rye, or any liquor to your taste, to intensify the fruitiness and tone down sweetness. You can make a compote cobbler, with dried fruits heady with Bourbon, and top it with a ring of flaky refrigerator biscuits. Or cook hard winter pears in a spicy syrup that sparkles with gin, and cover the fruit in a rolls casserole with a rich, pastry-lik- e topping of butter-flak- e from a refrigerator pack. For a quickly made, welcome variation of your favorite apple pie, omit the bottom crust, flavor the fruit with rum, and top with biscuit-midough, enriched with cream and brightened with more rum. When the crust is browned, cut it down into the fruit and bake again a delicious new version of the famous Pennsylvania Dutch specialty, Apple Pan Dowdy. Whichever you choose to serve, youre bound to inspire an appreciative chorus of She can bake a cobbler pie in the twinkling of an eye from every Billy Boy in your household! Prune and Apricot Cobbler 1 cup sugar 1 pound dried apricots 1 pound dried prunes 14 teaspoon nutmeg 12 cup Bourbon teaspoons corn starch 1 package refrigerator biscuits 2 cups boiling water Soak prunes and apricots overnight in 12 cup Bourbon and boiling water. Simmer fruit for 20 minutes, drain and reserve the liquid. Pit the prunes and arrange apricots in a buttered quart casserole. Add sugar and nutmeg to reserved liquid and boil it rapidly to reduce it to 1 cup. Dissolve com 6tarch in a little water, add to liquid, and pour over fruit in casserole. Arrange an overlapping ring of refrigerator b Leu its on the fruit, brush with milk, and sprinkle with sugar and nutmeg. Bake in a hot oven (400F.)for 20 to 25 minutes, until topping is golden. Serve with heavy cream or whipped cream, if desired. Makes G servings. Cobblers are even easier than pie required, and an easy mix or ready-to-bak- e - -- deep-flavore- x -- 1-1- 1-1- 2 2 d g the-overa- cost-of-livin- g pense for middle-incom- Dis- crimination on account of age, also prohibited by the federal statutes, cost two workers $10,-821. . (9-2- 4 Workers Nicked for $996,977 Under Wage-Hou- r Law e families have risen twice or three times as fast. And these are often cpstly items that consumers must save for a long time to purchase. Looking at costs in one typical urban area, it was found that college tuition was 110 percent to 156 percent higher than ten years ago. The cost of medical insurance for employees increased 147 percent in the same period. A three: bedroom home in the suburbs costs nearly 45 percent more than ten years ago, while taxes on that house were up 114 percent. Much higher increases also were found in the cost of major events in a familys life, such as weddings, childbirth points out, for example, that money put into a mutual fund in 1961 would have grown an average of 100 percent by 1970. Money put in savings deposits in commercial banks or in Government savings bonds would have increased 46- percent over the same ten years. Money left in a savings and loan account would have increased 54 percent. An investment in blue-chistocks on the New York Stock Exchange, as measured by the Dow Jones Industrial Average, would have increased 92 percent, less brokerage commissions. - But the most practical way of investing for protection illness and death. Despite the extra burden that these increases put on the family budget, surprisingly few people make special preparations to protect themselves against higher costs in the years ahead. Many people, too, indicate little knowledge .of the impact these' increased costs are likely to have on them. Many of the more substan- against rising costs for many American families, explains the Institute, probably is a mutual fund, which spreads the shareholders investment over many different stocks and also provides many convenient services. There are different mutual funds for different investment aims, and investment programs can be started with as little as $25. Today, some six million Americans have a total of more than $50 billion invested in mutual funds. But studies show that many millions of others who might wish to invest still know little about mutual funds and how or where they can be bought. Free information can be obtained without obligation from the Investment Company Institute, 1775 K tial items of expenditure for families can be foreseen and the impact can be cushioned if proper Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006. preparations are made. The Investment Company After deduction of all costs Institute, national association and with all distributions of the mutual fund industry. reinvested. middle-incom- e 4 |