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Show FRIDAY, DECEMBER Page Ten Miscellaneous Notices Consult clerk of the District Court or the respective signers for further information. SUMMONS Civil No. D 5850 In the District Court of Salt Lake County. State of Utah LINDA SAN MIGUEL, Plaintiff, VS Defendant The State of Utah to the Above Named Defendant: You are hereby summoned and required to file an answer in writing to the attached complaint with the Clerk of the above entitled Court, and to serve upon, or ma:l to William G. Shelton, Plaintiffs attorney 314 Atlas Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, a copy of said an swer, within 20 days after serv-icof this summons upon you If you fail so to do, judgmen by default will be taken agains' you for the relief demanded in said complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court and a. copy of which is hereto annexed and herewith served upon you. This is an action for divorce. Defendants Address: General Delivery Campwood, Texas Dated this 20th day of Deceme 1971 WILLIAM G. SHELTON lpon you. Dated this 20th day of Decem-be- r 1971 BERNARD M. TANNER Attorney for Plaintiff (12-2- 4 SHERIFFS SALE 10-22-- DISTRICT COURT Judicial District in and for A concerning the the County of Salt Lake, State above proceeding named child is pending of Utah. of real property situate in Salt de- nt y, e BE-GINNIN- G. (12-2- 4 12-3- 1) SUMMONS NOTICE OF SALE Civil No. You arc hereby notified that of Salt the following automobile: In the District Court 1971 Mercury Tudor, of Utah Lake County, State HENILIETA JULIANA Serial 1K31F521615 will be sold at public sale at HUMPHREY, Plaintiff, 11:00 A.M. on the 3rd day of vs. January, 1972 at the offices of WILLIAM QUENTEN Recovery Bureau, 0 West 4th South Street, Salt HUMPHREY, Defendant. me City, Utah. The State of Utah to the Above The proceeds of the sale will D-37- 49 Enrollment is now open for the Respiratory Disease (RD) Self Care Class, in January, it was announced by the Christmas Seal Association. The next five session course will begin on Jan. 17 for inter-ese- d persons who have emphysema, bronchitis, asthma or other chronic pulmonary disease. The January class will mark the beginning of the third year of the RD patient education service. It is sponsored by the and Respiratory Disease Association of Utah, Utah Thoracic Society and the LDS Tu-besrcul- Sani-Flus- h out germs. wipes Sani-Flus- h Toilet Bowl Cleaner wipes out com' mon household germs Hospital. For further information about the classes or to obtain physician in IS seconds. referral and registration forms, write the TB-RAssociation of Utah at 1616 South 11th East or call D Disinfects as it deans. 484-445- 6. Plaintiff, vs. CONRAD F. WALTON, Defendant. ' at To be sold Sheriffs Sale at in the Courthouse (he County of Salt and Lake, County City State of Utah, on January 11. 1972, at 12 oclock noon of said day that certain piece or parcel 1) 21) Respiratory Clpss Opens in January CARTE BLANCHE, CORP., De-smb- er 1-- 71) EXECUTION NO. 200171 n the District Court of the Third father. to-w- it: (12-3- 1 In the District Juvenile Court for Salt Lake County, State of Utah, Before Hon. John Farr Larson, Judge STATE OF UTAH, in the interest of BABY GIRL SISNEROS (DOB A person under eighteen years of age. TO: CHARLES SISNEROS, 4) to-w- it: feet-thenc- 1) 1) Attorney for Plaintiff Lake County, State of Utah, 314 Atlas Building Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 scribed as follows, Beginning at a point 1664.15 (12-3- 1 ft. South and 1281.82 ft West of the Northeast corSHERIFFS SALE ner of the Southeast quarter DISTRICT COURT of Section 8, Township 2 EXECUTION South, Range 1 East, Salt CIVIL NO. 170213 Lake Base and Meridian, In the District Court of the Third and running thence South Judicial District in and for 28 03' West 19.60 ft; thence the County of Salt Lake, State North 88 47' West 74.13 ft: of Utah. thence North 17 32' East FIRST SECURITY BANK OF 106.35 ft; thence North 2 a UTAH, N.A., 50' East 39.25 ft; thence corporation, Plaintiff North 17 55' East 27.40 ft; VS thence East 121.33 ft. to VRONTIKIS BROS., INC., et al point of beginning. Defendants. Purchase price payable in lawTo be sold at Sheriffs Sale a' ful money of the United States. the County Courthouse in the Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, City and County of Salt Lake this 13th day of December. 1971. State of Utah, on January 25 DELMAR L. LARSON. Sheriff 1972, at 12 oclock noon of said of Salt Lake County, State of day that certain piece or parce Utah. of real property situate in Sal' By Sgt. Michael D. Wilkinson Lake County, State of Utah, de Deputy scribed as follows, Docket No. 52730 PARCEL A: All of Lots 2 .nthony M. Thurber 3 and 4, Block 2. STATJ ttorney for Plaintiff STREET ADDITION, ac Date of first publication cording to the official pla 17, 1971. 1 7 71 f1 thereof. PARCEL B: All of Lots 18 19 and 20, Block 2. STATx NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT STREET ADDITION, ac Delinquent irrigation assess-necording to the official pla'1 on Brown and Sanford Ir thereof. Company Books. PARCEL C: BEGINNING rigation will be sold at the home at a point 33 feet West fron if Stock Amos B. Mosher, 2124 East the Northeast Corner of Lo' 7000 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 20, Block 6, Five Acre Pla' xt the hour of 10 A.M. on Mon-iaField Survey, anc A, Big thence January 3, 1972 to pay deSoulh 49.f linquent assessments thereon, torunning 165 West thence feet; with cost of advertising South 85.5 feet: gether md expense of sale. thence West 50 feet; thence Amount Due ame North 135 feet; thence Eas William L. Allen $ 3.00 215 feet to the point of 3.00 Edgar Allen 3.00 J. M. Purchase price payable in law- Heber Gallegos 3.00 Geisler 6.00 ful money of the United States W. W. Johnson Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah Marvin Jones 34.25 this 24th day of December. 1971 Fred Jordan 3.00 DELMAR L. LARSON, Sheriff El wood Knobel 11.75 of Salt Lake County, State of John Lounis 5.50 Utah. 3.00 Robert McCarthy 1.75 By Lt. Robert A. Stowe, Deputy Louis E. Martineau Docket No. 52978 Devon C. Oliver 3.00 3.00 Ray, Quinney & Nebekcr Gary Thurgood for Plaintiff 3.00 Attorneys Martin Vigil Date of first publication De- Lyla H. Clark 3.00 cember 31, 1971. AMOS B. MOSHER. Secretary 1-2- THE SALT LAKE TIMES 1971 be applied first to the payment in the above named Court and Named Defendant: You are hereby summoned and of the costs of retaking, storing an adjudication will be made required to file an answer in and sale of the said automobile which may include the permawriting to the attached complaint and cost of publication of notice nent termination of all your parwith the Clerk of the above en- of sale and then to the satisfac- ental rights. titled Court, and to serve upon, tion of the balance due under the You are hereby Summoned to or mail to Bernard M. Tanner, contract covering the financing appear before this court in said Plaintiffs attorney, 2900 South of said motor vehicle. Surplus county on the 9th day of FebState Street, Suite 204, Salt Lake will be paid to you and you will ruary, 1972 at 9:00 A.M. oclock City, Utah, a copy of said answer, be liable for any balance remain- in the Court Room of this Court within 20 days after service of ing unpaid under said contract. this summons upon you. GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES located at 3522 South 6th West, Salt Lake City, Utah. If you fail so to do, judgment CORPORATION G. be will taken E. default Dated this 29th day of Decemby CORSON, Manager against (12-1- 0 you for the relief demanded in 1971. ber, said complaint, which has been NETTIE M. MARTIN iled with the Clerk of said Court SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION Deputy Clerk and a copy of which is hereto (12-3- 1 229566 Case No. annexed and herewith served 12-3- JOHNNY SAN MIGUEL, ber 31, March of Dimes Urges Rubella Vaccination of Preschoolers by Arthur J. Salisbury, II.D. Director of Medical Services The National of Dimes had known" is a I Foundation-Marc- h "If only phrase many a young mother murmurs when she learns that her babys birth defects me caused by rubella (German measles) a disease she caught in the early months of her pregnancy and may not have been aware of it The National Foundation-Marc- h of Dimes, whose goal is the prevention of birth defects, has launched education programs to increase public and professional understanding of the urgent need for mass vaccination of children against German measles. In the near future there will simply be no excuse far not having all children from ages 1 to 12 vaccinated either at school clinics, public health departments or by ones own doctor. The vaccination should be as automatic as immunization against smallpox, diphtheria, measles and polio. Some parents, unfortunately, think that a vaccination against regular measles also protects against rubella. It does not because German measles and regular measles are two distinct diseases. In the epidemic of German measles in 1964-6some babies 60,000 throughout the country were handicapped or 5, destroyed. This figure includes about 30,000 fetal deaths and 20,000 live-bobabies who were bom with blindness, deafness, heart defects and mental retardation. But if the rubella vaccine is given the widest possible use, this source of congenital damm age can be eradicated. Public Concern Vital Small children, between kindergarten and second grade, are the most likely carriers of the disease. They can transmit it easily to their mothers or the mothers of their friends. If these children are immunized against rubella, they will not be able to pass it on to women of childbearing age. The moat inaccessible part Rubulla vaccination of proschoolori Is an ossontlal part of tha campaign to ollmlnato birth dofocts causod by Gorman moaslos. Tha March f Dlmos sponsors educational efforts to make tha public aware of this Mid. of the population which must be vaccinated against rubella is also highly vulnerable-presch- ool children. Others not yet vaccinated include children in many school-ag- e rural areas and in ghettos. The effectiveness of the vaccine is suggested by the number of reported cases of rubella in the first six months of 1971. It is 25 per cent less than in the same period in 1970. Instead of this decrease, an increase had been exin- pected. This preliminary dication of vaccine effectiveness provides hope that the vaccine can head off or blunt the next epidemic which could come as early as 1972. We would like to be able to say "when and if, but it is too early to justify such optimism. Rubella cannot be totally wiped out unless the transmission of rubella. Hard to Reach In the first two years of availability of the vaccine, more than 22 million doses of rubella vaccine have been administered in public programs. This represents 48 per cent of the target population which numbers 47 million children aged 1 through 12. It is estimated that an additional 4 million doses have been given by private physicians. Thus, approximately 55 per cent of the target population has been vaccinated a signal achievement but far less than the level required to wipe out the disease. There is a great need for public awareness about the life-savin- g benefits of the rubella vaccine, and for public action. Tb encourage max- preschoolers imum use of the vaccine, and others missed so far are March of Dimes chapters are vaccinated. Ultimately we working closely on educahope to achieve what is railed tional projects with local herd immunity, which health departments and medmeans that the number of sus- ical societies and are assisting ceptible persons is reduced in many ways to organize and below the level necessary for conduct vaccination dinicsi hard-to-reac- h |