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Show PAGE TWO SUGAR HOUSE,UTAH THURSDAY AUGUST 6 1959 INDEPENDENT Legals To Mortgagor by Mortgagee in proceeding to foreclosure and sale. By virtue on a chattel mortgage executed by Aletha Foster and Faye Soli's dated the 14th day of Jan-uary 1959, and upon which de-fault has been made and upon which is due $181.98, we will ex-pose for sale at public auction on Aug. 6, 1959, at 1:00 o'clock, at 1063 E. 21st South, Salt Lake City, Utah, certain property men-tioned in said mortgage as follows, to wit: 1 Universal Zig Zag Sewing Machine. Budget Loan Co., Larry Buck, Mgr. 1063 East 21st South. Who Makes the Decisions? ? ? DEPARTMENT OF STREETS AND PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS ( Sanitary Division ) Information PortaJnlng to Collection of Garbage and Rtfuso: Your Day for Collection of Ashe, Cant, and NOTICE Waste Material 1st 1. Ashes and garbage, together with container, must not exceed 75 lbs. (Sec 811 Revised Ordinances 1944). Receptacles must be provided with a tight fitting lid with handles sufficiently-- strong so that workmen may handle them conveniently. 2. PASTEBOARD CARTONS AND PAPER BAGS are not to be used as containers. Pasteboard cartons or heavy cardboard must be broken down and securely tied in bundles and placed alongside of garbage receptacles. 3. Shrubs and twigs must be tied in small bundles. 4. Lawn grass (but not lawn sod) will be taken if placed in separate container. Fruit baskets are allowed for this. 5. Hot ashes will not be taken. 6. Building materials, rocks, dirt, lawn sod, manure, auto parts, etc, will not be taken. 7. Drums or barrels of any type are not permissible for use as containers. 8. During the months of June, July, August, and September, collections will start at 7:00 A.M. During the other months, collections will start at 7:30 A.M. 9. All receptacles shall be removed from the curb ' line, street or sidewalk as soon as practicable after they have been emptied. 10. When containers are worn out, they will be collected without notice. 11. ALL PAPERS MUST BE TIED IN BUNDLES. 12. Please be considerate and do not overload the cans so that the garbage might be spilled while the can is being lifted into truck. . 13. The City Dump is located at 6200 West on North Temple Street All garbage and trash not collected by the City must be hauled to the dump. Gty Dump is open 24 hours every day with an attendant on duty at all times. JOE L CHRISTENSEN, Commlstloner Dept. of StrMti and Public Improvements Let's Consider the Human Element It is gratifying to read the reports each week that are sent home by our Congressmen as to their activities. It is also a pleasure to read their speeches in the Congressional Record and thereby be able to follow their ideas on different subjects. The huge disappointment is that most of the accomplishments are in the area of obtaining more tax money for .local projects, protection of land rights for the state versus the Federal government and many other non-perso- nal results. All of this may be important, (except the expenditures of additional tax money), BUT wouldn't it be possible to worry about and do more for the human element. The Citizens. The Voter. Reading of the Congressional Record leads one to believe that there is an awareness by Congress that we, the people, are over-burdened with taxes, too much security, too much control, and too much fear of our own government. We read of attempts to save a billion here and a few million there but what is saved is spent some place else. We read of waste and we read of inefficiency. Nowhere do we read of action, of a positive nature, to give the public the relief which could so easily be obtained. Ten or twelve God-feari- ng statesmen with a sincere ideal before them could alter the situation in less time than it takes the hard pressed businessman to fill out his income tax forms. Since the time of the Declaration of Independence there has never been a more opportune time for a small group of Congressmen to become heroes of history. To stop this continual rise in taxes, stop this unnecessary hiring of more Federal employees which merely increases "red tape" and expense, stop the waste and duplication of expenses, stop this give-aw- ay of our money, stop this complete hindrance to the individual businessman and the ones who do this can write their own ticket for the future. T, N. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Sherman D. Hideout, also known as S. D. Rldeout, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the. undersigned at the office of W. Douglas Allen, 2121 South State Street, Salt Lake City, Utah on or before die 18th day of November, A. D. 1959. Date of first publication, July 16. A.D. 1959. Victor A. Rldeout and LaNoire Roberts, Co-Execu- of the Last Will and Testament of Sherman D. Rldeout, aka S. D. Rideout, de-ceased. W. Douglas Allen, It) VQQft. Attorney for Executors. Kremlin Butcher To Visit America MERLE RICHE And now comes the Kremlin Butcher to America! Do you remember how our a- - tomic scientists and traitors in Washington stole our nuclear se-crets and gave them to Commun-ists who built dead ly weapons to use against us? f j Do you remember the 11-bil-l- ion of your money and mine given to Soviet barbarians not one cent of which has been repaid - and which built their war machine aimed di-rectly at us? Do you remember our Treasury Traitors who gave American cur-rency printing plates to Moscow plotters the use of which sustained them while they plotted our over-throw? Do you remember Mac Arthur being told to withhold his fire at the Yalu River which permitted Reds to win over us and over the bodies of thousands of American soldiers? Do you remember treacherous World War II planning which tied Patton's hands while Communists took over Germany? (I was there.) Do you remember the drinking of toasts by our spineless interna-tional representatives at Geneva and the telegraphic congratulations from our Washington wizards to Bolshevik schemers on the anniv-ersary of their revolution? Surely you can remember our Supreme Court of the United States freeing practically every Commu-nist charged with plotting to over-throw this government? ' Do you remember the dispica'-bl- e act of recognition after every other respectable nation on the face of the earth had withheld such re-cognition? Surely you remember the visit of George Dewey Clyde to Russia on money put up by the Ford Foun-dationwhose plottings every should understand? And you must remember the brainwashed Yes that is 'going up from our Utah representatives in Washington and deal according-ly with them at the next election! South East Independent The South East Independent is entered as Second Class Matter, March 1, 1946, in Salt Lake City Post Office under the ct of March 3, 1879. It is published each Thurs -- lay morning. TOM NOTESTINE Owner and Publisher HU 5-8- 261 EMERSON S. SMITH Managing Editor DA 2-1- 881 Subscription rates are $3.00 per year or ten cents for the single copy. Send all mail to box 136, Sugar House Station, zone 6. FOR ONE DAY SERVICE I On All Your Made-To-Ord- er RUBBER STAMPS Call HU 43 QUALITY RUBBER STAMP SALES 5 Kensington Ay. S.L.C., Utah VDOWNTOWN Vov MLVEDItl WLrtfrdS-US-321- 0 1 17 Sadal Hal Ava. lJ7S. IMiTThU S4tt Va OARDfN PARK JA 12171 , . Vo.UNIVISITY ?m"r" UMS.UH1..HU5.M41 isIia,aMSii03s vw north mnch Vaw SOUTH TlMril SOUTHWUT 4 Ava. at R. St II tU27 471 LS. Hpa, It Itt W, 1M Vaaaa SOUTHEAST Vaawa SUOARHOUSI Mil HIqUomI DHv A I, llrtS, IN4-1I- J1 HU.WM1 I i Zcrno Great for Minor Durno, Cots Zemo, doctor's formula, liquid or ointment, soothes, helps heal minor burns, cuts, bruises. Family antiseptic eases itch of surface rashes, eczema, teen-- e r'mrfc, athlete's foot. Stops scratching, so ids faster healing. For stubborn cases, get Extra Strength Zirv. ISNT! Anybody who isn't in the public relations business isn't in business. Above is a copy of the rules regulating the collection of garbage by the City Streets Dept., Sanitary Division. This card was found laying in the one unemptied container on my front lawn this A. M. (Tues.) with a note on the back, "We can't haul garbage rrom your place of business. A call to the Streets Dept. resulted in talking to two parties, both of whom were very courteous and willing to come out at once and investigate the situation. However they admitted that any decisions would have to come out of, or did come out of, the Board of Health. Therefore it was decided that there really wasn't much use of their, coming out. A call to the Board of Health gave me an opportunity to talk to another courteous employee of the city but absolutely no one around with any authority to tell me what was what. It is true that while looking for a proper office in the Southeast area for this paper I am doina Political Elephantiasis Ever hear of "political ele-phantiasis"? That's the apt term that the president of one of.our electric utilities applies to the federal government's role in the realm of private business. He cites a recent Budget Bureau report showing that the government engages in some 20,000 com-mercial business enterprises --e- of which could be handled by a private, investor --owned business. An outstanding example is the electric industry. The government is up to its neck here, through TVA and other such agencies. Yet there is no needed power development that private enter-prise is unable or unwilling to undertake. As an example, the taxpaying utility companies have more than $35 billion invested in plant and equipment. This year they are increasing their construc-tion expenditures by more than 2.5 over 1957whereas industry as a whole has reduced it ex-pansion budget by 17.4. And the nation's investor-owne-d companies pay approximately 23 of their total revenue in taxes as com-pared with a mere2.47o for govern-ment --owned or financed projects. The great domestic problem of the time is how to stop in-flation, balance the budget, start reducing the debt and, as soon as possible, cut taxes. A huge-ste-would be taken in that direction if all government business opera-tions were, first, placed on a self-sustaini- ng, tax-payi- ng t isis and second, gradually sold at the best possible price to private enter-prise, to operate on the American instead of the socialistic plan. most of the typing in my basement. That undoubtedly could be inter-preted as being a place of busi-ness in some peoples minds. The equipment consists' of two elec-tric typewriters, a map table and a desk. Barely more than most business men keep at home, ex-cept for the extra typewriter, to do some of their work on. As far as the rest of the rules go, I and many others have been violating numbers, 1, 2, 3, 7, 9, and 11. What I want to know is who made the "decision as ' to the ' classifi-cation, and how the classification was made without any consulting with the property owners, and have conditions reached such a point that any city employee can make such a decision without any notice to the property owner and without normal human consideration. T. N. |