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Show V Industry generally, Holes of Interest from Neighboring by Leah James A birthday dinner Sunday t the Tony Pinarelli home honored Ionna. Guests included Yvonna James, Verla and Louis, and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pinarelli and fam- to economic expansion. There is increasing sentiment for enactment of the Herlong-BakW. DOUTI1AT JAMES by bill which, among other Industry will be vitally affect- things would lower nprsnn.il and ed by the decisions Congress corporation income taxes to a makes on a variety of maximum cf 47 per cent by a legislative proposals during the series of five annual reductions. session that started election-ye. s er "'u the second session,. January 6 also for legislation to industry cf the 86th Congress. fc.it: CUi O juvuuyuiy puwvi Serious threats are presented giant labor unions. The prolong-b- y a number of ed steel strike clearly demon-measurwhich would increase strated the need for some limita-th- e tion on union power to paralyze difficulties of operation or possibly and also of providing the jobs an entire industry and products essential for the na- - the entire nation, tion's economic growth. Pressure for congressional ac-- 1. Among these are proposals: t. o could, develop from any cnp-tnotice For requiring advance e srlkes hjch the government of intentions few months. i ed in the next . t How industry fares during the 2. For requiring advance notice to the government of intentions current session will depend on a to increase prices and justi- number of factors, including: 1. How at pubincreases effective a case it fying the price makes to Congress lic hearings. and to the 3. To destroy the present defor the legislation it public fense to price discrimination advocates and against the legisthat price reductions lation it opposes. Grass roots charges were made in good faith to meet support or opposition can be decisive. competition. 4. To permit the government to 2. The length of the congres seize records on mere suspicion sional session and how much time is consumed by the contro of antitrust law violation. versy over civil rights legislation There are additional threats in scheduled in the Senate for "on grandiose spending proposals; be- or about Feb. 15." ing ardently advocated by New Leaders hope for final adjournDealers despite the government's ment before the Democratic concurrent battle against "red ink" vention meets in Los Angeles on financing and the serious infla- July 11. But it is possible for tionary effect such legislation Congress to recess for the two would have. conventions (the Republicans Economy' advocates are countmeet in Chicago on July 25) and. ing on presidential vetoes to stop then reconvene for additional any of these measures which consideration of legislation. might receive congressional apThe 1959 session ended on Sepactual and tember 15. Ordinarily Congress proval. Vetoes threatened played a prominent adjourns much sooner. part in economy efforts in the 1959 session of Congress. Since I960 is an election year, BEATNIKS it would be surprising if a num"A North Carolina editor says ber of members of Congress did not seek to become more active about the only difference bein playing the role of Santa tween an ordinary bum and one beatniks is of those Claus to the voters back home that the ordinary bum is either at the taxpayers expense. Many members of Congress ashamed of his status or is inhope that government spending different. The beatnik, on the will be curbed in order to in other hand, is proud of his low crease the chances for tax re spot on the totem pole of human duction. society." tfo Comment) er Carole JTielson enjoyed her 6th birthday on Thursday with a party given by her mother, Mrs. Jim Nielson. Little guests who joined the gay affair were Lori Christensen, Kala Kabonic, Larry ily. Wand aMelo recently visited in Goodrich, Corey Bell, Edna Arizona with her brother, Earl Jones, Jamie James and Debbie Gentry. Rowley. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pinarelli and daughter, Deannna, were Salt Lake City visitors Saturday. Of The MIA extended their thanks to all who donated or helped in To Be any way toward the banquet held Saturday night. All proceeds went On KSL to the Building Fund. Weather conditions "and the Russell Williams has been hosmoisture situation so imporat the Holy Cross Hospitalized tant to farmers and ranchers in Lake City. Salt pital in the Intermountain Area, The Annual Spring Glen Ward be featured during Janu. will ary on THIS BUSINESS OF Party will be held Saturday, FARMING. January 16, at the school house. On Monday, January 11, at Dinner will be served from 6 to 12:15 p.m., the wintertime 7 p.m. After which moving picmonthly snow survey will be tures of the construction of the discussed with hydrologists of the Utah Soil Conservation chapel thus far will be shown. Service. Also interesting films of the SaThe 1960 outlook for dairy moa Islands will be shown by prices in Utah and the nation, Mr. Bieglow, the chapel enginand methods of eliminating eer. Everyone 15 and over are e squeeze on all agriculture will be presented on invited to attend. Tuesday, January 19 at 6:45 Friends of George Fullerton a.m. were glad to hear that he is reFriday, January 22, at 12:15 p.m., the program will deal after being rushcovering with prevention and care of ed to the nicely on Monday in hospital concrete construction to avoid serious condition. freezing and cracking. Mr. and Mrs. Howard GoodVarious tax changes which rich were host and hostess to go into effect in 1960 that concern rural and urban resithe Mutual Young Married Class dents, with emphasis on agriSunday evening. Seven couples will be discussed with culture, attended and special guest, Mrs. State " Tax Commission offiDean (Nielsen, of Kenilworth. Recials on Friday, January . 29, at 12:15 p.m. freshments were served to the Saturday, January 30, at group. 6:45 a.m., valuable informaKerry Blackham, small son of tion dealing with wintertime Mr. and Mrs. Fred Blackham, storage of potatoes and other was hospitalized several days last vegetables will be presented week after he had a serious fall by Dr. Alvin Hamson,- - horticulturist. at the home of his grandmother. THIS BUSINESS OF Mr. and Mrs. Dulan Rasmus-se- n FARMING, heard over KSL and son visited in Provo reRADIO, is brought to vou Monday, Wednesday and Fricently with Dulan's mother, who is in the hospital there. day at 12:15 p.m. and Tuesday, Thursday and Saturdav The young members of the at 6:45 a.m. by the UTAH ward enjoyed Fireside meeting DIVISION OF KENNECOTT COPPER CORPORATION. Sunday evening at the home of Bishop and Mrs. Jim Nielson. Winter Storage Vegetables Featured cost-pric- . ELK SURVEY - far-flu- ng ar anti-busine- ss j so-call-ed Department of fish and game biologists and pilots are now taking the annual winter aerial of Utah's elk herds survey-censfollowing recent snowstorms in mountain ranges the various where these animals make their winter homes. Spokesmen said a general heavy snow cover is necessary in mak ing any accurate count oi tne animals, with these winter aerial surveys providing key information which, along with spring range studies and harvest data, will be used by the Board of Big Game Control in setting the elk seasons for I960. us Whin your ikin worr'm yow, whtfi y rw4 rtlitf from harshn. nd other rritttiom try mtdicattd lotion. HT Itching, OtADI twftbvrn ttw lfi-ll- y LOTION COPPER PRODUCTION Since operations started at open Kennecatfs world-fame- d pit copper mine in Bingham Can yen, Utah, more than pounds of copper have been produced. This is enough copper to encircle the cartn at the equator with a solid band, one inch thick and more than two feet wide. toiy to ooply liquid form, ptno tretoi dep, givoi Instant fttitf to chopped, sun or wind burned stein, dry, crecked other skin hands or feet, s A trrttotions, N ttimutcfoi your sklo to now vitality. Relexos the dry ond brittle feeling Comes in nry Immediately. mi inn i 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 1- es 1 .' ., ' I .... " ' u ' " k" 'J S j V "'N& i : i . r : ) v Or maybe it's just the world that looks that way . . the world that forjrts that polio is still a terrifying cripplcr. Tommy Davey was stricken with paralytic polio when he was 14 months old. That was over four years ago. Arms, legs, chest muscles, all paralyzed. His earliest memory is the iron lung and the world seen through a mirror. . FOR ' ANY TIME! BATES LIST FINDER r What he sees is the white, hushed, institutional world of the hospital. But here he seems to be looking at at all of us. He seems to be reminding us you at me that polio is a costly cripplcr still. 1 Tommy is one of 50,000 polio patients receiving March of Dimes aid. Your help in the past literally kept him alive. Your help also enabled scientists to develop weapons against polio, like the Salk vaccine and advanced rehabilitation techniques. Use for Phone Numbers Your contribution to the NEW March of Dimes in and SETTLEMENT OF THE STEEL STRIKE People, Spots In The News that the steel strike would be settled before the expiration of the eighty day injunction period. The basis of this assumption was that both economic and psychological factors would lead the companies end union management to reach an agreement. None the less announcement of the settlement came as a major surprise. It was a surprise because the final hearings of the presidential fact finding board were as harsh as such a meeting could be. The union president, David McDonald, was extremely caustic in his com ments about management, claiming that the companies were trying to break up the union. The chief of the company negotiators, R. Conrad Cooper, also was caustic, insisting the union was making inflationary demands. Even the chairman of the committee saw no possibility of working out an agreement because it was evident that, judging by these hearings, union and management were not only as far apart as ever, It has been assumed h wind WINDJAMMERS, leaning into on carrier "Essex" in Mediterranean, these U.S. sailors appear to defy gravity. . mination of the injunction and presumably another walk out by the workers. At that point the Administration and the Congress would be expected to step in with some kind of a forced settlement, and perhaps new permanent legislation designed to meet the problem of industry wide strikes. What the general public did not know was that some weeks ago Vice President Nixon started a series of private meetings with both the union spokesmen and management, trying to resolve their differences. Along with him was Secretary of Labor Mitchell. The final session was held here in 'Washington and lasted twenty-two hours. This was followed immediately by a press conference announcing the settlement. The terms of the agreement go substantially beyond anything had offered premanagement viously. Over the thirty-mon- th period the cost will amount to an estimated forty-ceincrease per hour. In the aggregate the cost will amount to over one billion dollars, according to Roger M.. Blough, chairman of U. S. Steel. Some of the steel companies probably can absorb this rise in the cost of production, but others can not. Before too long we shall see higher steel prices. That will lift the cost of production of all steel using companies, and many of them will be forced to raise prices. The only offset to this is ' the fact that we shall have peace in the steel industry. That the public has paid, and will pay, an enormous price for this peace goes without saying. Even more dismal is the thought that there is no basis for concluding that the same thing will not be repeated again and again and again just as it has been over the past many years. CLAMP DOWN "About a half a century ago, it was necessary for the government to put clamps upon arrogant heads of business. It has now come to pass where public sentiment is reaching the conclusion that the same sort of clamps will have to be applied to labor bosses who practice tactics." ed i ft lt' lastE? refreshing coach George Robertson, wwtow p 1 Smith r ONLY Priced from S2.00 In Three Finishes OAK - BIRCII - WALNUT Responsible For High Utah Record ,4t M I LaSalle Ilotcl Bldg. ' Z0 E II05IE - s - 4 Distributed by HELPER ' 10,-C- $39.95 up Ilelper, Utah ' LADIES' MAJOR LEAGUE Salt Lake County and a high fatal High Team (Single Game) incidence of multiple-deat- h traffic accidents were mainly reKaiser Coal, 977. ' traf204 of total for the sponsible High Individual (Single Game) fic deaths in 1959, compared Barbara Tomsk, 177, Frank's with 193 deaths in 1958, the Glass Shop. Utah Safety Council stated today. Dorothy Miller, 177, Miner's Thirty four persons were killed Trading Post. in Salt Lake County (exclusive High Team (Three Games) of Salt Lake City, Murray, and Frank's Glass Shop, 2796. South S.alt Lake) in 1959, com- High Individual (Three Games) Vivian Seitz, 482, Miner's Tradpared with 19 deaths in 1958, a increase from the previous ing Post. 79 year. TEAM STANDINGS accidents in 1959 Multiple-fat- al L W 23Vi 36M: took 57 lives in 23 such type Frank's Glass Shop 26 mishaps, compared with 42 lives Miner's Trading Post 34 lost in '18 similar type accidents Kaiser Steel 30 30 in 1958. !9'4 40H Kaiser Coal Separate accidents in San Juan and Weber counties respectively each took 4 lives. Seven other accidents around the state also ERN'S RADIO & each took 3 lives. Combined they T-- V accounted for 29 deaths in 9 REPAIRS accidents. All but one of these accidents involved collisions with Work Guaranteed other cars, the other occurcd 165 Roosevelt St. Ilelper from running off the road. Dial GR 'Fatal traffic accidents, as such, decreased in 1959 from the previous year, with a total of 170 in 1959 and 173 in 1958. Seven cities in the 5,000 to PROFESSIONALS population group were fatin 1959 (Brigham, ality-free City, Price, Bountiful, Cedar TIIORIT HATCH Tooele, Orem and Springville). LAWYER Four counties (Morgan, Piute, Ric.' and Wayne) were also free 155 So. Main Phone Gil of Uaffic deaths in 1959. Helper, Utah Utah's 1959 traffic toll also included approximately 6,000 persons injured, and an estimated M I T C II LL economic loss of $30,000,000. The Council's complete sum. . FUNERAL mary and analysis of 1959 acciDick Mitchell dents now nearing completion, Embalmer & Funeral Director will be printed and distributed in the near future, preliminary Price Phone MS findings of the causes of the mis- - Sec, Hear and Play the Musical Phenomena AT JOUnilAL OFFICE " mum Multiple-Death- s PHONOGRAPHS CARL'S RECORD SIIOP - introduced at U. of Texas SOUTHERN HOSPITAL-ITMedical School's hospital in Galveston is "mobilteria." a rolling combination steam table and refrigerator, keeping hot foods hot and cold ones cold while rolling from, floor to floor serving up to 100 patients. COMPLETE LINE OF HI-- FI 9 .."V time-savin- AND U BIG THREE of famed U. of Cincinnati Bearcats: Ralph Davis and Oscar A "Must" STERO-PHON- IC aj I "Vjp Dial Phones t Iff e n n. l t HI A which originated spots 30 years ago, is receiver no larger than ciggte pack. V U Tommy your help can make the world right side up again. g for with the new A Bulova. f AJ time r would be accepted by the workers. There was no hope on this because the record shows that the union always makes this a vote of confidence in the union leaders, not on the terms of settlement offered by management. In these circumstances it is almost inevitable that the final offer be refused. The next step would be ter- high-hand- V t hi v . but were taking a harder position on their stands. It appeared certain, therefore, that the next step would be to have a vote by the employees on the last offer of management. But there was no hope that this 1960 offers new hope to polio victims. For sufferers like Addresses of Friends and Businesses PAGE SEVER THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, I960 ed - JOURNAL ' (Utah) Bi Ralph Robey nt TOMMY'S WORLD IS ALL UPSIDE DOWN... HELPER The NATIONAL OUTLOOK strongly advocates tax reform in order to remove the road blocks InilUtl SPRING GLEN and the public as reflected in polls MERCANTILE, Helper, Utah. |