OCR Text |
Show ' ' THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH '. FINNEY OF THE FORCE H&22. What Those Welsh Rarebits Won't Do! --r 1NNEY 16 STILL DREAMING ABOUT HIS TWO GAG-W6- I j ItfllFllttilll'ft'llIllliliN ' l I . I WiS V?Yl Xr Qtm AnmmA Y ' 1 THE FEATHERHEADS ..iL, A Good Time to Gear Out &iCdt 9Sn US DOWM.FELIX!!- - lbST CUt LESS A)6 HAVE. JUST R&AD U d. MS F00ttt- - ( FEDDEGHAlD -- DEYAEE ) ! MESSAGE OF TUvS I WM WflUlM AM kMCH OF I LOLLYP0P5 Y ttTTER , V 5 -- 5 TTT fi SOT BROADCAST WS LIFE TOR WGMG- - anD. X X-- I fl L VSoJ ulX ALU OVERf-n,'5- ft "WAT LETTEQ AMD EM" --?C S 11 ) A TV Utah Legislature Passes Income Tax The Nineteenth Utah legislature paused the personal Income tax bill on the final day of the erosion. The personal Income tax bill car. rlca a maximum rate of 4 per cent, offacta of thirty-thre- e and one-thir- d per cent, a $1 filing fee which must be paid by all adults, save only mar-ried women who have no independ-ent main source of Income. The corporation, franchise tax bill which was passed by the legis-lature proposes: that corporations hall be taxed for their privilege of doing business in Utah, at a flat rate of three per cent of their net Income, and that they shall be al-lowed to offset not to exceed one-thir- d of auch franchise tax by a like amount of taxes they may pay on tangible property In thla state. Income only from business done within the state, so far as may be allocated by the formula written In-to the law, la to be taxed, and tax-es may be paid in two Installments, three months apart The federal In-come tax setup Is the basis of the machinery provided for adminis-tering the Utah tax passed on In-come. Several minor tax laws having to do with the powers and duties of the tax commission were enacted. This completes the major tax program and put Into effect the constitutional amendments as voted on by the people of the state In the last election. The school equalization bill as passed by the legislature will in-crease gradually from $147,000 for the school year of 1032-8- 3 to five time thut amount for the fifth school year thereafter, The legislature received bills from lta mem-bers and approximately seventy of these met with approval. This is a low record in number of measures to be passed by a session and at the same time more fundamental changes were made In the laws of the state than has been made by any previous meeting of the law-makers. More than one-thir- d of house bills introduced during the sixty-da- y session were killed on the last day. Among the bills slaughtered were those which would enable county commissioners to raise extra levies for unemployment relief, and a bill by Representative George M. Miller of Carbon county calling for an outright apropriation of $100,000 for Dnemployment relief, the blU for tax on natural gas, and a tax on Mil boards. Senate bill 30, by John B. Booth, inthorlzlng cities and towns to shade tree commissions ; sen-ate bill 00, George Jefferson, enubl-n- g counties to establish levies of me-tent-h of a mill for the care of udigent blind, and senate bill 43, Cnox Tatterson, enabling chiroprac-tors to take industrial commission ases were passed, x Senate joint resolution No. 6, Hur-on W. Musser, which the house is known as the "home rule" jill and enables Incorporated cities ind towns to establish, by consent f the people, any type of govern-ment they desire. Under the pres-ent taw it is specified as to what type of government cities of differ-ent sizes shall operaate under, met with approval. The bill as it came from the sen-ate limited this power to cities hav-ing 6000 inhabitants or more. The -- house amended this to read "any in- - ... corpora ted city or town," and the amendment was concurred in by the .senate, ' New laws as enacted by the legis- - lature and signed by the governor include some items of interest as follows: 18, Booth, transferring board of equalization funds to state tax com-mission; 4, Keyser, requiring flying of flag at polling places; 17, Shields, providing for railroad crossing de-vice; 1 Fowles, transferring land to Ogden for park purposes ; 40, Shields, licensing auctioneers ; 20, Mnsser, pertaining to mutual fire in-- " surance companies; 22, Shields, 34, Welling, licensing aircraft pilots. Bills passed by the senate: II. B. 41, Fuller General appro-priations. '. " . '"I''' "t. S. B. 104, Fowles Bad checks. Senate concurs in house amend ineut. S. B. 114, Candland Corporation franchise tax. Conference report ; recommitted for correction. Amend-ed report presented and adopted and bill repassed. n. B. 4, Mills Legislative vacan- - cies. Amended and passed. II. B. 72, Anderson Reapijortlon-men- t. Amended and passed. It B. 102, Woodruff Banks to sell real estate. : ,i H. B. 130, committee Legislative code commission. S. B. 199, Fowles Board of sup-plies and purchase. S. B. 21, Maw Chiropody. Sen-ate concurs, bill repasses. II. B. 27, Jorgensen Gasoline tax increase. ,,v n. B. 47, Neslen Military code. Senate amends and repasses. S. B. 01, Booth Juvenile courts. ' Senate concurs in house amend-ments by party vote of 11 to 8; bill repassed. II. B. 65, committee School equ-alization. Along the Concrete Eg lfefcKill A The Home Censor - ,r MAN THAT 1 6AVE "SS'SSSP "m KL j nomTeK i j ' r' - . mi. in.iii.ii. . .lu. mil. MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL Sfe! No Grouch, This Boy Wv ' weft W njKJ 20UEJ r 4 . tHE CLANCY KIDS His Mixture Is Thorough Enough (ffl,scaMsai,, By percy l. crosby 1 1 , . -r- ' i i iCiuAHl H tf'jfr TH0RM6H 6tiE0M ? V ) WANT to ZW A rfiurf tNTHewORtOQ r V N r L00t 1 lOOtS'N H SAYS THIS OOi'SCbTM j wiP VTH0H0OCM 0RCOJ J ALUjAYS tCfffN YA LlKt NO U CCAit TweN7Y-Flv- 6 QRCEDS IN f h fog oiy r n evcRYrfiNff.vA cANrf rrHORoucneaeoj S hm. i ce weoucttrro r JP j j&ji |