OCR Text |
Show Thursday. January THE LEADER. Trwnonion. Utah 13. 1955 TAX FAX Claim Deductions From Youngsters While in College if you have paid over you are not required to include any amounts received by the student as scholarship for study at an educational instituion. This applies only to your children. That is, your son, daughter, All step-so- n or other dependents must have ADEilD WOtCoargoll II UM I BvcAncM - MfcfOUt moauM step-daughte- r. Peter James Wikel Pnblic Accountant earnings of less than $600 to qualify as your dependants. By Your child can earn over 5600 in 1954, and you can stni claim the dependency deduction for him provided he is under 19 years old; or if he is over 19 years old, he was also a full time student for at least five months of 1954 at an educational institution which normally maintains a regular faculty and curriculum and normally has a regularly organized body of students in attendance at the place where its educational activities are carried on; or if he was purcourse of insuing a stitutional on farm training under the supervision of an accredited agent of an educational institution or of a State or political subdivision of a State, and you provide over one-hathe cost of his support. In determining the total cost of support of the student to see full-tim- Loomna X. 1 e lf Your children, if qualified as above, can earn any amount. They may be required to file a tax return, if they earn over $600, and be required to pay income tax, and they may claim their personal exemption of $600 on their own tax return. They may, if they earn under $600, file an income tax return and claim their own personal exemption of $600 in order to secure the refund to them of any income tax that may have been withheld from their paychecks. This will not in any way prevent you from also claiming their $600 dependency deduction on your income tax return, provided they meet the requirements above. If, however, your child is married and files a joint return with his are her spuose, then you cannot claim the dependency Best Prices Paid For Your WHEAT - BARLEY - OATS Socialism Leads Eventually To Coninuinisni Thomas, as a member of Parliament, Socialism in Great install helped 3ritain. But as he began to see the true nature of Socialism in practice, he quit the party and wrote a book entitled The Socialist Tragedy. In it he warns the free world that no matter how well it is doctored up in the dress of social reform, "production for use," or welfare state "capitalism," Socialism, over the long haul, means poverty and ultimate enslavement for a nation's people, including, of course, the very ones it claims to champion the wage earners. In his chapter on "Socialism and Freedom," Thomas notes that Socialism and Communism have the following three main characteristics in common: (1) the communal ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange; (2) the abolition of personal incomes derived from rent, profit and interest; and Ivor Labor-Sociali- st GET OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU SELL Headquarters For Agricultural Chemicals Member Federal Warehouse System - Protect Farm Waterways Tremonton From Damage of: This Array Hollywood Favorites . HEAR a Parade of Your Favorite Tunes SEE A full-Colo- r, Full-Lengt- . . Picture h - i I I profit-makin- g profit-makin- t g ... NEWS COLUMN ERVIN ST0IIL 2411 "persuasion was first used to wanted them to go . . . but the induce workers to go to the grim facts of economic life forcindustries where the planners ed the government's hand.- CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET Year Ended December 31, 1954 150.000.000 Population of United Stales 52.000.000 65 older or .i People years 98.000.000 Balance left to do the work 54,000.000 People 21 years or younger Balance lefl to do the work .... 44.000.000 21.000.000 People working for the Government 23.000,000 do Balance lefl to the work 10,000.000 People in the Armed Service 13,000.000 Balance left to do the work 12,800.000 and Offices in Slate .... People City 200.000 Balance lefl to do the work ... 126.000 People in Hospitals. Asylums and Meetings Balance left to do the work 74,000 ., K9 ADO Rums anrl fthtrs wttn wnn't urnrlr 12.000 Balance left to do the work x Persons in jail 11,998 z rsaiance leu to ao tne work t i i SOIL CONSERVATION DISTRICT Cleaning - Rollingo - Grinding Phone planning Northern Utah WE DO CUSTOM - of in a British pit." LIBERTY AT STAKE GOVERNMENT CONTROL (2) If private incomes from 1) Communal ownership rent, profit and interest are means, in practice, state owner- abolished, as they are in Socialship and control. "When all ism and Communism, "then all power is concentrated in the individual incomes well be dehands of the state," Thomas prived from the state or state writes, "it is a simple matter for bodies," Thomas observes. one man or a few men having "They may be in the form of control of the state mechanism salaries, pensions, allowwages, to turn all that concentrated ances and possibly fees but they power in any direction they will all come from one central please; and unhappily their chest, and if the persons who pleasure has usually been in the control the flow from the chest direction of evil. decide to stop or divert it they The wide diffusion of prop- can do so. It will be seen how erty therefore acts as a valuable precarious are the liberties of corrective to the evil propensit- man in such a system." ies of totalitarian regimes. The importance of The ownership of private is emphasized by Thomas. property, he notes, also "pro- "If is eliminated," motes liberty of thought, writing he says, "consumers' choice will and action among the private inevitably disappear, and this is owners," and thus stimulates a consequence which will be progress. "If the history of felt in every home in the counthought is studied, particularly try." in England," he says, "the studThe attitude in which the ent cannot fail to be struck by intellectual bureaucrat typical the fact that so many of the views the average citizen, once leaders, the pioneers and dis- the bureaucrat gains control coverers have been men enjoying through Socialism, is clearly a sufficient competence to free shown in Thomas's book. He them from dependence upon quotes Mr. Douglas Jay, Econanyone else. omic Secretary to the Treasury (Moreover), when the private in Britain's Socialist governowners of property are expro- ment: state and the steps into priated their shoes, henceforth here is BUREAUCRAT'S ATTITUDE only one landlord and only one "Housewives as a whole cana mineworker not be trusted to employer buy all the whom the National Coal Board right things, where nutrition and wants to get rid of has no pos- health are concerned," Minister sibility of again getting work Jay wrote in his book o f his own. "This is really no more than an extension of the principle according to which the housewife herself would not trust a child, of four to select the week's purchases. For in the case of nutrition and health, just as in the case of education, the gentleman, in spring. Construct them with a Whitehall (the government wide flat bottom with gently building) really does know betsloping sides. Apply barnyard ter what is good for people than fertilizer before and after seed- the people know themselves." ing if available. (3) The central planning of A well sodded waterway can production, which is the heart take a terrific beating. Later of Socialist and Communist burthis winter we will tell about eaucracy, requires the regimenhow Radcliffe Henrie's gully tation and ultimate enslavement seeding stood up under a cloud of the individual worker. burst. "In Britain," writes Thomas, (6) the central production. one-hal- f, All our dry farms have nat- ural waterways which carry water from spring runoff and . summer cloud bursts. Unless these waterways are protected they soon become impassable field boundaries. Fields are cut up making contour tillage impossible. Wallace Simmons, who lives over in Beaver Dam, had a thirty acre field which was cut into three pieces by gullies. The SCS farm planner suggested to Mr. Simmons that he grade them in and seed droughth resistant sod forming grasses and alfalfa Wallace had the grading done early in the spring, must have been before April 20. A firm well packed seed bed was prepared and the seed drilled. A light mulch of barnyard manure was applied after seedin'g. Careful Attention By careful attention to the important details of seeding early on a firm seed bed he established a good thick stand the first year. This seeding was made in 1950. He claims that this gully planting produces more hay than any part of his farm. Wallace has hydraulic power lifts on his equipment so he can contour strip crop the entire field by lifting his tillage equipment while crossing the waterways, Without these waterways he would have three shaped fields laying up the slope. An interesting sidelight on the Simmons waterways is that since they were constructed they haven't had to handle any excessive amounts of water. Mr. Simmons believes that this is due to the conservation practices, such as contour strip cropping and stubble mulch tillage applied by his neighbors above. TWO YOU I and I And YOU'D betisr get a wiggle on . . I'm tired of running this country alone. We NEVER could have made it through 1954 without you! You can count on us in 1955 to do our best to serve you better! Gephart Stores Co. " h IURE.m ' I j ar You'll minut ."'" will delight I Family Hit n t-MrL-- ii. urciAr i irtcc" ''Oddities in Farming" New Gordon "Power Steering Takes .QGXDCD L vtry interest paclctd program an entertaining and In- - nine riWJ A nley of this and aid alike and .L . . young its HLI (ALL Over' and Added Short Subjects CDdBQ THURSDAY January 27, 1935 1:00 p. in. if - r- . ... we ' . bo for i THYliE PETERSON TRACTOR SERVICE Phone 2211 Tremonion Working Together Thus, we can see the benefits of farmers in the same watershed working together. This is also a good example of how the different soil conservation practices supplement each other. As you travel from Collinston to Beaver Dam watch the slope on both sides of the road; see the grass waterways of T. W. Potter and Ben Johnson from the highway. There is need for many more graded and seeded waterways in the Soil Conservation District. Here are a few suggestions for you farmers. Grade and seed your waterways early in the ll! Tuke a long look . . , and you'll long for more than a look! be satisfied with wishing . . . because we have a "Rex ket" 202 Oldsmobile waiting for you right now! So come in and take the whirl. Feel the touch of your toe translated into instan t action. See how easy every driving moment can be. How hills seem to flatten as the "Rocket" wings you along. And feel how rough roads iron out in this most comfortable of all Oldsmohiles. Even if you've driven a past "Rocket", Ull, don't you're missing something until you try this flashing welcome to test it . . . soon. Then you'll want to make this your year to go ahead with Oldsmobilel all-ne- "IWket" 202! You're MOB OLD FRONK CHEVROLET SEI YOUR NEAREST OlDSMOIILI PHONE 2311 121 East Main DON'T MISS "NAUGHTY MARIETTA"! ANOTHER GALA ! DIALER DI CO. MUSICAL ON Tremo N8C-T- V JAN. 13 I i "Buy For Cash and Pay Less" VVVVVVVVV'Vr JUST TWO WORDS COMPLETE i i ! |