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Show SEPTEMBER jRSDAY, More -- liwunHiiuC AUC tify REACH CLAIMS MiMtt illRHSl FflR w- iJWWWi- applications for Fed-- i Insurance account nuni- - 149.S31 vtil nid-Ag- e Salt ;Lake Fleld f the Social Security board wday that payment had been during 25 working days of 'e on "4 1933 fir iiii'iiii a iiiii P ,.-- 5 15, UUUJ July 31. the Sonth of 42 claims Federal amounting Old-Ag- e In-jj- to e $2,- - to pass the 40,000,000 j, application mark, the board JSred a 'total of 532,289 new for account card numbers Jul'. lcal officials were The July 1938 national card total is an increase of applications over the 31- total as of July 31, 1937. jjlS than half of the claims cernationally ia Jul- y- of the estates of wage earners who have died, according t0 WiIliam B Hayward, manager of the Salt field office of the board. The mainder of the claims came from wage earners who had reaches! the G3. of age Cash payments in Utah during the month of July averaged $55.56 in contrast to the national 12.41, Mr. Hayward said. A total of oou sucn claims, with a value of $23,972, have been certified in Utah since the Federal Insurance program became effective January l' rl av,. Old-Ag- e 1937. na-.- i order re-eS- ts ac-"ii- Mrs. LaFel Oman wa hm... the Friday Sewing club last week Her guest was Mrs. Bert Marshall. Members in attendance wo tq Gale, Fern Larsen, Mrs. Waldo Gale Airs, jack Simonsen, Mrs. Spenst Chapman, Mrs. Carl Rath m,. T1J ana Mrs. LaVar Johnson. uiyaer Constitutional Amendments Constitutional Amendment No. 1 OF LANDS AND OTHER FUND UNIFORM SCHOOL FUND PROPOSING I JOINT RESOLUTION TO AMEND SECTION S, ARTICLE PROCEEDS PROPERTY-PERMAN- ll ftp m ma ENT ur Itld tUiioiiiUiiLiY RELAT- - STATE OF UTAH, rtcuvtiEus vf theOTHER PROPERTY TO LANDS AND CREATING A PERMANENT fVND AND A UNIFORM SCHOOL TUND FOR THE COMMON AND AND SCHOOLS. by the Legislator of of all thi state of Utah, elected to each house the members wncMrrtnff therein: SECTION 1. That it is proposed to mend ection 8 of Article 10 of the fjnitttution of the state of Utah ai mended by the vote of the electors it the general election of 1930 to read u follows: tee. 8. The proceeds of the sales if ill lands that have been or may kireafter be granted by the United lute to this state, for the support if the common schools, and five per of the witum of the net proceeds ulei of United States public lands sold state and by the Wag within the to the adUnited States subsequent mission of this state into the Union, thtll be and remain a permanent fund, to be called the State School Fund, tie interest of which only, shall be upended for the support of the com-ro- n schools. The interest on the State School Fund, the proceeds of all prop-irt- y that may accrue to the state by acheat or forfeiture, all unclaimed ikiiei and dividends of any corporation incorporated under the laws of this itate, the proceeds of the sales and the. ((timber, proceeds of the nil or other disposition of minerals other property from school and rtite lands, other than those granted for specific purposes, shall, with such itkw revenues as the Legislature may from time, to time allot thereto, concrete a fund to be known as the Uniform School Fund, which Uniform School Fund shall be maintained and tied for the support of the common ltd public schools of the state and (portioned in such manner as the shall provide. The Legislature of Section 7, Article XIII of this Constitution shall be construed is i limitation on the rate of taxa-tlon tangible property for district wool purposes and not on the amount if funds available therefor and, f r, no moneys allocated to the Uni-tiSchool Fund shall be considered h firing the rates of taxation speciIn fy Section 7 of Article XIII. SECTION 2. The secretary of state directed to submit this proposed wendment to the electors of the, state U the next general election in the turner provided bv law. SECTION 3. If adopted by the "ton of the state, this amendment nsll take effect the first day of PUBLIC Ji it resolved two-thir- ot ur-tk- m tawny, 1939. Constitutional TAXATION January, 1939. Constitutional Amendment No. 3 HOURS OF WORK ON PUBLIC WORKS JOINT RESOLUTION PROPOSING TO AMEND SECTION 6, ARTICLE 16 OF THE CONSTITUTION OF UTAH, RELATING TO HOURS OF WORK ON ALL PUBLIC WORKS. Be it retolved by the Legislature of the state of Utah, of all members elected to each of the two houses voting in favor thereof: SECTION 1. That it is proposed to amend section 6 of article 16 of the Constitution of the state of Utah. Sec. 6. The Legislature shall determine the hours that shall constitute day's work on all works or undertakings carried on or aided by the state, county or municipal government; and the Legislature shall pass laws to provide for the health and safety of employees in factories, smelters, and mines and shall determine the number of maximum hours of service per day. SECTION Z. That the secretary of state is hereby directed to submit this proposed amendment to the electors of the state at the next general election in the manner provided by A two-thir- "SECTION 3. If adopted by the electors of this state, this amendment shall take effect the first day of Amendment Nn 9 UTS OP purposes, which shall constitute the high school fund; said furd shall be apportioned in the minner the Legislature shall provide, to the schoo districts maintaining hiKh schools, and such levy for district school purposes which together with such other funds as may be available for district school purposes, will raise annually an amount which equals $25 for each person of school age in the state as shown by the Inst preceding school census; the same to be distributed among the school districts according to the last preceding school and in addition an equalizationcensus; fund which when added to other revenues provided for this purpose by the Legislature shall be $5 for each person of school ape as shown by the last preceding scnool censua; said equalization fund shall be apportioned to the school districts in such manner as the lature shall provide. Said ratesLegisshall not be increased unless a proposition to increase the same the rate or rates proposed specifying and the time during which the same shall be levied, bj first submitted to a vote of such of the qualified electors of the state, ai in the year next preceding such election, shall have paid a property tax assessed to them within the state, and the majority of those voting thereon shall vote in favor thereof, in such manner as may be provided by law. , SECTION 2. The secretary of state is directed to submit this proposed amendment to the electors of the state in the next general election in the manner provided bv law. SECTION 8. If adopted by the electors of the state, this amendment shall take effect the first day of 1939. January, PURPOSES T H Vfnnmn SafnafarT tit Stata RESOLUTION PROPOSING TO SECTION 7, of the State of Utah, do hereby certify is a full, true and mjCLE XIU OF THE CONSTI-WJS- that the foregoing 0F THE STATE OF correct copy of the 3 Constitutional EAS: RELATING TO THE RATE Amendments proposed Dy tne regular session of the legislature of 1937 at purposes and the same appears of record in my nitruolved by the Legislature of office. , m State I further certify that tney wui of Utah, of all tha at ballot official the on numbers elected to each house appear I Z 8. 1938. Vnvamhfllw . BIOVWWH gBMBIM n?mn9 therein: herein and title number BCTIOlf 1. That It if the under proposed to .i .nv ."- , EL,e.ct,on 7 of Article 13 of the designated. , wnereoi, In- witness of the 8tate as t MM ttonrl anA f f i Y Pf! thi by the vote of the electors at the State of Utah, toll of Seal election of 1930 t read Great follows 26th day of August, lyja. Bw 1 mn" 01 taxation ca tkuriku J property shall not exceed on .f I tofk Ination, two and four- d,T " ofior general state purposes, one mill for Secretary of Stat. jytnth IK TT NT W AMENDMENT N two-thir- lfl., Uh, nt high tUZ HELPER JQDR ROOSEVELT OFFICIALS NAL-HELP- EB, UTAH JURY LIST DRAWN FOR THIRD TERM HIGHWAY DISTRICT COURT FROM "Matter" is the subject of the list of 30 petit jurors to serve -sermon in all Churches of Christ, during the third term of district Scientist, on Sunday. September IS. 11 STATES MEET court here was drawn this week by Ainoug the selections from the County Clerk B. H. Young, County- - liible is the following: "These are Treasurer Viola O'Berto and County, the geneiatious of the heavens and Attorney Marl D. Gibson. They are to of the earth when they were created, 6 Revelt appear Highway Monday, September 19, at 10 in the day that the Lord God made Pawes through, met in Denver, for a.m., according to Donald Hacking, the earth and the heavens, and every the lth annual meeting of the assoei-a,'o- district court clerk. plant of the field before it was in wf'k ago Monday. The jurors are: H. H. Holdaway, the earth, and every herb ot the Directors from New York and Penn- CVarence Thompson. Seien Olsen, field before it grew: for the Lord sylvania told of the of Harold Forsyth, Nora Watkins, Ervin God had not caused it to rain upon expenditure millions of dollars for completing of Fausett. Leo Lowry, Dave Anderson, the earth, and there was not a man tour-lanhigh sys and nthor im. Fred Reynolds, A. W. Shiner and to till the ground." Provementa. In Colorado, a new cut- George Miluer, Jr., Price; Hal Taylor, Among the Biblical citations are the Continental Divide at J. B. Willis, R. H. Jacobshagen, R. A. the following: "O Lord God of hosts, bhrine Pass, will shnrton . ..m Dart and A. W. Ray, Helper, who is a strong Lord like unto thee? evelt highway route thirty-twmiles. William Henderson, Clear Creek; or to thy faithfulness round about u uian tne rapid completion of the George Boll, Columbia; Wesley Gen thee The heavens are" thine, the small remaining portion of graveled try and Earl LeRoy Allen, Spring earth also is thine: as for the world road in Western T'tah . Glen; Parley S. Beal and Carl Al- - and the fullness thereof, thou hast With the completion of this work in bertson, Spring Canyon; Elmer Frand-se- founded them." 1 tah and Colorado and Franklin Larsen, Hiawatha; Correlative to the selection is the nignway will be an all hard snrfapCri H. B. Allen and M. B. Carlson, Castle following from "Science and Health route offering motorists twelve Gate; L. P. Pearce, Kenilworth; John with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary months of enjoyment. The famous ; Ramage, Royal; John Bezyack, Baker Eddy: "Here Is the emphatic t highwav extend, from Wellmgand Foster Shimmins, declaration that God creates all Privincetown, Mass., to Long Beach through mind, not through matter, ma. that the plant grows, not because of Val Cowles, of Price, was a Plan Fathers' Councils repseed or soil, but because growth is resentative from the Price Chamber Fathers' councils to instruct fathers the eternal mandate of mind . . . . of Commerce at tne meeting, and re- - and prospective fathers in the care because mind makes all, there is pouea an active camnaien wonM h of children are being planned in this nothing left to be made by a lesser launched immediately to entice tour- district, to supplement the pre-natists through this section of the state and infant clinics conducted at the power." Included ,as correlatives are the via the Roosevelt highway. present time for mothers, according to Dr. Edward L. Van Aelstyn. state following passages from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures: Price Legion Elects deputy health officer. "Substance is that which is eternal and incapable of discord .and decay. Wright As Commander Truth, life, and love are substance, SAME FEE WILL BE Clark Wright was elected com as the Scriptures use this word in mander of Price post No. 3 of the 'The substance of things Hebrews: American Legion last Thursday, suc CHARGED 11 AND 12 the evidence of things not hoped for, ceeding Earl Jones who Has served seen.' As God is substance and man during the past vear is the divine image and likeness, GRADE STUDENTS Other officers were named as fol man should wish for, aud in reality lows: Elmer Young, first vice com has, only the substance of good, the Eleventh and twelfth grade stu- substance mander; Lawrence Heebe, second of spirit, not matter." vice commander; Blaine Thompson. dents at Carbon High school will be adjutant; Scott Fausett, finance of charged the customary $5 student Mrs. A. S. Wahl was a week-enficer; Donald Hacking, historian: b.itly fee and 50c locker fee, contrary visitor in Salt Lake. George Oman, sergeant-at-arms- ; Bish to the rumor that has been circulatop W. B. Stapley, chaplain: Harvey ed to the effect that additional fee Thomas, Fred W. Keller and Vernon would be charged, inasmuch as the PROCUREMENT DIVISION, PubDavis, executive Ted junior and senioi grades of h'gh lic committee; Buildings Carto Branch, are school housed in Washington, be the Thomas and Leland McBeth, trusbon Junior college buildings. Sealed bids in D.C., Sept 1, 1938 tees. For the college students, the total duplicate will be publicly opened in Installation of officers will be held in September, at which time officers fees for the year will run between this office at 10 A.M., Sept. 22, 1938, of Utah department are expected to $60 and $70. Tuition is $17 per quar- for lot curb for the U. S. P. O., at ter or $51 for the year; entrance fee, be in attendance. Helper, Utah. Drawings and specifiThirteen delegates to the state con $10; student body and miscellaneous cations, not exceeding one set, may vention to be held at Cedar City fees, from $5 to $9. Both college and be obtained from the Custodian of school students must furnish the August 5 and 6 were elected as fol high building or at this office in the own books, as has been custheir lows: Earl discretion of the Assistant Director Jones, Clark Wright, the of Sam Weiss, Vernon Davis. Harry Tas- - tomary throughout the state in Procurement, Public Buildings past. Branch. W. E. Reynolds, Assistant ker, Dow 'Young, Ben Ward, Law Schools buildings throughout the Director. rence BeeDe, Arthur Horsley, Fred have been redecorated, re district W. Keller, Blaine Thompson, Scott and made ready for the open paired, Fausett and Wilford Jensen. of the public schools for approxiAlternates are: William Reed. Rol- - ing 4,8000 students on September lo West, Val H. Cowtes, Elmer Ber-to- t, mately G. J. Reeves said. 12, Superintendent Dr. F. R. King, William H. Toy. If the college 'buildings are not ready Leland McBeth, Emery Ward, Asa for occupancy at that time, school Roberts, Craig Wills, Harvey Thom- will begin under the same setup a3 as. George Oman and George Dunn. last year. lesson- A V - e o ..,r.. Club Elects County Officers Greek-Americ- The missionaries serve without salary, though glad for any aid. Bibles for sale at cost or less. Everybody invited; seats for ladies; music. Meetings begin at about 8 o'clock In the evening; open air. at the New-hous- e hotel corner. Main street. . Directors of the Political Club of Carbon county were elected at the meeting of the club held last weekyin the assembly hall of the Greek Orthodox church. The following were elected to the board: James Pappacostas and Ted Gust Pappas, Jouflas of Helper; Harry Mahleres, Nick Salevurakis, Steve Diamenti, Kosmos Andrulakis, John K. Daskalos and Tony Pallios Hiaof Price; Angelos Pepperakis, watha; John Daskalakis, Castle Gate, and Tony Kontgas of Wattis. Greek-America- tlTit UFMJJLLiJJi; DD DE CodtNumbtris Mats, Na 45 fearta, No. 44 iiiii myariAM" a $50,000 Damage Suit an n SPIKE CCC CAMP ESTABLISHED Transferred To Salt Lake Court The $50,000 suit of Dorothy Olson against the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad and its Wilson McCarthy and Henry Swan, for personal injuries sustained in an accident in Price last year was removed Tuesday to the Federal Dlst rict court In Salt Lake. It had orig inally been filed in the district court. The suit, brought in the name ot Miss Olson by her father, Emmett K Olson, alleges disfigurement January 23, 1937, when the car in which she was riding collided with the caboose of the Rio Grande train at Price. It is charged that the caboose was not lighted. a- AT MUD SPRINGS ill water Vov V UC Will uou develop- - will be estab- Mud Springs, at lished next week district W. A. Magleby, to according are other projects Several grazier. wun wnirr contemplated nrinritv. Several water Ulcllto reservoir sights have been selected. iuu-ou- t "Every efrort is Being maue water,' to develop the district a spike the grazier said. At Emery 3 .nnKW On camp of 30 men is aireauy wwwed tor this purpose. Ivan L. Huntsman, range ruimci, orAriin?a in the district along uaa tO DOSt al- W" onrnllees wnn iv iuic n hnundaries. Mr. . rA Ira l . "u loimeui thOUSana ronnrted. Two metal posts with Division of Grazing markings have teen receivcu Alt old cedar posts and are being r signs used previously aro being moved, and the new signs . . 1. iont - new boundaries esuiuii..OUl in advisory the tabllshed this spring by - ... . Unit meetings or an u Mr .Mag- held in the near future, . 111 niir nvpr r in r til n ouu lO f saiu . ... .nnmmpndatIon8 regarding , 'r to xne yu range Improvements meetings win De and erouD allotments units as far as various the within necess 7 e will possible. These " limited liy waier wninr Imorovementfl planned iut with a view of securing mi win be made of stock. proper distribution - 11 piu..., kh-i.- 1. JRACHUTE JUMP fort Sco-field- board- DAILY ASCENSION The gospel meetings by the Wagon Missionaries began last week and have b.'en fairly attended. They are expect, d to continue each evening, with only the v,ea:her p"rn;it,iiig, greate-- t subjVvi ;. v.Ii'cj co.itein everyone, and v.uicli, o course, all need to understand, presented in both Biblical and a most practical way. The speakers belong to several evangelical denominations, and their objec: is to stir up Bible study and appropriation of the eternal truths of that divine book; hoping also for the salvation of many from this ef- coast-to-coas- & BALLOON uH STREET MEETINGS CONTINUED GROWTH CALLED MANDATE OF MIND IfQ lilted? A telephone keeps you in touch, saves time and trips for a few cents a day. In emergencies, one call may be priceless. -- 1 EE! 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