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Show THE LEADER. Tremonton. Utah 17. 1955 Thursday. February TAX FAX A IL IE SERVING Child Care Costs Are Deductible While You Work ID IS IB VALLEY RIVER BEAR THE Published Dy the LEADER PUBLISHING COMPANY, Inc. on Thursday afternoon, for Friday Distribution 43.00 per year (in advance) RATES SUBSCRIPTION The per capita income of the state has hit SI. 000 a year. Another phase of this great civic work was the "Build Your Own Home Town" clinics. Mr. Moses traveled the state, holding the clinics in 75 counties. As a result, many Arkansas communities have long range civic improvement plans such as You can deduct up to $600 Crossett's. Mr. Moses and his for the care of your children to company have demonstrated a enable you to work, if you can high calibre of corporate citizen- qualify, and provided you use the long form 1040 and itemship. ize your deductions. FOR THE NATION This can be deducted only if One other example, this one is for the care of your son, it on a national scale, should be daughter or step-d- a noted: In June, 1950, the United step-sounder 12 years of age; or States government knew that Soviet Russia had obtained, for the care of any other dethrough espionage, our secrets pendent for whom you are enon the possibilities, and titled an exemption who is perhaps already had begun man- mentally or physically incapable of caring for himself. ufacturing the bombs. The Du Pont Company officAlso, a married woman can ials were called in. Would they, deduct her child care expense the government asked, throw all only if she and their unique engineering rehusband her sources and chemistry know-hofile a joint reinto the building of the turn and together earn less gigantic billion dollar Savannah River plant to make the materthan $4,500 per ials for The answer year. If they was, yes. 0 earn over Du Pont built the plant in per year, record time. As a result, our then the. deducgovernment recently announced tion is reduced that we were far ahead of Comby the amouift munist Russia in this field of over the earned Mr. Wikel decisive nuclear weapons. $4,500. If they For all the know-how- , and earn over S5.000, then there is lending the hundreds of techni- no deduction. This does not apcal engineers to the government if the taxpayer's husband for the Savannah River plant ply beis incapable of construction, Du Pont charged cause mentally or physically the government $1, 'in addition defective. to actual expenses. The expense must be paid and Its best men were employed it cannot be paid to an individover a long period without the ual for whom you claim a decompany's profiting. This is the pendency exemption. In other kind of corporate citizenship words, you cannot pay your that builds our nation and keeps mother who lives with you to it strong. care for your children and also claim her as your dependent. You can only make this deLt. and Mrs. David Stenquist and family spent last week in duction provided the cost is for Tremonton with their parents, you to earn a living or to enable Mr. and Mrs. Edwin O. Sten you to look for work. If you work only part of the quist, and other relatives. Entered at the post office at Tremonton, Utah as Second Class matter October 15, 1925 under act of March 3, 1879. r A. N. RATTING, Editor-Publishe- day and pay for child care for all the day, then you can deduct only the part that corresponds to the time you were working, not for the time that you were not working. If the person who receives the payment does work other than child care, the payment is allowed only for that part that is child care and the pay ments that are attributable to other work are not allowable. The deducion is allowed only to women and to widowers. Widowers include men who are divorced or legally separated land have not remarried. A separate statement should be attached to your tax return giving the details of the deduction that you are taking and a simple statement of the facts concerning the age or physical condition of the dedendent, etc. ATTEND COUSINS FUNERAL John and Charles Barfuss were in Logan Tuesday to at tend the funeral services for a cousin, John F. Blauer in River Heights ward. J 3s Barii Hymn ) BY CLINT BONNER n, LOOKING AHEAD c in in mini bucatom mooum Industries As Good Citizens Benefit Nation Men of unusual abilities and unusual attributes have built America into the nation which provides the present generation of people trie greatest measure of welfare in the history of the human race. These individual prime movers, must be recognized as citizen benefactors. There is another kind of benefactor bringing progress to America, the corporate benefactors, the companies which have utilized unusual abilities and unusual attributes for good of mankind. In the heart of Arkansas's pine timber belt, a sawmill began operations 50 years ago. It was called the Crossett Lumber Company. Its lifetime was limited. It would cut out the available timber and leave. One day one of the owners a log being stood watching snaked up out of the mill pond into the sawmill. As the butt of the log went by he counted the concentric growth rings in the structure of the wood. Then he had a flash. He exclaimed, "Why, that log has grown from a twig since we built our mill! Why not grow our timber and harvest it as a crop? We could stay here forever!" CROSSETT PROGRESSES The Crossett Company built a model town, brought in some of America's foremost foresters and began to revolutionize this nation's concept of its timber resources. Today, its scientifically controlled forests grow enough timber each year to supply its needs and this caa go on, indeed absent-mindedl- y SEE . . for ever- - Today, every family in Crossett, Arkansas, owns its home. Through the enlightened man-agement and civic leadership of the company, the little town has become a city preparing itself for a population of 25,000, fol- lowing a plan prepared by one of America's noted city planners. A visit to this wonderful community refuels one's reservoir of faith in America and especially in the business leadership of America. Its streets are broad and treelined. Its churches are among the most beautiful in the nation. Its schools are the last word in modern facilities and in faculty standards. Its hospitals, parks, swimming pools and playgrounds would make any city envious. The Crossett Company, now boasting huge paper mills and chemical plants, has insisted that the citizens do these things for themselves. It has supplied the vision, the push and a sizeable share of the financial cost. That's corporate citizenship. STATE-WIDCITIZENSHIP In Little Rock 14 years ago, a man and his company decided to expand their corporate citizenship. The man was C. Ham ilton Moses; the company was the Arkansas Power and Light Company which he headed. At the time, Aarkansas's per capita income was $252 a year. Its economy was based on raw material production, with little processing and manufacturing within the state. Mr. Moses called together 1,000 Arkansas businessmen and they devised "The Arkansas Plan." The primary objective of "The Arkansas Plan" was to bring new industry to Arkansas and stimulate establishment of processing and manufacturing plants. The new payrolls would enrich the economy of the state. Largely through the dynamic leadership of Mr. Moses and the use of the resources of his company, Arkansas has obtained thousands of new industries in the last 14 years. ( E locally-finance- w " $4,-50- self-suppo- rt Sweet Hour of Prayer An old carver dictates a poem Everybody in Coleshill, England, knew William Walford. On Sundays he preached around at different churches for his minister friends. During the week the "townsfolk made his little trinket shop their favorite meeting place. He was forever whittling out novelties for children and he made his scant living carving items from ivory. Though his life was filled with adversities and he had seen many "seasons of distress and grief" there was something uplifting about the old carver's outlook on life. One day in 1842 when Congregational Minister Thomas Salmon stopped in Walford's shop he found his friend with more on his mind than his carving and usual optimistic philosophy. He had composed a poem and he asked the Rev. Salmon to take the words down as he recited them. fgl LOWER "to-L- jiast a,s it , Sweet hour of prayer! Sweet hour of prayerl May I thy consolation share, Till from Mount Pisgah's lofty height, I view my home and take my flight; This robe of flesh I'll drop, and rise To seize the everlasting prize, And shout while passing through the air, Farewell, farewell, sweet hour of prayer. JIQ? 2 INCHES d And since He bids me seek His face. Believe His Word and trust His grace, I'll cast on Him my every care. And wait for thee, sweet hour of prayer. Sweet hour of prayer! Sweet hour of prayer! That calls me from a world of care. And bids me at my Father's throne Make all my wants and wishes known; In seasons of distress and grief. My soul has often found relief. And oft escaped the tempter's snare By thy return, sweet hour of prayer. Sweet hour of prayer! Sweet hour of prayer! Thy wings shall my petition bear To Him whose truth and faithfulness Engage the waiting souls to bless; Three years later, on a visit to New York, Salmon presented the old carver's poem to the New York Observer. It was printed in the September issue of 1845 but nothing of note came of it until 14 years later. Then, in 1859, a copy of it came to the attention of New York's organist and composer William Bradbury. In addition to directing choirs, writing music for some of the most famous hymns and manufacturing organs, Bradbury published some 60 hymn books. He immediately saw in Walford's poem material for a hymn, set it to music and published it. The reason William Walford had asked the Rev. Salmon to take down his poem while he dictated it was because the old caiver was blind and couldn't see how to write. rn.-u.c- kut n .TRY. . ..COMPARE! 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