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Show REPOfiT FILED If 11 TREfiSURER Receipts Are $11,845,979, I and Expenditures Total $11,854,361. Receipts of the state of Utah for the fiscal year ended November 30, 1919, were $11,815,979.38, according to the annual an-nual report of Daniel O. Larson, state treasurer, tiled yesterday. Of this amount $5,440,o9S.3-l is classed as nonrevenue receipts, re-ceipts, being proceeds from the sale of state road bonds, money returned to the state land trust funds wdiich had been out on investment, proceeds of sales of state lands and water, which go into the trust funds; receipts of $625,000 from the sale of short-time notes and of $750,-000 $750,-000 in temporary loans, which were simply sim-ply the creating of an indebtedness, and similar items. The true revenue receipts, therefore, are cut to $6,405,381.04. The state treasurer's treas-urer's books show that the disbursements of $11,854,361.33 . for the year were about $9000 in excess of the receipts. The balance bal-ance on hand at the beginning of the present fiscal year was $13,619,899.58. Of the true revenue receipts, $2,899,-744.21 $2,899,-744.21 was from the state and state school tax on general property. To this was added $561,606.79 state road taxes, the amount of levy for which was fixed by the respective counties, and the money was spent by the state in those respective respec-tive counties. Special taxes yielded an additional $2.-021,588.14. $2.-021,588.14. subdivided as follows: Bounty tax, $157,S61.I3: occupation tax on mines, $967,731.95; motor vehicle license tax, $281,262.41; inheritance tax, $329,-432.44; $329,-432.44; corporation license tax, $111,851.02; insurance premium income tax, $97,008.47; car company tax, $4,432.22; fish and game license tax, $4o,940.09; premium tax collections, col-lections, $16,038.43. The interest and rentals on the state land funds and grants provided an additional addi-tional $399,130.13 for the state, the money, of course, going to various institutions. From the federal government the state received 80S, 650.04 as its share or the national na-tional forest receipts and $13,66S.46 as its share from the sale of public lands In Utah. The various banks in which state funds are deposited paid to the state a total of $12,755.99 in Interest for the use of the state's money. Fees and miscellaneous receipts from state officers and boards amounted to $141,462.63, while state institutions in-stitutions produced in fees or in produce sold. $5S.S99.16. Federal appropriations were received totaling $108,993.12. The law courts of the state yielded in fines, forfeitures, reporters' fees and the like, $10,822.06. A trust estate, which sooner or later, unless an heir appears, will go to the state general fund, totaled $306.07. There were contributions for the Lincoln highway, . in Tooele county, of $60,000. The sale of state bonds rendered $15,936.75 in accrued interest, and there was interest inter-est on returned investments of redemption redemp-tion funds totaling $1846.57. The report classifies the receipts as thev came from the various counties. Salt Lake county produced the largest revenue to the state, totaling $1,323,362.82. Utah county was next with $282,114.46: Weber county, third, with $226,963.08; and Box-elder, Box-elder, fourth, with $206,343.77. Cache yielded $170,846.01: Millard. $146,965.46; Tooele, $144,733.91; Carbon. S140.98S 39 and Davis, $109.S92.79. All other counties contributed each less than $100,000 to the stales receipts. Daggett being lowest, with $55S7.2o; Wayne next lowest, with $12,719.56, and Washington, third lowest, with $16,709.11. Kane county was the only other contributing less than $20,000 to the state's coffers. |