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Show CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNORSHIP SPEAKSMONDAY No additional taxation measures meas-ures are necessary to run the state government, Herbert B. Maw, now Democratic nominee for governor, said in a run-off election eve talk at Society hall Monday evening, declaring he would refuse to sign new taxation taxa-tion measures, if elected. Dr. Maw said that during his ten years in the state senate he 1 n fl rnnn I-o vr rrnlnvlit f mines and mining, and that rumors ru-mors he would favor taxing the mining industry out of existence were entirely untrue. By elimination of waste of state commissions and bureaus, much money can be saved, Dr. Maw said. "The thing Utah needs most is to creaje employment. We need all the industries we have and new ones must be developed to raise the level of average family income. The federal government has expended twice as much relief re-lief per capita for Utahns as in other states. 3000 young people leave the state every year in search of employment, he said. A grape industry in Utah's Dixie; gilsonite products plant in Vernal; development of silica beds in Juab; exploitation of Carbon's Car-bon's coal and asphalt; advertising advertis-ing of Utah's beauty spots: these present opportunities for Utah's growth, Dr. Maw said. Lambert Gibson was chairman of the meeting. Other candidates making speeches were Charles Spencer and Ed H. Watson, nominated nom-inated Tuesday as Democratic candidates for the state senate; Gwynne Page, nominated for county commissioner on the Democratic ticket, and Judge Allen G. Thurman, Democratic attorney general candidate. |