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Show WHAT'S YOUR SHARE 0 $14.8 BltHOW? Many organitttioM and publk final, authority ha ikow MM" Fi.rol budgM to, fioJ yr 1953 m b. r.d.d Wh,onoUy. For "V! NaHonat Attockition of Momifoetuwri hoi praparad foe and BBtm deal IM rhe bMdgrt can b. reduced from $35.4 bUlioo to $70.6 bill , What wM tkk toWnf morn H yon m4 fern fe-t $8&4 BJIUON PtOPOSEO KOCKAl BUDOCT " IMUIOtf REDUCTION The propel nJvctio wmM imI I IMJ0 for vy iww, wi mod cWoVln H-r mrA - $U3 hr a family of fair. T " THE BULLETIN FOR FINE PRINTING I TOM'S CASH COAL LUMP $10.00 PER TON TREATED SLACK $0.00 PER TON WILL DELIVER ANY AMOUNT WEIGH ON HOWE SCALES HAULING FROM CARBON COUNTY SUMMER RATES ON LOAD LOTS CALL 217-J TOM PRIGMORE y 'tf' a ne same day she emerged as Hollywood's EfwHT" newest movie star she was presented with a J 1 huge wreath of flowers m CQ honoring over 70 yeari of faithful service and .klStsbk signifying virtual re tirement. A featured star vlzk jn the recenriy premi- ered "Denver & Rio Grande," Cinder Ella, narrow-gauge locomotive 268, makes her exit with more honor and glory than she has ever known. Acclaimed as a novelty of today, she was a hard working pioneer of yesterday. ..a faithful builder of the west. d0fya 1 ' 3m BIS any years ago, in 1890, when giant standard gauge loco. . f5?3"7f motives pushed her off Rio Grande main lines and consigned her to SalM a rapidly diminishing narrow-gauge empire, she knew her era was tSS passing. To be sure, she and her sisters have fought long and hard to keep the pace, and technological advancements in all types of transportation and the transition of bonanza pgyw, ; mining camps to ghost towns have combined to gJItSgg il point up the significant job done by the narrow gauge. -"3atJlM A v S3 s she looks forward to her retirement, she has every reason to be proud because of her fame as a film queen, and, more important, because of her contribution to the development of a great modern railroad, the home railroad of Colorado and Utah, which is today one of America's foremost transportation servants. She can bask in the f r-rzft j 8'orv of the sleek Vista-Dome Vista-Dome streamliners which jtffwmfcmy streak over the trails she blazed through the heart of -jOr the Rockies a progres sive railroad in 1952 spending another 23 million dol lars for improvements to plant and equipment. Old 268 can pop a valve with pride when she views the schools, highways, and airports built with tax money she helped earn for the Rio Grande taxes today amounting to more than one million dollars per month, among others supplying the very life blood of local government in her territory. She can take maternal cheer in the knowledge that -today an average of three million dollars a month makes up the payroll of more than 7,000 Rio Grande employees (average annual wage in excess of 14,500) who work in the main line communities she once served. ll&aybe) not today, or tomorrow, or a year from now; but soon her whistle will be stilled forever . . . soon she will lead the procession of the few remaining members of her narrow-gauge fleet away from the hopeless struggle with progress. 'ITTfi et Hollywood co-stars named her Cinder Ella, and properly so, for her story ends in the melting pot of progress she will live "happily " ever after," literally recast to fit a new role in the never-ending advance of civilization. JtsL ' Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad 1 lufffiMyititn OOOOCX Hebmimge BRAND MUM I B6 PROOF . THE OLD HERMITAGE COMPANY. FRANKFORT, KENTUCKY FINANCIAL INDUSTRIAL FUND, INC. A Managed Mutual Fund Cumulative Investment Plana Monthly Payment Plana ? PROSPECTUS ON REQUEST THE DAVIS COMPANY REAL ESTATE INSURANCE INVESTMENTS 1479 South Main Salt Lake City, Utah Telephone 84-4365 . I am interested Name Address - , |