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Show &ut 9 Jteaia By STEVE WILLIAMS The husband who's always al-ways busy as a bee may someday find his honey missing. Mayor Martell o cr at Heaver Heav-er wants ns to proclaim next week National Education Week and Tuesday as Vets Day and call on all the citizens citi-zens for proper observance, etc. Used to be proclamations were something special that really meant something, but now it's got to the point where there's a special proclamation i on every editor's desk lor ali most every clay of the year, complete with all the flower) wherefores and whereases and therefore nows. So we've joined the hundreds of other newspapers that quit proclaiming but keep on an-nou an-nou ncing. r Next Week Hizzoner Mayor Martell will be observing National Na-tional Educatiin Week and on Tuesday will be helping the Legionnaires and Ladies of the Auxiliary observe Veterans Day, and he invites you all to join him. Valentine says one of Maurice Abravanel's favorite favor-ite musicians spent all week working on an arrangement and then found out his wife wasn't going out of town after all. Hal Hickman, up at the U of U, is doing a new kind of thesis for a class a.ssigngment. Instead of the usual written treatise on why leaves turn brown or what makes milk turn to clabber, he's doing a television program on "The Life and Death of Frisco" and will feature much of the old history of the defunct but once roaring mining town, along, with intimate personal stories, ot people who lived there. It'll lie shown on Channel 7, Utah's education station. But Hal needs help. Any Beaver County residents who have any knowledge whatever of Frisco, when it was alive,, and especially old photos, are urged to write Hal Hickman, University of Utah, Salt Lake, or Mrs. Sam Hickman, Beaver. Beav-er. Hal will be down over Thanksgiving. Women can keep a secret just as well as men, but it takes more of them to do it. C. Victor Smith recently received a nice letter from Chairman Shoemaker of the State Tax Commission commending com-mending him for his extra effort ef-fort and research in compiling compil-ing that tax breakdown we published a couple of weeks back. "We wish more county officials offi-cials would do this so that the people would know where their tax money goes," Mr. Shoemaker said. More of 'em probably would, only it takes four or five hours of digging into records and adding up figures and figurin' percentages, and maybe most county clerks figure when it ain't required of 'em why bother? Some of the Milford party Continued on Back Page HERE'S MORE ABOUT 1 DUNNO Continued from Page One leaders were a bit perturbed because there was no space on the ballot for justice of the peace, as there is on the Beaver Beav-er ballot, and started a campaign cam-paign for writeins even tho there "vasn't no place to write in a name. The County Clerk instructed instruct-ed tellers to ignore votes for justice at Milford and a quick contact with the attorney general's gen-eral's office brought a tele-grgam tele-grgam advising they should be ' "counted by held" pending an official ruling from his office. Dunlin what the outcome will be, but unofficially Richard Rich-ard Jefferson beat out John Hanley, about six votes to four, for justice of the peace, and Wes Bolton garnered a write-in for county attorney. Wes don't believe it, but Fly Tolley swears he ain't the one that wanted "Wes elected. |