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Show 9 2 unna, Gut 9 cAeaia v (J Ni By STEV WILLIAMS Mahoney is really getting up in the air during -this session of the State Legislature. Last Friday he flew to Milford, by way of Delta and then Garrison, on an inspection inspec-tion trip of the three airports, a passenger in State Aeronautics Director Di-rector Harlan Eement's plane. Then Thursday of this week lie and Thorpe Waddingham, our State Senator, were aviated to Milford for a special legislative clinic in the Milford High School, scheduled for 8 p. m. and planned to discuss legislation pending in the current session which will be of importance to Beaver County. Jack said the road work on the Milford-Delta connection is continuing con-tinuing to progress speedily with Max Baxter doing a great job on this end. He also advised that the Minimum Mini-mum Crew bill is scheduled for public hearing at 9 a. m. Tuesday, Feb. 3, and the Right to Work bill will be discussed publicly Feb. 2. Wes Bolton wants to know what Daisy Rowley and Durham Morris are up to, listing three "does" in their suit against the city council for selling cijy property. "We just got this shooting at does under control," Wes said, "and now here they come shooting at 'does' again. I think I'll ask the Fish and Game Commission to investigate 'em." Returning from out west with E. L. Smith, Mayor Kizer and Bill Hopkins, where we took pictures of the new Lions Club highway sign, we ran into a real character at Baker. Name's Art, and he and his wife operate a club and restaurant at Baker. From the time a customer hits the door until he leaves Art keeps up a rapid fire bombardment of gags, insults and compliments, and a stop there is good for more laughs than watching a Red Skel-ton Skel-ton TV show. . This character can take a deck of cards and tell you what black-. black-. Continued on Back Page congressional adelegation may address ad-dress Sen. Ted Moss in care of S?nate Office Bldg., or Rep. King (or Dixon) care House Office Bldg., Washington, D. C. HERfe'S MORE ABOUT . I DUNNO (Continued from Page One) jack h3nd he's gonna deal you (and himself) three hands in advance. Art broke an- ankle a few months ago, and finally decided last Tuesday that maybe he'd better bet-ter have Doc Symond look at it. His biggest worry, though guess it's his only worry is getting. get-ting. the county commissioners to arrange for public telephone facilities facili-ties at Baker, "so we can at least call a cop if we get robbed in the middle of the night, or if one of 'hose wild men from Milford runs ;nto the ditch on lus way to Ely." Well, the FCC had to do a slowdown on their kick-the-boost-ersout order. They've extended to six months instead of 90 days their order to booster operators to get off the air. And in the blizzard of protests that greeted the scandal-ridden FCC's order was a resolution by Utah's new Congressman David S. ors visit the booster areas and determine de-termine which, if any, are causing interference with airline signals. And Utah's Senator Ted Moss used the cccasisn of his maiden Senate speech to expound the benefits of boosters to thousand? of his constituents, and condemn the FCC order. Senator Moss pointed out that the FCC itself is divided on the booster order, saying that: "Commissioner Craven, the only FCC Commissioner with an engineering background and considered con-sidered one of the foremost authorities in radio engineering in the country, stated the FCC can and should establish reasonable reason-able rules oroviding for the authorization of boosters on a practical basis." Senator Moss joined with Sen. Carroll of Colorado in sponsoring a resolution which would express the sense of Congress as supporting support-ing the authorization of TV booster boost-er stations. Anyone .wanting to write our |