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Show MINING in UN ,E 40 r -A 55 E1 (LI W S sustnes . T H Aiii B a Plan f iLEO E - i n the e.ditor apparent of KKUDucmo rather stormy meeting last s iday night officers to iead Helper season seball team during consisted of a re elected, which !At a the-194- 7 and ten directors. the younger baseball and fan public were on hand Saying an emphatic protest to most policies and methods of run-ju- g the ball team this season, and make a few demands for. the '47 fason. The main argument advanced I the opposition was regarding the Importation of ball players which had home-towjjsnied players a chance i participate on me team, mey there exists In Helper laintained ual talent to that that had been fought in from On the other side of the argument ose responsible for the team duriseason just ng the very successful the fifrom especially impleted, ducial standpoint, maintains that ien the season first started and jroughout the first half local talent with the excfes used exclusively eption of not more than three or ur men, and that the local boys ifi quit the team on their own free which made it necessary to fcport more players to complete the of fiA n up-stat- e. 11 frond half. I And that's the way the argument lis and that's the way""it"h'as "ne'eri" Iring the late part of the Indust-ifw league season, or since faces were named in several Helper's There Is always two sides question, and it takes two J an argument. Not desiring to take sides one way fan, f another, this humble baseball dur-Spporter and enthusiast, who the past fifteen years has been iftively concerned In seeing base-$1kept alive in Helper, has serv- as an officer, a director, score-teepe- r and on finance and translation committees year in and ftar out, and each season it has been Weup. every make g 1 te same old story gate receipts fallen off players have lost finterest ?e our existance in the loop has been threat-fe- d because of Helper's Inablity to et the competition. We have been perennial cellarfteam and the fact tat we live a long way from the filter of the loop has made it difficult to keep other clubs from our franchise. Baseball since 1)34 has been a very indefinite Quan-in this community. MThis year has proven that Helper Carbon county want fast base-the fans have proven by their Wtronage at the ball games that want to see and will support winning club. The first six ball nes durng the first half when Hel-- r was perched atop of the league ;e ,0cal grandstand would not ac odate the crowd. Again as the frond half got underway and our tod won three in a row to take the again, they came back yelling r winner. The average ball fan ? St- Louis, New York, Chicago, Franfisrn anA CoH T ota aren't " much concerned where with ,ef team members were raised or Tre are they living what they nt to see is a ball team that can . and they'll go the limit to sup-"thpm when they are among the ers. Just because those cities are J" and Helper Is a small city, snt make too much difference J1"1 Mr and Mrs Public spends uesne iu inoir auusiy j a nit of recreation. If we were to I (Continued on Pago Two) J m Y! the state. Thi3 committee will ask the coal operators to make a research to find some suitable method by which coal might be burned and eliminate the pmoke p oduced and will ask the railroads if it will be possible for them to install equipment on all c:a'. "jurninj locomotives entering f"!t l ake City whirt has proven to eliminate 90 percent of the smoke. Makes Report This committee was decided upon following a report by J. A. Theobald, secretary, in which he stated that Mayor Earl J. Glade had suggested such an action with the thought in mind that if the operators and railroads are able to show this can and will provide a suitable method of doing away with the smoke, the Salt Lake ordinance, scheduled to go into effect, might either be replaced or amended. It was pointed out that the ordinance as it now stands will mean a loss of about 600,000 tons of coal to Carbon county now used by the Denver & Rio Grande railroad between Salt Lake and Helper, since officials of the railroad have said they would discontinue the use of engines at Helper. Only "Forerunner" Members of the group also expressed the opinion that the present ordinance which, prohihits.the use of equipment after August 1, 1947, will likely be only a forerunner to the prohibition of all coal burning, both domestically and industrially, in Salt Lake City. Mr Theobald gave a summary of the activities of his office since the last regular meeting was held May 7. He reported that extensive activity had been taken toward the naming of a route running diagonally across the United States from Florida to Washington and that the full support of several states and organizations had been pledged for this project. He also reported on the Salina canyon road and on proposed highway improvement and construction in Southeastern Utah. f CLERK ven iremen's o can-win- g a complete ticket of World War I and 11 veterans with County Clerk It H Youna:. One addition and me change to the the tieket as selected on July 23 at j mas meeting if veteran was shown in the ticket filed yesterday. Miss Mevlene Kerry, of Helper, who served in the YAC is listed as a candidate for county recorder, a spot that was vacant before, and Olio L. Shiner of Price replaces George A. Rowley of Spring Glen as the party's candidate for treasurer. Mr Rowley declined to run. The office of surveyor and attorney are vacant due to two World War II vets having qualified on the Democratic ticket. They are John Bene and A. John Rugged. The nominees named on the filings include Walker A- Diamanti, Helper, state representative, First district; Max Bertola, Price, state representative, Second district; J. B. Willis, Helper, four-yea- r commissioner; L. O. r comBuffmire, Dragerton, Joe Holman, Price, sheriff missioner; John R. Goni, Price, treasurer; Mer-len- e E. Berry. Helper, recorder, and Alden L. Budick, Hiawatha, clerk. - two-yea- CARBON - GRANITE RELATIONS EXPERT TRANSFER GAME Mar-Taco- 1 OflicersAre makers w - HdWJw. TALKS TO KIWANIS ON U.S. CONSTITUTION The election of officers to govern the student body at Carbon college will be held next week. Preceding the elections a campaign assembly will be held at which time the nominees will place their merits before the students. The Associated Women's Student organization and the Associated Men Students organization will also sold their elections after the general student elections next week. Dr. Aaron E. Jones announced that each teacher would only be allowed to be adviser for one, class or club. noted artist and scuVptor, and a native of Utah. He is well known throughout the art centers of the world, and has recently been retained by the Art Department of the Michigan University, at Ann Arbor. Michigan. The emblem was designed for the Centennial commission while Mr. Fairbanks was vacationing in his native state this summer. There is great strength and depth deof feeling in the simple, coin-liksign. The front, pictured at top above depicts In a prayerful pose, a pioneer of 1947. viewing the unending trek of the pioneers, in the panel below is the pioneer mother, with child ren who participated in the grand The feeling which inadventure. spired and and pioneers and their descendants today is told in the sim"Our Heritage: ple inscription: Gained by Brawn and toil; Guided by Faith and Vision and Courage." Copyright for the emblem has been applied for by the Centennial Commission. Special permission will be required for its use. Will Discuss School The opening football game of the season with Granite high school of Salt Lake that was announced to be played on the Carbon field tomorrow night at 8 o'clock has been transfered to the Granite field and will be played under the lights at 8:15 Coach Pres Sumrnerhays announced this morning the Gran ite school officials asked for the transfer of the site of the game due to the Polio scare in Carbon. Lunch Project At Meeting In City Hall A special meeting has been called tonight at the city hall to discuss the problem 0f school lunches for Helper during the present, schooi year. Organizations have been asked to send representatives to the meeting where plans to meet the problem as it now exists will be laid. Carbon school district have more or less laid the problem of finding a building to prepare the lunches for the Helper schools. An attempt to Relected Wahl Albert secure the use of the auditorium has Head of Helper been discouraged by organizations In the city, and the city officials have Baseball Association with the protesting groups. agreed At a meeting of the Helper BaseGeorge Spratling was named by ball association Friday night at the the city to head a committee and call civic auditorium, A. S. Wahl was re- the meeting. J elected to serve during 1947 as its president, and Ernest Gardner and Greek Orthodox Church E. F. MarchettI were reelected as New business manager anr secretary respectively. Sunday Services Ten members of a board of directthe arrival of their new pasors were also named and Include torUpon Efstathios Hatzidakls, the Greek Ko-seLuke Cormani, Ace Verdi, Louis Orthodox church of Price was able Joe S. Dalpiaz, Henry Telaroli, to resume regular services last SunJoe Juliano, Vince Bonza, Charley He will take over the pulpit - day. Martin Gapand Huff, Pete Perrero formerly held by Spyrldon C. Econ-omwho left for a new parish In of directors will be A meeting California two weeks Sacramento, called in the near future to draft byago. the of policies discuss laws, and The new priest was a former pasorganization for next year. tor in Monesen, Pennsylvania. He has been in the United States seven COLLEGE ENROLLMENT years, serving before that time in REACHES THE 225 MARK Canea, Crete, Greece for 11 years. Car-bDr. A. E. Jones, president of It Is reported that his wife who Is ncollege,. Tuesday reported that still In Greece will join him In the enrollment In the upper division had near future. reached the 225 mark, with 125 of the enrollees being GIs. Last week of the college at any one time. 642 the enrollment was less than 200 bad been enrolled in the lower divwhich was the largest In the history ision, 11th and 12th grades. Hear At Priest c, o o Dr. Henry E. Pace, member of the Carbon college faculty, was guest speaker at the regular, weekly meet-igof the Helper Kiwanis club. His subject was "Constitutional Government," which fit into the club's obser "Constitution! national of vance Week." n e NOTED FAMILY y CARBON INSTRUCTOR ELECT STUDENT OFFICERS Fakianks CARBONTO HEAR J 9 CARBONlrO- Dr. 19, 1946 State Unite To Helo Check Polio Utah will have an official emblem for the Utah Centennial in 1947, David R. Trevithick, public relations director, announced this week. The emblem will be used on souvenir coins, medals, trophies, or for any other purposes for which it Is adaptable. The emblem was created by Avard coal-burnin- g Under the sponsorship of the Carbon board of education, Carbon colcouncil lege and the Parent-Teacher- s a series of six lectures has been arranged by Paul Popenoe, director of the institute of family relations, Los Angeles. The talks will extend over a two-daperiod, Monday and Tuesday, September 30 and October 1, at Car. bon college and the municipal auditor ium. General theme is "The Family In a Changing World." No charge will be made and the public is cordially invited to all the lectures. First of the series will be held at the college Monday at 11 a.m., en "' titled "Looking Forward to At 2:30 D.m.. Mr Popenoe will talk on a "Changing Family In a Changing World." The same nlgnt iia win address the nublic at the city hall on "Helping Youth to Face a New World." Tuesday, October 1, Mr Popenoe will talk at the same time in the same Places as the previous day. His will be "Is subjects at the college "Growing o Vbw Morality?", rpt,M at night in and Emotionally," Up the city hall he will discuss AnAiding a Success of Marriage." Stake discussion will follow each lecture. sacrament Meeting one of The speaker is considered the country in On Sunday authorities the best relationships, and has LnS 8take' and 1,0 Brady' lectures in all the largest Is urgr me nigh council, were cities of America. The public to hear effort r a special make sacrato at tne regular ed of the numbers. kst c8erVice8 of the Heler ward any or all 'ay even,nDavW Colton, superinof th warl James B. Loftis.. former railroad was h bishopric, Grande RIO f the of the tendent raetln- I .. . ji.,itnn and at one time g t0 Bl8hp Ly"n Broad- - Salt laK5 Ul Lit in tb, unselor, Elmer Park- - trainmaster f wii Vlm CharBe of next week'" was a visitor in town time he Is etln an1 ,8 ,0 arrnge the pro- - and today. At the present California. im living at Palo Alto, Approximately 7:00 tax notices for real estate were sent Monday by the office of Carbon county treasurer, according to A. N. Smith. Last year was collected in taxes or almost 97 per cent of the total amount charged against property owners. Tax collections should go over this sum in 1946, said Mr Smith, as Price city now has a tax levy that will more than offset the decrease in the county levy. "Deadline for tax payments is at noon on November 15. Centennial Emblem Is Okhed By Commission coal-burnin- g y City And TAX NOTICES $740,-220.4- rany Wednesday filed and semi-pr- ir 191G fil Car'u THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER S;3NDS OUT H The first fall meeting of the Associated Industries of Carbon Couuty held at the Htlpm- auditiriu:n Tuesday night gave its president I). K. uowney power to form a committee official. of Ut.iirs rail;to call up-roads and the Utah Coal Operators and present to them the situation as viewed from this area of the seriousness of the effect a recently passed anti-coa- l burning equipment ordinance passed by the Salt Lake cimmittee will have cn the coal area EDITORIALS cc:t: i i errrs iSEBALL NEWSPAPER COUNTY TREASURER VETERANS' TICKET 20i Hgdllld elper'S DISTRICT HELPER. UTAH . mm -Il- RAILROAD 38 NUMBER fcsGCiateu " AND Pace stated that the first coun- try to have a constitutional form of government was Great Britain. He reviewed the articles of confedera: tion and the establishment of the present form of government that were based on the constitution of the United States. Weldon Thacker of Castle Gate and Louis Crocco of Kenilworth, were presented with a check each in the amount of $8.00 as a prize for having placed first in their respective communities in the Kiwanis junior garden contest. A third winner from Helper was not in attendance. Roland Taylor, chairman of the Child Welfare committee, made the awards. To Sponsor USO Drive The club voted to sponsor the USO drive that will be made nationally next month and named O. A. Ross as chairman of a special committee that will be set up. This drive will take the place of the United War Fund drives of past years. A former club member, James R Loftis, was a guest of the club and recounted his experiences since leaving the Rio Grande as its superintendent In .1943. He was with the ODT for several years during the war;- - and at the present time is retired and living in Palo Alto. Robert Booth was in charge of the program, and P. J. Bowman conducted the meeting as chairman. Next week John Booth, former Spanish Fork mayor, and a past governor of the Utah-IdahKiwanis district, will review what's expected of Kiwanis during 1947. He was recent ly appointed a member of the international committee on Public Affairs. o RULES OF FLOWER Spread The state board of health through their Carbon county representative H. C. lioulton, have discouraged the city of Hrtpr ' from carrying out a plan they had approved last Thursday at a regular council meeting of spraying all garbage containers thru out the city as a precaution against the spread of Polio. Mr ISoulton Wednesday expressed the opinion that only a very few garbage containers in Helper were covered and to spray uncovered garpage containers would be of very little value. He recommended that a campaign be undertaken by the city to encourage individuals to spray their own containers and secure covers for them. Mr Boulton also advised that if every housewife would spray their screen doors with a DDT solution" they could do a great service to the community and aid in curtailing a spread of polio before it got started The epidemic at Dragerton where 14 cases were reported up to Saturday has subsided, but this scare has made the entire county conscious of the seriousness of the dreaded disease, and a desire to do all In their power to confine It to the area. A report from Hiawatha reveals that two cases have been discovered In that community.- , Cover Outside Toilets The city with the aid of Mr Boulton are going to conduct a campaign-agains- t the outside toilets with the objective of seeing that each is completely covered and made air tight. In his opinion the outside, open toilet is the worst ,bed that 1 can be found in any community. If the spread of polio becomes more active Helper will go all out to spray every possible spot where flies assemble, and will cooperate to the i limit with the board of health. ' Awards Light-Bas- e Contract Joe Rebol has been awarded the contract for pouring the concrete bases for the new whiteway lighting system that Is' now underway in the city. It has been reported that the poles are probably on their way front the factory, and with part of the cables already installed the old light ing system should give way to the new within the next thirty days. The council last Thursday approved a revision to the present electrical ordinance as it concerns the use of commercial power. A copy of the ordinance revision will be found on page seven of this issue of the SHOW ANNOUNCED FOR COUNTY FAIR Barney Hyde, supervisor of the flower show at the fair to be held September 26, 27 ' and 28, at the County Fair Grounds, advises that the following rules will govern the flower exhibits: All flowers must be properly named, must be grown by exhibitor and all containers labeled with class designated must be furnished by exhibitor, (the committee will not be responsible for breakage or loss, altho the best possible care will be given). Points will be given as follows for the best single specimen (any variety) one bloom in container, best individual display mixed cut flowers, tables, vases and baskets arranged by exhibitor, best basket or vase of one variety of flowers, blooming pot plant, potted fern and most artistic centerpiece. The entrants from North Carbon area have a chance to win the $50 donated by the Helper Kiwanis Centennial Flower committee besides the Fair prizes. Flowers must be at the Fair early Thursday but If no transportation is available contact Mr Hyde at O.P. Skaggs by 10 a.m. Thursday morning and he will take care of them. Judging on flower entries will be on the following basis: Color, 10 points; Form, 10 points; Stem, 20 points; Condition, 20 points Arrangement, 20 points; Size according to variety, 20 points. Originally the Helper committee, which was sponsored by the local Kiwanis club, had Intended to sponsor a North Carbon flower show, but when the fair became a definite reality the committee, which Is headed by H. E. Perkins of Spring Canyon, decided to combine their show with the fair and have a real big affair. REGISTRATION DATE8 October 8, 15 and 29 are the three remaining registration dates before the general election on November 5, according to County Clerk B. H. Young. Eligible voters are urged to get their names on the rolls or check to see that they are corrertiv registered. "Perfect Attendance" At Sunday School Planned by LDS Stake September 22 next Sunday has been designated throughout North Carbon stake Sunday schools of the LDS church as "Perfect Attendance Sunday" and' also "Dime Fund" Sunday, It has been announced by members of the stake superlntendency, C. N. Memmott, J. E. Johnson and Gerald Anderson. An effort will be made to have all regularly attending Sunday school members bring a friend with them with the idea of enrolling them as regular members. The "Perfect Attendance" idea begins a churchwide project of reaching a goal of 400,000 members in the Sunday School by January 1, 1947. Each ward has been given a quota of new members to attain. The following Sunday, October 2f. the stake will conduct its Sunday school union meeting at the Helper ward chapel. This meeting is for all stake and ward officers, and teacher training will be the general theme. Dr. L. II. Merrill Takes Position With U. S. Fuel Company Dr. L. H. Merrill, who until he enIn the U. S. Navy medical corps about 14 months ago was associated with the Spring Canyon Coal company, for a great many years, has accepted a position with the United States Fuel Company at Hiawatha, and ibegan his new duties last Monday. listed Helper Liquor Store Names New Manager Vince Bonza, World War II veteran, and an employee of Helper City corporation for many years, has been appointed manager of the Helper Utah Liquor store, succeeding E. R. Crissman, deceased. Mr Bonza, a life long resident of the Helper area, excepting the time spent In the European Theatre of war, assumed his new duties at thhe liquor store Monday, September 16. . |