OCR Text |
Show HELPER THK To Be Christened "City Of Helper" JOURNAL NEWS ABOUT OUR NEIGHBORS FROM Helper, Utah THURSDAY, SEPT. 30, 1948 PAGE SIX Utah Tax Items Attract Attention Two tax items recently present, ed to the public by Tax Commis-eio- n members are interesting. One report quotes a study made by the Minnesota Institute of Govern-th- e tax on net corporate income fnent Research which shows that in Utah is lower than the average for all states in the union impos- - Castle (Gate LDS COAL MINE HOUGHTON BY JOSEPHINE OPERATED BY CHURCH NEWS IN CASTLE GATE THREE STAKES improvements have the past few rnonth3 at sing 6uch a tax, and lower than the the (oa ,nine near orangeville tax in several other states compar - (hat is owne(1 and operated by the ably situated. On a $25.noO net Mr .and Mrs. Jim Tabone and of JeHU, Christ of Latter come ine nan tax is comparI'ete Tabone, were called to son, with Shirl McArthur Saints as ed with the national average of jPay Rock the general superintendent. Springs, Wyoming, by the $415. In Idaho the same tax is Secured by the church over two death of Mr. Tabone's only brother 668; $S67; California, $482; Coloyears ago the mine is being oper- Tom Tabone. They left Sunday Many new l)f,en note(1 ' rado, $433; Arizona, $410 and New ated by the North Carbon, Carbon Mexico, $173. Despite the rising and stakes as a welfare Emery costs of government it cost the Coal from the mine is project. State Tax Commission less to colused the church in heat being by lect more revenue during the last church-owneand d fiscal VAflr than at nTivtlmo in hia ing the various such as temples buildings tory. The collection was made at Iterated the new low figure of $.018 per the tabernacle at Salt Lake; church etc. Not one dollar of state revenue collected. office buildings, is being sold on of coal the pound During the previous iiscal year market, which the collection expense amounted the commercial keeps the mine in a noncompetito $.0212 per dollar collected. tive class. Stakes and wards may Clip Boards, wooden or masonite, secure coal for their chapels from 65c and up at th-- Journaf. the mine but must pay the cost of production . Only a few men are e and they are employed compensated through regular welfare procedures of hiring the men. New Mine Equipment The road from the bins to the mine portal has ibeen improved enough to permit the new ma. hinery to be taken into the mine The bulldozer is now working on tne roaa Deiow tne mine to pre pare it to better accommodate the new truckg now in operation. Five new trucks have been pur chased for transport of the coal. Three of them are now 'being used and two old trucks are also being used until the other two new ones are delivered. The trucks each have an overall length of 60 feet. Work is presently going forward on the new airshaft, and work in the mine itself has been stepped up until at the present time 100 tons of coal per day are being MARLINE produced. It is expected that operations will continue to be expandDIETRICH ed until 200 tons a day will be the ultimate production. WALTER P1DGE0M The Carbon and North Carbon L. D. S. stakes are leveling ground In on which chutes "will be construct99 ed to enable the loading of coal into railroad cars. Another imW provement currently in progress hi - i.tr r nt on man - . is the running of an electric power hone, .... line to the mine site by the Utah iiis faith . . . wife her devotion? Power and Light company. It is expected that this project will be within the near future. completed Theatre Guild on the Air Aaronic priesthood members from wards in Emery stake have M been working at the mine doing odd outside jobs for the past three weeks, and the Carbon and North presented by Carbon stakes are planning to i UNITED STATES STEEL furnish workers for the mine on s full-tim- SUNDAY U urn ir;ls KOAL 7 30 p Saturdays. PROFESSIONALS MITCHELL and CASTLE GAT K Officers class lcaders of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association for the coming year include; William Johnson, Superintendent; Bruce Fiack, 1st assistant; Johnson, Secretary.Treasurer; EdJohnson, M Men Leader; gar Thomas Bendall, Special Interest morning. Mrs. Fern Cousins is now back Leader; Steve Star, Scoutmaster; on the jib at the Wasatch Store Lawrence Davis, Assistant Scoutafter spending a two master Company, weeks vacation at Denver. Colo. Miss Clara Wilstead, Primary officers and teachers of Salt Lake City, is visiting at the home who will work this year include: Thalia Thacker, President; Joseof her sister and brother-in-laphine Houghton, 1st Counselor; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Richard (Dick) Ida Evans, 2nd Counselor; Rheta AnnaEvans and children, Alice, Kent, Miller, Secretary-Treasure- r; and David, of Fairview, visited at bel Fish, Teacher Trainer; Bulah Loa Ann Chorister; the home of Bishop and Mrs. Fay Tabone, Kromple, Organist; Coreene Booth, B, Thacker Sunday. Mrs. N. N. Simmonj returned Seagulls; Peggy James, Bluebirds; Mae home Saturday from Payson, where Deon Craig, Larks; Anita Hreinson, Guides and Trekkers; she visited during the week. Pearl Letha and Ailey Griffin, of San Thelma Nielson, Blazers; Diego, California, visited at the Stagg, 2nd Zion's Boy and Girls; home of Mrs. .Griffin's parents, Leona Turner, 1st Zion's Boys and Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Taylor. Mr. Girls; Virginia Lewis and Shirley and Mrs Griffin and Mr and Mrs. Etzel, 2nd group; Melba Mills Taylor were dinner guests at the and Marjorie Brady, 1st Group, Cradle roll home of Mr and Mrs. Lynn Wil- Rae Dell Pearson, stead, Tuesday. They returned to roup. their home Saturday. Miss Marjorie Winn of Kenil-wort- h Thomas Grundy left Tuesday for was the special speaker at Salt Lake City to enter Saint Marks hospital where the cast he Sacrament meeting Sunday evehas been wearing for several ning. She told of her missionary months will (be removed. experiences while serving in the Mr. and Mrs. Donald Thorpe and Canadian Mission. Other numbers daughter, and Iretta Thorpe of on the program were by Mrs. CorPrice, were visitors at the home eene Booth's group in the L.D.S. of their parents, Mr. and, Mrs. Girl's program; Marilyn Thacker James Thorpe, Saturday. played a piano solo and Faye Mil-e- r The wind storm Saturday and gave a reading. Sunday did a great deal of damage to treljs, fences and a porch between Mooseheart and the averwas blowndown at the Roy Russell age orphanage cannot be better home. described than through the use of Yvonne Foote, daughter of Mr. the statement made to the POST and Mrs. Oscar Foote is nowj by one of Mooseheart's graduates, home from the Price hospital hav. Russell Raycroft who, at thirty-thre- e, ing undergone an appendectomy. is an executive of one of John Houghton was a Salt Lake the largest radio agencies in the City visitor Tuesday. country. In his statement to the POST, Raycroft said, "My father died, Story of Mooseheart leaving our mother, my sister, "City Of Children" Mary, and myself entirely dependIn Sept, 4 ent. We had to go to Mooseheart The Child City, operated and and none of us wasted to go. To maintained by the Loyal Order of me it was an orphanage and orMoose for the care and training of phanages were dismal, orphan children at Mooseheart, repulsive places. We walked up avenue to MooseIllin is, has long been recognized the tree-line- d as the world's finest home of its heart and I dreaded the end of the buildk kind. Even though the Child City walk the usual has been acclaimed by scientists ing. Suddenly we came into full Mooseheart's great exand educators all over the world view of k buildings but aud has ibeen visited annually by panse no hundreds of thousands of visitors, fine, bright home spread out on it has not been generally in the hundreds of acres of beautiful public eye until just recently when lawns. I loved Mooseheart from circulated magazines that moment and I will until I nationally and Sunday supplements 'discovered'' die. I've been around, I've made a its outstanding difference from career, fought in a war and have the ordinary type of orphange seen many foreign lands, hut I The complete story of Mooseheart, still get homesick for Mooseheart." Ray Anderton, Secretary of the the Child City, will appear in the of September 4 issue of "Saturday local lodge of Loyal Order advises new six Moose, that homes Post" with a illustrated Evening host of beautiful and distinctive dt Mooseheart have just been opened for boys and girls ranging color photographs. The Child City is located 35 from babes in arms to seniors in miles west of Chicago on a tract the Mooseheart high school. The of more than 1200 acres situated on article, "City of Children", written the beautiful Fox River in North- by Warner Olivier will he of great ern Illinois. The terrific difference interest to every parent in tnis tommunity. II. A. bring his total to S64; The style of an author should he Smith lost two votes at Standard, ville to drop his total to 827 and the image of his mind, but the Mark C. Lloyd lost five votes in choice and command of language South Price to drop his total to is the fruit of exercise. Edward Gibbon. 131 Le-R- "Post" red-bric- red-bric- red-bric- Vote Canvass Finds Few Changes In Primary Returns by deep-cushion- ed Auxiliary was held Wednesday evening at the homeof Mrs. Ruth DeAngeles. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Clea Davis, October 13th, Members pres ent were Mrs. Clea Davis, Mrs. Inez Robertson, Mrs. Ellen Carlson, Mrs. May Hilton, Mrs. Edna Hardee, Mrs. Helen Houghton, Mrs. Sylvia Barney, Mrs. Lillie Pecor-ell- i, Mrs. Mrs. Lenore Davis, Josephine Houghton. ' past figure is also four-mont- $12,-138,0- greater than the same per. .od in 1947. CENTRAL COMM. months four the During past 12,449 business establishments em. AND SUPPLY CO. ployed 121,270 workers at an aver, age monthly of $212.03. Wages for Materials some type of workers are higher officials than, others. Employment FOR YOUR do not attempt to present an optiBUILDINQ NEEDS mistic picture of the employment future. Their reports do show that Utah wages in general have kept Phone 72 Helper livcost of the with in line rising Mrs Bettie Cassella wai,, hastess at a luncheon at her home Sep. ing. tember 22nd. Her guest list includ44mOmmnt ed: Mrs. Bulah Tabone, Mrs. Ansr. nie Mills, Mrs. Tressa Johnson, From where Mrs. Melba Mills, Mrs. Marjorie Brady, Mrs. Judy Haggerty, Mrs. Frances Zmerzliker, Mrs. Ellen Carlson, Mrs. Thelma Nielson, Mrs. Shirley Etzel, Mrs. Rita Oldroyd, Mrs. Virginia Lewis, and Mrs. Sophie Callar and Mrs. Mary Callar of Helper.. Now that the bandstand has been tiesfrom freedom to enjoy a Utah Wage Income painted, and the park glass of beer or ale, to a woman's Placed at 300 Million we have about the nicest right to vote along with men. t Utah's total wage income for village green in the county. Folks can thank themselves that 1948 is expected to pass the three And it's all because, at the last on summer evenings they'll be able hundred million mark. The average town election, folks got out and to listen to band concerts in a well-kewage earner in the state receives voted 85 per cent of them! That park . . . enjoying a bottle of $212:00 monthly. This is the highbeer or soda pop (whichever they way, they passed the amendment est salary peak in the state's hiscalling for park improvements prefer). Because from where I sit, tory. that's a freedom they've earned by The new income is three times over those opposing it. exercising a still more important Reminds you again how imponormal. greater than the pre-wIt is five time higher than the de- rtant the right to vote is in this freedom: Voting! pression low. The total wage incountry. And it's a right we can come for the past four' months retain only by exercising it! . . . (May, June, July and August) was like all the other individual liber $77,13S,0S5.00 This figure is an in. crease of $2,829,085.00 over the Copyright, 1948, United States Brewers Foundation first period of 1948. The Better ft. l I skv Am Joe Marsh, Your Most Important Right pt ar four-mon- th Car and Truck Owners Attention! c -- were found Very few changes the county commissioners in the vote tabulations of the prielection held on September mary Embalmer & Funeral Director 7. The vote canvass was conducted PHONE 300 PRICE yesterday afternoon. mione The changes found, enough to change the course of the election, were as follows: THORIT HATCH Marl D. Gibson picked up one vote in West Helper to make his LAWYER total 1430; J. Orvel Peterson lost 12 votes, five at Scofield and 8tafford Bldg Phone 276 to cut his total seven at Wattis. Helper, Utah to 1380, Jesse Bryan gained seven 9999 votes at Wattis to raise "his total to 1417; W. W. West lost ten votes Loyal Order of Moose at West Helper to cut his total to SS0; David J. Wilson picked up Meet Every Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. 30 votes in Central Price to raise HELPER LODGE HALL his total to 968; Rendell N. Ma- bey lost one vote in South Price AFFFIDAVIT to drop his total to 209; William Nick Uzelao in East Chris Jouflas, Leonard Lanie, Subscribed and sworn to before I Warner lost two votes Governor frice and 15 in South Price to and Thomas Beveridge, each for me this 23rd day of September, Ray Andertoh drop his total to 546; Archer R. himself, being first duly sworn, A. D., 1948. Secretary Clayton lost six at Castle Gate deposes and says that he and the ' Thorit Hatch and picked up one at Martin to other persons herein named are Notary Public, tho exclusive owners of the busResiding at: Helper, Utah. iness known as the Food Center, My Commission Expires: located and doing business in HeL October 26th, 1950. SPECIFICATION per, Carbon County, State of Utah. APPRECIATED CONFIDENCE That the said Chris Jouflas, TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONYOUR Leonard Lange, and Thomas Bev. CERN: eridge are the exclusive owners of BE IT KNOWN THAT Chris Joufthe trade named described herein las, Leonard Lange and Thomas and is in use by thorn in the bus- Beveridge of Helper, Utah, being of Labor, Industry, To all iness of retail food dealers. .engaged in the business of retail in me who supported said food dealers adopted for their use trade and the claim that Business They is the name under which goods a trade name, of which the followElection by selecting me as the and merchandise are sold and dis- ing Ig a description, or facsimile: county commisDemocratic candidate tributed by them. appreciate your confidence. CHRIS JOUFLAS Datp of first publication, Sept. sioner, I LEONARD LANQE 30, 1918. Date of last publication, 'Oct. 7, 1948. THOMAS BEVERIDGE to off ice in November promise FUNERAL HOME Dick Mitchell CASTLE GATE In a Salt Lake Temple ceremony September 23rd, Miss Canna Assay exchanged vows with Wayne Nielsen, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Nielsen, of Castle Gate. Miss Assay is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Burns Assay, of Roosevelt, Utah. Attending the luxury highway coaches are being put int Five new Temple ceremony were: Mrs. NielRio Grande and week Mr. Traiiways on their main lines from this service by sen, mother of the groom; Mrs. Myron Harmon, and Mr. and Denver to Pueblo to Salt Lake City, SMpplementing the fleet of modern Darwin Nielsen of Price, buses purchased two years ago. Mrs. The latest features of design a,nd comfortable rldftig qualities hav members of the groom's family been incorporated in the new coaches, which are of GMC manufacture and Calvin Craig. a 200 H.P. Diesel engine, and body construction A reception honoring the young They are powered by of is almost aluminum, entirely of at home the couple was held for comfort, and The adjustable reclining seats are the bride's maternal grandmother, controlled reading light is provided over each seat Heat individually jan Mrs. John Johnson of Salt Lake systems are of the most modern type. ing and City. Guests included thhe aforeOne of the new buses will be christened the "City of Helper" and mentioned of the groom's family will carry special name plates with that designation, following the Rio and his sister, Mrs. John Best of Grande custom of naming their main line buses after the principal Price. They will make their home cities they serve. at Hill Field. 'ESS i ACCESSOR ENGINEERED AND BUILT BY CHRYSLER CORPORATION FOR SOBEE All BRAND Plymouth NEW PARTS ASSEMBLED AND BLOCK-TESTE- D ' representatives others the Primary for I to discharge the duties of the office fairly, honestly,and to the best interests always of the majority. J. (Paid Adr. br O. (Blondie) Peterson. 3. O, I ODGETRUCKS Latest mpwemenfe! i greatly If elected AT FACTORY Peterson, Columbia, Utah) FoD D QUALITY FOOD5 OT A 5RVine HlTBll SflTISFACTlOn GURRflnTEEO ASK ABOUT OUR BUDGET PLAN LOW DOWN PAYMENT UP TO 15 MONTHS TO PAY BUNNELL GARAGE 160 South East Main Street .- -. Price .--- -7 Utah |