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Show THE HELPER JOURNAL PAGE EIGHT THURSDAY, HELPER. UTAH SALT LAKER TO FACE GREEN AND 1 COUNTY TAX MONEY APPORTIONED DEATH CLAIMS JOE TO ELIGIBLE TAXING UNITS; BARBOGLIO i , GOLD BALL DISTRICT COURT ON CONFIDENCE GAME OF N. CARBON STAKE The 1946 taxes collected in Carbon county up to date of delinquency, November .10, have 'been apportioned with the county schools, state and State schools, and county general fund petting the lion's share of the tax monies, a report issued by A. N. Smith, county treasurer, reveals. Of the 1723,530.96 collected, appor tionments were made as follows: State and state schools, $57,343.55 OB a levy of 2.7 mills; county general fund, $53,095.86 on a 2.5 mill levy; county schools, $403,528.62, on a 19 mill levy; county road and bridge fund, $25,486.01, on a 1.2 mills; county Indigent poor fund, $5309.60 on .25 mill levy and county public wel fire fund, $31,857.53 on a 1.5 mill t Jevy. Temporary transient relief, $6371.50 en a levy; exhibition and ad $4447.66 on a .20 mill fund, vertislng Jvy; county airport fund, $10,619.17 m ft .50 mill levy; weed eradication fund, $4247,66 on a .20 mill levy; agricultural extension reserve fund, $21,238,34 on a .20 mill levy; bond Interest and sinking fund, $31,857.53 mill levy; Carbon water n a conservation district fund, $5309.60 on a .25 mill levy, and the building and construction reserve fund, on a one mill levy. Price city, $24,178.19; Helper city 121,351.20; Scofield, $562.81; Welling $3299.51; fcem, Hiawatha, $2182.86; Castle Gate, $2878.85, and Sunnyside .30 mill $21,-ZSt.- li "WEAR A BEARD" $2333.45. These county apportionments total $721,547.16. Apportionments to the state bounty and predatory animal control fund totaled $1374.38. This amount was raised by a 30 mill levy on sheep, five mills on goats and two mills on horses and cattle. The tuberculosis and Bang's disease fund received $45.93 on a three mill levy and the inspection fund received $245.68 with a three mill levy on horses, mules and cattle and a five mill levy on sheep and goats. In addition, of the total tax col lections, $326.81 is used for the con trol of noxious weeds and is assessed by the county agricultural department for work already completed on lands throughout the county. This amount is not charged to the treasurer al though it is collected on the tax rolls. This fund is to be used for the noxious weed program conducted in 1945. The amount of taxes collected from the county at large amounts to $448, 745.79. 'Collections from Price city totaled $99,904.02 on a 10 mill city levy in addition to the county levies. A 13 mill leyy in addition to county levies totaled $72,763.87 from Helper city. Collections from Scofield twon on an eight mill levy plus county levies totaled $2767.27. having the highest Wellington, town levy, 18 mills, paid taxes total ing $5983.63 plus county levies. A four mill levy at Hiawatha resulted in a collection of $29,405.88 in addi tion to county levies. County levies and a town levy of four mills at Castle Gate resulted in $25,405.88. Sunnyside with the lowest town levy two mills, and county levies paid (Continued from Page One) chairman of the "Queen" named and an announcement committee, ajade by him Saturday is to the ef feet that a new Plymouth car will be raffled off and the competing girls In the queen contest will sellchances $38,851.93. In addition to the $723,539.96 col on the car. Tickets are in the pro cess of being printed and will be lected by the treasurer, $31,200 has been collected by the county asses circulated aJbout January 6. Revived after having been a war sor on personal property which will caiualty since 1942, the Centennial be distributed to the taxing units as Jitji of '49 is being sponsored as in of December 31. Also to be added to these appor the past by all organizations in the city with lighting the baseball park tionments is the car and bus com U the major project. The committee pany taxes which will come from the tre actively arranging a program state proibably by the end of this that will equal anything that has month. been produced in years past. Assurance has been received that NEW PENNEY STORE the ball park will be lighted and IN PRICE SETS ready for the opening of the Utah Industrial Baseball league opening OPENING JANUARY 10. arly in May. Helper city has under The doors of the old J. C Penney written the project, and any funds store in Price closed the night of raised from the '49er show will be December 24 and business will not be pplied on the payment of the pro resumed again until the new J. C. Jct., According to Pete Bottino, head Penney department store, one block Of tae light department, 90 light units east of its present location on Main nave been received. This leaves only street has its formal opening Friday, 80 more units not received. The Gen January 10, according to announce eral Electric Co. who have the con ment by L. R. Eldridge manager. tract, assured the Baseball associa The store is one of 30 in the tion that poles and transformers will Penney chain in Utah and decision be available by April. to construct the new one at Price reflected the company's postwar alms in this area, said Mr Eldridge, who added that "Penney's will now be THE equipped better than ever to serve the people of Price and this section." TROY LAUNDRY is able to give you the best in Service and Workmanship. We guarantee no shortage. Just send a list of articles with your bundle. Call Us - Our Truck Will Pick Up Your Laundry "Let's Trade At Home" TROY LAUNDRY Phone 350 Comfort iBH BEST in tmi WEST" 1 There Is An ABERDEEN DEALER In Your COMMUNITY Three Rich Residents Fined For Hunting Deer Out Of Season game wardens, I Laketown residents, the Utah fish and game deuartment announced today. Investigations of other cases are continuing, the department reported. According to arrest reports, How ard Lamborn, Albert I. Weston and Westly Weston, all Laketown, were fined $50 each 'by Justice of the Peace John Weston on charges of hunting deer out of season. In each case $35 of the fine was suspended. Chief Deputy Warden, George W. Reid, was in charge of the investigation, aided by Deputies LaVere King. Jess Dalley, Arnold Christensen and Ed Rosa. Price Raises Judge Salary To New High The city council of Price last followed the pattern set iby other Utah cities who emnlov a citv judge, and authorized an increase in the salary of their city indee to $4500 a year from $3900. The increase will become effective January 1. and according to the Price council, the new salary paid to Judge Sweetring will be the highest of any city in the state, with the possible exception of Salt Lake City judges. week INDEPENDENT COAL & COKE COMPANY acting upon persistent rumors of deer law violations, spent several days in Rich county the early part of December and their investigations have result ed in arrest and conviction of three HEAT George Weber, 46. Salt Lake City, charged with obtaining money through the use of a confidence game was bound over to district court last Friday afternoon by S. J. Sweetring Price city judge. According to the complaint against the man, he had presented himself as the representative of an upholstering company to several residents of Carbon county. As such, he had induced several persons to give him money as an advance payment on furniture upholstering jobs which he would promise to do at a later date. The complaints claimed that this work was never done. Funeral services for Joseph Barboglio Jr., 34. local attorney, who morning, died sometime Tuesday December 31, following a lingering illness, will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Mitchell Funeral home in Price under the direction of the Price Elks lodge. Mr Barboglio was born in Salt Lake City September 23 1912, the son of Mi and Mrs Joseph Barboglio Sr., and had been a lifelong resident of this while city except ;! attending school. After completing grade school in He! entered per, he Wasatch Academy from where he grad uated in 1929. The , ,. j following year he enrolled in Cieigh- - Joe Barboglio ton University at Omaha, where he received his degree in law In 1935. He was admitted to the Utah bar in 1936, and set up an office in the He Helper State Bank building. served one term as city attorney,'. At the time of his death Mr Bar boglio was a director in the Helper State Bank, the First National Bank at Price, and the Eastern Utah Electric Company. He was a member of the Elks lodge, and the Eastern Utah Bar association. His father, who founded the Helper State Bank, preceded him in death, and he is survived by his mother,ia sister Mrs Carl Leavitt of Price, and a brother, Frank of Helper. Burial will be in the Price city cemetery under the directions of Mitchells. 1 SHERIFF JOE DUDLER i CAPTURES j ESCAPED CONVICT The arrest of James E. Newton by Sheriff J. W. Dudler and Lyle Hyatt state highway patrolman on a Price street Friday at 3 p.m. ended his r liberty after escaping from the Utah State prison farm. A search nine-hou- 'been conducted for Newton had since officers had received information from Salt Lake City earlier in the day that he had escaped. They arrested him on South Carbon Ave., as he was attempting to enter a business establishment after seeing the officers. Although he made no further attempts to resist capture, the man denied being an escaped convict, but Sheriff Dudler said he had positive identification. left Newton's capture at Price prison officials and peace officers but one of the night's two escapees to search for. He is Louis C. Ren- burg, 49, committed to the prison for assault with intent to commit rape. Renburg had been in the prison since March, 1944. He Is a former resident TREASURER ISSUES SET FOR JANUARY 31 Plans for the second annual Green and Gold dance for North Carbon LDS stake have been laid by the combined stake MIA board of the young ladies andyoung men, and Friday, January 31 at the Price auditorium, has been selected as the date and place, Mrs Louise Anderson, cochairman of the publicity committee announced Wed nesday. According to Mrs Anderson the two stake boards have recommended that the Centennial of Utah theme be incorporated into decoration the scheme. Carl E. Olsen, special inter est supervisor of the YMMIA of the stake, heads the decorations commit tee and is being assisted by Carmin Lewis of the YWMIA board.. Mrs Marguerite Degn, and John Barton,, activity counselors in the two stake presidencies, have been appointed general cochairmen of the committee, and will be assisted by the following: Decorations, Mr Olsen and Miss Lewis; Property, Charles Menzies and Hazel Kissell; Refreshments, Howard Campbell; Dance manager, P. W. MoCnne; Floor show, Mr Mc Cune and Mrs Grace Roberts; Tickets Mrs Eliza Dalley and Melvin Sim mons; Advertising, Mrs Anderson and Ross Boyack, and Queen presen tation, Mrs Mary Black. 1947 is the second year since North Carbon stake was created. The firs Green and Gold dance last year was considered a grand success, and the committee are hopeful of making the Centennial affair the best ever. Phone newt itemt to The Journal TO SCHOOL DISTRICT Proof of the fact that the county . treasurer's nffino oQ.v, ,. octriliN Trt collecting agency for the school di, rict lies in the lion's share . T 1946 tax collections which is marked for the school district Of the $752,779.17 collected in county for 1946, $403,528.62 goe8 ,! the county schools. This amount increased with the receipt of per sonal property taxes which are beine collected by the county assessor A. N. Smith, county treasurer hai issued a check for $400,000 whicb was sent to J. E. Pettit, school dist rict treasurer. Additional amounts ' will be transferred after the tai collections have been completed The amount that goes to the school' dist rict is based on the 19 4 19 mill ieTr for county schools. v, V. wi-b- sT Ap I K Only.! H I . TACKIMO. fflTTACHS MAKKWILL IX tOSOT MA1KWIUMFAUWAT status fmj . tacks STArttS TACKS assault with a deadly weapon. Pre liminary hearing was set for Jan. 2 and bail fixed at $1500. It was alleged in the comnlaint that Coleman assaulted Frank C. 111 Zubal, Dragerton, with a .25 calibre automatic on the night of Dec. 23. of Mt. Pleasant. Phone 21 COUNTY Warden John E. Harris said Ren- Although one shot was fired from the Helper burg, like Newton and all other men gun no injuries occurred. at the Point of the Mointain farm camp, was a trusty, who had the un animous vote of guard, turnkey, chief The record value of more than clerk, chaplain, deputy warden and in crops and warden before he was permitted to $1,079,000 produced livestock by the farm families of leave the institution on East lst Carbon county last year, more than South. doubled their annual gross income in Warden Harris and Jesse Walton comparison with 1940 as reported by suDerintendent at the prison farm the U. S. Bureau of Census. said Renburg's escape between 11 The huge increase in farm revenue p.m. and midnight Thursday ana will undoubtedly result in heavy de Newton's escape between 5 and 6 mand for general farm improvements a.m. Friday were facilitated by a and for home remodeling when mater heavy fog which hung over the Point , ials become more released by the of the Mountain camp, projected site Tile Council of America. With every of the new state prison. A VERY LIMITED SUPPLY OF STURDY industry anticipating greater busin escapee was de The ess in the state than before the war, cribed as 5 feet 8 inches tall, about HARDWOOD CONSTRUCTION floor and wall tile manufacturers 145 pounds, blond with blue eyes alone expect their sales here to triple and compledion made ruddy by out in the next few years.. door work. A reward of $25 is offer "Increased sales of industrial prod ed for his apprehension. ucts mean in turn a new level of Blue Upholstery A Real Value prosperity for every local business $22.95 PRICETPERSONS man and worker," said D. P. Forst, FOUR chairman of the council's residential construction committee. FACE LIQUOR CHARGES FARM INCOME THE HELPER JOURNAL CARBON AHEAD OF 1940 AFTER CHRISTMAS Furniture Bargains! - still-missin- g Platform (Rockers at Volume of home SPECIAL modernization throughout the country will foe great Bids To Excavate For ly stepped up as a result of the pres ent rapid extension of electric ser Hotel Readied vice to rural areas, according to the By Price Committee study. Heaviest remodeling demand is Directors of the New Price Hotel anticipated for the installation of committee announced this week that running water, tiling of bathrooms preliminary plans will be completed and improving kitchen layouts, Forst by the middle of January for the ad- said. Forst also pointed out the need vertising of bids for the excavation and foundation work on the new for replacing much of the warweary $300,000 hotel to be located on the machinery on the 420 farms listed for corner of Carbon Avenue and First this county in the 1945 census Xig ures. "The demand for new trucks, North street. It was also announced that with the tractors and other equipment, as letting of these contracts, bids for well as for home remodeling, demon the superstructure will be accepted strates the importance of the farm market and makes it one which no by the end of January. businessman or manufacturer can Utah Helper JR., HELPER ATTORNEY $21,23834 2. 194? j I HELPER CITY'S SHARE JANUARY As the result of a raid on the City cafe in Price last Sunday four men were arraigned in Price city court Monday on charges brought by the state liquor commission. Farrell E. Sorensen, agent of the state liquor commission, jointly charged the men with the maintenance of a common nuisance. and According to Mr Sorensen Harley Heaton, the arresting officer, it is alleged that whiskey, in violation of the state liquor control act, was kept at the City cafe for sale from Nov. 15 to Dec. 29. Three of the men, Tony Pallios, Gus Saridakis and Leonard D. Davis, were arrested by the agents Sunday night at the time the raid was conducted while afford to overlook," he said. the fourth, June Davis, was arrested Game Department To Monday. Each of the defendants requested -Move Offices While a preliminary hearing. These hear were set by Legislature Meets Judge S. J. Sweet ings 10 at 10 a.m. for Jan. ring Made temporarily homeless by" the Rail for each was set at $100. coming session of the legislature, the The City cafe was closed by the Utah Fish and Game Department officers. commission will move its offices to 535 Atlas liquor Building, 36 Vs West Second South Road Engineer Street, the first of the year, Armand Carr, Chief Clerk, announced today. Named To Society Carr said the job of moving the Of American Engineers department's bulky files and other Colonel William N. Carey, execu equipment would 'begin Dec. 30 and that the new offices "will be ready tive secretary of the American So ciety of Civil Engineers announced and open for business by Jan. 2." The Chief Clerk forecast that the recently that Donald Miles, district commis department would not return to the engineer for the state road been has at with offices Price sion in until sometime April. Capitol of member an associate as enrolled Meanwhile, he urged all department correspondents to address their the society at its national headquar ters. mail to: The American Society of Civil En Utah Fish and Game Dept. 535 Atlas Building, gineers with a membership of some 22.000 is the oldest national engineer Salt Lake City (1), Utah. ing organization in the United States and has affiliated with it 65 local Good 53 Sugar Stamp sections throughout the country. State WHILE THEY LAST $C.95 ONE GROUP DINNETTE CHAIRS In Blue or White Upholstery Regular J n 95 $7.50 Value At Stiff J. , ? r I' :i ONLY A FEW LEFT OccasionalfRockers A BARGAIN AT $7.95 I Effective January 1 Sugar stamp No. 53 in ration book Drunken Driver Gets four will become good for five pounds Fine By of sugar on January 1, the office of S. Sweetring temporary controls announced today. Judge This stamp' will remain valid through A plea of guilty was entered in April 30, and another, also for five Price city court Friday by Andrew pounds, will be validated before No. Jackson Moffitt, 28, Hiawatha to a 53 expires. charge of drunken driving with the fine of $150 imposed by Judge S. J. Who bathes in worldly joys, swims Sweetring being paid in open' court. in a world of fears. George Coleman, 49, Sunnyside, a Phineas Fletcher Negro, was arraigned on a charge of I Home Furnishing Headquarters For Eastern Utah HELPER FURfllTURE & HDVJE. CO, PHONE 3 76 SO. MAIN HELPER |