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Show 1.61 , . . iTi'mi MINING A "VOL'.XZ UTAH - 5 AND RAILROAD XU-- HMiiwaiM DISTRICT n I iimwiimm win ii i mm iii in p i iwii Fishermen Return From Mexico Tour Hunters Invited To Rabbit Hunt At Joe's Valley Saturday LISTS TAXES PAID BY TYPICAL FAMILY The typical 'family in a Utah city pays $162 in direct state and local taxes and receives approximately $901 in state and lcca! services, according to a study just completed by Utah Foundation, the private tax research organization. The other half of the tax bill, obof $4S3, the Foundation serves, is paid for by the taxei levied upon business and industry, which must ibecome part of the prices charged for goods and services or a reduction of income to the owners and the employees. Public school costs are equal to $297 per family, state government costs equal $281 per family, city costs equal $222 per family, county costs equal $78 per family, and other local costs equal $23 per family, the report continues. Computations are for an average family living in Salt Lake City. (Foundation analysts note that the difference between direct taxes paid and government services receive becomes ' even greater in cases where a family has more than- - one child in the public schools. The cost of state and local governmental services increases to $1,291 for a family with two children in he public schools, $1,654 for a family witn three children, and 01,977 for a family with four children in the public schools. The state and local tax bill paid by the family is in additioa to $1,500 in Federal taxes $803 m direct tax and $697 in hidden taxes paid as part of the purchase price of everything they buy. The study concludes that tax- payer resistance has been progressively modified during recent years because cf the following three separate trends which have camouflaged the impact of the growing tax load: 1. An increasing part of the tax burden has been shifted to "bus iness", a device which disguises on Page Four Three Appointed To Carbon Cancer Board Three now appointments to the Carbon County Cancer Board were made recently and announc d this week by Mrs Harold O. Patterkk, county chairman. Mrs Robert Goudge accepted the position of education chairman to fill the vacancy left by Mrs Dean iHoldaway, who has served in tiiat category for the past two years and also for a longer period on the board. Mrs Goudge is a former public health nurse. Mrs Ed Sheya was named to the treasurer's post, the vacancy having been left by the resignation of Mrs Ross Boyack who has held that position since 1955. Mrs Kay Bunnell was appointed as the new secretary. She replaces Mrs George Patterick who served for one year. Mrs Harold Patterick highly praised the three workers who have left the board. Their volunteer work, she said, was a Ital part In the services given by the cancer society In this area. Three members, Mr, Goudge, s, '!. " , ' X I V ":yv: f "Visit Louvre" Via Slides and Sound The Carbon Art League last Friday night at its regular meeting in the Art Barn, enjoyed the first of a series of 12 tours to world famous art galleries. The group faw 32 of the most famous pictures and hearj a recorded commentary on slide-and-lect- those pictures Mrs Bernice Wor-the- n, president of the club, presided over the meeting. The Louvre was the Art Gallery in this first lecture. Lorus Winn, Helper reporter (" the league, said that work on the giant murals being painted by league members to be hung in in the prehistoric museum Iice, Is well underway with a"l the background work completed and a good start made on detail lines of the pictures. . m iwi m i iiiii n TlRrRSIAY, FEB. ! HELPER FTA SPONSORS ADULT SERIES 70 PINTS 23, 19G1 OF BLOOD The Helper PTA in cooperation vited to enroll along with the MONDAY with the Carbon County Exten- wife. This clas is open to any- DONATED will sponsor a one, no matter which community All hunters in this area are sion Service, series of six free adult education they live iri. extcnde-- i an invitation to partiSome of the subjects to b" TO. MOBILE UiNT cipate in a rabbit hunt Saturday classes concerning Family EcFtb. 25, in the Joes Valley dist- onomics. Lloyd Clements, exten- covered in the.se series arc: At hte annual visit of the Had rict, it was announced today by sion economist for USU, will Family goals and spending instruct the class which will ba plans, Keeping a Check on the Cross mobile blood unit here Arnel Downard of Price. local residents donated The hunt is sponsored by the held Wednesday, March 1 at Family Spending plan, Consu- Monday, 70 pints of blood to be put into Cottonwood Creek Cattle Assn., ;7:30 p.m. at the Helper Junior mer credit its cost and use, High school. Dates of following and how to increase the family the blood bank in the county and local Federated groups. will be left up to tl incmoe and make it more val- hospital in Price, it was reportmeetings Hunters planning to take part ed this morning by Mrs Myrtle group attending. uable. are asked to meet at the Ranger Bryner, Helper, chairman of the with These deal to classes will enroll may Anyone desiring Station at Joes Valley, not later drive. Verla at from of OR call Mrs Dunn 'all phases budgeting; than 10 a.m. Saturday. Mrs Bryner expressed thanks iwise buying and use of food, to Enrollment must be comYoung hunters should be ac- 'quality from her elf and the drive com-mit- te to 27. Feb. credit buying. pleted by buying, companied by an adult, Downard to all persons who donated With conditions as they are series classes of same This pointed out. He said there will blood and to all other persons at this class on would benefit March also will 2, begin be extra adults on hand to take today, who assisted in any way. folk The at Methodist homamaker. Church men 7:30 any p.m. care of all the young hunters. could also benefit and are in in Price. 'Registered nurses on duty weie-LoiIt was reported that this is a Telaroli, Margaret Garav-agli- a supervised hunt, and no rifles and Mrs Bryner. Practtca. or side-arwill be allowed nurse attending was Mrs Arditt only the trusty old shot gun or HELPER PTA PLANS DISCUSSION SESSIONS Crawford. bow and arrows. Doctors assisting were Dr. L. K It was decided at the last teachers? "!Pack your own lunch," DowDayton, Dr. O. W. Phelps, Dr. nard reminded all. "Raw jack meeting of the Helper PTA to 2. What about discipline in Gale Haut, and Dr. A. R. Dem-macancel the regular March meeting the home and in school what rabbit isn't 'top' fare!" and replace it with a series of, can parents and teachers do? Other volunteer assistants were confr-Adu- lt 3. Do parent-teach- er Discussion groups as part of the Mrs Carl Schoenberger, Mrs Education program of the ences help? Geno Ori Mrs James Orl, Mrs FUBLIC FACILITIES 4. What kinds of study habits Edith PTA, it was announced today by Litizzette, Mrs Wrilma Bot Mrs Verla Dunn, PTA president. do parents encourage at home? lino, Mrs Claranell Day, Mrs to 5. Is it a good or bad thing Discussion Group program Zehna Brundage, Mrs Hazel Cox, ASSISTANCE OFFERED wasThelaunched at the last PTA reward children for academic Mrs . May Bray and Mrs do enachievement? What you do? meeting and received very SEN. MOSS REPORTS. thusiastic response when the au- 6. Is there a relationship bedience was divided into small tween assuming responsibility at Utah communities wishing to groups to talk over the problems home,' performing assigned tasks Boy Scouts Feted their public facilities in helping children to achieve at home and good grades? improve es added receive under teach-tudmay 7. How can parents and help better grades and improve atti- By Kiwanis 3Iembers President Kennedy's liberalized toward school and learn- - ers make children WANT to Annual Boy Scout night regulations governing operations ing. Group leaders were PTA learn? last night by the Helpof the Community Facilities Ad- members who had 8. our children Are pampered er Kiwanis club, with just completthe Troop E. Senator Frank ministration, ed a class in "Applied Leader- and unwilling to accept the ehal sponsored by the club being Moss said Thursday. Dr. Claude conducted of lenge learning? ship" by guasts and furnishing the "Heretofore only water, sew- J. Burtenshaw at Carbon ColThese are a few of the needs for the evening. and age, gas transmission proj- lege at Price. to be discussed. Both parents and program ects in communities up to 10,000 to do something In the month of March many teachers want The boys presented a very inpopulation were approved for discussion groups will be held in about it. The group discussion teresting and varied program un-i- CFA loans," Sen. Moss said, "but the homes of PTA members to as a method for helping people der direction of their new the agency may now lend for city on in the discussion of to find solutions to their prob-th- e Martin Sunter. carry hails, fire stations, jails, recreamany facets to this problem: lems has been acclaimed by our tion projects, libraries in fact, "What can Chairman of the meeting was parents and teachers finest educators, religious leaders for any public works which the do to encourage Joe Myers. children to and civic leaders, community has the legal right achieve higher grades to workj "It is our hope that through Next week the program will' to build except those that may to their individual and exchange of ideas and just talk-ho- w be under the direction of the capacity, receive Federal aid through ancan parents and teachers ing things over . . . calling in Agriculture and Conservation other agency." children develop good at-- 1 experts if we wish, will help us committee, of which Dallas Craa help "And the population ceiling titudes school and lear- - to help our children to achieve j dall is chairman. toward has been removed; cities of any the excellence in education our ning?" Music on the program was fur size may participate," he said. In this broad statement there nation Is striving for," said Mrs nished by Eugene Vea and his "Also, the President has mov- are many thinss to be consid- - Dunn. accordion. ed to reduce by one quarter per ered (Dates, time and places for the by the parents: cent the interest rate commun1. What is the attitude in the discussion, will be announced ities may pay. The new rates are home toward education and the next week. 4 Sen. Wallace Bennett percent on general obligation bonds and 4-percent on revAsks Study On enue bonds. Willow Creek Project TOURNEY PLANS COMPLETED CFA makes loans in three ca- BASKETBALL tegories: for advance planning Senator Wallace F. Bennett (R- of community projects, for their Early interest in the 12th an- ley of Woody's Jewelry In Helper Utoh) last IFriday asked the construction, and for college hous nual Kiwanis Invitational basket- states that Woody's will again of Engineers- - to investigata tournament indicates a present the outstanding player of Corps ing. The agency makes no out- ball construction cf flood control Bulova structures on Willow right grants; the entire amount? strong field of entrants to vie the meet with a Creek, a are repayable with interest. for the championship. wrist watch. Jack Mannion of of the Price River. tributary ar five-yeof Utah Power was the recipient of period During the Sen. One of the first teams to apply the watch last noted that Willow 1956 through H960. CFA has year. Mannion is Creek Bennett has been RV fnr nlan.1 for entry is the Okland Construe playing responsible for in TTtah college ball for BYU this most of the serious ifloods on the ning, $1,029,000 for project con- tion team of the Salt Lake Co year. struction and $H0,S5S,000 for col- recreation league. This team was Trophies for the tourney have river and said that it appeared recently seeded fourth in the arrived and will go on display in that some flood control work on lege housing. In this area Carbon College has area invitational tourney being the front window of Woody's the stream Ls necessary to proborrowed from CFA $134,000 for! played this week in Salt Lake. Jewelry store next week. They tect the cities and towns lying downstream. housing conduction on the cam Other teams expressing Interest Include trophies for first, second, Sen. Bennett said the request include local In the tourney pus fot student occupancy. third, and consolation, a team js being made at the suggestion Moab, Circle 'K' club of Carbon sportsmanship ptrophy, trophy of the Price River 'Water ImCollege and Busico's of Tooele for highest scorer, and individ& Power Utah others. provement District, which inamong ual awards for the ten Helper Scout Among cludes all cf the incorporated Light of Salt Lake is defending players. Two Honored Recently champion. towns and cities lying along the Season tickets for the meet Price River, Including Helper, announcement An important Two Carbon county Boy Scouts Continued On Page Eight Price, Wellington, and Carbon-vill- e. made history locally at a recent this week from Woodrow Merkceremony in which they received the distinguished Alpha Omega B. JUNIPER AT FENCE award. The two Scouts are the Surf-Sid- e Six Event first in the history of the Utah to receive National Parks Council Auditorium this coveted honor. Announcement was made today Presentation was made by the that another St. Anthony's social Right 'Reverend John Demetrious will be held at the civic auditorof the Greek Orthodox church ium Friday night starling at 8 at Price. p.m. Hams and turkeys will be were the awards Receiving some of the prizes to be given Steven Diamanti, son of Dea and to lucky participants. Steve J. Diamanti, Helper, and Angelo Kontgas, son of Mr and Mrs Tony Kontgai of Price. Angelo is an Eagle Scout, and PARISH MISSION Steven !s a Life Scout and HearScout ing completion for Eagle honor. Angelo is a member of BEGINS ON SUNDAY Troop 293 and Steven is with Troop 272 of Helper. The St. Anthony' Parbh Mis sion will begin Sunday, Feb. 2G, nnd will be presided over by The m. Rev. M gr. .Times Hugh Ilelpepr PTA Elects O'Neill of Pueblo, Colo. New Officer Slate M-rO'Neill will speak at all Mis-cThe new officers of the Helper Sunday, and urg'?5 all fV,r PTA, elected at a recent meetppniitf of the ?"f' :h nnd their friend to nffTid the ing were Mrs Norene Jewkes, as exnre!set during the weclr. president; Keith Williams, first Mn-svice .president; George Pizza and will be offerer) according Miss Sally Mauro, second vice to ihr I,er)en fVVr'ln ri- devotions presidents; 'Betty Mascara, secnntinred, anl cvrnin will be mml'ictcd at 7:,"f) p.m. retary and Beth Ciochctto, is treasurer. eneh PveninT. . M-tO'WHJ will mnk" .fi They will assume their duties nWfi'nf'MiVntir'' rcVve t at Installation ceremonies at the Courtesy, lather MtCvtby 'iMV' thof the Mission next Sunday. May meeting of the PTA. s i n. fill j ' 'A ' Rase-Perrero- if Returning last week from their annual visit to Mexican Fish' ing water:, were Thorit Hatch local lawyer, and John Skerl Sr., manager of Mutual Furniture, who this year brought back photo-proof some of their catch. The picture was submitted by Hatch with the following information: "The Marlin on the left being admired so fondly by me weighed 165 pounds. It was hard to land because, unfortunately, I had hooked it in the eye. Standing next to me is (Robert H. Sharibacher of Vernal, my brother-in-lawho stands next to his J60 .pound Marlin. To Shanbacher's right is Mr Skerl, who "had to be different" and hooked a fighting sbark, shown hanging to his left. It was a husky .125 pounds of dynamite. The smaller fish behind John is a b dolphin I landed "just to kill time." In the foreground is the ship's crew: Captain Manuel and his assistant Jose Venegar. They Salazar, with the our the Barracuda.' The picture was taken chartered boat skippered 31 at Mazlatan, Mexico, on west coast. It is about 738 January miles from Nogales. Our wives accompanied us." of 40-l- gla-se- s the-speci-al (D-Uta- h) j i ' i ' i COLLEGE NAME I CHANGE DISCUSSIONS For 38 Editor, Helper Journal Helper, Utah My Friends in Carbon County: As a member of the Utah Legislature in il969. I worked with my good friend, iRepresenta tive (now Senator) SFrank Mem- -' mott, against severe resistance, to lift from the Sifting Committee the bill that made Carbon College a Branch of the University of Utah. So, I feel a great deal of attachments for the College and its supporters. Thus, I have been concerned by the efforts to have the name of the Editor, Helper Journal Dear Sir: I am writing in regards to House Bill 96 now in the sifting committee of the Utah State Senate. There seems to be a great deal of misunderstanding on the parts of citizens throughout the state of Utah. We in Carbon County hold the name of Cai'bcn to mean a great deal to us living in Carbon County. If I thought for one moment that by changing the name of Carbon College, would have a bad effect on the coal industry; would damage our college in Price, then I would work at great lengths to see House Bill 96 killed. I think that we are being selfish to want to keep the name Carbon for a school, that was intended for the students of Eastern Utah. The Board of Regents a the University of Utah voted unanimously on the proposed name change. rumors to the There are effect that if we change the name of Carbon that we will not be able to get money and grants for research for our suffering coal industry. This argument, I feel is silly and absud. In contrast to this statement, Page Five. College chaDged. I feel Carbon College bears a fine, proud name a name that lends prestige to the county after which it Is named. It 'is as it was intended to be a community and regional institution, and no name change can or should alter its basic reason for existence. The primary industry of your county is coal mining and one of the contributions of youri college should be research and development in techniques relating to the mining industry. The Mrs Sheya and Mrs R. II. Brown function has never 'been fully ttended a cancer conference in realized. cf us who were Salt Lake City two days of last members Many of the Legislature visweek. ited several of the Carbon County mines and saw, firsthand, the Carbon Art League 1 Mil nw NEWSPAPER HELPER, UTAH FGUMDAT1QN Continued nn Continued al'-r- on " FilEHISTORIC MUSEUM A work party of 23 people met la';t Friday at theCollcge of Eastern Utah Prehistoric Museum location and completed work on show cases, received and catalitems, and ogued archaeological otherwise worked toward making the mus'eurn ready for formal opening May 1. Clarence Pilling brought the ten clay figurines, which are the subject of a book, to the museum and stated he would lend them for Mr and Mrs Fred W. Keller brought pottery and basketry for display. A metate and mnno found by Dean Max-fie- ld of Fmery on a farm near his home and lent to the museum S. 'Reeves, was by Mrs Vivie-nnadded to the bird tracks In shale, IS SHAPING UP" dinosaur tracks, and other items About twenty showcases are now ready to be filled with rare displays, the committee reports. in charge Quin A. Whiting. , of collections of display items, faid that Mr Pilling will lend his world-famou- s figurines for permanent exhibit. The Keller Indian artifacts are for permanent display. Donald L. Burge, curator of th( museum. "William Tirrmmn. Sam Vance, Wayne Johnson and Carr Kilim spent the evening in cataloguing items and arranging n'i plays. Show cases were first lined with cloth liningi by Mrs Carr Killln, Edith Johnson and Bertha Vance. Continued On Page Eight 23-je- ey At M Friday MW$ s m!--Io- ej |