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Show t Federal Highway Tax Due August 31 THE BEAVER (Utah) PRESS THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1964 GOT F QOfispSTS iHiiiiiiiiuttitniiiiMiiitiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiimiitiitiiiitiiinmiiimitniiit MHIIUItUIUtlllUllHilKUHMIIIlIIII 4 2'2 89c Hunts Peaches cans 14 02 Del Monte Catsup 2-2- 49c lb Franks BAR-- S Libby Lemonade 5-4- Supreme Cookies 3-8- CHASE MURDOCK ii 9c By A. C. Gordon rri is " I To" nr I n is " 77 uT" "T IT" 7 9c , AG CROSSWORD i 9c 3-7- Alpha Bits I 9c 75 "" 77" " nr " sT TT T" ST vT" 5 v5 7T 7? 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Wise, District Director of the Salt Lake District Internal Revenue Service today reminded owners of trucks and buses that the Federal highway use tax is due on August 31. Revenues collected go int0 a highway trust fund, created by Congress to help finance the Government's interstate highway building program. In addition to the Federal highway use tax which affects truck and bus owners, revenues from taxes on motor fuels, tires, inner tubes, retread rubber and other items are being funneled into the highway fund. Highway use taxes on trucks and buses range from $81 to 180 annually for each vehicle subject to the tax. AH' trucks operating on public highways are subject to this tax if they meet certain unloaded weight and axle specifications and are registered by state law. Federal tax return Form 2290 necessary for filing, contains a listing of the specific tax to be paid on trucks according to the month the vehicle was put into operation. Form 2290 also describes the tax to be paid by bus owners. For1 buses, the tax is based on unloaded weight of the bus, plus 150 pounds for each unit of seating capacity. This applies primarily to operators of intercity buses. Local transit systems are exempt from the tax under cer- tain conditions. Details and information are available at local Internal Revenue offices. Tax Forms 2290 were mailed in June to those who filed highway tax returns last year. Copies of this form, as well as a helpful booklet on the tax, Publication No. 349, can be obtained from local Revenue Offices. Mr. Wise cautioned that the form now requires the taxable year be inserted by the taxpayer. Tax returns for the year beginning July 1, 1964 must be filed by August 31. 1964 for every taxable vehicle in highway use in July of this year. The tax may be paid in quarterly installments. Dates for these installments are August 31, December 31, March 31 and June 30 Truck and bus owners should also remember that vehicles acquired after they have filed the 1964 return are subject to the highway use tax this year.In these cases the tax return, Form 2290, must be filed by the last day of the month following the month a truck is put into highway use. Revenue collected in Utah from the highway use tax totaled $602,985 in the last fiscal year. j "f For further information, telein Salt Lake phone City or your local Internal Revenue Service offices. On August 5th, approximate109 members and their chaperones arrived at Kents Lake for a three-da- y camp. Everyone hoped for bright and sunny skies, but as usual, it rained. That put an end to the hike led by Dee Ritchie. Instead, Mr. Ritchie gave us a short talk on the Kents Lake area. Right after Dee Ritchie's talk, an election of officers was held. The results of the election are as follows: Mayor, Joanna Gillies. Reporters, Tammy Oakden & Faye Dotson. Clean Camp Committee, Gerry Nowers, Mary Ann Esplin, Bren-d- a Marshall. Committee, Nancy Program Griffiths, Darla Eyre and Carolyn Baldwin. Flag Raising Committee, Debbie Gillins, Madelyn Hollings-hea- d and Bonnie Osborne. Log Sawing Committee, Darla Joseph, Susanne Kelsey, and Janet Marshall. Camp Fire Committee, Lynet-t- e Davis, Konda Marshall and Renee Albrecht. On Wednesday evening we all ate together and then attended a hootennany around the camp-firRichard Carter presented the hootennany. After the hootennany there was a $64.00 question quiz game. One member from each club was given the chance to try their luck. The following were able to answer all the questions correctly. Tammy Oakden, Beaver; Madelyn Hollingshead, Minersville; and Julie Hollingshead, Minersville. On Thursday, August 6th, recreation and handicraft included Key Kups, Key Holders and Groomer Sets in leather that had to be tooled. There were also Link Belt Kits. That evenings program consisted of skits and musical numbers from each of the clubs at the camp. Those numbers that won are as follows: 1st Butter-finger- s, Junior Division: led by Betty McCann; 2nd, Saucy Cookers, Eleanore Marshall and Reva Albrecht; 3rd, Kitchen Kuties, Fay Harris. Senior Division: 1st, Lucky Cloverettes, Edith Marshall and Carla Eyre; 2nd, Scamps, Eulita Sherman and Irene Davis; 3rd, 3 Stitchettes, Nan Truman and Marsha Hollingshead. On Friday, August 7th, all Clab members participated in relays. After the relays, two members from each club competed ?n the Log Sawing contest. The winners were: Junior Division 1st, Dainty Keepers, 32 seconds, Mariam Limb; 2nd, Kitchen Kuties, 43 seconds, Fae Harris; 3rd, Saucy Cookers, 43 seconds, Eleanore Marshall and Reve Albrecht. Senior Division 1st, Cooking Cloverettes, 21 second!. Merle Gillins and Vie Marshall; 2nd Luck Cloverettes, 27 seconds, Edith Marshall and Carla Eyre; 3rd, Sizzling Serloins, 32 seconds Gatha Benson and Kristy Farrer All prizes were given at our awards program which was held . just before going home time, "lhis year's prizes consisted of pencils, individual notebooks, song books, recreation hand books, cooky cutters and, of course, candy. This years clean camp winners were 1st, Lucky Cloverettes, led by Edith Marshall and 4-- H ' James Henry Hess Dies James Henry Hess, a former resident of Beaver, 76, died of causes incident to age Tuesday, August 4, 1964 in a Roy hospital. He was born November 14, 1887, Plymouth, Box Elder Coun ty, to James Henry and Elizabeth White Hess. He married Alice Tovey, January 27, 1909 in the Salt Lake Temple of the LDS Church. She died January 1929. He was a member of the LDS Church, served a mission from 1911 to 1913. He was a member of the Fielding Ward and active in the Sunday School and Genealogical Society. He Is survived by two sons and four daughtsrs, 28 grandchildren, 19 great - grandchild- - JELLO asst- 3-7- No. 1 'N Complete line of DRAPERY RODS and HARDWARE BAGS for all makes of vacuums Thro-awa- y SPECIAL THIS WEEK 4qt Electric Ice Cream Freezer Only $16.95 Nevada Explorer Scouts Enjoy Trip In Beaver Mountains Nevada scouts & their leader, Merritt Paice, a former Beaver boy, now of Lund Nevada spent four days in the Beaver Mountains last week. They truoked their equipment and horses here and then went the rest of the by horse-bac- k way. Jim Low accompanied the group. They spent their first night at Kents Lake, the second at Big Flat, the third at Big Johns Flat and from there they went to Baldy and Belknap and returned by way of Merchant Valley and the Ice Caves. Blaine Blackett and Rondo Farrer took their camp equipment to them each night. They report having had a wonderful time with no mishaps except the loss of one horse, Blaine Blackett's. (Leave it alone and he'll come home, etc.) I'll bet. I wijsh I weren't so old and scared and I would try riding a horse once again.. It sounds like fun. Twenty-fiv- e Carla Eyre; Sizzling Serloins, Gatha Benson and Kristy Farrer; 3rd, 3 Stitchettes, Jan Truman and Marsha Hollingshead. Everyone had an enjoyable time in spite of the rain. 2nd, Capt. Robert Osborn Attends Army Training Field Course FORT MacARTHUR, CALIF. Army National Guard. Capt. Robert D. Osborn, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Dern Osborn, Beaver, Utah, is participating in two weeks annual field training at Fort MacArthur, California, as a staff member for art Army Reserve Command and General Staff College course conducted by the Presidio of San Francisco, Calif., U.S. Army Reserve School, ending Aug 8. The Army Command and Gen eral Staff College course was created in 1957 to enable reserve oficers to receive the same instruction given in residence by the four month course at Fort . Leavenworth, Kan. Completion of the course takes five years with the last two weeks spent at Fort Leavenworth. Captain Osborne is regularly assigned to Headquarters Battery of the 145th Artillery's 2d Battalion, an Army National. Guard unit in Provo, Utah. He is a 1948 graduate of ren. Funeral services were held Saturday at the Rogers Mortuary Chapel in Tremonton. While Mr. Hess was living in Beaver he was a cattle buyer and worked with S. Albert Smith. Cedar City. The captain and his wife, Iris, live at 135 Brookside dr., Spring ville, Utah. Seedless Grapes 19c lb Firm Tomatoes Ripe Great Northern 15c lb X .''i ii. ,'! il'. " ';; IK: !,. '! i". r 9EAM , 3c cans $1 "4 mm i 6-- $1 3-9- 10 Bea- ver High School and attended College of Southern Utah in 4-- r Cans Pineapple-Grapefru- it Ellis Beans r BOLOGNA Chunk 39c BOLOGNA Sliced 43c Giant Blue Cheer 69c 6-- $l 3c oz Strawberry Preserves 69c 46ox New Carpet Samples ,in Famous LEES Nylon and Actilan, priced from $5.95 and up. Installed over heavy rubber pad Cudahy Vienna Sausage Cudahy Vienna Sausage 40 We now have STARLITE light fixtures. Shades for use inside and out 9-- $1 10-9- 5c Pitted Olives' Maywood ARMSTRONG CEILING TILE Expertly installed. Choose from patterns for every room 4-- H i -- itiiitiiiiiiiiimitiiiMUiimfMiiniitiiimmitm e. "Beaver's Dept. Store Campbells Tomato Soup Beaver Home Furnishings 4-- 524-587- 0 1 Camp Report H ly Rome 16 38 Rudimentary Know ledge (abb 39 Skilled persons 41 Cave birth to an equLne 7 - Exist 8 - Tightens 11 - Spanish 1-- In Utah, people have a taste for good living and JIM BEAM Utah's favorite bourbon is part of the scene. 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