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Show Poge 4, THE LEADER-TH- E GARLAND TIMES. February 14, 1974 sssas Yn& STAR-GAZIN- G STARR BY CURTIS Editorial Siar-Gaz-- er ories. THK M rMOKIKSinclude such cold things as diving into an ice that was so chilled it took your breath away and sent you gasping in evhilaratioi 1'y a yards back s. you could pass District Bond Election NEXT TUESDAY'S T re monton-GarlaDrainage District bond election has created about as much excitement as a nd swimm'.ng test. summer rerun. That's unfortunate because it means the election Mill probably be decided by a couple of hundred voters at the monthly sewer charge to easily repay the original loan and the $28,000 loan while still creating a maintenance fund and without increasing the payback time. FOR ANYONE who has taken the time to get informed about the issue at hand, there is really only one reasonable way to vote. And that is "yes." election is rather trifling sum as far as bond elections go and isn't likely to attract throngs to the polls. But per- bags the least amount of shinnane-gaand questionable gestures to passing motorists. THE ELECTION, simply stated, boils down to the fact that the Drainage District ran into unexpected costs which went beyond the original amount of money they borrowed. They need $28, 000 more. THE DISTRICT has two ways of raising that money. First, and least desirable, it can up the current minimal two mill levy in the district to 10 or 12 mills for a period of at least three years thus providing the revenue. Or it can borrow $28,000 from Farmer's Home Administration and leave the mill levy alone. a $28,000 THK M":M0KD'S include all eligible Tremonton and to go to the polls and exvoters Garland ercise a right which is too often abused or reserved for the larger more glamorous Issues. And while you're at it see if it doesn't make good sense to vote tatoes, ical jokes. include MKMOKITS THK campfire programs around the fire high on Die face of a rocky ledge overlooking that very cold lake as the stars tried valiantly to light up the sky. ' oC LETTERS TO THE WE URGE Charlie, a smr.ll b'.ack puppy with a curly tail and white feet "disappeared" in July. lie was our birthday present to Jason for his fifth birthday. Jason On February 17, 1897 PTA was organiM. Birney and Pheobe A. Hearst, mothers of school children who knew there were children in trouble and needed united effort of others to get them out. PTA was organized because of concern and love for children, it is motivated by love and has endured to serve the young because of love. PTA has identified and solved unsolved problems, met unmet needs in homes, schools and communities where children were involved. The challenges have always been those of the times. few of the accomplishments of PTA have been to urge the formation of kind A suspect TAKE A boy and turn him se and you have an unrefined source of energy, often misguided, often undirected, and often headed in the wrong di- rection. rs THK MKMOlillS include sitting on the edge of a tent in a winter windstorm io keep tlie tiling from blowing away. And unbearably cold feet as boys struggled to clear Die snow for a place to put that tent. please contact us. She has a homo. She's medium brown, with white feet a short tail and a friendly lick. She's about the size of a kitten. Our phone numberis257-jli- 2 and I sincerely hope I hear from someone with som clues. Td hate to be the one to tell stand what happened to his puppy. If your child brought hom Sparky, or knows someone who thought she needed a homo, young trail's of a Ml MORI1 S TKE A scoutmaster, or cubmaster and you have a grownup Mho has put in hours of tim? to help a boy have a little enjoy rrwnt and find suc- cesses den-mot- he might never which have reached. TAKE and you have a upwith a lot of fond memories and an inner strength put their by someone he may never even bother to hank. ex-sc- blistered THK MKMOKITS include a bath taken in Die second coldest witerever known to man--sta- rk Jason that there really are people who would steal his pet. Chris & F.llen Thwaites 170 N. 2nd Tremonton, include feet as a boy proudly walks to end at the culmination wilderness hike. Till painfully TAKE A boy and turn him loose with acubmaster, denmoth. er. or scout mister and you have a boy whose energies are guided and directed in a constructive direction. You have a boy w ho w ill learn to appreciate nature and himself in relation to the group. MIT IM1M I COllMft naked sitting on a rock to get off ten days of trail dust before marching to trail's end. W Utah was quite upset about loosing Charlie and cried about him every night for several weeks. PTA Organized 1897 zed by Alice EDITOR ' all CONQUERS Lost Dog We have just lost our second puppy in less than six months. Guest Editorial ate pancakes, burnt podirty faces and pract- bond haps those voters who would usually stay home should consider this fact: Often people who plan to vote negatively on an issue are more motivated than those who agree with the question at hand. So, if too many voters stay home relying on a few public spirited individuals, they may just find themselves at the hands of a few voters who always vote no to any bond proposition. I ns most UNFORTUNATELY AND THE memories include two men and some women. None ever ent to school to train for their job or received a di. ploma specifying their qualifi. cations. Intact none ever gat paid. All would do it again, 'o-o- THK MKMOHIi.S include riding in the back of a large cattle ith at least 24 other truck of sleeping bovs. a half a and paraphernalia and not THE SECOND course is the most desirable since the district has enough income from the current mill levy and a include merit badges and some honors, skills learned and friends made. early-teenag- Ji MEMORIES THE IT'S HAH J Tor old to think back to his years without recolsome very" fond memlecting We in more public schools. To in the help setting up of juvenile courts and the federal lunch program. It founded the Summer Round-u- p of the children, a health program to find and treat physi-ic- al defects of children about to enter school. It has helped greatly with the library program of the schools and many ergartens other needs. The greatest natural resource we have is our children. It is up to us to help them achieve the goals our Founders worked so hard to establish. Be sure to attend your Founders Day programs to be held in February and learn more about the accomplishments and needs of the PTA. Jason another promised puppy from the next litter. He waited six months for Sparky. She's not a special breed of dog and wouldn't seem extra special to anyone but Jason. We brought Sparky home 10 days Jason let her out today ago. as soon as he camo: horn? from school at 12:45. At 1:00 Jason called her to come in. She was gone and an afternoon of searching turned up nothing. Needless to say, Jason is more He can't under- than upset. - fmm ONLY 1 Pies with 1 MONDAY V lCherry y : a :v LEADER The Til 'JIILi1U tlMH Published every Thursday by Tbe Leader Publishing Co. at 10 North 1st West, Tremonton, ' Uah, Subscription Rate: Box Elder, Cache, and Oneida - $5.30 per year. All other areas $6.00 per year. Second Class Pottage Iteld at Tremonton, Itah 84337. Election 1 contc from page one He urged local as possible. voters to get out and vote. Boyd Munns, a district of- ficial from Garland, also noted that prior to construction of the drain, Tremonton City had been faced with prospects of up to a $1 mollion costto their sewage treatment plant to moet EPA guidelines. The drainage district has succeeded in alleviating m;ich of the ground water which was being processed thru the local plant thus giving it more capacity and easing EPA censure. rk The city though, still faces prospects of upgrading the plant to meet an EPA timetable of standards by 1979. Polls will open at 7 a.m. and close at 8 p.m. Voters in Garland's two districts will cast their ballots at the Garland Armory. In Tremonton voters from 'Jie four districts will cast ballots at the Tremonton Civic Center. No special registration is required for the election. Voters appearing on the last registration roll will be eligible. -- On Saturday evening February 23, 1974, at 8 p.m., the local American Party will sponsor a special program at the Civic Center in Tremonton. Featured speakers will be Bruce Bangerter, American Party candidate for the U.S. Senate and Will Christensen, a Provo businessman and delegate to the American Party's National Convention in New Orleans, La., last October. The purpose of the meeting Is to explain to the public: why the American Party was organized; the principles upon which the party is founded; and the goals and objectives the party plans to accomplish in the coming months. Originally founded in Ohio in 1969, the American Party is now organized in over 35 of the 50 states, and hopes to be organized in every state by 1976. The public is encouraged to attend the meeting. More details will be published next week. 70 MONDAY ONLY Pies with 'lCherry JMevery $5. purchase (Up to $30.00) American Party To Host Bangerter Skit SpiTops I Dresses I Pont Suits I Some Lingerie 1 I SkdtottA Ps VJ. SAY 12 of y lirT o ff I OF f Tremonton I |