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Show G3IILETE8 UBOT WIT! (E K823flD '83310183 f CtSas wia nay Urhar state taeoM Ium to IMS of fee Federal tacome tax redactions enacted by Congress this year, tepeet of the Federal lax eaaages Is analyzed tea research stadjr Jut completed by Utah Pevxdatloa, the print tjw NMSfCh Organization. arc a deductible Item la com Observing that Federal pvUng state Income taxes, Utah Foondarlna analysts point oat that the Federal Income tax redaction win automatically re in aa Increase la state income taxes. The Increase for t individuals will range between six percent and 16 percent additional state Income taxes as a result of this Federal Income tax reduction. ds of this Increase will Between and three-fourt- hs affect ' state Income taxes payable on or before April 15, IMS on 1M4 Income, with the remaining portion of the increase coming the following year (IMS taxes payable on or before April 15, 1966). Reason for this two-st- ep upward adjustment Is that the Federal tax reduction win occur over a two-ye- ar period. out that percentagewise, the , : The Foundation report points state Income tax has been the fastest growing revenue producer of an of Utah's major taxes. Since the end of World War U, Individual Income tax revenues In Utah have risen 104 percent. This compares with a 569 percent rise In state and local sales tax receipts, a 366 percent Increase In total property tax collections, and a 499 percent rise In motor fuel tax revenue. note that because of the steep graduation , Foundation analysts in tax rates applying In a narrow Income bracket range, Utah's Income tax collections are extremely sensitive to changes in personal income they Increase disproportionately with rises in personal Income but faU with equal suddenness when personal income declines. The study shows that the average state income tax In states which impose both a state sales tax and a personal Income tax Is substantially less than the average tax in those states which levy an Income tax but no sales tax. The differences are greatest at the lower Income levels. Foundation analysts conclude that In most eases the sales tax acts as an offset to higher income taxes, especially at the lower end of the Income scale. ' According to the report, Utah ranks relatively high among the 23 states which Impose both an Income and a sales tax In the economic Impact of its income tax. For example, a man, wife and two children with a family Income of $10,000 and normal deductions would pay a state Income tax of $170.00 In Utah compared with an averageof $137.20 In the 23 states which Impose both an Income and a sales tax. : When, the comparison is extended to all states which Impose, ah income tax, Utah's individual Income tax burden more nearly approximates national and regional averages. In the case of .the hypothetic family having an Income of $10,000 per year, the average Income tax would be $170.62 in the 33 states which Impose the tax andS154.63 In the six Mountain States which levy the tax. As noted, this compares with a tax liability of $170.00 In Utah. : Withholding has become a rather general practice among the states which Impose In income tax, the report observes. Of the 33 states that tax wages, salaries, and other forms of Income, 27 states (including Utah) now require general withholding by employers. r tun HBOM.TMC The largest annual eonstrae- Uoa program in the history of ratals States Telephone in Utah, was completed in IMS. with an expenditure of over $17 minion. Improvements in local and king distance calling were brought to telephone users throughout the State, Eric C. Aaberg, Vice President and General Manager for the Company said. Last year, 16,429 telephones were added to the Company's lines in Utah, bringing their total telephones In service to TIME A4JL HKTlOUM. LCAUM C RECOUP vicionts, 42 vewr ap STMT1M6 MS 5EASOM wrTM TV two-thir- nearly ate l0K OUT WON MOK HH(&, MORE BATTELS AKIO POSTED MOKE ZO WIN .SEA36M& THAU ANY LCFTHANDER M HISTORY. H WOW 23 FOR A SKTH PUCE ClOB IN 165... tional snow at higher elevations Snow, Cold Help Yafsr Outlook is received. Results of the survey show: Clear Creek Ridge No. 1, 15.3 In Ufch County cent average; Clear Creek Ridge No. 3, 6.4 inches of wa ter, 96 per cent average; Pay son Ranger Station, 16.8 in ches of water 88 per cent aver age; Rock Bridge, 15.1 inches of water, 114 per cent average, Other stations include: Hobble Creek Summit, 14.3 Inches of water. 96 per cent average; Packard Canyon, 10.7 Inches of water, 96 per cent average; 12 Inches y, of water. 73 per cent average Beaver- Creek. 8.9 inches of water, compared with 9.3 In ches of water over 15 years. At the Soap stone measuring station ther e was 11 Inches of water compared with 13 In ches for the 15 year average, and at Trial Lake, the survey' or found 19.2 Inches of water compared with 291. inches over the 15 year average. InAkne r9 tamAt mis-k-'tt- ng unless It is remembered Jhat most oMhls low water for drugs that win cure cancer. The Salk vaccine against polio is a good example of what can be accomplished. If a vaccine against cancer and aU of us hope Is found lt may that lt wlU be found be your dollars contributed to the American Cancer Society during Its annual Crusade that helped make lt possible. If you would like to see and drive a New Ponriac, Buick or G. M. C. Truck, please give me a call. there. Pick VP your phone and go VteRJrj tenfcht .iS Uvczn AHccIxa M Co 3 James W. Jeffers, Sprlng-vill- e, speeding, $10; Blaine L. Jones, Lehl, public intoxication, To know what to do is Wis dom To know how to do it is skill To do a thing right as lt should be done, is service, There ire many more trap-door- s to failure Than there are short cuts to $25; Claude D. Cooper, Kearns, failure to heed red light, $15; Tim Chadwlck, American Fork, improper parking, $2; Dale Ray Anderson, Salt Lake City, speeding, $10; B. M. Carlson, American Fork, parking in restricted zone, $2; Robert D. Harris, Salt Lake City, speed- Howard H '!!' ITS j-j Brown jyp i. benefits minorals-mo- ro 1870, only a handful of minerals were used in . . . coal, iron, tin, lead, copper, stone and oil. Hie list has grown tremendously with the addi- quantity Today tion of molybdenum, beryllium, uranium, vanadium, aluminum, , potash, phosphate, sulfur, gypsum and many ethers. These minerals make a major contribution to our expanding economy and rising standard of living. UTAH MINING AOOOCIATIOtJ Mm for all" s flucf mi . rap? When you install flameless electric heat in your new or remodeled home, you put more joy into living, because you put more house into your home . . . with less cost. Some of the ways you can get more house with electric heat: Clean Lines. No bulky furnace, vents, ductwork. Easy lo Add On. You can expand your without costly heating home easily modifications. , Cleaner Home. Because flameless electric heating keeps walls, .draperies, furniture cleaner. 7 More Comfortable. ' A home built for no electric heating is better insulated drafts, cold spots on walls. Spirt uboer: (.'nrrttr. Sting liny, Chevy Coupe R II Nuvu, ('ortnir Moitza, (,'herelle Alulibu, Chevrolet Impala. A44tnfk finite tt kit selkslal mnlfA mlJwut f)in(j oirrbimirl 011 jtriw It's time. time. Baseball time. Trade 'N' Travel Time at your Chevrolet dealer's. Time to get out ol that wintertime rut, into one of Chevrolet's five great highway performers. Now it's easy to go on vacation first class without paying a price. In a luxury Jet smooth Chevrolet, for example. This beauty rivals just about any car in styling, performance and comfort. Or try a totally new type of travel in the youthfully styled Chevelle. Lots of room Inside yet nicely sized for easy handling. Now thrifty Chevy II has X g?3j'&yffy power. Unique Corvair offers extra power that accents its rear engine traction. And the exciting Corvette speaks for itself. Time. Time to get the most Yes, right now is new car time. fun from a new car. To get a great trade on your old one. To get a big choice at your Chevrolet dealer's. Come on in ! first-cla- . ss -- I road-huggi- lOTTrail T-N- -T ism You can't bat ftctrfc heoff w Mm Seem to $10; 8 a........................... 756-353- O on on S ATUr fcsir Neal John Scovlll, Orange-vlll- e, Utah, speeding, $10; Kenneth Boyd Baugh, Bountiful, speeding, $10; Frederick John Stagovlch, Salt Lake City, speeding, $10; Jill Philip Dahl, West Jordan, speeding, $10; Harold WiUey, Provo, speeding, $10; Jean Wilcock, Lehl, failure to yield right of way, $20; Bernhard Monroe Iverson, Salt Lake City, speeding, $10; Glen Carl Roberts, Eureka, public intoxication, $25; Neldon May-nar- d, American Fork, speeding, S . Nqt so with Long Dittanc. It keeps you to lowing: Protection 'drinks iVloro In docket of Judge and completed included the fol HOLLEY JIM S five-milli- four-milli- WIS Over 2000 citizen solldlersof eran cadre of replacement filProvo and surrounding com- lers chosen from Army reserve munities will participate as pools throughout the United success. members of Army Reserve States to bring the battalion to When two people quarrell-bo- th units In one of the most mas- wartime strength. are probably wrong. ing, $10. sive military exercises of reLt. Col. Robert E. Bunker, cent years during May. Provo, has announced a maxi The exercise Desert Strike, mum possible number of unit involving over 100,000 men personnel will participate, al LIFE FOR YOUR playing war games on a battle though some waivers for train FIRE field of 13 million acres, will ing at a later date will be AUTO kick off in Arizona between granted students, faculty memMutual Funds May 9 and 23, and will provide bers, and a few additional men Provo' s Third Battalion of the in specific situations, under HOSPITAL B. famous "Rock of the Marne present policy. Insurance answers your questions Thirty-Eigh- th Commanding the elements of Infantry Regi ment an opportunity to "fight the Utah County infantry unit with and against such crack for the move to Desert Strike Regular Army units as the 82nd wlU be Major Charles E. Bitter, (All American) Airborne and Orem. Major Bitter will be We have a guest cottaee in the QUESTION: 2nd Armored Divisions. The served by a staff living in rear or our summer home. Should this be in- surea oy a separate fire policy or is it covered Army Reserve Third Battalion, communities ranging from with headquarters In Provo, is Price to Holladay. Battalion wiin tne njain ouiiaing? one of the few Civilian Com units Involved are Headquar ANSWER: ..Since the guest cottage probably has considerable value it would normally be insured ponent Infantry organizations ters and A Companies, based at selected for the Desert Strike Dale Rex Army Reserve Censeparately but yours is a problem that should be discussed with a good agent. maneuver, and is equivalent of ter, Provo, and B Company, earning a slot on the varsity whose home station Is Pleasant team. Grove USAR Center. The third This public service is our way of advertising. Your insurance Battalion personnel will move rifle company, C Company from from its training center In Holladay, will be Integrated with questions will be answered without charge or obligation if Provo and Pleasant Grove In B Company technical you'U send or bring them to three Increments. A small ad- operations, during and for Desert vance party wlU depart on May Strike only ' the battalion will HOWARD B. BROWN AGENCY 7, followed by the main motor be reinforced with a C Company on 8. May convoy Remaining provided by an Arizona 770 No. Center Lehi PO personnel will move by bus and air to a rendezvous area somewhere in Arizona. Here the battalion will be reinforced by TRADE TRAVEL TIME AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S carefully selected subordinate elements from other areas and become part of a vast task force "from the earth comes an abundant ttko Covc?uCo KonttcoExsr: ill. loni Distance Is the next bast thlnf - eWtMMMM Cases brought before the Leland Powell one-milli- on before he structure; Ode aapectl ofltKEexercise ;:: the quart before drives phis WmT be gone before the Irriwill provide realistic training the hearse. In aa Important aspect of the gation season gets under way, One reason the courts don' battalion's initial mission in the Mr. Peterson said. Measurements on the upper handle more drunken drlv event of mobilization for a NaProvo River show that there win lng cases the undertaker gets tional Emergency. This is the be an early flow of water but them first. Integration by the unit's vet- that the late summer flow win be below average unless addi m in touch, lets those ' you call know you're thinking about them. Daniels-Strawberr- He who EZnvd3 3c to ttfca Grcattj Ulrica, k&z Ecca Co CJaaOoe Qao . . Hi Out of Sitiht, Out of Mind V Ridge No. 2. 11.8 Inches of water, 79 per - . fll nAPIAnt erage; Clear Creek Continued cold temperatures coupled with generally good precipitation during March have improved the water supply outlook for Utah County. This announcement has come from Stanley Peterson, Soil Conservation Service snow surveyor, who announced that snow pack water content on the courses which are measured show 80 to 114 per cent of the 14 year average. The larger ' percentages of water content are found on the lower courses. Mr Peterson said. This is largely due to winter storms which struck hardest at lower elevations and the cold temperatures that have held back the normal .melt to hthis late date. jThis condition could be 'f Bate man, Fourth Ward; Mrs. Blaine (Marie) A damson, Fifth Ward; Mrs. El-d- on (Judy) Ar mlstead, Sixth Ward; Mrs. Dee Ray (JaLalne) Russon, Seventh Ward, and Mrs. Frank (Doris) Morehouse, Fairfield and Cedar Fort. In her plea for the utmost support of Lehl residents, Mrs. Haws asks the following question, with encouraging answers. i Are we closing in on the cancer problem? There are hope- - HU PITCHED MORE WORKED SHUTOUTS, STRUCK. ful indications. Great gains have been made. Greater gains can be made now. Research has produced ma jor advances in recent years. Scientists are coming up with new and encouraging findings. This accounts for the feeling as one scientist has said--th- at cancer might be conquered In M ft our lifetime. t The hopeful facts 'are; that this year the , llvtf Of 46,000 people win be saved from can cer people who would have died of the disease had they developed It a decade ago. An other hopeful fact is that half of those who develop cancer In any year can be saved If the disease is diagnosed early and treated promptly. This could mean 270,000 lives in 1964. A half century ago, few cancer patients had any hope of cure. Today there are more than 1,200,000 persons alive In the United States, cured of cancer. A vast research effort Is being made to find ways of sav lng the one out of two who can not now be saved. But the re search effort goes beyond this. It is seeking ways of preventing all cancer through a vaccine or other means. It Is hunting S C3IOT Massive Arizona Exercise in May HE T-y- served by two long equipment win be Installed early In 1964. coin telephones. More local telephone lines Long distance circuits between Salt Lake City and Ogden, were Installed where needed as well as from Price and Provo thToaghoat the state to accomto Salt Lake were Increased modate expanding businesses service materially. A new microwave and provide one-par- ty and to residence customers requirsystem was constructed Salt ing better communications. placed In service between The 1964 construction proLake City and Tooele. This Improved long distance to the gram of nearly $17 million incommunities west of Salt Lake cludes well over for City including Tooele, Grants-vUl- e, new buildings; central office and Dugway. equipment and new dial instalservice lations will exceed Teletypewriter the nation was and more than dothroughout changed to dial operation in llars wlU be spent to install the fall of 1963, which resulted additional lines and cables be tween customer premises and in better printed communications for approximately 1500 local telephone offices. Mr. business customers in Utah. Aaberg pointed out that the The local calling area was balance of the $17 million ex expanded in SpringvUIe to in- penditure programmed for 1964 clude Mapleton. Tooele tele- win be used to Improve long phone lines were extended 36 distance service and keep pace miles to provide exchange ser- with the growth and developvice to 35 customers in Ver-no- n. ment of the state. Previously the Vernon area Over 2000 Guardsmen to Join in Fund Campaign in Lehi Area Don (Mae) 400,000. Major construction projects during the past year included new telephone buildings with associated dial systemsSub-In North Ogden and Parowan. stantial additions were made to buildings in Salt Lake City and Clearfield. A new central office building was erected at Huntdial ington where Mrs, Knollin Hans to Direct Cancer - Mrs. Knollln (Shirley) Haws has accepted the chairmanship of the Cancer Control campaign In the lehl, Fairfield and Cedar Fort area.. The appointment was made by the Utah County Board, headed by Mrs. Ruby Brown of American Fork as chairman. With her are serving, Dr. Kent Davis and Howard W. Robinson of Mil; publicity chairman and treasurer, respectively; Boyd Jund.of American Fork, ed- lioii. chairman, and Marjor- Eastmond, secretary. Mrs. tstmond is also of American '. fork,- -. v $ Mrs. Haws as the wife, of Warrant Officer Haws of the rational Guard, has become health and safety minded in that connection and also in the care of her family. She is one of three ' Lehl ladles to receive the certification from the General Board of the MIA in the safety and survival program. Formerly MIA president In her ward, she is currently teaching in Primary. She has served as president of the Lelty Club, and Is a former employee of the Deseret Chemical Depot The Haws children include John, DaLaurene and Erie. vid, In planning the house to house campaign, Mrs. Haws has called on a chairman from each ward area,' who In turn, have Selected committee members to work with them. The canvass win be completed within the next three weeks. Families are reminded to welcome these when they call and contribute generously to this vital campaign. The ward chairman Include: Mrs. Garold (Carma) Jolley, Second Ward; Mrs. Gaylon (Lu Dean) Pugh, Third Ward; Mrs. TEE LEHI FREE PBFSS y. Agril IX 1U4 tvHtbto and enjoyed urn.. In 67 foreign Itne tt worM ever. UTAH POWER A LIGHT CO. CHECK THE T N T DEALS ON CHEVROLET CHEVELLE t:C II CORVAIR AND CORVETTE NOW AT TOUR CHEVROLET OEAIER'I m raw ffllMrWlull" WON! CHEVY (5-35- 47 co. AKdICAU fOlK |