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Show J Extra Deer 1962 Friday, August 24, The Tooele Transcript Permits Now On Sale North Tooele Schedules Pioneer Polka Special permits for hunting additional deer went on sale Aug. all are sold or until the season 20 and will remain on sale until ends on each herd unit where permits were set by the Utah Board of Big Game Control this True to pioneer custom, age doesnt matter as far as mixing and having a good time is concerned. At least this is the Pioneer the behind thought to be presented in the Polka North Tooele Stake House, this Saturday at 9 p m. Scheduled as a night of dancing fun for everyone 14 years of age and over, the Pioneer Polka will feature a sneak preview floor show composed of dance numbers to be presented next June at the big MIA dance festival. Admittance is free and the public is invited. Just don your cottons and come join the fun. year. U. S. Highway Use Tax Due On August 31 - Jon D. Maher, President of the IN APPRECIATION Col. Davio Tooele County Chamber of Commerce presents of Dugway Prov-in- g Officer Commanding Armltage, past excellent recGround, a plaque of appreciation for his ord as a military commander In this area and his support from of Chamber activities. Colonel Armltage will retire his military career In the near future. William Sagers To Be Buried Deer Hunt Bow Permits Here Friday Funeral services for Wllliarfi Waibre Love Saeers. 72. will be held Friday noon in the Emerson Ward rhael in Salt Lake City. Burial will be in Tooele City cemoferv MR. SAGERS a native of Tooele. died Mondav in a Sa't Lake hosoital of a heart ailment. He was born in Lincoln, Nov. 9, 1889, a son of William and Harriet Love Sagers and was married to Christina Murray, on March 3. 1999 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. She died in 1920, and he married Clara Erda Taylor She also proceeded him in drith. Now Ready Deer hunting permits for Utahs 1962 archery season may now be secured from the fish and game offices over the State and from regular license agents in Cedar City, Ogden, Price, Provo, Richfield, Salt Lake City and Vernal. Once again, this year a cardboard tag has been attached to the archery deer license. The continued use of this tag, since its inception last year, is in keeping with the new departmental policy of issuing paper tags for all big game hunts. Archers were reminded that the permit must be carried at all times while hunting, that the tag must be attached to the carcass at time of kill with the holes punched to supply management information, and remain with the animal through processing and until it is con- He worked as a carpenter and was a High Priest in the Emerson Ward. He had served on a mission for the LOS Church. SURVIVING ARE sons and daughters, Robert Leo, Joseph Lvnn. Sterling and George Alvin all of Salt Lake City; Earl, Delta Stanford, Enterprise; Mrs. Leora Los Angeles, and Hutchinson, Mrs. Zona Curtis, Bountiful. Also surviving are 18 grandsume children, two great grandchilThe statewide deer dren and sisters, Mrs. Olive Al- season is set for archery InSept. len, Mrs. Alice Peck, both of clusive. Washington: Mrs Agnes Smith, Anyone 16 years of age or oldMrs. Mable Gordon, Mrs. Ervin er possessing a valid Utah big Sagers, all of Tooele; Les Sagers game license may obtain an arHalfway. Oregon and Mrs. Marchery permit and hunt during ion Shields, Roosevelt. this prescribed season when only the bow and arrow is legal weapon. Funeral Saturday For Heber Palmer Tackle requirements decree a Funeral services for Heber E. Palmer, 72, will be held Saturday noon at the McKay Ward chapel in Salt Lake City. Mr. Palmer, a former resident of Grantsville, died Aug. 21, in a Salt Lake rest home, after an extended illness. Friends may call at the Deseret Mortuary, Friday from 6 to 8 pm. and Saturday prior to minimum bow pull of 40 pounds and the archers ability to shoot 130 yards at regular draw length. Arrowheads must have two or more cutting edges and not be capable of passing through a seven eighths inch hole. Other laws governing this hunt make it illegal to carry firearms of any kind while hunting, or to lunt or discharge an arrow from t vehicle. Red or yellow headgear is required by law. Roland V. Wise, District Director, Salt Lake City District Internal Revenue Service today reminded owners of trucks and buses that the Federal highway use tax is due on Aug. 31. REVENUES COLLECTED go into a highway trust fund, created by Congress, to help finance he interstate governments lighway 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 tunneled into the highway fund. HIGHWAY USE TAXES on trucks and buses range from $81 to $180 annually for each vehicle subject to the tax. All trucks operating on public highways, are subject to this tax if they meet certain unloaded weight tured are: Anna Palmer, Versal Shields, Kathryn Koffel, Clarence Koffell, Paul Kueser, Sherri Kuester, Erma Mathews and Donald Kuester. This photo was taken as a group from Lake View LDS Ward were practicing their floor show an evening of Pioneer Polka, for dance to be held Saturday at 9 p.m. Pic FANCY PRANCERS Special deer permits are issuserved ed on a first come-firs- t basis. Application is by mail or in person. Applications should be made to the Deer Permit Sales Office in the town shown for each special hunting unit in the 1962 deer hunting proclamation. APPLICATIONS must contain the applicants full name and address, choice of hunting unit, big game license number and proper fee to cover the permit applied for. Fee for a single deer special permit, either special antlerless or special either sex, is $3 for residents and $5 for nonresidents. The fee is $5 for resident and $8 for nonresidents on all r special permits. The law allows all holders of a valid bigjame or combination license to apply for, and receive, two special deer permits, only one of these, however, may be obtained for any one deer herd uni:. IN CLARIFYING this regulation, department spokesmen referred specifically to Deer Herd Unit No 31 the San Juan. Even though three spearate special special permit hunts have been authorized for this unit, hunters two-dee- (Form 2290) must be filed by its revenue sources, received a the last day of the month follow- total of $2.8 billion. The largest ing the month a truck is put into contributor to this fund were highway use. motor fuel taxes, which accountREVENUE COLLECTED from use tax totaled highway $46.8 million in 1961 and $37.7 million in 1960. Increased enforcement jgfforts are planned to get fuller compliance with this tax law from truckers and bus ed for $2.3 billion. Annual accumulations in the highway trust fund since it was created in 1957 total $11 billion. The amount contributed by the highway use tax during this period was $177 million. operators. FOR FURTHER information, The highway trust fund in 1961, call DA Extension 465. of from all counting proceeds the COOKERY Are .you acquainted VEAL with the recommended methods of cooking veal? Being young beef, veal is very lean and lacks fat, although it is tender. Braising, one of the moist heat cookery methods, is best for cooking chops and steaks. Large cuts may be roasted, but frequently strips of bacon are placed over them to keep them moist during cooking. may make application for only one such hunt, since it is considered that all deer within the county belong to the same deer herd. In other areas, however, where letters have been addd to the herd unit numbers, such as 23A, 27B, 62C and so on, separate deer herds are to be hunters found; consequently, could submit permit applications for special hunts on, for example, both herd units 51A and 51zb. and 51B. SPOKESMEN also reminded that permits for many of the more popular units are fully subscribed soon after the permits go on sale. They advised early application for those planning to secure them. The 1962 proclamations may be obtained from license venthe State. dors through UHIIDRENISISHOESI s. iiONE in L jGROUP Size 8 Vi to 99 3 LADIES SHOES One Group $1.88; One Group $2.99 j i I BROWN'S POODTOIVN R QOVs UMMs tyVLoJdjUtynJLr specifications and are by state law. tax return Form 2290, 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 and axle registered Federal necessary owners. FOR 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 certain conditions. Details and information are available at local Internal Revene 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 and from state motor bureau agencies. TAX RETURNS for the year beginning July 1, 1962 must be filed by Aug. 31, 1962, for every taxable vehicle in highway use in July of this year. The tax may be paid in quarterly install- ments. 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 their 1962 return are subject to the highway use tax this year. 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