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Show $; 3 Jtj 1 3TN " asp , St, , Cool Tax Plan Seen vocate l!Si As Hope For Second Section DTD The house ways and means committee decision recently to increase the depreciation allowance on coal mining was interas improving the chances preted Canal of of the western nonferrous mining 1 industry to obtain similar relief. were conduct- fical respiration, he took her in g servi ' ty .jeral Representative John Carroll - V m the his car to the Price where she was (D, Colorado), who has appealed funeral hospital Mitchell rto the committee to increase the ylc Patterson, nounced dead on arrival. fr allowance who was depreciation Mr. Davis mining old, keeping watch years from 15 to 27 2 the same alPrice canal alone at the bridge, where search- lowance as allowed the oil in'ers had placed a steel gae cov- jjjarswudustry said he would continue to Au- - ered with fence wire m the canal on pjjpg r press for this tax relief even of Je tas the Other searchbridge. against daughter M7 jjjg js 1 though the committee had earlier Mor- - ers left the spot, but Mr. Davis . S ft Kiza LaRue 8 tentatively rejected it. s said he thought he would stay an- The committees decision to aid conducted 0.her 20 minutes. Within a min-- J w,gre the coal industry by increasing . Monte ute of the time the other men direction of depletion allowance from five to Pnce Fourth left, he saw the leg of the child h hon of the 10 of gross income will result of against the gate in the roily va-- ;i of Jesus christ Vh CMrcn in a tax saving of between to $10,000,000 a year. ' Almost at the same time, Brig as drowned i M 1 , This should have a beneficial body lifeless Harmon, another searcher, founu la? and her ' V s effect on western coal and I hope canal about the sweater of the child in the "wiled from the n ' I , the industry passes these benefits after she had water only a block and a ha.i - m jjd a half on to the consumer, Representafrom her home. ."used. THETA JOHNSON search- tive Carroll said. This is a means volunteer a over 100 volunteer searcheis Davis, for making coal more competifro m the cana cionned boots ed fte body and fishing joined tive with oil. road bridge Local in tbe hunt. Watermasters ILtui ae airport and east o Representative Carroll declared jdcwnstream jord and A. P. Dimick turned the an hour and water from the canal that the committee now should lPProximately cutouts into a t He told help out the nonferrous mining e.C1 above and below the city limits jt later o nad child which is in serious the industry officers flow. decrease the t trouble in the west by granting to3 Mr. Davis reported, however, jt it similar relief. pump the stream flow was still at arti-! by He pointed out that so far contaler from her The Utah State Agricultural full size at the road bridge when college extension service has just gress had been unable to agree on the body was found. the mining aid legislaIt was not known how the child published a third year H club tion proposed and that as a result more and bulletin entitled Lets a Make fenced back well escaped the yard more lead, zinc and silver mines of her home, which is located on Best Costume. were shutting down. He held that This bulletin is intended as a the south bank of the canal on mining, which he described as a H to Noith 5fh East street. She had guide girls doing advanced sick industry) should be entitled W3S been missed only a few minutes, Complledto depreciation allowances com Wrr when relatives and neighbors be- by Theta Johnson, former Car- - parable Wlth the -oil healthy bon county home demonstration 'industry, gan a frantic search of the neighI borhood. agent, now extension clothing spe- Most of the canal banks within cialist, in cooperation with Fern Dragerton Catholic Price city limits were fenced 16 Shipley, assistant supervisor of Summer School Opens years ago, after little Marsha Ste- extension youth programs In H this third of of vens, phase Yesterday daughter morning was the Mr and Mrs. Steve Stevens, fell, clothing work, you will plan and opening time for the summer at the Good Shepherd into the water and was drowned. make a costume for best wear However, much of the fence has You wil learn to choose styles church in Dragerton. The Sisters detemorated and in some spots and fabrics that are becoming to1 of the Notre Dame Parish, Price, you and that you have skill assisted by some young women of has been torn down. states Miss! East Carbon, are conducting the She is survived by her parents; enough to make, school. Father J. A. Sanders grandparents: Mr. and Mrs. Au- Johnson in the introduction. of the bulletin will be ed that all Catholic children peers everywhere stin Morley, Price, and Mr. and distributed through county ex- - should attend especially those H who aie preparing for the second Price Youth tension service offices to class of Holy Communion. clothing clubs. Omdutfed For Youthful U y OU SAY, or did you think that the crash of funa, the and crackle of email arms, the deadly thudding of the ih of imdescent water against the sides of out ships, the scream of dive bombers, the shrill insistence of boatswains whistles, the tnlhng whirr of rockets, the blunt crash of bombs, the shrieks of dying men, are all in the past? Moet folks think that those days are lavered over with the press of current events and the pressure of day to day living in peace and what goes for security these days. Yes, most folks think the hell and horror of war Is over. Most people are glad that the stink and the mud and the terror is all part of history now. But it isnt not at alL THOSE THINGS live today almost as fresh and terribly terrifying as they were five, six or seven years ago. Those things happen again every night and tear the soul with as cruel slashes ns they did on the beaches of a thousand islands, in the hedgerows, mountain passes and deserts of the fronts all around the globe. The hurt and the memory of the hurt still lingers In the minds of the men whose bodies and nun da were torn in the holocaust the West Mine Industry Authors Bulletin Drowning Tragedy City-Coun- f - fO I .. 00 Former Home Demonstration 2 Agent Writes Book Jt Cs 4-- 4-- three-year-o- A recollection never grows dim. Those thousands who have spent every day since then in hospitals have had to live close to it. They have not had the grace and goodness of civilian life to spread a thin veneer of Insulation over scars and burns of those days. OH, I KNOW HOW easy it is to forget things which are painful to remember unless such have been branded so deeply that conscious thought is never free from the ugly recollection. Thus it comes as a shock, a hurting shock to hear that more than fifty two thousand disabled American veterans have been in the hospitals for an entire year without a single visitor. The gray walls, the gray corridors, the gray bathrobes, the gray ceilings and the gray faces of the patients in the veteran's hospitals are so easy to forget. So easy to put out of mind in the rush and color and goodness of life m these United States. But we must not forget. We must not forget so soon. We promised a lot of times that we wouldnt forget them. Now it is time to pay the debt and it is a real debt. IT IS THE TIME NOW when the veteran who has been awarded a compensation payment under the law is looked upon as a tax liability and moves are under way in both house of congress to effect some economies in thia part of governmental expense. This, too, is further evidence that we are forgetting. Good to relate is the fact that the Disabled American Veterans (the DAV) are organized in order to help each other. No other program or project is on their agenda. The idealism of the organization is not left to walk on clouds. It is practical and hard headed In its approach to the problems of the disabled veteran. Of course there are some mistakes made, but they are few and hundreds of worthy, needy and honest veterans are honestly helped. So it behooves us who are fortunate to remember to remember that the war isnt over that it wont be over that it comes back again and again and' again, into the lives of those it hurt in body and mind. Fifty two thousand completely forgotten disabled American veterans is a national disgrace. Add to that figure those other hundi eds of thousands who still bear the burden of war with a tiny money payment aa compensation. TH ATS ALL FOR TODAY Dont forget those Cho cant forget. ' J. M. Hazl.lt, "Sounding Off", Fault Valley Democrat, Fauli Valley, CIloKoma. winner of Doubled Amerjcan Veteran! annual newtpaper column award. 4-- ld stat-Copi- es 4-- Your Wiring Needs For All CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank all the peo- ple X k Electric Co. S S All WORK GUARANTEED FREE HIRAM Phone ESTIMATES SEPPI JOHN Phone 789-- R L. Who promptly responded in the search for our daughter, Peggy Ann. Also for the many beautiful floral offerings and as- sistance in our recent bereave-- 1 ment. Mr. & Mrs. Norman G. Patterson Mr. & Mrs. John A. Patterson Mr. & Mrs. Austin Morley CALL SKIFF 369-- M Castle Gate Girl Pledged at Denver U Helen McDonald, 1949 of Carbon senior high school, is one of six University of Denver women students to be pledged this week to the Coed Journalist club of the large Colorado school. Miss McDonald, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James A. McDonald of Castle Gate, is a Mrs. John A. Patterson, Sunny-sid- e, freshman studying journalism at and Mrs. Sarah Jane Morley, Denver university. Price, Apropos these allegations of Windmills first became com- communism, we wonder how we mon in Germany and the could prove our one hundred per cent Americanism. Miss graduate Headed member of the North Carbon stake presidency. Following his graduation from Carbon, David TO SERVE enrolled at the BYU where he has been active in student affairs, at IN BRITISH MISSION present serving as associate editor of the B. Y. Universe, student of the close after the Shortly spring quarter at the Brigham publication. At the end of the spring term Young university at Provo, one of its prominent and active students, at the Y David will complete David Pond Forsyth of Spring! his first quarter as a junior stuCanyon, will depart for the Brit- dent, having attended school durish Isles where he will serve as a ing one summer term.. He has missionary for the Church of been preparing for his mission Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. by taking a special course in misHe will enter the mission home on sionary training that is offered at June 19. the Provo institution. A graduate of Carbon high school two years ago, David is Americanism: the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sterling staging a demonstration when the given the opportunity to make C. Forsyth of the Stows ward in Prime Minister of Ulster arrived sight seeing tours at all ports. Spring Canyon. His father is a in this country. SPRING CANYON BOY For Far East Duty Headed for the western Pacific to join the Seventh fleet, whose mission is to support American foreign policy in the Far East, is Lewis Chiaretta, seaman, U. S. navy, of Route 1, Price, a crew member of the aircraft carrier USS Valley Forge which departed from San Diego, California, early this month. 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