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Show Page April tin: journal 2 Melvin Du-- t ot the b.-patents Mi. and Mrs. Lorin Paik called Road and another called Rounds (i. Wood. d Mrs. Cayle Stc ensoii, is expect-oand Sonnet t s was presented by Clear-fiole- l the Jr. (Ilcaneis. Dancing "ns held any day now to join the aleit-nc- s aftei the progiams. police foire after her and speedy call to lolice A planning meeting was held News About Folks in The JOURNAL CLEARFIELD White Dorothy newspaper published in Correspondent the interests of the residents of Rhone: 0100-J- I Davis County, at Layton, Utah. i matter at Mrs. Carol Steed was the victim for the Pack sug this pad Wednes- Chief A f Padgett caused the Entered as second-clas- s of a stolen car to its ownei Layton, Utah, under the Act of of a bad sore throat this week. day to round up plans for the 1879. who had March A weekly rn 1 of two men was also forthcoming Pack meeting on Apiil and the ancst taken it in Rock Springs, W yo. :;n. 8, Published Rv INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 -- UTA!! SWF ?. r C- t, -- rr cp TH Anritf Q?j NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Mrs. Inez Kiuithosch on the sick list with minor troubles. Several Clearfield folk attended the funeral of Norris Stuart in Morgan this past Monday, Included were Mr. and Mrs. T. L. White and Mrs. Charles White. A Harvest of Harmony is Natl Advertising Representative scheduled for s pm. this Friday at Newspaper Advertising Scrxice. the stake; house. This is being pre222 No. Michigan Ae. sented by the group from Salt Lake and features the llonneville Subscription: $1.00 Per Year Payable in Advance. Clippers and Reehive Statesmen, In combination with The Weekly Reflex, $2.00 per year. and Toni Chords quartette plus a Tickets are go minute chorus. K. Anderson Lloyd available at .TO cents per person or Kditor Manager si. 2r a family and will help finance Mary R. Rowring the stake ('amp (1 round. It is News Kditor J. V. Woolsev under the direction of the Seventies Display Advertising Manager quorum in the stake. Tickets in Clearfield may he obtained through Harold Weatherston or Rriant Wife Preservers Stringham or at the door. Clearfield Fourth ward will hostess the last of the seasons stake dances this coming Saturday night at S:to p.m. at the stake house. This will he a Spring Frolic and a good orchestra will he on hand as well as refreshments to he sold. Chicago, 111. Equal amounts of mayonnaise and cottage cheese make a tasty salad dressing. Last Tuesday was Drama night in First ward and two skits were presented. An Easter drama was n portrayed hy Larry Taylor, Peterson, JaRue Allen and El-wi- Fish Timely Dishes Feature salt By ALICE DENIIOFF sauce, and pepper to taste. Cook 5 min. longer. Introduction is necessary bay leaf from sauce and for fish dishes at this time of Remove sauce around salmon. Bake pour year. oven for about 30 min., F. in 400 Is a which with recipe Starting basting frequently. a bit out of the ordinary, try a For Oyster Lovers to the To please oyster dish fanciers, Halibut Pot Roast, recipe erve 6. cook V2 c. each of chopped onion and chopped green pepper in 4 Halibut Pot Roast c. butter until soft. Add tbsp. Saut6 a minced garlic clove In 1 c. tomato hali- chopped parsley, 3 tbsp. olive oil. Add a ketchup and 1 pt. oysters. Cook but steak, 6 carrots, 3 onions, 6 until oysters are plump. Serve at stalks celery and 3 tbsp. olive oil; 6. brown. Cover and cook in 350 once on toast. Serves combine To oysters and fish, oven until tender. prepare Baked Haddock with Barbecued Salmon, a West Oyster a substantial and Coast favorite, is another fish deliciousStuffing, fish dish. dish that will prove popular. To serve 4, place a haddock Barbecue Salmon fillet on a greased pan and lb. need V2 To serve 4, youll sprinkle with salt and pepper to salmon in one piece. Season fish suit. Wash and clean V2 pt. oyswith salt and pepper. Place 6 ters and dip in 1 c. cracker bacon strips in bottom of baking crumbs. Cover fillet with oysters. dish, place salmon on top. Melt Place another haddock fillet on 2 tbsp. butter or other fat, and top of oysters and fasten in add a small chopped onion, l2 place with toothpicks or skewers. chopped green pepper and y2 Sprinkle with remaining cracker crushed garlic clove. Cook about crumbs, juice of 1 lemon and dot 5 min. Add 1 c. cooked tomatoes, with tbsp. butter. Bake at 350 1 bay leaf, tsp. Worcestershire F. for 1 hr. NO 3-l- b. Landscaping at the First and Third ward chapels took place this week when a eiew woiked Tuesday and evening putting in shrubtrees. .Mis. Mai un .Mumroid and her three children joined her husband a return trip to Palo Alto, Cali fomia. where they will live tor at least a year. Repents are that she and the kiddies like their new home and location and all is well with their family. Mr. Mumford has been woiking in San Francisco for several weeks while Mrs. Mum-forstayed behind at the home of - d Mrs. :;!. IT, What They Are Doing in Washington . . of what, This is Vol. 1, No. In a simple, peiiuiiio hope will newsletter, sent to supplement of what my colleague and are doing in the Nations Capital. as rallied in Utahs daily and weekly press and in our fiequei.t radio and television repoit-- . Ill welcome jour comments . . . INCOME & EXCISE TAXES: For the next six weeks, expect to anywhere from four to si hours a day in Senate Finance Committee hearings on your taxes and mine. When weve fink-duour committee work on the gen-eitax revision hill. I intend to vuppoit the President, lies asked that a proposal to increase peisonal agiee exemptions he killed, and with him. This measure would (inly oh Peter to pay Paul. Tlu suggestion has been advanced as a break lor the little man. Actually, the rich man tanl to gain up to four times as many benefits as the small wage earner under this scheme, d too, we may ask, Was the interadvocates sinest of these tax-ccerely in the the little man dining the past 2(i years when taxes were cut hut once and that by the do nothing soth Congress ? The IOC cut given earlier this year and the cuts given directly 01 indirectly to the little man in the excise tax hill are all we ( ;in stand at the moment without endangering our Federal income. Most of you know or know of lack Curtice, genial athletic director of the University of Utah. Jack was in my office about 10 days ago asking me to help exempt college athletic contests from excise taxes. At the time, the Finance Committee did not seem inclined to make any changes in the House version of the hill because of delays in getting such compromise measures out of a conference. joint Senate-Hous- e Rut when other suggested changes came up which would have necessitated a conference anyway, I was quick to support the proposal to The exempt college athletics. eduCommittee accepted it. Our cational institutions, as I . 1 ie-poi- repented that Stevenson, she noticed the two men tunefully cleaning off the door handle's ol the ear and with her womens intuition woiking called the indict lie men who math the airest. had violated the Dyer act of diiv-in- g a stolen car acioss a state line, which is a federal ot tense. Mr. Padgett praised Mis. Stevensons alertness and said if more folks were as aleit to report crimes they would be fewer. The owner of the ear also made a special trip to the ladys home to express his thanks. 1 ts 1 1 al 1 Miners Hail Efforts of Utah Solons to Save Industry The recently announced government program of stockpiling metals already has shown signs of helping Utahs dying mining industry. according to Miles P. Romney, manager, Utah Mining Association. Even before the program went into effect, lead and zinc prices advanced slightly, Mr. Romney said. He pointed out. however, that although the new program is cheering news, mining men and Utahs congressional delegation consider it an emergency measure and not a permanent solution to the problem. Utahs real need. Mr. Romney said, is a long range program that will enable the industry to operate and grow without setbacks. In the past two years 40 of our mines have stopped operating and more than 1000 men have lost their The mines were jobs, he said. forced to shut down when dumping of foreign metals on the American market drove prices down. While an increase in the price of lead and zinc will make it possible to resume operations, it will not war- 1 -- out further prospecting for new metal sources we cannot look forward to more than a few years of operation using known ore reserves. Stopgap measures cannot do away with the spectre of ghost towns in Utah. Mr. Romney pointed out that the solution to the problem lies in the control of imports. Unless we work out such a program, he said, we would be calling on the American taxpayer to buy the world surplus of metals, and we can scarcely expect our people to bear such a burden for any length of time. Mr. Romney expressed the mining industrys appreciation for efforts of the Utah congressional delegation in working toward a stable market. He also said the industry was encouraged by Presi-deDwight D. Eisenhowers appreciation of the need for action to save a basic industry. We in Utah have a particularly high stake in successful mining operations, he said, and the future prosperity of our state will derant necessary expenditures for ex- pend to some extent on the deploration and development of long velopment of a program that will range ore reserve projects. encourage risking capital to seek an Mining plays important part new ore bodies that will enable the in the prosperity of our whole industry to keep operating in the state, Mr. Romney added. With future. nt TO HAVE AND TO HOLD lu-n- , ut '0-call- ed non-prol- it industries already having tough sledding, are entitled to enough some relief. ATOMIC REACTOR F U Senator Watkins and I are working to see if the Atomic Energy Commission will consider building any of its furnaces in Utah. In favor of the proposal are our vast expanses of open land far from population centers. Also, were quite near the big reactor station at Arco, Idaho. One thing, militate which however, may against a Utah site is our lack in some areas of power and water another good argument for our hacking of the Upper Colorado River Storage project. Copyright, 1954, King Features Syndicate, Ine.) LEADING LIFE INSURANCE CO. Best Results Obtained From WANTS DISTRICT MANAGER FOR LAYTON Placing Ads and Want Ads In THE REFLEX and JOURNAL 7, T ; ' AREA. Contact C. LaMAIt FAGG ::U) Ecclcs Bldg. Ogden, Utah |