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Show mujsiim at t:i:ki.y "Shore Thing REPORTER THE EUREKA ijtaii AllT CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY is Utah Si'Kingvillk, matter February 10, 1048, at tlie aa second-clas- s pout office at Kureka. Utah, under the Act of March ,'i, 1879." " Kittens Subscription In Advance, Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10c IIakkison CoNovhR Editor and Manager Mks. ISeli.e Re pm ter NATIONAL ADVCiriSING AAEnTIfifcj lASTN VN.i.S.i NATIONAL Coffey lEMESCNTATIVf EDITORIAL U$TAINtNOMiMI OOCaCO NEW SEATTLE rot San mancisco As the Scheduled adjourmneiitithe appropriation of 6,110 million date for the first session the 81st annually for fiscal years 1910 and congress neared, it appeared there 1951 to improve the most travelled would be several important sub- highways on a fifty-fiftmatchjects fur legislation to go by the ing basis with the stales. Under wayside. These included new legis- - an indeieudent offices npprupriulation and appropriations for the tion bill for the 19.ri() fiscal year, nation's highways, the status of there Is included a 390 million sum the nation's airlines and the ex- for federal-aihighway system. n The house tension and increase of the hud already a ppm veil y - d minu-mui- million of this sum. With u carry-ove- r of 40 million from last year's highway appropriations, sufficient money is expected to be available to cover federal contributions, planned and under construction on the state matching basis. Hut on the basis 37.1 wugclawB. Only within the past few weeks, President Truman submitted a report to the congress prepared by the bureau of public roads which indicated that more than 11 billion dollars must be spent on major highways over the next 20 years to bring them up to eak efficiency in handling the nation's traffic, to save lives and to save time and expense in vehicle operation. The 1948 highway act authorized . . ' j of the muds bureau report, insufficient money is being appropriated to meet the mills, and in addition, states arc finding it dif- - vcnicnce.- - Holland N. two by Mr. Greenhulgh. I Hit ton, Iiirds are being planted this year Presidcnt Truman when 8. 0, 10, 11 and 12 weeks old, . with the cocks being banded and life career as a dirt fain,, ,. recorded. Sportamen will be asked There are 11.1196.979 27 i,1TllJ( to report on the banded birds taken to aid game managers in dvtermin- - land in the U. S. National anyway. When we bear so darn much of this thing called love sometimes wonder if any of us really know just what iL means. I've liven kinda W'ondering if some of us don't mistake affection for love. As tlie two are pretty dose together. I remember us if it were yesterday I was only 12 years obi. One morning an old nigger man knocked on our back door asked my mother if he coatd do some work for Ills breakfast. She says yes. So the old man with snow white hair and beard cut some stove wood while she cooked his she When cooked, breakfast. culled him in In eat. So when the old man had washed his face and hands mother told him to sit down at the end of the table where we ate. Yes we too had a dining room hack there in Georgia way hark in them thar days. We had lone eaten hut like a lot of little boys these days eallul my mother into the kitchen and said aren't you ashamed to set that old dirty nigger at our table where we rat. She put her hands on my shoulders slid says too me, son, the boy of my heart you love Uncle Hrack don't you?, which was her 'brother. I said yvs. She says you know sometimes he gia'S to Atlanta or Itiirmingham and gets drunk anil wires me for ninoey to get home on. Would you hate when uncle (track was on one of his drunks to ask somebody for something to eat and them to hand it to him to go out and eat like a dog. Then she says to me agnin, son of my heart, somebody lives this old dirty nigger just like you love Uncle Hrack. Well folks these words have stayil with me all these years. According to the hig hook, wasn't this old nigger a child of Hod? If I haven't missed or misunderstood, the old nigger has about as much rhanee hereafter as you or I. Well must close for now but who of us are more in the eyvs of Oik! as the old nigger. Sam and Helen Talbott 2G, i(J49 The birds were distributed bying the must advantage,, Farm Supt. Rhy Hyatt, Cliff fur planting. Oreenhalgh, Salt Lake City, and Let It never he said uial . "" Frank World. Price sportsman. About 1200 birds are ready for grandparents religion planting that now remain at the pi.rlencei to our parents'll? a farm and these will be taken to tra htion' to u , an into,, Richfield within the next day or Folks would sura like to say a whole heap this time but Just had so darn much to do this week, this, that, ami t other but somehow the past few days just kinda been thiukm' about love and what it Printed by ,1 August The Eureka (Utah) Reporter Page Two - ENJOY YOURSELF WHERE FRIENDS MEET at the ... SILVER CLUB Is It anaecmly to kiss your own DISORDERLY CONDUCT wife? Roy M iffie tun of Washington, D. C., and his wife, Eleanor, demonstrate the embrace that caused him te be charged with disorderly conduct at Mays Beach, Md. Miffleton waa arrested after be playfully grabbed hla wife around the waist and planted a kiss on her cheek in full virw of the couple's approving children. Miffleton and a friend, who tried te stick up tor him, were arrested. ainruHm trend toward white lines because of this defect. chief i ngineer, Roy W. said that surveys show that motorists drive approximately four feet from any barrier, including snow, banked along the road. This habit makes the visibility of center lines all the more important during winter months, he said. The question of white vs yellow In any event, according to Mr. center lines on Utah's highways Whitlenburg, there will be no was anything but settled this change in color of center Rom where I sit ... fy Joe Marsh ,4 Mcl-ccs- e, mark-wee- ings k. this year. D. II. Whitenburg. state road ' commission chairman, said that before the commission decides to ' neasanTs named change the color of the center n Carbon Area lines it must be sure that the change is made in the interest of' Eight hundred phcaaants that had boon raised at the state game latest advocate of white center farm near Price were planted In lilies was Ab Jenkins, state traffic the Carbnn-Einer- y area Tuesday safety consultant, who favoml.by Jack World, president of the them in the Interest of uniformity fish and game association, among states. Most states use of the 14,000 birds raised at the white center lines. Price farm, only about 1400 were area, Against the white lines, how- - planted in the Carbon-Emer- y ever, is their comparative invisi- - with all the others being taken to bility on snow flecked highways, hunting spots over southern and Utah has resisted the national eastern Utah. pLi If They're Wild, They Belong To Tik! Saw Tik Anderson last week and was reminded of the first time I ever spoke to him. The missus had sent me out one Saturday afternoon to hunt for aome blackberries. I took a long hike and couldn't find any. Finally, I came to Tike house along that low atretch east of the fork on River Road. Hi there," I says, "any blackberries around here?" Tik says, "There used to be hut I don't know much about things that grow wild." Later, I found how Tik supports his family by picking berries. Ever since, I've been like the rest of folks in tows respectful of his right not ts tell where "his berries grow. From where I sit, respecting other folks rights comes natural in in America for that our town matter! Whether ita a person right to enjoy a temperate glass of beer or ale, or whether it's Tik Andersons right to keep secret where his berries arc, it's all a big part of a real democracy! ... Copyright, 1949, United States Breners foundetios XHitmiRicsiiHiiiHiiiUHiiiiiiiiiicaiMiiMiHNCimiiiiiiuiciHmuiiuiciiiMiiiiinicitiiuiiiiHiiiiiiiniiiMiciiiiiniiHiiniiHiiiitiiiciiiii CHIEF BRAND fieult to raise the necessary funds As a matter of fact, states arc ii increasing gas taxes and automo- n bile license fees in an effort to step up their collections for mad repairs. According to this report. approximately 91 per cent of the country's main highways must be rc pain'd and impmved to meet today's volume of traffic, but it is LIME i CHIEF HKANI) HIGH CALCIUM i likely LIME We Specialize in High Calcium Chemical Hydrate for Mills and Smelters sfS 1 ill 1C rural FERTILIZERS O PLASTERING CHIEF CONSOLIDATED MINING CO. 2.p7 miles t'osts Plant: Saddle, Utah twins arrHH be allocated, 3.29 billion within urban areas and S.PS billions in rural sections. An ample provision should be made for increased traffic volume in next 20 years and a capital investment of more than Mo million annually will be required over the next 20 years to make the primary mad system adequate. Then1 ulso is great need for im5 proved principal secondary roads, and congress should continue to authorize appropriations for this purpose of not less than 1.10 milI lion annually. Decay of the highway system was largely due to factors growing out of the war. and in It 1, the congress passed the fcdcral-uihighway act of that year, providing for 1.1 billion dollars to la sent over a . Salt Lake City 60S Dooly Huilding and through cities and towns, would 3 that legislation will not la forth nuning until next year. Highlights of the highway report included: Nmls in repair and improvements of the main highways are greatest for better sight distances, wider pavements, shoulders and bridges. Pn'sont system would be Ii shortened by Hppmximately 611 miles, of which 38 nulcs would be !! MMHHIIIMinil s i li ir. l r. AT NINtTttNIH i i 1; i. r. r. i: r. i: l r. r. i: U i: Three Afternoons nt 2 p.m. Friday - Saturday Monday September 2-3-- Labor Da) Jigbl. 5 SfMr - Friday, September 2 PARADES - Labor Day, September 5 4-5 Sept. 1 Carnival - Reunions - Band Concerts FOUR DAYS AND NIGHTS SEPTEMBER OF FU9I -5 i. i: u r. i; rr. r. i. ii ii r. N w i; r. K1KKK nitAMil OF ii: I. li ii: Ornamental Iron Aluminum & Sheet Metal Work All Types of Welding Hit 4t Steel Reconditioning Pncumntlr Kqulpment Repair Dqwdq li li . . . UTAH BIT & STEEL SERVICE CO. DBcefinag AT r. li Representative 2-3-4- l. i: .1 FREE FIREWORKS FLOWER SHOW - September Nebo Dairy Show - Thursday, li While most of the schedulis! airlines am now out of the "red" there are still some scheduled feeder lines H'rating at a loss and the susiilies to all scheduled airlines have been particularly heavy, running well over 100 million a year, including mail pay One of the highlights of the weeks of hearings before the senate interstate and foreign eoinmerce committee to determine what to do with the airlines was a move to differentiate Ivtween actual payments for carrying the mail and direct susidics to keep the planes flying. Hccaiim' of so much diverse pressure. there is some likelihood that no adequate miiuimuu wage law will get through this congress. featuring - r. Washington. GQLDEnVnion dims and HomEcominG AMATEUR RODEO i. r period. During the past year states whieli have increased gasoline taxes in an effort to raise more revenue include: Delaware, Kansas. Minnesota. Montana. Nebraska. Nevada. New Mexico, North Uamlina. North Dakota. Oklahoma. Oregon, iennsylvania Vermont, Washington. California. Connect lent, Illinois, Michigan. Missouri. Now Hampshire, South Carolina and Wisconsin. Motor Vehicle regist ration tees have tai-increased in Indiana. Arkansas. Iowa, Minnesota. Maryland, Montana, Nebraska. Oregon ami LABOR DAT CELEBRATION Look In Cars i; d thn-e-yca- The Next r tr 1 CELEBRuXTE UTAWS BIGGEST AND BEST 1950 STUDEBAKER if Central Utah Motor Co. r. if-i: I i. l. JOHN A. ROSS Telephone M i ' r. La 110 SomiIId UJmiv. Ave.. .. Provo j |