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Show W 3J? TIIE JOURNAL fish & GAME TRUMAN SIGNS ARMS AID Page The Low Down From Hickory Grove BILL Mon ami more, we look like Europe. But we talk loud of freedom listen to speeches, coast to coast. Everybody is for freedom it is unanimous. Rut as a little innocent sample, vou o to work ami discover a likely looking riffle in some crick and figure you are freu to go about putting in a waterwheel and dynamo for turning out some kilowatts, you will learn something about freedom. Even it it is your very own savings that you will spend on the crick your very own you will not proceed. Vou must ask the (Jovt., just as it is in Europe. Europe tells its citizens where to get on and off it makes its socialist kilowatts, it runs the telephone, the railroads. Europe, that is and who chooses to move to Europe. if' do-re-- TOPICS t) J grouse sage the Commission has and Game that 350 ided permits on six area will be open erent hen He study considerable ftpr L hunt season. will be sage hen season hunted and the permits for each are as (D-Md- 125 Mountain Mile I Lake Summit Area ffDry Hollow Hatch ;ue permits will cost m each. Applications Fair Employment Committee sportsmen will be act- Names Chairman later than Sep-ib- er 1, 1950. I drawing for lucky numbers at 2 p.m., September at the State .Capitol Build- held be 950, tatter Ad tah has not it since 1932, had a sage hen and until recently to have been no uptrend in sage hen popula- - p. seems CO. ring the we have last three years sage increased in great in certain sections of the Bbers Some the this to have attributed extensive Odd Fact predator control work improvement of range con-er- s Jukebox, they broke Into a high gallop at the first Hiyah, scattering their load of plows across careftd studies have pre-J- e decision to hold these Pea hunts. Hunter harvest will serve as another in (ul itfj phase were 0 lea ranges. s ted t?orkd other studies fent i&t fa .Populations and caredully frL eir location on the Ci lituT ruftf town. that is being carried Concerning upland game birds. Paring late winter and sprimj T y Game Wardens over the Mi made appeals of sage L .der- - 500 birds or more con-throii- Another thing is that she has become accustomed to making her own money and spending it as she pleases and a woman, who has been doing that for twenty years, is hesitant about giving up her financial independence. KKsiMis uEay H. Grant Ivins gh the summer under f Cliff Greenhalgh, tice legislation in Utah were comand James L- - Lords, pleted today when H. Grant Ivins Fork accepted apof the Fair chairman as pointment committee Practices ,being held where the Employment exceed ten for the state of Utah. khe totalnk. bird popula. Other Officers of the organization include Mrs. William J. Cope IoriJr.e states Pa t0 and David H. Oliver, first and secvice chairmen, Salt Lake City; S the Cuent .of their bird ond hunting harvest. Sam Herskovitz, treasurer, Ogden; and Gail Martin, executive director, have Salt 8roups Lake City. The FEP committbe sage Srouse tee is made upof Utah civic leadV. Mea, noted. . ers, who believe there is a need ''ktrlSfy?' drawin on Sep-- I for this type of legislation. applicants Mr. Ivins is widely known oney returned. ssful annii5a throughout the state as a teacher, reCeVe 'or farmer and' business man. Now engaged in the poultry hatchery busbe set!? rvuC't'ng statins iness in American Fork, he was into thecWi?1 the hunter Utah OPA director from its beginstation he ning to the end of controls. He giVe to be Intlng Permit filled the professorship of animal k ba hi baggeihe husbandry at Brigham Youfcg University, Utah for 12 years. He 5 koprat18 dor th two acted for 3 years as secretary of a,In ad closedays a. . at .the Salt Lake Horse Show Association, having had charge of some of f' Mrd New- ark, Ark., heard the opening bars of Mule Train over a nearby Jerstood. Wor.k to do. When a herd of mules In attribute the to causes not well in-as- ed numbers JO SERRA. (R-Wis- c.). Dear Louisa: ed by mail only, and the sports-- i may begin applying on August must 1950, and all applications he Yours with the low down, .); the largest shows put on in the When we were first married it intermountain west. was necessary for my wife to Work of the committee will work but now, after twenty years, have but one objective, Mr. Ivins I am in a position to support her said, that is to obtain passage of without her having a job. My trouble is this. She refuses an act by the Utah Legislature making unlawful the discrimina- to give up her job because she likes tion in employment against any it. She says she finds it more inout among people person on account of race, relig- teresting to he is where there something always ious belief, or ancestry.- - Social, to stay home and than and happening charitable religious SALT LAKE CITY Plans to fraternal, house. exkeep organizations are specifically Dont you think she should give carry on'lin educational campaign empted from provisions of the law. on behalf of fair employment prac- her job and pay a little more The bill now being drawn up by up to me? attention the organizations attorney, would Disgusted Husband N. Y. accomplish its objectives largely Answer: through education and conciliation I am afraid you have waited rather than through coercion. It too long, my friend, to 'make any would operate similarly to the law set-uin domestic change your passed in New York, which during Your wife has been working outthe few years of its life has ac- side of the home so long that all of complished untold good and only her friends and interests are probresulted in 0 legal cases all settled ably in the business world and outside of court. should she quit her job and stay home, she would no doubt feel like a fish out of water with nothing 50 50 50 25 Si Valley ii Valley not now. 50 isihe area east of Bear 5e Wyoming border.) postmarked S. A. Western Europe and Atlantic Treaty nations, and the rest to Iran, Turkey and Greece. Witnessing the signing are (1. to r.) : Sen. Millard Tydings Secretary of State Dean Acheson; Deputy ECA Administrator William Foster; E. T. Dickinson, assistant to Joint Secretaries of Defense; and Sen. Alex Wiley ( International ) SemConnally (D-Te- x.) nond Too many good citizens up and down our Main Streets and elsewhere are not scanning our Govt, road map. The flowery speeches on freedom have allayed us the Govt, itself has grabbed the freedoms we hold the hag. Look at the 3 men at Morristown, Tennessee, and their dwindling freedom. They thought they could work where they chose. They were ambushed shot. Freedom to work for how long, how much, and for what outfit, is a flimsy sham in our own U. A CEREMONY in the White House, President Truman puts his signature to the $1,222,500,000 arms aid bill. About a billion of this sum goes to areas to be Q-- Six of Commerce, AT season. of Americans spent $446,000,000 last year for restaurant tips, according to the U. 8. Department Sep-,b- er and October 1st. Each allowed a mit holder will be birds for two of (session limit iber Odd Fad to a 30th tte ! SrtTdies!eader n UPand of American VOOM ' L ffio (tin fists msds ... 5) ffjps&BD C!lul ttrr1 ; HIRAM WALKERS 9q p DUiilWd from 100 American grain. Hlrom Wofcar & San Inc Paorla, 11L The only thing for you to dc to fix youi breakfast and look out for youi comfort. Perhaps is a few more years, your wife will be older anc is to hire someone get tired enough to stop working and stay home with you. LOUISA. Dear Louisa: ha?e an only child and I am thinking of sending him to kindergarten next year. He is five years old and we have always been very particular with him. too My motner thinks he is young and thinks I should keep him home. What do you advise? I II. C. T. CONN. Answer: If there is a good kindergarten in your community, I should certainly send him to it. All children need to learn to work and play with other children. They have a much easier time when they start school if have have learned to adjust themselves to the give and take of group society. An only child particularly needs this experience. He does not have to share things with other brothers and sisters and is accustomed to having everything his own way at home. ( LOUISA. |