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Show Page 4 'roggcrs Grab Big Ones for Gourmets IF: Lost and Found System Makes Children Neat are you find that children their belongleaving ings about the house? If you do, you know that this is especially true in summer because youngsters are around so much more. To teach her children to correct this fault Jean Hersey started a unique system which she tells about in the June issue of Good Housekeeping magazine. Settling: down on the sofa Mrs. Hersey found that she was quite apt to meet various nubbly objects as she leaned back to relax her boys' fire engines, or her daughter's roller skates. To make sure this didn't become a common habit Mrs. Hersey put up a convenient shelf and over it a sign saying: "Lost and Found. You must work your belongings out." Any possessions left where they shouldn't be are hastily put here by whoever discovers them. To retrieve an article Mrs. Hersey made the provision that the owner must d a job that benefits the household in general. "The tasks" she says, "are never too arduous, but the knowledge that they must be done inspires a higher standard of neatness than we ever had." If the children want their toys back they must do such things as water the plants or wash and dry the dishes, and they are always accomplished cheerfully and with quite a bit of humor. DO (Bell Syndicate - Leather-skinne- d ORLEANS. fishermen nifjhtly are polling their pirogues along the banks of Louisiana's sluggish bayous in search of the gourmet's delight NEW giant green bullfrogs. They are only part of the army of fishermen from Florida, Tennessee and Missouri and other states that make their living catching the giant frogs from fresh water marshes and shipping them to big cities. Louisiana boasts, however, that the largest and best eating frogs come from the southwestern section of the state. Rayne lays claim to the capital city, but Morgan City and other towns in the area also are heavy producers. The state department of conservation, in figures released recently, said that 1,228,000 pounds of frogs were caught in 1940. The United States bureau of fisheries says that no complete statistics of the domestic catch of frogs are available for Louisiana. However, the bureau said Louisiana "unquestionably is one of the most important of producing states" for frogs. Methods for catching the big, green fellows differ in the many states, but in Louisiana such implements as the spear and gig have been prohibited by law. It wasn't humanity, but economic reasoning that prompted adoption of the Louisiana frog catcher, a tong-lik- e instrument with wooden handles and claw-likjaws. Conservationists discovered that too many frogs were being gigged or speared and then released when the frogger found they were too small for the market Most of these frogs died. at Murray 317 for your Winter's COAL Treated $4.75 Per Ton A note from London states that smoking being forbidden in air- Peerless Lump $6.50 1 plane and munitions factories, girl workers are taking to snufT-an- d tryinng hard not to sneeze. -- 7 I 1 4 WAYNE Sash & Cabinet Shop FIXTURES 4774 South State MILLWORK Murray, . . . t 302--- - We will call and pick jour car up at no additional cast and return it the same day if we can have your car before noon. Four Reasons Why You Should Try Our Gasoline . . . 0 Not an Ordinary Gasoline! 0 Graded High as Ethyl! 0 No Driving Ping! 0 No Missing on the Hills! Silver Bell m Murray's Original Trackside Station4400 SOUTH STATE STREET - S UuhJJ We are as close as your phone! Just give us a ring at Murray SEs M Suddenly sparks will fly between some lovely woman and some hitherto devoted husband and father, und then the mischief sturts. He takes an earlier train home a day or two later, when she happens to be out in the garden, in striped slacks and a broad garden hat. They talk. By KATHLEEN NORRIS SOMETIMES when you her enjoying a thrilling love affair with some other man, the natural resentful question is: how does she get away with it? Every smart suburb has a few of her; she is pretty, She is young, also, the other women think, unscrupulous and common, even if her father is a judge and her name on the list at the country club. But what they think doesn't bother her. In fact, she enjoys the knowledge that she is annoying them. self-confide- Perhaps her lover Is somebody's husband; that makes it worse. In small communities, where everybody plays bridge and golf and tennis together, and gives parties where the same men and women are always meeting, suddenly sparks will fly between some lovely woman and some hitherto devoted husband and father, and then the mischief starts. They exchange looks; he sends her a book and she returns a note; he takes an earlier train home a day or two later, when she happens to be out In the garden, in striped slacks and a broad garden hat They talk. And all the time the surface is all She is brightness and decorum. especially nice to her husband and those two small boys; his two little girls can see no change in Daddy. His wife can, but, as I have mentioned in this column before, the wife under these circumstances has no chance. If she goes into jealous rages, everyone sympathizes with Rob and thinks she is acting disgracefully. If she holds her head high then and refuses to admit, much less discuss, the affair, then the pronouncement is that Sally has always been a terribly cold, reserved sort of wife, and you can't blame poor Rob fur looking for affection elsewhere. i Must Tay Sooner or Later. But, if it is any consolation to the ' women who find themselves in Sally's position, the other woman never docs get away with It. She may for awhile, but sooner or later she pays, and in the hundreds of cases of the sort that have come to my attention, it is Interesting to note that for every moment of illicit bliss she steals, she pays in many hours of humiliation or embarrass- merit. Humiliation if the man presently writes her a manly, honest letter telling her that he loves her as much as ever but that out of consideration for dtar little Sally, it must all stop. She knows full well as she reads the eloquent lines that he has stopped loving her entirely, and that the time to consider dear brave little Sally was some years earlier. But she has to accept the rebuff, the lessened respect of her friends, her husband's quiet, scorn, and her own lowered self esteem. Talnful all 'round. The alternative is almost worse; embarrassment This is what she experiences when she is tired to denlh of the affair, bored to tears by Sally Brown's stupid husband, furious at herself for having written those poetic, playful, adoring letters that he so treasures and quotes, and at her wits' end to get rid of the man. But no, he will go on telephoning and writing and reproaching her gently for change of mood, and trying to werk up quarrels and rcconciliiitions In the old way, and pleading for dates thl she simply cant and won't give him. Hnrrd, Turns to Muslr and Love. Here is a U Iter from Elira Davis of Butluii, who finds herself in a d I C- - M(1C AMU 100 rW fl' National DiMillrrt f IH' IT U IIKVttrC rro.huu Corn. N. Y. Child Health Ca Some of the most gress made by the Cd 1 fession has been nesses and deaths The number of & nots children for now h u 1910. Each of eighf of childhood death bed of much of DIFFICULT FUTURE marriage cumulates in an illicit romance. In six months the fires of love have crumbled into ashes for one, but still burn brightly in tlie breast of the other, who insists upon at least a Then a third figure enters the scene and completes a new triangle. Miss Norris advises on the only course open to the troubled. A thrill-les- s token-marriag- very annoying predicament "My marriage was orthodox, conventional, dull," she writes. "We had the expected boy and then the expected girl, but I may say honestly that in the first eight years since I dutifully said 'I do,' 1 never once experienced the thrill that ought to be the lot of every bride, wife, housekeeper, social favorite, mother. My own father and mother were cold, quiet people who kept me constantly busy in boarding schools and on European trips with ' Secretary of Agriculture Claude B. Wickard has proclaimed wheat marketing quotas for the 1942 crop year on the basis of estimatmared supplies for the 1942-4keting year according to information received by James H. Jensen, chairman of the Salt Lake county AAA committee. The proclamation was made at this early date for the benefit of farmers seeding wheat this fall, Chairman Jensen stated. Quotas are already in .effect on the 1941 crop which has assured farmers a high loan value for their wheat. A loan program in 1942 will depend on farmers approving wheat marketing quotas for next year in a referendum which will probably be held next spring. Estimated carryover of wheat on July 1, 1942, is a 640 million bushels and 1942 crop on the basis of the 55 million acre allotment is estimated at 660 million bushels. The quota level, which is the amount of wheat utilized for domestic consumption and exports plus a 35 per cent reserve, has been placed at 998 million bushels. On this basis the supply, of wheat in 1942 will exceed the quota level by more than 300 million bushels. "In view of this large supply of wheat, marketing quotas are necessary to protect the loan program and equally distribute the available market among the wheat producers of the country," said Mr. Jensnen. As a result of marketing quotas, acreage allotments and wheat bans, Salt Lake farmers are enjoying a better price for their wheat than they , have had for several years. pro t ' one-tent- hX C3USes mm 3 e Slack ; WNU Service.) I94J kffi J Crop Announced The Game and the Candle Pounds Yearly. Delbert Hinnen Royal-Oi- l Wheal Marketing Quotas For 1942 Kathleen Norris Says: Yields Million Louisiana CALL i Thursday, AugustU THE MURRAY EAGLE . the 0 0 0 0 Courteous Prompt Efficient Service Buy Our Weekly Ride Pass Cards! "A SAVINGS TO YOU" For BEST RESULTS this season, USE . . . DRAPER QUALITY FEEDS SEND YOUR EGGS TO DRAPER EGG PRODUCERS W E. CAIN & SON 429 East 39th South Phone Mur. ASSN. 750-- school groups. .,, "Two years ago, when my children were seven and five, I began to study music. One of the teachers at the school was a vital, hand- some, eager man; American-borbut of foreign parentage. Never having known love I fell in love; but more, I see now, with love itself than with him. His was a violent wooing. I was bored and unhappy, and we became lovers. He had been divorced; his wife, much older, with children of an earlier marriage, lived iu another state. For perhaps six months I lived In a fool's dream, then I awakened and attempted to end the affair. But he was unwilling to have it at anything but fever height "Meanwhile an old friend, a man who had loved me since babyhood, though I didn't know it came into our lives, and both my husband and myself took great pleasure In his constant company. Seven months ago my husband was killed in a motor accident, and George, the new-ol- d friend, asked me to marry him. It seemed to me only honorable to tell him of the affair with the musician, whom I will call Leo. especially as Leo was annoying me by taking it for granted he and I would be married. Sen No Happincsa With Leo. "George thinks that I am morally obliged to marry Leo, even though his feeling for me and mine for him is the deepest our lives have ever known. Dignified, generous and noble In all his ideas, affectionate and tender and sympathizing, yet he feels that It would clear the matter up to have me marry Leo, even if I immediately afterward sued for a divorce. "My children actively dislike Leo and love George. He has been 'Uncle Ceorgc' to them, closer than ever their father was. This disgusting situation has driven me out of my senses. I am thin and nervous and cannot eat nor sleep, and I ask your advice. Could Leo sue me, or subject me to any publicity If I married George? Is George right in asking me to sacrifice my own and my children"! future by mar-rlag- e with a penniless musician? In what way could Leo give this if he story to the scandal-monger- s liked? George Is a politician with a future before him. Would rumors of my affair affect his career? I am going mad over the whole and will await your answer with the utmost anxiety." No, I don't think Leo could make much trouble, and whatever gossip he started would presently die away. Certainly a temporary mar. rlage Isn't the answer, and George should not exact it Your only course is to tell Leo once and for all that the affair Is over, and hope that George loves you enough to decide, upon Sober consideration, that he wants you anyway. And this time try to maintain a somewhat higher standard as a wife. JAMES B. SHIELDS, Masseur n at-fa- ir Midvale R.D. South Jordan 1 Resumes Work August 20ih Mr. Shields has been ill for 3 months but has recovered his strength and will resume work August 20th at his office in South Jordan. Appointments may be made August 20th and thereafter. A Home of Your Own! . jT-r'"- JJ Ihtf'l II III I "I j I J I 1 I 7? a COPPER LUMBER COMPANY Specializing In all klmW of nill.MNG MATERIALS, CEMENT, and HARDWARE TAINTS Salt Lake's Newest and Most Complete Lumber Yard If you on? 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