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Show T r 2 THE BOX ELDER JOURNAL, Brigham ll City, Utah Instructor Thursday, October. 15, 1964 By CWC It am to bo that tho Utah Fiih and Gamt and tho U. S. Fish and Wildlife sorVice aro taking all tho sport out of bunting. Thoy havo a dofStod so many rulos and regulation that they mako law broakors Is But watch out. Someplace, maybe ting scope or binoculars, from a truck. He's out to blind or a pick-u- p get you if you continue this bad, bad buddy hunting practice. to teach high school lh Calif, ornia, New York and New Jer. sey. He has taught shorthand, typing and bookkeeping at Ox. nard High school In California and at Bloomfield High school in New Jersey; and account, lng at Syracuse university, cost accounting at Columbia, and acat New York uni. counting versity. All Interested secretaries are invited to attend the dinner meeting. arrangements for Mrs. Esther Petersons visit Friday, presents reception Invitations , to David R. Waldron, state senate candidate, Reservations should be called In before Friday, Oct. 16, to Mrs. Whitney, 723-388- Beverly Cobta, 723-636- Green onions are usually Immature early white or bulbless having graduated from Upsala onions. Leeks, larger but similar, college In 1950 with a BBA In have broad dark green leaves accounting. His MBA in finance and straight, thick white necks. was earned at Syracuse univer. Shallots grow In clusters and sity in 1951. From 1953.57 he have only slight bulbs. worked toward his Ph.D. at New YOURE INVITED . Mrs. John Alex, a member of the Democratic committee making you do? You leave the spot rebl quick and let the bird rot in the field. Who Wodld believe a hunter if he carried it in? You cant afford to take the chance. This Is conserving game? and Commissioner William D. Burton. York unverslty. At the present time, White Is Spray children's anklets vice president of the Ogden starch to lightly with spray-o- n Chapter of the National Assn, make them look trim and neat. of Accountants. He is certified ed 1 talked with a friend this week who told me he had quit duck hunting. "When they kept cutting the limit while raising the price of the duck stamp, decided it just wasn't worth it," he explained. And Im sure a lot more feel the same way. I'm sure the F&G will have their bills back in the next legislature to raise the price on licenses as well as many others setting new restrictions on the sportsmen. Were really getting regimented from all sides. ' 'S,f A Parsons Service UHXShbU3h5I Center F I With limits as low as they now are, .even I can get a five duck limit and Im probobly the poorest duck hunter in northern Utah. It just takes me longer because I get in more shooting than most hunters. But the point is I still come home with five ducks. The ban on certain species of Robert W. White SPEAKER will address Beehive chapter of NSA Wednesday evening. Whitney said. White Is well qualified to di. rect the studies in accounting The dog catches a hen and kills it before you can get to him. What do doesn't conserve any game. It manager the Beehive chapter of the Na. tlonal Secretaries Assn,, will be guest speaker at the Oct. 21 meeting of the chapter. The meeting will be held at Georges Stake House, 94 South Main, Brigham City, beginning at 7: 30 p.m. The Certified Professional Secretaries and education com. mlttee will be in charge of the program with DeEsta Whitney as chairman. Mrs, serving Whitney and Barbara Stevenson will discuss the 1965 studypro. gram for the CPS examination. White will teach a class In accounting, beginning In Jan. uary, which will be tailored to the CPS requirements for local secretaries interested In taking the examination. The class will run from ten to 12 weeks and will be a great help in the ac. counting area to those planning to take the 1965 exam, Mrs. a hblf mile away, a Warden may be watching your group through a spot- inually taken buddy hunting cases U. S. Courts, makto the case. Federal ing it a great big Now the state is cracking down where in the past they have merely looked the other direction.' They knew it was going on but didn't do anything about it. W. White, cost accounting depart, ment at Thlokol, who will in. struct a class for members of I The Federals have been enforcing this for several years and have actjam-pack- Robert of the he got it. One of them is bound to be right. say It is a party bird and the group only has eight more to go. Someone will only get two more so he can claim the partnership bird. the ban on buddy hunting which both law enforcement agencies seem determined to break Up. It used to be that hunting was a group sport. You went out , with friends and when you filled up, you quit and went home. 'Not any more, says the F&G. Now In you kill your game, put your gun the case, and wait until your buddy gets his. If you do otherwise, you are not one passed breaking the law or the Congress legislature by but a regulation handed down by arbitrary decision of the dictators who run the bureau. pet peeve NSA Chapter Then we go pheasant hunting. A bird jumps up and three shots ring out. The bird drops. Whose is it? Each one of the trio feels certains out of ovorybody. My To Address ducks Is ovon moro ridiculous. Evon tho exports havo to have tho duck In hand to mako positive identification sometimes but thoy expect tho hun-to- r to do that while it is flying 40 miles per hour, 30 yards away. I'd like to know how many redheads are stomped into the mud each season. 1600 SOUTH MAIN 723-801- Tlx 2 723-315- 0 -- rr vV MS'"" Maybe my friend is right. Maybe isnt worth it. it just days were largely the personal prop, organs of strong-mindeagandists for causes. If you think the press is rough on pol. ltlclans today, you should see some of the Yltriol printed way back when. The concept that publishing a newspaper Is a public trust has been developing over the years. Freedom of the press now con. d Join With Us . . . this, your own Hometown Weekly Newspaper, In- vite you to observe National Newspaper Week with us. It it set aside to remind Americans of a right, basic in this country: The Right To Know! To be of genuine importance to people, newspapers must be free. No people are free where the press is gagged. So, it makes a big difference in peoples lives whether or not their newspapers are free. The predominate difference between free and Red citizens is The Right To Know. dominated police-stat- e During National Newspaper Week we wish to pause a moment from our busy daily routine and say . . . Thanks . . . because if it werent for each of you it would be impossible for us to publish a newspaper. Thanks to our Readers: We extend our thanks for your interest in the Journal as evidenced by your rapid response to renewal notices. Thanks to our Advertisers: For your confidence In Investing your advertising dollars with us. Your support has enabled us to give the people of this community a newspaper which is comparable to those printed in much larger places. Thanks to our Correspondents: For your fine job of reporting the happenings In your respective rural communities. These items of local interest are a great asset to our newspaper. Thanks to all Others: Who have assisted us during the past year by bringing in news and pictures, or have covhelped us in any way to give complete and accurate erage in this area. notes a responsibility to fair, to present both sides the facts and let the readers reach their own conclusions. LXXE ALMOST everything by men, newspapers else made are changing with the times. audience to survive. Bad news, r COX ELDER JOURNAL !d 'haler Tint every Thunder hi NeweJeunuU, lie West, Brtshtm City, elk end entered e Seeend CUM. eftlee la Bits-CrriM et tHe peelunder the set ef -- v li w-e- . n, rSrtv-v- r r-- e f . rie In sdvfaeet I tee Sea (,d la eeeaneetten; l4r New heeiys Mnr iler'd mealto). eisglf k CLUS" hr TFiUXirn.-U- fr.Ht1 Cm -- Asyea.a, . idea that the press be should Its guaranteed freedom. That this nation has endured and prospered is due in part to the foresight of the founding fathers in insisting on making freedom of the press a fundamental precept of our form of government. In 1881, Thomas Jefferson wrote: Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without news, paper or newspapers without a I should not hes. Svernment, to prefer the latter." No doubt he had in mind that if there were no the press would government, see to it that on was formed promptly. WHAT a tO remarkable a. bout the oonsitutlonal guarantee and Jeffersons statement is that the newspapers cf the early rs. Street hard-presse- SmrtOWItt-- ln Mmtizu f fit 85 modolt f ltd older eon, too. OUR READERS WRITE (Continued from page one) treatment. The approach here was still at IN 1780. IT WAS A revolu. Built with . the deepest biting edges ol iny snow.. .more skid resistance on slick roads. fjrkn COM construction lor extra strength and winters of wearl MEDIUM CARS LARGER CARS i Reader Upholds Author; Asks Voters to Study Candidates Editor: In Drew Pearsons column In the Ogden Standard and in his news broadcasts over local radio stations he has attempted to discredit the author of awid. ely distributed book, A Texan Looks at Lyndon by J. Eve. tts Haley. This book is being published In the Congressional Record as he stated. It Is the book Dan Smoot said should be read by every voter before the election on Nov. 3. It Is the book the U.S. News and World Report magazine said the Demo, cratic National committee were concerned about. It is the book which Liberty Lobby of Wash, lngton, D.C. has reprinted In a 12. page edition newspaper under the title LBJ Political Biography which they are sel. ling at cost for maximum dis. trlbution. Pearson made no attempt to discredit any of the issues contained In the book, but only to slander the author and other persons whom he claims did re. search. Usually an author gives credit to anyone who helps him with a book, but Haley makes no mention in his book of any collaborators. papers 'do not last very long. different. The streets were cut Readers pay only about one. down to grade and a slx.inch quarter of the cost of their gravel base laid down and spraynewspaper. Advertising reven. ed with Penta Prime, ahigh.rate ue is what makes possible the penetrating oil which locks the production of a paper. Thus gravel Into a reasonably when a citizen patronizes a asphalt surface. A seal-cowas then applied. local merchant who advertises in the hometown paper, he Is Smith said this type of surhelping to ensure continued pub. face will be good for several Ucatlon. years and will serve as a base if and when the street Is plac. WHILE THE HUGE metropol. ed In a special Improvement ltan dallies dominate the news, district for curb. to.curb paving. paper field, the backbone of the THE COST FOR THIS TYPE Of industry Is the hometown paper, whether Issued dally, semi, surfacing Is about 33 cents per weekly or weekly. These are the square yard compared with papers that are closest to the about $1 for plant mix asphalt people and In many cases the paving. Not wanting to harbor waste editor knows most of his read, In any segment of the program, ers personally. There are more than 8,000 asphalt on one street, torn up weeklies published today, because It was too rich, was with an aggregate circulation of placed on Sixth West street. over 24 million copies per Is. It does not make an especially sue. These figures do not In. good surface but "keeps down elude shopping papers carrying the dust. little or no news or newspapers Smith said he wished to that work done this past with not paid circulation. Technological progress has summer has Involved existing IN THE SEPT. 21 Issue of the given the weekly field a shot In streets and only to the extend of Freedom Press of Los Angeles If a was street in recent arm the years. Intro, existing paving. In a Interview with Haley t duction of the only two thesepress pro. not curb.to-curhis words: "1 have are cess has led to the establish, lanes paved It was repaired been asked to explain the back, or ment of many Joint printing cen. replaced that way, of the publication of my ground ters through the nation, No long. A Texan Looks book, r does a publisher require his THE CONSTRUCTION of new latest book was con. This at Lyndon. streets with curb.to.curb pavown press to publish. and pub. researched ceived, ing Is another matter. Itrequlr as a sound historical llshed BIO IN es a EVEN CITIES, two gravel base and study, not as a campaign doc. competing papers may be pub. couple of inches of blrumlnous ument. No group, no organlza. It Is same the in This llshed plant. surfacing. considerably and no party has had any. reduces operating costs during more costly than simple main- tlon, whatever to do with It, thing a period when publishers are tenance and repair, 1 alone financed It from the and of to This type construction will particularly meet rising expenses, plus continue to be handled In spec very first and Pm still f Inane, Its publication. Haley then strong competition for the lal improvement districts with lng a brief synopsis of the con. made advertising dollar from elec, benefiting property owners ex. tents of the book closing with to tronle media. their share of the photo-offse- Trollmokor COMPACT CARS , dur-abl- e They must to survive. Most of tho changes are subtle and un. dramatic, likely to go unnoticed except by those In the trade. And examination of the back files of any successful paper will demonstrate some of the changes, Newspaper publishing is a unique business. Article 1 of the Bill of Rights of the Constltu. tlon declare: Congress shall make no law.,.fbrldglng the freedom of speech or of the press." No other business has such a guarantee, nor such a responsibility. tlonary t product must appeal to a mass plant asphalt mulch. By BERT MILLS Distributed by'Nstlonal Editorial Association ar taken for Newspapers granted by most psople most of tht time but ones each year the press focuses attention upon Itself by sponsoring National Newspaper Week, which is being observed October 11.17. This event serves the useful purpose of providing both an op. portunlty for self examination by those who produce the nearly 10,000 newspapers and an oc easlon for 84 million buyers to pay special attention to the papers they read. Both groups can profit by this scrutiny, l AT THE SAME TIME, a news, IN SOME INSTANCES where paper must pay Its bills. Gone are the days when a rich man the existing street surface was far gone oxidized and could become a publisher to air too his personal views. Publishing crumbling it was torn out and is highly competitive and the replaced, although not with STREET, U.S.A. r.lAin " be of a public question, to lay bare rick I. F. Sort . STREETS LOOK GOOD. Inspecting the surface of a newly.surfaced street In Brigham City Is Public Works Director O. Neil Smith, This past summers maintenance and re. pair program was the most ambitious ever here. b sources. We believe that the statement made by Frank Kluck. hohn Is true that perhaps not one American In ten thousand is aware of whats going on. We Americans have become too It lazy to think for ourselves Is too easy to pick up the newspaper or turn on the TV and let others do the thinking for us. We are convinced there Is more at stake In this election than Just the Issue of Johnson or Goldwater, Democrat or Re. publican. It Is an Issue of resort-lnback to the people the free, doms guaranteed them under our Constitution or continuing down the road to socialism and eventual Slav g God-give- n this Having done this, I stand unafraid of what may follow because I believe in the san. ctlty of the printed word well knownlng that when 1 commit the honest Judgements of history to the printed page they are for the author whether fortunate or hopeless, beyond recall, We have personally read this LITTLE SLVCGER and sincerely recommend book HIS BIG TW O that all who Intend to cast a CHICAGO (UPI) Johnny BALTIMORE, Md. (UPD -- Cooney, now a coach with the vote should read It. Little Luis Aparlclo was the Chicago White Sox, hit two OVER THE PAST YEAR we only member of the Baltimore major league home runs. The have Invested much time and Orioles to hit a grand slam first on Sept. 24, 1939, the sec-'n- considerably money In a atudy home run in 1063. the following day. of our government from many U9ei unn !o )ti $ Una uiiN Om, Me Butch. Chevy n, Camel, Deit, Fetoe. Jee Leneer Owe. BemMer, Miiir, vmm 1 ..... Fttl Butch. Cat Cervetie Chevretel Fore Ooe, Mercury, OMl Pontiac, Jt lewwwil. K0ESSYC3VX AMU ahretee 00 ter M MiN UMM llN MUM Fee Butch. ChryMar. CMwetet. Oeae Fere MemsytOHh Pontiac. Wyraeum. RamMor EEC IRSTANT CREDIT K0 TRADE-IREEDED ResSttlentl (targe fer neu ntlnf ll IwheKene h Mtlenal credit cerds LANDERS STEAM & DRY IRONS One Year Full Warranty ery. IT BEHOOVES EACH one of us to study, research, analyze, the candidates on their past performance that we may cast our votes intelligently and not make our judgements solely from the news media accounts of this election campaign In which the candidates are out to chalk up votes. An excellent analysis of the voting records of all U.S. Sen. ators and Representatives over the past three years has been compiled by Dan Smoot Report, Dallas, Texas 75214, Copies are available for 25 cents each or six for one dollar. Ask for Vot. lng Records 1962 and "judge Them By Their Records covering 1963 and 1964, Sincerely yours, Mr. and Mrs, Duane L. Wells 'Somebody forget... 3 d pected pay During National Newspaper cost It was pointed out. Week, pause to consider the important role your newspaper plays in your dally life. You FIRST TRACK NEW YORK (UPI) need it in more ways than you The think. You would be lost with, first formally lald-ohorse out it At least, I would. racing track in New York was completed in 1665, Just 12 yeari after the city was founded. 1 1 RECAPS 750 XI 4 Dili. Buy Them Early Phiinrfecepge 1!-- '' ut d, IAY-A-WA- Y tJOW FOil every litter bit hurts ainisTms! I I' I 5 |