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Show Bond Sales Jump Syracuse DUP Meets Camp Normal Back To Rachel Layton SYRACUSE Warren camp, Daughters of Utah In March Tally Pioneers, held their monthly meet- - PRESIDENT BEGINS HIS SIXTH YEAR & i y v i i ; &4J-- $ !Vf--' , , K , --- :: x. f ? 7. ? m .v'v r aW 5 c?7j f I l! bulked Odd head of heavv and under. $:M.W while the and down. A few half-fa- t at $2.r,o, but P f 1 Av ; r 'W Vi $ i . &&& """Z $2,-310,0- 4 .t?4,, 1 Individual National and International Problems Inseparable From Local Welfare One of the cent books on Police State: Know About Written by . most interesting m 00 I year term. while a few 114L AM MAa4 a4iAM I y4l Kremlin bosses even if they .5? took on between level the place top Stalin and Truman could not Pos- siblv do anv eood and 'that even thev mieht do ereat hann bv nro I 3fcnatth largely at -T- homas1 ket is ending up the week showing peror. very little price change. Supplies continue to run light, but the unWife Preserve er?:one 0Ae trade appears to be easn?. a little. Demand for fresh meat is only fair with beef prices coming down when compared with the high time of a few weeks ago. At the same time pork is a bargain, but there has not been a great deal of buying action on the part of retailers. Receipts of cattle this week were a little smaller than both a week and a year ago. Quality showed little change with fed stock in the minority, However, the first of the Dredge your breakfast bus local grass cattle put in their ap- - meal, then fry it to required for a delicious taste. pearance with several loads of gooc fat cows arriving as well as a gooc load of steers. Steer and heifer quotations are FOR SALE showing little or no change from WOOD FI a week ago, although somi ,of the TWO . BOATS I better kinds appear to be a little 14-FO- I 119 Parkwayj Drhtl CLEARFIELD, 11 5 hoe' heavir.,waterfills in warm weath unchanged while maker, chairman of the Utah Pub-- 1 calves and vealers are about $1.00 DO YOU WANT STEADY lie Welfare Commission. h'kher. Replacement cattle are Well, we have a good jd. Middle-age- d Couple wM sistie 01 J, Fletcher SCOWCrOft, .medium and Milking Cows and can K jU? chairman, good fed steers sold this week from of a good farm . . . SJMWt oU,ns !.ave nominated 325.00 to $27.00 with one load at modern living conditions. of your experience and rtfc, letter to P. 0. Box 389. I 1 DiiwnrtnowH AND ELK COMPANY FURNITURE If we are to accept this reason- - the Board of Trustees. The Board and under in E5YCH TTACSQ 1! i Rom where I sit I V ...Joe Marsh ' i J His Punch is His Signaturo Was on the train up to Central City the other day and when the conductor came around, I asked him why their ticket punches make holes'in the ticket. inch Every conductor in the country has a different design for his punch he tells me. Some even show up a fellows preferences. Now take mine. The hole it makes looks like a beer goblet. Sure enough! Then he went on to say that the punch is just like the conductors signature. Makes it easy to trace tickets ... to check up U something happens. odd-shap- t n i t i i 7 i. V u ed From where I sit, even though your ticket is punched differently from mine, it still gets you where youre going. Just like people with their opinions. You might like coffee, another person, tea and Ill settle for a temperate glass of beer. But what does it matter, so long as we respect the right of the other to have tastes and opinions? Were aJ trying to go in the same direction towards a friendlier, more pleasant world for all of us. a limited way. Gooc representing fat grass cows sold up to $22.50 membership totals various economic groups and areas with young of the state. Nominated as a sue- - cessor to Fred S. Mulock who has moved to Boston is Ward Tuttle of Salt Lake City, Under Utah Foundation s, additional nominations may be made by the membership at the 35 i Copyright , 1950 , United States Brewers Foundation fed stock at 355 24th St, Phone 4621 $23.50 I by-law- annual meeting. Presiding at the annual meeting will be Herbert A. Snow, president of Utah Foundation. 1 the policy has on occasion been changed and modified for strictly political purposes. .Here is why the demand for a return to a genuinely bipartisan foreign policy has again reached a climactic point. That kind of policy died with the illness of Senator Vandenburg which prevented him from carrying on the enormously important work he had been doing. Mr. Trumans appointment of John Foster Dulles as a special advisor to Mr. Acheson marks, it is almost universally hoped, a return to bi- partisanship. Another shot in this direction was fired in a major speech by Thomas E. Dewey, in which he strongly and clearly showed the direct relationship between an effective bipartisan foreign policy and national liberty and security. Mr. Dewey berated both Republicans and Democrats who put politics above the public welfare. Per-hpthe best sign of the times is that more and more men in1 high places recognize that the terrible seriousness of the situation as de-jman- 3 lest SCHOSS ing, and if we are to win the cold war, we must have a strong and bit stable policy and the strength to back it up. The most reasoned MllfICI criticism of President Trumans past and present foreign policy is that it has often consisted of big words which we could not possibly OALT LAKE STAMP CO. justify with deeds. To make mat- DEPT. N, 43 WEST 3RD SOUTH ters worse, in the view of many, i Old $12.00 and A great man will not trJ on a woman, nor sneaky nt ! J but yearling $18.00 and down. Ms luaslatsjsaMi.sts 5SsA8?ar fattecS "InTlPc all reflected a deep pessimism, and a firm and reasoned feeling that steady, . ar Russia is called The What You Want to the Soviet Union. Craig Thompson, a former Moscow Correspondent of Time and Life, and published by E. P. Dutton, it gives small comfort to those who believe that some kind of fair and workable agreement can now be achieved between Russia and this country. Mr. Thompson is absolutely convinced on that the Kremlin is hell-bethe political and economic enslavement of the world and that it is not interested in half a loaf. Of the Russian leaders he says, To S Lambs were ost about 50 cents iin5 grading spring lambs so, Once again the livestock mar I re- $19.40. Heavier butcS) ing 240 to 2JH) lb. soiJH Sows bulked: lo rflnqeks QiuonftockIJam - I Happenings That Affect the Future of Every . i try trade. ry SITUATION hem, compromise is only a stratagem, a device to fool the enemy and gain a 'more advantageous the part position. In . other words, The annual of Utah . of wisdom is to view every So- - Foundation will meeting be held Friday, viet act and policy-- no matter how May 5, at 12:00 noon at the Hotel Seve trustees will be se- L be with the utmost lected for five-yemay seem terms and one to susPlcl0n trustee fill a vacancy for a four- - ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS i; W pljOO to $23.00.,C,f,lS were suitable ufasiOjff Utah Foundation Will Hold Annual Meeting A RADIANT SMILE lights up the face of President Harry S. Truman as he poses for photographers in the White House at the start of his sixth ( International Soundphoto ) year as the nations Chief Executive, ! v?1 & just in Marca jbers present, . t: " $1,248,919 of 1949. V Sales in E bonds in Davis county in March of 1950 amounted to $51,-21- 7 compared to a sale of $30,402 in February, 1950, it was announced by Haven J. Barlow, local chairman of U. S. bond sales. An attempt is being made to keep sales durnig April above the 1949 figure in order to make up the earlier losses this year and put the state on an even keel going into the Independence Drive of 1950, during which Utah must sell purchase price of bonds be- tween May 15 and July 4 in order to meet its share of the national quota. :; &;o i - , .?. a total of i-- t?J nduding from $llr.oodairy to Hog prices omt this week, butopened at the cl'J gained early losses J.. cents or more higher S Sons recent the with the of 971 E bond sales in 1949. trip Mormon battalion and choice 1!k to Vii, Total sales for the state in E, Utah Pioneers ?1S.00 to'X 5.ld F and G bonds amounted to $1,- - trek. There were nineteen camp mem-wit- h 399,103 in March of 1950 compared ed 'I i Wil-Februa- ,2. Most medium ing last Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Elvin Hansen. Assisting hostesses were Mrs. Earl W. Dahl and Mrs. Joseph B. Han sen The lesson was given by Mrs. Clarence W. Smedley, Mrs. liam H. Wilcox, Mrs. Roy Briggs and Mrs. Delbert E. Wilcox. Each gave a very interesting account of After dropping off sharply in February to $803,530, Series E bonds jumped tok to for the state in March, Charles L. Smith, state chairman, announced. This makes up for some of the losses, since it is more than $300,000 above the February figure, and comparies with $1,019,- - . . i 1 1 THE JOURNAL 12 Page . I tion. resolute and unselfish ds BY NATURAL APPK HAVE YOU AN APPLICATION If so, let me help your heating O Gas Conversion Burners. O Gas Furnaces. O O Gas Circulating Heaters. Gas Water Heaters. O Gas Floor and Wall Furnaces. FOR G you probk5 , FREE ESTIMATES . . . TERMS CAN BE ARBl Expert Workmanship and Materials K. B. COTTRELL HEATING Heating Contracting and Applance . 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