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Show file THE UTAH STATESMAN 2 ' Friday, September THE UTAH STATESMAN "I HAHRY B. MILLER, Publisher The official name of Landholder-SportsGame Department Committee was adopted by state representatives from the organizations during a meeting held early this week at department of fish and game offices in Salt Lake City. The committee originated this spring when the growing problem attending the greater use of private lands by the increased number of sportsmen going afield to fish or hunt. man 121 Chuck Street Phone EM 49 , Entered as 2nd Class matter at the Post Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rate 81.00 per year Published weekly at 421 Church Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION. 1956 Vol. 11; No. 36 (Friday, September 13, 1957 United Fund Agencies To Hold Open House5 Week Public of Sept. Come-and-S- ee United Fund Agency Week will be Inaugurated Monday, Sept 16 by Governor George D. Clyde and mayors and managers of 20 cities and communities in the Salt Lake and South Davis county areas. Doors of the 30 health, welfare and character-buildin-g agencies of the United Fund will be thrown open to the general public from 9 am. to 5 pm. daily Sept. 16 through 20. To accomodate working personnel and entire families, agencies will hold open house on a staggered basis, from 5 p.m. to Theatre Schedules Noted Broadway Play S. L. The Dairy of Anne Frank one of the outstanding plays of recent years, will come to the Capitol Theatre in Salt Lake City on Monday and Tuesday nights, Sept. 23 and 24 with a matinee on Tuesday. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Critics Award as the best play of 1955-5The Dairy of Anne Frank recently embarked on a tour after playing 90 weeks on Broadway. Joseph Schildkraut of stage, screen and TV fame, is starred in the role he created on Broadway. Featured players are Maria Palmer, Lou Jacobi, Nan McFarland, Abigail Kellogg, Lou Gilbert and Otto Hulett. Mias Kellogg plays Anne. The Diary of Anne Frank was dramatized by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett from the dairy kept by an adolescent Jewish girl while she and several others were in hiding from the Nazis for two years in an Amsterdam attic. Quietly, often gaily, the play rey creates the life these simtheir their people problems, and irritations their ple pleasures, apprehensions. Produced by Kermit Bloomgar-deand directed by Garson Kanin, The Dairy of Anne Frank is filled with excitement, humor and tenderness and is a play for all the family. It ha been successful not only in this country but in 15 foreign countries. In Germany it 'has been produced in 37 theatres. The management of the Capital Theatre is to be congratulated on giving Salt Lake City and vicinity this opportunity to see one of the great dramas of the modem threatre. The two evening the performances begin at 8:30 at 2:30. matinee Tuesday Mail orders, or phone calls are now being accepted at the Capitol Theatre, Salt Lake City. 6, coast-to-co- Slated as Days 16-2-0 ast day-to-da- n Forest Products In West Face Good Market Gevcrueir Weekly Newspaper Dorstol fe Ceel -- Goal of the committee is to ommend and implement methods hy which current trespass problems can be better understood and reduced. A program has already been recommended and set up by the committee which through signs will tell the user of these lands what is expected of him when afield this fall t rec- These signs will be made available to all landlords in the near 9 p.m. throughout the week with future and will be distributed a special schedule of activities. through the cooperative subcommittees on the county level. Mrs. Jerry Landa (Esther) is tour chairman in charge of The committee further recommended a statewide three-da-y Agency Week. pheasant season for consideration Gov. Clyde has issued a per- by the fish and game commission sonal invitation to all mayors and this year. Only the opening date city managers to accompany him for this hunt, Nov. 9., has been on the tour. Dr. E. Allen Bateman, set. State Superintendent of Schools making this recommendation has invited all school superintend, theIncommittee expressed the need ents to accompany him. These to the problems attending tours will begin at 9:15 asa. and the study annual pheasant hunt, with a will officially open Agency view toward agreeing upon a longWeek. er season in the future if the This is part of a tremendous trespass and other problems could effort this year to make the peo- be resolved by the work of the fuple of this area completely cogni- committee in the coming and seasons. ture zant of how their days pay given to the United Fund benefits them and the community at Kids? idling .areas over the large said John H. Klas, cam- state are open to angling by any paign chairman. licensed person until the properly of the end angling season Oct. 6 Presidents and executive directors of the 30 agencies will be on this year. hand to outline the aims, funcThis ruling, effective Sept. 3, tions and purposes of the individ- was by the Utah Fish and ual agencies. Special demonstra- Gamemade Commission when the angL tions by recipients of the aid from ing proclamation for 1957 was agencies, educational films and an written. explanation and viewing of the facilities' of the agencies will hold Reason for the ruling was to the Agency give opportunity to the adult prominence during Week. angler to harvest remaining trout in thes waters before the close Agency Week will proceed of the season since the children .the campaign kickoff scheduled are back in school and seldom for Sept. 24 when more than 3000 fish them in late season. volunteers will contact their fellow employees and urge them to It was based on the fact that contribute a days pay the United many of the trout still in these Way to meet this years cam- waters do not carry over through the winter and are best harvested paign goal of $851,000. seasons end. The public is invited to come before any time during the day to the Deer hunters were reminded toagencies and to bring their family day of two new regulations conand friends. No longer should the special hunts this year. agencies of the United Fund he cerning of fish and The department mystical units of the mind, but game said rulings of the Utah can become a reality, showing a Board Game Control allow definite function of taking care two of Bigdeer permits to each special of all the health, welfare and license provided holder, game character-buildinneeds of the big that only one such permit could community. be on any one such hunting unit. This Board action followed a Legislative change in the law this year which had previously restricted these permits to one to the license holder. The other new regulation this year allows the possessor of a special deer permit to also use his regular license tag to take another deer on the special hunting unit. . . g .This week the annual meetings of the International Association of Game and Fish Commissioners are being held in Las Vegas, Nevada. Representing the Utah Fish and Game Department at these important meetings will be Acting Director Harold S. Crane and Commissioner K. E. Bullock. 1957 . 13, These meetings are held annually to review new developments and techniques in the management of wildlife resources and . , t to discuss and formulate legislative measures In the interest of The Mountain Ogden, ''Utah wildlife. States area offers innumerable opportunities for vastly expanded timber development according to Big game hunts will swing into a report by S. Blair Hutchison, full gear September 21 on four issued by Intermountain Forelk and three deer herd units. just est and Range Experiment StaHunting on all seven units will tion. While vast coast and southbe by special permit only. ern timber areas have beat liquiThe elk hunts are the Ashley-Dagge- dating their vast stands of virgin sAshley-Verntimber, the Mountain States area and has been comparatively laggard. Special permits for these hunts were awarded at the pub- States Timber is the latest report lic elk drawings held August 29. forest economics issued by the Eight other elk hunts are set Intermountain Station. Mr. Hutchto begin September 28 and will ison, the author, was a member continue for varying lengths of of the staff of Forest Service intime. Two late hunts are also vestigators of the timber Industry. He is widely known for his studscheduled; Browns Park-ThrCorners beginning October 19 ies of both the national and local and Fish Lake beginning Nov- timber industry. Hutchison points out the rate of ember 15. American population increase, Deer hunts beginning Septem- and from this projects the probber 21 are the Antimony, East able increase in national demands Zion and Henry Mountain. .All for lumber, wood pulp materials permits for these hunts were sold and other forest products. He also shift on a first come-fir- st saved basis points out that the present acceleris in population' creating from department of fish and game ated demands for these products offices. in the mountain region as well as Deer hunters were again re- In the nation generally. Whereas minded that each holder of a total population in the United valid big game license may this States increased 80 per cent from year procure two special deer 1910 to 1955, population in the 11 permis. Permits still remain un- western states rose more than sold on a number of units. These 230 per cent. Especially high continuing demay be obtained by written or for Douglas fir, ponderosa mand personal application to the approwhite pine is certain. and priate deer sales office listed in pine use Increased of spruce and lodge, the 1957 prodamaion. has pole pine already occurred The archery deer season ends and will continue, especially as September 15. The department supplies of other noted that the bow and arrow woods diminish. The cut spruce alone has risen continues as a legal weapon during any deer season, general li- from 31 million board feet in cense or special permit, where 1950 to 432 million in 1955. Lodge-pol- e the user is properly licensed for pine, long regarded as a weed tree, first gained recogthat hunt nition as a pulp spruce. Improved This has been the law for many maufacturing practices have made years past and is listed in answer lodgepole an increasingly popular to numerous inquiries received source of quality knotty pine on this subject by department paneling. personnel. Hutchisons report shows that The Utah Fish and Game De- woods grown in the Mountain States an impressive potenpartment today announced that tial in have the rapidly expanding deremoval of trash fish was commands for paper pulp other wood, pleted last week in Payson Lake fiber products. The reasonably exand Burriston Pond. pected demands for wood within y next the are certain Several tons of trash fish were to on draw timber producheavily removed from these two waters. 0 Only small numbers of trout ed in this area. In 1950, some were the persons employed by were present Most Trout killed were salvaged and put to use by timber industry in the mountain sportsmen present to watch the states, tobut the forests have capacity support at least six times treating procedure. that many on wood industry Three other lakes remain to be chemically treated under this seasons program. These are Twin Lakes, Puffers Lake and Rexs Reservoir. fl Drive safely and . . . tt, al, Ashley-Whiterock- Hole-in-the-Ro- ck. ee . soft-textur- ed half-centur- 25,-00- Twin Lakes in Mayfield Canyon wll be treated ths week. The department said that no dates have yet been set for treating the other two waters, though they are now scheduled for sometime later this month. courteously yourself. O Insist on strict enforcement of traffic laws. Of interest to big game hunters this month will be an article entitled How to Hunt Mule Deer appearing in the September issue of the Utah Fish and Game Magazine. The article will outline the five most popular hunting methods used to bag a deer in Utah. Among the methods covered are walking or horseback riding, stalking and still hunting. The"magazinef monthly organ of the Utah Fish and Game Department, will be available next week. Distribution is through subscriptions and sales at department offices. Sspportjrosr local safotfcoasdi , - |