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Show i i : Page THE JOURNAL 1G SM&oand , , Where to Go , , LITERARY club at Clearfield, monthly dinner-meetinApril 10, Cobble at Cottage, Ogden. SPRING FESTIVAL Annual event at Farmington will be held LITERARY SENIOR club, on April 25 in the Farmington Mrs. home of at ward. All wards in the stake will Farmington, Blanche Wilcox, April 10, 7:30 p. participate in music drama, dance m. Mrs. Lucile Clark, reviewer. and speech. MOUNTAIN VIEW club, FarmART EXHIBIT, paintings of Le ington at home of Mrs. Effie Conte Stewart in lobby of Kays-vill- e Apr. 12, at 8:00 p. m. Mrs. theater. Until next WednesTurner, reviewer. day. Public invited. ROSE CITY club at home of - GARDEN TALK Mrs. Augs-berge- r, Laurita Griffith, April 13, at Fred by 1 m. Luncheon. Farmington. president of the Salt Lake p. Garden club, at Layton Third ward special interest meeting, April 10, 7:30 p. m. Public invited. v g, Congratulations to formal Pauline Smedley, Layton, and at event, spring Farmington ward Richard Wallace, Clearfield, on amusement hall, April 21, at 9 p. m. their engagament. TEEN-AG- E DANCE, AROUND THE WORLD in 35 Mrs. Alice Ann M. Carlos who days, a talk to be delivered by F. marked her 83rd birthday at her Robert Bayle and Nicholas G. Mor- home in Layton, Friday. gan, Salt Lake Jaycees recently g returned from a trip. Jean Burton and Ronald Rix, Kaysville elementary school, 8 p. both of who will Layton, exchange m., April 13. Kaysville Jaycees. marriage vows in the Salt Lake Public invited. LDS temple Monday. JOSEPHINE DAINES, student who went to Holland last year in William 0. Ritchie on the openthe international farm youth ex- ing of his new jewelry store at change program, will speak at Da- Sahara Village Friday. vis high school auditorium Wednesday at 8 p. m. Farmington Davis high students, Albert Lions. Sconberg, Bob Moss, Shirlee Willey, Bob Rose, Iona Mitchell, Olive Kynaston, Maxine Burton and John Cushion, who won speech awards at the state drama school at BYU globe-circlin- GUEST COLUMNIST Youth Exchange (Editors Note: Our guest writer this week, J..Theo Horne, is apparently a man of Traveler Will Give Davis Talk outspoken opinion. This is his second venture into the guest column. Thats what this column is for to let readers say what they think. Some will with Mr. Hornes article, a-gr- ee others will take issue with it. Comments, pro or con regarding this article, or on any other matter of interest, in the way of a guest column, are welcomed. Ideas expressed are the writers, and not necessarily those ot this newspaper.) By J. TIIEO HORNE The patriots of 177G may or may not have been confronted with such terms as Communism, Fascism, Socialism or other isms now plague-in- g our government. At any rate, and this is the important point, they did not let any of these prevent them from forming the type of government which suited their ideals and seemed to them to answer the demand of their new nation. Primarily and fundamentally they established a system of free enterprise. However, if they saw any instance where private industry could not economically give the proper service as required by a nation of the people, by the people, and for the people, they did not hesitate to give that function to the government. In this category they found the postal system at that time it was their only means of communication and they saw very clearly that, in order to tie the people together, an efficient on April 1. communication system with the deGARDEN club at Kaysville, Apr. pendability that only the govern14, 8 p. m., at home of Mrs. WilMarion F. who ment could offer must be put into Adams, Layton, liam Heaton. C. L. Smith. Clearcelebrated his 81st his at birthday being. field nurseryman speaker. Plant home Wednesday. Whether or not this system paid Layton exchange night. of in dollars and cents was not Clover Club Foods bowling their concern. They knew it would SUNFLOWER CAMP, DUP, at team for winning the Sportsmans be profitable in the service it perhome of Mrs. Earl Tall, April 13. league championship. Team mem- formed in maintaining their new bers are Dale King, Leslie Draney, democracy. PHILLIPS CAMP, DUP, at Wayne Swanger, Ron McCormick, So today, we can send a letter home of Mrs. Mary Bowman, April Myron Chambers, Wendell d very rapidly to any part of our na13, 2 p. m. tion for a trivial three cents. And, and Keith Layton. may I venture to say, this postal system which was established in FISH AND GAME TOPICS our original government is a communistic enterprise? The point is, According to Armond Carr, ces where a dog flushes a bird dont let this frighten you. Make Chief Clerk of the Utah Fish and from the nest during certain stages yourself aware of the fact that the Game Commission, the 1950 fish of incubation, the frightened bird dangerous part of the Communist and game licenses are on sale at all often deserts her nest. In case she party is the fact that it plans to license agencies throughout the does not come back to it, but nests overthrow this government. Anyone state. The b old license becomes in- again, the clutch of eggs is often who is affiliated with such an orvalid on April 15. Those wishing to much smaller than the original ganization should surely not be fish for catfish and common fish nest. given a responsible position in in the state after that date will be Although there are no laws in Washington. However, in the great conflict required to be in possession of the our state to prohibit training dogs 1950 permit. on game in the wild, it can only between our democracy and the This year a new type of license is be considered a sportsmanlike act government of Russia it might help for sportsmen to refrain from tak- the solution some, if we do not in use. Attached to the deer the combination licenses, ing their dogs afield until well aft- shut our eyes too tightly against the principles they embrace. Let deer and game bird, and the non- er the nesting season. us, like the founders of our great resident deer are several coupons. nation, have our eyes wide open to These are to be used in case an ap- features which we need to add or plicant wishes to apply for any of substract from our system. In the the special hunting permits usually rapid progress of science today we issued, including the application must be alert to these required for antelope and elk permits and changes. the permit that is issued for special A local event must come into the deer hunts. The sportsmen are this is the only type of applispotlight this week. Two thousand cation that will be accepted by the young men are now being stationed at Hill Air Force base for trainGame Department. With the new ing. At the mention of this, Im system, it will be unnecessary to afraid I can see many of our orthosend their hunting licenses to the dox church leaders looking down Game Department as was required Proverbs 12:2S provides the Gol- their noses, and a lot of parents formerly. n Mr. Carr issues the warning that den Text for the on say to each other: Now, we must this year there will be no duplicate Are Sin, Disease and Death put a strong watch over our teen or perhaps, This licenses issued. Anyone losing their Real? at all authorized Christian age girls, will the be our ruination of Science churches on Sunday, April youth. license will be required to purchase they can see two a new one. Heretofore it has been 9. It reads, In the way of right- In other words G. I.s shoved into their possible to get a duplicate license eousness is life; and in the path- thousand communities to degrade their in case one is lost upon the pay- way thereof there is no death. ciyoung girls into immorality and Another significant Biblical ment of 50 cents. This practice has shame. tation from I Chronicles (19:31) been abandoned, But I see the situation from a reads, Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice; and let different angle. I can see 2,000 of The average hunter worked hard dur-in- g men his to say among the nations, The the finest young men of America and long pheasants bag Lord This season. is placed here for a short training in reigneth. the last open the finest air corp the world can SciBaker in Mary Eddy writes shown in the tabulations found in the February issue of the Fish and ence and Health with Key to the produce. With a little vision and Scriptures, We are sometimes led constructive imagination I can see Game Bulletin. to lovbelieve that darkness is as real a few hundred fine local girls in who also are If you hunters as Light; but Science affirms dark- the higher teen age bracket enterers of dogs want to improve the ness to be only a mortal sense of taining these fine American boys hunting next year, keep your huntAlabsence of light, at the coming at our recreation halls under church the wild. running ing dogsnofrom of which darkness loses the ap- direction. Refreshments are served. studies have careful though of would to reveal pearance reality. So sin and sor- No one leaves the hall. No dates been made that what extent roving dogs destroy row', disease and death, are the are made. Then our lovely girls with know that a suppositional absence of Life, God, elevated ideals will be in a position the nests of birds, we are lost. Re- and flee as phantoms of error be- to give these fine young men an considerable number insight into perhaps a different search has proved in many instan- - fore truth and love (p 215). Meetings , Al'lUl, Max-fiel- ad-vis- ed Lesson-Sermo- f News About $ Folks it anchors MRS. EDWARD HAy, Correspondent 3,9 . Av-- A young lady who visited Holland last year under. the International Farm Youth Exchange program will describe her experiences and impressions while in Holland, in a speech here Wednesday night. Miss Josephine Daines, of Hyde Park, will speak Wednesday night at 8 p.m. in the Davis high school auditorium, under sponsorship of the Farmington Lions club. The Farmington Lions sponsored her as the Utah representative in the Youth Exchange program, and financed her trip abroad. She spent several months in Holland, studying the people, customs, habits, and living conditions of that country. Since returning to Utah she has traveled throughout the state speaking before civic clubs, high school student groups, and other gatherings. Her talks have been acclaimed as interesting, educational and filled with Jhuman inter- Anchorage residents coming new neighbor.' a$ tb men from Hill Field s flew Richard Derby of Minnesota, who was chosen to sing the baritone solo in Brahms Requiem last Sunday in the LDS tabernacle choir, will be present to furnish additional entertainment. now living in Price. The grandparents are Mr. and George Preece of 327 Drive Mr. Russell and Mr.. Victor f er have just returned horpe 2 weeks training cruises as bers of the Naval Reserve. Rudy Cash of Lane C has loa his shoe repair business in a home at Sahara Village, friends and neighbors wish est. Cancer Drive ForUtah Is Scheduled Set aside by the nation and state as Cancer Control Month, April will be marked by the annual fund drive of the American Cancer Society. The funds will carry on the continuing campaign against the dread disease by education, by research and by medical services. The call for the annual dlrive has been made by A. Pratt Kesler, state fund chairman, and will be participated in by various communities of the state, all of whom participate in the immediate benefits of cancer services, and with the nation in the benefits of medical research sponsored by the American pany arrive. We regret seeing the bors move but such must old, departure was Mrs. Jean 1 who has moved to Hooper Mrs. Loretta Johnson ha, enjoying a visit from her Mae and her husband There are quite a few cv on the sick list with sprint Susan Olsen and Jeanie and; ley Chapman have been qu Miss LaDean Strasburg j, again after spending with her brother LaVere 2j ily, who are former Andie" residents, that now ! live in No Primary was held in age this week, to allow the to attend general Salt Lake City. Its a girl for the C oft confereneJ Eldon Flora Tatton is an Tatt Anchorage p B. :i every success. The latest arrvials as residi in the Anchorage are: Merli Strong, 214 Idaho; Charles Sti berg, 330 Dr. A; Veral Smith, Idaho; Charles Pemberton, Nevada; Lt. Frank Y. Dill, Drive B; Fred Allgier, C; Lt. William J. Davis, Antonio C. Ponce, 32!) Idaho come to all of them. Here's hop: J theyind the Anchorage as frie have fiv ly a place as they ever The Boy Scouts of Troop enjoying their judo lessons c: the leadership of their scoutmas Sgt. Bill Maughan, and Sgt Gaffney. They receive instruct at the Navy base gym on Mos evenings. The plans are for exhibition in judo for the p sometime this month. Monday, April 10, is work Relief 81 . Cancer Society. Each year the American Cancer for the LDS Anchorage Society, through research grants ciety. A special demonstration in Utah, returns fo the states fiber flower making and ffi MORE htan the states entire fund bird construction is planned quota, and nearly three times as der the leadership of Marion much as the national society re- and Verletta Andern. A s!2 ceives as its share of the Utah charge will be made for matem fund. for those wishing to make the For each dollar contributed to selves flowers. the cancer fight in Utah, 33 cents Everyones getting the . is spent locally for medical reIndications of planting search, 25 cents goes to research urge. lawns show to find the cause and cure for can- ers and reseeding old man few days, but cer, 22 cents to public education to every ambition;' detect cancer in its early stages as chills everyones start. they get a good when it is curable, 8 cents for administration expense, G cents for fund raising, and 4 cents for nil A; kind of environment than they had anticipated. If other associations are to result the young lady can insist that the fellow come to her home and she can introduce him to her parents. From there on the situation should be well in hand. People of this area spend thousands of dollars annually sending missionaries abroad. Now these people from abroad move here. Is that good or bad? Dont close your eyes to the situation. When opportunity knocks open the door. Wife Preservers . I , , I k : I N ' Rub soap on the hand and under the fingernail before you begin painting. When the work is done, washing the hands In soap and water wilt take the paint off. 1 GODMOTHER . . Cleveland drops in at three-df to welcome rls Martin to the wr babys mother, foroeW Chaney, is a close BooeeveSt family D0 f p |