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Show October SO, 1951 the journal fish and game Page game animals, shall wear conspic-- this eai. nous led headyeai and ied shiit, (lame department figmes show l -- H animals taken on 25 permits for I he legal pursuit of deer is con- - the Cedar City hunt, with 44 for ined to daylight hours. 5o (m the Box Elder unit. Kill suc- t shall he unlawful for any per- ees amounts to s(K'( and Sv; at any time ot hunt, kill, or spectively. Hu sue deei with a dog or dogs. It shall he unlawful for any per- , Checking station lepoits covei-Hat any time to hunt, kill, the lecently held general elk citing deer with a shotpuisne reason show hunter success to he ciosshow, gun, l evolver, pistol, or with a about the same as lealized a year caliber, .22 special or any ago. On the Salt Lake unit the other lifle except a .22 kill jumped fiom ."O' in 1953 to high power, .22 Hornet, or a .22 070 this year. On the Nebo unit Swift or equivalent. A plea for all the kill was 57', (down slightly hunteis to make the deer season a from the (120 of the 1953 hunt), Utahs greatest annual game safe and sane season was are not yet in from the expressed Repoits j unt got under way last Saturday, by Depai tment Director J. Perry Manti units, wheie the hunts were Oct. L::, with the opening of the kanheld from Oct. It through Oct. IS. genet al deer season. 1 re-s(- BABY BORN TO PARALYZED PAIR ' ,n t, u iT t' n 2.'-j- 7 C i , "t ' i) .22-calih- er - The Ashley-Dagget- t, Browns Park It was estimated 125,000 nimrods Every year 300 or moie elk are Three Corners and Ileaston hunts in 'were out in the hills this year killed and durto left be called on five days notice will illegally spoil lursuit of a mule deer trophy, ing the annual deer hunting season, on r after Nov. (5. ' ac-oidi- ng to game department fore- according to estimates of the pa i tment of Fish and Came. casts. The general season lasts through with either sex mals legal game over most of the state. Buck only areas are the popular Vernon, Ileaston, Stans-burTintic units, the West Des-e- it area, and a large portion of the San Juan Desert section in central Utah. Present field conditions indicate a prime season for deer hunting this year. Much less foliage on trees and shrubs than during the past two seasons with average or heavier deer populations in nearly all areas indicates a high hunter success will be the rule. Hunter Xo ember 2, ci eased each over 507 during the past four seasons. Came department spokesmen note the following regulations the among many shown in the 1954 deer proclamation covering the current season . Deer must be tagged immediately at time of kill. It is pieferred that the tag be placed in the hock joint. It is unlawful for any butcher, locker, or storage plant to receive an animal unless it D prop-rl- y tagged. Any person carelessly or negligently killing or wounding another person while on a hunting trip shall he subject to license privilege revocation for a period of five v ears. Every person, while hunting big RE-ELE- CT are what British doctors call Douglas Irvine, shown held his here being by father, John Irvine, while the mother smiles happily from her bed in an Aylesbury, England, huspital Both parents are paralyzed from the waist down and were married in wheelchairs In August, 1953 Irvine was injured in a shipyard accident and his wife was hurt In an automobile crash. (International Radiophoto) A "MIRACLE BABY" Is Only a portion of the Duck Creek trout population was lost in- - eai toward curtailing through inadvertent poisoning suiting from the recent trash fish eradication program conducted by the Department of Fish and Game slaughter. Signs warning the hunter that he is in an area where elk lange are placed on entrance trails and roadways into such sec- - v, success has been well efforts Depuitment ani- De- - re-th- is at Navajo Lake. This and other facts were deternote that each Spokesmen mined by department fisheries biolnial illegally killed means one le.-- s ogists during surveys made followfor elk Utahs permit allowing ing the reported loss of trout in harvest during the next season, this stream. It also means that an average of Duck Creek Springs, source of mimio pounds of prime game meat the stream, is known to find its has been wasted. At the cheap source in part from seepage of 3(c per pound this amounts ters from the bottom of Navajo to a dollar loss of $27,000. Lake some seven miles away. Pos- all Offieials are again urging sibility of fish losses in the stream aniwas considered as one of the prob-malspoitsmen to know their game difabilities when the lake was treated, They cite the distinct The late survey showed less than feienees in size and coloration of an average load of hatchery fish deer and elk. Any sportsman observing the lost through seepage of the lake shooting at or killing of elk dur- - water into the springs. Many ing the coming deer seasons is trout are still in evidence in the a.sked to report same to the near- - stream. Final survey of trash fish killed est department officer. Visible licence number andor name of the in the lake shows double the num- offender should be reported if pos- - her set during original estimates, or nearly ten tons. Navajo will be sible. All hunters are reminded that lestocked with trout during the each illegally killed elk means oneailv spring months. less peimit for the legal harvest, next fall. Complaints from landowners and spoitsmen alike concerning the Hunter success was high on the running of bird dogs in areas are coming in in two antelope herd units where lim- ked special permit shooting was creasing numbers to the Departauthorized during September hunts ment f F'sh an Game. Landowners are especially con- corned where dogs are being run in fields where some crops are still not harvested. The Utah game code provides that the "capturing or chasing of any game birds or animals is a misdemeanor punishable by fine tions. ani-sout- j h wa-pri- ce s. REFERENDUM OF SENATE BILL 29 Chapter 22, Laws of Utah, 1933 First Special Session An Act Abolishing Caibon College as a State Maintained Institution; Providing for Disposition by the Board of Examiners of Real and Personal Property Comprising Said College; and Repealing Secand Utah Code Annotions to the Establishment and Operation of Cartated, 1953, Relating 53-33-1- 53-33-1- 4, 53-331- 53-33-1- G, 5, bon College. 7, BALLOT TITLE Proposition No. 2 AN ACT PROVIDING THAT CARBON COLLEGE BE DISCONTINUED AS A STATE MAINTAINED COLLEGE; THAT THE BOARD OF EXAMINERS DISPOSE OF ALL REAL AND PERSONAL PROPERTY COMPRISING SAID COLLEGE IN SUCH MANNER AS IT DEEMS TO BE TO THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE STATE OF UTAH. I, LAMONT F. TORONTO, Secretary of State of the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing are full, correct and true copies of: (1). The Title as enacted, and, (2). The Ballot Title, in Referendum of Senate Bill 29 (Chapter 22, Laws of Utah, First Special Session, 1953), as will appear on the Ballot as Referendum Proposition Number Two, at the General Election, November 2, 1954, and as appears of record in my office. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Great Seal of the State of Utah at Salt Lake City, this 1st day of October, 1954. LAMONT F. TORONTO Secretary of State SEAL j farm-pheasa- WM. A. DAWSON for Congress DAWSON saved our School Lands! DAWSON can win the fight for Echo Park Dam! DAWSON increase Social Security Benefits! helped DAWSON supported the Eisenhower administration Prices! ending the 3 year drop in Farm DAWSONs leadership opened Utah's Lead and Zinc nt andor imprisonment. Department spokesmen note that a minimum amount of field training of bird dogs has been permitted in the past. Proper training of these animals is considered a move in the direction of better con- servation through birds recovered in season which otherwise would be lost to the hunter. They cite the need for dog owners to exercise every precaution with dogs in training them in the open fields. Even more important is the need to get landowner permission before entering private property. Mines! DAWSONs Multiple Land Use Bill made Uranium Claims valid. DAWSON supported ECONOMY for lower Taxes! Davson Doss FJlore For Utah rnld Folitiinl Advert ioTnont. Household Hint When loading an automatic dishwasher, always place aluminum pieces toward the back so that, when the detergent cup opens, thej wont be sprayed with undisscT. detergent. The proper an'vt of detergent, when dlssoLc. i uater, will not harm . aluininTt. REFERENDUM TO SENATE BILL 39 Chapter 24, Laws of Utah, 1933 First Special Session Act Abolishing the Operation of Dixie College, Snow College and Weber College as State Maintained Institutions; Providing for the Transfer of All Real and Personal Property Comprising Said Colleges on Condition That They Be Maintained as Colleges; and to Both Inclusive and Sections Repealing Sections to Both Inclusive, Utah Code Annotated 1953. and Chapter 85, Laws of Utah 1953, Relating to the Establishment and Operation of Dixie, Snow, and Weber Colleges. 53-33- 53-33-- 11 53-33-- -1 53-33- -7 12 BALLOT TITLE Proposition No. 1 AN ACT PROVIDING THAT DIXIE, SNOW, AND WEBER JUNIOR COLLEGES BE DISCONTINUED AS STATE MAINTAINED SCHOOLS, AND FOR TRANSFER BY THE BOARD OF EXAMINERS OF ALL PROPERTY COMPRISING SAID COLLEGES TO A TRANSFEREE ON CONDITION THAT SAID TRANSFEREE OPERATE THEM AS COLLEGES. IF THEY FAIL TO BE OPERATED AS COLLEGES. THEN ALL SAID PROPERTY SHALL REVERT TO THE STATE. IF SUCH TRANSFER IS OF DOUBTFUL CONSTITUTIONALITY, OR HELD UNCONSTITUTIONAL, THE BOARD OF EXAMINERS SHALL SELL THE PROPERTIES TO THE SAME TRANSFEREE FOR SUCH CONSIDERATION AS IT DEEMS PROPER CONSIDERING THE SAVING TO THE STATE IN BEING RELIEVED OF THEIR OPERATION. I, LAMONT F. TORONTO, Secretary of State of the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing are full, correct and true copies of: (1). the Title as enacted, and, (2). the Ballot Title, in Referendum of Senate Bill 39 (Chapter 24, Laws of Utah, First Special Session, 1953), as will appear on the Ballot as Referendum Proposition Number One, at the General Election, November 2, 1954, and as appears of record in my office. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Great Seal of the State of Utah at Salt Lake City, this 1st day of October, 1054. LAMONT F. TORONTO Secretary of State SEAL |