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Show DOE PERMITIS GO ON SALE 2:500 Permits to Be Issued in Cache County Application procedure to obtain one of the 35,100 doe permits to be issued in Utah this fall and one of the 2,500 on the two Cache districts, were outlined Tuesday by E. N. Larsen of Hyrum, chairman chair-man of the State -Board of Big Game control. 1 200 antlerless deer permits will be issued on the Cache district, including all area draining onto Cache Valley north of Blacksmith Fork canyon, all north side of the Blacksmith drainage, and all of the area, draining into Bear Lake Valley north of the old canyon road. 1,300 permits will be issued on the Paradise district, including all of the south side of the Blacksmith Black-smith fork drainage and all other areas lying between the Blacksmith Black-smith Fork river and Highway No. 91 between Brigham City and Wellsville and draining into Cache Valley, also the mountain area east of highway No. 91. Sportsmen will apply for permits at their local license agents, or by sending their application and fees to the State Fish and Game Commission, 329 State Capito! Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. The permits will be mailed direct di-rect to the applicant. All feet must accompany each application. The applicant will be required to produce his regular Utah big game : hunting license before the permit ! will be accepted. It shall be unlawful to submit more than one application for districts on which permits are limited, including the Cache and Paradise districts. r In the event more applications are received than the number of permits to be issued, a public drawing will take place at 9 ajn. October 3 at the Fish and Game commission offices. Each applicant will be given a number and a corresponding cor-responding number will be placed in a container to be drawn out by Intterv. from going higher than the March levels. Apples will be featured as a Victory Food Special during the week of September 17 to 26. During Dur-ing this week grocerymen and fruit dealers will put on a drive to increase in-crease the consumption of this fruit. Eat apples and save other foods for lend-lease and the boys in the service. Schools granting students leave to help in harvest on permit system sys-tem in some counties. Utah feeders may be using more oil cake meal this next winter. Through the Commodity Credit Corporation, feeders of poultry and livestock may obtain supplies of cottonseed, soybean, linseed and peanut oil cake for winter feeding. War demands for the increased production of oil crops has resulted result-ed in an increase in the supplies of oil cake. Indications are that 6,800,000 tons of oil cake will be produced this year as compared with the 4,100,000 tons produced last year. Prices and delivery arrangements ar-rangements will be announced later. The War Production Board has ruled that motorists must turn in old storage batteries when buying new ones. Production of Livestock Up Three reasons for the tight meat situation in the East were given by the Utah state USDA War Board this week: 1. ' Increased civilian consumption due to bigger pay checks and longer hours of work. 2. Men in military ' service eat more than in civilian life. Average weekly consumption of meat, poultry poul-try and fish for civilian, less than 3 pounds; for soldier, 5 pounds per week. 3. Lend-lease shipments of meat to allied nations. . Americans may be aswed to observe ob-serve one meatless day per week to conserve shipping. This would free 30 to 40 ships for hauling war necessities if meat for United Nations Na-tions could be shipped direct from U.S. instead of from more distant sources Farmers' wives may vote and hold office in the AAA farm por-gram. por-gram. Articles of associations are the quota for each Utah farm, says Orvilie L. Leet chairman of the Utah State USDA War Board, who urged farmers this week to do what they can to see that their sons and their neighbor's sons have the equipment they need on the batle front. "We don't want to send them out there without the best guns and planes and ships we can give them." he said. Farmers who underplant their 1943 wheat allotmens in order to increase their acreages of crops which are vitally needed in the war will not suffer deductions from their AAA payments for 1943, nor will their wheat acreage allotments be reduced in future years because of such diversion. Urgent need for tomato pickers reported from Davis and Box Elder El-der counties. Unsuccessful huntes will receive their money back. The regular season will be October Oc-tober 17 to 27 inclusive. being amended to provide tor tms change. The Utah State USDA War Board wlil cooperate with the Office Of-fice of Defense Transportation in securing trucks for farm transportation. trans-portation. Purchase of trucks cannot can-not be approved when: Use is seasonal; second-hand vehicle can be purchased; trucks are available for lease or hire; repairs can be made; or truck could be used longer long-er hours to take care of the situation. sit-uation. Middle-aged women in Utah and Weber counties are helping in the canning of tomatoes. They are replacing re-placing younger women who have gone into war industries at Provo. Salt Lake City and Ogden. The Junior Chamber of Commerce Com-merce of Ogden has offered its services if the situation warrants. Hie Food Requirements Committee Commit-tee estimates that from July 1. 1942 to July 1, 1913, the output of meat in American will reach 24 billion pounds. However. 25 to 27 billion pounds will be needed. Every pound of scrap metal that can possibly be turned in! That's |