Show 4 I j The Boys Column ColumnA 11 U III t I 1 A i SPOT GOD wj WALKED In my garden gardenA At A Adawn dawn of the day And sprinkled the flowers dew drops of gray With ewy the the sunbeams Then U up toile rose And kissed them with light And lo 10 my old e garden With ith Jewels was bright God walked In my garden TWIxt dusk and the dark And Joyously sang through The voice of a lark He breathed oh so ISO gently On each tender bloom And 10 lo the old garden Was Wa sweet with perfume Clod walked In my garden When the world was wee at rest reat And the moon like a crescent Hung flung low In the west He smiled mailed at the beauty Surrounding Him there For he be knew that my garden Was a temple of prayer Alice Alice Whitson Norton O O O OBSERVE TilE THE SIMPLE SIl RULES OF SAFETY RECENT ACCOUNTS of near and rescues should serve as dramatic warnings to parents and all people engaged In recreational activity during the coming summer vacation vacation vacation va va- va- va cation period the Utah Safety Council advised today Such accounts also point up the traditional experience of the Rocky Mountain States as the most dangerous area In the United States regarding water hazards The death rate from drowning In the Mountain States Is 19 56 per population compared with the national average of 86 This fact is emphasized in the current edition edition edition edi edi- edi- edi tion of Accident Facts Just JUlIt released from the National Safety Council Our relatively small population with other areas no doubt has considerable effect on this figure but even more responsible are the thousands of miles of ot dangerous Irrigation ditches mountain mountain mountain moun moun- tain streams and fishing lakes stated O. O Ernest Bourne Executive Secretary of the Utah Safety Council It Is physically and financially Impossible impossible Im im- im possible to erect adequate protective devices around all these hazards Mr Bourne added and therefore it Is the responsibility of every individual and particularly the parents of small children children chil chil- dren to guard against su such h tragedies It Is not an easy task to keep a watchful eye over little children but neither IsIt is isit isit it easy to bear the grief and possibly the blame for a child by drowning drown drown- ing The Mountain States also leads the nation in accidental deaths resulting from firearm accidents the Safety Council Council Council Coun Coun- cil spokesman reported Here again Is la where individual responsibility Is necessary necessary necessary sary to prevent such Incidents he sug sug- Seventy-eight Seventy persons were killed from these two types of accidents In Utah last year This is a ratio of one out of every four of Utah's traffic non-traffic accident deaths in 1952 The greatest percentage of these deaths occur to children Mr Bourne stated and this fact alone places much of ot the blame for such tragedies squarely square square- ly on the shoulders of the parents Indifference and idle thoughts of other things when safety considerations apply approaches the point of criminal negligence negligence gence Bence when such preventable tragedies occur Learn think and observe the simple rules of safety And Just to re remind remind remind re- re mind everyone about these rules the Utah Safety Council listed the followIng following following follow follow- ing To prevent drowning 1 Keep Keep watch over small children where water hazards exist 2 Never swim alone 3 Never dive strange water know the depth and the bottom are safe sate 4 Never swim beyond your strength Remember Its It's Just as far back as you have lt already gone 5 Dont Don't swim after eating nor when overheated To prevent firearm accidents 1 Respect any gun for Its deadly character That's what Its It's made for 2 Never carry a loaded gun In an auto wagon or other vehicle 3 Never lay a loaded gun down In Ina a boat 4 Never point a gun at anyone loaded load load- ed or unloaded 5 II Keep firearms away from children OO O WilES WHEN MEN IES' ARE AltE HIM P PROGRESS AND a better life result when men are free to use new Ideas and developments developments and and are free tree to learn all aU that they can about them That In to essence Is the theme of a recent Wall Street Journal editorial dealing with the efforts of ot socialistically Inclined groups and cliques to defeat the proposal to loosen some of the re restrictions restrictions re- re which now make atomic en energy en ergy a government monopoly In the papers paper's words Their reasonIng reasonIng reasoning reason- reason Ing is pretty clear If It atomic energy can be continued as a federal monopoly and if future developments make atomic energy en en- ergy a feasible and cheaper cheape r fuel for generation of or power the federal government govern govern- went meat then would have effective control of ot the whole power Industry And with control of power the I government would be In a position to control all Industry and business It IL would be within the power of the federal government to say what wheel wheat would turn and what light should be bu lighted The Journal then used as a parallel the Internal combustion engine an engine an In Instrument Instrument Instrument In- In strument which has transformed the world orld aa as we know It lt It and which Is II still la In n the process of development and Im im- provement It pointed out that many men meri and many minds were free to ex experiment experiment u. u with possible uses for the engine en and gine and used that freedom with reIts re rh Its cults that have enormously everyone Then It said H It will win be Just w 10 with atomic energy If It men are en to know about It and to work It lt If the maximum of mental re rh I w are brought to bear on It the thee e will follow U It the know ledge edit dg of ot confined atomic energy U la to be I 1 i to a few people It will remain a kind of i horrible museum piece Shall totalitarian thinking which thinking which U ta UI I I what socialism Is ls Is deprive us ua of ot the i enormous potential benefits of ot the I peaceful application of or atomic energy |