OCR Text |
Show MbHAAY t' - ty-- , SPORTSMEN-- ml VOL. NO. 8. NO. 23. Bird Dog Used In Taking Quail, Pheasant Census Mora Money Needed to Develop Science of Fish Culture in U. S. Dollar Spent in Farm Investigation For Every $850 Farms Produce. In making counts ol game under the auaplces of the school of forestry and conservation of tho L'nivarally of Michigan, tha bird dog has been found invaluable, ays the American Gama Protective association. Professor II. M, Wight of tho school has s fine Gordon . The following article on fleh culture wu given by 8. B. Locke, district forest inspector, with headquarters In Ogden before the American Fisheries society at their annual meeting In Seattle last winter. The general relationship of forests to flah.llfo has boon discussed many timos nnd only two years ago ably presented to the society In connection by Mr. Tltcomb. with the western tistlonal forests, however, there Is a more specific relationship and one connected with policies of the administration. The national forests of ths west Includt over ISO million acres of timbered land, ao located as to' be largely the key to the water systems. These Include large areae at the headwaters of all the principal streams Considerable sections of rivers and streams lia outside these but the water supplying them cornea largely from the ' national forests Although primarily estaa-llshc- g for timber production and watershed protection, s' more fectlvs measure for maintaining water conditions favorable for permanent fish supply could hardly bo devised. Tbo practice of forestry and tha protection from fire and ovsrgrasing in sections not commercial timber containing stands contributes Materially to policy contemplates tha maintenance of s continuous forest cover lo keep the area productive, to prevent erosion or the development of sondltlona adverse to the timber frowth. In addition to tho timber on the national forests the forest service considers also the recreation uses he forage and tha flab and game forest resources to be admin' ustered to give the highest possible production for use. No one la always supreme, but there a developed a plan of coordinated e with necessary adjustments the various interests Since the general jurisdiction ver game and fleh Is a state matter, to most effectively carry ec aur responsibilities demands clots muperstlon with tho state fish and tame departments. There rests ipon our shoulders the responsibilnot ity of effective cooperation, nly with the state but also othei tranches of tho government. Thera a developing a mutual understand-ju- t of this responsibility which lu a more cordial and cooper-itlv- o spirit among our own officers tnd In the organisations with which we cooperate. Thla brings ibout a better appreciation and reaped for each other's efforts and t dearer conceplon of respective responsibilities It Is In the field tf cooperation that tho pollcleo of :he forest service directly touch the rish resources The forest officers aerial in an onforccment of protective laws furnish information re- (Continued On Page Four.) re en te NO FRIEND IN - About COURT 400 Repute IN In UTAH. State PIONEER TRAPPER STAGE DRIVER LEAD In Kem Report waa received merer yesterday of the deatn of Jamea Williams, aged 17 ytara, which occurred the latter pait of last week at tha home of Charles Belling of Fall River Basin. Funeral services were held in Tuesday lari. Decedent had lieen a resident of tha Basin for about 15 year He waa a pioneer of Wyoming, having been a trapper and bibkc driver moat of hla life. At one llnte ho drove stage from Rawlins lo Fort Washakie for John McDonald brother of Joseph McDonald of Kemmerer. He also drove stage at other plauee in Wyoming and In the Black Hllla country of Dakota. Kemmerer Gaxette. Bon-dura- nt Bruin in Utah la left without a Viand In court, the recent aeaelon at tbo legislature taking him off :he protected Met and again leaving him without any legal stand-nThis la hardly - serious aa Jt may spund for strangely enough Bruin, for the past few yeera haa sad two distinct, official and legal ratings In the - atate of Utah. In ana section of- the Utah law ho n was protected and in another ho Is on tho bounty list. The :wo section did not come In conflict for the simple reason that no ona cared to tost the matter ind see which part of tho law really counted. In many stales the bear la protected. ltruln finds the going rough. The bear In Utah has had pretty ,ough going all along the road,di- a lot of hie troubles being dua rectly to hlmeelf. In the ten yesr g. arc-lio- Id Id and bounties were paid for 101! bear, ar about a hundred a year. In ind forty bear were slain by Id bounty seekers. Estimates made recently placo the number of hear rilll In Utah at about 400. About a dnsrn of there ore Krlixllra. While the hear was on both the protected and the bounty list there was a mutual understanding that If a among all concerned Brula berams bothersome he was under the bounty law end If he was not ho was pn tho protected list. However, stockmen claim that the bear haa been doing a lot of real damage to livestock herds, particularly sheep, and tha legislature proceeded to declare a permanent open season on him. The M. bill was introduced by Arch Mellor of Sanpete county. It we reported favorably out of the fish and game committee eonsleting of J. J. P. Killian. Emery county; H. Kemp, Cache county; Archie M. Mellor, Sanpete; B. L. Dart. Duchesne: G. W. Okerlund. Wayne. A. R. Creer, Utah; Chrla Green hagen, Salt Lake; W. C. Crump, Kelt Lake; W. Le Baron, Utah John Holley, Balt Lake, Black (Brown) Bear Common. The blark (brown) bear la the common hear found In Utah, although there are many grltslh. The grinlles seem to be located at the present time up Logan canyu and over in the Ulntaha. There I always an argumeut between the bear's frlende and hie enemies, regarding the damage dona by the animals. It is an accepted fact that a hear le not In the strict sense of the word a meat eater, end prefers honey, fruit berries and even ante and hues. But It le generally admitted by many that a hear will turn to meat when he Is hungry. A bad berry year mstna that tho atockmen ore (Continued Oa Pago Throe) State Grcles Hundred Persons Seek Trout Where One Did Thirty Years Hence. Hover Urns Bad fl.00 A YEAR. Beaver Hides Cause Stir in The following discuarion of fish and game affairs on the Uintah country was tarried In tho Roosevelt Htnndard as a letter from Warsetter which he has trained den Dave Thom peon, who jiaa been to help him in making counts of pheasant and quail. The with the department in tho Uintah dog was trained on hunting Banin for the last nix qr seven in and pheasanla Oregon years. Ths Roosevelt Standard arduring tha see ton of ltll he ticle follows: traveled more than 10,000 miles on tho running board After twenty years of experience of hie master's car ' and and work in the Fisk and Gama depointed approximately 1,C00 partment of Utah, I think that I birds la Southern Michigan. am In a position to give a fair reA bird dog to he of tha greatest use In this- sort of port of gamo conditions In the Uinbo a wide ranger, study must tah Basin mountains, streams, lakes staunch and ambitious and and forests, at the presept time. In must bt able to discriminate 1905, at the time of tha opening ot between tha various species tho Uintah Judian reservation, our of birds. streams were' lull of fish, as the In Tho information which la dtans ara not so much for fishing, being aciught in this sort of, (more for hunting.) In 1(01 when work involves tho exact lotho whts min began to settle bare cation of each bird, the type among tha Indiana, a man did not of cover in which each one need to bo a real fisherman to go In found, tho sex of tho gamo out and get a mesa of fish in a few birds when evident, and a hours. consideration of tho availi Hero ara soma of tho reasons why able food materials in tho fishing has gone from bad to woim, locality. as tha ysArs go by. Today there are at (east one hundred men or women who go fishing to on man or woman who fished In 1101. One great reason for thla Increase in fishermen, e that good roads have been built to our etroama and. faresta. Another big Ytaaon why the fishing baa gradually become worse, la that WMIgillgegUigqdiignMg" their homatea' they at once built canals and ditchJs and diverted water from Its natural flow, by putting obstructlona in the river and changing ita natural source. Horn In the early flapping days the rivers in tha basin have as much of the Misiaippl aa ten canela coming out of one greater part river. valley was swarming with beaver. Natives Go Up. Beaver skins were almost tho only It la the nature of the native Item In tho tripper's trout to go up stream In high watimportar.t catch; other furs were of little er. They go up stream for the purvalue and were only taken inci- pose of spawning, and usually detheir spawn In small ride dentally. The beaver, like the buf- posit rt reams or rlflea and aa the water comfalo, were swept away by recedes, the fish drift bark down mercial greed. Having been lostor-e- d stream and In thla way thoueanda to certain limited areae in of email fleh go out Into the open and, In the fall the headgatsif northern Minnesota, Wisconsin and canals ore closed and the email fish are unMichigan, they are gradually, stranded in the dry canals, I have der protection extending their been asked many tlmre by fishermen why the stato does not put in rango again. some screens the people being tax- A number of beaver were liberMisated last fall on tha Upper (Continued On rage Four.) sissippi river wild Ufa ani fleh refuge near Wabasha, Mlnleaota. ANOTHER UNIVFJldriY GAME COURSE. and they have since been observed State universities are gradual!) to have erected lodges and collected food for use during tho pari developing an Interest In establish winter, eaya an American Game ing courses of study in conservaProtective association bulletin. Tho tion end propagation of gam an I favorlto food of tho beaver in that mala and birds. Ono ot the latest region is the hark of the apen or to establish a course is tha state poplar and willow, an abundance university of Idaho, which haa Inof which la found along the bayous troduced a course of study in ame and sloughs bordering tha Missis- propagation in Ka poultry departof agriculture, sippi in the refuge. It la the bellet ment of tho school of Huperintendent W. T. Cox that Experimental work in propagathe bottom lands being well tion la to be carried on especially timbered and watered era wel. with the view of developing meth lees expenso than adapted to the restoration of beav- ode Involving those in common use. Incubators er. and artificial brooders are used in Bulletli of those experiments. tho American Gamo Protective association. In Brain ltll Itn Elimination ot Tariff On Game Birds Used As ; Brood Stock is Urged Boats Thrill at the Outing . Ofriod between Get your copy of the from (loh and same the Statesmans FREE- - SALT LAKE .CfTY, UTAH. JUNE 6, 1929 3,000,000 Pounds Of Trout Taken Annually From Western Streams Estimate SPORTSMEN talesman (IP HAS teriMat oirr Special earlier in the apring and ao aiuch appreciated other articles we hare carried pa outdoor subjects that we will henceforth have a special section of four to eight cMVnmsi dealing with fish and game. The editor, a graduate forester, former forest service nub, former game warden, ten years a newspaper man, and for two years sports editor of ' The Salt Lake Tribune, is fully competent to give the sportsmen of the state just the of a section they want. Gat your copy of ttaa t"om fish and game tha Stataaman. FREE. Brer U UUHi.. IICXTINGTOX. CASTLEDALE HIGHWAY TO BE SURFACED HUNTINGTON, Utah. (Special) According tn word given out by David Leonard, state road super-viso- r nf Emery cuunly stale and federal aid roads, tha arterial high and way between HunUngton Castle Dale. a link In the Tlket n Ocean to highway, will receive a coating of gravel for part of the distance In the early sum. mer. At the present time the atate crusher Is graveling tho link of this highway between Huntington ' county and the Emery-Carbo- n At the conclusion of thla line. project, now (0 per cent complete, the project running from here, seven miles south will be under taken, after which the link between line and Price, tho Carbun-Uiner- y 10 mllea In lepgth, will bt reeur Peak-Ocea- faced. Fifteen Braver hides have been confiscated by tha Mate fish and game department and indications at that proceedings will be taken egainat the Northwestern Hide and Fur Co. of Fall Lake. The complaint Is scheduled to be Utahs Ancient Lake snap of the speed boats which vied for places In the races at tho Sportsmens outing at tiara-uqt- a, on I tab lake left. Heal, winner of the li(irr Class G out hoard rare with Art Johnson aboard- - Upper right. The Flying bwcdc. Cal Johnson's speedboat which won the free for alL lower right. Am Hanson's Kaaebox II. B rise winner. Ralph Winslow, Manager of tho races, waa at the helm while Hanson mapped the Leaves. Evident Story Doesnt Take Scientist Tot See Water Markings on Bonneville Shoreline; .Morgan Would be Lake Port if Inland Sea W ere to Return; Salt Lake Would f Need Subs. Back to Us aalt after a period1 of freshness, back to Its minimum after enjoying its maximum, back to Its own yard after an ex pan aton which touched three statea, beaten into submission by a vicious nature, imprisoned by auk and, drouth, lies Great Balt Lake,- last, vestige of what waa. onco the: groat Lake Bonneville, and unless. geologic features fall, the predeces-aor ..of thla same, lake which ifc now aurceoda. ,, - ' - v Hillsides Tell mart V : ; The hlllaldea tell their owh story. Layman and scientist alike 'can wm 3 . . it. swansgccaiE1 an uncompromising nature Its battle to go up. which it won- end Ita battle to stay there, which It lost. The layman cmn see the drainage of the area at tha present Halt Great time pointing toward Lake and the trained observer can see that the drainage antedates the system of shore marking. In other words, what la Balt Lake now, was prahabty Salt Lake ages ago, and in between times waa a period in which the grim and lonely stretch of inland sea took on new life grew, grew, grew, until it reached its highest contour, trickled over it the lowest placo on tho nm, a channel gouged deeper and then hurled itself through a Nlgara until it had chopped itself down again to nature's else and was thence pushed back whence It came. Such- - In brief, in the history of the body of water which is called at its hrighth Lake Bonneville, and which, at ona time covered parte of three states to a depth of almost a thousand feet. - pklma If Bonneville Were to Return If lake Bonneville were to suddenly return the "Mormon" temple in Balt Lake .City would 1 covered with ISS feet of water; tha Logs it teinplo would be 500 feet 'upder i the surface; Lucln Cutoff ipf tho Southern Pari fin snmkli kn a thnrtbiagfoeti below tho surface; Fort Douglas would be 150 leet below; Also transcontinental passengers Union Pacific and Denver A Rio Grands Western would havo to leave the train at a station in the mountains . and travel 150 mllea by boat to a Nevada lakeport and tnen resume their rail Journey. Incidentalfind ly soma golfers would s their ' birhest The Stroller" tell it: Nicholas Kappea, phllosoph-iand rancher of thla district, spent Saturday in the city. The venerable Mr. Kappea le always good ''copy'' for newspapers because the aged man Is a shrewd end observing thinker. He has good eyes and la quick tone things that And h others would overlook. general judgment la pood. While here, Mr. Kappea staled wee the that thg winter of 1925-2moat severe he ever experienced after a residence of marly half 3 century In Wyoming. cold and there was lo1. "It of snow, said Mr. Kappea; "and I could tell by the action of the wll 1 game that they realised it, too. Dei r left the upper ltllla early and a; wared lean and Many antelope wandered In close to our ranch home; but they are moi-timid than deer and keep at a distance. Coyotes looked lean aud r.aunt. too, because they bad difficulty In beating through the almost Impassable enow drifts, e e "I observed a premier thing this e winter," continued Mr. Kappea. action of a mill flock of eagles which make thrlr neat In tho crags above my place. They became hunyry and hovered over Ilia Mile and fields lit search of prey. They became resourceful after their period of starvation Unlike the usual eagle habits. T found them snacking my rows In the pasture. One day three large ones were annoying a cow. They alighted on her b.ack and began tu cliw hi r. The row was In distress and tried to drivs them off: tho eagles would then scratch at her eye. Tho at let r 9 doi-bir- Golf courses now use tho old bench for fairways and the deep depression rauaed by the ancient drainage for hasards: real estate men and city planners ure tha successive benches for subdivisions; thoroughfares following the genmarks; eral contour of the old highway engineers find their scenic utilising roadmaking simplified by (Continued on Pago Four) al Educated le Cows half-starve- d. e "In-th- frighted cow bellowed and ran wild around the pasture. We heard her and went to her rescue by driving tho marauders away, rite cow's back was scratched and lacerated iu a number of spots. The eagles were so ravenously hungry that they would have killed a valuable cow in their desperation. "It le the first time I ever heard of an carle attacking the larger dw nestle anmals. f hive een crows nnd magpies light on the back of n steer or horse that was wounded and eat into the open flesh. But eagles usually have different tactics and lack of the instinct of follow Ing carrion scent or walling for rick cnimale to die. They prefer live ooo food. The OOO oddest thing I over wit negat'd occurred this winter. That same It be of eagles keot flying close to my. houeo and acted et range. We n ver disturb them - a rule they get rid of many cotton tall rabbits which always i nuisance to rancher This day they tehaved unusually. I watched them closely. The drove a number of the rabbits Into the Iwush whlcn lioterted the bunnies. When the arlea saw they were outwitted several hovered ov- -r tha brush while the others flew Into our I Investigated. And to my surprise those eagles picked up small sticks In their daw, flew hack , dropped them Into the brush freer ntly a rabbit darted out ani waa Immediately pounced upon by 0 swooping eagle. They kept that up nearly all day. Boon ae ona of them got hla rabbit dinner, be flaw haunts, eway tn their mountain-to- p They kepi dropping sticks into that lurkhrush until they drove all .those rahhlta nut. Afler many years lesldcncn in that vicinity, that was the first time I ever nnaerved that habit In the nativa eagle." ar barn-yi-.r- Grazer Is Wrong d. uy Summary of events at Sports men's outing: Archery (.men) American round SANTAQUIX, Utah. Ms ySt. Chris Eggerta. first; Gerald Bantlquln, Utah, May 21. 1121. Thorne, second; Chase Pace, third. Editor Utah Statesman, Balt Lake 451. Ladle. Columbia Score, City. Utah: round Ellen Steele, first; EvanSir In a recent Ireue of Tbo geline Cunningham, second; Kath- Statesman I read a letter to your It 01, erine Rauch, third, Score, from Wasatch county urging Junior boy Fred Nelson, first; paper the state tha of Utaa of sportsmen Elmer Willard Orlaamore, second; 25V. to unit with the people of WasScore Holmgren .third,county In having the land Clout shoot (men) Dean Green, atch around Strawberry added to the Imported Hungarian partridges Aral; Chrla Eggerta, second; Wen- forest reserve instead of the Straware subject to a duty ot 59 cents dell Nelson, third, ficorc, 171. Clout Wateruaera w association,' Ever since the enactment ut berry each. shoot (women) Ellen Bteele. first aa they would the present taritt law the game Evangeline Cunningham second; privet ownerships ggfftvf Bier B(ui.li j' tWlHss .Hewer ventlon have formally 'protestsd IS. Clout shoot (Junior boys) that there are shareholders living against this tariff and similar acFred Nelson, first; Elmer Holm- In 12 communities In Utah county. tion has been taken at each annual gren, second; Ruasell Rosa, third. Apparently It aeems that Waaatch matting of tha National Gam conBoore Flight shoot (men) Dr. L. D. f bouts, Aral; Chat Paco, county and the sportsmen ar stir- ference. It became tha duty of ths newly second; Chris EggerU, third. Dis- ring up the hornet's nett again la doing. created national committee on wild tance 121 yards. Flight shoot (woIn a Therefore broader sente cf life legislation to take this matter men) Ethel Pace, first; Van Cun- view: Can thla land be called up with Congress. A ningham, second; Katherine Rauch, private ownership? We,really shareholdconsisting of E. Lee LeCompia third. champion (men) ers, at the coat of millions of e, atate game warden of Maryland, Chrla Egggrtx; women, Ellen built tho reservoir Strawberry Keith McCaiwa atate chairman; Bteele. the Diamond Fork toad. The U. gams and fish commissioner; Beth Fly and halt coating Fly caet-in- snd H. R, service purchased These lands Uordon, conservation director et for distance, H. F. Tucker, from th Indiana reservation to bo the Isaak Walton League of AmerCooke, second. Dis- used first; Keate In for to ua order SI-graring help ica, .and Carlos Avery, president of feet. Fly casting for tance. accuracy D. H. Madsen, first; lay for the water. In return w the American Gama Protective asKeats Cooke, second. Score 5 points must reimburse ths service for this sociation, waa created for tha purBait casting for distance L. H. land. These lands then, are a pose of making tha necessary reppart of the Strawberry project, aa resentations to Congress and, it Brunner, first; If. F. Tucker, sec- w have bean lead to Iwlleva before possible, secure the elimination ot ond. Distance, 105.5 feet. Horseever used a drop of ureter from this tariff in tha act which It la shoe pitching (doubles) Lee Be') we evxpected will soon be passed. This and C. R. New ey, Ogden, first; SI raw berry. We have bad one law suit for appeared before the Chris Littla and G. Ecenroad, Bait these lands and will fight again to ways and means committee of the Lake, second. retain them, simply because they house of representatives recently chamTrapshooting Saratoga are a part of our btead and but- and presented testimony to show pionship (105 tageta), W. H. Grif- ter. It I further etatru that If Con- that thla tariff la entirely unwarfin, Balt Lake, 51, first; John O. Colton could get a senaranted. Thera la no, Industry la Beard, Grand Junction. Colo., 55, gressman a Mil eauld be sent the Unite,) States which requires second; C. E. Hulah, Eureka, 54. tor to help, third. Ladies event (50 targets), through to take these lands away protection by such a tariff, with Miaa Vivian Urine, II, first; Mrs from us I presume the reason Is tha poaslblue exception of tha Mrs. that Senators Smoot and King to- breeders of pheasants; tha revenue E. E. Finch, 25, second: Leather-wooto d the U. 8. treasury Js gether with Congressman accruing George 11. Johnson, 21, third. do not contemplate tha un- email; the funds from which lha Boat races Inboard, free Emil Johnson's Metal dermining of the U. 8 R. policy; bird ara purchased and the tariff for all Am mu seen' Maid, first; Georg (Continued On Page Four.) (Contlpued On Page Four.) Miss MarJ, second; L R. Jonnes Mias Salt Lgke. third; W. E. An deraon's Algjp, fourth; Stanley H, Evans' Ida E., fifth. Time, 5.25. Two-mielaea B (outboard ) Hansen's Baa Box II. first; Carl Johnson's Flying Swede, second. Three-mil- e Inboard (handicap) Ida E. first: Metal Maid, second; Alsco, This Issue third: Mias Balt Lake, fourth; Mias inboard, Pantages, flfin. Five-mil- e handicap Mlaa MarJ, first. . Alsco, Tariff on Game Bird Brood Stock. second; Mies Balt Lake, third. Two mile class C outboard Bcatt, first; Bara Box. second; Saaa Box The Story of Lake Bonneville. II, third. Three-mil- e free for all outboard Flying Swede first; PackValue of Fish to the West, by S. B. Locke of ard No. 2. second; Base Box. third. Athletic events: girls Service. the Forest Carol Brlnghurst. Dorothy Mae Robinson: boye Clarence A Strawberry Wateruser Replies. Evan. Blaine Thurman: girl Margaret Lawson, Marjorie Tlejus. boys Game Conditions In the Uinta Basin. Robert Connell, Earl Thurman. girls Frances Haataker, Geneal Patten. Deer In Eastern United States. boys Billie Ritchie. Alfred Evans. girls 1Dorothy Ballard, The Friendless Bruin. Elllnor Fehr. boye le "Tho Stroller," in the Rock Springs Rocket, digs up a lot if readable material. This time his findings came from an Interview with ona of the old timer of the Rock Springe territory. We will Irrigator Says (. well flooded. Annoying Strawbeny Unit The waye and mesne committee of the U. 8. houeo u( reprewntalivbo ha been in aearion almost eontln-uouslsince the opening of tbo abort newton of tha last Congress holding hearing on a new tariff measure which le now being discussed. Gam Asti tori lies Buoy. Most of I hot appearing before tho committee were asking for a higher tariff raise for purpoea of, protection, A notable exception to this general rule wa a request, made on behalf of tb aportemou and game authorities of the couu- try that the tariff duty now exiit-- 1 Ing on live game blrda imported for any purpose be abolished. Tho tariff under the present law on im- -. ported game birds la 50 csiits each in case the value of the Llrd la not more than 15.50. O birds valued at mors than 15.09 tha duty la 29 ' per cent ad valorem. A couple at year ago, through the Intervention of the representative! of the game commissioners of the country, the tariff on bob whits quail imported from Mexico was reduced lo cents per bird by executive order. The law did not permit entire slim- Inatlon ef thg duty by that method. Partridge 8 messed M Cent. i BEAT RABBITS FROM BUSH WITH STICKS. Reported rom-plalnl- Only Three Foreign Species Found to do Well On American Ranges. . on the Rod Springs Eagles Issued Thursday. Del Terry and Dave Thompson, wardins for tho department, have gathered the facts which will be used In tha prosecution of the case. Terry will bt the witness. Import Duty of Hungar ian Partridge Fifty Cents Each at Present. IN THE STATESMAN George Bryson, Norris Moore. girls Lucy Bulat, Doris Brvsop. boys Harry Ballard. William Roaqaitt. Pearl girls1 Vera Crookaton. Jones. boye Kenneth Fehr. Jo Thurman, boye. (second rare) Minor Knight. Boh Brighton. 1 girts Louise Ahelhousen. Ruth Jones. 14 year-old boye Harry Ballard, Jack Calton. Potato rare Tom Marsh. Boh Main. Jack Catton, Ray' Havich. 5 and Jack McGovern, hoy Raymond Roes, glrlr Norman Kamuelaon. Norma Crookaton, girls June Hansen, Mercedes Derrick. Boys relay Henry Day. Howard Ballard, Alvin Oulre and George Berk. Bovs' frog race Boh Taylor, El-- don Klrhlna. Toadies' open Odessa Brhow. Mrs. H. C. Wheelbarrow race John Hanson. Bnckward race Reer. Jack Rosa L. H. Brunner, (Continued On Pag Two) NEXT ISSUE The Opening of the Fishing Season ift Utah. Canadian Efficiency In Bird Conservation. The Deer In Utah. Rabies A Review of the Outbreak Among Coyotes In Utah. The New State Fish Hatchery On Beaver Creek. Recreation On Reclamation Projects (crowded out of thi issue.) The Vanishing Upland Game Birds. The Pheasant and Its Relation to the Farmer. |