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Show Pate Twelve THE DRAGERTON TRIBUNE ON THE HIGHWAY WEST of DRAGERTON pp) Uu psn Starting at 9:00 p.m. 4 - (Continued from Page Eleven) Moderately Heavy ! ' The Utah Department of .Fish and Game said today that a previously reported minor outbreak of botulism on the states duck marshes would now have to be classed as , moderately heavy at- -' tack. Did You Know That . . . f , Continuing high' temperatures extremes since early September has contributed to the loss of many more birds from this common ail ment known as duck sickness .which is incident most years to a greater or lesser degree. Norm ally, cooling weather and early fall storms see a lessening of the sickness by this date. , The department said total losses of ducks on Utah marshes this year may reach as many as 15,000 birds. Most are early migrating pintails. It was noted that while any such loss is considered serious the overall picture remains bright for a good hunter harvest during y the fall shoot which begins October 15. Crews with airboats are treating and saving many thousands of infected birds on state and federal marshes. With the nationwide revival of interest in the Old West, the Indians of Utah take on added significance so far as the tourist is concerned. Near Whiterocks, which is a few t and Hawaiian companies by means of .radio circuits. The demand for service is expanding rapidly making it necessary' to supplement existing facilities. The companies believe that the best way to do this is by cable rather than by additional radio installations. The radio spectrum is becoming crowded and future growth by this medium is necessarily limited. Also, continuity of service is more definitely assured when two means of transmission, radio and cable, are available. Meanwhile work is continuing deep-se- a cable aboard 0N THE, HIGHWAY of DRAGERTON WEST and Spanish trappers. During its 12 years of existence, the post was visited by Kit Car-soJim Bridger and other noted figures. n, x, Education seems to be an end . ' less affair. ag BT .at: 'Distillers of the worlds finest bourbon for 160 years the ship. Cable laying operations are expected to be completed in late 1795-19- 55 September. M FOSSAT Photo Studio 80-da- m miles north of U. S. 40 in Uintah county, the first semi-- , permanent settlement in Utah was established. Its ruins still remain. It was Fort Robi-douestablished about 1832 Robidoux with the Antoine by assistance of other French on the laying of the first section of telephone cable across the Atlantic ocean. The cable laying ship Monarch on August 9 picked up the initial segment of the first cable and spliced it to the 1200 mile f 4 Minor Notes Orchestra EVERY SATURDAY O Telephone Duck Sickness , Tuesday, September 20, 1955 . DIRECTLY ACROSS THE STREET Worthy of Your Trust for 160 Years . . Beam old fashioned Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey is distilled and aged under a formula passed on from generation to generation for over 160 years. Only Beam tastes like Beam-- . . . only Beam tastes so good. KENTUCKY STSATCHT 88R23F BOM W1CT HES B. BEAM DlSTEIfiS C3 FROM POSTOFFICE CEE80.7, KENTUCKY Trout Season Ends On October 9th JPTrtjromt The general trout fishing sea son in Utah ends this year on . Only major exception to this closure is Fish Lake, in Sevier county, which closed to angling September 18 this year. The department of fish arid game noted that the last heavy plant of hatchery legals into hard fished put and take waters over the state took place just before the long Labor Day week end. Planting of these fish is being designed each year to place them in these waters during the most heavily fished days of the warm weather months when most anglers are afiled. Continued good creel returns are forecast during the remainder of the season, especially in the larger stillwaters and' in sections such as the Uinta mountains are .The department said many streams and reservoirs remain open to angling on a year around basis. These are chiefly the low elevation waters not productive of trout. Many, such as ytah lake, produce good returns throughout the year for warm water species of fish. October-9- off-the-ro- with IPeirsmmllMnii 39 Let Electricity Helper, Utah 52 South Main Street Phone 31 Trim Winters Work and Worry ! ad Did You Know That . . . 5 No living city in Utah today possesses a more fantastic history than the quiet agricultural, community of Corinne. It is located 66 miles north of Salt Lake City on highway U,.S. 30. About 1870 it .was a city of about 2,000 white people, excluding some 5,000 Chinese left behind when the railroad work was concluded at the driving of the golden spike at Promontory in 1896. For a short while it was the capital of Utah, to wrest the government hoping from Salt Lake City. The dream was to make it the railroad and non-Morm- steamboat center for the territory. The railroad made Ogden its center, and after a few trips the steamboat route across the Great Salt Lake was abandoned. While it lived, Corinne was a splendid example, of the rough-and-read- hard-boile- d ... -- on Old West. Electricity can really be a farmers friend when cold weather comes ; . . by providing plenty of hot water and heat for the milk house or by keeping winter water, warm and avoid freezing for cattle and chickens. A few pennies for electricity can save many hours of work and really step up production, too." Gee, Bob, we can do our homework in private- - now. Mom talked Dad into putting an extra phone in my room. deal for families with growing'youngsters, additional cost only 3 dr "4 cents a day each. The installation charge is small , regardless of location. Telephones are now available in a selection of eight decorator colors, for a e nominal extra charge. Just call our Business Office. Mountain States Telephone. tele-phon- es Be Modem one-tim- y, . ; FARIA ELECTRICALLY Utah Power & Light Co. |