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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH - ie Restocking? and fish divi-- d :5 ibat this writer be- -' ' I most logical and Lion in years of the S o' the eternal con-irnin- g the value or itte, J restocking streams are enormous streams of their own. capa-'i- T '."Li billions of fish fry : a female smallmouth from 2 -- t, ,;ance, spawns J, young a year. If only 1 1 more fish in such i ("serfs Is like turning H I on concrete high- -' j l graze." Ill of all Missouri small-- 1 1 1 spawn, the 1 .:;al toward reproduc- - I In kind would run into J I don't catch these 1 ( !:h," says the fisher- - aat happens to them? n'J Y s to the fish that are ' J le hatcheries and turned 1 1 1: streams?" I .riSherman. Look about II s a landowner turning I utile in on an already bJ I pasture. Here is an- - Ltting the steep slopes it I lot trying to convert it eil I: Here is still another I I his land; another crop-- 1 1; slopes that are bound r.i I the floods, too. Many :J ;!.c f'.oods come about n 1.4) are spawning. With 111 ;s and earth churning ij l.ms of our streams, it (1 I; imagine what happens t I try and fingerlings. el I those glittering August 1 1 the stream is too low, J la plods wearily down I l.vel bar and "shallows" 1 1 .able holes of water. 'lis live in those barren J I tches where food and I I more fish in such I ;:ts," one conserva--- J I "is like turning cattle I I crete highway or into 1 1.? lo graze." it I s not the solution to 1 1? in a sick stream. The I r here is to cure the I lowered its fish-.- 1 1 capacity in the first J lostrolling erosion and J Ii pollution and silting, i 1 3 take time to restore I I & A A sill?te ! 'MACK ATHLETES oT ) 'Xl J I If )' LONG AGO AT TIC UNIV. ? '' OF ILLINOIS COMPETED AFTERNOON, A H1 CS FOR SUCH PKKES AS A ni MAYING RIGHT A V WtLSS MUSTACHE CUP, A BATH L"J 5. TIOOIT. TICKET Of? A GROUP TV COBS THREW T picture or the 007 ""e: men Mn (UIYJ AT FIRST BASE.' Cliff IVaII fc J ;w?t' y Dressed in a costume typical of those of her people, Esther J. Joe (above) of Wide Ruins, Ariz., teaches a group of Girl Scouts a simple Navajo dance at the an-nual Western Hemisphere en-campment at Muskegon, Mich. In the photo at left, Estella Elias-Rey- es is greeted upon her arrival at camp by Margot Woodworth of Sierra Madre, Calif. The Girl Scout handshake, used the world over, is done with the left hand because it is closer to the heart. Eugenia Cuellar, of El Salvador, at left in photo above, argues o point in a discussion group at the Girl Scout camp. Joy Burke, seat-ed on bench, is ready to take notes. She is from Jamaica in the British West Indies. At left, Miss Burke adds salt to "rundown," a popular Jamaican dish, as two other Girl Scouts look on. "Run-down" is made with bananas, co-conuts, coconut milk, salt mack-erel, salt and pepper. The by-standers are learning how to cook "rundown." L& LU,,ilit NTi- - hit J'-rMt- , tmr .- '- -.Jul.flVr,gigi....A. MN A BLINDING FLASH1 The Blind Shall See...' HOPKINTON, MASS. His slghv suddenly restored "In a blinding flash" after 18 years of total blindness, Edward R. Ray. 63, j finds that "everything looks sc rich and bright faces, flowers . . . even the sky on a gray day." The first thing he saw was hla brother-in-law'- s face. It looked wonderful "wrinkles and all." Surprised at Grandchildren Then he was able to see his wife again. She hadn't changed at all, he said. His daughter, now grown up and married was "even better-lookin- g than they told me." But the greatest surprises were his two grandchildren, Joan, 6, and Edward, 3. Both were entirely dif-ferent from the picture in his mind's eye. "From their voices I had pic-tured Joan as having a heart-shape- d face. It's as round as a moon. Ed is real chubby instead of wiry." Ray continued treatments for his blindness although seven years ago doctors told him he probably never would see again. There is only one drawback to the miracle of returned sight. Can't Judge Distance "I Just can't seem to judge dis-tance," he said. But he expects that to clear up soon like his vision. Ray lost the sight of one eye and all but one-tent- h normal vision In the other through an accident when he was 9. Then in 1929 his son drowned. The shock evident-ly was so great, doctors said, tha Ray became completely blind. I SPORTLIGHT . Teams Fall for Michigan 'Pilch' I Jy GRANTLAND RICE TSNT THERE somt way tomtom can spill him? Isn't there some way one tan stop him? Isn't there some way one can kill him? Isn't there some way one can drop him? Isn't there some way someone can show him lie should be placed in his last, final rest? Isn't there someone one who might know him To prove without doubt he's the world's greatest pest? Summer, Smoke and Football Mr. Tennessee Williams, an eml- - nnnt Hrnmntist snmp timo aan Ho- - Bed Blaik wiU have a fine Army team. It will be ably coached and directed. But it will have to be something ex-tra to invade Ann Arbor and return with a Wolverine hide. Look at that Michigan backfield Charley Ortmann and Leo Ko-ces-the brilliant 220 pound Dick Kempthorn Teninga and Tom Peterson these and many others. Will Minnesota with its powerful line finally return to the Big Ten's top? What about the reviving West Coast, determined to slip back into the big picture? California, U. S. C, Stanford, Washington, UCLA and Oregon all stronger? What about the revival of the Ivy League, headed by Cornell and Dartmouth? This 1949 season can be the all-tim- e peak. Great Pitching In a season of rather shoddy pitching where the average pitcher has only a vague idea of where the plate is located, we took a brief journey through years long under dust to see what past performances had to offer. In juggling around we ran across a compilation by Tex Oliver known as "Kings of the Mound." In this review from the present to the long ago, Oliver put together some oi the most remarkable feats of the game. For example, he gave high-est rating for the year to Eddie Rommel, the umpire, back in That year Rommel won 27 games and lost 13 with the Athletics, who finished seventh with one of the worst ball clubs on record. Oliver figured that any pitcher who could win 27 games with the 1922 Athletics should wear an Oliver wreath studded with laurel blossoms. livered an epic known a s "Sum-mer and Smoke." We'll make this epic "Summer, Smoke and Foot-ball." For it sud-denly occurred to us that foot-ha- ll was lust Grantland Rice around the corner and be-fore any could guess what had happened, Michigan would be throwing passes again and beating teams 20 to 0 that were just about as good as Michigan. Which proves that it still pays to be smart. Michigan is al-ways smart. And as long as the forward pass is legal, Mich-igan will continue to throw for-ward passes, dating from Ben-ny Friedman to Charley Ort-mann. Why murder running backs along the ground when you can pick up 55 yards on one pitch? Which brings to mind the thought of what an amazing combination Michigan has in Fritz Crisler, graduate manager, and Bennie Oosterbaan, head football coach. Crisler, a great coach on his own, adds 15.000 to Michigan's seating capacity giving Wolverine follow-ers space enough for 100,000. Also Crisler has already sold out his four big games Army, Minnesota, etc. for a 400,000 four-gam- e total. And in the same interim Benny Oosterbaan is starting with 22 this fall, plus a flock of promising sophomores, to keep the Maize and Blue where it has been for the last two years-- at the top. He gives his next rating to Jack Chesbro in 1904, who won 41 games and lost 12. Walter Johnson runs third in 1913, when Old Barney won 36 and dropped only seven with Washington, as remarkable a rec-ord as one can recall. The same is true of Ed Walsh In 1908 with the weak hitting White Sox. Walsh that year won 40, lost 15 and saved nine other games. Walter Johnson won 23 games with the 7th place Sena-tors in 1911 and Urban Faber won 25 with the 7th place White Sox in 1921. Have You Heard About The Bulls and the Bees? ROME If you haven't heard about the bulls and the bees, then you can learn a lot from this tale: There was a marriage at a farm near Naples the other day, and the guests were gathered at the table for the wedding feast. Out-doors, Francesco Minniti, 5, all dolled up in a red suit for the oc-casion, played in a field. A bull spotted him. Francesco fled into a near-b- y automobile. The bull charged, missed, and hit a beehive. The bees got mad and chased the bull. The bull ran into the house, and on to the dining room. The guests jumped out the windows and into a water-fille- d ditch. The bull fol-lowed. The cool water calmed him down. Nobody was hurt. Honeymoon of Lad, 18, and Bride, 44, Ends Abruptly MIAMI BEACH, FLA. Federal narcotics agents abruptly inter-rupted the honeymoon of an youth and his bride when they arrested the latter on charges of fraudulently obtaining narcotics prescriptions from a Miami doctor. The bride is Mrs. Katherine Bo-ga- rt. "Our honeymoon is definitely ended now," she told reporters. Herman Bogart, her youthful hus-band, said, "We love each other very much. I guess we'll stick to-gether. We figure things will work out that way." Bogart said he and his bride eloped from Gary, Ind., and were married in Charleston, S. C, on June 10. They came here for theiff honeymoon. J I to Sportsmen Jl Kip - '. ,. lit ' jjL J&-- en floodlight lan--i ( nswer to the out-- J ;' fayer, as It pro-- i rss and outdr j writer 1, par-- with the re-- J Koolgn- p- handle ; W"ch makes the liable for focusing r' spots areas. ,'Jerman will find U h's equipment. geCarp :.f'sh, the carp, if ,g streams and ,;e Jakes during the e t0 some ot the ?Sfectlve opinion f 30 Wh Seek the rgard it good (i;Uhatthis spe- - . does taste 10 e hot months. : Air Propulsion Soon May Power Barges in Italy ROME A i r p 1 a n e propellers soon may be used to power barges plying Italy's northern inland waterways. In this way It is proposed to make use of the old Venetian canals whose walls, built cen-turies ago, could not resist the wash from conventional under-water screws. The idea of using air propul-sion was presented to the recent inland waterways conference in Padua by Prof. Luigi Sante Darios, who has made a long study of the problem of adapting the an-cient waterways to modern navi-gation needs. Man Never Cashed Pay Checks for Five Years WEST CHESTER, PA. When Harry G. Lamborn died, unopened weekly pay envelopes dating back to 1944 and containing a total of $0,291, were found in his one-roo- apartment. Lamborn, a former factory work-er, hoarded the envelopes in a paper box.. His will, written on a scrap of wrapping paper, left $2,500 of his estate to Mrs. Mary A. McLear, his landlady. Attorneys said the resi-due probably would be divided among Lamborn's nine first cous ins. Q f I TOfrFlX-- rf By Harold Arnett rilJw1 PLACING A BUTTON iNTME Lp f 80WL. Of A PIPE WILL AID yk J GREATLY IN YOUR. 5WOKlNG ENJOYMENT. THIS WILL fCZV' PREVENT SMALL PARTICLES TgTf-- J?7 OF TOBACCO FROM ENTER" i , ; IkM 1NG THE PIPE STEM, THUS : , ; Jf KEEPING THE TOBACCO DRV . , Vt& ANP MELLOW. THE BUTTON ; ,J. 1 IS MELt? ABOVE THE BOTTOM 2-- .: OF THE BOWL, WHICH IS OFTEN V PAMP WHEN THE PIPE IS IN USE. f mm f&usK H I JS WHEN USING- - A SAFETY 11 gZjQiii RAZOR BLADE FOR STROPPING f YfT OR F0R CUTT,M& PAPEIZ,YOU 11 UiP H0LD ,T CONV4TLY I J 6Y 0PENNG ONE BLADE OF A I J d0Z PC! PLACE THE R4Z) f l Bisje ,N E SLOT AND CLOSE f l Auto Racing Re ; Bullfighting in , .. MADRID Speedway racing is rapidly replacing traditional bull-fighting ss the national sport in Spain. So, at least, says Senor Gregario Brendis, who promotes dirt-trac- k racing in Madrid and recently visited Glasgow looking for new talent. |