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Show TIIE JOURNAL ijm & Game ish bek MBEBi Utah they will immediately lirtlid; -- J Utah is extremely fortunate in getting this many mackinaw eggs, as the mackinaw is a diminishing species. The Lamprey eel has made such heavy inroads on the mackinaw in the Great Lakes region that no eggs are available to us from that source. o L be dis- persed to the Panguitch Hatchery, where we have had the most success in hatching mackinaw eggs in the past. The fingering mackinaw will be planted in Fish Lake. Mackinaw trout have been established in Bear Lake as well as Fish Lake. These are perhaps the only two bodies of water in Utah where a mackinaw population can : live. It appears that no lake will support mackinaw unless it is deep enough to contain what is known as a thermoclime. ilia just been received has 42,000 W Utahroute from en Canada. J. the eggs "St that mac-- s Sas--- 5 Perry Egan are compli-fro- m Gov-- - the Canadian obtained were and M. J. Mad-s- f the efforts of I of our fisheries division, obtained these eggs cooperation with Dr. Ros-j- f the University of Saskat-- , dsen i ack The icksblrtl 23, the eggs are being ship-ires- s. Upon their arrival in The State Fish and Game Department also announces the arrival of 50,000 blue gill sun fish which were sent with the compliments of the Fish and Wildlife Service from Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, formerly known as Hot Springs, New Mexico. These sun fish are to be planted in Clear Lake Reservoir where they will be used as forage for the bass there. However, blue gills are considered a game fish, and although they seldom grow larger than nine inches in length, they provide a tasty morsel. Re ielphia h 8th birth 3 Old Ma OfeMmej gestures iternatioi Win Gfrmouncemenls mn( iesd . in With Distinction! n Salt ach wen ess she Schick ion fi Wedding wen suit invitations announcements printed by us have an indefinable ition. )avis air of grace and beauty. be; ere Mae la Ito, 1 and Plumber Works 17 Years at Hobby To Build Railroad CRESTON, Iowa Byron Hiatt has been working on his hobby for 17 years. In that time he has built a real railroad, complete with two locomotives, two freight cars, a mail and baggage car, a passenger car with an observation platform and four trestles. He operates it for passengers on Sundays and holidays. The train also has a box car and a caboose. The locomotives are about 8 feet tall at the smokestacks and about 36 feet long, including the coal tender. Everything is built to scale, the result of Hiatts handicraft. One of the four trestles on his route is steel reinforced and about 70 feet across. Another spans a gully about 80 feet wide. Hiatt has them numbered so passengers will know they are riding on a railroad line with four trestles. Hiatt fell in lovewith railroading when he was a boy. After high school, he went to work for the Burlington railroad. In 1944, he decided to build a miniature train of his own. As a railroad pipe fitter, he had gained much of the know how for the job, so he started to work. At $2 a foot, Hiatt estimates he has Invested about $6,400 in roadbed alone, and thats just one of the less costly items. He assembled the locomotives from parts he made or ordered from machine shops. The track was bought from coal mines. The passenger and freight cars were used to advertise the Burlington railroad before Hiatt bought and rebuilt them. There is a regular roundhouse and train shed arrangement in the a where the train center of is parked during the week. Most of the work on the railroad has been done beforejwork in the morning or in the evening. I get up at 5 a. m. and work on the railroad about two hours, Hiatt explained. That way I gain an extra day every week. B: Room Inland 0n6 10 Wheflb flic hurry and er Utah, the con the Nati , 5 the-are- school mers rself Page Printing Co. Kaysville Spanish American War Vet Gets Paid After 46 Years ? Donf ivenf fo miss took a LA CROSSE, Wis.- -It Kla-le- r while, but soldier Richard finally got paid. The army veteran received a check for $374.30 to reimburse him for travel and subsistence expenses in getting home to Chicago after he was discharged from the army in Manila, P. I. Klaber put in 10 claims before congress got around to appropriating the money to take care of his and other similar claims. Congress acted in 1945, 46 years after Klabers first claim was filed. Klaber, you see, is 73 years old a veteran of the Spanish American war. American Soldiers Retain Right to Listen to Rumors KOREA Like in the last war, SILVER buy" A BOTTLE TODAY j lk'y'3axwtlkey.70x Grain Neutral SpTrICa.S 6.S Proof. Kinsey DistlltimCorp Unfiel J.P. American soldiers are still holding on to their right to listen to and start rumors. In Korea they have a long list: All United States troops will soon be withdrawn suddenly from Korea, and the air force will drop a number of atom bombs on the Communist forces. United States troops will not leave Korea but will remain for 25 years after the defeat of the North Koreans. All North Korean tank crews are either padlocked into their tanks or chained within them. Other United Nations are sendto ing a total of one million troops Korthe help in the battle against ean Reds. Other United Nations plan to send no troops to Korea. North Korean troops are being promised one acre of land for every kill. fifty Americans they North Korean troops are fighting with guns at their backs. 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