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Show HELPER The Notes of Interest from neighboring NATIONAL BY BOB BREWSTER Outdoor Editor, Mercury The muskellunge is a fish That grows to near 70 pounds And is longer than most men are tall. It is ugly as a mud fence, with a vicious and permanent smile that shows a mouthful of sharp teeth and is well known for a nature that matches its looks. s a tribute to its vicious-Ties- s one luremaker has fashioned a highly popular plug-ithe shape of a small duckling. By SELMA ROWLEY of hooked muskellunge ramming a boat. They will rush, By Ralph Robey jump and lie still during the battle for freedom with the angler. The favorite tackle for mils-kie- s includes a bait casting rod that possesses good backbone (like a pool cue), a substantial level-win- d eel, a 20 to 35-ltest line, a variety of artificial lures and a stout heart. Some fishermen cast or troll live bait, the Mercury people advise, usually suckers nearly a foot long. The baits are cast over likely areas and worked rapidly, because muskellunge usually strike a bait that has considerable action. And when they are brought near the boat at the end of the long struggle (it is never short) they are usually stunned with a billy club or rendered hors de combat with a huge gaff. No fisherman who has ever looked down the tooth-linemaw of a mature musky would ever dream of bringing one of them into a boat while there was still life in the critter. FEDERAL AID FOR DEPRESSED AREAS Both, the (House and the Senate have passed a bill enabling the federal government to aid de pressed areas. There was strong opposition to such a proposal, but there never was any real hope of defeating it. President Kennedy made this one of his measures and the Eisenhower administration had supported such an extension of federal gov ernment activity. The cost of the measure will be some $400 .million. At present there are 103 areas which meet the requirements for help as depressed areas. This is determined by the percentage of unemployed in relation to the average for the nation as a whole. There are imany reasons why an area may become depressed, and these are crucial from the viewpoint of appraising the wisdom of this measure. Some of Tlhe (more BIGGEST OF ALL important of these are: reasons The world record musky was IIIGiH LABOR COST taken 'from the St. Lawrence River, the border between This can force up the costs of Canada and the United States. and thereby increase production It lacked one ounce of an exact result is a smaller The prices. 70 pounds, topping a monster of market and less need for the 69 pounds, 12 ounces that had old output. This is one of the been taken earlier from the Flowage in Wisthings which has happened in Chippewa consin. the coal fields. To attempt to The outboard motor has meet it the miners have made brought musky fishing within enormous investment in machthe reach of nearly everyone. ines to keep prices at a level A light twin that will which enables them to compete weed beds go smoothly through with alternative sources of fuel. and over underwater obstructions is ideal for musky fisherUNFAVORABLE (BUSINESS men, and the Mercury people CLIMATE answered this need with their This may take the form of a Fishin' Merc 60. bad tax system, hostility on the The little gem gets up and part of the local government, runs with plenty of power for two fishermen in a misunderstanding of the probboat, lems of management, refusal to getting them to where they want to go in a hurry. enforce the laws against labor From then on it's up to them. abuses, and so son. Where such a situation is found it is to be Y FEDERAL TROUBLE expected that business will not remain any longer than necessary. From a Wall Street Journal SHRINKING MARKET editorial on the financial troubles This may be permanent, as, for of the imulti-ibillidollar fedexample, buggy manufacturing, eral highway program: ". . .the or it be temporary as in the matter of the is that case may simple truth of automobiles and steel this enormously expensive road today. In either event it reduces system is required not for the the need for workers and hence pleasure driver but industy; the increases unemployment in these highway is a roadbed for truck industries. transportation exactly as a rail .TRANSPORTATION COSTS line is for the railroads. But the With competition as vigorous railroad;-- have had to not only las it is today in most lines, the build & maintain their own road icost of getting a product to beds, but in addition are taxed market may become a matter of by every county, town and ham- utmost concern. The result in let for the "privilege" of bringmany cases is that a business ing freight and passengers into will- - set up units as close to its the community. market as possible, and this may leave many workers at the old Paul Johnson -- b. partners 14-fo- ot on m economy BetterHomes Book" Cook M am W&jr All Types of In trimmii g your food This famous "best seller" jivea special attention to economy ooking;, whether for large families, r just 2 or 1 Mors than" 1000 triple-teste- d recipes. Loose-Ua-f, o you can add other favorite recipes. Tabbed and indexed for quick, say reference. Hand- washable cover.. Hcre'i help bills. i l Tf oar tTiTy'O Yin Equitable Insurance Agency George Patterick Price Phone ME anti-recessi- on -- AX, v t ' i r, ' V- :X - Y . 1 ' XKX V?. Salt Lake is their regular meeting Thursday evening at the home of Mrs Lot Kosec Mrs George Olsen and daughter Mrs 'Robert Winn, visited in Sal' Lake Monday with Mrs O's mother, Mrs Emma Tanner, who is ill. She was accompanied hom" by another daughter Mrs Bobby Wall and family of Brigham City. Mr. and Mrs John Marafcr were visitors in Salt Lake City Saturday. M and Mrs Peter H. Anderson of Layton visited over the week end at the home of the Harold Hansens. Phillip Vea spent Wednesday through Monday at the Carbon hospital. Dennie Sallas of Salt Lake was a week end guest at the home of Mr and Mrs Sam Fazzib. Mr and Mrs Cliff Hansen spent the weekend in Moab visiting their son, Jimmie and family, j The Pins and Needles club met Thursday at the home of ' Nedra Richardson and started on apron and bag projects. Trudy Skerl served refeshments. The annual science fair was held Tuesday All six night. grades had displays. There was a good attendance. Marie Fazzio, daughter of Mr and Mrs Sam Fazzio celebrated her bithday on the 14th. A birthday cake was shared by the family and a few close friends. Mrs Francis Blackham is attending the spring quarter at Carbon College. Dave and Selma Rowley were visitors in Provo 'Saturday. Verona Haycock and Harold were released as Cunningham Aides in the Sunday school. The Young Married group held a party Saturday night at the chapel. Attending were Mr and Mrs Edward Simms, Mr and Mrs John J. Nielson, Mr and Mrs George Bell, Mr and Mrs Boyd Anderson, Mr and ' Mrs Floyd Blackham, Mr and Mrs Harold Cunningham, Mr and Mrs Fred Richardson, Mr and Mrs Pete Jones and the Dean Nielsons of Kenilworth. Mr and Mrs Fred Daffendol of Price were guests Satturday at thte home of the Ed Simms. and Mr and Mrs children spent Friday through Sunday at Grand Junction where they visited with the Cliff Haycock family. Mrs Cora Oliver of Wellingtton fer- ' v f ' I 1 i i ' ' i 111 L..1 i ....... ' J J .., ......I ... t ' ! -- WsrV-L-L I I : -- i -l , p". i: U LI. L. i ..4 ' 1 ) 1 ' I i i-- V fi j j : . t, j EHX'S T-- V ? it-- WO &&fc$&ba it ' RontPvelt St. Dial GR UT Helper BOCKKEEPINS RECORD BOORS lfp 4 Butimn Tl IIlP-llO- Jt UAf Mill tlM U II . VI M LM TAX tmt AM ' v t - j r. . ! I "l i "HI "I s C 4 I r -"-- - - ' ' - t ,"4 - " -j h : : . ' i .i II ! I' I I i , , v , "II I JL. , 1 ! .J..4j , J - t . i 2 , ! i h I I r4l iJ 1 SITi' t , i i rti jr ! . ; rjj lit"' M t j. j i ? -- ! f jpj , " 'j i I i ? " " ' i i . ws ; tj i f tt .cft.vft.va..s. v, t t o 'Jeep' Universal is ruggedness.That's been proved on battlefields and wheatfields for he past twenty years. It has been use tested and abuse tested. You know that. But did you know this rugged worker is available in different sizes to suit different needs? That's important to you because you don't want to pay for .more whee'base than you really need. Come in and let us measure your needs against ariioa-proves the wheeibase of a 'Jeep' f- vehicle. They run from 80" to 1 01". One is right for you! univcrsal i.d B The d 'dlfiHi 7xJ? ftl J COMPARE THE FIGURES! SEETHE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE CJ-- 6 AND ITS NEWEST IMITATOR. curbwelght payload Jeep'CJ 6 2336 lbs. Vehicle "S" 3000 lbs. 1564 lbs. 900 lbs. 8 600 lbs. 200 lbs. ' 3 of th growing lUiMr Industries WILLYS MOTORS, INC., TOLEDO, OHIO. On lUllL-I- H accommodated payoad capacity Sunday 6:30 P.M. (4) MAVER,CK HONG KONG Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. (4J KRAYKC MOTOR CO. ALVAYS THE EEST FOK LESS 93 Gouih 3rd East Price, Utah Mrs Tony (Skriner.. Mr and Mrs Alton Digelow of Springville were visitors Sunday at the home of Mr and Mrs Stanley Judd and Mr and Mrs Vic Walkington. Mr, Chrystal Fullerton return ed home Sunday after speeding a week in Salt Lake visiting with the Keith Gardners. Mr and Mrs Lester Blackham and Harold Cunningham were visitors last week with .Mrs Verona Ball at Kearns. M 1 . l - r i & Work (iiiaranlrcd 165 ' n rn,iiMmi.i.w 1 REPAIRS Str.tPUFIED wilt IMAII4I Ult Ull IIIMUI i .;:. f 0011 SIZES! J j . . . SHOP THE AUb IN YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER! ' ! ' f I "shopping around" J f s ! John-Haycoc- accomplish efficiently tells her vhoro to find the best prices offered on items she needs. It saves her many long hours cf .v . CQfiiES 4-- H 14 i j anization, larger units, better tilizer and better seeds, the increased output per acre has been fantastic. The same process, to some extent, has gone on in almost all industry. FOREIGN COMPETITION An increasing number of industries are finding it difficult and some, impossible, to meet the prices of competitors from abroad. Wherever this is true, it hurts employment in this and daughter, Mrs Laurie Johan sen of Elmo were visitos Thurscountry. fed-erday at the home of Mrs Delia al Now financial aid by the Rasmussen. and will not, government James Helkey celebrated his can not, offset any of these reasons for an area becoming de- 79th birthday Saturday. There was a party given by his steppressed. This does not mean that that the problem i9 not serious. These daughter, Christine Fazzio, was attendee by family members. need unemployed persons jobs, Mrs Earl Standley and child re and the nation needs to get them to their home in Torrence, turned to work. back this week after having Calif., Senator Wallace F. Bennett (R a month with her husband's spent -to exhaus Utah) after listening and tive hearings on this bill,, said mother, Mrs Pace Boyack point-blan- k in the report of the family. his parents, the Committee on Banking and Cur- ited Sunday with of Salt Lake vis Clark Rowley to a "the time stop rency that A. Rowleys. George surge of federal intervention in Mrs George Olsen was hostess the field of plant location is be- a birthday party for her at infore the principle of federal Tuesday on her tervention Is established." Unfor- - daughter Valene The children played 8th birthday. too late for that tunately it is refreshments. new. But that does not change games and enjoyed were Francis Curtis, Attending site without jobs. the fact that expenditure of this Lorrie Snider, Stella Montoya, EXHAUSTION OF A $400 million will not .begin to L. Winn, NATURAL RESOURCE solve the problem of depressed Jimmie Jensen, George & Rhine Susie Rex Sacco, Terry This is what gave us the ghost areas. hardt, Ken and Keith Barker, towns of the west. But it may Ken Christensen, Gaylene, Cahappen in any field which is MERRY iMIXERS roline and Terry Howell, Claudia based upon the extraction of and Helen Jensen. Barker naof the The second meeting manufacturing process of a Mr ani Mrs Richard Haycock, held clubwas tural resource. Mixers Merry M. Hammond and Mrs Sarah INCREASED PRODUCTIVITY Tuesday. The girls learned how Mrs Johnson attended the funeral of From the point of view of em- to make banana milk shakes Tom Davis at Ephraim. ployment, farming offers the best the kind packed with lots of deMrs Zelpha Vuksinick was taklicious calories. of Mech this. Through example en to the Carbon hospital on Tuesday. Mrs Ruby Johnson, Dr. LuelLa Hall and Mrs Elda Boyack were visitors Monday at the home of Mrs Florence Rich of Price, Mrs Eliza Hansen of Elmo visited Sunday at the home of her brother, Dulan Rasmussen. Mr and Mrs Lee Rowley spent Saturday at Green River, YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER Mrs Shirley Keele and two children returned to her home in Moab Thursday after spending IS A REAL CONVENIENCE! . four days with her parents, the Lee Rowleys. At Relief Society meeting the lesson on proper feeding of the A wonderful way for a busy young mother to sick was presented by nurse Vera serve countless hours is by shopping the ads in Jacobs. Some of the ladies enjoyed quilting on a beautiful her hometown newspaper By knowing, before quilt while others under direction she goes to town, which products she wants and of Udella Peterson, completed the where to buy them, she can do an efficient job of bead work. Luncheon was served by Elva Judd, Eva Jones and marketing. While the housewife spends her time Maude Haycock. becoming an expert nurse, laundress, cook, playNow officers elected at the recent PTA meeting were: Presimate, end bookkeeper, the local nevspaper 13 dent, Mrs Robert Miiano, Carbon-vill- e; bringing her the shopping news. It tells her Vice president, Mrs Johnny about the latest products and services that will Skerl Jr., Secretary, Mrs Dick Gordon cf Kenilworth; Treasurer her work most it help her To The Busy Housewife SAX of spending some time visiting his mother, Sarah Johnson and his sister, Annie, The Happy Needles was held Satturday at the home of leader; The Mrs Frances Cunningham. girls learned how to sew on ma- chine made pin cushions. Refresh ments were served. Mr and Mrss Orvile Hansen of Elmo were visitors Sunday at the home of Mrs Hansen's sister Mrs Dulan Rasmussen. Mr and Mrs Sam Pinarelli and daughter Deanna and Mrs Joe Corey and daughter Margarete spent the weekend in Salt Lake. The Friendly Sewing club held d Yet without a doubt this freshwater tiger is one of the most highly-prize- d fishes that swims, according to authorities at the Mercury outboard company, whose home base at Fond iu Lac, Wis , is in the heart f good musky country. And there is a valid reason or the popularity of musky fishing -- - the musikellunge is probably the most difficult fish to hook and land in all waters, either salt or sweet. It is a moody fish, sometimes biting readily and other times sulking in the deeps, refusing all offerings. In typical waters muskel-)ung- c lurk near the drop-off- s from rock or sand bars in the middle of lakes, along weed beds, in small weed covered hays and in shady waters close to shores that are fringed with overhanging trees. HARD LOSERS Once hooked a musky will do everything but climb into the boat trying to escape, and there are authenticated cases PAGE SKVEX SPRING GLEN OUTLOOK Outboard JOURNAE (Utah) THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1061 North, South, East, West the call is for Kentucky's Bcstl v-ii-- U' Also Avallabl BOTTLBO IN BONO taFILL-MZIE- R FINE KENTUCKY BOURBON lOll OVEUt 150 YEAJtS It rtoo ... Kwa m wrrui p ttmru m num mwrt (mm, umnn, moi |