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Show Extension Service Uncle Sam wants you!! crvr Creek Reservoir, Current Creek drainage in Wasatch County and all tributaries to the Strawberry Reservoir. Anglers are advised to be folly aware of the laws as they pursue their sport this season. Proclamations and information can be obtained at any of die offices of the Fish and Came Department. LOCATION RFFCRE lEAmcnfoMT -"- ItTHW family where you reminder to fliliermen from oificens ol the Department of Fiih and Came who, along with oificert from other agenciei, put in many re going" ii houn each year attemjting to locate "mitplaced" spoit-me- n. Relaying information about emergenciei at home or tearching for outdoortmen who have failed to return home on ichedule are the usual reasons for attempts to locate by law enforcement officers. It would be of great help to the search and rescue efforts if officers knew where to begin a search. When planning a fishing trip, the wise fisherman will inform his family about the fishing location, route of travel and estimated time of return. Such action may save the family needless worry, and assist law officers in find lng the "lost" fisherman. If a fisherman is late or missing, the family should not attempt to organize a search party, but should notify the county sheriff who may call on persons familiar with the area and equipped to conduct a search. WATERS WITH SPECIAL mm With tire 1967 fishing season already under way, anglers should note the special regulations which apply to some waters of the State. The following waters are closed to angling in 1967: LeBaron Reservoir, Sheep Creek Lake, Triple Reservoir, Hardscrabble Creek, Lost Creek Reservoir, Gooseberry Reservoir, Mill Meadow Reservoir and W'hitney Reservoir. Waters which do not open to angling untiljuly 1, 1967 include: West Fork drainage of the Duchesne River, Red Creek drainage in Duchesne County, Allen Canyon Dreek in Rich County, Crouse D1PARTMFNT PUBLICATION: TCTODvTrUTXTT FISfH Anglers who want to know more about their favorite fishing water or who desire information on some of the other popular waters of the State, should obtain a copy of the booklet, "Popular Utah Fishing Waters" published by the Utah State Department of Fish and Came. This booklet lists 26 of the most popular fishing waters of the State. It includes information on how to get to them, how to fish them, size, depth and species of fish present. The cost of the bookelt Is 254 and it can be purchased at any Fish and Came office. SPAWN TAKING CONTINUES XT 5TTTF.P Egg-taki- ng C REFIT operations are in foil swing at the Department's fish traps on Straw- berry Reservoir and Sheep Creek Lake. Department spokesmen note that this year's run of cutthroat trout at Strawbetty Reservoir is the largest run since the treatment of the Reservoir in 1961. Rainbow trout eggs have already been taken from spawners at the Strawberry stations, and the Department personnel will continue taking cutthroat trout eggs until Department needs are met. The eggs taken from these spawning operations will be brooded at the Logan, Spring-vill- e, Panguitch, Scott Avenue, Loa and Fountain Green hatcheries where they will be raised to advanced fry size for stocking into selected waters later this year. is guaranteed--i- n writirg--bc-fo- $2 Report The Army has an immediate need for young men who have an aptitude and ability to be trained for tough technical jobs. Sergeant Jahn, the Army recruiter in our area, pointed out that the Army gives the enlistee a guaranteed choice from over 300 fields of training. The Craduate Specialist Program, designed for high school graduates who can pass tlie qualification exams, offers specialized courses in electronics, precision maintenance, combat specialties, electrical or motor maintenance, graphics and clerical procedures, to name Just a few, he stated. One important fact to keep in mind; only through enlistment in the ReguUr Army can you be assured of getting the training you want. Your choice re you sign up! Sergeant Jahn at Provo can be reached by calling 0, collect. He will be happy to provide additional information. f 373-415- ATTENTION young women graduating from high school this spring. Are you planning to find an interesting, challenging job offering security and advancement? Are you hoping to travel to foreigh lands? Are you looking forward to furthering your education? A world of opportunity awaits you as a member of the Women's Army Corps (WAC). If you qualify, you w ill travel to the Women's Army Corps Center, Fort McClellan, Ala. , for eight weeks basic training. Next you will attend school at Fort McClellan, or one of the other Army schools, for instruction in the medical, dental or optical careen, or specialized training in communications, finance, photography, automatic data processing, administration, air operations support, food service, or public relations, to mention just a few. The training you receive SMpKINC HSU U nil the Hilling to gel underway and, miiigerator 1 hojv-full- CciEi t i boxes or wrv. you fop fhis? vlunoal Vh'it fish that are t least in. lies long. I hey should be evivver.ted and washed as soon as possible alter Catching But no skinned or scaled. I ih L ss than 12 in. lies can be m oked whole ind larger fish should be either halved or 't kevi into sections not one pound. One process is to place the Msh in a brine solution ior 24 to lx hours, ior tiro brine use H oz. sugar, I lb. salt ami y, tm nrore liih table, hero are iDiiie ways to .moke fidi and avid to your eating pleasure, according to Blaine Jones, rxtenilon Agint. 1 he process ol xmeking fiih iv not as diliicult as ndghi be believed. To pro wive meat by smoking, a smoldering tiro that sheds relatively little heat is necessary. Wood or charcoal are used and the heat is smothered with wood or wood chips to produce a constant cloud ot smoke. The best (lav or is imparted by using sweet woods, such as fruit or nut wooviv. Hickory, maple, oak, chokecherry, river birch or aspen can be ued, but resinous woods, such as pine, should be avoided. Smoke ovens can be made from oil drums, barrels, old r 2 gallons of water. Alter soak- ing remove fish and rinse with dear water, allowing to drain be loro placing in smoker. If Hsh aro brined longer than i hours, soak in Iresh water 2-- ior one-ha- lf to one hour before lacing in smoker. Another method used is to make brine of cup brown sugar, 2 cups salt, one gallon water, I tablespoon black pep per, 34 teaspoon orogano and is the best. Skills learned one cup bay leaves water (4 are in continuing demand by bay leaves simmered in one civilian industry, too. cup water). Soak lish in above You will be assigned to one solution for six to eight hours, of the Women's Army Corps then wash with clear water, units at a military post in put on w ire racks or hang up the United StJtes ior your first to dry. After dry ing for about After one of service. year three hours a shiny film will year, you may apply for asslorm on fish. Then place fish ignment to a WAC unit in fairly close together to smoke Europe or the Far East. over a fire using 4- -6 hickory The Army needs women to charcoal briquettes. Starter fill skilled postions. You can serve your country as a member fluid may be used to get the fire glowing. Add a handful of an organization which has of applcwood chips to mainestablished a tradition of tain smoke-- . Do not let chips "Pride and Dignity" in patriotic service over the past 25 years, blaze but keep them smoulderAs a member of tire WAC you ing. The temjvr.it ure should be 150 to 200 degrees and a are eligible to participate in cheap oven thermometer may further to your many programs education. You may complete be used to aid in teniperaturo control. Smoking time is correspondence courses or between eight to ten hours, and attend classes for actually may be varied to suit taste and college credit with financial size of fish. To tell if the fish assistance provided by the are done, break one open and Army. sample a piece from the Call Sergeant Jahn at Provo, middle - if it suits your taste 373-41(call collect) for it's done. additional information on the A large hooded charcoal braopportunities which await you zier can be converted for the in fie Women's Army Corps. 1 A mixed Scotch Foursome tournament will be held at the San Juan Coif Course Friday, June 9 at S pm acconling to A1 Haskins, President of the Men's Colt Association. This has been one of the most popular forms of competition on the course. Sportsmen to propose hunting programs Albert Lucero of Monticello proudly holds aloft his prize 1 he 2 lb. 6 oz. ft .inbow trout was caught at Race Track on Blue Mountain on June 3 and is 17 Inches long. Record Photo catch of the opening day of fidiing. The Monticello Rod C Cun Club wilt show a Fish and Game movie on Buffalo at its next meeting to be held in the Library at 8 pm, June 14. The club will also make recommendations on the deer hunt and the Bighorn Sheep hunt to the Big Came Board which will hold its meeting June 21. Civic groups prepare for local golf tourney Service Clubs and civic groups will enter teams in a new competitive event sched- purpose of smoking fish, Agent Jones advises. Place the half-doz- en lighted charcoal briquettes in a small cluster in the brazier. Place the sweet wood on the briquettes. Place the fish on the rack, in it's highest position, or suspend the fish from the hood w ith aluminum foil to capture the smoke inside. Smoke for at least two hours. Check for doneness by testing the muscle layer near the backbone. When the meat flakes it is done and ready for serving. Longer smoking produces a drier more firm product. So light up the fires and have a feast! uled for four Saturdays this summer on the San Juan Coif Course starting this Saturday. The five-ma- n teams can play any time during the day for the first round which is scheduled for Saturday, June 10. The best four scores from the five players will be used for scoring the tournament. Golfeis plan to hold the event annually and a travelling d, sponsor trophy is being as well as individual trophies for the team members. Handicapping will be by the Callahan handicapping sys pur-hase- tems which does not require players to have a rated handi- cap before entering the event. Teams from the Monticello City Council, Monticello Chamber of Commerce, Mon- ticello Jaycees, Monticello Lions Club, Rlanding Cham- her, KUTA and others are expected to enter the event, according to Al Haskins. Any team is invited to enter the tournament. A $10 entry fee in addition to greens fees will be charged. Houseguests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Berry last week were her camping excursion in parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vem Canyonlands. They will' Morgan of Layton. After spending Saturday night with "jeep" and back pack into Salt Creek. They are acctheir granddaughter in Bland-in- g the Morgans returned home ompanied by leaders Max Black and Carl Barton and will Sunday accompanied by grandson Tom Berry who is visiting return Friday. Cene Ney and family will in Layton for a week. leave Monday to take son, George Walton returned from CSU last Saturday to Steve, to Philmont, New Mexico where he will spend spend a few days with his the summer as a Ranger at parents, Mr. and Mrs. William the Scout Ranch. While there, Walton, before enrolling for summer school classes at the Neys will sight see in BYU. the area. Upon their return at the end of the week, they Alta Rincin Reid has been will go to Salt Lake to find a here this week to clean house for her mother, Mrs. Lucinda place to live. They plan to move later this month. Redd. A Mon-ticellay free is The long-livsequoias and bristle -- cone pines of California, oaks of the and the centuries-ol- d humid East have led many people to regard all forest trees with awe. Perhaps this has resulted in the belief that forests are indestructible if only they are left alone. A man's life span is so short that it is easy for him to imagine that the forests of today in the Manti LaSal National Forest so back to the beginning of time and are ageless. But according to District -- Forest Ranger Don T. Nebe-ke- r, a tree is a living thing, and old age and death come to it as to all other living organisms. Left alone, a gray birch has a life span of 40 years, a sugar maple lives longer up to 500 years. Some oaks may live to be 1, 500 years old, but sequoias may live for 4, 000 years. The ancient forests that have clothed and reclothed the land that is now America were often ruthlessly destroyed by natural forces. Inundation by inland seas destroy from Logan where they spent their vacation with their parents and renewed acquain- tance with many old school friends. Mr. and Mrs. Lee C. Christensen and boys went to Salt Lake City on May 26th for eye tests for the children. They then went to Redmond to spend several days visiting his parents Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Christensen. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Jameson have received word of the arrival of a new granddaughter at the home of their son, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Jameson of Denver, Colo. She was bom ujoradfrous inKal so A TREE IS A LIVING THING ed i Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Erickson returned Sunday night Monticello. I'tiili Thursday, June 8, 1967 Page Seven Mrs. Alex Jameson, before leaving for Urbana, Illinois, where he will join the staff of the University of Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Claire Topance and children went to Salt Lake City last week where they were houseguests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Davis. While in the city they attended the annual meeting of Associated Grocers and visited former classmates. Before returning home they went to Midway for a visit with her parents, Mr, and Mjs. Henry Kholer; to Provo to visit her sister, Mrs. Joyce Jeffrey; and stopped at Payson to see the Marve Tolman family who were neighbors when both families lived at LaSal. Dfivomcj runiing that they can be material, ed them over vast areas. made into wood products useMountain building often cut ful to an expanding population. off the life giving moisture and forests that had been Young trees must be harvested along with mature ones to there for milleniums either retreated or died out entirely make way for a network of logging roads and log landings. as newly formed deserts By harvesting mature and detook over. During the glacial trees through timber fective obliterated were forests ages, sales, the district ranger from millions of acres. Ther maintains the forest in a slowly they reclothed the rathat is thrifty condition--on- e vished land as the great ice resistant to ordinary winds, insheets retreated. Since then, sects, and disease. But if a such natural forces as hurrhurricane should get tropical their have taken icanes toll, and roar through and lightning has put the torch the forest, he stands ready to salvage wind thrown and dam.0 vast acreages. aged trees before fire, insects, Nature is often the ruthless or disease destroy them and destroyer of forests, but man spread to standing timber. can be their protector. This It has been thousands of years is one of the roles that the since the last of the great ice district ranger plays in mansheets of the glacial age came aging the timber resources of down from the North to destroy his district on the Manti aSal the forests that barred its path. National Forest. He proNew forests have grown up to natits from tects the forest supply the needs for timber, ural enimies--fir- e, wind, water, wildlife, forage, and does and and disease, insects, Under multiple -recreation. of as an important part this use -management they can be his overall multiple use manmade toyield all of these proagement job. ducts and services while being Nature and defective trees protected and developed for must be harvested while they future generations. still contain merchantable side-track- June 3, weighed 7 pounds, 15 ounces, and has been named Tracy Kay. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Berry went to Montrose, Colo. , on May 27th to attend the ' 50th Wedding Anniversary celebration for his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. W.B. Brown, They remained as overnight guests and returned to Monticello on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. Kieth Jameson and daughter Lisa arrived last Friday from Manila, P. 1. where they have been teaching at the University of the Phillipines for the past two and one -- half years. They plan to spend a week here visiting his parents, Mr. and Homes are Happier... Steering is Steadier... ssr ed Vs O LOGGING OF RENEWABLE TIMBER RESOURCES ON THE Monticello Ranger District, Manti-LaS- al National Forest contributes to the local economy and protects timber stands from insects and disease. Livestock is Healthier... Industry's Wealthier... BECAUSE MAKING LOANS IS OUR Tune in June 10 and 11 to the 10th Annual Buick Open, on NBC-TV- . BUSINESS AT FIRST SECURITY BANK Money is available for every purpose Buick Bargain Bays are here. .2 &cii TIMEWAY LOANS -- For home improvements . . . new car . . . furniture . . . appliances . . . vacation . . . education . . . emergency. v MORTGAGE LOANS to aid in buying or building new homes, apartments, businesses. -- -- Now drive a Buick bargain. AGRICULTURAL LOANS -- To assist in the production of better livestock and crops. BUSINESS LOANS -- To help build the economy of the area. IN ALL WAYS -- First Security is the bank for you. JVVS SEGU sssw Member Federal Deposit Insuronce Corporofion i ; The San Juan Record MONTICELLO LOCAL HAPPENINGS On Monday 21 Scouts of First Ward began a . sag |