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Show Page June THE JOURNAL 2 Australian mission. A testimonial and farewell will be held in the Third ward chapel on June 19 at News About Folks In The CLEARFIELD JOURNAL 11, 1955 MOTHER MOOSE SHOWS HER TWINS Dorothy White 5:00 p. m. Correspondent Also leaving on June 29 for a is Eleanor Slater, daughter of Mr. mission in the Central States and testimatter at and Mrs. Ilenry Slater will leave Lee Bell. Ilis farewell Entered as second-clas- s for an LI)S mission June lit). She monial will be held June 17 at Layton, Utah, under the Act of has been called to serve in the 8:00 p. m. March 8, 1879. Mrs. Mildred Smart and son, Fork and other major and minor Published By streams where conditions did not Lonnie have left for Seattle, Wash., CO. where they intend to make their INLAND PRINTING warrant earlier stocking. 10 On the way they planned to Phone: Kaysville The department said periodical home. Park and Grand now continue until visit Yellowstone wjll planting : T Coulee Dam and other points of rvr1 walate summer in all hard-fishe- d OP THE- t,.ASSOtKRO-ters where legal sized trout are interest. UTAH STAR weekly newspaper published in the interests of the residents of Davis County, at Layton, Utah. A - J J NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION normally planted to meet the angling pressure. Seasonal field work is now getRepresentative ting under way as biologists for Newspaper Advertising Service the Department of Fish and Game 222 No. Michigan Ave. continue the long range invetnory Chicago, III. of Utahs fishing waters. Survey work will begin on drainYear Per Subscription: $1.00 ages into Utah Lake as this Federal-Advance. in Payable to fisheries project goes inIn combination with to the third year of operation. PreThe Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year. viously covered are the Sevier, Price, Weber, Bear, and Ogden RivLloyd E. Anderson er drainages. Editor Manager A crew of six men will sample Mary B. Bowring fish foods, habitat, and actual fish News Editor J. V. Woolsey populations from each water covered. Classified knowledge from Display Advertising Manager these surveys then forecast the best types and numbers of fish & suited to each water. In turn, the states hatchery planting program is geared to the known facts in stocking waters to bring a maximum creel return to the angler. The department said that all waters of the state will be surveyed and classified as this important project continues. Natl Advertising Aid FISH GAME Utahs Fish and Game Commis- sion and key department personnel will attend the annual meetings of the Western Association of Game and Fish Commissioners June 15, 1G, 17 and 18 this year. Meetings will be held at Moran, Wyoming. Commissioners and fish and game management officials will be in attendance from the eleven western states and British Columbia in the thirty-fift- h renewal of this important conference. Theme of the conference this year will be, What is the place of wildlife in land and water development. National conservation leaders will again be present to discuss this topic at the general sessions of the convention. Several technical subjects will be covered by members of the Utah condelegation during the four-da- y ference. These meetings are considered vital in furthering enlightened fish and game management in Western America. Planting trucks from the states twelve hatcheries are on the go again this week as receding high water in many streams makes it possible to sotek them with legals. All streams that were high and roily for the May 28 opening of the general trout season are now receiving legals from the ample stocks held at each hatchery, according to the Department of Fish and Game. These include the Upper Weber, Upper Frovo, Logan, Blacksmiths Trout eggs will be taken this week from native cutthroat spawn-er- s that have come up the states newly installed fish ladder at the Indian Creek spillway on the south-enof Strawberry Reservoir. Several hundred spawners are now being held in ponds above the ladder for the important egg taking operations, according to the Department of Fish and Game. Nearly two million native trout eggs have been taken at the Clyde River station at the north end of the reservoir. Peak of the run has not yet been reached as recent cold weather slowed the migration of spawners into the traps. Native cutthroat eggs are also being taken from the Fish Creek station at Scofield Reservoir. Creek-Strawber- ry City officials are weighing the possibility of closing the Layton City dump and having Clearfield and Layton use the same dump. Second ward held a gala carnival last Friday at the recreation hall and despite the weather had a good time for all who came out. This was for the raising of funds for the stake welfare assessment. MSgt. and Mrs. Paul Rampton of Pullams Trailer court are preparing to leave Clearfield. There is destination Tripoli, North Africa. Keith and Donna Smith are enjoying a trip to California this week. They plan to visit relatives in San Francisco and in Lakewood PROUD AS ANY MOTHER, Harriet urges her twins to try their legs as they make their debut one day after birth in Washington Park Zoo, Milwaukee, Wis. This is the second pair of twins for Harriet, the only captive moose known to have done so. (International) City. The family and relatives of Roy Pearson met for a family dinner Good roads mean lower transin Roy Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell. Here the portation costs. That means a savfamily got better acquainted with ing to the farmer on the produce Roys bride of this week, Nelda he ships by truck and to the conWaite. Nelda is the daughter of sumer who buys the produce. And, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Waite. Inmore than a quarter of the trucks cluded were his mother, Mrs. Han-pa- h farm-ownePearson, Colleen Pearson, Dean in America are Pearson and Mr. and Mrs. Anthon d. Eight out of ten U. S. vacationists this year (1055) will travel by car about 00,000,000. The money they spend means that pleasure travel by car has become big business another compelling reason why we need good roads. Montgomery. Mrs. Joseph Rango of 400 E St. left for an early summer vacation in Denver with three children. No sooner had they landed at the home of her relatives then one of her offspring came blossoming out with chicken pox. Mumps is the order of the day at the home of the Elmo Hodsons. Young David acquired the disease first and now his little brother, eight months old is having them right along with his teething which he thought was bad enough by itself. Jimmy Baggs is staying at the home of his aunt in Montana and soon will visit his grandparents for part of the summer. It was quite an adventure for him as he went by bus all by himself. From where I sit... Joe Marsh Sad Note From The Bugle i All of us on the Clarion were alarmed to learn that our principal rival in the newspaper field the Balesville Bugle might have to shut down. Crops were bad in Balesville last year and one of their factories moved out of town. Just temporary hard times, of course -- but the Bugle needs help now if its to survive. So, this paper is going to scrape up a little money to help tide them over, and we hope other local concerns will do the same. Weve seldom agreed with them editorially over the years -- but we want their competition to keep us on our toes. From where I sit, this country needs papers with different points of view just as it needs people with different ideas and tastes. You may prefer iced tea as a I generally cooler choose a cold glass of beer. But if either of us couldnt express his opinion, and act on it, that hot-weath- er ... would be bad news for the whola community. Copyright, 1955, United States Brewers Foundation , Dairy foods arc better than ever in this area and Americans are eating more milk products up 1 per average person since World War II. We are proud of the increasingly important role electricity is playing in upgrading milk and its products . . . through refrigerated milk tanks on the farm, hot water heaters, milk house heating, better farm lighting, water pumping electrically, and many other ways. JUNE IS DAIRY MONTH : UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. |