Photo by Pai Cancro afternoon. Scores Low The Southdale Trap and Gun Club held its first ATA register- ed trap shoot of the year March 26 at the club grounds near Shickshinny. High winds kept the scores low but 51 shooters, representing eight Pennsylvan- ia counties and New Jersey, made the competition keen. Jake Gesek, Plymouth; Ir- ving Horn, Berwick; and Joseph Keenan, Scranton, tied for first place in the 16 yard event with scores of 91 out of a possible 100. The trophy was awarded to Keenan for having the longest straight run of 29 broken targets in succession. Marie Rice, Wilkes-Barre, was high woman shooter in this event scoring 71 breken targets out of a possible 100. The handicap event also ended in a tie between Horn and Ronald Hreha, Plains. They each broke 79 out of 100 and Hreha was awarded the trophy for his longest straight run of 16 broken targets in a row. High woman shooter in this event was Patricia Mikolezyk of Trucksville who broke 74 out of a possible 100. Gesek won the doubles event with 76 out of 100. Robert Johns of Benton was a close second with 74. Horn won the high-over-all trophy with a combined score for all events of 242 out of a possible 300. W.G. Lazusky of the Pennsyl- vania Fish Commission focused his camera lens on one of the first successful opening day fishermen at Harveys Lake. Joseph Mirim, 9, of Wilkes- Barre, took his catch of Rain- bow Trout in the Sunset area of the lake. Learn More About Dogs— Would you like to learn more about the different breeds of dogs? Find out the pros and cons by studying a Penn- sylvania State University correspondence course on dogs. For a list of correspondence courses and their prices, write to Correspondence Courses, Box 5000, University Park, Pa. 16802. ' { Pennsylvania’s newest and most modern fish hatchery will be officially dedicated and opened to the public April 23. Known as the ‘Big Spring Fish Cultural Station’’, the new hatchery was built by the Pennsylvania Fish Commission through the use of Project 500 (Land and Water Conservation Fund) money and was com- pleted in the fall of 1971. Located: near Newville, in Cumberland County, the ultra- modern facility is presently rearing thousands of trout fingerlings scheduled for release in public fishing waters next year and has an ultimate production goal of 750,000 legal- size trout per year. Principal speaker for the dedication program, scheduled to start at 2 p.m., will be Spencer H. Smith, director of the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, Washington, D.C. the formal program and ‘Open House’’ Sunday afternoon, starting at 1 p.m. The Big Spring Hatchery, first all-new fish culture station constructed by the Fish Com- mission since its Huntsdale Hatchery, also in Cumberland County, was completed in 1942, covers about 100 acres of land above the spring which forms the source of Big Spring Creek. It features some 8,000 feet of concrete raceways for rearing of trout, a modern hatch-house and incubator room, a small visitor center and reception room, and a waste water treatment plant specifically designed to maintain high water. quality in the effluent re- entering the stream. At peak production, the hatchery will require about half of the 12-- 16,000 gallons per minute flow originating in the spring. Commission officials em- phasize, however, that the hatchery is only one part of an overall Big Spring development program. A major stream improvement project will be started this year to improve trout habitat in the stream, especially in the 3.5 miles of waters and surrounding lands acquired by the commission under Pennsylvania’s ‘‘Project 70” recreational land acquisition program. Using funds allocated to it from this bond issue, the commission acquired approximately 242 acres of land, including two old commercial trout hatcheries which were heavily polluting the stream. To protect the remaining native brook trout population during the stream improvement work and to conduct further research on these unique fish, the com- mission recently announced a one-year ban on fishing in the upper 3,300 feet of the stream. Some preliminary work has been done by commission engineers this past winter on the stream improvement program. On April 22, a second phase of erosion control and beautification will be started by Boy Scouts from the Keystone Area Council, working under supervision of commission personnel in planting some 8,000 seedlings on adjacent hilsides along the stream. if and discomfort . . . Quick Service 675-5121 Reg. 1.29 99° DRUG STORE Easy Parking 675-3368 T+ td A Greenstreet News Co. Publicat 2 FREE T.BONE STEAKS TO EVERY CUSTOMER PLACING AN ORDER DURING THIS SALE «> AI ee RRL BU IIE A TT CO dT All 4 items free with side of beef . choice of 2 with'hind quarters - i 1d NN) ATTEN OO CSS a foes PID a SS L) GUARANTEED TENDER—DELICIOUS WESTERN GOVERNMENT INSPECTED & VARIETY PACKAGE \ OUR BUSINESS IS SELLING GOOD BEEF! 50 Lbs. At $12.95—Reg. $24.95 l/ (INCLUDES SECTIONS A-B-C-D) f RELI NL nd Da STN "SECTION | SECTION] ggcTiON | SECTION 1 x : 4 4d rg gy Ee) Y cnuck gst. {RIB STK. | sirtom STK. | ve RST. \ PLUG ge (TAR RUMP RST. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers