ANGLIN' AROUND By M. T. (Bus) BRIDGES The weatherman sure has play ed the mischief with Ashing for the past week or so. If the wind is not blowing then the rain cahte down. Or both. All types of angling has been held almost to a standstill. The trout streams are so full of waier that it is hard to Ash them, and we understand the catches have been small for those who have braved the elements to try their luck. Lake Ashing has also been cur tailed quite a bit. Some have braved the wind and rain and a number of nice catches have been reported. Last Saturday we gave it a try on Fontana, and together with strong gusts of wind and some rain, we managed to do a little Ashing. How many did we catch? Well, we finally boated sixteen fish; 13 crappie and one nice small-mouth bass. We saw several nice strings of bass and crappie in the late afternoon. All the lakes in the TVA chain are rising, especially Fontana. We understand by way of the grape vine tiu?t Fontana has come up some six or eight feet in the past few days. No wonder, there has been enough rain to fill almost anything. Also that the head of the lake is muddy. If you are planning to fish Fon tana this weekend, better be pre pared to take a long boat ride or enter the lake further down. There is a new section of lakes open for fishermen in the Canada section of Jackson County. In oase you do not know where this sec tion is located, it is on the left prong of Tuckaseigee river; turn ing left at Tuckaseigee and trav eling back in the hills. The four lakes that are situated in this sec tion are called East Fork Lakes, and reports reaching us via Rich ard Gross, District Fisheries Biol ogist of the State Wildlife Com mission, is thai this is a paradise for trout, especially three of the lakes. The first lake, or lower one, call ed Cedar Cliff Lake, is open for fishing twelve months of the year. Due to .the number of warm water fish, mainly small-mouth bass and rock bis88, this lake is not desig nated as trout water. There are quite a few trout in the lake, how ever, but no trout stamp is neces sary to Ash. The next lake, Bear Creek, con tains some 475 acres and is 200 feet deep and has plenty of spawn ing streams leading into the lake. This lake has mainly rainbow and brook trout, and is designated as trout waters and trout regula tions are observed here. ? number of nice trout have been taken from this lake, which is generally clear all the time. On above Bear Creek Lake are Wolf Creek and Tennessee Creek Lakes which are good trout waters. These lakes have not been Ashed too heavily because there are no boats available at any of them. If you plan to fish from a boat you will have to furnish your own. There is plenty of shoreline for the ones that would like to try their luck in that manner. Mr. Gross showed us a "contrap tion" which he has used to some degree of success to lure the trout into striking. The woven leader was some four feet in length and contained four spinners about the size of a teaspoon spaced about eight or ten inches apart. Tied onto to the end of this was a regu lar gut leader about three feet in length with a hook attached. Gross explained that these spec ial lures were not used very much in this section, but were the thing in the State of Washington and in Canada. He used a crawler for bait. To use this rig you troll with the lure about fifty to sixty feet behind the boat. Last Sunday he and two other anglers braved the rain to try their luck and boated 25 rainbow and one nice brown, with most of the fish being caught on this special lure. Frankly, it is a funny looking thing, but if it brings results that is what iishermen are looking for. I The contraption ts called Cow Bells, and if you are interested in one of the things, contact Mr. Gross on Route 1 Waynesville. He can tell you where and how to get one of them. We are planning, weather per mitting, to try Hiawasee Lake near Murphy, this weekend. We have not had the pleasure of catching a pike, and hope to remedy this situation this weekend. We will give you a report on this lake next week. Here's hoping that the weather will take a change for the better so keep on fishing. J 1 1 2,600 Trout Are Stocked b Five Haywood Streams Approximately 2.400 trout have been stocked in Haywood County streams In the past week and an other'1,500 will be stocked in the next several days, according to Earl Williams, county wildlife protector. Mr. Williams listed the streams stocked and the number of trout put in as: Jonathan Oeek, 050: Big East Fork, 450; West Fork and Lit tle East Fork, 600; Aliens Creek 400, and Plott Creek. 200. He said that each of these streams was stocked with about the same number of trout in March, and will be stocked several more times between now and the first of August. Scheduled to be stocked soon for the second time this year are Hur ricane Creek. 350; Mt. Sterling, 500; Cold Springs, 500, and Big Creek. 150, Mr. Williams said that rainbow, brown, and brook trout have been used in the stocking operations. Home Crowds Help EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP ? Michigan State University basket ball coach Forddy Anderson says the guy cheering from the bleach er seat often means the difference between victory and defeat for the home team. "A crowd helps you win," said Anderson. "If a team goes out on the floor and sees a full house ? unintentionally or not ? they play a better game. It's not the same as when you play before Just a few relatives and loyal fans." Flock Of Fouls CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) ?Bob Petterson, a Louisa high school basketball player, figures he owns some kind of record for prsonal fouls. He committed 12 in one night. i Petterson made five fouls id a junior varsity game. Because the Louisa team had only five players, the opposing coach allowed Petter son to remain in the game. Petter son made five more fouls. Then he played briefly in the varsity contest and committed two more fouls. RjookieyvJ StarsUlci NORMSIEBERN AP Newsfeatures Although he injured both knees in a St. Petersburg exhibition game, Norm Siebern was chosen by the writers with the New York Yankees as the most promising rookie of the American League champions. He is 22, a native of St. Louis, bats left, throws right and hits left handers well. It could be that he will be the regular Yankee left fielder although the chances are that he will share the post with Elston Howard. As a service returnee, Siebern will not count in the 25-pIayer limit. He broke in with Mc Alester, Okla. in Class D in 1951. He hit .324. In 1952 he hit .281 for Joplin, Mo., in Class C. In 1953 he batted .281 for Birmingham in AA. He then went into the service. Rivalry First EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) ? Michigan State Uiversity Coach Duffy Daughtery told a luncheon club: "I would rather see our team beat the University of Michigan than go to the Rose Bowl three years in a row." MSU lost to Michigan last sea son, but represented the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl. Way nesville Drops First Baseball Game Of '56 Season To Hendersonville, 4-3 Th<* Wivn*?vi1lf> Mnnnfraino*>i*? ? ? . . 5 tfoKte i , 7W4V gi *VP. 0F? OF THE B'S ^ _<* I QUEWOAS &, J^ Wl Ulb\ 'MAT^ /// STORE v/^y^Sr] ) FOR THE.PlTCFlAO IwkA. S>/ P/6 TFREB ?' THE/ WOi / 7A^aP?k OFLY46/AI If CO/A PARED fj /%; W WITH A GZ-W/ASff / \ \ AVERAGE TRE "V V J PREVIOUS 4 SEAtofc. /9F5 W ^4 $ /V? |' /*? 7R/0E RAP AO 20-6AM WPiAi AH OTHER POSER /* 'WHO'S OH F/RST P' ,/c HERTZ /SH'T UP TO IT? THERE ARB PLEHTY OP hopeful* oh ha hp HO Pi HQ TO HOOK THE/R SP'KE* /HTO TH? 3AO. 4[AH /fM% : - * ? Cheaper By The Can MEDFORD, Ore. (AP) ? Sports fishermen find the price of sal mon high in these parts. The Oregon Game Commission reports that fishermen spent $1, 300,000 in a single year on the Lower Rogue River in fishing for salmon. That brought the price of every salmon caught to $102. Prefers Deer To People CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP)? A hunter from Buckhannon wrote the Conservation Department: "My party got a 100 per cent kill of deer last year in Hardy County, but found the people very unco operative." Use the Want Ada for results. WAYNESVILLE 1 0 i \i j FIRST SHOW AT DUSK ? Last Time Tonight, i THURSDAY, APRIL 19 DOUBLE FEATURE! ?w ?*? -*** ' ** ~ + ?< ** "CONQUEST 1 OF SPACE" < (A Space Thriller V In Technicolor) J ? ALSO ? Selected Short Subject* ?PLUS? L m -tmc .awn i ??***> ' ? ? FRIDAY, APRIL 20 "APPOINTMENT IN HONDURAS" (In Color) Starring GLENN FORD ANN SHERIDAN rLUS 5 COLOR CARTOONS I I 1 I ? SATURDAY, APRIL 21 DOUBLE FEATURE! i ^ ***&&! ZACNARY CAROLE JM SCOTT MATHEWS 4JA L ? PLUS ? "BOWERY TO BAGDAD" Starring BOWERY BOYS ? SUNDAY. MONDAY & TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 23 & 24 I It- I 1 TlSUylSIQH I Hrtckock... the master of . suspense brings yen ^ his greatest ~ engine AS# ASM AM! I iwi*? w f?ntCfi 10 ^ f^aatsks^M. ^jgnfT IKHNKOIO* GRANTKEUY PARK Theatre Program LAST TIME TODAY THURSDAY, APRIL 19 "SPY CHASERS" Starring LEO GORCEY and the BOWERY BOYS ?PLUS? Selected Short Subjects ? FRIDAY, APRIL 20 DOUBLE FEATURE! "THE BIG COMBO" v. Starring ? I CORNEL WILDE ? BRIAN DONLEVY ? ALSO ? ABBOTT and COSTELLO Starring in "LITTLE GIANT" ? SATURDAY, APRIL 21 DOUBLE FEATURE! "BACK TO GOD'S COUNTRY" ? (In Color) ; Starring ROCK HUDSON STEVE COCHRAN ?ALSO? ABBOTT & COSTELLO Starring In "THE LITTLE GIANT" ? SUN? 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