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Show - April 5 Page Ten THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD "i 7 --iv- ; : T of 1.48 birds was also listed as a .. ,v in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He preceded her in death, Aug. 25, 1945. She is survived by eight children 30 grandchildren, and 21 great grandchildren, three brothers. Freeman C. Bird, Ma-pleto-n; Elmer Bird, Provo and Merrill W. Bird, Ogden. t !oII;:r of Iced vcno dies; Lurid here Funeral services were held Tuesday in Spanish Fork, for Mrs. Jennie Bird Hill, 77, a native of Mapleton, mother of Mrs. LaMar (Ruth) Weight of this city, who died at Sunset Manor Saturday of ailments Incident to age. Burial was in the Evergreen cemetery. Born at Mapleton, Dec. 15, 1884, she was the daughter of Charles Monroe and Abby Ann Whiting Bird. Her early years were spet in that community and she began her education in schools there. Later she at-tended the Brigham Young University, completing two-ye- ar requirement work for a teaching certificate. ' Active throughout her life in LDS church work she held ' various offices in ward and stake organizations. On May 8, 1912, she was married to Leonard Ailson Hill 7ne Old 7tin&i "What most of us need to get off our chest is our chin." for an average per hunter. The mourning dove, long! rated as the number one game bird across the nation, again ranked second-be- st in popu-larity with Utah hunters. The annual season last September found 15,210 hunters afield who bagged 128,068 doves for an average bag of 8.42 birds per hunter. The first open, season for grouse over the northern and eastern portions of the state s the department Tt"" season hunt saw tte J.4 ers afield bagging 1 a t 2,246 grouse of all spe an average bag of 2 per hunter. t Department spokesm,, C noted more than the u t terest in Hungarian t and quail hunting L : " The average bag on th-- $ flying birds amounted T t and 2.74 birds per hun,V i spectively. Total bird kill for '61 listed Utah upland game bird hunters last year enjoyed an-other above-averag- e hunt, de-partment of fish and game spokesmen said today, as fi-nal figures from field and har-vest questionnaire compilations were released. The records show that the wily rooster preasant was again rated top game bird by hunters in the Beehive State with 83,592 gunners bagging a total of 293,073 of the brightly' colored birds during the annual November shoot for an average of 2.86 birds per hunter. Hunting for the chukar par-tridge, newest upland game bird for Utah scatter-gunner- s again increased in popularity during 1961. The long season hunting for this bird last year attracted 14,963 hunters who bagged a total of 20,813 birds The annual producing .cap-acity of the woodland admin-istered by the Bureau of Land Management was more than one billion board feet of tim-ber in 1960. The standing volume of the commercial forest land admin-istered by the Bureau of Land Management in Alaska was 180 billion board feet in 1960. In Greece's Golden Age, Aristotle lectured to I vji privileged pupils while he paced the streets Vy J5t the Stoic school met in Stoa tane of the market- - ::: f k VV place among vendors, traders, and captive slaves s; , . weather permitting. -. V'i Sc- " 2,200 years later in the U.S., H ')- - """""P VlT pioneer children crowded in-- I -- " I T T to one-roo- log cabins, ( '"jT" I where a" grades shared a rttC ,JttAJMJIa5f'rV? 1 single teacher's attention ?Jl lit ll- -f rifles were kept close" at hand miB "lUUtlf'" " & in case ' sudden Indian at-- Today, more and more spa- - iJjIlniSi-- "" cious schools-ar- e designed & jr - with modern "curtain walls," 2 Ju PI i ' r incorporating such versatile IPfcyV f iwj materials as galvanized (zinc ATi'fli protected steel for safety, Wj?ffij?:&&" lasting strength, insulated I 4 U Y -- t&tj2.i'f; comfort, and economy. Vj The annual producing cap-acity of the commerical forest land administered by Bureau of Land Management in Alaska was 1.5 billion board feet of timber in 1960. Ilslcbry pis 125.0 egos A shipment of 125,000 cut-throat eggs from Pacific Coast-al sources was received recent-ly at the department of fish and game's Springville Hatch-ery. Slated for release into the recently treated waters of the Strawberry Reservoir after hatching, the shipment marks the first of several hundred thousand eggs which will be used to replenish the big Was-atch County water. In addition to eggs schedul-ed to arrive from commercial sources, native trout spawning stocks now being held at the Kamas and Whiterocks hatch-eries are anticipated to supply an additional 600,000 eggs. Initial stocking of the treat-ed waters was accomplished last fall with the release of 250,000 native trout finger-ling- s. Strawberry will remain closed to angling through 1962 with scheduled reopening of the waters set for June 1963. Only four million acres of the 33 million administered by the Bureau of Land Manage-ment ' in 13 Western States is classified as commercial forest lands. If you sowed seeds of Can-terbury bells last year and are going to transplant the young plants this spring where you want them to bloom in June, note carefully the exact green of the foliage. Plants with light green leaves will have white or pink flowers; those with dark-er green leaves will have blue ones. It helps to know this when you place the young plants. The Bureau of Land Man-agement sold 14.7 million board feet of timber from its Alaska public timberlands in 1960. More than $34 million in lumber was sold from the Ore-gon and California grant lands in 1960. ' FOR SALE: I 'NEW HOME - NEARLY READY FOR A FAMILY) j Carport with Storage Area Vz Baths Gas Heat k Hardwood Floors is Built-i- n Range and Oven Hf All Improvements Paid BEAUTIFUL TAN SPLIT BLOCK CONSTRUCTION - Only S5C0 Down t! it Contact Vernon Cook j; Day Phone HU Evening Phone HU .. SGANJ 3- - SHIRTMAKERT; I Mf CHECKED H S3 4' GINGHAM 3? 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