OCR Text |
Show ' Tuesday, April 24, 1958 THE DRAGERTON TRIBt'KE f i I Tax Three hunt and harvest seasons each many years. In recent years the marshes or nearby marshes in sis ing banded in Labrador. banding of geese has been accent- ter states. This information is the Each band is numbered and year. ed to better determine habits and Seven million birds, representAll 7,000,000 of these records are how much hunting pressure this year to year key to setting the lists instructions to notify the Sering more than 600 species, have on file in the banding office of the prime target of the waterfowl bag limit. vice or other banding agency. been banded for identification pur- U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service at maincan afford and still Some unusual and interesting Bands are returned to the finders family poses since the turn of the cen- Laurel, Maryland. The Service is tain adequate brood stock. facts from the banding records wishing to keep them for souventury, according to the department recorder for all such banding recThis pnase of the Utah banding show one pintail duck banded in irs. of the interior, ords and also sets the final regu- program, through return of bands North Dakota was killed in South Continued success of the Banding records tell the story of lations covering the waterfowl taken from birds by hunters and America; another banding program is depintail banded bird .migrations and longevity. As hunts in each state and flyway. 90 shows cent of that in California on was Pacia shot others, per pendent upon the cooperation of this story concerns migratory watIn Utah, the department of fish the Canadian geese taken in Utah fic Island 4,500 miles away just the persons finding them turning erfowl, these records form an im- and game' has three months, later; another was them in to the state or federal cooperatedf in the are of the Great Basin portant key in determining thd waterfowl --banding program for brooded and raised on the states killed in England 21 days after be Seven Mon Dirds, . im-ponta- sub-specie- nt s, AS i ! ? : 1 On 1924 Charles H. Winn started as a brakeman at the Bingham Mine of the then Utah Copper Company. Today, as a locomotive engineer at the mine, he still is helping to produce copper. What started as a job 32 years ago, has turned into a career at Kennecott Copper Corporation. And two more generations of Charles H. Winn's family are following in his footsteps. His son, Charles E., joined the Kennecott family in 1951 when he started as a trackman at die mind He is a dispatcher today. And his grandson, Kenneth W. Foster, started with Kennecott in 1950 as a trackman. He is now a payroll clerk. The like father, like son history of the Winn family is repeated so often at Kennecott it can well be called a tradition. In all, 691 men at the mine, mill and refinery are die sons of Kennecott employees. And hundreds more are related in other as brothers, uncles, nephews, cousins and ways This family allegiance to Kennecott tells only a part of the story of careers in copper. Another chapter was unfolded recendy, when Kennecott honored 206 employees who had comyears of continuous service and 51 other pleted employees who had completed 30 years of service. in-law- s. Of Kennecott's 6,500 employees, 1,019, or nearly have served 20 or more years, a total of one-sixt- h, more than 30,000 years! With so many long-tim- e employees and father-so- n teams serving Kennecott, it must follow that the Kennecott tradition is careers, not just jobs $ t s A Good-- Neighbor Helping to Build a Better Utah C |