OCR Text |
Show 4 - int bllUtn IIIWllMHIlf WWI ti, Bobcats Lose Obituaries I ' ' Owen A. Kirby Surviving are his widow and the following sons and daughters: Dr. Albert Juan Munk. San Itafael, Calif.; John E. Allen, Benson; Mrs. LaKcne Nash, North Logan, and Mrs. LaThair (Verlye) Pedersen, Logan. A daughter, Phyllis, preceded him in death. Also surviving are IS two greatgrandchildren; grandchildren; two sisters, Amanda Smith and Sophia Torbcnson, Logan. Friends called at the mortuary Tuesday and Wednesday. Burial was in the Logan City Cemetery with John E. Allen, a son, dedicating the grave. The family suggested in lieu of flowers, contributions be made to the Primary Children's Hospital. Memorial funeral services for Owen A. Kirby, 70, were conducted Saturday at 1:00 p.m. in the Hyde Park Second Ward Chapel, with Bishop Jack Nixon in The outlook is rather dim as fur as the Bobcats Region One tournament hoies go setback by, after a 22-1- Weber last week. The teams offensive performance was noteworthy but they just couldn't get by the tough Weber team. In region play the Sky View team stands 2 with three teams in the region holding belter scores. Currently Bonneville stands and Weber and Roy are both 2-- 5-- 3-- Sky View will travel to Box Elder this week to meet the Bees at 1:30 p.m. The game is being played today because of the noon dismissal time on Friday for the deer hunt. The following week is Sky View Homecoming and the Cats will meet Roy on home ground Friday. ffoTfla&cUtKCtit Young College and from Utah State University. He had been active in church and civic affairs, and in scouting. He was a high priest, and a temple officiat-o- r and had been a counselor in the Hyde Park bishopric. Also, he had been MIA superintendent, and a stake missionary. He was recipient of the Silver Beaver Award in 1971, for his service to scouting. Mr. Kirby had been a school teacher for 39 years. Surviving are his widow of Hyde Park; four daughters and four sons, Mrs. Orval (Kathleen Sorensen, Bountiful; Mrs. Bob (Elaine) McMurdio, Hyrum; Mrs. Don (Carol) Johnson, Hyde Park; Mrs. Wenden (Laura) Waite, Moreland, Idaho; Sherwin Kirby, Hyde Park; Dale Z. j .Kjrbyi .. Saratoga, Calif.; Lynn Kirby, Salt Lake City; Vance N. Kirby, Los Angeles; 30 grandchildren; one Friends called at Hall Mortuary Friday and Saturday at the Relief Society room at the Hyde Park Chapel prior to services. Burial was in the Hyde Park City Cemetery with dedication of the grave by Sherwin Kirby, a son. great-grandchil- d. lx-a- 20-2- d. Girls Play include two sites two different headquarter buildings and later on a ranger's home. Also to be constructed will be two lakes. The site of the proposed reservation is one to behold in its fall finery. Everyone from the Scout executives, Scouts themselves to volunteers of the Preston National Guard were busy last Saturday putting tile pipe in the freshly-du- g trenches. It is hoped the pipe lines can be completed this fall so that water can be used for tree planting. Glen Tanner, a member of the Preston South Stake LDS high council has offered to donate some 1,000 evergreen trees to the reservation from his tree farm in Whitney. Tanner said the trees are I mm one foot to three and f feet tall and have !ooii grown from seedlings. He will enlist Boy Scout help p with one-hal- , in digging and them. transplanting H s hoped that the tiisl frUlj scouts will be able to go to All work on the pipe-- laying )he reservation next year on basis. camp-servicproject was donated. 18 volunteers from the No ,, t speaks of the Ins tional Guard offered many nature of the spot tunc welcome helping hands last noting that the old Pony Saturday. Express route went through t the canyon. He said hiking WATER FROM the will be established tu systems will also help fill two trails Wilderness and to the lakes which will provide an Camp Cave as well as Alpine setting deluxe for Minnetonka Bloomington Lake. future scouters. three-quarte- of a by Paul Woodbury Conservation Officer Division of Wildlife Resources SCHOLES and. Zollinger are as enthusiastic about the reservation as they can be. They were in on the planning for some time. Rodney Jensen, Preston, a member of the Preston South Stake presidency, is project chairman for the facility. The reservation includes some 300 acres with 160 having been bought from the Hulls and another 140 from the Forest Service in an exchange of property transaction. The camp unit to the right of the valley will have a gravity-flosprinkling and culinary water system. A tank has huge 10,000-gallo- n been placed at the top of the northern extreme of the reserve for water for the remainder of the camp. It will have to be pumped from a spring about one-hato e to OURllGHTEST CHAIN SAW OUR LOWEST (DICE EVER! w AND Newton girls participating Saturday begins Utahs most popular season of the year. Each year over 200,000 deer hunters descend upon the hills in quest of a mighty mule buck. This year will meet Utahns with the most restricted statewide season in over thirty years that being a buck only hunt. Cache area herds are up somewhat from last year but are still at a low number and finding a buck will take some doing. Most of the roadside deer have been taken in previous years and so a guy is going to have to get out of his and get out in the bush where the ole' moss horns are holed up. Hopefully by the Saturday opener we will get some weather so a hunter can distinguish fresh signs; if we don't, then the camping ought to be real enjoyable. The dry conditions will affect the hunt somewhat, with the deer seeking water areas and staying within a few miles of them. We are not finding them high as usual but in the bottoms of draws and canyons where there is some water and a little green feed. The dryness of the area makes it ever so noisy and we might find the bucks moving out way ahead of stalker. The buck only regulation will bring some problems as it has with the bull only elk hunt, and that is the leaving of evidence of sex. In other words the regulations insist that carcasses coming out of the hills must show that the animal was a buck. That means that either the head must be attached to. the body of the animal or else if he is skinned, then some part of the. sex .organs must be attached to the area of the carcass where they normally belong. This takes just a little more time with the cleaning and skinning process, but if you're one who likes to take the head off it will save you possibly losing your deer and paying the judge a visit. Also important is the regulation on transporting other people's deer. This can be legally done if the person transporting the animal has in his possession the license that belongs to the owner of the deer and a note that has on it the following : 1 ) name of person transporting, 2) name of person who tagged the deer, 3) description of buck, 4) place and date of kill, 5) origin and destination of transporting, and the owners signature. This regulation is for those who like to take someone else's license and go get them a deer. A few other regulations that are worth mentioning are proper tagging; make sure all three appropriate punches are punched out. The only legal handguns for deer are .357, .41, .44 and .454 magnums with barrel lengths not less than four inches. Loaded guns in or on vehicles are always a problem and care should be taken here. Hunting hours are hour after hour before sunrise to one-hafrom one-hasunset. So, know the regulations, go prepared for any type of weather, be careful with your fire, and good luck. region one girls athletic event of the season were Ann Sutherland and Mary Ellen Jones. The Bobcat gals finished third in the region one tennis meet held in Ogden. Ruth Hobson who is in charge of the girl's athletic program at Sky View received a championship effort from Ann Sutherland in the No. 3 singles category. Ann defeated Ruth Marks of Bonneville for the crown. Mary Cardon finished second in No. 1 singles. The double team of Mary Ellen Jones and Marilyn Bodily won the consolation championship in No. 1 doubles. lf Top dairy cow $550; Good to choice dairy cows and held for Albert Jacob Munk, 94, at the Nelson Memorial Funeral Chapel in Logan Wednesday noon under the direction of Bishop Loy W. Watts of Logan Fifth Ward. Mr. Munk died at his residence, 264 North Third East Street, Sunday of causes incident to age. He was born in Logan Sept. 17, 1880, a son of Hans Jorgen and Larscne Larsen Munk. He married Emma Pearl Price of Pendleton, Ore., July 6, 1914. This marriage later was solemnized in the Logan LDS Temple. She died, and he then married Leone Roundy Allen in December of 1927 in the Logan LDS Temple. Mr. Munk attended Logan City Schools and Utah State University. He assisted his father and brothers homestead in Benson and also worked in the lumber industry and for the Union Pacific Railroad. He operated a dry farm with his brothers in Howell and Blue Creek, and later moved back to the family homestead in Benson where he lived until 1957 when he retired and moved to Ixigan. A high priest in Iogan Fifth Ward, Mr. Munk had been active in the church. He was genealogy chairman in Benson for many years, president of the high priest quorum, and a temple 258-2S- Match HOT DOGS lb. Smithfield Livestock Auction Funeral services were HEATING Lewiston, Utah lf in the Sky View first official lf Albert Munk milCL away in Tennis in graduated from Brigham The hope's of Boy Scouters young and old are beginning r to fruit in the colorful fall scenery of the Hull Valley Ranch area in Cub River Canyon. Iasl week some 5 men and boys were on the site of the new Boy Scout Reservation of the Cache Valley Council BSA putting in water lines that will provide the g element to not only vegetation for the new reserve but for thirsty Boy Scouts of the future. William Scholes, Smith-fielPresident of the Council, and Floyd Zollinger, College Ward, past president. were at the site last Saturday helping put in the first hefty tile pipe which will carry water from two springs nearby. THE 1111.1. Valley Reservation when complete will charge. Mr. Kirby died Wednesday a Logan hospital. He was born July 24, 1904, in Hyde Park, a son of Albert and Caroline Daines Kirby. He married Edna Zollinger Sept. 3, 1924, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mr. Kirby had attended school in Cache County, and to Weber heifers $400 to 6175: Smaller common dairy cows $275 to $375; High yielding heifer- ettes $26 to $29.50; Utility and commercial cows $20 to $23.10; Canner and cutter cows $16 to $19.25; Bulls $27 Hereford stock $25 to $31.50; T-BO- STEAKS NE UNK SPECIALS THRU OCT. 18 - 19 steer Here- ford stock heifer calves to $27.50; Holstein to 500 lbs. $18 to $24.25; Holstein steers 500 to XK) lbs. $18.25 to $23.25. $21.50 steers Hogs $31.50 to $35.90; Newborn bull calves $10 to $30 per head. to $31.60. calves Choice fed steers None; Choice fed heifers None; Fed Holstein steers $25 to $28.50; Holstein heifers 300 to 500 lbs. $20 to $30: Holstein heifers 500 to 900 lbs. $21 to $27.50: Lambs $28 to $32.50: 99 300 Market: All feeders selling a little stronger. Meat cows 25 cents to 50 cents lower. Good quality dairy cows selling steady. Poor quality cows hard to sell. ATTENTION HUNTERS! LET US CUT YOUR CUSTOM i Nov. WILD 9. .Jr 1974 (uL.lS MEAT Professional care given Check our competitive prices WE WILL ALSO CUSTOM CUT YOUR FDDSl BEEF. PORK OR MUTTON 1S4 No. 6th West Logan 752 9855 YMEflJ - Diruuniun od family WOODBURY'S CO. Paper Plates Seiwici COUNTRY SHOPPER PROVIDENCE - LEWISTON 79 r: Cortifrcih Walnuts Pecans 12 Oi. 12 oi. 99 99 J |