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Show Sportsman's Picture Well Received By Utah Audiences ') f. ',4;-' JIM BONO Thousands have been turning out to see Jim Bond's monumental monumen-tal mule deer picture which was filmed entirely In the beautiful mountains of Utah. 'This Utah deer picture has been well received." Jim told us, "and I am very happy about it. I have shown the pictures In Oregon, Ore-gon, Washington, Idaho, Montana Mon-tana and Alberta, Can. Everywhere Every-where I left people thinking about colorful Utah. And I have been showing this picture In Utah for several weeks now and I have received such good comments com-ments that it makes me wish I lived here." The mule deer picture starts out with the "tagging" of tiny fawns on the Oak Creek study area. Three tags are put Into the ears of each fawn, those numbered num-bered tags to stay with the deer all Its life. "It's an amazing story we learn from watching these tagged deer," commented a veteran woodsman, "and some of. the things I will tell you are unbelievable but true." The story moves rapidly. There is suspense as a huge mountain lion stalks a deer, a very rare picture Indeed. There are some of the most outstanding pictures of big bucks ever brought to the screen, some with 4(1-Inch antlor spreads. There are so many big bucks running around In one se. quence that Jim said. "It's the grandest slight I ever saw in all my years In the mountains." While Jim's r0-mintite deer oleture is the featr there are some 4.1 minutes of Nrth America's Amer-ica's finest flshinr. From Montana's Mon-tana's Madison and Mtamtrt rivers comes a mo:t Interesting nlcture of what that stste has to offer the fly and spin f'sherman. And from the water-wilderness of vast unper Saskatchewan comes an ac'in packed coW film of great 5 and 30-pounders flighting flight-ing away at 4-ounce rods and 6 pound test lines. This picture was sponsored by the Saskatchewan Saskatche-wan government and Jim spent about a month In that . north country. |