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Show H B I j BIRDS COME IN I TO THE CITY. Residents on the bench, not a great h j distance from the heavy brush on the fl foothills, report quail and robins ap- H J ji earing in great numbers in their H l' A lover of birds telephones the H i Standard to urge the people to feed H j! the birds. The feathered little Strang- H 'i ers have been driven out of the wil- H ? lows and underbrush of the deep can- H iV yons by the heavy fall of snow which H has cut off their source of food, and B ' ' hunger has forced them in to the city. 1 Hobins arc to be seen in all parts (' of Ogden. They are not harbingers of 5 spring, but visitors appealing for some- j thing to eat, B These birds prey on insects and H 5 are the farmer's friend They are a H j rt part of the beautiful in nature. Be- B cause of their usefulness and attrac- 1 tiveness, they should be preserved by 1 ' t being fed when the deep snow thrcat- H ( ens their destmction. H I ' The children should be encouraged H to help save the hungry birds from H the mountains. |