CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — Two bills that sponsors say would protect Wyoming's domestic sheep industry against possible federal land grazing reductions are advancing in the state Legislature. The Wyoming House of Representatives voted Thursday to give preliminary approval to a bill that would codify in state law a plan that state agencies have used for the past 10 years to resolve possible conflicts between wild and domestic sheep. The House also gave preliminary approval to another bill that would endorse removal of a herd of bighorns from an area of the Bridger-Teton National Forest if the federal government proposes to cut domestic sheep operations there.