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Show are available at Day's Murray ad- Music, 4914 So. State, with mission $1.50 for adults and $1 In Certified Murray Softball Circuit Out-Fro- Turning back a rally by the Lucky 13's in Tuesday night's softball play here, Certified Packaging remained unbeaten and clung to the circuit lead. The Packers copped an 6 verdict in a game that had all the earmarks of a routine win before the losers erupted with six runs in the fourth and fifth frames. J&N Body and County Merchants moved into a tie for the runnerup slot by copping Tuesday wins. The Bodymen nipped and the MerBlair Photo chants routed Taylorsvllle 5th, MURRAY. late-inni- ng 8-- 3- -2 11-- 3. Certified will have a soft- - touch assignment in next Tues game at 8:40 day's wind-u- p 2 Butterfield hurls one shutout of Olympus on In mates afternoon Murray park. Spartan Monday gave strong support, garnering eight hits and playing errorless ball in the state quarterfinal. DIAMOND GEM . . . Murray pitcher Ron 4-- 0 down the hopper enroute to a three-hi- t, against last place Taylorsvllle. Merchants and J&N will duel off second place in the 6:30 opener and Blalrs meet Lucky 13's in the 7:35 tilt. Certified got away to a 7lead after three innings against the 13's in the Tuesday clash. Then pitcher Bill Shaffer ran into a streak of wildness, giving up four walks and a hit as the losers closed the gap to in the fifth. At that stage. Cert ified choked off the rally, scored again In the sixth and sealed the issue. Lou Holdener and Jim Waters had two hits each for the victors; Merlin Drlggs led the 13's with a homer and two RBI's. Merchants piled up a 10-- 0 lead in the first three frames of the middle game and didn't get a runner home until the top of the sixth, when they tallied three. Bry Gunderson gave up only three hits while twirling the victory. Loser Ron Wallace was touched for 15 blows. Among them were homeruns by Stan and Jim Martin In the third, when the winners scored five times. Grit Young had a perfect in the merchant attack and Earl Mulcock, Jim Martin and Gunderson had two apiece. Five errors by Blair Photos -0 . IAOIE ADVERTISER MUUAI (UTAH Thuriday, May 18, 1967 son. He faced situations with runners on base in nearly every inning. A major threat in the third frame saw Olympus runners on second and third with none out. While Spartan fielders handled the first two outs, Butterfield set the last Titan down on strikes, to snuff out the Olympus scoring attempt. 1 1 7- -6 Church Notes Active Week , J - yir ... AT FIRST SAFE AT LAST! Spartan first sack- er Dick Johnson awaits throw from hurler Ron Butterfield in pickof f ? v , , attempt of Olympus baserunner., t - , , Murray Mine To Face I ligliland In Activities sche duled for members of the con gregation of Christ Lutheran church include a women's Bible study class today at the home of Mrs. Herbert (Mildred) Zafft, 6062 So. State. Track and field events will be held for all Utah Lutheran sch ools at Christ Lutheran school in Murray tomorrow (Friday). Students from all schools will be given an opportunity to par ticipate in at least one event. A special dinner honoring new confirmands Is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. on Sunday. Rounding out the week will be the presentation of an op eretta, "Tom Sawyer, by Ch rist Lutheran students in the fifth through eighth grades. Applications for enrollment for the 1967-6- 8 school year are now being accepted by Den nis Llndeman, principal of the school. Interested persons may 4. contact him at MURRAY. ...t' pC With a 4- -0 shutout ing of Ron Butterfield and timeon Monday, ly hitting by Spartan mainstays Murray high's Spartans vaulted gave Coach Bud Campbell's Into the state high school base- Murray lads the quarterfinal ball semifinals, pitting them win and mythical Region Three against 19C6 state champ High- championship. An estimated 300 land tomorrow (Friday). to 400 persons occupied nearly MURRAY. . , Tomorrow's Murray - High- every available vantage point to land tussle is slated for Derks watch Monday's contest, played under Ideal weather conditions. Field, starting at 4 p.m. Consistently masterful pitch- Butterfield, the senior southpaw who has paced his Spartan mates to 11 wins In 12 games this season, limited Olympus batsmen to a mere three hits 1 and up 14 strikeouts. Murray, after three scoreless innings, came through with base-knoc- ck ks SALT LAKE. Six graduates of high schools in the Green Sheet area are among 50 Un iverslty of Utah students elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national ' scholastic society. The students and their alma a pair of tallies In the fourth. maters Include Barrle B. Stra- A double down the right field chan, Murray high; Robert J. line by shortstop Dave Shaw Taylor, Cyprus highs Judith sent Mike Ogrln and Kelly Bills Howe, Jeffrey J. Slirola, James across the plate, after the Ti- R. Despaln and Marl Ann Bill tan pitcher had Issued a walk hymer, all of Granite hlgh.'All are seniors except Miss Bill- and hit a batter. The Spartans added another in hymer, who Is a Junior. the fifth, with Bills and Dennis Davles rapping out back-t- o Rotary Safety Honor back singles; Bills scoring on Goes. To Jordan High a single by Jon Winget. In the MURRAY. Perennial winner last of the fifth, winget pres Jordan high last night (Wederved the shutout, making a was presented the 1966- diving catch from his left field nesday) 67 safety trophy by members position. A one-ba- se hit by Davles in of the Murray Rotary club. The Rotarlans, sponsors of the sixth gave Murray an insurance run. The blow came the program, designated Jord after singles by Shaw and Bills an as the winner of competition high and Dick Johnson getting a free In which 10 for best the traffic vie schools a hit after by pitched being trip records. ball. Included hits eight Murray's at the plate " a perfect by Bills, two apiece by Shaw and Davles, plus one by Winget. The Spartans played errorless ball afield, while Olympus fielders were guilty of two mis cues. Only three Murray batters " went down via the strikeout WORN route. not a of was bed All roses' ) ALL for Butterfield In racking up ) IN 'V his seventh shutout of the sea- - it 'it- - Pondfoton Til O fit t Sportswear SI at CMS- - ncnn CUthfji (linn 1 4173 So. State in Murray important game in Tuesday's windup. The clubs were even in hits, three each. The Body-mscored first in the third when Gary Nichols laced a triple with a mate aboard. The winners added two more in the sixth on a pair of walks and an error for a 0 lead. Blair's made a belated surge in the bottom of the final frame, scoring twice on two walks, an error and Dick Olson's single. Kay Bills, the winning hurlen 3-- er, whiffed three, walked two. Dick Read, on the hill for last year's state ASA champs, also struck out three, but walked the same number. Area Singers To Perform In 'W Program and SALT LAKE. Several persons residing in the Green Sheet area will be participants in an 8 p.m. choral music program on Wednesday at Kingsbury Hall on the U. of U. campus. Scheduled to perform are the Chorale and University-Civi- c the University of Utah Symphony Orchestra. Guest artist will be Thomas East, tenor and new ce at the U." Among area residents with the choral group are sopranos, JeNell Ashcraft, 4011 So. 300 East; Anita Cameron, 520 E. 6170 South; Nancy Lamb, 6223 So. 440 East; Mary O'Nell, 4E. Regal St. Tenors performing include Richard Pearce, 3696 So. 5725 West; Preston Shock-le- y, 4075 So. 3080 West; Frank Wilcox, 5770 So. 920 East. Others include Margaret Weaver, 2865 W. 3835 South, an alto; Frank Keele, 4881 W. Valley View Dr.; Lawrence Ashcraft, 4011 So. 300 East and Wendell C. Day, 4924 Poplar St., In the bass section. Tickets for the performance Sonotone's smallest hearing aid is worn all in the ear ideal aliOur New Hit COMPARII Group Elects Murray Lady f mil Camatary rlUINCCK OUR ONLY BUSINESS ..and we know our Mrs. George W. (Jessie) Diamond, 5791 Nena Way, has been Installed as new president of the Salt Lake chapter of the 'Sweet Adelines. Installation ceremonies for the harmonizing groups were held at the World. Motor Hotel. Mrs. Clyde (Loreli) Dunkley, outgoing president, served as She was installation officer. MURRAY. business) Having trouble getting Auto Insurance? ; SEE USI alto file a We'll Form SR 22 with the State for you STttfS-Dlspla- ytd in the process! Modern Showroom J. Mcm start at $25.00 Wr deliver and install laiy Tarmt- -3 ynart to pay Fully guarantaad L0 JENSEN GRANITE MARBLE BRONZE AGENCY Nowar Vasa INI.0"" 79 rar FIREPLACE EQUIPMENT ; 4960 So. "tamar tatlifactlaflJ State - MURRAY 6095 So. State VBO CERAMIC Till, MARHI BANKAMERICARD Call 266-793- 66-705- 2. 3 FULLY AUTOMATIC TWO MINUTE CAR WASH ALL YOU DO IS SIT IN YOUR CAR WHILE THE "WASH HORSE" DOES THE WORK cars chamois Dried SONET weighs just onetenth of an ounce with battery. It, th fur WgM Into llipf See for yourself FREE CAR WASH MAYFAIR 6261 South State 6377 South Sraro 6385 South State ONLY with purchase of 15.00 10 purchase .Of ..ftO ximmi a MHO SAIT mf 90k. UKI cm t. 3rd So364.9171 rw Mr, - WMMt, "in- - of gat GILL-WEL- "ft, SxdAUX40u with f ollowing Merchants AMERICAN HOME CENTO visit or write V 20, and 21, 1967 STEVE'S SERVICE STATION FREE replica. Phone non-operati- the bourbon for you get FREE May 19, nd outside cords, tubes or Aires If you hare a ta$te tor the outdoors, irc're made SPECIAL i need better hearing. The ll'MM IS MAY 19, 20, and 21 who! (or active men and women I Sweet Adeline , All ISO St 00 Mrs. George Diamond MONUMENTS OF polished 17 Manwrtol Day Maf 30th OPENING of outdoor. How about you? responsibilities the skills he needed to make the transition from civilian to Coast Guardsman. artlst-in-reslden- HUNDREDS rm- - t LS VEMD - A- WASH 15,00 purchase ' m t? ' n, at-s- ea A sj XPR' Wil-so- WBBA In The Service TO You'll find Cabin Still boldly mallow, distinctly hearty. This is the. winning difference of our unique Sour Mash Bourbon. For the man asm STIT ifl "BWftH IkD richness who enjoys the Members of the board of directors for 1967-6- 8 include Mrs. H. Ward (Delores) Mrs. Mirriam Cope and Mrs. Rulon (ShirrlenejNichol. Others are Mrs. Morris D. (Mary Gail) Stark, Mrs. Edith Nickolson, Mrs. James P. (je. an) Hickman, Mrs. Lucille Action in the ArLeague is scheduled to begin here next week, with all four teams seeing action of the during the first two days season. With games set to start at and Mrs. Dunkley. 6 p.m., the Vaughn Soffe team Monon will play Trail Sports will day, while Valley Meats Manface Berns on Tuesday. GRADUATED. Seaman Ap. agers of the teams are Joe VicchrlUl, Soffe's; Joe Shear- prentice Fred E. Cory, son of Mrs. LaRue O. Cory, 396 Wal-U- n ing, Trail; Herm Lundberg, McAve., Murray, has graduated Valley Meats and Terry from eight weeks of basic trainClelland, Berns. ing at the Coast Guard Recruit Training Center at Alameda, Calif. Guided by experienced Coast Guard senior petty officers during his training, he studied the fundamentals of such military and naval subjects as seamanship, infantry drill, shipboard procedures and survival techniques. The basics of military customs and courtesies, and familiarization with the Coast Guard's mission aaEait UrMii surer. MURRAY. GRANITE PARK. Auditions for the Granite district senior youth symphony will be held at 3 p.m. on May 24 and May 25 at Granite high, 3305 So. 500 East, announced Ormand Weight, district instrumental music supervisor. Students eligible to audition are sophomores, Juniors, or seniors who are registered for band and orchestra for the 1967-6- 8 school year. R. Neil Weight, band director at Granite, Is chairman of the symphony. High School Grads Arlington Loop Sets Openers On Monday cost the defending champs an lington Audition Dates Set For Youth Symphony Phi Beta Kappa Taps, 6 Green Sheet Area for students. ty is C" 5 racked back-to-ba- 266-871- State Semis; Olympus Blanked of Olympus here lle nt Others assuming office were Miss Una Pickett, vice president, Mrs. Richard (Elizabeth) Roberts, secretary, Mrs. Harold (Sandra) Petersen, trea- 117 East 6281 Scutfc (Mayfair Shopping Center, 6400 South) |