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Show Page Fourteen The Springville Herald July 30, 1970 ft 0 II? n. ft? 3 5 1 After placing second in North Springville Mustang League play, Ted's Glass won the city championship. On the team were, front, left to right, Victor Kemp, Ronnie Simmons, Barney Measom, Rony Miller, Scott Jensen, Mark Cox, Rodney Rodrlquez; second row, Alan Preston, Dale Holley, Bill Sumsion, Jeff Johnson, Brent Bird, Steve Barker; back row, Coach Robert Jensen, Ted Cox, sponsor; Rodney Fullmer, assistant coach. Absent were Ray Barker and Lane Christen-sen Christen-sen and Roger Frazier. JSSVrS irfTliSH3 ".: :-.U v;' VJ -bj I Polar King Team members who placed sec- ing; front, Steven VVeiser, Skip Curtis, Jay ond in Springville South Mustang League Mower, Dale Watkins, Mark Snow, Coach are, rear, left to right, Joe Wheeler, Evon Fred Huff. Clark, Paul Guff, David Burt, Kevin Gold- I JJrr - L f 1 J C 1 k ' ' A- L. f f III I I ' iimmikui The State Farm Team of the South Mustang Mus-tang League (9 and 10-year-olds) came in second for the city championship. Seated, front, Roger Barney, Kevin Hatfield, John Valentine, David Bona; standing, left to right, Coach Wayne Bona, Jeff Fisk, Kevin Titcomb, Robert Bona, Allan Miller and Coach Doyle Hatfield. Absent were Steven Shepherd, Richard Clegg, DonneU Jones and David Peterson. Sportsmen set directors' meet The Springville-Mapleton Wild Life Federation board of directors will meet at the home of President Marvin Warren this evening at 7:30 p.m. for the purpose of discussing improvements im-provements for the next annual outing. Also, plans for completion of the new bridge over Hobble Creek to the rifle range will be taken up at the meeting. The bridge is already under construction. con-struction. In connection with the meeting, there will be a steakfry and visiting in the back yard of the Warren home. A handy rule of thumb for estimating loss of speed due to the buildup of marine growth on the bottom of boats is to allow one percent increase of resistance for every week the boat is in the water. Pickles use more glass bottles than any other food . product, says Pickle Packers International, In-ternational, Inc. Leaders claw each other when they should be fishing The trouble with world lead- when they're at the peak of the ers is that they have to claw heap there's nobody left to their way to the top, knocking fight but each other, down the opposition and This is the statement of Er- "W. Center, Provo JANTZEN Balance of our stock SWIM SUITS also limited selection of SPORT COATS V2 Off Friday and Saturday only! jl LITTLE LEAGUERS, Jimmy Malaske, 9, (left) and Tommy Carll, 10, of Cedar Grove, Minn., cast their ballots for baseball's All-Star teams at home plate in Rosemount, Minn., where the votes are being tabulated. With fans selecting the starting teams for the first time since 1957, the ballots reflect heavy write-in votes for players not originally nominated by team managers and player representatives. Youthful runner places in marathon race The only participant from Springville, Russell Clark, 15, ' son of LaMar and Carol Clark, finished 28th of 73 runners in the Pioneer Marathon, covering 26 miles, 385 yards, held July 24 in Salt Lake City. The youths raced from Far-mington Far-mington in northern Utah, through Centerfield, Bountiful, North Salt Lake, up Victory Road and down past the Capitol Building to Liberty Park. After going around the park, they finished the race at Brigham Young monument. The Springville runner, third youngest to enter, was awarded a medal for finishing the race and also received a white shirt with insignia. A tenth grader next year, Russell favors track and has been running from 5 to 20 miles daily in preparation for the Marathon. He also likes other sports and participates in most f"', . b Russell Clark, 15 of them. His hobbies are photography and hunting. The Marathon was sponsored by the Deseret News with sanction of AAU. nest Lyons, editor of the Stuart Stu-art News in Florida, who made a proposal to change the well-known well-known slogan "Take a boy fishing" to "Make all statesmen states-men go fishing." Everybody would sleep better nights if they lfnew that Brcsh-nev Brcsh-nev was trout fishing in the Urals, Kosygin fishing for sturgeon stur-geon in the Volga, Gromyko trying to catch pike thrcugh a hole in the ice on a Siberian lake, and Dick Nixon trolling for barracuda in the Keys.' "What a sigh of relief would go up if the Kremlin and the White House tacked 'Gone Fishing' on their front doors on the same day." "We would not need to worry about Mao exploding a bigger thermo-nuclear bomb any day he was fishing on the Yangtze. Yangt-ze. As long as the big shots were angling, no loud noises would be allowed to scare the fish." "Maybe peace would come. Tfa wide-awake bank makes it all so easy. Give U$A Chance To Say "YES' CENTRAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY Offices in Springville, Provo and Spanish Fork xVll that stands between you and a loan from our wide-awake bank is a phone call. Call and tell us how much you need. For a tuition loan, a home improvement loan, a tax payment loan, a vacation loan, or a personal loan. Short term or long term. Over the phone, in plain language, we'll explain our low repayment plan. And when you arrive at our wide-awake bank, we can have the paper work completed and the money waiting. If you need . an easy loan, dial the wride-awake bank. Use our seven numbers for openers. VW o o Wm'V k ""v Z) O O Ql if n i WV3 Q 0 III if u , Dial 375-woo for money SM-(c) 1969 Leon Shaffer Golnick Adv. Inc. mm fl$HE!fc il - us, (St. aypi 11 'ft- II mm ftnnawan I BUS GBCT :f3neflMte 3 r 1 f t I L |