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Show i Page Eight THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD August 11, Uj6Q Pocatello team captures top spot in Pony Leagi tournament held in Springville for Disrict Six them a second chance at the Champs. In the final game Saturday night, it was Bountiful all the way until the fateful seventh. The Champion All-Sta- rs of Pocatello was given a check for $250 and a trophy. A tro-phy aso went to Bountiful. It was the second District championship for Pocatello as they won the tournament in Springville two years ago. Bountiful took Springville in stride when they won a 13-- 5 battle Friday evening to thwart any intentions which the local team may have had for th e upper berth. I The visitors made six runs ' in the early part of the ti inning and added another in the second; three in the third and after that it seemed easv Springville struck twice the third inning on a pair of Bountiful errors, two walks and a single by Kent Creer Springville catcher. Hits and Gerald Althouse, an error, a walk and a fielders choice produced three more ' runs in a temporary rallv in the fifth. t' Springville, Spanish Fork and Provo to name three teams, were disappointed at being dumped out of the win-ning in District Six Pony Lea-gue baseball play here last week, but not so much so as the plucky Bountiful fellows, who lost out at the near close of the seventh inning in a championship game Saturday night, with Pocatello. ' The Pocatello All-Sta- rs made a sensational four-ru- n rally in the seventh inning to win the title in a 4-- 3 thriller. It was the fifth consecutive win for the Pocatello boys during the week-lon- g tourney to give them a berth in the Region Eight Tournament, at Santa Monica, Calif., beginning today. Pocatello had beaten Boun-tiful 10-- 8 in the second round of play Wednesday to put the northern Utah team in the con-solation bracket. Bountiful turned in victories over Spring-ville and Spanish Fork to give ! ms sprit ! ta sMi pfe i The Hobble Creek All-Sta- rs of . Springville : won a berth in the Utah State Tourney by yir- - I tue of their winning a game with Vernal Dist-- rict 5, in an inter-distri- ct playoff at Heber Friday, j Hobble Creek had won the right to go to Heber by win- - ! hing championship honors over i five teams in the Springville and Mapleton area in a tour ney last week at Mapleton. ; The Hobble Creek Champs scored three runs in the sec-ond inning, four in the fourth and three in the fifth in the championship game. Gordon Livingston and Ben Olsen are managers and Dale Bringhurst is president. The boys will travel to Bountiful to play Friday and Saturday. At that time, the four winners in the eight-tea- m tourney will go to Santa Mon-ica, Calif., for the grand finale August 18, 19 and 20. Members of the Springville Champs are: David Giles, Rus-sell Springer, Lynn Wardle, Larry Jensen, Val Christensen, Ricky Clark, Bruce Childs, Bobby Liddiard, Michael John-son, Kent Boswell, John Pehr-so- n, John Hansen, Roy Bird, Larry Bringhurst, Bert Oak-e- y. - j I - i , . : ! ! ! i STiE'' 5'.:S r- - H : i l ' A . r I v - i i tU-- r. -- fiiu " ' :WmJ If 1 - lit --r rr'inaii r T" Ti mwhi ii i ii Early plans were blueprinted this week for an all-ou- t, valley-wid- e "salute to Utah County's men of Steel" on Sept. 29, 3ft, and Oct. 1 by representatives from nine valley communities. William K. Wother-spoo- n, manager of the Provo Chamber of Commerce, seated center, was chosen to head up the over-a- ll coordinating commit-tee, with Blaine W. Mar tell, Santaquin, left seated, and Russell Innes, Lehl, as right, Other committee members shown are, left to right, Clair Bowen, Pay-so- n; Stewart A. Durrant, American Fork; J. A. West, Pleasant Grove; and Dean Ab-bott, Orem. Dr. Robert Jenkins, of Spring-ville and Cleve Childs of Spanish Fork, were unable to be on hand for this pic-ture. Dist. 7 church play includes two local teams Considerable interest is be-ing exhibited in the District Seven Church M Men Softball Tournament being held in Spanish Fork at the Ball Park, today, Friday and Saturday. In the opening game sched-uled for 6 p.m., Kolob Stake will meet either Spanish Fork or Millard. In the following game set for 8 p.m., the Springville Stake men will play Carbon. Louis Clegg of Mapleton is acting as district chairman and issues an invitation to all Springville and Mapleton fans to attend. iJSJ avo'd being flooded by spring rains, &V)r inhabitants of exotic Kashmir in Ihe foot- 'Sy" hills of India's Himalayas seal their "uniT houses and flee to lower ground until the torrent is over. Northern Nigerians lick njMf$ the weather problem,, with SWJ;i- 7r--r-- V MV permanent "tailor-made- " jfeT J W IjtW roofs made of hard wood. "2Jk When the house rots from ' prolonged weathering, (jsSsi5kN fL T the owner simply moves JgSyjNV: his roof to a new site and jJWjM(& ' builds a new house on- - tgTAy II Today we protect our homes in oil kinds f wea,her with inexpensive zinc or zinc-coate- d gutters, down--' 3 SP. ancl flashing which carry off : Hil E.piWvr rain' meltin9 ice' snow- - assure long-- ! i W r48ES)fl'ni' term corrosion-fre- e service. '; Sports Line .The Utah Department of Fish and Game today issued the following reminder con-cerning special regulations covering two of the state's fishing waters. Strawberry River from its confluence with Avintaquin Creek upstream to Sulphur Springs at Pole Gate is closed to angling for the balance of the year. Francis Canyon stream above Francis' Gate on the Weber River drainage opened to ang-ling Aug. 1, thru Nov. 30. Application for elk and moose permits will be received at the main office of the Utah Department of Fish and Game, 1596 West North Temple, Salt Lake City 16, between Aug. 5 and Aug. 19, the department reminded today. Applications for elk permits must be made only in the spe-cial envelope provided for this purpose. They may be obtain-ed from department offices or : from any license agent thru-ou- t the state. Application for moose per-mits may be made in any other type envelope and should be marked "Moose" on the out-side. Any letters postmarked later than midnight, Aug. 19, will be returned to the sender. thers and sisters: Oran, Scott and Melvin Beardall and Mrs. Heber (Leota) Cox, Mrs.- - Don (Leola) Hazel, Mrs. Harold (Ida) Hardy all of Springville; Ray L. Beardall of Santa Rosa, Calif.; - Donald Beardall of Spanish Fork; Mrs. Laurel (Dorotha) Cook of Sandy and Mrs. Frank (Jeannette) Jones, a twin sister to Jean, of Escon-did- o, Calif. She had been active in Pri-mary and Sunday School or-ganizations as an officer and teacher. Monday services held for young mother ' (Continued from Page One) the Manti LDS Temple. Prior to her illness, they had lived at Tooele. Surviving besides her hus-ban- d and her parents, are a son Steven and a daughter" Cindy and the following bro- - - STEEL MILL "ROLLER COASTER" is this new continuous an-nealing line just placed in operation at U. S. Steel's Pittsburg Works. Ribbons of steel strip race up and down through the towering line at speeds up to 1500 feet a minute. The new facility at the Columbia-Genev- a plant heat treats thin strip steel which is processed into tin plate fcjr use by the canning industry. Cans in the making are the coils Clarence Brown, left, and Ralph Fulton are checking before the steel enters the line. Sportsmen given thanks for collecting seed A "thanks" was . issued by the department of fish and game today to sportsmen, in-dividually and collectively, who have aided in the collection of browse seed for use by the de-partment in range reseeding programs. Field activity by several sportsmen groups during the past year has resulted in the collection of much valuable seed, such "as bitterbrush and cliffrose, used in planting de-pleted deer winter range. Many thousand acres of such range have been reseeded under a joint project being conduct-ed by the Utah Department of Fish and Game and the Inter-mounta- in Forest Range and Experiment Station at Eph-rai- The browse seed plantings are made on critical winter ranges where the abundance or lack of these feeds are the key to the numbers of deer which can be maintained in herds using these ranges.. Director Harold S Crane said, "We encourage interested sportsmen and organizations to collect this browse seed since it is not available in quantity from other sources. Their work to date has been of primary importance in our range program." Crane encouraged participa-tion in this project and asked that interested individuals or groups contact their local con-servation officer or fish and game office if they were inter-ested in the browse seed col-lection program. Would you like to reach the end of a trip with an unrump-le- d look ? Take along fresh clothes, .stop and change at a service station near your des-tination.' BACK-TO-SCHOO- L IPAQRJI SALE I SAIiFORD'S PAINT AND GLASS 397 East 4th South For the month of August we will feature: i , TREASURE TONES Vinyl Latex Wall Paint Outside White Paint 'at JJtj3 at $5.29 gal. ff $5.05 And All Other Paint, Wallpaper, i and Painting Needs at I WHOLESALE PRICES! ? Come in and take advantage of this sale and get j your painting done before your helpers get back J in school. t BOW HUHTERS I SPECIAL Pre-Seas- Sale on New GORDON BOWS "Everything for the Bowhunter!" Custom 40Reg. 74.50 7,' Knight Deluxe 00 OR Reg. 64.50 Kin-g- OA Q5I Reg. 54.50 01. Custom Hunting Arrows De02e S10 up MT. MAPLE ARCHERY 124 East 4th North SPANISH FORK, UTAH Open 7:30 First Run Adults .00 Show at Dusk Co-HhS-- L w f WMOY "duel "d Directed bf "Young Jesse James''1J MAM ROBSON Ray Str.cHyn-Wi- ll.rd ParUr ERNEST LEHMAN fwwtv mi Mjf"fJ'.' i i.uiJj..iii..i..ii i i- - x .V "'C'A l. lf I u j Ono call saves a j loS of shopping To Serve you better we stock the most complete line of farm petroleum products in the West more than 100 in all. Besides familiar Chevron and RPM fueis and iubri- - j cants, we carry top quaiity ,roof coatings shingle oil and 3 stain solvents and paint thinners wood preservatives, ' ! I and many other useful products for farm and home. I i ' j : For any Standard Oil product, calf jV-- J i j' UTAH SERVICE, INC. 1 j 4th So. 4 Main HU or f kiwi i.. yii mjuji i ... (a It's an American Tradition . J U WITH YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER I "f3i ' After a hard day s workit is a genuine pleasure to sit down with I VV;C;. X f&i' thS hometown newspaper, like the old friend that it i-s-jl VtXivN --VV relax and catch up on news and entertainment. For what-- , 'f-ry- X '. ever interests you most politics, society, sports, business ' yu Uimd news of it, in detail, in your local newspaper. J V X V 'i '' ''' ' : You can reac 1 anytime, wherever you are; i :i I 'X. A .v . '- - i at your own leisure. That's the beauty of news- - V'A iJt- - - i'" rXZ! if M PQPer--it's all there, and you can pick 4 Yii?r iJk?' ff.: : - yr , i' hl 'f i-- il UP or put it down and come back to it. 'I: 1 ENJp YOU if HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER! V A iiJJ nlll TO INTEREST YOU! tivK nTtf:SS ASSOCIATION ! I 4 hoaoway $ait i a k t ott, otam A remember... ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT FOREST FIRES! New lights, runway seen at airport (Continued from page one) Building which fcomprises a waiting room, rest rooms and information center. This build-ing also houses the big trans-former and terminals .for the lighting equipment. There are eight private plan-es housed at' the airport be-longing to Spanish Fork men; another four belong to Spring-vill- e men and one to a .Genola man, "making about 20 in all at the airport. A number of out-of-to-planes land at the airport and with the new lighting system and runways extended, it is ex-pected there will be many more using the facilities. There are four full time em-ployees and others part time, besides costruction workers at the airport making it a busy and convenient place of busi-ness. Advertising is not necessary: there is no law to compel a business to grow. Surprise ; An interesting sidelight developed in connection with the District 6 baseball tour-nament in Springville last week, when it was learned - that the coaches of the Idaho Falls and the' Bountiful teams were brothers. They had not visited each other for several years and neither ; knew the other would be at the tournament until they met in the Springville Ball Park. |