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Show Page Eight THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD j il. 1 . Ki Regulations on Strawberry to be changed effective June 28 result of the most critical wa- - ter table in more than twenty--' five years. They were listed as the pro-bable loss of trout during the late summer and the present rehabilitate the lake plan to treatment later by chemical in the year. A n g 1 ing regulations for Strawberry Reservoir will be liberalized June 28, to allow fishing 24 hours each day with no restriction on the number of game fish an angler may catch and possess. Bait and other regulations will remain unchanged at Strawberry and those liberali-zed affect only this water. Department of fish and game spokesmen said the changes in regulations covering this major fishing lake were made to allow the greatest possible catch of trout during the weeks of summer ahead. The decision was based chiefly up-on two reasons, both a direct Second session of swimming registration set for June 24 dent's last lesson to examine teaching procedures and the progress made by the student. Registration for the second session of swimming classes will get underway Saturday, June 24 at Park Ro-Sh- e, and will remain open until Tues-day, July 4. The session will run from July 5 to July 29. The next session of instruc-tion will include beginning, in-termediate, and advanced swimming plus life saving and ' diving. Men and women adult classes will also be given. Pri-vate lessons can also be ar-ranged through any of the Ro-Sh- e instructors. Parents of children who are concluding the first session on June 28 and 29 are invited and encouraged to attend the stu- - The Western Rustlers Ranch Hands Possee Railroaders High team: r- - 619; Posse, 569- p h 537; sLres: WhltJJ ' Clarence oisen ffame: Leonard s, Lloyd Whitehead, J," Kinross, 182. llliiJ El DAYTONA BEACH WINNER of the Standing Mile Championship is Bud Faubel of Chambersburg, Pa., whose winning speed in a stock Chrysler 300G was 90.9 m.p.h. The Autolite-equippe- d Chrysler develops 375 horse-power. NASCAR FLYING MILE CHAM-PIONSHIP was won for the sec-ond consecutive year by Gregg Ziegler, Elgin, Illinois, hardware dealer. His stock Chrysler 300G set an average speed of 143.0 m.p.h. and with a one way speed of 149.6 m.p.h. NEW BEACH RECORD for Im-proved Series Production Cars was set by Andy Granatelli, Santa Monica supercharger manufacturer, who pushed his stock-bodie- d Chrysler 300 to 179.4 m.p.h. for a one-wa- y run, and 172.1 m.p.h. for a two-wa- y average. Fish plantings in high waters now being made The planting by plane of more than 200 high country Utah lakes will get underway this week, ac-cording to the department of fish and game. First plants to be made will be in southern ranges of the State where seasonal conditions are advanced compared to some ranges in northern Utah. These annual plants, made by department pilots and plane equipped with special tanks for this aerial stocking pro-gram, have proven highly suc-cessful over the past five years since this method re-placed the slower, more costly planting procedure of earlier years when the small fish were carried to these waters by pack trains. Bulk of fish stocked will be brook and native trout. A majority of these will go into lakes of the high Uinta moun-tain country with lesser num-bers scheduled for lakes sit-uated on the Manti, Thousand Lake, Boulder, Escalante and Wasatch Mountain areas. The plants are made by spe-cies, number and time on the basis of continuing populations, food conditions and the plant-ing needs of each lake from year to year. Garden club tours city The Springville Art City Garden club saw several types of landscaping on their an-nual tour of gardens in Spring-ville and Provo Monday even-ing. They also inspected some or the rare tree specimens in Springville including the Gin-k- o tree on the City Park; the Oak tree on the Cutler proper-ty on South Main and the Elm tree near the Art Gallery, said to be the only one of its kind in the city. The tour was under direction of President Rosena Ennis of the Garden club, directed by Robert Frazier. Family together for reunion I The family of j, Kennedy gathered atV Sunday for a reunion the day swimming nic lunches and vi- - attended. " 'I Mr. and Mrs. r. nedy and family Mrs. Lamar Holt CJ Salt Lake City; f' Keith Kennedy and fair i!l Provo, and from s J; Mrs. Gale Loftin V , Mr. and Mrs. , Roy B;; and Mrs. Carvel Bit' and family and Ju'. :, w It is more shameful to dis- - trust our friends than to be deceived by them. La Roche- - foucauld. Game control board sets public meetings A final reminder of the five annual public meetings was is-sued by the board of Big Game control today. In this area, the mpptinp' is scheduled for Salt Lake City at the Governor's Board Room Monday, June 26 beginning at 8 p.m. These public meetings, one in each of the state's five fish and game commission districts are held annually by the Board for the purpose of receiving recommendations c o n c e rning Utah's big game herds and the hunting seasons. Spring hangs her infant blossoms on the trees, rocked in the cradle of the western breeze. William Cowper. Sty? gjirtu0utlb Sjmlii f GPOR7G J Magazine gets top award Utah's Fish and Game Mag-azine has been awarded first place in the Nation in its cate-gory of publication as a con-servation news outlet. The award was announced today by director Harold S. Crane following official notifi-cation from the American As-sociation of Conservation In-formation. Director Crane commented, "We of Utah's Fish and Game Department are extremely proud of this award. Enlarge-ment and upgrading of this of-ficial monthly department pub-lication has been a team job bringing much favorable com-ment from both within and outside the State during the past 18 months. STARTS FRIDAY ;! KARLON BRANDO Fl I 111 WAIN LJmO sTi CSJGD JACKS fl 1 untHUl muiM KiifiKMiii oiiiwmniioitir. 1111 jC""" c J t..th pi j Join the swing to v J Kentucky's best bourb:; ;r G AltO Available BOTTLKO IN BOND h ord WMERFIll-M- li FINE KENTUCKY BOURBON FOR 0T" i yUt r t 86 fROOF . . . DISIIUIP WO BOTTUO BY WATEIflU NS (UZI 0' ,M t : aching L. rTTwiTTo wT j .1 7. ( FOR SECOND SESSION OF ) SWIMMING INSTRUCTION AT I Park Ro-Sh- e ( Adult Evening Classes Children Morning Classes ) ( Diving S Oe Sal 'J. re; i ; - s , - I ; v K - 4 ! r " U " ( - - f i i - & ! ! - s of to I' liospits SElffi WTBIESSESI 1 THESE ARE HIGH QUALITY SERTA-LU- X MATTRESSES, MADE WITH: Ay s Jnc innersprings of U.S. Steel " - I decorator tickings by Burlington polyfoam from General Tire, with ' raw materials from Allied Chemical Corp. " plus craftsmanship by Serta - y?5 1 r mattress you choose, you'U be getting a real yJW A At '"""'tss value now at a never-befor- e low price! S- v.1 III LOWEST PRICE EVER ON FAMOUS y ,"V J SERTA-LU- X MATTRESS . Of0yfM-- i Hi jdh f .You get tuft-fre- e, smooth-to- p comfort, x- - 1 lX r ticking 8u.PPrt; attractive woven Hs'l freshen'"g , , r vents and easy-tur- n handles. v JVfr LWest price ever " luxurious :X SERTA-LU- X DELUXE MATTRESS N N::-l- fM SJ PI 8 8 New i"nersPring unit with 23 H AI W I V r"-- Ji0W$C ,ever Wlth a cushioning la ver V , .prine.s.m.1owPric.e f Mi"thane-exclus- ive Serta X S ' liltllS PO"FOAM-f- or real sleep luxury L-- 2B FCSDELL9 Oi!(Co & . X ) BIG ,r VALUES v trom MM) . iNv j j 1 GLEN TIPTOH I960 VALIANT V200, Ruby red, auto-matic, radio, heater, very low mile-age, air foam seats, white side wall tires, clean $1895 1958 RAMBLER 6-c- Cross Country, radio, heater, very clean, stand. trans., complete motor overhaul $1295 1957 FORD V8 Fordor Victoria, radio, heater, Fordomatic, power steering, tu-to- ne paint $1095 1957 VOLKSWAGEN Sedan, radio, heater $945 1955 MERCURY Sedan, radio, heater Mercomatic $495 1954 FORD V8 Sedan $395 1952 FORD 6-c- tudor $145 i 1952 RAMBLER Hardtop tudor $145 j 1949 CHEV. Carry-al- l $125 i 1950 G.M.C. Pickup, ed $395 1956 DODGE Panel, very clean $495 'i CHUCK PETERSON MOTORS i 4th South and University Avenue Provo, Utah j SUMMER SPECIAL! NEW $1.39 FULL-SI-ZE 88c MASK and SNORKEL With the Purchase of SWIM FINS f7-'-- X55. At the Regular Price of Xy A FULL $4.86 VALUE! X ' Professional style swim equip- - men Adults and children! New style wide angle swim maslc and automatic valve con-trol snorkel FREE of additional cost when you purchase Riveria swim fins. Fins are pure white; medium and large size. Maslr has shatterproof plastic lens, adjustable strap for snug fit. LIMIT 2 SETS TO A CUSTOMER (PQ Lumber Co. "f J 38 West 2nd South, Springville Fishermen, know limits! Utah's anglers were caution-ed to know and observe the creel limits for the various game fish species. This advice came from the department of fish and game after field re-ports covering the opening week of the general trout sea-son showed many anglers had been arrested for possession of too many trout. Trout-salmo- n possession lim-it is 10 fish or seven pounds and one fish, whichever is caught first, for all licensed anglers, .f or resident juveniles under twelve years of age the limit is four fish or three pounds, whichever is caught first. Nonresident juveniles un-der twelve years may- - fish without license, but must fish with a licensed angler and all fish caught by such juvenile must be counted part of the creel of the accompanying li-censed angler. Proclamations covering creel limits and all other rules and regulations for the 1961 ang-ling season are available from department offices or from license dealers throughout the state. My Neighbors "Well, I may not have the facts straight, of course, but everything else is true, By George!" Airman 1C James D. Poul-se- n, son of Mrs. Shirl Poulson returned Wednesday evening to Puerto Rico, where he has been stationed the past 16 months, following a four days visit with his parents and other re-latives and friends here. His work is defense systems oper-ator on a B--52 stratofortress. During his stay his parents en-tertained at a family reunion at Mirror Lake Sunday and Monday with Doug and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wheeler and family being guests. Springville stake MIA girls have returned from a trip to Zions Canyon. Enroute home, they stopped at the St. George temple grounds and went swimming. In the party were 74 girls and chaperones in two busses. Gwen Cutler and Lois J. Child, stake leaders were in charge. It is my certain conviction that no man loses his freedom except through his own weak-ness. Mohandas Gandhi. Former resident dies in Calif. Funeral services were held in Alhambra, Calif. for Mrs. Mary Elizabeth G a b b i t a s Loynd, former resident of this city who died June 6 there. She was born Nov. 16, 1974 in Springville and married Tho-mas Loynd in the Manti tem-ple. He died in 1951. They were the parents of 7 sons, four of them born in Springville. Four survive: Paul of Seattle, Wash.; Malon of Monterey Park, Calif.; Holley, San Clemente, Calif., and Har-old of San Marino, Calif. Bro-thers: George and Herbert Gabbitas of Springville and a sister, Viola Cannon of Twin Falls, Idaho. Fourteen grand-children. Mrs. Jack Whitehead, the former Marilyn Roylance, and baby son Richard left recent-ly to join Mr. Whitehead at Juneau, Alaska and make their home. Mrs. Whitehead was ac-companied as far as Seattle by her mother, Mrs. Erling Ro'lance, and she went by plane from Seattle to Juneau. Mrs. Roylance returned home with a sister Mrs. Virginia Peay of Provo, who had been in Seattle visiting a son. The Whiteheads plan to make their home in Alaska for some time while Jack is employed with the state road commission. Jon Bird, son of Arvil Bird is home from the British Isles LDS mission having been re-leased in March. He spent two months touring Europe and vi-sited a short time with an un-cle Charles Lambert and fam-ily in Italy. He also spent a few days with friends in Ire-land. In New York, he was de-layed three weeks before he could have his car released due to the dock strike. Latins praise Kennedy plan. |