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Show ' March ., Page Twelve XIIE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD ' ' Only The Water Moves in New Thermoelectric Ice Cube Maker 1 , iHlillllllilfi ELECTRICALLY MADE ICE is produced in this new ther.no electric ice maker manufactured by the York Division, Borg-Warner- . York's president Joseph B. Elliott (right) and Vic President of Research and Development A. B. Newton are shjwi above with this newest development in refrigeration technology. Twelfth Yerd Bentcm club wins; wil! play American Forfi Sat. Springville Twelfth ward Bantam Basketballers will en-ter another playoff as a result of their victory over Lehi last Thursday. The Twelfth ward-ers meet the American Fork five at American Fork Armory Saturday, .Feb. 3, at 10 a.m. ville players more than doubled their opponents in winning 35-1- High score getters for the Lions were Phil Clark and Steven Taylor with able aid given by Steven Killpack, Karl Jensen, Shirl Miner and David Taylor. If the Springville team gets over the Forkers, they will meet one more opponent to get into the state finals the mid-dle of March. Should they win Saturday's game and the one following, they would represent this area in the state tourna-ment. Ron Warner is coaching the club. In their game last Thursday with Lehi, at Lehi, the Spring- - (J3oivHinc Scored Art City Ladies TEAM W L Artistic Beauty 20 12 Brookside Market 20 12 Westside Market 16 16 Friels Inc 14 18 Town Pride Dairy 14 18 Utah Service Inc 12 20 High Team: Artistic Beauty, 2188; Utah Service Inc., 1981; Westside Market, 1926. High series: Shirley Schar-din- e, Artistic Beauty, 527; Jo-An- n Richmond, Town Pride, 453; Mary Lou Llewellyn Ar-tistic Beauty, 428. High game: Shirley Schar-din- e, Artistic, 204; Louise Young, Artistic, 180; JoAnn Richmond, Town PryJe, 154. Merchants League TEAM W L Snow Dairy 18 14 Johnson Tire 25 7 Thorns Rock 13 19 Valley Bowling 13 19 Springville Bank 12 20 High Team: Valley Bowling Supply, 976; Springville Bank. 975; Springville Herald, 962. Ed Johnson, Johnson, 626 Julian Raulston, Valley, 597; Gene Averett, Thorns, 595. High game: Ed Johnson. Johnson, 246; Bill Danials. Thorns, 233; Bert Early, Val-ley Bowl, 222; Dan Barton, Bank, 222. Illegal e!!i shot numbers 94 Known illegal elk kill dur-ing Utah's 1961 deer seasons numbered 94 animals, the de-partment of fish and game said today. Of this number only 26 were salvaged after being located prior to spoilage of the meat. Department spokesmen not-ed that 144 elk were known to have been illegally killed dur-ing the 1960 seasons, with 27 o this number salvaged. Game managers believe that the known illegal kill repres-ents no more than 50 of the actual loss since many such kills are not reported or found. Projecting the illegal kill for 1961 on. this basis would mean that 188 elk were mistakenly or maliciously shot during the fill deer seasons. Three moose were illegally killed during the deer seasons in the Uinta Mountain section where Utah's only small herd of these animals ranges. MARK ) A v -- jlX " " BARRY j FAMILY OKLAHOMA SURGEONS 54ri CORRECTED IDENTICAL BROTHERS JIM AND VESSELS JOHN DEATON t I morewTlluve CfTT jheMORE YOU GIVE E. j &H j A Different Menu Every Day! Lunch S1.10-S1.- 50 J You'll never tire of our lunches! Our" chefs crea- - k an exciting, new menu every day vs a variety of taste-temptin- g entrees & vegetate t. to please every palate! ss SAGE 1 11 N Restaurant . 1250 North Main V ' I Tai : r1 Lion's Broom Sale March 8th j iftsllllill DS CD) QJ RJ 03) STEAKS : 72' i iPODcm ds(Mi -- mi I A0JA(EE CS(D)LQ f1 Hind Quarter Beef Vw.. lb. 63c Sirloin Steak figfe lb. II I Cube Steak se.' lb. 98c Bump Roasts Sfe...... lb. Ill I VETS DOG FOOD 14 for 1 00 . Jill UITS 1 High Quality SPRINGVILLE RED DEVIL SWEATSHIRTS. $i 1 1 . H I 1 ! i jof.,jij r4 I '; . l Nil If V ' . I . ...--- '' : :. : - i. : :: ; : I i :: ... -- . ii. -- - . . ..,, ... wy,lir : j Reg. 195 - Spscia! $2.29 i I : !45 West 2nd South HUnter ! '"' r - Itauata 6 for 49c 1 't7" 1 i TOMATO JUICE oz. 3 for 69tf cl Icrrc T0ILET T,SSUE 1 " EGGS Large AA Grade doi 4 fmotn 12 ro m j (CATSUP Pierce's . 6 for 1.00 M AIHI n e 1 ! DRESSING Kraft Salad Bowl 3 Dinners : 6 lbs. 93c II : 2 '" 8 I r- - CHEESE - 2 !b, 81c JWHEATIEsX - Produce - I Meat Pies lM CHEERI0S P0TAT0ES Ul 20 lb. 49c I 6 for 1.00 j O 02 z OLETTUCE 13cl !3 7Mmm . . . 3 bunches i3c I 6ftc : WS.... each9ci3lP Devils vs. Dinos af Price Friday m cage finaie Springville Red Devids will ring down the curtain on the 1962 basketball season Friday Mar. 2, when they journey to Price to play the Carbon Di- - nos. Game time is 8 p.m. and will be preceded by the jun-ior varsity game at 6:30. Actually the game has no bearing, one way or another, on the league winner, since Provo, Spanish Fork and Orem have already sewed up a tour-ney berth, placing in that or-der. However, the Devils can move up one if they can win over the favored Dinos. Lose close one In a game that looked like it might go to the Red Devils at Orem last Friday, the Ti-gers pulled out of the fire and came up with a tight 55-5- 1 victory to clinch third spot in Region 5. ' Roger Ried and Roland Sen-ior led the Red Devils in their battle, which was in their fa-vor throughout the first three quarters, although the Tigers came in for some tieing shots now and then. Reid played great for the Devils hitting 21 points. Senior counted 14. Spr-ingville lost Groneman and Senior via the foul rule in the later part of the game, which made the difference in winning or losing. Quarter scores show-ed both teams getting 13 points the first quarter. Spring-ville was one point behind at the half, 21-2- 2, but pulled a 5 point advantage, 37-3- 2, at the third quarter mark. They came out on the short i end of the final score. Quarter horse clinics planned Programs are in the mail for the first Quarter Horse clinic of the season, and plans are being made for a second clinic, both scheduled in the Intermountain area. Jack Givens, Nampa, Ida., chairman of a clinic to be held at the College of Idaho in Caldwell Mar. 2-- says that Leonard Milligan of Denver, Colo., will serve as moderator for the educational meeting in that city. Dr. William R. Linfoot, well-know- n Calif, track veterinar-- ! ian and no stranger to Inter- - mountain Quarter Horse breed-ers, has accepted the modera-tor's assignment for the second clinic of the season at Brig-ha-m Young University in Pro-vo March 24. The BYU clinic will be un-der the direction of Prof. Phil Shumway, BYU animal hus-bandry department, and Ralph Knight, Santaquin, Utah, bre-ede- i'. Additional clinics are planned by the intermountain Quarter Horse Assn. at Idaho Foils, Ida. Mar. 30-3- 1; Las Vegas, Nev., April 21, and Fillmore, April 28. aerial observation make these Annual surveys as weather and flying conditions permit. Ideal conditions call for clear, calm weather immediately following a heavy snow storm in any given herd area. Information from these sur-veys is used in the elk herd management program and is important to scheduling the annual fall hunts. Aerial census of the remain-ing elk herds will continue as snow cover and flying condi-tions permit. Aeria! count on elk herd made Aerial census of elk on the Ashley- - Daggett, Cache, Heas-to- n, Nebo, Salt Lake and Og-de- n River herd units has now been completed, according to the department of fish and game. Counts from the air have also been completed covering the state's only moose herd with 95 of these animals being located on the north slopes of the Uinta Mountains. A reduction was noted in elk herd numbers on the Cache, Heaston and Nebo units with a slight increase tallied for the Ogden River, Salt Lake and Ashley-Dagge- tt herds. Department pilots, j planes and field personnel trained in Gootf or bad? When Mark Twain edited a newspaper in Missouri,- - one of his subscribers wrote him that he had found a spider in his paper and wished to know whether it meant good luck or bad. Twain replied: "Finding a spider in your paper is neither good luck or bad. The spider was merely looking over our paper to see which merchant was not advertising, so that he could go to that store, spin his web across the door and lead a life of undisturbed peace ever afterward!" Fourth loses in second round Springville Fourth ward jun-ior M Men cagers playing in the finals in Salt Lake City, dropped their sec-ond day tourney game Tues-day to Valley View Second ward by 5 points, 52-4- 7 after having won their opening game of the meet. They down-ed Geneva of Montpelier 5(2-3- 3 in their Mondav fame. The Tuesday loss eliminated them from further champion-ship play. The Fourth warders, winners of Region 8, actually lost the game in the third quarter when they made only 8 points to the winners 18. The third period score was 37-2- 5 for the Valle View team. A brilliant fourth quarter rally by the Fourth warders came w'ithin 5 points of tieing the contest. Wisconsin was the first state to appoint a commission to inspect its forestry policy in 1867. Maine in 1869 followed and New York in 1872. Bush beans will continue to bear until frost if you keep the bushes picked clean. So, don't pull the plants when only small beans remain on them: leave them in place to pro-duce another crop. The modern miss, it seems, is all right; she says to her-self. An otherwise, drab .area can be made bright and cheery the whole summer long by planting there seeds of two perennials coreopsis and gaillardia. Flow-ers of the first are bright yel-low; of the second, dark red, brick red, orange, and shades of yellow, either alone or in in-teresting combination. There is no need to prepare the soil; just broadcast the seeds. Amateur boxers set AAU dates The Intermountain AAU box-ing championships, the main event for amateur swatsmiths in Idaho, Nevada ana Utah, will be held Mar. in the Murry Police Boys club, according to Bert (Red) Taylor and Harold McNiel, of the AAU boxing com-mittee. ' the Murray Police Boys club, will be the sponsoring member of the AAU, with Pete Gia-com- a handling the details un-der McNeil, who has been nam-ed tournament director. The tournament will be held in novice, junior and senior divisions, with a ar age minimum for all boxers. Entry deadline is noon, Mar. 19 at the weigh in at the boys club. Deer tagging in progress now Some 325 deer have been tagged to date, this winter. This phase of Utah's deer manage-ment program is conducted an-nually by department of fish and game field men throughout the state. Animals are attract-ed into the baited, net-cor- d single deer traps only when deep snows cover much of the natural food supply. Metal tags and vari-colore- d plastic streamers are placed in the ears of the animals before deer are released unharmed by the experience. Through field observation of deer carrying the colored streamers and re-turn of the tag by hunters dur-ing later seasons, this program contributes valuable informa-tion necessary to better man-agement of the state's deer herds. The reputation of a gooc' newspaper is answer enough to its critics. 1he Old im&t, "People who have no money to speak of just nave to do their own talking. |