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Show y , Page Ten THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD November 14, i963 Red Devils begin cage drills; pre-seaso- n schedule listed Coach Hal Jensen opened the basketball season practice here Monday night for prospective cagers at the high school with a large number of aspirants trying out for the squad. By mid-wee- k, the squad had been trimmed down to 18 players including some out- - standing sophomores of last year's club, Ron Bird, Richard Thorpe, Bill Allred, Gary Niel- - son, who played regular or semi-regul- during the entire season. Roger Reid, shooting sensa-tion of last year, will be back. Others still vieing for positions are: Richard Miner, Mike Tay-lor, Doug Bringhurst, Stephen Jackson, David Thorn, Mike Olsen, Neil Strong, Judd Har-war- Kent Creer, Craig Whit-ing, Mark Fitzgerald, Mike Shepherd and Mike Mason. Coach Jensen should come up with a team from this squad and fans will be treated to some top basketball should the Red Dev-ils shape up like they are ex-pected. A good pre-seaso- n schedule has been worked out for the club and will open with Pleas-ant Grove here on Nov. 29. The schedule is as follows: Nov. 29 Pleasant Grove here; (two games will be played starting at 6:15 for the Junior Varsity and 8 p.m., for the varsity on all games list-ed) Dec. 4 Lehi at Spring-vill- e; Dec. 6 Springville at American Fork; Dec. 13 and 14, Springville at Richfield; Dec. 18 Springville at Mur-ray (3 p.m.) ; Dec. 20 Clear-field at Springville; Dec. 27 BY High at Springville; Dec. 28 Granger at Springville. (J2ow(incf Scored Commercial League Team W L Marv Naylor 27 13 Sports Shop 24 16 Quality Cleaners 20 20 Dot & Martys 18 22 Kolob Realty 17 23 Kolob Lumber 14 26 Ind. high series: Kent Kin-ross, Quality Cleaners, 553; Glen Harris, Marv Naylor, 541; Jim Bird, Sport Shop, 531. High team game: Quality Cleaners, 1110; Sports Shop, 1052; Kolob Lumber, 1031. Ind. high game: Marv Nay-lor, Marv Naylors, 212; Jim Bird, Sport Shop, 207; Kent Kinross, Quality Cleaners, 195. I ? ' I ; i i v "I ! X V f 1 Mountain Fuel Supply Company's Distribution and General Office divisions recently were awarded a safety certificate for completing 1,430,009 consecutive manhours of work (from December 12, 1962, to September 16, 1963) without a dis-abling injury. In picture above, June O. Olsen, left, meter setter foreman, and Emerson V. Hatch, serviceman, demon-strate proper placement of "bonding cable," a safety step taken before gas meter is uncoupled from service and fuel lines. Pheasant hunt ends in state Sunday evening marked the end of the 1963 Utah pheasant hunting season in the nine counties which remained open to nine days of shooting this year. The season in all coun-ties of the State had ended by Wednesday, November 6. Sunday evening also marked the close of the 1963 quail hunting season in all but elev-en counties of the State. The quail hunt continues through November 24 in Box Elder, Cache, Davis, Morgan, Rich, Salt Lake, Summit, Utah, Washington and Weber Counties. ibiibi Hi IIIWIIIIJTiJl Ml In addition, Washington Co will reopen to the taking 0J quail beginning December 2i through January 5. Seasons for chukar and Hu garian partridge continu" statewide through Sujh.,1 November 24. y' Africa's upper Nile js badly clogged with the laven der water hyacinth that tives can walk on top 0f th river . . . The southernmost town in the world is Williams, Chile. Populating 350. The dodo never had chance. He seems to have bee! invented for the sole purnose of becoming extinct and that was all he was good for. Day-lon-g clinic Saturday for coaches at BYU A basketball clinic for all members of the basketball coaching fraternity has been scheduled at Brigham Young University for Nov. 16, in the George Albert Smith Field-hous- e. The day-lon- g clinic is being sponsored by the College of Physical Education, and is open to all high school, junior college and college basketball coaches. Officials point out that the clinic is free to all coaches. Highlighting the afternoon session will be Johnny Wooden, head, basketball coach at UC LA, and E. L. "Dick" Romney, one of the area's foremost ath-letic personalities, will speak at noon luncheon. Saturday morning sessions will feature Courtnev Leish- - man of B. Y. High and Jerry McCleary of the Jordan High School as guest lecturers. Leishman won the State Class "B" title in his freshman year of coaching in Utah, while McCleary's team from Jordan won the Class "A" Champion-ship in his first year in high school coaching. Registration is set for 8-- 9 a.m. Saturday, and coaches planning to attend the clinic are asked to notify the BYU Athletic Department of their intentions. Revegetation in mountains set With first winter moisture already laying in the moun-tains Deparment of Fish and Game revegetation projects are being rushed to completion. One tract of 4,000 acres in the Wallsburg area of Wasatch County was seeded with grass and preferred browse species scattered from low flying air-craft last week. This week an additional 4, 300 acre tract in the vicinity of Indian Peaks in Beaver County will receive seed. In addition to these two pro-jects, Department spokesmen said that a burned over area on the Brigham face south of Brigham City will be drilled with browse seeds later this month. "To insure the education of their teenagers, parents need to pull a few wires TV, tele- - phone and ignition." " - AN EASYGOING SHOE l L 1: , i ; ': v " i m- This Hush Puppies Shoe is soft where it should be soft and strong where it should be strong. It's made of Breathin' Brushed Pigskin always pliable but always strong. For support, a steel shank is built right into the sole, made of springy crepe that cushions every step. And the shoe is tough on dirt won't have any more to do with it than a wire brush can handle easily. The Hush Puppies Shoe is easy to get along with; why not give it a whirl? Sizes from '6V2 to 12 USE OPEN OUR J MON. & fmJL II A FRIDAY tJltJ"' J PLAN TIL 9:00 I 6 West Center Provo u,i,r:-.- "- ...., j I ' III I pra The latest I 1 M word in I j comfort I KUPPENHEIMER Suits j J witli SuP-Pant- s ( II To "comfort" add the word , I I "confidence." No-be- lt SuP-Pan- ts 11 have a bidden, inner elastic I I I waistband that holds your I I trousers up, keeps your shirt in, ; II makes you feel pounds slimmer, I I look years trimmer. They're I I everKreased, too. No wonder a I I Kuppenheimer is such I j a pleasure 1 :, j j THE 1 KUPPENHEIMER ! LOOK : I I IS THE CONFIDENT LOOK HOOVER'S II 78 West Center, Provo I I UCIBIIO 00B LI C0TTIII THEHTUIAM LtTTIRf MTIHT . 1,717, ill. LVEXCEL OIL COMPM'S Kx WINTERIZE SPECIAL j DELICIOUS HOT DOGSfX IF IS EE we CLIP OUT THIS COUPON AND BRING IT INTO SOUTHEAST : SERVICE FOR A FREE LUBE JOB!! j t VOID AFTER NOVEMBER 18, 1963 j I Good for One FREE LUBE JOB 1 Southeast Service HaiJoCi ail ttlhese wnimtei? specnals! j Good Year PERMANENT SPARK f I StIO - TIRES AMTI-FREEZ- E PLUGS 2 for 19.95 JUST t29 P.sai 29c each jj plus tax and trade p I Ecel iS, Mc. - Sowtiieast Service l 4th South 4th East 489-528- 7 DOUBLE STAMPS ALLJJ?f J BE SAFE BUY ALL DRUGS FROM j A PHARMACIST AT Haymond Drug Co. fAtfdlUJr DON'T TAKE i MEDICINES IN THE DARK "Ugh," said Martha grimacing in the I dark, "that's the second time I've brushed my teeth with Tom's shaving cream!" Martha, it could have been a really ser-ious mistake ... so, do turn on the light j when searching in the medicine cabinet for your prescriptions. A man should never be ashamed to own he has been in the wrong, which is but say-ing, in other words, that he is wiser today than he was yesterday. The average daily service charged for a hospital bed in the United States increased by one dollar last year, from $18. 40 to $19.40, according to the American Hospital Association. Although many silks are washable, they are not ma- - chine washable. Wash your sport and casual silks by hand if you prefer it to drycleaning. It's amusing to read about rare coins. Aren't they all? M Men schedule for the week M Men schedule for the week: (all games begin at 7 p.m.) Springville Stake, Wed. Nov. 20 Fifth vs Third, Eighth vs Ninth, Seventh vs Tenth, (includes Jr. M Men also) Kolob Stake: tonight, Nov. 14 First vs Second, Maple-to- n 2nd vs Twelfth, Mapleton vs Sixth. Kolob Jr. M Men: Nov. 16 First vs Second, Mapleton 2nd vs Twelfth, Sixth vs Mapleton. FAMOUS AHEMCAH 8RMlD-Dfl8?- S Barry M. Goldwater SpEs)jV Barry M. Goldwater was born on SMym January 1st, 1709, in Phoenix zona- - His love of the active, out- -' ' i'fr- door 'ife began in the frontier-lik- e f CfrStepSgft atmosphere of Arizona in those ,:M5iSSlTfj days and continued during his wi feT5 years as a studenr Staunton Mili-- y ary Academy in Virginia. Goldwater served with dis- - "( yt, lij " tinction as a pilot with the X Army Air Force during World TLMgQy War II. He's still an enthu- - K .JgfyTljW siastic aviator . . flies his le W. CTVfjpjB "ft'a-- own planes and is qualified - --v. Jl 'Skp to pilot the latest military jet ggjgJ iVjf ll --fi 'wl A V j Arizona sent Barry Goldwater to nS y((kv III i 0 ,he United States Senate as its K I rer Junior Senator in 1953. He quick- - 7y f , ly established a national reputa- - nAwi VY iJ2?" "on ' ' became a leader in the Father of four, the Senator says Sen..,e Is"ow hera(,de.d " a ead. Repubhcan for he has "2 grandchildren and 1 1964 presidenfa nommahon. In escrow." He is a doting and . devoted Grand-Da- d and his CG W photo hangs with the photo- - hrt fWu H graphs of other famous grand-- xrJ WMW fathers in the Old Grand-Da- d r7T ( Corner at Sardi's East in New ( rLJ' I 1 III York, Sage's Restaurant In Chi- - SkAXJ 1 1 cago, and other Corners in fa- - jyfa-aff- i "ft kpf mous eateries. old 6RAnp-oad- J m . j Special hunting areas listed Only five areas remain open to the taking of deer over the coming weekend, Department of Fish and Game spokesmen said today. The areas and hunting dates were listed as follows: Paunsaugant, Herd Unit 60A open daily through Nov. 17; Dolores River portion of the LaSal, Herd Unit 30, open daily through Dec. 20; Gordon Creek, Herd Unit 33, open Nov. 16, 17, 18; Huntington, Herd Unit 34, open November 16, 17, 18; Joes Valley, Herd Unit 35, open November 16, 17, 18. In addition to the above mentioned areas, hunters will have from Nov. 23 through December 1 to bag a deer on the San Juan-Sha- y Mesa por-tion of Deer Herd Unit 31. Biologists check trout die off Investigations by Utah State Department of Fish and Game biologists continued this week into the causes of a trout die off in the Flaming Gorge Res-ervoir. A blue-gree- n algae, which is toxic when decomposing, has been identified in the area of the fish kill. The algae identi-fied is known to cause exten-sive fish die offs. It was also determined that fish examined were suffering from bacterial infection on the fins and gills. Investigations are continu-ing to determine if either of these factors are the primary cause for the die off. that major concentrations of the big birds are still confined to the extreme northern mar-shes. The 1963 season continues through January 2, 1964, with legal shooting hours of one- - half hour before sunrise to sunset daily. Waterfowl on marshes good I Waterfowl populations on I State marshlands were listed I as good as the 1963 duck, I goose and swan season entered i it's sixth week, j Department of Fish and i Game biologists said that wa-- I terfowl populations across the I State are still high but that 1 there has been relatively little 1 movement of the birds. With the exception of sev-- I eral windy and overcast days I since the beginning of the sea-- 1 son last October 5, shooting I has been rather slow in most 1 areas. I Current reports from water-- fowl management area super-- 1 visors indicate that some 27, 1 000 swans are now in the State 1 and that some of these birds I are now being harvested by I holders of the 1,000 special per-- I mits authorized this year, but LI y Njihl)ors "I trace it all back to the moment we dashed out on the field to face 'em." |