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Show Page Twelve The Springville Herald January 24, 1974 Scrappy Springville falls before powerful American Fork 75-70 t "J'iiii'i il, Ti " .' jiii ii I , , iy 7Ajy . v , Hf TI ' 4--. IrCt V- A State basketball foul shooting contest, sponsored by the Elks Clubs was held In the Provo Armory. Garth Felix, (right) shooting in the 10-11 year old bracket, hit 18 for 25 and received a 2nd place trophy in the Utah Southern division. In a shoot off, Garth ended up third to the State Champ. His brother, Brent Felix, shooting in the 8-9 year old division, hit 13 for 25 and received a 1st place trophy in the Utah Southern division, and advanced to the state shoot off. In the shoot off Brent finished as runner up to the State Champ in his age group. Hunting is over; work continues The winter season is not a slack period for Division of Wildlife Resources personnel, says Homer Stapley, assistant game management chief. It is at this time that a full assessment of the past season's activities, including hunting and fishing, can be made and plans can be formulated for the future. The vast volume of data collected during the past year is being critically analyzed, and will aid in objective management of the wildlife resources. Many land use programs are adverse to wildlife, and it is the responsibility of the Division to offset those programs by developing new ones, said Stapley. Harvest questionnaires are also being studied. Licensed hunters who receive questionnaires question-naires are urged to return them to the Division, because they are a necessary tool in carrying out management activities. Information regarding wildlife species will continue to be collected throughout the winter, including migration habits, where and how well wildlife are wintering, and their effect on the winter range. Certain species will be relocated into areas of suitable habitat which can support additional ad-ditional animals. These species include Hungarian and chukar partridge, pheasants and turkeys. American Fork's 75-70 victory over Springville Friday night proved the Cavemen are the 3-A team to beat in Utah this year but when tournament time rolls around, the Red Devils will be making some noise of their own. Scrappy Springville, down by nine points early in the fourth quarter, fought back to tie the game at 68 with 1:42 left but some free throws by the Cavemen and some turnovers by Springville proved the difference dif-ference in the final minute. A key play came with 1 : 19 left to play when Kurt Holmstead stole a pass, scored a layup and was given two free throws for an intentional foul. He sank them both to put American Fork in front, 72-68. Roger Rife, Springville's counterpart to Holmstead, connected on a long jump shot with 1:07 left to cut the lead to 72-70. 72-70. Scott Bond made a free throw with 49 seconds left and Shirl LeBaron added a pair with 11 seconds left to complete the scoring. Bond finished as the game's top scorer with 23 points and LeBaron contributed nine points in the Cavemen's seventh Region Six victory against no losses. Holmstead had 19 and Randy Rhodes added 18. In what may have been "the game of the year" in Region Six, American Fork kept its composure com-posure on the road to stiffle the upset hopes of a hustling Springville squad, which went into the game with only one loss. Ironically, the Red Devils had six men in double figures but still lost. Rife led the group with 18 but lots of credit has to go to. Mike North, Gary Christensen, Last weeks Bantam Junior Varsity games showed Friels defeating Stocker by a score of 30-24 and Superior downing Art City 36-28. Tonight's ball games at the armory starting at 6 p.m. will be Art City vs. Stocker and at 7:30 p.m. Superior vs. Friels. (Photo by Lowery) Cut Food Costs THIS YEAR Plant a vegetable Garden o you ll be glad Now Available. A Large Variety IWU UIU! .. . .1 or vegeraDie aeea. GUARANTEED FRESH AND FERTILE BUY NOW AND SAVE! (Prices will be higher next spring!) PEAT PELLET l" 79c dozen WtJ $4.99 per 100 U I The Pot That You Plant! Seeds, Plants, Bulbs Grow Big Faster I " 50c doz $3.50 for 1 00 2l4" 60c doz. $3.99 for 100 3" 89c doz. $5.50 for 100 4" 1.79 doz. $10 for (00 Jiffy-7 Peat Pellets Combines functions of not anH seventh its ultimate 1. . ' UH!1 "no: 8 .f'l,.?5tncl,ed wf "Pands into a sphagnum fxat pellet I in. across and 2 H in. high upon addition of water geeds mav be started in it. or cutting transplanted to it. Provides fast, uniform growth .. . saves filling of pots, prevents transnlantini; shock. Special F R F F PLANTING CHARTS wiiii an itieu purchases OPEN & a'm r5:30 p.m. Clo..d Sund.vi and Holidays WE ACCEPT- S3zJ ViiA-v-N t- I I whit,, II ' st''t6m Chris Miller is last week's Prep of the Week. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Miller and is a junior. He was selected because of his fine performance against Uintah last Saturday night. (Charlie Lowery Photo) Mike Newton, John North and Chris Miller. Newton fouled out in the opening seconds of the final quarter and Miller was disqualified with three minutes left. They are both 6-4 and the Red Devils were left with no one over 6-2 in those crucial final minutes. "Their size really hurt us," said Springville Coach Elliott Jordan. "And you have to give them credit they made some key baskets. Our own kids gave it all they had and you can't ask for any more than that." "This was really a big win for us," said American Fork Coach Carl Ingersoll. "We had been worried about this game all season." Coach Ingersoll's team now has a two-game lead over Springville and Lehi after the first half of the league schedule. Had the Cavemen lost, they would have been tied with Springville. If there was a turning point in the game, it came midway through the third quarter. Springville was leading, 32-31, and its deliberate four-corner offense was keeping the game close. Then with 4:26 left in the quarter, Don Williamson made a hook shot and was fouled. He missed the free throw but Scott Bond got the rebound and scored. Bond was fouled. He missed the free throw but Scott Bond got the rebound and scored. Bond was fouled, missed the free throw and a jump ball was called on the rebound. American Fork controlled the ball and Bond was fouled, again. He made the first of two and again the Cavemen got the rebound and Bond scored from underneath. un-derneath. When the smoke had cleared, American Fork had scored seven straight points in 16 seconds and taken a 38-32 lead. From that point on, Springville had to abandon its four-corner offense and run with the Cavemen. American Fork built up eight-point eight-point leads five times in the next few minutes and led at 57-48 with 6:51 remaining. Miller then scored nine points before fouling out to cut the margin and Christensen and Mike North contributed some important points. The Cavemen had taken a 5-0 lead but Springville tied the game at 13. American Fork went ahead, 27-20, in the second quarter but the Red Devils cut the margin to 29-28 at halftime and took the lead in the opening minutes of the second half. "Our kids got too anxious defending against the four-corner four-corner offense," said Coach Ingersoll. "We were just glad our rebounding forced them out of it Bond battled real well under the boards and Holmstead and LeBaron fed off well." "All our players did a good job," said Coach Jordan, "but losing our two big men when we did really hurt." I AMERICAN FORK (75) G..F..P Holmstead 8 3-5 19 Bond 9 5-11 23 Rhodes 8 2-3 18 Williamson 2 0-2 4 LeBaron 3 3-3 9 T.Smith 1 0-0 2 Totals 31 13-24 75 SPRINGVILLE (70) G..F..P M. North 4 3-6 . 11 Christensen 4 2-2 10 Newton 5 1-1 11 Rife 7 4-4 18 Miller 5 0-0 10 J. North 5 0-0 10 Shepherd 0 0-0 0 Totals 30 10-13 70 Score by quarters: American Fork 15 29 52 75 Springville 14 28 44 70 Bowling scores Springville Ladies League Team: Won Lost Art City Parmacy Rex Drug Dean Evans Chry-Ply Berg's Art City Theatre's Terry's Drive Inn Ind. High Series: Wheeler, Evans, 576; 1 5 5 6 9 10 Ethel Pat Brinkerhoff, Terry's, 471; Dot Perrero, Berg's, 469. High Team Game: Dean Evans Chry-Ply, 843; Art City Parmacy, 832; Rex Drug, 818. Ind. High Game: Ethel Wheeler, Evans, 236; Pat Brinkerhoff, Terry's, 176; Marlene Bott, Pharmacy, 172. o . il Part of the action in the Springville-American Fork game played last Friday in the Springville High School gymnasium was Mike North trying to recover a loose ball before it rolls out of bounds. (Photo by Charlie Lowery) iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin Could YOUR executor arrange to sell profitably your home, a 1922 Ford, 18' boat, jewelry, patent and license agreements, GMC stock, your stamp collection, and an original Norman Rockwell painting? WE COULD . . . It takes dedicated and experienced people to administer an estate. And, technical knowledge. Knowledge of how to arrange for prompt and accurate, appraisals. 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