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Show Tigers Battle For Posts-PG Game Nears Doves 1st Target Of 1 968 Seasons Hell Week as the first week of- football is called has finally conio to an end at the Orem High Tiger camp. The first two weeks of football did not come to end without causing a number of potential football players to throA' in the towel and call it quits as far as the garni? of "rock'em sock'em football is concerned. Out of the nearly 60 jiuiors who reported for the first drills 19 are all that remains. The seniors did not show the wear and tear of the first weeks grid as much as the juniors as there is about 50 upper classmen still knocking heads for the positions po-sitions on the team. A scrimmage will be held Saturday Sat-urday morning and after that Coach Westover will know a little more about what to expect from this years crop of battling Tigers. Last Saturday the Tigers battled battl-ed each other for four hours in a inner-squad gam;- and at the end of the game the only score chalked up was by Val Oveson. Boys that are bound to be heard from before the season gets too far along are Dave Affleck, and Kent Peterson at quarterback, Gai-y Taylor, Craig Crompton, David Schofield, as backs. Dave Cunningham a transfer from Y High has been looking good along with Rick Shumway a guard fr ;m the Y High. Other boys that displayed dis-played promise are Howard Lewis, Lew-is, David Stanley and Dale Johnson, John-son, just to muation a few. Schofield Scho-field is looking good as a kicker and should have a great year in that department. Orem meets Pleasant Grove at Orem Friday September 6th at Orem in their first league game. New Quail Species Introduced to Utah A new species of quail was introduced into the State of Utah by the Division of Fish and Game last week. The birds, mountain quail, were trapped by the California Department of Fish and Game and shipped air express to Salt Lake City. The birds were picked up by the Divison of Fish and Game personnel and released in Davis County and on the LaSal Mountains near Moab. This initial release included adult and juvenile birds. It is heoped the quail will be able to adapt to their new environment and establish breeding populations. popula-tions. Mountain quail are reported to be an exceptionally sporty bird; difficult to hunt because of the terrain they inhabit and are also reported to be rated among the top in table quality. These birds should not compete with other game birds such as chukar partridge or forest grouse. They are adapted to vacant va-cant habitat niches and should provide another species for the upland game bird hunter to pursue pur-sue during fall months. This mountain quail is the largest of the species of quail. It is larger than both the California Cali-fornia quail and the Gambels quail. Adult mountain quail will weigh nearly 12 pound. Mourning doves will be the target of scattergunners as the first bird hunt of 1968 gets un derway on Monday, September 2 at 6:25 a.m. for an estimated 25,000 hunters. Open rangelands will provide the better hunting areas as doves will frequent these lands rather than the cultivated lands. Basic rules for this season call for a September 2-30 hunt with a bag and possession limit of 10 and 20 respectively with shooting hours of one half hour before sunrise to sunset each day of the season. This years bag and possession lijnits are a reduction from past years. The entire state is open except part of Salt Lake and Utah Counties, Coun-ties, and the same regulation on having shotguns plugged so no gun can hold more than three shells in the magazine and chamber combined com-bined is in effect. Dove hunters are again asked to abide by regulations which make it unlawful to shoot from a vehicle or to shoot at doves on power or telephone lines or poles. Opening day shooting ends at 7:59 p.m. A complete list of daily shooting hours is listed in the mourning dove proclamation. All persons 12 to 15 years of age are permitted to hunt mourning mourn-ing doves but they must have a small game hunting license and be accompanied by a person 21 years or older. All hunters are encouraged to obtain a proclamation proclama-tion for all rules on this dove hunt. During the 1967 dove hunt the 25,161 hunters harvested 263,949 doves with hunters in Utah, Box Elder, andTooele Counties taking the greatest percentage of the statewide harvest. f - ' mm mm Please, Drivers, Give 'em a Brake The next few weeks will see public and parochial schools back in session throughout Utah. Streets and crosswalks around and leading to schools will again be busy areas. The next few weeks will be especially es-pecially hazardous for both the motorist and the youngsters as everyone re-adjusts to the special traffic and predestrian patterns created by school schedules. T he Utah S af ety C ouncil pointed out today that all traffic must stop for school buses when the flashing red lights on the buses -are in operation. This includes both the traffic behind and the traffic approaching the bus, except for oncoming traffic on divided highways. The reason behind this law is obvious. Children are hurrying either to get on the bus or to get out and play after a day of classes, and they often forget about traffic. This is especially true when they know that traffic is expected to stop for the flashing flash-ing lights on their bus. Each year complaints pour in to local law enforcement offices about motorists who fail to stop. Usually this is just a dangerous violation of the law, but far too Now - Bennett's "Tender Loving Care" Paints (it once-a-yenr SALE PRICES AVAILABLE IN HUNDRIOS OF AUGUST 22th through August 31st Bennett's LATEX-WALL PAINT Save on our best latex wall paint. Quick drying, long'last ing, completely washable. Reg. $685 $4 Bennett's LATEX SEMI-GLOSS VI-KO LATEX HOUSE PAINT For people who don't like to paint so often. Our best formula for-mula house paint. Dries dust-free dust-free and bug free in minutes. Lone lasting! D $Q15 l t Vj . J Satin-lustre latex enamel for 9 O waUs and woodwork. Easy flow- C JT, ing, fast drying. Water clean-'r up. Odorless and excellent Jr washability. Reg $829 EL RANCHO REDWOOD STAIN Beautiful, durable finish for 88 mr mm mm fonpcic chincrlac and miMnnr 4) t 3 furniture. Ready-mixed. Manu- O O lineup. jr . Now only " 9al- Entire line of ROLLERS - BRUSHES SHAMPOO 2Q BIG 9x12 FT. PLASTIC DROP CLOTH ony OFF W - fREi !jM this con wiberg's Dept. Store ladies- nn vnini ait : O r POLY RAIN COAT LADIES- OR MEN S Compact, full length t cjin tout w;th hood and mop fastener. G'eol for fishing, golf, hunting . . all occasions. 83& North State - OREM Phone: 225-0336 MERLIN FINCH displays a beautiful trophy head from his prize antelope that he bagged in the Southwest desert, about 8 miles out of Delta. The horns had a span of 14 inches. Merlin drew one of the 30 permits issued in the area, 'which covers approximately 500 square miles in the Madena area. The kill was made from about 400 yards with a 300 Mangum. The antelope when first spotted was about 4 miles away and had to be stalked until shooting range was achieved. Merlin reports that he also killed seven rattlesnakes on the trip. Merlin and his boys hunted two weekends. Douglas and David helped in the hunt, Mrs. Linda Finch, and son Mike also accompanied the successful hunters. Randy Price Wins Provo Golf Tourney Randy Price a senior at Orem High school this year pulled a major upset last Saturday by winning the Timpanogos Golf championship at Provo. Young Price had to win over Paul Lan-gager Lan-gager another potential great on the golf course. Both boys are from Orem High School and were coached by Coach UdellWestover. Final score 5-4. Price, a boy who appears as calm on the course as the proverbial pro-verbial cucumber eliminated some top golfers on his drive for the title. He beat Charlie Hawk a tourney champ, 3-2. Mix Newberry New-berry 1 up and Garth Ford 3-2. All three mentioned above are consistant winners on the golf course and have been around for quite a few more years than the youngsters from Orem. Six Bird Hunts Begin Sept. 28 Meeting in Salt Lake City last week the Board of Fish and Game set final regulations on six bird hunts for this fall, all hunts set to open September 23 at daybreak. day-break. Opening Saturday, September 28 will be the chukar, hungarian partridge, ruffed grouse, blue grouse, sage grouse, and wild turkey season which means hunters hunt-ers will have a chance for some fine mixed bag shooting. Longest bird hunt of the year will be for chukar and hungarian partridge, this hunt runs to January Jan-uary 15, 1969 with a bag and possession limit of 8 and 16. In passing on the forest grouse season the Board established a hunt of September 28 through October 29 with bag and possession posses-sion limit of 4 and 8. Wild turkey will be legal game in, the open areas September 28 through October 18. Unlimited special permits are available for $3 and the bag limit was set at one bird for the Lasal Mountains and two birds in the other open areas. Shortest of the bird hunts will be for sage grouse. This will be a two day hunt with bag and possession pos-session limits ranging from one and two to three and six birds respectively depending on the hunting area. All of this upland bird hunts will have daylight shooting hours. Interested hunters should pick up proclamations for the bird hunts and make sure the area they plan on hunting is open and the bag limits. Orem-Geneva Times Thursday, August 29, 10GB THE GIRLS By Franklin Folgsr VCD "1 just made the most wonderful discovery! If you put one foot at a time on the scale and add the two weights together, it isn't NEARLY as much!" Advertisement JIM BEAM BOURBON-MAKING BOURBON-MAKING NEWS SINCE 1795 often it ends in tragedy as a child dashes out suddenly from behind a bus and is struck by a car which failed to stop. In marked school zones, speed is limited to 20 miles an hour during hours when children are present. The same is true of school crossings. Last year there were 548 auto-pedestrian auto-pedestrian accidents in Utah, a large proportion of them involving involv-ing school children. Many of these tragedies resulted in snuffing out the life of the child. The Council stressed the fact NARCE Convention Sept. 13 at S.L.C. C. Leland Dalley, president of the Provo Chapter of the National Nation-al Association of Retired Civil Employees (NARCE),reports that the annual State Convention of that organization will be held Friday, Fri-day, September 13,attheRamada Inn, 1000 South State Street, Salt Lake City. CivilService Retirees from this area are invited and urged to attend., ,. Registration is from 8:30 to that children are unpredictablex 9:30 a.m. Meetings commence at and often irresponsible simply a" ana win continue inrougn' because they are children. This imposes an even stronger burden upon motorists to be extra cautious cau-tious when driving in areas where children are playing or apt to cross the street to or from school. 1 Please, Mr. and Mrs. Motorist, be careful! Larkspur's Lovely llllllli&liplllllll out the day. Speakers for the meetings will be Senators Wallace F. Bennett and Frank E. Moss, Carlton J. Chace, Director of Field Operations Opera-tions for the WashingtonOfficeof NARCE, Joe G.Attebery, National Nation-al Field Vice President for this region, Region VII, and County Commissioner Conrad B. Harrison, Harri-son, Speaking for Mayor J. Bracken Brack-en Lee, who will be out of the city. A banquet will be held in the evening at 6 p.m. Reservations for this should be made with chapter presidents. Pheasant Rules Set By Board Scattergunners will have about the same season for 1968 as they did last year in which to pursue pur-sue the ringneck, as the Fish and Game Board in their meeting meet-ing last week established this years season length of from 5-23 5-23 days. Utah and Salt Lake Counties will have the shortest hunts running run-ning from November 2-6, with slightly longer hunt set for November No-vember 2-8 in Beaver, Carbon, Emery, Garfield, Grand, Iron, Juab,. Kane, Millard, Piute, San-juan, San-juan, Sanpete, Sevier, Tooele, Wasatch, and Wayne Counties. Sixteen day hunts from November Novem-ber 2-17 will be held in Box Elder, Cache, Daggett,Davis,Du-chesne, Daggett,Davis,Du-chesne, Morgan, Rich, Summit, Uintah, Washington, and Weber Counties. A season of November 2-24 has been set for state and federal fed-eral lands which will provide even more opportunity for the dedicated pheasant hunter. Shooting wiU start at 8 a.m. opening day with the balance of the seasons shooting time set at daylight hours. Bag and possession limit this year is three and six respectively, respective-ly, with roosters only being legal targets. CLERMONT, KY 173 years ago Jacob Beam started : making Beam Bourbon here in Kentucky. It is still being made here today. And still by the Beams. Along with inspired skills, the making of a Bourbon like Beam requires an unusual :ombination of land, climate and natural materials. And it's all here, in north central Kentucky. There's the ancient, underlying under-lying limestone springs that supply sweet, clear water a vital ingredient in the making af fine Bourbon. The rich, fertile, surrounding surround-ing valleys and plains provide the needed corn, rye and bar- ioresis 01 fchiTr l in ne jggg wood, frei theH-imr takes plac the q Beam Bo much to tion and adhefenfeOTeorig-inal adhefenfeOTeorig-inal formula. But it owes even more to the fact that today, as for over 173 years, it's the Beams who make Jim Beam. Every gjssof today's Beam nature an to David to T. Jer Booker t im best from ' de that was ob to David lonel James Baker and 4. 173 years. w.v.i.-.- . .L.-.v.'..:-:-::v. x-jSBR:':!?' n?m J THI W0E1D5 mCSIBOUEBOK Vmst r : : yiom liMBEaJkr m 1 w I UMUCKT " ' 1 i STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY Side taon ;aor ,ber 1 f Z'UA i - tv Jim Beam 86 proof Kentucky Ken-tucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Whis-key distilled and bottled by the James B. Beam Distilling Co., Clermont, Beam, -Kentucky. The newer larkspurs branch from the ground, thus form more compact, better looking plants. Larkspur's a lovely flower early - blooming, graceful with its long spires and feathery fo-. fo-. liage, colorful in sufficient variety va-riety to suit any gardener. For earliest flowers, sow seeds in fall. Blooms from this sowing sow-ing will appear in May ' and early June. Spring sowing will result in later blossoms and the flowering flower-ing season can thus be prolonged pro-longed until September. Warm weather at the time seeds are sown often results in erratic germination. Wait until it is cool, then sow seeds in well prepared garden soil where the plants are to bloom. Larkspur seedlings respond poorly when transplanted. Allow 3 to 4 weeks for seeds to sprout although, if planted late enough, fall - sown seeds will not come up until spring. When seedlings are 3 to 4 inches high thin them to leave the sturdiest standing a foot apart. Then they'll have room to develop fully to their ultimate ulti-mate 4 to 5 foot height. Water copiously each time there has been no soaking rain for a week. Larkspurs love moisture. Some kinds, instead of having side branches from the upper part of the stem, branch at the ground, thus producing more compact, better looking plants. Names of strains with this ground-branching habit include Supreme, Regal. Giant Steeplechase Steeple-chase and Giant Imperial all very popular. 4 2 Every '68 Chevrolet goes ... at low close-out prices during our '68 Chevy Clearance Sale. Stop by today and get a car as sharp as the deal. SAVE NOW ON A CAR WORTH OWNING WOW Turbohydramatic Transmission Tinted Glass Electric Clock 4 Season Air Conditioning Rear Seat Speaker 825 x 14 White Wall Tires Power Brakes Power Steering Radio 275 HP Turbo Fire - V-8 Engine Reg. $4261.95 THE LITTLE PROFIT DEALER (P. Mtom C 175 NORTH 100 WEST 373-9500 |