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Show Braves Shock Farmers In 62-6- 1 Fray; Cyprus Next GRANITE PARK. Bountiful's Picture at Right mmm Braves, who weren't that highly high school, Viewmont, on Dec. regarded, snipped the 10. winning skein of Granite Like the varsity, the Farmer high's cage crew at seven Jayvees took it on the chin, but straight here Thursday. The by a bigger margin-77-6- 0. The visitors chalked up a defeat was the sixth, against 62-narrow verdict in a game one win for the Granite team. In which they led almost all Down 17-after eight minuthe second half after trailing tes, the junior Farmers stayed during portions of the first. with the Bountiful crew the next Their setback left Coach Jim two quarters, trailing 35-at Hill's crew with a 1 mark the half and 55-5- 0 going Into the as they moved into competition final stanza. The home team for the title in Region Three's kept pace largely through the division one. Their initial foe, efforts of Jay Maddox tomorrow (Friday) night at 8, scoring and Roger McMillan who prowill be the Cyprus Pirates. duced 22 and 16 points, resThe game, which will be at pectively. is the first of three Magna, The Granite crew lost the between the services of McMillan in the final league clashes two clubs. They'll play Jan. period, still trailing by just five. 28 at Granite and again Feb. 15 The Bountiful cagers taking adat Cyprus. vantage of the Granite loss, It's part of a unique sche- widened the gap, then turned the dule in which all division one game into a runaway against squads will play each other Farmer substitutes. three times. The Farmers get Despite the loss, Coach John Olympus and Granger twice at Wood said he felt his Granite home; play Skyline and Cyprus lads played "one of their better In games. The twice junior Farmers hit addition each team plays each 12- - for-1- 2 from the foul line other squad on its own court, as compared to for making a total of 12 games the Bountiful cagers. The visiwhich will decide the division's tors held the upperhand in the state tourney entrants. 4. field goal department, In spoiling a perfect mark for the Farmers in Thursday's tus sle, Bountiful built up a four er marpoint, 18-gin which the home club erased in the second stanza and turned 1 intermission lead into a for home fans to cheer. The It was short-live- d. OGDEN. Nine Cyprus high Braves stormed back with a five of them from graduates, out-pin the third the Pirate squad which won the 16 frame while giving up only 1965 state high school swimwith Granite and it was 54-ming championship, head up a on the short end as the last 13- - man Weber State college period opened. swimming team which opens its The Farmers nearly got their season in the home plunge on edge back in the last canto, Saturday. outscoring the visiting clan 11-- 8 The Wildcats host Utah State with a controlled offense. But it in a dual meet slated to start wasn't enough. at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. The losers kept pace at the Freshman members of the free-thro- w line, trailing rather Weber team include Glen Cea-se- r, from decisively Wade Collings, Ron Wim-me- r, where Bountiful rang up 25 Dennis DeDecker and Jay fielders and Granite only 20 Diamond, who performed with The Farmers hit the state champion Bucs last at the charity mark while Boun year. tiful meshed only The Wildcats' only returning Fortunately for the Hill-me- n, lettermen are all from Magna. talented Junior Gordon Jolley They are juniors John Shackle-for- d continued to hit the strings, and Greg Bateman. Both firing 23 points on eight field scored in the Big Sky conferers and a output at ence meet last year. e. He had scant the Two other Magna lads who are help. Steve Paur rang up 10, returning lettermen are Ralph rt and all from defending conference Ray Green, Jennings hit nine with a re- champion in the 200 yard breast-strok- e and Howard Mikolash, verse of Paur's formula, sinkin the coning only one fielder but bagging another point-gett- er at the foul line. ference meet. Normally potent Mike Curtis total slumped to a seven-poiand Larry Georgeadis, starting for the first time this season, withmanaged five out a field goal. Thursday's point Although total wasn't the lowest of the year, it was second only to the MURRAY. The second annual 58 tallies the Farmers used to Little League Football father-so- n nt three-poideciout a squeeze banquet will be held here sion over the other Bountiful at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the Murray City Municipal Buildpre-leag- 9 ue 61 11 31 7-- 26-2- Former Bucs 14 first-quart- 33-3- v -- TT, ' : l, S V... I Swim Team 23-po- int GRANITE HIGH'S 49 out-co- foul-strip- out-cou- Liffle League Banquef Slafed For Safurday nt gift-toss- es Region III Race Gets Underway title race The MURRAY. gets underway in Region Three basketball tomorrow (Friday) night with a full schedule involving all but one of the 11 teams in divisions one and two. Only Granger's Lancers, a darkhorse in the division one picture, will be idle. There'll be a key struggle in both divisions, spotlighted in spite of the fact all games have much Importance. Grabbing headlines in division one will be the Olympus invasion of Skyline, where the visiting Titans look capable of putting a damper on Eagle hopes for an opening victory. In division two, the blg onet takes Jordan's Beetdiggers to Judge. There's reason to believe Coach Jerry McCleary's invaders have the firepower to stop the defending division runnerup although the Bulldogs are notoriously tough to beat on their own floor. Other division two games will take Tooele to Murray and Bingham to Hillcrest. Cautious sldellners label the host Spartans a slight favorite and the home-cou- rt Huskies a substan-l- al one. Division one's other clash takes Granite to Cyprus, where Farmers will the favorite a as reign Pirates. to trim the Friday's games are the only ones scheduled In division two, but there'll be a Tuesday schedule in division one. It'll see Skyline prying the lid off Granger's home league season and Cyprus visiting Olympus. Granite will draw the Tuesday bye. en top-hea- en ing. Honoring the nearly 80 youngsters who participated in the league program last fall, the banquet will feature presentation of trophies to the outstanding lineman and back on each of the Junior, Bantam and Midget teams. Also, a 'fireman trophy will be awarded the Junior team member considered by coaches as being the most Inspirational to other team members. Murray high football coaches, city officials, Little League pep club girls and fathers of players will also be guests. Mothers of the youths will prepare the meal. League officials are extending an Invitation to any boy interested in playing football In the league program In future years. For reservations and further information, Ray Welte, district chairman, may be contacted. Stafe Reminds Of Gun Rules 6-- 6 Snow or Reg. Tread $3)95 HEM and up The practice MURRAY. campaign ended, Murray high cagers jump into competition tomorrow Tooele (Friday) night when is the visitor. Coach Jim Spencer's quintet and the visiting squad mentor ed by Gary Hale, will pry the lid off the title race in Region division two in the Three's 8 p.m. fracas. It will be preceded by a meeting of Spartan and Buff junior varsity squads. Depending upon the sports prognosticates, Tooele is ranked as high as a potential third in the region and as low as fifth. On the same basis, the Spartans have been rated the runnerup team In the region or as low as fourth. It would appear, on the basis of preseason play and sideline observations, Friday's game Is about a toss-u- p. The opening league schedule Murray a break. gives Following the Tooele starter, they'll be at home again next Friday against a Jordan team which is looming bigger in the title picture with each game. must Since the Spencer-me- n face the 'Diggers early, it's of some import to play on the Murray floor rather than at Sandy, sldellners point out. The Spartans wound up campaigning Thursday on the home maples by nipping Grove a persistent Pleasant 8. It was a tight quintet, ball game all the way, with the host crew displaying a poorer brand of ball than they exhibited against Skyline a week play-for-kee- ps pre-leag- ue 61-5- earlier. With Jim Butler and Winget pumping In six Jeril first-quart- er the points apiece, 4 winners got away to an advantage In the opening eight minutes of the game. Winget continued the pace with another half-dozIn the second stanza, four of them at the gratis-tos- s line. It was well he did, for the visiting Vikings poured In 19 tallies in the period and went to Intermission rest owning a 18-1- en 33-3- 2 lead. A third-quart- SALT LAKE. A reminder about illegal use of guns by juveniles was issued this week by the Utah Department of Fish and Game. State law provides that no one under the age of 14 may own a gun, officials said. Nor may they use or hunt with a gun before 73-6- 70-4- 64 57-4- 72-3- 54-4- ss foul-fill- 61-3- ed 60-5- pre-seas- on 39 67-6- 78 74-5- 73-6- Bucs Ouf Of Frying Pan, Info Fire Of League Play 63 pre-seas- on 44-3- ng 81-7- Tbt Hit UlTtrHiir til Thursday, January 6, 1966 -- m 0 and It was another big night for Hesse whose 26 points came on 11. fielders and from the 52-3- buckets. He grabbed game scoring honors, making nine of 18 attempts from the field and ah five of his chances at the charity line. The victory was gained in a come-fro- 7 1 behind fashion. The Lancers trailed by 6 at the quarter and had dropped behind 4 by intermission. But the Granger shooters swished the nets for , 19 points in the third stanza to enter the see-safourth period with a 2 lead. Contributing to the winners' offensive output were Mike 20-1- 75-4- 7. foul line. Schenk's 16 counters Included 10 free throws on 13 attempts. Other Lancer scorers were Stark 14, Thompson 11, Mendenhall and Hunt four each and Dan Paxton with three. Granger Jayvees last week fell to East 9 and to Clearto even their season 3, field mark at 4. East juniors held the Granger offensive to meager outputs of 11 points in each the first and third quarters and only nine in the second canto. The victors lead at the grabbed a 15-quarter, held the upperhand at then increasthe half by 0, ed the spread to 27 points with with the score reading 58-three periods gone. 71-4- 40-3- 64-5- 4-- w 55-5- Thompson with 15, ReedSchenk 12, seven apiece by Ron and Tom Stark and three by Merrill Hunt. Mendenhall, credited with the Men-denh- all last four defensive rebounds, shared honors in that depart 11 34-2- 31 ment with .Thompson. Each had Jerry tallied Mangus 10 and nine, while Schenk snared eight. Tom Christensen eight in the 92 Granger 78 losing cause, while Clearfield George Three quarters of torrid Paynter shooting by Clearfield was more than enough to overshadow a output by the Lancers In the final period last Thursday when the Granger won-lo- ss column was evened at The Clearfield cagers peppered away at the goal, aver aging 25 points each quarter for the first three periods and held a commanding lead Into the final eight going minutes of play. Granger's deficit by quarters was 7, 4-- 4. 28-po- 27-1- was credited a with "good night on the boards. The junior Lancers, in a 64-5- 3 loss to Clearfield, started off on the right foot, but could not stave off a second half surge of their hosts. Gran- - ' at the quarter and ger led 17-29-2- 7 at Intermission, before 1 going Into falling behind the last canto. Dale Reiser pumped in 14 points for the losers, while Kelly Benson added 11 and Roland Turpin picked up six. 16 43-4- 6. VHI .. SCOT; omi (tetwb 13 ) 2980988 41-3- fcm fenmim fa&r WGi&miti-- (sal after eight minTrailing 25-utes, the Magna lads fired In 25 points during the second AUTOMOTIVE quarter, narrowing the deficit break. WAYHE JOHNSON & SONS to 8 at the half-tim- e But the Miners, their lead 1770 WEST 3500 SOUTH threatened, came back with 22 "We Fix All You Car And Boat Problem" points In the third period, good 3 lead going enough for a Eves, for Your Convenience p.m. Weekdays, lt-- 4 Sat Into the final frame. A output In the last eight CHILD DAY CARE minutes cut the Miners' In half, but left Bingham with a five-poivictory. MURRAY NURSERY SCHOOL Key to the Cyprus loss, Coach Member of National Child Development Program 26 was the Smuln said, times which Pirate cagers 'threw the Asswlatlon for Education of Young Children ball away" and the 10 Bingham 344 EAST 5600 SOUTH points which resulted from the Buc mlscues. COLLECTIONS Brent Hogan's seven fieldfoul line ers and 262-469- 1 COLLECTIONS accuracy topped all scorers with 24 points. Jerry Coon BAD CHECKS? DELINQl ENT ACCOUNTS? popped In nine from the field Let I Collect Thrm Val Mot'leery and made one of three charity COLLECTIONS RECOVERY BUREAU, 5245 SO. STATE tosses for 19 points, while Ken Weldauer's 12 points came on three buckets and HEATING from the free throw mark. Four Bingham players were in double 262-138- 2 SHEET METAL WORK, FURNACES figures, headed by Loosll with Dimon 18 Shulsen and 20, WATER HEATERS 2', Stlcox 12. "Small Job Our Specialty" Cyprus coaches praised the cMOt CALL CHARLIE COOPER e board play of Dean a who sub Rees, grabbed five rebounds In the final three 255-400- 0 THOMPSON & SONS HEATING minutes. It was Rees who paced the 7640 SO. STATE I AIR CONDITIONING York Cyprus Jayvees to their sixth Certified Dealer In win eight starts with a Full 10 Vr. Guarantee Sale ft Service Ireo Estimate output, 14 of thorn in the last quaitor of a HOME CARE conquest of the Junior Miners. ll Tied afior eiQt.t n.inu-te- s, 262-015- 9 the Junior Bucs produced CAREER HOMEMAKERS CENTER two quarters for their and gift the highest game total of Sell Your Hand-Mad- e Items f 100 Yearly Membership season. Not to be outdone, the rertrmnltird House Work Weekly UQ Miners, following tntprrr.lstlon, Pally IS produced a qiuulTo! 63-5- rj?r V ..1 The home team Miners built up a first quarter lead which proved too much for the Bucs to overcome, although they produced in creditable fashion In the second and final stanzas. HOME SERVICES ED SMITH'S FORMICA 3699 Made Coffee Tablet Licenced Contractor GRANGER WEST Custom Table Kitchen Remodeling 4-- 298-552- 4 Expert SOUTH 3325 int in spurt er which they limited PeeGee to 11 and swished In 1? points of their own enabled the winners to overcome the deficit and pick 4 up a margin with eight minutes left. Though they whitthe Vikings tled it a trifle, couldn't slice the margin enough In the last stanza. Butler wound up with scoring reaching 14 unless accompanied honors in the Spartan cause, by a parent or guardian. Provisions of law also subject bagging 17 on seven fielders and free-to- ss the parent or guardian to arrest a perand prosecution for contributing formance. It was two more than to the delinquency of a minor teammate Jeril Winget collecshould they permit the juvenile ted on three from out -- court and to violate the laws. at the charity line. Department spokesmen noted Gary Blair and Craig Lott the Intent of this law was to meshed 10 apiece. In the losing cause, Dave provide for a period of time In which juveniles might be Klemm and Craig Colledge fired taken afield by someone of adult 13 each and Don Klemm added years so they might learn safe 13. Coach Dee Jensen's junior gun handling. varsity got away to a sizzling start in the first quarter, then coasted to a relativ3 win over Vlk ely-easy seconds In the second half of the day's double-bil- l. It was 25-- 9 at the quarter-tur- n, but the future Spartans had only a 1 bulge by Intermission. They moved it up to 0 by the end of three per) purchase 65-5iods. Dick Butler, who, incidentally, Is no relation to the varsity's top scorer, posted Murray 19 points to lead the winners and fiauled down 16 rrfcoun-ts49-4- COMPLETE 77-6- 43-3- II MILLER SERVICE 3939 So. Stat St. 74-4- Starts As Region Play The Murray, Utah, EAGLE AF High Is Lancer Foe Before First League Tilt 78-6- 25-po- int Used Tires 62-o- prevarsity with identical season records of three wins, three losses. In warming up for league play, the Spartans lost 8, to American Fork and Highland 9 Springville, 9, then bounced back to GRANGER. While other area Skyline whip South Sevier 8, 67-and Pleasant Grove. cage teams are opening league The Jayvees have traded action this week, Granger high's He had scoring help from Ron They bowed Lancers will wind up their preButter field, who hit 17; Dennis to American Fork, then season slate with an encounter 5 Davies with 11 and Bob Jensen, stopped 8. at American Fork on Saturday Springville who bagged 10. Butler garnered Highland administered a 5 night. nine field goals, but hit only defeat, then the future Spartans Coach Don Snow's squad, with on free-toopportuni9. a victory and a loss added to Skydowned SouthSevier game. line won a ties in the 9 record last sqeaker their Collectively, Murray sank before the PeeGee victory even- week, Will be out to keep their line while ed the season record. at the free-fli- p record above the .500 mark the visiting squad notched Although it has little bearing In the Saturday encounter. The on this year's situation, Lancers tripped East 5, but Thursday's results left the Murray trimmed Tooele last were downed 92-by Clearfield junior year, a week ago. 6. Spartan varsity and 1 and Tuesday will bring the Skyline to the Lancer court, In Eagles Pre-Seas- on the Granger team's opening encounter In Region Three, division one action. Varsity squads square off at 2:45 p.m., with a Jayvee game to follow. A jump into the their own and possessed a 64-MAGNA. The win over East was hanglead at the end of the third league fire from a on the rim of the Lancer ing frying pan promises to be a period after trailing the Bucs basket when the final buzzer hot one for Cyprus high's bas7 at the half. sounded. With the clock showing ketball Pirates. Three players accounted for 15 seconds left, Ron Menden-ha- ll Coach Dick Smuin's Bucs, 70 points of the winning team's rebounded an East attempt with just one win to their credit, totaL Adding to the 30 by Rees to break a 65 -- all tie. With the one Dar-rcwere Dave Cline's 21 and open Region Three, division ll seconds ticking away, Steve Walker's 19 counters. play tomorrow (Friday) night Hesse fired from 15 feet, high-flyiGranite's Pleased with the against win, Coach missed, then rebounded his own Farmers, then take on Olym- Thayne Applegate said he was shot and fired again. Fate held pus high on Tuesday. The two disappointed In his team's the accuracy of his shot as the Cyprus foes are tagged to battle defense, but tickled todeath ball rolled around the rim, it out for league honors. The with the offensive showing. through the net only Pirates have the home court Applegate credited Junior Mar- dropping the buzzer signaled the after advantage against Granite in a tin Jensen with a good passing game's end. game slated for 8 p.m., to be game, helping to get the junior Hesse was credited with makpreceded by a 6:15 p.m. Jayvee Bucs' fastbreak started. the last three ing Granger encounter. The Bucs travel to for a 2:45 Olympus p.m. game on Tuesday, with the Jayvee contest to follow. Last week, the Cyprus cagers suffered their seventh loss in eight starts, bowing to Bingham Tooele Invades Friday (21) and Moss (41) of a game the Farmers lost OUTSTRETCHED ARMS of Granite high's Mike Curtis Bountiful reach for a rebound in the closing minutes of tarry Georgians (25) pulls down a rebound in o battle with Bountiful's Anderson (43), while other Granite players Gordon Jolley (22) and Ray Jennings (It) focus in on the action. ut once-beat- u LA. 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