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Show - Mays Bolsters N.L. WilCINCINNATI (UPI) lie Mays, the grand old man were selected by players and of active competitors, will make his 16th appearance all-st- in n the classic when he joins 10 other stars to complete the National League squad in Washington Tuesday night mid-seaso- St. Louis Cardinal manager Schoendienst today named the 11 to the squad. The starters, with the exception of pitchers, Red coaches. Classic Hopes All-St- ar Tony Perez of Cincinnati and Dennis Menke of Houston. did not pick anybody from his own Cardinals. Instead, he named Roberto Clemente of Pittsburgh, Pete Rose of Cincinnati and Rusty Staub of Montreal to join San Franciscos senior Schoendienst citizen. Added to the Infield were Ernie Banks and Glenn Beckett of Chicago, Lee May and Aaron, Atlanta, of; Matty Alou, Pittsburgh, of; Cleon Jones, New York, of. Catchers Randy Hundley of Chicago and Chris Cannizzaro of San Diego round out the squad. The nine pitchers Schoendienst named include Tort Seaver and Jerry Koosman of New York, Bob Gibson and Steve Carlton of St. Louis, Juan Marichal of San Francisco, Phil Niekro of Atlanta, Larry Dierker of Houston, Bill Singer of Los Angeles and Grant Jackson of Philadel- n The starting lineup for die NL. against the American League will be Willie McCo-veSan Francisco, lb; Felix MUlan, Atlanta, 2b; Don Kessinger, Chicago ss; Ron Samo, Chicago, 3b; Johnny Bench, Cincinnati, e; Hank phia. The Cardinal skipper also revealed that. Chicago manag- terfield er Ernie Banks makes his Uth appearance in the World's In A Mad Whirl! 15th Victory United Pres International Phil Niekro has corne a long way ince his high school days as John Havliccks basketball teammate in Bridgeport, Ohio. Havlicek gained stardom with the Boston Centics, while it was rainbow Dexrtt water the eddy. Far under the brush, off the main current, an-- .. surfaced Just enough to nip a small 3 ( other fish the tree. He might have tumbled off which - fly brownie. small a been r! I figured the big browns, if there were any in acul-pi- n , that hole, would be feeding the fast water for or shiners. Lots of small fish to be found. The spring hatch had been good and the holdover Dugwas Jerry Preston Just then two men came down the river. One stopped at the top of my hole and chummed it with canned coin. Then he fished it He jerked as if a fish had struck him. But no more action, r ' ' was cheesing The other joined him In their due time they went ashore, walked the next hole. ' Vi it to t s They didnt even fish where the feeding fish it had were. The com showed in. the shallows settled back in the sands. Looked like a swill pit I spent a little more of the day lazily, waiting out the evening until the day dozed into dusk. My father, in those old depression years, had taught me to be on the stream as the sun set He was the best fly fisherman Id ever known and a nr fine instructor he was. - . By DAN PATTEON Deseret News Sports Writer Its down to die nitty-gritt-y row as far as the Utah little leaguers are concerned! Tournaments from Cedar (Sty in the south to Logan are starting to fulfill the aspirations of boys ranging in ages Discipline, training, integrity, physical fitness and die frill to win are the stand- -' ards which guide die leaguers. One of die most interesting tournaments is taking place at the Rosecrest Park, 2760 South 2700 East. This is die Northern Utah Little League District Tournament. The winner of this tourney will travel to Cedar City next- for the . " " The action was on the waterway. Yon could savy a mans success by the fuss in his fight Yon knew when he landed a lunker. You kept the fat fish to trim a taut table; people in depression circumstances were hungry. At least we were! And you stayed late because you didnt know whether fate would fetch you to the fishing very soon agin. Frank Evans, an fly fisherman, made a point the other day as we talked about our d hobbies. Fishermen dont have the patience to fish with a fly rod any more, Frank figured. The art is going out with this generation! Maybe its gone! ,j rJ old-tim- er ? flippy-wriste- Two Big Drivers u - A TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) field headed by Bobby Unser and Mario Andretti compete Saturday in the 38-c- v U" Ex-A- Deseret News Special Flanker Mike OShea, tailback Altie Taylor and defensive secondary LOGAN ? coach Walt Corey will be on side of the College when they face the New York Jets Aug. 1 in Chicago. Corey, who joined Utah States staff in 1967 after playing seven seasons with the Dallas Texans and Kansas City Chiefs of the AFL, will '"hand!s defensive secondary chores for the All-Sta- . Utah finals. The Utah winner will join winners from other states in the Little League World Series at Williamsport, Aide Taylor signed a contract with the Detroit Lions earlier this year for terms reportedly to be toe best for a rookie in 1969 since O. J. Simpson remains unsigned. Taylor and Mike OShea were two members of States 1968 backfield which included quarterback John Pappas and fullback Frank Nunn. All four backs have signed professional contracts, Pappas and Nunn going to Conley r, 2-- Pennsylvania. Dugways little leaguers left their hitting caps at home as the defending champs of the Northern Utah District Tournament were dropped by last years runnerup Rosecrest, Thursday. Maxwell Bob had the defending kingpins on the ropes while hurling a 3-- one-hitte- r. In other games, Juab edged and Sunset Fillmore, 4-- 2, socked Southeast, Boyd Parks, Juab boys exploded for three runs in die first frame anad then fought 7-- 5-- 1 (UPI) -veteran pro and a young former amateur great shared e a lead going into todays second round of the $150,000 Philadelphia Golf' PHILADELPHIA A Classic. Frank Boynton, an ebullient pro from Cleveland, and Bob Dickson, a former U.S. quiet and British Amateur champion, fired five under par 67s in sweltering weather Thursday during toe opening of the tourney at the White-mars- h Valley Country Dub. Their similar rounds of five birdies and no bogies gave them toe slim lead over Mac Dale Douglass, McLendon, New Zealands Bob Charles and Lou Graham, who were bunched at 68. Two strokes off toe pace were Joel Goldstrand, Bunky Henry, Ray Floyd, Bob Stone, Babe Hiskey, Deane Beman and Tommy Jacobs. Former U.S. Open champl- - O 8-- 8-- Bob Burdas e . fires hot 67 on Lee Trevino was among seven at 70, two under par, while Dave Hill, Don January and Chi Chi Rodriguez were in a crowd at 71. Bob Defending champion Canada. OShea, who set nine pass receiving records at State in 1968, will report to camp with the Minnesota Vikings following the game. Both Taylor and OShea were three-yea- r lettermen at USU after transferring from junior college Taylor from Diablo Valley and OShea from Boise. Taylor, a native of Pittsburg, Calif., was a crowd pleaser when toting the ball All-St- whether on scrimmage runs, punt returns or kickoff returns. Taylor set a single game kickoff return record of 98 yards against Wichita State last season. OShea holds every season and career pass receiving record at State as well as one single game record. Tayloi; was selected to the North-Sout- h All-St- - -1-- -5 6,7 n homer in the seventh inning capped a wild slugfest. Bobby Bonds drove in five runs for the Giants with two homers and a double. Maury Wills and Wes Parker connected' for Los Giant-Dodg- Fewer. Hand Teols KETCHUM'S , Ftreryfhinj For TIm (Mldtr ' 4thS.et7tbWtMJ-4- Angeles. SALT LAKE THE CaODSTTO, j ' 30 WIDER TREAD - 7-R- Better Traction Better Steering McreMilesge 68 6i 5 35 36 3469 DESIGN IB 6.50x13 Frank Boynton Bob D'ckson Dale Douglass Bob Charles Lou Graham Mac McLendon Joel Goldstrand Bob Stone Tommy Jacobs Deane Beman Babe Hiskey Raymond Floyd Bunkie Henry John Jacobs Lee Trevino Dave Eichetberger Tom Weiskopf Bruce Crampton Fed. Excise Tax 55c Elackwall WW $1.00 more plus Recappable Tire ALL SIZES AVAILABLE AT COMPARABLE SAVINGS! In 35- -70 ONE DAYS SERVICE ON CUSTOM RECAPPING at 8 A.M. out at S P.M. Immodiot Service an Exchange Ait tire dona by Orlbtreod9ieeu atm enconditianalty guaranteed retread which (ail with Weetronkolly proeaaad for wporier balance ond tread adhastoo again! any failure lu than half of tha tread worn off will ba replaced with no charge to theeustomee, any tread wear an tha abov liittd pricu plw tba applicabla excise tax and eating charge. SLEEPING BAGS AIR MATTRESSES CAMP EQUIPMENT button Tho Camper" MOST BANK CREDIT M feta ACCEPTED -- i.'i.ia.MgyHa b Ihs Unit.d Statu. cards :LRainif Thi guarantee backed by Utah, oldest retread or, in busints tine 19.16, and can be covered by any B. F. Goodrich dtalor in TENT TRAILERS " EVERYTHING tor All (or A Ufa el tba traarf, with ao limit an time or mileage. Ait a (ailing with half ormore of tha tread warn off will ba replaced by Charging tho customer on a pio-rat- game in Miami, Fla., in January, and OShea played in toe Bowl in Tampa, Fla. . Financial NEW IN Her r (UPI1 sof ttie Philadelphia Golf Classic at the WM- temarsh Valley Country CIA (par . three-ru- eeSports PRESENTS as did Murphy had a par-7-2 PGA champion Julius Boros, Frank Beard and 1967 Classic champion Dan Sikes. weathThe near er and high humidity took its toll among the starting field of 147 players, which will be cut approximately in half after toe end of todays play. UB. Open champion Orville Moody collapsed on toe 15th fairway and had to withdraw after being treated in toe locker room. PHILADELPHIA Bob Dickson SECTION D 3-- In games today, Fillmore and Southeast started die ao- - the first round score :r it 4-- -- By ED McFALL is n six-ru- n 14-1- honored Thursday at the dedication of the new field by having it named after him. In winning or losing, sportsmanship and doing their best is a bond the little leaguers follow. ging. Scott Murphy, Wade Leatham, and Maxwell were the top hitters for the Rosecrest nine. a key Murphy contributed double. 3-- ThursCincinnati Reds, 12-day night for his 15th victory of the season, tops in the majors and put the second-plac- e Braves within a half game of Los Angeles in the Western Division. San Francisco edged Los St. Louis routAngeles, and ed Philadelphia, 11-Montreal nipped Pittsburgh, in the only other sched-- uled National League games. In the American League, Detroit topped Washington, Baltimore squeezed past Minnesota Cleveland, and Oakrapped Chicago, Bosland downed Seattle, ton at New York was postponed by rain. don with a consolation game at 1:30 p.m. Clearfield and Juab mixed it up in a championship contest at 4 p.m. and a big battle between Sunset and Rosecrest takes place at 6:30 p.m. Paul McGill, president of the Rosecrest League, was a rally by Fillmore to win. Clark Kerry Greenhalgh, Wood, Kevin Wing, James Eyre, Kelly Anderson, Brent Park and Curtis Hall provided the needed spark for the win. Sunsets Derek Washington smashed two homers and also the winning was pitcher Frank .against Southeast. Cramps and Bob Christensens crew looks like a team to beat with their power slugoff O'Shea, Taylor Join All - Stars gs S- by Dav IPkov WE RENT Vi 3 4 Trenton 200 auto raw. Unser won toe Indianapolis 500 last year and Andretti captured that classic last May 30. Photo Pro Boynton Amateur Dickson Share 1 Stroke Lead At P hilly In those lean years people labored long hours, traveled slow roads, never had days off, or paid tie another knot Nrw . . . while Rosecresfs Wade Leatham shows jubilation and thrill of victory as Bob Maxwell watches. y&aiiD Not Enough Timo vacations. We had to learn the night life of the native trout For that is when we had most of our fishing time. We walked in a whisper, never rippled the night-river to rout the trout We cast carefully time in the trees is no breeze. We had no light to e has had some of the best teachers, including Atlanta Luman Harris, Manager Coaches Harry Dorish and Satchel Paige, and Paul Richards, Braves' vice president, who handled top talent as one of the shrewdest catchers in baseball. ' The faculty lessons are paying off. Niekro beat the TOURNEY TIME! heavy. Lika A Swill Pit shows the intensity of the game as he talks to his coach Jim Perhoc . . . -- ' ' See Mjor League summary on Page D-- 5 Another fish was feeding in the eddy up the feet Maybe a rainbow Joe Torre had a single, dou- ble and homer No. 15 as St. Louis routed Philadelphia and narrowed its third-placmargin behind Chicago to nine games in the Eastern Division. Dave McNally, Baltimores unbeaten seemed destined for his fust loss of the season Thursday night after 13 consecutive victories. Ha trailed the Cleveland Indians, when he was removed for in the seventh a pinch-hitte- r inning. But its that kind of a year for Dave McNally. Bong Powell doubled in the eighth inning and Brooks Rob-- 1 inson followed with his 15th homer of the season to give the Orioles a 2 victory. George Mitt erwal two-rudouble highlighted a first inning as the Twins beat the White Sox for their ninth straight victory. Harmon Killebrew led off the second inning with his 28th homer of the season. belted Willie Horton a three-ru- n homer in the first inning and Dennis Higgins the! wild pitched across eventual winning run in the, eighth as the Tigers nipped toe Senators. Sal Bando had five hits and drove in four runs to power toe Athletics over the Pilots. Bando had two doubles and three singles to back Jim Hunters six-hpitching. Niekro discovered his decision to play pro baseball was a torturous road through minor league towns. Along the way, Niekro developed a knuckleball to go with an assortment of pitches that finally elevated him to ntajor league status. But h , hole 1 r had two previous -tints. Beckert, Cannizzaro, .undley, May and Menke make their debuts in the classic. Niekro Posts well hidden from the chum- -, couple of seasons mere, the spinners, the swill Jills. The trout was flicking for a small caddis fly. X thought of switching to a tannish quilL 9 Pete Rose played in three others and Perez and Staub putouts. He started 14 consec1957 from utive games He 1966. wasnt through named to start in 1967 or 1968, but last year opened In cen- - I had thee. The fish had been there for a ,,i all-st- all-sta- large enough. I looked at my small Adams dry fly, fingered its wings a little to spread them for the right sot upon the surface. I waxed it a little and then dipped it in the water to wash off excess oil. - n r Willie Mays is in the record book with 23 hits, 20 runs, six stolen bases and 50 I sat and watched. It was an ideal spot for a natty native. By the size of the swirl he looked wa classic. Third to Mays and; Aaron in longevity. Clemente has been in eight other gams. all-sta- I walked through the cottonwoods and paused along a grassy bank. The old Weber River was running right. There was a bit of a bug hatch out. Now and then a nipping trout would snatch a gnat off the tail sticks of the big hole. . Leo Dorocher and Cincin- nati manager Dave Bristol r coaches. will serve as KiHMinilffillMtnUIIMHWmiHMUHHWffilttinHtlMffMRIUHMMUtl - Rose Haeli '.lilicr V ' when injured. Uid wivii vfvie Tints CO. 49 East 9th South 5214123 Open Mon. thru Set. 8 a.m. to 6 Between Main vj. The p.m.- - A Straight-Tal- k Tire People State |