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Newspaper Archive of
Shelton Mason County Journal
Shelton, Washington
September 17, 1964     Shelton Mason County Journal
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September 17, 1964
 
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17. .,u- tmlI hey Are... 16 9E3 LgIbN--MAfi0N C0LTN'rY 30T.VRNAL--Published in " Twi, tma. town, 9helton, Washington Dave Bob Don JOH NSON M I LLER CLARY fullback halfback halfback \ sF Tom Bill Steve Steve Jim Roy LOWE A RCH ER ARCH ER AN STEY R ICH AR DS R ITN E R halfback q ua rterback center guard guard g uard ) Ed Brian Bill Floyd Mike Larry LATHAM SNYDER BATSTON E BARNES BRICKERT POWELL tackle tackle tackle end end end 1.1 12 Ibs. less tees up Football swings the spotlight on-I-:t bail club which could give the to Loop Field this Friday nightI Climbers fits. when the Shelton Highclimbers ELMA IVILL outweigh Shelton open their 1964 regular schedule I in the backfield principally be- Against an honored and worthy cause of 185-1b. quarterback El- traditioniflopponent,the Ehna mer James, who operates with Eagles. , 160-lb. halfbacks Bob Come," ano For years the Eagles ~ere a I John Mores and 177-1b. fullback conference i'ival who dished out] Carl Huttula. Shelton scouts re- port James is an' adept faker with the kind of size and speed which as much as they took from the Highclimbers when both were membe,'s of the Central League. ~Vhen Shelton left the Central five years ago the Eagles remained on the Climber schedule as a non- co'nference foe but have not been able to claim a victory over the • I Climbers since. 1N FAGT, a Bob Sund-c0ached Climber team has yet to lose to Et]na in his six semsons at the Shelton hehn. There have been a cotlple of ties and seve,'al one- point decisions, never anything wider than one touchdown--so the competition has been fierce and keen, to the delight of fans watch: ing these two long-time rivals battle. Last year tKe score was a thrilling 7-6. The script calls for no change in that. situation this year. The Eagles again have come up with 27 years in Olympia SOON A II// to be in ~.~AJV ]t' SHELTON ~j]~/ makes him a dangerous running threat. Up front the Eagles pre not overpowe,'ing but they have good all-around size, especially with tackles in the 185-190 pound divi- sion. The Eagles didn't have to show much in walloping Ilwaco last week, 31-0, using reserves through- out the second half and sticking almost completely to a running game. COAOIt SUND may give the starting £ullback assignment to ~senior Fred Lamont tomorrow, pier to ,arise. V With the help of one forfeit SkokoniiM~ swept to its second In- dian baseball tournament champ- {unship of 196~ over the Labor Day weekend at Nisqually. • Skokomish won the Fourth of July meet at Taholah ~-ls0 on the way to a highly successful Year for the Mason County team. Skokomish Whacked ~Varm Springs, Ore., in the opening vic- tory at Nisqually, 5-3, With two runs in the ninth on Guy Miller's probably the olfly change from the dqnble to break a 3-3 deadlock ex- lineup which opened and played {stunt since the fifth. • much of the jamboree last Friday. The title game was a breeze by This included Mike Brickert and comparison, 11-6, over Queets. Larry Powell at ends, Brian Sny- .Skokomish missed scoring only in der and Bill' Batstone at tackles, the first and third frames, didn't Jim Richards and Steve Anstey bat in the ninth. at guards, Steve Archer at center, BOB MILLEIt pitched the chum- Bill Archer at quarter, Tom Lows pionship victory, although he was.. and Mike Johnson at halves, and n't around at the finish. He got Dave Johnson at full. into a bit of trouble in the seventh Letterman halfback Bob Miller will be available Friday but let- and gave way to Charlie Frank, who finished up and gave the last terman halfback Don Clary is still severely slowed down from the effects of a bout with a bees' nest. MEN'S INDUSTRIAL Otherwise the squad is in good W I shape, although Snyder has theBoWs Tavern ........................ 7 1 handicap of a broken finger which Lumbermen's Mere ............. 7 1 has to be heavily protected. 20th Cent. Thriftway ...... 5 3 Game time is 8:00 p.m. Morgan Transfer ................ 4 4 ...................... Pantorium Cleaners .......... 3 5 Corrections Center'. ......... 3 5 Some falls are means the hap- Canteen ................................ 2 6 --Shakespeare i Clary Trucking .................. 1 7 !!!! !~!iii!iiii! High game-- ill Batstone 225 High series----Lionel Leman 597. Stair Step--Mark Fredson 175 176, 177. L.M. 4 ILionel Leman 597), 1V[or. gan Trucking O (Dean Smith 521); Pantorium 3 (Ken Freds,m 548), Clary Trucking% 1 (Chuck Reneck- er 457); BoWs Tavern 3 (Dan Densley 542), 20th Century 1 (Gary Clark 563) ; Canteen 2 • (Roger Russell 518), Correctimls Center 2 (Oscar Dierckins 453). LADIES TRIO LEAGUE W L Cottage Care ...................... 3 1 Team 4 ........... : ...................... 3 1 Temn 6 .................................. 3 1 Senior Morns ........................ 1 3 Team I .................................. 1 3 Team 5 .................................. 1 ,3 High game--Clara Erickson 180. High se~'ies---Davida Caersar 466 Split picks---Vel McInelly 5-10, Freida Britt 7-6-10, Merridee Guy- er 5-7, Beth Elliott 2-7-10. Openings are available for five or six additional girls to affiliate with teams in the Ladies Trio League, to complete an eight-team fircuit. Anyone interested is in- vited to contact league secretary Verna Johansen at 426-6134, or eave their nm-nes at the Timber Bowl. Tim league bowls every Thursday at noon. We have a few choice League spots left for fall. Q more engines, the best In 4- and 6-cyl nde5 V8 and diesel power, 18 tough truck engines workpower/ in all including 4 new lower cost !ng\l[nB of Chevy trtt.cks diesels. Here's the huskiest bunch in with miles of new of haulers that ever came looking Pment. Like that hand- for work! de pickup that leads the Our word for a!l t.hlS is workpower, of the 18 pickup modelsThat's the stu?l" mat makes a truck a i8 year. . tea~truck. A har -no ea money-saver, !ng, you'll find economical Yes, workpo.wer s herB and Chevy's , a wide selection of walk- at it in such a variety of types a'nd ]ger choice of big trucks, gsizes'that picking the best truck for components--trucks your job will be easier than it's ever tOUr business and budget, been before, if you're in the market those hoods you'll findjust get in touch with your dealer, BEGINNERS SENIOR CITI ZENS STARTING SOON We're going to have a SENIOR CITIZENS BOWLING" LEAGUE This season. Minimum age 55. Senior Citizens find bowling a source of FUN AND COMPANIONSHIP Ask for deta!ls at the Grove Streets SHELTON Phone 426.4426 L. L. Mclnelly, prop. 0 Queets run in the ninth. Miller was ahead, 8-3, going into the seventh and orobably could hav~ suYvived but: manager Mike Da- vis didn't want to take any ch'mc- es. ' Shortstop Dick Adams was the batting ace for Skokomish "with four hits, including a double aud triple, driving in three runs and scoring one. Miller also had a tri- ple. Catcher Pete Peters0n banged three hits and Rick Miller, Tom Gouley and Jim Tobin each pro- duced two as Skokomish kept~ up a steady tattoo against Queets pit- ching throughout the game. IN THE TOURNAMENT open- er, Ronnie Peterson did the pitch- ing and the three Millers--.Bol), Rick and Guy--the heavy hitting. Bob had three bingles, including a triple, as did Rick for his one blow, and Guy had two, including a double which drove in the im- portant ninth inning runs. Bob's triple drove in the first Skokomish marker in the third to equalize £or W~rm Springs' first-fram;e tally, and Tom Gouley tripled home a pair of teammates in the fourth. Peterson allowed Warm Springs only four hits and no earned runs. Two-out errors started Vearm Springs off in both its searing in- nings. The short scores: 11 liE Skok. 001 200 002--.--59 4 Win. Srgs. 10O 020 000- 3 ,t'4 Batteries--Run Peterson and Harmon Sparr; S. Miller and S. Sohme. ]l It li~ Queers 010 200 201.-- 6 13 2 Skok. 010 232 12x-]1 16 3 Batteries- l~ich Hicks, Butch Hicks and Dan Charles; Bob Mil- ler, Charles Frank and Pele Pet- erson. Gnod and bad, as could be ex- taunt hammered through the mid- pected, showed up in Highclimber dl(L fm: the eqna!izing l)o!nt; .... h ~ ~ . I In the seorelesS verflict, with piay Qnrl.ng t e pro-season zoot- . . • . [South, the Chmbers unveiled Lar- bail 3ambmce at Pozt Orchard list~ p • } , . ". ' i .~ .y owell's pass receiving assets Friday, where Shelton battled to and how they plan to compen- a 7-7 deadlock with East Bremer- [ sate for his slowness afoot. Twice ton and a scoreless draw with South Kitsap. Most Shelton fans eame away fairly well impressed with their Climbers, but Coach Bob Sund was none-too-happy over an obvious weakness in pass defense (which let East get away with a 50-yard scoring aerial) and .some rather lackadaisical taclding at times• However, Sand may have found a quick answer to that defensive soft spot against the long bomb for he inserted Byron Debban, the new junior from San Diego, at the left hallbaek spot where East had found an early opening and Deb- ban almost won the decision for the Climbers with a fine intercep- tion and brilliant 59-yard runback. THIS CAME with two minutes left in the 15-minute period. Deb- ban latched onto an East pass on the Shelton 15 (East had gone from its own 45 after an intercep- tion to two first downs on the 28) and weaved his way to the East 24 before beiug bounced out-of- bounds. Shelton surrendered the ball on the 18 four plays later after a. Tom Lowe to Larry Powell pass missed in the end zone. East scored with only 2:05 of the period gone, on a pass from quarterback Biff Strum to end Cal Pharr, who caught the ball on Sheltons 30 pretty well in the clear and legged into the end zone without being touched. A placekick got the extra point. APPARENTLY nettled by this lapse, the Climbers wasted no time squaring accounts. In 2:33 and six plays they had the touchdown, scored by Mike Johnson from the four. The move carried from the Climber 38, where the kickoff was returned, and included a cushy off- side penalty which mill{fled a 17- yard pass completion from Bill L~yeher to Mike Brickert. But Lowe made up for it with a fine 18-yard run to the East 49, Fred Lamont banged another 9 and an- other Archer-Briekert pass put it on the four to set up Johnson's scoring dash around left end. La- the 210-p(mnd, 6-3 end made re- ceptions, then lateraled to trail- ing Mike Johnson for husky gains, the first time for 50 yards, the second for 36, both going to South's 30-yard line. SOUTtl STOPF-ED the first threat on its own 19 and the clock stopped the other with the Climbers on the five. South gained considerable yard- age against the Climber defense yet never penetrated beyond the Shelton 30. Shelton played without tx~o backfield lettermen, Don Clary be- ing held out (although in uniform) because of bee stings, and Bob .Millet" because he~ hadn't put in the required minimum 14 practic- ..... ~ i i,, • ,,, iii Live £nlertainment Terrific Music by The Banjo King Trio es. Otherwise Coach Sund made full use of his uniformed forces, ~ennie plays many instruments which included several plas ers on ~nd all requests, accompanied by the B squad. MARTHA & GENE FLEMING All came through without tnjtuT ..... and should be r(~ady fdr the season ~vlemvers unly opener ag.ainst Ehna on Loop Field , ,,,, , ' nT2 t: ................................................ That Delightful Bowling Activity tI")NTE II.0 IEt IJ IIEl This = 'day Ni hi 2 SHIFTS 7 P.M, and 9 P,M. Please Call in for reservations or Sign up at the desk. PRIZES DONATED BY YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS WILL BE AN ADDED ATTRACTION. Phone 426-8452 \ 1st & Mill St, I RUGGE I RED & BLACK AND BLUE & BLACK ~0 o~ Woo, C~o ~o~ ~:t4'~ Also 24 oz. Wool Cruiser ADDED EXTRAS Yellow Dri-N-Tuff Waterproof Guaranteed, Oil & Acid Resistant \ Heavy Weight Cotton EL $ $295 WOOL SHIRTS ALL COTTON from $1295 Genu,ne Thermal Knit 2 Piece Each from $1,0 WATERPROOF 'HATS from $1'' Hunters Special Heavyweighl 85% Wo,ol 15% Nyion Regular $1.69 NOW & FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY $' '95 FLAME COLORED VINYL JACKETS Many Extra Features Only $198 I! I A Subsidiary of P. N. Hirsch & Co. Hunters Clothing Headquarters In Shelton