October 1, 1964 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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gI{ELTON--MA ON COUNTY
-- Publlshed in "Ohrl,qhnastown
.~..WL.
Washin
No'
ng 20.0
'deVoid of offensive
the Shelton Blazers
against the Miller
their 3unior high
atal last Thursday
Field.
showed fl,'uqhes of
hold off the
¢ielded lhree
loss.
'failed to nmke a
netted but eleven
in the ]fiean.-
pushed across
by
King Trio
.ny instrument
accompanied by
GENE FLEMING
O aly
touchdowns ill the seeolld and
fourth quarters. An 18-yl 'd t)as~
from quarlerbaek ,h)hn Aneich t(,
end Marl{ Vekieh followed by
Fred Ahel's irE-for-point phmg.:
gave the visitors a 7-0 halftimo
lead. The Blazer defense thwarted
two olhm serious hids, alld another
in the third qHarier, t)lll: Len Brltd-
vik and Aneich scored lO|lchdo\vns
for Miller in ihe final qtmrler on
eight and one-yard runs.
Coach Bill Brickert used Buff
Judah, Jan Donaldson, Jim Tylcz-
ak, and Dave Puhn at ends; Dave
Pierson, Gene Purvis, Mnrk Wen-
ton, Chris Close and Bill Tibbitts
at tacldes; Gary Miltenberger,
Chris Thoml)son, Sieve Bead, and
Mike StaH¢ey at guards; Tom Mal-
loy and Jim Stone at eenhw; John
Koch and Mike Swisher at quar-
rel'; Son Howe, Steve l~.enecl~:er,
Steve Mills, and \Villie Leo at
halfbacks; Dave Frank lind l)otlg
Swett at 'Fullback.
Three of the starters and rive
reserves were playing their first
Football g'ames. Miltenberger, one
of the neopllyles, led the Blazer
tackles with six, Frank, Reneeker
and Swisher had five each,.
Brickert was encouraged by one
facet of Blazer play --- his green
kids weren't sucked mIt of posi-
tion at any time.
Thirteen additional players par-
ticipated in a scoreless "fifth quar-
rel"'. ,
The Blazers draw a bye in lea-
gue play this week, their next ac-
tion being scheduled at Aberdeen
against the Hopkins Huskies on
Oct. 8. Meanwhile, the Blazer
eighth glade club, coached hy Jack
Mallingcr, sees its first action
next Wednesday on Loop Field
when it imsts Jefferson of Olym-
pia at 3:30 p.m.
The 8th graders play a four-
game schedule with teams in
Olympia.
1"o ^l/z:ll you need
,ou .nMv ca[ insurance
• TRIP ACCIDENT =NSURANCE
AS NECESSARY AS YOUR LICENSE
PHONE 426-8272
Herb Angle
Dick Angle
DI ¢H
()I,Y.MPI(; LICA(~ UE
\V L pf
Port Angeles ............ 1 0 16
Shelion .................... 0 1 13
Nm'lh Kitsap ............ 0 0 0
South Kitsap .......... 0 0 0
Central Kilsap .......... 0 0 0
East l),remerl(m ........ 0 0 O
L,a~l Friday
Port Angeles 16, Shelion 13
East Brcmerton 27, Kelso 0
Central Kitsap 34, Sequim 0
South Kilsap 26, Vashon 0
Meadowdale 32, North Kitsap 0
Tiffs Friday
Tumwater at Shelten (no)
East at West Bremerton (nc)
South at North Kitsap
Central at Perl Townsend
Port Angeles at Bainbridge
pa
13
16
0
0
0
0
If Port Angeles goes on to win
the 1964 Olyml)ic League football
championship, as the l~oughriders
are now favored to do after their
1.6-13 victory over Shelton last
Friday, there will be a laint on
the title.
In the minds of 'all who witnes-
:sed one of the most keenly con-
i tested and interesting prep foot-
ball games in a lifetime there is
.... :7:: ...................... " ...... I left side for the last five, hut
s,)l)homore Clfief Clayl.on's place-
kicl¢ on the conversion just missed
hy a hair of l~notl.ing the count.
'The Climhers were caught with
I lheir defenses asleep a. bit later
and thai: led to the Riders' second
score. The Ridars had 4th down at
the Climber 49 and went into punt
formatiml. But Patterson lit out
around right end instead of kick-
ing and went 38 yards lo Shelton's
11 before hc was apprehended.
A fourth down pass from Lovell
to end Jim Enos on the third play
of the final quarter went fer nine
yards and the touchdown. Duane
Wilson charged through to hlock
Shore's attempted placekick and
made it possible for the Climbers
to tie it up eleven plays after the
ensuing kickoff.
AFTER ABSORBING an off-
side penalty which nullified an 11-
yard pass gain on the first play,
the Climbe'rs moved 59 yards for
their touchdown. Critical plays
were two Archer to Ciary passes
for 14 and 9 yards and a 12-yard
power crash up the middle by
Fred Lament. Clary finally made
the final stride for his Second
score of the game (he entered for
the first time this season as the
second half opened). Archer pas-
sed to Mike Johnson for the ty-
ing try-for-point.
a big, glaring question: did the
tim(.keeper play:it fair?
THIS IS ~VI-IY that question
keeps churning around in the
aftermalh of the game which most
pregnosticators fig~wed would de- You've heard tl~e rest of the
terl:nine the conference title, excitement.
The Roughriders gained posses- Coach Bob Sund was pleased
sion of the ball after a Shelton with his team's performm~ce for
series of downs fizzled on the '~ the most part and was high in
Shelton 49 with 1:17 on the clock. ........ ~
praise of the passing ability of
A pass for 36 yards lint it on the DON CLA,RY Lovell, PA's fine quarterback, and
Shelton 13, after which tt~ree 2 TDs In 1st O~[me his two favorite receivers, Pat-
straightpasses went incomplete, * * * terson and Enos.
At this cruciM moment 160-Ib. officials called for it. Wilson Having Clary back in action,
junior end Wiley Duckctt, one of screamed at the timekeeper to stop though it was only for one half,
two Negro boys on the Port An- the clock, but he didnit, and some made the Shelton offense much
"elese. roster, idcked, a field goal seconds later fh'ed the gun signal- more potent. The senior halfback
ge
which broke the 1,)-13 deadlock ofling the end of the game. speed merchant has been sidelined
the nmment. He told the questioning referee by an ankle injury. .
As the teams were taking their that time had run out during theThe play of Shefton's interior
positions for the ensuifig kickoff
someone noted that the clock was
still rmming but by the time field
officials were notified it was stop-
ped with 40 secends still showing.
An indeterminate number of sec-
onds, at least ten, were squander-
ed.
BECAUSE OF THiS Shelton
assistant coach I-tarold Wilson
glued himself to the timekeeper
last play The referee could only
take his word for it.
SO THAT'S IVIIY a big, glar-
ing qt~esHon keeps gnawing at the
minds of those who saw the game
..... did the thnekeeper play it fair
with the boys?
It is a shame such all excellent
game ended under such a black
cloud. These were two evenly mat-
ched ball clubs Wl~o battled it
out in the best tradition of the
gridiron in hard-hitting, well exe-
cuted action.
The Riders got on the score-
board first, on the second play of
the second quarter with a 25 yard
pass into the end zone thrown by
quarterback Bob Lovell to half-
back Denny Patterson. Brent
Shore.'s plaeckiet¢ made it 7-0. The
Riders moved 47 of the drive's
58 yards on two passes, both on
the Lovell-Patterson battery.
SIIIqLTON MA1)E it 7-6 in the
third quarter hy taking the second
ha.If kickoff 67 ,yards in 12 l)lays
for a touchdoun. It was all on
the gronnd, sparked by Lowe's
20-yard svceep ar(mnd the right
for the remaining moments.
Mike Brickert returned the kick-
off ten yards to Shelten's 45. Tom
,'-, r:r
Lowe tiw'ew a sideline pass to
Don Clury good for 16 yards and
out-of-bounds at the Rider 39.
Clary hit left taclde for six. Bill
Archer passed to Lowe for 18 on
the sidelines arid out-of-b(mnds on
the 15.
Then Archer threw for Larry
Powell and led him just a couple
of inches too far. He was at the
goal line and would have scored
simply by falling fomvard had he
been al)]e to latch onto it. ,
Mike Jolmson then passed to
Lewe for eight yards, to the seven.
Lowe signalled for time out. the
line, severely out-weighed by the
Riders' big tackles, drew strong
commendatien from Sund for Jim
Richards, Steve Anstey, Steve
Close, Brian Snyder, Bill "Batstone,
and Ed Latham.
STATISTICS
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Shelton .......................... 0 0 6 7--43
Port Allgeles ................ 0 7 0 9---16
Touchdowns: (PAl Patterson,
25, pass from Lovell; IS) Chu'y,
I run; (PAl Enos, 11, pass from
Lovell; IS) Clary, 5, ram.
Field Goal: (PAl Duckett, 30
yards.
Conversion: . (PAl Shore (1)
kick; IS) Johnson, pass from
Lowe.
TEAM STATISTIC~ PA
First downs .................... 12 9
By rushing .............. ,,.. 6 6
By l)assing .................. 5 2
B~' penalties i ............... 1 1
Rushing (No. of plays).. 33 40
Yards gained i ............. 167122
Yards lest ..... : .............. 38 21
Net yards gained ........ 129101
Passing
Number attempted .... 18 17
Number complethd ....11
7
No. had intercepted ....
3
0
Yards gained ............ 101 137
230 238
Total net. yards ................ '5] 57
Total plays ....................
Fumbles ............................
Ball lost ........................ 200
Punts ................................ 4140 30.3
Average . ...................
Penalties ..........................
Yards lost .................... 30 33
FOOTBALL SCORES
Port An~'eles 16, Shelton 13
moment he wa___ss downe__~d an2 the flank to the nine. Clary ran the
in " Ford interiors.. .
to the. spacious new
ithe twin-edge lgnltl0n ke.y (works either side. up)..
!P Ford's livelier and thnftler new engines...(elther Sl.x or V-8's).
the smoothest ride of any Cars in their class (or possibly any class).
to the Quiet Ones.
SEMIFINALISTS SET
IN CLUi~. CIIAMPI()NSiIIP
cmifinalists have been deter-
miz~ed in all four flights of the
1964 Shelton Golf Club men's
championshil) tom'namenl.
In the championship flight, de-
fending titlehohler Smmy Lowe is
match(,d against Bob Slettedahl in
the lower bra.cket as he goes after
Iris fom'th straight crown. Jim
Fletcher and Heinie Hilderman
are lmi,cd in the upper brael~ei.
Lowe rea.ched the next-to-last
roond by defeating Fred Stuller
md Don Pauley in previous rouuds,
Slettedahl knocked off Ivan My-
ers and Clint Willour, Fletcher
humbled Joe Holt and Bob Olson
while Hilderman eliminated Mark
Fredson and Bob Kiebmtz enroute
to the semifinals.
In other first rmmd matches
Holt beat Po'p Hulberl,Fredson
beat Oliver Ashford, Stnller
knocked off Andy Tuson, and My-
ers dropped Jerry Thompson into
the first flight.
The first flight semifinalists arc
Olson snd Ashford in the upper
bracket, Tuson and Willour in thc
lower half. Olson eliminated Hul-
bert,. Ashford kayoed Kieburtz,
Tuson knocked out Don Pauley,
and \Villour benched Thompson in
the first flight first round.
Ray Rice plays Bud Pauley and
Frosty Koch meets Clyde Coots
/
MAGKEY TIPS RRST
600 IN INDUSTRIAL
M[EN'S INI)USTRIAL
W L
Lumbermen's Mere.......14 - 2
Bob's Tavern ................ 11 5
20th CenturyThriftway i0% ' 5~
Morgan Transfer . ....... 9!..', 6{.~
Clary Tmmking ............ 6 10
Pantorium Cleaners .... 6 10
Corrections Center ........ 5 11
Caalteen ............................ 2 14
High game -- Bill Dickie 225 .
High series -- Buck Mackey 60,
Buck Mackey escorted Lumber-
men's Mercantile to tl~e top mmg
in the Industrial Leagxm standings
last week with the cireuit's first
600 series of the new season.
Buck surrom~ded a 196 middle l
game with 206 and 205 frosting
which sped the L. M. to a shutout
win which dumped Bob's Tavern
(Bob Newell 514) off the throne.
Two other decisions were calci-
mine jobs: Clary Trucking (Chuck
Renccker 50,5) over Canteen (Con
Saupe 425) and Morgan Transfer
(Leo Nault 593) ow~r Pantorium
Cleaners (Jim McComb 5,t7). The
night's fom'th match retnrned 20th
Century (Rip Ripple 57ff~ a 3-1
winner over the CmTections Cen-
ter (Curt Wolfe 532).
........................................h
MI'RCHANTS LEAGUE
~V L
.Kimbel & Whitey's ............ 11 5
State Farm Ins~n'ance .... 10 (~
Prepp's Rexall .......... .......... 9 7
Fuller Construction ............ 9 7
Stewa:rt's Foodliner . ........... 8 8
, (
Ralph s Serve-U ................ 7 .)
Miller's .................................. 5 11
Olympic Plywood ................ 5 11
High game .... Corky Dickinson
215.
High series L. L. McInelly 569.
Kimbel & Whitey's 4 (Wilf White
549), Plywood 0 (LeRoy Simpson
457); State Farm 4 (Don Brown
544), Fuller 0 (L. L. McInelly
569); Prepp's 3 ,(Morley Prepper-
nau 533), Ralph s 1 (Don 3eseph-
son 483); Stewart's 2 (Bob Lich-
ter 481), Miller's 2 (John Hulet
523).
@
is the measure of car quality. So take a
drive and listen.., to the uncanny quiet
MI 17 new Fords. Compare their smooth,
ride, their quality feeling against any
cars.., at any price. You'll know imme-
"--these new Fords are the Quiet Ones.
Galaxie 500/XL's-the sporticst Fords. Bucket seats,
289-cu. in.. V-8 standard. Spacious all-vinyl interiors.
~cting, extra trunk space.
~W Ford Galaxie 500 LTD's-mosz luxuridus Fords evcr.
@
@@
@
Elcga,lt paneled interiors, rich quilted upholstery, cut-pile
nylon carpcting, rear center arm rests, Silcnt-Flo ventilation,
standard on ,1-door nmdcls, changes air with windows doscd.
4 new Ford Galaxlc 500's-with new 240-cu. in. "Big Six" en-
gine fi)r bette~ milcage, more punch, V-8 smoothness. Strongest,
(tuietest body-frame ever lmih for a Ford.
4 new Ford Customs and Custom 500'S-same solid construction°
easy handling, smooth ride, front and rcar arm rcsts, roominess
and clean look all '65 Fords share. "Big Six" is standard.
5 new Ford Wagons--including Country Squires and Country
Sedans with new dual facing rear seats, ideal for lhmilics up to ] O.
Sec all thc new modcls front Ford at your Ford l)ealcr's soonl
,~@R@ ,GALAXiE 500 LI"D 4.DOOR HARDTOP
FORD GALAXIE 500/XL 2-DOOR HARDTOP
1~StL~., OF
c r.e)
Moloa C~W
7btalPeffomance
MUSFANG " FALCON " FAIRLAHE • FOR0 . THUNDERBIRD
501 Railroad Ave., Shelton
RIDE WALT DISNEY'S MAGIC SKYWAY AT THE FORD MOTOR COMPANY'S WONDER ROTUNDA, NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR
South Kitsap 26, Vashon 0
East Bremerton 27, Kelso 0
Central Kitsap 34, Sequim 0
Port Townsend 38, North Mason
~eadowdal~ 32, North Kitsap 0
West Bremerton 13, Mr. Tahoma
Elms 12, Montesano 0
St. Martins 12, Tumwater 7
Raymond 21, Valley 6
Olympia 18, Hoquiam 0
I-Iudsoffs Bay 19, Aberdeen 7
Sumner 27, North Thurston 12
TEACHERS LEAGUE
Tardies .................................... 3 1
7 'Ritin' . ..................................... 3 1
'Rithmetic' . ............................. 2 2
6 Recess ...................................... 2 2
Sldppers .................................. 1 3
Readin' . ..................... : ............. 1 3
High games --- Jean Temple 172
LainT Lyle 199
High series .... Jean Temple 425,
Larry Lyle 534
Freshmen Welcomed To School By Sophs.;
Students Attend "Hamlet" Aberdeen
By Mae Coekbun
and N~.y StoddeR
If an inspector had visited our
school Sept, 25, he would have
been highly exasperated R.tmning
around the hall were lipstick-
smeared, hair-ratted, rag-clothed
freshman. One certain girl even
had nerve enough to carry a sign
saying "Singe for Superintendent".
This was the result of a clever
week of planning by the sopho-
mores to welcome the freshmen to
high school. A dance was held that
night with more surprises waiting,
for the freshmen as they entered
the door.
The Senior and Junior girls spent
all day Tuesday in Shelton sel-
ling ads for our 1965 yearbook.
~ Wednesday, part Of the high-
school students m~der the super-
vision of Mrs. French and Mr. No-
lan went to Aberdeen to see the
movie "Hamlet" starring Richard
Burton.
A P. T. O. meeting will be held
Oct. 8, at8 p.m. The following
entertainment is scheduled:
Senior band: five or six num-
bers; Senior choir; Bells of at.
Maryn, I'll walk Beside You, He's'
Got The Whole World; Trio, Au-
tumn Leaves; Quartet, Railroad
Bill; Solos, Rene Perkins and Jan
Starks.
The Student Body plans to sell
tickets on two cakes at this meet-
ing. The tickets will be l0 cent
each.
The AnnuaJ H~zwest Dinr~er,
sponsored by the R T. O. will be
held Oct. 3, 1964in the Mary M.
Knight School Gym. The profits of
the dinner will be extended to-
wards the various P. T. O. pro-
jects.
IIIi IHI I
in the two semifinal matches in
the second flight after Ray.lind
whipped Itarr.v Cole and Val Sien-
ko, BIId lunlbled I{~el(y ]q.elnbroff
and G'~orge Hernl(m, [Vr(mty spit-
led HarYy Pei('l'soll an(l BII(t i