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14
Imlllll i i i i
Bushel Harine
Ev]nrude Sales
and Service
Pacific Mariner Boats
USED MOTORS
14.FT. BELL BOY
Complete with windshield and
steering - 1959 Evlnrude 35-h.p.
Big Twin - Used - Complete
$750.00
At Union on
Hood Canal
PHONE UNION 481
SHELTON-MASON COUNTY JOURNAL-- Published in Christmastown, U.S.A.," Shelter Washin
• SIq)RTS'00
Blazer Defeat to Yelhwjackets
By Ken Kesel
CENTRALIA ...... Combining an
injury to starting tackle Eldon
Todd, the absence of Jim Swin-
dell, two lapses on pass defense,
and an impressive Centralia run-
ning attack, the Shelton Blazers
had too many cards stacked
against: them here Friday night so
receipted for a spectacular 14-12
defeat at the hands of the Yellow-
jackets in a Kiwanis Club benefit
game under the lights of Noble
Field.
Taking advantage of the unsure
Blazer pass defense, the Bees
scored the evening's first touch-
down 54 seconds after the kick-
off. Fullback Tim Hudson out-
raced the defense and croed in-
to the Blazer end zone on a 69-
9-D STAMPEDE BARN DANOE
Every Saturday Nits
9"-30 p.m, - 1:30 a.m.
KAMILCHE CUT-OFF
3i. west of McCleary)
Music by
ghe Velvetones
Admission $1.00
yard pass-run play for the score
then phmged through the Blazer
line for the extra point.
SHELTON'S first offense drive
sparked by the impressive run-
ning of halfback Joe Waters and
fullback GaLv Combs, wound up
in the Yellowjacket end zone with
quarterback LeRoy Austin going
nine yards. Halfback Joe Waters'
try-for-point run failed and the
teams left the field at the half
with the score 7-6.
Austin handled the signal call-
ing in place of Billy Smith, who
was able to play only on defense
because of a bout with the flu.
Austin generated a drive which
shot Shelton into the lead in the
third quarter when he intercepted
a Centralia pass and ran it to the
Jacket ll-yard line, from where
Combs banged it over. Combs was
stopped on the conversion at-
tempt, however.
THE BIJLZER, tiring under
the superior manpower of their
hosts, gave Up the winning touch-
down half way through the final
period. A short punt returned to
the Blazer 30 set up the soars
which halfback Mile Caton made
and Hudson converted.
A third-quarter Centralia touch-
down was nullffed by a penalty.
This was Centralia's first game of
the season, ShelteR's second. The
Blazers have an open date this
weekend, go to Hoquiam for their
WINTERIZE YOUR HOME
We Can Supply Your Needs In Such Things as
WEMHER STRIPPING
MORGAN & EACRETT LUMBER COMPANY
I Blazer 8th Graders
Please u,n, 13-6 Loss
To Varsuty Reserves
Coaches Jack Mallinger and
Jerry Knutson were well pleased
with the performance of their
Blazer 8th grade team in its first
game-type action despite coming
out on the short end of a 13-6
score with the Blazer varsity re-
serves Saturday afternoon.
One of their own 8th graders,
loaned to the reserves because of
a player shortage in the older
ranks, had a hand in the 8th grade
defeat for Merle Hoosier scored
the first reserve touchdown after
taking a 15-yard pass from John
Bliner in the first quarter.
The younger gridmen tied it up
with a journey into the reserves
end zone in the second quarter
when right half Bob Carson broke
through left tackle and romped
60 yards,
The reserves won the decision in
the fourth quarter when Bliner
passed 15 yards to Larry Sund to
the two and then sneaked over for
the touchdown. Bltner's pass to
Nels Anderson scored the try-for-
point.
Mallinger and Knutson take their
8th graders to Hoquiam this Sat-
urday for their first inter-school
game of a four-game schedule this
year.
next game on October 16.
Coach Bill Brtckert was pleased
with the general performance of
his club despite the defeat, feeling
the lack of depth on his squad
hurt badly with three starters out
of action.
THE TWO TEAMS eacn had 15
first downs, Centralia had the
edge in rushing yardage at 141 to
125, and rolled up 96 yards to
none for Shelton passing for a net
yardage margin of 176 to 101.
The starting Blazer lineup had
Peterson and Waylett at ends,
Todd and Crawford at tackles, La-;
mort and Wagner at guards, An-
derson at center, Austin at quar-
ter, Waters and Sheedy at half,
and Combs at full. Subs were
Bliner, Drebick, Goodpaster, Rog-
ers, and Smith.
MEN'S INDUSTRIAL
W L
Cole & Myhre Service .... 10 2
Pantorium Cleaners ............ 7 5
Lumberman's Mere ............ 7 5
Waterfront Realty ............ 7 5
Morgan Transfer ................ 6 6
20th Century Thriftway .... 4 8
Grant Lumber .................... 4 8
Shelter Motors .................... 3 9
High game--Mark Fredson 233
High total--Mark Fredson 584
SIMPSON MEN'S LEAGUE
W L
Mill 2 .................................... 11 5
Mill 1 ...................................... 9 7
Raih'oad .................. : ............. 9 7
Loggers ................................ 8 8
Loaders .................................. 8 8
Engineers .............................. 7 9
Insulating Board ................ 7 i ,911
Shape ..... ...........:....,:...,., ..... 5 .....
High game--Pete:Roberts 185:
High total---Rip Allen 499
LEAD
TTH O SA NHUNTING!
Rayonler lee farm lands wlH
ugain be open for sportsmen during
the entire hunting Nason. All are
welcome to shore in the harvest of
en Important tree farm crop--wild-
life.
Maps are evollable showing ac-
cess roads, rivers and streams, and
ether information which will be of
value to you while you are our
guests. These ore offered free at
every Royonier office.
For your own protection we ask
that you respect oil signs indicating
areas closed because of logging op-
erotions, fire hazard, or othe, dan-
gers incidental to our operations.
00'Vv'O'NT I E
Natural Kesourccs ' "
" ' Chemistry
Fumbles Keel) Climbers In the Hole
SHELTON, ELBA PLAY SECOND
STRAIGHT GRIDIRON TIE, 7-7
Shelter won all the statistics Climber 30 and reversed it to
and thoroughly outplayed Elms, on
Loop Field Friday night but had
to settle for a 7-7 deadlock in the
Central League opener for both
clubs when the Eagles capitalized
on a fumble and blocked punt for
a touchdown and the Climbers
missed two golden opportunities
to tally the winning points in the
dying seconds of play.
Bob Sund's Climbers served no-
tice they'll be important factors
in the conference flag campaign
with their best performance of the
season but nullified their chances
of opening the title chase with a
victory by committing four costly
fumbles plus some ineffective
blocking and inaccurate centering
at critical junctures, i
Two of the fumbles and two bad !
centers on punts allowed Elms to!
control the ball throughout the l
first half, during which the Eagles i
ran 33 plays against Shelton's
23. The contrast was more pro-
nounced in the first quarter when
Elma ran 17 to Shelton's six.
THE FIRST BREAK came early
in the first quarter when a wide
pass from center gave end Mike
McCool time to get through and
block Denny Temple's attempted
punt on the Elma 38. The ball
bounced clear back to Shelton's 32
where McCool also recovered it.
The Climbers stopped t ha t
threat when an Eagle fourth down
Jab at right guard was only an
inch short of first down, but a
Shelton fumble three plays later
put the Climbers right back in
the soup on their own 26, whex
halfback Gus Hoag recovered for
the Eagles.
It took ten plays against the
stubborn, stalwart Shelton line to
make the end zone but halfback
Stan August made it from a yard
out on the first play of the second
quarter and Bob Beerbower swept
left end for the extra point.
Another Shelton fumble and an-
other bad pass from center which
resulted in a short punt kept the
Climbers in hot Water the rest of
the half but the muscular Red and
Black line, finally beginning to
play up to its potential, held off
threats which got to the ten and
17 yard lines.
TWO MORE FUMBLES and an
intercepted pass stymied Climber
efforts to move the ball in the
third quarter but the Shclton grid-
men finally worked the kinks out
of their play in the fourth quar-
ter and took complete command
of the game.
The tying touchdown came with
4:05 left to play on a 32-yard pass
from Ray Manke to Will Rodgers
after Jerry Mallory had returned
an Elms punt 20 yards to the Ea-
gle 27. After an offside penalty,
Manke threw a beautiful overhead
shot behind the Elma secondary
and hit Rodgers in the clear along
the left sidelines.
Rawlin McInelly .dug through
left ,nmrd for the crucial tying
extra point.
After the kickoff the Climbers
again held the Eagles for downs,
forcing a punt from the Elma 43.
Mallory took the ball at the
Manke, who came back down the
right sidelines with a mass of in-
terference for protection and
seemed headed for a touchdown.
GARY FRETENBURG, howev-
er, managed to elude the block-
ing wall and tripped Manke from
behind on the Elma 21 with 1:30
left of the game.
Manke then threw four straight
passes intended for Mallory, had
him in the clear at the five on the
first one but overthrew, and con-
nected for a six-'yard gain on the
fourth, so the Eagles took over on
their own 15 with time only for
two plays.
The Clixnbers outgained the Ea-
gles on the ground 147 to 99
yards and in the air 57 to 20, net-
ted 187 to 102, and had 9 first
downs to 3.
South Olympic Tree
Fam Lands 0pened
For Deer Hunlnng
Simpson Olympic Tree Farm
lands totaling over 200,000 areas
in Mason, Thurston and Grays
Harbor counties once more will be
open to hunters.
H. O. Puhn, land and timber
manager, said that Simpson, act-
ing in cooperation with the State
Department of Natural Resources
and the State Game Department,
will lift closures on Friday, Oct. 9.
The closures have been effect-
ive since lsst July due to the ex-
treme fire danger of the annual
dry months.
Only along roads where Strop-
son presently Is conducting log-
ging operations will gates be
closed to yehicles, Puhn said.
Hunters will-be permitted to walk
into these limited areas.
Bill Looney, managing forester
of Simpson Olympic Tree Farm,
said that hunter-sportsmen have
always been welcome.
"We have had excellent cooper-
ation from campers, fishermen
and forest users in fire prevention
on our lands, as demonstrated dur-
ing the critical fire periods of the
pat months," Looney said. "We
ask only that hunters oberve
safety precautions and bc careful
with fire."
TIDES OF THE WEEK
Computed for Hood Canal
Oakland Bay Udes are I hr. and
50 rain. later and plus 3.0 ft.
I,rtday, Oct. 9
Low ................ 4:00 a.m. 0.5 ft.
High .............. 11:23 a.m. 11.4 ft.
Low ................ 5:07 p.m. 6.4 ft.
High ............. 10:05 p.m. 9.5 ft.
Saturday, Oct. l0
Low ................ 5:09 a.m. 1.1 ft.
High .............. 12:29 p.m. 11.5 ft.
Low 6:27 p.m. 5.8 ft.
High .............. 11:38 p.m. 9.2 ft.
Sunday, Oct. I 1
Low ................ 6:18 a.m. 1.7 ft.
High ............. 1:28 p.m. 11.7 ft.
Low ................ 7:33 p.m. 4.9 ft.
Monday, Oct. 12
Hlgll ............. 1:08 a.m. 9.3 ft.
Low 7:22 a.m. 2.2 ft.
High .............. 2:16 p.m. 11.7 ft.
Low ............... 8:27 p.m. .t.0 ft.
Tuesday, Oct. 13
High ............ 2:20 a.m. 9.8 ft.
Low .............. 8:21 a.m. 2.6 ft.
tiigh .............. 2:56 p.m. 11.7 ft.
Low . .......... 9:11 p.m. 3.0 ft.
We(lnelay, Oct. 14
High .............. 3:20 a.m. 10.2 ft.
Low ............... 9:11 a.m. 3.1 ft.
High .............. 3:31 p.m. 11.6 ft.
Low ................ 9:50 p.m. 2.2 *ft.
Thulday, Oct, 15
High .............. 4:11 a.m. 10.8 ft.
Low ............... 9:56 a.m. 3.1 ft.
High .............. 4:02 p.m. 11.4 ft.
Low .............. 10:28 p.m. 1,5 ft,
Thursday,
In the second half Ehna failed
to make a first down and gained
only 38 yards on 19 running plays.
Elms had possession of the ball
for 23 plays in the second half,
Shelton for 29. In the 4th quarter
it was 18 to 10 plays for Shelton.
THE EAGLES attempted only
two passes in the entire game,
completed both for ten yard gains.
MaRks threw a dozen for ShelteR,
completed three for 57 yards and
the Climbers' only touchdown.
Bill Goodpaster, Denny Temple,
Pete Buechel and Jim Mattis all
played fine ball in the Climber
line and McInelly did some effec-
tive line smashing in the Shelton
offense, carrying 15 times for 72
yards as the workhorse of the
backfield.
The lineups:
SHELTON 7 -- ends: Sharpes,
Close, Somers; tackles: Goodpas-
ter, Temple, Zeitler; guards: Mat-
tl, Buechel, Spiker; center: Her-
me, Ellis; quartet': Manke; half-
backs: Mallory, Rodger, Lord,
Dennis; fullback: McInelly,
ELMA 7 -- ends Weld, McCeol,
Comer, Scheelke, Johannes; ta-
ckles: Lynn, Harvey, McMillan;
guards: Fretenburg, Crane, Mur-
row; center: Henry; quarter: M.
Murphy; halfbacks: Beerhower,
August, Hoag, Berry; fullback:
Easton, Bassett.
t(,oring
Shelton .................... 0 0 0 7-7
Ehna ........................ O 7 0 0-7
Touchdowns: August, Rodgers.
Conversions: Beerbower, Mcln-
ally.
STATISTICS S E
First downs .......................... 9 3
Rushing ............................ 8 2
Passing .............................. 1 1
Penalties .......................... 0 0
Yards netted .................... 187 102
By rushing .................... 147 99
By passing .................... 57 20
Lost rushing .................. 27 17
Passes attempted ............ 12 2
Completed ........................ 3 2
Intercepted ...................... 1 0
Penalties .............................. 4 0
Yards penalized ............. 20 0
Fumbles ............................... 4 1
Lost ball ............................ 4 1
Punts attempted ................ 3 4
Blocked ............................ 1 0
Full Round Slated
In Conference Play
For All G.L. Teams
CEN'UIIAL I,EAGIYF, S'F.ANi)IN(;
\\;V L T pf pit
Montesano ........... I 0 0 14 6
SIIELTON .......... 0 0 1 7 7
Ehna ........................ 0 0 1 7 7
St. Martins ............ 0 1 0 (i 1t
North Thm'ston . . 0 0 0 0 0
Chehalis .............. 0 0 0 0 0
Last Friday
Shelton 7, Ehna 7
Montesano 14, St. Martins 6
N. Thurston 7, Cent. Kit. 0
Chehalis 46, Centralia 6
Thin Friday
Shelton at: N. Thurston
St. Martins at Chehalis
Montesano at Ehna
Central League teams have an
all-conference round of games
scheduled this Friday night with
North Thurston and title favored
Chehalis, fresh from victories in
their last games, making their
1959 debuts.
CHEHALIS put on a resound-
ing display of power and finesse
during a 46-6 cakewalk over Cen-
tralia last week and figures to
give St. Martins a bad beating in
the Bearcats' league opener at
Chehalis tomorrow night. The
Preps took a 14-6 loss at the
hands of Montesano on the Lacey
gridiron last week.
North Thurston, a horseshoe-
laden 7-0 victor over strong Cen-
tral Kitsap last Friday, entertains
the Shelton Highclimbers in the
Rams curtain raiser in league play
in what shapes up as a game just
as close as last year's 7-6 deci- ___
sion scored by the Rams over the
Climbers on Loop Field.
MONTESANO is at Ehna in the
third conference contest in a scrap
which should tell a lot about the
relative strengths of the clubs
which will be fighting it out for
the runner-up spot behind Che-
halls this year.
With only two games on the
conference books so fat', George
Raines of Montesano is the indi-
vidual point leader with a touch-
down and conversion to his credit
for seven tallies.
Shelton's Will Rodgers, Monte-
sano's AI Beaulie, Ehna's Stan
August, and St. Martins' Wayne
Mom'oe have each notched a
touchdown, while single conver-
sion points are credited to Shel-
tows Rawlin McInelly, F.lma's Bob
Beerbower, and Montesano's Tim
Dills, the latter's by placement.
JUNIOII /IIGli FOOTIALL
Centralia 14, Shelter 12
Hoquiam 15, Miller 0
North Kilsap 19, East Brem 0
Central Kitsap 20, Whitman 6
Hopkins 32, Washington 0
RI,X:REATION LEA(; [ E
W L
Lenlke's Servi(.c ........... 12 4
Mick's Tavern ............... 10 6
Shelton Recreation .... 10 (i
Ritner's Straight Shots.. 10 6
Rainier Beer . ..................... 9 7
Log Cabin .......................... 8 8
Olynlpia Beet" . ................ .:. 4 1.2
Lucky Lager Beer ....... 1 . 15
Hg'h game-.Jean S('} 158
tligh total .Jean Schnitzer 432
15 - 16-
Johnny's
429 Railroad
LAflT
L
420 SOUTH FIRST
Open 'til Noon
J. V. "Joe"
HA
AccID!
I1
Prottion from
the moment you
begin preparing
for your trip
and traveling
--at th hunt,
--till you reach
home again
HUNTERS
ANGLE
Herb Angle
LOV(!S to
401 R
Average yards ............ 15.3 26.5
................................ Locker
PREP FOOTBALL SCORES
Shelton 7, Elma 7
North Thurston 7, Cent Kit 0
Montesano 14, St. Martins 6 & ( €
Olympia 14, Stadium 0 :"
North Kit 21, South Kit 0
Davis (Yakima) 27, Pasco 7 CUT AND
Roymond 25, Valley 0 WRAPPED I 1 PER LB.
Aberdeen 27, East "Bremerton 6
SedroWoolleyl3, Mt. Vernon6 Shelton Meat
Pt. Angeles 47, Pt. Townsend 14
Bellarmine 25, Wilson 6
Lincoln 25, West Bremerton 0 On Slaughter House Road Phone HA.
Chehalis 46, Centralia 6
14
Imlllll i i i i
Bushel Harine
Ev]nrude Sales
and Service
Pacific Mariner Boats
USED MOTORS
14.FT. BELL BOY
Complete with windshield and
steering - 1959 Evlnrude 35-h.p.
Big Twin - Used - Complete
$750.00
At Union on
Hood Canal
PHONE UNION 481
SHELTON-MASON COUNTY JOURNAL-- Published in Christmastown, U.S.A.," Shelter Washin
• SIq)RTS'00
Blazer Defeat to Yelhwjackets
By Ken Kesel
CENTRALIA ...... Combining an
injury to starting tackle Eldon
Todd, the absence of Jim Swin-
dell, two lapses on pass defense,
and an impressive Centralia run-
ning attack, the Shelton Blazers
had too many cards stacked
against: them here Friday night so
receipted for a spectacular 14-12
defeat at the hands of the Yellow-
jackets in a Kiwanis Club benefit
game under the lights of Noble
Field.
Taking advantage of the unsure
Blazer pass defense, the Bees
scored the evening's first touch-
down 54 seconds after the kick-
off. Fullback Tim Hudson out-
raced the defense and croed in-
to the Blazer end zone on a 69-
9-D STAMPEDE BARN DANOE
Every Saturday Nits
9"-30 p.m, - 1:30 a.m.
KAMILCHE CUT-OFF
3i. west of McCleary)
Music by
ghe Velvetones
Admission $1.00
yard pass-run play for the score
then phmged through the Blazer
line for the extra point.
SHELTON'S first offense drive
sparked by the impressive run-
ning of halfback Joe Waters and
fullback GaLv Combs, wound up
in the Yellowjacket end zone with
quarterback LeRoy Austin going
nine yards. Halfback Joe Waters'
try-for-point run failed and the
teams left the field at the half
with the score 7-6.
Austin handled the signal call-
ing in place of Billy Smith, who
was able to play only on defense
because of a bout with the flu.
Austin generated a drive which
shot Shelton into the lead in the
third quarter when he intercepted
a Centralia pass and ran it to the
Jacket ll-yard line, from where
Combs banged it over. Combs was
stopped on the conversion at-
tempt, however.
THE BIJLZER, tiring under
the superior manpower of their
hosts, gave Up the winning touch-
down half way through the final
period. A short punt returned to
the Blazer 30 set up the soars
which halfback Mile Caton made
and Hudson converted.
A third-quarter Centralia touch-
down was nullffed by a penalty.
This was Centralia's first game of
the season, ShelteR's second. The
Blazers have an open date this
weekend, go to Hoquiam for their
WINTERIZE YOUR HOME
We Can Supply Your Needs In Such Things as
WEMHER STRIPPING
MORGAN & EACRETT LUMBER COMPANY
I Blazer 8th Graders
Please u,n, 13-6 Loss
To Varsuty Reserves
Coaches Jack Mallinger and
Jerry Knutson were well pleased
with the performance of their
Blazer 8th grade team in its first
game-type action despite coming
out on the short end of a 13-6
score with the Blazer varsity re-
serves Saturday afternoon.
One of their own 8th graders,
loaned to the reserves because of
a player shortage in the older
ranks, had a hand in the 8th grade
defeat for Merle Hoosier scored
the first reserve touchdown after
taking a 15-yard pass from John
Bliner in the first quarter.
The younger gridmen tied it up
with a journey into the reserves
end zone in the second quarter
when right half Bob Carson broke
through left tackle and romped
60 yards,
The reserves won the decision in
the fourth quarter when Bliner
passed 15 yards to Larry Sund to
the two and then sneaked over for
the touchdown. Bltner's pass to
Nels Anderson scored the try-for-
point.
Mallinger and Knutson take their
8th graders to Hoquiam this Sat-
urday for their first inter-school
game of a four-game schedule this
year.
next game on October 16.
Coach Bill Brtckert was pleased
with the general performance of
his club despite the defeat, feeling
the lack of depth on his squad
hurt badly with three starters out
of action.
THE TWO TEAMS eacn had 15
first downs, Centralia had the
edge in rushing yardage at 141 to
125, and rolled up 96 yards to
none for Shelton passing for a net
yardage margin of 176 to 101.
The starting Blazer lineup had
Peterson and Waylett at ends,
Todd and Crawford at tackles, La-;
mort and Wagner at guards, An-
derson at center, Austin at quar-
ter, Waters and Sheedy at half,
and Combs at full. Subs were
Bliner, Drebick, Goodpaster, Rog-
ers, and Smith.
MEN'S INDUSTRIAL
W L
Cole & Myhre Service .... 10 2
Pantorium Cleaners ............ 7 5
Lumberman's Mere ............ 7 5
Waterfront Realty ............ 7 5
Morgan Transfer ................ 6 6
20th Century Thriftway .... 4 8
Grant Lumber .................... 4 8
Shelter Motors .................... 3 9
High game--Mark Fredson 233
High total--Mark Fredson 584
SIMPSON MEN'S LEAGUE
W L
Mill 2 .................................... 11 5
Mill 1 ...................................... 9 7
Raih'oad .................. : ............. 9 7
Loggers ................................ 8 8
Loaders .................................. 8 8
Engineers .............................. 7 9
Insulating Board ................ 7 i ,911
Shape ..... ...........:....,:...,., ..... 5 .....
High game--Pete:Roberts 185:
High total---Rip Allen 499
LEAD
TTH O SA NHUNTING!
Rayonler lee farm lands wlH
ugain be open for sportsmen during
the entire hunting Nason. All are
welcome to shore in the harvest of
en Important tree farm crop--wild-
life.
Maps are evollable showing ac-
cess roads, rivers and streams, and
ether information which will be of
value to you while you are our
guests. These ore offered free at
every Royonier office.
For your own protection we ask
that you respect oil signs indicating
areas closed because of logging op-
erotions, fire hazard, or othe, dan-
gers incidental to our operations.
00'Vv'O'NT I E
Natural Kesourccs ' "
" ' Chemistry
Fumbles Keel) Climbers In the Hole
SHELTON, ELBA PLAY SECOND
STRAIGHT GRIDIRON TIE, 7-7
Shelter won all the statistics Climber 30 and reversed it to
and thoroughly outplayed Elms, on
Loop Field Friday night but had
to settle for a 7-7 deadlock in the
Central League opener for both
clubs when the Eagles capitalized
on a fumble and blocked punt for
a touchdown and the Climbers
missed two golden opportunities
to tally the winning points in the
dying seconds of play.
Bob Sund's Climbers served no-
tice they'll be important factors
in the conference flag campaign
with their best performance of the
season but nullified their chances
of opening the title chase with a
victory by committing four costly
fumbles plus some ineffective
blocking and inaccurate centering
at critical junctures, i
Two of the fumbles and two bad !
centers on punts allowed Elms to!
control the ball throughout the l
first half, during which the Eagles i
ran 33 plays against Shelton's
23. The contrast was more pro-
nounced in the first quarter when
Elma ran 17 to Shelton's six.
THE FIRST BREAK came early
in the first quarter when a wide
pass from center gave end Mike
McCool time to get through and
block Denny Temple's attempted
punt on the Elma 38. The ball
bounced clear back to Shelton's 32
where McCool also recovered it.
The Climbers stopped t ha t
threat when an Eagle fourth down
Jab at right guard was only an
inch short of first down, but a
Shelton fumble three plays later
put the Climbers right back in
the soup on their own 26, whex
halfback Gus Hoag recovered for
the Eagles.
It took ten plays against the
stubborn, stalwart Shelton line to
make the end zone but halfback
Stan August made it from a yard
out on the first play of the second
quarter and Bob Beerbower swept
left end for the extra point.
Another Shelton fumble and an-
other bad pass from center which
resulted in a short punt kept the
Climbers in hot Water the rest of
the half but the muscular Red and
Black line, finally beginning to
play up to its potential, held off
threats which got to the ten and
17 yard lines.
TWO MORE FUMBLES and an
intercepted pass stymied Climber
efforts to move the ball in the
third quarter but the Shclton grid-
men finally worked the kinks out
of their play in the fourth quar-
ter and took complete command
of the game.
The tying touchdown came with
4:05 left to play on a 32-yard pass
from Ray Manke to Will Rodgers
after Jerry Mallory had returned
an Elms punt 20 yards to the Ea-
gle 27. After an offside penalty,
Manke threw a beautiful overhead
shot behind the Elma secondary
and hit Rodgers in the clear along
the left sidelines.
Rawlin McInelly .dug through
left ,nmrd for the crucial tying
extra point.
After the kickoff the Climbers
again held the Eagles for downs,
forcing a punt from the Elma 43.
Mallory took the ball at the
Manke, who came back down the
right sidelines with a mass of in-
terference for protection and
seemed headed for a touchdown.
GARY FRETENBURG, howev-
er, managed to elude the block-
ing wall and tripped Manke from
behind on the Elma 21 with 1:30
left of the game.
Manke then threw four straight
passes intended for Mallory, had
him in the clear at the five on the
first one but overthrew, and con-
nected for a six-'yard gain on the
fourth, so the Eagles took over on
their own 15 with time only for
two plays.
The Clixnbers outgained the Ea-
gles on the ground 147 to 99
yards and in the air 57 to 20, net-
ted 187 to 102, and had 9 first
downs to 3.
South Olympic Tree
Fam Lands 0pened
For Deer Hunlnng
Simpson Olympic Tree Farm
lands totaling over 200,000 areas
in Mason, Thurston and Grays
Harbor counties once more will be
open to hunters.
H. O. Puhn, land and timber
manager, said that Simpson, act-
ing in cooperation with the State
Department of Natural Resources
and the State Game Department,
will lift closures on Friday, Oct. 9.
The closures have been effect-
ive since lsst July due to the ex-
treme fire danger of the annual
dry months.
Only along roads where Strop-
son presently Is conducting log-
ging operations will gates be
closed to yehicles, Puhn said.
Hunters will-be permitted to walk
into these limited areas.
Bill Looney, managing forester
of Simpson Olympic Tree Farm,
said that hunter-sportsmen have
always been welcome.
"We have had excellent cooper-
ation from campers, fishermen
and forest users in fire prevention
on our lands, as demonstrated dur-
ing the critical fire periods of the
pat months," Looney said. "We
ask only that hunters oberve
safety precautions and bc careful
with fire."
TIDES OF THE WEEK
Computed for Hood Canal
Oakland Bay Udes are I hr. and
50 rain. later and plus 3.0 ft.
I,rtday, Oct. 9
Low ................ 4:00 a.m. 0.5 ft.
High .............. 11:23 a.m. 11.4 ft.
Low ................ 5:07 p.m. 6.4 ft.
High ............. 10:05 p.m. 9.5 ft.
Saturday, Oct. l0
Low ................ 5:09 a.m. 1.1 ft.
High .............. 12:29 p.m. 11.5 ft.
Low 6:27 p.m. 5.8 ft.
High .............. 11:38 p.m. 9.2 ft.
Sunday, Oct. I 1
Low ................ 6:18 a.m. 1.7 ft.
High ............. 1:28 p.m. 11.7 ft.
Low ................ 7:33 p.m. 4.9 ft.
Monday, Oct. 12
Hlgll ............. 1:08 a.m. 9.3 ft.
Low 7:22 a.m. 2.2 ft.
High .............. 2:16 p.m. 11.7 ft.
Low ............... 8:27 p.m. .t.0 ft.
Tuesday, Oct. 13
High ............ 2:20 a.m. 9.8 ft.
Low .............. 8:21 a.m. 2.6 ft.
tiigh .............. 2:56 p.m. 11.7 ft.
Low . .......... 9:11 p.m. 3.0 ft.
We(lnelay, Oct. 14
High .............. 3:20 a.m. 10.2 ft.
Low ............... 9:11 a.m. 3.1 ft.
High .............. 3:31 p.m. 11.6 ft.
Low ................ 9:50 p.m. 2.2 *ft.
Thulday, Oct, 15
High .............. 4:11 a.m. 10.8 ft.
Low ............... 9:56 a.m. 3.1 ft.
High .............. 4:02 p.m. 11.4 ft.
Low .............. 10:28 p.m. 1,5 ft,
Thursday,
In the second half Ehna failed
to make a first down and gained
only 38 yards on 19 running plays.
Elms had possession of the ball
for 23 plays in the second half,
Shelton for 29. In the 4th quarter
it was 18 to 10 plays for Shelton.
THE EAGLES attempted only
two passes in the entire game,
completed both for ten yard gains.
MaRks threw a dozen for ShelteR,
completed three for 57 yards and
the Climbers' only touchdown.
Bill Goodpaster, Denny Temple,
Pete Buechel and Jim Mattis all
played fine ball in the Climber
line and McInelly did some effec-
tive line smashing in the Shelton
offense, carrying 15 times for 72
yards as the workhorse of the
backfield.
The lineups:
SHELTON 7 -- ends: Sharpes,
Close, Somers; tackles: Goodpas-
ter, Temple, Zeitler; guards: Mat-
tl, Buechel, Spiker; center: Her-
me, Ellis; quartet': Manke; half-
backs: Mallory, Rodger, Lord,
Dennis; fullback: McInelly,
ELMA 7 -- ends Weld, McCeol,
Comer, Scheelke, Johannes; ta-
ckles: Lynn, Harvey, McMillan;
guards: Fretenburg, Crane, Mur-
row; center: Henry; quarter: M.
Murphy; halfbacks: Beerhower,
August, Hoag, Berry; fullback:
Easton, Bassett.
t(,oring
Shelton .................... 0 0 0 7-7
Ehna ........................ O 7 0 0-7
Touchdowns: August, Rodgers.
Conversions: Beerbower, Mcln-
ally.
STATISTICS S E
First downs .......................... 9 3
Rushing ............................ 8 2
Passing .............................. 1 1
Penalties .......................... 0 0
Yards netted .................... 187 102
By rushing .................... 147 99
By passing .................... 57 20
Lost rushing .................. 27 17
Passes attempted ............ 12 2
Completed ........................ 3 2
Intercepted ...................... 1 0
Penalties .............................. 4 0
Yards penalized ............. 20 0
Fumbles ............................... 4 1
Lost ball ............................ 4 1
Punts attempted ................ 3 4
Blocked ............................ 1 0
Full Round Slated
In Conference Play
For All G.L. Teams
CEN'UIIAL I,EAGIYF, S'F.ANi)IN(;
\\;V L T pf pit
Montesano ........... I 0 0 14 6
SIIELTON .......... 0 0 1 7 7
Ehna ........................ 0 0 1 7 7
St. Martins ............ 0 1 0 (i 1t
North Thm'ston . . 0 0 0 0 0
Chehalis .............. 0 0 0 0 0
Last Friday
Shelton 7, Ehna 7
Montesano 14, St. Martins 6
N. Thurston 7, Cent. Kit. 0
Chehalis 46, Centralia 6
Thin Friday
Shelton at: N. Thurston
St. Martins at Chehalis
Montesano at Ehna
Central League teams have an
all-conference round of games
scheduled this Friday night with
North Thurston and title favored
Chehalis, fresh from victories in
their last games, making their
1959 debuts.
CHEHALIS put on a resound-
ing display of power and finesse
during a 46-6 cakewalk over Cen-
tralia last week and figures to
give St. Martins a bad beating in
the Bearcats' league opener at
Chehalis tomorrow night. The
Preps took a 14-6 loss at the
hands of Montesano on the Lacey
gridiron last week.
North Thurston, a horseshoe-
laden 7-0 victor over strong Cen-
tral Kitsap last Friday, entertains
the Shelton Highclimbers in the
Rams curtain raiser in league play
in what shapes up as a game just
as close as last year's 7-6 deci- ___
sion scored by the Rams over the
Climbers on Loop Field.
MONTESANO is at Ehna in the
third conference contest in a scrap
which should tell a lot about the
relative strengths of the clubs
which will be fighting it out for
the runner-up spot behind Che-
halls this year.
With only two games on the
conference books so fat', George
Raines of Montesano is the indi-
vidual point leader with a touch-
down and conversion to his credit
for seven tallies.
Shelton's Will Rodgers, Monte-
sano's AI Beaulie, Ehna's Stan
August, and St. Martins' Wayne
Mom'oe have each notched a
touchdown, while single conver-
sion points are credited to Shel-
tows Rawlin McInelly, F.lma's Bob
Beerbower, and Montesano's Tim
Dills, the latter's by placement.
JUNIOII /IIGli FOOTIALL
Centralia 14, Shelter 12
Hoquiam 15, Miller 0
North Kilsap 19, East Brem 0
Central Kitsap 20, Whitman 6
Hopkins 32, Washington 0
RI,X:REATION LEA(; [ E
W L
Lenlke's Servi(.c ........... 12 4
Mick's Tavern ............... 10 6
Shelton Recreation .... 10 (i
Ritner's Straight Shots.. 10 6
Rainier Beer . ..................... 9 7
Log Cabin .......................... 8 8
Olynlpia Beet" . ................ .:. 4 1.2
Lucky Lager Beer ....... 1 . 15
Hg'h game-.Jean S('} 158
tligh total .Jean Schnitzer 432
15 - 16-
Johnny's
429 Railroad
LAflT
L
420 SOUTH FIRST
Open 'til Noon
J. V. "Joe"
HA
AccID!
I1
Prottion from
the moment you
begin preparing
for your trip
and traveling
--at th hunt,
--till you reach
home again
HUNTERS
ANGLE
Herb Angle
LOV(!S to
401 R
Average yards ............ 15.3 26.5
................................ Locker
PREP FOOTBALL SCORES
Shelton 7, Elma 7
North Thurston 7, Cent Kit 0
Montesano 14, St. Martins 6 & ( €
Olympia 14, Stadium 0 :"
North Kit 21, South Kit 0
Davis (Yakima) 27, Pasco 7 CUT AND
Roymond 25, Valley 0 WRAPPED I 1 PER LB.
Aberdeen 27, East "Bremerton 6
SedroWoolleyl3, Mt. Vernon6 Shelton Meat
Pt. Angeles 47, Pt. Townsend 14
Bellarmine 25, Wilson 6
Lincoln 25, West Bremerton 0 On Slaughter House Road Phone HA.
Chehalis 46, Centralia 6