JIT TN NE Ne ar i Be ce oig NA ue ibs ith o's of ia J a’ ue nd int p= av- ith rie and ith hey 10D 74 SET ASE 8 Rhad been successful all season and ~ partially block the punt with the oy Barry Kennedy kept the Wyoming £ possession on its own 30 following ' DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Dallas Fi rst Opp Dallas Sophomore Halfback John” Farley gains ground during the tight Dallas-Wyoming game as an alert Wyoming defense moves in to haul him down. “iis. The con contest | was a display of excellent defensive work on the i part of strong lines, Dallas at times rising to superb heights to overwhelm the hard running Wyoming backs. Time after time blue-jerseyed players came from nowhere to smother a play at the line of scrimmage, Andrews Thrills Dallas Rooters With 91-Yard Kick-off Return A fired-up, underdog Dallas eleven closed out the season in stirring fashion Saturday battling a highly-favored Wyom- ing team to a 6-6 tie and thus gained the distinction of being the first team to score on the Redskins this season. nN Playing before the largest crowd to witness a West Side Conference game this season, Don Andrews shattered whatever hopes * Wyo- ming had of going through the season unscored upon. He elecrti- fied the onlookers and broke the . of many Wyoming rooters by taking the second half kick-off and streaking 91 yards into pay- dirt. Andrews thus also gained the distinction of being the only gridder to cross the Redskins goal to date. It undoubtedly took a little spark out of the Redskins but not enough. They fought back to gain a 6-6 tie with the aid of a partially blocked punt by Jan Saunders. Dallas Threaatens First Coach Eddie Brominski really had his boys fired-up. The forward wall consistently outrushed Wyo- ming during the first half. Wyoming failed .to gain follow- ing the kick-off and was forced to punt. Taking over at midfield. Dallas operating out of a shotgun forma- tion, went for broke on the first rlay oanly to have Hislop overshoot his intended receiver at the Wyo- ming 20. The following play Sova picked off another Hislop aerial and Rretusied to the 40. 7 Again Wyoming failed to do any- thing on the wide end sweeps that was furced to punt. This time Dallas took over on its cwn 32 and moved to the Wyo- m'ng 19 before Sova picked off an- other pass in the end zone to halt a Dallas threat. Don Andrews had set up this threat breaking loose for a 34-yard run to the Wyoming 32 before being hauied down from behind. The remainder of the first half turned out to be a defensive battle until late in the second period when Wyorung moved from mid-field to the Dallas 19 before Mike Jones re- covered a fumble on the 23 just before the half ended. - Andrews Goes 91 Yards ‘ Before the fans had a gnod chance to really settle back following in- termission. Don Andrews grabbed the sccond half kick-off, headed straight up the middle through the “entire Wyoming defense and broke into the clear around the 40 from where Le angled to the sidelines with Wyoming’s speedster Dave hristman in pursuit. Christman took a diving shot at Don around { the 15, tripping him up, but An- |, drews had enough momentum to regain his balance and continue on to paydirt. The pass on the point after was juggled and fell incomplete. This was the only real offensive spurt Dallas had the entire second half. The Wyoming forward wall rose to the occasion following the touchdown. Danouski Scores Following a Wyoming punt, Dal- las took over on the 13 and failed to pick up a first down. With Gauntlett in punt formation, end Jan Saunders came roaring through he ball reaching the Dallas 28. On first down tailback Christman made his best offensive surge of the afternoon racing 23 yards to the Dallas 5. Three = plays later ‘Danouski smashed over from the one, being driven back about three yards after his momentum had = just | carried him over the final stripe. Wyoming elected to try a pass for the extra point but Dorosky hit Christman with a jarring tackle to shake "the ball loose when it looked like the winning point had been successful. Redskins Threaten Again Dallas spent most of the after- ‘noon on defense hereafter as the Redskins continually ground out yardage. Late in the third period Wyo- ming started a drive from its 29 to the Dallas 19 before a fourth down play backfired and a fumble lost 11 yards. Two key third down passes to attack rolling in the drive. The game ended with Dallas in and was a Wyoming punt, Statistics ‘Wyoming held the upper hand statistic wise thanks to a fine sec- ond half as the Dallas defense seemed to tire. ‘Wyoming compiled 12 first downs to 5 for Dallas. The Redskins com- pleted 3 of 8 passes while Dallas had no completions in 8 tries and had 2 intercepted. Wyoming gained 157 net yards from scrimmage against 91 for Dal- las. In passing Wyoming picked up 26 yards while Dallas showed a minus 16. } Standouts It would be difficult to name one individual standout in the contest. For Dallas it was Letts, Palrtineri, Jones and Harris who crashed through repeatedly to break up the wide running plays while Shrey, Kowaleski, Smith, Piatt, Drake, Dorosky and the deep safety men who did the yeoman work on plays up the middle. Podwika, Van Camp, Ragantesi and Zelenski did the bulk of de- fensive work along the line with Christman and Danouski checking the long gains. Fine Season Coach Brominski and his assistants Dombeck and Palermo can be proud of this season’s record as the team finished with six wins, one tie and ! two losses. Except for the 6-0 setback at the hands of Exeter, Dallas could have been co-champions with Wyoming unless West Wyoming upsets the applecart in the Turkey Day Classic. {Seniors playing their final game were Russ Hoover, Mike Kowaleski, Fred Drake, Harold Hislop, Tom Dorosky and Earl Harris. Carl Bush, another senior, has been out of action for the past month with a fractured collar bone suffered in the Exeter fray. Mrs. Esler Hostess To Executive Board Mrs. Clyde Esler was hostess rec- ently at her home in Elmecrest to members of the Dallas Junior High School PTA executive board, when plans were made for future meet- ings. The growing campaign against communism, and a drive against immoral advertising and publications was endorsed. { Present were Mrs. Carleton Dav- ies, John Rosser, Mesdames Lester Jordan, Robert Bayer, Sherman Harter, Hayden Evans; Mr. and Mrs. Esler, Sarl Kashenbach, Robert Bach- man. Sgt. Leonard S. Stoner Top Army Marksman BAUMHOLDER, ' GERMANY © (AH- TNC)—Sgt. Leonard S. Stoner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Stoner, 118 Park Street, Dallas, recently achieved recognition as a top Army marksman by qualifying for the expert marksmanship badge dur- ing range firing with the Army's new M-14 rifle in Germany. The M-14, which is being issued to Army units in Germany, will replace the M-1 rifle, carbine, Browning automatic rifle and the M-3 submachine gun. The new rifle is lighter than the M-1, packs the fire power of a light machinegun, land fires the standard 7.62 milli- meter NATO cartridge. A gunner in Battery A of the 8th Infantry Division's 16th Artil- lery in Baumholder, Sergeant Ston- er entered the Army in May 1951 stationed at Fort Sill, Okla., before arriving overseas in January 1960 on this tour of duty. The 29-year-old soldier is a 1950 graduate of Dallas Borough High School. His wife, the former Doris Hazeltine, is with him in Germany. “If American prestige was on the skids during the Pe admin- istration, as President Kennedy in- sisted before the election, it certain- ly has not taken an upturn under the new administration.” ‘Subscribe To The Post RL LAKE-LEHMAN DOWNS : WEST WYOMING 13-6 FOR FOURTH VICTORY Lake - Lehman gridders notched their fourth win of the season Saturday by defeat- ing West Wyoming 13-6 at the Dallas field. Unable to get its attack roll- ing in the first half Lake-Leh- man trailed 6-0 at intermission but came back strong in the second half to roll for two scores and a victory. Bob Rogers scored from the 3 following a 85-yard march after a voor Cowboy punt in the third period and Ellsworth converted the kick for a 7-6 lead. In the final period Snyder broke through to block a West Wyoming punt with the Knights recovering at the 38. From here the Knights pick- ed up two first downs before Rogers hit fullback Stan Palmer for a 12-yard pass scoring play. Ellsworth’s kick failed and Lake-Lehman wound up with a 13-6 victory. SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST Regulator Station Is Near Completion Pennsylvania Gas and Water Comp- any, now engaged in bringing nat- ural gas to certain sections of the Back Mountain area, reported it had, to date, installed approximately 2 miles of 8-inch pipe and 1% miles of 4-inch pipe with the latter | size to continue eastward on Pion- eer Avenue to a location near the road intersection: leading to Mt. Airy Terrace. It was announced, the presently | contemplated pipeline work will be completed by the middle of Decem- ber. The 24-inch pipeline of the sup- plier, Transco, has been tapped and the meter and regulator station is well under. construction near Na- tona Mills, Michael Balent, Pittston, is the masonry contractor for the meter and regulator buildings for the Company and Transco. Harry A. Peiffer, Dallas plumbing contractor, will work on the Company build- ing. In the near future, the meters, regulators and piping controls will be installed in the stations. During the next 6-8 weeks, there donfield Heights, Shrine View and Elmerest housing subdivisions. Teacher: “Junior, if I take 83 from 107, what's the difference?” Junior: “That's what I say—who | cares?” will be gas mains laid in the Had- THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961 SECTION C — PAGE 1 onent To Score Against Wyoming As Teams Play 6-6 Tie Whistling Swans Invade Pennsylvania Great numbers of whistling swans —protected migratory waterfowl— visited Pennsylvania in recent days. Some hunters guessed these were snow geese which also are not legal game. . Unfortunately, a hor of gun- ners hunted or shot cygnets, the gray-plumaged young of the swans, calling them Canada geese. Wher- ever the great white birds “sat down” on Pennsylvania waterways Game Commission field officers as- sumed or were assigned the task of watching over them. Cygnets, young whistling swans, do not attain the full white plum- age of adult birds for two or more years. This recalls the oft-stated warning: Know your waterfowl], and don’t shoot unless sure the bird is legal ‘game. Archers’ Harvest Surpasses 1960 Nearly 1,400 bow and arrow hunters already have reported suc- cess during their October deer hunt in Pennsylvania this year. During and after the 1960 archery deer season 1,174 bowmen report- ed bagging a whitetail: Hunt Ends For Certain Small Game The 1961 hunting season for wild turkeys ended at 5 vember 11 p. m., EST, No- in many counties, parts of counties, in western, south- ern and eastern Pennsylvaia. Following Veteran’s Day 1961 the turkey season continues until No- vember 25, inclusive, in the Coun- ties of Cameron, Centre, Clearfield, Cliton, Elk, Forest, Jefferson, Ly- coming, McKean, Potter, Sullivan, Tioga, Union, Warren, and in those parts of Blair and Huntingdon Counties north of Route 22, and in that part of Mifflin County north of Route 22, west of Lewistown and north of Route 522 east of Lewis- town, and in that part of Snyder County morth of Route 522, and also in those parts of ‘Bradford, Columbia, Luzerne, Montour, North- umberland and Wyoming Counties north and west of the North Brach of the Susquehanna River. The final day for hunting doves, sora and rails was November 9. The current woodcock/ season ends November 22. . Game Commission To Examine Deer or Pennsylvania Game Commission will operate a Deer Examination Station during the first week of the buck seaason. Deer hunters in the northeastern part of the State will be urged to take their deer to the station to be examined for age, weight, antler development and general physical condition. This information is necessary to provide basic data for deer herd manage- ment. The station, to be located three- fourths of a mile north of Franklin on Route 8, will be well marked by signs to aid the hunters in locating the station. Since the age of deer is deter- mined by examining the teeth, game technicians suggest that hunt- ers prop the mouth of the deer open with a short stick if the weather is | jaws | exceptionally cold. If the freeze closed, the teeth cannot be examined, Deer will also be examined at cold storage plants, farms, camps, homes, etc., throughout the state. If for some reason, your deer is not examined at one of these places, and you wish to know the age of your deer, simply extract one-half of the lower jawbone (either side) and mail it, along with information on sex and location of kill to: L. Lang, Biologist, Pennsylvania Game Graphic Arts Services INCORPORATED PHOTO-ENGRAVING Offset Negatives and Platemaking Screen Prints, Art Work VA 5-2978 Phone Rear 29 North Main St Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 1. BEDROOM... room telephone you don’t even have to get out. of bed to make or receive calls. 2. KITCHEN .. easy ways interruptions with a convenient kitchen phone, your most valuable labor-saver. to fop 3. DEN... Or the private corner of a room within easy reach for frequent telephone _ telephoning. convenience 4 UTILITY ROOM... A telephone installed in your many unnecessary trips and many missed calls, too. . With a handy bed- . Save steps and avoid “work” room will save MONWEALTH TELEPHONE COMPANY OMEROY'S SHOP THURSDAY — 9:30 AM. TO 9:00 P.M. 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Bears Cause Unique Situation ‘The bears are coming to town,” states LeRoy Gleason, Supervisor of the. Game Commission’s ten-county northcentral division, home ground of most of the bruins in Pennsyl- vania, K “At present,” says Gleason, “this division is heavily populated with bears in the most unlikely places. Hosts of the animals are moving, but they generally can be found in the vicinity of food such as standing corn and foods grown or thrown away by man. ‘There is almost no natural food such as acorns and other nuts this fall. This situation has caused bears to move closer than usual to resi- dential areas and, in some instan- ces, into towns. “Hunters should keep the food aspect in mind, during the coming season, and look for bears in the vicinity of cornfields, apple orchards and other places where food for ~ these animals still is available,” Gleason recommended. 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