| i 8 of p n. ERTS a TERETE ST - DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA 4 THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1962 SECTION C— PAGE 1 Et oiman Seeks 5th Win a Exeter Here Saturday At 2 Dallas Overpowers Exeter 26-6 Behind Strong Defensive Work * ” Amidst this pile-up is Dallas quarter- back Paul Siket after he had picked up 16 yards on a roll-out keeper-play late in fourth period to set up final Demon score. Harris hit off tackle on the following play for the TD from the six-yard line. x xox ~ mainly on his Alan * * - Joe Noon was responsible for this score 28-yard runback of an Exeter interception to reach the 22. Dallas players identified are Harris (33) between (70 and 81) two Exeter linemen, - Kaschenbach (21), Swartwood (28). x x ‘x “Let's make hay while the sun shines” is exactly what the |scored the third tally by smashing Demons of Dallas Senior High School did Saturday afternoon over from the one to wind up a 37- in overwhelming a supposedly strong Exeter eleven 26-6 be- fore some 2,000 rabid grid fans at the Dallas field. Displaying an alert, stout-hearted defense along with a diversified ground attack, Dallas moved for three second-half touchdowns after hold- ing a slim 7-6 half-time margin to break the game wide open. Joe Noon cracked over for the first two scores, one on a one-yard | buck up the middle and his second in the third period when he took a hand-off from quarterback Paul Siket on a draw play up the middle good for seventeen yards and a TD. Tom Kerpovich, second-string fullback, DRAWING EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 2 EACH WEEK UNTIL CHRISTMAS Tickets Given With Every $1.00 Purchase Made DRAWING . EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT RLSO S&H GREEH STAMPS BIRTH’S SERVICENTER Junction Rts 118 and 309 MAIN HIGHWAY, DALLAS ‘ DALLAS ESSO Clyde W. Birth yard drive, while Alan Harris scored from 6-yar ds out for the final tally. Joe Fenner, smooth working Pan- ther quarterback tallied the only Exeter touchdown on a keeper-play in the first period. Fumbles Sets Up Score Following a Dallas punt early in the first period, an Exeter back was hit hard in trying to take a hand- off from Fenner and fumbled with Farley falling on the loose ball at the Exeter 13 to put Dallas in business. After Farley picked up a yard, Si- ket rolled out for a six-yard gain to put the ball at the 6. Kerpovich then hit the middle for five-yards to reach the 1 from where Joe Noon bucked over for the score. Siket then com- pleted his only pass of the afternoon by hitting Kerpovich in the endzone for the extra point, and at half-time the conversion looked big. Panthers Roar Back Fenner took the ensuing kick-off {at his own 12 and moved to his own 42 before being hauled down. | over the line to reach the Dallas 46. Two running plays netted but two- | yards against the big interior line of | the Demons but on third down Fen- | ner completely baffled the Dallas de- fense by faking a hand-off to his | half-back moving right as he moved ito the weak side and picked up 11 | yards without no blocking. Again two running plays into the | line failed and Fenner took to the | air again to his favorite target, Hu- | dak, and he made a great catch at the Dallas 5 to set up an Exeter score. Mosolusky was stopped cold as he | tried to sweep his right-end, but once again Fenner on the keeper-play roll- "ed to his left and went over the final stripe untouched to close the gap to | 7-6. A running play failed to pick up the necessary yardage and Dallas held on to its slim one-point margin until half-time. | Scoreless Period |" Both ‘teams battled on even terms throughout the second period. Dallas did move from its own 21 to the Panthers 46 early in ‘the second quarter before safetyman Fenner picked-off a Siket aerial at his own 27 to halt the drive. | Later in the quarter Noon got off a high punt against the wind and the | ball bounced to the Dallas 32 to give | Exeter an opportunity to go ahead before intermission, but the Dallas defense tossed Fenner for a six-yard loss on the first play then two passes overshot the intended receivers be- fore fourth down completed pass was stopped at the 28. | Great Blocking Up Front ' After Exeter picked up a first down at its own 39 following the second half kick-off, the Panthers fumbled again with the ever alert Mike Jones grabbing the ball at the 40. ‘With Farley and Noon alternating on running plays, Dallas reached the 17. It was from here that Siket pulled the most beautiful fake of the season, he faked to Farley, then faded back |'as if to throw and in doing so handed to Noon on a draw play, and with great blocking in the forward wall, Noon raced untouched the final 17 yards. Harris then slid off-tackle for ‘the extra point and a 14-6 lead. After that it was a continual hard- charging line on the part of Dallas that broke the game wide open. They repeatedly stopped the ball carrier SS On first down, Fenner hit wing-' man Andy Hudak with a quick pass | Lake-Lehman Edges Edwardsville 13-8 On Rogers 63-Yard Jaunt Injury riddled Lake-Lehman ral- lied for a ‘third period TD Saturday afternoon to turn back a stubborn Edwardsville eleven, 13-8 on the loser’s field. Lake-Lehman marched 80-yards for the opening score in the first period and then in the third quarter marched the length of field (yes 100-yards) after a punt was downed on the one-foot line. Bob Rogers, battered and bruised, raced 65-yards for the score. / Edwardsville on the other hand tallied its eight points in the second quarter after a pass interception with Gingo punching over from the five. ception by Lake-Lehman in the end zone resulted in a safety when the ball carrier tried to run it out. That gave Edwardsville an 8-6 lead at intermission. Eagles Threaten The Knights took a 6-0 lead when fullback Stan Palmer capped an 80- yard march with a three-yard jaunt into paydirt. Palmer and Rogers did most of the gaining in the march downfield. Edwardsville twice threatened in the opening period only to be halted on the great defensive play of safety- man Bob Rogers. Following a 23- yard run by Gingo to put the Eagles in scoring position, Rogers picked off an "Edwardsville pass and later in the period hit Gingo with a smashing tackle that shook the ball loose with Lake-Lehman recovering. Edwardsville finally hit paydirt in the second quarter following a pass interception. Gingo set up the score with a 24-yard jaunt and then crack- ed over from the five-yard line. The extra point failed. Later in the period an inter-’ Edwardsville was on the move a- gain before half, but again a pass in- terception halted the drive, but the Eagles got two-points when the safety man tried to run the interception and was nailed in the end-zone. With this safety, Edwardsville went to the locker rooms with an 8-6 half-time advantage. Deciding Tally Lake-Lehman’s winning drive started midway in the third period following an Edwardsville punt that was downed on the one-foot line. With fullback Palmer and half- back Brown alternating on running plays ‘the Knights moved to their own 35. Coach Eddie Edwards called upon the injured Bob Rogers to come off the bench and Rogers responded, pulled leg muscle and all. Bob took the snap from center and faked two hand-offs ‘to his backfield moving to the right and neatly hid the ball on his hip and rolled to the extreme side of the field and with a running limp moved 65 yards for the winning touchdown. The final period although a score- less one was one of the hard running of Stan Palmer against the passing game of Edwardsville, but the defens- ive units closed the gaps when need- ed Statistics Lake-Lehman compiled 15 first downs compared to 11 for Edwards- ville. The Knights totalled 264 yards rushing against 154 for the Eagles. Edwardsville completed 5 of 13 passes while Lake-Lehman surpris- ingly only tossed four and had one completed. Lake-Lehman had one in- tercepted with that one setting up the Edwardsville TD. Prokopchak Intercepts On the opening play of the final period, an unherald sophomore, Wal- ter Prokopchak, who did a fine job on defense all afternoon, intercepted a pass that was deflected by a hard- charging Dallas lineman at the Ex- 1 eter 37. ’ Dallas used ten plays to score with Kerpovich crashing over from the 1. Siket picked up an important 10- yards on a roll-out to put the ball at the 14 in the drive. Noon Intercepts Moments later Joe Noon picked- off another Exeter pass at the mid- field stripe and returned it to the Exeter 22 before being stopped after a fine run, eluding several ma- roon and gold jerseys. Paul Siket aided by a great block on the part of Noon swept around end for a 16-yard gain to put the ball at the 6. Alan Harris, sub left-half- back sliced off his own right tackle for the remaining six-yards and the score. A running play on the extra point failed, but Dallas had ‘the game sewed up 26-6. Scrubs Even Function Exeter moved to the Dallas 40 af- ter the kick-off before ‘Big’ John Brominski, Charlie Lockard and Larry Piatt smothered Fenner for an eight-yard loss on attempted pass play. With a little less then four minutes remaining coach Eddie Brominski cleared his bench and even the un- derstudies played like champs. They broke up two pass plays to take over at ‘the 48 yard stripe and then moved to the Exeter 13 as the game ended. On the first play, quarterback Don- nie Martin handed to his fullback, Jim Haines up ‘the middle for a nine- yard gain. Martin then on a keeper play, behind some good blocking rolled around end for 21 yards to reach the 22. On the final play of the game, right-halfback Randy Jones picked up nine more yards to the Exeter 13. PROTECTION ance . . . right protection for you. IS A JOB FOR PROFESSIONALS PROFESSIONAL help is especially important when you buy insur- because insurance protects everything you own. You can depend on our professional experience .and knowledge to provide the Call on us for professional insurance service backed by the policies with the P.S. — Personal Service. HAROLD E. FLACK Insurance Agency BROOKS BLDG. VA 3-2189 Statistics Quarterback Paul Siket mixed his plays all afternoon and with coach Eddie Brominski alternating his half- backs and fullbacks, had the Exeter line guessing all afternoon who was going to carry next. Noon, Farley and Siket each car- ried ten times while Kerpovich was called upon seven times and the re- maining backs each had a few cracks. Noon and Farley both netted 44 yards while Siket picked up 40 and Kerpovich 24. Dallas led in first downs ten to seven. The Demons completed one of four passes and had one intercepted. Exeter meanwhile went to the air- lanes 14 times, completing three and had three intercepted. Dallas amassed 206 yards rushing and 2 yards passing. Exeter finding it tough to gain through the forward wall of the Demons netted 58 yards rushing and 41 passing. Highlights The Dallas forward alignment of Bullock, Brominski, Lockard, Piatt, Paltrineri Kerpovich, Jones, and Prokopchak deserve much of the credit for the victory, they were the fellows that made the breaks to give the Demons the pigskin by their hard-charging, hard tackling and alertness to pick off three passes ... Siket called a flaw- less game and is improving with each game, watch for him to run the option play more often in future con- test .. Joe Fenner, Exeter signal- caller, is one of the top ranking quarterbacks in the the WSC, he can run as well as pass .. Ron Beatty, diminutive fullback of Exeter showed nothing against the big forward wall of Dallas, he like the other backs where being latched on to before they could get started ... Something new, coach Eddie Brominski ran the ball club from the stands via walkie-talkie with Lou Palermo and George Dom- beck on ‘the sidelines-it worked at least for this game ... Both High along with linebackers, ‘Dallas, WS Conference Leaders Meets Ldwardsville Saturday DeWitt In Stakes For Hole-In-One NEW YORK — A hole-in-one scor- ed by Jack DeWitt of Grandview Avenue, Goss Manor, may earn him a trip to Scotland for two and $1,000. By getting his ace at Irem Temple Country Club, the Dallas golfer was entered in ‘the national Old Smugg- ler Hole-In-One Sweepstakes. The winner will be announced at the end of the year. B/1C Larry W. Farr Surprised On Birthday | A surprise birthday party for A /1C | Larry William Farr 22, was given by | his wife at Pope Airforce Base, Spring Lake, N.C. Mrs. Farr is the former Barbara Ann Cooney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Cooney, Pikes Creek. Larry is son of the Stanley Farrs, White Birch Trailer Park. (Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rogers. Mrs. Rogers is the former Carol Hislop, White Birch Trailer Park. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. James Bleau, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Farrell, Mr. and Mrs. J. Bardin Carr, and the very young Farr daughter Valerie Kim, six months. Serves On Destroyer Returned To America Albert J. Tondora, sonarman third class, USN, son of Mrs. Helen G. Tondora Hemlock Street, Fern- brook, is serving aboard the radar picket destroyer USS Steinaker, which has returned ‘to Norfolk, Va., following a seven-month tour of duty with the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean. While with the Sixth Fleet the Steinaker participated in several major operations, including NATO exercises countries. “Some babies are born to rule and some are boys.” Marriages are made in Heaven— so is thunder and lightning. Autumn has come, Summer has went; Vacation is over; Money is spent. School bands entertained the fans with a fine pre-game and half-time show. Back Mountain will be the scene of another important West Side Con- ference contest Saturday when the Panthers of Exeter meet the Knights of Lake-Lehman on Dallas Junior High field at 2. This is a must for both clubs since both still have an outside chance of catching Dallas, the loop | leaders. Dallas leads with 3 wins, 0 losses and a tie. Lake-Lehman is second with 4 wins against 1 loss, a ', game ahead of Exeter with 3 wins and 1 loss. Edwards Worried Coach, Eddie Edwards, is quite “A LOCAL FOOTBALL STAR IMPROVING Joe Lopasky, 1960 graduate of Lake-Lehman High School, who is a sophmore at Houston Un- iversity and is majoring in phy- sical education, called home on Sunday to reasure the folks at home, that his shoulder’ which was injured during the game with Texas A & M, is improving and that he played a short while in the game with Alabama on Saturday. Joe’s mother and Bonnie Case plan to attend the game be- tween Houston and Boston on October 27, in which Joe will play. The game will be held in Boston. Beautiful Letterheads Are Produced By Dallas Post Offset concerned about his team for this en- counter since the win over Edwards-- ville was rather costly player-wise. Fred Brown, halfback was hospit- alized with slight concussion and a whiplash of the neck; Bernie Snyder suffered a severe bone bruise and { Bob Rogers, hampered by a bad | knee all season, came up with an ankle injury. = It's almost definite Brown will not see action this Saturday but Edwards is hopeful that Snyder and Rogers respond to treatment and are ready for full time action against the Pan- thers. Edwards figures maybe Dallas softened up Exeter and that his boys will be up for this one. Dallas-Edwardsville Dallas goes after victory number “4” Saturday afternoon when it travels to Edwardsville to meet the Eagles at 2 on the field behind the Edwardsville School. Last week the Eagles threw a scare into Lake-Lehman before dropping a- 13-8 verdict. Coach Frank Thorik will have his boys primed for this one in hopes of an upset. Dallas’ big line will have to stop a block-busting back by the name of Gingo who kept Lake-Lehman in constant hot-water with his “bull- like” rushes. ™ Coach Eddie Brominski is hopeful the first and second stringers can build a substantial lead so he can get his scrubs into action after the way they moved the ball against Ex~ eter last week in the final minutes of the game. 7 YOUR GOOD MUSIC STATION £ WNAK E& Serving 12 Counties Tune in Sunday at 2 P.M. for the CLEVELAND BROWNS — ST. LOUIS ball game, sponsored by your Admiral Dealers and Mary Carter Paints. 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