The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, September 27, 1973, Image 12

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Stanton 'I'V shut out Woodland
Inn while Whitesell Bros. split
evenly with Harris Associates
Shupp League. Willis Hearing
men picked up 3 points from the
Ranch. Wagon team. and Yen-
cha’s five copped 3 from Fino’s
Pharmacy. Castle Inn took 3
E. Fedor’s 209-220 (608) was
high, followed by ‘J. Yenale-
vitch’s' 225 (594). G. Brobst
rolled 207 (585), T. Hazinski
fired 203 (573), G. Doescher 232
(571), R. Bonomo 254 (571).
Toppling pins for 200’s were J.
Masilus 203, D. Alexander 212,
C. Glasser 214, H. Kocher 206,
E. Sundra 212, K. Orkwiss 203,
A. Wendell 203, P. Feldman 207,
and D. Purvin 213.
In the Offset Paperback
League, the Camels and
Cougars are tied at 11-1. The
Camels blanked the Beavers,
while the Cougars took all from
the young Cubs. The Panthers
stayed close on their heels by
taking 3 points from the Bears.
The Pintos continued their
losing streak by dropping 4 to
the Bucks, and the Mavericks
lost 4 points to the Mustangs.
Taking 3 points were the Colts
from the Wolves and the Lions
from the Leopards.
R. Mocium tumbled the
woods for a walloping 230 (584)
212. C. Kazokas hit the lanes for
M.A. Whitesell’s 187 (482), J.
Nafus’ 171, S. Riegel’s 189 (478),
S. Yenalevitch’s 176.
Carverton B copped 3 points
game ahead of E. Dallas,
Orange A grabbed 3
from Mt. Zion, and Shavertown
Taking all were Shavertown C
from Shavertown/B, Trucksville
C from Carverton A, and the
Lutherans exploded for 4 points
from Trucksville B.
High scores were scarce with
top honors gong to S. Williams’
(577), Long putting up
In the Back Mountain Neigh-
League, = Henry’s
Novelty
divided with Disque’s Funeral
Home. with the jewelers and
novelty men remaining tied for
top position. Payne Printery
and Dallas Finance made it 2-2,
‘Photo by Dave Kozemchak
ts from Konefal’s. J. Baur
sizzled the lanes for 234° (605),
and J. Yenalevitch scattered
pins for 201-217 (593). G. Krako-
sky hit 203, and B. Prutzman
202.
L. Cyphers hit 170 for Tom
Reese Girls in the Bowlerette
League to cop 3 points from
Trucksville Pharmacy to keep
their hold on first place. T.
Langdon had a big 188 for Duke
Isaacs as they picked up 3
points from Boyd White maids.
In the Commonwealth
Telephone Co. Girls League, C.
Exarhopoulis’ 178 paced the
Starlites to a 3 point win over
Magicall, and Tel-Butler picked
up 3 points from Memory
Phone.
Konefal’s Restaurant League
men had trouble finding the
strike zone on the lanes as the
Eagles shut out the Rams and
the Chiefs dropped 4 to the
Indians.
Dallas Post continued to win
in the Crown Major League,
taking all from Elby's Restau-
rant. They were paced by C.
Williams 203 with an assist from
D. Zimmerman’s 204. E. Willis’
210 was high for the restaurant
men. Vanguard Security’s R.
Bonomo Jr.’s 237 (611) led them
to 3 points from Dallas Shopping
Center. He had help from
Baur’s 212-210 (578). J. Mere
blasted the pins for 259 (598) to
lead Shavertown Lumber in
taking 3 from Gebhardt’s who
had K. Orkwiss with 239-214
(614). B. Gosart managed 217 as
Wesley Gulf and Automatic
Cigarette split 2-2. Fred Stevens
gave 213.
St. Paul’s Brotherhood Lea-
gue has the Eagles in first place
with their 4 point win over the
Hawks, and the Falcons split
evenly with the Owls to move
into second place. The
Mustangs shut out the Tigers to
place in a three-way tie with the
Tigers and the Hawks. A.
Whiting scorched the lanes with
208-223 (626), and G. Shonk
blistered them with 246 (611).
Goodman’s picked up another
4 points in the Imperialette
League to stay in front of the
pack by four games. Their op-
ponent was Lahr’s Arco.
O’Malia shut out Fitch & Sons,
Apex Used Auto Parts blanked
Dallas Dairy, and Fairview
Shoe Store picked up 3 points
from Lombardo Bakery.
High scores for the night were
posted by M. Smith 181 (503), M.
Shepherd 182 (476), L. Thomas
198 (479), S. Riegel 170 (466), P.
Poynton 170 (462), J. Lerch 186,
J. Bolinski 175 (466) and J. Gar-
about how to best avoid the
big Pittston Area linemen. The
Single Membership
$5.00
864-3674
Family Membership
$10.00
256-3985
It was Jim Cefalo’s night last
Saturday as the Pittston
Patriots trounced the Moun-
taineers 48-14. The victory was
sweet for the Patriots who
waited a year to atone for last
season's loss to the Back
Mountain eleven.
It was Cefalo who put the first
touchdown on the scoreboard
when he scored from the five-
yard line with only 1:24 run off
the clock in the initial quarter.
The score came after the Pa-
triots took, the opening kickoff
and went 60 yards down the field
on four plays. A pass from J.
Castellino to flanker T.
O’Malley took care of 40 yards
of the drive. M. Nocera kicked
the extra point to put the Pitt-
ston squad in the lead 7-0.
The Mountaineers had a
tough break on a prior kickoff
which opened the game, when
C. Eckman recovered the ball
on the Patriots’ 27 yard line, but
had the play called back when a
Dallas man went offsides, and
the ball was kicked over from
the 35.
A. Pisaneschi’s pass was
intercepted by M. Biscotti, and
with the ball on the 30 yard line,
Cefalo starred again by carry-
ing the ball three times and
scoring from the 14 yard line.
Nocera missed the extra point
and the Patriots were in front
13-0.
The next action saw the
Mountaineers come to life when
quarterback Pisaneschi hit
endman Fritzges with a 23 yard
pass for six points, and B. Sick-
ler kicked it over the posts for
the extra point. The Mountain-
eers’ drive down the field was
highlighted by a 37 yard pass
play by Pisaneschi and Fritz-
ges, helped by a pass interfer-
ence penalty against, the Patr-
iots.
Once again Cefalo came into
the spotlight, and on a series of
downs carried the ball for good
rushing yardage and climaxed
There is a correspondent in
your area if you live in Dal-
las or Shavertown.
Call 675-0419
Charlot Denmon
GAY MURRAY
STORE TALK
TIME FLEW-seems like
busy with ‘‘Spring’’—now,
we must all get busy with
“FALL.” Hit those little
paintin’ and fixin’ jobs that
protect your buildings and
you from the bad weather.
YEARS AGO-Horse traders
slipped: a chestnut ~burr
under the horses tail to give
“him extra pep—we’ll be glad
‘to spire you in the same
‘way by showing you what
i you need for those home re-
i pair jobs.
HEATING STOVES-for
' burning wood, coal or oil—
¢ we have them, and sell lots of
them including the FRANK-
LIN FIREPLACE and
SINGER OIL BURNER
which will heat your whole
house—Oil Heater for 4
rooms—=$79.85.
STORM WINDOWS-alumin-
um with shelf storing
screens and most of the im-
portant features ‘‘costum’”
only $10.50. Regardless of
what fuel you burn, they will
save 20 percent—and you
can install them yourself.
SIGNS OF FALL-our flower |
bulbs from Holland just ar-
rived—a fine assortment
plant them now and you will
get a real thrill next April. A
spoonful of Bonemeal will !
cheer them on. |
GARDEN HINT-seed it
down now. with annual Rye
Grass to plow down next
spring—the recent garden
show proved to us that this.
plus compost and organic
fertilizers grow the best. Ask
us.
LAWN TALK-Fall is the best
time to seed it—and we'll
have a big load of Scott's
products this week—we also
stock bulk seed so that you
can choose your own mixture
and price.
Let's start
IALL" ‘here.
Gay Murray Co.
Bridge Street
TUNKHANNOCK. PA.
: 836- 2175
action for
scored his sixth touchdown of
a 63 yard drive with a touch-
down from the nine yard line. L.
Mariangeli passed to B. Mullen
for two points and a 21-7 score,
with 9:30 remaining in the sec-
ond quarter.
Less than two minutes later,
Biscotti recovered from a
Mountaineer fumble, and
Cefalo scored again by taking a
39 yard pass from J. Castellino.
Nocera kicked the extra point to
increase the Patriots score to
28.
Biscotti, who played heads up
for the Patriots throughout the
game, intercepted his second
Pisaneschi pass, and with only
one minute left to the end of the
first half, Cefalo again ran into
touchdown ground from the 16
yard line. Nocera added an-
other point and the half ended in
favor of the Patriots 35-7.
The Mountaineers held the
Patriots in the third quarter and
with only five minutes remain-
ing in the period, P. Shiner
recovered a Pittston fumble on
the 35 yard line. A 15 yard
roughing penalty against the
Patriots put the ball on the 20
yard line and with less than one
minute in the quarter, Pisa-
neschi ran 15 yards for a Moun-
taineer score. Sickler kicked the
extra point to give Dallas 14,
their last score of the game.
In the final quarter, Cefalo
the night on a thrilling 75 yard
run. He shook off most of the
Dallas players as he ran to the
score zone. Nocera added an-
other extra point.
With the Mountaineers’ junior
varsity in action, the Patriots
scored again with less than
three minutes in the game on a
pass from Castellino to
O’Malley. A pass for two points
failed and the score stood at 48-
14.
With four seconds left in the
game, Pittston attempted a 37
yard kick for a field goal but
Nocera’s. kick was wide.
Jim Cefalo thrilled the more
than 7,000 spectators with his
running, jutting, darting, and
strength. The stellar back more
than made up for the five
fumbles he made in last year’s
game, by collecting 310 yards on
the ground in 29 carries to
establish a new record for the
Pittston Area school and poss-
ibly the Wyoming Valley Con-
ference. He also caught two
passes for another 62 yards, and
his six touchdowns broke an-
other record.
Art Gramps, Tom Considine
Fred Schulze, and Mark Lusai-
tis did a good job on defense for
the Mountaineers.
The Mountaineers meet
at Plains stadium
Friday night. Game time is
7:45.
. Publication
stops of Pittston’s Jim Cefalo.
TENNIS RACKET 2
STRINGING =
Machine Strung Z
e No Guess Work
CALL E. J. YABLONSKI
623 Powell Ave.
Clarks Summit
Ph. 587-4126
WEEK DAYS AFTER 5 P.M.
ALL DAY SAT. AND S es ?
Let us know the news
as soon as you hear it.
675-521 1 or 825-6868
*
th
Use one of Sears
Convenient Credit Plans
Sears Firearm and
Ammunition Policy
All guns, including BB
and Pellet guns, sold
only to residents of state
where purchase is made
(Proof of residence re-
quired). Ammunition
may be ordered or pick-
ed up outside of the state
in which you reside. No
deliveries will be made
outside of the store. All
. sales subject to applic-
able Federal, State. and
Local laws.
sale ends
SATURDAY
*
Sears
ani]
Hl yTRA- RANGE
SHAN HELLS
Sears
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SAVE 5.95 to 40.95
Reg. $139.95 Model 300 12-gauge is @
gas-operated with less recoil than fixed- = O
plete with a take-down barrel and a
hand carved walnut stock and forearm. Sl
Variable Choke Shotgun
SAVE 40.95 T ; i
type game. Just twist and 139 i!
*30.95 Off...12-G
mmm = all ge
Automatic Shotgun
action automatics; that means smoother
second and third shots. It comes com-
REG.*139.95 20-GAUGE MODEL .....*109 J
Ted Williams
Reg. $179.95 12 or 20-
Gauge models, ideal for any
dial proper pattern. 3 7
12-Gauge Double 4
» Barrel Shotgun » 5
ot 3 4
Hand-crafted receiver stock % : 0
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69 |
SAVE $10.95
Reg. $79.95 with twin act-
ion slide bars. Walnut finish,
hardwood stock and forearm.
EXTRA RANGE 55.11 Off!
SHOTGUN MEN'S HUNTING COAT
SHELLS Regular $17.99
save $1.11
288
Full back and front
pockets and flaps of
blaze orange nylon for
high visibility. Bronze-
color front cotton duck.
Double-stitched and bar
tacked.
7.99 MEN'S
HUNTING PANTS
*1 Off! Ted Williams
Orlon Hunting Socks
reg. $2.99 1.99 pr.
2a box
regular $3.99
‘32
WYOMING VALLEY
MALL—RT. 115
WILKES-BARRE
829-1311
VIEWMONT MALL INTERSTATE 81—EXIT 57E—342.8101
SHO? MON. TO SAT., 9:30 TO 9:30—FREE PARKING
IN CARBONDALE CALL 489-8674