The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, October 21, 1957, Page 6, Image 6

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    National Consecutive
Record
, ..... -vfl.VvXU
JUST A LITTLE SORE says marathon bowler Bus Eaton
about his thumb late Saturday night just after breaking the
national record of 261 straight games without rest. Bus
started his bowling at 12:45 a.m. Friday morning and
finished the record breaking game about 10:30 p.m. Sat
urday. He finished with a grand total of 280 games and
might have gone even further if blisters hadn't developed
on the thumb. (Staff Photo).
Five Teams Share League Lead
After Cleveland And Colts Lose
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelnhia bounced Cleveland.
Detroit stunned Baltimore and
list like that it's a jamup today
the National football League.
Five teams hold a. share of first
place. Everyone a been whipped
at least once and what looked to
be a possible pullaway for the
Browns and Colts now has all tha
earmarks of another inp-tiop cion
nnvlii-nnlc
Both the Eaulcs and Lions
created tfio chaos yesterday by
getting even with opponents they'd
DOWea 10 quietly ill uaiuui BauiL-n.
The Eafiles beat Cleveland 17-7
and Detroit upset Baltimore 31-27.
The Colls had led 27-3 midway of
the third period.
Cleveland's loss dropped the
Browns into a first-place tie ffi tho
Eastern Conference with New
York'a world champion Giants,
who routed I'itlsbiirtfh 35-0 In their
home opener. Delroit and Balti
more share the Western Confer
ence leadership with San Francis
co, which pulled even at 31 by
cuffing Green Bay 24-14.
Bears Whip Rams
In other games, the Chicago
Cards routed Washington 44-14 to
tie Pittsburgh for third in the East
both only a game off the eoleaders
pace, and Chicago's slumbering
Bears finally got into the win col
umn, calling on Rookie Willie Gal
imoro for four touchdowns in a
gclci Rams.
Four touchdown passes by John
NOW! THE BESTTASTING
90 PROOF.,6 YEAR OLD
STRAIGHT BOURBON
YOU CAN FIND!
IV I A in.
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(Qentury
NATIONAL 0IST. PR00. CO.. N..YSTRAICHI.B0UR80N WHISKtY. 90 PROOf,
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AMeEUXAMSl
ny Unilas giving him 12 for the
brief season fired Baltimore into
a 27-3 lead when tho reviving Lions
got to work. Detroit still was down
27-10 with only nine minutes re
maining but rallied behind a Bob
by Layne-to-Hopalong Cassady
pass combination to pull it out
with three quick touchdowns two in
the last 90 seconds, Layne's 29-
yard toss to Cassady did it with
45 seconds left.
Hookie quarterback Sonny Jtir
genson was the Eagles' big man
as he passed for one touchdown
against me previously unbeaten
Browns and scored another on a
sneak.
Steeleri Handcuffed
Veteran Chuck Conerly passed
for 155 yards and two touchdowns
for the Giants against a Pitts
burgh team that never got past
New York's 25-vard-line.
Y. A. Tittle handled the brunt
of the 49ers offense, throwing for
two touchdowns and plunging for
another. ,
Galimore, ran for four touch
downs from within the Rams' 20.
The Bears led 34-13 before two
late Los Angeles touchdowns.
Oregon High School Football
Saturday Camtt
South Eugene, 27, Hudson's Bay
(Vancouver, Wash.) 13
Tillamook Catholic 40, Star of the
Sea (Astoria) 0
m 1
Eaton
Bus Eaton Finishes 49-Hour,
15-Minute Stint At 280 Mark
A man who thought "it looked
like an interesting thing to do" set
a new national mark for bowling
consecutive games Saturday night
at the Roseburg Bowl lanes.
Thirtv-five year old Bus Eaton,
local lumber truck driver, finished
off his stint at 2 a.m. Sunday
morning, some 49 hours and 15
minutes after he started, with 280
straight games under his belt. He
beat the old record ol 261 games
set in 1931 by Paul Garfield of
St. Louis. Mo. at Saratoga Recrea
tion in Maplewood, Mo.
Eaton beat the record at iu:Z7
p.m. Saturday when he rolled a
133 score on nis zbzna game, ror
the 262 games he averaged 169.68
on 44.456 pins in 45 hours and 42
minutes. At tne Zbz-game marc ne
had 883 strikes, 1,075 spares and
295 errors.
He finished his marathon at 2
a.m. Sunday when he rolled a 132
game. His final average was 161.6
pins per game on a total of 45,305
pins. He had in his 280-game total,
926 strikes, 1,138 spares and over
300 errors,
Averages 161.6
Local pinmen compared his feat
to dc me equal ot rolling three
complete leagues seasons by the
average bowlers who rolls three
games per week in one league for
32 weeks, in terms of dead weight.
pinmen figured that the 3,202
times Eaton threw his 16-pound
ball down the alley represented
handling about 26 tons of weight
in the 49 hours and 15 minutes.
Eaton, presently unemployed,
found that he had lost six pounds
from his 5-9 frame after the feat.
He weighed in at 164 before he
started Thursday night and scaled
158 soon after he finished bowling
early Sunday morning.
Upon completing his 262nd game
amid the cheers of a large crowd
College Scores
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FAR WEST
Stanford 21, Washington 14
tiregon 14, wasnington Male 13
UCLA 26, Oregon State 7
California 12, USC 0
Puget Sound 20. Whitworth 12
Oregon COE 31, Portland State
College of Idaho 18, Lewis and
Clark 13
Central Washington 20, Pacific
Lutheran 0
Idaho 7, College of Pacific 7 (tie)
San Jose State 46, San Diego
State 0
Western Washington 39, British
Columbia 7
I, infield 41, Pacific University 7
Whitman 13, Willamette 13 (tie)
Eastern Washington 59, Carroll
Mont.) 6
Southern Oregon 33, Oregon Tech
12
EAST
Brown 20, Pennsylvania 7
Harvard 19. Columbia 6
Yale 18, Cornell 7
Colgate 12, Princeton 10
Army 29, Pittsburgh 13
Vanderbilt 32, Penn State 20
Dartmouth 14, Holy Cross 7
Koston College 12, viuanova I
Delaware 59, New Hampshire
Temple 13, Lafayette 12
Lehigh 13. Rutgers 7
llhode Island 27, Massachusetts 13
Connecticut 19, Maine 0
Maryland 21, North Carolina 7
Boston University 28, Bucknell 0
Vigrinia 38, VIM 7
Bowling Green 29, Toledo
MIDWEST
Ohio Stale 56, Indiana 0
Miami (O.) 26, Ohio Lniversity 0
Iowa 21, Wisconsin 7
Colorado 42, Kansas 14
Syracuse 26, Nebraska 9
Detroit 30, Xavier 20
Michigan 34, Northwestern 14
Purdue 20, Michigan Slate 13
Illinois 34, Minnesota 13
Missouri 35, Iowa State 13
Louisville 33, Dayton 19
Cincinnati 14, Marquette 0
SOUTH
Navy 27, Georgia 14
VMI 14, William and Mary 13
Tennessee 14, Alabama 0
Auburn 3, Georgia Tech 0
Duke 34, Wake Forest 7
I.SU 21, Kentucky 0
Mississippi Southern 14, Memphis
State 6
North Carolina 35, Virginia Slate
0
The Citadel 2. Richmond 0
Florida Stale 34, Abilene Christian
7
Mississippi State 29, Florida 20
SOUTHWEST
Texas 17, Arkansas 0
Oklahoma 47, Kansas 0
Texas A&M 7, Ti l! 0
North Texas 14, Tulsa 12
llavlor 14, Texas Tech 12
Hire 27, S.Mtl 21
Oklahoma Slate A. Houston (
ROCKIES
Montana 35, Utah State 25
Denver 12. Utah 7
Hngham Young 0, Wyoming 0
Colorado State 20, Colorado Col
lege 14
Idaho State 26, Montana Stat 13
New Mexico 14, Arizona 0
Hardin Simmons 27, Wichita 14
IwH 1 ,
' '' WOOD SAWDUST
; Q iBLOWER SERVICE )
; i , : ROSEBURG : LBR. CO. II
- '
Etegling
Sunday
gathered around alley 16, Eaton
accepted the greeting, answered a
long distance phone call, then re
juvenated set about for further
record-setting.
He said that he felt at this stage
as good or better than he had when
he started. However, by the 273rd
game he said he "started really
deteriorating fast." 'During the
280th game his thumb developed a
new buster he said, this neces-
sitated his "forcing the ball" which
in turn he said "wore me out.
Decide To Quit
Upon completing the 280th game,
Eaton was examined by a physi
cian and a pulse reading of 120 per
minute was taken, wun nis pin
per game average falling gradual
iy and all the other factors taken
into consideration be decided to
terminate the marathon.
Through his entire nerformance.
Eaton's meal-taking consisted of i
one sirloin steak (which he did not
finish), a couple doughnuts, num
erous candy bars, two milk shakes
(one with an egg in it), cokes, milk,
root beer and lots of orange juice.
He arose Sunday morning about
7:30 and said "he felt fine." He
said his fingers of his throwing
hand "felt a little stiff." He was
bothered by a blister early in the
going, about the 110th game, which
also hurt his throwing and brought
on a series of splits.
Eaton pointed to the fact that a
"perfectly centered Manhattan
ball" was largely responsible for
his hand's endurance and he also
cited that over the entire distance
the automatic pin-setters at the al
leys functioned without fail.
He bowled on alley 16 some 260
of his games. Three times during
the course of the marathon he
switched to alley 13 for cleaning
periods on alley 16 and for some
i'h hours on Friday night his game
per hour pace was slowed down
while he shared the alley with a
regular league team.
Merchant Marine
Eaton's tentative plans are to
join the merchant marine for the
winter. He has served there for
nine years in the past. He plans
to return to his trucking operation
here next year again.
He is married and the father of
three youngsters, aged five, four
and two. Eaton has lived here
since 1951 when he moved here
from Portland.
One accomplishment which Eat
on was quite proud of, among oth
ers, was the fact that during his
entire kegling stint, he didn't
throw a "gutter ball" on his first
throw in each frame.
Two Teams Share
Lead In NWC Chase
Northwest Conference Standings
W L T Pet.
I.infield . 2 0 0 1.000
College of Idaho 2 0 0 1 000
Willamette 10 1 .750
Whitman oil .250
Lewis and Clark 0 3 0 .000
racilio 0 10 .000
Saturday's Results:
I.infield 41, Pacific 7
College of Idaho 18 Lewis-Clark 13
Willamette 13, Whitman 13
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Linfield and College of Idaho
are atop the Northwest Confer
ence one because of its powerful
attack and the other because a
shrewd quarterback took off his
shoe.
Linfield Saturday night raced to
its second straight foolball win in
the conference a lopsided 41-7
victory over Pacific.
College of Idaho also got Its
second consecutive win, a narrow
1813 tirumph over Lewis and
Clark.
Lewis and Clark led 13-12 with
four seconds remaining in the
game. Then quarterback Charles
Alvero lined up his team for an
apparent field goal attempt.
Alvero look off his right shoe
and slocking and went back to
kick. He comes from Hawaii,
where a lot of football players
like to kick bare-footed.
But instead of kicking, Alvero
look the pass directly from center
and flipped a 10 yard pass to end
Mike Bcrklan, who stood by him
self In the end zone.
Sports Calendar
MONDAY
BOWLING: City and Elks leagues,
7 p m. Town and Inter-City
leagues, 9 p.m.
PAL CLUB: Winston, Douglas
High.
TUESDAY
BOWLING: Ladies leagues, T and
9 p.m.
FOOTBALL: Dislrict 8-A-2; Suth
erlin at Douglas, 2 p.m.
VOLLEYBALL: Men, 6:30 p.m.
Women, 8 p.m. Central JUS.
WEIGHT-LIFTING: YMCA, 5 p.m.
6 The Newt-Review, Rosegurg,
Sutherlin UVL Grid Contests
Highlight Week's Prep Slate
Several key games are In store
this week for the schools of Doug
las County as they move into the
latter stages of the season. A total
of U games highlight this week's
action, with the Sutherlin-Douglas
and Sutherlin-Myrtle Creek games
being the big ones.
Both Sutherlin and Douglas have
two games on their schedule this
week as they will make up the
game cancelled against each other.
They will start the week's activit
ies on Tuesday when the Bulldogs
will travel to meet Douglas in a
2 p.m. game. Both teams are un
beaten in league play so far and
this could point out the top team in
the district.
Sutherlin will go on the line
again Friday against Myrtle
Creek in an 8 p.m. game on the
Bulldog field. Myrtle creek drop
Ded its first league game last Fri
day to Douglas and will be out
lor some son or revenge.
The Roseburg Indians will stay
at home this Friday to tangle with
Crescent City in their next to last
home game of the year. Last weeks
game against North Bend was can
ed off due to the flu, but Coach
Brad Ecklund of the Indians has
hopes that his team will be back in
top shape tor ims one.
Trnv Slates Lions
In the second game of the week
for Douglas they will travel to meet
Cottage Grove Friday nignt in vol
tage Grove. This gives the "Tro
jans a total of three games in one
week.
Glide will host the powerful Pow
ers team in a Friday atternoon con
test at Glide. The Wildcats had
last week's game against Oakland
jostponed as several ol ine uan-
anti dovs were aown wun uie iiu.
Powers is regarded as one of the
state-wide powers and could give
the Wi deals a lot ol trouble.
After winning its first District
5-A-2 game of the season, urain
hit a bad streak and is now tied
for the cellar position with Cres
well at one win and three losses
each. This FrKlay they will play
host to Willamette in an 8 p.m
game. Willamette is one of the five
teams tied for second place in the
standings with a 2-2 mark for the
season. The Warriors were stomp
ed last Friday by league leading
Elmira 48-6.
Oakland will step into the B
league ranks this week with a
game against Yoncalla scheduled
for 2 p.m. on the Oakland field. At
the present time Yoncalla is at
0CE, Southern Oregon
Lead 0CC Grid Race
Oregon Collegiate Conference
W L Pet.
Oregon College 2 0 1.000
Southern Oregon 2 0 1.000
Oregon Tech 2 1 .667
Eastern Oregon 0 2 .000
Portland Stale 0 3 .000
Saturday's results:
Southern Oregon 33, OTI 12
OCE 31, Portland State 6
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Southern Oregon and Oregon
Co eee of Education both dis
playing offensive power are
deadlocked for first place in the
Oregon Collegiate Conference with
2-0 records.
Southern Oregon dropped previ
ously unbeaten Oregon Tech out
of a first place tie Saturday night
by clipping the Klamath Falls
team, 33-12.
A freshman from Calgary, Alia.,
was the key factor in OCE's 31-6
crushing of Portland Stale. Quar
terback Jim Bowlen accounted for
350 of his team's 553 yards gained
as the Portland team suffered its
Ihird straight loss in conference
play.
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CARTER TIRE
Ore. Mon. Oct. 21, 1957
the bottom of District 6-A-2 stand
ings with an 0-2 mark.
In District 2-A-2 action. Heeds-
port will travel to Coquille in what
turns out to be a crucial tilt. The
Braves were edged by Newport
Friday. 7-6. and will be out to get
back into the race for the honors
they won last year.
Pirates Host Phoenix
The high flying Glendale Pirates
will be host to Phoenix in a south
ern District 6-A-2 game Friday
night at 8 p.m. This game could be
the one to determine the winner
of that section as both clubs are
undefeated this year.
Only two games are lrrstore for
the B schools this week, but both
are league affairs. Riddle and Elk
ton will tangle in a Thursday aft
ernoon game at Elkton. This is a
battle for third place in the stand
ings and both teams will be out in
full force. Days Creek will travel
to meet second place Canyonville
Friday at 1:30 p.m. Canyonville has
surprised several teams this year
and is a cinch to finish higher in
the league standings than it has
for several years. Days Creek is
in ine cellar witn an 0-3 record,
while Canyonville has a 2-1 mark,
Pirates Nail
Fifth Straight
End Wes Young picked a Henley
pass out of the air in the final pe
riod of play Saturday and ran it
back 55 yards for a Glendale score
to give the Pirates a hard earned
13-7 win in a District 6-A-2 game
played at Henley.
The interception was the second
of the day for Young and broke a
7-7 tie to give Glendale its fourth
league victory of the season and the
fifth win of the year against no de
feats. It was an uphill battle for the
Pirates as Henley opened the scor
ing the first time that they got
their hands on the ball. A 15-yard
off tackle run gave them the score
and a successful kick gave them
the extra point.
Glendale started its first drive
of the game late in the first quar
ter and scored the tying touchdown
early in the second period on a one
yard line smash by Ray Munyon.
The drive covered 65 yards and
was the longest drive of the game.
The extra point was added on a
pass from Troy Reynolds to
Young.
Neither team could manage a
score in the third period of play
although Glendale reached the Hen
ley 10-yard line on two different
occasions only to lose the ball on
downs.
Young then picked the pass out
of the air in the'final period for
the tie-breaking touchdown. Not a
hand was laid on him during his
55-yard gallop. The extra point was
no good on an attempted pass.
Glendale 0 7 0 613
Henley 7 0 0 07
Glendale scoring: Touchdowns,
Young, Munyon. Conversions,
Young.
Fred Haney Re-Hired
MILWAUKEE OH Fred Hancv's
only worry now is answering the
thousands of congratulatory let
ters he received after his Braves
won the World Scries.
The game, little manager said
as much Saturday when he signed
a new one-year contract to man
age the world's champions in 1958.
The pact, by far the best he
has received in his 34 years as
a player and manager in the ma
jors and minors, calls, for an es
timated S40.000.
HAVE
For As
TIRE CO.
These Features:
Automatic Tread Builder
Live Action Tread Blocks
20 Mora Wear Thru
Electronic Curing
28 o Quicker Stopping
Tread
Ducks Lead
14-13 Win;
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
' W L Pet. Pt. Op.
Oregon
3 0 0 1.000 44 19 '
o i n Bil7 15, 28.
UCLA
2 10 !667 47 26
Oregon State
Wash. State
2 1 0 .667 47 39
Stanford
1 1 0
.500 39 35
.500 19 13
.000 6 29
.000 14 40
.000 0 32
California ,
Idaho
Washington
1 1 0
0 2 0
0 2 0
0 2 0
USC
By JERRY O'BRIEN
TiT! imam ipi A niece of 2-
inch pipe weighed heavily on foot
ball enthusiasm at Washington
State College Monday and it
pitched the Rose Bowl shouting
here down to conversational tones.
Quarterback Bob Newman's
An..arcinn nttpiTint after the sec
ond fourth-period touchdown in a
dramatic comeoacR. aKauisi vic
gon Saturday hit the left upright
on the metal goal post and
bounced back.
Thus, a 14-13 Oregon margin
was preserved, the Cougars lost
iha Ioq1 in thp fnur-tpam race for
Pasadena in the Pacific Coast
Conference and a budding nose
Bowl demonstration among the
5.500 WSC students withered and
died. . .
Meanwhile Oregon, by us vic
tory, moved into the conference
lead with three victories and no
defeats and was in the driver's
seat in the race toward the Rose
Bowl. Oregon's only loss has been
to Pittsburgh, 6-3, in an inlersec
tional clash.
Th nnnks mppt Palifnrnia in
a big one at Eugene next Satur
day wnue w&u piays aouureni
California in the Los Angeles Coli
seum. Frenzy Planned
The WSC student body was
ready to break out in a yild ex
hibition of football frenzy had the
Cougars been ahead at the final
gun in this big game between tne
only two eligibles undefeated in
the PCC.
Among the student rooters in
the crowd of 19,000, it must have
been embarrassing to have a WSC
Rose Bowl banner tucked under
the seats at least until the last
11 minutes of the game.
Oregon Coach Len Casanova
had thrown a 4-4-3 defense at
Cougar passers Newman and Bun
ny Aldrich, stopped the WSC ae
rial game and watched his Web
foots drive methodically on t h e
ground for one score, then get an
other on a 35-yard pass play by
Leroy Phelps and Jim Shanley
Huskies Beaten By
Stanford Saturday
SEATTLE WI The Washing
ton Huskies, still searching f o t
their first football victory of 1957,
will stay at home this weekend
and see if the fugitive will come
to them in the pe.rson of the
Oregon State Beavers.
They came to life twice Satur
day against Stanford but Stan
ford had three lives. The invad
ing Indians let Washington's
Homecoming Day crowd of 36,000
have a brief taste of leadership,
then rolled to three touchdowns
and left the Huskies still winless
after five starts.
The score was 21-14. Washing
ton started with a bang, scoring
on an 80-yard march in the first
quarter. The Huskies finished ex
plosively with a 67-yard touch
down drive. But in between th"y
had the look of a fizzled firecrack
er. Stanford struck 57 yards in 9
plays to knot the count at 7-7 as
the second quarter opened. Before
the gun sounded for recess the
Indians had another, after Gary
Van Galder cornered a Washing
Ion fumble on the Washington 16.
It look 6 plays to put it over.
That made the count 14-7 and
Stanford ran it to 21-7 in the
fourlh period with a march of 75
yards. A tricky reverse and a gal
loping fullback named Chuck
Shea kept the Huskies befuddled.
As it turned out, Stanford needed
the insurance counter.
Stanford had only a slight edge
in first downs, 15 to 13 but it
also had only a slight edge in
touchdowns, but edge enough.
DRIVE WITH SAFETY
YOUR TIRES RECAPPED
Little As 25 PerWeek
CUSTOM TREAD RECAPS
i III fir III f TVf
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CO w w
W. Vw vVv;f M
PCC Alter
OSC Upsel
for a 14-0 fourth quarter lead
after a 27-yard Jack Morris field
goal attempt to pad the score was
blocked.
Old fans who haven t been seen
for years had come trom all parts
of the Northwest to see WSC. Then
the sluggish Cougar came alive
with 11 minutes to go.
Newman took me loam a yards
for one score and then, 71 for an
other and it was 14-13 with 65
seconds left, toacn Jim sutner
land sent fullback Eddie Stevens
in to try the conversion. Newman
overruled him, tried it himself
and ran into that 2-inch pipe.
There wasn't enough time for the
last minute lightning that struck
down Stanford the week before,
21-18. A planned onside kickoff
was too long.
No Blame
Sutherland laid no blame on the
21-year-old junior for second
guessing him. He said Newman
had the spunk to take responsi
bility on his own shoulders be
fore thousands of people.
The Ducks, behind the great
running of Morris, Jack Crab
tree's heady quarterbacking and
a stout line, gave WSC a bad
time three-fourths of the way. The
Webfoot attack was unspectacular
but it made points, ate up time
and produced 49 minutes of dull
football to the frustration of Home
coming Day fans who had come
to cheer WSC to its first Rose
Bowl bid since 1931.
Now Oregon assumes the lead
among the four PCC schools who
have athletic purity and can
travel to Pasadena.
Ukes Snap OSC
Win Skein, 26-7
Corvallis OB Oregon State's
football team came home 'Sunday
with more to worrv about than its
26-7 defeat by UCLA at Los An
geles Saturday.
Several players were on the in
jured list as coach Tommy Proth
ro prepared to open drills for next
Saturday's game with Washington
at aeaitie.
Joe Francis, ace tailback, was
knocked unconscious when tack
led Saturday, and still was having
dizzy spells. Bill Robertson, train
er, believed, however, Francis
will be all right.
George Enderle, reserve tackle,
suffered a bad ankle sprain that
probably will keep him out this
week. Starling end Dwa.yne Four
nier also had a sprained ankle.
Regular blocking tack Ted Searle
and reserve tackle Ed Kaohelau
lili had less serious injuries.
The Beavers, ranked No. 7 in
the Associated Press poll, had no
alibis for their first defeat of the
season. They conceded that they
were simply outplayed.
The Beavers' only touchdown
came in the fourth quarter the
only period in which the Bruins
failed to score. A 34-yard pass
from reserve halfback Larry San
chez to Jerry Doman put the ball
on the USC one, and halfback
Jim Stinnette went over. Sanchez
converted on a run.
The Bruins went 67 yards by
land and air with 'the opening
kickoff for Iheir first touchdown
A 49-yard drive in the seoond
I quarter gave them a 13-0 half
1 time lead.
I In the third quarter Coach Red
i Sanders' men cashed in on a pass
I interception and a fumble for two
more touchdowns.
The feared Beaver backs were
outplayed continuously by UCLA's
halfbacks Don Lone. Kirk Wilson
and Chuck Kendall and fullback
Barry Billington.
SCOTTSBURO DOG THIRD
HIGHLAND, Mich. WI Lud
wig von Weisenhof, a Weimara
mer dog trained by Ray Tanguay
of Eugene, Ore., won the open
all-age stake at the Highland field
trials here.
The dog is owned by J. B.
Oliver. Palm Springs, Calif.
A dog owned by Bob and Lee
Kellison, Scoltsburg, Ore., was
third in the trials.
PIELIR CORI GREEN SLABS
DRY OAK PLANER ENDS
PHONE OS 9-8741
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CARRY FULL
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PHONE OR 2-2689
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