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Reno Gazette-Journal from Reno, Nevada • Page 10

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Reno, Nevada
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13-6 Pack Rides to History Repeats JNevada Victory Over Heath' Arm Right North time when Cromer intercepted one of the two Heath passes to fall into enemy hands during the afternoon. 76-YARD MARCH Spearheaded by Harold Bartlett, 190-pound left halfback and outstanding North Texas ball carrier, the Eagles marched 76 yards for their score, with the big gainer coming when McCain passed to Abbey for 45 yards to the Nevada four. Big Duke Lindeman had to catch Abbey from behind. On the third crack from the four, Cromer took a lateral and swept to the goal line, where three Nevada defenders bounced him back to the three. He fumbled at that point, and Nevada recovered, but the official ruled he had crossed the goal line previously, and a disputed touchdown was thus allowed.

After Leon had blocked what appeared to be a very crucial conversion, Nevada again failed to move the ball much during the first quarter. The second period saw the Pack's forward wall still being outplayed and its backs being out-gained by North Texas. Nutt's best punts of the afternoon kept most of the play in Nevada territory. But with five minutes to go until the half and after the Eagles had been stopped cold in midfield and Nutt had kicked dead to the Nevada five, the payoff came. The Pack had failed to gain in two efforts, and on third down.

Heath faded five yards hack of the goal, watched as end Carl Robinson decoyed the Texas backfield out of position and then threw beautifully to By BILL. FKIEL Gazette Sports Editor PHOENIX, Jan. 2. The eyes of Texas had Nevada cinders in them today, seven of them, to be exact, representing the slim margin by which the Nevada Wolf Pack yesterday topped a. tough band of North Texas State Eagles, 13-6, in the first annual Salad Bowl game.

Some 11,000 fans saw the contest. The smaller-than-expected crowd witnessed a close, viciously-fought football game as' the Wolf Pack. tep having rough going against a powerful Texas line and big run ning backs who engineered a first quarter touchdown, jumped back into the scoring end of the contest late in the second quarter on the strong arm of Stan Heath. Heath daringly pitched the ball from his own end zone almost 60 yards in the air to Tommy Kal-manir, who went the rest of the total 105 yards for the score. CORLEY CONVERTS Center Bob Corley kicked the conversion for what seemed as though it might be the deciding point of the game.

Tackle Fred Leon previously had blocked Texas' attempted conversion after the Eagles had marched 76 yards midway in the first quarter to send fullback Bill Cromer over from the three. Except for "the flawless Heath-to-Kalmanir long gainer, North Texas had all the best of the play in the first half, with a pair of fire ends, Bill Kemplin and Joe Abbey, smashing into the Pack backfield consistently. The rest of the Eagle line was generally outplaying the Nevada forwards during the same time. GAZETTE BILL Texas Maintains Unbeaten Sugar Bowl Record Bobby Layne Stars As Longhorns Crush Alabama NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2.

UP) Texans, who won't even use shrinking violets for funerals, were bragging prouder and louder than ever today, this time over the great Bobby Layne, and his Longhorns who kept the Lone Star escutcheon at the Sugar Bowl masthead with a slashing 27-7 triumph over Alabamba's ebbing Crimson Tide. Equalling the all-time margin of victory in II years of Sugar Bowling, the University of Texas yesterday whipped the Tide with Layne's stupendous individual exhibition which saw him complete 10 passes for 183 yards, pitch for one touchdown, set up another and score one himself as the Longhorns maintained the reputation of their state's college football of having never lost a game in this post-season classic in four tries. For a half it was a great ball game, with Alabama's mighty line giving the Longhorn wall a classy licking. But the Texans caught their second wind at half-time intermission and from there on out the Tide never had a chance. -BROKE THEIR BACK" It was early in the third period, with the score tied 7-7, that Hugh George Petrovich, Texas tackle, blasted through to block Monk Mosley's punt on the Alabama 20-yard line and follow the bounding ball across the goal line where it eluded him.

Two Alabamans dove at the pigskin but Vic Vasicek, Texas guard, was there before them and gathered the oval into his arms as Petrovich also grabbed the pigskin. That was the turning point of the game. That broke their backs," said Texas Coach Blair Cherry. This was easily recognizable to the packed crowd of 72,000. In the final period the Longhorns got two more touchdowns, both through the efforts of Lew Holder, Texas end.

He intercepted a pass for one score and recovered a fumble to set up another made by Layne. BEST AND WORST The real story of the game was this: Layne played his best of the season; Harry Gilmer, heart and soul of Alabama team, played his worst Gilmer, who passed for the lone Alabama touchdown, was the "goat," It was one of his lobbying passes that put Texas in position to make the other score. Statistically, Texas buried the Tide. The Longhorns snorted and romped to 242 yards rushing and passing while Alabama got 103. Gilmer completed only three parses for 45 yards and ended up with a net gain of five yards running with the balL tries, but the 200-pound Zeno finally powered over left tackle for the score which iced the game with nine minutes left.

After Corley missed the second conversion, the Eagles penetrated to the Nevada 25, thanks to a holding penalty. From that point McCain hit Abbey on the Pack 10 with a last down pass but Abbey dropped it. Nevada took over and seemed to te driving to another score, with the reserves doing most of the work, when the game ended. Phoenix fans who bought tickets and turned out 11,000 strong for the game, thus assuring the sponsoring Kiwanis club I slightly better than an even break I were elated over the contest, which was exciting throughout i and marked by particularly vicious blocking and tackling. Team and individual statistics: Tex.

Firrt downs 13 16 Net yards rushing 102 191 Net yards pasHDK 247 46 Forward attempted 14 8 Forward completed 11 1 Forwards Intercepted 1 1 Number of punts 5 4 (x) Average distance of punts 42 45 4 Fumbles 3 4 Ball loftt on fumble 1 2 Number of penalties 4 2 Yards penalized 50 20 UJ From line of scrimmage. NEVADA Times Net 1 Plaver Carried Gain At. Kalmanir 40 40 307 Trachock 14 14 1 Zeno Jl 46 4 01 Kondel 2 8 4 Klo-terman 1 6 4 NORTH TEXIS (Bartlett 15 4 626 Nutt 12 27 2 25 i Cromer 6 16 2 60 McCain 2 49 24 5 I Lallrker 8 23 2 99 McNeill 4 16 4 howe 4 20 5 Mitchell 1 13 13 and the consequent lack of scrimmage had hurt the team's line play, though the backs played good ball. He pointed out Heath's fine defensive play as a safety feature which was outstanding along with the same man's passing. And everyone was high in praise of Ken Sinofsky, who turned in a tremendous game at guard for Nevada.

Some Nevada players thought North Texas one of the toughest adversaries of the Jong season. Kalmanir compared the Eagles with Tulsa, and pointed out that the two ball games went about the same way. with Nevada having it tough In the early going but coming through with the necessary points. KALMANIR RAMBLES It was Kalmanir, incidentally, who supplied the vital touchdown in the Tulsa game with a 92-yard kickoff return and his great catch and run yesterday, good for 95 yards and the Pack's first touchdown, sent the Nevadans on their way again. Following the game, the Nevada team was presented with 41 beautiful Elgin wrist watches by the sponsoring Phoenix Kiwanis club.

It was, all in all, a happy ball club which headed home today. Dressing Room Scenes Find Nevada Wolf Pack Jubilant, North Texas State Eagles Quiet After Salad Bowl Game 1 0 RENO EVENING GAZETTE on with Nevada, thanks to Heath, enjoying a tremendous bulge in passing. Heath, who was described by Texas Coach Odus Mitchell as "the one man difference in the ball game," hit his receivers 11 out of 16 times, and rolled up 247 yards via the aerial route against the Eagles' 46. That gave Nevada a net yardage of S49 to 237, and it was enough to tell the tale. North Texas, as things proved out, was too tough on the ground for the Pack, or at least was so during the first half, but Heath's aerial magic turned the trick.

The pass he threw from five yards within his own end zone which was daring quarterbacking to say the least accounted for 95 yards of the 247, but he was hitting consistently with tosses into the flat to Ted Kondel, Dick Trachock and Kalmanir. Most of those ultimately resulted in laterals which yielded additional yardage. GOOD PUNTING Nevada kicked off to North Texas to open the game, and the early going saw the Pack's ground attack stymied, with North Texas dominating the offensive play and keeping Nevada at bay with fine kicking. Richard Nutt of the Eagles had a 45.25 punting average, topped by a 57-yard effort which rolled dead on the Nevada five from where Heath threw his touchdown pass. But Scott Bcas-ley, especially because of his fine kicks later in the game, approached Nutt's average with a mark of 42.1.

After punting to Nevada early in the game, the Eagles got their hands on the ball for the second Here's Roundup Of Bowl Scores 25 New Year's Day Contests Staged By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif. Michigan 49, Southern Calif. 0. Sugar Bowl at New Orleans Texas 27, Alabama 7. Cotton Bowl at Dallas' Southern Methodist 13, Penn State 13.

(tie). Orange Bowl at Miami, Fla. Georgia Tech 20, Kansas 14. East -West at San Francisco East 40, West 9. Delta Bowl at Memphis, Tenn.

Mississippi 13, Texas Christian 9. Dixie Bowl at Birmingham, Ala. Arkansas 21, William Mary 19. 'Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Fla. Georgia 20, Maryland 20 (tei).

Salad Bowl at Phoenix, Ariz. Nevada 13, North Texas State 6. Cigar Bowl at Tampa, Fla. Missouri Valley 26, West Chester (Pa.) teachers 7. Vulcan Bowl at Birmingham.

Ala. Wilberforce 27, Grambling 21. Flower Bowl at Jacksonville. Fla. Bethune-Cookman of Day-tona Beach, Fla.

6, Lane College of Jackson, Tenn. 0. Sun Bowl at El Paso. Texas Miami (Ohio) 13, Texas Tech. 12 Lilv Bowl at Hamilton, Bermuda U.

S. Navy 12, U. S. Air Force 12. (tie).

Harbor Bowl at San Diego, Cslif. Hardin-Simmons 53, San Diego State 0. Raisin Bowl at Fresno College of Pacific 26, Wichita 14. Houston Bowl at Houston, Texas Texas State U. for Negroes 12, Prairie View (Tex.) U.

0. Cattle Bowl at Fort Worth Texas Samuel Houston 7, Philandei Smith college 0. Tangerine Bowl at Orlando. Fla Catawba 7, Marshall 0. Pineapple Bowl at Honolulu Hawaii U.

33, U. of Rcdlands 32. Youth Bowl at Albuquerque, N. M. Bethlehem 56, Sacramento 0 Silver Bowl at Las Vegas, Lis Angeles Bulldogs 38, San Francisco Clippers 3..

Bamboo Bowl at Manila Philippine Ryukyus Command Seahorses 21, Hawaiian Mid-Pacific Commandos 0. China Bowl at Shanghai Guam Marines 45, China All Stars 0. NYU BEATS COLORADO NEW YORK, Jan. 2. UP) Dor orman looped in 17 points to ieaa undefeated New York universitj to a 59 to 46 victory over Colorado last night in the first game of a New Year's doubleheadcr at Madison Square garden before about 18,000 fans.

It was the Violets eighth straight triumph. 7 it Stan LUJACK STARS AS EAST OUTCLASSES WEST 40-9 Notre Dame Quarterback Astounds Fans With Brilliant Display of Grid Magic SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 2. (AP) All America Johnny Lujack, as talented a T-formation ball handler as ever played on anybody's football team, passed and quarterbacked a fine Eastern All-Star team to an astounding 40-9 victory over a completely outclassed West team in the annual New Year's As Wolverines Crush USC 49-0 Michigan Victor In First Rose Bowl By Identical Score PASADENA. Jan 2.

UP) Michigan 49, Southern California ,0 is the latest entry in the Rose Bowl log. Run your finger to the top of the list, the first game reads: 1902 Michigan 49, Stanford 0. Yesterday, then, was where the Wolverines came again after an absence or to yeais mm rewiuie the record book. Not only that, the Ann Arbor perfectionists prolonged the Pacific coast conference's Rose Bowl miseries. Last year it was Illinois 45 UCLA 14.

In 1946. it was Alabama 34 Southern Cal 14. WRECK HAVOC Leaving some 93,000 enthralled fans wondering how good can the Big Nine get, the magical Michi-gans besides tyirk the higb score record wrecked the following havoc on the Rose-stained (or is that Trojan blood?) pages: 1. Ran up 491 yards running and passing, surpassing USC's 427 total against Pitt in 1930. 2.

Completed 17 passes (in 27 attempts), one better than Navy against Washington, 1924. 3. Jim Brieske booted seven straight conversions. Four was previous individual high. 4.

All-America Bob Chappuis all of that, in every sense passed for 188 yards, ran for 91. The total of 879 yards easily were 21 points ahead and died high of 239 set in 1935 by Alabama's Dixie Howell. 5. Spinning Fullback Jack Weis-enburger scored three touchdowns, all on one-yard bucks, to tie the tally mark of Notre Dame's Elmer Layden in the 1925 game against Stanford. Impressive as all this is on paper, observers found it even more staggering on the field.

The Trojans actually were never in the ball game; their lone drive, good for 75 yards, came after the Wolves were 21 pointns ahead and died on the Michigan 13. It was Troy's only thrust into enemy territory. While Chappuis and Weisen-bureer the latter also collected 91 yards in 20 carries were the big guns, the superb blocking of Quarterback Howard Yerges and Guard Dominic Tomasi, pass-catch-! ing of Bump Elliott, Bob Mann and Dick Rifenburg, and general defensive play of the Wolves were almost equal factors in the super-showing. "BEST OF BEST" Coach Fritz Crisler the man who was moaning about what the hilmu ueathpr uas r)riner to his boys relaxed after the demonstration and admitted: "It was the best game by the best team I've ever coached." Neither he nor rival Jeff Cravath would say whether Michigan was better than Notre i Dame, which was accorded the mythical national crown after beating the Trojans, 38-7. Cravath opined Notre Dame's regulars were stronger, but Michigan had more reserves.

The Wolverines admitted they had started shooting for 49 points or more after the score mounted! to 35. First they wanted to beat Notre Dame's 38, then equal the mark Willie Heston's 1902 gang. From Chappuis, who pulled a leg muscle two days earlier, came post-game's best quote: "My leg hurt all through the game and I couldn't seem to get going." All he did, besides the above statistics, was throw two or four touchdown passes 11 yards to Elliot and 18 yards to Yerges. The others went 45, from Hank Fonde to Gene Derricotte, and 29 yards from Yerges to Rifenburg. Michigan payoff drives, ceming in every quarter with three in the last period included marches of 63, 59, 83 and 64 yards.

As Crisler's undefeated squad prepared to leave for a big homecoming at Ann Arbor, it boasted a 14-game winning string (from 1946) and a final aggregate of 394 points to foe's 53 this To the coast, it leaves only headaches at the thought of having to face three more dismal New Years. The coast conference's five-year pact with the Big Nine doesn't expire until Jan. 2, 1951. Miami U. Wins Sun Bowl Game EL PASO, Jan.

2. UP) Miami university carted the Sun Bowl victor's trophy back to Ohio for another year today as reward for a hard-earned 13-12 decision over Texas Tech in the 13th annual border country gridiron fracas. With thom uotit rT it fxnw. Dell Morgan, whose Texas Red Raiders had the bitter dose of losing the third of three appearances in El Paso's New Year Bowl. "The better ball club won," Morgan said.

"They simply had too much hustle and were foo fast for us." BERT COHEN TAX CONSULTANT Formerly with Bureau of Internal Revenue Telephone 6831 16 E. Second Suite One Texas Only great defensive play by Ken Sinofsky, the 208-pound guard who backs the Pack line and directs it defense; Duke Lindeman, Dick Trachock and Heath, who stood out for the first time as a fine safety man as well as passer and T-master, saved Nevada from further first-half Eagle scores. But the tide turned noticeably as the game wore on. Nevada's offense began to click on the ground, and Heath's pin-point passing found further holes in ths Texas defense. ZEXO GOES OVER Shortly after the last quarter began, the Pack was able to march 53 yards to score, with fullback Ernie Zeno pounding over on the last down after a stout North Texas line had stopped three previous plunges inside the five-yard line.

The Nevada drive started when Jack Carmody recovered a fumble by Fred McCain, slick Eagle quarterback, on the Pack's own 47. The touchdown itself was set up when Heath hit workhorse Dick Trachock with a 13-yard pass on the Texas five. And the Pack was on the march again as the game ended, having driven from its own 25 to the North Texas 18, where it was second and seven when the gun brought an end to the "mystery blood battle." It was notable that in the course of the march in the waning moments, the Wolves were turning the Eagle ends for the first time. Statistics told the story of the game, with North Texas having an edge in first downs, 16-13, and in rushing, 191 yards to 102, but FRIEL, Sports Editor Jan. 2, 1948 Lujack's stars poured it on mercilessly.

LUJACK AGAIN With a 20-9 lead, Lujack ran off left end for eight yards and a touchdown, crossing the goal untouched. Althoiigh he played 55 minutes, going out only briefly early in the fourth quarter, Lujack carried the ball only that one time. A few minutes after Lujack's score, Art Fitzgerald of Yale whipped a pass to Lou Mihajlovich Lujack stars poure dit on mer-yard line for a fifth touchdown The East gained possession again the closing minutes and ham mered down to the nine. Bob Smith of Iowa on a reverse ripped off right tackle for the final touchdown. LUJACK CHOSEN AS GAME'S BEST SAN FRANCISCO.

Jan. 2. LT) Johnny Lujack, All-America quarterback from Notre Dame, was voted overwhelmingly the oustanding player in the East West game. The vote, by members of Northern California Tooball Writers association, gave Lujack 26 first places out of 30 ballots cast. Ventan Yablonski, fullback from Columbia, was second choice and Herman Wedemeyer of St.

Mary's, left half for the West, was third choice. TRYOUTS POSTPONED NEW YORK, Jan. 2. UP) The Olympic soccer tryouts scheduled at Metropolitan oval here yesterday were postponed indefinitely today Decause of the heavy snow covering the NO LEMON, HE CLEVELAND, Jan. 2.

UP) The Cleveland Indians announced today that Pitcher Bob Lemon had signed his 1948 contract at 100 per cent increase in salary. Phone 5637 to Kalmanir on the North Texas 45. Kalmanir had slipped behind defensive back Frank Smith and took the pass at full speed. Smith was- unable to close the three-yard gap between them the rest of the way. The third quarter saw a Nevada resurgence.

Ends Bill Kemplin and Joe Abbey, watchdogs of the North Texas flanks, were tiring as Pack line blocking improved, and for the first time, Kalmanir, Trachock, Kondel, Subda and Zeno were able to do something on the ground. Despite that, the Wolves didn't generate a scoring drive during the quarter, and the teams surged back and forth near mid-field. TRIPLE FUSIBLE A triple fumble exchange worked to the Pack's advantage as the fourth period got underway. Nutt lost the ball on the Nevada 34, and Beaslcy recovered. On the first play from there, fullback Turk Eliadcs went for ten but fumbled, and Louis Lowe recovered for Texas on the Nevada 46.

Off the wide-spread pass formation the Eagles favored, McCain was caught behind the line of scrimmage by the ever-present Beasley and dropped the ball, which Carmody picked up on the Nevada 47. From there, Trachock, who was a workhorse both on the defense and offense yesterday, Kalmanir and Zeno powered the ball down-field, with a Heath-Kalmanir-Tra-chock forward-lateral adding 13 yards and a Heath-Trachock pass another 13 to the march. The Texas line 'stiffened and held for three years in as many riition of the playing field. All had lost a good deal of skin on the al-most-grassless surface, which" was baked concrete-hard by the warm Arizona sun. Cutting and turning was almost impossible for the backs.

Coach Odus Mitchell of North Texas was crushed after the game and repeatedly said he couldn't figure out how his team lost. "Nevada is a fine club, though he added. "Not quite as good as Arkansas (to which the Eagles lost 12-0 during the regular season), but a good hail team. "My pore little boys weren't up to par," he continued sadly. Mitchell said Heath was a "really great passer" and the difference in the two clubs yesterday.

He also called Kalmanir a fine back and Beasley a standout end. Coach Joe Sheeketski said in the Pack dressing room that Nevada's long layoff from practice Billings Prepares For Pro Baseball BILLINGS. Jan. 2. UP) Archie Cochrane, president, and three other officials of the new Billings club of the Pioneer Baseball League will leave today for Idaho to inspect ball parks and confer with league president.

Jack P. Malliwell. Cochrane said they would visit parks in Pocatello, Twin Falls, Boise and Idaho Falls to obtain ideas before drafting final plans for a 60,000 remodeling job on Athletic park, home site of the Billings club. It's Fun to Bowl at the RENO BOWL AIR CONDITIONED Open Diilj 11 A. to 1 A.

M. Newly Resurfaced Lanes Next to the Tower Theater on South Virginia Street PLAY BALL We have complete supplies for all sports. Also ski equipment and cloth- I ing. SPORTING GOODS 126 Eat lrrw.A St PhaM PAUL ILCANO STAN SMITH BERT OPFIO SIE WATCH WORK Honest Work ot Honest Prices N. A.

TINKHAM Watchmaker at RENO JEWELRY CO. I 223 North Virginia, Phone 21306 Have your car heater serviced now! If yMi South Wind let one of our trained service) men put it in first class condition before cold weather comes. If yeii net have Suth Win we a re equipped to install the only heater that gives Hot Heat in 93 second Sooth Wind Heater. AUTHORIZED SeutA Ufaut SALES' AND SERVICE PHOENIX. Jan.

2. The dressing rooms of the various Nevada Wolf Pack and the beaten North Texas Eagles presented no great contrast after yesterday's first annual Salad bowl game. The Nevadans were jubilant, of course, but quietly so, and the Texans took their defeat hard but not bitterly. Players for both teams, though none were seriously injured, were distinctly unhappy over the con- Bulldogs Win Las Vegas Game LAS VEGAS, Jan. 2.

UP) A last minute field goal by Quarterback Ben Reiges gave the Los Angeles Buldogs a 38-to-35 win over the San Francisco Clippers in the first annual Silver bowl game yesterday. Three thousand fans saw the contest. Reiges sparked his team's efforts with passing, running and point-after-touchdown conversions, his most spectacular scoring play being a 60-yard pass to End Bill Hoyt. Mel Rcid was. a Clipper standout, his 5-1-yard runback for a touchdown after intercepting a Reiges pass tieing the score at 35-35 in the waning minutes of the Sjarr.c.

Reiges winning goal was from the 10-yard line. The Bulldogs led 14-0 at the first quarter and 28-21 at the half. There was no third quarter scoring. Wilberforce Wine Vulcan Bowl Tilt BIRMINGHAM. Jan.

2. JP)A fourth quarter touchdown gave Wilberforce a 27 to 21 decision over Grambling in the seventh annual Vulcan Bowl here. The Grambling Tigers had the edge both on the ground and in the air in the New Year's day Negro football classic, but a 90-yard drive climaxed by Fullback Charlie Mahoney's score provided the payoff for Wilberforce. JESSE W. SMITH, M.D.

PRACTICE LIMITED TO RADIOLOGY (X-RAY) Announces the Opening of on Office on th FOURTH FLOOR MEDICO DENTAL BLDG. 130 No. Virginia, Room 403 PHONE 2-5404 Fiscal) Presents ''SPORTS BY SHUMATE' KWRN 1490 on Your Dial HARRIS AND 949 Eost Fourth classic before 60,000 delighted spectators. It was the worst beating ever inflicted on a West team and that goes back to the start of the annual spectacle in 1925. Apparently unhindered by a gridiron slippery with mud, which quickly made it almost impossible to distinguish one player from another, Lujack abruptly neutralized a West touchdown scored in the first four minutes of play and went on to engineer touchdown after touchdown with incredible ease.

The West, in making its lone touchdown, put together a nicely organized drive from the East 36, scoring on a pass from Quarterback Virgil Eikenberg of Rice to Gail Bruce of Washington. Lujack, handling the slippery ball with nary a fumble or wild throw, lashed out with a deadly accurate pass from the West's 17 to Bill Swiacki, gluey fingered Columbia end. Ventan Yablonski of Columbia muffed the try for point, although he kicked four good one during the day. WEDEJIEYEF BATTLES Midway in the second period, Lujack connected with a beautiful pass to Halfback Bob Sullivan of Holy Cross for the second East score and the East was rolling, despite the splendid efforts of Herm Wedemeyer, St. Mary's and his outgieined but hard fighting teammates.

After a 36-yard drive from the West's 36, yard line, Earl Maves of Wisconsin, one of the East's big guns, plunged over for the third score early in the third period. The tiring West team, unable to stop the passing of Lujack or the hard drives of Eastern backs like Bill Luongo of Pennsylvania, Glenn Treichler of Colgate and Yablonski, seemed to weaken badly in the final period, togb around the ends and passed over the defensive backs for three more scores. The West managed to pick up a third period safety for two points when Luongo was nail; 1 in his end zone. AFTER SKI BOOTS All Leather Fleece Lined Crepe Rubber Sole I PAULL GARAGE Phone 2-1273 link- Zipper Front A Guaranteed 7 tj Comfort In Both -CjT All Sizes Mens and "-v I Women's $1 TED SEZH Extra Special! CUSTOM MADE AUTO SEAT COVERS $25.00 Made to fit your individual car i TRUCK CUSHIONS REBUILT AND RECOVERED 56" BLACK COBRA GRAIN TOP MATERIAL $2.00 per yd. THE CANVAS SHOP 350 N.

VIRGINIA STREET PHONE 2-271 1 "Nevada's Leading Sporting Goods Dealers" Monday Through Friday 6:15 P.M. 425 Mill Street.

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