The Greene County Guardian, February 21, 1957
Page 2, February 21,1957 the GUARDIAN Bulldogs Bounce Rams from Tourney S o m e say the Rams were playing the next game, some say possession ball whipped them and others claim it just wasn't their night. No matter how you look at it, the widely-favored Rams CedarviJle Co] lege Wins Cedarvllle College Satur day night proved it can play with the best by d o w n i n g Wright-Patterson AFB 67-54. The perrer.ially p o w e r f ul Kittyhawks were able to stay with the C e d a r v i lie squad only for a half game. After that the collegiaies walked at ay easily. WRIGHT PAT TER SON - Magby, C -l-13; Conway, 0- 4 - 4; Bennett, 5-2-12; Stat- tina, 4-3-11; Harrison, 3 -0- 6; Kegarise, 3 -0 -6 ; Bryant. 1-2-4; Totals, 19-16-54. CEDARVILLE - -Wentzel, 2- 0-4; Entner, 4-4-12; Reese, 5 - 2-12; Humphries, 4-0-H Moody, 7-10-24; Thornton, 3-1-7; Totals,N25-t7-67. o f Greeneview High School were k n o c k e d out of the Greene County tournament race by Yellow Springs Bryan Saturday night by a score of 51-43. The Bulldogs used a poses- sion-type o f f e n s e , a zone defense and a game-slowing deliberation at every step— t short, all the t h i n g s to which the Rams have been proved v u l n e r a b l e earlier •nit vf-ar. The Rams like to run and s h o o t , playing wide -open, h i g h - scoring, fast -moving ball g a m e . But Y e l l o w Springs wouldn't allow that. Now it's Bryan and Bellbrook in the tournament finals to night. G r e e n e v i e w drops to the consolation brackets. D a r r e l l Dawson sank 20 p o i n t s for Yellow Springs, then fouled out in the fourth pe ;od. Jerry Hill, -Greene- iew center, led the scoring 777 Den Are Killed COLUMBUS - — A total of 777 deer were accidentally killed in 1956, according to game P r o t e c t o r year-end reports. This is a two per cent decline from the 793 which were reported a cci dentally killed in 1955. Regionally, the Deer Pop- u l a t i o n Index declined 18 percent in eastern Ohio while it i n c r e a s e d 41 percent in c e n t r a l and western Ohio. This change in the pattern of accidental kills indicates a continued build-up of the d e e r herd in the we s t e r n p o r t i o n o f the state. The decline in the eastern part of Ohio may be accounted for by the 1955 legal kill of 4200 deer which r e d u c e d the deer population in areas o f high a c c i d e n t al kill in accord with D i v i s i o n o ‘ Wildlife deer policy. — ■=—* — 1 '7 ■ A DEERE Readers: No doubt you've seen sev eral of these beautiful blue, glass-lined Harvestore siloes in your travels--particularly in the b e t t e r farming sec tions, and actually wondered if one of t h e s e would be a good investment on your own farm. We are happy to announce that we are now in a position to answer your questions and supply your needs concerning this new boon to farming. We will have an informal meeting at our store at 7:30 Tuesday, Feb. 26, complete with movies and a question! and answer session. We sincerely believe that you will find this information c o n c e r ning new principles of crop processing and m e chanical feeding helpful in your long range planning and more practical than you have ever thought possible. --John Evans NED PETTIT KENNETH REED Ned Pettit,Ken Reed Rate Pittsburgh Try-outs Two erstwhile Greeneview greats in diamond campaign ing will report soon to a six- w e e k camp at Springfield t r y - o u ts with the National League Pittsburgh Pitates. Ned Pettit and K e n n e t h Reed will make the trek to Springfield and may continue from there to Pittsburgh later this spring with contracts in hand. At present, neither has been handed a definite con tract. P e t t i t , one of the hottest moundsmen in county circles in recent years, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Pettit, 17 Clemens Avenue. R e e d , who held down the t h i r d base corner regularly for the Ra m s , is the son of Mrs. Ruth Reed, E. Xenia Street. Both are 1956 gradu-' ates of G r e e ne v ie w High School. Pettit spent four years with the Ram basketball squad and shined in the 100-yard and 220-yard dashes and on the relay teams in track. Reed also was a t h i n clad, com p e t i n g in the 880-yard run and mile relay. with 23 points, i n c l u d i n g eight field goals. But his e f forts weren't enough. Jefferson, which had been d r o p p e d to the consolation bracket by a first-round loss to G r e e n e v i e w , c a m e through with a Saturday night 57-51 v i c t o r y over Cedar- ville. Coach Royce Pauley started all und e r c l a s sme n for the first 12 minutes o f play be fore sending in four seniors The I n d i a n s held the lea until the third period when Bowersville came abreast and took over command, closing out the third period with a 42-36 edge. Bob Ma r s h a l l paced the Tigers with 20 points. Results: Pete Reese Dunks 34 But 0)11ege Loses C e d a r v i l l e ' s Pete Reese poured 34 points through the buckets against Findlay C o l lege test week but it wasn't enough. Cedarville College dropped the Mid-Ohio League game by 92-76. Findlay, leading the loop, roared to a 52-35 half-time m a r g i n , giving the Oilers their sixth s t r a i g h t league v i c t o r y against two early losses. C e d a r v i l l e has a league record of 1-9. Results: FINDLAY--Polinski, 4 -0 -8 ; Walcutt, 14-3-31; Hanauer, 11- 4-26; C o h i l l , 6-4-16; D e n n e y , 2 -2 -6 ; McClure, 1 - 0-2; Stechschulte, 1-1-3; Totals, 39-14-92. CEDARVILLE—W e n t z e 11, 2- 0-4; Entner, 7-4-18; Reese, 12 - 10-34; Thornton, 1-0-2; Moody, 2 -5 -9 ; Humphreys, 2 -2 -6 ; W o o d w ard, 1 -1-3; Totals, 27-22-76. JEFFERSON — Marshall, 4 - 5 -1 3 ; G u s t a f s o n , 1 -2 -4 ; Guthrie, 2 -2 -6 ; Brown, 8 - 4 - 2 0 ; W i l l i a m s , 3 -0 -6 ; Hineman, 1 -1 -3 ; Gallagher, 0 -1 -1 ; Gregory, 2 -0 -4 ; T o tals, 21-15-57. CEDARVILLE — Hamer, 1- 2-4; Jeremiah, 5-2 -12 ; M el ton, 7-1-15; Pickering, 6- 0-12; Sttaley, 3 -2 -8 ; Totals, 22-7-51. By quarters: Jefferson 9 18 42 57 New Shipment o f LOWnBoy at NEW, LOW PRICES Authorized Agent for Clinton, Briggs & Stratton and Wisconsin motors- Repairs of all kinds r a m tamu . s u m * DU& 4-7*31 WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF PARTS Hal J. Hil FarmService South.on State 72 at'City Limits Jamesfown Phone 4-9091 Cedarville 9 24 36 51 BRYAN- - Blackwood, 4 -0 - 8 ; Dawson, 8 -4 -20 ; Garman, 2 -3 -7 ; Pieh, 1 -5 -7 ; Augs- purger, 1 -5 -7 ; Yeakley, 1- 0-2; Totals, 17-17-51. GREENEVIEW—Faulkner, 3- 2 -8 ; Hill, 8 -7 -23 ; Howard,. 2 -0 -4 ; P a t t e r s o n , 2 -2 -6 ; Miller, 1 -0 -2 ; Franklin, 0- 0-0 ; Totals. 16-11-43. By quarters; Bryan 8 23 41 51 Greeneview 6 23 35 43 Heifner’ s Pharmacy Aminals Needs Erysipelas and Cholera Serums Penicillin, Streptomycin, Sulfas Piperazine water Wormer $12.45 Per Gallon MHML6 CEDARVILLE. a GmneCount y CHECKERBOARD NEWS By Harold Stormont Randall & Stormont HURRY HOGS TO MARKET ON were loaded into 20-ton freight DiiDihj m m pi an cars, the train would extend four- PURINA PROFIT PLAN fifth, of the way around the world. Here s why Purina s Hog Profit o f we are happy to have Plan may help you make more h d rt in the distribution of ™?Z,n,S C 1Tore t h a n t h o s e 50 million tons because we was built by more than 30,000 . h j d m of our hogs and its been proved right folksyproduCe meat, milk and by thousands of hogmen. _ Only last fall 30,000 hogs in 29 ° n, a .h*!;h,,^ states proved Purina produced , Th.at b ® ... .P |, ‘ ‘ pork for only $9.80 per cwt. 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