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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1957)
OSS leavers Coast to Win; Intersectional Proves Easy By BILL CLARK United Press Sports Writer Lawrence, Kan. (IP) A pair of California speedsters ex ecuted the ancient single-wing reverse to perfection Saturday as Oregon State scored early and often to throttle Kansas 34-6. Before a sun-baked crowd of 23,000, Coach Tommy Prothro's defending Pacific Coast confer ence champions ground out 346 yards, most of it around Kansas ends. By halftime, Oregon State led 27-6 and, with a 53-yard run by John Francis, coasted to their second straight win in the final 30 minutes. Arnel Durden, 165-pound jun ior from Los Angeles, reeled off touchdown runs of 21 and 14 yards on identical reverses for the 1956 Rose bowl represent tives first two scores. Under study Sterl Hammack, another Californian, continued win j back sweeps with 10-yard scor ing run, minutes before the half Kansas, severely hampered by the loss of quarterback Bobby Marshall in the first six minutes of play, mustered only two lengthy drives, both in the sec ond period. Bobby Robinson, a second string left halfback, picked up the lone Kansas tally when he shook loose for eight yards f ol lowing a pass interception . by guard and co-captain Bob Kraus. Following Hammack s touch down, Oregon State blocking back Ted Searle intercepted a Kansas pass On the KU 33. Full back Nub Beamer, a star in a 20-0 victory over Southern Cali fornia a week ago, picked up 29 yards to the four and two plays later dived over the three with 41 seconds in the half remain ing. Francis returned the second half kickoff to the 42, Beamer got five at tackle and Francis then sped 53 yards for tlje game's final score after picking up his own fumble. Ashland Gridders Subdue Yreka Miner Club 20-12 Score By Periods: Kansas 0 8 9 0 6 Oregon 13 14 7 0 34 Kansas scoring: Touchdown-Robin on (8. run. f Oregon State scoring: touchdovns Durden 2. (21 and 14 runsi; Hammack (10. rum; Beamer (3, run); Francis (53, run). Conversions Searle 4. Grants Pass Cavemen Tip Indians 13-7 Roseburg All touchdown lng was confined to the last 5V4 sninutes of play here Friday night when Grants Pass high edged Roseburg 13 to 7 in non league gridiron contention. Jim Smith smashed into the end zone on a keeper play end ing a 60-yard Grants Pass drive for the first TD. Big gain of the promenade was 35 yards by Jack Dean on a counter play putting the ball on the Indian 13. Smith went over three plays later and Dewain Gurule thumped the ex tra point. Roseburg fought back 73 yards in 10 plays with Dave Bradley shoving the final yard. 5 rent Long booted the conver jon. Bob Steel connected on ihree passes on the march with the last one for 20 yards to Bradley putting the ball on the one. One minute 34 seconds were1 left when the TD tallied. , Winning Counter GP got the winning touch down with 42 seconds to play. The goalward move started when Dick Bird of GP fell on the Roseburg onside kick-off by Bud Olsen on the Caveman 49. Pass interference put the ball on the Roseburg 36-yard line. A Smith to Mike Sparlin pass put the ball on the 10. Smith hit Sparlin in the end zone for an aerial score. Grants Pass had the net yard age margin 266 to 249 and Rose burg rolled up 12 first downs to 10 for GP. The Indians dom inated first half rushing with 133 net yards to just 27 by the Cavemen. Grants Pass had the uperhand 110 to 33 in the last two quarters. In passing GP led 56 to 18 yards in the first half and 73 to 64 in the second. SPORTS Prep Scores FRIDAY FOOTBALL By l'nited Press Crater 13. Redmond 13 Milwaukie 31. Hillsboro 0 Gresham 18, Parkrose 0 Phoenix 27, Brookings 12 Dallas 21. Revnolds 12 Ashland 20. Yreka 12 Sandv 25, Clackamas 0 Illinois Valley 24, Rogue River 8 West Linn 2, Oregon City 0 Bonanza 13, Jacksonville 0 Newberg 36. Oswego 6 McMinnville 27. Forest Grove 0 Tigard 19, St. Helens 13 Concordia 40. Knappa 6 David Douglas 7. Central O Jefferson 32. Cleveland 7 Washington 26. Wilson 13 Grant 12, Roosevelt 6 Lincoln 45, Madison 7 Benson 22. Franklin 0 Silverton 6, Woodburn 6 Albany 13, Bend 7 Serra Catholic 40. Gervais 13 Vale 53. Grant Union 0 Central 30, Canby 0 South Salem 13. North Salem 8 Molalla 39. Madras 7 Dallas 21, Troutdale 19 Baker 27, Union 0 Sublimity 2, MacLaren O forfeit St. Paul 21. Eddyville 12 Salem Academy 34, Sheridan 0 Dillard 26. Oakland 12 Klamath Falls 7. Redding 6 Drain 13, Creswell 0 Amity 18, Banks 6 Willamina 32, Sherwood 6 South Eugene 41, Cottage Grove 0 Hood River 13, Vernonia 6 Newport 12. Coquille 0 Nestucca 12, Neahkahnie 0 Toledo 6. Gold Beach 0 Ontario 32, Mountain Home, Ida., 6 Scio 32. Jefferson 0 Doulgas 26, Oakland 12 - Mt. Angel 24, Cascade 6 Evergreen 33, Estacada 7 Walla Walla 43. Pendleton 12 Siuslaw 33, Taft 6 Corbett 48, Star-of-the-Sea 6 Mt. Angel 25. Turner 6 Elmira 20, Junction City 12 Oakridge 13. Pleasant Hill 8 St. Francis 30. Willamette 7 Mapleton 12. Shedd 7 Monroe 40, McKenzie 7 Bronwsville 12, Coburg 7 Triangle Lake 43, Alsea 39 Lorane 26, Mohawk 6 Oregon Deaf 26, Hereford 22 Weston 46, Boardman 19 Lexington 63. Umapine 12 Helix 12, lone 6 I Irrigon 45, Touchet 0 Umatilla 34. Fossil 18 Pilot Rock 20, Wallowa 8 Stanfield 46, Joseph 0 Heppner 25, Athena 13 The Dalles 21. Battle Ground 0 , Warrenton 6. Clatskaine 0 Merrill 39. St. Mary's (Medford 6 Talent 19. Sacred Heart (Klamath falls I 0 Nehalem 20. Gaston 7 Grants Pass 13, Roseburg 7 Springfield 20, North Bend 7 Kennewick 26, Hermiston 0 Montesano 13. St. Martins 8 Yoncalla 20. Riddle 13 Elkton 18, Dav"s Creek 6 Myrtle Point 26. Myrtle Creek 8 Powers 27, Canyonville 21 Sutherlin 12, Glide 6 ' Net Test Won in Rain By Chili's Luis Ayala Berkeley, Calif. (IP Luis Ayala of Chili, seeded fourth in the Pacific Coast Tennis cham pionships here, won a marathon rain-interrupted victory over Kurt Nielson of Denmark 8-6, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 Saturday to advance into the semi-finals of tne mens singles. Ayala teamed with Sven Davidson of Sweden to defeat Hugh Ditzler and Lt. Clif . Mayne of Berkeley 10-8, 6-4, 10-12, 7-5 and go into the finals of the men's doubles. Ashland Ashland high foot ballers touchdowned on two long drives and turned a fumble recovery into a score in a 20 to 12 Friday night victory over Yreka, Calif. Bob Murray went over for all Grizzly TDs. Tom Wilburn tabulated one Yreka score and passed to Howard Pierce for the other. Ashland held a 14 to 0 half way bulge but Yreka hacked it to 14 to 12 in the third stanza. The home club went 58 yards to get across the goal in the second quarter. Murray plung ed over from the two and Steve Gray rounded end for the ex tra. One play after the Ashland kick-off Hank Hampton of the Grizzlies recovered a Miner fumble on the Yreka 10-yard line. A Miner offside put the ball on the five and Murray crossed from there with Jerry Stubblefield kicking the conver sion. Ashland moved from its own 47 to tally in the fourth quarter. Murray did most of the lugging and the final carry was from three or four yards out. Yreka chugged for 75 yards in the' third period with Tom Wilburn packing on 17 of the 19 plays needed to reach the gain. The Miner back then countered from the three-yard line. The Grizzlies went to the Yreka two and lost the ball on a fumble. Wilburn heaved a pass from back of the goal line but it was incomplete. Then he con nected with Jerry Dillen who rambled 79-yards to the Ash land 11 before being hauled down. On the next play Wilburn tossed to Pierce in the end zone. On the strength of the pass ing, 112 yards to Ashland's 24, Yreka led in total net yardage 230 to 211. Ashland did better on the ground 187 to 122. First downs were 11 to eight for Ash land. Yreka completed four of six pass trie3. Ashland threw only one and made good on it. BIG WINNERS Agua Caliente, Mexico (IF) Two horse players, neither im mediately identified, picked per fect cards of six straight winners in the 5-10 cash handicapping pool Saturday. Each won $15, 236.60. WAR MARSHALL WINS Pomona, Calif. (IP) Charles E. Brown Jr.'s War Marshall, a refuge from small midwestern tracks, turned back a talented field today in the third running of the $20,000 added Fixture at Pomona race course Saturday. Berg Leading In Reno Test Reno, Nev. (IP) Defending Champion Patty Berg fired a siz zling 67 Saturday to take a com manding lead in the 36-hole, $3,500 Reno Open Women's Golf tournament. Miss Berg, who won the title in the only other Women's here in 1953, birdied six holes and took a bogey on the rough 15th to move four strokes ahead of Betsy Rawls and Gloria Arm strong who tied for second with one-under-par 71s. Following Misses Armstrong and Rawls in the two-day tour nament play were Wiffi Smith who carded a 72, Betty Jameson with a 74 and Marlene Bauer Haage and Jackie Pung with 75s. Leaders in the other amateur flights were Bobbie Smilanick of Reno, first flight, who shot a 78; Lois Hayes of Reno who shot a handicapped 92 in the second flight and Iren Marich, also of Reno, who carded a 98 in the third flight. TAR HEELS VICTOR Chapel- Hill, N.C. OP) North Carolina's Tar Heels put tar on their fingers , as well Saturday and grabbed every loose football to smear Clemson 26-0 in an Atlantic Coast conference upset. 3 seas MINNESOTA WINS Minneapolis, Minn. (tfl Power-laden Minnesota successfully opened the 1957 football season by routing Washington 46-7 be fore a record opening day crowd of 63,512. It was the Gophers' ninth vic tory in 13 intersectional games with Washington. !STA-dfV CORN REMOVER v Gives instant relief from pain ana post tivety removes hard corns, toft conu between th toi, callous, warts, papillomas, club nails. It con rains tv oral cfiffrnf oils that soften, loo ond does not coui the irritation as do strong acid mixtures. When oil others hav failed try this ono. Try our (union Relief, which relieves pom, soreness, swelling first or second application. Both remedies sold . OO momy back guarantee. ' Exclusively at WESTERN THRIFT OVER 10,000 ITEMS 3 OPEN SUNDAYS P"iWAUTO wmi KSDUTM. SOB Peri -Cher. -Ply, FUEL PUMPS TWIN CAR RUGS m fit SUPPLY THIS IS THE PLACE- Vt. d Reto tr A09 p,ss g Zpr. ! locks I Shooting Fair, Report Hunters Rtporti ytsterday afternoon concerning the opening of the deer hunting season in Ore gon were not too conclusive concerning the general luck of the nimrods in this area. It was indicated that quite a number of deer had been taken but the overall kill did not appear to be heavy. Hunt ing apeared to be concentrat ed in the Green Springs area. Bucks were killed there, but a check with a number of sporting goods stores and cold storage plants brought out that hunters had not seen many deer. Opinion was expressed that, the wet weather was respon sible for apparent poor hunt ing, keeping the deer lying low in the brush. Kills were reported from the Dutchman peak. Dead In dian. Table Rock. Jacksonville and Applegate sections. . College Scores ' FRIDAY COLLEGE SCORES By L'nited Press UCLA 16. Illinois 6 San Jose St. 27. Denver 20 Citadel 13. George Washington 8 Kent St. 26. Baldwin Wallace 13 Washburn 33. Omaha 13 Chattanooga 6,- Abilene Christian 6 TCU UPSETS OHIO- Columbus, Ohio (IP) Under dog Texas Christian smashed a last-ditch Ohio State scoring threat late in the fourth period Saturday for an 18-14 victory and the feuckeye's first opening setback in seven years. IV Cougars Down Chief. -Eleven 24-6 Rogue River Illinois Valley high broke into the District 6 A-2 football victory column here Fri day night with a 24 to 6 de cision over Rogue River. Cougar gridders had a 12 to 0 lead after one quarter and were on top 18 to 0 at the half. A 42-yard surge in 10 plays, after a Chieftain fourth down gamble had failed, took the IV club to the goal with Gary Mer edith going the last 10. After the teams exchanged possession of the ball on fumbles, the Cougars took over the pig skin on the Rogue River 48 on a punt. Grant Dickey swept 38 yards to the RR 10 stripe. Three plays later Meredith touch downed from seveh yards out. Near the end of the second quarter Dan Slanaker ran a Rogue punt back 40 yards to the goal but IV was called offside and the Chiefs got another chance to boot. The Cougars' Russ Beem blocked the boot and IV took over on the RR 13. It took four plays to score with Dickey reaching the end zone from the three. IV got the ball on the Rogue River 30 in the third quarter when Mike Hamby intercepted a pass. Meredith gained eight yards and Slanaker romped 22 yards for the TD. Rogue River drove 50 yards from midfield in the fourth quarter for its marker with Bill Dixon punching for the last five. Sunday, September 29. 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE World Series D iscounts Buy any sport coat, suit or topcoat. The next day we'll discount it in dollars the amount of the total .scores of the next day's game. Example: you buy a $60 suit. Next day's game 7 to 5. We discount the suit $ 1 2! Come in from Tuesday on and play ball with us. MAIN AT CENTRAL Y7?G0 Off - FKfl(5jG? ! jjL Installing anMewe - Pga Ifl In the modern car can be s- V .VX4- A s88" M a difficult task. Have your s. f 'y 4 'jm dealer, an expert, ' ( : do the job. ' f . T?nnra? Kit I I I I l V l II 1 l4tll VLUU 1U2I ii u i i i rssiiffiEE m RAND - I Jlil MAJOR CAUSE: RUST! SAVE YOUR RADIATOR WITH "PRESTON E" ANTI-FREEZE, THE BRAND WITH MAGNETIC FILM! Don't let rust and corrosion rob your pocketbook. Have your dealer put in "Prestone" anti-freeze the anti-freeze with Magnetic Film. Magnetic Film, developed in the lab oratories of Union Carbide, immediately coats all the surfaces of your cooling system. It protects all winter long and is equally effective in guarding each one of the seven kinds of metal commonly found in a cooling system. This year be sure to get the extra protection of Magnetic Film by insisting on "Prestone" brand anti-freeze! TheGREEH THC, attached to your radiator by your dealer, proves you have "Prestone" anti-freeze and not a substitute! For your own protection, be sure to look for the Green Tag as soon as your anti-freeze is installed. The "Prestone" anti-freeze guarantee is printed on the tag. PROTECT WOTD-fl ANTI - FREEZE Th terms "Presfons", "Eveready", "Union Carbid" ond lh Green Tag are trade-mark of Union Carbide Corporation NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY Division of Union Carbide Corporation 30 East 42nd Street, New York 17, N. Y.