Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1958)
Inspired Wyoming Grid Team Stuns OSC Powerhouse 28-0 Laramie, Wyo. - (LTD - An inspired University of Wyo ming football team Saturday scored a stunning 28 to 0 win over Pacific Coast conference powerhouse Oregon State. The Wyoming Cowboys, playing almost flawless ball and taking advantage of Ore gon State mistakes, punched over two touchdowns in the second period and one e?.ch in the third and fourth, to walk away from the injury weakened but highly touted Beavers. Wyoming's line, outweighed by 12 pounds per man. was the Eagle Point Batters Glendale Gridders W. L. Pet. 3 0 1.000 2 0 1.000 1 I .500 1 2 .333 0 2 .000 . 0 2 .000 Eagle Point ... Illinois Valley Henley Glendale Phoenix Rogue River Eagle Point - Eagle Point hieh strengthened its unblem ished position at the front of the Rogue league football race by swamping Glendale 58 to 7 at Olendale on Friday. Taking early command, the Eagles led 28 to 0 at the quar ter. Halftone bulge was 34 to 0 and the count stood 40 to 7 . after three cantos. . Bill Turner touchdowned . on 40, 45 and 50-yard runs. Bill Skeeters went 47 and 18 Indians Upset U.W. By 22-12 Stanford, Calif. -(UPB-Quar terback Bob Nlcolet, general ly regarded as too eccentric to play full-time varsity foot ball, turned in a steady game Saturday while leading vic tory starved Stanford to a 22-12 upset of Washington. It was the first win of the season for the Indians who had lost their previous three games by lopsided scores, while the huskies had come to town fresh from making Ohio State fight for a one touchdown triumph. But after taking a 12-7 half time lead, Washington folded before a hard-charging Stan ford line and tremendous teamwork between Nicolet and halfback Rick McMillen who murdered the huskies with their pitchout plays. Indians Forge Ahead Stanford went ahead for keeps in the third period, d.4 12, when Nicolet intercepted a pass by quarterback Bob Hivner and raced it back 15 ' yards to Washington's 20. From there, McMillen scooted past left end and down the sidelines for his second touch down of the day. The deft Stanford halfback had scored earlier in the first quarter from five yards out to c ap a 65 yard drive in which he had whizzed for 28 of them on one of Nicolet's pitchouts. The third Stanford score came in the fourth period af ter quarterback Phil Borders, veteran Washington halfback fumbled the ball on his own 20 and center Roch Conklin recovered it for the Indians. Hedriclc 8th 20-6 Victor Hedrick Junior high eighth grade recorded its second grid decision over a Grants Pass club by defeating its counterpart from the. GP South school 20 to 6 on Fri day. Jim Bandy ran 45 and 60 yards and Roy Ross 50 yards for the Medford team's goals. Hornet extra points were on a kick by Dan Miles and pass Miles to Roy Shaw. Grants Pass found the end rone on a 35-yard play. The week before ' Hedrick downed North Grants - Pass' 21 to 6. IMPROVE YOUR FIREPLACE! IT SMITH-DYNGE big difference. They charged hard on both offense and de fense to break Oregon's pass ing game and to break loose their own runners. Wyoming moved into scor ing position the first time when Quarterback Jerry Wil kinson tossed to End Dale Memmelaar for 37 yards to Oregon State's 11 yard line. Halfback Bud Snyder carried to the six and then Halfback Gary Jozwiak ran wide around left end to score with three minutes gone in the sec ond period. Snyder paved the way with a key block. yards for scores while Bill McClure bucked a yard for one TD and galloped 60 yards on a punt return for another. Bob Berryman tabulated on a 16-yard amble and Dusty Gerbing ran 16 yards to the pay zone on a pass intercep tion. Blocking Sharp Dave Huffman and Skeeters each ran two extra points. Glendale got its TD on a 38-yard pass play. Sharp offensive blocking and tough defense paid off for .the Eagle Pointers. Dale Casey and Roger Hooper paced the offensive line play and Bill McClure and Bill Hubbard were standouts on defense. EP's No. 2 unit played much of the second half and all 35 Eagle squad members got into the game. Eagle Point is host to Illi nois Valley here next Friday in the skirmish which may determine the Rogue titlist. Bears Roll Over Utah By 36-21 Berkeley, Calif. -(UPD-Calif-ornia added the dipsy-do, fea-, turing pitchouts and three way laterals, to the split-T Saturday and rolled to a ri diculously easy 36-21 victory over outmanned University of Utah. With quarterback Joe Kapp running the show, California romped to a 36-0 lear midway in the third quarter before Utah could threaten against the second-stringers. It was the secJnd consecutive vic tory for the Golden Bears and was accomplished before a slim crowd of 28,000 in Me morial stadium. Ball Handling Befuddles Kapp's ball-handling so be fuddled the Utes' defence that many times the redskins were tackling three men before coming down with the ball carrier. A standard play was for Kapp to pitch out to an end, who would lateral to a halfback. Utah liked the play so well it used it itself with considerable success in the second half. At times the bat tle resembled a basketball game. Utah picked a lot of yard age in midfield, but it could not make a sustained drive until midway in the third per iod. A' 43-yard pass from Lee Grosscup to end Larry Wilson set up the first touchdown, with Grosscup going over from the one. In the fourth- stanza, Utah scored again as Bob Mastelotto, went 32 yards around end and the final Utah counter came with four min utes to play after a Cal fum ble was recovered on the Cal 11 yard line. Monk Bailey scored from two plays later. TO TOUR JAPAN San Francisco - (WD - World Series stars Bob Turley, Lew Burdette and Ed Mathews are scheduled to join 22 members of the St. Louis Cardinals who are touring the Orient this winter. CALL NOW! SP 2 7 1 6 LJ No Sparks No Smoke No Floor Drafts LOWER FUEL BILLS Uniform heat from floor to ceiling. Burn wood, presto-logs or briquets. You con trol fire . . . your home and family safer! SEND FIREPLACE WIDTH and HEIGHT, RECEIVE Colorful Booklet FREE! PHONE SP 2-7166 LBR. CO. , Quarterback Joe Dempsey kicked the extra point. Pass Aids TD The second TD came after the teams had traded the ball twice. On the third down on the Oregon 40 yard line, Quar terback Jim Walden passed to End Neal Curtis who car ried the ball from the 11 to score. Mike McGill, a 150-pound halfback, kicked the extra point. Oregon managed its deep est penetration of the day in the third period when Half back John Horrillo, Tailback Paul Lowe and Fullback Leo Criner led the attack to the Wyoming" eight . to lose the ball on downs. ' ' A few minutes later Wyo ming scored its third touch down when Walden intercept ed a pass by Lowe at the mid field strip and ran 50 yards down the right sideline. Dempsey kicked the extra point. The last score of the game came with six minutes and 52 seconds remaining in the fi nal period when Fullback Mark Smolinski bowled his way through the right side of the Oregon State line from the 26 yard line. Army Scores 14-2 Victory Over Irish South Bend, Ind. -(DPD- Ar my's speedy halfbacks, Pete Dawkins and Bob Anderson, overran Notre Dame's shaky defence with ease Saturday to lead the Black Knights to their first win over the Irish in 13 years, 14-2, before a record crowd of 60,564. The victory was hardly an upset, even though Army was a one point underdog, since the winners had been rated fourth nationally and Notre Dame third. Dawkins, who scored Ar my's second touchdown on a seven yard run with seven seconds to play, and Ander son were the big ground gain ers for the victory, but had plenty of help from a fast and rugger line, headed by a 210- pound tackle, Bob Novogratez. The Army forwards contain ed the ,Irish offense so well that Notre Dame couldn't cross the Army 20 until less man eight minutes remained and, the, the march was halt ed on the 19. Meanwhile, even though outweighed, the faster Army linemen cleared holes constantly for Dawkins and Anderson and gave 160-pound quarterback Joe Caldwell plenty of protection on passes. ; Army, outgained on the ground by the Irish with only 176 yards compared to 203, picked up 100 yards in the air compared to 11 for Notre Dame. Irish thrower Bob Wil iams completed four of eiaht pitches for only 11 yards. Walter Camp, who is credit ed with picking the first AU American football team, play ed the game at Yale for seven years, from 1876 to 1882. In those days, graduate students were allowed to play too. There are about 30,000 cleaning and tailoring shops in the U.S. In 1957, they did an estimated one and a half billion dollars worth of busi ness. "' mi CONCRETE Any Time o Any Place Any Amount . . Delivered SP 2-5271 Gold Ray Fish Count WEEK ENDING OCT. 11: Chinook salmon ' 53 (includes 3.77 per cent jack salmon). . Summer steelhead 21. FULL SEASON TOTALS: " Chinook salmon 15,- 704 (includes 13.1 per cent jacks) since April 21. Summer steelhead 998 since May 6. SPORTS WSC Nabs Idaho Pass; Wins 8-0 Moscow, Idaho -OIPD-Wash-ington State cashed an inter cepted pass for a last period touchdown and then held off a determined rally to defeat Idaho 8-0 in a Pacific Coast conference football game Sat urday. The break came late in the third period when fullback Laroy Rath intercepted quar terback Gary Farnsworth's pass and returned 37 yards to the Idaho six. Then sub quarterback Dave Wilson passed to Don Ellingsen for the winning tally. Fullback Chuck Morrell plunged for the extra two points, and that was the ball game. Idaho Stopped Idaho moved to the Wash ington State 20 but was stop ped there with seconds re maining in the game'. The victory for WSC was forged from a decisive battle featured mostly by long, quick kicks by both teams. And it was even tougher for the win ners b e cause quarterback Bob Newman, the nation's top passer, was sidelined after only four minutes when he was hit while punting. Newman's injury was the first incident in this 59th "battle- of the palouse" be tween the two neighboring rivals. Before it w a s over, WSC had set a new confer ence penalty record by being assessed 145 yards, 60 of them for personal fouls. The winning touchdown was the only scoring threat of the second half. WSC boot ed a chance in the second per iod when halfback Carl Ket chie fumbled on the Idaho one yard line. The ball rolled out of the end zone and Idaho took over. ".-"' Aside from those drives, however, Idaho kept WSC bottled up by superior punt ing and line play. Fullback Ken Hall quick-kicked 76 yards in the first period. Half back Keith Lincoln of WSC answered with a 72 yard boot in the third. . The Greeks named it the "mantis" meaning "diviner" because they believed the insect was studying the fu ture, while Moslems insisted it was praying with its face toward Mecca. America's first copper sheet rolling mill was estab lished at Boston in 1801 by Paul Revere. Agent Wanted! To tell new patented taw horse bracket to carpenters and con tractors. SAF-T-EST' BRACK ETS make the WORLD'S BEST CARPENTERS SAW HORSE in 10 minutes. Work full or spare time, good commission, protect ed terriory. For details phone MU 5-4101. Registered HI IK ... For Industry Around the Home . . . On the Farm irwcatx CONCRETE C? 248 E. McANDREWS RD. Iowa Blasts 34-13 in Opener Iowa City, Iowa-(UPD-Iowa's resurging Hawkeyes, using a two platoon attack for the first time this year, complete ly reversed form Saturday to blast Indiana, 34-13, in the big ten opener for both clubs. The victory, sparked by the equally effective play of star quarterback Randy Duncan and unsung Mitchell Ogiego, was the sixth straight for Iowa over Indiana. A dad's day crowd of 50,700 could hardly tell the Hawkeyes were the same club which staggered to a 13-13 tie against upstart Air' Force last week. Hallfback Ray Jauch start ed the . fast-charging Iowa squad on the runaway with just 1:24 gone in the first per iod when he dashed off tack le on Iowa's third play from scrimmage for 64 yards and a touchdown. Ogiego, an ex-serviceman playing in his first college game, then took over direc tion of the Iowa attack. Direc ting traffic with Duncan's poise and passing with the same skill, Ogiego led the sec ond unit 67 yards in 14 plays for the second touchdown. American scientists have located the South Pole within a probable error of 100 feet in any direction. It is not pos sible to set the exact spot for the North Pole, since it is located on drifting ice. 700,000 RADIATORS lA: RUST!- aflilstl P1 fSi The overage cost of radiator repair fast year: $75.00. SHS" ' -sS T,!'5!S!j ft'- You can beat the rust and corrosion danger by making - ' p sure you get "Prestone" brand, the anti-freeze with 41 j Magnetic Film. Magnetic Film prevents rust and corrosion. boM&'-'AVA am faaVw. v w Twib v H j. u. A. mi uuv tuk . f, " 1 iV ii r" " nrir uri n 4 r-Lf" GRADE GAMES PLAYED Washington defeated Jack son 21 to 0 and Roosevelt nicked Jefferson 16 to 13 Friday in city grade school football games in the Na tional league. GP Knots Marshfield Coos Bay - Marshfield and Grants Pass high schools, two powers in southwestern and southern Oregon fought to a 6 to 6 deadlock here on Fri day. Grants Pass missed a vic tory chance with 38 seconds left to play. The Cavemen had reached the Marshfield 10. From that point a field goal attempt by Ollie Woolsey was wide to the left by just two feet. GP hit pay soil first in the game with Jack Dean going over from the two-yard line on a crossbuch in the third quarter. Jim Purkett had set up the opportunity with a pass interception. Rossi Scores Woolsey for GP and Jerry Larsen for the Pirates missed point after touchdown kicks. The game was evenly fought although Marshfield had a slim edge in yardage and an 18 to nine spread in first downs. Grants Pass em ployed quick kicks to ad vantage. The first railroad passenger service in New England was operated between Boston and 'Newton, Mass., in 1834. PROTECT " Prestone","Eveready","Union Carbide" and the "Green Tag" are trade-marks of Union Carbide Corporation NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY Division el Union Carbide Corporation SO Cast 2nd Street. Now York I7.N. V. Prep Scores: FRIDAY FOOTBALL United Press International Jefferson 67, Grant 0 Cleveland '19, Madison 13 . Roosevelt 38, Washington 13 Franklin 26. Benson 20 Lincoln 7, Wilson 6 North Salem 20, Corvallis 7 Grants Pass 6. Marshfield 6 South Eugene 10, Albany 0 Roseburg 20, Springfield 13 Medford 26, Crater 0 Orland, Calif., 14, Klamath Falls 7 Redmond 32, Bend 0 South Salem 33, Lebanon 7 Pendleton 19, La Grande 13 Baker 26, The Dalles 12 Beaverton 21, Central Catholic 6 Phoenix 19, Ashland 13 Vale 42, Weiser. Idaho 0 Hillsboro 14, Clackamas 7 Forest Grove 19, Lake Oswego 6 Oregon City 7. Tillamook 6 West Linn 40. St. Helens 19 Dallas 20, Newberg 0 Hood River 19, Concordia 19 Sandy 19. Molalla 0 Wy'East 40. Jesuit 0 Scappoose 37, Silverton 14 , Parkrose 13, Reynolds 7 McMinnville 32, Tigard 0 Ontario 21, Meridian, Idaho 8 Mac-Hi 23, Hermiston 12 Brookings 19, Coquille 13 . - Reedsport 39. Taft 0 Newport 20. Siuslaw 18 Estacada 26, Warrenton 7 Rainier 46, Clatskanie 2 Heppner 13, Maupin 6 Nestucca 21, Yamhill 14 Umatilla 37, Sherman 0 Valsetz 61, Perrydale 28 Nehalem 26, Knappa 8 Stayton 31, North Marion 20 Willamina 26. Dayton 6 Neahkahnie 13, Seaside 7 Irrigon 5,9 Touchet, Wash. 12 Amity 6, Salem Academy 0 Vernonia 26, Gaston 14 Jacksonville 41, St. Mary's 12 Union 13, Elgin 13 Cove 32. Richland 20 Serra 18. Mt. Angel 0 Yoncalla 20. Monroe 0 Myrtle Creek 47, Oakland 0 Myrtle Point 48. Pacific 6 Eagle Point 58, Glendale 7 Canyonville 7. Riddle 0 Sutherlin 27. Douglas 6 Philomath 13. Sherwood 0 Central 12, Woodburn 0 Santiam 27, Sublimity 26 A super breed of heifer de veloped by experts of Rutgers is expected to produce more than twice as much milk as the average cow. "MJTFD mam mm i PREVENTS RUST- PREVENTS FREEZE-UPS "Prestone" anti-freeze protects against freeze-ups through the bitterest winter weather. Magnetic Film forms a thin, tough protective coating throughout the entire cooling system to prevent rust and corrosion. So don't settle for partial protection. Get the total protection of "Prestone" brand anti-freeze with amazing Magnetic Film! - ' LOOK FOR THIS SIGN wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmMMmMMmmmimMMMMMMMMmmmmmammmaMmmMmmmmmmmammmm New Double Guarantee Plan combines the famous "Prestone" anti-freeze , product guarantee with the dealer's personal guarantee in writing. "Prestone" anti-freeze has always been guaranteed by the maker. The j guarantee is printed on the "Green Tag". The dealer who displays this sign is prepared to add his personal guar antee, in writing, on replacement, of "Prestone" anti-freeze lost as a: result of mechanical leakage. ' .' " Tii. Creeii The which your the radiator is his way of telling "Prestone" brand anti-freeze and MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Sunday, October 12, 1958 13 CP Defeats McLoughlin Central Point eighth grade was 14 to 6 football victor over McLoughlin of Medford in a Friday scuffle. Mike Glines went 40 yards for one touchdown for the Pointers and Gary Wald trav eled 15 for the other. Glines passed to Vern Swanson for the first conversion and ran the second one. Frank Van Pelt got the Mc Loughlin TD on a four-yard run. It was the second win of the season for the Pointers. Four hundred million dol lars worth of records were sold in the U.S. in 1957, com pared with five and a half million dollars worth in 1933. Helium, the second lightest element, is inert, odorless, and tastesless but not com plete,ley weightless. ATTENTION DEER HUNTERS! BOY SCOUT TROOP No. 41 WANTS YOUR DEER HIDES ... PLEASE KELP' US OUT BY CALLING SP 3-1149 or SP 2-9888 WE WILL COME RIGHT OUT AND PICK THEM UP! RUB YEAR! WITH dealer attaches to you that you have not a substitute. freeze mm Indian's Skeleton Found Near Chicago ChicagcMUPD-The skeltonof an Indian, apparently killed on a wilderness trail 100 years ago, has been unearthed in suburban Mundelein. , , Dr. Robert Ritzenthaler, an thropologist for the Milwau kee Public Museum, identified the skelton as that of an In dian male, who apparently was killed by a blow on the back of the head. a?7 Builders Supply S3 QUALITY BLOCKS Bricks, Flues, Drain Til 727 W. McAndrewt Ph. SP 2-4107 OFFICIAL AAA FIGURES , ',..,...!