Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 17, 1958, Image 9

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    Brown, Ameche, Shaw Star
As Cleveland, Baltimore
Grab Pro Football Triumps
NFL STANDINGS
Eastern DivUlon
W L T
Cleveland 6 2 0
New York 5 3 0
Pittsburgh 4 4 0
Washington 3 3 0
Phila 2 5 1
Chi. Cards 2 5 1
Pet PF PA
.750 222 162
.625 160 146
.500 158 165
.375 166 203
.286 197 213
.236 182 241
Western Division
w I. T pet.
Baltimore 7
Los Ang.
Chi Bears
Detroit 3
Sin Fran. 3
Green Bay 1
1
5 3
5 3
4
5
6
PF PA
.875 272 118
.625 253 182
.625 217 169
.429 197 202
.375 128 244
.143 126 243
Sunday'! Results
Philadelphia 49. Chicago Cards 21
Pittsburgh 31, New York 10
Cleveland 20. Washington 10
Detroit 35. San Francisco 21
Baltimore 17, Chicago Bears 0
Los Angeles 20. Green Bay 7
By EARL .WRIGHT
United Press International
The Baltimore Colts and
Cleveland Browns appear
headed for a National Foot
ball league title showdown
that would pit Jimmy Brown
against Alan Ameche in a
classic battle of fullbacks.
Brown erased one of pro
fessional football's proudest
records Sunday with a 152-
yard surge that helped Cleve
land regain a one-game East
ern division lead with a 20-10
victory over the Washington
Redskins. He boosted his
1958 rushing total to 1.163
yards, smashed Steve Van
Buren's old season mark of
1,146 and still has four games
to produce the most fantastic
rushing total in NFL history.
Ameche, a 220-pound bat
tering ram, gained 142 yards
as Baltimore invaded Wrigley
Field and boosted its West
ern division lead back to two
games by blanking the Chi
cago Bears, 17-0. The Bears,
almost unbeatable at home,
could have tied the Colts for
first by winning but suffered
their first shutout since 1946
before a sellout crowd of 48,
664. Sxeelers Wallop Giants
The Pittsburgh Steelers
would almost prefer a vic
tory over Cleveland to a ca
pacity crowd but gave the
Brownies a vital assist by
Lions Drop
Forty Niner
Club 35-21
Detroit-flJTO-Coach Frankie
Albert conceded today that he
was as puzzled as everyone
else over the collapse of the
San Francisco Forty Niners
"We're not playing winning
football," he said after the
Forty Niners fell before De
troit, 35-21. "I don't -know
why. The boyi are trying and
we've got good personnel.
"But we were outplayed
and outblocked in the line
and it was obvious that we're
not making the big play like
we did last year.
Albert was especially per
turbed about a first-quarter
"alley-oop" pass that bounced
off R. C. Owens' chest in the
end zone and into the hands
, of Detroit defender Jack
Christensen.
The touchdown would have
tied the score. Instead the
Forty Niners were never in
the game again as. the Lions
piled up a 28-7 half time lead.
Vindicated
"When we won last year,
Owens didnt' drop those alley
oops," Albert said grimly, al
though he pointed out that
Owens vindicated himself
somewhat by catching two
long passes.
The Forty Niner loss, wit
nessed by a standing room
only gallery of 54,253, left the
team in fifth place with a 3-5
mark while Detroit moved
Into fourth with a 3-4-1 rec
ord. Detroit fans saluted the vet
eran quarterback Tobin Rote,
who had had one of his worst
days when the Lions lost to
San Francisco two weeks ago.
Yesterday, he was hot. He
hit 13 for 23 passes for 194
yards and three touchdowns
and ran for 75 yards.
Fullback Gene Gedman
also sparkled. He threw two
passes with spectacular re
sults. He found Hopalong Cas
sady for 81 yards for the
Lions first score and later
tossed another 30 yarder. He
also ran the ball 12 times and
received two of Rote's passes.
U IH5-3&
WHAT HEAVY WEIGHT"
CHAMPION LOST Ht5
TITLE FOB. ".-REE"?
John L.Sullivan -fought Jim Cor
bett in Hew Orleans on Sept. 7,
1992,-for a 25.C0O puree and
20,000 stake Cide bet).
Corbwtt knocked Sullivan
out in V 21 round, took
tfmtitfe and alt of tf money.
TOP THIS! To any reader submitting
contrary proof. Tip Brady will send a,
signed, wallet-sized diploma. Write to:
BEAT THIS, co this paper. Box 575,
Sausalito, Calif. Enclose self-addressed,
stamped envelope.
SUdan , SvaalMM (MM
BOWLING
ELKS LEAGUE
Standings:
Miss Fitts
1 Lively Five
Go Boys
PERs
W
34
31
31
25
L
14
17
17
23
Cementers
Alley Gators
Adairs
"Wallflowers
Medics
23 'i 24 i
23 25
2 Hi 26 ',4
21 27
IV 31
13 25
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE
Standings: W L
E H. Mann 33 15
Timber Wolves 31 V2 16 Vx
Midooast Painters 27
Communication Workers 25
Ideal Cement 24
Hughes & Dodd
Cove Vailey Supply .
Tee Pee Plywood ..
Table Rock Lumber .
Andy's Jewelers
23
22!.:
20 '
20
20
21
23
24
25
25 i
28
28
28
Results:
Mann Co. 3 (Ed Mann 604) 2789:
Timber Wolves 1 (Dale Graham
617) 2761
Midcoast 0 (Neal Dow 554) 2645:
Communication 4 iLyle Brown
64 j' 2945.
Ideal 1 (Bill Day 572) 2599;
Hu5hes & Dodd 3 (Art Baker 552)
2C27.
Cove Valley 3 (Frank Fagalde
603 1 2712: Andy's 1 (Carl Perdue
563) 2650.
Tee Pee 1 (August Petard 517)
2524; Table Rock 3 (Dick Harrison
5301 2611
Hirti Game Llye Brown 255.
High Series Brown 643.
Standings.
Johnny Rebs .
Rough Riders
r:n stealers
Ronchy Rollers
Question Marks
Gutter Gang
W L
8 1
6 3
4 5
3 6
3 6
3 6
Results:
Question Marks 0 (Dave Serry
21SI 1235; Gutter Gang 3 (Wally
Huffman 269 1 1352.
Rough Riders 1 (Tom Ginn 290)
1375; Johnny Rebs 2 (Mike Davis
284 1398
Pin Stealers 1 (Alden Stewart
268 1400: Ronchy Rollers 2 (Eric
Schade 269) 1415.
High Game Clifton Roberts 169.
It has been found that when
peach trees are exposed for a
long time to gamma radiation
the fruit ripens about ten days
earlier.
Card Pitcher
Might Accept
Offer in Japan
Tokyo - (UPD - Righthander
Phil Paine, one of the eight
pitchers brought here by the
St. Louis Cardinals for their
16-game goodwill series, may
play for a Japanese ball club
during the 1959 season.
Paine told United Press In
ternational he was "definitely
interested" in an offer made
to him by the Nishitetsu Lions
club, professional baseball
champions of Japan in 1956,
1957 and 1958.
The 28-year-old Paine had
a 7-3 record with the Lions
while he was a member of the
US. armed forces in Japan
in 1953.
Solly Hemus, manager of
the Red Birds, told UPI "the
Cardinals will not step in
Paine's way if he thinks he
is bettering himself, especially
in a move which we consider
may help to promote friendly
U.S.-Japan relations."
The Cardinals wound up
their tour Sunday sweeping a
doubleheader from the Japa
nese All-Stars, 8-2 and 4-2.
The Cardinals finished the
tour with a 14-2 record. Japa
nese experts had expected
them to lose at least , five
g'ames.
Radio, Television
Networks in Truce
New York-flJPD- Performers
on the nation's major radio
and television networks were
at their jobs today under a
truce agreement postponing a
threatened strike to at least
midnight Tuesday.
Representatives of Ameri
can Federation pi Television
and Radio Artists and the four
networks were to resume ne
gotiations which recessed at
2:45 a.m., already past the
original strike deadline.
The networks involved are
the National Broadcasting
company, the Columbia Broad
casting system, the American
Broadcasting company and
the Mutual Broadcasting system.
SETS PEDALING RECORD
Zurich. Switzerland-IUPD-Al-fred
Ruegg, a 24-year-old
Swiss amateur, pedaled 28.4
miles in an hour Sunday on
the Zurich Oerlikon track be
fore 5.500 fans. An Austrian
named Edwin Simic had been
credited with the "world rec
ord" at his sort of thing-27.9
miles in an hour.
walloping the New York
Giants, 31-10. It was a famil
iar chore for the Steelers.
They've ruined New York's
Eastern title hopes four times
in the past eight years.
The Los Angeles Rams
moved into a second-place tie
with the Bears by defeating
the Packers at Green Bay,
20-7. Clarence Peaks scored
four times to spark the Phila
delphia Eagles to a 49-21 vic
tory over the Chicago Cardi
nals while Gene Gedman
scored twice and threw
touchdown pass to help the
Detroit Lions whip the San
Francisco Forty-Niners, 35-21
Each team has four more
games but Baltimore, paced
by Ameche, George Shaw and
a brilliant defense, may have
vaulted its biggest hurdle at
Chicago.
Proves Excellent Replacement
John Unitas, Baltimore's
No. 1 quarterback, is sidelin
ed with cracked ribs but
Shaw proved an excellent re
placement. He completd six
of six passs during Balti
more's first scoring drive in
the second quarter, climaxing
the 93-yard march with a
seven-yard scoring toss to
Ray Berry. Ameche lunged
four for Baltimore's other sec
ond period touchdown and
Steve Myhra added a 12-yard
field goal in the final period.
The Giants appeared head
ed for their fourth straight
victory when they took a 10-0
lead but quarterback Bobby
Layne plunged a yard for
Pittsburgh's first touchdown
just before the first half end
ed. The Steelers took charge
in the second half. Layne
threw a 10-yard scoring pass
to Tom Tracy and sneaked a
yard for another touchdown
after Gary Glick recovered
Frank Gifford's furnble and
raced 36' yards to score.
Browns Break Tie
Cleveland can't win at De
troit but usually has the ne
cessary answers in all other
cities although it had to work
hard Sunday at Washington
The Browns snapped a 10-10
tie in the last five minutes
when Brown and Lew Car
penter rushed 10 straight
times to set up Lou Groza s
25-yard field goal. Don Paul
then stole a Redskin pass and
Brown scored his second
touchdown of the game in the
final seconds. He now has 17,
one under Van Buren's sea
son mark.
Peaks scored three times
in five minutes during the
second period at Philadelphia
and got his fourth touchdown
against the Cardinals in tne
third period.
Knickerbockers
Take 6 in Row
United Press International
The New York Knicker
bockers, off to one of their
finest starts in years, have
used a six-game .winning
streak to help them register
the best overall record in the
National Basketball associa
tion thus far.
The Knicks made it six in a
row by mauling the Minnea
polis Lakers, 98-90, Sunday in
the NBA's weekly nationally
televised game. New York al
so beat Syracuse, 96-92, Sat
urday to make it a perfect
week end.
Mountains Scoured
For Missing Plane
Fort Collins, Colo. (UPD -Searchers
went into snow
covered mountains northwest
of here at dawn today to re
sume a hunt for a missing
cargo plane believed to have
crashed with two California
pilots and a cargo of high
priority military freight.
Civil Aeronautics adminis
tration officials at Denver
said the captain of the plane
was F. L. Courtell, Hayward,
Calif., and that his co-pilot
was Calvin Cloud, Napa,
Calif.
The C-46 transport plane
left Denver's Stapleton air
field Sunday for Hill Air
Force base at Ogden, Utah.
A rancher who lives 30
miles east of Laramie, Wyo.,
reported that he saw a flash
and explosion near his ranch
at about the time the plane
disappeared.
Portland Gasoline
War Continues
Portland (UPD Portland's
gasoline price war, which
showed signs of coming to an
end last week, was still on
today.
Some dealers put regular
gasoline back at the usual
price here of 33.9 cents but
many others held firm at the
"war price" of 26.9.
One operator said the war
may last all winter.
SPORTS
Rams Clip
Green Bay
Pros 20-7
Milwaukee, Wis. -(UPD- It
was "on to Baltimore" today
for the Los Angeles Rams
who moved into a tie for sec
ond place in the NFL Western
conference Sunday by defeat
ing the Green Bay Packers,
20-7.
The Rams arrived here by
bus from Green Bay and fly
to Washington, D.C., where
they will drill on the George
town university gridiron until
ready to move into Baltimore
and their crucial game with
the Colts next Sunday.
The Rams, favored by 10
points over the Packers, had
to come up with a fourth per
iod touchdown to exceed that
margin although they led for
all but a few minutes of the
first period.
Biggest play of the game
was quarterback Bill Wade's
first period pass to Jim Phil
lips good. for 93 yards, with
the ball traveling 55 yards
through the air into the arms
of the big end from Auburn,
Longest Play
The pass play was the long
est in Rams' history, breaking
tne mark of 92 yards set sev
eral weeks earlier on Wade's
throw to Del Shofner against
the Bears at Chicago.
In the fourth period the
Rams' marched 70 yards in
six plays with Jon Arnett
scoring from the five. Phillips
again was a key man on the
drive, hauling in a 27-yard
pass from Wade to put the
Rams in scoring position.
Reliable Paige Cothran
added field goals from the 12
and 36-yard lines to round out
the Rams' scoring.
The Packers picked up
their lone touchdown in the
first period on a 44-yard pass
from quarterback Babe Par
illi to end Max McGee which
was deflected into the receiv
er's arms by defensive safety
man Jack Morris.
The win left Los Angeles
with a 5-3 mark, still two
games behind Baltimore's 7-1
record.
Wade enjoyed a terrific
day. He connected on 19 of 42
aerials for 372 yards. All told,
the rambunctious Rams mov
ed for 504 yards total offense,
their second straight week ov
er the 500 mark.
OSC Still
Has Hopes
Corvallis-(UPD-Oregon State
was still graspinff that one
last ray of hope today that
may take it to the Rose Bowl
on New Years day.
The Beavers are tied for
second place in the Pacific
Coast conference after Satur
day's 24-16 win over Stan
ford. Thev are onlv one-half
game back of leading Cali
fornia.
The Beavers need to win
this Saturday against Oregon
ana uai must lose to Stanford
to nab, or share, the title.
Washington State is tied with
OSC "for second. Each has a
5-2 mark.
Oregon State almost threw
away its last chance at Palo
Alto Saturday blowing a 16-0
ieaa nut came back on a long
pass play from Nub Beamer
to Roger Johnson for the win
ning TD.
Gordon Ridings
Taken By Death
New York -(UPD- Gordon
Ridings, whose Columbia bas
ketball teams won three east
ern intercollegiate champion-
snips and compiled a five
year winning percentage of
.810, died early Sunday of a
heart attack at the age of 51.
Ridings took over as head
basketball coach at Columbia
in 1946 and won the eastern
title with a 15-5 record in his
first season. He also wnn the
championship the next season
with a 31-3 record and won a
third title in 1951-52 with a
22-1 mark.
Ridings, a native of Mar;
auam. Oregon, retired the fol
lowing season after suffering
a heart attack. His teams had
a 94-22 record for his five-
year stewardship.
Ridings was a basketball
star at the University of Ore
gon in 1928 and 1929 and was
picked on Northern division
all-star teams.
Grid Bowl Line-Up
Almost Complete
By FRED DOWN
United Press International
The New 'Year's day bowl
lineup is virtually complete
today with Louisiana State,
Oklahoma and Clemson "in'
and California and Texas
Christian only one victory
away from automatic bids.
With only one more big
Saturday left in the season,
here's the likely lineup for
the five major bowls:
Rose: Iowa (6-1-1) vs. Cali
fornia (6-3-0).
Sugar: LSU (9-0-0) vs. Clem
son (6-2-0).
Orange: Oklahoma (7-1-0)
vs. Air Force Academy (7-0-1).
Cotton: TCU (7-1-0) vs. Syr
acuse (7-1-0).
Gator: Mississippi (7-2-0) vs.
Pittsburgh (5-3-1) or West Vir
ginia (4-4-1).
LSU, the nation's No. 1
team and the only major col
lege unbeaten and untied
power, made the Sugar Bowl
bid a mere formality when it
beat Mississippi State, 7-6,
Saturday night. Oklahoma
clinched the Big Eight title
and Orange Bowl bid with a
39-0 rout of Missouri and
Clemson won the Atlantic
Coast conference champion
ship by beating North Caro
lina State, 13-6.
California retained its Paci
fic Coast conference lead with
a 12-7 decision over Washing
ton and can clinch a Rose
Bowl bid by beating Stan
ford next Saturday.
TCU took over the South
west conference lead with its
22-8 conquest of Texas and
will clinch a Cotton Bowl in
vitation if it defeats Rice
(4-4-0) next Saturday.
The Air Force Academy
moved solidly into the bowl
picture with its 21-6 victory
victory over Wyoming. Syra
cuse kept rolling with a 47-0
rout of Colgate and West Vir
ginia walloped William and
Mary, 55-6, to win the South
ern conference championship.
Mississippi and Pittsburgh
stayed in the running despite
losses because of fine records
against consistently good foes.
The next-to-the-last Satur
day of big activity was mark
ed by more than its share of
upsets including the Quantico
Marines' 13-12 upset of previ
ously unbeaten and untied
Rutgers. Ohio State blasted
second ranked Iowa, 38-28,
unranked Tenness.ee edged
out eighth-ranked Mississippi,
18-16, and Nebraska surprised
lOth-ranked Pittsburgh, 14-6,
in the other top upsets.
Third-ranked Army beat
Villanova, 26-0, as Pete Daw
kins scored three touchdowns;
fourth-ranked Auburn topped
Georgia 21-6, to stretch its un
beaten streak to 22 games,
fifth-ranked Wisconsin defeat
ed Illinois 31-12, seventh
ranked Purdue topped ninth
ranked Northwestern 23-6,
and Charley Milstead com
pleted 15 of 28 passes as Texas
A&M upset Rice, 28-21, in
other top games.
ALAS, ALAS
London -(UPD- A cartoon in
Sunday's Sunday Times show
ed Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev juggling skulls.
The caption: "Alas, poor Bul-
ganin, Malenkov, Molotov,
Kaganovitch, Fhepilov, I
knew them well."
Washington - (UPD - The Na
tional Coal association, which
represents the nation's bitu
minous coal owners, announc
ed today that it will build a
nine-story, $1 million head
quarters office building here,
to be completed in 1960.
Stanford's Indians
Could Throw Coast
Loop Into Tangle
PCC STANDINGS
W L
California 5 1
Wash. State 5 2
Ore. State 5 2
UFC 4 2
Oregon 3 4
Stanford 2 4
UCLA 2 4
Washington .... 1 5
Idaho 0 3
PF PA
111 70
US
86
87
73
74
70
57
42
71 136
83 96
43 - 89
6 55
United Press International
California hung onto a half
game edge over Washington
State and Oregon State today
in the race for the Rose Bowl
and can cinch a trip to Pasa
dena if it defeats Stanford
next Saturday in the 61st
"big game" between the
schools.
But if the bedraggled In
dians should rise up and smite
down the high-riding Bears,
the Pacific Coast conference
conceivably could .be thrown
into a tangle that only its top
brass could unravel.
S o u t he r n California, a
game off the pace, also had
a chance on paper of crashing
the Pasadena tilt. USC, which
was idle last Saturday, meets
UCLA next week end. Ore
gon State hosts Oregon and
Washington State is at Wash
ington in other time-honored
duels.
California, with quarter
back Joe Kapp in the wheel-
FOOTBALL
SATURDAY COLLEGE GAMES
Ariz. State (Flagstaff) 7, Willara-ett-
0
Linfield 20. Col. of Idaho 7
PorUand State 18, Westminster 7
Whittier 27, Oregon Tech 8
East. Oregon 20, Grays Harbor 13
OCE 28, Lower Columbia 18
Olympic 82, George Fox 0
Pac. Lutheran 26, Whitworth 20
Pomona 18, Laveme 18
Cal Poly (Pomona) 35, Red-
lands 20
Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo) 48,
San Diego State 14,
Occidental 19, Cal Tech 6
San Jose State 48, Fresno State 6
Prep Scores:
SATURDAY FOOTBALL
Pendleton 26. North Salem 14
Vale 40. Serra 6
, Eagle Point 33, Oalcridge
Yoncalla 19, Mapleton 7
Umatilla 19, Joseph 13
Merrill 26, Maupin 20
Six-Man
Alsea 38, Westfir 0
Culver 28, Lexington 13
Ten thousand copies of the
Russian Bible were orinted
last year in Moscow from mats
furnished by the American
Bible Society.
house, sailed to its fifth PCC
win Saturday by downing
Washington, 12-7 while Ore
gon ;State and UCLA won
their games in the last per
iod. The Beavers dropped
Stanford to its seventh loss,
24-16, and UCLA upset Ore
gon, 7-3.
Tigers Blanked
Washington State erected a
good defense against Dick
Bass and whacked College of
the Pacific, 34-0, in a non-conference
game that gave cred
ence to an earlier claim by
Tiger coach Jack Myers that
the Cougars were the best
team on the coast.
Spaniards See
Football Played
In Yankee Style
By ROBERT ROONEY
Madrid (UPD American-
style football made its debut
here Sunday and the biggest
hit with Spanish fans was not
the forward pass or the punt
but an Air Force band which
played U.S. college songs.
The football game was part
of a unique doubleheader
played before a mixed Ameri
can-Spanish crowd of 125,000
at mammoth, triple-tiered San
tiago Bernabeu Stadium.
In the opener, Real Madrid,
the home team, defeated visit
ing Valencia, 2 to 0, to remain
at the top of the Spanish soc
cer league.
Game a Mystery
Then in the nickhtcap. a
U.S. Air Force team from Gie-
belstadt, Germany, defeated a
similar one from Toul, France,
26-6, in a regular American
football game.
Typical of the comment
from Spanish fans was the
opinion voiced by one stadium
usher:
"I like the team in the sil
ver uniforms Toul, but I wish
I knew what they were do
ing."
Almost the entire overcoat-
ed crowd stayed for the open
ing kickoff between two
American teams, and although
the throng slowly thinned out.
especially after the first cou
ple of touchdowns and the
half time break, it was esti
mated that 35,000 were still
on hand at the closing gun.
MAIL TRIBUNE, MadfonL Oregon, Monday, November 17, t5 t
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borrow everg week
If you need up to $1500 for any
good purpose, see Household
Finance, America's oldest and
largest consumer finance com
pany. HFC specializes in
prompt, friendly loan service
where you borrow in privacy
with up to 24 months to repay.
Life insurance on your loan available at low group rate
I0USEH0LD FINANCE
128 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
PHONE: SPring 3-5301
Bayer Gains Golf Prize
Havana, Cuba -(UPD- Big
George Bayer, the "human
howitzer." who hits a ball a
mile, picked up the juiciest
pium of his golf career by
tapping in a three-inch rutt.
That putt sunk Slammin'
Sammy Snead on the first ex
tra hole of a "sudden death"
playoff Sunday anf, earned
Bayer the top prize of $6,500
in the $45,000 Havana Open
Golf tournament.
It marked only the second
triumph for the 6-foot-5, 240-
Britain's petro-chemicals in
dustry is second only to that
of the United States.
pound Bayer since he turned
pro in 1954. Prior to Sunday's
victory, the huge San Gabriel,
Calif., slugger had won only
the Canadian Open in 1957.
Tied with 286 apiece at the
end of the regulation 72 holes,
Bayer and Snead both crank
ed up and let fly with their
tee shots on the first playoff
hole.
Doug Ford of Mahopac,
N.Y., finished third in the
tournament.
Ford's 291 brought him $2,
500. Billy Caspar of Chula
Vista, Calif., finished with
292, good for fourth place
and $2,200, while Julius Bo-
ros of Southern Pines, N.C,
gained $2,000 for his 293 total.
Daily's U-Drive
Medford Airport
FL
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'59 OLDS 365095 93" 23"
CAR "A" 341 300 8727 218J 5" 1"
CAR "B" 324260 8287 207 103 242
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A Non-Profii Educational Foundation
17 West 67th Street, New York 19, New York
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE