Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Sept. 23, 1957, edition 1 / Page 7
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Greenwaves Suffer First Loss J he Dunn High Dreenwaves wi fered their first defeat of the 195' football season as the Clinton llarl Horses defeated them last Fridaj mght by a one point margin Th« score was Clinton 19, Dunn IF.. A capacity crowd estimated at 1500 people gathered in the llunr ball park to watch two of tht strongest teams in the conference meet. Harry Pope kicked of I n Dunn and Clinton returned the ball to the fifty yard line In the firs; two minutes of play showing the superb driving power of the Daik Horses, Jo McLamb, a letter-man halfback, went over the line t<; sedre Clinton's first touchdown The attempted conversion wv- no good. In the second quarter Jerry Autry ran 13 yards on a pass from Harry Tart to start Dunn's offen sive drive. Tart passed for a ‘ ec ond time and left end, Carry Stevenson picked up 15 yards Again quarterback Harry Tart pas sed, this time to right end. Tommy Thompson. Thompson made a spectacular run of 30 yard-; for Dunn's first touchdown. The try INSURANCE For Fire, Auto, Home arm Business Insurance CALL 2121. Snipes insurance Agency M-W-F-tfn A good thing to remember i When yam think of radiator aervica think at BACTORT METHOD RADIATOR CLEANING and REPAIRIIJO by trained radiator ipecMIcM Every Job FLO TESTED lor your ndded protection AU WORK OUARANTCM Barefoot's Radiator Shop At Dunn Auto Parts Phone 3228 f Ol’NTl l> ON—Handsome Bill Thompson grimaces fierce ly—for the benefit of his foes and a friendly cameraman—as he catches his pass in practice at Duke. A varsity end, the oldest of Diiiiii s three football playing Tompson brothers is considered one of the best around—a major asset to his team. for (he conversion was no good. This tied the game at fi all. Horace Pope, husky right half for the Greenwaves, ran I'o • 20 yards as the third quarter openeu Thompson picked up another 20 yards on a beautiful phss horn Tart. The Greenwaves scored their second touchdown when Hilly Car lull ran for 20 yards on a pass from Tart. In the Iasi minutes of the third quarter Gent* Mussle vhitc veteran quarterback toi the Dark Horses scored on a quarter back sneak. The conversion at tempt, which proved later to be the straw ttiat broke Dunn's back BIGoodrich TRUCK TIRE mm* CARNIVAL L^l«OlThuYear »Lo**^ Only tubeless truck tire that seals punctures permanently! af«Joodrich V Only B F Goodrich Seal-omatlc Express Tubeless tires protect against bruise blowouts and seal punctures permanently, thanks to Inner liner and layer of sealant. LIMITED TIME ONLY •Plus tax and retreadable tire No trade-in list price 45 05 Now 9095*1 6 00-16 TRUCK BATTERY List price 29.40 no trade-in NOW Exchange Maximum capacity posts and connectors. Extra-thick power-producing grids. HEAVY DUTY EXPRESS Tread design that came on new truck* for years! Cuts tire cost! No trade-in list price 29.35. 6 00-1* 6-ply Tuba-Type SIZE PlY PRICE* 16.50-16 j 6 7.00-15 | 6 7.50-20 8 27.75 33 40 60.15 CREDIT TERMS only 1.50 a we«k for 2 tir**' LEE'S TRUCK TERMINAL FAYETTEVILLE HIGHWAY DUNN, N. C. Phones 2052 Or 2727 BJF.Goodrich Tires . was good and Clinton led 13-12. In (he first minutes of the fourth quarter Dunn forced to kick. Clin lon recovered the punt on their ! own 26 yard line. Harrell, half back for the Dank Horses, went over the line for Clinton’s third touchdown. The try for the con version was no good. Clinton led Dunn 19-12. Clinton was forced to punt and Murphy Taylor, left half for the Oreenwaves, made a beauti ful return with a run of 45 yards with another brilliant run of 30 I yards. The try for the conversion | was no good. As the final whistle blew (lie score was Clinton 19, Dunn 18. Major League Standings By UNITED PRESS National Milwaukee St. 1-ouis Brooklyn Cincinnati Philadelphia New York Pittsburgh Chicago League W. L. Pet. 91 57 (115 8(1 (12 .581 82 68 ,547 77 71 .520 74 76 .493 69 82 .437 60 91 .397 58 90 .392 Sunday’s Results Milwaukee 9 Chicago 7 10 Inns St Louis 7 Cincinnati 5 Brooklyn 7 Philadelphia 3 Pittsburgh 5 New York 1 Saturday’s Results Pittsburgh 5 New \ork 4 1st New York 9 Pittsburgh 5 2nd Milwaukee 6 Chicago 2 Philadelphia 3 Brooklyn 2 Cincinnati 9 St. Louis 8 10 inns Monday’s Probable Pitchers St. Louis at Milwaukee night — Mize 11 8-10 vs Burdette 16-9. Tuesday’s Games Pittsburgh at Brooklyn, night New York at Philadelphia, night St. Louis at Milwaukee, night Chicago at Cincinnati, twi-night American League New York Chicago Boston Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Kansas City Washington Sunday’s W. L. Pet. 95 54 .368 88 59 .599 78 70 .527 75 73 .507 72 75 .490 71 76 .483 56 90 .384 55 93 .372 Results DUNN FURNITURE COMPANY FS1GIDA1RE Carmen Basilio 3-2 Favorite To Win ■\lw YORK, Wl — Welter weight champion Carmen Basilio Is a solid 3-2 favorite to wrest the middleweight crown from Sugar Kay Robinson tonight in their mod ernistic ring spectacular at Yan kee stadium. Anticipated late support ."or 37 year-old Sugar Ray failed to ma terialize before weigh-in time to day. Despite the smaller stadium crowd, tonight’s scheduled 13 - rounder at 10:30 p.m. e d t. will be witnessed by more paying spec tators than any previous attrac tion in history — sports or other wise. Through the help of electro nics, the fight will be shown on screens in 178 theatres in 133 cities in the United States and Can ada. with more than 510,000. The battle of champions between slender, debonair Robinson, 37. and raw-boned dist-scarred Basi bo, 30-year-old ruler of the welter weight division, will not be tele vised to homes. But will be sent to homes by radio NBC in the United States, Canada, Hawaii and some Latin American countries. Thanks to theatre-TV tonight's slender, debonair Robinson 37? and raw-boned, fist-scarred Basi lio, 30-yeard-old ruler of the welter weight division, will not be tele vised to homes. But will be sent to homes by radio NBC in the United States, aCnada, Hawaii and some Latin American countries. Thanks to theatre-TV tonight’s bout will be the richest in the ca reers of Robinson, the flamboyant new yorker, and Basilio of Chit tenango, N. Y., the somewhat shy son of an onion farmer. Five Big Powerhouses Play This Week IU FRANK LITSKY United Press Sports Writer The national champions from Oklahoma, already past ppssibly their biggest hurdle of the fWball season, relax this week while five powerhouses from the Big Ten make their 1957 debut and take up the chase. Oklahoma rolled over Pitts burgh, 26-0, Saturday for its 41st straight victory with a typical blow-‘em-down Sooner attack. Ok lahoma’s swift backs ran for 310 yards and three of the four passes they completed went for touch downs in the outstanding game of the first collegiate weekend of the fall. Now, with the Sooners idle until an Oct. 5 meeting with Iowa State, attention turns to the Big Ten, the traditional area of foot ball strength which should be tougher than ever this year. Big Ten Opens Making their bow on Saturday are Michigan, Michigan State. Minnesota, Ohio State, and the Rose Howl champions from Iowa All meet tntersectional foes except Michigan State, which plays host to Indiana in the conference open er. Michigan, a veteran team with depth to spare, plays Southern California, which took a 20-0 drub bing from conference champion Oregon State on Saturday. Min nesota, strong at every position except halfback, faces Washington, New York 5 Boston 1 Chicago 9 Cleveland 5 Baltimore 6 Washington 5 Kansas City 4 Detroit 3 1st Kansas City 2 Detroit 1 2nd Saturday’s Results Boston 8 New York 3 Chicago 7 Cleveland 6 Washington 8 Baltimore 1 Kansas City 6 Detroit 3 Monday’s Probable Pitchers Chicago at Kansas City night— Keegan 10-8 vs Gorman 5-9. Detroit at Cleveland niglt — Lary 11-16 vs McLish 8-7. Boston at Washington night — Sullivan 13-11 vs Ramos 12-16. Only games scheduled. Tuesday’s Games Chicago at Kansas City Boston at Washington, night Only game scheduled. GREETINGS 4 GIFTS are brought to you from Friendly Neighbor* ft (Trie & Social W^far* Leader* S* ^^4 through ' wm.rmiR YVAriPN 0» tk* occasion aft V Change of rwldweg x,__ Aniral« o| Neui^nilTf W Mrs. Harold Jernigan DUNN, N. C. — PHONE 2075 which played a 6-6 tie with Colo rado. Ohio State takes on Texas Chris tian, which had to settle for a 13-13 tie when Kansas connected on a touchdown pass in *he last second of play. Iowa, ineligible to return to the Rose Bowl this sea l son, gets the only breather oi the j lot, a Utah State team which beat Hawaii two weeks ago and has been idle since. McKeiver Featured The nationally-televised game of the week brings together Stanford, a 46-7 winner over oftern pe-.ly San Jose State, and Northweste », which features breakway halfback Bob McKeiver, all five feet, four inches and 158 pounds of him, and little else. The three major conferences in the South feature games which may go a long way toward corwn ing champions. Tennessee, the Pre-season favorite in the South eastern Conference, tests its sin gle-wing power against dangerous Auburn in the curtain-raiser for each. Duke, more than ever 'he At 'r--— Duke Emerges As Top Team In Conference By UNITED PRESS North Carolina State's Wolfpack joins highly-rated Duke for a share of the early Atlantic Coast Conference lead this week but the Blue Devils leave little doubt as to who is the top-ranked team in the group. The Blue Devils have disposed of one of their serious challengers while the Pack fears worst is yet to come. South Carolina's Game cocks. picked as the most likely squad to topple the Duke power house in the race for the title, held the Blue Devils to a tie at half-time Saturday. But Duke mov ing with the assurance of a good reputation, kept things under con trol for the second half of the sea son opener, taking a 26-14 win. Meanwhile, the Wolfpack brought back bad memories for Jim Tatum’s North Carolina Tar Heels, dumping them 7-0 in their opener for the second straight year. The Blue Devils began prepara tions today for next Saturday's meeting on1 their home ground with the Virginia Cavaliers who held their own in a 6-6 tie with favored West Virginia. Fought Hard Battle-" For the Wolfpack this Saturday there is a trip/ to College Park, Md.. to met the Maryland team which fought a hard battle before bowing to Texas A&M Saturday 21-13. The remaining conference game puts Tatum's Tar Heels against Clemson who crushed Presbyter ian an 66-0 in its opener Saturday. In non-conference games, Wake Forest opens its season against Florida at Gainesville, Fla., and South Carolina plays host to Wof ford which upset small college power Lenoir-Rhyne 13-6 Satur day. lantic Coast Conference standout after a 26-14 win over South Caro l'na, runs into Virginia, which held West Virginia to a 6-6 tie. West Virginia, defending its South ern Conference laurels, should get an acid test from Virginia Tech, a rising power which upset Tuiane, 14-13, Friday night. Sport Shorts MAY ROW TOCETHER ITHACA, N Y. OP! — Some mem bers of the Cornell University crew which won three straight I. R A. regatta, the Henley regatta. I and the International Champion - ! ship may row together this year as a graduate crew, it was an - nounced today. MARTIN HEADS FIELD HOT SPRINGS, Va., (W — De fending champion Alistair Martin of Glen Cove, N. Y.. heads the men's singles field in the 42nd Homestead invitation tennis tour nament which opens today. DE VICENZO WINS OPEN RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, (W Roberto De Vicenzo of Argentina shot a three-underpar 69 in yester day’s final round to win the Bra zilian open golf tournament with a 81-hole total of 281. Leopoldo Ruiz of Argentina was second with 289. GRAND PRIX MODENA, Italy. W — Jean Be hra of France, driving a Mase rati. won the Modena Grand Prix auto race Sunday winning each 40-lap heat. Total distance of the race was 114.398'' miles. SEATTLE OPENS TOUR The Seattle Rainiers of the Paci fic Coast league opened their South American tour Sunday with a 6-4 victory over a Nicaraguan all-star baseball team. Babe Fri cano was the winning pitcher. Daily Record Ads Pay a case of •very student needs a Remington Qttietju/ez* PORTABLE The Portable with the fee turn that students need and want I •lakes homework easier to write, sasier to read, helps students #st a* Is 18* better grades. COSTS JUS? $l * was MORRIS WADE SALES CO. 121 N. WILSON AVE Dunn, N. C. Phone 4555 Oxygen Equipped Ambulance Service CROMARTIE FUNERAL HOME Phone 2077 Dunn, N. C. HARNETT'S 10ih ANNUAL LEGION FAIR OPENS AAONDAY NITE 6 P. M In The Beautiful Hew Fairgrounds On The Jonesboro Road - - - ALL NEW BIGGER BETTER Agricultural And Livestock Exhibits Big Midway — Free Acts — Fireworks FAMOUS COLD MEDAL SHOWS ON THE BIG MIDWAY IS SHOWS -10 RIDES First Appearance This Section FREE ACTS NIGHTLY THE WORLD - FAMOUS AERIAL WINTERS On The High Wires — Most Daring Act In Show Business FIREWORKS NIGHTLY-BI66ESI DISPLAY EVER SEEN HERE DON'T MISS THIS GREAT EVENT ALL NEXT WEEK-Mon-thmSot Sponsored by Dunn Post 59 Of The AMERICAN LEGION - - -
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1957, edition 1
7
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