Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 23, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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    Athlete Of Month To Be Selected
By Medford Athletic Association
Athlete of the month will be
selected on a year-round basis
by the Medford Athletic Asso
ciation, it was decided by a
unanimous vote of the board of
directors at a meeting last night.
The winner, to be revealed on
the tenth of the month for the
preceding month, will receive an
awartl from the association.
The athlete will be chosen
from the ranks of amateurs or
professionals and may be from
any locality, so long as he per
forms the athletic fete for which
he is chosen in Medford. Charac
ter and sportsmanship will also
play an important part in mak
ing the final decision, the direc
tors decided.
Public Vote
Selection of the winner will
be open to public vote. All let
ters naming a candidate must
be signed by the sender and
must be received by Harry
Chipman, sports editor. Mail
Tribune, on or before the fifth
of the month for the preceding
month's selection. Chipman has
been chosen as chairman of a
committee to make the selection
and will pick two members of
the board of directors to assist
him each month.
First On Nov. 10
First selection will be an-
to relieve stuffiness, invite
If nose fills up jJRX
It's wonderful how a little Va-tro-nol
up each nostril relieves stuffy transient
congestion. If you need relief tonight,
try ltl Follow directions in package.
WICKS VA-TRO-NOL
Karakul Wool Blankets
Have you selected your beau
tiful lifetime Blanket or Auto
Robe? Sale now going on.
Open to 9 p. m. Banquet
Room Holland Hotel.
WOMEN!
FULL OR PART TIME
WORKERS NEEDED
FN A Y CUI CT 8 a- m- to 6 p. m. Rain or
J f I drllr I ' thine Inside work, can
ning pears.
EVENING SHIFT p-rn7
PEAR CANNING season is now on at your local can
nery, Front and 13th streets. GOOD WAGES GOOD
WORKING HOURS GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS!
Piece Work for Women with
GUARANTEED HOURLY MINIMUM!
ROGUE RIVER PACKING CORP.
Telephone 3982
II I II I BMHH I
II
l
I FRIDAY
I 6 I
wmmm a I in mi in WMtVi Wf- t'H" wiaaaasaaawai t
lili hi LLlt-iLjlin.u i i i i iMHt Hi i inn irirn imnni wi aaaaai a aiai ii
nounced on Nov. 10 and will
cover the outstanding athletic
fete for October. Letters contain
ing choice of the athlete of the
month may be sent at any time
during the month but none re
ceived after the fifth of each
month will be considered on the
previous month's selection.
The selection takes in all
branches of sports, including
hunting and fishing. If fishing
or hunting achievements are
presented for consideration, the
catch must be available to the
selection committee for inspec
tion, along with proof of all
claims made in connection with
the catch.
Jockey School At
Santa Anita Track
Instructs Riders
Arcndia, Cal., Oct. 23 (U.R)
Jockey school at ita Anita
race track today found twelve
students learning the funda
mentals of turf riding.
The dozen prospects, selected
from 175 applicants, were given
three-day tryouts before final
acceptance last Friday.
Students are quartered with
regular jockeys and eat at
special "feed box' 'in the stable
area. They study ground rou
tine a well as getting daily rid
;ng lessons at the model racing
stable set up for their use.
FIGHTS LAST NIGH1
By United Press
Baltimore Holman Williams,
163, Chicago, outpointed Archie
Moore, 173Vi, St. Louis (8).
New York Ellis Phillips,
135Vi. Philadelphia, knocked
out Gus (Pell) Mell. 137V, Mon
treal (3).
Newark, N J. Freddie Ar
cher, 145, Newark, outpointed
Baby Al Brown, 140V4, Panama
(10).
Providence, R. I Ralph Zan-
nelli, 145, Providence, knocked
put Nnva Esparza. 145, Mexico
City (4).
Closing time toi Sunday 100 Late
to Classify 4 uu iiaiuraay inemoon
Please lemember
AGED JOE LOUIS
New York, Oct. 23 (U.R)
Cmdr. Jack Dempsey and Jack
(Doc) Kearns, greatest fighter
manager team in history, believe
that Joe Louis faces a tough as
signment in trying to recapture
his former prowess for a title
defense next June,
Dempsey, still in Coast Guard
uniform, says, "Louis will have
been out of the ring more than
four years when he meets Billy
Conn in June, and he'll be 32
years old then. That's a bad
combination age and long ab
sence from the ring. Particu
larly when you're a puncner,
matched against a fast, smart
boxer who is younger.
Experience Tells
"I found that out in 1926,
when I fought Tunney the first
time and lost my title. I hadn't
had a fight in three years, and
was way off form. I was better
when I fought Gene the second
time, with the Sharkey bout un
der my belt, but I was still a
long ways from the fighter I had
been at my peak. I was 31 when
I fought Tunney the first time.
You just can't get back your
stuff, after a long lay-off, when
you've passed 29."
Dempsey declined to pick a
winner at this early date; but
his conversation indicated tiat
he leaned toward Conn. He em
phasized, however, that Conn,
too, had been out of the ring al
most as long as Louis, although
more than two years younger.
Kearns, who guided Dempsey
to the championship and to his
first two million-dollar gates,
with Georges Carpentier and
Luis Angel Firpo, agreed that
Louis never could regain his
former prowess. However, the
dapper Chicago promoter picked
Louis to score another knockout
over Conn.
Los Angeles, Oct. 23 (U.R)
Heavyweight Champion Joe
Louis said today he will "flat
ten" Billy Conn when they meet
in a title bout next June.
"I think I'll kavo him. I think
he'll lose his head just like the
last time," Louis grinned, "and
ill flatten him."
Just released from the armv
Louis plans to relax with golf
rounds and radio appearances
for two months or so, and a few
refereeing assignments during
his "vacation."
"Billy was the best fighter I
met," the Brown Bomber said
"He could do everything but
clout. He was giving me a tough
whipping, too, but he didn't
keep his head. He tried to knock
me out and I flattened him in'
the 13th." Louis referred to their
match on June 18, 1941.
TICKETS READY FOR
GRANTS PASS GAME
Those who have spoken for
tickets for the Grants Pass
Medford football game, to be
played at Grants Pass Friday,
should call for them at the high
school office before Friday
morning, Principal Lester Har
ris said today.
Tornado T-Party Formation I
i - r-i - f v.
Jim Cave, center, and Earl Stelle, quarterback, are shown re
hearsing handling of the ball In preparation for their tricky T
formation plays which Medford will throw at Grants Past In a
Southern Oregon conference game there Friday night.
NAVY RATED AS
TOP GRID TEA!
E
Los Angeles, Oct. 23 (U.R)
Undefeated Navy, with a tough
struggle against Penn coming up
Saturday, was listed today on
top of the nation's football teams
in the Dcke Houlgate rating sys
tem. The Houlgate system rates
teams on the basis of the strength
of the opposition and classifies
them as A, undefeated and un
tied; B, beaten or tied once; C,
beaten twice; D, beaten three
times; E. beaten four times, etc.
Navy held first place with 26
points.
Purdue, although a surprise
35 to 12 victor over Ohio State,
dropped from a three-way tie for
first place to second place two
points behind. The third of last
week's first place trio, Georfiia,
dropped down to 11th place and
B ranking by virtue of Satur
day's trouncing by LSU.
Not far behind Purdue was
Holy Cross, also undefeated, with
23, followed by Indiana, holding
down last week's fourth spot
with 22.5 points, despite a tie
with Northwestern.
Tied for fifth with 21 points
were Alabama, Columbia and
Notre Dame. Temple was eighth
with 19, and Penn and Texas
ninth with 17 points each, rank
ing ahead of Tennessee and
Georgia, each also with 17
points, but rated as B instead of
A teams.
Big 10, Coast To
Play Annually In
Rose Bowl, Claim
Cleveland Oct 23 U.R)
The Cleveland Press said today
that it had learned that the Rose
Bowl 'ame will be played an
nually between the champions
of the Western and Pacific (Joast
tumuri'iiues airer mis season.
A Press sports writer, Jack
Clowstr, said that formal action
of the big ten to permit its
I t-iiau-ijiuii ivj iu me nu.se
; Bowl will be taken either this
i winter or at the spring meeting
of the conference.
Clowser said the big ten, he
learned, was dissatisfied with
watching1 "some southern school
get e $100,000 slice of the big
gate and ther, use it to subsidize
a flock of prep school stars."
CANUCKS FAVORED
Vancouver, B. C, Oct. 23
(U.R) The Vancouver Canucks,
playing their first game of the
season enter tonight's Pacific
coast hockey league contest as
favorites against the Portland
Eagles.
Clonnc nme for Bunmy Toe Lat
to clasFlfy 4:00 snturday afternoon
STOPS DOSING
AT 65 YEARS OF AGE
Famous Cereal
Banishes His Constipation
Given op hope of overcoming
your constipation? Then read thii
letter:
"For iereral Tri, lmort twr mom
In. I took nm kin") of Uxmtive bfor
brrckfam until I hfam m weak I rouM
harrflr walk around tha houw. About a
jrmr aio I BtarUd eating- KEl.LOfiti'S
ALL-nHAS erery dar. and am harlnt a
daily natural action and feel much brtur
and ftrona-er. I am R yeara old." Carl
Render. 121 Woodlawn Ave., Wilmington.
N. C.
Want to be completely free from
constipation and never have to
take another laxative? You may,
if your constipation is due to lack
of bulk in the diet and you eat a
dish of KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAS
every day, and drink plenty of
water. If not completely natisfied,
' lend empty carton to Kellogg's of
Battle Creek. You'll be paid double
your money back. ALL-BIiAX is
not a purgative. It's a noturad
regulating food made from the
' vital outer layert of wheat. Sup
plies gentle-acting bulk to aid nor
mal taxation.
Get KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAS
at your trroeer's. Made by Kellogg't
1 of BatUe Creek and Omaha,
SITE DISCUSSED
Chicago, Oct. 23 (U.R) A
mail vote was under way today
among the 50 member countries
of the International Olympic
Federation to determine the site
of the 1948 Olympic games.
Applications for the interna
tional spectacle have been sub
mitted by only four American
cities, Minneapolis, Baltimore,
Los Angeles and Philadelphia,
Avery Brundage, chairman, said
today. The deadline for applica
tions since lias past.
London has claimed priority
on the 1948 games since it was
awarded the 1944 games which
were cancelled because of war.
Only American cities ever to
sponsor the sporting classic were
St. Louis in 1904 and Los An
geles in 1932.
Bay Meadows Race
Season Under Way
San Mateo Calif.. Oct. 23
(U.R) The annual Bay Meadows
fall season will open today with
the west s finest thoroughbreds
competing for $155,000 in stake
prizes.
An estimated throng of 10,-
000 were expected to be on
hand- for the opening of what
promised to be a record-brenk-ing
meet.
GRACIE TO COACH
Hollvwood, Oct. 23 (U.R)
Bob Gracie, top scorer in the
"SAFETY MAM" JSL
"Safety" is every railroader's watchword; maintaining
it is his number one duty.
But to many, one trainman particularly symbolizes
safety: the passenger train brakeman...the "flagman."
Like a football safety man, this S.P. safety man
plays far in the backfield. Even during an ordinary
station stop, he drops back thirty feet behind the last
car. On unscheduled stops, he must immediately go
back far enough to
He places "torpedoes" on the track and waits on
guard with flag or lamp until the train is set to go.
When a whistle signal recalls him, he leaves behind a
burning "fusee" a bright red flare that burns for ten
minutes (even when wet) to caution following trains.
But all this is just one of our safeguards. There
are also amazing mechanical watchdogs (such as auto
matic block signals, Centralized Traffic Control and
Automatic Train Control) and such safety measures
as regular track and equipment inspection, physical
examination of trainmen, double-checking of train or
ders, and regular inspection of all trainmen's watches.
With all this backing him up, the brakeman has
helped make trains the safest way to travel. You're
American Ice hockey league
last season, was signed today to
coach the Hollywood Wolves in
the Pacific coast league.
ENVOY NAMED
Washington. Oct. 23 (U.R)
President Truman today nomin
ated Avra M. Warren of Ellicott
City, Md., to be minister to New
Zealand.
Closln Ume (ol Classified Ads 8:30
nv Too Late to Classify 12:15 p m
LEGAL NOTICES
NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING
In the County Court of the State
of Oregon for Jackson County.
In the Matter of the Estate of
EDMUND PEILE, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given that Ed
mund Alfred Peile, administrator
with the will annexed, of the
nbove entitled estate, has filed
his final account and petition for
distribution and that the 8th day
of November, 1945, at 10:00
o'clock A. M. at the court room
of said court, have bein appoint
ed as the time and place for the
hearing thereof. All persons in
terested arc required, then and
there, to show cause, if any there
oe, why said account should not
oe approved and distribution
made.
EDMUND ALFRED PEILE,
Administrator.
I. F. FLIEGEL,
Attorney for Administrator.
NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING
In the County Court of the State
of Oregon for Jackson County.
(n the Matter of the Estate of
LOTTIE VELMA PEILE, De
ceased.
Notice Is hereby given that
Jonie Deborah Peile, Executor of
She above entitled estate, has
filed her final account and peti
tion for distribution and that the
Bth day of November, 1945, at
10:00 o'clock A M., at the court
room of said court, have been
appointed as the time and place
Tor the hearing thereof. All pcr
ions interested are required, then
jnd there, to show cause, if any
there be, why said account
mould not be approved and dis
tribution made.
JONIE DEBORAH PEILE,
Executor.
J. F. FLIEGEL,
Attorney for Executor.
Summons for Publication
In the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon for Jackson County.
EDGAR DeLYLE and EDGAR
DeLYLE, JR., Plaintiffs,
vs.
ALBERT D. BEARDSLEY and
JANE DOE BEARDSLEY, his
wife, her true given name be
ing to the- plaintiff unknown;
ali unknown heirs at law of
said Albert D. Bcardsley and
Jane Doe Beardsley if they be
deceased; and all other per
sons and parties unknown
claiming any right, title, inter
est lien or estate in or to the
lands described in the Com
plaint. Defendants.
TO the above named Defendants
and each thereof:
YOU AND EACH OF YOU are
hereby notified and required to
appear in the above entitled
"ourt and cause and answer the
Complaint of Plaintiff now on
file therein against you within
four (4) weeks from the dato of
msure protection for his train.
Tueiday, Oct. 23, 194S
the first publication of this Sum
mons, which is the 16th day of
October, 1915; and if you fail to
appear and answer or otherwise
plead to plaintiff's complaint
within the time required, for
want thereof, the plaintiff will
apply to the Court for a decree of
the Court quieting the title in
plaintiff as the owner thereof of:
Government Lot One (1) and
the Northeast quarter of the
Northeast quarter of Section
30, in Township 38 South,
Range 3 West of the W. M.
in Jackson County, Oregon,
less tho lands described in
Volume 229. page 352, of the
Deed Records of said county.
This summons is served upon
you by publication in the Med
ford Mail Tribune once a week
for four (4) consecutive weeks by
virtue of an Order of Honorable
H. K. Hnnna, Judge of said Court
which Order was made on the
15th day of October, 1945.
The last day for appearance Is
November 13, 1945.
GUS NEWBURY,
Attorney for Plaintiffs.
U. S. Nat'l Bank Bldg.
Medford, Oregon.
NOTICE OF FILING FINAL
ACCOUNT
In the County Court of the State
of Oregon, for the County of
Jackson.
In the Matter of the Estate of
ISSIE McCULLY. deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the undersigned has filed
his final account nnd report in
the above entitled estate and
that by order of the County
Court in and for Jackson Coun
ty, Oregon, a hearing upon the
same has been set for Friday,
the 23rd dny of November,
1945. in the County Court' Room
at the Court House in Medford,
Jackson County, Oregon, at the
hour of ten o'clock, A. M.
All persons hoving obtections
thereto are hereby notified to
present the same on or before
such time.
Date of first publication of
this notice is October 23. 1945.
EUGENE THORNDIKE,
Executor ofthe Estate of
Issie McCitllv, deceased
GEORGE M. ROBERTS.
Attorney for Executor.
Hunting For
New Sheets?
Used fait are needed In
making sheels, shirts, towels,
nylons, girdles and many
other items you want ...
at well as soaps.
TURN IN YOUR USED FATS!
Wedding Gifts, Xmat Gifts
A Karakul Wool Blanket or
Robe on Sale in Banquet
Room, Holland Hotel. Open
Evening!,
actually safer on a train than in your own home!
The brakeman is a key man on our Southern Pacific
team one important key man among the thousands
of experienced railroaders who guide and guard every
train on every mile of ita run.
MEDFORD MAIL-TRIBUNE THHHS
Use Mall Trnrana wast Ada,
aWaaaMfiaMAir
7
'a-- I
made from juicy, recTripe
tomatoes. ..thick cream,
fragrant spices
ali combined with
homelike care
HEINZ SKILL!
r4
The friendly Southern Pacific