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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1958)
BIX MEDFORD (OREGON) lodgers Announce '58 Home; Coliseum Hopes Still 'Held Br HENRY RIEGER Los Angeles HPi The Los Angeles Dodgers finally have decided where they will play their 1958 home games maybe. Dodger President Walter C. O'Malley called a hurried preys conference Monday to announce in a prepared state ment: Negotiations to use Pasa dena's famed Rose Bowl had collapsed. The Dodgers would use bandbox sized Los Angeles "VVrigely field for their 1958 home base. But then he tempered the latter statement by saying, in answer to a question, he had "not altogether ruled out the possibility" of using the mas sive Los Angeles Memorial coliseum. And then he quickly add ed, "But at the moment, the decision to play in Wrigley field is final." He did announce he would meet with Los Angeles Mayor Norris Poulson to "discuss" the Coliseum and Wrigley Short Schedule Set By PCI in San Francisco W Direct ors of the Pacific Coast league met Monday to accept three new cities into the loop and to announce a 1958 prelimi nary schedule one of the shortest in PCL history. The meeting was probably Pease, Hunt To Captain Gun Teams Ed Pease, and Gene Hunt will captain the Blue and Red teams, respectively, in the an nual team shoot of Medford Gun club. They were selected by vote of shooters. Team shoot will be on Sun day, Jan. 19, at the club all paid up members will have a chance to participate and will be named to a team as they arrive on the grounds. Traps will be open at 10 a. m. for practice with the competition to begin at noon. Ray Coleman and Bert Peck broke 25-straight in practice shooting at 16-yards last Sun day. GIRD FOR SECTIONAL Medford Junior Rifle club members will have "improve ment" competition at their weekly practice shoots. Each Is firing 10 shots at the weekly drills in each of four positions prone, sitting, kneeling and standing to gain proficiency for the na tional sectional tourney in April. Scores are recorded and the member making most improvement over his last score will receive a box of ammunition. Phyllis Taylor had high score last week with 352 out of a possible 400. Eddie McGrew fired 335. Fish Farm Will Reach 500,000 Per 1 nf ahont 500.000 fish sold per year has been-set by the Talent Trout Farms, ac cording to Harry Ringland, co partner of the farm. Ringland and his partner, Homer Harris, told the cham ber of commerce's roundtable meeting Monday noon they have been in operation about seven months and have about 300,000 fish in different stages of growth. They recently re ported the successful spawn ing of 100,000 rainbow trout. The fish, when first hatched, will be kept in a trough for about six to eight weeks be fore being placed in the ponds. Ringland said. The farm has nine ponds at present, he add ed. Ringland said all ponds in use now are gravity feed ponds and are supplied by two creeks which meet on their property. He told the group the farm does not hold the water but runs it through the ponds and then back into the streams. Plans are now underway to intall a pumping system which would be required for a larg er number of ponds. Ringland said the men first became interested in raising trout in Southern Oregon when Harris came to the Med ford area for vacations and bought 10 acres of land near the farm, which at that time was a small operation owned by a local man. After finding outlets for the trout in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Portland, the men moved to L area and began learning MAIL TRIBUNE field. Poulson, in a followup statement to O'Malley's an nouncement, said that Wrig ley field was a "splendid structure" but added that the Coliseum "is the best place available." The Dodgers own Wrigley field, securing it as part of the deal which transferred the now defunct Los Angeles Angels from the Chicago Cubs family to the Dodgers. It is small in comparison to most major league parks. It also has such problems as short foul lines, practically no public parking facilities, and a none-too-accessible lo cation. The stands are double decked with a maximum ca pacity of 22,000 fans. With a minimum of alterations, they can be expanded to handle 23,600. Some architectural plans call for a maximum of 28,000. O'Malley hopes to answer the criticism of Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick, that the low left field fence makes for "cheap" home SF Meet the last to be held in San Francisco, the new home . of the Giants of the National league. PCL President Leslie O'Conner said the new league headquarters would be moved to either Phoenix, Ariz., or San Diego. The directors did not accept the agreement with the Na tional League on the terms for permitting the Dodgers and Giants to invade PCL ter ritory, but O'Conner said only a minor technicality in the wording of the agreement had to be ironed out. Phoenix, Salt Lake City and Spokane were officially welcomed into the league, re nlacinz San Francisco, Los Angeles and Hollywood. The Giants will control the Phoe nix club, the Los Angeles Dodgers will handle Spokane, and Salt Lake took over tne old Hollywood franchise. The PCL, which previously rilaved 172 eames or more, an nounced a 21-week schedule of 154 games. Crater Frosh Trim Phoenix Central Point Crater high freshman basketball team subdued Phoenix 53 to 32 last night. The Comets had 21 to 8, 30 to 16 and 47 to 26 quarter bulges. Gerald Slo per. Phoenix, was top scorer with 15 points and Dave Foote had 11 for Crater. Bry son LaCasse and Dan Edwards headed rebounding with 10 each although playing only half the game. LINE-UPS: 53 Crater F 11 Foote .... F 8 Edwards Phoenix Thompson . Lumley Sloper 9 LaCasse 10 Romine Richey K Allen Coeeins Substitutions For Crater. White 5. Nielson 2. Hogue. Martin 2, Mattson. Fisher 2: for Phoenix, Fowler 9. Bolz, Kelso. Sommons. Year Goal the trout business, Ringland explained. One Southern California man buys about 10,000 trout per week and picks them up in his own truck, Ringland said. He indicated the 500,000 Der year mark could be reached soon. Hcsaid because of the loca tion it the farm, freight rates are four cents per pound cheaper than their nearest competitor. He told the group all shipping is by truck. Port land and San Francisco re quire "fresh", or ice packed fish, while the Los Angeles market wants the fish frozen, he said. Since first purchasing the farm, the partners have in vested about S45.000 which has increased the capacity of the farm from 70,000 to 300, 000 fish at one time. Fish are raised from eggs which are purchased in Washington, Ringland added. . Fish are of market size when they are about eight inches long or weigh about one-fourth pound, he said. Fish this size are more flavor some and look better, he ex plained to the group. Each fish is placed in a plastic bag before shipping, he added. The farm limits sales to wholesalers but maintains a pond where fishermen can drop in a line when they run out of luck in streams, he said. Some fish placed in the pond are as big as 18 inches, he said, but fish are sold by number and not size. Tuesday, January 14, 1958 runs, by erecting a 40-foot screen atop the fence. This would be similar to Fenway park in Boston and would aid in keeping the hefty National league left field hitters from breaking Babe Ruth's 60 home run record the easy way. Latest Roadblocks O'Malley's revelation that the Rose Bowl negotiations had collapsed was the latest in a series of troubles the Dodgers have met in trying to locate in Los Angeles. Initially, Los Angeles vot ers petitioned to hold up the move to build a stadium in Chavez ravine until after a June 3 election. And the Congress to Receive Baseball TV Request Washington OP) Organized baseball went to Congress to day with its television trou bles, but its effort to get legis lative relief was doomed in advance. Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick and a three-man minor league committee arranged separate meetings with Chair man Emanuel Celler (D-N.Y.) of the House Judiciary com mittee and Rep. Kenneth B. Ashlanders, Tornado Vie This Week Medford's Black Tornado goes back into Southern Ore gon conference basketball contentior this week with every indication that it will have put forth considerable effort if it is going to bust into the league win column. Ashland will be the Friday and Saturday opponent of the Tornado with Ashland scene of the first night ruckus and Hedrick gym here playing site for the second evening. Both clubs have fallen vic tim to Klamath Falls. But Ashland's Grizzlies gave the Pelicans a rougher time than did Medford. Ashland, how ever, had one advantage that Medford did not. The Lith ians met Klamath on their home floor. The Tornado met the Pels on the KF court when action almost always proves tough for the visiting club. KF at GP Klamath Falls vies at Grants Pass on both week end evenings in the other league series. Crater has a bye and will be idle. Full activity Is billed In the Rogue league on Friday with Glendale at Brookings, Rogue River at Illinois Val ley and Phoenix at Eagle Point. Other Rogue tiffs are Brookings at Illinois Valley and Phoenix at Rogue River on Saturday. Friday slate in the Jackson County B league is Prospect at Jacksonville and St. Mary's at Talent. There are four games to night. Talent is at Jackson ville in the Rogue circuit and Butte Falls at St. Mary's in the B loop. Prospect has a non-counter at Rogue River. BASKETBALL COLLEGE RESULTS By United Presi East Tufts 63, Northeastern 38 St. Francis (Pa.) 61, Providence 59 St. Fran. (N.Y.) 72, Fsh-Ieigh 63 Bates 72. Middleburv 66 Kings (Pa.) 84. Lincoln (Pa. 60 Westminster iPa.) 78, Thiel 54 Wash. (Md ) C. 73, Catholic U. 71 South Georgia Tech 76. Mississippi 67 Kentucky 86. Tulane 50 Tennessee 75, Louisiana State 51 Will. & Marv 75, Davidson 61 Tenn. Tech 76. Middle Tenn. 65 Delaware 83. Ursinus 69 Florida St. 56. Memphis St. 81 Florida 66. Alabama 62 Vanderbilt 74. Mississippi St. 62 Miami (Fla.) 90, Rollins 71 Midwest Michigan 72. Ohio State 63 Indiana 85. Minnesota 64 John Carroll 91. Fenn 72 Kansas 67. Colorado 46 Cincinnati 93. Houston 57 Northwestern 82. Iowa 80 (o.t.) Wisconsin 71. Illinois 70 St. Bonaventure 81. Detroit 59 Depaul 62. 'Louisville 60 Nebraska 57, Oklahoma 54 Wash. (Mo.) 65. Beloit 57 Iowa State 63. Drake 42 Bradley 85. North Texas State 58 Southwest Arkansas 58. Texas Tech 55 Hrd -Simm. 66. Tex. Western 43 Southern Methodist 82. Texas 68 New Mex. A&M 73, W. Tex. St. 72 Tex. Christian 92, Rice 68 West Gonzaga 61, Eastern Washington 42 Santa Clara 66. Chico State 56 Montana State 70, Portland State 56 TALENT SLATES GAMES Talent Talent high grade school hoopmen have their next games at Gold Hill on Thursday with junior varsity mix at 6:30 p.m. and the var sity brush at 7:30 p.m. In games last week Talent downed St. Mary's 44 to 15 and 18 to 8 in varsity and jayvee contests. Dodgers then ran Into a road block when they sought the Coliseum as a home base and the park commission refused to allow them to locate the diamond where all baseball experts said it should be. And finally, Monday the Rose Bowl negotiations were called off when O'Malley dis covered that the $750,000 it would take to alter the sta dium could not be amortized in a short term lease "after payment of what in itself would be a substantial annual rent." Pasadena officials also felt that the face lifting "would leave physical scars on the beauty of the Rose Bowl." Keating, N. Y., senior commit tee Republican. Frick and the minor league officials minor league czar, George M. Trautman, Inter national league president Frank Shaughnessey and President Frank J. Horton of the Rochester, N. Y., club of the International league want Congress to bail baseball out of a dilemma resulting from an agreement by six major league teams to na tionally televise Sunday "games of the week." Celler and Keating made it clear there is little or nothing they can do in the way of cor rective legislation. They sug gested they would send Frick and the minor league officials to the Justice department for guidance and a possible ruling on any anti-trust aspects of the TV arrangement. ' Both said it is up to the ma jor leagues to solve the prob-. lem. Keating, branding the majors as "short sighted," counselled the majors to go slow on televising games into major league territory, "lest they kill minor league base ball." Conversion Rule Striking Change In Grid Sport By FRED DOWN United Press Sports Writer The nation's top college football coaches have agreed that the extra point will be killed by the NCAA's new two-point conversion play but differed sharply whether that will help or hurt the game. "There'll be less and less kicking," was the virtually unanimous comment and oth ers included, "You've just got to go for the two points instead of the one . . . the coach is sure to be second guessed no matter what he does . . . and . . . there'll be fewer ties and more inter est." NCAA rules committee chairman Fritz Crisler, athle tic director at Michigan and author of the new rule, was outspoken in favor of it. Striking Change "It is one of the most strik ing changes in football his tory," he said at Fort-Lauderdale, Fla., where the commit tee passed the rule. "It's a progressive step and should inject more drama into foot ball's dullest, most stupid play." The new rule, which mark ed the first change in football scoring since the NCAA was formed in 1906 was approved unanimously Sunday by the 10-man committee. The com mittee also voted to liberalize the substitution rule, permit ting all substitutes to reenter each period once, and made four other rule changes. The conversion rule re tained the old one-point for placement or drop kick reg ulation but added the option that a team could try for two points by running or passing from the three-yard line. Most high schools throughout the country are expected to conform to the regulation. Redskin Player On Shrine Club Eldon Smith, Jacksonville high, has been named to an end berth on the West squad for the Shrine B school all star football game. He was the only player chosen from Jackson county. The game for Shrine hospi tal beneft will be played in August at Pendleton. MONTANA ST. RAPS PSC Portland (IP) The Mon tana State Bobcats used a fast break and an all-around team effort Monday night to dump the Portland State Vikings 70 56 in a non-conference basket ball game. MedfordvJTwbune SIPdDIffiTS i'Vc - "MPs!88 ; ' . ' i .-il " W . 'SHOWBOAT HALL Finally Made the Ranks Detroit Boy Makes Grade as Mainstay On Globetrotters A good deed by Abe Saper- stein Jn 1944 has paid off for him in one of the greatest basketball players now with the famed Harlem Globetrot ters, who go against the Wash ington, B.C., Generals at Hedrick junior high school gym Friday night. Game time is 8 o'clock and the box office will open at 6 p.m. It all happened when Sap- erstein took his Trotters to Detroit to play a benefit for a Negro community center. Leon Wheeler, director of the center, had sent Saperstein HOCKEY Montreal (W Dick Moore leads the National Hockey League scoring race today with a 51-point total that doubled his last week's lead of one point over Montreal teammate Henri Richard. New York (IP) Willie Marshall of Hershey scored eight points last week to in crease his lead in the Amer ican Hockey league scoring race. West Virginia Holds To Lead In UP Ratings New York HP) The Un ited Press major college bas ketball ratings with first place votes and won-lost rec ords through Jan. 11 in par entheses: Team Points 1. West Va., 29 (12-0) ... 335 2. San. Fran.. 3 (12-1) ... 229 3. Kansas. 1 (10-2) 207 5. N. Car., 1 (11-2) 166 6. Cincinnati (10-2) 165 7. Maryland (9-2) 145 8. Bradley (8-1) 101 9. Okla. St. (10-1) 91 10. Temple (10-2) 83 Second 10 group 11, Ore gon State, 45; 12, Michigan State, 37; 13, Kentucky 30; 14, Utah, 13; 15, Mississippi State, 11; 16 (tie), Notre Dame and Tennessee, 6 each; 18, Dayton, 5; 19 (tie) Minnesota, Illinois and Seattle, 4 each. Others Texas Christian, North Carolina State and UCLA, 3 each; St. John's, N.Y., California and Memph is State, 2 each; Iowa State and Northwestern, 1 each. Thirty Staters Will Convene Movies of the recent Ore gon State college UCLA basketball game will be shown at the regular monthly meeting of Medford Thirty Staters at 7 p,m. Wednesday, Jan. 15, at the Jackson hotel. Robert Knoll, OSC alumni director, will be speaker. The club is an OSC booster club and membership is open to male alumnus of the school. DUCK RECEPTION Portland OP) A mass re ception for the University of Oregon Rose Bowl football team will be held here Jan. 23 in the Masonic temple with a capacity throng of 1400 guests expected. The Port land Chamber of Commerce announced plans for the re ception, assisted by the Ore gon Journal. several basketball prospects in the past and this was his way of showing appreciation. In the crowd watching the game was Robert Hall, a 17-year-old Detroit youth who was so fascinated by the Globetrotters that he vowed then and there that he some day would he one of them and as slick as the rest in comedy and ball handling. Got Chance Later It wasn't until four years later that Hall got his chance, made possible through a friend of Hall's, Sammy Gee, who had landed with the Trotters the year before. Hall, who hadn't played high school basketball but was a standout at the com munity center, was tutored in the Globetrotter farm system and fast made the grade to the main string. And now Hall's ambition has been realized. Not only is he a stellar performer, but "Showboat," as he has been dubbed by his teammates, is one of the finest comedians in Globetrotter history. In addition to the basket ball program, six top vaude ville acts gathered from the country's leading night clubs will be seen before the game and at halftime. Tickets are on sale at Lam port's Sporting Goods store in Medford. There are no re served seats. Schayes Posts New Record for Scoring in NBA New York (IP) Adolph Schayes of the Syracuse Na tionals was officially con firmed today as the all-time professional basketball scor ing champion, even as he closed ground on Detroit's George Yardley in this sea son's scoring race. Sunday night Schayes set a new career record of 11,770 points, topping in 10 years the career mark of 11,764 set by former Minneapolis star George Mikan. Both figures in cluded play by each man in the National Basketball league, but not playoff games. The league reported that Schayes' new point record is one of 18 individual and team records broken during the first hftf of the current season. Schayes scored more points, 109, in four games last week than Yardley did, 108, in five, and so crept close to the pace making Piston. Yardley con tinued to lead the chase in the regular weekly standings with 1,034 points, but Schayes was a close second with 986. FALL SIDELINES DUPUIS Geneva, Switzerland (IP) Ski jumper Claude Dupuis of the Canadian team will be un able to compete in he world championships because of in juries suffered in a fall and is en route home. New York (Ifl Unbeaten Stephen Redl of Paterson, N. J., making his first appearance after a six-month army hitch, has been matched against Gale Kerwin of Valley Stream, N. Y., for a 10-round welter weight bout at Madison Square garden, Feb. 14. Pels Rate Top Votes In Polling Portland up) Klamath Falls, winner of 10 straight games, ranked in first place today in the Journal coaches' poll among Oregon high school basketball teams. Klamath Falls had 78 of a possible 80 points while South Eugene, also with 10 straight wins, was next in line with 71 points. Team Poinlt 1. Klamath Falls 78 2. South Eugene 71 3. Grant 59 4. North Salem 54 5. Marshfield 45 6. Rooievell 40 7. Astoria 24 8. Beaverton 14 9. Pendleton 11 10. Springfield 9 Others: The Dalles 8, Mc- Minnville 8, North Bend 6, Hermiston 5, Jefferson 3, Cor vallis 3, St. Helens 1. Pep Plans 'Another7 Comeback Boston (IP) Willie Pep, billed as the Connecticut Comet in the days when he was the world's best feather weight boxer, lays his current comeback and possibly his career on the line tonight against Tommy Tibbs who was just a boy when Pep was a champion. Pep, who first laid claim to the featherweight crown in 1942, then recaptured it after a two-year lapse in 1949 only to lose it seven months later, has won most of the 220 bouts during his 19-year ring ca reer. Pep has ambitions of re gaining the crown. But a loss to the Boston boy would all but write an end to the 35-year-old Middletown, Conn., native's ring career. Pep now boxes out of Tampa, Fla. A&M Talks With Navy Head Coach College Station, Tex- Eddie Erdelatz and Texas A&M officials both spoke cau tiously, but there appeared little doubt today that the highly successful Navy coach would be offered the Aggie football coaching job. Erdelatz became the num ber one and for the present the only contender when A&M's nine-member board of directors Monday announced that Iowa State coach Jim Myers had withdrawn his name from consideration A meeting between Erdelatz and the board was scheduled today by the Faculty Athletic Council, headed by Dr. Chris N. Groneman, whose recom mendation as a prelude to consideration by the direc tors. It appeared likely from the effort 1 exerted in attaining a personal visit by Erdelatz that he would be offered the post, bolstered by the fact he brought three assistants with him. - Ryff Gives Cat Away, Posts Two Bout Wins New York OPI Light weight Frankie Ryff, who gave Kid Centella a lopsided licking Monday night in their TV fight, today attributed his comeback prowess partially to the fact that "I gave away my cat." Since he transferred his black and white tomcat "Tip py", to his mother-in-law at Brewster, N. Y., three months ago. New Yorker Frankie registered two comeback vic tories, the more impressive being last night's win over Nicaraguan Centalla at St. Nicholas Arena. PLAYER NAMED TO TEAM Portland (IP) Paul God dard, halfback . in Lincoln high school's football team last fall, was named today to the 80-player All-American prep team picked by Scholas tic magazine. He was the only Oregon player named on the squad. FOLSOM FORMS FLEET Mobile, Ala. tlP) Alabama Gov. James E. Folsom today mailed commissions in the Alabama navy to all the play ers, coaches, sponsors and an nouncers who participated in the Senior Bowl football game last Saturday. LARRY'S Line Up Shop 3724 So. Pacific Hwy. NOW OPEN! Wheel Alignment Wheel Balancing WORK GUARANTEED . 7 f . SIZZLING Bob Rosburg of San Francisco, who fired a sizzling seven-under-par 65 in the first round of the $50,000 Bing Crosby Golf Tournament at Pebble Beach, hits an iron on the first fairway at Cypress Point at the start of the second round. Clark, Mitchell Net in Holiday Leland Clark and Jack Mitchell took over the lead in the chase for best single match net score when they carded a 60 in holiday golf handicap tourney competition last week at Rogue Valley Country club. ' Ed Hall and Frank Allen are still on top in the stand bies with plus 29 points in seven matches. Each team is to play 12 matches at March 1. Dr. D. C. Boals and Dr. William Miller rank second STANDINGS: Ed Hall Frank Allen Dr. Dave Boals Dr. Wm. Miller Wm. Blackledge Bob Little Ken Knapp Rob't. Brown Russ Hevsell Ed Gordon Jack Worthlngton Jerry Wells Bob Morris Jack Sanborn Virgil Swanson Wayne Chase Glen Fabrick Ray Frisbie Everet McGraw Ken Teeter Bill Catey Stan Stark Dick Travis Lloyd Pope Clayton Lewis Jim Sheldon Jim Curley Chas. Mickelson Jack Lewis Bob Wells Bud Parsons Clyde Knight W. W. Deakins Dean Lambert Leland Clark Jack Mitchell Dick Hogan Ron Gandee Dom Provost Jr. Jim Busch Al Hart Geo. Sloinger Carl Schmidt Duane Lubbers Fred Sears Dick Henselman John Nuich Jim Varga Lee Flink Homer Sullivan Alan Holmes Roy Smith Clark Mears Bob Voegtly Jim Dunlevy Jack Dougherty Jack Eidswick Ed Nichols Dr. Frank Wilson Dave Koblick Murray Gardiner Chas. Meyers H. E. Nulton Tom Teutsch Jerry Cottingham Gene Spencer Sports Groups Set To Oppose Fish, Game Agency Combination LaGrande (IP) Sportsmen from Union and Wallowa counties Monday night ex pressed opposition to any plans to combine the Oregon Game Commission and the Oregon Fish Commission into one authority. Their reaction was similar to that expressed earlier in the day at Pendleton at a meeting attended by about 45 sportsmen. The Legislative Interim Fish and Game committee is holding a series of hearings for the purpose of making recommendations to the 1959 Legislature. About 90 sportsmen attend ed the meeting here. Jerry Bingner, past presi dent of the Union County Izaak Walton League, said op position to combine the two groups was made principally because their sources of funds and interests differ. BIG Y WINS MIBL TILT Big Y market rolled over the National Guard's A com pany, 99 to 42, in a Medford Independent Basketball league class Monday night. Don Spinas pushed in 20 points and Gene Helm buck eted 21 to lead the winners. Parent netted 16 and Weddle 10 for the losing A company. JANUARY. CLEARANCE Bargain Grade 2x4-8' S5.00 Per M' Cheney Stud Mill CENTRAL POINT Chalk Up 61 Golf Handicap with 15 points in four match es. Ken Knapp and Robert Brown are second in single game net with 61 and Boals and Miller fired a 62 recent ly. Clark and Mitchell had a 26 net on their front nine. Plus and minus points are collected on the basis of by how many holes a match is won or lost. After a team has a minus 10 standing it may not be challenged but it, itself may challenge any team it has not played before. Matches - 7 5 4 5 2 r- 2 4 2 3 3 4 2 3 . 1 3 2 4 3 0 0 1 3 3 - 2 3 2 i 4 2 2 . 2 4 S Standing Plus 29 " 15 " 7 " 7 " 6 " 5 " 5 " 4 " 4 " 4 M 4 " 3 " 3 3 " 3 " 3 " 3 " 1 " 1 0 0 Minus 1 " 5 " 5 " 1 " 7 " 7 - 9 " 10 " 11 " 13 - 14 " 21 Medford Motors Your Only AUTHORIZED and FRANCHISED DEALER For Willys OFFERS Lirgest Stock of Willys Part South of Portland k Complete Stock of Winches, Cabs and Acceioriet k Most Moditn and Best Equipped Shop in Oregon k On Hand All Models of 1958 Vehicles Let Us Prove Whet! A "Jeep" Vehicle Can Do For You. Medford Motors Inc. LINCOLN-MERCURY-WILIYS 225 South Riverside Phone SP 2-6157