Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1958)
EIGHT MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE els Subdue Med.ord Quint 70-59 With Torrid SOUTHERN" OREGOV CONFERENCE STANDINGS Klamath Talli a 1 Grant Pass 4 4 Ashland 4 8 Med ford 4 6 Crater , 3 7 Pet .800 300 .400 .400 .300 Klamath Falls stood four games in front of its closest Southern Oregon conference basketball adversary after merging its tremendous height with a fast moving at' tack, well-fed passes and siz zling accuracy Saturday night e to spurn the upset ambitions of the Medford high Black Tornado 70 to 59. It was the ninth league vic tory for the skyscraping Peli cans and the 15th decision in 16 games this season. The verdict with the 59 to 54 win on Friday gave the White birds a week end series sweep and roughly bruised Medford efforts for at least second place in the circuit and a state A-l tourney spot. Medford with a 4-6 league standing is now knotted with Ashland a full game behind the Grants Pass Cavemen who were idle over the week end. Grants Pass is 4-4 in the conference for current hold on second. iHad To Put Out " An acknowledged state title t contender with No. 3 rating in Oregon prep polls, Klam- ath lived up to its prestige "with a spirited second half performance. It had to put .out to establish control over Z the hustling Medfordites who Z on the night before had come Tnear to stripping the Pelican feathers. Z The Black Tornado, fight ;ing ferociously for the ball on defense and fast breaking for Z its own hoop when It nabbed Z possession, stayed with the elongated Pels through the first half, even getting the j-jump at the start. But the Z Klamath superiority in eleva Z tion and its sizzling firepower Sfrom the field took its toll on the Tornado over the third and fourth quarters. The Pels with Glenn Moore and Bob Peterson flipping in most of the tallies, took gradual con trol in the third session then boomed away, to lead by 21 points in the fourth. Pels Hit .527 Medford flicked in floor goals at a commendable .400 average for the night. That marksmanship, however, was cool compared to the .527 by the Pelicans. Klamath bom barded 15 for 27 for .555 in the last half after 14 for 28 or an even .500 in the pre vious portions of the game. Moore rang in six field goals and two free shots in the second half and had 25 points for the game. Peterson, with five field buckets and three gift markers for last two quarters, totalled 24 for the night. Lowell Dean and Bilbee Lane, whose scoring work helped keep the Torna does in first half contention, had 17 and 14, respectively. Bob Niles ran up 14 for the Pelicans. Medford, on two free shots by Dean and a fielder and gifter by Lane, got a 5 to 0 hop in the fracas. Klamath with Niles picking up five of HOCKEY NATIONAL LEAGUE By UNITED PRESS Add the "necessity line" to the long list of attacking trios in the colorful history of the Montreal Canadiens. The line Dickie Moore, Henri Richard and Marcel Bonin was formed as a re sult of the numerous injuries suffered by the Canadiens. Bonin scored his 12th and 13th goals of the campaign Sunday night three fewer than he has scored in any previous full season when the Candiens beat the New York Rangers, 3-1, and rebuilt their National Hockey league first-place lead to 25 points. The Toronto Maple Leafs shut out the Boston Bruins, 2-0, and the Detroit Red Wings shaded the Chicago Black Hawks, 2-1, in the other games. AMERICAN LEAGUE By UNITED PRESS The Springfield Indians, who for many weeks shuttled in and out of the American league cellar, now find them selves within striking distance of third place after a pair of important victories during the week end. The Indians edged Provi dence. 4-3, Sunday night on Ken Schinkel's third -period goal, to move within two points of the third place Reds. Significant in the Indians' week end play was Real Chev refils, who netted a three-goal -hat trick" in the 12-3 romp over Buffalo Saturday, and contributed a goal and a pair of assists in Sunday's win. In other action Sunday night, Cleveland defeated Rochester, 2-1, and the Her shey Bears, doing all their scoring in the 2cond period, whipped Buffalo, 4-1. ROADKING WIZARD Sonny Mitchell, above, is the dribbling wizard and ball handler of the Harlem Roadkings basketball team which plays at the Eagle Point high gym on Tuesday night, Feb. 11. He is regarded as a deadly one hand shooter. Sonny was named to a high school All-Ameri-can as a eager at Louisville, Ky., and played one year at Duquesne university. He is in his third season with the Road kings. Rival of the traveling club will be the Big Y Market quint, unbeaten winner of the Medford Independent league. Game time is 8 p.m. Oregon's Webfoots Earn Revenge Over Idaho Five Corvallis (IF) Idaho's Vandals, their PCC title chance dimmed by two de feats in a row, take on Ore gon Stale's still contending Beavers, in Gill Coliseum tonight.'. Eugene OP) The Ore- the points, caught up at 8-all and went ahead on another bucket by Niles. The Pelicans were ahead 16 to 12 at the quarter and pushed to 22 to 14 in the early moments oi the next period. Tom Hamlin swished a field shot from Medford and Dean a free point and a field goal. Don Bowling, recently arrived in the mix, sank a long shot and two tries at the free stripe. Medford was on top 23 to 22. Go Ahead To Play Peterson's rebounder gave the lead back to Klamath. Dean regained it for the Tor nado with a 10-foot jumper. But Peterson reboundered again for 26 to 25 and KF had the upperhand for keeps. The Pelicans had a slim 34 to 31 halftime advantage. In the third stanza Klamath stretched to 41 to 32. Med ford cut it to 41 to 38. A tip in by the 6-8 Moore snipped the last serious Tornado bid and by the close of the third chucker the scoreboard show ed Klamath 50 and Medford 41. Klamath surged for 15 points in the opening 3V4 minutes of the wind-up stan za while Medford managed just three and that made the totals 65 to 44, widest spread of the game. The Tornado scuffled back to shut the gap but the bulging Whitebird margin was too much to over come. Four Men Score In the rebound retrieving department Medford outma neuvered its taller foes for 17 to 15 edge in the first half. Klamath had 19 to 10 control in the second half and 34 to 27 for the game. Moore clear ed the boards 16 times, Peter son nine and Niles eight. Dean had nine "boards" for Medford. Four men scored all of the Pelican points with Smiley Herrera joining Moore, Peter son and Niles. Three previous encounters saw the Medford junior varsi ty tip its Klamath counter part in close games. The Jun ior Tornado made it a con vincing 68 to 53 verdict on Saturday, holding some leads of 20 points. Jerry Shultz had 20 counters, Calvin Dean 14 and Booth Deakins 13 and for Klamath Paul Bishop ran up 12. Halftime score was 27 to 17. VARSITY BOX: Klamath FG FT 0 6 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PF TP Niles, f Peterson, f . Moore, c Robinson, g Herrera, g . Ankeny . 7 9 10 0 3 0 0 2 14 24 25 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 70 Don DeLap Dave DeLap 0 Bk-hop 0 Hall 0 Sevde 0 Luce 0 Drace 0 Total Medford .29 12 17 FG FT PF TP Hamlin, f 3 Anderson, f Brown, c Lane, g ... Dean, g Peek .... Bowling Totals 20 19 17 ' 59 Referees Bocchi and Douglas. JAYVEE LINE-UPS: 68 Medford Klamath 53 F 20 Shults Dunson 8 F 13 Deakins Hall 10 C 2 Olson Lewis 3 G 14 Dean . Bishop 12 G 6 Allen Dave DeLap 8 Substitutions For Medford, Frohnmayer 3. Koch. Miller 2. Mon roe 5. Durkee 3: for Klamath, Griggs 8,, Drace 5, Santo 6, Binney Monday, February 10. 1958 Shooting UNE gon Webfoots revenged them selves Saturday night behind the 35 points of forward Charlie Franklin and defeat ed Idaho 82-75 in a hard fought Pacific Coast confer ence basketball game. The Vandals drubbed the Ducks 81-76 last month on their home court. Franklin, who scored 35 against Idaho in the Moscow game earlier, hit 11 shots in 19 tries from the floor and dunked 13 free throws in 14 attempts. Gary Simmins, leading scorer in the PCC, took high honors for Idaho with 25, his identical point total in the last game with Oregon. See-Sawed The Webfoots jumped off to a 12-3 lead in the first five minutes but the Vandals, led by Simmons, came back steadily and tied it up 16-all with 10 minutes gone. The half see-sawed with four ties before Simmons hit a 35-foot shot with one second left to give Idaho a 36-33 halftime lead. Although Oregon shot .593 from the floor in the second half it was close until guard Bud Kuykendall and Frank lin broke it open with six minutes to go. Franklin grabbed 18 off the backboards to pace the Ducks to a 47-37 rebound ad vantage. It was Oregon's fourth PCC victory against six losses. Idaho has a 5-4 conference record. Baptists Ramble In YMCA Men's Division Fray Medford First Baptist smashed First Presbyterian 76 to 26 Saturday night in YMCA Church Basketball league men's division play. Ned Landers rolled 23 points for the victors and Gor don Gillmore had 18. Gordon Taylor's 10 was high for Pres byterian. Junior high division games saw First Baptist beat St. Mark's Episcopal 30 to 23, First Methodist trimmed Pres byterian 36 to 29, YMCA romped 56 to 8 over St. Peter's Zion Lutheran. John de Place had 13 and Jerry Stevens 10 for the Bap tists and Bob Emmens and Jim Randle nine each for St. Mark's. Heyerman put in 17 for Presbyterian and Atkins 11 for the Methodists. For the Y Steve Ray collected 18, Danny Coghill 16, and Tom Bortis 14. Delany Eyeing Record in Mile New York (IF) Ron De lany, admitted today that maybe he'd like to break the world indoor mile record after all. The Villanova senior came close Saturday night in the 51st annual Millrose games at Madison Square Garden with a 4:04.6 performance. It was a turnabout for the slender, dark-haired Delany, who had maintained that he was interested only in win ning. He will wind up the in door campaign in the New York AC meet Saturday night, the national AAU champion ships Feb. 22, the IC4A meet March 1 and the New York Knights of Columbus games March 8, and the Chicago Daily News relays March 14. BASKETBALL SATURDAY COLLEGE GAMES By United Press (East) St. Bonaventure 90. La Salle 71 Lafayette 62. Rutgers 53 Manhattan 76. Canisius 57 Cincinnati 100, St. Josephs Pa. 78 Dartmouth 72. Columbia 70 Harvard 63. Cornell 59 NYU 72. Boston U 66 Fordham 82, Georgeton DC 45 Niagara 77, St. Johns NY 68 (South) Duke 91, North Carolina 75 Auburn 75, Georgia 73 Maryland 74, Wake Forest 67 Miami Fla. 92. Army 82 Louisville 76, Xavier Ohio 74 (Midwest) Notre Dame 98. Air Force 70 St. Louis 78, Wichita 73 (Southwest) W. Texas State 80. Arizona 49 Texas 71, Texas Tech 59 SMU 84. TCU 67 Rice 63, Arkansas 59 (West) Wyoming 64. Utah 63 Missouri 55, Colorado 51 California 61. UCLA 58 Colorado St. U. 75, Montana 59 Willamette 103. Lewis & Clark 86 Idaho St. 60, New Mexico 46 San Francisco 71, Fresno St. 54 Linfield 76. Pacific 57 Whitman 72, NW Nazarene 67 Oregon Tech 77. East. Oregon 8 So. Oregon 93. Oregon College 65 Seattle Pac. 80. St. Martin's 72 Linfield, Willamette Keep Pace By UNITED PRESS Willamette and Linfield in the Northwest Conference and Oregon Tech and Southern Oregon in the Oregon Col legiate Conference continued their winning ways over the week end to keep the two races hot. Willamette, getting 31 points from Ed Grossenbach er and 27 from Vic Backlund, drubbed Lewis and Clark 103 83, to keep right on Linfield's trail. Coach Roy Helser's Wildcats made their confer ence mark 6-1 with a 76-57 win over Pacific as Jackie Riley hit 22 points. Willam ette is 7-2. Oregon Tech kept its full game lead over Southern Ore gon by clubbing Eastern Ore gon at La Grande 77-58 for a clean sweep of the week end series. Three OTI players, Truman Williams, John Rhine and John McCutcheon, had an even 20 points. Southern Oregon, 11-2, to OTI's 12-1, made it two straight over winless Oregon College of Education with a 93-65 win at Ashland. Bill Hollingsworth had 24 for the winners. Whitman upset Northwest Nazarene 72-67 in a non-conference' game. Baylor Sits In Hoop Score Race By FRED DOWN United Press Sports Writer Seattle's Elgin Baylor is sittin' pretty with "four aces" today in his running battle with Oscar Robertson and Wilt Chamberlain for the na tional college basketball scor ing championship. The race reached its most sensational peak of the sea son Saturday night when all three went over the 40-mark. Baylor tallied 46 in a 107-71 win over Gonzaga, Robertson connected for 43 in Cincin nati's 100-78 conquest of St. Joseph's and Chamberlain tallied 46 in a 102-46 Kansas romp over a Nebraska team that has a 6-4 center as its tallest starter. The latest scoring orgy by the "Big Three" left Baylor with a 33.72 average, Robert son with 32.94 and Chamber lain with 32.86. It's still close, of course, but then there are Baylor's "four aces" four games with small college teams while Robertson and Chamberlain are finishing their seasons ex clusively against major col lege opponents and in some cases top-ranked ones. Three Powers Lose Aside from the scoring race Saturday's schedule was marked by losses suffered by three national powers and HOAD HEADS BY THREE . Los Angeles (IP) Pancho Gonzales and Lew Hoad head ed for New York in their 100 contest series today with the blond Australian retaining a three-game lead over the vet eran pro tennis campaigner. Gonzales, playing some of his most brilliant tennis , beat Hoad two sets to one Sunday night before a capacity crowd at Pan Pacific Auditorium, leaving young Lew with a 9-6 lead in their series. CRAWFORD FAVORED New York (IP) Welter weight Mickey Crawford is favored at 2-1 to beat Tex Gonzales tonight in their TV ! fight at St. Nicholas arena be cause of his speed. ??y Builders Supply QUALITY BLOCKS Bricks, Flues, Drain Tile 727 W. McAndrews Ph. SP 2-4107 Cal, UCLA Knotted; OSC Trails Closely By SCOTT BAILLIE United Press Sports Writer California and UCLA, who are jointly walking out of the Pacific Coast conference, are head and head again today in the disrupted loop's basket ball race while Southern Cal ifornia and Oregon State trail- Jones New Captain of Cup Squad New York HP) Perry T. Jones, an iron-handed czar of the Harry Hopman school, today assumed the task to day of restoring the U. S. Davis Cup tennis prestige. Jones, a retired business man in his 60's, became the new captain of the U. S. Da vis Cup team Sunday when Billy Talbert was relieved of the job in a sweeping "new deal" announced by United States Lawn Tennis associa tion President Victory Denny. Denny said in the formal announcement that "no re flection was intended on the job done by Talbert," but the United Press learned that the move climaxed a long "tug of war" between western and eastern leaders for the con trol of amateur tennis. It also learned that Talbert, who guided the U. S. fortunes in the Davis Cup challenge rounds from 1954 through 1957, had "hoped and expect ed" to be retained in the po sition. Jones, for many years pres ident of the Southern Calif ornia Tennis association and director of the Pacific South west tournament, headed the committee which favored op en tournaments" which are tournaments in which ama- tures could meet profession als without losing their ama teur status. The proposal was vetoed bythe USLTA. HIGHEST SINCE 1941 Boston IIP) Ted Williams' .388 batting average in 1957 was the highest in the major leagues since 1941 when the Boston Red Sox slugger at tained the peak of his career with a .406 average. Pretty jockeying of positions for next month's annual tourna ment merry-go-round. Sixth-ranked North Caro lina was knocked off by Duke, 91-75, ninth -ranked Bradley lost to seventh-ranked Oklahoma State, 64-52, and nth -ranked Michigan State bowed to Indiana, 82 79. Second-ranked West Vir ginia beat Richmond, 72-60, third - ranked San Francisco downed Fresno State, 71-54, fourth-ranked Kansas State defeated Iowa State, 77-70, lOth-ranked Maryland knock ed off Wake Forest, 74-67, and 12th-ranked Kentucky whipped Mississippi, 96-64, in other games involving the top dozen. 4 Big Reasons WHY YOU SHOULD USE CONCRETE ITRU-MIX CONCRETE it scientifically designed, controlled 1 and mixed. 2TRU-MIX CONCRETE offers maximum convenience on Hi iob. 3 You know what each cubic yard of TRU-MIX CONCRETE 1 will cost. That is an important item any timo but particu larly when the cost of each operation must be closely watched. 4 TRU-MIX CONCRETE makes it possible to obtain uniform 1 strength and appearance in the finished work. SPECIFY and INSIST on TRU-MIX CONCRETE Delivered SP-2-5271 ed.a half game behind them. The Bears dragged the Bruins back into a first place tie Saturday night by with standing a desperate rally to take a 61-58 victory. Southern California, which had knock ed off Cal on Friday night, stayed in business with a 54 49 triumph over cellar-dwelling Washington State. Dons Battle Third-ranked University of San Francisco also had a bat tle on its hands for a while before it could subdue Fresno State, 71-54, in a non-conference game. Oregon defeated Idaho, 82 75, in a PCC game which av enged an earlier loss to the Vandals. Charlie Franklin led the Ducks with 35 joints. College of the Pacific, which has had another bad season, won its second game of the week by downing Ne vada 52-40. Tiger veteran Ken Flaig was high for his mates with 18. Prep Scores SATURDAY BASKETBALL i ly Unitci Press Roseburg 33. North Bend 30 Marshfield 66, Cottage Grove 47 North Salem 44, Springfield 37 Corvallis 55, Albany 41 Baker 39, Mac-Hi 38 Pendleton 47, La Grande 42 The Dalles 75, Prineville 60 Madras 49. Lakeview 47 Klamath Falls 70. Medford 59 Bend 94. Redmond 60 Crater 44, Ashland 42 Ontario 56, Payette 22 Myrtle Point 51, Powers 34 Grant Union 60, Burns 37 Sisters 62, Sherman 48 Clatskanie 56, Knappa 46 Phoenix 52. Brookings 47 Nestucca 58, Newport 52 Clackamas 53, Estacada 50 Washington Ski Victor Timberline Lodge (IP) The University of Washington, represented by the Husky Winter Sports club, won the second annual Portland State Winter carnival ski trophy Sunday. 'Washington had three men in the top six in the two-run slalom, won by Bob Kershaw of the Huskies with a com bined time of 1:07. Reed college of Portland was second and took the Ore gon title. Three Oregon Boxers Capture Championships Portland HP) Oregon fighters won three titles in the annual Journal-Golden Gloves AAU boxing tourna ment here Saturday night. The Oregon champs were Jerry Rebein of Estacada in the flyweight division, Clyde Williams of Portland in the bantamweight division and John Massey of Portland in the heavyweight division. Boxers from Ft. Lewis, Wash., took four titles while Lindy Lindmoser of Vancou ver, B.C., decisioned Paul Kiesling, also of Vancouver, for the light heavyweight title in the most colorful bout. Average life of motor ve hicles before scrapping is dou ble that of 1925 and accumu lated mileage had quadrupled. CONCRETE C9 248 E.McANDREWS RDL Tucson Golf Toga Won By Hebert By HAL WOOD Tucson, Ariz. (IP) The greatest brother act in golf, the Hebert boys from the Ca jun country of Louisiana took it's talents to Texas to day to go on display in the San Antonio Open golf tour nament, starting later this week. It's Lionel" Hebert, the na tional PGA champion and winner of the $15,000 Tucson Open that ended here Sun day, and Jay Hebert, who will be defending champion at San Antonio. Not since the days that the Dutras, Turnesas, Epsinosas and Mangrums were touring has there been such a success ful brother act as the Hebert boys. In the first six weeks of the 1958 swing, Jay has won $7,720. He finished in a tie for fourth here Sunday, collecting $862 and Lionel has collected $4,260, includ ing the $2,000 for first prize in the Tucson event. Closes with Rush Lionel closed with a rush, shooting a final round of 66, four under par, to edge Don January of Eastland, Tex., by two strokes for the title Sun day. He had a 72-hole score of 265 15 under par for the dis tance on the tight, little El Rio Country club course. January, the third - round leader, blew the title when he knocked his tee shot out of bounds on the second hole, lowering his take to $1,500. Third place went to Long John Barnum, a 45-year-old pro from Grand Rapids, Mich., who finished with a 269 score, good for $1200. HOWARD VARSITY WINS Howard grade school var sity downerl Lonp Pine 30 to 20 in a basketball game over the week end. Ken Bradley had 10 points for Howard and Ford eisht for LP. The Piners won the jayvee mix 12 to 10 with Carpenter getting five points. Richard Sokal had four for Howard. I 1 ylviOUN L a a a a a- I COMPLETE SELECTIONS, NO WIDER RANGE OF AND SIZES ANYWHERE. IN FOR A FREE POWER CHECK TODAY! St. Mary's Defeats SH St. Mary's high of Medford turned in its best game of the season yesterday to whip Sacred Heart 48 to 29 In non league cage rivalry at Klam ath Falls. The Crusaders had period leads of 13 to 9, 24 to 15 and 42 to 20. Coach Bill McKibben had his reserves in the tiff most of the last half for St. Mary's. They didn't score a lot but restrained the Trojans with good defense. Jerry Flakus had 13 count ers and Mike King 11 for SM. The Crusaders also claimed a junior varsity decision 39 to 25 with Al Yates putting in 11 and Roger Hout 10. line-ups! 48 St. Mary's Sacred Heart 29 F 11 King Amberg 6 F 7 Miksche Horn 3 C 13 Flakus Debel 5 G 4 Evans Hurley 8 G 2 Kerr Beard 2 Substitutions For St. Mary's, Colver 3, Michael 2, Read 4, Hayes 2. Mansfield; for Sacred Heart, Bramble. Krok 2, Folk 3, Andersen, Wilkinson. MACRO TRANSFERRED Portland (IP) Joe (Smacko) Macko, who played briefly with the Portland Beavers last year, has been transferred from Portland to Fort Worth of the Texas league by the Chicago Cubs. WSC TOPS OREGON Eugene HP) Oregon suffered its second wrestling defeat of the year Saturday when Washington State edged the Webfoots 18-15 before a Dad's Week end crowd. CARBURETOR SAVES GAS BY "JET-ING" Car owners who are wasting noney and not getting proper ga: nileage due to over-rich mixture: will be pleased to learn of Wisconsin inventor who has de veloped a very clever unit that saves gasoline by adding smal; iets of air to automatically iean and "Vacu-mat" improper! idjnsted carburetor mixtures Easily installed on cars, truck: aid tractors. The manufacturers :he Vacu-matic Carburetor Co. 7617-70 W. State, Wauwatosa Wis- are offering: a Vacumatic to anyone who will install it an his car and help introduce il to others. They will gladly send full free particulars if you write them or send your came and ad Iress on a post card today. AUTO MJK Riverside Deluxe -"if DELUXE TUBE-TYPE TIRES JUKkwaHs Whlf wcHfa I Wired frodi Im I Norod Tro di ttZI Ut Prita Sal Pries . list Prica Sot Pa 6.70-15 17.75 14.45 ' 22.75 145 7.10-15 19.95 15.95 25.25 -0.45 7.60-15 21.95 17 .75 27.45 i 2225 6.00-16 I 15 45 12.75 J 19.95 16.25 DELUXE TUBELESS TIRES HckwoH Whtf wolU I Mo-Troda trait In No-Troda Treda tm Size li-Prica SolaPrtca '- U Price $! Pric e0-15 20.45 16.55 I 25.45 20.55 1 . 7.10-15 22.45 17.95 I 27.45 22.25 7.60-15 I 24.45 19.75 ) 29.45 HJ-L SALE! standard batteries 1 6 types Save dollars on a dependable battery equal to national brands priced at up to $15. 12"V WITH OLD BATTERY 13.94 TYPES COME - TEAM TOSKT NABS TOURNEY San Juan, P.R. OP) Pint-sized Bob Toski, a Massa chusetts native now playing out of Miami, could claim the mythical Caribean golf cham pionship today. Toski won the Puerto Rican Open Sunday with a 72-hole score of 288 after winning the Jamican Open at Kingston the pre vious Sunday. Each victory earned him $1,000. LET US DEMONSTRATE the World's Most Useful Vehicles It's good business to own a vehicle that helfis you get more work done every day in the year . . . and can be adapted to serve you in a variety et tough jobs. FORWARD CONTROL 'JEEP' TRUCKS . . . Unequalled combination of ma neuverability and p a y I o a d capacity. UNIVERSAL 'JEEP' Does hundreds of jobs. S2 'JEEP' UTILITY WAGON Dual purpose vehicle for busi ness and family. THE 'JEEP' FAMILY of 4-wheel drive vehicles. Medford Motors Inc. 225 S. RIVERSIDE 117 SOUTH CENTRAL PHONE SP 2-6241 Hours: 9:30 to 5:30 Mondays Til 9 - DAY Super strength, bruise-reslstoef rayon cord body. Long mileage because of mulff row cold-rubber tread. Now, with Words 20-monfh rood hazard guarantee. e Guarantee honored in ajl retail stores, catalog offices. 11145 6.70-15 tube type feJocwf '6 DOWN Winter King 1 44 with your old battery Fit$ these 6-voh cars Plymouth and Dodge '32-55 (without powerflite) Chevrolet "29-54 ' Ford and Mercury '39-55, Nash '50-55 i