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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1958)
r Fame Kail Selections Installed New York-aTD-President Ei senhower, a one-time Army fullback, joined gridiron greats of the past and present Tuesday night at the official installation of the nine newest members of college football's Hall of Fame. The nation's Chief Execu tive was presented with the National Football foundation's first "gold medal award" and later addressed members of the foundation and the Hall Of Fame. Named to the 193 Hall of Fame were: the late Charles Barrett of Cornell (1913-1915); the late David C. Campbell of Harvard (1899-1901); Mar shall (Biggie) Goldberg of Pittsburgh (1936-38); the late T.A.D. (Tad) Jones, former coach and star at Yale; Harry Kipke of Michigan (1922-23), who also coached at Missouri, Michigan and Michigan State; Francis L. (Pug) Lund of Minnesota (1932-34; Frank John (Dutch) Schwab of La fayette (1919-22); Harry Stuhldreher, one of Notre Dame's Four Horsemen (1922 1924) and Harry Killinger (Cy) Young of Washington and Lee (1913-16). MedfordTribuni sipawmrs Ducks, Beavers Favored By Gridiron Oddsmakers Ortiz Decisions Dave Charnley London OJPD Young Car los Ortiz said today he'll wait six months before challeng ing for the world lightweight title despite Tuesday night's impressive victory over Brit ish champion Dave Charnley. "I'm not ready yet," ex plained the 22-year-old New Yorker who had given Ameri can ring prestige a needed boost before a sellout crowd of more tharT 10,000 at the final boxing show in Harrin gay Arena. Puerto Rican-born Carlos, now ranked third among con tenders for the 135-pound crown, broke the American bad luck streak with the first U. S. boxing victory on Eng lish soil in four months, stud ded by four U. S. defeats and one draw. It was his 28th win In 30 professional bouts. He lost only once and had a no- decision affair. New York -4UPB- Oddsmak ers today tabbed Louisiana State a six-point favorite over Mississippi for Saturday night's "meeting of the un beaten" that may well decide the Southeastern Conference championship. Both squads sport identical overall records of 6-0 for the Baton Rogue, La., encounter, with LSU winning three SEC games to Mississippi's two. In the featured Big Ten contests, top-ranked Iowa is an eight-point favorite over Michigan at Ann Arbor while Wisconsin is the choice by six over Michigan State in the na tionally televised game at East Lansing, Mich. Army Choice Second ranked Army hurled from the perfect list by virtue of its tie with Pitts burgh last week end, is a 32 point pick over Colgate. Oklahoma, Notre Dame and Southern Methodist hold slight edees in the weekly odds. Oklahoma is seven over Colorado for their Big Eight conference showdown at Boul der. Colo.: Notre Dame is three over Navy at Baltimore, Md. and SMU is a three- point choice over Texas in a Southwest conference clash at Austin, Tex. Three week end games are rated toss-ups. They are Duke vs. Georgia Tech, Georgia vs. Alabama and UCLA vs. Wash ington State. Point spreads for other leading games: SAVE ?500 ON ANY COMPLETE Brake Reline Rivetless Brake Lining Bonded To Your Shoes GUARANTEED for 30,000 iSars Firestone Brake Special! ni9 A 3.50 W Ul W a at at ak UANY CAR Imm Froat WbMla, lnse.ct Ihfag. a CIm mmd Bapmtk had Wheel 3 Impact 4 Cluck mm Ami Brake FlaU. 5 Ae Irak SImm. Car fully Tit rakaa. Finest Equipment, Shop and Best Trained Mechanics Tircstont STORES 214 So. Riverside Ph. SP 2-7119 BOWLING Senior Junior league mem bers rolled for the last time last Saturday to determine averages for the start of loop contention. Gary Williams, 212, and Sharon Lang, 184, had high games while Richard Schroeder, 486, and Judy Ross, 401, rolled high series. Schroeder converted a 3-7-10 split. VICTORY LEAGUE Standings: W Clave Construction 24 Jackson County Federal 19 U.S. Bank 18 Trowbridge tc Flynn 16 Pioneer Club 10 Hearin Lumber 16 Quality Market 14 E. H. Mann 10 L 4 9 10 12 12 12 14 18 18 18 'i 20 Baker Moulding 10 Rogue Sportsman . 91. Vikine Sewine Center -. 8 Hillyer Oil 7!i 20 V3 Results: Clave 4 (Dons Hickson 488) 2125; Baker 0 (Mamie Baker 480) 1986. Jackson Federal 3 (Mane Traut- man 408) 1798: Rogue Sptsmn 1 (Ann Wilson 395) 1752. US Bank 3 (Charlene Pardee 492) 1938; Pioneer Club 1 (Alice Monroe 426) 1910. Trowbnge & Flynn 2 (Editn Dickinson 433 ) 2002: Quality 2 (Helene Culy 470) 2011. Heann 3 (JSva sessions 4U3) 1987; Hillyer 1 (Helen Clark 471) 1931. E. H. Mann Co. 1 (Gertie Blind 439) 1970: Sewing Center 3 (Yvon ne Strobe 424) 2uzu. High game Charlene Pardee 210. High series Pardee 492. WOMEN'S MAJOR LEAGUE Standings: Keglers Pin Ups Buddies Follies Channel Cats Sputniks III Triple Threats W L 31 5 26 10 17 19 13 23 12 24 9 27 Results: Kegiers 4 (S. Daigle 544) 1569: Triple Threats 0 (A. Harris 451) 1290. Pin Ups 3 (H. Clark 490) 1373: Sputniks III 1 (C. Lowd 499) 1358. Channel Cats 3 (L. Learning 528) 1547; Buddies Follies 1 (A. Bohan non 307) 1502. High series S. Daigle 544. L. Learning 526. High game 5. Daigle 211. O. Christianson 200. 19 over Dayton, Boston Col lege 6 over College of Pacific and Boston University 3 over William and Mary. East: Cornell 14 over Co lumbia, Harvard 6 over Penn sylvania; Princeton 6 over Brown, Dartmouth 3 over Yale and Pittsburgh 1 over Syracuse. Midwest: Purdue 7 over Il linois, Minnesota 7 over In diana, Ohio State 6 over Northwestern, Missouri 6 over Nebraska and Kansas State-Kansas even. South: Clemson 8 over Wake Forest, North Carolina 7 over Tennessee, North Car- lolina State 6 over Virginia Tech, Auburn 6 over Florida, Mississippi State 3 over Ken tucky, South Carolina 3 over Maryland. Southwest: Houston 13 over Tulsa, Texas Christian 10 over Baylor and Texas A&M 8 over Arkansas. V Far West: Southern Calif ornia 6 over Stanford, Ore gon 3 over Washington, Ore gon State 1 over California. Winter Angling Rules in Effect On November 1 Portland - Anglers are ad vised by the game commission that Oct. 31 marks the final day of the general summer trout season in Oregon. Be ginning Nov. 1 and continu ing until the spring of 1959, the winter angling regulations will be in effect. Anglers after Nov. 1 will find it necessary to check the winter regulations in the back of the angling synopsis. Win ter regulations begin on page 34. Instead of listing closed waters as in ' the summer rules, the booklet lists only open waters. In zone 1, or the coastal zone, the winter season will extend through Feb. 28, 1959. Rogue Rules Listed In zone 2, the Willamette valley area, and zones 5, 6, and 8, which encompass cen tral and southeastern Oregon, the winter rules will extend through April 24, 1959. The ending dates in zones 7 and 9, northeastern Oregon, vary as to stream, and anglers are urged to consult the sy nopsis for open waters during the winter season. These rules will be found on pages 30 through 34 of the summer rules. Winter bag limits ap ply. Zones 3 and 4 x cover the Rogue and Umpqua drainages and are listed in separate rules in the synopsis. Anglers are urged to consult these rules found on pages 22 through 25 for winter regula tions. Bag limit for most zones for trout, salmon and steel head 12 inches in length or over is two fish per day, four in possession or in seven con secutive days. Punch cards must be used for salmon and steelhead 20 inches or over. Elk Season Will Start Saturday Portland - For some 35,000 rugged and dedicated nimrods the roughest and toughest of all big game hunting will get under way Nov. 1 with the opening of the state-wide gen eral elk season. In the coast range the sea son will extend through Nov. 16, with a bag limit of one bull elk with three points or better in the northern coast and one bull elk with antlers longer than the years in the south coast section. The north coast includes all of Clatsop, Columbia, Lincoln and Ben ton counties and part of Lane and Tillamook counties. Legal bulls in this area must have at least three points two or more inches in length on one ant ler. The south coast includes all of Coos, Curry and Jose phine counties and part of Douglas county. In the Cascades and north eastern Oregon the season will extend through Nov. 25. Bag limit in the Cascade range and in the 16 northern elk man agement units is one bull elk with antlers longer than the ears. In the southern elk man agement units the bag limit has been set at one elk. These southern units include Wheel er, Grizzly, Ochoco, Maury, Northside, Baker, Keating, Lookout Mountain, Murderers Creek, Beulah, Malheur River, and biivies. Special bull elk regulations this year require hunters to tag and possess the antlers with scalp and eyes attached while the carcass is in posses sion in the field, forest, or in transit. This new ruling has been put in effect to halt a few unscrupulous hunters from using old sets of antlers to bring out deliberate illegal cow and calf kills. From all indications hunters can look forward to another good year with elk popula tions on a par with last year. The greatest number .of ani mals will be taken from the elk ranges of eastern Oregon with the Wallowa and Blue mountains the greatest pro ducers. Along the coast, Clatsop in the north will be the hot spot, while Coos and Douglas coun ties will be the main produr ers in the south. Bobo Olson Halts Grant Oakland, Calif. -UPD- Don Grant, who suffered a seventh round technical knockout on Tuesday night at the hands of Carl (Bobo) Olson, was taken to a hospital early today after he complained of difficulty with his breathing. Grant was rushed to High land hospital by ambulance. He was immediately taken into emergency for examination. Oakland, Calif. -(UPD- If Bo bo Olson still has a glass jaw, it will take some other fighter besides Don Grant to test it. The former world middle weight champion used Grant of Los Angeles, as a punching bag Tuesday night while launching his second come back attempt in a lopsided bout that was stopped at 2:33 of the seventh round. At that point, Grants was standing helpless in the cen ter of the ring while Olson showered him" with short left hooks and rights to the head that had the crowd of about 4,000 hollering for surcease, Referee Frankie Carter stepped in between the two men and Olson's second come back officially was launched SCHOOL BUSSES COLLIDE Florence, Miss. -(UPD- Four teen students were injured, but none critically, when three school buses collided near here Tuesday. Investiga tors said one bus struck an other from behind, knocking it into the third vehicle. Calhoun Fights Franz Szuzina Rochester, N.' Y.-(UPD-Brawn meets brawn tonight when Rory Calhoun, lOth-ranked middleweight squares off with squat Franz Szuzina of Bre men, Germany, in a 10-round, nationally-televised fight. Both employ similar styles, boring in constantly to con centrate on heavy body punching. Welter Tilt Confirmed Los Angeles (UPD Some backstage maneuvering ac companied official confirma tion today that welterweight champion Virgil Akins wquld make his first title defense against Don Jordan here Dec. 5. Co-promoter George Par nassus has been insisting all along that Akins and his camp had agreed to take on the winner of the Jordan-Gas par Ortega fight in a bout to be held at Olympic auditor ium. So when Eddie Yawitz, co manager of Akins, in effect refuted the announcement by saying no site had been select ed, Parnassus was surprised and not very enthusiastic. Tuesday, it . was Yawitz who announced Akins was ready to defend his title against Jordan in Los Angeles on Dec. 5. Parnassus, ready to make official announcement of the fight terms today, refused to release advance figures. I never had any dealings with Mr. Yawitz." he insisted, "all my dealings were with Akins' co-manager, Berme Glick-man." FIGHTS Holyoke, Mass. (UPI) Harold Gnmps ISO Prnvirfenm U T pointed Pancho Carmona, 135! New York (10). n A i r'-n a A t i : , i i ? . h f , .7.7, Ut!t,';tffit,Z, A BARREL OF QUALITY IN EVERY BOTTLE! CHEIfBOLET mum 6 Cyl. 1937 to 1954 Models ONLY! REGULAR n,.$(5) $1 18.05 Value un, U WE WILL: We FURNISH: I 55 17 Steam clean engine Install piston rings Install piston pins Grind valves Clean & reface rocker arms Adjust main & connecting rod bearings Clean oil pump Clean oil breather Tune motor A GUARANTEED CHEVROLET MOTOR RECONDITION ING PERFORMED BY MASTER MECHANICS USING GENUINE CHEVR0LET-4ARTS. Piston rings Piston pins Condenser Distributor points All gaskets valve, head and pan 5 quarts oil mum 9th and Bartlett Sts. Medford $778 Per Month On Approved Credit o Fix Your Car Now and Fix Us Later! WHET Phone SP 2-6115 Today, more than ever, buying milder Old Quaker really makes the most sense... because it gives you everything you ever wanted in a whiskey. fe a If M IPoldhI fgUAKERl ffaoUMorl fir OLD I mreTllrBOiiDRnN Kl tl4M,,L: JIM j OVER 12,000,000 CASES SOLD! STRAIGHT I0URB0N WHISKEY 84 PIOOF OLD QUAKE! DIST. CO, lAWtEKEIOK. INI. Gram Rail Rale Reduction Urged Salem-dTD-Oregon Agricul ture Director Robert J. Stew ard today urged North Pacific Coast Freight Bureau and Pa cific Southcoast Freight Bu reau to reduce rail rates on grain and grain products from Oregon, Washington and northern Idaho to destinations in California. His request supported an earlier one made by the Paci fic Northwest Grain and Grain Products Association. Steward said his request was made in behalf "of Oregon wheat growers, millers and the labor effected as well as for the state and Pacific Northwest Agriculture as a whole. Kilkenny Urged as iled Stales Judge Pendleton-flJPD-Members of the Bar Association of Umatilla- and Morrow counties, representing the Sixth Judi cial District of Oregon, Tues day night recommended the appointment of John F. Kil kenny, 57, Pendleton attor ney, as United States Judge of the Oregon District to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Judge Claude C. McColloch in Portland. Kilkenny is a past president of the Oregon State Bar, past member of the Board of Bar Governors and now heads the Pendleton .law firm of Kil kenny, Fabre and John H. Kottkamp. I MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Ore., Wednesday, October . 1958 COMPLETE AIRLIFT Amman, Jordan -OJPD-Roy-al Air Force transports today completed the airlift evacua tion of British troops from Jordan. The sea withdrawal was expected to be completed in another two weeks. TAX-PAYING EASY Fitchburg, Mass. - (UPD -Mayor Hedley Bray is mak ing it easy for the tax money to roll in. 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