Jacksonville miner. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1932-1935, June 08, 1934, Image 1

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T he J acksonville M iner
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“The Sheet That’s in the Pink”
Volume 3
Jacksonville, Oregon, Friday, June 8, 1934
I
y
Number 23
(MINERS TO MEET ‘“«er NEW DEEP PORT r Hot Dog Jubilee J’VILLE DAY OF
Office as Display CRESCENT CITY
LITHIAN EAGLES
For one week in their lives,
JUBILEE WEEK
at
least, Medfordites and visit­
Arriving in a large, bulky en­
velope Wedneaday afternoon, a IS MINING NEED ors to their city can get ’em
HERE ON SUNDAY section
SANS SPEAKER
while they're hot on every
of an old flag which for
street comer. In fact, the unin­
many years floated over Jackson­
ville was received by The Miner Mine Scout Declares Port formed might even be led to Small Crowd Sees Mine
believe the pioneers, 75 years
Jubilee week reminds us that
for display here.
Would Aid the Mineral ago,
Cleanup, Baseball Game;
were just ending a fast
the age limit should tie raised on
According to short note accom­
Development
of
Inland
and
entered
the
union
between
Interest Up in Historical
curfew.
panying the bit of weathered cloth,
Sections of This Vicinity two halves of a bun.
the flag hung at half-mast earlier
Buildings,
Landmarks
Anyway, one of the finest
Pln-feuthera and lithia water are In the week in respect to Governor
Americanism: Making two grow
collections of hot dog stands,
By THE MINE SCOUT
Governor or no governor, Jack-
where one grew before, so the expected to fly Sunday on the James Holph, who received the
One of the moat Important mat­ wagons, push-carts, autos and ; sonville day of jubilee week,
AAA can pay for ' plowing the Jacksonville diamond when the greutest public accord of any of
Miners meet Gosnell’s Ashland California's governors over the ters to the mining industry in tents ever assembled in Oregon Thursday, saw about a thousand
second one under.
Eagles at 2:30, In their third meet­ week-end. The old colors, first flag southern Oregon and northwest­ is being shovtn in Medford this visitors inspect backyard mines
week Bassos, sopranos and
One-half the world sesma to tx ing of the season. Twice before of Jacksonville, many times has ern California was up for consid­ crooners are hawking their and historic buildings here. Julius
flown
at
half-mast
in
respect
to
the
Ashlunders
have
defeated
the
L. Meier, governor, scheduled to
eration
before
the
United
States
spending most of Its time figuring
wares from every curbstone
out what the other half should do gold washers, but their recent vic­ Jacksonville notables, and local board of engineers for rivers and and threaten to undermine busi­ speak from the old county court­
so it can be mad at 'em when they tories over other nines of the val­ old-timers will recognize the seg­ harbors at the Federal building in ness of the carnival freaks in house platform specially construc­
ley have convinced the Miners fans ment ax part of Old Glory which Medford a week ago. A hearing
ted for the purpose, cancelled his
don't,
will ace a reversal of the score replaced the early-day red petti- was held at which the various in­ town.
date at a late hour Wednesday
•
when Bill Hamnieraley starts on coat banner famed by prose and dustrial interests presented many
Which may be remindful of a evening, resulting in abandonment
"Moat of the trouble that cornea the mound for J’vllle.
poetry.
facts and figures pertaining to the sure bet the early-day pioneer of governors’ day in the old town.
to us is Invited," says Clark Wood
Other segments of the well- reasons why the government passed up. Now if he'd just
Visitors seemed quite content,
The
Miners,
due
to
the
departure
of the Weston l-eader. Clark, you
known flag are in existence, said should build a deepwater harbor fought the Indians with buns however, to crowd around sluice
for
Lakeview
of
Catcher
Swingle,
con-
know, is the chap who is
Mrs. Marne Nelson, who has a aec- at Crescent City. George 8 Bar­ and weiners there would have boxes of several downtown mines,
alantly having difficulties wlth have been casting about for some­ lion from the field of blue.
been one savage army that where special cleanups were made
ton of Medford represented the
one
to
stop
'em
behind
the
plate,
Olin Miller down in Georgia.
---------- -®—
1 mining interests by outlining the traveled on its stomach—writh­ for the guests, and the old Meth­
and
are
dickering
for
a
CCC
player
•
THURSDAY NIGHT MEETS
odist church, the Museum of
vast territory, rich in mineral de­ ing.
We are tod that munitions from Steamboat who is said to be
TO BE RESUMED NEXT
Pass the mustard this way, Southern Oregon, the old Beekman
deposits, to be served by the open-
I
one
of
the
best
ball
smotherers
makers start wars. Yeah, we
WEEK. MEDFORD ARMORY I ing up of a harbor suitable for Buddy.
bank, Native Daughters’ museum
know; just like boxing-glove man­ in this end of the state. Other reg­
and the quilt display drew heavily
deepsea vessels plying between the
ular
players
on
the
lineup
are
ex-
Weekly
wrestling
shows,
which
ufacturers promote all the fights
peeled to tie seen in position Sun­ have been q feature of southern I Pacific and Atlantic seaboards.
of copper ores. A smelter could be of visitors’ attention. The various
•
day,
and
Gosnell
declared
earlier
built when cheaper power is avail­ points of interest were thronged
Transportation
rates
now
avail
­
Oregon
for
some
months
past,
will
A baseball In the hand is worth
in the week, when he defeated the resume their usual Thursday night able prohibit millions of tons of able—as will be soon—and the most of the afternoon.
two in the bushes.
A special jubilee baseball game,
Medford Rogues, his Eagles will spot, said Promoter Mack Lillard raw ores from reaching ready matte from the smelters could be
•
scheduled between the Jacksonville
•ome
over
with
their
talons
fresh
­
transported
to
New
Jersey
for
re­
this
week.
Jubilee
card
was
staged
markets.
For
instance,
take
the
Bometimea one is moved to won­
ly shaqiencd for more Jacksonville Tuesday night, when an outstand­ chrome ores. During the war, due fining, which now is being done Miners and the Medford Rogues,
der whether this so-called silver
blood.
ing lineup of talent performed be­ to lack of ships, large quantities from Selby and Tacoma. One who drew several hundred fans during
lining la all it scams
The nugget knockers, of late, fore the largest gathering of fans of chrome were mined and shipped is at all familiar with the deposits the afternoon, and the day's pro­
from southwest Oregon and north- of base ores can readily see the gram was topped off with a dance
Yea. and then there's the fellow have displayed better form and in many years.
In
the
special
curtain-raiser
west California by rail and by boat wonderful opportunity that is pre­ in the old U. S. hotel building, it-
have
won
several
hotly
contested
who couldn't even get up in the
i
from Crescent City to San Fran- sented for a smelter providing a self one of the main points of in-
games,
and
lost
others
by
narrow
Man-Mountain
Bob
Burns,
Med-
world if he went in for stratos­
murgins. Isist Sunday Medford’s ' ford restaurant owner, met Spec cisco and then loaded on cars'and deep water harbor was available. terest for jubileers.
phering.
Jacksonville’s participation in
Gilmore IJons, who set the locals O'Donnell, freckled movie hero shipped to New York, Had the This, with the immense deposits
the celebration of Oregon’s seven­
of
lime,
running
into
the
hundreds
from
Hollywood,
and
the
two
of
down
0-1
in
a
five-inning
game
re
­
ships
not
been
needed
badly
in
Simile: As gloomy as a carnival
cently, were sent home with a 10-3 them, after a hilarious caricature carrying troops and munitions to of millions of tons, from which ty-fifth birthday anniversary has
during u rain storm.
defeat burning their ears after the of the grappling art, caught Jubi­ Europe, no chrome would have our cement is manufactured, and been chiefly as a historical back­
ground for the Medford program,
Who can remember a few iu-a Miners knocked Pitcher Paul Hess lee Chairman Jerry Genome inside been mined, as foreign sources of manganese, barite, etc., would fill and has offered a fascinating con­
the
requirements
for
ballast
and
the
ring
busy
throwing
the
bull,
so
supply
would
have
supplied
the
formerly
of
their
staff
out
of
sons back when a man like Dil­
they conspired to throw him, to demand. The cost of transport­ provide a cheaper transportation trast to the modernism of other
linger would have been a glorified the box in the seventh inning.
Miners, however, had been held the complete satisfaction of fans. ing chrome from New Caledonia rate from Crescent City than sections of the state during the
hero for evading the law? l*ublic
Ted Thye. Portland, - took two as ballast on wool and wheat-laden would be the case from San Fran­ week’s acitivities.
scoreless
till the sixth, when Hail
sentiment, at least, Is one change
------------•------------
out
of three falls from Pete Bel- vessels from New Zealand and cisco or Portland, due to the sec­
singled,
stole
second
and
traveled
for the better that can be credited
ond
largest
standing
timber
area
to the abandonment of prohibition on home on an overthrow. From c as tro, Sacramento, in the semi- Australia was $3 per ton. No ves­
then on the bars were down--for windup, while Charlie Hansen, sels being available, our govern­ in the United States being ad­
•
And we suppose this Cunadiun the gold diggers- and a hitting Seattle, downed King Kong Cox, ment spent many hundreds of jacent to Crescent City.
spree broke loose that remained Oakland, two out of three falls in thousands of dollars fostering and
Ln event of a war. this nation
on the Folks
woman who gave birth to quin
er. five children- has Mussolini unstemmed Hammersley, for the the fastest and fiercest match to assisting in the mining of "war without doubt would be compelled
Miners, allowed but six hits, while be seen in many moons The Med­ minerals," one of the most im­ to depend on its chrome deposits
By M. E. P.
biting his fingernails.
Hess
and Skinny Wilson surren­ ford armory was a sellout for the portant being chrome.
even moreso than in the World
•
Fred West attempted to
event, and further cards of like
Today, with plenty of ships, war as with more modem destruc­ charge a scribe 50 cents for
Famous I-ast Words: The rain- dered 14 safeties.
The game was featured by two caliber are promised for wrestling chrome is brought in from foreign tive devices, battleships and mer­ half a dozen words of informa­
drops sparkle like diamonds this
home runs, one by Sakraida for fans during next few weeks, Lil­ countries as ballast at low rates. chant marine would have less tion for The Miner this week.
week!
Gilmore, and the other by Garde­ lard said.
However, if we had a deep harbor chance to reach foreign ports as
Earl Saltmarsh from Medford
at Crescent City today we could be now and return with these vital
The guy who believes himself a wine for the Miners. Tommy White
is visiting his esteemed uncle,
three
bingles
tn
a
row
spoiled
his
and
Yakcl
each
clouted
out
three-
busy
mining
chrome
from
this
vast
ores.
Therefore
the
conclusion
is
big shot more often is only half
on the Applegate at pres­
base hits for the Miners with run­ near-record and saved a white­ storehouse The present price of sound that a deepwater harbor is Glenn,
shot.
ent. Between spells of fisin'j,
ners aboard, and Gardewine fea­ washing for the Miners. Tungate, $22.50 fob. Atlantic seaboard a big factor in the nation’s ability
•
Earl usurps the family dog and
Possibly one reason why the tured work at the stick with three pitching for the Miners, was would provide a very good profit to successfully defend itself in trees all the digger squirre's in
nicked heavily in the first five on many of the deposits available. event of a foreign war whether in
NRA hasn't worked out to every- connections in four times.
the neighborhood.
In a special Jacksonville day frames, and Bill Hammersley. reg­
Boats carrying cargoes of lum­ the Orient or Occident.
one's entire satisfaction la because
The Miner at least has an in­
game
Thursday
Hal
Haight's
Med-
ular
gold
digger
hurler,
took
over
ber
would
seek
the
opportunity
to
most people expected the Blue
Considering the matter from the centive to plug onward through
Eagle to do all their work for 'em ford Rogues evened matters with duties for the remainder. Errors procure chrome or other ores des­ interests of the people of this do­ the years. Ray Offenbachcr is
the Miners when they avenged by the losers contributed to the tined for the Atlantic ports to use main. it would break down the
•
as ballast, as lumber, like wool and barriers now existing in high considering a subscription, and
People, people everywhere ready themselves of an early-season de­ top-heavy score.
Sunday's
game
with
Ashland
wheat, is a "top load" on boats. transportation rates both coming says he has been 41 years mak­
feat
here
by
taking
the
gold
dig
­
to do you, and nothing to do.
gers to the tunc of 14-1. Jack will be called at 2:30 sharp on the Thus $3 for one-third the distance in and going out. as well as bring ing four-bits, and by the time
he is 80 he will have a dollar.
Along about time imbibers tear Hughes, moundsman for the local field and the new backstop, from New Caledonia to New York into the well-favored valleys many
Behind a short but austuro set
recently
started,
will
be
in
readi
­
would
be
very
profitable
business.
Rogues,
pitched
a
no-hit,
no-run
thousands of new citizens. The of gray whiskers Fred Clute is
Sweet Adeline and their tonsils to
ness
before
then,
it
was
said.
There
also
are
large
quantities
game
til)
last
of
the
ninth,
when
mild climate which in general is able to recline with ease and
pieces the suspicion arises that
enjoyed here, together with the watch the world go by, for his
beer is flavored with birdseed in­
stead of hops.
large and varied natural products, friends don’t know him. Mr.
would tend to build larger cities Clute says he raised the whisker
and create factories.
The best one this week was
crop for the jubilee.
The opening of trade with
when Senator Hamilton, of the
If ever a friendly word could
China, Japan and India now im­ help a downcast farmer when
News, saw the sign, "feed the kit­
minent through legislation pro­ his hay has been wet for a
ty." in a Medford resort, and went
posed on silver would be facilitated month, then William Fruit, sage
bock to town after a bottle of
J -H ave Eld.MT
T
vjo
>ou
and the wheels of industry would of the Sunnyside at Ruch, can
milk.
J e LLT IbEAMS AMD
AMS- ilV.
ME
start humming again for this sec­ help. Bill has inquired after the
I'M <4O mm A 3>< vi DE
51Y -A m ’ "T vjo
While speaking of the brother­
tion.
welfare of nearly every hay crop
T+I em 3 u $T EvEtJ
MAKE. E i AHT. &ES,
The harbor would make the on the Applegate, he infers, and
hood. we might menUon that Art
IT
FI4AL1U
OUT
markets available anu railroads advises that it is better to cut a
I PI) Powell of the Central Point
and highways would follow as a little and get it in than to try to
American dropped into The Miner
ExACTkY 'R i ^UT
matter of course.
office a few days ago telling about
harvest the whole thing at once.
the close squeak he had the other
"I have waited on my hay lots
CAINE-HARTBAUER
day when a slicker nicked his type
of times, and now it can just
instead of him, for a change.
Miss Helen Caine, daughter of wait on me,” is the droll bit of
Mrs. William Eaton of Jackson­ philosophy set forth this week
The administration should stand
ville, and Simon Hartbauer, son of by an Applegate farmer who is
AAA high with the farmers who
Mrs. J. W. Moorhead of Hazleton. wound up in the jubilee, and has
have received their benefits.
Idaho, were married at the Epis­ foresight enough to know that
copal church in Grants Pass on 75 years don’t roll around every
A nudist camp has its advant­
Wednesday, May 30, by the Rev. day This is not the usual whisk­
ages, after all. Imagine a wife
Davis, priest in charge. Miss Caine ered farmer in a straw hat. but
there complaining that she hasn't!
spent her school days and girlhood a dashing young man in college
a thing to wear.
in Jacksonville and is one of the a few years ago.
most popular young women of the
If ever a young cowboy felt
Too. there is another blessing of
younger set. The groom, Si Hart­ the call of the saddle surging
the Jubilee. For a change, there
bauer, has been with the Jackson­ within him, it is Norman Kubli.
are a few new faces to look at.
ville service station the past two Norman was requested to ride
years, where he has made a host in the pioneer parade, and he
of friends.
has been preparing to comply
$4000 Pocket Found
After a trip to Port Angeles, with that request for some time.
Wash., the young folks will be at Norman has a fine little pony
Lower Squaw Creek
home to their friends at the Julia with the latest saddle and bridle,
Williams place on Third street. besides chaparajos, a small scale
Dave Force of Central Point will
Mrs. Hartbauer will continue her 10-gallon hat and a snappy
remember Oregon's birthday party
position as postoffice clerk, and "let 'em buck" silk scarf to
because that was the time
if you have missed Si at the serv­ match. This miniature cowboy
found the big pocket.
ice station recently it is because has accompanied his dad to Med­
It has been learned that
he is mining on the Johnson prop­ ford to work on the roundup
Force and his son Bob took
erty. Of particular note is the fact committee, and has become a
a $4000 gold pocket on the lower
that here is one young bridegroom good friend of Buddy Regan,
section of Squaw creek on upper
who had purchased a home for his 8-year-old rider here for the ro­
Applegate a few days ago. The
'»ride.
deo from Buffalo. Oklahoma.
two men had been prospecting in
•-----------
----------- •-----------
that vicinity for some time.
When the small tradesman finds
O. O. McIntyre’s first newspaper
himself involved in the maze of his job paid two dollars a week. So
• Robert Lewis has returned to
NRA code, it isn't only the eagle did ours, and we’re still doing
his home here, after completing
that’s blue.—Weston Leader.
nearly that well.—Weston Leader.
his senior year at OAC.
Gold Diggers Down Lions
10-3 Past Sunday; Drop
Game to Medford Thurs.
Slants
S’MATTER POP
•
•
•
----- •-----
By C. M. Payne