Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, March 10, 1939, Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
Foursome M ill Fight
In Armory Ring For
Team .Melee .Monday
Mack Lillard has carded the im­
possible for the mam event at
Medford armory next Monday
night when he teamed Pete Bel­
castro, the wild Wop from Weed,
and Danny Savich, the Utah grid
ace, against brothers Tuffy and
Mike Jones from Magazine Moun­
tain, Ark. All four men will be in
the ring at the same time with
Belcastro and Savich taking sides
against the whiskery pair.
Belcastro wired last week that
he could lick the whole Jones clan
if he was given a fair deal and
with Savich as his partner, should
just about be able to do that.
Lillard, not satisfied with this
stellar match alone, also has
matched brother Tony Jones with
Joe Smolinski, the Polish palooka.
for six 10-minute rounds. Tony,
the 212-pound former blacksmith,
has yet to be beaten in the Med­
ford house of cauliflowered ears
but Smolinski is a plenty tough
customer.
NEW DIRECTORS
NAMED FOR C-C
Frank Van Dyke, W. F Knox.
Dr. Walter Redford. Ken Weil and
Tom H. Simpson were reelected to
the board of directors of the Ash­
land Chamber of Commerce early
this week, according to Secretary
Marclnal
Stansbuiy,
and
1'
R
Hardy was elected to replace H.
L. Claycomb.
The board will meet at noon
today, March 10. in the Plaza cafe
to discuss a coming banquet set
for Thursday. March 23, at which
time GOV Charles A
Spiayue will
be principal speaker.
Victim Auto Mishap
Reported Recovering
First Baptist Church
Charles E. Dunham, Pastor
• TONIGHT •
I AND SATURDAY I
SHOPPERS’
WEEK-END
BARGAIN
PRICES
25c
They’re off to the country
. . . making hay and hey-
hey in a great big way!
THE JONES
FAMILY
“DOWN ON THE
FARM
—also—
GENE AUTRY
in
‘PRAIRIE MOON »
SUNDAY-MONDAY
The Thrill Picture
of the Year!
Church school meets at 9:45 a.
m. C. N. Gillmore. superintendent.
I Rev. J. R. Turnbull begins his
'second week of evangelistic ser­
vices. Meetings every night dur­
ing the week except Monday. The
message Sunday morning at 11
o'clock is “Four Kisses,” and in
the evening at 7:30 the theme is
"The
World's
Greatest
Love
Story.”
The Young People's Union will
meet at 6:30 p. m.
We believe a great blessing is
at hand are hoping it will be a
week of spiritual birthdays for
many men and women. Come and
hear the old Gospel story and en­
joy the song service.
----------•-------------
My Neighbor
A can of chicken and a can of
vegetable soup combined makes a
delicious soup.
• • •
Line your clothes basket with oil­
cloth cut to fit basket Fine fab­
rics will not then catch on loose
pieces of cane.
• • •
If the cement floor of your cel­
lar has a rough finish, paint with a
special paint used for this purpose
sold by paint dealers.
If iodine is accidentally dropped
on a linen towel, cover the spot
immediately with dry starch and
the stain will soon disappear.
Print your child’s name inside his
rubbers when he goes to school,
This will make it possible for his
teacher to identify them among the
many rubbers of about the same
size.
-f
A HOME-OWNED THEATRE
Friday, Saturday
“SUBMARINE
MERRIE MELODY
"IDENTIFIED”
Weaver Brothers
and Elviry
Of Mountain Folk
and Their Feuds
Qinmufe
clerk's office of sai.l court in said
county on the 6th day of March,
1939,
Notice is hereby given that,
pursuant to the terina of the said
execution. I will on the Mh day of
April, 1939. at I» <H> o’ckick u tn .
Skeet O'CoiineH's Grizzlies, early at tile front door of the courthouse
this week made their annual all- in the city of Meilford. in Jackson
star opponents' selections Bleking county, Oregon, offer for Stole anil
outstanding players from all op­ will sell ut public auction for email
ponents, the Grizzlies named Mon­ Io Die highest bidder, to satisfy
teith of Medford and limning of said judgment, together with the
Grants Pass ns forwards, Fletcher costs of this sale, subject to re­
of Weed, center, and Rush, Klam­ demption us provided by law. all
ath Falls, and Dully, Grants Puss, of the light, title and interest that
the defendants In said suit, <> <’
as guards.
In the southern Oregon confer­ Boggs (also known as O C Boggs,
ence circle, the Grizzlies favored Jr. and Oliver Carter lioggs. Jr »
Monteith and Lanning as for­ executor of the estate of o <’
wards. Miller of Medford us cen­ Itoggs talso known ns Oliver <’
ter. and Rush and Dully as guards Boggs and Oliver Carter Boggs),
In the district which includes deceased; Ethel W. Boggs, o <’.
Ashland, Medford and Grants Puss Boggs, Jr (also known as (»liver
the local players replaced Rush Carter Boggs, Jr ); D. 8 Boggs
of Klamath Falls with Kresse at anil Edith Boggs, his wife, Jack
guard.
son county, it municipal corpora­
tion; O R Hall and June lss>
Hall, his wife, had on the 23d dav
of May, 1929, or now have, in and
1 to the following described real
property, situated in Jackson
county Oregon, to-wlt:
.Meeting in Medford Wednesday
Beginning at n point on the
night, members of the newly or­ North line of Section 19 Township
ganized Rogue River Sportsmen’s 38 South of Range 1 West of the
club voted to investigate ways and Willamette Meridian in Jackson
means of improving fishing con­
Oregon, which |siint is
ditions In Squaw lake. Fish lake county,
2208 35 feet East of the corner
mid Lake o' the Woods, and three common
to Sections IN anil 19 In
committees were ap|M>int<*d to look Township .'IX South of Range 1
into the problems of each
Objective of the sportsmen's West of the W M , anil Sections
it and 21 in Towihinp 38 South ot
group, as outlined at the meeting, Range
2 West of the W M . thence ,
is to develop fishing conditions in South 28 degrees 51' West X76 03
southern Oregon and to improve
facilities where |M»ssible to offset feet; thence South 59 degrees 05'
West 1 15 17 feet. then. .• South 2
the tendency toward retrenchment degrees 12' West 174 30 feet,
of fishing privileges Clearing of
floating logs, drat ruction of fish thence South 34 degrees 31' West
infection, restocking and other im­ 185.7 feet; thence South 15 de­
provements in the lakes will be grees 32' West 353 12 feet; thence
South 40 degrees 40' West 66 feet;
considered.
thence South 0 degrees 27' West
1124 8 feet to the South line of the
East half of the Northwest quar­
ter of said Section 19. thence East
1217 feet, more or Iras, to the cen­
of said section; thence North
lc per Word per Insertion ter
2640 feet, more or less to the
North quarter comer of said sec­
STALLION FOR SERVICE Reg­ tion. thence West 13165 feet (O
istered Percheron.
Breeder of the point of beginning
Also, the West half of the
better Percherons, M M Eu­
banks. 5 miles north of Medford Northeast quarter, and the South­
at Four Comers on Crater Lake east quarter of the Northeast
highway
1 13p) quarter of Section 19. Township
38 South of Range 1 West of the
Willamette Meridian In Jackson
THE FORD BULLETIN
county. Oregon
Saving and excepting county
We have customers for two
late model coupes 1937 or
roads.
Also, L>ts 1. 2. 3, 4, 5 6. 7. 9.
1938 See us for highest tnule-
in prices!
11. 12. 13. 16. IS, 20. also Ix>ts 14
and 15. except 3 acres off the
SPECIAL
South end thereof; all in the R.sty-
1938 Dodge Sedan with built-
al Orchard Tract Numts-r Two (2)
in trunk, low mileage, looks
In
Jackson county. Oregon, ax
like new. See this one and
numbered, designated and describ­
save $300 00!
ed on the official plat thereof, now
PICKUPS
of record
1933 Ford Vs
$265
Dated this 6th day of March
1936 Ford V-8
1939
$395
SYD I BROWN.
PASSENGER CARS
Sheriff of Jackson County. Oregon
1936 Ford DeLuxe Sedan $425
By Howard Gault. Deputy
1934 Ford DeLuxe Sedan $295
First publication -March 10. 1939
1932 Foni DeLuxe Sedan $225
Ashland Grizzlies
Ashland l nein ployed
Pick All-Opponents
lIMBAirn E*AD A A
in Benefits
Members
of
Ashland
high
»■ÄiVitU I UK v~v In Month of February school's
iNisketlMkll squad, Coach
Jack Storey, employe at the
Jack Robertson ranch near Siski­
you who was crushed when the
truck in which he was riding over­
turned Wednesday afternoon, was
reported to be recovering from in­
juries last night by attendants at
the Community hospital.
OLD TIME DANCE
Mrs. Robertson was driving the
held
An old time dance will be
car at the time of the accident on
in the Ashland Odd Fellows
the south Pacific highway near :
Friday night, March 24,
Siskiyou and. in attempting to
announced today.
avoid a dog on the roadway.
struck a guard rail and overtum-
ed. The pickup truck was bady
damaged.
!
Friday, March 10, ia
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Ashland claimants of state un­
employment compensation bene­
fits received $2,825.62 through op­
eration of the jobless insurance
law during February. the com­
mission's report disclosed
The Medford office, which clears
claims for Jackson and Josephine
counties, accounted for $20.183 of
the state total of $519,964, or 3.8
per cent.
February disbursements exceed­
ed those for January over the
state by 2*-j per cent.
The Portland metropolitan area
dropped from 51 per cent of the
state total to 47.6 per cent.
Marshfield dropped two per cent,
although retaining second place.
Salem was third.
Eye Three
FARMERS GET Sportsmen
Lake Improvements
CREDIT DROP
Southwestern Oregon
farmers
and stockmen had one-tenth of
their interest bill for short term
credit cut off this week as the
Medford Production Credit asso­
ciation announced a reduction of
interest rates from 5 to 41-, per
cent.
The new rate is the result of a
like reduction in the discount rate
of the Federal Intermediate Credit
bank, Bren H. Starcher, secretary­
treasurer of the Medford associa­
tion. explained. Loans by Pro­
duction Credit associations are dis­
counted through the Federal Inter­
mediate Credit bank.
~
Both are
units of the Farm Credit ad min-
istration.
Reduction followed the sale of
debentures of the nation's 12 cre-
dit banks at one of the lowest in­
terest rates ever obtained by a
private securities sale. The deben­
tures are not guaranteed by the
government either as to principal
or interest.
This low rate, said Starcher, re­
flects the soundness of short term
farm paper marketed wholesale
through the credit banks.
The changed rate affects all
business written on or after Feb
24. In 1938 the loan volume of the
Medford association was more
than $700.000.
"This is the lowest rate at
which Production Credit has been
available since the system was
created in 1933.” Starcher said.
“Based upon the present volume
of business, this increased reduc­
tion will result in annual savings
of approximately $800.000 to the
243.000 members of the 535 Pro­
duction Credit associations in the
United States.
“This reduction is in line with
the policy of the Production Cre­
dit system to pass on to its mem­
bers any savings that can be
made The reduction will remain
in effect until changed by another
revision in the discount rate of the
Intermediate Credit
bank,
to
whose rates Production Credit in­
terest is geared.
"These loans are made for agri­
cultural purposes and repayments
are made at the time the member
is best able to pay from the sale
of crops or livestock or other op­
erations financed. Most loans are
made on the so-called budget plan
in which members get a commit­
ment from the association to ad­
vance them sums covering certain
production periods, thus enabling
them to have money when they
need it without having to pay in­
terest on the entire amount of the
loan for the entire season.
“This is the basic principle of
Production Credit: That money is
advanced as needed, and that in­
terest is paid on money only when
it is actually in use.”
The Spokane Bank for Cooper­
atives. another unit of the Farm
Credit system, also announced this
week that its interest rates on
commodity and operating capital
loans will likewise be reduced one-
half of one per cent. Rates on
these loans, like those of Produc­
tion Credit associations, are like­
wise geared to the credit bank's
discount rate.
------------- •-------------
LEAVES FOR DAKOTA
Mrs. Dick Adams left Wednes­
day for Bismarck, N. D., where
she was called by the serious ill­
ness of her mother.
Í
J
to
The
Final
Check
tyilEN you bring
car Io the .loin th
Garage to I»- oli rli.111I4
you may hr «tire thi
every detail 11 III I m ■
tended
to
exactly
|
»(H.lfletl Wl' lint............ .
IMMidnblr and < XI’ Xltlj
repair sen 1er.
*
CLYDE ( ATOS’S
Junction Gara
South Pacific Illghanj
Phone 71-J
• WANT ADS •
LMt publication Man h 81
AT 8:30 EVE
MONDAY NIG
3 ALL-STAR
MAIN EVENT!
1M0
Many Others from $25 Up
CLAYCOMB MOTOR CO.
Ashland
Complete Service Under One Roof
HAMILTON grand piano for sale
style 261 walnut I-oiils XVI
with bench, about 3 years old;
scratched some, but could be re­
finished easily, cost $875; ac­
quired by foreclosure of mort­
gage; a modem style piano .4M NEVER SAW ANYTHING
LIKl LUSTER-FOAM
made by Baldwin and can be
bought for what it would cost
TO MAKI TEITH
to get a cheap instrument. See
SPARKLE
Briggs & Briggs, attorneys (8c)
Life - Auto - Fi
INSURANCE
Monuments and Marks
of Bronze and Granite
At Price* You ( an Ufs
M. T. BURNS
FOR SALE New and used desks,
filing cabinets, swivel chairs and Amazing NEW “Bubble Bath”
safes. Medford Office Equip­ rids teeth of ugly, dull film
ment Co., 32 North Grape street. It'a almost Incredible the way the N EW 1.1»-
Medford.
(48tf) Ufine Tooth 1’ m U'. containing Liutcr I oam
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of an execution in
foreclosure duly issued out of and
under the seal of the circuit court
of the state of Oregon, in and for
the county of Jackson, to me di­
rected and dated on the 6th «lay
of March, 1939. in a certain suit
therein, wherein Occidental Life
Insurance Company, a corporation,
as plaintiff, recovered judgment
against Ethel W. Boggs, one of
the defendants, for the sum of
$5.087.14 with costs and disburse­
ments taxed at $25.50 and the
further sum of $400 00 as attor­
ney’s fees, which judgment was
enrolled and docketed In the
deu-rgvnt. inakiv teeth gU»Ui> ami »;arklc.
Th«un«tant lmu.li ami »all vatouch l.iwtrr-
I'oam <1. urgent. It »urKiw Into a (<«am of
tun, active bubbles. which net» at ‘tain
and d«ay breedmif area» that even «« ut
may not reach. And a» Il swwpsovrr lootl
fcurf.x»« and Into minute ervvioun. your
wl ,le mouth tlngl<w ibhghtfully . . your
teeth lake on uvw polish and luster.
T he regular Mzc tube 1« 2.W Tint your beat
buy 1» tin- big 10« tube containing more
Ilian U pound of thia modern. r’irruitrd
dentifrice Al all drug counters. l.an>l>crt
Phariuacal Co., St. Louin. Mo
TH!
NEW EOIMUIA
LISTtRINE TOOTH PASTE
\\' 'X
i
'
■
...
supercharged with
//✓/✓
LUSTER-FOAM
Next Door tn Post offli
( nil Office 113, Res SOI
Evening Appoint mento
DEPENDABLE SERVICI
DRY PINE
SLABS
$3.75
Per 100 Cu. Ft.
Dump Delivery
Whittle Transfer
f
f / I I ! I I I I I I I t M » » \ \ \\ \ \\
------- ani
Mystery House”
with
Ann Sheridan
Dick Purcell
A picture that is different
instory,
treatment
and
background.
DELECTABLE
DELICIOUS
HOME-MADE
hx
WE WELD EVERYTHING
Sun., Mon., Tues.
SERVICE
DE LUXE”
with
Constance Bennett
FRESH DAILY
AT
VINCENT PRICE
HELEN BRODERICK
CHARLEY Rl (.GEES
MISCHA A1ER
A Riot of Laughs!
Pete's Lunch
EARL D. (PETE) NUTTER
PLOWSHARES
XV'ITH plowing and spring farming activitira going Into
full swing, we are ready to keep your miu'hlnery In
Mhii|>e for efficient, steady work. We have experienced,
farm-wise mechanics and welders ready to repair, repoint,
rebuild and remake parts for any ami all farm implements.
We are headquarters for all ty|M*s of welding, ami we know
our work—which means better satisfaction, greater economy
for you!
Í
OAK STREET GARAGE AND MACHINE SHOP
Lik « tmiitt ambi « <
-----------
97 OAK
SIREET, ASHLAND, OREGON
phone sîj