Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, September 27, 1940, Page 10, Image 10

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    Page 10
Friday, Sept. 27, 1940
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Patterson Plans To
‘Blitz’ Six-Man Lo''?
Coach Leonard (Pat) Patterson
of Jacksonville high school once
■gain is gunning for the Jackson
county six-man football title with
the return of three regulars from
last year's championship team and
17 other players. Gerald Pearce
of the backfield and John Wood­
ward and Cliff McGinty, ends, are
last year's regular members re­
turning.
Six other lettermen of the 1939
squad have answered Patterson's
call and the mentor is looking
nappily forward to another suc­
cessful season. Those veterans who
have returned are Cliff Medley,
and Ed McGinty, backs; Merlon
LeRoy, center; Bill Hyde. Walter
Hueners and Jack Swaryck, ends.
The Redskins have arranged the
fohowing seven-game schedule:
Sept. 27, Phoenix Oct. 4. Talent;
Oct. 11, Gold Hill; Oct. 25. Myrtle
Creek; Nov. 1. Ih-ospect; Nov. 11,
Oakland, and Nov. 25, Eagle Point.
• Mr. and Mrs. Frank Homes of
Yakima, Wash. arrived in Ashland
Tuesday for a visit at the home of
Mrs. C. I. Homes and other rela­
tives and friends.
• Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Anderson
recently returned from a vacation
trip in California.
• WANT ADS •
FOR SALE—New and used desks,
filing cabinets, swivel chairs and
safes. Medlord Office Equip­
ment Co., 32 North Grape street,
Medford.
(48tf)
SOUTHERN OREGON HIGH SCHOOL
CONFEREHCE TO OPEN TONIGHT
WITH ASHLAND'S TIFF AT 'PASS
158,
THE Southern
Oregon
high inches,
sophomore; Citi Ì
school football conference opens Decker, left tackle, 18 6 feet 1
tonight when the Grizzlies of Ash­ inch, 210, sophomore; Bob Dunn, i.
land high invade the Grants Pass right end, 17. 5 feet II inches, 140,
Caveman gridiron at 8 o’clock.
| , Junior; Bill Elam, fullback, 15, 5
Coach Leighton Blake of the feet 3 inches, 126, sophomore; diet
Grizzlies is confident that his team Fowler, right end. 16, 6 feet, 160
will make a good account of pounds, junior; Clyde Garrett,
themselves in spite of the fact right guard. 16, 5 feet 9 inches, 154
that John Bergstrom is definitely pounds. Junior; Keith Haines, left
out with a badly sprained ankle ( tackle, 15, 5 feet 8 inches. 197
Lawrence
and Al Newbry and Martin Herrin pounds, sophomore;
have minor injuries but will start. Hall, left guard. 15, 5 feet 4 inches,
Bud Provost will get the call at; 133 pounds, sophomore; Russell
left end in place of Bergstrom Hawk, center, letterman 1, 16. 6
with the rest of the starting lineup feet, 183 pounds, junior; Martin
shaping up something like this: Herrin, fullback, letterman 1, 16.
Westerberg at left tackle; Ran­ 6 feet. 187 pounds, Junior; Charles
dles. left guard; Hawk, center; Jandreau, left half, letterman 1,
Garrett, right guard; Newbry, 16, 5 feet 8 inches, 130 pounds,
right tackle; Fowler, right end; Junior; Albert Newbry, right tack­
Caton, quarterback; Jandreau. left le, 15, 5 feet 9 inches, 155 pounds.
half; Weaver, right half and Her­ Junior; iaMir Ormond, left guard,
15, 5 feet 8 inches, 160 pounds,
rin, fullback.
A squad roster, showing name, junior; Bud’ Provost, left end. 16.
position, years a letterman, age. 6 feet, 152 pounds. Junior; Ivan
height, weight, and class, follow: Randles, left guard, 18, 5 feet 8
Dale Anderson, right guard, 14, inches, 148 pounds, senior; Don
5 feet 4>? inches, 148 pounds, Warren, quarterback, 17 5 feet 5
sophomore: Bob Autry, right tack­ inches. 120 pounds. Junior; Earl
le, 15, 5 feet 7 inches, 137 pounds, Warren, left half. 17, 5 feet 7 inch­
sophomore; John Bell quarterback. es, 123 pounds, senior; Bob Wea­
16, 5 feet 8 inches, 144 pounds, ver, right half, letterman 1, 17,
junior; John Bergstrom, left end. 5 feet 9 inches, 157 pounds, senior;
16, 5 feeet 11 inches, senior; Bill Dick Westerberg. left tackle, let­
Blackmer, right guard, 16, 5 feet terman 1, 17, 6 feet 1 inch, 196
10 inches, 146, junior; Bill Burdic, pounds, senior; Earl Wordsworth,
right half, 14, 5 feet 6 inches, 120, right half, 15, 5 feet 3 inches, 118
sophomore; liick Finnell,
sophomore; John Cady, center. 18, pounds,
i
5 feet 5 inches, 125, senior; Ken right end, 16. 5 feet 9 inches, 143
Caton, quarterback, 15, 5 feet 9 pounds, Junior.
I
ing. Mrs. H. De Jamett, president,
conducted the meeting and Mrs.
Arthur Pedersen led the devotion­
al«. Those who attended were Mes-
dames Frank Ward. Walter Bray
• Frank Lewis of Los Angeles, and daughter Judy. O. Bemheisel.
gravei truck driver for Parrish Frank Bemheisel. Frank Graves.
Brothers’ Construction company, W. Holmberg, John De Witt, W.
was seriously injured Friday after­ 1 Gran, T. Quamme, H. Clevenger.
noon when his loaded truck was Richard Williams, Nelson Watts
struck by the northbound South­ I and son Gene, Arthur Pedersen
ern Pacific train and carried about and children Sonny and Ruth, and
820 yards along the track. Lewis Harry De Jamett. Following the
suffered broken vertebrae in his business meeting delicious refresh­
neck. He was given emergency ments were served by the hostess­
first aid by Dr Schlappi at the es. Mrs O. Bemheisel and Mrs.
Hilt hospital and then rushed by Frank Bernheisel The next meet­
ambulance to the Yreka General ing. Oct. 3, will be held at the
hospital. He is doing well now. home of Mrs Frank Ward.
The truck was completely wreck­ • Mr. and Mrs. Richard Williams
ed. Mrs. Lewis came from Los visited Tony Mendes in the Yreka
Angeles to be with him when noti­ General hospital Sunday evening.
fied of the accident.
• Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Cobb re­
• Hilt Ladies Aid met Thursday turned from a two weeks vacation
afternoon at the home of Mrs. O. trip in southern California.
Bernheisel with 14 ladies attend- • Mr«. Jack Lindener and her
baby daughter of Yreka went
home from the Hilt hospital
Wednesday.
• Mrs Eldon Bradfield and baby
came home from the Yreka hos­
pital Wednesday evening
• Mr and Mrs W Gran visited
Tony Mendes in Yreka Wednesday
evening.
• Mr and Mrs. Richard Williams
spent Wednesday in Medford.
• Warren Bayliss returned to Se­
attle to resume his studies at the
university.
• HILTS NEWS •
THIS DELICIOUS
CHEESE FOOD
digttiibl» os
milk itflf
NOW PLAYING
Through Saturday
o
Could Noi rorge!
YOUNG,
GILBERT .
SUN DA Y—MONO AY—TU ESD A Y
HENRY FONDA-
THE RETURN OF
4
FRAÏJK JAMES
V
F
f
A
wM
OINI TIIKNIY
JACKIE COOMI \
HENRY HULL
IT TOPS “JESSIE JAMES*
IN ALL THE THRILLS OF
AMERICA'S MOST
LAWLESS ERA!
A XXS CIMTUSr-FOX HCnSM.'
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY
DARGAIN DAYS-15C
LAURELHRRDV
M A UNITED ARTIST RELEASE
plus Roland Young, Constance Bennett in
“TOPPER TAKES A TRIP”
(Held over from last week)
• The Ladies club met Thursday
afternoon at the club house with
Mrs. Harry De Jamett hostess for
the afternoon Others present were
Sesdames Frank Ward, Vernal
ebeker, Fred Haynes. Lloyd Lu-
per, Ben Ollom, Ray Elliott, Frank
Ohlund, Arthur Nelson. Ed Ad­
ams, John Kallvet and Arthur Pe­
dersen. Bridge was enjoyed by
those attending with Mrs El Mott
receiving high prize and Mrs. Kall­
vet, low. Delicious refreshments
were served.
• Miss Florence Mendes, daugh­
ter of Mr. and and Mrs. Antone
Mendes, became the bride of John­
ny Verandes of Hayward in Reno,
Nev., last Tuesday.
They will
make their home in Hayward.
• Mrs. A. Pedersen gave a birth­
day party for her daughter Ruth
Sept. 6. Those present were Don­
na and Ruth Roaecrans, Doris
Wall, Sherry Bradfield, Maurine
and Sally Ryce, Kay Williams,
Donald Lee, Jere Brooks, Rosalie
Parker and Sonny Pedersen There
were favors for all and a lovely
birthday cake and ice cream were
served.
• Mr and Mrs. Jean Hebvard of
Ann Arbor, Mich., who spent sev­
eral days as guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Wade Roop, left Thursday
afternoon enroute home via south­
ern California and New Mexico.
Mrs. Hebvard is a cousin of Mr.
Roop. She Just recently returned
from a visit to her homeland in
Sweden and to the former home of
Mr, Hebvard in Paris, France. Mr.
Hebvard is a professor of archi­
tecture at Ann Arbor. Mrs. Ethel
Florey of Medford was also a
guest at the Roop home.
• Mr. and Mrs. Richard Williams
and xm Roy spent Saturday in
Medford on business and visiting
Mrs. Roy Rushton.
• Raymond Coleman
returned
home Friday after spending three
months playing baseball in the
east, and is spending a week deer
hunting before enrolling for his
studies at Yreka high school.
• Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gil berg
and daughter were Medford visit­
ors Saturday.
• Miss Phyllis Sullivan of Dorris
is staying with Mrs. Elmer Jack-
son and attending high school in
Yreka.
• Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lindener of
Yreka are the proud parents of a
little daughter, Diana Kay, bom
Monday morning at the Hilt hos­
pital.
• Mrs Stella King was in Med­
ford Saturday.
• Miss Jessie Davis of Portland
LEG SPECIALIST!
Above is Balk Estes, clever 1 leg
wrratler, who fiu-en Taro Ito > In
the o|>ener at Medford armory
Monday night.
Others oti the
curd are George Wilson v».
Whitey
Wahl berg and
Bob
Kruse vs. Mike Nazarian.
Miner ‘Seer’ Gives
Nod to 10 Cinches
For Week-End Tiffs
By HARRY CHIPMAN
The old average took an early
season Jump last week-end when
10 football games were picked in
tins column with nine of them
being correct. After one week of
grid contests the average reads
.900. Again this Friday the neck
goes out for 10 more selections
with each one of them being tough
to pick, excepting the Gonzaga-
St. Mary's fracas at San Francis­
co Sunday. Those Bulldogs are
Just too good for anything on their
schedule this season.
Tonight, Leighton Blake takes
his Ashland high Grizzlies to
Grants 1‘ hss where they will open
the league schedule against the
Cavemen. Due to Grizzly grid ex­
hibitions over a past two-year per­
iod the Cavemen look pretty good
but Blake says for the writer to
pick his squad, or else, and he’s a
pretty big guy so it’s Ashland for
a win.
Medford didn’t have anything
but 11 men in uniform and Bill
Bowerman against Weed last Fri­
day night but the combination was
good enough for a win so we take
the Tornado over Corvallis at
Medford tonight
Klamath Falls will retain their
spent a couple of days with Mr.
and Mrs. Norton, enroute home
from San Francisco where she had
been called by the death of her
only sister. Miss Davis is Mr.
Norton’s niece.
• Mr and Mrs William Gran and
son Bill spent Saturday afternoon
and evening in Medford.
• Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kennedy
spent the week-end in Grants
Pass.
• Tony Mendes was taken to the
Yreka General hospital last week
for treatment and underwent an
operation Tuesday morning.
• Mrs Tom Toulouse and chil­
dren, Tom and Caroline, of Mon­
tague were visiting Mrs. Oren Ed­
wards Monday,
• Wayne Baumgartner and Fred
Haynes went to Dunsmuir Satur­
day to play for a dance.
• Mr. and Mrs C. A. Baumgart­
ner were in Yreka Saturday eve­
ning.
• Billy Bemheisel left for Grants
I*asa Sunday to enlist for army
training.
• Ivan Black returned from his
Alaska trip Saturday.
• Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Black and
children were shopping in Medford
Saturday.
A Lot of Noise
KRUSE WILL TRY
HALTING WINS OF
MIKE NAZARIAN
TO BE SURE—COME TO
REED & YOUNG’S
TEXACO SERVICE
Ashland Hotel Bldg. Phone 4501
Double
sah
Stamp« Sundays!
I’hone 75411
Friday, Saturday
Frankie Darro
In
“LAUGHING
AT DANGER99
THEY’RE MU A RED TO
DEATH BUT STILL FULL
OF FIGHT!
“COVERED
WAGON TRAIL"
with
Jack Randall
Sunday, Monday
and Tuesday
--------- «---------
• Dale Williams and Everett
Nance left Monday for I-xm An­
geles where they plan to enter the
Douglas Airplane school.
undefeated status tonight when
they entertain Eugene on the Peli­
can gridiron.
Here's a real tough one: Can
Tex Oliver and his gang of Web­
feet atop the San Diego Marines
tonight at Eugene ? Every system
of football prognostication has
failed to come up fur an answer
so there is nothing left to do but
use our own Judgment. Oregon has
a good team but if the Miner's
linotype operator has any small
type, will he please put the follow­
ing in the tiniest letters: San Die­
go Marines
Oregon State has a push-over
with Idaho at Corvallis Saturday
Michigan comes a long way to
meet California
.. ............... s ~
Hearn at Her-
keiey Sa tu rday but it will bv
worth it. Michigan
As mentioned brfore, Gonzjvga
over St. Mary's at San Francisco
Sunday.
Babe Hoillngberry is praying
for wet weather at Loa Angeles
tomorrow
•
but the weather-man
says he’ll be disappointed no
Southern California will come
through
Stanford will have a field day
against the San Francisco Dona
Saturday The tilt is in San
Francisco.
Those Rose Bowl-bound Wash­
ington Huskies will show Minne­
sota how football should be played
when they tangle at Minneapolis
Saturday.
“THE AWFUL
TRUTH"
with
Cary Grant
Irene Dunne
Wednesday and
Thursday
Everyone 10c
4
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See
STEVEN R.
PHONE 4731
•
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SERVICE
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When you are nerved tasty
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and added to that, we fea­
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EARL D. (PETE) NUTTER
AT 8:30 EVERY
MONDAY NIGHT
3 AIJ^HTAR MAIN EVENTS
Medford Armory
For Reservations
Phone Brown’s, Medford 101
THE BARE FACT IS ..
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A HOME-OWNED THEATRE
L>OB KRUSE. Oswego broccoli
' grower and one of the Pacific
coast's veteran wrestlers. will at­
tempt to put a halt to Mike Naza-
rian's winning when the pair clash
in the top main event at Medford
armor)’ next Monday night, Sept.
30. Both men are past masters al
the wriat lock and each delights
tn creating rough goings-on in the
ring. It took a lot of <x Mixing on
the pni t of 1’ioniot ci Muck I .i.l.ti >1
to get Nazarian to consent to the
bout for the Armenian knows that
Kruse has the best chance of nip­
ping his winning streak where it
hurts worst.
George (Wildcat) Wilson, for­
mer all-American f<»otb<U ace
from the University of Washing­
ton, cornea back to Medford to
face Whitey Wahl berg in the mid­
dle go. Wahibcrg has yet to lose a
match in Medford after a three
weeks campaign, although he got
a draw last Monday. Wilaon will
have a weight and size advantage
but few wrestlers have the apccd
and bag of tricks owned by the
little Swede.
Balk Estes, who made a big hit
last Monday with his clever leg
artistry, meets Taro Ito, the tar-
rsl-Uke Jap. in the opener. Both
are scientific masters of the game
and a thrilling go is expected The
bout goes to the mat at 8:30 p. m.
Pete's Lunch
There are a lot of way« to
do anything.
One Is to
make a lot of nol«e and
waste a lot of energy. Our
way la to make less noise
but get more done. We
don’t
na la taken,
make
either, Every detail
checked carefully.
LITHIA
—Come On, Make
Us Prove It!
TURING
A-ONE DRAFT BEER
5c
p »
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AL BROWER, Proprietor