VÁ* POf** *1kat J/cU A GROUP which nailed « hi the ** Oscar II, Henry Ford'« "peace ship," recently obaorved the 2flth unniveiaury of the niiaudventurr und once again chose a bloody time in history to poae aa humani­ tarian heroes. 111 How ahort the trip from hero to heel han been moat graphically demonstrated by Charles Mnd- iiergh, to whom amall taiya used to look up to until he atarted opening hia mouth. He and Hitler must look elsewhere for applause 1 1 1 The famed Roman warrior who thrust out his cheat during the Ethiopian campaign now has shown his true fighting worth when faced by an enemy »rm«l with more than a deep suntan. 111 Herbert Hoover still wants to feerrvisor of both Junior and sen lor high schools and will form u theme background for the’ music­ al presentation which will include 100 voices and the combined tal­ ents and efforts of the entire pub­ lic schtxil music, art and dramatics classes. The two window panels will be divided into three sections repre­ senting the perio«l of the captivity 1,1 Egypt, institution of the Mo­ saic taw <10 Commandments^, capture of Palestine under com­ mand of Joshua, the rise of David as the King whose lineage places Christ as legal claimant to the thrhne of Israel, the division and fall of Israel as repiesenled by the Prophet Elijah and John the Baptist as a herald to the coming Christ. Rosette in the arch de- picts the nativity. Harriett Hill, music ’supervisor of the Junior and senior high schools, is in charge of the pro­ gram which includes Christmas carols, candlelight processional, choir, chorus anti orchestra num­ bers. The Christmas story will be told in hymn and song by the a cape I la choir, girls' sextet, chorus, boys' quartet and solos by Sally Rice. Marilee Erwin. Bill Willits, Sue Parkinson, Betty Middleton and Betty Wimer. The musical groups will be at­ tired in uniform garb and the en­ tire piogram promises to I m - a most impressive affair entirely in keeping with the Christmas spirit. The public is invited to attend the program as guests of the public schools and gifts of focal and use ful articles to be distributed among needy families by school students will be collected at the door. Pantomime Pictures — Mary. Shirley Cushing, Joseph. Al New- bry; Angels, Margery Newton and Ann Crandall; Shepherds. Frank Carroll. Ray Eager. Robert Broili, Bill Elam. Ned Barraclough and Nathan Gale; Wise men. Norman Christlieb, John Kerns and Bill Black mer. JUNIOR HIGH CHORUS Director—Miss Harriett Hill Soprano — Lilliebelle Haynie, Pearl Hile, Jessamine Pendleton, Shirley Speece, Donna Clark. Vir- i ginia Stevenson, Maxine Fox. The famous kiltie band of Ash­ Marilyn Young. Lyda Davis. Geor­ land post No 14. American le­ gia Taylor. Patricia Bell. Vera gion, will give a Joint concert and Steams, Margaret Hutchinson and dance in Port Orford Saturday Gene Templer. evening and word from the coast Altos — Betty Adams. Betty town Indicates that an outstand­ Clawson, Faith Warnock, Eugene ing event is being planned, with Hance, Glenn Durham. Betty Jane a band from Gold Beach also be­ Anderson, Sharon Schofield. Phyl­ ing invited. lis Hance. Kathryn Young, Mary Commander Herb Moore, mem- Harvey, Gemmy Lee Cooper, Ila tiers of the bagpipe brigade and Bess Warren, Shirley Weiss an«i several city officials will journey Vivian Bostwick. to the southwestern community Tenor—Winfield Roberson. Ray­ for the kilty band's first appear­ mond Peart, Jack Waybrant, Ger­ ance in that section. ald Newton. Edgar McLain, David ; Ring. Neil Holbrook and Jack Cate. BAHS — Emery Wine, Victor Lantis, Harlalee Wilaon, Joe Whit­ Nln- seniors will finish their sett. Rolland Baughman, Owen teacher training work at the Griffith, Fred Wilson. Bill Barker Southern Oregon College of Edu­ and Ben Ricks. cation Dec. ¿0 Acc«Mn|MUii«ts — Delores Erwin They are Frank W. O’Conner, and Roberta Greene. Flora E. Stokoe, Betty E. Thomas and Ruby Velma Turner of Ash­ SENIOR A (APELLA CHOIR Director, Miss Harriett Hill land; Phyllis Ranking of Eugene; Madelyn Jane Beals of Klamath Accompanist, Miss Wilma Froman Falls; Mary Ann Wilkens of lake­ Soprano — Carmen Cary, Doro- side, and Katherine E. Bishop and thry IMLisle. Sue Parkinson, Thel­ Esther McKeown of Portland. ma Morang, Sally Rice, Marilee -------------•------------- Erwin. Betty Wimer, Wilma Owen. EXAMINER COMING Betty Dunn, Jo Curtis, Carolyn An examiner of operators and Rose, Agnes White, Doris Renze- chauffeurs will be in the Ashland nta, Ada Davis, Julia Noble, Al­ city hall from 1 p. m. to ft p. m. leen Tamney and Betty Jo Burns. Friday, Dec. 20. to issue licenses Alto — Betty Middleton, Geral­ anti permits to drive cars. dine Lininger, Vivian Freeman, |---------------- --------------------------------- *1 Vayle Specht, Florence Clark, Le­ ia Griffith, Alyce Harvey, Janet Mrs. Amy Bentley Fullerton and Veda Williams. and Companion Tenor—Earl Wordsworth, Cecil Bishop, Warren Hance, Keith Are Invited to Be Guests of the Haines, Bill Willits, Arthur Kent. Leggett, Charles Jandreau, Southern Oregon Miner Manley Bob Dunn and Bill Cooke. To See Their Choice of Bans—Chet Fowler, Bob Wea­ ver, Bill Cate. Bill Burdlc, Elwood the Following Hedburg, Earl Warren, Ross Wil­ Varsity Theater lard, Bill Alves, Ralph Gillmore. Dick Finnell, Raymond Renzema, Programs: John Bergstrom. Bud Provost and Keith Wine. (Friday and Saturday) ------------- •------------- "YOUTH WILL BE SERVED" MERCURY SINKS HERE "RIDE, TENDERFOOT. Ashland residents, unused to RIDE" sub-freezing temperatures. Tues­ day night experienced 18-degree (Sunday, Monday, Tuesday) readings on their thermometers "SOUTH OF PAGO-PAGO" and saw frost thicken on their • lawns and car tops. Only three Please Call at The Miner Office times since 1880 has the tempera­ for Your Guest Tickets L_______ _______ J ture here dropped as low as aero. Nine SOCE Seniors To Finish Training ASHLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1940 Volume IX PANELS TO SHOW HIGHLIGHTS OF BIBLICAL STORY &ayi.9tl Number 50 HOOP JAMBOREE TO OPEN WINTER SPORTS SEASON ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ GASTINEAU TO Albany's Invading Captains! ALBANY-SOCE ♦ UNVEIL GRIZZLY QUINT TONIGHT GAMES TO BE HEADLINERS ASHLAND HIGH SCHOOL'S 1940 basketball team will make its season debut tonight and tomorrow night, Friday and Sat­ urday, when the Grizzlies meet Hank Neilsen's Bend 1-ava Beats in a preliminary to the Southern Oregon-Albany college tilts on the SOCE floor. The high school game starts at 7:30 o'clock tonight. The last minute drion on the |mrt of Kouthren Oregon College of Education officials has moved the Saturday night SOCE—Albany game to Cen­ tral Point. The tilt between the Ashland high Grizzlies and the Bend laiva Beam, or­ iginally scheduled as a prelim­ inary, will br moved to the Junior high gym beginning at 8 o'clock. games will go on Tonight's _ in the college gym as sched­ uled. Gerry Gastineau, coaching hia first year at Ashland, is not too optimistic about his squad's chances against the Bears Flu has been bothering his entire squad and Alvene Monroe is suf­ fering with a bad ankle However, Gastineau thinks Monroe will be able to play tonight. Gastlneau’s fast-break system of play is new to hia team but the mentor thinks it will work out. Bud Provost. regular last year, looks to be about the best man on the squad so far but the others are rounding into shape nicely. Bend took two games from the Grizzlies last year and has most of its players back, according to information drifting into Ashland. Gastineau plans to start Pro­ vost and either Monroe or Jan­ dreau at the forward spots to­ night with Smith at center and Fowler and Weaver at guards. Others who will be wearing the newly - purchased uniforms are Green. Elam. Richard Ormond. Dunn and Earl Warren. The Bears opened their season Dec. 7 with a 29 to 31 win over Edison high of Portland after only two days of practice. An extra long football schedule made bas­ ketball practice impossible. Neilson has announced hts prob­ able starting lineup as follows: Bill Eby. a veteran of two years and halfback on the champion­ ship football team, and Tom Lal- liberty, one-year letterman, at for­ wards; Bob Douglas, with two years experience at center, and Willard Femean, a football half­ back with no previous hoop ex­ perience, and Johnny Anderson, also a grid halfback with one year varsity basketball experience at guards. Ashland’s firemen Santa's Lit­ tle Helpers, this time of year — yesterday issued a call for addi­ tional discarded toys which can be mended, repaired or refinished and distributed to underprivileged children at Christmas. To date few good toys worth repairing have been brought in to the fire station where a crew of men yesterday started repairs on the articles, and an especial short­ age of wheel toys has been noted. In the part Ashland firemen al­ ways have received good response to their calls for discarde«! play­ things and have been able to pack many stockings with bright, usa­ ble toys. Those working on toy repairs include Joe King. Lawrence Wil­ son, Bert Kindred, John Baldwin and Jim Rightmier. ------------- •------------- JANE FEWEI. Funeral services for Jane Fewel, 86, who died Dec. 8, were held at 2 p. m. Dec. 10 at the J. P. Dodge and Sons chapel with the Rev. H. H. Young officiating Interment was in Ashland cemetery. ------------- •------------- BURTIE JOSEPHINE HOXIE Funeral services for Burtie Jos­ ephine Hoxie, R2, who died Dec. 11, will be held at 2 p m Dec. 14 at the J. P. Dodge and Sons chapel. Interment will take place at Mountain View cemetery. £ 'HET CARDIFF, left, and Don Koch are co-captain* of the Albany «■ollebr basket hail team which will meet Southern Oregon College of Education on the SOCE gym floor tonight, and in Central Point Saturday night. Ashland high face* Bend in tonight's preliminary. YULE VESPER C-C DIRECTORS SERVICES AT VOTE TO PUSH SOCE SUNDAY HIGHWAY PLAN ANNUAL Christmas vesper ser­ vices will be held in the South­ ern Oregon College of Education auditorium starting at 3 30 o'clock Sunday afternoon, Dec. 15 and will present college musical groups in Christmas songs and special num­ bers. The general public is espe­ cially invited to attend the ves­ per. to which no admission charge will "be made. The Treble Clef club. SOCE choir. Double trio and Men's Glee club will participate in the num­ bers, which include Christmas hymns, song of the Holy Night, lullabies, songs of the Christ Child, carols of the Magi, pastoral carols, songs in praise of the Vir­ gin Mary, Hallelujah chorus from "The Messiah" and "Silent Night." Those taking part in the pro­ gram include the following: First Tenor—Wilson Church. Chester Robertson. Warren Foster and Kenneth Thompson Second Tenor — Bob Jensen. Francis Poole and Tom Walker. Baritone- David Barker, Peter Barker, Merle Beagle. Otis Grieves. Duain Monroe and Rich­ ard Schuchard. B om — Bob Bauman. Weldon Sloan, Ted Smith and Walter Win­ termood. First Soprano Alberta Arends, Nyla Brown, Aileen Brown, Kay Bishop, Helen Cox. Martha Gear­ hart, Corinne Harwood, Phy lis Keith, Lucille Le Bow, Martha Hasset Olson. Cherokee Seiler, Flora Stokoe and Evelvn Sum- mers. Second Soprano—Ellen Brown, Betty Dano, Rosemary Dolan, May Belle Dyer, Nancy Firestone. Thelma Messenger, Lorraine Rus­ sell, Borgny Romtvedt, Lucille Scott and Delta Winfry. First Alto—Marie Kerns, Mar­ garet Lininger, Doris Shortridge.. Mildred Thompson, Maxine Tyrell and Norma Jean Wertz Second Alto—Doreen Delisle. Leola Lee, Katherine Sulser and Betty Lee Walters Double Trio—Aileen Brown, Kay Bishop, Corinne Harwood. Mildred Thompson, Marie Kerns and Mar­ garet Lininger. Accompanist» Katherine Gent­ ner and Dorothy Wilder. ------------- •------------- HENRY FERDINAND R1GGERT Funeral services for Henry Ferdinand Rlggert, 56, who died Dec. 4, were held at 2 p. m. Dec. 7 at the J. P. Dodge and Sons chapel. ------------- •------------- ANNIE J. SMITH Funeral services for Annie J. Smith, 83, who died Dec 11. were held at 2 p. m. Dec. I." at the Litwiller Funeral Home. Inter­ ment In Mountain View cemetery. -------------•------------- • Mr and Mrs. Arao Swingle and children of Bremerton arrived here recently for a visit with relative«. ASHLAND'S Chamber of Com­ merce directors yesterday au­ thorized partial payment from chamber funds to local creditors, in connection with efforts to clear the deficiency incurred by the 1940 Fourth of July celebration. Simultaneously, the directorial board voted to accept the offer of John B Rogers producing com­ pany which staged the cavalcade for $25 this amount constituting a portion of the figure requested as reimbursement on assertedly contract bills. This action will ciency matter as nances are concerned The cham­ ber recently raised approximately $40 and made partial payments on obligations and representatives in­ dicated that the balance would be paid as soon as the company's check had been received. The chamber also went on record approving, endorsing and actively supporting the program calling for modernization of ths Pacific highway between Grants Pass and Roseburg and also be­ tween Chehalis and Kelso, Wash. I Frank Hull, manager of the Med­ ford chamber who was a guest of the local board, cited the progress already attained since active work was started in October and report­ ed that this project had received wide-spread endorsement through­ out the northwest. He indicated that if federal funds were to be appropriated, this action was ex­ pected within the next six months and added that "there appears to be little doubt as to the necessity of modernization of these potential bottlenecks in conjunction with rapid movement of troops." Hull urged a favorable local representation at the special meeting called for Friday, Dec. 27, in Portland where groups from three states will meet to map fu­ ture plans. A special railroad car is leaving southern Oregon on Dec. 26 and local reservations may be made through the Chamber of Commerce offices here. ------------- •----------- - Federal Employes Dine Here Thursday Postmaster John H Fuller Thursday was host to members of the Southern Oregon Federal Bus­ iness association at a luncheon in the Lithia hotel, at which time the group elected B. G. Harding, in­ ternal revenue agent of Medford, as president; Otto C. F. Krueger, ranger in charge of PAC adminis­ tration, vice president; T. C. Par­ ker of the national park service, secretary-treasurer; E. P. Cliff, Siskivou National forest supervis­ or of Grants Pass, and B. F. Hay­ den. US Bureau of Reclamation. Klamath Falls, reelected to the executive committee for 1941. i SOUTHERN OREGON COL- ° LEGE OF EDUCATION vars­ ity hoop team will open its 1940 conference season tonight, Dec. 13 and tomorrow, Dec. 14. when it clashes with Don Faber's Albany college quint from Portland. Faber formerly was coach at Ashland high. Ashland high will meet Bend in a preliminary starting at 7:30 o’clock. Half-time and between-game entertainment is being arranged which will include the college and high school pep bands and drill teams. The Ashland Downtown Quarterbacks have prepared a stunt program and several college students also will stage stunts. A joint rally with students of the two schools participating will start at the plaza at 6:30 p. m. and a serpentine through the busi­ ness district will follow Yell lead­ ers and bands of both schools will lead. The Sons, stinging under two defeats handed them by the Uni­ versity of Oregon Rangers, will be gunning for the Albany Bucs while Faber will be anxious to make his Ashland return a vic­ torious one. The SOCE squad will be decked out in new white jockey suits and warmups for the game. Albany will be led by Dan Koch and Chet Cardiff, co-captains and forward and guard respectively, who are playing their last year of college basketball. Cardiff is rated by many as one of the best guards in the state. He is an ex­ cellent long shot with a knack for breaking up the opponents’ of­ fense. Kocli, second high scorer last year, is an excellent one-hand­ ed shot and very fast on breaking around defense. He is a good ball iukwk and first class pass inter- cepter. Pete Leslie, southern Or­ egon boy hailing from Glendale, plays center and is a good swing shot and leads the Albany back- board play. Wayne McGee, forward, is a small but tricky ball handler. Sam Tosti, guard, is the only freshman on the starting five. He is a small, hard-driving speedball and a specialist on defense. Following are the starting line­ ups as announced tentatively: SOCE Poa. Albany Mohns ............. F............... .. Koch Lowery .... F.......... ..... McGee Bassman ......... C................. Leslie Fisher ........... „G................... Tosti DeAutremont ..G..... Cardiff SEEN IN A DAZE COLLIN MOORE locking up his oil station to visit his new son, COLLIN LARRY, at the hospital. GEORGE SHAFER carefully preserving visibility of his bar­ ber shop window when placing Christmas decorations. CLIFF CULMER, back from the middle west, wondering what all the shivering’s about. BILL ALLEN denying that the postoffice force intended to postpone varnishing front doors until the day before Christmas. CLYDE CATON and STEVE ZARKA feeling sheepish, in a frigid sort of way, when they fell through the ice into Sheepy lake. FRANK VAN DYKE enrich­ ing the Medford police fund by $1 as the result of too-leisurely parking. DOM PROVOST Introducing a new technique to timekeeping at a basketball game when he ran the clock without time-out from first tlpoff to half-time.