Page 8 Friday, Jan. 31, 1941 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER GRIZZLIES TAME TIGERS TWICE T Friday and Saturday! at the mines! Where diamonds spell D-E-A-T-H! GIORGI BRENT ItlNOt MARSHALL “BLACKOUT VIOLENT A T U R E I W esterner with WALTER BRENNAN Asuiand nigii s tiguimg oasket- bau macnine took a tina grip on sec on u p.ace m tne umirivi »oui noop luce over U'.e pa»i wwk wnea tney stopped a raging Meu­ ro ru Tiger on uie oleuioiu court r i nlay night 28-oU ami again on the iocsi junior high tioor luesoay nignt o> a 48-87 count 1'he game at Meoiord went lAto an ovet ame penou wnen, w«m seconds to go, rtaroiu c-awceci tossed a tiem goal that knotted tne score 27-2«. Lee Reynolds uiew mst biood in me overtime with a tout shot and Cnauey Jan- dreau, who led all scorers with 14. put his team in xront wun a bas­ set and was touted a tew seconds later and made nis snot wnicn put Ute game on ice tor me Grtuues. Asiuand led at the end of me mst, second and third quaiteis aim omy twice in me game, wuen luey Sana me tust basxei and brieiiy in tne mi rd period, was .ueuio.u m tne lead. In me xuesday game. Captain VS eaver mane a ioui snot co put the Grizzlies out in front 1-v aim ms ciuo led throughout Uie con­ test with tne exception ox a snoil time in tne Lhnu quarter wnen Medford went ahead 28-27. For a while in the tourtn quarter it. was anybody's ball game with Med­ ford a constant threat but as the final period drew to a close the Grizzlies quickly ran away from their opponents. Both games kept capacity crowds on edge throughout the evening. Blake's Barbarians dropped the Friday prelim 28 to 9 to tne Med­ ford Sophs but gained revenge 25 to 19 here Tuesday night. GLODETROTTERS TRIM SONS 40-32 Handtomc he-man Gary Cooper outwit, Walter Brennan In thia swift. moving, aelionful teene whlrh take» plaee during the unreeling of Samuel Goldwyn’» “The Westerner.” the «weeping apeetaele of the old We»t, The Federal Land Bank of Spo­ Ashland's Southern Oregon Col- kane substantial gains in lege of Education basketball team almost made every department of its and Eastern Oregon College of operations in 1940, according to Education still are tied tor tint Patterson, sectelary-trea­ place in the Oregon Intercollegiate .Warren of the Medford National conference race as a result ot the surer Fann Loan associations. These as­ Sons' week-end barnstorming trip. sociations are stockholders In the Ashland split games with Ore­ bank and make und service land gon College of Education at Mon­ bank loans in Jackson and Josejih- mouth, dropping the Friday night counties. Patterson received re­ f encounter and coming back to port of the bank's condition a last take the Saturday night mix. Monday the SOCE moved to I-a week. As reported by Patterson, the Grande where they went into the bank's in 1940 league lead by stopping the Moun­ included accomplishments a net earning of taineers 6» to 59 but the race was $1.208,500 making the year after ad­ put bac’t into a tie Tuesday night justment of for reserves; the retire­ N ■ - — - ■— — — . I when EOCE emerged victorious ment of $6,129,375 of government 63 to 50. Jan. 21—Gene LaVern Ball and owned stock in the bank and the Gladys Hall Bali, Indians, round sale of $3,346,000 worth of real guniy on mora,s chaige and eacn clays are other economic mineral estate. linen $oO and costs pius a 9V-aay deposits known to exist within the One figure that was less in 1940 jan sentence to be suspended u ' four counties mentiontxi in addi- than in 1939 was the amount of i tion to mapping the areal geology, loans outstanding. At the end of pair text town. Jan. 23- Richard Terry McMul­ the department plans to give spe- the year this total was $100,007,- len, Klamath Fans, and Viggo cial attention to the economic 000 a decrease of $1.271,000 in Larsen, Ashland each lined »10 geology of the area and to an the year, despite the fact that new and costs tor not having PUC li­ analysis of the production possi- loans made ui 1940 amounted to bilities of all economic mineral $4,320,000, or $600.000 more than censes. Jan. 28— Charles Arthur Moore, substances. was loaned in 1939. ----------- •--------- »_ Ashland, $1 and costs for failure During the last three summer1 to stop at highway intersection. field sessions, the Oregon Geolog­ Geoige Graven, Grants Bass, ical Survey did mapping in the 1940 Motorists Came $200 and costs plus 90-day jail Wallowa mountains of northeast­ sentence for driving a car wnile ern Oregon, in the Ochocoe of cen­ From Nearby States drunk and after his operator’s li­ tral Oregon and in the Tiller dis­ Seventy-five percent of the non­ cense had been revoked. This was trict south of Roseburg in south- j resident motor vehicles registered the second such charge against western Oregon respectively. The in Oregon during the year 1940 him within a month. According to work in the Wallowa« was pointed came from the three western law. Graven was subject to a at the possibilities of commercial states. Idaho, Washington and maximum penalty of »1,000 fine production of tungsten and molyb­ California, it was annouced recent- and a year in jail for such an denum. In the Ochocos and the ly by Earl Snell, secretary of offense. eu dnectiy at giving assistance state. Eugene Brooks Hall. Reno. Nev. Tiller district, the work was point- California led the Hat with 70.- Indian who was with Graven, was with quicksilver production. In the 754 cars, while Washington sent fined $15 and costs on a drunken­ fourth season, northwestern Ore­ 20,949 and Idaho contributed ness charge and a 30-day jail sen­ gon has been chosen for attention 4,596 tence be suspended if he lett town. by the department. Total non-resident registration ------------ e------------ for the year was 127,941 vehicles, IRON DEPOSITS OF LOWER Booked on a begging charge in the lowest registration since 1936 COLUMBIA DI E FOR STUDY Chicago, Patrick Murray told the In 1939, the registration totaled Iron deposits of Columbia coun- judge that the reason he wore 149,502 vehicles, but the registra­ ty will be investigated and map­ rubber gloves was to protect him- tion for 1940 is believed to have amounted to not quite half of the ped during the summer season of handled in his day’s work. out-of-state cars actually visiting 1941 by geologists of the state I Many department of geology and min- Germans use potatoes and other Oregon during the year, eral industries, according to Earl farm products to provide 40 per tourists did not bother to register K. Nixon, director. cent of the fuel which drives their their cars at all ,it was pointed Before the season is over, it is motor cars. out. expected that geologists of the department, carrying out recon­ —<> * naissance work as a part of the < I » Oregon Geological Survey, will The World’s News Seer Through i > < cover parts also of Washington, I > < Tillamook and Clatsop counties, he hristian cience onitor » < although the majority of the work An International Daily Neml>dl>er > < this season will be in Columbia < Publiibed by THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY county. Ont, Norway Street. BoUon. M»M»chusrtl> > < For the season of 1942, provided Truthful—Constructive—Unbiate«!—Free from Senaational- > < departmental funds are available iam — Editorial» Are Timely and Inrtructive and Ita Daily ► < through legislative appropriation, Feature», Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make ► < the geologic work started in Co­ th» Monitor an Ideal Newapaper for the Home. lumbia county will be continued > < Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. westward to tht coast in Clatsop ► < Saturday Iaaue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. county, thus completing a geolog­ < > Introductory Offer, 6 laaues 2z Genu. ical cross-section of the Coast < range at this point. Although the Obtainable at: > < iron deposits were surveyed geo­ > < IN CHURCH EDIFICE logically about 20 years ago, new > < infermation now is available and Pioneer Avenue > < some recent exploration has been I > < carried out. wwvvwre'rwweeweww'rr,"« > Besides iron, coal an drefractory ourt Proceedings T BARGAIN DAYS «45C Kiddies a Dime! o Federal Land Bank Shows Heavy Gains Sons, Eons in Tie For First Honors C DRIVE A SAFE CAR! S M The Harlem Globetrotters, world professional basketball champions, defeated Jean Eberhart's Sons of Southern Oregon College of Edu- cation 40to 32 in the SOCE gym here last night. The llnrlenis scored the basket and were never headed, 1 commanding a 20 to 5 lead a few ( minutes before th«* half ended. A sudden splurge by the college brought the score to 24-12 as the half ended. Gene Crites, playing forward for tiie Sons, wan hot when it ’ cam«« to finding the basket and accounted for 12 |M>ints to lead ' his team ill the acoie column Young of the chuinplons took hign honois for the game with 13 points. Tne fail -sized crowd was highly I amused ut the clowning antics oi | the colored players Jake Fisher, sparkplug in th< Sons’ lineup, was out with a (Hick Injury received at lai Grande .Mon day night and was unable to sec acdon last night. TJie Uttle Sons won over Jo« Jvasei's All-Stars in u Jackson; County A AU I vug tn* game, th« ■ preliminary feature The final I score was 37 to 35. Lineup for the main gunie fol- low: 1'0«. liarle in*. MOCK Ixiwery F 2. HudstNi 1 Crites, 12 F 10, Cumberland BaMinan, 8 C 13, Young *. 4 <; G 1, Peyton D'Autrem’t, 2 G ... 6, For« I I Reserves: SOCE Spayde, 2. Mohns, Werner 4 Harlem» Tuck er, 8. Official»;' Parker Hess and Al Simpson, (VW'8 FROM LOCAL HERDS RECEIVE HIGH KATIN«.S Dairy herds of the Rogue Itivri Jersey Cattle club were well rep- resented in the 50-pound list re­ cently published in the Jersey Bulletin. Tests were under the su|>ervision of the American Jer- sey Cattle club testers. Several Ashland dairymen ha