QUARTERBACKS PLAN BUS FOR ROSEBURG TILT V arsity A WAI Tin H LtVtSf III tNHWtftt Friday and Saturday! i 1 1 >** < lÄv-sw®« Ashland basketball fans who would like to attend the Roæburg- Ashland game to be played at Rixseburg Feb. 15, are in for a Ashland break if plans of the club Downtown Quarterbacks work out. The organization of businessmen plan to charter a bus to make the trip if enough passengers can be obtained. It will be necessary to have 37 passengers before the bus can be obtained Fare will be $2 50 round trip which is cheaper than one can drive a private car Those taking the bus will return the same night after a "victory din- ner*' following the game Those interested in making the trip are asked to register with Bob Ingle at the Ingle Drug com­ pany. Doni Provost at Provost's Hardware, or with Frank Van­ Dyke at his law office in the Flr«t National bank building. Mighty Mites Whip Roseburg and G. I\ FRANK CRAVEN DONALD CRISP FRANK McHUGH Roy Rogers ROUGH RIDERS’ ROUND-UP” SUN «MON «TUE i GKEAT ACTKESS.. ■ ja » tiery «•rftctly fitti«« het tai««t! Herbert MARSHALL • WED & THUR • BARGAIN DAYS Adults Kiddie« a Dime! 2 - BIG HITS - 2 FIRE!! What Then? - »üb. Will part of the loss be yours f Or will you be able to say “I'm glad now I made Mire I had <4iough fire in­ surance!’’ Have you increas­ ed your fire insurance as you added new furniture and other articles? Better make an inventory—NOW—and if the total exceeds the amount of your fire insurance, tele­ phone us at once! INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS Billings Agency REAL ESTATE and REAL INSURANCE Phone 8781 Friday, Feb. 7, 1941 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Page 8 41 East Mair. Old Man Basketball was kind to Al Simpson's Junior high casa- ba team during the past week and enabled them to add two wins to their season record. The junior Mighty Mites won over Roseburg junior high 28 to 21 at Roseburg Friday to give the local club re­ venge for a previous beating here earlier in the season. Wednesday nig'.it the juniors went on to trounce the Grants Pass Frosh 23 to 22 in an overtime period. Tnis is the second junior win over the Cavekids this year Halftime score favored the Pass boys 11-8. Simpson's reserve team was not so fortunate as the varsity and lost out to the Grants Puse re serves 13 to 9 after being tied 3-3 at the half. Talent Club Joins State Federation (Continued from page 5) ed the Navy Mothers club Wed­ nesday at an ail-day session. • Mrs. Ed Davidson was pleas­ antly surprised Thursday after­ noon when a number of her neigh­ bors gatherd at her home for a farewell party. Those attending were Mrs. Nora Walters, Mrs. J. C. Williams, Mrs. J. Ottenger, Mrs. Spencer Hackler, and Mrs. John Malone. Mrs. Davidson left -Sunday evening for Detroit Mich • Roscoe Perkins of Tule Lake called on friends in Talent Sun­ day. Perkins is a former resident. • Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Carver who . recently sold their restaurant have ' moved to Red House, Nev. • Mrs. John Murphy of Eugene is spending the week at the home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. An­ drew McMahan. • Mr. and Mrs. H. Anderson have moved to Gunter, Calif. • A booster station has been in­ stalled at the local sawmill by I Copco. It proves quite a help in . the light situation, which has been J a source of much complaint the ; last year. • E. E. Wolff and family have moved to Phoenix. • Mrs. Dora Smith has completed cleaning her gladiola bulbs stored in the Butler building and now is packing them and getting them ready for market. She has a fine assortment on hand, 80 different kinds. • Mrs. Clarence Homes of Ash­ land and Mrs. Roy Estes were transacting business in Medford Monday morning. • Walter Enberg and son Jimmy were calling on friends in Eagle Point Monday. • Lloyd Lacy was called to On­ tario, Calif, by the death of his brother last week and returned home Saturday. better • The Frazier ranch, known as the Withrow place, Sam changed hands last week Hamilton has had charge of the property for the past two years. • Henry Kerby of Neil Creek was calling on friends in Talent Tues­ day. • Mr. and Mrs. John Hamilton of Tule Lake visited relatives here Monday. • Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wolford who have been living at the Garle property for the past year have ; rented the house of Mrs. Bernice i Anderson on Wagner creek and will move there soon. • Roy Hill of Dead Indian area was a business caller here Tues­ day. He reports from one to two feet of snow at his place. • Charles Skeeters, local logging contractor, is moving his equip- ment to the Prospect district where he will begin logging op- erations next week. • Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hart made a business trip to Eugene Sunday and returned home Tuesday eve­ ning • Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Cowdrey and children Car) and Shirley and Mrs. Ivah Blackwell of Ashland were Sunday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Parks. • Walter Enberg sold his ranch on Wagner creek to J. Norton of Kansas. Norton rented the proper­ ty to Mr. and Mrs. Neil Tripp and returned to his home, stating that he will return at a later date to take charge. • Robert Adams of San Francisco who is employed by the navy spent the week-end with his mo­ ther, Mr«. Ethel Maxwell and family. Wild Life Federation I In Two-1 Jay Meeting AHS A second two-day meeting of the Oregon Wildlife federation has been called by President W J Smith to meet at Oregon State college Feb. 13 and 14 This sec­ ond general meeting of the feder­ ation was arranged tentatively at the. annual conference late in November. - Aside from considerable organ i¿alion business of the federation itself, items to be taken up in elude a consideration of bills be­ fore the present legislature deal­ ing with wildlife conservation and related matters in this state, says Smith President Smith reports that following the fall conference, when action was taken urging the sale of land around Summer lake for a public shooting ground and re­ fuge. the state land board has ap­ proved such sale Smith is asking that each brunch of the federation have at least one delegate at the February meeting • Court Proceedings Charles Arthur Mre, Centra! Point, failure to stop at highway intersection, $1 and costs George B rear ley Lloyd Jr., Van­ couver, Wash.. $3 and costs foi speeding truck Hugh Forest Jones, Central Point. $10 and costs for lack of PUC license Arthur C. Yeager also was ar­ rested for operating without a PUC license He furnished $20 bail and is cited to ap|>ear Feb. 10 ------------- •— The old-fashioned girl who used to write a letter to Santa Claus now has a daughter who buys what she wants for Christmas at the store and has it put on the old man's charge account. —•------------- Italy officially urges her people to eat more fruit, especially grapes. Even though some of them may be a bit on the sour side. ------------- •------------- - Pure wool is hard to ignite and will burn very slowly, even over an open flame. ------------- • Lafayette is buried under soil taken from Boston's Bunker Hill to his native Fiance ---------- •— Patronize our advertisers PLAYS AT FALLS TONIGHT Ashland high s Grizzlies, with a firm gup on second place in the district tour conference race, will desert the league tonight when they travel to Klamath Falls to meet tile high-flying Pelicans on the Klamath Union high court. A previous game, scheduled for the Ashland maple boards, was camelled ^o enable the Grizzlies to make then northern Invasion. According to Jerry Gastlneau, Grizzly mentor, Klamath Falls is not anxious to make up the can­ celled date so the one game prob­ ably will lx- the only one piayed 1 between tlie two schools this season. The Pelicans are practically a cinch to make the trip to the state Imxkeltiall tournament in Salem as representative of their district because of their wins over laike- view and Bend. Gastlneau probably will take 10 men on the trip, leuving Ashland late this allernoon. Charley Jan- dreau and Bud Provost at for­ wards, Jim Smith at center and Captain Bob Weaver and Chet Fowler at guards will lie the start­ ing five with Bill Green, Don Gi igs- by, Earl Warren. Dale Adams and |M>asibly Bob Dunn will make up the rest of the traveling squad. The remainder of the Grizzly schedule follows: Keb 7 Klamath Kalla there Feb 14 Granta Paas here. Feb 15 Roseburg there. Feb. 1» Medford there, Feb. 21- l^akeview there. Feb 22 Lakeview there Feb. 25 Grants i*aaa there. Feb. 28 Medford here —♦--------- Miss Betty Grace Robbins and Miss Frances Schilling, teachers at Sams Valley, spent the wwk- • Clinton Hartwell of Rogue River was a week-end visitor with Mr and Mrs. Virgil Jackson • STARNES-MANN Miss Margaret Venlta Starnes, daughter of Mr and Mrs. J E Starnes, was united in marriage to Marion S. Mann, son of Mrs. Rose Mann of Astoria, at 2 o'clock Sun­ day aftemisin, in the presence of near relatives and close friends The ceremony was performed at the Methodist parsonage with Dr. G W. Bruce reading the impress­ ive ring service. • »■> Civil Service Exams I Offer Various Jobs The United States civil service commission has announced exam­ inations for the |M>silions listed below Applications will I m * accept­ ed at the commission’s Washing­ ton office until the closing dates specified. Where two dules are given, extra time is allowed tor applications sent from Colorado and states westward, All salai lea are subject to u 31« pel cent le tirement reduction. Marketing iqiecialiat siUons is lequiled Closing limes ate fro 13 and 17, 1941. Junior supervisor tubulating equipment o|>erutois, $i,MM) u yem; junior supei visor. alpnabetk card-punch operator«, $1620 u year Mupervisoi y experience in one of these fields must be shown t .osillg •>..’■ - ll< i i b 13 .10'1 I • 1941. Public health nurse, $2.000 r year; gruduate nurse, general stmt duty, $1.600 a year, Indian ne id service, including Alaska, department of the in tenor. Appn cations will be accepted until fur thee, notice. < 'lo-mlcal engineer (any «pedal •zed brunch), various giadea, with xa.aucs ranging from $2.noo l< $5.600 a year. Completion of col lege study in engineering plus up piopriate experience Is required Applications wilt be rated as re ceivrd until further notice, but qualified pel sons are urged to ap ply at once. Full information as to the re- quirements for these examinations mid application forms may tie ob taincil from the secretary of the board of US civil service examin­ ers at any first- or second-class post office. -------- —. LITHIA 1 A HOME OWNED THEATRE Phone 7 (Ml I Friday, Saturday “MEET THE WILDCAT with Ralph Bellamy and Margaret Lindsay “Trailing Double Trouble” with Ray Corrigan and Terhune AIJM) NEWN Sunday, Monday and Tuesday “THE SEVEN SINNERS” with Marlene Dietrich and John Wayne Wednesday and Thursday DIME NIGHTS Mutine.-« Saturday and Sunday only Three Bulletins Issued For Special (¡roups i Three bulletins that have value to specialized gloups within the state have just have been issued by the Oregon experiment station One is entitled "Preparation of Starter for Cheese, Buttermilk .ii"t Butter," and Is written by G H WUatet "f th<- OSC dairy de­ partment. and F E Price, agri­ cultuial engineer The bulletin de sciiiM-s simple and Inexpensive equipment which may be inatalled in any dairy products plant, by which these necessary cultures may be developed. About 125 milk products plants in Oregon use u total of more than four million pounds of starter a year The other two bulletins are on the control at diseases and peats of nursery stock. One, "The Cause and Control of the Coryneum Blight of Oriental Arhorvitae,” is by J A Milbrath and F P Mc­ Whorter, state plant pathologists The other is a circular of informa­ tion, No. 232, which gives prelim­ inary results of methy! bromide fumigation for satin moth. * The coryneum blight can be controlled successfully by the use o fa spray program developed at the station. The results of the fumigation for satin moth are still incomplete, but apparently a dos­ age has been found which will kill the caterpillars without injury to the host plants, reports the au­ thor, Joe Schuh, assistant ento­ I mologist. DOCTOR’S FORMULA quickly r«Uev«« fiery Itching of ECZEMA It f»rr. Ing«, arms or hamla »re covered with red, waly »zrtna for speedy re­ lief from the terrible itchins burning h »reneiee use |>ow«rfuJly weilhlng Liquid Zemo. Zemo bring» quick relief I mm - sum it contain» 10 »I>eeng valued for helping nature to heal plmplre. acne, eczema, ringworm iymp- Inn« ami »irmlsr »kin irritation« due to external cause, First trial convinceat Real »ever« ca»ea may need Elira Strength Zemo. AJI drugaturea. • WANT ADS • AGATES cut and mounted to or­ der. Agate cutting machine« and supplies. Blue white and brown Zircons. Choice arrow heads wanted. Santo's Agate Shop 125 East Main, Medford. 3-6 PLUMBING — HEATING SHEET METAL Day and Night Nenlrr Anywhere LITHIA PLUMBING and HEATING Ph. 45« I Iles. Ph. 859« DOG LICENSE IS DUE License is $1.00 for males and $1.50 for females. After March 1st a penalty of $1.00 is added. Get your license now and save a dollar. G. R. CARTER, County Clerk L