VOL. XI Civilian Defense, Commerce Office To Join Forces Secretary's Office Will A nn I n I Supervisor in Currylnx on Work Definite plan» have noi been completed fur the new civilian de­ ft nae act-up in Ashland, but suffi­ cient prog i ex» ha» been made by the new xupervlxor, Elmer Hiegel, to indicate the «cope of woik to be cal ried on. One alvp already taken ha> been Joining with the Ashland chamber of commerce In which the accretary'a office will aaalat in book woi k and other routine mat­ ter«. thia cooperation on the pai t ot the chamber la expected to make the civilian defense progi a mine effective thiough the con­ venience of the xecretary'x office and the fact that information may be obtained there at any time dui Ing office houra. Information and record* of the Civilian defense' council will be on file in the cham­ ber of commerce office, according to Allie I'attrraon, acting wen- tury, who will have charge of the work Another feature of chamber of commerce service which ha» tn _ authorised by the board of dire«, tor* and which Mr« Patterson will Inaugurate Immediately ia a charing house for dispensing in­ formation relative to business and the war. Aa much. Informative matter aa can be accumulated will be kept on file and buaineM prob­ lems affected by war measures will ire answered by the secretary wherever possible Those not com­ ing within the local scope will be referred to •’Information Please." radio program commanding ser­ vices of experts in the various branches of federal government In thia connection, it might be added that the chamber of com­ merce contemplates sending Mrs l*atteraon to the Western Institute of Commercial and Trade Execu­ tives to be held at latke Arrow­ head. Calif The inatitule will open Sunday, Aug 2 and continue to Aug 7. inclusive Sponsors of the school are Western Commercial Secretaries' association. Western Trade Association Executives, the Chamber of Commerce of the ti­ nned Slates, and the University of Southern California Speakers already lined up for the inatitute who will lecture and hold open foium on subjects to be selected Just prior to the first of August include Eric A. Johnston, preM- dent of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, Ralph Brad­ ford. secretary of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, and Tom Wolfe, president Western Air Lines. Late assignment of subjects will be made to insure their timeliness Use of Forested Areas Restricted Users of forested areas, either tegular or prospective, are remind­ ed that there are restrictions gov­ erning the forests and befoie en­ tering any timbered section it is advisable to get all necessary In­ formation relative to boundaries, camping privileges, and equipment to carry and other matters. Curtailed us«« of the forests has been made necessary due to con­ tingencies arising from the war So many men have gone into the service and with the withdrawal of all CCC units forest protection work is greatly hamfiered. Faced with these conditions both the state forestry department and th< national forest service found it advisable to limit use of the for- calx The' order became effective as of July 8. In thia section, certain areas of the Rogue forest have been closed Users of these areas must hav<- permits based on definite buxine» necessity This does not mean that vacationists and others will be shut out of their favorite haunts so long as these haunts are situ­ ated along regularly traveled high ways, and strict observance is given regulations Since regulations, boundaries etc., are so numerous, It la con­ sidered advisable for prospective forest users to acquire necessary Information, which is available at the office of T J. Norby, fire warden, at the chamber of com­ merce rot>ma in Ashland. Norby suggests that a visit to his office will save time in the long run and possibly prevent embarrass­ ment. ----- —<------- Gordon Tripp to Join Father in Logging Business Gordon Tripp, for the past iwu years instructor in instiumentai music in the Ashland scnooi sys­ tem and currently director of me Asnland Municipal band, has Handed in his i eslgnation.. to the scnooi board. He nas decided to enter business witn his lather, prominent Eugene logging con­ tractor and ex|>ecla to enter upon hi» new duties at the conclusion of the »uniinar band concerts Ine eider Tripp paid Ashland a visit over the ]>ast week-end when anangementa were made for his son's change. 'ine Tripp logging concern con­ ducts extensive logging operations in tne Euene area Aside trorn log- ung equipment, the company mu its own road building machinery to construct roads into units oi Umber where operations aie car­ ried on. Incidentally, the father resided in and near Ashland many years ago. At that time he was engaged in cruising most of the timber in the Dead Indian area. He related !• IK PER ON 1’1« Mi II AM The '•Information Please" hour, that he walked over the hills from which was so successful last year his work to Ashland on numerous at Eugene, is the successor to the occasions. dauly round table used at past conferences A group of represen­ tative secretaries will be quizzed by the conductor, the questions having been submitted by mem­ The winner of the ma.n event bers of the student body. Among wrestling match at Medford ar­ those assigned to the quizz group mory next Monday night has been la Dean Pieper, former Ashland virtually assured of a chance to secretary now serving in the same meet the original French Angel capacity with the Redding cham­ one week from Monday night, ac­ ber of commerce. cording to an announcement b> Emphasis this year will be gi­ Promoter Mack Lillard early this ven to war-time problems involv­ week. Lillard »aid he was practi­ ing the stimulating of production, cally positive of having the famous sub-contracting, housing and en­ Angel for July 20. Lillard said tertainment of service men and earlier that the Swedish Angel defense workers, preparations for would appear but last Monday an the post war period, etc. with the original French Ange), With conditions changing al­ nounced that he was negotiating most dally, the board of directors with the original French Angel. believe the secretary should be up Just who will clash in the top to the minute on current events spot Monday night for the right and feel that money spent in send­ to face the sensational French­ ing Mrs. Patterson to I-ake Arrow­ man could not be learned today head will be wisely invested. but IJllard has promised to have -----------------e---------------- three outstanuing bouts Monday ------------- >------------- ------- •------- Monday’s Winner Meet French Angel Anglers Urged to Report Fish Caught Anglers again are urged to re­ report the results of each of their fishing trips to the game commis­ sion on the special orange colored catch record cards furnished for this purpose and which can be se­ cured from all fishing resorts, li­ cense dealers and Htate police. The game department is partic­ ularly anxious to have as com­ plete information as possible on this year’s fishing season and the cooperation of all sportsmen is needed. The cards are self-address­ ed and stamped and require no signature so that it is only neces­ sary for the angler to indicate in the spaces provided the num­ ber of fish caught, species, loca­ tion and other pertinent informa­ tion. The data so acquired will help determine where present fish planting policies of the commis­ sion are successful and where changes should be made for the future. ------------- ---------------- • G. S. Butler departed Thursday morning for Brookings, Oregon, where he will enjoy a vacation for three weeks. He was accompanied Number 28 ASHLAND OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1942 HERE FROM WASHINGTON Barnard D. Joy of Washington, D. C. is spending the week in Ashland with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Joy, and other rel­ atives. Mr. Joy is with the depart­ ment of agriculture and has been instructor in a short course at Pullman, going from there to Cor­ vallis where he worked in the 4-H club office with H. C. Seymour for a few days. He will go to Berke­ ley for conferences at the Univer­ sity of California from here. A NON IN BORN Thomas Gratton Parker is the name given to the 8 pound 4 ounce son born to Dr. and Mrs. Charles M. Guilbert Friday, July 3 The young man was bom in Portland The Guilberts reside in Coquille to which point they went at the conclusion of Dr. Guilbert s pas­ torate of Trinity Episcopal church in this city. ------------- •------------- ADDRESSES LUNCHEON CLUB Mrs. A. M. Storch of Long Beach, Calif, was the guest speak­ er at the regular luncheon meet­ ing of the Rotary club at the I •- mm uuici hub HUUII, thia hotel this noon. XK1IB. Mrs. OLUrvIi Storch is visiting for a time with her by his nurse, Mrs. Katie Scroggins. sister, Mrs. Stella Case Wagner. | More Teachers Named for Posts At Ashland High New Cartoon Sells War Bonds Civic Club House Favored by USO Ashland's Civic club hour« ap­ pears to be slated for USO head­ quarters for the duration of the war. Thia fact wa» made evident this week through a letter re­ ceived by Dr. Ralph E. Poston, president of the chamber of com­ merce, from west coast headquar ter» of the organization in San Francisco. Poston had intervened in behalf of the club house and his presen­ tation was such that the district authorities assured him of their interest and that definite reply would be forthcoming shortly. It is announced that equipment already has been ordered for the ciub house grounds, including croquet sets, badminton and other lawn games, This would seem to assure definite selection of the building, as well as the officials’ ‘tatement that USO diteet'-rs will be named shortly. This is taken to mean that Mrs. Penny Fon­ taine and Mrs. Helen Small of Medford will be in charge. Officials of the USO who have visited Ashland and inspected the Civic club house have been favor­ ably impressed with its appoint­ ments and its location virtually in the city park. Expenditures for equipment will be light, inasmuch as the building is equipped with facilities for the type of enter­ taining required. In most instan­ ces additional pieces are all that is needed. Junior Hostesses To Swing Into Action Sunday With Soldier Party Ashland will break into the bus­ iness of entertaining soldiers Sun­ day when the Junior Hostess League will make its debut with a party for 50 of the boys from Camp White. A program embracing a swim party at Twin Plunges, treasure hunt through Lithia park, supper in the park followed by dancing at Twin Plunges, is designed to keep the young men entertained between the houra ot 2 p. m. and II p. m. Accompanying the soldiers will be three officers, while the two USO directors, designated for the Ashland center, Mrs. Fenny Fon­ taine and Mrs. Helen Small, will be on hand to advise and assist the young women in their first effort as USO hostesses Funds for the swim party have been provided through rubber sales. The Plunges management has made a special rate for the soldiers on this occasion and is asking for assistance in providing swim suits for the boys. It is sug­ gested that anyone having a suit or trunks will be aiding in the program by loaning them for this party. The Junior Hostess League is providing food for the supper in the park. Plans for the entertainment were laid in a meeting at the home of Miss Marian Ady Tuesday eve­ ning. Twenty girls were present as were members of the USO council including Mrs. Ralph Me Culloch, Mrs John Broady, Mrs Ha! McNair, Mrs. C. W. Fortmil­ ler, Miss D. Virginia Hales. Miss Dorothy Chappel, Mrs. Earl Lee- ver, all of Ashland and Mrs. Pen- ny Fontaine from Medford. Mrs Fontaine gave a talk on USO plans and helped the girls in ar­ ranging their program. Now .that Ashland is launched on the ‘program of sod lie r enter- tainmeqt, it seems pertinent to re­ print a'letter received by USO coast headquarters from Pvt. Henry L. Ross, now on foreign 1 service with an infantry division ; of the United States army. He; write»: I “Enclosed please find my check for one dollar for my contribution to your worthy organization. "I am now in foreign service and we have a USO in the neigh­ boring town. It is by far the nic­ est building in town. I believe that the USO fills a more needed spot in foreign service than it does at home due to the armed forces be­ ing in strange lands with strange customs and habits. If a soldier or sailor in the States ■wishes to go to a show or to eat, etc., he can go almost any place and be sure of the best quality. However, here and in most foreign bases one has to be "ery careful in all his ac- tiona, So the USO is the place where he can relax and feel at home. "Thanks to your splendid organ­ ization both in the States and here for their splendid work.” The Unconquered People . . Imagine reading the following mothers baked. Life was not so easy after the government announcement in your German conquerors came. The men Southern Oregon Miner: had to do what the rulers ordered. “All men of Tai ent have been Limits were set on worship in the shot. The women have been church and on schooling for the deported to a concentration children. The women didn't have camp and the children sent to such good things or so much to appropriate centers of educa­ fix for meals. But the people lived tion. All buildings of the vil­ on, they worked, they loved, they lage were leveled to the dreamed—oppression had been up­ ground and the name of the on them in the past, but "Wilson village was immediately h I hi I- street" seemed a reminder that to Ished.’" a people of unconquered spirit, freedom at last returns. Those are the words of an of­ Then two men fatally wounded ficial Nazi statement issued re­ Reinhard Heydrich who, as Nazi I cently except that the town was "protector” Czechoslovakia, of named Lidice—a quiet little com- earned the title of "hangman.'' munity of Czechoslovakia near That happened on a highway Prague. which doesn't even go through Li­ In Lidice (pronounced Leed- dice. The Lidice people told the eet-say 1 men and women lived Nazi secret police that they didn't where their ancestors had lived for know anything about the two more than 600 years. A Lidice son men. brought his bride to his parents' But the Gestapo agents learned home; his children were born in that Lidice folk still dreamed of the same room where his grand­ freedom. They claimed they found father first saw light. Above the a radio,forbidden by German con­ roofs of the town rose the spires querors. arms and munitions. Sev­ of St. Margaret's church, a sym­ eral of the Lidice young men had bol of faith since the church’s escaped to join United Nations building in 1736. forces fighting the Germans. And In Lidice, a farmer with earth the Nazis follow their policy of sticking to his boots greeted the bloody vengeance a policy which coal-dusty miner who as a boy has meant the murder, in retalia­ sat beside «him in school. On a tion for the death of Heydrich, ot warm day the tapping of the shoe more than 700 innocent men and repairman sounded through an women So when you read or hear the open door like a faint echo of the blacksmith's hammer. A store name of Lidice imagine what it mean if Talent were keeper going to the tailor shop would paused on Wilson street named crushed to the earth, its name for an American president— scratched from all records, the to gossip with a man carv­ bodies of all its men dumped into ing wood before his front door. a common grave, their widows Children laughed k^iiiiuirn lau^ucu emu and piajcu played vt or imprisoned, the doubly-orphaned were drawn to kitchens by the children in the hands of the venge­ sweet scents of the cakes their, ful and merciless foreigners. Vacancies Due to Resignations Being Filled, Norby States Three more new teachers were elected to the faculty of Ashland high school this week, according to Theo J. Norby, city superin- tendent. Replacing Miss Cornelia Hulst, resigned, the board has elected Miss Mary Jean Hendricks to teach high school English. Miss Hendricks received her B. A. and masters degrees from the Univer­ sity of Nebraska, attended sum­ mer school at University of Calif­ ornia and now is at Willamette university to get her Oregon cer­ tification. She has taught at Wa­ terloo and Wahoo, Nebraska. Leonard Warren, SOCE and Asnland high graduate, who has been teacniug at Jacksonville, has ueen elected to teach physical edu­ cation at Ashland junior high scnooi, replacing Al Simpson wno was elevated to the position of football coach and science teacher at the senior high school, succeed­ ing frank O'Neil, now with the navy. Alexander Boyer, graduate of State Teachers College, St. Cloud, Minn., has been retained as in­ structor in industrial arts at the high school. He has done gradu­ ate work at Oregon State college; taught in elementary schools in — —— - - — Idano and was instructor in in­ dustrial arts at McGill, Nev. high school and the same course at Although given small chance for Petersburg, Alaska. He is a mar­ approval, the city council Tuesday ried man and has three children. Latest resignation from the lo­ night authorized Mayor Thornton S. Wiley to file application with cal high school faculty is Miss the Federal Works Agency for Ruth Woods, language teacher. funds with which to construct an Miss Woods has accepted a anu­ addition to the Community hos­ lar position on the Medford high pital. It is proposed that the city school faculty. During her incum­ submit a bond proposal in the bency here she was active in sum of $35,000 as a local dona- dramatics, coaching most of the tion toward the hospital project, high school plays. She is the third with the FWA to be asked to teacher to resign and the board is considering applications to fill donate the balance. City Attorney Frank Van Dyke the vancancies. expressed the opinion that the Monday, July 13, is the date proposal has little chance of rec­ ' scheduled for starting instruction ognition He pointed out that Med­ , in airplane sheet metal work at ford, directly in the cantonment the high school. An experienced area, with a crowded hospital, had instructor in the person of Harold been placed on the deferred list. Van Hoosen has been chosen for In cases where hospital assistance this course which is designed to has been given by the FWA al­ give patriotic citizens training in lowance has been made for wood­ work that may prove beneficial en structures, suggesting that the in the war effort. Van Hoosen has policy of the agency is not to been teaching this craft in the provide funds for other than tem­ Portland schools for 16 years and porary additions. is credited with one year’s exper­ K. P. Nims, manager of the ience at the Puget Sound navy Community hospital, stated that yard and 14 years practical sheet an increase of from 40 to 60 per­ metal experience in Portland cent has been experienced in re­ plants. He is married and with cent months and that the hospital his wife and three children will is virtually filled all the time, ’ reside in Ashland for the duration with the demand growing for pri­ of the course. vate rooms. Citizens wishing to enroll in An estimated $97,372.29 will be required for building and equip­ this coruse have been advised to ping the hospital addition. These apply at the high school where figures are based on plans drawn Mr. Van Hoosen will interview by William Lang, former Ashland them between the hours of 8 a. m. architect now living at Medford, and 12, 1 to 5 p. m. and from 7 and include the following items: to 9 p. m. today (Thursday). Construction cost, $59,787.18; hos­ pital equipment, $25,000; kitchen THIS AND THAT equipment, $3.644; contingencies, (By Old Timer) $5,040.70; legal administration, To the Editor: $600, and engineer, architect and Some of the "travel expense” other costs, $3.89021. Some allotted the city solons could be items, such as plumbing and heat­ utilized to good advantage by an ing, are estimated on tentative official inspection tour of the city. present costs and would have to We venture the opinion that such be adjusted to current prices. a tour would prove an eye bpener and result in measures being ta- ken for the betterment of the community. Council Applies For Hospital Fund Craters Split Series With S. F. Draymen e 1 t 1 Hitler must yearn occasionally for the good old days when every­ thing came easy . t t t Rumanian casualties in the first year of war are put at 157,000. A sorry reward for tagging along with Adolph. t f t The shell project at the city park has, in the language _ _ of the late Grover Cleveland, fallen into innocuous desuetude. ---------•-------- CHAMBER TO RESUME FORUM MEETINGS SOON Arrangements are under way to resume the chamber of com- merce forums and plans announced by Dr. Ralph E. Poston, chamber president, call for one of these meetings later in the month.. De­ finite arrangements had not been been concluded this morning but an effort is being made to provide an interesting program. John — P ~ Daugherty is chairman of the forum committee and Dr. | Waiter — — - ■ is forum chair-1 Redford man. f Speaking of cherries : At a na- tional defense pie party held at Buhl, Idaho, 18 cherry pies were auctioned at prices ranging from $18.75 to $3.000. Purchasers, how­ ever, received more than just pies. Each was given war savings bonds for the amount of his bid. < < » No one has yet attempted to look up McArthur's politics and advance him as presidential tim- ber. The Medford Craters split even with the Nangano Drayage base­ ball team of San Francisco at the Craters' park over the week-end. Medford took the Staurday affair 6 to 5 but Sunday afternoon the bay city club showed its strength by trouncing Dutch Lieber's out­ fit 11 to 5. Nanango was a last-minute substitute for the Owl Drug team who found that bus connections would not permit them to arrive back in San Francisco early enough for work Monday morning. The second half of the Oregon- California league gets under way Saturday night and Sunday after­ noon with the Craters entertain­ ing Klamath Pelicans at Medford and Grants Pass travelling to Dorris. Klamath Falls now leads the league with Medford second, Dorris third, and Grants Pass bringing up the rear. » ♦ ♦ Some motorists have discovered to their surprise that the old backyard is twice as cool as the country road. Chickens are reported roosting high. Soldiers are coming to the city from Camp White. ere The Watch on the Rhine should have been an alarm clock, judging from what the RAF has done to I that area.