Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, March 24, 1939, Page 4, Image 4

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    Friday, Ma
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 4
Southern Oregon Miner
Editor and Publisher
★
SUBSCRIPTION
HATES
(In Advance)
ONE YEAR ........
SIX MONTHS ......
(Mailed Anywhere in the
United States)
★
Entered as second-class
matter
February
15,
1935, at the postoffice at
Ashland, Oregon, under
the act of March 3, 1879.
★
TELEPHONE 170
SEI’ YOU FREE"
“THE TRUTH WILL
TAKE IT EASY IN TOWN, DK1XEK!
With bright spring weather here, it might be well
to turn our thoughts to the somber hazard on city
streets now, before tragedy has marred the summer
for some child or parent.
Although Ashland enjoys a comparatively accident-
free flow of traffic, nevertheless a constant vigilance
on the part of all drivers must be maintained. 1 ar-
ticularly should motorists be on guard through the
residential district, where the sunshine has brought
out the children.
Youngsters, playing marbles, tag, flying kites,
throwing balls—early-season indulgence in these
things often make them forget caution and tiaffic.
It is up to the motorist to make allowance for thought­
less pranks of children.
Downtown, too, with children and old folks on the
streets more than ever, drivers should slow down at
crosswalks and be ready at ail times to stop or swerve
to save the skin of some pedestrian whose mind might
be on other things.
And as for fault, what succor does it give a tot’s
broken body to know that the blame was not the driv­
er’s? The goal of all motorists should be to eliminate,
as much as is humanly possible, all accidents.
★
★
What 01hi
Are Si
OF ALL THINGS!
N’lll.l. SliMl
MEN |
Hurry Hopklim
OTATE of the nution Bureau <>!
k commerce analysis allows that light when he k . ii
one out of every nine employed the other night t|
people I m on the public payroll. administration,
This one-ninth druw down one- yen l a III Wushu
eighth of th«* total amount paid notMflg whi< it .
out in Halarte« and
i_..2 wage» Bl the honent hUMineus n
alann The plain
country.
pU|HT llUH Htllti <
r
1
»
again, that Mr II
During the eight yrum from more generous to
1931 through 193», 4.487.085 per­ him been to <4Um
sons left the United Staten to tuk. th«* worker« Tin
up permanent residence abroad by wuy of criticii
while 4.269.081 moved into the to keep the recoi
country Boiled down or subtract
Neverthelca», I
ed from, this leaves a net loss of of business men
227,004 in population through emi
lliis is one Of t
grution something we never even phenomena of i
suH[H*cled
Immigration
quotas .Mining«*.*«! thing d
limit the total Inflow to 153.774 bus in ess men wh|
people who can prove Unit they most ar® the on« i
ar«* not likely to become public In their denum q
charge». Only so many can coin«* i ndliiat ration an L
from each nut ion regard!«*»» of Even now, when I
whether or not th«* other quotas , thrown the dooq
1 are full
wide open, mart)-1
* *
V
to refuse to "plus
They may 1«
The Flicker»: The department
of Mtate han jiiat no-noed Sum Into two t'llIMHCS J
projxMuil to pnaiuce I mmoihc "jittery |
Goldwyn’a proj>«>»al
"Thirteen Go Flying" I mi ««*<I on believing th«* st J
tile flying bout Cavalier’» ill-fatnl them In nrwspq
trip to Bermuda It also is . Inhne.l and "bualnesa lefl
that they mentioned "FDR would puloua propugiuJ
I like" to Jimmie R«H>»evelt, one of who are not ■
"square deal" bifl
, the Goldwyn v-p’a.
turn to the 'go<*d|
t » *
no luw rentrictel
they priictiiiJ
Berlin-born Maria Magdalene and
to at«*Bl."
I
8ieber last week received her aec-
laihor im glinl I
ond citizenship papers and Will
take th«* oath of allegiance In a his I ies Mxtm-s iJ
couple <if months
Marlene for any quarter tj
Dietrich is her other name
< >ur government fl
thing in Its ]«>■
<
r
r
legitimate bll.ni J
Of No Importance Whatever: not g i nnl |<-tt,'d
We Jun! saw a picture of Lum ’n' bm-ciinecrs who ■
Abner and they looked juh I Ilk«* s«*us of imhiMt i v ■
we thought they did and there bing Investors ¡ufl
have been 17 television »tudl.wi 11- Lor nmt agri. ulta
cenaed in the US.
Leonard N. Hall
Published Every Friday
at 167 East Main Street
ASHLAND, OREGON
★
LIFE'S BYWAYS!
Consequently, the New Deal was swept into power
the brink in 1932 is to ignore the desperate circum­
stances and thoughts of millions of people.)
by a people convinced that democracy must prove
itself or admit inadequacy. And people, with empty
stomachs, are not patient. The New Deal announced
its reforms and action followed word. Emergency ex­
isted, and we got emergency results: confusion, mis­
understanding. duplication, waste. But we got action
that saved the day. Now, several years later, we have
gained perspective and realize the inefficiency of those
r
<
f
black days in 1932-33. We now are busy attempting After a WPA crew pulled down « MlVIlt SAW AMI
to straighten out the kinks that resulted from the the wrong building in Brooklyn MM LUSTIR-f
the executive council of the Amer­
frenzied period.
TO MAKI TIT
ican Federation of Actors passed
- . SPARKll.
Because of this natural result, some critics are a ruling banning all Wi’A jokes,
probably figiiring that anything
prone to say that the New Deal was wholly wrong, laid
on a stag«' after one like that
that it can justly be condemned in both theory and would fall pretty flat
Amazing NEW
rids
teeth of
practice. However, those who are quick to condemn
r
<
r
hirmhbiel
the humanitarian administration of President Roose­ Now it i« ix*ing told: The North •• Il ithnMt
iiu | .M>di PaM> nai
drteritenl.
iiuüm
*
velt are wishfully looking at the flaws rather than at American Aviation company and T I m * ) n«tan t bni*h
m
Doug
lax
Aircraft
were
in
a
me«*
Fount duUTgrrit it 4
the whole. Unless one remembers the awful emergency to turn out a »ample plane for a Uni
i v• i. «• ■ kfl
d«say briw«ln.<g
under which many of the New Deal reforms were . French government order Doug- ana
inai not reach An<Jtf
Ian finlnhed their» fimt and in a «.arfar»«
anil into a
conceived, one is likely to misjudge their motives.
fit nf >iv<itxulH'taiKv th,- pilot on * !«‘>i‘ mouth tri • I
Uwlh
laMr
on ne* ¡d
Back in 1917, when the United States entered the the trial »pm ntarti*«! ntunting the
Tbr iwular M/« toM
new
»hip
clone
to
the
ground
over
World war totally unprepared, with neither trained the North American plant, rv- buy U I be Idtf KMj
th*in
i*ounri of ■
men nor modern equipment, a national frenzy and nulting in the crackup of the plane (Irutifrin*
A» all <tni
J
‘
bar
macal
< ’«> St U
th«* employe»’ parking lot, kill­
confusion developed that made for waste and extrava­ i in
ing the pilot an<i dcMtniying eight
THlNfWl
gance, but we got the job done. Now, years later, we can The reprenentative of the
,
French
government
crawled
out
can see the waste of such forced work.
and identifieil himnelf an Simpkin», LISTERINETI
The thought occurs that perhaps the present dis­ i a mechanic, but it wouldn’t hold
%upci
appointments from some New Deal legislation may be wat«r and the ntory got to con-
resulting in the row we all
due to poor administration and haste which was com­ grew,
read about.
hi
pelled by need, just the same as the unpreparedness
for war in 1917 created such incongruous results as
grade school boys earning $5 a day as roustabouts
in shipyards.
The fault has been in our habit of postponing re­
form until a crisis forces the issue and thrusts us into
a wasteful haste to do suddenly something that should
have been accomplished by gradual transition.
A-
RUSSIA PROFITS BY COMPARISON!
Exactly why the American people, at least in print,
are so bitter towards the Soviet Union has always been
a mystery to this department. Perhaps the hotbed of
communism does lie in Russia, but what of it?
In the plans of rehabilitation and rejuvenation of
Europe and Asia. Russia has been pursuing the happy
course of internal reform; hers has been a job of self­
help and improvement. Conquest, to Russians, means
the attacking of economic and political problems at
home rather than the murder and invasion of a neigh­
boring people who possess coveted riches.
The most outstanding difference between the po­
litical philosophy of Stalin and Hitler—from this dis­
tance, at least—appears to be that Stalin does his
head-whacking in his own country while Hitler cracks
the skulls of his helpless neighbors. Whether Stalin’s
course is right or wrong, the rest of the world can
thank their Creater that his ambition lies within Rus­
sia and not outside it.
Perhaps The Miner just doesn’t comprehend some
facts of life, but we can’t get all het up about the Red
Menace that frightens Willie Hearst and certain other
flag-wavers. Stalin seems to be doing a good job of
minding his own business and the notion persists that
the lot of the average Russian has improved consid­
erably during the last 15 years.
★
★
★
HASTE MAKES WASTE!
That much of the New Deal reform has bogged
down with its own weight and that some of it has been
definitely a failure there can be little argument—even
by such partisans as this little democratic weekly.
But then it should be remembered that few, if any,
governmental undertakings are ever wholly successful,
especially in a democracy.
Perhaps the greatest fault with the New Deal’s
modernization of some functions of government and
business was the haste with which the reforms came.
They were the result of last-minute acknowledgement
of an accumulated and critical pressure.
Had gradual reform followed the gradual develop­
ing need for change, then that reform could have come
about with less impact. The progress of governmental
theory, had it been continuous, would have occasioned
no great wastes of effort and funds. However, climaxes
in the political and economic field had been let develop
to the point where drastic—and immediate—action
was the alternative to possible internal revolt and civil
uprising. (And to say that this nation was not near
It Is Our . . .
Sincere desire to serve faithfully
and well at a price within the
means of the most modest purse.
Funeral Service Since 1897
LITWILLER
FUNERAL HOME
(Formerly Stock’s Funeral
Parlor)
We Never Clos»—Phone 82
. LUSTEI
//// / i « i
Editorial Grist
| who is three months old and owes
twelve months rent. Spoke to the
wife
and applicant who was strain­
RIGHT TO THE POINT
ing to make ends meet Applicant
From the Kansas City Kansan is typical real American He is
comes the following column of the father of eight children.
items taken from the Independent
Man hit by automobile speaks
at Murphysboro, Ill., being the
serious reports of social service broken English. This woman is ill.
workers. The list starts with the She is being treated. The gas has
results of a young woman inves­ been turned off The family seems
tigator who called on a widow ap­ to be just sitting around waiting
plicant and reported, “Woman and for grandmother to get old enough
for pension. Woman says husband
house neat but bare.’’
has illness that sounds like arith­
Other selections from a year's metic. I think she means arthur-
record of reports: Man has ulster itis Woman says that no matter
on his stomach Woman has no which way she looks at it, she has
job to be mention<?d. Woman is nothing.
saving up for an illness. Couple
Family’s saving all used up
breaking up home, friends helping
relatives have helped Applicant’s
Milk needed for the baby and wife is a lady and hardly knows
father is unable to supply it. Until what it is all about.
Woman
a year ago this applicant delivered taught bridge and suffered broken
ice and was a man of affairs.
1 leu. Applicant worked in children s
Couple have been completely I underwear. I^et out recently.
stripped. Now are barely able to
Applicant and family got $15
get along. These people are ex­ from neighbors for moving from
tremely
cultured
Something former address Saw mother and a
should be done about their condi­ child evidence of a father Good
tion. Since Christmas family has type of American family app«*ar
been living on a Democratic club refined, but intelligent. Woman is
basket.
willing to struggle if given an
Man has diabetes and is insulat­ | opportunity.
ed twice a day.
Couple’s only
—•----------- -
source of income is four boardeni
•
Subscribe
for
The Miner today.
all out of work They owe $600
Man aggressive has nine chil­
dren.
Applicant’s wife is making little
garments through the kindness of
a neighbor. Applicant took job as
janitor in home for the working
Here’s Quick Relief from
girls lasted three weeks.
Nice
Their DISTRESS!
quiet home family. Dorothy has
The
annoying
diwomforta of a cold in
been out since July.
ehr*t or throat, generally ea*r when
Applicant and wife are illegally
warming Muaterole m applied.
separatefl. The people have relig­ soothing,
Better than a mustard plaster. M*u*-
ious pictures all over the place,
terole gets action because it’s NOT junt
but seemed clean, however Man
a salve. It’s a •■count^r-it,It.int": ati.uu-
recently had operation but is able Uting, it penetrates the surface skin and
to hold any position he assumes
helps to quickly relieve local congestion
Woman ailing at present eye­ aches and pains due to colds.
Used by millions for 30 years. Recom­
sight poor
does housework when
mends by many doctors and nurses
able to find it. Apartment crowded
In thr.-e strengt|1K: Regular. Children'«
and untidy. Saw evidence of girl
(mild) and Extra Strong. 40s. Approved
in clothing.
by Good llouackeeping Bureau.
Applicant has one child, Lillian,
CHEST COLDS
OH! MARY Bought A Littkl
Got Home At Five, - - Half-fi
Still Mary Served Her Meal Ol
She Cook* with GAS, - - It'»
F AMT
COOKING—MoalrnUi*
Cooking — Mlow Cookins —
With A HuntRed In-lletworn
Thl*
Kpeed«.
New
Modern
Oaa Rang«* (live« You K«*n|
Selectivity
Cooking
In
Speed*. There*« , New Giant
Burner for
Qnlek
Yowr
Stawner-Save
FHe
Morning**
Coffee — There’* a
Burner
with
K e o II o m I c ■ I
Ytny
name* That
Will Cook mi
Entire Meal Foe a* IxH» a*
Cent.
One-Half
Il
Ute
Jnet
the
Moe,
,
And
Till«
Beginning
of
'•••••♦
YOU’LL HA.
Nww Bulge«.
Piloti«* .
AboiM <Mir Kaxy Monthly
• <'<MR*ortabU
klf.i
YOUR GAS COMP
CALIFORNIA PACU\C UTILITÀ