Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, August 04, 1939, Page 5, Image 5

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    Friday, Aug. 4, 1939
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 5
T
for the Modoc division of the Kla­
math project.
<
r /
The new »chrdul«* of power
rate* for Bonneville are In­
tended to eti«-«»urage uwe of the
energy which ha* been going
to waste for going on two
years. The rates were submit­
ted to the federal power cont-
iiiission and that body ru«h«d
it* approval In four day« in
order to adjourn for the num-
mer. Senator» of Oregon and
Washington have been advised
to notify the commission by
August 15 If they have any
suggestions to make. Mean­
while Secretary of the Interior
Ickes Is asking legislation to
hire a fl«xk of officials for
Bonneville at $9000 each. It
would require the sale of 620
kilowatt year* on “at site”
rate to pay one salary for on«*
year. To date only 200 kilo­
watt years have been sold.
^I.TIIol Gli rrop failure I» one of the most disheaitruing acourgr* ever to visit a fami, Ertieat
< hriatophrrson of Ione (in*ei1) I« ubi«* to look aero«* hit ruined wheat fichi» In Morrow county
and not tie loo diwourag« d. < iirlstophrrson 'was among more than 7<8i Oregon farmer* who took out
federal Inaurane«* on their !9S9 wheat crop*. After dry weather ruined hl« yield, he ho'iune ime of
the flrat two farmer« In Oregon Io collect «m the policy. In On* field shown above, < hrtatophrrson
ha* turned «time of hl* catti«* In to makr Use of the »mall amount of nourl«hment remaining. Re­
cently In* received a check from the Insurance corporation paying him In full for the Insured loss,
which was 75 per <e««t of nomai yield. Application may now be made In any wheat growing county
for insurance covering fall wheat sown for 11*10 liarvfst.
really as mad at President Roose-
< volt as he is at Vice President
Garner. ills calling Gamer "an
evil old man", is paralleled by his
charge that Mr Roosevelt was an
ingf.it.- wh.-n the president sat
silent during the sitdown strikes.
And from the
whispers which
have circulated In Washington for
two years, the President has his
own opinion inert flattering), of
Ix’wls It was the sit-down strike
and the administration's refusal
to step In and establish law and
order that caused the break be­
tween the vice president and presi­
dent. (’actus Jack, after telling the
President what he thought, packed
(Continued from page 1)
high officials A bill is now being
drafted by the slate department
which will be introduced by a
senator of the Pacific northwest
possibly next January.
Social S«.*curily board cut off
"match" money to Ohio brcausc
the monthly checks for old-age as
slstanc«- c«rri«*d u note announcing
the governor wax a candidate for
rceie< lion. Now SSB is under con­
trol of Paul V McNutt and the
monthly bulletin mailed to bene­
ficiaries in Indiana tan official
publication) Is lx«osttng him for
the democratic nomination for
MESCAL IKE
rz s.
up and went home to Texas, not
returning unUl Mr Roosevelt re­
quested him to return and smooth
out the fight over the court bill.
<
r
«
One of the arguments for ear­
marking 90 million dollars for re­
clamation projects In the lending­
spending hill so bitterly fought,
wax that 13 4 million can be used
in Oregon and Washington, most­
ly in Washington. There could be
used from this fund $1,000,000 for
Deschutes project i which will coat
$8,400,000 to complete); $1.500,000
for Yakima-Roza project; $10,000-
0O0 for Grand Coulee and $900.000
celled the air voyage because their
wives
insist
on
accompanying
them and women are not permit­
ted in army or navy planes . . .
Government payments to farmers
for the first six months of thia
year were 414 million dollars,
compared with 257 million for the
same period last year
—•---------------
• Jean Billings returned this week
to Eugene where she attends the
University of Oregon, following a
visit here at the home of her par­
ents, Mr and Mrs Homer Billings
• Mr and Mrs Benny King re­
turned recently to their home in
I»s Angeles following a visit here,
1
i r
Mr. Roosevelt is being condemn­
ed again. He said he would not
visit Alaska this summer as plan­
ned, because there are dense fogs
in that region at this time of year
Tills has scared tourists contem­
plating an Alaska trip. Unpub­
lished is the hint that Mr Roose­
velt was Informed fishing for
salmon and steelhead in Oregon
is not good in August, but is bet­
ter in September. He will test this
report in September . . . Congress­
man James W Mott’s daughter is
to be queen of the Astoria regatta,
so as a compliment to Mott the
entire naval affairs committee of
the house will attend. Committee-
men planned flying to Astoria in
a navy transport plane but can-
ï
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.It
lW>'
finii'
Ms
’•*)
“fi
»
•Don'tsufferfro.n - -: n-
ing. «marti n eyr».
Murine brine» you
<i ■iicl..amezin4 r linf.
Il urine'» six extra in­
gredients completr'y
wit.h away eye irrita-
Gon-mate your e> -»feel
cleaa,fresh,abvef Use Murine twice daily,
strata due todc.ct .driving,glare,elo»e work,
inovic*,rr d.-.latehrxurv Murine wi Inotet«-
r-ct r/eilefuxxK'le». F« treatrucntoforganiceye
.H«un,i-r 3 - .rr-t^-ient profc»ma»l at once.
MULLEN-BROWN KITES
Archie O. Brown of Klamath
Falls and Pearl Mullen of Ashland
were united in marriage July 22
at the Churcn of the Nazarene in
Reno, Nev. Brown ia employed at
the Algoma box factory
The
couple will mane their home in
Klamath Falls.
•
• Beryl Tucker returned from a
visit in Portland Monday.
• H. I, Gregory and Mrs Arthur
Sellars of Central Point visited
here Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Mark True.
_
_ ________
• ____
Mrs ____
Hugh
Bates _ of Seattle vis-
ited here with friends Tuesday,
¿¿[Js About
Vie oce 9°‘?rnest
Le oi toe
in ’-he
speciohY
,/CAX
zXfc ot bocks**
co*Ge‘OM<
¿ekvetV ^^eioce few b*f
THE MINER PRESS
A
I
167 EAST MAIN STREET, ASHLAND
PHONE 8561
l huntif . y
Idsnt McNutt ha* not crau i
ed down on Indiana, which is his
homo staU fol doing what Ohio
did Beneficiaries in Oregon and
Washington will soon receive sim­
ilar propaganda.
* V V
,
Survey of |M«t«Titial waler
|x>ker in th«* l'nit«*d State*,
ju»t completed, place* Hiwh
Ington «late at th«* head of th«*
list, with Oregon Ms-ond and
California third. Washington'«
potential |x>wer shows 8,768,-
<881 horsepower availabl«* !8)
|M*rc«*nt of the time and 12,-
021,(881 available 50 |M*rrcnt
of th«* time. Oregon'« poten­
tial horsepower available IN)
percent of the tiing 1« 4,502,-
(88) and 6,104,000 available 50
|M*re«*«it of the time. Th«* thns*
Pacific coast state* have 41.67
|M*rcent ol all the power which
is available 9» percent of the
time. It will always I m * |M>ten-
tlal until there are enough
|M*oplr to supply a market.
f f f
[<<-»*>( righi.
S’MATTER POP- It Gets a Fella All Mixed Up!
John Llewellyn Ix*wis, head of
cio.
who contributed $500,000
(dues from union members) to the
Htxisevelt campaign in 1936, is
THEM DAYS ARE GONE FOREVER
Muzzle This on Your Mudguard.
By C. M. PAYNE