Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, June 07, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Friday, June 7, 1940
Southern Oregon Miner
Publlxhed Every Friday
onard
*
Ix
nt 167 E.iel Main Street
Page 3
PEN PORTRAITS of OREGON • WANT ADS •
DRAWN FOR THE MINER BY MAC PHEKNON
FOR SALE New and used desks,
filing cabinets, swivel chairs and
safes. Medford Office Equip­
ment Co., 32 North Grape street,
Medford.
___
(48tf)
N. Hall
Editor and PubHuhar
ASHLAND. OREGON
★
★
SUBSCRHTION
RATES
(In Advance)
Entered ■I* aocond-cluaa
mutter
February
15,
1935. ut the |M>Nl<>fflcr lit
Aahlund. Oregon, under
the u< t <»f March 3, 1M71»
ONE YEAR
SIX MONTHS
À
TELEPHONE 8561
»1 50
MX
(Mailed Anywhere in the
United State
*)
"THE TRUTH VULL/^U-p^\ NET YOU FREE"
BEW ARE SELF SEEKING GROH’S
HIDING BEHIND CLAIMS OF PATRIOTISM’!
The Associated Farmers of California have an­
nounced plans to organize 50.0(H) farmers into an anti­
fifth column vigilante group and promise that “within
three days in every rural county of California farmers,
quiet men doing their bit, will be at work."
On the face of it, that sounds like a timely and pat­
riotic move but, if the Associated Farmers of Cali­
fornia are a behind-the-scenes group with mysterious
financial backing as in Oregon and Washington, then
the harried and exploited migrant worker of the golden
Htate can get set for further imjxisitions and persecu­
tions. Red-baiters, super-patriots and political pres-
surites de luxe, the misnamed “farm groups" have left
odor wherever they have acted.
With the fifth column scare being what it is, such
group activity as that proposed by the Associated
Farmers will bear close watching by state and federal
authorities lest they use the fifth column scare as a
screen to cover strike-breaking, sweatshop working
abuses and other wholly un-American dollar-grabbing
activities.
The day may not be far away when the worker who
refuses to be cajoled or underpaid arbitrarily will be
branded as a “fifth columnist” and driven out of the
community. Some employers may be waiting for war
hysteria to reach the point where they can use mob
psychology to their own profit—at the sacrifice of
American liberties.
★
★
★
YES, IT’S EASY TO CONDEMN SURRENDER
WHEN YOU’VE FLED TO SAFE GROUND!
Although King Leopold of the Belgians has been
scored by many, including his fleeing cabinet members,
time probably will reveal the stout young king used
wisdom and mercy for his people and soldiers in capit­
ulating to the German blitzkrieg.
With his army and countrymen faced with almost
certain annihilation, and with promised help from the
allies inadequate, who can blame Leopold for his de­
cision to save what countrymen he could from the
slaughter? As for the condemnation of his cabinet,
which fled at the start of war to seek refuge in Paris,
that criticism is understandable when one remembers
that cabinet members first saved their own necks—
and the Belgian treasury, with which it absconded—
and then, dependent on safekeeping and hospitality of
the French, proceeded to make “good guys” of them­
selves by throwing mud at their sovereign. Not only
was Leopold’s cabinet selfish enough to run at sound
of the first bomb, but also they further ignobled them­
selves by turning on their ruler—when they reached
a safe distance.
King Ix)opold of the Belgians is deserving of ad­
miration and respect of the world and he should be
given the advantage of any doubts as to his reasons
for surrender.
• HILTS NEWS •
• A fa re well bridge party wax
given at the club houxe Wednes­
day afternoon for Mrs. Helena
.;< Iih-utcr by Mrs. W. Holmberg
und Mrs. Frank Ohlund. Those at­
tending were Mesdamea William
Bray,
Fred
Bayliss,
Florence
Clark, M. J. Bailey, Roy Schiappi,
Frank Graves, Ben Ollom, John
lieWitt, Enzie Wright, Ted Quam-
ine, Ray Elliott, Pete Schleuter,
Fred Haynes, Lloyd Luper, John
Kallvet, Scott Willis of Ashland,
William McClusky of Medford,
Ann Gilberg of Palo Alto, Vernal
Nebeker, Russel Harris, Harry De
Jarnett, Frunk Bernheim
*),
Frank
Ward. Orson Coleman, O. Bem-
lieixel, Arthur Pedersen, Ethel
Seif, C. A. Baumgartner, Bert
Mitchell, E. Crandell of Portland,
T. Anderson, Jack Calkins of
Weed, Wade Roop, Anton Mendes,
and Fred Lehman. Prizes at
bridge were won by Mrs. Self and
Mrs. Calkins. Delicious refresh­
ments were served.
• A party was given Friday af­
ternoon for Ruth Ardcll, whose
fifth birthday anniversary was on
May 13. Those invited were Maur­
ino and Sally Ryce, Wilma Brown,
Sherry Bradfield, Shirlie Black,
Doris Wall, Leona Raybould, Ruth
Pedersen, Vallee Ann Goldenpen-
ny, Mildred Planalp, Donna Mc­
Cullough, Gwen Robinson, Kay
Williams, IXinna Rosecrans, Vir­
gie St. Clair and two young folks
from Gold Hill, Vonnie Tepovac
and Marie Chamberlin, who are
visiting at the Roaecrana home
Delicious refreshments of cake,
gelatin, cookies and lemonade
were served. Favors were given
and games were played. All en­
joyed a delightful afternoon.
• Among those who attended the
Memorial day services in Hom-
br<x>k Thursday afternoon were
Horton and Donald Geroy. Henry
and Audomar De Clerck, Billy
Gran, Tony Marin, Charles Vieira,
Jack Eddy, Billy Bayliss. Ray
Coleman und Gordon Alphonse of
the Hilt Boy Scout troop and their
scoutmaster, Bill Tallis, and as­
sistant Walter Bray, also Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Ohlund, Mrs. Pete
Schleuter, Irvin Mendes, Russel
Williams. Mr. and Mrs. William
Gran. Mr. and Mrs. Henry De
Clerck. Mr. and Mrs. Florent Van
De Weghe and son Joseph and
daughter Agnes, Fred Bayliss and
Mr and Mrs. Elmer Jackson.
• Mrs. Mary Wisenback and sons
of Klamath Falls are visiting at
the home of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. M. J. Vieira.
• Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Henry and
daughter Elsie have moved back
to Pacific Grove.
• Minr Florence Mendes of Oak­
land is vliiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. A Mendes.
• Mrs. Stella King spent Memor­
ial day in Mount Shasta.
• Miss Kitzlng left Monday eve­
ning for San Francisco. She does
not plan to return for the fall
term of school.
• Mrs. Drusilla Burr of Oroville
recently visited her granddaugh­
ter, Mrs. James Purvis.
• Donna McCullough of Klamath
Falls is spending two weeks with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Ward.
• Pete Schleuter came to Hilt
Saturday after Mrs. Schleuter and
left Monday morning for their
home in Marysville Miss Evelyn
Nelson is staking Mrs. Schleutor's
place in the Fruit Growers Sup­
ply compan ystore.
------ •------------- -
• Mrs. Donal Brace made a trip
to San Francisco early In the
week,
NOTICE OF SALE
IIIOSF. WIIKESil JAH. TERMH
l f** mler « r»<
*u
luu the courts in
Neu. ) vrk »lute muy lei prisoners
serve iml term» on a part-time
ham. Il the t om irlerl man ha» a
¡oh and must »erie thirty duy«, u
judfe muy let him term it week-
end» or on other tperified Hays.“
Neu . item.)
• • •
"When I read Items like this in
the papers these days I never know
for certain whelh
er I am reading
the funny papers
or a report of an
actual fact,” de
dared Elmer
Twitchel) today
“Maybe sentenc­
ing men to the
hoosegow for breaking the laws and
then arranging It so the sentence
won’t interfere with their lives very
much is u swell Idea, but it still
leaves me dizzy
• • •
“I always thought the Idea of a
jail sentence was to teach a law­
breaker a lesson and make him feel
crime didn’t pay. but if a fellow who
cracks a safe, sticks up a bank cash­
ier or ambushes a peaceful pedes
trian knows that, even if convicted,
the jail term won't be much of a
hardship. I give up.
• • •
“The whole theory of punishment
used to be that It would at least
cause some inconvenience.
The
authorities used to hold that a term
in stir was bound to take an of­
fender away from his regular
pastimes and industries
Nobody
seemed to feel that these terms
should be arranged so the prisoner
would hardly notice ’em
“It Is going to seem funny to
me, at least, when I read of a
judge saying: *1 find you guilty
as charged and sentence you to
M days In jail. Would you like
to serve It all In one lump?
*
• • •
’’Naturally the prisoner is going
to reply: ’Well. I tell you. yerronor.
1 have a job when I work at it,
and it would be a favor to me if I
could get back to it and go to jail
only after my working hours.'
" 'Just how would you like this
jail term arranged’’' the judge is
going to ask
“ *1 do not work Tuesdays or Fri­
days. judge Tuesdays 1 go to the
ball game, but I would be willing to
go to jail Fridays. It rains on a
lot of Fridays, anyhow.'
“ ’Well.’ the judge will say. ‘un­
der this new law I guess Fridays in
jail for you will be al) right. Would
you be able to fix it so you could
report at the jail Thursday nights?’
" ’Not very well.’ the prisoner will
reply. ‘My work is rather tiring
and I would rather go to jail early
Friday morning, say around ten
o'clock.'
" 'Couldn't you make it eight
o'clock?' the judge will plead
" 'Not without great inconven­
ience,' the prisoner will reply.
“ 'Very well, 1 will compromise
and make it nine o'clock.
*
the judge
will reply.
• • •
"It is al! very interesting if some
what disturbing," concluded Mr
Twitchel!. "I hope the rest of the
country don't copy the idea.”
MEMORY
1 remember once, so long ago.
A sweet springtime in the rain
When a boy took me out riding
Whom I never met again.
We drove into the country.
Where the fields with grass were
green.
And saw a weathered apple tree
The first one we’d ever seen
It's boughs were bridal robed in
white.
There in the rain it stood.
The boy stopped near and wondered
If a few stolen blossoms would
Destroy its grace and beauty—
If it still would be the same
1 can smell the rain-washed petals
But I cannot recall his name!
—Sue Saltus
• • •
Add similes: He was running
faster than If he had received an
offer of help from England.
•
•
•
Dewey may be the bright stai
in the G. O. P. heavens, but look
closer and you will see the Will
kie Way.
•
•
•
A soup proof necktie has been
perfected. Somebody Is always
worrying about what happens to
the soup.
• • •
DIALOGUES
Q.—UPW are. things «1 bom«?
been almost as hard hit as the
shattered allied lines in Europe, j
Prior to this catastrophic develop- !
ment G. O. P. election prospects i
appeared very bright indeed.
It looked as if the campaign would
be fought chiefly on Republican
ground; that is, on domestic issues.
Also, it was doubtful whether Roose­
velt would run.
But the Hitler
blitzkrieg changed this situation
i overnight.
Washington. D. C.
Roosevelt's move to bring one or
JAP ORDERS DELAY U. 8.
1 more Republicans into the cabinet
One of the things which is holding made things worse. •
Up the manufacture of more mili­
Something had to be done fast to
tary equipment for the army and block this.
navy is the fact that so many U. S.
The barrage on Roosevelt was
factories are sending machine tools opened by Colonel Lindbergh's
to Japan.
speech pooh-poohing any invasion
The war department has just fin­ danger. In inner G. O. P. circles
ished a confidential survey of the this is credited to Hoover via his
machine tool industry and finds that close friend William Castle, former
most American plants are working undersecretary of state.
on orders for the Japanese. Ma­
This was followed up with the
chine tools are all-important in the carefully spaced statements by
munitions business, because they Landon, Hoover. Representative
are used to equip new factories ex­ Wadsworth, House Floor Leader
panding to meet new national de­ Martin and others demanding that
fense orders.
the President renounce a third term
As far as the war department is as the price for G. O. P. partici­
able to ascertain. Japan has plenty of pation in the cabinet.
. . .
machine tools, and is storing many
of the new shipments now received
ICELAND AND U. 8.
There is a lot more behind the <
rushing of American consuls to
Greenland and Iceland than appears
on the surface.
Boiled down to cold facts, the
Roosevelt administration is afraid
of a Nazi air base only 1.500 miles
from Maine. Bombing planes al­
ready have been developed which
can fly this far—loaded.
• • •
CAPITAL CHAFF
A PERSHING AIDS FRANCE
Mrs. Frances IParren Pershin/t,
the war nenerafs dattfhler-in-
laic, modeling a noun in New
York for French war relief.
Rids for gowns ranged from
9250 to 91.000.
from the United States—for emer­
gencies. Japan also continues to
be a big importer of U. S. scrap
iron, and also Is storing it for the
future.
These arc two reasons why Pres­
ident Roosevelt has asked special
powers of congress to embargo
shipments of materials which are
considered vital to the defense of the
United States. He expects, as soon
as authorized by congress, to slap
an embargo on scrap iron and ma­
chine tools to Japan.
• • •
G. O. P. BLASTS
The barrage of Republican blasts
against a coalition cabinet which
hns strafed the country recently was
no spontaneous meeting of minds.
Neither was it aimed entirely at the
President.
It was aimed much
more against the Republican party
itself.
Inner G. O. P. master minds ad­
mit that their political chances hqye
A. Well we’re noi xetttrg w
* jo
well since my wife’s mother came
to live with us
Q. —The old fifth column, eh?
•
st
Ex-Kaiser (greeting the German
troops in Holland)—What detained
rou?
Said Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick
Simms: "I have never seen any­
thing like the sentiment out West for
Tom Dewey."
But in her home
state of New Mexico, Mrs. Simms
was turned down as a Dewey dele­
gate.
Interesting sidelight on how things
are shaping for a third term: Rep.
Gene Cox of Georgia is one of the
bitterest anti-New Dealers in con­
gress. Yet the day after Georgia
leaders named a third-term delega­
tion. Cox announced he would sup­
port this year Roosevelt if he is the
candidate.
• • •
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that on June 29, 1940, at 10 o'clock
am., at the front door of the
court house in Medford, Jackson
county, Oregon. I shall sell at
public auction for cash to the
highest Udder the following de­
scribed real property, situated in
Jackson county, Oregon, to wit:
Beginning at a point on the
southerly side line of Main street
in the city of Ashland, Jackson
county, Oregon, which point lies
North 56 degrees 19 West along
said street boundary 30 feet from
the point of intersection of South­
erly line of Main street with West­
erly side line of First avenue
(heretofore known ax Hargadine
avenue): thence South 35 degrees
02' West 100 feet to a point on
the northerly side line of an alley
as described in Volume 56 on page
450, Deed Records of Jackson
county, Oregon, which point is 30
feet distant from intersection of
the Northerly side line of said
alley with westerly side line of
said First avenue; thence North
56 degrees 19’ West along North­
erly side line of said alley
56 feet; thence North 35 degrees
02’ East 100 feet to a point on
Southerly side line of Main street
which point is distant 86 feet
along the southerly side line of
Main street from its intersection
with westerly side line of First
avenue; thence South 56 degrees
19' Elast along the Southerly line
of Main street 56 feet to place of
beginning.
Also, the party wall right in
West wall in First National Bank
building as set forth in an agree­
ment of record in Vol. 69 of Deeds
on page 565 and as contained in
deed of said First National Bank
of Ashland to J. Syd McNair and
Susie L. Allen as of record Vol.
77 of Deeds on page 2, Records of
Jackson county, Oregon.
Also: Subject to the conditions,
rights and privileges relating to
West party wall of the premises
herein described, contained in an
agreement made between J. Syd
McNair and Susie L. Allen with
N. J. Reasoner as recorded in Vol.
88 of said Deed Records on pag
*-
458 and Deed of Record Vol. 87,
page 414, thereof.
Said sale is made pursuant to
an execution issued out of the
Circuit Court of the state of Ore­
gon for Jackson county on the
20th day of May, 1940. in a cer­
tain cause wherein G. S. Butler is
plaintiff and O. T. Bergner, et al.
are defendants.
Dated May 24, 1940.
SYD I. BROWN, Sheriff.
By HOWARD GAULT.
(M 31, J 7-14-21).
Deputy.
Life - Auto - Fire
INSURANCE
Monuments and Markers
of Bronze and Granite
At Prices You Can Afford
M. T. BURNS
Next Door to Post Office
Call Office 6’61, Res. 640«
Evening Appointments
“DEPENDABLE SERVICE”
HAY FEVER
or ROSE FEVER
Mew, GwaraAtwd r«m«4y work» last tkro
system, relieves your misery in • few mir.ui
REESE’S BLU-TAB
'SfaXSZ FREE same ­
east SIDE PHARMACY
SENATOR NYE ON BENITO
Quote of the week comes from
Sen. Gerald Nye of North Dakota: i
“Mussolini is like Southern Repub­
lican delegates—easy to buy but
hard to keep bought.”
---------- •--------------
• Dr. and Mrs. E. G. Everett
visited with relatives and friends
in Lakeview last week-end.
• Mr. and Mrs. Henry Metz re­
cently returned from a visit with
relatives in Indiana.
• Kenneth Lusk of Manteca.
Calif., is visiting here at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Lusk.
Phone 6732
FOR QUALITY
AND SERVICE
CLOVER LEAF
DAIRY
»