Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, July 26, 1940, Page 6, Image 6

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    Friday, July 26, 1040
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 6
Southern Oregon Miner
Published Every Friday
at 167 East Main Street
ASHLAND. OREGON
★
Entered as second-class
matter
February
15.
1935, at the postoffice at
Ashland, Oregon, under
the act of March 3, 1879.
★
TELEPHONE 8561
“THE TRUTH WILL
Intoxicating?
Oregon's 'Fifth Column’
Leonard N. Hall
Editor and Ihiblisher
★
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United States)
SET YOU FREE"
THE ARMY’S BOMBERS MUST AIM
THEIR MISSILS AT SOMETHING!
• Mr. and Mrs Al Sherurd spent
Saturday night with relativea In
Central Point and spent the day
with Mr and Mrs. F. L. Steph­
enson.
• Members of the Talent Town­
send club met Tuesday evening in J
th«« city hall with 16 present.
• Mr. and Mrs Harry lx>wr and
son Hobby, Hilda. Marta, Mabel
and Helen Romunger spent part
of last week at Twin Cabins and
other places.
• Mrs. Bill Hotchkiss and mother,
Mrs Guy Hamilton, have returned
from Vancouver, B. C., where they
visited Earl Hamilton and family.
• Mr and Mrs Lyle Tame spent
Sunday at their ranch on Dead
Indian mountain.
• Mr and Mrs Roland Parks and
«laughter called on his parents,
Mr and Mrs R F i'arks, Tues­
day.
• Mis. Carrie Wimer ami two
daughters, Marie and Wilma, re­
turned Saturday from Lake City,
where they spent a month visiflng
relatives.
• Mrs Francis Tame and eon
Cecil have purchased the filling
station recently vacated by Wil­
liam Thatcher who now is located
at Culestin, and will take ¡ mmscs -
sion soon.
*• Mr an«l Mrs. Joe Spitzer and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Duncan are
spending the week in Crescent
City Ben Clark is helping at
Spitzer's service station during his
absence.
• Th«* school gymnasium auditor­
Tim Iwauty of tills seen«’ ia, al­
ium is being enlarged The addi­
tion will provide seating nx»m for though It's only a giant whir glaum
the orchestra and will place seats of purr spring water la-itig o(Vow'd
for the audience nearer the stag«* you by lovely Fay Iaw.-y, one of
(lie 1IMU Fair's Gohlen Forlh-a
• Mrs Bertha Hungate and moth
Girls on Treasure Island, w Im la
er. Mrs Elizabeth Palmer, attend
cd the Montana and Kansas picnic aiding Oalifosvila'a wino industry-
in Ashland Sunday
• Mrs Ben Webster ami baby • Mrs Helen lllgglna returned
daughter returned from Commun­ from a month visit nt B«>z<-mun,
ity hospital In Ashland Saturday Mont . hint week
Mrs Williamson of Ashland la
helping at the Webster home for
several weeks.
• Mr. and Mrs Roy Estes spent
; Sunday at Crescent City fishing
and visiting with Mr and Mrs
Charles Estes.
• Mrs Alice Byrne of Ashlaml
called on Talent friends Tuesday.
• Jay Terrill, Roy Parr ami
George Phiefer spent Wednesday
of last week fishing at Lake creek,
Forest creek and Diamond I take
• Mr and Mrs Jack Mill«*r and
Mrs George King of Long Beach,
Calif , and Mr and Mrs. Edward
I Jones of Central Point were call­
ing on friemUi here Thursday.
• Mr and Mrs Bert Nichols have
taken an apartment from Edith
Cochran for the summer.
• Ruby Dobbins, Barbara Ter­
rill, Beverly Malone. Aller Wooten
and Agnes Itacey have been at­
tending the Day Scout camp in
Medford The camp closes Friday
i i may ‘ he ..
“__ ;
of this week
guilty of ' luilitcwi* (bad
• Juanita and Shirley Chitten of breath) this very minute, and yet lx
California are visiting their grand­ unaware of it That's the insidious thing
parents. Mr. and Mrs. H. E Mor­ ■bout this offensive condition, so fre­
quently due to food fermentation in
gan
• Mr and Mrs Wiggins and eon ilie mouth.
You yourself may not recognize It
have moved from the Forbes house
. . but everyone you come in «.ontact
on Coleman creek
• Mr lamb and daughter. Mrs xith d«xs.
Listerinc Antiseptic halts such fer­
Roy Estes, called on Mr and Mrs
Clarence Homes in Ashland Wed­ mentation, said by some autlxinties to
1« a major cause of mouth odors, und
nesday.
overcomes the odors themselves. So why
------------- •--------------
• Subscribe for The Miner today. risk annoying and offending ot Iters? Why
Sheepmen of eastern Oregon are protesting pro­
posed use of 140,000 acres of grazing land for an air
corps bombing range. Their protest is based on the
fear that target practice will damage the land which
they graze six months out of the year.
The area wanted for bombing practice perhaps is
among the most barren in the state, else sheep—the
original land-wreckers—would not be grazed there.
And it is a certainty that the army’s airmen must aim
their explosives at something, somewhere.
The incident fully illustrates how deeply-rooted is
selfishness in democratic peoples and how eager they
are to avoid personal inconvenience on behalf of their
country’s preparedness. Certainly army heads would
not have proposed the eastern Oregon area as a bomb­
ing range without due consideration of all factors in­ almost any and all republicans, that’s just our bedside
volved, and this seems to be no time to obstruct de­ manner; much of it is written merely for the nuisance
value of distressing our republican friends—our be­
fense plans.
The eastern Oregon sheepmen making the vigorous loved enemy. (If The Miner didn’t like republicans we’d
ignore ’em. We just like democrats better, and now you
protest do not become themselves.
know why. Or do. you?)
★
★
★
EXCEPT FOR ONE DIFFERENCE, THERE’S
LITTLE CHOICE BETWEEN PARTIES!
With a former democrat as republican nominee for
president, and with a former republican as the demo­
cratic vice presidential nominee, many voters are be­
ginning to wonder just what is the difference, if any,
between the two political camps.
As The Miner sees it, there is but one fundamental
difference which sets them apart. Both parties are
overstuffed with political grabbers, opportunists and
loud-mouthed scallawags, and each party has its sav­
ing percentage of sincere, capable men. Except for the
one basic principle which separates a democrat from
a republican, there is practically no choice between
parties as far as the average voter interested in the
welfare of his country is concerned.
That one difference is this: The republican theory
holds that the people’s welfare is best served from the
top down; that is, that if business is coddled and helped
and given free rein, business will benificently pass on
down to the common people its benefits. The demo­
cratic way is just the reverse—assist and protect the
wage earner and the small business man and when this
group prospers, big business will prosper as a natural
consequence.
Republicans believe that the fruit begets the
plant, while democrats proceed on the theory
that the plant begets the fruit.
So there you are—you take your choice of working
plans and proceed to lambast the other side with every­
thing you can lay your tongue to. However, one politi­
cal camp is not all virtue and the other scheming graft,
nor does one side work only to grab power or the other
to exploit labor.
Aside from the foreign issues involved, as far as
the United States’ welfare is involved, the election this 1
November actually will decide whether the American
people want benefits of legislation to go directly to the
people who most need it, or whether this assistance
will be routed through care of the captains of industry
who are presumed to be anxious to pass the benefits
on to the worker and small businessman.
The democratic theory is one of direct
action, the republican idea holds that business is
essentially honest and fair and that benefits
should be distributed through business. That is
the “restoration of confidence” about which we
have been hearing so much.
The Miner, as a member of that majority of Amer­
icans who depend on daily toil for existence, believes in
the democratic^theory of government. It is because of
this—and not because of a belief that republicans are
inherently rascals—that we in our small way plug
for the democratic party.
And as for this newspaper’s habitual fun-poking at
ENLIST FOR “TOTAL WAR”
Because of unprecedented drought and Incendiary nett vl Uns,
Oreron faoes the moot aariona foreat flra maaaoa of many yearn.
Thoughtful citliaaa am rebelling against ths caralaasBaaa, the ap­
athy and criminal activity that permits thia destruction of beauty
and wealth and Living things. If you wish to Join la tha -total war1*
against foraat firns fa your home state, sigs tha “aaMatmaat** bleak
below t
Stat« Forester, Salem. Oregon
I pledge myself to report to you any acta of carelessness or in­
cendiarism that I may see along the highways or in the forests of
Oregon and to observe scrupulously myself these six rules for pre­
venting fires—(1) Be sure your match is out, break It in two before
throwing it away; (1) Extinguish cigarette, cigar and pipe sparks
in ash tray provided in my ear; (3) Build all camp fires In hole
dug in ground. Clear all inflammable materia) from around camp­
lire site; (4) Never leave eamp before campfire is out—dead out;
(Si Pour water or pack earth over campfire, stirring coala to make
rare that every spark to absolutely extinguished; (4) Never burn
brush or slash in windy weather. Get burning pennit from fire
warden or ranger,
NAME_______________________________________________________
STREET ADDRESS er RFD_________ ___________________________
POSTOFFICE__________________________________________________
FILL OUT AND MAIL TO STATE FORESTER, SALEM. OREGON
See through Glass Car
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TODAY
?
IS YOUR PRESENT LIFE
INSURANCE ADEQUATE?
See
STEVEN R.
SCHUERMAN
PHONE 4721
hurt yourself socially and in business?
It is so easy to guard against offend­
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safe antiseptic. Your breath becomes
sweeter and more agreeable. If you
value your job and your friends, use
Listerine Antiseptic regularly. Lambert
'*harmacal Company, .St. Louis, Mo.
LISTERINE
""HALITOSIS
(BAD BREATH)
METROPOLITAN LIFE
INSURANCE CO.
DOCTOR'S FORMULA
quickly relieves fiery itching ef
The Washington
Merry-Go-Round
General Motors spent *200,000 to build
at the 1940 Golden Gato International
(left) stretched out on the floor (glass)
crawled under the front fender to prove
model machine.
a glass car for exhibition
Exposition. Allern Poole
boards and Doris Hiller
you can see through the
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Everybody today haa a
chip in the political pot.
And everybody, through
news dispatches, ia
watching the play of
political hands.
But the action is so fast
and so widespread that
more is needed than a
running report. You
want explanation of the
strategy, disclosure of
the forces, understand­
ing of the personalities
involved. And you'll
find just that in The
Washington Merry-Go-
Round, by Drew Pear­
son and Robert S. Allen,
in these columns.
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