Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, January 24, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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    Friday, Jan. 24, 1941
SOUTHERN 0RK6ON MINER
Page 4
Southern Oregon Miner
OUR DEMOCRACY
M INVENTION ANP DEVELOPMENT
CHAS M GIFFEN
WILLIAM SAVIN
Ihiblishers
Published Every Friday
at 167 East Main Street
ASHLAND. OREGON
*
Entered as second-class
matter
February
15,
1985. at the postoffice at
Ashland, Oregon, under
the act of March 3, 1879.
★
TELEPHONE 8561
•THE TRUTH WILL
<»
WE ARE NOT ONLY INVENTORS -WERE 0£V£LOP£R&
FROM SPORTS TO ECONOMICS -
W|\£ DEMOCRATIZED.
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
tin Advance)
ONE YEAR ...... $1 50
SIX MONTHS
80c
1 Mailed Anywhere in the
United States)
★
by Mat
WE DEVELOPED
FROM AN OBSCURE EUROPEAN
GAME CALLED ' rounders :
SET YOU FREE”
MUST THE TAXPAYER FINANCE THE
DELIVERY OF NAZI PROPAGANDA?
Recent investigations reveal that tons of foreign
propaganda, mostly of German origin, are being deliv­
ered throughout the United States—and at the expense
of the taxpayer. Under the International Postal
Union, the country from which mail is sent retains all
the postage and the country of destination delivers it
free. So all Germany has to do is to print up a lot of
stamps and get the material into United States ports
obliging Uncle Sam does the rest free.
Reciprocity was the basis of the Postal Union, but
we are certainly gaining no benefits from this one­
sided flood of propaganda. We have no minister of
propaganda to launch a counter attack and if we did,
the material would get no further than the nazi censor.
Surely some legislation should be enacted, so that we
at least are not compelled to be unwilling financial
backers of the fifth column.
★
★
FOOTBALL
//
MADE FROM RUGBY.
^HECKING ACCOUNT5, ENJOYED BY
COMPARATIVELY FEW ABROAD, AR4
USED BY MILLIONS IN THE US A.
LIFE INSURANCE, STARTED IN ENGLAND,
IS ALMOST UNIVERSAL HERE .
LOW COST EDUCATION IS THE MOST
WIDESPREAD /N TH£ WORLD.
AND THROUGH D£V£LOPM£NT. MASS PRODUCTION AM)
£FF/C/£NCY, WEVE BROUGHT OUR GREAT INVENTIONS
TO ALL THE PEOPLE -MOTOR CAR-RADIO-T£L£.PHON£ ~
MOY/£3 -£c£CTR/C U6NT AND POWER - FOR EXAMPLE
ALL. AMERICANS DEN £ FIT FROM
AMERICAN ACHIEVEMENTS
Encouraging news was brought to Ashland this
recently from Sebastopol. Calif
week by a delegation of citizens who attended a NEWS FROM
Richard Mischke has been de­
meeting of the state highway commission in Port­
layed on his trip to South Africa
He is now in a hospital in Nampa,
land. If assurances the delegation received from the Washington School : Ida.,
recovering from an appendix
commission are definite it appears that the Plaza By SCHOOL STI DENTS
and tonsil operation. He will be
Dale King celebrated his birth­ able to sail from New York on
bottleneck is on the way out.
day Tuesday.
Feb 1. We all wrote letters to
Opinion has been divided on the question of elimin­ We had several hobbies in the him at the hospital.
hobby show. Roy Rogers showed
The hobby show sponsored by
ating the curve formed by North Main street as it his
hobby of feathers. Marilee Ma­ the Washington P-TA was a great
leaves the Plaza. Perhaps the difference of opinion has son had a hobby of buttons which success. The crowd was the larg­
told of on the program.
est to attend thia annual affair.
resulted more from the standpoint of feasibility than she Teddy
Wei--el is a new pupil in The exhibits were varied and in­
desirability, yet in the light of highway progress in the second gu.de. He came here teresting Many school patrons ex-
- hl bi ted ‘fine collections
Each
Jacksonville.
recent years there is nothing to question feasibility from
The second grade is interested , grade was represented by pupils
except possibly the financial part of the improve­ in the Ashland flower shop and who talked on their hobbies IJt-
A committee was ap­ , tie Kathleen Hartley played sev-
ment. It now appears that the commission is actually greenhouses.
Roberta
pointed to visit the greenhouse i eral piano selections
considering the problem and some of the more ardent and then to report to the class Greene delighted all with her fine
what they saw Mr. Sander took performance in piano solos. Mr.
backers of the project are looking forward to a fairly us
around among the flowers and i Kathan of the junior high school
early start.
plants and explained how he keeps talked about his hobbies, stamps,
greenhouse warm so the plants ' coins and myrtle wood novelties
Opposition may develop when it becomes apparent the
can grow and flowers bloom in Melvin Smith spoke on his stamp
that the project is to be accepted by the highway winter. The committee had many collection of art work in the
After the program, re­
to tell the other children school.
commission. Up to the present the movement has things
that afternoon. Patti Shaffer, Carl freshments were served in the
been fostered by a comparatively few influential citi­ Williams, Julia Norby, Robert school cafeteria.
Some of the hobbies from room
Arthur Ostrander, Betty
zens who have realized the necessity for making a Oden,
Skiiuier, Dolores Childers, Lois 6 included polished agates shown
change in that part of the highway route through the Kathan and Sherman Moseley by Skippy Rush, tax tokens from
were the committee.
Another many states by Leona Dixon,
city and since they have carried the matter this far it group
will be chosen to visit a rocks and arrow heads by Charles
would be ill-timed to start a movement to block the grocery store to report on ques­ Zarka, seashells including two un­
usual slipper shells by Joann Pre-
asked by the class.
enterprise. Benefits will be derived from more than tions
The second grade hobbies were I vo, salt and pepper shakers by
one source, the greatest of which will be elimination very interesUng. Janet Campbell Camela Daly, and minerals rocks
brought her collection of dolls, and fossil remains by Dick Leever
of a traffic hazard which is a constant threat to life Robert
Oden his school scrapbook, who told about his collection on
and property.
and Norma Davis her collection of the program.
★
★
★
DEMOCRACY BEGINS AT HOME!
To those of us who are somewhat tired of the
voluminous writings of news commentators and other
“experts” on world-saving there was a refreshing note
found in an article by J. P. McEvoy in the last issue of
This Week Magazine. The author of “A Letter to My­
self” has discovered that perhaps his responsibilities
are a little closer home that attempts to remodel the
world and to reform the leaders. So in this New Year
letter to himself he writes:
“....... this year I want to start right off shrinking
that world outlook of yours. Scale it down through the
nation, the state, county, township, village, neighbor­
hood, the house next door, your own house, and finally
—but right away please—to you....... stop stewing
about our international relations.... stop worrying
about the national budget and balance your own ....
stop griping about how much the government owes and
pay up those instalments on the car, the refrigerator
and that last baby .... stop grousing about the extrav­
agance of this generation compared to the thrift of our
pioneer ancestors—fix those leaky faucets, turn off
those lights. The nation is getting soft, and it worries
you. Take a couple of those spare tires off your own
waist.
“ .... You will be told that Democracy is something
you should be eager to rush out and die for. Don’t
argue the point. The time and energy is better spent
living for Democracy than arguing about it. Democracy
is a vague generality as long as you think of it in terms
of everybody else; it is very definite and personal when
you realize that Democracy is You. There can be no
honest government without an honest citizenry. Na­
tional government is the sum total of local govern­
ments. And local governments are fashioned out of you
and your neighbors.... If you must have a crusade I
for 1941, don’t try to save the world for Democracy.
You tried that before. Save Democracy—by saving
yourself.”
A combination spray program
Total mineral production of the
I stute of Oregon for the year 1940 recommended for the control of
wan approximately
$11,344,018 three leading pvata anil diseases
of cherries has Just been I as uni in
Tills is divided as follows: Pro­ the form of a circular of informa­
duction of metallic minerals, in­ tion, No. 225, by the Oregon Hiute
cluding gold, quicksilver, lead, college experiment station.
zinc and copper, was $5,794,018,
By using a combination of lime-
of which an estimated $1.71X1.(MX)
sulfur
and load arsenate, applied
is quicksilver alone.
at different intervals from the
Non-metalllcs, according to a time the blossom petals full until
survey just completed by the Ore­ four weeks after the shucks fall,
gon state department of geology it will be |M>aaiblr to control leaf
and mineral industries, accounted spot, aynctu licetle and the cherry
for $5,550,000 The latter figure fi nit fly, according to the circular.
covers the value of limestone for, Thia combination spray pro­
cement, sand and gravel, diatom- | gram Ims been worked out as the
Ito, coal, building and monumental result of extensive research car­
I ried on with funds allotted by the
stone, semi-precious gems, etc
It la the custonm of the United last legislature In the so-called ag-
States bureau of mines statistic­ ! rlcultural omnibus bill. The re-
al division around the first of each scarcch leading to the three-nly
year to announce a preliminary protection program wus carried
estimate of the production by the OUt by UM •l< i>»n tmvnts of ugrl
various stutes of gold, silver, lead cultural c I ii - iii I n 11 y. botany and
and copper.
Obviously, thia la entomology.
quite incomplete for Oregon aa '
These sprays in no way take the
quicksilver is not Included. The1
press release by the bureau of place of dormant and pre-blossom
mines is thus misleading and usu­ sprays for the control of other
ally results in newspapers and peata and diseases which some­
leaders interpreting the figures times are u problem with cherries,
i given by the bureau as total min-! the circular points out. Use of
eral production for the state Thia lime-sulfur for fruit fly control
year the bureau of mines reported presents aomc spray residue com-
but the ordinary wash-
| for the four mctuls mentioned u I
i In canning cleans the
value for 1940 of $4,094 018 This
! is an increase of 22 percent over fruit effectively, It has been
I similar figures for 1939, and the ¡ found
•
, increase of total mineral produc-1
While Giovanni Evangelist! was
tion for 1940 over 1938 (when tie
! last non-metallics survey was waiting for a trolley In Rochester,
made) is 30 3 percent Thus, the N v U m door handle of a pas-
mining industry of the state, on senger car caught in his trousers
pulled them off.
The auto
the basis of value of pnalucts pr >• and
i
took him home
< I need, is increasing more rapidly drivai
1
than any other basic industry Ini
Oregon.
1
WILLYS
THREE CIRCULARS ISSUED
ON HORTICULTURAL WORK
★
ASHLAND BOTTLENECK APPEARS
TO BE ON WAY OUT!
iMineral Production (Three-Ply (’berry
Shows Rapid Increase Spray Developed
charms. Lois Kathan, Patti Shaf­
fer, Tommy Trueman and Billy
Wren brought scrapbooks.
Our room showed some nice
hobbies. Joyce Rein bold had an
Indian collection. Two doll collec­
tions are shown, one by Earline
Rogers, and a very large one by
Joanne Brown who told about hers
on the program. Helen Flaharty
explained her shell collection and
how she began to collect.
A program was held in room 5
Jan. 14. Everyone told about his
hobby. The chorus sang "Oh, for
Wings!” The Chickagami Camp
Fire girls sang "You May Push.”
Jacquie Donne's mother, Mrs.
Lowe, sent us some delicious cook­
ies. We think she is a very good
cook.
Shirley Ann Weitzel started to
school here Jan. 13. She came here
from Jacksonville and came there
IS YOUR PRESENT LIFE
INSURANCE ADEQUATE?
See
Bohemian Club
Cook’s Reception
Log Cabin
Pop,wd and Sacked
by
PHONE 4721
•
PLAIN
DRESSES
PLAIN
COATS
WINS AGAIN!
☆
29.06 mile« per gallon
of gas on Gilmore
Grand Canyon contest
Costs lx*ss to Buy
and Lean to Run!
INVESTIGATE
MADDEN AUTO CO.
NO North Main
REMEMBER WHEN
sulphur and molasses was the recognized cure for
spring fever and that tired feeling 7 As a precautionary
measure, mother gave you several doers of the mixture
whether you needed It or not The word vitamin wasn't
m th.- dicUonary then Remember’
Mother didn't prcM-rila* sulphur and mo­
lasses, but did teach us the "Golden Rule."
DEPUTY COI'NTV CORONER
LITWILLER .
FUNERAL HOME
(We Never Close)
Phone 4541
C.M.IJtwIller
MSMSMsesesMSMSMSMSMseseses»
The sixth grade formed an Au­
dubon club the week before last.
They have gotten some pictures of
birds. They held a meeting Tues­
day and discussed the robin and
the swan
STEVEN R.
METROPOLITAN UFE
INSURANCE CO.
Three brief mimeographed and
printed circulars in the field of
horticulture have puat been issued
at Oregon State college for free
distribution Circular of informa-
Uon No. 228, which Is a revision
of a former publication, lists the
insect pests of holly and makes
control suggestions. It was pre­
pared by Joe Shuh. assistant, and
Don C. Mote, entomologist, at the
experiment station.
A brief printed folder, extension
bulletin No, 498. gives directions
for the control of mosses and
lichens on • fruit and nut trees
Bordeaux mixture is recommend­
ed for this purpose Extension cir­
cular 356 by O T McWhorter, ex­
tension
horticulturist,
contains
suggestions for training boysen-
berries and youngberries, and in­
cludes drawings of two systems
Harry Chipman’s
149
East Main
St.
30‘
When you start won­
dering i U mmi I insurance,
or have some question
you’d like answered,
just give us a ring and
we'll ba glad to help
you any way we can
... our business Is in­
surance, our purpose Is
to help you! We de-
i>end on the value and
protection Oregon Mu­
tual
Fire
Insurance
Company's famous Di­
vidend Policies give
for sales, not high-
pressure . . . may we
help youT
Are you planning to buy a new or used car soon ?
Then you’ll be glad to know that we can save you im­
portant money on your car and liability Insurance , . .
just ask iis for full Information, without obligation, of
course!
I. C. ERWIN
240 East Main Street
Phene 8751
CLEANING SPECIAL
FOR AN
INDEFINITE
PERIOD
5c
Standard Cleaners
OR MIX THEM UP—THREE FOR
SAME
HIGH
QUALITY
FJ
WORK
I