Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, May 30, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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    Friday, May 30, 1941
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 4
Southern Oregon Miner
CHAS. M. GIFFEN
WILLIAM SAVIN
Publishers
Published Every Friday
at 167 Elast Main Street
ASHI.AND, OREGON
¥
★
Entered as second-class
matter
February
là.
1935. at the postoffice at
Ashland. Oregon, under
the act of March 3,1879.
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
(In Advance)
ONE YEAR
$1 50
SIX MONTHS
80c
(Mailed Anywhere in the
United States)
★
ROGER M RYES'-
DWcAor. National Farm Youth Foundation
EFFECTIVE PUBLIC OPINION
Since the beginning of this
country the farmer has been the
mainstay of American stability.
Today, more than ever before, it is
SET YOU FREE”
necessary that every member of
our rural com­
munities shoul­
der this respon­
sibility. Many
While editorial comment on the president's speech is things are hap­
to Amer ­
varied to the extremes of *A virtual declaration of war pening
ica that deserve
to “Disappointingly vague and not concrete," we are serious consid­
hopeful that it will at least result in immediate and de­ eration. Amer­
ica was founded
finite action along two lines —namely, stoppage of de­ on the premise
fense orders by strikes and the equally dangerous but that people are
Eyes
intelligent and
less publicised fifth column activities.
sensible. The
Labor dictatorships which can force men to leave pride of America has been the
knowledge that public opinion,
their jobs regardless of their own wishes, the welfare based on a full knowledge of the
of the nation, and in defiance of the government itself, facts, has been able to direct this
through a century and a
is inexcusable. Especially when most disputes could be nation
half of progress and well being,
arbitrated without loss of precious man-hours of work such as any other nation or people
experienced.
which are so important in providing defense needs. The has It ever
doesn't seem so long ago that
importance of the man in the factory was forcibly em­ the representatives of the people
would join them at the town meet­
phasized at a recent meeting of the machine tool build­ ing
and openly discuss the issues
ers association at which it was stated that in modern of the day, then return to the
warfare it takes 18 men in the factory to maintain one assemblies of government for the
purpose of carrying out the will
at the battle front.
I of the people.
Today, however, it is difficult for
After all, it is the men, women and children in the i any
congressman or senator to
are
United States whose lives, liberty and happiness
fully represent the people. There
at stake in our prepardness drive. No labor dictator can are a number of reasons for this.
is the very atmosphere of
save them from an agressor, if his acts cause a break­ First,
Washington. It is like the seat of
down in our defense ability. Witness the fallen coun­ government of any nation. The
minute you step out of the railway
tries of Europe.
station you get the feeling you are
Startling disclosures by Jan Valtin, author of “Out in a world apart The huge laby­
of corridors makes one for­
of the Night,” regarding Nazi activity in this country, rinth
get that America
lives and
industrial reports showing Nazi control and influence breathes on the fresh air and com­
in some of our most important industries,, reports of mon sense of the country side.
TELEPHONE 8561
Defense At Home!
shipping insurance companies providing vital inform­
ation to Nazi agents, these and many other evidences
are coming to light which show that invasion is actual­
ly here now rather than being some vague far off pos­
sibility.
Our defense should start at home. Says the Seattle
Times, “... again we pledge our loyalty, but from the
president we demand what our loyalty earns —ruthless
abolition of fifth columnists.
★
★
★
Honor Our Heroic Dead!
The Memorial Day observance is two-fold. It brings
flowers and orations for the dead and exhortations for
the living. The finest tribute we can pay to our heroes
is paid when we reproduce and perpetuate their spirits.
Another great factor upon which Memorial Day lays
special emphasis is the spirit of self-sacrifice. In Scot­
land there is a battle field upon which the natives and
their Saxon foes met in a terrific battle. No monument
marks the spot, but a singular little blue flower grows
there and nowhere else. They call it the “Flower of
Culloden” because it sprang from the soil where patri­
ots were buried.
The choicest flowers of human civilization are al-
REMEMBER WHEN
—the kitchen lamp set on a fancy iron bracket that swung
out from the kitchen wall? There was one over the cook
stove and one beside the kitchen cabinet. Polished reflectors
increased the lamp’s efficiency. Filling and cleaning lamps
was part of the regular morning work. Remember?
Our “regular” service pleasea
the most exacting.
DEPUTY COUNTY CORONER
Litwiller Funeral Home
We Never Clowe—Phone 4541
HII.T NEWS
(Continued from page 1)
visitors Saturday.
• Miss Marian Hunt, instructor
of the intermediate grades at the
Hilt grammar school, entrained
Friday night for San Francisco.
• Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gran and
son Bill and Jack Eddy attended
ir^^e^bi™ of^^mh*Sy
Scout troop camped near the Cir­
cle P. Ranch.
• Mrs Arthur Gilberg entertained
Thursday with a birthday party
for her son Gene who received
many nice gifts from his little
friends.
• Mr. and Mrs. Henry De Clerck
and Mrs. Florent Van De Wegle
were in Yreka on business Satur­
day.
• Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Walker and
sons Buster and Billy and daught­
er Audrey, Mrs. F. Brownlee and
daughter Phyllis of Hornbrook,
Mr. and Mrs. Jes Brownlee and
grandsons and Willis Brownlee of
Medford picniced in the Ldthia
Park Saturday. Later in the day
the party was joined by Mr. and
Mrs. Walt Foster and Richard
Laustalat.
• Mrs. Maud Wert spent the week
end in Ashland at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Ernest Francis.
• Mr. and Mrs. Richard Williams
and son Roy were Medford visit­
ors Saturday.
• Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ward, Mr.
and Mrs. Donovan Ward and
daughter Diane. Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Bray and daughter Judy,
Mr. and Mrs. L. McCulloch and
daughter Donna of Klamath Falls
and Babe Bumheisel enjoyed a
I picnic in I.ithia Park Sunday.
OAK STREET GARAGE ARD MACHINE SHOP
“We build Storage Tanks”
97 OAK STREET, ASHLAND
Bendix Eclipse Out-board Motors
so you are
going to lie
MARRIED!
ET us be amonn the first to
L
extend best wishes, with the
hope and trust that the years
to come may bring you ever-
increasing happiness and rich
realization of your fondest
drcams.
\
Billings Agency
sideration in the determination of
policies under which this nation
is to be governed.
• Mr and Mrs Primo Favern
were in Yreka Soturday.
• Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gilmore of
Klamath Fails and Mr and Mrs 1
Finley and sons of Medford wen-
guests of Mr. and Mrs. O. Coleman
Sunday.
• Mr. and Mrs W A. Dutro were
in Ashland Saturday and Sunday
• A special meeting of the em­
ployees was called Monday after
work to vote on working Satur­
days with the voote going 100
to 8 against the proposition.
• Mr. and Mrs. Julio Rossetti are
Goodwin at the hospital.
to Yreka Sunday to visit Gerald
the parents of a son bom at the
Hilt hospital.
• Mrs. George Goodwin, Margaret
Coleman, and Billy Gran drove
And by way of starting
everything off right,
IF YOUR CAR
ways Culloden flowers; they spring from the soil that
has been enriched by sacrifice. Freedom is one such
flower. It has claimed its price in the lives of our best
that we might be a free land. Religous liberty is an­
other which has claimed its thousands of martyrs to a
great cause. Christianity is another—it sprang from
the blood-dewed ground at the foot of the cross!
You’ll have no trouble landing the
big ones if you use one of our non
sinkable, light weight Metal Boats
They take you where you want to
go! See them at
PHONE 458«
Conference after conference ir, MRS. MAPES ENTERTAINS
smoke-Ailed rooms makes it diffi­ PANT NOIII.E GRINDS <1.111
cult for any man or woman repre­
The Past Noble Grunds Club
senting the people to maintain th« of Hope Rebekah Uxlge met nt
same perspective as the folks back the home of Mis W H. Mapes
home. There is much criticism ol Friday afternoon. Mrs. Charles
our lawmakers because they ar« May presided over the b'isinosa
»aid by many to have given away presided over the business meet­
their powers for political advan­ ing Mrs. George Trimble was el­
tage. If this is true, the blam< ected president in place of Mrs
should fall not on the man, but or Charles Young who hus moved a-
the people back home, who did not way. Refreshments were nerved by
take the time and trouble to givs the hostess assisted by Mis Belle
“
him the beneAt of their council Schwein and Mrs George Trimble
•
and advice or words of encourage­
ment when they were needed most KNO'IT-CARMEAN
In the old days, it was easy to
Mrs. Gladys Knott linn an-
go to town meetings and expresi nounced the marriage of hcr
an opinion, but when it comes to daughter Virginia June to John
writing a letter to our senator or Charles Carmean, son of M r and
congressman, we neglect it be­ Mrs Millard Cnrniean of Medford
cause most of us hate writing let­ The young couple were married in
ters. Yet we will denounce th« Reno, April 21 and were accomp­
work of our public servants to out anied by their mothers Ttp-y left
last week for their new home in
neighbors and friends.
If we get an America of a sori Ixm Angeles
we do not want in the next Av«
years, it will be the fault of th« r
American people who have prac­
tical opinions, but who fail to ex­
press them to those representing
them in Washington because such
action requires a little gumption.
Few of us take the Rouble to
review the work of the United
States Congress. Today our news­
papers are Ailed with discussion«
in In HU red iiguinnt only fire
about strikes in our defense indus­
luid theft, you're out of luck
tries and, yet. practically none of
If Its ditinug«*d or destroyed
us have written to Washington for
by flood, f idling tree or
a copy of the Wagner Act which
many other thingw that cun
governs the interrelations of in­
hii|>|>en to It. The modern
dustry and labor in the matter of
way to insure u ear In the
defense. Every American should
Comprcht-iiHlve, In <• In ding
know the contents of the impor-
Collision, “AU-Rtodcs" Auto
mobile Polley — It covers
tant Acts of Congress.
damage from practically any
It is time that we, the people.
cause. Ask for details. No
take off our coats and help those
obligation.
who are trying their best to repre­
sent us by taking a deAnite inter­
est in their work, both by giving
our opinions and by reviewing the
INSURANCE
work that has been done in an
effort to determine whether or not
OF ALL KINDS
it serves the best interests of the
American people.
Because the best thinking in
America has come from the land,
it is the special responsibility of
REAL ESTATE and
the rural people, who have pro­
REAL INMUKANCE
duced sound opinions, to see that
Phone
8781
41 Eaat Main
such opinions are given full con­
wc offer you a gift copy
of our precious little
Bride's Book...precious, but
/rtf, like so many of the best
things in life.
It's all about how to best let
your friends know about the
most important event you'll
ever have in your life.
Virginia Courteney, recognized
authority, writes entertainingly,
informatively, about the mod
cm way to say "I'm married,
and I want to tell the world.”
Virginia suggests only what
the smart girl of today should
do...can't afford not to do.
Our gift, with our very best
wishes co you, and we Jo mean
YOU.
P. 8 See us for your an
nouncements and Invitations
Southern ()r«*g«»n .Mint*
Wardrobes Special
PLAIN
St ITS
COATS
DRESSES
35c
WARDROBE CLEAHERS
“ON THE PLAZA”
45 North Main
Phon«* 3281
I
I
I
How To Keep The Home
C-O-O-L
Employ Electricity in its Many Uses
COOL -■
to cook with
to wash with
—in many ways
It’s Cheap Too!
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Ashland Light Department
“Your SERVICE Department”