Thursday, Nov. 5, 1942 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Page 2 LN THE NAME OF THE FOR BUNIN ENSMENt The businessman, who has marchan- STATE OF OREGON, you are I Utae or service to sell, will profit hsraby required Ur appeal aud answer the complulnt filed against highly through F’RFXJUENl us. you in U>e above action, witidn of our printing service. A mod ». 'tour weeks from the date of the ern plant, skilled craftsmanship first publication of this summons, economical charges these meal ui<| if you f.*ll to a|>|>ear and ans­ printing that will help you sei wer within said period, the Plaln- .iff will tuke Judgement against more you for the sum of 836.31, together With the costs and disbursements LEGAL NOTICES of this action This summons is served u|«>n SUTUX Of UMBER HALE you by the publication thereof, auaivu bids, iiiaraeu vuuutK pursuant to an order of M. T. "fetus tor tuuuer , an adureaeeu Burns, Justice ot the Peace, said to Ute Forester, O. tmu u. district, dated October 24th. 1942, Admmiairauon, 41U Cue tout by which order you are required nous«, t uiiuMid, Oregon, win tn. U» appear and answer on or before received unut 1U.8U a *T, i'acUK the 27th day of November, 1942 nine, November 1U, 1942 tor Ute Date of First Publication: Oct­ purettase ol umfeer upon trails ober 29, 1942 oureimu ter described; each otu WM M BRIGGS must state tne amount per M. Attorney for Plaintiff ! leet B M., wtuen will be oiiereu Postoffice address: lor each species and the totai Pioneer Bldg , Ashland. Oregon, consldeiatiiMi wmeh will be p*uu □er. 29. Nov 5. 12. and 19 ior tne limber. No bld fur (ess man me appraise«] value will ta> Ten per rent of >uur Income considered. Lach bnl must be In War Honda will help to submitted in duplicate and be accompanied by a deposit in tue build Ihr planen and tanka iorm m a certified cneck in fav­ that will Insure defeat of Hit­ or ut Ute Treasurer of the United ler and hie Axis partners. Blates, lue deposit ot any sue- ceastul bidder will be credited on the contract, Payment in lull at the time uf filing the contract is required in sale* amounting to 325OU or less . F'or copies of the form ot proposal, form of con-' tract and bond, terms of pay­ ment, amount oc deposit required I with bld, amount of bund rs- quirvd with contract and other information, application should be matie to the address shown above. LN JACKSON COUNTY: T. 37 8.. R. 4 E, 8cc 21. all merchantable timber design­ ated for cutting oil the NE*«BE>«, 10HW>i«C|( and SEI«BEK«, estimated for the purpose of this sale to be 2420 M. feet Douglas Fir. 495 M. feet Shasta Fir. 570 M feet White Fir No bfd for less than 83 00 per M ft. BM. for the Douglas Fir. 82 00 per M ft B.M for tile Siumta Fir, >1 50 per M ft. BM for the White Fir. or a total purchase price of 89.105 00. will be considered. All Douglas Fir less than 26 ins. DBHOB, and all White and Shasta Fir less than 18 Ina DBHOB, and all White Pine reserved from cutting. Tb be logged with caterpillar tractor The right to waive technical (leOx-ta, and to re­ ject any and all bids ta re- served. Dated at Portland, Oregon, 26 th day of October. 1942 W. H Homing. Chief mighty fine Forester place to down mici O. C. Administration •atlafy that appetite. What­ Oct. 29. Nov 5 ever you want to eat—you'll SUMMONS * find lota of GOOD thing* IN THE JUSTICES COURT TN here. You’ll find fair prices AND FOR THE DISTRICT OF' too. ASHLAND, JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON. M E. Kaegl, va George Foley. your meeting place TO GEORGE FOLEY, the above named Defendant STABILIZATION OF HIGHER ED. CITED IN HUNTER REPORT PORTLAND Measures taken by the state board of higher educ­ ation in the |«ast two years have Published Every Thurs. had a stabilizing effect on the FRED MILTENBERGIÖI at 167 East Main Street state system and its institutions ASHLAND, OREGON Publisher and have stimulated development within established patterns in * ★ each institution. Chancellor F. M Entered as second-class Hunter reported to the board at SUBSCRIPTION matter February 16, its October meeting here. RATES 1935. at the postoffice at (Ln Advance) Dr. Hunter reviewed the edu­ Ashland, Oregon, under SIX MONTHS 81 50 cational background of Oregon the act ef March 3, 1878. pointed out weaknetnett he- be ONE YEAR 32 00 lieves exist in the general edu­ * (Mailed Anywhere in the cation program uf the alate, and United States) TELEPHONE 8561 then recounted recent steps taken i by the state board to improve higher education. SET YOU FREE' "THE TRUTH WILLZ^— Six pruicipai steps listed are, defining the relationship of Radio YOUR HOME TOWN PAPER KOAC to the system, establishing fourth-year work at the colleges Old ideas cling to most of us like ivy to a stone wall Old pre­ of education, clarifying the posit­ judices are hard to down—and because of these failings, most of us ion of the medical scchool as an programs, alumni programs, the go through life missing a lot that makes existence very much worth integral part of the University of dormitory system and the high Oregon, providing terminal cours­ school relations committee. while for others. es such as secretarial training at • In the back of the minds of many persons is the vision of the the colleges of education, re­ MEDICAL REPI-A< E.MENT old-time home town newspaper. They fail to realize that, as with storying major instruction in six TRAINING CENTER everything else, home town journalism and printing craftsehip. science departments at the univer- C AMP BARKE1.EY must keep in step with the march of progress or fall by the wayside. sity, restorying degree work in Medichi Replacement Training mining engineering at Oregon To these persons let us admit that we could no more content to State college and authorizing de­ Center, Camp Barkeley, Texas, CpI George H. Swartsley. 27. son of read in 1942 a "country paper" of 1880 than could they BUT— gree courses in business and tech­ Mrs. Edith B Swartsley, of Ash­ nology at the state college. HAVE YOU SEEN THE MINER LATELY? land, Ore., today laid aside his "These measures of the board non-commission stripes to assume now it’s a better one The Miner always was a good newspape have unmistakably had a stabiliz­ All we need is a little qacy.uragement. via the advertising route ing effect on the system and Its the gold bars and commissioned rank of second lieutenant He was and local news. We live here, we spend our money here with you institutions," Chancellor Hunter graduated today in the fourth and it takes money to publish a newspaper, let us have your com­ declared. "The motive ofplnstitut- and largest class of the Medical mercial printing, we can help you with composing, designing. ruling, ional advantage has been mini­ Administrative corps Officer Can­ mized." didate school to date, receiving art-work, engraving, making and matching colors of inks. Looking ahead. Chancellor Hun­ his diploma and certificate of The MINER wants to thank those kind hearted people that have ter said the task of unified con­ commission from the general him­ stood by us in these days of uhrest and confusion and we hope that trol will require the continuation self. Brig -Gen. Roy C. Heflebower we have done them some good. In our estimation, there are not of wise leadership on the part of MRTC and school Commandant A former Oregon State college any better class of people in all the land, than here in Ashland and the board. The working program of his office, under the board, student, Lt. Swartsley was a Southern Oregon, consists of improving the habit of pharmacist In civilian life before ★ ★ ★ He now goes institutions working together to­ entering the army HEADACHE FOR THE MERCHANT ward a common end, emphasizing on 10-day furlough, returning here for assignment to duty. Price fixing may sound simple to the man in the street. But it special allocations of services for each institution, achieving a bal­ is a monumental headache to thousands of retail merchants ance between institutional prestige BEAR .MEAT CHEAP Never before have the people and the industries of America faced and service of higher education as Housewives who fret over the a whole, and achieving economics the necessity of donning a regulatory straitjacket such as is embodied in administration through budget­ attended an auction held by the in the deluge of pamphlets now reaching storekeepers from Maine ary control and surveys of needs. rising price of meat should have Control agencies aifectlng all Montana state fish to California Everything from gum to tractors is being ,-fixed” or anil game "frozen" The price of each item on a retailer's shelves must be institutions he listed as the grad­ commission recently held at uate division, general research Helena. Two bears, a yearling carefully set according to formula council, labrary administration, v bi enforcing these new laws will general extension division, and and a two-year-old, all dressed The policies and methods used i of marine biology. and ready to be cut into steaks ncP fixing effort Long before the es- institute make or break the entire prii Central administrative undertak­ went for an average of 3 7 epnts tablishment of the price laws, retail merchants bent every effort ings Include the work of the divi­ a pound. toward holding down inflationary rises in the cost of living They sion of information, campus deve­ I did an effective job for which they received praise from high govern­ lopment plans, land purchase pro­ grams, phfMcal plant care, health Think Before You Ink ment officials - « . i . 411 Southern Oregon Miner Ten ParCcnt OF YOUR INCOME Should ba qoing into U.S. War Bonds end Stomp« I And now these same merchants, many hundreds of thousands of them,are starving valantly to comply with the complicated ceiling decrees issued from Washington. A great many of them have un­ knowingly become lawbreakers because they have found it im­ possible to quickly understand the technical rules Their cases deserve far different consideration than those of the very few who maliciously seek to evade the law- -In this instance the old saying that ignorance is no excuse should fabt be applied. Ignorance, if you wish to call it that, is a very definite excuse And if the administrating officials are wise they will not begin our new authoritarian era by fining og throwing any erring store­ keeper in jail until they have determined his intent. After all, our main job is to win the war, not persecute good American citizens * * * 4 WE CAN ENT/ THIS WAR WHEN YOU ARE HUNGRY Germany knows that defeat this time means the complete obliter­ ation of the German nation, for this reason they too, will fight to death for their country. We are fighting for the same reasons and we too will figfat to death ba* something seems to be wrong— we are not advancing in comparison with our war effort as we should be doing. Kaiser can build a battleship in ten days—but Washington does not keep this tremendous activity going. Kaiser also can build cargo planes but Washington has not given him the the complete “go” signal. Why—vyhat is happening in Washington? People are sending their alumintini, tin, and iron to war—but is it getting there fast enough—is it even getting there! It is deplorable, yet it is true that politics is prolonging the war. We know that to be a fact and delay in the war effort means lives and suffering—yet the American people contend with such govern­ mental mockery! There are a few civilians who are not back of a quick end to the war forthey are gaining in monetary wealth—yet we have not taken a definite stand against those barbaric actions! There are also so called Americans withholding necessary scrap i/Jon and steel—yet they are true citizens! Something is very wrong for a good many of us believe this war could soon be ended and that it is Dot necessary to prolong it to a five or ten year conflict. The German people appartenly are asking the question, "Peace, and when?” And still a peace effort remains- in the shadows. Let this war be ended and let every American see that every effort is made to end"K behind the scenes, for there is an important “front.” Let Kaiser build his planes and ships, let every effort be made to end this conflict—the common people can and must demand such action from Washington. He VV ho Laughs Lasts! I THE INDIA the female blimp RUBBER MAH FAT EMMA HE DOESN'T WALK-HE BOUNCES/ -r-2---------------------- fi-> I - INSI6HT fo/Q Lß Before You Put Summer Things Away SEND THEM HERE FOR EXPERT WASHING DISCONTINUED ON ACCOUNT f OF PRIORITIES # =z 1 'S // We are noted for skillful laundering of clothing and all household things. We send them back just like new. It cost so little too. PHONE 7771—That’s all ASHLAND LAUNDRY COMPANY 'riwoner* in State Penitentiary at I-a Grange, Ky., volunteer as aOwwl donor* to Mood bank established by the John N. Norton Mern- teflrmary, Loul*evllle, an Episcopal Church sponsored insti- MCtak. The American Legion is Cooperating In the plan, which is by Dr. Eunice S, Greenwood, pathologist at the Infirmary. , ..•el ot Wirt M. Wright, Prop. WWW a* rw mt ,«,*. Phone 7771 : 31 Water St. 4