SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Thuraday, June 10, 1043 Ai lb«-««* are not cchedulerl to arrive until July they will not in i’ * * a t > Jirie, and from 250 to 300 who terfere — — ••i. .u* with the . 1 •• H club ----------- summer By Itulit Taylor The Associated Women Students will lie enrolled in th«- I imn I c train school scheduled for June, college Those who live in perpetual of the Southern Oregon College ing also in progrvHH here officials point out. tiui knots develop acuter percep of Education elected officers tills tion In other senses. We who are week, to serve next year. They living in dimmed out cities und ate: President, Barbara McLean towns air developing an acuter of Klamath Falla; Vice-presiiicnt peiception, too. Henrietta Hall of Gerber, Califor WI ivii tile little street lani|iH nia; Hecratary, Aim Crandall of blink out, we draw together In Ashland; Treasurer, Verna Dean closer companionship, In a realiza Meggs of Klumath Falls; Sergeant tion of our dependence one upon at Arum, Florence Wood of Ash tlic other. Our sense of neighbor-' land. Retiring president is Nellie lincHH iM'comea more acute. McLain of Astiland. When I come up Into the dark These officers direct the extra | ened Pennsylvania Station or curricular activities of the women when I walk along the blackened students; they have charge of the streets of New York, I notice this big Mister work, the entertaining new feeling of frlendllncHN There of new girl students at the begin is I chh hurry, leas rush, more |io- ning of the school year, and the Q iiteneMs, more consideration. Peo acquainting them with the college ple talk together, where Where before during Freshman Week in Sep- they would have Ignored ignored each . (ember. Barbara M<*la*an, Henri other's existence 'rticre is a feel- etta Hall, anil Verna Dean Meggs lug of neighborlim-sa in the air. are students of teacher-training. We are tied In bonds of common Ann Crandall and Florence Wood clanger. are enrolled in the junior college Our manner of living, too, has department. been dimmed out by war. Those ------ BUY BONDS------- things we thought essential, for MORE ADVANCED AND BASK which we have fought, are put ASTI MEN < oming TO OM aside We arc already restricted OREGON STATE COLLEGE tn many of our liberties and we Around four to five hundred more know that la-fore long we will have to dim out other privileges soldiers for the Army H|M*ciaHz.cd But tin our eye* have, become Training unit now on the campus accustomed to t h e darkened are due to arrive here early in streets, to the absence of the July, according to notification re strong lights which detracted ceived here from the War Depart from the details of the every day ment at Washington, D. C. Ten scene, we have learned to see with tative plans call for the arrival of LSI riJtury Urtar tmrrtl other eyes, to know what we truly believed As the material things have been taken from tin we have learned to use the senses of our hearts und minds. Only in material things does the dim-out prevail I Our faith is not dimmed out, i Our spirit is nut dimmed out. We know that it is up to each and every one of um to make* this dim-out a temporary thing that it ia up to ua and to our work to turn the light» on again. In tills darkened period we need to be a united people, to hold hands with our fellow men, to work with them regie rd less of race or creed or color. We arc no longer rich or jioor, worker or employer, biack or white, Cath olic, Jew or Protestant. We are. each one of us, simply Americans, believers In a common credo of democracy, in the freedom of all mankind, in the sanctity of the individual. In the dark hours the liarriers of pride chin out first. We are at lust free to meet as neighbors, j ready to serve, comfort and be-; friend one another regardless of whom our neighbor may be. Let us resolve, therefore, that when the lights go on again we will carry this friendlincNS into our daily lives, living ns bravely in the light as in the darkness! DIM-OUT WOMEN STUDENTS AT 100 150 m,n for th® SOCF FT FCT OFFICERS v‘u""* wolk ul" u|y under way ANGLERS TO REPORT CAT< II Anglers are urged again to co operate with the Oregon K’.iie No American want« this war Game Commission by mailing in to co one minute beyond the catch record cards for all fishing time we can bring it to a vic ; trips made, A report is wanted tor torious end. To hasten that each trip even if no fish ate victory—to save possibly the caught. lives of millions of our boy« I The orange-colored cards, which on our far flung fronts—it la are simple to fill in, need not be Imperative that every Ameri- signed and need no postage. They can do his part in the Hec»’nd can be secured from state police War Loan. There is an in- vestment to fit every purse. officers, game license agents, fish The most you can do is little ing resorts and boat concessions enough compared with the sac as well as from the office of the rifice offered by our boys in Game Commission. service. They give their lives The Commission desires to se —you lend your money. cure as much information as pos sible as to the angling success in THE M IX KK P It E H S FOR the various streams and lakes of U A I, IT y P K I N T I N G. the state. To Hasien Victory w » * - r v » v The World’s News Seen Through T he C hristian S cience M onitoi An International Daily Newipaper PaMiM f, IHt. < HRI DAN S< It M E PUBLISHING SOCIETY One. Norway Street, B-nion, Manachuirtu 11 Truthful Constructive—Vnbiared—Free from Senaational- **m — Editorials Are Timely Jnd Instructive, and It. Daily Feature., Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal New.paper for the Home. Price ¡it 2 00 Yeirly, or >1 00 a Month Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2 60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 l*»ue. 25 Cents. Obtainable* at; Christian Science Reading Room Pioneer Avenue Ashland, Oregon PRODUCTS OF A FREE COUNTRY 0 Bob Mortensen is a production foreman in a factory that used to make bicycles. He's seen a good many of his boys there at the plant called into the service, and Bob kinda likes to keen in touch with them. He was writing to Don Sumner not long ago, and said something to this effect: ------BUY BONDS------ THE LOW DOWN ---------------------- - from--------------------- HICKORY GROVE A nation-wide salca tax right now, to pay for the war, is the medicine we need. Unless we care to drag around for year» as a half-way Invalid, we better start doing something * - and taking our medicine. A aalea tax is a hot potato and |M>iHon to many office holders. But more than one politician of renown has always had finger on public pulse- they Just think they do. That is why we see so many new faces there on the old Potomac, as time rolls along - - as we get hop. And while we are on the pulse subjeot, it reminds me of the horn»' doctor story that the chef down at our Coffee Pot Restaurant told me A hors»1 doctor, he aays, must be smart- - smarter even than your family doctor. You tell your family doctor where you feel bad, he says, and the doctor proceds ! to fix you up. But a veterinary, he can’t ask the horse where he has a pain. Rut the sales tax- - I am off the subject.. Yours with the low down, JO SERRA ------ BUY BONDS------- Nee iin now for Automobile Liability I in tl ranee. Mrs. M. T. Bums—on the Plaza. "You'd hardlv know the old place, Don. Things are humming around here 24 hours a dav. We're not making bicycles any more, and I wish I could tell you what we are making. We've converted. There's a girl at your old stand now, doing your job—only on a different kind of machine." Well, in that letter, Bob was tellinq Don a story that has been reneated many times since Pearl Harbor. Plants, factories and mills by the hundreds have changed over from roller skates to aircraft parts; from typewriters to guns. To make the swing to war production really effective, there had to be electric power—tremendous quantities of it, ready and waiting. The power was there, all right. America's electric companies saw to that. They were prepared. They had built up reserves of power to have on tap when needed and where. Behind that* readiness in the emergency is the tradition of American business management—free men and women, working together, and inspired by the incentives that only freedom can pro vide. Without good business management, in its electric companies, America would not be the power-full nation it is today. There is no substitute for War Bonds, either! Tlie Miner for Quality Printing. THE CALIFORNIA OREGON POWER COMPANY