••••-« '» i
m in e a ,
American Worker Is World’s Best Producer
recorded on Oregon highways
and streets, is u better indication
of tlie relative safety of truffle
thnn tlie uctuul number of deaths.
Thus, tlie death rate this year in
dicates a need for increased cure
in driving anti wulking, the Sec
retary of State suid.
I f you want to know why the Allies won the war. look at the above
...... O'
-
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Carryl H. & Marion C. Wines, Editors-Publishers
Just in case you have forgotten the fact, remember this: The Am eri
can workman is the world's greatest producer.
Before and during the war, he ranked j j per cent better than the
Canadian, i j j per cent better than the German, 180 per cent better
than the Russian or Briton and jo o per cent better than the Jap.
Entered as second-class m all m a tte r In the post office a t Ash
land, Oregon, F ebruary 15, 1935, under the act of Congress
of M arch 3, 1879.
production figures, which are based on production per man hour o f
work.— The Progressive Miner.
Published Every Thursday at 167 Main Street, Ashland, Oregon
W hat P a tte rn Freedom ?
Letter From
Washington
The labor situation in the United States today causes any person w itl
the welfare o f his country at heart, to th in k o f its fu tu re w ith a feeling
almost o f fear. We see pow erful labor unions calling strikes which fore
hundreds o f thousands o f men to be idle! I f there are a m illion men i
the United States today w ithout work, who do not care to join union
they w ill not be perm ittd to take jobs in "s tru c k " plants. L ittle dictatoi
all over the United States can law fu lly prevent a man from exercisin
his constitutional rig h t to earn a livin g , unless he "joins” and "pays” fc
the privilege, regardless o f his wishes in the n u tte r.
Take the situation in the oil industry, fo r example. The president o
the O il Workers International Union which has a dispute w ith majt
oil companies, has the authority to call out nearly 300,000 oil workei
and close down oil production w ithout regard to the damage and sui
fering caused a nation o f 135,000,000 people. The oil workers are amon
the highest paid in the land and they w ork short hours. They not onl
claim the rig h t to destroy the oil industry i f necessary to enforce the
demands, but they can prevent other men who m ight be idle, from tak
ing their jobs. And they do this under thelaw. H ow can such a conditio
exist in a country that is supposed to have a C onstitution guaranteein
and protecting individual freedom?
\\ hat would happen i f the oil companies should organize a union o
BY H A R R IS E LLS W O R T H
Representative- In Congress
from Oregon
As nearly a I could tell from the
debiite and from discussions I
have hud with members, no one
feels entirely satisfied with the
ship disposal bill. It endeavors to
solve a very complicated problem.
Perhaps the best we can do is to
hope that it is a good bill ant
plan to amend it in the future
where necessary.
The Mountains of
the Heart
Once again we are assured that
he plant to produce alcohol and
ther useful products from saw-
lust will be completed. Since
uly, the fate of this project,
B y R u th T a y lo r
vhich has been under construc-
Several
years ago on my way
ion at Springfield, Oregon for
back
from
the West Coast, I stop
everal months, has been in doubt
The plant was ordered con- ped off in Colorado and one nev
tructed at Springfield by the er-to-be-forgotten day I drove
far Production Board for the out to visit a few newspaper edi
mrpose of producing alcohol for tors in the smaller towns. I stop
•ar from a non-food source, ped at a little one-street town
hortly after the end of the war nestling in to the heart of the
n Europe, and when the end of mountains and stood with the
he Japanese war seemed to be editor at the front door of his of
n sight, the War Production fice, looking around at the moun
loard ordered construction of tains circling the town. It was
corporations, and say to the public: *'We are going to raise the price o
he plant stopped. The fact that a sheer beauty and I said enviously.
oil products 30 per cent .and we w ill hire any man, union or non-union«
“How fortunate are you to live
upplemental application for ad here!”
That would be collusion in restraint o f trade, and such companies woul<
itional funds to complete the pro
He smiled a soul-weary smile
>ct was filed about that time pro-
fin d themselves in the hands o f the law. But how would that be col
and said, “I know what you mean
ably
hastened
the
decision
to
lusion any more than in the case o f labor organizations that agree on
top the construction work. The - but our hearts are always striv
unitorm policy and price which must be met by companies and th
fPB doubtless felt that it could ing to cross the mountains.”
Every heart has its own moun
lot, as a war agency, authorize
public to prevent a shutdown?
tains
to cross. No matter where
he expenditure of an additional
The w hole situation is preposterous: First, because one man or :
we live, we feel that happiness
;um under the circumstances.
lies on the other side of the range
group o f men can tell another man or group o f men that they canno
It then became necessary to that
our ways been laid in
work, and by rig h t o f m ight get away w ith it. Second, because an un
ustify the completion of the other had
places,
would have done
lant by the government. Care- so much we we
regulated international organization can, by collusion and agreemen
would
have gone so
ul investigations were made to far!
w ith in our borders, close an entire industry. T hird, because our nationa
letermine whether or not the
We condemn those who live
labor policies actually prevent 3 "s tru c k ” company from hiring A m eri ilant could be operated on a
on the other side for not making
can citizens w’ho m ight dare to go through the "picket lines” o f the peace-time basis. The results of
the most of their great opportuni
strikers. Fourth, because we consider passing fu ll employment laws and these investigations were favor ties .We forget that they in turn
able. The Department of Agricul
paying unemployment compensation when our national labor policy ture, through Secretary Ander condemn us for not realizing how
fair our own pathways are. Intol
permits unregulated labor monopolies to prevent unemployed men from son, understood in so far as it
erance
breeds on both sides of
w orking i f they so desire, or employers from hiring them i f they need could, the sponsorship of the pro the mountain, whether it be
ject ,and informed both John
them.
Snyder, head of the Office of physical barrier or a mountain
Unless labor organizations adopt "appeal and service” as their drawing War Mobilization and Reconver built of our own prejudice and
ignorance.
card fo r securing members and social gains, rather than "fo rce and co sion, and heads of the Reconstruc
Mountains are too often but
tion Finance Corporation, that
ercion, they are repudiating the principles on which they were founded, the project was considered nec misunderstandings. They lo o k
impassable to those who see them
and destroying the freedom o f the worker.
essary in the national interest. from
afar. But those who live
Under the reconversion law, John
among them know that there is
Snyder is supreme authority in always
a way through.
When The Chips Are Down
such matters. On the basis of
The
trails
of understanding are
assurances
mentioned
above,
Mr.
trials may get under way before those in Nuremberg. In any event, Gen-
not
easy.
No
trail that leads up
house building, as o f October 15, despite the fears of O PA and other Snyder approved the completion ward is ever easy. It requires the
of the plant. The Board of Direct footsteps of many It. make a road.
agencies that prices w ill skyrocket. This is in line w ith true American ors of RFC likewise voted to com
But the reward of effort is
tradition. Agencies which controlled the nation’s activities during the plete it, and the Willamette Val great. When one reaches the sum
war are bound to develop a feeling that their services are indispensable ley Wood Chemical Company was mit and sees both sides of the
so informed.
mountains - then is the way made
in peacetime, and no m atter when controls are released they can figure
Not only will the new plant clear.
Then is the hour of under
produce alcohol, but it can and standing. Then has the heart tru
up a good "emergency” argument fo r continuing them.
As government throws o ff restraints, industry and individuals face boubtless will produce high pro ly crossed the mountains.
tein feed, dry ice, gypsum, fur
the obligation o f showing themselves capable o f voluntary control over fural and some other products.
their own actions to prevent inflationary prices. The people now have The establishment of this plant Oregon Trarfic Death
a chance to prove that they are intelligent enough to conduct the a f and the successful operation of it Rate Upped in Year
will undoubtedly lead to the con
fairs o f this nation, as in the past, w ithout government policing to pre-
Oregon’s traffic death rate for
struction of more such plants in
the
first eight months of 1945
\e n t price gouging. I t is probable that price increases in some cases the future, with the result that
Was
ten fatalities per one hun
wood
which
is
now
going
to
w ill be necessary to meet increased cost o f production O n the other hand
dred
million
miles of travel, ac
waste will be used.
it is just as probable that mass production and distribution may in many
cording to Robert S. Farrell, Sec
> > >
of State.
cases hold prices at current levels or actually reduce them under the
In former newsletters I have retary
This
compares
to a rate of nine
discussed the so-called “full em for the same period
stimulus o f competition.
a year ago.
ployment
bill”
at
some
length.
As
The nations leading retailers w ill be a powerful brake on any ten
The
death
rate
for
the
month of
anyone who read my previous
dency to unnecessarily inflate m anufacturing costs. The consumer and documents about it would realise, August this year was nine, com
pared to a rate of eight for Aug
the retailer can refuse to buy any article whose producers seek to take I do not think much of this piece
ust of 1944.
of
legislation,
although
I
consid
undue advantage o f the demand fo r goods.
Farrell said the death rate,
er it harmless. I have just learn
Aside from all this, when the chips are fin a lly down it should be re ed that the House of Representa showing the number of persons
killed in relation to the mileage
membered that in the long run the authoritarian system which price tives Committee on Expenditures
in
Executive
Departments
will
control represents must be abandoned at any cost i f representative
almost certainly refuse to report
government is to be preserved. We are indeed a fickle people i f we let the the bill to the floor of the House.
stresses o f inflation destroy the free institutions o f our Republic.
This means that, in spite of the
fact that the bill as finally pass
ed by the Senate was amended ‘you can depend on’
War Trials
so as to be unobjectionable, it
On October 8, when the W ar Crimes T ribunal holds its firs t meet will not be enacted during this
session of Congress.
• Automobile
ing in Berlin, the fate o f major war criminals w ill move a step closer
Insurance
to determination.
Here is one subject on which the United States has a definite policy
and is pursuing it — the trial and punishment o f those responsible fo r
starting the war and fo r violating its international rules Associate Jus
tice Robert H . Jackson is to be commended fo r his vigorous, continuing
efforts to bring the m atter to a speedy conclusion. The American case
has been ready fo r some time, its judge appointed, and its legal delega
tion o f almost too members established in Nuremberg fo r over a month.
But the congealed molasses o f inter-A llied legal processes has moved
but slowly. Even after the in itia l trbunal meeting, it probably w ill be
at least a month before the trials open. Counsel fo r the defendants can
The House Ways and Means
Committee is working on a tax
bill. Everyone seems to agree that
present federal tax rates will be
reduced.
I
The bill to provide for the dis-1
posal of surplus merchant ships
has been passed by the House.
”
i(t Hi
nese war criminals is proceeding, and there is some possibility that the
trials may get under way before htose in Nuremberg. In any event, Gen
eral M a c A rth u r’s assurance o f an early trial by m ilita ry tribunal is a
decisive answer to the Japanese request to conduct their own trials and
in flic t their own punishment, as the Germans were perm ittted to do
after the last war w ith such demoralizing consequences.
—Christian Science Monitor,
you
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•>
Collection of salvage fat in Ore
gon for 1945 has run well over
1944 figures, but there is still ur-
gent
need
for continuing
salvage
» it U
111 W I I
l«» V «» l n v n n
h iu iiib
O k ..
at a high
level
even I though
the
war is over, according to a person
el report made to O.S.C. extens
ion officials t by Paul W. Munns,
Guum—Hurry Deane Horne
western representative of the
pharmacist's
mate, third class’
American Fat Salvage committee,
and Dale R. Winn, from the US USNR, 183 Harrison at., Ashland*
is serving here with U. S*
DA Portland office of production Oregon
Fleet Hospital No. 103.
and marketing.
The hospital, after moving from
Every month except February, Samonu when its usefuln e s s
June and July so far hus shown there was over, cared for casual
increased collections in Oregon ties from Iwo Jimu nnd Okinawa.
Burns Agency
I------- -------
not be procured u n til after the indictm ent in Berlin, and it may take
several weeks fo r the defense to be prepared. But at least Great Britain
and Russia have now appointed their judges, w ith France expected to
follow shortly, and a definite date has been set fo r convening.
In the meantime, on the other side o f the world, the round-up o f Japa
• F ire
More Salvage F at
From Oregon Needed
over the corresponding months of
lust yeur. June and July collec
tions dropped markedly, although
the August totul is more than
8000 pounds above the correspond
ing 1944 fiure
Beeuuse there appears to be no
indication of eurly relief from the
fat shortuge through reaumpatlon
of imports, the department of Ug.
riculture is laying great stress on
the continuing need for salvaging
every pound of fats and oil. Coun
ty extension staffs are checking
up on collection points and local
committee work in an effort to
«timulate continue«! fut —
saving
. •
Ill
rurel ureas, from where much of
the sulvuge hus come this yeur
Pitta» i n t i tam pit to p in
. . T h t Cbriilian Sciane»
of
Monitor.
□
□
Plt a it lim i a oat-m onti I
trial lubicriplio». I tn- I
d o t i 91
For Better Flavor
& Satisfying Goodness
ASK FOR
M T ASHLAND
Butter & Creamed Cottage Cheese
At Ashland Groceries and Markets
ASHLAND
CREAMERY
W hat is m ade in A shland, m akes Ashland
f»
4