SOU lj U RN ORI ÇON MIN1R, 1 HURSDAY, MAY at. 1946 CHURCH OF CHRIST Earl Downing. Pastor erican Negro”. At 8 P. M the . buccalaureatc service for' the Bible School, 9:45 A M. Classes High School graduates will he for all ages; nursery for the given in this church bv the Rev e n bhil^e v cve,',y Thyrsda> by the SISKIYOU PUBLISHING Wilkinson, pastor of the Baptist babies and tiny tots. CO. lb, Last Main Street, Ashland, Oregon. Church. The midweek Bible Morning Service, 11:00 A. M. WENDELL LAWRENCE, Editor Sermon, “We Here Highly Re study and prayer service is each Thursday evening at 7:30. Dr G solve”. • W. Bruce, Minister. Entered as second-class mall matter In the peat office at Ash- The Christian Endeavor meet­ Uuid Oregon, February 15. 1935, under the act ol Congress ings and the evening service will of March 3, 1879. be dismissed to unite in the High School Baccaluureute Servfce at INSURANCE 8:00. P. M. in the Methodist 'X HAT CAN I DO FOR MY COUNTRY? Church. Fire - Auto - Theft As America s youth graduates from the schools and colleges of the Midweek Service, Wednesday STANDARD COMPANIES nation this spring it is gratifying to realize that these young people are 8: .00 P. M. Gospel Meditations, KMED. thinking seriously about their world, the world into which they wi &r 4:00 P. M. Tuesday and Thurs- now take their places as adults. The following essay was written by day. SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Bud Hagen, a graduating senior of the Saginaw, Michigan high school. Hagen is a nephew of Mr. and M n| Owen Gragg of Ashland. As long as FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST America’s youth continues to consider national ideals in as strong a Sunday, May 26, 1946 fashion as indicated by this essay we have no fears for America’s future. Sunday Morning Service at 11 This essay placed first in the city of Saginaw in an annual contest con­ o’clock. Subject; SOUL AND BODY ducted by the Veterans of Foreign Wars. An American soldier stops in his headlong rush toward a Nazi pill­ box, shudders, and falls — a German gunner grins. A young sailor, fresh out of an Albuquerque high school, shuffles into an Iwo dressing Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Wednesday evening meeting, which includes testimonies of Christian Science healing, is held at 8 o’clock. Reading Room open daily from 2 to 5 P. M. except Sundays and holidays. The public is cordially invited to attend these services, and to use the Reading Room. station, staring dully, incredulously, at the shattered stub of his arm. A veteran marine screams above the shellburst in a Leyte night ant reaches for his face, but he no longer has a face! Alarmist, you say, "pessimist, sensationalist.” Well, maybe. "We should foget all th at,” you m utter . . ."The war’s over; push those Neighborhood Church memories aside.” Congregational Yes, sure, forget the sordid details of war; the human mind quickly Comer of Blvd. und Morton rejects what it doesn’t want to remember. You can forget, but some Evart P. Borden, Minister 9:45 Sunday School. Classes ofr cannot. Can the hollow-eyed battle fatigue veteran forget? Can a tight- lipped mother forget the unutterable anguish of that moment when she all ages. Morning service 11:00 A. M. trembling, opened the tdegram, "The War Department regrets to in­ Dr. Borden will speak on “Gate­ way To Happiness. form - - - your - - son killed in action.” Pilgrim Fellowship meets These men fought because they were called upon to fight, and yet within them was a certain feeling that what they were doing was right. When they liberated a long-oppressed village or city there was a sensa­ tion of real joy in seeing the people freed. For freedom is the fundamen­ tal principle of the American way of life and government. 'X ell, let s see. Freedom of speech. There are no strutting dictators or brutal secret police to silence an American. We may say what we wish when we wish. We may denounce and be denounced. We may praise, we may criticize. We may be wrong in what we say, but it is our un­ deniable right to say it. Through our brief history we have sent reverberations of our free speech throughout the world. We spoke for just taxation, for freedom of the seas, for freedom of religion. for"liberty or death.” To the men who made these statements freedom and liberty were great gifts; gifts to be won whatever the cost, and guarded jealously. To us, perhaps freedom is a right. The country owes us liberty, we say; but that is not true. Freedom of speech and of the press and of religion and all the rest are priceless possessions — they are not abstract ideals or out-dated ideas written on a scrap of paper in the Library of Congress; they are vital, live, throbbing things — things to be respected to be kept alive to be practiced! We must take these freedoms now as in the bleak days of World War II and use them, for only through use will they be kept free from the rust of degradation, abuse, and misuse. We must hold up the princi­ ples of that scrap of paper in Washington before the world, and loud­ ly proclaim that we in a free America intend to make this great de­ mocracy function and work through them, and that we intend to ex­ pand these ideals from our shores to all the people of the world who want to receive them and live in a free society. Our American ancestors fought for their freedoms — fought in the streets of Boston, off the shores of Tripoli, in the dust of San Juan Hill; fought on the bitter fields of Gettysburg, in the much of the Argonne, yes, and through the horrible, screaming nights of El Alamein, Sicily, Normandy, Aachen, Leyte, Okinawa, and Iwo. The men of these wars who fought and returned or fought and died where they fought left us a wonderful heritage. What can I do ior my country? No, what MUST I do for my coun­ try? I must remember the kid on Iwo, the marine on Leyte, the white- lipped mother, and all the rst who bled, died and suffered for my coun­ try. I must take up a great document called the Bill of Rights and read it and then reread it, and then I must take the ideas and ideals of that document out and I must practice them. I must preserve them and de­ fend them. I must keep them alive and by keeping them alive, keep this mighty country alive, healthy and strong. 167 E. Main NOW! Get Those Flies! Kill These Insects Use Insect-O-Blitz ASHLAND’S NEW> DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT th e ' church and the work of re­ finishing the Sunday sch o o 1 rooms will begin sooty. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH North Main and Laurel St. Ö 61 N. MAIN P hone 4 i } i ACROSS FROM SOUTHERN OREGON COLLEGE Kills . . . FLIES, ANTS, MOTHS, MOS­ QUITOS, S1LVERFISH LICE, BEDBUGS, FLEAS, TICKS, ROACHES, SPIDFRS TRY OUR RwG CLEANING SERVICE Phone 3281 LaMarres Drug Store Wankrobe Cleaners On the Plaza CTgyqpgy ■ • 1 OPENING Dance At Our Selection of Graduation Gifts Fine Stationery Dance Under the Stars to Music of a Hot Combo Etched Stationery Linen Papers Record Albums Jazz Records The Old Masters - Swim Dance Adults 40c Children 25c Gentlemen 85c Pen & Pencil Sets — i Eversharp Reynolds B ooks - S ta t io n e r y H o m F A p pl ia n c e s - Dancing to Good Music Each Thurs­ day and Saturday. Begins io p.m. GRAND OPENING OF DANCE FLOOR SATURDAY, JUNE 1 Plunges PECKS M u s ic - Ladies 35c Under i 2 Swimming week days 1 to 10 p.m. Swimming Sunday 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. 2 Colors $2.79. 3 Sizes— Children 2 to 7. Perfect for Children - S afe fun PLAZA GROCERY -eMcit The Sunday School meets at 9:45 each Sunday morning. There is to be a Daily Vacation Bible School for Beginners, Primaries and Juniors, June 3 to 10. The morning sermon is at 11 o’clock. Four seconds spraying treats This is a Memorial Service, and the patriotic organizations of lully 1000 cubic feet or a room Ashland are to be the guests of 10x10x10 feet. honor. The pastor will speak on Self Spraying the subject "We Remember”. I The choir under direction of Mrs.; Bill Weber with Mrs. Frank Dav- j is at the organ, will offer special music. The Junior Church? meets for worship during the morning sermon with Mrs. Lucille Mackay and Mrs. Ida Burns as sponsors. Ashland Oregon The Senior and Intermediate Me­ thodist Youth Fellowship groups will have a joint worship service at 6:45, with Miss Neva West bringing a message on “The Am BARGAINS Toddlers Skates S & H” Green Stamps Now Available at THE iSBiiiun at es, go ahead: forget — forget the un-pretty deatils of how it was 6:30 All young people are invited done, — but don’t forget what these men — loudly welcomed heroes, to attend. Firtex has been delivered at and men for whom there will be no homecoming — ever — did. It sounds nice to say that they carried the hope of humanity on their shoulders, that they were fighting in a just and holy cause, that they were out to save the world from slavery — you’ve read it all on the bond drive posters and in the magazine ads. Sounds great, but how about it? Those fellows didn t leave school and jobs to go forth with the light of a mighty and inspiring ideal shining in their eyes. They got out and did it because there was a foul, nasty, reeking, mess to clean up and they were called upon to clean it up. They were there because they had to be, and the K-rations and the blackouts and the fox-holes and the shellbursts and the stench of death were part of the job. J. F. EMMETT l‘h. 8 j 6 i G uts , S w 2K î sod Dance Each h^ursdsy 2nd Saturday Telephone 5331 for Special Reservations