Southern Oregon News Review, Ashland, Oregon, I hurt., May 18, 194k j
southern
OREGON
y c u /C D C V IiU Z
l i t 11 3 A t i l t 11
MAYOR’S PROCLAMATION
WHEREAS, the American legion and the Veterans ol
Foreign War» will, on the i8 tli and 29th days of May, 194*
Published every Thursday by
THE SISKIYOU PUBLISHING COMPANY
Ashland, Oregon
38 East Main Street
Carry 1 H. Wines and Wendell D. Lawrence, Publishers
engage in their annual Poppy sale; and
WHEREAS, the proceed» of such Poppy sales are used
entirely for the benefit of the sick and disabled \ rterans and
their families, and no part of the funds realized therefrom
WENDELL LAWRENCE. Editor
Entered as second-class mail matter in the post office at Ash
land, Oregon, February 15, 1935, under the act of Congress of
,
March 3, 1179.
are used for any other purpose; and
WHEREAS, the purpose ot the Poppy Sale is to give aid
and comfort to those- who have given so treelv that then
country and its democratic institutions might survive the
Firecrackers
threats against democracy; and
WHEREAS, every citizen of our country should show Ins
respect and appreciation by purchasing and wearing the sym
_______
bolic Poppy on these appointed days;
N O W , THEREFORE, I. T. S. W iles, Mayor of the t ns
of Ashland, do hereby proclaim Mas aStli ami 29th, as Poppy
As the old timer said, "Days ain't what thcv used to be, partickerly
the Fourth of July.”
And he’s right. The only trouble with this line of reasoning is that
his nostalgic recollections are only of the better side of those pre
vious days and not of the more grievous, sadder side.
Firecrackers are one thing he dwells on longingly. Those were the
days, he says. They certainly were, days of powder burns, of shat
tered fingers, blasted eyes, burning houses.
That the days of old were dangerous ones can readily be seen when
one stops to think that only this week a house in Valleyview burned
because of a firecracker being tossed to the roof.
Within the city of Ashland the sale and use of firecrackers is pro
hibited. That this is a sensible ordinance goes without saying. Yet,
the old timer sits out in the sun and tells the kids that the old days
are better days, that firecrackers ain't what they used to be. and that
the zip has gone from the Fourth of July celebration.
H e’s (ust dreaming, and like all dreams, his only tell him what he
wants to hear.
Days, in our community.
Dated this a jth day of May, 194k.
T. S. Wiley, Mayor
★ * ★
Well Dressed
★ ★ ★
Beauty Contest
★ it ★
•»
Things Are Quieter Now
Now' that the primaries are over the voters can get back to their
gardening and the politicians can begin cultivating their plans for
the November harvest.
Looks as though Doug McKay and Earl Newbry are in the state
house to stay. N o use spending many words here on the fact that
winnijng the Republican nomination is tantamount to election in
Oregon. It’s too bad, but that’s the way it is.
And Governor Dewey nosed out Harold Stassen, too bad in a
way, but neither of them are yet president, the nation’s contest is a
bit different from the Oregon contest. We liked Stassen, but felt
that his stjnd on outlawing communists was ill taken and that he
Ralph A. Foster
I
237 East Main St.
Ashland, Oregon
That advertising pays and that the shoemaker’s kids are always bare-
x)t was brought out very strongly last week to A. E. Powell, editor
f the Central Point American. Powell, a long time newspaperman, lost
ae race for county commissidner to L. G. "Shy” Morthland.
"I’ve been preaching that newspaper advertising pays for several
ears,” Powell said after the votes had been counted and he had been
minted out, "but it took Morthland to prove it to me.”
Pufwell pointed out that Morthland had advertised to the hilt in
very newspaper in the codnty— and he said, a mite ruefully, it cer-
ainly paid.
R eceiving w atches slm illar to
these last y ear wen- M arita
W iltse and Zane Tucker.
T he w atches w ere pre eliteil in
an assem bly W ednesday, Mas 19,
by a re p resen ta tiv e from S h e ld
ons Jew elry .
Gel your Job Printing at the
News Review
O. R. EDWARDS
Authorized Dealer
WHIZZER MOTORS
343 E. Main
Phone 2-1541
A P P E A R IN G
grandchildren.
Seal) has ap p eared in some 01
ch an ts, according to C. B. C ordy,
C ounty Agent,. If by careful e x
am in atio n you can find any scab
in y o u r trees, it would be d e s ir
ab le to adii F erm ate to tins first
cover spray, C ordy said.
Use I *a lbs per 100 gallons
F erm ate van be added Io 1)D1
and DN. If fixed copper is being
used, it will give p ro tectio n
ag ain st m ild scab Infections to
om it the Ferm ate. Local usage in
dicates H ETP is com patible w ith
fixed eoppei.
•>«/»!
From where I sit... / / J ° e Marsh
It's Leap Year, Girisi
First girl in ear town to “get her
man” on Leap Year was the Cup
pers’ daughter, Jane, who wed Bill
Webster’s hoy last Saturday.
Whgn I asked Bill Jr. if it was
true that Janey really did the pro
posing, Bill »aid: No, but she made
it plain she’d make an ideal wife.
Instead of looking for diversion or
excitement every evening, she was
content to chat beside the fire,
1 know it’s usual for older folks to
luike their heads over the younger
generation. (It’s gone on for hun
dreds of yeurs, now.)
But from where I sit, young
people of marrying uge today are
1 very bit as commendable us their
elder» were—In their temperance
(a glass of beer for instance), tol
erance, and common senae. So to
Jane and Bill the best of luck!
“ I could plainly see,” say» Bill,
“that we’d really have a lump
home life— which la Just exart I)
what I want from marriage."
<9*
Cupyiigltl. M , United Slatet U reteri fuundation
y
'
£
what it takes to handle
19 MILLION
CALLS A DAY
MONUMEI
Marble, Granite, Bronze
Extra Lettering Available
BURNSAGENCY
1. Down th e line come telephone instru
ments. ..your first link with an amazing sys
tem. They’re sensitive and complex —but just
a small part of the facilities required to con
nect your home with millions of others —
and handle nineteen m illion calls a day
That’s Pacific Telephone’s present average
In 1940 it was 11,00(1,000 calls a day.
"On Ihe Plaza"
2. In tric a te switching e q u ip m e n t like
nation locally.
Advertising
name.
W IL L IA M D. G R A Y
W illiam D G ray, »17, who died
at bis hom e, 315 Mary s h e e t,
M edford, S atu rd ay , was buried
W ednesday, May 2«, at Si k ly o tf
M e iiln il. il
p a rk
S eivice w eie
co nducted at Congei M orris Fu
nerul chupel in M edford by the
Rev. E arl Downing of the F u st
C h u rch of C hrist, Ashland
Mr. G ray wua a form er A sh
land resident, having lived here
for 1» years. The past tw o years
he had lived in Medford. He was
horn Septem lx'i 12, 1HH0, In S h e r
idan county, Kansas.
He is survived by Ids w idow,
Edith, tw o sons, C arrol G ray, of
Rogue R iver; and Eldridge G ray,
San Jose, C alifornia; a d a u g h
ter, Mrs. B lanche Vlnyurd, of
G ran ts Pass, and tw o brothers,
ten gran d ch ild ren , anil six gu-ut
Union Service Station
lost a lot of ground in the radio debate.
Perhaps he’ll recover some of that ground at the convention, looks
very doubtful, however, for more than likely neither Dewey nor
Stassen, despite all the money they spent in Oregon, will ever be
nominated this time for the presidency.
Both min would make fine executive leaders. The nation is lucky
to have, during this time of international expansion, men so qualified
and so competent, running for public office.
The same might well be said for the men who received the nomi
Our congratulations go to William H. Fluhrer who will probably
be the next state senator from Jackson count; Frank Van Dyke and
Ben Day, Republicans; and J. P. Graham and Marie Myers Bosworth,
Democrats; also deserve congratulations as do "Shy” Morthland and
C. L. Hockersmith, and of course, Frank Perl.
volved with a gang of bank rob
bers.
1
"N ature Boy,’’ the tune th a t’s
been booming to the top of the
hit parade in recent weeks, is
said to have been w ritten by a
character who’s as as different as
the song Itself. His nam e is eden
ahbez, but around Hollywood,
he’s referred to as The Yogi.
Here Is w hat Music Business,
the disc jockey's own magazine,
has to say about this guy, eden:
•‘eden is C hrist-like in ap p ear
ance, w earing a long beard and
dressing in a drab tan smock. He
either goes barefoot or wears
sandals. He believes in O riental
philosophy of life and spends
most of his tim e in prayer, he
says.
"He is a strict vegetarian, and
his meals are served on a m at on
the floor. T hroughout the year,
he and his wife sleep outside in
sleeping bags. He earned his livE
ing (before N ature Boy) as a fruit
picker, following seasonal crops."
Obituaries
S heldon Jew elry S to le of Ash
land held its second an nual a
w au l given to one senior boy and
girl of th e g rad u atin g class "I
A shland Senior High school. The
lucky w inners w ere l.uclle Iliad-
ham and Hob Phillips, each r e
ceiving a 21 jew el Itulova E x cel
lency w ith 14 c a re t gold case.
The nam es of the w inners w ere
d eterm in ed by a large clock
w ound and placed 111 the sto re
w indow May 6. S tu d en ts nam es
w eie on a large w heel, hoys on
the Inside and girls nam es on the
o u ter edge. A fter eight days the
clock stopped at the w inners
SC A B
Friday afternoon, the Ashland
Teen-Agers will take to the air
for a half hour of anything goes.
From- 4:30 to 5 o’clock, the kids
will take over the m ain studio to
put on their own show, which
will include local talent and some
platter spinning.
The whole idea of the show is
a build-up for the opening of
A shland’s Teen-Age club on the
The well dressed man and woman, too, for that matter will be follosving night. However, plans
wearing a buddy poppy this week end. The little paper flowers which I are underw ay to Install the Teen-
Age show’ as a regular Friday
mean so much can be bought for so little only a dime, and they’ll afternoon feature.
Incidentally, the opening of the
mean the difference between being in style or being completely out of
club
in the junior high gym na
style.
sium will also be broadcast ovei*
The ladies of the Veteran’s organizations, who are making the sale KWIN from 9 30 to 10 p.m. S a t
of poppies possible this year as they have in years gone by, and as urday night.
Speaking of entertain m en t by
they’ll do in future years, are doing a great job. The poppy is a symbol
and for kids, the popular Kiddies
of the spirit of the men who made them, the disabled veterans who Corner heard over KWIN on
haven’t given up. And those people who sell the poppies and those Monday, W ednesday and Friday
who buy them indicate that they haven’t forgotten the men who afternoons has now been ex ten d
ed to a daily feature Monday
today lie in the hospitals and spend their time making little paper through Saturday at 5:15 to 5:30.
This show features record album s
poppies.
of the alw ays popular children's
stories, told by m aster story tell
ers.
A nother show for the children
An Ashland girl has a chance this Fourth of July to be selected .Miss now heard over KWIN is "The
Ashland and thus to compete in the Miss Oregon contest. In turn, A dventures of F rank F arrell,”
Saturday afternoons from 5:45 to
the winner of the Miss Oregon contest will have an opportunity to be 6 o’clock. This show is a contin
come Miss America.
uous adventure thriller which
Lacking right now are sponsors for the future Miss Ashland. Each started last week. And at the end
of the first episode, F rank F arrell
girl who enters the Miss Ashland contest will be sponsored by some and his cohorts w ere already in-
merchant, and that girl will be known as Miss So and So’s Store, de
pending on just who her sponsor might be.
For the merchant, it’s a good way to get some cheap advertising,
and it’s a good way to get some good charm school training on the
part of the girl.
The expense of sponsoring a girl in the contest should be negligible
there are some 180 merchants in town and there are at least twice that
many good looking girls so it should be easy enough for each mer
chant to get out and scout around until he finds a winner; not that
all will win, but one is sure to win.
As for the girls, it’s a wonderful enterprise for each one who enters.
The training which each girl will receive in speech, in posture, in
poise, and in personality would normally be unavailable except to stu
dents of a charm school,
Sheldon Jewelry
Presents Watches
S.C. Jones & Sons
Ashland. Oregon
BILLINGS AGENCY
209 W. Main St.
Ph. 7558
Medford .Oregon
Main & Oak
Ph. 8781
DEPENDABLE
INSURANCE COUNSELORS
A U TYPES O P
U P E INSURANCE
PROTECTION
Raprm ntlng THE TRAVELERS, Hartford
this must be practically custom made and in
stalled before telephones can be used. You’ve
probably never seen it...but it’s on the job
every time you make a call. And there’s still
more to the story. Land and buildings and
other equipment must be provided — all of
it’s expensive.
4 . W h e r e d o e s th e
m o n e y com e fro m ?
M illio n s o f new w orking d o l
lars... needed to extend and im
prove service...must come, not
from telephone bills, but from
thousands o f people who put
th e ir savings to w o rk in the
telephone business. T o attract
these w orking dollars, we must
pay a reaso n able a m o u n t fo r
their use. This depends on the
sale o f our services at fair and
adequate prices.
3. "R o a d w a y s of s p e e c h ".. . telephone
lines and cables...have to be ready to carry
the calls. T here’s nearly fourteen m illion
miles of wire now at work in the West...ami
more is being added every day. Handling
more calls than ever in our history keeps all
our facilities mighty busy—along with tha
telephone people who man them.
The Pacific Telephone
and Telegraph Company
More than 70,000 people working together to fur
nish ever better telephone service to the West
4