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About Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946 | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1948)
Southern Oergon News Review, Ashland, Ore. Thurs., July-TtT 194S ■■■■■ SOUTHERN OKEGON NEWS REVIEW vur ---------------- c Published every Thursday by THE SISKIYOU PUBLISHING COMPANY Ashland, Oregon 38 East Main Street Carry 1 H. Wines and Wendell D. Lawrence, Publishers 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, 1879. WHO SAID SI MMER SLUMP? Persons wishing licenses nr per action th e principle of th e se lf-d e term in a tio n of peo- exam iner due hlhe (||1V i k K t ., ,, pies — a principle, curiously enough, w hich h a s n ’t b, A^ r,( ! „ ^ h h m T T L L ,| ¿ . h , w ith ti ■ . vu.nne. w e ll be on duty in changed in sig n ifican ce since W orld W ar 1, when July ,9. at the •llv hall between head ‘ »f ,lu ' • I h i'd u lt'd « Iosin, W oodrow W ilson m ade his co u rag eo u s but doom ed ph»* b«>ms <>f it a m am i i i " II,1(11 III Ol d« I t<> uMNiir«’ co m p ii fig h t fo r his 14 p oints. according to a t................. |ip lliitlo tu i w ith I tim i «»1 I I k 'H I e la i \ tin celved from in iiitn <»f «lei«.' I t is c e rta in ly c le a r th at th e Soviet U nion h a s not, State's office. and has never had, an y desire fo r se lf-d e term in a tio n . H er policy lies in enco u rag in g , and giv in g m a te ria l su p p o rt to rev o lu tio n s inside n a tio n s w here sm all but well organized m in o ritie s tak e over all th e reig n s of pow er and la te r ju s tif y them w ith th e phoniest kind of elections. T h is technique h as been th e m ean s of I I giving R u ssia all o f h er trem en d o u s g a in s since V-E day. Yet, from th e K re m lin ’s point of view, it m ay not \ er \ I all be rosy. T h ere is every evidence t h a t m illions of Poles, Czechs, Y ugoslavs and o th e rs hold th e b itte re st h a tre d fo r R ussia. T he C om m unists can liq u id a te the leaders of th e opposition, but th ey c a n ’t clean out all th e d issid e n ts am ong th e rank and file. In th e ev en t of w ar, o r a n y in te rn a l em ergency .the S oviet U nion c e r ta in ly could not depend on h e r sa te llite c o u n trie s for e n th u s ia stic a ssista n ce . T here a re som e who believe th a t th ese c o u n tries m ig h t prove to be an in to lerab le d ra in on R ussia, by forcing h er to police them w ith a rm ies of tra in e d men. In an y event, th e re is m ore and m ore talk of the need fo r an ab so lu tely clear-cut A m erican foreign jx)l- icy w hich will say, in effect, th a t we will help th e co AN N I o p e ra tin g n a tio n s recover, and will su p p o rt th em in KJT vihsh imi JL selectin g g o v e rn m e n ts of th e ir own choosing, th ro u g h j » 4 ADO 00 F U* f IO u r M v U i i C v H n I i i (O u n N i IR R v in v e m in f l I A A V VOR O i I m IAINU1 W IIH free and se cre t elections. The em p h a sis would be on c o n stru ctiv e a ctio n — r a th e r th a n being based on m ore o r less u n re la te d p ro g ram s designed to help co n tain R ussia. W e have m ade p ro g ress in th a t d irectio n , and ••HI . • th e hope is th a t th e next y e a r will see a real jo b done. Baked Exclusively lor You oy O — ----------------- . . — . I I III ' The big prize fight is over and Joe Louis is still the world’s heavy weight champion. The republican national convention is now history and Governor Dewey of New York out-egeneraled the opposition which was bunched gainst him, and secur ed a unanmir us nomination to represent the republi can party in the November elections for President of the United States. Thus, it goes all through life. The world acclaims a winner always ,and the winner is always the one who stays in there punching when the chips are down and the going is toughest. Right now is the time to deliver a body punch that will knock out old man “Summer Slump.” Many a bus iness men, who refused to accept the inevitability of a recession in his business during the summer months has found that it just required a little more concen trated thinking and a little greater effort to avoid what so many have considered a vital element of summer. Sure, many people go on vacations. True, some lines of business show a dropping off during hot weather. Of course, schools are closed and activities of many A shland softballers 2-1 in a pitcher's duel. V ein Col organizations cease. lins chucked one-hit ball for the LOSE TO MEDFORD TEAM lum berm en and fanned 18 men In an inter-city softball scrap But, vacations themselves offer opportunity for alert to pace the Jew elers trium ph. business men. Many seasonal activities such as berry at Ashland, Friday night Andy's Cal Bonney of the A shlanders al- picking, hop picking, food processing, and other farm Jewelers of Medford slipped by lowed but two hits and struck activities are at their peak during these months. . Lum ber Mills, inc., of A shland out 14. * These opportunities call loudly to everybody to be i «■ ready and available for lines of business which will turn losses into profits. Just as in prize fighting or z politics ,the real winner will be the one who stays in /W iD C iW O O D % there punching. ★ * * TOP GRIDDLE MODEL t I William Henry Chamberlain, who is one of the best 'peajunb'f | informed and most dispassionate of American writers upon foreign affairs, recently discussed the very’ vital The Folding Cover Top f problem of continuity and consistency in our foreign policy, in a column appearing in the Wall Street Jour / nal. As he writes, “An America that wobbles and va / cillates will not carry the weight in world affairs that is appropriate to its political, economical and mili z tary power.” This is not, however, as simple a matter as it may appear on first glance. For, as Mr. Chamberlin also says, “There can be no continuity in inconsistency.” And the glaring inconsistencies that appeared in our foreign policy both during and immediately after the war have undoubtedly weakened our prestige, and aroused suspicions as to our motives and our wisdom in quarters whose whole-hearted co-operation is ne cessary if the Western powers are to present to the world a strong and unified front. Mr. Chamberlin discusses Yalta where, in his opin ion “a high point of hyprocrisy was reached.” At Yalta Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin again affirmed their faith in the broad principles of the Atlantic Charter. The most important single provision of the Charter is that all peoples shall have the right “to choose the form of government under which they will live.” An other, of almost equal moment, is that all the nations, including victor and vanquished, shall have access on equal terms “to the trade and raw materials of the world.” These great principles presumably were the Out Beyond the City Gas Mains, You, too rockbound basis on which the war aims of the great powers rested. Can Enjoy All The . . . Yet, at Yalta a deal was made whereby Russia was allowed to take over close to half of Poland’s pre-war territory, and Poland was not even represented at the conference. Following that, it became increasingly clear that the peace settlement, to quote Mr. Cham berlin again, was “calculated to turn Germany into C @ M I F @ I R ir an economic wasteland and Europe into a perpetual dependent on American subsidies.” The roots of this lay in the Morgenthau plan which was designed to re duce Germany permanently to a fourth-rate economic power. Of course, hind-sight is easy. During the war there was an understandable eagerness to keep Stalin hap py, and this unquestionably led to over-optimism as to the sincerity behind Soviet pledges to work with this and other countries for world peace and rehabilitation. . . . of Inexpensive Gas Service Even so, the fact that the acts of the great powers with the Modern nullified the Atlantic Charter even as their represen WEDGEWOOD RANGE tatives praised it in general and meaningless terms, did us no good abroad. And it helped the Communists, W ID G EW O O O 'S C ontrolled-AtTion Top Burnors M IE I I » I M I U L T I M A T I I N T O T B U R N I R C O N T R O L who are experts at making capital out of human dis illusionment, to build up their large fololwings in France, Italy and elsewhere. In the last year or two, fortunately, something more only to nearly resembling a consistent and continuous foreign policy has come into being. It has been forced on us by the dire necessity of stopping Russia before her sphere of influence goes clear to the Mediterranean and the Atlantic ocean. The idea of permanently de stroying Germany as a major economic power has been C -R W U C abandoned. And there has been a very real effort, bi partisan in character, to reaffirm through positive! Ashland, Oregon Telephone 5291 E AIE C leanliness C ontendente U«« S to rtin g Burner (fig b rin g b o il food» I) to u The C o oking S im m er (fig 2) The •» o ie d to m u m lo in c o o kin g (hg K e tp W o n Simn er UTILITY W S E R V IC E a o if io PAINTING Houses. Mills, Barn*. Roofs. Interiors, Exterior*. Whitewashing We Estimate and Paint Anything t iu it ir r smaanv R l i . E. JETT Phone 4890 310 Bridge Street Ashland, Oregon LEO. R. 11 ENT Classified Advertisements - Read ’em and Reap - RENT—Rooms $3.00 per week FOR SALE—Rubber stam ps, and up. M inor Barber Simp. stam p pads and stam p pad ink, Fourth street. The News Review, 38 E Main. B U S IN E S S MOTOR INN F e a t u r e s c o m p le te A u to m n tlv . K ep alr D e p a r tm e n ts M H C H A H IC A D - E D L C T B IC A D MODY ■torAU«: D a y , W eek or M outh 36 ■- l e t 8 t . P h o n e 3-117«, H o o p er’s R a d ia to r S e r v ice Clogged Radiators Boiled Out and R epaired New 135 Morse D IR E C T O R Y Mac’s Shoe Shop W. C. K iK lN N I H , P rop S h oe Ke B u ild in g . K uh her H e e ls Pritchard’s Grocery Q rocerlex l.u n c h m e a ta Beverages Teli. phone - M ilk 3731 C. E. Taylor MACHINE SHOP Acetylene Welding - Work - Metal Fabri General Auto a n d Truck Repair. »70 O ak S t. - O pen u n til » p.ni. e v e ry e v e n in g O ak S tr e e t G arage AND Arc and Machine cation - A k I i I u iu I GO! A. S t. Ph. 4851 Hl. 1 Box r.lBA, F o rd y c e H lrr H P a in tin g - P a p e r H a n g in g C o n tra c t o r by th e h o u r MUggeatlbn« an«l Katlm ateM free. T e x tu rin g P h o n e 45S(i T elep h o n e 71 til - x 1» f. p m Chiropractic„ Health Clinic Swedish Massage MBS. OODDIK M. WOLl'K 308 N. Main Phone 4371 Ashland (irn d u a te M aaaeuni By a p p o in tm e n t I’hom s .n l 7(17 j.; M ain A nhlam l Rosemary’s F lo w er Sh op C u t E lo w eia, C o n a g e s , D otted PlantH , C im erai D c h ìr iih , C om p lo te W edding E q u ip m e n t 3, k c « p t fc o d i a l »erv ___ ___ a u if o a n ia Spray or Brush 50 E. M ain T e le p h o n e 22281 Radio Repairs 25 Y ear« E x p e rie n c e O N E HAY S E R V IC E T h e Heal C oala ...... - al THE MAHT 27« E. M ah, A ehlam l Stephen Laninovich Upholstering and Furniture Repair T h u e an d on« h u ll P hone 7 Ï2 1 MUe.s »So. K la m a th J u n c tio n K t. J, Box 107, A shl.im l Bellview Cafe n itfg e r 8r, B e tte r T fia n e v rr O pen 24 h o u r s a d ay