Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, August 11, 1949, Image 5

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    SOUTHERN
OKKOON
NEW S R E V IE W
Aihland, Oregon
CHURCH
the Veterans A dm inistration nas
announced.
The forms will be available at
every poetoffice, VA office and
a t veterans’ service organizations
on that date.
Checks will sta rt flowing out
sometime in January of next
year and are expected to rea. h
a m axim um of 200,000 daily.
Announcements
38 East Main Street
Entered mm second- c I umi mail m atter in the post office at Aah-
land, Oregon. February 15, 1035, under the act of Congress of
March 3. 1870.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Logan White. Publishers
FIR8T CHURCH OF CHRIST
Second and B Streets
Earl F. Downing, M inister
Bible School 9:45 a.m.
M orning Service, 11 00 a. m.
Anthern by the choir. Sermon
by M arlin Pierce Medford.
Junior Church, 11 00 a. m., for
the children.
Christian Endeavor, 7:00 p. m.
Evening Service, 8:00 p. m. The
Youth Chorus will sing. Sermon
by Jam es Fraley, Medford.
Union Vesper Service, Lithia
Park, 6:00 p. m.
Midweek Service, Wednesday,
7:00 p. m.
Caedles
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
717 Siskiyou Blvd.
Evart P. Borden, M inister
Sunday school 9:30. M arjorie
Flinieu, superintendent.
Classes
for all ages. You will be made
welcome.
W orship service 11 a.m. t
15 SCHEDULES
SHRINERS SCHEDULE
ALL-STAR GRID TILT
Portland, Aug. 11, (Special)—A
brilliant array of the sta te ’s high
school football stars, m any of
them considered outstanding col­
lege prospects, will be in action
for the Oregon A ll-Stars when
they m eet the P ortland A llStars
in the second annual Shriners’
Hospital game at M ultnom ah s ta ­
dium Saturday night, Aug. 27.
Tickets for the game, from
which net proceeds go to the
N orthw est unit of the S h rin e » ’
Hospital for Crippled Children,
are available by sending order to
headquarters in the Portland
hotel.
Daily to MEDFORD
11 on Sundays and Holidays
12 SCHEDULES
Daily to GRANTS PASS
11 on Sundays and Holidays
Get com plete tim etables on
this convenient service from
your friendly agent
Proof that Ashland is fast becoming a point of inter­
Rebatt* Applications
est to vacationers and others who are interested in
Fred W. Kiel
Available Aug. 29
101 E. Main
settling in Southern Oregon, came with an order for an
Application blanks for the $2,
Phone 8181
additional 1000 folders on the city from the Shell Oil
800,000,000 National Service Life
Company Touring Bureau, early this week. This is the
Insurance special rebate to be
paid to some 16,000,000 present
third shipment of the folders requested by the Shell Oil
G R EYHOUND
and form er policyholders will be
Company office in Los Angeles this summer, the sec­
METHODIST CHURCH
available for veterans Aug. 29.
Rev. R obert M cllvenna, m inister
ond during the past six weeks.
9:45 a.m. Sunday school, W il­
The folders, advertising Ashland and vicinity, were liam
Weber, Supt.
engineered by McGee and printed through the coopera­ 11:00 a.m. M orning worship
6:00 p.m. Vespers in Lithia
tion of Ashland merchants and individuals last spring. Park.
They tell a quite complete story of the industrial 7:00 p.m. Youth Fellowship.
picture as it now exists and its future possibilities.
Church of Christ. Scientist
The information listed gives vacationers a vivid picture First Pioneer
Avenue. South
of the attractions here during the summer months. Sunday m orning services at 11
Also listed in the folders is information concerning o’clock.
the Shakespearean plays, now being held here. Prob- [ Sunday School at 9:30 a. m.
Subject:
SOUL
ably no other city in the country has as much to offer ' Golden
Text: Isah 57:15 “Thus
in the way of entertainment, particularly during the saith the high and lofty One that
month of August, as has Ashland. Proof of the in­ inhabiteth eternity, whose name
WASHES CLEAN
is Holy; I dwell in the high and
Does Not
creased interest in the plays is being shown this year holy
place, w ith him also th at is
when more people are passing through the gates at of a contrite and hum ble spirit,
Use as much water
the Elizabethan theatre than ever before. One news to revive the spirit of the hum ble
and to revive the heart of the
Does not have to be
writer on a metropolitan newspaper has said that he contrite
ones.”
believes the Shakespearean Festival in Ashland will W ednesday evening meeting,
bolted down
a,so the temperature
which includes tesUmonies of
soon rival Portland’s Rose Festival.
you want
Science healing, is held
Interest in Ashsland is coming from other sections C at hristian
8 o’clock.
of the country also, with a heavy demand for informa­ Reading Room open daily from
MAKES IT A PLEASURE TO WASH
tion coming from American Automobile club of Calif­ 2 to 5 p. m except Sundays and
ornia and others. It is heartening to note that organ­ holidays.
Public is cordially invited
izations who have received folders are requesting to The
attend these services, and to
additional shipments.
use the Reading Room.
The manager of the Ashland Chamber of Commerce
end merchants cooperating with him are to be com­
“We have a Corner on Lithia Park’
mended for the fine service they are rendering the Legion A sks For
community.
HOTPOINT”
Automatic Washer
299-95
State Vet Bonus
Once upon a time, there was a poor soul who bought
, himself a weekly newspaper and after he bought it he
was even poorer.
As he walked down the street one day, a lady came
up to him and said, “Why don’t you ever print any
personal news? Your paper isn’t worth a plugged
penny.” He walked a little farther and a man said
to him, “Your paper wouldn’t be so bad if you’d
put something in it besides personal news.” And
then he met another man who said, “I owe you some
money for that stove I advertised in your paper but
I didn’t sell it and I don’t see why I should pay you.”
When he got back to the shop, a lady called up and
gave him holy ned for leaving out her grandmother’s
maiden name in a news item she had sent him. Two
more people called up and said they hadn’t been
getting their paper since they moved and, no, they
hadn’t sent out change of address cards. What was
a publisher for, anyhow?
Then a man came in and wanted two million posters
printed but he wouldn’t spend more than $3.50,—what
kind of a gyp joint was this?
Just as the publisher was getting ready to hang
himself with his necktie from one of the rafters, he
dropped dead from overwork.
By and by, a new man bought the newspaper anc
when the people read it they sniffed, “Humph, he sure
doesn t know how to put out a newspaper. Too bac
the old fellow had to die. He sure was a good editor.
And the old editor, who was enjoying his first rest
in many years over at Stormont’s Funeral Home in a
bower of lilies, just laughed and laughed.—Grass Lake
Mich., News.
Á
L From where I s it...
Joe Marsh
Reversing the stand taken at
two previous conventions, state
bonus proponents at the 31st
annual Am erican Legion con­
vention just concluded in Salem
pushed through a resolution call­
ing for paym ent of $10 a m onth
for domestic duty and $15 a m on­
th for overseas duty to Oregon
veterans of World W ar II.
Speakers favoring the state
bonus argued th a t the “stay-at-
homes" during the last w ar rec­
eived a partial bonus in the form
of state income tax “forgiveness
For Office Supplies
Stationery — Job Printing
Try the News Review
THEY GET GOING FAST WHEN TROUBLE STRIKES
Telephone repairmen’s big job is keeping your calls moving
SHORT’S
EAST SIDE PHARMACY I
Walgrwn
Phone: 4811
Specs A n d I See
Eye To Eye
Asked Specs Allen to go hunting
last week. Known him all my life,
so I wasn’t surprised when he
showed up with no gun. Specs
doesn’t like to kill anything.
Couldn’t ask for a better hunt­
ing companion, though. We tramp
around the woods, and whenever
the dogs flush a bird, I blaze away
while Specs just watches.
Told him once I was surprised he
went along . . . feeling the way he
does about shooting anything.
“Well, Joe,” he says, “you do what
you think is right and I’ll stick
to what I think is right. I’ve no call
to dislike you for not seeing eoery-
thing the way I see i t ”
From where I sit, open-minded­
ness Is a wonderful quality. There
are plenty of things Specs admires
that / don’t care for. Like his
fondness for buttermilk. I ’d rather
have a glass of beer anytime . . .
but Specs Allen and I don’t let
little differences get in the way of
something big like friendship.
Agency
Ashland. Oregon I
Pet Foods and Farm Supplita
Phoenix Feed & Seed
Highway 99, Phoenix
Paint • Fertilisera
Weed Killers
M ill Wood
Fuel Oil
Gunter Fuel Co.
> )) 4th St
Copyright, 1949, United States Brewers foundation
These telephone men will soon make a damaged long distance cable carry calls again. Come along and see how
r
Phone 17 j t
1 . W h e n s o m e o n e ’s d itc h -d ig g e r bites a
chunk out o f a long distance cable —and it
happens now and then —repairmen get on the
job fast to fix it. Back at a test center, sensitive
instruments located the break and splicers hit
the road. Almost simultaneously, many calls
were routed through other cities to get them
through w ith as little delay as possible.
3 . K eeping service re lia b le makes your tele­
phone a more valuable servant—just as keeping
rates low as possible makes service a bargain
today. A local call still costs just a few pennies
...and calls to the East Coast at day station
rates only $2.50 plus Federal tax.
The
Pacific Telephone ®
2 . S e r v ic e r e s t o r e d ...th e hundreds o f tiny
wires have been spliced temporarily and, even
as the workmen stow their tools, calls are speed­
ing through the cable. Later it w ill be per­
manently spliced without interrupting service.
Such fast repairs are possible by planning
ahead for emergencies, so trained people can
be quickly pulled from other jobs.
Your telephone
is one of today’s
biggest bargains
and Telegraph Company