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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1951)
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBUSHER Alton F. Baker EDITOR William M. Tugman MANAGING EDITOR Alton F. Baker, Jr. SERVICES Full Associated Press, United Press, Audit Bureau of Circulations. The Register-Guard's policy Is the complete and Impartial publication In Its news pages of all news and statements on news. On this page the editors of The Register Guard offer their opinions on events of the day and matters of Importance to the community endeavoring to be candid but fair and helpful in the development of con structive community policy. A newspaper is A CITIZEN OF ITS COMMUNITY. Entered at the Post Office at Eugene, Oregon, as jecond-class matter. PAGE 8 EUGENE, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1951 Speaking of Christmas Favorites There is a vast literature built around the theme of Christmas, but there are oi.ly a few of the thousands of "Christmas stories" or poems which are enduring favorites. We have on the desk a request from a man who says he is past 80, to reprint "The Night Be fore Christmas" in "its original form." He says: "That was the favorite of my childhood which was spent mostly in a sod hut in Nebraska. Christmas was a pretty simple af fair in those days, but my father and my older brothers always managed to whittle out some interesting toys and my mother made gingerbread men. On Christmas Eve my father always read the Bible stories and we would sing "Silent Night" in German, but the big event for me was when my mother recited 'The Night Before Christmas' just be fore she shooed us to bed. I know most of it by heart, but over the years there have been so many parodies and changes I would like to have a copy of the original version to read to my great-granddaughter, who is six. I suppose the author is unknown." The author of "The Night Before Christmas" is NOT unknown, but not a great deal is known about him. He . was Clement Clarke Moore who was born in 1779 and died in 1863. He was the son of Benjamin Moore, who was a notorious Tory during our Revolu tionary War, but was later a distin guished American citizen rector of Trinity Church in New York City and a bishop of the Episcopal church, and president of Columbia University. Clement Clarke Moore, the son, was a scholarly man, a preacher and teach er who authored "A Compensious Lex icon of the Hebrew Language" in 1809, a notable contribution to theological education in its time, but his real fame attaches to the jingling "Night Before Christmas," which he wrote in 1823 for his own children.. Here it is: THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse; mu .tn..Mnffa iratA hnntf Kv th chimnev with care, In hope that St. Nicholas loon would be there. The children were nestled all snug In their beds, While visions of sugar-plums danced in their heads; And Mama in her kerchief and I In my cap, Had just settled our brains for a long winter's nap; When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter, I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter. Away to the window I flew like a flash, Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. The moon on the breast of the new fallen snow, Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below, When, what to my wondering eyes did appear, But a miniature sleigh, and eight tiny rein-deer, With a little old driver, so lively and quick, I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick. Moro rapid than eagles his coursers they came, And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name; "Now, Dasher! now, Dancer! now Pranccr and Vixen! On, Comet! on, Cupid! on, Donner and BliUen!" To the top of the porch, to the top of the wall Community Singing on On Monday evening just before the downtown stores close there will be a real old-fashioned Christmas Eve sing ing of carols at the intersection of Broadway and Willamette. The civic A Cappclla Choir, under the leadership of John Ilendrickson, will lead in this observance and everybody is invited to join in. A portion of the street area will be roped off by the city police. Mer chants are donating gifts of candy for children and Santa Claus will be there in person. This simple program may be the answer to the long discussed problem of "Community Christmas," the pro ject which the Lookouts have been urg ing since the end of World War II. It has the great advantage of being rela tively informal. It will not require any elaborate preparation or setting. It will be timed to catch the interest of all the last minute shoppers and people em ployed in downtown offices and stores. (For the store employes, the occasion should be especially welcome. The end of the Christmas rush Is somewhat comparable Morquis Child Now dash away! dash away, dash away all! As dry leaves that before the wild hurri cane fly. When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky; So up to the house-top the coursers they flew, ' With a sleigh full of Toys, and St. Nich olas too. And then in a twinkling I heard on the roof, The prancing and pawing of each little hoof As I drew in my head and was turning around, Down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound. He was dressed all in fur from his head to his foot,. And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot; A bundle of toys he had flung on his back, And he looked like a peddler just open his pack. His eyes how they twinkled! his dimples, how merry! His cheeks were like roses,-his nose like a cherry! His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow, And the beard on his chin was as white as the snow; The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth, And the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath; He had a broad face and a little round belly, That shook when he laughed like a bowl full of jelly. He was chubby and plump, a right Jolly old elf, And I laughed when I saw him In spite of myself, A wink of his eye and a twist of his head, Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread; He spol:e not a word, but went straight to his work, And filled all the stockings; then turned with a Jerk, And laying his finger aside of his nose, And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose. He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle, And away they all flew like the down of a thistle. But I heard him exclaim ere he drove out of sight, "HAPPY CHRISTMAS TO ALL . . '. AND TO ALL A GOOD NIGHT!" Literally millions, young and old, have found delight in these verses over the 128 years since they were written. So far as we can learn Clement Clarke Moore never received a penny for this masterpiece, probably didn't expect any reward except the wide-eyed excite ment of little kids listening to them. It was "a thing of the moment," but in the re-telling of an ancient legend it created a picture of Christmas which the world has cherished. Christmas in the home! "Yes, but ... Yes but what? So we don't have the great fireplaces and broad chimneys they had when Moore wrote. So Santa Claus arrives by airplane or rocket ship nowadays. So the North Pole is just a way-point in the ice on a round-the-world hop, and most kids are completely blase be fore they're out of the first grade! So what?" V All Christmas is an act of faith. The time will never come when Santa Claus and his reindeer will not be very real to the little kids. It is a waste of time to rationalize too much: Our venerable friend, now past 80, will bear witness. There was no great fireplace in the sod hut on the Nebraska prairie, but you could hear the reindeer pawing on the sod roof. You can still hear 'em, where evcr you may be, no matter how old you are if you hark! Christmas Eve to the Inst day of school for kiddies. Every body feels like letting loose.) The timing of the event is quite im portant and we are told that the singing will be started in ample time so that nobody will be delayed in getting home. Over the years we have had many op portunities to observe the phenomenon of Christmas Eve downtown. Up until store closing the stores are usually crowded. Half an hour later you can shoot a cannon up and down William ette Street and hit nothing. But there is always a sort of festive Deak iust before the rush for home. That's where this plan to have carol singing comes in. It should catch that last minute peak of enthusiasm before the family rites begin. (Although we have nothing much to con tribute to the singing except a clumsy bum bum, we plan to sea and hear this thing. There arc enough good siiiRers In Eugene to make the well-known WELCOME ring.) The last word is to the weatherman, urging mm to be kind, although we doubt if a little snow or rain would mat ter much to people who want to sing. CHILDS Timing for Ike's Return Debated WASHINGTdN For those who hope that at the very least there will be a spirited contest for the Republican nomina tion the news from the Eisenhower camp can hardly be considered encouraging. Be tween General Eisen hower's active political backers and his close friends something like a division has grown up. This is largely over the timing of Ike's resig nation from his com mand in Europe and his return to the United States. What his active political backers think was summed up in a letter Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts has just sent to Eisenhower at SHAPE headquarters outside Paris. In that letter Lodge, leader of the move ment to get the Republican nomination for Ike, expressed the strong conviction that the general should .return at the very earliest moment, preferably by the end of January. Lodge has swung Increasingly to the view that a last-minute draft with Ike in Europe until the eve of the GOP con vention is a political improbability and in all likelihood an impossibility. BETWEEN THE LINES Between the lines of the Lodge letter one may read the plain implication that if Eisenhower wants to be President, then he must return to his native land and per sonally direct a campaign for that great est of all political goals. Eisenhower scouts in the south and southwest have heard similar expressions of discontent with the remoteness, both geographically and polit ically, of their hero. Doesn't he think this is important enough to come back and work for, they demand. Isn't he being pretty cavalier? It happens that this view point con flicts with that of Elsenhower's close friends and probably with that of Ike him self on at least two counts. First, the feel ing is that he should not return while there is still such a long way to go in doing the job of hammering together a western European defense force. Eisenhower is said to feel most strongly on this point, with little or no likelihood that he can be per-, suaded to change his mind. DATE OF SPECULATION When this reporter was at SHAPE headquarters three weeks ago the date speculated about for Ike's retirement was the end of March or early April. But even this may be optimistic in terms of what Eisenhower hopes to do as supreme com mander of a force still for the most part In the planning stage. On the second count, purely as a mat ter of strategy, Ike's closest friends are con vinced that it would be wrong for him to come home early in the new year to be come an active condidate. This, they feel, would dissipate much of the element of drama centering around the Eisenhower name. He would tend to become merely another political candidate, pressed on every hand for his views on the Taft Hartley Act, FEPC, flood control and other sundry and assorted issues. ARRIVE AT CLIMAX As these friends see it, by delaying his return Eisenhower will arrive at the cli mactic moment. On that climactic home coming he wsuld come forth with some dramatic concept such as federation not for Europe alone but for the west. In this role he would have an enormous appeal for Americans who are fed up with politics as usual in both of the major parties. But the pratical politicians, working to put Ike over, simply can't see it that way. They want a live flesh-and-blood candi date instead of a symbol several thousand miles away. For their part the dedicated friends are of the opinion that if the politicians want Elsenhower badly enough, they will be willing to go out and do the job themselves rather than insist that he clear the path by his own personal efforts so that they may follow along. The friends go so far as to say that the politicians must be satis fied if Ike makes no move to withdraw his name once it is entered for the New Hampshire presidential preference primary on March 11. That passive indication of his willingness must suffice. This discussion of ways and means is taking place against a background of formidable gains being made by Senator Robert A. Taft and the effective team campaigning in his behalf for the GOP nomination. Those gains are being record ed in the south, the southwest and the north. And at the same time as the weak nesses of the Truman -administration are more glaringly revealed, the chances that the prize will go to Taft almost without a challenge are increased. (Copyright. 1931, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) 'False or Not They're Teeth !" i iiei-rTiriTi I IT In The Editor's Mailbag SO THEY SAY A few thee's and thou's can make viol ence acceptable and sex unassailable. Milton Shulman, British film critic, on Hollywood's Biblical productions. I personally don't know whether Gen eral Eisenhower is a bird dog or a rabbit dog, and I usually want to know what I'm hunting. Gov. Kerr Scott, of North Carolina. Modern art, not satisfied with the denial of the spiritual nature of man, distorts in a grotesque and repelling fashion his hu man form. Dr. Matthcy Spinka, professor of church history, Hartford Seminary. MY FRIEND "Ye are tnu riend." John 15.14 You've meant so much to me this year ... So many times you've shown you care , , About what happens in my life . , , Our friendship is so free of strife . I want to say at Christmas time . . "Thank God for you!" in this brief rhyme . . . You'll get a lot of gifts and things . , . From Santa Claus, but this verse brings ... A message from your good friend's heart . , , Of which you've come to be a fart. JUUEN C. HYER INDIGNANT MINER REEDSPORT (To the Editor) On returning from the Bohemia Mining District recently, your art icle of September 23rd, sponsored by County Judge Bayly, respect ing mining claims, came to my at tention. Being an owner of un patented mining claims in the Bo hemia District and also a tax payer in Lane as well as Douglas County, the remarks contained in this article do not set. well with me. My partner and I have followed the practice of doing about doU' ble the amount of Work required each year for assessment work. We have been working on our claims in the Bohemia District for ten years and have not yet applied for any patents, but we want to state emphatically that the Government has no more moral right to hold up or delay patents on mining claims where claimants have complied with the law than the Government would have to hold up homestead claims. We are wondering what legal authority County Judge Bayly had for hiring Francis Wagner and Richard Baker to help the Department of Interior look af ter the Bohemia Mining District,. We have never before heard of Francis Wagner or Richard Baker as mineral experts. We believe the Interior Department is capa ble of handling their business without the help of a small cali ber county judge and his min eral experts and we can see no reason why the taxpayers of Lane County should have to pay for this kind of nonsense. The County Judge could profit ably spend a little time and money improving some of our Lane County roads, some of which are in a deplorable condition. We would call his attention particu larly to the Brice Creek Road to Bohemia which is in the worst condition it has been for 10 years. If he will attend to reducing the taxpayers' burden and the County Court's legitimate business he will have his hands full without try ing to run the Federal Govern ment's business. I have not been able to figure whether this socialistic article by Judge Bayly is just small caliber, political ballyhoo cr whether it is some kind of a smoke screen. Per sonally, I do not favor socialism. The socialistic idea of taking away the surface rights belonging to the miners is not much dif ferent than the acts of the Com munists,' except that the Com munists always begin with the big corporations, like some right here in Lane County who got a lot of their timber holdings for $1.25, $2.50, and $3.00 per acre. If Judge Bayly wants to start a real sensational crusade of in vestigation to enhance his politi cal ambitions he could start an in vestigation of the handling of I.ane County tax lands, involving many millions of dollars worth of timber. This scandal has been no secret over the State of Oregon for years. WherA harA Vnil VtOAn rlnrlni, the last ten years, Judge Bavly, jjCfi timing wiiiL-n iime some oi tne friends and relatives of the poli tical ring which has hovered about the Court in Eugene have I . faViittni.e .....! - u-i purchase of these county lands. If you are as anxious and as solicitous as you pretend to be in championing the taxpayer's wel-1 U... J , ... '. . ....v. nun uui-s u Happen you niai not go after this county lands is sue during the past fifteen years? You might have profitably asked for a Congressional inves-'lji tigation. It would have been real ; "" political thunder for you. Youi'! could start an investigation of" this scandal without getting off i ". the seat of your pants and with- 4" out hiring mineral experts like Mr. Wagner and Mr. Baker. Perhaps this is enough to sav !' to Judge Bayly at this time. 1 4" But to the sensible citizens oi Lane County we would like to say that the mineral industries of the U. S. are the backbone of our fair land. And the present mineral laws have served the country and the mineral industries well. We have in Bohemia Mining District deposits of base metals of great potential wealth. With foresight this district was set aside by our Federal Government for the fur therance of mineral exploration and development. The free-mill ing surface has merely been scratched. But the great depths of base are known to exist in this district, they are yet to be opened up, and when this happens (we hope it will be soon) this may become just as important a distrist as the Butte, Montana, District. Let us demand that we have a good road up Brice Creek so that when people like the Ameri can Smelting and Refining Com pany send men to investigate opening up these vast bodies of base metals, as the A.S. & R. did during the past summer, they can report a decent road for access to the mines. Few districts In the world are blessed with the natural drainage which the Bohemia District has, which offers low cost production. At Grass Valley, Calif, water is pumped to the surface from ap proximately a mile deep. There is an urgent cry for base metals for our government in the war effort. At Bohemia all it takes is deep level tunnels to drain the district and open up the vast bodies of base ore. and if we boost as a unit for this district and good roads, we will see Bo hemia one of the important sources of wealth in Lane County. And the good road, when we get it, will also be worth its cost as a source of attraction to tour ists to the gorgeous mountain scenery of Bohemia. Fifty years ago Cottage Grove was an important mining town. We have good reason to believe it will be not many years hence more important as a mining city than as a lumbering city. MAX KRUSE, SR. Reedsport, Oregon. Woodworth Named Attorney for OLCC PORTLAND (JF) George Woodworth Wednesday was nam ed attorney for the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. License supervisor since July, 1949, he succeeds Gerald Norville. resigned to enter private practice here. W. A. Bingham, OLCC adminis trator, said a member of the com mission staff would be named li cense supervisor. COLD CCRE . SPRINGFIWr, tor)-oiderDeor;,r'i0N cows and man '"aBWsi dreadful diseSs." wh a lump of e."" m a smallTaVo"8 ' a child', neck. t.a,.,trinH isolated sni.... V...ePt ft? learned that .L'..,15e Parer.J ?llottedplen,;X'?H shouldn't be tnu v.. a way older American,,, be rugged inrii,.iJ. .V.s .le ..uuausij oalt nnrlr . Per-the thicker h7 T more the neDnor . u worn n iht nj I always wnrw.j ,! 1 .!.ni ci day if one can f M buy a Deep e .... .r. 8N to pepper. No, f: Piece fastened' overK1 doctor, even when we b, J ior a sore throat h.w" ?n? "'"toe - , "u Was. anH .1 Will he 11 lacK H might sav: sepj may explain whv Prohibition. ' ""u Skunk grease, kerosene Douglas County Plans Centennial SALEM (P) An organization to celebrate Douglas County's 100th birthday next year was in corporated here Thursday. It is called Douglas County Centennial, Inc., with headquar ters in Roseburg. The incorpora tion will expire on Jan. 1, 1953. The corporation's purpose is to sponsor a pageant and celebra tion, educate the public about the county's history, and put up his torical markers. lard, turpentine and land "-""" uiese at, grand, old remoHi.. ' nose, neck, chest (front and J ov, "" i me ears, iust r going to bed. Mother, i ,1 I doubt if Crisco or oleo i unless it's used south nf tJv nj ti: I-.. . aim i,iAu,i ime ana skunk sailing scarce. Why did , Off all those Vines ar,A ...L- . have an OPA? I'm 50rr, 'j3 ecuciaiiuil. I isnt it far more sensM tempt germs out ot the J ay&ieiii imo piece or pork uum mat piece or pork t use shots which kill th. and leave their dead rati wnnin tne numan body to l out later in boils, ulcers or cers which reauire morn y cure them? No wonder doctor ousy tnese days. Porous plasters slwjyi pores for the germi to nt or there wasn't any usJ leaving - pores" in them first place. One rubbed kerosene lad on, all winter, fully and (nil turpentine and lard, skunk p knowing full well that his late in the spring would or lard, grease, germt mil after it had served its purpJ Keeping germs out of the system. All this was common knoii a few years ago but these tangled doctors won't listen No 'wonder older folks pine and die waiting sorrowMj those good old days to : again. Maybe the Republics put this in their platform have been looking for son!' W. W. V: (twuraf UWMT RUIUIN The Gold Arrow Stamp Co, Wishes to Announcs That H & M Richfield Service 187 E. 6th Phoni 5-SKII nwuM 091 fUMWM COMMflT Will Give and Redeem Gold Arrow Stamps . . . Remember banki pay Interest on money you gave . Gold Arrow Stamps pay Interest on money you spend . limited redemption. Las 4- 3 on last minute gifts UNDER $10 Shirts Argyle Sox Ties Belts Cuff Links ' Tie Bars Wallets Pajamas Suspenders Nylon Shorts "Sunshine Corner" EUGENE'S MENS STORl uHlAintttt Broadway ana 1