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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1961)
Kennedy (Continued from page 2) Of "jjv - - -mn i h cr uuoz? Aft ,wf smm This Big FREE Fnrit Tre ond Laadscop CATALOG of U S, Patented Leaden in Standard and Dwarf Fruit Trees. Alao famous Stark Ornamentals, Rosea, Shruba, etc. Stark Ilro'a is largest nursery in the world oldest in America. Mail coupon now for KItKE CATALOG. y Ideal for Your Backyard Orchard. Take Up Little Space. Use for Ornamental Planting and Borden, Too. Imagine! Bushels of luscious, full size fruit from trees no bigger than a lilac bush! Get luscious apples, peacheB, pears from these hardy Stark Dwarf Trees. Plant them in your back yard or borders as orna mentals. A riot of blossoms in the spring, beautiful all year, with early fruit crops, often at 2 years. Plant up to 9 trees in plot only 20 feet Bquare. Easy to pick; only 8'-12'high. Make Extra MONEY Check coupon for Free Salea Outfit which shows you how to make money taking ordera In spare time for Stark Bra's. STARK BRO'SSK'.-c? 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Greascless, stainless. 45e trial bottle must satisfy or ntoney back. lon't suffer. Ask your druggist for 0. 0. D. PRESCRIPTION. Mrs. Kennedy will use her own tasteful French Provincial furniture in the third floor living quarters. This should be an ex cellent mating of furnishings and building. Visitors Non-VIP: I hope you will find time to go on the public tour of the White House so you will know what tourists are shown. I'm sure you know that one million visitors pass through your new home each year. These people wait outside the East Gate, often for hours. Yet they are in and out of the White House in 10 minutes and see only five rooms the East Room, the State Dining Room, and the Red, Green, and Blue Rooms. I have always felt this was unfair. In my opinion, you would be doing a real service if you also included on the public tour the two first floor anterooms in which the presidential china is kept in glass cases. Your Staff Quarters: On the first floor of the Mansion, the central part of the White House, you will find a very comfortable library. Since your staff will have many important research problems, they could make valuable use of this room. Might I suggest that you turn this into a research library for your White House aides? Your "Fourth Estate": The one underprivileged group at the White House are the reporters. The 20 regu lar correspondents, who will be like mem bers of your family for the next four years, have atrocious working quarters. The press room, off the West lobby, is so small that "you have to go outside to change your mind." This is my suggestion: next to the press room there is another small room now used by the Secret Service. Why don't you tear down the dividing wall and add this space to the press room? I'm sure you would have no trouble finding another place for your Secret Service men. Your Children's Quarters: I haven't any suggestions for entertain ing children at the White House. But I can make one personal observation. I have seen President Eisenhower's grandchildren drive their toy convertibles down the first-floor corridor of the Mansion, and I can attest to the fact that this hallway makes an excel lent course for drag races. But quite seriously, Mr. President, you will find that your domestic staff and the career office personnel at the White House are a most dedicated, devoted, and hard working group. They have the sort of hand-in-glove knowledge that only long experience can bring. For example, Bill Hopkins, the White House executive clerk, and Frank Sanderson, the administrative officer, have served every President of the United States since 1931. They will do everything within their power to ease your burdens, during the coming four years. And from Lincoln's Bedroom to the Dip lomatic Reception Room, from which F.D.R. delivered his fireside chats, you are now the sole tenant in the most important house in the world. Most sincerely, V Stephen Hess General MacArthur The understanding that unites this 81-year-old -father, this 61-year-old mother, and this 22-year-old son finds eloquent ex pression in a prayer written by MacArthur himself during the early days of World War II. It is a prayer which all three often re peat in their morning devotions: "Build me a son, O Lord, who will be strong enough to know when he is weak, and brave enough to face himself when he is afraid; one who will be proud and un bending in honest defeat, and humble and gentle in victory. "Build me a son whose wishes will not take the place of deeds, a son who will know Thee and that to know himself is the foundation stone of knowledge. "Lead him, I pray, not in the path of ease and comfort, but under the stress and spur of difficulties and challenge. Here let him learn to stand up in the storm, here let him lcain compassion for those who fail. "Build me a son whose heart will be clear, whose goal will be high; a son who will master himself before he seeks to master other men; one who will reach into the future, yet never forget the past. Family Weekly, January 22, 1961 (Continued from page 7) General MacArthur chats with his one-time commander, ex-President Herbert Hoover. "And after all these things are his, add, I pray, enough of a sense of humor so that he may always be serious, yet never take himself too seriously. Give him humility, so that he may always remember the sim plicity of true greatness, the open mind of true wisdom, and the meekness of true strength. "Then I, his father, will dare to whisper, 'I have not lived in vain.' "