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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1962)
Poets' Cqrner Conducted by Arnold Eugene Jenny Pottry: Univtrial Truth Transmuted , Poetry is emotionalized experience. It is universal truth in thought or feeling, transmuted by the imagination into lining images, and expressed in beautiful, and usuallv pat terned, language. It is the perfect expression of a worthy idea in measured language. It is the product when a brood ing imagination finds in man and nature deep matter for consideration and transmits its findings to others for their delight and edification. --Gerald Senders O -Grass Tall grass, fed by the early rains, Now shoots its sunlit blades Heavenward, but a mower will reduce This windblown field to well-proportioned length. But I, for one, dislike the thought Of shaping nature's ways. Too soon the blistering sun will sap the ground Of all the winter rains, and then this field Of greening, tossing-sunlight will dry and die To amber foxtails in the dust of sun. Now, as the grass is reaching heavenward, My thoughts are forced to trim it to the roots, Then nuture it up heavenward again. How like the tall grass bending in the sun Is my own reaching to the sky. Lloyd B. Halverson Medford O Ants' Highway The anls' highway is the pasture fence When the grass Is tall; then the ants commence To trundle their burdens back and forth; Back and forth, from north to south and south to north, In such confusion that I cannot find The truth of whether an orderly mind Is driving the ant to work so hard, While I do nothing but sit and regard His errands with a critical eye On the pasture fence as he trudges by! Ruth H. Cowley Tigard, Oregon 0 Auf Wiedersehenl' When comes the hour to call the roll Of saints redeemed in heaven's demesne, The reading of the sacred scroll Most surely will revel the name Of each good soul we've known on earth. And if our fortune finds us there Among the host who've earned rebirth By lives so lived that everywhere Men blessed the day so we came their way We'll ask to see that honored list Of friends and neighbors, proud to say That without them we might have missed The way to that celestial realm. A shout of joy will escape our lips To find right at the very helm Of our own ship to cross the Styx: Bing and Louise of Manor fame Rogue Valley Manor mark it well, For far and wide that is the name That friends and loved ones ever tell About when folk begin the quest For dignified, serene retirement, Assured of comfort, peace and rest, Without the cares of house and rent. So let us join in loud acclaim And heartfelt wish! Auf wiedersehen. Louise and Bing! You'll e'er remain Beloved of all the "Rogues." Amen. Arnold Eugene Jenny Dedicated to Mr. and Mrs. administrators, Rogue Valley at the lareweii party tendered Communications Letter to the Edltoi must heai the name and address of the .vntei although undei cer tain circumstances the use ol a pen nam ui initial fot publica tion ib ocnussible The Mall Tribune reserves the right to edit ui', ieltei with an eye to claniicalim and enndensation Letters submittea for publica tion must not exceed 400 words No Place Fast To the Editor: If it takes you three hours to fly three limes around the world and it takes four hours to find you, you ain't gcttin' no place fast. Everett Acklin Ashland. Ore. P S -Try a Brush car. Feeling Oats To the Editor: In spite of weather w'e oldsters are feel ing our oats and there's no shelf wide enough to seat us. May 22, the Golden Age Orchestra, led by William Pickell played on Johnny Linn's TV program. Members received many calls of appre ciation and praise for their perfect timing. Wednesday. May 23. Med ford's Senior Center orchestra held a rummage sale, helped by their many music-loving friends. Thursday. May 24. their larue croup - taught by Ed ward C. Root played for sev eral guests at the Senior Cen ter. Friday. May 25. the month's ATT NAME ADDRESS CITY Please DDArrif 1 KAU I IWMk MUiWIIW JVIIVVt A Adult Education Office, Medford Senior High l Irving P. Beesley. assistant Manor, and read by the author tnem at the Manor, April 18. birthday party was held at Medford's Fifty Plus Club. May's party table was beauti fully decorated for the Taurus born. Flowers and cakes tenced in by merry faces Every birthday of the year is ' remembered that way. Yep. I'm an 1883 May gal. All right, I no longer am, but I was a "girl" once, I bet yuh, even if they did call me a tomboy. My A3 pounds have doubled, but I'm sure I can climb trees and play ball yet even if I can't chin myself a dozen times and climb the Rockies. The other day a friend asked me what I thought of Home Rule. I am not in poli tics, but I once heard of a club that chose a small group to be leaders, and some of them got important right away. They indulged in back, biting, personal spite and scandal. They gave that club a bad name, then outsiders heard about their rumpus raising, Now our Fifty Plus club is different. It was formed for the recreation of old people in and around Medford. We are not interested in politics necessary, ne saia. to octer or trouble making nf anv kind I "'"rrs from cheating on their Just a large group of oldsters. 'i,xl'5- Sherwin was convicted happy people who will get j dodging $16.394 in taxes along together always, for we will do as we'd be done by. corner of Fifth st. and Oak That's the one true rule for i dale ave. Fridays at noon, being plainly nice to know Pearl Sparkman Hope to meet you there, NF. Jacksonville. Ore. EMTSO Send Me Full Details ai MiiDtmritrunni I Phone 773-7220 Try and By BENNETT CERF- 'jV'ANCY FAGG, spectacularly L ' gal in Houston, Texas, has a Meredith who heard the word two schoolmates of Mex ican extraction. "Mum my," inquired Meredith one evening, "exactly what a plaza?" "A plaza," explained Mrs. Fagg, "is a square." Meredith considered this information judici ously, then announced, "The new principal in our school is sure one big old plazal" Quotes: Georga Jean JTathan: "I don't know much about medicine, but I know what I don't like." Ovid: "Chaste is she whom no one has asked." Kin Hubbard: "The hardest thing to disguise is your faelings when you put your mother-in-law aboard a train for home." Oscar Wilde: "Duty is what one expects from others." Austin O'Malley: "A gentleman is a prevaricator who never heard his jruest's favorite new story before." Fapa Shrecklich wasn't too impressed with the girt Junior brought home for dinner. "I thought you said your girl's less were without equal,' ha jeered while she was out of the room. "Not at all," hedged Junior. "I said they were without parallel." O 1963. by Bennett Cert. Diiuibuted by King Features Syndicate THE WEEK IN Explosion Patrolman By United Press International A fuel explosion and fire wrecked an Intercontinental Titan Missile and its under ground launching silo near Chico and sent 63 men to a hospital for treatment of smoke inhalation. Five men were trapped underground for a half hour when dense smoke blocked their exits. All but seven of those hospitalized were re leased after brief treatment. The explosion occurred as civilian workmen tested the installation prior to turning j it over to the Air Force for operation. The Titan was installed in a 160-foot deep silo, with a I heavy door on top. The S2 mil lion missile was 97-fcet long and weighed 110 tons. Re placement cost of the silo was estimated at $20 to $30 mil lion. Air Force Investigators swarmed over the missile complex in an effort to deter mine what caused the explo sion. Elsewhere, there were these developments: Patrolman: A wounded California Highway Patrol man shot and killed his at tacker in a blazing gun battle in the coffee shop of a plush hotel near Btirlingame. But the officer, Dale Krings, 32, of Redwood City, died two hours later. Several witnesses st?jd they heard the attacker. Edward Lang Hargrove, 48, of San Mateo, state "I hate cops." Investigators theorized Hargrove shot Krings because of his dislike of law enforce ment officers. The two had never met. Chapel: California State As semblyman Charles Edward Chapel (R Palos Verdcs) was was fined S600 and sentenced to serve two months in the Sacramento county jail for making a false report of an explosion aboard a March 15 United Airlines plane. But the sentence was suspended and he was placed on six months probation. Sherwin: Alameda County Superior Court Judge Marvin Sherwin was sentenced to one year in prison and fined $1,000 on a federal income tax evasion conviction. U.S. Dist. Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli said a prison sentence was not necessary to deter Sherwin from further crime. But It was VttHWU on the O P MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGO Stop Me - easy - to - Iook - at newspaper 7-year-old daughter named "plaza" used frequently by CALIFORNIA l i Wrecks Titan, Silo; Kills His Attacker for 1954-56 by failing to dis close $37,000 in income. Construction: Talks aimed at settling the $3.5 billion northern California construc tion dispute resumed between employers and the laborers union. Meanwhile, one con tractors group called for an appeal to Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg. The strike was in its fourth week. The union began picketing several building projects May 1. and the contractors later retali ated by ordering a general shutdown. Muslims: Nine members of the Black Muslim cult indict ed by the Los Angeles County Grand Jury for their part in an April riot in which one Muslim was killed and a dozen others injured, were sched uled to be arraigned in Su perior Court. The grand jury indicted eight men on charges of assault with a deadly weap on. Five policemen were in jured. All nine Muslims were charged with resisting arrest by use of force and violence. The indictments came at the end of a week-long grand jury hearing into the riot in which an estimated 50 members of the anti-white sect battled po lice outside of a downtown Los Angeles Muslim temple. Bakers:- A strike against six major southern California wholesale bakeries was set tled and some 2.200 employ ees returned to their jobs after a one-day walkout. But by the week's end the dismito had extended to the Snn Fran cisco Bay Area, idling some 500 bread truck drivers and salesmen. A strike also was threatened in Sacramento. Tobriner: Gov. Edmund G. COUPLES WW DfflCE GAY STUDIO PARTIES ARE PART OF THE FUN AT ARTHUR MURRAY'S.. DISCOVER NOW how you can get so much more fun out of life through dancing. And it's so quick and easy learning to dance at Arthur Murray'.,. See for )wn?7 2-for-l rates are in effect for a limited time at all Arthur Murray Studios, right now! You'll love the gay Studio Parties that arc part of the fun at Arthur ' Murray's. There you meet new friends. You gain new poise and confidence, as ei eryhody dances! Stop in now and get special 2-for-1 rates at the nearest Arthur Murray Studio, open 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. ARTHUR MURRAYstudio L censctf by irtuf Vuniy, Inc. W. G. Parks, license 320 East Main St. Medford Phor 773-5365 Bill Stoppi In Field Cr By YVONNE FRANKLIN i Mail Tribune Washington Bureau ' Washington (Speciali-A hill providing that pre - teenagers can't pick fruit and vegetables , for Din monev : this summer is providing a major irritant to some Ore gon voters. 6 W 1 Jne 'pS'sla- n-- f tion, designed to protect the c h i 1 dren of migrant bihnr. rr""" ers from bouis , exploited, has produced a flurry of mail from protesting uregonians wno want ineir youngsters to have a work ex perience during school vaca tions. nop. cawm it. jjtirno w as indignant and also distressed I at the possible impact this bill I might have on the farmers of j ; Oregon if it Is combined with I possible action by the Secre tary of Labor in barring Mexi- can nationals from work north I of the California border. I "From the time I was 10 Brown nominated Justice Mathew O. Tobriner, 58, of the First District Court of Appeals In San Francisco, to serve on the State Supreme Court. The nomination went to the Commission on Judi cial Appointments for expect ed approval. He would fill the seat vacated by Associate Justice Maurice T. Dooling Jr., who is retiring. Exhausts: Road tests of ex haust control devices began in an effort to assure state approval on at least two pro totypes by next year. Three devices accepted by the Cali fornia Motor Vehicle Pollu tion Control Board were in stalled on 75 cars for testing and a fourth device will be placed on another 25 vehicles. Two Accidents Are Reported in City Two non-injury accidents Involving vehicles were re ported to Medford city do! ice Thursday. One driver was cited, police said. Vehicles operated by Harry tugene Rose, 78. of 700 Chest nut St., Medford, and Andrew Jackson McCleary, 18, of 255 Beatly St., Medford, collided about 10:25 a.m. at Fifth st. and Central ave. Rose was cited for making an improper left turn. About 5:04 p.m., a car driv en by Evelyn Florence Hcr rin, B0, of 503 Hamilton St., struck a parked motorcycle registered to Laddie Darrell Livingston, 115 Jcanette st. The mishap occurred on East Sixth St., police said. !, 2 W $k -.1 ng Children's Work eates Many Protests years old until I was old. enough to work in a saw mill I at 17 I picked hops or logan-; berries." Durno declared. He added that his daughters when teen agers had worked in the j fields at harvest time "for pin j money" and "their primary reason was to heip the indus try, because the industry is' what keeps the Rogue River . valley alive." j He pointed out the difficul ties in getting farm labor just at the precise moment it is , most needed - when the crop is ready and must be picked. Durno has protested to Gold berg about the hardship that a prohibition of Mexican workers would have on the Oregon economy, and expect ed a reply shortly. Rep. Edith Green's office produced a file of some 50 let ters received in April and May from the McMinnville, Dayton, Amity area. The let ters were for the must part long, thoughtful, well-written and friendly, but all protested. Value of Earning The parents wrote that even very young children who work (often with parents) are taught the value of earning and handling money. They pointed out that a youngster learns responsibility, and most all of the letters mentioned the value of work in prevent ing juvenile delinquency. One teacher said it helped pay her way through college and she was pleading for those now in their early teens to have the same opportunity. S.1123 has passed the Sen ate and is expected to be called up in the House after the Memorial Day holidays on the consent calendar - which means that one dissenting voice can quash the bill and it "lays over" until the next call of the calendar. The bill provides that a youngster may work if he is employed by his parents on the home fnrm; or if he is 14 years of age or over; or if be tween 12 and 14 and works within 25 miles of his perma nent home with his parents' consent. It allows the Secre tary of Labor to make regula tions barring certain hazard ous employment for children up to age 16. Telegrams from Hatfield Durno and Rep. Walter Nor- hlad had telegrams from Gov. Mark Hatfield which said that the measure would compound an already serious problem; that there was no evidence of misuse of youngsters; and if problems should arise, action could be taken by the state to protect the interests of the children. Wiley Clowers, president of the Oregon Farm Bureau Fed eration, had called on all par ents, farmers and small busi nessmen to write their con gressmen opposing passage of S.1123. Clowers stressed the importance to the economy ("worth millions") and that retailers would be affected be cause of the material goods which the wage-earners buy. He said work was a character builder and preventive of f I: i 14 juvenile delinquency. Norbald, who opposes the bill, said he had ben getting i telephone calls as well as mail j against S 1123. Amount of Work "I think the kids do a tre-, mendous amount of work in j the Willamette valley towns , picking heans and strawber ries, etc." Norblad said. "AH the kids go out to work in the j summer: it is just a family . thing to do to earn school and ; movie money. It is hard to gel stoop labor these days, and it is a tremendous benefit to the farmers." Norblad predicted the bill probably won't pass. Greg Janson, 6342 N. Com mercial, Portland, wrote to Mrs. Green: "I am a boy of 13 and just heard of S.1123 and don't like what I have heard. I am sure that you have heard that Kennedy is all for physi cal fitness, and berry picking is a good way to keep fit." Ashland Sets Plans For Memorial Day Ashland - American Legion activities on Memorial Day and the week end preceding it Include preparation for the service in Mountain View cemetery when all Ashland patriotic organizations unite in the traditional service at 11 a.m. Wreath making for the ob servance Is scheduled Tues day, May 29, at 1:30 p.m. in the Legion hall on Winburn way. At that time members of the auxiliary will meet to make five memorial wreaths. Workers are asked to take their own scissors, wire and other materials. Following the Memorial service May 30 the annual all- patriotic groups covered dish dinner will be served in the Legion hall at 12:30 p.m. Members of the auxiliary and junior members were on the streets early Friday sell ing the red poppies made by disabled veterans. The Poppy Days continued through Sat urday. Nevada is the driest slate with an annual average nf just 8 B Inrhes nf rainfall, based on a B7-yer record. PRINCE GARDNER Burniifiid Mahogany Polished Cawhldt. Alio available In tan, black. A. REGISTRAR BILLFOLD $5.00 I. POCKET SECRETARY $5.00 C. KEY GARD Snap doling Styla $2.95 Not Showm Matching Bill Gard $2.95 All Hut U Prottd by "An Invinbli Stitch" Thl tint Art of Udlhrrmfl ir'l A. FOR HIGH-SCHOOL GRADUATES &0 SUNDAY. MAY 27, The Family Council Editor' not: Th Family Coirrl rnmiiti of a Juttx. phvrhlatrtM Ihrre rlrn.vm.-n, thrre ft. ton and a wnmrn't editor, Kath artirlr if a iin.nnry of a famil divagrrrmr nt presentfd In Lha Cminrtl. The I'nunril draU with problrim, ma (or and mlnni, fnroiinirrpd bv iuidnrf rmimHurt and wil workers, Edited by Mri. Alma Dtnnry. (Copyright by General feature Corp.) Mrs. H.V. - If she won't mind Larry 1 can t visit my daughter. i Winda V.-llow tan I watch : over a wild teen-ager? Mrs. H.V. - We have a mar-' ried daughter living out West, a married son living a hlock away and a 15-year-old son j liviuK ti iiuuit- hum ua. wlj daughter expects her second child soon and is counting on me to stay with her family while she's in the hospital, and for a few weeks after her re turn. What can be more natural than for me to send my young est over to his brother's house for the month or so I'll be away? I can't leave him home ! with my husband. They gel into terrible arguments and when I'm not there to keep i them apart. I shudder to think ! what could happen. I figured j he'd have some respect for ; his brother and especially for Wanda, my daughter-in-law, who's new in the family. But Wanda says no, ab solutely no. She wants me to take Larry along. ... Wanda V. - My mother-in-law considers herself a pro gressive mother where her baby boy is concerned. He's never been disciplined and, as a result, Is a wild kid. He won't take orders from me, I'm sure. He doesn't act friendly to anyone in the family except his mother and me. Making me responsible for him would ruin our friend ship. The boy is an adolescent and too much for me. He flares up easily if crossed. Maybe it's all right for him to practice on his trombone at all hours in his own house. My in-lows own it. But we're just tenants in ours and if he behaved the way he does at home, we'd be evicted. Frankly I have enough of a job taking care of my hus band, her other son. She'll have to figure out some other solution for this one. The Council: As Confucius might put it: She who seeks hospitality for child must raise child to be. gracious GIFTS for the C. X by PRINCE! GARDNER Th ldel graduation gilt to lak to collage ... or to tha new Job In todij'i hi(.b ichoolt tod colleiM, competition it tr rifte. To met It, ten-jri must b ible to Ulk uid writo accurately uid with iiur ince. Thii it where Merriun Webiter'e New Collfjiite can bo a conatant help tor It li required or recommended at achoole and colletea eT.rjr where. With Merriam-Web-.t.r von know You're richt; ita deflnltiona are complete, accurate, and up-to-date. For the Ideal iraduation rjft, ji.e a Merrlam-Web-eter. 16 plain, 8 indexed. De lute bindinta to $16. Let ne ihow ;ou a copy. 1962 A 5 guest. Larry's behavior may be the kind that "only a moth er can love." If so, Mrs. V. is not free to run off and leave him with anyone else, certainly not with her young daughter-in-law who is not long out of her own adoles cense. Parents with "theories" on child raising are entitled to test out their ideas to their heart's content. But, unless their methods produce a civil and civilized youngster, they can t expect to "inflict" him-half-baked, half-shaped-upon kindly friends and relatives who must assume he knows the routine, basic "rules" of social conduct. Thus, if Larry flaunts authority and can ba managed only by his mother, Mrs. V. must stick around. There must be something wrong with his bringing-un, or with the home situation, i he can't be left with his fnth- And Wanda's no mother- substitute for a brother-in-law only a few years younger than she. especially one with mora than the usual teenage prob lems. There are two possible courses for Mrs. V. which come to mind. One is to take Larry along on the western trip. Perhaps the stork will hold off till the end of the school term. If not, some ar rangement may be worked out whereby he can join his moth er and sister and the latter's family immediately after his examinations. Out there ha can be enlisted to help with, the older child, to run on im portant errands and be other wise useful. Away from his old haunts and stultifying cronies, a new and charming Larry may reveal himself. At least in letters home, Mrs. V. and her daughter will prob ably depict a Larry whom Wanda won't recognize - able, willing and a real "Jack Dal ton of the Marines". Nothing like a change of climate for some kids. Otherwise, Mrs. V. should postpone her visit. She must choose between doing right by her daughter's baby or her own baby. When her own i. more mature, or can be left in ithe proper hands, she can skip town. for a very Special Gift TRI-TAPER by MMtWiWniT?wwfnriwtWaWiw NEW PALMCUtRD HANDLES NEW SURIGLIDE LOCKS RICH NEW INTERIORS PLUS THISI MOVIN FIATUHIS telnloritd with Flberglosi (onitructlon sloinleii Heel interlocking iloiurei' Fermonitg' covitlngi that teiitt travel wiar 2S gnalir pockobility FO WOMEN! Tin lii.i in four colon Gold.n Whito, American Blw., Silver Oulk, Frinc.ll Twtod fOR MINi Nin. lii.i tn four colon - Silv.r Duik, Cavalier Brown, American Blue. 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