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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1963)
MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON SUNDAY, JANUARY 6. 1983 Communications Ltittri to the Editor mutt bear tht nam and iddresi of tha writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. Deer Killing To the Editor: Would like to thank the Central Point Sportsman's Club lor their efforts to put a stop to the killing of doe deer. This club is sure on the right track, and I hope many other organ izations will join in this worthy cause. We buck hunt ers have been treated like a bunch of stupid yokels, be ing told what was good for us and the game for a long time and this condition will continue as long as we keep quiet. I'll back up my - friend Johnie Minor for his good letter of 1-1-63 and say that his many days spent in the woods should make hi ob servations of value to all con cerned. To this we would like to add our "two-bits" worth. I have hunted deer in three states since 1928 and smaller game and birds for 15 years before that. Have put in the last 17 seasons here in Oregon and during that time I've seen the deer steadily decrease in numbers, especially in Eastern areas. Have had good hunting up In Wallowa county for four years previous to the past sea son, so when the Game Com mission issued 1,000 permits nt S5 to cut down the esti mated great surplus of deer Jn the Chesnimnus area, I was one of the yokel suckers that bought one. Made a 1,200 mile round trip, hunted four days, didn't see a buck and only a few does, some of them in very poor shape. Gave up in disgust and came clear home with a pocket full of tags, yellow permit card, tagging instructions, and a very empty bill fold. Five of my friends hunted the area hard and the total bag for the six of us was one very small fork horn. The area should have been closed to hunting, j The Game Commission calls : this a surplus of deer. To them any number over one Js known as a surplus. Come on, all you buck hunters. Kick up a lot of real noise and maybe it may help our future hunting a little. At least help prove that Hank DeVoss was wrong when lie said "Only about 1 per cent nt the deer hunters in this State are at all organized." Personally, I think he should have said 110 of 1 per cent. Bill Brewster Box 550, Trail, Ore. cause of the oposition of its scientists. In our own country the As sociation of American Physi cians and Surgeons (15,000 members) in convention in San Francisco a few years ago voted unanimously to op pose f luoridaiion in their com munities. The most eminent doctors of our country are members of this organization. Furthermore most of the doc tors, dentists, and practicing nutritionists who comprise the American Academy of Nu trition are opposed to fluori dation. Actually as far as the medical profession is concern ed, fluoridation is opposed by many of its most eminent members. For instance, Dr. Oechsner of the famed Oechs ner Clinic in New Orleans is very outspoken in his oppo sition to fluoridation. Perhaps it would not be out of place here to relate how the idea of fluoridation was accepted by the U.S. Pub lic Health Service. Early in President Truman's term of office Alger Hiss introduced a Mr. Oscar Ewing of Pitts burgh to him. Mr. Ewing was (and is) chief counsel for the American Aluminum Co. with a reputed salary of $72,000 per year. Mr. Truman imme diately appointed him head of Civil Defense at a salary of S17.000 per year. I do not remember his exact title. This position automatically placed him over the U.S.P.H.S. It is not known what pressure he used but it was while he was in Washington that U.S.P.H.S. began advocating fluoridation. Having accomplished this he returned to his office in Pitts burgh. Anna M. Streed, 36 North Peach st., Medford The Pig and the Drunkard To the Editor: Oh, how well do I remember, Its was early in December, I was walking down the avenue of pride. My heart was all a flutter. As I fell down in the gutter. And a pig walked up and lay down by my side. Our hearts were both a flutter As we laid their in the gutter And a lady passing by was heard to say. You can toil the man who boozes By the company he chooses And the pig got up and slowly walked away. (Name on file) Medford No Miss Oregon To the Editor: I really don't know to whom I should men tion this, but whoever is "Miss Oregon," Marly Wyatt's P.R. man sure did goof. Why didn't he have her on the Oregon float. Not a girl on there. It was very funny - different friends have asked me why -because you see I am her grandmother, and I used to live in Medford, was married in Jacksonville in 1911. Next year they might consider "Miss Oregon" on the float. Of course it won't be Marty. Mrs. C. Watson 2217 Berkeley ave., Los Angeles 26, Calif. A Silver Dime To the Editor: How many dimes will you do nate To all of those who lay in wail In hopeful dreams that you will share Willi them a wonclcrous cour age rare? Their pleading hands are stretched to you To help them fight this battle through: A twisted leg, a tortured back Earnestly pleading . . . "Help attack This enemy that strikes with force, Without regret, without re morse." No respecter of brown or white; Both old and young are in its sight; Hich man, pauper, big or small, Yet bravely fighting ... one and all. Please . . . won't you join us in the race To put this cripplcr in i's place? A Silver Dime could do so much Toward a cane or tiny crutch. There'll be no glory, fame or wages As long as this evil monster rages Upon the face of God's great earth, So let '63 be the Nation's birth Of a fighting crusade against sorrow and pain, Let's help the stricken to live again; This joy is ours . . . yours and mine . . . ; And the price is small . , . just a Silver Dime. Ann Parsons 148 Van Ness Ashland, Ore. Fluoridation Again To the Editor: This is in an fwer to Miss Stratton 12-31-62. You state: "If fluorine Is co dangerous, that it is unfit for use by humans, why do medical and dental persons advocate its use?" That is a good question and it is in the mind of nearly every one. It is because fluoridation has been advocated by doctors and dentists that it has been hard to combat. But in regard to this ques tion the medical profession is house divided. This is not generally known. But it was opposition by the Swedish medical and dental societies that caused the Supreme Court of Sweden to declare fluoridation illegal on Dec l( 196! Switzerland has tnvrr had fluoridation be- Poets' Corner Conducted by Arnold Eugene Jenny On Writing Poetry: A Portrait I do not now remember all the words She said, but in that granted interview She made it clear that nothing new is new: Then turned to watch the sky and flight of birds. Her private worlds were Dante and his host,' But still she flirted with the modern school: She made me feel that I was quite the fool To dream that I might make an honored ghost. She never looked me squarely in the eye, Or told me that a poem really grows From strange and twisted roots that no one knows: She merely sought her patterns in the sky. ( Virgil, the host to Dante in The Divine Comedy.) Lloyd B. Halvcrson Medford o Opportunity This I beheld, or dreamed it in a dream: There spread a cloud of dust along a plain; And underneath the cloud, or in it, raged A furious battle, and men yelled, and swords Shocked upon swords and shields. A prince's banner Wavered, then staggered backward, hemmed by foes. A craven hung along the battle's edge. And thought, "Had I a sword of keener steel That blue blade that the king's son bears, but this Blunt thing!" he snapped and flung it from his hand, And lowering crept away and left the field. Then came the king's son, wounded, sore bestead, And weaponless, and saw the broken sword, Hilt-buried in the dry and trodden sand, And ran and snatched it, and wilh battle-shout Lifted afresh he hewed his enemy down. And saved a great cause that heroic day. Edward Rowland Sill O My Enemy My enemy and I have fought: He lies there, in the rain. His sightless eyes look to the skies; He'll never see again. I should be glad his life is done; Our war is at an end. But still I think that had he lived He might have been my friend. Louise Livingston Medford (Composed at age 17.) - Chinology If you'd make friends of those about, Hold up your chin; don't stick it out. Jack Finel Central Point, Ore. - O In Years To Come In years to rome, when men have grown more wise, A child shall find, in some museum nook, A rusty sword or twisted bayonet; Perhaps a hand grenade, or some device Of poison-death, upon which he will look With questioning. In sorrowing regret His grandsire, at his side, will make reply: "A sad, sad talc, it is: there was a time When fathers sped their stalwart sons to kill On fields of battle, spurring them to die. If need be, that some other sons in grime And gore might fall. A nation's mighty will, Its wealth and life, were spent that there might be Above one flag emblazoned, 'Victory!' 'Twas long ago you doubt my word, I sec, But that's the tale my grandsire told to me." Thomas Curtis Clark NEW MAP Greater Medford Metropolitan Area Covering tome 40 iquare miles end including Central Point and Photnii, With itrtet and road rndei. Includes latest new subdivisions. 36"t20", printed on white Tag Board with wood ends, for wall hanging. Delivered FLAT. Only S3. Call 7728662 and maps will be delivered. M. Dal Newton, Publisher Pernicious Law To the Editor: As the dale for the convening of the 1963 I session of the Oregon Legis lature draws near it becomes obvious that one of the most vital subjects to come before that body will be the price of electric power and its effect on the slate's industry. Ten years ago we had a chance lo get a big block of cheap pow er in the Snake River valley, but due to the success of a re actionary national administra tion and the appointment oi an official who chose to be tray the people of his own state, we lost that opportu nity and are now paying the highest rate in the northwest. The private power company is now demanding an exorbi tant increase in rate and has obtained a substantial part of it in Idaho. It will probably gain the same increase in Oregon. Meanwhile, Bonneville Power Administration is pro ducing great blocks of cheap power from the waters of the Columbia river, the potential of which, without doubt, be longs primarily to three states, only one of which is getting its share. And why? Because of the obstructive laws relating to hydroelectric power which both Oregon and Idaho have allowed the pri vate power monopoly to in sinuate into our statutes. The state of Washington has the most liberal public utility laws in the nation and it should require no argument to convince anyone that the state has profited largely by them. A bill was passed in the 1961 session to give the Pub lic Utility Commission, now headed by a known staunch friend of the private power companies, authority to con trol the extention of P.U.D. lines into territory claimed by a private power company, and it would seem that that law is now on the way to a court test. The West Oregon Electric Co-operative wants to move into the area around the deactivated Tongue Point Naval base. Under the origi nal public utility laws the Co op would have required per mission of no one except the public to be served. Under the 1961 statute it must ob tain permission from the Pub lic Utility Commission and Pacific Power & Light is said to be demanding exclusive control of the area. If the private power com pany wins this decision I be lieve the constitutionality of the law will be tested in the State Supreme Court and if it is upheld there it will ring the death knell of the P.U.D.'s in Oregon and eventually it will mean that the great bulk of Bonneville power will go to Washington and taxable property and population will go wilh it. It is of vital in terest lo the people of Ore gon thai this pernicious law be expunged from our sta tutes at the earliest possible dale. D. Ivan Frills 974 Fortncr Lane Ontario, Ore Questions To the Editor: After living in other parts of the USA, Germany, Turkey, Siberia and Switzerland from 1-10 years each, and traveling extensive ly in some 40 other countries on five continents and nearly every stale of the Union. friends in various parts of the globe still ask me how in the world I had come to settle in Medford, Ore. of which none had ever heard before- except one in N. C. who once sent me a box of Harry & David pears. My answer is quite simple: because here's where I found the u.4imate in residences for retired folk: Rogue Valley Manor! After living here over two years my friends still ask: "Are the country and people around Medford as fine as you first indicated?" My answer to botli queries is an emphatic "Yes!" However, I do have a few questions that trouble me a bit now and then-and which I prefer not to discuss with my friends: Why do Medford laundries, unlike any I'd ever done bust ncss with elsewhere, insist on charging 42 cents to do a plain cotton sport shirt and delivering it on a hanger in a bag, yet only 33 cents for a dress shirt neatly folded for tucking away in a dresser drawer? One laundry's an swer was that "the general public" prefers it that way (perhaps for shirts of delicate fabrics but surely not plain NOW ON LEAVE Ashland - Laurence Butler, associate professor of educa tion at Southern Oregon col lege, is on leave to do gradu ate study at Washington State university in Pullman, Wash. Butler is working on his doc toral dissertation in the field of audio visual aids with emphasis on learning. "the public" to find out? I would doubt it. A radio announcer report ed a few days ago that the Census Bureau (I believe he said) found that doctors, den tists and lawyers receive the highest personal incomes. Anybody doubt it? But why should their fees in Medford be even -ii lo 'j higher than for comparable services on Long Island? After shopping in most of Medford s major supermar kets for good eating apples, I've rarely found any in tex ture or flavor to match those of N.Y. (or its imports from Wcnatchee). Pears, of course where can one find belter? But apples oh for a crisp, luscious Macintosh or Delici ous of like quality! Why should the Oregon in come lax on my reduced in come of modest pension and Social Security hit me for al most twice as much as' else where on my salary when I worked for a living? Anyboby got any good answers? Arnold Eugene Jenny Rogue Valley Manor Medical Sleuth Now Serving County Thl, .Ivnlrenn pnimi,. .n,,-t Friday noted that the new j medical investigator system is now in effect and replaces the former county coroner system. A medical investigator or one of his assistants will be available throughout the day to investigate all reported deaths. County Judge Earl M. Miller, noted. Miller attended a meeting last week of the county pub lic health board during which Dr. John L. Welch, Medford physician, was appointed as sistant county medical investi gator. The appointment of Dr. Ralph Ilibbs, Medford physici an, as a second assistant was temporarily tabled. Following a letter from Dr. A. Erin Merkel, county public health officer, and a meeting with them, the county court rejected his recommendation for salary increases for four public health nurses and nursing supervisor. Proposed increases were from $420 to $460 for the four nurses and up to $490 a month for the supervisor. Miller said the court could not authorize increases in mid budget year, but would in clude the proposal in budget requests this spring when work starts on the new fiscal year budget. CAREER SALESMAN Eipanding tales program hai creat ed excellent opportunity to join the lalei staff of the Northwest's most progressive manufacturer of Pre-cut Solid Cedar Homes. A proven product with built-in sates success. Extensive publicity pro gram insures outstanding volume of leads. Young, aggressive orga nization that you witl be proud to represent. Call or write CEDAR HOMES MANUFACTURING COM PANY, 2511 U6th N.E., Bellevue Washington. Phone VA 2-2245. NOTICE! CUSTOMERS OF BIG Y CLEANERS Having Claims Arising From Fire of 1230'62 CONTACT GENERAL ADJ. BUREAU 1005 East Main Phone 772-6121 Between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. ario, Ore. cotton). Did they ever poll I Medford I ---- No money down on credit at Wards-just say "Charge It!" Fir PTE? EXCITING VALUES THROUGHOUT THE STORE! 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