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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1963)
MEDFOBD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON SUNDAY. MAY It, ISM A 5 ... Communications ... Litton to Ih. Editor mu.l bear th. n.mi ,d ,ddr, oi the writer, although under ir-it uain or initial for mihlieation ic nrm uth a. in 11011 uiBunt reserves: Ihe riant to arfit .n i . , r ' .. . condimition. L.lt.r. .ubmitted tor VuhH i W"h TiW cl,riiic'ion nd printid in thi, column do not n.c.u.r 1 "n Sf ,X"d 40S WOrd- 7"' . ""V contrary ii oltin th. cui. n""y nprii.nt th. n.w, oi ibi pipiri in iict th. Gambling a Sin? To the Editor: On the Sun day editorial by E. A. on gam bling, I would like to make a few comments. You asked il gambling is a sin, Is it im moral, or ii it harmful? Any thing that is a sin must be immoral and harmful. Now all we have to do is define ciii. You can get varied def initions for sin, but the Bible scholar will use the defini tion from the Bible. It states that sin is the transgression Jrom God's law. We will now have a disagreement as to what the law is but I think here it means the law of love. Any Christian will agree that the law of love is the center of Christianity. My definition of sin has provoked many a discussion and no one has completely de nied it yet. I can't say that many completely agree with me. To me sin is anything that distracts or takes away from happiness. Contrary to many Christian beliefs and teachings, we were put here to be happy and not just to learn to bear the trials and tribulations of this life in or der to reap the gains in the next life. The only argument that has arisen is over what is meant by happiness. Webster defines it as good luck, prosperity, or a stake of well being. Web ster seems to have it centered around material life, but hap piness in the Christian as pect deals with the spiritual side of life, or in modern terms we would say mental stability or atitude. You may kid yourself about what makes you happy, but if you are a vrue Christian you know the difference between being happy and monetray pleas ures. Can you gamble without causing mental anquish to yourself or others? The size or amount gambled is like try ing to say which is the bigger sin. One man can afford to lose a thousand dollars bet ter than another could lose one dollar. We all gamble ev ery day of our lives, but the sin comes in when we will fully promote unhappiness in ourselves or others. The act of gambling is not a sin, but the willful losing of money that can cause mental anguish to the person, or persons he may be obligated to, or are depend ent upon him is. Creston McNeel, 2987 Delta Waters rd., Medford. sire, and to him that is given mat snail you minister, there by shall you gather. But hj that ministers not those things, it shall be taken away and given to him who has, and he shall be cast out. OUt because nf this ratlin and ministprino chaii ,Finfl ... n .,u(1 4 about that what the Lord said, "Suppose ye that I am come to give peace on earth? I tell you, nay; but rather division: . . ." For this is the time and the Baptism of which he spoke. Whosoever that will offend one of these, beloved of the Father, it would have been better for him that he had never been Poets' Corner Conducted by Arnold Eugene Jenny Letting In Air To the Editor: May I ans wer the two rebuttals to a letter I submitted about a weelr ago? Mr. Hook, Jr., claims I abused statistics, yet he overlooked the fact that the report covers a nation wide survey of 287 correct ional institutions, not only those in Oregon which I thought would be interesting for local readers. May I re quest a critical response that analyzes what I said and does n't refer to a 12 foot pot hole for statistical crrants in a 2 foot coverage depth river? "J. R.'s" comments are, however, of a different nature and deserving of a detailed response. Very true, "J. R.," what I said is not conducive to "unity," yet I felt what I said needed saying for this reason: I have noted the soft approach toward the Catholic hierarchy. The authoritarian ism (which the recent editor ial "stirrings in the church" says is diminishing) and some of the medieval concepts, which I believe are partly re sponsible for the very sorry record which the statistics re vealed, I respectifully be lieved should be aired. Unity, in itself, is no vir tue. Unity with, or in, what? with communism? with igno rance? with the free and open discussion of ideas? with hon esty? It makes a difference. Unity, mutual understand ing, harmony - call it what you will - is a natural by-product of free and open discuss ion, not suppression. The aforementioned article quotes Pope John as saying the recent council was to "let tome fresh air in the church." Many of us. including numer ous Catholics, believe this is long overdue. I have no argument what soever with any individual Catholic. However, I do sin cerely feel the hierarchy of the church, with its oppres sive authoritarianism, has done much to bring about the situation which the statistics so incriminatingly reveal. Irving S. Thomas. Route 4, Box 427G, Medford. Beautiful must be the mountains whence ye come, nna Drigni in tne truitful valleys the streams wherefrom Ye learn your song: Where are those starry woods? O might I wander there, j-i.Muj,s me nuwers, wnicn in tnat neavenly air Bloom the year long! Nay, barren are those mountains and spent the streams: Our song is the voice of desire, that haunts our dreams, A throe of the heart, Whose pining visions dim, forbidden hopes profound, No dying cadence nor long sigh can sound, For all our art. Alone, aloud in the raptured ear of men We pour our dark nocturnal secret; and then, As night is withdrawn From these sweet-springing meads and bursting boughs of May, Dream, while the innumerable choir of day Welcome the dawn. Robert Bridges (1844-1930) o To A Bird In My Hand A drop more to drink and a moment to rest, Till dizziness fades and the life-throb is stronger; The fluttering heart in your satiny breast May trust me to keep you not one second longer. How can you escape from the dangers that fill The way you must travel is past my descrying; And yet you will doubtless return to our hill With springtime, wee voyager rescued from dying. Blithe symobl of freedom, whose airy career Invites emulation, my spirit is winging Where you cannot follow; already I hear The orbital song which the planets are singing. May both of us prosper, now you have flown You in your element, I in my own! Robert J. Richardson (Reprinted by permission of the publishers of DRIFT WOOD, 110 Savage Creek Rd., Grants Pass, Ore.) O A Strange Thing I found when on an idle quest, A speckled egg within a nest; And when I straightway soon forgot, Of nest and egg I little thought. When fluting spring again came 'round I looked and this is what I found: Upon the bough where was the nest, I saw a bird with russet breast, And from his swelling, joyous throat ' There poured a sweet and tender note. This thing I pondered, deep and long: How speckled egg could turn to song. Frank Roberts Medford O The Wind The wind was in the trees tonight. I walked a lonely mile. I saw the stars bedeck the sky And saw the moon's bright smile Till clouds came scudding o'er his face To hide his every beam, Just as the clouds of doubt and fear Blot out my every dream. I drew my cloak around me; The night was dark and chill. I heard the sighing of the trees; The wind would not be still. But then it blew the clouds away And left the moon to shine, Just as the winds of hope and faith Renew each dream of mine. Martha Ella Minnick Central Point, Ore. born. But whosoever will give one of these, so much as a glass of water in the Lord's name, will receive a righteous man's reward. For the time comes that this divi sion shall be even in a man's house, where there are five there shall be three against two, and two against three. But suffer those things for it is well pleasing to God that you do it. Knowing that the same word that came unto you, also came unto them. But you had love of God there in you, received it. But came as a testimony against them. Now all shall be called as it pleases God in their ap pointed time. Hold fast to that what is good, and don't de spair, and covet charity as Paul describes it. Whosoever you know, wheresoever they are, that might receive these j things, write or tell them i these things, stirring up the purity of their minds, for if these things were not true, would not have written them. Prayers for them who minister. Now all praise is unto God. Amen. Ted M. Sletten Route 1, Box 224 Rogue River, Ore. everybody In all of us. In these critical days, when auto mation threatens to throw ad ditional millions out of work, we should demand of our lead ers that they go promptly and thoroughly about the business of making our economy mean ingful to ALL. There arc, of course, the fortunate few who have al ready "made it," and the ma jority who are still striving to that end; but what of the millions who would LIKE to "make it" but are ruthlessly pushed aside and labeled "The Unemployablcs"? To these last, the blowing of the fac tory whistles at noon simply means "it's 12 o'clock" rather than "time for lunch." Might it not have been that his former status of UNEM PLOYED painter pushed one, Adolph Hitler, into the idea of becoming a Feuhrer? George M. Babcock 427 Hospital dr. Ashland, Ore. In Chains To the Editor: I was very much surprised at the article of Mrs. Charles Wulff of San Angeleo, Calif. Does she not realize Kennedy must have the Negro votes to win the next election? Here's hoping the South keeps them away from the polls election day. One hundred years ago they were slaves, today they call themselves the super race, tomorrow the whites may be in chains. C. W. Corey P.O. Box 144 Phoenix, Ore. Damaging Town To the Editor: I can't under stand why some, with so much to lose, are determined the highway should divide Jack' sonvillc - ruin it in so many ways. Some will ask why I'm so certain. 1 lived in a town al most a carbon copy of Jack sonville - an old town the first stage stop from San Diego in days gone by. Old timers with lots of land refused to vote the water in. So the town had stood still for years. But after their wells went dry the water had to be brought in, also sewage. My! It wa hkp living in the midst of a whirlwind. Real estate offices on every corner, a large shopping cen ter planned, all buildings were to be on the western theme. The couple leasing the local store were denied a new lease. The owners decided they wanted to gel rich. My neighbors and myself sold our homes to May Fair stores Inc., other friends were getting op tions on all the land they could. Then all of a sudden a highway came through the town. If there's any thing a Call- fornian runs from it's a valley with a highway through it (unless he has to live there), So after five years it's still as it was before water and sew age. May Fair is still paying me by the month, hesitant to put more money in the town, the chances arc it will never be more than a smelly, noisy town with cheap housing. Have the Senior Citizens given thought to the added expense to them, in fact every one, the changes in sewage and loss In taxes that the pro posed highway route would cause? Have the businessmen giv en serious thought to the loss of every day business from motel and trailer park against the catch-as-catch-can of the highway trade? Building up a good solid residential town would bring the most solid trade to local business. Adcle Purgason 506 North Oregon Jacksonville, Ore. of the enjoyment of the ma jority of Its people that Uncle Sam does occasionally have to step in. The people of this state voted soundly against this asinine law once, but this wasn't enough for the few who stood to benefit by D.S.T., to with the condon ment and backinn nf nur anv. crnor they were allowed to put the pressure on the peo ple, as we all remember, and then we were told unless we voted for what they wanted we could expect more miser ies to come. The neatest bit of disregard of our wishes as I have ever witnessed. So now to add insult to in jury they have decided with out our votes to extend this thing another month this fall. Yet the people narrowly voted for this last time be cause they had no other choice. I find very few who do not hate it and which it does not work hardship on them. ;. I say unless we can stand behind our wishes and votes in spite of the pressures put on us and be determined In our decisions then we deserve all we get. I for one had rather hive confusion - time then to give up a principle and vote for a thing I hate and see no sense in at all. (Name on file) Eagle Point, Ore. To the Editor: Do not de spair, all fellow-sufferers, of this monster they so wrongly call daylight saving time. 1 I understand that our Federal Government has become as j alarmed at the chaos, con fusion and general havoc this has wrought on us nation-wide that it is being seriously con sidered to outlaw it in all states. I suppose when the states refuse to govern them- j selves for the betterment I The SALVATION ARMY Can use your discards- CLOTHING RAGS APPLIANCES '.'Wf' 3 YOUR USABLE EURNITUPF Pick-ups on Tuesday and Friday PLEASE CALL 773-7335 Our Daily Bread To the Editor: Years ago I read of a group of million aires to whom was posed the question, "What is the most important thing in life?" Var ious answers were given, but tne one voted the best-by rich men, mind you!-was "a piece of bread." Give us this day our daily bread" is still our prayer. But our economy cannot be deemed healthy, nor our free- enterprise system adequate to I our needs, when we do not take care of ALL. What is there to look forward to when a government official routine ly announces: "Jobs are going to be harder than ever to get, especially for the 5Vi million new young workers who will not be going to college be tween now and 1965"? Must it ALWAYS take a WAR to bring about full employment? Our chronic recessions may be likened to having the pro verbial "bull by the tail," and they could ultimately bring about the collapse of our vaunted "way of life." The fate of our society could well become like that of a number of our sailors who, in the hey day of the dirigible, tragically fell from the sky when they instinctively clung to the guy ropes of a Navy airship that took off from the ground be cause of a sudden wind. Many in our society pride themselves as "self - made" men. They forget, as someone wrote, "No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. Any man's death ("unemployment" I would have written II!) diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind." 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