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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1960)
CD CD 0 b Q o w-ArOQ W, fNr-" OOCZCP O o r:o occ r i i o n U J - o O O O J MAIL TP.IBONI, MatWef, Or: A Sunday, May 8, 19M Medford883wbibdw "Everyone in Southern Oregon Readi The Mail Tribune" Published Daily exreot Saturday by MEnFORTi PKIN'i iNt; CO 33 North Fir St.. PhJ5P2-tU ROBERT "W RUHL, Editor' HERB GRKV Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bus Mr ERIC W At-LEN JR Mne Edits F RV, H C:tv EJitirf HARRV TH'HMAN Tries fr.dltn RICHARO jEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STAROHER. Women't Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as .pond class matter at Mertford. Oregon, under Act of March S. 1R07 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bv Mall In Advance. Cop 10r Dully and Sunday 1 year $lSftC Daily and Sunday B mnii 0(1 Dailv and Sundav 3 mo 4.25 Sunday Only One year 4 20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ahland. Central Point E a g 1 e Pntnt. Jacksonville. Cold Hill Phoenix. Shadv Cove. Rogue Riv r Talent and or '.notor ri Dailv and Sunday 1 year $1H Ofl Db'Iv and Sundav 1 mo 10 Carrier and Dealers cnpv 10c All Terms Cash In Advance Officii! Panur of 'ritv of MedforX Offlftal PapT of Jack-ion County tin .rd Press International Full Leaned Wire U P ITelephoto Newinicturet ""MEMBER OF AIT fl IT BTTREAU OF CIRCULATIONS AdvertUine Rc-nri-sent alive: fl'VCT umiriAV CO INC Of- fleei in N.v Y"rk rhienn De- trnit, San Frunrfscn. Los Aniele Seattle. Portland S Louil, At lanta. Vancouver. B(!. O1" NEWS PA PER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL E0ITORIAI A&OCfHTION lSKTlgl rmnnm.'.il'lfn Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County Hlllory from the files ot Th Mail Ttibuno 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Mv . 1950 (Mondavi Medford's civil air patrol squadron won the Oregon wing CAP drill championship in a contest on the Medford High school football fild yes terday. Some 23 out of 53 Boy Scout patrols atending the area council's camp-o-ree at the Hilltop ranch west of Griffin creek, won blue rib bons yesterday. 20 YEARS AGO Mav 8. 1940 (Wednesday) The fourth annual national catfish derby will be held next Sunday at the Bybee Beach Dark. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The OSC plant department has concocted a spray that mnKcs the grass crow, while killing the weeds. What is needed next is a lawnmower equip ped with enough gumption to provide its own motive pow er." 30 YEARS AGO May 8, 1930 (Wednesday) Earwig poison is now avail able for use on local lawns. State convention of laun drymen will open here tomor row. 40 YEARS AGO May 8, 1920 (Saturday) Medford banks started elos ing on Saturday noons today and many persons, despite re peated notices, forgot. Summer regulations for wa ter users go into effect tomor row; they include such items as, "all customers must turn off all water immediately upon the sounding of a fire alarm', " 50 YEARS AGO May 8, 1910 (Sunday) Walter Damrosch and the New York Symphony orches tra of 56 men and four metro politan vocalists will perform in Medford within next few months; will be the smallest city they have ever performed in. The most enjoyable dance of the season was given by the Elks last week- Medford's finest appeared in formal at tire. What's Your I.Q.7 Nint or ten correct ii superior; lovtn or eight is excellent; five ot lis Is good. 1. Anaconda, Montana., Is famous for what product? 2. Is antimony an animal, vegetable, or mineral? 3. Does louivi travel faster in warm or cold weather? 4. If a boy is given the same name as his Uncle is he desig nated as junior or second.' 5. Is a Nipponese a citizen ot China, Japan or India' 8. In "The Shooting ot Dun McGrew: A buudi ot the boys whopping it up in liiejChests which preceded were M .. 7. What portrait is nu the revere side rf a Buffalo nickrl .' 1 8. Have the word abdica tion end resignation the same .meaning? t Was the peak of unenv jploymenl U the Uoiied, Sun rteciie.1 in IftRi, 1891. 1B.U? 10. ric cow s milk cua tain iron? '' Anwts: 1. Copeetx 1 Mia 3. Warm wealherV ( t, (tMe. 4 Jepeft. . Malemule jaM. 7. Un JimWridejioIllil)1 Dogs and the City Club The Portland City Club is a sober-sided organ ization which meets periodically for lunch to hear distinguished speakers. It also has a committee system, which is assigned the chore of making investigations of certain public questions, and issuing reports. Its reports and their conclusions cany consid erable weight in Portland, for they are compre hensive and factual, based on the best expert opinion and advice obtainable. The most recent committee report concerns the problem of dog control, for Portland, in com mon with other cities including Medford and Rogue River, as well as will vote on the question THE committee report 1 any editor in the state people are highly emotional about their pets, possibly even more so than about their children." The Journal's report ings says, in part: "It is hard to find validity in the statement that dogs should be allowed to roam freely as that is their nature. Such is also the nature of other animals, but they don't enjoy any immunity on this point. "It must be noted that the prepared ordinance has many shortcomings. It will not satisfy those who are interested in putting all dogs on leash when away from the premises of their owner. However, we believe it will improve the climate for dogs in Portland, and will allay efforts for even greater restrictions. "Some emotional individual referred to 'man's best friend,' and stated this ordinance was poor reward for such devotion. It would be more accurate to state, 'Man is dog's best friend.' "We believe the proponents of this measure have produced an ordinance which is fair, places no undue burden on dogs and their owners, and protects the majority who tolerate the pels of their friends and neighbors." MAYOR JOHN SNIDER, after his journeyings T through the state to 22 meetings of city and county officials, reported that dog control is one of the most universal, and difficult, problems facing Oregon s cities. There is no reconciling the views of the dog freedom and dog-restraint elements. It is simply a case where the majority will have to rule, and the minority accept it. There was a time when we opposed any dog control ordinance. But we have become con vinced that, in a citys it has now become a neces sity for the protection of lawns, gardens and shrubs, to say nothing of children, and the safety and well-being of the dogs themselves. OO, COME May 20, we plan to vote for the dog control proposal in the city of Medford. As for the proposed there are some good arguments against it, argu ments which do not apply within a city. On that particular question we plan to leave the ballot blank, feeling tate what their rural neighbors should do about their dogs is not quite fair. Farmers, ranchers and working partners, and a work an undue hardship United Fund Changes A caller asked us the other day about the Cancer Crusade, now under way, and about other fund drives. "Aren't these supposed to be part of the United Medford Crusade?" she asked. "We thought the UMC was supposed to take care of all these things, with one donation covering every thing." About the only answer we could make is that it's a free country, that no one can force any organization to join the UMC, and that all that recipients of UMC funds do is promise not to conduct separate drives. TMIE agencies which still conduct their own fund-raising campaigns do so, of course, be cause they believe they can obtain more money that way than through a United Fund. And who is to say they are wrong? The nrincinle or "united" giving is a good one, in theory, but it does have its drawbacks one of which is, there is no way of insuring that the United Fund drive will actually eliminate a number of competing fund campaigns. I TN'ITED FUND drives ade or so, lost some people. Time was when a gootl percentage of the funds noing to charitable purposes. But. with the rise of the public welfare agen cies, which take ewe of the mimimal needs of many people without uther incomes, the need for private charities (in that otio sense of the word) diminished.0 0 So the UFs ri)ow raise monev largely for health, welfare and character-building activities, which, worthy as they the same appeal as ilnvofDto feed the hUDKSiy ami whelps $ffije all of Jackson county, May 20. declares as a fact (which can attest is true) that of the committee find county-wide measure, that for city folk to dic stockmen use clogs as control ordinance might on them. E.A. have, over the past dec- of their appeal to some thev (or the Community most of them) collected muyjbe, do not haCi) quite Dennis tfi irciiiiiiiiiir ' i minimi! 'I'll GOTO 6EP WHEN 1 GBT 3000 AN' Matter of Fact Joseph ai50P OFF CHANCE FOR KENNEDY Charleston, W. Va. - The West Virginia outlook for Sen. John F. Kennedy of Mas sachusetts 1 now a little little better though still far from good He may yet be beaten badly, but he also has a narrow chance to de feat Sen. Hu- icpu alsop Dert ti. Hum phrey of Minnesota in the important Presidential pri mary here. The fact that such an upset is possible has to be inferred from the results of one of the longest, most Intensive sessions of pavement-pounding and doorbell-ringing this reporter has ever attempted. The total sample of ballots from 184 registered voters here In Charleston was sub stantially more massive than any sample previously col lected in the city, by any of the pollers who have lately infested this state. The new results were also decidedly more favorable to Kennedy than the previous resuus omained in Charleston by Lou Harris, the profession al poller who works for the Kennedy organization, and by Alan L. Ottan, the astute political analyst of the "Wall Street Journal." The Harris Sample, taken first, was also the most closely divided. The Otten sample showed 55 per cent of the Charleston voters choosing Kennedy.. In the lat est sample, Kennedy's share rose to 57V4 per cent of those Democrats who had made up their minds. HTHE places polled were -I- chosen by the Charleston Mail's" able City Hall re porter, Charlie Connor, who also shared the work. The largest individual samples were taken in the 1st and 13th Wards. These are "C and D areas" In the pollsters' jargon. meaning that the people who live in the small houses and walk-up apartments on Sixth Avenue and Dixie Street and uie nuiny otner streets we vlslled, are in the lower-mid dle to lower Income groups A smaller sample was also taken, to see if corrections were needed. In the more middle income 17th Ward. It showed little variation in the pattern, which was consistent. in summary, tne 184 per sons polled broke down into 4 for Kennedy; 34 for Hum phrey: 20 undecided; 83 un able to vote in the Demo cratic primary because they were Republicans; and one other man blocked from pri mary voting because he was one of Kanawha County's tiny handful of voters who have registered as independents. Slightly under half the Humphrey voters-15 to be ex act - specifically stated Uiat the main factor in their choice was r e 1 i g i o u s prejudice against Sen. Kennedy's Cath olic faith. Among the 20 un decided Democratic voters, moreover, no less than nine said they would have made up their minds to vote for Kennedy long ago, "if It weren't for his religion." TniE work of collecting the sample nrndured the tminl dividend of human comedy. There was one old gentleman who was an enemy of prog ress He indignantly explain ed that he hBd "Just decided he'd never vote again when thy put in those pesky vot ing machines." There was also the languidly vivacious bru nette, surrounded by I per feet swarm ot young, &he somewhat surprisinslly an nounced that she was an un married housewife, and add' frtl, as au) afterthought, "Not all the six children are mine; little vW-nfcV over there is (a) friend's." (t) (li)e) tPG) fls0 revealed Mm w Menaca c & 'JOKE .' TZATS'A .frwr junAAf three interesting new trends First, besides benefitUng from the usual harvest of religious ly prejudiced votes, Senator Humphrey has begun to get more votes of the kind he wants. More people now speak of him as "the work ing mans friend and the like. Second, Senator Kennedy is benefitting from the support Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr. A surprising number of peo ple said, "Kennedy looks like he might be another F.D.R.," something of the sort. Third, and perhaps most im portant, a few people could now be found who were for Kennedy, not only because they liked him, but also be cause they were reacting against the power of prejudice in tnis primary contest. "The Constitution's good enough for me; it ought to be good enough for everybody; and, it says 'no religious tests,' " snapper one defiant Baptist housewife, who had heard her pastor attack Ken nedy. QVER all, if Kennedy really " is picking up in larger cities, as our Charleston sam ple seems to suggest, then he has some chance to win off West Virginia in spite of the floodtlde of religious preju dice in the small towns and remote country districts. But Today & Tomorrow By Walter THE DETENTE When the heads of govern ment meet in Paris, each in his own way and for his own reasons will be greatly pre occupied with problems that lie outside of Europe and are, speaking directly, out side the com petence of the summit meet ing. strictly European question, which arises out of the partition of Germany, there is, as I have pointed out in preceding articles, a very large degree of tacit agreement. The two Ger manys are not to be reunited. Moreover, what both sides are seeking is a detente in Europe, a relaxation of ten sion, which accepts in sub stance, though not in all the formal details, the status quo. This search for a detente is inspired, of course, by the realization that there is no European question which can now, within the existing bal ance of power, be settled by war or by the threat of war. But the search for a detente in Europe is Inspired also, and in growing measure, by the need to conserve energy and attention and resources for the mounting problems out side of Europe-in Asia, Af rica, and in this hemisphere. None of the groat powers Is great enough, is strong enough and is rich enough, to continue an intensified strug gle for the mastery of Eu rope and also to deal ade quately with its own inter ests outside ot Europe. LET us consider the Soviet Union. Mr. K. and his col leagues may hope, they may even believe, that all of Ger many will become Commu nist. But they know also that they cannot use force to impose Communism on West ern German or on West Ber lin Without precipitating the Wr which they, Just as we in the West, must avoid. On the other hand, the Russians know Uint they can not take China, for granted, and if they arc )a protect their interests, and their security in Asia, they must not use up their resources in a me of ill Walter Ltepmann On Uie Coniniunicatiofis Letters to th Editor must the writer, although under of a pen nm or initial for Mail Tribune reserve the view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 word. The letter printed In rhif column do not necessarily represent the yiy ot me paiper; in racr Clana-U Wasted To the Editor: What do we pay our county officials a sal ary for? What happened to the slo gan, "Keep Oregon Clean," or does that just include a few? Does this just pertain to the highways, or does it mean our county as a whole? A certain shack and sur roundings have been reported to the county health depart ment under Dr. C. I. Drum- mond, also to the sanitation department under Mr. Moore. They either don't want to take the time to investigate this matter or they just can't see or don t care. We saw all of these people including the district attorney. They told us they could do nothing about this. I thought we had a county courthouse for just such matters. But all they do is pass the buck. We are tired of all this mess. Judge Miller was the only one who was nice enough to talk to us and come and see what we were complaining about. A city dump would be a credit to what we see every two factors remain which make Kennedy's chance only an off-chance. On the one hand, the tide of prejudice is still running very heavily indeed, as the results we got in urban Charleston too plainly Indi cate. On the other hand, the number of undecided voters is still large-20 per cent of the Democrats in our sample. All the undecided voters are Protestants, as well. Most of them may therefore end by flocking to Humphrey's cor ner. If this happens, Hum phrey, not Kennedy, will carry even Charleston. Thus the best guess one can make Is that Kennedy's off chance will only become a real chance if two things have happened-if the West Virgin ians have been strongly im pressed by Kennedy's per formance in the debate with Humphrey; and If some of the religiously prejudiced voters are persuaded to forget their prejudices by the major cli mactic speech Kennedy also plans to make on the religious issue. (c) 1980 New York Herald Tribune Inc. lippmann armaments. They must be able to face towards Asia with a free hand, which means with out being tied down by the possibility of war In Europe. This is the central reason, in my view, why they want a ban on nuclear testing. Such a ban will not only promote a detente in Europe but it will also provide them with a de cisive reason why they can not supply China with the means to become a nuclear power. They have every rea son in the world, far more reason than we have, to wish that China should not become a nuclear power. This is the reason why the proposed treaty is so impor tant. It is not that cheating is Impossible if the perfect crime is committed by the Russians. It is important be cause the primary interest of the Russians will be to main tain the ban in the treaty. . . . TT IS evident that the main A preoccupation of France to day lies across the Mediter ranean in Algeria and in French Africa. That is why a detente in Europe is a French necessity. The French army is not in Europe but in Africa, and French Interests in Africa make it impossible for France to regard the NATO military establishment as of vital Importance to French security. What is more, if the French presence in Africa is to be maintained, metropolitan France will have to draw heavily on its capital resources. Therefore, in spite of the two nuclear explosions in the Sahara Desert, France cannot afford to run in the race of armaments. The Commonwealth confer ence now being held in Lon don defines the question which is becoming the prime preoccupation of British for eign policy. It is the question of how the older nations of the Commonwealth, which are predominantly white In popuialion and Western in their culture, are to live With and to work with the new nations of South Asia and Africa. If Uie British Common wealth can find the roa! to intcr-racial amity, it will be at least as great a contribu tion as any of the greiit con tributions which Britain has made to good, gtvarnment itd fltit a utere, bear th nm nd iddrtts of cartain rirrumt.nr th ,,c publication is permissible. The riaht to edit all lattara with . rne contrary it often the cs day out our windows, plus rats, open stinking floating toilets. When the wind is right we certainly get the bad odor from it all. Is this good advertising for newcomers to our valley? We nave asked for county zoning but that will not help us here as this already exists. Why can a lew people spoil everything for others who wish to make their places neat and clean? If the people named don't like this they have no one to blame but themselves. It wouldn't be a bad idea also to clean up a few departments at our courthouse too. We think a few could stand it. (Names on file), Medford. School Philosophy To the Editor: It was my plan to write something light and amusing. But there has come to us here so much ap preciation for my last letter to the editor, that this shouid be along the same line, so to speak, the voting down of more money for our schols. There is little point or ob jectivity in castigating people for voting down the much wanted money. We should try to find out why they voted the way they did. Like doine a 'Joe Alsop' of door-bell ring ing irom door to door and getting the low-down on the whys and wherefores. For peo ple oo have a right to their free thinking and opinions. Here, seated in an ancient rawhide-bottomed rocker of our Home council-corner, was a man who has spent much of his life in and around schools. "It is my experience and care fully considered opinion," he told us, "that boys and girls completing the R's of early days, were much better fitted to get out and make their un aided way ir life than the fin ished high-schooler is today. As a boy at home, I was taught to obey, work and respect the rights of others. Today that is considered fuddy-duddy and outmoded, even to some ex tent by school authorities, even though a growing num ber of schoolrooms are broken into and made a shambles by undisciplined school-kids, who appear to get their moral training in high-cost gyms for basketball practice and foot ball on fields as big as cow pastures. All this takes a whacking lot of tax-dollars, far more than the little old red schoolhouse could ever "Boiled down and well-sea soned with other people I meet, I'm of the opinion that too many taxpayers are not satisfied with the product of our present day schols. So, we find them showing their re sentment at the ballot box." One thing is sure In this very serious situation, as was pointed out in a Mail Tribune is to be a race of armaments in Europe, and if the cold war is to become increasingly deadly, there will not be the time, the energy, the wisdom. the patience, or the resources to find the path of concilia tion. WE, TOO, had our reasons for seekine a detente in Europe. We cannot any longer turn our attention away from this hemisphere. Moreover, to keep up in the race of arm aments we must spend at least as much as the President asks for, and to be safe we prob ably ought to spend more. In order to do this we have been faced with a choice. Shall we meet the public needs of our growing popu lation and the rapid concen tration of this population in big cities? Or shall we let these needs be inadequately met while we raise the stand ard of private consumption? In the Eisenhower Admin istration we have sacrificed public needs and taken mili tary risks in order to increase private consumption. In the days to come we shall have to reverse the Eisenhower prioriUes. Like all other powers, we have an acute interest in a detente, (e) 1960 New York Hernial Tribune Inc. Indians May Fish At Cascade Locks Portland - T.W -Army en gineers said Friday Warm Springs, Yakima and Umatilla Indian tribe members have been p'ven permission to fish exclusively from a smell sec tion of the old Cascade Locks without interference from other during the present spring run. The arrangement was made after Indians anked for perma. nent fishing rights in the area Engineers said they could bos grant peratuuieni penmsDon, , PLUCK (By M-T Staff and Contributors) x Dick Moody. Dick Moody. Dick Moody. There. kz t.;iu;. ar tifice enyone, it is simply e response to the poor man' complaint that he'd never had his name in the Mail Tribune He did it over the air, too. on a radio station which has its headquarters on a rural lane outside of town to the west.) You're welcome, Dick. From the New York Times (a clipping we swiped from the women's editor, who was planning to use it in her column)) "William F. Quinn, Gov ernor of Hawaii, was in town last week, telling a story about a member of Congress (name mercifully withheld) who wrote to the State Department to say that one of his prominent constituents was planning a trip to Hawaii and could the department arrange to have our Ambassador there ex tend him the usual courte sies. It would also be appre ciated, the Congressman went on, if the Embassy would provide an interpre ter since his constituent spoke no Hawaiian." Any comment seems su perfluous. Oh, gosh. Oh, gosh. Oh, gosh. In this column we try (not always successfully) to be light and amusing and incon sequential, and to hurt no one's feelings. But we did, the other day, and herewith apokize. It was when we started out the col umn by saying, "Let's put an end to all this sports car non sense . . . etc." What we were referring to, of course, was the chit-chat In various M-T columns (includ ing this one) about the new sports cars acquired1 by our women's editor and our re gional editor. And you know what? The editor of the "Checkpoint," editorial rather between lines, it a more objective and co operative approach must be made by the deeply-involved taxpayer. It might also be mentioned that had the old time debating meetings been the custom of the day, rather than the new opinion-forming TV, radio and movies, it is most unlikely that this school financing crisis would be the problem it is today. F. J. Clifford, Route 2, Box 200F, Central Point, Ore. Scorner's Seat To the Editor: It was with concern and regret that the letter of the atheist was read. For it may have the wrong in fluence upon innocent people. Especially upon the young and inexperienced. It seems he did not stop to consider that there are TWO classes of people in the world, the children of God and the children of satan. How can we tell them apart? By their fruits ye shall know them. For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be con demned. How? He that is of God heareth God's words. Ye therefore hear them not. Why? Because ye are not of God. So it is not difficult to tell the class others belong to. Jesus called the disciples fools and slow ot heart when they failed to believe the prophets. So that is another class of fools. Peter calls us natural brute beasts when we speak evilly of things we un derstand not. Also that such are made to be taken and de stroyed. The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God. Since It is a fool who says there is no God, we will see more things fools will do. Likewise the fool and the brutish person perish. The fear of the Lord is the begin ning of wisdom, but fools de spise wisdom and instruction. roois mae a mock at sin. Fools walk in darkness and know not where they go. God's ways are as much higher than ours as the heav ens are above the earth. The Lord's words are pure. Mock ers and scoffers who are will ingly ignorant will come They walk after their ungodly lusts. Such will not enter heaven but will have God's judgment rest upon them Hell was made for the devil and his aneele, not for men. so men wilfully go there. God does not send them. Who are the a'hicsts to question God? Historians and the averafe person recognise the fact that tiie Son of God came to earth. And history is bs.'ed upon that. Tim is reckoned by that. God gives a sound mind, fools lack it, and stand in the way of others, and sit in the scorner s seal. G. C. Cunningham, SCixilKl. o Centira Foittt; Ora. o publication of the Siskiyou Sports Car Club, thought we were talking about sports cars ir. gcr.i;;:, ant; di.sppioving. ly, too. "Some consternation," he said, "has been expressed by various members about the above, and rightly so." But he added, graciously, that he doesn't feel "any slight to our club or our interests was intended, but was merely overlooked. However, the writers will be visited, and, it is hoped, the error publicly corrected. The Mail Tribune has previously been very co operative in helping SSCC publicize its functions." Well, aside from not know ing precisely what "error" he is talking about, we're glad to assure him that no slight was intended, and we're sorry he took it that way. We LOVE sports cars. . Which naturally leads us into one more (and we hope the last) sports car story em anaiing from our own staff. A reporter was a passen ger in BB (the regional edi. tor's blue Sprite) last week, when a minion of the law pulled up behind and sound ed his siren. BB was accused of VBR (violation of the basic rule) for the second time within a month. After the officer did his duty and left, the regional editor (an emotional type) started muttering about the "blankety-blank police state we're living in," and how he i "th goat for every ticket-happy officer In the county." The passenger - reporter relayed to the city police station the regional editor's opinion of the county law enforcement agencies, and his feelings that they were ell on the lookout for him. Came the reply, "After that stuff he wrote about us in his column, you're darn right we're watching out for him." And the passenger-reporter said to ua, "All the little old ladles pushing ' baby buggies ecross busy highways in the county should be relieved to hear that our lead-footed friend has taken a solemn oath to obey the speed limits but we must nevertheless wish them luck." The scene is the music room at the Medford high school. The time was a few days after the return of the choir from a concert trip to Salem ana Portland. The occasion was the opening of a large shipment from the Senator hotel, where the group stayed. Lynn Sjolund, choir direc tor, presided, and as he called out the room numbers and the articles which had been left behind, the owners claimed them. There was, among other things, a pair of black high heels, a hair brush, an elec tric razor cord, a shirt and dirty handkerchief, and one dirty sock. The Haven Herald, we ere sorry to report, has sus p ended publication, and when, or even if, it will re sume is uncertain. We quote from that estimable publi cation: "This is the last Issue of the Haven Herald. It has ben issued every Saturday since November 14, 1959. The Herald has helped de velop the neighborhood of the 300 block of Haven Street. Some of the events that have been held since the paper was started are two model car shows, two different drawing contests, staff parties, and the Haven Club Frolic. "Some of the clubs which were active during the time of the Haven Herald were: The Science Club, Art Club, and the Seven Aces Car Club, The Herald has about 20 subscribers. "The paper has had vari ous articles in the Medford Mail Tribune in the past month. "The Haven Herald plans a skating party or a swim ming party sometime this summer. All staff members will be invited. "On behalf of the Haven Herald staff I would like to thank you. The Subscribers, for your cooperation in making our paper e big success." Thank you, Bob Bennett, and the Herald staff. It's been one of the moat enjoyable subscriptions we've ever had And we thing you earned foul journalism merit badge. T elate, let utoers more eh HrelsV-fJobebly for Hieleet tims A paesn by Bob? lno! " I had a lernb And I had ctatn o (avt p cias , human iitfctty o V o O o G "is o o o OO CO n U 0 O o c: 0 0 0 0 Ci) 0 0 0 ft, O