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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1963 A : 3 " '."l::. .. . r rz t. ? --""y J PLAN DINNER Wayne Martell, president of the Rogue Snowmen, and Glen L. Fabrick (right), president of the club in 1933-34, dis cuss plans for the group's 30th anniversary dinner-dance at the Rogue Valley Country Club scheduled Nov. 23. The dinner will be part of the entertainment planned for the an niversary. Other entertainment will include a skit by past presidents and a reunion hour. A display of pictures from the past also is scheduled. Motel Pools Said Business Getters , CHICAGO (UP!) - Most guests never go near the water at motel swimming pools, al though one of every five mo tels in the nation now has a pool. Manager Dan Pavis of "'O'Hare Inn said only 10 per cent of his guests used the pool 'last summer, although a survey showed 90 per cent of the guests were attracted by the pool. "A pool brings business but doesn't do any," Pavis said. Going to Portland ? for business or pleasure, treat yourself to a j casual inexpensive fun visit at the NEW Portland Hilton Hotel 921 S.W. SIXTH AVENUE PORTLAND, OREGON Single Rooms $ QOO Start ot . . . . w It's easy to reserve your room! Notices Mailed to Former Businesses Under New Program Humor Magazine in Russia Says U. S. Dials Revolutions What's in a name? Plenty, if the name is for a firm in business and identifies it fori its customers. New living trends are reflected in many of the business names on file in the Jackson County Clerk's of fice. Many of them came to light recently as 5,848 notices were mailed by the clerk's office to individuals named on certifi cates when business names are assumed. This is the first step in a pro gram under a new law passed by the 1963 Legislature which provides for the filing of the certificates with the Corporation Commissioner in Salem. County Clerk Marvin Madden first no tifies all businesses no longer believed to be in business or no longer using the name, tell ing them to reregister within a 60-day period or the name will be cancelled., Started In 1913 Business names are on file in Jackson County from June, 1913, and the office -has numbers to 13,300, which includes certifi cates, amendments and retire ments. Certificate Number 1 was is sued to Medford Sheet Metal Works and Number 4 to Hub bard Brothers. Other early fil ings are for livery stables, har ness shops, and related busi nesses. World War II is marked by Number 1391 for Contractors Medford cantonment, ior con struction of the U.S. Army Can-, tonment and facilities at Camp White. Later Madden will notify all known operating businesses by certified -mail that they must register their name with the Corporation Commi s s i o n e r. Forms and instructions will ac company this notice, he said. Done Without Fee The county clerk explained that if reregistration is wished by any business, this may be done without fee and the name will be retained in the file of active businesses. In the initial mailing, busi nesses known to be in operation were not notified. They will be notified by certified mail later. The first mailing, by regular man, is to save the county the cost of sending certified letters to those businesses no longer operating. The entire progrom will cost several thousand dollars, Mad den explained, but noted that part of this will be reimbursed by the Corporation Commission er's office next year. In the initial mailing last week notices were sent to Bal four, Guthrie and Co., Liver pool and London, England; Jacksonville Post, Rogue River Valley Cigar Works, Oregon Central Cigar Factory, Sons of Italy Inn, Ice Arena Coffee Shop, and the Medford Military Tailors. Early Certificates A check of some of the early certificates issued in the county shows Oregon Hotel, Ashland, Number 22, and the Nash Hotel Barber Shop, Number 65. Other names assumed by bus inesses and groups through the years include M & D Asthma Remedy Co., Phoenix Mercan tile Co., Ashland Mills, Ashland Livery Stable, Talent Drug and Furniture Co., Mercantile Ad justment Co., Medford Hike and Junk Co., New York Hair Dress ing Parlors, Cascade Stage Line, Bend - Medford Stages, Eastern Supply Co., harness, shoe and bicycle; Medford Har ness Co., False Friends' Club and the Fanny Fit Co. The records also reflect busi ness sales. High on this list is Woodland Heights Market which has 25 filings on record signify ing sales. By NEIL A. MARTIN United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) -Dial R" for revolution? Accordine to a Russian hu mor magazine, that is the thing to do these days among the Washington cloak and dagger set. It seems. It said, that when ever Washington wants a mili tary coup or civilian dictatorship in Latin America, it simpiy or ders one by telephone. These and other caustic com ments on U. S. influence in Cen tral and South American poli tics were published recently in Krokodil (Crocodile), a Soviet tri-monthly magazine. In a two-page spread entitled, in the region of the banana presidents," the publication ac cused Washington ana "Norm American Companies" of keep ing Latin American govern ments "bustling with war -like activities." Bursting At Seams "So much so," Krokodil con tinued, "that the entire area is bursting at the seams ... (and) threatens to sweep revolution' ary Cuba from the face of the earth. "With shaking fists" the peri- odical added, Latin American dictators and "presidents" de clare "that there is no demo cracy in Cuba." "What thev really mean," Krokodil concluded, "that there is no military junta in Cuba, similar to those ordered regu larly from Washington by tele, phone." The magazine took a journa, listic jaunt through seven Cen, tral and South American coun. tries to acquaint its readers with "Washington's small but high ly dangerous provinces" and to "create a picture in our satiri cal journal of what s happen' ing there." Tour Latin Countries The Soviet propagandists "toured" Honduras, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Haiti, Costa Rica and Nicaragua and said thev found pretty much the same thing in each country. The Latin American politi cians, Krokodil added, are sell' ing out their native countries to North American companies to "better their bank accounts." And with Washington's protec tion, it said, the republics "change governments like one changes gloves." It said that Latin American dictators and presidents contend "that democracy real free dom exists in their dictator- PET TALK Sy M. I. L. ial patrimony. But in reality the president does whatever he wants to. If he wants to ex ecute the democrats in his coun try he does so." The Organization of American States (OAS), President Ken nedy's Alliance for Progress program and the influence of U. S. capital in Latin America are frequent targets of Soviet satirists. Their attacks took on a harsher tone after the U S. economic blockade of Cuba and anti-Cuban measures taken by the OAS and some central American countries. Contributes Money Even the John Birch Society, one Soviet Journal stated is contributing money "to recruit and pay mercenaries, buy arms and bribe central American civil servants to ensure their governments' participation in the projected invasion" of Cuba. As the Soviet propagandists see it, Latin America is an area where the republics are really U. S. -Supported police states; where politicians and presidents are really Washington's hire lings; and where "economic concessions" to U. S. capitalists are mandatory if the regimes in office are to survive. fc Heater & Furnace Repair fr Sales & Service JACK HALL 772-6181 482-3950 T TDM! IV Beautiful Contempory or Colonial... "COLOR MATED -STYLE RELATED" Free Organ Lessons! Join Music Centers Christmas Carol Club We Guarantee to teach you to play Carols by Christmas. Buy The Organ of Your Choice LOWREY GULBRAIISEII RODGERS NO DOWN PAYMENT DELIVERY CHRISTMAS EVE (By Santa and his Elves) NO PAYMENTS TILL . FEB. 15th, 1964 MUSIC CENTER Arcade Bldg., 126 E. Main Phone 772-2211 "The Happy ORGANizers" TEACH THE CHILD The wise teacher, experienced and enliohtcned bv life's ways, omits nothing from his teach- no that helns develop character and wholesome attitudes, so, u is most important to teach the child that God made all living creatures not only man, that God gave intelligence, feeling and iov of life to the wild crea ture of plain and forest. He will teach the child that animals also are citizens of the world, and that man has no right to torture them in cruel steel traps, or to efface them from the sur face of the earth. And, that the man, who cannot make friends with animals, who does not know the joy of companionship with a cat, dog or horse, or t h e r furred and feathered creatures, misses some of the most precious gifts of lite. How ever rich he may be In the thincs of this world, he is spiritually poor. Teach the child not to Kin needlessly, not to main and destroy for amusement. And that an imprisoned or chained up animal suffers in much the same way as a human being suffers. Teach the child that he who expects compassion and sym pathy for himself must show compassion and sympathy to every living creature. ( CONSOLES Man The Most Dreaded Animal The Bronx Zoo has an exhibit in Its Great Apes House. Visi tors are surprised to see them selves in a mirror, above which a sign reads: "You are looking at the most dangerous animal in the world. It alone of all the animals that ever lived can exterminate (and has) entire species of animals. Now it has achieved the power to wipe out all life on earth." 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