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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1948)
kith Problems Ly Senator f . we last local audience, on this ,marvddrs too 'day night told more than aWne Morse gday ofgCommerce al ai Bfntfte beautiful city it was a few i citizen, not as a senator," he peaking now as a to raise children as Eugene not"Jverv fast, and must adjust re ft" to meet thegrowth Town Must Adust, Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore., Tues., Sept. 81, 1841, Pag 11 Morse Says and he laid he would fight for the western projects. Aralnit Mundt BUI basic J La selu,'v"m(.vbe f ' verwhelm'ng 11 may develop. ST wand town believed E foook down on Med Highways - Fly io ; T ANGELES ; foura, 21 minutes m lliahts at ' f ... B lights at fn, . 2:34 p.m. BwHjht Savin Time lift ir Pi" 'Ik I - J,vJ Tax Wnmilim, CJ it Travel Service 1804 Municipal f- Airport J 1429 1 out "We need a sewage oiai vrfsm. and there are problems of ' nitv nlanning. There are W""V. I A L.... .HfMcfpH trailer canius biw ww In projects which do not meet mv measure of America as a country of private homes. Good homes are our best check against -nmmiinifim. ana kuuu hwhi" jnn't mean congested settlements. There are not as many high class private homes in augem were a tew yem. s. All Imnortant tv. wnator prefaced his i.ntv. remarks on domestic at .(-. ,ith the statement that "No matter what 1 say boouv u. Issues, I have a aeep cuuvicuuu that It Is all inconsequential wu pared with the great Issue of win ning the peace." Business men, he declared, especially need to think deeply on world affairs, since they will be called on In the near fu .,.. fn make contributions of citizenship involving self-sacrifice to keep the private property system in America. Another world war will mean losing the free enterprise system for many years, Morse empha- t sized, and told Chamber mem-1 hers that "If you take my word for anything, believe me when I say that if we don't win the peace the next type, of war will involve the complete regimentation of American economy and man power for years to come." Chambers Commended Morse commended the Cham bers of Commerce of the area for the facts sent him during tne last session of Congress, pointing out that many of his addresses in the Senate were based on facts sup plied by Chambers of Commerce in the state. Touching on some of the do mestic issues now before the na tion, Morse declared that he would vote for public power develop ment "wherever the facts war rant it, as Russia will pay more attention to this type of move than any other defensive moves, Tn his discussion of the Mundt Nixon Bill (outlawing commu nism), Morse said he would vote against me dim as a "constitutional liberal." "I believe In followine the fnn. stltutlon," the Senator nolntort ,,( We should investigate the sub versive elements in and out of the country, but I Insist on and flsht for the applications of the safe guards of Judicial process that I dont believe would be followed in the Mundt bill. If the hill l passed it will result in many In justices such as those now result ing from the Congressional hear ings wnere persons broueht tn lesuiy nave no rights. I can't reconcile that, as a lawyer, with o.ue process and fair trial and hearing. I shall do what I can to set up a procedure to lick Com munism on top of the ground, and noi drive n underground. No pub nc pressure can cause me to violate the oath of office I took to protect human rights in ance with guarantees." Morse will vote for the Taft Bill on federal aid to education, he told his audience, although pres sure has been brought on him to voie against it. He urged th-it "the education of children in a com munity not be dictated by the tax- paying ability of the community" and emphasized that the problem of citizenship "recognizes no state Dounaartes. ' Morse warned business men tn watch out for the over-development of personal government in contrast to the checks and bal ances of constitutional govern ment, and warned the Chamber members to "face the facts about the private property system." The law of supply and demand In peacetime cannot apply now in this transition between war and peace, he argued. I "I am pleading for recognition1 that America can never return to : the laissez faire economy of the : 20's," Morse said. "Those wanting I that will be left behind. We need now a cooperative program Dro- nccora-'tecting business from regiments constitutional tion, but realize at the same time that powerful groups must some times be checked for the common good." The two big strikes now in pro gress are inexcusable from the point of both labor and manage ment, Morse believes. Both sides owe it to the public to wash out tic sparring. The strikes should go to arbitration, he believes. Morse closed by advising Cham ber members to remember that crystallized public opinion always rests on the facts, once the public has the facts. , Rabbits sometimes produce In a single year five or six litters of the dispute and stoo the legalis-1 from three to l(young at a time, BCAIITV cunu NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY MBBBBBaiMiaBBBBBBlBBBBaMBBBB(BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBHBBBBBk BEAUTY SALON OIL PERMANENT FROM $2 50 SHAMPOO & FINGER WAVE from $1.00 ALL WORK ABSOLUTELY, GUARANTEED 60 W. 10th in. j b, r"l Phone 4848 Open Thursday Evening 111 TAII II VI Bia ' ' riKIKIAMDKI ROLLS I Nourishing, enerfixlnf elnna- JrSJ mon r0" treat for kids I -'A and grown-ups too. Extra good I j 1 aerved warm. Take some home I ' J today. Package of eight for I jjr twenty five cents. I JV At Tour Grocer's J. if i ii i m iMiiiiiiinimnS'lTT"m 'Tii .ari.r TTrrri-rr rrr fPPears in nothing flat? lilltl .!.. iKf,,danB0 f00. 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