Neuberger
'Blitzkrieg'
Rejects
Theory
Of Representation
Portland f Special) A mem
ber of the United States Senate
should serve God and his inner
conscience, rather than any
"blitzrieg ot mail and telegrams
from his constituents," Sen. Rich
ard L. Neuberger told members
of the Moreland Commercial
club here Thursday.
"No single pronouncement so
reveals the shabby nature of the
McKay campaign," said Neu
berger, 'as the recent television
speech in which McKay attacked
Wayne Morse, because Morse has
often stated that he will exercise
his own best judgment, instead
of meekly and timidly submit
ting to every casual whim of
what seems to be public
opinion."
Rejected Doctrln
Neuberger told the luncheon
group that his own mail from
Oregon ran 5 to 1 against Presi
dent Eisenhower's reciprocal
trade program, which the Presi
dent himself said was at the
heart of our foreign policy. "In
addition, said Neuberger, our
Republican state legislature
urged me to oppose the Presi
dent i trade program. If I had
followed the McKay formula of
counting noses on such an issue,
I would have opposed the Presi
dent s bill. I am happy to inform
you that I rejected the cowardly
McKay doctrine for arriving at
decisions.
Neuberger said it was his opin
ion that the people of Oregon are
"sufficiently independent to fa
for a Senator like Morse, who
acts on the basis of logic and
facts, rather than to want a Sena
tor such as McKay evidently
would be operating some mys
tic Univac roulette machine to
determine what a majority of
1 the voters favor every morning
I and evening."
Cites Pressure Groups
j "The McKay doctrine of rep-
; reservation would turn a Sena-
tor into the tool of the pressure
1 group manufacturing the most
. names on petitions or stimulat-
ing the most letters and resolu-
i lions from special interest
t groups," Neuberger said. '"Mc
Kay does not seem to grasp the
constitutional meaning of the of
fice which he seeks. Since the
days of the founding fathers,
members of the Senate have
been designated as United States
Senators. They seem so named to
serve the interests, not only of
individual states, but of all the
American nation, not some frac
tion which reflects only a spe
cial viewpoint.''
State High Court
Denies Petition
Salem (U.R) The Oregon
State Supreme Court has denied
without opinion the petition of
convicted Portland murderer
George F. Sack for a re-hearing
of his case. He faces the death
penalty.
Sack's conviction for the first
degree murder of his wife.
Goldie. was affirmed by the
high court July 11. No execu
tion date has been set.
Sack was convicted in the
Multnomah county Circuit Court
of Judge Frank Lonergan of
murdering his wife in February
of 1954.
A decree of the Circuit Court
of Deschutes county which
awarded 779 shares of stock in
the Bend Furniture Company to
plaintiff Arthur C. Stipe was
modified by the high court to
award 114 shares to the First
National bank of Portland, trust
ees of Stipe's estate.
Stipe's children had claimed
that as part of a property settle
ment on his divorce, he trans
ferred 105 shares of stock to
them. But the court found the
trust to bank to be irrevocable.
The high court also affirmed
a decree which dismissed a suit
brought by Verna M. McCal
lister. Jackson county, against
her divorced husband to make
payments on mortgaged property
she received in a divorce "settle
ment. The opinion affirmed
Circuit Judge H. K. Hanna
decision.
ill Remembers
'Weary Traveller'
Salem (U R) The will of the
late State Supreme Court Just
ice Earl C. Latourette, admitted
to probate here, recognizes his
wife, children and also "the
weary traveller."
The estate was valued at $51,
000. mostly in stocks and bonds.
The bulk of the money will be
Included in a trust fund for his
widow and most of the remaind
er divided evenly among his
three children Mrs. Anne Cook.
Mrs. Jeanne Linklater and Earl
C. Latourette Jr.
However, three lots in Latour
ette's home town of Oregon City
were left to Clackamas county
on the condition that they be
made into a park honoring his
father Charles D. Latourette.
"This property overlooks the
beautiful Willamette falls and if
properly developed will be an
everlasting joy to the weary
traveller who chances to pause
there for rest, thought and soli
tude," the will read.
Justice Latourette. a former
Oregon City attorney and judge,
died Aug. 18 of a lung ailment.
Typhoon Kills 27,
Leaves 20,000 Homeless
Taipei, Formosa CU.R' The
typhoon which lashed Formosa
Monday killed 27 persons, in
jured 157 and left 20.000 home
less, it was announced today.
Gov. C. K. Yen said the howl
ing storm also damaged high
ways, railroads and government
rice warehouses.
Use Tribune Want Ads
Just Call 2-6141
For Action,
! Services for Nixon's
r
Father Held Today
Whittier, Calif. (U.R) Funer
al services will be held this
afternoon for Frank Nixon, 77-year-old
father of Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon.
Nixon and his wife, Patricia,
will be among members of the
family attending the final rites
conducted at the East Whittier
Friends Church by Elder George
Jenkins. Interment will be in
the family plot at nearby Rose
Hills Cemetery.
The retired grocer died quiet
ly Tuesday night at his home
in La Habra. He had suffered
from many painful ailments and
battled death for two weeks in
hopes of seeing his son reelected.
The vice president and other
members of the family were
present when the elder Nixon
died holding his wife's hand.
Nixon and his wife are ex
pected to return to Washington
this week end.
Pretty Girls, Poodles Not
Seen In German Red Zone
Read and Use Classified Adi
BY JOSEPH FLEMING
United Press Correspondent
Leipzig, East Germany (U.R)
Pretty girls and French pood
les, two sure signs of prospering
economy in Germany, are absent
in the Soviet zone.
East Germany is still ration
ing beauty along with meat, fat,
potatoes, sugar and milk.
Visitors from the West to the
1956 fall Trade Fair here are
struck immediately by the con
trast between life in Communist
East Germany and the West.
East Germany is another
world, a drab, colorless anthill.
Shops display wooden wash
tubs instead of electric washing
machines. People line up to buy
apples and peanuts.
Cold statistics disclose that an
East German has to work 779
hours to buy a television set,
compared with 300 hours in
West fiprmanv anri ahnnt 75 in
'the United States. It takes 65
Friday, September 7, 195S
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
hours work to buy a pair of
men's shoes here compared with
17 in West Germany.
Love Animals
Pretty girls and poodles are
not contained in the economis
tables, but they particularly
strike a visitor from Berlin.
Germans love animals and in
West Berlin there are almost as
many dogs as people. Most of
them are French poodles.
In Leipzig th're is no need for
a dog catcher. You can wander
for hours and never see a pooch.
There just isn't food enough to
feed them.
Also, Berlin has some of the
prettiest and best dressed women
in Europe in the cafes and boule
vards of the Western section. In
East Germany they don't exist.
Clothes are shoddy and unfash
ionable. A pair of shoes costs a
secretary more than a week's
salary.
Leipzig still is the ruin it was
Astoria Firm Submits
Lone Fishery Bid
Olympia (U.R) Duoos and
Son, Astoria, Ore., submitted
the sole bid of $62,694 yester
day for construction of addition
al facilities at the State Fisheries
Department's Neman salmon
hatchery.
Robert J. Schoettler, fisheries
director, said the bill was taken
under advisement because of a
legal requirement that three bids
be received before an award
can be made.
The hatchery is situated about
18 miles south of South Bend.
AWARD CONTRACTS
Salem (U.R) TheState
Highway Department today
awarded a $161,858 contract to
A. H. Saxton and Son, Portland,
for constructing a bridge and
grading arid paving work on the
Finn Rock-Elk creek section of
the McKenzie highway, about
two miles west of Blue river.
There were three higher bids.
at the end of the war. After 11
years of peace, the scars and
rubble of war are still every
where. But go to Frankfurt or
Duesseldorf in West Germany
and you would never know a
war had hit them.
Close In, Convenient
Sixth and N. Riverside
ASKING
Merrick Property
MONTHLY-$5
DAILY -40c
They don't come any smarter
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In truth, there's been a quiet revolution in
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performance, all the space and styling
you've always hoped for and better
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Price is no longer the measure of prow
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America'sk
largest selling car
2-million more
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Ninth
and
Bartlett
Streets
(TdDIU
110,1.
mm
dDLIET
Phone
2-6115
Medford