New Justice of
Supreme Court
Faces Scrutiny
Washington - (LTD - Potter
Stewart, the new Supreme
Court appointee, was certain
today to undergo careful
scrutiny by Southern senators
before winning confirmation
to the nation's top tribunal.
Sen. Spessard L. Holland
(D-Fla.) indicated he and other
Southern senators would take
a long hard look at Stewart's
record when he comes before
the Senate next session.
Succeeds Burton
President Eisenhower late
Tuesday named the 43-year-old
judge of the U. S. Court
of Appeals for the Sixth Cir
cuit to succeed Justice Harold
H. Burton on the Supreme
Court. Burton retires next
Monday.
Except for Justice William
O. Douglas who was appoint
ed at the age of 40, Potter is
the youngest man named to
the court in 105 years. Initial
reaction to the appointment
.was favorable.
Southern legislators, how
ever were believed certain to
scan Stewart's past record for
indications of his rulings on
integration and states rights
issues. There was no imme
diate indication whether any
significant opposition to the
confirmation would arise.
Followed Courl's Decision
The rangy, handsome judge
from Cincinnati, Ohio, wrote
a concurring opinion in an
integration case involving a
group of Negroes who wanted
to attend a previously all-
white school in southern Ohio.
His opinion closely followed
the Supreme Court's 1954
school integration decision.
A close friend said Stewart
had a "fairly conservative
viewpoint without being a
stand-patter. He is a progres
sive conservative who believes
in the American system in the
things which have made the
country strong."
Man on Way to
20-Mile Altitude
Alamogordo, N.M. -(UPD- A
giant plastic balloon soared
toward a 20-mile high destin
ation today with an airman
aboard as the much delayed
Man-High III project got un
derway. Lt. Clifton M. McClure, 26,
a jet pilot from Anderson, S.
C, was the lone passenger in
what Air Force authorities
called a "perfect" takeoff.
The Air Force hopes the
balloon will reach the edge
of outer space. The long
awaited launching followed
a wind collapse of another
balloon Tuesday when a sud
den gust of wind spilled it
across its desert launching
site.
Air Force officials said the
balloon was drifting slowly
south and southwest in al
most calm canditions. They
said it might come down over
Albuquerque Thursday morn
ing, after more than 24 hours
aloft at a 100,000 foot alti
tude. By 9 a.m. (PST) three hours
after it had taken off, the
balloon had reached 65,000 j
feet and was still climbing. I
McClure was calm but j
"eager" for the flight. He will I
be studied more closely, by j
remote radio control, than ;
any other human being ever j
to ascend to that altitude. :
And his voice will be the '
first broadcast over radio j
from what amounts to outer I
space.
Net Farm Income
In Oregon Declines
Corvallis -41TD - An Ore
gon State College farm econ
omist reported today that net
farm income in Oregon in
1957 was down 11 per cent
from the previous year at
5147,500,000. Mrs. Elvera
Horell, said that was the
lowest total net farm income
in the state since 1954.
Averaged out on a per-farm
basis, each farm operator in
Oregon earned an average
net farm income of S2684
last year, compared to $2946
in 1956.
Mrs. Horrell reported, how
ever, that the firjt seven
months of this year show an
increase in receipts from
sales of farm produces of near
ly 9 per cent over the same
months in 1957. Both crop
and livestock receipts show
gains.
Headache Remedy
Sales Up in Arkansas
Raleigh, N. C.-UPD-A head
ache remedy manufacturer
says sales have "skyrocketed"
at Little Rock, Ark.
Mrs. Sara Hicks, vice presi
dent of the Hicks - Capudine
Co. here, said Tuesday that
orders for her firm's head
ache remedies at Little Rock
have doubled lately.
State Veterinarian Resigns;
Raps Steward Administration
Salem - (ITD - Dr. Kermit J
Peterson, state veterinarian,
resigned Tuesday and Agri
culture Director Robert J.
Steward said he would accept
the resignation.
In his letter of resignation,
Dr. Peterson said that "under
the present administration it
is impossible for me to con
duct a sound animal disease
program or a sound meat in
spection program."
He continued: "The con
Elderly Tillamook
Hunter Sought
Tillamook - (UPD- A search
party of Tillamook county
sheriffs officers, state for
estry personnel and volun
teers set out at dawn today
to continue a hunt in the
Walter Tree Farm area south
of here for an elderly Tilla
mook man reported lost on
Monday.
Frank Sullivan, about 70,
was reported missing by his
family when he failed to re
turn home after a one-day
deer hunting trip about five
miles south of Tillamook.
Two Norman Wilson blood
hounds from Dallas were to
be used today, weather per
mitting. Searchers said the
dogs were on the man's trail
Tuesday but lost the scent
when it began to rain.
Lebanon Forces
To Leave Soon
Washington -mi- The State
Department announced today
that "barring unforeseen de
velopments," all U.S. military
forces will be withdrawn
from Lebanon by the end of
this month. ;
The announcement said the
"current unrest" in Lebanon
"appears to have essentially
domestic origins," unlike the
outside interference which
caused the United States last
July 15 to heed the plea of
then President Camille Cha
moun for American military
forces to bolster his tottering
regime.
"In view of the progress
made toward more stable in
ternational conditions in the
area" the department said. "It
has been concluded that Unit
ed States forces can now be
totally withdrawn from
Lebanon." . ; )
"It is the confident hope
of the United States govern
ment that the republic of
Lebanon, its sovereignty and
independence strengthened,
will move forward in unity,
peace and prosperity."
Hotppini famous for Dbhweisheirs that do the job
ducting of such programs is
the duty of the state veterin
arian and when conditions ex
ist which do not allow proper
protection to the livestock in
dustry and the people of Ore
gon, I no longer feel that I
should remain."
Press Release Issue
The resignation came al
most at the same time as a
press' release from Steward in
which he said that he and
Peterson had agreed that
Army-Navy War
Game Scheduled
San Francisco - (UPD - More
than 25,000 soldiers and sail
ors will begin gathering at
West Coast ports late this
month in preparation for the
biggest Army-Navy amphibi
ous exercise since 1950.
Named Exercise Rocky
Shoals, the maneuver will
send 13,000 troops from 19
Army posts and 40 Navy ships
ashore ilong a 30-mile stretch
of the central California coast
line Nov. 5.
Troops will hit .the beach
from helicopters and landing
craft. The maneuver will use
simulated atomic weapons in
the first evaluation by the
Army of its "pentomic" or
ganization in an amphibious
assault.
Navy ships will depart from
San Diego and Long Beach
Oct. 20 headed for Puget
Sound, Wash., ports, where
troops will go aboard from
Fort Lewis Oct. 26-30. Nov.
5 is "D-day" on the beaches
of San Simeon, Calif., and the
maneuvers will continue until
Nov. 10 in the Hunter Liggett
Military reservation, Camp
Roberts and the Hearst ranch
at San Simeon.
Eisenhower to Get
Giant Birthday Card
Washington -(UPD- Republi
cans will extend good wishes
to President Eisenhower on
his 68th birthday Oct. 14 with
a giant birthday card.
The card, expected to be
larger than the average-sized
door, will be presented to the
President at a birthday break
fast here. It will bear the sig
natures of hundreds of GOP
leaders and workers from
every state and U.S. territor
ies and possessions, as well as
of the 650 persons expected
to. attend the celebration.
Washington- (UPD - Factory
employment showed a "mod
est improvement" in August,
the Labor Department re
ported Monday. Layoffs de
clined instead of rising as is
usual in August, and hiring
increased, the department
said.
Stock; Limited
To the Remaining
1958 Models
changes in the two programs
should wait until the Legisla
ture meets in January.
Steward said the release
had been "worked over" by
both of them, as well as other
members of the agriculture
staff, and that Peterson had
agreed to its release as well
as to remain on the staff until
the Legislature met.
A disagreement between
the division of livestock in
dustry has been brewing for
some time.
Peterson said he had origin
ally agreed with Steward's
press release after a day-long
staff meeting, but then dis
agreed when he took it home
Monday night and re-read it.
Object! to Denial
"I found I couldn't go along
with it and I called Steward
and told him so. I also told
him that I would resign," Pet
erson said.
Peterson objected to Ste
ward's denial of charges made
earlier by the veterinarians'
liaison committee that the
livestock disease control and
meat inspection programs are
being run inefficiently.
M. E. Knickerbocker is
head of the division of ani
mal industry and Peterson's
boss. Steward denied that the
division was being run in
efficiently. The agriculture director
said that during the 1957-58
fiscal year the state tested
715,336 cattle for brucellosis
compared with 377,527 the
year before.
He added that more meat
than ever is being inspected.
Explorer IV
Signals Stop
Washington-(UPD-The Army's
Explorer IV satellite,
launched July 26, has stopped
sending signals "back to earth,
the government's Space
Agency announced Tuesday.
This left the U.S. Vanguard
I, launched March 17, and
Russia's Sputnik III, launched
May 15, as the only satellites
still broadcasting.
Explorer I is still orbiting.
But it lost its voice Feb. 28,
about a month after its
launching Jan. 31.
Explorer IV's tracking
transmitter stopped sending
signals Sept. 9. The other
transmitter stopped sending
scientific information Sept.
22 but continued to broadcast
another signal. This one was
victims of the ignominioius,
Monday by the tracking sta
tion at Antofagasta, Chile.
Vanguard I is transmitting
on power supplied by the sun.
It is expected to continue
sending back signals as long
as the satellite stays in orbit,
perhaps 200 years.
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Storyteller First
On Knife, Fork
Schedule for Year
A master storyteller spoke
at the first fall meeting of the
Rogue River Valley Knife and
Fork club Tuesday evening
at the Rogue Valley Country
club.
Speaking to a capacity au
dience, Mrs. Emily Kim
brough, author-speaker and
managing editor of the Ladies
Home Journal, told of "Fur
ther Confessions of a Scape
goat." She explained that all the
experiences she writes about
in her -v various books have
actually happened to her and
regards herself as a member
of a fraternity of scapegoats,
victims of the ignominious
for whom life is a series of
"dismal surprises."
Foreign Language
Mrs. Kimbrough stressed
the importance of having
knowledge of a foreign lan
guage while traveling abroad
and added that children in the
United States should be
taught to master English as
well as another language.
H. D. Christensen, presi
dent, introduced the speaker
and persons at the speaker's
table. They included Mrs. Dan
A. Hull, entertainment chair
man, and Mr. Hull, Archie C.
Pierce, vice president, and
Mrs. Pierce, and Mrs. Chris
tensen. Four out of town guests
were present.
Other speakers scheduled
by the club during the year
include Dr. Walter H. Judd,
William Clyde Donald II, Cy
Radcliffe, Philip Geary, and
Dr. John Furbay.
The Milky Way galaxy is
made up of something like
five trillion stars.
Right Out of the Oven to You
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Television Turns Boy Into Zombie,
Father Complains To London Court
j,onaon-uni-A latner com
plained to a magistrate's court
Tuesday that his son had
turned into a zombie the liv
ing dead because he did
nothing except watch televi
sion. The magistrate ordered the
boy to undergo psychiatric
treatment in hopes it would
cure his television sickness."
Names of the 16-year-old
boy and the parents were
withheld because he is a juve
nile. Has No Control
The father took him into
the magistrate's court Tues
day and said he no longer had
any control over his son who
has watched television "all
and every day" since he left
school last February.
"He has been reduced to the
state of a zombie," the father
said, and because of television
caught a "sickness requiring
treatment."
"Please," the father plead
ed with the court, "make him
cooperate with the doctors."
He said his son had refused
his own orders to do so and
was living in a strange, iso
lated world of the walking
dead.
"He won't get away from
the television set," the father
said. "He has no other inter
est in life. He does not even
want pocket money because
DUKE'S CLUB CLOSED
London (UPD The "Chez
Peter," a Thames River coun
try club and favorite haunt of
Queen Elizabeth's fun-loving
cousin, the Duke of Kent, was
closed today because it served
liquor after hours. A Maiden
head court Tuesday ordered
the club "struck off," because
it "was deliberately run with
out any attention being paid
to regulations."
WEDDING CAKES
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he never goes out to spend it
Hospitalization Advised
The father said he took the
boy to two doctors who ad
vised hospitalization, "but he
won't go he just wants to
live his silent life at home
watching the TV."
Magistrate S. W. Billingham
ill
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told the boy it was obvious
he was in "some kind of nerv
ous state" and should not re
sent treatment even if it
meant going away.
He adjourned the case for
two weeks and ordered the
boy to see the specialist again
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Reg. $2.49
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Wednesday, October 8, 1958 3
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
UNFIT INVITATION
London-EPD-The Soviet Em
bassy rejected an invitation
to attend the Piccadilly Thea
ter premiere of "Shadow of
Heroes," a story of the Hun
garian rebellion. Daily Ex
press critic John Barber said
the embassy "did not merely
decline. It sent back the in
vitation, Eisenhower fashion,
as unfit to be considered."
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9