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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1960)
4 A MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE, fWIDAY, JULY 23, 1800 "Ivaryont in Southern Oreros nmAm Th Malt TVIhlina" itbtlnhed Daliy except Saturday by ' as North fit St., Pit spa-sui ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertliina Manafal GERALD T LATHAM Bus Mgr. ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mn Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRV CH1PMAN Tela Editor RICHARD JEWETT, Sporti Editor OUVE STARCHER. Women"! Editor DALE ERICKSON. circulation mit An Indapandent Newspaper Entered aa eecond class matter at March s! U97 atmacnrPTION RATES By Mall In Advance. Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Dally and Sunday mo B OO Dally and Sunday 3 mot 4 IS - Rtindav Or.lv On vear 14.20 ttv fiirlMwIn Advance Medtord Aahland. Central Point Eagle Point, Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix. Shady Cova. Roiut Riv -r Talent and on motor rotitet Dally and Sunday 1 year 0111.00 Daily and Sunday J mo IJIO Carrier and Dealart copy too All Termi Caah In Advance "official Paper of City of MetforS t Official Papar ot Jacoi CcaatT " United Preta International Full Leaaed Wire 0 P.l. Telephoto Neiraplctarea ""member or AUDIT BirREAtT" Or CIRCULATIONS ArtvortUlnp Renresentatlve: WEST HOLIDAY CO. INC Of fices In New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francis, eo. Loa Angeles. seatue. poruana sc. uouu. im lanta. Vancouver. B.C NEWSrAMI PUILISHEKS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAI Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from fh files ot The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and SO yean eoo- J0 YEARS ACO July 22. 1150 (Saturday) Medford' Army Reserve units have not yet been called into service despite wave Of rumors to the contrary. "" The Jackson county chapter of the Red Cross spent $29, 500 during the 1949-30 fiscal year according to their annual financial statement. 20 YEARS AGO July 22, 1940 (Monday) "Daley hall, formerly used by the Eagle Point Grange, burned to the ground in Eagle Point today. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Win ter woodpiles have started ap pearing on vacant lots. They keep down the weeds almost as well as the cement on ser vice station corners." 30 YEARS AGO July 22. 1930 (Tuesday) Crater Lake National park Is to get four new fire look out stations this year. The water in the Rogue river is declared by many to be too warm for fishing. , 40 YEARS AGO July 22. 1920 (Thursday) . Dr. J. C. Hayes, after prac ticing 12 years in Portland, buys a bungalow on West Main st. ....... Two men accept appoint ments as substitute letter car riers at the Medford post of fice. SO YEARS AGO July 22. 1910 (Friday) State Railroad Commission er Oswald West today an nounced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Oregon. The last length of pine in the city's new $350,000 grav ity water system from Little Butte creek was laid today. What's Your I.Q.? Nino or tan comet is tuaeriae; eeren at eight Is excellent; fire Of six ( foaal. . 1. Was the "Titanic" sunk by a submarine? 2. Are there three or seven hills of Rome? 3. Is marjoram, native to South America and the Medi terranean, a spice or a small monkey? 4. Was Edmund Burke born In Ireland or England? 5. Who originated the idea of placing buttons on the cutis of men s sleeves? 8. Why do gasoline tank trucks have chains dragging on the ground? 7. Was the law creating the u.a. civil service Commis sion created under the admin istration of President Theo dore Roosevelt? 8. Who was the Prime Min ister of England before Nev ille Chamberlain? '-" 0. Were ambulances first in troduced in warfare by Eng. llsh, French, or Americans? ,. ' 10. "Walls have tongues and hedges have ears." Is this a reference to gossip or eaves dropping? ... Answers) 1, Mo. Icoborg. - 2. Sovan. 1. Sales. 4. Iraland. 5 Frederick tha Groat. S. To dissipate static electricity. 7. Mo. Chester A. Arthur. 9. Stanley Baldwin. 9. French. 10. Both. Two Mr.Nixons on Growth , If Vice President angle from which to economic growth, we have one to suggest. If he will revert to a speech he made April 24, 1958 he will find that what he said then is pretty much the same as Mr. Rockefeller is saying now, and quite a bit different Nixon is saying. The Vice President, the Junior Chamber of took issue with Governor of a growth rate of 5 per the Governor without tne parlor game oi growtnmanship. " Mr. Nixori disparaged the critics of the Unit ed States growth rate who say the Soviet economy is growing faster than i i i i i snouia De aone aoouc h. A LITTLE over two years, however, the Vice President in addrpssino- tho hiirAo.ii nf ad vertising of the American Newspaper Publishers Association "seemed much more concerned than he is now. He warned that the Soviet economy had made formidable strides in its first 40 years and went on : The Soviet economy is . , . We must recognize that tween the free world and the Communist world, may well decide the world conflict. . . . The only way to ' stay ahead is to move ahead. To meet (our) domestic needs, together with the increasing costs of our pro grams for national security, we should set as our goal not the present rate of growth of our economy of 3 per cent but the higher rate of 5 per cent recommend ed by the Rockefeller report. . . . This goal will never be achieved if we adopt a stand-pat, status-quo attitude . toward our economy. About the only comment we can make about this remarkable trend toward conservatism in a young man who is said to have matured while in office is that Mr: Nixon must be practicing shrinkmanship. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Sad Commentary Six reporters all became one and the same man the other day in an effort to learn something about Federal Income Taxes. What they learned was that nobody seems sure exactly how much an American citizen really owes in income taxes. Donald I. Rogers, business and financial editor of the New York Herald-Tribune- told his half-dozen men that each of them was to be George Jackson, salaried employee, and gave each identical data to Revenue Service men t; i pavcioiiguie uuuiJuw jiiulh uiey uwe untie oaiu.:ing at the old VA 0jtice on CACH of the six had his ferent I.R.S. employee. They came up with these answers One was told that, stantial tax withheld from his salary he still owed Uncle Sam $26.69. Another that he owed $12.22. Two were informed that their bill was $7.22 and two that it was $7.05 The data presented i: : .... i iu eliminate any unsuai ihe diiierences in the I.R.S. men s answers were not caused by bad arithmetic, but by various in terpretations of I.R.S. rules. The rerjorters were impressed wiin tne sincerity ana neipiumess oi iltAnn v.nv. n A ..1-1,1 .1 . 1 ' 1 1 ' , mcoc men, uu swpaiuizea wiui ineir inaDiiiiy, unaer tne snaaow of our ambiguous tax regula tions, to come up with the same figures. IT has been evident for some time that our tax 1 structure is confusing, with some taxpayers overpaying, some underpaying, even with the best of intentions. It's bad to have thousands of pages of I.R.S. rules, often conflicting and contradictory. we have and have had a lot of clucks in gov ernment, but we have and have had some able and intelligent people, nave not been simplified to the extent that there can be no argument about their interm-etation is a sad commentary on our It's...Sniff...That Time Again It's Ah-chew! It's . . . ugh . . . humph . . , hay fever season. And in case you don't know, it's . . . cough . . . terrible. This is the time of year when all hay fever sufferers hate the world. Tempers are short. Grown adults . . . drip, drip ... are crying. People who normally wear contact lenses have to revert to their old spectacles . . . eyes are just too .. . anp, anp . . , wet. : Doctors say that . . . ah-chew ! JJOCTORS say that about one in every ten peo- pie suffers from the ailment. Hay fever is caused because people are al lergic to . . . gnash . . . air-borne Dollen. When it is sniffed into the nose or mouth, or lands on the eye, people cough, sputter- drip, sniff, and hate each other. , There is .' . . utrh . .' . science is making inroads. For some, a shot will halt the misery. For others, cough . . . relief is a ways away. In the meantime, we'll . . . pfnuff, aw-chewl Aw' nuts! Bend Bulletin. Nixon is looking for an continue the debate over from what the I960 Mr, in his recent speech to Commerce in St. Louis, Kockefeller s advocacv cent or more. He accused naming him of playing ours and that something growing faster than ours economic competition be present to the Internal who help harassed tax - l 4.1 ....... tt i. c return figured by a dif-' in addition to. the sub was carefully worked out : ... income or deductions. too. That our tax laws system of government. Jf endleton bast Oregonian. hone thoucrh. Medical Dennis the 'coumw' Ay money. The guy on HAVE A SrVlAWIN'KXXfaR 'JUST Communications I.ottsrs io tho Editor must boar tha nam and address of tha writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pan name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves tho right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Loiters submitted for pub lication must not exceed 400 words. The Utters printed in this column do not nacossarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is To Georgia To the Editor: Georgie-Porgie, puddin' and pie Wrote a poem to make us cry. G.O.P.s are here to stay -Georgie's rhyme is just a bray! Mary A. Ragland Vice Chairman, Jack son County Republi can Central Com. 3182 South Pacific Highway Medford They Do Their Best To the Editor: I was sad dened to read of tho death of Jim Rea. During the four years I was contact man at the Domiciliary, I got to know him well. He loved to play the piano, and, like all of us, was capable of making a poor decision or striking a wrong chord. veterans being people they . Feuu'e lots f ne,'D-1 r?m- !ber once when I was reliev- I Riverside a man came in say' a doctor at government ex- pense to see if he required hospitalization. When he brought the report back the diagnosis said gangrene. I called the VA hospital in Portland and the admitting office said to send him in. But he demurred and said he'd like to wait until the follow ing week. We talked awhile and he decided to go As I remember it, I drove him to his room for his things and then took him to the bus station and waited until stage left with him on it. Some weeks later he walked into my office at Camp White, having been transferred from the hospital I'd like to testify that the employees at Camp White do their best to look after the nearly 1,000 members there, I think they deserve much credit and an occasional offer of volunteer assistance. Veldon J. Diment, 213 Portland ave., Medford. Pay for What You Get To the Editor: In regard to the editorial, "Kennedy's SDeech." I beg to differ. In a series of high sounding words and phrases in which he criticized, condemned and censured the present adminis tration, he offered no one do- inite solution for any of the problems he cited. He believes in a forceful executive lead ership. Where would he lead us? To war, like all the other Democratic presidents of this country? That is their way of solving farm, labor and un employment problems. He repeated all the prom ises of the give-away program with which he expects to buy votes with taxpayer's money. According to the extremely radical platform on which he will campaign, everything is to be provided for each and every one from the cradle to the grave. But he said nothing about how all these things will be paid for, because he has never earned a penny in his life and knows nothing of busincs administration. The son of a multi-millionaire, he has been on the dole all his life. So why should he worry about the ones who work and save to pay the taxes? Not only in taxes must we pay, but by forfeiting the rights of men which Mr. Jef ferson proclaimed, the right to be free of the tyranny of government, to order our properly and our lives as each of us may choose to do. During the last four years instead of being concerned Menace meetsworJ said we could A FEW PENNIES A 0AW often the case. with whiit was going on at home and abroad he has de voted most of his time plan ning his campaign and making speeches. But behind his Har vard accent and boyish looks is the ruthlcssness of a back alley Boston battler. Just remember you pay for everything you get, out of your wallet or through t h e nose. Mrs. Janet- Brinker 2305 S. Holly St. Medford. Socialist Labor Party To the Editor: One of the things that gripes me about the newspapers, especially the big city papers in New York City, is the constant reference to Norman Thomas and his so- called Socialist party. In contrast to the Socialist Labor party, which is con stantly increasing the scope of its activities, the Socialist party, in spite of all the free publicity it gets from the press, is destined to go the way of all reform parties, and that is downward. In 1956 the Socialist party candidate for president receiv ed only 2,126 votes, down from more than 900,000 votes rolled up by Norman Thomas in 1932. In 1956 the Socialist Labor party presidential nominee, Eric Hass, who is running again this year, received 46, 000 votes, in spite of the fact that the Socialist Labor party campaign was hardly given any notice by the press. Nathan Pressman 12 Catherine St., Ellenville, N. Y. Enforce The Rules To the bditor: In answer to Mrs. B. J. Wyatt's letter of July 15, I wonder If she has been swimming in the Hawthorne pool in the after noon? Mrs. Velva Frazer and I took our Girl Scout troop swimming last Tuesday after noon. Not only was it terribly crowded but children were jumping off the edge of the pool with a complete disre gard of swimmers under them. Mrs. Frazer was dunked three times in the space of a very few minutes while trying to give a Girl Scout pointers in swimming. I feci that a certain amount of splashing is necessary, but what was going on Tuesday was terrible. Children should be taught courtesy, and if they won't follow the rules, then take away their priviledges, in this case, the right to use the pool. Also, the life guards arc not baby sitters, so go along with your kids and see to it that they behave and are a credit, and not a debit, to you. So, you lifeguards, enforce your rules strictly, so every one can enjoy the pool and In safety. Ella L. Fllzsimmons, Rt. 4, Box 400, Medford. Study and Learn To the Editor: I believe that In a previous letter I stat ed that religion and politics were two things I did not argue about but would dis cuss them. I do not believe these columns arc to be used to lambast someone's charac ter or to defame his religious beliefs. If thinking American citi zens would dig In and study more for themselves, they would have a broader view on the vital Issues of the day, both political and religious. I fear that in our modern age of rush and hurry we de pend too much on what the other fellow says or docs, The Rockefeller's Grandfathers Recalled in Notes on Change in Political Philosophy By LYLE C, WILSON Chicago -HU'll - Politics ulso makes stiuiigc grandsons, us wllnt'ss the case of Nelson Al- drich Rocke feller, gover nor of the state of New York. N e 1 son A. Rock efeller was n a m c d after his ma ternal grand f n t h cr, Sen. drlch of Rhode Island, You might say this young Republi can new denier Inherited a political tradition, But you would bettor suy It with con siderable qualification. Aldrich was a hard shell Republican U.S. senator, 1881-1911, who died unshrlv- en of a conservatism unmatch ed among present day politi cal leaders. The politics unci policies of Ihe late Senator Aldrich and those of his grandson are so utterly different as to make it amazing that each bears the Hammarskjols Quiet Efforts Bring Hope (or U.N. By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor Tha Man of the Weak: United Nations Sacrelnry General Dag Hammarskjold. The Place: United Nations Headquarters, Now York. The Quote: "I believe that, to the extent that the Republic ol the Congo needs international assistance. such assistance should, with in the framework ol the United Nations ... be given by Us sister African na tions, as an act of African solidarity." This week, quiet spoken Swedish Dag Hammarskjold made a progress report to the united Nations Security Coun cil on the dis patch of U. N cmerg c n c y forces to the strife -torn Congo. In response to his appeal troops from I'iiil nkwso.m Ethionla. Tu nisia, Ghana and Morocco be gan pouring Into the Congo in a giant airlift aided by planes provided by the United States and Britain. The new arrivals swelled in numbers from 700 to 2,000, then to 3,500 and finally prob ably would total well over 10,000, possibly as many as ZD.UUU. They would not all be Af rican. There would be contin gents from Sweden, the Irish republic, from Canada and from Latin American nations. But there would be none from the major powers, and, much as possible in the par- idea of impulse decisions arc gaining ground. Walk into a supermarket and see. Reminds me of a friend who on viewing a mass display of of a canned product purchas ed five cans for a dollar. When she got home she found the individual cans were marked 49 cents. Yes. we are In such a hurry we don t take time to think We are on the eve of another presidential election. The Democratic Parly has chosen their candidates. The religious Issues Involved promise to make this a most interesting grandstand affair. Many non- Catholics are sputtering and spewing because a Roman Catholic has been chosen to run. On the other hand I have talked with Catholics who themselves wonder at the outcome of it all. As I see it, Catholic, Protes tant, or what ever the pro fession, the Individual owes It to himself to clearly study the issue in a nonprcjudiccd way. For instance if one hears something, the proper thing, if it's important, is to gain the facts. Not long ago there came to me some information pertaining to a widely accept ed practice for which there seems to be no Bible founda tion. I had read and been told that the Catholic church took due credit for the existence of this belief. I visited a priest and he informed me that what I had heard was correct, Many non Catholics, sad to say, when confronted with some of this Information, either deny the facts or get stirred up. Protestants claim to lake the Bible only, while Cath olics take both the Bible and tradition. May I suggest that you readers secure a copy of a book that I value very highly. It is called "The Triumph of God's Love." This volume has helped me to a better under standing of many problems. Henry Johnson Jr. 2400 Highway 66 Ashland, Or. sumo party label. Tho very old I liners will cunnect the sena tor's niiiiiu with the Piivne. Aldiieh Tariff Bill of I !)(). The senator wus an extreme protectionist, mid It was that kind of it bill. Helped Doloat Republicans The dictionary of American history relates that: 'The Payne-Aldilfh tariff led to the decisive defi-il of the Republicans In the cm - gresslonul elections of 1910 ' It was this political trend and such conservative Repot) - llcan leadership that brou!;it Theodore Roosevelt In 11)12 roaring off the bench to ere tito the Bull Moose Party and to run for president. Such Is Governor Rocke feller's political heritage, ul- though the young man Is least as fur removed from ths political credo of his materiril grandfather us from the rutii less business practices of more famous grandfather, John D, the first. The fume of John Davison Rockefeller, who founded the family fortune, rests now In the popular mind on good tlculnrly sensitive areas, they would be African. It was the quiet diplomacy of llammiirskjold In Nnvem- h r 195(1 that accomplished the Impossible In a moment nf life or death for the U.N On that date the first troops of a U.N. emergency force ar rived to take up positions along the truce line between Egypt and Israel. Ills diplo macy had arranged the cease fire and his diplomacy had ob tained permission from a sov crign nutlon for establishment of U.N. troops on its soil. It was a tremendous boost for U.N. prestige and opened up the possibility that, with the right man. the post of U.N. secretary-general could be one of great power. In his report to the Secur ity Council this week, llam miirskjold was pushing the U.N. toward new heights of prestige, and demonstrating Washington Report By WILLIAM By WILLIAM S. WHITE RINGING BELLS Washington - It may be early to ring the glad, bells, but this corrcspo i lent 1 really thinks 3 not. vmuwv c r else may Imp- vi p e n in the 'F president I a I i .J election, there v 7 !. ....... ............ to believe this country is mnrl., ,M at William S. . ' , . Whlta at last of two sets of extremists which have plagued its politics for dec ades. These arc: 1. The qulvcrinu crackpots of the left wing, whose malice toward any disagreement is absurdly vehement and whose knowledge of sensible poli tics is nonexistent. 2. The bourbons of the fur right who, learning nothing of the present and forgetting nothing of the past, livo In a generally honorable but total ly blind word that never was. The action of the Democrat ic convention In putting up the Kennedy - Johnson ticket has been, in one sonse at least, immensely healthy. For ncr- hups its truest significance Li this: the reasonably liberal and the reasonably conserva tive factions huve come to gether In adult determination to put an end to the long be- dcvilment of that party by the irresponslblos - tho ultra-liberals and the ulta-conscrva-tives. TUHS does not mean t'...i - these reasonable llber.ilj and reasonable conservatives even now simply love each other to death. It means Unit Sen. John Kennedy and Sen. Lyndon Johnson have seen the dangerous ronlltles of this present age. So they have de cided to pander no moro to the prejudices of those who wish to stop all chance or else to run forward so fust as to destroy all traditional values. Moreover, there is every prospect tlial the Republican convention In Chicago will take a similar line. Vice President Richard Nixon, the prospective GOP presidential choice, has no intention to tear this country apart to please the ellhor-or fellows In his parly whether right or left. Much bus been written about the mystery of John son's agreement to liiko sec ond plnco nflor falling to bent Kennedy for tho ton place. There is, however, not the slightest mystery in it, and never was. . works, on fuliil menial linages of a very old mini giving dimes to llltlv children, on u widely publicized grnllum t'l iiekers-iind.mllk diet to com bat sloiniieh utt'i-i's uiul on the mosl monumental distri bution nf nil time ot private fiilii':: fur Ihe public good. D loJdy's Wrath lie old man s glgiinllc phll ! iin.lironles and his folksy way 1 with small change ereuled u lusting public Image under the auspices of one of the ' greatest public relations men ; nf them nil, Ills name was ' Ivy Leo and the socko effect - ' nf Lee's public relations twin sel Is proved by the fact that I a Rockefeller (Nelson) has - 1 been elected to public office :md could be nominated here at' fur vice president If he'd take ll. That would nut huve seem - ; i d possible AO years ago and for some time utter Unit, II was In January, 11)011, that President Theodore Roosevelt had something to say about the business tycoons of Ills time. Rimsevell said it In message to Congress which Prestige again the workings of his "quiet diplomacy." Two Good Reasons Ills plan to use Africans wherever possible In tho Con go emergency had n two fold purpose. First, mutinous Con golese troops could be ex pected to react with less re sentment ugulust troops of their own color. Second, in Hommiirskjold's own words "With this approach, t h c present operation should serve to strengthen the African coin munlly of nations and to strengthen also their ties, within the United Nations, with the world community.' If Africa is to escape be coming a new theater of the cold war. the new African na tions must assume ut least par tial responsibility, llammiirsk jold was giving them both an opportunity and a lesson In those responsibilities. S. WHITE JOHNSON Is Mill what he ' r-'w.-ys h -i been, a genuine uc aerate who thinks It more important to make the system work than to insist upon each and every syllable of his own Ideas. Kennedy actually is the same kind of man. They both simply know what poli tics Is - the art of the attain able. Confronted with the ob vious - and overnight - prob ability at Los Angeles that Kennedy's hurd-hunded nomi nating victory had split the country, Johnson did what he had to do. He consented to take tho buck seat of a party automobile that otherwise was headed for a disastrously wild ride. The labor bosses and the big city bosses had chosen Kennedy. Now Kennedy need ed - that is to say the Demo cratic parly now needed - a wider and less doctrinaire all- national base on which to face the people themselves. NOW, many have discovered with ecstatic cries from the bandwagon that Johnson Is Just what he has nlways been - a moderate national and not a sectional politician, the only kind of politician of any use In a wide and diverse na tion. These eager discoverers, who lire knee-jerk liberals for the most purl, are In many Instances Ihrise who until yes terday had clucked endlessly th' '. moderation meant evil .johnsonian "compromise" and trick "manipulation." But it was, of course, pre mlscly moderation and com promise by both Kennedy and Johnson which producod tho ticket to which these discover ers now cry out their equiva lent of "gee, Isn't It swell," IJEGARDLESS of which " wirty wins In November, there is great satisfaction in the thought Unit wo have reached a place where it Is possible to run a grown-up campaign. Farewell to the knee-jerk liberals, like Americans for Democratic Action. Farewell, too, to the ultra-conservatives. But to them, from this cor respondent lit least, a kinder furowell, Whatever their shortcomings they arc, us men, far from bad fellows. One can nt least say of them that, mostly, they never learn ed self -righteousness or. to hale. (Copyright, 1S60, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Murk Sullivan described In "Our Times" as the "most sensationally provocative lit Icruucc of Roosevelt's i-n-pit.ii-" Wealth Denounced Tho trust-busting President denounced the criminals nf great wealth, pledged hliunelf to shuekle their cunning. Roosevelt scorned the greed mid trickery of these "mule, factors of great wealth" whom he denounced cor rupt. Theodore Roosevelt did not iiiuno Ilia men. Sullivan's hook Identified one of thorn as John D, Rockefeller, Stand ard OH magnate. Another was Kdwurd II, ilurrlmaii, rallroud financier, and father of Av erell Ilurrlmaii whom Nelson Rockefeller defeated for gov ernor of New York two years "go. llurrlmiui, Ilka Rockefeller, Is a left-winger In his own parly. 11 nil goes to show Unit parents and grandparents cun never know how the kids will turn out. In the Days News By FRANK JENKINS Hack to politics today. As this Is written, the GOP plutform drafters (Ihe 103 members of the Republican national convention's Resolu. tlons Committee) ure gather ing III Chicago. Tliev huv. heard Senator Barry Cold water, of Arizona, who i a conservative and nroud In confess II, suy that he Is con cerned lest his nnrty lose In identity "In a n,ui.k..., fort to adopt the tocllrs and prncllces of llie smmiLanH spend, elect and - elect architects of the Now Deal and the Fair Deal," They huve heurd Represen tative John Byrnes of Wlscon- ln soy that he would prefer rniwr IJr.r EAT to adontlon of what he called a "spending nave iistcnra to seven other political, in-. n nlfn.. ! ft , . . lusirini, econom c and arlrn. - tlflc leaders who offered-' counsel as to what ought to be done. 'IMIE correspondents tell us - ll,,,l II,. ......!.... ...... (,v- xve lis most enthusiastic recep tion to thoso who criticized whot they culled a trond to ward a welfare state and cheeercd loudest those who culled for bold cutback In government participation In tho economic life of tho na- tlon. That Is to say: , It appears from all this that these members of the GOP resolutions committee believe their hearts that the RIGHT rond for the Republi can pnrty to choose at this moment in history Is the CON. SERVATI VE road. The road that leads to fiscal snnlty. 'IM1E members of the GOP r c solutions committee who believe that have before their eyes an Interesting ex ample. The example Is West ern Europe. Sobered by the aftermath of a great war. the countries of Western Europe nave been doing the SENSI BLE things. They have been doing away with the customs duties that for centuries con stricted Western Europe's commerce. They have been making trade freer. flMIEY have been holding down Inflation. They have been keeping their COSTS in line. They huve been holding their taxes within the limits of reason and common sense. By doing so. thev have keot In,. llw..M ln ,1 l 1.. i- ucts odvantngcously In the r markets of the world. In fa r vorahlc competition with the T countries whose costs have : oecn FUKCKD up. uy uumu uu tuts, incy nave - .mini,, .u imu.v- itn mousirics to western uuiu,b, mi,-.; wiuy tun I'l..- . in ine unitca states. i THESE are the things that'. Influence the thinking of ! the members of the Republic . cun piairorm-wruing commit- . win, ,1-nii iuwuiu wiu tun-. . scrvative side. mil 1 ' , The theory is widely spread, ',- Ml .1111 .1llll.iy 1IIIIV LMU lllli.Q wo spend, the more wo think ' wo think of the future, tha" ''- 'Phn wntn.nnltimf rwntinf .if ' ..... ...... ,,. n ... II, nl tUnrxvt, La .1 1 .......... I 1 bin.. ,,,i:wij ..III I V UV tliniUIIIII,- 1ACK In 1850 ... In a sltun- ' when COMPROMISES bo- '. tween what Is right and what Is wrong wore being urged uu Nuiuicai reasons, iienrv Clay said In a fnmnus speech! "Sir. I would rather ha rlirht. - lllnn hft rJrnaUn.il Few nnlltlclans ran fciruet ' that Henry Clay NEVER BE- r- CAME PRESIDENT.