0 o U. of 0. Library q 20ie, Oreeo o C0.u? Q ' ?i:Lc,eJEUMPlE 1HREAT CONSTANT Reductions Will Show In Ceiling Prices On Beef, Effective Monday WASHINGTON (AP) The price control cleaver is lopping about 12 cents a pound off some chuck steaks and pot roasts, and five to six cents off rump roast. The reductions, ordered last night by the Office of Price Stabilization, will show up in the dollars-and-cents ceiling prices on all beef which become effective Monday morning. Retailers must have their prices posted by June 4. Tobacco Poses Tax Question To Committee Treasury Wants To Up Tax Levy On Cigarettes From Seven To Ten Cents WASHINGTON UP Tobacco smoke curls a big question mark over the next tax-raising decision of the house ways and means com mittee. The group already has pushed its prospective 1951 tax in creases above $5,700,000,000. The treasury wants to collect an additional half-billion dollars a year by increasing the tax on cig arets from 7 cents a package to a dime. Rep. Robert L. Doughton, the 87-year-old North Carolina Democrat who heads the tax-drafting group, has made it clear he intends to look out for the interests of the to bacco farmers as he has in past years. There la m.in In lh. tee, however, which insists that tho in.-aiiH i,.j ,. arets should be exempted from any ; ... .r . . increase, or at the least be given a tax differential. Doughton firmly opposes the dif ferential idea. First skirmishes In the tobacco fight broke out yesterday after the committee had voted a $250,000,000 increase in alcoholic beverage taxes. Although no decisions were reached, there were tentative pro posals to leave the cigaret tax where it is, or at the most raise it to 9 cents a package. If any increase is voted, the bat tle over a differential for the cheaper brands is accepted as in evitable. Rep. Hale Boggs (D-I.a) led a campaign for such a differential last session. He won an initial en counter over Doughton by a single vote, but suffered a reversal when the matter was reconsidered. Whether Boggs or someone else would take the lead next week was not clear today. Also due for decision is a treas ury proposal for a $25,000,000 i n crease in the tax on cigars. By voting to raise the rate on hard liquor from 9 a gallon to $10 50, on beer from $8 a barrel to $9, and by approving relatively light increases in the rates on wine, the committee yesterday ran its prospective tax increases above $.i.7(Ki.O00,000. The bulk of this would come from individuals (nearly $3.ou0,ooo,oou) and corpor ations (approximately $2,000,000, 000). President Truman has asked for an additional $10,000,000,000 in tax revenue this year. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS T .AT, . aisKiyou county (California) seems to be about as deeply shrouded in mystery as "Oregon." In Yreka the other day, I was told a new version of it. The Indian name for Mount Shasta was a word the early whites rendered as Wyreeka or spelling to that general effect. It sounds quite reasonable. Noth ing is more obvious than the fact that our forbears had quite a lot of trouble in rendering the Indian languages into something that could be spelled in English. i The beautiful Melolius river, for' example. Army engineering parties Who rprnnnn,lDr.H lhl . ,n lh. m early days wrote in their journals i mat the Indian word for it was a series of grunts sounding some thing like Umpto lias. Time and usage softened that down into the present musical name of the lovely , stream over in Central Oregon, I The village of Rickreall up by I Salem is another instance of this I named La Creole by the Hudson's Bay Company's French trappers who settled there under the wise and kindly policies of Dr. John Mclaughlin, but the Willamette Ualinu lnl.n.. ..... ....hi. . nnunce the letter "1", giving it the sound of "r" instead. That made it Ra Creole. Ra Creole in time became Rickreall The name Oregon is perhaps the prize mystery of the lot although no one hss yet been able to put a definite finger on the origin of the name California. Our two states are akin in that they must share the uncertainty as to how their That, of course, ends the similar ity in our backgrounds. California's orieins he in Spain. The Spaniards, made giddy by Cortez's rich booty gained in the sack of Mexico, spent (Continued on Page 4) The Weather Partly cleudy today and Sunday I wirti few scattered showars ccasisnal periods of cltaring H, 9h.it temp, for any May ... Lowest tomp. for any May H19h.1t ttmp. yesterday Lowest ttmp. last 24 hours ... PrecM. last 24 hour I . 101 .. 30 .... 51 .... .0; 1.11 411.37 10.07 Proctp. from May I Procip. from Vpt. 1 Excess from fiep. 1 .. Sunsot todav, 1:27 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow, 5:$e a.m. ' i a Although the new order was is sued on the same day that the Bur eau of Labor Statistics reported a three percent drop in livestock prices during the week ended May 8. it had no apparent connection with thia development. Nor was there a connection with the projected general rollback which is scheduled to reduce all : beef prices by about 10 cents a pound by next Oct. l. The new order simply amends ceiling regu lations to allow for "inequities" and to provide other adjustments in an order issued April 29. This directed retail dealers tot post controlled ceiling prices by I May 14. Here is what the new order does: It sets the same price for steaks and pot roasts of the varities known as chuck arm and chuck blade, bone in. Reductioni Listed Arm chucks were about 13 cents a pound higher than chuck blades in the original April 29 beef order. On Monday, the ceiling on arm chiles will drop 12 cents and the ceiling on chuck blades will go up one cent. The reductions in the announced ceiling price on choice and good grade rump roasts, bone in, will bring the butcher shop price down ,rom 84 oent!' Pund ,0 about 79 i cents, OPS. officials said. The price i of choice and good boneless rump i rnmain tat CI 1? rwuinfl remains at $1.12 a pound. The OPS postponed the effective date of retail kosher beef price ceilings from next Monday to May 21. Wholesale prices in general de clined for the second week in a row during the week ended May 8, largely because of the 3.0 percent drop in livestock prices. The Bur eau of Labor Statistics reported yesterday an index of 182.9 percent of the 1926 average was a decline of 0.3 percent from the preceding week. The index was 1.8 percent above the level of Jan 23, just before the th. V.. , Min. 7r.V.i "!y AVU.n,e, " J.PIe'.Ko.r"i average, ago. and 17.7 above a year Douglas County State Bank Bid On Bonds Is Low School district 12, Glide, ac cepted the low bid of the Douglas County State bnk to ourchas ' muu.uuu in senerai ODiisanon acnooi tfcinric at a mpetino m th fhnnl board Friday night at Glide. The Douglas County State bank's The security rule on atomic ex bid was at an interest rate of two penments is that the AKC makes and one kjurth percent on bonds maturing 1953 through 19.)8. in clusive, and a two percent interest rate on bonds maturing 1959 through 1962. The only other bid was submit ted by the TJ. S. National bank of Portland, with interest rates of three percent and three nd one fourth percent covering the same bond maturing periods. ti.. .-. , .... Period as indicated by the sue eesstul bidder, approximated $54.- 700, compared with that submitted by I'. S. National of $81,000, or a difference of $26,300. L. E. Garrison, president of the Douglas County State bank, stated ' he was glad the bank was able to l finance the school development bv purchase of the bond issue in totai. He indicated the Glide dipt is on ' 'he strongest financially in lh slate of Oregon, and that it is well managed. nrlrrc CvnnelnJ WOlilTOIS CxD6CTefl aai - . I O &UT meat jtOCK ' Black markets, empty cases and shortages! These conditions are ex- peeled by wholesale and retail meat, dealers in Roseburg if the meat price controls recently put into effect are not eased. n,rai,.. th. ... ....hi. k imoie price, oiacif market con ditions are going to be started, be lieves one local meat dealer. A spokesman for the Rnsehnro Meat Co. said, "Wholesalers can't "y Vh0 l rme! ,h.' ht. ,hlnk' nt-.!numu gpi. rtno ine tarmers won't sell meat if they don't get their price. Cnless we can buy meat within our profit range, we won i nave any in the cases." Opinions expressed by other wholesalers diflered. Some are pes simistie, but one wholesaler ex pressed the opinion the farmer ould eventually get adjusted to the controls and start selling, Elkron Voters To Cast? Ballots On Two Issues Friday. Mav 18 Elk u.n a.nA . . . wiii uiiitii till (lip n il mail nnnil s. ue to provide funds to construct and equip an adriitn on the grade .school. Part of the money will be used tor repairing the nresent building and to acquire additional aoj!reaI property adjoining ibe Khool. rons win re open from 2 to ff p.m. Polls will Uo be onen Mav is for mimft on tlie proposed increase new home on the second floor C) Ettntilt Advocated in Ue school tax levy over the 6 the Kohlhapen building. j First, "we must maintain the es- percent limitation because: It is hoped, the commander said, J sential services"' ol lire. p-Mu-m 1. Increased student enrollment to complete the moving toh by K I and other control denartmerts. necnMitatinK additional teachers p.m. in time for the regular buni-Nxt, "we must exercise maxi nd facilities: nes session. mum economy" because of me 2. There is fn inadequate tax Nomination of officers, regularly hich cost of national defense Third, base on the pre-war value of the scheduled for the Tuesday meet-"we must guard against war men- iirV 2 k if b.contfluc'wl in tn high school from 7 to p.m. i 9 Established 1873 U.S. Explodes Atomic Bomb At Eniwetok Defense Emphasized In Closely-Guarded 'Operation Greenhouse' IIONOI.1II.it - ( Vt The United States has exDloded another bomb at Eniwetok in the first atomic test emphasizing defense against the A-bomb. Even the time of the closely- 1 guaraea "operation Greenhouse ! explosion was not definitely : known. But presumably it took place Monday or Tuesday in the 200-square-mile proving grounds 1 2,000 miles west of here, force ,h ; , slruclur buiit tt the Eniwetok proving ground to develop infor- i mation on construction design and materials which best can with stand the A-bomb's destructive power. Not Hydrogen Bomb Early speculation that the test might involve a hydrogen bomb was discounted. The hydrogen DomD experimentation was b e- ueven 10 oe sua in me early stages. The first positive word on the latest test came from Rep. Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash). He said here that he had attended "a test" at Eniwetok I A short time later, in Washing ton, a member ot the senate-hou: atomic committee, asking to n main innnvmmii sairf "the. has been finished." This source said Mav 7 was the ' target date for the main and final, .. . it- .i 1 51,1,1 hild not n evaluated' and he had no immediate infor-1 mation on the exact nature of the test The atomic energy commission said only that a "test program is night in the presence of his six under way" at Enivetok. I year-old son who had accompanied his fnther on the 50-mile ride Irom Jackson Slates Conference llawkinsville to Robins air force Jackson, just before leaving by I base near Macon. nlnnn fnr Kan Vrurwia,.n nA Un. Th. Ai. ..L..... attle, said he would hold a news comerence in Seattle this after - noon at 1:30. p.m.. Pacific Day- light time. I hi inniratiwi th i nmi anrou r.m missinn nA..ikl Mi... .i..!un ,n I , , , I an announcement today. all initial announcements and par ticipants or observers cannot re port or discuss beyond the bound aries of the public announcements Dy the AKL AHvinr pnnrl, K th. ..:.. sion clearly indicated that struc I tural defense against A bomb at tack would be a key phase of "op eration Greenhouse." Tonnocroa flAmM Chief Ambushed BENTON, Tenn. (.Pi Three slow, deliberate shots from am bush late last night took the life of 'he titular head of the Demo- crane party in Hoik county The slaying of W. A. Iwis, 44, came against a backdrop of po litical strife which had left the county, situated in mountainous southeast Tennessee, without a functioning government for nearly three months. Lewis was chairman of t h e county court, restored as govern-1 iiik agi-niy uy uemoerai irgisia u"n ln t"ehruary. An opposing fac Iron, the bi-partisan Good Govern ment league had refused to sur render the power it won in a 1948 election which left three persons uru uy viuK-me. The Tennessee highway patrol was alerted for the possibility that1 i . u Lewis claying might touch off a repetition of the 1948 factional blood letting. Safety Commissioner Sam Neal said last night not manv , persons kyiew of the slaying and that "if trouble comes it will come I E?; t'g'r.gc'.ft si turning with his family from a trip to Cleveland, 15 miles distant, at about 11 p m. (EST). He walked a short distance to his home, and Dr. John 11 Lillard was quickly summoned. Lewis shook his head when atked if he knew who did the shooting. He was placed in an ambulance but was dead upon arrival at an Ath ens, Tenn., clinic, 30 miles away. Tuesday Moving ; Day For Legion t... j ... ill .;... - u fn. I urstut win irr iii'ii mi unv ii t'mpqua post of the American L-1 8lon TH Dauber. post coraander , bers to be at the j reet quarters at 7 urges all mem uth Kane street P m. to hcln move furniture and ! equipment. irucK will be on hand to transfer fui rnklilni? In the immI's ,n. will be postponed. Dauber said, until the first meeting; in June, d . WW -- i ini 1 CIVIL DEFENSE RADIO Installation hat been mad of the Douglas county civil defenst radio broadcasting tower on Pisgah. Pisgah is the pioneer name for this high point above Mt. Nebo, upon which the installation stands. The picture looks to the east towards Deer creek. The radio network is scheduled to be put into operation Tuesday at 2 p.m. Mobil units have been installed in the cars of the county's deputy sheriffs. There are 14 mobile units, including an airplane pilot ed bv Deoutv Ira Bvrd. and three rjaclt sett will ba in the field for the first full scale test Tuesday. I Picture by Paul Jenkins). ; Two Soldiers Shot By Chief WARNER-ROBINS, Ga. --- Ml- A Georgia police chief fatally shot '? soldier-prisoners last night and todav found himself the renter n( intense civilian-military inquiry ,n, the killings. Thomas Bragg, chief of police at llawkinsville, shot the two pri- i vates from Fort Bragg, N. C. last were withheld pending notification 1 of kin were picKed up at ilawmns- ville yesterday for investigation of : charges oi being absent witnout , A... nH nr.nn ...... .A,..ninrt the nearest military installation to llawkinsville. I In Stlf-Defense Bragg told a coroner's jury that he was attacked by his prisoners I near Indian creek, a few miles jmuth of Warner Robins, shot them in BCU-OClense and then drove on ! ilob,ns wh,re the soldiers were , u un miitai at uasc uuimiii. i were, however, suffering slightly lne propusru ouugt-i wuuiu in Sheriff C. C. Chapman of llous. ; fIom exposure and hunger, he said 'crease the salary of city manager ton county said that alter the core- JIr, vvheelcr and Mrs. Harper i from $500 to $.-.50 monthly, that of ners jury heard Bragg s account : f,ac gon( f ish'n? at the forks v hero ' a stenographer for the city man S . .u5.? g, re'i"n. u'.V.tr'ltish creek joins the North TJmp- agi-r increased from $L'00 to $215. diet that the police chief shot the ( quJ ,bou, lu milc, be,ow (h. ta, Salary of the city attorney would two soldiers in self defense. , ,rIli, ,.,,,, PowPr company remain at $200. but that of munu i- Lhapman said the soldiers were an( t Tokel pa jUKe wolld be upped from $100 unarmed and handcufled together i hllth,H. .,mj , tiai monthly mart timei. at the time of the shooting. The Robins public information of fice said there were several as pects of the case which were puz zling and were being thoroughly investigated by military and civil ian aulhorities. Arms For South Koreans Used For Nippon Polict WASHINGTON (.11 Secre- tai-y Marshall testified Friday that Washington offered last January to I send Gen. Douglas MacArthur j enough small arms for 200.000 to ! 3oo,(X0 South Koreans. The Defense secretary said Mac Arthur indicated he believed such . arms could be better used to arm i, national police reserve being built in japg c-t- t- o -.. .Senator hnnwland (R - (am) -n,.aA it,. . $,- t P"" " '"' hearing of " na,e ,orelcn """IT" . n MacArl""r s dismissal. 'City Governments Are Better Douglas County OfficialsTold By Milbank "City governments are better I ally, democracy can be preserved forrement fund. In describing the than ever." reported President 1 at home hv (o.icrmo the (reerinms benefits of the bill. Seegcr said Morris Milhank of the league of Oregon Cities Friday mrht 1 Speaking to more than 50 city of- j finals 01 Douglas county, 1 li e I Grants Pass mavor painted a rosy j picture of continuing city devel - . opment and better city government I in Oregon. He cited the large turn- j out for annual regional meeting at I the Cmpqua hotel as proof of the : municipal goviToinent are ' sleep intense desire for municipal bet-! ing restfully" in caucus while ev- 1 tn-mttnt h. , I. .. - ,u I ,- He warned, however - that city governments have increas- mgly difficult job of helping to preserve American democracy Citing the d-ordered international aittwtion, Milbank nSfd that city crnmems ne lour xpeciiic oo "l:'.'atinn in this relation. aces" through law. traffic. heHh j controls and civil defense. Fin-; ROSEIURG. ORECON SATURDAY. MAY ... -'"-"s ! . Proposed Budget Provides Cost-Of- Living Salary Hike (Fid. note: This is the second of three articles analyzing the proposed Rosebtirg city budget) By LEROY B. IXMAN RcstburK's proposed city budget, on which the voters will again express their opinions ei the polls Tuesday from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. provides for cost-of-living salary increase for city employes. ThiR is not a blanket increase as some salaries believed to be adequate would be left as they are. Two Women, Lost lit WOOClS FOUIld " - wmiii Shpflff NotlflPfl I "WimcM Word was received this morning Dv the sheriff's office that two women, lost while fishing m the rugged North Umpqua area, had been found. Deputy Sheriff Ira Byrd reported the two women, Mrs. Fred Wheeler and Mrs. H. H. Harper. both of loketee. were unharmed f-om their evnerieni-e nf hpint Inst two days and two nights. T h e y they did not return, went un '"sh creek trail in search of them. Other I would be increasrd from $.115 to searchers joined them later. It was ! $375; while that of police chief, fire at first feared the women had been ; chief and city inspector woulH be drowned. j increased from $.115 to $365. The' The search was to have been re-j salaries of street superintendent, I sumed today. Deputy Sheriff garage mechanic and parks and Virnon I'ouncey and George ( as- sewage plant operator, corporation key of the Sheriff's reserves left by playground superintendent would car for Tnketce early today. Dep- ! all he increased from $300 to $3j0 uty Byrd and George Felt were pre- monthly. paied to lly to Tukelee to conrili- j The salaries of the police and rate an air and ground search. ! fire departments would hold to a They were already to take off, i similar pattern. The assistant po awaiting a break in the weather, j lice chief, meter maintenance man, when word came that the women j assistant fire chief, and street fore had been found. They had taken ! man would all be increased from the wrong trail up Fish Creek can- i $275 to $325 monthly. yon, it was reported. DRUNKENNESS CHARGED I.ee V. Thompkins. Winston, was arrested Friday for being drunk in an automobile on a public highway, state police reported. He was scheduled tor arraignment Satur - day morning. on which lihertv is based he said The l.ea'ue l.-'ii.il'iv ( n.i- sultant Deane Seeger reported that from a l--;isiMive siaiui'Mnrit, mil-1 nicipal interests garnered Ihe high-' est possible benefits from the Hi.'.l 1 stale lawmaking activities. He! sail, largely (hro-.r.-h the e'fnrts ntf lh t .aana hiltc HMt-imntil tn rry UIM which was un I'lr H-airta? program has been enacted. Seeder ilemireit IS. aiirh h,ll. p,fd h. wou,d b. , ,4, rPct ln.los, u city '.init ials. In 'dusing the legislation aHowinv allocation of five percent o f state liquor revenue to the cities Se-gpr w;injfd tn.it A' emit i Dila tion of this benefit depends largely on in ire fnr dtw enforcement. McKay Has Doubts I Seeger said Governor McKay 1 had signed it with many misgiWj ings. In voicing his opposition, the governor called the bill "lousy"! necause tne money would k to ! the general ftind of the city budget rather than directly to a law en-1 , 12, 19S1 er.r an approximate $50 monthly There is some confusion In the j minds of the voters as to how this increase is shown in the budget. -The cost .of living allotment is shown as a salary adjustment. The budget committee's intention was : to keep the present salary base, I permitting future committees to re vert to it without actually cutting wages. City employes on Feb. 1 were voted a 10 percent salary increase, to be in effect until the end of the fiscal year, June 30. The 1951-52 proposed cost of living increase would substitute fur not be in addition to the 10 percent in crease now in effect. ; Not Blanktt Raise The recorder treasurer's salary Police Pay Uppad The pay of three polire ser geants, and four engineers for the tire department would be increased from S-IS to $315; six police pa- .-nl,n,tn anrt fun hnfmnn fnr Ihe ,r. rt.,rim.nl wnulri he increased : ' (Continued on Page 2) Than Ever that from the elt'ei tive date ol , July 1, 1951 the enactment Willi mean ar. additional revenue to the I city budgets of from 30 to 35 1 cents per capita of the city's popu- I lat'on. By virtue of another enactment ; house Joint resolution . cities will 1 prt a rhanr-a In oiiminnta thp fih. get a chance to eliminate the on slfle tax base that has provert so harrowing to both city aw) counly governments in determin ing budgets. Seeger st'd. Through this bill, the people will vote (m a constitutional anicmtmcnt in Nn vemtKT of 19.ri2 Kir Ihe purpost of ' setting new local tax bases. . ' I Following Sreger's riiscussififT of the bills, Koselmryrs Senator Tom i Paikmson and Arnold Weslling oft the tnireau of municipal research and Service joined him in answer ing quest inns from the floor. High Assessments Questioned A Kiddle delegate rai.ed the question of high asscMUmt rates. r-nMy this. Seeger said, one ' he most effective ways would i b to have property valuations (Continued on Page 1 ) 113-51 Ike Eclipsed By Mac Affair. Claims GOP MacArthur Testimony ' Undermines Confidence In Administration, Claim TULSA, Okla. (JPl Some Repuolicans contended today me MacArthur episode has reduced the chances of General Eisenhower will get the parly's presidential nomination in Chicago next year. The windy city won the 1952 con vention on a compromise date of the week of July 7 by an 88 to 11 vote of the GOP national committee. Senator Millikin of Colorado col lapsed last night near the end of a speech broadcast nationally . ' . supplying unscheduled drama to the Republican meeting which winds up today. He was revived quickly after slumping over a mi crophone. An attending physician said Sen ator Millikin sultered a fainting spell brought on by nervous exhaustion, heat and humidity. National committeemen gener ally said that the testimony ol Gen eral MacArthur, Pacific com mander tired by President Tru man, had boosted general opposi tion to the administration in Wash ington. Some members said the long range effect of the testimony be fore senate committees has been to undermine grass roots conli dence in the auility of military leaders to maintain a professional viewpoint untouched by admin istration political policies. W alter Hallanan, West Virginia cominiUcemau, said AiacArUiur'a statements have "put Kisenhower in eclipse" because Eisenhower is so closely linked with Defense Sec retary Marshall and other military men serving the Truman adminis tration. Former Senator Harry Darby, now national committeeman from Eisenhower's home state of Kan sas, said he thought the MacAr thur incident had introduced doubt among the people as to the judg ment of military leaders. Millikin Raps Administration Early in hia talk Senator Millikin brought the Republicans to a stand ing ovation with the mention ol MacArthur'! name at a "sena torial dinner." The Colorado senator cracked down vigorously on the Truman ad ministration, which he accused of "alarming and dividing our people when the need tor unity is great est." He said MacArthur's ouster and return to report to Congress showed the "gross and shabby ma terials which nave oeen passing as honest goods" on the adminis tration's counters. Panama Pledges US Cooperation PANAMA, Panama (T) A wealthy dairy larmcr quietly as sumed the presidency of riot-weary Panama yesterday and promptly pledged full cooperation with the United States. old former vice president' took over ' i this country calmed down auer tour days of strife which claimed H lives. In the turmoil, Arosemena was catapulted into the top post dis placing Arnuho Arias, who was hauled from the presidential pal ace and clamped in jail alter a bloody battle. More than l.Ouu of Anas' fanatic followers also were put behind bars. Arias, one-time national hero, sparked a public uproar when he attempted to seize dictatorial pow ers and resisted impeachment by the national assembly. The assem bly has ordered him held pending its action, indicating he would face trial possibly for treason. Arosemena set up his offices in his own residence. The presiden tial palace still was in shambles from the three-hour battle which Anas and his men staged against the national polire the country's only, armed force before they were flushed out Star Mail Route Will Be Extended Postmaster I. I.. Wimbcrly has received word from the Post Of lice department that the Star route vvhicn has been operating each week day from Eugene to KoseburK and return will ht ex tended on June 1 so that service will be provided to Myrtl Crew and return to KiifMie. This change will provide earlier receipt of mail from northwest and easiern points to post offirei at lillard and Myrtle Creek. It will alo give tlyise points earlier dis patch nf their mail to the north, leaving Myrtle Creek at 4 30 each week day and arriving at ttligent at H 4.S for direct connection to tiain No. in to l'irtand. Mil) will arrive in plenty of time, for first delivery next dav in Portland No change will tc made In the arrival and dispatfft ol mails for Roseburg. which now reach here from 1:30 to 2:30 pm. and leave fnr Ihe north at 5 00 p.m. No change Is made in contractor, who I is W. H. Scofield of Eugena. Risk Of War Said Greater In Far East Secretory Says Reports Indicate Continuous Buildup On Both Fronts WASHINGTON (JP -Secretary Marshall said today he oper ates on the assumption Russia "may step into the aggression at any moment" in Western Europe. At the same time, Marshall re peated to the senate armed serv ices and foreign relations commit tee that he feels the risk of pro voking Russia to war in the Far East is greater than is the danger in Europe. The secretary of defense ex pressed his views at the inquiry into the firing of Gen. Douglas MacArthur by President Truman. Senator Cain (R-Wash) asked Marshall to state his "fundamental reasons for assuming that an ag gression will not take place in Western Europe until we are bet ter prepared to meet it, while seemingly you believe that Russia will enter the Korean conflict if we bomb and destroy military in stallations possessed by the Red Chinese?" May Step In Cain said he was asking the question because "it has seemed innarsint ti ma fs Ua.t apparent to me for some time that Russia could presently, today de feat any forces which might be op posed to her in Western Europe." Marshall replied: "In regard to Western Europe. first I go on the basis myself that Russia may step into the aggres sion at any moment. "Also that that is no argument that we do not do our best to pre pare lor it even tnougn it may take two or three years. "In other words, we don't sit impotent and say Russia can act at any time and therefore we do nothing. That is the sense of the buropean situation, and those ar guments came up in connection with the rearmament proposals." Marshall said reports received by this country Indicate t contin uous hoviet build-up, Dy rear rangement of her troops in Europe and by increasing her itrength in the rar bast. Cain asked Marshall: "la there any reason to believe, on the basis of your intelligence reports, that an aggreasor is pres ently threatening to invade West ern Europe?" Marshall replied: "The impression from the re ports that we gather from many aourcet is there has been a con tinuous build up and not neces sarily in strength, though it may be, but particularly in arrange ments, specifically In the satellite states, and in regard to disposition of Soviet troops in Western Eu rope, and as to Soviet increaset in strength, as we understand them, in the Far East." "Ia it not generally agreed," asked Cain, "that America and her Western European Allies would become immediately involved in war if an aggressor occupied Ber lin or any part of Western Europe by force?" Marshall: "I would assume so." Other high spots of today'! ses sion : 1. Cain asked whether Marshall had withheld any information "be cause it might seem to reflect upon the Democratic administra tion in power." Marshall Said: "That was not my intention what ever and I don't think I can recall anything I have withheld along that line." 2. Marshall said President Tru man's Jan. 13 message to Mac Arthur was aimed at bringing the far eastern commander into "com plete understanding" of adminis- j iration policy and the Korean war. 1'L. - a nnHa eti-BaeiwI Wllhinffa stressed Washing i" ton's view of the Communist threat as global and said actions in Ko rea must not lose for the United States the Allies Mr. Truman said this country would "desperately need" in case of war with Russia. 3. Marshall testified the National Security council the agency cre ated to advise the President on meshing domestic, foreign and military policies was not co n. suited before MacArthur was fired. Cain suggested the law required consultation with the council, but Marshall denied that. 'Lucky' Fisherman Fined For Too Many Salmon Franklyn T. Jones. 29, of Idleyld Park has been fined $25 fnr exceed ing the weeklv bag limit of salmon, reports District Judge A. J. Ged des. Five dollars of the fine was suspended. According to the arresting state polire officer. Jones was reported by other anglers on the river after he had allegedly caught two salmon in two consecutive days. The baa; limit i one in any seven consecu tive dsrs. ROY M. CON HAD The fe.nains of Roy M. Conrad, who dlrd while peeling logs near his home In Days Creek Thursday, were forwarded to the Turner and Stevens Co. morticians at Alham bra, Calif. Loral arrangement were handled by Gam mortuary Myrtle Creek. Lvity Fact R ant By L. F. Reliensttia I There's only enti way for r Roteburq to 90: AHEAD. I There's only on form of motive power: TAXES. 1 Hnlthy progress Is better than ) stagnant foult-flndlng. I Four wards, FORWARD!