Ths OREGON STATESMAN, Salrau Otmgoo, Sunday Morning, February '4, 1949 'Grand Jury Probe of Dies Letters Is Beimanded Bum Voyage, Mates! PACETWO Many Charges iGted by Hook Issue of Withdrawal 3Iay Come up on Monday; Motion Is Filed WASHINGTON, Feb. Rep. Hook D-Mlch) demanded today a grand" jury Investigation of all Um facts connected wiCi letter which ha placed In the congressional record concerning Rep- Dlea ( D-Tex ) . Hook made the request la a letter to Attorney-General Jack sou, saying there had been "charges of forgery, perjury, col lusion and conspiracy" which he thought should be cleared up. The letters purported to estab lish a llak between Chairman Dies et the house- committee on un American actlTltles and William Dudley Pelley, chiet of the Silver Shirt Legion, an organ real km de scribed by the committee as -fascist," 'The Wee committeemen in formed the house that D a r 1 d Mayne of this city had confessed that he forged the documents and ; eld them to persons who handed them OTer to Hook. ' Mayne appeared before the com mittee at a closed session today. Informed sources said he bad been asked to show the committee how well he could imitate Pelley's sig nature and that the result was "a , masterpiece. j The rules committee will con sider Monday a resolution by ftep. Hoffman (R-Mich) to hare the hook letters and remarks expunged from the record on the ground that they improperly Deflect upon another member of the house. I One member of the committee predicted that "Hook will be pret. tV well skinned" by the com mittee, unless he offers to with draw the matter from the rec drd, apologiies andconcedea that the documents were forced, j This Informant said the "skin ning" would take the form of a resolution of censure. Hook attempted to withdraw tha matter from the record Thursday, but Rep. Keefe (R W1V blocked the move because Hok refused to say the letters wef e' forgeries. The Michigan representative sail today that his position was nihanged and that he would not declare the documents forgeries until they were proved to his satisfaction to be that. Freezing Sliced Apples Process p Held Perfected IiIaTTLE, Feb. 3.-(P-Got-er&gent chemists announced to da;k(hey had perfected a'tnethod to reese sliced apples without the sli es discoloring. '' 1 J.;C. Dlehl. senior chemist of th f. department of agriculture, en- head of the United States trocen pack laboratories here taiB the new method "means that frozen, crisp apple slices, ready to drtt-lnto a ple and as white as they, were the cay they were cut. 8cxt"will be pouring into eastern mackets from Washington." ; Diehl said the new process woald open up a new outlet for thrf state's apple crop which would alf lit reducing the surplus caused yjthe elimination of European shipments. fhh research work at th lab oratory was done principally by ehimists assigned by the WPA, who, piehl said, were baffled for tong time by the tendency of .apples to discolor when 'sliced. tTTp overcome this problem a thin layer of ice is .frozen over the allies of apples Immediately after tbexre cut. The slices are found to fsoTfer no deterioration in ap pearance or flavor when thawed foeuse," he said. The Seattle frozen pack labora tory, "has perfected many many important quick-freezing process es and about 110,000,000 worth et frozen fruits and vegetables were sold from Washington and Orfgon last year. Sfonn Warnings , a uoivu ua vmuai fORTLAND, Feb. 3.-;P)-Ex-eenVln Hood River and Pendle ton thermometers remsiaed above utf-freezlng today as rain fell over most of the state. . Southeast storm warnings were posted along the coast. The government weather ba rest. forecast occasional rain tor Sunday, with snow over moun tains and locally in east portion and little change In temperature. tfood River's minimum temper ature was 29 degrees, one degree above Pendleton's, which was re corded at the airport- .14 Bjptte Norwood Is Honorary Colonel EUGENE. Feb. S.-A-Dark-L aired Bette Norwood, pretty Jamlsson, Ore., Delta Delta Delta, waa v acclaimed honorary little colonel at the annual military ball held on the campus tonight under the. auspices of Scabbard and Blade, military honorary. Members of her official staff, runners up in a popularity con test.; were: Elisor Sederstrom, Sa lem; Sadie Ttnrri, Boise, Idaho; Joan Hoke, Pendleton, and Jeanne Burt'Colton. Stanford Winner I In Feature Even StENO. Nsv Feb. -(y!P-S tan ford anlverslty won the team title- la the downhill race hers to day at the Nevada winter earal- . raj. in which 11 teams are com peting. The University of Nevada Is the defending champion. Stanford was credited with 100 points la the downhill nee. Ne- Oda was next with 11.9. ' ' Balkan Entente Studies Neutrality Plans nf , ITALY JfilHPvi nVn m Wn tj -. 7 . YUGOSLAVIA ft KTH BiacJk Sea Kjos of Europe are on Belgrade (1) where representatives of the four "Rankan Entente powers Ru mania, Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia, assembled to find a way to keep out of war. Plan for "eco nomic neutrality" was first discussed. Caught In the middle of the conflict, Raman La was faced with the prospect of Hungary's striking at Transylvania (2), Rostda's marching Into Bessarabia (S) and Bulgaria's cry for part of Dobruja (4). German pressure on Rumania for oil, industrial and agricul tural products wm reported. Vibrations Delay "Flying Bullet" Tests I n n TT ! Engine and propellor vibrations delayed test flight on one of the army's newest and fastest pursuit planes, known as the "Alracobra" and nicknamed the "Flying Bullet." The new plane, shown .at BoUteg field, Washington, DC, is of nltra-etreamUne design, -capable of carrying a one-pound cannon and four machine guns, all fired automatically from the pilot's cockpit. First Birthday 48otf a : I 1 TTtTpwgsmr -Jr . &" . l".:i ww-l tM '"V, e U. j Texas' Badgett quadruplets celebrated their first birthday at the Galveston home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Ellis Badgett, recently, but a siege of sniffling colds prevented them from having a party. At one year, Jeraldine, left, is largest, weighing 26 pounds. Others average 18 pounds each. Jeraldine, Joan, Jeanette and Joyce received scholarships to Texas' Baylor university among other birthday gifts. Firm Declaration Made by Stanley War Must Go on Till Peril Represented by Nazis Is Broken, Asserts NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE. Eng land. Feb. -(;P)-GlTing a blunt answer to advocates 0f peace ne gotiations. War Secretary Oliver Stanley declared today that the war must go on to end forever the power of Germans "to inflict upon the world the misery twice in our life they have done." Vehement in his first speech slnae taking office, Stanley said that a halt now would bring "no lasting peace but only a troubled truce," with "no assurance for the present and no security for the future." "Within a few months, at the most within a few years," he said, "we should find we had not won peace but had sacrificed victory." Britain, he sard. Is ready to "grasp with both hands at a peace which Is both secure and honor able," but only victory can assure such an end to the conflict. Criticises Hcrtaog Stanley singled out Gen. J. B. M. Hertsog, former prime minister of the Union ot South Africa, as one of the advocates of peace and an "apologist" for Adolf Hitler. Hertsog went oat of office Sept. t after losing a campaign for a separate peace with Germany, and was defeated recently when he re vived the issue in the Union par liament. Stanley said "distance had lent enchantment" to Hertxogs views on Europe, and suggested that "we call as our witnesses not people thousands of miles away bat people a little nearer the scene" for Judgment ot Hitler. - Ask Neutrals, Urges ' "Let us go around Europe," Stanley said, "and ssk the small neutral countries It they feel this S 'J' f SWEDEN II 11 (- fcjL'IIlL -v;. J"'M i 4 7- for Texas Quads; Colds Bar Party Europe Is Closer By Air as Horta Stop Eliminated MIAMI. Fla., Feb. 3.--It's just an overnight jaunt now from Florida's resort area to Europe. The American Clipper of Pan American Airways' trans-atlantic service took off at dawn today and was scheduled to reach Lis bon, Portugal, early5 tomorrow morning. The trans-atlantic service was started last June, and the 100th crossing was completed a week ago. More than eighteen hundred passengers and many thousands of pounds of mall have been transported. In the past, flights have re quired 27 to 30 hours, with stops at Bermuda and at Horta, the Azores, on the way from New York to Lisbon. Now, with seven months' ex perience. Pan American has ar ranged for heavier gasoline loads and will omit Horta from the itinerary. The handling of pas sengers and mail was speeded. These innovations are expected to reduce the flying time to 24 hours in good weather. Pan American officials hope to maintain the one-day schedule whether- the western terminals are In the north or south. confidence In Hitler." His voice sharp with sarcasm, the war minister continued: "Are we just a little inconsist ent? No, General Hertsog Just 2000 miles nearer the facts. "Millions of different race, ot different language and ot differ ent creed bear witness to the tact that with this man (Hitler) lead ing and with his nation allowing him to lead, there will be no peace and there will be.no secur ity for Britain or Europe or for the world." Stanley was Interrupted several times by hecklers, leaflets headed war la in vain" were ' showere J from the balcony. FRENCH BRITAIN ALLIANCE T77 GERMAN SOVIET Y A ALLIANCE BALKAN INTENTS Indians Lay Claim To All of Seattle But Willing to Settle for Mere Three Millions; Bill in Congress SEATTLE, Feb. 3-(ff)-The Du Wamish Indian tribe claimed to day to be the real owner of "all the land In the city ot Seattle," but expressed willingness to set tle for I3.07C.800 from the fed eral government. Superior Judge J. T. Ronald acknowledged a contract in which the Indians retained Attorney Ar thur E. Griffin to press their claim for such an amount' at ses sions of congress. Chief Peter J. James ot the Da wamieh tribe, who. lives at Mar ietta, Whatcom county, declared the Indian claim was based on a treaty signed In the 1850s by Got. Isaae Stevens of the Territory of Washington, whereby the Indians relinquished their ownership of all the Paget Sound country In re turn for the promise of a reserva tion. Shevens subsequently was killed la the Civil war; and, the chief claims, the agreement was never kept and no lands were as signed the tribesmen. BUI Is la Congress Hence, the Indians argue, their prior ownership of King county land particularly that on which the city Is built should still be recognised. Sen, Lewis B. 8chwellenbach (D-Wash) introduced a bill in congress last year authorising payment of I3.07t.800 to the tribesmen. The current action is another attempt to obtain that settlement. Judge Ronald pointed oat . that Griffin obtained a substantial set tlement for Yakima Indians under similar circumstances soma time Isgo. " - Drager's Trial Opens Monday Nine Days Required for Testimony, Forecast Grand Jury Meets (Continued from Page 1) ended at that time with a hung jury, and Richardson is again to go on trial February 19. Meeting of the grand jury will be given over in large . part to routine matters to be presented by District Attorney Lyle J. Page, it la understood, but may again be concerned with the probe into the affairs of City Recorder A. War ren Jones begun last November. Prior to its adjournment in De cember, the grand jury handed a resentment to Judge McMahan ! advising him of certain facts dls- covered in the course of the In vestigation, and asking for ln ! struction as to whether under 1 such facts any law had been vio lated. To date the judge has declined comment on the presentment, but is expected to make some refer ence to it in the course of the new session of the grand jury. Study of the city recorder's office began last fail when an au ditor alleged that f 4081 waa un accounted for. Jones was absent i m San Francisco at the time. Lambert Estate in Equity Court In addition to the grand jury hearing and the Drager trial, the courthouse will also see taking of a deposition in the Lambert estate matter before Judge Lewelling to morrow. On Tuesday the judge holds his regular motion day, and on Wednesday the case of Kubine vs. state unemployment compen sation commission is set for hear ing. Trial of Bedient vs. Anderson on Friday will be followed on the next day by the case of Union Pacific and other railroads vs. Ormond R. Bean, public utilities commissioner, to which virtually all truck lines operating in this state, together with the AF of L. Teamsters union, have been ad mitted as interveners. The case concerns the power of the utilities commissioner to sus pend announced rates for trans port of petroleum by railroad. Trucking companies in their peti tions in intervention have alleged that if such rates are allowed to stand, they will have a depressing effect on their business. France Indignant At Rail Bombing Prompt Protest Promised as Report Says Five Europeans Killed PARIS, Feb. 3.-TP)-Govern-ment spokesmen voiced "Indignant surprise" today at reports that Japanese warplanes had bombed a train on the French-operated Kunming-Hanoi railway in south western China and said the matter would be "taken up" at once with Tokyo. Five Europeans were reported killed in the bombing, which de stroyed 100 yards of track and wrecked a bridge over which the train was passing. Most of these victims were believed French, al though details were lacking. Authorized quarters said the bombing was a surprise, because France had been given to under stand by Japanese officials that attacks on the railway, which have occurred several times in the past, would not be repeated. This was in response to French pro tests in Tokyo. US Protest Reported These sources said the United States also had protested previous bombings, and declared that the French ambassador to Japan, Charles Arsene Henry, had point ed out that the railway is of wide international interests. French quarters said that United States protests against at tacks on the railway (presumably registered by Ambassador Joseph G. Grew in Tokyo) were based on tne contention that the line is the only means for transporting Amer ican merchandise into central China and the only means of com munication between Americans in Chungking and the outside world. Budget Reduction Slight Says Glass (Continued from Po-? 1) be cat from the $1,800,000,000 defense estimates and used In part for farm benefits. He said that the appropriations committee would have to hear numerous witnesses on the farm legislation, and that it might not reach the senate floor before May. A senate-house conference com mittee approved today legislation authorising a I2S1.200.000 emergency expenditure tor estab lishment of the neutrality patrol and expansion of other military activities, paving the way for fi nal congressional action on the first ot more than a dozen ap propriations bill. Restoring only about 1 100,000 of 217.788.IC4 lopped off the bill by the senate, the conferees agreed on a figure approximately 119,600.000 below the presi dent's budget request. Sons Beat Humboldt ASHLAND, Ore., Feb. 3-ff)-Southern Oregon College of Edu cation outrushed Humboldt State college in a furious second half tonight to win a basketball game, 50 to 44. Baseman ot Southern Oregon was high scorer with 12. Sether got 11 and Lee 10 for Humboldt, Lansing's War Plan Revealed Preparing 2 Years Before US Entered War, Shown by Secret Letters By ANDRUE BERDING WASHINGTON. Feb. 3 -()-Robert Lansing, World war sec retary of state, was preparing for the United States entry into the war on the side of the allies near ly two years before this country finally broke with Germany, his secret correspondence reveals. The correspondence la to be published by the state department within a few weeks, and, authori tative sources said, will disclose this fact and many others throw ing new light on the trying 1914 18 period of American neutrality and belligerency. It was taken by Lansing from bis files In the state department when he fell out with President Wilson and resigned In 1920. Aft er his death his relatives returned It to the state department and congress authorized an appropria tion to publish it. The letters will appear in two volumes of about 700 pages each. Xotes Exchanged Many exchanges of private memoranda between the secretary of state and his president are in cluded. In one, written in August, 1915, Lansing stated his belief that a rupture of diplomatic rela tions with Germany was probable and analysed the advantages the United tSates would receive from such a break. One of the most striking sec tions centers around the British nurse, Edith Cavell, whom the Germans shot on suspicion of spy ing and aiding prisoners to es cape. At that time, the American minister to Belgium, Brand Whit lock, took energetic steps to save the nurse's life and delivered a strong protest to the Germans against the execution. Publication of the correspondence will shoe? he took the action without au thorization of the state depart ment, indeed without notifying the department until after he had taken it. Secret Accord Bared Release of the Lansing papers also will bring greater clarifica tion to one of the few items of "secret diplomacy" in American history the so-called Lansing Ishii agreement between the Unit ed States and Japan. In the agree ment, signed in 1917, the United States agreed to Japan's "special interests" in China. But in ex change Japan agreed that all na tions should be on the same foot ing in China. This second point was made a secret clause ana Lansing had frequent occasion to regret having consented to keep it secret, especially after the Jap anese translated the phrase "spe cial interests" into "paramount in terests." Another front-page highlight of American foreign policy thrown Into greater relief in the corres pondence is the American effort to force Japan out of Chantung, Chi na, which Japan had seized from Germany at the outbreak of the World war. The papers are understood also to throw new light on the differ ences of opinion which led to the break between Lansing and Wil son and Lansing's resignation in Feburary, 1920. The two volumes will begin with March, 1914, when Lansing became counselor of the state de partment, and continue through his tenure as secretary of state starting in June, 1915, after the resignation of William Jennings Bryan.' 1 jvjv 3 - the " vnsP0 A -ra ' TaKlr 'iasd !?at A eoSW. From the Oregon Statesman Feb. 1st AH Loans Include Many Free Services Mr. John R. Towlea, former Associate Director Federal Housing Administration, is at the Capitol Lumber Com pany and win help yoa se lect year loan, prepare all paper and other details free off charge. There " Is abso lutely no charge for our many - complete additional services. 1020 North Commercial - , -nanfr j . ' $ I i I II r- i iSJ) sr: iv- - - - v u-'i h LJ " " t'l 3 fl ...1.. J ' 1 That seems to be the opinion of Louise Chne (left), 3, and her sister, Shirley, a, bewildered and frightened asfthey arrived in New York with their grandfather. Chew Sang, en route from Jamaica, BritLsh West Indies, the children's birthplace, for a visit to Hongkong, home of their ancestors. Labor Federation Criticizes NLRB Incompetence, Stupidity and Bias Are Charged by High Command MIAMI, Fla., Feb. 3-(Jp)-The American Federation of Labor high comand accused the national labor relations board today of "bias, stupidity and incompe tence" and called for sharp cur tailment of its power. In a statement made public by President William Green, the fed eration said labor, industry and the public had lost confidence in the board, as now constituted, and added: "The present board and Its staff are totally unfit for their important duties. "This governmental agency has never been an Impartial umpire but has assumed powers never granted to them by law in an ef fort to impose their own partic ular philosophies on labor and industry." Wants Bill Passed Green urged that the Walsh Barden bill to amend the nation al labor relations act be passed at this session of congress. He said It would abolish the present three-man board, provide "a com plete housecleaning of its staff," and create a new five-man board. He said the new board then would be required to let the workers pick their own bargain ing agency, would be bound to AAes tasue& -U-. i end of 23 .u tot js- Is Your Building Answer These comparative figures give you the answer ... compare them with your present rental and they speak for themselves. 92500 Loan 13.90 Month 92800 Loan S30O0 Loan 16.68 Month 93300 Loan 19.46 Month Month For That Home of Less NEW FJIJL - 95 For Complete Information on FJLA. recognize bona fide contracts, and would be compelled to avoid de lays now charged against the board. The AFL expressed sharp op position to amendments backed by employer groups, "because we believe they intended to nullify the basic principles of the law." Green urged immediate action by congress bo the issue would not become a "political football" in the forthcoming campaign. Cooperative Land Use Plan in Coos CORVALLIS, Feb. S.-f-Ten federal and state agencies will participate in a cooperative land use adjustment program in Coos county. The program was approved by the Oregon State Land Use com mute. Three objectives of the com mittee follow: 1. To protect and perpetuate the forest industry and estab lish Its permanent relationship with agriculture In the commun ities. 2. To establish sound farm ing systems in areas suitable for agriculture throuri desireable shifts in management or types of farming which will increase farm Income, maintain soli fertility and prevent erosion. 3. To prevent further decrease in the tax base in order that essentia public services may be provided without undue burdens on property owners. MM Headlines Shout of Construction Records Brokenll Day by day Week by week Month by month- new home construction has been steadily on the march. Again we ask yon to look about you and see how many of your friends and neigh bors have built their own homes in 1939. YOU CAN DO THIS SAME THING IX 1940. Wouldn't It be far better to OWN YOUR OWN HOME than to merely have a HANDFUL OF RENT RECEIPTS at the years. 4iO F.H.A. 2o L0AII 25 Year - S0 Appraisal 94000 Loan 22.24 Month 95000 Loan 27.80 Month Than $2,500 There's a - 15 YEAR LOAN Loans - Call -Phone 9293