TO Anyway, It Really Qui Be Done sfcesrtJetsa waa evtaee4 bci ehemfcU declared Utat klxa-rrase alwaaln eeeld fee predaced free lew-grade clay. Bat , Um Ua was ghrea ckaaee ander Um argeaey ( war. Wedaes . day a Sate U rd Maetf. Mmwi kere la C J. eae. saetaJ- twrteal tafiaMf at the galeae alaaslna-rraaa-clar alaat. toealag a-rvr aaaaa of Um flnt ejaallty alaaUna. having t ae real avail- a ale para aJaadnaat. (Theta y Bill Keett, SUiessaa Uff abe ' tagraaaer). Salem Alumina Plant Passes Final Tests; Quality Product Made Out of Low Grade Clay The Salem alumina-from-clay plant had passed iU test today. "We're now turning out quality ttuff - - we've proved that high grade alumina can be produced from lew grade clay." declared W. R. ey fried, project manager of the Chemical Construction company. The Salem plant w as one of four op? a hens on which th fed eral government spent millions of dollars during World war II to Otf-' An arpeal net been addressed to Dr. Paul X Raver, Bonneville administrator, urging him to re ; fua to sign any contract with a private utility unless the con tract contains a provision requir ing the company to sell its pro perties at a fair price to public agencies in areas where the peo ple have voted in favor of public power. The appeal is signed by Charles Baker who says he repre sents directors of Interstate Elec tric, a recently-formed coopera tive, and IS PUDs and coopera tives m Oregon and Washington. Interstate Electric is the coopera tive which recently made a ten der to purchase Pacific Power end light. The request may meet with Dr. Haver's favor because previously be has made somewhat similar conditions for signing long-term contract with private utilities. Portland General Electric, for ex ample, has never been able to get a long-term contracts neither has ML States Power except with extroneous and objectionable con ditions. Inserting any such requirements as Baker requests in a sales con tract ts extra-legal and an exer cise of arbitrary power. The Bon neville power act reads: j Subject to the provisions of this act and to such rate schedules mm the Federal Power commission may approve, as hereinafter pro "VldcdV the administrator shall negotiate and enter into contracts lor sale at wholesale of electric energy either for resale or direct corjumption, ' (Continued on Editorial Page) DEBT UMJT BILL SIGNED - WASHINGTON. June 26 -tV TiTT'F'nn reducing the legal debt limit of the United States govern ment from S300.000.000.000 to grrS.000.000.000 was signed into law today by President Truman. Animal Craclccrs P WAREEN GOODRICH T fan dancers cleaned mm oaf o sfocfc now T m otng after the balloon dan' err trade" . . evolve new processes or making alumina the raw material for aluminum. The alumina is a pow der obtained from clay after ex haustive chemical processes, and is "even purer than many me- idtcinal chemical.' Seyfried de clared. Made laU Alaaa Crystals Mott of the clay lias been brought in from Washington state. Cleansing and filtering pi resea i educe it to alum crystals, with the product then being channeled either for use as alum ina or for ammonium sulphate ( fertilizer ) . Several tons of alumina daily are now being produced, but so ; far as ascertainable there now are no plans to Mep up produc tion to the once-contemplated ca pacity of 50 tons daily. Present production is being stored. Fa tore Matter of Conjecture The alumina plant recently was given a new lease on life by the recontruction finance corpora tion, to permit production of am monium sulphate for fertilizer until next January I Around 200 tons of fertilizer are now being made each day. Plant employment approxi mates 225. With alumina experiments now having been proven successful, but with war-time need no long er urgent, the ultimate future of the Salem plant is only tonjc tural, officials said Wednesday CPA Rejects Sulem Building H. E. Rohland's application for per mission to build a $11,741 store building in Salem was re jected by the civilian production administration Wednesday, it was reported from Portland. R oh land now operates a department store at 1981 N. Capitol st. Also rejected were a request for building a $22,000 poultry building in Albany, filed by Ray W. Archer and E. D. Heyarly. and application for a $40,000 high school at Wheatland, filed by Western Mennonite School. Weather May Delay A-Test ABOARD USS PANAMINT. Thursday. June 27-OP)-Haze, clouds and rainsqualls led scien tists aboard the Panamint to pre dict possible postponement of the atomic test, as they sighted the Marshall islands this morning. The observation ships Pana mint. Blue Ridge and Appalachian are due at Kwajalein at dawn to morrow and will proceed toward Bikini, site of the July 1 test, the same day. Zoning Commission May Get Two New Requests for Changes Request for two more city zone changes may reach the planning and zoning commission tonight when the group convenes at t p.m. in city hall to conduct a public hearing on the proposed change from zone II to III at State and 14th streets. Petitions were filed Wednes day with the city recorder, seek ing to establish business zones (class III) that would permit the Electric Cleaners on Highland avenue between 5th and Church street! and the Lester DeLapp truck service to expand their facilities. NINETY-SIXTH YEAR 12 Vets Seek Stronger Labor Bill Spanish War VeteransEnd Encampment A demand from Oregon United Spanish War Veterans that labor unions be incorporated under fed eral law was on record today. In closing hours of the 38th annual encampment, the "boys of '98" unanimously adopted a resolution condemning as "disloyal and sub versive John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers. A. F. Whit ney of the Brotherhood of Rail road Trainmen.- Alramey John son of the Brotherhood of Loco motive Engineers. Joe Curran of the National Maritime union and Harry Bridges of the CIO long shoremen. The resolution, directed to de partment commanders of the American Legion. Veterans of Foreim Wars and Disabled Amer ican Veterans, asks thee organi zations to Join the USWV in petitioning congress for legislation to force "all labor organization, associations andor corporations, whose activities are essential to the welfare of the nation" to be incorporated and to require that officers and members of such or ganizations and officers and stockholders of such corporations be liable under both civil and criminal law "for jeopai dizing the public safety." Express Appreciation In another resolution, the en campment asked Governor Snell to integrate the emiloment set -vice with the Mate department of veterans' affairs when it is re turned to the state Hesoluttons expressing appreciation to the Elks club, where most of the ses sions were held, the Elsinore the atre, where Joint meetings of vet erans and auxiliary were conduct ed, to host organizations, chur ches and newspapers. Statesman employes were de lighted with the special "note of appreciation" sounded by the USWV band. Ranging in age from 62 (one member lied about his age to Join the army in 1898) to 80 years, the band personnel has played In a variety of military organizations befoie getting to gether as a veterans' group. Cervalli Chosen Curvallis was chosen as the site for the 1947 encampment, with the date to be set later. F. W. Humphreys. Oregon City, who was elected state command er Wednesday without opposition, was chtn-en delegate to the USWV national encampment in Milwau kee. In the only contested race Alfred L. Marnman won by three votes over Carl Thompson for state inspector. Both are from Portland. f Other new officers are F. M. Rich,- Poitland. senior vice com mander; and John Simmons, Klamath Falls, junior ice com mander. New officers of the auxiliary installed at Joint services with the veterans, are Zidonia Quick. Portland, state president: Austia Barnesberg. Klamath Falls, sen ior vice president; and Lena Veach, Eugene, Junior vice presi dent. Fan-Makers Named New officers of the Military Or der of the Serpent, fun-making branch of the organization, are J. D. Carleton, Portland, grand Gu Gu Grandississimo: Bob Carter, Azalea. Grand Datto; Mark Rolf son. Portland, Erick Anderson. Newport, Guy Lewis, .Newport. Frank Pliska. Albany, Slick and Slimy Keepers of the Ophidian. Members of the Salem volun teer company of the 2nd Oregon regiment held theirflrjt reunion since the Spanish war. Only 30 of the 108 original members are still living. The delegates refused to ap prove a resolution for increase of Spanish war pensions because the question is being studied by the national organization. They approved a resolution asking con gress to order the navy to re condition the c4d Battleship Ore gon and iet urn it to its berth In the Willamette river in Portland The Electric Cleaners project would change a SO by 50 plot from zone I to III. The DeLapp project would require change from II to III of a small tri angular plot at the north city limits south of Locust and east of Myrtle streets, adjacent to the Paulus Bros, warehouse property. Several remonstrances have been filed with the city in pro test to the proposed change sou ght by Mrs. Elizabeth F. Marcus at 14th and State streets where erection of a service station on the northeast corner is contemplated. PAGES vd"s (LPs Woft 3 --a r r P& HBdDD FBDfltoMsteir Spanish Question Unsettled NEW YORK. June 28 -Soviet Russia invoked the veto three times tonight during a stormy and confused session of the Uni ted Nations security council which ended in a complete dead lock on the future status of the Spanish question. After almost six hours of the bitterest debate ever heard at the council table, the weary dele gates gave up their efforts to tied a formula defining the terms under which the case would be kept on the agenda. Council Adjourns The council adjourned subject to call of the president after the veto of Soviet Delegate Andrei A. Gromyko had blocked action on proposals offered by Austra lian Delegate Herbert V. Evatt and the delegates had rejected subsequent suggestions of Gro myko. This left the exact status un clear In the case based on Po land's charges that the Franco regime threatens world peace Evatt said, however, that the Is sue was still on the agenda and that the "moral condemnation" of the Franco government Still stands. Reds Black Motion The council gave up its efforts, for the present at least, after Gro myko used the veto for the third time to block a motion by Evatt providing that the case be kept on the agenda "without prejudice to the rights' of the general as sembly to take up the case later. Firm's Cherry Pack 2i Times Previous Year Kelley Farquhar & Co tins season will pack two and a half times as many cherries as last year, officials of the company stated Wednesday. The management made it plain that despite reports of a barrel shortage, the big cherry crop of this season waa anticipated and a surplus of barrels accumulated well in adv ance of packing time. Cherries still are beirig taken from all growers to whom the company has made commitments and by the time alt are packed the total will be 250 per cent of last year's, it was announced. In order to fill their commit ments, however, it has been nec essary to turn away pome inde pendent growers who have brought in cherries, officials said. They estimated Wednesday that the amount or . cherries already packed is 150 per cent of last year's total. Kelley Farquhar takes cherries only for brining by the barrel, not for canning. Willamette U. May Hold Night Classes If Vets Subscribe President G. Herbert Smith of Willamette university told Mar ion county veterans' service com mittee officials Wednesday that night school courses may be held at the university next fall If vet erans indicate the need. A sub-committee of the vets' group was assured by President Smith that action definitely will be taken to set up night classes next fall if veterans want them. On the three-man committee are H. C. Saalfeld, Marion county veterans' service officer; Wayne Smith, training officer for the Salem office of the veterans ad ministration, and Don Good, contact officer for the state de partment of veterans' affairs. Veterans interested ara advised to contact any of the three com mitteemen. LORAIN E SAl'L WINS CORVALLIS. June 26- P) -Loraine Saul, Marion county, won the original class in the 4-H club poster contest, and her poster was on display at the 4-H summer ses sion today. 3 JEWS SENTENCED JERUSALEM, June 27 A military court today sentenced 30 members of the militant Jewish underground organization Irgun Zvai Leumi to 15 years imprison ment for carrying firearms and explosives. POUNDBD 1651 The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Ore- Thursday. Yosuke Malsuoka Dies, Former State Resident TOKYO. Thursday, June 27-(P)-The death of American-educated Yosuke Matsuoka, former foreign minister was announced Yosuke MaUaoka today by the international tribun al before which he was on trial with 27 other accused war crim inals. The 66-year-old defendant ForreNtal Wary Of Merger Plan WASHINGTON. Jur Secretary of the Navy? Forres tal. in a cagily-worded letter, said today he would help attain the "objectives" of President Truman's army-navy merger plan but Capitol Hill looked for plenty of controversy about the specific details. Forrestal's letter to the presi dent, dated Monday ii releas ed by the White House today, was not nearly so unreserved as Secretary of War Patterson's June 18 letter pledging "whole hearted support." Little Traee of Missing Cons State police and other authori ties followed slim leads Wednes day night, but no trace ejf the three escaped convicts who : fled from the state prison annex Tues day afternoon developed. - Closely checked were two' re ports of stolen automobiles in the vicinity Tuesday night. Clifford Willard reported a car taken from his garage In Aumsville and Fred O. Peter, route 2, reported a car stolen from Lebanon. The missing convicts are La Verne F. Keller, 21. Frederick E. Cleveland, 25, and Alfred W. Strain, 26, all short-termers. Blaze Guts Attic of Home Fire gutted the attic and up stairs rooms of Mrs. Catherine D. Weiss' home at 1615 D st. Wed nesday evening. City firemen from the east Salem and central stations brought the blaze under control after pouring water Into the flaming house for nearly an hour. Flames and smo.e enveloped the roof as firemen were called from the nearby east Salem fire house about 7 p m. Two pumper crews fought the fire. Damage was considerable but no immediate estimate of the loss was made. Much of the furniture was removed to safety by neigh bors. Mrs. Weiss, a widow, lives there alone. VA Calls Meeting of Slaytoii, Sublimity Veta Veterans of World war II liv ing on farms in the Stayton and Sublimity areas are Invited to a meeting at the Stayton city hall tonight at 8 o'clock. Representa tives of the veterans administra tion and the state division of vo cational education will discuss the new agricultural training pro gram for veterans. The Weather Max. Mm Preclp. SaJcm . 5 Portland San Francisco 1 Chicago M New York 92 44 trace at cn u oo 5 SO 7 .00 Willamette river -9 feet. FORECAST (from US. weather bu reau, McNary field. Salem): Partly cloudy today, tonight. Frequent light showers. Highest temperature S3 degrees. w : ."-ejsiP-":- -ep.- J "'" ' nv. owio A - ; f -if -j ttemai June 27. 1946 died in the isolation ward of To kyo Imperial university hospital. He had been suffering from tu berculosis, arthritis and other ail ments. The tribunal president. Sir William Webb, announced that Matsuoka's name would be stricken from the indictment as a result of his death, an3 all charges removed. Matsuoka was a one-time resi dent of Oregon. In 1893 he at tended Atkinson grammar school in Portland, and in 1902 graduat ed from the University of Oregon law school with honors. His last visit to Oregon was in 1933, the same year he strode from the League of Nations chambers in firotest over the League's hand ing of the Sino-Japanese con flict. Matsuoka wrote two newspa per articles, for an Oregon news paper in 1934, one of which wasJ prophetic. He wrote: "Japan has proclaimed to the world that she regards with dis favor the activities of western nations in China which tend to thwart the recovery and devel opment of friendship between China and herself and the main tenance of law and order in the Far East." Highway 99E To Be Widened At Woodburn A bid of $139,892 by Warren Northwest, Inc.. for widening 1.18 miles of the Woodburn section of Highway 99E was opened Wed nesday by the state highway commission in Portland and pass ed on to the state highway engi neer with power to award the contract. Several project bids were re jected as excessively high. In cluding a $1,057,370 bid by Gen eral Construction Seattle, for straightening the CfHmbia river highway by six miles oK roadbed embankment from Troufldale to Wahkeena Creek. Tentative approval was given a $413,000 widening project for 99E between Canby and Oregon City and a $300,000 bridge at In dependence where only ferry ser vice now connects with the South River road into Salem. Salem Rents Said pSeaiidaP "The rent situation in Salem is rapidly approaching a national scandal" and national OPA rent control should be established here, or if not available at once, local control should be set up, chapter 27 of the Oregon State Employes association has notified the Salem city council. "Ministers, returned veterans, state employes and business men not Interested in renting or selling real estate" are suggested for lo cal board personnel. ? The resolution for chapter 27, is comprised by state printing de partment personnel, further sug gests that employes of firms em ploying five or more persons be required to report any rent raises which hava occurred since remov al of rent controls (a local board, not OPA, functioned here during the war), and that landlords be required to show justification for such increases. Half of Nation's Butcher Shops Closed by U. S. Meat Shortage By the Associated Press The severest fresh meat short age of modern times grew worse yesterday. It hit the legitimate butcher shops, black market and restau rants. The thin run of livestock to market, already at a record low, dronned off still further as the senate debated the fate of the OPA extension bill. A survey of the nation's cities brought from everywhere the same report: "Uttie or no iresn meat." In some cities, even . cold nit were hard to find in normal channels. Poultry and fish, how ever, were relatively plentiful. Tha National Assooiauon oi Re No. 78 ToinrQ w r LDin) 0 'Daniel Threatens Long Talk WASHINGTON, June 26 -(yp) Senator O'Daniel (D-Tex) threat ened a filibuster today to pie vent passage of the OPA exten sion bill before the present act dies Sunday midnight, "I think it would be swell,", he told a reporter, "if the American people could wake up Monday morning under the American form of government they've been out from under so long." O'Daniel's desk was piled high with papers . apparently ma terial for a long, long speech and he said that "more will be arriving if its needed. I hope to get help if its necessary." Failure to enact the OPA bill before the deadline would cause all price and rent controls - to lapse. They could be reinstated again when the measure finally is passed. But O'Daniel's filibuster would thwart a strategy urged upon President Truman by labor lead ers and others. This is to veto the OPA bill, with its limitations on the agency's jKiwers, in the hote that congress would then approve before Sunday an emerg ency measure continuing the OPA as Is. Democratic Leader Barkley (Ky) recommended the measure to the senate today as "the best bill possible under the circum stances." Payrolls Take 1.3.6 Jump in Marion County Marion county payrolls report ed to the state unemployment compensation commission were" 13.6 per cent higher in the first quarter of this year than In the corresponding period last year, commission officials reported! Wednesday. Their,. report showed also t&at the total reported payroll In uary, February and March rpre snted a 7 per cent decline from tha payroll of the preceding quar ter. The first quarter payroll was listed as $5,662,983. Multnomah county's 38 per cen payroll decreasefrojj. a year ago, however fereagnT the statewide payroll comparison down to a 23.6 per cent decrease from iast year's first quarter. Compared with last' year's first quarter, Clackamas county gained 20 per cent. Linn gained 2.8 per cent, Polk 3.5 per cent and Yam hill, .5 per cent. Ninth Baseball Player Dies SEATTLE, June 26-;P)-Chris-tian Hartje, 30-year-old on Spo kane's Western International lea gue baseball team, died tonight in a Seattle hospital to raise to nine the number of players killed or fatally injured in the crash of the team's - chartered bus from the Snoqualmie pass highway In the Cascades Monday night. State police patrol officials said a gasoline station attendant across the Cascades from the wreck scene told of an automo bile in which passengers spoke of having sideswiped a bus-. The at tendant, however, was uncertain of the last digit in the license number. tailers reported half the nation's butcher shops had closed their doors. Meat supply in Salem markets is not expected to show much im provement by week's end, but the $lim supply at present is better by comparison than the supply In most cities throughout the coun try. The Midget market reopened this week but predicts a sellout of its OPA quota- of meat for the July 1-15 period in three days. McDowell's market is closing each day as soon as its daily quota is sold. In most markets there is veal, lamb and luncheon meats available, but beef is scarce. Price 5c Treble Damages Sought Prielices SaiI Interfering With. Construction SAN FRANCISCO. June 261- -The government tod3ysued 40 far eastern lumber companies i seeking a total of $9.0 13.530 in treble damages for a'-lcged OPA. violation resulting in "artificial lumber shortages" and "exorbi tant charges" flo contractors and . builders all over the country. OPA said it i was the first mas legal action to bring into the optn hindering the efforts of business- men and homeseekers, including veterans, who have been bargain ing desperately to obtain bvildrrg; materials. - ? . Involved are some 65,649,123 beard feet of lumber. The mils were filed simultane - ously in U. S. district court in San Francis o, Lcs AngeIrar.J Sacramento, in California; Phoe nix, Arizona; Seattle, Spokane and Tacoma, in Washington, and m I five Oregon courts. ' - Largest single suit was. filed at : Tacoma, Wash., against the Twin Harbors Lumber Co.. of Aberdeen, j Wash. There, the OPA sought un , specified damages which it esti- mated to run to 525,000. j Oregon Firm " . , " ! One other major suit seeks I $370,000 treble damage-against ! R. G. Robbins Lumber Co , of Portland, Ore. ' OPA said the suits were the climax to a long standing attempt by congress to get to the bottom of a lumber bottleneck that has been delaying the nation's post war rebuilding program. In an effort to head off any criticism that "OPA is intererr ing with recognized business prac tices," Lumber Enforcement Chief Ralph Colub said: Tricky EvMlena' '"It is of vital concern to tha government tht the several new ly develoed type of evi'-n be halted and that the morjt is sues involved in the triiky eva sion we charge be male a RUt Golub listed as some of the alleged "rackets" the fallowing: 1. The diversion of lumber; I. C, the shipment of lumber to the ' shipper himwelf at lummy addresses, to be held for bar- gaining. ' 2. Re-saw lumber without re grading. 3. Refusing to produce standard size lumber such as 2x4't and turning out exclusively 2x4 14 which must then be remiliedat the cojt of the building contrac?". ' The fractional odd-size in thin case Is traditionally used chiefly for barge building and brings 111 more per thousand feet. - 4. Upgrading of materials. 5. Charging customers for more lumber than was actually de livered. 6. Unlicen?ed retail sales. 7. Flagrtint over-ceiling sales. 8 Cutting short lengths. (Additional details on parfe I . School District ote Confirmed Warren Calloway was elected zone three director of the Marion county non-high school district, a canvass of the June 17 vote by the board at It meeting Wednes day showed. Raymond P. Smith, route 2, Woodburn, was named to serve out the unexpired term of Mlcheal Weinacht who has moved out of zone I. Earnest Werner of Central Howell is chairman of the board which met in the office of Agnes Booth, school superintendent. The budget was accepted as recom mended. It provides for expendi tures of $127,065. All property in the county not in a high school district is in cluded In the non-h i g h school district Redin Defense Denies Charge SEATTLE, June 26-UP-The defense contended there is "not a scintilla of truth" in espionage charges against 30-year-old Nico lai Redin as the first day of the soviet naval officer's trial ended with Federal Judge Lloyd Black denying motions for dismissal ot the case. The government's key witne, Herbert Kennedy, a shipyard en gineer, took the stand just as the day's session ended too late for testimony the prosecution con tends will prove Redin conspired to obtain secret information from Kennedy about the United States destroyer tender Yellowstone. Hi' i j Our Senators lis lost