J 2 The Ore. Statesman, Salem, Engineer Saves Throwing Cans MALT EN, aCass., July wu a winr.inc pitcher tonight. Tracred thh-deep by the R t &Urt in a factory, early y-. t remember to make 30 throws for his life. TUe 3C:h throw - - a tin ran White Russian Fear Claimed By Lt. Redin ; SKATTTX, Jwly (A. -I mpli-c-..j tr.t tuow Wlute Ru.-Min ; ?-i,reeit. e nvtfl have been I 1 U ee." Lieut Nir.U: CI. Re- , . i . I. Htuta Of eJlMHJe 3I1U H'll- ! J v wrie brHftit into hi. ml by t.it counsel tolav. i I x i i-i css-eKfiufiitifin. Chief; J-iftant U.S. Attorney Allan P rr.erny aed Relin about vc.n 4nhUi& re had h.i with Byron J r r ur!. former newspaperman, I 4- the Joir.irud fcwie Pneiey had quoted Johnirrud 1 Uvm E.-ked Red-n "Don't you f ir.fc thst the co-conipiratoi to br r-mtd is Herbei t Kennedy''"'; D.dr I you reply: 'Well it could ! l- wtl.erx"" Pomerujr jked. Th ror.ersation took place, P..m-Ky n.id, bWoie the name of Keriijr was made public with t'.e DrflK tmenU Tr ? year-old Russian naval cf'.r den.ed he made any tilth : T-'y arwl from Ute witness stand a i iim d Pi mer)f of ordering J hr.yrur! tc say it JiptrfLTi-d was on the stand as a g Afrnirim! witues briefly last ee I'r.der re - direct examination, j Av.iny TraCy E Clnffin, Seattle, l.'.'uftit i.p Retlin's conversation v .th .Fohnjrud and Hked," CfUt mu think that the only p"iufc.k prty on wh.m th gov f rnnrft eculd rely a r -ron?pir-a'.-r i..id be sn- Whilf Kui--ar trying to get jrou" The iutenant replied "That a .!!." A k rr. mute previyu-!y he a.M u-t;f.d as a conviv officer rpi"t.r.' the soviet purrhas i:. i mm si on he had had trou l , with the White Kn.viri nrgan- ! 'it K4I Bin U, msinir In China Seen NANKING, Wednesday. July 10 P -( trament sources charged t -ia thii Chinese communit ; had rf vamped their military com miri it) preparation for "a full- dre upntmg on a national n j Tii rrr.munists, these sources e t a t f r d. were concentrating jt:.P? ar.d munitions in an area ex: t iling from the Yangtze riv er yithwtrd into Manchuria j T. i h-argei came as both jides cjrtcfhi that truce negotiations iin hd brukeu d-jwn. At the -a time, new clashes were re f rlKt jc north and central pro- i . , MAfcYIK COOK HURT Mairir Cook, 550 N Summer i: i !itH to Salem Leacone l:-Ui) ttrly this morning for trf?lrren a hip mj-jry incur rerf Hhilr a: work in Oregon Pulp arirt Fifr Co shortly after mid II 1 F-r?t aid n.lVlire officers v r rur called said h picic of Ji ml-r hid fallen on C k. 2 ( AKS COLLIDE 'kiy :-nder dmag.; resulted ff.'rr, ;;.:t-e-car coliisi n Moixiay rit-ni.f it. :he 4tW bli k of North H ki, j-tit-tt Pilice ilei:tifit- the rj:f a Hannah it B-ikt r. 1520 N'k 1-iiMii. . C M Seniiiitt, Si4 MiJ! t and Roselle C. t i one. KIT A ' rtmerciil t Bl IHiFT APPROVED iPOPTLAJVD, Juty 9 Nine-t-t-n tfMml J.lltrs was Lui-lt--l ty :r.e Orettttn Dury Pro fl li f I . t rruri?jjiiori, a governor- iJHjoiUt; grwp, for promotion of cry priucls in Cregwi m 1946 4" i Gas on Stomach Rdiea4 ia S Baiti mr aovkla yw mmomy back yr m Ml ram mmmr Sarfe rtnar, 4 kottl 1 ; starts Taday! Ovens $.45 A BeI drAdano . Witia Geae Tierney Jean Uodiak CO-FEATURE e Hspakmg Caasidy " L 1 M'B E RJ A C K Wiairflaiiiaia LADIES! Dor. t rzdt until last minuto for remodeling and re- pairing of your fur garrr.er.fs. Firing them in now and have Jjtrc whan you want them. Fre insurad storage oft all Jure c!:ered or renvn'd. "fur work from a patch to a new garment Bemardty, Room 2 Downstairs, 1st Phone 21995 Ore- Wednesday July 10, 1H8 Own Life by at Wall Switch 9-;p)-Ceorge Ross, 48-year-old engineer, grinding rollers of a conveyor belt, today fought off pain for a time he aimed like the others at a push-but ton electric wall switch six feet away - - scored a bullseye, shut ting off the power and stopping the rollers. Maiden hospital authorities re ported Ross as "comfortable" to night and said he had a good chance of recovery without am p citation. Ross' wife, Laura, said she talk ed to George "just for a minute at the hospital. "He said he thought he got caught about three o clock but he; fainted and doesn't remember." Fauna Yelling for Help Police Sergt. Willia Butler said his detail found Ross, With the conveyor stopped and yelling for help, about 5:25 a. m. (EDT), on the third floor of the Potter Drug and Chemical company Dumped around him, Butler said were the cans spilled from the conveyor belt which Ross bad cu thrrfugh with a jackknife Jn try ing to free his mangled legs. Butler said the engineer had twisted to support himself with one hand on the floor whije with the other he hurled tin cans in his miss and try-again-for-life pitching. Cause I'ndetermined It was not determined how Ross was dragged into the machine, recently installed to move objects from floor to floor of the plant. Butler said police were called by a neighbor who heard Ross' shouts but was unable to get into the . factory. nescuers worked for half an hour to free Ross, Butler said, and the engineer smoked a cigarette and directed the work In the police ambulance he fainted. Hughes Tried To Save Plane LOS ANGELES. July 9-JF)-F'rom a hospital bed where he is fighting tenaciously for life, How aid Hughes told business associ ates today he knew he was in 1 trouble half an hour before his ex perimental reconnaissance plane i crashed Sunday on its maiden I test flight, but decided o go down with the ship, trying Uj save it rrom demolition. I The associates, who requested that their names be not used, said , the wealthy flier-film producer told them that approximately $8,000,000 costs and months of re search were at stake and for that reason he chose to disregard all personal danger and attempt to keep the faltering plane aloft. There was a parachute aboard, but Hughes did not attempt to use it after power failure devel oped, his associates said. , The flier's condition tonight was described as "still critical.'? Oregon Picked For Priorities PORTLAND. July 9 -(P)Ore-on was crKen today as the only Mate in the nation to receive ipecial cement priorities for vet erans' homes. The civilian production adminis tration said builders who were ready to pour cement for veterans homes the first of this month may apply for priorities. Later, the preferences will be extended to other veterans' housing. The CPA said the cement short age was worse here than eLsa where in the country. RIVERS. HARBOR BILL VOTED WASHINGTON, July 9(yp Only a final senate vote on amendments remained today to send a billion dollar rivers' and harbors bill to the White House The amendments were approved by the house after conferees aban doned a senate proposal to in crease from $55,000,000 to 1150, 000.000 an initial authorization for a $300,000,000 navigation j and flood control program in the Ar kansas river valley. TEMPLETON WELFARE HEAD Appointment of Herbert ' A. Templeton, Portland, as chair man of the Multnomah county public welfare commission, : was , announced by Gov. Earl Shell here Tuesday. Templeton 'suc ceeds C. C. Keeney, Portland, who has resigned from the commis sion. He will serve a four year term. BAKERY STRIKE LOOMS : PORTLAND, July SMP) -Employer and union representatives failed today to reach agreement in a vwsge dispute which might set off a strike in Portland bak eries. Tailor Furrier NatL Bank Bldg Iff - MM . munitions ificu Woe Heard By Patterson ! (Story Also on Page 1) - : WASHINGTON, July -(JP-Secretary of War Patterson today testified that he listened to com plaints of Rep. May (D-Ky) con cern i n g the Illinois munitions makers' troubles during the war. He acknowledged that May had; complained to him over a war: production board order halt ing work on a contract held by Batavia Metal Products company, another of the associated firms, and? that he had a subordinate look into It. He declared that he had in tervened with the war manpower commission to obtain additional labor for Batavia, emphasizlnf this was don only to get shells for a mounting offensive In Eur ope. . He denied that May had asked him for, or that he had ordered, award of a big shell contract to Batavia. He termed this "idle gossip and utterly untrue. E-Award Approved Patterson stated that he had approved an army-navy -a. award for Batavia about wmcn May had inquired. He insisted that he did so only after subor dinates informed him that Bata via had exceeded production schedules. "I am not in the business of doing favors for anyone, Patter-f. son told the committee sharply at one point. Committee members focused chief attention upon an order freezing payments to Erie Basin issued over Pattersons signature on Sept. .6, 1945. George H. Knutson, a member of the war department price ad justment board, testified earlier in the day that the order originally froze all of the Drofits. but was modified a week later to permit payment of $723,000. Knutson said the modified order was designed to cover repayment of $800,000 which the government expected to collect through renegotiation and $974,000 which the government had advanced to Erie. Phone Talk Introduced Senator Mitchell (D-Wash) read nto the record a transcript of a telephone conversation between Henry Garsson, Batavia official and Col. Maurice Hirsch of the war department .general staff corps referring to the- freeze order In yvhich Garsson repeatedly men tioned his conversation with Pat terson. Patterson said that a "few days' after Issuance of the original freeze order, May, chairman of the in fluential house military commit tee, telephoned asking him to come to his office and he did so. Patter son then was undersecretary or war in charge of production. He related that he met two men, neither of whom he could idenT tffy, in May's Office. He expressed belief that one of them might have been Henry Garsson, who has been described by army officers a the 'brain" behind development of the Illinois combine. Patterson said that May him self "didn't have much to say bout : the freeze order, but that the two men claimed that it would prevent them from getting into civilian production." ane Lost April 26 Found SEATTLE July 9 .--Searchers today found the wrecked fuse lage and the remains of six occu pants of a Cessna two - engine plane that disappeared in the Cas cade mountains April 28. The twisted wreck was found three ; miles southwest of Lake Keechelus, east of Snoqualmie pass. The search was intensified dur ing the past three days after fish ermen found pieces of it strewn through the woods." The searching party reported all in the plane died almost instantly WHEAT HARVEST BEGINS PENDLETON, July 9-(JP)-Umatilla county has harvested its first 1948 wheat, with a yield of 35 :to" 40 bushels per acre. The first harvest was from State Sen Carl Engdahl's ranch. Five other ranfcher will be cutting wheat tomorrow. two mniis uom iostoi.. no ilcjjciio it in loin WW! ) X lairf SISTERS bdsttiti CO-HIT! Dangerous Advent are! Was. Gargaa fas "HOT CARGO' Airpl 'ajaal"""1-114 - V,'- .'TTTTfl 1UJU Thomas Edison's Long-Locked Roll-Top Desk WEST ORANGE, N. J- July 9. (TP) The heavy, roll-top desk at which Thomas Alva Edison worked, sealed sine the Inven tor's death in 1931, is to be open ad in a few weeks. The twin locks on the old fashioned desk were turned 15 years ago by members of Edi son's family, and the notes and records the inventor was working on at his death have lain undis turbed. The new Thomas Alva Edi son Foundation, Inc., now plans to open the desk and examine its hoard of documents. There may be new devices whose de velopment was halted with the death of the inventor. There may be inventions be was not prepared to give to the world, or a message to be dis Portland Food Mart Pickets To Start Walk PORTLAND, Ore., July 9.-(P)- Picketing of food markets here where prices have been raised "excessively" will begin Thursday morning, the Portland anti-inflation committee announced tonight. Leroy Hersh, chairman of the group sponsored by the' American veterans committee and support ed by vote of the CIO industrial union council tonight, said a mass meeting also would be held here Friday night to organize opposi tion to higher prices. Ron Roley, president of the CIO union council, declared the union would urge voters to "get a new line-up in congress," and said con gressmen who have helped scuttle price control have "double-cross ed American workingmen by em asculating the one bulwark against Inflation." Meat Drop by Fall Predicted WASHINGTON, July 9 -AJT)-The agriculture department said, today retail meat prices would be likely to settle down by fall to an average of 15 to 20 per cent above former OPA ceilings if price controls are not reestab lished. Critics of the OPA have con tended that black market prices of meats were in many cases as much as 50 per cent above ceil ings in effect before the price agency expired June 10. Tending to bring prices down would be the increased market ings of cattle and hogs in the fall marketings which normally reach a peak in mid-winter. mr h i&'SXcJS V I f- I I '' f iMVv ia kel, arte i kkitei vi.Vv: mA mz Wx ,MO' i - - : --siHi,-Tirt r miff- ni.fi. i 1 1 y QDfsj CO ' 1 ' A rticcF 1 1VE L0V1BLE i!!!lILS . . A y all signs pdiKifi n 1 1 ) 5lX?, C ) zr-id$ V TO FUN Ml Ah MV ALL SIGNS POINTi n IV , to fun nJ. Chas. Starrete In "FRONTIER GUN LAW to Be Opened closed long after his death. If the desk yields nothing else, lt should produce valuable add! tions to what already is known of Edison from among the sheafs of papers In his own hand writ lng. Two New York spiritualists nave said that the desk con tains a hidden message to the world. The message, they say, is Inside a fountain pen. Norman R. Speiden, curator of the Edison library, said he doubts the fountain pen prediction, be cause Edison rarely used a pen. preferring pencils. However, no one has examined the desk since Oct. 1$, 1931, when Edison died. It was the In ventor's personal sanctum, and lt was rarely violated during his lifetime. Revenues Exceed Budget Estimate Interest revenues of the state treasury department for the cur rent biennium will aggregate ap proximately $380,000 against a budget estimate of $170,000, Stat Treasurer Leslie M. Scott report ed here Tuesday. Payments for the care of in sane at the two Oregon state hos pitals also were expected to ex ceed the estimates, Roy Mills, sec retary of the state board of con trol announced. GOP Victory Says Stassen MINNEAPOLIS, July t. -(P)-Harold E. Stassen. former Minne sota governor, today aaw in the Minnesota primary election results a decisive victory for the "pro gressive republican policies" he himself Is espousing in his all but formal campaign for the 1948 re publican nomination for president. Others interpreted nomination of Gov. Edward J. Thye as republi can candiate for U. S. senator and Luther W. Youngdahl for governor as strengthening Stassen's national bid. as strong personal tributes to the winning candidates, and as signalizing the death of isolation ism in Minnesota. "The primary election results. said Stassen at a press conference today, "represent a victory for a forward looking domestic program with a new labor policy, vigorous support of the United Nations, and world cooperation and con tinuation of good and efficient government in Minnesota. WAR PLANT TO EXPAND PORTLAND, Ore.. July 9-(P- A $500,000 expansion program of Western Wax Paper company plant here the next two years was announced today by the Crown- Zellerbach Corp. division. , n it t k .. I Big 4 Clash on Disarmament Treaty Plan By Joseph Dyaaa PARIS. July 9 -oP- Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov and Secre tary of State James F. Byrnes clashed today over America's pro posed 25-year German disarma ment treaty, informants reported. Byrnes asked that the special deputies be named now to con sider all phases of the German problem for a report to the next series, of meetings by the four power foreign ministers, presum ably next autumn. French and American Informants said there was no Immediate rnponw from the other ministers. In the course of an hour-long statement assailing this American proposal, Molotov today accused Britain, France and the United States of breaking the Potsdam accord on German reparations to the Soviet Union. According to American infor mants, Molotov also branded the suggested 25-year treaty to pre vent rearmament of the Reich as wholly inadequate." The Byrnes proposal does not guarantee de militarization of German war in dustry or the political denazifi cation of the Reich, the Soviet foreign minister said. Molotov added that it would not insure against a rebirth of a spirit of aggression in Germany. Molotov said, such a treaty to be effective should be in force for at least 40 years. In reply Byrnes accused Rus sia of violating the Potsdam ac cord by making levies which were too large on German industry. He pointed out that under the Pots dam agreement reparations weie j to be limited to a size which i would permit Germany to exist without outside help. j Meanwhile, the French gvrrn- , merit issued formal in itautxis to . 17 other allied nations for the general European peace confer ence here July 29, and the minis ters asked the United Nations tn postpone its general assembly sea- ' son in New Yolk until Sept 23' to allow Ume for diplomats to at- ( tend the Paris conference. ' o PHONE 34C7 MATINEE DAILY FROM 1 r.M. TOIIOBnOW! ft in all TIDDII Tae fill n sty 9 ea SNOOPY CO-HIT! JUST A aS I al f a - J I r 3 Survivors Of Auto Crash Said Improved Three survivors of the auto col lision whlrh killed four teen-age valley residents at the t'hemawa- North Howell Intersection Sun- i day were reported in improving condition late Tuesday. Raymond C. Roth of Central Howell, who im-urred a bnken leg and abrasions, was in "fine condition at Salem General hos pital. He was driver of the 'coupe in which the four killed were passengers. Mrs. Darcy Drennan, route 3. Salem, was in "good" condition at the Silverton hospital and ex pected to be released in a few days. Darcy Irr nan. her himband and driver of a panel tru k with which the coupe collided, was "resting belter" at Veterans his pital, Portland. Extent of his in juries was not diM'tcMcd. but he had been described in serious con dition Monday. urn rf s nTT OPENS :4S TM. NOWI EERY THRILLS! ass Co-Feature! LVNNE ROBERTS "GIRLS OF THE BIG HOI SE" UI:H:h.rS', OPENS ;4 TM. Nowl Action! Thrills! Co-Featore! Bob Steele "NAVAJO TRAIL Tr arc. "rflfj' fjr mm im iVi - e As BeaulLfiil ai a Disney Feaiure Come lo Life! Filmed iha Glowing Colors of Naiart'i Wonderland! SB MRettlNOlV J tair LOT OF FUN! MR OrIEN Tte Srog WW are- I - " oMs e WooeWI I I Cane Fruft$ Board Meet Po8tnbned The meeting hf tlr Oregon Irene fruits control biard!aet for Wed nesday night to. fix minimum pri ces on rane berries j for thIS4 seowi. has been pMtpmed pun til Thursday, board officials announ ced lunAmj. !j j Boy sen berries were said to be seltjing at from 20 to 22 rents a pound on the present market amd loganberries and i j o u n g berries around 27 rents, : Whatever Is the prevailing ran nery price probably ! will bei the board s price. ii , TOC'KPILES OKEIir.O WASHINGTON. July M4V Legislation authorizing the gov- eminent to build up stockpiles of strategic and rriUcal ma tn is is over the nest five years cl-sred the senate today and, went M the: 1 While House. BCMPidor Ekcords How to Give A Ssccesful Parly let lie ia gaag everj aad seta Ike latest aad swweot record. Fvrrreae will nave a weeder fel Unm daaelag a4 lagtag. Meleet jeer record fre leea. Hcidcr's 48 C'oeH ML Pbeae 7Jt ENDS TODAYI (WEDJ Mark Stevene THE DARK CORNER --I Julie BUhop "STRANGE CONQUEST I.L i rn Mil- C0M0K0 LOWE IREKOA OTCE scvcrn nun umnw Nil UTQ . CUNCT CI PLUS! I II LATEST NEWS EVENTS ZERO HOUR AT BOONI FOR ATOMIC BLAST! . . !. PRESI DENT TRUMAN VETOES THE OJ.A- BILL AND PLAINS I THRILLS AS YACHTS RACE! 34 - :tti r-' tPQIH r-..-. NEXT! A STOLEN LI E"