The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 26, 1947, Page 1, Image 1

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    Russia Accepts United States Control of Pacific Island Outposts
Solons Favor Rent Increase
,
Stock Market Declines as New Inflationary Reports Mount
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25-fV
A senate subcommittee voted to
day to raise rents 10 per cent,
while soaring commodity prices
brought talk of "dollar bacon"
in Chicago and scared the New
York stock market into a decline.
American Retail Federation
leaders meeting here said, how
ever, the swing from a seller's
to buyer's market and efforts by
many industry leaders to brin:
lower prices will help alleviate
- new drains on the consumers'
pocketbooks.
Labor department offici;il?
who fit retail and wholesale
Otf
id H H I LSI
wd ana
At the chamber of commerce
Monday. Supt. Frank Bennett
gave a very lucid and fair state
ment of the educational problems
confronting the Salem school dis
trict no. 24 and the adjacent dis
tricts of Marion and Polk coun
ties. An election on the question I
of consolidation occurs on March
11th. Here is a case where every
effort is being made to supply in-
formation but not to sway the
election. As a matter of lact, tne toij tnat jf jt was not issuei by
election has evolved naturally as Mr Truman a competitive state
the people of the various districts f would be issued by Mr.
met together and discussed the i Dewey." (Gov. Thomas E. Dewey
very serious problem that con- : OI New York.)
fronts them
In short, that program is the
growth of population beyond the
housing of the adjacent district
and sometimes beyond their fi
nancial capacity to provide. Sta
tistics show an increase in school
population in the area of about ;
the equivalent of a new grade t
school each year. And this growth
shows no sign of stopping. In
stead, it promises to continue, so
the problem will become more !
acute as time passes.
Bennett made it plain that
schools both inside and outside
the city will cost more money be
cause of the rising level of salar
ies. Consolidation will not stop
that There is some chance for
economy in capital outlay because
if the area can be treated as a
big unit the existing schools may
be continued for the smaller pu
pils and the older pupils trans
ported to say, two junior high
schools. Also, the Salem school
district could
(Continued on Editorial Page)
Guarantee of
Pav Endorsed
By Advisors
Or
WASHINGTON. Feb. 25.--President
Truman's reconversion
advisory board endorsed the guar
anteed wage today as one of a
number of tools which, when em-
ployed together, may build up
national economic stability.
The board of industry and la
bor leaders reported unanimous
ly to the president that the wage
guarantee idea should be corre
lated with other stabilizing fac
tors such as social security, min-
imum wages, anci tax policies, n
said the guarantees should be
worked out between workers and
employers through collective bar-
gaining, without any national leg- j
islation. i
The guaranteed wage is an em- j Wocls illfrfmi N;iIliS
plovers pledge to his workers of! " HUIIlCr)
a fixed amount of work over a j p IIf ,11
given period, often a year. The , VjIUCI OI -1SI
idea is to promise workers in ad- j
vance they can expect to have so j OLYMPIA, Feb. 25 -P- Gov.
much work to do at so much j Wallgren today appointed Lt. Col.
money. i Ensley M. Llewellyn. 41. Tacoma,
Advocates of the p 1 a n - - a 1 as state adjutant general, suc
number of w.ige guarantees have ' ceeding Maj. Gen. Maurice
been in effect for some time - - i Thompson, 68, resigned because
maintain it tends to regularize i cf illness.
production and remove, partially I The governor also revealed that
at least, a fear amonf workers of he will recommend to the war
imminent loss of work. But many Niepartment that Col. Clarence A.
industrialists contend that guar- o?dorff. Spokane attorney, be
antees would commit them to .appointed major general in corn
spend a great deal of money in , mand of the 41st division.
wages to idle workers at some . .
period of slackened demand.
Animal Crackers
By WARREN GOODRICH
w l Tiff-
tv6
"Ugh! The place is full of
bed bus$r
prices into consumer price in
dexes declined to predict what
might happen to food prices in
the next few months. Neverthe
less, some department experts
agreed that the recent highs for
wholesale prices point naturally
to higher retail prices.
At Chicago today. record
marks were reached in commod
ity prices with hogs selling for
$30 a hundred pounds. Cotton got
as high as 35.02 cents a pound
before it broke and wheat futures
for a time were at a 30-year high
of $2.39 a bushel.
In Washington, Maj. Gen.
Palestine
Row Laid
To U. S.
LONDON. Feb. 25 -(A3)- For
eign Secretary Ernest Bevin de
clared today that President Tru
man had "spoiled"' Britain's ne
gotiations on Palestine by insist
ing on issuing a statement during
the United States congressional
election campaign last fall call
ing for the admission of 100,000
Jews into the Holy Land.
Bevin told the house- of corn-
mons that he had
begged" James
j f. Byrnes, then U. S. secretary
Gf state, "that the statement j
; should not be issued, but I was
"I really must point out that in
international affairs I cannot set
tle things if my problem is to
be made the subject of local elec
tions," he said.
The foreign minister said Brit
ain was still willing to make one
more try to settle the Palestine
problem before referring it to the
United Nations. He also asserted
that Arabs could be persuaded to
allow 100,000 Jews to enter the
Holy Land if future immigration
"was to oe determined
elected representatives
by
the
the
of
people of Palestine."
Winston Churchill, originally
scheduled to lead the conserva
tive party's rebuttal, was absent
because of the death of his
brother. Instead, Oliver Stanley,
former colonial secretary, criti
cized Bevin for offering no spe
cific recommendations to the UN.
Cannery Fat
Fryer Burns
Art oil fire which broke out in
the deep fat fryer of the Blue
Lake cannery. West Salem, at 5:45
. p. m. yesterday, was extinguished
after some difficulty by cannery
; workers and Salem firemen using
carbon dioxide sind foam chemi
cal apparatus. Thick smoke at
tracted crowds to the fire scene.
The fryer, used for French fried
potatoes which are later frozen, is
electrically operated. Officials of
the cannery said they thought the'
fire may have started from the i
oil. which was being drained, hit
ting the hot bottom of the tank.
Little damage was reported by of
ficials last night.
Salem firemen yesterday morn
ing extinguished a kitchen wall '
fire at the home of George B.
Rirhfpr In.Sn Rnrl 3iv The fir
started. firemen said, from a box
nf wainvjts that cought fire close
to a cook stove whjle the famiiy
was away
'
Trailways Wins Bus Permit;
New Salem Terminal Planned
Competitive bus service on the ; new buses, and will increase its
Pacific highway and a new bus '. Salem-Portland runs from four at
terminal for Salem appeared as- ' the present time to 10 by mid
sured Tuesday as the public util- i summer. Cooper added,
ities commission granted West The company's application was
Coast Trailways an intrastate ' fought bitterly by the Greyhound
service permit, ending the long lines, which now operates the
fight by the Pacific Greyhound ! only first class intrastate bus
Lines against such a move. : service on the highway in Ore-
The Trailways permit, to start , gon. Greyhound also owns an in-
March 15, supplants their present j
franchise which prohibits them
I from selling tickets between any
two Oregon points.
The company now operates a
ticket office and curb bus service
at the comer of Ferry and High
streets, but with expanding op
erations, an off-street under-cov-er
terminal will be acquired here,
H. G. Cooper, Salem manager for
the firm, told The Statesman
Tuesday.
Plans for the terminal, to be ei
ther a new or remodeled struc
ture, are being completed in San '
Francisco, he said
The firm is adding a fleet of 22 j
Philip B. Fleming, head of the
office of temporary controls, told
the senate appropriations com
mittee he sees a danger of sugar
going as high as 30 cents a pound, j
He said this could well happen ;
unless congress grants some
$16,000,000 of funds slashed by
the house from OPA and other '
control agencies. !
Rent control would be stopped
officially December 31 in the j
bill which the senate banking I
subcommittee adopted on a 3 to
2 vote. The bill provides that a
10 per cent increase be allowed
immediately.
Sign of Spring:
S25 Price Paid
II aleill 11 llll)
R. W. Hogg and Son. Salem,
brought the first Willamette
valley s-pring lambs to the north
Portland livestock market Mon
day and sold them for a record
high price of $25 a hundred
weight.
The eight lambs sold aver
aged 101 pound. The 1946 first
lambs from the valley weighed
84 pounds and sold for $15.50 a
hundred weight.
Production of
Milk Growing
In Valley Area
By Lillie L. Madsen
Farm Editor. The Statesman
A healthy growth in milk pro
duction in mid-Willamette valley
was indicated in reports at the
annual business meeting of the
Salem unit of the Dairy Coopera
tive association Tuesday night at
the association building. While
dairymen were optimistic, the
feeling that some preparation
should be made for lower prices,
in keeping with reduction In oth
er farm product prices, was ex
pressed. Salem uses more milk in Aug
ust than any other month in the
year, and less In November and
December, reports showed. The
transient harvest help was given
as the reason for the heavier
season.
Reports further showed that in
January of this year the Co-op
distributed 12.050 quarts of milk
daily in the corporate limits of
Salem and West Salem, while in
October, 1944, when the local
unit opened its milk bottling di
vision, only 4000 ouarts were dis-
tributed daily in this aera. There Morse, Frank Van Dyke and Har
are now 750 producers in the vey Wells.
Salem unit
Officers elected in 1946 will
hold over until 1948, with Floyd
Bates as unit president and Ralph
Shepherd as secretary.
Speakers were Will Henry,
general manager from Portland;
Arthur Hulbert. division manager
at Salem, and Ray Hobson, di
rector. A musical program was
brought from the Vancouver unit
by P. C. Poe. head of the field
department, Portland.
Union Merger
Plan Stymied
!
Also introduced in the house
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 -Jf) were me;ures requiring the peri
Prospects for any immediate mer- odic inspection of school buses;
ger of the American Federation ! altering the grading requirements
of Labor and the Congress of In- 1 of walnuts and filberts; providing
dustrial Organizations virtually ! a method of registering (for vot
vanished today when the AFLjing) by mail, and exempting beef
took the position that the CIO cattle from Bang's diseases and
had rejected its unification pro-1 tuberculosis tests except under
posal
AFL President William Green,
in a letter to CIO chief Philip
Murray, said he deeply regretted
that the CIO had "declined the
request" to meet "for the pur
pose of creating a united organ
ized labor movement on a sound
and permanent basts."
Murray had told Green in a
letter Feb. 18 that "organic unity"
could be discussed eventually, but
that the first step was to cooper
ate in fighting off unwanted leg
islation in congress and state leg
islatures. terest in Dollar lines, a low-rate
bus service over the route. The
Southern Pacific railroad owns a
one-third interest in Greyhound.
The Greyhound company indica
ted during lengthy hearings last
summer that it would go to court
if it lost the case.
In granting the Trailways per
mit, the commission said Pacific
Greyhound had "indulged in mon
opolistic practices ... to the
inconvenience and detriment of
the traveling public" by "circuit
ously routing passengers, causing
the inconvenience of delays and
unnecessary expenditures in
fares."
NINETY -SIXTH YEAR 10
Freeway
Dispute in
Deadlock
By Wendell Webb
Managing Editor. The Statesman -
Imise on proposed freeways faded
Tuesday wnen l.. . noestei oi
Milwaukie. leading opponent of
the plan, told the senate roads and
highway committee his group
would accept nothing short of
outright defeat of the bill author
izing their construction.
The committee did not indicate
what it intended to do. But the
legislature still faced plenty of
work otherwise.
Tax Bill Entered
Proposals for the long-heralded
1 per cent withholding tax, and
abolition of justices of the peace
in Slem, Eugene and Oregon
City, highlighted new introduc
tions in the house Tuesday.
The 16 new introductions in
cluding a plan to have the state
fair start on the last Monday in
September (instead of at the dis
cretion of the agricultural depart
ment) and a memorial seeking
state acquisition of the Chemawa
Indian school if and when the
government abandons it far out
weighed in potential controversy
the 14 bills passed and sent to
the senate.
Among the latter were meas
ures setting up an Oregon-Washington-California
compact for the
conservation of off-shore fishing
and appropriating a $165,000 re
volving fund for the acquisition of
surplus property.
In the senate, new introduc
tions included a joint resolution
to authorize the establishment of
an alcoholic rehabilitation clinic
under the educational advisory
committee of the liquor commis
sion, and four bills including those
to give the state game commission
the duties of the fish commission
and abolish the latter.
The house Tuesday adopted a
senate joint resolution providing
for a legislative committee of five
to confer with similar groups in
other states regarding aviation
control and coordination. Named
to the Oregon committee were
Sens. William Walsh and Paul
Patterson and Reps. William B. I
Reps. William B
The proposed withholding tax,
i under the plan offered by the
house committee on assessments
I and taxation, would be applicable
! to all incomes of $50 monthly or
more, with such deductions to be
, applied toward state income
; taxes.
District Judxe Soucht
' The plan to abolish justices rf
the peace in the three county
1 seats constituted part of a house
bill instituted by the Clackamas
county delegation. It would pro-
ivide for a $4500 district judge to
i be named by the county court in
I each county, with concurrent
rights to the curcuit court up to
sentences of a year in jail and
$3000 fine.
county court order or unless beef
cattle are pastured
dairy herds.
Salary Bills Passed
A scries of 16 county salary
bills were passed by the senate
Tuesday, eight of which were sent
to the governor and eight others, 1
. i . . j : . i i . . - ,
county salary boosts, to the house. 1
The only other bill passed by the
senate (SB 301) permits county
oitices to open at 8:30 a.m. in
stead of 8 a.m. on week days.
The senate, by a 17 to 13 vote.
accepted a minority committee
report indefinitely postponing a
bill which would have exempted
the state game commission from
the state -tithing'' act under
which self-supporting boards and
commissions contribute 10 per j
cent of their income to the gen- ;
oral fund.
School Elections L'p j
Leading the list of 13 bills up ,
lor linal action in the house to- ; tration. should arrive here m a
day are the house bills providing : few days, Comdr. Bert Creighton,
that non-property owners can Puget Sound naval shipyard pub
vote at school elections (set over 1 lie information officer, said today.
from yesterday's calendar) and ;
specifying that rivers are common VET BONUS BILL KILLED
boundaries of adjacent towns bor- OLYMPIA, Feb. 25 -7P)- The
dering.them. The latter measure senate military and naval affairs
constitutes enabling legislation for committee tonight "indefinitely
a possible Salem-West Salem 1 postponed" action on a proposed
merger.
The senate had calendared for
final action today 22 bills, includ- I
ing the proposal to seek immedi-
ate acquisition of Camp White '
hospital facilities for use of the !
state. Among the 21 other bills
to be voted on by the senate are
house bills to allow the public
utilities commission to set maxi
mum train speeds in town outside
of Portland and reduce the non
commercial daily limit on smelt
from 50 to 25 pounds.
Both the house and senate will
resume at 10:30 a.m. today.
(Bill analysis page 10)
MUNDIO l&SI
PAGES Satan. Oregon, Wednesday Morning. February 28.
Body Found in
LAFAYETTE, Ind Feb. Z5-;p)-Resue workers pull a sheet ever the body of one of two stadenU killed
when bleachers collapsed at half time daring a basketball game between Par doe and WhteenaJa hero.
(Af Wlrephete).
County Salary
Bills Approved
In Senate Vote
The senate approved salary In
creases for 11 ceti of county of
ficials Tuesday in eluding those
for Marion, Polk and Benton
counties.
Final action was taken on the
Benton county bill. The Marion
and Polk county proposed In
creases were sent to the house.
All raises will Uke effect July 1.
The officials and their salaries
include:
Marlon county Judge $2500
to $3840; commissioners $2400 to
$3600: treasurer $2100 to $3600:
clerk $2400 to $3600; sheriff $2400
to $3600; assessor $2400 to $3600;
school supt. $2100 to $3600.
Palk mu h(t- Juris 2.tOO tn
$3600; commissioners $7 to $8 50
. j,. I,..,,,,., mrto tn ?ann-
clerk $2400 to $3000: sheriff $2700
j to $33Q0; assessor $2100 to $2700,
I and school Fupt. $2100 to $2700.
Benton county: Clerk $2500 to
j $2700; assessor $2500 to $2700;
' school supt. $2300 to $2400; treas-
1 urer $1800 to $2100
'iXrtFZ',
ar, sheriff set 1
to $3000; commissi
day to $2400 a yea
I a $3000.
Salary increases for the Salem
justice of the peace and constable
al? were Included in bills passed
by th senate and sent to the
house Tuesday. The justice of the
Pace a,ary rBld
from 53000 to 3.600- tne constable
I rum ziuu icj ouuu.
B-29 Missing
Over Alaska
ELM EN DO RF FIELD,
Alaska. 1
Feb. 25 -(JP)- A B-29 plane on a
training mission from Elmendorf
field has been overdue since early
this forenoon and was last re-
adjoining ' ported near Bruin pass, on the
Alaska peninsula. Brig. Gen. Jos
I eph H. Atkinson, commanding
general of the Alaska air corn-
mand. announced late today.
The Bruin pass location is about
100 miles southeast of Naknek,
A 1 . L. ,4il
The plane's gas supply should'
have lasted only until about 8 or
9 a. m. All Alaska air search
agencies nave Deen aieriea dui
weather hampered the search ac
tivities later today, General At-
kinson said.
Olliser Peiisacola Due
At Bremerton Yards
BREMERTON. Feb. 25-7P)-The
cruiser Pensacola, which took
part in the Bikini atom bomb
test and has been studied for de-
activation of radioactive concen- I
veterans' bonus, in effect killing
the senate measure.
OREGON AUTHOR DIES
OREGON CITY, Ore., Feb. 25.-
VMrs. Eva Emery Dye, 81, au
thor of several books on early
Oregon, died here in a convales
cent home today.
PUBLIC HEARINGS
MttM of selecttec ri (SB
MS) Thursday. February 17, 1 p. m..
room 40I. ttatahouM. before senate as
sessment and taxation committee.
Labor nteo racttres bills (SB 314,
323. 333) Thursday, February 27. fol
lowing afternoon adjournment, room
401, state house, before senate labor
and Industrie committee.
Wreckage at
"Z 4
9 Remain Critical
After Collapse of
Purdue Bleachers
LAFAYETTE, Ind , Feb. 25-tV
Purdue university engineering ex
perts set out today to learn the
cause of the collapse that tumbled
3500 basketball fans Into a tan-
1 gled heap from which two per
sons were taken out dead and zao
others injured.
Of the injured 142 remained in
two hospitals and th university
infirmary, and at least nine of
them were reported in critical
condition.
The bleachers fell last night at
the halftime intermission of the
Purdue-Wisconsin basketball game
as the fans arose to cheer the
home team, which held a one
point lead over the Badgers, lead
ers In the Big Nino race.
Purdue officials will make the
final decision whether the school's
basketball game with Wisconsin
, will be replayed, it was decided
: in Chicago today by Kenneth L.
wuson, western conierence com
missioned
!
Office Opened,
Quotas Fixed
By Ked Cross
Red Cross drive headquarters
for 1947 were opened Tuesday in
Warner Motor company. The 1947
drive to raise the Marion county
quota of $49,000, of which Salem's
share is $31,500, will ctart unof
ficially late this week
The headquarters are in charg
of Mrs. Blanche A. Anunsen and
Elsie Holman. who will be at th
office at all times during the day.
The official kick-off meeting will
be held Monday at Salem Cham-
Dr ' Commerce forum luncheon
wnen waiter Mails, puDnc infor
mation officer for the Red Cross
and former Pacific Coast baseball
player, will speak
Fred' G. Starrett is county
airman of the 1947 drive and
cha
P. H. Schnell is rural chairman.
Division chairmen and their
quotas are:
Automotive. John Stark, $2000; '
contractors. R. B. Hynd, $2000; I
general gifts, George Kingan,
governmental, Carl D. I
Gabrielson, $4000; educational, E. mi t tee, appointed to study the
A. Carlcton. $1200; industrial, 11. ! general newspaper situation, de
D. Robertson and Joe Dodd, i cided today to concentrate at the
$3800; mercantile, James R. Beard,
$4500; professional, Edward O.
Stadter, Jr., $3200; utilities, J. M
Clough, flOOO; residential, Mrs.
Custer Ross, $6200.
SALE OF DRINKS VOTED
BOISE, Idaho, Feb. 25-ypy
Legislation to legalize liquor-by
the-drink was given a thumping i
43 to 14 vote of approval by the I
house today as the 29th legisla-
ture comoleted arinntinn of a hill 1
giving Pocatello a full-fledeed I
four-year college.
Committee Hears Arguments
In Favor of Closed Shop Ban
The house labor and industries
committee was asked Tuesday by
sponsors and proponents to ap
prove proposed constitutional
amendments which would outlaw
the closed shop and require labor
unions to incorporate.
The committee voted to hold
another hearing Thursday, when
labor representatives and other
opponents will present their case
against the measures.
Rep. William B. Morse, retired
Prineville merchant and father of
the anti-closed shop measure, said
"Every man has tho right to work i
No. 286
Basketball Game
a
- V;
rj
First National
To Open New
Bank March 24!
The Salem branch of the First
National bank of Portland will
open for business in Its new home
at Court and Liberty streets on
Monday, March 24. Guy Hickok,
manager, disclosed Tuesday. Tho
present banking facilities ot State
and Liberty street will handle
all business to and including Sat
urday, March 22.
T. A. Livesley. owner of the
First National bonk building,-said
Tuesday no definite plans yet
could be announced as to the
future use of the first-floor bonk
ing quarters.
The new granite and marble
structure two blocks north of the
present bank was begun a year
ago.
The building, ith full base
ment and a rear mezzanine for
the bank's own business office,
has been unofficially estimated to
have cost not far from half a
million dollars Safely deposit
facilities and customers' restruoms
are in the basement. The ground
floor is devoted to tellers' rages
and offices.
Opening of the new building
will find everything complete
with the exception of the bronze-
framed front doors. Hit Work said
The doors are now being mnu-
factured to specifications.
City Renames
1947
Pric 5c
f J
S Appeals Board
Robert L. Elfktrom, Snlem may- try too rieienlent upon the L'mt
or, announced Tuesday he was re- ed States; Japan ha mw a cap
appointing present memleis of able self-government.
the city appeal board which acts
on appeals from decisions of the
city engineer and bu.ld.ng in, pec- I I lllHKim JIM II (fI'.H
tor. The members are E. E. Hat- .
? r;i'r3;'enfBarlho,om'w '"d G
R' Boat right.
HearillgH to Start Oil
m, . .j
iNeW8ttIlt Shortage
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 -H)-
A senate small business subcom-
start on the newsprint shortage
Chairman Capehart (R-Ind) said I
that as the hearings proceed, I
newsprint producers and consum
ers will be heard, along with in
terested government officials.
TRAIN WRECK KILLS 171
DOMAGAWA. Japan. Feb.
25
A) A government inspector aid
at least 178 persons were killed
and 350 injured today when the
last four cars of a six mr Iriiin
broke looe and pluneed down a
30 foot en bank men t.
and the closed shop is a kind of
dictatorship that denies it."
Rep. Giles L. French. Moro,
asked if the bill "could be broad
ened to include the bar associa
tion and doctor's organization."
Frank Hettwer, manager of the YTTil.
Mt Angel Cooperative creamery. w eailier
said labor is entitled to organise I
Just like farmers can orcanize I
into cooperatives.
"But we don't believe," Hett
wer declared, "that we should be
entitled to demand that every
farmer join our cooperative and
that we should dump his milk if
be doesn't'1
U.S. Told
Trustee
Plan Fair
WASHINGTON. Feb. 23 -(yp)
In a ftuiprii move. Russia has
stamped its cordial a;prjvl cn
a plan for American control of
623 Pacific Islands wrested from
Japanese mandate, Serretary of
State Marshall disclosed 01 ay.
A Mowow note took the posi
tion th.t United States control
would be entirely fair becaue
the blobbed In evirting tho
Japanese wan largety American.
The note, contrasting so-sharply
with Russia's frequent dis
agreement with this country. st
the capital buzzing with upeculM
tion about noibIe motives. Mar
shall was aked at a news con
ference whether he thought Mos
cow wai trying to et a prece
dent to justify the Sonets' own
postwar land acquisitions. He
declined comment.
Soviet-British ftUnd F.xooeted
Ruhm hjd been goneraliv ex
pected to ide with the Brltth
and Australian conn!ion that
the United Nations nhoulf po1,
pone the whole quexti rt of the
future of the strategic Mimhsll,
Marianai and Caroline groujo
until a ! treaty l written
with Japtn.
RuMn-American aff;ju tn
the eve .f nest month' M i-iow
peace confennee of the Bi( FMir
foreign miniMei rl mnu'ed a
serie i.t announcement arid
comment by Marih:!, which
included:
Theie hb been no rhanye
whatever in genet af poline f.f
the United SUtes on term of a
European postwar settlement from
the pronoun rment of former
Secretary Ji.m- F Brrn lht
fall at Stultgxrt and the Angli
can poMtK.ri at the 1941 Potsdam
onferenie.
Note Exrhance Clooetl
Marshall considers as clotted the
diplomatic quarrel resulting from
Undersecretary Dean Ahewifi'a
a?
omment that soviet f oretgri p 1-
"argresaive an 1 eapand-
The United States -profoundly
hopes," Marshall said In a formal
statement, that India wit: accept
the "challenge" of the rtntnh rf
fer of self-government rv 194$
and proceed to break the impasse
between the congrev and tro
Moslem reogue.
Speed Urged
In Democracy
For Islands
TOKYO. Feb. 25 -fnterlor
Secretary Krug and fieri McAr
thur today advocated a seli.p
of demo ratisturfi pr M-snes for
American controlled u! tills of
the Panllr and for Japjn
Krug. cm a tour of Pacific Is
lands administered by the United
States, r-aid the native should t
given "a measure of the freedom
we hae at home." Specifically,
he advocated U. S. citiwnuhip for
Samoani and Guammans in rec
ognition of their long association
with the United States.
MacArthur told R-p. PouWort
(R-Calif), Rep Eng!e (D-Cal.f)
land Delegate Farringlon (rt-IU-
iwan), all tA Krug's party, that
A formal peace treaty should
ye rigned quickly with .1 i. n
which "can r--cme a mre thor
ough democ raiy than (lerrnny
delay in concluding the p;ice is
handicapping Japan's develop-
i merit and miyht make the. conn-
HoilH'htCail CliailCC
i
KLAMATH FALI-S Ore. Feb.
25-I-Ten more veteran . In
cluding Amos Uierly of ff jbbdid,
hit the government jtkp it tiwiuy,
drawing farms In the rich Tule
lake division of the Kljnuth lt
clamation project.
They replaced ten others elimi
nated by the reclamation bureau
from the original list of 84 who
held lucky numbers in a drJAing
last December. The bureu said
eight were rejected because they
lacked farming esteiienre; one
for owning more than lft) acirs
of land on an irrigation project,
and one for having utipjii re
clamation debts.
Accidental Shot
Wound Sxdcntitc
Raymond Kelley, 30. route 6,
box 330, Salem, was treated
Tuesday by city first aid men and
Salem Detroness hospital for a
frontal sclp wound apparently
caused by the accidental dis
charge of a .22 caliber rifle which
Kelley held, according to fust aid
officers. They said the ballet did
not enter Ket ley's skull and tho
man was released from the hos
pital after examination. Neither
city police nor the Marion county
sheriff's office was called to in
vestigate the shooting
Mu. Mm Frorip.
u it ,os
sa si on
Salens
Portland
&n I ritx IMO ) OU
C'htrsfo SI 1 trace
New York 41 is M
Willametl nr I 1 feet
FORECAST ificxN U S. wesUter bu
reau. MrNarS fald. Silrm ) : Continued
fair westnes today and tonight witn
persture ih today, OS; tow,
r