3' P : II Prasodteirat r NINETY-SEVENTH TEAH Commuters Clamor for Petrillo Wins Fight tio Force Stations to! Hire FJuOisiciainis J : ! - - ' ' mm, - y I , r ( . james c. rrnuixo One Roaad We Off SGEDjQB PDCDQC1 This week President Truman presented his budget to the con gress. Already it is being discussed both In and out of that legislative body. Chairman John Taber of the house appropriations committee says he hopes to cut off $5 billion from the president's near-$40 bil lion. A legislative budget commit tee is due to go over the budget and set the-limit for spending in the next fiscal year. Then the various items will be studied cri tically by sub-committees and re viewed by the general committees on appropriations in house and senate. Finally each legislative chamber will take action. This is the legislative process in the United States, and the same route in general is followed in state legislatures. Our legislative bodies guard zealously the "power of the purse" having learned to do that out of the experience of the Brit ish house of commons in its strug gles with the royal Stewarts. But Bulgaria, fresh child of communism, does things differ ently. The administration prepares the budget and submits it to the narliamnt- There IK nine social ist deputies undertook to criticize the government budget, where- upon Premier Georgi Dimitrov, the Moscow-trained seal who now is boss of his native Bulgaria, made a speech in this wise: "From this rostrum, as you re member. I warned your allies of the Nikola Petkov group ten times. They did not listen, did not pay at tention to all warnings which were made. They broke their heads and their leader is under the ground. You yourself think not to share the fate of your own allies, for eign agents and Bulgaria's ene mies. If hitherto- you were not wiser and do not get wiser, you will receive from the nation such a lesson as you will remember as far as Saint Peter." Petkov, it is recalled, was a lead er of the Agrarian party, a staunch believer in true democracy who was executed last September under conviction of "plotting against the government." In these days communist spokes men have calmly stolen the ban ner of "democracy," but for them It is a false label, for their meth ods are totalitarian, not democra tic. This speech of Dimitrov's is about as good evidence as one would ask for of the kind of "de mocracy" Russia and its satel- Lies "enjoy." I have no doubt it silenced the nine socialists. Animal Crackers By WARREN GOODRICH "Dark glasses and torn sun tan oil f m heading South." '!.'': k ) It PAGES Lea Act Said 'Dead' CHICAGO, jan. 14 -V James C Petrillo won hi fight today to escape conviction under the Lea act which congress passed to trim his powers, and declared the way now: is cleared to seek additional broadcasting jobs for his 225,000 union musicians. Federal Judge J. Walker La Buy ruled the government failed to prove its charge that Petrillo attempted, in violation of the act, to to coerce radio station WAAF, Chicago, to hire more workers than it needed. Petrillo called three of the station's record librarians out on strike on May 28. 1948 after the station rejected his demand that three additional librarians be hired. This was not coercion, the court held, because "nothing contained in the letters and telegrams be tween the defendant and the re presentatives of the station dis cloted to the defendant the lack of need for additional employes as a reason for rejecting the de fendant's demands." Neither did the evidence I how Petrillo was told of this, the decision added. jBbUaat Smile Petrillo, 55. : who received the judge's verdict with a jubilant smile, said to newsmen : "I guess this puts a different lieht on the situation. The broad casters have been telling me I cannot force them to hire more musicians thaa are needed. Now I can ask for additional musicians as long as they perform actual services Petrillo's lawyer. Daniel Car mel. said, "the essence of this decision is that the Lea act is dead. If a union, in good faith, asks a station to Install live mu sicians, such request is valid and the union may strike, rf necessary." Network officials themselves de clined to comment but those fa- miliar with industry negotiations doubt that Petrillo intends to pull musicians off network shows when the present contract expires Jan. 31. Most persons felt that union musicians would remain on net work programayWle negotiations continued. 7 However, the decision dealt specifically with one point Petrillo has raised in negotiating with the networks. That is his demand that key network stations employ more musicians and that local stations be required td employ musicians WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 Rep. Hoffman, (R-Mich.) proposed "decisive steps" today to curb what he termed the dictatorial methods of James C. Petrillo by suggesting a federal law making it a criminal offense to Interfere with radio broadcasts. Polio Victim (7 cite Tiiimnn T 191 L9 X 1 111114411 WASHINGTON, Jan. 14-04FV Three-year-old Terry Tullos, legs in braces, walked into President Truman's office today, threw his arms around Mr. Truman's neck and . said, "Mr. President, you're sweet. - Terry, a curly-haired, brown eyed youngster from Laurel, Miss., is this year s March of Dimes "pos ter boy." His White House visit was part of the annual fund-raising campaign for victims of infantile paralysis. Over and over, the president and his little visitor embraced while the scene was photographed by movie and "sou camera men. School District Favors Annexation STAVTON. Jan. 14 -(Special) Voters of the. Stayton union high school district Wednesday night balloted almost unanimously to approve addition of several dis tricts to their district, and approve the union high school's 1948 bud get. By a 63 to 0 count the voters approved addition of Lyons, Mc Cully Mountain, Oakdale, Inde pendence and a portion of district 120. Vote on the 1948 budget was 62 for and one against. WALLGBEN FILLS POST OLYMPIA,- Jan. 14, -OP)- Gov Mon C. WallgTen today picked the state chairman of the demo cratic central committee to com plete the unexpired term of the late Belle Reeves, appointing Earl Coe of Bin gen secretary of state. OLDEST STUDENT DIES SEATTLE, 1 Jan. 14 -OP)- The University oC Washington's oldest student. Mark B. Franklin, 72-year-old retired school teacher, collapsed and idled on the street tonight while on bis way home from the university. Weather Max. Min. M 2S 17 Freda. mini Purtlaad 47 S7 BO no San I raxiclaco ChMraco i II Yrk . as n no facccat I from U M mmttr McNary field. ? Salem I : Cloudy toddy, tontarht and Friday. Uigh today 44, low tonight 30. M1 KUNDDD 1651 Tlx Oregon Statesman. Satan. Oregon, Thurtday, January IS. 1948 with Suit Verdict James Walton On List of New PGE Directors James J. Walton, Salem, presi dent of the Walton-Brown Elec tric company, is one of - 1 1 di rectors named by Federal Judge James A. Fee In Portland Wed nesday for the Portland General Electric company. The appointment was one of the last actions in reorganizing Portland Electric Power company. Walton is also president of the Salem Chamber of Commerce. Other directors named are Wil- I ham C. Christenson. president of ' the Commercial National bank of Hillsboro; Wade Newbegin, man ager of R. M. Wade Sc Co.; Ralph Thorn, assistant manager of the Bask of California, Portland branch; Sidney F. Woodbury, pre sident of Woodbury St Co.; Lloyd J. Wentworth, Douglas Fir Ex port Lumber company; John A. Zehntbauer. president of Jantzen Knjtting Mills: Henry F. Cabel. Portland business man; James H. Po&iemu. president of P.G.E., and R. L. Clark and Thomas D. Dejzell, independent Pepco trus tees. New directors are to serve un til the first regular meeting of stockholders following expiration of the first year after the plan was declared effective October 11. Helen Marcus Hurt in Wreck Helen Marcus, 1411 State St., prominent Salem clubwoman, was seriously injured Wednesday night about 10:50 p. m. when the car which she was driving plunged off the road and overturned" three mues sou in or raiem on mgnway 99 C, state police reported. Investigating officers said the car left the highway, near the Hugh Harris ranch, and overturn ed several times before ending up in a deep ditch. The victim was thrown out of the vehicle. She wa driving north toward Salem when the accident occurred, of ficers said. She was taken to Salem General hospital by the Salem first aid car. Hospital attendants early this morning said she was suffering from several face lacerations and shock, but did not consider her condition serious. Wallace Toy. wilh Governorship Race PORTLAND. Jan. 14-0P)-Lw Wallace, democratic national com mitteeman, said today he was con sidering whether or not to run for the democratic nomination for governor. He made the statement in an nouncing that he would not seek reflection as national committee man. Wallace ran for governor against the late Earl Snell in 1940. Jets Rapidly Replacing Props On Planes, Maj. Carl Asserts By Let Cear Staff Writer. The Statesman Jet propelled aircraft are rapidly replacing propeller-driven planes in all branches of the armed forces and will soon take over the job completely, Maj. Marion E. Carl, marine sir force ace and na tive of Wood burn, told The States man in an interview Wednesday. Carl, now commander of a Jet night fighter squadron at Cherry Point, N.C., is one of the country s outstanding authorities on all types ot aircraft and bolder of the world's speed records. Last Aug ust he flew a Douglas Skystreak 650.798 miles an hour at Murdoc Dry Lake, Calif. He recently com pie ted two years of duty testing all types of military aircraft at the naval testing base at Patuxent River. Md. The handsome, retiring Carl ar rived unauspiciously at the Mar lon hotel Wednesday night a short time before he was scheduled to speak before officers and civilian recruiters of Salem's marine re serve corps. He was "cornered' by reporters a short time later aa he was await ing; dinner in the hotel dining room. While an authority on let jobs, Carl laughingly admitted he really had spent more time fly Additional Bus rwmmmjj i rs 1 immmmmmjr $, - r , - - . - - : .O- Bus-Riders requested Improved bos service Attarney C T. TerrtI (standing) front ef table at which ait Mrs. and James Singleton, TV 17 assistant superintendent or motor transportation. (Statesman photo by Don Dill, staff photographer.) Full Restoration of Former Suburban Schedules Asked By Robert E. Gang ware Ctty Editor. The Statesman Salem suburban bus service is under consideration by the state public utilities commission today, after a heated public hearing in which local commuters clamored for routes offered last year by an other company. Oregon Motor Stages, seeking" a permit under a new law re quiring PUC permits for suburban bus operations, proposed eight Indian 'Joke9 Frustrating to Plane Seekers ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. Jan. 14 -Vfy- Indians have Just about disrupted a hunt for two missing fliers in western New Mexico by playing a game with civil air patrol searchers. The CAP is hunting for 20-year old William Bohannon of Los Angeles and his cousin, Roy How lett of Richland, Mo , unreported since leaving Albuquerque Jan. 4 for Los Angeles. Capt. Frank Nicely said a ground party, dispatched to the rugged area along the Continental divide to investigate flashing mirror signals, found today that Navajo Indians are responsible. The Indians found that mirror flashes quickly brought a plane and in no time at all a dozen were circling. "It's no Joke," declared Nicely, "it's the type of signal a downed flier would make and we can't pass any of them. The boys who have hiked 15 miles to check them are getting burned up." Idanha to Receive Funds for Airport Idanha, east of the Detroit dam area in southeast Marion county, has been added to the list of cities which will receive federal help in developing airports. Rep. Walter Norblad informed the Salem Chamber of Commerce by wire Wednesday. Norblad said the cost of the project would total $4,825, includ ing $2,700 in federal aid, and that the work would include clearing timber, grading landing strips, marking and improving access roads. ing helicopters, and thought they could be very useful in the time of war. Recalling his combat days with the marine air corps in the South Pacific, Carl said one of his narrowest escapes came one day on Vella LaVella in the Solomon islands where he was flying in the same squadron with Gregory trappy; uoyington, popular ma rine ace. Carl said he traded flights with Boyington one day. Boyington was out after his 25th Jap plane and wanted the flight. "Pappy . he re called, was shot down on that flight and captured by the Ja panese who held him prisoner al most until end of the war. Carl also pointed out that all jet pilots aren't necessarily young; men. One of the marine corps finest jet pilots is near 45 years of age. "The old men make better test pilots," he observed. "They don't try to press an unknown plane to it limit." Carl spent Friday night with his brother, Manton, who operates a farm two miles east of Hubbard. He didn't know just where he was going today, but thought he was scheduled to give about 10 more speeches mostly in the Portland area. (Story also on page 2) Price 5c .. - n ...... - 'Q; - : i Facing pablle muliuea exanuners and Oregon Motor Stages officials ta shewn part of a crewi of mere than 269 suburban bus riders of the Salem area who at a PLC hearing In Salem ml the bos company seeking suburban bns aermtts Is speaklna In Mildred Warrick. TVC reporter; bus routes four of them dupli cating service which Salem Sub urban Bus Lines was offering when it withdrew from business December 31. More than 200 suburban bus users gathered in Salem Cham ber of Commerce hall Wednesday morning, most of them to protest the service which OMS has de veloped to cover the general area served formerly by a bus system operated by Dwight Wyatt. Added Mileage General Manager A. L. Schnei der pointed out that Oregon Mo tor Stages has added 7,000 miles per month to its schedules since January 1, when that firm took over the area Salem Suburban company was serving exclusively and revised suburban routes it had begun last fall. Most citizens who took the floor at the morning session of the hearing Implied that OMS had forced Salem Suburban Lines oat of business and then reduced service In their areas, either in frequency or in routing. New Opposition When, as a result, Oregon Mo tor Stages amended its applica tion for permit to duplicate Wyatt's routes, opposition again was voiced by several commut ers who asserted that Wyatt's service at the end of the year had already been curtailed in an effort to meet the competition from OMS. They asked Oregon Motor Stages to restore the ser vice Wyatt was offering prior to October when OMS entered the suburban field. Examiners conducting the PUC hearing indicated that Public Utilities Commissioner George Flagg would issue an order on the request for permit, probably by the end of the month. They noted that since Oregon Motor Stages is coming within PUC jurisdic tion for the first time (in the Salem and Eugene suburban routes requested) the decision will be made on the basis of gen eral routes proposed. If a permit is granted. PUC assumes certain responsibility for the public's in terest in timing of schedules and related matters, ontea Proposed . The eight routes proposed by OMS are the present routes to Keizer, Fisher road and Four Corners, a route to Chemawa via Highway WE and returning by Highway 218, Front. Columbia and Commercial streets and these four "Wyatt routes": South Commercial street Lib erty road Boone road old highway 99 12th Mission South Commercial. South Commercial street Lib- erty road Browning avenue U. S. Highway 9E Ratcliff drive Bluff Fairview ave nue 99E t South Commercial. Center street Lancaster drive State Elma Mahrt Lan caster Auburn Fruitland Lancaster Garden road Park CenW. Center street Lancaster drive Swegle school Hollywood drive Silverton road Lan caster Garden road Park Center. Hall Backs Plan for Territorial Centennial PORTLAND, Jan. 14-P-Gov-ernor John H. Hall said today he hoped to go forward with the late Earl Snell's plan for statewide celebration this year of the Ore gon territory' centennial. HaU told the East Side Com mercial club he has called the state emergency board to a Thursday meeting to vote funds for the celebration. No. 251 Service Chamber of Commerce Wednesday. Malcolm L. Jones, TVC examiner. Killer Given 60-Day Stay Of Sentence OLYMPIA, Wash., Jan. 14.-0rV Talkative Jake Bird, who has told officers he could clear up a 20 year cross-country trail of slay ings, won a 60-day reprieve from hanging today, but the information was kept from him at the state prison Gov. Mon C. Wallgren announ ced the 60-day postponement in execution of the 48-year-old ne gro to facilitate further investiga tion of numerous murders in which he has admitted a part and because of a request from Gov. Dwight Green of Illinois. After the governor's announce ment. Prosecuting Attorney Pat rick Steele of Tacoma announced that he was going to the peniten tiary at Walla Walla to administer "truth serum" to Bird for further questioning. He said he was taking a psychiatrist with him. U. S. to Reopen Base in Tripoli LONDON", Jan. 14 - (yP) - The United States will soon reopen Mellaha, highly strategic air base near Tripoli in North Africa which American transport planes used as a landing field during the war, it was disclosed today. U.S. air officials in Europe said the base was being reopened "be cause of additional supply-carrying transport flights necessary . to serve American missions in the middle east, including the mission to Greece, and the air base at Dharan in Saudi Arabia." (Secretary of Defense Forrestal said in Washington the Tripoli tan base was "not an air base in the military sense" but a "way station on a trunk line to Athens." Democrats Gain on GOP in Multnomah PORTLAND, Jan. 14.-VP-Hea-vy democratic registrations are about to end Multnomah county's republican majority. For several weeks an average of 100 democrats and 50 republicans have been registering daily. The total now stands at 81,861 repub licans .and 81,206 democrats. and JEm EDoe In the course of "A Russian Journal," now appearing in this newspaper, John Steinbeck and Robert Capa touch upon some ot the tranje impressions the Russian people have of the American people. But are our ideas about them much less inaccurate? Until this great writer and ace photographer actually spent two months living In Russia ming ling with everyday Russian people no one could be quite sure. Now you are given the first close-up of a people heretofore obscured by censor ship and badly interpreted by their own leaders' propaganda. With a drama and insight such as only John Steinbeck's words and Capa's photographs could bring this series the second installment cf which appears today on page 4 belongs on your list of not-to-be-missed reading. s&e (jDrejfton statesman TDnireati Dm:Piea ffoir C By Sterling F. Green WASHINGTON, Jan. the republican-controlled confp-efls today that it must him price control, rationing and other strong anti-inflation powers or take responsibility for a possibly "destructive' slump. , - .j Congressional democrats followed through by fntrt du cing legislation to provide the $40 "cost of living" Income'tax cut asked by the president for every taxpayer and dependent. The bill was offered by Rep. Dingell (D-Mlch) In opposi tion to the $5,600,000,000 tax-cut bill which the j republican leadership of the house has pro mised to push through quickly. In keeping with the president's recommendations, Dingell's bill proposes that the $3,200,000,000 lost to the government through the Income tax cut be made up from higher corporation taxes. It provides a partial return to the wartime excess profits tax. Warns of Stamp The president sent to Capitol Hill a 136-page economic report bristling with warnings of Infla tion and "serious" slump. It reported the nation at i high level of prosperity." It fore cast "another year of splendid achievement. But It reported that this seeming well - being rests "on a wave of inflation which has already caused serious hardship and presents grave con cern for, the future. Just as the message reached congress, secretary ox interior Krug testified that If price con trol authority is granted he will at once "freeze" the retail and wholesale prices of coal, fuel oil, gasoline and all petroleum pro ducts for 60 days. Mar Ratton Fuel Oil It might "possibly" be necessary to ration fuel oil, Krug told the senate banking committee. Secretary of Commerce HarrI man told the senators price ceil ings also are planned for steel, textiles, lumber and farm machin ery if the administration gets tho authority. He said steel ceilings would be imposed to stamp out the so-called "gray market buying and sel ling of scarce steel at abnormally high prices. Coffins Keep Ship Afloat WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 -UPh- Army officials expressed the be lief today that the load of Sealed coffins aboard the still burning hull of the army transport Joseph V. Connolly Is making the ship sink-proof. The transport, east bound for Europe, carried about 6,300 cof fins intended for use in return of war dead. Army transportation experts said the coffins, sealed tightly,: probably are acting as a huge life preserver for the ship and would make it virtually im possible for her to sink, even if subjected to gunfire. Train Wreck in Canada Fatal to 7 ' PARENT, Que., Jan. 14 -(JP) Seven persons were killed and 43 injured today In the wreck of two westbound passenger trains at Wykes, a flag-stop station i on the Canadian National railways far up in Quebec's bleak, snow covered northland. Unconfirmed reports said the number of dead might be as high as 15. In bitter 35 below. zero weath er, passengers and crews, many cut and bleeding, fought their way into the wreckage to recover bodies and rescue injured. DANIELS WEAKER' RALEIGH, N. C, Jan. 14 -W) Joeephus Daniels, 85-year-old editor and former cabinet member who has been gravely 111 with pneumonia for several days was reported today to be "somewhat weaker." off HHPresident Tromtn Gas Rate1 Revealed . .1 PORTLAND, Jan. 14 -(i-Ratee for gas supplied Oregon consum ers of the Portland Gas an4 Coke company will be Increased 8.4 cents a thousand cubic feet ju cf January 7 the company reported today. ! fl - Under Oregon tariff laws th utility la permitted to adjust the rates on the basis of a .1 cent per thousand cubic feet for each five cent a barrel rise irjl cost of c4L The utility is not required to file formal application with the Estate utility commission for rate' dif ferential Increases. ; The Portland firmfhas fild an application with the Washington state public utllltief commission ror a similar increase to county consumers. " : ; Clark Vote Slated oh Hubbard Union !l i High District Five school districts In nijthera Marion county will vote February 16 on a proposal to fcreate ;ai Hub bard union high school district, tho Marion county school district boundary board decided at ia hear ing Wednesday. j , (' The elections are? prompted by remonstrances to the proposal filed from Aurora, Butteville andiWhite! districts. it h , j Hubbard district, also Involved in the proposed union high district,! already has favored the mdve, ao it will not have to ballot in rebru-j ary. The five districts votiae are Donald. White. Broadacresi Aurora and that part of Butteville; district i not now a part of the Canby union 1 high school district. ? ; J Site of the proposed union hleh school is near- the junction -of Boone's ferry and Mineral Springs ! road about two miles west of Hub-jj bard. Mrs. Agnes Booth. iJMarionl county school superintendent, said.! A large group of residents of thai H ,11 II told Increase district involved attended the meeting In the courthouse, j Chief, objection voiced against the pro-I posal was the current high Coat of . building and construction fnater-i Uls. . I .1. I It was pointed out that the atx districts have a combined jvalua-f - , iowea aDout SZ30.090 under state law, to ouiid a school building. Missionaries Flee in China CHENGCHOW. China. ThursJ day,1 Jan. 13 Evacuation of American missionaries 44- and equipment from a 100-bed lwpital was under way today,) while Chinese communists fought "within three miles of this well-defended. city. ! I A veteran American missionary. who survived the 1927 dnti-for- eign violence in China, comment-l ed: "It looks to me like It's time for us all to get j out off China again." t I Commercial airliners were fak-l ng out some evacuees, fetid the' Lutheran mission transpoHJ - pla n' "St. Paul" flew out yesterday with! the first load of equipment from; the 100-bed Southern Baptist hos pital, one of the largest in tentral China Europe Socialists Termed Bulwark Against Commies WASHINGTON, j Jan. j J -MPJ European socialist! are I "among; the strongest bulwarks in Europe against communism," the state de-j partment told congress today. It explained that this ifjso be-' cause socialists believe in; dermx racy, fundamental freedoms uchL as those of speech and jrtligionJA and individual rights, j j 7 ' The view was set forth in summary of the European) polity . cal situation presented to conn gress by Truman administration; agencies as a basis for legislative acUon on the Marshall recovery program. -s .J $1250 Ring Lost Driver Signal Turn PORTLAND. Jan. 11 Blanche E. Johns of Portland is tempted to give up being a earn ful driver. S t She told police she signaled for a stop yesterday, and Sjii.Z3q diamond ring fell from her fin4 ger. She hasn't been ablej to find it. i