OO EDO o DO G OC3C2U 300 ODDO O CD OD DO O OQO OlO'P 'O ec. Marshall j Unveils Hitler-Stalin Treaties as Diplomatic Slap). Nazi-Soviet Plan to Divide Europe Told In Captured Papers Br Edward E. Bo mar WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 -iJPh- Secretary of State Marshall threw the book at Soviet Russia tonight a massive array of captured nazi documents baring details ot the partnership between Russia's present leaders and Hitler's reich for the division of eastern Europe. . With Marshall's sanction, the state department published the entire- record of 260 formerly secret records disclosing that Russia: SSCEfflUB Wednesday I attended the hear ing in Eugene called by the de partment of the Interior to con cider; the creation of a sustained Lield forest unit in an area of ane- and Linn counties -lying northeast of Springfield reaching over the divide between - the Mo hawk and Calapooya rivers. C. Girard- Davidson, assistant secre tary of the interior presided since the major portion of the area is o & C grant land administered by the department. rrhm hearine attracted several tuimfred Dersons. many from a mnsiderable distance, because it Is the first operating unit to be cqnsidered by this department, and ; the pattern set here will probably govern future units. The federal forest service has estab lished unit of its own around Sheltoiu Wash., and has others under consideration. The real battle which develop ed at this hearing is over selec tion of one producing mill with substantial acreage as the one for which the timber on federal land$ should be reserved. Other operators, now buying timber on bids, see their source of supply reduced and vigorously oppose any "chosen instrument' policy. The argument for the program is that 'timber is now being cut at a ; rate faster than it is growing. (Linn county's cut was 800 mil lion board feet last year and its increase through growth 400 mil lion h.f.) Hence the mills are now fast cutting themselves out of sup plies. Under the proposed plan the j public and private timber agreement would be pooled to permit continuous (Continued on editorial page) 25 Jump to Safety as Fire Engulfs Plane l BOSTON. Jan. 2 l-(VTwenty- five persons jumped to safety in a snowbank today to escape flames sweeping through a big Eastern Airlines passenger plane when fire broke out only seconds after the big ship nosed into the snow in a landing skid. Fourteen passengers were in jured, eight of them hospitalized, I in leaps from the tilted and burn ing plane but all were credited by the five crewmen with following orders calmly in the escape. : Capt Merrill E. Thayer of Mi ami, pilot of . the NPwark-bound flight from Miami, which was re routed to Boston because of bad weather, said the 20 passengers 'weren't a bit flustered." : Flames destroyed the million dollar ship, a 60-passenger Con stellation. ; Flight engineer Harold C. Coon ley, 27, of Miami, said the big plane swerved on a snow-dusted runway because there wasn't enqugh dry surface for the brakes togrip. Wolf at Door Buys Home SPOKANE, Wash, Jan. 21 -OP) Mr. Bear found Mr. Wolf on his doorstep and sold him the house. 'C. E. Bear, real estate dealer, said today he had sold a five-room house to Luther W. Wolf, a ma chinist. Animal Crackers By WARREN GOODRICH in ; "This hot weather lerres me limp." 1 Backed Germany heavily in her war against the west, fur nishing supplies by the hundred thousand ton, striving to the last for "friendship" with Germany and aiding the nazi campaign to keep Turkey neutral. 2 Agreed with Adolf Hitler that the United States, as well as Britain, should be shut out of Europe, Asia and Africa. Demanded Bases 3 Lost Hitler as an ally, and paved the way for Germany's in vasion, by demanding among oth er things a military base "within range of the Bosporus and the Dardanelles' and assurance that the oil-rich area "south of Batum and Baku in the general direction of the Persian gulf be recognized as the center of the aspirations of of the Soviet Union." ; Starting" with an official report of the first" Soviet bid for closer tier, with the nazis, months before world war two, the book em bodied evidence whose release Russia blocked at the Nuernberg war crimes trials. Secret Agreements Included in the 362-page vol ume were secret agreements, sign ed by Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, to partition Poland and slice eastern Europe into Rus sian and nazi spheres of control. The final entry dealt with Hitler's invasion of Russia. The state department said the documents were all from the of ficial archives of the nazi foreign office, were captured by American and British troops and were pub lished now "to complete the re cord." While there was no reference to the present state of U. S.-Rus-sian relations, the circumstances nevertheless gave the sudden re lease the effect of a major dip lomatic stroke. Copies of the special compila tion, dealing entirely j with nazi Soviet relations between 1939 and 1941, were made public on such short notice that Moscow had scant opportunity for Quick counter - stroke of propaganda. 'Drought' in Salem Longest Since August Probably most Salem residents haven't noticed, but it's getting positively "arid" lately. For the first time since last Aug ust, Salem has been without rain for 10 days, the U. S. weather bu reau at McNary field said early this morning. Since the cold snap set in on January 11. not one drop of precipitation has fallen.; Salem's last "dry spell was fromi Amrust 10 through 20. Th tmn.rahire in the Salenl area, however, remained cool Wednesday morning at 28 degrees, but warmer temperatures ranging from 50 degrees today to a low of 35 tonight were forecast by the bureau 4 Monmouth Students Hurt DALLAS, Ore., Jan. 21 -P-Four students of Oregon College of Education at Monmouth were in a hospital with injuries from a collision of two automobiles on the Pacific highway tonight east of here. Polk county deputy sheriff Tony Neufeldt said all were taken to the Dallas hospital here. Hospital authorities early, this morning said all four were in "fairly good' con dition. Riding In the one car were George Warren Jones, severe head injuries; Lewis Holt, leg fractures; BUI Somppi, shoulder fracture; and Wayne Lairman, Stayton, bruised and cut. In the second car were Char lene Meier. Dallas, bruised and cut, and Ed Yeager, Dallas, also an OCE student, who suffered fractured nose. They were leased after treatment. Rep. Hartley to Poll Top Musicians On Records Issue WASHINGTON. Jan. SI -4Jf) Chairman Hartley (R-NJ) of the house labor committee announc ed plana tonight for a secret poll of union musicians to determine whether they favor the ban their president, James C. Petrillo, has put on record making. "If Petrillo wont do it, we will,". Hartley told newsmen af ter a day of committee testimony by the head of the American Federation of Musicians. Hartley said thei mail ballots will go to "name" band leaders and members of, their orchestras the men who make the records. The announcement was Hart ley's response, to a challenge which Petrillo made from the stand, to join in a poll of all the 225.000 ATM members. NINETY-SEVENTH YEAH mm SOOUD Girl Prodigy Located 8 Days After 'Escape9 SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 21 -JPy- Fifteen-year-old Jacqueline Horner, piano prodigy who broke away from her home ties in rebel lion against what she said was an inhibited, unnatural life in which she was exhibited "like an animal,' was found here today after an eight-day search. She promptly declared she would run away again if returned to her mother. Found SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 21 Jae aeline Iforster, 15. plan pro digy, wbs was found today in a drab hotel eight days after she left home where she com plained she was "exhibited like aa animal.'" (AP Wirephoto to The Statesman.) Hall's Decision Fails to Halt Reprieve Pleas PORTLAND, Jan. 21-7Py- New groups prepared today to ask Gov- ernor Hall to commute the death sentence for Wardell Henderson, convicted of slaying a Vancouver j man on Christmas eve of 1946. Henderson is scheduled for ex- f ecution Friday morning. Mrs- Jonn amn, president of the Oregon Prison association j 'aid the governor today had re- lused ner request lor a conference witn six organizations to save Henderson from execution. Mrs Catlin said the governor said "My mind is made up." Earlier this week, the governor had refused clemency for the 27-year-old ne gro. Efforts to win a stay of execu tion for Henderon stem from an affidavit signed by the jury fore man that some furors were preju diced against Henderson for ra cial reason. Lewis and Clark college stu dents were circulating a petition today, signed by several faculty members, which a spokesman said would be presented the gov ernor on Thursday. A local representative of the civil rights congress reported the national office has asked for a stay of execution and Hall to re consider his decision. A delega tion from the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored people today asked Judge Frank L. Lonergan, who presid ed at the trial of Henderson, to in tervene. A spokesman said the judge asserted the case was now beyond his jurisdiction. Speech Rumor Pictures Tito as Saying 4War with U. S. Near' PARIS. Jan. 21.-(JffVThe Italian newspaper La Voce in Trieste pub lished today a purported speech by Marshall Tito of Yugoslavia in which he was quoted aa saying war with Britain and the United States was perhaps a question of several weeks' and that Yugosla via had a weapon mora destruct ive than the atomic bomb. Pierre G. S. Dumas, assistant editor of the pro-DeGaulle news paper, Dissidence 40, which pub lished the same purported speech oa December 15, said today, how ever, that he was convinced the report was a fabrication. La Voce in Trieste said it nad had the text of the purported speech for a month but delayed publication until convinced it was authentic and upon learning it had been published in Dissidence 40. The published text contained these quotations from Tito: "We are ready to sink their first fleet in the Adriatii." 14 PAGES T A painstaking hunt, which en compassed various tawdy side street bars and transient hotels finally led police to a hotel room. There the girl, who admittedly has been seeing life as she never saw it before and enjoying her ex perience was found with Wal lace Wells, 19, Hood River, Ore sailor off the navy tanker Cim arron. Jacqueline and the' sailor em phatically told police and news men they had done nothing wrong or improper. Wells Charged District Attorney Edmund G Brown didn't see things quite in. that light however. He charged Wells with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. A similar charge was filed against Mrs. Gloria Jean Costello Miles, a casual acquaintance of Jacqueline's who, police say. taught the girl "bar girl" tricks. such as how to pick up sailors. Brown said he would investi gate five hotels in which Jacque line had stayed here since her arrival. He said she stayed with Wells at two and with Mrs. Miles at three. Under Physician's Care Notified in Los Angeles that her daughter had been found, Mrs. Horner, who had expressed fears of a kidnaping, was placed under a physician's care. Jacqueline's prime interest was her new hair-do when she was re united today with her sister, Adele Carole Horner, 21, an em ploye of a San Francisco broad casting firm. Jacqueline ran away from her Hollywood home on January 13. She said she had grown weary of the life demanded of her by her mother, Mrs. Clara Horner of Los Angeles. The girl said she had not been allowed to play with other children for fear she might ruin her hands for the piano, and that she could not go swimming because her mother feared she I might damage her ears. . Spa Restaurant Purchased by California Man Sale of the Spa restaurant by Charles Johnston to J. R. Linton of Glendale. Calif., was disclosed in Salem Wednesday. The restaurant at 382 State si, a downtown Salem landmark for half a century, will be operated by Linton, beginning January 29, and the new preprietor with his wife will make his home here at 2940 Fisher rd. Announcement of the transac tion was made by the Goodwin and McMillin realty firm. Finan cial considerations were not dis closed. Linton began as a Union Pacific dining car chef and for the past 26 years has operated restaurants in Glendale. He is leaving the Larry-Lea coffee shop there after 16 years as proprietor, because of a long-standing wish to locate in the Willamette valley, it was re ported here. It was expected that Johnston will return to Los Angeles where he makes his home. He came to Salem several months ago to take over active management of the Spa. but retained his home in the south. "To their atomic bombs we will reply with ours." "Our soldiers are equipped with the most modern arms and a ma terial whose destructive force is superior to that of the atomic bomb." W arc receiving our materials from inexhaustible sources, and our communication lines will nev er be cut," The Russians arsenals are pro ducing 30,000 tanks monthly." "Russian general headquarters disposes of 150 divisions which can be on the march in 48 hours, and destroy all obstacles on its route and reach Paris." "War against the Anglo-Americana is inevitable. It is perhaps even a question of several weeks." The text added that "Comrades, you know very well that the peo ple are not with us" and "if the priests give the alarm to the peas- I ants the rrr Itt I UL" POUNDOD IA5I The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon Thursday . January 22. o r u u STEVE ANDERSON Janlor First Citizen Lawyer Named Salem Junior First Gtizen Steve Anderson, 33, local at torney and member of the Salem housing authority, is Salem's Junior First Citizen of the year. The title was awarded him Wednesday night by Salem Jun ior Chamber of Commerce during a banquet at the Marion hotel in observance of the national Jun ior Chamber's 27th birthday. Only other award of the occasion went to Milan Boniface, Jaycee mem ber and local auto salesman, as the Salem organization's key man of the year. Pay -Trtbate In presenting the Junior First Citizen award. Superintendent Frank B. Bennett of the Salem school district paid tribute to An derson for his active part in Wil lamette university alumni groups, Methodist church bodies and re publican politics. Anderson, a member and Sun day school teacher of First Meth odist church, has served on the church board and as vice presi dent of the men's fellowship. He is past president of the statewide young adults' organization and was a summertime Methodist camp director. He is president of the Willam ette University Alurrint associa tion and member of the alumni advisory board for Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Active la Politics In politics, Anderson has been active in the republican central committee and young republican groups of this county and has served on the board of the state Young Republican club. He is a precinct committeeman. With his wife and four-year-old son he makes his home at 1587 N. Winter st. Among organ izations in which he has served are the Salem Chamber of Com merce, YMCA. American Legion (pot.t 136) and Red Cross service committee. He is a World War II navy veteran. (Additional details on page 2.) Long, Jones to Vie In Louisiana Vote NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 21 -(JP)-A bitter, no-holds-barred contest for governor of Louisiana was in prospect tonight between Earl K. Long and Sam Houston Jones, both of whom have held the office before. The two men. who faced each other in a runoff in 1940 with Jones corning out on top, lead a field of four in yesterday's demo cratic primary. Unofficial returns from 1,203 of the 1,878 voting pre cincts, gave the following vote for governor: Jones 96,956; Robert F. Kennon 75,416; Long 147,209;' James H. Morrison 62,888. QUICKIES Td like te place a Card ef Thanks in Ths lit st as a WsatAia any wife Jast left - V ?: ; f w. , ...? ts, 2 1 v- 30 A mmo Blast Shakes Illinois, Iowa Area 150 Tons of Anti-Tank Mines Explode SAVANNA, 111., Jan. 21 JPy- An underground ammunition dump holding 150 tons of anti-tank mine exploded tonight at th Savanna ordnance depot, jarring windows and homes throughout a three state area in a 100-mile radius. CoL Eugene Regad, commanding officer of the depot, aald there were "no casualties,' although the explosion left a crater 100 feet wide and 50 feet deep and rattled windows In Peoria, 111- 100 miles southeastward. Ineperatire at Night CoL Regad said the depot, which normally employs 1,000 persons, is inoperative at night. He added that patrols in the area were not injured. The blast oc curred about 6:55 p. m. (PST) and caused widespread reports of earth tremors throughout north western Illinois, southern Wiscon sin and eastern Iowa. He said cause of the explosion was "undetermined " Damage tt Miles Away The impact blew out most of the windows in Savanna, but there were no other reports of damage in the area. Traveling down the river, the concussion shattered at least one plate glass window in downtown Moline, 50 miles to the south. At Peoria, 100 miles south eastward, windows were rattled. However, at Sabula, Iowa, just across the river from Savanna, the blast did little, if any, dam age. One eyewitness there said he saw "a huge ball of fire" followed by a "thunderous blast." Series of Union Conferences Slated in Salem A series of three statewide AF of L labor union conferences will begin at 1 pan. today in the Salem labor temple when delegates of Oregon painters unions open a two-day session. The Columbia river district council of laborers will meet Sat urday morning and most of the delegates will remain for the two day annual convention of the Ore gon state building trades council, slated to begin at 1 p.m. Saturday. General problems relating to painter unions will be discussed at their sessions, according to J. L Cutler, a member of the board of trustees of the State Painters council, and Ray Rickhart, dele gate, both members of the Salem painters local 724. The painters meeting will end with a banquet Friday night at 6:30 o'clock in the Marion hotel for the approximately 60 delegates. Delegates from 75 Oregon lo cals representing construction and building luaborers will open a brief session at 9 a.m. Saturday, according to Albert Chi vers, del egate from the Salem laborers Lo cal 441, who is arranging for the conference. Election of officers and discus sion of state council policies and agreements will take place at. the building trades annual convention Saturday afternoon and Sunday, it was reported Wednesday by F. D. VanSweringen. business agent of the Salem building and con struction council, who is arranging for the convention. Reporters Barred from Area of Reported Soviet (Editors' Not: Edwin Shank, vet eran Associated Presa correspondent in Germany, n one of eight Ameri can correspondents taken by the Rin nans on a itipervtsrd seven-dar tour of Soviet-occupied Thurlnia and Sax ony. The area la rloaed to newsmen ex cept for tours whose itinerary must be approved in advance by Soviet occupa- Hon authorities By Edwin Shanke LEIPZIG, Soviet-occupied Sax ony, Jan. 19-(Delayed)-(4VThe minister president of Saxony dis closed today that 25,000 Germans are toiling in the Erzegebirge (ore mountains) of southern Saxony, where the Russians have been re ported mining uranium under the high priority pressure of the atom ic race. They are being paid premium wages, comparing favorably with those of a "high state official," he added. Efforts of American correspon dents on a conducted tour of the Soviet zone to penetrate the tri angular district of Aue, Marien berg and Annaberg were blocked by Russian authorities. It was another example of the many "curtains" behind the "Iron curtain' which bar correspondents from access to news in the Russian zone, even when they obtain per mission to enter the gone. 1S48 Price Sc Medford Scout Executive to- Move to Salem Gordon Gilmore, Medford, ex ecutive of the Crater lake area council of the Boy Scouts for the past four years, has been selected to take over leadership of Cas cade area council, succeeding Lyle Leigh ton who resigned recently to become deputy regional execu tive in Kansas City for the nation al scout council. Announcement of Gilmore's ap pointment came Wednesday night from Medford where he resigned as head of the Crater Lake coun cil. Leighton said a Cascade coun cil selection committee had chosen Gilmore over five other eandl dates in a meeting last Friday Mayor Robert Elfstrom. Gardner Knapp, William Bailey and HoUls Smith were on the selection board. oiimore, 46, has been a pro fessional scout leader for 64 years including 2H years in Spokane as a field executive and four years at Medford. Previous to this he was a scouter and scout leader for 12 years. Me is marriM and nas a son and daughter. Ilia daughter is now attending Pomona Junior college in California and his son Is 1 high school student and boy scout. Gil more's wife Is teaching school In Medford and Leighton said the family may remain In that city until the end of the school term. Leighton said the new leader would probably arrive sometime in mid-February. Leighton will remain in Salem a short time to acquaint Gilmore with the Cascade area. Leighton pointed out that Gil more had both rural and metro politan scouting experience in his professional career. He was highly successful In his four years with the Crater Lake council which is located in a less heavily populat ed area than his new charge. Lighton said. British to Scrap 4 Famed Battleships LONDON, Jan. 21 -OP)- Four of Britain's best known battle ships and the 31-year-old battle cruiver Renown will be scrapped as obsolete, cutting the royal na vy'i capital ship strength to its lowest point in modern naval his tory, a government spokesman announced today. The five battlewagons whose scrap will be used to boost Bri tain s steel production are the Queen Elizabeth, Valiant. Nelson, Koaney, ana battle cruiser Re nown. Uranium Mines Max Seydewitz, minister pretl dent of Saxony, said in an inter view mat za.uou uermans are working in what he described as cobalt, zinc, lead and kaolin mines, lie said this figure compared with 5,000 to 6,000 workers before the war. Both Gen. Dudarov and Seyde witz remained silent on the output of the mines and professed not to know that pitchblende, a source of unanium, was being mined. The German press has carried many stories saying uranium is being taken from the mines. Seydewitz confirmed that the entire produc tion of the mines is going to the Soviet Union. , A request to visit the former concentration camp of Buchen wald outside Weiwar also was re fused because "it is a military in stallation." The conducting official denied political or other prisoners were being detained in Buchenwald, as generally reported in the Ameri can and British licensed German press. Throughout the seven-day trip the correspondents were not per mitted to go out alone "because you might get lost." 4 Now 237 j Palestine Migration Rejected By Ma Barrel . ' i LAKZ SUCCESS, Jan.1 31 Britain tonight rejected the tec ommendation of the United Ra tions assembly for opening a ma Jor port in Palestine by February 1 to permit the beginning of large scale Jewish Immigration. " Britain's refusal to1 com fly with this key provision of )m Palestine partition plan was plc ed before a secret meeting of the V. N. Palestine partition commis sion by Sir Alexander Cad or an. The British declaration thua, made ft clear that the commis sion would be unable to imple ment the first step in the ir titioning of the Holy Land and would be compelled to report Site failure to the security council, i Te Keep taaae Qaeta jf I Cadogan. replying to four re dfic questions submitted by lte five-member commission, also (de clared Britain had no intention; of Increasing the present Immigra tion quota of 1.500 a month I tween now and termination ( of the British mandate now sched uled for May IS "or earlier." Cadogan's answer was given special Importance because it 1 In volved the first deadline In (tlie partition plan and thus provided the first test of the commiitn'a ability to implement it. After hearing Cadogan. I the commission was to begin discus sion on the nature of Its n report to the security couth 11 which probably will be submit ted late next week. t Te Note Bri tale's gland ft This report will Include a sum mary of the commission's diffi culties to date and will undoubt edly call the council's attention to Britain's position on Immigra tion as well as other phases of the partition plan. : v In explaining Britain's refusal to comply with the U. fi.- recom mendation to evacuate a major port by February 1, Cadogan raid that If there was an uncontrolled influx of immigrants into! the a a . ... " jioiy Lna it would jeopardix an already delicate situation, would create further difficulties and endanger general security Pa lei tine. . la Boy in Poison Case to Live In Boys Town i BEND, Jan. 21 The1 11- year-old youngster who made hie father poisoned cheesei andwrhee was en route today to Boys.' Town. Nebraska, where he will live. Cecil Snyder, arrested after Ma father's poison death last Def rm ber 12, was released by Juvenile court to be sent to Boys' Town. A Coeur d'AIene. Idaho, num. offered to take the youth there. The decision to send the; boy to the famed rehabilitation center ended the baffling problem of whether to prosecute an llear- old for murder. I i Sheriff C. L. McCauler said the boy told of repeated abuse by Me r t. t A u .i r -. The motner is dead, and all the brothers and ' sitters had viously left home. even pie- The youngster, who rtller- skated down the corridors! and sang in his cell while he was peing held in Jail, seemed confused When he headed for Boys' Town, lie looked uncertainly at the i new clothes people had sent hini and observed that his old, worn; on were "more comfortable. i f Accident Prevention Conclave Oneris Totlay The fourth annual Industrial accident prevention conference. sponsored by the accident preven tion division of the State Industrial Accident commission, will open to day for a two-day meeting In Sa lem. I i v . Gov. John Hall will give the ad dress of welcome. RepresentaUvee of industrial firms from many sec tions or the northwest will eiterwf. Wealher Max. - SI Vin. I " M i 14 fieri p. Sales Portland San rrancisco to , .Ml . .49 Chicago .. .. New York M Willamette river St feet, falling. Forecast (from Ul. weather bureau. McNary field, ealerni; Cloudy tot! a and tontfht. Warmer tonight. Iiga to day SO. iosv tonight S3. I , SALEM PEECiriTATlOV (Stnre Sea. ) k This Year Last Year Averaaa as-za aoai imu . 0 II