. - - . . ' ... : - . ? ' : . i . I l ' I i ' 4 . - . j , Guninmm-'Rob PmsengerSf Shoot? Slug-.rewm in- Train MoMmp. TJileini KilDedl Son - Blast in Creamery MT. ANGEL, March 0 Ste phen Sprauer, 33, and John Po iinsky, 95, died today after a milk cooler tank blew up sud denly at about 4 pjn. In the Mt Angel Cooperative Creamery. . Both men died In a Silverton hospital where they were re moved after the blast. Sprauer died shortly after arrival at the hospital and Polinsky succumbed to-ammonia burns and other in juries at about 8 pjn. Polinsky and Sprauer, both creamery employes, were stand ing on a platform above the cooler when the mechanism ex ploded. They were blown off the Jlatform onto the cement floor, lembers of the Mt Angel fire department donned oxygen, masks to drag them out of the ammonia fume-filled room five minutes later. . A third man, Paul Wachter, was also in the room near the Bar to Liens An4i-Red Bill Approved , . By , Wendell Webb Managing Editor. The Statesman An outright bar to state liens getting old-age pensions was approved by a 6 to 9 vote lot the house welfare committee Wednesday, apparently on the basis of protests aired at a public bearing the previous night j . The committee wrote the anti-lien provision, which exempts property up to $5000 la value, into the bill calling for $50 minimum OtP 8(350008 up croizg Living on to the age of 90 Wil liam S. U'Ken outlived his own fame, Tew in Oregon knew him personally these later years, and probably the majority of present citizens would fail to Identify his name with the political revolution that occurred about the turn of the century. Ytt in that revolution VBen played a leading part That overturn was In the direc tion of pure democracy. Soma might call it evolution but In fact it involved a radical departure from the political ideas of the founding fathers. Our government, both federal and state, was con ceived as a republic, with power vested In representatives chosen by the people. The president and vice president were to be elected by an electoral college, not by the people directly. Senators were to be elected by state legislature, only the representatives by the people directly. . In states governors, senators and representatives were elected by popular vote; but aa far as legis ' lation was concerned this was a form of representative government The political party system came Into flower with Martin Van Bur en and after the civil war, with the rise of industrialism, business and politics came into close alliance. As political power came to reside chiefly in the political machine (like Tammany hall In New York city, the Quay-Penrose machine in Pennsylvania) people came to lose confidence in their elected repre sentatives. To break the grip of the political machine reformers planned fresh implements which Involved a transfer of more power to the people. " i ' William 8. ITRen, a Portland lawyer who had served in the 1897 session of the legislature (a blank because of the deadlock over elec tion of a U. 8. senator) was one of these reformers. He was the "Idea-man." The tools he devised included the direct primary to re place the caucus-convention system (Continued on editorial page.) XESUILDINa CZOOX DIKES - PRINZVXLLZ, Ore., ' March 9 (AVCrook county dikes are being rebuilt along the Crooked river to guard against possible floods this spring. Record snows in the moun tains also have led to formation of evacuation and relief commit tees in the county. Animsl Craeltcrs - By WARREN GOODRICH "Do you reazt there's only 290 diys 'til Christmur Results in Deaths door at the time of the blast He crawled to freedom through the door. He was- treated for am monia burns about the hands and face at Silverton hospital and then released. 1 j ' The new ammonia t tubular milk cooler was Installed only three days ago and had been working satisfactorily, according to Frank Hettwef, creamery manager. He said he had not de termined the cause of the freak explosion. j Services for both pen are be in arranged by the! Unger Fu neral home here. The blast did not damage the rest; of the crea mery and it will continue to op erate, Hettwer said tonight Sprauer is survived by his wife and four children. -Polinsky is survived by bis widow and sev en children. (Additional details on page 2.) lite on the property of most persons mommy uiuwm to persons over 65 years old., But the provision will get a going-over in. the joint ways and means committee, which has offered a bill of j its own de manding liens - to insure repay ment of state assistance. Compromise Possible; There was talk Wednesday of a $2500 compromise in the lien pro vision. ) Meanwhile, the senate unani mously passed and sent to the house Sen. Jack Bain's proposal to bar communists from state em playment Dismissed sir sons would have the right of appeal. The senate also passed and sent to the house measures putting school-bus inspection under the secretary of state; raising from $75 to $100 nonth the income exempt from garnishment, and providing for a plaque on the new state office building: In Portland in ttonorof former U.JS. Sen. Fred erick W. Mulkey. j , - Parted by the senate and sent to IX, governor were house-approved measures creating a state potato marketing comrrtssion, in creasing the mileage allocation in sparsely-settled school districts and asking President Truman to spur U. S. delegates In tha United Nations to work for; a world po- uce, ana reduced armament and a limited world federation. New Bills Entered The senate received nine new bills Wednesday, including those to Increase the salary of supreme court justices from $8500 to $10, 000 a year; prohibit livestock from running t at large; license dental hyglenists and permit chil dren to be excused from physical education classes. The senate 'has fa fairly full calendar today, and the house sets the session's record4-lt has 29 bills up for final passage, Including its own measures proposing amend ments to the withholding tax law, the licensing of practical nurses, licensing of building contractors, changing the "deadline for dams on the Rogue river fo permit con struction of a $90,000,000 project altering the milk-grading act and requiring that initiative measures must provide means of financing whatever is proposed. Both the seriate and house will resume at 10 a.m. today. (Additional details' on page 1, J) WOOL OUTPUT DROPS PORTLAND March "-(-Oregon's wool production dropped to a 39-year low In 1948, the federal crop reporting service said today. The total was estimated at 8,100, 000 pounds, about t per cent less than in 1947 and only 50 per cent of the 1937-48 average. quested Republican Women Crowd Galleries at Capitol 1 1 fl 7. 1 1 r r... "1 k It" 4 State legUlalors Wednesday worked under the watchful eyes of hundreds ef members ef Oregon Repub lican Women's Federation who descended en the legislature from all parts ef Oregon. Pictured above a . ma . a m a . a i . -M A S 1 is ui senate gauery pacxea wun I11 West Virginia MARTTNSBURG, W. Vau, March fc-iffV-Two gunmen in a melodra matic holdup renunscent-of wild west days robbed everybody aboard a Baltimore and Ohio ex press train, shot one person and slugged several tonight. The robbers forced the Ambas sador, Detroit bound from Balti more, to stop outside this small town in the eastern panhandle of West Virginia. They were joined by two accomplices and escaped in a car they stole from a nearby night club. A chef was shot in the leg when the robbers fired twice to make passengers open the club car which they had locked. A passenger and three trainmen were slugged with gun butts. None required more than first aid treatment when the train arrived in Cumberland. Took All Cash Terrorized passengers said the gunmen went through the cars twice, taking everybody's cash. The robbers, who boarded the train at Washington, brought the train to a halt by pulling the emergency cord a few minutes after it left Martins burg. There were about 100 persons aboard. Pulling what passengers said ap peared to be .45 caliber revolvers, they started pushing around the riders and demanding their money. Rebecca Davis, a negro girl going to Detroit was hit behind the ear. Shoot tnte Car Club car passengers locked the door when they became aware of what was happening. The gunmen shot twice into the car, one bullet rlchocheting and inflicting a flesh wound on a chefs leg. After making a clean sweep of money among the passengers, the gunmen headed for the front of the train. They met Engineer C. C. Moore who had come back to to investigate the emergency sig nal. He was banged on the head and herded back to the cab where the three crewmen were held at gunpoint Backed Up Train ' Engineer Moore was ordered to back up the train to a grade cross ing siding. There the two gunmen forced the crewmen out of the cab, robbed them and fled. Martlnsburg police In scouring the area for the robbers were in formed at a night club that four armed men had shown up there, stolen a sedan and left The car was found abandoned a short dis tance away and later another auto believed stolen by the quartet was discovered empty. , (Additional details on page I.) Kansas Sober TOPEKA, Kas., March -UP) Kansas took its legal liquor sob erly today I after a 89-year -drought." Officials said they saw no in crease in drunkenness. Publication of the state's newly enacted control law made it pos sible for a Kansan to possess liquor without facing a manda tory jail sentence, although they wont be able to buy it in stores before July l. Kansas didn't go on a spree to celebrate. One man in the street here put it this way: "Legal liquor takes half the fun out of drinking it."'. Dam Builders To Open Office MILL CITY, March 9 Tempor ary Detroit dam project offices for Consolidated Builders, Inc., will be established early next week, fa cials announced Wednesday. The quarters will be over the fire hall and in the ' Presbyterian church recreation halt Only a few men are to be as signed here i et first growing as the contractor's work on the dam progresses. Eventually the offices will be adjacent to the dam site. R. A. Hoffman, superintendent for Consolidated, will be in charge. s rr J ft Drinks Legal 4 inieresiea women spectators, (statesman pow, SSih Tear 14 PAGES fflKCP 'Axis Sally9 Trial Jury Deadlocked after 10 Hours New Fighting Reported Between Israel, Arabs Trans-Jordan Claims Jewish Force Stopped AMMAN, Trans-Jordan, March 9-PV-The defense ministry i re ported tonieht a clash between Trans-Jordan's Arab legion and Israeli armed forces moving to ward the Gulf of Aqaba.. (In Tel Aviv the Israeli ministry of foreign affairs said it had no knowledge of any such clash. A spokesman declared that no1 Is raeli units are stationed or oper ating outside Israeli's territory.) The Trans-Jordan defense min istry announcement said: l -The Arab legion stopped: Is raeli forces proceeding toward Aqaba at a point 50 kilometers (32 miles) from Aqaba. A Jewish force has proceeded toward Aqaba since March 7." j No further details were given. But there were reports that fight ing broke out last night and con tinued today. The Gulf of Aqaba is a joint Red Sea outlet of Israel ana Trans-Jordan, who are not en cased in armistice talks at Rhodes. Trans-Jordan's port of Aqaba, where British troops are stationed, is flanked on the west by a 10 mile coastal strip of Palestine's Negev desert which the United Nations assigned to the Jews. It was reported Israeli armored forces moved south in two lines, from Beersheba and from posi tions south of the Dead Sea,7 and that a clash developed last night Anti-Filibuster Leaders Claim ! GOP Support WASHINGTON, March 9 -JP Senate a n 1 1 - filibuster leaders claimed -unexpected' republican support tonight for a showdown attempt to break the southern- led talkathon tomorrow. The debate, directly involving the risrht of filibustering and indirectly keyed to the bitter errU rights controversy, has jammed the senate's legislative machinery for nine days. Majority Leader Lucas (D-Bl) told newsmen late this afternoon that 33 senators so far had sign ed a petition to end the Dixie filibuster against a proposed change in senate rules. Only 16 names are required on the so-called cloture (debate lim iting) petition, which Lucas said he will file tomorrow. But if Vice President Barkley rules that the petition can be entertained a majority of those present will be necessary to up hold his ruling. And to put an actual limit on debate requires a two-thirds majority. The sen ate has 90 seats. Among the signers of the peti tion were 17 democrats and II republicans. The GOP signers Included Sen ator Morse (Ore). JOE E. BROWN IN HOSPITAL PHILADELPHIA, March 9 -OP) Comedian Joe E. Brown, suffer ing from a recurrence of malaria Contracted during World War II. was removed from his hotel to a hospital today. r 1 Si "l " ' fOUNDBD 1651 ' j J j The Oregon Statesman, Salem. Oregon. Thursday, sQ Pressmen End Strike; Publication Still Stalled PORTLAND March tMAVThe strike of AFL pressmen against Portland's two daily newspapers ended today, and employers said publication would be resumed "as soon as production problems can be solved." The end of the 20-day strike was announced in a joint statement by publishers of The Journal and The Oregonian nd the Web Press Plea Rejected 4 J .4 WASHXNGTAN, March 9 Soviet aratrsmflirr Alexander S. ran yaskkln antvee at fee state de partment today to ask Secretary ef State Dean Aeheeen to se cure the re lease ef Talenttn A. GaMtehev, arrested la New York en aa esptenage charge. Aeheeen rejected the demand. (AP Wlrephete to the States- ). Price of Coal Drops in East PITTSBURGH, March 9-4PV-A crack opened today in post-war soft coal prices. But it's too early to tell if it means your furnace coal will be cheaper. Pittsburgh Consolidated Coal Co., often called the world's larg est commercial producer, announc ed price reductions of from 15 to 40 cents a ton, according to graae, in coal 'from some of its northern West Virginia fields. The price cuts are being made in several new yearly contracts be ing negotiated with industries. The contracts usually are effective each April 1. Bankers Plan Farm Conclave Western Oregon farm trends lit turkeys, beef cattle, dairying and farm woodlands will be the theme of the annual western Oregon agricultural conference of the Ore gon Bankers association scheduled for Portland March 1$ in the Ben son hotel. The conference is held in cooperation with Oregon State college. The program recently distribut ed calls for many brief reports from farmers, college specialists, ana Dangers eoncenung we situ ation In the four enterprises em phasized this year. OSC extension specialists scheduled include- N. L. Bennion, poultry; H. A. Lind gren, livestock; H. P. Ewalt dairy ing.' and Charles, R. Ross, farnvf forestry. (Additional Farm News on pages 8 and 7), W ) air, men s Local 17 . It did not mean, however, that publication would be resumed at once, since the AFL printers have announced they will not go back to work until "future working conditions'' have been settled. Claim, Leek Oat The printers, laid off with other of the papers' 2,000 employes February 19, asserted they were locked out, and Indicated they, would demand pay for the period since. The CIO American Newspaper Guild local also has announced its members would not return to work until the situation has been dis cussed in a meeting of members. The Guild is in negotiation for M wage revision under an Interim opening clause in their contract with the two newspapers. Agreement Reached The Joint : statement said the pressmen and the newspapers had reached an agreement on a new two-rear contract. It provides a pay taerease of $3.23 weekly, re troactive to January 1. That would lift the scale to $90.79 for a 17 H-hour week. It also pro vided a third week of paid vaca tion. The statement said, "It also embraces an alteration In the operation of the presses when color is run ea black unite and a two-year term with sA Interim opening for discussion of wages and hours. Other deails were not disclosed. The pressmen originally asked a publisher-financed pension plan of which no mention was made in the new contract and up to $110 weekly, although this later was scaled down to an approxi mate $90. Stacker Asko For Opinion on Pyramid Clubs Marlon County District Attorney E. O. Stadter, jr., aald Wednesday he wrote to Portland and Multno mah county authorities regarding roc legality or Pyramid clubs, wmcn are sweeping saiem. Inquiries from local residents wanting to know the status of the clubs have been Increasing at the district attorney's office and at that of the city attorney Recently one Pyramid party was raided ; in Portland, arrests made and several participants fin ed. Local officials expressed In terest in the mathernatlcal calcu lations involved in the clubs where a payoff Is promised those who reach the apex. Stadter said recently, although he was doubtful as to the back grounds of i the dubs, he could find no statute barring them. Man Held in Cottage Grove Jewel Robbery EUGENE, March 9 - CP) - EUze Claud Farrell, 23, Cottage Grove, was held in jail here today follow ing the theft of $10,000 worth of jewelry at Cottage Grove. Police Chief C. A. Nordstrom of Cottage Grove said the man's pockets were bulging with dia mond rings, earrings, watches and necklaces when arrested there. The store robbed was the Com munity Jewelers. Nordstrom said It was the third theft in Cottage Grove in a week.. 1 h;6 wGoriwoQ I Max. l . . l M Min. Precip. S4 1 S3 ' .01 Portland Sa franc laco Chieaso 04 at a New York Willamette river 4.1 feet . rorecaat I from VX. weather bureau. McNarr field, Salem): Mostly ewudy tooay ana ion ism wim kcowmi rains today High today near J de grees; low tenight near U degrees. SALEM FKCCTFrTATION SevC 1 to Marca IS) This Tear : Last Year Average K.T4 U.SO MM March 10, 1949 Jurors Locked In Hotel Rooms Until Morning WASHINGTON. March 9-0P)-A federal jury weighing the gov ernment's treason case against Mildred E. (Axis Sally) Gillars was unable to reacn a verdict tonight and was locked up until morning. The jurors started their delib erations at 12:03 p.m. (EST). More than 10 i hours later they were still not ready to announce a verdict In the case of the Port land, Me, native who broadcast for the nazl radio in wartime. Marshals took them to a hotel where they were to be sealed off for the night under guard. Charles Ward, chief U. S. dep uty marshal, said the jurors will be brought back to the courthouse after breakfast in the morning. Federal Judge Edward M. Cur- ran turned the case over to the jury at 12:03 pjnJ, after admon ishing them to "weigh the evi dence dispassionately. If convicted, the 48-year-old former broadcaster for the nazl radio would face a possible max imum penalty of death in the elec tric chair. As the seven-week trial here entered the climactic phase. Judge Curran Instructed the jury at length on defense claims that "coercion, compulsion and neces sity" drove Miss Gillars to make her propaganda broadcasts from Germany during World War II. These factors, ne said, could not be used aa an excuse for treason unless the jury believed that Miss Ulnars suffered well-grounded fear of Immediate death or great bodily Harm" u she bad refused to obey her German masters." -And a fear that ahe might be sent to a concentration camp is not sufficient'' Judge Curran said. Church Bing Games Safe PORTLAND. March 9 -OP) Church bingo ; games are safe in Portland, and' punchboards are, too et least for a while. Mayor Dorothy McCullough Lee said today she had no Intention of ordering police to molest the church games and raffles. The punchboards were spared Impend fng seizure when Circuit Judge Alfred P. Dobeon Issued a temporary restraining order order against the city on a plea from Martin Xors, a punchboard distributor. i Minimum Pay Hike Advances WASHINGTON, March 9 -WV The house labor committee today approved a bill to raise the nation al minimum wage from 40 cents an hour to 79. After more than six hours of heated discussion, several republican-sponsored amendments were tentatively voted Into the bill. Then Ren. Bailey (D-WVs) mov ed to substitute the original bill for the amended measure. Hie mo tion carried IS to 12. with three democrats voting with the com mittees nine republicans. After that the committee went through a formal vote approving the bill in final form, it passed 19 to 9. I TurneiAuni8vilIc School Issue Talk Tonight at Lyons STAYTON. March 9 Another meeting for Information and an swering questions regarding the proposed merger of union high school districts 4 end 9 . will be at Lyons at 8 p.m. Thursday. Sponsored by the Lyons grange, it will be in Rebekah halt open to the - public. A representative is expected rt rom the state depart ment of education. The Stayton and Turner-Aums- ville union districts will vote Fri day on whether to consolidate. Polling places are the high school in Stayton and the school gymna sium in Aumsville. More than 200 persons attended an "information" meeting at Stay ton high school Tuesday night Questions were answered for more than two hours by Mrs. Agnes Booth, Marion county school sup erintendent and Cliff Robinson, state director of secondary education, mm Price) 5c No. SC9 I Prog ra; Set for Asse: Doubled ear llrmu fM Sin lr stead of $3) and an extra cent of gasoline tax (6 cents instead of 8) appeared in prospect for Oregon' todav tar, raise an arid Itt Anal tL. mated revenue of $7,500,000 a year. Ana a new system or taxing trucks may raise another 93,000,000. Bills calllne for theae InmntM were approved Wednesday by the house highway committee. The ex tra gasoline tax would be effective Jlllv 1. the neuf tmrlr ta min A the car license Increase January L ' viues, tjoanuee snare The state hlihwi Mmmlulna would sret the entire tlmatwi - 900,000 increase in car license fees nut cities and '. counties would share the Increased gasoline tan estimated to nroduce ts.ooo oon an nually. The proposed truck tax bill calls for fixed license fees according to Welffht similar in h mun abolished two years ago when a wn-nuim tax Dasis was adopted. The legislative lolnt waa n means committee alan 1tln4 ih. drive for adjournment Wednesday vj sending to the floor for final action the first of its big budget measures appropriations for state institutions for the next two years. avcirrenatuis uaeiy Na man waa cimuM. 0 r. WW. WWW AWI.JfVW buildings, and it was indicated proposals for construction both at state institutions and at highet education centers might be refer : red to the people. uuagets approved by the Joint ! ways and means committee ln eluded: state hospital $4,827781 Eastern Oregon state hospital S2 ou,zfv; rairview home 92.683,3741 State School for the Deaf $644,82 .-The ways and means committee wo approved a bill requiring the State liauor mmmlnlnn in hi, ail ' its supplies (except liquor) through we eiaie purcnasing agent. ' Meanwhile, representatives of the COUntv fudee'a nliflnn eaa plained to the wayg and meant ' Committee that -the enuntUa ..a unable to meet demands of the -public welfare : commission foJ funds greater than provided tj I county budgets, f y (Additional details page I) 1 House Backs , Radar Fence, Rocket Range . WASHINGTON. Mirth flwffj ;i a wo oeiense moves to guard the uniica States S rains t sneak- aerial " attack and to develop long-rare nuasuca lor . counier-atucx won' unanimous approval la the housj tooay. By voice vote, the lawmakersl passed and sent to the senate: , ! L A bur authorizing the ail force to set up a "radar fence" te ; warn of the approach of enernjh planes. . , . Z. A measure approving cone. structionof a 9,000-mile range fci : testing guided missiles. j Military witnesses nave tesu-t i fled that robot missiles capable oi traveling 900 miles will be read for testing this. year. This com; pares with the; wartime German I-' atiwOT4 Jk aWrvai Mill.. V ea s www a se etwue aw mmm i At the outset the bills woull limit expenditures 'to $3500,00 for the radar warning system an$ 70,000,000 for the missiles range, ! Ultimately, the radar net is ex pected to cost 9181.200.000 and th rocket-test range about 9200,000, 000. I Butter Prices I i ' i Skid in Salem jj Decrease In butter and butterfaT prices in Salem continued Wed nesday. ! Butter dropped one cent pt pound, to 69 cents wholesale an4 ; 74 cents retail. I I Dutterfat prices were 88 cent! for premium, 84 for No. 1 and l i for No. 2. i 4 '' PORTLAND, March - W ej Butter went down a cent at most : Portland retail toutlets today, reel ducing the price rsnge to 71-71 cents a pound for grade A. Santlam Flax Growers ' Exporting Tow, Mexico f JEFFERSON. Mar. 9 The firsf carload of tow Is being loaded la Jefferson by Santiam Flax Grow ers to be shipped out this wceJt to Mexico, as part of a contract made with a Mexican company several months igo. It will be the '; first time that tow produced in , this country by private enterprise: has been shipped to another coun : tnbly