nn rii i' on , : E i ! . S 1 . ' Letter Ne. I . wirar vnnK I was in Phlladel phla Monday to attend a meeting of the board oi "rresDyienan ia.c, h TvihHrntlnn of the Presbyterian church which is now Just a year old. I was one of the committee named to launch the magazine ana am still on its board- Tne expen ham heen an interesting one Launching a magazine, even un der church auspices is Dy no means easy. The board meetings are strenuous affairs, under compul sion to decide many important mat 4rm in limited time. My associates on the board come from various parts oi tne country, most of them laymen. One man, J n r-mtrhfield of Pittsburgh, ii president of the American Fruit Growers, witn interests in we wu thern Oregon pear belt and in the apple growing sections of Wash ington as well as in other parts of the country. One man is a col lege president; one woman is wife of the president of another col lege; another woman a former na tional head of the P-TA. One mem ber Is in charge of public relations fnr nn nt the country's largest corporations. The contacts with inese peopie ax iuuwu"i though the time for visiting is ex ceedingly short. In New York Tuesday I at tended the trial of 11 commun ists charged with conspiracy to Hhrnw tha government. It is held In the federal courthouse in Foley square, before Judge Harold R. Medina. Weeks were consumed by the obstructive tactics of the lawyers for the (Continued on editorial page.) Lewis Orders Miners to Start PITTSBURGH, March 24 -VP) John L. Lewis passed the word down to the UMW ranks today co back to work Monday. It was good news for Industry. It was also welcomed by the 463,- 000 Idle hard and soft coal miners larSci the Mississippi. They said at the start of the two-week me morial - protest shutdown March 14 their pocketbooks would be sagging by the scheduled end of the work stoppage Monday. v Lewis' word to return to the pits as scheduled came in the form of an' "executive communication. It came shortly after the Balti more and Ohio, an important coal carrier, announced that 8,500 shop workers now on furloughs would return to work April 4, one week after the miners resume opera ' tions. Idled train crews will be recalled as needed. Over the na . tion more than 70,000 railroaders were laid off during the mine shutdown. Pen Population At Record High ' Population was at an an - time high at the Oregon State peniten tiary today. Warden George Alexander said the prison, with accommodations supposedly for 1100, had a regis tration of 1334. There were 120 at the peniten tiary annex, 93 in the so - called garage dormitory and 82 at the hospital at least half of them there only because ' there wasn't room elsewhere. -. The new cellblock designed to iccommodate 400 and thereby bring the prison's "capacity" to 1500 will be finished within two or three months. Officials have estimated population will exceed the 1500 - mark within a year or two. ; ; PANES SUPPORT PACT COPENHAGEN, Denmark, March 24 -VPy- The-lower house of the Danish parliament today approved the nation's entry into the North Atlantic alliance by a five to one margin. The action was referred to the upper house, where similar approval is re garded as certain: Animal Crackers Bf WARREN GOODRICH "No? Woll portent you'll find something you likt in our btrgsia bistmentJ - :; ork Monday sS tt BaanaaaBsaBaeMaasBaauBaBaasaaauaaBBaa w Disputes Shackle Session Houses Senate Dispute 'Who's Slowing Who' Br Lester F. Cour Staff Writer. Tha Statesman Sharp differences over old age pensions and racing meets slowed down the Oregon! legislature Thursday, threatening to make the 1949 session the longest in his tory. I At the same time, a rift be tween the house and senate over "who's murdering our bills" promised to bog down progress still further as the lawmakers wound up their 74th day only 10 days short of the record 84-day session in 1947. : A joint ways and means sub committee Thursday divided 5 to 3 over provisions of the proposed S50-a-month old age pension writ ten by the house welfare com mittee. J Five committee members be lieve the state should have prior claim on any real i property left by deceased pensioners. Pots S5,00t Limit Three members favor the bill written by the welfare committe which bars state claims on prop erty valued at less than $5,000. Under the bill, the state could deduct what a recipient had re ceived in pension payments from money received by a pensioner's survivors when property worth more than $5,000 Isf sold. The race meet problem came to a head Thursday afternoon when the house state and federal af fairs committee recommended a bin to repeal all pari-mutuel bet tins: on dog and horse racing. Tired of Wrangling Committee members said they were tired of listening to session long WTangle between horse and dog racing interests ever who should have the best racing meet dates. : i The committee action came af ter the house sent the group's race meet bill back tar committee for amendments. The committee had been workins? on the measure for two months, but admitted it was unable to ' satisfy f either the dog or horse racing interests. Rep. Rudie WilhelmJ Jr. Portland. chairman of the committee, said he hopes the i threatened repeal wul bring the ttvo Interests to time. v . i !-.f Canon Leads Off The rift between the house and senate developed Thursday morn ing when Sen. Allan Carson, Sa lem, charged that numerous bills approved unanimously in the sen ate were being buried in house committees. Senators charged that one committee . has failed to act on more than 100 bills. Others said the house was deliberately passing its own bills, refusing to act on tne senate's and then charg ing the senate with holding up adjournment I Both houses moved through long calendars Thursday, passing sev eral important ! measures and killing several.' ; Split Income Passes The house voted to permit mar ried couples to continue splitting their incomes for state income tax purposes after the repealed com munity property law expires. The bin now goes to the senate. Sent to thel governor by the house were senate-approved bills allowing the board of control to send Oregon's I criminals to a women's reformatory in California and permitting officials of Hill crest School, for Girls to return Incorrigible girls? to Jurisdiction of the courts. J Drivers License Bill The house killed a bill which would have boosted drivers' lic ense fees to $3, earmarking the additional funds for county and city roads, .ill Also passed In the house and sent to the senate were bills ap propriating $22,500 to bur addi tional property for the state heat ing punt at 13th and Ferry streets; Increasing from $4,500 to $5,000 the annual salary of district judges of Marion, Lane and Clack amas counties; abolishing the post-war readjustment and devel opment commission. Senate Defeat Plan The senate defeated 22 to 8 a bill which would have given the secretary of state power to reject a political party's statement In the voters' pamphlet which he con siders false. The! majority charged it would .set up ,a censorship over the pamphlet i I . The senate completed action on house resolution setting up a five-man interim committee to study the possibility of taking over the $2,500,000 Astoria naval hos pital as a state hospital- The fa culties could be obtained free. The committee ? - will investigate the hospital immediately and report back lo tne legislature. The house labor committee vot ed 5 to 4 Thursday to recommend defeat of bills to repeal two. 1947 acts which restrict labor unions. They would repeal laws outlawing secondary boycotts and requiring labor elections to determine if labor disputes exist The bouse will decide the -issue Monday.' Both houses : resume at 10 a.m. todav. i . : - ' h-. ; . v. ... (Additional details on page 12.) 8URGEKY FOR -THOMAS WASHINGTON, March 24 Aides of Rep. J. Parnell Thomas (R-NJ) said today the condition of the former hotue un-American activities committee chairman was "good" following an abdominal operation earlier today. 89th YEAB 20 CdDsft off ILovDinig Po-op WDpes Food Prices Reduced 2i Last Month WASHINGTON. March 24 -OP) The cost of living has dropped for the fifth month in a row, and vir tually all of the increase that oc curred in 1948 has now been wip ed out government figures show ed today. The bureau of labor statistics reported that its consumers' price index declined 1.1 per-cent be tween January IS and February 19. This fifth consecutive drop brought the index down to a point where it was only 0 J per cent higher than a year ago. The Index figure on February is was 169 per cent of the 1935 39 average. It was 27 per cent above June 1946, when OPA con trols were abandoned, and 71 per cent higher than the pre-war level of August 1939. The substantial cuts in food pri ces between January and Febru ary sent the index on that class of items down 2.5 per cent There were smaller declines for clothing and house furnishings. As a result of the three the index, which represents the retail prices of goods and services bought bv moderate Income families in large cities, took one of its deepest de scents for one month since the war. The food index on February 15 was 199.7 per cent of the 1935-29 average, S per cent below the July 1948 peak. It was :2 per cent lower than a year ago and 27 per cent above the June 1948 level. . '' . '" - f. mmmnWt Sue Barnes Salem Cherry Fete Princess Suzanne Barnes, 1 17 - year - old senior at Salem high school, was selected Thursday by the student council as Salem high princess for the annual Cherryland festival. Miss Barnes, recently in charge of a high school improvement as sembly, is the daughter of Mrs. C A. Downs, 2121 S. High at First to be named to the royal court of the 1949 festival, she will compete with eight other mid-Willamette valley girls for Cherryland queen. Max, - n ; - s SS : Min. U 11 Proeip. M Silent Portland San Francisco Chieaao 42 trac ts m Nw York 7 as jM WUlamott river IJ tl FORECAST (from lA wmUmt bu reau. McNary timid. Salem) : Cloudy with light rain today, becoming part ly cloudy with scattered showers to nirht, High today near S4. Low to niht near SS. SALEM rmECTFITATIOM (Seal. 1 to March 2S) This Year Last Year 17.7 Average 90.34 ass Hungarian Government Ousts VIENNA, Mar. 24-In hoUI room la Vienna today. Lt CoL John P. Merrffl (right) pelata U phetesUUe copy ef receipt for garage Mil which Hongarian government says he refused to pay and for which rea son he waa expelled freaa country, yesterday. With Una Is IX CoL Peter Keaesak (left), former West ' Point football star, who also waa expelled freaa Hungary. Both were assistant aailltary attaches ef the U. 8. legation at Budapest Hungary also accused the two U. S. army anea of spying and "brutal ab ed diploma Ho artvileges.' (AP Wlrepheto via radU from Vienna to The Stotesmaa.) it ! . r . : PAGES The Oracjon Ton of Dynamite Blasts Rock at -- This recent blasting eporatioa at a ton ef dynamito waa set off la one blast in the Croisan creek area fear anUes south of gaJem. Behind the leg barrier is Robert B. Brennan ef the West Coast Powder Co. (Story ea page 2). Bulganin Removed as Russian Military Chief LONDON, March 24-AVTbe Soviet Union announced tonight that Marshal Alexander M. Vasilevsky, 49, has succeeded Marshal Nik olai A. Bulganin as minister of tha armed forces - - the highest mili tary post in all of Russia. This was the first big change Prime Minister Stalin stepped down as minister of the armed forces i ... ic m i 1 i ,' ' i , . ' ' i , ' , - ' , . . , ' - -t s - - " f t " .--. . LONDON, March 24 The Mos cow radio announced tonight Marshal Nikola! A. Balgaata (above), has been succeeded by Marshal Alexander M. Vasilev sky as minister of the forces ef the Soviet Union. T-H REPEAL ADVANCES WASHINGTON. March 24 -(JP) President Truman's bill to repeal the Taft-Hartley act won 13-10 approval by the house labor com mittee today and headed toward an early debate in the house. POUNDDI 1651 Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Friday. March 25, 1849 Croisan aauurries produced! seaae 15,1 in soviet military leadership since in 194? and appointed Bulganin to succeed him. Stalin ran the armed forces during the war. The new shift followed top lev el changes in the soviet political hierarchy in the last few weeks. The most Important was the re lease of V. M. Molotov as foreign minister to be succeeded by An drei Y. Vlshinsky. Bulganin is also a vice chairman of the council of ministers of the soviet union-a deputy prime minister. A man known for his ability as a skilled negotiator and administrator, BuJvnin will pre sumably keep his dvuty premier ship. Into the post of minister of the armed forces comes a relatively young man who has carved out a distinguished career in soviet mil itary annals. Vasilevsky was dep uty minister under Bulganin and therefore is closely associated with the workings of the office. Smelt Run Hits Sandy River PORTLAND, Ore- March 24 (AVTha long-awaited smelt run reached the Sandy river tonight, signalling a sure-to-follow stam pede of Portlanders to the river banks IS miles east of here. Licenses entitling the holder to 23 pounds of fish per day are sold at the scene for 50 cents. Last year 22,170 were sold in the few days of the run. Two Americans 4 ' 3 . - 4 -f ''-. Oaoft :&S5ws (SodDsft Croisan Quarry yards of hard reek after China Ship Hits Pirate Mine; Casualties High CANTON, Friday, March 25-UP) Authorities estimated more than 100 persons were killed or injured seriously today when the motor ship Miss Orient struck a mine between here and Hons; Kong. The ship was en route to that British Crown colony from this south Chinese port when the ex plosion occurred. (A dispatch from Kong Kong said there were a 00 passengers aboard.) The injured were being brought to Canton. It was believed here that the mine was laid by pirates after the owners refused to pay extortion money. The explosion occurred in Eliot passage, six miles east of Canton. The Orient la a ship of 1,200 tons. Senator Walsh Acting Governor Senate President William Walsh, Coos Bay, took over as Oregon's chief executive Thursday while Gov. Douglas McKay Is in Poca tello, Idaho, attending a Columbia basin interagency committee meeting. Sen. Dean Walker, Indepen dence, presided over the senate in Walsh's place. Governor McKay will return to Salem today. TRUMAN BUCKLES DOWN WASHINGTON. March 24 -JP) President Truman today swept his April calendar clear of all out-of-town engagement and announ ced a daylight-to-dark work schedule, apparently aimed main ly at getting his legislative pro gram through congress. RAISE FOR CITY WORKERS PORTLAND, March 24-CP-City employes here will get a $5 monthly pay boost start July 1. Ormond R. Bean, city finance commissioner, said it will cost taxpayers about $188,000 annually. Polk County Assessor Advises Overall Re-Appraisal Program DALLAS. March 24 -(Special)-A huge re-appraisal program in volving all real estate in Polk county was recommended to the county court this week by Ed C. Dunn, county assessor. The plan would Involve all city residences, business buildings and lots in West Salem, Independence, Mon mouth.' Wmamina and Dallas, as well as all farm land, both tilla ble and non-tillable, in the county. It -was presented by Walloce S. Wharton, chairman of the - state tax' commlnlon. and Bay Schott an appraiser. . -. - 'The project, which would re quire three years to complete, will be presented to the county budget committee for consideration of costs involved. Its purpose is to equalize tax burdens. Those presenting the program recommended that the land ap No. Delegates From Salem Absent at Senate Hearing State Highway Engineer JL IL Baldock and Portland City Com missioner William A. Bowes pro tested tonight against a bill which would prohibit spending of any state highway funds Inside cities until Oregon's primary highways are brought up to federal stand ards, j The: only witnesses against the bflL they said it would make ci ties into bottlenecks all over the state's road system. j If Senators Saeneer Sixteen of the 30 state senators are sponsors ef the measure. Port land was the only city represented at the hearing before the senate highway committee. Portland la most vitally affected because the bill would delay the proposed Sullivan gulch freeway until the primary road system is completed. It also would delay Sa lem's proposed $7,000,000 highway and bridge construction program, but no one from Salem showed up. Bowes said "One-third of all traffic In the state Is in urban areas. The financial condition of the cities is so bad that they are strapped so that they can't do much of anything on their roads and streets." Weald Change System Baldock said the bill would force the highway commission to do away with Its system of allo cating money equally to the state's five highway districts. This, he said, would cause spending of the Portland district's money in other sections of the state. F. M. Hathaway, Portland mo tel owner, suported the bill be cause he owns a motel on sanay boulevard, from whore through traffic would be diverted to the gulch.; The Oregon Farm Bureau fed eration also supported tne bui, as serting that all money should be spent on fann-to-markei roaas. National VFW Commander to . Talk in Salem T.vall T. Beers, national com-' minrir in chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, wiU speak at a district meeting of 'VFW posts in Salem, Saturday. April 9, it was announced Thursday, night. Subject of his talk will be an nounced later. Berts will install new officers of the district's eight posts at the meeting which will be held in the VFW halL It will be open to tne nubile. The Marion and Meadow- lark posts will be hosts. i Mr. Rush Fined - For Speeding Salem notice sav a name doesn't mean ; a thing to tnem, dui wm Karl Rnh Portland, was fined tlS in municipal court Thursday for that s right speeding. Arresting officers said nusn was rushine out North Caoitol street at 45 miles per hour when arrested early Thursday morning. QUAKE AT GRANTS PASS GRANTS PASS, March 24-(P- A light earth tremor, felt over a considerable area today, caused no damage here. It was recorded at 12:53 p. m. Many persons teleph oned in reports. praisal start with former Camp Adair land that has been resold to individuals. This area was re ferred to as the "sore spot of Polk county with regard to taxes. West Salem would be the prime area for revising lot values.. This work! alone would require the services of two appraisers for an estimated' six months. The appraisal of lands is con sidered the most important phase of tha overall program. Enlarged aerial photos would aid in the task of computing values ' of the 280,000 acres involved. The re port died suburban -land near West Salem as an example of how values have increased during the past 10 years. I - Cost of the work If undertaken would be shared by county and state. Dunn said rtate funds might pay two-thirds of the expense. PRICE 8c Rankin Concedes Fight Lost Recount of Votes Sends Measure Into Oblivion By Morgan Remolds f WASHINGTON. March 24 .tin In a final Jittery lip-flop ballot the house today killed the Rankin veterans' pension bill by a cna vote margin, i Ironically, the death stroke wla administered on the initiative oi a World War II veteran. The sudden end to Rep. Joha E. Rankin's efforts to put acmes his multi-billion dollar measure climaxed three days of quarrel some debate during which tha house members changed Ihejr votes five times before htvin the bill. s On the showdown tha fall u 208 to 207 to send the riddled legislation back to the veterans committee for further study (Reps. Norblad. Ellsworth tA Stockman voted to shelve the bilL itep. Angell favored tha nencioa plan.) , That kills this legislation fof this cpngress., Rankin said. When Rankin confident! brought his pension bill before the house TuMdiv it iir.ft. to provide $90 a month for vet erans of both world wsrs when they reached the ace of SS. r. gardless of their financial needs. Weighted with Amendments J But by the time the final re jection vote was tallied, tha f measure was so weighted with amendments that even its author could scarcely recognize it It was a combat veteran. Rep. Olin E. Teague. of College Sta tion, Texas, who set off the legis lative machinery to halt the Ran kin bill. . 1 f Teague moved to strike out tha' measure's enacting clause - thtf vital part of bill which would j ut x into enect If enacted. f I The motion lost on a standing vote, 169 to 153. But Teague demanded a teller vote, and when the members had marched down the aisles, the count was 171 to 1S in favor.? ine xexan men asxea me nouMl to send the bill back to the com mittee, i ! m a I 1 This brought the most tenra and confused moment of all n the lawmakers made public th f decision in a roll-call vote. Unrf r similar circumstances two dnvs earlier they had voted off the record to shelve the bill, then changed their minds on the roll call test. $f . As the count was In progress two Pennsylvania democrats. Reps. Barrett and Granham, changed their votes to the side with the Rankin bill foes. i On the Associated Press score sheet these switches changed the unofficial total from 209 to 200 against to 208 to 207 in favor it the Teague motion. But the clerks erroneously reported the result as 209 to 208 against the motion. Keeenat Ordered ' Acting Speaker John McCor- mack (D-Mass) on his own ini tiative immediately ordered a re count U When the last name had been called and the votes counted with ho changes they added up to 208 to 207 in favor tt Teague's motion to shelve the bill. It was tha closest vote on a major bill In the house since Aug. 12, 1941. That was when, by another one-vote margin, the law makers approved extension of the draft law. !: - " 'r i " Jane Wyman, l Olivier Capture Movie Oscars I HOLLYWOOD, March 24 A- "Hamlet" which William Shake speare wrote and Laurence Oli vier brought to film life, almost swept the boards tonight fpr 1948 s Academy awards. It took the coveted Oscsrs ss the best picture, for Olivier as the best actor, for art direction, set decoration and costume design. Lovely Jane Wyman won the feminine award for her plain but appealing deaf mute in "Johnny Belinda, for Warner Bros. $ -Hamlet- Is the first British picture to win this country's top award. . - i A miniature statuette, a spe cial award, went to Ivan Jandl, for the best Juvenile performance of the year. The 12-year-old was the sensation of the Swiss-made -The Search." , John Huston was named the best director for -The Treasure of Sierra Madre." - ; Olivier was not present to re ceive his award. Miss Wyman de clared: "I accept this award very gratefully for keeping- my mouth) shut once. I think 111 do it again. - -Hamlet" which won several minor awards, also waa adjudged the best picture of the year. 3 The veteran Walter Huston won the Oscar for the best supporting performance of the year In -Tha Treasure of Sierra Madre," direct ed by his son, John. s Claire Trevor, another veteran, won the best supporting actress award for her trampish lole s Edward G. Robinson's girl friend in -Key Largo. r JMv I: