''"' -.V ,' '' '. f V,;V - ' '- i ' '! 1 .'.p ,-. ' -': . ' ; , T ' 4 . . -Sv.v-..r.v 1. .-. . : ' . v ...... j , - .V--', ;-.- ; i:. . - . ;, ' ' ' " . ' ,.' 'i v-''--;. .4 1 LAPAi, Bolivia;. Mar 31-CP)-The government tonight ordered a general mobilization of Bolivian rmed force because of the grave situation caused by riot and strikes by tin miners and railroad workers. All reservists were called up by the drastic government mobiliza tion order. A. state of seige already hai been invoked by the government. Under this proclamation, which means modified partial law, nor mal civil rights are suspended for 80 days. . The new move by. the govern ment came as a detachment of 200 soldiers was reported ba'ttling 2,000 ' dynamite-hurling. . strikers Off 0KEQ3 Under present .federal taxing awi; utility ha 10" go up iwo ateDs' to advance one. Like the spokesman for a pair who wer dividing spoils, it is "one for you and one for me." For Uncle Sam sits in on business deals as a part ner, a silent partner as far ' as running the business is concerned, but decidedly conspicuous when time comes for kharing the profits. This situation is clearly .brought out by Public Utilities -fommis-' sioner George M. riagg in tne re cent telephone rate case. He ap proved an increase in rates of an estimated $3,563,892. The federal government will take 38 per cent of this (assumingfit is all carried to net operating income) for corp oration income tax. That wiH leave the company an actual in crease in its net income of $2, 209,614. As far as the telephone user is concerned, the -federal govern ment isn't through with him. There is an excise tax of 15 or 25 per cent added to the customer's bill for, exchange service. This will amount to an estimated $597,873. The effect, then, iso take from telephone users an additional $4. 161,765 so the company may get an addition of $2 209.614. That's very close to "fifty-fifty," These- facts help give night . ma res to regulatory officials. To give a utility a dollar, thev must virtually, dftuble the rate increase required. No wonder that Gen eral Manager Tellwright of the telephone company thinks the raise was too skimpy. Of course there "isn't anything that anyone' can do about it. And the way the federal gov ernment is spending money ..(Continued oti Editorial Page), Farmers Fear Fili to Add to Flood Dama ire . Fears that flood damage to low lying farm lands might be increas ed (by. he proposed fill on the M . f ..-.t,'. . j ariori j county approach to thestratton youth was found with his .wwe-, expressed Tuesday when land- , l owners et witlvthe county court iicuicTmoinrJ ui live laree r.1 fi. 1,1 1 ... ... landholdings m the vicinity of the! approach said they believed thati the fill would form a breakwater 1 which woulil change the current 1 and increase washing of the; land. I Judge Grant Murphy said the complaints had plausibility and would be taken under advisement by the courf. which jntehds it consult with highway "llepartment engineers. It is believed that pil ing would be the only - possible substitute for the earth fill, which would rise as high as 15 feet. The court also examined, roads ind Tands along the river, noting that floods of the past winter had caused considerable damage along the river tank. Bus DeliTrv Delav Postpones Schfdule Delay In transferring! and de livering proper vehicles Tuesday postponed the .scheduled start of 'ga,-T"Jamb"V'Vrland- Ga & jCoke crompany fero Roy EasJ knes The tnpswill def- iw w inJicated today in the mneiy iari louay wuu a u a.m. bus from Salem, according to Y. H, SwiUer, agent. - Thhe lines will use the .Grey hound terminal here for two pchedules each way daily. , , . ' . Animal Crackers By WARDEN GOODRICH OinUc! OinkJoT ftirlEieliivte for control of the Patino group's Huanuni tin mines. - Superintendent Howard Keller, a U.S. citizen, was held captive by the miners, who struck to en force a demand that the govern ment return 28 men union lead ers and others deported to Chile Friday. It was a1 continuation of vio lence, which the government, de scribed as a politically ' inspired "state of crjil war," set off at the weekend in the tin mining region of the 'Andes southeast of La Paz. A state of seige, or modified mar tial law, was imposed last night U.S. citizens and . other foreign ers were being evacuated from the mining area. Sympathy strikes crippled railway service. .4- Poker Pole Bests 1929 ' Auto pi Mwiiiiisiiiiiiw njiiiimwmm hiwj.hw mn , . . ..." . ''07 I Witt-I-Si Two teen-age youths were Injured, one seriously, when this 19Z9 auto crashed int a power pole south of Salem Tuesday morning. The wrecked ear is shown lying In a field beside the battered pole. Injured were FredLambert. nd Neil Stratum, IS, both studenU at Saleni. academy. (Staiesman photo). Salem Academy Youths Injured in Jalopy Crash Two youth on their way to school Tuesday morning in a 1929 jalopy ended up in a local hospital instead. Severe uts from plate glass window of the 20-year-old Ford coach kept Neil Stratton, J6, in Salem; Memorial hospital last night in serious but riot .critical con- I ' dition. His companion,' Fred Lambert, 1.7, incurred leg and shoulder in juries, but was noi kept in the hospital. Both iWeie enroute to Salem itcadcrhy fronjj the Turnidge farm on Jeffcison route 1 where they live. j ' State notice said ! the bovs car skidded on wet blacktop pavement WASHINGTON. May 31-(TVA and struck a powek- pole pn the wage increase bigger than a labor SunnysioV road abkit h miles , uniQn demand was declared illegal south of Rosedale. No other car . ' J was involved in the! mishap. J hy th "Prerne court today be The investigating officers saicr, cause the employer failed to notify the boys were located at Rosedale. j the union of the raise, where a passing motorist appar- The court ruled unanimously ently had taken therji before wm- ; mtir 1 n a m hrjcriitfll BmhitlanrA iace a mass OI Dioooy cuts ana me ot her boy was near-hysterical, ! police reported. i - c-. ...u : ! ,annuii was tun leu m kiu ',,;' .iX, wi ' ,,1 ;,,.,,;.. ronci.teH motlv ! f facia, Xt nd wounds, extend It -.t -t K..n rnm. 1 JL " "AL n. "HLT n , Dletelv .determined. His oa rents reside in Spokane, Wash. " Lambert i the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Charge of Salem route 1, box 233. Both boys' are ninth f gVade students at the Salem aca- demy. The shock of the auto snap- ; ping the power pole caused inter-1 ruption of service to one custom- er. Portland deneral Electric com- pany reponea. unemen repiacra a. the pole and a transformer. Cooking Gas Price Cut Indicated as Oil Costs Recluced PORTLAND. Mayi'31-C- An- ,K, H ir. Vk- .oJ nfth. Port ...Bk nf nrlr lah on oil used to manufacture the gas. Standard G"il of California an nounced a 15icent a barrel cut in I heavy oil. Other major oil com i panies usually follow Standard's ! Oregon's rfete s'truicture for the j i utility provides for i rate dropr of i j 1.2 cents per ,: 1.000 ubic feet for ieach five-cen drop in the tost-of i I'the oil. 1- -'j j The cost his dropped 60 cents ! ; a barrel sme'e Jan. il The pre- 1ous 45 centi in cuts have beeneUht lives. passed along;; to trie northwest Oregon and southwest Washing ton consumers. i I--(!H1 gfiQutSOQl Max. M I as Mtm. 4 SO 92 rrertri Saleni Portland . 5an Franctaco 7 .17 trace .00 M Chiraco New Xotk ... ?S 53 Willamette ritrer I I feet. FORECAST rom L 5. weather bu reau. sic.Mrj Ufm, aic 11: raruy cloudy with fecattercd shower! liiis mominc. biromj mcMtly clear this afternoon and tonifht.i Hichest 1 tem pcratvra today (tear C4 degrees; lowest totuirht. near 48. Conditions mostly favorable for' all farm , activities. SA1 KM Uir Cli'ITATION, (Spt, .l to June X) Thm Year, iast Year Krmal 40.6S .;: 44.S0. ; ; 33.73 . u - ' . ; if oiniiDiniaoe Uriofficial reports said the death list might total 50. The government announced that 14 persons had been killed and 25 wounded, but its figures were in complete. - Two miners were killed and six wounded yesterday in an attack on the federal police station at Huanuni. Several policemen were wounded. ' Troops were dispatched to the scene by Gen. Ovidio Quiroga, commander of .the Oruro region. The miners threw sticks of dyna mite from surrounding hilltops, as others had done in a vain stand Saturday at the Siglo Viente mine pf the Patino group, 15 miles away. They cut telephone and rail links iwith Oruro. Court Clarifies Raise Question that when an employer is nrgotiat- ina ur.tth . . n i n I jii ...mi m uiinii vii' ii increase, he can't grant a general . increase without consulting the union. Thi the court held, is a violation of the national lhnr .atin. i Vlt ' -v., n.,.. CT,, .n4.- u - . uioiuit5 uic iikih oi coneciive h.r.ni ' The rnmmn. t n , n 1 Ja Crdmpton-Hichland Mills. Inc., of r.riff, n, ti,. r-r- ... ''"T ! era union had Jia'rgaininggent for workers in n plant. -and negotiations were in Progress for a contract. , ' 'aftc opg StOrk 111 I u,-'viih. Rpflin-A lllltl v T? ono "CI IIiIIIJail iaCe ' ALBANY, Ore., May 31 -(Jp)-Mrs. Marshall Leeson left Berlin by Air. So did the stork, close be hind. She arrived here Sunday. A son was born this morning. A son was born previously to the couple in Berlin, where Leeson was stationed with the U.S. air force. He returned in March. A tractor drives, he is currently un employed. They were married in 1947. -She is the daughter of a German army captain. J 'i Memorial Day Death Toll at 413: Oregon Fatalities Reach Eight Bv the Asoc1atd Press The final toll from the Mem- orial day weekend in Oregon was Highway crashes claimed three. Drownings took three more. A boy was crushed by logging equipment on which he was playf ing. and a tot choked to death on a crayon. Two drownings reported be latedly boosted the total to eight. Arthur E. Demning. 40. Prineville. and his ft-y ear-old nephew, Benny Leming, were the victims. ' The boa Demning was piloting overturned in the Ochoco reser voir. Demning's wife and -James G. Lossee, Portland, saved them selves by clasping hands over the smooth bottom of the boat until rescuers arrived. Demning lost his life in an attempt to rescue young Leming, the son ot Mrs. Floyd Itachor. 93th YEAB U PAGES Clhoefe off Mickenloopeir, BJHent!ial Face-to-Face ic Hearing Opens Today WASHINGTON. May 31 (JP Coneressional investigator? today decided to let Senator Hicken looper (R-Iowa) himelf oueftion atomic chief David E. Li'ienthal in a face-to-face meeting Tomor row. Chairman McMahon . (D-Conn) , announced, the decLion jaftera; two-hour clo-ed door seson "of 1 the sehate-hou?e atomic 'energy J, committee. j I McMahoh said he will let Hick- enlopper 4 conduct the questioning j tnerey setting the stage tor 1 dramatic encounter between the two principals in a round robin o bitter charges and counter charges. The public hearings will stact at 9 a.m. (7 a.m. APD). Hickenlooper has accused Lil ienthal of "incredible mismanage Publ ment and maiaaminisirauon in PARIS. May 31-OF)-It was the directing the nation's atomic de- West's turn to say "No" to Russia velopment, program. ' j today. The Iowa senator's charges cap- ! The United States, British and ped a series of disclosures that a; France refused the request of small quantity of uranium-235 was 1 Soviet Foreign Minister, Andrei missing, from a Chicago atomic j Vishinsky to invite a 22-man dele laboratory for seven weeks before Ration from the Soviet-sponsored the' FBI was .notified and that German People's congress to pre federal agents "stole" two bars of; sent the Germancase to the-for- uranium from the Hanford, Wash.,; atomic plant in a security test anc kept it for months without being detected. i j Congressional witnesses have I many under the Bonn constitu also testified that at least one! tion on Monday and again for 2'i admitted communist and three or four others ,who?e loyalty has been questioned., have been awarded $1,600 to $3,750-a-year atomic fel lowships. Finally stung to the explosion point, Lilienthal called newsmen to his office during the Me'moriaU day holiday yesterday - and cut loose with one of the sharpest blasts a top government 'official has levelled against a U.S. senator in years. , 1 Lilienthal accused Hickenlooper of restoring to "Un-American smear" tactics aiid declared the senator's charges are "calculated io arouse.' fear, uneasiness, fight and ultimately panic. 1 Hickenlooper estimated it will take five to eight days to present his case. McMahon .predicted a three-week hearing, perhaps long er. County Courts Switch Clocks To Fast Time Local Marion county trial courts, succumbed Tuesday to the ray ages of confusion. They'll be on daylight saving time starting7 to day. The announcement , affects . the two circuit courts and the district court. The judges said too much J confusion had been, experienced in geuing jurors, witnesses ana others from variou parts of the county together at the proper times. Even though it means getting up an hour earlier than theyiave for the past few weeks, court attaches showed no displeasure at the change, since they can now live without carying two watches or a watch and a slide rule. Other county departments are continuing on standard time! STRIKE RULED ILLEGAL SEATTLE. May, 31 -JP) A federal court ruling today threw the Boeing Aircraft plants here wide open to a stepped-up union jurisdictional contest. The U.S. court of appeals in Washington, D.C., ruled that last year's costly 140-day strike was illegal. ' By the Asociafd Press The sumrrter season's first bi weekend was the last for Americans. 1 That number lost. their ives in accidents on the highways; at the beaches and resort cottages and in miscellaneous observances of the three-day , Memorial day holiday. The period covered by thesurvey extended from 6 pjn, Friday untii midnight Monday. As usual traffic was the big killer 253 persons dying on the khighways. The toll surpased the estimate of 2 IS by the national safety council. Eighty-seven persons drowned and 73 lost their lives in fires, falls, airplane crashes and other hodi day tragedies, i CaUfornia led the lfet with 33 traffic, six drowning and eight miscellaneous deaths. i . Th Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon. Wednesday. Jun 1. 1949 ftaffi? Reject Mock Ado (Bafttte Plans Pay Differential Sparks City Budget Committee Meet;. Action Deferred By Robert E. Gangware City Editor. The Statesman Whether a difference in" pension plans entitles police to $20 more montnly pay than firemen raised the biggest question. mar(c Tuesday night when the city budget committee delved into a $1,658,355 budget proposal. Action on this question and the budget in general was deferred by tne committ.ee 01 aldermen and West Refuses I Russian Bid in Big-4 Session eign ministers council. This was after Vishinsky said 10 "mo the Western proposals for a merger of east and west Ger- 1 hours today. in mucn snorier Time out no less emphatically, U. S. Secretary T l 1 A AT , . . ' of State Dean Acheson, British Foreign Secretary Ernest .Bevin and French Foreign Minister Rob ert Schuman said "no"' when their turn came. . That seemed to end in failure ' discussion on the political merger of Germany. The minist ex pec ted to pass on to the Berlin problem tomorrow. The question was whether the same deadlock would develop on that issue, too. The delegation which Vishin sky asked the ministers to receive was chosen yesterday from a single salte in a show of hands by the People's congress in Berlin. "I do not believe this delegation of the third (Pe6ple's) congress could or would 'express and views whatsoever other than those ex u.. ir:,;.i... v, son said. "I prefer to look to Mr. ly dollars Under th-s clothing was taken from Bishop's Vdn f. ft I ?1 1 Vishinsky himself for official ex- I ?ca)e- the chief would rece,ve $4f)0. ; Clothing store. 145 N. Liberty St.. " ficer. sa,d Mi I pressions of the Soviet govern- fctant chief $360. captain $33f, ovv the Memorial day weekend; ' " 'nceming the hm serceants $310 and detectives $30OTr-rK- .. o. i. i t.,. ciations of .Serrctiry of D fens Bevin and Schuman answered along the same lines as Acheson. Morse Asks Power Jumps In Valley Area 1 WASHINGTON. May 31 -fPl-Senator .Morse (R-Ore) wants Canhy, Clackamas county, and Sa- lem to get more power. . priations subcommittee for funds to extend the Bonneville transmis- sion lines to Canby apd to a rural The special committee W further electric cooperative system ini$tud the budget include Alder- Clackamas county I He suggested a substation Could I be cut in on existing Bonneville ! lines passing near Canby.', He also urged approval of the full appro i priation asked for Bonneville.. Morse also asked that Bonne ville be authorized to provide an additional 2,500 kilowatts to the Salem Electric cooperative. He said the cooperative yould need 5,000 kilowatts by 1957. Billion Dollar Loss Totaled as Stocks Drop to Years Low, NEW YORK. May 31-.The winds of deflation blew hard in the nation's market places today. Sjtbck prices "in the New York exchange plunged SI to around M a share and t'he market generaTlv hit bottom sirace mid-March last year. Bonds cracked $1 to $8 per $1.- i 000 bond. Railroad and industrial biff - obligations made new lows fer the 413 year. ; -". i The stock declines represented a loss of more than a billion dollars in all issues traded. Wheat ip the Chicago board of trade tumbled nearly 6 cents a bushel before losses were trimmed. Com, oats and rye joined the pa rade. Wheat in the Kansas City cash market dived around 10 cents a bushel. Cotton in New York was mark ed down $1.05 to $1.65 a bale. Wholesale butter in the New York ind Chicago markets sold below j 59 cents a pound, lowest since July 1, 1948, when the OPA price ceiling was in effect. ; The : declines were additional lines in a pattern being etched with increasing clarity as 1949 rolls on. fOUNDBD 1651 appointed citizens until they hear a special committee Report at a June 13 meeting. In their initial session at city hall last night com mitteemen merely discussed items as City Manager J. L. Franzen ex plained the budget he had drafted. A proposal for increased pa trolmen's pay, advocated by May or R. L. Elfstrom, drew fire from Fire Chief W. P. Roble whose po sition attracted support from some of the committee members. The hiidopt urntild hike natrnlmen ci,ri.. i'm . th .uii.i'ew Tork, May SlAlger Ills. leaving firemen's pay at "$250, tjtie j monthly salary now paid both firemen and patrolmen. Mayor Elfstrom declared that the difference in pension payments made by the city toward the re spective pension funds would be adjusted by the salary proposal? so that police and firemen would Cost the city equally. Firemen have their own pension plan, voted several years agcKby balem eiec tors, and police come under the 1 relatively j art iw state retiremen act Fire Chief Roble. however, blasted the salary differential as "discrimination against the fire men." He told the budget , com mittee that the city is under con tract pbligation for its hare in financing the firemen's pension plan and, anyway, the city would pay $6,000 more than at present Lif firemen were under the state pension plan because , or tne many 20-year veterans on the fire force. Other features of the suggested budget are wider spread in poMee salaries, addition of 10 patrolmen, a captain and two new patrol cars. Police Chief Clyde Warren re commended adoption of new salary ' schedules for rated policemen, to wiaen ine Dreseni saiarv sieDS 01 "Addition of a captain would place t. C. Lharlton m an ex clusively administrative post as assistant chief, a title-he now holds while in rank as one of three captains. The police-budget over all would rise from $156,766 this year to $205,192 in the new budget. Fire department's over-all share xt thW budget" would be up from $225,533 this year to. $3 17,800. with increases including the addition of 21 firemeawrXbnder a voter-approved shortened- work week). A Kinswood fire station-f$5. 500) and ; raises f $10 to $15 for the chief. j battalion chiefs, captains and first j chief would be in addition to thejpi.il, fl-li- Inrtnirv : 21 firemen new to the foite. i -lar,t' Vnirnt siitiui r j man Albert H. Gille. ' chairman,! Aiaerman uaniei.j. r ry anrr J. simerai. iney were appomtei by Alderman David O'Harai chair man of the budget committee. : (Additional details page 2) PORTLAND BUILDING, UP PORTLAND. May 31-Tl- As predicted earlier, building permits reached a record $7,629,975 valua- tion for the month today, but bank clearings dropped. The bank clearings were down to $561,p44.750, a decline of. about $26,000,000 frdm last month. . Eisler Arrives in Prague After Secret Flight from English Field PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, May 31-(Pi-Gerhart Eisler. bail-jumo- ing, communist, slipped out of England to Czechoslovakia by plane today. v Slated for a -leading role in the said he was Eisler. ' Russian zone of Germany, he said ; He .had been given an exit per he was enroute to Berlin and then . by th B . . h holm cUict He to a unlverSitv chair af linn? to udd everything I can tb help the communist party. tie said he left Englahd without Ivance notice to avaid rAmerican advi tricks. and expressed gratification at being in Czechoslovakia "in stead of in the America of that damn fool Tom Clark and" the un American activities committee.'' In Washington, however, Clark's aides indicated they did not con sider the Effort to return Eisler to th United States had been closed. Eisler arrived at Northolt air port outside London this morning in a closed car Just before the Czech airlines plane took off on a con-stop' flight to Prague. Hrs PRICE 5c Set M.C Showd Defendant ex-state department official, was bark In the snotlight today as his federal court trial for per jury besan. His Was accused of giving false information re- rarrlinr hla rvlatinna uilh . nr.v for a communist spy ring. i , mue SearcIiforTwfj Escaped Cons No trace of two Oregon state prison escapees was reported ear- ly this morning although city, state and county officers and jftate prison guards continued the search. The hunted men are John O. Pinson, 31, convicted murder..-, and William P: Benson; 43, serv ing a term for armed robbery, They escaped over the prison wall -' ' - y t il Police Corit amid a barraee of bullets early ed Ut week by, another mj ul 1j Morwlay morning. jean committee member, Rcr. Wn Police reported these slender " Zar.dt of Pennsylvania, Hf utktd cluep: that a ,s;cciai nouse committee ba Twpariv c.7nn r.rih r,r mtnTe , day morning. Entrance was gained through a sjmashed wire-screened "wi , -.. nw wmh. window . t Atlas Corporation. . -V ' ' . V. ' The Consolidated Vjiltee Air A conductor of a Southern Pa- m,t, n fc cific freight train told police he ; . conlrollcd by 0-ilUm through At had seen two touph characters ,aJ Zandl $aid dnt Mptirt in the "bruh beside a fire a few miles west of Salem about 7 a.' m Tuesday. Meanwhile , : . . , 11 report of stolen cioimnK no o.nrr miwu. lions are oc-ing cne-tnec i oy puwr and all train stops m Salem and . in this section of the s ate are be- ing checked regularly for the. missing men. , Tn Witnp,e Tanmerinff i " r WASHINGTON, My31-W)- ; Attorney General Tom Clark to- day ordered a grand jury investi gation of reports that there were attempts to tamper with witnesses who testified against Harry Brid ges. . n One of the government witnes ses was Mervyn Rathborne, who, as a former secretary-treasurer of j the California lO t-ouncil, had ' been an associated Bridges. ; ' In San Francisco last week end ; Rath borne said two of Bridges' at- 1 torneys visited his home after the ; indictment and wanted, to know i what he had told the grand jury, name was not on the passenger' list his baegage was net labelled. nd his ticket tw-e no name. Jt was not until the plane was gonci that im- migration and custtjms; .officials waI listed on plane; manifest j as stateless. though ne. claims j German nationality. , :; Dressed in a sporty blue and gray checked, coat, g!iay trousers and cap, Eisler smiled amiably when he landed herei Two plain clothes recurity officers,- without customs formality, tcck him to a separate room at the airport where wine and' sandwiches had been spread put for him. The pasting of his baggage was similar to that accordetnat ox oipiornats. He said he cad come by way of Prague because he didj not dare fly I direct to Berlin, where planes land lm or near American installations. No. 74 t - House Orders Check on R-36 Buying 'Deals' WASHINGTON? Mar 31 - (JT The joint chiefs of staff turned down today a house committee proposal to stage a mocfair battaa between the navy's jet fithtersi and the air force 's, B-36 fuir bomber. : . A spokesman for the oVftn department disclosed that Secre tary Johnson had sent the joint chiefs .objections to Chairman Vin son (D-Ga) of the house armed service committee. The committee had I approved a resolution suaesting tht the uir force accept the navy's chi,lleng for a high altitude duei under sim ulated combat conditions. But the defense spokesman raid the joint chiefs rerprf.memted against the plan for security rri.s ons atul on thef ground such aa event would serve no lusefu) pup pose. Their letter was Iquott d fur-, ther a savin? similar JtrMs mijrbft be held secre'ly so thfct infoirria tion about the planes; would not get out. The commitee's rosohitoin sug- 1 geted that air force as wU as n'. fli;ert enw;cd the pi- ant B--j .Tne navy v?as t.'-Ker or the test. It quickly offered the jet- ptjuerod McDonnell F2H-1 Fn-' shee, the jet Gruman ?VF Panther and two conventionally - ixiwfitd planes to take on the fl-6. I WASHINGTON, May 3l-(AVA, house c ) m rtiif.ee to)ay irlrtd m full-scale investigation; of the ra tion's airpowcr policies and "dis turbing rumoiV atoi4 puichts of the huge B-36 bombeis. . Admittedly worried by repcorta ' involving top defense otficifcls. aircraft companies and demwra- j tic party palitics, the house airrud services "coynmitlee oj'dercd tli study. It voted to ask for Sf0.(uO to do the job. '"This'will be no whitewash ir vestiaiion," sid Chairman Vin son (li-Ga). The investigation was ciemand- created :o do it. ; Louis Johnso.i. A:r Secretary, Sy- viau . 1 1 1 n v vi w mm he added, is that Symidgton ilarn to, resign gl and became hed of : a gigantic aircraft combine "under the tuhmb of F1jvd 0dlum ?ym m ho?, demcd thi- Van zindt sa,d john vfc. . d- ConsoUdaUkj hTIi un attorncv for the lirm unti, ,h;rt. M'rm h berime secretrv of ..j -T defense in March. ? The Pennsylanvian also cited what he called "well founded re ports" that Odium was fvery act ive" last fall in helping "Johnson raise money, for the democratic party. Johnson -was the party's ac fund raiser for the 1948 campaign. " r- ?c AEC Education Prompts Check WASHINGTON, May 31-0TV Senator-s worKing on the approp riation for the atomic energy com- i mission (AEC) decided today to j write into the bill a requirement for an FBI check on all, applicants for AEC education funds. Senator O'Mahoney jtD-Wyo) told report eds that will be pufTn to the appropriation bllh- He la chairman of tin appropriations sub- i committee nananng tne aia. re I quest? for over a billioh:!do!lrs in ; the 12 months beginning July 1. The present congressional in- 7 'mo,ihe !?u off by disclosure that art admitted communist holds an AEG fellow ship. WESTERN INTERNATtONAI At Salem 7. Bremerton li At Wctutche 7. Vancouver 11 At Spoan 4. Victoria i ' At Yakima . Tapoma 3 " COASTt LEAGUE At San Diefo S, Portland 1 At Sarrimento 4. SeatlW At Qsland 3. Hollywood 4 Ay ttm Angeles 10, San Franeiaco V ATIOXAI LEAGUE At New York 4. Brooklyn (14 feu.) At PhAadelpnU S. BoOoii 7 only fame taheduied. 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE Ho games Scheduled i 1 1 . KHIIaTOHWiHUl I 1 - 4'