Russ Refuse to Probe JPeace Pact Violations WASHINGTON, June -(;-Bussla has refused to take part in an investigation of American-British charges that three soviet satel lite states violated their peace treaties. The state department said today Moscow made the counter charge that the western powers were try ing to use the treaties to interfere In the internal affairs of Hungary. Romania and Bulgaria. The Rus sian note was delivered Saturday. Russia also supported the deni als by the three countries that they have violated their treaty pledges. Britain and the United States have accused them of failing to live up to pledges to grant fair trials, free speech and other human rights to their, peoples. Moscow's note was a reply to the formal British and American re quests made May 31 that Russia join in investigating the dispute, as provided for in the treaties. All three countries, now soviet satel lites, Were axis allies during the war. The next step presumably is for the United States to demand cre ation of three-member commis sions to take up the dispute with each satellite country. Under the treaties, the first step wa to try for a settlement through the big three powers. By the treaty terms, one mem ber of the t'tfmmisieons would be chosen by the western powers, one by the at'llite country involved and the third by the secretary general of the United Nations. Truman Prods Congress for More Power WASHINGTON, June 13 - --president Truman prodded con gress indirectly again todav to give him unrestricted Hwer to rerr ganire government agencies and department. He-wa quoted by Dr. Robert L. Johnson, president of Temple uni versity and chairman of a citizens . committee backing th Hoover commission reorganisation plan, as Haying he wants suc h authority ) .without any exemptions. Johnson tailed at the White Ijoue. j A li.i iic reorganisation bill is: uf up m vnaie-riouse comer- i nee irtut ructerl to iron out differ- ! ences between versions passed by the two houses. One of the stum- ' tiling block is a house provision! - exempting seven agencies unless any reorganisation affecting them is submitted separ.ttelv. Rhode Island Man to Head 'Rotary Clubs NKW YOHK. June 13 (P. The tedei ship ot Itol.ii v Intel nnl tonal passed today from a tetiied Aui trail, in grain broker to a Ithode Inland yam rnahij1.ii tuiei Peicv llodgMin. 47. of I'awturket R I . was elected president bv ac clamation althe 40th annual Ko tmy convention, the -biggest in the service organisation' history. In a spcet h prepared tor de livery tonight, outgoing president ( Angus S. Mitchell of Melbourne Ausll ali.i. urged KotjtioHs to Ix even lellet (total iaiv.s, even betlei citizem of , the world He tnged them to intensity their ellort to gam suppott for the United Na tions "Peace, like war," he said, "is a state of mind. We must loiuiitio.i j tbt, nund ol man so that he will, woik as diligently5 and patient- ly lor pea e as he has always bec-i ' willing to work toward victory in war," McKlliiiiiU'v Wins fcLt'a(lr, Killing For 2Jith Ynr Chad S. McKlhinney of Sa-1i-m, employed by the Standard Irisuraiu-e company for the past 31 years, has qualified fur the organization's "leaders Club" fer the IXth year, it was reported here Moin4V. McKlhinney has sold insurance m Salem for the past 20 years. Prior to tht time he was in Boseburg Qualification for the loader club are sale of at least $10,000 worth insurance and I 1 rem! 11 m income in a year. Only one other man in the com pany surpasses Mcr'Ihlnney in time of service. The Sajem man will attend the annual convention of tbe leaders club in Victoria, B. ( later this month. G. V. llrown of the same company, who Ito qualified for the club, will attend the convention from Salem. jomw them- BESOT' Ml IIISTHUIIEIIT For Your Summer Band And Orchestra Court JAQUITH IIUSIC 138 S. High Ph. HOWS THAT AGAIN? ; i 1 . UG 4 after Sir 200 See 31-Year-0ld Stand of Grass at OSCs June Field Day By Lillie L. Madten farm Editor. The Sli)fman The 31-year-old stand of alta fescuej the original planting of a' grass developed at Oregon State college experiment station, was in- spected by more than 2D0 persons who attended the June field day j during the weekend arranged to inspect; past accomplishments and j present work of the college in the field of soil conservation. j Among the fields viewed were the 'grass fields of Floyd Fox.! noted east-Marion cotmty sheep - j n,aAi'. f . j i ' tures jas measured by milking Alta fescue was nrai4ed as bina ' one of the best tools of soil con- servation in America, With ladino clover being a close second. Said Soil Saver Alta fescue Is considered prob- j ably the most nearly universally I adapted grass and the most prom- ! ising single grass in the; country as a soil saver, a soil fertility im- j prover and all-aiound forage pro-I ducei. i Visitors also viewed plots at the ' state college experiment station where- irrigation and rotation ex periments were started in 1907 when many farmers believed that irrigation in western Oregon would "kill the soil." Instead the experiments have shown that fer tility can be improved through a practical program of irrigation, ro tation and fertilisation. Some Kl), 000 acres in western Oregon are now irrigated, according to re ports made on the annual field tour. i Original II Acres L.'idmo clover nelds1' were a Uo : viewed bv visitors who sw the j original II acres seeded in 1927 on j land that had ben abandoned for j ordinary crop production. Through this and later trials jhe expert ment station has demonstrated that an acre of irrigated ladino I and grass will yield four Kmes as j much usable teed as an acre of tame grass pasture and eight times as much a even god haiive grass pastuies The lorage ; yield per acre from .lich ladmogiass mix- 1 ave on 4-u-T atoeei I I - i I 7 rotMtettr list rt NOW ONLY 5219"! feajr ;"' i Automatic: tempratur control Onepistl cobinft j A" glass-fiber insulation Automatic;; inferior light Temperature indicating light (-- a) j. j Saltd-in rafrigtrating syitm GENERAL ELECTRIC HOME FREEZERS COME IN AND By DAVE COX never Blind." cow lual five ton of al" ; falfa ir 200 bu JieU of oats. It will carry about 2' cows per acre for a 200-day pasture season. A plea for getting the new sci ence of land ue applied to every acre of land in the United States was niade by Kent Leavitt, Mill brook, N. Y., president of the Na tional; Association of Soil Con servation districts. He condemned, however .the policy of what he openly termed governmental brib ery of "paying everybody to do everything" and said that this should not be the basis of soil conservation. ; ; ( Ship Freed After Ru lining Agrou'ntl VANCOUVER. Wash., June 13- (.VThe Liberty ship Joseph Squires, heavily down at the stern with "a cargo of wheat, ran aground here today shortly after moving into the Columbia from the Willamette river. The! ship had loaded at Port- jWnd afid was moving here for ad- ditional grain bound for Japan when it appearedta be caught in the Columbia curreM- and shoved aground on the Washington side. mver ui g men saia me i,ioeriy ship vyas making a difficult turn when !it w as grounded. Tugs later freed ft i money 2 Home Freezers! ! Freezer Prices Reduced I 2L Buy Food in Quantity and Savel Buy wnSrfwl new horn frresr at thea new low price . atl buy and fnrM ytxu food in quantity when it' cheapest I Titan you'll mi money t9 way I The 4-cu-ft model ttorrt up to 140 pound of as sorted food; tti -cu-ft model (tore up to 240 pound. Both, ara I j fi ft VJEtM t - CU SEE THESE MONEY-SAVING MODELS TODAY I Chambers' Wife Rattled on Witness Stand NEW YORK. June 13 Ujp- A rapid-fire cross examination so confused Mrs. WhitUker I Cham bers today that she becapie un certain when and where the last saw Alger Hiss. Federal Judge Samuel If. Kauf man called a Jive minute halt at one point in the Hiss perjury trial to give her a chance to "think it over." Last week, Mrs. Chambers testi fied jhe entertained Hiss and his wife at a wedding anniversary in December. 1939, and that she was a guest at the Hiss home for a New Year's eve party Dec. 31, 1937. The dates are vital because Hiss told a grand jury that he did not see Chambers after Jan. 1, 1937. Aorused r Perjury The grand jury accused him of perjury and added a second count to the indictment when Hiss said ha, never gave Chambers state de partment secrets. Chambers said he was a courier for a prewar Soviet spy ring dur ing his association with Hiss. Earlier. Mrs. Chambers admit ted covering up the "communist underground" activities of her husband when trying to get her daiughter into a private school in 1937. Great Citiien She said she alwavs reorder! her husband as a "great, decent citizen." But, she acknowledged, she described him as a "free lance writer" and not a communist spy courier when she applied for school admission for her daughter. She also testified that she did not know of the role Hiss was accused of playing in the spy ring until she read it in the news papers. Mrs. Chambers testified that she and her husband lived on the money he earned as a "communist conspirator" from 1931 to 1937 or 1938. Work Party to Help Prepare Camp Pioneer First work party to prepare for Boy Scout ramping, set to start July 10. will be in Camp Pioneer this Saturday and Sunday, accord ing to Gordon Gilmore, Cascade area council executive. The leader also said that the camp this year will have all new canoes and rowboats. because those used before were wrecked when snow caved in soma buildings last winter. The work party will include scouters, some telephone company employes and members of Salem Junior Chamber of Commerce They will start cleaning up the snow damage. The snow is going off fast, said Gilmore. and the winters results will not delav or hamper the summer camping pro- I gram. ways equipped with the fa mous G E sealed -in f frigeratini ytem. Mora than 2.0O0.0OO of these dependable unit hav b-rn m ue in General Klei'tric refrigerators 10 year or looser f - fT MOOCl foeMiatr tuoos NOW ONLY S31900 kmtf TeraNl lPaMie HHeem-dls ciecuit coubt William Dingman et al vs state unemployment compensation com mission and others: Defendant commission, commissioners and administrator file answer to peti tion for review of claim. Ida A. Newton vs William L. Newton: Defandant ordered to pay plaintiff $75 monthly (or support , during pendency of suit. Marion county vs Mary F. Mor ris and others: Attorney for de- ( fend ants files answer consenting! to foreclosure on defendants pro perty for overdue taxes. Anna M. Hansen vs Pacific Greyhound lines and Journal Gar age company: Order grants plain tiff until July 9 to file motion for new trial against defendant garage company. Joyce Rowland vs Dale Row land: Defendant files answer and cross complaint alleging cruel and inhuman treatment and asking custody of two minor children and ownership of certain real aiyi per sonal property. Alba L. McCollum vs Cora Mae McCollum: Suit for. divorce alleges desertion by defendant since June 5, 1948. Married Aug. 27, 1945, at Las Vegas, Nev. Ellen Lock vs Roy Lock: Com plaint for divorce alleging cruel and inhuman treatment seeks ratification of property settlement agreement, awarding custody of three minor daughters to plain tiff and four minor sons to de- j fendant, $20 monthly support money from defendant Married Apr. 25, 1931, in Battle Creek, Mich. DISTRICT COURT Lloyd Demarest, 721 Stewart st., charged with driving while intoxi cated, pleaded innocent, trial date So be set, held in lieu of $350 bail. David Mendel Riggs, Salem route 9, switching auto license plates, pleaded guilty, fined $100 and costs. Richard Carter, 1275 S. 12th st.. larceny, continued to July 15 for sentencing. Karl J. Harvey, Gervais. charg ed with obtaining money by false pretenses, preliminary examina tion held, charge dismissed for lack of ev idence. FROBATE COURT, Brown E. Sisson guardianship: Order confirm 4a I a of real pro perty. Mae M. Ivie guardianship: Or REVIVAL CONTINUES at the- Wesleyan Methodist Church corner 15th and Mill Sts.. here In Salem. Rer. Warren Pamp-To-Pee, Converted Indian. Preaching each Evening at 8 o'clock, except Saturday. An Invitation la Extended To All. GLEN YATES. PASTOR. There's a Home in Your Future What rvrr your income tlirrr a homf iii your fulurr! It "a the right wav to rair our faruilv . . . it" the right nay to sav money. Your home will provide security, Ixjth while your children are youno; ami whrn it's timr to retire. Investigate your chances of owning a home now ... they're good! ,-ia'rl FIND YOUR HOME IN der sets June 27 for hearing cn petition of L W. and Glenn A. Ivie for appointment of guardian. Otto F. Johnson estate: Order confirms sale of real property. Thomas Watson Steeves guard ianship: Order authorises guard ian to execute new and modified lease agreement. Bertha M. Brians estate: Apprai sal of estate at $17,772.75. Arvid E. Johnson estate: Order appoints Lester Howell as admin istrator and Oscar Specht. James H. Nicholson and Evelyn Fertiau as appraisers. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Roy D. Baughman, 21, laborer, and Martha Edmonson, 18, both of Woodburn. Victor A. Youngs, 25, cabinet maker, Venice, Calif, and Orabelle Dugger, 20, music teacher. Turner. Clifford L. Bradfield, legal, construction worker. Mill City, and N. Marion Browning, legal, wait ress, Portland. Douglas N. ULsh, 19. farmer. Great Falls, Mont., and Cauleen Madison, 18, clerk, Portland. Richard C. Bighley, 23, factory worker, and Severina Smisek. 25, factory worker, both of St. Paul, Minn. Dallas Haney, 21, state highway department, Woodburn, and Doro thy Brennan, 19. housework, 1639 Lancaster dr., Salem. Donald J. Sommer, 22, route salesman, 1425 Fir st , and Jacque line Torgerson, 22, nurse, 701 Kingwood dr., both of Salem. Harold Chris Ramberg, 25, elec trical engineer, Scappoose, and Avon Joan Simmons, 25, nurse, Woodburn. 10 Years Added lo Cuiiimiiigs' Term PORTLAND, Ore , June 13-(Pl-Thomas L. Cummings, 25, already convicted of manslaughter, recei ved an additional 10-year prison sentence today for robbery. It will be added to the 15-year manslaughter sentence previously imposed, making a total of 25 years in prison ahead of Cum mings, who was convicted of the hotel -room slaying here of Alvin Edward Iacopetti, Seattle. a: it- ' -4, .7wf .4 Th S tatman. Salem. Ortxyon, Tuesday. Tun 14. .1943 7 Senator Gtes Farm Program 'Propaganda' WASHINGTON. June 13 -n Senator Aiken (R-Vt) today ac cused the agriculture department of peddling "propaganda" and of making "false" statements to pro mote the administration's new farm program. Aiken told the senate a 10-page document which he said the de partment has given wide distri bution "is purely and simply prop aganda designed to promote a po litical plan of prosperity for farm ers." The farm program to which Aiken referred was drafted by Secretary of Agriculture Bran nan. It has been submitted to con gress in the form of legislation. Brannan told a democratic con ference in Des Moines today the plan is the best way to prevent a "farm fed and farm led" depres sion. In brief, the plan would let con sumer prices for perishable farm commodities seek their own level and provide for payments to put a "floor" under farm income. It also provides price supports far crops that can be stored. Aiken said the agriculture de partment document contains 4S questions and answers "purport ing to explain the proposed plan." He added: "It is my understanding that 7X. If mm mtrin This year 0 Mr 1 ri iv 1 I V I V aWsl 1 I 1 1 V 5 J thrill to the gift every outdoor men has always wantee1 . . . leutch Lomb Stnocwlor . . . the world's suprem instrument fo bright, sherp, olott-up views ... for vacation travel, nature study, sports events. Give BM Binocular this Father's Day. and dad will b grote fvl the rest of his life. KEN GRABER SPORTING GOODS 1 154 South Liberty 1 v- . vV 1. THE : ':.. APT this document has been distribut ed to 94.000 PMA (production and marketing administration) com mitteemen located in every agri cultural community in the United States. "It is also reported, that larg quantities of this document have been made available by the de partment - for distribution to cer tain labor and: other organiza tions." j Aiken said he knows of "no provision of law which authorize the distribution jot this document, nor do I know what appropriation by the congress could ethically be used to finance its preparation and distribution." S Sitter Fatally Beats Child LANCASTER; Pa., Juna 13-P-A 14-year-old baby sitter fatally beat a 6-year-old boy today be cause the child, ripped out the electric cord to the washing ma chine as she was doing the familr wash. Sgt. Stiles Smith ot the stat police reported. ; The child, Ronald Glen Keller, died in Lancaster General hos pital of head injuries about five hours after being admitted. Smith said the youngster had been beat en about the head with a piece of wood two Inches thick and Iff inches long. District Attorney John Milton Ranck ordered ! Jim n Sonnen. of Lititz, Pa, held at the Shelter home for girls in I.ancaster. N charges have been placed against the girl. j : , . ' - X A .lUwnillccm C,iil tor dad J.. f ATM fit OAT JUNI It few fortunate dad con v--&.?ki: m'. m,mmm i i m mi i a i ' The rtgfei war to pad d home la tbxeuah the Ore aoa Staseaaaasi Qaeeilled Ada. What ! your eons, what rt tout needa there' a home Hat ed today that will meet your requirement.; Houee kusU the eaef way. find yeur future koaae la tb Stateeesaa rlniatiisit ads. 27$ Hortk Ubevtr