i 4 vt t m ' " -ji' t t L-Tho Stafoekum.' Scloim. Orxjofl, TfriiraxkryV YonV 23, t943 Frankfurter, Reed Testify For Alger Hiss NEW YORK, June 22-CfVTwo TJ. S. supreme court justices and an appeals judre j doffed their black robes today and became common law court witnesses for AI?er Hiss, accused of perjury. All testified as character wit nesses that Hiss enjoyed an ex cellent reputation when he .was a government employe in Washington.- ! The three were Justices Felix Frankfurter and Stanley M. .Reed of the supreme court, and Chief Judee Calvert Magruder of the U. S. circuit court of appeals in Boston. - When they finished, the defense dramatically produced a battered old Woodstock typewriter and an odd job man who said HLs cave it to him in 1936 and that it stayed in his family until about 1911. . . ' The government contends Hiss jised an old Woodstock in 1937 and 1938 to copy state department ecrets (or Whittaker Chambers, act f -st. vied former courier for a prewar Soviet -spy ring. Spectators chuckled at times as they watched the thret judges especially the dapper,' bow-tied Frankfurt fence with attor neys like any other witness be fore an American court. Frankfurter, who sent Hiss to Washington in 1929 from the cam pus of the Harvard law school. said it was his fiirt appearance as a character witness in his many years in the law. Asked to describe Hiss' char acter, Justice Frankfurter replied "I would say it is excellent' Justice Reed said he was U. S. solicitor general in 1935 when His became a special attorney on his staff. His went to the state department a year later, remaining there until he left gov ernment service after the war. Reed aid that "so far as I know" Hiss had a good reputa tion. Judge Magruder said he was on the faculty at Harvard 'aw School when Hiss was a student. "I not to know him very well and he and I have been friends ever since," Magruder testified. The appeals judge said he never heard any reference to Hiss as a "communist or communist sympa thizer" or that he stole state de partment documents. Merchants Draw Blame For Rasli Of Forged Checks Of the 232 criminal cases pro cessed bv the office of District Attorney. E. O. Stadter, jr. since January, a total of 54 dealt with bogu check writers, Stadter said Wednesday. Speaking before the Salem Ex change club, Stadter said that "a current rasn or nad checks here seems to be encouraged by mer chants who are not too careful In looking for identification" of check rashers Larceny cases totaled 40 during ine past six months, he said, ind non-support litigation ranked third in volume of cases handled by his office. Late Sports Marshall Has 14th Victory Bremerton's Johnny Marshall uncorked a four-hitter at the Ya kima Bears last night in Bremer ton towln 4-3, his 14th pitching victory in the Western Interna tional league this season. Larry Powell of the learue leader the victim, dropping his third game against seven wins. At Vancouver, in a home rim filled came thie Cans uwnrifH th Spokane Indians 13-11. Manager mil urenncr or ine Caps clouted three homers of the seven hit Charlev Mead had n anrf h Spokes' Larry Barton, Paul Zaby ana Lee Howard each had one. Victoria Went 12 inninira hfnr downing Wen a tehee 4-3 at Vic toria. Yakima ! SOS 000 001 3 4 DmuttiM 1. 01 M( M i Powell and Ortei. Tornay ,1); Mar 7 halt and NeaL Wenatrhee, 100 ono 000 3001 t 3 Victoria ... 010 OM 000 SOI 4 U S McCotlum and Winter; Ward. Lo fvif (III and Morgan. Spokane coo 301 uo 11 13 3 ancouver lie 47 00 11 is 1 -Teaa-an, Bishop i5 Howard Bab Wit ill and Parks: Kindafather. Gun uraon (Si K. Snyder (Si and Brenner. PCL Line Scores: Seattle 100 000 041 11 2 Lo.i Angeles 300 100 000 4 2 Fletcher. Karpel (6), Ardizoia tj ana arasso; Watkins, Kelly (8) and Malone. Entry Application for Cherryland Festival Jr. Parade Saturday July 2, 10 a. m. NAMI ACI ADDRESS HON! 1 Will ENTER IN Mail or bring Application to: Sons, Jewelers, Corner High Bicyclists Struck Bji Automobile, Injured Austin Reed. 33, of 581 N. Church sti, sustained back injur ies at 4:1) p-m. Wednesday when struck by a car while riding a bi cycle at South Commercial and Owens streets. City 'first aid men took him to Salem Memorial hos pital. . J The car was driven by Edna Z. Main, 1604 Chemeketa sL. ac cording to city police who said that no charges were filed. Governors Ask Passage of Atlantic Pact COLORADO i SPRINGS. Colo, June 22 -4JPy- The nation's gov ernors called tonight for speedy senate approval of the North At lantic pact, followed by implenv. enting action to give It "full force and effect" Kansas' republican Gov. Frank; Carlson was elected chairman, succeeding Maryland's democratic Gov. W. Preston Lane as the Gov ernors ended their 41st annual conference. The state executives gave indi rect endorsement to the admin istration's proposal to furnish pact signers with $1,130,000,000 la arms. But the resolution, calling for "continued support" of the United Nations, an "adequately financed" European recovery program and pact approval, did not specifically allude to the arms program. It said merely that the pact should be approved by the sen ate "at the earliest possible time and that necessary action should likewise be taken to Implement the pact and give it to full force and effect." In another resolution, the con ference said it "heartily approves" the basic objectives of government reorganization, as proposed by the Hoover commission. They approved the usual resolu tion calling for f statehood .for Alaska and Hawaii. Death Toll Climbs In Japan Typhoon; 1,086 Left Missing TOKYO, June 22-(.P)-A typhoon that hit southern Japan killed 137 Japanese,, left 1,086 missing and wrought damage in the millions of dollars, welfare and police auth orities reported today. The death toll may mount, since 131 of the missing were believed drowned ", when the ferry Aoba Maru sank in churning seas off the south coast of Honshu. Most of the other missing are fishermen from the inland sea area. Occupation authorities said many probably will turn up safe The typhoon blew itself out in the Sea of Japan today, but auth orities were watching a new "squall" area forming off Okin awa, big American base which also was hit In Monday's typhoon. Price Support Bill Passes Committee WASHINGTON. June 22-OVA new farm bill embodying perhaps the highest over - all farm price supports ever attempted by the government was approved fl I to 3 today by a house agriculture sub committee. The measure, to be effective In 1950 if congress approves it, would: 1. Authorise a three crop "trial run" for the Truman administra tion's proposed i "production pay ments" farm program. 2. Repeal outrrght the 1948 Ai ken law 'that is due to set up a flexible 60 to 90 per cent of parity support program. 3. Set up a new parity-of-farm income system and support prices of major-crops at 100 per cent of that standard. PROMOTION ANNOUNCED Promotion of Walter M. Wood. SOS N. 22nd st., to lieutenant (J g.) in the naval air reserve was an nounced I Wednesday night by Lt. E. T. Eldridge, commanding of ficer of the Salem unit BAKERY STRIKE AVERTED PORTLAND, June 22 H?V Portland's major bakeries and AFL truck drivers averted a strike here tonight, four hours before the drvers were scheduled to walk out COME TO THE NEW Paradise Islands Pickhicklng " Swimming New Modern Dressing Rooms Swimming Pool Landscaping 1 Miles East oa Airport Read Call 2-9021 far Picnk Reservations 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 SECTION The Salern Chamber of Commerce, A State St or Kay's, 460 Stat St Drive Started ToReapportion Legislature EUGENE, Ore., June 22-WVThe State Federation of Labor launch ed an initiative move tonight to reapportion the Oregon legislature. A resolution at the annual state 1 convention directed the executive j board to prepare the initiative1 measure for the 1950 election. It would make mandatory a reappor tionment, guided by population shifts. The resolution protested that the legislature itself had defied, the state constitution by refusing to revise its membership after every census. A resolution aimed at a recently proposed city income tax in Port land was defeated. It opposed sales taxes and the pyramiding of in come taxes. Delegates rejected the measure, however, after Eugene Allen, chairman of the laws com mittee, said new sources of reven ue sometimes were needed and as serted that delegates in a previous resolution had expressed willing ness to pay higher income taxes to get rid of sales taxes. Resolutions urging a shorter work day and elimination of noise in industry were approved. A proposal Jo start a statewide AFL newspaper provoked argu ment on where the finances were to come from. The matter was re ferred to the executive board for study. The board also got for study a nroDosal to change the primary law sothat a voter would not be bound by party lines. Judith Coplon Says Morals Charge Frame WASHINGTON. June 22-W Judith Coplon cried out at her espionage trial today that she Is being "framed and that federal prosecutors are seeking to Drana me as a harlot" In shrill fury, the former gov ernment girl steadfastly defended her morals and charged that the man with whom she admittedly held all-night trysts in Baltimore and Philadelphia hotels is "part of this whole frame-up." Miss Coplon demanded that the government put H. P. Shapiro, the "other man" in her tangled love life, on the witness stand. But prosecutor John M. Kelley, Jr. said that was up to her lawyer. The dark-eyed little defendant fought back at every turn as Kel ley probed deeper into her testa mony yesterday that she spent nights with Shapiro, a bachelor lawyer in the Justice department's criminal division, at hotels and in his Washington apartment. ?He didn't make any improper advances, she declared. "I was fully clothed." Then, leaning forward in the witness stand, she shouted: "You have branded ; me as spy and now you art trying to brand me as a harlot."; Varied Program For Thrill Show Stunts at the Hollywood bowl auto thrill show Friday night will vary from a crash through 4,500 pounds of ice to four events in volving a drive through fire. And the new Four Corners fire depart ment truck will be on band to ex tinguish the flames afterward, sponsoring Salem police aerial pa trol members said Wednesday night Chief Ted Miller and two Four Comer's firemen will man the truck, and will demonstrate their new fog-spray equipment in ex tinguishing the blazes. The show is a benefit with funds going toward purchase of an air plane for emergency use in this area. SECTIONS MARCHING UNITS COSTUME lMPERSONATlON PET DECORATED BICYOI ' MOUNTED (HORSES, ETC) flOATS Salem, Oregon, Stevens A 1 Ocean Fresh I CRAB 1! Cocklail I At Tear . 1 Fa vorit". Tavern Try One Teday f LEHHAH'S I ' Seafood J) fL 2M5 Fsrtlaad Rd. J I Ph. -f4 Teacher Injured By Uome-Made Bomb TACOMA, June 22-aVTwo high school teachers homes were damaged and one teacher injured yesterday by home-made bombs believed to have been planted by a juvenile gang. Lloyd C. Hague was injured by a fragment of one of the explosives placed in his mail chute. The second explosion did minor damage to the' front porch of the home of George M. Forsyth, also a teacher of Lincoln high schooL Showers Give Eastern States Drought Relief By the Associated Press Some relief developed Wednes day in the northeast's June drought and heat wave. Showers fell in central, northern and southeastern New York state. They moved on parched New Jer sey. Temperatures i were less ex treme in New England and New York after nearly a week of un broken daytime peaks in the 90s. Except for lowering tempera tures, however, tinder dry Massa chusetts found no relief in sight Forecasters saw ho appreciable rainfall there or in Rhode Island and Connecticut for the next few days. Heavy rains fell in Maine Tues day, and there were showers in New Hampshire and Vermont, re lieving conditions somewhat in those states and lessing forest fire danger. The 23-day drought was declar ed ended in many New York state areas. However, bone dry areas re mained in the extreme eastern and western portions of the state and in the metropolitan and Long Is land areas. New Jersey, which sweltered un der a 93 degree high Tuesday, ex pected lower temperatures and a few scattered showers Wednesday night But weather bureau and agriculture officials feared the showers wouldn't be heavy enough to do much good. The three-week drought in Mas sachusetts caused millions of dol lars damage to hay, vegetable and tobacco crops. The long dry spell was creating a serious water shortage problem in many Massachusetts localities. Community reservoirs were getting low and many farmers reported their wells dry or running out Graveside Rites For Minnie Hunt Scheduled Friday Graveside services for Minnie G. Hunt, 85. former? Salem resident who died Monday in Berkeley, Calif, will be held here Friday at 3 p.m. at the I OOF cemetery. She was the widow of M. W. Hunt, former Salem attorney, who died in California in 1915. He was the son of G. W. Hunt, early Sa lem pioneer. Mrs. Hunt is survived by two sons, George W, Hunt of Madison, Wise., and Homer H. Hunt of Par adise Valley, Calif., and a daughter, Mrs. W. J. Phillips of Berkeley: two brothers, John McMonies and Fred McMonies, both of Los An geles, and by 5 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Services here will be under the direction of the W. T. Rigdon chapeL iirrVhrll OPENS 1:45 P. M. O Co-Hit! TTaosaao Mitchell Barry FltxgeraM LONG TOT AGS HOME" New! Opens :45 P.M. Roy Rogers Color Nightimo fai Nevada Ring Crosby If I HAD MY WAY i I Last Times Tonight! II !Free Shetland Pony Iff Rides for the Kid- II I dies Starting Daily If At f P. M. HI Claudette Colbert I Fred MacMnrray 1 1 "Family Honeymoon" 1 1 I Richard Denning Iff I Trady Marshal ill "DISASTER Jlf e '--lN NOW1 S Jehn Way ae I. , ' Claire -V"C5r Trevor U ; Coach' AEG Accused of In Operation of (Story also WASHINGTON, June 22-W-Senator Millikin! (R-Colo.) tangled with the Atomic Energy commission's general counsel, Joseph Volpe, jr. today over a section of invitations the A EC and the General Elec tric Co. issued to bid on commercial rights at Richland, Wash. The disputed section, as read into the record,: provides that the bidder will "abide by such rules and the commission may Irom time to time establish pertaining to . . . the operation of the busi ness, or the health, sanitation. fire protection and safety of the residents of Richland." Millikin demanded to know what the phrase "operation of the business meant commenting that such a provision does not exist in private contracts. "It means the bidder should operate the business on a business-like basis. Volpe replied. "Why should they be permitted to run on an unbusinesslike basis?" Millikin asked. Volpe said that would be "detri mental" to the community, and Millikin retorted this was an ad mission that the A EC wanted to control business. Volpe said the A EC is trying to get away from "controls" as rapidly as possible, but he said: "We can't do it overnight be cause the government owns all the houses and all the land." Volpe denied that the A EC is operating the business in the town. "Have you been doing any fas cistic things out there?" Millikin asked. "Indeed, we are not," Volpe said. Senator Hickenlooper' told the senate-house committee: 1. That the Du Pont company, which formerly operated the Han ford atomic plant at Richland, once sent a corps of engineers to Hanford at a cost of roughly $800, 000 to the government. 2. The manager of the Hanford operation office, FredC. Schlem- mer, could authorize up to $5,- 000,000 in contracts without con sulting AEC headquarters in Washington. Hickenlooper touched only briefly on these points and did not elaborate. The Iowa senator also fired questions about the engineering experience of Frank L. Creedon, former U. S. housing expediter, who is now a $36,000-a-year Gen eral Electric co. official at Han ford. Schlemmer said Creedon is man ager of the GE design and con struction department and is re sponsible for all construction at Hanford. including the building of atomic piles or "ovens." Production manager Williams then told Hickenlooper that Cree don has done "a masterful job of expediting and organizing" at Hanford. Senator Millikin. asked Schlem mer if the AEC's Washington of fice had been kept "thoroughly and currently" advised about the skyrocketing cost of an AEC schoolhouse at Hanford. Originally estimated at less than $2,000,000, the school cost the government about $3,800,000. "I couldn't say thoroughly ad vised'," Schlemmer replied, "but is HURRY - LAST DAT1 "Don't Trust Tear Husband' -Aet of Vlolence- HeW Tomorrow! Another Tap-Notch lilt Bargaia Program! Mm umiw wnisAiioMt COIMBMlRiff Cress f CO f alert im 2ND MAJOR TREAT O V AND! IP HIDE-OUT j Cartoon - Brevity (eMail L eSbtWssstfcWfBSBf ellllaaBWS? miYB00ILw And Color Cartoon News Fascist Tactics Richland Town on page 1.) j and regulations as General Electric I could say that Washington has been kept reasonably currently advised." Millikin roared with laughter. Reasonably currently advised, the senator repeated, "you could drive a hayrack through that" Water Crews Start Feeder Project Line (Picture on page 1.) City water crews have started construction on a $60,000 mile long feeder pipe line to extend from Mill street to the Salem Gen eral hospital which will give north Salem increased water pressure, according to the Salem water de partment. A 24-inch feede pipe will con nect at the Salem General hospital with a 24-inch main line which was laid in the northeast area last summer, then will be laid along 24th street south to mill creek and Trade street, then west along Trade to 21st., and south again to Mill street where it will connect with a 30-inch main. City water crews and local contractors finished placement of a huge eight ton section of the line under mill creek at Trade and 24th streets -Wednes day. At present all the large mains in the northern sectors of Salem tie into each other, and the new main will mean increased pressure and better service during dry pe- STARTS TODAY! c 7 -i J U S-jJfV-- Meg Randall . Harry Antrim 0Y J j A ' ' VjLj Esthr Dalo Isabel O'Madigan Xi I P -- " - rrt f 1 er 3f-5L ov CO-FEATURE! I f ?r J ZrJZ. Tr 9 M -5 : ! ' Crippled Guard Plane Lands Without Trouble MOSES LAKE AIR FORCE BASE, Wash., June 22 -ify- A glancing bullet from one of its own guns crippled a national guard fighter plane today as it strafed ground targets on a gun nery range. An officer of the national guard 60th fighter wing headquarters said the plane was-' landed with out of difficulty by its Pilot, Capi. William P. Coburn of Boise, Idaho. Stroke Fatal For Rollie Southwick Rollie Southwick, 72, a retired carpenter who ltved in Salem many years, died late Wednesday night at a local hospital. He was taken there Wednesday noon by city first aid men following a cerebral hemhorage. He was the son of Frank 6. Southwick. the contractor who built Salem's city halL Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Margaret H. Cox of Omaha, Neb. and a bro ther, Ralph W. Southwick of Sa lem. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the W. T. Rig don chapeL riods. The project is scheduled for completion in September. 1 m Theatre WOODBURN, ORE. Now Playing! "The Search" With Montgomery Cliff and Chips of the Flying U PH. 3-3467 MAT. ihKs3sruafrn - ALAN BAXTER KIRN OlMtO ptoowcnoMS, hxU' ; Winn mas i' Aininiea: $1.59 (IncL Tax) Children 85c 8P.IL K LINE BIO SUroiTTTED PORTLAND, June 22-(iP)-Tbi low bid to construction a 115-K transmission, line between Forest Grove and McMinxnrille was $88, 232, submitted by Armstrong Coni struction Co., Vancouver, Bonne ville power administration said to day. - f Ciiv Obituaries OSBOKNK ( ' MfmobofW, at the residence at BOA Williams ave.. June XI at tha az of 31 yvars. Survived by parents. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Osboro of Salem; tour sters. Mrs. Marion Buntin and Mrs, Ines Lewis, both of Salem. Mrs. Mir. jorie Doidxe and Mrs. Mildren Flyniu both of Portland; a brother. Max Os borne of Sei: and Ats netces and nephews. Announcement of service later by the Cloufth-Barrick chapeL NOW SHOWING - OPEN C:45 OLIVIA de HAV1LLAND auuun.wtuuraiiBaaiuu 2cxj Second Feature BLONDHTS REWARD With ThV Bamstesds" In Person Tiny and His j Wranglers Stan of KWU & KVAN Ono Nile Only Sloper Hall Independence Saturday Nite. Jane 25 Dancing ; from I U 1 A. M, American Lesion Post 23 DAILY FROM 1 P. M. Color Cartoon "Th Thr MlnnUV Airmail Fox Movietone i News! - yi "53 band's