Tito Answers 'Plotting1 Blast By Hungary Br Alex Singleton BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Sept 14 -(Jpy- The information ministry Issued tonight a statement declar ing Hungarian charges that Pre mier Marshal Tito's government plotted against Hungary's commu nist regime were "lies and slan ders." Hungary declared last Saturday that Yugoslav and American agen cies conspired with her former for eign minister, Lazlo Rajk, and seven others to kill off key com munists and overthrow the Hun 'garian government. The eitrht are to go on trial in Budapest Friday. The denial was another shot in Yugoslavia's word war with the Russian-led communist informa tion bureau, the cominform. To Increase Trade A fresh step in Yugoslavia's ef forts to increase trade with non communist areas was announced too. The government said Yugo- and metals to Finland in return for rayons, paper and other goods under newly concluded trade part to last until the end of 1950. The amount of gods Involved was not stated. The statement of the Hungarian treason case was presented by the information ministry by the Yugo slav organization of republican veterans of the Spanish civil war It said that Hungary, with So viet permission, has used "base lies and deceptions against Yugo slavia, as in the case of Rajk." It referred in detail to Yugoslav con tributions to the fight against Gen eralissimo Francisco Franco in the Spanish war and to the Yugoslav batle for liberation in World War II. Called Secret Agent The Hungarian indictment deal ing with the former foreign min ister, in addition to charging that he plotted with high Yugoslav au thorities, said he was a secret agent in Hungary's prewar police and engaged in "destructive activ ity" in Franco's behalf in Spain. A Yugoslav leader declared to lay Russia hopes, in steaming up he propaganda campaign against 'ito, to block him off from trade nd other agreements with the est. Vladimir Bakaric, president of ,ie Croatian republic, wrote in he communist newspaper Borba j that this pressure-cooking is in tended to create the impression Marshal Tito's government is about to blow up and it would be un safe to make deals ,with him. A Sound Analysis Diplomatic observers said this seemed to be a sound analysis of tne situation. Yugoslavia is near conclusion of a big long-term trade pact with Britain. A world bank commission has under way an in quiry into Yugoslavia's application for a loan of $250,000,000 or more. Her bid for western aid already "has born fruit in a $20,000,000 loan from the U.S. export-import bank and a U.S. permit to import a 33.00000 steel mill from America. From here it looked as though Russia may be aiming at blocking further aid from the west, gamb ling that the almost solid economic sanctions clamped on Yugoslavia by the cominform states of eastern Europe eventually would then bear fruit in the collapse of the Tito regime. Business Name Changes Filed Seven certificates for assumed business names were filed with the Marion county clerk Wednes day. Names for Salem businesses in cluded those filed by Mary B. Leslie for the State Street Alter nation shop, 360 State street; How ard D. Price, Jr., and Harold L. Godkin for Price & Godkin Serv ice station; and T. A. and Marie T. Fitzsimmons of 1122 Third st., West Salem, for a magazine pub lishing business bearing the Fitz simmons name. Others include those filed by Bill and Bessie H. Lepley of Jef ferson for Jefferson Town Tavern; Bruce and Edna Billings of Sil- verton for Silverton Green Houses burn for Woodburn Nut Co. Springfield Plans Disposal Plant SPRINGFIELD, Sept. 14 -OTV This city Tuesday night decided to hire a san'ary engineer to draw up plans r a sewage dis posal plant. This action was prompted by a letter from the Oregon state sanitary authority, dated July 27, which demanded Springfield submit within 60 days a definite fiscal- program and time schedule covering such a develop ment DEDICATION OF PASS SET PORTLAND. Sept. 14 HP)- A pass between Mirror lake and the head of East Xagle creek in the Wallowa mountains will be dedi cated Friday as Horton Pass, commemorating the late F. V. Hor ton of the U. S. Forest service. 3,029 Wholesalers In the United States and Canada have used our service. George &Aay Company Established 192S Five.of a 1 y-v, READING Pa- Sept 14 Quintuplet calves, considered rare in cow circles, icen ai ine neaninc rair ttrritv' 15-tear-bld June EHassen watches her charges. The heifers are owned by June's mother. (AP Wirephoto to! the Statesman.) Water District Boundary Line Change Asked Mafion county court has under advisement a request that the boundary lines of the proposed Liberty-Salem Heights wates dis trict be amended. A hearing on the request was held before the court Wednesday. Proponents of the district consent ed to eliminating from the present proposed boundaries an area ex tending from Salem city limits southland east of the Pacific high way to Oak Hill avenue. A number of residents of that area requested they be excluded from the proposed district because they had "other arrangements" for fire protection. Not yet settled are other proposals to eliminate a small section adjacent to Mary and Jlw aid avenues, Scenic View and Duplex drive find an area along the south side of county road 813 the road just south of Liberty road. Present et the hearing Wednes day tvere Ray R. Ritchie, Wayne A. Curry, Eloyd McClellan, Carl Harris, Mrs. Paul Riffey. Mrs. H. A. Rosebraughi Raymond P. Rich- ie, Tpul Griebenow Edward Cot- man,: William J. Ljniooi, r.ieanor S. Griffith, and two state fire war-dens4-M. J. Celson and A. J. Butsch. . ; Marine Recruit Officer Due M Sgt. C. J. Graziaho, wno ar rived in Salem from a Mare island- marine; corps assignment Wednesday, soon will become non-commissioned officer in charge of the local marine recruit ing station. Gfaziano will succeed T. .Sgt. George E. Bartlett who is await ing reassignment after his two year recruiting stint in Oregon. The new recruiter here, now looking for living quarters for his wife and two children, has been in the marine corps 17 years. He served with the 2nd marine divis ion in World War II. Graziano will; take over his new duties in the present marine recruiting of fice,! room 211 at the Salem post office, i BRITAIN JOBLESS RISES LONDON, Thursday, Sept. 15-(jP)-Britain's Unemployed number ed 261,008 on August 15, the min ister of labor announced today This was an increase of 18,000 over the previous month. j SALEM'S I City-Wide Free Treasure Hunt New Fall Window Displays Automobile Show Band on the Streets TREASURE HUNT Treasure Hunt tickets will be distributed by all participat ing stores' all day ' Friday, Saturday, Monday and Tues day. Match your ticket num bers with- the numbers on prizes In the store windows Tuesday night! -Kind J s a Lot , u v. r -n m tkaM3Mt:. . O & C Cedar Pole Timber for Sale Daniel L. Goldy, regional ad ministrator of the bureau of land management, reported Wednesday that 10 parcels of Or and C. timber carrying a volume of 5,415,000 board feet of timber and 750 lineal feet of cedar poles with an ap praised value of $36,627.50 will be offered for sale beginning Septem ber 26. The tracts are located within Benton, Douglas, Jackson, Joseph ine and Lane counties. The sales will be by bid or auction at Port land, Coos Bay, Eugene and Rose burg. Assessors of 8 Counties to Attend Meet Assessors of eight counties In the Willamette valley will attend a training course to be conducted by the assessment and taxation division of the state tax commis sion next Tuesday and Wednes day in Salem. The main theme of the con ference will deal with methods of appraising dwellings and in dustrial plants. The state tax commission has compiled and pub lished a 111-page pamphlet en titled "Factors of Cost for Build ing Appraisals." This is the first revision of a manual of appraisal methods since 1931. The factor book is intended as a guide to the components of a dwelling and includes a quick method of arriv ing at an appraisal after a brief study of the structure. This conference will be the third of a series of five meetings. Ses sions have already been held at LaGrande and Pendleton and following the Salem conference there will be groups of assessors and appraisal officers at Medford and Astoria in October. It is the desire to give every assessor an opportunity to attend the lectures and have the amendments to the assessment and taxation laws, en acted In the 1949 legislature, ex plained by an assistant attorney general. Invited to the Salem In-service training program are the follow ing assessors: E. E. Larkin, Ben ton county; Rufus E. Wood, Clack amas; George A. Stock, Lane; John W. Sheppard, Linn; R. Shelton, Marion; Wilbur J. Falloon, Mult nomah; E. C. Dunn, Polk, and Fred Muhs, Yamhill. In addition to the assessors and their assist ants, the sessions will be open to all officials interested in taxa tion and especially in appraisals of property. 0 7 s) of Cows -i " i'fS ! "iijXJZ, S ? i. . T'lT'!m? Vfv2M rr, WMuMVwrTAd.M Paper Predicts Appointment to Supreme Court INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 14 ifP) The Indianapolis Star said to night in a dispatch from its Washington bureau that Sherman Minton of Indiana is scheduled to be appointed to the U. S. supreme court tomorrow. At Washington, White House sources said in answer to a query that they knew nothing of the report. Minton, 58, is Judge of the U. S. circuit court of appeals in Chi cago. A former senator, he , was a seatmate and close friend of President Truman when he serv ed in the senate from 1935 to 1941. He was named to the appeals court by President Roosevelt in 1941. Minton would succeed Justice Wiley Rutledge, who died last Saturday. NEW ALBANY, Ind., Sept. 14 (JPl- Federal Judge Sherman Min ton of Indiana said tonight that reports he is to be appointed to the U. S. supreme court tomor row came as "a complete sur prise." Minton, who is Judge of the U. S. court of appeals in Chicago, said he knew nothing more about the appointment than was carried in the newspapers. White House sources in Wash ington said in answer to a query that they knew nothing of the report. Minton, 58, and a former senators was a seatmate and close friend Of President Truman when he served in the senate from 1935 to 1941. He was named to the appeals court by President Roose velt in 1941. 400 Freshmen 'Get Acquainted' With Willamette Nearly 400 new students arc getting acquainted with the Wil lamette university campus during orientation activities -for freshmen this week. Director of Admissions Charles A. Paeth announced Wrednesday that 335 undergraduate freshmen have registered, 183 men and 152 women. About 60 starting law students are expected to register Saturday. Last year's u n d e r g r aduate freshmen numbered 882 at reg istration time in the fall. Registration for upperclassmen will be Monday, with classwork to begin In all departments Tues day. The Greatest in AU the City9 s History I y CI? U.S. to Protest Reds' Abuse of Human Rights By John M. Hightower WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 -UP)-The United States will carry to the United Nations its charges that communist Bulgaria, Hun gary and Romania show "callus disregard" of their peace treaty pledges to protect human rights. Secretary of State Acheson dis closed this at a news conference today. The action will be the latest in . a long and increasingly bitter series of exchanges be tween the United States and Brit ain on one hand and the three Russian satellites on the other over the methods by which the communists in those countries have seized and consolidated their power. Smash Opposition American ana British allega- : uons oi peace ireaiy viuiauou were based on charges that the Bulgarian, Hungarian and Ro- manian communist regimes had mashed opposition political parties, suppressed free speech. denied free worship and other . obbed thei DeODl. f demo. cratic rights. The two western powers for mally accused them of violating their peace treaty pledges. The satellite governments, with ob- vious Russian support, rejected the accusation. Thereupon Lon don and Washington sent notes invoking peace treaty provisions for setting up commissions to set tle the dispute. AU Reject Proposal Acheson reported today that with their usual unanimity Bul garia, iTungary and Romania had all rejected the commission pro posal. The three governments continue to contend they have not violated treaty guarantees of human rights, he said, but "have refused to co operate in establishing these commissions." The question of human rights violations by Bulgaria and Hun gary is already on the agenda of the U- N. general assembly which meets in New York next Tuesday, Acheson said, and Australia has proposed that the Romanian case also be taken up. New Jaycee Club Formed WOODBURN, Sept. 14-(Special) -A new junior chamber of commerce chapter was activated here tonight with William Dunn, jr., as president. Frank Merrill, Albany, vice president of the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce, was the activating officer at the meeting attended by 350 persons. Speakers at the program In cluded Mayor Elmer Mattson of Woodburn, Gene Malecki of Sa lem and Frank Ward, president of Salem Junior Chamber of Commerce. Exquisite S o 1 i taire with match l n g wedding band. t. ,$87.50 Fed. Tax IncL 40 lift humify Beautiful Six Diamond Duet $154.75 Fed. Tax IncL kWf) HI j Open For Your Convenience Friday Night Till 9:00, P. MJ Credit Terms Gladly! Ne Extra Charxe r ; ,.;.VV"- iS NAVAL ARCHITECT MiU Andrej "Pete") MnUer, of Westfield. N. J.. rradnate nav al architect, studies a problem at heij drafting: board ia Fore River Shipyard, Quiacy, Mass. Suits Result Frojm Double Auto Accident Two Luits for damages result ing from an automobile accident August B7 on the Pacific higmvay near Salem were filed in Marion county circuit court Wednesday. In oee complaint James W. Schwabl driver of one automobile, is seeking $5,000 for injuries al lpcedlv becurring in the accident James t. Dye, owner of the car driven fey Schwab is suing for $400 fofj damages to his vehicle, a 1936 Crjevrolet. Both complaints are orougni against F. M. Gray and O. P. Emery, described in the complaint as owners and operators of the second car. Gray and Emery are i . charged, in both complaints wun being negligent and Intoxicated at the time of the crash. The accident occurred, accord ing torthe complaint, when the car beifig driven by Schwab slow ed down at the scene of an earlier collisiop on the highway. Both cars were traveling north, according to the complaint. Fillxjrt Growers to Vole On New Marketing I'lan PORTLAND, Sept. 14-K-Ore- j rr,n r!rt Washington filbert grow ers will vote from September 19 to 23 in the new federal marKet na aereement for filberts. TKI nrnnosal would withhold 25 peri cent of the crop from the in-shell market. O N D RINGS All the accumulated experience of 4 gener ations of diariond cutting has gone into the development pf vour Multi-Facet Diamond Ring. This diamond of extra brilliance created at ch cutter' bench . . . tested at dentine laboratories . . . sold by jewelers of proven reputation -r brings you the ultimate in diamond beauty. Be sure to . i . . . ' see these exautsite rings soon. to mM4 4t MM-fMl thm4 mtr. hip ai Other Diamond! Priced from $24.75 to $2500 With each purchase f iMULT IlT A- CET DIAMOND ym receive a signed la- ffwraatee. The Statesman, Salem, Ort Ex-Sen. Cooper JVominated for U.N. Vacancy "WASHINGTON, Sept 14 - VP) - fohn Sherman Cooper, former state judge and republican senator from Kentucky, was nominated today to take over the United Na tions post formerly held by John forster Dulles. j President Truman sent Cooper's nomination to the senate along with those of other delegates to Represent the United States at the fourth regular session of the U. N. general assembly. The assembly will convene in New York Sep tember 20. I Secretary of State Acheson will head the U. S. delegation as usual, but he does not have to be con firmed by the senate for this post i Warren R. Austin, former repute lican senator from Vermont, was Urvo nn th HoWatinn H will when pe senior representative cheson is unable to be present. . I Others renominated were: Philip C. Jessup and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, widow of the late pres ident. I Nominated as alternates were: yVllson M. Compton, president of Washington State college; Benja min V. Cohen of New York; Charles Fahy of New Mexico; John D. Hickerson of Texas; and Mrs. Ruth Brvan Rohde of New York. a King could wear nothing finer or smarter than a ii - .at - - - The Man's Shop -THE STOKE OT STYLE. QUALITY AND VALUE MOXLET AND UUNTINQTON ? S 41S State Street I SAlesa, Ores Thursday. September IS, 194133 Engineers to Release Valley Dam Waters j EUGENE. Sept 14 4V Army engineers will begin lowering the level of the Cottage Grove and Fern Ridge reservoirs Thursday. They said the release of stored waters would raise the level of the Long Tom river channel about five feet and the Coast Fork of the Willamette river about three feet The levels are being lowered In anticipation of fall rains. I Pineapple to Cost More on West Coast SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 14- Hawaiian canned pineapple wilt cost West Coast consumers more than those on the East Coast ac cording to Henry A. White, presi- ! eni. ot Hawalian ' rinPPl ! Co.. because of the Hawaiian dock ' White made this prediction here i today in discussing the movement of the canned product from tha islands. Ships carrying the goods. White said, are being loaded des. pite the strike but are-by-passing the West Coast becauselongshore men won't work the vessels. As a result, he said, the bulk of the 1949 pack is being routed to East Coast ports. It is unloaded there and reshipped by rail to the West Coast. This added cost.-White said, "will be an expensive burden for western consumers." OfhlTToTl Vr II U- gabardine topper mmm mmm am Iff :- " - 1 i V $60.00 A Gab Royal is both a royal and loyal wardrobf j standby because of its regal appearance, any j occasion appropriateness, and any weather service, j It'i the coat you'll proudly wear anywh&trtmj'tirne. ! 4