Weather Max. Min. Preclp. SC 4S : .5 57 50 .73 67 45 i trace gain Portland SQ3HG0 San Francisco . Chicago , New York 59 1 Willamette river 3 feet. 29 trace 42 trace FORECAST (from U. S. weather bureau. McNary field, Salem): De creasing cloudiness today and tonight. Scattered light showers today. High today 60-62; low tonight 42-44. FOUNDBD 1651 CearW to tat Growtk af OftgM rwv vvw. ; s '1 Travel Letter No. 14 COLORADO SPRINGS -rThe i distance from Dallas, Tex., to Colorado "Springs is about 800 miles. You cross the "high plains," cut through the northeast corner of New Mexico, then come north roughly paralleling the Rockies : through Trinidad and Pueblo. It is a steady up-grade from altitude 466 feet to 7834 at Raton pass on the New Mexico border.; I Cultivation extends through ! Texas virtually to the border. The . tilled land Is interrupted by big f patches of waste land, rough, ero ded, with mesquite, yucca and i sagebrush for vegetation. But the i broad flat plains are devoted to dry farming: wheat and cotton ! as far west as near Amarillo, ! which is the "capital" of the Pan i handle. In New Mexico you get j Into mountains, the ranches be- ing typical stock ranches. The whole area suffers severe ! ly from drouf this year, the first I' and worst since the dry yean of ! the 1930s. There was virtually no 1 snow and spring, has brought lit tie rain. Instead, dry winds blow, i rilling the air with dust and suck i lng moisture from the ground. Wheat is already hurt Cotton seed Isnt planted till May but will ! ' need rains to bring it to . produ cing thrifty plants. 1 . All this is big scale farming, the i same as we have in eastern ! (Continued on editorial page 4) Doctors Widen Effort Toward Public Service ! The Marion-Polk County Medl : cal society, already embarked on i program of medical service to j all, Wednesday announced two : innovations Resigned to establish ! still furthef 'cooperation between the medical . profession and the i general public. : , The society laid: (1) Any person requiring med- i leal care, and who is unable to communicate with -his physieian, may call 3-9187 (day or night) in order to locate him; the personnel at this number will also provide the names of physicians willing to . i take emergency calls for those patients who hay nor local family physician. ' . - ' V (2) Any patient who has a grievance against any physician In the Marion-Polk County Medical society may address a letter to the grievance committee, in care of Dr. Howard Kurtz president. The society's statement said it wished "to provide a better mut ual understanding between patients and physicians; misunder- ; standings in this delicate personal relationship do occasionally oc cur, and can best be removed by consulting with a group of doctors who have earned the respect of the public and their professional colleagues." -s. It also said it was recognized I that "it is our duty to?rovide . . . : services to all, regardless of abil ity to pay," and "to provide ser vices at all times, including nights and week-ends. China Ratifies Russian Pact TOKYO, Thursday, April The Pelping radio announced to day comrrmnist China has ratified its 30-year treaty of "mutual aid and amity with the Soviet union. - The alliance binding the world's two largest communist countries was signed in Moscow Feb. 14 by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky and Chou En-lai, pre mJer and foreign minister of Red China. , ' ! The Pel Ding broadcast, monitor ed here, said separate agreements with Russia covering the future of the Changchun railway, Port Ar thur and Dairen, all in Manchuria, also have been ratified. Animal Crackers I By WARREN GOODRICH "Junior! Step scribbling 4e ktt on th w!is pt your hi Nex Tuesday. April 100th YEAR Five Will Become Cherryland floyalty Us '1 .Vv r -' Z jV f - V ! v i - 1 - ' - ' "V ?l ' - - '."V h I'' - n - Mm 1 in irniifi 1 r -r 'filtsui n Five of these charminr girls will be Salem's 1959 Cherryland royal court after final selections Friday night at the Salem high school auditorium. There they will model gowns given to them for that night i by Salem merchants, and Judges will choose the five princesses on basis of personality, poise and appearance. The girls are, front row, Doris Haworth, Jefferson; Patricia Kirk, St. Paul; Marlene Hartmann, Sublimity. Second Nancy Miller, Salem. Third row, Winona Locke, Independence; Darleen Thomas, Gervaisi and Doreen Place, Turner. Fourth row, Vera Pantle, Woodbnrn; Wanda Nelson, Monmouth; and Donna Dunbar, Stay ton. Top, Eva Miller, Dallas; and Dwynn Her berger, Sacred Heart academy, Salem; (Story on page 13.) Pudding River Bridge Project Set by County Preliminary plans to reconstruct one bridge and to accept another were made Wednesday by Marion The building project would be bridge on the old Salem-Silverton Bates Backed By Cattlemen For Director By Lillie L. Madsen Farm Editor, The Statesman' tloyd Bates, Salem, president of the Marion County Jersey Cattle club, was endorsed unani mously for western director to the American Jersey Cattle club. ; En dorsement came at the April meet ing of the directors or the Ore gon Jersey Cattle club held at the Salem Chamber of Commerce rooms Wednesday. Should Bates be elected, he will fill the place now held by Peter Henning of i Arlington. Wash., whose term expires at the close of this year. Both Clackamas and Washington county clubs have al ready voted their approval, direc tors reported. Washington State club members have indicated that its membership would endorse! Bates at their next meeting.: i John Gale of Canby, reporting, for the state club milk committee, urged the appointment of a Jer sey fieldman to promote a "good! milk program". He also urged, enforcement of a minimum butter fft labeling law, requiring milk and cream sold to the retail mar4 ket to carry the proper label. J The directors favored Dale Dean of Meadowridge Farms, Mich., as judge for the Jersey show at tha state fair and completed plans for the spring shows which will open at McMinnville on May 25 with Polk and Yamhill holding a Joint event. Marion county will ; hold its show on May 29 to be followed by Clackamas on May 30 and Washington on May 31. (Additional farm news on page 6.) . cofffj: feice cut i PORTLAND, April 12 -JP)- It costs 2 cents less a pound for coffee now. The price cut became general on most brands after one brand led off by reducing its price! 1 COAST UAGl'I At Portland-Hollywood, rain. At SnJ a-4. Oakland -ll At Los Anlca 3. Sacrameato (13 inn ) At Saa franciaco T .Saa Diego 1 20 PAGES row, Martha Storrttste, Silverton; county court. replacement of the Pudding river road, so it may serve as a detour when the mam road to the south is rebuilt this summer. The court directed ordering of lumber for the span. Commissioner E. L. Rogers said the present wood piling bridge, 152 feet long, is 18 years old and is now subject to a five-ton load limit.-The new bridge will also be on piling. Construction will begin when the lumber is delivered. The court said it would accept a temporary bridge, across a slough at the east end of the new Willamette river bridge at Inde pendence, when Tacco Construc tion company, contractor, is done with it. The firm wrote it would turn over the span, used during con struction, to the county for con sideration of one dollar. However, the county does not plan to main tain the bridge. SALEM PRECIPITATION Ttif Year Last Year Narmal 38.91 37.90 32.38 Politics on Who's Running for What in the May Primaries! (Editor's aote: Coauntata la this writs arc made fcy or for tat candi date without restrieUon. and tny or may not reflect tho opinion of this now (paper). Today's subject: Mark Hatfield (r) Candidate for State representative (Marion) As the porter on the Pullman said to the passenger standing on the platform between cars, Mis- tah, dat plat form's to git ii on. not to stanc on." Such is often i the case with those who have political ambi tions. They for mula t e high sounding phrases, promise the moon, and changa their be Mark BntfleM liefs to fit their audience. Having been training in legis lation and state government and having worked at the grass-roots in state-wide political campaigns, I have no naive opinions regard ing politics-in-action. However, it is my earnest con viction, , and the thing on which A 2LS, Ds the Final (Day for Registration; Matte the Oregon Margaret Nicholson, Aumsville; and Salem to Join ii ew Defense 1 1 n Net Program Salem will give itiij full official cooperation in the nW state pro gram of air raid Earning and ground observation. Mayor Rob ert L. Elfstrom said j Wednesday. The mayor planned to consult city officials on selection of a local supervisor and j other mat ters suggested by Qjov. Douglas McKay in a letter 6 92 Oregon mayors. The c om iri u n i c ation reached Elfstrom yesterday. Principal request!; j from the governor concerned 1 deal appoint ment of ground observation sup ervisors and possible location and building of observation posts. jThe state's civil defense agency has been reactivated! at the re quest of Louis Johnson, U. S. secretary of defense 1 A stand-by force of 6,000 volunteer Oregon citizens is sought, alping with 300 observation posts, foiir Itey warn ing points and a filter center in Portland. Parade I I i I pin my ambition member of Oregon that inefficiency in to become a legislature, the legisla tjive process lends itself only to ineffective government. I We cannot stress tpo much the importance of local a ted state gov ernment, and the Vital check it should make on ou t expanding federal government as it is ope- rating in Washington today i To make the stale and local government a contributing and Effective influence, we must con stantly strive to pfnprove the structure and operations of our home front through the elimina tion of waste, overlapping uneco nomical procedure?. As our democracy has grown and prospered, interest groups have girded themselves with po litical armament and have, too Often I think, blind4 themselves (to the overall objective a dy pamic, well-knitted United States, so strong in even 'Stg weakest link that it need have no fear f inroads by other ways of life. In any legislation in which I y be fortunate enough to par- mate. I will suboort those measures which will benefit the lotal population I obligated to none, but open-minded to alL (Tai 'W Roy I HMtk.) Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday. April 13. 1S50 Weather Stops' Chinese Pilot's Withheld TAIPEI, Formosa, Thursday, April 13 -(JP)- The Chinese na tionalists said today a Russian- built fighter plane has been shot down along the China coast and its pilot captured. His nationality was not disclosed. A dispatch from Chushan island said the plane was shot down south of Shanghai Monday while strafing nationalist guerrilla troops operating against the Chin ese communists on the mainland. The dispatch added: Downed by Guaboat The plane was downed by a nationalist gunboat while it was flying with another Russian-built fighter in strafing. The pilot of the downed plane parachuted and was captured and was being taken to Chusan, na tionalist air and naval base 100 miles southeast of Shanghai. The nationalists j have charged that at least some of the Russian-built planes fighting for the reds have been piloted by Rus sians. Blackout Ordered . The growing threat of red air attacks caused the nationalists to order a blackout at Hoihow, cap ital of Hainan island off the south China coast All red efforts to establish beachheads on Hainan have fail ed. Nationalist authorities, how ever, expect a big blow soon. All possible preparations are: being made,: nationalist sources said. Air raid precautions also were strengthened on the main nation alist bulwark 100 miles off China's southeast coast. , Clnld, Youth Conference ens Today Child and youth problems will get concentrated attention from several hundred Oregon citizens in a conference which opens today in Salem. The governor's state committee on children and youth will open the two-day meeting with a gen eral convocation at 10 a.m. in the house of representatives at the capitol. Attendance of nearly 1,000 dur ing the conference was forecast Wednesday as the advance guard of conference leaders began ar riving. Various phases of youth studies will be discussed in separate meet ings today and tomorrow, with final reports to be summarized in a closing session at 1:30 p.m. Fri day in the house. Headliners at the opening ses sion today will be Dr. Martha Branscombe, director of Elizabeth McCormick Memorial fund, Chi cago, 111.. Gov. Douglas McKay and Mrs. Sadie Orr Dunbar, chair man of the state committee. The Oregon conference is pre liminary to a national conference on the subject, called by President Truman. Salem's Size? 1,435 Guesses So far. 1,435 persons have entered The Statesman's guess ing contest regarding Salem's 1950 census figures. Forty-six persons have guess ed under 40,000. Fifteen have guessed more than 100,000. Heaviest concentration is in tha 53,000 bracket (109 guesses) and the 54,000 bracket (128 guess es).; The contest is open to every one one guess to a person. To qualify for the $25 first prize, S10 second prize and $5 third prize, guesses must be la The Statesman office before mid night Saturday, April 15. You can use the form on page 2 today, or write your guess on any piece of paper. ItH be fun to see who wins. And it might well be someone from outside of Salem, to. Scores of guesses have come from other valley towns. Deadline Saturday, April 13. Nativity Op j Down Russian - 'Worldless' Man Requests Asylum The "man without a country" had nothing on a visitor who call ed on Gov. Douglas McKay Wed nesday. Hugo Visnapu, a former Eston ian, can't even call the world his home. He may have to settle for Mars, Mercury or a flying sau cer. Visnapu is a displaced person who is visiting Willamina, now U home of another former Es tonian, Linda Sider, whom he plzns to marry if he can just find a country in which to live. Briefly, Visnapu was in a dis placed persons camp in Germany two years ago. The government of Eire called him to that. country for Crash of Superfort Claims Lives of 13 ALBUQUERQUE, N. M., April 12-)-A B-29 superfortress plowed straight into a mountain instead of turning and killed 13 air men near here last night. The ship cracked up in a highly secret area of Sandia base, which is engaged in atomic and other special weapons work. Result: a tight security cloak on most de- tails of the tragedy All aboard the four-engined bomber died in the fiery explo sion which followed almost in stantly. Towering flames were visible 17 miles distant in down town Albuquerque for more than two hours. The bodies were burn ed beyond recognition. Plane and men were from the strategic air command's 508th bomb wing, stationed at Walker base outside Roswell, N. M. They had landed at Kirtland base here and .refueled on what was official ly labelled a navigation training flight Authorities declined to amplify that description of the mission. The superfort took off eastward toward the Manzano- mountains from a runway more than 10,000 feet long. Kirtland authorities said they were unable to explain why it did not execute a 90-degree bank to avoid the rocky crest, as is prescribed for all craft operat ing from the field. Such a course prevents takeoffs over congested Albuquerque districts None of the crewmen was from the Pacific northwest FEP Sidestep Flayed by Taft WASHINGTON, April 2-OP) Immediate senate consideration of fair employment practices legis lation was demanded today by republican leaders. Senator Taft (R-Ohio), speak ing for the senate GOP policy committee, said a democratic de cision yesterday : to postpone ac tion on FEPC "throws doubt oh the good faith of the majority in the whole civil rights program." He told reporters that policy committee members feel that the delay was "inspired by demo cratic political considerations to postpone any action until south ern primaries are largely out of the way." This was denied yesterday by Democratic Leader Lucas of Il linois. He said President Truman felt it was more Important to give right-of-way at this time to foreign aid legislation. First Quarter Business on Uptrend; Industrial Expansion Slackens Pace WASHINGTON, April 12 -;P)-The president s council of econom ic advisers today reported to con gress an upturn in virtually every business index in first-quarter 1950. Industrial output bounced back in March; it more than made up khe losses of the coal strike. Home building set a record. National in come, which means buying power, rose after falling in each quarter of 1949. : But the council's acting chair man, Leon Keyserling, told a re porter that the gains still fail to show an economic growth rapid enough to prevent a slow, year-by-year rise in Joblessness. "We are not getting the expan sion in industry and investment that we need to absorb the steady increase in the labor force," Key erling said. "That is a serious problem." PRICE Hunt for Plane advice in the field of plastics in which he is an expert. By July 16 he is supposed to re turn to Germany but intervening changes in displaced rx sons laws now prohibit this move. Eire of ficials warn he also cannot return to Eire after the July deadline. He is in the United States on a temporary visa which expires May 16. On that day he must leave this country. Where will he go? He doesn't know. He asked McKay for advice. The governor said he would noti fy the Oregon congressional del egation of his dilemma and ask for help. Invite to Quit Race Rejected By Pearson State Treasurer Walter J. Pear son Wednesday declared he would not withdraw as a democratic candidate for governor as de manded recently by State Senator Austin Flegel, another democratic candidate. Pearson said he was not run ning against Flegal but against Gov. Douglas McKay, republican incumbent. "I am conducting my own campaign and am not paying attention to statements made by democratic opponents,'' Pearson said. The state treasurer refused to comment on Flegel's criticism of his senate voting record, particu lar in regard to private vs public ownership of power. Pearson believes that If elected, he can appoint his own successor as state treasurer and break re publican domination of the board of control. Flegel and several prominent lawyers contend that McKay would be entitled to make the appointment before Pearsen could be sworn Into office. Siletz Tribe to Resume Spring Feast Custom PORTLAND, April 12 -VP)- The Siletz Indian tribes will resume their old-time spring feast custom with a celebration In the long house at Siletz Sunday. It will be the first time In many years that the Indians have held a spring Thanksgiving feast there. ASSOCIATES ASSOCIATE DALLAS. April 12 -0P)-Mrs. Nell R. Short a census taker, call ed every night for almost a week at a certain house in Dallas. Fin ally she found the occupant at home Mrs. Hazel E. Hansen, an other census taker. The council's monthly report to congress; "Economic Indicators," noted a March drop of 551,000 in the number of jobseekers but said the improvement was "seasonal." Production of all goods and ser vices reached an annual rate of $258,000,000,000 in the first quar ter, up nearly $3,000,000,000 from late last year but not yet back to the level of a year ago when the skid began. A "sharp rise" in consumer's spendable income, or earnings af ter Uxes, was attributed largely to the $2,800,000,000 GI life Insur ance refund most of which, the council said, "was not spent in the first quarter". Consumer spending rose to an all-time peak rate of 1181,000,000, 000 a year. This represented a modest gain of $1,200,000,000 for the quarter, and indicated that Sure You" Cam '"V oft No. 17 .Fighter Soviets Criticize Search By Ole Arafast COPENHAGEN. Denmark ril 12-P)-Fliers hunting life rafta from a missing U.S. navy plan spotted yellow objects and an oil slick on the squall-flecked Baltie sea today, but a concerted search or ine area ended with negative results. At least on of tho viimr k jects turned out to be a three- loot-long fish storage box used by Baltic fishermen. Bad weather Interrupted tha quest tonight The score or more oi air crews planned to take off again at dawn in the search for traces of the plane, a four-engined privateer that vanished with its 10 -man crew Saturday on a fligbt from Wiesbaden, Germany to Co penhagen. Resemblance Noted The hunt drew newsnanor at ticism in- Soviet Russia, whir protested yesterday that a it bomber of the B-29 type exchang ed shots with a Soviet fighter over Latvia Saturday and then headed toward the Baltic. The theme wee that the search was just an excuse to conduct aerial maneuvers off Soviet territory. American officials have indirnt. ed a belief the Russians might be reierring 10 tne privateer, which resembles a B-29 in profile. But they said it was unarmed, that a flight to Latvia would have been more than 300 miles off its Wiesbaden-Copenhagen course and that it was under instructions to stay away from Soviet territory. Tho formal American answer to the Russian protest is still awaited. Yellow Ob JectaJSpattedw., U.S. air force officials were ad vised B-17 search plane spotted four yellow objects. Navy escape equipment is colored yellow to give its high visibility against dark seas. Mar nave Been Raft The pilot referred to the objects as "debris" after he landed, but said one could have been a life raft. "Just before I set course for Copenhagen," he said, "a Danish minesweeper reached the spot and picked up some of what I thought was debris. The Danes reported by radio that the first thing they pick ed up was a wooden box, used by fishermen for storing fish. What happened after then, I don't know." A Danish pilot expressed belief the American searchers might have been misled by a buoy marking the deep sea burial ground of thousands of tons of mustard gaa the Russians dumped in the Baltie last year. The discovery of the fish box raised the question whether all tho other objects sighted might have come from fishing boats. Optim ism lowered at U.S. air force head quarters in Wiesbaden. Year Precipitation Tops Mean in City Even If it didn't rain another drop from now to September L the 1949-50 season could be con sidered a Wetter than usual one. Wednesday's .55 inches of rain fall boosted the year's total te 33.91, Just .35 inches above the mean precipitation of the past 59 years, the weatherman reported. And there is still four and a half months to go on the weather year. most veterans were spending their refund checks prudently. The average personal Income, after' taxes, was estimated at a annual rate of $1,323 for every man, woman and child. This ex ceeded the average for boomtime 1943 by $21. Because of the slight price decline, it represents $51 more buying power. Only two of the major economie indexes pointed down, but they were important ones farm In come, and industry's investment in new plant and equipment. Farmers' income was running la February about 10 per cent bo hind year ago.' Outlays for industrial expansion, a forecast based on reports by business to the government. Is ex pected, to run, behind 1949 by I per cent in the first half and 11 per cent over tho full year. 5c ,s)