..rsihi Juaittiv? .'.V. r I! r 1 v f Tkf Etaleacra. Sclemu Onoon, Monday-TagtaaT Ur 1S31 . , Rlilf Control Hearing: Due Age BeforeBpauty Irf Legislature A hearing cm proposed repeal or redaction of state milk control Is one of the focal points this week for the Oregon legislature. Week end developments were concerned principally with budgetary prob lems, both Income and outgo. One bill for discussion at Friday- night hearing would repeal the entire state milk control act while another would modify dras tically its present provisions. The hearing will be conducted by the dairy and food committee consum er representatives from Portland and many other sections of the state were expected to play an im portant role in the discussion. The recent reauest for milk Increase prices in Portland has added fuel to the legislative investigation. Only bill for final passage in the house Monday provides machinery for payment of $600 a year to leg islators as approved by the voters at the last general election. Pro vision is made in the bill that pay ments be made on January 15 of each year. Designates Game Fish In the senate twa bills, by the game committee, will receive final consideration. One designates Ma ckinaw or Lake trout to be game fish, subject to game restriction laws. The other makes it unlaw ful to angle for game fish in any lake with snags, gaff hooks, set lines or lines having more than three hooks, excepting floating bass plugs. It also would be un lawful to fish in streams with lines having more than two trac tor blades or three hooks. Agitation for an increase in state Income tax rates was revised among legislators over the week end following reports of gaining opposition against Gov. Douglas McKay's proposal to eliminate fed eral deductions in computing state Income levies. Tax committees of both the sen ate and house have arranged meetings for this week to study the over-all financial situation as It involves the largest state budget ever presented to an Oregon legis- T Resume Study A subcommittee of the joint ways and means group will re sume its study of state employes' salaries Monday. Outstanding pro posal before the committee in volves continuance of the $10 a month cost-of-living increase ap proved by the state emergency board last November. This increase expires February 28 unless con tinued by legislative action. Cost of continuing the increase through the 1951-53 biennium was estimated by State Director Harry Dorman at $3,649,920, in revised figures released Saturday. Ap pro&imatelyw $1,824,960 would come from the general fund. Several committee members in dicated a reluctance to vote for continuance of the increased un less there is more department con trol involving the number of em ployes and operating practices. Sentiment for drastic curtail ment of the state building pro gram, involving both state institu tions and higher educational facil ities, apparently is inc reasing among ways and means committee members. Building reauests for the next biennium already exceed $30,000,000. 4: - . " s ... 1 " .1 ST. LOUIS, Mo Jan. 21 Six teen-months -old MarUnn Bach pretests with tears as 105-year-old Gustave Brenek takes the first blta ef his cake at a surprise birthday party for Brenek. Brenck, whs came from Germany in 18G9. said it was his first birthday party and "well worth waiting for." Mariann's grandmother and the staff of the St Louis city Infirmary, where Brenck is the eldest patient, cava the party. (AF Wlrephotp to the Statesman). Mysterious Turnabout9 Plane Baffles Veteran Airline Pilot KANSAS CITY, Jan. 21-(P)-A veteran airline pilot tonight told of seeing a strange aircraft last night that dad something "you just can't do with airplanes of today." Larry W. Vinther of Kansas City, Mid-Continent airline pilot who has been flying 17 years and has been with Mid-Continent seven years, said the incident occurred over Sioux City, la. He described the strange plane Nobel Prize Winner to Talk AtWillamette Dr. Robert A. Millikan, a Nobel prize winner in physics,: will speak at the Willamete university student convocation Thursday morning at 10 o'clock in the gymnasium. James T. Brand, chief justice of the Oregon supreme court, will introduce the speaker. . "Two Su preme Elements in Human Pro gress" will be topic of Dr. Mil hkan's address, open ;to towns people as well as students and fac ulty members. The internationally known sci entist and speaker on social ques tions began his career as a teacher of physics at Oberlin college in Ohio soon after graduating there in 1891. He later received his doc torate from Columbia university and studied at the University of Berlin and at Gottingen in Ger many. Since 1948 he has been vice president of the board of directors of California Institute of Technol ogy as well as trustee Of Hunting ton library. In addition to the Nobel prize in 1923. Dr. Millikan has been hon ored with many of the highest awards in the scientific field, in cluding the Edison Medal of he American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Faraday medal of the London Chemical Society. HARRISON PLATT RESIGNS PORTLAND, Jan. 21-UP-Harri-son Gray Piatt, 84, Portland attor ney and former chairman of the state textbook commission, died in s hospital here today. One of the founders of the University club here, he was a former chairman of the board of trustees of Pacific university, Forest Grove. V' 1 . 0 ----J - - V- - . - - - . . ;..v v-v v. .-.v.- .v.v . . .v." :-. Go cISpogC thru tL,:i)f. coin nftd I Hf f All HOLT BUS UNI 1 Portland Boy Rescued from Laundry Chute PORTLAND, Jan. 21-(P)-Fire- men were called tonight to rescue 11-year-old Tony Prag, trapped in the laundry chute of his home for three-quarter of any hour, Tony, a bit on the chunky side at 115 pounds, started down the chute feet first to retrieve a pock et knife. Stuck with his head three feet below the opening and his arms pinned to his sides, he bang ed around with his feet until his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Prag, found him. The parents tried pushing from the bottom and pulling from the top but couldn't budge the boy. They called firemen who: used a table leaf to shove Tony! up out of the chute. He suffered a slightly wrenched shoulder and bruised fingers. His feelings were injured, too,, because he didn't get the knife. as about "one and a half times the size of a B-29, with a long, slender fuselage, long straight wings set farther forward than a B-29's." "There were no engine mount ings on the wings and. I saw no exhaust glow," Vintner said. "The wings were straight, not swept back like on the B-47 and other jet bombers, and there were no jet poods visible." Vintner said the craft was seen by his co-pilot, James F. Bach meier, Kansas City, and one of the 11 passengers aboard. "As I was getting tower clear ance to take off from the Sioux City field at 8:26 o'clock," Vintner said, "the tower asked us to check on the strange light in the sky. We spotted the light and climbed in that direction. We saw the plane had some sort of navigation lights, in addition to a strong white light underneath the fuselage. The lights all blinked off and on five or six times as we drew nearer." Vintner said his DC-3 was doing 120 miles an hour and the other craft was goirfg faster than that in the opposite direction. "I had just turned my head irom waicning nim go past our wing when there he was again, fly ing right beside us about 200 feet to our left, going in the same di rection we were," he said. Vinther said that's what mysti fied him because "you just can't turn an airplane around that fast at that speed." The strange plane flew along side about four seconds then eased off below the DC-3 "and we lost him, " the pilot said. Vintner's flight stayed overnight at Omaha. He said he checked the air base at Offutt field there and learned there were no air force jet planes scheduled in that area. KiiuteRo clme'sl Son Shot in - Breaking WICHITA, Kas.. aJn. 21-P-A man who authorities said identi fied himself as William D. Rockne, son 01 the late Jtnute Kockne, zam ous Notre Dame football coach. was shot twice last night after 01 ficers said, he forced entry into a Wichita home. He was reported in "critical" condition at bt. Fran cis hospital. Latex Shenix Lockett said he had talked with Mrs. Rockne at South Bend and that she had con firmed the wounded man was her son, positive identification, he said, was established by a scar on one leg caused by a burn when Kockne was a boy. Sheriff. Ty Lockett of Sedgwick county and Criminal InvesUaater Clyde Madden said papers lound in the man's- possession gave his next of kin as Mrs. K. K. Kockne, of South Bend, IncL, where Notre Dame is located. At South Bend Mrs. Rockne told reporters she had a son, William D, whom she had not seen for two years. She gave his age as 35. The wounded man told ouicers he was 32. Report of Shooting Lockett and Madden gave this report of the shooting: Rockne tried twice to enter the home of Joe Novacek, 33, a used car dealer, who lives just outside the city limits. Novacek ordered him away once, but he returned later and succeeded in getting into the house. Novacek struck him with a board and ordered him to remain until police arrived. In stead. Rockne tried to escape. No vacek grabbed a pistol and fired three times at the fleeing man. When officers arrived they found Rockne on the around near the house, shot twice. One bullet had pierced his right side; the other his thigh. The first wound neces sitated an emergency operation to day. The officers said KocJcne had been drinking and that a partly- consumed bottle ox liquor was found in his pocket. Truck Driver Sheriff Lockett said Rockne had spent the night at the police tta tion as a "sleeper" about a month ago, recently be had been working as a truck driver for the Salvation Army Lockett said papers in Rockne 1 possession indicated that he bad recently been in Texas. Arizona. New Mexico and California. De partment of justice records ihow ed, Lockett said, that Rockne had been charged with passing bad checks in Los Angeles in 1945 but that he was released on probation when he made restitution of the amount involved. Rockne's condition prevented his being questioned in detail. He was well dressed when taken to the hospital, officers said. In his pockets was about $5. No charges have been filed against him. Knute Rockne was lulled on March 31, 1931, when an airliner on which he was enroute to the west coast crashed in nearby Chase county. Sheriff Lockett said the Nova- ceks both said they "had never seen Rockne before, and couldn't imagine why he forced entry into their home." Gervais Rites Today forifcW if VI, Last Granddaughter Of Gen. Joseph Lane llihin New Bcnrtc WOODBURN, Jan. 21 Grave side services for Mrs. Alice K. Willis, 94, last granddaughter of Gen. Joseph Lane, a territorial governor of Oregon, will be held at 4 pjn. Monday at Sacred Heart cemetery at Gervais. Mrs. Willis died Tuesday in Port Angeles, Wash., where fu neral services were held Friday. Daughter of an early pioneer. Judge Mosher, she formerly re sided at both ; Wood burn and North Howell. Survivors include a nephew, A. G. Cowan, Wood- burn. Funeral arrangements are be ing handled by the Ringo chapeL REDS BOOST "PEACE BERLIN-(.'P) "Little Peace Dove Fly Over the Roof," Is the latest communist song for kindergarten children in Soviet-occupied East Germany. At a recent student fes tival at Magdeburg, the children sang the new tune while 30 live doves were turned loose. "They flew eastward," reported the com munist newspaper "Volksjtimme," "to where the bulwark of peace, the great and mighty Soviet Union, lies." Canby Man Arrested After Wife Wounded OREGON CITY, Jan. 21 -V Mrs. Myrtle Iverson, 61, was in hospital here with serious knife wounds today and her husband, Louis, 72, was in jail, charged with assault while armed with a dan gerous weapon. State Policemen Gerald E. Hampton and Paul Bowman re ported they were called to the Iverson home on route 2, box 232, Canby, Saturday night by neigh bors. The officers said they found Mrs. Iverson with chest and arm wounds. Iverson had minor self inflicted wounds on the head and chest, they said. FIG WILLOWS KENT, 0-(INS)-If it weren' for ah Englishman's taste for figs. neither Britain nor America migh boast any beautiful weeping wil lows. In the early 18th century, Alexander Pope received a basket of figs from Turkey, according to Martin L. Davey, jr., the tree ex pert. One little twig, about to bud, was in the basket. Pope planted the twig, and was rewarded by a fine tree, the grand daddy of all the so-called Babylon weeping wil lows in England and here. 1 000 : . CHUCK' SI EM HO Open Mondays From, 6 P.M. to 2:30 A.M. Open Daily from Noon H1 2:30 A. M.f "Just Past the Underpass en 99E" j . USE BOOK OFFERING ROME (INS)- Pope Pius XII will be offered hundreds of books gifts of publishing houses throughout the world by dele gates of the First International Pilgrimage Congress of Publish era of books and magazines which will meet in Rome December 6th, 8 th and 10th. Federal Budget Includes Salem Area Projects A half-million dollars in Sa lem area facilities of the north west federal power system are Included in the president's pro posed budget for the fiscal year beginning next July 1, according to cnarles Dunn, Bonneville pow er aamirustration district mana ger. Dunn said the budget estimates, which total $8,948,000 for lower Columbia river power grid lines and other transmission facilities. were developed prior to the decla ration of a state of emergency "and do not reflect impact of an accelerated defense program but surveys are being made "to deter mine possibilities of increasing capacity of existing hydro plants, interconnection with other sys tems, steam plants and other measures to supply required de fense loads. Projects and funds requested for this area include a Forest Grove - McMinnville - Salem 115 kOovolt line, $85,000; East Mc Minnville transformer, $43)00; Salem-Boyer 115-kv line conver tion, $55,000; Salem terminal $106,000; Boyer substation, $219, 000. Boyer is near Grande Ronde. MALIK "MUCH BETTER' NEW YORK, Jan. 21-iTVRus-sia's Jacob A. Malik is "much better" after a recurrence of an old heart ailment, a Soviet spokes man said today. He added that Malik should soon be able to re sume his duties at the United Nations, where he is permanent Soviet delegate. Id EWA Proposed by Henry Wallace BOSTON, Jan. 21 -(flV Former Vice President Henry A. Wallace today proposed as an alternative for war a really big PWA pro ject for the whole world. The unsuccessful progressive party candidate for president two. years ago said his program would cost $10-billion a year. This country, he said, was pre paring to spend "an additional $30 or $40-billion a year for war pre paration that may continue year after year." Wallace said his plan would not be appeasement .but a-peace-ment" He recommended the $10-bil-lion a year be spent through Uni ted Nations for all people of all nations but iwtfii eonrflflona. . ' Speaking at the Community church, non sectarian, Wallace said to benefit, "the Iron curtain countries would have to join all UN agendea.7 These countries also would have to agree to a! program of disarm ament, "park! the atom bombs," discontinue fifth, column activi ties and build UN police force "stronger than the armed might of any individual nation." Wallace said: "I would spell out a really big PWA project for the whole world! in terms of specific dams, roads,! bridges, electrifica tion for towns and farms, irrisa tion ditches and fertilizer factories in definite spots." He said that "all the high com A Mat Dally From 1 P. M. NOW SHOWING! ACTION CO-HIT! Bill Williams , Gloria Henry "Rookie Fireman" luil Open C:5 P. NOW! M. mi 4 KELLY 6AKLAK9 , ft in Essn-iumcjii Speacer Tracy Jaaies Stewart pCXvLi TLAHM BIQ VCrY W ( '. NEW DELHI -CSV The largest number of Voters In history wiQ go to the potls next April to elect their representatives to the legis latures. Nearly 180,000,000 Indiana almost half of the country! po pulation voting under adult fran chise will .elect their representa tives to the central and state legis latures under the new constitution. The election, scheduled to begin on April 10 next year, will be com pleted before the end of May. munis ts are materialists. They axe for sale if the offer is high enough." , m PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA James Sample, Conductor SALEM CONCERT Tuesday, Jan. 23, 8:15 Salem High School Auditorium Ernest Bloch, Guest Conductor All Seats Reserved $2.40, $1.50, 90c All Prices IncL Fed. Tax Tickets on Sale at Ladd & Bush Bank Box Office at High School at 7 p.m. 1 5&S Chicago Pastor Dies on Pulpit; Aide Dies Also CHICAGO, Jan. 21 -(AP)- A Chicago minister died on his pulpit today as he finished his sermon, and a friend who rushed to his aid also collapsed and died a few. minutes later. The Rev. Howard C. Fulton, 59, pastor of the Belden Avenue Baptist church for 20 years, died apparently of a heart at tack as he concluded his sermon, "The Touch of God." His friend, Henry F. Weiler. 52, the church treasurer for 31- years, collapsed in the pastors office while talking- to a physi cian. The physician said he succumbed to a heart attack, apparently Induced by the shock of the minister's death. CLOTHES KEEPER NEW YORK -(INS)- The "clothes keeper" consists of a rack extended across two poles. The bottoms of the poles are inserted into a floor rack that provides space for overshoes and umbrel las. The upper rack holds from 30 to 40 garments. All you do is stand the rack in the closet. Or if you have hall space, you can stand it in the hall and create an extra closet that way. New Shewing-- Opes C:45 r-mm V Oaklti ifaaariBCZ3 i dZTSI lata UZ33 i Comedy Co-Hit! J "Champagne Far Caesar Ranald Celmaa, Celeste Melaa MORE exavNG THAN wHtsraiNG SMmri w-irTedinicolar 111 ;.! 'tY1i Marie Lanza Kathrym Graysea in "The Teast e xNew. Orleans" ?)) ASSOCIATED PRESS STAFFERS Are Recording nisiory on mis Pacific Front Today w fv m r v l If ; : I - . : t !' TslnHfY Tokyo 3 ,w - A -- xt ":shohoiS & ; Nil I -1 ; : CHINA $f f" WVH n'PHIUPPIN6S for iccufofecomptete. Pr$ coverofl to L