The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 02, 1952, Page 1, Image 1

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Ike Warns Europe,
American Patience,
Resources Limited
SUPREME HEADQUARTERS ALLIED POWERS IN EUROPE
UP)-Gexx. Eisenhower warned Europe Wednesday that there is a lim
it to American resources and to the patience of American taxpayers
unless European nations cooperate fully for the common good.
"There is no real security yet achieved in Europe," he asserted.
There is only a beginning." But he said the tide of battle in the cold
ITTTP
III
SHEDS
Of
The City Council has under con
sideration a six-point financial
program which will require voter
approval. If it is adopted in whole
or in part at the council meeting
on April 14th the items will be
submitted for voter decision in
the election on May 16th.
Here they are:
Bond issues:
Street widening $190,000
New bridges 85.000
Drainage 100.000
Sewers 16S.000
Total 440,000
Extra (and continuing) tax lev-
For parks one mill
For street lighting .... two mills
Two years ago the voters ap
proved bond issues as follows:
Sewers $600,000, bridges $125,000,
drainage $280,000, water reservoir
$300,000 a total of $1,305,000. The
water bonds are serviced from
water department revenues, the
others from property taxes. Also
In 1950 voters approved a special
levy f one mill for purchase of
fire equipment and rejected a spe
cial levy for airport purposes.
Taxpayer reaction may be that
the bonds and extra tax levies are
coming fast and heavy. On the
other hand the expanded city and
larger population (plus higher
costs) force assumption of extra
burdens.
There may be resistance also to
the extra levies because they are
continuing, that is will be renewed
from year to year without new
vote of
(Continued on editorial page, 4)
Arrest of Boy
Gang, Leader
Clears Thefts
Donald Ray Colby, 22, 375 Tay
lor St., Tuesday pleaded guilty to
a charge of receiving and con
cealing stolen property and is to
be sentenced Wednesday. He is
being held in lieu of $500 bail.
City police revealed Tuesday
that Colby is the oldest member
of a gang of some seven or eight
Juveniles who are, by confessions,
accounting for approximately $350
of stolen property in Salem. The
other members of the gang are all
youngsters of about 12 or 13 years
of age.
A great percentage of the stol
en property has been salvaged by
city police. It consists of sporting
equipment, clothes, and other odds
and ends stolen by the gang. Also
money has been acocunted for i n
confessions, but to this date it is
believed to be already spent.
Arrest of Colby and several ju
veniles have cleared at least six
burglaries in the Dallas areas and
are accounting for many larcenies
in Salem.
Animal Crackors
Bv WARREN GOODRICH
Krs depertment? SUnd by! Ws're
ejoma. to S9M Grandpa's CskeT
ITPCD
0t fct MAVDCH-KfNNCDV Vtt. Int.
The Orecon Stcrtonxncm, Salemv Orecoa, Wednesday.
war "has begun to ow our way
Eisenhower made these points
in a 12,000-word report marking
the end of his first year in com
mand of SHAPE, military head
quarters for the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization of 14 .nations.
His report did not refer to U. S.
politics. Eisenhower has indicated
he" will leave his command this
spring to actively enter the pres
idential campaign.
He struck a note for economy.
His report said:
"It would be fatuous for any
one to assume that the taxpayers
of America will continue to pour
money and resources into Europe
unless encouraged by steady pro
gress toward mutual cooperation
and full effectiveness. America
can not continue to be the pri
mary source of munitions for the
entire Free World. To do so would
be militarily unsound.
"Moreover the United States
can not long continue such expen
ditures without endangering her
own economic structure. The
soundness of that structure is of
vital, concern to the entire Free
World, for its collapse would be a
world-shaking tragedy.
"We must be fearful that we do
not prove that free countries can
be defended only at the cost of
bankruptcy."
"As of today, our forces could
not offer prolonged resistance east
of the Rhine barrier."
Ike Compares
Arms Line-up
Of West, Reds
SUPREME HEADQUARTERS
ALLIED POWERS IN EUROPE
(JP) Gen. Eisenhower Wednesday
gave this lineup of the military
forces opposing each other across
the Iron Curtain in Europe:
Land Forces
Allied 30 divisions. Communist
175 Soviet and 60 satellite di
visions. Air Forces
Allied 4,000 planes by end of
1852. Communist 20,000 planes.
Naval Forces
Allied U. S. Sixth Fleet, Brit
ish Home and Mediterranean
Fleets, plus supplementary
strength from France, Italy.
Greece, Turkey and other nations
and Allied Rhine River patrol.
Communist 300 submarines, 20
cruisers, estimated four battle
ships and assorted craft.
Atomic Weapons
Allied secret but powerful.
Communist although inefficient
by Western technical standards,
according to Eisenhower, Soviet
industry a year ago "had already
demonstrated it was producing
atomic weapons.'
ASHLAND BOND VOTE DUE
ASHLAND (JP) - An AsMand
school bond election will be held
May 1 with the question that of
issuing $685,000 worth of bonds
to provide increased school facilities.
Politics on Parade
ik
Who's Running for What in the May Primaries !
(Editor' note: Stories in the "Po
litical Parade" are written by or for
the candidates, on invitauon of The
Orecon Statesman, and views ex
pressed herein may or may not be
in accordance with the opinion of
this newspaper. The articles are
published in the public interest,
and without obligation on the part
of anyone.)
Today's subject:
M. H CHRISMAN
Candidate for
COMMISSIONER (POLK CO.)
Meet your new commissioner in
Polk County come November 4.
Marcel, Neoma and their five chil
dren live on a
productive fruit
and stock farm
about midway
between Dallas
and Sheridan,'
Our. vro r thy
candidate is of '
German and
English descent
and was born on v
one of the many
Chrisman pioneer ,
farms of Western s
Iowa. Like, his M. IL Chrismajt
father, his interests center in farm
organizations, school activities and
church endeavors. In the ranks of
POUNDS I
1651
Clean -Up Crew
' -w . 1 ; . i w v, r v dhxl 1 ,
Initial "rough clearance" of years of undergrowth In the Odd Fellows Cemetery is being done by the
city park department to remove what many city officials have described as "an eyesore" on South
Commercial Street. Debris is being trucked from the cemetery for burning. Pictured are C. D. Run
ner (left) crew chief, and two laborers from the population of the city Jail.
Pen Escapee
Caught After
Nine Years
SEATTLE f7P)-An escapee from
the Oregon State penitentiary was
apprehended here Tuesday after
engaging in a bitter 30-minute
hand-to-hand struggle with three
policemen and a former police de
tective. He was identified by police as
Jack Erwin, who escaped from
the Oregon institution in 1943.
Prior to that he had been con
victed in Seattle of the robbery of
the Greenwood National Bank in
1927 and sent to the Washington
penitentiary for 10 to 15 years.
His arrest was brought about by
Ernest W. Yoris, former Seattle
detective chief who last saw Erwin
in 1933. Yoris, now an airline se
curity officer, spotted Erwin
standing in front of the Frye Hotel.
He recalled the man was wanted
for escaping from the Oregon
prison nine years ago.
Yoris called on the police for
assistance and they sent three men
to the hotel where they found
Erwin in the lobby. Yoris grabbed
him and the battle started. The
five men struggled about the
lobby, out the door and onto the
street for 30 minutes before the
badly-mauled ex-convict was sub
dued. Erwin first gave his name as
John Peter Osterman, 51, of
Spokane. Later he admitted his
identity and his escape. He said he
had been serving time at Salem
for assault and robbery.
He told police he has been work
ing in Alaska summers and at
Sand Point, Idaho, winters.
Asked if he had ever been fin
gerprinted during his trips to
Alaska, he replied:
"Dozens of times."
FALLING LIMB FATAL
ROSEBURG -Norman Gil
bert Vredenburg, 32, a logger, was
killed near Myrtle Creek Monday
by a falling tree limb. He moved
to ' Myrtle Creek recently from
Bremerton, Wash-
labor he is recognized for his
brilliant participation in labor
management relations and tireless
efforts to interest the working man
in politics. Mr. Chrisman has been
an active precinct committeeman
for the Democratic party in both
Iowa and Oregon and was county
chairman of the party the last two
years. He has given the Polk Coun
ty Democratic party strong lead
ership and new vitality in pre
cinct organization.
For five years Mr. Chrisman has
been sensitive to the demands of
many local groups that something
be done about the worsening con
ditions of county roads. He has
recently, analyzed the .costs, the
programs and conditions of county
roads in three other Oregon coun
ties comparable with our prob
lems. His program will Include:
Closer job supervision, better uses
of maintenance monies, changes in
new construction and equalization
of road expending.
You can depend on Mr. Chris
man to work hard to get results,
to use his fine education and ef
fective leadership in a vigorous
campaign for county commissioner.
(Tomorrows Gilbert Ley)
April 2, 1952
Cuts Cemetery
7
tew
t k A, - I
Hoover School Contract
Awarded to Batterman
E. E. Batterman, Salem contractor, was awarded a contract Tues
day night for construction of fhe new Hoover School north of D Street
te the end of Tess Avenue.
Salem School District Board gave the contract to Batterman on
his low basic bid of $258,487, which figures at just under $9 a square
foot and considerably lower than much recent school construction.
The new elementary school will :
be similar in size and plan to the j
new Washington and Lincoln'
Schools and, like them, will serve :
the growing population east of Sa
lem city limits. Hayslip, Freeman
and Tufts, Portland architect firm,
designed the school.
Other bids opened by the school i
board Tuesday night at the Public
School Office Building were by
Smith & Nelson, $266,987; Viesko
& Post, $270,615; Bickford Con
struction Co., Portland, $275,300;
Wall, Bertram & Sandford, $284.
000, and Henry G. Carl, $287,384.
Contractor Batterman said he
would start the project in about a
week. His contract calls for com
pletion in 135 days, which would
put the building ready for use by
the next school year s opening in ,
oicmuci.
The 10-acre site on wmen tne ,
new school will be located cost the
school district $24,000.
School directors also looked over J
preliminary plans last night for a
new school in the Rosedale area
south of Salem. Architect James
L. Payne submitted drawings of a
school with four classrooms and
James L. Payne submitted draw
ings of a school with four class
rooms and a multi-purpose room
for cafeteria, auditorium and rec
reation. Candidate for m
President Jailed
SAN FRANCISC (JP) - Vincent
Hallinan, millionaire presidential
candidate of the Progressive Par
ty, surrendered Tuesday to begin
serving six months sentence in
federal prison.
The wealthy attorney told re
porters "I'm proud to go to jail."
He twice carried his case to the
U. S. Supreme Court in an effort
to avoid prison.
He was cited for contempt twice
during his defense of Harry
Bridges, West Coast longshore
leader convicted of perjory con
spiracy. Pen Releases
Con Wanted by
Klamath Police
A former Oregon State Prison
inmate, released two hours earlier
than scheduled at the prison on
Monday, is free but wanted today.
John H. Parker, 27 -year-old
convict, had served a two-year
term and was released Monday at
about 10 ajn. The catch is that
Klamath County authorities
wanted him on a forgery charge
and were due to take Parker into
custody as soon as he stepped
through the prison gates. They ar
rived two hours late. .
Prison Warden Virgil O'Malley
said that Parker's record plainly
showed that Klamath County had
a detainer on him.. He said it was
"just plain carelessness" that al
lowed Parker to be released before
the Klamath deputies arrived to
take over.
( Parker was last seen Monday af
ternoon in the Hollywood area
where he met an unidentified man
in a car. The two took off in the
direction of Portland.
No. S
Undergrowth
h v-
Si's.
y ,
r
:-
m
Atomic Blast
! Fails to Raise
Big Concussion
By BELL BECKER
LAS VEGAS. Nev. P-From 16
miles away, I watched an atomic
explosion Tuesday. It was quite a
sight, but surprisingly its force had
no effect in our light plane.
r lying at n.uuu feet, we
watched the blast over Frenchman
at the farftung tesmg grounds
northwest of here
The device as the A EC called
it was released from an Air Force
exactly at 9 a.m
The red glow lit up the right
side of our plane for about a sec
ond and a half.
It was the closest that any un
official air observer has been to a
nuclear explosion since William
Lawrence of the New York Times
watched the war-ending bomb
drop on Nagasaki in 1945.
After the fireball faded, we
watched for a breathtaking minute
and a half as the usual column of
smoke and desert dust erupted into
a small rusty mushroom.
Then we braced ourselves for
the concussion, which we had ex
pected all along.
j oui none came, wnaiever waves
oi souna and snock the blast sent
out just cua not reach us.
By a freak of atmospherics the
blast was felt at St. George, Kan
arraville and Cedar City, Utah,
from 120 to 170 miles to the north
east of the test site.
It can be safely said that Tues
day's experiment involved one of
the smaller weapons or weapons-to-be
in our atomic arsenal.
McKay Speaks at
Ike Rally in Idaho
BOISE, Idaho (JP) Gov. Doug
las McKay of Oregon told an Eis
enhower rally Tuesday night that
the Republican party must win
this election or it may not have
another chance.
.1 . .
; vlu ou-
port the man easiest to elect, he
said-
Joe Stalin
By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER
NEW YORK UP) Prime Minis
ter Joseph Stalin Tuesday assured
a group of American newspaper
editors and radio men at long
distance that a third world war
is no nearer than it was in 1949
or 1950.
Stalin said he feels a meeting
pf the chiefs of state of the great
powers possibly would be useful.
Also that the time has come to
unify Germany, and that commu
nism and capitalism can exist
peaceably side by side if.
He expressed these views in a
telegram dispatched in response to
four questions sent to him March
24.
The telegram arrived here, per
haps not by chance, on the eve
of the Moscow economic confer
ence, a major propaganda project
for the Soviet Union.
American and other Western
spokesmen at United Nations head
PRICE 5a
Kefauver Outrunning.
Kerr:
Eisenhower
Holds SHght
Edge on Ohioan
By DON WHITEHEAD
OMAHA UP)-The furious Ne
braska presidential primary set
tled down into a dog-fight be- i
iween sen. lan ui uiuu onu wen.
Eisenhower early Wednesday with
the leac shifting between them.
Taft took an early Head in ine
vote count from Tuesday s pri
mary, lost it, won it back, and
then lo$t it again in the see-saw
struggle.
Harold Stassen was running a.
strong third behind Eisenhower
and Taft although he had the ad
vantage of having his name on
the ballot. All the Taft-Eisenhower
votes were write-ins.
All indications were Stassen was
pulling strength from Eisenhower.
On the Democratic side Sen.
Kefauver of Tennessee took the
lead from Sen. Kerr of Oklahoma
early in the count and steadily
widened the gap.
Returns from 595 of 2058 pre
cincts: Republicans
Eisenhower 12.999
Taft 12,887
Stassen 10,814
Mrs. Mary Kenny (stand-in for
MacArthur) 1.772.
Democrats
Kefauver 6794
Kerr 5180
The returns were slow because
of the long and complicated ballot
an da near-record vote drawn to
the polls in large part by the bitterly-contested
presidential popu
larity contest.
There were some write-in votes
for MacArthur, President Truman.
Gov. Warren of California and
others but they were an insignifi
cant part of the tptal.
The early returns reflected a
political curiosity in which the
candidate on the ballot Stassen
was running behind two candi
dates whose names were names
were not on the ballot.
The Taft - Eisenhower write - in
campaigns begain about two weeks
ago with both sides conducting
drives to "educate" the voters on
how to use a blank line on the
ballots privided for write-in votes.
But this task was complicated
by an attorney's general's ruling
ruling that the voters must spell
out the last name of .a candidate
and also mark an 'X' in the
square before his name to make
the ballot legal.
There were no immediate re
ports on whether ballots with
misspelled . names and without
"X's" in the square were thrown
out by election judges as spoied
ballots.
In the state's hotly -contested
GOP senatorial race. Sen. Hugh
Butjer took- an early lead over
Gov. Val Peterson.. Butler is re
garded as a Taft supporter while
Peterson is known to lean toward
Eisenhower.
John Steelhammer
Due to Become
Acting Governor
John H. Steelhammer, Salem
attorney who was speaker of the
house at the 1951 State Legisla
ture, will become acting governor
this week end when both Gov.
Douglas McKay and Senate Presi
dent Paul Patterson are out of the
state.
Patterson became acting gover
nor Tuesday when the governor
left for a' conference of state exe
cutives in Chicago. Patterson ex
pected to leave Thursday for
Phoenix, Ariz., far an interstate
meeting on highway problems.
Margaret Got $3,000
For Portland Concert
PORTLAND (jpy-Margaret Tru
man got $3,000 for her concert
nere aaturaay night, the man-
vager of the municipal auditorium
reported Tuesday
He said shp pot n piiarantooH
- e.
iee, pius a percentage or me gate,
; The audience of 3.629 paid a gross
: of $6,897, he said.
enies War Moving Nearer
quarters here called the Stalin pro
nouncement propaganda.
Here is the question and an
swer exchange as announced by
James I. Wick, Niles. Ohio pub
lisher who was a member of the
party sending the queries:
NEW YORK (JP) There ap
pears to be a disagreement be
tween Prime Minister Stalin and
his deputy foreign minister. Jac
ob A. Malik, about World War
ra.
Stalin said Tuesday be does
not believe It is closer, than it
was two or three years age. Bat
two months ago, in United Na
tions debate. Malik said:
"Tne third world war has in
fact commenced in Keren, In
dochina, Tnnis and Morocco. "
Q. Is third world war closer
now than two or three years ago?
A. No, it is not.
Stassen
Wisconsin
(t.9M out of S.24 precincts)
Taft ...290,249
Warren .232,723
Stassen 152,869
Kefauver 180,722
Pro-Truman 16,951
Unpledged 15,825
Nebraska
(595 out of Z.05S precincts)
Ike (write-in) ...
Taft (write-in) ...
Star-sen
Pro-Mac Arthur ...
12,999
12,887
10,814
1,772
6,794
5, 180
Ke fauver ..
Kerr
Arnall Fears
Steel Strike
Unavoidable
WASHINGTON ( -Fl-Crave doubt
that an April 8 strike in the na
tion's steel industry can be avoided
was expressed Tuesday by Ellis
Arnall, price stabilization director.
"I hope for the best, but fear the
worst," Arnall told newsmen.
His comment came after a con
ference on prices with President
Benjamin Fairless of the U. S.
Steel Corp. Arnall indicated he is
standing fast against giving the
steel industrv anv special price
WASHINGTON (yTVThe White
House has asked Justice Depart
ment experts to comb the stat
ute books for possible laws nn
der which the government could
seise the steel industry in the
event of a strike.
concessions to encourage it to ac
cept a government proposal for
a wage increase.
The industry faced the choice.
assuming that the administration
continues adamant in opposing a
price boost, of (1) refusing to ac
cept the suggested pay raise for
CIO steel workers and thereby
triggering an almost certain strike,
or (2) granting the pay increase
and trying to get along on present
prices.
So far the industry has said It
cannot possibly absorb the sug
gested 17 4 cent hourly pay boost,
and other benefits, to Philin Mur
ray's million CIO Steelworkers
without compensating price in
creases.
The steel crisis brought about
the resignation of Mobilization
Chief Charles E. Wilson last week
end.
Liquor by Drink
Initiative Filed
A proposed initiative measure
to allow sale of liquor by the
drink in Oregon was filed with
the State Department Tuesday.
The petition, which would go on
the November election .ballot if
26.282 signatures are obtained by
July 3, is sponsored by Cecil W.
Jones, Paul Walsh and T. E. Fen
olio, all of Portland.-
It would legalize sale of liquor
by the drink in private clubs, fra
ternal and veterans organizations,
on railroads and in restaurants.
A similar measure was defeated
in 1948 by the voters, 273.62L to
210,108.
An initiative measure to ban
sale of all liquor in Oregon also
is being circulated.
WATER SUPPLY GOOD
BURNS P-The John Day-Har-
1 Kin .-. 1 1 V. . rt ninn4.
.i.T wu. in on n ill nail. uicii 1 J
of water for all its farm needs
this year, water forecasters said
here Tuesday.
Q. Would a meeting of the heads
of the great powers be useful?
A. Possibly it would be useful.
Q. Do. you consider the present
moment opportune for the unifica
tion of Germany?
A. Yes, I do.
Q. On what basis is co-existence
of capitalism and communism pos
sible?
A. Peaceful co-existence of cap
italism and communism is quite
possible if there Is a mutual de
sire for cooperation, if there is a
readiness to fulfill the undertaken
obligations, if there is observance
of the principle of equality and
not Interference in the internal af
fairs of the other states.
The StnUn statement showed
nothing, essentially new.
Wick bad led a party of ,40
newspaper and radio men on a
tour to news centers in Europe.
Fades
Warren HoI:!s
In Wisconsin
BY JACK. BEZX
MILWAUKEE LPV-Sea. Taft el
Ohio surged toward a i Ifl psti
dential race victory TOsABeaday
promising him 24 of Wlesessin '
30 Republican convent!. -dele
gates. . . -
With more than two-thMs of-
the state's precincts eennttd in
Tuesday's primary elect ten.
Ohio senator swept the s&Oe-wxk
race in which 10 presidential aoto
inating delegates were etarteaL
With a show of strengtla MO
waukee's silk stocking Fifth Css
gressional District. Taft pps
Second SpoE
entry pulled out at least two of
the four district delegates! elected
by this late counting city. - -
Warren to Get Four
Gov. Warren of CaKSornia a
possible beneficiary of vales from
Republicans who want Gen. Eisen
hower to become theiv suaT'i
nominee seemed on the my to
getting a total of six cut ?0
delegates elected in district con
tests. ?
It looked like a shutout for for
mer Gov. Stassen of Miww 'mts.
who slipped into third pjaec in i
state where he won 1 8 of 23 4e3e
gates in the 1943 GOP xvesadetv.
tial contest. ;
Stassen had offered te deliver
to Eisenhower half of my dele
gates he got. The generafs stm
wasnt on the ballot and-voenat .
legally be written in.
Wins City Votes . '
Warren rode a tide ofrveAea to a
probable victory over Taff sa Mil-"
waukee's Fourth . District largely,
an industrial area. He als-g abtd.
a substantial ' lead in tb district
which includes Madison, the stacj
capital. . :
But outside of that, it was all
Taft in a state which he- eaid in
advance would be a "key test of
his ability to attract popular -wtes.
In the state-wide - race t elect
10 at-large delegates, the eunt -from
2,994 of 3,204 precincts gave:
Taft 290,249; Warren 232,723; Stas
sen 152,869. t
A slate running for Gen. llae-
Arthur, who said her isnt candi
date, polled 24,039 votes and Perry
J. Stearns, Milwaukee, aim myJ
got 2,731. ; i.
Kefauver Winning J
Sen. Kefauver of TKmesaee,4 the
ex-crime prober, appeared m have
tucked the state's 28 Desnecratit
presidential nominating vcs un
der his belt. t
With Kefauver rolling along
with more than 80 per cent f the
at-large vote, Charles E. Prongiw
ton of Sheboygan heading a rival
"draft-Truman" slate cncce4 -defeat.
? i
A third, uninstructed slate, bend
ed by Jerome Fox, was running
just ahead -of the B rough ton group.
In 2,994 precincts, Kefaover ba4
180,722; Fox 16,951 and Braoghtcei
15,825.
If the expected victory here
were combined with a rimfhle Jfin
in the Nebraska primary, Kxtmtf -would
be in a top position among
announced candidates to aucccej
President Truman as the Demo
era tic nominee. ;
Thaw Floods I
Midwest Area
By The Associated
Quick spring thaws sent flood
waters on the rampage in parts ci
the 'Midwest Tuesday.
The floods hit areas of the Da
kotas, Minnesota. Wisconsin and
Iowa causing considerable dam
age. Homes were evacuated, bus
iness houses were flooded, n4
dikes were battered down.
The swollen Root River poach -ed
through an embankment at
Houston, Minn , spilling; two fee
of water over the business dis
trict. - -
The flood caused extension dam
age in Southeastern
The Redwood and Minnesota Riv
ers also were rising rapidly.
Water was up to the nave of
some Marmath, N. D, hecnen. An
ice jam sent the swollen little Mis
souri River to a record Wixlil ui
23.1 feet, more than Bvw dEt
above flood stage. ;
Allies Hurl Back
China Red Attack
SEOUL. Korea LP Allied in
fantrymen. Wednesday h oried back
some 1,500 bugle-blowing Gunese
Reds who penetrated United Na
tions lines south of Panaonjom
Tuesday-Flight. -"7- w
Fierce hand - to - hand fighting
marked the three - hour ba t tie"
heaviest along the Korean xreund
front in nearly ; two months, a
front line division officer said Red
casualties were severe.- -
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