2-Th .Stateimcm. gnlnv Orfc, SoiadaT December 231352 Are May Discuss Stalin Talk Issue With hOP Solons v NEV YORK m President -elect Eisenhower may discus Premier Stalin's world peace over tures with Senate Republican lead er to get their views on feasibility of conferences with the Russians. That possibility developed as El senhower met at his Columbus Un iversity residence Saturday with Lewis W. Douglas, former (ambas sador to Great Britain in the Tru man administration. s- The general and Douglas who Poland Claims U.S. Bringing Spies by Plane WARSAW, Poland 11 Poland accused the United States Satur day of flying two spies from Wies baden Nov. 4 and parachuting them 40 miles behind her Baltic Sea frontier. A press announce ment said the two were arrested and had confessed. ("That story is obviously a fake." said a U. S. ir Force spokesman at Wiesbaden, West Germany. He said there was no record of an American plane hav ing been anywhere in the Baltic area near Poland on that day. (The charge recalled a spate of similar accusations against the United States a year ago, when ' Communist countries were shoot j bug at a provision of the Mutual i Security Act for the aid of anti j Communist exiles. I 'At that time the Communists declared a U. S. plane, forced ; down with four crewmen in Hun- giry. was equipped for parachu I tng espionage agents. Spies also were declared to have been . mopped in Romania and the So viet Union.) The Polish Telegraph Agency fPAPi asserted in an authorized announcement that radios, cam sera s. arms, instructions, codes and other apparatus for spying were dropped with the two men near Mizdow. in Koszalin Province. PAP said the two men, Stefan Skrzyczowski and Dionizy Sosnow ski. were flown by a United States plane from Wiesbaden over a cir cuitous route across the Baltic to Sweden, the Danish Island of Born holm and the Polish Coast near Darlowo and finally dropped at Mizdow. The agency declared the Inci dent showed the "exceptionally cynical" methods used by the Uni ted States against Poland, despite normal diplomatic relations. It added that the United States was guilty of a "brutal violation" of accepted international law. Warmer, Drier Predicted for - ' . v Next Centuries ST. IX) UTS UP) Weather pra- diction warmer and drier for the next few hundred years in the United States. This note for kids with sleds, women wishing fur coats, and men worrying about aging furnaces, came Saturday from Dr. Paul B. Sears, professor of conservation at Vale University, in a report to the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science. The evidenc comes from pol lens, like those that cause hay fever, found buried in layers, iri the earth. Dr. Sears and colleagues dug up fossilized pollens from trees from below the surface of dried-up lake beds far New Mexico and Mexico. The layers form a record of changes in vegetation and climate dating back for thousands of years. In New Mexico, the pollens showed a gradual change from predominantly spruce to pine for ests, he said. Spruce grows best In cool, moist climate, and pine trees In warm, dry weather. The pollens are a barometer pointing to warmer, drier climate In coming years (for this country and the Northern Hemisphere, he said. This change may be expected to last several centuries. The pollens confirm warming-up evidence based on melting of polar Icecaps and glaciers, and the fact some animals, birds and fish that like cold weather now are found farther north than formerly. On a conservation note. Dr. Sears warned that warmer -and drier weather will increase the de mand for water, already scarce in some areas of the United States. He urged better land use and con-; servation of natural resources. backed Eisenhower for the presi dencywere together for 90 min utes and Douglas said afterward they had talked 'very slantingly" about Stalin's latest peace state ment. Douglas did not elaborate. He said the conference also dealt "briefly" with the forthcoming vis it of Britain's prime minister, Winston Churchm, to the United States. Churchill is scheduled to arrive in New York on Jan. 5. He plans to confer with Eisenhower here and with President Truman later in Washington. "We wandered all over from football to water conservation." Douglas told newsmen after his meeting with Eisenhower. "I was here to renew an old association. Eisenhower already has an nounced plans to get together iwth GOF Senate leaders to discuss the new administration's legislative program. No date has been announced for the conference, but the general's headquarters said earlier it prob ably would be held before the 83rd Congress convenes next Saturday. Senators scheduled to meet with Eisenhower are Robert A. Taft of Ohio, slated to be majority leader in the new Republican - controlled Congress; Styles Bridges of New Hampshire, in line to be president pro tempore the Senate's pre siding officer in the absence of the vice president; Eugene D. Milllkin of Colorado, chairman of the conference of ail GOP senators, and Leverett Sal tons tall of Massachusetts, who served as assistant minority lead er in the last Congress. Eisenhower met with House Re publican leaders last week before the Soviet Embassy In Washington m"de public Stalin's replies to questions submitted to him by the New York Times' correspondent, James Reston. Eisenhower's Dec. IT announce ment of plans to meet with GOP congressional leaders said the con ferences would deal with the draft ing of a legislative program and would cover "vital Issues relating to foreign and domestic policy." Aides to the general said the Stalin statement, tied up as it is with the vital issue of world peace, seemed likely to figure in any Eisenhower discussion of foreign affairs with the Senate leaders. Allied Planes Bomb Commie Supply Center By GEORGE MeARTHITR SEOUL GB Two hundred Al lied warplanes bombed a sprawl ing Communist supply center near the Red Korean captial of Pyong yang into a flaming pyre Sunday, It was one of the biggest such raids since last August. Towering smoke clouds billowed over the target. Planes from four Fifth Air Force fighter-bomber wings and Marine Air Group 33 converged on the target starting at 11 a.m. Swift Sabre jets patrolled the cold skies to the north, protecting the slower fighter-bombers against Red jets-. whjCfirhave swept far south in recent days. Allied pilots said they heavily damaged 70 buildings and explo sions indicated they had touched off ammunition stores. Frigid cold held the ground war to patrol actions. Temperatures on the Western Front Saturday night dipped to one degree below zero. Chinese Reds sent out patrols in greater numbers Saturday. Stalking Allied raiders turned them back in short, sharp fights which crippled the Red )prob rs. VJ0UU-7ILW MW GOODS 194- TODAY 1 ) J I BREAD i pound 1 5 llllii Ml IX I QUART M 1 ! J KpRESSi i - i vi-Tin 1 abi ; SUIT Sees Son; Sick Mother - to Tight to Live' (Picture on page 13) IjOS ANGELES (JP) "Now Tm really going to fight to live!" So said Mrs. Jean Garrett, 27, Saturday as she smiled fondly at her day-old son, Michael, who lay beside her In Angelus Hospital. Mrs- Garrett, gravely in with Hodgkin's disease, a usually fatal cancerous condition of the lym pathJc system, left her home and three other boys Christmas night for the hospital, not knowing whether she ever would see them again. Doctors had warned her that she might not survive the caesarean operation. Saturday night both she and Michael, born a month premature, were doing fine. U.S. Policy in U.N. Stable Despite Election, Sprague Declares (Picture on page one.) Policy of the United States delegation in the United Nations will probably not change as result of the election of Gen. Eisenhower. Charles A. Sprague told newsmen here Saturday. Sprague, an alternate delegate to the United Nations, returned early Saturday to his duties as publisher of the Oregon Statesnuei after resigning from the delegation. The U.N. General Assembly concluded Its seventh session last Slav Parliament Ratifies Plan to Break With Pope BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - With Marshal Tito looking on, the Yugoslav Parliament Saturday unanimously ratified the govern ment's decision to break diplomat ic relations with the Vatican. Before the vote. Peter Stambol ic, premier of Serbia and a power in the central Communist govern' ment, denounced the recent desi nation of Archbishop Alojzijc Stepinac of Zagreb as a cardinal. He said Pope Pius' appointment of the Yugoslav churchman was a propaganda move designed to serve the purposes of "Italian im perialism." Parliament then recessed until Jan. 10 when it will take up, and almost certainly approve, a new constitution which is expected to make Premier Tito the country's erst president. . OFFICE FURNITURE Easier Days! No need to suffer that "Chained to a desk feeling, another day! Learn what a modern planned desk can. do In easing the day's work. You will .find desks in all price ranges, in our displays but every one designed to aid efficiency, restfulnesa, toward a pleasanter work-routine! Commercial Boole Store 141 R Commercial week. Speaking at a conference of press representatives sponsored by the world Affairs Council or Port land, Sprague Indicated that dele gation policies on world affairs were not generally affected by do mestic changes. He said, how ever, that the delegation position was weakened by doubts as to the outcome of the election. Sprague said he was generally in agreement with the policy trans lated for the U.N. delegation by Secretary Dean Acheson. He said Acheson is "an able man of high Intelligence and great ability." Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R. Mass.), named by Eisenhower to head the next delegation to U.N., is apparently well thought of in U.N. circles, Sprague commented. Lodge was defeated in his bid for reelection by Joseph Kennedy. A resolution on information ap proved in the U.N. without the support of the UJS. was described as ineffective by Sprague. The right of correction will be followed by the responsible press and ig nored by the irresponsible press, he said. Sprague was U.S. repre sentative on the committee con sidering right to gather and trans mit news, right of correction and freedom of information. Russian energy in combing everything ( to build their case in the U.N. was astounding, Sprague said. They apparently covered every newspaper, magazine and book to bring out points in an at tempt to disprove UJS. claims of press freedom, he said. Leading the questioning during the conference was Dr. Frank Munk of Reed College, Portland, who is president of the World Af fairs Council of Portland. Sprague is scheduled to address the next meeting of the council. Death Laid To Foul Play ONTARIO, Ore. (! Arthur W. Thompson, who died at his home on an island in the Snake River Monday, was a victim of foul play by an unknown person, a coroner's Jury reported Saturday. The body was found Tuesday by a mainland neighbor, William Kin ney, after another neighbor, Wal ter Bishop, reported that he had heard Thompson shouting. "Let me go." and "Let me live," Mon day night. After Thompson's shouts were heard, Kinney and Bishop called over to the island to see if Thompson was all right. A voice, which both men said they believed was Thompson s, replied yes. The coroner's report said Thompson had smothered to death because of a dislocation ox his neck. Italians Cast Of f Communism SAN SEVERO, Italy UP) . A group of 432 Italian peasants marched into a local, theater Satur day night and renounced member ship in the Communist and So cialist parties. The group then declared alle giance to Italy's governing Christ ian Democrat Party. Matteo Pistillo. former local Red leader, said the peasants were switching their allegiance in rec ognitJon of Premier Alcide de Gas peri's agrarian reforms under which property grants are being given to landless peasants on a long-term mortgage basis. Last week another group of 450 peasants, turned in their Commu nist membership cards In a simi lar mass demonstration. Liquid From Tree Light Nearly Fatal TOLEDO. O. 11 Vhe 20-month- old daughter of a Toledo hockey player was hospitalized Saturday with severe convulsions after she swallowed poisonous liquid con tained in a Christmas tree light. Karen Lemoine, daughter of James Lemoine, defenseman for the Toledo Mercurys hockey team, was reported to be in "fair condi tion" in Riverside Hospital. Lemoine said his daughter bit the top off a glass candle-shaped Yule tree light, which contained a fluid that bubbled when the light was lit, and drank part of the liquid. The Lemoines' physician, Dr, William Cather, said he contacted an official of the New York City firm which makes the light, and learned the liquid was methylene chloride, described in pharmacolo gy books as "toxic" and "danger ous when taken Internally. He added, however, that he was not suTe that the girl drank enough of the fluid to become poisoned and said that her convulsions may have been caused by a sore throat a symptom she developed at the same tune. Centra! U-Drivo Truck Service Corner 12th and State Vans, Stakes, P.U. FOR RENT X-9083 mum mf Eastern Oregon white face Hereford beef bought direct from the ranch and hauled m our own tracks. Buy and novo at Packing House Wholesale Price. Co flng and wrapping, smoking, curing. Free deep freexe service. Crfffty1 iwgT HOTHDKJ DOWIJ 8 MONTHS TO PAY LOCKED BEEF Front Oucutei , BIDY BEEF Hall or Whale -LB. Half or Whole U4L TEDT GSADED SESLl fEDS CO. 1323 S, Hi .:.lZwr-'-- yXhm342S BILLINGS, Mont. (JP) A young Billings mother wrote words of en couragement Saturday to a Los Angeles mother. Both are ill with Hodgkins disease, an incurable ail ment, but both have given birth to children and lived. Alice Maxfield. 23, wrote to Mrs. Jean Garrett, 27. after reading how the California woman gave birth to a son Friday, knowing the birth would shorten her life is she survived at all. "When my first baby was on its way, I was very sick and no one thought either of us would! live," Mrs. Maxfield wrote. "But we did." That was four years ago when a daughter, Mary Alice, was born. Mrs. Maxfield gave birth two years ago to a son, Billy. Crosby to Support Cancer Research HOLLYWOOD OP) A coopera tive non-profit organization to aid cancer research is being formed in memory of Dixie Lee Crosby, who died last Nov. 1. Dixie Lee was the wife of crooner Bing Crosby. Bings brother, Larry Crosby, said Saturday the organization will be known as the Dixie Lee Crosby Memorial Foundation, dedicated to the assistance of es tablished groups which are con ducting biochemical and histo chemical studies of malignancies. Latourette ' - - . 1 Y.-V Associate Justice Earl C. Latenr ette who was named Saturday to serve at chief justice ef the Oregon Supreme Court begin ning Jai- 5. (Story on page ene.) Pickets Ask Qemency for Rosenbergs WASHINGTON W Pickets, shivering in near freezing weather. began what they called "a clemen cy vigil' outside the White House Saturday sight, demanding the President save Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, convicted atomic spies from the electric chair. A spokesman, David Allman, said the sign - carrying pickets would continue to march until the husband-wife spy team is granted clemency. The Rosenbergs are scheduled to die the week of Jan. 11 in New York's Sing Sing death house. They have been imprisoned since shortly after they were convicted on March 29, 1951, of conspiring to transmit atomic secrets to the Soviet Union. Seventeen pickets 12 women and five men began the march on East Executive Ave., beside the White House. The group sponsoring the White House vigil was identified in a press release as the "National Com mittee to Secure Justice in the Rosenberg Case." Jitterbugging Termed 'Shockiiig' KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya UFi Proponents of ballroom dancing have started a campaign here to oust hot awing and jive dancing. Banded together as the Selangor Society of Amateur Dancers, fol lowers of graceful dancing have begun . teaching about 80 youths and girls the niceties of ballroom 1 style "It la shocking to see the way some people dance these days nothing but sheer vulgarity' an official of the society said. -1 W. !. Schicss D. S. 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