V S Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, U.S. Twiiust Rlleet Guatemala Challenge, Senator Asserts By GARDNER L.BRIDGE WASHINGTON I Sen. Smath- ers (D-Flai said Friday the ship-! ment of communist arms to Guate mala is "Russian intervention in Latin America and emphasises a challenge this nation has no choice but to meet." "We face the ugly and infuriat-! "The officers and crew members ing fact that we now find Russian ! who are being questioned are co intervention in this hemisphere on operating on a purely voluntary an alarming scale, in violation of basis." the Monroe Doctrine, Smathers ; said. "The diabolical scheme of the enemy has become apparent, and challenges not only us in the United States but all members of the great organization of. American states." Smrt"iers spoke out as the Swe dish freighter that carried 2.000 tons of Red arms to Guatemala changed course and put in at Key t Action Delayed On Columbia Compacl :t Vote SPOKANE, Wash. The Co lumbia Interstate Compact Com mission tentatively adopted seven proposals in the draft of its com pact Friday, but left some of the meatier problems for discussion at a later meeting. Action was postponed on the di v: ion of voting powers among the seven states to be included Wash ington. Oregon. Idaho. Montana. Wvominz. Nevadr and Utah: aD- portionment o' water; allocation of j mg goods tirms m a central Artier power and financing.' ican country considered friendly to The members also agreed early j the United States, at Friday's meeting that any action ' The State Department formally taken at this point would be con- cleared the French ship of any lidered tentative and subject to dis- : attempt to smuggle arms illegally cussion at a later date. j to Guatemala, and said the Wyo- Among articles receiving tenta- . ming will be allowed to proceed, tive approval were those on: probably Saturday. Pollution control, recognizing the problem and authorizing the com-; SAN ANTONIO, Tex. OP Sen. mission to study t and make rec-! Lyndon B Johnson D-Tex said ommendations. Friday night the United States Kecognuion oi existing rignis oi Indians, the government and others on certain areas within the Colum bia River system. . , , . ,,,, j s on. to collect data on water ana ' f (V, :,.,. cc other resources of the river sys-; . . ,,, tern, correlate and publish the facts i T mi IlldAC I CI Isl I III 1 1: lua l iuilo. Rules and regulations, empower ing the commission to establish by laws, rules and regulations. Ratification and effective date providing the compact shall be come effective upon ratification by Legislatures of Idaho. Montana, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming. Utah and Nevada may join if their Legislatures ratify it. The compact draft included al ternates for several of its propos als. There are three alternates for members to consider on apportion ment of the vote. All three would give Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana a majority vote. The first alternate would give each of those three votes each, Wyoming two, Nevada and Utah one each. A second alternate would give Oregon and Washington six votes; Idaho, Montana and Wyo ming, four, and Nevada and Utah, one. The power article of the pact provides for reservation of power produced at the site to the state ! after rejecting at a meeting an in which the project is located. I other offer by employers to renew Mates witri upstream projects also would get a "fair and equitable reservation of downstream bene fits resulting from their projects. Alternates to this article would give the commission leeway in the reservation of power in certain in stances. Frank Banks, of Coulee Dam, : Wash., was reelected chairman of th- commission. Other officers re elected are Lester A. Colby, Mis- j goula. Mont., vice chairman: and ! Mark R. Kulp, Boise, Idaho, sec-! retary-treasurer. Ship Settlement Made by Greek WASHINGTON UP Stavros Niarchos. the Greek shipping ty coon with headquarters in London, n nfade a multi - million - dollar set tlement with the United States gov- ernment Friday for the score of vessels he illegally obtained from the U. S. surplus fleet after World War II. The settlement involved, among , other things, an agreement to hand v. the vessels- back to the United States, along with a four million dollar indemnity payment. THE MIGHTY CI D AUTO 6 Car Destruction Derbv Sat. Nite, Mav 29 HOLLYWOOD BOWL SALEM Time Trials, 7:45 P.M. - Races, 8:30 P.M. Ot Sat., May 29. 1954 West, Fla.. to enable U. S. State Department officials to question her Ptain and crew Government officials flown from Washington went aboard the 4.600 ton freighter in Key West harbor at 8 a. m .and the State Depart ment said: in a statement issued bv Press Officer Lincoln White, the depart ment said the Swedish ship, the Alfhem. had put into Key West "in accordance with instructions issued to the captain by the ship's owners." The freighter had been sched- Cuba but proceeded to Key West instead and anchored during the night about two miles offshore. She was escorted into the harbor by Coast Guard craft and the I'. S. destroyer escort Loeser stood by while Washington authorities went aboard. A Key West dispatch identified the Alfhem's skipper as Capt. Jo han Henry Lind. Smathers, in a speech in the Senate, said the "pattern of inter vention" in Guatemala is the same as Soviet agents used in bringing West European nations under Mos cow's domination. Meanwhile it was "learned that a search of the French freighter Wy oming, which was halted at the Panama Canal, has turned up sev en cases of rifles and pistols, three of them bound for Guatemala. The remaining four cases were reported destined for private sport- should trv to "embargo all Corn- munist arms shipments to the Western Hemisphere " The Democratic Senate leader suggested that a conference of . u a k n American stages should be called ... . .. , u-j; quicklv to seek a firm, binding . .. . cil . omK,r commitment for such an embar- go. Johnson, in a speech said that the recent shipment of arms to Guatemala from Poland "means that the Communists have estab- Woodworker Union Okehs Negotiations PORTLAND OP The federal mediation service Friday arranged resumption of negotiations next week between the CIO Woodwork ers Union policy committee and lumber operators. The union committee requested the agency to get talks resumed the old contracts. Next Wednesday the union com mittee will meet here with fir and plywood employers, including the big Lumbermen's Industrial Rela tions Committee and the Long Bell Lumber Co. It will confer here Thursday with representa tives of the Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. and at Klamath Falls Friday with the Pine Industrial Relations Committee. In a statement the union com mittee made no mention of a strike, originally scheduled for May 3 in support of proposals for a 124-cent hourly wage increase and other benefits. The committee noted that AFL pulp, paper and sulphite workers recently were granted a 2-cent hourly increase. It said that in many plants these men and the j CIO Woodworkers "go through the same gates to work. : ! ! J ' No. 2275 It Good For $25.00 Ca8h rtekpot rackpot I KELLEY'S CORNER SERVICE STATION 3300 N. River Rd. B S RACES Plus lished a military beachhead in the : ing while doing these days in ac Western Hemisphere." cordance with a policy that patrol- "In the past. Communists in the men should learn to type their Western Hemisphere have re- ay reports by the touch system, mained in the shadows," he said. . . nnrY,nKcVtoA K honv "Now they are gathering their forces for a trial at arms. It may j be only guerrilla fighting in Central i American. It may be only a few j border raids sporadic sniping j across national boundaries. "But that is the way the war started in Korea That is the way the war started in Indo-China. Johnson said "Guatemala is in a ly position to strike at every na- tion in Central America. It could ship the Communist arms to guer-; rilla bands in Honduras. Nicara- , gua, Costa Rica. It is little more than a step to our vital Panama Canal." Miller's 'Big StoiV Slated For TV Show The "Big Story" of Statesman Reporter James Burr Miller, as broadcast over NBC radio last January, is slated for television from New York City on June 25. Word of the television show's scheduling was received Friday by a telephone call from Wyle Associates. Inc., New York agents for the Big Story programs. Representatives of Port land Station KPTV explained that they would probably carry the show on June 25 via the hookup with but if not j j Hollvwood. Calif would be broadcast the following Fririav .Inlv 2 The storv involves a Vancou- Bernardo Devora. a laborer, nar ver. Wash., man who surrendered rowly escaped death or injury to Reported Miller in November. ; wnen ,he three-story-high structure 1952. to face a charge of murder fel1- He was the only man inside, in Douglas Countv. The murder- i Five others who usually worked at ed girl was Georgia Lucille Lang, the Plant had left an hour before, a young nurse in Roseburg. The man, John Coffield, 25, was taken to Roseburg to face the charge and was acquitted by the Janu ary. 1953, Douglas County grand jurv. A companion of his on the night nf April. 1952. Chester Dean Crabb, Arago. Ore., was in- dicated and convicted on a charge of first degree murder. He is now serving a life sentence at the Oregon State Prison. Three Added As Directors Of Red Cross Five board members were re elected and three new ones chos- en during the annual meeting of the Marion County Chapter Red Cross attended by about 54 per sons at the YWCA. New to the board are Lawrence Spraker, Stayton; Willard Glaze and Lloyd Ramey, both of Salem. Re-elected were Elton Thomp son, Mrs. Ralph Moody, Mrs. Leon Perry and Marion County Judge Rex Hartley, all of Salem, and Mrs. John Hooper, Woodburn. A chairman is to be selected from this group of board members. Chairman now is Elton Thomp son. Speaker at the meeting was Harold Berentson, manager of the Portland-Multnomah County Chapter. STARTS TOMORROW! TWO OF THE SCREENS IMMORTAL HITS RETURN TO SALEM IN ONE TREMENDOUS PROGRAM! 2 V V MS nee in a picture like this.. m O WATS1 2ND THERE NEVER WAS A MAN LIKE ALAN LAOOJEAN ARTHUR VAN HEFUN . GEORGE STEVENS' T 3 LV.fvJ E Criminology Not Only Study For Policemen Citv Dolice are definitely learn- of typewriters in the ready room of city police station being equipped with black tabs over all the keys. Above these machines is a large chart showing the placement of all letters on the keyboard. Theo retically officers are to keep an eye on the chart as they compose reports. However, across the room are several typewriters sans black tabs. Mixer Plant Collause Idles Dam Workers THE DALLES. Ore. OP A con crete mixing plant at The Dalles Dam collapsed Friday morning. No cne was injured but nearly 1 200 men were made iohless and mnstnirtinn nn the Washington side of tne jam will be delayed about two months The plant, valued at $200,000. had an hourly capacity of 250 cubic yards and was reported to be one of the largest in operation. It pro vided all the concrete for the main powerhouse which is under con struction. The huge mixer collapsed from a structural flaw, the exact na ture of which was not immediately determined. A large batch of con- ireie nau jum oeen mixcu wiicii the mishap occurred. Sedan Rams Bank, Driver TJoUlir,rl ilOSpilrtllZCCl A 1938 model sedan driven by Benjamin Merle Ensley, Salem Route 4. was considerably damag ed Friday night one mile south of Liberty on the Liberty Road when it apparently went out of control on a curve. Ensley told investigating state police that he was enroute to his job at the State Hospital when the car "suddenly veered off the road" digging out several lineal yards of bank. Neighbors and passersby told I officers that they heard "a clatter ; and a roar.. coming down the dark road heading toward Salem. The car spun to a stop in the middle of Liberty Road. People who first got to the scene found Ensley prone alongside the vehicle. He was taken to Salem Memorial Hospital for treatment of a bump on his head and kept for observa tion. Last Day "CARNIVAL STORY" "WHITE FIRE" a generation ( Open 1 :30 Today )) (( 2234 Fairgrounds Rd. 1 tOOK says "Should go down in history as one of the greatest ever mad!" tltlX t3 RTZ3IMJ mi TCCISSin TSSf GREAT HIT Six Nations Reject Reds9 Plan on Korea GENEVA OP Six nations whose soldiers fought under the United Nations flag in Korea rejected one by one Friday the Communist plan to unify Korea with what the West Calls "rigged" elections. Led by the U.S. undersecretary of state. Walter Bedell Smith, the delegates demanded that the Unit ed Nations supervise any elections in divided Korea, as proposed by South Korea. Colombia. Turkey, Thailand, Australia and Greece fol lowed Smith in rejecting the Com munist formula. Smith referred to a denunciation of the United Nations by soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov two weeks ago and to similar dec larations by Red China's Foreign Minister Chou En - Lai and North Korea's Foreign Minister Nam II. Smith observed: "What the Soviet Union, through its delegate, is telling7 the world from Geneva is that it rejects the principle of collective security, that it intends to do as it pleases without regard to truth or justice or peace." Non - Communist Asian countries have expressed belief in the United Nations as the cornerstone of their security against aggression. Molo tov, Chou and Nam II have re peatedly denounced the United States as seeking to use the United Nations to impose "Western im perialism on the Eastt. It is a strange phenomenon," Smith said, "that we who came here to unite a divided and war- torn nation find ourselves defend ing the international system of se curity to which every one of the governments of the world, if it were truly representative of the wishes of its people, would be eager to contribute all possible and material support. Smith said the U. N. charter is still regarded "by the vast major ity of us as the world's best hope for peace." The Chinese spokesman Huang Hua, discussing Smith's address after the meeting, said "the dis cussion bogged down today in stag nation and unproductivity." A committee of experts sought Friday to unravel the forbidding tangle of proposals submitted in an effort to obtain a cease fire in Indochina. It was reported reliably that the Soviet Union's expert, An drei Gromyko, added complica tions Friday by throwing into the discussion a new list of proposals. Ship Disaster Toll Now 99 QUONSET POINT. R. I. OP Twin scourges of ravaging burns and shock pushed the death list higher Friday as Navy doctors worked to save the lives of fellow men of the sea trapped in Wednes day's explosion on the aircraft car rier Bennington. The number of dead stood at 99 after eight crewmen of the' big car rier succumbed since the disaster at Newport Naval Hospital across the bay from the naval air base. STARTS TOMORROW! How Many B I G MOMENTS CAN A MAN OR WOMAN HAVE? The big moments happen theatre, sometimes at a movie. And they give life a new, a richer meaning. As when you see 'THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES. You live this love story of soldiers and sweethearts. You feel its hearbeat, reel to its impact. And you say to yourself, "I'd like to live this moment again Myrna Loy Dana Andrews Virginia Mayo The BEST LOYED Picture Of Our Time! The MOST HONORED Picture Of All Time ! f TV iitwa 1 AfO y Academy Vfi Awards 1 Ay SAMUEL GOLDWYJCS THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES ALSO COLOR CARTOON - WORLD NEWS The Theaters Today ELSINORE -CARNIVAL STORY" with Anne Baxter and Steve Cochran. WHITE FIR I" with Scott Brady. CAPITOL "PHANTOM OF - THE RUI MORGUE" In Third Dimension with Karl Maiden and Patricia Medina. GRAND "SPECIAL MATINEE KIDS' SHOW." Stage fun with .Roy Qor don. Evening Show: "BOY FROM OKLAHOMA" with Will Rogers Jr. JIVARO" with Ternando Lamas. NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN SASKATCHEWAN" with Alan Ladd and Shelley Winters. "RED GARTERS" with Rose mary Clooney and Jack Carson. HOLLYWOOD 'I. THE JURY" and -THE JOE LOUIS STORY." Regulations Tightened In Guatemala GUATEMALA OP Guatemala issued two emergency regulations Friday as a result of the crisis with the United States. They require that: All private planes in effect be grounded under an order banning cross-country flights: Any messages written in code or in a language other than Spanish must be accompanied by a Spanish translation filed at the cable office. This meant all press messages in English must have a Spanish trans lation attached for study by a gov ernment agent. Meanwhile, a secret radio urging Guatemalans to fight communism and attacking the government, con- i tinued its broadcasts despite re ports that officials had smashed it. Outside of this development the capital settled down to normal aft er a jittery 24 hour period in which a plane rained anti-Red leaflets over the city. Airline service was resumed. There were reports that Castillo Armas, an exiled Guatemalan whose name appeared on the leaf--! lets, would speak over the secret radio. But he made no appearance before the microphone and many listeners who waited for his broad cast were disappointed. Stores which closed Thursday opened up Friday and foreigners who had been keeping their chil dren home from school sent them off to their teachers. The top story in newspapers here was one from Washington saying the United States was thinking of recalling its air and military mis sions to Guatemala. 50-Year-Old Charged With Molesting Girl Vincent J. Liuzzi, 50, of 479 State St., was arrested by city de tectives Friday on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. He was lodged in jail Friday night in lieu of $5,000 baiL Detectives said Liuzzi signed a statement admitting that he mo lested a four-year-old girl. Last Day! "BOY FROM OKLAHOMA" and "jrVARO" to all of us. Sometimes in a Fredric March e Teresa Vrighf Hoagy (armichael s Town Has Whale of Headache Without an Aspirin in Sight WESTPORT, Wash. OP A sec ond whale very dead, very ripe, very rank has been cast up by the sea near here, doubling the whale - size headache created by their disposal problem. The latest arrival washed ashore Thursday night a half mile below Grays Harbor south jetty. It was badly decayed, and had a length ot 2-inch hawser still attached to its tail. This led to speculation it might have broken loose after be ing harpooned by commercial whalers. The second whale, a 40-tooier, floated in just one week after the first a 48 - foot sperm that grounded about 12 to 15 miles Jo the south. They are the first whales of any size washed up on the beach in the Grays Harbor area for IS years. About getting rid of them. No one, it seems, wants to shoulder the responsibility. And it's SOME responsibility. Ever try to dispose of a whale? If they're burned, the oil will kill surrounding clam beds. They can't be buried because high tides would promptly uncover them. They're too "ripe" to be towed to sea because the pull would cause them to break up. County commissioners, have adopted a "who me?" attitude. The State Fisheries Department says "tain't our baby." The State NOW SHOWING OPEN 6:45 Admission 50c Mickey Spillane's "I, THE JURY" Co-Hit The Joe Lewis Story (Excerpts from Fights) HOLLYWOOD KIDS MATINEE Tomorrow 1:00 to 4:00 3 Cartoons Serial Special Matinee Feature "HAWK OF WILD RIVER" With Smiley Burnett ALSO Benson's Birthday Cake for John Allen Vaves. Kathleen Sue Goodrich. Lois Gardner, Sharon ALford, Eugene Kam mler. Janet May Mathistad, Terry Gandy. Jimmy Morro, Rosemary Danen, Douglas Mansfield, S o n y a Schoessle, Dickie Chandler. Virginia Bal dwin. Judith Ann Sclsgiver. David Narkaus, Ronnie Brown, Bonnie Penny, Wayne Blum, Sara Bare, Jimmy Ross, Viola Yost, Mary Feskens. James Panger, Barbara Kautz, Terry Alley. STARTING mm DEuniif non Doc Mitchum and hb town buzzing!... (and the and bees, Eigzr Robert V2 .A MITCHUM $ Jean xph .- !;MsiffiONS S51 TECHNICOLOR CO-FEATURE Health Department hadn't bean about, 'em. Someone even suggested the Pure Food and Drug Division should get into the act. Hardly seems logical, though. Brother those whales ain't pure, Burglar Wastes Talents in Entrv ay' At Lumber Yard The burglar who broke into the Borkman Lumber and Hardware Store, 2460 State St.. sometime Thursday night, apparently wasted his talents. Entrance was gained to the store by raising a ladder to an over head door and forcing the door open. Once inside the culprit made his way to the main floor and broke out a window to gain en trance to the office. He rifled through the cash drawer in the counter from which all money had already been re moved by the owners at closing time Thursday. The entry was dis covered when the business was opened Friday morning. Gates Open 6:45 Shew at Dusk Ends Tonite Two Technicolor Hits ALAN LADD SHELLEY WINTERS in Saskatchewan Also ROSEMARY CLOONEY JACK CARSON "Red Garters" Also All Color Cartoon Carnival Starts Tomorrow! Two Technicolor Hits ROCK HUDSON STEVE COCHRAN "Back to God's Country" Also AUDIE MURPHY LORI NELSON "Tumbleweed" Bring the Whole Family See a Movie front Year Car LAST DAY "Phantom of the Rue Morgue" "Ralls Into Laramie" TOMORROW! Icrvely patient have the whole . birds too!) (?) rT- ta 2-7029 n 1! ! M IDTtriTD TJT TITXTTPI ITT V- .f rllUHUU IlUiUUlAJll Bockuu WaSsct Fori CXI IX3S FOUTAinE-JOORDAli bril tSSZ ts&ti Tack PRICE OF LIBERTY I t mM JACK MUWI M TECHNICOLOR Priced, this Engagement Only: Mat. 65c; Eve. 80c