Bill Introduced to . End Deduction of 'U. S. Income Tax POUNDDD 1651 -w - By HECTOR L. FOX Associated Press Writer X A possible solution to about the next two years reached the Legislature Wednesday in a bill in troduced by Republicans. i It is the part of Gov. Paul L. elimination of the federal income CHICAGO, Jan. 24 The after noon papers, report President Eisenhower's appeal to Congress for authorization to use United States military forces for defend ing Formosa and the Pescadores from conquest by Red China. This will require U. S. assistance in ferrying Nationalist troops from the exposed islands adja cent 'to the mainland. Then the President made this startling de claration of policy: , i "Be alert to any concentration of employment of Chinese Com munist forces obviously under taken to facilitate attack upon Formosa, - and be prepared to take appropriate military action." There in miniscule but none the less sharp and clear is "pre ventive war." We would not only defend Formosa from Commun ist attack but bomb troop con centrations and boat assemblies which point, to the launching of a Red invasion of Formosa. The iresiaenrs message orougnt a prompt rejoinder from Premier Chou En-lai of Communist China, denouncing U. S. intervention in China's affairs, even quoting the Charter of United Nations in sup port of the Communist decision. The Daily News here reports this conflict of policy between the United States and Red China;, ana between the two statements runs a dispatch from its own veteran correspondent in the Far East, Keyes. Beech, who reported from Taipeh, Formosa: j The United States is closer to war with Red China than at any time since the critical battle of Dien Bien Phu." 'He reported before Eisen hower's message reached him and based his judgment on the imminent evacuation of Nation alists from the Tachen islands which would expose . American shipping to Communist bombing or shelling. p I persist' in the view that no general wa" between the United States and Red China will break out in the immediate future. But the ratification of the -(Continued 'on editorial page 4) House Votes rtailment of atidns WASHINGTON tfl A House curb on 'congressional investiga tions was announced Wednesday, but in the Senate the Rnlx r. mittee voted to recommend money ior iwo new proDes. one of them int the stock market Chairman Smith D Va) of the House Rules Committee said - it would approve no investigation uniess a good case is jnade for it and would cut down on "this matter of investigation all over crtation." s ; . Smith told the House the policy hadihe backing of the Democratic and Republican leadership, he said more than 80 investigations are now on the list his committee has been asked to approve. Many.' of the pending requests Involve "duplications and unnec essary excursions. he said, and he intends to see "there will be no fishing expeditions." The Senate Rules Committee voted to ask $100,000 for the Bank ing Committee headed by Sen. Ful bricht (D Ark) tit sharp increases in the stock mar- 1- ... .t L 1 &ci wnicn nave oeen going on for more than a year. Two Senate investigating groups were given extensions for a month; they may be extended a longer time later. One 'is the Communist-hunting Internal security subcommittee of me juaiciary committee. Another is an armed services preparedness subcommittee. QUARRY WORKER KILLED BAKER. Ore. Ufi Lester Lee Schafer. 30. Weiser, Idaho, : was injured, fatally Tuesday while working at the Portland Cement Co. quarry at Lime, some 40 miles southeast of here. ANIMAL CRACKERS V WAJtRCN OOOOK1CH I I I I t7 BALD EAGLE SHEDDOB Investig I I I I s ' yett. Bad! half of Oregon's budget deficit for Patterson's program suggesting tax deduction in figuring state I income tax returns. ' This would rake about $30,000, 000. but still leaves about $33,000,- 000 more in revenue for the law makers to find. The Income Tax Bill was intro duced in the House by Rep. Wil liam W. Bradeen, Burns, and Sens. John P. Hounsell, Hood River, and S. Eugene Allen, Portland. , It would prevent Oregon's state income taxpayers from deducting THURSDAY HEARING On standard rale-making, hear ing procedures for state agencies (HB 49) House Judiciary com mittee, 10:30 a.m., Capitol Room 421. their federal income tax payments when they figure their state tax. It thus would increase state in come taxes, especially in the high er brackets. Referred to Committee ' 1 The bill was referred Thursday to the House Taxation Committee, which will be busy until about Feb. 8 studying the whole tax picture. This committee, headed by Rep. Loran L. Stewart R. Cottage Grove, doesn't know yet what its recommendations will be. So far, there has been one sales tax proposal, which is strongly op posed by Labor and the State Grange and Farmers Union. 38 New Bills The Senate and House will re convene at 10 a.m. today after their Wednesday business which included introduction of 29 new House bills and nine Senate bills and final action on a few minor bills. The House approved three minor motor vehicle bills and passed a Senate bill to let anybody start action to have a child declared de pendent or delinquent Now such a petitioner must reside in the same , county as the child. But committee work was the big show Wednesday. The Senate alco hol committee heard the Oregon Dispensers Association oppose any change in state liquor commission makeup or policy. The bill up for hearing would substitute a high- salaried administrator for the pres ent unpaid three-man commission. Asks Dam Work A memorial calling for construc tion of John Day Dam, either by the government or by partnership, won -endorsement in the -House State and Federal Affairs Commit tee. Approval was on straight party lines four Republicans for, two Democrats against it. The committee also recommend- ea passage of bins to create a state historical board, and to set up an advisory committee for state institutions for delinquent children. Substitute BUI It shelved a bill to give the state a bigger share of state racing re ceipts, announcing that a substi tute is being written at the request of the State Racing Commission Rep. Maurine Neuberger (D), Portland, introduced legislation to put State Police under Civil Serv ice. State Police Supt. H. G. Mai son, meanwhile, told a Senate committee he opposes another bill to let' dismissed officers appeal to the Civil Service Commission.-He said it would harm discipline. The Senate Education Commit tee approved a bill to abolish non high school districts, which send their children to high schools in other districts and pay their tui tion. The tuition would be paid by existing elementary and high scnooi districts. (Additional legislative news on Page 10, Sec. 2.) Garpet Ruled Not Taxable As House Part EUGENE W Frank Kinney saia Wednesday he has received a letter from the State Tax Commis sion ruling that wall-to-wall carpet ing is not, for tax purposes, part oi a nouse. Kinney, a realtor, appealed to the commission last fall when Lane County assessed the camel ing as real rather than personal. property. He contends that carpet ing is the same as furniture. Crippled Plane Locates Ship In Mid-Ocean, Crash-Lands NEW YORK un In a delicate ly tricky hide and seek maneuver, a crippled four-engined military plane covered hundreds of miles of stormy mid-Atlantic Wednes day, then ditched beside a Coast Guard cutter. All eight persons aboard the plane were picked up safely. "No injuries, was the word messaged here from the cutter. For an agonizing two hours and 21 minutes. ' the plane groped through storm and gathering dusk toward : the Coast Guard cutter Coos Bay, a tiny speck on the vast, turbulent sea. , Then, minutes before nightfall, the plane found its target The pi lot brought his craft down exnert- ly on the heavii., gale-swept sea. Lifeboats plowed to its side and the survivors were whisked to safety. . Radio was the thin thread that brought the plane .and the cutter together in a life-savin rendez vous xar xrom una. 2 Swim Suits Sell Briskly in Below Zero Weather INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn. (JP) Swim suits and shorts sold briskly in 12 be low zero weather in this Cana dian border city today to retail clothiers. A Minneapolis salesman chose winter's coldest day to take orders for heat - wave sports wear, and reported sales lively. First Commie Guilty Under Anti-Red Law CHICAGO UH Communist lead er Claude Lightfoot Wednesday was convicted of informed mem bership in the Communist Party, in a precedent - setting jury ver dict with far reaching implica tions. The case provided the first test of a Smith Act provision holding that membership m an organiza tion, knowing it advocates violent overthrow of the U. S. govern ment, is a punishable crime. The provision goes beyond mere membership. The law specifies that a member; before he can be adjudged guilty, must have knowl edge that the organization seeks or advocates violent overthrow of the government. The law provides a possible max imum sentence of 10 years in pris on and $10,000 fine. Prosecutions under the Smith Act, heretofore, have been based against groups of Communist lead ers charged with conspiring against the government. Lightfoot, 44-year-old executive secretary of the Communist Party in Illinois, told newsmen he will continue to work for the Commu nist Party until his case is finally disposed of through further legal steps including appeal, if neces sary. .He remained - free '-oa -830,000 bond. A defense motion for a new trial was set for Feb. IS. Judge Philip L. Sullivan of U. S. District Court also will rule then on a defense motion for a directed verdict of acquittal. GeneraPs Wife Shares Honor At Unveiling LOS ANGELES UFi Feminine interest focused on a petite, brown- eyed woman who quietly shared the limelight Wednesday with her noted husband. Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur. Mrs. Jean MacArthur stayed close by the side of the general during ceremonies in MacArthur Park on his 75th birthday. Mrs. MacArthur was dressed in a black wool suit, a small off the face white hat and a mink fur scarf. She carried a bouquet. She walked with Gen. MacArthur, hand in hand, to a podium and pulled the . cord revealing the 8-foot statue of her husband. Mrs. Virginia Carlson Knight, wife of the. California governor. rode with Mrs. MacArthur to the park. i "She's so natural and warm and good." commented Mrs. Knight afterward. "Her goodness comes from within. STOCKPILING WEAPONS DAYTON, Ohio UH The vice chief of staff of the Air Force said Wednesday night that the Rus sians are building a stockpile of tremendously destructive nuclear weapons" and a bomber fleet de signed to enable the Reds to strike the North American continent. The Coast Guard here said the plane, bound from the Azores to Bermuda, apparently accidently lost 330 gallons of gasoline. Short of fuel and 1,000 miles east of Bermuda, 'there as no hope of making a landfall. At 2:37 pjn.. EST. the pilot ra dioed the UJS. Air Force base at Bermuda, told them he was buck ing vicious headwinds and des paired of reaching land. The Coast Guard cutter imme diately was informed. It changed course to intercept the plane, meanwhile guiding the pilot in its direction by radio. . Then, in a race against dark ness, the two converged across hundreds of miles of angry ocean. - The Coast Guard here was in formed that the plane had ditched within 2Vi miles of the Coos Bay at 4:58 p.m., EST. - The plane was operated by the Military Air Transport Service, an arencT of the combined militarr 1 services. - 104TH YEAR Ii oSb SEaiONS-20 PAGES Sabreiets Ordered Operation Continues as Prison Flax Mill Fate Pondered , -. -xyj itm rMHr- T iff l lW 7 7r:?Z?; :Vrx' V li tfaJkP'' f;?V--,X . U X ' vs. Ti't V -W- ) . ljj H'-j? Wrh ? Operating at full speed, this Is what Penitentiary looked like Wednesday afternoon. Meanwhile, fate of the prison industry is pending a study of the linen fibre market ordered by the state Board of Control which is considering aban Lawyer-Solon Rule Reversed By. High Court The Oregon Supreme Court, reversing a ruling by Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton, held Friday that attorneys who are members oi the legislature can represent claimants before the State Indus trial Accident Commission. Thornton had ruled, that legis lators couldn't do this because the constitution bars legislators from doing business with the state. The high court, however, said that cases before the Accident Commission are not cases against the state. The decision involves State Rep. Ben Anderson (D), Portland who belongs to a firm handling cases against the Accident Com mission. However, it affects sev eral other members of the legis lature, too. The supreme court, whose de cision was by Justice Hall S. Lusk, held that such actions are not actions against the state, be cause, the state has no interest in the accident fund, which is set aside solely for injured work men. Sweet Home Mail Has Close Brush With Dynamite SWEET HOME HV-Jim Womack, powderman at an M and M Wood Working Co. logging operation 25 miles east of Foster, had just finished blasting Tuesday and had on3 of six dynamite sticks left He put it in his hip pocket - Suddenly a cat pulled a cable taut, the cable twanged . into a block of wood weighing some 10 pounds and sent it flying through the air toward Womack. It hit him in the hip, flattened the dynamite stick and knocked him sprawling. At Langmack Hospital here he was doing veil Wednesday but attendants said he would be kept there a couple of days more with a severe bruise. Explosives experts said dyna mite is usually stable and as a rule is not set off by concussion. However, since it contains nitro glycerine a blow sometimes does set off a dynamite, blast Max. Mia. Precis. .4 S3 .M 40 , 31 J01 24 2 M 5S J4 .00 M 38 .00 49 32 .00 58 36 .00 71 37 .00 23 7 J Sale - Portland Baker Medford North Bend Roseburg San Francisco Lot Angeles Chicago New York 38 27 .00 Willamette River 2J feet. . FORECAST from U. S. weather bureau. McNary field, Salem): Tog and low clouds this morning, lifting and a few breaks this after noon Low clouds and fog re-forming again this evening. Mostly cloudy with a few 'shows Friday. High to dav near 44: low. tonight near 30. Temperature at 12:01 a.m. today SALEM ntCCIPTTATIOK Sines Start of Weather Year Sept. 1 This Tear last Tear Normal uta sen 2x14 The Oregon Statesman, the flax mill at the Oregon State Senate Groups Favor Formosa Defense Plan WASHINGTON (President Eisenhower's fight-if-we-must de fense plan for Formosa drew a heavy vote of endorsement Wednes day from two key Senate committees and hot criticism that It "f signals "preventive war. , In the first rumblings of a momentous Senate debate, Eisenhow er supporters jumped up to declare the only purpose of the policy is peace, tnrougn a show of strength to .'discourage Red Chi nese aggression. 27-2 Vote By a 27-2 vote, the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees approved a resolution to empower the President to use American men and weapons to keep Formosa, the Pescadores, Is lands and "related positions and territories" out of Communist hands, i . But in committee and on the Senate! floor, a small but hard hitting band of senators began a fight. They centered their fire on the "related positions" phrase and its implied authority to attack Red invasion forces on the Chinese mainland and to defend small is lands strung along the Chinese coast. Preventive War "Put in plain English," said Sen. Flanders R-Vt), "This is preven tive war."-; He told the Senate he would vote against the resolution the show down may not come before the end of the week or later al though he voted in committee to send it to' the floor. Sen. Morse (Ind-Ore) likewise took a stand that the resolution permits preventive war and ex pands the possibility of conflict. He encountered an ; immediate challenge from Republican Leader Knowland of California. Over and over, Knowland de clared that the resolution doesn't involve "one iota of desire or in tent" of preventive war against Red China or any other nation. Death Claims Early Pioneer. Ex-Legislator . ROSEBURG W A former Oregon state legislator and son of Douglas County pioneers died in a hospital here Wednesday morning. He was Ira 6. Riddle, 84. whose parents crossed the plains to settle in this area about 1850. The nearby town of Riddle is named for them. Ira Riddle was the first white child born in-the Cow Creek Valley of Southern Douglas County. He was admitted to the bar after study at Portland is 1892 and 10 years later served in the Legis lature. Walnut Sale Profit High WOODLAND, Calif. (UP) -Rancher JacoJ) Dieteker had just loaded S2 bags of walnuts on his truck when a boy appeared at his door offeraik four bap for sale. Dieteker paid the youth $4.50 for the walnuts and loaded them on bis truck. Then he counted the load again. It added tm to bags. Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January doning the plant. Decision of the board will be made at a meeting of the Board of Control and Flax and Linen Board committee to be held within 30 days. (Picture also on page 3, sec. 1.) (Statesman Photo) Britain Aived By Unconcern Of Americans LONDON tf Several London newspapers confessed Wednesday they do not understand what keeps American blood pressure steady. It was generally assumed that critical developments over For mosa would have given the United States a case of war jitters. But British correspondents in Ameri can cities report they discern no excitement whatever. "No doubt Mr. Chou En-Lai, premier of Communist China, will be annoyed if ever he sees Ameri can evening newspapers, said a dispatch to the Daily Express. "His threats against the United States are rated no more import ant than the fact that Marilyn Monroe has been seen having din ner with ex-husband Joe DiMag- gio, the baseball star. Eden Defends Ike's Stand LONDON in Foreign Secre tary Sir Anthony Eden Wednes day defended President Eisenhow er's stand on Formosa and angrily rejected Laborite leader Clement Attlee's charge that the United States is interfering in a Chinese civil war. Renewing the British plea for a cease-fire in the Formosdn Strait, Eden told the House of Commons "force is not the solution." Atom Spy's Young Son Barred From Prison Visit With Father SAN FRANCISCO (J-Five-year-old Mark Sobell flew from New York to San Francisco Wednesday to visit his father, atom spy Martin Sobell, in Alcatraz federal prison. Sobell is serving a 30-year term for conspiring with Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, executed as atom spies. Mark waited excitedly at the federal docks, watching the prison boat corning from Alcatraz Island. He talked of his first boat ride and speculated whether San Francisco Bay was deeper than New York's Central Park lake. Then the twat arrived and a guard handed his mother a note. It was from Paul J. Madigan, newly appointed warden of Alca traz. It said simply: "Your visit cannot be granted today." v Mrs. Sobell stepped into a phone 27, 1955 to Formosa Ex-Treasury Head Heard In Tax Probe OMAHA W) John W. "Snyder, former secretary, of the Treasury, took the stand Wednesday before a federal grand-jury probing St. Louis Internal Revenue matters.. After waiting all forenoon with out being called, Snyder went into the jury room in mid-afternoon. Earlier in the day the grand jury heard William II. Woolf, Washing ton attorney and former Internal Revenue official and George J. Schoeneman, former - Internal Revenue commissioner and admin istrative assistant 1 0 President Truman. In earlier sessions the Omaha grand jury heard James P. Finnegan, former SL Louis collec tor, now serving a federal prison term for misconduct in office, and other present and former Internal Revenue off icialsf. Only one Indictment has been returned by the grand jury. G. Elmer Brown,' Philadelphia Internal Revenue service official, was accused of perjury, in his testimony before ' the grand jury in connection with the 19o0 investi gation of the St. Louis Internal Revenue office. ' Finnegan and his staff were cleared in that investigation. Today's Statesman Sec Page Classifieds Comics Crossword .!!.. 8-9 Editorials Farm Legislative J. Sports Star Gazer TV, Radio ...LU1.IL. Uran. Boom' Town II- Valley Women's, Society w I.. . 6 . 3 . 4 .8-9 booth and called the warden.-She accused him of reneging on a promise made by former , warden Edwin B. Swope, "because of the publicity involved" in letting Mark visit his father. Madigan said Alcatraz formerly had a . policy of not permitting small children to visit the island, and the prison' "will return to that policy. . While- Mrs. Sobell was in the phone booth, the Alcatraz boat cast off. ' v . Frantically young Mark pounded on the telephone booth and shouted at his mother:' "But. you promised. CaL the boat back., You promised." On the way back to town he buried his -head in his mother's lap and sobbed, "'I want to see Morty. Didn't; you have enough money for the boat?" His mother tried to quiet him: "You don't have to pay for that .ll.. 6 .ll 7 I 4 .ll . 5 10 ll.j-2 I... : 3 boat ride. Not with money". " No. 306 TAIPEH, Formosa An entire wing of F86 Sabre jets manned by American pilots started moving to Formosa Wednesday, the Far East Air Forces announced in Tokyo. Word of the temporary transfer came through as Chinese Nation-, alist four-engine bombers renewed . their attacks on Communist Yik ingshan Island with excellent re sults, according to official reports. The first Sabrejets already had landed on Formosa "and the re mainder will be in the place short ly." The Sabres racked up a 13-1 score over Communist MIG15 jets during the Korean War. From Okinawa (The 18th Fighter-Bomber Wing was being transferred from bases in Okinawa and the Philippines. In addition, FEAF said, other of fensive units were being rede ployed to forward bases. This meant that long range jet bombers such as the B47s of the Strategic Air Command on Guam were be ing moved closer to the troubled Formosa area. That could mean. Okinawa, the Philippines or Jap-; Ian.) j Press reports said the U. S. 7th , Fleet, whieh has massed a power- ful air-sea armada in the Formosa' area, staged "show of strength" maneuvers Wednesday north of Formosa in the general area of th? invasion-menaced Tachen Is lands. . News reports said 300 U. S. planes streaked through the skies north of Formosa. Decision Near , The reports came as the Na tionalists were deciding whether to pull out of the Tachen Islands 200 miles north of Formosa. Plans for the evacuation, under protec tion of U. S. sea and air units, were believed completed and only awaiting the Nationalist policy de cision. The predawn Nationalist raid on Yikiangshaim IBfles north' of the Tachens, was made through in tense antiaircraft fire, the reports said. Communist warplanes failed challenge the bombers and all returned to Formosa, the reports added. The nightly raids on Yikiang shan, captured by the Reds last week after a sizable amphibious invasion and heavy fighting, ap parently were aimed to suppress Communist guns which could har rass an evacuation of the Tachens. Fog Hampers Motor Traffic Motorists in the Salem area got through Wednesday without any serious mishaps despite patches of fog that covered the region most of the morning and formed again during the evening. ' t Airplane service was disrupted along the West Coast by fog con ditions, wittf some Salem flights cancelled. Weather observers re ported patchy fog for the length of the coast, and the McNary Field station in Salem predicted addi tional fog for today. The early-morning forecast Thursday called for fog patches here throughout the morning, with some breaks during the afternoon. Additional fog is expected again tonight. Weathermen said temperatures! in the area will be slightly lower today, ranging from an afternoon high of about 44 degrees to a low of 30 tonight. Justice Suggests . Formosan Solution PHILADELPHIA UFI Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas said Wednesday night one solution to the Formosan crisis might be "equal recognition" for the Na tionalist China and Red China gov ernments by the United Nations. In the Interest Of Spelling! More than 3000 7th- and 8th grade students of Marion, Polk, Linn and Yamhill Counties are competing in me u annua Statesman-KSLM Spelling Con test. Following are among words being studied: congratulate violin ; ... ammunition courteous enthusiastic encourage umpire vision ' cashier expression delicate worship utmost j K solemn, satisfy remittance occupation, resident, v othencise noble porerty stenographer receiver -scheme . territory PRICE 5c Planes Manned ByYanks