2-Soc. 1-Sttt$man, Stltm, Or.t Monday, March 21, 1953 U.S. Allies Urged to Confront Reds With Violations in Korea Instructor V By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON UP) The United States is urging Britain and other allies to join in making the Chi nese Communists face up to the consequences of their violations of Salem Firm Burglarized A burglary at the Salem Auto Parts Co., 365 N. Liberty St., re sulted in theft of an undeter mined amount of money, city police said Sunday. " Officers said the firm was en tered sometime between closing time Saturday and early Sunday morning. A cash register report edly was opened but owner Frank Ward said it was not yet determined how much money was taken. An upstairs office and desk in the firm were ran sacked but Ward said approxi mately ,000 in checks in a desk drawer were untouched. There .were indications, however, that some tools may have been taken. I Police said the cash register was removed from its mounting and left on the floor behind a counter. Investigation indicated entry was made by breaking a glass panel in a rear double door. Ward said the same method of entry was made in a burglary at the firm last December. REA Association Demands Hoover Commission End WASHINGTON Wl The Nation al Rural Electric Cooperative Assn. urged Congress Sunday to abolish the Hoover Commission on Gov ernment Reorganization. The association said Herbert Hoover, "repudiated by the Amer ican people" in his bid for reelec tion as President, "has returned to a high place in the land as chairman of the commission to carry out his earlier aims of serv ing the vested interests against the common people." x The cooperative, which says it represents more than 2Vi million rural power consumers, centerea Its fire on a commission report of a week ago which recommend ed a broad reorganization of the government's 104 lending, insuring and guaranteeing agencies. the Korean armistice agreement, it vas learned Sunday. Only by facing this situation hon estly, the State Department has argued, can the democratic nations have any real hope of getting agreements with the Chinese Reds which wuT be respected in thefu ture. i This reasoning is being applied especially to persistent Allied hopes for a cease fire in the Formosa area. What the United States wants its 16 United Nations allies of Korean War days to do is this: Jointly denounce that provision of the Ko rean armistice which prohibits either side from reinforcing or re equipping its forces in Korea. The State Department believes this would have two results: 1. It would end a hypocritical state of affairs in which everybody knows the Reds have violated the armistice but everybody continues to act as if they were observing it in good faith. In effect, denunciation would put the Reds on the spot as treaty breakers before world public opin ion. 2. It would clear the way legally for the U.S.-U.N. Korean command to take whatever measures may be found desirable to strengthen the position of its forces and re dress the balance of military power in Korea. It is understood that the Joint Chiefs of Staff do not actually plan any elaborate countermeasures. They would like to put in some more modern jet planes and other equipment now prohibited under the armistice agreement. Some allied countries like Tur key favor forthright action to call the Reds to account. Others, like Britain, were described as reluc tant to take any step now on the grounds that it misht upset hopes for an eventual Formosa cease fire. They also argue that public opin ion does not sufficiently understand what the Reds have been up to in North Korea. , : ',v y : V i v y y t f J V 1 t Sgt. Myron Warren (above), mem ber of the safe iavestigatioa de tail f the Portland Police De partment, who will serve at instructor at advanced police training classes Wednesday and Thursday at Salem's City HalL Lt. Farley Megan of the state police will be the instructor at classes U be held here Monday. Chiropractors Conclude Meet Airliner Craslf Lands at Chicago 66 Escape Injury CHICAGO UF "A four-engine American Airlines plane with 66 persons aboard crash-landed at Chicago's Midway Airport Sunday and nosed into the runway at about a 60-degree angle. None of the passengers or crew was ' injured seriously, officials said. Among the 60 passengers was x singer Connie Boswell who is crip pled frtim poliovShe and her hus band, Harry Leedy, were en route to New York to make records. After landing safely, she sang "We came home on a wing and a prayer" words from a song which was popular during World War II. An American Airlines spokesman said the nose wheel buckled as the plane was landing on three en gines. The spokesman said the pi lot had feathered the No. A engine on the right side because of minor mechanical trouble. A two-day tri-district conven tion of the Oregon Association oi cniroprtcuc Physicians con cluded here Sunday with a series of board meetings. Approximately 100 Western Oregon chiropractors and wives attended the convention, fea tured by a Saturday general ses sion and a banquet and executive board" meeting Saturday night at the Senator Hotel Dr. John Ahlbin of Salem, served as gen eral chairman for the convention. Six Charged After Burglary At Dallas Firm Six persons, three of them juveniles, were arrested at 2 a.m. Sunday morning and charged with possession of stolen prop erty after a report of a burglary at a Dallas service station, city police said. The arrests were made after Dallas and Salem police joined forces in apprehending occu pants of a car in the 1400 block of Edgewater Street in West Sa lem. Dallas police radioed to Salem officers for help while trying to overtake a vehicle which fled from Dallas shortly after the burglary. Those lodged in city jail on the charges included Harry Wil liam Detillion, 30, Salem; W. S. Hittson, 34, of 1445 B St.; and Robert Ernest LaChapelle, 27, of 1580 Center St Officers listed two- of the juveniles as 16 and the other 17. The minors also were charged with juvenile de linquency. Police said a grease gun and two-gallon oil can, items listed as stolen earlier in the night from the A. J. Esau service sta tion at Dallas, were found in the halted car. a 1947 Nash. The station owner reportedly identi fied the items as those taken from his est'blishment. The six persons were held for Polk County authorities. Cain Hasty' In Wallgren Red Charge ! WASHINGTON W) Former Sen. Harry P. Cain said Sunday he was "hasty" and acted "im properly" in 1949 in accusing Mon C Wallgren of being "soft" toward communism. Cain, now a member of the Sub versive Activities Control Board, said in an interview that he did not know then and does not know now whether the charge was true. He said he made it based on in formation from others without making the accusers say on what "precise information" it was found ed. At the time he made the charge Cain was a Republican senator from Washington and Wallgren was a former governor of the state and a former colleague of Cam in the Senate. Because of Cain's stiff opposi tion. President Harry Truman withdrew Wallgren's nomination as chairman of the National Se curity Resources Board, at Wall gren's own request. Cain said Sunday that he made the "soft" toward communism charge while telling the Senate he thought Wallgren was not compe tent for the post. Wallgren denied the charge at the time. South Africa Cops Hunting 'Wolves' JOHANNESBURG. South Africa OF) Police are blowing the whistle on street corner wolves in South African cities Fines and jail terms are threat ened under an act heretofore used against women accused of solicit ing for immoral purposes. Several cases are already pending Lie Detector Test Rumored In Slaying Reports circulated Sunday that a person was subjected to a lie detector test Saturday in connec tion with the unsolved slaying of Silverton hop rancher Ervin Kaser. But Marion County Sheriff Denver Young refused to confirm the reports, replying. "I won't say such a test wasn't made, but I also won't say one was made." Young did say no new suspects have been uncovered in the case and added that a continuing in vestigation has produced no new other developments. . Still to be found is the murder gun, believed to be a .30 caliber rifle, which an unknown assail ant used to slay the 49-year-old Kaser in front of his Silverton area home the night of Feb. 17. At The Theaters Todav ELUNOBE THX FAR COUNTRY with James Stewart "WEST OF ZANZIBAR," with Anthony ' Steel CAPITOL -CAMTLLE.- with Robert Tay lor and Greta Garbo "MASTERSON OF KANSAS." with George Montgomery GRAND DEEP IN MY HEART with Jose Ferrer "THE YELLOW MOUNTAIN." with Lex Barker HOLLYWOOD "ATHENA." with Edmund Pur dom "TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MAD RE," with Humphrey Bof art Senate Group Says Powell Betrayed U. S. Polish Sailor Desertions High VIENNA. Austria Wi Commu nist political officers aboard Polish ships are getting a dressing down from Polish newspapers for the frequent desertion of crewmen in Western ports. The political offi cers are deputies to the captains. They are accused in papers new ly arrived in Vienna of simply spying on the sailors and making no effort to enlighten them on such questions as why Westerners enjoy a higher standard of living than Poles and why there is "chaos, inability, bad work and even thefts" in Polish shipyards. WASHINGTON W) The Senate internal security subcommittee Sunday accused John W. Powell of San Francisco, former editor of The China Weekly Review, of "un speakable betrayal of America's cause in the Far East" It said he "remains at large" in defiance of the Senate and de clared he must be brought back before the subcommittee for fur ther questioning. In a report on investigations of the last two years under the for mer chairmanship of Sen. Jenner (R-Ind), the subcommittee said: "There is no precedent in recent American history if indeed there is prcedent in all Amencan his tory for the conduct of John W. Powell. "His unspeakable betrayal of America's cause in the Far East is matched only by his arrogance toward the Senate of the United States." The subcommittee received testi mony that Powell's magazine, pub lished in Shanghai, was used by the Chinese Communists for forced indoctrination of American prison ers of war in Korea. Former POWs told of being beaten and tortured for refusing to subscribe to its articles. The report said "The evidence strongly indicates that The China Review was both controlled and supported by the Chinese Commu nist government." As a witness before the subcom mittee last year, Powell refused to say whether he was a Commu nist or to answer numerous other questions about his relations withj uic striping guci iimcrui. He invoked the Fifth Amendment protection against possible self incrimination. StocksProber Says Witness Praised Reds WASHINGTON HI Sen. Cape hart (R-Ind) demanded Sunday that Harvard economist John Ken neth Galbraith be recalled as a witness in the Senate's stock mar ket inquiry to explain a 1949 pamphlet which, Capehart said, "praises communism." Galbraith denied the pamphlet did any such thing. He accused Capehart of deliberately quoting one passage out of context, and said the 1949 publication was "sup ported in general" by Milton S. Eisenhower, brother of the Presi dent, and Allen W. Dulles, head of the Central Intelligence Agency Capehart stirred up this new storm in the stock market con troversy in the course of a tele vision debate (NBC's. "American Forum") with Sen. Monroney (D Okla). Both are members of the Senate Banking Committee which. under the chairmanship of Sen. Fulbright (D-Ark), has been study ing market conditions. Capehart said he would submit a resolution Monday asking that Galbraith be put back on the wit ness stand for questioning about the pamphlet, called "Beyond The Marshall Plan," which the Har vard economist and onetime Of fice of Price Administration offi cial published six years ago. Pearl Divers Strike; Seek Increased Cut MADRAS, India Ifl A thousand pearl divers refused to take the plunge at Tuticorin. South India, Sunday, stalling a state-run opera tion which hoped to net 27 million rupees (more than four million dollars). The striking divers complained about the profit-sharing terms. 50c Open 6:30 'Athena" Jane Powell Debbie Reynolds "Treasure of the Sierrq Madre Humphrey Bogart Dulles Warns of War Possibility . NEW YORK On Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said Sun day night the United States "dare not be blind to the fact" that it may again be forced to "for.ego peace in order to assure the bless ings of liberty." In an address at a convocation of the United Negro College Fund at the Metropolitan Opera House, Dulles said: "Peace is the product of many wills, and not merely of one alone. In the past it has been necessary to forego peace in order to assure; the blessings of liberty, we dare not be blind to the fact that that may happen again. Eugene Girl Wins Elks Scholarship PORTLAND UP Dorothy Ann Gamblin of Eugene Saturday was named winner, of the top award at the Oregon Elks scholarship banquet. She received a four-year scholar ship of $600 from the state organi zation and was given a $400 check by the Elks National Foundation. William Shive Beehen, Klamath Falls, received the second, place award of a $600 four-year scholar ship. Carlene Inman, Pendleton was third place winner with a $400 cash award. Winners, who can go to any col lege in Oregon, were judged on the basis of scholarship, leader ship, resourcefulness, and extra curricular activity. BANK ROBBER ESCAPES VANCOUVER, B.C. Con victed bank robber William Allen Babcock, described as a "menace to society," escaped from OakaUa Prison here Sunday. in 1 Voo list Un'poc d Them.. .and They're jj THE ALL NEW STAR-MON1C Stand-up Toning CV 'v V Area Selector Switch Y All 82 Channels 1S. for the Be,t Fringe ) i ' Area Performance ) AH Cascade Tuner ' 'X ( and Circuitry j' .V-l , AIumlniied J U Available in Four I ! ' . Decor CCor, A m. If LAX h -X1 Kf Viewing Area ?) 18,000 Volts of )) ) Picture Power JwpT Raytheon's. 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