2-(3c 1)-5tatsman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, July 4, USS Ex-U.S. Treasury Official 'Leader of Wide Spy System' WASHINGTON Sen. East-1 mercial espionage fystem report- laod (D-Miss) said Sunday a com-1 ing to him.' mittee investigation into the World I Eastland said excerpts from the War II activities of the late Harry diaries of former Secretary of tht Dexter White has produced "a rec-. Treasury Morgenthau show White's ord that demands greatest precau tions against any repetition." i Eastland, chairman of the Senate "knack of seizing power and for broadening and deepening any au thority given him." The excerpts Fireworks Display Flashes at St. Paid Rodeo "' ' ' -'-- V " - i ' "I, if Valley Family internal security subcommittee, previously had been made public said White, the former treasury , by the committee at a bearing official who has been called a So-i June 15, -Tiet spy, "had a worldwide om- "The picture beginning to .emerge from tne manes. Jtast- land said, shows White ' in a much more powerful position with, the treasury than has been generally understood." Died tm 14S White died in 1948, three days after he denied being a Communist in testimony before the House Un- American Activities Committee. Morgenthau told Eastland's stoud June 1 that while he was secretary of the treasury he had no reason to question White s toy alty. He ' said that not until some time after his resignation did he learn of the charges against White. Among the diary excerpts placed in the record was a report from a treasury employe in Lisbon on commercial and economic activi ties of the Axis powers in Portugal The brief report, headed "Econom ic Intelligence From Portugal, was forwarded to Morgenthau in a Dec. 23, 1943, memorandum from White. The memo said: "I think you will be interested in glancing at the appended information which has been furnished us by our man Wood in Lisbon." Esploaafe System Inserting this in the record, sub committee counsel J. G. Sourwine commented "The interesting thing here is that by this time, by the! end of 1943, Mr. White had a world wide commercial espionage system reporting to him. This document is an instance of that" Asked at the time by Sen. Wei ker (R-Ida) to "clarify that a little more, Sourwine said: Well, this, sir, is a report to White. . . from one of his subordin ates by the name of Wood. . .and it gives what was then a very import ant and in part highly confidential information about the commercial and economic activity in Portu gal." Sourwine also put in the record a Dec. 22. 1943 "report to White from one of his men, a Mr. Ness, and here is political rather than economic intelligence. "This particular report," Sour wine said, "concerns the then re cent coup d etat in Bolivia. It Is high-level inside dope and indicates the type of political intelligence that White had flowing to him at the end of 1943." Editor Wins Lassie Pup lUtenui Newt ferric . MOLALLA A Salem family won one of Lassie's puppies Sun- day as the Molalla Buckeroo was presented before an estimated 20.000 persons at two performances. New owners of "Lassie Junior" are the three children of States man valley editor Charles Ireland. The puppy is a certified off -spring of Lassie, the collie dog of motion picture and television fame. Rodeo action Sunday saw Casey Tibbs, former world's champion cowboy grab the lead as the first-go-around of rodeo events was completed. Tibbs won both the bareback riding and saddle bronc riding events 'to amass some 400 points and, incidentally, win $400. Other leaders included Bill Hart man, wbo had a net time of 16 sec ends for bulldogging . two steers. - He felled one steer in 7.3 seconds Sunday night to post the best time for that event in the meet. The roedo will end Monday with t 1:30 p.m. performance at which i rodeo officials expect another capacity crowd of 12,000.- They said persons were turned away from the gates Sunday afternoon. Another estimated 8,000 persons attended the night show after a brisk shower at about 6:30 threat ened to spoil the snow. MIG-Blasted Plane Crew Reaches U.S. -1 it 7 . .r i V r v Jl IL ... r . w ST. PAUL Triditional Independence Day fireworks displays will bursting patterns .f colored fire similar to the one shown above explode over various mid-Willamette Valley areas tonight All at the St Paul rodeo Sunday night . (Photo by John Ericksen, are supervised displays, and are expected to provide noise and Statesman photographer.) (Story on sports page.) Latest Russ Jets Unveiled In Moscow Discipline Said Top Problem In Classroom OAKLAND. Calif. I In cheer ful spirits, despite wounds, burns and bandages, seven U. S. fliers whose Navy patrol plane was shofi down June 22 by Russian let light ers over the Bering Sea arrived here Sunday from Anchorage, Alaska. A huddled group of families and friends watched at Alameda Naval Air Station as the seven stretchers were eased out of their hospital plane shortly before 3 a. m. A - woman burst into tears.' She was Mrs. Nellie Janke of Alameda, who had -caught sight of her husband. Chief Electronics Technician. Elmer R. Janke, swathed heavily in bandages. She rushed forward to greet him. Aviation Machinists Mate Thad deus Marian of Oakland propped himself up to greet his wife. Ruth, and 6-year-old daughter Carol, and then gaze long and happily for the first tmie at his son and name sake,' Thad Jr., 5 weeks old. And Aviation Ordnanceman Mar tin E. Berg of Alameda, despite hands made clumsy and awkward with bandages, clasped his wife in a hard embrace. The. group, part of the 11 whose misadventure in Northern seas touched off a diplomatic storm while the United Nations was in. session . at San Francisco, were loaded onto an ambulance bus for ' the 10-mile ride to Oak Knoll Hos pital in the Oakland foothills. CREATES DIVERSION r SAN ANTONIO, Tex. ( Sher if Owen Kilday says he's going to install television sets in the county jail to keep prisoners' minds off possible future crim inal plans. Since World War II, about one married woman in six of child bearing age has had a child each year, whereas the figure was about one in eight before the war. 1 en with a wrench, police said. Chicago Youth Killed in Gang War; 8 Held CHICAGO OB Eight youths Saturday night were charged with murder in the slaying of a high school senior in a West Side gang war. Five other youths including Clement Macis, 14. who told police he fired a 12 gauge shotgun that killed Kenneth Sleboda, 17, Friday night were not charged immedi ately but were turned over to ju venile authorities. As juveniles, they cannot be charged in Magis trate s Court. Assist. State's Atty. Frank Whel an said he will go before the grand jury Tuesday to obtain murder in dictments against Macis, Donald Lewis, 16. Raymond Hilloch, 15, James Bracken, 16, and Ronald Fuhri, 16 the youths too young to be arraigned before a magis trate. Arraigned on a charge of murder were Eugene O'Brien. 17, and his brother, Robert, 18. James Sarna an airman on leave, James Bart lett, 19, Gerald Walsh, 18, John Maher 18, Raymond Kennedy, 18 and Larry Degnan. 17. "I didn't mean to do it. It was an accident. It just went off." said tall, sandy-haired Macis, breaking down after six hours of intensive questioning, v The shooting followed an earlier clash between rival gangs Friday night in which one youth was beat- BY STANLEY JOHNSON MOSCOW, iff - The Soviet Air Force Sunday staged a gala ex position of military planes in spec tacular variety- including 48 of its latest supersonic, single - jet fighters. The Aviation Day show at Mos cow s Tushino Airfield permitted foreigners their first glimpse of the new fighter and several other new Soviet aircraft. Western ob servers gasped as the 48 sleek jets whooshed over the field Aerial Ballet An aerial ballet featured flap- wins radio controlled glider. This is the second year it has been on display. The Soviet Union ap parently has only the single model. Also unveiled were so twin-let fighters, seven four-engine turbo prop bombers and nine four-jet bombers. - : Additionally, there were 54 twin- jet medium bombers of a model first seen last year as a prototype. four huge two-engine helicopters which seemed capable of carrying about 60 men, each and a big new twin-jet transport. Top Reds On the reviewing stand for the big show were Premier Nikolai Bulganm. Soviet Communist rarty. Chief Nikita Khrushchev, Defense Minister Georgi K. Zhukov, Klem- enty Voroshilov, president of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, and a full array of other govern ment dignitaries, including former premier Georgi Malenkov. With them as special guests were the commander of India's air force. Air Marshal Suberoto Mukerjee, and Lt. Gen.. Zdenko Ulepic, commander of Yugoslavia s air force. Some of the aircraft displayed had been seen earlier in rehearsal flights over Moscow, but the 48 new jet fighters and the jet trans port were fresh sights. . Cemetery Parking, Drinking Prohibited RALEIGH. N. C. (-Sen. Jack Blythe of Charlotte introduced a bill in the General Assembly for bidding drinking and night park ing in church cemeteries. Said the realistic senator: "I'm not trying to stop folks from doing anything. I just want to change the scene." CHICAGO I An education commission has found the break down of discipline in the nation's classrooms to be just about the teacher's No. 1 problem. "We in the National Education Assn. consider the problem of classroom discipline second only to the related problems of teach ers salaries and overcrowded classrooms," Richard B. Kennan of Washington, D. C. said Sunday. Kennan is secretary of the 10 member national commission for the defense of democracy through education, which he describes as the "troubleshooter" for the NEA. The commission reached its con clusion on the discipline problem from a survey made recently of 3,400 "typical" teachers throughout the nation, he said, and has ob tained the NEA's approval to: (1) Make an intensive survey of 10,000 teachers to determine the causes of this breakdown of disci pline, its extent and what can be done about it; and (2) Hold a series of four to six regional conferences in which a psychiatrist, an educator and a so cial worker would augment the survey with firsthand knowledge. Kennan said the dates and loca tions of the conferences haven't been decided on but would be held "in the near future." The commission also hopes to enlist the aid of a graduate school of education to help evaluate the survey, he said. Announcing the commissions findings at a news conference, Ken nan said the recent general survey of 3,400 teachers revealed: (1) Reports of disciplinary break down have jumped from "negli gible in a similar survey taken three years ago to a number that is indicative of a "major national trend." (2) Small towns and rural com munities are having their share of unruly students as well as the big cities. (3) Teachers feel the cause of disciplinary breakdown is the same as the cause of juvenile delinquency. Indian Group Asks Freedom BOMBAY, India l Indian citizens demanding freedom for Go a from Portuguese rule entered Goanese territory Sunday in three groups by devious routes. Fifty-five unarmed volunteers were arrested, but 34 were freed near the Indian border. Portuguese police detained the rest, including the leader K. Bhandari. This was the seventh such dem onstration since May 18. Two Drivers Gted After 99E Wrecks Garden Hose 'Still Digging9 In California Two separate auto accidents on Highway 99E Sunday resulted in traffic citations for two drivers, report state police. A three-car "chain collision" one mile south of Brooks at 5:45 pm. brought a citation to Craig Arthur Hull, Portland. State po lice said his car struck another driven by Theodore F. Zacker, Aurora Route 1, which had slowed for a car towing a boat on a trailer which was driven by Ar den U. Tripp of Kinzua. Hull was charged with following too close ly The other mishap at 6:17 p.m. at Labish brought a citation to Kenneth Bates, Albany, whose car was involved In a collision with that of Marvin B. Thomp son of Beaver Creek, police said. Bates was charged with reck less driving. Officers said the Thompson car was halted for another vehicle which was pre paring to turn left when struck in the rear. (Picture on Page 3, Sec. 1.) DOWNEY, Calif, un Well. sir. that Downey hose is still going down. - - . More than 17 feet of George di Peso's green plastic garden hose has now disappeared since it start ed burrowing underground like a huge earthworm last Thursday. The hose has been weaving its way downward, like a strand of berserk spaghetti, at the rate of about three inches an. hour for nearly three days. i Di Peso is just about i running out of hose and patience. More than 1,000 people, attracted by re ports, have made a mess of his lawn. And there's more hose un derground than above. In trying to pull the hose out. George tied it to his car bumper. ! ' But it held fast and 19 feet snapped off. The loose end is tied to a hydrant' pipe. Originally, it was 50 feet long. ucuigc uds ueen uoinx a 101 on &KATTLK l A vm.no r. thinking and has come up with the , lander stood on an Alki Beach theory that maybe his house, which ; bulkhead and was trying to show WBI hill If in 1QC1 1 ! im filxf.1. k r J . - Hells Canyon Review Asked ByNeuberger WASHINGTON OR Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore) supported and Rep. Utt (R-Calif) opposed, in a tele vised debate Sunday, the construc tion of a federal high dam in Hells Canyon on the Snake ' River be tween Idaho and Oregon. At the same time Sen. Neuber ger (D-Ore) urged in a statement that President Eisenhower include in his "second look" at th Dixon Yates contract a "good long sec ond look" at his administration's opposition to the Hells Canyon project. ' iv Appearing on DuMont's "Both Sides of The Aisle" program mod erated by Louise Gore, Mrs. Green ipoke on behalf of the federal proj ect and her .bill to authorize it She said that as a federal under aking it would carry on federal policy of the past 20 years in multi purpose development of streams. She said it would provide needed "electrio power, flood control, navi gation and recreation. 'Ready, Able' Utt said the Idaho Power Co. is : "ready, willing and able" to un jdertake the power development of the Snake River with a series of low level dams and that where private enterprise could undertake such development he was for giv ing them' authority. He pointed out that the contro versy over public or private de velopment of the Snake had been going on for many years and that even were the federal project au thorize it would be at least 18 years before appropriations and construction would yield the power sought. He said Idaho Power could pro vide about as much energy as the federal project within 30 months. Mrs. Green contested Utt's state ment on the! lack of availability of money for the federal dam, cit ing the large sums appropriated for foreign aid and arguing they could be spent at home just as well. Utt agreed, paying he had voted against foreign aid bills. He also pointed out that there are more than $900,000,000 in authorized fed eral projects in the Columbia River Basin area and he favored catching up on some of these be fore undertaking Hells Canyon as a federal project, especially when private capital could do it quicker. ' 'Favors Surrender' j Neuberger said in his statement that the President, through his sec-! retary of the interior, "is commit- ted to a policy which favors the surrender of this finest of all American hydroelectric sites to the 1 Idaho Power Company for piece-! meal development. "If Idaho Power's small Brown lee Dam is permitted to become the administration's substitute for multipurpose Hells Canyon dam, the nation will lose forever an amount of power potential which. at present federal wholesale rates, has a value of approximately 13 million dollars annually. "Over a 50-year period," he said, "this loss would represent more At The Theaters ELStNOKB -AIXT MISBKHAV1N'." with Horjr Calhoun. Piper Lauri. Jack Carson and Mamie VanDoren. "JUMP INTO HELL." with Jack Sernaa and Kurt Kasinar., v CAPITOL TALL MAN RmrSG. with Randolph Srott. Corothy Malone and Peggie Castle. . - ' "THE LOOTERS with Rory Calhoun and Julie Adami. ; , grand' . "-STRANGE LADY IN TOWN." with GreerjGaraoa and Dana An. drews. fi - "THE ETERNAL SEA." with Sterling Hayden, Alexia Smith and Dean Jagger. - c ' . ' NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN "UNDERWATER.- with jane' SuMeli and Gilbert Roland. - "WHITE FEATHER." with Rob ert Wagner, John Lund and Deb ra Paget. , BOLLYWOOD "THE COUNTRY GIRL," with Blng Crosby. Grace KeUy and William Holden. "RETURN f ROM THE SEA." with Jan Sterling and Robert Ar thur. - --..--. Firecracker in Kerosene Can Kills Youngster LONG BEACH. Wash. UP) A 6-year-old boy tossed a lighted fire cracker into a 5-gallon can of kero sene late Sunday. The resulting explosion resulted in his death a. few hours later. . , The boy was Rodney BoswelL the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hawkins. They were visiting the boy's grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burchtorf. when the boy went into the Burchtorf garage -with his firecrackers. The boy was rushed by am bulance to the Ocean Beach Hos pital at Ilwaco, where he died around 9 p. m. Physicians said he had suffered third degree burns over 85 per cent of his body. Kiddie Rides Open Today 2:00 P.M. Weekdays :30 2234 Fairgrounds Rd A passenger in the Bates auto, Miss Jo Tice, St Helens, was treated at the scene for minor in juries by Willamette Ambulance men. than one and one-half times the cost of the dam." " Neuberger said the administra tion's position represents "costly; wastage of our natural resources Vigorous Cast Costs Tooth SALEM WOMAN HURT ST. PAUL (Special) Mrs. Cecil Moellerd was thrown off her horse during the colorful drill of the Sa lem Saddle Club at Sunday after noon's performance of the St Paul Rodeo. She was treated on the grounds by the rodeo physician for injuries that did not prove serious. 'Ole Miss9 After Last Landing i 4- ai r - I V' . V r - - - I "IT I j Nehru, Tito Take Tour BELGRADE, Yugoslavia t -President Tito and Prime Minister Nehru of India traveled several hundred miles by train and auto across Yugoslavia Sunday to the ancient town of Dubrovnik on the Adriatic Coast. - They inspected a steel plant, a new power station and scenes of action by Tito s partisans in World War FI. Large crowds greeted them along their route. First Amvet Leader Dies was built in 1951. lies above a sub terranean fault. "It's sandy down below there," he says. "And it's possible . that it's a kind of quicksand which is exerting the pulling effect on the hose." Di Peso's wife. Rutin said she first tried to free the hose by turn ing on the water. In similar cases, hydraulic engineers have said this could create sufficient suction in sandj soil to pull the hose down. Some substantiation for the fault theory appeared in the report of a neighbor, Mrs. Robert Breeze. She said she let water run for an hour into a coDher hole in her backyard and later found 15 feet of hose had disappeared. When ef- lons laiied to extricate the hose, it way cut off and the hole filled up. , . i The Di Pesos were rather blearv- eyed. Sunday. It seems an unidenti fied woman kept periodic check every time it moved, she would awaken everyone within earshot by screaming: "It moved! It moved!" I remember hearing ; her at 2 a.m. and again at 4 a.m.." Mrs. di Peso? said, yawning. "There were people here all night. Once I looked out and saw 14 couples, dressed in evening clothes, stand ing on our lawn." LOS ANGELES tfi Atty. Jack W. Hardy. 52, the first national commander of the American Veter ans of World War II (Am vets) died Sunday apparently of a heart attack. Hardy, a Republican, was an un successful candidate for Congress in 1950. losing to former Rep. Sam iW. Yorty in the California 14th District race. , . mends how to make a deep sea fishing cast. He swung head and . shoulders into a vigorous arc. Then, mum bling, he clapped one hand to his mouth and with the other pointed to a small white object sailing into the water. He lisped with depth peration: "My peg tooth!" The 20-year-old Portland, Ore gon man, Denis Curry,, and twe other Portlanders. Charles Riegler and Tom Farrell, later watcher with closed-mouth interest as r skin diver, Arlen Prauno, prowlec the 10-feet-deep waters for the missing tooth. In 10 minutes he found it. Curry, displayed a wide, gap -toothed grin as he headed back for his dentist in Portland. Dine With Us on JULY 4th Prime Rib Roast of Beef Sour Cream Cole Slaw Mashed Potatoes and Brown Gravy - Hot Rolls and Butter $1.10 Roast Oregon Turkey Dressing - Cranberry Sauce Sour Cream Cole Slaw Whipped Potatoes and Giblet Gravy -Hot Rolls and Butter Now! Open Hear Mary Barton Play th Mighty Wurlitxar Organ 6:30 to 7:00 Tonight 2NI HIT HOT FROM RECENT HEADLINES! r.- IVa&aaMJI' -JACK HNAS STRIKE TO END LONDON UFi Britain's crip pling six-week dock strike col lapsed Sunday night. Workers in the big Merseyside and Hull ports voted to return to work on Monday. avaa ft 95e 4 North's M In the Capitol A? .: Shopping Center Air ffL, NOW PLAYING - 233 atvW.J WAIONS Wmmnmr9tmf tMa men mnvm CO-HIT . fjaaan !3 jutil aaawt ' POPULATION GROWS WASHINGTON UP The Census Bureau estimated Sunday night the nation's total population has grown to approximately 162.250.000 per sons. , WASHINGTON: D.C Fred Key is greeted ' ight, after landing at Wash- in eton's National Airport la bis famed Coras Robta pitu... las," which will take its place with other famed flying machines la the Smithsonian InstitntioL. Tred was the pilot and AI co pilot when th monoplane flew continuously for more this 27 days to set I sew endurance record to 1935. AP WlrephoU.) 1 Woodburn Drive-in MON. TUES. in technicolor THE NAKED JUNGLE" pins "MA and PA KETTLE ON VACATION m i rArtTft Si Si ana ' at i 1UMM L in SOt Phone 4-4713 20 MATINEE TODAY!, Cont 1:45 BING CROSBY GRACE KELLY WILLIAM HOLDEN fci A RXtBCRCJEATON Nte. THE 1 COUNTRY GIRL ACTION CO-HIT -"RETURN FROM THE SEA" Jan Sterling. Robert Arthur Celebrate a Safe and Sane 4th By Eating 'Til You Explode! At nesi4 40SUTEJ SAIMM AHYouCanEat Monday 1 2 to 8 p.m. Buffet Guest Check For bad 99C For Mem 99C For Sis ... 44t (Undtr 10) For Junior (Under 10) Total for Family of 4 2 86 99 Salads galore to help yourself to Choico of Pot Roast of Beef and Chicken Pot Pi Coffao by rht Siltx-full Choico of Dossort HriH.IOI OPEN 6:45 P.M. Straiige Lixnvrpj tlSl Town WNtCotOW mtmm wot wctmt - PLUS ETnnnm. Sua rEusursa-iiSco-Buurai HKKSJCnCTUK Gate Open 7:15 Show at Dusk Two Technicolor Hits Jane Russell "UNDER WATER" - 2nd Technicolor Hit ROBERT WAGNER JOHN LUND v . f! "White Feather"!