bolon 1 hreatens sJbt. lioss With CoritemDt of ' . . , X Congress By WILMOT HERCHER WASHINGTON UP The head ef the Securities .Exchange Com mission wes threatened with pos sible prosecution for contempt of Congress Tuesday in connection ith the Dixon-Yates row. ! The possibility was raised by Sen. Kefauver D Tenn, after SEC Chairman J. Sinclair Arm strong refused to testify whether his agency was free from White House "influence" in handling fi nancial aspects of the Dixon-Yates private power contract. But Armstrong stood firm on a declaration that he couldn't dis cuss the question because, of a gtsnding presidential order not to di.-c!ose confidential exchanges be tween executive departments of the government "I don't mean to imply by as serting privilege that there were ny such communications," Arm Strong told a Senate antimonopoly fubcommittee headed by Kefauver. Ordered Cancellation President Eisenhower ordered the controversial Dixon-Yates con tract cancelled Monday after i re ceiving assurances from the city of Memphis that it would build a generating plant to supply the lectricit" the federal government had ordered from the private in- . teresis. , ! r At the Senate hearing, ' Sen. O'Mahoney D Wyo) complained "an iron curtain is being erected 'between Congress and the SEC." Armstrong s refusal to answer questions, he asserted. Is "another instance of the gradual attempt cf the executive branch to extend powers over the whole government of the United States." For Three Hoars , Kefauver and other members of the subcommittee pounded at Arm strong for three hours in an at tempt to find out why an SEC hearing on Dixon-Yates financing was postponed at what Kefauver called a crftical stage in the case. Finally Kefauver told the SEC chairman: "Under penalty of possible con tempt of the senate, I order and direct you to answer these ques tions." "With great respect," Armstrong Appeal Fund Okehed For Military Construction Three Judges Deny Of Sheppard CLEVELAND Ufi Three Judges Tuesday denied an appeal by Dr. Samuel F. Sheppard for a new trial. They held the 31-year-old osteopam s conviction tor me mur der of his pregnant wife ended "a fair tria'" and that "there was sufficient evidence to support" the Jury verdict. i - The defeat dees not mean . an end to -.Treppard's battle to upset his conviction last Dec. 21 iof sec-! end degree murder in the killing ef his wife Marilyn.. 31, at their lakefront home early on July 4, 1954. - . ; The appellate court still has to rule on another new trial motion based on what the defense claims in newly-discovered evidence.- But In rejecting a new trial Tuesday en contentions of error,, the ap pellate judges left little reason for Sheppard to hope they would grant him a new trial later this month when they make their second rul ing, r Defense attorney Fted W. Gar mone said an appeal would be earned to the Ohio Supreme Court Ohioan Chosen As Defense Aide ,? i ' ' WASHINGTON (UP) President Eisenhower Tuesday Dominated Reuben Buck Robertson Jr.. Ohio industrialist, to be deputy defense secretary, succeeding Robert B. Anderson. : : 'Anderson submitted bis resigna tion Monday, effective about Aug. 15. - Robertson, 47, is president of the Champion Paper and Fiber Co. in Hamilton, -Ohio. He is a Republican. AGREEMENT SIGNED VIENNA, Austria Ml Austria and the Soviet Union signed a reparations agreement in Moscow Tuesday. The pact calls on Austria to deliver to Russia ISO million dollars in goods within the next Six years. WASHINGTON UPt More than 43 million dollars for the Pacific ! Northwest was included in a $2, j 471,745,000 military construction bill approved Tuesday by the House Appropriations Committee. Washington would get $33,638, 000 for 13 projects, Oregon $4,030. 000 for three and Idaho $5,961,000 for one. Many of the projects were au thorized only Monday in the mili tary public works authorization bill. But the House committee denied funds for several authorized pro jects, including two million for planning work on a new drydock at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Wash. Sen. Magnuson ID Wash) said he hoped for Sen ate approval of the planning pro ject, with a chance to get it finally okayed if the bill should go to con ference. Northwest projects which the House committee approved are: Army Madigan Army Hospital, Wash., $333,000; Camp Hanford, Wash., $167,000; Ft Iwis, Wash., $14,- 940,000. Navy Bremerton, Wash, shipyard. $200,000; Tacoma, Wash, station, $3,024,000; Tongue Point Station, Astoria, Ore., $92,000; Whidbey Is land, Wash. Air Station, $1,958,000; Keyport, Wash., Torpedo Station, $376,000. Air Force Geiger Field, Wash., $1,716,000; Klamath Falls, Ore., Municipal Airport, $2,042,000; McChord, Wash, AFB, $2,959,008; Paine Wash., AFB, $1,978,000 and $85,000 in separate projects; Portland, Ore., International Airport. $1,806, 000; Fairchild. Wash.. AFB., $2,. 187.000: Mountain Home. Ida- AFB, $5,961,000; Larson Wash., AFB, $3,682,000. replied, "my position with regard to the questions you referred to remains the same." Armstrong, 39, is a former Chi cago lawyer who has been a mem ber of the SEC since 1953. A Re publican, he became chairman last April. Inquiry to Continue Despite cancellation of the Dixon- Yates contract Monday, Kefauver announced his inquiry would go on until the senators got "to the bot tom of this entire matter." Armstrong balked at testifying when asked whether the White House or "any other person in the executive branch" proposed post ponement of an SEC hearing on Dixon-Yates financial setup June 13. Armstrong was ordered to come before the subcommittee Wednes day for further questioning, bring ing with him all other members of the commission, its secretary, Orville Dubois, and the examiner in the Dixon-Yates bond case. James G. Ewell Hearing Delayer The SEC hearing was postponed June 13 and resumed June fB. Ewell told the senators he had act ed on orders of the commission. which had said it wished to con sider procedural matters. Kefauver said the postponement was made "without explanation" just when the House was about to vote on legislation to appropri ate 6V4 million dollars for a power line to connect the proposed Dixon- Yates plant with the TVA system. He asserted the hearing was held up until it was "too late to get . to the House of Representa tives testimony of Adolphe H. Wenzell, former vice president of the First Boston Corp.j which might have influenced the voting. In a vote June 16, the House defeated an effort to knock out the 64 million dollar item and to spend the money instead on start ing a new steam plant for TVA at Fulton, Tenn. Crop Surplus ; Laid to High Price Props DIAMOND. Mo. W) High price supports were blamed by Secre tary of Agriculture Benson Tues day for "unmanageable surpluses" of farm products and shrinking markets. The federal crop controls are lessening the freedom of millions of small fanners to think and act for themselves, Benson said at memorial services for George Washington Carver, noted Negro scientist-educator. "Because we have not faced the simple facts, of economic life," Benson said, "our farmers today find some of. their markets shrink ing and our prices depressed through huge and unmanageable surpluses that have been brought about by a program of high, rigid price supports. "They find their lands are blow ing or washing away because the same supports encouraged the production of crops that are wrong for their soil. They find that mil lions of smaller farmers are still poor, deriving little real assistance from the various government price support programs." Claiming the administration has won acceptance of a program of flexible price supports, 3enson said the Agriculture Department is working toward farm programs under which "people of today and tomorrow wfll not become de pendents of government subsidy and control.' Refugee Center Financed bv U. S. NUERNBERG, Germany tfl A new U. S.-financed model transit center for Iron Curtain refugees preparing to emigrate overseas has been opened in suburban Zirndorf. The center will house 350 refu gees at a time who are to attend language classes and receive vo cational training. Salk Vaccine Control Draws Idaho Blast Bill to Safeguard U. S. Resources . On Public Lands WASHINGTON UFi Congress Tuesday completed action on a bill aimed at preventing the exploita tion of timber and other surface resources on mininz claims in na tional forests or other public lands. The bill would limit uie use oi such resources to those actually needed for mining 'operations. It would prohibit the cutting of tim ber for sale and would bar the use of claims for any purpose other than mining.' The measure also would rule out the location of sand, stone, pum ice and pumicite claims tinder the mining law. BOISE. Idaho UB Acting State Health Director L.J. Peterson cri ticized the U.S. Public Health Service Tuesday for "ineffective controls" over manufacturing and testing of the Salk antipouo vac cine. He told the Boise Ki warns Club the Public Health Service was to blame for the release of what the State Health Department believes to be defective Salk serum in Ida ho. There have been 114 polio cases in Idaho this year, all but 11 hav ing occurred since the mass vacci nation program in April. Peterson has called off the program, saying i he believes the serum was the; cause of the outbreak. Peterson said the Cutter Labora tories of Berkeley, Calif., which manufactured the serum used in Idaho, could not be blamed be cause it was a victim of "ineffec tive controls" imposed by the Pub lic Health Service. He said the USPHS had declined to issue a report on the Cutter vaccine and that the U.S. Depart ment of Health, Education and Welfare had not properly publi cized instances of live virus which turned up in serum manufactured by other companies.: Gas Pipeline Due in Boise Next Summer BOISE (UP) Construction on the first natural gas pipeline through southern Idaho is "pro gressing nicely" and the fuel should be in the Boise area by next summer. That was the report Mondav of Frank Skaggs, field man for Fish Northwest Constructors. agents for the Pacific Northwest Pipleine Corporation. Pacific Northwest is bringing the natural gas from the San Juan Basin in Colorado and New Mex ico. Skaggs is in the area to obtain right-of-way for the line in Canyon Payette, Gem, Ada. Elmore and Twin Falls counties. Pacific Northwest has announced that it hopes to have its line into Idaho by this fall. Idaho Natural Gas Company holds the distribu tion franchise for southern Idaho but this award has been appealed Dy jntermountam Gas Company, Burglar Alarm Sounds; Wind Real Culprit f HAGERSVTLLE, Ont. UrV-There were some red faces in ,a bank here Tuesday." - The bank's alarm went off at 2 a.m. and police arrived to find the front door wide open. Police said the door was left un locked and was blown open by a heavy wind. . Burns Man Fined For Tax Evasion PORTLAND (fl Ray O. Apple gate of Burns, Ore., who pleaded guilty to a federal charge of income tax evasion In 1948 and 1949, was fined $1,000 Tuesday. Burns' attorney said that amended returns would be filed to show that he earned only from Long-Time Slate Lawyer Succumbs PORTLAND W Sjur Ness, 84, who had practiced law in Oregon since 1902 until his retirement two years ago, was buried here Tues day. ' ' $4,000 to $6,000 more than a is returns indicated. Trad and High TIRE STORE Phone 3-4201 ill lii m i 71 only X y. for 2nd the 6.70-15 Uodrwof WHEN YOU BUY 1st TIRE AT LOW NO TRADE-IN LIST PRICE OF 21.85' You get a 30 trade-in a How one when you buy a pwr of River side Deluxe, 1st quality materials, 1st En standards of eorotrvctto Deep, non-skid tread with a natter tread proftl that give better steering control, greater skid resistance, more miles of greater safety) ' Multi-row tread design gives extra traction. Quiet-running voriobi pitch design. 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