-e r l a- . M .,' ! I I t ! I V a , . lit V i r 1 i ( M M - i . f 1 tp )LD LiWuLJU LiUUOJ LubuuU Li uuuuu uuuuuuo uuuuu uuu uuuuuu uuuu n h P The Wcallicr FORECAST (from V S thfr fcsrtau. McNarv fild. Salmi: Inrrnsinf clmidinrsa tnriay with Tain lata thii afternoon and continti Inf tnntiM: huh today 44-4(1. low to right JS-DS; roniidrrdhlc cloudlnru and fhowery Sunday. Tmpratur at KOI m. tndav wis 34 SALEM PRECIPITATION Sine Start of Waathar Yer Spt 1 rhu Yar Lit Vfir Normal 41 46 19 7 J7.32 "r.- fti rN -o Nr- -fiAsV , V M I II Mil II II X J I I I i I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Vvy . POUNDnD 1651 105th Year JSECTIONS-UPAGES The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, February II, 1954 price s No. 321 (Eisenhower Vetoes Gas Measure, Hits Lobbyists7 Tactics By WILMOT HERCHER 'w WASHINGTON The natural gas bill died suddenly Friday killed by a wad of $100 bills and a presidential veto. With a slap at the "arrogance"' and "highly questionable activi ties" of some supporters of the legislation, President Eisenhower re fused to sign it into law. , He said he agreed with the basic objectives of the bill, which would exempt natural gas producers from direct federal regulation, but he said that to put his signature on it now would "risk creating doubt among the American people concerning the integrity of govern mental processes." The President left no doubt that he was referring to the $2,500 cam- nn;MH MA.;VtiitinM ion kill 1m I pcugl! imili luuuuii u . nn miia ill an envelope offered to Sen. Case K-aui a lew weens Deiore me Senate voted on the controversial legislation. CRT ggptHB Vr-rv-rr i ; r-vr-H llAULLUJj INW Court House Christened With Bootlegged Gin DENTON. Tri. lTV-A half-pint bottle of Kin, part nf the evid ence, was handed ' to Denton County Alty. Robert H. Caldwell Jr.. ai he tried a hontlegging case this week' la a new court 'room at the County Courthouse. The bottle slipped and broke aa the concrete floor. "I know this U the first time we've ased this room,'' com mented County Jadge Jack Gray, "but I never thought we would christen It with a bottle of gin." Refused Donation Hawaii, is having winter too its ; winter". Low this week was 63 de-l grees, artd people are noting the in a subsequent investigation a spe coolness. Water is warmer, about 1 cial Senate committee traced the Williams May Enter Race Europe Again Hit By Snow Storms Heap New Misery on Are.a; Toll 616 For Congress I tin onrl cnnthoacr Vn rt onrl ant Bruce Williams, prominent 6 '.. " . I LONDON ( Fresh snow storms Friday night heaped new misery on Europe, ice-locked in a relentless 3-week cold wave which already has claimed 616 lives. Damage to crops ran into hun dreds of millions of dollars. Fuel shortages grew. Yugoslav army artillery shelled ioe barriers massed on the Morava River in Eastern Serbia in an effort to ease flooding. Snow fell over London East Ang Case refused the donation, and ""J who has been weatherman forecast "very much colder weather. 74 degrees. Tonight s paper says the trade winds are back on course to it will warm up. While plane travel has been growing fast the island still is geared to the arrival of the Matson liner Lurline. It is due tomorrow morning. Hotels, taxicabs, tour managers all arrange their plans to care for the crop of "malihini" (newcomers). Attended Rotary club today at money to oil and gas interests fa voring passage of the bill. The committee is now trying to decide whether or not the contribution was offered in an attempt to influence Case's vote. But at any rate it was clear that the $2,500 proffered by ardent sup porters of the bill had boomer anged and dealt a death blow to the measure, in its present form at activo in i-ivic anrl athletic affairs in Salem for several years, said! Records showed Italy's 16-day Friday niqht he is "seriously con- cold wave was the worst since Isidering" entering the Republi-j l. The u. h. embassy announced can race for Congress, and would a aoo.uoo American Kea cross do reveal his decision' one way or nation to help Italian cold victims. Smoking Wreckage of Fatal Plane Crash ! mt With Thump Eisenhower's veto message wns least. Nobody had any belief that the Queen's Surf hotel over a j Congress would override the veto. hundred visiting Rotanans. They have the welcome ready with a grass skirted Hawaiian girl to drape a lei over your neck. i drafted at his vacation headqu.ir Thouch a territory they take ters near Thomasville, Ga., and national politics seriously over j delivered to the House, where the i he would run for governor. Salem here. Secretary of Labor Jim Mil-i legislation originated last year. It' Attorney Jason Lee is a Dcmo- chell is here tonieht to address a! hit Congress with a thamp. cratic candidate lor the ouice the other in a few days. Williams, who managed the late Gov. Paul L. Patterson's cam paign in 1954, said he bad been conferring with party officials throughout the district the past few days and indicated favorable reaction to the possibility of seek ing the 1st District nomination. If Williams enters the campaign The U. S. Air Force wound up its airlift from Germany across the Alps to Italy after delivering more than 700,000 pounds of sup plies for Italian storm Victims. Pope Pius XII gave a special bless ing to Americans who worked on the airlift. Light snow fell over most he will oppose William E. Healy, rrnc hov recently resigned assistant ,ec. ered at the freezing point. retary of state who switched from the secretary of state race after Rep. Walter Norblad announced GOP $100 a plate dinner. His com ments about Jack Hall, local I.u. W.U. boss (that's the Harry Brid ges union) stirred up a lot of at tention here. Hall is one of the Hawaiians in the Longshore union convicted of Communist conspir acy. The case is on appeal but Hall ii heading the union in its negotiations on sugar and pine apple work. The union has voted authority to call a strike in sugar, which would hurt the islands' eco nomy. Hall' offered to drop out after Mitchell's blast but it is doubtful if the unions will drop him. ' Got away from Waikiki beach by auto today, around famed Diamond Head and up Nuuanu canyon to Pali the sheer cliff where defenders of Oahu jumped to their death when King Kameha meha came over from the Big Island, Hawaii, to extend his con quest. Everywhere lush tropical vegetation abounds. Couple Killed In Crash Near Klamath Falls KLAMATH FALLS UB A coti pie was killed Friday and two stu dents were Injured in a two-car collision 20 miles south of here. Dead were: Leslie Cook, 68, P.O. Box 994 Quinc, Wash., and his wife, Norma. . Injured were Ron Harter, 22. the driver of the second car. and John Lee Gregory, about 16, Healds burg, Calif. They are students here. Harter's address is 15 N. Adams St., Eugene. The accident haJpneed a few hundred yards south of the Ore-con-California border. The Cali fornia Highway Patrol said the youths' car, traveling south, ap parently skidded on Icy pavement into the path of the Cook vehicle, headed north. Harter received head and knee Injuries. Gregory suffered shock, facial cuts and bruises. Senators who fought the bill, on the ground that it would add mil lions of dollars to consumer's gas bills, made no attempt to conceal their elation. "I'm dancing a jig," crowed Sen. Wiley (R-Wis). Gloom prevailed on the other side, which had argued the bill would benefit consumers by en couraging exploration for gas. "I believe I would not be dis charging my own duty were I to approve this legislation before the activities in question have been fully investigated by the Congress and the Department of Justice," the President wrote. At the same time, Eisenhower said legislation conforming to the basic objectives of the bill is needed. Ike Plays ? Holes of Golf THOMASVILLE, Ga. (Jf - Presi dent Eisenhower "a little fright ened" and a bit rusty played a round of golf Friday for the first time since his Sept. 24 heart at tack. He tallied an 11-over-par 47 for 9 holes. "Well, I have been looking for ward U) this," Eisenhower said, a smile on his face, as he stepped up to the first tee at the rolling Glen Arven Country Club course. A light, misty rain fell the full 90 minutes he was out. He was tense and quite obviously somewhat nervous, and he stopped short of really laying into his drives with full power of old. And at the end of the round he re marked solemnly: "It was awfully good to get out. But I'm a little frightened not Williams, who is 37, is a gradu ate of Salem schools and Willa mette University, winning a law degree in 1948 after service in World War II. He has practiced law in Salem since 1950. Detroit Reels, But Icy Grip On Salem Ends Rising temperatures Friday broke winter's icy grip on most of the Salem area, but Detroit noted new snow. Weathermen said the mercury will continue on the warmer side, with rain ex pected today and Sunday. Moderating temperatures de livered a knockout punch early v ' - -" ; l ' w j dP i ' f - t ' . , . rl r V ;'' r i f -. t : ..... ; Tk.' ! :fC;-j wl - 4 - t - i T V " I -4 OAKLAND, Calif .General view ef the broken rear section f the four-engine Marine plane that of I rrKil in mrreil hill ranntrv to mile northwest af hera Frida. All W Marin naiuenfert and the crew f five died in the disaster. (AP Wlrephoto.) Freight Car Flips With Auto Cargo Some 200 feet of track on the Southern Pacific mainline were damaged Friday evening when a moving boxcar loaded with new automobiles overturned near Pringle station in South Salem. Extent .of damage to a shipment of Fords in the sealed car was not immediately determined. Yardmaster Homer Robinett, who estimated track damage at about $1,000, said the accident fortunately occurred between two siding switches. Ensuing rail traf fic kept on schedule as it was shunted to the sidings. The boxcar, part of a slow moving northbound freight train, flipped over on the west shoulder Friday morning to a driving snow of the tracks about 7:30 p m. ap storm that came in on a south parently as a result of a broken wind. Th tnrm nuirklw derjosit-: brake beam. In addition, to dam Lion Strolls Around Block, Then Gives Up ed a thin layer of white, which vanished as the mercury climbed. Last remnants of snow from an earlier storm also disappeared from the area Friday. The storm of early Friday morning struck more heavily in mountain sectors. Electric and telephone service was interrupted and schools stayed closed Friday at Detroit as heavy snow con tinued all day. By nightfall, the snow was nearly two feet deep, about 13 inches of it bclng new. Snow plows Kept the Santiam highway open, but some motorists were stuck on side roads. aging rails and tics, it tore up a switch on a spur line of the Mc Donald Candy Co. Little damage apparently was done to the car itself. . When the big car flipped, it snapped couplings of adjoining cars but an automatic brake de vice halted the entire train. An SP wrecking crew reached the scene late Friday night to speed track repairs and right the top pled boxcar. LADY CHURCHILL SAILS LONDON I Lady Churchill sailed Friday night for a holiday in Ceylon, leaving her husband in snowbound London. She re- VISAS ABOLISHED , KARACHI UH Pakistan and ! cently has been ill. Sir Winston Greece have agreed to abolish ' will return soon to his inter- only of the strokes, but also I'm a i visas for travel between the two.rupted holiday on the French little frightened of myself." I countries. I Riviera. Diphtheria Germs Found in 3 State Blind School Girls " Three Blind School pupils were placed in isolation Friday after results of throat cultures indicated they had diphtheria germs. "They are the healthiest kids in the school, too," said Walter Dry, superintendent of the school where two deaths have already occurred from the disease. Positive results from the cultures on the three girls' from the school do not indicate they have the dis ease, health officials sakL only that germs were present. All three re portedly had close contact with Mrs. Violet Fry, a housemother at the school, who died of diphtheria Monday. The second death was 7-year-old Christine Artiano, a pupil at the Blind School, but who resided with her parents at 715 S. 12th St. Supplies Short Immunizations, Schick tests and cultures, accelerated by the out break, threatened to exhaust avail able supplies, but additional ship ments were on the way. Dr. Wil lard Stone, Marion County health officer said Friday. The health office, operating on an assembly line basis to handle the rush reported they had given a total of over 600 boosters, tests or cultures during the day Friday. The office, normally closed on Sat urday, will remain open this morn ing because of the emergency. Much Encouraged Dry said "We are much encour aged that there have been no new cases to this time" as the average incubation period for the disease was passed. Normal incubation for the disease is from 2 to 7 days. Last contact at the Blind School with either af the known cases was five days ago. . No new cases had been reported elsewhere in the state, according to State Board of Health in Port land. Four known cases have been reported, two of them the Salem deaths. A possible fifth case in volves a 2V4 year old Grand Ronde child reported to have symptoms of the disease. M&M Firm Sale Being Negotiated PORTLAND Wl Several major stockholders In the big M It M Wood Working Company are nego tiating for sale of their shares to the Simpson Timber Co., Clay Brown, M A M president, said Friday: He confirmed reports that have been widespread In lumber indus try circles for weeks. Brown announced that dickering MEMPHIS (-A lion escaped at for sale of M It M. a family-con- a circus performance in the City , trolled corporation with assets of Auditorium Friday night, strolled 1 $45,000,000, is in a preliminary out the front door, circled the i tace. He said necotiations mieht block and was captured as it re- take 40 days. entered the building An auditorium employe, Ruben Rock, said there was no panic $35 Per Share Simpson, he said, had offered among the capacity audience of , $35 a share on the basis of equal about 4,500 at the Hammon-Morton ( treatment to all stockholders, but Circus. - no lecal commitment has been Rock said the lion somehow got I made to buy or sell. The price i Naval Hospital, gathered at De uui i a nig mac uuiuik a wumwas aimosi aoiiDie me dook vaiue coto to work through the brush to No Life Reported At Scene Rescue Party Finds Disaster In Box Canyon OAKLWD. Calif. (F) A I ! Marine Corps plane carrying m Marines crashed and burn- etl in the southern Alameda County hills Friday, only nine minutes from its destination at Alameda Naval Air Station. A ground party, including sev eral Navy doctors from Oak Knoll Naval Hospital, reached the scent north of Niles Canyon at 5 25 p.m. There we$ no survivors. Because of the rugged terrain and dense brush it may be sevjnl days before road can be bull dozed into the area to remove tht bodies, members of the party said. At El Torn Marine Base. spokesman said the pilot was Maj. Alexander Watson, 33, whose wid ow, Elizabeth, lives at Santa Ana, adjoining the base. They had one child, Susan, S. No other names were released. Wreckage Fauad The wreckage was still burning when discovered by Russ Reed, Oakland Tribune photographer. and his pilot. It lay on a 45 degree slope In a tight box canyon near Niles, 21 miles southeast of Oakland. Thert was no sign of life. Reed and his pilot flew three times into the canyon alongside the flaming, twisted wreckage. The four-engine plane was car rying 33 Marines and S Marin crewmen from El Toro Marina Base in Southern California to tht Alameda Naval Air Station on Saa Francisco Bay. From Camp Pendleton The public information officer at Camp Pendleton said 32 of tha plane's passengers were from Camp Pendleton and one from El Toro, as were the five crew mem bers. The passengers all were be ing transferred to new stations. He said that all names would be withheld pending notification of the next of kin, and added that might be "some job." inasmuch as most of those being transferred had their personnel records with , them and reports of the crash in dicated the records probably all were destroyed. The Marine plane was an RD.1, the Navy equivalent of $ DC. Its passengers were all dressed in dungaree!. ' Near Farmer Crash The site of the crash is almost identical with that of Northern Cal ifornia's worst airplane disaster. On Aug. 24. 1951. a United Air Lines DC6B crashed into the hill near Niles with a loss of 50 lives. The Marine plane was last re ported at 1:42 when the pilot re ported to the Oakland Municipal Airport that he was starting his approach to the Alameda Navel Air Station, 21 miles away. The plane crashed and burned 1,300 feet up a wooded peak. Rescue teams, with doctors and ambulances from the Oakland animal performance, walked outlnf M ft M's shares the main door of the auditorium. nrn .ait (h. .nMlinr,m,nl ri MWW II IUIU BIIH"IIH IIIVIH went around the block, came back ; "may seem premature but has in and was captured by its trainer. :beeB forced by currfllt KpH:l)ation Sioinach-Aclies Waylay 700 at Montana College MISSOULA. Mont. (-School of ficials are trying to find the rea son for 700 stomach-aches among the Montana University student body Friday night. . Dr. Harold A, Braun, director of the student health service, said the condition may have resulted from a form of food poisoning which produced abdominal pains and di arrhea. He said a few itudentj were ad mitted to the university infirmary, but none was in serious condition. Irish Setter Adopts Four Cub Lions .... , i:.v.:v,::v Heavy Hauls Still Banned On Polk Roads based on irresponsible rumors He said M ft M stockholders involved In the negotiations asked the scene. Marines, sheriff's depu ties and a coast guard helicopter joined in rescue work. The wreck was at least a mil and a half from the nearest road. him to issue the statement as ad- SySll I If If I Slllt visor to other stockholders and VVUUOllll the company's 2.060 employes. He saw "no reason to believe that the contemplated' sale would disrupt the M ft M organization," he said. Nothing ta Add At Seattle, Stephen J. Hall, di rector of industrial relations for Simpson, confirmed Brown's an nouncement. He said he had nolh- Filed Against Drew Pearson WASHINGTON I - A $250,000 libel suit was filed Friday by Lew Wallace, Portland, against colum nist Drew Pearson. Wallace, a former Oregon Demo cratic national committee man, state senator and nominee for gov- 1SI ! tit i T i "n. V ' X I SUtrRiaa Ncwi Srrvict DALLAS, Ore. Polk County roads will remain closed to heavy hauling for an indefinite period, it was announced Friday by the Polk Tniintv Pnnrt County Judge Cal M. Barnhart i in to 8dd 9 u- said that the court had hoped to' M ft M, with headquarters here,' lift i ho han In Hpavv InaHs Fph is one of the nation's bin eest nrn- tn kni fminH n nnnrariirai h,i rfnrer nf Dnnplfli fir nlvwnnri. It ernor, entered the complaint in to current weather conditions. also manufactures doors and proc- U.S. district court. It alleged that Barnhart declared that the roads esses Northern California Redwood Pearson "falsely and wrongfully would be open to logging trucks lumber. published and broadcast" that and other heavy haulers as soon1 Simpson, with headquarters at Wallace had urged President Eis as possible. Anyone wishing to haul Seattle, has lumber and logging enhower to "exert pressure' on must clear through the county interests in Washington, Oregon Interior Secretary McKay, court, he added. and Northern California. i The suit said Tearson wnla i ; ! that Wallace sent a letter to the President In urge McKay to award mining patents to the McDonald family, owners of Al Sarena Mines,' Inc. This, said Wallace, was meint to convey the impression he wis , ' . .. guilty of conduct "unbecoming a Rjr LILLIE L. MADSEN 1 the situation was 'still fluid . No wn0 h)1!l aj(,d p,lbic of(ll.e Farm Editar, The Statesman I price is set here as this is a to- m tne past." In anite nf amm confusion this operative. Plans indicated at the ,.' week in the vegetable processing annual meeting was lor a alight . R River National Fnrt industry, one Salem packing plant acreage reduction this year and VJXd There ha been Joseph Stalin Denounced by Russ Regime MOSCOW Of The Soviet Un ion's entire propaganda apparatus Saturday denounced the political and economic work of the late Premier Joseph Stalin. For the first time, the denuncia tion called Stalin by name. The dictator died March $, 19:3. The unprecedented barrage acainst hitherto venerated actions of Stalin appeared in the 'text of came out Friday with a consider-more action on the matter-has Democratic charges that Al Sar-na a apeech made by First Deputy , abe increase in price offered in been taken, fiddmen said Friday ha$ done M mMng M fu premier a. i. aimoyan ai me jn ; iean contracts over a year ago.! ;-uuiuh comj uiuiiii , PsiimaieH . , .i c..i- ,!:.. r- . . ' , .. I.Vic ,, in .nn s. n IMHUdiru Salem Packing Firir. Hikes 1956 Bean Contract Prices1 Congress of the Soviet Union Com munist party. It was printed in all Moscow newspapers and broad cast widely Saturday. swan . vi ! nvi.i uvi a j vui i sn PsiinidiPO uuu uw This is the first 1950 price indi-1 tg per cent : cut ,n acreage as from thelan(,Si $100,000 worth of cation received here. Wnoi. However, inaicanons are California Packing Corp. officials now mat not so mucn oi a cut STATE OF SIEGE ENDS - SANTIAGO, Chile I - The gov- rnmAnt nnnnnnravl FrlHav it will lift the state of siege imposed last1 Pce. Grade No. 2 is also bringing month (by the end of March. announced Friday morning Jhat their plant is signing contracts with bean growers in the Willamette Valley at $17$ a ton for Grade No. 1. This Is $10 above last year's The Weather PEORIA, 111 Contentedly mothering four male Ilea tubs at Glee Oak Park to here I "Lady," I ( . . Ll.L I f A . -. . . - J L . a . lilt-. Tk. A..kaf H-lll-.l tnree-vear tia lrisn aeiier wmtn wnij a rw uji i wtmtu , mm. u iuu, .i... u,l. k.. klrib tm uwnl litlr af rnhi hut kit refuted la nunc aav mt them. iChlcifo muni - I New York (AT Wire pnoio;. Salrm Portland - Baker ..... Mertford , North Bnd RoMburi ... San Francluro ..... Loa AnftlM Mi. Mln. Pfrrlp 4t .l 4i n n U I .14 S7 .35 44 M .M 3 ' ,M 12 3S M M 3ft l U 1 .11 may.be made. Beans have been moving very well this year, with reports at the Northwest Canners meeting in Portland a month ago, indicating that all No. I s were Today's Statesman Wlllam.ua Rlvar 1.1 teb Church News sold out, that No. 2's were moving. Classified I. $10 more a ton. or $150 this year, wen , ana mat me larger oeans The company was offering con- e also moving, out more tracU for $9S for No. J, only a l"Iy- t J u $2.50 raise over iU 195$ price. anrT, Rumor had it out that D iles $f5 for No. 4-or a $S raise. .had made pluns to add corn to, rn iformprlv it's pack this year, but officials Paulus Bros.t officials said, while, "aid Friday this wld probably, their (ieldmen had been making; be done in 1937 Plans call for a bean contracts with growers, they;mall increase here, In vegetable were open contracis wim me . ! going" price to be written in. Blue Lake fieldmen reported that most of their acreage sign ups for Other packers said Friday that ther would hold their corn pack l "about normal", increasing it only 1954 had been completed although ill additional orders came in. Comics ....... Crossword ......... Editorial. Home Panorama Markets Obituaries ........ Sat. TV Sun. TV ... Sports Star Gazer Valley Wlrephoto Page II Sec. Page I. ..6, 7 -.11.. 3 ...II S ...I 4 !, w ...II. 5 ...II ..... S ...II 4 n.. s ll.u-.l,2 3