State Forecast OREGON Considerable cloudiness today, tonight and Wednesday; very light rain southwest portion Wed nesday; slightly warmer to day. Watch Parking Give the other fellow a chance. Do not take up his space by parking over the white lines. Volume LVI BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, ORE., TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1947 No. 92 THE BEND BULLETIN CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Bill Would Deny Wagner Act Rights To Unions Dominated By Communistic Leadership Industry-wide Bargaining Also Target of Proposal; Voluntary. Closed Shop Policies Would Be Agreeable; Changes Are Expected Washington, March 25 '!JJ.E The house labor committee staff has drafted a sweeping labor control bill which would deny Wagner act rights to communist-dominated unions, it was learned today. The tentative draft of the bill, called the "labor-management peace act of 1947," was prepared for committee discus sion under the direction of Chairman Fred A. Hartley, Jr., K N. J. It would: . Veto Invoked By Russians; Greece Target Lake Success, N. Y.. March 25 illi Russia used the United Na tions veto power to kill a security council action aimed at Albania today, then attacked the Greek government for the first time since President Truman proposed United States aid to Greece and Turkey. Andrei Gromyko, the soviet delegate) invoked the veto power to nullify a security council reso lution finding Albania guilty of knowing about mines which dam aged two British destroyer and killed 44 seamen in the Corfu channel last October 22. Complaint Voiced In his subsequent attack on the Greek government, Gromyko made no mention of the American program to aid Greece and Tur key and prevent the spread of communism in the eastern Medi terranean. . . ... ..... ... Gromyko complained that the Greek government failed to com ply with the secretary council regulations in its treatment of soviet delegates on Ihe UN Bal kans Investigating commission. Charge Made He referred to the Greek gov ernment's refusal to "guarantee the safety" of a soviet representa tive and some other commission members who remained behind In Greek guerilla territory recently to interview a Greek guerilla general. Gromyko changed the govern ment's action was an act against the authority of the security coun cil, which sent the commission to investigate trouble between Greece and Balkan neighbors Albania, Bulgaria and Yugo slavia. Salute To Bend Plans Outlined Plans for a "Salute to Bend" week, in which industrial oppor tunities In this area will be ad vertised on a local, statewide and national scale, were outlined this noon by George P. Griffiths, pro motion manager of the Oregon ian, at a joint luncheon meeting of the Lions and Kiwanis clubs at the Pilot Butte Inn. A feature of the week, May 5 to 10, will be a full page adver tisement on Bend in Newsweek magazine. The Oregonian will carry a full page article on Bend in its Sunday magazine section and this city will be featured on "Horizons of Tomorrow," a radio program originating over KGW and to be carried by KBND. New Migration Here Griffiths said the northwest Is now experiencing its third great migration and the current adver tising campaign is to throw the spotlight on several communities in Oregon doing outstanding jobs in promoting industrial develop ment. With Griffiths In Bend are Ted Bushman, of the MacWilkins, Cole and Weber advertising agen cy, and Miss Helen Alexiene, of the KGW staff. They will remain in Bend today and tomorrow lo gather information to be used in the advertising program. A main feature of the joint club program today was an ap pearance of the high school a cappella choir, directed by Don Pence. The choir presented four well-received numbers with Jeanne Moore, David Coyner and Maureen Lyons as soloists. Koll Call Report Made Del Hale, chairman of the Red Cross drive, reported that ,60 per cent of the county quota had been reached. The Easter egg hunt in Drake park on Easter Sunday will be the largest ever held, if (Continued on Page 5) 1. Kreak up industry wide bargaining by forbidding the certification of a single bar gaining agent for two or more competing employers. 2. Withhold Wagner act rights from unions striking for a closed shop. Voluntary clos ed shop agreements would still be permissible. 3. Permit the attorney general to apply to U. S. district courts for injunctions against strikes that imcc'i-il the nublic health and ! safety. I 4. Provide for 20 to 30 day cool ling off periods before strikes or lockouts can take place on a dis pute over an existing contract. The cooling off period is not pro vided In a dispute in which a new contract is under consideration. Pruning Expected The bill was prepared only as a basis for discussion and many of the controversial sections may not be approved by the full commit tee. No member is bound by its provisions until it and other pro posals have been voted upon. A major provision would for bid the national labor relations board to certify as a collective bargaining agent any union when one or more of its officers Is a member of the communist party or who by reason of active and consistent promotion or support of the policies, teachings and doc trines of the communist party can reasonably he regarded as belong ing to or affiliated wltn such par- Terms outlined The measure would place labor unions under the provisions of the Sherman anti-trust act. Ut would forbid federal courts to is- sue Injunctions under that law- in any dispute that arose out of "terms and conditions ot em ployment. Industrywide bargaining would be permitted for plants only 50 miles apart and with less than 100 employes each. In addition, local unions would be permitted to af filiate with a national organiza tion providing that the terms of their bargaining "are not subject directly or indirectly to common control or approval." Declaration Set Forth The act would set up a number of policy statements including a declaration: "The public shall have the right to freedom from strikes, lockouts and other forms of industrial strife growing out of matters that may be adjudicated, adjusted or settled under the provisions of this act, in the courts of law, or under the provisions of collec tive bargaining agreements." Train Derailed In Washington Portland, Ore., March 25 (IP) A Spokane, Portland and Seattle east bound passenger train ran into a rock slide 20 miles east, of Pasco, Wash., early this morning, blocking traffic on the line for four hours. v A company spokesman In Port land said the. train was not de railed and no one was Injured. The train returned to Pasco and was rerouted on the Northern Pacific lines while the slide was cleared, the spokesman said. Fire Razes Hospital For Mental Inmates; Body Discovered in Ruins Af Steilacoom Steilacoom, Wash., March 25 UP The body . of an unidentified male patient was raked from the ruins of a three-story brick build ing gutted by fire at Western State hospital here today. Dr. W. N. Keller, hospital di rector, said the body was found by firemen six hours after flames broke out in a clothes closet of a top-story room at 2 a. m. "The building lodged 232 "chronic and incurable patients, Including 86 bedridden cases," Dr. Keller said. An additional 125 were evacuated from adjoining wards as officials feared the flames would spread to the other ancient structures. "Four or five" patients escaped during the confusion of evacua tion, but two were apprehended soon afterwards by state patrol - iiiii, nit; iiM-biui uianucrcu. Yat a Manslaughter Charges To Face Actress Redlands, Calir., March 25 ill')--Actress Helen Walker today was ordered held for trial on a charge of manslaughter resulting from a traffic accident in which a hitch hiking soldier was killed. Another hitch-hiker in her car, Joseph Montaldo, Los Angeles, testified at the preliminary hear ing that he begged her to slow down just before her car hit a traffic island and rolled over six times. "I told her we were driving too fast," he said. Montaldo has filed a suit for $150,000 damages against the pretty blonde actress, seriously in jured herself in the New Year's day crash. She got out of bed only two weeks ago. Senate Opens Arguments On School Aid Bill Salem, Ore., March 25 UP The senate without debate or a vote of dissent today passed legislation amending the rural school district act, passed by the voters' last No vember, and opened argument on the bill to distribute the $16,000, 000 basic school support fund. The rural school district act amendments by the senate educa tion committee make the law operative starting January 1, 1948. The house had amended the t rvtaao.-P in rlnlal, tha art until January 1, 1D49, a move which q,, D, Dot(' uniehnm ri. scribeclias an attempt to "slowly chloroform the bill The measure now tgoes -to the house for approval of senate amendments and probably will have to be ironed out in a confer ence committee. Districts Excluded The measure excludes union high school districts containing first class districts and union high school districts with population of 1,000 children between four and 20, The bill as approved also would I change the act by placing a 75 cent base for each child figured on total daily membership as the amount to be levied in each rural school district. If a district finds it necessary to go over 75 cents, it must hold an election. If a dis trict does not need that much it can request the.county board for permission to levy only for its needs. Restaurants Told Competition Due Chicago, March 25 HPi Restau rant operators were told today that they must utilize all their re sources and skill to compete for dollar conscious customers, and that the days of tlie spending binge are over. Walter F. Clark, of Seattle, Wash., president oi the National Restaurant association, told the organization's convention here that "we are definitely in a buy er's market," and "the abnormal, liberal spending binge is but a memory." "On the basis of annual depre 1 elation, the building already had paid for itself, but it will take about ' $900,000 to replace the structure and equipment lost in the fire," the doctor said. Twelve fire trucks from Fort Lewis, McChord field, the south Tacoma naval depot and half a dozen rural communities re sponded to the call. One patient around the bars and jerked them loose with a truck. The patient climbed down the ladder to safety. "The responsibility is squarely on the shoulders of the state leg islative appropriations committee which turned down our request for $4,700,000 capital outlay to make necessary modernizations, including a new fire truck, water 1 tank and new buildings," Keller ) l.llt.1 guu. No New d Potsd an UNRRA Soup Major S This lad illustrates one of the problems in Greece, the nation Presi dent Truman declares the U. S. must help if she is to avoid internal collapse and likely Communist domination. The lad is hungry and without proper clothing, as s most soup as lunch, provided by UNRRA, lage of zarouhleika. Picture Dy Russell AchesonGets Support For Berth as Bend Basketball Coach; Played Under Stiner The teachers' committee of the Bend high school board will recommend at the next board . meeting the appointment of Hiisp11 Achpsnn nf Took Rnv ns-hiVh school hnskpthnll cnarh 7 V oT ', P, , l. to succeed Claude Cook, who duties early last month, it was announced today by James W. Bushong, Bend school superintendent. Av.i 1 ft . f : J 4.1, ! Auiitrauu, vciciewi ui iuui , . ' . . r,. . a graduate of Oregon State college and received high recom mendations from both Lon Stiner, head football coach, and A. T. (Slats) Gill, basket ball coach whose team this year won the Pacific coast con f erence title. He was a mem- ber of the varsity football squad for two years under Stiner -and had his basketball training under Gill. Acheson, whose recommenda tion by the committee will un doubtedly receive approval of the school board, was in the Medford school system from 1935 to 1942, when he entered the army. He was physical education instructor and coach in the junior high school there In 1935 and 1936 and was advanced to a senior high school position in 1936, serving as basketball coach and assistant football coach. Following his dis charge from the army last year he entered the Coos Bay school system and is currently coaching football and basketball and in structing in physical education there. He received his high school education at Hood River and Washington high school in Port land and then attended Pacific university for a year before o- (Continued on Page 5) He said that 27 of the 48 build ings composing the state's largest Institution were built 50 years ago or more. The building de stroyed in today's fire was built in 1900. "Don't talk to me about crowd ing in concentration camps," Dr. Keller stormed. "We have 2,831 ir, tun i.nnnt.ni . ' fWS.r'SRlH0 load of 560 patients. With the destruction of one building, we now have more than 800 patients above our normal complement." The doctor charged that the danger of fire in the antiquated structures had been pointed out was trapped on the third floor by rapidly-spreading flames. Bars on the windows blocked first efforts to rescue' him with an aerial lad der, but firemen wrapped a cable to the legislature repeatedly. For Greek Boy of the Green population. He gulps is served in his school in the vil Leo stoecKer, p-iiua pnotograpner. j n: t" i i-i resigned this portion of his i vcaia uo. aci vitc ill me ax iiij', 10 i .... .., ... ' ... Morning Check Of Cars Ordered Persons who park their cars all morning on downtown streets will have just one week to mend their ways, according to Chief of Police Ken C. Gulick, who said that morning checks of vehicles in the one-hour parking zone would be started on April 1. At the request of City Man ager C. G. Reiter, police were in structed to check parking condi tions on downtown streets last week in the morning hours. At 8 a. m. it was found that 50 per cent of the parking spaces were occupied, at 9 a. m. 90 per cent of the spaces were lull and at 11) a. m. nearly 100 per cent of the available parking spaces were used. Traffic tickets will be given for one hour parking violations on and after April 1, according to Gulick, and regular fines will be levied. Chabot Receives 2-Year Sentence Charles F. Chabot, 37, pleaded guilty yesterday in circuit court to a charge of larceny by embez zlement and was sentenced by Judge R. S. Hamilton to three years in the state penitentiary. Chabot was returned Saturday from Colfax, Wash., where he served a six-months jail sentence on a similar conviction. ' Chabot admitted taking $285 from W. E. Piland, by whom he had been employed as a meatcut- ter. The theft occurred In Octo uer, xwio, wnen niuna was oui ?. From Bend he went ber, 1945, when Piland was out to Colfax, then to Chicago, where he was arrested and returned to face the Washington charge. CHICO MARX ILL Las Vegas, Nev., March 25 HPi Comedian Chico Marx, one of the three famous Marx brothers. suffered a slight heart attack and propriate for institutions infllter cancelled an engagement at the ed with communists because Nevada Biltmore hotel here, It "they are going to undermine us was announced today. I if they can." am Pacts Published; carets' Are Turks Pledged To Enter War, Papers Reveal Washington, March 25 IP The text of the Tehran protocol,1 signed December 1, 1943, by the late President Roosevelt, Premier ! Joseph Stalin and Churchill, 1 shows that: 1. Turkey was to have entered the war on the side of the allies and Russia was pledged to fight Bulgaria now one of the soviet satellites if that nation attacked Turkey. Turkey declared war on Germany and Japan effective March 1, 1945, but never took any direct military action. 2. The big three "took note" that "Operation Overlord" was to be launched on the Normandy coast in May, 1944. A shortage of landing craft, however, held up the invasion until June 6. r . .. i : i . l : .. tr I. . .TH" Vl ' Bive ax me same nine wini uiu object of preventing German f .Sn.f fr.m v,o x w5 eastern" front. Frontiers Set Up In addition to the reparations question, the Yalta conference temporarily set up Poland's pres- ent western frontier along the . Oder-Niesse rivers. Although the pact states that Poland's final boundaries "should await the peace conference," Russia and Po land maintain that the present lo cation is permanent. The United States will hold at Moscow that the Polish boundary is "open" and i nn.,M ditional food-producing lands for p.n.m,nw utiumii, pan," said that the "Kurile islands 'at the ringside, in charge of the shall be handed over to the soviet, time gong. In recent years, this union" a brief but much-con- decision long since made Putll- . . fleets Divided Hitherto undisclosed portions of the August 1, 1945 Potsdam pro- tocol outlined the three-power I nlan for division nf thp Gorman , . : , - -- naval and mprchant fleets. Tn In general, all ships and submarines wppp tn- hp hivIHpH pnnaiiv ho. tween the United States, Britain .., , TTitp a..o and Russia. In cutting out the dollar figure un ueiiiian reparations, me rois- aeatn oy nis wue, on June ju, sraBe for the first maior dis dam declaration further said 1943. His only immediate sur-' agrement at the current Moscow "that reparations should not be yrvor here is his son, Robert K. c?nference. The current produc exacted from Austria." I Innes. The family came to Bend ,,, mjmH hm Spring Opening Set For Friday Both the high school drum and bugle corps and the high school band will appear at the spring opening festivities Friday eve ning, according to Floyd Burden, chamber of commerce chairman for the event. This year's spring opening should be one of the largest in recent years, according to Bur den, and will incorporate an auto mobile show for the first time since before the war. The drum and bugle corps will parade on downtown streets at about 7 o'clock, according to ar rangements made by Burden, and a high school band concert will follow at the Wall street-Minnesota avenue intersection. A spe cial radio broadcast of spring opening events is being planned. Actually the spring opening will get under way about 6 p. m., Burden said, when merchants un veil their store windows to reveal new spring merchandise and styles. The new automobiles will be displayed in a portion of the street in which parking of other venicies win be prohibited that evening. Red Infiltration At U.O. Charged Salem, Ore., March 25 lBRep. William B. Morse, Prlnevllle. Ore.. today told the ways and means committee that he has been in formed communists are among the teachers at the University of Oregon and that it would "be hoove" the Oregon legislature to look into the matter. He said the state would be throwing its money away to ap- War Danger Still Remote, Says General Washington, March 25 IIP) Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, army chief of staff, said today that in his opinion "there is no imme diate danger of a deliberately pro voked war." No nation in the world can af-1 frdha w,r. "T'pLSaii L" talk No nation in the world can af- "But because al! wars are stu pid, they can start stupidly," Eisenhower said. Joe S. Innes, 1909Pioneer, Dies In Bend I Joseph Stuart Innes, 71, mem- e .u i . . 'J?e"dH LSSL? 1921 and 1922 and a former mem- h - ... Dpsfhnrps county court, died in Bend last night, following an illness of six months. A pioneer of Bend, Mr. Innes came here in 1909, when railroads were building up the , Deschutes canyon, and was join- ed here in 1910 by his family. A native of Detroit, Mich., Mr. Innes left home when a boy, win ning fame as a wrestler in his youth. At one time he held the weight division, on the eastern nirauuiE iiaiiiuiuiisiiiu. in ilia seaboard. Through his long resi - i- t3j i, j ui- j terest in amateur athletics, and in L.nnM ' caxitci uayo, 111 UUUl Ul II Id 111 1 job was taken over by his son, Bob In early day Bend, Mr. Innes 'operated a barber shop, in part- nership with J. S. Davidson, now of Lebanon. In the closing years I of his life, Mr. Innes was again' ' an aoonr-iato ilth his Spp,- partner, Davidson. The men joint- ...... t..u..v.w narttwr Ttavlriann The tnsn Inint. ly owned a store in Lebanon. Mr. Tnnps aisn in thp .oo i poto.p ., i k " ' .' " S and insurance business in Bend ; in early years. . . , Mr. Innes was p.c.cuci, iii from Canyon City, Colo. f rn.. Funeral services have been ten tatively set for Thursday. The Niswonger and Winslow mortu ary will be in charge. Law Graduates Pass State Tests Salem, Ore., March 25 (IP) Fourteen law graduates passed the state bar examination held in Portland, Jan. 27 and 28, Chief justice George Rossman of the Oregon supreme court announced today. feuccessful candidates included John V. Colombo, Mary Louise Dvall, Shirley A. Fields, George H. Fraser, Francis E. Harring ton, John Robert Jordan, Charles R. Mears, Richardson W. Mah stoll, John W. Purvis, and Wilbur S. Williams, Jr., all of Portland; Charles W. Creighton, Jr., and Claude M. Johns, Jr., both of Sal era; Max L. McMillen, Vancouv er, Wash., and Francis C. Mel drum, Eugene. Japs Warned of Red Menace; U.S. To Fight Communism Tokyo, March 25 (IP) The Unit ed States will oppose communist aggression "anywhere in the world," a spokesman for Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquar ters told the Japanese people to day. The spokesman, Dr. Pieter Roest, chief of the political af fairs division of MacArthur's gov ernment section, warned Japan ese voters they must be alert in the April elections and guard against "fifth columns." The United States, he said "ab hors to see democracy destroyed In country after country by 'rig ged' elections such as recently occurred in Poland by stifling the voice of people who protest, or by all high-handed and violent methods by which one-party con trol is established and perpetu ivulged Tehran Terms Also Released By Officials Washington, March 25 (IP) I PuHcation of the Yalta and Pots- dam agreements today revealed the preliminary jockeying by the wartime "Big Three" on repara tions and other points at issue in the German peace treaty. The two documents, plus the 250-word text of the Tehran agreement, were released by the state department in answer to congressional demands for full disclosure of commitments made by the United States at the war time conferences. The texts disclosed no new ma jor "secret" decisions but com pleted the background for the bickering af the current Moscow conference on a German peace treaty. Background Held Needed The leading congressional ad vocate of making the agreements public Rep. Karl E. Mundt, R., S.D. said release of the facts would provide the proper back ground for current U.S. foreign policy. "This will go a long way to ward clarifying the atmosphere and giving the average American citizen a chance to formulate an intelligent opinion on foreign af fair s," Mundt told a reporter. "Without these documents, we - . . A. ' Zou,a. ?.e fcu!?B u" "le i ai Pz ,; v0u -iqak r The text of the February, 1945, ' aJ f' SSyS? the United States agreed to a so- llnnnnQDrlnn" iLi Pormui. g r 1 gj $J T-talf of f.,.1...? 2? 'Ptl0?0 i i 3 ai. Z7 an ac. ! cord on delivery of reparations frn pllrrpnt norman inrinstrial jti , productiS Aiti,,??!,. !hn TtrfHci, .f1""., Rrlm.e minister, Winston VnuIC.n "STw sipned the Yalta Dact tne lint- ". x,ul? ftl ure.r?" !,' u",ft , abu, oi reparation .no .su?n "Bure of reparation should be mentioned When the Big Three met at I Potsdam in mid-1945, the dollar jigUre was cancelled, setting the "u" Aral"- ly at Potsdam so that proceeds of exports from current production would be used primarily to pay ' for imports. At Moscow, Russia Is holding tenaciously to the $10,000,000,000 reparations figure and receipt of reparations from current produc tion. The United States, joined by Britain, is equally firm in its stand that Yalta was superseded by Potsdam. Secretary of state George C. Marshall has told so viet Foreign minister V. M. Molo tov that this country will not "re treat to Yalta" on the reparations issue. Bend Weather (By United Press) Bend and vicinity Increasing cloudiness tonight; Wednesday cloudy with occasional light rain toward evening. High temperature today, 55; low tonight, 34; high Wednesday, 58. ated." The United States will fight such "ruthlessly aggressive com munism" as it had to fight naz ism and fascism and Tojo's 'Ja panism," Roest declared. He warned the Japanese against following the leadership of any group promising direct rule in place of parliamentary representation. Otherwise, he said, they are likely to find them selves under "a worse dictator ship" than in the past. . Such a dictatorship he said, would be "not of the proletariat but of a handful of political party bosses or of one strong man." Democracy, MacArthur's spokesman said, is facing its greatest crisis today and is not safe from attack in Japan.