Little Damage To Cherry Crop Caused by Rain If Weather Remains Cool No Cracking Expected in Valley If the weather remains cool throufh Monday there probably will be no damage to the cherry crop by the Sunday rain, even though the weather may turn warm again Tueaday. Thia was the opinion Monday at the office of the Marion ecu. ty agent. Should Monday after noon turn warm, however, there might be damage by cracking. Comment was qualified by the itatement that it is yet too early to speak definitely about effect of weather on the cherry crop Much Hay Down There is quite a heavy ton nage of grass hay, clover and vetch down in the area, but with ordinary care not much damage is expected as a result of the rain. Since there had been an ab sence of rain for three weeks the . week-end downpour was wel comed generally by the grain farmers. One good effect of the rain was to relieve the water short age in the Salem Heights and Vista Heights districts. Because of new population and increased demand- the irrigation of lawns had resulted in a shortage be tween the hours of S and 9 p.m The situation was normal Mon day because the rain made irri gation unnecessary. Water Shortage Ends The shortage was caused by inability of the pumps to work fast enough to accommodate fully the homes about the 450 foot level. There was no short age of water in the city reser voirs. The two districts get their water from the city on a mas ter meter basis. (Concluded en Pare 5, Column 5 Need 1000 More Cherry Pickers The pressure for cherry pick ers was increased over the week end and growers could have used an additional 1000 Monday morning, reported Wm H. Bail lie, manager of the Salem of fice of the state employment ser vice. Rain Sunday night creat ed considerable anxiety among the growers. The employment service Is seeking outside help in Portland and southern Oregon to aist in gathering the cherries, since Willamette valley folk appear to be a bit Indifferent as to whe ther the crop Is harvested. The crop is far above the average of recent years and pickers can make good wages, the labor ofice reports. "There Is no need of any young man or husky young wo wan or adults remaining unem ployed," said Baillie. Growers are willing to provide transpor tation to and from their or chards. They report at 6 o'clock each morning at the employ ment office at South Cottage and Ferry streets. Strike Stops All Sound Busses Seattle, June 20 U The north-south intrastate bus driver strike entered its third day to day with bus travel in western Washington virtually at a stand still. The appearance of picket lines was the only change in the dispute. Nonstriking drivers ob 1 served the picket lines and re fused to take vehicles in or out of the terminal. Passengers were being loaded and discharged at the street curb. Approximately 550 drivers, members of the AFL motor coach employees union, are on strike. John D. Parker, business agent for the striking union, said, "we are willing and ready to negotiate. The company will not meet with us unless we change our position." John R. Neely, company spokesman, said, "we are ready to meet with the union any time they want to appear with a pro posal that will dissolve the dis agreement. However, no strike confer ences have been held since Fri day night, and none are sche duled. The dispute is over wages and working conditions. Man KilledVs. .F Hotel Conflagration San Francisco, June 20 W An unidentified man was killed and 40 other persons were rout ed last night by fire in three story hotel. ( The dead man was found un Tr a bed in his room. He was 'believed to have suffocated. There was no immediatt es timate of damage 61st Year, No. 146 Czechs Tighten Guard on Palace Of Archbishop Prague, Czechoslovakia, June 20 W The communist govern ment's security police apparent ly tightened their guard on Archbishop Josef Beran's palace today while Catholics weighed the meaning of organized com munist heckling of the prelate at Sunday's cathedral services. The heckling drove him from his cathedral and prevented him irom completing nis sermon. Attempts of many persons to talk to the archbishop today were foiled by security police supervising the palace recep tion desk and telephone switch board. No Visitors Permitted An attempt to reach his pri vate secretary by telephone met a reply from the switchboard that "they are accepting no phone calls or visitors." It could not be learned whether the po lice had refused them the right to see or talk to anyone. Shrill communist interrup tions of the archbishop's Corpus Christ! day sermon in St. Vitus cathedral yesterday brought the long battle between church and state to its highest tension. The archbishop, defiantly resisting communist efforts to control the chur'h and break the spiritual rule of the Vatican over Czecho slovakia's 9,000,000 Catholics, had to leave the pulpit and re turn to his palace, already under the watchful eyes of the secur ity police. Prelate Jeered The whistling and jeering broke out from demonstrators bunched near the altar as the archbishop began a denuncia tion of the government's moves against the church. The rest of the congregation, many In tears, burst into a hymn in an attempt to quell the disorder. Some Prague priests told their congregations the ancient ca thedral might have to be re consecrated because the disor ders had profaned Holy ground. However, a cathedral official said this would not be necessary. Vatican Ousts Czech Hecklers Vatican City, June 20 (IP) The Roman Catholic church to day excommunicated members of the government-sponsored Catholic Action society of Communist-dominated Czechoslova kia. The sacred congregation of the holy office issued a decree which condemned the group as a schismatic one fraudulently la belled. The decree, published in Os- servatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, declared: "Recently the opponents of the Catholic church in Czecho slovakia founded a so-called Catholic action by which they tried to induce the Catholics of that republic to desert the Cath olic church and to deny obedi ence to the legitimate pastors of the church." Archbishop Josef Beran. head of.the Catholic church in Czech oslovakia, has denounced the communist-led group. Yester day at mass in the Cathedral of St. Vitus in Prague, he was shouted down shrilly by heck lers when he began a sermon continuing his denunciation 'of government acts against the church. Church-state tention is high in Czechoslovakia, remini scent of the conditions which ex isted in Hungary before the Jail ing of Josef Cardinal Mindzenty on charges of treason. Hungar ians connected with that were excommunicated by the Roman Catholic church. P.G.E. to Move Offices to Pacific Building, South High Portland General Electric company, which for 32 years has had its Salem offices at 237 North Liberty street, will move the latter part of the summer to 136-142 South High, In the Pacific building The utility offices will takt over by lease two adjacent 20 foot frontages, now occupied by the Jaquith Music company and the Fashion Lounge, the lat-- ter operated by Ben Wittner. Douglas Jaquith was out of the city Monday but it is un derstood the firm is not yet ready to announce its new lo cation. At the Fashion Lounge it was said that store has several location's available, but has not yet made i selection. The two concerns in the Paci fic building will move by Au gust 1, and it will be necessary for Portland General Electric company both to remodel the new quarters and move out of the old location during the month of August. The removal will be completed by September 1. With a frontage of 40 feet and a depth of 80 feet the company'! G apital J Quiriaal BftlUr at sUlm. Oregon Salem, Key Test Votes On Labor Bill Loom in Senate Washington, June 20 (IP) The senate labor law debate edged today toward a series of key test votes on how to deal with strike's imperiling the na tional welfare. ' Senate leaders hoped for a showdown by nightfall on that issue. It is regarded generally as a key issue because the outcome is expected to point up pretty definitely for the first time the voting strength of: (1) Those in the senate who want to get rid of all or most of the Taft-Hartley law, and (2) those who want to preserve most of it. Fight Over Injunctions As the third week of labor legislation debate began, nearly all senators in that second group were backing a proposal by Se nator Taft (R-Ohio) which would keep the Taft-Hartley provision for injunctions against critical strikes. Taft's plan also proposes gov ernment seizure of struck plants something which is not auth orized under the present law. Senators in the other group those opposed to the Taft-Hartley law are far from being agreed on an alternative to the Taft-Hartley injunction, a pro vision the labor unions hate. But the plan which 'appears ti have the most support in that camp is one by Senators Doug las (D-Ill) and Aiken (R-Vt). It would let the government seize plants for up to 90 days. Taft Predicts Approval The Douglas-Aiken plan says nothing about injunctions, but its sponsors have acknowledged that once the government had seized a plant or industry, the way would be open for an In junction. Taft predicted over the week end that his plan would be ap proved. He said he expects that about 16 of the senate's 54 demo crats will vote for it, and that only four or five of the 42 re publican senators will ballot against it. But Douglas took a look at Taft's estimate and declared: "I still think we have a good chance. I am not worried." . On the other hand, another democrat who favors the Douglas-Aiken plan said privately. after some nose-counting, that it doesn t have a chance. 13 Death Toll Virginia Flood Petersburg. W. Va.. June 20 (U.R) Rainless skies heartened thousands of Shenandoah and Potomac valley residents today as they dug out of the worst flood devastation in the dis trict's history. As the muddy flood waters of the Potomac and Shenandoah river branches receded, the death toll rose to 13 with eight bodies recovered and five other victims presumed dead. Authori ties estimated from 11 to 20 victims still were missing. The rain-swollen tributaries of the two rivers in West Vir ginia and Virginia raged over their banks Saturday. Hundreds were made homeless and pro perty damage mounted into the millions. National guardsmen, state po lice, Red Cross workers and volunteers joined into a gigantic rescue force to cope with the widespread disaster and suffer ing. Second army headquarters at Fort Meade, Md., rushed land and water craft. 200 cots and 400 blankets to the striken area quarters will all be on the main floor, but it will also have the basement space. A move has been under consideration by the PGE for several months, but for some time the company was undecided whether it would lease or put up a building of its own. The location In the Pacific uuiiaina is on ine rasi iiae oi South High street. The building is owned by Robert L. Elfstrom, Walter C. Winslow and Roy Harland. The present location of the PGE was built for It in 1917 by the Steusloff interests. About a year go it was bought from the Steusloff estate by the Liberty! Investment company. Oregon, Monday, June I r, l t A. '- v ' ... J 9 -J -? "1 iT. : S I"-: '. 7' rN-"-' A'B 1 5 . v 1 y V i President Greets 'Boy Governor' James Cooke, Salem, at President Truman's left, who presided as "governor" during the Youth in Government convention held here last April 28, 29, and 30, one of a group of boys from over the nation greeted last week by the president in the nation's capital. Young Cooke, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Cooke, was Hi-Y president at Salem high school where he was a mem ber of the student council and active in debate. He graduated with the June class. (AP Wirephoto) Railroad Situation at Salem to Be Discussed What may be the first definite Salem from its steel shackles will Railroad tracks that hedge all four sides have long been and an admitted hazard to persons Robeson Loves Russians Most New York, June 20 Paul Robeson, addressing a welcome- home rally shortly after seeing his son wed to a white girl, de clared last night he loves the "Soviet people more than any other nation." The Negro singer told a Har lem audience of 3.500 persons that he loves the Russians "be cause of their suffering and sac rifces for us, the Negro people, the progressive people, the peo ple of the future of the world." Robeson, just returned from a tour of the Soviet Union and sev eral countries of Europe, said he would "defy any part of an Inso lent, dominating America to challenge my Americanism." The Harlem rally was spon sored by the council of African affairs, a group listed by Attor ney General Tom Clark as sub versive. The baritone said he had ex perienced discrimination as a youth and declared: "I never accepted an inferior role because of my race or color, and by God I never will." Robeson told the crowd that in Paris he had said "It was un thinkable the Negro people of America or anywhere else in the world could be drawn into war with the Soviet Union." "I repeat it with hundredfold emphasis. They will not," he de clared. Robeson addressed the rally after attending the wedding of his son, Paul Robeson, Jr., 21-year-old electrical engineer, to Miss Marilyn Paula Green berg, 21. .64 Inch Rain in Salem Area Sunday Ending a long stretch without precipitation, .64 of an inch of rainfall came down in the Salem area through Sunday night. Ex cept for an occasional trace, it was the first measurable preci pitation since June 2. The total for the month is now .77 of an inch, still .06 of an Inch below normal. Forecast is for clearing to night with slightly warmer tem peratures, Tuesday. Most concern about any con tinued rain comes from the cherry and berry growers gar- dens, pastures and lawns, etc. to benefit from the rain. 20, 1949 (18 Pan' pcsidentAsks 1 step toward freeing downtown be taken Tuesday evening. In the main part of the city on an inconvenience to street traffic and property. Tuesday evening representatives of the Southern Pacific company, the state, the city administration, and several other agencies will meet at the Senator hotel to talk about pos sible relief. The meeting will be at 6 o clock, and other meetings may follow at later dates. Representing the Southern Pacific company will be J. W. Corbett, vice president; L. P. Hopkins, superintendent, and perhaps others. The long range planning com mission will be represented by Chairman J. N. Chambers, C. A. Sprague, George Putnam, W. W. Chadwick and C. A. McClure. For the city of Salem Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom and City Manager J. L. Franzen will at tend. The city planning and zoning commission will be rep resented by Hedda Swart, the state highway commission bv R H. uaiaock, state highway en gineer, and the state board of control by Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry. Relocation or grade separation of rail lines enters vitally into future planning for the city, and has to be taken into considera tion in development of the pro posed street grid system under the Baldock plan. For motorists driving toward the city center Southern Pacific tracks are crossed on 12th street, Union street. Trade, and Front streets. For future consideration removal or tunneling of the 12th street tracks has often been mentioned, and by advice of the long-range commission the Un ion street franchise is extended only a year at a time by the city council. Not only do the Southern Pacific tracks enclose the city center, but the Oregon Electric company also has tracks on Front and on Mill streets. Women Flogged by Klansmen Birmingham, Ala., June 20 A 38-year-old mother said to day that she and a 16-year-old daughter were flogged near here by a hooded mob while another daughter was forced to watch the beatings with a rope around her neck. WEATHER (Released by United 8tates Weather Bureau) Forecast for Salem and Vicin ity : Clearing tonight, becom ing fair and slightly warmer, Tuesday. Lowest temperature expected tonight. 44 degreea; highest Tuesday. 78. Conditions will be mostly favorable for farm work. Maximum yesterday 72. Minimum today 62. Mean tem perature yesterday 62 which was normal. Total 24-hour precipita tion to 11 30 am today 64 of an Inch. Total precipitation for the month .77 of an Inch which is 06 of an Inch below norma, Wlllametie river height at Sa lem Monday morning. -1 foot. aj0V Price 5c Congress to OK Reorganization Washington, June 20 W President Truman today asked congress to create a tenth cabinet-rank department a de partment of welfare and to put the commerce department In charge of public roads. The plans seven all told were sent to Capital Hill within a half hour after Mr. Truman signed the long-debated reor ganization bill giving him broad powers to merge and streamline government agencies, subject to congressional veto. The public roads administra tion now is in the federal works agency. Welfare and social se curity matters are handled by the federal security agency. Carry Out Hoover Plans All the plans. If permitted to take effect, will carry out re form and economy proposals of the commission on government organization headed by former President Herbert Hoover. The other five would (a) give the bureau of employment se curity (jobless pay and Job re placement) to the labor depart ment, (b) reorganize the post office department, (c) enlarge the scope of the executive of fice of the president, (d) stream line the civil service commis sion, and (e) strengthen the authority of the chairman of the maritime commission. All seven plans were describ ed by the White House as con forming "quite closely" to the Hoover commission recommen dations filed with congress this spring after two years of re search. In Effect In 60 Days Under the new law, the plans will take effect in 60 days un less either house of congress vetoes them within that time by a majority vote of the house. Each plan is to be considered separately. (Concluded on Page 5, Column S) Judith Coplon Repeats Denial Washington, June 20 (IP) Ju dith Coplon repeated today her denial that she ever gave gov ernment secrets to Valentine A. Gubitchev. She further testified in her trial on espionage charges that Gubitchev never asked her to give him any government sec rets. Asked by Defense Attorney Archibald Palmer whether her relationship with the Russian engineer with whom she was arrested March 4 was on a "per sonal basis," the tiny brunette replied: "Definitely." "As between a man and a maid?" "Definitely," Miss Coplon re peated. The former Justice depart ment political analyst told the jury of eight men and four wo men that she and Gubitchev had long conversations about liter ature, but never even discussed the nature of her work in the justice department. She said she was amazed at Gubitchev's knowledge of Mil ton, Shelley and Shakespeare. Palmer jumped back and forth from dates and places as Miss Coplon neared the end of her story flatly denying that she ever engaged in espionage activity and maintaining loyalty to this country. Dividend Ordered Paid on Veterans Life Washington, June 20 VP) Veterans administrator Carl R. Gray, Jr., today authorized payment next year of a special $2,800,- 000,000 dividend on national Gray said he hopes veterans time in January, 1950," with in the first half of that year The dividend payment has been hopefully anticipated by some economists as a stimulant to pur chasing power which might help offset declining business activity. About 16,000,000 veterans of World War II will receive the dividends, This would average about $175 for each ex-serviceman, but the agency said Individual calcula tions have not been completed. In general, every veteran who took out National Service insur-i limit of time on which dividend an and kept it In force at least accumulations will be allowed three months will be eligible, is the anniversary date of the Where policy-holders have died, policy in 1948. the beneficiaries will receive the Government officials expect hind Gray said. the dividends to be spent Application bianKS for tne promptly and In provide a no dividends are ocing prepared and ticeable "shot In the arm" for' may be available in August lni business. I New Meeting of Big 4 Called At Vishinsky's Demand Alter Withdrawal of Signed Agreement Announcement Made Hour After Adjournment And Announcement of Pact Settling in Principle Stop Gap Arrangement Paris, June 20 iPi The Big Four announced agreement In principle on Austria and a stop-gap arrangement for Germany today, and then adjourned. Russia immediately threw the final outcome into doubt, however, by asking and getting a new ses sion tonight. The new secret meeting was arranged at the French foreign ministry. V. S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson postponed his takeoff for the United States. This was the sequence: The four powers adjourned the meeting at 6:30 p m., Paris time. They issued a communique for publication at 8 p.m. Shortly before that hour, Vishinsky asked that the communique be held up and a new meeting be convened. The Americans at first said it didn't seem likely his request could be granted. In any event, the communique already had been released. New Moscow Orders j However, there were hurried conferences among the staffs of i the western ministers, and the French arranged the new night session. Vishinsky said he had new information from Moscow. There was no indication what this con cerned. The west, in the last hours of the conference, rejected Vishinsky demand to discuss a Japanese peace treaty. They said the 10-power Far Eastern commission was the proper body to handle it. Acheson, replying to a Vishinsky assertion it should be taken up under the Potsdam agreement, commented that when the Potsdam declara tion was signed, Russia was not in the war against Japan. Agreed to Disagree The ministers announced only agreement to disagree on Ger man political and economic unity, at least until September, when they will discuss a new date and arrangements for an other session. The Austrian agreement in principle, in which Russia pulled the props from under Yugoslavia's demand, is turned over to the deputies with instructions to try to reach full agreement by September. On the German arrangement, an American spokesman said "we did not lose any ground nor did we gain any." But the Austrian agreement, he said, was a "substantial step forward. Ending a session which began May 23, the foreign ministers of the United States, the Soviet Union, France and Britain dis closed agreement only on a "modus vivendi" a sort of live-and-let-live arrangement for Germany. A communique winding up the talks said the four powers will discuss in September dur ing the United Nations assem bly meeting the date and other arrangements for a new session of the council on the manifold problems of Germany. Discussions Continue Meanwhile, discussions will continue at a lower level among the occupation authorities of the four zones on problems of divid ed Berlin. The authorities will be guided in these talks by what has taken place at this confer ence in discussing steps to re store normalcy in Berlin's life. On the Austrian treaty the ministers agreed on these lines: (Continued on Pase 5. Column 6) Reds Say Ready to Repatriate Japs Tokyo, June 20 Pi Russia said today she is ready to resume repatriation of Japanese prison ers of war. General MacArthur has been pressing the Soviet to speed up their return. The Russian intention was an nounced In a letter from the Soviet mission here to allied headquarters. It requested that four Japanese ships of 2.000 man capacity be sent to Nakhodka. Siberian repatriation shipping center 50 miles east of Vladi vostok. Insurance service life insurance policies. will begin receiving checks "some payment substantially completed post offices, veterans service or ganizations, and VA offices. Meantime the administrator asked veterans not to write now about their dividends because letters "will only cause the pay- ment to be delayed. The special dividend will not be paid on policies Issued after January 1, 1948. But such poli cies may participate in some lat er dividend, Gary said. The cut-off date that is. the Cut in Defense Costs Promised Washington, June 20 (IP) Sec retary of Defense Johnson was reported today to have told sen ators defense spending can b trimmed by $750,000,000 in the 12 months starting July 1. Members of the senate appro priations committee said John son told them behind closed doors that this could be done mainly by cutting back the fu ture size of the air force from the 70 groups proposed in con gress to the 48 urged by Presi dent Truman. The senators had called John- son for testimony on the $15, 900,000,000 armed forces money bill passed by the house. Chairman Elmer Thomas (D.. Okla.) of the subcommittee con sidering the bill has said he hopes that at least $1,000,000, 000 can be trimmed from it. He called defense officials back to day for more closed-door testi mony. Chairman Tydings (D..' Md.) of the senate armed services committee said in a radio in terview yesterday that "unless some new situation evolves we may get by for $14,500,000,000 or $14,600,000,000 at the out side" in defending spending for the coming fiscal year. Tydings also said at least 30 senators are backing a proposal which would direct President Truman to cut government spending from five to 10 percent below the total amounts voted by congress. Court Upholds Spy Probers Washington, June 20 (IP) For the second time in as many weeks, the U.S. circuit court of appeals today upheld the house un-American activities commit tee in cases challenging its in vestigation methods. The court ruled unanimously that the committee did not vio late constitutional rights when 1946 it demanded "all the books, record, documents and correspondence" of the National Federation for Constitutional Li berties. The decision upheld the con tempt conviction of George Marshall, chairman of the fed eration, who refused to deliver the records. Marshall was con victed in U.S. district court here in April, 1948, and sentenced to $500 fine and three months in jail. In appealing the case. 'Marsh all contended that ( 1 ) the house acted unconstitutionally when it created the un-American activi ties committee, and (2) the com mittee violated his constitution al rights when it subpoenaed the records. A week ago, the circuit court ruled the committee has a rieht to ask witnesses whether they are or have been members of the communist party. That decision upheld contempt convictions of Screen Writers John Howard Lawson and Dalton Trumbo. Carrier Princeton In 'Mothballs' Fleet Bremerton. June 20 (IP) The aircraft carrier Princeton was decommissioned and placed "in mothballs" at ceremonies at the Puget Sound navy yard here to day. The 27,100 ton vessel Is part of the Bremerton group. Pacific reserve fleet. One of the Essex class, she is 888 feet long. Miniature planks, with small plaques attached, were presen ted to 24 of the Princeton's crewmen who have served aboard her since commissioning ceremonies In November, 1945. Those receiving planks includ ed Harry N. Moore of Tacoma, and Walter B. Starrctt of Ban don, Ore. Planes from the Princeton saw action at Tarawa, Makin Island, Okinawa, Formosa, and Leyte gulf, where she was dam aged by a bomb.