2 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, August 2, 1949 Potato Farmers Protest At Being Whipping Boys Washington, Aug. 2 Of) A spokesman for potato farmers told congressmen from potato producing states today that the growers are "tired of being whipping program." W. M. Case of Grand Forks, White House Not To Be Replaced Washington, Aug. HIP) The White House is going to be ren ovated instead of replaced. Senator McKellar (D., Tenn.) chairman of an official commis sion on the project, made the an nouncement following a session in the White House today. Congress has appropriated $5 400,000 to do the work. In one report to congress, Pres ident Truman conceded that it might be cheaper to rebuild than to try to repair the ancient struc ture on Pennsylvania avenue. However, he said that the Amcr ican people would like to pre serve the present building in sofar as possible for sentimental and historic reasons. The commission decided to re tain the mansion in its present form rather than build an en tirely new structure as had been advocated by some congressmen and others. ' The commission, which Mc Kellar heads as chairman of the senate appropriations committee, is the final authority in the con troversy. The reconstruction will in volve the residential part of th White House. The Truman fam ily is now living in the Blair house, across Pennsylvania ave nue from the old slate depart ment building. The executive offices in the west wing have not been dis turbed. It has been estimated that the remodeling work will require 18 months or more. The presidential part of the present structure has been de clare unsafe by building engi neers. Woods Witness 5 Percent Probe Washington, Aug. 2 Ml Housing Expediter Tighe Woods said today he told senate "five percenter" investigators that his agency's postwar building regu lation was a "farce." Woods spent 90 minutes with the staff of the senate's special Investigating subcommittee and afterwards told newsmen that the names of both James V. Hunt and John Maragon figur ed in the closed door session. Hunt, a former army officer who now is a "management counselor" here, Is a key figure in the senate inquiry. Maragon, fabulous former Kansas City bootblack who now calls many top government of ficials by their first names, ap peared before the staff of the special Investigating subcommit tee three consecutive days last week. Woods said over the week end that committee investigators had found Hunt mentioned in the housing agency's files In connection with postwar con siruciion work at two race tracks Tanforan at San Bruno, Lant., and Jfoxborough, neat- Boston. Woods said then that in (he Tanforan case, Hunt asked the housing agency to give favorable consideration to a 1947 applica tion for a go-ahead on construe tion work at the track. He also said that Hunt "sought our opinion" as to whether the Foxborough track could qualify for a green light on construction work. Hunt was advised, Woods said, that the track was eligible. The housing expediter said he understands that Hunt was paid a $15,000 fee by his client in the Foxborough case. He could not name the client. Rent Controls Off Oregon Motor Courts Portland, Aug. 2 W) Port land Area Rent Director E Daryl Mabee said today that controls have been off motor courts in Oregon tor some lime His comment was made on an announcement by Sen. Cain (R. Wash.) that rent control on mo tor courts and trailer parks in Washington and Oregon will be removed by the end of the week. Mabee said, however, he has received no announcement from the nation's capital on decon trol of trailer space. ENDS TODAY IpniAiM mm (1 mm IV s flAlirv nr PBBtli mi .TIIMtfftitm Second Feature "NIGHT WIND" boys for the farm price support N. D., executive secretary of the Red River Valley Growers i sociation and member of the national potato council's legisla tive committee, told the potato bloc: "We are tired of being held up to public scorn as the recip ients of so many millions of dol lars without any credit at all for the growers' own efforts over a period of three years to reduce costs. "The record clearly shows that potato growers, on the whole, have done almost exactly what the government has requested of them under programs that have been in effect." Today's Capitol Hill meeting was called by Senator Brew ster (R-Me.), chairman of the informal congressional group from potato states. It was called to discuss a threat mandatory price supports might be with drawn from potatoes, the only perishable crop In the price sup port program. Last Friday Chairman Pace (D., Ga.) of a house agriculture subcommittee called a hearing on his bill to institute produc tion and marketing restrictions on potatoes and to prescribe penalties for violators of such controls. Grower representatives op posed the measure, saying they had not had time to study it. They urged that potatoes be left alone for the present sup ported at 60 per cent of parity and with acreage goals set by the secretary of agriculture. Parity is a figure calculated to give a farmer a fair return in relation to things he buys. Pace said that the current program benefits non-coopera- tors more than cooperators and is costing the government "un justified" amounts. He said the agriculture department esti mates the potato support pro gram will cost between $50 and $100 million this year. This, he said, could endanger the whole price support struc ture. Case said the present "very low level of 60 per cent of par ity" amounts to the equivalent of insurance" on the cost of pro duction. He said the record will show that under the present support price support and goals, acreages have been cut voluntarily to 41 per cent less than in 1943 and are the lowest in 70 years. Alabama Klan Leader Jailed Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 2 (IP) Alabama's top Ku Klux Klan leader was ordered back to jail today for refusal to produce rec ords of the whilerrobed order. William Hugh Morris, direc tor of the Federated Klan, was returned under a contempt ot court citation arising from his refusal to give the records to a grand jury. Under the decision, Morris can be held indefinitely. He can clear himself of the cita tion only by turning the Klan's records over to the Jury. The jury resumes its Invest! gation of mob violence after i week-end recess. Eighteen men already have been indicted on flogging and related charges. Morris has been out on $500 conditional bond after previous ly spending 16 days in jnll. Circuit Judge George Lewi ruled that the Klan chieftain failed to clear himself of the contempt charge. The decision followed a three day hearing during which Mor ris testified he was now willing' to produce the records but can not because they were stolen from his home. Morris, a Birmingham roof Ing contractor, was in jail at the time of the alleged burglary at ms home. Solicitor Emmett Perrv ask ed Morris the Klan's numerical strength in Jefferson (Birming ham) county. Morris replied between 6,500 and 7,000. When asked If he could recall the full names of any individual members other than the offi cers, Morris replied; "I can't recall the names." LATE SPORTS NATIONAL Nrw York. .010 001 1003 0 Chicago ...000 000 0000 S 1 Johm and R. Mueller; Leonard and Schefflng. 3311131 New TODAY! BEHIND A BLONDE ' PIRATE...mutUK anaminxn THE IMlllEERS JON KALI -ucumm t cttwMu nenm I KM 47 ' TiK If.;, . r SsJ kwi A ' , I ' Policemen Surrender on Bribe Indictments Two Los An geles county grand jury, accept copies of their indictments as they surrendered at Los Angeles. Left to 'right: Sgt. C. V. Jackson, Lieut. Rudy Wellpot, Bail Bondsman August Nardoni and Court Clerk L. D. Hahn. Jackson and Wellpot are former members of the police vice detail. (AP Wirephoto) Russian Protest Rejected by U. S. Washington, Aug. 2 UP) ,The United States today emphatic ally rejected a Russian protest against Italy's membership in the North Atlantic defense pact. Secretary Acheson termed the charges "utterly without foun dation" in a note delivered to the Russian embassy shortly be fore noon. "The text of the treaty itself the best answer to such mis representations and allegations," the American reply said. The Soviet government had charged that Italy violated its peace treaty by joining in the 12-nation defense treaty last April. Acheson had denounced the Russian charges at his news con ference last Wednesday, fore shadowing today's formal re jection of Russia's latest ac cusations. In his written reply, Acheson noted that the views expressed in the Russian note of March 31 are identical in their misrepre sentation" of the nature and in tent of the Atlantic treaty with those published by the Soviet foreign office last January be fore the text had been decided. 'It would thus appear that the views of the Soviet govern ment on this subject do not ar ise from an examination of the character and text of the At lantic pact but from other con siderations," Acheson wrote. Bomb Explodes, Cohen's Home Los Angeles, Aug 2 P) A crude, home-made bomb explod ed near the home of gambler Mickey Cohen today, arousing him and other householders in an exclusive Brentwood neigh borhood but doing little damage. Police said they were unable to determine whether the ex plosion, across the street from Cohen's house, was the work of pranksters or was an attempt to get the gambler. Cohen is still suffering from a shoulder wound Incurred when he and his party was ambushed at a Sunset strip night spot July 20. In that shooting Edward (Neddie) Herbert, Cohen's 35- year-old lieutenant, was injured latally. Officers L. L. Lance and John llasko reported the bomb ex ploded in a driveway of the home of Mrs. Maria Wilkes, about 50 feet from the bedroom where Cohen was sleeping. Cohen, shaken and white, told officers: "I was sleeping soundly when I heard something. I thought it was a dream a night mare, sort of I can t under stand what it could mean." p i "ii rt tttrt'w ! it Wff New Wooilburn PIX Theatre; Oregon O-SO-EASY SEATS TUE., WED., AUG. 2-3 T-Men and Night Wind T 2 Top Thrill Hits! nun HE Lady Fan After Joe DiMaggio New York, Aug 2 W) Joe Di Maggio, center field for the New York Yankees, has turned over to officials of the club the problem of a lady fan who he thinks is bedeviling him by writ ing to columnists" about a show girl Junior Standish. Arthur E. (Red) Patterson public relations director for the club, said the fan writes con stantly to DiMaggio and that of late she has written to column ists, signing the letters either as Miss Standish or as a friend of Miss Standish, telling of the purported romance. Both DiMaggio and Miss Stan dish have denied their acquain tance has blossomed into romance. Patterson said that DiMaggio gets hundreds of letters daily and that the fan, who DIMag gio never has met nor seen, is one of the most persistent. "Apparently she gets a vicari ous thrill out of seeing Joes name linked in the columns with Miss Standish, Patterson added. Dorothy Arnold, movie star let, divorced DiMaggio in 1944 after five years of marriage. They had one son, Joe, Jr., who now is 7 years old. Pickers Are Handy For Bean Harvest- Lebanon Sufficient pickers to harvest the bean crop are in local yards, according to a re port given through the Lebanon office of the state employment service, unless a prolonged heat spell causes a sudden maturing of beans, which will then re quire additional pickers. Mills and logging operations in the locality are likewise op erating fairly steady. In the event of higher temperatures and low humidity, work In the woods will be forced to shut down. There is believed to be an ample supply of cold decks on hand to meet this emergency, It was reported by the service. To ease Its unemployment Eire is trying to reopen aban doned industrial plants. Wesh'nghouse Night! See the New Westinghouse Laundromat! Tonight Only! Frr ShMland Pnn? Ridel for lh Kid. din ftlarttnf Daily I 8 P M. Paulette Goddard Jnmes Stewart Henry Fonda "On Our Merry Way" 0 Charles Starrett Smiley Burnette "West of Sonora" ENDS TODAY! 6:45 P. M. Betty Hutton "DREAM GIRL" Dana Andrews "DEEP WATERS" ' TOMORROW! I.ulabelle and Scotty "Swln Your Partner" jlCzedi Red Paper 'Acrojets' Feature At Air Maneuvers Portland's Columbia airport will be the scene next Sunday afternoon of the third annual Northwest Air Maneuvers, with the famous "Acrojects" from Williams field, Arizona, taking top billing. In addition to the performance by the "Acrojets" the Air Force will have many planes in the sky. Besides the air force ma neuvers the plans for the show include a flight' of National Guard and Air Reserve aircraft an all-girl air race; and a dis play of Air Force and civilian planes. Funds realized from the air show will be used to carry on Civilian Air Patrol cadet train ing for the year, at the 15 Ore gon Wing air units of which Salem is one. g - Silverton Iheatre 0Ttf0B SUN.-MON.-TUES. IT'S THRILLING to watch a woman fight when her man's in trouble!1 JAMES JUNE STE WAAT-A UYSO H FRANK MORGAN ACNES MOOREHEAO BILL WILLIAMS A METRO G0LDWYN MAYER PICTURE A SAM WOOD PRODUCTION Sertm Ptr by DOUGLAS MORROW and GUY TR0SPER Slon bv DOUGLAS MORROW Dirtcttd by SAM W000 ProdiMdbr JACKCUMMINGS STARTS Tomorrow! SCOOP! M-G-M printi Hjvi Daring! New Dangsrs! ' (O?1 THeG JiriKft Ydllldil Prague, Czechoslovakia, Aug. 2 UP) Rude Pravo, the Czecho slovak communist organ, today accused the Vatican and the Roman Catholic hierarchy of trying to provoke civil war in Czechoslovakia over the state church strife. The newspaper sought to im plicate Francis Cardinal Spell man of New York and what it called the "American organiza tion" in the alleged plot. The charges were made in a long article by Andre Simone, the paper's foreign commenta tor. It was entitled "The Vatican Fifth Column." The attack appeared after a week's lull in press assaults on the church. Simone claimed the Vatican was working in cooperation with the "American organiza tion" whose task, he said, is to organize espionage and diver sions in those countries which have deserted the capitalist sys tem. "To ttiis organization belongs Cardinal Spellman, who is' the Pope's Schacht, because he rais es 80 per cent of the Vatican income and is potentially the mightiest man of World Catholi cism next to the Pope," the ar ticle declared. Allen Dulles, brother of Sen. John Foster Dulles (R-N.Y.), Healthfully Air-conditionetl! LAST DA it "Sorrowful Jones" and "Manhandled' TOMORROW! One of the All-Time Greats RETURNED TO THRILL YOU AGMN! HOOT MIME SHOW . Color Cartoon Warner O Phone 3-3467 Matinee JUDY GARLAND ji. FRANK M0R6AH Ml B0L6ER f T Mk. DOUBLE THRILLS! SEE EDDIE in PERSON on Our Stage was named as director of the al leged organization. (In New York, Dulles said he knew nothing about the report. He pointed out he is chairman of the executive' committee of the national committee for free Europe. The purpose of that or ganization, he said, is to fur ther the cause of liberty and peace and to support in this country political leaders who have been driven out of their own homes by communism.) Silverron Community Canning Plant Closed Silverton The Silverton community canning plant is not to be opened to the public this season it was announced today by members of the executive board of management of which Mrs. Carl Specht is chairman. Home canners are planning to Ends Today! Linda Darnell "Forever Amber" (Tuesday) and Joan Davis "Yokel Boy" PHONE 3-3721 Tomorrow! Sensational! A Thousand Thrills from the Jungle Depths of Indo-China! Where Superstition Reigns . . and Mighty Apes Are Gods! (iQ7"F0RBIDDEN P.Tp ADVENTURE" SCRATCHY" j. THRILL CO-HIT! A IT'S JAN WILEY X f- "Fig Leaf J it for Eye" ? NO ADVANCE IN PRICES Daily from 1 P. M. Friday at 9 P.M.! patronize the Salem Blundell's Kanning Kitchen, South 13th and Wilbur streets this year. Previously many Salem home gardeners patronized the Silver ton plant. Trinidad and Tabago have drawn up plans to provide the colony with 27,000,000 gallons of water a day. ' BASEBALL Tonight DOUBLEHEADER 7 P. M. , SALEM SENATORS VICTORIA Waters Field . 25th and Mission OPENS 6:45 Ends Today (Tuesday) Barbara Stanwyck "LADY GAMBLES" George Brent "ILLEGAL ENTRY" P.M. ft t