THE WEATHER HERE CLOUDY, SLIGHTLY WARM ER with rain tonight; becoming partly cloudy with showers Sun day. Lowest temperature to night, 35; highest Sunday, 53. Maximum yeiterday, 54: minimum today, SO. Total St-honr precipitation: 0: for month: .S3; normal, .48. Season precipita tion, 9.77; normal. 11.2.1. River beliht, 4.S feet. (Report by U.S. Weather Bnrcan.) G aoital. HOME EDITION 6 1st Year, No. 288 Entered u Jond elut mUei tvt tSmlem, Oregon Salem, Oregon, Saturday, December 3, 1949 Price 5c .jit kl Claims Hopkins Sped to Russia A-Bomb Secret Congress to Probe Sending of Uranium By Soviet Airplanes Washington, Dec. ? VP) A for mer lend-lease officer's story that planeloads of V. S. atomic and other secrets were sped to Russia with the late Harry Hop kins' help set off a congressional inquiry today. Chairman M c M a h 0 n (D., Conn.) of the joint senate-house atomic energy committee said the committee's staff had been instructed to look into the ac count. His announcement followed a statement from Senator Hicken looper (R., Ia.), ranking repub lican on the committee, that he would insist that the group make inquiries. And Senator McCarthy (R., Wis.) told a reporter that if the atomic committee did not act he would urge that the senate in vestigating subcommittee headed by Senator Hoey (D., N.C.) go into the story. Air Captain's Story Senator Edwin C. Johnson (D., Colo.), an atomic energy com mitteeman, also joined in the de mand for clearing up what he called "very serious charges." These expressions of congres sional concern followed a broad cast interview last night in which former Army Capt. G. Racey Jordan related experienc es as a lend-lease inspector at Great Falls, Mont., on the route over which planes for Russia were flown in 1943 and 1944. He said he saw suitcase after suitcase full of state department and other documents in Russian baggage. He said he saw references to "energy produced by fission or splitting," to "neutrons and pro tons" and "walls five feet thick of lead and water to control fly-, ing neutrons."1 Orders From Hopkins AH that was long before any . body but a select few in the Unit ed States had been let in on the secret that there was such a thing as an atomic energy project. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 51 Turkey Signing U.S. Alliance Istanbul, Turkey, Dec. 3 VP) The Istanbul newspaper Tan said today Turkey is signing a military alliance with the United States. Foreign Minis ter Necmeddin Sadak's own newspaper, Aksam, quoted Sadok a short time later as say ing the Tan story was unfound ed "from end to end." Tans story was published a day after George McGhee, U.S. assistant secretary of state, spent two hours with Sadak and one hour with President Ismet Inonu at Ankara. Tan said political circles re ported an understanding be tween the two countries had been reached along the general lines of Turkey's alliance with Britain and France "and prelim inary documents already are drawn." Tan said the alliance would provide these three points: 1. The United States will au tomatically intervene if Turkey Is invaded. 2. Turkey will protect and help the United States when the latter's interests in the eastern Mediterranean and Middle East ar endangered. S. The pact will be valid as soon as ratified by congresses of both countries. Turkey, together with Greece, already is receiving U.S. funds and aid under the Truman doc trin. Fog. Cloudiness and Freezing Weather Foe and cloudiness, and below freezing temperatures were the weather offering for the Salem area. Saturday morning. The mercury slid down to 30 degrees, two below freezing. Prospect for the week-end is for cloudiness, some rain and lightly warmer temperatures. The weather officials reported this morning storm warnings again are hoisted along the coast with the more severe storms due to the north along the Wash ington coast. Idanha Again Seeks to Stop Incorporation 70 Residents Storm County Court Protesting Election The effort to stop by injunc tion the election on the incorpor ation of Idanha set for Decem ber 9 came into circuit court again Saturday under a new guise with Edison Vickers and about 70 others appearing as re lators the state of Oregon being in the complaint as plaintiff by E. O. Stadter, Jr., district attor ney. The county court and H. A. Judd, county clerk, are named as defendants. The case will be heard at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. e. A preced ing case instituted by Edison Vickers alone as a taxpayer and citizen has been dismissed by Circuit Judge Hex Kimmell on the grounds that the plaintiff did not have legal capacity to sue and such suits must be insti tuted in the name of the state. That case never got past the de murrer stage and only one ele ment in the demurrer, that the plaintiff had no legal capacity to sue, was passed on by the court. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 8) New Order for Ward Expulsion Washington, Dec. 3 VP) A new Chinese communist order "expelling" Consul General An gus Ward from Mukden raised hopes today for the early release of four other American prisoners in the Far East. Ward and his aides, including 15 Americans, are now expect ed to start home early next week by way of the North China port of Tientsin. After trying to leave for months, they were finally ordered to depart by 8 a.m. Wednesday by the Mukden municipal government. The state department mean while hopefully awaited word from Moscow on the prospects for freeing two ECA shipping of ficials who were taken to Soviet-supported North Korea on September 22. Russia agreed nearly three weeks ago, after two American requests, to take up the matter with the communist "people's republic." The United States turned to Russia for help because it does not recognize the North Korea regime and has no representa tives at Pyongyang, its capital. The North Koreans neverthe less have demanded "official correspondence' presumably t direct request from the U.S. Officials hope Moscow's in fluence will suffice. .prospects remained cloudy for two abstentions, to go to the spe two American servicemen who ciai political committee for fur have not been heard from direct- thcr study. Iy since they disappeared more Israel, with the hope of some than a year ago on a routine --cr support, promises a training flight in the vicinity of bitter fight against international Tsingtao. (rule for Jerusalem 0'Hara Compiles New Book of Election Laws By JAMES D. OLSON , Thirty-seven new election laws and amendments to present statutes, enacted by the 1949 legislature, have been incorporated in a new election law volume by tions in the secretary of state's office The new booklet will be distributed to county clerks and elec t?nn officials. Three of the new amendments were passed to remove technical obstacles to the merger of Sa lem and West Salem, being agi tated at the time of the legisla ture but since effected by the vote of citizens of both commun ities. . Another trio of amendments changes the form of petitions for nomination at primary elections to include a statement that for 180 days prior to filing his petition, the candidate has been a duly registered member of the political party by which he seeks to be nominated. Aimed at Switches These amendments were pass ed to prevent last minute party switches by candidates, emphas ized by the change in party of former Sheriff Mike Elliott of Multnomah county who changed his registration from republican to democratic just a few days before he filed for democratic nomination as sheriff. One important amendment to the election laws provides that meeting for voting additional I i J - i -v . r i 'F't 1 , ,' 1 , I."-'' A V . 1 UK Near Vote On Jerusalem Lake' Success, Dec. 3 (P) The United Nations ' neared the de cisive stage1 today1 on the prob. lem of Jerusalem's future. The Holy City now is occupied by: Hashemite Jordan and Israel j both-of them opposed to inter-! national rule and determined to hold their respective parts of it. But before taking up the issue of Jerusalem, the general assem bly's special political committee is scheduled to review the Dutch-Indonesian question. This may delay its start on the Jeru salem question. The special committee last night approved a $54,900,000 relief-works project program for nearly 1,000,000 Palestine war refugees. Final adoption by the assembly was assured by the lop sided vote of 48-0 in committee. A 17-nation subcommittee put final touches to its draft of an Australian-Russian-El Salvado-ran-Lebanese resolution to inter nationalize Jerusalem and its holy places under a UN trustee- It was adopted 9 to 6 with Dave O'Hara, registrator of elec taxes in road districts must be held in the month of May, in stead of in November as in the past. .Nine sections of a new act authorizes incorporation of county or a part of a county as a municipal corporation as a! hospital district for the purpose of supplying its inhabitants the facilities for the care of sick and injured persons. j The question of establishing such a hospital district is to be by the county court submitted to the voters at a special election, when a legally sufficient peti tion seeking such district has been filed with the county clerk. Voting Restrictions Removed The new compilation includes an amendment to Section 6, Art icle VIII, of the Oregon consti tution, adopted by the voters at the last general election, nulli fying an existing statutory prop erty ownership qualification for voting on school bonds and taxes. (Concluded on Fage S, Column 6) 'We're Lucky to Be Alive' Top, Tom Smith, left, at tendant on Ward 31 and Ed Rollins were garrotcd by four dangerous criminally insane inmates who escaped from Ore gon State hospital last night. "We're lucky to be alive," they said. Smith is shown examining the knotted bed sheet used by Marion Watson to tie Ed Rollins who entered Watson's cell alone in criminally insane Ward 38 to relieve his feigned attack of appendicitis. Below are, from loft, Robert Melvin Burr,; considered most desperate of the escapees; Marion. -Watson,' who led 'escape; Walter Chamberlain and James WUliarjx;.Cameron. Burr and' Watson are stiil at large. -' : Taxi Driver Hoffert Gets 5- Year Probation John Hoffert, ex-taxicab driver, recently sentenced to 16 months in the state penitentiary on a charge of contributing to the de linquency of a minor in connection with the taxicab vice ring cases, won a five-year probation from the sentence from Circuit Judge George R. Duncan, after Navy Plans Use ! Of A Weapons Annapolis, Md Dec. 3 VP) Admiral Forrest P. Sherman has disclosed that the navy is snap-: ing new strategy calling for the use of atomic weapons and guid-' ed missiles in submarine war fare. The chief of naval operations outlined the new concept in an address at the naval academy. His comments obviously were directed at navy critics as well as the future admirals. Without mentioning Russia by name, he said another power has a submarine force larger than ours." This, he asserted, "is a potent argument for the Unit ed States to possess, not an equal number of submarines, but anti submarine na'val elements of greater effectiveness." Of the type of vessels needed for the new anti-submarine stra tegy, the admiral said it might include: A) Fast carriers in conjunc tion with surface and submarine guided missile ships for attack ing bases, (b) Special raider amphibious units for demolition of bases, (c) Hunter-killer teams of submarines, surface ships, airplanes and blimps, (d) Pow erful convoy escorts and coastal defense against submarines fir ing guided missiles into our ci ties. It was Sherman's first speech since he was named to replace Admiral Louis E. Denfeid in the navy's top uniformed post as an aftermath of the navy row over Pentagon policy, and he had some comments on that matter. Storm Warnings Posted Seattle, Dec. 3 W The wea ther bureau today ordered south east storm warnings hoisted at 9 a. m. from Cape Blanco to Tatoosh and through the strait of Juan de Fuca. The forecast was for increasing southeast winds off the coast and east winds through the strait, reach ing 40-50 miles per hour off the coast, and 30-50 miles per hour through the strait by tonight. an extended hearing Saturday smormng. Hoffert is to forfeit his licenses o any kind for dnv- ing passengers for hire, is to obey all laws, and is to remain the county 3ail until the parole board authorizes suit able employment for him. Hoffert, two-time loser at the state penitentiary, when sen tenced before was not granted probation because of his prison record and Bruce Williams, his attorney, asked for an opportu nity' to make .a showing. Appearing on behalf of Hof fert as character witnesses were Allan McRae, city juvenile of ficer; Howard Maple, local bus mess man; Earl Mootry, Holly wood druggist; Ross Miller, de fendant's father-in-law; Wil liam H. Johnston and Waller Cline, Jr., proprietors of the Greyhound bus depot restau- rant, and Mrs. John Hoffert, wife of the defendant. An af-: fidavit also was submitted from Rev, James ' A. Scott, pastor of a church at Whittier, Calif., who had visited Hoffert in jail and was familiar with his situation. Burden of the testimony of the character witnesses was that aside from this one slip Hoffert had maintained himself as a good citizen during the five years since he was last released (Concluded on Paffe 5, Column 8) Vefs Planning for $55 Million Bonus Portland, Dec. 3 &) The American Legion and the Vet erans of Foreign Wars laid plans today for a SJi5.G0G.000 bonus for Oregon World War II vet erans. The veterans' group will cir culate initiative petitions, to place on the Nov. 1950 ballot a constitutional amendment pro viding for the bonus, i The bonus wou Id be pa id through state-issued bonds, which would be retired by a state tax on real property. It would go to veterans who ser ved during the period from Sept. 16, 5949 to June 30, 1946, on the basis of $10 for each month of stateside service and S15 for each month of foreign service or sea-duly. 4 Criminal insane Inmates Escape Hospital; 2 Fiery Lava Flow From ML Etna Slowing Down Catania, Sicily, Dec. 3 UP) Fiery lava from erupting Mt. Et na today threatened the little Sicilian town of Maietto but an official source at noon 6 a.m. EST) said the burning flow had "slowed down" considerably se veral kilometers from the town of 3600 inhabitants. The police chief at Catania, who reported on this most ad vanced of several flows from Mt. Etna, said the pressure of the eruption appeared to have de creased because new craters were acting as "safety valves." He estimated the "pent-up' lava now was flowing from at least ten openings in the moun tain's side. Blast and Quake At dawn, exactly 24 hours af ter Etna began its new eruptions, monstrous flames shot toward the sky from the main crater. A four-second earthquake jolted the area with a terrifying roar, witnesses reported. The flow advancing on Maiet to appeared no longer to threat en Bronte, a town of 18,000 southwest of Malctto. The lava stream came from one of three new craters which Europe's highest volcano pushed open yesterday. One witness said the lava had reached a point three miles from Maietto destroying outlying Concluded on Pace 5, Column 6) Truman to Push Civil Rights Bill Key West, Fla., Dec. 3 1 President Truman moved ahead loday with plans to ask congress for a strong civil rights pro gram while this country specu lated on the range of his new: anti-discriminating policy in federal housing. The White House gave full endorsement to a statement by Solicitor General Philip B. Perlman in New York that fu ture housing projects can not expect federal aid if (hoy write clauses against tenants of any color or creed. The full extent of this ruling awaited further clarification. Meanwhile, the president re sumed work on the "state of the union" message he will deliver to congress in January in which he will renew his demands for: .1, A federal anti-lynching law. 2. Repeal of the poll lax as a requirement for voting for fed eral officers, 3. A whole series of other laws designed to ban discrimina tion against Negroes and other minority groups. This same message, io be de livered in person, also will call for repeal of the Taft-Hartley act and the passage of measures Mr. Truman advocated in his 1948 election campaign. X-Ray Microscope Shows Inside of Things PhiladelDhia. Dec. 3 VP) General Elettrie company today dis closed production of an X-ray microscope that can show 1he in side of things through which light cannot pass. In other words: It can look candy. The new instrument was shown for the first time at ai meeting of the American Society for X-ray and electron difirac- tion. Charlys M. Lucht of the G-E research laboratory told the group the X-ray microscope is still in the laboratory stge of development. But Miss Lucht pointed out it "may result in much sharper images . and higher magnifica tions than are possible using visible light. "The instrument may compete with electron microscopes in the future." Right now, iiectron micro scopes are the most powerful magnifying instruments in use. These use team of electrons rather than light to form an image of materials under study. Miss Lucht said the X-ray microscope doe not need to be if-' Henry Schrimpf Says Red Tactics Used by Bridges San Francisco, Dec. 3 WR) Henry Sehrimpf, a walking boss member of Harry Bridges Inter national Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's union, faces a gruelling c r o s s-examination from his union chief's attorneys next week. 1 Sehrimpf, a government wit-: ness at Bntigcsr perjury- con-: spiracy trial, testilied that com munist strategy and tactics guided San Francisco's bloody three-day waterfront strike in 1934. The burly walking boss said he Joined the communist party shortly before the' 1834 strike on the urging of Henry Schmidt, one of Bridges' two co-defen danls. Shortly afterward, he said, lie attended meetings "I consider ed them communist meetings" at which Bridges and Schmidt were present. Then he went on lo describe three meetings, two of which were mentioned previously in testimony by government wit ness John Schomaker one to discipline Norma Perry, Bridges' ex-sccrclary, and another to meet Earl Browder, then chief of the U.S. communist party, Another Typhoon Drives on Philippines Manila. Dec. S fft Another Pacific typhoon loday cocked an 85 mile an hour punch at the central Philippines' Visayan re gion, whore two storms have claimed 1,442 lives since Octo ber 31. The Philippine weather bu reau's latest forecast, based on U.S. aeriai reconnaissance, said j the blow would be about 295 miles due cast of Surigao early tomorrow. Surigao is on the northern tip of Mindanao, south ern Philippine island. into a bar ol sieel or a nar oi used in a vacuum like the eioc t'on microscope. "Because ol this advantage,' she said, "It may be possible to examine living materials at much higher magnifications than ever before." I She reported that "clear, sharp X-ray images, magnified 10 times have been produced in the laboratory, and these images: have been magnified 10 times further by photographic enlarge-: ment without serious loss of de tail." So far the X-ray microscope ha,, been used only to study the insides of line mesh screens. And Mis Lucht says the instruments' abiliiy to reveal tiny details has been excellent. The microscope operates on the principle that X-rays can be r.-tfh'ctod from polished sur faces, as can visible light, pro vided that the rays strike the surfaces at very small angles Captured 2 Regarded As Most Dangerous Still at Large Four inmates of Ward 38, de tention quarters for the crimin ally insane at Oregon State hos pital, escaped Friday night after beating and choking two attend ants into submission. The two most dangerous are still at large. They are Marion Watson, 21, who engineered the break, and Robert Mclvin Burr, 21, considered the most desper ate of the four. The two had fled together once before when Burr was an attendant. Returned to custody are Wal ter Chamberlain, 19, caught near the city soon after the escape, and James William Cam eron, 25, taken on the highway- near Woodburn Saturday morn ing. While Watson started the break, it may have been inspired by Burr, who two days before had been transferred to the mental hospital from Oregon State penitentiary after feign ing insanity. He once was em ployed at the hospital as an at tendant, and knew his way about. So his pretense of insan ity doubtless was a clever plot to escape. Story of Escape It was just before 7 o'clock Friday night that the break oc curred. In charge of the crim inally insane Ward 38 with its 51 inmates was Attendant Edwin K. Rollins. In charge of the adjoining Ward 31 was Atten dant Tom Smith. Both wards'- arc on the third floor. Alone In his cell was "Watson. Also ceiled alone was Burr, and he was In handcuffs, for he was still under observation after transfer from the prison. Cam eron and Chamberlain and oth ers were in the same cell. Watson suddenly called to tiie attendant. He was sick, he said. and in great pain. He feared an attack of appendicitis. Attendant Rollins entered the cell alone, which, according to Dr. C. E. Bates, superintendent of the hospital, is a violation of rules. However, he wasn t severely critical of the atten dant for giving this attention to man he thought was sick. Rollins found Watson on the floor and started to help him to liis bed. Watson grabbed him by the throat, knocked him out momentarily and entangled him sheet. He took the atten dant's keys and locked Rollins in the ceil. Watson then went to Burr'i cell and unlocked the door. H removed the gyves from Burr's Safer Housing Need Stressed The speaker of the stale house of representatives and Ihe slate mental hospital superintendent today cited last night's mass es cape by four inmates as an ex ample of why Oregon needs safer housing for lhc criminally in sane. House Speaker Frank Van Dyke of Mcdford and Supt. C. E. Bales said last night's escapes "points up the necessity of hav ing a separate cell building at the state hospital or at lhc slate penitentiary for the criminally insane." In lhal way, (he two men slat ed, the inmates could he held with greater safely to the pub lic. The present criminal ward is in the main building at the state hospital. Adminislralion offficos also are boused in the main building. Dr. Bales said several states provide separate ceil buildings for the criminally in sane in order to prevent such incidents as occurred here last night. Van Dyke, who was in Salem at the time of the break, agreed with Dr. Bales that "a separate building for the criminally in sane eventually will have to be erected." "We have among the crimin ally insane," said Dr. Bates, "about a dozen old-timers who have committed murder. But they arc not ihe dangerous ones. "The dangerous inmates are Ihe young men who classify as rriminally insane, the auto , thieves, sex criminals, etc." 4