THE WEATHER HERE MOSTLY CLOUDY TONIGHT, Wednesday; intermittent snow tonight, occasionally mixed with rain, Wednesday. Not quite so cold tonight. Lowest tonight, 20; highest Wednesday, 32. Maximum yeittrday, 34: minimum to day, :. Total 24-haur precipitation: tract! far month: 6.A7; normal, 2.84. Seafon pre cipitation, 21.06; normal, 20.13. Rirer height. 8.8 feet. (Report by U.S. Weather Bureau.) Capital Jonirmal H O EDITION 62nd Year, No. 14 Entered u second einsi matter t Salem, Oreeoo Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, January 17, 1950 . o,esJ Price 5c - C rtV b n i Little Relief From Winter's Clasp Offered Snow and Slush Glazed Over As Thermometer Drops to 13 Above The newest frigid blast in the current winter weather sent thermometers down to 13 de grees Tuesday morning to glaze over the pilcd-up snow and slush in the Salem area. And the weather bureau re ports there is little relief ahead, at least for this week. Intermit tent snow and continued below- freezing temperatures are due tonight, although the forecast is jfor a minimum of around 20 to night instead of the 13 recorded for Tuesday morning. A five-day forecast lists below normal temperatures and occa sional snow mixed with rain, with little change due before Saturday or Sunday. New Storm Forecast A new storm, threatening to bring further snow showers for the northern part of the state was due to hit the Oregon-California border Tuesday The wea ther bureau has ordered small craft warnings hoisted along the coast for easterly winds 25 to 35 miles an hour. Washington, however, is expected to catch the worst of the new storm. A new snow storm started falling again in Salem at noon today, and the ground was frozen enough for the stuff to stay. The northern part of the val ley and Portland were worst hit in the new cold wave sweeping in during the night, and the Sa lem vicinity was in on that wave. Portland reported a minimum of 8 degrees this morning, the sea son's low there toy date. Salem had 13, while on south in the valley Eugene reported 21 de grees. 'Concluded on Page 5, Column 8) Wind and Snow In California San Francisco, Jan. 17 VP) Winds up to 65 miles an hour whipped rain and snow across northern California last night in the third successive storm in a little more than a week. The downpour,, with snow at higher levels, was scheduled to continue today and tomorrow extending as far south as Paso Robles and Fresno, in the San (Toaquin valley of central Cali fornia. Storm warnings continued up from Point Sur, near Monterey, north to Cape Blanco, Ore. Saw mills and an old tanker anchored in the harbor supplied power to Eureka as power lines remained out in Humboldt coun tv of northwestern California. Planes dropped cottonseed pellets to livestock marooned in the bald mountain area of Hum boldt county. Other planes were scheduled to try to drop food to six electric company workers marooned near Hyampon neiehboring Trinity county Railroads expected to get their trains between California and the Pacific northwest back on schedule today. But highway traffic remained difficult. Bus travel was limit ed between Oregon and Califor nia. Oregon state police ordered the tonnage limit cut in half in some places to protect weather weakened roadbeds. Reports from the snow coun try showed snow packs from 36 to 81 inches. Snow and Ice On Highways Oregon's highways were cov ered with ice and snow today, anrl motorists were warned again to use chains. Little snow fell in the past 24 hours, giving snowplow crews -a chance to open all roads excent those which are closed every winter. The 9:30 a.m. road report: Government Camp High wind of marked violence, packed enow, plowing, carry chains Santiam Pass High violent wind, drifting snow and silver thaw. Packed snow, plowing chains required. Six inches new snow. Sisters Snowing hard, packed snow, plowing, chains re quired Two inches new snow. Lapine, Willamette Pass, Che-mult--Snowing lightly, packed snow, plowing, carry chains Two inches new snow. 1 Midwest Flood Menace Grows As Rivers Rise Engineers Prepare for Biggest Fight in 13 Years on Mississippi (By the Associated Pre&s) Imperiled townsfolk sandbag ged levees or fled before the ris ing Wabash and Ohio rivers in southern Indiana and Illinois to day. Further downstream the big Mississippi, fed by all the swollen tributaries, prepared for the biggest flood fight in 13 years. The historic fortress city of Vincennes, Ind., expects a Wab ash river crest of 28 or 29 feet Friday. But army engineers say they may save the city from floodwaters. They say they have the manpower and equipmnt to hold out the river if it doesn't go above 30 feet. Volunteers even schoolboys helped bolster the concrete floodwall with sandbags. Thousands Evacuated But on the Illinois shore of the Ohio, and along the Wabash and Little Wabash rivers, more families were forced from their homes. Evacuation of all persons liv ing in the extreme north end of the Birds Point - New Madrid floodway In southeastern Mis souri was ordered by United States engineers and the Ameri ian Red Cross today. Nearly 12, 000 persons are affected. (Concluded on rage 5, Column 7) Northwest Still Frozen Hard Seattle, Jan. 17 (P) Weather- weary Pacific Northwest resi dents shrugged off as "just one of those things" today a weather bureau forecast that intermittent snows would plague the region for at least another 48 hours. The mantle of white, starting with the 20-inch cover blown in by last Friday's whistling Arc tic-bred blizzard, has made i stock joke of Washington's mot to: "The Evergreen State." As the subnormal weather con tinued, buses and trains neared regular schedules. Schools be gan to open. Housewives re sumed normal shopping tours. Six Southern Pacific trains, held up for hours in Oregon's Cascade mountains by derail ment of a snowplow and work train, resumed their runs yester day. The carried 1,450 passen gers. For many, however, the tedi ous task of readjustment was just beginning. Property dam age ran into the millions of dol lars and at least 11 persons were known dead as a direct result of the cold, wind and snow. Tacoma, alone, estimated the toll of pounding waves to small craft and waterfront homes and bulkheads in the vicinity at $1 000,000. Snow collapsed the roof of the Kelso, Wash., Floral company's greenhouse, causing another $10,000 loss. Hugh Earle Injured Portland, Jan. 17 VP) Hugh Earle, U.S. collector of internal revenue, is in Good Samaritan hospital, the result of a fall on the ice. He suffered a leg frac ture Sunday night. Millions of Said Facing Hong Kong, Jan. 17 (IP) Millions of peasants face starvation Red China this year. Upwards of 40,000,000 persons, mate, are in famine areas. Some 8,000,000 right now In east China alone 16,000, 000 may starve to death. Floods, crop pests and plagues are blamed for the great food shortage. The communist state adminis trative council in Peiping is mo bilizing relief agencies. Its direc tive is available here in British Hong Kong. The directive says a fifth of the cultivated land in east China alone was flooded. That wiped out crops on 9,000,000 acres The Manchurian barter agree ment with Russia is draining off much food from north China Under the agreement food is to be exchanged for Russian manu factured goods. Manchuria was unable to meet its quota. So 'arming areas below the Great Wall are making up the Man churian deficit. USS Missouri Runs Aground Norfolk, Va., Jan. 17 (U.B The mighty Missouri, the navy's only active battleship, ran aground today in Hampton Roads. She was undamaged, the navy said, but probably will re main a prisoner until nightfall. The "Big Mo" grated only a sandbar at 8:45 a.m., at ebb tide. The navy sent a dozen tugs to aid her, but they were unable to get her off immediately. The navy said she probably would not float free until high tide to night. The 12 navy tugs failed in their first efforts to free the bat tleship. The navy said the tide will continue to fall until 2:48 p.m., EST and the tugs probably will not be able to free the Mis souri until high tide at 8:37 p.m., EST. There was no serious damage to the 45,000-ton battleship and no reports of casualties or in juries, the navy said. The battleship went aground 1.7 miles east northeast of the Old Point Comfort light in Hampton Roads. She struck a sandbar on the left side of the channel. Weather Affects Parking Meters Clouds in the skies over Sa lem this week had no silver lin ing so far as the city coffers were concerned at least. The clouds, snow, rain and sub-freezing temperatures com bined to make most of the park ing meters of the downtown area inoperative on Monday. Only a handful of tickets were issued. Tuesday, patrolmen were or dered to check the meters and issue tickets when the red flags were showing. The order to is sue tickets came after a check of four sides of one city block shoved only five meters out of action Chinese Starvation by communist government esti are desperately hungry. An already suffering peasant ry is being bled white. Peasant living standards are near or be low mere subsistence levels The communist budget for 1950 calls for the government to receive 41.4 per cent of its reve nue from food levies. The tax scale asks peasants to surrender average of 20 per cent of their harvest. Even with this stiff rate budget deficit of 18.7 per cent is anticipated by the Reds. All of this explains the com munists' troubles with the peas ants. The Chinese communist gov ernment will support 9,000,000 civil servants and soldiers this year. The Reds say it takes 30 Chinese farmers to support one soldier and his family. Sled and Toboggan Race Snow vehicles show as much variety and rivalry at Salem coasting places during the spell of winter as hot rods do in the springtime. On the sled at the left are Tony Bren and Kent Goechner, and on the toboggan are Judie Burdette, Justine Lewis, Bob Wulf and Ted Foxley. Behind pushing are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tiernan and Kent Tier-nan. Miss Lewis later suffered a leg fracture in a coast ing accident. Repeal ofOleo Tax By Senate Vote Near Washington, Jan. 17 VP) Backers of straight-out repeal of oleo margarine taxes today beat a dairy state substitute, 48 to 37, in a senate test. Tne margin indicated the oleomargarine repealers had control of the senate and eventually would put through their measure, Democrats OK k Formosa Policy Washington, Jan. 17 VP) Sen ate democrats united today be hind President Truman's "hands off" policy on Formosa. Senator Lucas of Illinois, the democratic leader, said a party caucus showed that all of the democrats support the stand of the president and Secretary of State Acheson in refusing to give military aid to the Chinese Na tionalists on the island. "The democrats think the state department and the presi dent are definitely right in the actions they have taken," Lucas told reporters. "The democrats are fearful that any intervention there ultimately will mean war." Republicans have taken the lead in sharp criticism of the president for refusing to move to Formosa, an island 100 miles off the China coast, secure against attack by Chinese communists. The reported agreement fol lowed a suggestion from Senator George (D., Ga.) that Moscow may be calling all the signals for the Chinese communists' treatment of American diplo mats. Plan to Detach Rich Saar Basin London, Jan. 17 VP) Diplo matic sources reported today the three big western powers agreed secretly last November to detach the rich Saar basin from Germany and give it semi- independence. A foreign office spokesman confirmed that the United States, Britain and France have a sec ret understanding on the Saar but he refused to discuss its ex act nature. The spokesman told a news conference that when the three western foreign ministers met in Paris last November they reach ed agreement on the relationship between the Saar and the coun cil (parliament) of Europe. France had been pressing for the Saar's membership on the council, presumably to formalize the fact of its separation from Germany. This agreement, the spokes man added, was "not mentioned in the official communique" is suedaat the end of the talks. The informants said this agreement was that the Saar would be given membership on the council as France desired. American and British endorse ment of the French request, they went on, came only after France made a number of concessions. saw already passed by the house But Senator Langer (R.-N.D.) whose state is a big dairy pro ducer, planned an effort to tack "civil rights" amendments to the repealer. Debate on these could run at length and perhaps lead to de feat of the measure. The repeal backers accepted without argument an amend ment by Senator Frear (D., Del.) which would require colored oleomargarine sold at retail to be packaged in a triangular form. Langer then called up the first of his civil rights amend ments one to tie an anti-lynch provision to the measure. Langer said he was doing that "to find out whether the senate at long last is going to give the poor people, Negroes as well as whites, a square deal." The so-called "dairy state" substitute would have repealed oleomargarine taxes, but would have banned shipment of yellow- colored oleomargarine across state lines. Before rejecting the substitute, the senate: 1. Turned down 56 to 33 an amendment by Senator Cordon (R-Ore) to repeal the 3 percent tax placed on transportation of property in 1942. 2. Refused by voice vote to strike out a section which would have cut back to 1942 levels ex cise taxes on such items as furs. jewelry, luggage, telephone bills, admissions, and transportation tickets. C of C Remains In Old Offices The Chamber of Commerce has reached a definite decision to retain as headquarters only the Cherry room and the admin istrative offices in the Eckerlen building on Liberty street. The chamber is relinquishing the large dining room and the intervening room that is now oc cupied by the Oregon Farm Bureau Federation. Both those will be taken over by Joe Ran dall of the Golden Pheasant res taurant who will use them for the serving of dinners to organ izations and parties, including the Monday luncheons of the chamber. The change has been made for economic reasons. The board of directors has considered various locations, but considering all phases of the question decided the most practical plan was to remain in the present building with reduced space. The Farm Bureau federation will be moving in a short time to its own quarters. .tew Offer for Pacific Power System Made Fight Between Public and Private Ownership Looms New York, Jan. 17 W) A group of investment bankers to day made a cash offer of $15 000,000 for all the common stock of Pacific Power & Light Co., of Portland.Ore. The offer would be effective only if the securities and ex change commission does not ap prove a previous offer for the stock of the northwest utility. which was submitted by a dif ferent banking group. The first offer named a base price of $10,000,000 plus an added sum "contingent upon the sale of certain properties of the Pacific Co." The total price would not exceed $19,500,000. Today's offer was made to American Power & Light Co., a holding company which controls Pacific power St Light. Posts $1,000,000 Herbert Allen, a member of the firm of Allen & Co., New York investment bankers, said the new syndicate had "posted $1,000,000 with American Power & Light Co., as evidence of their willingness to pay $15,000,U00 in cash for all the common stock of Pacific Power & Light Co., only in the event the securities and exchange commission should not approve the sale of such stock by American Power & Light Co., in the proceedings now pending before that body." (Concluded on Page 5, Column 5) Asks Expansion Of Security Washington, Jan. 17 VP) The Truman administration today asked congress to expand the so cial security program to cover practically all employed per sons a broader extension than the house voted last year. It also asked that benefits be increased more than the house bill provides. These desires were outlined to the senate finance committee by Arthur J. Altmeyer, the social security administrator. He was the first witness at hearings ex pected to last 60 days. Altmeyer also urged a bigger tax take for social security. He recommended that the tax be lev ied on the first $4,800 of a work er's annual income. Under present law, the tax now is 1V4 percent (but will rise in later years) and applies to the first $3,000 of income. The house bill would apply it to the first $3,600. On coverage, the pertinent fig ures are these: The present law covers about 35,000,000 work ers. The house bill would add 11,000,000, bringing the total to 46,000,000. Presbytery Meet Dated Portland, Jan. 17 VP) The An nual Oregon presbytery meet ing will hear the church s na tional moderator, Dr. Clifford E. Barbour, at Mt. Tabor church Thursday night. t ' - f'l ' i ih,-- v They Went Coasting in a Dishpan Some hero of nursery stories once went to sea In a sieve, and fared no better than these two Willamette co-cds who went coasting on the cam pus in a dishpan. Margy Powell is in the pan and Pat Howard is pushing. McKay Stalled In Ice Rescued By Competitor Governor Douglas McKay, a Chevrolet dealer, got stuck in the ice today, and was saved by his principal competitor. The governor was supposed to be at the state house for a 9 a. m. board of control meeting. But he telephoned his office to send help. The state car was frozen to the icy pavement in front of his home. A newspaper reporter, hav ing the only handy car with chains, went after him. The rescue car is owned by Valley Motor company, Salem Ford distributor, and was loaned to the reporter. After the governor got into the car, the reporter told him who owned it. "Let's wreck it, then," the governor quipped. Governor McKay was only half hour late for the meeting. Arnold's Body Sent Arlington Sonoma, Calif., Jan. 17 VP) Friends and neighbors paid their respects today to Gen. H. H. (Hap) Arnold. The 63-year-old wartime head of the army air forces, died Sun day. While his body lay in state, an air force honor guard standing watch, public memorial services were to be held from 11:30 a. to 12:30 p. m., in the chapel of the Bates and Evans mortu ary. From President Truman on down, the nation's leaders ex pressed sorrow at the passing of the retired five star general, After the noon services, the body was to be taken to nearby Hamilton field and flown to Washington. P.nnnrnl arnnll. UnAir ,i,lll be placed in the chapel at Fort Myer, "Va. Funeral services will be held at 3 p. m. (EST) Thurs day at Arlington national cem etery. President Truman, who ex pects to attend the services for the pioneer military airman, sent his own plane here to take members of the Arnold family to Washington. The plane, the Independence, will carry Mrs. Arnold and their sons, Lt. David L. Arnold, March Field, Calif.; Col. Henry H. Arnold, Jr., Fort Leavensworth, Kans.; and Capt. William B. Arnold, Banana Riv er, Fla. A daughter, Lois, the wife of Navy Cmdr. Ernest Snowden, lives at Corpus Chris ti, Texas. 65 Mile Gales in North California San Francisco, Jan. 17 VP) Winds up to 65 miles an hour whipped rain and snow across northern California last night in the third successive storm in more than a week. The downpour, with snow at higher levels, was scheduled to continue today and tomorrow extending as far south as Paso Robles and Fresno, in the San Joaquin valley of central Call fornia. Storm warnings continued up from Point Sur, near Monterey north to Cape Blanco, Ore. Board Raises Institutions Doctors' Pay $50 Advance Voted by State Group to End Shortage of Physicians By JAMES D. OLSON Shortage of doctors at state in stitutions and in the state health department led the board of con trol Tuesday to recommend sal ary increases of $50 a month to institutional doctors and $100 a month for state health board physicians. The civil service board must approve the increases. William C. Ryan; director of institutions and Harry Dorman, state budget director, reported to the board that the increases rec ommended had been agreed upon at a recent conference be tween superintendents of insti tutions and representatives of the health bureau. All Shy of Doctors Ryan said that the state hos pital was short three doctors, Fairview home, one; Eastern Or egon hospital at Pendleton, three and the Tuberculosis hospital at Salem, one. State Treasurer Walter Pear son, although voting for the rec ommendation, expressed his dis approval of the higher pay for the health bureau doctors. In the first place their work is not so difficult," said Pear son. "And further the state health bureau keeps adding and adding to its staff and I wonder just what they are doing." Present Rate of Pay Efforts of the civil service board to obtain doctors for state institutions at the present salary scales had failed, according to Dorman. He said that hundreds of letters had been sent to doc tors all over the country but no acceptances of offers of acceptances of offers of posi tions were accepted. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 1) Truman Sees No Emergency Washington, Jan. 17 VP) President Truman today reject ed an appeal by Senator Brew- ter (R-Me.) to invoke the Taft Hartley act against John L. Lew is in an attempt to settle the coal dispute. Emerging from Mr. Truman's office, Brewster told newsmen the president said he feels "the time has not yet arrived" to use the national emergency provis ions of the law. Under the emergency provis ions of the act, the president could seek a court injunction to restore full production in the coal mines. Approximately 79,000 Unit ed Mine Workers are now on strike and the others are work ing only three days a week. The coal shortage already has cut in steel production, Crucible Steel company of America an nounced in Pittsburgh today that it is reducing operations about 25 per cent at its Midland, Pa., plant. There also was a threat of a power shortage in Pittsburgh. Senator Brewster said he in formed Mr. Truman that, as far as New England is concern ed, the situation "already is an emergency." The president made it plain, Brewster said, that he is "not allergic" to the Taft-Hartley act, since he has used it seven times in the past. The president said he would not hesitate if a situation arose which he could satisfy a court that a national emergency exists," Brewster said. "But he said he still feels that the time has not yet ar rived." Gas Pipe Line Blows Out; Shoots Flames Dumas, Tex., Jan. 17 U.R Workmen today repaired a 26- inch gas pipe line that blew out last night and cause a spectacu lar fire. The blowout occurred five miles south of Dumas on an El Paso Natural Gas company line used to connect gas fields in the Texas Panhandle with Los An geles, Calif. There were no ca sualties. Service to California was not stopped. Gas was gathered at points operated in New Mexico by the El Paso company and piped to California. The blowout shot flames about 500 feet into the air for 15 minutes.