THE WEATHER HERE MOSTLY CLOUDY with occa sional rain and snow tonight, Thursday. Slightly warmer. Lowest tonight, 20; highest Thursday, 35. Maximum yetterdar, SO: minimum tn. day, IB. Total 2-hour precipitation! .07r for month: 6:14) normal, 3.01. Seaion pre cipitation, 21.73! normal. 20.30. River helaht. 2.0 feet. (Report bj U.S. Weather Bureau.) Caoital HOME EDITION 62nd Year, No. 15 SSfJ'St'oSSl Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, January 18, 1950 (78 Pages) Price 5c fin . HTM1 Forecast Says Gradual End Of Cold Wave Mimimum Today 15 Degrees With Rain Or Snow Predicted By MARIAN LOWRY FISCHER What next in a weather deal? That was the main question in Salem, Wednesday morning. Will it be more snow and cold, or icy rain and a possible silver thaw, or just a good rain to melt away the snow and ice? f Reports from here and there made the outlook a bit confus ing. The local weather bureau forecasts occasional rain and snow tonight and Thursday and slightly warmer temperatures the low tonight due to be around 20, which is still 12 degrees be low freezing. By 1 p.m. the mercury had climbed only to 21 degrees, the weather bureau reported. No new snow fell during the morn ing and that on the streets and sidewalks became a bit slushy with constant travel. Weather a Guess While Salem was listed with a morning minimum of 15 degrees, Wednesday, Eugene with a 16- degree' reading at mid-morning was getting a wet, freezing mist; Roseburg was threatened with a silver thaw, while on farther south Medford was soaked with 1.02 inches of rain in a six-hour period ending at 4 a.m., and re ported a minimum or 4 degrees. Over at Klamath Falls, the mi nimum was 37 this morning against the 15 in Salem and 14 at Portland, most of the south ern part of the state reporting warmer temperatures and rain. East of the Cascades, Bend re ported its worst storm of the winter over Tuesday, 16 inches of new snow bringing the total there to 25 inches on the ground. AU school and mills in that vi- , cinity were closed and logging operations suspended.- ' , . ' (Concluded on Cage 5, Column 5) 2 Main Roads Closed by Storm The Columbia river highway will be blocked all day today by snow between Cascade Locks and Hood River, the state highr way commission said in its 9:30 a.m. summary of road conditions. The Willamette highway was closed by fallen trees between Goshen and Oakridge. Other highways were danger ouy Icy or snow-covered. But one bright spot is that conditions in southern Oregon are near normal. The road report: Government Camp Packed snow, plowing, carry chains. Columbia River Highway Closed at Shell Rock, between Cascade Locks and Hood River, all day. Hillsboro-Silverton Closed by drifting snow 5 miles north of Newberg. Hope to reopen by noon. . Siuslaw Highway Closed 8 miles east of Florence. Santiam Pass Packed snow, , plowing, chains required. 8 inch W es new snow. Willamette Pass Snowing hard, slush, 20 inches new snow. Raining at Oakridge, highway closed by fallen trees, Goshen to Oakridge. Highway 36 Drops 12 Feet Florence, Jan. 18 ff About 200 feet of highway 36, the route from Eugene to this coast al city, dropped 12 feet during the night, and because of the lo cation, about eight miles east of here, it cannot be detoured. A state highway shovel crew from Roseburg was about to start work Wednesday filling in with dirt. No estimate was given as to how long the job will take. Dirt will have to be brought from a considerable distance. The highway at this point is bordered on the north by-the railroad and on the south by the river. Traffic is being routea around by Drain and Reedsport. A few hardy drivers are attempt ing the old route which leaves route 36 east of Mapleton and angles up and down a very steep hill, coming out betwen Cush man and Florence. Army Combals Major Flood On Mississippi Tributaries and Main River at Highest Point in 13 Years (Br the Associated Pre&s) The army ordered heavy earth moving equipment to critical fuze plug" sections of the big Mississippi today in the biggest flood threat since 1937. The mayor of historic Vin- cennes, Ind., issued a special sec ond call for volunteer flood fighters in his endangered city on the banks of the Wabash. The army sent the bulldozers and earth movers to the levee tops of the Birds Point-New Ma drid floodways. There the crews will await orders either to blast out sections of the levee, or set their machines chewing into the massive earthen iloodwall. To Pull Out Plug The idea is this: If a "plug" is deliberately pulled out of the levee, the mighty Mississippi's torrent will surge into the 139, 000 acre floodway. This will lower the pressure on other walls, up and down stream, such as that at Cairo, 111. A leaking dike on the north side of Vincennes made Mayor William L. Betz' call at Vin cennes necessary. He asked 400 or 500 fresh workers to bear a hand at the levee near the mouth of Kelso creek. The north side of the city, the site of Indiana's old territorial capital and other historical monuments, is in dan ger. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 5) Flood Threats In California San Francisco, Jan. 18 VP) Winter storms which have whip ped northern California for two weeks tapered off today, leaving in their wake the threat of floods in a score of communities. Three deaths attributable to the storms were recorded in northern California yesterday, bringing to six the number of victims of winter-caused fatali ties. The flood threats today cen tered largely in the north coast al counties, as did the heaviest downpours from this week's storms. The Smith river, near the Oregon line in Del Norte county, was rising rapidly. So were the Eel, the Mattole, the Mad and the Klamath in Hum boldt county. The Eel, rising a foot an hour, was expected to reach a height of 22 feet today, five feet above flood stage Silver Thaw Threatens Roseburg, Jan. 18 VP) A sil ver thaw threatened to shift south to the Roseburg area, as the temperature dropped to 29.7 degrees at 9:30 a.m. and was go ing lower. State police reported the highway a sheet of ice from the Winchester bridge, six miles north of here, through to the Willamette valley.. Pickett Appointed as District Phone Manager Selection of Bruce F. Pickett of Portland to succeed Harry V. Collins as district manager of the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph company in Salem was announced today by Fred Scholl, general commercial manager for Oregon. Collins, who came here as Salem manager for the company in 1930, and was advanced to the district post in 1931, retires Feb ruary 1 after more than 40 years of service. Pickett will assume the responsibilities of his new position on that date. A graduate of Oregon State college, where he received his bachelor of science degree in business administration in 1923, Pickett has been personnel rela tions supervisor in the compa ny's administration department in Portland since' 1947. Starting his telephone career! a student engineer in Port land immediately after gradua tion, he transferred to the commercial department the fol lowing year. Advancing through various levels of supervision, he subse quently served as sales supervis or, office manager, and manager in Portland, and in 1946 was named district manager for the company in eastern Oregon, with headquarters at Pendleton. In 1947 he was returned to Port land and given state-wide re sponsibilities in personnel rela tions work, the assignment he m s M iicj.,mieaeviaeaia- n ; Snow Crashes Roof at Dallas Dallas, Jan. 18 Heaw snows caved in the roof of the Frank Neufeld dehydrator on South Jefferson street Tuesday morn ing, causing damage estimated at $2000. Two trucks, a tractor, prune equipment and dehydrator equipment were stored in the plant which had not been in op eration since the walnut season. One truck was damaged and some other equipment was hit when the roof fell in the center of the bulding. The cave-in was directly over 500 sacks of wal nuts, which were not believed to be seriously damaged. New fluorescent lights in the building were all broken. The owner said he had examined the room Monday, but decided that buildings on his farm were more seriously threatened and devot ed the day to clearing them. A large barn on the Academy ranch just northwest of Dallas, caved in from the weight of the snow. Eleven head of livestock in, stalls along one side escaped but a 1941 model, automobile was crushed. The ranch is on the Ellendale road and was for merly a riding academy. Wallace Admits Report on China Washington, Jan. 18 (IP) A republican senator's complaint that Henry A. Wallace fathered America's China policy has drawn from Wallace the retort that if his ideas had been fol lowed, the U. S. would be bet ter off. Senator Ferguson (R., Mich), told the senate yesterday that a "secret report" which he said was written by the former vice president in 1944 laid the basis for present American foreign policy in China. Ferguson de plored the policy as helpful to the communists in China. Wallace's response was given to a reporter at South Salem, N. Y. I f the administrtion and Ken eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek had followed the line he suggested, Wallace said, "we would be in a much stronger 'position in the Orient today.'1 Bruce F. Pickett held until his Salem appoint ment. With Mrs. Pickett and a daughter, Jocelyn Davis, who is a sophomore at the University of Oregon, he plans to establish residence in Salem Immediately. tit-':-.,.-. .- V. , & "MitaaMeWtttWiar ' W CM. Roof Falls Under Snow Heavy snow laid low the large expanse of roof covering the Frank Neufeld dehydrator on Jefferson street at Dallas Tuesday. The main roof was com pletely down, the shed roof partially. On hand to inspect the trouble are Claude McAllister, Rollin Friesen, Leon Goebel and Roger McWhirter, who are enjoying an extended vacation from school because of snow. In the background is the ele vator of the Farmers Union Cooperative warehouse. Army Reserve Corps Armory For Salem By MARGARET MAGEE Salem Is to have an Organized Army Reserve Corps armory and the city has been given number one priority in the entire Sixth Army area for the construction of the structure. Confirmation of the construction of tne new armory in oaiem is broueht here by the Sixth Army site board from Sixth Strike Notice Given Chrysler Detroit. Jan. 18 W) The CIO United Auto Workers, rejecting Chrysler's 100-a-month pension offer, handed the corporation ; Seven-day strike notice today. The ultimatum was handed the company at the start of regular ly scheduled negotiations today. There was no immediate com ment from the company. Norman Matthews, UAW Chrysler director, said the union considered Chrysler's pension of fer, made late yesterday, "un sound and inadequate." Total benefits in the offer amount to only about five cents per hour, Matthews said. In recent pension agreement be tween the UAW and Ford Motor company union gains were esti mated at 10 cents an hour. 'Chrysler is trying again to disguise with glowing words cheap and shoddy offer which falls far short of meeting the needs of Chrysler workers and their families," said Matthews. Negotiations between Chrys ler and the UAW have been go ing on since last July. The cur rent union contract expires in August. At the crucial stage in negoti ations, it is often the union's practice to strengthen its bar gain hand by setting a strike deadline. Such a move does not necessarily mean that a strike is imminent. Ice Jams Hit Lumber Plant Tygh Valley, Ore., Jan. 18 (IP) Ice jammed across the White river in this lumber mill town south of The Dalles, crunched out over the banks, ripped down fence and threatened four houses today. Ice heaved up into piles eight to 10 feet high as cakes from up- river flowed underneath the sur face sheet, smashed into the jam, and buckled the top layer. The threatened houses one was evacuated during the night are in a low area over which massive ice blocks are pushing out. The jam formed yesterday. This morning the jagged cakes moving slowly into the low area were 30 feet beyond the south bank of the river. They leveled fence and inched up to one house, reaching the floor level at dawn. Farther on are three more houses, occupied by mill workers, all in the path of the frozen flood. A powder expert was being brought here today by Wheeler Rucker, resident army engineer at The Dalles, to study the possi bility of blasting the jam. Frank Burglung, timekeeper at the Tygh Valley lumber mill said residents feared that a se rious flood would follow any sud den thaw if the jam were not broken. -rt JCourt Asked by J OArmy headquarters, Presidio of San Francisco. The board, which was joined by northern sub-area represen tatives and engineers from Se attle and Portland, was in Sa lem Tuesday to confer with Lt. Col. Bruce Johnson, instructor for the Salem Army Reserve units, and to inspect proposed sites. Currently being considered by the army as sites of the armory are locations on the airport road just off East State street. One of the sites would be just south of the state highway laboratories on the west side of the airport road and the second across from the laboratories on the east side of the road. A tentative agreement has previously been made with the state of Oregon to secure one of these locations for the site of the armory, to be used in training army reserve units in the Salem area. The building, which will be concrete and concrete block structure is to be a two-unit ar mory and is a standard army design armory with a few al terations. Final plans have not yet been completed. Members of the Sixth Army site board in Ealem Tuesday were Lt. Col. William F. Curren of the G-3 section; Maj. William H. Peterson of the G-4 section, Maj. Pierce P. Hurley from the engineer section and J. J. Adams and James M. Orr, an engineer, both of whom are from San Francisco. Joining the men from the Presidio of San Francisco here were Col. Thomas F. Kern from the northern sub-area; Hanford Thayer and W. C. Nelson, both from the district engineer's of fice in Seattle; and D. M. Bel- ton, from the division engineer's office in Portland. Civil Rights Clauses Lose Washington, Jan. 18 (IP) The senate today junked an anti lynching amendment to a bill providing for the repeal of fed eral oleomargarine taxes. One of the three civil rights amendments offered by Senator Langcr (R., N.D.), it was killed by a 60 to 20 vote to lay it on the table. A similar fate apparently was in store for his anti-poll tax and fair employment practices am endments. Their rejection would help to clear the way for a quick senate vote on the repeal bill. The motion to table was made by Senator Fulbright (D., Ark.) immediately after administra tion leaders had attacked Lan- gcr's proposals as an effort to kill the bill. Democratic Leader Lucas of Illinois said Langcr hoped to "cause a filibuster" which would ultimately kill the repeal meas ure. Southern democrats are bitterly opposed to the civil rights measures. "He is not fooling the people who are truly interested in pass ing the civil rights program,' Lucas added. Page Resigns from Supreme Bench; Latourette Succeeds nlkd tor ban On Coal Strikes Washington, Jan. 18 (U.R) La bor Board General Counsel Rob ert H. Dcnham announced today he is asking the federal court here to prohibit the United Mine Workers from calling any strikes until they drop several allegedly illegal contract demands. Denham said he considers the current three-day week in the! coal fields a strike. He wants the court to issue a temporary injunction to put all coal miners on a f we-aay week. 4 Violations Charged Specifically, Denham accused the union of four violations of the Taft-Hartley act. 1. Demanding an illegal closed shop; 2. Demanding a welfare fund for union members only; 3. Seeking an illegal contract clause which permits miners to work only when they are willing and able, and ' 4. Bad faith in bargaining. Denham said he would ask the court to order John L. Lewis and the mine workers union to give up their allegedly illegal de mands and "forthwith resume bargaining in good faith" with the coal industry. Denham said he had cleared his action with the White House 'and they raised no objection." Accused of Coercion The soft coal minors, on or ders from Lewis, have been working only three days a week since Dec. 5. Lewis put his' men on the short work week to allow them to earn some money and still reduce coal stockpiles. (Concluded on Pago 5. Column 3) Reds Necessity Caused Seizure Tokyo, Jan. 18 VP) Radio Peiping said tonight "military necessity" prompted Chinese communist seizure of American, French and Dutch barracks and other buildings" in Peiping last week-end. The radio added the govern ments concerned had "consent ed" to the seizures. (The seiz ures prompted the United States to recall ail state department of ficials from Red China). The communist statements were made in a Chinese lan guagc broadcast. It was moni tored here by Kyodo News agency. After mentioning "consent, however, the Red radio said the three governments' "former con suls" in the Red China capital had "yielded" to communist de mands for the buildings. XJou .4 p ar I T fit t, "w I , , I if? p aid What Do You Feed a Flicker7 The photographer's springer spaniel, Duke, retrieved this cold, half starved bird from , the West Salem park Tuesday, and posed a tough feeding problem for his master. Birds throughout the valley are finding slim pickings during the current sub-freezing weather. (Bob Brown photo) -Ks'':,(BlltaaaMajj Jr'1-'''! ted - " k- - :' N . Above Justice Earl C. La tourette of Clackamas, below Justice E. M. Page of Marion. Polish Delegate To UN Resigns Lake Success, N. Y., Jan. 18 (U.R) The counselor of the Po lish delegation to the United Nations has resigned and asked Secretary of State Dean Ache- son for asylum in the united State because "freedom has dis appeared in Poland," it was re vealed today. 1 Aleksandcr Rudzinski, a key figure in the Polish UN delega tion since 1946, broke with the Polish government over its sup port of Russia's walkout from the security council and other UN organs in the last few days. He resigned from the Polish UN staff and from the Polish con sulate in New York. He charged that the Soviet walkout was designed to "par alyze" the UN. State Department Spokesman Michael J. McDermott said in Washington that the request for asylum is under consideration. Rudzinski wrote to Acheson Monday for political sanctuary in this country. He said that Po land had undergone a "rapid and profound transformation" in the last few months, climaxed by the imposition of Soviet Marshal Konstantin K. Rokos- sovsky as Polise defense minister. Win More Comn,; vJ," VJ r .. 4ft Resignation of Justice Page Due to III Health By JAMES D. OLSON Associate Justice E. M. Page of Salem submitted his resigna tion Wednesday from the state supreme court bench and Circuit ' Judge E. C. Latourette of Ore gon City was named by Gover nor Douglas McKay to fill the vacancy. Ralph Holman, Oregon City attorney, was appointed circuit judge of Clackamas county by the governor. Both Latourette and Holman are members of pioneer Oregon families. Latourette a democrat and Holman, a republican, must stand for cleotion for their new non-partisan offices in the May primaries. Accepted With Reluctance Governor McKay said he was 'forced to accept Page's resigna tion with extreme reluctance" but was compelled to do so be cause the associate justice had been in failing health. Page, de scribed by the governor as a "fine legal mind and a staunch friend," served on the Marion county circuit bench for eight years prior to his appointment to the supreme court last July to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the late Associate Jus tice Percy R. Kelly. Ex-Governor A. W. Norblad, republican, named Latourette to the circuit court position in the fifth judicial district 19 years ago. Latourette has experi enced what the governor called a "phenomenally small number of opinion reversals in that time." Favored by Bar Poll The governor also pointed out that the Oregon state bar poll on candidates for the newly-created Oregon federal district judgeship favored Latourette by better than a three-to-one mar gin. 'I believe in promoting faith ful servants of the state wherev er possible," said McKay. "Judge Latourette's brilliant service to this commonwealth for nearly 20 years certainly entitles him to such a promotion." (Concluded on Page 5. Column 6) Friday Vote on Rules Change Washington, Jan. 18 VP) War ring group's in the house agreed today to a showdown vote Fri day on a rules change that could bottle up civil rights legislation and other parts of the Truman program. Speaker Rayburn announced the decision after a huddle with administration lieutenants. Ho said there will be no caucus of democrats. Many democrats feel that a party caucus last year on the same subject is still binding. That meeting bound most demo crats but not all of them stay ed put to support a change in rules stripping the rules com mittee of its stranglehold over legislation. The rule was changed after that caucus. A republican-southern demo crat coalition now is backing repeal of the 1949 rule and re turn to the old procedure giving the rules committee its former power. The rules committee is dominated by the coalition forces. President Truman predicted yesterday an all-summer fight for the civil rights program, but he got no outpouring of support from congressional leaders. Mr. Truman said he is doing "everything possible" to prevent adoption of the house rules change. $75,000 Fire at Copco Tokefee Plant Roseburg, Jan 18 VP) Fire causing damage estimated up wards of $75,000 destroyed the warehouse and compressor room at California-Oregon Power com pany's Slide Creek unit of its Tokctce Falls project Wednesday night of last week. Information of the fire was brought out Tuesday by Karl W. Smith, camp supply man.