10 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Monday, January 23, 1950 XT?? , ft a J It I ll .' lis .,N. I Hiss After Verdict Alger Hiss, former state department official, his face grim, his head up and his wife Priscilla, holding on to his arm, walks out of the U. S. courthouse in New York after jury had found him guilty on both counts in his second trial for perjury. Hiss' bail of $5000 was con tinued until date of sentencing, Jan. 29 (AP Wlrephoto) Hiss Will File Appeal After Sentence Wednesday New York, Jan. 23 (IP) Alger Hiss, convicted of perjury and branded an aide of pre-war Soviet spies, will file an appeal immediately after he is sentenced in federal court Wednesday. The one-lime hiKh-ranking state department official, an ad viser to President Roosevelt at the Yalta conference, faces a (Possible maximum sentence of ten years in prison and $4,000 in fines. Hiss was free on $5,000 bail after the jury of eight women and four men found him guilty Saturday about 24 hours after they received the case. His chief defense counsel, Claude B. Cross, said at his home in Brookline, Mass., yesterday that the appeal will be filed with the U.S. circuit court of appeals here as soon as sentence is im posed. Cross declined to state what grounds would be cited in the appeal. Before appealing, the de fense lawyer is expected to ask the trial judge to set aside the conviction. Any appeal from the circuit court would be to the U. S. supreme court. The 45-year-old Hiss and his wife, Priscilla, were reported to have spent the week-end at the home of friends studying the rec ords of the trial. Hiss and his wife, who testi fied for him, were not available to newsmen. But friends report ed the defendant kept protesting his innocence and remained firm in his belief that the conviction would be reversed on appeal. Friends said Hiss was shocked at the outcome of the trial, and told them he had been confident the jury would disbelieve the story of his chief accuser, Whit taker Chambers, self-styled ex communist courier. "It just seems impossible that anyone would believe Cham bers, the admitted perjurer," Hiss was quoted as saying. By its verdict, the jury showed it believed Chambers' testimony that Hiss fed him U.S. government secrets for relay to Soviet spies. The government's case was built mostly on Cham bers' accusations, and the main question for the jury was to de cide which man was lying Hiss or Chambers. The latter admit ted on the witness stand that he had lied at times. Hiss was convicted on two counts of perjury for lying be fore a federal grand Jury inves tigating espionage. One count was for his denial that lie gave U.S. secrets to Chambers. The second count was for his denial that he had seen Chambers aft er Jan. 1, 1937. Chambers charged that Hiss, gave him the secrets in 1938. Hiss could not be charged now with espionage because the stat ute of limitations bars prosecu tion at this late date. E ; " .-L 1 Chambers Hears of Verdict Whlttaker Chambers, self admitted ex-communist cour ier who was the chief prosecu tion witness in the Hiss trial, is shown in his Westminster, Md., home as he received word of the verdict which the jury brought in Jan. 21. Alger Hiss was convicted of perjury. (AP Wirephoto) Marquis Childs fo Address Press Meet University of Oregon, Eugene Jan. 23 Marquis W. Childs, noted author and journalist, will be on the University of Oregon campus February 16 and 17 to give the principal address of the Oregon Press Conference, spon sored jointly by the School of Jornalism and the Oregon News paper Publishers' association. Ho will arrive in Oregon Wed nesday, February 15, and will spend Thursday with school of Journalism students and faculty. His speech, on Friday afternoon in the University theater, will be about news coverage in Wash ington, D.C. Childs will be the fourth an nual Allen Memorial lecturer. His appearance here was arrang ed by trustees of the Eric N. Al len Memorial fund which pro vides for an outstanding journ alist to be brought to the campus each year during the Oregon press conference. Thia will be the 31st annual press conference to be held on the university campus, accord ing to Carl W. Webb, secretary manager of the Oregon Newspa per Publishers' association and assistant professor of journal ism. The conference is open to all editors and publishers of the tate. (Advertisement) RELIEF AT LAST For Your COUGH Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the scat of the troublt to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm md aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. 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Money London, Jan. 23 U.fi Winston Churchill said Saturday that a conservative government could lead Britain back to solvency without further foreign aid. Britain's war-time prime minister formally opened the con servative party's campaign for the February 23 general elec tion with a speech prepared for delivery over the uritisn nroaa noctintf corDoration, If the conservative pariy wins, the election, Cnurcnui wm re turn to the prime ministry. He told the British people that they must choose whether to take "another deep lunge into state ownership and con trol with the labor government or win greater freedom of choice and action under a conservative regime. If the labor (socialist) party continues in power, he said, the nation will descend to conse quences the like of which we have never yet suffered or even imagined." He said a labor victory more over would mean continued de pendence upon "foreign char ity' from the United states ana the dominions. He deplored labor's failure to acknowledge in its election manifesto the millions and millions of dollars so generously supplied to Brit ain by America since the war. He said the conservatives, if returned to power, would seek to establish and maintain a ba sic standard of life and labor, below which no man or woman, however old or weak, would be allowed to fall. "Once we have made that standard secure," he said, "we propose to set the nation free as quickly as possible from the controls and restrictions which now beset our daily life . . . "The main reason we are un able to earn our living and make our way in the world is because we are not allowed to do so." Churchill said a conservative victory would not jeopardize the social services put into effect by the labor government and would not mean unemployment. I CIO Supports Tree Press' Portland, Jan. 23 (IP) The CIO state council stood opposed today to the proposed $25 city tax on non-residents working in the city. Among other resolutions ap proved Saturday, the council urged continued rent controls here, voted $100 to campaign a passage of an anti-discrimina tion ordinance in the city, and supported the Oregonian in its controversy with Meier & Frank company. The council offered to join the AFL, the democratic party "and any other legitimate forces in a program that will bring this controversy to a successful con clusion in favor of a free press and unsuppressed news." This referred to curtailment of Meier & Frank advertising after the newspaper published a na tional labor relations board rul ing involving the store. Justice Douglas Is Back in Saddle Again Tucson, Ariz., Jan. 23 u.R) Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, recovering from in juries received when a horse fell on him last fall, has resumed his daily horseback ride. Douglas rode about an hour in the desert yesterday on his first attempt since the accident. He was riding in the moun tains of eastern Washington last autumn when his horse fell and rolled on him. He was hospital ized several weeks. Buy Sack Worth 77 Cents for 1 Cent, and Get Spuds, Too Washington, Jan. 23 (U.R) For one cent the government will sell you a brand new burlap sack worth 17 cents. There's practically no limit on the number you can buy hundreds, thousands, millions. But there's a catch to it. You also have to take the 100 pounds of potatoes in the bag. They're free, but you can't eat the potatoes or let anybody else in this country eat them. If you do, the gov ernment will charge you $3 per bag. And don't try to throw them away, either. If you do, the government's charge is $1 per bag. You have to export the pota toes and you can't ship them to Canada, Cuba or the Caribbean. Suppose you decide to send them to Europe. That's when your trouble begins. It costs about 30 cents per bag to ship the potatoes to port from country shipping points up in Maine, where most of the potatoes are stored. Then, it costs another $1.50 to get them across the ocean. If you can find an European buyer who 11 pay $1.B1 per bag. which officials say is doubtful, you'll break even. Not so Uncle Sam. He loses $2.09 on every 100 pound bag you buy. The one- cent export deal is part of the government's program to get rid of at any cost surplus pota toes farmers have produced un der the price support. Officials doubt it will help dispose of many of them. from neckline to hemline YOU PASS EVERY FINER I I ARYCLEAN1NO He notices everything that stubborn spot, that split seam. Finer drycleaning pay, more attention to dress details, assures letter-perfect appearance Electric Cleaners 565 Highland Phone 3-4821 Order Xavier Cugat Into Receivership Los Angeles, Jan. 23 (IP) Those Latin rhythms of Xavier Cugat will just help to fill a receiver's till until his wife's di vorce action is settled. When the rhumba dispenser, currently in Kansas City, failed to appear in court for alimony hearing Friday, Superior Judge Joseph M. Maltby ordered Cu gat's income and $250,000 com munity property into receiver ship. The band leader's annual in come was estimated at $400,000 by his wife, former Actress Lor raine Allen, 29. But the judge also continued the alimony hearing until Feb ruary 1. Mrs. Allen wants her 48-year-old husband to pay $2, 000 a month, plus $15,000 attor ney fees. The American ice industry produced 49,750,000 tons in 1949. Charles Evans Hughes, Jr. Charles Evans Hughes, Jr. Dies New York, Jan. 23 W) Fu neral services will be held to morrow for Charles i,vans Hughes, Jr. Hughes, former U.S. solicitor general and son of the late chief justice of the United States, died Saturday night at the age of 60 at Columbia-Presbyterian Med ical center. Death followed an operation for a brain tumor. The family has requested that no flowers be sent to the funeral, and that the money be contributed to the brain tumor research fund of the neurological institute of New York. Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. (EST) tomorrow at Christ Episcopal church, in the River- dale section of the Bronx where Hughes resided. Hughes entered the hospital for observation a week ago last night. Hughes, a republican like his father, was appointed solicitor eeneral bv President Hoover in June, 1929, and resigned in April 1930, when his father was ap pointed chief justice. Hughes, a native of New York, is survived by his widow, Mrs. Marjory Stuart Hughes and four children, Charles Evans Hughes, III; Henry Stuart Hughes, Helen and Marjory Bruce Hughes, an of New York. Kahn Gets $765,700 On Jewel Theft Claim London. Jan. 23 W.PJ British insurance firms paid the Aga Khan and his wife $765,000 in claims shortly after they were robbed of some of their jewels in Cannes last August, an insur ance investigator said today. If recovered, the jewels will become the property of the in surance companies. However, the investigator said it is cus tomary to offer recovered prop erty to the original owners at cost. He said the $70,000 reward offered at the time of the rob bery still stands. 'Crude Mistakes' of U. S. Role In Foreign Affairs Hit by Russ By TOM WHITNEY Moscow, Jan. 23 (P) Pravda, voice of the communist party, has attacked a new Soviet history book which it says made crude mistakes in depicting the role of the United States in recent world history. The book, entitled "Essays in Current History," was written by K. Gerbov and was issued bys- Everyone Knows Only Caterixed Oil Leaves NO CARBON! SOOT! 35622 or 35606 Silem'i Exclatir Caterliad Oil Dealer Howard J. Smalley Oil Co. 1405 Broadway IF YOU'RE TIRED.. ... of turning screws with a kitchen knife ... of cutting wire with scissors ... of turning nuts with poor fitting pliers ... or using tools of 1850 vintage . . . then come to PR0TO headquarters and buy the hieh nualitv. tnntrh longlasting tools you need for doing your work right! LU FHONI Lvi.H bRown I a Ukrainian publishing house. In describing the causes of the entry of the United States into the first world war, Prav da says, Gerbov forgot the main one: "The annexationist plans of American imperialism in the 1914-1918 war." Pravda said Gerbov attribut ed the intervention of the United States in the Soviet Union in 1918-1919 as having taken place only under the pressure of the British and the French, and only in order to protect United States interests. Pravda commented: "To ex plain the intervention of the United States in our country by the necessity of defending its own 'interests' means to justify tne American imperialists who in fact had openly annexationist purposes, striving to stifle and destroy the young Soviet repub lic, to enslave the Soviet peo ple. The Soviet paper said Gerbov wrote that it was the United States which compelled the Japanese to withdraw their troops from eastern Siberia in 1922. This, the paper said, is a falsification of history and piays into 'the hands of Bour geois historians who pharisai cally sing of the 'love of peace' of the U. S. Pravda made other criticism of Gerbov, saying that iie was silent about the "class struggle1 in the U. S., and that he praised in every way Wilson, Hoover and "other reactionaries." The paper condemned the Sov iet' writer for using great num bers of western source material at the same time ignoring some ot the most important docu ments of the time he wrote about. It said he quoted abun dantly from Citrine, Hoover, $$ MONEY $$ FHA m Real Estate Loans Farm or City Personal and Auto Loans State Finance Co. 153 S. High St. Lie. S-216 M 222 Clearance Shoe Sale NOW IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO STOCK UP ON HIGH GRADE SHOES AT THE LOWEST PRICE IN . 10 YEARS! Thousands of Pairs of Quality SHOES Reduced " Th $5.00 K, Added feature for One Week Only. $2.00 Reduction on the CANTILEVER SCOUT World's Most Comfortable Shoe ACKLIN'S B00TERY 105 NORTH HIGH Keynes "and also the bandit, Al Capone." "The issuance of this harm ful anti-Soviet booklet of Ger bov is a great mistake of the publishing house," Pravda con cluded. , THE SUN NEVER SETS IN A BENDIX AUTOMATIC DRYER New models! New improve ments! 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