jm WEATHER HERE J PARTLY CLOUDY TONIGHT, r Sunday morning with occasion al snow flurries; increasing cloudiness late Sunday with light snow. Lowest temperature tonight, 20; highest Sunday, 28. Maximum yesterday, 3S; minimum to. flay, 25. Total S4-hour precipitation: .09: for month: 11.34: normal 4.M. Beaton precipitation, 36.33; normal, S2.10. Rlrer height, 11.1 feel. (Report by IT. S. Weath er Bureau.) C apital nial HOME EDITION 62nd Year, No. 24 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, January 28, Price 5c "OS33' JlJoUl Unemployed in Oregon Listed Over 90,000 Increase Heaviest in Timber Areas Slight Gain in Salem By JAMES D. OLSON Oregon's unemployed total is IB Ward at ,11. State Hospital Gels Federal Ok ISIS Snow and Cold To Continue, Forecasts Say Little Hope Held Out For Weather Change In Northwest By MARIAN LOWRY FISCHER More snow, more cold that's the general weather outlook for Salem and vicinity this week end, and not much information is gleaned from the weather bureau as to when relief will come from the continued winter bold on the valley. Already January has set an all-time record for any month lor the amount of snow here and there are still three more days in the month. Up to 10:30 a. m. Saturday, a total of 26.5 inches of snow for the month had been recorded. The previous high for any month was a total of 25.2 inches meas ured for the month of Febru ary in 1937. The previous high for January had been 22.1 inch es measured in 1943. 20 Degrees Tonight Total snowfall in the 24-hour period ending at midnight, Fri day, was 4.2 inches, and up to 10:30 a. m. Saturday, .4 of an inch more had been added. A low of 20 degrees is pre dicted for tonight and the fore cast calls for occasional snow flurries tonight, increasing clou diness Sunday afternoon and ev ening with renewed light snow falls. But while many gloomily viewed the weather situation with its icy streets and roads, and slowdown for traffic, and gave thought to higher fuel bills and slackened business gener ally, the young folk and those with more artistic souls were enthusiastic over the continued snow. Beautiful Landscapes The landscape 'generally is very beautiful, trees and shrubs with their covering of snow making picture scenes. And children look forward to a big week-end of sledding and snow sports, right at home. (Concluded on rage S, Column 7) Same Old Story For Northwest (Br ih Associated Press) Winter stayed on in the Pa cific northwest today (Saturday) clamping parts of eastern Wash ington, Oregon and northern Id aho in a sub-zero grip as low as an unofficial minus 37. There was an over-night snow accumulation, too, that added to already set January snow rec ords in such cities as Pendleton, Seattle, Yakima, Salem and Cor vallfa. Eastern Washington and northew Idaho coal stocks were just aboult gone and dealers were on a day"day basis. With no relief front the cold in sight, worries BrMff- But last -night's snowfall was not heavy and lor tne most Dart today's vfeather story was just one of "a An inofficial low of minus 37 degreeat Deer Park. Wash., be lieved tjh coldest in the United otatesy nu oxitcicti imuua lean ings' ot 21 at Harrington, Wash., - y,f at Coeur D'Alene, Ida., and jl at Bend, Ore., and Spokane, iVere reported. Spokane's weather station had a v "warming" fog layer over it. Elsewhere in the city thermom eter, dropped to 20 below. Tfijmath Falls, too, had er rant thermometers. The airport CA1 thermometer went, to abrfve at the same time a down towlP thermometer nose-divided ,ji 12 above at 6 a. m. to 2 . below two nours later, Snowfall Snaps telephone Wires 'The Pacific Telephone and Tf elegraph company has been ex- i u ui- 1 ,. penencing consiueiauie uuui.m tv in maintaining service be tween Turner and Mill City. The trouble is due to the excessive jnow fall which has been snap ping the wires about as fast as 'workmen can repair them. V Service has been on the in termittent side, although no re Jports of cross arms and poles being broken has been received. j Crews of 15 or more men have ' been working almost around the ) clock in an effort to restore serv. sue. Elsewhere throught the valley fervice has been fairly normal, cnslderlng the weather. between 90,000 and 100.000 ac cording to an estimate made Sat urday by the state unemploy ment compensation commission. Actual figures on the unem ployment picture will not be available until after February 1 when all claims are in. The commission reported 64.539 claimants under the state law for the week ending January 20. Only a slight increase was re ported from the Salem area, the commission reporting 5,700 un employed as of January 1, as compared with 5,000 a month earlier. Lumbermen Idle Although more than a third of the state's labor force is concen trated in the Portland area, it accounted for only a seventh of the post-holiday unemploy ment increase. During Decem ber only 1,200 were added to the metropolitan iob-seekers. while outside areas had 46,500 without jobs against 34,000 on December 1, 1949. Increases were heaviest in the western Oregon timber areas. although virtually every office in tne state reported a strong uptrend. It was pointed out that last year's all-time unemploy ment peaK oi o,3Z3 in mid-February included 23,068 applicants for veterans' readjustment al lowances, while currently only about 1,100 of the idle workers co-lid qualify under the G. I. Bill of Rights. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 8) Winter Sports Weather Good Portland, Jan. 28 (P) Good winter sports weather through out the entire Cascade ranee was reported Dy the weather bu reau today. The weather bureau issued the following general ski fore cast: Generally good winter snorts weatner entire cascade range, wim partly cloudy skies, consid erable sunshine higher eleva tions, light northwest winds ex posed areas, continued cold, oc casional light snow flurries with little snow. ' Timberlme Lodge 195 inches snow, 15 inches new snow, tem perature at 8 a.m., 18 degrees; skiing excellent: roads open. chains required, ample parking, tows operating. Cooper Spur 92 inches snow, iu incnes new snow, snowine heavily, light northeasterly wind, 2 tows operating, roads one way in many places, passes very narrow, chains advisable, parking limited. Odell laks 50 inches snow, 8 inches new snow, fluffy, snow ing lightly, skiing good. No other reports were avail- able. Small American Arms Assembled for Europe Washington, Jan. 28! VP) Small being hastily assembled for delivery to Atlantic Pact nations. Officials said these initial supplies are intended as "psychologi cal boosters" for the European countries, which have been con cerned over the delay in getting The aid project was approved bv congress last October, but could not get rolling fully until yesterday, when the ambassa dors of eight western European nations agreed to terms set by this country. At the same time, President Truman formally proclaimed his approval of the master defense plan drawn up by the 12 Atlantic pact military chiefs. The president acted m accor dance with a congressional order holding up $900,000,000 of the billion-dollar European program until Mr. Truman said western Europe's defenses were "inte grated" to his satisfaction. Mr. Truman hailed the Joint defense outline as a "deterrent to aggression," and said its re commendations "provide fur ther convincing evidence of the determination of these nations to resist aggression against any of them. He noted, however, that the tjKt i aW I . ItKiL . .- .. M W.. i- vflk. v. -in 1 ilT Mississippi Raps Acheson Jackson, Miss., Jan. 28 VP) The Mississippi house of repre sentatives sharply rebuked Sec retary of State Dean Acheson yesterday for his comment on the perjury conviction of Alger Hiss. Acheson had said: "I do not intend to turn my back on Alger Hiss." Hiss, former state department employe, was convicted and sen tenced to five years for denying passing confidential state papers to a pre-war Russian spy ring. The Mississippi house's reso lution declared Acheson's stand is "shocking and unprecedent ed." It said the United States is be ing threatened by "the gradual but steady march of communism directed from Moscow" and that communism already has invaded . . the high and important de partment of state as evidenced by the disclosures and conviction in the trial of Alger Hiss." It urged a congressional inves tigation of the state department; the judiciary and the rest of the federal government. In discussing the resolution. House Speaker Walter Sillers said "We have the spectacle in our country of a man proved of disloyalty, convicted after two trials, being defended by a man in the position of holding and guaranteeing the secrets of his country, who stands by mm (Hiss) instead of standing by the people of his country. Russians Shot Jap Prisoners Tokyo, Jan. 28 P) Repatria tion authorities said today a Ja panese army prisoner of war smuggled out of Siberia the names of 150 comrades who died of disease, malnutrition or be fore a firing squad. Authorities accepted the names as authentic and have be gun notifying next of kin, who had no clue to the war prison ers fate. The Japanese officer is Mino- ru Yahata, 29, a company com mander. He was held alternately at Kharaza and Tabaheiza camps in Siberia and at a hospital in Iman. American arms shipments are the arms aid program started. military aid defense plan is but a "first step" and that a strong defense demands constant re view "in the light of changing circumstances." The eight European govern ments signed up for their share of the U. S. arms in a 13-minute ceremony presided over by Sec retary of State Acheson. speaKing for the eight na tions, Ambassador W i lh e 1 m Munthe De Morgenstierne of Norway said the signing of the agreements proves that the western democracies are now profiting by the lessons of his tory. . "We have refused to make all over again the fatal mistake of letting an aggressor pick us off one by one," he said. And, apparently anticipating Russian denunciations, he era phazide anew the "utterly de fensive character" of the North I Atlantic treaty. Heavy Snow Covers Hills and Valley View from a Fair-. . mount hill yard looking westward into Polk county shows shrubs, trees and distant hills deep with snow. Production Credit Assn. Plans Office Building Phil Brandt, manager of the association, Saturday announced purchase of property at North Commercial and Division and plans for immediate construction of an office building. The property, at the northwest Churchill Up For Re-election London, Jan. 28 VP) Conser vative opposition leader Winston Churchill enters the lists offici ally tonight for Britain's general election, only 24 hours after Prime Minister Attlee. The wartime prime minister who seeks to bring his party back to power in the balloting Feb. 23 is to be adopted as con servative candidate for the house "of- commons from Wood ford constituency, north London, He will speak there (at 2:30 p.m. EST) tonight. Attlee, who lost his old consti tuency of Limehouse, east Lon don, in the last redistribution of seats, was adopted last night as the candidate from West Wal- thamstow, only a few miles from Woodford. The 75-year-old Church ill, veteran of almost 50 years in parliament, has represen ted Woodford since 1945. The liberal party, Britain's third in strength, approves its platform today in the windup of a two-day emergency meeting of its assembly. The liberals published a list of 400 candidates for the 425 seat house of commons last night but said there would be more nominees later. The labor and conservative parties will contest all seats. Snow Piles-up lii California San Francisco, Jan. 28 U.R A Pacific storm swept east across the Sierras today leaving north California rail and high way traffic disrupted by snow and dumping up to 2 'A inches of rain in the San Francisco bay area Winds up to 50 miles an hour were subsiding today, and the weather bureau predicted scat tered showers today, with clear ing and a new cold snap to morrow. Heavy snow is predicted for parts of the Sierras and rain was forecast for most coastal and central valley points south and east of here. The storm dumped seven tenths of an inch of rain at San Francisco airport up to midnight. Other sections of the bay area got up to three times that amount, with Mt Tamalpais, across the Golden Gate reporting 2.46 inches for 12 hours ending at 10:30 p.m The Southern Pacific railroad was forced to cancel today's Shasta Daylight streamliner runs between here and Portland, Ore, because of blizzard conditions and derailment of a freight train in the Cascade mountains. Tracks were cleared about 1 a. m.. but not in time to allow yesterday's trains to reach their terminals and be serviced for runs today. Some 1,300 pas sengers were delayed Heavy snowfall was reported over the Siskiyou and Sierra mountains to the north and snow invaded the upper Sacramento valley, with a fall of more than I five inches at Redding. rV vim: .-Sjewr N Willamette Production Credit corner of the intersection, and 'now without buildings, was bought from the Caidalaria In- vestment company through Gra benhorst Bros. The building will have of fices both of the Production Credit association and the Fed eral Land bank, and off-street parking will be provided for customers of the association. It will be of one story about! 40 by 65 feet, of reinforced concrete or steel, and cost an estimated $16,000. Plans are now being prepared by an archi tect and construction will start as soon as the design is approved py tne association board. The property is 119 feet on North Commercial and 75 feet deeD. Willamette Production Credit association and the land bank employ at present about 12 per sons besides field men working out ot saiem. But the building will be designed for expansion that could employ twice that number, Brandt said The offices are now at 299 North Commercial. Purge Begun in East Germany Berlin, Jan. 28 VP) Russia's agents in eastern Germany shar pened their terrorist weapons today against non-communists in politics and industry. The communist press publiclv acclaimed their campaign to de stroy independent leadership in tne Dig unnstian democratic party (CDU) and to fasten a sec ret police network on the Soviet zone. Communist charges of crimin al utterances by CDU officials and widespread sabotage by pro- western workers in the eastern two-year economic plan nearly distracted Berlin's attention from its other troubles. Ihe city's autobahn suddIv line to tne west still was throt tled by Russian guards at Helm stedt, 100 miles westward on the Soviet zone border, where the slowdown of truck traffic continued for the sixth straight day. About 160 trucks were queued up. About seven an hour were ailowed to pass the Soviet checkpoint. Previously this week the rate had been as low as two an hour. Officials here of the three western powers agreed that the Soviet squeeze probably could be broken only by direct interven tion of the allied high commis sioners with General Vassily Chuikov, chief of the Soviet for ces in Germany. Sec. Sawyer Pleads Consumer Interests Atlantic City, Jan. 28 VP) Secretary of Commerce Sawyer proposed today that business give up some of its profits and labor some of its wage demands to bring prices down. He said consumers' interests "must be a first concern of the government," that the farmer should bear them in mind "when he asks for public sup port of agricultural prices," and that the consumer sits unseen at every labor management conference. 130-Bed Unit, in Separate Building, To Cost $650,000 Rep. Walter Norblad Satur day informed the Salem Cham ber of Commerce that the fed eral public health service has approved the initial applica tion for a $650,000 tuberculo sis ward at Oregon State hospit al. The hospital, as planned, will be a 130-bed unit of the state hospital, but will be a separate building. It is a federal grant project. Of the estimated $650,000 that the building will cost the feder al share will be $216,666 and the state's share $433,334. Requirements Needed Before a contract can be awarded and construction start ed the applicant, which is the state, must develop the plans and specifications and meet other re quirements of title according to the public health service act. Col. W. C. Ryan, coordinator of state institutions, said today the word from Washington indi cated the project was safely on its way, but that much prelimi nary work remains to be done. It will take a couple of months, he said, to complete the draw ings and get the plans approved. Badly Needed Now Speaking of the need of the ward he said the state mental hospital now has a tuberculosis ward, but that it is very in- aaequate and has to take care of all mental tuberculosis patients both of the Salem and the Pen dleton hospitals The need, he said, is for a thoroughly modern hospital where the inmates can both be treated for tuberculosis and seg regatea from other inmates. The location for the ward is east of the present treatment hospital and north of Center street. 114,000 Idled By Auto Strike Detroit, Jan. 28 VP) The Chrysler strike pushed its ef fects deeper into the automobile industry today and had more than 114,000 workers idle. Of these, 85,000 are the CIO United Auto Workers strikers who walked out of Chrysler corp. plants Wednesday to en force pension or wage demands. The rest, numbering more than 29,000 have been thrown out of work by shutdowns of Chrysler supplier plants in Michigan and other states. The weekend began without any definite moves on the part of federal and state mediators to bring the warring union and company back to negotiations. It had been reported that they were aiming to get peace talks started by Monday. The UAW says it will hold for 10 cents an hour put into a $100 monthly pension and insurance trust fund, or else the same am mount of money in a straight wage boost. Super H-Bomb a Must Says Nobel Prize Winner New York, Jan. 28 VP) America must either run the race for the hydrogen super-bomb or risk letting Russia win the world by default, one of the country's A-bomb pioneers said last night. Dr. Harold C. Urey, Nobel prize winner in physics and a top atomic scientist, said: "In fact, we may have already lost the armaments race." Thc H-bomb referred to by some as the "hell-bomb" will be nearly 1,000 times more pow erful than the atom-bomb if it caii be developed, scientists say. "I am very unhappy to con cluded that the hydrogen bomb should be developed and built," Dr. Urey said. "I do not think we should intentionally lose the armaments race. To do this would bo to lose our liberties and, with Patrick Hpiry, I value my liberties more than my life." Dr. Urey referred to the fact that President Truman is weigh ing whether the U.S. will launch an H-bomb project or not and also to a report that this was postponed as far back as 1945. "These decisions in regard to the hydrogen bomb have been made in an almost unbelievable atmosphere," he said. "Those people who decided we should not develop it believed Clark M. Clifford Special Counsel To President Resigns Office Washington, Jan. 28 W) Pre sident Truman has accepted the resignation of Clark Clifford as his special counsel a situation which, he said, "from the bot tom of my heart I wish could be indefinitely deferred." Clifford is going back to pri vate law practice. The presi dent said White House adminis trative assistant Charles Mur phy will be sworn in as Clif ford's successor Wednesday. In the letter of resignation made public yesterday, Clifford said Mr. Truman has "furnish ed the highest type of leader ship, not only to the people of this country, but to the peoples of the world." Try Explosives To Free W Norfolk. Va.. Jan. 28 Small explosive charges will be set off near the grounded bat tleship Missouri tomorrow in an attempt to break that sue tion that imprisons her on Chesepeake bay shoal. Atlantic fleet headquarters reDortcd today the blasts will occur at mid-day at low tide and are not expected to free the 45,000-ton ship. A fleet spokesman said charg es equal to about 75 pounds of TNT will be placed about 50 feet from the ship on either beam. The explosives will be lowered into 10-foot deep holes dug in the bay bottom. Shock saves which will be set up in the water by the ex plosives, the spokesman said, are designed to do two things: (1) To "squash" or flatten ridges in the sand on which the Missouri rests. (2) To help the ship break contact with the sand. To emphasize the "small pota to" nature of the 150 pounds' of explosives, the spokesman com pared this charge with the 350 pounds and 500-pound depth charges the United States navy used in World War II. The charges will be exploded separately, the charge on the starboard (or right) side of the ship first. Holes for the explos ives were being dug today. that the USSR could not get the ordinary atomic bomb in less than 10 or 15 years. Time has proved them Incorrect on this point." Dr. Urey said he hoped "very much" that research on the H bomb will fail, but he docs not count on it. "I think we should assume that the H-bomb can be built he said. He estimated the cost as low as $100,000,000. Other estimates have run from two to four billions. Dr. Urey won his Nobel prize for discovering heavy hydrogen the isotope that would make any H-bomb possible and did some of the most critical work in isolating uranium 235, the stuff that A-bombs are made of. At present he is professor of physics at the University of Chi cago. Dr. Urey spoke at the annual Roosevelt day dinner of Ameri cans for Democratic Action. Air Search on For 3 Planes Lost in Canada Only One, U. S. Trans port, with 44 Aboard Definitely Missing Ottawa, Jan. 28 (CP) Three aircraft were reported missing today two In northern Ontario and one in the Yukon but R.C.A.F. headquarters said they knew of only one plane definite ly missing. That is the United States air force transport plane which has not been reported since Thurs day on a flight from Alaska to Montana. A total of 44 persons were aboard. Officials said search and res cue headquarters in Trenton, Ont., was assisting In an investi gation into a report that "a large plane" was seen to crash south of Chapleau, Ont.. last night. However, the R.C.A.F. had no report of any air force aircraft being in the area at that time. Third Plane Reported Lost Meanwhile, they discounted a report that an air force plane from nearby Rockcliffe station was missing in a flight which left here today. This report came from a transport depart ment officr at Porquis. Ont.. and said one Dakota aircraft flying irom nere to Winnipeg appar ently had not reported by radio to stations at Proquis and North Bay. The transport department of ficial was quoted as saying that of 10 aircraft which left Rock cliffe today for western Canada, only nine had reported. The R.C.A.F. at Rockcliffe re ported only nine aircraft actu ally left. Six were Dakota! dis patched to Edmonton to take part in a search for a missing United States transport plane. The other three were Lancaster aircraft headed for "exercise sweetbriar." No R.C.A.F. Planes Missing The Dakota.") were expected to chock in at Winnipeg's Steven son field for refuelling. 'Concluded on Pais t. Column 6) West Europe Opposes Spaak Paris, Jan. 28 VP) U. S. pres sure to put Belgium's former Premier Paul-Henri Spaak at the head of Europe's economic cooperation organization got a cold reception here today. Instead of giving Spaak a po sition of strong political leader ship, as President Truman and U. S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson, proposed 10 days ago, European ministers here to dis- c u s s economic "integration ' made a counter proposal. The eight-member "consulta tive group" of the organization for European economic coopera tion (OEEC) proposed that top level guidance be given two days a month each by the foreign ministers of three small Marshall plan countries. Those proposed are Belgium's Paul Van Zeeland, president of the OEEC council; and Sean MacBridc of Ireland and Karl Gruber of Austria, both vice-presidents. After two days of conferen ces, attended by Marshall plan administrator Paul Hoffman, several officials agreed that Spaak's candidacy was a "dead duck." Hoffman's spokesmen had said he would fight hard for Spaak's appointment to the pro posed new post of OEEC general secretary. But their enthusiasm had waned at the end of yester day's meeting. The question is due to come up for further discussion at an other meeting Tuesday morning. Child's Cough Saved Rivet Operation Omaha, Jan. 28 VP) Four-year old Garlin Young, playing with a toy construction set, slipped a rivet into his mouth and gulp ed. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young, rushed the boy from their home in Wood Lake, Nebr., to a doctor in nearby Valentine. On the doctor's ad vice, they drove 300 miles through the night to get Garlin to an Omaha hospital for an op eration. At the hospital today, Garlin was waiting to be taken to the operating room when he cough ed. Up came the rivet.