--bbbw m A THE WEATHER. VAMABLK CLOCDINI88 with few showers tonight; becoming mostly cloudy, occasional rain, Wednesday. .Little .chance .in tomperatara. Low tonight, IS; Wfh Wednesday, It. FINAL EDITION 65th Year, No. 41 Sattm, Oregon, Tuesday, February 17, 1953 - . a M t Price 5c (forages; unritMiaM Offer Water From Sanliam For Slate Lands Supply to Irrigate 760 Acres at $25 An Acre Proposed By JAMES D. OLSON Sale of a water right suffl eient to irritate 7C acre of atate land waa offered to the atate board of control Tuesday by the Willamette Valley Water company at an initial cost of $25 an acre for the water right pins a charge for maintenance of the canals. The water that the state would receive under the right is taken from the tail race of the Moun tain States Power company's power plant at Stayton and is used for irrigation of several thousands acres of land located between Stayton and Salem. The maintenance charge that the state would be required to pay would be the same as other land owners of the area now pay. Referred to Thornton On suggestion of Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry, the pro posal was referred to Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton to . check the legal aspects of the , offer as well as the state's right to purchase the water right. If the attorney general rules that the state can purchase the water right the board would then employ an engineering firm to investigate the proposal and if the report is favorable request an ap'ropriation from the legislature to cover the cost of acquiring the water right and maintenance of the canals dur . ing the 19S3-55 blennium. ' (Continued ea Page a, Column 1) Hearings for Surcharge Loom Rep. Robert L. Klfstrom of Salem was informed Tuesday that existing laws provide for a public hearing on application by utilities for permission to add surcharges to Its bills, providing a complaint is filed in the offi ce of the public utility commis sioner. A bill providing for public hearings prior to granting au thority to impose surcharges, has been introduced by Rep. Monroe Sweetland. This bill also pro vides for ompounding of any funds collected through imposi tion of a surcharge in event the surcharges were authorized prior to the holding of the pub lic hearing. John R. McCullough, attorney for Charles H. Heltzel, public utilities commissioner, in a let ter to Rep. Elfstrom, said that a law now on the statute books specifically provides any per son may file a complaint against any of the private utilities to de termine whether surcharges are unreasonable or unjustly dis criminatory. "I have been instructed by the public utility commissioner to inform you that if such a complaint Is filed with this of fice he will promptly arrange for a formal hearing with notice to all interested parties and thereafter issue his order. An appeal to the courts from such an order could be taken by any oartv to the proceedings. "In my opinion," McCullough .concluded, "additional leglsla tlon is unnecessary to provide the opportunity for such matter to be heard." Delegates Bill Dies in Senate The house-passed bill to make petition candidates for dele- f gates to national party conven - Hons sign pledges wss dead Tuesday in the senate elections committee. The committee decided to bury the bill, which would have made the petition candidates sign pledges to support the win ners of the state presidential orimarie. Candidates who file by paying the filing fee now have to sign this pledge. The bill was Introduced as the result of the 1SS2 primary. In which eight supporters of Robert A. Taft filed by petition All were defeated, but if they had been elected as delegates to the republican convention, they would not have been bound to support Gen. Eisenhower. Weather Details Hast T9iUr4mr, Mi Mitotan. 1 4tr, ikV Tefei M-ktwr rflIUttMi 1-s far lawtlii 4.01 1 rma, Lti. rt dtlUtlM. raal. M.M. Elver imiii, i. let. (aUtttrt Or WmOw Bart) Senate Passes $32 Million Highway Bonds Construction Bill Voted 25 to 3 and Sent Governor The it million dollar high way bond construction bill was paased 25 to S by the Senate and sent to the gov ernor Tuesday, but only after running into heavy opposition by Senate finance experts who demanded a pay-as-yoa-ga program. By PAUL W. HARVEY. JR. (AumimxI fkm CorrapoodmM The House gave overwhelm ing approval and sent to the Senate Tnesday a bill to create a Klamath River Commission to work ont a compact with Cali fornia for use and distribution of waters in the Klamath water shed. The commission would con sist of five members, four from Klamath County and one from Jackson. A bill providing for a inuiar commission now is be fore the California Legislature. "The time is already late in getting around to this Job," Rep. Edward A. Geary, Klamath Falls, told the House. "There is no question that if Oregon ex pects to continue its develop ment, it must take advantage of every opportunity. Objection Listed The Klamath watershed needs more water, and this commis ston . will prove our require ments ana now to meet them, uuuoraiB now is ma King a statewide survey of its resour ces, and it, too, believes the Klamath area is special case. "We cannot sit idly, by and see our waters going elsewhere, We have no quarrel with Cali fornia, but we are much closer to the Klamath Basin than Cali fornia is." Rep. Robert Root, MedforoV pointed out that the proposed commission, which hopes to get appropriation of 123.000. would function only until the compact is ratified by the two states and the federal govern ment. (Concluded en Pate . Column 8) Safety Group To Cut Deaths Portland ff Some 25 civic and business leaders met here Monday to plan organization of a state citizens safety committee to seek a reduction, in traffic deaths. E. C. Sammons, president of the U. S. National Bank who called the meeting, said the com mittee would "hold up the good right arm of the duly-constituted traffic authorities" and work for public support of traffic laws and their enforcement. He expressed hope that chan ters of the organization could be formed in every Oregon county, waiter May of the Oregon Mo tor Association said the yearly traffic toll is nearly four times the Korean War death toll. He said traffic deaths Jumped near. i jumoed near - ly 20 per cent from 1949 to 1992. Oregon's toll in 1S52 was 458. James Purcell, Portland police chief, Terry Schrunk, Multnom ah county sheriff, and Capt. Lee Bown of the Oregon State Police discussed methods of reducing traffic fatalities. Kraft Founder Dies Chicago 0M9 James L. Kraft, founder and chairman emeritus of the Kraft Foods Co., died yesterday in Wesley Memorial hospital here. He was 78. Heavy Rains Sending Valley Rivers Up Again Rivers of the valley are due to come up moderately during the next two days following the heavy downpours of rain through Sunday and Monday. No major flooding is In sight at present, however, says the wea ther bureau. At Jefferson, the Santiam was above flood level Tuesday. This morning the river there meas ured 12.8 feet and a crest of 14ft to 15 was due before the day was over. Flood stage there is IS fst hut 9jM frnm mnmA. erable washing In adjacent powers this evening and occa iitu minr rima sional rain through tomorrow. pec ted. The Willamette was comine uo . , .. ,, . - ' au aiong me line luesoay morning, but no big boosts areltraveling mountain passes. , - ? Fire Leaves Buttons Homeless When their modest home at 860 Trade street was gutted by fire Monday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sutton and their six children lost nearly all their possessions and were homeless besides. Salem fire stations are receiving food, clothing or furnishings con tributed for the family and another residence has been obtained. Family Loses Home in Fire, Friends Helpfal By VIC FRYER A family of eight was routed i picture of a young daughter who from its home Monday afternoon by flames that gutted a two- story rented house and destroyed all the family belongings except the clothes they were wearing, few articles of bedding and a Farm Doles Hit By FAO Chief Rw nvm A asABTTM Washington VP) The head! of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization FAO has called for use of less money and more of the "self-help philosophy in international pro grams aimed at helping back ward areas. N. E. Dodd, director-general of the co-operative world or ganization set up in the mid-40's to help combat hunger, said there is no doubt a huge amount remains to be done in provid ing technical aid for economic development. "But the answer," he said, "is not necessarily huge sums of money. The kind of thinking that asks for huge sums because there is so much to be done is what gets us into trouble. Once you are granted the huge sums, because there is so much to be done is what gets us into trou ble. Once you are granted the huge sums, you feel that you have to ' spend them within a certain period of time, and fre quently the countries and pro jects aren t yet ready for ex penditures of that size."- . . . . , " IIaiiHIa Trrirtr Trarlla VUUUIC IIUMV IICJIIG Af Yuma Destroyed Yuma, Ariz., UJ5 Fire Tues day completely destroyed a 270, foot double track trestle on the main line of the Southern Pa cific Railroad half a mile west of the Colorado River, tying up all rail traffic. First report of the fire came when a 91-car train of perish ables from the Imperial Valley came into the railroad yards here with four cars of lettuce blazing. booked. At Salem, the river was up to 7.4 feet this morning. in the Z4-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, 1.30 inch es of rain poured down in Sa lem, bringing the month't total to date to 4.01 Inches against a normal fall of 3.24 Inches for the period, The five-day forecast out from the weather bureau this morn' ing calls for rain throuah most of the week with temperatures normal. The forecast for to night and Wednesday Is for Nw heavy snows are report- ?. .,n. .th.e nih Cascades. The state nignway commission warns , motorists chains are necessary 1 -. -, .-. - - j c i m ' died about a year ago. Within a matter of minutes after the blaze, a drive was started for food, clothing and a.iunture lor the Clarence sut- ton family, whose home was lost in the blue at BOO Trade street. The fire broke out about 3:30 and in a matter of moments raced through the house, barely allowing Sutton and the three youngest of the six boys to get out before the entire inside was a rating tafexno, 'w.'.v?-'.--:o The are .was discovered aner 10-year-eld! Klmar rushed up - z . stairs to tell his father that he smelted smoke. Sutton checked through all the other rooms first and then opened the dining room to be confronted by room full of flames. He got the three boys, Elmer, 10; Lee, 7; and Doyle, 6, out of the house and yelled to a neigh bor to call the fire department The blaze meanwhile was sweeping through the house, the heat making it impossible to en ter to save anything. When the firemen arrived flames filled the entire house. They had It under control in a matter of minutes and com pletely out about an hour later. They said the fire apparently started from a backdraft in the chimney. Mrs. Sutton arrived home while It was still blazing and wept helplessly as she gazed on the ruins. Employes at Nohlgren's res taurant, where Mrs. Sutton works as a dishwasher, took up a collection almost immediately to temporarily tide the family over, and Ralph Nohlgren, pro prietor of the restaurant, issued a call for food, clothing and household furnishings over ra dio station KSLM on a 9:30 p.m. broadcast. Sutton, who walks with s cane, is unemployed because of a leg injury suffered in a fall last August. The Suttons moved into the rented home in Novem ber after living in Four Corners chief sources of discord be since April when they arrived ! tween them, in Oregon. I Observers suggested that Na (Continued ea Page I Column 6) Danish Draftees Stage First Strike Copenhagen, Denmark UJ9 Danish army draftees staged a Island base of Bornholm in a strike today on the key Baltic new flare-up of Insurrection against the extension of Den mark's compulsory military service. Approximately 1,000 young Danish soldiers already hsd been Involved la protests which a high officer denounced as mu tinous. The .troops were angry over an order extending the term of draft service from one year to 18 months as Denmark under took to do at last year's North Atlantic Treaty Organization defense conference in Lisbon.. It wss the first mass insub ordination in the Danish army in modern history. Authoritative . a r m y sources ssid there was reason to believe n the demonstrations resulted from communist propaganda, 'Voice' Radio Manaoer.3nl Called Rollen Senator Questions Whether Broadcast ing Sabotaged ' Wahingtoa Sea. MoClel- lam (D Ark.) Tnesday denounc ed the management of U. 8. 'Voice of America" overseas propaganda Broadcasts as "rot tea on the face of It1 He raised questions whether the Broadcast efforts have been sa botaged. McClellan's outburst marked the second day of public hear ings in a senate investigation of the program, marked already by suspension of construction of two huge radio transmitters for the "Voice," The committee has received testimony these facilities o n e near Port Angeles, Wash., and one near Wilmington, N. C, are. costing to times too much. Projects Halted Dr. Wilson S. Compton. head of the International Informa tion Administration which runs the "Voice" for the State De partment testified he ordered the projects halted because of "ob viously preposterous" provisions in the contracts. ! These, he said, allowed con tractors building the transmit ters to charge the government for the equipment they used. McClellan, senior democrat on the senate investigations sub committee which is conducting the inquiry, Interrupted the tes timony at one point with a dec laration: More Than Stupidity "It seeme to me there is whole lot more than plain stu pidity or Incompetence attached to this affair." McClellan said the subcommit tee should press the investiga tion to show whether any of the conditions being investigated came about "by design," adding "Tnis thing looks rotten on the face of it" The subcommittee, with a half dozen witnesses sitting about the room and being questioned, has neara cnarges tnar: - The two transmitters are lo cated in areas of magnetic dis turbances which will result in weak signals for broadcasts aim ed to pierce the Iron Curtain, and waste may claim 31 million dol lars of huge sums being spent on the huge propaganda and in formation program. Egypt'sHandsoff Sudanese Vote Cairo, Egypt () Egyptian Premier Mohammed Nagulb warned the Sudanese people Monday night that Egypt would not approve any attempt to make their mllllon-square-mlle Upper Nile Territory a part of the British Commonwealth. In a broadcast beamed to neighboring Sudan, Maj. Gen. Nagulb declared that any such attempt would void the British Egyptian Agreement to let the Sudanese decide their own po litical future within three years. Earlier, he told newsmen that the Sudanese must choose be tween "unity with Egypt or in dependence." The British-Egyptian pact, signed last week, called for the end of more than a half century of joint control by the two na- tions over the Sudan, one of the guib was replying to critics of tne agreement who said it gives the Sudanese the option of Join ing the British commonwealth of nations. Secrecy in Vice Trial Upheld New York W) A State Su preme Court Justice Tuesday re fused to order General Sessions Judge Francis L. Valente to open tne Minor Jelke vice trial to the public and press. Justice Benjamin F. Schreiber held that the Supreme Court has no right or power" to de cide whether the Judge "should or should not hsve ordered the exclusion of the public snd press" from the trial. Five newspapers, two wire services and a feature syndicate had filed a petition to open the trial. Judge Valente's order, Schrei ber said, violated no statutory or constitutional right of the news papers and wire services. The news organizations had argued that the closed trial was uncon stitutional and unwarranted. Ike Talks Farm r Prices, Secret Foreign Pacts, Controls and Taxes Washington W) President Eisenhower said Tuesday he personally is not considering a naval blockade or an embargo against Red China but he sup poses such steps are being look- Tax Cut Bill Pigeonholed . Washington QU9 House re publican leaders today shelved, for the time being, a committee approved bill to cut personal in come taxes about 11 percent on July 1. The bill which breezed through the ways and means committee yesterday on a 21 to 4 vote, went to the rules committee where Chairman Leo E. Allen (R., 111.) promised to bottle it up "until at least May 1." Allen hoped that by then GOP leaders would give him the sig nal to clear the measure to the house floor, where it is almost certain to be passed. Speaker Joseph w. Martin, Jr., and Re publican Leader Charles A, Hal lack believe that by late April or early May a tax cut can be Justified through heavy cuts in federaspendlng. . After a tax relief bill clears the house, it must be passed by the senate and signed by Presi dent Eisenhower in order to do the taxpayers any good. And it Is highly doubtful, as of now, whether the pending bill can go tne route. Oil Land Repeal Up to Congress Washington Wl Attv.-Gen. Brownell said Tuesday it is up to congress to decide whether to revoke President Truman's ex ecutive order dealing with off- snore submerged lands. Brownell repeated for the house Judiciary subcommittee his view that the order did not cre ate a naval petroleum reserve, but merely transferred adminis tration of the submerged lands area trom the secretary of in terior to the Navy Department. Brownell told the subcommit tee he was not prepared to go into the details of some 37 bills dealing with the administration of the off-shore oil properties. He said that administration witnesses, including Secretary of Interior McKay, will not be pre pared to discuss the subject In detail until next week. Brownell said he wanted to make clear to congress at the outset that naval petroleum re serves within the meaning of the Naval Reserve Act can be cre ated only by act of congress. Korea's Financial Panic Subsides Seoul, Korea (USD Financial panic that followed announce ment of a new currency issue subsided today after President Syngman Rhee assured the na tlon no one would be short changed. ' New currency named "whan" and pegged at 60 to the Ameri can dollar will replace the won whose value was officially 6.000 to the dollar. On the black mar- k me won was worth as little without meeting Communist re as 24,000 to the dollar. Islstance. Stay of Execution for Rosenbergs Granted New York UP) Condemned atom spies Julius and Ethel Ro senberg Tuesday won a stay of execution until at least March 80 and possibly longer. The stay will be in effect to permit the U.S. Supreme court to review the case. In the past the Supreme Court refused to review the Rosenbergs' case and then declined a motion for re consideration of Its refusal. They hsd been scheduled to die the week of March 0. A three member United States Appeals Court granted the stay on motion of Defense Attornw Emanuel H. flloch to give the condemned couple time to pet! tlon the Supreme Court tor a re. view. "We will give you a stay until March 30. and, if your petition Is filed then, then whatever the Supreme Court decides to do Is up to that court and the stay will not expire until they have acted." t ed Into by several government departments. - Meeting with newsmen for the first time since be took of fice, Elsenhower said also: 1. Any tax cut this year would; probably mean higher taxes In years to come, and should be held up until a balanced budget is in sight. 2. He will ask congress for new authority to deal with prices if there Is price gouging or other unreasonable action by business freed of federal con trols. For Pact Nullification 3. He wants congress to nul lify any parts of secret agree ments which have permitted en slavement of free peoples. But he doesn't feel there should be any repudiation of long-secret agreements such as the Yalta Pact as a whole. 4. United Nations forces can't be pulled out of Korea) completely so long as danger ous situation exists there, but ooutn Koreans should replace troops, in the fighting to the greatest possible extent (Canctadea ea Page t, Col sua 4) Provo Given Life Term for Treason New York ttUtt Former Armv Sgt John David Provoo was sen tenced to life Imprisonment to day for treason while ba was a prisoner of war under the Jap anese, v Federal Judge Gregory Noo- nan passed sentence on the 33-year-old San Francisco native. A federal Jury last Wednesdav found Provoo guilty of four ov- ert acta of treason, including ot tering nis services as interpret wr w ms Japanese captors and contrmumc to tne seats ear an American officer. Judge Noonan said he was sparing Provoo the death pen alty, oui auaed: "In Justice to those who suf fered untold agonies the pen alty must be severe. I have ar rived at this Conclusion after considerable soul searching." Noonan could have sentenced Provoo from five years in Jail to aeam. $ Troops Soon lo Raid Talpeh, Formosa OJJD The Chinese Nationalists may soon allow their regular forces, spear headed by American-trained Ma rines, to Join seaborne guerillas in commando raids against Com munist China, it was indicated today. The Nationalist high command has given high priority to stepp- ea-up training lor their Marines, Already 72 American Marine of ficers and enlisted men have gone to southern Formosa to hold two-month classes for the Nationalist leathernecks. It was believed certain more American Marines would follow those now here. s Meanwhile, it was officially announced Nationalist guerrillas landed on Meichow Island oft the Fuklen coast, SO miles north of Amoy, Friday. They withdrew Judge Hand said he would b unwilling "to foreclose a full op portunity for a review of the case by the Supreme Court." Concurring, Judge Jerome N. Frank said: "I would not want to have these people precluded from having a review of their case by the Supreme Court I would not want to have that on my conscience." In arguing for the stay, Bloch said "a aeries of substantial questions of law" was involved. The Rosenbergs' execution ori ginally had been set for Jan. 14 but a stay was granted pending a presidential decision on an ap peal for clemency. President Ei senhower rejected the appeal last Wednesday and the new execu tion date was set Monday, Bloch told the Appeals court he would begin work immediate ly on his petition to the nation's highest court Chiang' 57 n-Jr'' FeteiyTcIl ForSatreJc'j Fighter-Bomber Slash Enemy Supply Routes; Attackers Repulsed V Seoul, Korea IU0 Aaaerieaa ' Sabre Jets shot dewa a eemmu- " nist Jet lighter and damaged an other today while fighter-beaa bera slashed at Bed sopply routes and C.N. trees and artil lery repulsed a flurry af blows along the front The latest damage and destrue- :. tlon claims against MIG-13e raised the Sabre Jets' toll for February to 37 destroyed or damaged, Including fie damage claims belatedly confirmed. . Capt. Richard Cnndrtrk, Red lands, Calif., got credis for dam agiojj MIG. -.--.( -Saejr and clouds wen over North Korea, but fighter-bomb era nevertheless attacked scat tered enemy targets. Stop Oronnd Attack . : ' ' On the ground about 80 Chi lery and mortar barrage drove ' to within hand grenade rang ' of UJf . troops on Christmas hill in the east last night The allied defenders) maneu vered the Reds Into an area fill ed with napalm mines. When the trap was set the UJN. troop set off the mines, splashing the cunese with jellied gasoline and ending the battle. iw i mvmum wen "virtually wiped, out" when they punched at an allied out post near Jane Russell hill on the central front: Two other Phluu 1- enemy probe were also turned back In the region around the) Kumhwa ridge sector. The air force kept up nlght- nists. Yunnan Chinas, Talpeh, Formosa UB Ten thousand armed Chinese revolt ed against the Chinese commun ists in southwest Yunnan pro vince early this month and gain ed control of eight counties, the Tatao News Agency said today. Tatao 1 the new agency of the Nationalists' ' Interior ministry and is known a a Kpomlntang party Intelligence organ, It is a major source of news about guerilla activities on the Chin- e mainland. Lt Gen. Chang YJ-ting. spokesman for the ministry of defense, said he had no know ledge of Tatao's report as yet Military and Kuomlntang in telligence agencies work Inde pendently and the reports of on are not immediately sva liable to the other. Tatao said the rebels occu pied key points In Challi, Fuhal, Manchiao and Chunyuch coun-. ties and partly occupied point in Kiangcheng, Szemao, Ning klang and Llushun counties. Japs Back Prom Alaska Survey Washington VP) Two mem bers of a Japanese foieitiy mis sion that has Just completed a study of Alaskan timber re sources arrived Tuesday to re port their finding to the Japa nese embassy. The two are Takujl Oshima, executive director of a private agency for conserving Japan' forest resources, and Jugo Tan aka, an official of the Japanese Forestry Bureau. The six other members of the group have re turned to Japan. Oshima and Tanaka declined to discuss their findings in Alas ka relative to Japanese interest possibly establishing pulp and sawmills there. An embassy offi cial said the mission would con vene in Tokyo to prepare its re port to the Japanese government Army May Substitute Nylon for Iron Helmet Seoul, Korea (UFWTbe Army Is studying the effectiveness of steel helmets in protecting American soldiers In battle. They may be replaced . by lightweight helmets. xuv nriuy Mm wavy inn wound ballistics research unit is . collecting helmets which have been struck by bullets or shrapnel 'for close examination to guide tht test team "in recom mendation for redesigning."