THE WEATHER. PARTLY CLOCDY t a 1 f h t , Sunday. Little change la lim para tore. Law tonight, St; blfh Sudsy, 94. GDITIQN 65th Yeor, No. 45 Satan, Oregon, Saturday, February 21,. 1953 Price 5c Deluge of Bills Judges Favor Fear Internal D:-l::rFI:;!s Mercilessly Inspection of Fight for Pover Rises in Russia Welfare Lists r-.w. ! , V . -T r . .. . . J-ii . .. " ; . T 5 V k t , :? .;- .. ' lis--:-.- ,1 r f St- i i - V I t' 1 ! I 1 1 May Prolong 1953 Session Legislation Leaders Think End Sure in Another 50 Days By PAUL HARVEY, JR. (UnrliUa Pnu Oomnoadutl Threatened with the biggest delate el bills la history. Ore ion's 41-day-oId Legislature still hi confident It can wind up Iti work la another SO days, Having made good progress , this week with highway and liauor legislation, the lawmak- 1 ers guarantee a good show next week. Here's the schedule for next week, and it doesn't include un ' expected subjects that might de velop: i Monday The Senate will vote on the bill to divide Mult nomah, Marion and Lane coun ties into representative dls tricts. ,It also would have legis 1 latlve candidates run by num bered positions in districts where there are two or more to be elected. ' Fair Racing Money ' Tuesday The explosive issue of whether to keep cn giving - racing receipts to the fairs gets its first test hi the House, which '. will vote on the resolution for - an interim committee to make a two-year study cf the prob lem. (Concluded an Pan 8, Catena I) For Primary Withdrawals The senate nassed a house hill Saturday to permit presidential candidates to withdraw from Oregon's presidential primary elections, but it apparently is headed for a dispute in a senate-house conference committee. - As passed by the house, it would have allowed withdrawal - only If persons who swear that they are not candidates for pres ident. The senate changed it so that any person, including candidates nationally, could withdraw from the state primary when they don't want to run here. The bill, by Rep. Mark Hat field, Salem, is the outgrowth of the 1952 primary, in which Sen. Wayne Morse and Justice William O. Douglas were en tered in the presidential races here aeainst their wishes. Senators vot'ng against the hill were Stewart Hardie, Con don: John P. Hounsell, Hood River; Warren McMinimee, Til' lamook; and Lowell Steen, Mil-ton-Freewater. Governor Picks Interstate Group Oregon's committee on Inter ' state co-operation was named Friday by Gov. Paul I Patter ton and the presiding officers of the legislature. The 12-man committee works with other states in solving mutual problems and working out uniform legislation. Gov. Patterson, Senate pres ident Eugene E. Marsh and Speaker of the House Rudie Wilhelm, Jr., automatically are members. The governor reappointed Finance Director Harry Dor- man, State Engineer Charles E. Strlcklln, and Public Utilities Commisisoner Charles H. Helt zel to the committee. The legislative members are: Senators Robert D. Holmes, Gearhart; Elmo Smith, John tray, and Paul Geddes, Rose burg; and Reps. Carl Franck, Dayton; Lee Ohmart, Salem, and Robert Root, Medford. Variable Weather Week-End Forecast Variable wesiher comes for Salem and vicinity at the week end. Despite cloudiness, the minimum temperature lit the city dropped to below the freez ing mark this morning, 31 being recorded. The skies cleared up long enough around midnight to allow the colder temperature to move in. Low for tonight is forecast for 30. Skies were cloudy Sat urday morning, although the sunshine came through several times. Cloudiness is due to con tinue for over Sunday. Rainfall In Salem amounted to only trace in the 24-hour j period ending at 10:30 am. Sat urday. The Willamette river continues to fall, measuring 7.9 i feet at the local gauge this morning. County Commission ers Feel Opening of Lists Will Stop Frauds By JAMES D. OLSON Nine oat of It representatives of county courts In Oregon ex pressed favor for opening wel fare lists to the public and i anmber favored Including names of parents receiving aid for de pendent children, Id a vote tak en before a meeting of the Joint welfare committee of the sen ate and house Saturday mora lag. The committee was told by the county officials that while they favored protecting the children who are in foster i homes the money for aid to dependent chil dren goes to the parents and therefore the parents' names in such cases should be listed just as other persons obtaining pub lic assistance. -Only Three Oppose Only representatives of the county courts of Baker, Klamath and Wasco counties voted against the bill although it was indicat ed that Baker county may favor (Continued on rase t. Column ) Balkan Pad to Fight Aggression Ankara, Turkey VP) Turkey, Greece and Yugoslavia have (reached complete agreement on defense arrangements against possible communist aggression in the Balkans in talks here, in formed Turkish sources said to day. No communique was issued after the week-long discussions ended last night but the sources said: "Complete accord has been reached concerning defense ar rangements to be made jointly by the three nations." A treaty of friendship among the three, now being drafted in Athens, Greece, is expected to be signed here early next month. Indications are that ahy formal military agreement will be separte from the friendship pact and will follow later. PGE Welcomes Surcharge Probe Portland W) Portland Gener al Electric Co. said Friday State Rep. Monroe Sweetland s de mand for a public hearing on the controversial power surcharge was "groundless and irresponsl- ble." But Waldemar Seton. PGE vice president, said the firm would welcome a public hearing of the facts and would present its answers to Sweetl a n d ' s charges "in the orderly atmos phere of the formal public hear' ing." Sweetland recently asked the public utilities commissioner to investigate the 20 percent sur charge added by PGE to its cus tomers' bills to cover the cost of steam generated power used during the late fall water short age. The surcharge was ap proved by Charles Heltzel, pub-' lie utilities commissioner. Sweetland aiked that all sur charges be impounded and that the power tate structure be In vestigated. 4 Students in Plane Wreckage Franklinville. N. Y. WV-The wreckage of a rented plane in which four Niagara university students set out on a lark eight days ago was found Saturday and . the evidence indicated all four were dead. The Cattaraugus county sher iffs office said farmers Eben Stalcut and Archie Reynolds came upon the wreckage in a wooded gully eight miles east of this western New, York vil lage. . Stalcut's wife reported that the men returned to notify au thorities without stopping to look inside the wreckage but had seen what looked like bodies. The four-seater Stlnson van ished February 13 while en- route the 70 miles from Buffalo to St Bonaventure college, near Qlean, where the students had planned to drop pro-Niagara leaflets for a .basketball game between the two schools the next night. ..i . . ' . ; v. 9 - . Teachers Red Cell Probed Washington W Senate sleuths dug into reports of a Red cell of 500 teachers In New York todiy as It pressed its in vestigation of communist infil tration of VS. schools. Chairman William E. Jenner (R., Ind.) of Internal security subcommittee, said he planned to call a teacher known in "party circles''' as "Time" to testify on the cell next Tues day. ' - - "Time," he said, allegedly acted aa a liaison between the cell and the national control commission of the communist party. Witnesses have told the committee that the cell was set up as an underground with members kept in the dark as much as possible on their colleagues. Canntv Jndrea Disease Odcb Welfare Records Judges from many Oregon counties appeared before the legislative ways and means committee Saturday, morning to air their views on opening welfare records for public scrutiny. Judge J. B. Coleman of Jackson county is shown addressing the committee consisting of Eugene Marsh, president of the senate, Henry Semon, co-chairman of the way and means . committee; Senator George A. Vlett, Representative Dave Baum, chairman of the house ways and means committee; Senator Rex Ellis, chairman of the senate welfare committee; Representative Alva Goodrich, Representative Francis Ziegler and Carl Cover, clerk of the joint way and means committee. Straws lontract Let, Antarctic Row Groundbreaking Tuesday kmqhqm By MARIAN LOWBY FISCHER CITIES TO CONSOLIDATE t The Senate passed and sent to the House Saturday a bill to let Oregon City and Gladstone consolidate. Weather Details Shilna TMtorSar, Mi alalaaa to mw. II. T,U1 U-bMr mtlrttaltoai kwi hrtUUM, Sl.tli atnul. 17.1. Blnr Mkt, 7.ff Im. (Boar St U.S. WmIIw BlTMl.) Blaine McCord, Key Man In Legislature, Dies Ground-breaking ceremonies for construction of the new buildinff for St Paul's Episcopal church will be held at noon next Tuesday, February 24, it is an nounced by Glenn s. raxson, chairman of the church building committee. Contract for the new structure was let Friday to A. N. Minden comnany of Portland, and the bi'Udlng permit is expected to be- taken, out the first of the week for a total of $246,897. The Mind oomBsmy J tt concern now finishing construction or bi JoseDh'a Catholic building here, , The sew Episcopal edifice is to be on- the old Lincoln school property in south Salem, the Congregation owning the whole city block there between High " r-"-; flK Lead Red Army Moscow Marshal Vasaily Sokolovsky succeeded Army Gen. Sergei Shtemenko as chief of staff of the armed forces of the Soviet Union, it was dis closed Saturday. Sokolovsky has been first de puty minister of the armed forces slrtce March 30. 1949. Shtemenko became chief of staff Nov. 13, 1948, when he re placed Marshal Alexander Va of war. Sckolovsy is a full member of the central committee of the Communist Party. He was the captor 'of Berlin and became a hero of the Soviet Union for his work In that cam paign. He was decorated as a knight commander of the Bri tish Empire by Marshal Lord Montgomery in Berlin in 1943 and became chief of the Soviet military administration in Ger many in November, .1946. He gave up that job in early 1949 just before the end of the Ber lin blockade. - Truman to Write For Magazine Anglo-American Con ference Sees Threat to World Peace London (XV-The critical Inde- Caiaeso war and a possible West Germaa Heap with the Atlantic aUlaaee if the European army plaa falls will bo among top priority Hem at forthcoming British-American talk la Wash ington, British - Amerieaa talks la Washlagtoa, British govern ment soorees say. -These topics were reported last night as another highly- placed Briton expressed mount ing anxiety over a possible strug gle for power within Russia if Stalin dies or cults, such an in ternal battle, ho declared, would represent one of the biggest threats to world peace. This Briton said the West could be fairly confident as long as Stalin was in full command but In the event of an all-out struggle for dictatorship between ambitious rivals, "There la no telling what their rashness may plunge us into." (Ceawladea ea Page t, Oshoaa I) 1 Aa, I 9 m ' f 1 J ' 1 A. I 77 1 1 l 7 . ST 11 I Blaine McCord, 69, who had been a key man In the house organization of the Oregon leg islature for 34 years, died in sleep in. his room at the Marlon hotel early Saturday. McCord had been chief clerk of the House rule committee for 22 years. For 12 year be fore that ho had been chief clerk of the law committee of the House. Over a period of 34 i years he had been an Important figure in the House in 17 regu lar sessions. As chief clerk of the rules committee, a position he had held since 1931, all bills Intro duced had to clear through him for checking at to form and content ' McCord's home was at Wood burn. He was born April 21, 1884, at Benton Harbor, Mich., and was graduated from Ben ton Harbor college and the Law College of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and I Blalns McCord of Woodbura (CeaUaaot oa Pago I, Celaaui I) Kansas City OP) Former President Harry S. Truman an nounced Saturday he will write his memoirs and had selected Life magazine to handle all rights. In his first formal press con ference since he returned from the White House Mr. Truman said his memoir will be pub lished in one or two volumes. He also announced that he, Mrs. Truman and their daugh ter, Margaret will go on a cruise to Honolulu, spending about month there. - Mr. Truman declined to state how much ha would receive for his memoris. In a formal statement be said his memoir will not be publish ed for two year in the belief that by 1994 be will be able to speak mora fully on the subjects pertaining to the role his ad ministration played in world affairs. - Mr. Truman said that the per iod cowered by his memoirs will be from 1939, when he waa first elected to the United States Senate from Missouri until the time he left office last month. and Liberty streets and bound ed on the north by East Myers itreet . ' v The structure to go up now will include the church, together with the Sunday school depart ment and class ' room '.- and church office. The building is to have concrete basement concrete slab floor,' the super structure to be of brick veneer up to the wlndowsill, the upper part of wood. , . .' . ' ; The new buuaing wiu oave iti main entrance at the north. facing Myers. The parking lot1 facilities will be arranged along the south end of the property, St Paul's parish has been housed at the corner of Church and Chemeketa streets for the past century, the present parish hall being tne original cnurcn erected 100 years ago. The lot was given to the parish more than 100 years ago. Tne present church building was put up In the early twenties. The Rev. George H. Swift, rector of the parish, invites all members of the congregation to witness the ground-breaking ceremonies Tuesday. The church membership and the many inner-church organizations have worked for years towards the new cnurcn building. James i Payne is the architect for the new structure. Taft Defends Probe of Reds Chicago (ff) Senate 'repub lican Leader Robert A. Taft said Saturday 'he would not favor dismissing a communist professor unless he were sure the professor was effectively teaching communism. Taft however, spoke up for the right of Congress to conduct Investigations Into communist Infiltration of such fields as teaching, publishing and enter tainment saying: . "I see no reason why congres sional committees or others should not bring to the attention of the public the fact that men are communists if they are communists." In a talk prepared for the Na tional Can n ers' Association meeting, the Ohloan continued I see no particular purpose in examining the views of a few individual professors if they are not part of an organization pro moting the spread of commun ism ... "I see no reason why the gov ernment should continue to em ploy people with communist sympathies ... London (ffi Britain Saturday renewed her offer to take her Antarctic dispute with Argentina and Chile to the international Court at The Hague. ' The offer was made in two notes after British authorities last Sunday demolished an Ar gentine hut and tent near an air strip on Deception Island and deported two Argentines. At the same time a Chilean hut in the same area was knocked downj " '' Both Chile and Argentina, who challenge. British territorial claim In the Antarctic, demand ed Friday night that Britain build the installations, and Ar gentina demanded that her two nations be returned to their post Chile proposed that the affair be carried to the Organization of American States, to which the United States belongs. Both Argentina and Chile have spurned previous offers to settle the dispute In the world court. Crowned Leona Show away, senior at Chemawa In dian school, who 'haaf been elected queen for the 73rd an niversary observance at the school Feb. 28-27. The Feb. 27 program in the school gym at 7:30 pjn. will be open to the public . - ' ' ' . Chemawa Fete To Be Feb 26-27 Want fVoicer in Cabinet Agency Wsshlngton () The U. S. Advisory Commission ' on In formation recommended Satur day that the Voice of America and all other psychological war fare and oversea information program be placed in a new federal agency of cabinet level. The advisory committee 1 a group of five distinguished citi zen under the chairmanship of Mark A. May. director of the Yale University Institute of Human Relations. The proposal for removing the Voice and related activities from the State Department was one of seven recommendations which the commission placed before Congress in a report re leased through the department. It coincided with mounting criticism of the handling of Voice operations. The program is now being investigated by a Senate committee headed by Sen. McCarthy. Bohlen Acceptable As Envoy to Russia Moscow Vft An Informed source said Saturday the Sov iet Union has accepted the nom ination of Charles E. Bohlen 'as the next U. S. ambassador to Moscow. Bohlen, an expert on relations with the Soviet Union, Is now a state department counselor. If his nomination is approved by the U. S. senate he will replace former Ambassador George F. Kennan, whom the Soviets de clared personally unacceptable last October 31 ' Chemawa Students of Che mawa Indian school will present a tableau depicting the history of the school at ceremonies com memorating the 73rd anniver sary of the institution TBursday and Friday night, Feb. zo-27. . snssam wlUte BMaeenV ed in the school gymnasium fey the stodenU " lit - : : each night The first night the show will be for students and faculty member only. Friday night the program Will be repeated for the public, ' .-it'.' .' "v. ' Mis: Leona' Showaway, a Umatilla from ! Pendleton, has been chosen queen for the fes tivities. She is the daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Tom .Dominie Showaway of Pendleton, Princesses - will be Pauline Johnson, - daughter 'of Mr., and Mrs. Y. Johnson of. Steamboat Canyon, Ariz.; Lorraine Tom, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tom of Teesnospos, . Shiprock, New Mexico: Donna Jane Col- ville tribe, daughter of Mr; and Mrs. David Jones, Omak, Wash.; Georgia Lucel, Yakima tribe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lucy Lucel, Toppenlsh, Wash.; Patsy Ochiho, Palute tribe, daughter of Mrs. Rosie Arnett Ft. Bid- well, Calif.; and Augustine Phil lips, Yakima tribe, daughter of Andrew Phillips, White Swan, Wash. ' - ' The theme of the tableau will be "Moon Memories," written by faculty members Miss A. Chair lis and Miss H. Gordon. llil . Keren ; Sabre jeti Down or Damage 49 MI6S' " In 8 Days'-'' Seoal tin Halted Nattesa bomber planes ' of every . typo track mercilessly at the eetnaa- lats la aortawost Korea today. American Sabre Jet fighters in their eighth day of victorious aerial combat destroyed, dam aged, or probably destroyed 10 Russian-mad MIG-1S jets in de fending the swarming Allied bomber fleets... ,.- ', The Sabre Jets have downed, damaged or probably destroyed 49 MIGs in eight day. The Air Fore weekly summary said to day that only on Sabre jet ha been- lost In ah battle tat seven days. " ., -.- .. Bed Groaaat Attack . - ' In ground fighting ' on the Western Front United Nation Infantrymen broke up what ap parently had been planned to be the kick-off of the biggest Chi nese communist attack of the new year. Patrols caught 000 en- my troop massing for a two- pronged attack on T-bono hill. They called in reinforcements and artillery." Infantry, artillery and mor tars ripped into the enemy fore, x The Reds never even got to jump off and retreated to their main lines at dawn. B-2s in Big Bald Eighteen B-29s, in the biggest Suprefort attack of the year. hurled 180 ton of 800-pound bomb on a ISO-acre concentra tion of communist . buildings, - supply installation and troop dugouts near Sopo, eight mOe north of the North Korean capi tal of Pyongyang. (Osaitaiil est race i. Oiln U 'I 'Srr.:di':lrfer To Refofntionrc Washington Ci Mai. Gen. Wayne C Smith, commander of the (seventh division which ear. rled out the controversial "Op eration Smack,'! is coming back from Korea to take another as signment . I",.' t The Army, in announcing this Saturday said his return is part of a normal rotation -of officers and had nothing to do with th "Smack", incident and the up-, roar it touched off. Smith, a native of St Joseph, Mo., was sent to the Far East a year ago and was given com mand of th division tsar jury.'. Public Offices to Be Closed Monday Portland () Federal, state and county offices and liquor stores will be closed Mondsy in observance o f Washington's birthday which falls on Sun day this year. Worst Prairie Blizzard Subsides vith Cold Wave The worst prairie blizzard since 1949 subsided today, and the cold wave it sent pouring into the south dispersed torna does that killed on person and left widespread damage in three states. Although the midwest rn storm abated, it did not lose all Its teeth. Great clouds of dry snow, as Une as pumice, were carried across the plains by powerful winds. In some sreas residents couldn't even be sure it had stopped snowing. And th blowing, drifting powder snow hampered the task of clearing clogged highways, Stockmen in western .Nebras ka feared their cattl might be In critical danger, perhaps worse than during the severe winter of 1948-49. The cold front that swept Into Dixie stopped the sporadic twist ers that raked Alabama, Missis sippi and Louisiana late yester day before they could skip into Georgia. A mother of sue children was killed near Tuscumbla, Ala., and at least 10 persons were report ed injured in th storm. - Several rural and city homes were demolished ' In the three states where th twisters whirl ed. . . The mtdwestern blizzard showed its muscles like a pow erful bully. Near Loup City, Neb., th storm snapped 19 high power Une like matchitlck, and visi bility wss so poor that linemen couldn't find th live wires to patch them. Winds from 85 to 60 miles per hour moved a virtual wall of snow across Minnesota blocking highways and patalyz- Af ter bis return "within th next few months," the Army said, Smith will becosM com mander of the 11th Airborne Di vision at Camp Campbell, Ky., U.S. Prisoners j Revolt in Korea Pusan, Korea (V-The U.S. Korean base section said Sat- urday 30 American military prisoners were Injured Friday night In a revolt against stock sde discipline that was quelled after an hour-long battle with a company of military police. The base section announced two of the prisoner were hospitalized. It reported 137 prisoners, convicted by general court martial started fighting among themselves in the prison com pound. - Lt. CoL Edwin Weisman, provost marshal, said internal dissension and grumbling over a stricter prison routine caused th fighting. Th stockade for ."maximum custody" holds prisoner who have been sentenced by general courts martial to dishonorable discharges and' up to 10 year in prison. ing trafflo la th Twin Cities. tar shall Mortar Shell Hits r Mess Kit of 61 With U. 8. Second Division, Korea () A division spokes man reported today . that th communists served up a hot mortar round for hungry sol dier and dropped lt right through his mesa kit The spokesman said th sol dier unidentified brushed off th spattered kit, went to th kitchen, got a tray roll of new chow and finished his meal. No on was hurt by th moo