IT1' THE WEATHER. PASTLT CLOUDY tonlfht sad Friday. Little change la tesaper ' atara. Lowest tonight Bear SI degrees, alinest Friday scar H degree. A i i- EDITION 1 1 ; 65th year, No. 55 'KnWrtd h aeaed claw ' atur ml ala. Onto Salem,Oregon, Thursday, March 5, 1953 (32 Pages) Price 5c - JLalw Claim Truckers Bill Eliminates Competition Measure Places Floor On Minimum ' Railroad Rates - By, JAMES D. OLSON . ' Placement of a floor oa Bin Imam railroad freight rates, at provided la Senate BlU Sit, .sponsored by the big trackers, would eliminate eompetiUoa la transportation and result in higher rates to shippers. This prediction was made by Both Roy Shields and Frank Mc Colloch, appearing before the senate utilities and commerce committee in a. three-hour hear ing. When the hearing opened Sta. Phil Brady, retired head of the Teamsters' union in Ore gon, announced that an amend ed bill would be introduced bringing both the truckers and water transportation under the terms of the bill. Shortly there after Robert Knipe, representing the truck interests, passed out the amended bill. Morgan Repudiated One of the highlights of the hearing, however, was the re pudiation of testimony by How ard Morgan in favor of the bill by M. S. Shrock, who has been prominent figure in grange activities for SO years. Morgan, who purported to Represent the Oregon State grange as an economic adviser, declared that the grange fa vored the bill because It was in yie "public interest." Shrock declared that be did not agree with Morgan because in the first place the Oregon state grange had taken no stand on the Issue but had al ways favored lower freight rates. . . ; (Cenchried an Page S. Caloma S) Patterson for . Security Plan ; '.CfDv. Paul L. Patterson en dorsed Thursday a plan that would enable the state to Join its retirement plan with the fed eral social security system. - The plan, which might be adopted by the current Legisla ture, would increase public em ployes' benefits- at least SO per cent, and also would decrease the cost to the employes by about 22 per cent- The governor gave his views . to the Joint Ways and Mean Committee. It will require much study, he said. If the plan Is approved, state employes and teachers automa tically would come under it Employes of cities and other lo cal governments would be al lowed to come under it on the same terms. ' The committee had virtually lecided to have a two-year stu dy of the problem, and leave it to the 1855 Legislature. But with the new proposal, the committee hopes it can act at this session. jobless Doles To Be Extended Labor's proposal to extend un employment insurance to em ployes of little businesses appar ', ently will go to the senate floor without emDloyer opposition. . At the first hearing before the senate labor and Industries committee on the CIO-AFL bill to extend coverage to businesses with fewer than four employes, the spokesmen for the employers said they wouldn't oppose the extension of the coverages to lit tle business; However, the employers ar gued strongly against another section of the bill which would Increase the employers' payroll ava 2n rwrcent. ' James T. Marr, secretary of the State Federation of Labor, aid the tax increase is needed to keep the unemployment trust ! fund solvent. The fund totals M 7 million dollars, or about me 11 same as two years ago. I . T.mM foliar mnlover rcD- uuniiilm answered that the 1 fund Is In good shape, ana tnai 1 "this is no tme o pui J taxes on business. An increased i mi ,ia at a diaadvan- MlJk WUUiu - - I iage with employers in other states." i Weather Details ,..-.. mtoraar. til 1 ar. tt. TaMI M-aaa arartaiullaa: far MI alk: JMt aaraiak .5. "'" taiuu. Wat. Swill UUaa, Sl.Ml aanal. T" t, 1 faM, lanan a Price Controls Lifted on Long List of Products Major Household Appliances, Bread, Autos Included , Washington W The govern ment Thursday lifted price con trols from major household ap pliances, bread and bakery pro ducts, automobiles and laundry services. Price Chief Joseph H. FreehiU estimated that the annual sales volume of items removed from control by the action is 25 bil lion dollars. It was the fifth major sten in lifting controls since President Eisenhower, in his State of the Union message, called for an end to price curbs by April 30. These are the major items from which the controls were removed Thursday: All Bakery Products All bakery products, including bread, rolls, pies and so forth. estimated to have an annual vol ume of 3V4 billion dollars. All major household applianc es, including home refrigerators, dishwashers, ' ranges, clothes washers, driers and ironers, nd home and farm freezers. (Concluded on Page 8. Column 4) Senate Passes Justices' Bill The Senate passed 18 to 13 Thursday and sent to the Gov ernor a bill to remove Justices of the peace from partisan poll- tics. The action came after Sen, Richard L. Neuberger, Portland Democrat, took a slap at "threats" by members of the House. Neuberger, urging passage of the House bill, told the Senate that several representatives ap peared before his elections com mittee Wednesday and "made throats" about what would hap pen to certain Senate bills if the Senate Elections Committee acted unfavorably on some House proposals. He said Rep. E. H. Mann, Med ford, chairman of the House Elections Committee and author of the Justice of the peace bill, made "improper statements." "There has been a great deal of vlndictiveness in the House over sponsorship of some Senate bills," Neuberger said. "I want to give notice that their bills are likely to get the same treatment in the Senate if this continues." Strike Holds Up Sailing of Liner San Francisco VP) CIO ship radio operators refused to sign on the Matson luxury liner Lur- line, scheduled to leave for Honolulu Wednesday, and the vessel was still at her pier Thurs day morning. some 730 -passengers were feted on board Wednesday night as though the ship were at sea. The radio operators, asking a 9.S per cent wage boost, acted as individuals in refusing to sign the ship's articles. The CIO American Radio Asociation earl ier had said it would not at tempt to tie up the Lurline. Superior Judge Preston De vine declined to issue a restrain ing order against the union. He spoke with Matson officials by telephone and met with union officials at his home Wednesday night, but could not arrange a settlement Bonneville Council Gets McKay Statement One-of Secretary of Interior Douglas McKay's first major statements on power policies was made public today at the Bonne ville regional council area meet ing being held In the Camellia room at the senator hotel. The council, made up of u tili-1 tv. business, farm and education- al leaders, meet I quarterly to, discuss power needs and prob- lems of the area. j McKay's statement, made in a development and regulation of letter to the Northwest Public non-federal power generation Power association, was presented1 and distribution, by Gus Norwood, executive sec- "2. Urge that the people of the retary, as part of his committee. region utilize their full resources report. The secretary pledged to of private and public effort to use the influence and energies of achieve for themselves a maxi the department to encourage and mum development to the full 11 assist In unifying all possible mit of their capacity, agencies to achieve maximum, (Caocloded .a Fag t. Calami 4) V $fp r ft j I I0m& fij I 41 if: I . J Orgy of Fiery Destruction Hits N. Korea Seoul, W Allied warplanes unleashed an orgy of fiery de struction over North Korea to day. It included a record 1,000- mile round trio fighter-bomber smash within 50 miles of Rus sia's Siberian border. The U.S. Fifth Air Force said IS F84 ThunderJets, flying from bases in South Korea, plastered industrial-targets near Chong Jin, 140 miles from Vladivostok, in the longest fighter-bcAnber strike of the war. " Other fighter-bombers pound ed communist positions along the quiet, 155-mile battlefront. Thunderjets followed up the Chongjin strike with an attack on a muitions plant near Sun- chon, north of Plongyang North Korean capital. Seek Discount On Club Liquor Hotel, restaurant and club operators said Wednesday night that bootlegging would be in creased unless they get a 15 per cent discount on liquor bought from the State Liquor Commis sion. Testifying before the senate alcohol committee on house -passed liquor by the drink bill that now doesn't provide for a discount, they said bootlegging already has reached alarming proportion In Oregon. The senate committee gave a , special Invitation to church and I He said Britain had strained prohibition groups to say whaliher economy to the maximum in they think of the bill. Several her rearmament drive. were present, but none talked George Amato, Portland night i club operator, pleaded for a 15 percent discount because liquor by the drink then could be sold more cheaply. He also criticized the fact that dispensers could have bot tle club licenses or liquor by the drink licenses, or both. He ad vocated a single liquor by the drink license. development of the hydroelec tric potential of the Northwest. "More specifically," he said, "it is my purpose to "1. Recognize and sustain the right of the people of the local and state communities to decide whether they prefer distribution of electric power by investor- owned enterprise or by publicly owned agencies ana their right to control, at the state level, the Spring Weather Favors Road tle Creek road bridge spanning Mill creek immediately west of Turner is a Marion county Job 180 feet long and with a 24 foot deck.- This bridge will be completed and the road re opened in about 12 days. Lower: One of four overpass struc tures for the bypass route east of Salem under contract by Tom Llllebo and now progressing over market road 56. Construction Resumed On Public Projects . Pleasant spring weather nasi enabled Marlon county and state highway construction to be resumed' with - rigor -in -t-this Churchill Asks Record Budget London M) Prime Minister Churchill Thursday asked the House of Commons to approve a record peacetime defense budet of over AVi million dollars. This is an increase of more than 12 V4 percent over the 1952-53 figure. The British expect the United States to cover about one tenth of the total. The budget calls for spending of 1,636,760,000, $4,585,728, 000 for the year ending March, 1954. Churchill emphasized that the heavy defense sepnding was ab solutely essential in this "testing time for a free world." But, he added; "Any further substantial di version of our resources from ci vil to military production would gravely imperil our economic founditions and with that our lability to continue the rearma- men' program. Survey Urges Lower Tariffs Washington VP) A special White House survey urging sweeping changes in American trade policies strengthened the hand Thursday of a British dele gation here for dollar talks with top American officials. The report, drafted by 13 American business, labor and farm leaders, strongly appealed for lowering of tariffs and other barriers now restricting foreign exports to the U.S. The recommendations coin cided almost exactly with what British and other Allied officials have been hoping this country would do. Britain's Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Chancellor of the Exchequer Richard Butler were expected to cite the sur vey's conclusion as they arrang ed new meetings with Secretary of State Dulles and other U. S officials. LOT OF GAS IN CANADA Washington W) Some 20 na tural gas fields in Western Can ada's Peace River country con tain reserves exceeding 2 tril lion cubic feet, a geologist told the Federal Power Commission Wednesday. Construction Top: New Bat locality. Now a county crew under supervision of Joe Roble is building a new bridge over j Mill tyeek on Battle Creek-road ana Torn J-.Uiebo, with a crew of eight men, is pushing con struction of an overpass for the new bypass route east of Salem that will span market road 56. Marion county's new bridge on Battle Creek road immediate ly west of Turner will be 180 feet long and have 24 foot deck made of tongue and groove material. Thirty-six cedar piling acquired by the county in the neighborhood of Idanah will sus tain the structure. Because the formation here has the nature of a cemented gravel, most, if not all, piling is steel shod be fore driving. The pile driver on the job has a 2100 pound ham mer and piling is driven to a depth of seven feet. New Battle Creek road bridge replaces a structure near 20 years old and almost worn out While clearing for the new con struction Roble's crew discov ered truss blocks that, indicate a covered bridge once stood on this site. The new bridge will be completed and the road re-open ed in about 12 days. Lillebo's job is the first of four similar structures to be con structed for the bypass route west of SP tracks. The overpass for market road 36 will be 100 feet long and have a 30 foot deck. Llllebo also has under contract the Boone road, Pringlc road and Battle Creek struc tures. NAM to Oppose All Controls Washington Iff) . A standby system of wage-price-rent con trols would violate President El senhower's blueprint for a free economy, the National Associa tion of Manufacturers NAM told Congress Thursday. Charles R. Sligh Jr., NAM president, said in testimony pre pared for the Senate Banking Committee: "The association's views on price and wage controls, as well as on the need and desirability of standby controls, parallel those of President Eisenhower the free enterprise s.stem should be given a free rein." The committee is conducting public hearings on a variety vl controls measures, Including ex tension of authority for present economic controls which soon expire, as well as proposals for standby powers through which the President could freeze prices, wages and rents in the event of war or economic emer gency. Stalin's Lik Ebbing Amy , Rep ort Chart $tedilyfci& Ike Willing fo Meet Stalin's Successor Attaches Same . Conditions He Stipulated Week Ago Washington VP) President Elsenhower expressed willing ness Thursday to go half way to Moscow to meet whoever succeeds the dying Joseph Sta lin la Russia's scat of power. He attached the same condi tions he set oat a week ago for a possible meeting with Stalla. In a news conference state ment the president aald be did not know what might come from the impending shifts In Russia and described the Unit ed States' attitude of the mo ment as very definite watchfulness.- He said this country's basic aim would be, as it has been, to seek progress toward peace, (Canctaded rare S. Catamn g) Munitions Short Says Van Fleet Washington W) Gen. James A. Van Fleet told senators Thurs day there was a "serious short age of ammunition" the whole time he was In Korea, and Sen. Byrd (D.-Va.) promptly called on the Pentagon to punish those responsible for this "criminal In efficiency." Byrd cam out of a closed door session of the Senate Armed Ser vices Committee, where he had heard jVan- Fleet, and fired oft a burning letter to Secretary of Defense Charles . Wilson. Asserting that in 20 years In the Senate he had "never been more shocked" than he was at Van Fleet's testimony Byrd told Wilson: General Van Fleet testified this shortage has been continuous since he took command and that almost daily he had reported it officially and through channels." Byrd told a reporter Van Fleet Waiiiied there was a shortage of all types of ammunition, includ ing hand grenades. 60,000 East Germans Flee Berlin VP) Mayor Ernst Ren ter said Thursday between 50, 000 and 60,000 East Germans are expected to seek asylum In this island city In March and re newed his appeal for Interna tional aid. "Berlin and the federal repub lic cannot bear the load .alone," he told the city assembly. "What Germany needs is international support and not Just internation al spmpathy." He said negotiations are un der way with three allied Com mercial airlines serving Berlin to fly 1.500 refugees out of West Germany dally to ease the city's burden. Polish Flier Lands Mig On Danish Airfield Roenne Denmark (ff) The first Soviet Jet fighter plane to come into western hands un damaged was brought to a breath-taking landing by a dar ing young Polish refugee Thurs day on the Danish Baltic Island of Bornholm. A Polish legation spokesman in Copenhsgen declared angrily his government would "of course" demand return of the jet, believed to be a MIG IS, as soon as possible. High Dan ish air force officers flew here immediately to examine the air craft. The plane, which carried Pol ish air force markings, circled low over Roenne, administra tive center for Bornholm, be fore the pilot decided to risk a landing at the nearby airport. While airport personnel look ed on in horror, the Jet screech ed down the 1,300-yard long run way, about a third the length normally required for planes i s - a inV , Possible Successors to Stalin L. P. Beria (top), long chief of Soviet state security and secret police; Vlacheslov M. Molotov (center), a for mer Soviet premier and for eign minister and Georgi M. Malenkov (bottom), a deputy premier and a leader In In ternational communism. (AP Wirephoto) Mountain States Surcharge Ended Mountain States Power com pany was ordered Thursday to reduce its surcharges in the Coos Bay and Nelscott districts, effec tive with the March billings. Public Utilities Commistoner Charles H. Heltzel ordered the company to cut the surcharge n the Coos Bay division to 4 per cent, and in the Nelscott district to 8 per cent. He said the surcharge would end in those divisions after the J March billings. of that type. The landing was without accident. A strong military cordon was flung around the plane. The pilot, a curly-haired blond youth of 23, climbed out, still shaking after his experience. He asked immediately for asylum in Denmark, saying he could not stand conditions in his Moscow-controlled home land. Police would not disclose his name. Danish sources said the ref ugee would be given political asylum, but disposition of the plane remained uncertain. A U.S. embassy official de scribed the plane as a sensa tional catch that might yield Invaluable secrets to western experts. But he added: "Of course, the fact that the plane belongs to the Polish air force may indicate that it la an obsolescent model. It Is, only really interesting if It Is ot the latest type. Red Dictator Still In Coma, State icians Moscow VP) Joseph Stalin's heart b faltering, the latest bul letin from his physicians dis closes, and the announcement of his death may be only a matter ot hoars away. A medical bulletin Thursday' night for the first time mentions a failure of the Prime Minister'! heart. Previous reports had cen His Phys tered around a brain hemorrhage stroke-and disturbances in breathing and blood circulation. ' The latest bulletin the third. -from the 10 doctors since a stroke felled Stalin in the Krem. ' lln Sunday night acknowledged that his condition had deterior ated. It called his status "exceed- " ingly grave." Third Bulletin -It was perhaps noteworthy that this third bulletin was is sued only 12 hours after bulletin No. 2. A full 24 hours passed be tween the first and second bul- -letin. This third bulletin was issued at 8:30 p.m., and reported Stal in's condition up to 4 p.m., S ajn.r (PST). If described'. signs , of heart failure. . The bulletin read: ' 'The treatment is at present directed mainly toward combat ting the irregularities In breath ing and blood circulation, in particular of the coronary one." - This would mean the circula tion of blood through the heart. A leading medical authority said the bulletin meant Stalin soon would be dead, if he waa not al ready so, and said it waa in et- -feet a description ot fatal heart .failure. " Grows Exceedingly lal The phystcwrr bulletin ae- -scribed StaUn's blood pressure as . having da ere seed as,e .grew in creasingly -.pel. ,t-,. v-vs..--,., (Oaathiaed I Caluma 4) Caution Rules In Washinqfon 1 Washington WV-The United States will be supercautious to avoid sudden changes, in mili tary policy which might alarm either the Soviets or U. S. allies during any transition in the Rus sian regime. This became apparent today as the Pentagon weighed each bit of information about Joseph . Stalin and consulted frequent ly with the State Department Potentially dangerous situa tions were seen if the U. S. mili tary, for any reason, should make major changes in armed force strength or disposition of troops at this time: If the U. S. should start an abrupt buildup of strength on the belief the danger of war was Increasing because of Russia's internal situation, a new and in experienced regime in Russia might seize upon this as a pre text for launching "preventive" war. , United Nations Marking Time United Nations. N. Y. WV- Soviet Ambassador Georgi Zaru- bln said Thursday Soviet For eign Minister Andrei Y. Vishln sky will fly to Moscow Friday. United Nations, N. Y. (ff) United Nations diplomats anx iously pondered today over news of Russia's stricken Prime Min ister Stalin. They held little hope that any resulting events in the Kremlin would break the current deadlock In their debate on Korea. . Western delegates wondered If Soviet Foreign Minister An drei Y. Vishinsky would stay oa to argue for his program doomed in advance to over whelming defeat. There were unconfirmed rumors that he was trying to get back to Mos cow as qulckiy as possible. The proposals of the commu nist bloc were scheduled to be voiced today by Czechoslova kia's Foreign Minister Vaclav ' David, listed as the first epeak er In the Assembly's Political Committee. Vlshlnsky's policies were echoed yesterday by Polish Foreign Minister Stanislaw Skrzesexew ski. who made no mention ot IStalin's illness. i 'j'i 1 I i i! V it 4" -i. .s i -ei-- -.-T "-'- -. r . -v;... ........ uj;i: .VUC'aK