THE WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY tonight Wednesday. Scattered showers tonight. Little change In tem perature. Low tonight, 40; high Wednesday, SS. Enlargement Of Emergency Board Favored Joint Ways-Means p Vote for Group of 9 s From Both Houses 4 By JAMES D. OLSON '' Enlargement of the state emergency board from seven to nine members won approval of the joint ways and means committee Tuesday when a bill ' making this provision was re ported out favorably, j Five members of the comlt . tee would be appointed by the speaker of the house and four by the president of the senate. This committee disburses an emergency fund between legis lative sessions in event emer gencies arise, grants funds for new departments created by the legislature and should a bill providing for a legislative analyst become law, this com mittee will direct this official', work. Croup Legalized V"J The emergency committee operated for many years with out question until former At- : torney General George Neu ner held the committee lack- . ed statutory powers. During ' the past two years the com mittee served as an advisory ' (Concluded on Page S, Column 7) Senate Passes Security Plan Legislation to combine Ore son's public employes retire' ment system with the federal social security plan was ap proved by the Senate Tuesday and sent to the House. It will enable the 39,000 state, county, city, school and other public employes, who now are under the state plan, to get bigger benefits at lower cost. The benefit increase will be as much as SO per cent greater, while the cost to the employe Will be 20 to 30 per cent less. Sen. John C. F. Merrifield, Portland insurance executive who is the father of the idea, said "it will make it easier to attract many goqd people to public employment in Ore- l gon." ' The legislation provides that each employe under the plan ;: would get 60 per cent of the 'present benefits under the state plan, plus full social security benefits. - Sen. Roger Loennlg of : Haines cast the only vote against the proposal. Pensions Hiked For Disabled 1 For the third successive time, Rep. Gust Anderson, Portland labor leader, has "succeeded in gaining approval of a bill providing for pay ments of $75 a month for per manently disabled married men living with wives and $60 a ; month for widows of perma nently disabled husbands. Tuesday Governor Paul L. Patterson signed the bill, i Rep. Anderson first intro duced the bill in 1049 and be cause the legislation requires an appropriation it must be re-enacted every two years. Rep. Francis Zigler joined Anderson on introduction of the bill which passed both houses without a dissenting Vote. Without the legislation the beneficiaries under the law would be paid only $35 a month for the disabled per son and the widow would re ceive but $30. Springtime a Day at a Time ' Spring of 1953 variety seem ingly comes in one-day stretches. Mondaywas an ideal . spring day, the maximum go ing up to 69 degrees, then rain came again early Tuesday morning. And the forecast is for more cloudiness and scattered showers tonight and Wednes- : day. The five-day forecast out Tuesday just calls for more of the, same some light rain, cloudiness, and temperatures near normal. . The rivers in the central and lower valley regions were a bit higher Tuesday morning, but not alarmingly so. At Salem, the Willamette was up to 9.5 Tuesday morning. i 65th Revamp Plan Of Legislature Called Invalid Reapportionment Act Challenged in Cir cuit Court Here A complaint charging that the constitutional amendment providing for reapportion-J ment of the Oregon leglsla ture is unconstitutional was filed in the Marion county circuit court Tuesday by John F. Steelhammer, attorney in behalf of Representative David Baum of Union county. Secretary of State EarL T. Newbry-and Attorney General Robert Thornton are named defendants. While the complaint cites numerous paragraphs of the constitutional amendment which are held to be uncon' stitutional, the principal com' plaint is made that it gives the secretary of state legisla tive powers contrary to the constitution and grants the supreme court both legislative (Concluded on Page S, Column 5) Czechs Escape to West Germany Frankfurt. Germany Wl- Four anti-Communist Czechs one a woman brought a "Freedom Plane" out of their homeland Monday night after slugging the operator and grab' Mng the controls at gunpoint. First details of the daring dash for freedom came from U. S. H i g h Commissioner James B. Con ant. Conant said the pilot and three fellow conspirators re fused to land the craft with 29 persons aboard at Rhine-Main airport in West Germany until American authorities had as sured the four they would be granted asylum. Later two oth ers requested permission to live in the West. ; Conant gave this account of what happened before the silver-hulled C-47 put down at Frankfurt's Rhone - Main air base: "The escape plan was organ Ized by a mechanic of the famed Skoda armament works and his wife." House Group For Pelton Dam i The House State and Federal Affairs Committee voted 5 to 2 Monday night for a "Pelton Dam" Bill that only is a mere shadow of what it was when introduced for the Portland General Electric Company eight weeks ago. The bill would allow court appeals from decisions of the Hydro- electric Commission, thus throwing into the courts the disputes between the fish ing and power interests over whether power dams should be built. The Hydro-electric Commis sion refused PGE a license to build Pelton Dam on the Des chutes River because the Fish Commision exercised its veto power over the proposed 28 million dollar dam. The House committee voted Monday night to remove the bill's emergency clause, which would have made it become law as soon as signed by the governor. Budget Making to turn On Salary Increases Since salary and wage in creases for city officers and employes are the most baffling question before the budget committee the city budgeteers voted Monday night to make a new approach to the 1953-1954 financing job. They propose to determine the percentage of increase to be allowed, and what it will be in total amount, and then go on from there with the budget making detail. As a special committee to study the .pay question Chair man Dan Fry appointed Mayor Al Loucks,, Alderman Tom Armstrong, and Robert K. Powell, a non-council member. This sub-committee is ex pected to report at a meeting of the general committee next Monday night, and if its find ings are adopted City Manager J. L. Franzen will then be giv en another week to revise the budget accordingly. A long discussion last night C apital AJommal Year No. 71 nUrod m weond eUw mttUr t Salon, Ortgoa ; & Wheels Turn In New Mill Lyons New industrial wheels started turning Monday morning, as the new $800,000 Lyons Veneer company plant of the M and M Woodworking company went into production The new plant is situated a mile east of Lyons on the old Santiam highway. A crew of 45 men is employed at present, but projected plans call for enlarging the plant five times providing a complete plywood and veneer factory. The present plant is limited to production of veneer only, which is cut into commercial sizes and marketed to other plants. that use it to make fin ished plywood and veneers. Present to supervise open' ing of the new plant Monday was Andrew T. Nelson, man' ager of the plywood division of the M and M Wood Work ing company of Portland. The new plant is under dl rection of E. V. Bennett, who also is in charge of the Albany Plylock Corp. Ed Novak is pro duction superitnendent, and E. C. Carlson is plant engineer. The veneer plant will utilize the most modern equipment, enabling it - to- salvage., much otherwise wasted material. Labor Panel for Atomic Plants Washington JP President Eisenhower directed Monday that the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service establish a special panel to deal with la bor disputes in the" field of atomic energy. This group would replace one which formerly operated under the Atomic Energy Commis sion. Members of the old panel recently resigned. White House Pre3S Secretary James C. Hagerty said mem bers of the new panel would be named soon. It is being set up within the Mediation and Conciliation Service in the interest of ad ministrative - consistency, the White House said. A White House statement said President Eisenhower feels that "uninterrupted func tioning of our atomic energy program, without strikes or lockouts due to labor-manage ment disputes, is essential to the national security ..." brought threats of eliminating first aid and fire inspection services, as well as swinging the meat axe on some othef de partments, and even making all parking meters 5 -cent ma chines. And at one juncture Alderman Chester Chase re minded George Thomajon, who objected to the fire depart ment curtailments, that "money does not grow on bushes, and if we are going to increase sal aries we've got to find the money somewhere." Fry brought the discussion to a head by saying: "It looks to me as if, when you decide on your percentage of increase, you've got to take the bull by the horns, make salaries the first item in every department budget, and then go on from there." Alderman Tom Armstrong liked that idea and moved that the committee set up an 8 per cent Increase as a mark to (Concluded an Pate i Column 4) Salem, Oregon, PRODUCTION STARTS ' Workmen in new veneer plant of the M and M Wood Working Co., at Lyons, operate cutting and sorting ma chine as huge mill began operations Monday. The plant operates as a straight production line. Starting at west end of mill, logs are cut to standard length, barked, then the veneer is cut in a' huge lathe and the strips carried on endless belts to the cutting machine where it is cut into commercial sizes, graded and packaged for delivery. Chemical Plant Sold To Harvey Company Salem's alumina plant, con' structed during World War II by the government as an ex perimental pilot plant, has been French Police Raid Commies Paris VP) A thousand hel- meted French police- swept down on the headquarters of a dozen Communist-dominated labor organizations shortly af ter dawn Tuesday, seized big packets of documents and ar rested three men. Those jailed included two top directors of the big Cen tral Federation of Labor (CGT) and the editor of the official Communist newspaper, L'Hu manite. Warrants issued by military tribunal accused them of "attempts on the external security of the state." Those arrested were Andre Stil of L'Humanite, Andre Tol let, CGT secretary for the Paris area, and Lucien Molino, a na tional secretary of the Feder ation. , 1 The Red-led CGT's last mem bership claim was 3,615,440, for 1951, but official govern ment estimates have placed its strength as low as 1,800,000. Use Electronic Salmon Device Washington (IP) Construc tion of a pilot plant at Bonne ville Dam to study the reaction of salmon to electronic stim ulus under natural conditions has been proposed by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Such a plant, Dr. Albert M. Day, head of the service, re cently told the House Appro priations Committee, may pro vide the answers to the contro versy over fish vs. power now being raised in connection with river power development along the Pacific Coast. Day's testimony was released Tuesday by the Interior Appro priations Subcommittee before whom he appeared in support of a $260,000 budget request for salmon research. A small-scale electronic de vice already has been develop ed, Day said, with which sal mon can be guided in shallow tanks. Zellerbach Buys St. Helens Pulp San Francisco VP) Crown Zellerbach Corporation an nounced Monday it definitely has decided to proceed With its proposal to acquire not less than 80 per cent of the out- standlng stock of the St. Helens Pulp and Paper Com pany of St. Helens, Ore. The offer of exchange of stock will be made about April 30, President J. D. Zellerback said. The Zellerback Corporation presently is splitting its stock two for one. The offer to ex change stock with St. Helens stockholders is on the basis of one share of the new Zeller bach spilt stock for each one and one-sixth shares of St. Helens. The St. Helens plant pro duces bleached and unbleached kraft paper and bags. Tuesday, March 24, 1953 38 Pa sold to the Harvey Machinery company of Torrance, Calif. Announcement of the sale was made in Washington Mon day by the General Services Administration, which gave the sale price Bis $325,000. under Terms of the agree ment the Harvey Machinery company will make a 10 per cent down -payment with the remainder to be paid in equal installments over a period of 10 years. Four percent interest is to be charged on the unpaid balance. The , California -firm could give no exact date on when the plant will start operation here. but announcement has been made that Arch Metzger will continue as-manager. ' Metzger and Clay Cochran, secretary of the Salem Cham ber of Commerce, have been in Washington the past few weeks conferring-with govern1 ment agencies on the fate of the alumina plant, which had been operated recently by tna Ray- O-Vac Battery corporation, The lease of that company ex pired January 1 of this year. During a recent visit to oa- lem Lawrence Harvey execu tive vice president of the Har vey Machinery company, com mented that there would have to be changes and additions made at the Salem plant with the changes depending on the use to which the company put the plant. He pointed out that it was not a complete plant for the purpose for which it was designed. The chief engineer for the firm, Gene Zinniger, who ac companied Harvey to Salem, said at that time, if his firm acquired the plant, it would be used to get synthetic cryo lite and recover cryolite from old cell linings for the Harvey reduction plant located in the vicinity of The Dalles. Zinnnlger indicated that the major portion of the plant would be used for research and development work in connec tion with recovering alumina from domestic clay deposits. The research would include de velopment of an economical method of making silicon-aluminum alloy, using domestic oxide of clay bauxite from this Trumans Sail For Honolulu Los Angeles (u.B Former President Harry S. Truman and family sail for Honolulu today after sipping vintage wines and nibbling on rare delicacies as the honor guest of the Beverly Hills Wine and Food Society. Mr. Truman leaves aboard the luxury liner President Cleveland at 4 p.m. (EST). Last night . Mr. Truman showed that he's more com fortable at a Missouri church social than at a gourmet's lav ish feast. The reception and dinner, held aboard the Cleveland, took place on the eve of Mr, Tru man's departure on a month's vacation with wife, Bess, and daughter, Margaret. Despite the ex-president's warning that he was a "meat and potatoes" man, the gourmets laid a table of calorie-crammed tasties and priceless wines brought here from across both oceans DELAY SIGNING BILL The signing of the Uquor-by-the-drink bill will be delayed at least until Thursday, Gov. Paul L. Patterson announced Tuesday. GIs and ; jo AisjoAiun 88811-, kAnrv ivu I- -.J,v,0f- InDeadlyFight On Old Baldy Biggest Chinese At" tack in 6 Months Broken by Allies Seoul VP) Americans and Chinese were locked in deadly battle Tuesday night on the red-mud slopes of Old Baldy Hill after the biggest Bed at tack in five months was broken by U.S. and Colombian troops. The Chinese smashed in waves Monday night against Old Baldy, Pork Chop and T Bone Hills on the Western Ko rean front along the Imjin Val ley invasion route to Seoul. U. S. 7th Division soldiers cut out the heart of the 3,500 man attack by dawn Tuesday. But the Chinese clung doggedly to one side of Old Baldy still a churning battleground in the afternoon, t Tanks Blast at Close range Both sides jammed in rein forcements and U. S. tanks pushed up to blast the Reds at close range. The infantrymen fought on a coating of mud from an after noon drizzle. One American tank with a tread blown off was reported marooned on the crest with its crew inside. It has been In radio contact with the rear. : (Concluded on Page 5. Column t) Accuse Russia Of Fabrication , Washington, MV-The State Department accused Russia Tuesday of "fabricating an un founded version" of the March 15 clash of American and So viet planes off Siberia. The clash involved a B-50 weather observation bomber from Alaska and two Soviet jets. The United States, in ft protest March 18, claimed the B-50 was attacked by one of the jets and subsequently re turned the fire, - . , . " Moscow rejected the protest Monday and asserted that the American plane made two "premediated" violations of Soviet territory. The state Department re plied in a statement Tuesday that the Moscow allegations were "completely at variance with the facts as established by careful investigation." -The department said the American plane was over in ternational waters at all times Britain Accepts Russia's Offer London CP) Prime Minis ter Churchill announced Tues day that Britain will accept Russia's offer of talks designed to avoid air clashes over Ger many. . Churchill disclosed accep tance of the proposal in an ad dress to the House of Com mons about the recent shooting down of an unarmed British bomber by Soviet jet fighters near Hamburg. Seven British airmen lost their lives. Churchill said Gen. V. I. Chulkov, head of the Soviet Control Commission in Ger many, proposed two -power talks to avoid any further in cidents and Britain had accepted. McKay Says No Flat Interior Budget Cut Washington VP) Secretary of Interior McKay has indicat ed that there will be no flat "across the board" cut recom mended in the 607 million dol lar budget proposed by former President Truman for the Inte rior Department. In testimony before a House appropriations subcommittee, McKay s a 1 d he believes the budget estimate can be "sub stantially" cut, but on a selec tive basis. He said he will have a re vised budget for the Interior Department ready soon. 'Under prosperity we set Into some loose habits," he said in testimony made public Tues day. "We do not go broke in bad times. We go broke in good times. I feel with both busi ness and government that we have been a little careless in the past years, because every thing was so rosy. I think the tun is here Near Death As Heart Fails London ) A bulletin on Queen Mary's Illness, issued Tuesday night: "Queen Mary's strength Is ebbing but her majesty is sleep ing peacefully." This was the day's third bulletin. ' London. Un Britain's nroud old Queen Mary was near death Tuesday night., with her heart weakening. Queen. Eliza beth n rushed to the bedside of her grandmother. She was accompanied by her husband, the .Duke of Edin burgh and by her sister, Prin cess Margaret. Earlier in the day the Duke of Windsor, Queen Mother Elizabeth, the duchess of Kent and the Archbishop of Canter bury had gone to Marlborough House to see the 85-year-old Queen grandmother. Queen Mary widow of a King, mother of two Kings and grandmother of Elizabeth has been ill a month. To Scan FBI Files on Bohlen Washington W -The Senate Foreign Relations Committee decided Tuesday to have two senators examine FBI files on Charles E. (Chip) Bohlen, no minated for ambassador to Moscow. The task was assigned to Sens. Taft (R.-Ohio) ; and Sparkman (D.-Ala.). Taft, the Senate Republican leader, and . Sparkman, the 1952 Democratic vice presiden tial nominee, both are support ing Bohlen's appointment, i During hearings on Bohlen, Secretary of State Dulles gave the committee his evaluation of the material in the FBI files. He said there was nothing to raise doubt as to Bohlen from the standpoint of loyalty or se curity, :.:' . But some critics of the ap pointment have been Insisting that the Senators themselves should look over this material. Taft suggested Monday dur ing a torrid Senate debate on Bohlen that it might be well to have such an examination although Taft said he personal ly was perfectly willing to ac cept Dulles' appraisal of It. Streamlined Jeep in Korea Seoul W The army's new streamlined Jeep, built for a smoother ride and underwater driving, has arrived in Korea in large numbers. ' . Some American- soldiers have dubbed it the Snorkel because its watertight engine permits fording of rivers.' . "When you want to go un der water, you put a snorkel tube on the air intake and an exhaust extension on the muf fler, that's all," said Pfc. George Sechrlst, a truck com pany driver from Amarillo, Texas. He reports the seats were as comfortable as those in a pri vate sedan. "They have foam rubber wrapped around the. springs. The dirt and rock roads here feel like asphalt," he said. 'Of course, the new shock absorbers help, too." The new models have been in production in the United States about six months. when we should start checking to see where we are." Speaking of his work as governor of Oregon, McKay said he and his aides had "cut waste wherever we found it" "I do not think it is logical at the moment to say we will have a 10 per cent cut across the board. I think we have to go at it item by item in the de partments and pick out the s sentlal from the non-essential." McKay asserted that one of the things the nation must do is to continue reclamation pro jects "to bring in some addi tional land to produce the food the nation needs." "We should, preserve the things which we as Westerners cherish in the way of parks and things of that character, be cause it is a monument to na ture and they should be pre served as a matter of recrea tion for succeeding generations. I am very strong for that sort of thing." FINAL EDITION Nevada Test Most Brilliant Atomic Dbil t 53 Aircraft Flying Overhead, Including B-3tjs, Undamaged j Las Vegas, Nev. WV-A bril liant atomic explosion was touched oft on the Nevada des ert Tuesday morning with (S aircraft including IS inter- -continental B-S6 . bombers r-flying- on various missions ov erhead. The Atomic Energy Commis si o n ' s terse announcement about the presence of the planes said only that this was thft first ilmA nih' a InrffA number of aircraft had partici pated in a test. .. . The AEC said the blast was fired from a 300-foot tower on the Yucca Flat proving ground 75 miles from here. ) Crew Training The B-36s returned later to ' Carswell Air Force Base. Fort Worth, Tex, A base spokesman said the bombers were led by Brig. Gen. Joe W. Kelly, 195th Air Division commander, t An Air Force spokesman said: "Our part of today's op- ' eration was chiefly crew train ing. We want the lead crews of bombers which might some l day be involved in a real ato mic operation to know first hand what a blast is like. We want to make sure that they don't- suffer from buck fever, or that they get so fascinated with the flash that they are blinded. We plan the same sort of training for crews of other planes at later dates." i Brighter Than Last One ' The shot appeared much brighter here than the one that opened the 1953 spring series last Tuesday. Its coral tinted cloud, which divided as it rose, seemed to ascend much faster. The AEC did not disclose the energy of the blast or describe the type of device being tested. r But the sound of the explo ion, which takes about seven - minutes -to--aca this resort gambling center, was hot soJj loud as last week's. This was , apparently du6 ttf atmospheric conditions, which govern how . loud and strong a shock wave will be a a given point. Brig. Gen. William C. Bui- Jock, director of an Army ma neuver in which 1,300 troops were stationed in foxholes 4, 000 yards from ground zero, re ported there were no casual ties. Action Delayed bnt-H Revision Washington P) Sen. Taft R., Ohio, told the Senate Labor Committee Tuesday Congress will work out "the first com prehensive amendments" to the Taft-Hartley labor law after completing exhaustive hearings this spring. " The Senate majority leader, co-author of the controversial law, was the first witness as the committee opened hearings on proposed amendments. The House Labor Committee has been holding . hearings on amendments to thjS T-H law for a month. Taft said 'the .committee is aolne to trv to approach all the problems in a completely ob jective manner." The Senate hearing openea desDite a demand by Sen. Mur- ray of Montana, Senior Demo crat on the committee, that the Eisenhower administration give its views on T-H amendments before other witnesses are heard, Korean Reds Move Half of POW Camps Panmunjom, Korea, U-R The communists told the United Nations today they have moved half their prisoners of war camps in North Korea to new locations. North Korean Gen. Nam II, senior armistice negotiator, in formed Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison, chief UN negotiator, of the change in a note handed over at a brief liaison officers' meeting. Six of the 12 prison camps holding Allied prisoners were relocated, as well as a prison hospital and collecting point. The United Nations did not immediately disclose the new location of the prison stock ades. Weather Details Miilnim TtilMdir, Ml nlnlmm t. . fUr, 4ft. Ttal ll-haar prMlPlutUnl tTRM! for month i 4i normal 8-M. Sea ion rtelttllon, Hfl.Mi normal, S1.M. Rim heli-M, 9.s ft. Rport br V. Woalhor Baroaa.) V ..,.W.W-V Si, 4- C,:i-VftN: