Capital mlJdM'f THE WEATHER mi P I M A L ODITIOU -S $60,000 Cut Off Budget Boys' School Ways-Mtans Hopes For Intermediate Institution . : By JAME8 D. OLSON v ' Member of the Joint way aod means committee Than. aay siatned the requested bud get Item of 1230,800 for an ad dition to the segregation suit I at MacLaren School for Boys W0.000 In the hope that the legislature will approve an ap- propnauon lor an intermedi ate Institution for young of fenders, . ',-'., , Necessity for establishing an Intermediate institution . was stressed by Sen. Robert Holmes of Astoria, who said there are boys at the Woodburn school too old to mingle with young er, boys and boys in the peni tentiary too young to be housed . with older inmates. Over-AU Budget OK'd The over-all budget for the school was approved in the amount of $1,531,040 as com pared to : approximately . $1, OUO.uOG for the present bien nium. Holmes said increase' in ad missions at the school due to growing population of the state plus the unruly type of boys admitted to the school was re' sponsible for the increased bud get. : Senator Dean Walker, co- chairman ' of the ' committee, suggested that the state might save money if the intermediate Institution was located on the site of MacLaren. school, but this idea was opgosed by Holmes as well as some other members of the committee. Blames Legislature ' Blame for increasing child delinquency was placed on the state legislature by Sen.: Rex Ellis, who declared that every bill passed dealing with boys and girls "tends to relieve them of more and more responsibill- . ties." ' "It's about time we encour aged boys and girls to do some work," Sen. Ellis said. . Sen. Walker called attention to the growing number of oper ating personnel' in some state Institutions, referring particu larly to Hlllcrest School for Girls, where he said there were 48 employes lor 90 inmates. However, the appropriation for this school was approved.. Uniform State Laws A bill appropriating $4400 for the commission on uniform state laws was reported out fa vorably only after considerable discussion. (CeneteAed en Fat 5. Column 1) Wish McCarthy Drank Poison Washington U. Lady Nan cy Aitor told Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) at the Taft tea party for the Eisenhowers last night that she wished ' a drink he was sipping were poison. Her exact words, Lady Astor recalled today, were; "I wish it were poison." She said them twice, once to anybody who might be listening and once to the senator himself. What the senator replied, if any thing, she did not reveal. But Lady Astor did not go unchlded. Mrs. Alice Roose velt Longworth, the "Princess Alice" of the Theodore Roose velt era, told her:. "Nancy, you're being naughty." . The incident occurred in the near presence of president and Mrs. Elsenhower and their hosts, Sen. and Mrs. Robert A. Taft (R-O.). Lady Astor said she doesn't know whether they heard what she said to the senator. But a lot of others did. Ban on Color Television Lifted ' Washington VP) The Nation al Production Authority Thurs- ' day lifted Its ban on the use of defense material for mak ing home color television sets. Abandonment of the order, which went into effect in 1950, wis announced by Chairman Wolverton (R., N.J.), of the House Interstate committee. The group is checking into the color TV situation. Wolverton was. notified of the action by NPA Adminis trator H. B. McCoy In a letter stating "with this revocation, there are no restrictions under the Defense Production Act on the manufacture of color tele vision receiver and equipment for home use." 65th Liquor Drinlt for Statute Sinned By Governor .Patterson Mqkes Bill Law at Noon Thursday , By PAUL W. HARVEY, JR. (Awitlttaa Pnu Comipmdat) . Oregon's Honor by the drink bill became law at noon Thurs day when Gov. Paul L. Pat terson signed it , -: Thursday was a busy day at the legislature. The house ap proved unanimously a senate bill to combine the state re tirements system with federal social security, and the senate sent to the house a measure to let legislators fix their . own salaries.. Mandate of People . The liquor biU carries out the mandate of the people, who amended the constitution last November to sell liquor by the drink in places where food Is served. Bottle clubs, where members are served from their own bot tles, will be retained, but they also may be licensed to sell by the Urink m addition to the drink privilege. Restaurants, hotels and some taverns also will be able to buy the drink licenses, but there won't be more. than one seller by the drink for each 2,000 pop ulation. . .. . The retirement bill . passed by the house is the first of a series of three measures to give 39,000 state, county, city and school employes the benefits of federal social .security. (Concluded en Pare & Column 5) For Queen Mary :' London (U.FD-1-The royal fam ily planned today to give Queen Mary the quiet family funeral she personally requested. 1 - ; The dowager queen will be burled next Tuesday in a pri vate ceremony. J-f:,' Her body will be placed in thertomb where her husband, King George V is buried. When George died in 1936 she asked that the tomb be built with space for her beside him. . Mary's request for simplicity was part of the wish she con veyed to her family before she died last Tuesday night. .. Another part of the wish was that the- coronation of her granddaughter. Queen Eliza beth II, go on as scheduled June 2. It will. : The chapel at Windsor will be closed to the public for the simple family burial. Admis sion will be by ticket' only. Tickets were being sent today to closest relatives and friends. On Sunday the royal coffin will be carried in procession from Queen's chapel at Marl borough House, her London home, to Westminster Hall, less than half a mile away. She will lie in state at Westminster Hall until Monday evening. Flying Tigers and Slick Airways Merge Los Angeles U.R A merger plan for the world's tw.o larg est air freight systems, the Flying Tiger Line and Slick Airways, was announced today by officials of the two compan ies. Approval of the merger has been given by the boards of di rectors of the two companies and the proposal will be sub mitted to the Civil Aeronautics Board and Stockholders for ratification immediately. Both companies operate under CAB certificates and the merger is subject to CAB authorization. Family Funeral Neiv Santiam Hospital Dedication March 29 Stayton The new $400,000 j rooms, three four-bed wards Santiam Memorial hospital at and one three-bed ward. Also Stayton will be dedicated in a j there is a two-bed labor room, ceremony in front of the en- a delivery room, and a modern trance at 2:30 p.m. Sunday,! surgery. March 29. The building will be 1 An emergency electrical open for inspection after the plant has been installed on a ceremony. ' stand-by basis to provide elec- The institution will be open trie current in case of a power for its first patients Monday, failure. April 6, according to Mrs. Lou- Construction of the hospital ise Wilt, superintendent. Is the result of a prolonged Although the hospital capa- joint community effort by cities city is only 34 beds, It is of the North Santiam canyon, equipped with the most modern Control of the institution is equipment available. under a 21-member board of The nursery will have 18 directors, which was headed bassinets, two incubators and , originally by W. H. Bell, Stay an oxygen pressure lock to be ton attorney. He recently re used in the treatment of "blue linqulshed the post to J. C. babies." I Kimmel, Mill City druggist. The hospital has 11 two-bed I (Concluded mi Pag i, Coaaa 4) Ywr, No. 73 LIQUOR New York W John Robert Howard, former husband "of Actress Diana YBarrymore, pleaded guilty. Thusday to a charge of transporting a wom an across the state lues lor prostitution purposes, '. if-s; Howard, fifth ranking pro fessional tennis player, ' was Sentenced - immediately j by Federal Judge 'Gregory- F Noonan to a year and a day in Jail, The 28-year-old - defendant had been accused of taking a woman . from California to New York in 1948. , v Howard's attorney, Martin Benjamin, pleaded unsuccess fully for a suspension of sen tence. He sought to have Howard placed on "indefinite probation." . '? Assistant ' U.S. i Attorney Louis L. Kaplan maintained HowaTd- 'broug1rtae'' 'gcwU' tute here and peddled her to men at $5 to $250 a date. To See Benson Corvallis VPh- Dr. G. B. Wood; head of agricultural eco nomics at Oregon State Col lege, has been called to Wash ington, D. C, for his second meeting as a member of the in- terim agricultural advisory committee to Secretary Ezra Taft Benson. .. Wood will leave Corvallis Friday. Meetings will start Monday at the University of Maryland. They are expected to last two or three days. Major items of business will be a review of actions taken by the Department of Agricul ture since the inauguration and a discussion of future farm policies, Wood said. First meeting of the 14-man body was held Jan. 6. To Destroy 75 Slot Machines on Coast Toledo. Ore. VP) Sheriff W. H. Kuhlenbeck on Saturday will destroy 73 slot machines. They were seized last month in a state police raid on the Oceanlake warehouse of the Delake Amusement Company and have been in storage at Sa lem, i SS toUm, Ornon, BILL SIGNED BY GOVERNOR v) VI , At noon on Thursday Governor Patterson signed the liquor by the drink bill that -will legalize vales as soon :: as the liquor commission can perfect machinery for dls-; trlbutlon tinder the new law. From left: Sen. Dean Bryson, chairman, of the senate alcoholic control : commi(nn; ' Rep. Russell Hudson, ' chairman- of the house alcoholic commission; Governor Patterson and Hugh Barzee, legal -advisor to the governor. . . - Legislative President of the Senate Eu gene E. Marsh and Speaker of the House Rudle Wilhelm, Jr., Issued a statement .Thursday citing a list of 21 legislative RFC Loan for Fibre Products : Portland OP) The Recon struction Finance Corporation office - here reported -Thursday that It had ' approved" ' adding lorB tfiari a million dollars to' the loan made two years ago to finance a hard-board plant at iot mock. -,,- j.;,-,?.;:--,:.. -. - Oregon Fiber Products, Inc., got the original loan of two million dollars in order to. es tablish a hard-board and build ing board plant. Since that time, the RFC reported, sub stantlal changes have been made in plans and equipment, boosting the cost. So the new loan, for $1,100,000, was ap proved. . .- . j. The loan is to bear 5 per cent interest and mature In 10 years. . -, The plant when completed is expected to cost $6,047,160, the RFC said. Another RFC loan reported Thursday was $75,000 for five years to Salvage Lumber Co., Cave Junction, for Installation of a resaw and to pay recon struction costs in excess of in surance following a fire. . British Invite Bonn, Germany, VP) The British invited the Russians Wednesday night to name a time and place in Germany to talk over air safety problems but indicated that the Ameri can and French should join in. Such a Soviet-British con ference was proposed by Gen. Vassily Chulkov, Soviet com mander in Germany, in a note to British High Commissioner Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick. The note also rejected Allied pro tests against Soviet fighter clashes two weeks ago with three British aircraft. In one of the incidents, all . seven members of the British crew were killed. Replying Wednesday night, Kirkpatrick said: "Ji agree In principle with your proposal that a confer ence should be held in Berlin to discuss the question of air safety. "I shall be glad if you would communicate to me your pro posals for the time and place it should be held." $425,000 Traction Co. Pay Boost Agreed to Portland U. Portland Traction company's board of directors was slated to meet to day to consider a union demand for pay increases and other benefits estimated to cost $425,000. Members of the AFL street carmen's union asked a 12 lu cent hbrly wage increase. End of Session April 18 Thunder, Morth 2i, 1953 36 Pays fiici 5c .5 Leaders Set subjects which should ' either be approved or defeated by the legislature and predicting that the session can come to ah or derly conclusion not later than April 18. .;. .. Both President Marsh and Speaker Wilhelm made it clear the list submitted to the legis lature was not in any way 'a "must" list but .rather infor mative on what subjects of leg islation thev assembly would dispose of prior to final adjournment.- ;-A "We feel that this has been an exceptionally hard working negWattrrr.''the-' Joint, state ment read, "and that because Of the excellent work done in committees, we will be able to finish the business before us in an efficient and orderly manner1 not later than' Satur day, April 18. "There are, nowever,'! the statement continued, "the fol lowing problems yet to be con sidered by one or both houses, which we feel are, of suffi cient public interest that they should, be passed upon either affirmatively or negatively be fore adjournment." , (Concluded en Page 8. Column I) Belgrano Back From Manila Portland 0J-I9 Frank N. Bel grano, Jr., president of - the First National Bank of Port land, said today upon his re turn from the Philippines that the island republic is making progress toward self-sufficiency. ' Belgrano' heeded V a team which made a survey of mu tual security aid results. Belgrano made his report in Washington, D. C, before re turning here. He said the re port was "top secret," but that some of it probably would be released later by President Ei senhower or Mutual Security Administrator Harold Stassen. Retail Prices Drop Slightly Washington (ff) Retail pric es as measured by the govern ment dropped four-tenths of. 1 percent between mid-January and mid-February. It was the largest price decline in any month of the past year, " Falling food prices were mainly responsible.' The Bureau of Labor Statis tics said the retail price of food, clothing, housing and hundreds of other Items bought by moderate income urban fam ilies was 113.4 percent of the 1947-1949 average. The index for Jan. 15 w a I 113.9. With the figure at 113.4 for Feb; 15, the government's con sumer price index has now de clined for three consecutive months from the record peak reached last November. XHtMMUA 8B8U Mill J OnOunhcrllill Hold Slopped ; 0. S. Guns and War Planes Blast Chinese On Old Baldy Seoul VP) Chines made sew attacks in Western Korea late Thursday, - while eoaamaniata holding shell-rubbled Old Baldy, 25 miles away, took terrible punishment from V. 8. guns and war planes. , One attack by about' 750 Reds was stopped on Bunker Hill, five miles east of the truce talk village of Panmun- Jom, early reports said. Allied troops on a nearby outpost beat off another assault by a force of about 150 Reds. Foar-Bour Battle . At two other outposts In the area, fighting raged on four hours after the first ' attacks. I There was no estimate of the lumber of Reds involved. Reds and Allies, fought hand to hand at the positions. The attack in the Bunker Hill area could be a Red diver sion intended to relieve the deadly pressure on Old Baldy. .aliiiuiiL ubacured by the dust and smoke raised by Allied artillery (Concluded en Pate 5, Column 1) Probe Kluxers Reign of Terror Miami, Fla. VP) A federal grand Jury investigating racial violence and the Ku Klux Klan in Florida has reported "a catalogue of terror that seems Incredible." L. E. Broome and Emory S. Akerman, members of the Jus tice department directing the Investigation in Florida, hand ed Judge John W. Holland I iz-page report which was made public Wednesday. ' The report detailed acts of violence for which it said the Klan was responsible and said of the Ku Klux Klan: "It Is founded on the worst Instincts of mankind,;- At its best, t is fntfilerant and big oted. At its worst it is sadis tic and brutal." i Most of the terroristic out rages listed in the report oc curred in central Florida where, the Jury said,' "such things have been going on for years." .. '. ".- Tidelands Bill Ready by Night ' Washington, (U-R) Sen. Guy F. Cordon (R-, Ore.) predicted today the Senate Interior com mittee will approve a state's rights tideland bill before nightfall. The - committee spent the morning "perfecting" a bill by Sen. Spessard L, Holland (D., Fla.), Cordon reported. The committee was called to an other session at mid-afternoon, for a probable vote. The Holland, bill declares coastal states own title to sub merged lands out to their his torical boundaries. For most states this is three miles, but for Texas and West Florida it is 10 miles. Sen. Price Daniel (D., Tex.) said the bill, as it stood when the committee recessed for lunch, made no mention of the outer belt of submerged land, between state aeaward bound aries and the edge of the con tinental shelf. Author Refuses tot Tes tify on Red Issue Washington JP Dashlell Hammett, author of popular mystery novels and other b o o k t, refused Thursday to testify whether he is or has been a communist. He said "the answer might tend to in criminate me." And writer Helen Goldfrank, who followed him to the wit ness stand, told the benate In vestigations subcommittee that she proudly claimed the simi lar right under "our lovely Constitution" to refuse to tell whether she ever was a repre sentative of the communist In ternationale. The subcommittee, led by Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.), is ex ploring at televised public hearings allegations that the works of 73 American com munists were among the books placed on shelve. of public li braries the State Department Clark Denies' Any Shortage Now in Korea ' Tokyo ( Gen. Mark Clark said Thursday night If there was any request by his Far East command to divert ship loads of artillery shells from Korea to other parts of the world he did not know about It -:,. ;i,.,H;.:t. ... "Certainly I am aware of any request from this theater that any ammunition 1 be diverted any place else," Clark told newsmen. ''': -y-' A reporter asked the U. N. Far East commander to com ment on a New York Times story that the shells were di verted from the Korean pipe line this month. - '- : 1 have commented in the past, in response to several queries, that we now are in good shape on ammunition." Clark said. v. : The New York Times said ar tillery ammunition had become so plentiful in Korea that it exceeded storage space.-' ;.-'- -'Munich, CcKEsay (ir; Tub U. s.-consulate here announc ed Thursday; that Charles W. Thayer, American consul gen eral in Munich and a brother-in-law of Charles "Chip" Boh len, has resigned fro m the foreign service after a new in vestigation into hit diplomatic career was ordered. . A 1933 graduate of West Point and paratroop lieuten ant colonel in World War II, the 43-year-old Thayer plans to devote his full time to writ ing, the consulate press office announced. He is the suthor of books on his experiences as a diplomat in pre-war Moscow and post-war Belgrade. Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.) told the Senate Wednesday that Thayer had been ordered home 'and .is, I understand, to be discharged." Although McCar thy gave no reason, he said Thayer's activities when he was head of the voice . of America . are "well known to me senate. Washington WV- ' The De fense Department hat propos ed some changes In the doctor draft law, but the Budget Bureau wants the Pentagon to clarify tome of those proposals before it stamps its approval on the changes. Exactly what the Budget Bureau has in mind was not made known immediately, but Pentagon officials said they believed It had to do with the classification of military medi cal men. . The Defense Department re leased Wednesday the text of proposed new legislation, de signed to 1 extend the Penta gon's authority to draft medi cal men beyond its June 30 expiration date. The proposals went to the Budget Bureau for review. . , President - Elsenhower has approved lowering the num ber of physicians to be-drafted. RED SUPPLY SHIPS SUNK Talpeh, Formosa - Iff) A Chinese Nationalist n e w t agency said Thursday - that seaborne Nationalist guerril las tank ' seven Red supply Craft and three armed Junks and captured another supply craft In the first half of March off South China's Kwangtun Province. . -. operates overseas as part of the cold war effort. Roy Conn, general counsel of the subcommittee, told the group he hat established that 300 copies of books by Ham mett were used in 73 U, S.' overseas information center li braries, and that 80 copies of books for children written by Miss Goldfrank under the pen name of Helen Kay were in a variety of the overseas libra ries. Hammett it best known for "The Thin .Man," a humorous mystery. - ' , Mrs. Goldfrank, declaring "I am proud to be an American . . I am proud I can stand on the Fifth Amendment and every other amendment in our lovely Constitution,'?, refused to tell whether the ever wrote under the pen name of Kay. ' CharigesinDrdf Of Doctors Law I!:d D;::::j i:nPc:l Ammunition Situs- ; tion in Korea Par- fectly Sound . W7' Washington P) 'Tim4 Elsenhower aald Tneursday f : ammunition sUawUon ta Ka re now la perfectly sowed a compared with the type of $ rations going en there..- The : president made 4bM . statement at a new confeav ence during which ha also de fended his nomination - ol Charles E. Chip Bohlen to bo i ambassador to Russia. Mm said Bohlen, who has torn tm-' der are from a group ox re publican senators, la the beat qualified man and the nomJuVi ation sticks. ;-,:;.- V:ii-i . ,: i Eisenhower said be had ana clfically checked on the loss of "Old Baldy" mountain by, the allies and was 'told that ammunition was not a factor. "Old Baldy is an Important hill position which - eommn nist fcrcea wrested from allied. ' To Study Taxation ' M- On ote .': matters. Elsen hower: 1 1. Announced that ho wQI recommend to congress, with-' in a few days, creation of at presidential commission - to study federal-state relation far - the fields of taxation, grant, in aid and social security. t 2. Said he hat great admira tion for Wesley Robert, rex publican national ahtrm Eisenhower added that he will wait for a Kansas state eom- mlttee to complete an investi gation of charges against Rob ertt before deciding . whether ftwMv, luuuio .- iiaj - - u ' aa chairman. Roberta has been accused ot lobbying, without registering under : the state lobbying law. " j Loyalty Demand I I. Declared thai St lovem- ment employe are not willing to be courtly loyal to tbirfs superiors, they ahouM vriju While he was in the army, then president said, be alway felt it would be treasonoul for him to stay on It he could not give loyalty to the civilian authori ties above him. ' i i ? (Concluded en Pa(, Cat. D ? Washington ) President Eisenhower said Thursday' hi cold war talks with Trench Premier Rene Mayer will bo concentrated on NATO and Indochina. He said this at a new con ference a half hour before boarding the presldetnlal yacht. Williamsburg, to talk with Mayer and other top French officials. -;.-..--.::,.... The talks were held against backdrop of reports that thla nation was ready to transfer available fundi to ruth mili tary aid to Indochina, where France and loyal Indochines have been ' warring ' against Communist rebels 4or years. , Elsenhower, who drew criti cism in his presidential cam paign for tome remark about France, had kind Words for that nation Thursday. He re called France's service in two ' world wars and how in the , second war her pride was tram pled in the dust France has had a very hard time, he said, adding that ho sure America- hasn't forgot ten the sentimental tie with France reaching back to 1778. Protests Holding ; Of Dick Applegdfe London WV Britain ' Thurs day Instructed her envoy in Red China. to protest the hold ing of three Americans, taken oit a yacnt near Hong Kong on Saturday. , , The protest it on behalf of the United States government. which does not recognize the : umneie communist govern ment of Mao Tze-Tung. The Americans, taken off the yacht, Kert, are merchant ma rine Capt. Ben Kramer and two newt correspondents, Rich ard Applegate of Medford, Or., and Don Dixon. ; - Weather Details Mulmu rwtacSsr, Mi uriahum ta tar, St, Ttl 14-km ntIUUa. ei far !, I.li aaraul, SJa. tune rttltitiUM, m.oti mail sua. aim kaUkt, aj (mi, (bHrt ky C . fnaUar kanaa.) Mayer Consuls Ike, Indochina : . .. 'A