Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, March 26, 1953, Page 24, Image 24

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IMPERIAL CROWN BEING REMODELED
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THE CAPITAL JOURNAL,' Sale, Oregon
Ttwrfay. Marth 2,
Loyalty in Department Has
Secretary Dulles Wondering
Br J AMIS HARLOW
1 H. G. Goodibip, diamond mounter of the Goldsmitns
and Silversmiths company in London, flti the Black
Princ' ruby into on of the four crone abov the circlet '
of the Imperial Crown of 8tat which is being remodeled
for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. On the bench
before Ooodihip are the arche and the diamond mound
' which surmount the arche. In all the crown contain
1 J.78I diamond, 3TT pearl, XT spphlr, U emerald and
' tiv ruble. (AP Wlrephoto.) ' !
Second Convair
Salem had Jt second vliit
Thursday from on of United
Air Line ltet model two
engine Conv air passenger
plane.
- The plane, which will not
be among thoi operating in-
i to Salem for som time, at
least, will be used at time by
United in th plac of a DC-G,
' : Salem has been visited by
th plan , to familiarize the
local station' personnel with
th plan in event on of them
eome in her when forced to
us MeNary field a an alter
nate for th Portland airport
because of weather conditions.
Th Thursday flight was a
' practic flight for Salem sta
tion personnel and coming in
with th plan were som of
, th company' official, ln
eluding Walt Carson, assistant
flight manager from th com
pany', operation base for th
whole system at Denver, and
Bob Ashley, flight manager
from the Seattle office of th
company.
- Friday will find th plan
back in Salem again, this time
for survey flight with th
civil 1 aeronautic ' authority.
This flight i to test th local
personnel in th handling ef
the plan.
Progress Made by
Ham Operator Bill
- A House-passed bill to giv
apodal license plate to ama
teur radio operators was ap
proved Wednesday by th Sen
te Highway Committee. - -Th
. plate would bear th
all latter of th operators.
. The committee voted to
charge $5 extra for pair of
th special plates, while the
House had voted for only a f S
eatra charge.
Willamette Dam Bid
Far Abov Estimate "
Portland, W) Th low bid
for th Dexter re-regulatlng
dam on th middle fork of the
Willamette River waa $4,151,-1
083, Army Engineers reported
here.
Th government estimate for
th job waa $4,109,757.
' Th low bid cam from com
bination of two Portland firms,
McNutt Brothers and C. J.
Montag & Son. Th job calls
for construction of th dam.
three mile downstream from
Lookout Point Dam, plus con
struct! oa of a power hour at
to re-regulatlng dam. .
Kaep Spits Away from
Dying A" Scientist
San Tranclsoo CUJ Care-
i faliy-soreeued attendants hov
rod near th deathbed of I
ferllhan. atoms scientist to
make oartaio unauthorised per
son could not hear hi delir
ious babbling and learn vital
William C. TwiteheU, who
died Monday, "probably knew
a much about atomic energy
a any on man," a spokesman
, tat th Atomic Energy Com
mission said.
As th 84-year-old ehemieal
engineer lay dying of a brain
tumor at th Army' Letterman
- hospital n was under survell
lanoa by the attendant for 34
hour a day. .
Workman Saws Off i
Thousand Telephones
Independenc, Mo. W) A
workman sawed off 1,000 tel
ephone Wednesday.
Whil doing som work for
plumbing firm, th work
man sewed through what he
thought wa a large tre root
' It turned out to be cable
containing 400 pair of tele
phone wire.
' Cable splicers worked
throughout th night putting
back in service 1,000 tele
phone served by the cable. :
Neighbors Will
Advise Oregon
Legislative budget invest!
gators from Washington and
California will be here Friday
to advia th Oregon Legisla
tur on how to set up legisla
tive budget controls similar to
theirs.
They will talk to the Joint
War and Means Committee
about a bill to create the office
of ; legislative "analyst. ' He
would ,rlde herd on departmental-
spending between leg
islative sessions.
The Washington State offi
cials coming here are Robert
M. James, legislative auditor,
and Dr. Paul W, Ellis, assistant
auditor.1'--''"' '-; ' -'v
Those from California are
budget committee chairman;
Ralph N. Kleps, legislative
counsel, and Alan Post, legisla
tive auditor.
May
Be Extended
The Senate Labor and In
dustrie Committee voted Wed
nesday to extend unemploy
ment compensation coverage to
small Businesses.
Th bill probably will be
considered by , th Senate Frl
aay. , v j t ' f '"Ht ;
Employer of fewer than
four persons now are exempt,
and th bill would remove ya
exemption.' i ! v t r .V
An attempt to take away the
exemption failed in the 1951
Senate by a single vote.
Sens. Phil Brady, Portland;
S. Eugene Allen, Portland;
Paul Geddes, Roseburg, and
Philip S. Hitchcock, Klamkth
Falls, are the committee mem
ber for the blU. s
, Those opposed ' are , Sens.
Stewart Hardie, Condon; War
ren McMinlmee, Tillamook;
and George Ulett, Coquille.
mere are now 18,000 em
ployer under th law, and th
bill would add 18,000 more. It
also would bring 33,000 more
worker under the law.
13 Ounce Baby Lives
VA Days in Incubator
Portland, W) A premature.
13-ounc baby managed to stay
alive ltt days in an incubator,
but then died here Wednesday.
Doctor mid it was rare for
th baby, born after five
months, to survive beyond the
first minutes. The baby, a
girl, was born at McMlnnvllle,
then brought here to the
Doernbecher Memorial Hos
pital for Children. The par
ents were Mr. and Mrs. James
HarUell.
Washington ( Secretary of
State Dulles has csuse IO won
der whether everyone in the
t it deDartment besides D
ln loval to the country, 1
loyal to him.
Sen. McCarthy claims to
have enough information
about the department's inner
workings in at least on cas,
that of Charles E. Boblen, to
call Dulles untruthful.
Because the 48-y r-old
Bohlen, with 24 year foreign
experience, is one of th de
partment's best specialist on
Russia, President jsisennower
and Dulles decided to send
him to Moscow as American
ambassador. ' . 1
Sine. Bohlen couldn't hav
th job unless the senate ap
proved, the senate foreign re
lations committee would hav
to check on him first. This
meant Bohlen ' and Dulles
would hav to answer .ques
tions on Bohlen's background
and fitness.
But for som. unexplained
reason which ' originated be
fore Dulles' time secretary,
Boblen bsd never been Inves
tigated by th FBI. Several
weeks ago Dull asked th
FBI to examine Bohlen' 11.
He got the report last week
and discussed it with R. W.
Scott -McLeod, who Is in
charge of security matter for
th state department. Dulles
hired .- McLeod only a few
week ago. '
Before that MaLcod had
been admlnistrativ assistant
to Sen. Bridges, New Hamp
shire republican, who, with
McCarthy and Sen. McCarran,
Nevada democrat, have been
the main opponent to senate
approval of Bohlen.
, , . .,. ,,V.:.
The FBI reports all th In
formation, good, and . bad,
which it picks up on a parson
under investigation. But th
FBI draws no conclusion. It
leaves that to 'a high official,
like Dulles, in th department
where the investigated man
works.' ' .'..'.. - ' -,'
So Dulles went before the
foreign relations committee.
He didn't show the report to
the members. He aummarized
it for them, saying th report
contained som derogatory In
formation about Bohlen.
But none of it, he told the
committee,: waa of the kind
that could throw doubt on
Bohlen as a loyalty or security
risk. After questioning Dul
les for three hour, and talk
ing with Bohlen, the commit
tee unanimously' approved
Bohlen.
Dulles said that when Ma
Lcod looked over th FBI re
port and found th derogatory
information n naa told Dul
les: "This is not a cas which
can automatically pa be
cause wherever there 1 de
rogatory information of this
sort I think It i my duty to
bring it to your attention."
Dulles told a new confer
ence later that there was no
difference of opinion between
nun and McLeod on Bohlen
and, in answer to a question,
he said McLeod did. not sug
gest that Bohlen not be approved.
This is where ' McCarthy
steps into the picture, i Until
this point McCarthy, McCar
ran and Bridge had argued
against . Bohlen mainly be
caus ha had worked so close
ly with former Secretary of
Stat Dean Acheson and had
taken part in th Yalta and
Potsdam conference a Inter
preter.
McCarthy, McCarran and
Bridgea are not member of
th foreign relation commit
tee, before which Dule testi
fied. After th unanimous
vote for Bohlen,- McCarran
said Dulles had misrepresent
ed the situation to th com
mute, that McLeod, instead
of not differing with Dulles,
had actually told him he
"could not clear" Bohlen.
, McCarthy .' said th sam
thing, adding that what Dul
les had told th commute
bout himself and McLeod
wa untrue. , And, he said, he
knew what was in Bohlen's
file.
Sine th FBI Investigation
was not made until after the
Eisenhower 'admin istration
took office, McCarthy must
have meant he knew what
was in Bohlen's regular per
sonnel file, although he didn't
ssy how he knew. i -
He ' went beyond .' this.
though, by saying there' were
were IS page of derogatory
information about Bohlen in
the FBI report. This might
hav been told him in som
form by a senator who was
on th foreign relation com
mittee and beard Dulle tes
tify.,, . .
But McCarthy also said that
Bohlen was a bad security
risk.' He didn't explain how
ha and McCarran knew Dulles
and McLeod differed and how
he could be so positive that
the FBI files, which he wasn't
supposed to sec and didn't act
ually say ha saw, proved Boh
len a bad security risk.
The Rio Grande originates in I
springs 12,600 feet above sea l
level.
Union Official
'. Charles R. Smith, organizer
for the American Federation of
l-aoor aenied that he had
threatened Dwlght C. Battey,
Grant Pas restaurant owner,
for hi support of a number of
lanor bill In the legislature.
Smith, in a letter to James
T. Marr, executive secretary of
the State AFL, said that whil
in Grant Pass he called on
Battey and that in a friendly
conversation. Battey had told
him that be had no personal
grievance against union labor.
Smith said ha asked Battov
to place his view as expressed'
in writing but the restaurant
owner told him that he first
wished to consult bis attorney.
"Mr. Battey wlU. I believe,
confirm the fact that I offered
no threat during th course of
our conversation and aa I told
Mr. Battey, upon leaving him
early that evening, that I had
hope that the relationship he
had with organized labor in
this state, .which h admitted
was favorable to him, would
continue to be favorable."
In a letter made public by
Rep. H. B. Weatherford, Wal
lowa, Battey is said to have ac
cused Smith of threatening a
boycott on his restaurant if he
did hot write a letter giving
favorable comment on the
unions. This letter was read on
the floor of the house Wednes
day. . ' ' ' ' ' ' '
Merchant Ship
Out of Mothballs
I Portland, OF) The Maritime
Administration ordered a mer
chant ship taken out of the
mothball fleet near Astoria
Wednesday for the first time in
more than a year ; .' f '
Shipping interest expressed
hope this was sign govern
ment shipping would Increase,
and other ships would be re
ctivated soon. . .
The ship to com out of th
mothball fleet is the SeUn
Victory. It will b.
at Portland, th Job taking
about 12 days. ....
KILOCYCLES CHANGE
Washington, -A chang
from 1,590 to 1,240 kilocycles
wss authorized Wednesday by
the Federl Communications
Commission for radio station
KTIL in Tillamook, Ore. r
NURSERY SPECIALS
Reel Flowering Currant
Bushy 30-36" Plants
This Week Only ,
M.00
each
For Quick Shade i
Ore on Maple '-..1 P
Lombardy Popular ;
ft re I ft. Trees r ; .
Special This Week Only.
Fruit and Shade Tree Flwering Tree Berry Plant
. Roe Bnshes--Jt'f Green Stamps, Too!
KNIGHT PEARLY. NURSERY
Sale Yards Open 7 Days a Week '
Tewn Yard, IT 8. Liberty, 3 Blka. South of Stat '.
- . i - Country Yard en ME, 1 Mil South of Brook : , .
DOWNSTAIRS DBPT.
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