THE WEATHER PARTLY CLOimv - , " scat tered showers tonlrht c. rday. Little chant e in temper. hlrh Stale Building Grab Lost in Senate 19-11 Effort of Multnomah County to Pass log rolling' Bill Fails By JAMES D. OLSON n enort to transfer the power for placement of state Institutions from the voters to the legislature Wfl tnnnrll. feated In the senate Friday by The vote came on motion hv Senator Ben Dav nf Marlfn,.1 income tax nittxiifimantt moria that the minority report, rec- y at least two members of the ommendine nassaen nt fh hin commission and svamiiwH hv uc suusiuutea ior the majority tne tniru even though he does tyun wmcn cauea lor defeat no1 concur in tne decision, Q7 Baton u mim tltm :. 65th Year, No, FINAL EDITION To Lift Veil Of Secrecy On Tax Cuts Senate Group OKs Publicity on Income Settlements The blanket of secrecr oh In come tax settlements made by ine state tax commission would be lifted in a bill approved Friday by the senate committee on assessments and taxation. Under the terms of the bill information on reductions in Salem, Oregon, Friday, April 17, 1953 PRESIDENT ADDDRESSES PRESS Price 5c of the measure. Lamport Leads Fight Senator Fred Lamport, chairman of the senate com mittee on public welfare and ijiuiHuuuui, ueciarea mat pass' would be made available to the governor who in turn would be free to make the informa tion public. Approval of the bill was urg ed by Governor Paul L. Patter- age of the bill, which referred S0I. who declared: ine constitutional change to ine next election, would bring about log-rolling in the legis lature. He declared that under ine constitutional provision re stricting establishment of state institutions to Marion county, ume5s ine voters decree other- Wise, no new institution has peen established in Marion county since 1908, when the constitutional restriction adopted by the voters. Senators Day and Lonergan, both of whom were on the minority , report, contended that the bill was long overdue Approved by Governor 'Secrecy is the hand maiden of suspicion." The governor declared that because of- the many rumors heard throughout the state con cerning tax settlements, pas sage of the bill would be in the interest of the state tax com mission itself. 'During the past year or year and one-half" the governor said there has been a growth of suspicion on tax assessments and under the present law there is no way in which to 17 "" ' i p C . v House Repasses Welfare Bill and denied that the nuroose eitner Prove or. disprove such oi ine Dm was to move the rcJ'ur- capitol away from Marion (Concluded on Pare . Column 5) county, Senator Day said that he did not know of any group better qualified to make decisions on placement of state institutions than the state legislature. Would Move Capitol Senator Jack Bain, however, said that the ranltnl chnnlft ha moved to Portland. The bill opening up state "The onlv mistake that was welfare rolls to public Inspec- made when the old capitol tlon amended to prevent radio building burned down was that the capitol wasn't moved to Portland," Bain said. Other Multnomah senators quickly repudiated their fel low senator, insisting that it was not the purpose of the legislation to do this. (Concluded on Fare 5, Column I) as well as newspapers from publishing the lists, was re passed 44-13 by the Oregon House of Representatives and sent to the Senate. Already approved by both Houses, the bill was recalled I from the governor's office be cause Attorney General Robert IY. Thornton ruled the original measure discriminated against newspapers by applying the ban on publishing the names to them, without applying it to I radio. The new amendment bans any form of publication, but The Legislature's Joint Ways some House members still and Means Committee, which claim it violates fredom of passes on all bills appropriat- the press. They object that N.W. Gas Firms Plan Merger Seattle VP) Gas firms now serving nine cities in the Paci fic Northwest would be merg ed under plans revealed Thurs day by Stewart Matthews and Sanford Berry, gas company presidents, in Seattle. , Under the merger plans filed with the Securities and Ex change Commisison, Matthews' cascade natural Gas Co.. would take over the Northwest Cities Gas Co.. which Berry heads. Also embraced in the proposed deal would.be the Bremerton, Wenatchee an Bellingham gas companies which Matthews also heads. Matthews said the consolida tion would effect savings and strengthen the financial posi tion of the companies involved The Northwest company now serves Walla Walla, Yakima and Clarkston in Washington, Lewiston, Idaho, and Pendle ton and Eugene, Ore, president Eisenhower (arrow) receives a standing uvauuu uuiu uieinaera oi ine American society of News paper editors in Washington. The President told the group mat .Russia's leader can prove their will for peace vr cuuuig uic iwreaa war... ur reiepnoioj Washington VP) The Fed eral Power Commision has call ed a six-week recess in a hear ing on applications to pipe natural gas to the Pacific Northwest. Ways-Means Finishes Work ing money, cleaned up its work Thursday night. The committee killed, 7 to 5, a proposal to have a legislative analyst, who- would check on spending and operations of g t a t e departments between legislative sessions. Other action by the commit tee: Recommended an interim committee to report to the 1955 session on whether the state's money- collecting agencies should be combined into a the bill, which bans publica tion of public records, might set a bad precedent for the future. Clawson Fired By Sec. McKay Washington VP) Marion Clawson, who challenged the State Department of Revenue ' ecre ary of the under the governor. ........... ... .... ...... Approved a 53,828,542 DM-1 . t tha -tota ntnilcnliiru mmiHBCmcill, 19 UI1UCT romnared with the reauest bv formal dismissal notice. the1 prison for $4,542,932. War- McKay served the notice den Clarence T. Gladden was Thursday and gave Clawson ouotcd as saying the appropria- five days to show cause why it Hon would he bie enoueh to do should not become effective h. uinH of lob the nublic April 30. wanis clawson, wno said ne beuev- Gave the parole board $459,- ea ms JOO was proieciea Dy una nr S5B.000 more than the civil service but knew he could toard asked. The increase will not frce McKay to retain him, v. used to hire more Darole 5a'a was noi surprised ai ffirprs. as the hoard is about "e development, tie wunneio further comment. and House Speaker Rudie Wil- helm, Jr. said they think the session will run into next week. They had considered holding 800 cases behind ADDroved $7,309,300 for the state hospital, or $800,000 less than the hospital asked. Weather Forecast Shows Little Change The weather outlook for the next five-day period is for lit tle change from present con ditionssome light showers, slightly above normal temper atures and cloudiness. was measured in Salem for the f Sunday meeting only if the r.u.::.:rinrfina.f i nan legislature could finish its r. " work on that dav. Partly cloudy skie, and scat- The house killed, 11 to 25, a ....I. LI , .h. nrrior for senate bill to ban billboards on tonlRht and Saturday here, so newly constructed main high- . .... .u I., 37 on ways. lar mis momi w. .,, ,nlrnHll.j nn half of the Oregon Roadside Council, the bill would have wiped out virtually all bill boards outside cities. But it had been watered down so much that some rep resentatives didn't think It was worth passing. The outdoor advertising In dustry lobbied hard against the Housing Costs Washington (IP) The House Appropriations Committee Fri day ordered a halt to the gov ernment's low -rent housing program as it cut deeply Into the 1954 budget requests of 23 federal agencies. Its action, if sustained by Congress, also would start get ing the government govern ment out of the mortgage and housing business by ordering it to dispose of home mort gages it now holds and to re fund local housing bonds held by the Public Housing Admin istration. By committee arithmetic 61 per cent or $721,423,697 was lopped from original Truman budget estimates of $1,172,- 444,190 but some Democrats described much of the cut as "phoney." In the same category was a large part of an additional $1, 945,472,000 the committee claimed would pour into the Treasury as a result of its recommendations, REFUGEES IN HONG KONG Hong Kong VP) Forty-three refugees, mostly white Rus sians, arrived Thursday night from Communist China. All were former residents of Shanghai. Dulles Tells Effect ection Of Russian Rei . Washington VP) Secretary of State Dulles said it wlU be necessary "to move ahead on all fronta" with the defense buildup unless Russia responds promptly- to President Eisen hower's peace proposals. ' Talking with reporters ait- Chiang at Fault United Nations, N. Y. UP) Burma laid a mass of evidence before the UJJ. Friday to back up Charges that Nationalist China not only controls 12,000 guerrillas inside Burma but is supplying them with American arms. ; . Burma's chief delegate Jus tice Myint Thein presented his case in a 10,000-word speech before the 60 nation Political Committee and demanded that the government of Generallis- simo Chiang "Ks'-Shekbe con demned as aggressors. ' - - He hit hard at Nationalist China's claim that the guerrilla forces were independently di rected by Gen. LI Mi and were not under the control of the Taipeh government -, Myint Thein quoted statements from other Nationalist officials con tradicting this. I One of these - was ; Patrick Soong, charge d'affaires at the Chinese Nationalist Embassy in Bangkok. er addressing a closed session of the senate foreign relations committee, " Dulles was asked the effects of the president's address Thursday to the Amer ican Society of Newspaper editors. Dulles responded: 'It created a situation where it is obvious that unless there is a very prompt response from the Soviet Union in a great many respects it will be quite apparent it la neces sary to move ahead on all fronts, East and West, to de velop a stronfc position." borne of the senators Quoted Dulles as telling the commit tee were are "reasonable pros- Embassy Gives Ike's Address To (he Kremlin Chiefs of the U. S. Missions Abroad Deliver Texts Washlnrton U.PJ The United States embassy in Moscow has delivered President Eisenhow er'! speech to the Kremlin and stressed it is a "serious con structive effort" toward achiev ing world peace, the State De partment announced today. In an unusual, and perhaos unprecedented action, chiefs of all U. S. missions abroad also were instructed to hand texts or the speech to foreign min isters in 70-odd countries and to empnasize that it presents a way toward peace and stability. vaoinei meets This government was throw ing all its diplomatic and pro- puganas lorces oenind Mr. El senhower's "peace offensive." Mr. Elsenhower, himself. was recovering in Augusta, Ga., from an attack of food pois oning he suffered yesterday. But at his direction, the cab inet met here without him and thrashed over ideas and Plans ior marshalling the free .world behind his program. - - The Voice of America sent the President's words around the globe in 45 languages to the Soviet Union, its satellites, and to free nations. (Concluded cn Page 5, Column 3) Ike Suffering Food Poisoning Ga. ' Augusta, VP) President pects" for an agreement with Eisenhower came down Thurs- Western European nations for substantial Increases in the day with "a slight case of food poisoning" but an aide said fense forces, ' After another pmrance fTiaay. Dulles was quoted as sayine that "nolh. ing in United States policy con- rciupiaies a - irusieesnip over rormosa,' Abandon Plans to Hold Sunday Session Plans to hold a session Sun-1 bill, and some legislators feel day afternoon collapsed as Sen- the bill would restrict free en- ate President Eugene . Marsh terprlse. inch of rain has been meas ured, against a normal of .37 for the period. Weather Details Milan mi"'". Ml I"1"" I., aimlh. Jill nurro.l. Id-." J rlslUllaa. M rml. i'lrtl. 4 .t ft- ?' WwlhH Bum pre lum A bill sent by the house to the governor would let the De partment of Agriculture force landowners to eliminate rag weed, a prime cause of hay fever. ' Another bill which the house sent to the governor would pre vent doctors, chiropractors, and other healers from practicing while they are appealing from suspension or revocation of their licenses. This is aimed at alleged abortionists who have kept In business while ap pealing from loss of their li censes. Some 50 appointive state of ficials will get salary boosts under a bill passed by the Loggers' Wage Hike Rejected Portland HP) Employers rejected the CIO Woodworkers' latest move Thursday, a mo tion to submit their wage dis pute to the American Arbitra tion Association. A. F. Hartung, union presi dent, argued the union was en titled to a 12 -cent hourly pay increase, asserting that corpor ate profits have gone up 100 per cent while woodworkers wages have risen only 36 per cent. The employers said only that they were willing to renew the present contract. The eight employer groups represented in the session hire 23,000 of the union's 45,000 members in five Northwest states. size and quality of their de. there was no cause for alarm. ine auacic developed early capitol ap- m ,nB mornln8 oelore Eisen- Dulles was ugusia oy piane .ur ms loreign poucy speech in Washington and an informal talk at Salisbury, N. C. The president went to yA shortly after he,xeturned here Thursday night. His nhvslclan. Dr. Howard Snyder, said El senhower was fcelintf "not no not." The president himself told newsmen he was feeling "pret ty good" as he steeped off his plane and headed for his vapb- Wsahlnfftin cm tion headquarters at the Au. Eisenhower Frlrloir r,nmi.,i gusta National Golf Club. .... out. us ppearea weary and usuess alter a strenuous 12. hour day. Ike Nominates SRedMIGs Shot Down By Sabre jets Seoul mU. S. Sabre let puou snot down lour Commu nist MIG Jets and probably de stroyed another Frldav whili. Allied ' fighter bombers plas tered nea positions on the Ko rean Front. Capt Manuel J. Fernandez. Jr., Miami, Fla., one of the five U. S. double aces of the Kore an War, bagged his 11th MIG. It brought him within one of equalling the score of CoL Roy al M. Baker, McKinney, Tex, the world's leading jet act. Fernandez also Is credited with one MIG probably de stroyed and one damaged. " On the ground, the Chinese Reds hurled 1.000 men aeainat live west Korean hills, overran part of one key height, then Resurapfion ; Of Armistice Agreed Upon Allies and Reds Hold Liaison Meeting Sunday on Truce ; ' Manias. Korea W) Ti United Nations and Comma. ntet Friday agreed to hold a liaison meeting Sunday to dis cuss resumption of the lone suspended Korean Armistice talks. ' The ' agreement came less than 15 hours after the U. N. told the Reds It was readv to reopen , the talks, providing the Reds do no stalling on the lines in the face of lavage al lied counterattacks, Troops of the U. 8. 7th Di vision defended four of the five outposts. U.S. Destroyer change . of prisoners the last big obstacle to an armistice. , The U. N. had asked for the liaison meeting Saturday to work out details for startln. ' the new talks. The Reds, how ever, suggested 11 ajn. Sunday (8 p.m. PST Saturday), The U. N. agreed. ... Technical Details , . Allied spokesmen said th liaison groups probably would do little more than discuss tht technical details of resuming full-scale armistice talks. - (Caneloded en Page fc Column 4) POW Happy on Tokyo (OB Disabled Allied prisoners of war slated tor ex change at . Panmunlom next Monday are' "hilariously hap py" about returning home, a Communist correspondent said a Chicago manufacturer, Ed mund F. Mansure, to head the General Services Administra tion. . This is ' the "housekeeping' agency which has charge of government buildings and does a lot Of government buvins. Elsenhower also sent to the Senate the nomination of Nor man Ross Abrams of Philadel phia to be assistant post master general. Gromyko Called Bark fo Russia London U.B Soviet Ambas sador Anrirpf firnmvVn la lu. luansure would succeed jm m i-oniio 4 iurncn.... j Larson as GSA administrator. Jacob Malik probably will suc Larson resiened sonn nftrr th .uat v.i .,,ii...u.u... , r , I ....., auMiviiiauvc suurces usciuiuwer administration said today. took office. Gromvko nnlrl ri .oil- Eisenhower also sent to the ... , ,, . . i j .....iiQict oenuie ine nomination OX two Winstnn rhiirh11 caJ?e5 uPlomals lor Pt to handling the foreign office dur whlch they were appointed by ing Foreign Secretary Anthony President Truman in recess ap- Eden's lllnpa. nH ivrini.t0. P0...UHC11W. state Eelwvn Llovd. They are George Wadsworth The of New York, ambassador to Georgi Zarubln, the Soviet am Czechoslovakla, and Jack K. bassador to Washington, also McFall of Washington, D. C, may be replaced. minister to Finland. BA Contracts to Total $4 Million Portland OP) The Bonne ville administration Is about ready to place an order for more than four million dollars worth of transmission line. It will be aluminum line, reinforced by steel, with a dirmeter of 1.6 Inches. It will go into the Bonneville grid. including the ll.ies of McNary- Ross, Chief Joseph-Snohomish- Kitsap line. All told, there will be enough of It for 1,358 miles of power line. The apparent low bid was $4,078,784 from the Aluminum Company of America, with de livery at Vancouver, Wash., where Alcoa has a plant Officials said they would need further study, however, to determine whether a $4, 339,068 bid from Reynolds Metals company, Louisville, Ky,, might be lower when freight rates are considered. The RpvnnlHi hlri ttrnt nn ftn house and tent to the governor. f.o.b. destination basil. Heifetz Slugged In Jerusalem Jerusalem VP) An unidenti fied assailant slugged Violin ist Jascha Heifetz with an iron bar early Friday, injuring his right hand. It appeared he might have to cancel the re mainder of his recital series here. uromyko Is the second among Russia's leading ambas sadors to be recalled since Pre mier Georgi Malenkov took over the leadership of the So viet Union following the death of Josef Stalin. Washington VP) Enemy guns scored one direct hit on the destroyer . Maddox off Ko rea Thursday, wounding one seaman critically and causing minor damage to. the ship, the navy announced. The navy man was identified Seaman Frank Nick Cetl- do, Des Moines, Iowa. The navy said Friday at least two North Korean batter ies fired 156 rounds at. the Maddox in Wonsan harbor off the Korean east coast. A single shell hit the de stroyer on the main deck. portslde, but damage was "not today. serious," the navy reported, Alan Winnington of th communist London Dailv worxer, said be watched the Allied prisoners arrive at "collecting point" all day long. ne cua not say where the col. Iectlng point was,' but it nre- sumably was Kaesong, the Red truce camp six miles north oi Moscow UJ Alt ! Fanmuulom. newspapers published promt- niianousiy nappy nently today, and with tinpre- ' ',em8 on thelr way homo ceaented speed, a report of muu wonaering u au President Eisenhower'! foreign "." Winnington said in policy speech. dispatch broadcast by Pel The report was published in Pm tamo. He laid a "bar this morning's newspaper! Jn I handful' of the prisoner! are the form of an official news Matched cases and the rest agency disnateh with a Nw can get around York dateline quoting the ' Most are suffering ailment! speech and , giving a running "ng from wounds or frost- commentary on It. Moskow u"e wuicn occurred at tna radio also broadcast the Turn I time of their capture. A very large part of the repatriates have quite minor aisaouiues." Ike's Speech in Soviet Papers dispatch for foreign newspa pers. . The president devoted the major part oi his speech to a justification of American for eign policy, . including arma ments and the North Atlantic pact, blaming the Soviet Un ion for the existing situation," the Tass dispatch said. "But he did not give any facts to sup port inn. 2 More Sf ales Ratify Education Compact Two more states. Idaho and Wyoming, have ratified the western state compact for high er education, according to word received at the state capitol Friday. In doing so, these states have associated with Oregon. Ari zona, Colorado, Montana. New Mexico and Utah In planning ior tne training of doctors dentists, vetcrlnarles and pub lie health personnel living in these states that have no schools ofcring programs in these fields. Property Destroyed By Youthful Vandals Younff pnnrilrfnfp tnr ilol Heifetz was struck shortly Institutional rnre urn rnitalncf -- i. - I . . I , . - n " fiayea a sonata oy cny authorities no end of trou- German Composer Richard ble in Salem parks by destruc- auauu. oiaruss- music U Un- tion OI nubl e nronertv welcome In Israel, because of Twice this week all windows tne nazi oan on works bv have been lennrknri nut nt ... lewi. of the rest rooms in nnh Pn. onorny alter the attack on Heifetz, an anonymous caller phoned the- Voice of Israel radio station and said the slugging was carried out by nanorar Halvri Hebrew youth movement. The caller said ture Park, and other devil ment has been dona In the same park and others in Salem. Thursday morning all the windows were foui;d knocked out. They wen. replaced dur- Helfetz had better get out of Ing the day. Frldav nlafit thev Israel or the attack would be were crashed out again, repeated. Hanoar Halvri is And that Isn't all. All the reported to be an Illegal, ex- mirrors were broken, toilet tremist, nationalist organize- bowls were filled with rnrkn. tion. toilet seats Wfri hrnWl.n lnnca The Israel Philharmonic or- from the floor and th tanka chestra, under whose auspices dismantled. i the Jewish-American artist Is Light bulbs were shattered, touring Israel, issued a state- walls defaced with obscenities. ment condemning the "cow- and trash icattcrcd about the ardly act." floori. And. of course, there were the Inevitable beer bot tles. In other parts of the park outdoor fireplaces were overturned. There is evidence that the vandals enter the park in cars, and fencing li now con templated so cars can't get In. Similar depredations have occurred In Marion Square ana otner places. City authorities are consid ering the kind of legal action tc be used on the vandals if they are caught. "What will be done with them is, of course, a matter for the courts to decide," was one comment today. "But It looks like they need lntsitu tional care Jail or the peni tentiary If they are old enough, the State Boyi School or the home for mental defectives It they are juveniles. It looks like the work of morons." i 7 American POW to Be Free Washington VP) Russia has notified the United States that North Korean authorities "are taking measures to release" stven American civilians seiz ed nearly three years ago at the outbreak of hostilities. The state department said North Korean authorities also have sent wore1 through Rus sia that three other Ameri cana, including a Catholic bis hop, are dead and three others missing. , The Russian foreign office gave this information to Jacob Beam, . American embassy minister, Thursday. Beam had asked Moscow two weeks ago to use its good offices in help ing obtain the release of all 13 Americans believed held by North Korean authorities. Press Officer Michael Mc Dermott told a news confer ence the details and date of release have not been worked out yet. Moscow has promis ed to keep the embassy in formed. French Retreat In Indochina Saigon, Indochina VP) Some 3,000 to 4,000 French and Lao tian troops fleeing over mountain trails in the kingdom of Laos to escape a strong pur suing force of the communist led Vietmlnh were reported nearlng the safety of a strong ly defended area. The retreating column wu marching single file from th town of Samneua, 108 mllea southwest of -Hanoi, to Laos new key defense post of Xlengkhouang, 84 air mi lea south of Samneua but many more by the tortuous, densely jungled land route. . : The town b main outpost on a road leading to Luangprm bang, r