THE WEATHER F I N A L EDITION PARTI,! OLOUOI tonight, Friday. Little clung la tem perature. Low tonight, . 35; Jbigh Friday, St. ', 65th Year, No. 103 toUn4 m stoaad clui . matter at tUltm, Ortsoa Salenv Oregon, Thursday, April 30, 195 Aao3 Price 5c JOHI - t v ' . . 1 (o) FP Alexander Strikes Back AlO'Malley McKay Asks Restoration Of Cut Funds Senate Asked for $11 Million Slashed ' From Interior Bill .. Washington M The Elsen BACK IN THE U.S.A. 1U ' nm si Former Superintend ent Says Prisoners Ran Pen ' . By WILLIAM WARREN (UnlU4 Pnu Corrwpondtnt) ; George Alexander, until tbli week superintendent at the Oregon state prison, today un- leaahed s blistering attack on VlrgU J. O'Malley, who sac eeeded hint as warden of the penitentiary a couple of years ago. The office, of superinten dent, created when O'Malley succeeded Alexander as war den, rwas abolished this week when Gov. Paul ' Patterson signed a bill to that effect and putting in a business adminis trator at the prison answer able to the warden. O'Malley recently was fired as warden by the board of con trol, which put in Clarence T. Gladden, retired federal pris on warden, . in charge until conditions are ironed out at the penitentiary. Turned Things Upside Down v Alexander said today : ; - "O'Malley practically turn ed unrigs upside down at the penitentiary." i. , ; Convicts began telling the guards what to do, and as a consequence, Alexander said, lax administration resulted in smuggling of "dynamite, guns and drugs" into the prison. F Alexander said O'Malley permitted , the prisoners to ','roam freely" between the ell blocks and prison prop erty suffered. : Concluded on Pre 0, Column 4) Secretary Plans Washington VP) Secretary ' of the Interior McKay an nounced Thursday he plans two " flying trips to Oregon in May . and June. They will be his first visits to his home state since he came .' here in January to 'enter) the Eisenhower cabinet.-. McKay is the former governor. McKay will fly to Oregon ' May 29 to speak at commence;. mem -exercises ai wuiameiie university in Salem on May 31. - He also will speak to the Portland Chamber of Com merce June 1. . -1 He will return to Washing ton, go to Carlisle, Penn., to speak June 7 at the commence ment at Dickinson College and . then fly back to Oregon. He is to speak at the dedi cation of the Detroit Dam on June 10. He also will attend meetings of the Columbia Ba sin Interagency Commission at Send and Prineville, June 11. Patterson Signs -Publicity Bill i Oregon's public welfare lists jvere opened to public inspec tion Thursday when Gov. Paul L. Patterson signed the welfare publicity biU into law. The bill, cause of one of the legislature's biggest controver sies, had an emergency clause, so it became law when the gov ernor signed it. The lists including those who receive old age pensions, aid to dependent children and other forms of public assistance, will be open to the public in the of fices of county public welfare commissions. Nine other states have simi lar laws. ' It is illegal to use the lists for commercial or political pur poses. Picketing Bill ' Action Delayed - Does House Bill 663, the Legislature's anti-organizational picketing bill, legalize the closed shop? Gov. Paul L. Patterson will have to find out the answer to that question before be signs or vetoes the bill. He "plans to act after he returns from Wash ington, D. C, next Wednesday night v Reporters found out Thurs day that, In the last hours of the session, Section 19 was add ed to the bill. It says: "Nothing contained in this act shall preclude an employer -from making an agreement with a labor organization re quiring membership therein as a condition of employment" hower administration Wednes day took a firm stand against House trimming of the Interior Department's appropriations requests. Secretary of the Interior Mc Kay through an aide asked a Senate subcommittee to re store 11 million dollars slashed by the House from the Eisen hower budget for the Bonne ville Power Administration. The GOP administration had asked $34,300,000 for the year beginning July 1. The House voted $43,300,000. Eisenhower asked $47,200, 000 for construction and $7, 100,000 for operation and main tenance. The House gave $38, 300,000 and $5,000,000 respec tively. - - . . : Raver Testifies BPA Administrator Paul J. Raver interrupted testimony before a Senate appropriations subcommittee to confer with McKay on the slash. Raver was (Concluded on Pace ( Colamn"4) Banned as Red Washington () Sixty-two new. organizations,. Including the Washington Pension Union which is headed by an admit ted communist, were listed Wednesday by " Attorney Gen eral Brownell as being added to the Justice department's list of subversive groups.' Addition, of the new group brings to 254 the number of organizations in which mem bership . by a government worker will be made the sub ject of further inquiry as to the fitness of the person for federal employment.? -; The original 192 were listed during the Truman adminis tration.- Those listed Wednes day by Brownell will be given hearings prior to their formal addition to the list if they re quest, the' attorney general told a news conference. William Pennock, one of seven persons being tried on charges of conspiring to teach and advocate the overthrow of the -government by force, has been president of the Pen sion Union- since its organiza tion in Seattle id 1937.- Ice Goes Out of Tanana River ; Fairbanks, Alaska VP) The Ice went out In the Tanana river at 3:54 p.m. Wednesday, a time picked by a number of persons who will share a pool of approximately $100,000. ; Ticket holders on the win ning time were The Eleven Hopefuls, Juneau; Kathleen Barrlcklow, Juneau; Earl Pil grim, Bernice Hagberg, Den nis Vanhorn, Emil Arne Pool, City Electric Pool, all of Fair banks; the Three-Twenty-Six Club, the ACS Teletype mend ers, Florence Rainier and the Union Club Pool of Anchor age, and Randy Williams of Ketchikan. The ice jammed at the rail road bridge near the pylon shortly before the breakup and hundreds watched as the ice jam moved out. 32 Percent State Department Washington UP) A 32 per cent cut in new funds request ed for the State Department by former President Truman was recommended Thursday by the House Appropriations Commit tee. The committee also called for cuts of 25 per cent in funds re quested tor the Commerce De partment and 4 per cent in those sought for the Justice De partment. The three agencies' appro priations for the fiscal year starting July 1 are embodied in a package bill sent to the House floor Thursday by the com mittee. The bill wiU be debated next tfcckt Its total' of $1,143,146,712 is 22 per cent, or $326,347,803, below the amounts Truman re quested In his January budget and $147,911,303 leu than the Some of the 35 repatriated prisoners who arrived at Travis Air Base, Calif., from Japan walk off the ambulance plane which brought them from Honolulu on the final leg of their overseas hop home. (AP Wirephoto) - 63 More Freed POW On Freedom Airlift' ' Tokyo VP) Two planeloads of returning U. S. disabled xor mer prisoners of the Reds took off from Tokyo early Friday for the United States. " The second took off at 1:40 a.m. Thursday, PST, a few hours after another big plane carrying returned, prisoners roared off toward home on the freedom airlift.- , The two planes are carrying Gets 1 2th Mig In Roughest1 Fight of War Seoul Vf) Capt. Manuel Fernandez shot down his -12th MIG today in "the roughest fight I ever had" to tie the individual record for' destruc tion of the Russian-built Red fighters over Korea. ; j ; The scrappy 27-year-old jet ace from Miami destroyed the MIG in a fierce air battle just south of the Yalu river. He tied the mark set last month by Col. Royal Baker of Mc Kinney, Tex., who has gone home.: , Ground fighting remained light for the fifth straight day. Fernandez, who asked for 25 more missions after flying the required 100, has 14 left. He's going after the over-all mark of 14 Red planes set by Maj. George Davis, who destroyed 11 MIGs and three propeller driven planes before he crash ed in Red territory In Febru ary, 1952. ; ' ' v Mau Mau Bombed By British Planes Nairobi, ' Kenya WP) Royal Air Force planes bombed Mau Mau terrorists for the first time Thursday. Three RAF Harvards, which arrived from- Rhodesia recent ly, dropped eight 20-pound bombs on a suspected Mau Mau hideout 10,000 feet up in the Aberdare mountains. Cut from three departments received for the present year. . The committee gave no com parison of its overall recom mendations with revised money requests made since President Eisenhower took office. Here's - what the committee recommended: State Department $102, 744,787, a cut of $48,403,803 from the Truman requests and $30,290,092 below this year's funds. Justice Department $179, 265,000, a cut of $7,885,000 from Truman estimates and $5, 028,000 from current appro priations. . ; Commerce Department ' $881,136,925, a cut of $270, 059,000 from Truman requests and $112,593,211 from fiscal 1953 funds. a total of 63 of the sick and wounded who were exchanged at Panmunjom by the Commu nists last week, ;. ' The planes will make a 17- hour flight to, Honolulu, stop there briefly to let the prison ers rest and then make a nine- hour flight to Travis Air Force Base. Calif. . At the last moment, the Far East command ordered a near blackout . on details of the flights. .' . ' It held up the news of their departure nearly ah hour. The command declined , to give the' names - or "humber bf men aboard each plane. . Public information officers at command headquarters said censors considered the flights a mass, movement of troops. They thus applied restrictions that normally apply only to battlefield or support - situa tions. - , . " . , ... . n Washington WPJ East Coast longshore boss Joseph P. Ryan In a stormy Senate hear ing today has ignored AFL orders to throw -criminals out of key jobs In his union. ' "It's not my business to drop everybody that had a criminal record when young," the husky life time president of the In ter n ational Longshoremen's Association said. He appeared before a Senate Commerce sub committee investigating water front racketeering. Subcommitte counsel Dow ney Rice said 60 per cent of the ILA organizers in the New York area have criminal records. Everybody sent men to the docks that had criminal records. That's the only place they could get work," Ryan said. 'Am I the one to say a man don't get another chance?" ityan conceded ne naa Deen ordered by the AFL to clean out the racketeers. "Have you done it?" asked Sen. John J. Pastore D., R. I. "No, sir," saidRyan. Rent Controls Bill Signed Washington CP) President Eisenhower Thursday signed a bill extending rent controls on 5,500,000 housing units in 32 states until July 31. The con trols had been due to expire at midnight Thursday. The measure ' passed by Congress last week was a compromise on his request for extension until Oct 1. Under the new legislation, the Elsenhower administration must Investigate and certify anew each critical defense housing area, for purposes of determining need for rent con trol. And a new definition in cludes only areas around gov ernment defense installations Those areas that meet the new requirement an estimat ed 600,000-unit totalwill con tinue under controls until next April 30. on Expected Today Panmunjom (U.FD The Unit ed Nations will resume nego tiations with the Communists tonight on the exchange of sick and wounded war prisoners, it was announced today. Whether there will be any attempt to get more U. N. pris oners released was not known. - Rear Adm. John C. Daniel, U. N. liaison chief, called the meeting with the Communist liaison officers. It is to start at 0 a.m. (6 p.m. Thursday PDT). Daniel said merely, that he wanted to discuss "problems concerning, the exchange of sick and wounded prisoners." 684 POW Delivered1 ' The U. N. already has propos ed that the exchange of ailing prisoners be continued for the duration of the war. The Communists completed delivery of 684 U. N. prison ers', including 149 Americans, Sunday. The Allies are still de livering Jheir quota of Com munist prisoners. ' ' (Continued en Pag g, Oataatn t) --A'...- ,7Vr : s. London ) Prime Minister Churchill Thursday. : rejected Laborlte suggestions that he complain to Washington about the American offer to pay Communist pilots who surren der with their jet planes in Ko rea. ..." .'- -' ' ' . :- ! "I am not going to make any complaints to. the United. States government upon the subject," Churchill told the House of Commons. The Prime Minister hinted. however,-that there might be doubt whether the offer was well timed In view of the pros pects for a truce in Korea. ' The United States has offer ed to pay $100,000 to the first Communist airman who sur renders with a MIG-18 intact. Laborlte George Wlgg asked if the U.N. command in Korea had consulted with the Brit ish gflvernment about the offer, The Prime Minister replied: "There was no need for any consultations and none took place.'" Roads Program Washington (fl Authoriza tion for a 125 million dollar forest access road construction program was urged Thursday by Rep. Ellsworth (R., Ore.). In a bill prepared for Intro duction, the Oregon congress man detailed procedures un der which construction would be financed by government loans to the U.S. forest serv ice and would be repaid from proceeds of timber sales. Ellsworth estimated , his plan would bring 30 million dollars in new revenue into the treasury each year, per- mit harvesting of more than two million board feet of government-owned timber "now being lost," improve forest management, and provide Jobs by opening up overripe but inaccessible timber stands. In brief, the bill provides that when a road construction program Is required to man age a specific timber unit, the forest service certifies to the treasury that the road Is need ed and that sufficient timber will be cut and sold from the unit to repay the loan within 25 years. ' . All Northwest Power Restrictions Lifted Washington W-B The gov ernment announced today that all restrictions on use of elec tric power in the Pacific Northwest area will be revok ed, effective today. The defense electric power administration said the regu lations are being cancelled be cause of "the end of crucial water conditions . . . and upon the recommendation of the Pacific northwest advisory committee." 80 POW in Prison Camp in Good Shape Reports Corporal (By Ttu SuotltUd Vnu) A young corporal just freed by the - communists brought fresh hope and encouragement Thursday to relatives of Amer icans still held ' captive In North Korea. ' Oil Bill Lose Washington W The senate defeated Thursday what Sen. Taft (R-, Ohio) called a "half baked proposition" for federal administration of the sub merged continental shelf be yond the three-mile limit. Action came on rejection of an amendment by Sen. Mon roney (D., Okla.) to a bill to establish state title to poten tially oil-rich submerged off shore lands within their his- torclal boundaries. The roll call vote was 59 to 22. ,::.! .-;. These boundaries are claim ed to extend out 10 M miles Into the Gulf of Mexico in the case of Texas and the west coast . of Florida. Thus Mon- roney's proposal would have denied these two states seven and - one-half miles of what they claim. i ;,-.-, ' The amendment provided that federal revenues from oil and gas development in the area - outside the . three-mile zone would be devoted to re tirement of the 264 billion dollar public debt. i. .V: in. on Washington UP) President Eisenhower and the , U.S. Chamber of commerce were in accord Thursday on "trade, not aid" in foreign policy, but at odds over restraining- the government's treat y-maklng power. Elsenhower told delegates to the chamber's 41st annual meeting Wednesday night that healthy Internatiohal trade "is the material foundation of our whole foreign policy." "We must trade with others or we cannot exist," the pres ident said In a nine minute off-the-cuff talk. He spoke at a dinner after the delegates adopted policy declarations. Among these were a call on the government to halt foreign economic aid, not to be confused with military aid. But the delegates endorsed a resolution, now pending in the senate, to restrain the treaty-making power. QUAKE RECORDED New York 0-R A strong earthquake, probably centered In the South Pacific was re corded on Fordham University seismographs early today, the Rev. Joseph reported. Weather Details MtxlMam TWUrSkr. Bit Minima to- r, 41. TUI Sl-kW TMlIUtlHII .Ml far MMthi l.SSt iiraitl. S.tt. Smmh tmIIUUm, M.I4I rail, SI.SS. Bltar nifhi, l.t Int. iml f U.S. WMthtr hnu.) 4 Killed, Many Injured In Blast at Peabody, Mast. QU9 A ter rific explosion wrecked a war chemical plant here today and police reported at least four workers were killed and a doz en Injured. Police said four bodies had been recovered from the blaz ing rulnt of the main building of the American Resinous Chemicals Corp. plant. J. B. Thomas hospital report ed a dozen workers had been taken there for treatment of severe burns. Ambulances Rash to Scene Police said 22 persons were at work in the main building, a 250-foot-long, three story wooden structure, when the blast occurred at S p.m. EDT. Other workers were busy In Yalu River Cpl. . Everett W, Ritenour, 21, Woodstock, Vs., listed some 80 prisoners and . said they were in "pretty good shape" when he left Red Prison Camp No. 5 on the Talu River. Rit enour, repatriated in last week's exchange at Freedom Village made the list public in Tokyo, -m ' :-- Most of their relatives war aware they ware captives but the general comment was: .fit's sure good to get soma news direct."1' -. '1,r:" At Baltimore, Md., T. L. Ray, father of Pfc. Billy L. Ray, said he had received a letter from his son In. Febru ary saying he had enough to eat and warm clothes. " "But we ' couldn't be too sure because the letter had to go through communist cen sors," be added, . , , , (Concluded oa Page f Cilaam a) Hanoi, Indochina - () Com munist . led Vietminh troops sweeping toward the royal La otian seat of Luangprabang captured another French-La otian defense post today this one only about 25 miles north of town. It was the third, re verse suffered by the defend ing forces In as many days, The black-clad invaders of Laos one of the three French- associated states of Indochina successfully stormed ieasea at. Muongsung 'as -.tbe possibility increased of an -stout assault by the week-end on the residence city of aged, ailing King Sisavong Vong, . The loss of Muongsung, In the valley . of - the Namhou River, was announced shortly after a French Army spokes man expressed cautious optim ism about the general situation in Laos. He even went so far as to say "the situation is looking better," but he did not say why. Prisoners Put ; In Wire Cages Tokyo u.B American war prisoners refusing to make Communist , broadcasts were put in three-foot wire cages where they had to crouch like animals, a liberated soldier said today. ' ,, ' Cpl. Charles I. -Dick' of Spann, Ky., said some of the soldiers gained release from the torture and humiliation by saying they had seen the error of their ways. - "You could lie down only at night," Dick said. "The longest period I heard of was a man who spent six months in the cage. I was never there my self." . Most Signed Statements . Dick discussed the Commun ists' human zoo during an in terview in the library of an Army hospital. . "Most of us signed state ments and petitions," said Dick, 21, who used to haul coal in Spann. "I made a broadcast myself to let my folks know I was wounded. Peabody smaller outbuildings of the plant. . . . All ' available ambulances were rushed to the scene and fire apparatus was called from a dozen nearby communities, An hour and a half after the blast, Its cause was not yet de termined. Windows were shattered over a two-mile radiut and streets around the wrecked plant were littered with brok en glass. Half a dozen automo biles parked nearby had their roofs caved in by debris. A numbr of persons living in the neighborhod were slight ly injured by shattered glass and debris. " Redudion In Effective Defense Plans Washington VP) President Elsenhower said Thursday ne plans to ask Congress for $H billion dollars less than former President Truman asked for the fiscal year beginning, Inly. 1, The president told a news conference however, that . he. sees no possibility at this time of balancing the budget for the new fiscal year. - - v And he declined to speculate on whether the appropriations reduction he mentioned might open tne way for a tax cut. The White House had said In advance that Elsenhower would i make a major pro nouncement . on spending and defense of the United States in general. ; .-, ;- ' :v.. Beads Statement The president read a nreoar- . ed statement in which he said he had told congressional lead ers earlier in the day that al ready ' "we can see our way clear to ask Congress to appro priate at least $8,500,000,000 less new money for fiscal 1954 ' than had been asked by the previous administration." The president added that the saving would be realized with out reducing the effective mili tary strength of the United States and Its allies The appropriation reduction appropriations which Truman recommended to a new total of $04,400,000,000. . ; ; 1- New Appropriations Elsenhower emphasized, how ever, that he was talking about new appropriations some thing which is usually entirely different from contemplated spending.. .-'rV-:-i The amount of spending In t f fiscal year is determined at a practical matter by appropria- tions made over several years. Truman's spending figure for the fiscal year beginning July 1 was $78,600,000,000. Eisenhower noted 'that the ,; prospective deficit for the next , fiscal year was $9,900,000,000 under Truman's spending and revenue estimates. ' ' '', -' By Eisenhower ' Washington, VP) President Elsenhower Thursday sent Congress a . Defense Depart m e n t reorganization plan which would Increase the au thority of the civilian heads of the armed forces and limit somewhat . the power of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. . 7 "I believe our defense es tablishment is in need of im mediate improvement," .the President said in a special mes sage to Congress. The plan calls, among other things, for appointment of six additional assistant secretaries of defense and for the aboli tion of the Munitions Board, the Research and Development Board, the Defense Supply Management Agency, and the office of the director of instal lations. . ; ' Elsenhower told the law makers that in the case of the office of the secretary of de fense alon, a staff reduction of approximately 500 employes will be achieved. ' Ike Schedules June Speeches Washington U.R) President Elsenhower will make a series of speeches In five states, Min nesota, the Dakotas, New York and New Hampshire, In early June, the White House an nounced yesterday. The President, traveling by plane, will open his flying tour of the upper Middle West oa June 10 at Minneapolis where he will speak at 2:30 p.m. to a national convention of the Junior Chamber of Commerce. On June 11 at 10:30 a.m. he will speak at Garrison Dam, midway between Bismarck and Mlnot, N. D. The same day, the President will fly to Rapid City, S. D., where he will apeak at 1:30 p.m. to a national convention of Young Republicans. 1 . J. M i