, i 1 f 1 i apit al AjJoiiir lial . THE WEATHER 'AlHHIOH cloudiness to "if nti Increasing cloudiness Tuesday.' Continued warm, low tonight, 48; Ugh TuesdsT; FINAL EDITION 65th Year, No. 106 Statarat as aaooad alua aatwt at Salts, Onus Salem, Oregon, Monday, May ' NOoa2 iio 9aSs Price 5c Ship Owners Paid by Both ; Reds, Allies 793 Western Vessels Made 445 Trips To Chinese Ports Washington An Investl ' rator for a senate committee testified Monday that 19 own- STEEL FOR SALEM STRUCTURES She ob buiib iiying nags 01 . Western Allies of the V. 8. are taking money from Communist China with one hand and from the United States with the . other. " And a government transDor- tation expert said there has re nas to halt i firms been no official policy t U. S. business with such although the National Security council may come up with one soon. A Robert F. Kennedy, assist ant counsel of the senate in vestigations subcommittee tes tified about the "dual trade" something Chairman McCarthy n wis.) called , inconceiva ble, the "most inexcusable thing I've ever heard of." Iron Curtain Trade Kennedy said he has dug up evidence that 193 Western ally, ships were trading with Red China last year more than half of them British and that 66 operated in trade between ports behind the Iron Curtain in Europe. He said the 193 ships made 445 "provable ' voyages" to Communist Chinese ports last year and that he believes the actual total was about 600 voy ages. (Continued on Page 5, Column I) Tax Exemption Bill Signed Gov. Paul L. Patterson sign ed the bill i to make state in come tax exemptions conform with the federal exemptions. It will main reduced taxes for parents of two or more children, blind persons, and for persons over.,65 years old. The federal, exemption T is $600 per person. The-state-ex' emptlon has been $780 for each adylt, and $300 for each de pendent child. ' Other bills signed by the governor will give the state a new corporation code, pay pen sions to widows of Judges, in crease salaries of appointed state officials, permit seizure of property where abortions are performed, restrict the sur gery practice of chiropractors, and let legislative committees administer oaths to witnesses and to subpoena witnesses and records. Summer Time Weather Here Real summertime weather descended over the valley, Sunday and Monday, to bring high temperatures of the year. Sunday brought the high mark of the season to that date, 75 degrees, but Monday's maximum was to be higher, the mercury shooting past 77 degrees by 11 a.m. The last 75 maximum mark here was Oc tober 19. Continued warm tempera tures are booked for Tuesday, although there is to be some high cloudiness increasing It Mu 1 J.n Southern Oregon cities had higher marks, Sunday, Med ford with 80 degrees being the iunrm snot In the state. For the first time for the season, humidity readings be gan to drop In southwest Ore gon, a 25 per cent reading being due to reach 30 today and from 20 to 30 per cent in eastern Oregon. Logging was not expected to stop, however. Czech Amnesty Not for Otitis Vienna (U.B Communist Czechoslovakia today an nminrcd an amnesty which free a comoaritlvely small number of criminals from its crowded Jails. But the decree broadcast by Prague radio, apparently will v.or. ii RpH Drisons barred against the release of Ameri can newsman William Oatis and against Czech citizens who, like Oatls, are accused of "po lltiral crimes." Oatis, an Associated Press correspondent in Prague, was sentenced to 10 years in prls- a n K t aHarfffl 4: - ;VrWHijn is. v. j?hzsswi t TIT If I j& ; - ! . "jf - McKay to State Policy on Dams Washington (P) Secretary of the Interior McKay announc ed Monday he will hold his first news conference Tuesday 11 a.m. and that he will "discuss the department's position . on Hells canyon and the Snake River" power projects. This could mean that McKay and the Eisenhower adminis tration have reached a deci sion on whether the govern ment will continue to oppose an application by the Idaho Power Co., for a Federal Pow er Commission license for ; a hydroelectric plant at the Ox bow site on the Snake. ' . . The case is regarded as a key insofar as part of the Eisen hower administration's policy In the public vs. private power issue is concerned. ; . McKay's predecessor, former Secretary Oscar Chapman, In tervened in the power com msislon proceedings to oppose the Oxbow project. He con tended Its licensing would pre vent construction by the fed eral government of a proposed Hells Canyon power and rec lamation project. Graph Records Mexican Quake Pasadena. Calif. 0JJB1 Seis mographs at the California In-1 stitute of Technology today re corded earthquakes at 7:56.54 a.m. and 7:58.06 PDT and sci entsis said the shocks were strong enough to cause "some damage" in populated areas. The shocks, strongest in a series of quakes recorded, were centered about 300 miles from here in an undetermined di rection, Cal Tech authorities said: Strongest magnitude regis tered was 5. Earthquake in tensity is rated on a scale of 10. A Cal Tech spokesman said he "guessed" the quakes were centered in the Gulf of Califor nia but no accurate information was yet available on the loca tion. . Youth Legislature Set For Session This Week By DAVID On the heels of Oregon's legislature, boys and girls of of the state will be in Salem next Thursday, Friday ana Saturday to show how they would make laws. About 168 delegates will comnrlse the sixth annual Youth and Government pro gram sponsored by the YMCA and will conduct a regular session in the legislative cham bers. Nary an officer is from Sa lem this year las there is a system where the offices are passed around to the various sections of the state. With all the formality of a regular Oregon legislature, the two-day session will open early Friday morning with an Paul patter- the union " V .rpr , - r i Last shipment of steel for construction of new Marion county courthouse (top) arrived early Monday morning. Shipment will consist of ten truck loads of beams and columns from fabricators in Seattle. Lower: Beams re cently Installed by Moore Drydock company, subcontrac tors, in their undertaking to raise spans of the Center street bridge. The east or long shore span weighing 854, 000 pounds will be lifted 11 feet. Other spans to be lifted weigh 830,000 and 617,000 pounds each. Beams shown form a pivot between the second and pony spans. Tariff Barriers Aid Reds Asserts Dulles ; Washington (P) Secretary of State Dulles said Monday a tightening of U.S.. tariff bar riers . against imports would push other tree nations toward trade with the Communists. -On that basis, he bluntly urg ed the House Ways and Means Committee to kill a bill by Rep. Simpson (R.-Pa.) which would bolster tariff protection for Farm Controls Loom in 1954 Amarlllo, Tex. (U.B Howard H. Gordon, head of the Pro duction and Marketing Admin istration, said today the gov ernment may be forced to clamp mandatory controls upon farmers in order to hold down mounting surpluses of farm commodities. "Nobody likes this type of regimentation," he said, 'But there may be little we can do about it until there is an op portunity to work out sounder and more flexible ways of in suring agricultural stability." "In facts" he added, "the ab sence of such controls, under the conditions we face now, could result in building sur pluses so big that they would eventually break down the whole program of agricultural security." - Gordon's statements, made in a prepared speech before a convention of the Panhandle Grain and Feed Dealers' Asso ciation, was a strong indica tion that the administration will impose acreage allotments and marketing quotas on the 1954 crops of cotton and wheat, the two most troublesome sur pluses at present. BLACKMER speech by Boy Governor Kent Hotaling of Eugene will fol low. Then the young lawmakers will adjourn to House and Sen ate to hash over 25 prepared Hcuse bills and 30 Senate bills will get under way. Thursday night pre-training session will be held for the officers ' to familiarize them selves with the various pro ceedings used by the regular legislature. Many Oregon ' legislators vill be on hand to assist the youths in their efforts to learn about state government. Officers for the sixth annual session are Kent Hotaling, Eu gene, governor; Stewart John son, Grants Pass, president of the senate; Johnnie Johnson, (Continued en Page 5, Column 1) American industries against competition from cheaper for eign goods. Dulles said adoption of the Simpson bill "would have seri ous international repircui. Jions" and would be "injurious tO the best interests and wel fare of the United States." "It would be taken, through' out the free world, to forecast U.S. trade policies which would make it Impossible for them (U.S. Allies) to live without increasing association with and dependence on the Communist world." Dulles said. His bald attack on the Simp son bill opened a wide schism between the Eisenhower ad' ministration and some leading House Republicans. Simpson is chairman of the Congressional Campaign Com mittee the group that will work with Eisenhower to try to hold and strengthen Repub lican control of the House in the 1954 elections. ' ' Court to Rule On Lobbying Washington (U.R) The Su preme Court agreed today to decide the constitutionality of the 1946 federal lobbying reg istration law which one fed eral judge has ruled invalid. At the same time, the high bench put off for at least two weeks more rulings on the new appeal of doomed atomic spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and on segregation in public schools. The court's next de cision day is May 18. The test of the lobby regis tration law stems from charges brought by the Justice Depart ment nearly four years ago against the National Farm com mittee and three individuals, Georgia agriculture commis sioner Tom Linden Ralph W, Moore, Washington commodity trader, and Robert M. Harrlss, New York cotton broKcr. Federal Judge Alexander Holtroft of Washington, D. C, ruled Jan, 30 that the law is unconstitutional. Burglary of Jan. 8 Cleared by Arrest The burglary of the Indus trial Supply company, 554 Ferrv street, on January 22, was cleared with the arrest of John Howard Payne, 1116 Nebraska street, Sunday morn Inff. City detectives reported the recovery of two chain saws and fnnr fishing reels with a total value of over $700. All of it but one of the chain saws was recovered at Paynes home. Payne appeared in district court Monday morning and was granted continuance until Tuesday. He it'-belrtg held in I lieu of $3500 bail. Effort to Kill Premier Nehru By Bomb Fails Bombay. India, (At An at tempt to assassinate Prime Minister Nehru by putting a live bomb on the railway track over which he was traveling was foiled Monday. The bomb was placed on the track at Kalyan railroad hub, 35 miles from Bombay, a few minutes before the Amritsar Express, carrying Nehru from Jalnaf, thundered along the sec tion to Bombay. ' A policeman patrolling the track fired on an unidentified man believed to have placed the bomb. His bullets went wlBe. The policeman removed the bomb, without recognizing is as such at the moment, after locating it by the lights of the train it was suppose to have wrecked. Assassian Escapes The man who placed the bomb escaped 'In' the early morning darkness. (Continued on Page 5, Column S) Reds Closing in Loas Capital Hanoi. Indochina VP) A dos sible push by the Communist - led Vietminh toward the Lao- nan Kingo.onvs aaminmrauve capital of Vietlane shaped up today as French and Laotian forces still awaitlnd a major at tack on the royal seat of Laung- prabang. These forces, described as "light elements," ' apparently already were more- than 25 miles south of Xiengkhouang, on Colonial Route 7. That highway was the . principal rout of Viietmlnh forces which the other invaders from the entered Laos from the coast of Annam, in conjunction with the tother invaders from the north and northwest. Vietlane. home of the Lao tian government and a key point on the Thailand border, appeared the legical target for these forces to the south. The French have started strength ening the town s defenses, but they are not nearly so advanced as those at Luangprabang, 140 miles to the north. Mail Maus Kill 19 Pro-British Nairobi, Kenya VP) The anti-white Mau Mau terrorists society sent some 300 men swooping on a remote Kiyuyu home guard outpost Monday and burned and hacked to death 19 members of the pro- British unit. Only one member of the Ki- kuyu home guard post escaped to tell the story. The others were captured or died among the burned ruins of their huts after their last round of am munition had been exhausted. The Mau Mau men came out of their forest hideout to sur prise the home guard outpost set up by a Kikuyu headman named Stepano outside the vil lage of Gatembire. The survivor reported that the home guard held the at tackers off for a while but re treated finally into a single hut. When their ammunition ran out, they were cornered there and slaughtered by the Mau Mau' long knives. The lone survivor said three home guard members may have been taken prisoner but the other 19 were hacked to death with the Mau Mau pen gas and then burned as the raiders set fire to the huts. Model Talked Out of 140 Feet Tower Leap Santa Monlca.Calif ., (U.FDA beautiful model, who perched for seven hours atop a 140- foot water tower until her for mer sweetheart talked her out of a threatened death leap. goes to court today on charges of disturbing the peace. Police said 20-year-old Mrs, Theresa Cundall McKinney, divorced mother of two small boys, will probably undergo a five-day psychiatric examina tion as welL Pakistan Willing to Serve as Custodian Of Freed Korean POW Karachi, Parkistan UP) Prime Minister Mohammed All said Monday he sees no objection to Pakistan serving as custodian for Korean pris oners of war who won't go nome. The U.N. aUles have nomin ated Pakistan, A formal in vitation to serve is expected if the communists accept the pro posal. Panmunlom. Korea UJ0 The United. Nations told the communists - today to accent Pakistan as neutral custodian US Battleship Shells Airfields Seoul Korea. (U FO The bat tleship New Jersey bombard ed the east coast port of Hung- nam today and United Nations war planes dug deep craters in lour major Red airfields in North Korea. . . , Celebrating her first visit to Hungnam since returnins to Korean waters, the New Jer sey turned her big 16-lnch guns on the communist port in a aay-tong assault. 1 The "Big J" destroyed an electric power station, blew up two ammunition dumca and leveled 23 buildings. B-J9 , Sunerf orta entered (wo runways on the outskirts of the north . Korean capital of Pyongyang,: one of them long enough to accommodate J planes in- n emergency.' P-84 Thunderjets hit the Yonan airfield for the third time in less than a week and Marine Corsairs bombed an other airstrip at Haeju Duped by Reds New York (U.R) Band lead er Arie Shaw told the House Un-American Activities mittee today that he attended four Communist party recruit ing meetings in Los Angeles in 1946, but said he was not an active member of the party. The famed clarinetist told the committee, headed by Rep. Harold R. Velde R., III., that he wished to "tell the whole story" of his connection with California Communists because 'suspicion of me is quite Justi fied." Shaw wept as he completed two hours of testimony with the admission that he had been a dupe of the Comunlsts. He said he did not believe in the objectives of the Communist party and did not intend to re peat his "mistakes in judgment." New Committee Works On Moore's Bequest Services of Thomas C. Colt, Jr., director of the Portland Museum of Art, have been ac quired to assist in deciding what type of memorial to Ore gon pioneers shall be set up in Salem through the Carroll Moores bequest now held in trust for the purpose. Colt has been made a mem ber of a new commltte that is now working on the project The other two members are Chandler P. Brown and Charles A. Sprague. The Moores bequest, with accumulated interest, now amounts to about $30,000, and is in the hands of the Pioneer Trust company, which has re quested the commltte to select an artist to design the memor ial. Colt is representing the committee in the quest for an artist. The location of the memor ial has not been decided on, but some, at least, of those direct ly Interested hope to see it as part of the new Marion County Courthouse Kent, With that of Korean war prisoners or face another break off of truce talks. Lt. Gen. William K. Harri son, chief U.N. truce delegate, earner naa offered a major compromise by " nominating Pakistan as caretaker country for 46,000 Chinese and North Korean prisoners unwlllinar to return to communism. Blunt Statement Pakistan was one of four Asian nations which the com munists had defined as acceDt- able neutrals, and when North Korean Gen. Nam 111, head communist negotiator, Ignored the offer, Harrison became blunt. . ,, "The continued evasion bv your side can only be consid ered as inspired by motives other than those of reaching an equitable agreement," Har rison told Nam. i - Time Banning Out "Time in these dlscuulom is fast running out." Harrison said. "Are you prepared to accept Pakistan as the neutral nation? If not. we have no further issue to discuss with you." Harrison's offer came the two aides renewed discussions louowlng an unexplained two day recess called by the com munists last Saturday, , Returned POV TooMadtoTalk Pboenixville, Pa. (U.B army psychiatrist said toda he saw no evidence of com munist sympathy among- liber- Ishartus on April 21. Afahar ated war prisoners flown hero I tus was found strangled and in tight secrecy amid rumors their minds had been tainted by enemy propaganda, Lt. Col. Philip Smith of De Pere, Wis., assistant chief of th natiirnrwTOhlatri mi Vallav rnrn annv tinanftal backed up 13 of the prisoners who aniriiv H.niof . conference yesterday that they a j a i ' Kjrneu wwaro communism during their capitivity in North Korea. I bh. 41,. , Smith said the report that the prisoners hsd fallen vic tims to a communist "brain washing" apparently stemmed from "Inconclusive studies" made in the Far East. Of the 25 repatriated pris oners sent here for treatment, only 13 talked to reporters during the visiting period yes terday. Of the others, four were said to be so bitter about the publicity surrounding their return that they shunned fur ther Interviews with the press. Weather Details BfkilatBai ftttiriir, 19i Minima ta- 17. 4. Trial Il-baar aratlallallra: II far manlhi .Mi aarmal, .ft. Staiaa ara IplUtlon, M.IH rail, Mil. BlTir o.l.hl, t.a fait. (Baaarl kr C.s. Waalhar Baraaa.) mind, Pletro Bellusuhl, archi tect of the courthouse is also being consulted. Chandler Brown was. chair man, of a former larger com mittee, appointed by the mayor, which made an exhaus tive report listing all types of memorials suggested by citi zens of the community with the arguments for each. About IS plans were listed, only a few of which suggested statuary or any other work of art. There was a prevailing opinion, how ever, that the late Carroll Moores had a work of art in mind when he made the be quest. One of the suggestions made at that time was for a iype of memorial that would improve the Odd Fellows cemetery, There is still some sentiment that a memorial arch, or some other object with historical sig nificance, in that cemetery would be appropriate. Final decision as to the form the memorial shall take rests with the Pioneer Trust com- lnlpany. State of World at Washington VP) Governors of the states and territories conferred with President Eis enhower and other federal offi cials Monday in What the Presi dent termed consultations "on the overriding question of the peace and security of onr coun try." - The first session, bringing to gether the executives of 45 states and five territories, were behind closed doors at the State Department but the . White House made public a ' partial transcript of Eisenhower's op ening remarks. It said:. "As chief executives of the state and of the nation, you ana i nave a tremendous re sponsibility for the security and welfare of our people. It is fit ting, lt seems to me, that wo should consult on the overrid ing question of .the peace and security of our country. cooperation Asked "The conduct of foreign af fairs and the business of war and peace are under our Con stitution the responsibility of . the federal government But in (ConUnoed on rage a, Cohma t) General lahedi In SanduaiY Y.-t Tehran, Iran VP) Gn. Tm : : zoVlah Zahedl,- leading ovpceV : turn candidate to suoceee Fro mlar Mossadegh, took amrt ary in, the MalUa paxuamcitt building Monday alter toe gov- eminent "raquesteo." nun to re port to military, hrarinnartera .. Anl Zahedi had been in. hidinsT since the disappearance of Po- - Mice Chief Gen.: Mahmood Af- J Mossadegh's regime, charged I his murder was part of a . scheme to overthrow the gov- '. " communique Saturday, UK government CtlMTBed that (Zahedi's nephew, retired Brla. I Gen- Nasrollah , Zahedl, had I oeen a leaa jn tne.piot. Tlio lmFe wa?,ajI.ed to vUit Douce wiuun to noun. . , . i - - - . - I Iranian tradition prevents ar- rests or seizures of fugitives insiae ine juajus ouueung. juos- rial,h hlm.if. h.. rln sadegh, himself, has taken ref uge there several times since he became premier. . 38 More POW Enroute Home Tokyo VP) Two military transport planes left tonight bearing 38 repatriated Ameri can war prisoners to the United States. . . The first plane left at 6:21 p.m. 4:21 a.m. est ana tne second at 6:35 p.m. Original plans called for all the former captives of the Com munists to fly in a single big C9T Stratocrulser, but it de veloped mechanical trouble and two four-engine C94 trans ports were called into service. Only 14 of the 149 u. s. serv icemen freed in the sick and wounded prisoner exchange re main here. Ninety-seven have already been flown home 96 to the mainland and one to Hawaii. Ike Warns on Foreign Aid Cut Washington (WD President Eisenhower will warn congress this week that a 11,800,000 spending cut is all the foreign aid program can absorb with out jeopardizing world secur ity, Informed sources saia To day. They said he will send a spe cial message to the house and senate, perhaps today, request ing $5,800,000,000 In new mu tual security funds for tne im fiscal year beginning July 1 This represents a cut of 800,000,000 from the former President Truman's budget and is the new administration's rock-bottom estimate of what must be spent to bolster Allies , In Europe and the Tar East nut v,icvu ie"""