THE WEATHER GENERALLY FAtt tonight, Satarday. Little change la tern. ' Low Bif ht, 44; high atnrday, . . Denial Made To Charges by Bin Trucker: Brief for Oregon Operators Filed With State PUC , By JAMES D. OLSON Portland Charges by a bit tracker rfuilution of whole Mi tax evasion on the part of Oregoa track peraton were branded aa completely without foaadatioa la fact, and erron eous both In principle and In detail. The reply to the big truckers charges were made in a brief filed jointly by the state high way commission and Public Utility Commissioner Charles H. Heltzel with the legislative Interim highway committee mceung in xne state office building here Friday. - ' The original claims the truck operator! In Oregon are de frauding the state to the extent of 3 J per cent of their tax mileage was made by the West ern. Highway Institute, an or ganization supported by the big truck operators using western highways. , , The charge was allegedly based on fact-finding study car ried on by the institute at a re ported cost of about $100,000. Report! Misleading The joint brief filed with the committee repeated the charge mad by the Institute which read as follows: The mileage reported to the Public Utilities Commissioner for gasoline - powered PUC trucks and buses during 1951 was 384,422,622 miles and the estimated gasoline consump tion was 54,892,455 gallons. By deducting the estimated gaso line consumption of all other types of vehicles from the total tax paid gasoline consumed in (craciaaea an rage a, wiums ) Foreign Aid Bill Voted by House Washington Wl The house approved a $6,652,422,38 soiNkKertiaad now has only one net elga aid bill compromise Fri day 237-156. The bill, carrying almost 700 million dollars less than President Eisenhower asked, now goes to the senate for action. A Senate-House conference committee settled on the com promise In the congressional drive for adjournment. There was also progress on Eisenhower's request for a 15 billion - dollar increase in the national debt limit the House Ways and Means Committee ap proved it 17-6. However, the death of Sen. Robert A. Taft left virtually no chance the lawmakers could wind up the session this week end. The house, before accepting the foreign aid bill, narrowly rejected a motion to cut it still further. An attempt to trim 211 millions out of it was turned down by a vote of 200-192. House Group OKs Debt Hike Washington, W President Eisenhower's plea for a rise in the federal debt ceiling cleared one House hurdle Fri day. But in the Senate there was talk of putting off the issue for a possible special session in September or Octo ber. By a 17-6 vote, the House Waya and Means Committee approved a bill to lift the debt limit from the present 275 billion dollars to 290 billion. Leaders were aiming to get the bill to a House vote late TriAy- . . . On the Senate aide of the eapitol, however, vereran Sen. George (D., Ga.) taid key Sen ate Democrats were in agree ment on putting off the issue. George is senior democrat en the finance committee and its former chairman. He told newsmen he felt all seven democrats on the group were agreed on the view he was stating and added he had discussed it with the senate democratic leadership. Oregon Properly Value Over $4 Billion-AW 22 The total cash value of all j Willys agency, is taking over taxable property In Oregon tne Packard agency, shop Is 84 138 574 322, the state tax equipment and service of State Emission announced Friday. Motors, and will combine the The commission also found Packard and the Willys fran that utility companies have a chises. ,h value of $599,603,204. an ( Stan Baker Motors, operat o 40 millions overjed 6y Stanley Baker at North tart year. 1 High and Chemeketa, holder of 65th 3TopGenerals Said lo Rule Soviet Russia Churchill Informed Malenkov Called In' , War Heroes London W) Reports that a trio of Russian war-hero mar ahals nnder the famed Georgl K. Zhukov has taken over real power In the 8ovlet Villi were studied her Friday The Evening News said Prime Minister Churchill had been informed. The Foreign Office declined comment ' Fearful that he could not maintain his grip in the wake of the purge of Interior Minis ter L. P. Beria, the paper says, Premier Georgl M. Malenkov turned in desperation to the professional soldiers of the Soviet army who now are the "power behind the throne." Reeks Big 4 Meet - The article in Thursday night'a edition of Lord Rother mere's newspaper was signed by its diplomatic correspond ent, C. F. Melville, who said he understood Sir Winston was "so impressed by reports of a take-over of power by a mili tary pro-peace group that he is about to redouble his efforts lo get an early round-table be tween the Russian and West ern heads of government." (Continued nPagal, Cahratn t) TV Network lo Come If Needed The Northwest will have in creased television network fa cilities whenever the television ,tationg order them. F. A. Dresslar, Portland, testified Friday at the public util ities commissioner' hearing on the Pacific Telephone and Tele graph Company's request for a $3,966,000 annual rate increase in Oregon, Dresslar, a vice president of the company, laid the coaxial cable from San Francisco to work channel. But. he explained, additional channels could be added when ever the company receives or ders from the networks or the TV stations. This means, he said, that all of the national TV networks could be brought to the North west if the TV stations want them, Dresslar gave his testimony on cross-examination by Alex ander Brown, Portland's city attorney. Brown also asked Dresslar if the company charges excess legal costs against the custom ers of any one state in its sys- tem. July Very Dry Month in Valley Just more of the' same for the next few days no rain, slightly below normal temper atures and some cloudiness that's the five-day forecast re leased from the weather bu reau Friday morning. With only a trace of pre cipitation for the month, July goes out Friday as a very dry month, but there have been many other Julys like it in previous years. Normal rain fall for the month to date is .31 of an inch. The Thursday maximum went only to 78. Three Firms In Business By STEPHEN Three prominent Salem firm I names in tne motor vehicle in dustry are concerned in ft gen eral business change affecting the east aide of North High Street between Cheireketa and Center. State Motors, operated by C. E. Welling at 34'J North High, in the center of the block, is relinquishing the Packard ag ency and leaving the location, and Wellinf will (fntfr him at. Itention on his used car busi ness at 078 South 12th I Tk. E-1 U.I.. Capita Year, No. 181 JS aim. RULES RUSSIA? Marshal Georgl K. Zhukov Se6k to Svap Atom Secrets London W Britain made a new bid Friday to the United States for swapping atom bomb secrets and implied she could tell the Americans a thing or two about atomic matters. Discussing the second series of British atomic weapons tests, to be held in the Austra lian desert In October, Supply Minister Duncan Sandys told the house of commons. ' "We have made quite sure the United States administra tion are very wel aware of our extreme readiness to have a complete and frank exchange of Information," on the tests. The exchange, he continued. "would not, in our view, be by any means a one-sided af fair." Sandya did not say specific ally whether American ob servers would be invited to the British tests. They were not bid to the first British atomic bomb explosion, off northwest Australia last Octo ber. . -x.--- - 20 Drown in Bus Plunge Morrisburg, Ont. W Twenty persons drowned Fri day in the plunge of a bus with 37 passengers, most of them asleep, into the 20-foot deep Williamsburg canal. Most of the 17 pasenger sur vivors escaped through win dows and the emergency door. The speeding Toronto-Montreal bus struck a parked truck on the main highway, No. 2, between the two cities. Both vehicles toppled 25 feet into the canal, used by Great Lakes shipping to bypass the St. Lawrence river rapids. Ten bodies were removed from the bus and taken to a funeral home here. The acci dent occurred at 4 a.m. and 64 hours later the bus was pulled from the canal with 10 bodies still in it. Others were found on the bottom of the canal. The bus driver. Lome Cheesborough, of Kingston, Ont., survived, as did the driver of the truck, Max Rood- in of Toronto. Cheesbor ough suffered shock but Rood- man escaped serious injury. Some of the survivors had to swim 20 feet to safety. ' Involved Changes A. STONE the Dodge, Plymouth and the Dodge truck agencies, is ex panding, and will take over the building occupied by State Mo tors. The building is owned by George Weller. Welling of State Motors said today he would keep the firm name -but continur with used car sales only at his South 12th street location. He has been fn the automotive busi ness in Salem in the same block 29 years, or since 1924. He started with the Newton-Chevrolet Agency. It was bought by the Portland Motor Car company in 1927. Welling took the Packard agency in 1929. He held both the Packard and the Hudson agencies until 1944. and since them has had the Packard only. He said he was making the change for per. sonal reasons. (CanUaued m rag f, Calassa I) is - Salem, Oregon, Friday, July 31, 1953 Ma East German Police Seizing U.J. Gift Food Mass Confiscation Of Parcels Under Way at Potsdam Berlin (AP) Communist po lice Friday began mass confis cation of U.S. gift food parcels which hungry East Germans are bringing back from free West Berlin. - The confiscation campaign began at the big rail terminal in Potsdam, southwest of Ber lin, where the Red police in tercepted hundreds of persons returning with the food. The Potsdam station was surround ed by police, and the food bear ers were herded into an empty room and stripped of their gifts. West Berlin police immedi ately began broadcasting warn ings to East Germans to avoid the Potsdam station and try to get home by other routes. Million Parcels - The confiscation began just as West Berlin officials an nounced they had upped their target to three million free food parcels for the East Ger mans. Food stations in the Western sector braced for a week-end invasion from the east that was expected to boost the first week s distributions to two million. (Centianed an Part I. Calumn t) Salmon Loss Due to Poachers Portland (je Poachers have been taking "a very consider able number" of salmon that have been prevented by Meri dian Dam from completing their migration up the Willam ette River's middle fork south east of Eugene. Irvine French, superintend ent of hatcheries for the Ore- ffnn Flah Commission. . made th rhnrffr Vrirlsv and added that while state police had checked cars of 'worker and others leaving the dam now under construction no one had been caught. He estimated that from 5,000 to 6,000 spring Chinook salmon had been held vp by the dam and said that of these, "poach ers have taken a very consid erable number." The commission had planned to place racks some distance down stream from the dam to check the salmon, but had been prevented by high water from completing the worn, as a result, the salmon bunched in a pool below the dam, he sale Drop 27,000 From Reserves Washington, () About 27,- 000 reserve officers will hang up their uniforms during the next 11 months a the services trim down to the manpower levels for which Congress pro vided money. The Air Force will return the greatest number to civil ian life about 12,500 who must be dropped to make room for hew lieutenants from the Reserve Officers Train ing Corps. The Army said Thursday about 8,000 reservists would go off active duty in addition to those finishing regular tours. The Marine Corps set Its figure at 500. The Navy has made no official estimate, but an informed guess is 6, 000. The officers will be allow ed to return voluntarily to ci vilian life or, if necessary, will be separated involuntarily. Ar my selection boards for the purpose meet next month, paying . special attention to first lieutenants. Decisions are expected by mid-October. Some specialists, such as doctors and engineers, will not be allowed to go voluntarily on inactive duty. Final Shot for Navy Fired by Si. Paul Yokosuka. Japan " The heavy cruiser St. Paul fired the final shot by an Allied war ship only two minutes before the signing of the Korean truce, the Navy said Friday. That projectile was auto graphed by Rear Adm. Harry Sanders, commander of Cruis er Division 1. The St. Paul also claims the distinction of being the last ma J or U. S. naval unit to fire I salvo at the home Islands of Japan In World War II. JLJcrttMa mm HIS Seasto Russians Shoot Down US Plane In Japan Sea' Washington ) The United States Friday protested te Mos cow against the shooting down ef a U.8. B5 plane la the Sea of Japaa and called oa the Rus sians to release survivors it "presumed" were picked up by Soviet vessels. One of the plane's crew of 17 Lt. John E. Roche of Wash ington, D.C. was rescued by an American destroyer and was quoted by the U.S. Far East Air Force as saying Russian fight ers attacked the B50. The plane was shot down Wednesday. On Thursday, Mos cow charged the B50 violated Soviet territory, fired on Soviet fighters arising to intercept it. and disappeared in the direc tion of the sea. Deny Violations Gen. O. P. Weyland, com mander of U.S. Far East Air Forces, said: "No American airpli ne has violated Soviet ter ritory." . Roche was picked up by the USS Picking 40 miles off the Siberian Coast. He had spent 11 hours in the water and another 11 in a boat dropped by a search plane. The incident Is one in a long series of clashes with the So viets over shooting down of U.S. planes. Moscow has insist ed in each instance that the plane violated Soviet territory. The United States has contend ed there was no violation. In Russian Custody This is the first time, howev er, that there has been any I suggestion that survivors were taken into Russian custody, a ueparwwm ma saia ne aia not Know in num ber of survivors reported to be in Soviet hands. The protest to Moscow said "information hat . . . been received that . . . survivors have been picked up by Soviet vessels." UN Delegates OK'd by Senate Washington ) The new delegation to the United Na tions, including Gov. James F Byrnes of South Carolina whose selection had stirred up some differences among Dem ocrats, won Senate confirma tion Friday without discussion on the floor. Along with Byrnes, Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts was confirmed as chief Ameri can representative at the eighth session of the U. N. General Assembly, and Reps. Francis Payne Bolton, R., Ohio, and James P. Richards, D. S. C, as members of the delegation. These alternates also were confirmed: Archibald J. Carey, Jr., Chicago, a minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Church; James D. Zellerbach, San Francisco, chairman of the board of the Fibre Board Pro ducts Co.; Henry Ford II, pres ident of the Ford Motor Co.; Dr. Charles W. Mayo, Roches ter, Minn.; and Mrs. Oswald B. Lord of New York, a mem ber of the U. N. Human Rights Commission. Ike Not to Sign Film Tax Bill Washington W) President Eisenhower was reported by a republican senator today to have reached a reluctant de cision not to sign a bill to wipe out the 20 per cent movie ad- mlsison tax. Congress passed the meas ure a week ago. It cost the treasury an estimated $100 million a year in revenue. Movie theaters have been closing at the rate of 800 a year since the end of World War II. Theater operators say the tax has discouraged a lot of people from going to the movies. Other persons blame competition from tele vision. Many theater owners testified they would not pass on the saving to ticket buyers. A group of theater owners who called on thu president yesterday to ask that he sign the tax repealer said he listen ed attentively but made no commitment. 76 Pages ' Price 5c 'MR. REPUBLICAN' PASSES 5 ? Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, Republican Senate leader, and candidate for the presidential nomination in 1952, who died Friday in Washington. Ike Calls Taft's Death Tragic Loss to Nation Washington W President Eisenhower called the death of Sen. Robert A. Taft Friday "a tragic loss to Am eric:"" - Within an hour after an nouncement of the Ohio sena tor's death in New York, the President and Mrs. Eisenhower drove from the White House to the home of Mrs. Taft in Georgetown to express their sympathy. Presidential Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said the President and the first lady ei ther would leave their cards at the Taft home or would express their personal regrets to the senator's widow. , Eisenhower issued this state ment: - Loss to Nation, Says Truman Casper, Wyo. W Former President Truman declared the death of Sen. Taft (R-Ohio) in New York Friday is "a great loss to the country." 'I am sorry to hear of Sen. Taft's death," Truman said in a written statement. 'He and I did not agree on public policy but he knew where I stood and I knew where he stood. His death is a great loss to the country. We need intellectually honest men like Sen. Taft in public service. His family has the sympathy of my family and myself." Truman is visiting Missouri air national guardsmen under going training here. Hush of Mourning Envelops Congress Washington A hush of mourning, more eloquent than words, greeted the news of Robert A. Taft's death Friday in the Senate where he had been so long a towering fig ure. The Ohio Republican's law making associates paid that tribute to a lost leader before they loosed a flood of expres sions of grief that ran to such words as "great 'American," "true statesman," "great loss" and "friend." President Eisenhower described Taft's death as "a tragic loss to Am erica." Party labels and differences of views generally were for gotten in the outpouring. News of Taft's death first was passed to Sen. Knowland of California to whom Taft turned over the reins of active ir.iswiiisuwu (iCy "The passing of Robert ' A. Taft Is a tragic lou to America. "The brilliant son of ' our 27th President, Senator Taft served the people of Ohio and the nation with distinction and integrity.' ':' ' "He will be greatly missed on Capitol Hill where his un impeachable character and his vast knowledge of the business of good government - played such an important part in con gressional decisions over many years. 'The Senate has lost one of its leading members of all time. The American . people have lost a truly great citizen and I have lost a wise- coun selor and a valued friend. . "Mrs. Eisenhow and I extend to Mrs. Taft and the family our heartfelt sympathies in the personal loss that they have sustained." The President also' signed an executive order declaring: "As a mark of respect to the memory of the Honorable Rob ert A. Taft, late majority lead er and member of the Senate of the United States, it is here by ordered that the flags on the White House and the fed eral government buildings in the District of Columbia and the' state of Ohio be placed at half staff until interment." Weather Details MfitisBiM ytrtrlrt Tli larjatua oHr, 41. TU1 U'knr rMlIUUsii i far MMtk: tTMt Mrmtl, .11. t rflIUtlm 4S.Stt aril, SH.N. Blvar hcidit, -S.I (mi. Brt by l.L WmIIw r Birm.) GOP floor leadership when his illness first became serious. Knowland immediately ask ed a roll call of the Senate to assemble absent members. While the quorum call was on those members on the floor mostly sat silent, obviously buried In their private thoughts of past associations. The hush spread to the gal leries as solemn senators hur ried in to hear the news offi cially. In the House, at the other end of the eapitol, debate on foreign aid legislation was In terrupted for announcement of the senator's death. The task fell to Rep. Jenkins (R., Ohio), who told his col leagues: , "Our Robert Taft is gone. America's greatest stateman has passed away." F I N A L EDITION GOP Leader to Rapid Cancer New York MV-Sen. Robert A. Taft, a symbol ef repusllcaa- n, died nuay ef cancer. The end came peacefully for - the (-7ear-eld Ohio reDubll- ean, about lt hours after fee had lapsed into a deep coma. . At nis side were his four sons. Taft'a condition auddmlv hrf become critical just four days ago. Then, except for brief in tervals, his strength failed rap. idly. Not until the end did New York hospital disclose ; the cause. "Sen. Taft's life came to an end quietly and without pain at 10:80 a.m. (EST), July 81, 1953," the hospital said. "His death was the result of wide spread, highly malignant, rap idly growing tumors." Wife Seriously 111 , , , Taft's wife, Martha, was un able to be with him in his last hours. , - , TJ , I ... II. suit of a stroke three years ago, she was at their home in Washington, too sick to make another trip. She had been flown here for a visit Tuesday. lail a deatn came in a nnr and major chapter in his ca reer the job of majority sen ate floor leader in the first re- . publican administration in. 20 years. Hia illness, however, forced him to give up the active lead ership last June. His death leaves the senate for the time being with a one-man democratic majority, 47 democrats. 46 rerjubUcana and one independent. . Urlm Fight for Life In: describing the senator' last grim fight for life, the hos pital said: -vff "The first symptoms . . . were pains in the legs, later lo calized in the left hip. These (Captioned an Pate i, Celaaui 4) Sick POW to Be First Freed Panmunjom, Korea (UJ0 Red China announced today that the first group of Allied pris oners to be exchanged here next Wednesday will be non-Korean sick and wounded, including a good number" of Ameri- Pelping radio said the group of 400 prisoners will include most of the French, Turkish, Colombian, Philippine, Austra lian and Greek POWs. "A good number of Ameri can and British POWs are also among the first to be repatri ated," the broadcast said. The Allied POWs will travel 200 miles by train from Yalu river camps to Freedom Vil lage here where they will be exchanged for 2,400 Chinese and North Koreans. Morse to Keep GOP in Power Washington Senator Wayne B. Morse of Oregon said today that he will vote to keep the republicans in power after the death of senator Tait, re publican senate leader. Morse, who quit the GOP last fall during the presiden tial campaign, said he will work to defeat the Eisenhower administration in the 1955 congressional campaigns. But he said be will not take ad vantage of a parliamentary "emergency" to defeat the will of the people as expressed at the ballot box last fall. Even before Morse's an nouncement, Senate Democratic leaders had said they would not try to seize control of the organization now or next year. Morse's stand was in line with the one he took at the opening of the present session. He said then he would vote with the GOP on organization because that party held the presidency and a majority of the House, and should have full responsibility for running the government. A few Democratic acientees, which would not be hard to arrange with such opinions prevalent, would be enough to keep the Republicans on top in any organization vote, even if a lew Republicans were away. V