C apit at jlJ buMal . THE WEATHER. CLOUDY WITH taw itwen . tonight rila late tonight showery Sunday. Law toaighl, . 41-45J high Bandar, 41-J. FINAL EDITION 65th Year, No. 278 M Salem, Oregon, Saturday, November 21, 1or' A Price 5c Decision in Redistricting To Get Appeal Bourn of La Grande Will Take Case to Supreme Court By JAMES D. OLSON Aa appeal from Judge Rax Kimmell's decision upholding the validity .of the legislative district apportionment meas- . ore, approved by the voters in 1(52, will be taken to the state supreme court by Sep. Dave Blum of La Grande before December 10, the data an which the ((-day limit for ap peal expires. Assurance that the case will go to the state's highest court has been given by Rep. Baum who filed the original suit questioning the constitutional ity of the bill. . It is understood that Attor ney John Steclhanuner, who served as Baum's attorney, will participate in the preparation and presentation of the appeal and will be assisted by a num ber of constitutional attorneys of eastern Oregon. Baum has not announced who these at torneys are. rolttlcal Influence Wide If the apportionment meas ure is upheld, it will stand for the 1954. 19S8 and 1960 elec tions. The 1961 legislature is required, under the amend ment, to make a new appor tionment based on the 1960 U. S. census. Should the legislature fail to pass a new apportionment measure, an appeal will author ize the supreme court to direct the secretary of state to make a correct apportionment, and should he fail to function, it would be up to the court to make it. (Continued an Pago a. Column 4) Quirino Seeks Southeast Pact Manila VP) President Elpi- dio Quirino proposed today that the United States bolster far eastern democracies in their battle against communism by taking the lead in forma tion of a Southeast Asian eco nomic union. Quirino, defeated in his bid for re-election this month, out lined his plan to U. S. Vice President Richard Nixon dur ing a 1-hour, 15-mlnute con ference the longest Nixon has had with a chief of state during his goodwill tour of the Pacific. Quirino said a Southeast Asian union should be eco nomic rather than military be cause Pacific nations have in sufficient military strength. He expressed confidence that the cold war against communism T'iU be won with U. S. aid. Storm Signals Again Hoisted on Coast A showery week-end is in prospect for valley regions while renewed snow storms are listed in the high mountains. New storm amings were hoisted along the coast this afternoon, and cloudy skies and showers were looked for In . the valley. ' Central Oregon sections re ceived their first snowfall of the season last night An Inch was listed for the Prineville area this morning. Rainfall in Salem amounted to .12 of an inch in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. Big-hit Show Nets Over $5000 for By MARIAN LOWRV FISCHER If you heard an unusual roar around Salem Saturday morning, it was not a new storm, it was not a pregame enthusiasm from the prep ranks looking forward to to night's big football battle. That roar was from the big chuckle still echoing around the city following the bang-up show, "High Fever Follies," presented Friday night by Sa lem Memorial Hospital Aux iliary, and from the exhuber ant exclamations of the direc torate staging the ahow. The show's general chair man, Mrs. Charles H. Heltzel, announced Saturday morning the auxiliary will more than realize its net goal of $5000 from the benefit. About 1800 Winter Storm In Midwest, Smog in East Snow in Central States, Blizzard In Southwest (Br fjaius Prtut A vicious wintry storm pUed up to nine inches of snow In the midwest today, caused at least two deaths and cut off long distance telephone com munications to S7 communi ties. Meanwhile east coast resi dents coughed and . rubbed their eyes in the midst of a thick "smaze" that settled over most of the north Atlantic sea board. The storm raking the na tion's midsection rolled out of the Rocky mountains, ending a week of perfect Indian sum mer weather. The tempera ture fell to 15 below at Big Piney, Wyo., and 13 below at Laramie, Wyo., and generally cold weather covered the northern and central plains. (Continued an Face i. Column () French Chutists Attack Reds Hanoi, Indochina O Thou sands of French and Vietna mese paratroopers have lump ed deep into mountain territory of the Communist-led Vietminh to grab a major base for new raids on their guerrilla foes. The French High Command announced their forces, sup ported by U.S.-supplied fighter bombers, yesterday seized the big rebel war base of Dien Bien Phu, 180 miles west ol Hanoi. Gen. Rene Cogny, French commander in north Indochina, said the capture: 1. Provides a center of the rallying and training of parti' san fighters from the pro- French Thai tribes and for raids by them end the French forces on the Vietminh. 2. Removes a major threat to the Thai tribal capital of Lai Chau, SO miles to the north. $50,000Fine For CIO Union Columbus, Ohio VP) A judge, who said two union officials had tried to intimidate him, Friday night fined local 927 of the CIO United Auto Workers $50,000 for strike violence at the North American Aviation plant here. Judge Joseph K. Harter sus pended half the fine on condi tion of "good behavior" and provided the union make re stitution for damages. The judge found the union in contempt of his order limit ing picketing and banning in terference with workers enter ing the plant Negotiations will resume Monday In Los Angeles cov ering the strike at North America's Columbus, Los An gles and Fresno, Calif., plants. The union's national officers will take part for the first time. The union seeks a 26-cent hourly wage boost The com pany has offered a four per cent increase on wages ranging from 11.42 to $2.32 an hour. WILSON USES STENO Detroit VP) Defense Secre tary Wilson declared at a news conference here last night that I ve been misquoted a lot lately." He d'dn't go into de tail, but for emphasis a sten ographer sat at his elbow throughout the conference, taking down every word. Hospital persons jammed the high school auditorium to watch the show, a long row of them standing at the back because every seat was sold. The pro ceeds will be presented by the Auxiliary to help in furnish ing the new wing at the hoi pital. The Follies was about the best home talent revue one could ever aee, and how the directorate brought about that certain flare with only 2Vi weeks rehearsal was some thing to amaze the very re sponsive and appreciative crowd. But then, those some 150 persona In the cast work ed like slaves these two weeks to make their act super. (Continued rage i, Celaau 1) STEEL SPANS 1 Bishops Grill Persecution Washington .01.19 Tha. Cath olic bishops of the United States today called Russia's at tack on religion "the bitterest the bloodiest persecution in all history." The bishops denounced those who "retreated to a polite neu tralism" in the world struggle between the Roman Catholic Church and communism. In a special statement, en titled "Peter's Chains" and is sued at their annual meeting here, the bishops declared that the communist war on religion is waged "against all who be lieve in God and Christ, against all who dare to claim for man the liberty of the sons of God." They said that the story of today's martyrs to communism will rank with those of the great heroes of the Catholic church. The bishops said that only in the "Catholic press" is their story told, although "one would have thought that the Western World would rise as one man to do them reverence." The historians of the future, they said, would call their heroism "the greatest glory of today." Italian Speeder Killed in Racing Leon, Mexico, VP) The Pan American road race commit tee announced Saturday that Felice Bonetto of Italy had been killed in an accident. The committee reported Bonetto struck an electric light post while his Lancia car was racing - through Silao. Bonetto was fighting fur iously at the time to keep his lead over Humberto Maglioli's Ferrari. Maglioll moved into the lead when Bonetto failed to arrive at Leon, finish line of the first of the day's two laps. Bonetto, third in the Mille Miglia race this year, had won the first leg of the Pan-American event Thursday. He was legs but still was in the lead on the general classification, second in both of Friday's The gray-haired veteran had taken part in all three pre vious Pan-American races, al though he never had won. BIDAULT HAS GOOD NIGHT Paris VP) French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault, who almost collapsed Friday in the national Assembly, passed good night and Is restlni- Quiet ly, a spokesman at the Foreign Office said Saturday. He said Bidault expert to be present for the conclusion of the as sembly's debate on foreign pol icy on luesday. WILLAMETTE AT WILSONVILLE On Wednesday of this week lehem Steel Co. completed placement of 750 feet of steel between four piers on the new state express highway bridge at Wilsonville. Top: Viewing northward across the Wil lamette showing steel girders in place on this new bridge that has a total length of 1118 feet. Wilsonville bridge will be ready for traffic on or before June 1, 1954. Center: Erectors about to complete web placement between steel girders. This steel girder type bridge will have concrete deck 58 feet in width. Lower: Looking southward to show forms being placed for concrete girders that support the south approach to Wilsonville bridge. Concrete has already been poured to a distance of 150 feet on the north end of the bridge. Skull ofPitdown Man Declared a Phony London W) Three sleuth ing British scientists declared Saturday the skull of the fab ulous "Piltdown Man," accept ed for 40 years by mr.ny of the world's top anthropolo gists as a relir of man's earli est history, Is a phony. They branded the relic the product of a "most elaborate and carefully prepared hoax," partly faked from ape bones. Charles Dawson, an attor ney and amateur antiquarian. discovered part of the skull in a southern England gravel pit in 1911. In the next two years he produced from the same pit a jawbone and a tooth which some anthropol ogists said established the skull's age as at least 100,000 and perhaps 800,000 year old. Salem an Ideal Place to Build a Home and Thousands Have Here in the Past Decade This Is the eighth of a series of articles eublUhrd In the Saturday fauuet of the Capital Journal. This survey of Industrial commercial and cultural activities In Balem nd Marlon county will be baaed oa facta to show the stability of resource! and economical conditions. Tbe carrying out of thb) educational rriei has been made possible by the support that haa been accorded It bv representative industrial and commercial firms who are demonstrating their con fidence In the future of this region. Earh of Jieae firms haa an Interesting message on page ( and 1 of this Issue. By R. KENNETH EVANS Among Salem's greatest assets and permanent factors are the substantial homes, well-kept yards, wide streets and foliage adornments. It Is, however, easy for people to live among these conveniences and not fully realize what a wonderful asset such Improvements constitute in the general 'economy of a city or a region. The city's conveniences and stability, it must be remembered, is dependent upon the wisdom and industrious attitude of the citizenship. It has been the wisdom and energy of Sulem's proud home-owners and residents in general, that has made possible this city of fine homes, clean, well-planned and trim enough to attract the attention of aryone. Significant to the outstanding growth and development of this capital city in the last decade. Is the fact that Salem present un equalled opportunities for the building of just the type of home that Is characteristic of the American abiding place. Northwest are striving to upbuild and improve their civic and home feature, not one can offer superior advantage over Salem. It 1 also indicative of the stability of the citizens of Salem to state that this is a residential city where 83 per cent oi the people are home -ni irossneia flies jet wane I) steel erectors for the Beth. Dawson died in 1918 and a monument to his discovery now stands in the Sussex fields near the gravel pit where he found fame. The challenge came from Dr. K. P. Oakley of the Brit ish Museum and two Oxford university professors, Dr. J. E. Weiner and Dr. W. E. Le Gros Clark. They reported in the "Bulletin of the British Museum" that up-to-the-minute chemical tests have prov ed the jawbone and tooth to be deliberate fakes. Weather Details Matttaia eatar4a. Mi satalMfjaj U Ur, 42, Total tl-har prcelpltatlaa : .Hi far Mania: .; ratal, S.B7. Scataa raxlalUUaa. S.TJt aaraat. t.S. ftltar bright. J. 7 (eat. (ftctxrl ar V. Was ther Barcaa. t a. KosMia ivsos While other cities in the Pacific owners. W -ronlC unfit 1 At Twice Transferred to Stale Prison Jefferson City. Me. VP) . Carl Austin Ball and Mrs. Bon nie Heady today were held la death raw behind the gray, forbiddinr walls ef the Mis souri penitentiary. The condemned kldnan-kll- lers of little Bobby Greenlease were brought here late yester day from Kansas City where they were sentenced to death Thurday. The 150-mile trip was made by automobile. The prisoners, in separate cars. were chained and under heavy guara. They will die together in the gas chamber Dec. 18. iConUn aa Page $ Column f) Canada Ponders Spy Interview Ottawa VP) Foreign Secre tary Lester B. Pearson told a new conference Saturday he and. his colleague will discuss the second U. S. request for a congressional committee inter view with Igor Gouzenko and make a reply early next week. He declined to disclose the terms of the second request or to indicate whether it con tained further information which might change the gov ernment's decision in turning down the first request for an opportunity to talk to the form er Russian embassy cipher clerk. Pearson stressed that every particle of information the former communist embassy clerk gave tha Canadian au thorities when he bared tha espionage ring la Canada in 1945 and 1948 was given V, S authorities at the time. Pella Approves Trieste Parley Rome, (IMS Allied authori ties said today that Premier Giuseppe Pella has given "constructive and encouraging reply to proposals for an ln- ternational conference on Trieste. These source said Pella s position, outlined today in conferences with the United States, British and French ambassadors. Increased hopes for a satisfactory solution to Italy's dispute with Yugoslavia over control of the disputed territory. Pella called in the three am bassadors separately to out line Italy's views on their in formal proposal for a five power meeting of the Western Big Three, Italy and Yugo slavia. Allied quarters said Fella's reply has set the stage for further steps to bring about .a diplomatic conference on the Trieste issue. According to those who are familiar with the city's eco nomy the prices of real estate are leveling off somewhst but that new construction is main taining its price level. Sub stantial and modern homes. In Salem, can be purchased in a price range from $8,500 to $20,000. Older property values have been declining somewhat, according to thi source of reliable Information, but an investment in a Salem home is still sound and well placed. There is a national trend for smsllcr industries to lesve the congested Industrial sections of the metropolitan center in In the nation. There seems to be wonderful opportunity for Sslem to acquire some of these industries as there 1 a great abundance of logical site available along the main line of the Southern Pacific railroad and the Oregon Elec tric rail line. Prices tor these Industrial and commercial site range from $000 per acre to $1.23 per aquare foot, in the downtown location. i It if recognized that this f f Ni m ni ' Speed of Sound Assert Reds Holding Back ManyPOWs Panmunjom (A1) The Allies today accused the communists of holding back some prisoner of war and told the Red to turn over to Indian custody im mediately "all those POWs you till retain." . Maj. Gen. J. K. Lacey toldl communist members of the Military Armistice Commission that three Korean soldiers who sought refuge at an American sentry box Thursday were South Korean war captives who had been forced Into the Red army. The communists asked for a recess to study Lacey' state ment, then 30 minutes later asked for and were granted more time. The chief Allied member of the Armistice Commission told newsmen the ROK soldiers pro vided evidence that the com munists "have forcibly retain ed prisoners after they had cer tified that all prisoners had been turned over to the NNRC (Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission)." Hunger March Staged in Triest Trieste, VP) Jobless Trles tinl shouting "hunger, hunger" marched on City Hall Satur day in the third straight day of demonstrations for an In crease in relief roll in the disputed city. An estimated 500 demon strators besieged the building demanding to see Mayor Gian ni Bartoll, an Italian. A guard of 100 civil police barred their entrance but a delegation was slowed to Interview BartoU, The marchers claimed to represent 17,000 unemployed persons in the city, where more than 1,000 civilian em ploye of the allied military government have lost their jobs since Britain and the United States decided Oct. 8 to pull their troop out of the territory Zone A and turn it over to Italy. Girl Not Lost BabySiifer Minneapolis VP) A semi- hysterical girl who first claim ed she was Evelyn Hartley, missing 15-year-old baby-sitter from LaCrosse, Wis., was identified Saturday a Min neapolis juvenile. Detective G. H. Cronstrom said definitely the girl was not Evelyn Hartley. No reason was given for her assuming the name of the Wisconsin glrL who disappeared on Oct 24. Three youths found the girl in a drizzling rain on a resi dential street She hailed them saying, "I need help." She was taken to downtown police headquarters and placed in custody of a matron. section of the Willamette val ley has the raw materials, the fertile farm lands, and ample hydro-electric economical power to encourage Industries to locate in this area. It is a matter of record that Salem has the second largest cannery pack of vegetables and fruit in the United State. There is an abundant acerage of farm lands in the Willamette val ley for development of produc tion of all type of farm pro duct in commercial quanti ties. With the stable market maintained by the Industries already located here, no ques tion as to the disposition of tne production should ever arise. These farm lands, gov erned of course, by their lo cation, fertility and other fac tors, range in price from $100 per acre to $500. Salem being the Capital city of the state of Oregon, na turally, the state employment and activities constitute the largest Industry In the (tat. Thi make for backlog for industrial stability regardless of any changes In the nation, (Continued oa rag f. Column $) Top Speed of : 1327 mph Held World Record Los Aagelea tV-Teet MM Scott Croaaf leld flew the noodle neaed Douglas Skyrocket twice the speed ef sound Friday la the fastest flight man ha ever mad. The National Advisory Com mittee for Aeronautics said Crossfield reached a top apeed of 1,327 mph in the rocket pro pelled aircraft or 2.01 time the speed of sound. Flying the Skyrocket under power for only three minutes, Crossfield said that after climb ing at 45 degree angle, 1 did a nose over to reach level attitude or a alight dive'' in making the reeurd run. During the three minutes the skyrocket used three ton ef fuel. If plane flying at 1,327 mph could carry enough fuel for a New York to Loa Angeles flight H would make It in two hours, so the pilot would leave tne east coast at 8 a.m. (EST) and reach the west coast at 7 a.m. (PST). . Tell ef Hensitlen ' "The physical sensation was no different than flying thi airplane 100 or 200 mph less than this record speed," the pi lot said. He' flown the sky rocket about so time lor the NACA. Asked how he felt during the high speed run, Crossfield re plied, "1 had the flu and a stomach ache. (Continued aa rat a. Column 8) Los Angeles II.Y.6H40M -lo Angeles taVAmariean'' Air Lines flew - the world' fastest piston engine air liner, the Douglas DC7, both way cross the continent Friday. One of the new turbo-com pound engine-powered air lin ers flew nonstop 2,500 mile from Los Angeles to New York In 8 hour 40 minutes. ' The other, scheduled to make the New York-Los An geles hop nonstop - in seven ' hours and 55 minute, devel oped preasurizatlon trouble and lauded at Denver for re pair. After a three-hour de lay, It flew the 950 mile to Los Angeles in slightly more thsn 2V4 hours. American carried about 50 news writers on each flight in what was designed as a pre view of the nation' first reg ular dally nonstop service coast-to-coast in each direc- Uons, starting November 29. American said the DC7 i the only aircraft in service that can operate nonstop cosst-to-coast scheduled under eight hours in either direction. Several air regulation limit domestic schedule to do more than eight hour. . Pat ton Tanks Found Faulty Schenectady, N.Y. (JP) The American Locomotive Co. said Saturday reports of mechanical failures in its M-47 Patton tanks in Europe had resulted in a voluntary shutdown of two of the firm' upstate New York plants. An ALCO spokesman said failures had been reported in final drive mechanism turned out by five manufacturer on subcontract for ALCO and the Chrysler Corp. The Albany Knickerbocker News said a spokesman for the House Armed Services Com mittee in Washington had quot ed sn Army ordnance official as saying "an important part" of the M-47 tank had been found defective by Army standards. The ALCO spokesman said "the reported failures appar ently were not confined to the final drive produced by any one msnufacturer." , GUERRILLA8 EVACUATED Talpeh, Formosa ) The number of Chinese Nationalist guerrillas flown here from North Burma reached 880 Sat urday with the arrival of 99 more. About 2,500 to 3,000 guerrilla and dependent are being evacuated from Burma, where they fled in 1949 as communist armies overran South China.