I THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY, ocrnloasi nil tonight Wednesdsy. Sobm clc&rikg Wednesday aitrsea. ' Can tinned mild. Lew tonight, ; hick Wddr, it. t Cons Cannot Pick Crops on Private Land Attorney General Holds 30-Year Prac tice to Be Illegal By JAMES D. OLSON Attorney General Robert T. Thornton Tuesday ruled the tate board of control lacked any Iefal authority to ntillie penitentiary convicts in har , vesting; crops, on privately owned lands. .The opinion had been requested by the board. It has been the practice ior the last 30 years for the state to buy crops froni owners of . private lands, paying a fixed B price, always below thr mar ket price, less picking costs using penitentiary inmate to do the picking. Occasionally, .. a g r t ements have been made with owners . for picking or harvesting fruit or vegetables on a share basis, the crop being picked by con victs and divided on an agreed basis between the owner and the state. Cite Authority " ; In an opinion the attorney general cites legislative au thority for temporary use of convict labor outside the con fines of the penitentiary. Such authority include! use of convicts on public high ways and in or about any state institutions; use of convict in any useful work in state lands providing it doe not compete with free labor and establish ment of forestry camps and us of convicts with minimum ' security classifications. No Law Found But the attorney general holds that other than these exceptions he is unbale to find Implication in any one of the permissive provisions of the law giving the board author ity to use convlctse to harvest crops on private lands, or for harecropping. . , . . ,. (Cantlnnd n ran a, Column t) Royal Couple At Bermuda Hamilton, Bermuda UP) Queen Elizabeth II flrw today to this holidaying pleasure isle and a royal welcome for the first official stop on her round-the-world Common wealth tour. The young monarch and the Duke of Edinburgh left Gan der, Nfld. early today for the 1,265-mile flight in the big American-built Stratocruiser. Bermuda Gov. Sir Alexander Hood headed the party to wel come the Queen and her hus band in an airport ceremony, the first event of their crowded one-day stay. The royal couple will take off again tomorrow for Jamaica to continue the six month tour. They will visit Australia, Ceylon, New Zea land and 10 British possessions and protectorates. Highlights of their Bermuda program included a tour of the island, a speech of welcome and response by the Queen at a Joint meeting of the House of Assembly and the Legislative Council, the governor's garden party and a state dinner at Government House tonight. Robins States 3 Dams Justified Washington W A former assistant chief of Army Engi neers said Tuesday dams in the Army- master flood control plan for the Columbia River Basin are Justified by the engi neer on a power production basis. T. M. Robins, a retired ma jor general, made the state ment at a Power Commission hearing on applications by Ida ho Power Co. to build three low level dams in the Snake River between Idaho and Ore gon. "They're all Justified by power production," Robins said under cross examination by Mrs. Evelyn Cooper, attorney for group favoring federal construction of a high level dam In Hell Canyon in the same area. This was in reply to a ques tion a to whether Army Engi neer evaluate project from a multiple purpose point of view instead of only a flood control oasis. Russia Told To Cease Plots Against U.S. Must End Seeking Violent Overthrow To Win Friendship United Nation. N. T. (Pi The United State (aid Tuesday the only way Russia can win American friendship is to "give np seeking me violent over throw of the United States.' Chief U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. told the U.N. SO nation Political Committee th Soviet Union "admits it is plotting our destruction." He said this naturally caused a strong reaction among the American people and press. Lodge departed from the prepared text of a speech in which he urged the U. N. to junk each and every part of Russia s model peace plan to make his tough charges against the Soviet Union. Persecution of Religion He said the reason the Rus sians are viewed with "some thing less than affection" in the United States is because of their self admitted campaign to overthrow the American gov. ernment and way of life. Another reason,. Lodge said. Is communist persecution of re ligion as exemplified in the re cent arrest of Poland's Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski. He said "this has aroused religious peo ple throughout the world. (Continued on Fmt I, CMnmn 4) Hunter Safe Searchers Lost Victoria, B.C. W A missing hunter turned up safely Mon day but three men who joined the large scale search for him became lost themselves, RCMP said Tuesday. The three men had not come out of bush country in the Cooke area 20 miles northeast of here by morning. Missing are Herbert Smith, 53, Ronald Knight, 30, and George Bishop, 30, all of Vic toria. At one time, eight mem bers of the 1.500 man search party seeking 30 year old Ron ald Murray, were reported missing. Five of them straggled in late Monday night. Murray was cold and hungry but otherwise unharmed when searchers discovered him. He was brought to a hospital here for a check up and later re leased, Advocate Cut in Foreign Aid Washington UP) Two promi nent Republicans, both having first hand knowledge of Euro pean affairs, say United States financial aid to foreign nations can and should be reduced. Their reason: Western Eu rope has recovered sufficiently, with the help of the United States, to maintain substantial ly its current defense budgets. The two. House Speaker Jo seph Martin of Massachusetts and director Harold E. Stassen, of the Foreign Operations Ad ministration (FOA), said they believe U.S. economic aid can be terminated except in a few case. Martin expressed his views at a news conference Monday upon his return from a two month tour of Europe. He said his trip led him to believe we are going to have peace." State Makes Gain from Active Texas Gas Well The State of Oregon stands to possibly benefit financially from a newly developed gaa well in the heart of Texas, as the result of a bequest under the Brittana G. Fulton estate probated some 15 years ago. This became known Tuesday when the state board of con trol received a letter from the Shamrock Oil and Gas Corpor ation of Amarillo, Texas, noti fying the board the company had recently developed a gas well on property on which the (tate bas a portion of mineral rights. The company (aid that it planned to sell gas from the well and asked the board to execute an order for a division of the royalties among the var ious owner of tht mineral right. The Eastern Oregon Tuber culosis hospital is the direct vTwficfpry of the estate as U the Children' Homo at Cor- G aoit al A JOTimal 65th Year, No. 280 2St-JSToi: Wem, Oregon, Tuesday, November 24, 1953 20E Mti? U I . JO AM4' " -- -rfir- Spy Interview Not Prevented New York UP) Foreign Sec retary Lester B. Pearson said Tuesday Canada would not prevent American authorities from questioning Igor Gouz enko, the man who broke the Canadian spy ring case of the last war. He said, however, Canada can not guarantee to maintain the anonymity under which the former Russian embassy clerk has been living, if he wants to come to the United States. The senate Internal security subcommittee headed by- Sen. Jenner (R., Ind.) has been trying to get Gouzenko to come to Washington for ques tioning on possible American ramifications of the exposed Canadian spy ring. Pearson told a U.N. corre spondents association lunch eon Tuesday that Canada has cooperated fully with the Unit ed States in Inquiries into sub versive activities In the past. Aussies Swipe Atomic Gear Canberra, Australia UP) A high government source said Tuesday that "soveniring run wild" resulted in the lifting by Australian troops of secret Bri tish atomic gear from the Woomera rocket range in South Australia. The informant said that Bri tish scientists at the site, where Britain recently set off atomic explosion, apparently had told the Australian soldiers they could have certain gear not worth the expense of returning to Britain. This included gen erator and radio equipment The troop Interpreted liber ally the permission given them, taking some secret electronic gear, the Informant said, add ing: "You know how Australian troops are. They made the most of the situation. "Britain did not tell Austra lia that equipment had been abandoned at Emu plains." valli, both institutions having been willed mineral rights amounting to about l32nd of the total royalty payments. Roy Mills, secretary of the board, aaid that the state had been willed about 20 items. including some stock and bonds and real estate. All but two of these item have been disposed of, realizing approximately 115,000. Remaining Is a piece of property on the Columbia river which the army corps of engineer is negotiating to purchase. The other item is the mineral right on a section of Texaa land. Governor Paul L. Patterson suggested that further Informs tlon be obtained before the agreement I executed. "Wo have little information at band," Patterson said, "and we don't know if we are sign' lng for a few cent or thous and of dollars, i beiievo that (Cmunaad oa Pag S, Canon 4) 5 EISENHOWER HONORED M'v '" iwyrw '"f,,7?tr Washington President Eisenhower and Harry E. Schultz of New York, smile a they pose with the 10th annual ' America's Democratic Legacy award" which was presented to the Chief Executive by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B.rith. Mrs. Eisenhower and Philip M. Klutznlck of Chicago, left, president of B'nai B.rith, look on. Schultz who Is chairman of the Anti-Defamation League, presented the award for the President's "leader ship in the. great crusade to bring about elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed people of Europe," (AP Wirephoto) . Death Row On Missing Jefferson City, Mo. Pfl Chief of Police Jeremiah O'Connell of St. Lous will get One last chance to quit con demned kidnaper killer Carl Austin Hall and Bonnie Brown Heady about the mis' Ike Visits Son i At Ft. Benning Ft. Benning, Ga. () Pres ident and Mrs. Eisenhower arrived here Tuesday , at noon, en route to Augusta, Ga., where they will spend Thanks giving week. The presidential plane, the Columbine, was met by MaJ. John D. Eisenhower, their son. who Is stationed at Ft. Ben ning, and Ma Gen. Guy S. Meloy, Jr., commanding offi cer of the Infantry center. The party went to MaJ. Eis enhower's home on the post for a brief stay before resum ing the trip to Augusta. Mrs. John D. Eisenhower and the president' three grandchil dren, Dwight David II, Bar bara and usan, planned to accompany the presidential party to August The president s ton will re main here to have Thanksgiv ing dinner with the men in his outfit and wil join his family in Augusta Thursday afternoon. U.S.Court Hears Gateway Case Omaha UP) A three-Judge federal court Tuesday was to hear arguments of the Inter state Commerce Commission and opponents of an injunc- tion in the Ogden Gateway freight rate case. The Union Pacific railroad, ordered by the ICC to estab lish through routes and joint rates with the Denver and Rio Grande Western railway, is seek'ng the injunction Attorney for a number of intervener in on the side of the Union Pacific Monday told the court, in effect, the proposal doe not serve the public interest but rather the interest of the D&RGW. One of them John H. Car kin, representing the Oregon Public Service Commission, declared the Joint rate pro posal "could not but adverse ly affect the economy" of Pa cific Northwest states. PREMIER-DESIGNATE NAMED Jerusalem (4?) Israel' larg- est party, th Hapai Labor, ha nominated Foreign Minister Moshe Sharrett as premier-des ignate, if approved, the 57, year-old Sharrett will succeed David Bcn-Gurinn, who is re tiring next month. Interview Ransom lng ransom money in the Bobby Greenlease kidnaping case. Thomas E. Whit ecotton. tate director of corrections, told newsmen Tuesday the St Louis chief of police would be granted permission (or th death row interview. But he did not know when It would be held. The pair are to die in the gas chamber at tho state peni tentiary December 18, a week before Christmas. Chief O'Connell asked per mission Monday to question Hall and Mrs. Heady about (Continued an Par S. Column 4) British Writer. Jailed in Egypt Cairo, Egypt iP) Egyptian police have arrested a British journalist, Tom' Clarke, in Al exandria. He was the third Brit ish subject picked up by the Egyptian within a week. Clarke was arrested yester day but the British Embassy here said it had not been In formed of the charges against him. The embassy said the British consulate general in Alexandria had protested the arrest to the Egyptian government but no results of the protest had been reported. Clarke, a resident of Egypt for more than 20 years, is cor respondent for several foreign newspspers. He formerly was Alexandria correspondent for the United Press as well as Al exandria editor of the Egyptian Mail, a Cairo English-language daily. McCarthy On New York W.B Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy will lash back at former President Truman s Nov. 16 indictment of "Mc Carthyism" tonight from 8 to 8:30 PST on the nation's major radio and television networks. The communist-hunting Wis consln republican demanded and obtained the blanket, n( tionwide radio facilities of ABC. CBS, NBC, and MBS and the TV networks of ABC, CBS, and NBC to answer Truman's television and radio charge that McCarthyism is the "cor- ruption of truth . . . the aban donment of 'due process' of law . . , and the rise to power of the demagogue." McCarthy said the networks owed him th same privilege they had given Mr Truman In the course of presenting hi dde of the Harry Dexter White case to th nation. It will cost th nwnrr n estimated I30C.000 to giv McCarthy th choict spot. Lull in Rainfall Improves Flood Conditions Dulles Favors Asking Canada For Spy Quiz Washinsion UP) Secretin of State Dulles (aid Tuesday ha uiought It waa entirely prop er for congressional commit tees to ask the Canadian gov eminent for the privilege of questioning Igor Gousenko. Dulles also told a news con ference he did not think the Harry Dexter White case and it repercussions has had any significant or measurable ef fects upon America' relation with any country. Aa to the requests to ques tion Gouzenko, he laid he hoped that Canada would reply in the spirit of friendliness which haa characterized rela tions between that country and the United State. Dulles added that he believed such relation would survive this present incident Former Embaaay Clerk Gouzenko 1 the former Sov ient embassy clerk in Ottowa whose disclosures In 1048 broke a Russian spy ring in Canada. The senate internal security sub-committee, headed by Sen. Jenner (R., Ind.), and the sen ate investigations committee, headed by Sen. McCarthy (R., Wis.), both want to send repre sentatives to Canada to ques tion Gouzenko in connection with their digging into alleged subversive activities in th U. S. government (CanUnaed en Pat g. Column 4) Flood Evacuees Plan Return r Coos Bay UP) Peopl who fled their home Sunday in the face of riling waters wer hopeful they could start mov ing back lata Tuesday and It appeared many of them would be able to. As the rivers fell gradually, the Coquilie at mldmorning waa down 1.2 of a foot at Co quilie from Monday's high mark, police and coast guards men prepared to aid the evac uees in going back home. Several score of families left hurriedly in the rapid rise of the coastal streams. Workmen, digging away at slides, got a number of roads open to one way traffic. The receding water began to open up others, and it was thought that by late Tuesday the Co-quille-Myrtle Point road would be open. It already was open from Myrtle Ponlt to Roseburg. Highway 38 from Reedsport to Drain was re opened. Abandoned Ship Offered for Sale Portland The Oliver Olson, lumber schooner which ran aground on the jetty of Bandon harbor recently, was offered for sale Monday, Oliver J. Olson & Co., owner of the vessel, advertised the b'e In Portland newspapers, The firm said bids to wreck the freighter should be sent to Ssn Mateo, Calif., where they would be opened not later than Nov, 30. Two lift trucks on the deck of the abandoned ship are not for sale, the company said. Greenglass Says Red Spy Ring Still Active New York UP) David Green glass, confessed atom spy, tes tified In writing Tuesday a radar spy ring headed by ex ecuted Julius Rosenberg "could very possibly be continuing to this very day." A sworn deposition made by Greenglass at th federal pen itentiary at Lew is burg, Pa., waa read into th record at an open hearing conducted by Sen. McCarthy (R., Wis), chairman of the senate perma nent sum-committee on Inves tigations. McCarthy called th hearing ostensibly to support his charge that an espionage ring operated at the aimy signal corps radar laboratory at Ft , Monmouth, N. J, in Allies Seek To Win Back Pro-Red PWs Panmunjom ( The Allies revealed today tbey arc making final preparation for effort to win back 21 Americans, 1 Briton and 328 South Koreans who have refused to come home. The U.N. Command disclos ed It has been sparring tor two weeks with the Korean war prisoner repatriation commis sion over how many Allied in viewers will be permitted to talk with the prisoners. The Allies have requested a total of 155 Americans, 5 Britons and 5 South Korean. The commission bas set a limit of five. Meanwhile, AUied and Red negotiator meeting nearby on arrangements for a Korean peace conference discussed sites, but got nowhere again. Reds Told of Thanksgiving Panmunjom (fl US, Am bassador Arthur ' H. Dean Tuesday told communist dlp- lomata about Thanksgiving, God, worship and prayer. He asked that the diploma tic talks to arrange Korean political conference bo recessed Thanksgiving day, Dean told the Red about the Pilgrim, calling them God fearing groupw He said ever since the day of th pilgrims "it is our cus tom to repair to out churches and to give thanks to our Maker for th numerous bless Ings h ha been pleated to vouchsafe to ua during the year lat past" " H ald, "on that date we wish to go to worship with the people of Korea and to give thanks to Almighty God for our manifold blessings and to pray, for guidance in these talks." Th communist agreed to the Disarming of ; Japs Mistake Washington UP) Secretary of State Dulles (aid Tueidsy he agrees with Vice President Nixon's view that the disarm ing of Japan after World War II was "a mistake." Dulles told a news confer ence the United States carried disarmament programs for both Japan and Germany rather far. He noted some of these disarmament project have since been reversed be cause of the communist threat Those in charge of Ameri can foreign policy at that time, Dulles said, quite naturally as sumed the world was entering a period of lasting peace where disarmament might be possible. Dulles made plain he, too. believed this at the time and noted that the San Francisco United Nations' charter draft ed In 1945 contained provi sions calling for limitation of armaments. Weather Details Miiiara trtev. Mi tatalm-a to- Ur, U. Totol H-feur twMlrlUltMit Mi ir miui ft. if i ratu. M. Mi rmlrtUllM. 14Vt4i mmL M. ft iMlcbt. U-l ftH. (fttjrt hf V. . Ww Greenglass said that so far as he knew, th Rosenberg ra dar spy ring activities "never stopped." He is brother of Ethel Ros enberg, who was executed with her husband, Julius, In the Sing Sing prison electric chair for stealing atom bomb secrets for Russia. Greengals is serving a 15 year term for hi part in the atom spy plot He hid testified (gainst his sister and brother-in-law. Greenglass, who had been stationed at the Lo Alamos N, M., atomic energy project an army sergeant said he learned more about the activ ities of the Rosenberg ring af ter he left th army. ! lOeaUaaed ft Cvtama t) FINAL EDITION "alley Crest for River At 19 Feet Due On Wednesday By MAJUAN LOWBT FIBCBEB Flood condition la tfca Willamette Valley Improved Tuesday morning with th rain tapering off, and pro dieted crests for th iivr r- Most Willamette river areas will come off lightly in th , current high water period" compared to the flooding in southwestern Oregon. More rain is due later in the week, however, and there la possibility of mora high water . troubles with new water coming In before tho swollen streams bav subsided completely. The revised forecast bow puts the Willamete river level for Salem at 18 feet by 1 a.m. . Wednesday. That is one foot below flood level. Previously the prediction had been for 21 feet or (lightly below at Salem. The river hero this morning wa up to 18.2 feet (ConUnd n Pag K Cohuaa I) Coast Guard Feed Isolated laquuie uo uoan uuara boat carried food and mail to Isolated communities today as floodwatera almost paralyzed this southwestern Oregon area. Heavy rain which nt streams out of their bank let up last night but the runoff wa expected to be (low. School her ind in tho Myr tle Point area were cloud. Moat Coos and Carrf aounty roads were blocked, f armland wa flooded and rive Utt of water from th Coauill river covered Highway 101 near here. Soma persons war stranded. Sawmills wer closed and logging was crippled. Elsewhere in Oregon, th situation was reported oaslnc. Th Willamette river crest wa due in Albany this afteiuoou and was expected to exceed tho 20-foot flood stage only slight ly. But many roads in tho state remained blocked. Two drownings have been . blamed on the high water. Storm Parade To Continue Seattle UP) A continued pa rade of storm systems moving in from th North Pacific 1 in prospect for the Pacific North west for th rest of the week. But you won't need to batten Weather Bureau forecaster says their intensity is decreas ing from the level that swamp ed Southwest Oregon over th weekend. The storm centers also are expected to shift farther north so they will pass over tho Brit ish Columbia and southeast Al aska coast A new rain bearing storm system or low pressure area is expected to reach the Washington and Oregon coast Just about every other day. - Rain I expected to total as much as 3 to 4 inches along the coast, with lesser rains spilling over onto the east aid of the Cascades. Moderate temperatures are in prospect 5 Candidates Voted on for U. S. Attorney Five candidate appeared when the Marlon County Re publican Central Committee met In executive session at th Senator Hotel Tuesday noon to vote its prefercac for United States attorney for Oregon. Th fiv wer Jason Le. Seward P. Reese, Ed Oa Stadter, Jr., John RUelhaJB mer and Kenneth Thompson. Th committee had not balloted on th fiv at I sja, although all had been Inter viewed, Tbey appeared for th eommltte by tnvi- tatlAH. Fifteen Voting members t th eommltte war present,