I C apit al jlJoii final 66th Year, No. 5 JToZZ K Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, January 6, 1954. v;ort AlSa 5c THE WEATHER. OCCASIONAL RAIN tonight, partial clearing and 1 1 w hewers and cooler, Thursday. Low tonight, 42; high Thurs day, St. i FINAL EDITION. Airforce Lists if 256 of Missing Presumed Dead i List One of Eight Being Released by Defense Department WASHINGTON, UP The Air Force made public today the names of 256 officers and air men who have been "missing in action" in Korea for more than a : . ! dead." ; V The list was one of eight being ' ? released by the Defense Depart 'I ment this week. Altogether, they identify 3856 American fighting i men for whom a "presumptive 9; finding of death" was necessary " in the absence of any evidence f that they survived Korean com v t bat. .' 30.350 Death Toll When the last list is made pub- 'DUMMY' MONEY PACKAGE Parly in Italy Torn by Feud Cabinet Crisis Cre ated That Intensi fies Drift to Reds ROME UB The dominant Christian Democrat party was . 1 torn tnrinv hv "ramilu fA.." ' 2- that has created a cabinet cris-! swy ' is and intensified the threat of ! J an Italian drift lnus.rl Mmmiil ..... i I J niam. Premier Giuseppe Pella and his "cabinet of experts" re- j signed last night after less than . five months in office as a re sult of what amounted to a "vote of no confidence" from his own party.' President Luigi Einaudi re fused immediately either to ac cept or reject the Pella resig-, lie, the American death toll for ! nation, but the Premier Is r the Korean War will stand at an ! unpopular In Christian Demo i estimated 30,350 with additional I crat ranks that it appeared un- . ... ; u- ..,.tj r ..Aiu.. lianuDuea on race a. loiumi 31 c vwuiu .u.j.i iuw.cr caoinet. Lcftwing Christian Demo crats have been sniping at Pel la for months because of his policy of cooperating with the rightwing Monarchists to as sure a parliamentary majority for measures favored by his government. The leftists believe the party should collaborate with Pietro Nenni's pro-Communist Social- Spy's Testimony 'Very Valuable' . n i:i i r." . .. . 1 sV L m. ,MF - I I " V 1 4th Suspect In $160,000 Robbery Held All Accused Are Negroes; Woman - Also Picked up " -1 ejo "tJZ ' mzz Convenes in Brief Session of Preliminaries : ; III....IJ l. r.ewmemuers lUfiUI IIUIIIJ -iSouth Korea on 'Freeing P0W WASHINGTON - The Secret Service Wednesday picked up man they described as a fourth suspect la the SlSO.OuO New f ; Year s Eve theft of n;w $20 bills I from the Bureau of Engraving. Tu a-.,; 1 : t.J I 1 recovery of all but S1.700 of the SEOUL, KOREA, ' UP Gea. money. Kaxwell Taylor bluntly warned Charles Howard Nelson. 17. a So""1 Korea today he will on Negro, was brought under custody j le?,B his "B Army against South to the field office of the S?cret Korean t'oors if any attempt Is Service in the Treasury early rCt to free the mora than tV Wednesday, the ssrvice said. 000 ",: Cor.tnunlst prisoners There. Nelson was placed under ' Indian euttody, questioning immediately. I In the statement, Taylor "no- Nelson's address was given as ' tice ! the threat made yesterday Chapel Oaks. Md., near the District 1 bv South Korean Foreign Minis of Columbia line. ter Pyun Yuns Tae that the KCK Other details were not immcdi-'army mieht take "some action" ately available. ! if the Indian custodial troops con- The case broke open Tuesday ' tinue their "illegal screening" of with the arrest of a bureau em- the anti-Communist prisoners. BohlenSees Molotov on Atomic Pool MOSCOW (UP) U. S. Ambas sador Charles E. Bohlen visited Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov today In a new move toward negotiations on President Eisenhower's proposal for an atomic energy pooL Bohlen bad last gone to see Molotov In the skyscraper Sov iet Foreign Office oa New Year's Eve. the State Department said in Washington Monday, to dis cuss "certain procedures" for starting "substantive talks or ne gotiations on the President's pro posal. After the New Year's Eve meeting, Bohlen said be told Mol otov that the United States was prepared to begin discussions on ploye, his wile, and a solt-spo'cen South Korean officials either i the procedure for negotiations. WASHINGTON u. Sen. Pat McCarran predicted today that the senate internal security subcommittee's inter view with Iunr Gouzcnko will be 1 to get its program across, "very valuahle" ir future inves tigations into communist sub version. The Nevada democrat said he does not know when, if ever the transcript of the inteniew will be made public. "It certainly won't be for a long, long time,' McCarran said. McCarran and Chairman Wil liam E. Jenner (R., Ind.) ent to Canada last week end to in Lewis Puts up $50r0a0 More NEW YORK John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, has sent another $50,000 terview Gouzenko former code to the old International Longshore clerk in the Russian embassy ! men's Assn. and has promised all at Ottawa. Gouzenko s disclos-! the support that is needed in event ures to Canadian authorities ex I of a strike, the ILA reported U. i.L'i;.ii.un, lett, chief of the hecici ae.v.ct, luu nuuy J. Holtzclaw, associate director of the Bureau of Engraving,' display, a package of "dummy" bills found in the Bureau's value. While Treasury Department refused to comment the Secret Service was said to be holding at least .two suspects in conection with the theft Virginia troopers said the money was found on farm near Centerville, Va., 25 miles from Wash ington. The theft totaled $100,000 in $20 bills. (AP Wire photo) . Wednesday The figure might run as high as five million dollars, Capll William V. Bradley, ILA president, told The Associated Press. It prcviousy had been reported that Lewis had offered a one mil-, linn dollar strike fund. Th ILA, ousted from the Amer ican Federation of. Labor as rack eteer dominated, is locked in a struggle with a new ILA-AFL. for control of the waterfront ewis had turned over 550,000 to the ILA as a campaign fund shorty before the balloting. Air Travel Has Shown Increase Preliminary Meetings With Russia to Start BERLIN (UP) The Western Commandants of the United Allies announced tonight, they i S t a t e s. Great Britain and will start preliminary negotia-1 France will start the negotia tions with the Russians tomor- j tions with the Soviet com- row for the meeting of the Big mandant. Four foreign ministers which. little flagpole painter on a tip fur-' refused to comment on Taylor's nished after all-night soul search-1 warning or were conveniently Ing by the father of the woman. "absent from their offices or Cousin of Landis homes. The Secret Service identified I nj Nelson as a cousin of James Rufus j , ""' Landis, 2, who was held under . An 'ndl" spokesman for In $50,000 bail following his arrest dlan Gen- s- Thimayya, chair Landis was picked up at work at 1 man ot th Neutral Nations Re the Bureau of Engraving, his 26. i patnalion Commission, declined year old wife Mamie was arrested I comment lsn 'xcept to say: "It at their apartment and a neighbor, onlv "Sht tht Gen. Taylor has William Giles. 27, was the third to ! 'ulcMy reaciea to ine oouin B.O- reim inreai. Thimayya has asked both the United Nations and Communist commands to say whether they wish to change the Jan. 23 dead line for freeing the prisoners. Gen. John E. Hull, U.N. comand- er, replied firmly that he will consider the prisoners free at one second after midnight Jan. 23. The Reds have not replied. Continued en Pa . Ummn SI An American Embassy spokes men said he was unable to give any details of today's meeting between Bohlen and Molotov. It is expected here that Sec retary of State John roster Dul les and Molotov will discuss the atomic energy pool during the Big Four foreign ministers con ference which is to open Jan. 23 in Berlin. posed a Russian spy ring in Canada in 1946. The Canadian government stipulated that It have control of making public all information contained in ths interview. Mc Carran said the subcommittee still will be able to use the in formation supplied by Gouzenko as leads for future influjries. Ship Collision Being Probed SAN FRANCISCO I Coast Guard investigators heard addi tional testimony Tuesday that the freighter Colorado made a sudden right turn before it and the cement carrier Permancnte Silverbow col lided in the Pacific 145 miles north of San Francisco Friday night. Charles F. Corrigan. junior third mate of Henrv J. Kaiser's perma- m.ni cement shin, testified "the Colorado had the whole Pacific Ocean to pass in. and there was no situation until she made a right turn." Both of the 7.600-ton vessels were damascd but made port under their own power. Charles H. rabn. Welches. Wash., watch officer ot the States Steamship Co.'s Colorado at the time of the crash, was ill and excused from Tuesday's hear ing. Other crewmen described the scene on the freighter's bridge. Vilaliano R. Vilas of Seattle. helmsman of the Colorado, said he back to 1946, the first post-war was steering north on a 340 degree : car. and the 1953 revenue ex- course when the Silverbow was ceeded that of 1948 by 2663.8 pcr- sichtrd. He said rabn m rapid cent succession told him to cut the ship j Passenger figures were the right to 3.10 degrees, then to "make j oniy ones topping those of the it 360 more right, hurry put her previous year, however. The fig- over n.ii u ii'" uv.u.v ..v , ures lor iw.w on carsu uwajueu here were mail, 41,081 pounds: express, 17.01 pounds: and ireieht, 87.060 pounds. Those same figures for 1952 were mail, 43,960 pounds: express, 17.018 pounds: 18.068 pounds, snd freight, 178,325 pounds. opens here Jan. 23 The first meeting will be held in British headquarters in West Berlin at 10:30 a.m. More Layoiis At Richland RICHLAND, Wash., UP Addi tional layoffs appeared likely to day at the Hanlord project in me wake of a walkout of AFL car penters and millwrights in the Tri-City area. International union officials were called in late yesterday but local union officials said there was "no end in sight" to the walkout of 1.200 men. Some 2,000 other workers at the Hanlord project naa neen The first business Is to dis, cuss "technical details," chiefly the place in Berlin at which the Big Four ministers will meet. The Western Allies want all the meetings to be held in the free atmosphere of West Ber lin. The Soviets are expected to demand that some of the iVKseuugi, l least, take place in Communist ruled East Berlin or its suburbs. , ' I Explosion in White Chapel LONDON I The Whitechapel district of London's East End target for German bombers in World War II was rocked Wednes day by a series of underground ex- I plosions. Th Masts sent navini bricks More persons travelled to and hv vesterdav afternoon I nvins. snowed flames for 20 feet. irom !aiem via air in ihm man i ,nj tne number was expecteo 10 Dew out the front oi a snoe store, the previous year, united Air i rjse contractors said some other Lines year-end figures showed projects with work closely re when tabulated this week. atc(j to carpentering might be During 1953 a total of 4.470 .i..d if the strike continued. 1 I-,) 1 . ; Ctlnm r and 4.051 deplaned nere. previous year 4,326 persons boarded the planes here and be nabbed. All are Negroes. tt'ontinued on Pase t. Column S) Four Arrested in Reuther Case DETROIT UH Charging four persons with assault to kill police Wednesday cracked open the five year old attempted assasination of CIO President Walter Reuther. Wayne County Pros. Gerald K. O'Brien and Detroit Police Com missioner Donald Leonard an nounced the charges and the ar rest of two of me lour at a:n a.m. (EST). 1 am convinced the shooting No Trouble at POW Release Sworn in and Vinson Lauded WASHINGTON Ifl - Contresi convened Wednesday for a mo mentous session which will writ j the record the Eisenhower admla- istrauon must lay before the pe pie next fall in th mid-term .ec- , tion. , Fresh from five months among the home folks, the legislators as sembled in an atmosphere charged with politics. , . There was a general sense that the accomplishments of the next six months will go far toward de. i termining whether President El senhower will have his own Repub- , lican Party or the Democrats in control in the last two yean of , this term. The GOP has command by only a razor edge In this make-or-break campaign year session. In the House, the count Is 219 Republi cans, 115 Democrats. 1 lndepend ent A year ago it was 221 Repub-, ' beans, 213 Democrats and one In dependent The Democrats - picked up their two seats in spe-.. cial elections in New Jersey and ' Wisconsin. , , Senate Division, ' ' ' In the Senate, the division Is 47 Republicans, 48 Democrats and 1 independent Continued, nominal GOP control hinges on the avowed willingness . of the independent. Sen. Morse of Oregon, to vote with the Republicans on Senate organi. T,.Tf? 0? 1 Vice President Nixon can break a Guess at Ikes Farm Formula WASHINGTON ranking American officials, re- u.Vf.7or o f hGOP lui uuig null! uid r mi ba, w pressed confidence Wednesday that the release of Korean War prison ers on Jan. 23 will be accomplished without trouble and that peace ne gotiations will be resumed. A year ago, the division was 48 ' Republicans, 47 Democrat and 1 independent. The death of Repub lican Leader Taft of Ohio and ap pointment of a Democrat, Thomas A, Burke, as ms successor ettectea w v.- Ik . i rnnri t nrt and tl. jnvuiucia ut 1 ne ... :ut filri tn rnnrt 3.P15 came into Salem by Unit ed Air Liines planes. The year 1953 also showed an increase in revenue to the com pany at its Salem station with the increase being 9.7 percent over the previous year. The ' mpany's records here on rev enue from the Salem station go to work Monday to back demands for a $2.80 houriy wage for the carpenters and $3.05 for the mill- wrirhu Tne striKe came wnne the eastern Washington chapter of the Associated General Con tractors and craft unions con tinued negotiating for a new con tract to replace one- which ex pired Dec. 31. Both union snd management officials said the strike was "not sanctioned." WASHINGTON i Farm-minded hTmM . .,5.r .Sirnot on ih. - "n""B a plan to freese ,m?J'l;,K,S.tl3 Pt surpluses with a flexible t;,.TT.. .r.,,"r.rr price support plan. .. -;.. watery. Tnjf mI)rrmUioII c.m, Tuesday Crt RiiT if, . key i-elS7uoft0mrS.mr,,,O,Per' at the Kefauver committee hearing, mThJd,ertrj,nm2cted to re- AT. "..I t . I ' ."" '" program in viaic. ..v . I general terms in his State of the sen. Ont.. who once jumped bond , Unjon meJMW ThurK)ay. A special when accused of Illegal entry into , mesue on ,ubjeci i, due Mon day. collision. Two Soldiers Premed Dead Two army men from this area I were among those upon whose ' records the department of de-j fense Wednesday wrote "pre- ' sumed dead." i The men, both of whom were previously listed as missing in action in Korea, are Cpl. Wavne B Gill, Jr., son of Mr. snd Mrs. Wayne B. Gill. Sr.. 1760 Kansr. street, Salem, and Pfc. John J Lenn. son of N.-than N. Leno 1 Stnr route, Grrnd Rnnde. Two other On con men. Cpl I.eo R Saul, son of William R Saul. Bri er, and P'c Ch.irles M Tannrhill. son ot Harry V. Tan nehill. Grants P.', aiso wre on the list. The "prf'.umntive finning oi desth" was m-d.- by the rfrnart ment in the absence ol any ev inr. that the men may still be alive. It set last December knocked firemen off their feet and disrupted the supply of power to factories snd stores in the work ing class area. None ot tne tiremen was serious ly hurt but several suffered cuts and bruises. An electricity board otiiciai saia It was possible that an extra pow er load passing through the old network of cables under the ground caused a faulty wire to smoulder snd give off fumes, which caught fire. Dewey for Curb On Politicians ALBANY N.Y. Gov. COSTLY FOUR CENTS OKLAHOMA CITY (UP) Thomas L. Moc.aoee Thomas E. Dewey, whose admin rilrin t anow 11 11 was wunnwimc ' ... , i, i... ,, , . ; . ; iqvi istrauon nas uctmi suuii uj un making four cents more in lyoJ , . , ..... ...ji j...... i.i. than he did in 1952. Mockabee, , ' ,,, if,,!.i. , rn r Mm nreari (or a post office employe, said the : . t officers from using their settlement of a similar wage dis- lour ivm $10.96 more in income taxes be cause it boosted him into a high er bracket. Bank Loses Worthless School Warrant Case I, 1AMFS n OLSON The United States National I for recovery of the money and not oniy personal nonesiy uu . bank of Portland cannot recov the court awarded the district , absence ot any reasonable su p,. hiss of $2679 in worthless judgment sgainsi me oanx siier , ,, "" , the United States. Also named in the warrant was Peter Lombardo, 50, already serv ing sentence at the Tcrre Haute, Ind., federal penitentiary. The fourth .person named in war rants issued Tuesday by Record ers Judge John P. O'Hara. was Santo (Sam) Perrone. S6, father- in-law of Renda and a frequently questioned suspect accused by the Kefauver committee ot being a gang-leading strike breaker and enemy of organited laoor. Perrone is being sought by po lice. O'Brien said he was con- cinced Perrone was in Detroit within thilast 24 hours. ... . 'y. . i- .i t tne warrant naming uw iuur al so and four "John Does" indicat ing further arrests in the assassi- ..n AttAmnt aaillHl HJtll,nr f'D.i.- AiA nnl oiua naif full H I New York. UP Standard Oil tails of the arrests and filing ofir Winthrop Rockfeller torn ,k,ro.. i plained today that his estranged rwuc Dliui nam raiai-u iiic ante ,u 1 $10,000,000 in their negotiations ' for a divorce settlement He charged that she hsd re pudiated a written agreement made tree months ago for $5, 500,000, which would have given her the biggest alimony plum in American history. In a statement issued simul taneously through his attorneys here snd at Little Rock, Ark Rockfeller said "There is no ap parent way of meeting Mrs. Rock- feller's insatiable financial de mands. He also accused her of telling Asst. Secretary of State Walter I TJ. .!"': S.. Robertson and Adm Arthur 8pelski, Mlrtlll (R..Masa.) - 7. , 7m --V.:. j 0PPM his gavel promptly at the re . ' stroke ol noon to get the nous their observations on an inspection- , ,u ltM sion. Acrosa toe con.uii.uoo trip to , i-v caoltol. Vice President Nlxoa ' ana Formosa. I vninl the Senata toU ardor. ""Jt"0"-. vi ,T .v .i Gntterles of both chamber were pected any "trouble when the time 1 ,lUed .acuujra. au pnaonera nui iwia oj wc nvu and AllietHe replied be did not expect any troube and added; - "I talked with the Swiss. Swedes and Indians (on the Neutral Na tions ReoatTiation Commission)! ' L F.-J-'.h. and there seemed to be no dissent from them regarding our position." The commission has custody of 22.619 Chinese and North Korean The new surplus freese Is said to involve placing large stocks of wheat, cotton, corn and other stor age commodities held by the gov ernment in a national defense stockpile. Sponsors believe this would re move a depressing threat to pres ent farm prices and enable a flex ible price support plan to operate to balance demand and production. Bobo Ante up To $10 Million Continental Can Strike Ends NEW YORK U The CIO United Steelworkers Union ended its strike against the Continental of the positions for personal gain. pute idling employes The governor in ms annual mis-, American can io. sage opening the 1954 New York ; Negotiators for the USW and Legislature called also for a broad ' Continental Can reached agree social program running into hun-1 ment on a wage increase late yes dreds of millions of dollars and : terday, signaling a back to work indicated he would balance the order for 13,000 employes In 34 budget without Increasing taxes. ' plants in the United States and In pressing for early imposition Canada who walked out Dec, t. of curbs on greedy politicians, the : No settlement had been reach- governor insisted that "the public cd today, however, in negotiations is entitled to expect from its serv with American Can. although a ants a set of standards far above t'SW spokesman said he hoped the morals of the market place " the Continental Can settlement Tie people." he said, expect COuld be used as s pattern for settling the second walkout, which Involves 20.000 workers in 57 plants. Gen. Lucius I) ( lay. cnairman prisoners, taken by the Allied side, who have chosen not to go home. Also held are 135 captured mem bers of United Nations forces. Robertson, asked if he was opti mistic about resumption of talks for setting up a formal peace con ference, replied: "Ontlmistlc is the wrong word because I'm never optimistic about anything the Communists do. But I think the negotiations will get going again." French Defeat Indochina Reds Hanoi, Indo-Chlna (UP) French troops led by paratroop ers have routed a powerful force of Viet Minh Communist rebels in a savage battle in Central Laos, it was announced today. Ground troops opened the at tack on the rebels in the narrow waist of Laos where the rebels last month cut Indo-China in two by driving to the Mekong River. War nlanes then bombed the rebels snd showered them with flaming napalm. As the rebels faltered and stsrted to fall back, picked com mandoes parachuted to their rear and sent them f eeing into the jungle. The battle was the biggest lies about her present finsncisl since the rebel offensive opened StatUS, ln tjaoa ociurc iu inuiaa. er a H oi ... TT"-"V Uu.. - u. .WI.reH It was an srhnnl warrants deoosltea at IIS ine iraua naa oeen mscuvercu. K'r"w . , . v"-"- 'J""'-" , " twra congress convenru u. -. -- - - - St Heren7 branch Tthe Oregon Then the bank filed suit sg.inrt jUsue that transcended partisan of ,he board of Continental Can. (rjf(ldl)r ,. tod,y ,, it , democrat who succeeds the late be .three member, of stute supreme V. enreflay court ruled the billiard parlor. Multnomah county ! politics. Cireult ' Dewey also proposed said the company arreed to pay an AW rent increase in basic I .. . ,.nn. i- rtfM,nt hi,. T. kirk rmirt. in an obimon i,i. rharlM W. RriMine di-' " - i '") tnrv. written by Associate Justice , rec,"ed . verdict in favor of the I 'or. "PlnT "" Republicans and democrats Hall S. Lusk, heir" that the main b,nk , ,ne of one of th. " ' "'IZmA T.ZZ .'lranh headed Into angry oeo. e ,om,;Urvldt;iavv fsvor of the billiard parlor. ttTJ.t T.7J Ll'MBKR STRiTe END? ! nd poihly decide 0,Nov.m ehndren ' . PRINCE GF.ORGE. B. C. - nL.r?.,iT"",."V ' . WASHINGTON III Rerulation of union welfare funds was placed on the "must" list of proposed Taft-Hartley Labor Law change Wednesday by Chairman McCoo- ' nell R-Pa) of the House Labor Committee. 5 McConnell said preliminary study ' indicates thai alleged abuse af : union welfare funds "could develop Into a national scandal" involving billions of dollars. A subcommittee under Rep. wins Smith 1 R-Kan aready has beea set up by McConnell to investigate "labor racketeering" and the use of union welfare funds created by employer contributions. Both McConnell ana smtin inai cated they think these funds should be regulated by state agencies, such as state insurance commis sions which control Insurance com panies. ' "We've Just scratched the sur- . face," McConnell said ol Invests- - gations thus far conducted. He predicted that the study of wel fare funds would be "one of the big things for the committee at this -session." 130 Appointees ToBeConfirmed WASHINGTON 11 ' President Eisenhower will shortly ask the Senate to confirm more than 130 appointments, including those ot Earl Warren as chief Justice of the ' United States and James P. Mitch ell as secretary ol labor. There is no evidence oi serious opposition to most of these nomina tions, made while the Senate was in recess. But at least one. that of Robert E Lee to be a member of the Fed eral Communications Commission I FCC ), Is certain to receive search ing study by the Senate Commerce Committee. Also on the list of presidential nominations due soon alter Con gress reconvenes Wednesday will be three members of the War is expected to be on. ot the Sen. Robert A. is.t " -JTV- And. in accordance witn time - n- honored tradition c nmmittees ' , Elnnow.ri , utiiviaii; ... m Showdown Friendly Fireworks Expected uticitiunTou am Th lined uo to take their formal a ..... ,,f ih. raths of office. They Included Ktrd eonaress convened on a ben. 1 nomaa a. nurac, ine v... i h.mk in Portland had voluntarily rreditel its St. Helens branch with the amount involved. The school district wsrrants were fraudulently issued by the 31 ., the Hate or endmg pj, , Ti snd rno """' a K.n. c.'.'ed at the Elite Billiard par counts and paying death bene ' billiard par- '"' I lor deposited the warranU in 11 .L n 1 good faith at the bank in 1943, YieQlhef UetailS j records disclosed, according to m,.i mm.'. k ii the opinion. Later the billiard .... it. T.i.1 u-rnr .tirtt.it..: i pjrio, dosed its sccount with f r"., the bank. Suit m Instituted agsinst The bank then sppesled to the 1 cmdren l.tli imil lit . ..,rlll.l).n. 11 " "..""-' ." brl.ht. 11 f-t ISWrt I. . ! r a.rM I supreme court on the verdict" of the Jury while the billiard psrlor owners eross-appesled en the directed verdict of Judge Redding. The hith court In the opinioo I Vi..r Fall. reversed Judge Redding on bis! Dewey led off his 11 cue-word directed verdict and held that ; message with his plea for sction to the United Ststes Uational bank , raise the standards of ethics of of Portland could not recover gtate and local office holders snd investigations In preventing wit Besses from being "smesrea . Full support of state develop ment of hydroelectric power at the bank by the school district from the billiard parlor. A code of fair play in state A w-oay " " ' "' , T," ' ,B. rv. banged down WMinewiav w in ire rr.urn w ww ..-- . . of i.000 lumber workers in the northern British O'.umbia Interior. The agreement between the op erators and the International Wood workers of Arteries 'CIO) calls for a 5 per c.nt wage increase and an Industry wide maintenance of membership clause. It was a com promise formula. I political leaders. Mr. Elsen, hower of the opening of con grcss snd received inrmal notl ficstion that the president will deliver his State of the Union message tomorrow. But it was ail sweetness and ) Bu( behind the conviviality and ceremony the storm clouds were piling up. ln the crowded senste and house chambers st the stroke of noon EST. Among lnena ana toe alike, there were hearty greet ings, slaps on the back and vig oroua handshakes. For events have moved in such a way that congress In the next few months must decide highly controversisl isrues affecting tu tin kttstl Two new senator! ana lour . tne n.uun . p.....,, -----new representatives were wel- mllltsry strategy, ana its farm, corned to the fraternity and I labor snd tax policies. 1 challenging Eisenhower's authority to replace them. Eisenhower's recess appointment of Lee to the FCC has been ques tioned by some Democrat! In con nection with Lee s participation tn. the 1M0 election campaign of Sen. John Marshall Butler iR-Md). Lee. a former House employe, as a friend of Sen. McCarthy (R-Wist, who campaigned (or Butler against the Democratic Incumbent, Sea. Millard E. Tydings. A Senate elec tions subcommittee criticised that campaign as "despicable, back street type." r- ft- :' i: i' fc -1 i 94? 4A mt Afasi "