I. I) THE WEATHER INCREASING CLOL'DINI I S with nia toalgat, Saturday seralng becoming ahowery Satarday tlUrtMi. Lit II . chant ia tracer tar. Law to. algal, st; kick Saturday, St. FINAL EDITION so-ai nest JO aetfna 66th Year, No. 7 TZ?JZ?12Z Salem, Oregon, Friday, January 8, 1954 (H Capita Oregon Leads in HiwayFinancing In West Stales 11 Western States Ex pected to Adopt Road Use Tax on Trucks By JAMES D. OLSON Th itate ef Orefoa lead ia the 11 western state ia leglsr latloa deallnf with highway fi nancing, Stat Senator Elm Smltb told member of th Oregon committee on lnter-gov-cramental co-operation, meet tnr ia the state ho rue Friday. Member of the committee, including Senator Smith, made reports on a meeting of the western conference of govern mental relation held in Los Angeles last November. Sen. Smith said that the most for ward action on the part of the conference In relations to high way was recommendation of adoption of a road use tax for Interstate blues. Will End Arguments ' California and Washington, Smith said, are expected to adopt this tax soon, and when placed in effect, much of the argument between state on in terstate bus taxation will be eliminated. Smith said. , (Continued on Fare I. Column 4) Not Guilty Plea By Shoulders KANSAS CITY W Former Po lice Lieut. Louis Shoulders of St. Louis, captor of the Greenlease kidnapers, pleaded innocent in Federal Court Friday to a charge of perjury in connection with his account of what happened to the $600,000 ransom money in the case. ' The kidnapers, Carl Austin Hall and Mrs. Bonnie Brown Heady whom Shoulders arrested in St Louis, were executed Dec. II for the kldnan-murder of 6-year-old Bobby Greenlease, son of Kan sas City multimillionaire, Robert C Greenlease. Shoulders' Innocent plea was entered by hit attorney, Henry r. unrli M St. Louis, at th former police officer's formal ar raignment before U. & District Judge Albert A. Ridge. Should ers was present but said nothing. Need Chains on Santiam Pass The State Highway Department today advised motorists to carry haini at Santiam pass, where - fmie Inches of new snow fell overnight and at Austin, with two inches. Plowing was going on at both places. Spots of ke wer reported at rtnwrnment Camp, along with two inches of new snow; at Tim berline, with four inches; at Sis kiyou, Bly, Ochoco Summit and John Day. . Packed snow was well sanded at Warm Springs Junction, Wil lamette pass, Meacham and Senaca. The East Diamond lake high way had bare pavement in ex posed areas but continued slip pery conditions made chains a necessity. Th coast highway, closed by a slide three miles north of Roekaway, may be open ed late today, the department said. Until then a detour is avail able on the Miami river county road. U. S. Holds Key Canadian Plans . VANCOUVER. B.C. to The keys to the strong box holding un toiH vmlth in northern British Co lumbia may be in we nanus the United States. Canada may ask the U.S. for corridors to open new gateways to the sea through the Alaska panhandle. The corridor would open he way lor the development of a fab ulous treasure land of minerals, power, and timber areas. Canadian industrial and mining Interests are behind the proposals not for one corridor but for several to provide access to deepsea ports on the Pacific. The plan has been discussed in rut nA WachinfftOll. The executive of the B.C. and Yukon Chamber of Mines with headquarters in Vancouver backs the idea, supporting the industrial and mining interests. Beachcombers Out In Force After Storm TILLAMOOK (J-Beachcombers , in fan- this week as the recent series of storms uncovered wreckage of the Norwegian schoon er Emily Reed, which ran aground In tW. The vessel had ora num. Reulher Laid To Ganosfers Racketeers, Not Gam blers, Tried to Secure Control of CIO DETROIT to Wayne County Pros. Gerald K. O'Brien (aid Fri day that gangsters, who sought to seu control of the CK) United Auto Workers, were responsible for the 1941 attempt on the Ufa of CIO President Walter Reuther. O'Brien discounted previous re port that gamblers had mad Reutner shotgun target because of his successful campaign to cut down gambling by worker in auto plant. The prosecutor, top man la po lice investigation of the attempted assassination, a a i d racketeers came within an eyelash of gaining control of the UAW prior to Reuth er' election as president of the auto union in 1M7. O'Brien said Reuther'i election eliminated a lot of the racketeer operations within the union. Th prosecutor aired his views at a press conference. It was the first official revelation of the line the prosecution will take in it ef forts to convict the accused would be assassins. O'Brien reported the mass of evidence gathered painstakingly since the shooting, April 20, 1948, indicated that the gambling issue merely served to bring together labor leader and racketeers and set the stage for ensuing events. The real objective, O'Brien said, was to get the power to force man agement to agree to deals that would be far mora profitable and respectable than gambling operations. More of Same In Weather SEATTLE to The best the weather forecaster can offer the Pacific Northwest for the next five days ia: "It looks lik more of the same." There was a bars of rsrs sis- shine when he said it' Friday mornine. but he renorted more of the type of storms that brought rainfall records for th first week of January are on the way. The sunshine was too good to last. The prospect was for rain to start Friday night west of the Cas cades and continue intermittently over the next five days. The fore cast along the coast is for S to 5 inches, for the west side interior 1 to 2 inches, and for the East Side fraction of an inch; The first storm center was about 700 miles west of here over the Pacific Friday morning. Another was about 1,000 miles farther out The forecaster said they prob ably would hit at intervals of about 24 to X hours "preceded by rain and followed by showers." Mild temperatures are expected to continue. There are no violent windstorms in prospect. 3 Oregon GIs Listed as Dead STATE OF THE UNION ? v Al Yv TV Du wJ t MiU UilU Cm aruointounen Atomic Pact Talks Monday WASHINGTON 0J.I9 The Ar my today announced the names of three Oregon soldiers who have been missing in action in Korea for more than a year and are now "presumed dead." They are: Sgt Billy W. Beaverson, friend of Judge Walter Tooie, Mult nomah county courthouse, Port land. i Pfc Doyl G. Brown, son of Mrs. Mary Ann Brown, Myrtle Creek. Sgt James D. Murphy, son of John Murphy, 2600 Highway, Coos Bay. Also listed at "presumably dead" was Capt Ward O. Neville, husband of Mrs. Eugene K. Ne ville of Gold Hill, Ore., and Rich mond, Calif. Potino Heiress Honeymooning EDINBURGH. Scotland W) The honeymooning young Golds smiths dark-eyed former Maria Isabel Pstlnoand her husband Jimmy came out of hiding Fri day 'to report they had reached an understanding with her multi-millionaire daddy, who tried to block their elopement But details of the understanding were secret The smiling 11-year- old bride, looking a bit wan be cause of a bad cold, cut off all ques tions on the subject Jimmy, 20-year-old son of a wealthy London hotel man, would tell newsmen nothinc more than:. .... ' There has been a reconaiiauon and we are very happy to have this amicable solution." Th romantic young couple had managed for dav U mhuU wrt- n and the orivate sleuths Bo livian tin baron Amenor rnun nan hired in vain effort to track down hi runaway daughter and talk her out of marrying nntil aha was older. 1 ,; Strike Spreads At Richland RICHLAND, Wash. u. A wildcat strike by UOO AFL car penters and millwrights caused more layoffs at the Hanford works today, and officials said the entire work force of about 9,500 would be sent home by the week end unless contract nego tiations brought a settlement of the five-day dispute. Spokesmen for the 110 con tractors 'and subcontractors in volved did not give detailed fig ures on the number of workers idled by the strike but said it was more than 7,000. Workers were being sent home as their work caught up with that al ready done by the carpenters. Representatives of the strik ers and the eastern Washington chapter of the Association Gen eral Contractors met in Spokane in an effort to break deadlocked negotiations. A meeting Wednes day ended when contractors of-r.-.l ovon-rent hourly wage increase and union men stuck to their demand lor a zu-ccro wwou TRAFFIC "FATALITY IN wnttTI. AND PORTLAND (UP) Edward L. Miller, 38, of Portland, last night became the second traf fic fatality of the new year in Multnomah county outside Portland. He was killed in a car-truck collision on South east Division street about half-a-mlle west of Gresham. President Eisenhower has a big smile as he delivers his State of the Union message to a joint session of Congress in Wash ington. Seated behind the President are Vice President Nixon, left, and House Speaker Martin of Massachusetts. (AP Wire photo.) v ' - - j. . l , . - Couplets as Well as Grid Come Under Fire Salem' street couplets on the state highway street, a well a the newer downtown grid system. came under attack at a meet ing of business men at the Sen ator Hotol Friday noon, l The attack on th two-year- old couplets came from, the Capitol Shopping Center, which had Joined Friday with the downtown merchant in the By STEPHEN A. STONE original one-way . light on the grid system, J. F. Causey, representing the Capitol Shopping Center, moved, that the by-laws of the anti-grid group be amended to include the couplet in the demand that the one-way sys tem be abolished. He made the motion after Bill McMann, another representative from the Capitol Shopping Center, has aaid he would like to see t couoieu abolished, t Cauaey'a motion was not voted on, but even a it was hanging ltre anothef motion was made that an executive committee of five be appointed to carry on with the fight until another meeting is called. This motion carried and the com mittee is to be appointed. McMann first asked Mayor Al Loucks if throwing out the grid would also throw out the original couplets. The mayor replied that the question was hard to answer, since the coup lets were made by agreement with the State Highway Com. Ike Faces Fight For Program In Congress WASHINGTON ID - President Eisenhower today was right ia th middle of a fight for the program be laid down yesterday and en which he stakes the success of his Republican Party. On Dec t. (peaking of Novem ber' Congressional elections. Ei senhower said the Republicans did not deserve to retain control of Congress unless they put through a "progressive, dynamic pro gram." Applause Interrupted him 45 times during hi S4-minute state of the anion message to Congress. And afterwards leaden of his party expressed the usual, expect ed praise. Although bo mad It abundantly clear the menage was only an out line of hi program, and that he would fill it in rapidly with special messages, a tiny handful of mem bers bitingly dismissed It as a "hodge-podge" full of "platitude." But It was the opposition ex pressed, even by member of his own party, on ome major point in hi program, that served him full notlc b must assert leader ship to get it through. Last year, a period of learning hi job and preparing th program h produced yesterday, he may have lelt h could alford th com promise on many issues. This year, if he compromise when the opposition isn't strong enough to defeat him, then he can be accused of abdicating leader ship for the sake of being liked. (Continue' en fate S. Celoaaa () On Global Trip Washington u. vice President Richard M. Nixon today agreed to give the Sen ate Foreign Relations Commit tee a first hand report on his 46.000-niile round the world tour. Chairman Alexander Wiley (R., Wis.), announced that Nixon would be invited to ap pear. The announcement fol lowed a closed door meeting of the group yesterday at which Secretary of State John Foster Duljes briefed members on the general world situation. The vice president said he would appear at any date that can be worked out. The sug gestion that Nixon be heard came from Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D., Minn.), who was present for an Informal re port by the vice president at a private party earlier this week. Wiley said Dulles told the committee he does not think the Communist plan to re sume hostilities In Korea de spite report the Reds are stag ing a military buildup in North Korea. Some Early Moving to New County Building By FRED ZIMMERMAN Although the new Marlon county office buildinr is not ex pected to be fully completed un til next May, the county court plans to mov some departments Into the structure the first of February. Departments to be moved In clude the county school superin tendent the county sgent nd the 4-H group. All of these departments will be located on th basement flow of the courthouse and an early move will mean a considerable vm in rent Countv School Superintendent A onx Booth and her group of live employes ar currently locat ed in the Pacific building, where comber, picked up many ef moved .hn- scheduled for. February moving are situated in the school admin istration building. Mrs. Booth's department will be quartered la the northeast corner of the ground floor. where there win be much more room not only tor office purposes but for storage. She said Friday that she was anticipating the change with considerable enthu siasm. County Judg Rex Hartley stat ed that the move could have been made at an earlier date except for the fact that it is necessary to turn off the heat from time to lime. However, th contractors have given assurance that there will be coninuous best after the first of February. (CeaUsnrd a rag t, Cessna I) (Continued on Page 5, Col. 1) Claim Jobless Picture Worse WASHINGTON I The CIO said Friday the unemployment pic ture is far worse than the 1,190,000 Jobless figure reported officially by the Commerce Department. A statement by CIO Vice Presi dent Emit Rieve, chairman of the labor union organisation's econom ic policy committee, said the oin cia'. data faila to disclose an addi tional 1.400.000 out of work. Under Rieve's method of calcula tion th total of those willing to work but without Jobs would be closer to 3.250.000. The CIO lesder said the Com merce labor force and unemploy ment fieures for December, an. nounced a few days ago. showed ioblessness rose nearly 700.000 in two months, including 422.000 in December. "This is bad enough, but the re port doesn't begin to tell the full story," he said. "The Commerce measure of unemployment Just isn't adequate to catch what really has been happening in th Job mar ket in the past six months." - Resume Hearing On Hells Canyon WASHINGTON A Power Commission attorney began pre senting Reclamation Bureau wit nesses st the Hells Canyon hearing Friday, saying they will testily n.- ; i i .. r.inj..iuH iih. I freelv and "witnut restriction .. .d.m.iHl Fridav bv the i from the Interior Department.'' Flexible Farm Prices Opposed 27 Red GIs To Ge( New ReturnChance TOKYO 41 The Indian command said today it would give 21 unrepatriated Ameri can prisoners another chance return to their homeland and families, Lt Gen. K. S. Thlmayya, In dian head of th prisoner' commission, promised to eon duct a "head count" of the Americans, thus giving them an opportunity to request re patriation. Th Indians' announcement came at the earn time that Lt Gen. William K. Harrison, chief truce negotiator, made a mystery flight from Tokyo to Seoul, Indicating the United Nations may try to reopen talks on a Korean peace conference. There wer other Important developments on the Korean front: 1. South Korea charged that the United Nation was losing lt battle with the Communists by trying to negotiate a peace ful settlement of the Korean question. . 22,000 Face Uncertain Fate SEOUL W The Korean Repair! ation Commission, caught in the middle of an Allied-Red brawl, to day faced what may b In most critical problem ef Its existence: What to do with some b.ooo un repatriated war prisoners Jan. ax. The commission has two weeki until that day ol To Confer on Time and Place For Conference WASHINGTON m Secretary of Stat DuUe and Soviet Ambas sador Georg M. Zambia will be gin preliminary atomic talks next Monday, diplomatic authorities re ported Friday. The State Department pre of flea for the time being announced only that th talk will begin next Monday, but Informed diplomats aid Zarubin has an appointment at the State Department at 10:1 am. EST Monday, Th Soviet and American gov ernment agreed - earlier la the week that Dulles and Zambia should confer on th time. plc and other arrangements for mora formal discussions on President Eisenhower's proposal to create an international . atomic peel for peaceful purpose. 1 The Soviet sharply criticized th Eisenhower plan on the ground that it fail to de anything about atomic weapons. They mad a counter-proposal for a pledge not to as such weapon. Th Duues-Zarubla conversations will be what the diplomats call "procedural," which mean they will officially be concerned only with arrangements for subsequent But ia fact U.S. officials hop from these contact to find out whether th Soviet government is at ill seriously interested ia atom ic negotiations at this time or Is Just going through th nwueat for propaganda purposes. in declsism when the! 1KB C ... I! aUiea insist the POWs be roUHQl" of Bwatjatjl Astoria Slide Crosses Street ASTORIA This city's slid ing hillside crossed another street Fridav. forcing two more families to move and putting the total of abandoned houses at 22. Twenty-six families hsve moved out of these houses. Five families including two ol single persons snd three couples still remain in houses in the immediate slide srea, now larger than It was Thursdsy when eight families moved. WASHINGTON un-Dara clouds massed ess the Cannot Hill of the new farm program President ienbowr wil plresent to cress on Monday. The President said In his mes sage on the state of the union yesterday that he would propose that future (arm programs be ouut on the principle of flexible price guarantee. Of more than 80 congress mem bers who commented, only two senators gave the flexible price idea warm verbal support Some were noncommittal; more voiced opposition. Sen. Aiken (R-vt), chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, said Eisenhower wants "to get a farm program on a sound, long range basis and away from emer gency treatment." That was a ref erence to the wartime origin of the present fixed level price props for major commodities. under armistice urn. ; ... i wajnjTMGTON 4Jt Caatrmaa No matter which coarse H Tabor 4K-NY) of tea Bene Appro chootas. freedom or further can. nriattea fin? net as add Friday tivity for the prisoners the saw rreaiasnt Ximtmmtt fortbeem means protest and possibl vie- hig bodget weald be a exception hnee, - e frem the nil But "every budget Tne Jteas insist inn m prisoners be kept in their neutral tone com pounds until a Korean peace con ference tains over meir we lor 30 days. Th conference is far from a beginning even talk to set it up are bogging aown. Both Allies and Reds cita the can be cut" Tiber, leader of the House Re publican budget-cutting drive who Is often called "Meat Ax John." declared ia an intertvew his pas sion for economy doesn't follow party lines. we cut cat cooiidge and Her- DeGasperiTalks With President ROME to Alcide de Gasperi, Italy's postwar premier until last summer, conferred with President Luigi Einaudi Friday a the chief truce document as support-but Hoover, " h said. their Interpretations vary. Astorian-Budget based on confer ences with officisls, resident and real estate men. at something un der a half million dollars. Friday's esrth movement finsuy celled LouYs Q Puis m'engineer! President Eisenhower's State of Thailand Makes Up to Indochina SAIGON. Indochina to New political troubles bothered France Friday In her Indochinese back yard. Buddhist Thailand next ooor was making overtures to the Bud dhist Indochina kingdoms of Cam bodia and Laoa. and the Cambod ians at least were reported eager for ties with the Thais. A spokesman for Thailand's dip lomatic mission In Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, told I news conference his government had proposed "the group of Buddhist countries. Including Laos and Cam- of state continued his efforts tobodia," Join inauana in an aui- resolve Italy's three-day-old polit- ance against indocBtna s tommun. irl crisis 1 ist-led Vietmlnh rebels. De Gasperi, 72-year-old leader French sources in Saigon showed of the nation's biggest party the . annoyance at th suggestion, view Christisn Democrats, may be ing it is I possible step toward called to try once again to form , breaking Cambodia away from the government. But he oecnnea to i French Union. comment alter his uix wim tne ' president. Tiber said be expected Eisen hower to submit to Congress a fight'-' budget one already sharp ly pared from original agency rc ouests for money. "But th pot is boiling for furth er cuts and I think we will be able to make them," b said. "We can always find places for little more economy, - Weather Details The crisis arose on Tuesday when Premier Giuseppe feua. ,.4sr. another Christian Democrat who.. . t-1 m' 'H" succeeded De Gasperi alter the '.7-E-','. rlHSL indecisive elections last June, quit lm j imi. nn v. a after five months in office. Iwoiaw e.r... Ike Revises Ban on New Reclamation Work WASHINGTON I A reversal of the former Truman administra tion's bsn on new reclamation work officials and congressmen saio r n day after a preliminary study of who designed the proposed federal Hells Canyon Dam, as in urn oi about a down Interior witnesses .fleeted the downhill side of Bondllo he herd t . Fowif torn Street, which had been something of a barrier near the bottom ot the slide. One of the newly aban doned house is on that downhill side. BENSON ON RADIO NEW YORK, (UP) Secretary of Agriculture Etra T. Benson will outline the odministration's farm policy in a radio address to the nation Monday night the American Broadcasing company announced today. sinn hear in f on Idaho Power to. applications to build three dams in the same reach of the Snake River between Idaho and Oregon Secretary of the Interior McKay withdrew his department's opposi tion to Idaho Power's applications last year. The department under the Democratic administration had opposed the applications and asked Congress to authorize construction of the federal dam by the Rec lamation Bureau. n Igency of the .Interior Department ihe L'nion message. Undersecretary of the Interior Ralph Tudor ssid he believed rec lamation projects were among the 23 which ! Preaident said would be started in th fiscal year be ginning July 1. But reporters checking the White House, the Interior Department and the Budget Bureau were un able to obtain immediate confirm tion. a tmdeet official slid It "seems to be i chsnge" in the Truman or der which prohibited new starts ecu Identified lo determine wheth er there will be I new policy. An Interior Deoirtment official aaid he believed the President's statement means the Truman or der is being reversed snd Rep. Ellsworth (R-Ore gave it Sim ilar inlrnretatlon. Ellsworth Slid he wis "very gild the road blocks sgainst new starts is listed. This country can't stand still." Tudor said Ihe Interior Depart ment has recommended the White House seek appropriations for a number of new projects snd added, he believed some are Included in the budget Tudor refused lo identify the projects, but elsewhere It wis learned they may Include phases Oppose Hike In Debt Limit WASHINGTON ID A check of , the Senate Finance Committee Fri day made clear President Elsen hower and his lieutenants have a big selling job to do on on of their legislative proposals a raise ia the national debt limit. The President and Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey must win over four votes, on the basis of the committee's lineup last sum mer, to get the bill out on th Sen ate floor. . At th moment, the four vote ar not in sight although then are some good prospects among the 11 members who voted to shelve th measure at the end of th lass session. Four favored it then. Eisenhower told Congress Thurs day that progress Is being mad in balancing th budget but that deficit still is In prospect for th next year. He renewed his plea for n increase in the pres ent 175 billion dollar debt ceil ing. He did not g e figure, but ap parently meant the IS billion dol lar boost which was rammed through the House last summer but then stalled la th Senate Fi nance Committee. t after the start of the Korean War. i of Yuma in Anton. Minidoka n But he suggested waiting until the Idaho and Carlsbad and Middle budget is relessed ind the pro)-(Rio Grind ia New Mexico. Russia Insists Big 4 Meet in East Berlin BERLIN, (UP1 Th Russian have deadlocked preliminary ne aotiations for the scheduled Big Four foreign ministers' confer ence by Insisting that all of It sessions be held In Soviet Ber lin, Informed sources ssid today. , The Informants said that it yesterday's meeting of the four commandants of this divided city, Russia's Sergei A. Dengin refu. ed to consider the western view that at least three session In four should be held in Berlin' Western sectors. it. ! n 4