THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLEAR tonight. Wednes day. Patches of fog in light and morning houn. Continued mild. Low tonight, 30; high Wednesday, Improvements State Medical Service Urged Dr. Purvine Says Heads " Of State Institutions Fail to Cooperate By JAMES D. OLSON Lack of cooperation between heads of stale institutions in mat ters relating to medical services was said to exist, handicapping the medical program in these Institutions, Dr. Ralph Purvine, chairman of the stale medical examining board told the state board of control Tuesday. Dr. Purvine made a report to the board covering a six-months' study made by his bpard of the entire medical set-up in state in stitutions. Salary Study Urged : He told the board that his group strongly recommended a thorough study of salaries now paid medical personnel, .saying thCit a slight increase in present salaries would serve to attract more competent men. There are seven medical vacancies in the state institutions at this time. Dr. Purvine also recommended that facilities be provided in the state institutions to permit a "res idency program, under which medical graduates after spend ing two years in internship, could spend three years In residency at one of the state institutions, after which they could take an examination to qualify, as a spe cialist. Residency Plan Outlined The board was told that to do this would require employment of one medical man to supervise the men in residency, Dr. Pur vine saying that the cost of such a man would be more than off set by the services of three men in residence who would serve at a comparatively low salary. Governor Paul Patterson sug gested that the report be given a 30-day study during which time William Ryan, director of institutions, could obtain the viewpoints of the superintend ents of the various state institu tions on the subject Slate Cattle Improve with valnahle assistance from Oregon State college, the state herd of cattle, numbering 1000 i head, is rapidly being improved, . (Continued on Page 5, CoL 6) . Canadian Liner Crashes Rock VANCOUVER. B.C. ( The Canadian passenger liner Prince George hit a rock in treacherous Seymour Narrows shortly before dawn Tuesday but escaped with only light apparent damage. A radio report from the 350-foot ship said it proceeded on through the narrows alter the accident and hove to. It called only for a tug. The Canadian National ship was northbound on ils regular run from Vancouver to Prince Rupert. B.C.. and Southeast Alaska. It struck at about 6:30 a.m. PST. Foggy xonditions have been prevailing along the coast. Seymour Narrows Is about 200 miles north of Seattle and 100 north of Vancouver. It is a wind ing channel of fast-flowing tidal waters. Vessels normally travel it onlv during slack water periods. Two salvage vessels set out for the scene to give whalevcr aid is needed. A Canadian National spokesman here said the ship would return to Vancouver for dry docking and probably will be able to resume its run next Monday. Shadow Seen ' By Ground Hog It was a bright and sunny r.rnund Hoes day and the funny little animal had ample oppor tunity to see his shadow many limes In Salem Tuesday. It was a crisp, cold morning however, the minimum sliding down In 27 degrees. Mostly clear weather with some patches of im tonight and early morning is the outlook for the valley over tonight. The five-day forecasts calls for generally fair weather except for some fog in mornings and nights with clearing in the afternoons, and little or no precipitation un til the end of the week. Tempera tures are due to continue mild. Except for those roads already closed by snow for the season, traffic was going through on bare pavements on the highways, the Oregon highway department stat ed Tuesday. Wilsonville ferry remained closed because of high water. The Willamette river continued to drop slowly, being down to 13.3 feet at Salem Tuesday morning. Weather Details Mailmam flr. minimum ! 4U. J". Till t-h rrflBllillli: l ."'.uZZ. ' . mmi.' m'" krirm. is " ifi ' i'.. wi- " 66th ft Mr J.-.; . . 2'Jwiv' ';'.; M Seaton Named To Liquor Board Gov. Paul L. Patterson today appointed Lowell Seator. of Al bany to the Oregon Liquor Con trol Commission to succeed Wil liam A. Spanglcr of Klamath Falls. At the same time, Gov. Patter son said he was naming Lester Ireland of Hillsboro as chairman of the commission. Spangler was chairman until he resigned. Gov. Patterson said it was "with a great deal of regret" that he ac cepted Sprangler s resignation dui Spangler had served tor live had served for five years on the commission ann wanted to be relieved lor uusi ness reasons. Seaton is proprietor of the Low ell Seaton Building Supply Co. in Albany, a business he has op erated since 1947. Before then he was manager of the Copeland lumber yard for 20 years in Al bany and for a year and half was general manager of all the Copeland yards. Seaton is a native of Yamhill, Ore., and Mrs. Seaton is a native of McMinnville. They have lived in Albany since 1925. He is a for mer member of the Albany city council and now is serving on the zone commission there. - TRANSPORT DOCKS SEATTLF. VP The Navy trans port Gen. II. B. Freeman arrived here Tuesday with 1.431 passeng ers from the Far East. Most of the passengers were soldiers and airmen returning from duty in the Orient, but the list also included 24 Japanese brides. Surface Only Scratched' In Roosevelt Scandal LOS ANGF.LKS (UP)-An at- I tnrncy for Mrs. Romellc Roosevelt said today he has only "scratenco the surface" in charges of alleged marital infidelities filed against James Roosevelt by his estranged wife. Arthur Schiffcrman, her attor ney, said he is prepared to file new charges if Roosevelt contests a suit for separate maintenance, which charged him of committing adultery with three women and which named nine others in a let ter he signed in 1943. Roosevelt denied the accusations at a press conference yesterday, charging the infidelities were "im aginary" and that the letter had been used by his wife for "black mail." His attorney, Samuel Piconc, said Roosevelt, eldest son of the late president, may sue his wife ft.- divorce rather than separation because she made public the let ter. Piconc said he wil confer with Roosevelt tomorrow to con- siller amending his separate main- ! tcnance suit to include a divorce j nc Mjd "there is now a possi- bjijty we will also ask for di- CapitaljfcJ . a Year, No. 28 TRAIN DERAILED, TWO CREWMEN KILLED MAUP1N, Ore. Derailed freight cars strewn in canyon after diesel locomotive hit rock slide and plunged into Deschutes River near this central Oregon town today. Engineer and fire men were killed. In foreground is boom of crane working to raise locomotive. (AP Wircphoto) Stork Shower Started By Downtown Stores By STEPHEN When you hafta get up In the middle of the night, And hunt- paragoric Without any light. There's no place like home. Maybe you remember the old sons, and maybe you've got up at ; nijiht in the good old aays wnen the baby had the colic, or the wintry weather was too severe for the scant covers. It can happen even today. But there'll be none of that for a lot of babies born in Salem's new maternity hospital during Febru ary and March. The Salem Downtown Merchants Stork Shower was launched at a meeting of the directors of the Downtown Merchants Association Tuesday, and benefitting will be babies born during February and March in the new maternity wing ot Salem General Hospital, and their mamas and papas. First to be eligible for gifts will be Gary LcRoy Ucltzen, in fant son of Mr. and Mrs. Rich ard Ueltzcn, 1825 North Liberty, who arrived at 7;31 Monday night, just a few minutes after the new hospital opened for business. Besides lhat young Gary LeRoy gets all hospitaliza tion free, a gift of the hospital to the very first baby in the new wing. He was followed closely by Daniel Andreas Hansen, son of vnrcc on grounds of mental cruelty We have until Monday oo answer her separate maintenance suit. Roosevelt vestcrday apologized lo the women named in the letter and said "1 can emphasize their i lnoce nee and ask their forgive - new" Thoir reaction raneed from wrath to sympathy. Mrs. Roosevelt based her ali - mony claim on her estimate that Roosevelt is worth two million dol lars. However, at his press con ference Roosevelt said he was not only broke but $28,000 in debt. lie produced itemized statements which he said showed his wife is worth $90,000 In stocks, property and insurance policies she had ac quired since their marriage. The couple was married In April, 1941, a year after he was divorced ficm the former Betsy Cushing of Boston. Since Roosevelt had been divorced and was not a Catholic f low ner taitn ana me tnree cnn- dren by their marriage were bap tired s Roman Catholics, Saleri, Oregon, h A. STONE Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Hansen, Sa lem, Route 6, and third to come in was a baby son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith, 420 Boone , I UilU. 1 HV) (IWU Will cuinpi-n. drawinus fnr Drizcs. (Continued on rage 5, Col. 3) Marion Motors and Home Fuel Firms Merged Merger of two well known Sa lem firms, Marlon Motors, 333 Center Street, and Home Fuel Oil Company, 1710 North Com mrrclal street, was announced Tuesday by the proprietors of the establishments involved, W. L. Phillips. Jr., and Al W. Loucks. The merger is effective Imme diately and means that Phillips and Loucks will operate the two concerns. Phillips will be the pre sident of the two organizations and will continue to center most of his activities in the automo bile department. Loucks. as vice president, will handle the fuel oil distribution division. Tyler J. Brown will be secretary-treasurer of the combina tion. Marion Motors, which handles the Nash automobile, was organ ized In 1944. Phillips took over active operation of the firm when he returned from the service In 1945. ' Tugboat Men In N.Y. to Strike NEW Vf)RK IIP Tugboat men I Tuesday charted a midnight strike deadline, confronting the world's I biggest city with the possibility of , food and fuel shortages. Federal mediators strove lo avert the walkout, which would1 I bring one more labor problem lo a 'port already beset by one strike and a battle between two rival unions. The tugboat dispute involves some 3,500 members of local 333 (United Marine Divisionl of the independent International Long shoremen's Assn. and the Marine Towing and Transportation Assn., an employers' group. About 200 weighers, members ot Ih 1I.A' Incal 947. have hcen on strike since last week. Thn (inht for control of water- front labor between the I LA and the AM. international Lonsnore- IhT tugboa, was me mosi eri ami mm al problem for the Port ol .New air IUUUIIIII iwi inc wi u. York. Tuesday, February 2, 1954 f., JC unfjstn Swift River Blocks Search MAUPIN, Ore. 1 The swift waters of the Deschutes River con tinued Tuesday to hold the bodies of two trainmen who died in a Monday freight train derailment Krl Dovine, Portland commer cial diver, after a study of the river which races through rock canyon walls at (he wreck scene, said the stream was too swift to attempt diving for the bodies. J. C. Moore, vice president of lhe' Spokane portan(j & Seattle Railway, whose train is was, said the line would be cleared before 1 inner enoris vr! imiue iu .,. the diesel engine in which the bod- i ics may be imprisoned. ( I With a derrick operating at each I end of the derailment, the line is expected to be cleared for traffic by 7 a. m. Thursday, Moore said. Once lhat is completed, efforts will be directed toward finding the e.iginc and the bodies of Ernest H. Barton. 49, Portland, tnc en gineer, and Earl F. Sulton, Wish ram, Wash., the fireman. No Action on Bricker's Bill WASHINGTON W Sen. Know land iR-Califi said Tuesday that despite consistent failure thus far I to reach any compromise he be i lieves the Senate w ill pass a con stitutional amendment on treaty powers. Knowland, the GOP floor leader. told a news conlerencc he has come up with new language to be submitted to Sen. liruhcr in Ohio i but hasn't any certainty it will be acceptable. Bricker has proposed an amend ment which President Eisenhower said would hamper his conduct of relations with other nations and give the states power to "repudi ate" treaties. Bricker has denied h.s proposal would have any such effect. Alaska Bill up' Next Thursday WASHINGTON W Chairman , . ,eM Tuesday predicted .. .. ,,:, fmmiu- .,n - , ThH!lv , ,.nH Alaskan statehood bill to the Senate "whether or not the subcommittee has completed its work." "We'll risk perfecting the bill on the floor," he declared when asked by a newsman what happened if the territories subcommittee does not complete ils draft of the bill by Thursday. I The subcommittee only Monday Bot down to a discussion ol lan - guage and aireaiiy rcponcoiy n, run an.sr. K.-um; iih the' l-r L. - " - , original ana claims oi imp - torys natives, u was rcponcu. Vlcsi Rejects Molotov's Mew German Peace Plan Humphrey Says Budget Built On Prosperity WASHINGTON W Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey testi fied Tuesday lhat President Ei senhower built his new budget on an assumption of national pros perity only fractionally below the record levels of 1953. Opening month-long public hear ings of the Senate-House Economic Committee, Humphrey said the administration's estimates of rev enue were based on expectations of business profits of 43. billion dollars a year and total personal income of 285 billion dollars. "Our income estimate assumes a high level of business activity, a good volume of production, good employment at high wages, and reasonable corporale profit s," Humphrey declared. To Indure Production The secretary said the presi dent's program of tax legislation and other economic measures was aimed at inducing "high-level pro duction and employment." Corporation profits of 43 billion dollars, before taxes, in the fiscal year starting July 1 would be only (Continued on Page 5, Col. 2) St. Louis Firm Given Contract WASHINGTON I Interior De partment officials said Tuesday the Bonneville Power Administra tion has been authorized to award a $403,631 contract for a three-unit transformer to Maloney Electric Co., St. Louis. The American firm got the con tract under the bid specifications. the officials told a reporter, al though two foreign firms bid low er. It was the second time in I month that an American firm got a itonneville contract although un derbid by foreign firms. Officials said that among the specifications was a requirement that the company receiving the contract must have had experience in design, construction, testing, ""'I.-J oli.ol nrorolinn nl oi.r-h Irani. f. ,i,:i, . in .). lrjlnsformcrs and described as be- : ( .. complicated.' " Grange Chief For Cotton Plan ATLANTA, (UP) Herschel D. Ncwsom, master of the Na tional Grange, today sought to sell the nation's cotton farmers on President Eisenhower's farm program which includes at least one sorely criticized feature, flexible supports. He also advocated throwing basic commodities such as cotton and wheal into world market competition. Ncwsom told the 16th annual National Cotton Council meeting that "for the most part" the pres ihn ident had given congress "the best analysis of the agricultural situation it has received in many years." But he said the National Grange has asked Eisenhower and congress to go further than the president's proposals in ex panding the markets for wheat and cotton before cutting down the 90 per cent parity program now in effect. FredKuhre Killed at Madison St Crossing Bv DAVE CROMWELL Salem's first tralfic fatality of , up in lime In see the Kuhre car the year occurred Tuesday morn-j approaching the intersection. She im at 8 50 when Fred U. Kunre.isaio mai ncr nrsi inuuxma "- i. j r.n r-ti i; "llA-rl h.HA. rin enmnfhinff nrettv 7fi who lived at 698 Calterun ave - il. - t- kiki nil kt m uinrn inn car 111: ' was driving Southern Pacific passenger train. iho Shnxta Davlicht. at the Madi- son street crossinn. According lo the Marion County . YT'vVh VJ d 512 feet before the train could be halted. The estimated speed of the train, at the time of the collision according to police, was between 30 and 35 miles an hour. The engineer of the Shasta was j rj a. McCaullcy, who works out 1 ,, (he Port and terminal. accident A w.j,ni. , ,ne ; th. immediate area was Mrs. ,,,, ,,. IK., ... ..,. n. -v .-t . M.aA , . ui j" - Anti-Red PW Seek to Go to United States PANMUNJOM m - The Indians have asked the U.N. command whether it will honor requests of 64 anti-Red war prisoners to go to a "belligerent power", Lt. Gen. K .S. Thimayya said Tuesday. For the majority of the 64, that power is the United States. Speaking with newsmen after a short session of the Neutral Na tions Repatriation Commission, Thimayya said he has asked the UNC if it will guarantee that the men would not be turned over to South Korea or Nationalist China. He said that if no assurance is forthcoming, the prisoners may have to switch their choice to neutral nations such as 40 other prisoners have done. A special act of Congress might be needed to admit any of the 64. Growers Plan Sales Expansion CHICAGO U0 -The nation's fruit JTtJZ Tuesday for expansion of sales on the domestic market under '..'Lhiaih; .t. ...m. Inrnion emits foreign sales A continuing dubious attitude to ward building of export trade in perishables was based principally upon uncertainty of foreign gov ernment regulations. This view was expressed by Ernest Falk of Wenatchee, Wash., manager of the Northwest Horti cultural Council, who told a fruit marketing panel audience, "in or der to successfully redevelop the European market, we must have continuous access. A market can not be successfully developed on an in-and-out basis. Falk was one ot some 2,300 growers at the annual meeting of the United Fresh Fruit and Vege table Assn. U.S. Bombers Attack Reds HA NOT, Indo-China, (UP) American B-28 light bombers, leaned to French pilols by the U. S. Far East Air Force, today joined other French planes in attacks on Communist forces nrf - vHiicuiK iuw.nu i.u.uiii j ancient royal capital of Laos. "About 10" B-2Gs supplied on an emergency basis were flying wine to wing with other U. S. built planes of both naval and Air Force types in the assault on the Reds. As the Reds drove toward Lu ang Prabang, Laos' 82-ycar-old King Sisavang Vong vowed ho would remain in the city no mat ter what may happen. Communist columns believed to number 12,000 to 15,000 al ready had overrun one outpost on the road south from Dien Bicn Phu, and today they were reported closing in on Muong Ngoi, 60 miles north of the can-, it:,. There anneared to he little ' hope of saving Muong Ngoi, but a rrencn spokesman in-re sum : onvii'i mri'iKn minister vyaencs "Luang Prabang never will be 1 lav Molotov's repetition of all the taken." ' old Russian arguments on the Grr- ! ninn problem in Berlin Monday API. I.IKE BOV DISCOVERED j "was not a very hopeful starting TAIPEII, Formosa I A For-1 point for further talks." mosan newspaper Tuesday report- Government officials pointed out ed the discovery ol a l.i-year-oin hnv who looks like a hairless ape, climb trees with simian agility and lives on snakes and insects. , ne o newer ituim-unnK i"-.' ....r nnsl I linn ttnrnrtWfttf in . uuiin. mm im n. n- Mrs. Sorcnsen. "it hit him.' ; She said that Kuhre was travel- ing west on Madison at about 20 to 23 miles an hour and made no I aPP' corl ,n -,,0P 81 lhc i cross niz. ; The only other witness to the ae S!d.cnt waw,lb".0"c"e: 1385 Baker street, a paint contractor. Colletlc told the police that ho had just turned from Capitol street onto Madison going east when he saw the Kuhre car struck by the train. He could give no other details. Kuhre was a retired farmer. He was born August 7, 1877. at Downs, iwa P js survived by Soli Kuhre. his wit-, and Frank Kuhre. Ains- ?nt. K ,,,, s,.,m ,hmi. in years nav L V . i- V n0 rnm, hnrp frftm IOWA. - - FINAL EDITION Dulles Calls tor Endfo Foolish Red Chaffer BERLIN W - Secretary of State Dulles told the Big Four . foreign ministers conference Tues day the Soviet bloc and its one man rule is the real danger to world peace, not the Western de fensive alliance. This was tht American states man's answer to Soviet Minister Molotov's charges that the West ern powers are pro-noting war in trying to unify Germany within the family of European nations. In stinging language. Dulles hurled Molotov's own words- spoken after the 1939 Nazi-Com munist partition of Poland back . at him. At that time, with Mos cow and Berlin in a booty-hungry partnership, Molotov called it "not only senseless but criminal" for the Western nations to war against Hitler. Wrong at la 193 ' Molotov, in challenging the Western world's motives about peace now, is just as wrong today na "? .".' "5?": broadsiS ; a retort to Molotov a unyielding thTssirwouid I ..... .! !.., u.j only for a neutral Germany un I . . . ... able to have any link with the West and saddled with Commu nist influence. (Continued on Page 5, CoL 4) Delay Action on Chief justice WASHINGTON UH A Senate Judiciary subcommittee Tuesday deferred action on the nomination of Earl Warren, former RepubU can governor of California, to be en let justice ot the United States. ' . The, five-member subcommittee . first held a public hearing on the nomination and then went into . closed-door session. Afterward Chairman Langer (R-ND) sai'' he would call another meetine soon. . Despite the delay there appeared no doubt that Warren would win overwhelming Senate approval. Langer, chairman , of the full Judiciary Committee as welt as the subcommittee, told newsmen that Warren has not been asked to appear at the hearings. He said he 1 did not know whether the nominee would De called later. The appearance of a chief jus tice before the committee would be unprecedented. Langer had an nounced Jan. 16 that Warren "will be asked to appear." Molotov Plan Ires Germany BONN, Germany W Both the Adenauer government and its So cialist opposition expressed deep- est disappointment Tuesday at the unchanged Russian attitude toward Germany. A government spokesman said there was very little chango in the basic Russian attitude, which was quite unacceptable to the West. Mol otov proposed at the Berlin Big Four parley that an international German peace conference be held Inter this year. The proposal fol lowed old Soviet lines already re peatedly rejected by the West To Supervise Coffee Trading WASHINGTON i Chairman Aiken (R-Vti predicted Tuesday that the Senate Agriculture Com mittee will approve a bill requir ing government supervision of trading in colice. "I can discern ne serious oppo sition to it in our committee, Aiken told reporters after a three hour publid hearing. "It might do some good," he said, adding that he might call the committee together for action Wednesday. In the hearing Tuesday, Joseph M. Mchl, administrator of the Commodity Exchange Authority, testified his agency could control "unwarranted'' spurts in coffee prices if Congress provides the authority. Mchl said he thought lhc coffen drinking public is "entitled lo thai protection" hut lhat he has no au-. Ihorily now to Investigate the sky rocket rise of coffee prices.