C apit al JlJ ou rnal THE WEATHER CONTINUED FAIR tonight, Turf, day. Little change In temperature. Low tonight, 28 ;hlgh Tuesday, Si. FINAL EDITION 66th Year, No. 32 Z;.Z'o,''::i Salem, Oregon, Monday, February 8, 1954 (21 Infermediale Boy Institution Opinion Due Emergency Board to Determine if Suit Is To Be Instituted By JAMES D. OLSON Members of the state emergency board will consider the possibility of requesting to seek a declara tory judgment opinion from the state supreme court on the legal ity of using funds appropriated lor construction of an intermedi ate institution in Marion county for purchase of necessary land on which to place the new insti tution. Haley to Report The board, meeting next Thurs day, will receive an opinion from Sam Haley, legislative counsel, on the subject. Haley was requested by the board to determine if, first there is any precedent for purchase of land with funds im. uded in a building appropriation, and it so, what state agency or official should file the suit, and finally if there is any authority under which the emergency board to bring the svit. The 1953 legislature appropri ated $1,250,000 for construction of an intermediate institution, to be located in Marion county, and to which older boys at Mac Larcn school and young prisoners at the penitentiary, could be com mitted. No Procedure Outlined However, the legislature, In this connection, did not spell out any procedure for cither com muting or releasing inmates of the new institution. In order to have proper rec omemndations on hand for con sideration by the 1955 legisla ture, the board of control, acting on a suggestion made by Gover nor Paul L. Patterson, are in the process of appointing a com mittee to work out a set of operational-regulations for the inter mediate institution. This committee, which will probably be announced the board said Tuesday, will include Prison Warden-Clarence Gladden, James Lamb, superintendent of MacLar en school for boys, reprcsenta tives of -state association of Dis trict Attorneys, Circuit Judges, County Judges, and two members representing the public. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 3) 300 Fired as Security WASHINGTON, UP Scolt McLcod, top State Department se curity officer, said today that 300 I "security risks" resigned or were j fired from the department last year. The former FBI agent, a con troversial figure in the adminis tration, also said that much of the criticism aimed at him was caused by the "generous endorse ment that my friend Joe Mc Carthy gave me right after my appointment. "As you know, there is an al most pathological hatred of Sen ator McCarthy in some quarters," McLcod said in a copyright in terview with U.S. News & World Report, a weekly magazine. He said McCarthy (R., Wis.) had "absolutely nothing" to do with his appointment, which he said was made on the recom mendation of Undersecretary of State Donald B. Lourie. Pull Jap Ship Out of Muck ASTORIA Ifl The Japanese freighter Showa Maru was pulled Snnd.iv nieht after getting stuck in the mud while loading logs i Port engineers Monday began taking soundings lo determine the depth of the pier slip. They said silt apparently washed in from this winter's storm and reduced the depth. Che Japanese vessel was to have laVcn on 800.000 board feet of logs before heading home but after getting stuck the captain decided to load only B5.nno feet. The ship w is being moved to another pier Monday. Sunny Skies, Frosty Nights Continue Salem and the valley enjoyed sunny skies again Monday, and the prospect is for more of the same through at least Tuesday. Nights continue cold, however, the thermometer reading being at 26 for the Monday morning minimum, the Sunday minimum reading 25 degrees. Another low mark is due tongiht hut the fore rast calls for fair weather through Tuesday. So far, February has not regis tered a drop of rain in Salem and the normal precipitation total to this date it 143 -inches. Report Says Grant Store To Open Here Large Variety Chain Expected in Salem In Few Months By STEPHEN A. STONE From sources considered reliable it is reported that W. T. Grant company, operator of the third largest chain of variety stores in the United States, will open a store in Salem this year or early in 1955. The location has not been made, known. Other new units to be started in the Northwest in the next year or so, it is said, will be two stores in Spokane and one in Yakima. The W. T. Grant Company oper ates stores in 39 states, and open ed its 500th unit in September, 1953. The largest number are in New York, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania. Among stores to be opened this year is a 100.000-square foot unit in Philadelphia. Sales by the Grant stores in 1953 are estimated to have totaled $300,000,000, and the company ex pects to duplicate that figure this year. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 4) Jimmy Goes To See Mother LOS ANGELES (UP) James Roosevelt flies East tonight, pos sibly to see his mother. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, as behind the scenes attempts were underway to settle out of court his bitter separate maintenance battle with his estranged wife. The eldest son of the late President was not available for comment on his scheduled two day trip, but his brother, Elliott, said "it is entirely possible Jim my will sec mother after all, that's where she lives." Elliott said he did not know whether James would meet with brother Franklin, Jr., a New York con gressman. Mrs. Roosevelt, according to re ports from New York yesterday.' was on a speaking engagement out of thel city but her son is not sched uled to arrive at New York's Idle- wild airport until tomorow morn ing via Trans-World Airlines. Roosevelt, charged with whole sale adultery in a suit filed by his wife, Romellc, cancelled a speak ing engagement tonight and said publicly only that he was "called East." Sizzling Heat In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES (UP) Southern' California's winter heat wave con tinued riding desert winds today and threatened to equal yesterday's sizzling 88 degrees, the highest of the eight day hot sepll. The mercury in Los Angeles soared to its record high for Feb. 7 at 1:25 p.m.. after rising from a minimum of 55 degrees, recorded at 7:05 a.m. Culver City recorded 92 degrees, making it the hottest spot in the nation. Coastal cities from Santa Bar bara to San Diego reported that temperatures in the high 80s at tracted thousands to the beaches and hundreds into the surf. County lifeguards made 25 rescues at Her mosa. Redondo and Manhattan beaches. Weather Details Mfttimum TtttrrdiT. Ui minimum U Jit, Ifl. Total 21-hour prrrlplUMon: u: (or menlh: tit normal. 1.4.1. Sraiti prr rlpltatlon. IHAAt normal. ?SWi'. Klvrr (fttpart hr 1 . 8. Wrath Senate Opens Probe of High Cost of Coffee WASHINGTON L'P' A senate subcommittee opened formal hear ings today on soaring coffee prices but Sen. J. Allen Frear, Jr., said American housewives arc the real key to the problem. "Housewives can do more than we can ever hope to accomplish if they will use more coffee sub stitutes and milk," the Delaware democrat declared. "The coffee people know it and it worries them." Frear, a member of tlie special Banking Subcommittee' handling the investigation, suggested that Americans eliminate coffee from at least one or two meals daily as the sure fire way to drjve prices down. Subcommittee Chairman J. Glenn Bcall 'R., Md.' called Gus- tavo Lobo. Jr., president of the i ligation by the Federal Trade corn New York Coffee Exchange, as the i mission is in full swing, lt has lead off witness at today's hear-1 ings. ' .. ' f - I , m,, , , 5000 Families Quake Victims MEXICO CITY Fears of a heavy death toll in the earthquake-shattered region of Chiapas stale in southern Mexico, diminished today as new reports trickled in from the remote mountain region. But 5.000 families were believed home less following the severe shock Fri day. The quake centered in a 50-milo- widc coffee producing area 60 miles west of the Guatemalan border. Four towns were reported devas tated. Chiapas state Gov. Efrain Aran da Osorio said yesterday telephone reports from four mayors in the hardest-hit region did not list any fatalities. Officials said the lL.it construc tion of village houses probably ac counted for the lack of heavy cas ualties although damage was esti mated at 20 million pesos (23 mil lion dollars'. Locate Diesel In Deschutes MAUPIN. Ore. W Railway officials think they have located a huge dicsel locomotive unit which plunged into the Deschutes River last week after crashing into a landslide. The bodies of two men. engineer F.rnest Barton of Portland, and fireman r'arl Sutton of Wishram, Wash., arc believed imprisoned in the 125-ton engine. Divers have not been able to enter the river because of its swift current. On Saturday an electronic device that indicates the presence of metal was swung out on a boom over the river. It registered at a point about 200 feet downstream ! from the scene of the crash. j Workmen, using probing bars. ; were swung out over the area and they reported they hac1 found scrapings of paint similar to that ' used on the Spokane. Portland and j Seattle engine. ; A freight car. loaded with canned I goods, is believed to be about .100' feet downstream from the diesel. SI'iS officials reported Sunday they probably will have to build a coffer dam to get the engine out of the river. Leon Israel, Jr.. vice-president of the New York Coffee and Sugar r.xciidiige. iuiu .icnaic Banning j subcommittee nc crop crippling i Brazilian frost last July 4 has en- abled growers to demand and get ; more favorable prices He also indicated that current coflec consumption conceivably could strip Hrii7.il of all its corn ice supplies by next June. The Beall subcommittee investi gation is the third wave in the of ficial attack on zooming prices, now over $1 per pound for most brands. The Agriculture Committee fin ished its limited study by approv ing a bill to put the coffee ex change under federal regulation A White House endorsed inves- centered thus far on coffee change operations. cx- CHURCH WRECKED IN QUAKE i v " ' ' k ' ' ' ' :'v' 4. o. Front of this old stone church in Petlancingo in southern Mexico was wrecked by quake which shook area Friday morn ing. Priest, only, person in church at time, was slightly injured, Trcmblor left 5,000 families homeless but apparently caused no deaths. Four villages were reported virtually destroyed. (AP Wirephoto) US Gamblers Tax No Bar to Local Penalty WASHINGTON Uft The Su preme Court split 5-4 Monday in upholding the bookmaking convic tion of a Californian who claimed his purchase of a $50 federal gambling tax stamp barred city police from prosecuting mm. Rescue Crew on Grounded Ship LONG BEACH. Calif. (UP)-The Panamanian freighter Harry Lun deberg ran aground off Lower Cal ifornia early today, forcing its cicw to abandon ship. The Coast Guard reported that the S. S. Flavia of the Grace Line picked up all men from the strick en ship shortly after they took to life boats. The vessel was report ed "a total loss." ; The Flavia and several small Mexican fishing boats approached the scene within an hour after the Lundcberg sent out a wireless that it was "taking water." The. Flavia was within five miles of the Lundeberg when it went aground on shoals located in the Cape of ban Lucas. Number of men aboard was not immediately known. Coast Guard spokesmen here said the Flavia and several small Mexican fishing vessels were I standing by until tho Coast Guard cutter Perseus, en route north ! from Acapulco, Mexico, arrived on the scene. Idle Ships for Grain Storage ASTORIA. (UP) Capt. E. E. Tlmrne, superintendent of the reserve fleet at Cathlamet Bay here, said today he had been notified by the Maritime Com mission at Washington that ships here and at Olympia, Wash., had been r.ppmved for storage of surplus grain from Pacific North west wheat fields. Capt. Thornc said approval al so had been siven for dredging a mooring basin to accommodate ! the ships. Some 100 ships in the Astoria reserve fleet and 35 at Olympia will be used fur storing the grain, according to the Astoria tham'brr of commerce which said jt ot lhc (if,ure, from hc Si department of agriculture. Each (ship would store about 400,000 bushels of grain. Convicted Pastor Not a Methodist PORTLAND i-Church officials pointed out Monday that the Rev. Edwin L. Heem, who was convicted here of statutory rape. was a pastor in the Christian Church, instead of the Methodist Church, as erroneously reported by he Associated Press Feb. 4 Formerly at the Cornell, Ore.,! rhurch, he was sentenced last week to three years in prison. Thei 'rase involved a 15-year-old girl of his congregation. 31 But every member of the court raised questions in varying de grees of sharpness over the meth ods used by Long Beach police in arresting the gambler, Patrick Irvine. Irvine related that after he bought his gambling tax stamp city police had a skeleton key made so that they could get into his house. He said they then in stalled a microphone and other listening devices, recorded his telephone conversations, and placed fluorescent powder on his papers. Justice Jackson, who wrote the majority opinion, said he and Chief Justice Warren favored sending the. whole record of the j lime the executive director of the case to Ally. Gen. Brownell to de-1 League of California Cities, wcath tcrmine whether Irvine's civil cred criticism as a "40-day Demo- l rights had been violated. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 3) Commies Go Underground Yrtaniijiui, ui' rm i.niei j. r.ogar Hoover warned in test - mnnv mnHr. nnhlir Irwlni- fhnt fhi. Communists are destroying party j cards, staging loyalty tests, and even avoiding-old vices to con- cc.il their subervisivc activities. "They communicate . through ! couriers and avoid the use of wriUcn communications," he said. "They have instituted loyalty lests for all prospective under ground personnel. They rotate the underground personnel to avoid detection." The new "stealth" has "in creased the difficulty with which we are faced in trying to han dle' these investigations." Hoover said. It now takes about 10 men, he reported, to trial Communists hcreas it used to take nnly one. Other Developments Hoover made the .statements In ' testimony he gave before the House Appropriations Committee Dec. 9. The testimony was rc- leased amid these other develop-i espionage front. Benson Asserts ! Farm Plan OK'd WASHINGTON W" Secretary of Agriculture Benson said Mon day he hclicvcL a "big majority" of the Republican members of Congress and some Democrats fa vor the administration s new farm plan. The GOP farm chief told a 0n a dresser was a sign sny news conference he is confident inKi " am ,jm Nyj,hboI. ,aj( the bulk of the plan will become , tne c3-Vear-old Ilodcnheim some law. It features controversial flex ible price supports for major crops, to replace Uie present man datory high level price props. Benson said information reach- ing the department from farming i areas indicates increasing support for the program President Eisen.' i hower laid before Congress last i month. He said tho administration i will give whatever help Congress I "lay ask in drafting new farm legislation, hut that it will not use "high pressure methods" on the 'lawmakers Ausmu To Peace Treaty Indict Onassis For Fraud Deals In Surplus Ships WASHINGTON 11 - Joseph E. Casey, former member of Con gress, and Aristotelcs S. Onassis, Greek-Argentine shipping m a g nate, are accused of conspiring to defrud the U.S. government in multi-million dollar surplus ship deals in an indictment opened in U.S. District Court Monday. ' A grand jury returned the indict ment last Oct. 13 but it was kept sealed until Onassis was within uic jm lauiuuuu ut uie cuun. Fabulously wealthy and a world power in shipping. Onassis is a native of Greece but lives in Ar gentina ana is a citizen of that country. , Headquarters of his shipping In'erests are at Monte Carlo. n , Three years ago he bought the , casino mere lor Business omces. Promises to Surrender I Onassis came to the United Mate last week.. Apparently he came knowing he would be con - fronted with the indictment. It was learned that soon after his ar rival his attorneys telephoned the Justice Department and said they understood he was wanted. Informed that was true, the at torneys said 'Onassis would sur render in court at any date ap pointed. '; (Continued on Page 5, Col, 4) Demo Ticket In California FRESNO, Calif, t Richard Graves for governor, and U. S. Rep. Samuel W. Yorty for V. S. Senator head the organization Dem ocratic ticket in the 1954 state elections. The slate was selected with, an eye to "electability" at a Veckend convention of the California Demo cratic Council, new campaign arm of the party. It marked the second time since 1909, when the direct primary law came in. that the Democrats have got together lo make pre-primary endorsements. The endorsements arc unofficial ; ard Jh effect serve as rocommenda- lions to Democratic voters. Graves, 47. of Lafayette, long crat" and Yorty, 44, a second term congressman from Los Angeles, ! overcame opposition that finally j (ailed for lack of another candidate, to oppose Republican Sen. Thomas 1 II. Kuchel. ! A Republican for many years, Graves rc-regislcred as a Demo ! crat only last December. Airforce Nominations nnf f nCk Onnla JCIII IU HlC JvllUlC uiActnvr-ivw , i i . ,,Z1 11? . I ' " tLlUL6 Senate, including selection of Gen. Otto P. Wcyland lo be commander of the Tactica' Air Command. Eisenhower nominated Lt. Gen. Earlc K. Partridge lo be com mander of the Far Knst Air Forces. He also recommended that Partridge be promoted to the rank of full general. Partridge would succeed Wey Innd in that post. He has been serving as deputy lo Wcyland. Weyland. as chief of the Tacti cal Air Command, would succeed Gen. John J. Cannon, who is re- tiring, - Mystery Veils Sayings OfBodenheimandWife NEW YORK il - Maxwell Ro denheim. sensational writer of the 192i)'s who in his later days some- limes had to beg lo eat, was found slain Sunday with his third wife. Their bodies were sprawled In a dingy, furnished room on the fringe of the Bowery, not far from the Greenwich Village where he lived most of his bizarre life. times wore it on the streets. Police sent out a 13-stntc "pick up for Harold Weinberg. 25, de scribed as a scar-faced "fast talk er," for questioning in connection ...:,u I.:lt:... ' . . K I olicc said they also were ques- Honing persons in Greenwich Vil - laK wnt participated in "sadistic : orgies which Ilodcnheim attend - which Ilodcnheim attend-1 ea. Bodenhelm's death had none of the. beauty which he foresaw in a poem "kisses of death, like scented mriitea bv Bia4 Dean Remains Korean Peace Special Envoy Washington ii - The state Department said Monday "there is no basis in fact" for published re ports that Arthur H. Dcan will 'c replaced as special ambassador for Korea peace talks. A department spokesman read a written statement to newsmen when asked for comment on a dis patch by The New York Herald Tribune Monday saying that Dean is being replaced. The statement said: "There is no basis in fact for the report that Ambassador Artliur H. Dcan s being withdrawn from his 'assignment "Ambassador Dean is prepared 1 10 return to Panmuniom for a re sumption of the negotiations to- wara oeacc conference provided that lhe eonditions which he has , laid down for the rcsunrntion of . the conversations are met by the communists department holds the high- I est regard for the exceptional j ability Mc Dcan v demonstrated during the negotiations at Pan- 1 munjom." NAM Opposed . T-H Proposals WASHINGTON Wi The Nation al Assn. of Manufacturers Mon day opposed several of President Kisenhower s proposals for chang ing the Taft-Hartley law and asked a secret strike vote only when one of the parties specifically requests it. George W. Armstrong, Jr., chair man of the NAM'S industrial re lations committee, said in a state ment prepared for the Senate La bor Committee: i w .v, . t,iiM (secret strike vote) should result fear, of a.n upr8 rebellious from a request made by either of workers, it was reported today. , . the parties, that it should not be Weapons possessed by hunters mandatory unless one of the par- and even those of forestry officials ties does make such a request." are being seized, Ibe anti-Commu-EJscnhower asked Congress to I nist "Free Jurists Investigating j write into the Taft-Hartley law new provision compelling unions submit lo a government-conducted other sources, secret strike poll whenever a labor Advices from the Soviet Zone dispute enters the strike stage. said tnat workers had started glow r ailurc of a majority of employes down movements in factories in to vote for the strike would make P.tt .,ino( ni m. , it an unprotected activity. Reds Hit Near Laos Capital LUANG TRABANG, Laos U.R) Communist spearheads today struck lo within 15 miles of this beleaguered capital of Laos. Mil itary dispatches said the fast moving Red columns had reached the Mekong River north of the city. The Communist spearhead had slashed 21 miles through the rought jungle terrain since its position last was reported late yesterday. ' The advance indicated that the important river junction strong hold of Pakseng had been over run or abandoned. News of the rapid Red advance waS received here as French De fense Minister Rene Pleven was flt.inff In InHn-f-htna f mm Pari in an attempt to save the deter - inraling situation. The French position in Laos became desperate after one arm nf a three pronged Communist attack suddenly swept tn Pak seng, in a move apparently de signed to outflank the right wing of the French defense arc. coming In him as he strolled rain down life's road His body lay on the floor, a bul let in the chest. His brunette wile, the former Ruth Fagnn. .15. lay nearby on a cheap cot, fatally stabbed. Both Bodenhcim's poetry and his convention-defying novels. brought him a spectacular, con troversial career. By 193."), he was on the skids, and led a hand of hungry writers into relief head quarters seeking money for food and lodging. Lately, he had taken lo making the round of Greenwich Village bars, peddling manuscripts of poems for 50 cents or a dollar. i Police said that Weinberg, the mBn sought for questioning, was 1 onc ,,f t(,c ne'er-do-wells with ; w,om he spent his dnvs. ' chjrf of Detectives Thomas A. Niclson said "this is definitely not I a robbery murder" but did not dis - j close what other motive might lo ' under investigation. Parley Figl Plans to Come to Berlin From Vienna BERLIN UH - The Big Four foreign ministers decided Monday in secret session to invite Austria for the opening of the Austrian in dependence treaty discussions this Friday at the latest. The decision was announced aft er a four-hour session of the min- isters and their closest associates behind tho locked doors of the Al lied control authority building in the American sector. The foreign ministers also dis cussed point 1 of the order of the day. under which Russia had pro posed a five-power conference in cluding Red China and a general world disarmament conference. While it was not specifically mentioned in the communique is sued after the meeting, a spokes man for the ministers said France's Georges Bidault had been authorized to invite Austrian rep resentatives to sit with the Big Four. The communique gave no indication of any decision taken any part of point 1 nor was there any reference .to point 2, covering discussion of the German ques tion. Austria is point 3. . It was expected that the pro gram calling for discussion of the German question Tuesday would go on as usual in the semi-public session. ; (Continued on Page 5, Col 3) Reds Seize All Hunting Guns BERLIN (UP) The East Gr man Communists have ordered the confiscation of hunting weapons in a Committee"- said. The, committee to i gets its reports from refugees and ,he Bi(, Four Koreign Ministers Conference to keep them under the j Communist yoke. in uuuiiimi in previous reports precautionary Soviet troop move ments, it was. reported today that Soviet tanks had been concentrated near Fuorstemvnldc. 20 miles southeast of Berlin. ' The slowdowns in factories were reported by the West Berlin "fight ing Group Against Inhumanity," which said the leaders were the same men who led the anti-Communist uprising last June. Red Suspects Found in Oslo OSLO, Norway, (P) Norway' government says It has rounded up i group of spy suspects in the Oslo area. The newspaper After)- pnstcn reported today that 10 tn 20 persons were picked up on stiv 1 Pici!"l of !cllin ccrcV t0 ,ne The government in November arrested five farmers in the Arc tic Finnmark province, near Nor way's 130-mile border with the Soviet union, on espionage charges. A communique last night said the security police for some time had suspected a "small group of persons in the Oslo area of il legal intelligence service for a foreign power." The announcement said a num ber of arrests had been made and added: "As the investigations arc ex pected to become very extensive and require some time, further information will not be given out. Shopping News Discontinued PORTLAND il - The Portland Shopping News, a . free weekly newspaper established in 1924. will cease publication after its Feb. 25 issue. In making this announcement, Walter 1. Schade, general man ager, said the suspension was the result of "high publishing costs and stiff competition from two fine citv daily newspapers." the Shopping News, with a clrcu- lotion of more than 100,000, has IS , fulltime employes and about 400 ' carrier boys. It is printed at tha : Vancouver. Wash., Columbian 1 plant, r