Capital jlJo THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY with rain and fusty wind tonight, Saturday. Slightly warmer. Low (anight, 42: high Saturday, 0. ' FINAL EDITION 66th Year, No. 42 ZZ?,;' Salem, Oregon, Friday, February 19, IS Price 5c II Inheritance Tax Revenues Sliow Increase Unander Reorganiza tion Brings Tax Pay ments From Evaders By JAMES O. OLSON Through reorganization n both the offici and field staffs of the inheritance tax division of the State Treasurer's office by State Treasurer Sig Unander, inheritance tax collections during the 1933-55 biennium are expect ed to reach $6,500,000 and pos tibly a top of S7 million, 'ar in excess of the anticipated rev enue frcm this source set at the beginning o" the biennium at $4,465,000. Treasurer t'l ander said Fri day that for a long period only Multnomah county and some of the larger Oregon cities were properly and completely investi gated, leaving a ) rge section of the state untouched by inspec tion of county records, the prin cipal sources uncovering trans fers of property which had es caped taxation. I these areas, the inheritance division was de pendent completely on the re ported taxable assets as furn ished the office. 1 Eases Tax Burden In commenting on the expect ed large increase, Treasurer Unander calls attention to the fact that an: of these taxes un collected places an additional tax burden on the general tax payers of the state. "Because of the loss of large revenues n the past that did not come to the attention of our office, either through ignorance ot. the part of the people or by persons who were actually delib ate in tax evasion, arrangements (Continued on Page 5, Col. 6) Senate to Pass Air Academy Bill WASHINGTON "B - Senators considering legislation to create an Air . Force academy Friday exacted three commitments from Secretary of the Air Force Talbott, the measure. It has already pass- j cd the House. In a session with the Senate Armed Services Committee, Tal bott agreed to: 1. Accept recommendations of a proposed commission as to a site for the academy or else ex plain to congress why he did not. 2. Put a ceiling of about 145 million dollars on construction costs. Construction is expected to be a five-year job. The bill authorizes 25 million dollars for tho first year. 3. Submit within a day or two a proposal (or an interchange of some graduates of service acade mics among the Air Force, the Army, and the Navy. The thought is that unification will be improved if some air academy graduates serve in the Army or Navy and vice versa. Oregon Coast Road Closed The Oregon Coast Highway was closed Friday, for the third time this winter, by a slide at Jetty Creek, north of Rockaway in Tilla mook County. A detour. 14 miles long is available via the Miami River Road. The Highway Commission also said that chains are required be cause of packed snow on the road from Government Camp to Timber line Lodge, and on the East Diamond Lake Highway. It recommended that motorists carry chains at Warm Springs Junction, Santiam and Willamette Passes. Austin, and Seneca. There is sanded packed snow at Government Camp. All other points reported bare pavement. Rain and Wind To Be Expected The wind and rain were back; to build Pelton dam on thc Dcs- in good measure for Salem and j chutes river, the Ninth U. S. Cour vallev areas, Friday, and from j of Applcas ruled late yesterday, thc fivedav forecast it looks as 'of Appeals ruled late yesterday, if this section will slosh around i Thc court threw out an FPC for a few more days. Wind was clocked as high as 40 miles per hour velocity in ' project in Jefferson county, peak guts by the weather bu- In a 2-1 ruling, with Judge Wil reau in Salem Friday morning, liam lleaiy dissenting, thc court minute averages being 27 miles. held that the commission had ex Tk. immobile forecast is for i cccded its jurisdiction and had more guty winos lonigm nm, Saturdav. ! Aloag with the rain, tempera-, Hires are to continue mnn ra the next five day, , As result of the renewen rains, rivers in the va ley are sngnuy now. At Sa- .- !cm i 1L. ,1' 1 Umnl lin 111 I .t feet Friday morning. Italian Senate Opens Debate Scelba's Plan 2500 Police Stand Guard Against Communist Riots ROME (A5) A divided and an gry senate opened debate Fri day on Premier Mario Scelba's pro-western program. A heavitly armed 2,500-man police force stood guard against possible communist agitation. Riot police and carabinicri na tional police blocked off all trap fic in a 10-block area around the Palazzo Madama senate building.' The precaution was taken in the wake of violent communist scenes in both the senate and chamber of deputies Thursday night when the Red-hating Scel ba preset ted the program of his 8-day-old government to parlia ment. The chamber session broke up when communist and fellow-traveling socialist deputies walked out. Tense but Calm The opening of Friday's sen ate session war tense, but calm. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 5) Bill to Hike Tax Exemptions WASHINGTON ( Sen. George (D-Gal introduced a bill Friday to raise the individual income tax ex emption from $600 to $800 this year and to $1,000 in succeeding years. He described it as a move to ward off a serious economic downturn. George is the senior Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee and a former chairman of that group which handles tax lcgisla- , Two other Democratic members of the finance committee Sens. Kerr of Oklahoma and Frear of Delaware joined George in spon soring the bill. The technical staff of lax ad visers to Congress has estimated that an increase in personal ex emptions from the present $600 to $800 would cost five billion dollars a year in revenue. Sex Slayer Dies In Gas Chamber SAN QUENTIN, Calif. UP) Henry Ford McCracken, convict ed of the sex-murder of a 10-ycar-old girl near Santa Ana, was executed Friday for thc crime. Warden Harley O. Teets said the condemned man "went very quietly." The gas was turned on at 10:05 a.m. Physicians reported McCracken dead at 10:14 a.m. The killer, onetime hill-billy musician, appeared quite com-; P0On.v a few minute, before his j ,on 'ZnTrC s las, appeal to the McCracken courts was rejected. McCracken was convicted of thc May IS, 1951. murder of 10-year-old Patricia Jean Hull. Airport Light Panel Now in Operation The new light panel for Salem airport, installed in thc Weather Bureau offices, is now in opera tion. One box controls thc instru ment landing system lights. An other controls thc high intensity lights for the runways and all other lights on thc field. The panel, originally estimated to cost about $2,500 was actually done for about $300. Appeals Court Cancels Pelton Dam License SAN FRANCISCO (UP) - The proval to the project as a whole. Federal Power Commission in-, And we do not doubt that it has the ,u r n,.i.iu. . nrmiiv lii-mw vadrd the sovereign rights of thc state of Oregon in granting Port - land General Electric Co. a license license wnicn wouio nave permmea I construction ot tne nyorociccinc imrM,..i. " 1-,ws 10 Prolecl salmon- lroul and other hsh iiM : " .J 1 a ' "0? Oregon" i The opinion read in part: ! f.j.Mrfi th mmmitsinn I L WUUIJKH'J has the legal right lo give iU ap - Imlah Not at All Interested Donald Dwaine Imlah, 19-year-old Hood River slayer, wasn't in terested Friday when Warden Clarence T. Gladden told him that Imlah's attorney had appealed Im lah's death sentence to the State Supreme Court. HlnHHen who advised Tmlah nf the appeal Friday morning after : Retting olficial noiice of it, quoted Imlah as saying: "Oh, is that so?" Now I suppose I'll be around here until next Oc tober." ' Gladden said Imlah was unemo tional, and shrugged his shoulders. The youth, who had been sched uled to die in the-gas chamber next Tuesday morning, had told reporters he wanted to die, rather than face life in prison. if Imlah's lawyer proceeds with Ihc appeal, it might be a year be- fore Imlah would be executed, if! .ouici De cxecuiea, u, thc high court affirmed thc con-! vicuon. 1 The high court probablv would hear thc appeal next October. , when it holds its fall term at. Pendleton. Asks 26 Weeks Jobless Pay WASHINGTON UPI Secretary; ha, wri ten all BorWriBi i unemployment insurance systems i be strengthened. lie ashen mill inc si.uus prov lie 26 weeks of benefit payments uni-! formly Mitchell noted that thc Federal Advisory Council on Employment Security has recommended that in : each state thc maximum weekly j benefit should at least equal 60 to 67 per cent of the state's average weekly wage. He said President Eisenhower had pointed out too many insurance claimants now get I less than 50 per cent. of their rcgu-! lar waf.es. I Ml iL f a 'I VeOtner . UetQIlS Mklmnm ttftlrrdiv, 441 minima t. i ' dar. 411. Tolal ?l-hnur tirrrlpitillnn: .111 lr mnnth: l..1it nrmal. a-A'!. gtaian prrriptlattan. All narmal. 1.;t. Rifrr hHthl. 1.1 Iffl. Iftrporl pit I .8. Wfllhar Rurcpp.l 1 right to grant a permissive license 1 for the construction of the dam on ! its own property." ' "But." the court declared, "thc ; commission has issued no pcrmis- j j Sjve license. It has issued a license , .purporting to grant thc complete ; ieRa rjRht t0 the construction and . operation of the project. The judges said that, in that respect, "wo think thc commission has exceeded its legal jurisdicion in that the ownership of thejxiwer dam site docs not empower thc U. S. government to use the wa- 1 ters of the Deschutes river .. con- trary to Oregon stale law." Th(, mm cnnchl((.(li u is our opinion that the commission has Irespassrd upon the sovereignty of lhc rt8le Oregon.' The FPC order had been ap- j pealed by the state of Oregon and the S ate rish and uame Lommis- l.ionj. GET TOGETHER AT CONFERENCE , . i . II if I '(- ' ' 1 :r,,-. WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 Gen. Dan Thornton nf Colorado, left; Gov.' Paul Patterson of Oregon, right, and Capt. W. L. Groth of the Virginia state police headquarters at Richmond got together yesterday at a session of the White House con ference on highway safety. Thornton is chairman and Groth is secretary of the public officials section of the conference. (AP Wirephoto.) ; Ike Appoints Group to Reduce Auto Death Toll WASHINGTON (P) A newly created President's Action Com- mittcc for Highway Safety Friday assumed the guidance of a nation- Republicans Now Rule NLRB WASHINGTON (UP) Republi cans .look command of the Na ! tional Labor Relations Board to- i day lor the first time m us la-year history alter the senate approved "'".' " " a GOP appointee over nearly soim ........... Kn...,. Albert C lieeson. lormcr wcsijjg ivc, ast ycar But yison Coast business executive moves I ,)cd "Ho '"e vacant seat on the live-; ; man board that now includes two . I oincr m-iiuum-ciii awmuira u 0 Pennsylvania Avenue. J lie ted I two holdover Democrats. c.at government can give support int scnnie oy a 10 iz voiejand Jeaderslup uui local ouinuis approved Beeson's nomination late yesterday in the closest shave for the adminislration in Congress this year. It was also thc shakiest majority the senate has given any ness. labor, public officials, agri appointee of President Eiscnhow- culture, information media, civic cr. land fraternal organizations, and Beeson's confirmation, giving ! nhn three-to-.wo control of I expected to signal I d for what 0.PIl i called "reexaminations" of past . , j:; MnnriAPAj k., LSZL rf by thc Lost Paradise In Crystal Cave III Wl frfiMi CRYSTAL CAVE. Ky. W A "lost paradise" of jaded coral can- vons was discovered Friday in the nrovinuslv unknown recesses of Crystal Cave the spectacle was stumbled upon by accident by a group of five ex- niorcrs who had wandered fur hours through underground pass - ages and had lost their way. It is being proclaimed "the most important find to dale" for the Na tional Speleological 'cave study) Society's week long exploration. "Thc wall of one large cave room was lined with fossil shells and coral deposits pressed there milllinns of years ago," the find- l crs said. ! ' Thc discovery occurred as ex-! 'plorers sought an answer tn the: I 'e "i!JjSr" hLa'chr: I 'h.a 1 P "l f"1 '"w Jh ' 'ace of the earth near Mammoth Cave National Park. Black Gold Rush Starts in Nevada RENO (UP) A new gold rush was on in Nevada today, hut thc race this time was for black gold, something new in the state that has produced billions nf dollars wort'i of gold and sil - ver The U. S. Land Office here was swamped with hundreds of appli- rants alter Shell Oil office here annoi.nccd that oil in commer cial quantities had been discov ered in Pailrnad valley, 60 miles southwest of Ely in Eastern Nevada. wide campaign to reduce the auto mobile death toll. Gov. Dan Thornton of Colorado, one of the eight members so far named, called the President's ac tion "the greatest forward step in years" toward reducing the haz ards of tho highways. For the first lime. Thornton said, the permanent a ay i o r y .group jiiilUprowdo a. "direct linB ot coordination from the White House to the grass-roots efforts of the communities." Vice President Nixon announced Eisenhower's action late Thursday to the White House Conference on uinhuj-iv Safety. Nixon said the : t ' was vitally interested in the accident problem which cost ,.Ths ;s a ,iril,icm which must be s0vc(j on Majn Slrccl jsiPad have to do the real job. The reports of seven conference task forces were presented to inix on by the representatives of busi women s groups. A "Crusade for Safety" theme lo be buirt around te signing of where sponsors can be found, (Continued on rage o, 1.01. hi BriberyTales Stir Japanese TOKyo li - Japan's pres Japan's press Sat- urday bannered a reported brib. j cry scandal involving top govcrn- ment officials and declared it ' might topple Prime Minister Shi- Keru Yoshida's cabinet. ! i There was speculation that if; Yoshida s pro-Amerrcon aonunis- 1 1 ration falls, a new conservative : coalition government might he , formed by Mamoru Shigemilsu. lie is me onc-icggcn uipiumui wuu signed the surrender fur Japan and served a term as a "war crim inal." Kvodo News Service said testi mony before a Diet investigating committee allegedly linking top government (initials to a shipbinlcl- ing subsidy scandal "is now icarco fatal to thc Yoshida government." This view was echoed by the in- nucnnai newspaper iimiii. ILA Refuses to j0jn With AFL 1. ! tional Longshoremen s Assn. say ' ILA delegates from 20 Atlantic and j Gulf Coast ports have rejected a i bid to join the AFL. Brenner said the delegates of the independent union made the . decision Thursday alter hearing an appeal from AI'l. President Geor- ge Meany at a meeting in Wash- ington The API. ousted the ILA last fr.ll l..p r-Mluen In miri'P Itself (if crime and racketeering. The AI'l. Z control of waterfront labor. South Korea (alls Wg 4' Meet Victory for Soviets Confessions of Germ Warfare Due to Torture WASHINGTON im - Maj. Roy Bley testified Friday he was "mentally and physically broken" by his Communist captors in ho rca when he signed a false con fession to engaging in germ war fare operations. I Bley, 40, appeared at his own request as a witness in tne Ma rine Corps court ot inquiry which is determining whether his fellow officer, Col. Frank H. Schwable. should face a eourt martial for a similar false confession. Bley was named "an interested parly" to the inquiry Thursday after Schwablc's counsel, Col. Paul, Shcrman, told Bley he was "sus pected" of improper dealings with the enemy after Schwable and Bley were captured July 8, 1952. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 6) Reds to Choose Punishment DETROIT Ul - Six Michigan Communists, convicted of conspir acy against the government Fri day were given the choice of prison sentences ranging from four to live years, or going to Russia. In addition, Federal Judge Frank A. Picard fined each of the defendants $10,000. A jammed courtroom heard Judge Picard deliver a scathing criticism of the defendants in passing sentence. The defendants, Saul Wellman, 48: Mrs. Helen Winter, 45: Nat Ganley, 48) Thomas B. Dennis Jr. 35; Pnilip Schatz, 39, and William Allan, 46, expressed no emotion JudK picard aeUvercd thc sen. - L,CTC(1. - - - - Mrs. Winter and Allan were sen lenced to four year terms; Gan ley, five years: Dennis, four years, six months; Wellman, four years and eight months; and Schatz. four years and four months. "Under federal law, I can change this sentence any time within the next 60 days," Judge Picard said, "and if any of you should decide lo want to go to Rus- I jjB wouM be giad to do s0 3 Arrested on Check Charges EUGENE Wl State police ar rested three men driving between Albany and Salem Thursday mgnt alter Eugene and Albany mer chants had reported receiving sev eral bad checks. Thc car was traced by a license number noted by a merchant who became suspicious of a man who attempted to cash a check. Thc three were identified as Lylc Fleishcr, 24. Longvicw; Robert Al len Welsh, 23. and Scott Jewell, 30, both ot .vatllc. I hey were lo nc arraigned here Friday afternoon on present because he was on a vaca forgcry charges. I tion. But such a meeting was far Altogether six bad checks were cashed, most of them for $25 but one (or $75. Dl'I.I.F.S TO MAKE RADIO KKI'OKT NEW YORK Ifl Secretary of State Dulles will report on thc Herlin llig l-our contcrcncc in a nationwide radio address Wednesday Irom 7 to 7:30 p. m. ipS'l'i. the major networks an- , noiinrea rruiay. The nniiiniiHfinenls from NBC. CBS and ABC said the broadcast would originate in Washington. Ike Enjoys AndMav Extend It PALM Sl'Kl.NUS, cant, im'' President Eisrnhnwrr is enjoying his vacation so much he may pro- ion? it. White House aides accompany ing the President Indicated today lhc President may stay nn at this desert resort beyond Monday, set originally lor his return to Wash ington. Mi. Eisenhower arrived here by plane from Washington Wednes day niht. lie and thc first lady are the guests at Smoke Tree lliinili Lome of Paul Helms, pro - prietor of a Los Angeles uakery chain. Host with Helms h l'tJil C.; !ll!mar l.o used to head the government .foreign aid proKram, oi inc ruiue -o y i. JZ pi C dcrbird course. But he was faced IndianGuards Board Ship Unmolested INCHON (UP) An Indian ad vance party boarded the trans port Jalogapal without incident today, but in nearby Seoul for mer war prisoners angrily de manded the arrest of the "In dian introudcrs." The first group of 213 Indian soldiers was sent here to load baggage aboard the troopship. The main body ot 1,000 troops is scheduled to leave the truce zone early tomorrow on the way here. Gen. Won Yong Duk," provost marshal- of the South Korean Army and leading opponent of the free departure of the In dians, said yesterday he is "not interested" in the baggage party. He hinted, however, that cx POW's may oppose the sailing of the main body of troops. The advance detail come by train from the neutral zone early this morning. There were no in cidents en route or at Inchon. American soldiers armed with machine guns mounted on jeeps, rules and pistols, guarded the In chnn port area, but passersby paid scant attention to the dis ciplined and unruffled Indian troops. South Korea Slams Big 4 SEOUL Wl South Korea to night angrily denounced the Big Four agreement to hold a Ko rean peace conference in Ge neva and declared it "cannot give anyone a blank check to write a peace treaty. Thc ROK government, In Its first official reaction ,to the de cision reached in Berlin, called it "fundamentally incompatible with the Korean armistice agree, ment." However, government spokes man Karl Hong Ki did not rule out eventual South Korean par ticipation in a political confer ence on terms agreed to by thc , United States. Great Britain, France and Russia at Berlin yes terday. Although highly critical of thc Big Four action, nowhere in his 400-wnrd statement did Karl say South Korea will refuse to at tend the April conference. Mao Tze-Tung Probably III HONG KONG iff - Moo Tze- Tung piay be gravely ill. TkJ kL. r iiw, nL,.,.-,r.iH Chinese Communist leader from an extremely important meeting oft..4- ."ll-y ll,c empiy vote on his party central committee tn Peiping has raised speculation here about Man's health. The Peiping radio Thursday night, evidently feeling obliged to offer some explanation of Mao's absence sa d thc leader was not too important to be passed up, even by Mao, for a holiday. thc meeting normally would have been the one at which the Politburo, thc core of the party which controls the central commit li,n uai rlprtrtl Hill there was no 1 announcement of a new Politburo. BACA It 1)1 HEIR KIDNAPPED SANTIAGO. Cuba ifl Thc family reported Friday the kidnap I I"" ping lor $50.(100 ransom ot ra- cunilo Bacardi Bravo, 8. a mem- her of the internationally known I Bacardi rum family of Cuba. Vacation iwiin caicning up nn some iaii : work before he could get out on the links, James C. Ilagerty, White House press secretary, said a mail pouch arriving from Washington would keep Mr. Eisenhower busy for a few hours. In the pouch were a series of bills which Congress has passed in the last few days. The President tried out the Tam arisk Country club course for the first lime yesterday. He and Ben llogan. the triple champion of 1 ma. plaved against Helms and mm ..,., ,j,)h , fnr .. Mf Ei,enhnwcr Mi, will, a grin lo .. . a difficult approach to the ninth hole and then sink a three-foot j;- Par four Hogan, the . old maslcr, did no better. See U.S.Moye On Recognition Of Red China WASHINGTON (AP) South Korea's ambassador. You Chan Yang protested Friday that the Berlin conference represent! "a diplomatic victory by the So viets." He said it produced a first ' move by the United States to ward diplomatic recognition of Red China. Yang told a reporter he would make this; charge in writing to the State Department later Frl- clay afternoon in a meeting with Deputy Asst. Secretary Everett Drumright. The ambassador said the West ern decision to meet Red Chinese representatives at Geneva to dis cuss Korean peace means "a com plete change of policy. The move, he asserted, "com pletely bypasses thc United Na tions and disregards a General Assembly resolution sponsored by the United States only last Au gust." Yang Acted as Ordered. Russia's part in Korea as an aggressor "will go into hiding at Geneva" as a result of the soften ing of the American-British-French stand, the ambassador said. Yang, acting on instructions from his government, contended that the Far Eastern conference was agreed to "without our or South Korea's consultation or agreement." . "W pnnnnl tA nlhar than fnn-. ful," he said. "There will be no punishment of thc aggressor, we feel, instead Red China's invitation to be pres ent can be construed by us only as an initial step toward recogni tion." fCnnliniiari in Pacta ft Pnl A Delay in Pact PARIS (AP)-The Berlin confer ence's promise of Indochina peace talks posed a new obstacle, today lo speedy French action on the holly disputed European army treaty. Following Big Four agreement lo meet again April 26 to discuss prospects for peace in Asia, even I lie supporters of the European ' Defense Community faced this di lemma: 1. Press for the French National Assembly to ratify the army trea ty at once as the United States wants and perhaps so anger Rus sia that she would not use her in- "."cc " finest tomrai. " 5 ? ,,ne uLTT.'St eaaf" : of the Victminh rebels to stop the waJ Indochina; or thc army treaty until after the Geneva! conference on Korea and Indochina, and run thc risk of the American Congress cutting off all important aid to France. the final decision on when to put the treaty before thc Assem bly rests with Premier Joseph Lanicl and his Cabinet. Lanicl has been working toward an Assembly vote during thc sec ond half of March or early April. It was not certain whether he would yield under the new pres sure for. further delay. Thc Cabinet, awaiting the return of Foreign Minister Bidault from Berlin, may hammer out ils stra tegy next week. A new excuse for French delay on EDC would hit the U.S. Con gress just as it prepares to discuss U.S. foreign aid appropriations. Many congressmen already are impatient at the delay. Austrian Papers In Mourning I VIENNA. Austria W Austrian non-Communist newspapers were bordered in black Friday and car ricd bitter denunciations of Mos cow's refusal to give this country independence free of foreign occu pation. Thc Communist press not in mourning blamed the West. These were reactions to the fail ure of th Big Four to agree at their conference in Berlin to grant this little nation of seven million people the independence treaty thev pledged during World War II. The right wing independent paper Die Prer.so accused Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov of being cy. icn' and said he will have to "learn from history, which has furnished numerous examples in the past decades, that thc cynical disregard fnr a nation's longing for freedom docs not pay."