Capital AJourna THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY with occasion 1 light rain tonight, Friday; mild temperatures. Low tonight, 36; high Friday, 46. 4 SECTIONS : 36 Pages 69th Year, No. 27 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January 31, 1957 tctertd ai im"" r State Senate Probe Set on Assessments Public Invited to Protest at 2nd Of Hearings By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. Associated Press Wriler The Oregon Senate's Assessment and Taxation Committee Thursday The Tas Commission's program of reappraisal of all property also has resulted in higher home taxes in many cases. Meanwhile, the House Taxation Committee announced it would vote Friday on legislation to en act a 3 per cent sales tax. Since the committee has a 6-3 Demo cratic majority, it is expected fo reject the legislation, and then set ordered a full-scale investigation ! about 'indinS was t0 boost nf ascoscmpnt nrartirrvQ thai have j v-UIl,e locnuia. caused home owners to protest loudly against their property tax increases. The committee announced that two public hearings would be held Members of both houses got stern warnings Thursday that they must submit their bill-drafting requests to the legislative counsel by next Thursday. If they here on the nights of Feb. 4 and i don l. they won t ke able to in 11, troducc their bills. First for Listening : At the first one, Samuel B. Stcw nrl, chairman of the state Tax Commission and head or its prop erty tax section, will explain the property tax picture. The public will be invited to listen, but not to speak. , At the second hearing, the com mittee will listen to any one who wants to protest. The investigation was sparked by Sens. Walter .1. Pearson (D), Portland, chairman of the com mittee, and Rudic Wilhelm R . Portland, who was chairman of the committee in 1955. They said that higher taxes on homes, which have raised a storm nf protest n Portland. Lane Coun ty and other areas, are the result of action taken by the Legislature two years ago to make home taxes uniform with taxes on utilities and industry. Retires Supreme Court Justice Stanley Reed resigned today effective Feb. 25. Reeif, 72, a Democrat, served 19 years on the high court. (AP Wlrcphotn) Justice Reed Resigns From Supreme Court Interim Group Urges Election Laws Changes By JAMES D. OLSON Capital Journal Wriler A constitutional amendment pro vlding for appointment of the state superintendent of public instruc tion rather than by election was proposed Thursday in a package of bills recommended by the legis lative interim committee on elec tions. Another proposed constitutional amendment would make all coun ty officers subject to appointment except for members of the county court or board of county commis sioners. Still another tightens up the elec tion code by requiring a majority of the total number of persons voting at an election to pass a constitutional amendment in place of Ihc present requirement for a majority of votes on the measure. A change in the law allowing filing of absentee ballots up lo 5 p.m. of Ihc day before an election in place of five days before the election is also in the package. All the bills dealing with elec tion law changes were introduced at Ihc request of the legislative interim committee on elections. This committee held a number of hearings throughout the state dur ing the past two years. However, none of the members of the com mittee is back in the present le islalure. The house local government committee introduced a bill cor recting provisions in the law de clared unconstitutional relating to county surveyors. The- bill also provides for statutory qualifica tions for county surveyors in con formity with the constitutional amendment passed by the voters at the last general election. While House Has No Comment on Successor WASHINGTON m President Eisenhower Thursday accepted the resignation of Supreme Court Justice Stanley Reed, effective Feb. 25. Reed, 72, is a Democrat. He has served on the highest judicial tribunal 19 years. The naming of his successor will be Eisenhower's fourth appointee on the Supreme Court. Eisenhower s other appointees are Chief Justice Warren and As sociate Justices Harlan and Bren- nan. The White House said it had nothing to announce at this time regarding a . successor. Reed turned in a letter of resig nation, dated Thursday, saying he wished to retire from aclive serv ice. He is taking advantage of a pro vision ol law which allows him to retire at full pay and subject to call for occasional service on the court if this is desired. Eisenhower, in a letter to Reed, said he was taking the opportunity "to tender my congratulations on your long and splendid record in public service." He also praised Reed s dedi cation and devotion that are so much a part of your reputation." NW Thawing: Roads Slick; Snow on Way By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS There were no below-zero--temperatures in the Pacific North west early Thursday for the first time in more than a week and there was even a spring like thaw in places. ' Rising temperatures brought heavy snow lo parts of the Inland Empire, with 10 inches reported in the Idaho Panhandle. The mercury went up lo 38 Thursday morning at Walla Walla and it was 42 at Cascade Locks. The Weather Bureau forecast rain and snow showers in inland areas and said the temperature may reach as high as 40' in the Inland Empire Friday afler days of bitter cold. Coastal areas were told to ex pect a little snow and rain, with overnight low of from 33 to 36 and maximums Friday of from 40 to 46. In Portland and other Willam ette Valley points the tempera- lure rose above freezing for the first time since Jan. 17. The thawing, which began late Wednesday, caused slick roads and highways in some areas. Worst spots were along the Wil lamette River and cast of Port land where cold winds swept down the Columbia Gorge. Ike Seeks Alien Law Revisions Bids Congress Up Immigration By 65,000 WASHINGTON Wl President Eisenhower Thursday asked changes in the immigration laws so it will be easier lo give haven lo refugees "who have fled or in the future flee" from Communist tyranny. In a 2,000-word special r.iessagc lo Congress, the President called also for general revisions of the law to allow about 65,000 more immigrants to come to this coun try each year. The present an nual quota is 154,857 and is based on Ihe 1020 census. Eisenhower asked quotas based on the 1950 census. Asks Quota Revamping Eisenhower also- called for a redistribution of the immigration quota "in proportion to Ihe actual immigration" from 1924 through July 1, 19551 An effect of this would be to in crease the number of southern Europeans and Mediterranean peoples permitted to emigrate to the United States. This is because the number of immigrants from that area has been greater in recent years than in the earlier period on which quotas are now based. Eisenhower said, loo, that Con gress should pool the unused quota numbers for Europe, Africa, Asia and the Pacific area. These would then be available on a first come, first served basis without regard to where a person was born. This similarly would open the way for admitlancc of additional southern Europeans since present ly the unused quotas have been those of northern European coun tries. Would Admit Orphans Further; Eisenhower said, pro visions should be made for the an 7 Planes R Near Schools: Six Killed mSVML lO JL' aii & "t ... Rackets Prohe Help Promised By Teamsters Officials Who Dodged Queries Before Now Will Cooperate WASHINGTON Wl A new Sen ale committee empowered lo in vestigate racketeering in labor unions and industry had a prom ise Thursday of cooperation from Teamsters Union officials who re fused answers lo a previous Sen ate group. Frank Brcwsler, president of the Western Conference of jfeam- sters, and Nugent Lafoma. secre tary, wired a pledge of full co operation, Brewster was cited for con tempt by the former commitlec for refusing lo say, among other things, whether he got union money outside his salary. He con tended the original group lacked authority to probe labor unions a power given specilically to the new committee. Sen. Ives (R-NY) said Thursday the newly created committee will expose crookedness "wherever we may find it, cither in labor or industry The bipartisan eight-man group is expected to name Sen. McClcl- lan (D-Ark) as lis chairman, and Ives as vice chairman. The Sen ate voted unanimously Wednes day to place the inquiry in its hands, Vice President Nixon, who ap pointed the members, must set Street a Canal in Coal Mining Town .' V ' ETTV-f- ; & HQ I " 11 i -Clr M u - ?l t 1 V &t-J M km I h&i.'" it.-.i.' mm ft; i 1 I 5 a, a WJ .Ml i- wr. I 4 .'I nual admission of orphans since the dale for its first meeting. Mc- DA Undecided About Retrial For St. Clair Whether a new trial will be or dered in the case of the Stale of Oregon against Jack St. Clair, local agent for the American News Co., may depend upon the reading by District Attorney Hatlie Bratzel of Ihe pockbook entitled "A Dame Called Murder." He is acuscd of selling indecent literature. ' The first trial conducted last December by District Attorney Kenneth Brown resulted in a "hung jury." More recently, an other trial in which Claude Cum- mings, Salem News Agency opera tor, was the defendant, resulted in an acquittal. In this instance the book involved was "Men Into Beasts." Asked concerning a report that pressure was being brought against Ihe district attorney to halt fur ther prosecutions because of the expense involved. Miss Bralzell said that she had not been sub jected to pressure of any sort. "In any event further action will de pend upon my own reaction in the matter, at the same lime taking into consideration what has gone before." Meanwhile Mrs. John Pfeifer, Silverton. housewife who w a s largely instrumental in providing a Marion county grand jury that returned indictments with various I at 8 a.m. The mill was closed types of materials, says she will : down at the first of the week not abandon her crusade- against ' by freezing weather, the sale of "indecent literature." j The renewed operation at first Mrs. -Pfeifer has in her posses-; will affect only the green end of sion a letter from H. J. Simon. I the mill. Production on the dry resumed at a later Ply Mill Will Reopen Friday DALLAS (Special) The Wil lamette Valley Lumber Co. ply wood mill will resume operation Friday morning with the day shift there are many Americans eag er to adopt -children from abroad." 7A.. w A number of other administra tive and technical changes were requested. They include: 1, Eliminate inspection of aliens arriving from Alaska and Hawaii. 2. Repeal the law's requirement that aliens must specify their race and ethnic classification when ap plying for entry permits. 3. Drop inequitable provisions concerning the status of Asian spouses and of adopted and other children." 4. Eliminate the requirement for fingerprinting of aliens on tem porary visits. The Russians and other Communist countries have made a propaganda hullabaloo about this provision, contending it insults Europeans, who arc finger printed only for criminal cases. Woman Killed In House Blaze At Hood River HOOD BIVEfl Ml - Mrs. Bob Orcutt was killed and her bus band and their six-mnnth-old son critically burned early Thursday when a fire flashed through their one-room home near here. Firemen said the blaze appar ently caused by an exploding oil heater reduced the little bouse to aslies. Clcllan and Ives Indicated they expect lie will call the meeting 600n.-J'..-.-.r!ii. -:."- Members said privately tncy expect the new committee to slart its probe with anolhcr look at af fairs of the Teamsters Union, on which the Senate Investigations subcommittee already has started hearings. Flood Relief Speeded Into Sixof60Men Rescued From Stranded Train CHAMA, N.M. (UP)-The lirst six of some Ml trainmen stranded on snowswepl Cumbres Pass since Saturday arrived here in Army Weasels today and reported one man slill on Ihe pass was feared lo have pneumonia. The six rescued men. bearded and lired but in good spirits, said all remaining with two trains stalled in snow along the pass were in ' no danger and comfort able. But brakeman AI Locke, Salida Colo., said the sick man, identified as Carl Gilbert, a bulldozer oper ator from C'hnma, was running a temperature and quite ill. Gilbert was one of 2.1 men bunked in a section hand bouse alop the pass. This group won't be rescued until l-ridny. WILLIAMSON, W. Va. Main business Blrett of Williamson, coal mining center -of 9,000 population, lies under water at peak, of Tug Klver flood. Eitlmaled 75 per cent ot city wa under water, AP Wirephoto) 3y THE ASSOCIATED I'll ESS Numerous towns in Ihe Anna lachian Mountain coal mining area lay prostrate Thursday, stun ned by floodwaters that took 12 lives, left thousands homeless and caused untold millions of dollars damage. 'he floods, sweeping out of the mountains :nto southeastern Ken tucky, West Virginia, southern Virginia and cast Tenncsso. may be the worst in the region's history. President Kisonliower lias des ignated flooded eastern Kentucky 'major disaster area and or dered use of whatever lederal funds are necessary lor relief. Ihc President acted in response to a telegram from Kentucky Gov. A. B. Chandler. Gov. Cecil Underwood of West Virginia also joined with .Chandler in asking for immediato aid. Kentucky has 8 dead, West Vlr- gina 3, and Virginia l. The Army, Red Cross, Civil Air Patrol and other agencies worked together in ferrying porlable gen erators, water purifiers anil ty phoid vaccine into stricken areas Weather forecasters warned of new rains today or tomorrow and again Saturday or Sunday. Leaden skies stretched from the Kentucky and West Virginia border lo Ten- nessee. Twins Share Mumps, Sore Jaws Prince Goes tt !sion a letter Irom H. J. Simon, i ine mill, r lllTO I lOSlllta I ipoflal inspector of Washington, end will be iU " "1 D.C, in which Ihe book "Men In-, date. WASHINGTON Ml L i 1 1 1 c tu Beasts" is regarded as nonmail-: Two hundred and : JO men were t Prince Mashhur of Saudi Arabia, able. .laid off when the mill closed limping but wearing a wide, dis-j aiming 5IIllie, Cllll-iru ndiu-I nv nvnr wrrn rriAf L'C Heed Army Hospital Thursday for HMIiMIIV WMI I llr,? a medical check up. The 3'i-year-old prince, came In this country father. King Sand, for it, has suffered since birth from partial paralysis of his right hand and leg. President Kisenhowor arranged for some of the country's best military physicians, stationed at DAYTON. Ohio-iL'P) Mrs. "without funds and will be unable Walter Reed, to examine t he Cvnthia Cnrrnditll, a 23-year-old to be there .- ; - . Salem. Eugene Balk On Bus Eiiie Subsidy Salem and Eugene city officials over the bus line or providing a tS;Nobody Wants 'Me,9 i birth from Complains Bigamist prince and try to determine ex- nrccnant blonde, who says acuy wnai is wrong. DO YOU KNOW Tlud f 81 an-ins B-mltnl ulnnnm ntnuflUrs iron the CiOrartu trolte m toM 1Kb dkmurnbnt niKndbar friflu ptindi KnWh Oi California? The Read tory Sec. 1- Page 6 When told she would have to one seems to want mc" was due I spend one more night in Ihc Day- (o be returned lo Richmond. Ind..ton jail, .Mrs. inrranuu ruonea Indav to face bigamv charges for her back and exclaimed "oh, no," the iotest of her seven marriages. 1 complaining of the steel bunks and The attractive wom who ; Tuesday sa,a- .,., , -. M0-ris llie.-o. Toe IBrre o io to Detective Sgt. J.H. Pickard said )et y v oll nrrjago Mrs. Corradilti signed a statement mixi,p Wednesday admitting she had. jWfis said i,e wouid stick by taken part in a bigamist 'marriage Mrs Corraditti, despite her past, in Richmond. . t hut Fultz returned to Wilmington Also due here was the woman's; College any was unavailable for mother, Mrs. Evelyn Boyd. San comment. Diego, who called Wednesday. Authorities said Mrs. Corraditti i nifht to say she wanted toijy'ip obtained only four divorces and her daughter. thai her .till legal marriage was Another call was receded from to Benny Corraditti, 2". in Knkslon W.M. Vilcs. Oklahoma City, who Ga.. in I5M. Her latent two are , said h u ber father but wai, bigamist marnajci, Uicy laid. f rf Y . Wife vfey ! i meeting here this morning lo study City iransil Lines future in both cities agreed the bus firm was in financial distress but were not in clined to give Ihe company any aid which might cost (he cities money. ' The opinion was summed up by Eugene Mayor John iMcGinly, who presided at the meeting, when he said: "We are not particularly in lereslcd in picking up the check." Mayors and council members of both cities along with their city managers, attorneys and other of ficials were present for the meet ing which began at It a.m. and was to continue through the afternoon. Much of Hie morning's discus sion revolved around Ihe question of a city's responsibility for mass transportation. Although those present admitted that the transit firm was in dire financial straits, they question the effect on the public. Salem Mayor Robert White re called that a public meeting on the cancellation of night service brought a nearly tilled council chamber but that only lluee or four were present when Ihc council actually look action Alter Ihe night service was eli minated I didn't receive a call. be said The Eugene mayor said Ihe com pi a nils regarding night bus eh minalion Ihere came from about 28 persons. The idea of Ihe city's taking subsidy also met with a cold shoulder from the council mem bers of both cities. . Snlem Alderman E. E. Roth said 'I don'l like the idea of owning Hie bus company and f also don't like the idea of subsidy.". -(Continued on Page S Column 1) Weather Details Maximum vttrrriav. 19! minimum I oris y, 37. Total 24-hour iirrrlplla tlon: .01; for mnnih: 2.41: normal, V64. Reason nrrrlpllallon, 11.13; nor mal, 23,99. Itfvrr hfliht. -.2 nf a foot. (Report by V. ft. Heather llureaii.) Metropolitan To Construct Salem Office An ultramodern office building, containing some 4,000 square feet of space on a single lloor Is to be constructed at the northwest corner of Center and North Cottage streets, When completed the building will house . Ilia district ullices of (he Metropolitan Life Insurance com pany. It will cost, approximately $50,000, although the exact ligurc will not be known until bids have been received. The site, which Is L-shapcd has a 1 10-foot fronlage on Center street and Mi feet on Codngc. It is cur rently occupied by two older type residences, owned by Charles W. and Kslher M. Brock. The land has been leased from the Brocks for 25 years by ,loe K. and Mabel OeWilt, who will finance Ihe building and lease it lo the Metropolitan company. The Salem ollice of Ihe Metro politan Life Insurance company has been located on Ihe third floor of the Masonic building for the past 30 years. William H. Vcllon is the local manager, 40-60 Students On Grounds Injured VAM MT1VG nnv.r in A I.,. : transport plane and a jet fighter collided Thursday on test flights nign over me aan rernanao vai- .. Icy, killing five men aboard tin planes and at .least one school- . child. - Two or three score more school children were injured by the fall- ing wreckage. Pieces of Ihe big transport, a DC7, showered down In flames oil three schools. Pour aboard the airliner and the pilot of the jet " were among the dead. Jet Falls In Canyon ; The jet came down in a can- yon. , .. - Both planes were on test flights at the time of the collision. The schools are all within three blocks of each other in the small community of 'Pacoima east of here. Pacoima Junior 'High, whore there are 1,890 students, was worst . hit. Parts of the large plane plum meted down on an athletic field where gym classes were being conducted. 75 Boys Playing . One observer said it was a flaming main section of the trans port fcH on the playing field, where there were 75 boys at games. "The boys fell as though they were hit with a scythe," one. teacher said. , The area was roped off. Police , appealed to spectators to stay away. . : .. A number of children were -re-, ported laid out on the grass and " covered with blankets avraitintf (ho arrival, of ambulances. Torrabolla Elementary School." adiacenf with 918 'Student'. itlsnA was hit by pieces, as was Hflddon Klemcnlary School, three blocks .. away. The transport, a four-e n g 1 n e DC'7, was on a lest flight out of ; Douglas Aircraft Co's field at nearby Santa Monica. The com pany said there were four men aboard, including the pilot, Wil liam Carr, and the co-pilot, Arch ie Twitchell. The jet apparently was an F89 Scorpion on a production test flight out of Palmdale Airport in the Antelope Valley. Northrup Air craft Co. said the plane apparently .. was one pf Us craft and two men were aboard. One man, Curtis A. Adams, 28, . of Palmdale, a civilian radar ob server for Northrop, parachuted. ; He suffered face burns and shock and was brought to St. Joseph Hospital In nearby Burbank.. Forest Service . To Add Camping Picnic Facilities PORTLAND Ul - The U, S. Forest Service Thursday an nounced plans to increase camp ing and picnicking facilities in Oregon and Washington In the next five years. ,1. Herbert Stone, regional for ester here, said that 419 new camping and picnicking grounds, ( which will accommodate 8.75.1 ad ditional families, are planned for Ihe two slates by 1962. - The existing 909 camps and grounds also arc to be repaired. He said that recreation visits lo national forests of Oregon and Washington hit an all-time high n( 5't million in 1935 compared wilh 3'i million in 1946. RI.UEPRINTS FimiEl? fl Sweden Reveals Biiss jllSpyiiig on A-Shcltcrs JT -, J STOCKHOLM ii Security of-1 The engineering firm which em- Jerry and Cary Sloan Iwln sonn of Mr. and and (oilchl llimr )n hurl. The twins, 8, have Mrs. Frank Slnan, 395 South lMh, rrr lhln( fr rfrr (i,Pr, hut Ihe (irli haven't rriught rrrrthin( didn't have In rome ,li pairs Thursday Her both were hit Willi mumps. Here thry (ouch) show Ihalrlwo eaiei are worse than one, the mump Clauiscn) -yet. (Capital Journal Photo by Jerry ficials said Thursday a large-scale Soviet attempt to probe the sec- rels of Sweden s underground de fenses ngninst A-bomb attack is involved in this country s kilc.st spy plot. A 32-year-old Turkish Armenian engineer, Hrdros .nriaryan, nns been jailed. He is awaiting trial next week lor "grand espionage in favor of a foreign power." Two Swdish engineers, described a his employers, have been charged wilh grnss carelessness in handl ing secret documents.'1 Security officers said there Is no doubt Ihe foreign power in volved is Russia. They said evidence lo be pre sented at Ihc trial includes 50 min- ulrs nf films nf meetings between Zarlaryan and Soviet embassy nf licials, taken by Swedish security ponce. ployed Zarlaryaii was engaged In work for the government s fortifi cation administration. This is the government depart ment which is building n country wide network of underground atomic bomb-proof nnval baes and air bases. Security officers said Xatlaryan had handed Soviet Russians blue- 'prints and information nf under- S . I .. .,l.l,la1.nu,nlE KMitiiNi Minimi y i-sinuiii vm.-i and fortifications of the utmost Importance to Sweden's defense against an invasion. The prosecutor's Indictment consisted nf one pnh'lc and one secret part. Most nf Ihe trial was expected to be held in secret In nrder not lo disclose Ihc precise extent of Ihe damage done to Swedish security News in Brief i For Thursday, January SI, 1957 NATIONAL Bodwell Denies Grimes Killing - Sec. 2, P. 8 Federal Aid Rushed To Flood Zone Sec. t, P. 1 LOCAL Pedcslrlan Death Hate Down . . .. Sec. 2, P. S House Vole on Sales Tax Due Friday Sec. 1, P. 2 STATE . Senate Group Slates Assessments Probe Sec. 1, P. 1 Sweden Savs Russ Spy Sodght A-Shelter Data sec. I, f. i SPORTS Baylor, Machamcr Stage Scoring Due sec. , i: i District Prep Games .Sec. 4, P, 1 REGULAR FEATURES Amusements Sec. 1, P. 2 Editorials Sec, 1, P. 4 Locals .-See. 1, P. 5 Society Sec. 1, P. -7-8-9 Comics Sec. 3. P. 10 Television Sec. 2, P. 4 Want Ads See. 2, P. 4-3 Markets See. 4, P. 3 rwnihu rilv See. 9. P. 4 Crossword Punle ... Sec. 3, P. W Food i. v T