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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1947)
PUsidd 9 'QJete U "70 n il 1 o OUNDBD 1651 fx. V il KEW YORK, Sept. It Soviet Depsty Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishlasky (left), confers with Sir Hartley ghaweroea of the United KiafSem detegatiea at Fluhtaff Mttdtwi, ti. at United .Nation Aaseanbly session. Vleltfnsky denounced the "tccoad Mara ball plan" at the Assembly session today. (AP Wlrephote to The Statesman.) Speech Dims Hopes of Settling Red-U.S. Bout By John M. Illghtewer . NEW YORK, Sept. 18 -4JP) Andre Y. Vishinsky seems to have made one thing clear above all others in bis speech to the United Na tions assembly today. The political conflict between the United States and Russia can not be settled or at this stage even-promoted in the United Nations. It will have to be worked out, not in words but in political and econo CUP . LaasMaMBssMasssaasMasMMaMHSi Some days ago in this column I criticized the .current, wave' of communist witch-bunting and the requirement . of oaths denying communis affiliation: on . the part of officials of-unions.. A far bet ter Job in defense of civil rights Is given in an article In September 1 Harper's magazine. It is written by Dr. Henry Steele; Commager, distinguished professor at Co lumbia university' and author of numerous books on history. Its title it"Wbo is Loyal to Ameri ca? It; ought to be widely road and . especially by these super duper, 100 per cent, Americans who think that any deviation from their own conceptions of govern ment and economics is treason. . Commager defines the "new loyalty" as being Tabove all, con formity," As he says: It ii' the uncritical and un questioning acceptance of Ameri ca as it la the political insti 'tutions,j the social relationships, the economic practices . . . It abandons evolution, repudiates the onto popular concept of progress and regards America as a fin ished product, perfect and com plete." - Now i "Americanism" Is not a body of doctrine handed down from some political Mt. Sinai. It Is not rigid dogma. America, the new world, this form of govern ment were all adventure, experi ments If you please. It is a ser ious mistake to assume that our creative - period has ended, that even the slightest variation from political or economic orthodoxy (Continued on editorial page) Frosts Strike Lower Valleys PORTLAND, Sept IB - VP) -Oregon's summer yielded to frost In the low valleys early today and the weather bureau forecast a continuance of cool weather with freezing temperatures in the mountains tonight but somewhat warmer tomorrow. Meacham's 29 degrees was the lowest in the state early today, bat Baker with 31 also was be low freezing and Klamath Falls was only slightly above at 33 de grees. ; Animal Craclccrs 6y WARREN GOODRICH Donl ghre mt that ,YOU-AU,yWToJy Veen down bcre a weeUT i 0Q) ,.7 ?-,.-,- yvy ... -'Jtf r LIS mic actions, in the places where the blue chips are down the middle east, Europe, perhaps Chi na. ManT delegations from the world's small and medium na tions came to the United Nations assemhlv a few Have ifn isvina that the great Russian-American dispute must be settled at all costs. They were hopeful of work ing along that line at this session. .Tonight the best many of them could say about the situation is that Vishinsky made clear Russia doesjiot want war. But that is not essentially a new point, which, for example, might change the present line oi American foreign policy. Officials of the great pow ers have believed for months now that Russia does not want. war. - What did Viahlnskv seek to ac complish with his speech? One Possibility is that ha waa seekine to rally world opinion against present American foreign policy with the cry of war." He direct? ly attacked the ; concept of a wnn poucy towara jkussisu Marshall and Vkhinskv seem in agree in one thing. They recog nize V. N. main u a an-tana of influencing' world public opinion. It thus becomes, under the impact of the wishes to the twd greatest powers, a great mirror for reflect ing world conditions rather than a vital agency -for doing very much a now inem. Parking Meter Receipts Set New Record Parking meter receipts for the week ending September 11 repre sented the- highest week's total since installation of meters last April, it was reported Thursday by City Treasurer Paul H. Hauser whose record shows S2.O30.5O counted last week. Only two previous weeks show ed a total over $2,000, with $2, 033.34 for the week ending July 3 and 92,000.19 for the week end ing June 12. The . treasurer said average weekly receipts from Salem's 1,- 1 00-odd parking meters now stand at $1,826, aa collections in the 20 weeks and four days since meters were put in total $37,438.93. Last week's high total was counted before the newest group of narking meters began collect ing coins in the vicinity of the Elks lodge bunding. Hauser'a figures show also that there has been no noticeable let up in deposits of dimes, which give the depositors only one cent's worth of parking time lz min utes. Last week US dimes were collected; the weekly dime col lection usually ranges between 60 and 100 dimes. ( .!.... Salem's Naval Reserve Unit Activated by Lt. Although lacking a full compli ment, Salem's new naval reserve unit was activated Thursday night by Lt Comdr. Vernon Gilmore, unit, commander. ' A total of 22 men and officers, who have been processed and as- slgned to the unit, were among the 63 who turned out for the activation meeting, rlfty-t w o more applications for member ship are now being processed in Seattle, Wash., Comdr, Gilmore said. .The 22 assigned members were placed on drill pay status last night and physical examination of apprentice seaman was begun by Lt Comdr. M. K. Crothers (MD). When the unit is at full compli ment its rate structure will hold 200 enlisted men and 13 officers. Gilmore said that billets were open in all rates, particularly in the apprentice seaman class where 126 are needed for a full compli Others Named In Accusation NEW. YORK. Sept 18 - UP) - Andrei. Y. Vishinsky, Soviet dep uty foreign minister, cried "war monger today at John ' Foster Dulles and - eight other leading Americans and turned down flatly the new' Marshall plan for re modeling the United Nations. ' The war-monger " charse was thrown directly at Dulles. Dulles was sitting with the U. S. delegation midway in the U. n. assembly hall as the Russian chief delegate vigorously flayed nations and personalities in the basic Soviet policy statement to this session of. the assembly. Dulles began making quick notes and the audience tensed perceptibly when it heard Vishin sky single out a delegate in the hall for part of his attack. Vishinsky declared that Dulles in a speech in Chicago on .Dec. 10, i47, urged a -tough foreign policy against the Soviet Union." Denies Statement Dulles, obviouslr with the in. Droval of Secretary of State Mar shall, issued the following state ment after Vishinsky spoke: "I did not make the statement whieh Mr. Vishinsky attributed to me. I havex repeatedly said and "aaui uiat miumer war need not be and must not be: and I have dedicated myself to that end. "I am confident . that the as sembly will quickly forget the violent personal attacks made by Mr. Vishinskv and nroceed con structively, creatively, and I hope, harmoniously, to deal with its im portant nusiness.' Vlaninsky Summation Vishinsky charred that the Americans he named had made anti-Soviet speeches and state ments. Then he summed it up this way.. ' . "The meaning of these state. ments is clear. They are poorly camouflaged Instigation for war against the U. S; S. R.". After one more short sneech. the assembly adjourned at 8:03 p. m. (EST) until 10 a. m. to morrow, when it will continue the general statements. Vishinsky. hittin hard at the U.S. policy supporting Greece, proposed that the assembly adopt a resolution calling on the U. S., Turkey and Greece to halt "The propaganda of a new war" which he said was being carried on by "reactionary circles." , . Asks Atom Weapon 'Ban " The resolution also called for outlawing atomic: and other wea pons of "mass extermination' as being in the interests of "all the peace loving nations" and as "the neaviest blow upon the propa ganda ' and the instigators of a new war." The Chief Russlon delegate Nn 1 deputy to Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov. blamed the 1Tn(( States and Britain specifically for wm siow process on atomic en ergy control and arms litigation two points advocated by Soviet Russia last vear. DeBoanees Marshall Plan . He labelled the Marshall nlan announced yesterday as an "ill conceived scheme to substitute and by-pass the security council." visninsa-y sat down, to the ap plause of the Russian rrmm In tha assembly, which had cheered him several times. The United States delegation did not applaud or make any move when the grey haired Drosecutin? attorney now a diplomat, finished. (Additional details on page 2) 'Weed Killer' Cocktail Fatal . REDWOOD CITY, Calif, -Sept 18.-(iP)-Mr- Mary Pumphrey Tower, 53, wealthy - widow, was found dead in her home last night and officers said today she died presumably of a cocktail concoc ted of wine and weed killer. Jack O'Brien, acting chief dep uty sheriff, said the drink presum ably was quaffed with suicidal in tent. He ordered an autopsy. - O'Brien said Mrs. Tower left this note: , "Fight it out, everybody! I don't want to live to see the battle'. Comdr. Gilmore ment. Membership Is open to all within a 50-mile radius of Salem. Formal activation and commis sioning of the unit's men and of fleers will take place soon at a public ceremony Gilmore said. In the meantime the unit will con tinue to meet each Thursday night In building T914 at the Salem air port. . Officers assigned to the unit in addition to Gilmore Include Lt T. R. Stook, Lt (Jg) W. W. Cooley, Lt (Jg) J. E. Mudd.and Warrant Bos'n Henry Schimenek all of Salem. Included among the 17 men are J. S. Hinkle and CMS W. H. Merrill whose acceptance was announced Thursday. Gilmore said Thursday that plans to construct a naval armory here for . use by reserve units were awaiting decision from 13th naval district headquarters in Seattle, Wash., regarding the site oi the proposed building. NINETY-SEVENTH . TEAfi XlaairirDeaDii Floods Jap Areas TOKYO, Friday, Sept 19 -UP) The unofficial casualty toll in Japan's typhoon disaster reached 5,015 today and fresh reports from north of Tokyo said 300,000 Japanese were marooned there. U. S. army engineers spared already flooded Tokyo from new inundations by blasting three gaps in the raging Edo river's levees at the northern outskirts of the capital. Simultaneously, the army rush ed hundreds of boats to Saitama prefecture, just north of Tokyo, where 200,000 Japanese were re ported marooned, and to stricken Gumma prefecture where 300, 000 others were believed isolated. Kyodo news agency said its latest tabulation ; showed 1,692 persons - dead, 609 injured and 2,714 missing from nearly a week of floods fed by torrential rains from Monday's typhoon. It predicted the figures "would rise sharply when reports were received from Saitama and Gum ma, both of which have been nearly isolated since the high waters overwhelmed levees. The newspaper! Mainlchi car ried an unconfirmed report that the known dead In the regions north of Tokyo had reached 200. The home ministry's offi cial figures a day old were 644 dead, 471 injured, and 1,902 missing. If Kyodo's- figures were ap proximately correct, the current disaster would outstrip last year s tidal wave and; earthquake in which ' 1,354 Japanese, perished. 5 Sentences Meted Out in Circuit Goiirt five aentencea f for .three men were decreed Thursday by Mar ion. County Circuit Judge . M. Page, after the men waived hear ing by grand Jury and pleaded etiiltv. ' Howard Howe, ; Salem, cnargea , . . , with tarrying a concealed weapon and with assault with a deadly wcanon. received; terms of two years and one year, respectively, in the state penitentiary, me sen tences to run concurrently. He was arrested by city police Sep tember 10 followincthe shooting of Thomas Conyers, 2665 Port land road. Concurrent county jail sen feniea of two months for threat ening commission of a felony and of one month for carrying a con cealed weapon were given Jonn Robert Thomas. Lakebrook hop- vard. He was arrested September w - . 12 after allegedly threatening Orval B. Reed at the hopyara. Ren Odenbaueh. Salem, was sentenced to three months in county tail for larceny after his arrest by city police for petty thefts in hotel rooms. Truman to Leave i Battleship Today ABOARD UJ5.S. MISSOURI WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN, Sept 18 -iPh Tanned by the sun and wind, President Truman will return to the United States to morrow from the Rio defense conference to face an accumula tion of foreign and domestic pro blems. Mr. and Mrs.. Truman, their daughter Margaret and members of the White House stall will transfer at Norfolk to the presi dential yacht Williamsburg for the cruise to Washington. Kicks Supplant Buzzer In Opening Door of Bus OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept 18. (P)A lot of people who have had to ride an extra .block or two on city buses because the driver did n't hear the buzzer will be glad to read this. Curtis Masoned Oklahoma City, couldn't resist an . impulse when the driver of his bus failed to open the rear doors and drove by Ma soners corner. He kicked the door off its hinges and jumped out - Ralph Barnes Sbip Sold to Danish Firm PORTLAND, Sept. 18 - UP) - The Liberty ship Ralph Barnes, named for an ex-Salem news paper man killed early in the war when his plane was shot down over Europe, has been sold by the Maritime Commission to the Dan ish East Asiatic Co., Ltd. The ship, built at Oregon Ship yard here in 1943, baa been re named the St Jan. Isolate Th Oregon Northwest 16 PAGES Of Winter Power 'Brownout' PORTLAND, Orel, Sept. 18 UP)- The Pacific northwest with two billion kilowatts of electric generating power is riding dan gerously close toward a winter "brownout," members of the northwest power pool were told today. Any one of several factors could create an emergency un der which power demands could not be met the co-ordinating organization of operating electric utilities was advised as it met to draft plans for meet ing peak requirements. Bonneville a d m in i s t ration and other public and private power officials gave this sum mary: The demand in December, January and February will ex ceed . two billion kilowatts each . month greater than the high est wartime peak; all of the northwest's vast generating ca Gold Fever Hits Canadian PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, -Sept. 18(CP)-The 9,000 residents of this wave - lashed Pacific coast mining town tonight were seeth ing with a gold fever not felt In this part of Canada since the trail of fi? J carried sourdoughs to the Alaska goldfields. Men with transits and compass es were up with the northern dawn staking claims for registra tion, many of them well within city limits. Word of the strike ripped through the town by "moccasin telegraph," after a workman on a new road, leading to fishing floats at the west end of the waterfront last night, chipped off a piece of rock believed to contain two oun ces of gold. A Prince Ropert business man, who was formerly engaged In practical mining, tonight estima ted the value of the sample of gold rock obtained at $75,000 a ton. The free gold was reported to be so rich that the rock was actually pliable. There are no gold mines within 20 miles of Prince Rupert. Situated 550 miles north of Vancouver, main scene of the claim-staking activity was a se ries of rock outcroppings on the side of a bluff overlooking the harbor, close to where the Skee na river empties into the sea. Rail Workers to Seek 30 Per Cent Wage Increase Cleveland, Sept 18 -PY- Five operating brotherhoods today de cided to ask the nation's railroads for a wage increase of 30 per cent effective November 1, for more than 350,000 rail employes. Executives of the trainmen, en gineers, firemen, conductors and switchmen, following a meeting of the five brotherhoods' Wage com mittees announced that the de mand would be served on the car riers Sept 30. A brotherhood spokesman said the range of present daily basic wages was not available, but that as some of them were under $19, a minimum of S3 was set as the demand for this bracket. Pastor Says Gift Liquor-Tainted DU BOIS, Pa., Sept 18 -JPh Sixty-five-year-old Rev. Thure A. Holmer said today he has resigned his li-vear nastorate of the Leb anon Evangelical Lutheran church rather than condone acceptance of a $2,000 gift from a club holding a liquor license. The gift was tendered, he said, by the Swedish-American club and the congregation voted to accept despite his pleas to refuse it Another Price Cut Due For Portland Butter PORTLAND, Sept. 18-D-But-ter dropped one cent here today, and light demand resulted in an other cut being scheduled for to morrow. Wholesalers said the cut would be 1 cent on the two top grades of butter and 2 cents less for grade B. Retail prices for top grades are expected to range be tween 88 and 95 cents. NORBLAD TOURS PACIFIC . ASTORIA, Sept 18 -UP)- Rep Walter Norblad, a member of the house armed forces affairs com raittee, will leave this week on a 30-day tour of Pacific defence. Mining Town Stcdeaman. Salem, Ore- Friday, September 19. 1947 siti Faces Possibility pacity, both hydro and steam, must be utilized to capacity. The hazard is this: The water level In the Columbia river and its western tributaries threat ens to be low, impairing the overload capacity at the big dams. Grand Coulee generators, op erating at n average load of 130,000 kilowatts each, al though designed for only 108, 000, might fail -at a critical time. . i . Oil requirements of steam plants are estimated at 2,378,000 barrels of which oil-burning utilities now are assured of only 1,692.000 barrels. Utility men agreed there would be no power shortage if luck rode with the generating plants but they proposed drafting a program which could be put into operation immed iately in the event of a major breakdown. Cordon Cautious On Special Session WASHINGTON. Sent. 18 -UP Senator Cordon (R-Ore) said to day that unless "a desnerate emergency which cannot be nanaiea Dy me executive de partment of the sovernment un der existing laws has arisen" a special session of congress should not be called. He told a reporter he believed the congressional committees ap pointed to investigate the Euro pean situation should be allowed to complete their work. War Memorial Group Elects ' Rex Kimniell Voicing individual resolve to proceed immediately with the work of planning and erecting, a war memorial building, members of the Salem War Memorial as sociation Thursday night organ ized for the coming year under the presidency of Rex Kimmell. Kimmell, deputy Oregon attor ney general and past commander of Capital. Post 9, American Le gion, succeeds JC Burr Miller. The group unanimously adopted Al lan Carson's nominating commit tee slate of officers, electing in addition to Kimmell, Don W. Bal lantyne as first vice president; Dr. Seward P. Reese as second vice president Peery T. Buren secretary and Clarence E. Greig treasurer. Retiring president Miller re commended to the new officers a canvass of local organizations for new and renewed member ships, early selection of an arch itect and . wide publicity to in clude a speakers committee, school poster contest, member ship committee. Membership now stands at 44 organizations and 109 individuals. President Kimmell declared the memorial building should be a primary objective tof the city in the year to come and every effort made by the association to expe dite the project He said a nom inating committee will be named to suggest advisory committee men, and that plans for work ahead will be outlined at the next association meeting October 16. Births in County Nearly Double Last Year, Health Board Told An increased school population and a highly potential Increase six years from now were dis cussed Thursday by members of the .Marion county health board. Reports at the meeting disclosed that 1,794 babies have been born in the county during the first eight months of 1947, almost double the 816 births in the same period last year. While August's births were only 45 ahead of the 203 in August of 1948, only one month this year (July) has fallen below the 200 mark, while only one (August) reached that level in 1946. Male births in August outnumbered fe male 131, to 119. Recent arrival of three new nurses as replacements in the health department staff wal an nounced. They are Mrs. Jane Domkowski of Bremerton, Wash.; Erna Bertecker of Chicago and Mrs. Olga Curtis of Long Island, N. Y. City Manager J. L. Franzen told the board that a mosquito control campaign is considered necessary for Salem next spring. The board considered a change in rabies control, to provide for vaccination of dogs rather than of human beings- However, lt was learned that a change in state Price Mow Eugene Hoffman, superinten dent of Seattle City Light sug gested that all utilities make a survey to determine what in dustrial loads could be cut off on short notice. Others propos ed a plan calling for blackout of commercial signs and store window lighting, shifting of in dustrial loads to off-peak hours, and - appeals to householders to conserve power. . Col. Theron D. Weaver, di vision army engineer, said the level of the Bonneville pool could be raised from 73.7 feet to 78 feet but that this would Inundate lands behind the dam and should be resorted to only in extreme emergency. These measures, they agreed, may not be needed but if they are they will be needed faster than they could be put into effect without advance planning. ' ,-, tT Overell Yacht Murder Trial Defense Rests SANTA ANA, Calif., Sept 18. WVThe defense rested its case today in the Overell yacht mur der trial with testimony about the discovery of a box of dynamite in the garage. of Victim Walter E. Overell, but Overeirs housekeep er asserted in rebuttal that the box was not there two days ear Ur. . Testimony - corroborating the housekeeper's - was ' given - by a neighbor and by Chief Investiga tor Tom McGaff of the sheriffs Staff, who said he had searched the garage three days before, and reported he found no: dynamite there then. .' . R. H. Sandon, Santa Ana pri vate investigator - - described ear lier by Attorney Otto Jacobs as a witness who would "blow - the state's case sky high" testified that the partially filled 50-pound box of explosives was discovered in a garage of the Flintrldge fi nancier's palatial home on March 0, two weeks after his body and tht at his wife. Beulah. were r found m their-dynamited yacht But Mrs. Mary Pritchett white haired housekeeper for the Over ells for 18 years, asserted com ing back to the stand as a prose cution witness, was shown the empty box which. Sandon said had contained pie dynamite and was asked: "What did you do on .March 28?" she was asked by Assistant Attorney General Eugene D. Wil liams. "Mrs. Herbert van zwou, a neighbor, and I went out to the garage and searched it thorough' ly on March 28. "Wt found no such'box. fealher Max. 10 OS S3 SO Min. Frecip. Salem Portland San rtanclsco Chlcsso trac 40 40 4 .00 S4 jtn S3 M New York 79 Willamette river S.9 feet. FORECAST (from U. weather bu reau. McNanr field. Salem): Fair today and tonlfht. RlifhUy warmer daytime temperatures. Hlshest temperature today. 75 degrees; loweet tonight, near 40 degrees. Weather far oracle for farm work today. law probably: would be required. Participation in a special course of training was approved for Merwyn Darby, health nurse, to attend a special tuberculosis train ing session at University of Min nesota. Immunizations at the health office have greatly increased over those of last year, largely due, uid officials, to the number of civilians going overseas. For the first eight months of the year," immnunizations tor typhoid fever increased to 73 from 36 In the same period of 1946, tetanus from 11 to 24 and cholera from 4 to 34. Immunizations during August totaled 474. , Communicable diseases re ported in the county during Aug ust included chickenpox, 3 cases, dysentery 2, 'nfluenza 1, malaria 2, measles 8, mumps 6, lobar pneumonia 1, poliomyelitis 1, scarlet fever 3, tuberculosis 8, typhoid 1, trachoma 1, gonorrhea 6, syphilis 8, Vincents angina 2, whooping cough 2, scabies 2 and hepatitis 1. The lone death re ported from a communicable dis ease was caused by syphilis. ' Deaths reported in August from all causes totaled 62, 34 males and 28 females. Heart disease led in causes, with 14, while 12 were attributed to cancer. ' No. ISO irlsiinis Erratic NEWORLEANS Sm- tarf day )-VP) Storm winds of 73 miles 5c Storm's Course an nour or mgncr inreatenea tns - historic city today as a vicious, C- -' Unpredictable hurricane -went t. ward land from the gulf ml Mex ico wun -widespread 4fiteas and multi-million dollar --damage - aK i ready in its -wake. . Tha weather bureau repoiSed last night that the cosiiac of tho ' hurricane was expected to strike . by mid-morning near the mouth of the Mississippi river, approx imately ou miles south of the city. Blasts of hurricane farr wr- predicted for that area by day- ugni ana zor new Orleans a few hours later. i lot Miles rer Hear Velocities un to IDA ihiIm hour prevailed at the storm's core, 1 located at 11 n m. last m vvt ia miles east southeast of Burwood, , east oi acw urieana. Its lat eral movement at that time was about la miles an hour. Extreme caution waa urvrA tw the weather bureau against devas tating winds and tides f mm north- West Florida to Louisiana. Winds or gale force blew over that sec- 1 Oct -rVt wa -met aasa,aa Bm The great storm's oath has hm erratic stnee it rose up out of the ' uariDDean eight days ago. After pointing" northward, 1 it veered westward into the South FlnHta "Gold Coast" and blasted the rich and heavily-peopled peninsula for 12 hours. Winds rose la mil an hour and hicher. : iiz.ete.eoe Dasaage Florida property " damage al ready has been tabbed at ti2 ooo ' 000 with the figure sUll mounting. , i-miy i our persons were known to have lost their lives but hundred ! ' received minor injuries and thous- I ands were driven from their homes and suffered hunger and other1 hardship. -.-i-;-. ..?', ,- New Orleans, huge port city n4 ; center of southern culture, is ne stranger . itself to storm disaster. A 120-mile an hour blow strut is it In 1913 and left 350 persons dead in me euy and in natch boring Louisiana and Misiopl gull -areas. The ill-fated Cheniere Cam inada storm of 1833 snuffed out 3,000 lives in coastal Louisiana. although the city Itself did not suf fer heavily. , , , tlr i l. ., . .... u-csw cusasierf sun re , membered, gulf, coast residents took every precaution against the) ' latest throat, A stream of panicky refugees were moving from coast' al danger spots. Commodity Prices Slump By Tike A-eoeUted Preas The principal commodities mn sumed by the American public-4 meats, grains, butter and cotton; slumped in price at most major, markets throughout the nation Thursday bringing at least a tem porary halt in the upward cctt of-living spiral. A drastic slash in Noverrbrr, grain exports to shortage areas abroad touched off a selling wsv on the Chicago board of U-t's , that drove wheat prices don 19 clhts and corn down eight rents in the first few minutes of tr.Ki-, Ing the maximum price dxJir.ej . permitted under .board - regula tions. ' ; The drop was the first reaction of the market to the ann u rce ment of the agriculture drp-rt- 'v ment Wednesday night thrt No vember grain export alio nirna would be held to 29.5 14.000 bvh els, a drop of 33 percent frou c tober and 43 percent undtr the July-October monthly a vera tee. Robbery Suspect to Be Brought to Portland PORTLAND, Sept. II -UP)- Tha, FBI said here today that Joe B. r ry Bishop, 37, of Hugo, Ok).. j charged with the robbery of the Sweet Home bank, would bf brought here early next week tut trial in federal court. " The robbery netted two bandits $38,000. FBI agents here have rg j publicly connected BUhop, who description does not fit that of either bandit, with the duo. QUICKIES beeja Mine Stat remap Waaf , Ada again, I seer- .