I Drives i i on Mao?' IHlavaria Lashed! MIAMI, Fla, Sept. 20.-(-A severe tropical hurricane boiled over into the Florida straits to night and . headed toward south east Florida. . It was expected to hit Miami "in the morning. .'Still moving north northeast at bout 12 miles an hour, the storm sent ominous red and black hurri cane flags flying along both coasts of the Florida peninsula from Mel bourn to Fort Myers. A press and radio bulletin from the U. S. weather bureau said the hurricane entered the Florida straits east of Havana, ' Cuba, lighthouses and weather stations on ' the keys reported rough and rising seas and winds of 55 to 65 miles per hour. The center of the hurricane was expected to pass near Miami, pro bably to the west, about 9 or. 10 o'clock tomorrow morning. Winds are slowly increasing and will continue to increase in south Florida and the keys as the storm approaches, the bulletin said. - Interests in south Florida were warned to take every precaution USQUE When Ambassador. Walter Bedell Smith reported the western envoys In Moscow had a -delightful" two-nrf-a-half hour conference with "Premier Molotov the question, na turally arose as to what he meant by this adjective. Was the inter view socially pleasant dux politi cally barren? Was it agreeable all the way througn, wiin progress made toward some understanding? Or was the word used in satire, Thm event may tell: or perhaps it will not. It may be that the negotiations over the affairs Berlin will prove to be merely conversation. They have dragged on now for weeks, Bhtfflng from Moscow to Berlin, then back again to the soviet capi tal. Hints have come that Premier Stalin was cooperative, but that the familiar Russian negative is in terjected when oral deals are set to written form, i But in the news Saturday was another item that is: quite reas suring. The airlift to Berlin com pleted over 800 flights that day and carried in 7000 tons of coal and other supplies to the city besieged by a ukase. That quantity is more than enough for a day's provision ing of the western sectors of Ber lin. So it may be that winter will not bring the showdown' long an ticipated, between German cold and hunger, Russian obduracy and allied inability to supply food and fuel. Begun as an emergency re lief the air lift has grown into a vast enterprise as fleets of cargo carriers make the hop from wes tern airfields to Berlin. The suggestion is made that this demonstration of allied ar power may open the eyes of the Russians. If the air fleet could only fly over (Continued on Editorial Page) Air Arm Shifts Top Officials WASHINGTON, Sept. 20-4P)-The air force shifted three im portant officers today, putting a young wartime B-29 leader in command of the long range strik ing arm and sending the dean of its veteran generals to lead the air university. Lt Gen. Curtis X. Lemay, now commander of the U. S. air forces in Europe, takes over the strategic air command the long range out fit. Gen. George C. Kenney, will take over the air university - at Montgomery, Ala. Lt Gen. John K. Cannon, chief of the air train ing command and a veteran of the air' war in Europe and the Medi terranean, will succeed Lemay in Europe. YUGOSLAV! ESCAPE - BELGRADE, Sept. 20-4P)-The ommunlst newspaper Borba said today a small group o Renegades escaped to Sofia and set up a Yugoslav front organization oppos ing Premier Marshal Tito. They applied to Bulgaria for recognition. Animal Crackers V WARRQM GOODRICH ' . Jnt thm ehildrea cvfe (ere pitying 'Book-lmdS 00 0S3ODO8 sStfco for protection of life and property in the face on the severe storm. Heavy rains and abnormally high tides, especially on the keys and along the east coast, were pre dicted. I Hurricane warnings were order ed up north of Miami to Mel bourne and north of the keys J to Fort Myers, including the Lake Okeechobee region. j Northeast storm warnings were posted over southern Florida northward to the Daytona beach Tarpon Springs line. HAVANA, Cuba, Sept. 20.-i&h A tropical hurricane hit Cuba to night, isolating the fishing port of Batabana where it struck. It moved toward Havana which, had 60-mile winds early this, eve ning. Trees and advertising signs toppled in the capital. The storm passed over the Iple of Pines southwest Of here soon after noon, causing heavy damage to orange groves. No causal ty was reported there, however. Average Consumer Said Little Curbed by Controls Federal credit controls which became operative Monday will not drastically effect the average consumer, it was pointed out by a local credit bureau official. j ; ) , C E. Schmitz, district manager of Credit Bureaus' reporting de partment, said the new controls may not even be noticed by many credit buyers. At the same time Associated Credit Bureaus of America Mishaps Fatal For Eleven - On Week End By th Associated Press Eleven persons died violently in Oregon weekend mishaps, i Six of the fatalities were tin Lane county, three of them in an automobile that plunged into the Siuslaw river. Two men were killed in separate accidents I in Josephine county and one man died near Tlfalin Harry Due of Mapleton, fiis daughter, Sharon, 10, and son, Dickie, were trapped in the ear in the Siuslaw river plunge. Two persons, Marvin Woods and Mrs. Hazel St Clair, the latter driving, escaped. William Marquardt, president of the Springfield Bod and Gun club, drowned when a motorboat riaiwu la xciu auu&c uuc j . x. motorcyclist; Donald Dean Afp, 21. Cottage Grove, was killed in a collision with an automobile Jess Brent, railroad section hand, burned to death in a fire at jus quarters. In Josephine county. AveryfJ. Tipton, 58. was struck down by an auto at the close Of the county fair and Claude Burlin Potts, 11, Grants Pass, was fatally hurt when a bulldozer, overturned at a log ging site near the Rogue river James Wilbur Garland,1 47, was killed when his auto crashed: a bridge abutment near Malin. His two sons, age 9 and 12, escaped unhurt. . Two men were killed east ; of Sweet Home when a light plane crashed and burned late Saturday afternoon in the woods. Fred erick Redding, 27, and Darious C. Adair, 31, both Sweet Home, were believed killed outright by the crash. i In another air mishap two Port land men were injured. Ralph AngelL jr., 35, Portland lumber man, and his passenger, Ralph Hlmmelsbach, 23, were hurt when a glider they were attempting; to launch crashed near Aurora. Meat Packers Say: Prices to Lower J In Coming Months NEW YORK, Sept. 20.P)-Mat prices should be somewhat lower in 30 to 60 days, meat packers said today. Some though they might be down as much as 40 per cent, i The drop will be a seasonal one. but may well be the beginning of a general downward trend, in the opinion of some packers here for the 43rd annual meeting of the American Meat Institute. i F. W. Specht, president of Ar mour 6c Co., said in an interview that consumers should not expect freer supply and lowr prices im mediately as a result of the record corn crop. He said the corn has to be harvested, converted to feed, and then fed to the animals. I River Dragged for j Seven-Year-Old Girl I BANDON, Sept. 20-4P-The Co- quille river was dragged vaihly today for Jean Hart, missing 7- y ear-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hart. 1 The child vanished while play ing with two other youngsters near her Riverton home Saturday. State police were not certain whether the child tumbled into the river, wandered away, or had been picked up by passersby. I Weather Iftn. M 45 S3 St Pnftctp Jf trace trace .4S T1 Portland San Francisco Chicago SS New York tl e jm Willamette rtwr S.t fact. forecast (from C. S. weattacrt bureau McNary field. Salem): Mostly cloudy today with liht rains in the afternoon. Partly cloudy Wednesday- with show en. Hi)i today 70. low tonifht.BX. Weather will be favorable for most farm activities thia morning; but jm favorable in afternoon. salem pas CIPIT ATIOV rres Sept. L to Sep. XI I This Year Last Year Average OX V01 Jtl Batabana was believed inunda ted. Communications with the port town of 7,000 were down, making it difficult to assess damage. Havana police and the militrt? ordered a 12-hour curfew from 8 p. m. They r acted while crowds milled the streets despite the 60 mile winds j of the approaching storm. The curfew was to prevent injuries and; possible looting and disorder, j " Hospitals and first aid stations reported a' dozen cases of injuries, most resulting from prep arations from the storm. One man died of a heart seizure as the hur ricane seared. South in the Caribbean, the hur ricane had driven the freighter Lochmdnar hard aground on lit tle Cayman island with 73 persons aboard.. Winds estimated at 60 to 70 miles an hour blew at Neuva Gerona, capital of the Isle of Pines, for an hour. The I storm center passed there at 1 p. m. said the act is not as strict as most people believe. Schmit? pointed out the follow ing features contained in the measure:; -f- The curb idoes not include the regular; 30-day charge account, or items that retail for less than $50 tmiy; iz types or consumers s durable i goods are specifically named n th regulations. They are automobiles, cooking stoves, dish washers, j ironers, refrigerators, washing j machines, combination units of j these items, air con ditioners I (room unit), radio, tele vision and phonograph sets, sew ing machines, suction cleaners, furniture and surface floor cover ings. J j au or tnese except cars are subject to a; down payment of at least 20 per cent. Those jwho are on the list for new car, schmitz explained, may have to dig deeper into savings under "the new rules. Automobiles will require a 33 13 per cent down payment; If the balance is less than $1,000-: it must be paid off within i 15 months. If more than $1,000, i it can be liquidated over 18 months, but payments must not be less! than $70 per month. Unions Agree To Load Ship Alaska Bound SEATTLE; Sept. 10 -(JP)- Two cracks appeared here today in the West Coast i maritime tieup. One permitted rail shipment east of strikebound salmon valued at be tween $10,000,000 and $12,000,000. The other gave clearance for a Nome, Alaska, supply ship. Five j striking maritime unions agreed 'tonight to load and man the Alaska steamship company freight er Square Sinnet so the Nome and Norton: Sound areas may receive winter ; supplies before the Artie ice pack closes in. A contract for the Alaska voy age is scheduled to be signed to morrow : morning by union and compahyi officials. It provides for the work to be done on pre-strike terms, with any wag increase ob tained in future negotiations be coming; retroactive. The Square Sinnet will be load ed for the Nome run soon after its arrival here Friday from Alaska. The agreement for moving sal mon east from Seattle was reach ed earlier today by fish packers and the i independent Stevedoring firm of Griffiths & Sprague, which contracted with the army last week to handle essential cargo. i Firsp Navajos 1flayVAwaf.'way. tfj'-m-r qf.yt'av. svpi One hundred Navajo Indian children Join 4t ether Indian ehildrea ill rollment at Chemawa Indian school north of Salem this. year. Shown above In one or tne oornuiery recreation rooms Monday Is a group youngsters taking It easy between physical examinations and registration preparations before actual school begins. (Photo by Den DilL Statesman staff photog rapher.) i j NINETY-EIGHTH YEAR 12 Quizzed WASHINGTON, Sept 28 Mrs. Bransten Herman. 39, leaves hearing room at Washington. D.C.. after refusing to answer house un-American activities committee questions regarding Its Investigation of alleged atomic espionage. The New York heiress was before the committee for more than an hoar and a half. (AP Wire photo to the Statesman.) Blonde Heiress Denies Atomic Spy Activities WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 - (JP) - Mrs. Louise Bransten Barman, blonde heiress billed as a one time associate of soviet agents, re fused today to answer questions in the congressional investigation of atomic spying. The slender and attractive 39- year-old witness had next to no thing to say to reporters or to a house un-American activities sub committee beyond a formal state ment That statement denied any "wrongful activities' and accused the house committee of an in famous act" in linking her name with its inquiry. Rep. McDowell (R-Pa) told re porters that in an hour and half of questioning by himself and Rep. Hebert (D-La) behind closed doors, Mrs. Berman relied on her constitutional immunity from giv ing answers that might incrimin ate her. McDowell indicated, however. that her chapter in the investiga tion was not closed. He said the subpoena for her appearance be fore the committee still remains in effect Shortly after its fruitless session with Mrs. Berman, the committee announced postponement of plans for subcommittee questioning of Mrs. Oksana Kasenkina in New York Wednesday. ACTRESS STILL IN COMA HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 20-5)-A heart specialist was called in to day to take a look at Rita Johnson as the screen actress began her third week of coma. Attend Chemawa - iff -, "S ' " . - I A .. . ' " QfA : POUNDBD 1651 j ; t PAGES The Oregon U.N. Sets ing Sessions By Edward Curtis PARIS, Sept. 20 -(JPy- The Unit ed nations general assembly opens a fateful session tomorrow before a world worried over east-west tension in Berlin and unrest and assassinations in Palestine. The issue of enforcing peace in the Holy Land dramatically pointed up ; by thet murder of Count Folke Bernadotte stands high on t'he crowded calendar of the 58-nation "world parliament On the eve of the third annual session, there was a possibility that the Berlin blockade .would be thrown before the assembly for full debate. President Vincent Auriol of France will officially welcome the delegates at the opening of the session, expected to run three months. The first major item of business will be selection of a president. Herbert V. Evatt. Aus tralian foreign minister, was am ong those prominently mentioned for the post; Before taking up Bernadotte's proposal for enforcement of a Pal estine peace, the u. N. will pay somber tribute to the slain Swed ish count The final 35,000-word report of the U. N. mediator said the savage Arab - Jewish war should be "pronounced formally ended." He said if the Arabs and Jews refuse to make peace, the U. N. should do so. Closely linked with the eruptive Palestine Issue is Secretary-Gen eral Trygve ; Lie's plan to seek a U. N. police force of 1,000 to 5, 000 men. Other items on the assembly's 59-item calendar included such is sues as atomic energy, Greece. Korea and the Italian colonies all of 'them ; involving basic dif ferences between Russia and the western powers. Huge! Jet Plane Explodes; Test Pilots Killed TULARE, f Calif- Sept 20-4P)- One of the nation's newest aerial weapons, a. huge : air force 500 mile an hour jet bomber, exploded in shattered pieces today with a roar heard for miles. The plane was a B-45, the air force's first all-jet bomber. Aboard were two test pilots from its fac tory, North j American, but no army personnel. It crashed just outside Alpaugh, an isolated cen tral California farming commun ity some 20 miles south of here. The. two bodies were recovered from smouldering wreckage strewn over an area four miles square. Open Navajos Enrolled at Chemawa; Create New Teacher Problem Enrollment of aDDroximatelr Chemawa Indian school Monday for this year, announces Superintendent R. M. Kelley. This is the first group of -Navajos sent here for education from their home reservations in New Mexico and Arizona. Addition of the Navajos to the for Schooling from western states to swell en y ..7, Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, Sept 21. 1948 Marshall Leaves for Paris ''' f id- ' DM 4 WASHINGTON, Sept 20- Secretary of Stale and Mrs. Marshall wave te friends at the National Airport Washington, D. C shortly; before leaving for the Parla meeUns ef the United Nations Assembly. (AP Wirephote to The Statesman.) j West Foreign Ministers Study Strategy on Berlin i i By Joseph Dyuan ! PARIS, Sept 20VFy-The western powers tonight called a halt to Moscow negotiations and set up row with Russia over the future The American, British and French foreign ministers immediately plunged into a series of high policy conferences to decide their next move in the struggle wmcn nas kept Train Strikes Auto, Injuring Salem Couple A Salem couple narrowly es- caDed death Monday night when their auto was struck by a South ern Pacific freight train at Marion and North 12th streets. Mrs. Fred A. Anderson, 1349 Marion st, was taken to Salem General hospital by city first aid men, suffering from s hip injury and shock. Her husband, driver of the car. suffered a laceration of the right eye, but did not require hospitalization. City police said Anderson was driving west on Marion street and did not see the approaching train. The train, headed south, struck the rear end of the machine spin ning it around several times and driving lt against the surb. The right side of the auto was exten sively damaged. 100 Navaio Indian students at brings total enrollment there to 500 regularly authorized 400 Indian students at Chemawa has necessi tated seven additional teachers, bringing the teaching staff to a total of 28 and aggregate employ ment at the school to 70 men and women. Kelley said.' Many of the tenn-age Navajos will receive their first acquaint ance with the English language. Their special teaching staff la headed by Winifred A. Koske who has joined the Chemawa faculty from Sherman Indian institute in Riverside, Calif. Vocational train ing will be emphasized in the Navajo program. Several Indian schools through out the west are beginning to take Navajos as students, because the Navajo reservations have facilities for only 5,000 of the 17,000 school age children there, Kelley said. Other students at Chemawa, as formerly, are orphans or come from broken homes or from com munities where public schools are not available to them, Kelley pointed out The new program at Chemawa has resulted in an increased bud get for operating the Indian service school a budget which this year will exceed $325,000, according to Kelley who points out this includes the cost of feeding 1,500 -meals daily. So far 1,800 Navajo students have been enrolled in Indian serv ice boarding schools, off the Nav ajo reservations. TROOPS STAY IN KOREA WASHINGTON, Sept. 20-(4V The United States told Russia to day that American troops will be kept in Korea until the United Nations gives the word to with draw them, mnmm strategy headquarters ; her in their of Berlin, j tne former German capita under siege conditions for three months. AU three nations recalled their top advisers from Moscow and Berlin to sit in on the talks. Secretary of State George C. Marshall,! British Foreign Secre tary i Ernest Bevin and French Foreign Minister Robert; Schu man met for an hour in ah open ing conference at the French for eign ministry. Another meeting was set for tomorrow. A spokesman for the French foreign ministry described today's session as one to establish contacts among the respective staffs look ing toward discussion of issues which divided Russia and the western powers in the two-month secret Moscow negotiations. The foreign ministers are here for the meeting of the United Na tions general assembly tomorrow. However, Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov did not come, send ing Deputy Andrei Y. Vishinsky to head the Russian delegation. U. S. Ambassador Walter Bedell Smith and 'British Special Envoy Frank Roberts have announced plans to leave Moscow tomorrow for Paris.; The French spokesman said' French Ambassador Yves Chataigneau also would come; Marshall was accompanied to the first session by John : Foster Dulles, republican foreign policy leader and a delegate to the assembly;! Lewis Douglas, Ameri can ambassodar to London who has been i directing much i of the field; work in the Moscow negotia tions; Charles E. Bohlen, state, de partment adviser on Russian af fairs; and Jefferson Caffery, am bassador to France. TRIESTE WORKERS STRIKE TRIESTE, Free Territory. Tues day, Sept 21PV-A11 civil em ployes of the American-British zone in the free territory started 24-hour strike at midnight for more pay. Church Croup Approves j eek-Day o By Winston H. Taylor Church EVUtor. Tha Statesman Action regarding week-day ligious education, church building improvements and two November ballot measures was approved In Salem Monday by the executive committee of the Oregon Council of Churches. . The state churches' convention was set zor .February zi-za in Portland, t An attorney general s opinion on the legality of use of schoolrooms not otherwise employed or when vacant for teaching of religion on "released ! time" basis, will be sought through channels. Dr. Chester W. Hamblin, council pre sident end Roy Lockenour, chair- in of the legislative committee. both of Salem, are to prepare the request j In the meantime the executive committee urged, Oregon church- should strengthen their own education! programs and should maintain week - day religious tarhing programs, observing the existing laws. Standards for teach ing and curriculum nave been worked out by a committee of the council and will be published. Price So No. 163 President ( By tho Associated Press . Gov. Thomas E. Dewey opened his formal campaign for the pres idency by telling an Iowa throng? that he will bring to Washington "the biggest unravelling, unsnarl ing, untangling operation in pur nation's history." . i The republican nominee spoke, last night at Des Moines, while at Denver President Truman ripped into the republicans as "the eager agents of the big business lobbies." j Dewey, starting a 14-day tour Of the west began what he called a "campaign to unite America" in a world in which "tyranny is on the march." i - t Mr. Truman blamed republicans for high prices and the housing sit uation. He bore down particularly on the development of the west ; Dewey's language was relative ly restrained when he talked about who's to blame for what He said some of the unhappy conditions are the result of uncontrollable cir cumstances, that only part are po litically inspired. ; i A rousing western welcome Was given President Truman at Den ver1, with street crows cheering, whistling and waving as he rode through. . i i In his formal speech, the presi dent said, "We shall have to fight the slick political propaganda of the special Interests and the re publican leadership." "We shall have to fight the millions of dollars that Wall street is pouring into the treasury of the republican party 1 j Platform Talk By Dewey Set Here Monday A brief appearance In Salem next Monday by Thomas E. Dew ey, republican presidential can didate, was announced yesterday, along with word that Harold - E Stassen would not be able to re turn to Oregon. 1 '' i The candidate Is to arrive here about 8:50 a. m. on a special train, for a 10-minute platform talk. Re publican dignitaries of the state will accompany him to Portland. ' Stassen had tentatively planned to speak in Oregon this falL Steve Anderson of Salem, state Young Republican' club president was notified Monday that Stassen 's schedule would not permit such, a trip. .-!' 4 The young republicans have scheduled a state executive board meeting Sunday at 2 JO p. m. In I urn XKiLuuuunau uum m i rwuauu to plan for Dewey's visit Plaque to Honor j Former Residents! Killed During War WASHINGTON, Sept 20 -fPl- Two Oregon war correspondents killed in the war were among 40 listed on a plaque hung in the "working press" room of the Pent agon building today. The two were Ralph W. Barnes and Asahel Bush, both Salem na tives. Barnes, correspondent of the New York Herald-Tribune, was killed in the crash of a British bomber in Yugoslavia in 1940. Bush, associated press correspond ent was killed by a Japanese bomb on Leyet in 1944. I . r Education' Plans I :i As the culmination of two years work by a committee, a list of graded Bible readings is now rea dy for use in schools. Copies are to be sent to local school boards, who must pass on their use. The Rev. Gilbert Christian, executive secretary of the council, said that such readings, made by the teach er without comment or interrup tion, are allowable In the public schools. - v . . ) A year-long contest among Ore gon churches for Improvement 'of buildings and i grounds ,was ap proved on recommendation of the town and country life committee.. Churches interested In competing were urged to notify the council -Office in Portland. f i The executive committee, in re gard to the general election No vember 2,. took action on only two measures.:. It backed acquisition of property at Timber, Ore, for a state boys camp, and it confirm ed a mail vote among the 165 di rectors to fight thet proposed li quor dispensing licensing act The council is to furnish information on the measure to Oregon chur Berates Lobbies ches. t :