THE WEATHER HERE FAIR TONIGHT and Friday, ex cept early morning cloudiness. Slightly warmer afternoon tem peratures. Lowest tonight, 52; highest Friday, 88. Maximum yesterday, Hi minimum to day. 61. Total a4-hour precipitation, 0; for month, 0; normal, .01. Season precipi tation, 0; normal, .01. River height, -3.t feet. (Report by V.B. Weather Bureau.) HOM E EDITION 61st Year, No, 208 Bnttrtd m leeond lsj Salem, Oregon, Thursday, September 1, 1949 Price 5c m Journal r-rv. 68 Known Dead 223 Injured in Jap Typhoon Biggest Damage Ex pected Mountain Floods Hit Lowlands Tokyo, Sept. 1 VP) Dead and Injured piled up today In Tokyo's typhoon-flood ravished area with 68 known dead, 223 injured and SO missing in the central Honshu storm area. Some 100,000 men worked neverisniy 10 sanaoag rivr levees against a repetition of floods which in 1947 drowned ('2000. Reports of property damage from wind and water mounted steadily after the blow which lashed the Tokyo bay metropoli tan area last night, left 66,000 homeless, verified figures from the national rural police show ed. Victims still were being pull ed from shattered buildings when the flood toll started trickling in over partly paicnea communications. Thirty-o n e drowned in a levee break that let the Waterosi river sweep through Aiol. in the mountains northwest of Tokyo. Floods' Big Danger But the big danger was to some when the Tone river and other streams swollen by 13 inches of rain In the mountains raged down onto the Knto plain north of Tokyo. It was there, authorities fear ed, that the 1947 devastation to the Tokyo area might be repeat ed. The Japanese government concentrated its 100,000-m a n labor force in this heavily diked low country. ; Waters of the Tone already lapped at the bridge of the main rail line, and the flood crest was yet to come. All the dead were Japanese. The only American mentioned in ; either casualty or missing lists was an Eighth army sol dier hospitalized by flying glass. Record of Damage Less than 24 hours after the typhoon whipped Tokyo bay Into 60-foot waves with 100-mile winds this was the dismal pic ture: Eighteen ships and boats sunk and SO missing, most of them torn from moorings in Tokyo and Sagaml bays. In Tokyo alone, 49,000 per sons were being fed and shel tered by the Japanese Red Cross and government agencies. Many left damaged homes but most fled rising flood waters. In Kanagawa prefecture, which embraces Hokohama and the hard-hit western shore of Sag ami bay, more than 10,000 were homeless. To a lesser degree, it was the same through a total of nine prefectures on central Honshu island. The storm did extensive dam age to U.S. military installa tions, housing areas and air craft. Roofs were ripped off barracks and some quarters at Grant Heights, the army's larg est family housing project. AtlanfkPad Steering Group T Washington, Sept. 1 Vn The 12 Atlantic pact countries prob ably will entrust their defense planning to a small steering committee instead of a single su preme commander. Diplomatic officials reporting this today said all countries rep resented on the steering group would have equal rank with no single boss. Decisions would be taken by unanimous vote, These officials described the steering committee idea as more practical in peacetime since it would not give any one country the responsibility for mappng the defense strategy of 11 other member nations. A final decision is expected when foreign ministers of the pact countries gather here Sep tember 17 to put the treaty Into operation. The ministers are due to set the wheels into mo tion for divising joint defense strategy for use in event any pact member is attacked. Meanwhile, the fate of Presi dent Truman's request to con gress for a $1,160,990,000 arms aid program for European pact members was still up in the air in congress. Committees will resume consideration next week A sharply reduced program has been passed by the house. Key senators reportedly have agreed on a $1,000,000,000 fig ure, with emphasis on delaying full aid until joint defense strat Canada and U.S. Plan Combined Arctic Defense Ground and Air Forces To Work Out Fighting Techniques Washington, Sept. 1 VP) Can adian and United States ground and air units will work out fight ing techniques this winter for combined defense of the critical Arctic frontier. The army announced today that "Exercise Cross-Index," involving comparatively small units of the armies of the two nations, supported by the U. S. and Royal Canadian air forces will be conducted in the Yukon and Alaska areas near White horse, Y. T., during January and February. Each army will provide a "one-battalion combat team in cluding infantry some of which will be employed in a parachute role artillery, engi neers, signals and other support ing arms and services," the for mal announcement said. : Army officials declined to specify the total number of men involved, pointing out that the size of a combat team varies widely, depending on its mission The two air forces will pro vide fighter cover for troops and bomber, reconnaissance and transport planes. "In addition to existing com munications, mobile RCAF and USAF signals equipment will be used," the army said. "Mobile air force radar and control cen ters will also be employed." (Concluded on Fare 5, Column 8) Craig Elected Legion Chief Philadelphia, Sept. 1 .VP) The American Legion today elected George N. Craig, 40 year-old Brazil Ind., attorney as national commander. He is the first veteran of World War II ever . named to the post. James Green, 33, Omaha, Neb., was a close second with two other candidates Erie Cocke, Jr Dawson, Ga., and Donald Wilson, Clarksburg, W. Va. mustering only a few scattered votes. A total of 3,344 delegates bal loted. The Legion's 31st annual con vention approved a resolution backing a self-help plan "based on the initiative of the people in their own communities with out reliance of the federal gov ernment in solving unemploy ment problems." Under the proposal, town and city councils would confer with industrial and civic leaders and pool their resources on a com munity plan. It is a key part of the legion's 1950 domestic pro gram. Other major resolutions ap proved by the convention today included: 1. Calling on the .secretary of labor to act to restore the field staff of the veterans em ployment service to the former complement of 350. 2. Urged that the government give special citations to firms "outstanding in the employ ment of physically handicapped veterans." 3. Endorsed the veterans' pension bill before the senate and commended house members who supported . the measure. 4. Called for congress to pass the Ellender-Boggs bill to de clare picketing of U. S. courts a criminal offence. Bonnie Scott Crowned Queen of Hop Fiesta Independence, Ore., Sept. 1 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hop Fiesta Wednesday night. Coronation ceremonies were held at a packed gymnasium with Mayor Ralph Spencer crowning the young ruler. Ten acts of home talent were also presented.- The queen was selected at an open air meeting In the busi ness section Wednesday after noon with 20 candidates seeking the honor. Named princesses for the fies ta were Judy Lou Kilmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Loren Johnson, Independence; Linda Sue Hill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hal Hill, Eugene; Judy Fletcher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Beryl Fletcher and Ra melle Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wilson, In dependence. With the excep tion of Princess Ramelle, who is 10, all are eight years old ; The Hop Fiesta grand parade Mil i.l J i I J I II I II I 11)1 Ml I )i I I i II II. I., I II 1 1. I III I I II 1 '1 T -r - " i i) J ""IJMJ1 "HmWll & Mm I rrrmimmi M I I 1 t ii t. 1 ITT, - i i Daylight Time Ends Sept. 1 1 It was definitely decided to day that daylight saving time will end in Salem Sunday, Sep tember 11, at 1:59 a.m. That is the time fixed by the existing ordinance that put day light saving time into effect in Salem last May, but a complica tion developed when Alderman Albert H. Gille at the last coun cil meeting introduced a bill to extend it to September 25. The serious part of the com plication was that the council would not meet until September 12, which would have left Sa lem in a very confused situa tion for about 24 hours. . Today Mayor Robert L. Elf strom talked with Gille about it and the alderman agreed to move for indefinite postpone ment of his bill when the coun cil meets a week from Monday night. The main reason for the agree ment to settle the issue in this way was that Salem schools are to open on September 12, and whether they were to open on daylight or standard time was a problem. Gille introduced the bill to extend the time at the request of state employes, and to make the termination of daylight time here conform to Portland. New Hanford Unit To Begin Nov. 1st Richland, Wash., Sept. - U.R A new unit for production at the Hanford atomic works here will start operation in Novem ber, Rep. Henry H. Jackson CD Wash.) reported here today. Jackson said this was not a part of the two $80,000,000 un its planned for next 'spring. He did not give the cost of the new unit. Jackson, touring the works with Rep. Melvin Price (D-Ill.) said the United States was "def initely on top of the atomic power pile and intended to re main there." Bonnie Scott, 8-year-old blonde Scott, was crowned queen of the will be held at 7 o'clock Thurs day -evening following a show by the Salem Saddle club in the Hop bowl at 6 o clock. A children's parade will be held Friday evening at 7 o'clock with the King and Queen of Toyland to be crowned by State Senator Dean Walker. Second place winners will be a prince and princess with a duke and dutchess holding their place in royalty. The home talent show will be a feature after the cor onation. Closing event of the three day observance is the hop fiesta dance at the high school gym nasium Saturday night starting at 9:30 o'clock. . , n CARAUAN i " 1 45JLH' . -I ' Here Comes the Farm Bureau Caravan bringing Oregun Farm bureau federation officers to new headquarters arrives in Salem. Top: Gov. Douglas McKay thanks W. Lowell Steen, state president, for food products presented to the governor and by him donated to the WCTU children's home near Cor vallis. Lower: Caravan of six trucks and 24 cars parked for capitol porch reception ceremonies. . Summer Records for Aid to Jobless Broken By JAMES Unemployment in Oregon is according to the state unemployment compensation commission. All summer-time records lor were broken in August when workers and $265,120 to veterans unable to locate jobs. " Unemployment - Maims navee- been onithe increase in' Oregon almost constantly since July 1, with 16,674 persons filing for state compensation last week I the highest number since last April. Last month's unemployment benefit payments of $1,533,884 was an increase of 27.7 per cent over July and 163.4 per cent more than in August, 1948. The previous high was in July, 1946, when $1,423,245 was paid to war workers and returning serv icemen. Despite the closing of the re adjustment allowance program for 90 per cent of the veterans, August payments under this phase of the GI bill were 41.6 per cent higher than a year ago. About 60 per cent of the unem ployed former service men were believed to have transferred their claims to the state pro gram, while the remiander lack ed base year wage credits. New claims for the benefit year starting July 1 passed the 40,000 mark on the last day of August, the commission stated, while a year ago only 18,798 claims were on file. Heavy industry continues to account for more than half of the layoffs. Last week 29.6 per cent of the new claimants were from logging and lumber plants, 19.8 per cent came from con struction and food processing and 16.4 per cent from "other manufacturing." Of the 13,170 state checks is sued last week the Portland area was residence of 7,199 and the report of the commission shows that nearly 65 percent of the 1,- 205 idle construction workers were from the Portland metro politan area. Good Month at McNary Field McNary field had more oper ations during the month of Au gust than any month since the CAA tower started operation there in February of this year. Total operations, the tower reported, came to 6,829, when month-end tabulations were made Thursday morning. This figure exceeded by 245 landings and take-offs the largest previ ous total which was 6584 in April. During August air carrier op erations numbered 370; itiner ant planes totaled 1369 opera tions and local planes 5090. Broken down the itinerant planes were army, 66; navy 142; and civilian, 1161. The local plane figures broken down show 74, army operations; 24 navy; and 4992, civilian. Tin HI Hi tun If. IT " D. OLSON increasing by leaps and bounds, payments to Oregon's unemployed $1,266,764 was paid to covered First Break in Polio Epidemic Washington, Sept. 1 (IP) The approach of autumn has brought the first break in the nation's polio epidemic, the public health service said today. r For the first time since last March, the agency said, the count of new cases has declined. It dropped from 3,422 for the week ending August 20 to 3,214 for the week ending August 27. In the corresponding week a year ago the total was 1,412. Last week the health service said the 22-week rise in the number of poliomyelitis cases appeared to be leveling off. It now says last week's 3,422 total may be the year's peak. . The total number of cases re ported in the nation for - the year, through August 27, is 20,- 513, compared with 11,155 for the same period last year. The worst infantile paralysis year on record was 1916, when 30,000 cases were reported. Most of those were paralytic cases. - Last year had the second greatest total, 27,000. However, both diagnosis and reporting were much improved,, and the 1948 count included large num bers of non-paralytic cases of the type that were not even re ported in 1916. Hop Fiesta Queen Crowned Mayor Robert Spencer of Independence places the crown upon Bonnie Scott, queen of the Hop Fiesta. Princesses (from left) are Judy Kilmer, Linda Hill, Melba Wilson and Judy Fletcher. All members of the court received gifts from the Fiesta association. Truman to Keep Vaughanas Reply to 5 Percenter Probe Vaughan Sought Intervention For Tax Dodger Washington, Sept. 1 Drew Pearson testified today that Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vau ghan telephoned the justice de partment In 1946 "asking some Intervention" in the Income tax ease of a New Orleans oil man. The columnist took the wit ness chair In the senate's "five percenter" investigation short ly after a White House news con ference at which President Tru man said Vaughan would stay on as his army aide. Pearson identified the case as that of I. T. Burton, New Or leans oil man, and a "very good friend of William Helis." The columnist saidBurtonhad been tried twice on income tax fraud charges, and on both oc casions the jury failed to agree. Afterwards Convicted He went on to testify that Burton was subsequently in dicted and convicted of a charge of jury bribing. There was a lot of maneuv ering to prevent his conviction," Pearson said. He said he learned of Vau- ghan's purported interest In the case from James P. McGranery, now U. S. judge for the eastern district of Pennsylvania. At the time, 1946, McGranery was the assistant to the then attorney general, Tom Clark. Pearson said he was in Mc Granery's office, and that while he was there Vaughan telephon ed McGranery "asking some in tervention in the Burton ease," McGranery Refused McGranery, Pearson contin ued, told him about it, Pearson added: : "McGranery made the state ment he was darned If he was going to stand for any politi cal influence in the case." Pearson said that in Novem ber or December of 1946, "ru mors cropped up in Louisiana that large contributions had been made in the Kansas City primaries in order to prevent a conviction in the Burton case. Pearson had asked the com mittee to hear him. He said he wanted to deny that he prompted an FBI investigation of a report that Vaughan had accepted bribe in an income tax case. The committee questioned Vaughan about the FBI investi gation yesterday. He told them it was initiated by a "member of the press,", but he did not name Pearson as the man. Later. Col. C. J. Mara, assis tant to Vaughan, said that at the time the invesugauun w. in..n.hH Pearson was conduct inff n "vicious campaign" against v.,.hnTi. Mara also testified that the FBI "completely exon erated" Vaughan. The senate group recessed its hearings indefinitely after hear ing Pearson. It was left to Chair man Hoey (D-N.C.) to decide -when further hearings should be held. More are planned. (Concluded on Pare 5, Column 6) Boasts Russia Won the War Single Handed Br ths Associated Press) Today is the 10th anniversary of the beginning of World War II in Europe and the fourth an niversary of the Japanese sur render ceremony. The Moscow weekly New Times seized the occasion to de clare the Soviet Union won the European war single handed. The Soviet people bore the entire burden of the war against the German fascist invaders," it said. The Russians are just conclud ing their summer military ma neuvers east of the Elbe. The Americans will marshal 110,000 men in mock warfare in west Germany next week. Berlin Capital Of World Hate Berlin, Sept. 1 VP) Grass grows on some of the war ruins of Berlin, but this is a capital of world hatred. On the tenth anniversary of the bloodiest conflict in human history, which Adolf Hitler start ed and lost, people are trying fearfully to guess when the next war will break out. The Russians are just taper ing off their summer military maneuvers east of the Elbe. The Americans start a mock cam paign with 110,000 troops in the west next week. Germany, where the bloody conflict was spawned, today is a land divided. . This correspondent arrived in Europe In the Bpring .10 years ago, when hopeful souls still talked of "peace in our time. For the next six years mil lions of men fought with the most destructive weapons the world had ever known. Cities were ruined and ports shatter ed throughout the continent and elsewhere In the world. World War II was supposed to have been fought to crush Ger man militarism. But the lively ghost of the German army at least 100,000 troops strong has arisen east of the Elbe under Soviet sponsorship. Says Fair Deal To Be Enacted Washington, Sept. 1 (IP) President Truman predicted to day that his "fair deal" program ultimately will be enacted in full. The president told a news con ference he is confident that the 81st congress will catch up at its next session on matters he has been unable to get through at the current session. He reminded the conference that the 81st congress is in two parts and that there is still a long way to go even on the pres ent session. The second session starts in January. Mr. Truman said he stands full tilt behind the $41,900,000, 000 budget he submitted to con gress in January. i onlemplates No Change in Military Aide Washington, Sept. 1 VP) Pre sident Truman said today he will keep Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaug han as his army aide. That was just about all the comment Mr. Truman would make at a news conference about the senate in vestigation of Vaughan's acti vities. To other questions, Mr. Tru man said the hearing was held on Capitol Hill, and that it would not be continued up here (meaning the White House). A reporter asked whether ha thought Vaughan had got a "fair deal" from the committee. Mr. Truman declined oom- ment. Although the committee has dismissed Vaughan as a witness, Senator McCarthy (R., Wis.) said it is "just getting started" in Its inquiry about him. Endorses Deals" McCarthy, talking with re porters in advance of the presi dent's news conference, also said that for Mr. Truman to keep Vaughan as his military aide would amount to endorsing not only the "new deal" and the "fair deal" but also "all of Harry Vaughan's deals." Vaughan himself has indicated that one former White House fi gure John Maragon won't ba seen around there in the future. Vaughan said yesterday that Maragon needs to ba "washed up, fumigated." A reporter told Mr. Truman that Vaughan had said Maragon was his "loveable" friend, but ought to be "fumigated" before he re-enters the White House. ., (Concluded on Page S, dolman 6) lit t Held Slackening Washington, Sept. 1 VP) Pres ident Truman said today the war of nerves between the commu nists and democratic nations is slackening up very much. He expressed hope it would end In surrender as did the World War II shooting conflict. The president made the com ment at his news conference on the 10th anniversary of Hitler's invasion of Poland. He did not say so but implied that the sur render he hoped for would be that of the foes of the democrat ic nations. Asked for comment on the an niversary, Mr. Truman said he was exceedingly happy that the shooting war did not continue and regretted that it was fol lowed by a war of nerves. He said he hoped the war of nerves would end likewise in surren der. When a reporter asked what he meant by surrender, he said he meant just that. Pressed for his opinion on the present stage of the war of nerves he said he thought it Is slackening up very much. Later on, Mr. Truman said he was hopeful that the war of nerves will cease soon. When It does he said everybody will then be in a mood for peace, the United Nations would then work as it should and we should have generations of world peace. But he had nothing to say about Soviet troop movements in the vicinity of Yugoslavia. Secretary of State Acheson de scribed those yesterday as part of the Soviet war of nerves. Court Action to Upset Give-away Ban New York, Sept. 1 W) The American Broadcasting company has started court action to upset a federal ban on radio give-away shows. The suit is the first of several expected to be filed in the broad casters' battle against a federal communications commission or der against the prize programs. The ban becomes effective the first of next month. It would knock off the air most of the Jackpot shows which award some $5,000,000 a year in merchandise and cash to lucky listeners and contestants. The Columbia Broadcasting System, and the National Broad casting Company have announc ed they also will bring court ac tions challenging the ban. egy is completed. I