Tut vEAtHtk mr MOSTLY CLOUDY, occasional light showers tonight; clearing Friday afternoon. Cooler to night; slightly warmer Friday. Lowest tonight, 48; highest Fri day, It. Mailman ytitorSar, t; mlnlmam 1 iar, U. Tolal M-honr nrerflpllatlon: Mi for month: l.sli normal, 1.4a. Seaaan nra alallallon, l.!Uj normal, 1.4a. Kivrr height, . leak tReaorl kj U.S. Woalhar Ba-aoan.) Capital HOM E EDITION 61st Year, No. 232 .rJSZ Salem, Oregon, Thursday, September 29, 194 (32 Pages) Price 5c Ford Agrees lo Pension Plan Averting Strike Agreement Based on Proposal Made by Steel Fact-finders Detroit, Sept 29 (PI The Ford Motor company and the CIO United Auto Workers reach ed agreement early today on a history-making pension plan to be financed by the company. " It will pay $100 monthly in cluding social security to Ford workers over 63. The agreement, based on a ten-cent an hour package recent ly recommended by a presiden- (tial fact-finding board in the Iteel industry, averted a strike of 115,000 Ford production workers. The ma r a t h o n negotiations ran nearly 35 hours without re cess and set an endurance record for the auto industry. As late as midnight, when the old contract expired. UAW President Walter P. Reuther said there was still a 50-50 chance walkout might be called. -10 Months Peace The new pact runs two and a half years, giving hope of long peace in the industry. Effective Oct. 1, providing it is ratified by rank and file Ford workers, the new contract is unique in the auto industry's history in at least three respects: 1 It calls for the firs.t major pension plan, and the company agreed for the first time to shoulder the entire financial re sponsibility for pensions. 2 For the first time, the un ion let its demand for an hourly wage increase go by the board in favor of security provisions. The present wage rate of $1.65 an hour will be continued. 3 The 30-month duration, a record in the auto industry. Affects Other Workers The pact may well affect mil lions of workers in the nation's other heavy industry particu larly the steel workers. Ford Vice President John S, Bugas said his firm's pension agreement was based on the ex penditure of the 10-cent an hour limit recommended by a presi dential fact-finding board in the steel industry. That "package" has not yet been granted to steel workers and a strike has been set for midnight tomorrow. "This agreement," Reuther said, "points the way in the steel industry, where they are resist ing a principle established here that a pension should be en tirely company-financed. It will lay the ground-work in our in dustry for moving forward." Housing Survey Assured Here The federal housing adminis tration will, as soon as possible, make a survey of housing in Sa lem In connection with applica tions for approval of apartment house projects here. The applicant is Robert Coates, Portland contractor, who is being assisted by the Salem Chamber of Commerce. The chamber has enlisted the services of Senators Guy Cor don and Wayne L. Morse and Representative Walter Norblad. A telegram received by the chamber Thursday from Sena tor Cordon said the survey had been promised by Raymond M. Foley, federal housing commissioner. "The commissioner has agreed," said the Cordon tele gram, "to review the situation, and is making arrangements for an FHA market analyst to make a survey in Salem as soon' as possible." A letter from Manager Clay Cochran of the Chamber of Commerce to the Oregon con gressional members mentioned the fact that Salem's population has increased since the 1940 census from 30.000 to about 55,000, and mentions an "actual record of new families coming into Salem on an average of over 100 per month for the past year." Cochran mentioned new nationally-known businesses that are becoming established in the Capitol Shopping Center and other industrial expansion. Coates proposes three apart ment houses totaling about 80 housing units to rent at $75 or more a month. One would be located In the south part of the city, one near the Capitol Shop ping center and on in the Hol lywood district Russia Scraps Peace Treaty With Yugoslavia Alliance Signed in 1945 Abrogated As Result of Rajk Trial - London, Sept. 29 W Soviet Russia scrapped her friendship treaty with Yugoslavia today, declaring that Premier Marshal Tito's regime baa lined up with "foreign imperialist circles." The decision ending the alli ance signed in 1945 was disclos ed in a Soviet note to Yugosla via. It was broadcast by Moscow radio. The note declared the Buda pest treason trial of former Hun garian Foreign Minister Laszlo Rajk, sentenced to death Satur day, disclosed Yugoslavia had been carrying on hostile activity against the Soviet union. Rajk was accused specifically ! of plotting with Yugoslav and! American agents to overthrow the Moscow-backed communist government in Hungary. Marsh al Tito denounced the trial as a Russian propaganda move aim ed at weakening his Yugoslav regime. Economic Boycott On The Russian action was the sharpest diplomatic slap at Yu goslavia since the Moscow-led Cominform (communist interna tional information bureau) ex pelled the Yugoslavs in June, 1948. Since that time Russia and her eastern European satellites have clamped an economic boycott on Yugoslavia. (Concluded on Par . Column 7) 4 5 " "i "'"(l:., 0-a .1 L-S"i :-'. i.iY i orL ill Plane Outruns Sun in Flight New York, Sept. 29 (P) A plane that outruns the sun was mentioned last night in an ad dress by Air Force Secretary W. Stuart Symington. "This same plane, if it had the range," he said, "would ar rive in San Francisco before it left New York. That will give worry to the time table experts." There is a three-hour time dif ferential between New York and the west coast. Symington spoke at a dinner of the National Security Indus trial association. The group in cludes major industrial suppliers of the armed forces. Symington did not specify what kind of plane he was refer ring to, but he prefaced his ref erence to it with his remark: "Man has now flown and lived at speeds hundreds of miles an hour faster than the speed of sound which is 760 miles an hour at sea level." The air force has admitted pos session of a super-sonic plane, the X-l, but hasn't disclosed its top speed. The plane is under stood to have reached a speed of close to iuuo miles hour for a matter of seconds. ( State Police Oust Pickets on The Dalles Water front Area ilPeace Prevails Following Goon Riot at Docks Italian Fliers Adrift in Plane New York, Sept. 29 M") TWA announced todav it had received a dispatch from its Paris office indicting two Italian fliers, miss ing since Sept. 17 in a trans-At lantic flight, were adrift in their plane near the Bahama islands. The fliers, John M. Brondello and Camillio Barioglio, were on a planned non-stop flight from the Azores to New York in a single-engined plane. The U. S. coast guard said an army plane already had left San Juan, Puerto Rico, for the loca tion given a point due east of the middle section of the Baha mas group. TWA said the dispatch from Paris was relayed at the request of the coast guard. The message indicated the fliers were alive and relayed from the Italian marine radio which picked up a blind message. The coast guard said the blind message said: "Alive, drifting near Bahamas. Insufficient food. Radio inoperative. No search planes sighted." Training Program For Atom War Ready New Orleans, Sept. 29 W) The federal government is ready to train the nation's fire fighters in what "to do in the event of atomic, biological or chemical warfare. William Gill, coordinator of civil defense planning in the na tional security resources board, told the International Associa tion of Fire Chiefs here yester day that the training programs are ready. The Dalles Police at the sate to the waterfront terminal were powerless to stem onrushing longshoremen yesterday in pineapple-unloading melee. Several photographers were hit and their cameras smashed, but Mel Junghant of the Oregon Journal, who took this picture, was not molested. Officer in uniform is chief of police; man in white trousers is auxiliary policeman. (AP Wirephoto) No Water Shortage for City from Cut at Intake By DON UPJOHN While an injunction against the city of Salem from diverting more than its 22 second feet of water from its Stayton Island in take becomes effective under decree of Judge Charles Combs of Lakeview Saturday, City Attorney Chris Kowitz said today there will be no shortage of water this year resulting from it. Judffe Charles Comhc. in hand ing down his decision from the Weather Predictions Blamed for Forest Fires By JAMES D. OLSON A dry east wind, together with low humidity in place of stormy weather as predicted by the weather bureau, was principally re sponsible for the devastating forest fires of the past week, accord ing to Acting State Forester George Spaur. Timber operators under the law are required to dispose of slashing and other debris once each season and during the week of September 11-17 many such controlled fires were in progress under permits issued by state forestry inspectors. On September 17 the weather bureau predicted a storm rolling in from the coast. Even though the weather at the time was clear, the bureau insisted that the storm was on its way. The storm failed to materialize. "We were caught off guard by the report" the acting forester said "and the next thing we knew we were fighting fires. Fortunately, none were as disas trous as they might have been. Under the law logging opera tors are required to dispose of all slashing and debris consti tuting fire hazard. Both jail sentences and fines are provided In the law for operators who fail to do this. But before I slash fire can be started permit is necessary from the forestry department and an inspector passes on the burning area, the fire equipment of the operators and other essen tials before such a permit is granted. Lonely Heart Slayers Guilty Dover, Del., Sept. . 29 W) Under heavy guard in the Kent county jail, Mrs. Inez Brennan, 46, and her son, Robert, id, spent a calm night after their conviction in the lonely hearts slaying of Wade N. Wooldndge. Deputy Warden Harry Perry said today neither of the de fendants broke down after leav ing the courtroom where they were found guilty by a jury of 10 men and two women. Robert was convicted of first degree murder in the death of his mothers elderly Virginia suitor, but the verdict carried a recommendation of mercy. His mother, found guilty as his accomplice, was accused of ordering Robert to shoot Wool dridge. The jury did not rec ommend mercy for her. Perry said Mrs. Brennan seemed stunned by the verdict and at first was not able to un derstand the differences in the jurors' decisions between herself and her son. Bevan Replies To Churchill London, Sept. 29 Ml Bri tain's labor government defeat ed a conservative motion of no confidence tonight by a vote of 350 to 212 in the house of com mons. Steel Plants Bank Fires for Strike Signal Pittsburgh, Sept. 29 WP In the face of a strike threat, one small steel firm today agreed to pension and insurance pro gram terms demanded by the CIO United Steelworkers. The union jubilantly reported that Portsmouth (Ohio) Steel Corp., employing 4.000, had ac cepted a 10-cent hourly non contributory program exactly as recommended by President Truman's fact-finding board. The firm ranks 14th among steel producers. It was the minimum that Steelworker President Philip Murray said he would accept to keep his unionists on the job af ter midnight Friday strike deadline. Meantime, other steel firms began to shut down operations as steelworkers began walking out. Picket Lines Formed The Crucible Steel company just outside Pittsburgh said picket lines had been establisned at its gates and have resulted in a full-fledged strike, shutting down the entire Midland (Pa.) operation involving about 7,000 employes." A company statement added: "Arrangements have been concluded with the union for the orderly shutting down of the open hearth facilities and the coke ovens." (CwKladcd on Pxe t, Column () 1 M (V, -U . - J Oral understandings art reach- (under control. ed between the Inspector and the operator as to burning pro cedure and written Instructions as to what areas are to be broad cast burned and what areas spot burned. The difficulty arises that wea ther conditions can change the entire picture when slash burn ing time arrives and should an operator go ahead with his burn ing a high wind could carry the fire out of control. All logging operators must in stall fire fighting equipment satisfactory to the forestry de partment regulations; must re move all snags from the slash burning area must not burn In any area where young trees are growing. Spaur explained that the prob lem of slash fires is difficult. This he said was due to the fact that the department requires holding up large slash burnings until after a rain, but the slash ings won't burn if too wet. When slash fires are set the law requires that there be a su pervisor to each ten or 12 men on the job, such supervisors re sponsible in keeping the iires London, Sept. 29 (U.f A gov ernment spokesman, answering Winston Churchill's challenge to hold an election, denounced him today as a peddler of "fla tulent generalities" and called upon him to retire from public life. Health Minister Aneurin Be van, ace orator of the labor party, lambasted Churchill yes terday mercilessly on the third and decisive day of debate in commons on devaluation. He pounced hard on Churchill's black picture of British life un der a labor administration. Bevan rejected "tor the mo ment" the conservative demand for an immediate general election. The word "He" was bandied about. Bevan said at the outset he welcomed the chance "to prick this bloated bladder of lies upon the poinard of truth." Churchill snapped back that the word "lie" should not be used in the house. A tense situation was resolved by a ruling from the speaker that Bevan was reciting a quotation, not applying the word to Churchill. Bevan accused the conserva tive party leader of using every opportunity to deprecate British efforts. bench last August in the case against the city for alleged ov eruse of North Santiam river water, fixed the October 1 date as effective time for the per manent injunction. But, he said t the same time, if the eity found itself short for municipal use the date might be extended on into next summer. City Attorney Kowitz Friday is preparing papers for Judge Combs' signature asking for an extension of time. He said if this is not granted in time to permit the extension of the injunction date he will be prepared to file notice of appeal to the supreme court from Judge Comb's decis ion which, in itself,' would serve as a stay of proceedings as to the injunction date. Right now, said the eity at torney, the river mark is below that allowed under the decree so that the 11 cubic feet allow ed the city Is encroaching on the priorities of the plaintiff Gard ner Bennett. September, he said, is the low water period for the North Santiam. It had been hoped there would be fall rains which would bring it up past the necessary level for the city's water supply to be in the clear, but so far no such rains have fallen. As a result quick action is now considered expedient or the watermaster, acting under decree, will shut down the city's headgates to regulate the divers ion flow into its intake pipe, or regulate the valves, as he may find necessary. The decree directs the defend ant water master to assume con trol of the division of waters in that locality by adjusting the headgates and valves or other diversion works to divide the waters in accordance with the relative priorities "and to con tinue to divide said water as aforesaid so long as such defic iency in the flower of the stream at the city's diversion point shall continue." The decree states that the pri ority of Gardner Bennett, plain tiff, dates from 1866 that the Salem power right dates from 1856 and the eity of Salem's right for municipal use from 1923. Huge Bombers Sent Alaska Fort Worth, Ttx Sept. 29 W The Star-Telegram said to day long-range B-36 bombers began moving to Alaskan bases last week at the same time Pres ident Truman announced an at omic explosion in Russia. The newspaper said the huge bombers were manned by crews trained to deliver the atomic bomb. The 8th air force, whose 7th bombardment wing is the only wing in the air force operating B-36s, is located at Carswell air force base here. Eighth air force headquarters described the B-36 flights as "routine train ing missions." However, the Star-Telegram said it learned one of the planes which flew to Alaska carried Brig. Gen. John William P. Fish er, Carswell base commander and commander of the 7th bom bardment wing. Ma). Gen. Roger Ramey, the 8th's commander and one of the top experts in the air force on atomic warfare, was scheduled to return to his hvaclquarters here today after more than a week of conferences in Washington. Fishing Boat Blast Fatal to Youth Portland. Sept. 29 An 18- year-old boy perished and his father and another man were hurt in the explosion of a fish ing boat at a moorage here to day. Edward Arthur McGrath, Jr., Portland, was knocked Into the water. Rescuers pulled him out, but he was dead on arrival at a hospital. Timothy David Lake, Depot bay, said the sports fishing boat Jlnco blew up when be tried to start tht motor. Lonely Vigil telipe D Aquino, husband of Mrs. Iva Toguri D'Aquino (Tokyo Rose), maintains a lonely vigil in corridor outside San Fran cisco federal court as he awaits jury's verdict in his wife's lengthy treason trial. (Acme Telephoto) Jury Still Out Tokyo Rose Case San Francisco. Sept. 99 119 A jury of six men and six wo men today went into their fourth day of deliberation on the fate of Mrs. Iva Toguri D Aquino accused of ireason lor broad casting as the wartime 'Tokyo Rose." The jurors had argued for 98 hours and 25 minutes wham they were locked up last night and told to resume 'their study of the evidence this morning. Although shaken by the 66 day trial and the long wait for a verdict, the 38-year-old de fendant still managed a wan smile and a small joke. After the jury filed into tourt yesterday afternoon to request further exhibits, a faint smile played across Mrs. D'Aquino's lips. When she was led back to the U. S. marshal's office, a pho tographer's flashbulb failed to go off. "1 guess I broke tht earners." she said. McKay Holds-up State School Survey Governor Douglas McKay in structed the atate department of education to hold up the ap pointment of an tupert to make a survey of tht state schools. Yesterday, the board voted to hire T. C. Holy, an Ohio State university professor, to make the survey. But Attorney General George Neuner ruled that the legisla ture intended that the survey be made by its interim commit tee on the school system. Neu ner held that to hire an outside expert would be an illcgaj del egntion of power. Tht Dalles, Ore., Sept. 29 -J R) Oregon state police carrying ri ot guns with fixed bayonets to day ousted CIO longshoremen from tht waterfront area where six 'men were injured yesterday in an outburst of picketing vio lence over the "hot" Hawaiian pineapple issue. Four hundred longshore un ionists had arrived in The Dalles by 11 a.m., Leonard Kelly, prominent The Dalles wheat and cherry rancher, notified authori ties that he had organized a vol unteer brigade of farmers and ranch hands which would be "on call" If needed by police. Injuctlon Defied Despite an injunction issued against further picketing at this Columbia river port, carloads of CIO dock workers from Port land and other downriver water fronts returned to The Dalles in mid-morning. They described themselves as "pedestrians," not pickets. Thirty-five blut - uniformed state troopers, under orders from Gov. Douglas McKay to "tup press banditry," turned back longshoremen who approached the forbidden dock area. AH persons without special permits were ordered out of the water front district. 'What are they going to use- tear gas?" asked one longshore man who was halted outside tht restricted area. Stottlt Goon Squad Automobiles loaded with long shore-men began arriving in The Dalles in mid-morning. Police Chief M. X. Cloe said he had re ceived an "unconfirmed report" that a "goon squad" was enroutt here from Seattle, Wash. (CoaoMaal on Faxe I, Column ) -- - i -- "ill in .lit-.- I ill 'in ! V Maison Leaves For The Dalles Superintendent of State Polio H. G. Maison left for The Dalles this morning to take over per sonally supervision of state po lice operations in the "hot pine apple" dispute. Gov. Douglas McKay, who dis patched state police to The Dalles Wednesday night to curb what he described as "banditry" in violence growing out of a dis pute over unloading of a pine apple barge there, said he would remain in Oregon until the situ ation is "clarified." The gover nor was slated to leave for St attle today to attend a meeting of the Pacific Coast Intergovern mental Relations conference. He had accepted an invitation from Gov. Arthur Langlie of Washing ton to attend the Notre Dame Washington football game In Se attle Saturday. McKay said The Dalles city of ficials informed him that the situation was beyond control of local authorities. He declared: 'Harry Bridges is not running the state of Oregon." Bridges is president of the International Longshoremen's union, CIO, which has been on strike for sev eral months in Hawaii in sup port of wage Increase and im proved working conditions demands. Airmen Confer Britain's air chief Marshal Sir Arthur William Tedder (right) chats witli Gen. H. H. (Hap) Arnold, retired army air force chief, on the iatler's ranch near Sonoma, Calif. Tedder, who is In the U. S. to learn more about American air power, would not comment on connection of his visit to the rerent announcement of Soviet poestion of the A-bomb. (Acmt Telephoto) New Republic For Mongolia Hong Kong, Sept. 19 F.ttablishment of a new anti- communist autonomous Mongo lian repubic claiming jurisdic tion over 1. 000,000 people of in ner Mongolia was announced htre today. C. T. Shi, official spokesman for the new "Mongolian self government." told a news cli- ference the republic was pro claimed on August 11. The na tionalist government, he said. will have nominal tontrol over foreign relations and national defenst for tht new Mongol state. Tht proclamation was disclos ed as Red armies swept from the west through Inner Mongolia, ChtntKt communist troops, sup ported by their satellite Red au tonomous Mongol government, are believed to have already oc cupied the capital of tht new Mongol slate.