V THE WEATHER HERE GENERALLY FAIR tonight and Saturday, except early morning tot. Continued cold tonight. Slightly warmer Saturday after noon. Lowest tonifht, 2t; high eat Saturday, 60. Maximum jeattrdar, 11: minimum to day, 30. Total 24hour praelpttallon, 0: for month. l.U: normal, l.ao. Scaion precipitation, a.ai: normal, 3. si. Rivtr hcuht. -1 fatt, (Raporl bj VI. Woathar Buraau.1 Journal HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 251 Salem, Oregon, Friday, October 21, .1 (18 Pages) Price 5c Capital 'jk Top U.S. Reds Sentenced by Judge Medina Ten Get 5 Years Pri son, One 3 Years, All $10,000 Fines New York, Oct. 21 UR The 11 top leaders of the American communist party were sentenc ed to prison today for conspir ing to teach and advocate the overthrow of the United States government by force and vio lence. Ten were sentenced to five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. R. G. Thompson got three years imprisonment and a $10,00 fine. Identical sentences were handed down against Eugene Dennis, the party's general sec retary: John Gates, editor-in- chief of the Daily Worker, party paper; New York City Council man Benjamin J. Davis, Jr.; Jack Satcher, national educa tional director; Henry Winston, national organizational secre- tary; John Williamson, labor secretary; Gilbert Green, Illi nois chairman; Carl Winter, Michigan chairman; Gus Hall, Ohio chairman, and Irving Pot ash, vice president of the Inter national Fur and Leather work ers and a member of the party's national board. Two of Politbureau Free The conviction and sentencing riddled the communists' high command. Of the 13-member national board, only two mem- ors remained free. They were aMlliam Z. roster, national ?-iirman who was too ill to id trial on the same charge, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn who f"V named to the board after -vo other 12 were indicted by a NeW York grand Jury. Medina told U.S. Attorney John F. X. McGohey that he was giving "the most careful at tention" to the fact that Thomp son received the Distinguished Service Cross for his heroic ac tion in leading a patrol of the 32nd infantry division during the Buna campaign in New Guinea. Individual Sentences Medina pronounced sentence on each of the 11 individually, beginning two hours after the court session began. The judge directed the 11 to stand at their chairs at the left of the bench and called each of them by name as he pronounced sentence. Behind each defendant was a U.S. marshal. (Concluded on Pace 5, Column () Everson Jailed For Firearms Clifford M. Everson, an ex convict employed with the Sa lem Merchant Patrol business protection service, was ordered held in Marion county jail Fri day in lieu of $1000 bail pend ing a hearing on charges of il legal possession of firearms. Everson was taken to dis trict court in the morning, but asked for a 24-hour period to study the charge against him, The charge accused him of a fjnnv fllo-nl niMOainn nf a firearm capable of being con cealed upon the person. The charge was based on a law making it Illegal for ex convicts to carry such weapons. A conviction carries with it a one to five year penitentiary sentence. ) Everson was arrested in 1032, but paroled. On a forgery con viction In 1933, he served four months at the Oregon State pen itentiary. The arrest came last night while Everson was on patrol for the protection service operated by Harley V. Cordray, the for mer Salem police officer and ex convict from Illinois, who was arrested Thursday on charges of promoting a lottery tied up with slot machines. Cordray posted $1000 ball and was free pending further action of Marion county cir cuit court. Pickets Hold-up Payroll Pittsburgh, Oct. 21 (M Strik ing CIO United Steelworkers today refused to let non-union workers cross picket lines to collect pay at the Jones 'nd Laughlin Steel corporation Some joined the union so they could get through. No disorder developed. Teachers of 5 Counties to Meet Monday Instructors from Ben ton, Lincoln, Polk, Linn And Marion to Confer By DON UPJOHN County Superintendent Mrs. Agnes Booth Friday announced plans for a high school confer ence for teachers of five counties to be held in Salem next Monday and Tuesday at Salem high school with teachers here from Benton, Lincoln, Polk, Linn and Marion counties. On the same days at Leslie Junior high school an elementa ry teachers' conference will be held for elementary teachers of Marion county only. At the opening session of the big five county teachers' confer ence guest speaker for the morn ing will be Governor Douglas McKay. Greetings will be ex tended from Rex Putnam, state superintendent of schools, and invocation will be by Rev. Ches ter W. Hamblin of the First Presbyterian church. The bal ance of the morning and after noon will be given over to de partmental meetings while that evening has been designated as "fun night with square dancing and games and an orchestra pro vided. Departmental Meetings Tuesday morning's program is made up of departmental meet ings. In the afternoon F. A. Carleton will open the discussion followed by greetings from Cecil Posey, executive secretary. This will be followed by a panel on private industry and the conser vation program with Charles A. Sprague acting as moderator. Panel members will be Walter DeLong, director of public in formation for Weyerhauser Lum ber company, and Art King, soil conservationist for Oregon State extension service. (Concluded on P-cr .1, Column. 5) Truman Quoted On Big Strikes Washington, Oct. 21 W The White House refused today to affirm or deny reports that Pres ident Truman said there is "no sense" to the steel and coal strikes. Mr. Truman reportedly made the statement in an off-the-rec- ord talk to a group of 200 indus trialists at a hotel here last night. He also was reported to have told the businessmen there was something wrong" with them if they didn't sit down with their employes and work out their problems. He was quoted as saying labor' has equal respon sibility with management in set tling the coal and steel strikes. Press Secretary Charles G Ross was informed of second hand quotation but declined to say whether it was correct. Ross did say he had seen a steno graphic transcript of the presi dent's impromptu remarks. He said he is not making pub lic the transcript because the president spoke off the record and announced he was oins so at the start and close of the talk Ross said he understood the dinner was arranged by Ward Canaday, chairman of the board of Willys-Overland. A printed program carrieu about 200 names of industrial executives, including many it' company officials. Holding up Pearson 's Bill Hit by Neuberger Pendleton, Oct. 21 State Senator Richard Neuberger charged today that i. s "a prime act of political hypocrisy" for the secretary of states office to question a $160 state printing bill run up State Treasurer Walter Pearson, "for so-called per sonal advertising." (It was Gov. Douglas McKay, not Secretary of State Earl New bry. who refused yesterday to approve Pearson's printing bill. Newbry assistant, William t. Healy, said he thought it looked like a political campaign state ment, and predicted that New bry out of town at the time would not approve It, either (The governor and Newbry are republicans; Pearson and Neuberger are democrats) "I don't approve what Pear son did," said Neuberger "but Newbry has turned the licensing of motor vehicles into a personal publicity agency for distribution of hii own name." PrSa (Si ,P BU . ... si & ri (? 2s 2 2 ii Deadlock in. Both Big Strikes (By tha Aaaoclatad Prfail Coal operators walked out on contract talks with the United Mine workers Friday. But there was a flicker of hope that a break may come in the steel strike. Northern and western mine operators left White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., where negotia tions designed to end the live weeks old coal strike, were be- ing held. They accused John L. Lewis of being willing "to destroy" "ie coal industry "in his mad race for power. They said they would meet with union leaders again when the union leaders show they are ready "to con sider our employes and the in dustry." The situation in the costly, 21- day steel strike, says Cyrus S. Ching. federal mediation chief. is not hopeless." But, Ching said in a state ment in New York last night after conferences with U. S. Steel corporation officials, "we do not want to create the im pression that there is a basis for optimism." Ching's hint of hope, coupled with a warning against optim ism, followed earlier comment by President Truman that he has no present plans for inter vening in either the steel or coal strikes or for seizing either in dustry. Ching's statement came as the continuing steel - coal tieups choked off much of the nation s industrial activity and made idle more than a million workers. Troops Escape Hong Kong. Oct. 21 U- More than 50,000 nationalist troops from Canton and Kwang tune province escaped by the West river in the last days be fore Canton's fall and now are heading for Hainin islands, pn vate reports said today. The troops are commanded by Gen. Yu Han-Mour, who advised his family by telephone that he was seeking sanctuary on Hain an, of the southwest China coast. Forces under Gen. Pai Chung Hsi, which have dwindled from 300,00 to 200,00 men because of disaffection over failure to re ceive pay, were reported re treating through southwest China toward the Indo-China border. All communications with Swatow, southern coast port eva cuated by the -nationalists, have been cut. Neuberger. here to address the Pendleton Woman's club, also said that the official seal of Ore gon, embossed on gold paper, is sent all over the state like con fettl with Newbry's name signed to it." The senator said that the state printing office foots the bill. "Let's take all the names off the state literature, not just Pearson's," he said. "Very few states permit the auto license bureau to be turned into per sonal promotion agency." Neuberger had a bill in the 1949 legislature to take all names of individuals off official state literature, but it was de feated in the senate. Vishinskv Protests Russia's raises his hand to voice his protest during voting at United Nations general assembly at New York, which gave Yugo slavia seat on security council. Yugoslavia's United Nations delegate Edvard Kardelj (arrow) listens to proceedings. At extreme left taking his seat is British chief delegate Sir Alex ander Cadogan. (AP Wirephoto) Unemployment Claims Near Top 1949 Levels By JAMES D. OLSON Unemployment claims increased by 3,500 in the two weeks preceding mid-October to approach 25,000 a week, according to a labor report issued Friday by the state unemployment commis sion. Employment was maintained at near the top 1949 level through ''recent weeks, but seasonal de Mayer Fails to Form Cabinet Paris, Oct. 21 M" Premier Rene Mayer today was almost hopelessly stalled, informed po litical observers said, in his ef forts to form a new French coalition cabinet. Hesitancy of the socialists to enter his government was re ported the stumbling block for the radical socialist whom the national assembly last night ap proved for the premiership by a vote of 341 to 183. The possibility loomed, that the only way out of France's po litical crisis, now 15 days old, might be the dissolving of par liament followed by a general election. The socialist group in parlia ment debated all morning with out agreeing whether to go into Mayer's cabinet. There was talk the socialists might summon a national congress Sunday to reach a decision. Forecast tor Warmer Spell m th An.ntlatro Prrxat Temperatures dipped slightly lower again early today in east ern Oregon but the weather bur eau reported western Oregon was generally warmer than yes terday. La Grande, where a $100,000 apple crop is still to be harvest ed, reported a low of 18 degrees compared with 26 yesterday. Ba ker had 24 compared with 27; Lakcvicw 22 compared with 22, and Redmond 21 compared with 24. The Dalles reported 33, down three degrees from yesterday. The mid-Willamette valley was the exception to the generally warmer western Oregon region. The mercury touched 28 at Sa lem two degrees below yester day's minimum. Elsewhere, to day s low temperatures were two to five degrees above Thursday. Klamath Falls had 24, Roscburg 30, Eugene 26, Medford 27, North Bend 34. Portland 30. Central Oregon potato grow ers were concerned about spuds still in the ground. At Prine- ville, grower reports indicated some of the crop may have been damaged by the early season below-freezing snap. General Electric Behind with Orders Schenectady, N.Y., Oct. 21 (Pi General Electric company pro duction can't keep up with cur rent consumer demand, GE pre aident Charles E. Wilson re ports. Wilson said yesterday In a re port to stockholders that trre spective of the steel strike "wc will be unable to meet all pro duction requirements for the balance of the year." He reported a five percent In crease in net sales for the first nine months of the year. The total was SI. 190. 372. 040 com pared with SI, 137,935,052 farwsttcr for the Justice depart me same perioa msi i Andrei Y. Vishinsky (left) clines in lumbering and food harvesting and processing be gan early in the month, the re port stated. Local offices reported 36,000 qualified workers without jobs on October 1, a figure 21,000 higher than the unemployed a year ago. Placements for the month were slightly higher with jobs found for 7,505 persons in trade, service and industry and 15,523 in agriculture. Only 1,583 were placed in construction and lumbering however, as compared with 2,952 during September, 1948, and only 88 jobs in these industries remained unfilled at the end of the month, the report said. On the basis of reports cov ering 1,000 representative estab lishments, the number of non agriculture jobs as of Septem ber 15 was estimated at 433,500, almost the same as in August but 16,400 under a year ago. , Lumber and logging opera tions occupied nearly 77,000 per sons for most of the past two months about 14,000 below the 1948 all-time peak for Oregon's main industry. Construction with 25,600 workers was also about 15 per cent below last year's top, but other industries and most trade and service groups reported as many or slightly more employes than a year ago. Most of the early October in creases in unemployment claims, the report said, came from west ern Oregon, where seasonal lay offs in food processing and lum bcr were held responsible. In the two weeks preceding mid-October, the report said that initial claims from Salem, Eugene, As toria, Roscburg and Medford had more than doubled, while over-all increases of from 10 to 70 per cent were reported by nearly every office west of the Cascades. Leftist Union Files TH Oaths Washington, Oct. 21 M"i The left-wing United Electrical Workers, biggest CIO holdout against Taft-Hartley act rules, gave in today and filed non-communist oaths from its officers. The affidavits arc required by the labor law before a union can have access to national labor re lations board machinery for such things as collective bar gaining elections. They must state that the union officer are not communists and are not sym pathetic to communism. The U.E. has been described in hearings of the house un American activities committee as a hotbed of communist activ ity. Officers who submitted the anti-Red oaths Included Presi dent Albert J. Fitzgerald, Sec-rctary-Treaurer Julius Emspak and Director of Organization James J. Matlcs. The 10 vice presidents also signed. The NLRB bis no discretion about accepting the affidavits The authenticity of the oaths Is iiucin iv nicva v. Johnson Hits Hard at Critics Of Strategic Defense Plans Secrecy Veil Screens Visit of Chinese Reds Washington, Oct. 21 Senators nave clamped a secrecy lid on a state department mem orandum discussing reports that seven representatives of the Chi nese government arrived in the United States last August. The existence of the document came to light today in the print ed report of hearings held by the senate appropriations com mittee on the foreign arms pro gram. The report shows that Senator Knowland (R-. Calif.) told Un dersccretary of the State Webb, who was testifying behind clos ed doors: Seven from North China "I have been informed on what I believe to be reliable au thority that then are seven rep resentatives of the North China communist government that came into this country by way of Honolulu on or after August 25. . . . "I would like to know, first, if that is a fact; and second, if they are in this country, what kind of passports they have traveled on, . . ; and whether their passports or visas in this country had the approval of the state department." Webb, according to the print ed hearings, said he would furn ish the information. Not on Record Chairman McKellar (D., Tcnn.) remarked that it would be made a part of the record But the record released today contains only a parenthetical sentence: "This information has been supplied to the committee." Opposition to Higher Taxes WashinRton, Oct. 21 P) Cap itol Hill fired back at President Truman's talk of a tax increase today with counter proposals to slash government spending in stead. Another popular suggestion on how to make the government's ends meet was: By tax adjustments and oth cr incentives, encourage a bil lowing industrial and business economy with sights set on a $300,000,000,000 national in come. That, it is figured, would yield adequate revenue with out hikes in tax rates to sup port federal, state and local governments. National income now is at the rate of about $217, 000.000,000. House Republican Leader Martin of Massachusetts, issued a statement saying the president wants more taxes to put "his socialist schemes over on the American people." "The American economy," he declared, "is so shaky now that an increase in the tax burden might easily lead to a depression with millions ou of jobs." 'Unification Can Work' Army Chief of Stuff Gen. J. Law ton Collins (lrf) listens intently as Grn. Dwight D. Eisen hower, former army chief of staff, tolls the house armed services committee In Washington that he believes unification can work. He said differences of opinion were bound to oc cur and that "We're expecting perfection too quickly." Gen. Collins also testified, staling that he wanted In dispel any fears that there was an "overall pint" between the army and air force to "eliminate or drastically reduce the efiectiveness of both the Marine corps and the fleet air arm." (Acme Tele-photo) t Sheriff 'Mike' Elliott Portland Votes On Recall of Sheriff Elliott Portland. Oct. 21 M"i Port land and the rest of Multnomah county voted today in a special election on whether to recall Sheriff Marion LeRoy (Mike) Elliott. James W. Gleason, elections registrar, predicted 50 per cent of the registered voters would cast ballots, a heavier number than normal in special elections. Pineapples Still Unloaded The Dalles, Ore., Oct. 21 Wl A carload of Hawaiian pineapple waited on a spur track today and there was no hint when or whether it would be moved past picketing CIO longshoremen. The car was loaded with 49 tons of canned pineapple, destin ed for a San Jose, Calif., can nery, yesterday. Railroad offi cials said necessary paper work preliminary to moving it was not completed yesterday. Long shoremen, however, were bank ing on rail crews refusing to cross their picket line. Three pickets lounged at the port entrance today and two sat in a car near the spur track leading to the tcrmnial. Longshoremen say the pine apple was loaded in Hawaii in defiance of a longshore strike there, since settled. An effort to unload it last month ended in rioting. Only that which was unload ed before the fight broke out was put in the boxcar. The rest some 2,640 tons still is in the barge. A representative of Isleways, Ltd., the cargo owner, said yes terday the company still plans to unload the barge, but has not decided how or when. The port commission say the company must hire its own stevedores if it wants to do the work. l - . Y Plans Adopted Represent All Arms Branches Washington, Oct. 21 M Sec retary of Defense Louis Johnson said today his direction of tha military establishment is tim ed to keep world peace and get taxpayers 100 cents worth of de fense for every dollar spent The big, balding cabinet of ficer cracked back hard from the witness chair of the house arm ed services committee at critics of his department and its poli cies. The navy men who have at tacked strategic policies, he as serted, have built their case on 'straw men" and "false ru mors." ' In truth, Johnson said, the department has an "emergency war plan" that calls for utmost use of all the services and does n't resemble at all the picture painted by some admirals. Climactic Witness Furthermore, Johnson said, the congress members might be surprised to learn, in view of all the hullabaloo, that the plan was approved unanimously by the joint chiefs of staff represent ing all the services. Johnson was the climactic witness in the wind-up of the house group's airing of the bit ter row in the armed services. On the final day of the two weeks of hearings it also heard former President Herbert Hoov er and Gen. George C. Marshall, war-time army chief of staff and former secretary of state. Hoover called for "peace with in the armed services." Marshall said money was "at the root" of all the squabbling. The difficul ty, Marshall said, is that none of the services can have all the money they think they need. (Concluded on Pate 5, Column T( Johnson Fired Sec. Sullivan Washington, Oct. 21 VP) Sec retary of Defense Louis John son said today he asked for the resignation of John L. Sullivan as secretary of the navy because Sullivan did not believe in armed services unification. Sullivan resigned last March 25 with a blast charging John son with halting construction of a proposed navy super aircraft carrier without even consulting Sullivan. Johnson gave his account of Sullivan's leaving to the house armed services committee. He did so after Rep. Short (R., Mo.) had remarked that Johnson's sto ry of the carrier cancellation var ied from Sullivan's. Johnson was uuiuic iiic buiiiiiuiicc icauijiiia on bickering in the armed serv ices. "I have kept my mouth shut about Mr Sullivan's resignation. And Mr. Chairman, neither you nor anyone else has ever heard me say any unkind word about him. "Mr. Sullivan was not for uni fication and would not support unification. "He submitted his letter of re signation to the president on March 25 or a day or two before I was sworn in (as secretary of defense), because I told h I m there was no room on my team on the civilian side of the de fense establishment for any per son who is not enthusiastically for unification. " Police at Monmouth Active During Month Monmouth Police depart ment, city of Monmouth, report for September, is as follows: Number of arrests, 64; speeding, 13; no operator license, 6; park ing violations, 4; blocking traf fic, 6; no tail light on car, 3; total traffic violations, 53. L. M. Boyer nf Willamina was ar rested for drunken driving; Ber nard J. McHugh of Portland was arrested for reckless driv ing. Two arrests were for being drunk on streets In car. Melvin Keith Ross and Robert R. Wln kleback, both also of Salem. To tal fines collected during the- month, $387.50. Doris Not to Re-wed New York, Oct. 21 ( Duke, the tobacco heic today that she didn t j marry Porfiro Ruh inican republican tache.