. Capita jfcM f THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY with nln tonight and thowen Wednes day. Little change In temper ature. Low tonight, 40; high Wednesday, 5$. FINAL EDITION 65th Year, No. 100 BoUrod u Mcoad elu nutUr at ftlt. Orioa Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, April Price 5c Weeks Slates No Nose Dive In Production ff Secretary of Com f merce discounts ' ; Talk of Depression ' Washington W Secretary of Commerce Weeks said Tues day there will be "no sudden mote dive in defense produc tion." And there is no reason ta fear a business bust when and if peace comes, be added. . "Stock market fluctuations, of course," Weeks told the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. "Ad justments during transitions following later reductions in defense spending, sure. Some 'downturns in business activity' n specific lines after over stimulation ends, yes. . "But no old-fashioned de pression. s "The administration would not sit twirling its thumbs if at ome faroff date it should be confronted by a sizeable eco- nomic emergency." : Russian Reaction -..- The cabinet officer said new peace feelers from Russia "seem to hint that Moscow may react more favorably to Presi dent Eisenhower's p r a c 1 1 c al program for permanent peace." . Experience has taugh Amer ica that we "must not lower our guard," Weeks said, but added: , ,: "The president's logic in his epochal speech may have con vinced the new. rulers of the Kremlin that world tensions should be relaxed, and that trade should take the place of barbed wire frontiers." Weeks painted a glowing pic ture of "a tidal wave of peace time output and world trade" which he said could follow if mankind were guaranteed 20 ' years of uninterrupted peace. ' ' (Concluded on Page 8. Column 8) Congress Cool On Immigration WSsMngtbfffiii- President Eisenhower apparently will have to press harder than he lias done thus far If he wants congress to revise the contro versial McCarran-Walter Im migration act this year. , . His proposal to permit U.S. entry of 240,000 European Iron Curtain refugees in the next twp years also faces trouble. .... S Reluctance to tackle changes in the parent act, which was criticized by Eisenhower and bis democratic opponent in last year's presidential campaign, was demonstrated Tuesday in senatorial reaction to the president's suggestion for a re view of the measure. In an April 6 letter made oubllc Monday by Sen. Wat- kins (R. Utah) Eisenhower suggested that a study of the law be undertaken. He listed 10 administrative provisions of the act he said "it is claimed may operate with unwarrant ed harshness." Unions Drive for Rail, Steel Hikes Washington VP) Union groups representing two mil lion workers met separately Tuesday to kick off drives for labor gains in tne Dig rauroaa and steel industries. Their plans could generate two of the year's hottest labor dlsnutes. They also may give an indication where pay rates are going in tne nation's econ omy since controls have been scrapped. Representatives of almost a rnre of non-operating rail hrntherhoods. claiming a mil lion members, gathered here for a four-day meeting to lay plans for demands on the Car riers when present contracts expire on Oct. 1. The rail unions, most of them affiliated with the AFL, plan ned to devote the four . day meeting to dlscuslng possible demands for changes In work ing rules. They may reserve a decision on pay rate demands for a later meeting. Meanwhile, the 163-member wage policy committee of the CIO Steelworkers was in ses sion in Atlantic City gearing up for a pay boost drive this summer. Weather Details Biff) Big Anli-Trust Suits Against Oil Firms Off Criminal Proceed ings Begun Under Truman Dropped , Washington VP) The gov ernment Tuesday '' formally dropped a criminal anti-trust proceeding against major oil companies but left the way 'open to reinstate it later if it decides that should be done. Leonard J. Emmerglick, special assistant ' to Attorney General Brownell, moved in U. S. District Court to drop the DroceedinK which was begun during the administration of former President Truman. .' Emmerglick said Brownell wanted to make it clear that a criminal . proceeding would be started .anew if warranted by facts developed in a civil anti trust proceeding against five big companies. Subpoenas' Quashed Judge James R. Kirkland granted Emmerglick s motion to nullify all actions taken in the criminal anti-trust case. These included the quashing of subpoenas which had been Is sued for the production of many thousand documents and the discharging of a grand jury which had been impanelled to consider the case. (Concluded on Fate 5. Column 3) Oil Lands Bill Vote Tuesday Washington VP) The Sen. ate agreed Tuesday to bring the bitterly fought submerged oil lands bill to a vote at 2 p.m. (EST) Tuesday: May 5. Foes of the measure, who have been conducting a filibui? ter-type fight against it, pro posed this when confronted with a threat from Republican Leader Taft of Ohio that the Senate would be kept in con tinuous session until there-was a vote. . V i Capitol employes were alrea. dy getting cots ready to put in Senate ante-chambers when Sen. Anderson (D.-N.M.), quarterbacklng the opposition to the bill, offered the agree ment for a vote on May 5. It was the, 20th day of debate on the measure. . Taft promptly accepted An derson's offer and the Senate, by unanimous consent, placed a time limit on debate on the bill and all amendments to it, effective Tuesday afternoon.' Atomic School Opens, Bavaria Oberammergau, G e r many VP) Mankind's most terrible weapons became a classroom study today in this little Ba varlan town where Christ's crucifixion - is enacted each decade. Key commanders of the North- Atlantic Treaty allies were on hand for the opening of two unprecedented U.S. of fered courses on the tactical use of atomic weapons and the development of defenses against them. The instruction, directed by Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's U.S. command in Europe, will be given by American army, air force and navy specialists under strict secrecy wraps. , Defense department spokes men in Washington said ear lier, however, that no restrict ed information would be given the students. Grabenhorsts Buy Area Fronting Commercial Purchase of a four and one- acre tract in the 2500 block on South Commercial street from Mrs. Ruth Graham by Graben horst Bros., was revealed to day in a deed filed with the county recorder. The property has a frontage of about 169 feet on the west side of Commercial and ex tends a depth of 1050 feet to Fairmount, The portion of the property fronting on Commercial will eventually be part of the Candalaria Shopping Center, will be reserved for business locations, while the more west erly part will be platted, de veloped and built up with resi dences and paved streets. There Is room for about 16 UN REPATRIATES LEAVE COMMUNIST AMBULANCES A :t v ;-w I ff "ZSmil WxJJ P in fir riiii tJiiifm iiasMirini'i''AM,w''r tt. a a to T-H Act Asked Washington IP) Sen. H. Al exander Smith (R.-N.J.) Tues day proposed that all "local" public utilities and all labor management relations in the building and construction in. dustry be exempted from Taft Hartley Law. ' .Smith, who is chairman of the Senate Labor Committee, offered the proposal as a for mal amendment to the act, now being studied for possible re vision by both the Senate and House Labor Committees. ' Smith was known to have discussed his amendment with Senate Republican Leader Taft (Ohio) and some other mem. bers of his Labor Committee. The amendment would also exempt from the present law, and thus leave under control of state labor laws, these other employer. categories: '-- . All employers of less than ten persons; and employers whose interstate businfts does not exceed "certain specified minima in terms of dollars and cents." NRA Still With Us in Spirit Washington VP) Remember the National Recovery Admin istration, the NRA . ."Blue Eagle" agency that went out of business after the Supreme Court found it unconstitution al in 1935? It's still with us in spirit at least. . " Tucked away in the indepen dent offices appropriation bill passed by the House last week was a $370 item for the NRA. It was authorized years ago to be spent on behalf of NRA by the Fish and Wildlife Service for land to be used as wildlife refugees. Rep. Norblad R., Ore.; cited the instance Tuesday as "proof that it is easy enough to estab lish an agency of government but almost impossible to get rid of it . . . Putting them out of business seems to be a life time matter." MUCH UNSPENT CASH Washington VP) A Senate House committee reported to day the federal government had more than 135 billion dollars in unspent appropriations on Jan. 31. Of this, $82,400,000,- 000 was available for military spending and $13,300,000,000 for foreign aid. residential lots, and this part of the development will begin immediately, George H. Gra- benhorst said today, The Gra benhorsts have no Immediate plans for the business develop. ment, but said that later the front portion of the property will, with other blocks owned by the concern, become a shop, ping center with modern busl ness buildings. The purchase gives the firm four blocks on Commercial, north of Alice Avenue for business develop ment. Mrs. Graham, the seller, is the widow of the late C.A. Gra ham. They bought the property involved in today's transaction from the B. J. Miles estate 17 years ago. T United Nations' returnees released by the Communists . during the fourth, exchange of POWs at Panmunjom, are shown about to enter receiving tent after unloading from Red ambulances. At right, center, is Rear Adm. John, Daniel, chief UN liaison officer. (AP Wirephoto) Claims Convicts Used To Clear Private Pressing his demand for' an investigation1 of the use of com vict ' labor, State ' Domocratlc Chairman Howard Morgan told Gov. Paul L. Patterson Tues- Gladden Now State Prison Supt.' George Alexander, was- out of a job Tuesday after .Gov. Paul - L Patterson; signed a bill to abol ish Alexander's position. ' ' irfonday, but reporters didn't find out about it until Tuesday when they checked the records of the secretary of state. : Since the bill contained, an emergency clause, it became law as soon as the governnor signed it., It makes Clarence T. Glad den, the hew warden, the top man, thus ending the system of dual control. For the past two years, responsibility for running the prison has been divided between the warden and superintendent. The bill also gives Gladden a total of two deputy wardens. The prison has had only one deputy in the past. ' . Naval Atomic War Games on San Diego, Calif. VP). An atomic war amphibious force of 120 ships, carrying 50,000 men, sailed ; Tuesday in the Navy's largest West Coast ex ercise since 1948. 1 Vice Adm. Harold. M. Mar tin, over-all commander, said the exercise would serve as an unorthodox trial and error test of new weapons and methods of use. ' Atomic bombi will be simu lated. Helicopters will be used along with surface landing craft to put the new Third Ma rine Division ashore at Camp Pendleton, ' 40 miles north of here, in its "graduation exer else" May 5. The force, while sailing from here, is theoretically moving from Honolulu and San Fran Cisco. The enemy is supposed to have seized Alaska, after atom bombing Kodiak, An chorage and Fairbanks, The southwestern states have been invaded from Mexico to a line extending from Santa Barbara to El Paso. The Ma rlne landing is aimed to cut behind this enemy line. 35 ReleasedPOW Land at Midway . Honolulu UP) Hlckam Field authorities said Tuesday a big military plane bringing home 35 exchanged U. S. sick ana, wounded landed at Midway at' 6:12 a.m. (8:12 a.m. PST). The operations officer sa' the plane stopped one hour for refueling. Normally it takes about six hours to fly from Midway to Hickam Field here. That would bring the prisoners in about 1 p.m. (3 p.m. PST). day thai convict labor has been used' until very recently to clear private land. Morgan wrote that contracts for land clearing have been ne gotiated verbally with the land owners by a "high prison offi cial who- was and still is a su bordinate of the Board of Con trol.'" ; A 1919 law, Morgan said, gives the Board of Control au thority to negotiate land clear ing contracts' with land own- But Morgan quoted Roy Mills, board secretary, assay ing that the board hasn't nego tiated such a .contract in the 12 years he has been secretary. (Conoluded on Fare 5, 'Column ) i : . Adlaiin India To See Country Calcutta,' India W)--Adlai Stevenson arrived here Tues day from Ragoon to begin a 17-day tour of India. The 1952 Democratic Party candidate for the U. S. pres idency told newsmen at the airport that he wants to get a first hand picture of "this great country" and see how India's agricultural and electric pow er projects are shaping up. Earlier in Rangoon, Burma, Stevenson - said he believes Viet Nam troops will be able to assume the main responsi bility for defending Indochina against Communist-led rebels within a year. He also said the Russians must show by deeds the sincerity of their re cent peace moves. These were among several observations made Monday at a press conference held at the, residence of U. S. Ambassador William Sebald. Stevenson said the "building up of a national army in Viet Nam is a very encouraging step" and he predicted these forces would be taking over the main fighting job in Viet Nam "within a year." Protest Firing Of Career Men Washington VP) An emer gency cpmmittee on natural resources told President Eis enhower Tuesday government career men "should not be re' moved from their - jobs to make room for political ap pointees." Ira N. Gabrielson, the com mittee chairman, told White House newsmen the group set forth that view at a confer ence with Elsenhower. Gabrielson, former chief of the interior department's fish and wildlife service, quoted the president as saying he Is "very , much in favor of strengthening the career serv ice." In reply to questions, Gabrl elson said there was no men tion at Tuesday's session of the . demotion of Albert M. Day from chief of the fish and wildlife service to assistant director. "No personalities were men tioned," he added. Hx-Hlei Spy hs0ks $2k $S Smelt Pkm UN Tells Reds 'Talk Business', ' Panmunjom U. The United Nations told the Communist truce team today to start talk ing business or face another rupture in armistice' negotia tions; Lt. Gen. William K. Harri son, senior U. N. delegate, gave the warning to North Korean senior delegate Gen. Nam II at a fruitless 39-mlnute meeting here, third of the resumed truce talks. . The sticking point still was the disposition of the 50,000 Communist prisoners who re fuse to go back to their red ruled homelands. . Aim to Speed Up Talks ' It was ' indicated Harrison was trying to speed things up. Most observers ' believe . the Communists really want an armistice this time. They suggest that the Reds first may nominate India as a neutral to take charge of Com munist prisoners who refuse to go home, and that the U. N. will agree. Then they expect the Communists to accept the u. . stand mat tne prisoners must remain in Korea until their future has been' decided. The Communists spent near ly the entire 39 mintues of to day s session rehashing pro posals, which the U. N. already had rejected, for the disposition of the prisoner issue. (Concluded en Page 5, Column 5) Indochina Reds Hanoi, Indochina VP) The communist-led Vietmlnh cap tured the mountain post of Pakseng, 42 miles northeast of Luangprabang, , as : invasion columns continued Tuesday to press upon Laos' royal capital from the north and east. A French spokesman an nouncing the fall of Paksene said he did not know now whether part of . the .French Laotian garrison there had escaped or whether the lVet minh took the post in a sharp fight.. . The invading troops Mon day night were reported with in ia miles of Luangprabang on the east, and one unoffi cial report said advance Viet mlnh units were within 12 miles on the north. The sector north of Lupang prabang was reported auiet Tuesday, indicating the enemy may be awaiting fresh sup plies before pushing closer to the town. The exact position of the Vietmlnh north and northeast of Luangprabang was diffi cult to determine. 12 Liquor-by-Drink Approvals in Eugene Eugene (IP) The City Coun cu monaay mgnt approved a dozen application for liquor- by-the-drink licenses. It was the council's first ac tion on such applications. They now go to the State Liquor commission for final action. Press on Capital Shopping Center Not For Parking Meters The Capitol Shopping Cen ter Merchants 'Association does not want parking meters in that district, the city council was told emphatically Monaay night by W. M. Hamilton. Hamilton reminded the coun cil that Pacific Mutual Life In surance Company, landlord of the businesses in the shopping center, had spent $5000 to pro vide a parking area on the east side of Capitol between Cen ter and Union, and $9000 on Marion and Union Streets be tween Capitol and 12th. If this had not been done, he said, there would be no parking at all on Capitol. By the adding of space on Mar ion and Union, he said, the in surance company had made it possible for two lanes of traf fic to move in the streets. "One way of looking at Planes Bomb Targets East Korea Seoul VP) Navy planes from task force 77 bombed targets in Eastern Korea Tues day to provide virtually the only action in the Korean war. ' Gusty winds and gray skies grounded almost all land-based planes., .v.. u, .'.. r. Only few patrols moved across No-Man's-Land as truce negotiators met for the third day at Panmunjom.: ." Observers' said both the al lied and communist armies ap peared to be under wraps pending the outcome of the renewed truce negotiations. There has been no official cease fire. Fighter-bombers from the carriers Valley ' Forge and Princeton struck targets at Tanchon and Sopo, firing two supply dumps and destroying at least eight trucks. ., , ,. Sabre Jet Pilot With 8th Air Force, Korea VP) A U.S. Sabre jet pilot told today: of a harrowing escape from-, six : Red MIGs which herded him north toward Man. churia as the U.S. Air Force offered big cash bonuses to Communist fliers who surren dered, ' : : uv . s M . Capt. Robert J. Anspach: of South Charleston, W.Va.,' said he and his wingman became separated in; a recent dogfight and "Then I saw. these six MIGs, two on my tall firing away and two on each aide. .! ."They seemed 'to be trying to herd me north." he said. tried every trick in the book to break through,, but they stuck with me. They took me to the deck very low over Sinul Ju, flying as a team." , Anspach said that a 2,000 feet over Slnuiju Communist flak batteries opened up and the anti-aircraft fire seemed to bother the Red pilots. "I broke through them and headed for the water," he said. "As soon as I got out over the Yellow Sea, they broke off the battle. Carrier Blast Kills 11 off Cuba Washington W A boiler ex plosion In the aircraft carrier Bennington Monday killed 11 enlisted men and Injured sev en others near Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The Navy ' said preliminary reports indicated that the ex plosion was caused by a fail ure of boiler tubing" In the 27,000 ton carrier's number two boiler. The Bennington was under way on a shake-down training run in the vicinity of the naval base off the southeastern coast of Cuba when the accident oc curred. Of the injured, six suffered second degree steam burns, the Navy said. The condition of the seventh man, similarly injured, was listed as "serious." this," said Hamilton, "Is that after the owner of the adjacent property has gone to the total expense of over $14,000 to pro vide the parking accommoda tions for the public, who are customers of its tenants, the city is now considering collect ing a revenue off of the in vestment made by the proper ty owner by making the people pay the city for the use of that Investment by installing met ers. Is that consistent? "It seems to us that it would be a wise policy oil the part of the city government to en courage as mucn as possible owners of private property to provide off-street parking on their property and on city streets In areas not needed for traffic." (Concluded on Pat $ Column I) Escapes Trap Smuggled Out ine I'..: -'' Design from GM Washington WV-Toad Ma son, self-identified former communist spy testified Tues day that he stole secret U.S. plans for a military dlesel en gine during World War n. The witness who Is from Walllngtoni NJ., said -the thefts were from a General Motors plant, In Cleveland, O., and not from a Detroit plant ; of General Motors as reported , previously by the senate in ternal security subcommittee , before which he testified. : : . Mason said he stole tha ; plans one by one from files . of the inspection division, and t smuggled them to fellow spies who worked as a cook and ( "second assistant ' dishwasher" f In the plant's cafeteria. Plans Photographed The plans then were photo- I graphed in a secret hideout in the basement of . the cafeteria he- said.-. ' ' V s.'-, .; -, He learned later, he said, t. that the blueprints were tfor only part of the engine, al though' he' had believed he was stealing the plans for tha entire unit A lean, bespectacled .man. Mason gave his testimony at a televised public hearing. . speaking in a nervous, . rath- . er high pitched voice which on occasion failed him. ' Mason said he also stole from a Dupont chemical plant ' in 'Cleveland the formula for ; a preparation for the preven- : tion and curt of disease among . livestock. ;M r.;-.! s (Cenohided Fate s, Column I) i Bomb Workers : Silent on Crimes; " Washington W Russell B. ' Chatham, who once directed lie detector examinations at tha Oak Ridge atomic plant, said Tuesday that 000 employes or prospective employes there ad-'' mltted during the tests that they had withheld from tha government information on such things as major crimes or membership In "Un-American" organizations. Chatham, president of a pri vate firm specializing in lie detector examinations, .made the statement in an open letter to Chairman Gordon Dean of the . Atomic Energy Commis sion.. . ... He said he had been "per- ' sonally and professionally' - damaged by an AEC press re lease of April 2 which an nounced discontinuance of lie-' letector use at Oak Ridge. The AEC. release stated that a study had shown "there la little data available Indicating that the polygraph He detector has any value in detection of Intent to- commit sabotage or espionage, or sympathy with subversive movements or ldlol ogles." . . . . . U.S. to Reject Moloiov's Plan Washington V-The United States' said Tuesday that a Soviet-proposed five-power peace pact Is unnecessary, and suggested that discussion of peace settlements not "degen erate into a mere propaganda battle." Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov told communist sponsored peace partisans in a statement published Monday that Russia favored their ap peal for a peace agreement among Russia, the United States, Birtaln, France and Red China. State department press offi cer Michael McDermott told newsmen Tuesday that this sort of pace "appears to be un necessary in view of the char ter of the United Nations which Is a peace instrument binding on all signatories, most of the nations of the world." Labeling the five-power pact Idea as a familiar piece of Soviet propaganda, he said the state department la still watting for the Soviet govern ment to act for peace Instead of Just talking about it. S ' : : '', v ' ! ' m ;