THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY wit Mat tered answers Unlrht, kwrn. tag partly cloudy, slightly winner, Wednesday. Lew U alfht, it; Ugh Wednesday, 7. JoHima F IN At EDITION ill LJT Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, August 4, "353 . On'jLsitjs Price 5c 65th Year, No. 184 V ? ! ''1 v1 Hew License Plate System BringsSavings Cost of Plates to . State Reduced by $100,000 a Year By JAMES D. OLSON 83rd Congress Writes Finis to First Session Adjourns at Midnight On Action and Lethargy Record Washington OR At the PRESIDENT GREETED BsawSim Bin i "1 Cm of the stuttered license piste system in Oregon hss re salted in s saving ei $100,M a year in license plate east, ac cording ta a report issned Toes day by Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry. License plates for the 1949 1951 biennlum cost the state (379,632.62. Despite increased cost for plates and a marked increased of motor vehicles registered in the state, the plate cost for the 1951-53 biennlum was $188,066.66 or a saving of $191,565.96 for the two-year period. Authorised in 1941 The five-year license plate, issued on a staggered or month- ly basis, was authorized by the 1949 legislature at the request of Newbry. Officials of the motor ve hicle department declare the public has thoroughly accepted he change which has eliminat- Id the old year-end rush for registration and plates. 5-Year Plan Under the new plan new au tomobile vehicle plates will be issued every five years, with, i new plates scheduled for issu ance in 1955. Records of the' department show that during the five-year period from 1947 to 1952, Ore gon saw its greatest growth in motor vehicles. William E. Healy, assistant secretary of state, who pre pared the report, said at the end of 1947 there were 935,000 motor vehicles in Oregon. By the end of 1952 the number had climbed to almost 750,000. Motor Vehicles Increase The actual increase in the number of motor vehicles in (Conunaed on Fas i, Clnma f) Seattle Red HelfSuicide Seattle VP) Coroner John P. Brill Jr., lilted as "suicide' Tuesday the death of William J. Fenrock, one of seven de fendants in the government's communist -conspiracy trial here. Pennock's wife found him dead in his bed Sunday night. His attorney, John Caughlan, said Pennock lay down to rest about four hours earlier. Brill said chemical analysis showed death was caused by acute corrosive gastritis "due to pnebarbital poisoning sui cide." He said the drug was a sedative used in sleeping pills. The trial of the six other de fendants resumed in Federal Court Tuesday but Judge Wil liam J. Llndberg recessed the session after less than an hour. and announced only limited morning sessions would be held the rest of fee week. This was in response to pleas of defense attorney who said there would be 'unavoidable delay" in replaantnf the de fense case. Judge Llndberg expressed ' regret to Pennock's family at his "untimely death." Caughlan and Henry Huff, the latter one of the defend ants, gave eulogies for Pen nock. Light Showers Break Drought Showers of rain coming ' down during the nignt ana ' early Tuesday morning . amounted to .20 of an inch in Salem, the first measurable ' (precipitation since July 29. July was a dry month with only a tract recoraea xor we The five-day forecast out calls for some scattered show ers tonight, considerable sun shine Thursday and Friday, with more scattered showers late Friday and Saturday, clearing again Sunday. Tem peratures are due to continue slightly below normal. The Monday maximum went only to 65 degrees, but Tues dsy morning's minimum wss bit higher then for preceding at SS deOTMf. The showers over Monday eased the forest fire danger, although ll.htnlng storms still threatened. Weather Details TMterSiT. SSI IS. T.UI M-kar rlIUtlml J ft Mtkl Jt MTMl. ' """" kritht. -S.1 fk nntn t U S. Wtatt mr Sanaa.) stroke of midnight, the repab- Ueaa -controlled (3rd ceagreas wrote fink to a mixed record of action and lethargy in helping President Eisenhower imiui Ms campaign pledges. But the lawmakers left bo- hind for their second session beginning January 6, or pos sible special meeting this fall, an imposing list of key meas ures which will make or break their record. Many of the hottest pot toes, including some of the president's r ec ommendations, were simply left in the bin, Others, on the advice of the president, were handed to study commissions for closer scrutiny. Ike Reports Thursday This first session, of the first congress in two decades to be republican-controlled while a republican was in the White House, made a firm start to ward edging away from the democratic party's New Deal and "Fair Deal" philosophies. But even republicans con ceded it was only a start, and much of it at that achieved only with democratic aid. (Can us sea en Pas a, Cetasaa 1) Congressmen Head for Home Washington VP) Congress members headed home Tues day for a five-month vaca tion, with the prospect of re turning next January to face an official finding that they are underpaid. One of the last acts of con gress was passage of a resolu tion creating an independent commission to study congres sional and Judicial pay scales. The commission, to be com posed of six members appoint ed by the president, six by the chief justice, three by the house speaker and three by the vice-president, must re port not later than January 15, nine days after the start of the next regular session. And within 60 dsys after that, the resolution directs, congress shall act on the com mission's recommendations. Seek Uranium By Airplane Portland VP) Hidden treas ures are being sought in Ore gon by the latest method, air reconnaissance with elaborate instruments. There are Instruments that tell whether uranium lies in the mountains and plains the U.S. Geological Survey plane is flying ever. The instruments even csn tell whether the ground struc ture is promising for gas and oil exploration. The twin-engined plane, equipped with devices, to search for radioactive material, flew over Malheur and Harney counties Mondsy. Results will be announced later at Washington, D.C., said Parke D. Snavely, Jr., a geologist at the Portland office of the U.S. Geological Survey. Fay Lib- bey of the state department of geology accompanied him. Other flights this week are to take the plane over the coast range, the Willamette valley and the Cascades. Convicts Yell Five Hours During Night About 120 of the ringleaders of the July 10-13 rebellion at the state, penitentiary created a five-hour disturbance dur ing the night, but no damage was done. Wsrden Clarence T. Glad den ssid the men, who are still locked up because of their pert In the rebellion, "holler ed and yelled from 10 pjn. until S s.m. "They wero trying to at tract attention. They claimed they were yelling because one of their number didn't get his medicine on time. "They are the trouble mak . ' V l v '.-'j' Taf t Buried in Cincinnati VP) Sen. Robert A. Taft, the son of a President snd one of the nation's leaders in his own right, was buried Tuesday in the little commu nity which has claimed him as its own for three decades. His family and close per sonal friends were the only ones in attendance as a simple funeral service was read in the little slate-roofed Indian Hill church. There were slight ly more than 200 persons in the church. Fifteen miles away in down town Cincinnati public off! dais and the public gathered in Christ church for a memor ial service... , Sen. Taf t's body was brought back here Monday after a state funeral ki Washington. He died Friday in New York of cancer. An estimated la.uuu oersons viewed the closed bronze casket Monday in downtown funeral home. McCarthy Alter Allen Dulles Washington VP) Sen. Mc Carthy (R., Wis.) today accus ed Allen W. Dulles, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, of covering tip infor mation about a top oniciai oi the supersecret organization. McCarthy, chairman of the senate investigations subcom mittee, made public correspon dence with Dulles, brother of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles about getting Informa tion in the loyalty-security file of William Bundy. McCarthy, in a senate speech last month, said 'Bundy had contributed $400 to the de fense fund of Alger Hiss. Bundy is a top CIA official and a son-in-law of former Secretary of State Dean Ach- eson. Dulles advised McCarthy that a complete investigation of Bundy resulted in a "favor able determination by the CIA loyalty board and the loyalty review board of the Civil Serv ice commission." KING HAAKON SI Oslo, Norway, VP) Europe's oldest reigning monarch, King Haakon VII of Norway, cele brated his 81st birthday Mon day. "They'll stay locked up un til they learn to behave them selves." The worst of the trouble makers, the warden said, are locked up in the 30 segregation and Isolation Cells. The other 120 men are Isolat ed in the newest cell block. The rebellion started out as a sitdown strike on July 10. The convicts had control of the prison yard and industry buildings. They burned -, down the $100,000 tailor shop building, and then were driven into the baseball field, where they Seattle, Wash., Aug. 4 President Dwight Eisenhower (left) shakes hands with Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas as the President made an appearance at Governor's Confer ence banquet late last night. In center is Gov. Arthur B. Langlie of Washington, host Governor to the 45th annual conference of which Gov. Shivers is chairman. (AP Wire-photo) Ike Says Foreign Aid Cheap for Security Seattle, VP) President Eisenhower told the nation's governors Tuesday the foreign aid program offers "the cheap est way" to American security. Ban Imposed On McCarthy Washington VP) Sen.. Mc Carthy's - investigations sub committee can file -no reports with the Senate during ad journment without approval of a majority of the 13-member Government Operations Com mittee. The ban was imposed on the sub-committee late last night when Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R., Maine) blocked what appeared to be a routine resolution. The resolution, offered by Acting Republican Leader Knowland of California, asked the Senate's permission that the sub-committee of which Sen. McCarthy (R.. Wis.) is chairman be allowed to submit reports of its investigations to the Senate and have them printed at government expense during adjournment. . The parliamentary situation allowed the objection of a sin gle senator the bar the resolu tion. Discover Sash Of Virgin Mary Worcester, Mass. VP) Dis covery in Syria of a sash be lieved to have been worn by the Virgin Mary was announc ed last night by American Archbishop Mar Athanasius Yeshue Samuel of the Assyrian Apostolic Orthodox church. He said he learned of the discovery in a letter from Mar Ignatius Ephrem I, Syrian Pa triarch of Antloch and All the East. The letter said the sash was located in a fragile glass case beneath the a.tar of the centuries-old Church of Our Lady of the G 1 r d 1 e of the Virgin Mary, in Horns, Syria. The glass casing disintegrated at touch, the letter said. An ancient legend said the sssh wss in the church but spe cified no resting place. The church was built in 59 a.d. and altered several times but the altar has remsined In place 1894 years. Dean Not Among First POW Freed Munsan W) Ma). Gen. Wil liam F. Dean apparently will not be among the first Ameri can war prisoners returned by the Communists at Psnmunjom tomorrow. The first group of prisoners to be freed by the Communists arrived at the Red armistice camp in Kaesong last night, and Communist correspondents said they had no knowledge of The President, speaking formally at a round table dlS' cussion at the 45th annual governor's conference here, as serted that the money the United States Is pouring into efforts to strengthen its Al lies is not going out as part of a "give-away program. - We re not voting a give away program," he declared. "We are moving In the cheap est way toward preventing the most terrible thing that could .happen to the United States of America." Eisenhower pinpointed this remark with a discussion of the situation in Southeast Asia. He said the 400 million dollars Congress has voted toward helping finance the fight against Communism in Indo china represents security in surance for this country. Rescue 38 on French Plane Athens, Greece VP) An Air France DC4 flew Tuesdsy to the Greek Island of Rhodes to pick up 38 survivors from the airline's Constellation which crash-landed just off the south west coast of Turkey Monday. An Air France spokesman said a final count showed four passengers died in the crash, The survivors Included 30 passengers, three of them in jured, and all eight members of the crew. The plane's French pilot, Capt. Raymond Terry, after his two left engines failed, re portedly nursed his huge craft toward Fethiye, on the gulf of Makrl, and belly-landed it in the water close to the shore. Fethiye is 60 miles east of Rhodes. Turkish boatmen brought the survivors to shore. Among the rescued passen gers were the American wife of an Iranian, Mrs. Marjorie Clark Yahyavi, of Portland, Ore., and their child. They were returning from the Unit ed States to Tehran. Cannery Strike Hearing End San Francisco VP) Striking AFL Cannery Workers and the California Processors and Growers Inc., reached a tenta tive agreement early Tuesday which would end the week- long walkout against the state's major fruit and vegetaDie can neries. The agreement, reached after seven days of federal and state mediation, Is contingent on ratification by both sides, said John W. Bristow, executive vice-president of the CPG. Vern Pickerel!, spokesman for the growers, ssid his group will allow the regular union cannery workers until Wednes day to get back on the job. If they are not, he declared, the growers will be forced to move into the struck California Packing Corp. with their 1,100 man volunteer force to start canning the poaches them selves. Dulles Confers With Rhee on Lasting Peace Seoul VP) Secretary of State Dalles arrived from Washington Tuesday night for important talks with President Syngman Rhee. He said he hopes they will help trans form the Korean trace "Into an honorable and lasting peace." Dulles said he will visit Rhee nt 10 ajn. Wednesdsy 5 p.m. Tuesdsy PST, less than 12 hours after landing at Seoul City airport His plane was delayed by a combination of engine trouble and bad weather and was 13 hours lata on a flight across the stormy North Pacific. The plane landed at 10:06 p.m., 3:06 a.m. PST. Piano Repairs Needed The four-engine Constella tion developed a faulty . oil pump on one engine three hours out from McChord field near Tacoma, Wash. It re turned and spent two hours on the ground for repairs. A member of Dulles' party said at no time was the plane in any danger. When the plane reached Shemya island in the North Pacific the weather closed in and Dulles and his party wer grounded for aev era! hours before the weather cleared. (Cutlnaed ao Paf 5, Column 7) General Clark Visits Capital .Washington V-Cen. Mark W, Clark flew into Washington Tuesday to receive a formal military welcome and to con fer with defense chiefs before returning to his command in the Far East. Clark said in a brief state ment at National Airport that the armistice in Korea is "Just an agreement between com manders to stop the fire it does not mean that we have brought peace to that troubled part of the world." - Clark said the issue of peace will be "up to the political con ference that is to follow." Clark left the Far East last week after the armistice was signed and flew to New Or leans to attend the wedding of Ms son. He was sccompanled by Mrs. Clark. He plans to return to Tokyo in about a week. Judgeship Bill Dies in Senate Washington IW0 A bill that would have enhanced Oregon's chances for a federal judgeship died in the closing hours of Congress. The bill, which would have Increased the size of the ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, was blocked by Sen. Pat McCarren (D-Nev.) who Insisted that the measure include provision for another district judge in bis state. The version approved by the Senate would have meant ap pointment of three additional members of the ninth circuit bench. Several Thousand to Co into Nevi Upwards of 5,000 Salem vot ers will find themselves In dif ferent city wards from where they have been before by a change in ward boundaries called for in an ordinance bill now before the city council. However, the new lines have been fixed so that all council members remain in the wards from which they were elected. The new ward map, on which City Recorder Alfred Mundt, the city administration and the engineering depart ment have been working for several months, is msde neces sary because ward divisions have become out of proportion. This has been caused by an nexations and also by the at traction of population to cer tain areas of the city. In general Wards 1, 2, S and GOP SENATE LEADER a , 'Or-- , Senator William F. Know- Jand of California elected majority leader of Senate to succeed the late Sen. Robert A. Taft. (novland to Succeed Taft Washington (ff) Republican senators Tuesday elected Wil liam F. Knowland as the sen ate majority leader to succeed the late Robert A. Taft Sen. Homer F. Ferguson of Michigan was elected to chair manship of the ' senate GOP policy committee to succeed Knowland, a Callfornian. A turnout of 89 of the 46 republican senators stamped approval on the new leaders, whose -choice had beast genet- ally expected, at closed door eonlerencc. Sen. Homer Ferguson - of Michigan was elected to suc ceed Knowland as chairman of the senate GOP policy com mittee. - ,. i The republican - senators went into caucus less than three hours after Taft's burial at Cincinnati and needed less than an hour to elect the two men to the leadership posts. Only Technical Aid From GIs Washington, VP) The White House says the proposal to use the Army to help rebuild Ko rea doesn't mean that U.S. combat troops will - exchange their weapons for shovels. Secretary of State Dulles' announcement of a plan to use American troops to speed re habilitation of Korea as a showplace of the free world brought repercussions In the Senate. Sen. Kefauver (D., Tenn.) declared in a Senate speech Monday: "We're not going to tolerate the use of American troops ... as forced labor in rehabilitation work." The White House assistant press secretary, Murray Sny der said in a statement that President Eisenhower wants U. S. forces "to give techni cal assistance to the South Ko rean government ... to accel erate reconstruction." He em phasized that combat units would not be used as labor troops. City Wards 4 are increased in size, while Wards 5, 6 and 7 are reduced. Ward 8, which is all in Polk County, remains the same. The biggest change is In Ward I which under the pres ent lines has only about 900 registered voters. Under the new boundary set-up it will have 2600, an increase of 1700 voters. While no member of the city council is dislodged by the proposed new set-up, It could make a lot of difference, and possibly result in an unusual change of council personnel when the next election rolls around. In round numbers here are the changes in ward popula tlons ss proposed In the bill snd the present alderman from each ward: (Centmaed oa Page sV (Man D 70 Americans First on List to Be Liberated Panmanjom WV-Fear dred Allied war prisoners -76 of thenr Americana homo, to freedom in a f w hoars, opening too happiest postscript to tko Kereaa War "operation big switch." The big trade of Allied war prisoners for Reds begins to- morrow at 8 aJn, (7 pjn. Tues day. 1ST). : , . ; : - The Reds are handing over 12,763 captives 8,313 Amer icans, 8,186 South Koreans, 931 British and 42 from other Allied countries. Tour hun dred will be freed daily, 100 each hour for four hours. Some spent almost all 37 months of the Korean War in bleak prison camps in North Korea, They'll return to freedom at this neutral center where Ak lies and reds met for two years and finally wrote an ar mistice July 27 the ticket to freedom for the POWs. 74,4(1 Beds Freed , The Allies are giving the Reds 74,000 prisoners 69,000 North Koreans and 6,000 Chi nese at the rata of 2,400 abla bodied and 360 sick and wounded daily. (Ceatbned ea Page g, Celassa 4) Red Goons Riot At Food Depots i Berlin More than 6,000 communists. Including woman. invaded West Berlin Tuaactay and made three attacks on rood stations in an -nffort te break up the ir a a distribution oi American food to East Ger many's hungry. ; West Berlin police called out reinforcements, and beat back the columns of riot ganga with clubs and water guns in swirl lng street battles. - Dozens of heads were crack cd, and about ISO communists, including seven women, wer arrested. Police said they expected mora attacks. They reinforced their guards around the free distribution centers and moved mobile water guns up to stra tegic sectors. - The invasions took place in the Neukoelln and Kreuxberg boroughs of the American sec tor and the Industrial borough of Wedding In the Frepch sec tor. "We gava them a good beat ing," said a West German policeman in the American sec tor. Freedom Road One of the Best Munsan VP) The road to" freedom for returning United Nations war prisoners is one of the best cared for highway in rugged Korea. The dirt road from Pan- . munjom to Freedom Village has been specially treated to keep down dust. Part of the road has been oiled. At the north end of the road thick green shrubs and trees hsng over the shoulders and soldiers today wer busy cutting oft overhanging boughs and prettying up the road. Waterfront Probe on Coast Washington, tV-Sen. Capo- hart (R., Ind.) said Tuesday the Senate waterfront racket eering subcommittee will hold hearings in San Francisco and Seattle this fall. They are set tentatively for late September and early October, Capehart said. The Indianan is taking over the subcommittee chairman ship from the late Sen Tobey (R N.H.). He said he would carry out Tobeys plans for the probe of corruption and com munism in the nation's major pout.. ... . The subcommittee aires ay has looked into East and Gulf Coast port conditions. It issued a report last month saying the waterfronts long hava "lawless frontiers." A i - ! 1 H 1 ' ' ! - f i?;ii i v ( ! ! ? ;' !i ill I! f i V ers, and arc very resistant spent two nights. Dean arriving with the group.