THE VEATHEH MOSTLY CLOUDY tealxat Tharsday moralag , clearing and some warmer Taaraaay alter Low tonight, Z; ai(k Tharsday, It. Journal FINAL COITION 65th Year, No. 185 T SaUnt, Oregon, Wednesday, August 5, 1953 36 Pages Price 5c Sea Search On For Crev of Lost Bomber Plane Blazing Like Meteor Plunges; 23 Bail Out London, C" A big 19-ea-fin V. 8. Air Fore bomber biasing like a meteor planted U.S. Demands Russia Pay for Lost Bosnbsr Reject Russian Ver sion of Shooting Plane and Crew FIRST UN POWS REACH PANMUNJ0M - . IUIPT T 5 A . .; arv ; V 5 ' t 'X .!"' into the North Atlantic early Wednesday and its -33 men jumped Into the Icy wave. Fourteen houri tfUr the RB-38 reconnaiitance plane went down a British ship, the Manchester Shipper, radioed she had picked up one sur vivor and recovered one body, 420 mile west of Preatwick, Scotland. - Search plane lighted two massei of wreckage 285 milei apart Ships rushed to both places. One circling rescue plane radioed that it had spotted a raft with five men aboard. Four of the men waved but the ,ffth seemed to be motionless 'on the wildly tossing raft. Crew Bail Out Crewmen balled out of the blazing BB38 at 2,400 feet while it was en route from Travis Field,, California, to England. Some may have rid den the plane down in an at tempt to ditch her in the 13 foot high waves. .- Presumably the survivors were scattered over a wide area. Surface ships represent ed their best chance for life. Seaplanes reached the , scene but could not set down in the pounding seas. Two search planes Ameri can SB29's parachuted life boats to the men on the raft, and 12 American planes con tinued the search through the - night, hoping to spot flares. At dawn another dozen will Join them. (Continued n fate I. Cohmn 1) Gl Vefs Met By Governor Seattle VP) The nation's governors joined with Seattle Wednesday in a warmhearted welcome to 2,313 GIs from Ko rea to let them know that "America does care." The governors, holding their annual meeting here this week, carried personal greetings from their home states to the Army veterans returning aboard the military transport Marine Lynx. It was one of Seattle's big gest dorkside demonstrations for homecoming servicemen and the dense mass of khaki packed around the railing of the big gray ship sent back a happy roar to the dignitaries and their own waiting depen dents. The welcoming ceremonies ranged all the way from Seat tle's famous can-can girls, flashing their gold-sequin gar ters, to the appreciative whis tles of the GIs and to a sober moment when Rear Adm. Al lan E. Smith,: commandant of the 13th Naval District, told the veterans: "You have been misinformed in thinkine that nobody cares. Here is physical proof that America does care." Strike Ended In Canneries San Francisco WV-AFL can nery workers voted over whelmingly Tuesdsy night to asept an agreement ending their eight-day-old strike against 68 of California's major canneries. The vote was 11,169 yes and 689 against Sixty-seven votes were voided. The walkout had idled 35, 000 workers and endangered the state's multi-million dol lar pesch crop. The California Processors and Growers, Inc., representing 40 of the struck canneries, spproved the agree ment A union official said the agreement called for wage raises of 8 to 10 cents an hour, retroactive to March 1. mak ing the Kale $1.32 to $2.06 hourly. It also included a new health and welfare plan and other fringe benefits. The cannery workers, affili ated with the AFL Teamsters ltnlnn. had demanded a iu- eent-an-hour boost. Weather Details Mftxtetua reeer-w. Wi Ji. n. TotaJ 14-kMr swlylUUtt .Mt fr math: .tit . at SAi aftiiL Ml. oUr r Itrut.) Washington The United States demanded "appropriate compensation" from Russia Wednesday for the shooting oown of an American B-SS bomber over the Sea of Jaaaa July 2. A formal American note re jected Moscow's version of the incident and protested "in the strongest terms' against the attack. The American note, deliver ed to the Busian Foreign Of fice in Moscow Wednesday, re quested -an exhaustive investi gation" regarding the where abouts of, 16 crewmen aboard ine plane. At the same time, it demand ed payment not only for the loss of the plane but for "the lives of any of its crew who may have been killed as a re sult of the attack by Soviet fighters." (Centtnatd Pate a, Celamn 4) Russian War BudgetAdopted Moscow W) The Soviet gov ernment announced its 1953 budget Wednesday night and earmarked more than a fifth of the total for the armed forces. Finance Minister Arseny Zverev told a joint session of the Supreme Soviet parliament that 1953 expenditures will be 330 V billion rubles with reve nue at 543,300,000,000 rubles, giving a budget surplus of 12,- 800,000,000 rubles. Armed forces expenditure would be 110,200,000,000 ru bles, Sverev said, a 3,600,000, 000 ruble decrease compared with armed forces expenditure in 1952. The ruble's value Is fixed by the Soviet government at 25 cents, but this cannot be taken as a standard of measurement of Its purchasing power of the Soviet military establishment in comparison with the United States because of the Soviet Union's planned economy. ; - I Ike Works on Signing Bills Washington UR President Eisenhower waded into a stack of legislation today to clear the way to leave this week end for a summer vacation in Colorado. Back from a flying trip to the Governor's Conference at Seattle, the president had 207 bills before him for action this morning. One other bill was still in transit from congress. Mr. Eisenhower hoped to pass on the bulk of this legisla tion before leaving for Denver. But members of his staff said he still would be forced to take a number of bills with him to Colorado. Week in Denver Mr. Eisenhower was expect ed to spend more than a week in Denver, probably living at the home of Mrs. John S. Doud, the mother of Mrs. Eisenhower. When the president has caught up with his study of accumulated legislation he may go into the Colorado mountains north of Denver. Salem Men By SEC of Fraud Portland W A complaint charging fraud was filed in Federal court here Tuesday by the Securities and Exchange Commission against eight Paci fic Northwest men and three plywood cooperatives. - The complaint zued by bC attorneys John N. Fegan and Donald J. Stocking, Seattle, asks the court to prevent "fur ther violation of the anti-fraud provisions" of the 1933 Securi ties Act by Edgar Robert Er rion and Dwlght Holdorf, both of Salem and Independence; Glenn R. Munkers, Charles W. Williamson, Archie L. Bones and Harold A. Shoberg. all of Salem; James B. Carr, Milwau kie, Ore., and Thomas A. O' Connell, Boise and Seattle. The SEC said the violations involved ule of securities from the Beaver Plywood Coopera tive, Salem; the General Tim ber Cooperative and the Na tional Plywood Cooperative. i Russia Favors Big 4 Meet Washington UK The SUte Department said Wednesday Russia has left the door open for a Big Four foreign minis ters conference on Germany, The announcement added, how ever, that the new Soviet note on the subject is ambiguous and will require a gseat deal more study. The department said also there will be consultation with Britain and France before western answer is drafted. Informally, officials told re porters It seems clear that Mos cow has accepted a western bid of July 15 for a big power meeting on German unification but that Russia s note was so confusing officials were unable to tell after many hours of study what conditions were at tached to the acceptance. . The Moscow note was an nounced last night a few hours after being received at the State Department here. In it the Reds not only talk ed about foreign ministers meeting on Germany but said there ought also to be a meet ing to decrease world tension generally Filbert Ruling Under Attack Portland W Membership qualifications for the Oregon and Washington Filbert Con trol Board are under attack here. Sam .Peterson, northwest manager of Rosenberg Broth ers of San Francisco, testified at a Production and Market inw Administration hearing Tuesday -that he was oppos ed to "dual" memberships and that a grower representative shrould not also represent handlers or handler employes. R. E. Dougdale, another representative of Independent handlers, and John E. Trunk, general manager of the North west Nut Growers Co-operative, agreed. Accused . Some $200,000 worth of memberships in the three co operatives hsve been sold, mostly in Portland, Salem, In dependence, Dallas and Eugene, the attorneys said. The complaint contends that the defendants in selling secur ities, "had employed a scheme and artifice to defraud." Other allegations in the com plaint: That the defendants solicited Investors on the false represen tation thst they owned a large tract of timber in Lincoln County, Ore., when actually the tract Is owned by the Boe ing estate. Thst the defendants fslsely claimed 20 or more patents for a plywood graining process. That they misrepresented to investors that they could get a 3300,000 loan to finance their project from the Spokane Bank for Cooperatives. (CeoUaaea ea Page t. Oil () An unidentified Turkish POW makes a "V" for victory sign as he is .helped from the first Communist truck bear ing repatriated POWs at Panmunjom. Welcome sign is at right. Operation Big Switch eventually will see the return of 3313 U.S. POWs from Communist hands. (UP Telephoto) 37 East German Police Flee From Reds Berlin (ff) Thirty-seven East German soldiers and police men fled to West Berlin Wed nesday in the second largest mass desertion of Red armed forces this year, . . The .fugitives. Including one officer, deserted from the food blockade - which the Soviet Zone government set up around Berlin last Saturday to kill off American relief for 18 million East Germans. - Twenty were from the Red Wehrmacht and 17 from the People's Police. The record for one day's Malenkov Given K Moscow QUO The supreme Soviet tne parliament oi nu lla, met today in Its second session of 1953 before a capa city audience that gave Pre mier ' Georgt Malenkov a standing ovation as he entered the great hall of the Kremlin. The union council one of the two chambers off the su preme Soviet met in an or ganizational session and adopt ed a two point agenda, the budget and ratification of the legislation enacted by the pre sidium of the supreme Soviet at its last meeting. It will meet jointly tonight with the" other chamber, the nationalities council, which held its own organizational meeting. Malenkov, wearing a' light tan, semimilitary tunic, enter ed the union council meeting by a side door heading the del egation of parliamentary lead- 2 Die, 4 Hurt, in Airforce Crash Hill Air Force Base, UUh ) Two Air Force officers were killed and four airmen injured when a C45 from Larson Air Force Base, Wash., crashed and burned late Tuesday. The Air Force Wednesday identified the dead as Maj. C. N. Feeler of Danville. Va.. pi lot of the plane, and Capt W. D. Baird of Larson Am. Balrd's widow and four chil dren are at the Larson bsse, His parents live in Vancouver, Wash. The Diane was from the 82nd Troop Carrier squadron at Lar son Field. It reported engine trouble after taking off on a return flight to its Washington base at 3:14 p m. (MST). As the twin-engine craft came in for an emergency landing it touched in soft sand 300 feet short of the runway, nosed ever and burst Into flames. The four rescued were thrown clear, but the two offi cers were trapped Inside. s a, t t v - v,-. f 1 ft J f: flight was set June 24, a week after the East German revolt when 48 soldiers and police men applied here lor political asylum. The total for 1953 is A 35 two-thirds of them army troot. The Communist hunger blockade and a rash of terror trials cut sharpley Wednesday the rush of East Germans to receive free American food packages in West Berlin. The first death in anti-Corn. munist clashes last week-end with police and Red civilian gangs was reported Wednesday hv ha Frea Jurists Leaffue. a West Berlin intelligence organ ization. It said anti-Red fishermen from Zossen, a town 20 miles south of Berlin, fought a pitch ed battle- Saturday night with Communist Free German Youth and a police patrol at Mollen Lake. Vet Welcomed By Patterson Seattle, WM. Sgt Floyd W. Porter, 31, Corvallis, came home Wednesday to be greet ed by Gov. Paul Patterson of Oregon. Porter, who enlisted when 17 and fought in World War II. was selected as Oregon's honor veteran as governors of the states welcomed home vet erans from the Korean fight ing. The son of Mrs. Lydla Port er, formerly of Corvallis but now of Baker, he was wound ed in the African invasion in World War II, and later served in England and France. He is married to the former Mary Batty of Tacoma. Both his mother and wife were on hand to greet him, along with his brother, Harry of Portland. A sister, Norma Tarwell, also lives in Baker. Flight Records Made by B-47s MacDlll, AFB, Tampa, Fla. () Two Air Force B47s flew nonstop from England to Flor ida and Georgia Tuesday In a dramatic demonstration of the tremendous range of the world's fastest known atomic bomber. They were the longest known point-to-point flights by jet bombers, and the long est let tranatlantlc hops. One B47 flew 4,450 miles from Fsirford, England, to Tampa in 9 hours and S3 min utes. The other strstojet also was scheduled to fly directly to Tampa, but because of fuel shortage put down Instead at Hunter AFB, Savannah, Ga.. after a flight o( 9 hours, 26 Vi minutes from lalrford. Dulles and Rhee Devise Agenda For Conference Seoul ( U. . Secretary ef State Dalles and President Syngmaa Rhee reached a. nick agreement Wednesday an ground they will eover in four days of vital talks. They reportedly decided to seek an International post-armistice Far Eastern political conference between Oct 1 and 15. When the U. N. Assembly re convenes Aug. 17, it is to ar- range for the International conference which, by terms of the Korean armistice, mutt start by Oct 27. A qualified source said Dul les and Rhee agreed that Ko rean questions left unsettled by the war should rate pri mary attention at tne confer ence. . Session Goes Well -Emerging from the 1 hour and SO minute meeting with Rhee, Dulles told newsmen he relayed an oral message from Pesident Eisenhower and the session "went very well . . . we Did a good preliminary talk and agreed on topics to be discussed." (Continued en Pate S, Cohnaa I) Russia Spurns U.S. Protest London. C) Moscow radio said today the Soviet Union haa spurned a United States protest - against the shooting down of an American bomber off Siberia July 29.- . The broadcast quoted a Rus sian note as saying the Mot cow government ' had no knowledge of the 18 men missing aboard the U.S. plane. The big B50 bomber was forced into the sea. Only one of the 17 crewmen was res cued by an American naval vessel but the United States haa said - it had information that others may have been picked up by Russian craft The Moscow broadcast quot ed the Soviet note as declar ing the American protest 'completely groundless." It had been filed by- Washington officials after an earlier Rus sain charge that the U.S. bomber had flown over Soviet territory and opened fire, on Russian jet fighters. The United States - denied the charge and claimed that the Russian Mig jets had at tacked the bomber 40 miles out over the Sea of Japan. McKay to Attend ' $100 GOP Dinner Portland W) An invitation to attend a $100-a-plate repub lican dinner here Saturday night was accepted Tuesday by Interior Secretary McKay. Oregon's republican congres sional delegation also has ac cepted, officials reported. The main speaker at the meeting and at a rally the fol lowing day is to be Leonard W. HaU, national republican chairman. Parsonage Hits Snag And Removal Delayed There wss doubt today whether, after all, The Parson age, historic Salem house, will be moved into Marion Square. In a conference by Mayor AI Loucks, City Manager J. L. Franzen and Murray Wade, chairman of the historic sites committee of the Marion Coun ty Historical Society, it was de cided today that the move of the building from 1329 Ferry Street to the Square be delayed 10 days, pending a definite de cision. The building was sched uled for moving this week. In the 10 days the historical society is to find out if it can assure a fund of at least $10,000 to cover the cost of moving, rehabilitation and maintenance for a year. If it n ten a nee lor a jtmi. u cant, Murray waae said ineiouuains. iney w u w- project probably would "go oy Many Freed POW Victims Tuberculosis Freedom Village, Korea VP) The bead of the hospital at Freedom Village reported to day doctors found a high per centage of tuberculosis and other lung diseases among re turned U.N. prisoners of war and said, "I am not sure they will all recover." But Cot Fred W. Seymour stressed that in the past "wt have pulled some of them right out of the grave.'' . Seymour said over 30 men had "active pulmonary le sions" of the first 60 U.S. and other UJi. repatriates who entered the evacuation hos pital today. Seymour told newsmen "the first group we received was at least as sick as any in Oper ation Little Switch," the ex change . of disabled captives three months ago. ' Markus Denies Sharing Fee Washington vT) Louis Mark us, New York business man. denied under oath Wednesday that he shared in a $89,000 fee paid to a former democratic national committee lawyer for getting a favorable ruling In a tax case. The lawyer. William May- ock, told house lnvestlaatora only Tuesday he gave Markus S8.7B0 from the fee 830,000 of which, Mayock said, went into the democratr 1848 paign fund. wnen MarKus aeniea wea- nesday that ba received any "pUt" from the 365,000, Sep. Kean (R-NJ) commented: "We have a case here of per jury by someone. It Is either you or Mr. Mayock." Mayock had testified the $89,000 changed hands while he was "volunteer" counsel to the national committee. Mayock said the $30,000 came from a $68,000 fee paid after he appealed to an "old friend" then Secretary of the Treasury John Snyder and Snyder Interceded in the tax case with revenue bureau of ficials. Indians Leave ForPOWWork New Delhi, India W) The vanguard of India's delegation on the Korean Repatriation Commission left today for the war-torn peninsula to prepare for the task of screening pris oners who do not wish to re turn to their homelands. For eign Secretary R. K. Nehru, leader of the 12-member ad vance group, told newsmen at the airport that he would con sult both United Nations and Communist commanders on ar rangements for the commis sion's work. Maj. Gen. S. P. P. Thorat, Indian Army chief of staff, who will command Indian forces guarding the prisoners. said about 9,000 troops are now assembling at Jhansl, in cen tral India, for Korean service. They are expected to leave about August 28. the board." Burt Brown Bar ker, who once owned the build ini as did his father before him. has offered to head subscrip tion list with $500, An agreement had Men drawn up between the histori cal society and the city where by the house wss to be movea to Marion Square on a year's trial basis, the society to have that length of time In which to find out if it could be main tained without public expense. The agreement has been signed by officers of the historical so ciety, but not yet by city of ficisls. Doubt about the feasibility of the agreement arose when Mayor Loucks and City Mana ni" . . 7 ger Franzen inspectea we (Caaelaoea ea rage a, veceau n Censorship Slapped Up:n Freedom Village. Korea (HI 8 treaty Hiaittieatai, the herrer aad boredom et eem- maalst prtsea eampa tittal them, savored their first taat at freedom today at thai vil lage created V ea their way heme. light of thexnen. atrasuad tightly to stretchers, wet flown here aboard four hall- copters from Pantmmjoat where they were freed. There were few tales of totv ture, death and "H'nc ea the lips of the liberated pris oners who appeared happy but bewildered. Some interviews were cob ducted with frequent inter motions from censors and the men obviously had been told there were only certain tub jects they could discuss. - ! Army Censorship The war department caught hell after some of the stories the tick and wounded told when they cot ant last April," one officer said in re ferring to the exchange of sick ana wounded prisoners last spring. One prisoner said he was captured because a South Ko rean division collapsed on tat flank of his UN division. The censor and an interview offi cer quickly interrupted: (CentiameV ea Page a. Typ-cdPOV Tircd;5(Grcd Inchon. Korea () The tnm blond soldier from New Jer sey looked tired and scared when he climbed from a heli copter at Inchon and boarded a U.S. military bus. But by the tune he had drawn part of the pay he ac cumulated while in a commu nist prison camp, composed a radiogram home and aat down to a big dinner of steak and French fried potatoes. Pvt. Joseph JT. Hustey, 26. was grinning. Hustey was typical of Amer ican prisoners classified as able-bodied by the commit- nistt. They arrived by helicopter at the 609th army replacement center at Inchon to await ship for the United States. Hutsey was the first to alight He shook hands with -two American generals and walked to waiting bus. At the replacement center he was assigned s bunk In barracks type room. He car ried a tray through a serving line at dinner tune, just like any ether soldier. But the food was special. - War Casualties Now 141,705 Washington 0J.B With re ports still incomplete, Amer ican battle casualties In Korea, now total 141,709, the defense department announced today. The report covered all cas ualties whose next of kin were notified through last Friday and showed an Increase of l 159 over last week's report. The Increase was compara ble to those of ( the previous two weeks and reflected the heavy fighting in the closing phase in the war. The new total Includes 25, 434 deaths, 103,038 wounded, 8,703 missing, 3,001 captured and 1,827 previously missing but since returned to military control. The Increase since last week's report was 317 deaths, 749 wounded, 40 captured, 81 missing and two previously misting hut sines returned to military control. PRISON QUIET The Oregon penitentiary was quiet Wednesday, Ward en Clarence T. Gladden said. Gladden said that not sound was heard from the 130 segregated convicts who yelled for five hours Monday night and early Tuesday auorning.