THE WEATHER FAIR, CONTINUED warn to night Wednesday. Lew tonight, ; high Wednesday, Unander Says Slate Cars -Lack Seals State Treasurer Ob jects to 'Cloak and Dagger' Investigators Br JAMES D. OLSON State Treunrer Sit Unander Tuesday charted that many state-owned can were being operated without the seal of the state oa the sides ot such cars. Unander said that there were altogether too many - "cloak and dagger investiga tors running around the state. In addition he charged that many state can, by his own observation, were being used at night for social calls around Salem. His charges, made before the board of control s weekly meet : ing convened, were directed at Harry Dorman, director of the department of finance and ad' ministration; Dorman said that the only cars excepted from a ruling that the seal be displayed on each side of the state cars, were : those operated by. the state parole board and the . state liquor control commission. The parole board, he said, must fre quently run down parole viO' lators and the liquor commis sion cars in question are used ' by investigators, whose work - would be nullified if identity ot the cars were known. Report Requested - Dorman asked Unander to report license numbers of any cars he noted without the state seal and the state treasurer as sured him that he would do so. "There are just too manj of these cars without state seals operated at the present time" concluded Unander "and steps should be taken immediately to correct the situation." (Continued on Pare S, Column 1) 75 More U. S. PWs Released Panmunjom ) Seventy five more Americans streamed back today as the great Ko rean 'war prisoners exchange entered its third week. Besides the Americans, the Reds turned back 73 British and 300 South Koreans SO more than the 400 daily the Reds originally promised. Again tomorrow, the Com munis ts planned to step, up de liveries. They said they would return 458 Allied captives 75 Americans, 75 British and 306 South Koreans. It will be the largest single group returned. In 14 days, the Reds have re turned 1,105 of the 3,313 Amer icans they claim they held, a figure far less percentage-wise than number of Britis 570 of 921 returned. Brig. Gen. Ralph Osborne, chief of the Munsan Provisional Command, said the number of Americans repatriated prob ably will Increase when the Reds start emptying the next prison camp. i 75-Cenf Minimum Wage for Women Women and minor office workers will be guaranteed minimum wage of 75 cents an hour after October 13, Labor Commissioner W. E. Kimsey announced Monday. The 75-cent hourly minimum was set last week-end by the State Wage and Hour Commis sion which regulates employ ment of women and minors in Oregon Industries. The new rate was adopted after a ser ies of conferences and public hearings which began last spring. Other new provisions' for of fice employes order time and one-half pay for Sundays and legal holidays and mandatory 10-minute rest periods in the middle of each four-hour work period. Automatic Found in Klamath Falls Cell Klamath Falls UP) Jailers here found a small French automatic pistol Tuesday in the cell of a man being held on an armed robbery" charge. The prisoner, Richard Lewis Bridewell. 23. was searched by two state policemen, a Jailer and a sheriffs deputy before being placed in the cell Satur- . w B.. k, --! Via mrmm fthln in J m J . out flV wmiM I conceal the gun under bis belt 65th Year, No. 196 TAMMANY CHIEF Edward J. Flynn, 61, long time Tammany boss of the Bronx, New York, who died lasfnight at Dublin, Ireland. Boss Flynn of Tammany Dies Dublin, Ireland VP) Edward J. Flynn, 61, former national chairman of the U. S. Demo cratic Party, died in St. Vin cent's hospital here Monday night Many gave him credit, to gether with James J. Farley, for winning Franklin D. Roose velt the presidential nomina tion in 1932. The cause of death was not immediately announced. He had been ailing for some time, however, and his condition ap parently worsened. Flynn sailed from New York for Ireland July 25 aboard the Mauretania. He went aboard the liner in a wheel chair. His wife and daughter, Sheila, 17, sailed with him. The Flynns were staying here at the home of Chief Jus tice Connor Maguire, long a close friend. Flynn himself was of Irish ancestry. Flynn s long and colorful po litical career hit its first high- spot in 1932 when he was a key figure at the Democratic National Convention. With Far ley, he was credited with get ting the nomination for Roose velt despite the opposition ot Tammany Hall. . He succeeded Farley as Democratic National Chairman in 1940 and directed the Presl dent's precedent-shattering and successful third term campaign, Flynn was born Sept. 22, 1891 in the Bronx. He leaves his widow and three children. 20 Mexicans ill of Poison Food in Cal. Merced, Calif. U.B Nearly 260 Mexican farm workers were treated for ptomaine poi soning, apparently the result of eating meat sandwiches left in the sun. Hospital facilities in the Merced area were swamped with patients. At least 217 Mexicans were at Merced general hospital and 42 others were taken to Mercy hospital. Two men were in critical Condition and 15 others were seriously sick. Hospital attend ants said the others were "mis erable" but in no danger. Catholic Dignitaries To Meet in Pendleton Pendleton VP) Roman Cath olic dignitaries from four Northwest states and Alaska will be here Sept. 19-21 for the 7th regional Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, the Rev. John J. O'Hara, S. J., said Tuesday. The Rev. O Hara, pastor of St. Mary's Church here, is chairman of arrangements Masked Gunman Kills Mass. G.O.P. Leader Holyoke, Mass. UP) Alder man Henry H. Noel, 71, prom inent in Massachusetts republi can activities, was shot to death early Tuesday by a masked gunman who broke his way into the Noel residence. Noel was shot in the heart with a revolver as he was head ing down a flight of stairs from his bedroom with a .22 calibre rifle in his bands. Noel and his wife were awakened by the noises the gunman made in Jimmying open a downstairs window. Mrs. Noel said her husband grabbed the rifle and headed downstairs but got only half way down when the masked man fired a shot. Mrs. Noel said the gunman bolted through a locked screen door in his escape. The force ot the man s plunge knocked the screen several feet away. Mrs. Noel said she ran down GPO Worker Who Refused To Talk Fired Suspension Quickly Follows Refusal to , Answer Query Washington UJB A Govern ment Printing Office employe was suspended today within an hour after she refused to tell senate investigators whether he is a communist, has stolen secret government documents or has engaged in espionage. . "The employe, Edward M. Rothschild, 42-year-old book binder, refused on grounds of possible self Incrimination to answer questions by- Sen. Jos. eph R. McCarthy's permanent Investigating subcommittee. "Your refusal is telling the world that you have been stealing secrets, that you are a member of the party and that you have engaged in es pionage," McCarthy told Rothschild. Pay Cut Off Less than an hour later. Deputy Public" Printer Philip L. Cole suspended Rothschild from his job without pay pending the outcome of "con gressional action" fn the case. (Continued oa Facet. Column I) 0 9 New Fires, . All Controlled Oregon had nine new fires Monday in the forest areas controlled by the state forestry department, but all were con trolled and to date none of the Oregon fires have been serious. Two of the fires were log ging fires, but both were small. One was in the Clackamas-Ma rion district and one was in Douglas county. The seven other fires were all lightning fires and all were in the Northeast Oregon dis trict. One of these fires wax 10 acres in size and' another 12 acres. Altogether the seven fires covered a 23 acre area. Forestry weather reports in dicated that there would be lit tle change in temperature and humidities Wednesday. How ever, it is not considered exit! cal fire weather though the ha zard remains and there will be westerly winds in this area. Along the coast strip there is a possibility of some moisture, Democrat Committee To Welcome Adlai Washington (UJ9 Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell today is sued a formal call for a meet ing of the Democratic Nation' al committee in Chicago Sep tember 15. The committee meeting, first since last November's election, will be held in connection with a two-day Democratic rally to welcome Adlai E. Ste venson home from his world tour. The party's 1952 Stan dard-bearer will make a na tionwide radio - television broadcast from the rally. PLEA FOR GREEKS Geneva, Switzerland UP) Hugh Gibson, director of the inter-governmental committee for European migration, urged Canada, Australia and the United States Tuesday to ac cept as immigrants some of the 100,000 Greeks made homeless by earthquakes in the Ionian Islands. in time to get fleeting glimpse of the gunman, whom she at- scribed as tall, slim and young and wearing a soft hat, a sports jacket, slacks and a handker chief mask. One of the first on the scene was Dr. Frank Mahoney, the noei lamiiy pnyslclan who lives two doors away. Ho said Noel died almost immediately. Noel, an insurance man by profession, was on the board of aldermen for several years and was chairman of the Holyoke Republican city committee and a member of the Republican state committee from the Hoi yoke-Chicopee-Springfield sen' atorlal district. He and his wife were among a group of Western Massachu setts Republican workers who visited with President and Mrs. Eisenhower in the Whit House last June. o21 Solem, Oregon, . w ft Sbslhagos fi$o IpQke fib RETURNS Ike to Fly to II.Y. Tonight Denver U.B President Eis enhower put his vacation In temporary mothballs today to fl? to New York for talks with state politicians and enemies ot discrimination in the fed eral government and to dedi cate a $32,000,000 housing project dear to his heart. The chief executive, after a day in his summer White House offices at Lowry air force base here and possibly a round ot golf, was sched uled to take off at 10 p.m. PDT for an overnight flight to New York City. . He scheduled a full morning of conferences for tomorrow, including a meeting with mem bers of the new government contract committee dedicated to preventing discrimination in employment by government contractors. New Liquor Outlets ated Salem will have a privately operated liquor agency about Sept. 1, according to announce ment Tuesday by W. H. Baillie, administrator for the Oregon Liquor Control Commislson. The operator of the agency will be Raymond G. Moon, well known Salem salesman in the electrical appliance field as well as real estate. The agency jvill be located In the Arden building at South Commercial and Kearney Sts. In making the announcement Baillie stated that there was a need for relieving the pressure on the state operated liquor store ori Court street, where traffic regulations made it dif ficult for patrons to park. The agency, similar to those located in Dallas, Silverton and other communities of compara ble size, will operate exactly as state owred outlets as to hours and prices of commodi ties. The agent will receive a commission on his sales. Port of Portland to Start $587,000 Work Portland VP) The Port of Portand Monday decided to be gin work next month on filling the former Alderwood golf course to raise the land to the level ot the International Air nort here. The work will cost $587,000. The port recently bought the golf course for an addition to the airport. VICTIM OUT OF DANGER Lake Arrowhead, Calif U A 25 year old airline stew ardest, who lost her left arm and left leg from Being man gled by a motor boat propeller, was reported "out of danger today. 'A Si":. V ...." , Tuesdoy, Augu5n8rcat Pric. 5c TO FACE INCOME TAX Harold J. Adonis, right, former executive clerk in the office of New Jersey Gov. Alfred E. Driscoll, is escorted from the pier today after his arrest by U. S. Deputy Marshall Stanley Miller, left, on charges of Income tax evasion., Adonis returned voluntarily from Rotterdam aboard the liner Veendam and was clapped into handcuffs Immediately after he stepped from the ship. (AP Wire-photo.) Adonis Returns to Fight Graft Charges Hoboken, N. J. VP) Harold John Adonis, 45, who staged a long, successful battle against extradition from Holland, came home voluntarily Tuesday to face charges that he handled large sums of bribe money for bigshot New Jersey gamblers. "I am coming home in first class condition on a second- class ship to fight some third class politicians," Adonis, 45, told newsmen in his cabin aboard the liner Veendam. ' CoolerWeather For Most of U.S. (By Thi AuoeliUd Prcu) There were a few wet spots but generally it was fair and pleasant weather over most of the country Tuesday. Temperatures were around seasonal levels except for some cool spots in the Great Lakes region. It was near freezing Tuesday in Pellston, Mich. In contrast, the reading in Gila Bend, Ariz., was 93. Heaviest rainfall reported during the night was in south ern sections. Falls measured 2 inches in Norfolk, Va., ltt inches at Charleston, S. C, and about 1 inch at Miami, Fla. Light showers fell In the northern Rockies eastward to the western plains and in Cen tral Texas. Drizzle was re ported along the Northern Cal ifornia coast. Fair weather prevailed in other areas. Hot weather continued in the Southwest desert region. Mon Thermal and El Centro, Calif., and Yuma and Gila Bend, Ariz. Temperature Rise, 90 Seen Tomorrow Temperatures were warming up again Tuesday for valley re gions with little change ex pected through the week-end. A maximum of 90 or better is due Wednesday. The five-day forecast calls for mostly fair weather and warm temperatures with some cooling at end of period, but with little or no rain in sight. Fire danger continues high over Oregon due to the con tinuing warm weather and lark of rainfalL The Monday maximum tem perature in Salem was 84 de grees and the Tuesday morn ing minimum, 82 degrees. Weather Details far Wth ! .Ml BOTH.!. .19. SBtMI rarlritMMa. iX.I4t mil, M M. Ilrtr Swum, -as fart. iSMMrt O S. Wmu ot Saream.) CHARGES i Doug McKay Visits Capitol Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay was a surprise visitor in the state capitol Tues day. The former governor of Oregon spent considerable time with Governor Paul L, Patter son but said the visit was "only social." The secretary and Mrs. Mc Kay are spending a brief vaca tion at their beach home at Neskowin after which McKay will go to San Francisco to make a talk. He then will re turn to his office in Washing ton, D. C. McKay came west to attend the recent governors' confer ence in Seattle, where he made a talk and visited with his many friends attending . the conference. Search Made for ; Red Cross Director Linn Smith was appointed chairman of the committee to make recommendations as to who should replace Frank M. Parcher as manager of the Ma rion county chapter of the Red Cross. Parcher resigned, effective September 1, in order to accept a position with the civilian at fense organization. ' The board will meet later In the week to hear recommenda tions of the committee. 'Partnership' Stressed In New Power Policy Washinaton U.B The In terior Department today spell ed out a new federal power policy designed to reduce the federal government's role and increase the responsibility of local communities. The department said the new policy will be based on the "partnership" principle stressed by President Eisen hower during hi election cam paign. It said primary responsibil ity for supplying the power needs ot any area' will rest "with the people locally." The government will be a "part ner" with state and local com munities and private enter prise, i Presidential Endorsement In Denver, President Elsen hower endorsed the policy and said it "will serve the best interests of all the people.'' Russia Wants 'Neutral1 Countries Represented; By MAX HARRELSON United Nations, N. Y. UP) Russia proposed Tuesday that the Korean peace conference be made up ot five so-called neu trals and six of the countries which fought in Korea. This challenged the U, S. concept of the conference. The United States Insist that the conference be limited to countries which actually fought in the conflict, with Russia a possible exception. The U. S. position is that Russia can take pnrt if the Chinese Reds and North Koreans want them. The Soviet proposal called far participation of the United States, Britain. France, Russia, Red China, India, Poland, Swe den, Burma, North Korea and South Korea. Before the proposal was made. Russia suffered an ex pected setback. Soviet .Dele gate Andrei Y. vishlnsky rose Sanders Gains Nlckelsdorf, Austria 0JJ9 Silver-haired Edgar Sanders, Jailed by Red Hungarians for more than three years on false spy charges, crossed the' Iron Curtain to freedom today, The British businessman walked to freedom along the tame path taken by American businessman Robert A. Vogel- who also was imprisoned on trumned up espionage charges, Sanders was pardoned yes terday by the Hungarian Pre sidium and expelled from tne country. A British Foreign Of fice spokesman said Sanders would star in Vienna as long as he wished or the state oi nis health demanded. The British announced that Sanders' release would permit Britain to lift Its embargo on trade with Communist Hun- nn. "' Vicenzo Sciotto, an Italian Dardoned alone with Sanders, made the trip to the border with the Englishman. 3 French Explorers Trapped, Deep Cave Pierre St. Martin Caverns, France (UJD Comrades of three explorer trapped in Europe's deepest cave tried frantically today to reach inem wrtn an unwieldy steel cable. The rescuers, members ot a Franco-Spanish expedition into the cave where anoiner weu known European explorer plunged to his death year ago, reported they were unable to make contact Tranned 1.254 feet below the pit entrance were Robert Levi, head of the expeamon, norwn Casteret and Dr. Andrew Mai- rey. , Oil Man's Plane With 4 or 5 Aboard Missing Vancouver, B. C. (AT) A New Mexico oil man's plane with four or five persons be lieved aboard was missing in the British Columbia wilds Tuesday. Canadian and Amer ican agencies began an imme diate search. The plane, piloted by Eius Hall of Albuquerque, N. la the Annette Island airport near Ketchikan, Alaska, at 4:27 p.m. PST Monday on 700 mile flight to BeUlngham, Wash. Undersecretary of Interior Ralph A. Tudor told a news conference that the policy em phasizes putting domestic and rural customers "higher on the totem pole" than industrial consumers . 1 n preferential treatment Tudor said, however, that the government will continue to recognize those in the Pa cific Northwest which depend heavily on Bonneville dam for power. Domestic and rural customers will be given pref erence in obtaining new power from expanded facilities, ex- cent that olants Involved In national defense will continue to be recognized. Private Interests Tudor said the federal gov eminent will not assume "full responsibility" for power gen eration, transmission and mar keting. (CetvUsuatd est rage k Cctaaa O FlflA L EDITION at the opening of the U. N. Assembly's 60-natlon Political Committee session with a de mand that Red China and North Korea be invited to take part in the committee debate. The committee voted him down, 34-14 on China and 34- 18 on North Korea. Vishinsky made it clear that he would not complicate this session by moving for the seat ing of the Pelplng regime as a member of the United Nations. He said he would make a form al move to do this at the fall Assembly session which opens Sept 15. . Brtam and France got Igulckly into the fight over composition ox ine Korean peace conference with declara tions favoring a broader repre sentation than the United States advocates. They did not. comment directly, however, oa the new soviet proposal. British Minister of State Selwyn Lloyd . said Britain does not wish to perpetuate this concept ot two sides, to have the peace conference as king of political Panmun jom." ' He specifically urged the in clusion of India. Maurice Schumann, French foreign undersecretary ot state, said his country proposed that 'all those who can usefully participate In the negotiations should, in all good logic, be . Invited." He said the conference should not consist "of two op posing camps confronting one another." -t If the Korean question i first settled, other Far Eastern questions, including that of In dochina, could be discussed, he said. The votes on the proposal to Include Communist China and North Korea in committee de bate followed a warning by Vishinsky that "no solution U possible in their absence.' Strikers Defy French Gov't Paris 4JJB Nearly 2,000,000 French workers defied a "back to work" ultimatum today and the government fearing vi olence, massed tanks, para troops, Infantry and anti-riot police in the Paris area. Premier Joseph Iamei de manded in surprise national broadcast last night that the strikers who have crippled communications, utilities, mines and factories all over the country for IT dayt return to work today. He imvlied a threat to use force, and hinted he would jail strike leaders and workers who failed to heed official requisi tions to go back to their jobs. Services Are Crippled But the workers stayed out and the government feared that it it resorted to force, the Com munists would call a general nation-wide strike and send members of unions they con trol into the streets of Paris and other big cities for riots. RedsPurgedGlsWho Beat 'Progressives' Freedom Village, Korea C At least 20 Americans were "purged" from the Reds' re patriation roster because the Chinese thought they had beat en other POWs who cooperated with the Communists, three re turned soldiers said today. -Some of the progressives were slugged one night" Mid Sgt Edwin W. Erickson Jr., SomerviUe, Mass. "After that, there was more or leaf a purge of those the Chinese thought were responsible. "At least 20 were punea out of Company 4 Erickson's com pany in Camp 1 on July IS. We never saw them again." President Calls for Drought Conference Denver U.n President El senhower today called con ference here Thursday of Ag riculture Department officials, farm organization leaden and state drought relief chairmen from eight Southwestern state to review the federal drought relief program and plan for the future. States to be present et the) conference Included Texas, Oklohamo, Colorado, Now Mexico, Kansas, Arkansas. Missouri and Nevada. t. el. b at on sh its led ark '111 ,oy Tf- at uit ut sd . to to no ott if.