Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 20, 1953, Page 1, Image 1

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    THE WEATHER
PARTLY CLOUDY tonight.
Friday; few Mattered showers.
Little chute is temperature;
low tonight, S; high friday,
FIMA L
EDITION
Salem Oregon, Thursday, August 20, i8S"!e?" - Price 5c
65th Year, No. 198
Charge Unfair
HOME FROM WORLD TOUR
VVJn y LtTJ ! hJJ VI 1 lU II u:u rUM
Pickets Filed
Under Slatufe
Grants Pass Case -May
Result in Test
Of Controversial Law
Br JAMES D. OLSON .
Charges of unfair picketing
have been filed against the
Medford local 12 of the Cul
inary and Bartenders Union by
U wight D. Battey, sper
ator of the Cave Shop restanr
aft. Grants Pass, marking the
first action taken nnder the
controversial antt-picketlng act
passed by 1953 legislature.
The charges were filed with
the division of Labor Elections,
a new state agency, also creat
ed by the last legislature, and
the decision in the case is ex
pected to result in a court test
of the law itself.
Charges Processed
Fred J. Scherer, who was
recently appointed by Gover
nor Paul L. Patterson to the
new $8,000 year post of labor
examiner, said Thursday that
the charges are being "process
ed". This being the first case,
Scherer said, his division is
moving slowly in the case.
(Continued on Page 5, Column 4)
2 Killed in
Bomber Crash.
Picacho, Ariz. VP) A huge
B50 bomber was ripped apart
by a tremendous explosion over
the Arizona desert Thursday
' and . crashed in flames. Ten
of its 12-man crew parachuted
to safety. Two were killed.
Davis -Monthan Air Force
Base at Tucson, where the four
engine plane had taken off
only eight minutes before,
Identified the dead as Capt
Charles D. Bostick, Marion,
S. C, and S. Sgt. Herbert G.
Enverton, Fort Scptt, Kan.
Bostick, a radar operator,
was unable to eet out of the
v plane. Enverton's chute ripped
to shreds and he fell to his
death ,
Only one other man was list
ed as seriously hurt. He is Air
man 3C Charles R. Stewart, a
' gunner from Steubenville,
Ohio.
The other airmen were taken
to the Davis-Monthan hospital
for examination and treatment
The spectacular crash came
suddenly in the early morning
darkness. Residents for 25
miles around heard the explo
sion and saw the shattered
plane cut fiery trail across
the sky.
Six Fires in
Stale Forests
Six fires were started Wed
nesday in the Oregon forests
...J 1U. 1 1 1 1 - . . t -
uuuer me jurisaicuon oi ine
state forestry department All,
however, were under control.
One of the fires was in the
Clackamas-Marion district and
was listed ar being from a
miscellaneous cause. Clacka
mas county also had one fire.
The Medford area had two
lightning fires, but foresters
there reported that it was
"raining them out." One oth
er lightning fire was report
ed in the state, this one in the
LaGrande area. That area
also had a smoker's fire.
Foresters' weather reports
Indicated that the fire dangers
would be eased by moisture,
in fact it had been raining in
the coastal areas all Thursday
morning and sprinkles art ex
pected in this area. Humidi
ties art to be 40 per cent or
above.
Sixteen Forest Fires
Set by Lightning
PrincviUe VP) Lightning
set 16 forest and range fires
Wednesday night within S0
mile radius of this Central Ore
gon city. All were small.
Ten of the fires were on the
Warm Springs Indian reserva
tion, and Forester Charles
Chester said he believed all
would be put out with little
trouble. Four fires were on the
Ochoco National Forest one
on state forest land and one
on Bureau of Land Manage
ment land.
The lightning storm was ac
companied by rain. Prineville
had .29 of an inch and Warm
Springs .21. Hail feU at Pilot
Buttt but caused no damage.
Russia Urges
Disarming for
New H-Bomb
Announces Exploding
Of Hell Bomb Test
On August 12
Moscow ? The Russians
announced today that they
have exploded a test hydrogen
bomb of "great strength."
They coupled their claim with
a new call for International
acceptance of a Russian dis
armament plan Including a
ban on atomic weapons.
In Washington, the Atomic
Energy Commission confirmed
that it had Information on a
Soviet "hell-bomb" test con
ducted August 12 but implied
that the United States had
produced similar reactions in
the 1951 and 1952 tests at En
iwetok Atoll.
This was the official Soviet
announcement, as reported in
the communist party newspa
per Pravda and broadcast by
the Moscow radio to the So
viet people:
Test Claimed Successful
Recently in the Soviet Un
ion, the explosion of a type
of hydrogen bomb was carried
out with experimental aim. As
a result of the possession of
the mighty power of thermon
uclear fission in the hydrogen
bomb, the explosion was of
great strength.
"The test showed the pow
er of the hydrogen bomb is
many times greater than the
power of atomic bombs."
The communique received
only routine treatment in
Pravda, appearing page 2 un
der the heading: "Govern
ment Information on the Test
of the Hydrogen Bomb in the
Soviet Union."
(Continued on Page a. Column 6)
Ike Silent on
Russian Bomb
Denver, W President El
senhower was back at the
summer White House today
witn a top secret report on
how the United States learned
about Soviet Union tests in
dicating Russia may have the
hydrogen bomb
Eisenhower had no comment
on the Moscow newspaper
Pravda's statement last night
tnat . Russia recently touched
off a hydrogen bomb explo
sion. Eisenhower returned to his
vacation headquarters here by
plane last night from New
York.
There, at the dedication of a
housing project, he declared
that families with a ororjer
and decent living standard
constitute a better defense
against communism than "any
bomb of whatever kind."
"That is the kind of thins
that will preserve this nation,"
the chief executive said in a
brief speech at the dedication
ceremonies.
BAILED OUT OF AUTO
Rock Springs. Wyo. (U.R)
Ex-paratrooper Robert Hensell
of Logansport, Ind., said the
cuts and bruises he was nursing
loaay were the result of a dem
onstration of paratroop tactics.
He said he was showing three
friends how to bail out of a
plane by jumping out of an
auto speeding along U.S. High
way 30.
Weather Details
Mtximmu rmlertlar. Mi lnlm law
a?, 7. T-til 24-katir rMllullnt
Itkci ftrr Ik: ,i nfwl, .t.
mh trttli Ultra. 4I.MI norma), W.M.
Rlvrr lhl. 0.4 ft. (stetwrl hr U.S.
Wetthtr Marm.)
Putnam Says Oregon
Providing School Needs
By A. L. LINDBECK
For lb Auoclatcd Prtu
Is Oregon holding its own In
the race to provide adequate
educational facilities for a rap
idly increasing school enroll
ment? The answer, according to the
State Department of Education,
is "definitely yes."
With the stork working over
time and thousands of newcom
ers flocking in from other states
Oregon has for years been con
fronted with a real emergency
in school housing. But school
districts throughout the state
have been pouring millions of
dollars into a building program.
In many districts this has
meant back-breaking bond is
sues and tax levies but the is
sue has been met nevertheless,
according to Rex Putnam, state
superintendent of public in- 000 over the previous year, call
struction. ling for 16 million dollars in
When school opens this fall! (Cantmaed aa Page t. Column I)
r
I
Pulp Workers
Get Pay Hike
Portland, Ore. W) Bargain
ing representatives for West
Coast pulp and paper manu
facturers and unions reached
agreement late Wednesday
night on pay Increases and
other contract changes to be
submitted to referendum vote.
A wage boost of 2 per
cent is the same aa that made
in a previous proposal, voted
down by members of tin two
AFL unions involved. How
ever, a joint statement Thurs
day said the new proposal al
so contains a wholly revised
procedure for "selections, pay
schedules and promotions
which removes earlier objec
tions.
The pay boost proposal
would establish the men s base
rate at $1.76 V4 cents an hour
and women's at $1.47. The
statement said this continues
"the highest pulp and paper
industry wage rates in the
world."
If approved by the 46 union
locals, the wage increases will
be retroactive to June 1. Af
fected are 18,000 workers In
38 Washington, Oregon and
California plants.
Trace of Rain Falls
During Last Night
The elements took things In
their own schedule late Wed
nesday, surprising not only the
geqcral public but the Weather
Man, too, with a trace of rain
falling during the night.
The precipitation was not
general, however, and the
weather bureau recorded only
a trace up to 10:30 a.m. Thurs
day. Some closeby areas re
ported the rain more notice
able.
Forecast calls for partly
cloudy skies and more scatter
ed showers possible for tonight
and Friday. Temperatures will
remain about the same.
an estimated 313,590 youngsters
will flock into approximately
12,000 classrooms throughout
the state. Of these, 237,790
will enroll in elementary
schools. The other 75,800 will
be high school students. This
total represents an increase of
23.290 over last year's enroll
ment. To provide new class rooms
and other facilities for this in
crease .alone will cost an esti
mated $23,890,000. This esti
mate, by James L. Turnbull, as
sistant state superintendent of
public Instruction, is based up
on the "pattern" of actual en
rollment over the past several
years.
Last year's enrollment of
290.300 was an increase of 16,
Adlai Stevenson and his son, John Fell Stevenson, IT,
arrive at International Airport, here today, completing
six-month world tour. The defeated Democratic presiden
tial candidate said only the United' States can hold tht
free people of the world together, and that be found his
trip a "sobering experience."' (AP Wirephoto)
Adlai Says Free World
Nov Winning Cold War
New York () Former Gov.
Adlai Stevenson said Thurs
day the free world is winning
the cold war and the danger
of a third world war has de
creased, at least for the pres
ent
Restore Use of
Mail to AD-X2
Washington ) The Post
office Department Thursday
wiped off the books its pre
viously suspended order against
use of the mails in promotion
of the controversial battery ad
ditive AD-X2.
The original order was is
sued Feb. 24 after the Bureau
of Standards had rejected the
claims of Jess M. Ritchie, Oak
land, Calif., that the material
would add greatly to the life
of electric storage batteries.
AD-X2 is made by Ritchie's
company, Pioneers, Inc., San
Francisco,
The fraud order was sus
pended March 3 in the midst
of a raging controversy over
the product involving the Bur-
ear of Standards, the Com
merce Department, the Senate
Small Business Committee and
various scientific groups.
The row brought about an
order from Secretary of Com
merce Weeks firing Dr. A. V.
Astin as chief of the Bureau of
Standards, but Weeks later
asked Astin to stay on while
an independent committee of
scientists evaluates . AD-X2.
That study is not yet complete.
CIO Assails
Power Policy
Washington VP) The Eisen
hower administration's newly
enunciated power policy was
under fire Thursday from the
CIO Political Action Commit
tee and spokesmen for Ameri
cans for Democratic Action
ADA and .the National Rural
Cooperative Asociation.
The policy spelled out Tues
day with President Eisenhow
er's approval assigns to local
interests, either public or pri
vate, the main role in develop
ing power for the nation. The
Interior Department said the
federal government would con
tinue to build multi-purpose
dams too big for local units to
undertake.
The CIO's political organiza
tion, meeting here to open
campaign for election of a pro
union Congress next year.
Wednesday unanimously adopt
ed a resolution saying the
power policy "threatens within
a short time to wreck the entire,
public power program,"
Stevenson, Democratic can
didate for the presidency last
year, returned Thursday from
a six-month trip around the
world. - ;
His over-all conclusion, he
said, was that American post
war policies have been success,
ful.
"We have been winning the
cold war step by step," Steven.
son told a news conference. "In
consequence, the danger of
world war has diminished, at
least for the present. But this
is no time to relax or lower our
guard."
Stevenson said he traveled
through 30 countries.
"I talked with everybody
from cobblers to kings," he
said.
Some t his conclusions, in
answer to a wide variety of
questions, were:
"1. The spread of commun
ism has been arrested. Signs
of strain and defiance are evl
dent, and cracks are opening
in me iron curtain, notably in
tasi uermany.
"2. Since Stalin's death, it
appears that Russia has
changed its tactics and begun
a cautious retreat, but there is
yet no certain evidence that the
long-term objective of world
domination has changed.
3. Just now, unhappily, our
prestige and moral influence
have declined, together with
faith in our judgment and our
leadership."
"It Is hard for them to recon
cile our view of the danger of
war wun a cut in our aeiense
buildup," Stevenson said.
"There is an impression that
Trade hot aid' is becoming no
aid and no trade."
Nasser Urges
War tor Egypt
Cairo, Egypt JP) Egypt's
acting president. Vice Premier
Gamal Abdel Nasser, opened
the Moslem Feast of Bairam to
day with a call for Eypgtians
to prepare for total war against
"British occupation."
His warning to Britons to
evacuate their military forces
from the disputed Suez Canal
zone was cheered wildly by an
estimated 100,000 Egyptians
packing the big square outside
the former royal palace. Nas
ser spoke in the absence of
President Mohammed Naguib,
who is on pilgrimage to
Mecca.
"We must prepare ourselves
for a fight of all the people,
not only a group of comman
dos," Nasser said. "We must
teach the women and children
how to defend our county. This
is the way to liberation."
'You must be ready to fight
at any moment and at any
place, and wa shall be leading
you,", fie declared.
POW Exchange
Of Americans
Panmuojom VP) Tha great
Korean war prisoner exchange
passed the halfway mark to
day and there was every In
dication the Reds will start
sending back larger numbers
of Americans dally.
They promised ISO tomor
row, the biggest U.S. group
yet, and it appeared the step
ped up rate would continue In
definitely. Three hundred
South Koreans also will be
freed tomorrow.
Sixty Americans, 90 British
and 300 Koreans were freed
today in the 16th day of ex
change at this tiny village.
No British were scheduled
to return Friday. The Reds
have relivered 809 of the 922
British promised. They have
turned over only 1,319 Ameri
cans, well under half of the
3,313 they listed. .
(Continued an Page t, Cahuaa 1)
U. II. to Reject.
Russian Plan
United Nations, N.Y. V-
The major western nations
turned a cold shoulder in the
UJi. today to some talk of
compromising East-West dif
ferences over the makeup of
the Korean peace conference.
Russia's .position, as partly
set forth by Andrei x. VUhln-
sky yesterday, already had
drawn a quick rejection front
Chief U.S. Delegate Henry
Ubo lodge. Jr.
An aide said1 VUMnsky
might take the floor for fur
ther explanations today after
debate resumes in tht 60-na-
tion General Assembly Poli
tical committee.
First on the speakers' list
today were Czechoslovakia, a
Soviet satellite and ont of
the members of the prisoner
of war repatriation commis
sion, and Turkey, which had
troops under the U.N. banner
in Korea. ..
A host of small countries
were expected to follow them.
Cambodia King
Refuses Return
Siem Reap, Cambodia, Indo
china VP) King Norodom Siha
nouk of Cambodia said today
France still hasn't satisfactor
ily met his country's demands
for complete independence.
The King also said he would
n't quit his self-imposed exile
here in north-central Cambo
dia and return to his capital
Phnom Penh "until we have
obtained complete satisfac
tion."
Norodom said in an inter
view that France's recent pro
mise of independence was ac
ceptable In principle "but on
several questions It is going to
be difficult to work out agree-
ment"
SavRothchild Take
Secret AWitary Data
Washington VP) Senate in
vestigators made public Thurs
day sworn testimony by a for
mer Government Printing Of
fice employe that she knew
Edward Rothschild took a
code book and other secret
military data from the plant
during World War II.
The testimony had been re
ceived previously in secret
session from Miss Cleta Guess,
now a New Orleans storekeep
er. . Chairman McCarthy (R.,
Wis.) said Miss Guess could
not testify In person Thurs
day because slie has a heart
condition and her doctor ad
vised her to svold excitement
Rothschild, s bookbinder,
declined earlier this week to
tell the senate investigations
subcommittee whether he Is
a communist or whether he
either engaged In espionage
at the printing office which
handles much secret data,
Before Mist Guess' testl-iber
TORN TO PIECES'
, -..-!
6
-
A Tehran broadcast said
that Hussein Fatemi, for
eign minister under the oust
ed Mossadegh government
in Iran, had been "torn to
pieces" as Royalist insurg
ents' overthrew the Mossa
degh government Fatemi is
shown as he described his
experiences during imprison-,
ment for six and half hours
in - recent unsuccessful
coup d'etat staged by the
Royalists. Fatemi was re
leased by Mossadegh forces
after the failure ot the coup.
Tht report of his death has
not been confirmed, . (AP
Wirephoto)
Million Idle
' Paris VP) New strike orders
went out Thursday from non
Communist unions to hundreds
of thousands of workers in the
metal Industries and building
trades.
They were 48-hour stoppages
directed to begin Friday, but
workers were already reported
walking off the job In big plants
like the nationalized Renault
auto factory in Paris which
employs 37,000, .
At least one million work
ers were still Idle in the 18th
day of the strikes that were
tieing up tbe railroads, coal
mines - and post offices, and
sporadically hitting the ports,
arsenals, and other sectors of
life.
The Socialist and Catholic
labor federations called the
new walkouts with the threat
they might be continued be
yond 48 hours as a defiance
to the "ultimatum" of Premier
Joseph Laniel, who has said
"no negotiations while the
strikes are In progress."
There now seemed little pros
pect that labor's rebellion
would quiet down before next
week, when parliament is ex
pected back for an emergency
session.
FREIGHT TRAIN WRECK
' Eugene, W) A freight train
derailment 17 miles east of
Oakridge Thursday delayed
Southern Pacific freight and
passenger traffic for nearly
two hours.
monr was released, the sub
committee had Jsck Zucker of
Philadelphia In its witness
chair.
Zucker was called at the
request of Rothschild and his
wife, but declined to say
whether he knew Rothschild,
He also refused, on grounds of
possible self-incrimination, to
say whether he ever presided
at a communist hearing which
tried Rothschild on a charge
of "whit chauvinism."
"White chauvinism" means,
McCarthy said, refusal to treat
members of the Negro race on
terms of full equality with
white people.
Rothschild, 42, was suspend
ed from his GPO job immedl
ately after his refusal to tes
tify before the senate group.
His wife, Esther, similarly
refused to tell the subcommit
tee whether she ever spied
against this country or helped
husband to do so. .
Ousted Premier
Taken to Secret
Strong Point ;
- By DONALD BCHWIND :1
Tahram, Iraa W) Premier
Fasenak Zahedi's forces Thars
day arrested Mohammad Mos
sadegh and three ei his Ueatoa- '
ants la a houe tm tht tester
tf Tehran.
The arrest of the former Pre
tnier, who until Wednesday
held Iran in virtual dicta
torship, quashed earlier re
ports that he had escaped from
the shambles of his bunker
like house in Zahedi's royalist
counter-revolution and taken
refuge with friendly Kashghal
tribesmen in the south. - "
Tht three arrested with him
were All ' Shayegan, Mossa
degh's top political expert; -Gholam
Hosseim Sadlghi, his
interior minister, and Selxollah
Moazaml, the former post and
telegraph minister. . (
Clad fat fink Pajamas
An eyewitness said Mossa
degh, clad in pink pajamas,
surrendered to Geo. Zahedi la
the letter's office at the Cen
tral Officers Club at T pin.,
a.m., PST.
Pale, barely able to walk and
visibly depressed, the old ex
Premier, whose exact age is his
own secret weakly returned .
salutes of Zahedi's guards as be
limped into the club to meet
the man who bad swept bins
from power in a lightning coup
of nine hours. .
The eyewitness said Mossa
degh telephoned Zahedi at bis
office and said be was ready to
surrender under the terms of
Zahedi's proclamation Thurs
day morning guarantftl&f him
personal protection - -U
Secret "treat Paint 'V
While Zahedi waited for Mm
the 'streets around the club
were heavily manned by
troops.. Tanks rolled up ..and
trained theis guns on aU ave
nues of approach.
(Ceatbnai a Pact s, Catasea I)
France Deposes
. Paris France Thursday '
deposed the Sultan of Moroc
co, and the French Interior
Ministry announced it was ,
sending him and two of bis
sons into exile on Corsica, tha
Mediterranean Isle.
The 44-year-old sultan, Sidl
Mohammed Ben Youasef, who
has been giving the Trench
trouble by his encouragement
to independence, seeking na
tionalists, was ousted after the
tough Berber tribesmen of
Pasha Thaml EI Glaul of Mar
rakech, the sultan's bitter foe,
began to march m from the
hills en tbe palace at Rabat.
A fierce civil war threaten- .
ed between fanatical nation- ;
a lists supporting Sidl Mobem- '
med, and the warlike Berber
countrymen who follow El
Glaout '
Dispatches from Morocco
said the vanguard of Berbers),
from at least four tribes, trav
eling by horseback, truck and
afoot reached the outskirts of
Rabat and fighting already
was reported to have broken
out in the native quarters. -
Iranian Envoy
To India Stays
New Delhi, India () An
Iranian Embassy spokesman
said today Charge d'Affalres A.
A. Yekta "will continue as us
ual" under the new regime and
is not even planning to return
to Tehran for consultations.
The Iranian ambassador U
Washington, Allah Yar Salth,
who reportedly declared he it.
not willing to cooperate with
the new government "is very
special case," the spokesman
stated.
"He was a trusted friend of
Mr. Mossadegh and was ap
pointed to the delicate post in
Washington for that reason. 1
do not think the new Premier
will want him to remain there
despite bis abilities," the
spokesman explained.