Capital ik. Journal THE WEATHER. MOSTLY CLODDY with scat tered showers tonight. Than day. LKU change U temper atare. Lew tonight, II; high Tkariday, 14, . FIN A L COITION 65th Year, No. 203 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, August 26, 1953 24 Pages Price 5c HOME COOKING STILL BEST Ada Radford For Rcvicv of U.S. Defenses Chairman of JCS Says Red H-Bomb , Forces Realignment Washington, lV-Adm. Ar Dulles Urges United I lalions (lev Charter 10 M! n i USSl thur W. Radford Mid Wedaes- da; the Basslaa hydrogen ex plosion ..reqnlre .that .the ' United SUtei review Iti de tense against such weapon. Tha new chairman ol the joint chiefs of stall told a newt conference that U.S. mil itary leaders knew, however, that Russia would achieve an hydrogen explosion sooner or later Just as the United States had. He said the tact ol the achievement has not changed this nation's strategic plan ning. . i Radford did not elaborate on his statement- that there should be a review of U.S. de fenses. His predecessor, Gen. Omar Bradley, suggests in an article in this week's issue of the Saturday Evening Post that there is need for working out with Canada a more effec tive all-continent defense com mand. ; (Con tinned Pace C Column 4) Strike Ties Up Atomic Works Paducah, Ky, WV-The full construction force of 15,000 to 16,000 worker at the nearby atomic energy plant was off the job Wednesday, observing a picket line set up by union carpenters. An Atomic Energy Commis sion spokesman confirmed that the billion dollar project was ' "shutdown." t The 1,200 to 1,500 carpenters reportedly walked out over a dispute with one or more sub i contractors who haven't recog- nized a new contract granted : the union recently by F. H. McGraw it Co., prime con- ( tractor. . . The contract provided the ; basis for negotiations now in ' progress at Washington be . tween union and management . officials seeking a no-strike ' agreement for the project . which has been hit by frequent i walkouts. Clues Found to Missing Plane Ketchikan, Alaska (P) Re ports of an unidentified plane ' and an explosion pointed to . Northern British Colombia , Wednesday and in the wide search for a New Mexico oil wmu uu Him iuut paMcjiacxB ; on a flight to the states. ' Planes from the United ; States and Canada converged on the Smithers area, some 200 miles east of Annette Is land, takeoff point of Ellis i Hall of Albuquerque on the m-lated flight a week, ago Monday. The latest report came from a Mrs. Wookley, who lives north of Kisckio, B.C. The . Coast Guard said she reported hearing a plane about 8:30 ppi. the night the Hall plane disappeared and again about 10 p.m. An explosion and a flash of light bright enough to illum inate a room in Mrs. Wook ley's home followed, the re- : port to the Coast Guard said, Malenkov In Full Control , , Washington (UJ9 Russian experts said today Premier . Georgl M. Malenkov seems to be slowly tightening his grip on me reins of power In the Kremlin. They said Soviet army lead ers, who might have over thrown Malenkov in the back stage power struggle set off by Stalin's death, now appear to be losing ground. Nikita S. Kruschchev, who didn t get on too well with Sta lin at times, is edging his way up and looks to be the No.- 2 man after Malenkov. His sta ture has increased following the downfall of Lavrenti P. Beria, purged secret police chief. Foreign Minister V. M. Molo tov. the '.Old Bolshevik" com rade of Stalin, is still running No. 3. But Lt Gen. Vasilly Stalin, son of the former dictator, has dropped out of sight despite his rumored marriage to Svetlana Molotov, the foreign minister's daughter. ' Pre-Aromic Age Provisions Seriously Inadequate How Boston, VP) ' Secretary of Setate Dulles said Wedaesday the -"pre-atomlc age charter" of the United Nations eon tains ."serious .inadequacies' and needs to anderge Impor tant alterations. 'In a speech preparea for the American Bar Association, Dulles said he believes the ad ministration can achieve a bet ter world in the face of the fact that man now has the "power to destroy himself. But i e said the VM. would have to be changed to makeH this possible. He recalled that the charter. was drafted ana signed in San Francisco In early IMS "when none of us knew of the atomic bomb which was to fall on Hiroshima on Aug.Nj, 1949," and added: Provisions Inadequate "The charter is thus a pre- atomic age charter. In this sense it was obsolete before it actually came -nto force." Dulles went on to say that "as one who was at San Fran cisco, I can say with confidence that if the delegates there had known that the mysterious and immeasurable power of the atom would be available as means of mass destruction, the provisions of the charter deal ing with .disarmament and the regulation of armaments would have been far more emphatic and realistic". (Contained en Fate s. Cclsann t) Rain Worries Bean Growers Persistent heavy showers of the past two days are creating considerable concern in the ranks of snap bean growers as wen as In the hop division of seasonal crops. ' The rain has virtually halt ed bean picking although' five growers appeared at the em ployment i office Wednesday morning. They returned to their fields with few pickers. Another angle to the situa tion is the possibility that the rains, coupled with the weight of the unpicked beans will flat ten some of the vines. The growth of the beans means that growers will re ceive a lower price for their product and when picking is resumed the demand for pick ers will be unusually heavy. Failure to get the beans off the vines will slow work in the processing plants. (Continued en Pate . Column 7) Fruit Growers Face Heavy Loss Corvallis P) Western Ore gon fruit growers are faced with the threat of heavy loss from brown rot on peaches, prunes and plums. County extension agents in many parts of the Willamette Valley reported this week that the fungus has been showing up. Continued damp weather will be costly unless a spray or dust program is started imme diately, Dr. H. J. O'Reilly, ex tension plant pathologist at Oregon State College, said Wednesday. Inequalities Found in Grant Co. Assessments By AMES D. OLSON Startling inequalities In as- sessmenU, were unearthed in a recenlty completed reap praisal of properties in Grant county, according to Samuel B. Stewart, state tax commis sioner in charge of the assess ment and taxation division Wednesday. Some farm land in the coun ty was found to be assessed as low as five per cent of its true cash value while other farm owners were paying taxes on assssments of 240 per cent of true cash value, Stewart said. Timber and mining properties show about the same variation in ratios. Importance of the revela tions if the fact that the tax commision is engaged in a state-wide reappraisal pro gram that will eventually af fect every county in the state. ; ..v - - ' V VVNr French Strikes In Collapse . Paris, VP) France struggled back to normalcy . Wednesday after almost three weeks of dislocation because of strikes. The general back - to - work movement encountered only a" few islands of resistance. Railway trains were run ning again. Paris buses and subways were back on sched ule. Big bundles of mail were being delivered after the long tieup. Telephone calls could be placed to most parts of France, although traffic was much heavier than normal and delays somettimes were long, I The two biggest holdout to dustrles were the nationalized gas and electricity works and coal miners. Even here, there was some improvement. Gas and electricity were supplied throughout the strikes' except for minor disruptions. In some provincial towns, the regular workers were reporting back. The strikes, which at one time had about four million persons off the job, developed as a protest to proposed eco nomy decrees affecting work ers in government-run indus tries. Premier Joseph Laniel's government has not announ ced its final decision on the decrees. Yacht Off to Salvage Ship Astoria UP) The 140-foot yacht Caronia left the Colum bia River Tuesday after taking on stores at Astoria. It is bound for Canton Island in the Phoe nix group where it plans to sal vage the President Taylor, an American vessel grounded on a reef there during World War II. The 11 men, 4 women and 7 children aboard' expect to be gone about a year. The children will attend school on Canton Island 'during the efforts of the crew to refloat the big passen ger-freighter. William G. Cooney, Portland, majority stockholder of the North Coast Company which was formed for the salvage op eration, is aboard. Stewart said that the study made In Grant county showed that only SO per cent of the tillable farm land was found to be listed as such on the tax rolls. The study shows that farm ing, timber and mining prop erties were being assessed at an average of 29 per cent of the reappraised value. How ever, Stewart, said, 38 rural properties comprising 17.9 per cent of the total, were assess ed at or under 20 per cent of the reappraised value and tS properties, constituting 4S.S pjer cent at or over 40 per cent of reappraised value, Twenty-seven rural properties were found to be assessed it more than 90 per cent of re appraised value. (Oeaclaaed ea Page it Celaau 4) v -.xf'tv-r V ivi.fi Cpl. Edward K. Clevenger of Unionvale. enjoys cake -baked by his cousin, Mrs. Nellie Tbien, .left, upon his return home from Communist prison camp in North Korea. After a visit with friends and relatives Cpl. Clevcnfer will return to Camp Stoneman, Calif., for discharge Sept. 23. . ' -.'.---;.-' Clevenger Tells of Hunger Among POWs By MIKE Unionvale Hunger was the fifth columnist who. walked beside United Nations prison ers of war in communist prison camps. In Rio Grande Roma, Tex. U. The Rio Grande, international -river that was so dry a month ago children could walk across it, crested at 144,000 gallons of water a second . last night There were reports today that its tributary had gone into two Mexican towns. Hydrographer Charges Gil mer of the international boun dary and water commisison, said the Rio Alamo, a tribu tary, had gone into Cerrado and General Trevlno, Mexico. ' Mexican officials told Gil mer that Cerraldo had a "lit tle damage," but no reported (casualties. Heavy rains In northern Mexico and southern Texas, which received a total of up to seven . inches, were credited for the torrents of water that rose 9 or 10 feet at Roma dur ing the crest. ' Owens Admits Wife Murder Roscburg ) Burt Owens told state police he shot and killed his full-blooded Choctaw Indian wife Tuesday while his four children were playing nearby. Officer Holly Holcomb said the shooting at Owens' home in the Riddle area climaxed a long dispute between Owens, 45, and his wife Betty Jean, about 30. Owens shot his w'fe as she was sitting in a rocking chair on the porch of their home, Holcomb said. Mrs. Owens' sis ter, Willie Woolsey, reported she had witnessed the shooting. Holcomb said Owens had fil ed divorce proceedings against his wife last week and that they had been in Roseburg earlier in the day to arrange a property settlement. Mrs. Owens returned home with her sister. Owens went to the home of a half-brother, M. L. Kirkendall, and borrowed a shotgun, killed his wife, and then returned the gun to the brother, Holcomb reported. Owens then drove to nearby Canyonville where he turned himself in to police. riCCARD IN RECORD DIVE Aboard the Corvette Fenice off Capri, Italy W Auguite Piccard, stratosphere balloon ist of the early '30s, plunged five-eighths of a mile deep Into the Mediterranean in his bathy scafe Wednesday. The success ful descent was made after two previous dive failed. FORBES That is the opinion of Cpl. Edward E. Clevenger, repatri ated prisoner of war, who is now at the home of his father, E. E. Clevenger, Unionvale larmer. "We were hungry all the time," Cpl. Clevenger said. And the food- we were given was bad. ' That was as near as the re turned prisoner of war would approach the subject of the "Progressive" American pris oners who communists say have elected to remain . in China Instead of returning to their homeland. "Were there any progres sives in your prison camp." the corporal was asked. ' "I can't answer that ques tion," he said. General 'treatment in the camp where Cpl. Clevenger was quartered was fair, he added. He said he did not witness any brutality. The prison camp in which Cpl. Clevenger was quartered was never bombed by U.S. planes, he said.- The buildings all were marked plainly. The camp was at Pyktong on the Yelu river. The Chinese communists no tified the United Nations pris oners of war of the signing of the armistice four hours after the event, - according to the youth. Cpl. Clevenger is in the U.S. Army Medical Corps. He en tered the service in 1949 and took his basic training at Ft Ord, Calif. He was captured in an engagement at Ansong, November 27, 1950. . ! Since returning to his home Cpl. Clevenger has been the special guest at a round of homecoming parties In the dis trict. Tuesday night he was the honored guest at a dinner and party given by his cousin, Mrs. Nellie Thien, at . Union vale. i Although he suffered from hunger for nearly three years, Cpl. Clevenger s appetite al ready is becoming jaded with homecooked delicacies. But an angel food cake with choco late frosting, still brings a dazzling sparkle to hi eyes. Heavy Rainfall Freshens Valley Nearly three-quarters of an inch of rain poured down on Salem in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Wednes day, .73 of an inch to be exact Forecast is for continued scattered showers tonight and Thursday. Rainfall In August to date totals 1.23 inches as against a normal of .33 of an inch for the period. This August will turn out to be the wettest one in 10 year. In 1943, August brought 2.14 inches of rain. Last year but .03 of an inch was recorded. Reds Free 133 Jubilant Yanks From Stockades Panmunjom. Korea ll.n The Communis ts freed IIS jubilant American today and embar rassed their own returnees by mjecunr sex and military splendor Into a reception cere mony. . . Much to the embarrassment of the returning Communist prisoners who tore off their uniform as usual, the Red dig nitaries produced two beautiful blond Polish interprers. The Keel prisoner covered them: selves with their caps. All of the American soldier returning from Communist cap tivity as "Operation Big Switch" entered its final two week appeared healthy. Their elation over being lib erated subsided at nearby Free dom Village where many of them recallfd such atrocities a the murder of a nun on a death march and the torturing of offi cers to obtain "confession." (Ceatlna face a, Cotama 4) Costs of Living Edges Higher Washington VP) The govern ment reported Wednesday that living cost edged to a new rec ord high in mid-July. The In crease was enough to live a million auto industry- workers a 1 cent hourly pay boost ' - It was tha second straight month that the government' living - cost measurement had hit a record. The index has ris en now tor live month in a TOW.': . ,s .. . - Higher price for food, rent. transportation and medical care were the main item re sponsible for the new hike in consumer, costs, . The Bureau of Labor Statis tics said it index, known as the . Consumers Price Index, reached 114.7 per cent of the 1947-49 average. This is two tenths of 1 per cent higher than in mid-June, which wa also a living cost peak. The mid-July level was H of 1 per cent above a year ago and 12.7 per cent above the level at the start of the Korean War. 450 Freed POW Dock Saturday San Francisco, tin The second transport bearing re turning prisoners of war will dock at the San Francisco Port of Embarkation Saturday with approximately 430 released POW. The transport Gen. William F. Hase Is scheduled to dock at 9 a.m. Saturday with the released prisoners and 1400 servicemen on rotation. Three other ship with re leased POWs aboard are due here during the next two week. The hospital ship Haven, with 104 lick cx-prisoners, Is due about Sep'.. 4. The troop ship Marine Adder, with 367 released prisoners and 1473 returning troops is due about Sept. 8. The transport Gen. John Pope is scheduled to leave Ko rea today with 428 ex-POWs Iran Seeking Loan to Head-off Bankruptcy Tehran, Iran U Premier Fazollah Zaheda appealed di rectly to U. S. Ambassador Loy W. Henderson today for im mediate and substantial finan cial aid to save Iran from bank ruptcy, well informed sources reported. . Zahedl told Henderson that oust ad Premier Mohammed Mossadegh emptied the trea sury before he was overthrown last week in a Royalist coup, Informant said. It wa Indicated that Hen derson would make an urgent report to the State Department. The Premier reported im mediately to Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevl on his talk with Henderson. The Shsh promot ed Zahedl, who ltd the Royalist GIRL SLAIN JEb ' The bullet-punctured and partially burned body of Mary Dl - Rocco, 14, (top) was found In the cellar of her home at Sommerville,. Mas. A "very pretty" ste nographer Mildred McDon ald, 25, (bottom), confessed' slaying her. Heavy motor oil had been poured; over the girl' body and news papers and a - magazine, placed around the girl, had been set ablase. (AP Wire photo) -i H. lirlfu i,- 1 New- York ft. A pretty Massachusetts stenographer, cobbing hysterically admitted to police Wednesday she killed the '14 1 year -old sister of former boy friend who broke on witn ner ana mamea an other woman. Police quoted petite Mildred McDonald, 25, of Somerville, Mass.. a laying she shot the girl, Mary Di Rocco, on Mon day after the child told her the brother was happy with his new wife. : -. The girl had been shot five times, her throat slashed and her body partly burned in the Dl Rocco home in Somerville. A sharp-eyed policeman, Pa trolman George F. Grace, spot ted Mis McDonald near Times Square Tuesday night and took her into custody. He recognized her from an Associated Press Wirephoto he had seen in the New York Daily New only minutes before. ' ' For 10 hour, the blonde stenographer protested ner in nocence. Then near dawn police said, she admitted: "I shot her several time.' Weather Details UiIbm rwttrtir. oklna ti ttj, W. T.Ul ll-k pracldUttaai .111 rr mm I: l.m I. M. Im rtelBltfttlM. 44-fftt nail, SMS. a- wt mt U.S. mmlh Bonoa.) army coup, to the rank of a full general. An American Embassy state. ment said that Henderson and Zahedl began "working on ur gent matter in the Interests of their covernments. The embassy pointed out after the conference that Iran is to get $23,300,000 this year under the Point Four aid plan. and possibly more for addi tional projects. But Iran needs more than this, and need it a direct aid for tha treasury, Informed Iranian sources said that Iran might receive an additional $30,000,000 under the Point Four program, The Shah Mid he would ac cept money from any source, a long a there were no con dition attached. Stenographer Admits Slaying Request OnVesl'sSplit OverSovistRoh Cnitei Natioaa. N.T. Wednesday ant K qaarely to tha VM. to decide whether tha Soviet Union could attend the Korean peace conference witheat be ing lined ap on tha eemmn- aiit side. , The new Soviet move waa a challenge to, in unnea States position that Russia can . attend only If the communist belligerent, North Korea and Red China, del ire it Such proposal is now before tha U J, with United State back ing. ....... Soviet Delegate Andrei Y, Vlahlnsky, however, submitted to tha general assembly 80- natlon political committee Wednesday ,, morning an amendment atriking out ' tha reference to "the other aide.'' Challtnnga U. S. Statue This will bring into tha open the western split over Russia's role, in tha confer ence. Britain, China and soma other originally advocated the participation of Russia without any siring attached, but the limiting provision war Inserted on the. insist ence of the United State. (Oeatbned a Pace t. Cstaaui ) Bar Boston - WV-The '' house' of delegates of the American Bar association ha adopted reso lution ' condemning ' "book burning' end pledging sup port for lawyer who, though personally anti communist, de fend subversive a a matter of public duty. : "Freedom to read," the del egates, voted, "is a corollary of the constitutional guaran tee of freedom of tha press." The bar association ' com mittee on individual rights. which drafted the resolution, aid in it report however that there should be "no doubt that the government may properly restrict the content of librar ies maintained abroad," and- it added: "There Is no good reason why such librarle should in clude propaganda against th United State." But when it comas to li braries at home, the report Mid: ". . . we are dealing with a policy Involving the rights of our own people and .' . . wa believe that truth can be counted, upon to prevail in free competitoin of ideas." Fresh Quakes in Ionian Islands ' Argostolion, Greece, () A Greek earthquake expert warned the devested Ionian islands today they may get more "catastrophic" quakes but probably not for 40 year. . The predlctllon wa made by seismology professor Angelo Galanopoulos, who I touring the stricken islands of Kefall lnia, Ithaca and Zaklnthos, where an estimated 130,000 made homeless in quake two weeks ago. Shortly before the professor mide hi observation, the is lands were rocked by new tremors, the worst since the first ones. Walls of partly de stroyed buildings tumbled, killing three Italian demolition worker. Greece' King Paul and Queen Frederika continued their tour of the disaster area today, despite the new tre mors. ' ; Ike Leaving for Trout Fishing Trip Denver W) President Ei senhower will leave Denver Thursday for a few days of trout fishing at mountain locked Fraser, Colo., 71 mile northwest of here. - Eisenhower will stay at the Rocky Mountain ranch of an old friend, Aksel Nielsen, pres ident of the Denver Chamber of Commerce.