THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY tonight aad Friday, few scattered showers tonight Little change in tem perature. Low tonight, 55; high Friday, TC FIN A L EDITION 65th Yeari No. 204 S?-. Salem, Oregon, Thursday, August 27, 1953 . rages Price 5c Employment In Hon Farm Jobs Increase. Summer-time Unem ployment Well Above Comparable Periods By JAMES D. OLSON Increases i a construction. food processing and metals manufacturing -resetted in bringing non-farm employment in the state to an estimated 479,200 in July, about 3.200 higher than a year before and a gain of 11,600 from Jane, ac cording to a report of the state unemployment compensa t i o n commission Thursday. Wfth the number of lumber and logging jobs remaining about the same as the previous month, 86,800, durable goods industries r e m a 1 n e d about 3,000 below last year's figures. Furniture and fixture plants also reported little change from the previous month and remained about 600 behind 1952, according to the esti mates made in cooperation with the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. . Service Jobs Up Various service lines also re- ported Increases over last jcat employment, me report pointed out, but again and losses in trade circles about cancelled out each other. Fi nance, realty, machinery, transportation, utilities, paper mills, printing and publishing reported only minor Job ad justments. Increase in employment in food processing was due main ly to the delayed harvest sea son for berries, cherries and peas. - -. . Harvest Employment Lag - Summer-time unemployment continued well above compar able periods since 1949, the report said. Late harvests, par ticularly in beans and fruits, brought a lag ir farm activities and claims for insurance from covered workers were higher for any August in the past four years. (Continued en Pare S. Col una 7) USIAlo Fire ' 2000 Employes Washington W) The United Stats Information Agency Thursday announced it is cut ting down on its global' oper ations and dismissing more than 2,000 employes because of reduced appropriations. USIA operates the Voice of America, overseas libraries and other programs designed to tell the American story abroad. . It said dismissal notices are going out Thursday, Friday and Monday, to 1,300 citizens of foreign countries employed abroaS, 300 Americans on for eign assignment, 200 Ameri cans at headquarters in Wash ington, 200 with the Voice of America office Jo New York, and 70 with the motion pic ture service n New York. Theodore C. Streibert, di rector of the information agency since it became inde pendent of the state depart ment on August 1, announced that its future operations will be devoted to the most impor tant overseas activities while desirable but less essential ac tivities will be discontinued. Surcharge Costs Told at Hearing Cost of capital to electric companies and theories of rate regulation were discussed by J. Rhoads Foster, rate expert, testifying in the surcharge hearing before Utilities Com- misioner Charles H. Heltzel Thursday. Foster, a former nrnfennr New York University and now a consultant on rate and regu latory matters, was brought t Oregon by the Pacific Power A Liffht Comnanv nrt h Mnnn. tain States Pon ("Vimnanv two of the defendants to the complaint filed by State Rep. and Mrs. Monroe Sweetland. The Sweetlands have attacked the surchage imposed by the power companies Last fail a: both unreasonable and Illegal. Foster in his toatimnnv r prcsed the view that the rate oi return to a public utility snouia oe relatively stable and should not vary with the mood of the stock market Foster was expected to com plete nis testimony late Thurt day aftr which it is planned t recess the hearing until Monday. Lavyers Guild Listed Among Subversives Brownell Describes Group Legal Mouth piece for Reds Bestea W) Atty. Gen. Brownell said Thursday he proposed to put the National Lawyers Guild which he de scribed as the legal mouthpiece for the Communist rarty on bis list of subversive organisa tions. Brownell made the an nouncement in an address pre pared for the American Bar association (ABA) in conven tion here. There was no immediate comment from the Lawyers Guild. The attorney general said he had served notice on the Guild of its proposed inclusion on the list which the government uses in checking the affiliations of federal workers in relation to their loyalty and security. 10 Days for Bearing The notice means the Guild has 10 days in which to ask for a hearing if it desires to present evidence on why the organization should not go on the list. The ABA House of Delegates earlier adopted a resolution de claring that Communists should be barred from the legal pro fession in this country. (Continued nPaioi, Column 0) Ike After Trout In the Rockies Denver VP) President Eisen hower took his fishing gear, oil paints and some old friends and headed into the high Rockies Thursday for six days of real vacation. Eisenhower and his party left Denver on the 70-mile drive to Fraser, Colo., on the western slope of the continental divide. There he will stay at the se cluded ranch of old friend, Ak sel Nielsen, Denver business man. About 50 people, many of them neighborhood children, stood around the tree-shaded home of Mrs. John S. Doud, Mrs. Eisenhower's mother, as the President departed. Mrs. Doud went with him, She said she was merely taking the drive over 11,000 foot Ber thoud Pass to see the scenery and to look at the Nielsen ranch. Norblad Files Wheat Protest Rep. Walter Norblad (R., Ore.) said Thursday he has filed protests with both Harold Stassen of the Mutual Security Agency and Ezra Benson, sec retary of agriculture, against the proposal to ship all of the wheat for Pakistan from Gulf and Atlantic ports. Norblad said that approxi mately 37 million bushels of wheat have been committed to this program and that none of the shipments were planned for the Pacific Northwest. ' In letters to bort Benson and Stassen he pointed out that in view of the Pacific Northwest's historical export sales handling of wheat, at least 25 per cent of the shipments should be made from these ports. He also saia tnis would in a substantial measure protect 'the local mar kets of Portland, Astoria and Seattle. Alore Bean Pickers Needed Here at Once The available supply of bean pickers was up a bit Thursday morning but officials at the em ployment office. South Cottage and Ferry streets, report three times as many as showed up could have been placed to ad vantage. Growers of beanl and other agricultural products appeared at the employment office in large numbers but tew if any of them secured their requirements.- Due to the rain that delayed harvesting, beans have grown larger and larger with the re sult that the producer will be paid lower price. Then, too, where under normal conditions six persons could handle an acre of brans, it will take 10 to 12 to take care of the situ ation now. "Salem folk apparently have forgotten that this is pretty much an agricultural commun . VIEW DAMAGE AFTER AIR LINERS 1 57 On Airliners Michigan City, Ind. VP) Two commercial air liners, carrying a total of 57 persons, collided last night at 11,000 feet, but police landed them safely and no one was injured. The planes, twin-engine Convairs from American Air Lines and United Air Lines, had left Chicago about a min ute apart The collision over Michigan City, about 60 miles east, occurred about 25 min utes later, -"It was a very lucky situa tion all around," said William Whittacre, American chief of flight operations for the Chi cago region. "We have no idea who did what to whom. We don't say which plane Jan the other down, but it will be the sub ject of an inquiry by the com pany and by the Civil Aero nautics Administration. The collision rlpned a three foot hole in the tail section of the American plane while the UAL airliner was punctur ed on top of the fuselage be tween the pilot's cabin and the passenger area. , Hitch Hiker s -Kills Official Zanesville. Ohio m The State Highway Patrol said Thursday an AWOL soldier ad mitted the fatal ahontinff nf state oniciai who gave him a ride in his car. Patrol Cpl. C. E. Wells cap tured Harold T. St. John, 25, Dorchester, Mass., near here shortly after the slaying of Jo seph W. Harding. 53, assistant director of the Ohio Industrial Relations department. Wells said St. John admitted shooting Harding during a struggle after a robbery at tempt. ,- The patrol said St. John escaped from Camp Atterbury Wednesday after disarming two military policemen and forcing them to drive him to Indianapolis. - Harding was killed a short time after he left a farewell part for his retiring chief, Al bert A. Woldman. Gov. Frank J. Jausche was reported con sidering Harding as successor to Woldman. ity," said one employment of fice worker. He urged that those persons who get Satur day and Sunday off from their regular tasks help the farmer who is facing a serious condi tion. ' They all need help, and propective pickers can find employment no matter which way they drive, it was stated, Transportation is available for those who require It It is estimated that about 42 per cent of the bean crop has been processed, leaving a big balance yet to be harvested. The loss of 50 per cent of the crop would prove a serious ft nancial blow to the community It was pointed out The canneries have been shifting their worker In an effort to keep all of them em ployed. However, the lack of tonnage has meant the curtail ment of employment Chicago, Aug. 27 Francis Toiino (left) and Vincent Samaska, American Airlines employes, view damaged underside of their plane at Midway Airport here follow ing mid-air collision last night with a United Airlnes plane near Michigan City, Ind. Both pilots effected safe landings after the bumping at 11,000 feet and no one was injured: The planes, both twin-engine Convairs, had left Chicago about a minute apart shortly before 9 pjn. (EST), A total of 57 persons were aboard the two planes. This plane returned to Chicago and the United Airlines plane landed at South Bend, Ind. (AP Wirephoto) Ike Commends Shah On Success of Coup Denver VP) President El senhower has in effect congra tulated Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi of Iran on the royalist overthrow of the government of deposed Prime Minister Mos sadegh. -, Cement Trust -Suit Dropped Boston VP) Asst Atty. Gen. Stanley N. Barnes said today the Justice Department is withdrawing its eight-year-old antitrust suit against the Ce ment Institute and 89 institute members. , Barnes, who heads the de partment's Antitrust Division, made the announcement in an address prepared for the Amer ican Bar Association's section on antitrust law. Abandonment of the litiga tion, he said, had been decided upon because most of the pri mary objectives of the suit had been attained through volun tary actions of the defendants. The case has been pending in the federal District Court at Denver since 1945. Among oth er things, it asked for dissolu tion of the Cement Institute, which disbanded in 1946. Further, Barnes said, indus try pricing and selling prac tices assailed In the suit have In recent years undergone sub stantial changes. Sanity Test for Slayer of Girl Somerville, Mass. U-B An attorney said today he would seek a sanity test for. Mildred McDonald, 25 year old steno grapher who said she went "plain crazy" and killed her former boy friend's younger sister. The attorney, Dwight L. Al lison of Belmont Mass., who was retained by Miss McDon ald's family to defend her against a murder charge, indi cated he was considering the possibility of an insanity plea. Miss McDonald confessed in New York yesterday that she fatally shot 14-year-old Mary di Rocco to death in the dl Rocco home here Monday and tried to burn the body. TWO OREGON POW DUE San Francisco u. The Army said today two Oregon men are among 437 former prisoners of war scheduled to return Saturday aboard the MSTS transport Gen.-William F. Hase. They are: Sgt. Thomas J. Elchorn, Mil waukie. and Cpl. Henry F. Wll Uams, Medford. Weather Details MatkaaM rnterfir, lat aitahaaai la- iar, M fatal M-baar ar"tIUUa: .III far Meatht l.Mi aaratal. Jl. Haaaaa ar ttaltaUaa. 4.ajt aaratal, arts, laaaart k; U.S. Waalkar Sanaa.) COLLIDE . 1 1 ,y TfTffTTt rJ.V The summer - White House Thursday made public an Ei senhower message to the Shah which took no note of the young Iranian monarch's bid for financial aid from any gov ernment Russia included 1 willing to contribute. But it was phrased in terms which did nothing to rule out the pos sibility of United States aid. -The President's message said "In the spirit of friendliness which has always been the basis for the relations of our two countries, I offer you my sincere felicitations on the oc casion of your happy return from exile to your country and my continuing good wishes for every success in your efforts to promote the prosperity of your people and to preserve the in dependence of Iran." White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said the mes sage was sent to the Shah "sev eral days ago" through the U. S. ambassador to Iran, Loy Henderson. Hagerty added that word it had been delivered "was received by Eisenhower Wed nesday. , Asked whether the friendly sentiments expresed by the President meant this country is ready to respond to the Shah's plea for funds, Hagerty replied: I have no comment on that Cabinet Meet Held on Finance Washington, VP) Revised es timates of federal income and outgo for the current fiscal year ending June 30, 1654, were discussed at a cabinet meeting Thursday, Pending release of the fig ures for publication Friday there was no official comment. The cabinet session was the first since President Eisen hower left on his Colorado vacation Aug. 8. It was pre sided over by Vice President Nixon and lasted nearly two hours. Secretary of State Dulles also briefed the cabinet on developments in the interna tional field. . Four departments were rep resented at the session by sub stitutesDefense, Post Office, Labor and Health, Education and Welfare. Th Budget Bu reau and Foreign Operations Administration also was repre sented by other than top offi cials. 2nd Fatal Shooting In Roseburg Area Roseburg, UP) A shotgun blast In the stomach took the life of Virgil Canfield, about 38, late Wednesday. He was the second gun victim In this area In two days. Canfield's wife, - Eva, was held by state police who said only that questioning brought a report of a quarrel. The Can field home was near Glide, east oi here. q$ Rehsei Urn Including Three 'Convicts' Freed Fanmunloin VP) One hun dred fifty Americans rode eagerly from Red captivity Thursday three of the men their buddies feared would be kept behind In North Korea after they disappeared mysteri ously from their prison camps. One returning prisoner said 45 more Americans sentenced only a month ago to prison terms were in the Red grouping center at nearby Kaesong awaiting release. Freed Americans have told of prisoners jailed by the Reds In late July when the armistice was signed on such charges as instigating against peace. Their sentences ranged from 1 to 3 years. However, three who said the Reds called them "convicts' were I In Thursday's group of 250 South Koreans and 150 Americans. They were: Cpt Chnrles C. Gutdettl, 32, Philadelphia ;Cpl. Eugene R. ReiUy, 21, New York City; and Sgt. Guy T. Vadala, 38, Stone ham, Mass, - (Continued on Pas 1 Column 0) Reds Shot at 'Chilling Pilot Freedom Village VP) U.S. jet pilot among Thurs day's treed prisoners said the Reds tried to shoot him while he parachuted from his crip pled plane. He also told of an escape attempt, - Lt Jack E, Henderson of Clayton, Wash., was in a Shoot ing Star jet which was shot down by Red anti-aircraft fire 15 miles south of Sinanju Aug. 31, 1951. Rifle and machine gun bul lets whistled around him as he floated down from 8,000 feet. Three minutes after he hit the ground about 40 Chinese grab bed him. At a Pyongyang interroga tion camp for downed aviators, he found himself in a mud hut with an Australian, a Britisher and Lt Col. Thomas Harrison of Clovis, N.M., a pilot returned on the second day of the ex change. Firestone Tire Union Strikes Cleveland VP) The CIO United Rubber Workers un ion struck the big Firestone Tire it Rubber company throughout the nation today. Negotiators failed to reach a new wage agreement before a midnight deadline. Union and company repre sentatives talked far into the early morning and scheduled another session today. The strike involves 24,000 production workers In eight cities, Including 10,000 in Ak ron, Ohio. Most of the union locals went out about midnight local time, with the first walkouts reported at Akron, Pottstown, Pa., and Fall River, Mass. The other Firestone plants are in Los Angeles; Nobles viUe and Newcastle, Ind.; Memphis, Tenn.; and Des Moines, Iowa. Red Rioters Attack Berlin Food Stations Berlin VP Riot police were called out in West Berlin to day to break up a demonstra tion by 300 invading commu nists against the distribution of American "Eisenhower" food packages. Picked communist agitators led a mob from East Berlin Into the French sector. Three strong riot squads of West Berlin police were rush ed to the spot With them went one of the new police water cannon used to break up riots. Today was the opening day of the second phase of the dis tribution of the "Eisenhower" food packages, SaysUOOPW Killed by Reds InPrisonCamp Birmingham, Ala. 11 An Army sergeant said last night that 1.700 American. British and Turkish prisoners died of starvation or were killed by brutal Chinese guards in the prison camp where he was held. - . ' . Sgt Ellis C. Jackson, who survived a 326-mile death march to Prison Camp 5 in North Korea, told of being tor tured because he refused to sign statement that he be lieved in communism. Jackson is here to visit an aunt. Later he'll go to Meridi an, miss., wnere his mother. Mrs. Mary . Jackson, and 11 brothers and sisters live. The Negro soldier said bis unit wu surrounded by the Chinese and captured in No vember 1950. "Two hundred of the 800 American; British and Turkish soldiers who made the march to prison camp died from star vation along the way," he said Progressives Inchon, Korea JP) Chinese prison camp officials apparently bad no further use for Ameri can POW "progressives" after the armistice was signed, a re patriated American prisoner said Thursday. Pfc. Leo E. Dwyer, Law rence, Mass., said a Chinese POW camp interpreter report edly told one of the "progres sives" in Camp S: "The war is over now and we are done using you. You sold out your own country tor cigarettes and If we took you to China you would sell out China for cigarettes, too. . t "And if you went to Russia, you might sell the Russians out for cigarettes: . "And if you went to some other country you probably would sell them out, too. -. Dwyer said the interpreter s statement got out in camp- he did not reveal how and that the "loyal American POWs" taunted the progres sives with the information. Pickets Tie Up Atom Plant I PaducarC K., VP) Picket ing carpenters kept work at a near standstill on the billion dollar atomic project near here Thursday. E. A. Wende, project man ager for the Atomic Energy Commission, said an early count showed less than 1,000 out of a manual work force of 12,500 men were on the job, He said the carpenters set up an unauthorized picket line to protest the failure of some subcontractors to match a new contract given employes of F. H. McGraw & Co., the prime contractor. The unaffiliated carpenters union called meeting to de cide whether to officially sanc tion the line. Wende said 527 sheetmetal workers, about one half of the normal force, and 240 labor ers, 12 per cent of full force, crossed the picket line Thurs day morning. There were no teamsters, operating engineers, electricians or pipefitters, he ssid. The communists in thetr first move aga'jist the highly embarrassing distribution put Berlin "oft limits" to all East Germans seeking to reach the city. Sale of railway ticket to points within 50 miles of the city was banned. - Soviet troops were posted on roads leading to the city. These strict measures were taken as the United States and West German governments opened the second phase of a free food distribution program in the American, British and French sectors of Berlin, HO mile behind the Iron Curtain. UN Victory Vcn Over Russia fay United States Tnlted Nations, N. Y. P India failed Thursday to wia sufficient U. N. rapport to give her a seat at the Korean peace conference. She received a majority of the ' votes cast in the flO-na-tional political committee, but fell short of tho two-thirc'j majority required for approval ' by the general assembly which acts Friday. ' The vote was 27 for, 21 against, 11 abstaining and In dia not participating. ; It was victory for the United Stages, who has split with Britain and other west ern allies over the issue and fought vigorously against In dia's inclusion. . Only Fighters Seated ; : The committee also:, 1. Recommended seats at the conference for ail the Id countries who . fought under the U JJ. banner if they desire to do so. The vote was 42-7. with 10 abstaining and India not voting. . . 2. Rejected a Soviet pro posal that the conference be made' up of six belligerent , countries and nine "neutrals." The vote: 5-41, with U ab staining and India not voting. 3. voted to Include Russia in the parley "provided the other side desires it' The vote was 65-2 with two abstaining, (Continued en Page 5, Caiman 4) Mrs. FDR Sees Doric nc Virtnrc WUal UaKIlVeVIJ . New York WV-Mrs. Frank lin D. Roosevelt says the United Nations dispute over seating India at the Korean peace con ference means "a substantial victory for Malenkov in his drive to split, apart the free world," ,. - Mrs. Roosevelt speaking aa honorary chairman of the pro New Deal Americans tor Demo cratic Action, said last night In a statement that the India dispute no matter how it is ' decided dramatizes "the self- Isolation of the United States from its closest and most Im portant friends and allies." "American self-isolation in this particular instance," she said, "Is due to the stubborn, ness of our spokesmen and in flexibility of our policy." - VA to Discharge 1000 Workers Washington VP) The Veter ans Administration said Thurs day it will drop about 1,000 employes from the operating staff in its insurance division here by October 16. An official said the reduc tion will leave "a hard core" of about 1,500 operating em ployes which he said lt is fig ured can handle the work here. The reduction in force does ' not affect 160 staff and 425 actual employes here and does not apply in the field. Workers who will be retain ed have been advised, the VA said. It added that separation notices to "slightly less than 1,000" would be issued Sep tember 15, effective October. 16, and that the redaction was being carried out under civil service procedure. More Showers I Expected Here More than one-tenth Inch of additlonarprecipitation wa marked up for Salem through showers over Wednesday night and this morning, .13 of an ' inch being measured. ' . Apparently the showery weather is due to continue an other day or so, the weather man giving little encourage ment .When the sun doe shine, however, it Is still sum-, mer weather. So far this month, 1.18 inches tyive been measured In Salem. The skies were very threatening through Thursday morning and some section of the city reported real shower or tain, then 4utt wtaki.