THE WEATHER il Land Issue Tossed Bach To Thornton State Board of Control Replies to Attorney General By WILLIAM WAEEEN The State Board of Control today tossed back to Attorns faeneral Bobert Y. Thornton me controversial question coa-iPloyes and pay damares total I'fftoK so-called tidelands .11 ill $122,50 to seven others. bUl passed by the 13rd Con-1 All of them American citi- wT. they were llred because That bill quitclaims the fed- they refused to answer US eral government's title to the vernment questions snout uuuicrgea unas offshore the."ue8 communist ties. Pacific, Atlantic and Gulf stales. , Thornton, a Democrat, re cently wrote the hoarH bers, Gov. Paul Patterson, Sec retary oi oiaie JSarl T. Newbry and State Treasurer Sig Unan der all Republicans leaving 1 It up to them whether he ; snouia join the attorneys gen eral of five other states in test ing the constitutionality of the act giving the offshore lands i to the bordering states. i ; Letter to Thornton ; ; ; Today the three Board mem. bers sent a joint letter; to "we note that you state some figures as to the supposed values of the lands involved ana the possible value of Ore gon's share if these fanciful values were realized. You do not comment upon the effect of the loss to the state of Ore gon of the 676,000 acres which we gained by the law, which lie under the sea, or the 400, 000 acres under the bays and navigable streams. Neither do you comment upon the some $30,000 estimated return that Oregon now receives from the ' lands that it now owns, nor i upon the probability ci Oregon obtaining created reveuUe : through future development of these lands." (Continued en Pat 5, Column 1) Ho Penally for Looting Estate Klamath Falls VP) A charge of embezzling $6,500 . against W. Iamar Townsend, S3, Klamath Falls attorney, was dismissed in circuit court here Tuesday after the district attorney said Townnend's al leged actions were not a crime tinder Oregon statutes. Townsend was executor of the estate of his late friend, Dr. Joseph M. Cronin, Kla math Falls surgeon, who died May 25, 1950. Last July four Indictments were return ed against Townsend, each alleging embezzlement from the Cronin estate. These were dismissed and a single indictment alleging embezzle ment of $6,500 was returned. District Attorney Frank Al der son said he had found that Oregon's, statute does not cover embezzlement by ex ecutors or administrators of estates, therefore Townsend had committed no crime. Cir cuit Judge David R, Vandcn berg dismissed the charges. Alderson said: "It appears there is a seri ous defect in the Oregon sta tutes, in that there is no pro vision to cover such a state of facts as alleged in this indict ment." v Negro Leader of Reds Testifies Seattle, VP) Paul Bowen, described by the government as leader of the Communist "Red movement" among Ne groes in the Northwest, testi fied Tuesday he Joined the Communist Party because he felt its program was aimed to "help" his people. Resuming the witness rand at start of the 20th week of government's anti-Communist trial Bowen described as "ut terly false and untrue" the government's charges that he and five other defendants had conspired to teach ana aavo- catc overthrow or tne govern ment. . . "It (the Communist Party) was concerned with the force and violence exercised for 300 years against the Negro peo ple." he said. ; "It had a program to miti gate this force and violence, .. it w this program I ac cepted." He Joined the party in March. 1943, om when he was drafted because it was "strict policy' nat members going Into the armed forcei should disaffiliate them selves, be testified. 65th Un ordered to ReslorcJobslo Fired Clerks Tribunal Also Imposes Heavy Damages to Suspected Reds United Nations, v.v fs n umwa nation hirh trl. I bunal ordered the U.N. Tues- day to restore Jobs to four . The four-member interna tional board, highest appeals court for the U.N. staff held for an employe to invoke the U.S. Fifth Amendment in re fusing to answer such ques tions did not violate any U.N. staff rules. Upholds Firing of Nine But the tribunal upheld the firing of nine others seven involved in Communist In quiries and two for non-political reasons-because they were "temporary Indefinite" (Continued en Pare s. Column 2) cum jweuersx In Humid Heat (By Tin Auoelatad Fnu The summer's longest heat wave continued mercilessly Tuesday, and at least 28 deaths were attributed to the wither ing, oppressive weather. Hundreds of other persons were overcome by the heat. The high temperatures, rang ing in many cases beyond the 100 mark, covered . wide sec tion eastward from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic coast There was no immediate prospect of cooler tempera tures, nor of rain at least for two days, and possibly longer. In Pennsylvania, 17 deaths were attributed to the heat spell, now in its second week. The New York City area's heat left at least six persons dead. Three died in Texas, and at least one person in Chicago and one in St. Louis. The midday temperature in Chicago reached 99 degrees. It was the ninth straight day of 90-degree weather in Chicago. Survey Will Furnish ARP At Airport Salem's municipal airport, McNary Field, is going to have an ARP. If you don't know what that Is, it means "airport ref erence point," meaning the exact pinpoint on the field at which longitude, latitude and elevation will be determined. At present these are deter mined with reference to the whole area of the field, which is not considered an accu rate method of determina tion. Cecil Mclnnis and two others representing the Unit ed States Geodetic Survey arrived in Salem today and started a new survey of the field which will result in es tablishing the ARP. They ex pect it to be here until Fri day. It isn't Mclnnis' first Job at the 8alem airport He made a survey three years ago, and In the present sur vey will note changes In building construction, tree growth, etc. Weather Details. 4y, M. TUI t-hMr rcil ft fr nth: ti ml. .M. Seium rt elIUtl(t, $ rmBi, .. (A nw tbtr mr. eUrtetl BptailMr 1. Kltrr bmhU -1.1 IfU (Rcrl by V.t. Wea ther Bimi.) State Plans Re-survey Of Prison Flax Industry A revaluation of the state's flax interest was asked Tues day by Gov. Paul L. Patter son at a meeting of the State Board of Control here. The board said the state should get out of the flax buiiness if it finds lt uneco nomic in the face of falling prices and increasing compe tition from European flax growers and synthetic fibers. Flax processing Is the larg est plant operation at the Ore gon state penitentiary, wu- liam Ryan, superintendent of institutions, told the board. At present it occupies the Capital. Year, No. 208 tSKlTiSifSZ Salem, Oregon, -,'.';'- - v. V : v . Russia Explodes Second H-Bomb - Washington, VP) An Amer lean atomic scientist suggested Tuesday that Russia may nave two separate atomic teams one working on H-bomb de velopment, the other striving to improve A-bombs and "presumably has more atomic capability from the standpoint of numbers of scientists than we have thought" Dr. Ralph Lapp, who work ed on the wartime Manhattan project which produced the first American A-bomb said he drew that Inference from the Atomic Energy Commis sion's (AEC) announcement that Russia set off another ex plosion of the hydrogen type, on Aug. 23. Noting the previous AEC announcement of a Russian explosion Aug. 2 a blast which the AEC said had in dications of involving a "ther monuclear" hydrogen reaction as a fission type. Benson Talks Farm Problems Mineral Springs, S. C. VP) - Secretary of Agriculture Ben son said Tuesday government farm programs give the farm er too little income and too little security, yet at the cost of too much dependence upon Washington. "I am sure you agree with me that we should not pile up huge excesses of food in stor age when it could, and should. go into stomachs," he said, "that we should not accumu late vastly excessive stocks of fibers at the expense of the public. Neither should we price our products out of nor mal markets. "Where such conditions ex 1st, we should be derelict in our duty if we did not seek im provements. But let it be very clear that seeking improve ments in farm programs does not mean seeking lower prices or lower income for farmers. greatest number of prisoners, he said. The board directed Ryan to make a complete study of the cost oi flax and report on the possibility of finding new in dustry to substitute for the flax industry at the prison. A proposal to change the prison ration system to a weights and calories ba.ii rather than a cash allotment per man basis was approved by the board. The new plan will be tested at the prison and if successful will be ex panded to other state institu tions, Ryan said. tCssUinosi ea rage K Cil 1) SETS ALTITUDE MARK Marine Lt. Col. Marlon E. Cart climbs out of the Navy's Douglas Skyrocket research plane at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The Navy announced in Washington Aug. 31 that Carl set a r.ew altitude record of 83,235 feet during a test of s newly developed high-altitude flying suit on Aug. 21. Carl is from Hubbard, Ore., and is stationed at Quantico, Va. (Navy Photo via AP Wirephoto) Carl Tells of World RnenrA Altitiirln Slinht mm m nit! tuw f Los Angeles 4 Ur' Lt Col. Marion E. Carl, who flew rocket' propelled plane higher than man had ever gone be fore, says there would have been "no limit" if he had car rled more fuel. Carl, a Marine Corps avia tlon veteran, yesterday climb ed to an altitude of 83,235 feet, almost 16 miles, for an Carl Recent Home Visitor Hubbard, Ore. U.R The man who has flown higher than anyone else In the world has little to say about his aerial exploits when he comes home to Hubbard. Lt Col. Marion E. Carl spent this weekend with his brother, Manton Carl, two weeks ago on the, farm where he was born. Said Manton Carl after the colonel had set a new height record of 84,235 feet in his Skyrocket: "We had no idea he was go ing after the altitude mark. But then he never did say much about his work." Col. Carl called his brother from Portland Sunday while on his way to Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., where he expected to try to better the world s speed mars oi mo miles an hour. Jobs at Record Level in August Washington (P) The Com merce Department reported Tuesday that employment climbed to a record high level In August and unemployment dropped to a post-war low of 1,240,000. With 63,408.000 persons holding Jobs, the number of unemployed dropped by 308, 000 last month to a level which officials considered close to a bare minimum. By comparison, July em ployment was 63,120.000 and the number of unemployed was 1,548,000. Releasing the figures gath ered by the Census Bureau, acting Secretary of Commerce Robert A. Murray observed: "Only 1.9 percent of all ci vilian workers were out of Jobs this August as compared with 2.a percent a year ago. "Thus, with a current labor force of 65 million, unemploy- ment is barely over the one million mark." I Tuesday, hptcmber 1, 1W1 Wtagti Price 5c unofficial world record. He said he started with less than three minutes fuel and that there would have been "no limit to the altitude" with additional fuel. He was carried to an alti tude of 35,000 feet by a B29 plane before his Douglas built Skyrocket was launched. "I dropped down to 28,000 feet before I could get the first rocket to start," ha said. "utnerwise, ra nave gone several hundred feet higher." Carl said there was no sen sation of speed or height dur ing the flight. 'The only thing I noticed was the fact that the sky was a little darker, and my eyes troubled me. The contrast be tween sunlight and shadow is much greater up there." "I didn't have much time to look around ... I was just trying to. fly as high as possi ble." Carl said he was certain he could have seen San Francis co, 400 miles to the north, if he hadn't been so busy check ing instruments. "I know I was going well over a thousand miles per hour on this altitude run," he said, but added, "that speed doesn't seem very fast up there." Carl, who held the world's speed record of 650.7 miles per hour in 1947, said he would try for a new speed record in the Skyrocket to morrow. No Word Heard Of Applegate Washington UM It now has been 164 days since two American newsmen and the crew of their yacht, were cap tured by the Chinese Commun ists off Hong Kong. So far, the State Department has not been able to find out where they are being held, much less obtain their freedom. The international mystery began March 21 when the 42 foot yacht Kert put out from British Hong Kong for Portu guese Macao, a distance of about 35 miles. The British Royal Navy reported the same day that the vessel was seized by a Chinese gunboat and tow ed to Lap Sap Mel Island, five miles southwest of Hong Kong. This brief British report was the last definite word about the yacht owner, Richard Ap plegate, 37, National Broad casting Co. correspondent and former United Press reporter at Salem; Don Dixon, 25, Inter national News Service reporter; Ben Kramer, an American mer- chant marine captain; and three Chines craw members. or Man WSXl Red Plot to Wreck German Election Sunday Revealed 100 More GIs Relumed From Prison Camps Psnm union (A The Koreaa War prisoner exchange sieved Into its fifth and possibly last week today with lit mere Americans returning te free dom from North Koreaa prison camps. Riding happily into Panmun Jon on open trucks today were two high-ranking Allied , offi crs, both with many months of Red captivity behind them. t Colonels Returned ' One was Lt CoL James P. Came, commander of the 1st Battalion of Britain's gallant Gloucestershire Regiment, which was all but wiped out when cut off in the Imjln River battle in April 1951. Came, puffing a pipe, hop ped off a Red truck and told Allied officers who greeted him, -it reels great to be back." . The other top-ranking repa- triate was an American, Lt Col. Paul V. Liles, a West Pointer who spent almost three years as a prisoner. Tells of Bed Pressure He told a crim tale of sys tematic Communist pressure on prisoners to make them sign (Continued n rf i, Colama O Army Employed Indicted Men Baltimore, VP) The Sun aald Tuesday Army officials have admitted top secret military Information . has been going through the hand of civilian employe, who ii under Indict ment on charge! of bribery ana conspiracy to defaud the government The Sun cited the case of Louis I. Fragala, supervisory general engineer at the re search and development sta tlon of the Army Transporta tion Corps at Ft. Eustis. - He was indicted in New York on July 30, 1952 and pleaded Innocent about ten days later. The case has never come to trial. The government charged Fragala, together with several other civilians and former army officers, misappropriated nearly $600,000 in govern ment funds. They were ac cused of getting "kickbacks" for approving contracts for the writing of technical manuals and letting contracts for work not needed. A spokesman at Ft. Zustis said Fragala has not been in a position to receive secret in formation for the last couple of years. Stock Market Recovers Sharply New York VP) The stock market swung higher Tuesday after establishing a new low for the year Monday in a steep tail. Gains ran to between $1 and $2 a share at the most Losses were small. The railroad section, which has been notably weak in re cent days, was mostly higher Tuesday. Other higher divisions included steels, utilities, oils, coppers, chemicals, aircrafts, air lines, and radio-televisions. The motors were mixed. Legion Stages Parade Of Glory and Glitter St Louis VP) Glitter and glory the like of which St. Louis never before had seen surged through downtown streets Tuesday in the Ameri can Legion's parade of 100,000 participants. For many Legionnaires it was the big day of their 35th national convention where ma jor battles are shaping up over Air Force budget cuts and this nation's participation in the United Nations. A hot sun beat down as the parade began. The tempera ture was near 90 and expected to press 100 by mid-afternoon. That caused many of the older Legionnaires, veterans of World War I, to ride instead oi march. lint aid sUUoo were set uplwaidths U.N. North Korean Top Officials Off to Russia Tokyo () The Communist Pyongyang radio said six -top North Korean officials includ ing Premier Kim H Sung and Foreign Minister Nam n left by train today lor Moscow. The broadcast heard here said the trip was made "at the invitation of Moscow" but it gave no indication why. Kim is political boss of North. Korea and commander of the army. Nam served as chief Commun ist delegate during the long armistice negotiations. The Pyongyang broadcast Identified other members of the party as Pak Chong Ie, vice chain an of the North Korean Labor Communist party; Depu ty Premier Chbng II Yong, Chairman Chong Chun Paek of the National Planning Board and Minister of Railways Kim Hoe H. Tito's Charges Denied by Italy - Rome W) Italy has "cate gorically" denied a Yugoslav charge that Italian troops vio lated the Yugoslav frontier north of the disputed port city of Trieste. An Italian Foreign Ministry1 spokesman termed the accusation "absurd and fantas tic." Though tension, apparently wu lessening between the two nations, reports from Belgrade said President Tito's govern ment would make a formal diplomatic protest to Italy to day over the alleged Incident The frontier violation charge was announced last night by Belgrade radio after a week end of stress sparked by Ital Ian fears that Belgrade plan ned to annex the Yugoslav etc cupation zone in divided Trie ste. Tito's government since has denied an such intentions. The broacast claimed that 23 Italian soldiers armed with automatic weapons had crossed about 164 feet into Yugoslav territory near Nova Gorcia and deployed in "fighting order." Soviet Envoy to Iran Shoots Self Tehran, Iran WW A high Iranian official said today So viet Ambassdor Anatoli Lav- rentiev had shot himself but other government sources and the Soviet embassy denied the report Assistant Iranian Premier Amidl Nouri said Lavrien- tiev wu in critical condition and receiving blood transfu sions at the Soviet hospital. A few minutes later the Iranian propaganda depart ment denied the reports and the Soviet embassy repeated Us denial of last night Nevertheless, rumors swept through Tehran that Lavrien tlev, who had been recalled, had attempted to commit sui cide. Lavlentiev, who wu ambas sador in Yugoslavia at the time of Tito's split with Rus sia, also hsd served as Soviet minister to Hungary and Ro mania. along the two mile route which Legion officials estimat ed would be packed with pa raders for 10 hours. A hospital on wheels, staffed by six phy sicians and eight nurses, scut tled back and forth along the route to care for ailing march ers and spectators. Legion officials estimated there were at least 200,000 on hand for the opening of the pa rade. They expected 500,000 before the day was over. Bands and drum and bugle corps some 300 of them set stirring tempo for the marchers. Put aside for the day were the expected floor fights over the Air Force budget cuts and the United States' position to- F I HA L EDITION Goons Sought Destruction of 'Voting' Booths Bonn, Germany- () The West German government laid Tuesday it has uncovered a Communist plot to wreck next Sunday's national election by destroying voting stations throughout the country. ' The Federal Press . Office said top Red agents captured in an attempted mass sneak in vasion of West Germany dur ing the last three days had ad mitted the Communist plan. It was to send squads of riot trained toughs to attack elec tion officials, destroy ballot boxes and frighten away vot ers. The Communist "terror plan" called for groups of 20 hardened Reds to descend on each voting station, the press office said. Bed Agents Captured The captured Red agents were quoted as saying this was the master plan behind the in vasion of Communists from East Germany. Federal border police and lo cal police have arrested 4,500 of these agents along the inter zonal frontier separating West and . East Germany. Most of these already have been sent back.- . But hundreds slipped through before police clamped down strict controls on travel ers from Communist East Ger many, Tuesday the border po lice said hundreds of . others (CenttsmM ea Pate s. Coiunui W) POW Released . Panmunjom VP) - The names of seven Pacific Northwest men were on the list of American prisoners of war released by the Chinese Communists Tues day. They were: M. Sgt. Delwayne Codding- ton, mother, Mrs. Vera Cod- dington, Portland, Ore. Sgt. 1. C. Lester W. Byers. mother, Mrs. Tillie Byers, Mos cow, Idaho. Cpl. Harvey I. Rogers, mother Ruby B. Rogers, Med- ford, Ore. MaJ. Alfred O. Ellis, wife. Elizabeth N. Ellis, Tacoma. Sgt Lewis Cook, wife. Caro line Ann Cook, Tacoma. Sgt. Dale K. Roarbaugh, fi ance, Ethel Shanor, Tacoma. M. Sgt. Otha E. Emert, wife. Mrs. Annie M. Emert, Tacoma. Mediators Act In Phone Strike (Br United Pnu Federal mediators began new attempts today to end labor dispute involving this nation's long distance tele phone operators. An "improved atmosjjhere was reported in attempts to end a 42-day-old Indiana Bell Telephone strike. Negotiators headed off a threatened walkout by CIO rubber workers against nine Goodrich Rubber company plants. The strike, set for last midnigsK, was averted. when a new contract was agreed upon. At New York, officials of the U.S. Mediation Service met with negotiators for the long lines division of Ameri can Telephone and Telegraph company for the frist time since the CIO Communica tions Workers threatened a nationwide long distance tel ephone strike involving 22, 000 workers. 64 Red Spies Held y Korean Police Seoul VP) National police headquarters said Tuesday they had arrested 64 Communist spies, half of them students and women posing as refugees from Red North Korea. Some of those In custody were quoted as saying 28,000 North Korea men and women especially trained as guerrillas would be sent to South Korea. Some of the agents slipped in from Japan and Shanghai, police said, but most came down the west coast by way of offshore islands with the help of North Korean police 4 r t ftl aft ! : M he J- .4 k- m, M S '