Capital ji. THE WEATHER CLEAK and eeatUae warm tealf ht. BatanUy. Low tonight, ; kik Satarday, P I N At EDITION " " t , unnaxO 3K3002 wnnlHO aN30ai; 65th Year, No. 211 BSa-J Salem, Oregon, FridaySeptember 4, 1953 II jo iwMua wsuje Las! Minute Rash On for Fair Opening - Gates for 88th Expo sition Swing Wide ' Saturday Morning Tilo Demands GENERAL DEAN RELEASED That Italy End -.v atarday, BepWmkw I 1:00 ajn. 3Xt& opto. - (Judging In art and ladles' textile! completed sod rib bon placed prior to open log.) 9:00 am. Judging atarta In light and heavy horses; . poultry; rabblta; honey bees; floral displays: FFA poultry, and crops, and 4-H club flowers. 1:00 pjn. Judging In 4-H en - tomology. 1:16 pjru Horse racing. 3:30 pjn. Free Midway show. :30 pjn. Free Midway show. 1:00 pjn. Stage revue, grand stand Rawalan theme. World championship rodeo, stadium. Free Midway show. ' 8:00 pjn. to midnight Old time and western swing dancing. Sunday, September ( 1:00 ajn. Qtea open, 8:00 ajn. Judging of dairy goats. 3:30 pjn. World champion ship rodeo, stadium. Free Midway show. 8:30" pjn. Free Midway show. 8:00 pjn. Stage revue, grand stand Hawaiian theme. World championship rodeo, stadium. By MARGAEET MAGEK Oat at Oregon's State Fair. ' grounds the last minute push is on. . However, yon can be as sured that the 88th annual event which opens Its gates at t a.m. Saturday, will be in readiness, even It these put ting up exhibits have to work all night s Hawaii has the spotlight this year with that - theme used throughout .the fairground and especially emphasized in the night revue and the floral -department.. ..,.,. Adding a special Hawaiian touch at the night show the opening night, Saturday, will be the presentation of a lei c from Hawaii to Mrs. Paul L. Pa ttersotr"wif of -Oregon's governor. The presentation is being made by Princess Luana tor Gov. Samuel Wilder King of the Hawaiian Islands. (Continued on Page 5, Colamn 1) Army to Sell Liquor by Drink Washington m For the first i time in more than halt a cen tury, the Army is going to al ' low liquor to be sold by the ., drink and by the bottle to com , missioned and non-Commis-sioned officers at open messes. A directive from Mai. Gen. . William E. Bergin, adjutant general, made public Friday, says the new system will bring the Army into line with the ; practice already observed by - the Navy and the Marines and soon to be adopted by the Air Force. Sales of liauor will be re stricted to persons ever 21 and - the new regulation says: "Commanders will encourage abstinence, enforce moderation, and punish over indulgence." Bergin added the Army be lieves the new privileges "will. if used with moderation and restraint, serve to enhance the ' morale of all concerned." Hot Weather Looms for Fair Maneuvers Warning Sent Against Troops Along Border Belgrade, Tagoslavis (A Yugoslavia threatened officially Friday to send troops to the Italian-Yugoslav frontier un less Italy ends her maneuvers, termed "military demeastra tioa," in that area. ' The warning was contained in a note the fourth in three days-r-eent by President Mar shal Tito's government ' to Italy's foreign ministry in Rome ss a result of new tension in the seven-year-old feud be tween the two nations over the future of the free territory of Trieste. If the Yugoslav government establishes that the Italian gov ernment continues to adhere to the abnormal situation on the border," the note said, "it will be forced to undertake corres ponding measures on its terri tory." Te March la Troops In plain terms, this means Yugoslavia plans to march in troops to back up her frontier guards ia the Gorizia region, north of Trieste, unless Italy withdraws the forces on the op posite side of the frontier there. The note, made public by the Yugoslav foreign office's in formation section, described as unsatisfactory Italy's rejection of three previous Yugoslav complaints concerning border incidents of the past week. (Con tinted en rage a. Column I) New Survey for Dam on Snake Washington WV-The Recla mation Bureau will look into water resources development nossibillties on the lower Snake River between Idaho and Ore gon, Secretary of the Interior McKay announced Friday. A survey will cover that portion of the river between the Hells Canyon Dam site and the mouth of the Salmon River, some 60 miles downstream, the Reclamation Bureau said. In cluded in this stretch is the site of the proposed Mountain Sheep Dam and reservoir a short distance upstream from the confluence of the Snake and Salmon. The bureau said that if the studies indicate feasibility, planning report will be com Dieted by about Jan. 1. sucn I report is a preliminary step to consideration ot a project Dy Congress. -Earlier this year, when Mc- Kay announced withdrawal of departmental opposition to a program of the Idaho Power Co., for a three-dam develop ment on the Snake, including a oroiect at Hells Canyon, he described the Mountain Sheep site as "excellent." Bids Received on Amazon Project f - t. v.- v - - j .a. - 104 Sick and Wounded POW Reach 'Frisco Baa ' Franc lsee () One haadred tear sick sad weaad- led Asnarkan war prtseaars earns hems Friday to a falsi, bat emotion-packed alter resuul voyage Korea aboard the ship CSS Haven, Returning POW to Get Promotions Verv warm temperatures and increasing forest fire dan ger is the weather outlook for northwest Oregon over the week-end, the weather bureau forecasting continued low hu midities and dry easterly winds. In the second stretch of nmmer weather coming on hl week, a maximum of rAund as was due in Salem Trlriav afternoon and a aimi- i.r mark for Saturday. The Thursday maximum here was 02 riefree. "Fair, warm and dry" with temperatures above normal through Wednesday, is the rivi.iav forecast from the weather bureau. Humidities through Fridsy and Saturday will drop to as low as 15 per cent, tne weaui mr bureau states. Medford was the wannest place in the state, Thursdsy, with a maximum of oe WT. Cooler air and some lot or low clouds are due along ulil areas. Cooler read ings also were due east of the Portland WV-A low bid of $185,611 was made by J. N. Conley, Portland, for improv ing 5.6 miles of the Amazon Creek channel near Eugene, the Army Engineers reported Friday. It was under the government estimate of 1197, 495. There were five other of fers ranging to a high of $249,214. The work Is to be complet ed in 120 calendar days after notice to go ahead. Morris Chosen Prexy of U of 0 Portland (XV-Victor P. Mor ris. dean of business adminis tration at the University ot Oregon, Friday was named act ing president of the Institution. He will serve from sept. 10 until a permanent president is named to succeed Harry K. Newburn, who resigned to take a Ford Foundation job. -. - , Morris' selection was only by the Stat Board of Higher Edu cation acting as a committee, but Dr. R..X. Klelnsone, board president, said eonltrmatton would' be- automatte at-the board's next , oiUdal meeting, Sept. 16. Meanwhile, he said, some 20 men's credentials nave oeen studied in the quest for a per manent nresident and "we ex pect to begin interviews in the next few weeks." He- said the list of prospective presidents had been "sufficiently nar rnw,H" from the total studied. Morris, senior dean at tne university, is not a candidate, Dr. Kleinsorge said. Hurricane to By-pass Land Mimi, Fla. VP The severe Atlantic hurricane with whirl ing winds of about 150 miles an hour velocity was moving on a northwesterly course Fri day which should bypass land areas. Grady Norton, chief storm forecaster in the Miami Wea ther Bureau, said the violent storm, named carol tor xne third letter of the alphabet, may swing close to Bermuda but probably will pass to the east of that Island ana re main over open water. Carol is the third tropical storm of the season. The first. Alice, developed May zs ana the second, Barbara, August 12. " ' - Sept. 4 Ma). Gen. William F. Dean, wearing a Com munist issue cap, sits in the back seat of a Red jeep as he arrives at Panmunjom for repatriation after 37 months imprisonment as a prisoner ot war. The general was cap tured in July, 1950 as UN forces were failing back near Taejon, Korea. He was last seen firing on a Communist tank. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Tokyo) New York Returning prisoners ot war from Korea will be promoted under a Joint policy approved by the secre- tary of defense, the Navy's chief of personnel said Friday, Vice Adm. James L. Hollo- way Jr, outlined the- plan at the opening of the 16th na tional convention of the Fleet hosiihal Am' Aaaressmf we i,uuu aeie gates and their wives. Adm. Tea litter patients, most of Hollowav said, "vou mav ha them suffering tuberculosis 1 Interested In the new policy contracted in bleak commu-Ion advancement of prisoners nist prison stockades, were of war. It is a Joint sollev ao- the first down the gangplank proved by the secretary of da- of the gleaming white ship, fense. Prisoners and missing The Haven was the third I personnel will be advanced one American rcnatrlatinn ah In Winds "When they have from Korea, in less than .two I "uriiea the service require- weeks. A fourth, the Marine menu. Adder, is due to dock Satur- "After they return they will day with 167 former U.S. e advanced to whatever en- Drisoners. .. , . iiistea pay graae iney prelum FriH.v'. w.iromn. thrrmm iy ouid nave attained u - " 1 U.jl Ium let some 100 was comparative ly small, apparently because I friends and relatives had been I advised to meet the prisoners I at the army's Lettermsn Gen leratniospltal. i (Ceatlaaod ea rage S, Ootasma t) they had not been captured. Dean Tells of 3 Yean In Red Korean Prison Head Drive to 6 Jet Fighters Crash in Japan at . Tells of Years Of Captivity PasasusajMS. W Tka finally freed VA. MaJ. Qaa. WlUlam r. Deaa today aa ilaed a roooid-bj asking 175 AaaerleaBs for teoaerrew, the aext to last day of the Korean - war - prisoner ; ex- . chugs. Caked with dust, hU hair now white. Dean rod a leap back to freedom. No. 91 of 5 Americans freed today. Three long and lonely Tears of Red captivity were behind the gaunt former commander of the. 14th Division. .;- : He won a Measl of Honor battling the Reds alongside . his soldiers in ths bloody streets ot Taejon In the birth of the war, then was turned over to the Reds by a traitor ous Korean after he was cut off from his own troops. Tells at Prison Ufa Dtah told of three empty years in a Red prison without once aaelnf another Ameri can. . ; He told of gruelinc sessions ot questioning, one Urn for 68 sleepless hours. Except for the questioning and long marches, Dean said, the Reds treated him reason ably well, especially in tha Tokyo Or) Six American jet fighters crashed In western Japan Friday after running out! latter part ot his captivity. of fuel In "vlla weather," thai However, the 64-year-old Air Force said. , . general showed tha wear of hia Five pilots were reportedl" years under Communism. Freedom Villase V- Mai., prUons. today rode a Russian- JJenver tfr President Xisen- tale, but the sixth was still I ntir, once aanay rea. fJen. William F. Dean, white-1 built Jeep back to freedom and 1 nower rriaay named secretary 1 nussrag sate xnaay nigni. . ,. aw p- haired and thin after more to a heart-warming welcome I of the Treasury Humphrey vice I The Air Force said five tWl't0.?1"' hs was obvi- than three years in communist CENT AN HOUR HIKE Chicago iff) About 45,000 unionized production employes of International Harvester Co., will receive a one cent hourly cost-of-living wage hike start' Ing Sept. 7, the company said Friday. Cooler Weather for Sun-Baked Alidvest (Br Tlx Auocuud rrox) Cool northern breezes and refreshing showers spread across the sun-baked Midwest today bringing happy relief from a prolonged neat wave. Hot and humid weather. however, continued in wide areas in the eastern sections oi the country. But there was hope of an early break, prob ably tomorrow. The cool air mass from Can ada, heading eastward and southward, pushed back the torrid stagnant air that had held a tight grip over the Midwest for as long as 11 days. Temperatures tu m b 1 e d st much as 30 degrees ss the cool sir moved steadily across the parched mid-continent A band of showers about 100 to 200 miles wide were general slong i tha leading edge oi the cool air from Wisconsin southward into eastern Iowa, northwest' em Illinois, Missouri and northeast Texas. W e s t h e r buresu officials said the cool mass would cov er ell of Michigan and Indiana by late today. There' was Indi cation that It would continue eastward and southward and bring relief to other heat stricken areas. Showers were forecast for sections about 160 miles to the rear of the cooler sir, extend ing over eastern Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois and Indiana. Chicago, sweltering with other areas from tha Rockies to ths Atlanta Coast in the summer season's longest heat wave, got the welcome relief around midnight First34:Autos Go on Display Detroit OP) The first 1954 model automobiles went on dis play here Friday as Hudson showed Its new line at the Michigan State Fair. Nation-wide showing of the new cars has been delayed un til the Hudson dealer organiza tion can be fully supplied with the latest series of Hudson's Hornets, Wasps and Jets. ' Increased horsepower ana slightly higher compression ra tio are among new engineering features. The Hudson "step down" de sign is retained In all the new models. New front grilles and a redesigned rear-end on some models contribute to appear ance changes. Power steering and power brakes are offered as optional equipment on all but the Jet series. Legion Chief to Work for UNIT St. Louis W) The Ameri can Legion's new national commander predicts 1954 will be the year of decision on urn versal military training. Arthur J. Conncll of Middle town, Conn., elected Thursday in the closing session of the Lesion's four-day convention. said in his acceptance speech that he will wosk vigorously for adoption of UMT. At the same time ne coura no earlv nrospect for re ducing the defensive strength of our armed forces. The Legion itself adoptea a resolution criticizing selective service as inadequate and call ing for establishment of a UMT program to operate along with selective service. The convention slo spprov ed a report saying the United States should schieve end main tain air superiority, but avoid ed a floor fight over the ad ministration's cut in the Air Force budget Honor fighting beside his men J in -Wis streets of Taejon, had aged 10 years in appearerice. He came back wearing a dust covered blue cotton suit, brown sneakers, yellow shirt, a red tie and a wry grin. (Continued on Pago s, Col urns f) by the first Americans he had! chairman ot a federal govern-1 bras were lost In one flight andlou1"lln ndor the faded blue seen since his capture, . inwn comnuneo parucipanngi an r4 Thunderbolt was wetrTrr"? v "' w Dean, who won the Medal at "J"" " ewnmunuy cnen in another. Tha Sabre Is taev T"? 7" "T ZmXLZJSZ. hTi drlortunds. , . hottest W.8. Santa plana nl ,T ' '"'Al yr tm .MmmmBmmMm'.mmam)xi.i9 nty- the Thunderpeal1 HOI ."' H hesJicl aU department and g slightly older. ,v ,. (gegtjgwg-g P e a 4-'Vv)l J . 120 Pints Drawn in Donation of Blood An even 150 nersoni appear ed to donate blood in the Red Cross blood drswng Thursdsy and 120 of them Qualified. Ot the total group 38 msae replacements for friends or relatives. Good Mnresentationl of do nors came from the plant of the California Packing com pany. State Industrial Accident Commission and western rw per Converting company. Warren Slated For Federal Post Washington W A wave of speculation that Gov. Earl War ren of California ia slated for top administration appoint ment, possibly to the Supreme Court or the cabinet, churned up Friday from his announce ment he will not seek a fourth term as governor. But politicians, professing to ave no inside knowledge, were inclined to doubt anything was in prospect for the imme diate future. They anticipated that Warren would serve out his present four-year term which extends until Jan. 1, 1955. Warren, three-time governor of his state and long a leading figure in national Republican politics, apparently caught friends and associates here by surprise with his announce ment. None acknowledged hav ing any Information as to his future plans. . Building Up Stock Piles Washington ( The govern ment is not trying to build up, as fast as had been planned, all its stockpiles of materials needed tor arms production The Office of Defense Mo bilization announced Thursday an order to: 1. Continue buying a tew "high priority' Items, believed to include alloying materials for jet engines, with the idea of -having stockpiles of these complete by the former June 1954, target date. 2. Stretch out purchases of other materials, at least until a review of goals has oeen msde, to a June 1955 or later target date. 3. Honor existing contracts for stockpile purchases, but make no more contracts run ning longer than a year, ex cent In special cases. Director Arthur S. Flemmlng said that, besides Insuring "the most advantageous ase of fed eral funds." the new policy would prevent government overbuying and lessen the eventual shock when the gov ernment got out of the market on completion of Its stockpiles. agendas, tha Arssldent said: "I am confident that you will be glad to join with Mr. Humphrey . in this program which involves support ot vol untary health and welfare serv ices in more than 1,700 local communities snd which alio in cludes support of the united de fense fund. The services of the USO to the armed forces, help to com munitles overwhelmed by- de fense . sctivities and relief to Korea are all provided, as you know, through the United De fense Fund." Ike Consults An Osteopath Denver (U.B President El senhower went to sn osteopath for treatment today of a sore right arm that has bothered him for nearly a month. The White House declined to give sny details, ssylng merely thst the President was attempt ing to "accelerate the recov ery" of a bruise he suffered in Washington before coming to Colorado Aug. 8. He was SC' companled by 'his p s r s o n s 1 physician, Dr. Howard MN Snyder. When pressed for more la formation. Murray Snyder, as sistant press secretary ssld, there sre some details we pre fer not to give out." The Injury has interf erred occasionally with the Presl dent's fishing and golf during his stay here The Air Forea said tntwe al lots crash-landed with only HyinAlfsT A f minor injuries, and two others I If 1 1 1 , I llftf,, as ares niivi, parachuted and were listed . The Air Force blamed a vio lent weather front that built up suddenly and stepped a lid over the Japan bases. Unable to find a hole in the dense clouds, the Jets finally ran out of fuel. "They were all equipped for instrument landings," an Air Force spokesmen ssld, but they hsve a very limited fuel capacity. The weather was vue and apparently they could not make a normal instrument ap proach." - - ! . ! Arson Suspect Held at Eugene Eugene W) A 22-year-old Wisconsin man was arrested Thursday night and charged with tint-degree arson in con nection with a series of in cendiary fires here since July Raymond Loberter, 22, ot Milwaukee, Wis., was picked up st his home here by Eugene Fire Marshal Lester Bsrker snd members of the state po lice srson squad. Fire Chief Ed Surfus said Barker told Mm Loberter had confessed setting eight fires. He gave no reason for his acts, the tire chief ssld. Loberter was scheduled for arraignment in district court Friday afternoon, Jet Somber Transfer Across the Atlantic Brize Norton Alrbase, Eng land ( An advance guard of 13 U. S. B47 Stratojet atom bombers zoomed across the At lantic to England Friday just as a squadron of sister ships they sre to replace hurtled off for tha United States. In the biggest transatlantic transfer of jet bombers ever at tempted. IS ot the six-jet mon sters began taking oft Friday from Falrford Air Base here tor non-stoo. 4.500-mlle flights to their home base at MacDtll Field, Fla. They will be re fueled in flight over tha Atlan tic by tanker planes. They sre pert ot tha V. S. 106th Bomb Wing, which Is ending a 90-day training mis sion in England. Saturday, IS more of them leave and the fi nal IS leavt Sunday. Coming the other way to re place them at speeds sround 600 miles sn hour wss the first sausdron ot the 105th Bomb Wing, which also has headquarters at MacDlli The 305th planes began arriving at Brize Norton Air Bssa near Oxford after a 2,285-mile flight from Limestone, Me., wnere they had stopped oft on their trip from MacDiu. . The first B47 from Limestone touched down here five hours snd three minutes after its takeoff. Reports from Limestone ear lier said the B47's would try to crack the United States-to-Britaln record of tour hours, 45 minutes set three weeks ago by Lt Col. James M. Smith of Aus tin, Texas, on a B47 survey 'Progressives' ' Inchon, Korea (U.fl Amert. can officers treed by the Com ' munlsta called today tor prompt ' and. aevere punishment of lei- low BvlaniMrs. who. onld am! CA V '' "They definitely should Pun- ish those men," Cspt Jack C Perry ot Laguna Beach, Calif- said. "They should be shot . I . cannot sea a man selling out his eountry. ' 'There were both Army and Marine officers who kept a rec ord of what happened up there," Perry said. "The avl- . dence will be turned over to the proper authorities at the proper time, I sm sure." Other officers were equally bitter against the American "officers snd enlisted men" who Informed on their fellow prisoners and consorted with the Chinese. - - - i 72GIsSaved By Broadcast i . Inchon, Korea (ffV An sr tlllery major today said he made the first American pris oner ot war broadcast from, Seoul to save 72 fellow Amer ican POWs from the threat ot communist execution. MaJ. Ambrose N. Nugent, 42, ot Merrill, Wis., was cap tured on July 5, 1950, tha first day American forces saw ac tion in the Korean war. - Hs returned to freedom Tuesday, his 215 pound frame shrunk to 140 pounds and his hair turned almost white attar 38 months of Red captivity. After his capture, Nugent, an Air Force lieutenant an Army lieutenant and three American sergeants were taken to Seoul and told to make recordings ot two docu ments to be broadcast over Seoul radio. - - Nugent ssld a Red officer gave the group 10 minutes to decide on making the record ing. "They ssld they would shoot the whole 71 American prisoners gathered there and while we sst la tha room they marched tha whole .72 down tha corridor past our window. Weather Details ok. U. Total S4-aar smlsHtMioi SS for awti Oi oonaol, .11 Soaooa froot- u. .. i WAt. flight tot tha 303th Bomb Wing.l'w- ""-'" mountains.