1 THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOCDY tonight, Tuesday. Partly cloudy Tat. y aiternoea. Little change la JemperaUre. Lew tonight, it; Wh Tueeuay, 71. PINAL EDITION tt 65th year, No. 213 Salcmy Oregon, Monday, September 7, 1953 1 '14 Pages Prict 5c High Figures THEY CAME IN GREAT NUMBERS In Attendance li i . m.v At Stale Fair Front Gates, Shows,' Races, All Mount in Volume ' Honda?, 8epjmbr 7 1:15 pjn. Horse racing. J '30 pjn. Rodeo, stadium. Free Midway show. :30 pjn-Free Midway ahow. 8:00 pjn, Hawaiian stage . . revue, grandstand. Rodeo, stadium. 9:00 pjn. Old time and western swing dancing. '- Tuesday, September I 00 ajn. Ga'.ta open. 0:00 ajn. Judging dairy cat tie. Jerseys and Ayrshire; beef cattle, Aberdeen An gus; iwlnt, Spotted Poland Chinas, Berkshlres, Hamp ahlres and large York shires; and FFA swine showmanship, larm shop Judging and swine judging. 10:00 ajn Band Concert. .. . 1:15 pjn. Horse racing. 3:30 p.m. Free Midway ahow. 5:30 pjTL Free Midway show. 8:00 pm. Hawaiian stage ; revue, grandstand. Rodeo, stadium. 9:00 pjn. to midnight Old time and western awing dancing. Wednesday, September I 8:00 a in. Gates open. 0:00 a jn. Judging, swine, barrows; beef cattle, red poll, milking shorthorns; FFA, sheep showmanship and sheep judnlns. 10:00 ajn. Band concert. 1:00 pjn Aberdeen Angus sale. 1:16 pm, Horse racing. "' J:30 pm. Pree Midway show. 6:30 pm. Free Midway ahow. 8:00 pjn. Night show, grand ' stand. , Rodeo, stadium. t:0O to midnight Square . - dancing. By MARGARET MAGEK ' Oregon's 88th annual State Fair entered its third day today and Oregon resident and vis itors to the state are apparent ly taking advantage of the in vitation to "Come to the Fair" and continue ; to crowd the grounds for the bis event . Despite the cooler weather for Labor Day they began ar riving quite early. - Attendance Monday at the 10 o'clock a. m. check show ed 4170. Last year at the same hour it was 6586. Gate keepers reported, however, that the number of persons en tering the grounds today was growing rapidly. Saturday, the opening day, attendance at the fair, as well as all of the events, topped the previous year. At the races the pari-mutuel take was Siu7,711 as compared to $70,559 the ante day in 1952. The attend ance figures there stood at 3, 382 for 1953 and 2,674 last year. Admission tickets in 1953 netted $2,061.20 and the previ ous year the figure was $1, 642.70. Total paid attendance at the fair Saturday wa 21,743 while the previous year the paid at tendance figure was 19,845. The number of cars entering the gate this year was 7,454. In 1952 there were 6,154 cars en tering the gate. All Firures High The night revue Saturday night had an audience of 2,812 and took in $3,453.25, while the previous year the Saturday nisht attendance figure was 2,. 845 and the amount of money taken in from the event sj,. 128 so. . At the rodeo Saturday night were 2,659 in attendance, com pared to 2,403 the previous vftflr una ticket sales netted $3,. 146. The 1952" figure for rodeo ticket sales was $2,835. Sunday's attendance figure was some below that of 1952 but the night revue drew a big ger audience than in 1953 and fh nlffht rodeo had more in attendance than the previous year, though the attendance was down at ine anernoon ruueu. (Continued en Page . Column 1) Reuther Raps Depression Talk Detroit U CIO President Walter P. Reuther said toaay that talk of a depression is and reckless" and Amwican labor U determined there shall be no ruinous de Int inn Such talk, he said, merely bolsters false Communist prop aganda that prosperity in Am erica li geared to war produc- inn "American labor It deter mined that there shall be no peace-time depression for we the technical know-how and the economic resources to provide fuU and continuous employment for every citizen .v.1. .nrf willing to work, mak ing the good things of We necessary to aatisfy the unllm- '""" ' , - -A. the Ited peace-Ume need of tne people." he aaid in a muuu wide ABC radio addrew. Ml lit, n p ft f- h' 'N - ; .1. -- Death Toll of Holiday 396 (Br Tfo Auocltted PrmY At least 396 persons have died in accident in the 78-hour Labor Day week-end as the holiday period moved into its final 12 hours. Traffic mishaps claimed 287 lives. Forty-one persons were drowned and 68 died of mis cellaneous accidental causes. The National Safety Council had estimated before the holi day began that 440 persons would die in traffic mishaps during the 78 hours between 6 p.m. Friday (local time) and midnight, Monday. The council forecast was slightly more than five deaths an hour. The averaga was maintained the first day of tht period, then it dropped off a little. Sunday, with rain in the Midwest and in some other sections of the country, the pace quickened. Then later it fell behind the council estimate again. GENERATOR AT DAM Portland Jf) Pacific Power and Light Co., reported Satur day that the first generator at the Yake Dam on the Lewis River had been put into opera' tion. Beck and Levis Plead For Unity in Labor By Tlx Auoclitcd mu) Labor day. traditional end- of-summer holiday, brought to American workers Monday new reminders that they are Immeasurably better olf than their counterparts behind the Iron Curtain. It brought, too, declarations that they snouia be still better off. From two powerful union leaders, Dave Beck of the AFL Teamsters union and John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers, came pleas for unity in the organized labor move ment President Eisenhower, at his vacation headquarters in Denver, issued a statement aavins American workmen "mock the false insinuation that economic well being can be purchased only at tne con of political freedom." ? "They are the final answer to those who prate of freedom and practice slavery, who ex cuse terror ana aggrewion in for ,v.r. hn liv thev cuse terror and aggression In I very workers whose lives they -7 Sunday saw an estimated attendance of 68,705 at the State Fair, and during afternoon hour many of these visitors thronged the midway as the photograph shows. Here youngsters and adults alike patronized the con , cessions and watched gyrations of new-fangled rides. Lower: Not everyone parked their car at the 18th street entrance but many of 12,509 cars at the Tair on Sunday appear to have been in that area when this mid-afternoon photograph was made. . Truman in Labor Day Speech Raps at Ike Detroit WV- Former Presi dent Harry S. Truman told a Labor Day audience "there are plenty of signs of a return to the old philisophy that the ob ject of government . is to help big business." Truman, who frequently has taken the position since he left the White House that he want ed to "be charitable toward the new administration while it is getting its feet on the ground," said he didn't think the people voted last fall "for a change in the social and economic princi ples that have made us so strong and prosperous." "But that is the kind of change we are getting," he said in a prepared address at a rally of Michigan CIO and AFL groups in Cadillac Square. He singled out the adminis tration's policies on interest stifle," the president said. Former President Harry &. Truman used the occasion for a freeswingmg attack on the republican administration. In Detroit for tne first speech he has made on domes tic issues since he left tne White House, the democratic former chief executive said there are "plenty of signs of a return to the old philosophy that the object of government is to help big business." He said the people did not vote for, but are getting, "a change in the social and economic principles that have made ui so strong nad prosperous." Truman said labor has the task of holding its gains "against a spirit of reaction that Is using the election re sults of last fall to get back in the saddle again." The republican controlled congress came In for attacks by President George Meany of the AFL and Secretary-Treai urer James B. Carey of the I CIO. rates, labor, public housing, power and the government's ef forts to balance the budget by cutting national defense appropriations. We have to put first things first," he said. "And the securi ty and safety of this nation comes ahead of everything else, as far aa I am concerned. I don't see how anyone can take chances with national defense at this time in the world's his tory." He added a first-class air force and an air raid defense system would be worth quite a lot to us now "even if it un balanced the budget for a while and deferred a tax cut for some years to come. Saying he was great believer in balanced budgets, the former President said he kept the gov ernment budget balanced "un til an emergency came along that was a lot more important than all the balanced budgets In the world." 14 Persons Die In Chicago Fire Chicago W) Fourteen per sons, including seven children. died Monday when a fire flashed through an old, four- story building in a congested section of the South Side. Two buildings, on either side of the four-story structure, also were hit by the fire, but not as severely. Fire officials said they ex-J pected to find more bodies un der debris. Forty pieces of fire-fighting equipment fought the extra alarm blaie. which reportedly started in the rear of a bus! ness establishment at 3616 S. State St. The neighborhood is heavily populated by Negroes. Damage to the buildings was estimated at $75,000 by Fire Marshal John J. Haberkorn. Thousands of curious were at tracted to the fire. Cause of the fire was not I Immediately known. Dulles Consults Eisenhower on Foreign Policy Denver W! Secretary of BUte Dalles said Monday after a conference with President Slaenhower. that the chief ex ecutive la pleased with the Adenauer government victory in the West German election and that the victory was "far more than we had dared to ex pect." .. v, 1 j Dulles also told newsmen that Eisenhower "saw nothing out of the way" regarding Dulles' controversial remarks last week dealing with West Germany, India, Trieste and (Japan.. r Tk - i i .. Y-..i tcuuUM U1UUUCU UUt. les pre-election endorsement of West Germany's Chancellor, Konrad Adenauer, in his bid for a return to power. The Ad enauer forces won overwhelm ingly in Sunday's election. Outcome Satisfactory : Dulles called the outcome of the election "a matter of satis faction to the President and to me." : . He added that the Adenauer victory "showed that the Ger man people appreciate and are responsive to the policies of the three Western powers the United Kingdom, France and the United States and which we hope will bring uni fication of Germany and in creased unification of Europe." (Oeetlnd an Fage 8. Colamn ) Drownings Due To Hurricane ' Boston W) Four drownings and numerous boating accidents were in New England attribut ed to Hurrican Carol as the season's third big blow skirted 50 miles east of resort island Nantucket Monday and headed out to sea toward the Bay of Fundy. d The hurricane that chruned the coasts of New Jersey and Long Island with heavy seas is expected to bring little more than fresh gusty winds Monday to most of New England. Dense fog and heavy seas at tributed to the season's third hurricane approach caused numerous boayng accidents in New England waters. Four per sons drowned and 40 or more were rescued by Coast Guard as small craft swamped or cap sized. A 78-foot fishing vessel was wrecked when it ran aground in fog off Gloucester Harbor. Tito Proposes Plan (or Trieste Okragljica, Yugoslavia W) The world studied a new pro posal from Yugoslavia's Pres ident Tito today for the dis posal of Trieste. He wants the big Adriatic port placed under international control, with Yugoslavia to get the rest of the disputed territory. Tito made his proposals yesterday in a speech to a cheering crowd of more than 250,000 Yugoslavs packing this hamlet five miles from the Italian border. ' Tito said the controversy with Italy over Trieste had reached a stalemate, but that he was still willing to settle the issue through direct nego tiations with his neighbor. Previously the Yugoslav leader had advocated Italy and Yugoslavia administer the Tireste territory jointly, with details to be worked out between the two governments. Tito accused the Italians of having "imperialistic designs" on Yugoslavia but scoffed at recent Italian charges that Yu- goslakia plans to annex the southern zone of the territory, which Yugoslav troops have occupied since World War II. HOME FRONT TROUBLE Elk City, Okla. (PV Glenn Whitley was being razzed for being late to a stag party. His explanation: "I have one car and one daughter. And I have one wife and one bathroom I'm lucky to be her at all." ADENAUER ACKNOWLEDGES SUPPORTERS r I .-' '.".f'l 17 v Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of West Germany, leader -of the Christian Democrats, waves to supporters In been, - , Germany, after attending an election rally.' Ho expressed confidence of victory despite a closing rush from the Socialists, the nation's second biggest party. . (AP Wh- photo via radio from Frankfurt) '" t' . on the final day of Operation Bit Switch boarded a troop ship for home today while fears mounted that the com munis ts had not sent back all Americans who wanted to re turn. Oregonian Last POW Release (Br Tht Auoe li rriH) The last prisoner of war re leased by the communists in Operation Big Switch in Korea Saturday night was t-api. Theodore R. Harris, former ly of Gresham, Ore. Five other men witn fami lies In Oregon were among the 111 Americana freed by the Reds. They are Eugene E. Even, forest Grove; Capt. David E. Penny, Klamath Falls; Capt. Harold D. Kaschko; Paisley; Sgt. Richard Jones, Portland; and First Lt. Val H. Tandy, who has relatives In Roseberg. The families of Evers and Penny said notification by the Associated Press was the first word received r.bout the two men since they were re ported missing in action. The families of an six men were elated by tne news oi the release. Lightning Sets 88 Fires In Rogue River Area Medford. Ore. An estl mated 88 fires, started by a lightning storm that accom panied heavy rain and hall Saturday night, were burning In foresU in this area Monday. Fourteen were in the Rogue River National Forest and 74 on state-controlled land. None was in dangerous condition. The largest covered 25 acres in the Lather Mountain area of the Rogue forest Smokejump ers were parachuted to the blaze Sunday and foresters hoped to have it controlled some time Monday. All fires on state land were small, the largest blackening two acres. Nearly all of them were northeast of here In the Antelope, Little Butte and Butte Falls areas. They were being fought by 70 men, in cluding loggers and some from Grants Pass and Salem. Foresters feared that many "sleeper" fires, now smoulder I ' The U.N. command prep led to hand the communists a I lii list of "missing" persons, men like Capt Harold Fischer of Swea City, Iowa. Fischer, a Sabre Jet pilot, shot down 10 Mlgs before fall ing to return from a mission over , North Korea. April 7, 1953. .. Two days later Pelplng ra dio said . Fisched had been captured. - ... ' Yet the, big Korean war prisoner exchange-ended Sun day and Fischer was not among the last ill Americana freed, -...',' For three yean, allied in telligence officers have com piled a list of men believed to have been captured. Operation Big Switch re turned 3,597 Americana. Op eration Little Switch in April returned 149. Some Ameri cans died in camp. The list minus the names of all those men, will be handed the communist short; ly with the demand that they produce or account for tne missing men. The last group of returned Americans added a bitter fi nale to a month of stories of brutality in Red stockades. . These were fliers who, un der relentless physical and mental torture, signed false "confessions" that they waged germ warfare. ing sites the rain, might flare Into action with the return of dry weather. The Saturday night storm al so knocked out 500 small power lines in the srea, caused some $50,000 crop loss and damaged property of carnival playing here. . The California-Oregon Pow er Co. had about 100 men out Sundav on what it said was "hundreds of small repair jobs. Power was off Saturday night and most of Sunday in the Gold Hill, Butte Falls, Eagle Point and Camp White areas, ine company said the hall and rain damaged cables. The crop damage was In local ized areas, the south edge of Medford being particularly hard hit Most Rogue River Valley crops escaped Injury, G. B. Cordy, Jackson County agent, said. Pro-American Chancellor Gsts Record Vole Bonn, Germany ) Weet ' Germany launched Aaaerica's ally, Chancellor Konrad Aden auer, and his pro-Westera gov ernment patties on a new fosnv year term of effioa Monday tm a landslide election triiraah. Defying Soviet threats, moro than 27 million German voters also threw all the Communist out of their Parliament's lower . house, crushed a feared Nasi comeback and turned thumb down on Socialist plea for German neutrality In the East- -West (truggle. . In Europe's most lmtmrtant election since World War H, the West Germans gave an ov erwhelming endorsement . in Sunday's voting to Adenauer' " American-backed program for rearming west Germany in al liance with the Western pow ers against the Soviet menace. Get Control el Bnadestag ? The grim-vlsaged old Ger man statesman's Christian De mocrat Party won 244 of the 441 scats In the Bundestag lower house. That was ma jority of one for the party, the 'first single German fiction to win a clear parliamentary ma jority sine belore World War ' L. With, the 4S seats captured by hi allies, the Free Demo crat, Adenauer held a com- mending margin ox 7 seats. . (Onu rye a. Oatu f) Western U:;-i ' . WftahljitftAf. fll i mii a ii I ii i. 'official joyfully hailed Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer' German election victory mm a massive diplomatic defeat for Russia and a powerful gain for western unity. President Eisenhower, va cationing in Denver, was ex pected to lend a massage of congratulation to the West German leader, reflecting the keen satisfaction felt by his entlro administration. Secretary oi Stat Dulles, who warned Thursday an Ad enauer defeat would be a dis aster, said "I'm not surprised" when informed Adenauer's pro-western force bad won a sweeping victory, ' Dulles made thla comment in Denver after arriving for round of secret foreign pol icy talks with the president If Dulles wa not surprised, most of his aide were. Adenauer' smashing tri umph far exceeded the most optimistic prediction of key officials who nervously await ed returns, wondering wheth er Dulles' lsst minute en dorsement of Adenauer might boomerang. Adenauer op ponents bad denounced Dul les' action as meddling In West Germany' Internal af fairs. Wainwright Rites Tuesday ' Washington (V-The body of Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright, the hero of Corregldor, lay In state Monday at Arlington Na tional Cemetery's amphitheater the first man so honored since the unknown soldier. . Burial, with full military honors, will be Tuesday. The general will be Interned along side the grave of his father, Maj. Robert P. P. Wainwright Gen. Wainwrignt, noiaer oz the Medal of Honor, died at San Antonio, Tex., on Wednes day. He was 70. His body was brought to Washtntgon late Sunday by plane, accompanied by hi son and daughter-in-law, navy He serve Capt and Mrs. Jonathan Wanwrght of Norfolk, Va., and by former associates of the gen eral. The casket, lowered from the four-engine military transport by mechanical lift wu carried by 10 enlisted men to a near waiting at Washington National Airport. ; Weather Details Xutaa nrtortar. adafeaoa to tar, 0. T-ul st-kM smKttattai IraMI lie aMalki TraMI J, bun stkMIMImi, Tnx mtmtt, JS, Bw kr V. a. Wiatka wm n T i aa a" T , . j.iha aaniMBO'd