THE WCATIlin MOSTLY FAB toaigat. Wed day, except far aaeralBg cloadiaesa. Little change la temperature. Low tonight, SS( high Wednesday, ItT ' PI MA L EDITION in 65th Year, No. 214 SLaJtSA Uhm, Orc;, Tvtsdgy, Stpttmbtr 8, 1953 li Pagts Prict 5c - L . . ' . Biggest Day On Record at MondayRaces General Attendance At State Fair Below Last Year Tuesday, " September I (PORTLAND DAT) 00 tm.OB.lea open. 8:00 sjn. Judging dairy cat tle, Jersey and Ayrshire; beef cattle, Aberdeen An gus: (nine. Spotted Poland Chinas. Berkahlres, Hamp ahires and large York shires; and FFA . swine showmanship, - farm shop Judging and swine Judging. 10:00 a-m. Band Concert. .... 1:15 pin. Horse racing. 3:30 pmr-Free Midway show. S 30 pjiw Free Midway show. 8:00 pm. Hawaiian stage revue, grandstand. Rodeo, stadium. 1:00 pjn. to midnight Old time and western awing Wednesday. September ' (SALEM DAY) 1:00 ajn Gates open. :00 amWudglng, swine, barrows; beef cattle, red goll, milking ehortoorns; horihorns; FFA sheep showmanship and sheep Judging. 10:00 ajn Band concert. 1:00 pjn Aberdeen Angus sale. 1:15 pjm Horse racing. 3:30 pjn-Free Midway show. :S0 pjn-Free Midway show. 8:00 pm Niht show, grand -. stand. . Rodeo, stadium. 8:00 to midnight Square dancing. Thursday, September II :. t:00 ainOates open. , 8:00 am Judging FFA beef showmanship and beef Judging. 10:00 a .m. Band Concert. 1:15 pjn. Horse racing. 3:30 pja Free Midway show. :30 pjn-Free Midway show. S:00 pin. Night revue. grandstand. Rodeo, stai leo. stadium. 8:00 pa. to midnight Old unre ana western swing dancing. By MARGARET MAGEI - Leu people n " Oregon' State Fair Monday than the game day a year ago, but the parl-mutuel had the biggest take in State Fair history with the figure standing at $168,336, compared to ' $137,157 year , .Mwy..wvab,' Biggest day for parl-mutuels prior to Monday was the elos- ' ins Saturday of 1952 when the figure was - $149,695 for the day. The top pool at the Mon day races was $20,406. Prior to this the top figure had- been $19,156, which was the closing day of the fair In 1952. Paid attendance Monday of . this year was 37,722, while a year ago the paid attendance was' 40,063. However, more people are riding in cars than a year ago, for 11,738 cars en tered the ground this Monday compared to 11,206 a year ago. (Continued en Fage 6, Column 4) Gervais Men Land in Jail Two Gervaii men were Jail ed In the city jail early Tues day morning and another was hospitalized at saiem Memor ial hospital alter tney were in volved In a fight in which an other man took after them with an ax. ' In the hospital with a deep scalp laceration, a neck lacer ation and mild shock is Fer man Malloy. Jailed after treat ment for a deep scalp lacera tion and mild concussion was Richard O'Leary, charged with being drunk. Also Jailed on a drunk charge was James Carol, who was not injured. According to reports from city police and the Marion County Sheriffs office, the three men were among those in a drinking party at the J. W. Lucan farm, Route 1, Gervais, where they worked as farm laborers. They identified i fourth man as the one who be- n swinging an ax after a fight started. Farm Foreman J. H. Evans awakened about 12:30 a.m. by the sounds of the fight He ' and Lucan brought the trio to the hospital where city police rnxtMl the two on drunk charges. Picked up for questioning by a deputy sheriff was the man named by the trio as the ax swinger. He was released bow ever, when the victims refused h liim comDlaint for a war rant The deputy expressed doubt that the man named and questioned had even been In volved in the aitercauon. Weather Details . Hi atataM I far !: rMi a"- . TMtIUUM. '! krtlkh .l Iwk MIM Smn.) Bint (bwt W Yorlt Section - Approved ct Boys' School Addition to Present Security Building Wins Okeh of Board By JAMES D. OLSON ' Preliminary plans for an ad dition to the segregation wait at the MaeLarem school for boys at Weodbnra, at a esti mated east ef $!,, was ap proved by the state bear of control Tuesday. The new unit to be utilized as a workshop for the boys in the segregation unit, was auth orized by the 1953 legislature, as a temporary unit to be util ized until the proposed $1,250, 000 intermediate institution has been constructed. Plans for the structure ap proved Tuesday have been de signed by Burns, McNeil & Schneider, Portland architects. so that it can be transformed at little cost into a motor repair shop.-.-. r - . . . : . . Will Cat Escapees The thirty-eight boys rang ing from 16 to 18 years of age, now in the segregation unit have no present facilities for vocational training unless they are taken from the building, a practice that results in 85 per cent of the run-aways from the school,' according to James Lamb, superintendent (Cantlnaed en Page 1. Celama f) Throw Out on Oil Suit Asked Washington ) The Justice Department Tuesday asked the U. S. District court her to throw out a suit by the state of Arkansas challenging the right of coastal states to oil lands underneath the marginal seas. Congress enacted legislation at its last session recognizing claims of the coastal states to the lands. Arkansas filed suit contending the legislation was unconstitutional, - "' fri reply,"the Justice Depart ment filed dismissal motion contending that Arkansas has no legal interest The depart ment contended further that Arkansas does not have the right to sue the federal govern ment without the consent of Congress. Arkansas has until Sept 17 to reply to the motion. After its reply is filed, a date will be set for arguments on the matter. Million $ Loss By Hurricane Boston, Hurricane "Carol" blew out to sea today leaving in its wake grounded ships, crop damage of $1,000,- 000 and seven stranded sailors. Another boat, a 42 -foot cabin cruiser with three Bos ton youths aboard, was re ported missing in Massachu setts Bay today and a Coast Guard plane was sent from Salem to hunt for it. A captain and six crewmen were on one of the grounded ships, the Panamanian freight er S.S. Evgenia that was slung on a sandbar near Cape Cod yesterday. . They risked crashing seas and wind swollen tides to keep their ship for salvage after 17 others of the crew were rescued by breeches buoy and an amphibious duck. Six crewmen were plucked from the 80-foot dragger Jen nie & Julia when the vessel smashed into a rock reef off Deliver s necx meooai an tion near Gloucester. $9000LossinDurglary filename General Store Some $9,000 worth ot cash. checks and merchandise were taken Sunday night or Mon day morning in the burglary ot Ken Golliet's general store in Mehama the fourth bur glary in Marion county in less than a week. Included in the take, Gol liet said, was between $3,000 and $4,000 in cash from the safe and about $125 from three cash registers. Investigating state police said that the safe was expert ly cracked by knocking the dial off the door and punch ing the locking device back so that the door could be Giant French - Liner Grounded Le Havre, France If) The 51,839-ton French liner Liber te, ran around in a heavy fog Tuesday just after leaving this English Channel port with 1,- 075 New York-bound passen gers. The giant luxury liner, for merly the German' ship Euro pea, which, was awarded to France as reparations In 1946, was stuck in mud and sand. Three tugs immediately went to its side. French Line officials said they thought the ship could be refloated at high tide Tues day night She wrenched her self free 6 hours later at high tide to continue to Southamp ton, England, to pick up more passengers for the Atlantic voyage. .., . French - line officials said poor visibility was probably the cause of the accident Carpenters Bock in AFL ,y-.v Washington VP) The Car penters Union cam back into the American Federation of Labor Tuesday. A joint statement issued by AFL president George Meany and Maurice A. Hutcheson, president of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, said that a conference held here Tuesday agreement was reach ed for the union to "continue" in the federation. It had withdrawn at a meet ing in Chicago last month os tensibly in response to AFL action in agreeing to a no-raia Ins Dact with the CIO. uutcne- son at that time protested that first attention should go to the question of raiding within the AFL itself. His union has had numerous disputes with other organizations over jurisdiction al matters and the issue of raiding. That was the crux of Tues- day's agreement which pro vided that a no-raiding plan shall be presented at the fed eration convention opening in St Louis Sept. 21. Jesse Jones First Business Hit by Fire Houston, Tex. W The business through which former Commerce ' Secretary Jesse Jones began his climb to wealth has been destroyed by lire. The half-century-old Fairer Lumber Co., founded in 1902 by Jones, as the South Texas Lumber Co., burned yesterday with an estimated loss of be tween $350,000 and' $400,000. Besides the cash, some $4, 000 in checks most of them payroll checks of loggers and millworkers in the Mehama areawere taken from the safe. Included in the mer chandise taken were . several rules and two pistols. Entry was made by break ing a glass in a rear door to unlock it, police said. The break-In was discovered about 8:30 Monday morning by two Mehama men, Luther Stout and Robert Shields, who said they went to the store to buy some plumbing supplies and saw that the store had been entered. MILLION DOLLAR EXMIimON '? Old and young folk are attracted by the million dollar exhibit of farm and home machinery displayed at the western end-of the Oregon State Fair grounds. Every type of equipment used in the Willamette valley is shown from small garden tractors to the largest self-propelled combines. Stevens to Washington, O Secretary of the Army Robert T. Stevens agreed Tuesday to re view the Army's refusal to tell Senate investigators who gave security clearance to civilian employes accused by Sen. Mc Carthy (R., Wis.) of being Communists. The secretary promised to handle the matter with "no whitewash or blackout." ' Stevens said he may con sult the White House before 4 Percenter to Be Exposed Washington 15 A Bouse subcommittee said Tuesday itl will disclose complete details of a new case of alleged "in fluence neddliruf' in a deter mined effort i Staw4trt eort of thine." Fhfecaee Involved Warren L. Stephenson, Washington Re publican leader, who was said to have sought a 4 per cent fee to help a California manufac turing firm get more business with the Navy. Testimony before House Armed Services Subcommittee said Stephenson quoted secret Navy figures on rocket launch ers during his negotiation for a job with Century Industries, Inc.. of Bur bank, Calif. He was after a contract that would have paid him a percentage on any order the Century firm receiv ed for more than 25,000 of the devices. He did not get it Reports of the testimony leaked out over the week-end. Rep. Hess R., Ohio, chairman of the Subcommittee on Defense Activities acknowledged the af fair for the first time Tuesday. Warn Against Red Espionage New York () Allen W. Dulles, chief of the Central Intelligence Agency, counsel ed Americans Tuesday never to discount "the skill and abil ity of the communists in the field of intelligence gnd sub version." Dulles, returning from Eu rope aboard the liner Queen Mary, told newsmen: Communist i n t elligence, espionage and cold war oper ations are extremely well fi nanced and constitute a ma ior effort." To question as to whether United Ststes intelligence wss as well financed, be replied: "Congress is very fair to me, very good to me." Dulles and another passen ger, the Most Rev. Richard J, Cushing, Roman Catholic archbishop of Boston, express ed similar views en various government i n v e stigations and the recent German elec tions. "My answer was," he said, "that it all depends on what they think of communism. Despite any extremes or mis takes thst msy have been made, I don't believe a n y- thlng has brought out the evils and methods of commu nism more to the attention of the American people than the McCarthy investigations.' JAP CROWN PRINCE New York 0J Japanese Crown Prince Akihito arrived here today from Europe for a one month tour of the United AimyS States. Review ccuritvData reaching his decision. At the same time be announ ced a new policy that any employe who refuses to tell whether he is a Communist 'should not work for the de partment of the Array." Stevens statement was given at a news conference in the Senate office building. It fol lowed a hotel luncheon meet ing at which he discussed with McCarthy and others the re fusal of the Army's liaison man with Congress to give the names to McCarthy s Senate investigations subcommittee, McCarthy, who had sternly told Mai. Gen. Miles Reber. the liaison man- that he might appeal to President Elsen hower if Stevens' answer was no." told the same news con ference that "we are satisfied that .the secretary is opposed to any whitewash or coverup of anytnlng that is Improper in his department'' He said Stevens can have what time he needs to make his study of the facts, but In dicated that if the answer is negative, he still may go ahead and appeal to Eisenhower, Adenauer for Unification Bonn, Germany U.R Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer, bol stered by a landslide election victory for his pro-Western coalition government today set the "freeing of the 18 mil lion inhabitants of the Soviet zone from bondage and slav ery as "our goal" He said that with their lib eration "a free, unified Ger many can take its place in United Europe." The 77-year-old chancellor who hailed Sunday's election as proof that West Germans want to rearm and stand be side the West began work on the new government to run the country for the next four crucial years. His badly beaten opponents. the Socialists, met to find out what went wrong with their campaign against West Ger man rearmament Adenauer's coalition won 308 seats snd full control of the Bundestag or lower house of Parliament in the elections. Eugene Peak Climber Falls Bend W A young Eugene mountain climber was in cri tical condition here Tuesday after a long fall down a steep rocky slope on Diamond Peak. He was still unconscious 20 hours after his mishap. The youth, William Hallin 18, had climbed the 8,750-foot peak Monday with his father, Ralph L. Hallin of Eugene. They reached the summit at about 1 p.m. and soon after started down, the young man slipped on packed snow. For more than a quarter of a mile he was buffeted in his plunge. He was unconscious at the end of his slide. His father hur ried to Crescent Ranger sta tion for help. A party of forest service men, headed by Dis trict Ranger H. M. Cory, went up the maintain and at about 8:30 p.m. reached young Hal lin. They brought him down in darkness. At St Charles Memorial Hos pital here attendants said Tues day he had suffered severe head injuries. as . Supreme ClashOverPOW l.'ot Returned Paamaajom OP) A rail scale dispute ever the ex change of war artseners was building ap today. The Com munists a ceased the Allies of holding back captives and the VJt. Command drafted a de mand for the return ot Allied POWs it asserts are still in Bed hands. While Peiping radio asserted the VJi. Command withheld 357 Chinese and Koreans from repatriation, Gen. Mark Clark's headquarters worked over a list of Americans be lieved in Red captivity. . 1 Tb names were collected from interviews with returned prisoners, from Communist broadcasts and lists and from letters written by captives. Demand Accounting .. The UJJ, list, after careful re-checking, will be handed to the Communists with the de mand that the Reds either re turn or account for the miss ing Americans. Allied spokesmen s a 1 d the names will be announced in Washington, but there was no indication when. Nor was the number disclosed. Peiping claimed a cheek of prisoner lists showed the Allies (Centhnsta en Page i. Oetasaa I) Aly's Million to Free Rita Paris OlJD Lawyers for Rita Hayworth and Prince Aly Kahn reached agreement to day on a $1,000,000 divorce settlement which ended the couple's storybook ' romance and left -Mwr leMlaav star ire to marry again. i kt vMb .4n n.wiavf saddened bv the death of an Crura, representing Rita, saidioia ina u pm j, thmt b.a ihm aerwement. ai. 000,000 will be provided by I Aly for the cour'e's only child, Princess Yasmin, so she csn be raised in royal style ss a member of the Moslem faith. Rita got three paintings by Renoir,. Picasso and Toulouse Lautrec in the settlement, her only tangible souvenir of the 1949 marriage Crum said the only thing holding up immediate execu tion of the settlement is that a Nevada Judge will be asked to advise on a legal technical ity making the divorce final and binding throughout the world. Warm and Dry Weather Forecast Generally warm and dry weather la due to continue for the next several days, says the five-day forecast from the weather bureau. At the end of the period, somewhat cool er temperatures and possible showers are due. Meanwhile, the State Fair seems assured of fair weather through the mid-week. The maximum for Monday was 70 degrees, making the holiday a pleasant one, al though skies appeared threat ening. nnlv triM nf ainf&11 nil been recorded so far in Sep- tember. asalnst a normal of .30 of an inch for the period. At Least 572 Killed Daring Labor Holiday lit Ttit AuocitUd Fna) At least 572 persons lost their lives in accidents during the nation's Lsbor Day weekend, but traffic took fewer lives than the pre-boliday estimate. A survey Tuesday showed 403 traffic deaths for the period between 6 P. m. Friday and midnight Monday, compared with a prediction of 440 com- puated by the National Safety Council engineers. During the 78-hour holiday period there were 70 drown ings. Ninety-nine persons died in other types of accidents in cluding 18 victims ot a tene ment fire In Chicago. Commenting on the traffic toll, Ned H. Dearborn, piesi dent of the safety council, said, "a toll of 403 lives is a tragic price to pay for celebrating a ll rwrr run Korean Caves Not Damaged By Bombing Tokyo W- The communist Peiping radio aaid today Allied bombs devastated much ot North Korea, but couldn't touch great underground cav- ems into which industries and even theaters were moved. The Red broadcast said 420,-let 000 Allied bombs fell on the North Korean capital, Pyong- former holder ot many top ynf government posts was striek- "In every city In North Ko- en while at his Washington rea," the broadcast aaid, "one apartment, notes the gaping bomb-blasted His wife and his son, Fred, shells of factories. But one does Jr., were at tee apartment and not see abondoned machines, summoned physician at 2:30 wrecked or otherwise. They tjn, . But Vinson died 45 had all been moved under- minutes later. ' 1 H r2!Bdl7. V J Vinson took over leader. The Peiping broadcast des- ahlp of the U.S. Supremo crlbed mile-long tunnels dug Court June 34, 1946. an ap into North Korean mountains, nnlnt. aw.i "xtUe factory employ- "L !' , . .T L T printing plant with 1,300 work- era and hundreds ot other lac- torles operated wholly under- ground. i - "All were powered, lighted and ventilated by Korea's else- trlcity," the broadcast said. Public Flags : AtHaltmast Denver 4iB President . El senhower today decreed a 30 - day period of national rnourn - lni tor Chief Justice rrea M.iveu to head in tun the OXSe Vinson of the U. S. Supreme! Court whom ho hailed as anltno rederal boon AdnUnmra- "outatandlng citlaen" with national service record ot "of - flclency. dignity, and tnteg - The chief executive, m at formal mourning proclamation, I ordered flags on all pubucl buildings ot the United States) here and abroad flown at half f The President, genuraeiria,- : -eg I f i.y $ - 1 cancelled a goir a ate uus an ernoon and after fulfilling previous luncheon engagement planned to spend the rest of the day at home. . The White House said Mr. Eisenhower could make no definite plans about attending the funeral for the last Chief Justice until funeral plans are announced by the Vinson fam-1 ily in Washington. $287,182,390 In Tax Benefits Washington U.B The Office of Defense Mobilization an nounced today it has approved special tax benefits for 128 projects costing $287,182,390. Firms building the project will be allowed to write off part of the cost for tax pur poses in five years Instead of the usual 20. The program is intended to encourage rapid expansion of defense support ing industries. The ODM plans to cut down on the program now that the Korean war is over. The ODM said 52 projects in the new group involved small business. The largest certifi cates included: Kaiser Steel Corp., Fontana, Calif., steel plant .$52,000,000 total with 85 per cent allowed on $31,000,000, 50 per cent on '$17,000.000 and 40 per cent holiday, but in view of the fact that the traffic volume was up, snd this Labor Day toll IS the lowest in three yesrs, some progress has been made." 1 The council esumaiea inei u million automobiles used the nation's streets and highways during the 78-hour weekend period. The biggest death toil rrom a single accident this year was that of a train-auto crash in Tampa. Fla., which took the lives of seven women ana giris. Last year's Labor Day toil from accidents was 858, of which 431 were traffic deaths. The record year in both traffic fatalities and overall toll was 1931 when 858 were killed and 481 dead were counted in traf fic mishaps. ftr -i r (I II..J kti-J. ".n Allan Fatal to Jurist Ai Wflfh.-t.-i Ml If Udllilljf Lsl , , Washington OH Chief JKS ttee Fred M. Tlaaea, a KaaW tacky Jailer's sea who reee to the highest judicial 011100 ht the aatiea, died aaexseetedly a heart attack early today. . The 63-year-old ludse and Truman to succeed the late Cn,ef -lic Harlan F. Stone, The Kentueklan'i death' ptvei tte wly for p,,,, Eunhower to make his first appointment to the Supremo SJZt i t, . , , .... Vinson's elevation is the I high court seven yeirs ago I capped a public career thai included service in all tfcrea I branches of the government. I He was secretary of the treas ury before being named chief Justice.:..; During World War II he 1 was appointed by former irresMent rranraa s. Rooaa. ot , Economic EUkbUlxaUon eltlon and the Office of war 1 Mobilisation. Truman, then, icnose turn treasury boss. Vbrcn's Dcaili Denver C)Preeident - - iennower. - zuesonr - mournea a the death of Chief Justice Fred M. . Vinson as a friend. statesman , and Jurist "whom I admired deeply." , . The president Issued this statement .at the - summer White House; ?'' I share the nation's shock and grief over Chief Justice Vinson's untimely death. He was my close personal friend for many years and a states man and Jurist whom I ad mired deeply. ' A. man of exemplary character, he possessed great human understanding, appre ciation of our national heri tage and a keen mind. He has filled positions of great responsibility in all three branches of the government legislative, administrative and Judicial. "In all of them he served with efficiency, dignity and Integrity. "He was an outstanding citizen whose death is a loss to America." Speculate on Gov. Warren Washington W There was some . speculation here that California's Gov. Earl Warren would be Elsenhower's choice for Chief Justice to succeed Chief Justice Vinson. Warren, Republican, announced Thursday he would not seek re election when his present term expires at the end of next year. He gave no hint of his future plans. ; ' At - Eisenhower's vacation headquarters in Denver, assist ant press secretary Murray Snyder said then he knew of no post for which Warren was being considered. When Truman named the attablo - middle-of-the-road Vinson as chief justice in 194S is was widely believed ho was chosen as a peacemaker in the wrangle then going on between Justices Robert H. Jackson and Hugo L. Black. ' - Truman himself noted Vin son was to become the 13th chief Justice In U.S. history, and called it "lucky for too United States and lucky for Mr. Vinson at least I hope it is." SEIEMlSa ON BORDER London () Belgrade radio today reported another brief skirmish on too Bulgarian Yugoslav border. , .v.; WW t ; ! ; opened by turning the (Ceatimwd am Page . Catasaa 1)