, TH1 WEATHUn FAIR AND warn teal at ul Friday. Lew tonight 45; hi Friday.., PltJ At GOITIOC Krl Yar; No. 214 ESSASrSC: ; Salem, On., ThimJsy, September 10, 1953 U Pogti . Prict 5c Most Awards Nov Made at Oregon's Fair Competitive Events Continue to Thrill Expo Visitors 4 Thursday, September U :SO pjn. Free Midway show. :00 pjn. Night revue, grandstand. ... Rodeo, etadium. - ' 9:00 pjn. to midnight Old time an western swing dtnclnr. Friday, Hcptembtr 11 S:00 ajn. Getea open. ' ' 10:00 a.m. Joint 4-H and FFA Auction. Band Concert. , - 1:16 pig.-Hone racing. 1:30 pjn. Canning demon stration Food department, 2:30 pjn. Free midway show. 4:00 pjn 4-H Style Snow. 1:30 pjn. Free midway how, S:00 pjn. Night rsvns, , Grandstand. -Rodeo, Stadium. 1:00 pm to midnight Old time and Western awing dancing. 1 Saturday. September II (CHILDREN'S DAT) , 8:00 a.m. Gate open. 8.00 ajnv FFA Livestock and Dairy Judging contest. 10:00 ajnj Band Concert. 11:00 mr Canning demon stration. Food department. 1:00 pjn. FFA Poultry Judging. 1:15 pjn, -Hone racing. 3:30 pjn. Free Midway ahow. 1:00 pjn. Announcement of result of FFA , Judging contest. 6:30 p.m. Free Uidwuy ahow. I:0O pm. Night revue, Orandstand. Rodeo, itadium. -t:00 pjn. to midnight. Square dancing. By MARGARET MAGEE Oregon's 86th annual State Fair was in Its sixth day Thursday and by th end of the day aU ribbons will be placed except in the Future Farmer and 4-H club sections, where Judging has not yet been completed. , : Thursday morning Angora goats were still being judged, but this was' slated for com pletion sometime Thursday, and would end the livestock judging for the year. . . . Future Farmers and 4-Hers claimed the limelight from Thursday on, though one adult-youth event, the Hol steln calves' sale was held Thursday afternoon. An an nual event since 1948, the sale this year saw 12 calves placed in the ring for sale. Auction Slated Friday Eligible buyers are Future Farmers, 4-H club members and World War II veterans who are to become future breeders, with the buyers recommended by veterans' in structors or Future Farmers and 4-H leaders. ' Calves, which are among the best raised, are sold at a sacrifice of from $50 to $300 by the Holstein - breeders so that these people may get a start A double drawing is held to determine the order In which ' the buyers make their selection. In charge of the sale is Glen Ireland of Forest Grove, who has had charge of the sale since it was started. Held Thursday morning as one of the 4-H club events was the sheep shesring con test. (Centlnaed en Pat f, Calamn 4) Son Born to 11 -Year Girl CoquiUe () A chubby, 11- year-oM girl, much to her sur prise, gave birth to a son on Aug. 22, James Leonard, Coos County Juvenile officer, said Thursday. The girl wan alone at her southern Coos County home at the time, he said, but someone came in soon afterward and took her to a physician. She and the. child were reported in fine condition. Leonard said the girl did rot know she was pregnant, nor did her parents. They have eight other children. 1 The Juvenile officer released the sketchy information a short time before a 17-year-old boy, whose name he withheld, went into closed session of Juve nile court on a charge of im moral conduct. Leonard said the charge was roughly com parable, i.i this case, to statu tory rape. nation's Great Pay to Vinson Final llor.aoe . i . i Ike and Truman " Attend Memorial v Services at Cathedral Washington ) President Eisenhower, farmer President Truman and the great af the nation paid s final homage to Chief Justice) Fred H. Vinaoa at memorial service Thursday to Washington Cathedral. And hundreds of ordinary people asembled, too, to honor a man of humble beglnntog who rose to one of the highest positions in the land. Vinson died Tuesday of heart attack. He was 63. Eisenhower and Truman were seated a few feet apart in the cathedral nave. The chief executive arrived for the services a few minutes before the 1 pjn. EST starting hour, the former President a short while later with Mrs. Truman, daughter Margaret, and members of the Vinson family. (Centiased a Pag t, Calaaus I) Protests Hikes 1 In Oil Prices Washington (ff In an attack on recent oil and gasoline price boosts, Federal Trade Commis sioner Stephen J. Spingarn Thursday called on the govern ment to bring about ' a com petitive market or some form of supervision" over the oil in dustry. He estimated that increases in the past three months will cost consumers and taxpayers between 900 million and one billion dollars a year, including a 50 million dollar jump In petroleum costs to the armed forces. Spingarn's term on the Trade Commission expires Sept. 25. A Democrat, he will be replaced by Republican John W. G wynne of Iowa. FTC then will have a Republican majority. . Spingarn's statement de clared the worldwide round of price increases reflects a decis ion by the international oil companies to continue basing world prices on current Amer ican market - prices despite greatly .improved world sup plies. SEEKS POLITICAL ASYLUM FROM U.N. II 1 V v --;' . x' ' - ..... ; - . - 1 ' . V,w vv; "1 " 1 i s w J Copter Rescues Nine Airmen Luke Air Force Base, Ariz., (JP) An Air Force helicopter dropped down into a sandy desert wasteland near the ghost town of Sundad, Ariz, early Thursday and rescued nine stranded airmen. The flyers, wno (parachuted from a KC97 tanker damaged in an aerial collision Wednes day were flown back to an aux iliary field 20 miles west of Tuckeye, Ariz., and were re ported "all in good shape." They are to be returned to the main base as quickly as possible. The rescue came more tnan 20 hours after the four-engine tanker collided with a B47 jet bomber while refueling in flight. The nine crewmen of the tanker parachuted. NOD3HO IJCTOnS- niaf if ni it 5- rr mmJUJU Reds Accuse Allies of Faking Jan Hajdukiewicz (right), 28-year-old Polish 'inter preter who bolted from Communist control and given U.S. sanctuary, answers newsmena' questions t a press con ference in Seul, Korea, today. Hajdukiewicz was civilian interpreter for Polish members of the neutral nations in spection commission supervising the Korean, truce. He 1 asked VS. Col. Harold T. Babb for political asylum as a plane to carry him back to North Korea warmed up at Kangnung sir base, in East Korea. His request was grant ed and be waa quickly taken to a place of safety. At left . is Lieut Col. James Chesnut, Korean communications zone public Information officer. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Tokyo) Bolting Pole Expects Revolt Seoul (") A young Polish interpreter who bolted from Communist control and waa given V. S. sanctuary said to day his people some day will rise in revolt against the Reds but now is not the time." Jan Hajdukiewicz, 28. told a news conference the Commu nist rulers of his homeland could not be overthrown "with out outside help" even though 9B per cent of the Polish peo ole opposed the Red regime. . Hajdukiewicb was a civilian interpreter for Polish members tw( years hasuerred aa of the neutral nations lmp4ciii twdexer for the code ra tion commission unervisuig the Korean truce Yesterday he asked U. S. Col. Harold T. Babb for political . asylum . aa a plane to carry him back to Nnrth Korea warmed up at Kangnung Air Base in East Ko His request was granted and he was quickly token to a place of safety. "We had to get that guy out of there in a hell of a hurry," said one U. S. officer. Ike Sends Warm Greetings to Jews Washington W) President Eisenhower has voiced "warmest greetings" and a hope for peace in the Jewish New Year 5714, wnicn Begins today. The president's message, sent from his vacation head Quarters in Denver to Ameri cans of Jewish faith, came as sundown services yesterday ushered In the 10-day period nf Roih Hashana. "May this New Year bring to peoples of good faith everywhere the reassurance that more tranquil days are indeed n e a r," Eisenhower said. Mnnsaa ( The eommun lets today accused the Allies of faking a list of missing V. N. Midlers, mistreating war pri soners and kidnaping a Pole who fled trace supervisory team Into American sanctuary. The Reds unloaded this bar rage as the Korean armistice moved rapidly Into a new phase the disposal of Red and Allied prisoners who re fuse to return to their home lands. The first group of 500 North Koreans moved into the buffer zone under control of Indian troops today. Rock Observers A spokesman said they threw rocks In rage when they saw two communist observers standing ouUlde a barbed wire fence. The communists backed out of range. Neither was hit. The first group of 1,900 anti-1 Red Chinese was to be turned over to Indian troops Friday, The angry Red charge of kidnapping the Pole came in a meeting of the four-nation truce supervisory commission. (Centmaed an Page s. Cehuan 1) McCarthy Puts Army on Spot Grtuit Courts Under High Court Control - t'' V. By IAMBS D. OLSON: T .!' .? ': Jonel C BUI, who to Vtorcourt cofornv law designee, to DURKIN RESIGNS V' Martin P. Durkln resigns as Secretary of Labor ln Ike's cabinet. 1 .. of DurkinAccepted Washington (" Sen. Mc Carthy (R-Wla.) has demanded that the Pentagon explain, by nightfall if possible, how the Washington Martin P. Durkln Thursday resigned aa secretary of labor. The White House announced the resigna tion and President Eisenhow er's acceptance. Durkin'a ratter of resigna tion was not mad public But the White House gave newsmen copiea of on from the president to Durkln which Elsenhower voiced the conviction that, "the principal key to , the strength of our working democracy la the surance- of both industrial fUSCO- SOOConvirts Locked in Cells; $509,D Loss Walla Walla AV-Quiet set tled over the Waahington State Penitentiary Thursday and a prison official said "all appears peaceful" after Wednesday night's damaging riot and fire. Deputy Warden Al Remboldt said 800 inmates who took part la a noisy uprising that fol lowed a halt-million dollar prison fire remained in their cells and "no fresh trouble is anticipated." Guards, who broke up the night's disorder by spraying' prisoner's quarters with tear gas, continued to patrol prison walls and buildings. They had the help of State Patrol and sheriff s officers who hurried to the prison when the trouble be gan. . , ,s Kept at Minimum The guards were credited with keeping the outbreak to a minimum. They quickly herded prisoners into their cells when 14 inmates began acting up at evening meal time. Dlahea were thrown and chair amashod aa a group, of "young but tough" men began misbehaving. . (Oeaataaed ea Pag a, Celesta I) SCrcps Fcrctcst peace and the vitality of ourjcuitur. Department, m a near ' ixwo uoor unions. , 1 harvest time resort. Thuradav Durkln, a democrat, would! estimated thla -rear' a corn eras be the first member of Presl-lat S.2K.007.000 buahela and Army came to send out to S7dent Elsenhower' 'cabinet to I the wheat crop at 1,169,107,. of it command last year what leave hi post. - : o00 bushel. : the 'senator termed "clearcuti Hi possible resignation re-1 The corn figure is 114,411.- communist propaganda." portedly waa discussed, at 1000 bushels leas than last wiximi eauncll. Tharsday as sumed his duties aa adminis trative assistant to the chief justice, Earl C. Latoorette, after beinr sworn in oy me cmei jus tice. The new position was created by the 1953 legislature in a More Burglary Counts Against Turner Men 30 Killed in Cyprus Quake Nirae, Cyprus W An earth uake rocked the Paphos dis trict of this British island off the southern coast of Turkey today. Police said about 30 persons- were killed and 100 in jured in various villages. Southeast of Cyprus, Haifa and other points in northern Israel felt 'earth' tremors on this first day of the Jewish New Year buf no casualties or damage was reported. Police reports said houses in the Paphos district were dam aged extensively. Doctors were rushed to the area from Nico sia and other towns. The quake disrupted telephone communi cations with the area. . violent ouakes in the eastern Mediterranean area devastated three Greek islands in the Ionian Sea a month ago, kill ing an estimated l.ooo peron- Hearoes Held In Slavery Weather Details Ui llwfM fMt Wit MflMUlM, .icfc- al Two more counts of bur glary were filed against two young Turner men Thursday by Marion county authorities and the pair waived prelim inary hearing on the charges in district court lster In the morning. They were ordered held to answer to the giand Jury. Dale Zitek. 23. and Bobby Slilwell, 18, are being held in the Marion county jail in lieu of a total of (5000 bail each on three charges of burglary. The last two charges were the burrjarles of the Kenneth Golliet store in Mebama Sun. day id Feres Lumber com pany in Jefferson last Wed nesday. On Wednesday of thi3 week they waived prelim trarr hearing on the charge i.l hurtlarr of the Roberts Grocery in AumsviUe and were bound over to the grand Jury, i A fourth burglary which reduce congestion ' in . circuitipolnting-to photograjphlc copies oz v paea w u aocumvn. am said was nrenared ror an in doctrination course tor intelli gence officer! and others. ' - There waa no Immediate comment from the Defense De partment. ' A preamble, included In the nortions which McCarthy maae public, said the purpose of the study was "to aeveiop an un rlentandin of the Soviet peo ple which would be militarily useful in case of war," ana it added: "The problem Is not to demonstrate the political in justice and economic tyranny of the BolaneviK governmen. but to illuminate the Russian in his existing habitat." "If you read this and bellev-1 meeting Thursday 1 morning ed it, you would move to Rus-1 between Elsenhower and Vic lis," McCarthy tola reporters, president .Nixon, Atty (tap. the youths have admitted nrobably will not be brought to a formal charge, omciais Indicated. It was the bur glsry of the Central Sawmill and Manufacturing company In AumsviUe last week. Zitek has been on parole from the Washington state penitentiary from May 22 un til September 1 of this year, when he was classified as a r role violator. He was sen tenced to a 15-year term for burglary on which he served 30 months before being par oled. He also has served time In the Oregon State peniten Birmingham, Ala. ) A seventh white farmer was ex pected to surrender today to face federal charges of holding Negroes in slavery. Six others from Alabama and Mississippi were freed in bond yesterday. U. S. Dlst Atty. Frank John son. Jr.Y said Lindsay Win- yard DaU, 43, one of six Dial brothers and cousins who were Indicted hv a federal grand Jury, would appear at the U. S. marshal s on ice aurin the day. The Indictment charges that one Negro man died after be ing bound and whipped at gun- nnint. ; - . Three alleged oeaungs oi courts of the state by vesting authority for aenaral adminis tration or tn lower courts in the supreme court. The law is modeled after a New Jersey law which has been in effect since 1947 and credit ed with reducing the time of disposal of an ordinary lawsuit from around a year to five months. Specifically, the law grants power to the chief justice to limit the length of time a mas ter before a circuit judge may be held up under advisement Results Publicized Further, the law makes it the duty of the chief justice to col lect, compile and puDiicize sta tistics dealing with business of the circuit courts from time to time, as well as prepare a re port for the legislature every two years. (Centlnaed ea Page a, Calaata O Akihito Gives Ike Silk Screen Washington ! Japan's Crown Prince Akihito gave President Eisenhower a brll liantiy colored silk screen Thursday as a token of friend' ship from his father, the em oeror of Japan. The president, admiring the intricate hand embroidery told the prince: "As soon as my wife sees it, I'm going to lose this." The 19-year-old prince made the presentation during a 20-minute visit with the president at the White House. Akihito told reporters later that he had a "very pleasant" talk with Elsenhower. The youthful heir to the an cient Japanese throne was to have seen President Eisen hower In Boston September 21, but the White House call wss arranged lnstesd when the president Interrupted his Colorado vacation to attend the funeral" of Chief Justice Vincent here. Browneli; Presidential Aast Sherman Adam and other key ofXicislv month forecast of 1 ,130,41 8- ooo DOsneis. The wheat att mat to M,B2t,00 bushels lea than last montb'a ssrsaast ef Lgnt.ggetOOO Inuiwla. Mossadegh Hunger World Bank Loans To Three Nations Washington W The world bank made loan totaling 43, 350,000 Thursday to Turkey, Chile and Colombia. Chile was granted $20 mil lion to build a chemical pulp mill and a newsprint mill in tended to supply the country' needs nd produce a surplus for export. Colombia's loan was $14 350,000 for Improvements in the national highway system. Turkey's amount waa. $9 million New York. OT The New York Time said Thursday that Iran's ex-premier Mohammed Mossadegh, is hunger striking In his Jail ceU near Tehran. The Times said Mossadegh also demand to see a lawyer about drawing up a will. Robert C. Doty, tho Time correspondent in Tehran, quot ed an "exceptionally weu qualified government source" a savins! Mossadegh made the threat that he was transferred from an undisclosed prison to the Saltanatabad army bar racks near the Iranian capital. H renortedly motes ted the tranafer. demanded that hi captors "kill me now" and then announced his intention to refuse food. The hla-hlv emotional old leader, who Is in his 70s face charges of rebellion against the Shah. On Aug. 18, Mossadegh ignored a royal decree ousting him as premier. Three days later a pro-royalist uprising toppled Mossadegh. Tropical Hurricane Curves from Florida Miami, Fla. W) A tropical tlary. Some 18000 to S900O was romrtmA ivn in the Golliet Negroes were listed store burilanr and small The defendants paid amounts in the other two in which they are charged. About $800 of the total has been accounted for. Sheriff Den ver Young said. Deputies and state police are still Investi gating into the situation. fines for Negroes who were in Mis sissippi jail and took them to their extensive farm noioings in Sumter county". In west-cen Admission of Red China To UN Held Betrayal Taipeh, Formosa (t Sen. William F. Knowland, U.S. senate majority leader from California, said today It would be a betrayal of Korean cas ualties "to welcome the mur derer Red China" Into the United Nations. Knowland, on a fact-finding tour of the Far East, told a news conference he would miles per hour winds and the tral Alabama. Johnson "".SSi There the Negroes were re- quit the U.N. If Red China 1 quired to work out the debts, admitted. hurricane shaped like a huge amphitheater, with 100 mile an hour winds on the stage, curv ed to the north northwest Thursday lessening the danger to the Bahamas and Florida. Hurricane Dolly was pin pointed about 810 miles a little south of east from miami in uic 11 a.m. advisory, moving north northwest at about 10 to it miles per hour. Grady Norton, cniei ivorm forecaster at the Miami Weather Bureau, said that "If Ow hurricane continued on us nresent course It would not touch the Florida mainland. Norton emphasized the "If," and pointed out that the storm vn still in he formative stage, and condition might change in a few hours. He said an Air Force plane from Bermuda pen' trated this season's fourth topi ral atorm and reported it was crescent shaped, like huge ..nhithater. with the north nd east sides containing 100 1 Turk Island. south and west still open. Norton said the fact that tne storm had not formed a com plete circle around the eye was the reason for the various posi tions reported in the past 24 hours. The plane said the clouds were Just beginning to form all around the eye, indicating it was slowly winding up. The 11 a.m. advisory said "the more northward turn les sens the danger to the Bahamas, but further increase in force is exDccted with slow norm northwest movement during the next 12 hours.' The storm was moving on a west northwest course Wednes day. The change to the north west and later a nonn norm- west course marked the (tart of the curve away from the Florida neninsula, The S a.m. advisory reported the hurricane was centered com crop In or a,vn- 000.000 bushels would create a aurslu supply probably r autrin- Secretary Benson to in voke rutld production and mar keting control on the 1954 crop to prevent excessive sup plies. Benson has until mid November to maka a decision. Similar controls already haw. been invoked for next year's : wheat crop. ' - The corn estimate compare with last year's crop of 3,J0o 735.000 bushels and the ten-' year 1942-51 average of 1,038,- 380,000. Tho wheat figure compares with last year's crop of 1,291,- 447,000 bushels and wim me ten-year average of 1,088,548,- 000 bushel. . 422 American Repatriated POWs Return San Francisco fl Another 422 American repatriate re turned home yesterday from long imprisonment in Com munist prison stockades in Korea. Several hundred relatives and friends cheered their arri val on the Navy transport Gen. John Pope fifth repatriation ship to dock at i t. Mason in uw past two weeks. The Marine rnoenix, carry ing . 34 more ex-prisoners, is slated to dock Sunday, the Mili tary Sea Transport Service said. Yesterday returnee (aid at least two so-called "progres sives" Americans whom fel low prisoners said cooperated with the Communists in prison camp were beaten aboard tho Pope. Cpt. Harold W. Beerbower ot Saegerstown, Pa., said about 10 "nros" were aboard the Pope and they were segregated after the beatings, which occurred the first day out of Inchon, Korea. His account was supported at Pfc. Thomas M. Caroland Jr. of Cedar Hill, Term. Caroland said one ot the beat- on men was "just jersj wno was afraid," but he called the other "a real rat who spied ror tho Reds and got several Amer ican tortured." PENDLETON HEARING . Washington (U.B The bousa agriculture committee an nounced today that It "graa roots" study ot American farm nrohlema would include B UIQ nurn;irc .---1 ... . w about 180 mile northwest of hearing at Pendleton, iMovemoer .