THE WEATHER OCCASIONAL BAIN tonight, erne cleartni, patches ( fog Thursday morning. Increasing cloudiness, rain by late Than day. Little ckuii la tempera tare. Law tonif ht, it; high Thursday, M. Capital jiJoBffiniail FINAL EDITION 65th Year, No. 269 SSI Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, November 1 1, 1953 22 Pages Price 5c Obligation of Citizenry to Country Told Col. McKenney De scribes Significance Of Armistice Day By MARGARET MAGEE Salem observed Armistice Day Wednesday with a parade and a program at the capitol at which CoL Alfred E. Mc Kenney, chief of the Oregon military district, waa the peaker. The colonel, vrteran of over 85 years of military service, in opening his speech . reminded that it was almost 40 years ago that World War I inflamed Europe and that those hostili ties were suspended by U armistice, effective at 11 a.m, Monday, November 11, 1913. McKenney recalled, "Great was the hope that day. Great was the rejoicing. "This was the war to end all war.' " Noting that "the barriers of civilization had not fallen and the great freedom we enjoyed preserved," the speaker re minded that 25 years after the war there was a greater war from which ''we learned that preparedness only Is the watch dog of peace." "The world today demands that we have large standing forces," he said. After men tioning the places where we had men in uniform, he con tinued: "Yet the nation is above all things a peace-loving nation one that wants no large stand ing army or huge fleet. We wan the active service to be as small as possible." (Con tinned en Pais t. Column 4) Munitions Barge Grounds in Surf Astoria VP) A barge carry' lng 700 tons of explosives was aground in heavy surf a mile and a half north of Long Beach, Wash., Wednesday. It was presumed the cargo was ammunition destined for the Umatilla ordnance depot, although definite word was lacking in absence of the port security officer. The barge was being brought into the Columbia river under tow of the tug Columbia Queen when the line parted at 11:15 p.m. Tuesday. By the time the tug could bring in its line and turn, the barge had drifted north and aground. The coast guard vessel Ya cona stood by with the tug for a time then headed back for its berth leaving salvage ef forts to the commercial opera tors. The tug is owned by Tide water - Shaver Transportation Co. On Sept 24 another barge loaded with ammunition and towed by the same tug was struck and capsized by the freighter Hawaiian Planter. The salvage of that cargo of 700 tons is being completed this week. Think Marsh Killed in Crash Clinton. Ky. lPi A penni less hitchhiker killed in an au tomobile collision apparently was Thomas John Marsh, whose name figured in the Greenlease kidnaping case. . O The victim went under the name of Billy Stars of Mexico, Mo., but his identification tal lied almost exactly with that of the ex-convict once named as the killer of Bobby Green lease. The exception was this: Marsh's name was tattooed on his right forearm. On Stars' right forearm an old tattoo had been obscured by a fresh one. The FBI hoped to establish positive Identification through fingerprints. Stars was killed Saturday night near Clinton. Later an unidentified woman tele phoned a funeral home, inquir ing about tattoo marks on the "body and expressed belief that Start and Marsh were the same. Rock Bottom Hit In Film Indusliy Hollywood, ) Rock bot tom has been reached in the decline of movie produc , tion, the directors of the AFL Screen Actors Guild predict. The guild, representing 8,000 actors, pledged at its annual meeting yesterday to wage a continuing fight against the Inroads of run-away picture production and to do all in its power to promote addition al production in this country. x-wr,i' hp mm I 0 Wreath Placed By Eisenhower Washington W) The United States, keeping an uncertain truce in Korea, remembers to day another armistice 35 years ago. President Eisenhower a r ranged to go to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier of World War I, there to place a mem orial wreath at the base of the white marble block on a hilltop in Arlington National Ceme tery. The Chief Executive, himself a soldier by profession, thus planned to symbolize the na tion's tribute to the dead of that earlier war. Overtoning the addresses of national leaders who spoke throughout the country was the theme of a quest for enduring peace, which World wars I and II failed to win. Ask Hold-up of Power Policies Washington (A") Sixteen public power groups Tuesday asked the administration to hold up plans to revise the na tion's power policy. A petition sent to President Eisenhower and Secretary of Interior McKay said any changes should be suspended for a year, or until consumers and others affected by the the changes can study and dis cuss the changes with the sec retary. The gioup said the petition I was directed af recent actions hv th nHmini-tratinn -iifh ac signing of contracts with pri vate utilities for long term sale of electric energy and withdrawal of the Interior De partment's support for a Hells Canyon dam County Fairs Urged to Fight Diversion of Funds By JAMES Members of the Oregon Fairs association, meeting in annual convention at the Mar ion hotel, were urged at the opening business session Wed nesday to fight to the last ditch any attempt to place pari mutual receipts now allocated to county fairs into the state's general fund. The appeal was made by Kenneth Fridley, of Sherman county, chairman of the legis lative committee, during a re view of the work of his com mittee. IN ARMISTICE 1 "' fP Above, one of the American Legion and Auxiliary color guards that appeared Wednesday in the annual Armistice Day parade. Below, reunited members of Capital .Post's famous drum corps that won a national championship. Twenty-five members marched and played drums and bugles in today's parade. Traditional Pomp Armistice Day Parade The traditional pomp and color ef the Armistice day pa rade was displayed in full Wednesday morning as schools, patriotic organiza tions and other groups march ed before goodly crowds from the Capitol Mall to town and back to the Capitol again for the annual ceremonies on the Capitol steps. White House Diplomats Host Washington (P) President Eisenhower's first reception of the social season Tuesday night drew 1,400 diplomats, includ ing what one White Hquse aide called "more Russians than we've ever had." Soviet Ambassador Georgia N. Zaroubin and his wife, dressed in blue, turned out for the gay and brilliant event. It was the first of five state re ceptions on the 1953-5 social calendar. The first of six state dinners, held last Tuesday night, honored Eisenhower cab inet members. All moved smoothly Tuesday night. To music by the red coated Marine Corps orchestra, Eisenhower moved unsmilingly through the foyer to the Blue Room and shook hands with his guests for 2 hours and 10 min utes. The President and Mrs. Ei senhower stood before a bank of white chrysanthemums and ferns. ' D. OLSON "If the money now allocated to the county fairs is placed in the general funds," fie said. "It will mean that every county fair association will be requir ed to appear before the ways and means committee of the legislature and the result will be that the funds will become a political fooball." It was reported that approxi mately 90 per cent of the mem bership are opposed to transfer of pari-mutual funds into the general fund. (Cm tinned ta Pag it Cehuna i) DAY PARADE 1 i r:::.'.:Vt:v-V..U'; " " ' . 4 in A full dozen bands' furnish ed martial music for the pa rade. A large number of members of the old Capitol Post No. 9 Drum Corps that won the national American Legion drum corps champion spih in 1932 were on hand to show that their old skill had n't been frogotten. Salem area schools and military units furnished most of the march ing musical groups. The Al Kader Shrine band was there in its colorful outfits. Patri otic organizations furnished numerous other marching units. Members of the Gov ernor's Guard, the Salem Sad dle club and the South Salem Junior Saddle club formed a mounted unit. (Concluded on Par 5. Column 5) Mrs. Roosevelt On White Case Seattle VP) Mrs. Eleanor itoosevelt says she believes both former President Tru man and Gov. James F. Byrnes, secretary of state dur ing part of Truman's' term, are telling the truth "as they recall it" about, Harry Dexter White. The former president has said he did not recall seeing FBI reports concerning White's alleged activities in behalf of the Russian govern ment: Byrnes says he discuss ed the reports with Truman. Mrs. Roosevelt, here to ad dress the regional conference of the American Association for the United Nations, said in an interview, that lapse of time since 1948 has changed the perspective on the White case. An FBI report then, she said, "was more or less rou tine in appointments of that nature, and in the climate of 7 years ago it might have been glanced over hastily, perhaps not fully read by the president, and perhaps not re membered." FOG BLANKETS PARIS Pari tl Fog blanketed airports In Paris vicinity Wed nesday so thickly that passen gers leaving France had to go by train to Brussels, or south wards to the sunnier sections of the country. ')( Magsaysay Seems Elected - Manila (V Youthful Ramon Magsaysay Wednesday took I commanding lead over Pre si. dent Elpidio Quirino in the Philippines presidential race and appeared to have unseated the aging, ailing chief execu tive. Magsaysay has not claimed victory and Quirino has not conceded defeat. But a govern ment spokesman said the Presi dent might have an announce ment later. The first official returns from Tuesday's election gave Magsaysay 68 per cent of the votes or 255,691 to Quirino's 118,938. The unofficial count, running far ahead, showed Magsaysay 1,612,071 and Quirino 681.478. An estimated 4,760,000 votes . a record . . were cast. G.M. Purchases Willow Run Detroit VP) General Motors now owns the 62-acre Willow Run former bomber plant. The world's biggest auto maker purchased the property Tuesday from Kaiser Motors for 26 million dollars. Kaiser will move all its operations to Toledo. General Motors announced it will uie the property to con tinue manufacture and assem bly of hydramatic transmis sions. What further use may be made of the property was not disclosed. The purchase proba b 1 y means GM will not rebuild the Detroit transmission division plant, destroyed by fire at Livonia, Mich., last August. GM's president, Harlow H. Curtice said no plans have been made at present to re build the Livonia facility. In taking over the Willow Run plant GM acquires a plant Kaiser-Frazer purchased from the government for IS million dollars some five years ago. Polk County Buys 4 Voting Machines Portland W Polk County has contracted to buy four vot ing machines costing $1,500 each. Gene Roaaman of Port land reported Tuesday. Rossman, who is agent for a voting machine firm, said the machines are to be used at Dallas, the county seat. The last Legislature approv ed a bill legalizing voting machines. & if i Ihel jo Xi!aa!ua 88EII Truman in White Spy 'Probe U.N. Agrees to Debate on Red POW Atrocities United Nations, N.Y, VP) The C.N.' Oeaeral Assembly Wednesday agreed to air American charges that Com munists In Korea committed BlunMlralil trtitiSS SaTi'StSt U.N. prisoners. The vote in the 60-nation body was 53-5 with 2 absten tions. The overwhelming ap proval represented a resound ing rejection of Russia claims that the United States brought the charges only to torpedo the Korean political conference. Chief Soviet Delegate An drei Y. Vishlnsky charged the United States was trying to In flame public opinion with "flagrant lies" about atrocities. India, which heads the Neu- t r a 1 Prisoner Repatriation Committee in Korea, abstained in the vote. However, India's top diplomat, Mrs.. Vljaya Lakshml Pandit, said the chief U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr, had "shown he had Lodge, Jr., had "shown he has case. (Continual Pan I. Cehuaa t) Malenkov Not For Big 4 Meet London VP) Moscow radio Wednesday denied a resort that Premier Georgl Malenkov had Indicated willingness to attend a high level Big Four conference. . The radio broadcast thia dispatch of Tass, the official Soviet news agency: "The French Press Agency, referring to a British source has circulated a report alleg ing that a proposal has been made to u. M. Malenkov, chairman of the council of mnisters of the USSR, to take part in a conferene of the heads of the governments of the four powers the' USSR. the United States, Britain and France and that G. M. Mal enkov has informed the Brit ish government through For eign Miniiter V. M. Molotov, that he is prepared to agree to the convocation of such a con ference. "Tass is authorized to state that the above mentioned re port in no way conforms to reality and it evidently de signed to detract attention from the aims pursued by the suggested separate conference of the heads of the govern ments of the Untied States, Britain and France on Ber muda Island." Car Plunges From Road Into Siuslaw . Ma pie ton VP) A car plung ed from the highway thre miles west of here early Wed nesday and was submerged in the Siuslaw river. A diver sought the body of the driver, Frank L, Sandborn, 38, owners of Sandy's Cafe here A motorist reported that he suddenly noticed the lights of a following car had vanished. A check showed the car had left the highway and gone in to the river. Republicans Score Victory in California Los Angeles () Republi cans have scored a solid vic tory in Calilornia with the elec tion of a congressional candi date who aiked for a vote of confidence in the Eisenhower administration. The substantial triumph of 38-year-old Glenard P. Lips comb in the l!4th Congressional District special election Tues day was heartening to Repub licans because lt came after a string of sewn GOP losses in congreslonal district campaigns during 1953, the latest being the upsets In Iew Jeresy and Wisconsin. Lipscomb, a public account ant and . assemblyman in the state legislature, defeated two Democrats and a fellow Repub lican to win the right to serve the district for a year, the un pMpoenator POW Hearings Cancelled for Sixth Time Panmunjom VP) Interviews with North Korean and Chi nese war prisoners who have refused to go horn wen can celed today for the sixth con secutive day as the tottering explanation program moved nearer collapse. s..in Ctiotvuuu command almost automatically called off Interviews scheduled for to morrow after the Communists insisted again on seeing 365 Chinese prisoners missed last Thursday by stalling Red per suaders. Lt Gen. K. S. Thlmayya, Indian chairman of the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commis sion (NRRC) stayed at his headquarters here, apparently ready to make a second trip to Kaesong to talk with the Red high command. Armistice Day Taut in Korea Western Front, Korea J-B Armistice Day 1953 was a day of uneasy truce in Korea. As on that first Armistice day in 1918, the shooting bad stopped. But here it may start again. United Nations troops of the Eighth army hope for the best and prepare for the worst Their position are dug and their weapons em placed. They look to the north and wait Across a three-mile-wide neutral buffer zone a giant communist army also (its and wait. . The soldiers wait and the diplomats talk at Panmunjom. The summer warmth has gone from the bleak Korean hills. The chill of winter is here. Men huddled in bunkers or improved their entrenchments along the 135-mile-front So intense was the watching that nerves were taut. Marine Planes Killed 13 61$ Tokyo VP) Get). John E. Hull's headquarters announced today it was planes of the U. S. 1st marine air wing that acci dentally bombed a front line artillery position in Korea Jan. 8, 1953, killing 13 American soldiers and wounding nine. It was the first official state ment fixing responsibility for the mistake bombing. The Far East command is sued a brief statement saying a Joint investlagtion had found marine planes were involved in the nccident after U. S. army headquarters in Washington in a rebuttal of correspondents criticism of military censor ship in the Far East said the report of the investigation was available at Hull's public in formation office. LUMBER OPERATOR DIES Portland U.fS Jefferson Davis Cook, 88, long time Ore gon lumber and mining oper ator, died at his home yester day. Cook came to Oregon from Maine in 1890 and built a shoe factory at North Dalles, Wash. expired term of Norris Poulion a Republican, who resigned to take over his new lob as mayor or Los Angeles. Lipscomb, backed by the Re publican Party organization, won the race with 42,880 votes. Running No. 2. was George Arnold, backed by the Demo cratic Party organization, with 34,545 votes. This was on the basis of complete semi-official returns. The count for the other Republican, State Assem blyman John L. E. Collier, was 3,616 and for the other Demo crat, Irving Markham, 1.138. Lipscomb will have to run again for the office la the spring primaries, if he wants to attempt to keep the scat for an other two-year term beginning in January Ot 1955. Voices Faith in Patriotism of Ex-President Washington P) Fred deal Eisenhower declare- Wedaea day he doeaat belUve fanner President Tram an woald knew ingly do anything to damag the United States avd, person) Xy, m Merer weald Bav. sak poenaed the ex-President tB the Barry Dexter White cat. For 18 minutes. Elsenhower talked at a news conferene about the roaring political eon troversy touched off by Atty. Gen. Erownell's charge that Truman promoted White, a Treasury official, in 1946 after the riii reported to the wnlta House that White was a Rus sian spy. These points stodd out: 1. Eirtuiiuwer confirmed ba had advance knowledge that Brownell was going to talk about White and the Truman administration in -a speech at Chicago last Friday. But, the President said, Brownell did not say in talking with him that Truman personally had knowledge of FBI report on White when White was pro- moiea. Left It to Brownell ' .. , . ; Further, Eisenhower laid ho had told Brownell he would have to follow his own consci ence and decide what bis duty was. White House Press Sec retary James Hagerty had said last Friday Eisenhower told Brownell it waa his duty to re port to the American people. (Centlnaed en rage I, Cetsssa 6) Probers to Go - V k ' a ' Mm. lololumbio Washington ') Chairman Velde R- I1L, of the House Un- American Activities Committee Wednesday wired Gov. Jamea F, Byrnes of South Carolina that a subcommitte would so to Columbia. S. C. to auestion Byrnes about the Harry Dealer White case. Byrnes had teleeranhed Velde that he could not comply with a committee summons to appear before it in Washington but bad offered to answer ' questions, under oath if desir ed, in Columbia. Byrnes took the position that as a governor he could not be required to leave bis state and remain In Washington at tlM pleasure or tne committee. He said he would reply in writing to questions, or would testify before a subcommittee In fftlnmnt ' ' ' Velde, in a telegram released by his office, replied: "Your courteous telegram is more than appreciated. I feel that your suggestion that a sub committe come to Columbia is an excellent one and will undoubtedly be adopted by the committee. A data mutually convenient will be arranged at soon as possible." Trial Void Claim Of Mossadegh Tehran. Iran VP) Ex-dictator Mohammed Mossadegh claimed Wednesday ha has been hailed before an Iranian military court on treason charges In violation of his own decree. The 73-year-old former pre mierdefiantly maintaining ha still holds th-t post told too five-man army tribunal he had barred military courts from trying civilians In a decree Is sued under th' special dicta torial powers granted him last year by the Majlis lower house of parliament. Mossadegh, ousted by an ar my-backed revolt last August, is accused of defying Shah Mo hammed Reza Pahlevi, trying to overthrow the monarchy and Illegally dissolving the monarchy. The court iit now concerned with whether lt has the authority to try the aged Nationalist leader. . Mossadegh claimed Tuesday no court could try him until the Majlis through legislation nul lifies the plenary powers given him as premier. Weather Details Uutara mtarter Ml htta-m tor. . Twtal M-kjr irNlMHUN: .14 lor thi l.m Mna!, LN. Smi srw4l4uia, Clti Mrml, T.tt. Bin kiitU -13 (mi. UUmtI to VM. wmtk