Capital jkjJouff n THE WEATHER OCCASIONAL BAD) tonight, neatly cloudy with showers, Friday. Little change la tem perature. Law tonlxht, 41; hick Friday, (t. FINAL EDITION V '0 8BCI I' 65th Year, No. 270 SSfASSiSS Salem, Oregon, Thursday, November 12, 1953 34 Pages Pay Boosts for Stale Prison ' Guards Asked Board of Control to Have Civil Service Make Check, Repel By JAMES D. OLSON After member of the SUte Board of Control war Impor tuned to reeommend salary in creases for penitentiary guards, the board decided to request the Civil Service Commission to make a report on the sub ject and also discuss the mat ter with Warden Clarence T. Gladden. Leo E. Butts, representative of the Oregon Public Employ es council of the AT L and Mrs. Clare P. Argow, of the Oregon Prison association made the pleas for increased pay and higher Qualifications for the prison guards. Big Turnover Butt declared that prison statistics showed an eight per cent monthly turnover in guards, and contended that with such a large turnover, guards were in no position to attempt to "change the entire course of men's lives" in the rehabilitation program. "Guards must have sufficient tenure of employment," Butts said, "to become intimately ac quainted with the men if they hope to rehabilitate them. (Continued on Pas 5, Column I) Europe's Press Raps Subpoena London () West Europe's editors trotted out their big black headlines again Thurs- day to tell readers the latest developments on the subpoena of ex-President Truman in the Harry Dexter White case But the only extensive edi- torial comment Was In Britain, where papers of all political shades declared that the sum mons for Truman to appear be fore the House Committee) on Un-American Activities will blacken the name of America in the court of world opinion. One or two continental papers blamed President Eisen hower for what they called a new Republican attack on the former President. Communist papers cited the subpoena to show the "hys teria" In the United States. In Paris, the leftist but non communist paper Combat at tacked President Eisenhower for "lifting the brake on ex treme right-wing Republican ism." Golden Era For Medicine Chicago (Pi The president of the American Medical Assn. said Thursday that society is "passing through a golden era of tremendous medical ad vances' and is "headed for a future In which the doctor of medicine will devote most of his time to disease prevention." Dr. Edward J. McCormick of Toledo, Ohio, told delegates to a convention of the National Society for Crippled Children and adults: "Research workers are mak ing magnificent progress in all fields. Spectacular devices such as the mechanical heart and lung and the mechanical kid ney demonstrate man's ability to ferret out the long-hidden secrets of the human body. Op erations upon the heart, the brain, the lungs and the stom ach and other vital organs, im possible 25 years ago, are now being accomplished with safe ty and success." U.S. Gets First Turbojet Engine Washington UPi The Air Force said Thursday the United States has its first Jet engine "with an official rating In the 10.000-pound thrust class." It is the Pratt tt Whitney J57. which powers the Air Force's eight-engine heavy bomber, the Boeing B-52, and its new supersonic fighters, the North, American F100 Super Sabre and the Convair F102. At East Hartford. Conn., Wil liam P. Gwinn, general mana ger of Pratt & Whitney aircraft division of United Aircraft Corp., said in a statement the JS7 is "at least two years in advance ol any other engine we know of in the turbojet field," including British ones. City to Ask Drop-Arms at 1 1 Crossings . Wigwags Demanded At Others On SP Main Line By STEPHEN A. STONE What the city of Salem will demand of the Southern Pacific company la protection at the If trade crossings on Its mala line throurh Salem was oat lined Thursday at a conference in the office of City Manager J. L, Franaen. The demand will be made at a hearing before the State Pub lic Utilities Commission De cember z. included will be a contention that drop-arms and their accompanying warnings should be installed at no less than 11 crossings, and that some type of moving warning signal should be installed at others. Women Investigate The background of the move ment for safer traffic is an In vestigation and report made by the Salem unit of the League of Women Voters, which has been In the hands of the city administration for some time. (Continued en Pat . Cemma t) Big 3 After 4 Power Talks United Ntoins. N.Y. C The United States, Britain and Franco have proposed direct four-power talk with Russia in an attempt to break the log jam on disarmament and atomic weapon control meas ures, i The suggestion was made in a resolution submitted Wed nesday to the U.N.'s 80-nation political ' committee. There was no Immediate Soviet re action but Kremlin represen tatives here have supported similar proposals in the past. The resolution suggested that the 12-natlon .U.N. dis armament commission spon sor the talks. It urged the Big Four to "seek in private an acceptable solution and re port to the disarmament com mission." Fatal Bomber Crash in Italy Naples. Italy W A U. S. navy torpedo bomber plunged into a house on the outskirts of Naples Thursday, killing three Americans and two Italian children. Dead were the pilot and two American soldiers, passengers on the plane bound from Rome to Naples. The navy did not reveal their names pending notification of kin. Two small girls, pulled from the debris of the house, died in a hospital. The plane's co pilot and another passenger also an American soldier, were gravely injured. Four other Italians in the house when the plane crashed also were in jured. The plane, out of Rome with mail and passengers, appeared to be in trouble as it ap proached the airport here. Sawyer Made Member Of Water, Power Group Washington U.Robert W. Sawyer, former editor and publisher of the Bend Bulletin and chairman of the Oregon Capitol Planning Commission, was named by former Presi dent Herbert Hoover as one of 24 members of a task force to study federal activities in the water and power resources field. Mr. Hoover, chairman of a new commission on govern ment reorganization, announc ed Oct. 20 that retired Adm. Ben Moreell, board ' chairman of Jones It Laughlinel Steel Corp., will head the task force. The power study Is consid ered one of the more important tasks of the new Hoover com mission. Among other things, it will cover developments in navigation, flood control and reclamation. In a speech in April, Mr. Hoover urged the government to "get out of the business of leneratitfc and diatrihutins- power." He outlined a solution I wnicD included creation of a commission to reorganize the whole federal power program. in addition to those named I above those chosen for the 1 ,' Z'. ' til n: Ike and Mamie Off to Ottawa Washington UJ! President and Mrs. Eisenhower leave by train this afternoon for a three- day trip to Ottawa where they will be guests of Canadian Prime Minister Louis St. Lau rent Mr. Eisenhower is scheduled to address the Canadian House of Commons Nov. 14. The President told Ills news conference yesterday that his address will give him an oppor tunity to pay his respects to the Canadian people to whom Americans feel so close. He said it will be a general dis cussion of problems common to the two countries. The President emphasized that his trip was purely a social call returning the visit last May of St. Laurent to Washington. 30 Reported Killed In Argentine Crash Buenos Aires, Argentina W A four - engine passenger plane and a military plane col lided over Santa Fe Province Thursday . and first reports said 27 passengers and three mili tary men were killed. The crash occurred about ZOO miles northwest of Buenos Aires near the town of Maxi- Weather Details SUxlMa TMMroar. lil Mtalmam t ifty, 40. TtUI 94-lMor rcllutlM: .111 far Mth: l.tot Brftl. MS. Scauo rclIUtia, SSSi raal. 7.. River krlikl. -t.l ti. (arxrt r TJ.S. Wnlk- tr Stmi ) Robert T7. Sawyer, for mer publisher of Bend Bul letin selected by Herbert Hoover on water-power In vestigation task force. power-water task force includ- ed: J. Bracken Lee; Julian Hlnde, Los Angeles; Albert C. Mattel. San Francisco: Harry w. Morrison, Boise. Idaho, and William D. Shannon, Seattle. 7 JT .&mmr J i J! eLa Jk PAUSE IN PLANS Washington, Nov. 12 Chairman Harold Velds' (R., . 111.), of the House Un-American Activities Committee whose plans to question former President Truman and others in the Harry Dexter White case apparently have hit a snag, grins at his home last night as he chats with newsmen who wanted to know who was going to testify and when. The chairman said he would call a meeting of his group when two absent members of the committee were back in Washington. Three Democratic members of the committee said they heard there will be no hearings this week. (AP Wirephoto) McCarthy Told Reds In Albany, N.Y. ) A mys tery witness told Sen. McCar thy (R., Wis.) Thursday, the latter said, that the commu nists had a man in the Gen- Elect Hubbard Spokane Bishop Williamsburg. Va. W) The Ht. Rev. Russell Sturgis Hub bard, suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan, Thursday was elected bishop of the Missionary District of Spo kane, Wash. Bishop Hubbard, a native of Philadelphia, is 31. He Is a nephew of a former presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, the Rt. Rev. James Dewolf Perry. Hubbard has a reputation as an excellent preacher. Throughout his ministry, his particular interests have been in the fields of Christian edu cation and social relations, and the home missions of the church. He was graduated from Har vard University and Trinity College of Cambridge, England, and was ordained in 1928. Hubbard's election took place at a closed session of the House of Bishops held in Bruton Par ris Church. Benson Seeks To Serve People Columbus, Ohio UP) Secre tary of Agriculture Benson, tar get of some farm leaders and congressmen because of his farm policies, declared today he is not interested in "person al popularity." The GOP farm chief said he is striking ahead in an effort to develope a sound agricultural program that would serve "all of agriculture" and "all the people." In a speech prepared for a meeting of the Association of Land Grant Colleges and Uni versities, Benson said it would have been "comparatively easy" for him to "yield to the demands ... to go olf on a round of patchwork program- ming. "There Is no easy panacea for agricultur e." he declared. There is no magic formula that will set everything right. Patchwork remedies quack remedies patent medicine remedies ire dime a dozen. and that's all some of them are wortn. hJiddbdrattiw-- eral Electric company's super- secret Knolls atomic power laboratory near Schenectady. McCarthy told newsmen that the witness, whom he de clined to identify, also named 13 employes of GEs huge main Schnectady plant as hav ing been members of the com munist party last February, No names were made public by the senator, who Thursday closed hearings on what he termed "alleged communist infiltration" of the GE works in Schnectady. McCarthy, chairman of the senate inves tigations committee, is acting here as a one-member sub committee. He described the mystery witness as a young man who became a dues-paying mem ber of the communist party in 1949 and dropped out last February, McCarthy said the young man voluntarily came here from Toronto to testify. The senator said the witness testified that a New York City official of the party disclosed to him that the Reds had a man in the Knolls lab, oper ated by GE for the Atomic Energy commission. It is now developing an atomic power plant for U.S. Navy subma rines. Socket! Tries to Buy LA News Los Angeles ( The Daily News, a Los Angeles morning newspaper, said that It has agreed to sell a substantial in terest, provided certain finan cial requirements are met, to Sheldon F. Sackett, who oper ates newspapers and radio and television stations in Califor nia, Oregon and Washington. Robert L. Smith, president and publisher of The News, said Sackett came to him some time ago and offered buy an interest in the newspaper. No deal has been completed. The News said that Time Magazine prints an article in its Nov. 18 issue on the streets Thursday saying that the news paper is on the block, that va rious prominent persons "rang ing from Averill Harriman to Jimmy Roosevelt have backed away from purchasing the pa per because of its heavy losses. The Time article. say the News, "conveys the impression that Sackett has purchased The News . . . and speculates on his ability to raise the money to purchase the property, this in ! Itself is something ot cqntra- iOieuon. Truman Rejects Subpoena To Appem 'Before Probers Vaughan Says Doesn't Recall White Report '' Washington ) Harry H. Vaughan testified Thursday he had ne recollection of getting any FBI reports on Harry Dex. ter White. But he added that if Atty. Gen. Brownell said such reports were sent ta him "I would not question it for a moment." Washington W Chair man Jenner (H., Ind.) of the Senate internal security subcommittee said Thurs day there wA "no doubt" that derogatory information . on Harry Dexter White was delivered to former Presi dent Truman. Jenner, making the state ment at the conclusion of a subcommittee hearing, said he saw no reason for calling Truman as a witness "be cause the record speaks lor itself." .. . Brownell, in touching off the explosive White case last Fri day, said that reports showing White was a Russian spy were sent to former President Tru man through Vaughan, his mil itary aide. (Oantlnned on Pare i. Column 1) U.S.-Canadian Trade Group Washington W President Eisenhower announced Thurs day the United States and Can ada are setting up a joint com mittee to smooth out trade and other economic problems be tween the .two countries. Member of the group, to be known formally as the United States-Canadian Committee on Trade and Economic Affairs, will Be of cabinet rank. Eisenhower said the commit tee will meet at least once a year alternately in Washington and Ottawa to consider "broad questions affecting the har monious economic relations of the two countries." Creation of the board was first suggested by Canadian Prime Minister St. Laurent during a visit to Washington last Mny. It would parallel, on economic matters, the joint de fense board which supervises cooperation between the two countries on defense matters. 2 Killed in Riot For Mossadegh Tehran, Iran UP) Two dem onstrators were killed by po lice gunfire Thursday as thou sands of supporters of ex-Premier Mohammed Mossadegh took their ousted leader's case into the streets. Torrential rain and heavy army and police guards com bined to take most of the fire out of a communist-backed ef fort to promote a general strike in support of the ex-dictator, now on trial at Saltanatabad prison. About 20 demonstrators were arrested in various parts of the capital during the morning and hundreds of shops whose own ers back Mosadegh were shut tered but little pro-Mossadegh activity was in evidence be yond the stealthy distribution of communist leaflets. German Heirs Lose in Oregon Will Dispute Lack of reciprocation be tween Germany under Adolph Hitler and the United States will keep German relatives of John Krachler from getting the estate he willed them, the Oregon supreme court ruled Thursday. A tut case was brought against the state land board by Herbert Brownell as Unit ed States attorney general, with George Hagmair of San Francisco, a first cousin of Krachlr's joining as interven er and also as appellant. The question before the Oregon high court was wheth er or not a resident and citi zen of Germany could take the property under the will of a naturalized American cit Indians Plan For Screening If Reds Quit Panmunjora W) The Indian command today worked on de- tailed plans for screening cntnese and Korean war pri soners if the communists aban don efforts to woo them home. Red interviews with prison ers refusing repatriation were canceled for the eighth straight day when the communists re peated their demand to see 3S8 POWs who were skipped by stalling persuaders last Thurs day. Official quarters said the Red move appeared to be mere ly a maneuver while the com munist high command decides whether to go along with new Indian rules for running the interviews or torpedo the ex planation program. Lt Gen. K. S. Thlmayya, Indian chairman of the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commis sion, was ready for a trip to communist headauarter a t Xaesong whenever the Reds' answer is ready. There was no word from the communists. New Mail Given Pro-Red POW Panmuniom, Korea OJJD The United Nations turned over a new batch of mail for pro-Communist American prisoners to day in what might be a test of their determination to stay with the Reds. Mall for all 22 ot the Ameri cans still in Indian custody was given to the Indian custodial force today by the U. S, Army mall officer, Lt. Robert C Her bert, Macomb, III. ' ... Three "leader'' of the 132 South Korean, American and one British prisoner alleged by me neas to prefer Communism to freedom protested that the last bundle of mall contained material intended to "coerce' them to return to democracy. They demanded that the In dians stop giving them "propa ganda man. Today's mall will be offered to the men individually. 50,000 Koreans Greet Nixon Seoul vn An estimated 90,000 South Koreans braved an icy wind Thursday to greet U. S. Vice President Richard Nixon on his arrival in this battered capital. Nixon told top American and Korean officials who met him at the airp-Tt that Korea la "the half-way point and the high point" of his good will tour through the Far East. He said Korea was where "aggressive imperialistic com munism was stopped." The vice president and his wife repeatedly stopped the motorcade which carried them into Seoul to shake hands with cold, shy school chilldren who lined the street. Koreans said Nixon's ges ture helped to ease the hurt resulting from President Eis enhower s failure to make a public appearance during his hurried visit here last Decem ber. Nixon conferred with Pres ident Syngmsn Rhee. izen, Krachler, who died In Portland December 8, 1343. In an opinion written by Justice James T. Brand, said this question was dependent upon the existence of recipro cal rights at that time between Germany and the United States. Justice Brand held that the Hitler regime of Germany permitted unjust discrimina tion against American citizen as- legatees and that on De cember 8, 1943, reciprocal rights did not exist within the meaning of the Oregon law. in the Multnomah county circuit court, Judge James W. Crawford ruled for Brown ell a tn agent to convey the proceeds of Krschler't estate (Concluded en Pag t, Celaaui I) Velde Puts Off HST Summons Indefinitely New York () Former President Harry t, Trumam said Thursday he will set heed a snbpoena to appear Friday before the hens an American activities commit tee. .. .. In a letter to committee Chairman Harold H. - Velde (R., Ill ) which Truman read to a news conference Thurs day, be said: "In spite of my personal willingness to cooperate wlta you, I am constrained by my duties to the people of the United States to decline, te comply." -,. 1 i Shortly -before Truman made public his letter here, Velda announced that Tru man's appearance before the committee had been pottpaa- ta inoeumteiy. Called la While Probe V The committee had called Truman to hear his answer to charges by Attorney , General Herbert Brownell, Jr- that Truman appointed Harry Dex ter White, treasury aide now dead, aa American director of the International Monetary fund, despite an FBI report that White was a Soviet spy. (CenUnoea en rax a, Cshmra el Byrnes Replies To Quiz on HST Washington () James T. Byrne told senators Thursday rta t latlatiecl lormer fresi dent Truman- would - have stopped confirmatioii tt the lata Harry Dexter White's) appoint ment to the International Hon etary Fund in 1946 had the Senate not already approved the-nomination, - Byrnes, who was secretary of state at the time, made the statement In a telegraph reply to question submitted to him by the Senate internal security subcommittee. This added little to the pub lic statement Byrnes made last Monday when he said he talked with Truman about an FBI re- -port linking White to Commu nist activities; suggested with drawing White's nomination; and that Truman made a tele phone call and learned White had already been confirmed by the Senate. Nab Red Agents In LA. Harbor Long Beach, Calif. U A group of "nationally known communist agents" infiltrated a heavy security guard at the Loa Angeles-Long Beach har bor and were taught near a ship loaded with "highly secret cargo," the coast guard dis closed today. The diclosure was made by Capt. Paul D. Kronk, coast guard captain of poii, who was hi charge of government law enforcement at the harbor. The FBI declined to com ment on the disclosure, but said Kronk was fully author ized to report on the incident Kronk said nine persons, fiva ot them identified as "nation ally known communist agent" and "potential saboteurs," were caught in a security area on a port wharf recently after tney had eluded a heavy secur ity guard. The port captain refused to identify the persons, but said a check on flies in government Intelligence and law enforce ment agencies definitely estab lished five of them as being known "communist agents." Douglas Fir Mills Orders Increased Portland W Douglas fir mills have received Increased orders in the last five weeks. putting orders, shipments and production in "good balance," Harris Smith, secretary of the ' West Coast Lumberman' asso ciation, reported Thursday. Inventories, he said, are only a little above last yeer and the unfilled order file 1 about the same as a year ago. . r