G apitdl -jfcjl oufna TH1 VBATHER OCCASIONAL LIGHT rata U BlgM, shawtra Saturday wllk partial clearing in afterneea. Little ckuii la temBeratara. Law tonight 44; high 8atar day, I. FINAL EDITION 65th Year, No. 271 SuHJSt: Salem, Oregon, Friday, November 13, 1953 7ft Pages Price 5c Fair Group lo Reclassify All Beneficiaries 5-Man Committee To Report on Fairs And Shows in State Br JAMES O. OLSON . . Membe.-t at the legislative and reaolatiana committee at the Orefea Fair association prepared a resolution Friday calling for a five-man fact finding committee to re -classify county lain and ahowi that are beneficiaries at the pari mutual racing fund. Kenneth Fridiey, of Sherman county, wheat fanner and 4-H leader, chairman of the leffisla- man Chindren of Molalla, for many years president of the fair association, will present the resolution Jointly at the Friday afternoon meeting. Its passage is virtually assured. 1 The scope of the investigation will be to determine wnat oene ficiaries are dedicated to pro motion of agriculture pursuits and a report will be made at the next meeting of the association, to be held lust prior to the con vening of the 1955 legislature. (CenUnncs ma Pate a. Calumn () Wind Up Hunt For Reds in GE . Albany, N. Y. Mv--Sen. Mc Carthy (R., Wis.) Friday wound up the opening phase of hii hunt lor communism in de fense plants with what he call ed "strong evidence" of espion age at the General Electric Co.'f huge main plant in Sche nectady. The senator told newsmen that three of Friday'i seven witnesses before his Senate in vestigations committee hearing had declined to say whether they ever had been spies. It all adds up to a "very danger ous picture," McCarthy told newsmen. ' "Whenever a witness invok ed the fifth amendment" on such a question, McCarthy said, that "makes it clear they've bean engaged ln,-apiongJ-, Benson Tours Drought Area Santa Fe, N.M, MV-Secretary of Agriculture Benson told New Mexico ranch and farm representatives Friday his drought program is aimed at saving the foundation herds of bona fide producers, but not necessarily those "of the speculators." Benson and his party of 20, Including newsmen and photo graphers, are making a quick tour of Western drought re gions. He spoke briefly at a break fast meeting at which he sat between Acting Gov. Tibo Chavez iand U.S. Rep. Demp sey, two Democrats. Dempsey has been among the congres sional critics oi Benson's dt ps r t m e n t a 1 reorganization which abolished the regional offices of the Soil Conserva tion Service. Benson told the meeting bis department had found it "hard to refuse certain demands i made upon it. "It was not that we are un sympathetic, he said, "but we feel it would je a disservice to adopt any program that ap peared unworkable. Occasional Rain 5-Day Forecasl More rain but comparative ly mild temperatures feature the iive day weather outlook for valley regions, reports the weather bureau. Occasional light rain is due tonight, showers Saturday with partial clearing, then rain again by late Sunday. Only a tracs of rain was re corded for Salem during the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Friday, but cloudy skies prevailed. The weather bureau re ported this morning a series of storm centers are moving westward across the North Pacific to continue the inter mittent rains for the coming week. Weather Details 4ar. 1. TUI H.tat rttlltaU: lrMt for Malftn I.Wi araL t.sa. SiMB arttlalUtlM. I Bt aOTMi. Tax. m Mrtt, At hot. llnM tr la. Mololov Says Big 3 Blocked Big 5 Meeting Refusal to Include Red China Pre vented Harmony Moscow VP Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, In a rare aews conference Friday night, accused the Big Three Western powers at blocking a foreign ministers' conference. He restated a Soviet demand that ii such a conference can be beld it must include Red China and deal first and fore most with "measure for reduc ing international 'tension." Molotov charged President Eisenhower was wrong in claiming the latest Soviet note to the West "manifest -d no in tention to get together but an intention to create more diffi culties." Soviet Unit tor Feaca Molotov asserted that on the contrary the Soviet Union was working for a conference to get together and reduce inter national tension, end the arms race and plan for European se curity. Molotov met correspondents of the Western, the Soviet and the Eastern press in the con ference room of his foreign ministry. Dressed in a dark blue double-breasted s u i t , he stood under a painting of Sta lin. After reading a prepared statement in which he restated the Soviet terms for a Big Four and Big Five talks, Molotov submitted briefly to questions and answers. (Continued fat a. Cannon ) Confesses to Slaying Spouse Richmond, Calif. W Rich mond police said today a 40-year-old woman confessed that she and her "boy friend" stab bed her husband to death while he slept Then, Mrs. Rowena Johnson said, she went to sleep along side her husband's knife-torn bodv. . . . Inspector Darrell Davis said Mrs. Johnson signed a con fession admitting she and Harry D. Waller, 42, a sewing machine salesman, planned and executed Lawrence M. John son's death. "They planned it together," Davis said, quoting Mrs.- John son. "She stood by while Wal ler stabbed her husband, and made no effort to stop him. She gave Waller a pair of gloves to drive away in her car, so his fingerprints would not show." Battery AD-X2 Without Merit Washington () A commit' tee of the National Academy of Sciences sided Friday with the findings of the Bureau of Stan dards that the controversial battery additive AD-X2 "is without merit" The committee, appointed by Secretary of Commerce Weeks to evaluate the work of the bu reau in testing AD-X2, recom mended that no additional tests of the material be made. The California maker of the battery additive, Jess Ritchie, -claims that AD-X2 will rejuvenate w o r n-out but mechanically sound storage batteries of the type used in automobiles. In reporting to Weeks that its information supports the AD-X2 concludsion of the bu reau, the committee said the work done by this government scientific agency in testing bat teries "is excellent" Trails of Morse and Young G.O.P. Cross The trails of republicans and Sen. Wayne Moise will cross in Salem Friday but that doesn't bother either the Young Republicans or the Jun ior senator. The Young Republicans opened a two-day state con vention In the Senator Hotel Friday afternoon and will have a dinner meeting Friday night when Robert A. Elliott of Medford, chairman of the republican state central com mittee. Over in the senior high school. Sen. Mcrse, who bolt ed the republican party and styled himself as an independ ent, will tpeak under the aus Of 'xr Q Truman Raps Fear Hysteria New York VP) Former President Harry S. Truman says fear and hysteria "are being manipulated in this country today purely for po litical reasons. Truman spoke to 1,000 per sons last night at a $100-a- plate dinner tc benefit the Hebrew University of Jerusa lem. The university bestow ed on Truman its Solomon Public Award for distinguish ed public service. The former president made no direct reference in hit 13 mlnute speech to the contro versy over the Harry Dexter White case. ' ' He said truth wavthe beat answer to the propaganda of communism ana added: "To find truth, men must be free from thought control, must be free of pressure from the state. Under Faclst and Nazi rule, the schools had to teach the false doctrine of pre judice and hate ... to teach what is popular but not true. Let's not do that here." Greet Royalty In Los Angeles Los Angeles l The King and Queen of Greece arrived here Friday morning for a three-day visit King Paul and Queen Fred erika came by train from San Francisco. They were greeted by a party of about 75 civic, busi ness, film industry and reli gious leaders. Queen Frederika wore a gold flecked suit with a perky lav ender hat, the King a blue double-breasted business suit. Southern Californians will show the couple this area's scenic, cultural and industrial high spots. ROMULO NOT TO SERVE Manila VP Canos P. Romu lo, former Philippines ambas sador to Washington and for mer U.N. Assembly president, said Friday he would not serve officially in the new adminis tration of President Ramon Magsaysay. pices of the Military Order of the Purple Heart tonight at 8. George Jones, national ' committeeman of the state Young Republican Federation and convention chairman, said Friday that the dates of the state convention had been set months ago but If Sen Morse wished to talk in Salem on the same night as the conven tion opened, that was his priv ilege. And Morse wrote to his sponsors and said it didn't bother him if the Young Re publicans hold their conven tion In Salem the same day of j my scheduled address. (Can tinned aa rage a, Col tuna ! EARLY MORNING INCIDENT New York, Nov. 13 Comedian George Jessel, taking an early morning stroll today with former president Harry S. Truman, asks an unidentified woman who tried to break In on the strolling party, to clear the way. Incident occuired as Truman, dark coat, Edward Jacobson, left, his one-time partner, and Jessel were walking in the Rockteller Center area In mid-town Manhattan. Others are newsmen and spectators. (AP Wirephoto) US to Give Foreign Aid If Others Come Through United Nations. N. Y. The United States pledged itself Friday to give more, up to !.44 million dollars, for U. N. Tech nical assistance to underdevel oped countries next year, pro vided other governments also give more. But It insisted the other contributors take on a larger share pf the cost. .Ambassador James -J. Wads- worth, deputy U.'S. represen tative to the U. N., told the fourth technical assistance con ference, "The Congress of the Kidnaped Girl Freed by Captor New York VP) A 13-year- old girl was found Friday ap parently unharmed after being kidnaped from her East Side Manhattan home and held cap tive for almost four hours by a scar-faced man. The girl, Dorothea Del Lon go, was wearing only pajamas and a coat when she was forced into a car about 9 a.m. after the scar-faced man had terror ized her family for an hour. Police said she reported the man put her out of the car about 9 a.m. after giving her 5. Police said the girl had been riding around in the kid naper's car for about four hours. She still was wearing the pa jamas and coat when found In front of the Woodside branch post office in Queens. Police broadcast an alarm for a two-tone green sedan, be lieved to be the one used by the kidnaper. Airlines Frown On Jet Engines Wood-Ridge. NJ. () The head of a major aircraft en gine company saya jet engines are fine for the military, but for the airlines piston-an-pro-pcller combination! will be satisfactory for years to come. "You won't be able to take a passenger through the sonic barrier speed of sound for ears without scaring hell out of him," Roy T. Hurley, presi dent and chairman of the Wright Aeronautical Division of the Curtis-Wright Corp., told a new conference Thurs day. Meanwhile, he said, the turbo-compound engine, in which an exhaust-driven tur bine Increases the power of a piston engine by about one fifth, will be adequate for high speeds under, that of sound. He said the turboprop combination-jet engines driving propellers, will carry into still higher speeds "because we now have propellers that can take up to 800 miles an hour." V TV- 0 United States has Indicated its strong belief that the propor tion of United States support must decrease. This view is shared by the executive branch at well." . ' For the 1953 budget the U. S. pledged $12,767,145 at last year's conference and other countries altogether pledged 8Hiilliotrr -or' For-next year, Wadsworth said, this country will match the first 814 million pledged by other governments in the same ratio of 60-40, with a pledge of 12 million dollars. Beyond that figure, the U. S. will match further amounts up to three million dollars pledged by other countries at the rate of 40-50. with a max imum pledge of two million, provided other contributors pledged lltt million, the U. S. would give 14 million. Ban in Boston On Strip-tease Boston, (ff) ' Boston, a stronghold for burlesque for more than a half century, may never again be thrilled by the tease of the stripper. The Board of Censors yes- aerday ordered the city's two burlesque theaters the 108-year-old Old Howard and the larger Casino closed for the rest of the year because their shows were too dirty. Mayor John B. Hynes, as spokesman for the board, said he didn t know whether the li censes would be renewed. And he hinted very broadly that if burleiqie is allowed to re turn, the strippri will have to do a fadeout. Strip-teasers have been out lawed from Boslon night clubs for more than !wo years. The Old Howard and Ca sino theaters were ordered closed at a result of a muni cipal court conviction last week of three strip-tcacers and the managers of both theaters on chirges they pre sented and participated In im moral shows. Quickie Strike Qn Fruit Trucks Portland UP) AFL Team sters and Warehousemen re turned to work late Friday morning at the Pacific Fruit and Product Co. plant after a nine-hour strike. The unions, charging that the firm had violated contract!, potted a picket line. Dick Carey, plant manager, laid the dispute wii "settled satisfac torily." The company supplies an et timited 1,200 Western Oregon and Southwettern Washington food market. With Spy Case Subpoena Ike Arrives In Quebec for Two-Day Visit Ottawa, Ont. (Pi Under a leaden sky, President Elsen hower arrived In the Canadian capital Friday for a two-day visit He will address the Can adian Parliament Saturday. , Mechanical troubles delayed the special presidential train en route from Washington, and it arrived here IS minutes late. The President and Mrs. Eisen hower stepped onto a red car pet at Union Station to receive the greetings of Prime Minister Louise St. Laurent whose visit to Washington last May is being officially repaid. Massey Present Gov. Gen. Vincent Massey, brother of the actor Raymond Massey and Canada's first native-born governor general, also was on hand, along with members of the Canadian cab inet His position is that of the Queen's representative, a job with strictly nominal powers in the government. Massey and St Laurent will share honors as the President's host here. I Con tinned a ra a. Cabman 4) French Debates Foreign Policy Paris VP) Government lead ers mapped plana Friday to push an early full dress Na tional Assembly debate on France's foreign policy. Op position of tome deputies to the session hts aroused fears the Big Three Bermuda conference may be postponed. TIM) dispute involves French politicking in advance of the election of a successor to Presi dent Vincent Auriol, whose seven-year term is up January to. .. under mvira parliamen tary rules, the government will have to resign the moment a new president tfkes office. The foreign affairs debate was requested by the govern ment to give Premier Joseph Laniel and Foreign Minister Georges Bidault both expect ed to be presidential candidatei the benefit of parliamentary backing when they leave Dec. 4 for the British, French and United States talks. 5 Power Meet Asked, Trieste Washington VPi Yugoslavia Friday was reported to be pressing for informal talks on the Trieste dispute as pre liminary step toward setting up a five-power conference. The United States, Britain and France favor holding such a conference. Negotiations to arrange it have been underway lor several weeks, with France taking the lead. These negotiation iniwir tn have deadlocked, however, over the positions of Italy and Yugoslavia, the principal par- uet in the dispute. Italiv's notition la that it will not go into a conference unlett ine united States and Britain have first turned over Zone A to Italian control, as they have announced they intend to do eventually. Yugoslavia's position is that a conference must be held prior to the relcsse of Zone A to Italy. Eden Accuses Egypt Of Breaking Pledges London l) Foreign Sccre tary Anthony Eden said Fri day the Egyptian government has disregarded its pledge guaranteeing free parliamen tary elections in the Sudan. "More than this," he con tinued, "the Egyptians have clearly shown they have no In tention of allowing the Sudan ese people freely to hooie their own future ttatut." The foreign secretary made the charge in a parliamentary written reply to Brig. O. L. Prior-Palmer, Conservative member of Parlliment The Sudanese ire choosing their firtt national parliament In in election being conducted by phtaes until Nov. 23, Thi REJECTS SUBPOENA i a , ' wv" '. 'l j "n Tom C. Clark, associate. Justice of Supreme Court Resume Talks On Peace Parley Panmunjom WV-Top U. S. and Red negotiators return to morrow to discuss plans for a Korean peace conference after a week's recess while staff ad visers worked In secret on an agenda. The advisers' ended a aeries of aix secret meeting! today but refused to give any Infor mation on the results. Howev er, they apparently reached some sort of agreement since the top delegates were called back. Meanwhile, ' Gen. John E Hull, U. N. Far East comman der, aaid in Korea he would 'absolutely" press for the re lease of all remaining anti-Red Korean and Chinese war pris oner! on Jan. 22 if the already lata conference hasn't begun by men. By this, Hull meant the U. N would object to any Red claim that any prisoners be held longer for any reason. Stand Pat to Win Says Rhee Seoul UP) President Syng- man Rhee said Friday "If we stand firm" from the commu nists "will come to terms" on Korea. The fiery president predict ed the communists would ac cept a proposal to withdraw Chinese troops from North Korea and all allied forces from the south, "because that would save the communists' face." "If this happens," Rhee add ed, in in Interview, "the North' Korean communists would flee. They would have to. "All we have to do is stand firm." Rhee did not specify what he means by standing firm but implied it involved the threat of force U no agreement were reached. The 78-year-old Rhee talk ed anlmately In English for an hour with three American newsmen accompanying U.S. Vice-Pretidcnt Richard Nixon on his world tour. TOO DRUNK TO WALK Detroit UJS Lauri E. Nieni :S, was fined $150 yesterday for recklets driving when he told the judge "I was too drunk to walk." million squire mile territory, located at the headwaters of the Nile, is jointly administered at present by Britain and Egypt. A British-Egyptian agree ment on the Sudan, announced last February, provided for self-rule and the right of the Sudanese to decide within three years whether they wish to become independent or join Egypt Britain and Egypt have ac cused each other of interfering In the election campaign. The Egyptian guidance minister. Ma). Salih Salem, challenged Eden Nov, 6 to prove British charges. Comply jUSl.Ce OftUS Questionnaire Consideration : Washington Supreme) Court Justice Tern Clark re fmsed Friday to comply with snbpoena to testify fcefere the. House Un-American Activities Committee an toe Barry Dex ter White case. Clark offered, however, to give "serious consideration" to any written questions the com mittee may wish to tend him. ' In a letter to the committee, , Clark based hi! rejection of the subpoena on the premise that the judiciary branch of the gov ernment is Independent oi the legislative. This it the same constitu tional basis on which former President Truman declined Thursday to honor a committee subpoena.. Truman's stand was that the executive branch of the government was not subject to authority of the congression al branch. To Submit 10 Questions After a closed committee dlicusslai of Clark's letter, Chairman Velda R., 111.) an nounced that the "consensus" was to propose written ques tions to Clark after the com mittee heart Atty. Gen. Brown elL (Conclude an Page , Cabnaa 8) Vishinsky Cites American Plots United Nations. N.Y. VP) Russia's Andrei Y. Vlthinaky charged Friday that aggressive) American plots against the So viet Union have created inter national tensions making dis armament impossible. - 11. llalj.,1 IhM- M,l ... plee of the alleged American policy si the establishment of a ring of air bases surround fn- 19, teal- nl-n- 4k. militarisation oi Western Ger many and thwarting of Kor ean peace conference. Vithlntky claimed the Unit. ed States planned bombing at tacks against Soviet eiUes from Its ring of bases, He told the U.N.' 60-natlon Political . Committee Russia 'must strengthen our might to repel any such attack. Are wa supposed to be so impotent as not to be able to repel the planned bombing attacks?" he asked. . Puget Power Rejects Merger Seattle vn The directors of the Puget Sound Power tt Light Co., hsve voted to re main in business, canceling plans for the 94 million dollar company to merge with Wash ington Water Power Co., or be sold to five public utilitydis triets. , The decision was innounced Thursday by the power com pany's president, Frank Mc Laughlin, never a strong advo- cate of the merger with the Spokane firm, who recently announced he would work to preserve USP&L as a "golr.g 'lutinesi." Five public utility districts in Wathingtcn hava been en gcged in extensive negotiations with the company for a joint purchase of its properties. The plan has been marled in court proceedings and difficulty in raising Uie money needed. Soviet Sanctions Real Love Plays Moscow W Along with all the Dromlaed nnur i--Vvw and Vacuum eleanera th Hiu. sian people ire due to get a lot oi real love in Soviet nov els and plays. The macazine Theater aava the Soviet people want love on ine Human stage, passionate love and not any old milksop stuff that just makes love a subject for theoretical discus custion. There wilt be love in novels too, and it will be the pas sionate, real thing. On this score Komsomolskaya Pravda, . the young communist newspa per, has discussed a novel by ' Nikoall Toman called "Secret Agent," a theme popular with Russian adventure story writ ers. ..