imumw.j 4 d THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY tonljht, Saturday, wttk rata tonight. FINAL EDITION uowors tiutlir, etuusg la temperature. 65th Year, No. 289 EoSToS Salem, Oregon, Friday, December 4, 1953 20 Pages Price 5c Uniform Tax Newspaper VICTIM OF MOB 3 V,Mua 98SU For Big Trucks Strike Spreads i In West Looms To Long Island yapixa ill If re U mm r . m mm , Open Conference of Bit J i I It a n m a . Oregon's Weight-Mile Tax for Interstate Trucks to Be Studied . Br JAMES D. OLSON Legislatures ef 11 waters states, lneludlnc Oregon, will k asked to coaslder a unl form formula of taxation tor out-of-state tracks, wklek If generaly adopted will elimi nate the necessity of steles ea terinr -late .negotiated .reci procity agreements as at pres ent Edward Geary, chairman of the legislative highway inter im committee, who recently returned from a meeting in Los Angeles of the Western Interstate Committee on High way Policy Problems, told the committee that the new plan 4 would place a weight-mile tax xor large irucn nsuicn uuu state, similar to the .taxation method utilized all large trucks in Oregon. (Continued oa Pat i. Column I) ifor lsr oui-of-i if truck .t ' for all 7 Bll.. Foot of Snow In Mid-West Minneapolis Wl A storm that dumped more than a foot ef snow In some sections of mid-America buffeted the Da kotas and Minneapolis today as it swept northward into Can ada. Nebraska, Kansas and east ern Colorado also were hit but the snow had all but ended in these states. Schools were closed, motor ists were stranded and com munications knocked out in some areas. . International Falls in Min nesota reported 14 laches of snow. A foot fell in the eastern half of South Dakota. In north-central Nebraska Lexing ton also had a 12-inch total. No large-scale traffic tieups were reported in the Dakotas and Minnesota but some tele phone lines were severed ana driving was hazardous. In eastern South Dakota many schools were closed. Northwesterly winds caused near - blizzard conditions in parts of Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas yesterday. Communications were out in the central Nebraska snow area and in northeastern Ne braska, which got freezing rain. ' Just More Rain 5 Day Forecast "Just more rain" Is the sum mary from the five-day fore cast for the valley from the weather bureau. Friday. As result of the rains through most of the week, rivers of the valley were higher Friday morning, and further slight to moderate rises are due during the next 24 to 48 hours. The Willamette river was up to 9.7 feet at Salem, Friday morning. Rainfall in Salem amounted to .41 of an inch in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. to day. From 10 to 20 inches of new snow were recorded for Cas cade mountain passes this - morning. The Oregon highway com mission is warning all motor ists to use chains in the pass regions. The snow plow was at work on the Santiam pass this morn ing with 12 inches of new snow measured there. Flurries of the white stuff continued during the morning. Government Camp reported 20 inches of new snow this morning, the Willamette pass. 18 inches. Big Elevator For Seattle Seattle, W The Seattle Port Commission disclosed Thursday it plans to build a 4-million bushel waterfront grain elevator as part of what was called the most compre hensive grain-handling facili ty on the Pacific Coast. . Plans for the elevator fol low those suggested by the Cargill Co., which holds a 20 ycar port lease on the Han . fcrd property. As an initial step, the com mission authorized acquisition of a 142,000-square feet Mil waukee Railroad tank farm north of the present elevator Crew Refuses to Handle Ads of Struck N.Y. Dailies New York UP) The Lang Is land Star-Journal halted pub lication Friday when Its stere- otypers refused to handle news and comics at struck newspa pers in Manhattan which were to be printed in the form ef paid advertisements. No material from the adver tisers of the struck papers was involved.. Stephen Rogers, editor of the Queens afternoon paper, said in a statement the stereotype, who make casts for the adver tisements, refused to handle the ads, contending it was "struck work." In Violation of Contract "This action by the stereo typers union, in violation of our contract, destroys a vital link in the newspaper's production line, preventing us from plac ing printed pages on the presses," Rogers said in a state ment "Under the circumstances, the Long Island Star-Journal could no longer publish and re gretfully announces it must suspend until the controversy is settled." (Continaed en rase S. Calunia I) I Welcomed by Jersey City's Mayor to Quit Jersey City, N. J. WV-May- or John V. Kenny, who led the movement which shattered the Frank Hague democratic or ganization in 1949, said Friday he will resign effective Jan. 1. Kenny told newsmen that Public Safety Director Bern ard Berry will become the next mayor. The dapper, 60-year-old ma yor said he will continue as democratic leader olHudion county, a post held by Hague, one of the last of the old time party bosses, for almost three decades. Kenny told reporters that his resignation "has nothing to do with my health. I've Just had my fill of the rigors of office. I can't take it any more, espe cially the antics of crackpots. "Why should it take all that for $8,000 a year? Kenny, a former Hague lieu tenant who broke with the once-powerful party kingpin, said he will fight for the nom ination of his supporters in the primary next April. Water Storage Needed by Basin Seattle W) The new chief of the Army Corp of Engineers' North Pacific division says the Pacific Northwest's biggest problems in future develop ment of the Columbia River system is to provide 28,000,000 acre-feet of water storage. Ending a tour of Northwest power and reclamation proj ects, Brig. Ccn. Don G. Sliiiig- ler pointed out Thursday only about 7,000,000-acre feet of storage, principally behind Grand Coulee Dam, is now available. Shinglcr said more water storage is needed both for ef fective flood control and to as sure better utilization of pow er plants during low water pe riods. Most dams now under con struction, he said, are run -of - the river projects, without stor age. & y Strike Violence Again Resumed At San Francisco Egyptians Fire On U.S. Vessel Cairo. Egypt W An Am erican freighter carrying 9,600 tons of gift wheat for Arab refugees from Palestine was fired on In the gulf of Aquaba Thursday. Her owners in New York said there was no dam age or casualties. An Egyptian official here said an Egyptian shore battery fired what he called a warning shot at the freighter, the Al bion, because she failed to heed an order to bait for inspection. The American embassy here had reported the incident ear lier. The Gulf pt Aqaba is east of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. The Albion is scheduled to unload at the Jordan port of Aqaba at the head of the gulf Saturday, j Ceremonies are planned in con nection with the arrival of the gift wheat. Dry trans. Inc., of New York, owns the 7,255-ton ship. Her master is Capt. James H. Has sell of East Williston, N. Y, Renews Attack Upon Benson Washington ) Secretary of Agriculture Benson Friday came under a new crossfire of criticism and praise touched off by his reorganization of the Soil Conservation Service. Carrying on the attack be gun -Thursday before a house government operations sub committee, the National Asso ciation of Soil Conservation Districts accused Benson of bad faith and demanded Jetti toning of the plan pendir further study. But in another prepared statement, the American Farm Bureau Federation approved the "broad plan" of reorgan ization and exressed "whole hearted" belief that Benson should have an opportunity to carry it out. The house subcommittee called Benson and others be fore it in hearings to air the controversy over the reorgan ization, put into effect No vember 2 as part of revamp ing of the agriculture department. John P. Hanson, AFL union attorney, attempts to rise after being beaten to the ground by a mob of International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union pickets. The Longshoremen, who were having a work stoppage in Protest of Rep. Velde's un-Amerkan hearings, were mill ing about the San Francisco pier where marine cooks and stewards of two different unions were fighting over the right to serve aboard the passenger ship Aleutian. (UP Telephoto) ' Hammond Selects CofC Special Committees Some new standing commit tees of the Salem Chamber of Commerce may be created, and some of the old committees dis continued, William H. Ham mond, new president, aaid Friday. Holy War on Israel Looms Jerusalem, Jargon Section W A "holy wsr against Israel was threatened yesterdsy at the opening of a Moslem "Conference for Palestine's Salvation from Israeli Occupation." Thirty-four leading Moslem personalities from all Arab countries, as well as from Pak istan, Afghanistan snd Indo nesia, took part. Mohammad Mahmad Elsa- waf, secretary general of the Iraqi Salvation committee, said in a speech that "the day will come when we are going to declare a jihad holy war for the salvation of Palestine." Weather Details Nailnm ytrtirtUy, Ml U Ht. n. TUI H-btr rMip4UIIsi: .lit far gjMth: Mt ntmmL .74. - HplUtUss. 12.44i mil, 13. Elftr kelfht. .7 fMi. (Bwixrl by C I Wtsthtr MIIU.) Thornton Restricted In Grand Jury Probes AWOLCoburg Youth Captured Louisville. Ky. Vn Olen M. Mowdy, the 18-year-old pri vate from Coburg, Ore., who has cost the army $30,000 so far, is back in custody again. This time he is going to be prosecuted by the FBI on a charge of assault and rnhhery. With Pvt. Joe A. Laws, 21, Harrogate, Term., he is accus ed of everpowering two guards at the Ft. Campbell, Ky., stockade and making off with their shotguns. The army estimates It has spent 30,000 in man-hours and transportation in finding Mowdy on his AWOL expedi tions. The first one came last sum mer. At first it appeared ne was lost, snd a battalion of men spent dsys trying to find him. A month later he turn ed up in Oklahoma City with a sad story of hsvlng lost his parents. He also posed as an athlete, using another boy's nsme. Grand jury investigation in any county of the state cannot be carried on by the attorney general except on order of the governor, Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton held In an opinion Friday. The ruling was requested by Governor Paul L. Patterson in connection with a request of a group of Lincoln county citi zens that the attorney general conduct an Investigation pf charges of gambling, prostitu tion and corruption In that area. Later two large groups of citizens from the same county appeared before the governor and denied that the conditions charged existed at the present time, or had existed since new county officials hsd taken of fice last January, "It is my opinion," the attor ney general ruled, "that while the attorney general has the genersl power to make lnvesti- J gstions and may make evidence so attained available to the dis trict sttorney or the governor, the attorney general Is limited in his power to present such evidence to grand juries and otherwise prosecute criminal cases except in. cooperation with such district attorneys un der Oregon laws. "This duty," Thornton con tinued, "Includes the power to compel by mandamus county, as well as state officers when charged with duties to the state to obey the same. (Continued eu Fag S, Colama t) McClellan to Be NAM Chief New York Wl A minister's son, who developed a broken- down paint factory into a flourishing enterprise, is the new president of the National Assn. of Manufacturers the first Pacific Coast man to head the organization. Harold C. McClellan, presi dent of the Old Colony Paint & Chemical Co., Los Angeles, was elected last night at the 58th annual Congress of Amer ican Industry. He succeeds Charles R. Sllgh, Jr., president of the Sllgh Furniture compan ies, Grand Rapids, Mich., who becomes chairman of the board ,01 directors of the association. Hammond announced the personnel of three special com mittees that were authorized by the board of directors Wednesday night, and one of these, a committee on commit tees, will make recommenda tions relative to the formation of the administrative groups. The special committees were appointed from the board of directors, but, by a change in policy voted by the board Wednesday night, the standing committees will be selected from -tha .general chamber membership outslqe the board. For the committee on com mittees, Hammond appointed Kenneth M. Potts, chairman, J. A. H. Dodd, Reynolds Allen and Wes Stewart. A special committee on audit of chamber accounts is Judge Joseph B. Felton, chairman, Robert K. PoweU and A. H. Flicker. On a special committee on revision of chamber by-laws Hammond appointed Miss Hat tie Bratzel, chairman, Lee Oh mart, Roy Harland and Judge Felton. (Continued on rags S. Colama 1) Admits Slaying For Insurance Denver (JPi A young sales man and a co-worker were held Friday after police said they admitted a holdup-slaying to collect Insurance on a pret ty red-haired telephone operator. Detective Captain Charles Burns described the strangling of Mrs. Evelyn Leick, 26, last Tuesday night as one of the strangest ever Investigated by Denver police. In custody were her husband IRoy Leick, 30, and Gene Dukes, 20, employes of the same brokerage firm here. Detective Capt. William E. Fler said both signed state ments admitting a plot to kill Mrs. Leick but each blame the other for throttling her. They were quoted as saying It took 20 minutes. Mrs. Leick was found dead in the back seat of the family car 20 minutes after her husband was discovered, bleeding and semi-conscious from a beating, in a downtown alley. His wife's sister. Miss Vera Monroe, had been pushed out of the car in another alley, also after a beating. San Fraaclsea ) New dis orders occurred oa the water- treat Irmay and two pickets were arrested at the 8S Aleu tian's pier. Men Injured Shoving and jeering started second day of tension at Pier 39, seen of inter-union fight ing Thursday in which at least nine men were injured and six were arrested. Thirty-six AFL member went through the picket Una of the independent national Union of Marine Cooks and Stewards and boarded the Aleutian. Twenty policemen from out lying precincts stood by in case of repercussions of trou ble between 1,400 members of Harry Lundeberg's AFL Sail ors Union of the Pacific, and the independent National un ion of Marine Cooks and Stew ards backed by Harry Bridges. Injunction Issued Superior Judge Preston J. Devlne issued an injunction at the resquest of the Hawaii Pacific Line, which is charter ing the Aleutian, limiting pick ets to five men of each union. (Concisdo oa Pan a, Colama I) 30 More PWs Reject Pleas to Return Home Panmunjom U. S. En voy Arthur H. Dean told the communists today that unrepa trlated war prisoners will be freed Jan. 22 unless a peace conference decides tome other course "and no human hand or mind or debate can change It" we are never going to agree, under any circumstances, to a change in that date," he declared. Dean and communist diplo mats huddled for almost three hours on plans for a peace con ference while a few mites away 30 more South Korean war pri soners unanimously rejected pleas to return home. Dean said the Reds appeared to be trying to block a peace conference in an attempt to hold In definite captivity 22,600 Korean and Chinese war pris oners who have refused to go back to communist rule. Iranians Fight British Parley Tehran, Iran ff) Strong po litical opposition mounted Fri day against Premier Fazellah Zahedi's reported invitation to Britain to resume diplomatic relations with Iran. , ' Informed I r a tt la aources said Thursday night a note ask ing the resumption was on its way to London. Formal an nouncement of the action is ex pected over the week-end. Ayatullah Kashsnl, powerful Moslem religious leader, de clared Thursday that the dis pute with Britain over her na tionalized oil properties here must be settled and the Iran ian Parliament must give Its approval before British envoys are readmitted. Dr. Mozzafar Baghaie, a So cialist leader, blasted the con ciliatory move In a front page editorial in his newspaper Shahed. He described it as "a dirty surrender to an aggressive enemy." Ike's Left Hand Cut by Pistol Tucker's Town, Bermuda U.B President Eisenhower arrived In Bermuda today wearing a bandage on his left hand. Members of his staff said he cut the palm of his hand while cocking a pistol In his White House suite. They said the pistol was a small caliber target pistol, and that the President was showing Mrs. Eisenhower how old time heroes of the West "fanned" their ancient .44s. The President hit the ham mer vigorously, they said, and nicked the palm of his hand. The injury Is neither serious nor painful, aides said, but it was bandaged by the White House physician. Pro-Red Gl's Reject Bibles Panmunjom, Korea tun The 22 American war prisoners who have refused to return home have rejected New Testa ments and asked instead for communist newspapers, an In dian spokesman revealed today. The spokesman said the self exiled GIs flatly turned dowa a gift of 22 individually wrapped New Testaments set to them from the United State. The snub of Christianity's most sacred writings was re vealed after South Korean of ficers failed for the third straight day to coax home any nuK. prisoners. Young Korean officer have talked to 90 pris oners but all elected life under Red rule. Ask for Newspapers The Indian spokesman said the American prisoners, called "pro-communists" by the Reds, ssked Indian guards to give them newspapers and books from North Korea instead of New Testaments. British-French Delegations Tucker's! Town, Bermuda 11 President Eisenhower met Prim Minister Wlastea Churchill and Joaofk Lakiel her for their Big Thro eea fereae Friday with tha case fldent aaoertloB their talks will "result m better understand ing among tha peoples trrolT- ed." - Tha President, host Church ill and Laniel drove immedi ately from the; airport to the Mid-Ocean Club, where for five day they will seek to tighten the Western alliance and step up anti-Soviet defense arrangements a well as de termine the next moves in rt lations with Russia. Secretary of State Dulles, who arrived with the Presi dent on his special plana Columbine, British Foreign Minuter George Bldault held a pre-lunch - conference. The critical Trieste problem which Is splitting Italy and Yuso- - ilavia was understood to have been discussed. On Scheduled Time ' 1 Elsenhower' silver four-engine plane touched down at Kindley Field at 11:12 a.m. (EST) and pulled up at tne re ception area on the dot of the scheduled tune three minutes later. . (Continue ess tag t, Cohans 4) Strike Concerns Citrus Growers Pittsburgh () Stalemated contract negotiations pushed a nationwide strike against two top csn manufacturers Into Its third day Friday, intensifying the concern of the citrus Indus try over dwindling csn sup plies. Citrus canners in Florida. hit hardest by the walkout of 33,000 CIO United Steelwork era at 73 U. S. and Canadian plants of American Can Co. and Continental Can Co. pre dict a major crisis If the strike lasts much longer. 45,862 Listed State Jobless Oregon's unemployment pic ture got darker in November, with 46,862 jobless persons listed by the State Unemploy ment Compensation Commission, There were 18,600 workers Isid off during tha month, the biggest monthly increase since January, I960. There were 20,000 persons filing claims for compensation during November, 60 per cent of them being In the seasonal lumber, food and construction ifiduolrica. The commission said hun dreds of small lumber operators reduced their activities because of uncertain lumber markets. Payments to jobless workers totaled $1,437,638, seeond high est November total on record, and a 60 per cent increase over the October total. CHILE COPPER ON MARKET Santiago, Chile W The Chilean Senate voted Thursday night to place the nation's mounting copper stocks on the world market but with Iron Curtain buyers barred. Tens of Thousands of Koreans Killed by Reds Washington W) Col. James M. Hanley testified Friday that anti-Red South Korean civilians are killed by the tens of thousands" by their commu nist enemies. Hsnley, who was the first chief of the army's Korean wsr crimes section, told a sen ate Investigation: "In some cases, they threw lliem down mine shafts alive, they buried them alive, they burned them alive in jail, and they shot them in groups of hundreds. Sen. Potter (H., Mich.), who is directing the one-man sen ate probe of atrocities, mean while challenged Andrei VI shlnsky and his associates In ,01 communist hierarchy to try to disprove Korean veter ans accounts of bestial bru tal actions by Reds in Kores Potter hss hesrd over dozen accounts of atrocities, performed against captured military men, in the past two days. Frldsy's testimony by Hanley was the first In the hearings relstlng to atrocities against civilians. No one csn ever know how many South Koreans were communist atrocity victims, Hsnley testified, snd added: "I don't think exact num bers are too Important, wheth er It was 30,000, 40,000, or 50,000. "The fsct is that the com munists committed atrocities beyond sny shadow of doubt1 AskVishinskyto Prove Denials Washington (V Sen. Pot ter (B-. Mich.) today ehal- lenged, Andre4..Vunsky JM his associate to try to disprove Korean veterans' accounts of brutal, bestial atrocities. Potter, sitting as a one-man senata investigations subcom mittee has heard over a dozen such accounts in the past two days. On Mil today were 10 more witnesses to add detail to the grim recital. "It these esse are false," Potter said in an Interview, it would be the best possible propaganda In the world for the communist to prove that. If Vlshinsky and the commun ists are not afraid of the truth, why do they not ask an impar-. tial United Nations Investiga tion? "They are afraid of the truth and this gives the lie to Vish lnikys falsifications." - To Keep U.N. oh Tap for Crisis United Nations. N.Y. The United States and Its IS Korean war allies in the United Nations were reported lining up support today for a plan to keep the U.N. Assembly on tap after it closes shop next week. It then could be recalled quick ly If new trouble arises over Kores. Observers predicted the proj ected call for an indefinite re cess rather than outright ad journment would meet oppo sition on two counts. The scheme, springing from Allied feeling that Korea should not be debated while Special Ambassador Arthur Dean 1 negotiating with the Reds at Panmunjom, is expect ed to run into Soviet bloc ob jections. A source close to the Russians said they want the Korean Issue discussed here snd now on grounds that it is the most vital question before the U.N. 900 Telegrams on McCarthy's Stand Washlnifton, WV-The Whit House siild Friday approxi mately BOO telegrams had been received in response to the public sppeal from Sen. McCarthy (R., Wis.) that citizens let President Eisen hower know how they feel about the senator's criticism of allies who trade with Red Chins. Murrsy Snyder, assistant press secretary, said the mes sages, totaled for the first 24 hours tine the senator ap peal, had not been broken down to favorable and un favorable. . I r-' ; i