Capital jtJotiiMLa PARTLY CLOUDY, continued mild tonight and Saturday. Low tonight, 10; high Saturday, 92. FINAL EDITION 66th Year, No. 30 ;V"B.Ero Salem, Oregon, Friday, February 5, 1954 (J6 Pages) Price 5c More Federal Aid for Roads In Prospect Baldock Reports Many Bills Boosting Federal Aid for Highways By JAMES D. OLSON Prospects for substantial in crease in federa' id to states for construction and maintenance of primary ano secondary roads are exceedingly bright according to It. H. Baldock, state highway en gineer, who returned Friday from Washington, D. C. Baldock said that there are a number of road bills introduced in Congress, all of them provid ing frv im'-ease from the pres ent allocation of $575 million to from $800 million to $900 mil lion. $900 Million Suggested The American Association of Highway Officials, of which Bal dock is an officer and for whom he appeared at a meeting of the 4 sub-committee on roads of the house, has recommended an ap propriation of $900 million. Oregon receives $8.6 million under the present federal-aid rnad bill ano would he allocated an even $12 million if the asso ciation recommendation is al lowed. V. S. Takes Sl',4 Million Baldock said that the federal governm nt collects approximate ly $900 million from the two-cent tax on gasoline and in addition imposes excise taxes on motor vehicles, tires and automobile ac cessories, which brings the fed eral taxes collected in the states from road user? to approximately $1V4 billion annually. "It is too early to predict just what particular bill will be fi nally considered and passed by Congress," Baldock said, "but I feel confident that the new road bill passed by the present con gress will contain sufficient mon ey to provide a substantial in crease in federal aid for roads (Continued on Page 5, Col. 1) Outline for Defense Plans If Portland is attacked by an enemy, the Oregon Civil Defense Agency would set up an advance control center at Camp Withy combe, 12 miles southeast of Port land. State civil defense director Arthur M. Sheets, in making the announcement Thursday, said the advance center would he in a building at the National Guard headquarters. State CD headquarters are in Salem. "Purpose of an advance control center is to get closer to the disaster scene and reduce the lines of communication," Col. Sheets said. The advance control center will have radio and telephone commu nication with all county civil defense directors and state head quarters. Mild Weather For Few Days Mild weather is due to Aonlin- no nnssihlv Ihrn.inh nnvt UVHnr. r " dav. savs the fivc-dav forecast - -- - . AMI"? mailt: sdiiiu wuiiui-i, riiudj, however, if there were any rain 111 si(V;m, uui me nvttiai nii-ii- l,The3wk cJli. for some ,R at nights but sunny days during the period Another low minimum temper ature was recorded in Salem Fri day morning, 28 degrees, the fifth straight day with a mini mum below freezing. The Willamette river has dropped considerably during the week, measuring 9.H feet al Sa lem Friday morning. 250 Cops Keeo Peace on Docks JERSEY CITY. N..I. i - A 250- man no ICC detail KCPl IWO war- ring waterfront (actions a. bay Fridav as a partial work stoppage hit the docks. . rolice nn loot, horseback and mntnrrvrle. alerted because of a minor skirmieh on Piers D and t Thursday, held back hundreds ol milling, shouting longshoremen on hand (or an 8 a m. snaKcup The dock hands are members of two dock unions, the old Interna- tinnal Longshoremen sAssn and the newly organized AFL-ILA. The old union was ousted from the AFL recently as gangstor-domi- nated. Police said trouble started wnen Nick Maschucci. acting presioem .1 I ... IOJ7 II A nhieCted tO the hiring o. AFL members to work Piers F and D. Workers tor both piers usually arc hired on Pier F. Charge Soviet Seeks Rhine As Frontier U. S. Tells Molotov Of West's Reaction To Russian Plan BERLIN W-The United States, Britain and France Friday rejected-Russia's plan for unifying Ger many and charged Moscow L try ing tc extend its powers all the way to the Rhine. U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden of Britain and French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault exhausted 4,000 words more to notify the Kremlin that the idea of merging rival govern ments in divided Germany is not slick enough to fool anyone. Therefore, the Western ministers concluded, the Russian must be entirely without desire to unify the nation. Dulles took the lead in Friday's 11th session, denouncing the Rus sian plan as a mere grab for pow er west of Berlin. Afraid of Germans Dulles said Soviet Foreign Min ister V. M. Molotov had rejected a Western plan for unification of Germany through free elections because he is afraid the 18 mil lion Germans in the Communist zone "would overwhelmingly re ject" its present Red regime. "Mr. Molotov has good reason to be afraid," the American min ister said. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 5) Power Failure Causes Blasts SAN FRANCISCO I An un explained (allure in an 11,000 volt power line early Friday touched off a series of explosions felt over a wide area of Sun Francisco. Ignited sewer gas spouted flames from scores of manholes from which the covers were blown high. Two special policemen. Jack Meehan, 37, and John Martino vich. 39, sent to investigate, were knocked down by a nearby blast. They were hospitalized with con cussion. , Pacific Gas k Electric Co. I-' sued an emergency call for 100 workers. It said it might be hours before it knew the cause of the failure, which occured at a sub station. Windows were shattered by con cussion. Some manhole covers were re ported shattered into shrapnel. lo Vaccinate 250,000 Dogs CHICAGO i Health and po-i Ike department officials mapped ' plans Friday to enforce an order ; I J , r arc: that all Chicago dogs more than i I nLlluilS 10 VJCl Former Premier Alcide dc Gas 250.000 be vaccinated against!"'"'"' ,v peri, whose eighth cabinet was de rabies. ' 1 1 AAA feated last summer. The city's worst mad-dog scare V y An 111111 Former Premier Giuseppe Pella, in nearly 20 years piompted city I f U wno resigned Jan. 5 when his health authorities to request thej ' party failed to back him. order from the Illinois Department ' WASHINGTON' A House Chamber of Deputies president of Agriculture to force inoculation Interior subcommittee approved and leltwing leader Giovanni (iron- of all dogs, rather than just stray payment of $2,640,000 to Westell chi. animals. , Oregon Indians in settlement of a Former Interior Minister Mario i nnn.,.nioi.,.rC u-o-a nn a 'mi .i. .. i : i t i . t 14-MUUI -U-UilV UiJMft HIMt'tfU Ul IMC 1 . . I t.:r I ?.,cscm 8,."MC 1 sm "UUI " " 4,3 I hp number or Dorsons bitten 17 " was ir i-u iu sei up . j " ' R . J."'ii m.i.H r , . ' mniinirri in mnrR man nn a ruiv Health Department officials said this was twice the number reported j . - , . quarantine' was ordered for the m January after an anti-rabies Cl'v ana pan. 01 won county int: Iuiuti. "iiiui tin 171 iiouv:iii.u i uui a- i clay to include all of Cook County, requires owners of nogs to keep their animals confined or on hashes. t Hvasta Flying Back To ward United States LONDON Smiling happily, ' lure building to await a Strato .lohn Hvasta flew into London Kri- i cruiser lor New York day night and seemed tn enjoy He led Munich smilingly Friday nlaving cat and mouse with air- mornine for the land nf his aclnri. port reporters with the same dex - I,..,,,, hn j , ,.,i r-,k .l ; - - - - r .c T. ..nr.nlrt r.rh.hnrn ... ..,.. j : ,..' j '.,.,.. ,.,.j Ki ,v, i k...;,i k. rived here hound for ihe llniied Stales on the last leg of his story - . k'fj h. . ,r.eAnm ' Thrpf Scotiand Yard poijcernfn ; ma(e Jure h f n? Ammca n he jvacv he wan,ed ag he o((-g ,ane from Zurich mvm t0 tho jmmigratjon r- fice. Hvasta did call out: -, ! ......... .......-.... F ....... 1 Ic11-" nll"'illfl- nl ll,c ltlHll-m ' - -oyuung to '- He then disappeared inio a lop- lfloor "'re nf lhe airport dcpar - y. Mm . Spectacular Portland Fire . PORTLAND Wi A warehouse fire sent flames leaping high over the downtown area Thursday night and caused a two-hour traffic jam just after the peak of the evening rush. The eight-story Neustadtcr Build ing at S. W, Filth and Ankeny resembled a flaming torch min utes after' the fire was discovered at 5:40 p. m. Firemen said the blaze apparent ly started on the second floor, but soon flames were fanning out through windows on the top floor and shooting through the roof. Crowds, able to sec the flames and smoke from afar, rushed to the scene, adding to the traffic jam. All available firemen were called in. Eight firemen suffered minor injuries in preventing the flames from spreading to adjoining build incs. i Damncc was estimated by own-; ers and fire investigators at more than $225,000. i (pnt iirv -old Liml riistiutp Thiirsdnv. : Th It Cnnri nf rhimc ' " --"... v t i nnlhnp in. in nnirmnn in lJ Kill T ' ' ...j . ...J iiivtiim, , mi m, Ron Ellsworth iR-Orei inirn. - nuccn tnc mil. il nirects tne sec- ret-, of interior lo draw up rn ls ' me innai ocscennams. me nr iU0 nioney would be dmded among i lilt; II lucn IIILIUUl' IllUSe Ol llli. 1 confederated bands of Umpqun and '. Calapooias o( the Umpoua Valley I and of the Tillamook. Coquille. i Tootootoncy, Chetco and Molallas. 1 !tion after five fantastic years in i u;.i: .i.- i i - n...... , , ,hi ""I??, "," "r'J...:" , ,,, 'A ,ul ' v ' '" ' , ...i... u. . . ..',. . ir i: f ' ...i. 1 "' He in'mnoH ' ,,h.i in m , companion nf his Czechoslovak nrj ' hrk ci,,(;t,nnH ;nn. crs and Spnnk,d , the plane The ramp was replaced and he climbed aboa'rd barhpadt,d and smiin c due wild Airport at 5 25 am PST ! Saturdav. ,,,u ..mmu.hu a u- HIS V nUICS, nOW a SiaieiCSS PIT - son imng in ftiumrn. wnere ne is o i " i- nimmdn run Radio rree Europe. l I Continued on Page 5, Col. 3) TSL'L ', WAREHOUSE BECOMES TORCH t . 'jk-'jA .fi . if: . I I PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 5 A quick-spreading fire shot from bottom to top of eight story warehouse in downtown Portland just after peak of traffic rush last night. A two-hour traffic jam resulted, but firemen kept flames from spreading to other buildings. Damage was estimated at $225,000. (AP Wirephoto.) Leonard Rowan Files As Council Candidate Leonard Rowan, general manag er of the Senator Hotel, said Friday that during the day or Saturday lie would file as a candidate for alderman from Ward 3. The City Council post for that ward is now held by Cfnud Jorgen- sen, who Has held over an extra 4 Listed for Italy's Premier ROME Wi President I.uigi Kinaudi studied Friday the names of lour men who might pull Italy out of her government crisis. All Christian Democrats, the four Seclba. a . louch Sicilian who is nfli'inv Krt 1 fur It.ilv' f nmmii. ! v J " " nitK ti i u - .u. mint- i'i-im-u nine uicimc nun ------ -- . , ... . ,,r ii, fr i,i m..i,'al Limited, sideswmed a freight - ... ... .... ...... ..uu.u .. enough support lor r.innudi lo call hi, , lh. .,im u ii.,., 'V '""passenger cars. tt'Tl" ,V, K ii, A B&O snokesman in Baltimore ' veteran lie Gasper, '.,. Alcoa Ceases Air Pollution PORTLAND M'l i-'umes (nun Passengers from Ihe wrecked the Aluminum Company of Amer-; tram wt.r0 ,-;,nslerred to the Cap ica's Vancouver, Wash., plant are itol Limited which reached the ne lunte strong enough lo harm scene a little more than an hour livestock on nearby Sauvie Island. 1 a((.r llrcKon .Mate Lolleife and Wash ington State College experiment slalum workers made that report Friday alter more than two years of research. Since Derember. IflSl, after Alcoa installed "scrubbers" to re- dure the amount ol escaping duo-j rinn ca( llic nntmint -niir-hinn Island has ben a. a saie1 i-rt ih. ,.iri l Sauvie Island is a rich farm area of 24 scmare miles nine miles .., h...ci c iwnnnH anH iho cv,imk, nil or tmm ihi Alma r,it Parmer, ihm h.no snrH for-ond wnn-court awards lor Pasl fluorine damage to livestock. F. E Price, dean of agriculture t OSC and coordinalnr of the re- warch project, told farmers and Alcoa representatives meeting here o( ,h lmttn ..... . .. W PnthPf IJPfrlfC - - nmimnm TM-rn,,. mmimnn, in- ,m-h," nmi.uor an, Mmu. ri.., ; j,,um. . i.i. .R.nori k, i . "'". I .1 ii 1 ose.. f I I two years because of a tie vole In tnr 1952 election' -when his oppon ent was ' layton Jones. Jorgenscn has continued to serve under a law providing an elective official shall continue in office until his successor is qual ified and civ. -ted. At that time Salem had ..o legal provision for breaking a tic vote, so Jorgen scn continued to serve. Recent ly the -ouncil has enacted an ordinance providing (or breaking tie votes by casting lots. Since two years of the normal term will have passed when a new council takes office next Janu ary 1, the election for Ward 3 I I will be a short term of two years instead of a regular term of four years. Ko won has lived In halem since 1935, and has lived in the ward for two years, and his home (Continued on Page S, Col. 5) Engineer Dies In B&O Wreck WILMINGTON. Del. itf The IH:., ill.;,. li ;l ..,'- C I Ml 1 1 1 1 1 IVII V Qi UIIIU IVUIIIWmi 3 m. Lmiis-Nrw York Fiver, the Nation- ..... .. . ; " . ."' V" ?. ion maav. ocramnK iv oi me u fc:,i,l ih. rafinnr nf thi Shiimr i freight train. W. A. Jackson, ol Philadelphia, was killed and six train crewmen were hurt, but no passengers were injured. All the cars of the passenger was killed and six train remained upright. A (ire lhat followed Ihe crash in ttic die- j scl engine of the National Limited uas pvtimniishnl nilii-klv. Farmer Blocks Road Paving SIIEItWom. - A (armer dis- satisfied with having nn access or a new highway between Portland an" Sa,,'m hol'nK back proper- ty needed (or Ihe roadway. Paul Ycrarland owns a .Ton-loot section of the now Wilsonvillc ex- l-rcssway. He sold it to the state once for Wf!l, but got a court or- l('r ,nt return, of the property wnpn loaned he would have to '""ve 2 Smiles to , get on the road. Hp rcnurned the M. to the state. McFarland says he now wants $2,400 b. cause of the lack ol ac- ' ress Attorneys for the slale said lhal wa" 100 much, and indicated : condemnation proceedings might,,, . ' , ' " , , " i .irlrH The Moot section has been Rraded, but McFarland pnsled "no '"- lrcspn,sjn(!.. ,,, tn prev(.nt pBV.'olic Church Irnm all parts of the ing the route thrrc. j world. " J; 6 '-J: - - - ''Mi. - House Group Approves Hike In Postal Rates WASHINGTON UP The House Post Office Committee Friday ap proved a 245-million dollar boost in postal rates. It calls for an in crease of one cent for air mail letters and a 30 per cent rise in mailing costs on newspapers and magazines, , along with a one-cent rise on non-local first class letters. The bill, embodying most of the requests made by Postmaster Gen eral Summerfield in an attack on the department's red ink opera tions, and backed by President Eisenhower, now goes to the House. The committee completed action on the controversial bill to an ac companiment of some Republican grumbling over the administra- lon push to pass rate legislation this year. Most Classes Affected Increases in most classes of rates except parcel post were voted by the committee Friday on the heels of the approval Thurs day of a hike of one cent on first class letters other than local de livery. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 6) Beeson Agrees To Lose Pension WASHINGTON w - Albert C. Beeson told senators Friday he would give up pension rights from hi. r,n,!.r If Phn. "a,!!! make the Democrats happier" and still their questioning of his nom ination to the Natiunal Labor Re lations Hoard. Paul Davies, president of the Food Machinery & Chemical Corp., San Jose. Calif., had just testified to the Senate Labor Com mittee that Beeson had been given a one-year leave of absence to take the NLRB post. Beeson has been vice president of the firm, in charge of labor relations, for the last seven years. While on leave of absence. Da- vies said, Beeson retains full rights to Ihe pension fund accumulated to his account during his seven years. Questions have been raised by some senators as to whether Dee- sun's leave of absence status .and n.s mention . i .11 pension ngms ITl-illCS a tUNlllLl Ol inierCSl hat could akcNIh'm Jl "f Luang Prabang today as a thin cy is .basing its budget on the as the job on Ihe NLRB to which iine of Krench Union troops sumption that unemployment in he was named Jan. 7 by Prcs-lSOUgn( 0 fU a Communist drive first-half 1954 will average 2.600,- ident Eisenhower. Surplus Food For Missouri 1KFFF.RSON CITY, Mo. W-A government official says surplus commodity food will be shipped into Dunklin County to relieve 1 about 3.000 persons there who are without food and funds. Flvd 11 TiirWh-r nf rhir-non i - - - - .. assistant area field sunervisor (or ,ftc Apartment of Agriculture. says the food items should start moving into the southeast Missouri ! county the first part of next week. i Cnuntv Jtirtge C. M. Burcham County Judge C. M. Burcham i appealed for the government aid i after reporting the earnings by i (arm laborers, cut sharply by last ' year's drought, have been running out over the past several weeks. Anxiety Increases Over Pope s Serious In ess VATK'AM CITV ,pi Pn,u. Tl, l,.i,cc I,-. ,,, .. .11 Pills' difficulty in taking (nod has rontinueu to weaken him. said Ihe lirst ilfieial bulletin issue d on his condition Friday by his private physic ian. The bulletin, issued bv Prof, Ifccardo (,alea77.i-L,si said it is hoped "as soon as possible to re- neat unrticular Xrav rxnmina- tions In determine the condition both of the iponc's gastric area as well as of dner organs in lhat area,' Thc buicUn Mid nrevious X rav1."01 be able to get in lo his ollicc examinations had shown the pope's a!trir arca and organs in that area to be normal. It did not say, however, when these examina- ns had bcun madc. nffi,.ii hntlntin un. nr,.,-,.H. h . i i,. ,1 ihi it was made in reply In anxious Z J , , T. 'n "! 7 ? authorities " i Wife n n Coffee Lands Protest Drive To Cut Prices WASHINGTON I - The Latin American coffee-producing coun tries made an open bid early Fri day for United States government support against what they called a campaign in this country to com bat high prices by drinking less coffee, r A few hours later a Senate banking subcommittee made a start on a broad investigation of the soaring prices by naming the coffee trade leaders it will ques tion at an initial hearing Monday. The committee investigation is aimed particularly at finding out how much increased speculation has had to do with pushing prices above a dollar a pound and to IS cents a cup. The producing nations contend that the basic factors are in creased consumption of the brew and poor crops. That was the theme of resolu tions adoptet by the Inter-American Coffee Commission. s Crew Rescued MANILA Wl The.Pamanian freighter Liberal radioed Friday that it had picked up two boat loads of crewmen from the Brit ish motorship Fcrnmoor, which ripped open its bottom on a reef in the South China Sea. The U.S. Navy base at Sanelev Point near here said the Liberal r.ePj;ted lha, members of "i" Were Slan'ng "Th T " " V . Th! . JPneSe ( Japanese freighter F.isho Maru also was reported standing Dy. ine fernmoor struck a reel near Palawan Island in the south western Philippines. - The number of crewmen picked up by the Liberal was not report ed but it was believed about 40 were aboard the Fernmoor. An earlier message picked up al Sanglcy Point said the ship was tow in me water and the crew was in four lifeboats tied along- siue. Biffer fighting In Indochina HANOI, Indo China (UP) , Bitter lighling was reported alnna a 4fl.m In HnfnniA am nnplh Wina of Children to take the city. 000. This compared with a January Red vanguards sweeping south ! estimate that 2,359,000 were with in three columns were an csli-iout work, and his figures carried mated three days march from the the implication the bureau expects old Laotian capital. j more than the 2,600,000 to be out of The French defense line was jobs in part of the 1954 period, lightly manned and strung over steep, jungle clad mountains. It ran from Muong Sai in the ; west across tn Itnnn.-1n1h.1r in fhn' , Namhou Valley, and east to Ban! ! Momhang in the Nam Seng Val-i : ""V ln an nrc 40 JU n'll(,s north i ! "' .I'V:1!"!? ''rihang. ! Ml I it firv mitt Pf ti-nr hunnlnl t,e 10 ' ' irooI), nf ,hP crack Ited 3(IBth Division would have " v to halt (or sunnlies before con- . . ,nc,r uinwarn nnve. The divumn' minniv nn u ' rp,v worc , - , d "'. uslv and werVnnen lo .ttark hv i ..:,ii.i :n. ! ' i AI'TO FATALITY j AI'TO FATALITY PORTLAND W Beatrice M. I Porter. Portland, was injured la- tally Thursdav night in a two-car ! collision here. II was the cilv's 1 seventh traflic (atality of the year. more than 10 days. Scanty, occa- sional communiques have persist-' cntly maintained lhat he continues j to improve. But anxiety (or his! hcallh increased today when even I this assurance, for the time being. was lacking. . The Popes private physician.; Prof. Iticcardn Galea.zi-Lisi. spent, more lime than usual at the Pope si beclsicle today, contributing to in - creased worry. The doctor's office said he had telephoned he would 'CT lhl rnwning, as he usually! doe, afler visiting the Vatican ! l.he Vatican press office has de- ?crl,'',d ,nF 1 "Pf,s ailment as mat-1 unc inning o( the ncuro-digestivc ,ra.rt . rhls ha. resulted in inlermit-: ,l'nl hiccups that have trom time to time disturbed Ins sleep and. in general, weakened him. Yesterday the Vatican press of. (ice announced lhat the Pope was , contimiintr In improve. It added that he had spent a restful night, Weeps Money Demand Based on Past Expenditures PASADENA. Calif. I Mrs. James Roosevelt wept Friday at a temporary support hearing when she recalled on the witness stand how her three children were denied a second week of vacation last . summer because of the couple's separation. Unsmiling, she had testified that her $3, 500-a-month -demand is "es timated on the manner in which we have lived for the past 12 years. , ' The weeping came when Roose velt's attorney, Samuel B. Picone, asked her about the couple's vaca tions with their children last sum mer. She said the children had been with them during one week of va (inn and had been promised an other week in August. That was the month they separated. Pleads for Alimony Wearing a gray silk suit, the 38- year-old ex-nurse took the stand at a jampacked court hearing on her plea (or temporary alimony and support for their three children. Ihe support will be paid pend ing trial of separate maintenance suits filed against each other by her and the late President Frank lin D. Roosecelt's eldest son a legal battle spiced by her charges of adultery. James, 46, pushed through a hallway and courtroom crush smiling, accompanied by his at torney and his brother, Elliott. Mrs. Roosevelt, solemn-faced, entered by a rear door. Explaining her estimate of her husband's fortune at two mil lion dollars, she testified: (Continued on Page 5, Col, 4) See Recession Pnrlorl in Mnnln bllUVU III 1 IVIIIM WASHINGTON Wl The Labor Department told Congress Friday that employment service offices' across the country are "cautiously optimistic" that the downtrend of employment may be checked by mid-March and will be less severe than in the 1949 recession. Robert C. Goodwin, director of the Bureau of Employment Secur ity, testified before the Senate- House Economic Committee that a "fairly rapid expansion" of bus iness is "entirely possible" in the i second half of this year. 1 f !...: .1... kl. Ask Mexicans I Be Imported WASHINGTON (UP) Vegeta- ! ble .""P mal rot ln Cliforni 1 r... ... f,e'( "nl"" Congress acts swift- i.. - .... . r if..:.. - -- ,- r.- nv- -" ! ip8 (R-Calif.) said today, ! He asked the House Agricul- lure Committee for immediate I action on a resolution authori;,- ing the Laor J'epnnmem to im port Mexican labor for South western farms and ranches. The destruction of food might begin sometime next week," Phil- I ''P ,ol(l the committee. lie was joiihmi in li is pica uv two other California Republican congressmen, Robert L. Wilson and Leruy Johnson. Answering a question from Rep. K. C. Gathing.i (I)-Ark.), Johnson said failure to provide Mexican laborers would lead to a scarcity ol Southwestern vege table and Iruit crops and higher prices for consumers all across lhp cm,,,,rv- Illness Delays Bramblett Case WASHINGTON The trial 1 of Rep. Bramblett R-Calif Fn- I day was recessed until Monday I because of the illness o( John M. flardaway. a government witness. U. S. District Judge Walter M. Bastian announced that Hardaway had suifercd an attack o( llu dur- ing the night. Hardaway of Santa Barbara, Cald.. testified (or thc government , Thursday that Bramblett told him bv telephone Irom Washington .Dec. ill, 1952, "Don't worry, 1 can I fix It." That. Hardaway said, was I thc dav after FBI agents had questioned him and his wife about (her status nn Bramblctfs payroll. i