O Q ODD rd.OO ODDO OC1 OQSff O Q c? o ODD OOD'OC r- -' ttfiOti mm POUNDID 1651 Th Oregon Statunaxx. Salem. Oregon, Friday, October 31, 1947 Price 5c No. in ?-? --t:v ' " ' . iiX j. -V, rv -i - - jXj Vi?VV ' X . l : NINETY-SEVENTH .YEAR 18 PAGES Banking Houses Indicted eairclhieirs PSinidl Sltoa44eiredl " 'tw " V 7 I i.X i,V h . vA . i r. s . , -,-'1C V S x? V I - vr; vx: X. S - f' 1 KLAMATH FALLS. Oct. 30 The bedies ml Ortxan's top offlculs and their pilot today. Tbe crart erasnea late ft batte near the California line Tuesday nifht. Photo at the right shows trend-search rescue workers removing . the body of Got, Earl Snell from the wild country where the corernor. Secretary of State Robert S. FarrelL Jr, Senate President Marshall Cornett and Pilot Cliff Home of Klamath Falls lost their lives. (AP Wlrephote to The Statesman.) fLPCDCDDa , Coverner Snell, Secretary ol Btate Faxrell and Senator Cornett, whose death in a plane crash was finally confirmed when ground searchers reached the wreckage, had one quality in common: Friendliness. They liked people; and people In turn liked them. That is what makes news of their untimely deaths so crushing; they were known personally to so many people over Oregon, known so well they could be hailed as Earl or Bob. or Marshall. Governor Snell built his po litical career on ,; his personal friendliness which was not mere ly politeness but based on a-sincere interest in their welfare, and a readiness to extend a helping hand. I recall once when the board of control was on a trip in central Oregon. Snell heard of an old friend who was working nearby. We stopped the car and went, to a sheepshearing shed where his friend was at work and the two had a brief visit. It was typical of the way he drew to himself a host of friends of all clafses. I think his extreme cau tion in controversial issues was due in large degree to his un willingness to cause offense to people whom he knew. There were certain things which Earl Snell stood for in govern ment One was good government He wanted efficient administra tion, promptness in dispatch of Eublic businers, courtesy always i dealing with (Continued on editorial page) Hu irhes to Taxi Flyinj LOS ANGELES. Oct 30-UP)-Howard Hughes announced today that hit 200-ton flying boat subject of a congressional inquiry reopening Monday will leave its dock for the first time for water trsti Saturday. The mulnimillionaire plane ma ker, oil operator and movie pro ducer declined any statement be yond the announcement that trac tors and tugs will haul the behe moth, with its 320-foot wi'ng tpread, out for the first time Sat urday and that on Sunday he will cruise around the harbor on taxi tefts. - "It would be made clear," said spokesman, "that the ship will not fly for month, probably not until next fpringV i Animal Crackers By WASREN GOODRICH "You think you got trouble? Linen, friend, step down here piomemt. I want to tell you some- twisted wreekare of plane yielded Gornett's Pilot Convicted of CAA Violations KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Oct 31 -VPh The civil aeronautics ad ministration today opened an, in vestigation of the plane crash that killed Oregon's three top officials and one CAA inspector disclosed the plane's pilot twice had been convicted of violating CAA regu lations. E. S. Leach, senior CAA inspec tor for the Portland district said in Portland that the pilot Cliff Hogue, killed in the crash, was fined $100 in 1943 after another! crash that claimed one life. Leach sajd records disclosed that George Collins, 17, of Willow Ranch, Calif., was killed in that crash. Sept 4, 1843, at Lakeview, and Hogue subsequently was con victed in a CAA hearing of violat ing four regulations, including overloading and improper main tenance of the plane. Leach added that in 1941 Hogue's pilot's license was sus pended 60 days for giving flight instruction without an instructor s rating. Conducting the investigation here is Leon D. Cuddeback, region al head of the CAA air safety board, assisted by District Inspec tor J. T. Feeney and Inspector R. L. Kagy from Eugene. Cuddeback said he may later call a public hearing on the crash because of the "public interest and importance of this accident" Body of Aurora Airman Due on Funeral Ship The body of another of Marion county's war dead is aboard the army transport Stevens Victory, due to arrive today at Brooklyn, N.Y., army base, according to an army announcement listing the body of Navy,Xt (Jg) George A. Racette of Aurora as among 78 being returned in the third ship bearing war dead back to this country. The announcement was trans mitted by Associated Press from Washington, D.C., upon army. re lease for today. The Statesman's war record show Lt. Racette died at the age of 26 -as a result of navy air com bat in the Atlantic area. His par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Emile Racette, Aurora route 2, were notified of his death by the navy on Jan. 14, 1944. FIGHT NEAR CHANGCHUN PEIPING, Oct 30 -P)- Chinese communists, said by government dispatches to total 100,000 men, pressed fierce new assaults today, on Kirin and made diversionary stabs at the outskirts of Chang chun, Manchurian capital 60 miles to the west. State Office Idle Pending New Chief; Several Names Talked The office of the secretary of state, largest of the state depart ments, remained virtually closed today under an informal opinion by Deputy Attorney General Rex Kimmell, while various names came under discussion as possible successors to the late Robert S; Farrell, jr. Kimmcll informed Harold Phil lippe, chief auditor tor the state department that while some ad ministrative routine probably could be carried on subject to la ter authorization, any transactions such as the issuance of warrants would be subject to question be cause the department has no chief. There is no authorization in the law providing for an acting,, sec- the Mall TaCies Oath at , Somber Ceremony By Wendell Webb , Managing editor, Th Statesman Gravely and amid a silence borne of recent tragic events, John Hall, Portland attorney and speaker of the house, became Oregon's governor in simple ceremonies at the state ho use Thursday afternoon. He was sworn in by former gov. Jay uowerman, nis law panner, in the chief executive's panelled recepVon room. Three score state bf ficials and other friends stood nearby. The new chief executive's on ly words were "I do." spoken solemnly in pledging to uphold the laws of his state and nation. There was no program, no speeches. Voices were hushed, and ev en those who stepped up to shake Pastors Vote friendship. Train' Support Cooperation with , the "Friend ship Train" gathering food for Europe was voted Thursday in a special meeting of the Salem Ministerial association. The goal will be the $900 needed to com plete purchase of a carload of flour. For the flour. $2,700 has already been raised by the Methodist church at Halsey, Ore. The asso ciation said all funds in excess of $900 provided here will be used for other foodstuffs to go on the train. Freight service is being provided by the railroads and water transportation by. the gov ernment The association arranged for contributions to be made through local churches this Sunday, as well as daily, from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., at the Salvation Army head quarters, 241 State st All dona tions must be in by Tuesday. Oregon has already provided two carloads of foodstuffs from Portland and a carload of wheat from eastern Oregon. Bandits Net $110,000 Cash BOSTON, Oct 3QMAi-Six ob viously well rehearsed bandits held up a Hyde Park factory of fice today and escaped with $110,' 000 in small bills - the payroll of the Sturtevant division of the Westinghouse Electric corporation. Five of the . men walked into the main office about 8:15 a. m. - - a few minutes after Paymaster W. R. Marshall and five assist ants unlocked and entered a large vault to begin counting out the wages of 2,000 workers. One of the bandits wore a gun- nysack over his head, and two others wore harlequin masks. This is no Hallowe'en party,' one of the men announced in the office. "We don't want to hurt anybody - we just want the cab bage." retary of state,. Kimmell said, thus obviating the possibility that As sistant Secretary of State Harry Schenk would be named, by Gov John Hall temporarily. No drivers'- or motor vehicle li censes are being issued anywhere in the state. , Many names were mentioned for Farrell's successor, Schenk being among those most frequent ly under informal discussion. Oth ers included Reps. ? Robert C. Gile of Roseburg and Earl H. sHill of Cushman, and Sen. Eugene Marsh of McMinnville. Governor Hall said Thursday he would make no announcement until after the funeral of the three top officials who died in Tues day's plane crash. , ',r...t hands with the state's new leader spoke softly, bneliy. Appointment Pending Governor Hall, who was ill at his Portland home when word came of the plane-crash deaths which forced him into the state's top post by succession, conferred few minutes with Deputy At torney General Rex Kimmell, on whose advice the secretary of state's office had ceased to func tion pending appointment of a suc cessor to Robert S. Farrell, Jr., one of the crash victims. But no successor will be named for a few days at least, the gov ernor said in commenting that his new office had been so suddenly thrust upon him that he was not ready to issue any public state ment beyond the expression of sorrow and regret he had voiced upon receiving word of the deaths of Gov. Earl Snell, Farreii, his Portland neighbor and dose friend, and Senate President Mar shall Cornett. Officials at Ceremony - Many state officials witnessed the swearing-in ceremony, includ ing State Treasurer Leslie Scott, only surviving member of the re-; cent board of control; Sen. Allan ' Carson; Reps. Joe Wilson of To-J ledo, R. C. Frisbie of Baker, Earl ' H. Hill of Cushman and Robert CJ Gile of Roseburg; board of con- ! trol Secretary Roy Mills; liquor administrator William Hammond; deputy state police superintendent Lee Bown; budget director George Aiken; p r i s o n superintendent George Alexander; state highway engineer R. H. Baldock; highway counsel J. M. Devers and former Gov. Charles Sprague. Mrs. Hall was present with Mrs. Lee Bown. Halls Keturn Home Aiding in the brief rites were Governor Snell's grief-stricken staff, including Alene Phillips, his secretary for many years, and Eric Allen, his private secretary, but the governor's office 'remained closed except for essential busi ness. Also at. the ceremony was the late secretary of state's father, Robert S. Farrell, sr., and many other friends in the state's polit ical life. The Halls returned last night to their Southwest Kings avenue home in Portland which so sud denly became a mecca for state business as a result of the most tragic plane crash in Oregon history- Meantime, flags on all state buildings, the postoffices and else where were flying at half-staff and messages of condolence-lodd ed into the homes and offices of the deceased officials in unending stream from all parts of the west. (Additional details on page 10.) Wallace to. Visit Pope, Italian Communist ROME, Oct 30-(;P)-Henry A. Wallace arrived from Athens to night and said he hoped ito see leading Italian politicians includ ing Palmiro Togliatti, the com munist. The former vice president, who is visiting Europe as a reporter, will see Pope Pius XII tomorrow. Weather Max Salem 58 Portland . 55 San Francisco 64 Chicago 8 Nw Vork 54 Min. Irecip. M .18 .00 trace - .43 50 SO 81 82 Willamette river 2.7 feet. FORECAST from U.S. Weather bu reau, McNary -field, Salem): Cloudy today and tonight with Intermittent light rains. High temperature today 55, Jow tonight 50. II I Typhoon Sinks Ship in Pacific; Nears Manila MANILA, Friday, Oct. 31.HP) A violent typhoon spread destruc tion across six central Philippine islands today, sank one ship and was expected to rake Manila with 65-mile winds. Two other ships were beached by mountanif'iis eas, two Ameri can vessels in the storm zone were unreported but possibly safe, and the ci'tites of Tacloban and Mas bate southeast of Manila were hard hit. The Philippine air lines oper- ( buyers and w ith a minimum of risk ! always re.-ulted in the destruction ator at Masbate. city of 24.000 , tQ the investment bankers. j of the nation that permitted this population 230 miles southeast of Named as defendants were: crime against nature.. Manila, messaged damage was ! Morgan Stanley Si Co.; Kuhn ! "The south stands for segrega high there, gave no hint of cas- Loeb & Co.: Eastman, Dillon & tion and will continue to practice 'Watties and added "send relief." j Co.; Kidder. Peabody & Co ; Gold- it regardless." "Relief agencies were placed on , man, Sachs & Co.: Lehman Bros., I . . an "on call" alert. " I Smith, Barney & Co.; Globe, For-: Lykcs Brothers, operators of the ! gan & Co.; White Weld & Co.;j STORM WARNING ON COAST 7,196-ton Liberty ship Amelia ! Drexel & Co.; The First Boston SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 30-(VP Earhart, said she was agrgand on Corp.; Dillon, Read & Co.; Blyth ' The weather bureau tonight issued Mactan shoal near Cebu. (The & Co., Inc.; Harriman Ripley &:a southeast storm warning until vessel, operating out of New Or-'Co.. Inc.; Stone & Webster Securi- 8 p.m. Friday from Cape Mendo leans, normally carries a crew of ties Corp.; Harris, Hall & Co.; and cino northward to the mouth of the 39. i Union Securities Corp. ' Columbia river. Oath of High Office Taken at Hushed Rites iSt! ) . ft ... T . ., "; f ' V V r k.j . tav the top, wherein Speaker of the House John Hall (left), with Former Gov. Jay Bowerman as wearing. In officer, took his oath of office. At left below. Governor Hall Is shown nhig his Mtk.l office. I do aoleranly swear that I will uphold the constitution of the United Slate and the constitution of the State of Oregon and the Laws thereof, right are Hall and hfc wife In a house took his oath, in the executive office. (Photos by uon vim. new york, Oct. 3(M)-The government laid monopoly charges today against n ot wjh Mreet s leading banking firms in a civil suit described by Attorney Gen eral Tom Clark as "one of the larg est and most important in the his tory of the anti-trust laws." The financial district, veteran of many battles with regulatory and investigating groups, coun tered with a series of denials and dug in for a show-down fight. "If they want a fight," aid John M. Hancock, partner of" Lehman Bro?.. a firm named in the suit, "we'll give it to them." "My guess," he added, "is that it will be a dirty fight." ' Theuit, filed by the department of justice in federal district court for southern New York, specific ally accused the 17 internationally known investment-banking firms with conspiring to monopolize the JACKSON, Miss.. Oct. 30 (.41 -handling of new issues of ; secur- The south will continue to prac ities. j tice racial segregation regardless Some of the allexed practices injof a recommendation by a pr-i-which the bankers are accused of 1 dential committee that it be abol conspii ing include: i acting Governor Oscar . .. . ... ; Wolfe of Mississippi deviated to- Ehmination of competition among ' , KK themselves and among other in-"i among vestment bankers in the purchase and distribution of new securities. Influence and control over the management and financial activi ties of companies raising money by issuing securities. Concentration of the new securi ties business in a single market (New York) in which sales are made to large purchasers oi securir ties on terms favorable to such X 1 ruit Af hashed ceremonies, and that I wilt raitMuily discnarge picture taken at the spot where two vyi j r- . ( j :' n o I w x j Tt'aw at ' :-JJs - f I) :' .; - MIS sase -KLAMATH FALLS, Ore, Oct. SfX-Orefoa'a gorr nor, secretary of state, senate president, and their pilot wei found dead today on a crash out on pine bough litters along a path hacked through tba forest a few hours before Speaker of the House John Hall at Salem was sworn in as the state's new chief executive. The wreckage of the most tragic plane crash in Oregon history was reached this morning at the base of a cliff iat which the private plane ploughed on a hunting trip Tuesday, night. Three bodies lay in the unbumed wreckage, below tb South to Retain Segregation, Governor Savs f. In a prepared statement issued in response to a newsman's re quest for comment on the com mittee's proposal yesterday, Wolfe said: "AH forms of human relation ship and contracts cannot be reg ulated by law. History shows that where any nation has not practic ed segregation of races, but al- ! lowed miscegenation and amalga- mation of races, this custom has the start of which Is pictured at ine hiih minutes before the speaker of the siaiesman aian p..v..-i.u.., scarred bntte and were borne timbered cliff In Green valley. about 70 miles east of here near the California border. The fourth was thrown clear. - The dead are Gov. Earl Snell, 52; State Senate President liar shall Cornett, 49. next in line of succession for the governorship; State Funeral Monday A state funeral will be be 14 In the htuit af repreaeataUvee at the lUUhMM at Menday far Gev. Earl Snell. Secretary mt State Brt H Farrell. Jr asWI SeaaU President Marshall Ceraett. It waa ast nenneed ay the executive effW last night. The belies wilt net lie la state. Other details are be annaMKed later. Bodies af the geverae-r aad secretary mt state were breoght frvaa Klaaa alh Falls via bears aader palle escort, going threugh Salem ea rente to PerUaad early today. The body ef tbe senate president will be breagbt freaa Klamath Falls to Salem far Maaday's rites,- en rente to tatermeat at his birthplace In Keotacky. Secretary of State Rckbert S. Far rell, Jr, 41; and Cliff Hogue. U a Klamath Falls p&t of many years' experience. '..;' A convoy of state police escort ed the stretchers through the pin and cedar stands of the roadless, snow - patched wilderness, be hind a trail opened for them by axe-bearing rescuers. , From the main search camp green forest service trucks csr- ried the bodies through woods ti the Dog Lake guard station, and transferred to ambulances for tha trip here. Maison Leads Certege A somber crowd, headed by state officials, met the red ambu lance as it drove .up to the mor tuary here behind a convoy of six state police cars. State Polica -Supt. H. G. Maison, who cstna here from Salem, led the cortege. The bodies of Cornett and Hogue were left here, their hexoa city. Mrs. Cornett said her hus band would be buried in his na tal town. Burning Springs. Ky. lA hearse sent from a Irt!and mortuary took the governor a and the secretary of state s bodies on to Portland.. Searchers'' eame across tha wreckage this morning after a night - long hunt in the rain drenched, rugged country a brut three miles west of Hoz Lake. Gregory Tainter, one of. the fliere who first sighted - the crashed plane, and Chet Ellis, both at Lakeview, were erst on scene. . . 10 Men la Party The 100 - man searching party , composed of foresters, stte po lice, coast guardsmen, army, aca woodsmen, placed the bodies oo Improvised litters ot pine bough and blankets. The plane crash occurred whila' a missing Pan American World Airways plane with 13 aboard was still being sought in Alaska and a United Air Lines plana crash which killed 32 In, Utah waa being investigated. Just before the fatal plane trip, a reporter asked Governor Snsll if he were -not afraid of flying. Governor Snell raised his right hand, and joked: -Myjmark isn't up yet The governor's plane smashed into the butte Tuesday night, en route from here to the Warner valley for a morning of goose and duck hunting; but not until Wed nesday morning was it reported missing. Rancher' Tells News Mrs. Cornett. with whom tha party had dined here before tak ing off, assumed the plane had reached its destination. Oscar Kit tredge, the Warner valley rancher who was expecting the group,' as sumed it had not yet left. A check next morning disclosed that the- state's chief leaders were missing in the isolated, hill-pocked country, scattered with jack pines and Juniper. A telephone call from an iso lated cattleman, George Hill., who said he had heard a plane in trou ble, ; led , to discovery of tha crash: (Additional details on pagb 10) RENT CONTROL LIFTED WASHINGTON, Oct 30 -Giy Housing Expediter Frank Creedca today announced the removal ot rent ceilings from the San Ao gelo, Texv area. . V