Probe of B-36 Program Sought . Capital jfcjJonup Drive (or Low Cost Housing Trail Cold on Search for Two 1 By Committee (14 Pages) Price 5c I Gains Support Missing Convicts 100 Armed Possemen Make House-ro-Hpuse Canvass Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, May 31, 1949 o isr i ear, iiu. 11 muur anam. oimi Diversion of West Refuses House Group Votes Unanimously for Investigation Congressmen Join in Effort- to Aid Middle Income Group Columbia Water To Receive Reds Washington, May SI, W) The House Armed Service! commit tee authorised unanimously "searching Investigation" of the air force'! B-S bomber pro- rim, The commute, asked the house ; to carry out the investigation. Chairman Carl Vinson, D. Ga., aid the inquiry will cover not only the procurement and per formance of t h e controversial ix-engined bomber, but also will go into the whole air force concept of strategic bombing. "We will let the chips fall where they will," Vinson said. No Whitewash "This will be no whitewash in vestigation. We will find guil ty anyone who ought to be found guilty. We will exonerate any one who has been wrongfully charged." The committee went into act ion aa result of charges of irreg ularities in the purchase of the B-36. The plane is manufactur ed by Consolidated Vultee Air craft corporation, of which De fense Secretary Louis Johnson formerly was a director. Ugly Rumors Rep. James E. Van Zandt. R., Pa., a member of the committee and a naval reserve officer, told the House last week that "ugly" rumors about the B-36 involved not only Johnson, but Air Force Secretary W. Stuart Symington and Floyd Odium, who control Consolidated Vultee. Vinson said the committee will have "nothing to hide and nobody to protect" in its inves tigation of these rumors. He said the public is entitled to know whether there is grounds for the charges. Both Johnson and Symington have denied any irregularities in the B-36 program. Syming ton aaid the stories about h 1 m were false and that he welcom ed a chance to prove them so. The committee voted 22 to 0 in support of the authorization. Ford Calls for 20,000 Workers Detroit, May 31 (U.B The Ford Motor' company called nearly 20,000 employes back to work today following settlement of a 25-day strike. Some 16.000 employes return ed to their jobs at the huge Rouge plant and 1,200 went back to the Lincoln and Mercury plant while union representa tives met with Ford officials to select an arbitrator for the "speedup" issue which started the strike May. 5. Additional workers will be re called daily until all of Ford's 106,000 employes are back at their jobs in 33 manufacturing and assembly plants. Full em ployment is expected within two weeks. The strike, which was settled Sunday, cost Ford an estimated 83,000 vehicles and put the com pany far behind in its produc tion race with General Motors The company's chances of mak ing up its production losses were threatened by the possibility of another strike when the Ford contract with the CIO united auto workers expires July IS. The first discussions on the UAW contract demands have been set tentatively for tomor row. The union is asking a $100 a month pension, a medical care plan, and a fourth round cost-of-living wage increase. The com pany has already indicated it will resist those demands. Accused of Theft Of 80 Lbs. Peanuts The ease of the purloined peanuts 80 pounds of the goobers reached district court Tuesday when two men were arraigned on larceny charges. The pair, Lester E. Johnson of Oregon City, and Edward Heide, Molalla, pleaded Inno cent to charges of stealing the 80-pound sack of peanuts and tools from an automobile. Preliminary examination on the charges will be held on June 15. Bail for each of the men was set at S750, 100-Year GAR Vet Is Guest of Honor Portland. Ore.. May 31 B Theodore A. Penland 100-year-old commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic was guest of honor yrsterday at a memorial to Portland's war dead. The service was held against the grim background nf the eity'o honor roll of World War IX To South Probed Washington, May SI The - ' Columbia to the Colorado river is expected to come up this week before a congressional commit tee. The senate public works com mittee renews today its hearings on the administration proposal to set up a Columbia valley ad ministration in the northwest states to take over the work now being done by army engineers and the reclamation bureau. Senator Kerr (D-Okla) insist ed Friday that Maj. Gen. Lewis A. Pick, chief of army engineers, answer if such a transfer of wa ter ever would be feasible. Survey Needed Pick said he could not answer until after surveys have been made of the proposal to bring water from the Pacific north west to the C o 1 o r a d o on the western slopes of the Rocky mountains. Kerr was expected to renew his question today when Michael W. Straus, reclamation commis sion, explains to the committee the work of the bureau in the Columbia basin. (Concluded en Para , Column 8) First Ship Due In Shanghai Shanghai, May 31 nj.R)The first foreign vessele to reach Shanghai since the communist occupation was scheduled to ar rive tomorrow, marking renew al of Shanghai's shipping serv ice with the outside world. The vessel is the Dutch ship Molenkerk of the Royal Inter- Ocean lines, coming from Kor ean ports with a mixed cargo. Permission for the Molenkerk to dock at Shanghai was granted by the communist military con trol commission which was set up to govern the city. Officials of the American President lines also have sub mitted requests .to communist authorities for permission to bring in two of their vessels, the liners President Madison and President Polk. Both are due here around June 9 if per mission is granted. Shanghai rapidly was return ing to normal, with the commun ists continuing to take over gov ernment offices and enterprises. Most shops, including four large department stores reopened to day. Forty-eight textile mills have resumed operations and most schools are open. in taking over the national resources commission yesterday, Communist Commander Chen Yi, who has been named admin istrator of Shanghai, predicted the early communist occupation of all China. U. 5. Consulate in Mukden to Close Nanking, May 31 (Pi The U S. consulate in communist held Mukden may be closed. Authoritative sources here to day said the communist govern ment in Peiping had been ad vised of this proposed step. The Reds were asked, this source said, to help in evacuating Am erican consulate personnel from the Manchurian city. The consulate has been out of communication since Nov. 18 Freeze Cuts Strawberry- Gooseberry Crops by Half Local fruit nrnpesKOrt hnve linfavnrahl rnnrli lha mmrlimr stages of the 1949 fruit season high as possibly 50 per cent to the strawberry crop and the goose berry crop one of very small acreage this year being in short supply. The strawberry loss is main- ly result of freeze damage caus ing what are known in the par lance of the industry as "monkey faces." coupled with root dam age from weevil Infestation. So heavy is it in instances, more particularly the freeze damage that some growers reportedly hve discontinued picking and told folks to help themselves They have found dockage losses because of damaged fruit too heavy and the cost of the pro cessor in the same instance is very high In an attempt to sort the fruit. The "monkey face" condition results from freeze damage which causes a seedy crease in the fruit when past the bloom ing stage and as the berry ma tures the crease enlarges leav- Ins nn th mirim tl lha fruit - sm.ll rtDlic. of monkev f.in th looseberry acrM state the processors. Thii re sulu in a lumpy condition which' From Berlin Paris, May SI m The west. era powers voted down today Russia's proposal to Invite a del egation from the communist dominated German people's congress to appear before the foreign ministers council, French sources reported. Soviet Minister Andrei V. Vishinsky made the proposal during a two and a half-hour speech in which, once again, he denounced the west German state established in the Ameri can, British and French zones of Germany. In anticipation of Vishinsky's request to the council, the peo ple's congress of Soviet-occupied Germany yesterday had named a 22-man delegation which was to present a case to the foreign ministers. Held Not Representative In turn, U.S. Secretary of State Acheson, British Foreign Secretary Bevin and French Foreign Minister Schuman op posed Vishinsky's request. They contended the peoples congress is not really representative of all Germany, as it claims to be. French officials observed that if the east Germans were invit ed here, the west Germans would have to have an equal chance. This, he said, would turn the present conference of allied victors into a debate be tween two sectors of the defeat ed nation. The French foreign ministers had held up action on a request of the east Germans for entry visas, saying these would be granted only if the delegation were invited. Thus, the east Ger mans will not be permitted to come here at all. No Reason to Come "There is no reason for them to come here now," the official said. (Concluded on Pafo 5, Column S) Hiss Tried on Perjury Charge New York, May 31 (U.I!) The government began today its at tempt to prove that the most publicized lie of 1948 was told by Alger Hiss. The bright young man who sat behind the Late President Roosevelt as adviser at Yalta in 1945 was to go on trial for perjury in United States dis trict court. Court observers anticipated the fast selection of a jury, perhaps filling the box by the end of today s session. Hiss was charged with lying when he testified that neither he nor his wife ever had turned over copies of secret state de partment documents to an ad mitted courier for a communist spy ring. The government needed two witnesses, under federal court rules, to prove its perjury charge against the 44-year-old former state department offi cial who was secretary general of the San Francisco conference for the organization of the Unit ed Nations. There were indica tions that at least three maybe more would be called. Behind the case there loom ed a pumpkin shell, the shadowy movements of underground "ap paratus figures in pre-war Washington, and the strange even weird, story of the relation ship of two men. get under way showing losses as cannot be ediced eilh.r from the frozen or canned fruit and makes the berry so affect ed unmerchantable. It is said that the condition was more pronounced on the first picking and that the sec ond picking has shown a ma terial improvement but to what extent has not been estimated. The gooseberry pack is cut down to a very small product. It is stated. This is due both to freeze damage and also pre valence of worms and because of low prices and high cost of spraying the acreage prior to this year has been materially cut down and there would be a small crop to begin with, even if it was in good shape and un scathed by freeze and pests This year, it is said may result be- coming very near nil within n- other season. j a 7 ',X rff . ' ' ::. I .""- "-"" ., v r -. ; . , t I . m ' r " - V"" -i, . ' - . V I . .-. -' CrfC"-.'x a, , '.VT " . . rf " viO . - -' ' ?". . -...;. Manhunt Fans Out State, county and city police officers I" '-m j-n ' ' and prison guards formed this posse about to search a dense j X thicket immediately south of Salem, likely hideout for John f 1 Pinson and William Benson, two dangerous criminals who es- I ' caped the penitentiary bull pen early Monday morning. j Must Notify Union Before Wage Boosting Washington, May 31 A The supreme court held today that a union must be notified before a wage boost can be granted during contract talks unless the increase has been rejected by the union. Specifically the tribunal held that a Georgia textile mill com mitted an unfair labor practice after contract talks with the ClOf- Textile Workers union had be come deadlocked. The firm, Crompton-High-land Mills, Inc., of Griffin, Ga., contended the increase was necessary to keep a working force in a highly competitive la bor market. Justice Burton delivered the opinion, which was unanimous on the principle issue involved. Justices Douglas, Murphy and Rutledge disagreed on a ques tion of procedure. Burton was joined in the ma jority opinion by Chief Justice Vinson and Justices Black, Reed, Frankfurter and Jackson. The increase at issue, ranged from four to six cents an hour. It was more than the union had asked during the negotiations. In other actions today the court: 1. Held unanimously that the OPA should not have used as evidence against a businessman information he volunteered dur ing questioning by an investiga tor for the wartime price con trol agency. The case involved a $470,000 fine and three-year prison sentence given George Smith a New York manufactur er, on charges of illegal use of textile-buying priorities. The tribunal sent the case back to lower courts In New York. (Concluded on Pate 5, Column 4) Woman Held As Communist Seattle. May 31 (Pi Mrs Hazel Anne Wolfe, a lawyer's secretary, was arrested today by the immigration and naturaliza tion service on xhargea of mem bership in an organization which advocates overthrow of the government by force. John P. Boyd, the service's district director, said that Mrs. Wolfe was taken into custody on warrant issued by the office of the commissioner of immigra tion and naturalization at Wash ington, DC. Mrs. Wolfe, 51, is a Canadian citizen, Boyd said. She was ar rested at the office of Attorneyfran to a tree to hide John Caughlan, where she has been his secretary. She was taken to the immigration sta tion and held in $1,000 bond. The warrant of arrest charged Mrs. Wolfe with being a mem ber of an organization which distributes literature advocat ing the overthrow of the U.S. government by force and vio lence, and that she is a member of an organization which "ad vocate and teaches" such over throw. Boyd aaid that Mrs. Wolfe, who is divorced, waa born in Victoria, B.C. THI WEATHER Rlexpd by United States Weather Bureau ForerMt for Balem and Vicin ity : Partly cloudy with scat tered showers tonight and Wed nesday sllirhUy warmer Wednes dsy. Lowft temperature tonight near 48 degrees, highest Wed nesday near M decrees. Agricul ture activities will hinder by showers and fresh winds on Wed neftdav. Maximum yetterday M. Minimum today 49. Mean tem perature yesterday M which was 4 below normal, Ttoal 24-hour precipitation to 11:30 a m. today .06. Total precipitation for the montfl 2.17 which is .17 inches aboe normal. Willamette river hlffht at Salem Tuesday morn Ins. 1 I feet. because it raised wages 12 days Call Lilienthal To Face Charges Washington. May 31 UP) Da vid E. Lilienthal will be called before the joint congressional committee on atomic energy to morrow tb meet the charges of "incredible mismanagement" le velled against the atomic energy commission by Senator Hicken looper (R-Iowa). Chairman McMahon of the joint committee made the an nouncement after a two hour closed door meeting of the com mittee. McMahon said he plans to leave the questioning of Lilien thal to Hickenlooper, the next ranking member. McMahon laid Hickenlooper did not present any "bill of particulars"- against Lilienthal to the committee today. But he did press his demand that he be per mitted to confront the A EC head, who yesterday accused the Iowan of making "un-American" and "smear" charges. Hickenlooper promptly retor ' ted that the charges brought against Lilienthal "competency" are not to be tried out by newspaper bar rages and self-praise or self-ser ving declarations, but must he examined in an orderly way." He said he saw no need for "histronics or theatrics. Aly Khan and Bride Off on Honeymoon Cannes. France, May 31 Ci- Prince Aly Khan and his bride, Rita Hayworth, left here on their honeymoon today in soaking rain. Prince Aly driving his grey Alfa Romeo car, left the Chat eau De L'Horizon with Rita. Emry Williams, the chauffeur was on the back aeat. Associated Press photograph er Jean Jacques Levy said that Aly was in a bad mood. As soon as they saw photographers Rita "Get out of here," Aly Kahn was quoted as saying to photog raphers. "This is my home. If you want to make pictures go on the other aide of the bridge." Williams said the prince and his wife intended to make a non stop drive to Paris where they will arrive in about 10 hours. $300 Worth Clothing Stolen from Bishops More than S.100 worth of men's clothing was atolen from Bishop's clothing store in a burglary over the Memorial day week-end which was discovered Tuesday morning. A complete list of the stolen property will have to await an inventory of merchandise. The burglar gained access to the store by smashing a hole in a wrre-screen window at the second story level at the rear of the building. The bar lock of the window was pried loose by the burglar A metal stairway which leads!" reported quiet today, how- to the Chamber of Commerce 'vrT- wi,h rm' on ,he lrrt The strike originally broke offices permitted the thief toito maintain order among the out at a mine owned by the Pa reach the window. The store "r ikers. jtlno group, Bolivia ! largest tin is located at 143 N. Liberty. I Acting President Mamerto L'r-1 combine. 4 ii I KM PI Escaped Convict: Above, John O. Pinson, 31, lifer, gun slayer of a state police officer Below, William P. Benson, 43, convicted of armed robbery Both are being hunted by po lice after a Memorial day es cape from the Oregon prison. Bradley Protests Army Pay Cuts Washington. May 21 Gen. Omar N. Bradley, army chief of staff, said today that unless ade quate pay and opportunities are available to promising young of ficers there is danger that the army will be led by "second raters." Bradley spoke out in protest against what he called the fail ure of the house to realize the importance of pay raises for of ficers as well as non-commissioned officers and enlisted men. He addressed the political study group of Washington, a women s group. "Inferior inducements attract .oecond rate men," said Bradley. "Second rate men invite second best security. In war there is no second prize for the runner up." State of Siege Rules Bolivia As Miners Stage Revolt La Paz. Bolivia. May 31 'Pi The government declared a slate of siege throughout Bolivia last night as striking mine workers seized more hostages and the walkout spread through the tin pro ducing area. Two more mines and a railroad were reported closed in the strife-torn Catavia area high in- --. - i7.": the Andes where at least 27 per sons. Including two American engineers, were killed In bloody week-end rioting. The government communique said the action was taken be cause "a state of civil war" had been brought about by revolu tionary outbreaks among the tin mine workers. It blamed the right wing nationalist revolu tionary movement, a political party opposed to the govern ment. Reports from the tin mine area said two more miners were killed and six were wounded yesterday center government against un in a strikers' attack on the police on, wnich It charges are affili station at lluanuinl, site of one wjtn rightist, nationalistic of the Patlno mines. The areas arouoa attemotim to start a re- Washington, May 31 (Pi A drive of undetermined strength developed today behind legisla tion for government encourage ments to provide housing for middle-Income families. Spon sors describe these as families with annual earnings of $2,500 to $4,000. Rep. Hugh B. Mitchell (D.. Wash.) told newsmen that 21 house members are jointly sup porting a bill that, with federal loans, would help this income group to get housing at payments of not over $55 a month. Neglected Groups "This is the neglected group in the housing picture." Mit chell said. "It comprises over 30 percent of the population. Hous ing offered by private builders is beyond their means. The hous ing bill now being pressed be fore congress neglects them, too, as it intends to aid the lowest income groups. The west coast member put in a plug for - middle-income housing as administration demo crats threatened to force the ad ministration's housing measure out of the house rules commit tee and bring a vote on the house floor. This multi-billion dollar bill. already passed 57 to 13 by the senate, calls for a vast program of slum clearance, low-rent housing and farm housing aids. (Concludrd on Pace t. Column II Boeing Union Loses Rights Washington, May 31 (U.RI The U.S. court of appeals ruled to day that a lodge of the Interna tional Association of Machinists forfeited all rights as a collec tive bargaining agent at the Boeing Airplane company. Seat tie. Wash., by a 12-week strike in 1948. The appeals court ruled S to 0 that the union failed to file notice of a dispute under the Taft-Hartley law and violated a no-strike clause of its contract. Some 14,500 members of the Aeronautical Industrial district lodge No. 751 walked out of the Boeing plant April 22. 1948. The union at the time had been ne gotiating for contract changes for more than a year. But it gave only a 24-hour notice of its strike intention. The Taft-Hart ley law. which went into effect while negotiations were in prog ress, requires 60-day notice of termination of a contract and : 30-day notice of a dispute. Three days after the union went on strike the company an nounced that it would not deal with the union as a collective bargaining agent. It has contin ued this position. "The language of the act is simple," said Judge George C. Sweeney for the court, "and we conclude that . . . the union was not free to renounce its contract unless it complied with the act. There is no justification for ex cusing this union from the oper ation of the statute." Suicides In Subway New York. May 31 i1 A young woman deliberately laid her head on an indenendent ,ubway track in Brooklyn to day, police reported, and was decapitated by an on-rushing 10-car train. The woman was tentatively identified as Doro thy S. Klar, about 35, of Brook lyn. riulHKUIIIfl, will, nau miu caiuci the strike was aimed at over throw of the government, an nounced the imposition of a state of siege. He said the step was decided on with cabinet approval as a result of the "revolutionary acts" by miners at Catavl. The country had been in a state of siege from May 1 to May 20 as a result of political disturbances after the May 1 congressional elections in which the government party lost some ground to rightist groups. The topsy-turvy Bolivian situ ation apparently pits the left-of volt By CHRIS KOWITZ, JR. . Clues were still slim and the trail was growing colder today as 100 armed possemen contin ued their local search for John Pinson, 31, and William Benson, 43, two notorious convicta who escaped from the Oregon state penitentiary early Monday morning. City and state police, sheriff's deputies, prison guards and a host of volunteers are combin ing efforts in an all-out effort to locate the escapees. Some members of the search party have gone without sleep sine the break was first reported at 1:10 a.m. Monday. Check All Reports Every possible clue as to the whereabouts of Pinson and Benson is being checked. All reports of prowlers, strange noises, open windows, dogs' barking, etc., receive prompt at tention from the gigantic search party. Searchers are scrutinizing every freight train as it leaves Salem . . . clotheslines are being watched . . . fields, ditches, barns, etc., are frequently exam ined . . . police are stopping all cars which appear "suspicious" . . . 24 hours a day, the manhunt 80e on A house-to-house canvass was conducted along 25th street Monday, following a report that prints made by bare feet were found along a creek running alongside South 25th street. Several crews of searchers, each man armed with a gun combed every open field and clump of trees in and around Salem Monday. Some men were armed with high-powered rifles for distance shots, and others carried shotguns, which are very adept at knocking down a man who appears for only a split sec ond. Together, about a dozen men walked side by side, only a few feet apart, through the fields. Ordered to Shoot And nearly all the' men on the manhunt agreed on one point: "If you see 'em, shoot." At noon today, there were still no stolen cars reported in (he Salem area since the tim of the break. Burglary of complete outfits of clothing and luggage from Bishop's men store Monday night is thought by police to have a bearing on the convict case. Police believe it quite feasible that the convicts them selves broke into the store and stole the goods. Police are not overlooking a single possibility. Any report of any nature given to police is being screened with the tnougnt in mind that It may have some connection with the two escap ed criminals. (Conrlodrd on Pc . Column 1) Reaches 390 IS Unild Prej Traffic crashes, drownings and other accidents killed 390 persons during the Memorial week-end a final United Press count showed today. Hishwav accidents killed '17 persons. Just two more deaths than the national safety coun cil had predicted in its pre-holi-day warning to motorists. Nine ty persons drowned and 83 oth ers died in miscellaneous acci dents. The loll of 30 deaths marked a sharp decrease from the 1948 and 1947 tolls, but the number of highway deaths was slightly higher. Auto accidents Riuea 212 persons In 1948 and 206 in 1947. California led the states In casualties with 44 deaths, inclu ding 30 on the highways. New York was second with 27 deaths, including 14 on the highways. Texas had 24 deaths, six on the highways. Uinois had 23 deaths, including 19 on the highways. Last year 453 persons died in all types of accidents. In 1947, the nation counted 482 dead but that total included 103 killed in disastrous airline crashes at La Guardia Field, N.Y., and Havre de Grace, Md. Generally fair weather pre vailed throughout the nation ex cept for spotty showers In the) midwest and south. A cloud" burst at Thic' River Falls, Minn., flooded the area under 7 'i inches of rain that poured into basements and left shallow lakes in fields. Six Workmen Killed in Paper Factory Explosion Rome. May 31 Six work men were killed and flvi wera injured in an explosion and fir in a paper factory yesterday at Merate, near Como, dlspatchea from there reported today. '