Journal THE WEATHER HERE MOSTLY CLOUDY tonight and Friday. Little change in temper ature. Lowest tonight, SO; high est Friday, 76. Mailmam yesterday, 1: minimum to day, St. Total 34-hoor precipitation: trarot far month: .IW; normal, .09. Sraion pre- M clpltatlon, 4t.2S: normal, S7.43, Rtaor tiellhl, -S.4 loot. (Report by V. S. Weather Bareauuu.) HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 190 Entered u iceond elMf matter t Sklam, Oregon Salem, Oregon, Thursday, August 11, 1949 (24 Pages) Price 5c aoncai A Texas Ranger Here to Probe Murder Cases Seeks to Clear Up Two Slaytngs in Which McEwen Is Suspect Bv DON UPJOHN Texas Ranger Frank Probst from Amarillo, Tex., here in the hopes of clearing up the mur der of Tex Thorn, international ly known explosive expert of the nil fields at Amarillo, June 22, was in cooperation with Sheriff Denver Young and his deputies Thursday trying to weave a web of evidence around Edward Charles McEwen, in the Marion county jail also charged with 1 the murder of a rancher at rnoe nix. Ariz., this year. Arizona officers are on their way here to demand return of McEwen to that state on the murder warrant. McEwen landed in jail here after he had stolen a hearse from a local mortuary, wrecked it, and he then entered a plea of guilty to larceny in district court But in the meantime Arizona officials got wind of the ar rest and advised Sheriff Young that McEwen is a murder sus pect from that state. Susnected in Two Crimes Ranger Probst also got wind of it and certain similarities in tne Arizona and Texas crimes sent him hurrying to Salem. The Arizona rancher was found dead garroted, and wearing only his shorts and socks. The Texas oil field expert when found dead also attired only in his shorts and socks, with the exception his own shirt was tied tightly around his neck and his body had been pierced by some sharp implement. Probst came here with a cir cumstantial description of the man suspected of the Texas kill ing and he says it closely fits that of McEwen in the mam de tails. Scan Fingerprints Scattering bits of finger prints picked up after the Texas mur der were placed at the disposal of state police finger print ex perts here Thursday by Probst and Deputy Sheriff William De Vall for close comparison and while the first reports from the prints didn't say they matched, neither did they say they didn't and further careful scrutiny will be given before Probst gets his final report. In the meantime Thursday morning McEwen was hustled into the finger print room and additional prints were taken to be turned over to the state police experts for further checking. (Continued on Page B. Column 1) Science Aiding Chicken Thieves Is science coming to the aid of chicken thieves and gas bombs being put to use to aid them in their maraudings? That is suspected at least by some Marion county farmers, according to information de veloping at a meeting of the Grange auxiliary held south of Salem last night. Reports were to the effects that there have been a number of chicken coop forays south of the city. Steve Mindard on the t' South Salem road and a number of chicken owners in the Liberty , section were said to be victims of the thieves. Those discussing it said they are satisfied that the looters move in on a chicken coop arm ed with a small, pratically noise less gas bomb, dump it under the sleeping chickens without dis turbing them, and as soon as the fowl are overpowered by the fumes their necks are wrung without disturbance and the thieves make their getaway Turkey flocks in Clackamas county ana near me iorin iviai- ion county border also are said to have been subject to depre dations in the past few weeks. Hearing Asked in Ashland Fire Case Ashland, Aug. 11 OT Jack son county juvenile officer John Richard planned a hearing today for two boys, 12 and 13, involv ed in the fire that destroyed a woodyard and lumber ware house. Assistant Police Chief Herb Hayes said the boys had ad mitted tossing a firecracker into a tar barrel that exploded into flame. The blaze quickly spread through the Whittle Transfer and Fuel company yard and caused damage to the Copeland Lumber company warehouse. Confesses to Brutal Slaying 01 Young Girl Portlander Leads Po lice to Body of Stabbed And Beaten Victim Portland, Ore., Aug. 11 OT sallow-faced young man led DOlice today to the body of a 15- vear-old eirl who had Deen beaten, stabbed, 'and hidden un der a lor Pile near a Portland bridge. Detectives Noel Eck and Sgt. Dan Mitola said the man, picked up on another charge, voluntar ily blurted out tne story oi a brutal slaying that police had never suspected. They said a 22-year-old man with a long criminal record ad mitted killing the girl after she refused his advances, because "she was a good girl and would make trouble with the police." "It is the most cold-blooded case I've ever had," said Chief of Detectives William Browne Young Farm Worker The girl Thelma Taylor, Port land, a young farm worker had been reported missing by her parents last Saturday, but there had been no previous hint she had met with foul play. Sgt. Verne Nicholson arrested Morris Leland, 22, Portland, this morning on suspicion of driving a stolen car. On the way to the police sta tion, Leland said he wanted to talk to homicide detectives, be cause he knew about a murder. Detectives Eck and Mitola said the 22-year-old Leland told them he had killed a girl last Satur day, and led them to a log pile in the brush in North Port land. Wore Bobby Sox There police found the girl's body, fully clothed in the bobby sox, plaid shirt, and levis she had been wearing when she left her home last Friday morning to pick beans at Hillsboro. (Concluded on Page S, Column 6) Thief Posed As College Student A "Notre Dame" man was plucked off skid row Thursday by city detectives interested in questioning him concerning the sale of a Salvation army horn to a Salem pawn shop. Police identified their pris oner as Frank Rector, Jr. His suitcase bore several stickers from the Indiana college, in cluding one 10-inches tall. Suspicion was aroused when a second hand store operator ad vised police he had purchased a French horn from a transient for only $4.50. Rector was spotted on the street and brought to the po lice station for questioning. There he admitted taking the horn in a burglary of the Sal vation army headquarters in Eugene. He told police he had request ed help, but had been turned down by the charity organiza tion. He arrived in Salem in tne wee hours of the morning after hitching a ride on a truck. Police also pointed out tnat Rector's institutional training had been confined primarily to a term at San Quentin prison in California on a burglary charge. He was not a student at Notre Dame or at another college pre viously displayed on his well- traveled suitcase. The earlier alma mater's" identification was virtually obliterated by the Notre Dame stickers. ft ' mi m iiimj.mil ki" 41 y"8 - x . jtiis ? 'IT' ?l War Assets Employe sMote Called Invitation for Bribery Senator Mundf Sears' Store Opens Mrs. Howard H. (Roberta) Heiserman, ; who was chosen the "Average Sears' Shopper" cuts the ribbon that officially opened the new Sears, Roebuck, and com pany store here. At the left of Mrs. Heiserman is Mayor Walter Musgrave of West Salem and at the right are Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom of Salem with the key to the city and the manager of the Salem Sears' store, Jim Mosolf. Big Crowd Jams Opening Of Sears' New Store Salem opened its newest modern department store the Sears, Roebuck & Co. store in the Capitol street snopping center Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. Waiting at the doors to enter the store after the formalities the hrief ceremonv officially opening the stream- alined building were at least ouu persons, some of whom arrived Ecuador Town Drops 1500 Feet Quito, Ecuador, Aug. 11 OT Witnesses reported today one of tho most fantastic pranks of Ecuador's disastrous earthquake the little village of Libertad and its surrounding fields sank 1,500 feet straight down into the earth. The town, with a population of about 100 persons, just dis appeared. Where it once stood is n eaDine hole half a mile in diameter and 1,500 feet deep. The strange tale was told by military and medical officers returning from the quake area south of here near Pelileo, hard est hit city where thousands died. They said they were shown the big sink by Col. Gabriel Nunez, troop commander in the region. Most of the top soil earth in the sunken area was scrambled by the sudden drop, but in a few places crops continued to grow just as they did Detore. Shasta Daylight Crashes Into Truck Red Bluff, Cal., Aug. 11 U.B The Shasta Daylight, crack Southern Pacific San Francisco tn Portland streamliner, was held up for nearly an hour here vesterdav after crashing into a truck and trailer loaded with 15 tons of heavy lumber. Driver of the truck, Clarence Hinkle. 26. Red Bluff, escaped without injury. He told police he could not see the train com ing because of freight cars which blocked his view of the tracks at the crossing. SDeed of the train when the accident occurred was esti mated at 30 miles per hour. shortly after 9 a.m The crowd that swarmed through the doors included ev eryone from babes in arms to grandfather and grandmother and by 10:45 the parking area for the store was filled and a con tinual stream of people moved through the doors, Claiming the attention of the greatest number of persons was the main floor of the store where is found wearing apparel for youngsters as well as the grown ups. There was not a depart ment on that floor that was not jammed with shoppers as well as those "just looking." The opening ceremonies, heard over loudspeakers ana aiso broadcast over the radio, were held just inside the doors of the main entrance to the store on Capitol street. Both Mayor Robert L. Elf strom of Salem and Mayor Wal ter Musgrave of West Salem gave short talks complimenting the executives of the company on their choice of Salem for the new store and welcoming them Immediately after their talks the "Sears Average Shopper," Mrs. Howard H. (Roberta) Heiser man, cut the ribbon at the en trance as the doors opened. Early Start in Hops Makes Picker Demand An evppnl innallv pa rlv start for the first hop harvest has re- ,no ;n n urintii chnriaoo nf nir-kers. esDeciallv in the Inde pendence area, William H. Baillie, manager oi tne aiem biik ' the state employment service, said Wednesday. Picking of early hops near Independence began Wednesday, and in some fields as early as July 28, Baillie reported. Early hops usually are not ready to be picked until about the middle of August. Migratory workers who come to this section annually for the hop harvest aren't expected to arrive until around August 15, and since the hops came sur prisingly early this year, a shortage in help has resulted Baillie explained. Persons desiring to work in hop fields this summer are ask ed to report to the Independ ence area as soon as possible. I A branch office of the employ 3 Groups Probe Bus Tragedy Bloomington, Ind., Aug. HOT Three crews of investigators studied charred fragments of a Greyhound bus today in an at tempt to learn why it carried 16 persons to flaming death yester day. An even grimmer investigation moved slowly ahead at an em ergency morgue in the National Guard armory. There weary of ficials and dazed relatives tried to identify the last of the bodies of the victims. Five remained unidentified. Investigators for the Inter state Commerce Commission, In diana state police and Grey hound Lines were going through the wreckage at the Greyhound garage in Indianapolis. They would say little, but Su perintendent Arthur M. Thurs ton of state police said that, a preliminary examination had disclosed "no evidence of me chanical failure." Earlier, Driver Wayne Cran- mer, 25, Indianapolis, had said, "It seemed like the steering gear went out." The tragedy was three-fold in one family. The list of identi fied included a mother and her two children. House Raises Minimum Wage To 75 Cents Hour Washington, Aug. 11 UP) The house passed today a bill to raise the national minimum wage from 40 cents an hour to 75, as asked by President Tru man. The measure went to the sen ate, where a similar minimum wage bill is pending. The sen ate has set the measure aside repeatedly for other legislation, however, and it is uncertain when the bill may be called up for debate there. The house action was. in a sense, a victory for the admin istration. The bill carried the 75-cent minimum advocated by the president. Secretary of La bor Tobin, and representatives of major labor organizations. Revision Carried However, it also carried sub stantially the revision of cover age pushed by a coalition of re publicans and southern demo crats. The bill was introduced by Rep. Lucas (D., Tex.). Earlier the house had refus ed to wash out three days of heated debate on minimum wage legislation by sending the whole thing back to its labor commit tee for more study. A motion to do that lost 242 to 41 on a standing vote. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 8) -In ment service has been set up at IndeDendence. Baillie also reports that the quota of bean pickers needed from day to day in the Stayton vicinity is not being met. There are enough beans in the Stay- ton area now to keep BUU picK- ers busy for three full days and trucks are leaving the employ ment office at Ferry and Cot taee streets every morning. Several growers who brought trucks io the employment oi- fice Wednesday morning, in the hope of picking up a load of pickers for the day, were forced to return to the fields empty, be cause not enough workers were awaiting jobs for the day. McKay Tours Basin Project Yakima, Aug. 11 u.R With the Columbia Basin Inter-Agency committee meeting cut short by Gov. C. A. Robbins return to Idaho because of the fire sit uation, Gov. Arthur B. Langlie of Washington and Gov. Douglas McKay of Oregon today toured the vast basin project. Governors Langlie and Mc Kay made a field trip to the ir rigation experiment station in Prosser yesterday after tne morning had been taken up with the discussion of the conserva tism nt the soil and water re sources on the Yakima and Col umbia projects. Soeaking at the session of the inter-agency committee, which is an advisory group on state and federal development of north west resources, Governor Lang lie said: "People are rapidly becom ing water conscious. Cheaper delivery to farming areas com bined with more efficient pumps and the improvements in sprink ler irrigation point to wider use of the state's ground water sup ply." He cited the cooperation be tween two branches of the state government the state depart ment of agriculture and the de partment of conservation and development in state's land and water resources, He said that A. T. Flagg, an engineer, had been assigned to Uphold Label Of Subversives Washington, Aug. 11 OT The U. S. court of appeals today upheld the government's right to label certain groups "sub versive." The 2-to-l decision was hand ed down in the case of the joint anti-fascist refugee committee which had appealed to the court's after it was included on Attorney General Clark's "sub versive list" two years ago. The appeals court affirmed the U. S. district court here in dismissing the refugee commit tee's suit on a motion by the government. A list of alleged subversive organizations was published by the attorney general in connec tion with the loyalty check on federal employes. Justices Bennett Champ Clark and James M. Proctor said the justice department had acted for the president of the United States and that "had the presi dent performed the task himself his acts could not have been challenged legally.' Justice H. W. Edgerton filed a sharp dissent, Randall Sees Wage Fixing New York. .Aug. 11 OT- land Steel company president. Clarence B. Randall, said today that President Truman's creation of a steel fact-finding board was an "industrial revolution" which would lead to permanent gov ernment wage fixing. The attack on the president's action was the first made by an ndustry spokesman as the com panies Degan presentauun ui their case before the board. Ran dall is from Chicago. Last week the CIO Steelwork- ers union argued before the board for a 30-cents-an-hour package including wage, pension and insurance benefits. Randall, who spoke for his own company but also was the keynoter for the entire industry, not only rejected all the union's demands, but also denounced the very process of a fact-finding board Itself. "When the president announc ed the formation of this board he was in fact announcing an in dustrial revolution in America,' Randall asserted. "By doing so, he has declar ed himself as favoring a new social orders, and one so differ ent from that under which our magnificent production record has been achieved that unless the process is stopped, and stopped at once, there will be no possi bility of turning back. "Through this means, wheth er he knew it or not, he has pro claimed that wages shall be fix ed by the government. "The fixing of profits comes next, and then when incentive is killed and production falls, the final step of nationalization fol lows. Paul Henri Spaak Belgian Heads Europe's Group Strasbourg, France, Aug. 11 (fl) Paul-Henri Spaak, Belgian socialist leader, was unanimous ly elected today as the first pres ident of the European consul tative assembly. The chunky little Belgian re signed yesterday as Belgium's acting premier and foreign min ister so he could take over the top job in the newly-created council of Europe. Winston Churchill, Britain's wartime prime minister, nomi nated Spaak for the assembly presidency. The 101 delegates from a dozen countries quickly endorsed the selection without opposition. Delegates in private negotia tions yesterday gave their sup port to Spaak, one of Europe's outstanding political figures and first president of the United Na tions general assembly. Actual voting was delayed until today Grills Letter Written Hunt Washington, Aug. 11 OT Senator Mundt (R., S. D.) heat edly charged today that a letter written by a war assets adminis tration employe to James V. Hunt, in August, 1947, was a "blatant invitation for bribery or connivance of some kind." Mundt, a member of the sen ate investigations subcimmiltee, spoke out after a committee in vestigator had read the contents of a letter which he said was written by Clarence W. Oehler to Hunt. Another letter told of Oehler obtaining tor Hunt match covers with "White House" "H. H. V." and "H. S. T." printed on them. Match Folders Again Hunt, now a Washington busi ness counselor, has been a prime figure in the committee's inquiry into activities of "five percent ers" individuals who seek out government contracts for others for a fee. The committee investigation previously has developed that Hunt ordered books of match folders bearing the imprint "swiped from Harry S. Truman." Hunt said then that he was act ing at the request of the White House. 'H. H. V." are the initials of Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, President Trumans military aide, whose name has figured in the inquiry. Francis D. Flanagan, commit tee investigator, said that Oehler tn Bive Snaak time to deal with was a warehouse specialist for a Bnvernment shakeun in Brus- the WAA in the western area at sels in which he resigned his premiership. Spaak had been serving as acting ; premier since Belgian elections more than six weeks ago in which his socialist party lost ground. The assembly is the deliberat ive body of the council of Eur ope which opened its first ses sions here this week. The guid ing body of the council is the ministerial committee, com posed of the foreign ministers of the 12 member nations Brit ain, France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Italy, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Ireland, Greece and Turkey. Farm Program Wins Approval Washington, Aug. 11 OT A compromise farm program for next year won unanimous ap proval today of a bi-partisan senate agriculture subcommittee. The group struck out all re maining provisions for produc tion payments" proposed by Sec retary of Agriculture Brannan as part of his overall new farm pro gram. Brannan suggested this climl nation last week-end after the house previously had killed off a proposed trial run limited to a few farm products. Senator Anderson (D., N.M.), chairman of the seven-man sub committee, said the compromise bill will be considered Satur day by the full 13-mcmber ag riculture committee. Approval by that group ap pears likely because the subcom mittee is a majority of the full measure on to the senate. I . , i isLmi? imTI&iB- Fireman Wets Down Blazing Bus Wreckage A fireman squirts water pumped from a creek on to the blazing wreckage ol a bus in which 15 persons died and 12 omers were injurca hi represent Dotn aepartmenis 'V ".-,", u, tt kriH. .hutment, turned over and burst state s grouno Bioominisiuii, mi., nusu", . - . surveying the water supply. into flames. (AP Wirephoto) the time he wrote letters to Hunt, formerly a $50-a-day consultant for WAA in Washington. (Concluded on Paire 5, Column 5) Truman Sfifl for Gen'l Vaughan Washington, Aug. 11 OT Pre sident Truman said today his opinion of Maj. Gen. Harry II. Vaughan, his army aide, has not been changed by testimony brought out in a senate com mittee investigation of five per centers. Mr. Truman also told a news conference that the secretary of the navy is not free to relieve Vaughan from active duty in the way two other major gener als have been suspended tem porarily. Secretary of (he Army Gray suspended Maj. Gen. Alden H. Waitt and Maj. Gen. Herman Feldman after their names wer brought out in the senate investigation. Has anything that has hap pened on Capitol Hill changed your attitude toward Gen. Vaughan? a reporter asked Mr. Truman. Not in the slightest, the Presi dent replied. Mr. Truman added that he has not discussed with chairman Hocy (D., N. C.) of the commit tee the possibility o vaugnan testifying. He said he didn t want to in fluence Hoey's judgment that he wanted Hocy to get the facts and satisfy himself. He reiterated that Vaughan is at liberty lo testify at the hear ings. The President, in what ap peared to be a strong feeling about his army aide, commented on Vaughan's absence from the news conference by saying: He's not afraid of you, don't worry about that. In response to a question, Mr. Truman said he didn't know anything about a deep freeze which one witness told the com mittee earlier had been sent to Vaughan. Mr. Xruman said he had no comment to make, that he didn't know that such a thing occurred. "I refer to testimony," a re porter said. Bradley Nominated For Staff Chairman Washington, Aug. HOT President Truman announced today he is nominating Gen. Omar N. Bradley for promotion to chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. This would make Brad ley the nation's highest ranking military olficcr.