Journal THE WEATHER HERE PARTLY CLOUDY tonight and Saturday. Slightly cooler to il 1 1 h I. Lowest temperature to night, 47; highest Saturday, 10. Mailmun yMlerdsr. W: BlnlnaH M. M. TUI X4-bMr rclIUIIa; Mi lor month: l.9i nraal, .tt. clplutun. Mfii nsriaal. .. Ilm htlfbt, II IttL (Sepirt 7 I'. I. Wulkar - HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 221 Salem, Oregon, Friday, September 16, 1949 , 9J.s 'l&es) Price 5c C apital jl Interim Group Probes Truck Transport Tax Complaints Allege 1949 Law Subsidizes High Mileage Vehicles By JAMES D. OLSON Complaints that high mileage trucks are substantially sub sidized by the 1949 transpor tation tax law, passed by the last legislature, were under in vestigation by the legislative highway interim committee. Opening a meeting at the Mar Ion hotel Friday morning, Rep resentative Ralph Moore, chair ,man of the committee, pointed Anv.l that H. B. 188, providing for the amended motor transport tan was a stop-gap measure and purely temporary. "This bill," Moore said, "was framed with the objective of bridging over the coming bien nium so that further study could be made prior to enactment of a permanent measure. Cites Discrimination It was pointed out that under the new act, which becomes ef fective on-January 1, 1950, a small pick-up truck paid $86 in fees in 1948 and would be $156.30. It was also shown that a truck-trailer combination oper ated in fixed termini service, with annual mileage of 35,000, and combined weight of 62,000, aid $1,672.50 in 1948 and for a like operation in 1950 the total tax would be $1,569.10. The charges were countered bv A. F. Harvey, superintendent of transportation for the public utilities commission, who point ed out to the commission that heavy duty trucks, although paying tax on the weight of the vehicle together with the poten tial pay load, frequently trav eled with less than a full load and many times empty. Small Trucks Pay Most Harvey, in reply to a ques tion by Senator Paul Patterson s declared that he believed that ithe small commercial vehicles ,'operating in congested centers should pay at a higher rate of tax than the long distance haul era. Members of the committee were told by both Harvey and William Healy, assistant secre tary of state, that the motor transport tax and the increased gasoline tax would bring in greater revenues for highway construction than wer estimat ed at the time of the legislature. (Concluded on fate 5, Column 1) Gervais Youth Killed by Train Riverside, Calif.. Sept. 16 VP) The body of a Gervais, Ore., youth was here today after shift ing steel girders on a railroad flat car crushed him fatally at Indio yesterday. He was Ray Dean, 17. The flatcar was in the railroad yards at Indio when the accident oc- curred yesterday. Young Dean was reported to have come from Winterhaven. Ariz. The coroner took charge of the body and brought it here after notifying the youth's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen S. lDn of Gervais, who are on the v&? here to claim the body. Rajk on Trial Admits Plot to Seize Hungary Former Minister Implicates American In Conspiracy Budapest, Hungary, Sept. 16 UP) Alasilo Rajk, once Hunga ry's No. 2 communist, told a peo ple's court today he plotted with Americans and other westerners to overthrow the communist government and make Hungary a "colony of Yugoslavia. Rajk, former interior minister and foreign minister in the com. munist government, went on trial for his life with seven oth- ers against a background of a seething war of nerves between communist Yugoslavia and the Soviet-led nations of the com' inform. Rajk Pleads Guilty The former boss of Hungary's police pleaded guilty to all charges in the indictment. One of these was that he plotted with Marshal Tito's Yugoslav govern ment to assassinate leading Hun garian officials. Rajk quickly named two Americans as accomplices. Heap ing guilt upon his own head in a long recital to the court, he freely almost eagerly testi fied to contacts with British, French, American and Yugoslav intelligence agents. (The trial was following a fa miliar pattern. As in the case of the convicted Roman Catholic primate, Josef Cardinal Mind szenty, the defendants went on trial with the presumption that they were guilty until proved in nocent. This is the opposite of most western procedure, New Zealand to Defy Harry Bridges Wellington, N.Z., Sept 16 VP) Prime Minister Peter Fraser told the house of representatives today that the longshoremen's union leader, Harry Bridges, had threatened to tie up Pacific shipping and that amounted to a declaration of war on New Zealand. "Let them try," he said. "Let anyone in this country try. We will deal with them with the ut- most rigor of the law, and If that law is not sufficient, we will make it so." Opposition Leader S. S. Hol land said his party would help pass any legislation needed to deal with such a situation. . ft 1 V, 1- .r? - ... 4m i t rff . S ' -V 0 P" IHvrV v.." J 1 J 11 l( I 6 -v Tf r i Levis Stops Wei fare Doles: US Intervenes, Steel Strike Declines to Say Whether Coal Strike Called I Mediator Sets Joint Meeting Next Monday Washington, Sept. 16 ( The government today called steel companies and the CIO Steel workers union to a mediation meeting Monday morning. Cyrus S. Ching, federal medi ation and conciliation service director, called on both sides in the steel dispute to meet with government conciliators Monday at 9:30 a.m. Ching said in a statement there is a "good possibility" that the failure of steel firms and the union to begin bargain' ing on the basis of the presi dent's fact finding board report "springs not from irreconcilable fundamental differences in views, but from the meaning of words." World's Largest Bomber Crashes Fort Worth, Texas, Sept. 16 VP) A giant B-36, world's larg- ( Concluded on Pan S, Column 1) t bomber, crashed into a lake last nigni, laKing inree ur iiiuic lives. Air force officers said they were mystified by the 326,000- pound giant's plunge into Lake Worth. An unexplained power failure was blamed. One member of the crew of 13 was killed in the crash. Bodies of two other crewmen caught in the submerged wreck age of the huge craft, were re covered today. Two airmen still were miss ing. Eight of the crew survived. The six-engined giant roared down Carswell air force base's long runway just after dusk last night, rose only a few feet and fell into the lake at 100 miles an hour. Maj. Gen. Roger Ramey, Eighth air force commander, said: "After questioning all of the men in the B-36 involved in last night's accident, we are more Jn the dark than ever as to its cause." Ramey said that when the pi lot called for emergency power "the emergency power was in dicated on the instruments, but the plane was not delivering it." First Lt. Richard L. English, flight engineer from Sartell, Miss., said he stood on the fuse lage of the cigar-shaped ship aft er the plane hit and took a hasty roll call. He said every man an swered. Crash boats picked up survi vors from the wings, fuselage and the water as the six-engined air monster stayed partially afloat. The eight known survivors were rushed to the base hospital for treatment of minor injuries. Fall Opening Treasure Hunt Salem merchants participat ing in Fall Opening, set for Tuesday, Sept. 20, have begun distribution of t i c k e t s for the treasure hunt, which for several years has been a feature of both Fall and Spring openings. By Friday morning at least 75 merchants, most of them in the downtown area, had signed-up for participation in the annual fall event and over 165,000 tickets had been distributed to the merchants by the Salem Re tail Trade Bureau. One large firm has 10,000 tickets for dis tribution. Prizes for the tickets will be found the night of Fall Opening in the windows of participating merchants and will range from ready-to-wear to hardware and household items. Opening event of Fall Open ing will be a revived feature, not held for a number of years, a display of new models of auto mobiles by local dealers. This display is to be arranged in Court street between North Commercial and North High streets. As in the past, there will be a window display contest with merchants divided into a num ber of classifications for the event and windows slated for unveiling at 7 p.m. Judges for the contest will be three out-of-town window decorators. Alrea dy selected as judges are John Mock of Bedell's and J. R. Ness of Nudleman's in Portland. Final Plans for "Soil Conservation Day" Program Key figures check final plan for Oregon's 'biggest land use show, which opens Saturday morning on Irvin Bartels farm, one mile north of Shaw. Standing, left to right, Irving Bartels, owner of field day site and Bob Schmidt, general chairman. Kneeling, at left, is Vernon Jette, supervisor of Santiam soil conservation district, co-sponser of the event with the Oregon State Grange and W. M. Tate, local arrangements chairman. Soil Conservation Day Saturday at Bartels A farm which has lust about everything wrong with it from a soil conversationist's point of view will get a free face-lifting tomorrowby soil engineers in a big public demonstration. Irvin Artel's farm, near Shaw, 10 miles east of here, was chosen for the Willamette valley conservation day program from 847 faims in the Santiam soil Murray Appeal? Pittsburgh, Sept. 16 W The CIO United Steelworkers today appealed to the steel industry to accept the presidental board's peace recommtndations to avert strike September 25 and at the same time summoned its top strategists to plot the unions next move. Union President' Philip Mur ray sent this telegram to the 57 steel producing companies which appeared before Presi dent Truman's fact finding board. I Concluded on Fage 5, Column 8) Union Rejects Peace Plan in Hawaii Strike Honolulu, Sept. 16 W A new territorial government peace plan for Hawaii's 139-day dock strike foundered today on union rejection. Gov. Ingram M. Stainback had proposed that the 2000 striking dock workers go back on the job at a 14-cent hourly wage increase. Meanwhile, un ion and employers would nego tiate a new two-year contract. Fred T. Low, chairman of the CIO International Longshore men's and Warehousemen's un ion strike committee, said "no" to that. He said his committee would give immediate and serious consideration," however, to any concrete proposal made by the seven struck stevedoring com panies. The union has accused Stain back of "strike-breaking" with territorial opera t i o n of the docks. conservation district. It has red soil hillside lands subject to erosion, poor lowland drainage, and about everything else to give a chance to let conserva tionists show their stuff. Farmers from all over the state were expected to show up for the all-day spectacle. Gov. Douglas McKay will speak to the group at noon on the value to the state of con servation methods. U. S. and Santiam soil conser vation technicians have muster ed more than 100 pieces of equipment to do about two years work in one day. They will bull-doze, demon strate terrace cultivating, sub- soiling, and strip cropping, and will lay ditches and ponds for drainage. They plan to make it into a model farm of its type. Bartle, whose family has watched production slowly de cline over the past 60 years be cause of erosion, thinks it's "a fine idea." Eugene Plans Purchase Of Baseball Franchise Eugene, Ore., Sept. 16. (Pi A San Jose, Calif., businessman ap peared likely today to buy the Bremerton franchise in the Western International league and establish a WIL ball club here. The Eugene school board voted last night to negotiate for lease of the Civic stadium to Frank Burrell, San Jose. And Burrell, contacted by long-distance tele- Cyclists Tie-up River Highway Motorcyclists, mountain climbers and sightseers are just about driving the state highway commission crazy. They are tying up traffic on the new Columbia river high way east of Troutdaie every week-end. . Last Sunday, a dozen hill climbing motorcycle riders wrecked a bank which the com mission had just seeded with grass. On the same day, the moun Snow In Crook County Prineville, Ore., Sept. 16 U- Snow fell in Crook county to day, blanketing mountains of the Ochoco national forest about tflO miles southeast of here near Paulina. Rangers reported most of tht snowfall on Wolf mountain. phone, said he would be in Ta coma, Wash., Monday and Tues day to discuss buying the Brem erton franchise. Burrell said he hoped to es tablish a "first division ball club" for Eugene. The general belief in sports circles here was that the club would be in oper ation by next spring The school board did not def initely decide upon a lease, but agreed to talk the matter over with Burrell. An arrangement 0j wouia nave to DC wurneu uui bu that WIL games do not conflict with high school athletics on the 6,000-seat stadium. Burrell expressed confidence that he could arrange a contract satisfactory to the school board Tacoma. Sept. 16 Western International league directors past, present and prospective , will meet here Monday to trans act post-season business and con sider new developments of far- reaching Importance. President Robert B. Abel said today the W-I moguls will con sider proposed transfers of a pair of franchises. Wenatchee to Richland-Pasco-Kennewick and Bremerton to Eugene. Then, too. there's the "for sale" sign which proxy Bill Starr the parent San Diego Padres hung on the Tacoma Tigers last week, a matter which is expect ed to be the subject of some dis cussion. Representatives of Eugene In terests seeking to obtain the Bremerton franchise will be in attendance at the parley, Abel reported, as will several civic leaden from tht Tri-City area. "Willamette Valley Soil Conser vation Day" on the Bartel farm north of Shaw looks like this on a schedule: 10:30 Strip-cropping of 248 acres. 10:45 Sub-soiling. 11:00 Terracing. 1 mile. 11:15 Grass waterways. 1 mile. 11:45 Permanent pasture seed ing. 12:00 Rodent control. 12:15 Pheasant release and Multlflora rose planting state game commission. 12 :30 Program. 1:45 Tile drainage. 2:30 Open drainage ditch con struction. 2:45 Post treating. 3:00 Weed control. 3:15 Farm pond. 3:30 Side hill row crop cultivation. Senate Delays Minton Action Acheson Tells Of Cold War Washington, Sept. 16 iP) Sec retary of State Acheson report ed to President Truman and the cabinet today on new U. S. -Brit ish-French measures to deal with Russia in the cold war. The report was made at a 45 minute meeting in the White House. Acheson, however, de clined afterwards to discuss it with reporters. It was the reg ular Friday cabinet meeting. Topping the list was believed to be agreement to give Yugo slavia's Marshal Tito all essen tial support in his economic and political struggle with Moscow. All the various matters have been intensively reviewed here this week by Acheson and For eign Minister Bevin and Schu-man. The American, British, and French foreign policy chiefs cli maxed their round of meetings tain climbers scaled Rooster ytcrday, They held then a Study Raise in Price of Gold Washington, Sept. 16 (ff) Governors of the international monetary fund voted unanimous ly today to start a study of a proposed higher price for gold. The United States assented re luctantly. The fund and the $8,000,000, 000 World Bank held closed ses sions this morning. Both gov erning boards approved without dissent every report from their committees and from the man agements of the global lending agencies. , The bank in Its closed session, approved the application of the Republic of Haiti for member ship and fixed $2,000,000 as its share to be subscribed in the bank's capital. March 31, 1950 was set as the deadline for post ing the funds and accepting membership. Since Haiti also would join the fund, it's acceptance would raise the membership in both or ganizations to 49 countries. The dale for Liberia's accept anc of membership was post poned until next Marcn 31 Camille Gutt, managing direc tor of the fund, who reported the actions within the closed fund meeting, said the consensus among the members is to make start, however, small, on the removal of world-wide currency restrictions. Washington, Sept. 16 P) Senate action will be delayed a while on President Truman's expected nomination of Sher man Minton to be a supreme court justice. Although there was no appar ent opposition to the appoint ment, Chairman McCarran (D- Nev.) of the judiciary commit tee, said the nomination will "take the routine course." That usually takes about three weeks, a committee aide said. There is a speedier procedure often used in cases where opposition is lacking. Senators who would com ment on the appointment prais ed Minton, a former democratic senator from Indiana, a thor ough-going new dealer and now judge on the U.S. circuit court of appeals at Chicago. The president nominated him yesterday to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Justice Wiley Rutledge last Saturday. Many senators declined com ment. While some privately ex pressed disappointment at the president's choice, they said they knew of no reason to attempt to block the nomination. McCarran, now enroute to Eu rope for a three-week trip, has been at odds with the adminis tration over displaced persons legislation and other matters re cently. Senator Kilgore (D-W.Va.) told a reporter that McCarran telephoned his instructions on the appointment from his ship. Washington, Sept. 16 VP) John L. Lewis today announced suspension on welfare payments to miners effective tomorrow. . Lewis said the action was due to lack of funds. It was order ed in a resolution adopted at a five-hour meeting of the fund's trustees. Lewis, speaking brief ly with reporters, declined to say whether there would be a walkout in the coal fields. He also declined to say by what vote the action suspend ing benefits was taken. The trustees met in urgent session amid indications of a showdown over the refusal of some operators to make pay ments into the welfare fund. Lack of Funds Claimed The benefits include $100 monthly pensions for miners 60 yeazs of age or more, plus other forms of welfare benefits. Senator Bridges (R-N.H.), the neutral trustee of the fund, was with Lewis when the announce ment was made. Ezra Van Horn, operators trustee, had left ear lier, declining comment. Bridges told reporters in an swer to questions that he has not resigned as a trustee. There had been advance rumors that Bridges was ready to quit. The meeting came quickly af ter Lewis' return from White Sulphur Springs. W. Va., where the stoppage of 20 cents a ton royalty payments by some oper ators put a new complication in to negotiations for a coal mine labor contract. (Concluded on Fag S. Column 1) Rock, and cars were lined up three hour and forty-five minute for more than a mile to watch. "sio" devoted to discussing The sightseers, about carloads of them every Sunday, go only 20 miles an hour. And the road can't handle so many cars going that slow. The commisison asked the state police to straighten all this out, but the cops said that's in the domain of Multnomah coun ty Sheriff Mike Elliott. Now the commission is ap pealing to Elliott to help. 10 000 zuslavla Hna lie general nai- xan situation as wen as uer Storm Warnings Fly Portland, Ore., Sept. 16 UP The weather bureau today con tinued small craft warnings un til sunset on the Strait of Juan De Fuca and inland waters of Washington for southwest winds 18 to 28 miles an hour, gusty today and diminishing tonight many and Austria. Officials said they did not get around to talking about the development of a common anti- communist strategy in the far east but hoped to arrange an other session here in a day or so. Meanwhile Acheson scheduled a series of afternoon appoint ments with other western for eign ministers gathering here for tomorrow's meeting of the At- Furniture Workers Sign-up Seattle, Sept. 16 M"! A con tract granting improved work- lantic treaty council. This is the ing conditions but no wage in- body which is due to order crea rrease was signed yesterday for 2,500 furniture workers union (AFL) workers in 57 Washing ton and Oregon plants. The contract provided better senior ity rights, one week vacation Richard W. Cook today was ap- with pay after one year, two pointed manager of the atomic weeks after three years and lix I energy commission's operations paid holidays. at Oak Ridge, Tenn. tion of defense machinery for the western world. Cook Oak Rldga Manager Washington, Sept. 16 VP) ye 3J. Qj First In Pacific A squadron of these F-9-F Panther Jet fightrrs operated with the Pacific Fleet for the first from the carrier Boxer. The fighter above has Just landed aboard the flattop. Pilots enthusiastically voiced the Navy view that the Panthers could otitfly and outfight the air force's B 36. (AP Wirtphoto from U. S. Navy) Senate Rejects Carl llgenfrifz Washington, Sept. 16 VP) The senate today rejected President Truman's appointment of Carl A. Ilgenfritz, U. S. Steel Corp. official, to head the munitions board. It voted 40 to 28 to disapprove Ilgenfritz for the post. The opposition was chiefly a protest against White House-approved plans for Ilgenfritz to continue drawing a $70,000 a year salary from the steel com pany while serving in the gov ernrment post. Senator Byrd (D., Va.). who led the fight against confirma tion of the appointment contend ed that would establish a dan gerous custom under which big corporations dealing with the government might be allowed in the future to subsidize govern ment officials. Byrd said he was not ques tioning Ilgenfritz' character or abiliitcs. But he noted that U S. Steel has an important stake in military orders. As chairman of the munitions board, Ilgenfritz would have had charge of advance planning of wartime industrial mobilization, assigning military buying duties and fixing priorities for such buying. In a telegram read to the sen ate before it voted, llucnfritz of fered to give up the $14,000 sal ary of the chairmanship. But he expressed doubt that any such action would be legal. Miners Strike In Wyoming Rock Springs. Wyo , Sept. 16 in An estimated 8.000 coal miners in the Utah - Wyoming district of the United Mine Work ers walked out of the pits volun tarily today pending a settle ment of the currrnt contract dispute. Houston Martin of Rock Springs, president of district 22 which embraces the two states, said the walkout was purely vol untary and that it had not been called by union officials. "The coal miners of district 22." Martin said, "walked out on their jobs nn their own Initia tive, and I had nothing to do with It." Some 3,500 to 4,000 of the 8, 000 miners In the two states ar employed In coal fields around Rock Springs. All failed to show up for work at midday. Martin declined In make any I other comment regarding th walkout.