THE WEATHER HERE BECOMING CLOUDY with few light showers late tonight, Tues day. Slightly warmer tonight, continued low daytime temper atures. Lowest tonight, 45; high est Tuesday, 64. Moiimuni Toilordftr, Mi minimum to. ia, XI. Total 4-hur prrrlolutlon: ; tor Bionlh: aormtl, .t4. Sooton roelplu tloa. I.n: aivtr hrlfht, -t.t foot. (Report IJ.S. Wtalhtr Burets.) G apital HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 235 Entered u iteoiul dui tntvtUr l 4Ulta. OracM Salem, Oregon, Monday, October 3, 1949 f.J Pages) Price 5c MH. Kit Jf Mf s. ..? Criminal Trial Day in County Circuit Courts Some Sentences De layed for Information, Others Draw Penalties By DON UPJOHN Both departments of circuit r t tntertained criminals Y and in Judge George 'i department it Is vir all day session. Jtex Kimmell withheld on the case of Joseph 4, ' who pleaded guilty wting in an armed holdup jlliam Graen in a 12th street t September 20, until the k (ttte parole board has time to nake a pre-sentence investiga- tion. Bruce Williams, his attor ney, pointed to the man's war I record, which showed two com bat wounds and an honorable discharge, with no prior crim inal record. Two men alleged to have assisted Mainella in the holdup are still at large. He is under $3000 bail which has not been posted. The holdup alleg edly netted $75 and was accom plished with the use of a revol ver. Wilson Was Continued Albert J. Wilson was granted continuation of sentence after his plea of guilty to larceny of a Buick car from Estella E. Pom eroy pending receipt of his rec ord from the files of the FBI. Judge Kimmell said he wanted to know something about the man's past before imposing sen tence. Archie Oxford pleaded not guilty before Judge Kimmell 1i a charge of attempting to steal an automobile and was contin ued for a trial date. In Judge George R. Duncan's department, Eldon Hendricks re ceived an 18-months sentence in prison with credit to be giv en for time in jail on a charge of larceny of a power saw. Hen dricks was shown to have been arrested for bTirelary in Minne sota in 1947 and he said was granted probation. He also was involved in a larceny charge in Seattle. (Concluded on Pare 5. Column 5) Smoke Slashed Air Operations Low-hanging smoke during the month of September cut air operation at McNary field to the lowest since the CAA con trol tower was re-opened here the last of February. The operations for September, totaling 4,883, were 908 below those of the lowest previous month, which was July with 5781 operations. Biggest month for operations since opening the tower was August with 6,839. Increasing their flights during that month were the local navy planes, who had their biggest month since the facility was es tablished here. Total local oper ations for the navy were 70. Air carrier operations for September numbered 352. This figure held high because of the almost nightly stops of the new ly scheduled United Air Lines cargo plane. During five days of the month, September 23, 25 26. 28 and 29, there were 14 air carrier operations daily, seven flights in and seven out. Other figures on operations at McNary field during September were: air force itinerant, 102; civilian itinerant, 723; navy itin erant, 84; air force local, 10; and civilian local, 3542. Yandenberg Under Knife of Surgeon Ann Arbor. Mich., Oct. 3 W Senator Vandenberg (R., Mich.) spent more than six hours on the operating table today and doctors said half of his left lung had been removed. They term ed his condition "excellent." Dr. John Alexander, surgeon In charge, released the follow ing statement: "Senator Vandenberg was op- crated on this morning, one-half of his left lung was removed His condition during the opera tion was excellent. ' Stole Policeman's Vniform Washington, Oct. 3 Rookie park policeman Michael I . J, f iore reluctantly reported yes ' terday that a thief broke Into his parked car and stole his blue uniform and new police badge 102,000 Coal Miners Return But 400,000 Out 513,000 Steel Workers Idle Optimism in Hawaiian Dock Strike (By the. Auoclited PrM) One hundred two thousand of John L. Lewis' coal miners went back to work today, but 400,000 remained on strike as did 513, 000 CIO steelworkers. There was optimism voiced that settlement of the 156-day strike of 2,000 CIO longshore men at Hawaii may come soon. Tension relaxed in Detroit's auto industry as CIO auto workers planned to apply the Ford settle ment pattern to Chrysler and other manufacturers. Want Shorter Day Meanwhile, as the AFL con vention began at St. Paul, Minn., the federation's officers recom mended shortening of industry's work day and work week as an immediate economic goal. The United Mine Workers sent back to their jobs today by the terse hint from union head quarters that their idleness "is not now vital to the pending wage negotiations" were 80,000 anthracite (hard coal) diggers in Pennsylvania and 22,000 soft coal miners west of the Missis sippi. In the steel strike which hit 56 basic steel plants and 50 iron ore mines Saturday, there were rumors of new government in tervention. (Concluded on Fare S, Column 1) Reward Offered By Mrs. Fanfz Two awards totaling $3000 are being offered by Mrs. Charles W. Fantz, Silverton, for evidence of the death of her husband off the coast of California. Fantz and Henry Wergley, of San Francisco, were tuna fishing when their craft disappeared about 100 miles off the coast at Santa Cruz September 16. Mrs. Fantz, who returned from California Sunday, announced her awards through the state board of aeronautics in the hope that some private pilot with an amphibious craft might make ad ditional search In the area from which the 40-foot craft was last reported. She expressed disap pointment In that the coast guard conducted only one search off the coast and will not make an other unless evidence is present ed. A reward of $1000 is offered for any information as to the fate of the missing crew or craft, on shore or elsewhere, and $2, 000 for fishermen or private pi-1 lots who might locate any of the wreckage. Sideswiping Car Cuts Off Man's Left Foot Waldport, Ore., Oct. S UH When Melvin Downey of Toledo, Ore., pulled his car off the road five miles south of here and went to sleep early Sunday morning, an automobile side swiped his car and cut off his left foot above the ankle. Downey was taken to Toledo hospital. State police searched for the driver of the other car. 350 Canvassers Open Chest Drive on Tuesday Three hundred and fifty Community Chest workers, all of whom have volunteered their Salem and the surrounding area Annual event marking the beginning of the drive is the kick- off breakfast, set for Tuesday Marion hotel with the 350 vol- unteer workers as guests. Speaker for the breakfast is Gov. Douglas McKay, who In his speech will ask for general support for the campaign, which supplies funds for eight local agencies in addition to the state Chest funds. Master of cere monies for the breakfast Is Joe Dodd, chairman for tht local drive. The Salem Chest this year Is asking for donations totaling $105,000. Of this the state chest needs $10,890 and $17 473 is needed for the emergency fund shrinkage, campaign and admin istration expense. Local agencies receiving funds from the drive and their needs are Boy Scouts. $11,895 Camp Fire Girls, $5,207; Cath- olic Charities, $3,800; Girl Scouts. $3,250; Legal Aid Clinic. $300; Salvation Army, $9,000; hk-- I P" r 4 , . ... ; ' klii;, i 'iarigr PiiKia Breaks KWWjAW Red Nime L If LV " " VSt X- ? Zl V - , I i"f , 1..V Moscow, Oct. 3 (IP) Russia has; Find Wreckage Of Lost Plane Portland, Oct. S W) The dis covery 40 miles from Roseburg of a demolished airplane, with the bones of a skeleton be side it, was reported today by a Portlander returning from a hunting trip. It was apparently the single- engined Navion which vanished in February of 1947 as Douglas L. Locke, 22, Arcadia, Calif., was flying it from Los Angeles to Seattle. Harry Turnbull, Portland, said he came across an aluminum colored Navion, bearing the li cense number of the craft in which Locke disappeared two and a half years ago. Locke, fer rying the North American Avi ation company plane to a dealer in Seattle, was last heard from when he radioed the Eugene, Ore., control tower that he was lost A long search was unavail ing. The hunter who found the wreckage said the bones ap peared to be from either one or two skeletons. Locke, however had been alone in the craft. Clark Plane Crash Probed Los Angeles, Oct. 3 The civil aeronautics board was in vestigating today whether the plane which crashed in a busy m i d t o w n boulevard, killing crooner Buddy Clark, may have been overloaded. Five others, including Sam Hayes, top west coast NBC news caster, were injured in the crash Saturday night. The plane was returning from the Stanford Michigan football game at Palo Alto when its gas supply ran out. James N. Peyton, regional CAB chief, said: "Two -engine Cessnas of that type usually car ry a pilot and four , passengers This plane was carrying five passengers." Hayes, 44, suffered minor in juries. Hayes' wife, Sally, 28, suffered leg injuries. Frank Ber end, 56, National Broadcasting sales executive, sustained head injuries, and Jennings Pierce, 52, also a NBC executive, suf fered a brain concussion. All were reported in "satisfactory" condition. Clark, 38. was a top recording and radio artist. In recent years, he starred on his own NBC pro gram "The Contented Hour" and previously on the "Hit Parade." services, will start canvassing early Tuesday morning. morning at 7:30 o'clock at the Salem YWCA. $15,000, and Sa lem YMrA, $28,183. Members of the campaign committee working with Doddi are C. A. Kells, director, and! George Alexander, Reynolds Al len, Carl E. Aschenbrenner, Charles A. Barclay. H. E. Bark- er, H. L. Braden, Claire Brown, i Frank Doerflpr, Junior Eckley, Robert L. Elfstrom, Rex Gib-, son, Tinkham Gilbrrt. A. C ; Haag, Mrs. George S. Hoffman, I Carl Hogg, Harry Johnson. R.I M. Kelley, Gardner Knapp. Al Loucks. T. W. Lowery, Edward Majek, E. Burr Miller. James F Moslof. Mrs. Conrad Paulson. W. L. Phillips. W. L. Phillios, Jr. Russell E. Pratt, Edward Schre der, William R. Shinn. Francis W. Smith, Mrs. George Spaur, Loyal A Warnor. Robert F. White, and Mrs. Robert W. Wil- (son, Jr. Strikers Picket Closed Steel Plant Striking workers picket the main gate of U. S. Steel's Homestead Works in Pittsburgh, Pa. They carry signs stating their demands for pensions and in surance. Throughout the nation a half million CIO United Steelworkers were on strike. (AP Wirephoto) New Wage Increase Drive Opened by AFL St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 3 W) AFL President William Green today served notice of a new wage increase drive and bluntly said the AFL has no intention of being bound by President Truman's steel fact finding board no-pay-boost recommendation for American workers. ' In a keynote address opening the American Federation of La bor's annual convention, Green said: "We have never waived our right to demand wage increases for the workers of America. And we are not going to do it." Pres, Truman's steel board rec ommended against any new wage increases for workers, atthistime saying they would disrupt econ omy. The board, instead, recom mended a pension insurance plan worth 10 cents an hour for steel workers. Green was heavily applauded by the more than 600 delegates when he said the AFL had no fiUfaTuTTglng DoUBir By" any government board's recom mendations. "We don't want government boards," he said. "We don't ask for government boards. We don't accept the principle of govern ment boards setting our wages anywhere." Green said the AFL is "con stantly" seeking to boost pay rates. Labor must share in the earn ings of the corporations and we must share equitably, he said. We're not going to give up the right to demand an equitable share of these earnings, Green said that shaping plans for an even greatpr AFL politi cal role in next year's election will be the primary work of the convention. Higher Taxes British Threat London, Oct. 3 UJ9 The gov ernment today threatened the British people with still higher taxation if they spend instead of save their money. Douglas Jay, economic secre tary of the treasury and one of Sir Stafford Cripps top advis ers, admitted that devaluation had produced a real threat of inflation and a rise in the cost of living. Speaking at the annual meet ing of the Westminster local savings committee, Jay said the degree to which inflation could be limited depended upon "how far the public are willing to save rather than spend." 'If the public's savings are not enough," he said, "only two al ternative methods of checking the rise in the cost of living are open to the government, both of them unpleasant. Those two ways, he said, are higher taxes or cutting down building programs like housing. HEW TODAY! Your radio program log has been rearranged to further aid you in more readily se lecting the program you de sire. The five popular sta tions in this territory KGW, KOIN, KEX.KSLM and KOCO are listed in the same se quence as they appear on the dial of your radio. This is another added fea ture for Capital Journal readers appearing daily, starting today on the comic page. Nab Burglars With $20,000 Osterville, Mass., Oct. 3 (IP) Two pistol-brandishing robbers, listed as from San Francisco and Milwaukee, today roused a sleep ing couple, looted their Cape Cod home of $20,000 in valuables, and fled only to be trapped at a bridge to the. mainland, police reported. Donald Parsons, Jr., 30, a Woods Hole marine biological laboratory staff member, and his wife, Phyllis, 28, were awakened at 4 a.m., by the two men who took suitcases and loaded them with jewelry and antiques. Without awakening the cou ple's three young children asleep in another part of the house the robbers bound and gagged the parents and locked them in a closet. Breaking out of the locked cu bicle, Mr. and Mrs. Parsons noti fied the Hyannis police. The police swiftly threw road blocks across the two Cape Cod canal highway bridges at Sagamore and Bourne, the robbers' only means of escape from the cape. Bourne police, at the mainland end of the Bourne bridge, short ly afterward halted a big car its back scat loaded with valua ble identified as from the Par sons home. They arrested the two men in the car, who were booked as Henry Leo Schnitzler, 21, of San Francisco, and Gerald H. Noble, 25, of Milwaukee. Taken to Hyannis police head quarters, they were charged with breaking and entering in the night time and larceny. Apartment Occupant Dies by Gas Fumes A man identified as Austin Reed was found dead in an apart ment at 486 N. Liberty street early Monday afternoon from asphyxiation caused by inhal ing gas. Police and first aid men who were called said the gas appeared to have been pur posely inhaled by the victim. It was believed he had been dead since Friday. ii nun 1 1-- ' - - - i urn t Mini ' - Ten Die in B 17 Crash Only the giant tail assembly remained intact in the crash of the B-17 air force bomber 10 miles south of Trinidad, Colo. The entire crew of 10 perished. The four-engined bomber was on a routine training flight from Its base at Biggs field near El Paso, Tex., to Lowry air base at Denver. Members of the Fifth air rescue squadron spotted the wreckage. (AP Wirephoto) fruman Drops Civil Rights Legislation for This Session finally broken with the nation alist government In China to gie the diplomatic nod to the new Red regime there. At the same time she accused the western al lies of trying to split Germany by setting up a separate govern ment in their zones. The recognition of communist China was announced yesterday note to the premier of the Central People's government at peiping from Soviet Deputy For eign Minister Andrei I. Gromy ko. I Another Soviet note, deliver ed to representatives of the three big western powers in Moscow, rapped the creation of the west German government at Bonn. It charged the U. S., Britain and France had broken Big Four agreements to try to regain po litical and economic unity of Germany. Rival German Regime Diplomatic circles here felt the note .indicates that Russia feels the time is ripe for the cre ation of some kind of German administration rivaling the western government at Bonn These observers said that crea tion of such an authority in eastern Germany would make the western powers' position in Berlin extremely precarious. Four-power Berlin, lying in eastern Germany, would almost certainly become capital of such a set-up, they said. Meanwhile, Romania joined the parade of Soviet-style "Peo pie's democracies" in scrapping her friendship treaty with Yugo slavia. Poland, Bulgaria and Hungary already have followed the lead of Russia in denouncing their allegiance with Premier Marshal Tito's regime. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 7) Argentina Cuts Value of Pesos Buenos Aires, Oct. 3 W) Ar gentina today devalued her money 46 percent in relation to the doli.T. The effect was to make the U.S. dollar bring 84.6 percent more pesos than it did before for travelers and for cer tain services. The rates for ex ports and imports were realign ed less drastically. The rate was fixed at nine pesos to the dollar, compared with the old rate of 4.875. The peso was devalued to 25.20 to the British pound instead of the old rate of 19.37. This South American nation also suspended all imports at least temporarily. The central bank put into ef fect the reshuffled exchange rates. It also issued a 30-page list of items which can be im ported but said the method of asking for import permits will be set up later. The peso adjustments were ordered Saturday by the finance ministry In view of the devalu ation of currencies throughout the world touched off by Brit - ain's cheapening of her money. To date, 25 nations have de valued since Britain started the ball rolling by cutting the value of the pound from $4.03 to $2.80 on September 18. r h . i Red China Premier Com munist China formally pro claimed itself the Chinese People's Government with Chou Enlai as premier at a mammoth rally in Pekin. (Ac me telephoto.) Tribute Paid to Justice Murphy Washington, Oct. S (IP) The supreme court opened its fall term today with a brief session given over chiefly to tributes to Justices Frank Murphy and Wi ley B. Rutlcdge who died during the summer recess. Chief Justice Vinson announc ed the deaths of Murphy and Rutledge and eulogized their life work. Seven justices were on the bench. Tom C. Clark, former at torney general, took - his place for tffe first IllWe. Hetucceeds Murphy. .- tv Justice William O. Douglas, injured yesterday in a fall from a horse in Washington state, was the absent member. There is one vacancy on the nine-member bench since the senate has not yet confirmed President Truman's choice of Sherman Minton of Indiana to succeed Rutlcdge. Clark took his seat to the far left of Chief Justice Vinson. Next to him was the vacant chair, draped in black, that Rut- ledge used. Clark took the oaths of office in August in a White House ce remony. So today all he had to do to begin his court service was to step up to the great mahogany bench. With traditional ceremony, So licitor General Philip B. Perl man informed the court of the appointment of J. Howard Mc Grath as attorney general, in succession to Clark. 100 Families Routed By Sulphuric Fumes Lafayette, Ind Oct. 3 (IP) Sulphuric acid fumes pouring from a wrecked railroad tank car routed 100 fnmilies from their homes near the Purdue university campus in West La fayette early yesterday. No serious injuries were re ported. Church bells and police sirens sounded an alarm as po lice and firemen in gas masks laided by volunteers, aroused leeping residents and led them to safety. Families evacuated included 70 living in trailer camp for married war veteran students at Purdue, FEPC Program First on List For January Washington, Oct. t U.I! Pres ident Truman agreed with his congressional leaders today to drop requests for civil rights legislation at this session and aim for consideration of a fair employment practices bill early in the next. The president's decision was disclosed by Senate Majority Leader Scott W. Lucas of Illi nois, after the regular Monday legislative conference at the White House. Lucas said the president and leaders of both houses had agreed to let t he civil rights fight go over until next session. Lucas said it was agreed today ' that it was "very doubtful that any prolonged discussion of civil rights in the senate during the remainder of this session would be very helpful." To Fix Adjournment But, Lucas added, "the senate will definitely take up on FEPC bill early In the next session." House Speaker Sam Rayburn said that house democratic lead ers will meet tomorrow with the senate policy committee in an effort to determine when con gress can adjourn. Lucas expressed the belief that the senate could complete the bulk of its work within two weeks. He said he did not want to guess on adjournment date but thought it would come with in two to three weeks. Pending Legislation The congressional leaders de voted most of their meeting with President Truman today to dis cussing pending legislation and taking stock of what they think can be passed during the re maining days of this session. , Rayburn said that if the house gives clearance, the social secur ity bill will be brought tomor row or Wednesday. If there is no immediate clearance the bill will come up next Monday. Lucas said he thought the final big bill to come up for senate action probably would be the displaced persons measure sometime late next week. The democratic 81st congress is in its 10th month and a large part of the president's program dead for this session. Today marked the burial of the civil rights legislation. Social Security Sent to House Washington, Oct. 3 (IP) The house rules committee today sent social security expansion legislation to the house under a rule barring any changes. That means the house must ac cept the bill "as is" or turn it down. House debate probably will begin tomorrow. Rep. Doughton (D-NC), head of the ways and means committee which drafted the measure, pre dicted it will be approved over whelmingly. The rules committee vote to bar amendments was 5 to 4. One member said five democrats supported the rule and four re publicans opposed. The republi cans called the "this or nothing" procedure a "gag'' rule. Republicans already had ac cused democratic leaders of a double-cross for bringing the le gislation up at this time. "There was a definite under standing," Rep. Clarence Brown (R-Ohio) told a reporter, "that this legislation would not be brought up until next January." Rep. Masor (R-Ill) also said there was such an agreement in the house ways and means com mittee, which handled the so cial security bill. Speaker Rayburn says the de mocratic leadership never made any agreement to delay action until next year. Regardless of who is right, the bill is on the house work sched ule for this week. It is supposed to come up tomorrow for its first taste of debate. Mrs. C. W. Rohison Dies Portland, Oct. 3 i-P Mrs. Charles W. Robison, HO, Port land civic leader who had serv ed on the slate board of educa tion for 12 years, died early today. 1