C apital THE WEATHER HERE FAIR TONIGHT and Thursday, tome lor in morning, cooler to night. Lowest temperature to night, 36; highest Thursday, 65. Msiinun ?rttrar, 41: aUalnaai 4r. M. Taut ta-aaar aractallallM: traral far naatb: l.SIj larmil, l.ia. Saaaaa Bra alpllatloa, t.M; aaraul, S.li. aivtr atlfht, ,J af a laaL (Ecaart ki I I. Waatkai Sa naa.) HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 243 Inttrtt) u fra4 Iuf Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, October Ik, 1949 (24 Pages) Price 5c stur H MkSL Senate Favors Sliding Scale of Price Supports Farm Bill Sent Back To House in Party Line Split on Subsidies Washington, Oct. U m A sliding-scale system of govern ment price supports under major farm products won senate ap proval today. After weeks of angry argu ments that split party lines, the senators sent the so-called "price stabilization" act back to the house which ha? adopted a dif ferent plan. Passage was by voice vote. Another bitter struggle be tween the senate and house over what's best for the farmer especially during the 1950 con gressional election year now looms. And an apparent dis agreement between President Truman and two of his chief senate lieutenants threatens to cloud the issue for the demo crats in next year's campaign Truman for War Prices Both the president and Vice President Barkley are said to fa vor continuance of the wartime level of farm price props now existing. Senator Anderson (D., N.M.), former secretary of agriculture, is author of the senate's bill and democratic leader Lucas (111.) backed it. Back in July, the house voted to retain 90 per cent of parity price supports under cotton, wheat, corn. rice, tobacco and peanuts during 1950. The house also retained present supports under a long list of other com modities. (Concluded on Pare 5, Column 7) School Frats ob-up Again Illegal secret societies, the bane of the Salem public school administration, have bobbed up once more to plague the auth orities. No public announcement con cerning the latest outbreak has been forthcoming either from the school board or Principal E. A. Carleton. The latter, how- ever, said that the administra tion was in the process of inves- tigating the situation. A number of those suspected of being in volved in the latest society move have been questioned The probe has not proceed ed far enough to determine whether any athletes are involv ed, Principal Carleton said. The new organization, report ed to involve a score or more of boys at senior high, has been named "A.B.C." The boys claim it does not come under the state statute which bans secret soct- eties and has no connection with the Julius Caesars or Friars, two clubs that have caused the most difficulty. The statute governing secret societies sets forth that "it is the duty of each school board wihin the state, to examine. from time to time, into the con dition of all schools under its charge and to suppress all se cret societies therein, and for this purpose such boards are hereby authorized to suspend or expel from school, at their dis cretion, all pupils who engage in the organization or maintenance of such societies." $57,761 Given To Chest Fund Community Chest workers Wednesday morning added $683.81 to the fund for the 1949 50 Community Chest here, bring ing the audited total for contri butions to the $57,781,89 mark. The divisions and the amounts of the contributions for each di vision as they stood Wednesday noon were: Automotive and transporta tion. $7,813.50; contractors and builders, $3,890.10; educational. $1.27533; general gifts, $3,275.75; governmental, $7, 516.78; industrial. $7,622.87; mercantile. S9.899.75; profession al $3,934; rural. $345; utilities. $888; West Salem, $604 50; north Salem section, women's division, $1,040.10; central Salem section, women's division. $3,358 32; and south Salem sect on, women's di vision, $2,067.89. Eden Outlines Platform of Conservatives London, Oct. 12 UB Deputy conservative party leader An thony Eden outlined to the open ing session of the party's 70th annual conference today a 12 point program promising lower taxes and no more nationaliza tion. Eden, heir to the party man tle worn by Winston Churchill and first important speaker at the meeting, had to quell an in cipient floor revolt by rebel delegates who demanded to know specifically what the Tories would do if they won the elec tion. He also attempted to weld the split between party leaders and Publisher Lord Beaverbrook over Beaverbrook's recently announced empire first, last and always plan. Canton Defenses Fast Crumbling Hong Kong, Oct. 12 WR Na tionalist defenses in South China crumbled today before fast mov ing communist armies. Red elements were reported within 35 miles of the tottering provisional capital at Canton. The government fled to Chung king, far in the interior. Thou sands of evacuees jammed Hong Kong. Pro nationalist reports here said communist troops had en tered outlying suburbs north east of Canton. Hard driving red columns under General Cheng Keng struck toward the city on all northern fronts. Independent military obser vers expressed belief the main body of communists still is prob ably some 50 miles to the north and northeast of Canton. There has been no sign of re sistance from the five nationalist armies supposedly lined up to defend Canton. An estimated 80,000 government troops were falling back on the city. Com munist dispatches speculated that they would be evacuated by sea to Formosa and Hainan Is lands. Pudding River Bridge Unsafe The county court received a communication from A. L. Beck, superintendent of the Canby schools, Wednesday, advising of the unsafe condition of the inter-county bridge over the Pud ding river In the north end of the county. He said the bus driver for his district had advised that some of the supporting beams are broken, planks also broken and the west approach considered unsafe. Under an agreement between the Marion and Clackamas coun ty courts this bridge is one that comes under the maintenance of the Clackamas county court, each county paying half the ex pense. The communication will be referred to that court However, a year or so ago similar complaints came Into the court here as to an unsafe con dition at the bridge and efforts to get the Clackamas county court to fix it were so long de layed the Marion county court sent a crew there and made maintenance repairs regardless of the agreement. Option Given for Sale Of Washington School While the Grabenhorst Brothers firm of realtors was given a six months' option on the old Washington school property lo cated at 12th and Center streets by the Salem school board Tues day night, George Grabenhorst declines to discuss what he has in view. Grabenhorst explained that the location is in a residential zone which would have to be changed before any business en terprise could locate there. How ever, he said that if a deal, now in a tentative stage, can be put through, it would mean an in vestment of a large amount of money over and above the price paid for the land. It would re sult in the employment of a con siderable number of persons. In giving the option at a fig ure in e x c e s of $100,000 the school board abandoned, at least temporarily, any plan for converting the old frame Wash ington building into administra tion headquarters. Such a move, it was pointed out, would involve fire restric tions governing the conversion of a frame structure. The board agreed that unless the Washington property could I withholding of the final pay be sold at a reasonable figure, jmcnt. it would b retained. However, (Concluded Fag t t'oiiuna 7) Murray Claims Steel Strike to Be Ended Soon Predicts Union Vic tory Lewis Confers With Coal Operators Br tti Auociaiad Pr Philip Murray, CIO president. predicts the steel strike will end soon with a union victory in the tight for free pensions and insur ance. 'I assure you that before very long we will all be happy," Murray said in a fighting address at Youngstown, O, It was his first talk of a pep tour to take him to several of the nation s steel centers. There was no reply from in dustry to Murray's optimism or to his charges industry had forced 454,000 of his men to strike. The U.S. conciliation service went ahead setting up separate meetings with union and top in dustry leaders in an effort to break the strike. The first session is scheduled with Bethlehem Steel corporation tomorrow at New York. Other Developments In other labor developments today: John L. Lewis and soft coal operators went back to contract talks at White Sulphur Springs, Va., as the coal strike continued in its fourth week. Conciliators said a crisis is near. (Concluded en Pane 5, Column S) Reds Take Over Czech Business Prague, Czechoslovakia, Oct. 12 W) New nationalized busi nesses sprang up in Prague to day in shops whose owners had been seized in widespread police roundups. The purge arrests were reported continuing. Several people who went to trade with their former neigh borhood druggists, bakers or book shops reported they found communist-control led national administrations had been install ed. The businesses had been seiz ed by the government. In some cases it was reported the fami lies of the former owners also had been thrown out of their apartments. This lent substantiation to persistent reports that police ac tion against small businessmen which engulfed most of Prague the last 10 days had been aimed at liquidating remnants of. the middle class. Big enterprises had long since been national ized. Reliable reports said many of the people seized had been sent to forced labor camps by com munist-controlled national com mittees. Police Take Counterfeit $10 Portland, Oct. 12 W) Port land police had a good look at a $10 counterfeit bill today they took one in yesterday in payment of a fine, A transient was arrested last night trying to pass one at a liquor store. He said he got it in a poker game in Seattle last month, A num ber of the phoney bills have turned up here and in Seattle. it is recognized that it has lost its usefulness for class room pur-1 poses although it is now being used until the new building in the Capitoia district can be com pleted. Delay in completing the Capi toia school drew from board members criticism of the con tractor. No time for its occupan cy has been fixed although it probably will be delayed at least for two weeks. The Four Corners building is progressing at a sat- Wctory rate. Although the central heating plant which takes care of the high school and Parrish high school was completed a year ago, final payment to the con- tractor was not authorized until Tuesday night. Failure ot the steam line between the plant and Parrish brought about the To Visit President Indian Premier Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru (center) leaves plane at London airport, where he stopped off for week-end before resuming flight to Washing ton, D. C, for visit with President Truman. At left is V. K. Krishna Menon, Indian high commissioner in London and at right is Patrick C. Gordon Walker, under-secretary of state, commonwealth relations office. The premier left Londan air port aboard the Independence, President Truman's plane, for Washington. AP Wirephoto) Nehru Starts Tour to Find Out About America Washington, Oct. 12 () Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India set out today on a strenuous get-acquainted tour ot the United States. American officials hope it will help make India inclined more strongly toward the west in the cold war with Russia. ; Nehru is a hero of his coun try's fight for freedom and prob ably the outstanding figure m Asia. He was greeted personal ly by President Truman on his arrival late yesterday tor s state visit of nearly a month. Lat night he was Mr. Truman s guest at a formal dinner at Blair house. The White House reported to day that the president and Nehru did not discuss business at the dinner. Their conversa tion was described by Press Sec retary Charles Ross as purely social." Nehru and the president will meet again Friday at a recep tion at the Indian embassy. A visit to Mount Vernon and the Tomb of the Unknown Sol dier were on the prime minis ter's schedule today. This will be followed by two more days of sightseeing, speeches and handshakes in the capital before he leaves Saturday for New York and a transcontinental tour. It is Nehru's first visit to the United States, of which he has been critical at times, partly on the score of American race rela tions. , A moderate socialist who heads India's majority congress party, he also has expressed doubts in the past of the vir tues of American style capital ism. At the airport, Nehru was greeted in a cordial manner by Mr. Truman, who had at his side Secretary of State Ache- son, Secretary of Defense John son, and other cabinet members Nehru was clad in the Indian style costume, which included a long brown coat, light colored todhpurs and a small Gandhi tyle cap. . He responded to Mr. Truman's welcome with brief informal speech. With the prime minister Is his daughter. Mrs. Indira Gand hi his minister of external af fairs, corresponding to the for eign minister, Sir Girja Shankar Bajpi. 'Public Enemy No. 1' Faces Death Sentence Louisville, Ky Oct. 12 Earl D. Bircham, former "pub lic enemy No. 1," faced a death sentence today recommended by a Jury which found him guilty of killing a policeman in a gun battle which ended in his cap ture. The trial of the 48-year-old prison escape artist ended quick ly last night after one day of testimony in a courtroom close ly guarded by officers who searched every spectator who entered. The jury deliberated one hour and 10 minutes before returning a verdict of guilty with a rec ommendation for the death sen tence. Oregonians in Alaska Suit Anchorage, Alaska, Oct. 12 OF) Several well-known Oregon men and the name oi Nick Bez prominent fishing fleet operator, are figuring in a $90,000 mining suit here. Al Schneider, general mana ger of Oregon Motor Stages of Portland, was on the witness stand for the fourth straight day yesterday. He testified that Bez, former crony of Washington's Gov. Mon C. Wallgren and one time fishing host to President Truman, was consulted by the Oregon men before they ad vanced $70,000 to the Kougarok ureogmg worp. ne menuoneo Bez' name several times. He said Bez had told him Kougarok Con - solidated Placers, Inc., was a good investment. The Oregonians are suing to cancel an agreement with the Kougarok operators on the con tention that its president did not inform them as to the financial obligations of the firm. Other Oregonians In the suit are E. Royce, president of Ore- gon Motor Stages; C h a r 1 e Stearns and Douglas Owens ofjrcpublic. Medford, partners in a construe - tion firm: Earl McNutt. former Eugene mayor and ex-legislator;s'l'o" that our solidarity and John McNutt and Thomas Chao-in'8h fostered by the ex- man, The Kougarok operators, P. J. anrt Aurirov rniin fiiwi counter-claim against the Oregon ' Provide inspiring leadership men charging that they breached toward the achievement of those the contract by evicting the Alas-jaims " kans from gold mining premises' The weste hemisphere's de - and by other actions. Columbus an Example Rome, Oct. 12 i) Christo- pher Columbus must be an ex ample of courage and endurance to our generation. Premier Ai- cide De Gasperi of Italy said in message to the United States for Columbus day. K .,- . - , af ... I -V '.''"...,, WLt i'J cStP7 Ov Svl First flight of F t The air forces needle-nosed F-90, one of the largest fighter planes ever flown, streaks over the Southern California desert near Murnc air force ba. This is the first in-flight picture made of the stream-lined new twin jet which is designed to fly far behind enemy lines. (AP Wircphotol Admirals ftap Atom warm re ineory Truman Renews Opposition to 58 Air Groups Washington. Oct. It Ml Pres ident Truman today renewed his opposition to a 5S-grsup air force iat a White House conference .with members of the senate ap propriations committee. i he senators mm newsmen I afterwards, however, that the president suggested he would ac icept the house position on funds jfor stockpiling of strategic ma ' tcrials. The two controversies are holding up passage of an appro priations bill carrying funds for all the armed services. For 48 Air Groups Senate Democratic Leader Lu cas (111.), who participated in the conference, said Mr. Truman was standing by his position in fa vor of a 48-group air force, in stead of the 58 groups insisted upon by the house, because of the "savings of $741,000,000." Lucas and the other senators. including Wherry (Neb.), the re publican floor leader, said Mr. Truman did not say he would veto a bill carrying the house version. The outcome of the confer ence at the white House left the future of the bill as uncer tain as ever. Wherry Stands Pat Wherry, who supported both the- 48-group air force and the S27 1.000,000 senate cut in the house figure for stockpiling, in dicated that he would not yield on either count. (Concluded n t'ict 5, Column it Truman Talks fo Latin America Washington, Oct 12 OT President Truman told a group of Latin American diplomats to day that the United States is committed to "the exercise of re presentative democracy" in the western hemisphere. The president made this ap parent reference to Latin Ameri- ican military dictatorships in statement to the ambassadors to the council of the organization I of American states. The diplo- mats paid a brief visit to the White House in observance of Columbus day, a holiday throughout Latin America, "We in the inter-American system," Mr. Truman said in his prepared statement, "subscribe I fully to the principle of non-in- tcrvention in the internal or ex slterna! affairs of any American 1 "At the same time, we are dc- finitely committed to the propo- ercise of representative democra- cy in the Amiran states. I am confident that you will continue Is,re ,or ecurny, mr- iruman saiu, is noi primarily in oruer Uanaed hi that we m nro- igrcssivcly realize our vast possi- bilities. "It is this spirit which moti- vates the growing exchange of technical knowledge and skill that has been talcing place among our countries." Halsey and King 17 'W i t -1. y a X K- Top Admiral fa F. ("Bull") Halsey. Below, Ad miral Ernest 3, King. East Germany Loyal lo USSR Berlin, Oct. 12 " East Ger many, the Soviet union's newest satellite, pledged through its communist government today to give unswerving loyalty to Rus sia. The communist prime minis ter. Otto Grotewohl, made the pledge as he and his cabinet were unanimously confirmed by the people's chamber of the new Soviet zone republic. The 400 members of the chamber by a similar unanimous vote five days ago had set up the, new state and prohibited Ger-i mans in the east zone from vot ing for at least another year. In his induction speech, Gro- tewohl laid down a six point program: 1 Pledging eastern Germa ny a "loreign policy to that adopted by the Soviet satellite foreign ministers at the Warsaw conference in 1948. 2 Accepting the Gder-Neissc frontier, which ceded former German territory to Poland and Russia, as a final "peace bor der." 3 Developing trade with the youngest peoples republic" communist China, 4 A new economic plan even;, closed ci oor session. Senator more intensive than the current two year plan, to get unner way ( in 1950. 5 Abolition of food rationing, i except for meat and sugar, next 'year. ! 6-Equal rights tor mier jnazis who were not convicted of nireci crimes, n nsn . forces of against any revival of naxism. militarism or fascism." security Slarkew t loseu New York, Oct. 12 Seeur- ity and commodity markets throughout the United States were closed today, Columbus' 'day. I uik iitixr?i mm.- (anjHiticr marenea m. Ask Congress To Curb Power Given Johnson Washington, Oct. 1 Two fleet admirals Ernest J. King and William F. Halsey today denounced the atomic bombing theory sf warfare, and asked congress to strip Defense Sec retary Louis Johnson of power to weakest the nation's naval power. Both five-star veterans of World War II attacked what they called the air force's "mis taken, overplayed" theories of intercontinental bombing. Both said that in any war this coun try must hurl it striking power not at cities but at enemy mili tary forces, A-Bomb Overemphasized King, wartime chiej of naval operations, told the house armed services committee that "we have been over-emphasizing the atom bomb and the bomber that was planned to deliver it." The next war, "if we really expect to win It," will be fought much like the last with vast armies and navies and the "im portant services" of long-range bombers, he said (n statement. To build up the mobile strik ing power which he said this country must have, Halsey urg ed the committee to demand completion of the 6Q. 000-ton su per aircraft carrier scrapped by Johnson. He also said congress should strip Johnson of authority to cut naval spending below figures approved by congress. The committee has heard Johnson plans to do juit that. Halsey on Super-Carrier As for the super-carrier, Hal sey asserted that It Is "not super" but merely "a normal de velopment" from the carriers oi World War H. And another navy witness Capt. Arleigh A. Burke, assist ant chief ot naval operations in charge of research declared: "If we build this earner and find we don't need it, the cost to the nation will be $189,000,000. If we don't build this carrier. and find that we do need it. the cost to the nation may be the nation itself." King said the notion that tho air force's B-36 atom bomb com bination frightens Binsia is wishful thinking. (Concluded en Face 5, Cattra I) Progress on Austrian Peace Washington, Oct. 12 m Sec retary of State Acheson told tho senate foreign relations commit tee today "a good deal of prog ress" has been made with Rus sia on an Austrian peace treaty. Talkine with newsmen after Jconnaliy (D-Tes), committee chairman said Acheson advised Die senators that the United Stales and Russia have agreed informally that Austria will I have her pre-war boundaries, ha wiM mcan, Connally umt Austria will have the same boundaries sne Baa w lore Connally said Acheson report ed "substantial progress has been accomplished" toward the Austrian treaty, tat he added that questions of Danube ship- jping. reparations, and ownership (0f German-controlled property in Austria remain to be settled, Connally also said Acheson gave a complete report on tne entire Asiatic situation and dis cussed "the probable recogni tion" later of a communist gov ernment in China. "There has been no recogni tion," Connally Mid, adding he did not wish to go into the ques tion further. Timber Sales Drop In National Forests Portland, Oct. 12 Timber sales and cut in the IV national forests of Washington and Ore gon dropped sharply during the third quarter of this year com pared with the same period in 1948. The U S forest service report ed yesterday that sales were down to 302.80S.800 board feet. less than half the 815,853,000 a year asio Value was $i,254.063, down from $3,536,610. t