THE WEATHER HERE PARTLY CLOUDY tonight, cloudy with rain Friday. Little change in temperature. Lowest tonight, 44; highest Friday, 60. Maximum ytattrdM. Ml minimal t. 4v, 48. Tat I Njiir artriailatUa: .Hi far nanth: l.C?, nam I, t.U. r. ciattallon, normal, 4. At. BUtr halfM, -3.3 feat. (Rcaarl a; US. Wlhr Ba- anpital HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 256 KTAISrthSS Salem, Oregon, Thursday, October 27, 1949 Pogesj Price 5c r Acute Shortage Of Freight Cars Hits Industry Lumbermen and Other Industries Hampered In Shipments By STEPHEN A. STONE Freight car shortage in Salein and the entire Willamette valley it seriously acute. The lumber Industry Is feel ing the shortage most severely Some other lines of business fcl the cramp. Fruit r ackers have gotten past the peak of the sea son and manage to get cars by watching future needs and mak ing a fight with the railroad companies. Cause of the shortage can't be clearly determined locally. But it appears to be the larger move ment of loaded freight cars go ing east than coming west. And for some reason that is a little mysterious the empty cars of (he Southern Pacific system fail to return for months. Blame Exchange System Some shippers are inclined to blame the SP's exchange system with other roads. But most of them think the SP just doesn't have enough equipment, and some want pressure brought to have that road bring up its in ventory of freight cars. The growing Oregon country has something to do with it, they say. It's hard to keep up with the demand for transportation of commodities. The West Salem Lumber com pany, which turns out finished lumber, needs a car every day. Last week it got none. This week so far it has had one Southern Pacific and one Oregon Electric car. The company produces from 35,000 to 45,000 feet a day and its market is nation-wide. Lumbermen Hit The Arrow Mill & Lumber company is getting about 25 per cent of the cars it needs. It wants an average of seven every five lai,a in c nr.,, i . i- nutriiit r9 4vnm 40,000 to 50,000 feet daily to a market all over the United States. The company has recent ly been sold by M. DeNeffe & Son to Harlan Goble and Harry Engelen of Forest Grove. The company's main activity is wholesaling, but it is interest ed in milling and logging. The normal shipment in this area, which is from Eugene north, re quires about 100 cars a month. When it saw the shortage loom ing it quit putting out orders here and locally has been out of the market about six weeks. Inventory Increased From Dallas the Willamette Valley Lumber company reports an inventory of from 2,500,000 to 3,000,000 feet more than us ual because of the car shortage. In the last six weeks it has had only about half the cars needed. The company faces possibility of a shutdown, it was reported today by Art Quirin, sales man ager for the operations at Dal las, Corvallis and Foster. (Concluded on Pane 8, Column 8) Czechs Ask French To Leave Country London, Oct. 27 VP) Czecho slovakia accused two French em bassy officials in Prague today ' prying into Czech uranium mining and asked them to leave the country. A Czech note handed to the French embassy said the two were Georges Helliot, the French military attache, and his assistant secretary, Marcel Sa labert, said a broadcast dispatch of Ceteka, the official czecnono vak news agency. Uranium is used in atomic production. Officials of the French for eign ministry in Paris declined to comment pending a report from its Prague embassy. Ceteka quoted the Czech note as saying the two Frenchmen or ganized spying against Czecho slovakia and tried to get "lmpor tant state secrets concerning the output of uranium ore. Rates Ordered Cut On Wool Shipments Washington, Oct. 26 m In ruling on a seven-year-old case, the Interstate Commerce Com mission has ordered reductions on freight carload rates to the east on western wool and mo hair shipments. The commission's investigation of the rate case began in 1942. The changes apply to wool and mohair shipped "In the grease, or before cleaning. The reductions are due to take effect Feb. 10. . Tito to Battle 'Enduringly' Against Russia Pledges Continued Opposition to Kremlin Domination Belgrade, Oct. 27 Mi Mar shall Tito last night promised to fight enduringly" against Rus sian attempts to dominate Yugo slavia. 'We know," said Tito, "that in this struggle we are fighting for a great, just cause that will have tremendous historical sig nificance for the future and that this is the true, correct relation ship among the socialist states.' Tito sounded this serious note after a day in which a Moscow newspaper accused him of lav ishing diamonds on an "Ameri can spy," named as the Yugoslav-born Metropolitan opera so prano Zinka Kunc Milanov. Singer Says "It's Silly" .The singer, interviewed over the telephone, said the story in the Moscow Literary Gazette was "just silly." Tito pledged continued oppo sition to the Kremlin's present policy in a speech to a visiting group of Italians who had fought alongside his partisans during the last war. He declared: 'We shall fight and we shall fight enduringly " to prevent Yugoslavia's subjugation by Russia. Russia's leaders, said Tito "are following a policy of un conditional subjugation of small socialist countries by a big so cialist country." This Tito termed a breach in the development of relations be tween socialist partners. Socialism Not to Fail The Yugoslav leader conced ed that "socialism in the Soviet Union will not fail" because of the Yugoslav fight against the Kremlin policy. . (Concluded on Page S, Column 4) George V. Allen Envoy to Tito Washington, Oct. 27 W President Truman today named George V. Allen ambassador to Yugoslavia. Allen has been an assistant secretary of state. His recess appointment to the Belgrade post was announced after the resignation of Ambas sador Cavendish W. Cannon, who is retiring because of ill health. Allen has been in charge of the public affairs section of the state department, which includes the "Veice of America" and various cultural cooperation ac tivities. He returned today from a meeting in London of U.S. am bassadors to "Iron Curtain" countries. Japan Population Up Tokyo, Oct. 27 W) Tokyo's population was 5,910,701 on Sept. 1, the metropolitan gov ernment announced today. It said this was an increase of 340,709 since Jan. 1. School Officials File Answer in Frat Case Three identical sets of motions by three separate groups of defendants have been launched here in the case of Gene Lebold 24CJ and others in which it is sought to have IS students restored to their studies at Salem high They were removed Iron- school on a suspension order be cause of their alleged affiliation with a certain secret society and have been returned to school for the time being under a tem porary injunction order grant ed against the school board and officials by Circuit Judge Earl T. Latourette of Oregon City He has been assigned by the supreme court to hear the case. The defendants are separated in groups in the motions filed, Donald A. Young appearing for school board members; R W DeArmond for Connell C. Ward, clerk of the board and Frank B. Bennett, school superintend ent, and George A. Rhoten for Edmund A. Carletnn, principal of the high school, and Gurnee Flesher assistant principal and dean of boys. The motions seek to make the complaint of the plaintiffs more definite and certain as to its allegations. They ask that allegations be Subs to Carry Atomic Bombs Pearl Harbor, Oct. 27 ff) The navy will show Nov. 7 how atomic bombs can be delivered by submarines. It will be done by launching 15,000-pound guided missiles "loons," which could carry ato mic warheads from the stand ard fleet type submarine Cusk and Carbonero. Pacific fleet headquarters said the "loons," 30-feet-long im provement on the wartime Ger man buzz bomb, will be fired by the two undersea craft off Ha waii. The missiles, electronically guided by the subs, have a range of 100 to 200 miles. The demonstration will be a very significant step in the ex ploitation of sea power," said Cmdr. John S. McCain, Jr., who has charge of submarine guided missile development. He added: "The submarine, with guided missiles, has become a siege bombardment weapon and can be used to deliver atom bombs. The whole idea of using sub marines to launch guided missiles is a long step toward push-but-on warfare.'-' The navy said submarines proved in the Hawaiian war games concluded yesterday that they can carry huge high-speed long-range guided missiles across oceans in normal undersea op erations. For more than three years ex periments and training has been carried on off Point Mugu near San Diego, Calif. Egg Price Declines 2 to 7 Cents Dozen Further declines in egg prices were reported Thursday, varying from 2 cents on top grades down to as much as seven cents on smaller grades. The cuts here followed similar ones in Port land, which market followed the general trend over the nation, egg markets everywhere being in a scramble due to excess sup plies. The buying list here Thursday included the following quota tions: Extra large A A, 59 cents; large AA, 58 cents; large A, 55 59 cents; medium AA, 42 cents; medium A, 40-46 cents; pullets, 34-36 cents. Wholesale prices generally list grade A at 64 cents, mediums at 51 cents. at the complaint in circuit court and others vs. School District school permanently made more definite and certain as to the acts of the defendants being done in "an arbitrary, ca prlcious, officious, oppressive and discriminatory manner " as alleged. They also ask that cer tain parts of the complaint be stricken out, particularly a sub paragraph alleging that the de fendants were without jurisdic tion "by virtue of the constitu tion or of any valid law of the state, or any valid mle or reg ulation of the district or board to make, adopt, enact, issue or enforce any such order . . .' The motion then a t k that should the foregoing motions be denied an order be issued re quiring plaintiffs to show in what respect defendants were without jurisdiction and to show whether it is claimed the state law as to secret societies is in valid and the grounds for such claim It is also asked that the same showing be made as to rules or regulations of the board. Oahu 'Invaded' Carrying complete equipment, first wave of U. S. Second infantry division troops hit the beach at Pokai, leeward Oahu, to recapture the island from "enemy" troops. "Invasion" of the island was the climax of "Opera tion Miki," the biggest army-navy war games in the Pacific since the end of the war. Lying on the sand in the foreground are life preservers discarded by earlier invaders. (Acme Tele-photo) Police Probe Charge Of Racial Discrimination An investigation into charges policeman in Salem was launched assistant chief, following receipt owner of extensive farm and packing operations near Dayton. The letter, which was directed to the chief as well as the Berserk Pilot Commits Suicide Clearwater, Fla., Oct. 27 VP) A 23-year-old pilot terrorized Clearwater residents for two hours with wild power dives in a stolen lane, then calmly landed and shot himself to death today. Police Chief George McClam ma Identified the youth as Sam uel W. Watkins, member of well known Virginia family. Magis trate R. L. Baker pronounced the death a suicide. Officials pieced together this story: Watkins telephoned a girl friend last night about 11:30 and told her he had decided to kill himself. Then he hung up. Thirty minutes later frantic residents from virtually every section of town called police headquarters to report that a plane, flying without lights, was buzzing rooftops. Police cruisers spotted the zooming, diving plane and ambulances were readied for a crash. Watkins hurled the Piper Cub toward the Memorial causeway drawbridge and fishermen lin ing the span were forced to cow er behind concrete guard rails. Three times the plane screamed across, once missing the bridge tender's shelter by inches. Then the plane began raking Clearwater beach. Finally Watkins flew back to the airport, its runways lighted by the headlamps of police cruisers. He made a perfect landing, ap plied his brakes and cut out his run to less than 100 feet. Po lice heard a pistol shot, closed in and found him unconscious with a wound in the temple, a pistol on the cockpit floor. No Confidence Vote Defeated in Commons London, Oct. 27 "PI A con servative motion of no confi dence in the labor government was defeated 353 to 222 in the house of commons tonight. The opposition got more votes than It ever has in any of the eight confidence votes won by the labor government since it took office more than four years ago. Defeat on a confidence vote would mean the resignation of the government, followed either by appointment of a prime min ister from the opposition or a general election for a new par liament and new government. Bids Asked Friday On Detroit Projects Portland, Oct. 27 Ml Bids will be asked tomorrow by the Portland district corps of engi neers for projects at the Detroit dam site. The work Includes construc tion of a laundry and bath house, water and sewer systems and electrical distribution system for the trailer camp area at the site. Bids will be opened Nov. 10. x-' " ' ' i of racial discrimination by a city Thursday by E. C. Charlton, of a letter from U. S. Alderman, Capital Journal, mayor and the governor, cited the fact that Al- derman farms followed the letter of the state fair employment law which bans discrimination on color. The message charged that on last Friday a group of farm em ployes, including two Negroes, had waited for the paymaster at the Alderman bus stop in Sa lem on Commercial street be tween Chemeketa and Court streets. "During this interval," the lat ter said, "a city policeman, who was on his beat, approached the colored people and asked them what they were doing on the streets in Salem. "When informed as to their purpose they were told that as soon as they had received their money to get in their car and get out of Salem, as their race was not tolerated in Salem Alderman's letter was ended with the question of whether the officer had spoken with author ity for the city. Charlton withheld all com ment on the incident, pending a full investigation. He said he was seeking to question the Ne groes or others in the Alder man group who heard what, if anything, had been said and ex actly who had said it. He said he wanted to learn If it was a policeman who made the state ment. The assistant chief declined to release the name of any of ficer on the beat in that section at the time the incident allegedly took place until his identity was positively established. On the problem of racial dis crimintaion, however, the as sistant chief said that no officer had any right to tell Negroes they would not be tolerated in Salem "No officer has the right to make such a statement of policy for this department or for the city but we want to know all the facts before any conclusions are reached," Charlton explain ed. The police department receiv ed its copy of the letter Thurs day morning at 9:15 a.m. The assistant chief also reported he had received assurance that ev ery effort would be made to have the individuals, who al legedly heard the officer's com ments, report to police head quarters. Gandhi Slayers To Hang on Nov. 15 New Delhi, India, Oct. 27 (P The home ministry announced today that N. V. Godse and Na rayan Apte will be hanged Nov. 15 for the assassination of Ma hatma Gandhi in January, lf'48. Godse, who shot Gandhi, and Apte were convicted of the as sassination conspiracy and sen tenced to death last February by a special court in Delhi's Red Fort. Five other convicted conspir ators were sentenced to life Im prisonment. One defendant was acquitted. Truman Rejects! Intervention in Major Strikes President Says No National Emergency Warrants Action Now Washington, Oct. 27 W Pres ident Truman said today no na tional emergency yet exists in cither the coal or the steel strikes to warrant his interven tion now. He said he will not hesitate to use the emergency provisions of the Taft-Hartley act if such an emergency does develop. Reporters asked him at h i s news conference if he planned to invoke the national emergency provisions of the Taft - Hartley act to bring the steel and coal strikes to a halt. Refuses Committal He replied that he will cross that bridge when he comes to it and added there is no national emergency yet. The president also rejected a suggestion that the fact-finding board which functioned in the steel strike be reconvened for further recommendations. He said that board has done its job and added that no other board is to be appointed. Later, however, when he was asked if he might use the Taft Hartley act to help to set up a fact-finding board in each of the cases, he said that the law will be complied with when the time comes but the time had not come. No Deadline on Mediation Earlier the White House said Mr. Truman has set no deadline on mediation efforts in the stop pages. Mr. Truman couldn't recall us ing the Taft-Hartley act before until a reporter suggested he had done so to halt one coal strike called by John L. Lewis. A Long Way Off (Concluded on Page 5. Column 6) Record Prices Beef on Hoof Chicago, Oct. 27 m Beef on the hoof is selling today at near record prices in the union stock yards. But don't let that worry you. You aren't going to find that beef your butcher shop with a near-record price tag. In fact, you aren't going to find it there. The top 1949 price for cattle, paid yesterday, was $41.50 a hundred pounds for prime steers. That will cut out to prime meat. It's the kind which is sold directly to "name" restaurants, clubs and hotels. It doesn't get into the butcher shop. "People who will buy those steaks won't care much whether the price is $3.00 or $5.00," one livestock commission man said. 'There's always a steady de mand for beef from those res taurants, regardless of price." In the past two weeks prices for prime cattle have skyrocket ed. The price is now only 10 cents a hundred pounds under the all-time peak made in Sep tember of last year. If that peak to be scaled, livestock men think it will have to be done before the livestock show starts Nov. 26. After the show, the present extreme scarcity of prime beef will hove lessened. Pineapples Unloaded By Non-Union Crew The Dalles. Ore., Oct. 27 (U.R Protected by lhcriff's deputies carrying shotguns, a crew of 16 townspeople today began un loading Hawaiian pineapple from the barge "Honolulu" after a CIO Longshore picket line was broken up by a temporary antl nirlcrtina order. ' A squad of a dozen regular and special deputies took up po titions at the entrance to The Dalles dock as unloading oper ations of the once "hot" pine apple cargo was resumed for the first time since an outbreak of picketing violence Sept. 28. The amateur longshoremen, mostly local cowhands and farm workers, moved onto the dock at 9 a.m. after CIO pickets were served with copies of a restrain ing order issued by Wasco coun ty Circuit Judge Malcolm W. Wilkinson. Using a sling lift, the crew began lifting cases of pineapple tidbits off the barge preparatory to loading them aboard three empty freight cars at the dock siding. Disbanding of the picket line, even on temporary basis, left lML Above Admiral Louis E. Denfield, purged by President Truman, below, Admiral Forrest P. Sherman, his reported suc cessor. CIO to Expel Left Wingers Cleveland, Oct. 27 VP) The CIO's confident right-wing ma- iority planned today to expel at least three or maybe all 12 unions wnose leaders nave shown pro-communist sympathy, A resolutions committee under the United Auto Workers' head, Walter P. Reuthcr, stood ready to fight it out on the floor of next week s convention if neces sary. It is determined to oust the three unions most critical of Philip Murray's leadership: The United Electrical Workers, with nearly 400,000 members, the Farm Equipment Workers with 50,000, and the Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers numbering around 100,000. The plan of action decided upon by the powerful right-wing faction but subject to plenty of pressure before it can be put into effect calls for kicking out the three unions next Wednes day. Charters of the three would be challenged on the floor. First resolutions will be offered Tues day. Industrial Payrolls Show Slight Decline Oregon's industrial payroll which includes firms covered by the state industrial accident commission, slumped during September. The September total was $57, 492,751. That was $7,000,000 less than in August, and $4, 000,000 less than in September. 1948. The payroll in Multnomah county was $20,384,808, or $4, 500,000 less than in August. It wa- down $2,000,000 from Sep tember, 1948. the way open for hauling the pineapple out by rail and truck to the freight cocktail cannery in San Jose, Cal to which it was consigned several months ago. The pineapple was canned in Hawaii and loaded there by non-union labor at the height of the International Longshore men's & Warehousemen's union strike against Hawaiian steve doring companies. Declared "hot" by union longshoremen, the pineapple was towed first to Puget Sound ports and later to this Columbia river port, 200 miles upstream. The Dalles port commission stopped attempts to unload the barge Sept. 28 to prevent fur ther "bloodshed" after six men were injured in a picket line me Ice. Truman Ousts a m uenrem rrom Navy Chief Post "Act-inn for Good of The Country" Sher- ! man Likely Successor Washington, Oct. 27 W) Pres- ' ident Truman today lifted Ad- , miral Louis E. Denfeld from his post as chief of naval opera tions. Mr. Truman announced to a news conference that he was acting on the advice of Secretary of the Navy Matthews that "for the good of the country" Den feld shnnlH h trnnsfprreri "tn other duties." Washington has been buzzing with reports that Denfeld would be ousted since the chief of na val operations delivered a bitter criticism of present military policies to the house armed serv ices committee on Oct. 13. There have been reports that he will be succeeded by Vice Admiral Forrest Sherman. Silent on Successor President Truman declined to say whether Sherman will get the post. He said he did not know what duties would be as signed to Denfeld. The official word that Den feld was being removed came atop announcement that the navy and marine corps must make a 56,200-man cut and admid in dications that a storm was blow ing up on Capitol Hill over Den feld's case. Rep. Arends (D-, 111.), saying he had heard Denfeld would be asked to resign, had protested even before Mr. Truman's an nouncement. Arends demanded in a state ment that the committee con vene to meet this "insult to congress." He said the commit tee had promised Denfeld and other critics of present military policies mat they could speak their minds freely without fear of retaliation. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 6) McNary Field Airways Patched Work of patching the taxi- ways at McNary field was be gun Thursday morning by the Warren-Northwest, Inc., paving company. Unable to start the patching sooner because of other work and the damp weather, the com pany was Thursday drying the holes in the taxiways with torches before filling them. At the same time CAA men here from Seattle were prepar ing to erect the buildings to the south of the airport where will be housed the instruments for the H-facility, Airport Manager Charles Barclay reported. Other work recently done at the airport included the survey ing of the drainage system at the airport by engineers, clean ing of culverts, burning of grass in drainage ditches and the deep ening of the ditches. Ditches along the roao were also cleaned and deepened. Fairview home has plowed the area leased to it and was sewing oats there. In telling of the work that has been done at the airport, Barclay drew attention to the fact there is an area of about 200 by 100 feet along the rail road spur that the city would rent to firms, who wanted to erect buildings and use the rail road spur. City Officials Probe Drainage Conditions In rough garb, including rub ber boots. City Manager J. L. Franzen, City Attorney Chris J. Kowitz, Engineer J. H. Davis nd one or two other officials were investigating the norm part of the city Thursday where drainage is demanded. A meeting of residents of that part of the city with the offi cials is to be held Thursday night at City hall, and Saturday morning an outdoor meeting with residents along Portland road where lack of drainage caused serious trouble last year. With emergency measures be ing taken by the city it is be lieved much of the trouble can be avoided this winter, es pecially if weather is favorable. Trouble last year was caused by heavy rains Immediately follow ing a cold snap that froze tho ground to a depth of several inches.