THE WEATHER HERE GENERALLY FAIR tonight, Satur day; drnae fof blanketing arra south of Portia nf star ting earij this cvenlnr and through to near noon Saturday, and again Saturday eve ning. Lowest temperature tonight, 35; highest Saturday, 50. Mailman yttUrdy. Mi minima t dftjr, U. TUI hmr preclpltiUcs: .Ml far mnlht Btrmal, i.Sl. Scaasa r- tipitslion, .; normal, 1.93. Rivrr bciihl, t. fact. (Bcparl ay U.S. Wthr Ba- Capital Jounnm al HOME EDITION 6S 0SU) 61st Year, No. 275 SSSfJfSSoXS Salem, Oregon, Friday, November 18, 1949 Price 5c 15 Involved in Sex Charges Involving Girl 13 Under Arrest and Warrants Out for Two More By DOUGLAS THOMAS Who will be next? That was the $64 question Friday which (till busied police, worried others and kept alive the lively topic of conversation the sex lite of a 14-year-old Salem schoolgirl. Two more warrants were re Dorted on hand Friday. Four others arrested Thursday brought the total under arrest to 13. Each of the four signed ad missions for police. Five of those arrested earlier in the case were brought before Circuit Judge George R. Duncan for sentence Friday morning. All of the rape charges were re duced to charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Sentenced to Prison John Hoffert, whose record showed two penitentiary terms as well as a sentence to the state school for boys, was sentenced to serve 16 months in the state penitentiary again.. He will be eligible for parole in a year. Maurice Murdock and Carl A. Coulson, were sentenced to a year in the penitentiary, but the sentence was suspended. They were placed on probation for three years and were ordered to ' surrender state and city licenses and were ordered not to drive for hire during the period of probation. It was Murdock whom the girl accused of leading her to prostitution. Carter Hearing Nov. 25 Richard Roy Carter, operator of Dickerin' Dick's used car lot on south 12th street, asked for time to enter a plea and a hear ing date was set for November 25 at 9:30 a. m. Don Clark, part owner of a cab company, pleaded not guilty Bail was continued at $1,000. Meanwhile, six others charged with rape, including the men arrested Thursday, were taken before district court. There, they waived preliminary examina tions and were ordered held for higher court action. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 7) Taxi Firms May Lose Licenses Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom an nounces that the taxi companies operating in Salem may be asked to appear before the city council and Jhow cause why their li censes should not be revoked. He said he would ask for a coun cil investigation. Both cab licenses and space allotted for taxi stands must be approved by the city council. Li censes cost the. operators $50 a year for each vehicle, $10 a year for stand space in the metered, area and $25 a year outside the metered district. Licenses are limited to one for each 2000 population. Crommelin Asks Court Martial Washington, Nov. 18 (U.B Capt. John G. Crommelin to day asked Adm. Forrest P. Sher man, chief of naval operations, either to withdraw a public rep rimand which questioned his fit ness or to court martial him. The veteran navy flier, who precipitated the congressional Investigation of the unification battle, said that Sen. Joseph R. McCarty (R-Wis.) and Rep. Pat Sutton (D-Tenn.), have offered to be his lawyers if he is court martialed. Sherman publicly reprimand ed Crommelin on Nov. 8 and questioned his ability for future command because he had releas ed confidential navy letters crit ical of national defense policies. Crommelin said he wants the reprimand wiped from his rec ordor a court martial. He said he was making public his re ply since the official repri mand was a public one. Navy reprimands usually are not made public. "It is respectfully requested." Crommelin advised Sherman, "that the public reprimand . . cither be cancelled completely and forever, and expunged from all naval files and records, or that I be Given the opportunity to present the reasons for ny actions before a group of offic era in a general court martial." Dispute Over School Survey Left to Board Neuner Disapproves Appointment of Holy As Director By JAMES D. OLSON An argument between mem bers of a legislative educational advisory committee and Attor- ney General George Neuner over use of basic school funds to conduct a survey of elementary schools in Oregon was finally shifted Friday to the state emergency board for settlement. The advisory committee, of which Frank Schiro of La Grande, is chairman, submitted a proposed contract for employ ment of Dr. Thomas A. Holy of Ohio State university as direc tor of the survey. Neuner refused to approve the contract holding that first, the advisory committee had no au thority to employ Holy and sec ond that the contract delegated authority possessed by the state board of education to an indi vidual. Long Argument At a meeting of the board of of education Friday members of the board and the advisory committee argued for several hours and finally the attorney general held that inasmuch as money had been set aside by the legislature out of basic school funds for a "periodic study of the elementary school system of Oregon" the board would have the right to employ quali fied persons to assist in such a study. Such persons, he held, could be either from within or with out the state. No Funds Budgeted However, although $93,000 of administrative funds have been set aside in the state treasury no funds for the survey have been budgeted, Neuner contend ed, therefore, approval of a budget by th- emergency board is required. The matter will go before the emergency board Fri day afternoon for consideration. Neuner held that the proposed contract which he refuses to ap prove proposed delegation of authority of the board of educa tion to hire personnel and carry out other duties of the board. "This contract," he said, "vio lates the civil service law as well as the budget control law." Threatened Resignations Schiro in opening his discus sion said that the advisory board was not satisfied with the attor ney general's ruling but later he and other members of the board said that they wished a clarification on the law from the attorney general. As a result. a reported resignation of the en tire advisory board was averted. Members of the advisory com mittee in addition to the chair man are State Senator Robert Holmes, Astoria; Mrs. Lucille O'Neill, Klamath Falls: Miss Elizabeth Ducey, Portland; Ben Buisman; Rep. Herman Hender- shott, Eugene, and Rep. Lyle rnomas of West Salem. The state board of education is composed of Gov. McKay, Secretary of State Newbry, Rex Putnam, superintendent of pub lic instruction; Miss May Dar ling, Portland; Paul H. Spill- man, Powell Butte; Mrs. Georgia Patterson, Hillsboro. and Harry Boivan, Klamath Falls. Mainela Gets 10 Years For Market Robbery Joseph Mainella received a 10-year maximum sentence in the state penitentiary Friday before Judge George R. Duncan as one of a trio who on September 20 held William L. Gracn at the point of a gun in his 12th itreet market, eloped with the cash register from which they extracted $75 and threw the register in the river. Mainella's com panions, Dale Palston and Art Rusie, both 19, were given sus pended sentences, each placed on five years' probation, resti tution to be made. Mainella is lc have credit for time he has spent in Jail. Mainella told the court that he was responsible for the crime. "1 was th"! oldest," he said "and the other boyi were brought into this by me. I had the gun and if it wasn't for my presence they'd never have been in the trouble." The three met at I dance at the Horst hop yard and while coming into town to get some beer, he said, the plan of the robbery was hatched and immediately put into execution Palston's father, a captain in the Seattle fire department, was in court and made a pica for his boy. B-29 Crash Kills 5 in Take-off Tampa, Fla., Nov. 18 ff A B-29 starting out to hunt for the B-29 missing near Bermuda crashed brfre seconds after take off here today. Five of the nine known crew men aboard were killed. The other four were thrown clear of the plane and were only slightly hurt. The plane was from MacDill air base and was one of nearly 100 air force, navy and coast guard planes which have been searching for the bomber which ran out of fuel and crash land ed in the sea Wednesday. The crash of the MacDill bomber occurred shortly before 8 a.m. Seconds after it took off from the field which borders Tampa bay, its number four engine be gan to smoke. As it turned to land, the engine broke loose and the plane crashed. The tide was out at the time and the ship plunged into mud and slime. . The muck prevented a crash boat from reaching the wreck age and greatly hampered fire men from reaching the scene with hose. Czechs Convict 35 of 'Spying' Prague, Czechoslovakia, Nov. 18 W) A Prague state court an nounced the smashing of a big spy ring today as it sent 35 Czechs to prison for sentences ranging from life to one year. They were convicted of aiming to overthrow the Communist government. The group included two for mer members of the Czechoslo vak security police. Three of the accused were women. The court charged them with spying for an unnamed western power. The trial, which lasted eight days, was one of a series of trea son trials going on virtually non stop in Czechoslovak courts. Most of them are held in secret. Indications that more espion age arrests and trials were con templated appeared in a special security police broadcast today urging greater vigilance against the "aims of the rotten western reactionary regime which sends spies and diversionist agents in to our country." Mainella was shown to have in exceptional record as a para trooper in the war and bears machine gun wounds received in Sicily. Vera Mills, who several weeks ago was indicted by the grand Jury for contributing to the de linquency of her IB -year -old son for allegedly allowing him to roam at will and failing to exercise restraint over him changed a previous pica of not guilty to guilty and was sen tenced to six months in jail which was suspended and pro bation imposed for two years. James Clyburn, who pleaded guilty to raising a $5 check to $50, was continued for sentence to November 25 until his FBI record comes in. He admitted a previous conviction under the Dyer act In Tennessee (Concluded on Pag i, Column II B-29s Collide Head-on Air force B-29 Superfortress lies twisted and crumpled on marshy Macdonald island near Stockton, Calif., after it collided head-on with another B-29 during a routine "round robin" training flight to California from Spokane, Wash. The second B-29 crashed two miles away on'Rindge Tract and buried itself in 16 feet of slimy delta mud. Eighteen of the 21 airmen aboard the two planes were killed and three parachuted to safety. (Acme Telephoto.) 3 Plane Survivors at Loss to Explain Collision Fairfield-Suisin Airforce Base, (P Three men who lived through the collision of two B-29's over the nearby San Joaquin to explain the accident. Neither could they understand Life Raft Seen In B-29 Search Hamilton, Bermuda, Nov. 18 (U.R) A yellow object believed to be a one-man life raft was sighted today by aerial scouts searching the Atlantic for sur vivors of a Superfortress which went down somewhere off Ber muda with 20 aboard two days ago. ' The object Avas spotted 240 miles northeast of Bermuda-at 3:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. EST). The B-29 which saw it lost contact in the spotty weather over that part of the Atlantic. Long afterward it radioed that it was circling the area in an effort to rediscover it. Reports from the searching B-29 to Kindley field, the U.S. air force base here, gave no clue 'o whether any sign of life was detected on the object believed to be a life raft. Officers speculated that the crewmen probably were unable to get any clear idea one way or the other, particularly since the loss of contact indicated they had only a fleeting glimpse of the object. The report was the most prom ising indication so far of find ing survivors of the Superfort ditched somewhere off Bermu da when it had radio and com pass trouble. Dirty weather had promised to throttle if not thwart the search today, just as searchers mougnt tney might be near finding .survivors. Budworm War Given Boards OK The state emergency board guaranteed today that Oregon would take part in a $1,151,000 program to try to wipe the spruce budworm from almost 1,000,000 acres of forest lands in the state next year. The board appropriated $197,- 000 today. The federal govern ment will pay $857,000 of the cost, and private timber own ers will pay $97,000. Acting State Forester George Spaur told the board that unless immediate action is taken, the pest will destroy the state'i for ests. It is killed by aerial spraying with DDT. He said thil method was 97 per cent effective on the 267,000 acres dusted last year by plane. The lands to be sprayed next year are on northeast Oregon, southwest of Pendleton, south of Mt. Hood, and between Bend and Eugene. About 75 per cent of it is in eastern Oregon. The treatment can be given only during two weeks of each year. Of the total acreage to be treated, 633,000 are in federal forests, 323,950 on privately owned lands, and 1,850 in state and county lands. Spaur said research experts have met with no success in trying to find a natural parasite which would kill the budworm. Solano County, Calif., Nov. 18 river delta were at a loss today the death of all the other 18 men aboard the two planes which plummeted to earth at midnight Wednesday Delta islands near Stockton. The dead were all in what was left of the fuselages of the planes. Some had chutes partly strapped to their bodies. They never made it to escape hatches The three survivors at the Fairfield-Suisun airbase hospital groped through fogged remem brances of their last few seconds aloft. I was getting ready to call the navigator for position to send to Spokane when I heard the crash," said Pvt. Keith R. Burns, of Boise, Ida., lone survivor of the craft which crashed in flames. "I was knocked to the floor. I put on my parachute and the last I can remember was when I saw the navigator trying to get out. 'I couldn't remember anything after that. I don't know how I got out of the plane. The next thing I knew I was falling. I pulled the ripcord and looked up and saw a plane burning. I saw the lights of a city be low." TSgt. Frank Schmit of Neg lcy, Ohio, said he was making an entry in the log sitting behind tne copilot when the planes crashed. o "I saw nothing," he said. "I deprcssurized the plane and put the. nose wheel in down position and slipped on my chute. "I turned to the pilot (Lt. War ren Sharrock) and said, 'I'm leaving.' Sharrock was busy yel ling to the copilpt in an attempt to get the plane under control. I was sitting on my chute. The ship was in a spin and rolling over. The spin threw me free." The other survivor, Sgt Rob cr S. Kluge of Spokane, Wash., related: I heard the radio operator get Instructions from the pilot and right after that I heard the crash. I was thrown to the floor. The plane started rolling. 1 didn't hear an alarm bell or any thing. I started crawling to the rear, to the bomb bay door." One of the bombers crashed in flames on McDonald island in the rich delta land 18 miles northwest of Stockton. The oth er broke in pieces on Muddy Rindge tract, two miles away. It did not burn. 'Too Mony Calls' Js what (his man said about the classified ail Inserted In the Capital Journal. t nnRM. HOI 'HE on tcrr, Barn, line chicken hou. A doiibk farate. fimllr orchard, no a month. Pn. - . "The phone was ring ing when we reached home and It continue to ring until 10:30 th nite, then lt started again in the morning. We had over 100 calls; that is real service." Mr. J. C. Place YOl'R ad in the CapitalJournal PHONE 22406 Kidnap-Slayer Says Doesn't Deserve to Live Stroble Blames Little Girl's Murder on Drunkeness Los Angeles, Nov. 18 'Pi Swiftly, the courts started to work today to bring Fred Stro ble to justice for the sex slay ing of little Linda Joyce Glucoft. Less than a day after he was picked up in a downtown bar, the 66-year-old baker was ar raigned in municipal court on a murder charge. Over objections of the public defender's office, Judge Leroy Dawson set Stroblc's prelimina ry hearing for next Monday. The defender's office wanted a de lay, on the ground that Stroble has no private attorney and no plans for one. Deputy District Attorney Adolph Alexander predicted that Stroble, accused of stran gling, beating and stabbing six- -year-old Linda to death, will be brought to trial in superior court by early December. To Ask Death Penalty "We will ask for the death penalty," said Alexander. Stroble had a hunted look as he was brought into court, hea vily manacled, through a well- behaved crowd which jammed the corridor. Stroble, the grandfather of one of Linda's favorite playmates. poured out his sordid story to District Attorney William Simp son as a 48-hour fugitive search throughout the west and into Mexico wound up yesterday on a stool in a downtown Los An geles bar about five blocks from central police station and across the street from a down town park. Simpson said Stroble, formally charged with murder, admitted that he strangled and bludgeoned the pudgy little girl to death (Concluded on P-p 5. Column 5) Suspect Held in Kidnap-Murder Burley, Idaho, Nov. 18 (U.R) A 16-year-old youth was taken into custody today by state po lice at a roadblock near Ham mctt, Ida., for questioning in connection with the brutal kid- nap-murdcr of seven-year-old Glcnda Joyce Brisbois of Burley. State Police Superintendent A. P. Bunderson gave the youth's name as Niel Buttcrficld, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Butter- field, who live in the Emerson district of Minidoka, just across the Snake river from Burley. The youth, driving a "hot rod" version of a 1934 Ford, was hailed at the Hammctt road block, one of a dozen set up along highways west of Burley by State Police Officer Kenneth De Young. Buttcrficld had a pas senger with him, described by De Young as a hitchhiker. Hammctt is about 100 miles west of Burley. Both Buttcrficld and the hilch hiker were placed in a police car and driven toward Twin Falls or Burley for questioning Probate Judge Henry W. Tucker of Burley said Buttcr ficld was committed in Decem ber, 1947, to the state industrial school on a delinquency charge involving a bogus check. Buttcrficld was apprehended in response to a state police gen cral alarm broadcast. i f ' "h uif v-l :-4 a.'" ' ' t v . V i LJ L Liw; ;;, ,',..jAtq Vice President and Fiancee Vice President Alben Bark Icy (left) who married Mrs. Carleton S. Hadley (right) in St. Louis today, is all smiles as he ives his bow tic that last minute twist at dinner of the National Trailer Coach Manu facturers at Washington, D. C. Mrs. Hadley Is shown in a recent portrait made at the home of a friend. (AP Wirephoto.) i .i if$f iM ilf' s& i - yJr ' I if ' : 1 i vCliito ii lma i ' 'infill Kidnap Sex-Slayer Fred Stroble, sought in the Linda Glucoft slaying, is brought to the Los Angeles district at torney's office after his cap ture in a downtown park and admission of the crime. (AP Wirephoto.) Navy Cuts Planes Near 20 Percent Washington, Nov. 18 W The navy today ordered about zu per cent of its combat planes taken out of service during the next four months and is con sidering whether others must be withdrawn. The move signals insistence from Defense Secretary Johnson oh economy cuts, bitterly, pro tested by naval officials, which figured in recent congressional hearings on inter-service rows. The navy announced that a total of 35 squadrons 28 navy and seven marine will be de commissioned. The sea service now has about 2,250 first line combat planes, besides support and service aircraft. The 35 squadrons to be de commissioned contain about 480 combat craft. The navy department an nounced some time ago that a 25 per cent cut in air strength would be required under the over-all economy program order by Secretary Johnson. When asked if today's order might mean that additional planes would be pulled out of service to bring the total to the 25 per cent reduction, a spokesman said that question is still undecided and is being studied. Johnson is sticking to his plan to clip $865,000,000 out of de fense department spending in the current fircal year, ending next June 30. The navy's share in the cut, for both ship and plane operation, will be $353, 00f.,000. Pope to Return to Vatican Vatican City, Nov. 18 !) Pope Pius XII will end his stay at the Cartel Gandolfo summer residence next week and return to Rome to prepare for the open ing of Holy Year, on Christmas Eve, Vatican sources said today. n,Y Barkley Weds Mrs. Hadley In St. Louis Romance in Spotlight For 4 Months Climaxed In Church Ceremony St. Louis. Nov. 18 HP Vice President Alben W. Barkley and Mrs. Carleton S. Hadley ex changed wedding vows today, he with a resounding baritone "I will" and she in a low mur mur. Her voice could scarcely be hcaid in the comparatively small chapel of St. John's Meth odist church. A crowd which Police Chief Jernmiah O'Connell estimated at more than 5,000 waited out side and cheered wildly when the couple appeared after the ceremony. There was a slight appearance of tears of happiness in Mrs. Hadlcy's eyes as she and the vice president, arm in arm and beaming at each other, walked down the aisle from the altar. Bishop Performs Ceremony Bishop Ivan Lee Holt per formed the ceremony with the assistance of the Rev. Albea Godbold, pastor of the church. The only guests were mem bers of the families of the bride and groom 33 of them plus the vice president's civilian aide, William Vaughan. They sat on the right hand side of the chapel. There were no ushers. The vice president will be 72 next Thursday. The wedding was scheduled tor 11 a.m. The crowd at the canopied entrance of the chapel caused a slight delay and it was at 11:05 a.m. when the organ came out with "Here Comes the Bride." When they finally stepped out and faced the photographers. the crowd tossed a shower of rice The couple stood and chat ted for about 10 minutes while pictures were taken. Bride Fully Composed She was fully composed and complied when someone in the crowd behind her asked her to turn around so her face could be seen. The reaction from the one who made the request was, isn't she sweet. At length the bride said: "Alben, I don't think they're going to let us get out of here." Barkley said. "It looks like it. doesn't it." Then he gave the "V for victory" sign, made fam ous by Winston Church, appar ently to signify his successful suit for the lady's hand. Mrs. Hadley. who first met the vice president on a cruise down the Potomac last July, wore a smartly tailored woolen suit of "Barkley blue." (Concluded on Pace 5. Column 6) New Effort to Free Consul Washington, Nov. 18 (fl New efforts to end the imprison ment of Consul General Angus Ward by the Chinese commun ists termed an outrage by Pre sident Truman apparently will be based on the power of the pen instead of the big stick. One possible move by the state department is dispatch of a note to Moscow asking Rus sian intervention with the red Chinese government. Another is a new American appeal direct to the communist government at Pciping to free the American diplomat and per mit him and his whole staff to leave Mukden as soon as pos sible. President Truman told a news conference yesterday that he thinks the communist treatment of Ward is an outrage. The consul general, ranking American diplomat in MUKncn in Manchuria, was arrested along with his four staff mem bers on October 24. The com munist radio said he was accused of having physically beaten i Chinese employe of the consul- ,aie in a wage aispuic. I Th. Amnrirnn irnvprnmplit hns had no direct word from him since. Other members of the con sulate staff have been permitted to send him and his four aides food and clothing for which they have been given receipts. Their reports to the state department on the alleged Incident which caused the arrests have been sup pressed by the communists. Kussla Returns Frigates Yokosuka, Nov. 18 liPt All 27 patrol type frigates loaned to Russia under wartime lendlease have been returned to the U. S. navy, it was announced today.