THE WEATHER HERE CLOUDY, INTERMITTENT rain tonight; showers, Wednesday. Little change in temperature. Lowest tonight, 37; highest Wed nesday, 50. Maximum yesterday, 43; minimum t daj, 36. Total 24-hour precipitation: .03; for month: 1.68; normal, 4.37. Seaaon pre cipitation, 6.36; normal, 8.92, RWer helrht, -2.8 feet. (Report by U.S. Weather Bureau.) Capital mail HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 278 Stiff JTmSSFoXS Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, November 22, 1949 (18 Pages) Price 5c Offers Plan to Combat Sex Delinquency Governor Proposes 3-Point Legislative Curbing Program By JAMES D. OLSON Governor Douglas McKay Tuesday proposed a three-point legislative program to combat sex delinquency in Oregon. The governor said that while his plan probably would not j stamp out all sex crimes, it would go a long ways in par tially checking outbreaks of atrocities. His plan would call for legislative action to provide: 3 Point Program "1. Psychiatric investigation at the court level, to bring about the recognition of these delin quents for what they are; "2. Provision for indetermin ate committals to an institution, instead of set sentences to the state prison or confinement at Hillcrest school for girls; the state boys school or any of the present wards of the state hos pital, and "3. Erection of confinement facilities for this type of men tality, exclusively, with security measures provided of a scope and type comparable to those in force at the state prison." New Approach Needed Gov. McKay added that through efforts of the last two legislatures and the actions of the board of control, the state has made long strides in the treatment of the mentally ill but added that "the sex maniacs pre sent a problem requiring an ap proach all of its own." Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry will ask the board of control to consider establish ment of a separate institution for psychopaths, patterned after such an institution in New York state. ' Newbry's contention is that psychopaths are responsible for many of , the sex crimes "but they can't be placed in state hos pitals because they are not in sane." "Oregon has no place to put this type of criminal," he said, "until they commit a crime that justifies a prison sentence. Newbry added that an insti tution such as he has suggested, would protect society by lock ing up these psychopaths before they perpetrate serious crimes. No Claimants For Plane Wreck Disposition of a light plane which crashed near the Santiam Junction last week waits word from the owner with whom the state board of aeronautics has been unable so far to get in touch. Civil aeronautics regula tions require that all plane crashes be reported and so far this has not been done. The plane is registered to Russell H. Brown, Miami. Fla., and inquiry has been made there. Brown and a woman were seen to walk to the nearby highway and board a bus for Albany but there their trail apparently ends. Only information available to the state board here is tnat Brown took off from a Portland airport last Wednesday and lnnivH nt MnNarv field for servicing. He commented here that he was on a return flight to Florida. The plane apparently made a forced landing shortly after leaving the Salem field. Major damage was to the wings and landing gear. C-54 with 7 Aboard Missing in Flight McChord Air Force Base, Nov. 22 P) A C-54 troop carrier plane with seven crewmen aboard has been unheard from for two hours, McChord officials said at 12:30 p.m. today. The plane was on a McChord-Portland-McChord flight when It last reported over the Wood land aerial beacon that it was preparing to make an instru ment letdown. No word has been rcoeived since. Air rescue service crews have been dispatched to the Wood land area. The plane, attached to the 62nd troop carrier wing, heavy, was on a training flight. The plane carried enough gas for 8 hours flight when it left McChord field, or enough to maintain flight until 5 p.m. Candy Concern To Locate Here By Next March Company Now Employs 9 1 and Makes 59 Varieties of Candy By STEPHEN A. STONE A candy manufacturing com pany employing, in its present location, 91 persons will locate in Salem next March. This definite announcement was made Tuesday by the Cham ber of Commerce, but for the present the name of the con cern is not being made public. The company will either lease an existing building, build its own, or occupy a building to be constructed especially for its use, and early in December the company's representatives will be here to work on location and plant. The company, it is said, makes 59 varieties of candies and man ufactures 15 tons daily, and 15 or 20 trucks are plying in and out of the plant most of the time. To List Year Work The bringing of this plant to Salem will be one of the ac complishments of the year re ported at a joint meeting Tues day night of the old' and the new boards of directors of the Chamber of Commerce. Among other things in which the chamber has ' cooperated during the year, and been in the forefront for accomplishment or improvement, are airport better ments, the federal Detroit proj ect, negotiations for disposal of the Salem alumina plant, and expansion plans of Oregon Flax Textiles. . (Concluded on Page 5, Column 7) Baby Killer Under Arrest Fresno, Calif., Nov. 22 ot- An itinerant cotton picker, Paul Gutierrez, 25, was held under strong guard on a murder book ing today for the vicious rape- killing early Sunday of 17- months-old Josephine Yanez. Police said he gave them statement, admitting he took the baby from her parents' car and spanked her, but contending everything after that was "blank" until he woke up at his cabin later in the day. Gutierrez was arrested yester day afternoon, picking cotton in a field six miles west of Huron. It was near Huron, 40 miles southwest of Fresno, that the baby was taken from her par ents' car, violated and thrown face down in a furrow in a field, her head shoved into the mud. The parents, Ranch Worker Joe Yanez, 29, and his wife, Teya, 22, had gone to a Satur day night dance to pick up Mrs. Yanez' sister. When Josephine began to cry, Yanez left the car to go get his wife. When they returned, Josephine was gone. Searchers found her tiny body Sunday night, a few hundred yards from the dance hall. The child had been stripped naked, except for her bonnet and one shoe. There were tooth marks on her body. She had been beaten. Her liver was lacerat ed, indicating she had been squeezed violently, officers said. Silver Falls Timber Holdings Transferred By DON UPJOHN Deeds filed with County Recorder Herman Lanke Tuesday morning indicate transfer of the bulk at least, if not all of the remainder of the huge timber holdings formerly belonging to the Silver Falls Timber company but which have been under man agement of the Cascade Operating company since the company went out ot Dusiness. The transfer with revenue stamps indicating a considera tion of about $189,000 cover holdings in Township 8 which parallel and also lie pn each side of the old Silver Falls Timber company logging railroad now a county road called the new Bridge Creek road in the eastern end of the county. The deeds from Cascade Operating company to Longview Fiber company. Two deeds are involved, one covers land paralleling the road and lying in section 9 of town ship 8 and the other lands lying in township 8 lying south of the road. It is virtually impossible to determine the acreage from the deeds as one of them carries nu merous exceptions, covering France Debates German Issue Paris, Nov. 22 OT France's assembly opens a critical debate on Germany today which may decide whether the 24-day-old government of Premier Georges Bidault stands or falls. The question is; Will the as sembly support policies on bringing . France's traditional enemy back into the family of European nations. These policies were proposed by the big three foreign ministers who met here two weeks ago. If the policies are defeated Bidault will have to resign, leav ing France once again without a government. At least 30 speakers already are on the list to start out what promises to be a bitter debate of about three days. Before the discussions started, members of the government were optimistic about getting a generous vote of confidence. But they may feel differently by Friday, which the nation's two biggest labor unions have set for a 24-hour general strike. The strike is over economic is sues and union demands for more pay but may have an ef fect on some deputies' attitudes toward the Bidault government. It was this debate that cast a shadow of uncertainty over the deliberations of U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson, British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and French- Foreign Minister Robert Schuman when they met here recently to discuss the west's overall policy in Ger many. Light Drizzle Lifts Fog Blanket Some The fog in the Salem area lift ed some with the light drizzle of rain that came now and then, Tuesday morning, but there was still fog about to make the day a gloomy one. Rainfall in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday amounted to .02 of an inch. Forecast is for cloudiness and intermittent rain tonight and showers tomorrow " with little change in temperature. Tues day's minimum was 36 degrees following a maximum of 43 for Monday. The weather bureau at Port land reported small craft warn ings hoisted along the coast with light rains and stiff breezes due for that area. lands and strips of lands other wise deeded such as to the state board of forestry, the state, and a number of private individuals. The railroad right of way it self was deeded by the Cascade Operating company to Marion county, an original deed having been given by William F. Wood ward, deceased, former head of the Silver Falls Timber compa ny. However, this deed was lost and replacement deeds later giv en to the county covering the same right of way which is 100 feet wide and extends six or sev en miles back from the Silver Falls highway. The two latest deeds are sign ed by Charles E. McCullooch, as president, and David L. Davies as secretary of the Cascade Op 'erating company. Typhoon Lashes Guam Wind-whipped palm fronds and demolished quonset huts (background) graphically show the force of the 145-m.p.h. typhoon which hit Guam, causing dam age expected to run Into millions of dollars. No deaths were reported as a result of the typhoon. (Navy Radiophoto via Acme Telephoto) Murdock Re-arrested Taxi-cab Morals Case By DOUGLAS THOMAS Maurice B. Murdock, 30-year-old taxi cab driver and Turner resident who was freed under a suspended sentence in the recent morals case, was arrested Tuesday morning on a charge of procuring a female to engage in prostitution. The arrest climaxed a week-long effort by Salem detectives to Battle Raging In Philippines Manila, Nov. 22 OT Constab ulary headquarters reported to night a big battle was raging between communist-led Huk balahaps and constabulary forc es in Batangas province, about 60 miles south of here. About 300 dissidents, using mortars and machine guns; en gaged two constabulary com panies, the report said. There was no immediate re port on casualties. Brig. Gen. Alberto Ramos, chief of the constabulary, said he would leave for the battle scene early tomorrow. The Hukbalahap (people's al liance army against Japan) were organized as left wing guerrillas against the Japanese during- their occupation of the islands. In central Luzon they have been pitted against the landlords and the rural constabulary since the end of the war. President Elpidio Quirino, who was re-elected on Nov. 8, tried when he became president to persuade the Huks to surren der their arms. A very few did but most took to the hills and continued to clash with the con stabulary. Court Rebukes Bridges' Lawyer San Francisco, Nov. 22 OT In a long, scathing rebuke, Fed eral Judge George B. Harris to day threatened Vincent Halli nan, Harry Bridges' defense at torney, with a contempt cita tion. He declared Hallinan had reached "an all-time low" in his conduct of the Bridges case, in which the CIO longshoremen leader is charged with perjury. He said his remarks constituted review of the record as the basis for an order and certifi cate of contempt." ' Harris pounded his desk with his fist as he repeatedly accused Hallinan of lack of good faith in disregarding rules and direc tions of the court. . He was bitter when he spoke of H a 1 1 i n a n's "inflamatory course of conduct." The jury was not in the court room. Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Nancy Bridges, wife of the de fendant, sat side by side in the rows reserved for spectators. Judge Harris' condemnation of the attorney's conduct was so bitter it surprised court at tendants. But he assured the attorneys he had approached the matter "with a degree of care and judicial aloofness." The judge took most of the morning session to cite the at torney's conduct, page by page through the trial transcript. New Dean at U of W Seattle, Nov. 22 (IP) The Uni versity of Washington had a new dean of students today. He was Edward H. Lauer, former dean of the college of arts and sciences and professor of Ger man, 'secure collaboration for the 14- year-old girl's story of how she had been led into selling herself by the driver. Monday afternoon, detectives finally located the man who had been a party to the affair. He had been unknown to the girl, and only an intensive probe built on slim clues revealed his iden tity to officers. The name of the key witness was withheld by police, but the man signed a statement which supported the girl's story. She had previously told that Mur dock had arranged for the meet ing in a room and had received $10, splitting the fee with her. The new .arrest was the 15th in the case, with Murdock previ ously having been arrested for statutory rape. The rape charge, as in all the other cases, was re duced to a charge of contribut ing to the delinquency of a mi nor. Another man is being sought on a rape warrant. The young girl was taken to district court Monday afternoon for a preliminary hearing on charges against Terrle Conway and Troy Crabtree. Upon motion of Deputy Dis trict Attorney Gordon Moore, the session was closed to all but the accused men, their attorneys and court attaches, Upon her testimony and that of the Salem juvenile officer, both men were held for the Mar ion county grand jury. The git was reported to be an excellent witness and broke into tears only once. She was quickly hustled away by Mrs. Nona White, county juvenile officer, when the court session ended. Shortly after the district court action, five others were given suspended sentences in circuit court. The five men were Monte Burkhart, Richard S. Taylor, Les Hamrick,- Meyers Rbgow, and Eddie Halterman. They were sentenced to a year in jail, hut the term was suspended. They were placed on a three-year pro bation and barred from driving taxis during that period. . Washington Fag Tax Effective Monday Olympia, Nov. 22 OT Wash ington cigarette smokers will start next Monday more than a week earlier than expected to ante up that extra two cents pack tax for the veterans' bonus. Effective date of the $80,000, 000 bonus law was moved up yesterday when opponents signed a stipulation that no move will be made to have the state supreme court reconsider its de cision that the law is constitu tional. New State Office Building Burglarized The new state office building in Salem, which wun't be open ed for at least another six weeks, was burglarized last night. ' - But nothing was found miss ing today. A window on the south end was broken, and the burglar or burglars apparently left by a window In the north end. Recover 31 Bodies from Plane Wreck Dutch Transport Carried 28 Jewish Children and 7 Adults Oslo, Norway, Nov. 22 (IP) Police announced today they re covered 31 bodies from the wreckage of a Dutch plane which had carried 28 Jewish re fugee children and seven adults. The police said a 12-year-old boy was the only survivor. There was only the slimmest chance that there were any more survivors, the rescue parties re ported. The searchers found the twin engined DC-3 transport after searching since Sunday through the dense forests of southern Norway. It was lost en route from Tunis, North Africa, to Norway with the 28 undernour ished refugee children, three nurses and four crewmen. It was an Aero Holland ship. Smashed Into Forest The plane smashed into the forest, cutting a broad swath through the trees. As rescue workers came upon it, some of them reported they could hear faint, feeble cries. ' Several bodies were found strewn about in the dense woods. The plane was found near Filt- vet, a small town on the west side of the Oslo fjord, about 30 miles from the Norwegian capi tal. The nearest house to the crash scene is almost two miles away. The child who survived was taken to a hospital at Dram men, 20 miles from Oslo, police said and a doctor there was quoted as saying the boy has a good chance of recovery. (Concluded on Page ,), Column 8) Russia Plans to Take Over U.S. Los Angeles, Nov. 22 (JP) Paul G. Hoffman said today that the Russian politburo is "plan ning to take over this country of ours in due course. But communism's threat can be1' wiped out, America's foreign aid chief said, if the United States remains strong and pros perous and western Europe achieves economic recovery. In a speech prepared for de livery before the student body of Pomona college, the chief of the economic cooperation ad ministration (ECA) traced the background of events leading to establishment of ECA and the Marshall plan. Hoffman lashed out sharply throughout the address at Rus sian ideological, aims. He declar ed that while American foreign aid can help stem communism, western Europe must also work to provide economic and politi cal self-help in which freedom can survive. At the end of World War II Hoffman recalled, "the leaders of this country saw only too clearly that our freedom, our own way of life was definitely threatened by loss of our his toric allies to communism." Success of the Marshall recov ery plan so far, he went on, has turned the tide against the Rus sians. School District Survey Over County Planned A prospective organization for a general survey of districts over the county leading to a possible reorganization of the pres ent setup began to take form Monday evening at a preliminary meeting of educators and others held on call of Mrs. Agnes C. Booth, county superintendent. The initial move will be to as certain just how far Salem school district plans to go in its extension and addition of out lying districts and this policy is expected to be revealed at a meeting of that board Tuesday evening. Discussion was had of this situation Monday night and a general outline given, howev er, subject to the board's action Tuesday. The next move, after Salem's attitude is made plain, will be to call together a group of laymen with representatives from the district boundary board,' rural school board, county education al board and non-high school district board and out of these it is expected a definite reorgan ization group will be carved. The objective will be to ex amine the situation in the coun ty as a whole as to what dis tricts might benefit by consoli Brass Gives Tea Party for Montgomery Washington, Nov. 22 OT The high command of America's mil itary might is giving a tea party today. It's in honor of Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Great Britain, chairman of Europes western union defense, who ar rived yesterday for a two weeks' visit in the U. S. The field marshal, who gave a tea for the U. S. joint chiefs of staff when they were in Lon don last August, was invited to drop in for a cup of the same at 4:30 p.m. (EST) today in the office of General Omar Bradley, chairman of the joint chiefs. Montgomery doesn't drink any thing stronger than tea. Montgomery also had a date to address the National Press club (at about 1:15 p.m. (EST) today. Admit Vogeler Held as Spy Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 22 OT) Hungary announced today it had arrested Robert Vogeler, an American businessman, and Edgar Sanders, a Briton, on charges of spying and sabotage. Vogeler is an assistant vice president of the International Telephone and Telegraph com pany and its eastern European representative, with headquar ters in Vienna. Sanders repre sents the company in Budapest. Hungary also announced the arrest of Imre Geiger, managing director of Standard Electric Co., Ltd., of Budapest, a sub sidiary of ITT. He, too, is held on a spy charge. The Hungarian foreign office yesterday denied it knew any thing about reports of the arrest of Vogeler, who disappeared Friday morning during a busi ness trip to the Hungarian capi tal. The Hungarian government announcement said Vogeler and Sanders had confessed to sabo tage and spying. (In Vienna, Vogeler's wife said Hungarian agents had been shadowing her husband. Reports there said the files of the ITT in Budapest had been confiscat ed when he and a person re ported to be his secretary were arrested.) Slovakia Frees 168 Catholics Prague. Czechoslovakia, Nov. 22 OT The Slovak board of commissioners, ruling council of Slovakia, today announced the release from jail of 168 Catholic nriests and laymen who had been arrested for opposing the new church control measures, A government announcement said these Catholics had been "seduced by the Vatican" and that thev had promised "never again to let themselves be mis used for anti-government prop aganda purposes but to oin in our constructive efforts. Opposition to communist gov- 'ernment restrictions against the church had been strongest staunchly-Catholic Slovakia. Several outbreaks of violence had occurred there during the summer when Catholics fought communist police to defend their priests from arrest.. dation, partition or otherwise as might be determined and go into the question from the stand point of advantages to the coun ty as a whole as well as to the individual districts. The problem has arisen large ly due to the rapidly increasing schooi population of the county which has left many schools overcrowded, class rooms jamm ed, equipment available inade quate as well as a need for ad ditional teachers. The primary remedy in many cases is con sidered to be consolidation, at least a shifting of boundaries in some instances. But the ob jective is to determine on the inadequacies and then on what remedy should be applied and take steps toward that end. It is likely the reorganization committee will not be worked out until after the first of the year. Truman Urges Cooperation to Feed World By Nations Working Together Abundance Of Supply Assured Washington, Nov. 22 OT Pre sident Truman today pledged United States cooperation to help "create an abundance of food for all countries." He called this "a major co operative endeavor toward our common objective of a stable and peaceful world." In a speech for the annual meeting of the food and agricul ture organization of the, United Nations, the president declared: "If by working together in this organization, we can create an abundance of food for all countries, we shall bring better health, longer lives, and greater happiness to mankind every where." Point 4 Program Mr. Truman said the "point four" program he presented in his inaugural address last Janu ary could be utilized to increase production of foods in under developed areas. "Our experience, our know ledge, our technical experts are all available to you, and I hope that you will continue to call upon them as needed." The president made no refer ence to a proposal to set up a world food bank, or clearing house, as a means of getting sur pluses from one area into anoth er area where food is scarce. The proposed world food bank would have a revolving fund of $1,000,000,000, most of it prob ably from the United States. Doubt that congress would be ready to share heavily in the originally proposed capital of $5,000,000,000 promped the 80 percent scale down. Major Problems However, Mr. Truman de clared"that the work of the FAO centers around two major prob lems. "The first is to increase the production of foodstuffs and other agricultural commodities," he said. "The second is to see that those agricultural commodi ties reach the peoples and coun tries which need them." The president expressed hope the FAO spon will be able to es tablish permanent . headquarters in this country. Its task, he said, "is central to the whole broad effort to raise living standards and achieve greater freedom for all man kind." He spoke, too, of the "agricul tural revolution" that has been taking place in the United States. Chilean Attacks Soviet Policies Lake Success, Nov. 22 OT Russia was described by Chile in United Nations debate today as a super-capitalist, imperialist, totalitarian, police state "with nothing Marxist about it." The sharp attack came from Chilean Delegate Herman Santa Cruz, whose country broke off diplomatic relations with Mos cow in 1947. Santa Cruz has since led campaigns against Rus sia over the Czechoslavak com munist coup of February, 1948, and Russia's refusal to release Russian wives of foreign nation als from Russia. Santa Cruz spoke before the 59-nation political committee which is considering Russia's proposal for a five power peace pact and a rival western peace proposal based on the UN char ter. The session was stormy. The lead-off speaker, Dmitri Z. Man uilsky, foreign minister of the Soviet Ukraine, was interrupted by Santa Cruz and Yugoslav Delegate Ales Bebler with pro tests against what they called insults to their governments. Manuilsky and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky, in turn, protested against some of Santa Cruz's remarks. Santa Cruz supported the 12- point resolution sponsored by the United States and Britain, re-affirming the main principles of the UN charter and calling on all countries to live up to their international obligations and pledges. Coffee Up 3 Cents Portland, Nov. 22 OT That brown beverage you drank for breakfast is becoming more gol den. Wholesalers here yesterday hiked the price of coffee 3 cents a pound.