THE WEATHER HERE CLOUDY WITH RAIN tonight. Partly cloudy with showers Sat urday. Slightly cooler. Lowest tonight, 40 degrees; highest Sat urday, 47. Maximum yeiterdar, 41; minimum day, 46. Total 24-hour precipitation: .51 1 for month: 3.49: normal, 4.71. Seaion pre elpltation, 13.03: normal. 15.47. Rlvvr faclfht, X.i feet. (Report by U.S. Weather Bureau.) Capital JciiPJiaJ. H O EDITIO 61st Year, No. 305 ESfjr&ftSZ Salem, Oregon, Friday, December 23, 1949 (73 Pages) Price 5c B-50 Bomber Crashes Killing All 1 1 Aboard Flaming Plane Smash es in Marsh Burying Bodies in Muck Savannah, Ga., Dec. 23 UP) A flaming air force B-50 bomb er crashed in a dreary river marsh last night, killing all 11 airmen aboard and scattering and burying bodies and wreck age in the muck. The big bomber had just tak en off from Chatham air force base here when it went down on the bank of a branch of the muddy Savannah river. The crash was only seven miles above the city, but it was so inaccessible it took rescue par ties hours to reach it by boat. The first persons to reach the scene were forced back by flaming gasoline, floating on the water. The flames were visible for miles. On Training Flight Col. Frederic E. Glantsberg, commanding officer of Cha tham field, identified the plane. He said it took off at 9:12 p.m. (EST) on a training flight to El Paso, Texas. It crashed about live minutes later. The plane had been in ser vice at Chatham for a year or a year and a half. The B-50, an improved version of the B-29 uperfortress, has a wingspread of 141 feet, is 99 feet long, and weighs 125,000 pounds. The air force describes it as a more powerful version of the B-29 which bombed Japan. The crash site was less than two miles from U. S. Highway 17, which crosses the river just above Savannah. But it could only be reached by small boats guided by boatmen who knew the river. Near Previous Crash The crash was only a few miles from the spot where a chartered airliner crashed Jan. 7, 1948, killing 18 and injuring 18 Puerto Ricans on a flight from Newark, N. J., to their home. The air force wailed until dawn to send a large crash boat with score or more men, armed with shovels and ropes, to try to remove the bodies They had to transfer to small flat-bottomed swamp boats to get to the wreckage. Two planes took off from the air base this morning to circle the crash scene and guide the rescue boats. High tide on the river was at about 11 a.m., and the rescue narties hoped to be able to re move some of the bodies be fore then. Sam Rahal, chairman of the Savannah Red Cross disaster committee, said the first search parties could not find a single large piece of wreckage, and that apparently even the engines were under water. Support for Tito Promised Washington, Dec. 23 MP) From President Truman to Marshal Tito, a major target of Soviet threats: The United States is opposed to aggression against any nation. This is the world Mr. Truman has instructed George V. Allen, his new ambassador to Yugoslav- la. to pass on to the Tito govern ment. Allen is due to leave for Belgrade Dec. 28. i Tito has been under heavy pressure from the Russians since his break with Moscow more than a year ago. There has been speculation that sometime the Russians might try to break his power by means of guerrilla warfare. The United States and other western nations have given Tito economic and political assistance since he stormed out of the Sov iet camp. But there never has been any official statement of what this country's policy would be in the event of a Soviet-corn munist attack on Yugoslavia. Mr. Truman had a talk with Allen, before his weekly news conference yesterday. He told Allen, he said, to state this gov ernment s policy to the 1 no gov. ernment. Then the president added that the United States is opposed to aggression against any country no matter where it , is situated. This, Mr. Truman said, does n't mean any change in Ameri can policy which has been against agression lor a long time. Truman Spends Christmas at Missouri Home To Broadcast Greet ings to Nation Satur day States Policies Washington, Dec. 23 UP) President Truman took off in the rain today to fly back home to Missouri for the Christmas hol idays. He arrived at Kansas City at 12:45 EST in his personal plane, the Independence. With him was his daughter, Margaret. Mrs. Truman already at their home in Indepen dence. Except for a short radio speech Saturday night extend ing Christmas greetings to the nation, and eating Christmas dinner at home, Mr. Truman plans to follow no fixed sched ule while in Missouri. Custom arily he spends most of his time visiting with kinfolk and old friends. Due Back Wednesday He is due back in Washing ton Dec. 28 to face the usual heavy work load incident to the opening of Congress. In his final work day until after Christmas, Mr. Truman went over his state of the union message and other business with his cabinet and held a news con ference. Opening the news conference, the president wished newsmen a merry, merry Christmas and a happy New Year and remarked that the vast majority of them have been as kind to him as he deserved. (Concluded on Face 5, Column 5) Burning Ship Crew Escapes Boston, Dec. 23 UP) Squirm ing out of portholes and strug gling through smoke-filled com panionways, 40 crewmen and two stewardesses escaped nightclothes early today as ex plosions and flames wrecked the midship decks of the moored Norwegian freighter, Fern Bay. One crewman suffered burns and the ship's captain made his way over a cargo boom to safety in the 4 a.m. blaze which caused loss estimated at "between $100,- 000 and $500,000." Flames ate through the five deck superstructure of the 10-months-old 8000-ton vessel, out of Oslo, Norway, which arrived here recently from Port Said aft er a voyage to Far Eastern ports. Her cargo was crude rubber and tea. Tugs and land apparatus bat tled the flames. Fire trucks threw up a curtain of water to keep the flames from army base sheds. Radio Operator A. K. Lind suffered severe burns about the face and hands. Last to leave, Capt. Arild Wer- geland of Oslo, said he was trap ped in his stateroom and drop ped from a port to a cargo boom to make his way ashore. Two Funerals Planned ' Eugene, Dec. 23 VP) Funeral services will be held in Eugene, then in Los Angeles next week for Mrs. Louisa Flint Kellems, 78, religious educator and moth er of Miss Vivian Kellems, Con necticut industrialist. Cordray Pleads Guilty, Fined $250 Harley V. Cordray, ex-Salem police officer, changed his plea from not guilty to guilty in circuit court Friday morning to a charge of operating a lottery. sentenced him to 30 days in )ail and to pay a fine of $250, sen tence to be suspended on payment of the fine, which it is un derstood will be paid. A slot ma-1 chine involved is to be destroy ed. The change of plea was made and sentence imposed in the ab sence of Cordray, Paul Burris, his attorney appearing for him. He said Cordray had gone to Ventura, Calif., making arrange ments for a job there but sub ject to returning voluntarily if desired by the court. He said that Cordray was operating a small slot machine, a "tin horn operation," as he referred to it, and that admittedly it was wrong. He also said admittedly it was wrong that Cordray in operating a merchants' patrol service allowed his men in uni form and to1 carry guns, but nevertheless the charge was merely a misdemeanor and a small scale one. District Attorney Ed Stadter;was made of th alleged parole stated that the Cordray case has I been subject to a very uior- 20 Santas Out With Mrs. Santa Santas about 20 of them and all of them dressed in civ ilian clothes will be on the streets of Salem this evening waiting to be tagged. Mrs. Santa will be there, too, and the person first tapping her on the shoulder and saying, "Tag, you are Mrs. Santa," will be the winner of $100 in cash. Presentation of the $100 will be made at 9 o'clock in front of the Chamber of Commerce. The Santa Clauses, each rep resenting one of the downtown stores, will be of all ages, com plexions and stature. One may be a blonde, another have brown hair, one tall and another of medium height. All will have one thing in common, however, they repre sent prizes in merchandise from the store for which they are acting as Santa Claus. On being lagged and greeted with "Tag, you are Santa Claus," each Santa will escort the tagger to his store and there present a prize in merchandise ranging from $12 to $40 in value. Tonight will be the last night that the Santas and Mrs. Santa Claus will be on the streets and the hours will be the same as the two previous Friday nights, from 7 to 9 o'clock. Stores will stay open until 9 o'clock to ac commodate the late shoppers. Paul Robeson's Wife Lauds Chinese Reds San Francisco, Dec. 23 UP) The wife of Paul Robeson, Ame rican Negro singer, was quoted by the Chinese communist ra dio today as sharply attacking the United States government and lauding the communists. The broadcast, heard in San Francisco by the Associated Press, said she made a Peiping radio speech on Dec 19 during a visit to Red China. Mrs. Robe son was quoted: "Today, our government is controlled by sixty families who use our dollars, our press, our radio, our guns in plans for war. "Our people are pitted against each other by our economic, so cial and political systems." for Gambling Circuit Judge George R. Duncan ough investigation, an unusual ly thorough one both by his of fice and the grand jury and they were convinced he had but the one small machine in oper ation at a used car lot here and was not hooked tip in any way with any other slot machine op erators. He said apparently he bought the machine himself. He did say there was one slight ag grevation, that Cordray might possibly have developed his merchant patrol service into a racket if he wished to, but did n't say there was any evidence to that effect. He also called at tention to an old forgery charge against Cordray in Illinois back in 1935 with a charge of parole violation, but that the record failed to show what disposition violation. uoncluded en Ptc t, Catamn t) p r r I Explosives Found Examined Inspector Joseph V. Krug (left) of the Detroit, Mich., special investigation squad and Inspector Albert Langtry, head of the police scientific laboratory, inspect dynamite and fuses found on a basement stairs of the United Auto Workers international headquar ters building in Detroit. The dynamite, 39 sticks complete with two detonators and fuses, was found in a cardboard box wrapped in gaily decorated Christmas paper. (AP Wirephoto) Secrecy Lid Bomb Plant Detroit, Dec. 23 UP) A secrecy investigation of the dynamite bomb plot against the CIO's auto union. Both the FBI and city police Tuesday night's mysterious plant AFL Repudiates Cleveland Strike Cleveland, Dec? 23 IP) AFL leaders here denounced strikers against the Cleveland Transit system yesterday and pleaded with AFL President William Green to help get them back on the job. In an almost unprecedented move, the Cleveland Jjederation of Labor (AFL) disowned a strike by one of its affiliates, local 268 of the AFL Transit un ion. The local has 4900 members. For the second day, the walkout forced about a half million bus and streetcar riders in the nation's sixth city to hitch hike or ride cabs to stores or work. A telegram to Green, without naming names, accused officers of local 268 of "failing to keep their word" in pre-strike nego tiations. It said they had prom ised to notify Mayor Thomas A. Burke before calling the strike and had failed to get CFL ap proval. Then the dispatch urged Green to ask the union's inter national president, Abe Sprad dling of Detroit, to order the men back to work or send a representative to handle it. "The union," it said, "is vio lating rules of its agreement with the transit board here in Cleveland, and is violating the rules and regulations of the con stitution and by-laws of the CFL by going on strike. "They have failed to live up to' the arbitration clause they have in their agreement, and they have failed to take their dispute before the CFL to which they are affiliated to get a strike sanction. 4 Youngsters Killed In Auto-Train Crash Pana, 111., Dec. 23 UP) Two youths and two teen-age girls were killed and a third girl was seriously injured last night in an automobile-freight train col lision near here. Coroner Earl J. Baker of Christian county said the )0 year old car crashed into a Nev York Central freight train at a crossing about two miles west of this south-central Illinois community. The train, enroutc from St. Louis to Indianapolis, was delayed three hours. Bodies of the victims were thrown sev eral hundred feet along the railroad right-of-way. Baker said the five young people were returning to Pana after driving a third boy to his farm home, about a mile from the accident scene. He said the condition of the injured girl, Phyllis Huffmaster, 16, is criti cal. She was removed to a Pana hospital. Clamped on for Reuther lid was clamped today on the shielded their efforts to solve of a powerful explosion at the international union's headquar ters. Defects in the bomb prevented its explosion. FBI agents, ordered into the case from Washington, proceed ed without comment. . As a painstaking search for ciues continued, ponce iouk jur ther steps to protect unionists and to guard against any fur ther attacks. The nature of the precautions was undisclosed. "To reveal the steps taken would be to defeat our purpose,' said Police Superintendent Ed win Morgan. After the attempts on the lives of Walter and Victor Reuther police guards were placed at the brothers' homes. The CIO United Auto Work ers also bought an armored car for Walter Reuther, their pres ident. Walter was shot and seriously wounded in the spring of 1948 A year later Victor met a sim ilar fate again from a shotgun marksman in ambush. At his press conference Washington yesterday President Truman commented on the dyna mite plot. Mr. Truman denounced it as outrageous. Harry T. O'Connor, the FBI's special agent in Detroit, con ferred with Chief of Detectives Jack Harvill. Neither would dis cuss the conversation. However, Harvill said the in quiry fo far had turned up "noth ing hot." Gale and Rain Bring Wet Christmas Here Wind that reached a peak of 52 miles per hour velocity in stronger gusts whipped over the saiem area c rmay morning, ana that is strong wind for this sec tion. Through much of the wind storm the velocity averaged 37 miles for one-minute duration but in some of the severe blows went, as high as 52 miles. Altig with the wind came rain with prospect that the Christmas holiday will be a wet one rather than a while one. Rainfall in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Friday amounted to more than half an inch, .51 of an inch being meas ured. Forecast is for cloudiness and rain tonight, partly cloudy wea ther and showers, Saturday, and slightly cooler temperatures. AMA Magazine To Change Name Chicago, Dec. 23 IIP) Hygeia, health magazine of the Ameri can Medical Association, will change its name to "Today's Health," effective with the March, 1950, Issue. The masthead of the January number carries for the first time Ihe name of Dr. W. W. Bauer, Chicago, as editor. Pope Pleads Christian Unity To Oppose Militant Atheism Coal Strike or Lock-out Looms After January 1 Washington, Dec. 23 P President Truman's new refusal to step into the coal dispute set off more talk today of the pos sibility of a strike or lock-out after January 1. John L. Lewis minors will work only Tuesday and Wednes day of the next two holiday weeks. After that the big ques tion is whether Lewis will crack down hard and close the mines entirely in a real test of strength Those who argue that this is Lewis' plan think he adopted the three-day work week De cember 1 just to put some Christ mas money into the pockets of his hard-pressed miners. To Try Big Squeeze Having done that, some opera tors reason, he may call the dig gers out and try the big squeeze. This would permit operations only by those employers who sign a contract for a 35-cent ton nage welfare royalty and $15 daily wage. Even the three - day work week is pinching the operators With their mines down for four days out of every seven, and Lewis allowing only an irre ductble minimum" of mainte nance on those four days, the operators say they're eating up1 60 to 70 cents a ton in overhead. That comes out of profits which the employers say aver age less than $1 a ton. Would Close Mines For that reason, there is a sizeable group of soft coal oper ators who would like to lake the initiative and shut down their mines.- They think a contract would he forthcoming in less than a month. (Concluded on rape i. Column 6) Global Airlines Told to Merge Washington, Dec. 23 (!') Over the bitter objection of Trans-World Airlines, a govern ment examiner has recommend ed approval of a merger be tween TWA's two trans-Atlantic rivals. The transaction which would involve the purchase of Ameri can Overseas Airlines, Inc., by Pan American Airways, Inc., for $17,450,000 would have to be okayed by the five-man civil aeronautics board and by Prcsi dent Truman. Approval was recommended yesterday by CAB Examiner Thomas L. Wrcnn who once before had gone on record as favoring just two U.S. airlines in the trans-Atlantic service. Wrenn said the purchase agreement should offer protec tion to the employes of Ameri can Overseas, which is controll ed by American Airlines. He also proposed that Pan American take over the Atlan tic operating permit of the pur chased airline, as well as its assets. Suicide Believed Master Mind of Big London, Dec. 23 (IP) Scotland bizarre double life of a suicide who they believed may have master-minded some of Europe's biggest gem thefts in the past decade. The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, robbed of 20,000 ($56,- 000 worth of jewels at Sunning - dale in 1946, are believed to have been among his victims, Yard sources said. ; Already detectives have turn ed up stolen jewels worth 100, 000, and are searching for more. The dead man was known as Barry Holliday, 51-year-old man- about-town, famed among Lon don's underworld as "Society Bertie" or "Johnny tho Gent." He was found shot to death in a hotel room in suburban Vir ginia Water Wednesday. A walk ing stick hollowed out to con tain a concealed gun was by his side. One shot had been fired. Holliday had friends in high society. He frequented country hunting meets with socialites who later were often robbed of their gems Fingerprints taken afler his death identified Holliday as an other sort of man altogether Rain Making Claimed Water Shortage Cure Los Angeles, Dec. 23 UP) A noted acrologist today claimed success for a new artificial rain- making method which he says would have prevented New York City's current water short age. Dr. Irving Krick, official weather forecaster for the Nor mandy invasion, disclosed re sults of large-scale rainmaking tests in Arizona conducted by his American Institute of Aero- logical research. The new method works from the ground up much like smoke from a chimney. Another artifi cial method, developed by Gen eral Electric company, seeds dry ice into clouds from airplanes. GE also pioneered use of silver iodide seeding of clouds from planes. Krick says the ground smoking method is much cheap er. The Krick tests utilized mo bile silver iodide "smoke" dis pensers located strategically as to wind direction. He estimated that the method quadrupled the Arizona test area's rainfall dur ing a two year period. Late Spurt in Xmas Shopping By CHARLES MOLONY Washington, Dec. 23 UP) Christmas shopping showed communism though he did not signs today of taking a late spurt mention them by name to re that might carry it to a close turn to Christianity and legiti- finish with last year's record winner. It seemed to be in harmony with the optimism over the na tion's business outlook which was expressed by President Truman at his news conference yesterday. Mr. Truman didn't elaborate. The federal reserve board re ported that a surge of buying at the mid-December point shot de partment store sales ahead of Ihe same part of boomtime 1948 for the first time in months. And 1949, striving at being the 12th consecutive year to hang up a new Christmas sales high, packed one big advantage: it has an extra shopping day over last year, since this Christ mas falls on Sunday whereas it came on Saturday in 1948. The reserve board, compiling reports from all over the coun try, announced department store sales last week forged one per cent ahead of the same week of 1948. That was a sharp Improve ment over the department store record of a six per cent lag be hind last year for the period from Jan. 1 to mid-December. Power Line Disrupted Portland, Dec. 23 WV-Tho Bonneville Power line from Sa lem to McMinnvillc was disrupt ed today, cutting off power to McMinnville. The line went out at 10:53 a.m. Bonneville offi cials said a falling tree might have struck (he line, though they were not certain of the cause. Gem Thefts Yard pieced together today the ' one Barry fieldscnd who was haled into a London court last week, charged with ' unlawful possession of jewelry worth 10,000. He was freed on 2, 500 bail. Yard sources said Fieldsend- or Holliday was last convicted 26 years ago on a trivial charge. But for more than a year the Yard has been quietly probing his activities. Holliday described himself as a semi-retired dealer in precious stones. Detectives, checking through his papers, believe Holliday died a wealthy man. Why did he kill himself? The coroner, who returned suicide verdict at today's quest, said: "He knew that, as an enemy of society, the net was closing about him," Union Pleaded Within Roman Catholic Church Vatican City, Dec. 23 UP) Pope Pius XII pleaded today for union within the Roman Catho lic church of ail christians to op pose the advance of militant ath eism. The pope's address, his annual Christmas message, was directed to the whole world. He spoke on the eve of the 1950 Holy Year which he said "must be decisive, especially for the longed-for renewal of the modern world." "Oh, that this Holy Year could welcome also the great return to the one true church, awaited over tile centuries, of so many who through believing in Jesus Christ are for various reasons separated from her," the pontiff added. Why Separations He said "Men are anxious about the effrontery with which the united front of militant ath eism advances, and the old ques tion is now voiced aloud: Why are there still separations?" The pope expressed a hope for unity within the church and said, "The holv rionr. nnr arms nnH our heart" will be opened for all. "May this jubilee mark the re turn of all humanity to God," he declared. The pope made a strong plea for social justice, asking both social systems of capitalism and mate liberties and rights. He criticized the negation of funda mental rights and the enslave-" ment of men to totalitarian states. 1950 Holy Year of Peace The pope expressed the hoDe that the 1950 Holy Year will be a year of peace and not of war, a year of justice and not of na tional egoism. He encouraged workers to defend their "just as pirations" but said the possession of material wealth without faith- in God is of little use. If on other occasions," the pope said, "an invitation to un ity has been sent forth from this Apostolic See, on this occasion we repeat it more warmly and paternally ... for all those who adore Christ." "Beginning today," the nope said, "we direct to the whole world, then, our plea that all men and each one in particular, from every land and every shore, may accomplish the desired great return with all the urgency de manded by these extraordinary times." Pontiff, Truman Hope for Peace Washington, Dec. 23 (n President Truman told Pope Pius XII in a Christmas mes sage that the United States "gladly re-dedicates its efforts to the creation of a peaceful and advancing world order." The pontiff said in reply: "We invoke the light, assist ance and blessing of the Christ child upon your excellency's person and work, as well as upon all your fellow citizens, who courageously strive to find and follow the road leading to a peaceful future for mankind." The White House today made public the exchange of messages. Mr. Truman's, dated Decem ber 17, was delivered to the pope by Myron C. Taylor, U.S. rep resentative at Vatican CUv. "The summons to peace on earth, good will toward men, has come ringing down the ages, giv ing direction to the thought and the action of every human br ing whose life is lived accord ing to God's purpose," tho presi dent wrote, "The significance of the di vine call, personified in the birth and mission of the Savior, is increasingly visible in the rec ord of history despite the vicis situdes oftentimes encountered on the long path of the cen turies." Mr. Truman noted a "steady achievement of friendly, mu tually helpful relations among most of the world's people to day, living indeed as goodx bors." f .