Jowraal HOME EDITION -3 of jo HSJ3Aiun 0680 it Id 62nd Year, No. 42 Enter&d u second el&afl matter it Saleo, Oreeoa Salem, Oregon, Saturday, February 18, 1950 Price 5c le 10 Miners Renew Defiance of 29 Death Toll In Train Wreck Vogeler Enters THE WEATHER HERE CLOUDY WITH RAIN tonight becoming partly cloudy with showers Sunday. Little change in temperature. Low tonight, 42; high Sunday, 55. Mailmam yeiterdEjr, 58: mlnlmim U day, 36. Total 24-hour precipitation? ! for month; 4.07; normal, 1 19. Seaion pre cipitation, 30.76; normal, 86.91. Hirer heisbt, 18.6 feet. (Report by U.S. Weather But-tan.) aiDital m Search for Lost 5 Crewmen of B-36 Fruitless Aircraft Grounded By Gales All Clues Prove False Vancouver, B.C., Feb. 18 (CP) Possible clues to the fate of five American airmen, who parachuted In darkness from a Plea of Guilty To Spy Charges Court and Lewis On Long Island New Plea for Return To Coal Pits Refused As Peace Efforts Fail Washington, Feb. 18 VP) Striking coal miners renewed their defiance of a court order and a new plea from John L. Lewis today in the face of strong expressions of official hbpe that they will dig Monday. Peace negotiations, meanwhile, were called off for the weekend with no signs of any new prog ress toward a contract. The White House declared President Truman will make no weekend moves such as con tempt action over violation of a federal stop-strike injunction. Almost simultaneously with the recess in the bargaining here, the United Mine Workers' big gest local, the 1500-member Ro bena unit at Masontown, Pa., voted a defiant "no" to the latest back-to-work plea from Lewis. Vote to Continue Strike With some 800 members pres ent, the Lewis message directing the men to return to the pits "forthwith" was read. "The men that want to go back to work stand up," they were told. Only two stood. At least two other locals al ready had shown similar defi ance. Heretofore the union rank and file has followed Lewis's slight est whim without question. His back-to-work instructions of last Saturday were regarded generally as a mere formal com pliance with a court order. Yesterday's instructions to end the strike "forthwith" was em phatic. Peace Negotiations Off Contract negotiations were called of until Monday at 2 p.m. (EST) on the suggestion of Da .iyjd L. Cole, chairman of the 1 VinarH President Truman assign- l cd to look into the dispute that has spread coal strangulation over the nation's economy. , "They were not making the progress we hoped for this morn ing," Cole told reporters. "We thought a recess would be help ful. They needed a breather. The most hopeful thing Cole and Cyrus S. Ching, U. S. me diation chief, could report was that both parties "are making a real effort at collective bargain ing." (Concluded on Page 5, Column 8) Musgrave Files For Mayor's Job Walter Musgrave, 1230 Huge, became a formal candidate for mayor of Salem Saturday when he filed his petition with the of fice of city recorder as an inde pendent candidate. , Musgrave, who earlier an nounced his intentions, will be opposed by Al Loucks and Har rv V. Collins, who filed this week" before leaving on a vacation trip to California. Loucks nas not yet filed. The petition with its state ment says that the candidate is pledged to "exercise independ ence of thought, independence of 4nrt1nn and independence of con- t trol," and that if elected will "ex ercise proven efficiency and ec onomy consistent with (his) pro gram." In addition he will "pro vide experienced, able, aggres sive and. clean leadership as a matter of record, not as a matter of promise." Mn.srave sets forth his slogan which will aDDear on the ballot after his name. "You know"1 nrhern I stand." Musgrave, as mayor of West Salem, was active in the matter of annexation to Salem and since then is serving as the first member of the city council irom the district across the river Poultry Products At Bargain Prices Corvallis, Feb. 18 VP) Poultry products are bargain counter items these days, an Oregon State college specialist reported today. This Is the comparison made by Noel Bennion, poultry spe cialist: Eggs are 24 cents a doz en cheaper than they were a year ago; turkeys are down 20 cents a pounds; chickens are 13 cents cheaper. An over-supply, he said, Is the reason. f 100 Injured When Commuter Crashes Into Passenger Rockville Centre, N.Y., Feb. 18 ypj A crowded Long Island railroad commuter train sped through a stop signal last night and ripped headon into another passenger train, killing 29 per sons and injuring 100. Many of the injured were in critical con dition. . It was metropolitan New. York's worst railroad disaster, and the worst in the nation in four years. The accident occurredona makeshift siding where a tem porary "gauntlet" track was laid pending completion of a grade crossing project. The gauntlet consists of double tracks placed so close together only one train at a time can pass over the road bed. Motorman Arrested Jacob Kiefer, 55, of Baldwin, N.Y., motorman of the east bound train, .was arrested and charged with second degree manslaughter. 'He ran past the signal," Nassau County District Attorney Frank Gulotta said. Motorman T. W. Markin of the westbound train was too dazed to be questioned. He was sent home suffering from shock. The head cars of both electric trains were torn apart by the collision, which occurred at 10:35 p.m. (EST). The forward car of the eastbound train, load ed with early home-going the ater crowds from Manhattan, was sheared down the middle. It toppled over, spewing man gled bodies and wreckage along the siding. (Concluded on Pago 5, Column 1) Russia's Plants Invulnerable' Marrakech, French Morocco, Feb. 18 (ff) A recent attempt was made to photograph Russia's main atomic industrial site, but the Soviets shot the plane down with a new form of anti-aircraft fire, Kenneth De Courcy said to day. .. . The British editor of the ma gazine Intelligence Digest add ed in a typed statement to the Associated Press correspondent here that Russia's atomic indus try "is practically invulnerable." De Courcy said he was not at liberty" to disclose the identi ty of the nation that tried to photograph Russia's main ato mic center by high altitude fly ing. Two weeks ago De Courcy said the Soviet union Jiad exploded the first hydrogen bomb The report lacked any authoritative confirmation, as iar as could be determined by the Associated Press. In London British govern ment officials regarded his re ports with "cautious skepti cism." De Courcy correctly pre dicted that the Soviet union would set off an atomic blast in 1949. Flood Menace Grows; Blizzard Hits Midwest (By the Associated Pre! mnnri riancprs anneared Browing more serious in the South and a blizzard whipped across some of the country had fair weather, temperatures. Rising floodwaters in three states threatened further evacuation of families to join the 35,ouu persons already made homeless in the flood areas. East central Louisiana, south western Mississippi and Arkan sas are the hardest hit by the floodwaters which have spilled out over millions of acres of land. An estimated 23,000 are home less in Arkansas. Other hun dreds along the lower St. Fran cis river are in danger of the overflows. The backwaters of a half doz en streams, tributaries of the Mississippi, have forced some 8000 to flee their1 homes in 12 parishes (counties in Louisi ana and five counties in Missis sippi. The Red Cross estimated that from 6000 to 8000 more may be driven .from the low lands by March 1. - The 2000 residents of Marks- ville, La., were warned that they may be isolated completely in a few days. Floodwaters also I 2 a Mo's Captain Admits Blame Nnrfnllr Va Feh. 18 (IP) The commanding officer of the battleship Missouri testified to day -he had a "distrust" of the ship's navigator. Capt. William D. Brown made the statement as he opened his defense before a naval court of irmuirv whirh is seeking to fix responsibility for the grounding of the Big Mo Jan. n. Asked by his counsel wnat nis 1 f eelines" were about hie ravi0atnv and his ODGrationS officer the morning the ship ran aground, Brown sam: "Thorp had been built UD in me a 'distrust' of the navigator, Lt. Cmdr. Frank G. Morris, be cause of Morris' performance as navigator on a trial run the Mis souri made Dec. a-a. On the other hand, he said, he "leaned heavily" on his opera tions officer, Cmdr. John R. Millett; because of his "obvious ly more level head and greater experience." Brown said he had not com manded a ship from the time he was detached as skipper of the A4r.ra'lMinhnlnl in-1043 until he assumed command of the Missouri last December. Aon poonit nf nnt havini? com manded a ship during the six years between 1943 ana i felt extremely rusty when I took the Missouri out" on the Decem ber trial run and on January 17 when tne vessel saueu Norfolk for a training cruise to fJnantanamo. Cuba. Brown said, "My seaman's eye was playing tricks." Fad Finders for . Trainmen's Strike Washington, Feb. 18 VP) President Truman is expecieu iu create an emergency board next week to avert a threatened na tionwide strike of railroad train men and conductors. The national (railway) media tion board advised the White House yesterday that the broth a.hrui nf railroad trainmen and the order of railway conductors have called a strike tor r eDruary 27. midwest states today. The rest with many areas reporting mild crept toward the outskirts of nearby Ferriday, which has population of 3500. Rising waters of streams in Missouri have made 3000 home less and about 80 have been evacuated in Kentucky. Flood conditions in these two states have eased. A blast of icy air from Cana da was pushing southward into the north central part of the country. It spread over eastern Montana, the Dakotas and Mon tana last night and was moving into Nebraska, Iowa and Wis consin today. Blizzard conditions were re ported in some parts of northern South Dakota and in North Da kota. Temperatures were near zero and hgh winds swirled snow into drifts, blocking many roads. Minot, N.D., reported five below zero today. Snow also fell in Minnesota and there was light snow in the northern Ap palachians. Smoky Inferno Huge clouds of smoke, visable for miles around, billow from burning warehouse of the Airline Oil and Grease Co., at Lubbock, Tex. The $40,000 blaze destroyed 50,000 gallons of oil products and was still burning some 24 hours after the fire started. Note burning power pole (cen ter). (Acme Telephoto) Train Victim Identified Through Laundry Mark By DOUGLAS THOMAS Funeral arrangements were year-old Salem housewife and mother who was killed when struck by the Southern Pacific s southbound streamlined Shasta Day light. . Only a slender thread of evidence enabled the coroner to es Phone Strike Set For Next Friday Washington, Feb. 18 (IP) CIO telephone workers said they will strike as scheduled next Friday unless their new 15-cent-an-hour wage demand prompts company negotiators to get aown wi Bu siness." Company officials lookeu ov er the new proposal and said: We don't see how they justuy it." Joseph E. Beirne, president of the Communications Workers of America, said last night that or ders to lay the contract demand before telephone management had been sent to all 25 of the union's negotiating divisions. 'The next move is up to the company," Beiernes statement said, adding: "If the company negotiators will get down to bu siness, we may yet be able to reach mutually satisfactory agreement and avert the strike . . . if they don't there'll be a strike for sure." Bell system managers thus far have refused to agree to CWA's demands for more pay, shorter hours and other conces sions. Beirne said the 15 cent wage proposal was presented on a "package basis" for settlement of the money items. He did not go into other union demands. In New York a spokesman lor the American Telephone & Tele graph company termed the pro posal hit and run bargaining and said: 'This is a strange way to do business. On Wednesday the un ion walked out on bargaining sessions and left town without ever having disclosed the amount of its demands." President Cruises On Potomac River Washington. Feb. 18 VP) President Truman took advan tage of sunny skies and board ed the yacht Williamsburg to day for an overnight cruise on the Potomac river, He will re turn about 4 p.m. tomorrow J. Vivian Truman of Grand- view, Mo., his brother, and, Fred Canfill, U. S. marshal at Kansas City, joined him for lunch aboard the yacht at the naval gun factory ancnorage. iney came here for the Jefferson Jackson day dinner Thursday night and are starting back to Missouri later today. Seven or eight other guests were invited aboard later for dinner and a cruise to Quantico, Va where the boat probably will anchor for the night. The guest list was not made public Lookout Dam Bids Asked Portland, Feb. 18 W The army engineers will invite bids about March 1 on construction of two concrete abutments for a steel girder span to carry the relocated Southern Pacific rail road over Oregon state highway 58. It is part of the relocation work at Lookout point dam site, completed Saturday for the 27- tablish facts which led to her identity. The accident took place shortly before 9 a.m. Fri day, but the remains were un claimed until Friday night. Then, it was established that the woman was Mrs. Gertrude Elizabeth Rawson of 2114 Broad way. Her husband, Foster O. Rawson, made the identification from bits of clothing and a ring which was found on her finger. Authorities advised the hus band against viewing the body for identification purposes, and accepted the facts from the ring and clothing. When the woman failed to return home last night, all doubt vanished. In checking for clues which might be added to the description released after the accident Fri day, a laundry mark G. Raw son was found on her brassiere. Coroner Leston W. Howell, knowing that no local laundry uses names for clothing identifi cation while state institutions follow such procedure, made a check of those institutions in Sa lem. . From the state hospital, in formation was secured to the effect that a Mrs. Rawson had been discharged in November, 1949. Salem police were immediate ly dispatched to find the hus band. After that, the identifi cation was completed. An investigation dealing with the accident is not complete. The coroner disclosed Saturday that he intended to secure statements from the engineer, Oscar Bur- goyne, 3406 N.E. 16th, Portland and the fireman, Arthur W. Cas- sie, 1338 S.E. Maiden, also of Portland. (Concluded on Pare S. Column 5) Mormons to Quit Czechoslovakia Prague, Czechoslovakia, Feb. 18 (P) Eleven American Mor mon missionaries will leave Cze choslovakia next week to com ply with a Czech government ruling forbidding foreign - mis sionaries to work here. Wallace Toronto, head of the Mormon church in Czechoslova kia, announced plans for depart ure of the Americans but said the church would continue to function in the country. Toronto said the work of the church will be carried out en tirely by Czechs. Toronto declared the policy of sending American Mormon mis sionaries out of the country will continue until the work of the church is entirely In the hands of Czech converts. The move, he added, had noth ing to do with the recent arrest of two young missionaries on charges of "entering a prohibit ed area." These missionaries, Stanley E. Abbott, of Lehi, Utah and C. Aldon Johnson of Idaho Falls, Idaho, were arrested January 28 as they traveled through Mora via to visit church members liv ing near the Polish border. American Confesses To All Charges Made By Hungarian Reds Budapest, Hungary, Feb. 18 VP) American businessman Robert A. Vogeler pleaded guilty to spy charges today and said that as an American agent he had been instructed to help atom physicists escape from Hungary. Calmly confessing to all the charges in the indictment against him, the 38-year-old telephone company executive asked a Hun garian people's court for "a mild sentence." He said he used his position as assistant vice president of the International Telephone and Tel egraph company as a "cover for my espionage work." Six Others on Trial Vogeler's unemotional plea of guilty opened the second day of the trial in which he and six others a Briton and five Hun garians are accused of espion age and sabotage. Vogeler, who has been I.T. & T. representative in Europe since 1945, declared he had been a U.S. army intelligence officer since 1942. As an electrical and mechanical engineer, he said "espionage in the technical field is my specialty." He testified that he had been instructed by U.S. army intelli gence officers in Vienna to dig up special information about radar production, rockets, uran ium and oil deposits in Hungary and to get in touch with atom physicists and help them escape. (Concluded on Pure 5, column Wife Declares Confession False Vienna, Austria, Feb. 8 UP)-' My nuspanp, is. merely -recreav- inff from memory a lot of lies that have been pounded into him for the last three months," Mrs. Robert A. Vogeler said today in commenting on report that Voge ler has calmly confessed to all charges brought against him by the Hungarian government. She said: "I have known and loved Bob for nearly 11 years. It would be impossible for him to say such things without any show of emo tion. He just isn't that kind of man." Mrs. Vogeler. who lives In Vi enna, heard the news of her hus- bond's testimony in Budapest without showing any emotion ex cept possibly that of. exaspera tion. Bob was too busy washing di apers and doing war work in Chicago in 194Z to get mixed up with any FBI agents," she said. She added: "It is obvious to anyone who knew Bob at all that he has been drugged or subject ed to some kind of torture to make him say all these things. I don't know whether the torture was mental or physical but they have certainly done some thing underhanded during the last three months." Russian Plot Against Soviets Said Foiled Berlin Fph 1P. (JPi A West nearly 200 high Russian officials the war to overthrow the Soviet dliuu w no luvitu'ri' The American-licensed Der the conspiracy that caused Mos cow to reimpose last month the death penalty for espionage and sabotage Attributing its lnior mation to "sources close to the Soviet control commission in eastern Germany," the newspa per added: "After the plot collapsed, the Soviets started a secret purge action. Rumors of this have caused considerable disquiet in Karlshorst (Russian military headquarters for Berlin). The network of conspirators has not yet been fully uncovered." The aim of the plot, accord ing to Der Abend, was the cre ation of a great Russian repub lic with its capital at Lenin grad. "The conspirators feared that the expansionist policy of the Stalin-Malenkov clique could lead the Soviet union danger ously close to war," the news paper said. "They realized that promises during the war of a higher liv ing standard for the peoples of On Trial Robert A. Vogel er Jr., (above), American bus inessman, went on trial be fore a Hungarian people's court in Budapest, or. charg es of espionage and sabotage. He was arraigned with a Brit isher and five Hungarians as co-defendants. (AP Wirepho to) Churchill Asks A-Bomb Meet London, Feb. 18 VP) Winston Churchill, defying censure by his laborite opponents in Bri tain's election campaign, re peated his plea last night for high level talks between the west and Russia on atomic bomb control. Labor Prime Minister Cle ment Attlee promised to com ment on the proposal in a poli tical broadcast tonight. The 75-year-old Tory leader reiterated his call for east-west atom control talks outside the United Nations in a final broad cast to the nation allotted to his party over the British broad casting corporation. Attlee. having finished a 1,- 200-mile tour of the country in his drive for reelection, is to make his labor , party's fmal broadcast tonight (4:15 p. m EST) from the prime minister' pnuntrv home at Chequer Court. 35 miles northwest of London. Attacked by Laborite Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin for step ping into the international ring in his Edinburgh. Scotland, speech last Tuesday, Churchill defended himself. It is only by agreement of the greatest powers," Churchill declared, "that security can oe given to ordinary folk against the annihilating war with ato mic or hydrogen bombs or bac teriological horrors." Prince Aly Khan Breaks Leg Skiing Gstaad, Switzerland, Feb. 18 (P) Prince Aly Khan, husband of Movie Actress Rita Hayworth, broke his leg in three places to day in a skiing accident. The accident occurred lat,e this afternoon. Rita was visit ing friends at the time in Laus anne, 50 miles away. Informed immediately of the accident, she rushed to the prince's bedside at a hospital. Berlin newspaper declared today in Leningrad have piotted since government. Official confirm- .... , , . Abend sam it was oiscovery i the Soviet union were lies and deception." Der Abend identified the lead er of the plot as a Marshal Gov orov, commandant of the Lenin grad military district until re lieved in 1946. (Marshal Leonid A. Govor- ov was the leader of the defense of Leningrad in World War II and directed the Soviet offens ives that hurled back the Ger mans' northern flank and crush ed Finnish resistance in 1944 He spoke for the Soviet army at the . funeral in Moscow's Red Square Sept. 2, 1948, for Andrei A. Zhdanov, a secretary of the communist party's central com mittee who ranked high in the Soviet leadership. Zhdanov was once the communist boss of Len ingrad.) Der Abend said Govorov was joined by nearly 200 members of the political directorate of the Soviet army, Leningrad ci ty officials and even officers oi the ministry of state security, flaming B-36, burst like bubbles today in the path of weary searchers. As ground parties again dis embarked from the Canadian de stroyer Cayuga and two Ameri can coast guard cutters, search officers established that shouts and rifle shots heard Thursday did not come from the men still sought on Princess Royal Island, 400 miles northwest of here. Seventeen airmen early Tues day parachuted from the air craft. Twelve have been res cued and returned to the U.S. Rifle Shots Traced Rifle shots, an R.C.A.F. spokesman said, came from one of the ground parties combing the thickets and forests of the gulley-pocked island. Shouts heard were those of Lt. Charles G. Pooler of Beloit, Kas., the 12th crash survivor rescued. He was found on the island Thursday. A Royal Canadian navy spokesman at Esquimau, B.C., described Friday's search ef forts as "completely fruitless." Whether footprints in 18-inch- deep snow on the island and parachutes sighted dangling from trees are those of men al ready rescued or the missing has not yet been determined. Aircraft Grounded Aircraft were grounded for the second straight day as high winds again whistled over the Island. A dispatch from the Cayuga, headquarters of the giant,Canadian-American search, said ground parties reached the island without mishap. Searchers today will concen trate on the mountain area mountainous northwest corner of the island and adjoining Ash- down island. (Concluded on rat; 5, Column T) Renew Search For Lost C-54 Whltehorse. Y.T., Feb. 18 (IP) The Royal Canadian Mounted police are striking into the brush early today to follow up a new lead on the C-54 transport plane missing in the Yukon wilderness since Jan. 26. An Indian came in from the snow-filled forests yesterday at Burwash landing, about 176 miles northwest of here on the Alaska highway. He told the mounties that on Jan 26 he had heard a loud crash on a moun tain near where he was camping on Gladstone creek, north of Kluane lake. Since then, the Indian said, he has seen indications of landslides on the mountain. And he has seen large flocks of Whiskey Jacks, a scavenger bird typical of this area. The Indian did not try to ascend the mountain. The mounted police estimated that the position pointed out is about 16 miles west of Burwash landing, A constable of the mounties will lead a party into the heav ily forested area after daybreak. He has notified American army officers in the Burwash section, and it is expected that they will give assistance. Dog sleds will be used, and, possibly, weasels (the small tracked vehicle which the Ame rican army uses in overland work in this region). Mao Leaves Moscow To Return to China Moscow, Feb. 19 VP) Chinese Communist Leader Mao Tze Tung and Premier-Foreign Min ister Chou En-Lai were neaaea back to their homeland today af ter a two-month visit in the So viet capital. Behind them was the signature of the 30-year Soviet-Chinese treaty of friendship which was declared in Moscow to have al lied the "two greatest countries in the world." Before departing from Mos cow s Yaroslav railway station last night, Mao said over a mi crophone: "It is plain to all that the solidarity between the great Chinese and Soviet peoples, sealed by the treaty is perma nent, indestructible and firm."