THE WEATHER HERE PARTLY CLOUDY THIS EVE NING, becoming mostly cloudy with occasional showers late tonight and Wednesday. Little change in temperature. Low to night, 38; high Wednesday, 54. Maximum yesterday, SO! minimum ts dey, 40. Total 34-haar precipitation! trace! for monthi 4.10: narmal, S.M. Seaeaa pre cipitation, 30.M; aormal, Sfl.30. River fcelibl, feel. . (Boport 7 V.I. Weather Bureau.) Pi A A TT 1 HOME EDITION n Ti 62nd Year, No. 44 .."..'VelS Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, February 21, 1950 (18 Pages) Price 5c .a.fn.mrch mm . rt (uiiun ilculh m ryvu Youths Testify No Secrecy In School Fraf Members of American Boys Club Claim Legality Probed The high school fraternity ease, attracting overflow crowds to the Marion county circuit court room, was in its second day of proceedings Tuesday with little hope of being com pleted until sometime Wednes day or Thursday. Judge Dal M. King of Coos Bay is hearing the case , The suit was brought about jj(Vhen 18 boys who were expelled from high school for allegedly belonging to a secret society took court action against' mem bers of the school board and Sa lem high Principal E. A. Carle ton and assistant principal Gur nee Flesher. Monday afternoon and Tues day morning's court proceedings consisted entirely of hearing witnesses for the American Boys Club, plaintiffs in the case. Overlapping Queries , Up until noon Tuesday, seven boys who were members of the American Boys Club appeared as witnesses in their own behalf. One boy's mother and another boy's aunt appeared as wit nesses. Most of the questioning is overlapping in nature, and re sulting in a long, drawn out court trial. Members of the American Boys Club were expelled from high school on October 14, 1949. A letter from the school board to the parents of the boys an nounced the expulsion, terming the ABC as a secret society. Say Nothing Secret Testimony given by the seven boys Monday and Tuesday was to the effect that there was never anything secret about the club. They stated that . the member ship rolls were not secret, and that the boys freely discussed the operation! of ' the" "club with their friends and teachers.' The boys further said from the witness stand that it was the in tention of the club to align fac ulty advisors from high school, and to follow suggestions from the school board. No advisor was ever appointed or the school board ever con tacted, explained the boys, be cause they felt the club was not yet well enough organized. It was still in the process of or ganization, they testified, when the boys were notified that they were expelled from school. Parents at Meetings Every boy who took, the stand stated that all meetings of the ABC were held at the homes of the boys, and that in every case at least one parent sat in on the meeting. Testimony further stated that the boys had made a study of the legality of such clubs, and be lieved that the ABC was' legal in that it operated practically the same as the Hi-Y clubs, which have been acceptable to school authorities for years. (Concluded on Patre 5, Column S) Frigid Blast Hits Fuel Short Area New York, Feb. 21 m Fri gid weather, accompanied by biting gales, gripped the coal short northeastern states today for the second consecutive day. Sub-zero temperatures were the rule in the northern section' of the area. Many places report ed the lowest levels in two years. A weather bureau employe voiced the opinion of the man in the street when he remarked "I guess we had it coming" af ter weeks of unusually mild weather. Massachusetts joined New York state in rationing coal, but limited its order to soft coal. New York started rationing all solid fuels Monday. New York state's lowest read ing 36 below came from Ben son mines, in the northern part of the state. Nearby Canton and Watertown reported 30 and 22 below respectively. All six New New England states reported sub-zero read ings. The lowest was 35 below atop isolated Mount Washington in New Hampshire's White mountains. All of Maine experi . enced below-zero readings, and record lows for the date were set in many sections. New Jersey reported 10 be low at Stokes state forest. In Sussex county. Philadelphia had the lowest j reading in two years, 10 above, P, with lour above in the suburbs, U.S. Breaks Off Relations with Red Bulgaria Envoys Ordered Home To Climax Attacks on Legation Members Washington. Feb. 21 (JPi The United States broke diplomatic relations today with Communist Bulgaria. American Minister Donald R. Heath and other U. S. representatives In Sofia were ordered home. Bulgaria was directed to with draw its small diplomatic mis sion in Washington. Its legation here is headed by Dr. Peter Voutov, charge d'af faires. First Break Since War It is the first time the United States has broken diplomatic re lations with any nation since the war. The U. S. decision was com municated to the Bulgarian gov ernment at Sofia yesterday. Voutov was summoned to the state department today and in formed of the action. He was directed to make ar rangements to leave the United States with other members of the legation and their families. After talking with Llewellyn Thompson, deputy assistant sec retary for European affairs, Voutov told reporters, "I think the break is complete." He said there are 12 members of the le gation staff, including depen dants, and that all probably would leave early in March. In announcing the break, the state department published for the first time detailed charges that Bulgarian militia "threaten ed, arrested and tortured and eventually killed, three Bulgar ian employes of the U. S. le gation." 'Concluded on rare 5. Column 7) Searchers Hunt For Survivors Vancouver, B.C., Feb. 21 (CP) Four parties of .150 searchers were put ashore on Princess Royal island in a pounding gale today as the hunt for five miss ing United States airmen enter ed its seventh day. Winds, increas i n g steadily from 30 miles an hour this mor ning, whipped the rescue parties as they fanned out over the rugged island, 400 miles north west of here.. RCAF officials said the hunt will concentrate on the north west corner of the 50-mile long island, where crew mates of the missing men believe they must have landed. The search parties are com posed of sailors from the Ca nadian destroyer Cayuga, search control ship, and coast guards men from the U.S. coast guard cutters Winona, Citrus and Ca hoone. Twelve of the 17-man crew who "ditched" their blazing B 36 bomber early last Tuesday have been rescuedThree of the rescued airmen arrived here Sunday to aid in the search. Pilot Killed in Crash McGregor, Tex.. Feb. 21 (U.R) Cadet Howard W. Klein, 24, of Portland was fatally injured yes terday when his training plane crashed during the practice land ing on an auxiliary field near here. - Showing ofStromboli Condemned by Ministers By FRED E. ZIMMERMAN "We call upon the people of Christian conscience and charac ter to use discrimination in the and their families see," sets adopted Tuesday morning by the "We deplore the low standards ploit adultery to publicize a mo tion picture," the resolution con tinues. "It is our hope that pub lic protest and disapproval of such conduct, expressed through lack of patronage at the theater will help in raising the moral standards of an industry which has a major responsibility in American life." While the ministers engaged in considerable discussion over a period of more than an hour concerning two previous resolu tions, there was no lack of unan imity among those present in condemning the showing of the motion picture "Stromboli" which was not named in the res olution -that was adopted. The method of expressing disapprov p T , .Tl ill 0 Juror Let Out Sander's Trial Manchester, N.H., Feb. 21 (P) A British-born juror the old est of nine seated so far in the Sander "mercy killing" trial was dismissed today after the prosecution raised a belated challenge. Counsel for Dr. Hermann. ,8? bander offered no objections to removing 72-year-old Albefi? Baines, a retired Manchester Gas company employe Baines a Presbyterian we&fWmnties across the Willamette one of three Protestants among the first nine jurors chosen yes terday to try Sander on a charge of murder for pumping air into a hopeless cancer patient to end her suffering. After a conference of an hour and a quarter with defense coun sel and prosecutors. Judge Har old E.i.Wescqtt: returned to thci courtroom to announce "The state has requested' the right to challenge the last juror seated yesterday. The defense offered no objections. The re quest is granted." , The reason lor the state s re quest was not explained. Earlier, Attorney General Wil liam L. Phinney revealed that he was investigating the possi bility that names of the prospec tive' jurors had "leaked" out be fore they were made known by the court. As the examination of venire men resumed, the first two ex amined were excused. With Baines' removal,- eight jurors remained seated and five more were to be chosen. Of the eight picked, six are Roman Ca tholics. Turner Annexes Small District Turner, Feb. 21 Annexation of a small area immediately out side the city and lying along the highway was approved by an ap proximate vote of two to one here Monday night. Ttye ballot ing was very light and only 43 votes were tallied. The vote inside the city limits was 21 to 10 for the annexation and those outside were 12 unani mously for the plan. The area, which contains 30 families, ex tends to what is known as the old Smith place now owned by Wallace Riches. choice of every film that they forth a resolution unanimously Salem Ministerial association of an industry which will ex al was the center of debate. It was pointed out by one or two speakers that the releasing of the film "Stromboli" empha sized the need for constructive religious education. Representatives of the Amer ican Legion stated that local posts would get behind a move to get more children into Sun day school. The project receiv ed the approval of the minis ters. Plans for Holy Week, Good Friday and Easter sunrise serv ices were outlined. The sunrise service will be held on the cap! tol steps with Rev. Brooks Moore of the First Methodist church as the speaker. 'Mercy Doctor' Smiles Before Trial Dr. Hermann N. San der, 41, smiles as he escorts his wife, Alice, to the Manches- L ter, N. H., court where the physician goes on trial on a charge of murder in the death of a cancer patient. In left background is Louis E. Wyman, chief defense counsel. (AP Wirephoto) Steel Girders Ready For Independence Bridge .Ai, By JAMES 'Erection of steel girders on bridge will begin about March Mate highway engineer Tuesday. Ching Working On Phone Strike . Washington,' Feb.. 21 VPlx-ey- :tfsriCBiflg, feaerat'TriedlatSoif di rector,, gave the, White: House a report today on the threatened nation-wide telephone strike on Friday'. Ching, did not tell reporters just what he had advised, the White House, but from all out ward signs thereis now a tight deadlock in negotiations be tween the Bell Telephone sys tem and the ClO-Communica-tions. Workers of America. Ching presumably talked with John Steelman, presidential as sistant who specializes in labor relations matters. The mediation chief went to the White House after separate conferences with representatives of the Western Electric company, a Bell subsidiary -and leaders of the CWA division employed by Western Electric. This segment of the Bell sys tem has workers stationed at most Bell company offices and exchanges throughout the coun try and any walkout by them might bring sympathy stay aways by phone operators and other industry employes. Officials of the CIO's com munications Workers of Amer ica (CWA) have said they expect other phone workers will ob serve picket lines to be estab lished by 100,000 workers due to strike Friday at 6 a.m., local time. CWA has said the original 100,000 strikers will be joined by an additional 150,000 after March 1 when another set of contracts expire. Reds Invading Hainan Island Hanoi, Indochina, Feb. 21 VP) Chinese communist troops were reported today by crew men of an airliner from Hong Kong to have invaded the Na tionalist-held island of Hainan The crewmen said they had seen violent fighting on the is land as they flew past on a reg ular flight from Hong Kong. Hainan lies off the direct route from Hong Kong to Haiphong. Hainan and Formosa are the last two major island holdings of the Nationalist forces of Gener alissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. , As Hainan is separated from China's mainland by a strait only 10 miles wide, it is more vulner able than Formosa, which lies 100 miles or more off the coast of Fukien province. Communist invasion of Hainan has been reported before but has been denied. Today's report was not immediately confirmed, D. OLSON the new $950,000 Independence 15, according to R. H. Baldock, river, have been fabricated in -California and are ready for shipment as soon as the water is low enough to permit work to begin, Baldock said. Reports that the present coal strike might delay shipment of steel for the . Independence bridge are erroneous as the steel for the bridge was purchased months ago by , . Moore pryock corporation, steel fabricators. . The bridge contractors, Macco Corporation of Los Angeles, ex pect to have bridge crews on the bridge site by March 10, to be gin preliminary work prepara tory to erection of the steel it self. Although there was a long de lay in the beginning of work on this bridge, due to the in ability of the steel fabricators to obtain steel, Baldock is of the belief that the work on the bridge will go forward speedily after March 15, Steel for the new Marion street bridge between Salem and West Salem will not be needed for eight or nine months so the present labor difficulties have no effect on the Marion bridge plans, Baldock said. To Extend Aid To Rural Roads Washington, Feb. 21 W) The bureau of public roads says it is "possible under existing fed eral legislation" to extend gov ernment aid to some 100,000 miles of heavily-traveled rural roads. This, the bureau said in a port to a senate public works sub-committee, would permit fe deral aid to "practically all of the local roads" carrying 100 or more vehicles daily, and raise to about 700,00 the total mileage which the government helps maintain. The committee had asked for the report to guide it in a study of bills proposing that federal aid for secondary roads be made a regular budget item. The bureau said no recom mendations along this line but it suggested that local govern ments might have more money to spend on roads if they cor rected "evident weaknesses" in road administration and quit logrolling. The board estimated that needed repairs to locally-kept county, township and other ru ral roads would cost approxi mately $7,200,000,000 over a period of years. - It also found that 40 percent of all local roads don't carry any more than 10 vehicles a day and that many of the roads are wholly non-essential. It rec ommended abandonment of 400,- 000 miles of such roads. Ann Sothern Hospitalized Hollywood, Feb. 21 VP) Act ress Ann Sothern will enter Hol lywood Presbyterian hospital to day where tomorrow she will un dcrgo surgery to remove a be nign tumor from the thyroid gland. Acheson and Hoffman Ask Aid to Europe Extension of ECA Urged Because of Russian Aggression Washington, Feb. 21 (IP) Secretary of State Acheson told congress today it Is "doubly ur gent" to continue the Marshall plan because Russia is showing signs of increasing boldness." The secretary said that send ing American economic aid to western Europe is essential if 'the Kremlin's design for world dominion" is to be frustrated. Acheson was before a joint meeting of the senate foreign relations and house foreign af fairs committees to back up the administrations plea for funds to keep the Marshall plan going for a third year. Paul H. Hoffman, head of the economic cooperation adminis tration had just told the com mittee members that $3,100.- 000,000 is needed for recovery in the 12 months starting July l. $3.1 Billion Asked Hoffman asked for $2,950.- 000,000 in new cash and permis sion to spend an additional $150,000,000 which he said is still left from this year's $3, 778,000,000 fund. Like Acheson, the ECA chief said the recovery program must be kept going to block the threat of Russian expansion. His 5,000-word prepared statement dwelt at length on the role of the Marshall plan as a weapon in the cold war. (Concluded on Pa ire 5, Column t) Stalin Parley Issue in Britain London, Feb. 21 VP) Conser vative leader Winston Churchill claims his call for high-level talks with Russia on atomic con trol has blossomed into the out standing campaign issue in the British elections Thursday. But Prime Minister Clement Attlee continues to base his la bor party's appeal for re-elec tion on domestic policy. He is standing on his record and ask ing the people for a new term to "get you along the rest of the road" to recovery. Attlee mentioned briefly, how ever, his own party's internation al policy as "trying to build up not only in this country but in the world the kind of conditions that make for peace." Scorning the views of his la bor party opponents that the subject of big power talks to end the cold war should not be raised at election time, the 75-year-old Churchill said yesterday in Man Chester that the working classes should be called upon to vote on this as well as domestic issues, He said his original appeal last week at Edinburgh for an at tempt at reaching lasting east west settlement had "not only dominated the election in Great Britain" but also had "rolled around the world and may have created a new situation which, whatever happens, cannot make things worse and may possibly bring us nearer to our heart's desire. Jones Says Farm Unions Co-op Mismanaged Unless there is a gain in membership and subsequent increase in budget contributions, the Oregon Farmers Union will face a curtailed program this year, Ronald E. Jones, Brooks, stale presi dent, warned delegates to the 40th annual convention in his an nual message at the opening session at the Voterans of Foreign Wars hall Tuesday. While both a state secretary! and junior leader have been in the field most of the past year, the activities of at least the jun ior leader and possibly an other field worker may be cur tailed and the secretary left with office rather than field work for the organization, he said. "The story of the Oregon Farmers Union Cooperative is one of mismanagement and lack of management as will be shown in the report of the auditor and and manager," he said. "These culminated in 1949 after hav ing slid from a period of infla tion and sellers' markets to de flation and buyers' market with out change in direction of opera tion. Jones pointed out that many of the losses charged to 1949 oper clSi (Acme Telephoto) Robert A. Vogeler, Ameri can business man, sentenced to 15 years prison for espion age at Budapest, Hungary. Dad, 7 Kiddies Burned to Death Addison, Mich., Feb. 21 (P)- A fire devoured a farm house near here early today, killing seven children and their father. The only survivor of the mid- dle-of-the-night blaze was the mother, who was badly burned. Evidently, firemen said, the two-story frame building went up like a puff. It was in ruins when firement got there. The victims: Farmer Gerald Beagle, 44. His children: Geraldine, 14 Barbara Jean, 12; Eloise, 10; Norma Mae, 9; Paul, 6; William, 5, and Linda, 23-months-old ba by. The mother, Mrs. Dorothy Beagle, burned and cut in a flight through a window, was in serious condition at a hospital here. The blaze, believed caused by a defective basement furnace, broke out about 1:30 a.m. in near-zero temperature. . . It was starkest tragedy. Mardi Gras in New Orleans New Orleans, Feb. 21 VP) Cleopatra and Marie Antoinette got on a crowded city bus early today,- dropped in seven cents each, and hung on a strap all the way to Canal street. They drew only scant admir ing glances, for today is Mardi Gras and almost everyone is costumed. The few slccpy-eycd early ris ers met the many all-nighters and the thunderous din of shout ing, traffic, singing and shuffling blended into, a giant cacophony. The reveling throng was thick est at the river end of Canal street where at 9 a.m. (CST) Kine Zulu arranged to disem bark from his royal Mississippi river barge to begin the organ ized festivity. The dusky mon arch and his Negro zulus pa rade in mock grandeur as a burlesque on the white Rex's pomp and pageantry. - Rex, lord of misrule and em peror of the carnival, has pro claimed that the 600,000 Orlean ians and their' 100,000 guests frolic unrestrainedly until mid night ushers in the solemnity of the Lenten season. ation properly should have been charged against 1948 and prior years with the policies of these contributing much to the opera tion last year and "our only re gret is that the change of man agement could not have been sooner." If the membership will get behind the new management it will be possible to build a co operative in which the Farmers Union can be proud, he said. Production problems cannot be handled through cooperatives alone, as has been proven, Jones declared, with the only alter native left to devise a govern mental program that would in crease opportunities in farm ing. Monopoly must be met by creating competition if the free enterprise system is to endure, he said, referring to the Bran- nan agricultural plan. (Concluded on Fan 5, Column 6) Vogeler Draws 15-Year Prison Term for Spying Hungarian Court Sentences 2 of 6 Co Defendants to Death Budapest, Hungary, Feb. 21 VP) American Businessman Robert A. Vogeler was sentenced to 15 years in prison today on spy charges by a Hungarian court which sentenced two of his six co-defendants to death. Death sentences were meted out to Imre Geiger, manager of the International Telephone and Telegraph company's Budapest branch, and Zoltan Rado, former department chief in Hungary's ministry of heavy industry. Edgar Sanders, Vogelcr's Brit ish aide in the I. T. and T. branch, the Standard Electric Works, was sentenced to 13 years in prison. Defense Appeals The defense immediately an nounced appeals to a higher court, and the prosecution ham mered back with a statement that it, too, would appeal and demand heavier penalties for the five defendants who escaped the death sentence. The same prosecution an nounced an appeal when Josef Cardinal Mindszenty was sen tenced to life imprisonment for plotting against the state. The cardinal also appealed, but the original sentences in the case were unchanged by the higher court. (Concluded on Page 5. Column 5) Coal Shortage Grows Acute Pittsburgh, Feb. 21 VP) Chill blasts of an overdue winter ac cented the coal shortage in many parts of a shivering nation to day while rebelling soft coal miners kept right on striking. The 372,000 Idle United Mine Worker members shrugged off , thenew government contempt action as "just another order." They insisted: "No contract, no work." Effects of- eight months of off- and-on coal production that erupted into a full scale walk out five weeks ago struck new blows at all branches of Amer ican life: Education St. Louis schools will close today and won't re open until next Monday because they have only a three-day coal supply on hand. Schools in other communities also are closed. Industry Jones and Laughlin Steel corporation will begin to close down plants in Pittsburgh and Aliquippa, Pa., idling 23, 000 workers. Some 42,000 al ready are idle in steel and rail roading. Clvic-Rockford, 111. City council declared a state of emer gency because of the coal short age. Rockford forest preserve crews were ordered to chop down trees for fuel. Brazil, Ind. Water pumping station may close Saturday for lack of coal. Brownouts and coal rationing arc in effect in many cities and towns. ,The government yesterday asked the federal court to have the miners adjudged in contempt for failing to obey a week-old court back to work order. Soviet Troops Sent to Ukraine Berlin, Feb. 21 VP) Der Ab end, German newspaper in the American sector of Berlin, said today strong units of Soviet se curity troops had been trans ferred from Germany to the Ukraine to combat renewed par tisan uprising against Soviet rule. The newspaper did not give the source of its report. Amer ican intelligence officers declin ed comment. Last week Der Abend reported without con firmation elsewhere that a wide scale revolt against the Soviets had been hatched in the Lenin grad area. In today's report Der Abend said a number of Soviet offi cers had switched allegiance to the partisans because they want ed to wage an active fight against bolshevism rather than desert to the west. The newspaper added that the Russians are sending soldiers to the Ukraine to quiet unrest there and also shipments of textiles and other commodities.