I THE WEATHER HERE MOSTLY CLOUDY TONIGHT, Wednesday) with occasional rain Wednesday. Slightly warmer to night. Low tonlfht, 38; high Wednesday, 55. Mailmam yaatardar, 4St minima la day, 26. Talal U-aaar raalBHallant tract! for month! .sit aarmal, 4. Ration areel pjlallon, U.1X; normal, M.3a. Klvar halihl, 10.4 laal, lalllni. (H.porl I17 U.S. Waathar Baraaa.) HOME EDITION 62nd Year, No. 56 EX?jrZ' Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, March 7, 1950 (18 Pages) Price 5c C aptai k Ten-Year Plan Given Council By Franzen Total Over $8 Million; Drainage Put in Top Spot by Aldermen By STEPHEN A. STONE City Manager J. L. Franien's 10-year improvement program, prepared after months of survey and estimate with the help of department heads and advisory committees, was presented to the city council Monday night. It totals $8,336,439. ' Of this total $5,669,529 would , ,be outside the regular city bud C get and would be raised mainly by bond Issues, though some would be by millage tax. The self-financing water, depart , merit's part of the 10-year pro- gram is $2,666,910. 1950 Part of Program The 1950 part of the program, which the people would vote on in the May election if approved by the council, totals $857,363. In this total are $713,388 for sewage treatment, drainage, and storm and sanitary sewers, $47, 000 for bridges', and $96,975 for airport. Of the latter figure $20, 000 is on hand. The city council voted infor mally to give No. 1 priority to the sewage treatment, drainage and sewer item totaling $1, 841,711 for 10 years and $713, 388 for this year. The remainder of the program it voted to leave for priority arrangement to the joint citizens tax committee. The city council and the city planning and zoning commission met jointly at the Marion hotel as guests of Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom. Items Covered The items covered in the pro gram are: Sewage treatment, sewers and drainage Total for 10 years, $1,841,711; total for this year, $713,388; included for this year $125,759 for the northeast Salem drainage project. This will put the area wejl under control, but City Erigiheel'.. J;; H. Davit told the problem wouldn't be entirely whipped until a Madison avenue line, set for 1952, is completed at a cost of $82,708. : Contem plated also for this year are $71,262 to extend the interceptor sewer to Lana, and $260,000 ad ditional Is needed for the sewage treatment plant fund on account of plan changes advised by state authority. (Concluded on Page 5. Column I) Lie Passed in Senate Scrap Washington, March 7 W) In an angry senate scene, Senator Eastland (D., Miss.) accused Senator Lehman (D.-Lib., N. Y.) today of "untruthful" state ments and "unethical conduct." Before Lehman could get in word. Senator Neely (D., W.Va.) leaped up to say that Eastland, in effect, had called Lehman a "liar." Neely said senate rules forbid imputing to another sena tor any conduct unworthy of t senator. He demanded that East land be required to take his seat. Senator Sparkman (D., Ala.), presiding in the senate, direct ed Eastland to sit down, but Democratic Leader Lucas (111.) stepped in to smooth things over. Lucas suggested that Eastland be allowed to proceed in order that is, within the rules. The bitterness developed out , of the week of senate struggle over displaced persons legisla tion. Last Saturday, Eastland was making a speech critical of ad' ministration by the present law under which Europeans driven from their homes by the war can be admitted to the United States. Lehman asked him to yield the floor. Eastland yielded and left the senate flood to get lunch. Much of what Lehman had to say was in reply to Eastland. Today, Eastland bitterly pro tested that Lehman "attacked me without warning." "He didn't teU me he intend ed to attack me," Eastland said, adding "that was very unethical conduct." Administration leaders are hoping to get a vote tomorrow on the DP legislation. CVA Debate Dated Seattle, March 7 (URl Under secretary of the Interior C Cirard Davidson and Seattle At torney Payne Carr will debate the Columbia valley administra tion issue at a Chamber of Com merce luncheon here March 17 the chamber announced today Davidson favors CVA while Carr opposes it. Board Protests Change in Capitol Zone Oppose Building Serv ice Station Across From Highway Bldg. By JAMES D. OLSON The state board of control Tuesday voted to protest a zone change permitting construction of an automobile service station on the southeast corner of Cen ter and Capital streets, across the street from the new highway building, now under construc tion. The protest to be forwarded to the Salem city council was vot ed by Governor Douglas McKay and Secretary of Mate tan r. Newbry, with State Treasurer Walter J. Pearson refusing to oin in the protest. Pearson contended that if a good-looking service station was built it would be of benefit to the capitol zone. Pearson Opposes Action You can't deprive a property owner of the right to use his property unless the state buys the property," Pearson said. But both McKay and Newbry disagreed. Governor McKay said that a bridge was placed right down in front of his business property but that he had made no protest against that. "A property owner must take his chances," the, governor de clared. "If you let the bars down on the fringe property surround ing the capitol zone we will have nothing but commercial enter prises 'fronting the zone." (Concluded 'on Page 5, Column 8) 8 Lose Life in Ocean Falls Fire Ocean Falls, B.C., March 7 (CP) Bodies of eight persons were recovered today from fire -gutted apartment house here. Recovered were the bodies of four women, three children and one man. One entire family a man, his wife and their 18 months-old child are known to have per ished in the blaze which swept through the 25-apartment, woo den building at 2 a.m., but names of the dead and missing have not been released. The blaze, known to have started in the third floor of the three-story Balsam apartments. lit up the entire town of 3000 for more than two hours. The townsite, owned by Paci fic Mills Ltd., is 350 miles north of Vancouver. The apartment house, which housed 18 families, is part of the company's housing accommoda tion for the town's 3000 popula tion, comprised of employes and their families. Logger Killed Tillamook, March 7 W) Log ging crewman Chester May, 30, was hurled to his death near here yesterday when a donkey engine anchor cable looped around his leg and snapped him off a stump. The cable, around the stump on which May was standing, slipped. He was a sig nalman for the donkey engine crew. Larger Lots By New Zoning Code Under the new city planning and zoning code there will be no more 50 by 70 foot lots in new streets. All new houses will be 6000 square feet. Details of the new code now city council Monday night at itsf joint dinner meeting with the planning and zoning commission. Speaking on the . code mainly were Robert White, chairman of the commission, and W. W. Rosebraugh, chairman of the special committee working on the new code. White mentioned the public hearing on West Salem zoning, before the city commission March 31, and requested any one having any ideas to present them ahead of that date. Relative to the controversial application for rezoning the Rhoten - Speerstra lot at the southeast corner of Capitol and Center to permit a service sta tion White told why the com mission favors it. It is in the fringe of the capitol zone. White said that if some busi .... l-r J f if Smmmfili.ai ii i aalfcin iin i a. i n sjk . U jaM Coal Output Takes Big Spurt Pittsburgh, March 7 VP) Soft coal production took a big spurt toward normal today with full crews resuming work in pits across the nation. The steel industry revived suddenly. Retail stores in the coal regions said sales were im proving rapidly with the end of the long "no contract no work" strike. United States Steel corpora tion reported most of its cur tailed operations would be back at near capacity operations by the end of the week. About four-fifths of western Pennsylvania's miners are on the job. The rest will be back at work .within hours. U , Mining - increased in tempo in West Virginia, the country s big gest soft coal producer. , Diggers flocked to the pits in Kentucky in ever growing num bers but resumption of full scale mining is not expected un til later in the week.. Many pits there, and in other states, are not ready to reopen. Elaborate safety precautions, the inspections must be made in advance of full scale mining. Here and there, local griev ances or misunderstandings are holding up a work return. House Votes for Hawaii Stale Washington, March 7 (IP) The house passed a bill today to make Hawaii a state. Last Friday, the house passed the Alaska statehood bill by a vote of 186 to 146. Senate action on the two measures is uncertain. Two years ago, the senate interior committee allowed a house- passed Hawaiian statehood bill to die without action. The Al aska bill has never before been considered in the senate. Only a few house members opposed Hawaiian statehood dur ing debate. Several of the house oppon ents of the Alaska statehood bill joined the backers of statehood for Hawaii. Required plats, and no 30 and 40-foot required to be on lots of at least in preparation were given the. ness is not allowed in the area, he feared it would develop into a slum district as in other capi tal cities. Mayor Elf stro'm agreed with White, declaring churches and schools would avoid a main highway street. White mentioned off-street parking as under consideration and Rosebraugh went into the provisions of the new code for more zone classifications, to get away from the abrupt differ ences between zones. White mentioned the threat of a gravel pit by a new concern going in near the airport where it would be a flight obstruction, and wanted to know if there was some way it could be blocked It threatens to come in before the new airport zoning board begins to function. Union Aides Applaud Leader Members of the United ' Mine Workers union policy committee applaud their leader, John L. Lewis (center) as he walks down the aisle of a UMW headquarters meeting room in Washington to tell them the terms of a new soft coal contract he negotiated with the operators. The committee gave unanimous approval of the agreement which gives the miners a 70 cents a day pay in crease in addition to other benefits. (AP Wirephoto) Lewis Proposes Mutual Aid Pact for Washington, March 7 VP) John L. Lewis today proposed t mutual aid pact" between the CIO United Steel Workers. He want to join. The UMW leader suggested Jobless List Props20.000 'Oregon had 74,TU0 inert out of work on March 1, a drop of 20,- 000 from the all-time record set un reuruaij a, uic aia,o unem ployment compensation commis sion said today. The March 1 figure was 18 per cent less than a year ago. The commission said the west ern. Oregon lumber regions led the way , in February's back-to-work movement. Biggest employment increases were in Douglas county, where the number of jobless dropped during February from 4,300 to 2,350; Lane county, where it fell from 8,500 to 6,400: and Benton county, which reported a drop from 2,250 to 750. On March 1, the Portland area reported 23,000 unemployed per sons. Salem was second with 6,600. Klamath Falls, Bend, Pendleton and The Dalles re ported their unemployment dropped 20 to 25 per cent dur ing the month. The commission said there would be another big drop in unemployment during March be cause of spring farm work start ing. . Check Red Drive In South Korea Washington, March 7 UP) Secretary of State Acheson told congress today the communist threat to South Korea has been checked at 'least temporarily. But unless American aid con tinues to flow to the little re public, he said, there is "m hope" for its survival. ' Acheson testified before the senate foreign relations commit tee in support of an administra tion proposal for a $100,000,000 aid program for Korea in the year beginning July 1. Southern Korea has been men aced by communists both from within its borders and from Rus sian occupied North Korea. Acheson said in a prepared statement the air program should be based on a "determina tion to succeed" in keeping southern Korea non-communist "rather: than on fear of the pos sibility of failure." He said that In recent debates on the Korean aid, many con gressmen had argued that the possibility of failure made them question whether the United States ought to continue to help. They want the new aid plan tacked onto the $2,950,000,000 bill which would authorize third year of recovery spending in Europe by the economic co operation administration. Unions United Mine Workers and the said other unions might also it in a letter to CIO President Philip Murray. .He returned to Murray uncashed a $500,000 check which Murray had sent Lewis as help during the coal strike. Since their strike settlement, coal miners have offered to lend $1,000,000 of union funds to the CIO Automobile' Workers union, now engaged in a strike at the Chrysler plants. Lewis thanked Murray for the $500,000 check and said: Conditions did not permit the usage of this money. We therefore return the original check in the same amount, un cashed, and properly marked 'void.' " . Lewis' letter went, on to say that, in recent months major unions have been confronted by the "financial interests in Amer ica" with a notion that "our great industrial unions should be attacked and crippled, one by one." "This idea should be knocked the head," Lewis said, and added his proposal that the CIO and UMW negotiate a "mutual aid pact for common defense." He suggested that under it 'the assets of both organizations, a stipulated part thereof. would be made available, each to the other, under emergency conditions. 'The potential advantages to our respective membershiDS of such an arrangement are self evi dent." Lewis invited Murray to name a committee to meet with one from the UMW to negotiate such an arrangement. Atomic Plant For Navy Sub Pittsburgh. March 7 (Pi The Westinghouse Electric corpora tion is building an atomic power Plant for a U. S. navy subma rine. The work is being done, the company said yesterday. , at the old actus airport near Pitts burgh. " . . Previously, the company had disclosed only that it was mak ing an atomic power plant for a naval vessel and the project had been the subject of much discussion. Scientists have said an atom ic powered submarine could run virtually forever without refuel ing. 1 Westinghouse said work on the project was begun last April with estimate of its completion date ranging from two to six years. The submarine itself will be constructed elsewhere. Westinghouse said a technical staff has been assembled for the project and is already at work The submarine power plant is being made by Wcstinghouse's atomic power division in co-operation with the Argonne Na tional laboratory. Kravchenko Exposes Russr Spying in War One Time Soviet Offi cial Says Fuch's Case Only One of Many Washington, March 7 (PI Victor A. Kravchenko, one time Russian official, predicted today that the Fuchs case is only one of "many bitter surprises" the United States and other western countries will have about Soviet spying. Kravchenko was in the wit ness chair of the house un-American activities committee which is digging into stories of secret documents and atomic materials going to Russia during the war. He said he knew of "dozens and dozens and dozens of tons" of papers on military and indus trial secrets which were sent to Russia. He said the Russians called them "super lend-lease." Fuchs Only a Prelude Referring to the conviction of Dr. Klaus Fuchs, a top British scientist, as a spy who gave ato mic secrets to the Russians, Kravchenko said: The Fuchs case in England is only a prelude to much which we do not know and which is still to come regarding the scope of boviet espionage in America and other western countries. I do not doubt thatmany bitter surprises await us." Kravchenko said that spying is one of the principal duties of all Soviet diplomats. "Every Soviet representative diplomatic, military or econo mic is a potential spy," he said, "I Chose Freedom" Kravchenko came to the Unit ed States as a member of a war time nussian purchasing com mission. He broke with the So viets in 1944 and wrote a book entitled, "I Chose Freedom.1 (Concluded on Page 5, Column 7) Chinese Reds on Hainan Island Taipei, Formosa. March 7 (PI Approximately 1,000 Chinese communist troops have landed on the big nationalist island of Hainan and fighting is in pro gress, reports from there said to day. It was still too early to tell whether the landing was just a small-scale attempt to test Hain an's defenses or whether it was the beginning of the real in vasion of that island off the coast of south China. The report was brought to Formosa by the crew of one of Claire L. Chennaults air line planes. The crew said it was notified of the landings by the control tower at the air field at Hoihow, Hainan's capital. They were 'told the communists landed on the northwestern corner of the is land. Hainan is only slightly smaller than Formosa. The generals in command there recently prcd- ged their whole-hearted support of Chiang Kai-Shek when he re sumed the presidency. Meanwhile, Gen. Chen Cheng, 52, pint-sized foe of communism, was nominated premier of na tionalist China by Chiang, his old friend. ii rfc M Takes Stand in Own Defense Dr. Hermann N. Sander, ac companied by his wife, arrives at the court house in Man chester, N. H., where he took the witness stand to testify in his own defense against charges of "mercy killing" in the death of a cancer patient, Mrs.. Abbie Borroto. (AP Wire-photo) I - I i v .. I ' ' ifiljf' . M Found Guilty Upper, Ju dith Coplon. Below, Valentin Gubitchev. Coplon, Russian Found Guilty New York, March 7 (JP) A federal jury today found Judith Coplon and Valentin uuditcnev guilty. The federal court jury found the former government clerk and the Russian guilty of con spiracy and attempted espoin- aso. The jury of six men and six women had been out since 4:34 B.m. . '(EST) yesterday and had been locked lip over night. It resumed its deliberations today. - Miss Coplon was found inno cent of one count of the four count indictment which charged her of attempted espoinage in that she attempted to transmit classified documents to unauth orized persons. Gubitchev was convicted with Miss Coplon under the first count, which charged conspir acy to commit espoinage by re moving classified documents from government files and to defraud the United States of Miss Coplon's impartial ser vices. Under count three of the in dictment, Gubitchev was found guilty of attempted espionage in that he was an unauthorized person attempting to receive se cret documents. This count named Gubitchev alone: Miss Coplon was found guilty under count four which charged her alone with attempted espio nage in that she attempted to transmit documents relating to the national defense to a citi zen of the Soviet Union, "with intent and reason to believe same were to be used to the in jury of the United States for the advantage of a foreign power." At the request of U. S. Attor ney Irving H. Saypol Judge Ryan remanded both defendants until Thursday at 10:30 a.m. for sentence. Air Injection Not Fatal Say Pathologists Harvard Scientists 'Testify Quantity Much Too Small to Kill Manchester, N.H., March t VP) A Harvard pathologist appear ing for Dr. Hermann N. San der testified today that Injection of 40 cubic centimeters of air could not have killed Mrs. Ab- bie Borroto. The 41-year-old Dr. Sander isr-- on trial for murder on charges he killed the cancer-stricken woman by injecting that amount of air into her veins. Dr. Richard Ford, head of the department of legal medicine at Harvard, testified that between 200 and 300 ccs of air delivered within 25 seconds would be re quired to kill a human being. Dr. Ford said he was basina this estimate on findings that eight cubic centimeters per two and one-fifth pounds of body weight were required to kill a dog. Couldn't Block Blood Two state pathologists had tes tified for the prosecution they believed Mrs. Borroto died from air embolism caused by the in jections. "Forty ccs of air is not enough to block any appreciable part of the areterial system leading to the human lung," said Dr. Ford. The defense has argued that only between 25 and 28 ccs of air were injected into the can-. cer-wasted woman and that she was already dead at the time. Opening the morning session of the 12th day of the trial, Dr. Sander's wife, Alice, took the witness stand. The 37-year-old mother of three daughters wore a snug, brown felt hat and gray- -ish-brown tailored suit. Mrs. Sander Testifies . "I never wanted to marry doctor," Mrs. Sander said as she ' recalled her meeting and ro mance with Dr. Sander. (Concluded on Pai 5, Column 5) Farmers Union Raps Congress Denver, March 7 (Pf Wash- ington representatives of the na tional Farmers Union attacked the present congress today as "worse than the 80th congress" where monopoly and big busi ness are concerned. Russell Smith, legislative sec- ' retary, told the national con vention he is "almost certain" the Brannan farm bill won't be passed this session or next He warned farmers to be pre pared for "something we can't call a recession" next fall. Angus McDonald, assistant legislative secretary, predicted congress would pass the basing point bill, tidelands oil bill, and legislation to exempt natural gas from regulation. The Farmers Union opposes all of them. "The 81st congress is worse than the 80th on monopolies," McDonald said. "The people are being sold out on Capitol Hill. Benton J. Strong, executive secretary of national resources committee, said he doubted that congress would take any action on bills for Columbia and Mis souri valley authorities or one to place the civil functions of the army engineers under the interior 'department. James Patton of Denver, NFU president, and Herbert Rolph of Joplin, Mont., vice president, were renominated for two-year terms without opposition. Frosty Weaiher Returns to Oregon Frost was reported nearly ev erywhere in Oregon except along the coast early today. The wea ther bureau says it will be a lit tle warmer tonight. Some central and eastern cit ies had a good, solid freeze 16 at Bend, 15 at Prineville, 18 at Lakeview but little damage was believed likely. Some cities were just barely under the freezing mark. Pen dleton reported 31, Roseburg 30 Eugene 29. Portland's airport recorded 28, although the more sheltered downtown station had a minimum of only 34. Coastal points were chilly, Brookings and North Bend at 37 and Newport at 34. T I i