Oregon Franzen Gets Post; Kowitz, McKinney Also in New Setup J. L. Franzen, city manager of Oregon City for the last 21 years, will become the first city manager of Salem, with Chris Kowitz as bis city attorney and with W. W. McKinney as municipal judge. These "appointments" which cannot take on legal status until formally ratified when the new city regime is installed after Jan uary 1 came in rapid-fire order" last night as the council-elect met at the home of Mayor-elect R. L. Elfstrom to shape up Salem's government-to-be. Franzen, 62, long-time resident of Yakima and a civil engineer ing traduate of Washington State college, told The Statesman via 83333X3 TPS) ODDS The colonial system is crum- blmg rapidly. Through India and Kowitz, graduate at Willaro Burma, through Java and India- ette, former councilman and a China the white man is no longer i practicing attorney in Salem for -puka sahib ' to the man of color, ; 23 years, will replace Lawrence The native peoples themselves Brown, incumbent city attorney are claiming the fruits of the lan- , who did not reauest reaDDoint- suase of the Atlantic charter. It ! may easily be that in Asia rather than in Europe that document will get greater recognition. India is in the toils of release from British dominion. Burma, over the violent objections of Winston Churchill, is next to get ine oner oi irwuwi. ' : terested in the post in event such also m line for political readjust- telQn ukm ment. Egypt has already become j ' . free of British overlordship. Kowitz ' appointment neces- The Netherlands has had to i sanly was in the form of a rec yield to the aspirations of the i ommendation to the new city Indonese and a new federated re- I manager, who has control of ap pubhc of what was once the , pointlve offices, but Franzen told Dutch East Indies is being set up. The Statesman last night he Even Bali, wht.se halcyon days would be "glad" to follow the were rudely interrupted by the i council's suggestion in the mat invasion of the Japanese and then j tc. He and Kowitz are friends by Amt-ncan soldiers expelling j of 20 years' standing, the Japs, is learning of its new Ha Two-Year Tenure political ireeoom. In Indo-C'hina the once docile inhabitants are seeking to form an independent g o v e r n m -n I L French defeat in Europe in 1940 , cost it prestige in the far east Nationalists are indulging in acts of violence and the French are moving troops toward Saigon to control the situation. The yeast of liberty is working among the millions of people in the orient. Perhaps it works pre maturely, for the native popula tions may not be able to do a creditable job of self-government for a considerable period of time. But the imperial powers are being forced to reconsider and recon struct their policies. By force of numbers and by dint of the cost , a'wr New Years. The regulations to European nations the native ( propose that a quorum be set at peoples may prevail in spite ofl live (there are seven councilmen their political immaturity. land a mayor under the new set- Reasonable as their aspirations j up) and the regular meeting times are, the result of the overturn mav eailv be a prolonged period of disorder and unrest while the colonials try to reach the status i of competence in self-government. , French Place Revolt Blame r. , ,, . A Guenther, manager of the water PARIS. Dec. 26-)-A I rench departmtnt: William Iwan, acting foreign office spokesman tonight rnjef of the flre department, and accused Ho Chi Minh. president of j H . Davis, city engnieer and the fugitive Viet-Nam republican street commissioner, government, of deliberately plan- Present at the session with Elf ning and directing the nationalist strom were Chris Kowitz and all uprising against colonial author- , the councilmen-elect James H. Ity in French Indo-China. Nicholson, Claude W. Jorgensen, The accusation came as dis- j David O'Hara, Howard Maple, patches from the embattled col- j Albert Gille, R. O. Lewis and orry reported that Ho. who fled Daniel J. Frye, the latter only re-his- capital at Hanoi at the outset 1 cently having returned from a of the fighting last week, had ; two-months' plane trip in South reestablished his government at ; nd Central America. Hadong, six miles to the south- i (Additional details page 4.) west ! " ' Other dispatches said French colonials, now in command of the entire European quarter of Ha noi, were stabbing ahead on vir- i tually all the scattered fronts the nationalists fell back. Bl'DCET PLANNED OLXMPIA, Wash., Dec. 26 A) Goveinor Wallgren said late to day he has completed work on a budget for the 1947-48 biennium balanced at $488,500,000, exclud ing capitol outlays. Animal Crackers v By WARREN GOO0R1CH . l think iff going to tam my corns arc aching." City Executive leiepnone irom iong ueacn. Calif., last night that he would accept the post and would attend 1947 s first council meeting set for 9 a.m. Thursday, January 2. There were about 30 applicants for the job. The council-elect set the city manager's .salary at $7500 an nually, with the stipulation - that he be paid on the basis of two thirds that amount while he is handling the Salem post "-on- a part-time basis, pending Oregon City's finding a successor. Dead line for going on a full-time basis here was set for March 1. rart-Ume Schedule I ment. The position will continue ..." ... - " . to be part-time, drawing slightly more than $400 monthly for sal ary and secretarial help, until and unless the council acts on Mayor-elect Elfstrom's plan to make it a full-time job. Kowitz has indicated he might not be in- McKinnev. also a graduate of Willamette and an attorney here in Uill lk nvcr th. n... nicipa judgeship on a part-time basis reIieving city Recorder Al Mundt of those duties. McKin- ney's appointment extends for two years, without being subject to Franzen's approval, after which the municipal judge becomes an elective officer. Salary was set at $2,500, with secretarial help in addition. A tentative plan calls for court sessions at 9 a.m. daily. Also discussed last night was a proposed new set of regulations governing council action but no vote was taken pending the groups obtaining official stature be changed from the first and third Mortdays to the first and third Wednesdays. Incumbents Not Discussed There was nQ discussion last night on other appointive offices under the new city manager form of government, which now are held by Al Mundt, city recorder; Dr. W. L. Stone, health officer; Frank Minto, chief of police: Bat ty Cooper, sanitary inspector; Carl Deals to Enable "jExploit Middle WASHINGTON. Dec. 26.-oT-Two big oil deals, under which American companies would ex ploit more thoroughly the vast oil resources of the strategic middle east, were announced in "princi ple today. Hundreds of millions of dollars are involved and taken together, the deals involve one of the big gest oil transactions of all times. State department officials wel comed news of the transactions insofar as they relieved the drain on the dwindling oil resources in the United States and South Am erica. Two major American compan ies - - Standard of New Jersey and Socony Vacuum - - were involved in both deals according to an nouncements from London and New York. In what was considered the most far-reaching transaction, it was disclosed that a "prelimin ary" agreement had been reached whereby the Arabian-American Oil company, which owns exclu sive rights to the Saudi-Arabian fields, would sell about 30 per cent of its holdings to Standard Oil of New Jersey. Socony Vac uum Oil company is expected to buy another 10 per cent. The Arabian - American com pany is controlled by Standard Oil of California and the Texas com pany. Standard of New Jersey, an City Manager '..'"V 'X-r " --;,Jb v- - : v. . '' . -: J. L. FRANZEN City Attorney 12 CHRIS KOWITZ New Judge W. W. McKINNEY Manager-to-be In California For Holidays LONG BEACH. Calif., Dec. 26 ( Special to The Statesman )-J. L. Franzen, informed by The Ore gon Statesman tonight that he had been appointed Salem's first city manager, said he would be "de lighted to serve the people of Sa lem," though it would be "with regret'' that he leaves a similar post at Oregon City. He said he would be In Salem January 2 to assume his duties on a part-time basis only, "because 1 certainly don't want to leave Oregon City in the lurch," and that he hoped to take over his new post full time by the middle of February. Franzen and his wife are in Long Beach spending the holi days with their daughters, Mrs. Paul Hughes and Mrs. James Smith. U. S. Firms to East Oil Fields nouncing its share in this deal, said final consummation is con tingent upon surveys and discus sions now in progress. In the second agreement. Stan dard of New Jersey and Socony Vacuum reached an accord in principle with the Anglo-Iranian Oil company, Ltd., to purchase substantial quantites of crude oil from this British company, which operates in Iran. 1:: i y'it y 't . an' Pit . - f I Soloois Told Red Revolt Brewing in Nation By Willi as F. Arfeftgast WASHINGTON, Dec 26.-UP)-Ernie Adamson, counsel for the house committee charged with in vestigating unamerican activities, came up today with a report say ing: 1. There is a "conspiracy brew ing to promote a communistic rev olution in the United States through an economy - wrecking general strike, or other means. 2. Seventeen important CIO la bor unions are dominated by red agents of the soviet union. S. The library of congress is "a haven for aliens and foreign minded Americans.' 4. The state department ought to protest about activities of numerous representatives of for eign nations" attached to the United Nations and busily fol Appointed Salem's First City Manager. NINETY-SIXTH YEAR 4th Plane Safe Near Shanghai SHANGHAI, Friday, Dec. 27 The Shanghai Press reported to day that the death toll in three Christmas day air liner crashes here had reached 67 but a fourth missing plane with 10 persons aboard was safe. A brief announcement said the fourth plane, object of general anxiety for more than 24 hours, had turned back from the fog shrouded Shanghai airport along with nine other planes in the flight of 13 ships which had been carrying Christmas celebrants from the interior to Shanghai for the holidays. All the nine planes landed safe ly at interior airports. Among the victims was an American pilot, J. M. Greenwood, Bowie, Tex., an employe of the China National Aviation corpora tion, at the controls of one of the planes. His family was en route to China. The crashes occurred when the planes were trying to land at Shanghai's fog-bound airport and circled until they ran out of gaso line. They were part of a flight of 13 'carrying Chinese to Shang hai for Christmas celebrations. In addition. 19 occupants were injured, a Chinese woman and three children were killed when one plane struck a farmhouse. The missing 10 were aboard a plane which -still was unaccounted for among 13 planes bringing pas sengers to Shanghai for the holi day. Aided by radar, one of the planes landed safely. Eight turned back and landed elsewhere. Another American. R. B. Preus, piloting a second CNAC liner, was among the 19 seriously injured. Holiday Deaths Near Record By the Associated Press Christmas holiday violent deaths, most of them from traffic accidents, totaled 308 through the country. Traffic fatalities accounted for 253 deaths and miscellaneous causes claimed 55 victims between 6 p.m. (local time) Christmas eve and midnight Christmas day, a final compilation showed last night. The traffic deaths were far in excess of the 150 forecast by the national safety council for the same period and a council spokes man said it would be a near rec ord number, after inclusion of those dying from injuries suffered during the period. Bing Tops in Movie Boxoffice Tally HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 26 - CP) -Bing Crosby topped the list ot movie theatre box office attrac tions for the third successive year in the 15th annual poll of exhibi tors by the Motion Picture Herald announced today. The others in order were In grid Bergman, Van Johnson, Gary Cooper, Bob Hope, Humphrey Bo gart, Greer G a r s o n , Margaret O'Brien, Betty Grable and Roy Rogers. County Tax Payments Total $1,900,000 Tax payments by mail have in creased the amount of taxes col lected by the Marion county tax collector to $1,900,000, according to Harold Domogalla, chief dep uty in charge of collections, Thursday. This figure includes three turnovers of $474,140.42 made to the county treasurer dur ing the last tax term. The amount collected represents about four fifths of the 1946-47 tax roll of $2,472,715.83, Domogalla said. lowing "with blind obedience the dictates of Moscow." 5. "Communist-controlled un ions" are making inroads in the Panama Canal zone and by tying up the canal "can paralyze our en tire shipping and commerce.' Committee members reserved comment on Adamson's findings. The CIO and the -library of con gress called the references to them untrue. Members said the committee probably would meet early next week to formally approve, or modify, the report. "We haven't had a chance to read it yet," one member s&id. "It's all news to me." Adamson said: "The time has come for all labor unions to inquire fully into the aims of those who pose as Salenx, U. S. Border Closed To Mexican Cattle EL PASO, Tex., Dec. 2 6-OP) The U. S. border at all points was closed to Mexican cattle late today when an "urgent" message was received here from Washington by Dr. John Red mond, inspector in charge of the bureau of animal husbandry in El Paso. The order read: "Effective now make no further inspections on Mexican ruminants or swine offered for inspection - pending further instructions. Notify bor der inspectors, ijrgent." The border Was quarantined on June 15 when stock imported from Brazil was believed to have been infected with hoof and mouth disease. The ban was lifted on October 17. Heavy Rains Create Floods In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES. Dec. 26-P-The Los Angeles metropolitan area began drying out tonight after the heaviest Christmas rain storm in five years. The weather bureau forecast partly cloudy weather, with some showers, for tomorrow. Rainfall which began Tuesday and continued steadily through Christmas eve and Christmas day celebrations and into today to taled 2.64 inches, giving Los An geles a season total of 9.88 inches compared with a normal of 4.26 inches up to this date. Streets Blocked Many streets were blocked at times as water, collecting faster than it could run off, formed min iature lakes as deep as automo bile hoods in some places. Hun dreds of cars were stalled. Silt slides partially blocked sections along Hollywood boulevard, Ben edict Canyon road, Linda Vista avenue in Pasadena and the Arro Seco freeway. All were open to day, however. A huge piece of concrete from a retaining wall slid down a cliffside and wrecked a garage on Union avenue. Man Missing Roy L. Parcher, 47. was re ported by his son, Wayne, to have been swept off a bridge across a storm channel by a four foot rush of water while the two were trying to extricate an auto mobile. Wayne Parcher assisted police in searching for the body. The storm was one of the prin cipal contributing .factors in the unprecedented holiday toll of 47 traffic deaths In southern Cali fornia. WAL Airliner On Mountain . SAN DIEGO, Calif., Dec. 26-(4)-Sheriff's deputies searching for a Western Air Lines transport which disappeared Christmas eve with 12 persons aboard reported late today that they had sighted pieces of shiny metal in what ap peared to be a burned area on the east slope of Cuyapaipe peak, which is 65 miles east of here. The deputies, who made their way by automobile to a point two miles east of the 6375-foot peak, said the metal pieces were sighted through field glasses. Shortly after the report came in thick weather closed in on the mountains and forced cancellation of the search until tomorrow. H. T. Hesse Resigns State Legislature Resignation of State Represen tative H. T. Hesse, republican, Washington county, was received at the state department here Thursday. He has served in the house since 1939 and at the last legislative session was honored with a number of important com mittee assignments. Hesse lives at Scholls. The Washington county court will elect his successor. friends, but actually have no other interests than a fervent and sometimes violent desire to be instrumental in the establish ment of a virtual dictatorship in the United States." Communists who, he maintain ed, have infiltrated into the field of government, labor and educa tion, "realize that the communist plan of creating unemployment in the United States is the only medium through which they can possibly gain control of the United States through a victory at the ballot box." Other methods that may be used in "a foreign inspired con spiracy," he said, include " a general strike in the United States through communist - controlled labor unions which will ulti 14 PAGES NUNDID 1651 Oregon. Friday Morning; December 27. 1948 George Allen Reportedly Resigns RFC CHICAGO, Dec. 26. -JP)- The Chicago Sun said tonight that George E. Allen, director of the reconstruction finance corporation and one of President Truman's closest advisors, has resigned and that Mr. Truman has accepted the resignation with "deepest regret." WASHINGTON, Dee. 27 (FridayWAVGeorge E. Allen declined to comment today on a published report that be has ..resigned as a director of the Reconstruction Finance cor poration. Allen, dressed in a bathrobe, came to the door of his hotel apartment early today In re sponse to a reporter's knock. "I have no comment to make," Allen said. "And you can tell your read-, era I got out of bed; to make it." In a copyrighted story by its Washington correspondent Thom as F. Reynolds, the Sun said an nouncement of the resignation "will come from the White House in a few days." The article continues: "The resignation came only af ter Allen had obtained a 'release from Mr. Truman and assurance that his services would be avail able in the future for assignments in which the president is especial ly interested. "The resignation, it was under stood, will become effective on January 22 the first anniversary of the date on which Allen's nom ination (as RFC director) was sent to the senate by the presi dent." In Washington, Allen could not be located immediately for com ment. Some close friends of the RFC director, who also is a director of numerous private corporations, expressed surprise when told of the Chicago Sun's story. They said Allen had not told them of any plan to resign his government post. E. H. Ellis Hurt In Accident Edwin H. Ellis, 70, of route 1, box 113, Salem, is reported as progressing satisfactorily aj. Sa lem Deaconess hospital after in curring a fractured collarbone at about 9:20 last night when his auto collided with a car operat ed by Harold W. Hanson, 1912 Hazel ave., at Front and Center streets. Laraine Baron, 17, of 1535 Jef ferson St., a passenger in Han son's car, was dismissed from Deaconess hospital after X-rays showed that back pains were not caused by broken bones or other serious injury. Investigating city police said that both cars were badly damaged. Courtesy Driving Campaign Lauded For Yule Safety A record of traffic safety over the Christmas holiday was reached this year, Chief of Police Frank A. Minto said last night, and attrib uted much of the improvement "definitely to the Statesman-Warner Bros. Courtesy Driving cam paign" conducted here December 10-21. Only a few minor injuries were incurred here during the holidays. Of the holidays' four fatal acci dents in Oregon, none were in Salem. mately result in a revolution," or "industrial sabotage in the form of strikes . . . during a .period of war between the United States and Soviet Russia." As for the library of congress, Adamson said many persons ac cepted for employment in its re organized legislative reference department "have had extensive association with agencies or so cieties who have shown inclina tion to change the economy, if not the constitution, of the Unit ed States." Adamson said that probably the "most serious penetration" by communist forces "has been within the labor movement where the communists dominate 17 vital unions of the CIO." IS' Fd9 ((fflragr; Butter Price Drops 9-10 Cents Pound In Eastern Stores (By the Associated Preas) Cracks in the high price structure for many cost of living items suddenly appeared in major cities across the country yesterday. One of the sharpest breaks came in the New York and Chicago wholesale butter markets. Prices tumbled in New York from one to ,10 cents a pound. The drop in Chicago ranged from two to six cents Much of the mystery surrounding the break in New York, where charges of "rigging" had been heard, was removed late yester day. The Dairymen's League Co operative association said in statement that it had been active in the butter market in order to , keep prices up and thereby "pro- ; tect" present milk prices. j The decline in wholesale prices ' brought an immediate drop of nine to 10 cents a pound in some ot the principal chain stores in I the east. Egg Prices Decline ' WASHINGTON. Dec. 26 -tJfp) Egg prices likewise dropped American foreign policy. a ex sharp ly in a number of places. ; emphfied by the Truman-Byrnes led by a wholesale decline of Vandenberg-Connaliy stand, must more than five cents a dozen in be supported and strengthened to New York. I avoid another war. Sen. Morse Simultaneously, a cross-coun- (R-Ore) said today, try survey by the Associated: just back from" six weeks in Press showed that many of the Europe, the Oregor.ian declared big department stores in major that this nation must make clear ernes naa siasnea some ciouiing prices by from one-third to more than 50 per cent. Some groans were audible when housewives compared the new sale prices with those they had paid only two days ago. In Chicago it was learned at retailers' associations there are now looking for pronounced gen eral reductions in food prices in February and have been urging their members to get rid of their present stocks. Cities Report Prices Current reductions In some food items were reported in New York, Chicago, Boston, Philadel phia, Atlanta, Kansas City, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Shortly before the Dairymen's league reported it had been sup porting butter prices, the New York City consumers council, claiming to represent 86 organiza tions and 500,000 consumers, telegraphed Attorney General Tom Clark demanding "an im mediate investigation and pros ecution for the parties responsible for this flagrant violation of the anti-trust laws." N. Y. MUk Price Set The New York milk price is set by the department of agricul- ture's milk marketing adminis- tration on a formula that takes into account the price of top grade butter and skimmed milk powder for a 30-day period. This month expired on December 24 and the price for January was set at $5.46 a hundredweight, un changed since November. The statement by the Dairy men's league, which claims to represent 26,000 milk producers in the eastern area, declared that "purchases of butter" by the league "were made to prevent a threatened decline of 22 cents a hundredweight in the January price of milk." It estimated this had prevented a loss of around $600,000 to dairy farmers in the New York milkshed. Egg Price Falls in Portland Market PORTLAND, Dec. 26 -OP-The price df eggs fell 1 to 3 cents a dozen in several groceries today, reflecting an equal price drop in wholesale circles here and a sharp fall in eastern and midwest mar kets. The lower rates were expected to spread to other stores tomor row. Butter, was quoted 3 to 4 cents 1 ower on the wholesale market late today, will probably also be a little cheaper for house wives. Bus to Change Route Pending Bridge Repairs The Capitola bus, on that part of its route between Union and D streets, will traverse Cottage street instead of Church, pending repairs to the Church street bridge, it was announced by Oegbn Motor Stages last night. Weather Max. .. as 56 34 Min. Precip 3t JS 33 49 23 .00 Salem Portland San Francisco Chicago New York 44 30 trace Willamette river 2.6 feet. FORECAST (from U.S. weather bu reau. McNary field. Salem): Cloudy today and tonight with occasional rain showers. Highest temperature 44. Low est 33. No. 234 . Morse States Foreign Policy Needs Support tnat are in Europe to sta for whatever period of Years future events demonstrate that it is necessary for us to stay." He decried a domestic tendency not to support U. S. military government and state officials abroad, saying that this hurts American prestige at internation al councils and among foreign peoples. Morse cited as his "only dis appointment" during the tour his inability to obtain a permit to visit Russia. "It Is difficult to understand," he said, "why a legislative representative of "the American government is denied the same treatment accorded Russians in a similar status to visit this country." ' Cain Appointed In Move to Gain Senate Seniority OLYMPIA, Dec. 26-,P-Gover-nor Wallgren today aDDointed Re- ' publican Senator-elect Harry P. j Cain to the United States senate j effective tomorrow, i The governor appointed Cain , immediately after accepting the ! resignation of Sen. Hugh B. Mit- chell, defeated democratic incum bent. Cains regular term of office, to which he was elected last month, normally would begin January 3. His appointment effective" to morrow may give him seniority over new senators taking office next month. Traffic Menaces Medford Buildings MEDFORD, Dec. 26-P-Build-ing owners decided today that Med ford's traffic is becoming menacing. A truck careened into a filling station Christmas day and knocked over a 400-pound gaso line pump the fifth recent oc casion when cars have smashed into buildings. Iowa Farmer Stuck With 730,000 Frogs DES MOINES, Dec 26-P)-An Iowa farmer with 730.000 frogs on hand today filed a $101,041 claim against the state because of a law which restricts their distri bution. The farmer, W. H. Potthast of Milford, said he has 550,000 three year old frogs and 180,000 two year olds. He said he plan ned to sell them on the New Orleans frog market when he discovered the law prohibits their shipment out of the state. President Truman Back in Washington WASHINGTON, Dec. IS-(JP)-Presidept Truman returned to Washington tonight, his flying trip home for a Missouri Christ mas at an end. Mr. Truman spent an hour with his 94-year-old mother, Mrs. Mar tha E. Truman, at Grand view. Mo., before driving to the Iride pendence airport. Pric 5c