91 County Budget Board Votes for $10 Pay Raise Increase Extends to All But Elective Employes First act of the Marion county budget committee Monday open inf it le salon on the 1949-50 budget was to vote an across the board increase of $10 a month to all but elective employes which will represent 112,120. The action extends to county road crews, members of which will receive an additional S cents an hour which approximates the same raise. County Judge Grant Murphy was the only commit teeman voting against the $10 a month. He said he was opposed because it isn't enough. He said he favored a larger wage rather than an increase of personnel to make department hads feel justified in being more exacting with their employes. He also said, rather than a hard and Wfast raise, he favored one a lit- tie more open where adjustments could be made based on work done and ability. The iudse said further that he believed wage in creases could be made by cut ting out some of the other items in departmental requests, items he said might be handy to use but could be dispensed with. Justify Wage Hike The wage increase was further justified by statements that all governmental agencies Irom led' eral down have granted wage increases. "To keep the wages down so low in the county is to merely set up the county as a training school for future state employes," said Judge Murphy. "They come and take their pick with more attractive offers. With the wage problem out of the way the committee began tackling the budget item by item. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 7) 17 Legislators Off on Junket Seventeen members of the Oregon legislature, headed by William E. Walsh, president of the senate, and Frank J. Van Dyke, speaker of the house, will leave by chartered plane wed nesday for Sacramento where the group will visit the Califor nia legislature. Then members of the party, members of the Joint commit tee on inter-state cooperation, will meet with a similar com mittee composed of California legislators to discuss problems relating to traffic regulation. highway use by heavy vehicles and some problems facing both states in relation to aviation. The senate committee will be represented by Senators Carl Engdahl, chairman; Eugene Marsh, Paul Patterson, Irving Rand and Austin Dunn. - Members of the house com mittee that will make the trip include W. W. Chadwick. Sa lem, chairman; Carl Francis. Alex Barry, Giles French and Robert Gile. Other Oregon legislators who will make the trip include Max Landon, chairman of the house highways committee; William Morse, member of the ways and means committee; Ralph Moore chairman of the house taxation committee; Henry Semon, chair man of the house ways and means committee and Sen. Wil liam McAllister, chairman of the senate labor and industries committee. "Voters Affirm School Budget Voters in the 83 precincts of Marion county's rural school district voted favorably April 18 to affirm the district budget of $1,120,871, according to completion of the official count showing 1281 votes for to 917 against the budget. So shows the official count Just completed by the staff of County Superin tendent Agnes C. Booth for the district boundary board. However, there was an upset in the vote on the proposal to consolidate Stayton union high school district 4 J with the rural district boaad when final re turns showed that proposition defeated by a vote of 1110 against it to 1069 in favor. Both votes will be confirmed as official at district boundary board meeting Friday. At that meeting also votes will be canvassed on an elec tion April 22 on consolidation of Evans Valley and Briar Knob districti In the eastern part of the county. The unofficial re turn from that election showed J carried with a favorable vote each district. G apital A Journal 61st Year, No. 99 John L. Sullivan Sullivan Quits Cabinet Post Washington," April 26 W Secretary of the Navy John L Sullivan resigned today with a blast at Secretary of Defense Louis A. Johnson for blocking the navy's plan to build a super aircraft carrier. In a letter to Johnson. Sulli van called the defense secreta ry's order to halt work on the carrier "arbitrary" and said it was taken without even consult ing the navy. Sullivan added: "The conviction that this will result in a renewed effort to abolish the marine corps and to transfer all naval and marine aviation elsewhere adds to my anxiety." Sullivan's office made this letter public shortly after Presi dent Truman accepted his resig nation. The White House, announc ing Sullivan's resignation, made public an exchange of letters between him and the president. These, letters said nothing about the carrier. Sullivan wrote Mr. Truman: "More deeply than words can express, 1 regret the circumstan ces that prevent me from con tinuing in my present post to help you in your magnificent efforts. . Sullivan asked that the resig nation be made effective "at the earliest date convenient to you, Mr. Truman, replying, wrote he deeply regretted "that you feel impelled to relinquish your post." State Offices Tunnel to Start Interesting construction, start ing next week, will be a tunnel extending from the new State Office building at Court and North Capitol to the State House across the street. Be g i n n I n g Monday Court street will Be closed to vehicu lar traffic in the building area The traffic will be detoured by way ot center street. The reason for detouring to Center instead of Chemeketa is that barricades now extend 40 feet into Che meketa. City Engineer J. H. Davis said Tuesday the detouring to Cen ter street will probably cause a traffic problem and that some special policing may be neces sary. While the tunnel construction is under way arrangements will be made for pedestrians to use Court street. The tunnel will be about sev en by nine feet. A trench will be dug, the tunnel tube install ed, and then covered. Davis said the street would be closed from 30 to 60 days. No Drawing Straws for City Contracts Goes With Mr. Fry Maybe, said Alderman Dan Fry Monday night, it wasn't col lusion, but lt sure was a strange coincidence. And as for drawing straws to see who would get a city con tract the alderman couldn't go for that at all. So, on Alderman Fry's motion, the council refused to accept me commercial sand at Gravel Supply company's bid on ready-mix concrete for Salem's street work, and threw out two other bids as well. City Man ager Franzen was directed to look around and see what can be done. The bid of the Commercial company was $11 cubic yard. But the bids of the Walling Sand & Gravel company and the River Bend Sand & Gravel were also $11. According to I time-honored American custom the bidders met in the city engineer's office and drew lot. Whether straws or toothpicks were used, or whether they rolled dice, wasn't revealed. Anyway Commercial company won, and City Man sger Franzen recommended Its bid be accepted, Salem, West German Republic to Be Created July 15 Frankfurt. Germany, Anril 2fi (IPu An anti-communist federal republic of western Germany Is due to come Into being this sum mer. The west German state, foraed from the three allied occuoation zones, will have a oonulatlon second only to the Soviet Un ion on the Euronean continent. More than 46.000.000 people within its borders. The final obstacles to forma tion of a German republic free if military government were overcome in a momentous six hour conference last . night be tween West German political leaders and the three western military governors. Date Set July IS The announcement was made at a news conference by Gen. Lucius D. Clay, American mili tary governor. Clay set the target date for the birth of the republic as July 15 four months after the date set last year by the western allies. The accord Ignores Russia. which occupies almost a third of the prewar reich. The repub lic will be made up of the in dividual German states in the American, British and French occupation zones. Western Ge r m a n leaders. while going along with the al lies in formation of the repub lic, insist they want to see all Germany united eventually. Magnet to Germans They theorize hopefully that a prosperous west German state will prove a magnet to Germans in the Soviet zone and kill any Russian hopes of establishing a popular communist regime. Russia, which has been bitter in its opposition to a seemingly final splitting of Germany, has made many efforts to prevent formation of a west German state. House Debates On Labor Bill Washington, April 26 W) Rep. Lesinski (D., Mich.) got set to open house debate over the Taft-Hartley act today with a request that the administra ion's labor bill be passed "with out amendment." In speech prepared for de livery, the labor committee chairman said the people voted last November for repeal of the Taft-Hartley law. Then he de clared: "If we break faith with out own people who expressed themselves so clearly and in such detail last November we confess to the people of western Europe who are today desper ately seeking the truth, that the forces of communism speak the truth, while we practice hypoc risy." The administration bill. which bears Lesinski's name in the house and that of Senator Elbert Thomas (D. Utah) in the senate, would repeal Taft-Hart ley and replace it with a some what enlarged version of the original Wagner act of 1935. House republican leaders and many southern democrats are supporting a substitute introduc ed by Rep Wood (D.. Ga.). This also says the Taft-Hartley act is "hereby repealed." Then it proceeds to re-enact most of the Taft-Hartley provisions. The debate will take several days. Debate in the senate is still several weeks off. "Was there collusion?" Fry demanded to know. Franzen and City Engineer J. H. Davis said they thought not, and Davis explained how the $11 could have been arriv ed at, since there is a standard price for ready-mix. ' Why one of them didn't bid 5 cents under I can't say," said Davis. Fry still contended It was a bad precedent. "I'm afraid if we accepted bids like that It wouldn't be long until they were all meet' ing ahead of time and arrang ing their bids. I want competi tive bidding." The Warren Northwest com- pan was the only bidder for about 9000 tons of asnhaltic mixture. Its bid of $8 10 and 8 40 a ton was accepted. Oregon, Tuesday, April Record Recorded Ground crewmen pass gasoline to fliers Bill Barris and Dick Riedel at San Diego, Calif., as the pair reach the 964 hour mark of their successful attempt to stay aloft for 1,000 hours. This was the last re-fuelling planned for the fliers as they near their goal. They landed on the 1008th hour. (Acme Telcphoto) Camp Mongold Soon Operating at Capacity By JAMES D. OLSON Camp Mongold, constructed to staff of the Corps of Army Engineers during the construction of Detroit dam, will soon be operating at full capacity, according to Lt. Col. John W. Miles, resident The camp, located about six Indict 4 for Stealing Safe Dallas, April 26 Indictments were reported out by the Polk county grand jury Tuesday, charging burglary not in a dwelling against the four men arrested in Sacramento for theft of a safe from the Y cafe on Salem-Dallas highway. . The four, who have not yet reached here in charge of two Oregon officers, are Otis Lang- ley. 21, Douglas Samuel Boying ton. 22. and Jasper Boyington, 19. all Californians, and Charles Gepner. 21. of Salem. - Witnesses before the grand jury were Mr. and Mrs. Ervln York of the Y cafe. The true bills of indictment were return' ed to Judge Arlie G. Walker. In charge of the rour men, on their way here from California, are Deputy Sheriff Tony Neu feld and Sergeant Mayfield of the Oregon State police. DST Measure Before Council Mainly to gratify the wishes of people who work for the state a bill was Introduced in the city council Monday night to set up daylight saving time in Salem. It would be effective at 2:01 a.m.. May 16, and end at l:o a.m., September 11. Although it would not start until May 16, the bill" is sup posed to be given final action by the council at the May 9 meeting, and carries the emerg ency clause which would make it effective as soon as passed and signed by the mayor. While daylight saving is gen erally opposed by everybody ex cept those who are employed on fixed and liberal time ached ules, it probably will pass the council, since it is backed by the argument that Portland and few other cities have gone for it. Alderman Gilic introduced the bill. Attorney General George Neuner ruled Monday that when the new state law govern ing daylight saving becomes ef fective it will supercede any ci ty ordinances. By the act passed by the le gislature no part of the state may adopt a time change after July 16 except by proclamation of the governor, and no such proclamation may be issued by the governor except In confor- mity with time changes in ad joining states. If the state law becomes ef fective Salem and other locali ties would stav on daylight sav ing only until July 16. If the referendum, now threatened, is successfully Invoked against the state act the localities would continue on daylight saving. It would take the signatures of about 16.000 voters to referend the act. Robber Takes Day's Cash Portland, April 26 ifi An automobile dealer and service station manager was relieved of $426 and locked in his office by a lone gunman last night. Terrell W. Loos said he was alone, counting the day's cash receipts, when held up. 26, 1949 virtTC 3 serve as headquarters for the engineer. miles east of the damsite, is veritable city, with its own wat er and power supply, dormitor- ies and cafateria for the single men and apartment buildings, now all occupied, for families of the administrative staff. Although Detroit dam has been designed primarily to re duce flood damage in the Wil lamette valley an important link in the entire Willamette Valley project provision has been made for installation of two power generators to de velop a maximum of 90,000 kil lowatts. Land Will Get Water In addition 340,000 acre feet of water will be available for irrigation of lands lying below the dam. Col. O. M. Walsh, district engineer for this area, has made it clear that no one is to be forced to accept water foi irrigation. In fact. Col. Walsh states that no water will be appropriated for irrigation unless application is made by irrigation districts formed under the laws of the state of Oregon. The Detroit Dam, when com pleted in 1953, will tower 1569 feet above sea level. It will cre ate a lake 8 4 miles long and covering 3,580 acres. One of the large tasks will be clearing of the entire pool area of trees and shrubs. The first contract for clearance work has been let by the Consolidat ed Builders, Inc., the contrac tors building the dam, to L. L. and R. W. Byers of Redding Calif., to clear 48 acres at the' dam site. The Byers crew has already cleared a path for Bonneville power transmission line from the damsite. Miles Held Big Jobs Col. Miles, who has been as signed by Col. Walsh to super vise the project at resident en gineer, joined the army engi neers in 1934. He was on the staff that handled the Bonne ville dam construction and ear ly in the late war was in charge of military construction in the Portland area. In 1943 Col. Miles was dis patched to South America where he was regional engineer in charge of construction of eight large air bases. Upon conclusion of this signment, he was sent to the European theater, serving in England, France and Belgium in charae of construction work For the past two years he has served as special assistant to the district engineer in Portland working on flood control and river and harbors projects. (More on Detroit Dam proj ect in Wednesday's Capital Jour nal). I TaIhmUS LOWCI LOIUlTlDId Dikes Repaired Portland, April 28 (i Most lower Columbia river diking districts are making Improve ments in anticipation of high water in June, Cel. O. E. Walsh reported today. Walsh. Portland district army engineer, said recently that many districts had not taken any action. He warned that they were Inviting trouble. Since then, he said, reports of main tenance work have been receiv ed He said he would make pub lic about May 1 the names of any districts which have failed to report on condition of levees by that time. Panes) Price 5c I - 1008 Hours in Endurance Hop Fullerton, Calif., April 26 Wi Ending six full weeks in the air, Endurance Fliers Bill Bar ris and Dick Riedel landed to day. The wheels of their mono plane touched the asphalt run way at Fullerton airport at 11:45 a.m. (Pacific Standard time). They had been in the air 1,008 hours, one minute. Six weeks was the goal they set when they took to the air March 15 for their fourth try at exceeding the 10-year-old en durance rceord of 726 hours. Their three previous failures once because of magneto trouble, twice because of ice on the carburetor had been costly and they were kept in the air only by contributions of $1 each from some 2000 Fullerton citi zens. The Chamber of Com merce also had chipped in some $1500 from its surplus cash. A great cheer arose as a shot from the official timing stand announced that the pair had passed the 1008-hour mark. Im mediately the plane started down on its approach. North Marion Appeal Dropped Announcement is made In an official note from Bartlett Cole, Portland, attorney for the ob jectors in the matter of validity of the proceedings in connection with formation of union high school district known as the North Marion or Aurora-Hub bard district, that the appeal to the supreme court by the objec tors has been withdrawn. Ob jectors are William O. Gooding, Jack Murray and Edwin J. Mil ler. When the district boundary board recently set May 16 as date to vote on petitions asking the electors to again pass on the dissolution of the district, it did so with the statement made that in event a date was set for the election the appeal would be withdrawn. Withdrawing of the appeal lagged and County Superinten dent Booth wrote to Cole advis ing that unless the appeal was abandoned as had been indicat ed the district boundary board might withdraw the dissolution election. Cole says his letter Is in answer to the county super intendent's answer and "to give proof that a pending appeal has been withdrawn. PTA Meet Opens Eugene, April 26 ( The state Parent-Teacher associa tion opened a three-day conven tion here today. Fish Board Threatens Court Action Against Dam Portland, Ore., April 26 u.R today threatened to resort to tion of the proposed $12,000,000 river. The threat was raised during State Hydro-Electric commission' on the application of the North west Power Supply company to build a 150-foot high barrier athwart the Deschutes to In crease the northwest's dwindling power supply. More than 50 witnesses pa raded before the commission, again drawing the battle lines sharply between fish conserva tionists and power advocates. John C. Veatch, chairman of the fish commission, testified "We would be bound to move in against anyone attempting to block the stream. Oregon has Invested $70,000 on the Metolius hatchery site, above the propos ed dam site. This $70,000 would be a total loss to the state In event of construction of the dam. "Until there is n e w leglsla tion, I see no way the company can take over public land, occu pied by the lUta." U.S. Navy Ships Leave Shanghai Mi KCUi I1CQI 100 Americans on Warships, Communists Nearing Hangchow Shanghai, April 26 Heavy Moscow, April 26 (PI Mob II. S. naval vessels moved out of cow's press published today the Shanghai today as two commu nist spearheads rolled toward the Shanghai-Hangchow area. The communist radio in Pelp- ing boasted two nationalist ar mies, the 20th and 99th, had been wiped out. Two towns. Ithing, 85 miles west of here, and Chingtai, 60 miles southwest of Nanking, were captured, the radio said. The communist broadcast said the NankinR-Hangchow highway had been cut. Government gar rison headquarters said Red ad vance units were around Soo chow (Wuhsien), 40 miles west of here. Reds Capture Ihing Red capture of Ihing, on the west bank of Lake Tai, would mean the communists were half way to Hangchow, where some 300.000 government troops are believed dug in. A rapid thrust south could cut the Shanghai Hangchow corridor. The American ships went down the Yangtze estuary from here to avoid involvement in the civil war. U. S. Consul John Cabot esti mated 100 Americans, mostly women and children, boarded U. S. navy vessels for evacua tion in any emergency. Another group of Americans is expected to board the SS Wil son of the President lines when it arrives tomorrow from Hong Kong. (Concluded on Pure 5. Column I) Churchill Asks For Retaliation London. April 26 (Pi Win ston Churchill angrily told the government today it ought to have aircraft carriers in China water for "effective power of re taliation" against Chinese Com munists who attacked British warships. "This is not a matter of war-fare,"-Prime Minister Attlee re plied in the house of commons, "there is no suggestion of mak ing an attack anywhere at all." Churchill called the shelling of British warships on the Yangtze an "atrocious outrage" and ac cused the government of "throwing the whole burden" of responsibility on naval comman dcrs in China. The sloop Amethyst was disa bled by Communist artillery fire last Wednesday while en route upriver with supplies for the British embassy at Nanking. Oth er ships which went to her aid were heavily shelled and turned back. Attlee gave official cas ualty figures as 42 dead, 53 wounded, and 12 missing. Earlier the foreign office dis closed that Britain got a warn ing from China two months ago that it was unable to guarantee the safety of ships in the Yang tze. A spokesman said he un derstood the warning was sent to a number of governments with ships anchored there. BPA Contract Let Seattle, April 26 (Pi A $289 400 contract for installation of 10 circuit-breakers in the Bon neville Power administration network was granted yesterday to the Pacific Electric Corp., San Francisco. Circuit-breakers will be installed at Kcnnewick Shelton, Olympia, Covington, and Snohomish in Washington, ind Eugene, Coquille, McMinn- ville, and Coos Bay. Oregon The OreRon state fish commission court action to prevent construe Pclton dam on the Deschutes a day-long hearing before the It was explained later that the fish commission feels there is no place below the dam where the company could build a hatchery to replace the present state hatchery. Opponents of the dam out numbered the proponents at the hearing. RBy Kell, attorney for the Or egon State Grange, protested the application on grounds that con servation and irrigation needs were paramount over the pow er needs In the case of the Pel ton dam. Main contention of the oppon ents was that the power short aeg in central Oregon will be filled within one to three years, as soon as new Columbia river dams begin producing power, and that the Pellnn dam there fore Is not an emergency pro)-tct Russia Offers Terms for Lifting Berlin Blockade Hinges on Meeting of Council of Foreign Ministers terms under which the Soviet t'nion offer to lilt the blockade of Berlin. A statement distributed by Tass, the official news agency, said that if an agreement can be reached on a date for a meet ing of the council of foreign min isters, then: 1. The Russians will lift their communications ban, provided the west ends its counter-block ade of eastern Germany; 2. The Berlin currency ques tion, which hampered the four power talks in Moscow last sum mer, can be discussed by the four powers after the commun ications restrictions are lifted. 3. The entire German ques tion should come up for review by the four foreign ministers. Only Holds a Promise Some foreign diplomats here said this offer was the first sign in months that some agree ment might be possible between the east and the west, but they warned against either hasty op timism or undue pessimism. One diplomat said the Soviet state ment "holds a promise" which was worthy of consideration by the United States, Britain and France. (The Soviet statement comes closer than in any previous over tures to meeting the west's de mand that the blockade be lift ed first before any four-power talks can be held on the future of Germany as a whole. The of fer was made public only a few hours after the announcement by the west In Germany that dif ficulties barring the way to a west German government had been cleared away. Russia ve hemently opposes a separate west German state.) Red Press Bids for Peace It would appear here, from the terms of the offer, that a unified Berlin currency no long er is a prime condition for the lifting of communications re strictions In Germany's first ci ty If this be true, it represents a step forward from the point where the four-power discus sions broke down last summer. The three western envoys in Moscow almost had reached agreement with Prime Minister Stalin and then Foreign Minis ler V. M. Molotov, but the cur rency issue blocked the way. All newspapers this morning published the Tass statement prominently but made no edit orial comment, as if waiting for w estern reaction. It seemed significant, howev er, that the newspapers carried the new May Day slogans bid ding for peace with the west. Terms Held to Be Acceptable Washington, April 26 (IP) The United States said today "the way appears clear" for lift ing the Berlin blockade provid ed the Russians' terms actually, are those published by Moscow. The state department got out a 1200-word statement of the American position. It was un derstood the United States, Brit ain and France had discussed the published Soviet terms and had found them acceptable. The only reservation appears to be whether the Russians in tend to propose any further con ditions. The formal stale department pronouncement came after a round of top-level government conferences. One of these was a report to President Truman from Dr. Philip Jessup, the Am erican delegate to the United Na tions Security Council. Jessup had discussed the Soviet propos al at Lake Success, N. Y.. wilh Jacob A. Malik, the Russian UN delegate. For himself Jessup tnld re porters "things look hopeful." That presumably was an indica tion that he inclines to the view that the Soviet proposal Is a sincere one and Hint there are no hidden conditions to be sprung later. THE WEATHER (Released bv United Btates Weather Bureau Forecat for Salem and Vlcln. tlv: Considerable cloudiness to night and Wednesday, and a few shower Wednesday. Little change in temperature. lowest temperature expected tonight, 3S degree: highest Wednesday, fig Conditions will he moMlv favor able for farm work. Maximum yesterday SA. Minimum today .17. Mean temperature yesterday M. which was I above normal. Total 34-hour precipitation to 1130 a m. todav 0. Total precipitation for the month of an Inch which la 1 71 inches below nor mal WHIam.tt river height at Ralem TueadaT morning. S 6 feet. !