Active Water Accounts Pass ROOOMark Department Records Justify City Move for Big Cliff Source Capital jkjJe Celebration Greets Last Hours Of Berlin Blockade As Siege i Lifted 2:01 P. M. Pacific Time 61st Year, No. 112 Knttred u mcod4 cltu nailer tt ftAlim, Otmou Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, May 1 1, 1949 5?aai ; if (24 Pages) Price 5c I Active customer accounts In the city water department have In recent weeks, reached and passed the 10,000 mark, and Wednesday showed a total of 10,065 metered users ot city water. That is an increase of 95 since January, when the total, the highest on record at that time was 9970. The consistent yearly Increase in water consumption and num ber of users seems to Justify the application City Manager J. L. Franzen is preparing to make for an appropriation of water from Big Cliff dam on the De troit project. The Increase has been steady, month by month, over a period of years, and is more than 3000 higher than the figure was -running in 1935 when the city acquired the water system. Ac tive accounts had passed the 8000 mark in January, 1941, and the 9000 mark in January of 1948. Correspondingly the net pro- t action of water, metered ater sales, and monthly rev enue of the department have grown. (Concluded on Pace 5, Column 7) No Change in Ford Deadlock Detroit, May 11 (IP) Negotia tions for settlement of a six day-old strike of 65 000 Ford Motor company employees con tinued today with no outward indication a truce is near. Ford and United Mine Work ers (CIO) officials recessed their peace talks for lunch and said they would meet again two hours later. Asked by reporters if there was any change in the dead locked situation following the two-hour morning conference, Ford Vice President John S. Bu gas replied: "I wouldn't say so." UAW President Walter Reu ther, who is heading the union's negotiating team, declined to , comment. As the talks continued, Ford announced that a total of 90,000 employees will be idle after to day. By tonight, the company said, only four of its 19 assem bly plants will be open. Those are Ford plants at Richmond and Long Beach, Calif., and Lincoln-Mercury plants at Metuch en, N. J., and Los Angeles. Thus only about 16,000 of Ford's 106,000 production work ers still are on the job. 'Truculent Turtle' Completes Flight London, May 11 WV-The U.S. navy bomber "Truculent Tur tle" landed at Northholt airport today, completing i t s flight from America commemorating the first air crossing of the At lantic. Aboard the plane were Rear Adm. A. C Read and Aviation Machinist's Mate Eugene S. Rhoads, who were on the navy flying boat NC-4 when it made the crossing 30 years ago. The Turtle had come via Lis bon on the same route followed by the NC-4. The difference was that the NC-4 ended its flight when it landed in Plymouth harbor. The Turtle circled Ply mouth and went on to London to land. Governor Dewey Arrives in London . London, May 11 u. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York arrived in London without fan fare today and, almost unnoticed, checked into the exclusive Clar Idge's hotel. He drove here from South ampton, where he arrived last night from New York on the Cunard White Star liner queen Mary for a "several-day" stay in Britain and a tour of the conti nent. He was accompanied by his wife, and his secretary, Paul Lockwood. Counties to Get More Yets' Funds The 20 Oregon counties which hire veterans' service officers will get a 10 percent increase to finance these operations July 1, William F. Gaarenstroom, state veterans affairs director, an nounced today. The state now pays 30 per cent of the cost, up to a maxi mum of $1200 per county. On July 1, the amount will be rais ed to 40 percent and a $1600 -iMximum, 3 Prong Drive On Hankow by Chinese Reds Shanghai, May 11 (IP) Chi nese communists, apparently living off the land, bore down swiftly today on coastal Fukien province. At the same time the Red noose around Shanghai was tightened. The nationalist garrison here officially admitted these Red gains. Unofficial reports indicated Hankow, big Yangtze port in central China, may be doomed. A three pronged communist at tack on Hankow seemed to be gathering momentum. Moves Around Shanghai. The Shanghai garrison com munique today gave this pic ture: 1. A Red force of 2,000 men has attacked Kinki in Kiangsi province less than 50 miles from the Fukien boundary. Fukien is opposite the island of Formo- 2. The communists were at tacking Kashan, 50 miles south west of Shanghai. Communica tions with that city were sever ed at dawn. This usually means capture. 3. Thirty miles northwest of Shanghai the village of Chenmo in the Kunshan area was under communist attack. The communique gave no in dication of the size of the two moves around Shanghai. Most actions in that area have been small scale. (Concluded on Pace 8, Column 6) Thomas Favors Atlantic Pact Washington, May 11 VP) ! Spokesmen for the communist and socialist parties took op posite sides today on the North Atlantic security alliance. Eugene Dennis, general secre tary of the communist party, called the pact "aggressive" and told the senate foreign relations committee that this country cannot even pretend to good faith" in negotiations with Rus sia it it is ratified. He argued also that it "com mits the United States o forci ble supression of all popular movements" in signatory na tions. Norman Thomas, veteran lead er of American socialists, argued before the same senate group that failure to ratify the pact might be a tremendous jolt to governments and parties in Europe on which the hope of democracy depends." Though he approved the pact, Thomas cautioned that grave dangers are inherent in it. Thomas said he has received no answer to his question whether military men believe "we can make western Europe invulnerable if the Russian high command should decide that the hour had come to attack." He said American actions may convince the world of our sin cere intent to act against ag gressors and "thus strengthen the morale of our friends and weaken our potential enemies." School Bonds Voted Oregon City, May 11 (IP) School district voters here yes terday approved a $450,000 bond issue, 452 to 42, to erect a 13-room grade school building. The structure will replace the 56-year-old E a s t h a m school which was built originally for less than $9000. Golden Gate Bridge Jumper Repeats Leap San Francisco. May 11 UB sought to arrest Bob Niles, 22 - year 500 feet from the San Francisco of the bay. It was the red-bearded thrill chute leap. On March 26. he Jumped 220 feet from the Gol den Gate bridge into the chan nel connecting the ocean with tht bay. In yesterday's lump. Niles was driven out onto the bridge. With a parachute strapped to his chest and a cigar jammed in his mouth. Niles climbed one of the two huge cables. As he clambered upwards, some painters shouted at him to come back. Motorists stopped jamming traffic on the road way below. As a highway patrol car raced to the scene, Niles took seven minutes to climb to his take off point 250 feet above the roadway, which It another 250, feet above th water. "There was a west wind of, Hirohito Pays High Tribute To MacArthur Bv FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW Tokyo, May 11 ttl.PJ I talked today with the two men who rule Japan's 80,000,000 people and who are charged with re. constructing the war - wrecked nation Hirohito, the emperor, and Gen, Douglas MacArthur, the military ruler. Their views of each other were expressed frankly and freely. Although I was pledged directly to quote neither, I can say that the emperor paid the highest and apparently unre served tribute to the conquer ing general as a man possessed of the quality of grandeur. great administrator and a true friend of the Japanese people in peacetime. Hirohito a Patriot MacArthur regards Hirohito as essentially a patriot, a man devoted selflessly to the better ment of his people. Physically there could hard 1; be a greater contrast than between these two rulers, who lead their respective lives in buildings separated only by a lake and a park. Hirohito is a small, well-built man with a slight forward stoop, sitting rigidly in a chair with the burdens and troubles of em pire plainly showing in occa sional small, nervous manner isms. He would remind you of an expert surgeon or lawyer who is too tired but with the full knowledge of so many hopes dependent upon him he cannot rest. Awaits Peace Treaty I saw Hirohito in the morn ing and the tall MacArthur, re laxing his six feet two inches in an easy leather chair as he neared the end of his regular 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. workday. The general intends to stay and work with and through Hirohito until Japan has a peace treaty. MacArthur feels that the Japanese people generally have done their part well and have been ready for a peace treaty for some time past. However, they, now- are- pawn of global forces, and the treaty when it comes will in effect be dictated by the basic peace in Europe upon which it is dependent. Gilson to Take Sales Census Carl J. Gilson, 418 Dekum building, Portland, will be in charge of the census of business for 1948 in the Salem area. This was announced today. through the Salem Chamber of Commerce, by James Maxwell, business economist with the Portland district of the federal department of commerce, which conducts the census. The cen sus is now getting started, Max well said. No census of business has been made by the department in this area since 1940, which covered the year 1939. The census of that year show ed that sales in Marion county in 1939 totaled $26,884,000, and in Salem $20,279,000. These fig ures are official. Since no census has been tak en since 1940 no official figures are available for later years. Sales Management Magazine, however, estimates Marion coun ty sales in 1946 at $69,500,000 and Salem sales at $52,300,000, and for the year 1947 estimates sales in Marion county at $85, 200,000 and in Salem $64,100, 000. Off Bay Span Angry highway patrolmen today - old ex-paratrooper who leaped - Oakland bridge into the water hunter's second spectacular para about 15 miles an hour," he said. "I let the chute out. It blossomed out beautifully, al most parallel to the bridge. "The lines pulled me off the cable. I swung under, then back clearing the superstructure by a good 35 feet. I guided the can opy away from the bridge and got a 100-foot clearance." lies faced the bridge all the way down, grinning and waving to spectators and performing a somersault for news photograph ers. "When I hit the water 23 sec onds after jumping, I went un der four feet," he said. "It was a strong rip tide, but the chute stayed open. I was in the water tw0 ,n(j a nan minutes." Friends picked him up In a boat. r Llkm Tunnel Excavators Remove Old Fuel Tank When the heating plant for the old capitol was converted from wood to oil 35 years ago this 15,000 gallon tank weighing near five tons was used for fuel storage. E. J. Slick, Salem excavator, now digging for an access tunnel between the new state office building and the capitol, removed the bulky tank with his small Bucyrus-Eric shovel though not at the first attempt. County Of ficestoOperate On Standard Time County offices will continue to operate on standard time until Governor Douglas McKay takes action for the state one way or another as provided under a new legislative act which does not become effective until mid-July. This fact became evident from county court discussion and statements by county officials Wed nesday to the effect that theyf- can pursue no other course leg- ally than to continue to keep their offices open on the basis of standard time and their clocks set accordingly. In fact, it is possible that the town clock on the courthouse tower may continue to record standard time next week when other clocks in the city are shov ed an hour ahead. As it stands now the court Wednesday deter mined to leave this matter in status, quo but -left open "for further discussion." The tenti ment among the three members of the court as it stood today seemed to be in favor of leaving the tower clock on standard time regardless of the action of the city council. But there is no question about other clocks inside the court house remaining on standard time, especially those in the of fices of the County Clerk Harlan Judd and County Recorder Ho mer Lanke. Those officials said that the law plainly provides their offices shall remain open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., and that this means standard time and the law cannot be changed by an act of the city council. So clocks used for accepting filings will be kept also on stand ard time, the officials stating that in the filing of documents time often is of the essence and time on clocks used to stamp filing dates, hours and minutes, as well as seconds on documents will be left unchanged. This in turn will mean the of fices will open and close o n standard time as they do now. In effect they will go to work at 9:30 daylight savings time and the offices close at 6 o'clock day light savings time. The county court left it up to the depart ment heads to stagger the hours of their employes as they see fit in regard to luncheon periods. Judge Murphy said he'd do his eating on daylight savings time as he didn't like to take his noon hour lunch by himself. And whatever happens the county oiling crew will be kept on standard time. Commission er Rice said that the oil doesn't loosen up until about 9 o'clock and if a switch over was made the crew would have to wait an hour getting started and work an hour overtime in the after noon at a time and a half in pay. "If the governor orders us to do this after mid-July then we'll go ahead and do it," he said, "but until he docs the crew will stay on standard time as usual." THE WEATHER (Released by United State Weather Bureau) Forecast lor Salrm and Vicin ity: Generally lair tonight and Thursday. Little change In tem perature. Lowest temperature ex pected tonight, 47; highest Thursday, .near 82. Conditions will continue favorable for farm work Thursday. Maximum yes terday 81. Minimum today 4ft. Mean temperature yesterday 63 which was ( above normal. Total 34-hour precipitation to 1 1 :30 a.m. today 0. Total precipitation for the month 1.53 Inches which is .71 of an nch above normal. Willamette river height at Sa lem Wednesday morning, a fret. Columbia Rises Moderately Portland, May 11 UP) The Snake and Columbia rivers con tinued to rise moderately today with snow-melt cascading into the tributaries. Streams in north cen t r a 1 Washington wthe only . area where damage is expected con tinued to swell as warm weather went into its sixth consecutive day. Elmer Fisher, weather bureau river forecaster, said the lower Snake and middle Columbia would continue to rise for at least two or three more days. The Columbia will be near the 15-foot flood stage at Vancou ver tomorrow, exceed it Friday and crest at 18 feet Sunday, he said. The 18-foot stage at Vancou ver means further flooding of lowland pastures but no impor tant damage, Fisher said. The Willamette In Portland harbor also will reach 18 feet, which is flood stage, Sunday. No damage results at that level but an additional rise would cause evacuation of some of the lower dock installations. The north central Washington area from Lake Chelan north to Canada may have severe flood ing. Fisher said. Already a bridge has been closed by the Twisp river and a road in Me thow valley is covered. There is danger of severe ero sion damage, Fisher said, U.S. Attitude Toward Spain Washington, May 11 (IP) Sec retary of State Acheson said to day Franco Spain must go a long way toward restoring basic civ il rights before it can hope to be admitted into the family of free European nations, Acheson told a news confer ence the United States considers the issue of relations with Spain an International family matter on which European agreement is needed. For this reason he said the United States will con tinue to abstain from voting In the United Nations general as sembly on a resolution to re turn ambassadors to Madrid. Acheson referred to the Fran co regime as patterned after fascist Italy and nazi Germany. He said it is still fascist. The secretary's review of pol icy toward Spain followed up criticism of the state depart ment's stand by Chairman Con nally (D.-Tex.) and ranking members of the senate foreign relations committee. Franco Spain, Acheson said, has denied such fundamental human rights as habeas corpus, trial by Jury, religious liberty and free association. He said these are the same rights which make the difference between free Europe and the iron curtain countries. Demos to Oust Mike DeCicco Portland, Ore., May 11 U.PJ W. L. Josslin, chairman of the democratic state central com mittee, today said the state exe cutive committee would meet here May 21 "to oust Mike De Cicco as state treasurer of the party." Josslin said the move was prompted by "resentment all over the state in democratic circles" over the Gearhart in cident. DeCicco reportedly was beaten at his beach home in Gearhart by a group of sailors. DiCicco said the men were friends of woman employe whom he had discharged. Josslin said party leaders have tried to arrange a meeting with DeCicco but that he had "given us the runaround." The state chairman declared the committee would recommend that DiCicco be removed and an upstate war veteran put in his place. Josslin said the executive committee had full legal power to take this step, but if neces sary he would call a session of the full state committee. Supporting the move to oust DeCicco, according to Josslin, were: Mrs. Joada Leonard of Kla math Falls, vice chairman of the state committee; Volney Martin, secretary; Monroe Sweetland, national committeeman; and Nancy Honeyman Robinson, na tional committeewoman. British Advisor Shot by Burglars Berlin, May 11 (IP) Sir John Shcehy, British military govern ment financial adviser, was shot to death last night when he sur prised two burglars in his home, officials announced today. No arrests have been made. British officials here said Sheehy's wife telephoned police shortly after the shooting She told them that Sir John heard a noise in his home, lo cated at Vlotho, near Bad Sal zuflen, in western Germany and went to investigate. Moments later he fell, fatally wounded. Unwedded Parents Marry Vera Cruz, Mex May 11 Wi One hundred unwedded par ents were married here yester day in a mass ceremony cel ebrating Mother's day. Their 300 children attended the wed ings at City hall. One couple said they had lived together for 43 years. Tanana Ice Nears Break-up With $185,000 Pay-off Near Ncnana, Alaska, May It U.B The Ice broke In the Chcna slough at 8:29 p.m. (PST) last night sending a floe-choked stream surging towards the mighty Alaskans lined the shore waiting for the record $185,000 payoff in the famous annual Ncnana ice lottery. The slough is located in the heart of Fairbanks and usually breaks a day or two ahead of the Tanana river. Old-timers predicted that the ice -locked Tanana would start moving within 24 hours Max Willard or Anchorage won the $6,800 Junior pool when the Chena slough broke up. He gursed the ice would break at 8.32 p.m. the closest to the ac tual time. The biggest payoff in the his tory of the ice classic will go to the lucky person whose guess is closest to the actual time the Tanana itself begins moving to wards the sea. A tripod, situated about 285 I feet out in tha river is attached All Military Jrains Reinstated Along With Freight Trains, Trucks, Autos and Barges Allied Counter Blockade Also Lifted Berlin, May 11 OP) The last hours of the Berlin blockade ticked away tonight In a spirit of celebration and deliverance from avanta which brought the east and west The end of the 327-day siege of after midnight, which is equivalent to 2:01 p.m. in Pacific Standard Time. Trains and trucks lined up near the border between the British and Russian tones of Germany. The dropping of roadblocks will start them along the 100 miles ot Russian-con trolled territory that makes an The First American military Berlin Express," left Frankfurt a.m., FST) The express Is due German time tomorrow. The U. S. army announced that ated to and from Berlin as of March 1, 1948, will be reinstated. They will operate from Munich," Frankfurt and Bremerhaven to Berlin. Sixteen freight trains were ready, along with scores of trucks, automobiles and barges. The trains from the west carry coal and food the things that the 2,000,000 western Berliners have gotton only through the might of the American-British airlift in the last 10 months. Counter Blockade Relaxed At the same time the western powers will relax their counter blockade. Under that they kept goods from flowing into west ern Germany from the eastern (Russian-controlled) zone. But it is the Russians who take a diplomatic defeat out of the Ber ling blockade; western leaders say the Russians, not reckoning with the airlift, thought they could squeeze the west out of Berlin. Gen. Lucius D. Clay eommen ted today; "The west's stand showed the determination of the free tions not to yied in the face of pressure. This undoubtedly re sulted in renewed confidence of the people seeking a free way of life in Europe." Like a County Fair The American military gov ernor declared the Germans. tested by the blockade, had shown a willingness to fight for their freedoms for the first time since 1933. It was like county fair day at Helmstedt. the British zone town which is the main gateway for transportation entering the Rus sian zone enroute to Berlin. Traffic Jammed the ancient. winding streets. Five passenger cars arrived on the railroad from Frankfurt, to be attached to a British military train from Biele feld. The train will move across the zonal border at 2:13 am The American cars carried al most 100 news and radio corres pondents, photographers and of ficials. Rail Strike Averted A threatened strike of Ger man railway workers was aver ted. The workers' leaders said their demands that the wages of those who work in east Berlin but live in west Berlin be paid in west marks had been granted. Dismantling of brick and me tal barricades erected by the communists started today. Squads of German women, led by blue uniformed police, were doing most of the work. The Soviet headquarters an nounced the long-severed elec trical supply to west Berlin from Russian sector power plants woud be resumed, and that the western areas then could have as much current as they need. Postal Service Restored Post offices in both the west ern and Soviet zones of Ger many said they were making fast progress with plans to re store service disrupted by the blockades. Soviet zone canal locks have been readied to handle barges from the west "without fric tion," an announcement said. The Soviet army newspaper Tacgliche Rundschau described the easing of restrictions as a "contribution to peace." Prac tically everybody in Berlin agreed. (Conrludrd on Page 5. Column II) Tanana river where hundreds of by wire to a clock. When the tripod moves the clock will stop and spring officially will have come to Alaska. As sourdoughs, Checchakos. miners, Indians and fishermen waited tensely on the banks of the Tanana, the waters of the Chena began cutting into the big river's ice cap. It still could be the latest break-up In the record of the classic. The Tanana has never moved later than May 16. When the Ice breaks this year, residents will receive a few sec onds warning of the payoff time A new and unique siren system will be set off when the tripod moves one foot. j almost to the brink of war. Berlin was set for one minute island of Germany's greatest city. train for Berlin, the famed at 5:30 p.m. German time (7:30 to reach Berlin at 8:15 a.m.. all military trains which oper Acheson Talks On Conference Washington, May 11 (IP) Sec retary of State Acheson Indi cated today that success of the coming Big Four conference on Germany will hinge on how fai the Russians will go along with plans already laid out by the. western powers. He told a news conference the United States intends to de mand full guarantees of civil rights for the German peopla and will not accept any propo sals which do not provide foi such guarantees. Acheson also made this state ment, later authorizing direct quotation: "Whether a solution can bt reached in Paris depends, ol course, upon the willingness ol the Russians to make or considei proposals which will not retard in any way whatsoever tht great progress which has been made by the western powers in their effort to bring as much ol Germany as possible into a con dition where it can be a peace ful and constructive member ol the community of free nations in Europe." The meeting of the Big Foul foreign ministers opens al Paris May 23. In setting the limits of Ameri can maneuvers at Paris, Ache son went further than any top American official had gone to suggest publicly that if majol compromises are to be made foi agreement on Germany they will have to be made by Russia. Maguire Says Russ Licked Communism Portland, May 11 (IP) Th Russians themselves licked com munism in western Germany. Robert F. Maguire, Portland at torney, said today. Maguire has just returned from Nuernberg where he was I member of the military tribunal trying 21 nazis on war crima charges. "The attitude of the Russians and tho magnificent work per formed by the airlift have soli dified every element of society against communism," he said in an interview today. He said the best results In re building Ge r m a n y can b achieved by "spending a lot ol time on the young people. It it too late to try much in the way of educating the older genera tions which have lived through two hard wars." But, he added, uppermost in the minds of tha people there is the idea of build ing a government that combine! authority and responsibility and no dictator. Justice of Peace Can't Teach School A justice of the peace can't leach in the public schools, At torney General George Neuner ruled today. Neuner pointed out that tha constitution prevents any per son from holding positions in more than one branch of the slate government. A Justice of the peace is in the Judicial branch, and the school system is part of the administrative branch of government. The opinion was requested by William Bennett, district attor ney for Gilliam county. Ford Goes Fast There is nothing like being tops in your field and thit little Capital Journal Classi fied Ad has the dubious dis tinction of having sold the 'Cleanest car in town ! '.1 man CM'B roup. Clrsnrst tar tn town. HAH. flionr 1-ltst. GET (M ICK RESULTS Phone 2-2406 CapitalJournal II cr uh fer rrtr.