Drums, Bugles, Fireworks and Drills End Show Foreign Envoys Warned to Avoid Bulgar Premier G apital A Jouitssj World Leader Of Reds Dies 61st Year, No. 157 entered u iscond elui matter at Salem. Oreflou Salem. Oregon, Saturday, July 2, 19' P1 - Price 5c I Festival of '49 to Close ,With High Features Saturday Night " Cherryland Festival V Program Saturday, July 2 '. 8 p. m. Finals of Drill team and Drum and Bugle Corps contest at State Fairgrounds grandstand. Fireworks Dis play. Nightly public dances at 'Oregon State Fairgrounds grandstand beginning at 10 p.m. ' BY MARGARET MAGEE , Bugles and drums will be heard from the Oregon State Fairgrounds and fireworks will 'light the skies Saturday night When the final program of the 1949 Cherryland festival is pre sented. .Preliminaries to the statewide drill and drum and bugle corps contest that completes the fes tival program were held in the afternoon at the fairgrounds and in the evening only those ln,f- finals will compete. -'Queen Patricia and Princesses Dorothy Neufeld, Jeannine Bentley, Katherine Specht and Grace Kirk are to arrive at the grandstand at 7:40 Saturday and will be escorted to their boxes by members of the Cherrian Council of Nobles. .'At 8 o'clock the grand entry parade will start. Color guards will be from the Navy and Ma rine corps reserves here and be hind them will be the massed colors of most of the patriotic and fraternal organizations from Salem and the surrounding area. .(Continued on Pag 5, Column 1) Second Deputy Detroit Area Sheriff Denver Young Satur day announced addition of a new f deputy to his force which by shifting one now employed in 4hp nffinp will tfivp an Additional man in the Detroit-Idanha area. . The move is made possible by year which became effective on . Friday. Under the arrangement Sam B. Tice, resident in the veterans' housing project at 1210 South 18th street, is named as an ad ditional deputy who will take over the 3 to 11 o'clcok shift yhich has been handled by Dep uty Scott. Scott will be assigned to work with Deputy Sheriff Larry fright on the Detroit-Idanha fatrol. The office is acquiring new radio equipped car so both of the men on the canyon run ftill have cars with two way ra dios. The sheriff said their de tails will be worked out later but he added the men will some times work together and some times in separate patrols as may be deemed expedient. The budget committee had made provisions for an extra $15 a month for a deputy if he re sided in the Detroit-Idanha area but the sheriff said it is imposs ible to secure a man to accept ,the job on that basis as he could inot make ends meet, if The new deputy, Sam R. Tice, tis a native of the Willamette Jvalley and has lived in this area most of his life. For three years he was in the criiminal in vestigation department of the 'army in the Mediterranean area and is but lately home from Ger imany. Eugene Building Eases ! .' Eugene, July 2 WP) Building permits in Eugene during June ..covered construction of 37 new residences, but the valuation to tal was a relatively slim $294, !545. The total was lower than Hhe $329,105 recorded in May '.and far below the June 1948 to tal of $748,955. 1 n A f 1 iper Following its estab lished custom of 29 years' standing, the Capital Journal will ob serve Independence day as a complete holiday for its employees, The Capital Journal will not be published Monday, July 4, and the office will remain closed all day. N REX KIMMELL, appointed Marion circuit judge. U. S. Deficit Near $2 Billion Washington, July 2 VP) A big government revenue setback stuck President Truman today with a 1949 fiscal year budget deficit of $1,811,440,047.68 three times greater than the $800,000,000 he had predicted. Because of the huge size of the federal money figures the presi dent was off only 3.5 per cent in overestimating government in come by $1,334,000,000 for the 12 months ended Thursday. Mr. Truman's estimates were made last January. The president missed the spending figure only 310ths of 1 per cent, but it was enough to throw him off $123,000,000. Ac tual expenditures ran that much less than he'd counted, easing the effect of his revenue overes timate. The key figures, given roundly in a year-end treasury compila tion, were: Spending $40,057, 000,000, up $8,255,000,000 over the preceding year and a new peacetime high; revenue $38, 246,000,000, down $3,965,000, 000 and at a five-year low. An 18.5 per cent rise in spend ing and a 9.4 per cent drop in revenue converted the budget outcome from an unprecedented surplus of $8,419,000,000 in fis cal 1948 to a $1,811,000,000 def icit in the fiscal year just over. Gunman Killed By Own Weapon Los Angeles, July 2 IP) A man who attempted to hold up a couple in a car parked in near by Baldwin Hills was shot and killed by his own gun, police reported today. The couple, Alwyn I vers, 19, of Oklahoma City, and Betty Bowen, 16, were to have been married today. But in the strug gle Ivers was seriously wounded by a bullet which penetrated his jaw and neck. The gunman, with a handker chief over his face and carrying a revolver, approached the car and demanded the couple's mon ey. He also ordered Ivers from the machine. When the gunman turned his back, Ivers jumped on him. In the struggle Ivers was shot. But he wrested the gun from his as sailant and felled him with a shot through the head. Miss Bowen dragged her wounded fiance to the car and, although she didn't know how to drive, she managed to guide the car down the hill to a service station. The unidentified bandit was dead when Miss Bowen directed police to the scene. Convict Shot, Wounded In Futile Escape Effort Shots heard in the East State street district Saturday morning were not due to a premature celebration of the Fourth of July but were fired by guards at the penitentiary at James Wren, 27, who was making an attempt to escape. Wren spent but a comparatively few minutes outside the wall before he was returned to the prison hospital with a severe leg wound which is described as "not serious." The convict was captured by Capt. R. G. Howard, of the Ore gon state police, who had just arrived at headquarters to re port for duty at 8 o'clock. Wren was with a work crew under a prison gun guard re porting for construction work upon the new prison wall when he darted from the gang, heading for some brush and trees along Mill Creek. John D. Smith, prison guard, is credited with the shot that struck Wren high up on the in side of his right leg. The wound failed to stop the fleeing prisoner and though other shots were fir ed at him he presented a poor target in the brush. Kimmell Named Circuit Judge By Gov. McKay Deputy Attorney Gen eral Chosen to Suc ceed Judge Page Rex Kimmell, deputy attor ney general has been designated as circuit judge 01 Marion county bv Gov. Douglas McKay. Kim mell will succeed Judge E. M Page, who earlier this week was elevated to .the .state .supreme court, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Justice Fercy K. Kelly. Kimmell was born July 18, 1896 in Albion, Indiana and won his law degree from the Univer sity of Idaho in 1923. He served as district attorney of Valley county, and came to Portland in 1927 where he was a law partner of George Neuner, present attor ney general. Later he served as assistant attorney general when Neuner was appointed head of that of fice in 1930. Kimmel entered the state attorney general's office in 1938 as an assistant and was ad vanced to deputy under a 1947 law designating the office as the department of justice. He served in the navy .in the first World war and has been ac tive in Legion affairs, having served as commander of Capital post No. 9, Salem and judge ad vocate of Marion voiture, No. 153, 40 et 8. He is also a mem ber of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and a Mason. Kimmell is a member of the American, state and Marion county bar associations, and has long been a member of the Ore gon Republican club. In a written statement an nouncing the appointment, Gov ernor McKay lauded his appoin tee declaring "to my mind Kim mell's background particularly qualifies him for the office of circuit judge." "While I was a member of the legislature," the governor stat ed, "I became familiar with KimmeH's work'with that body and believe I can say without re servation that he has the whole hearted support of every member of the legislature who came in contact with him." It was reported that the Mar ion county republican commit tee had forwarded an endorse-1 ment of District Judge Joe Fel ton for the circuit judgeship. - It is expected that Judge Page will be able to conclude his work on the circuit bench and take his oath as associate justice ear ly next week when Kimmell will become one of Marion county's circuit judges. 560 Mile Pipeline To NW Proposed Salt Lake City, July 2 (IP) The Salt Lake Pipe Line com pany, owned by Standard Oil of California, hs called for bids on a 560-mile oil products pipe line from Salt Lake City to the Pacific Northwest. President C. E. Finney, Jr., said yesterday the $6,000,000 320-mile first leg of the line from Salt Lake City to Boise, Idaho, is scheduled for comple tion this year. Later the line may be extend ed to a terminal in western Washington on the Columbia river, he said, . with the total cost exceeding $12,000,000. Capt. Howard had not yet parked his automobile when he heard the shots. Driving out to the highway he noticed the run ning man, with a knife in his hand. Wren was down Mill creek near the state forestry building and had started over a rock wall. Capt. Howard did not have time to bring his vehicle to a stop and it continued into the wall, causing some damage. When Wren saw the officer near him, he dropped his knife and surrendered. Capt. Howard turn ed his prisoner over to the guards. Wren was under a five year sentence for assault with intent to rob and was received at the penitentiary in 1946 from Lake county. r b s f H EJM- WIS I K I Balloon Busting Event Thrilling One of the thrills at the Cherryland Festival horse show at the State Fair grounds Fri day night was the balloon busting event. In the above scene the center rider is Sherman Bostrack of Salem. The other two are from a Linn county saddle organization. Children of Salem Stage Own Colorful Parade Children of Salem had their and not only were they many participants but there were any number of outstanding entries. Leading the parade was a color guard of three Sea Scouts and immediately following was Queen Patricia and her royal court -on their float. The Eagle's Jun Nevada Locusts Invade Oregon Reno, Nev., July 2 m The largest single band of the west ern range locusts in modern times is eating its way north and west from Nevada into Oregon and California. - . v. - Harry E. Galloway, -field-supervisor for the state department of agriculture, said the name western range locust was ap plied to the migratory grass hoppers because a more precise technical name is not available. The band, 75 miles long and 40 miles deep, has penetrated into Oregon's southern Harney county for 35 miles, and into California for 15 miles. Nevada's hopper band is the only migratory one in the coun try, experts said. Those infest ing other parts of the country, notably Colorado, Montana and Wyoming, will live and die in a relatively limited area. The Nevada horde has moved 350 miles in the last 10 years. They were first found in 1937 in southern Nevada. In 1938 they started moving into the prevailing winds and have pro gressed in a northwesterly di rection. When wartime put a halt to control measures, their numbers increased rapidly. They fly only by daylight and Galloway said, sound like the roar of a distant waterfall or the rumble of a fast freight train. CIO Official May Take Post in Korea Portland, July 2 W) Stanley Earl, state CIO secretary since 1943, may go Korea as labor ad viser to the economic coopera tion administration. Earl was offered the post, but he said he has not decided whether to accept it. "It does not look too good in Korea just now," he remarked, mentioning the civil war and as sassinations. Should he decide to go, the state CIO convention in October would nominate candidates to succeed him. A referendum election would follow. -, During the interim until the convention, a temporary suc cessor would be appointed by the t-io state council s execu tive board. WEATHER (Released by United States Weather Bureau) Forecast for Salem and Vicin ity: Continued fair tonight and Sunday. Little change in tem perature. Lowest temperature expected tonight. 45 degrees; highest Sunday, 85. Conditions will be favorable for farm vork. Maximum yesterday 77. Mini mum today 45. Mean tempera ture yesterday 60 which was 6 below normal. Total 24-hour pre cipitation to 11:30 a.m. today 0. Total precipitation for the month 0 which is .03 of an inch below normal. Willamette river height at Salem, Saturday morning, -1.7 feet. own parade Saturday morning ior Drum and Bugle corps, Boy Scouts, Camp Fire Girls and Sheridan Rodeoettes followed, Next came the various divisions of the parade. Largest group entered in the parade were the students from the Paul Armstrong School of Dance. The children, all of whom participated in the Thursday night revue, were all in costume. To "Puss in the Well" entered by June Laue, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Laue, went the loving cup, awarded the best l-entryi Other children with- June and her puss which hung in a wooden bucket over a well were Nancy and Beckie Rudin, Luanne and Connie Pawley, Wil lis Holscher and Phillip Klaus. King Bing and Queen Anne of Cherryland (John Wesley, III, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Wes ley, Jr., and Toye Fae Esch, a daughter of the Verne Esches) took first place in the imperson ations division and placing first in costumes was a couple, dress ed as negroes from the deep south. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 3) Truman Urges Cut in Expenses Washington, July 2 OT Pres ident Truman told government agency chiefs today they must do their housekeeping more cheap ly and efficiently. He sent them a letter order ing cooperation with Jess Lar son, boss of the new general services administration, in gov ernment purchasing and house keeping operations. Mr. Truman asked each agen cy to plan its requirements for supplies, equipment, materials, and all other personal property carefully "in order that neces sary stocks may be maintain ed at minimum levels and high- cost small-lot purchasing avoid ed." Larson was directed to see whether present policies on buy ing and selling property for the government should be modified or revoked "in the interest of promoting greater economy and efficiency." The general services adminis tration was created two days ago under a reorganiaztion law auth orizing it to take over the func tions of the federal works agen cy and all its adjuncts, the war assets administration, the treas ury's department of federal sup ply and office of contract settle ment, and the national archives. Larson is former chief of WAA. Farm Labor Supply In Valley Adequate Oregon's farm labor supply is adequate now after a few minor, scattered shortages, the state em ployment service reported today. The cherry and berry picking seasons will gradually taper off in the next two weeks, and the Willamette valley snap bean and Eastern Oregon wheat harvests then will take the available la bor supply, the report said. Salem Merger Votes Scheduled If the city of West Salem votes this month, or any time this summer; to merge with the city of Salem, it is probable the peo ple of Salem will vote on the merger in late summer or early fall. This was the opinion today of Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom on being informed that the West Sa lem election petitions have been completed and the election date set tentatively for July 26. The election date depends on action by the West Salem city council. The names of only 34 certi fied names were necessary on the West Salem petitions to call the election. The petitions filed with the Polk county clerk had 63 names, and the county rec order has informed the West Sa lem authorities that 61 of them have been found legally quali fied to sign. Although more names are not needed the circulation of peti tions is continuing to show pub lic support of the merger move Mayor Walter Musgrave of West Salem announced Satur day that Friday night, July 8, at 7:30 o clock, a town meeting will be held at the city hall to give the people complete infor mation about the advantages of merger of the two cities. "It will be a question-and-an- swer meeting," Musgrave said. 'The West Salem city council will all be there, of course, and the whole Salem city council is invited." Musgrave said that Mayor Elf strom, City Manager J. L. Fran- zen and City Attorney Chris J. Kowitz of Salem have all said they would be present. Holiday Death Toll Starts Off With 49 (By the Associated Pre.su) Violent accidents took 47 lives at the start of the nation's three- day Fourth of July holiday. Thirty-two persons died in traffic accidents since 6 p.m. (local time) Friday. Eleven drowned, and four were killed in miscellaneous accidents. The national safety council has estimated that 290 persons will lose their lives in highway accidents over the three-day period. It figured that some 33,000,- 000 .automobiles will clog the highways leading to vacation lands and resorts. Last year's three-day Fourth of July death toll was more than 500, of which almost 300 were traffic fatalities. United Air Lines Traffic in Salem at Record Pace United Air Lines' only possible response to the Civil Aero nautics, Board's proposal that West Coast Airlines service be sub stituted in Salem for that of facts ana ligures tne board decision. That is the message received here by the Salem manager, Hal Sweeney, from W. R. Thigpin, assistant to the president of UAL. It was Indicated that the ques tion is whether Salem should be served by feeder airlines or con tinue to be served by a trunk line and that this is only part of an overall CAB program for the year as indicated in a statement to this effect issued in February. While the CAB ponders the question of the type of airline that is' to serve Salem, business for UAL in Salem continues on the upgrade. The day following the an nouncement in Washington by Slovakia Riots New Ban Placed on Western Diplomats By Czechs Prague, Czechoslovakia, July 2 (P) Foreign diplomats have been warned by the government not to make any unannounced trips into Slovakia, scene of bloody rioting between Roman Catholics and communist offi cials. The foreign ministry said it would be a "demonstrative" act against the Czech government and gross interference with in ternal affairs of Czechoslovakia" for foreign diplomats to travel into Slovakia without prior no tice. This new ban against west em diplomats at least was disclosed in the foreign minis try's rejection of a diplomatic protest against police detention of Msgr. Gennaro Verolino, charge d'affaires of the papal nunciature in Prague. Red Policeman Killed The announcement said "pres ent circumstances" in the strong pro-Catholic eastern province made the restrictions necessary. Informed church and diploma tic sources said last night that at least two communist policemen were beaten to death and an un determined number of persons injured during recent clashes in Slovakia between Catholics and government adherents. Meanwhile the communist government moved to take over the big national religious holi days which start today and ex tend through Tuesday. They will be marked by Cath olic pilgrimages and celebrations honoring the missionaries, Sts. Cyril and Methodius, and the monk, St. Prokop. Huss Memorial Day On July 4 the nation also marks the burning at the stake of the religious reformer, John Huss, in 1415. This holiday has been moved up from July 6 to make a compact week-end and save a working day for the "peo ple's democracy." Verolino s case is believed to have set a precedent restricting travel of foreign envoys here. Heretofore there have been patrols on roads between Slova kia and Bohemia-Moravia, but usually cars with diplomatic or foreign license plates were wav ed through. Storm Kills 2 In Galveston Galveston, Texas, July 2 (fP) Galveston counted two dead today after a thunder squall with winds up to 75 miles an hour raked the island city late Friday. As the coast guard stopped us hunt for persons who had been reported missing, a navy "hur ricane hunting" plane was sent from Miami, Fla., to check re ports of the first tropical storm of the season some 300 miles southwest of New Orleans. The weather bureau at New Orleans said, however, no trop ical storm has formed in that area. Leroy Bushers, 18, was drowned when winds blew him from a raft. His uncle, C. E Emmert, 50, died of a heart at tack while rescuers worked on the youth. Jimmie Jones, 12, who had been reported missing, was found safe after a half day search. Cmdr. E. T. Harding, officer in charge of the navy hurricane weather central, said the "area of suspicion" appeared to be a touch of squally weather ex tending roughly from 150 to 300 miles south of New Orleans. But, the bureau said, no trop ical storm has formed in the area and there has been little movement of the squally condi tion. What slight movement there has been, the bureau said, has been to the west or south west. UAL is to cooperate in supplying will need to arrive at a proper the CAB of the proposal that gave the capital of Oregon a questionable airline status. Unit ed Air Lines made its largest single air express shipment from Salem. The shipment, made by the West Mushroom plant to Ran cho Canneries at Sunnyvale, Calif., was 2000 pounds. The mushroom company at the same time indicated that it would continue to have large shipments and that as soon as proper packaging machinery is received it is planned to have monthly shipments averaging from 20,000 to 30,000 pounds. These are to be made by air ex press out of Salem and will go in half pound packages. Dimitrov Was Most Important Communist Outside Russia London, July 2 CP) Georgl Mikhailovich Dimitrov, premier of Bulgaria and one of the fore most leaders in world commun ism, died today, Moscow radio announced. He was 67. He had been a lifelong revol utionary, an exile, trusted agent of Soviet Prime Minister Joseph Stalin, a principal defendant in the German reichstag fire trial in 1933, and probably the most important communist outside Russia. Mikhailovich Dimitrov The announcement distributed by the Soviet monitor here said death was due to diabetes. Dim itrov had been under treatment in Bordikha sanitarium near Moscow for nearly three months. Granted Leave for Illness He was granted leave from the premiership in April to ob tain the treatment. Vassil Kol arov. vice-premier and foreign minister, became acting premier at that time. The highest councils in Russia, the central committee of the Soviet communist party and the ministers of the U.S.S.R., made the announcement of death. They said it caused them pro found grief. Dimitrov was an exile from Bulgaria for 22 years because ol his early revolutionary life but he remained an obscure figure until he was accused of engin eering the reichstag fire conspir acy. Hillcr, just risen to power when the reichstag building in Berlin burned the night of Feb. 27, 1933, put the blame on com munists. Acquitted in Berlin Dimitrov confounded his judges and eventually was ac quitted. The fire mystery never was cleared up. Hitler's gang was accused by anti-nazi sources of setting the fire and trump ing up charges against the com munists to serve their own pur poses. Dimitrov went to Mos cow. (Concluded on fage 5, Column 8) McKee Bridge Open to Traffic The newly established McKe bridge on the Gervais-Monitoi road was opened for traffic Fri day and the old bridge which. has been handling the situation while the new one was installed was blocked off and will be torn down as soon as the bridge crew can get to it, reported Counts Commissioner Ed Rogers. This steel structure is o n I which served on the Facifi highway at Aurora for manj years and when traffic becam such a new and wider structuri was needed there the state sold the old bridge to the county al five cents a pound for the steei it. The bridee was still ir. perfectly sound condition and ii expected to serve indefinitely in its new location with its newly installed concrete deck. A considerable fill is required at each end of the road but thos installed are of a temporary na ture. On the west end there will be a realignment of the road which will necessitate part ol the fill now put in being chang ed when the new road is ready. On the other end also a tempo rary fill was put in to allow a farmer to salvage his crop which was part of the agreement when right of way was secured. Th permanent fill on that end may be put in this, year but it ij doubtful if the road can be re aligned and a new road estab lished there until another sea son. Cop Refunded Dime Portland, July 2 (Pi Patrol man Harris Lyle went to the rescue of two 10-year-old girls last week they had lost part ol their carfare. He gave them five pennies. Today he had a thank-you letter, addressed to "Mister No. 49" at police head quarters, signed "Maureen." En closed was a dime. s-; ' , 'I