THE WEATHER HERE CONTINUED FAIR and warm tonight and Thursday except for morning fog and cloudiness In coastal area. Lowest tempera ture expected tonight, 55; high est Thursday, 90. Maximum ytsterday. Mi mlnimnm to day. 63. Total rainfall ait si hoara, tt for montb. Ot normal, ,ZS. Seaion precipi tation, 41.611 normal, S7.S1. Blrer heliht, . toot. Ml HOME EDITION ,0 isMa 61st Year, No. 165 Entered u aeeond elasr matter at Balem, Ores oil Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, July 13, 1949 (20 Pages) Price 5c Krug Opposes CYA Northwest Referendum Secretary Says Issue Should Be Decided by Congress, Not People Washington, July 13 U.R - Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug today opposed a referendum of northwest states on creation of a Columbia valley authority. Krug told the house public works committe the issue should be decided by congress because it was a national as well as a 1 1 -.L1nn. lUUcti IJLUUXCIll. i He supported legislation to create a Columbia valley au thority, and said the people of the northwest are unanimous in wanting speedy development of the Columbia River basin. He said it could be done best under a single authority rather than under the combined efforts of the reclamation bureau, army engineers, and Bonneville pow er administration. Government Unduly Alarmed . Krug said the governors of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana were unduly alarmed about an authority. The authority, he said, would not usurp state jurisdiction over any activity. He said the bill was designed to protect states rights over their re sources. If congress found the states were not protected, he said, the language of the bill should be changed. Krug declined to make an es timate of the overall cost of the project, but said he thought it would take from $200,000,000 to $300,000,000 a year to carry out the program. Chairman William M. Whit- tington, (D., Miss.), asked if it was true that the federal gov ernment had done more to de velop this area than any other section of the country. Comparison With TV A Krug said in dollars spent that might be true", but comparative ly the Tennessee valley was 90 per cent developed compared to 10 per cent for the - Columbia alley. , As far as hydroelectric power Is concerned, Krug said, "the Columbia river is our big un developed source." "That basin, in dollars spent, has not been neglected in com parison to other areas," Whit tington replied. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 6) 75 Pints Blood Donated Here Salemites donated 75 pints of blood during the visitation of the bloodmobile from the Port land regional blood center, Tues day a sum far short of the goal of 100 pints but a good showing for so warm a day, the mobile unit officials said. A total of 108 persons signed up to give blood, but there were many rejections. Of the 108 signed to give blood, 14 were replacements by persons who wished to give in return for blood that had been given their families and friends The replacement total was a gratifying gesture for the Red Cross chapter. Although re placements are not required, the .blood being given free of charge to all in need of it without re striction, those who can are en couraged to line up replace ments. Two residents from Turner who had brought in children for the "learn to swim" campaign dropped in to donate blood, say ing they believed that was the least they could do in appreci ation of the service. The Tuesday visitation was marked by the record made in keeping appointments. Hereto fore, many who signed failed to show up when the unit came, but yesterday practically every person signed to give blood kept his appointment, the Red Cross office reported. Next visitation of the blood mobile to Salem will be on the second Tuesday of August. Mark Julius Johnson Dies Astoria, July 13 Mark Julius Johnson, 67, prominent Clatsop county dairyman and former legislator, died Monday of a heart attack. He was president and a found er of the Lower Columbia Co operative Dairy association, a school director and member of the legislature from 1928 to 1932. The widow, two sons and two daughters survive. Strike Ordered in Steel Mills at Midnight Friday Affects All Plants Not Accepting Truman's 60 Day Delay Offer Pittsburgh, July 13 VP) The CIO United Steelworkers today accepted a presidential proposal to avoid a steel strike for 60 days. But Union President Phil ip Murray said he would call strike tomorrow, effective at midnight Friday, against those companies who declined Presi dent Truman's proposal. The walkout will be effective at midnight, Friday, July 16, said CIO President Philip Mur ray. Murray said he had no defi nite information on which com panies would be struck but that they appeared to- be the U.S. Steel Corp., Republic Steel Corp., and Bethlehem Steel Corp. "as far as my present in formation goes." Only one steelmaker Jones & Laughlin has accepted Pres ident Truman's proposal. The giant U. S. steel corporation, the nation's top producer, Bethle- nem and Republic all have re jected the white house proposal. A strike embracing 500,000 union workers was threatened for this week-end, at Friday and Saturday midnight. President Truman had proposed a 60-day contract extension while an un official fact-finding board in vestigated the issues. . Unionist's Viewpoint A highly placed unionist said after the executive board's act ion that: "The picture now looks as If our truce will be effective only with those concerns which go along with the president. The picture may change but that's the way it looks now." The union's 170-man wage and policy committee must ratify the executive board's action. This ratification was expected at a meeting this afternoon. CIO . President Philip Murray announced the executive board's decision. Murray told a news conference after the executive board meeting that "when the wage policy committee acts to day we will officially notify the president of our decision." 3 Referendums Shy Signatures Portland, July 13 OT Old age referendum backers claim ed success today, but the day- ugni saving reierendum was still short of the needed signa tures. The other two referendums on the Rogue river dam and the electrical contractors', licensing bill appeared doomed. Joe E. Dunne, old age pension leader, said 16,981 signatures have already been certified on the old age referendum. A total of 15,926 signatures are needed to submit laws to referendum, and prevent their going into effect until the elec tion of 1950. The daylight saving referen dum was 5,000 certified names short, but sponsors who had other names ready for certifica tion still hoped to meet the deadline. W. J. Smith, who headed the drive to halt construction of a Rogue river dam, reported "very, very bad" prospects for the success of his referendum. Senate Prunes Power of Public Power Projects Washington, July 13 OT The biggest reclamation program yet has been approved by the senate appropriations committee for the year which started July 1. But the committee which reported a $590,685,911 interior department money bill to the senate announced that it pruned several controversial puduc pow- er projects from the reclamation bureau plans. Gone from the bill as it was passed by the house were funds for the Central ''alley "west side" transmission lines and steam plant, the Kerr-Anaconda power line in Montana, two power lines on the Colorado-Big Thompson project in Colorado, a power line and switchyards on the Anderson ranch dam project in Idaho, and several proposals of the southwest power admin istration. Cutting deep into the power program advanced by the inter ior department through several of its agencies, the committee indicated that, if private utili ties will promise to do the job of delivering government power Plane Crash Fatal to 26 Rescue workers examine, the crumpled and twisted wreckage of the C-46 airliner in which 26 persons were killed. The plane crashed into Santa Susanna pass, 20 miles north of Burbank, Calif., where the plane was to have landed. Standard Airlines, which operated the plane, listed 43 passengers and five crew members aboard the plane. Seven minutes before the plane crashed, the pilot radioed Lockheed Airport tower that two men were fighting on the plane. (Acme Telephoto) New Laws Raise Fees for Visits to Courthouse By DON UPJOHN Starting Saturday as new laws go into effect it's going to cost people visiting the courthouse on certain missions more money and in some cases more troubles. Fees for recording papers both at the clerk's and recorder's office will be upped from 75 cents a page to $1 a page. Those se- 1 curinff came or fish licenses Thomas for Cut In Army Funds Washington. July 13 OT belief that Russia will avoid war any time soon was offered by Senator Elmer Thomas Okla.) today as "the underlying reason" for cutting appropria tions for the armed services. I think everyone agrees right how that Russia is in no condition for another war," Thomas told a reporter. "Not too lone aeo. we were told we might be bombed any minute. Thomas called a closed-door session, starting at 9 a.m. EST, today, of a senate appropria tions subcommittee to act on funds for the army, navy and air force for the next 12 months. 'I think we can safely cut $1,- 500,000,000 and perhaps a lot more out of this bill as it passed the house," Thomas said. The house approved just un der $16,000,000,000 in cash and contract authority for the arm ed services in this biggest of all regular appropriations. Deliberations of the senate subcommittee may take several days and then they will be re viewed and subject to change by the full 21-member appropri ations committee, before going to the senate. William O'Dwyer Will Run for Mayor New York, July 13 OT Mayor William O'Dwyer announced to day that he will run for re-elec tion. The mayor said at a news con ference: I deem it my duty in the best interests of the city to run for re-election." The announcement came day after the democratic mayor conferred with President Tru man in Washington to preferred customers of the government, it is willing to give them the chance. Following are among the amounts voted by the commit tee for Pacific reclamation proj ects. House figures are shown in parenthesis. Columbia basin, Wash., $70, 034,390 (59,075,000); Deschutes, ore., $176,700 ($153,000): Des chutes Arnold irrigation district, ure., $3,uuu ($32,300); Des chutes Ochoco dam, Ore., $1,- 150,000 ($977,500); Deschutes Grants Pass, $100,000 (house al lowed nothing; Klamath, Ore. Calif., $803,460 ($850,000). Dis approved by the committee was a request for funds to construct the Canby substation in Ore gon. will pay an extra dime on all licenses costing under $5 and an extra two-bits on licenses cost ing over $5, this added fee to go into the county general fund to cover license issuing costs. On January 1 next year licenses themselves will go up from $3 to $4 for hunting and fishing li censes and from $5 to $7 for combination licenses, plus the dime and two bits. A change made in the laws covering reporter's . fees .In cir cuit cbu'rt' which heretofore were $10 a case or $10 a day, are now changed to $10 for more than half a day and $5 for half a day or less and an added $5 for transcribing notes. After July 15 when microfilms are made of public records they will be made in dual rolls in stead of- one, one of these to be kept at the courthouse and the other stored outside. County Clerk Harlan Judd says the pro ject going on for several months to microfilm probate records up to 1923 will be finished a few hours ahead of the deadline so he will avoid necessity of doing part of that in dual film Under a change in marriage license laws any person in the armed forces may have a medi cal examination by a physician in the public health service or armed forces. Price of securing a certified copy of a birth certificate from the county records will go up from 50 cents of $1 and also will go into effect a law putting re cording of delayed birth certifi cates into the circuit court rath er than into the probate journal. (Continued on Page 5, Column 8) Army Building Bill Hearings Washington, July 13 OT Hearings open today on a $623, 000,000 military construction bill which would pour more than $195,000,000 into the na tion's Alaska and Pacific de fenses. The house armed services committee called witnesses on a giant army, air force and navy program to improve and enlarge bases' around the world. Tucked away in it was per haps the smallest proposed mili tary purchase on record. One section would allow the navy to buy a part of the Oahu rail road in Hawaii for $1. The bill would authorize the three services to spend approxi mately $383,000,000 in this country and about $240,000,000 on bases abroad. It also would set up an unidentified $14,529, 000 special weapons project for the army. No money would be made available by the bill. It would only grant the services permis sion to spend the money when they could get it. The actual money would have to be voted by congress in a separate ap propriation bill. The bill would concentrate about $130,000,000 worth of building by all three services in Alaska. I Truman on Radio At 5:30 P.S.T. Washington, July 13 (IP) , President Truman is going to sit down tonight and tell the Amer ican people about his prescrip tion for heading off a depres sion. He wants to get over to them his idea that there is nothing to be scared about in the moder ate economic decline unless folks get panicky. And he wants to defend the fiscal policy of his administra tion against criticism by some members of congress. The president will talk to the nation over four major radio networks via television from a desk in the movie projection room at the White House. This first major so-called "fireside chat" by Mr. Truman this year is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. (Pacific Daylight Time). The talk, White House aides said, will be an elaboration of his midyear economic report to congress on Monday. In this he scrapped earlier demands for $4,000,000,000 tax increase and proposed an 11-point program to expand. production, employment and purchasing power. . ine tneme of that message was that the country cannot have prosperity "by getting ad justed to the idea of a depres sion by cutting investment or employment or wages or essen tial government programs." Demos Revolt On Farm Bill Washington, July 13 OT A rebellion broke out in demo cratic ranks today against the administration-supported farm bill. This threatened to defeat even three-crop trial run for the controversial Brannan plan of production payments or subsi dies to support farm prices. Rep. Gore (D., Tenn.), usu- ai(y an administration support er, announced a bi-partisan group and some farm leaders are drawing a substitute bill to continue the present farm pro gram in 1950. The present program supports major crops at rigid 90 per cent of parity, through government loans and purchases that remove price-depressing surpluses from the markets. Parity is a price calculated to give farmers a purchasing power in fair rela tionship with the prices of things they must buy. Gores bill would reject the Brannan production payment plan entirely and set aside the Aiken law enacted by the republican-controlled 80th con gress and scheduled to become effective next year. The Aiken law permits a flexible 60 to 90 per cent of parity support pro gram for major crops. Aiken contends, however, that rigid supports could be maintained under the law. Rural Phone Bill Passed by House Washington, July 13 OT The house today passed legislation designed to provide better rural telephone service. The bill now goes to the sen ate. The measure allows the rural electrification administration to make long term loans to private companies or cooperatives to build and extend telephone fa cilities in rural areas. The interest rate would be 2 per cent, the same amount now charged on REA loans for elec tric lines. Reps. Allen (R-, 111.) and Brown (R., Ohio) tried to hike the rate but failed. Allen proposed 2.5 per cent, Brown 3 per cent. . Pilot of California Flying 2000 Feet Bodies of 40 Recovered in Bombay Crash Bombay, India, July 13 OT The rain-soaked underbrush on Ghatopar hill today yielded the bodies of 40 of the 45 persons killed yesterday in the flaming crash of a Royal Dutch (KLM) airliner on Bombay island. mirteen of tne dead were American news correspondents. The bodies of all but one of the correspondents Fred Colvig of the Denver Post have been identified. Hundreds of police slogging through monsoon rains contin ued the search for the five miss ing bodies. Luggage aboard the ill-fated plane has been recov ered. On 800 Foot Hill The plane, a Constellation, crashed on the 800-foot high hill while preparing to land at an airfield 15 miles north of Bom bay. Controller of Airdromes Shumshere Jung said the field was "perfectly okay" at the time of the crash and that other air craft had made takeoffs a short time before. ( The American consulate re ceived instruction from the U. S. state department to have sev en of the bodies of the corre spondents cremated at the re quest of relatives who want the ashes sent to them. In Hong Kong, Mrs. Dorothy Brandon of the New York Her ald Tribune, denied that she had refused to board the plane be cause she had feared it would be sabotaged. (Continued on Page 5, Column S) Reuther Seeks Control of (JAW Milwaukee, July 13 OT Stronger than ever and starting his newly-won third presidential term, Walter Reuther sought to day to make absolute his con trol of the CIO United Auto Workers. This goal was regarded by ob servers at the union's conven tion as a possibility but no cinch. All four top officers won hands-down re-election late yes terday over weak, left-wing op position that was only a ghost of another faction that once dominated the million - member UAW. Reuther overpowered W. C. Grant, ex-president of the big uord local 600, by a 12 to 1 margin. The final but unofficial vote count was 8,080 to 672. Reuther will hold his post un til the next convention in April, 1951 some 20 months hence. His three top aides won their second terms about as easily. Secretary-Treasurer Emil Ma zey beat out James Lindahl of Detroit Packard local 190. Richard T. Gosser and John W. Livingston held onto their vice presidencies with resound ing defeats of William H. John son of Detroit and John De Vito of Cleveland. All four candidates who ran against the Reuther slate were nominated by a group of left wingers some of them admit cd communists known as the "progressive unity caucus." assssasaaaassssaauuwujBaBaBaaaaa Liml i rr I, jTi I liii l'i ii'i n'Iflf India Crash Victims Fred Colvig (left) of the Denver Post and George Moorad (right) of the Portland, Ore., Ore gonian, were among the 13 American news and radiomen aboard the Royal Dutch Airlines Constellation which crashed neary Bombay, India. Besides the newsmen there were 31 other persons aboard the plane all of whom were killed. (AP Wirephoto) CAB Inspector Asserts Fight Between Passengers Had No Bearing on Santa Susanna Crash Chatsworth, Calif., July 13 (U.R) Pilot Roy G. White was 2009 feet below officially prescribed altitude when he smashed a C-46 Commando into the Santa Susanna mountains with loss of 34 of its 48 occupants, civil aeronautics board Inspector James Peyton said today. ' "I think I know why he was too low, but I don't want to say why until we complete our investigation and hold a formal hearing," he said. He snid he was convinced a fight between two passengers had no bearing on the crash. The plane, owned by Standard Airlines, a non-scheduled line, crashed and burned in Santa Susanna pass yesterday morning as White was coming in for a landing at Lockheed air terminal, Burbank. 33 Bodies Recovered Ventura county deputy coro ner, John Bragg, said 33 bodies have been recovered. Fourteen injured were identified and one passenger was unaccounted for and presumed dead. The air line said that one of the origi nally reported 49 occupants Lois Tucker apparently failed to board the plane at Kansas City. Peyton said he and his inves tigators would spend "another two or three days" digging through the charred wreckage strewn among the boulders in an effort to confirm his opinion of why White was flying at 1600 feet instead of 2500 as prescrib ed by the CAB. Approach Held Normal "Everything else about his ap proach was normal," Peyton said. "He came in on the right leg, contacted the control tower at the proper points, lowered his landing gear as prescribed, and made the correct procedure turn.' He added that visibility was adequate, pointing out that California Central Airlines pilot in the air awaiting his turn, to land was able to see the burn ing wreckage of White's plane from the prescribed altitude ofi 3500 feet. "The reports of a fight aboard the plane have a place in our thinking, of course," Peyton said, "but from our interview with survivors we're sure it had no bearing on the crash. It wasn't too big a fight, and it was over long before the crack-up." Identifying Bodies Deputy Coroners Bragg and Frank Watkins concentrated to day on identification of the 33 recovered bodies. They said some may never be identified positively because they were so badly burned and mangled. Another phase of the invest! gation was scheduled by District Attorney Arthur Wait, who planned to interview Charlotte Grenandcr, stewardess on duty when the New York-lo-Long Beach, Calif., plane crashed at 7:50 a.m. yesterday. Jennifer Jones Weds Selznick Portoflno, Italy, July 13 (U.R) Jennifer Jones and David O Selznick, American movie star and her producer-boss, were married today aboard his yacht off the Italian Riviera. Capt. Ernest Stround, skipper of the yacht Mcnona, performed the ceremony. It climaxed months of speculation over when the actress and the producer would be married. Their off-again-on-again plans had kept the gossips guessing. Airliner too Low Negro Lawyer On FEPA Board By WILLIAM WARREN Oregon's only Negro attorney, Ulysses Plummer, today was named to the seven-member ad visory committee ordered by the 1949 legislature to counsel the commissioner of labor in his handling of Oregon's new fair employment practices act. Gov. Douglas McKay an nounced the appointment of Plummer, five other men and one woman all from Portland to the commission. In making the announcement. Gov. McKay said he was "most hopeful that the committee's ef forts will lead the way to an era of real progress in this im- protant field of labor relations." Public members named by the governor are Plummer, who for merly was assistant district at torney at Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. J. H. Thomas, prominent in Portland church and WCTU ac tivities, and David Robinson, lawyer, president of the Port land City club and a leader in northwest Jewish affairs. Other Members Labor members are Al Me. Cready, newspaperman (Oregon ian) and chairman of the Ore- gonion unit of the CIO Ameri can Newspaper Guild, and S. P. Stevens, 9th district vice presi dent of the International Asso ciation of Firefighters, AFL, and member of the executive board of the Portland Central Labor council. Business and industrial man agement will be represented by Herald Campbell, personnel manager of Pacific Power and Light Co., and Francis Kern, one of the state's highest Catho lic laymen and owner of the Ea gle Lumber Yards of Portland and a Portland sash and door plant. Acheson Raps Arms Bill Cut Washington, July 13 OT Sec retary of State Acheson today flatly opposed any cut in the ad ministration's projected $1,450,- 000,000 foreign arms aid pro gram. He said this figure represents the absolute minimum needed for western Europe and other areas. The secretary stated his posi tion at a news conference while opposition led by Senator Taft (R., Ohio) was wiping out pros pects for a quick senate vote on the North Atlantic treaty. The small group opposing the defense agreement centered their fire on the military aid program and the commitments carried in the pact. Acheson also commented on another issue which has arisen on Capitol Hill. He agreed with Senator Dulles (R., N. Y.), that the United Stales delegation at the Big Four foreign ministers' meeting in Paris had considered whether the American people should be kept "artificially alarmed" and had rejected the idea completely. The matter came up, Acheson said, in discussion of whether the Russians might try to create a false sense of peace and se curity by making a show of co operation. The U. S. delegations, he added, decided that it should not reject any possible avenue of cooperation with the Soviet Union merely because accept ance of the avenue might relax tension in the world. Majority Leader Lucas (D., 111.), said he may keep the sen ate in session Saturday to reach a vote on the 12-nation alliance