Capital THE WEATHER HERE . CONTINUED FAIR and Kin' tonight and Friday. Patches of fog in coastal area. Lowest tem perature expected tonight, 55; , . highest Friday, 95. ' Maximum yceteriUr. Vt: minimum to- ,.- dj, 65. 24-hour preolpHatlon. 0; for month. 0; normal. .28. Seaion precipita tion. 41.61; normal. SUi. Hirer belrht, -!. feet. usal HOME EDITION (VP"" m 61st Year, No. 16 Entered u second elau matter t Salem, Oresou Salem, Oregon, Thursday, July 14, (24 Pogesj Price 5c Strike Holds-up Construction In Salem Area Teamsters Out at c i r i i r junu, varuYci unu de merit Mixture Plants f- Building construction in Sa lem is seriously handicapped, and the city's street improve ment program for the year is In danger of bogging down because of a wage dispute that has idled four of the main materials pro ducing concerns here. Involved in the dispute is Lo cal 324 of the Teamsters union on one side, and on the other r producers of sand, gravel and cement mixtures. No progress toward a settlement had been made today. The Warren Northwest com pany, which has the contract for' paving Salem streets, has closed down its plant on Cherry avenue because it is unable to get ma terials from the sand and gravel companies. With approximately 50 blocks of unimproved streets remaining under the contract the street improvement program is at a standstill. Contracts call for part of the program in ce ment and part in asphaltic con crete or blacktop. Street Paving Halts The only alternative for the Warren Northwest company is to haul "hot stuff" from its plant at Albany, but it is doubt ful if it would be willing to do that, because of added cost, since its contracts with the city call for delivery from the local plants. The city itself builds the curb ing for improved streets, and for the first time in eight years the city, is operating its own con . crete mixer, for the reason that the ready-mix concerns are una ble, because of the labor tie-up, to deliver under their contracts. For the setting of standards for the pew lighting , installa tions on downtown streets the city is bringing "hot stuff" from the Albany plant of the Warren Northwest company, and mak ing five or six trips daily.?' (Continued on Page . 5. Column 8) Russia Incites Japs to Revolt Washington, July 14 (U.R) American officials said today that Russia is attempting5 to use the Japanese labor movement to incite a Red revolution in Japan. They said this is clearly evi dent by recent communist-inspired demonstrations in Jap anese cities, statements by So viet officials, and return to Japan of thousands of Soviet- indoctrinated Japanese war prisoners who pledge allegiance ,q communism. ' The openness of the Russian tactics and their ultimate aims have become a source of seri ous concern to the United States, officials said. They attached the broadening of the commun ist campaign to recent commun ist successes in China and eco nomic unrest in Japan. The fight between the United States and Russia over labor policies in Japan resulted in a new clash yesterday, between meir representatives on tne ii nation far eastern commission, The commission drafts occupa tion measures for Japan. Gen. Frank R. McCoy, Ameri can representative, told Soviet Ambassador Alexander S. Pan- yushkin that despite his "demo cratic phrases" and the state ments of other Russian officials, this government believes recent cases of mob violence in Japan "are not designed to protect the rights of labor or to advance democratic tendencies." Attorneys to Vote On Federal Judge Portland, July 14 W Attor neys throughout the state will be queried by the Oregon state bar on their preference for pos sible appointment to the pro posed third federal judgeship in Oregon. President Walter H. Evans, Jr., said the board of governors believes the bar of Oregon should seek the most qualified person for the work. He said the vote would be by secret ballot. The recommendations would be forwarded to President Truman Evans said the bill creating a third federal judgship for Ore gon may go to the White House in two weeks. Communists I Stirred to Anger By Pope's Edict Excommunication of Reds Warns of No Compromise Rome, July 14 UP) The pope's excommunication of commun ists stung the communist-controlled press of Europe to vio lent reaction today. . The Vatican disclosed last night that Pope Pius XII has cut off from the sacraments and comforts of the fair all Roman Catholics "who make profession of the materialistic and anti Christian doctrine of the com munists." The action was a stern warn ing that the church will not compromise with communism. Called Act of Hatred II Paese, communist - line newspaper in Rome,, called the decree "an act of hatred" and the official Italian communist newspaper, L'Unita, said the or- Pder "crowns a violent provoca- tory campaign of the Holy See aonincf raflir.Ho url-in In nnt in tend to submit to its political di rectives. . Italy is an overwhelmingly Catholic country in which the communists officially number more than 2,000,000, and the pa pal decree could have a telling effect here. The communists have swung 000.000 vntpx in the nnsturar elections in France, also a pre dominantly , Catholic country, where the warnine of the DoDe to the faithful to avoid exDosine themselves to communist doc trines and writings, also could have a heavy effect. The concern the communists apparently feel in France is re flected in the official French communist newspaper L'Huma nite. In an angry attack on the Vatican, tne newspaper termed the decree "pure' totalitarian ism." Held Last Warniiir '' The decree, announced by the sacred congregation of the holy office which is in charge of pruiecung me iaitn and ap proved by the pontiff is inter preted by Informed Vatican sources to be a last warning to tamoiics wno may be leaning lowarn rnmmumem The decree marks the fourth time the nnne Vine ueari AvnAw. munication to ficht har-k- of the communists in recent years. x-revious decrees had been directed nt thn wrm tiori sentenced Archbishop Alojzijc oiepinac in Jugoslavia In 1946, at those resnnnsihlo tn 4ha prisonment of Hungary's Josef wniuiuai imnaszemy, ana at the founders and willing members Of a SeDaratifit ffnvonimanknn trolled Catholic action society in zecnosiovaKia. Pork Price Un Chicago. Julv 14 Pl Pnrlr in the hoof sold up another 50 cents a nunared pounds today and matched the highest price paid since last December 27. The top was $23.00, paid once before tnis year, on January 5. Norblad Again Protests Salem Airline Changes Another protest was made this to the Civil Aeronautics board west coast Airlines service for gon's capital city. In addition to the second protest, which was accompanied by a copy of the Capital Journal- editorial of July 1 entitled "A Threat to Salem's Air Position," the CAB proposal was drawn to the attention of the house of rep resentatives and included in the Congressional Record of July 1. In drawing the matter to the attention of the house Rep. Nor blad commented: "This nation-wide carrier has furnished our state capital of Salem with excellent service since it was instituted in 1941 and has carried an ever-increasing pay load from the city. It seems utterly foolish for the Civil Aeronautics board to even consider substituting that serv ice for one by a carrier which could furnish feeder service only." With this statement was also recorded the editorial of the July 1 dateline which compared the service offered by United Air Lines and that which could be offered by West Coast. It also drew attention to the position that United had in de velopment of industries in Sa lem, as well as showing the Truman Attack On Economists Irks Congress 1 President in Fireside Chat Again Urges Deficit Spending Washington, July 14 VP) President Truman's sharp at tack on "selfish interests urging drastic cuts" in federal spending collided today with both demo cratic and republican criticism in congress. So did his assertion that many people would like to have a de pression "for political reasons." On the other hand, Senator Pepper (D., Fla.) called Mr. Tru man's arguments "reasonable commonsense and full of prac tical justification." The president spoke out last night in telling the nation abou his new program designed to ex pand production and avert a more serious business slump He went on both the radio and tele vision. "Selfish Interests" "We shall have to be sure." the president said, "that the self ish interests, do not drive us in to the ditch, as they have done before." As he did in the economic re port he sent to congress last Monday, Mr. Truman said: "We are not in a depression." Many people who talk of a depression, he said, would like to have one "for political reasons." But he added that the increase in the number of people out of work "is something to worry about, and something that must be cured." The president again lit into the republican-ruled 80th con gress of 1947-48 for cutting in come taxes. He criticized it, too, for refusing to enact the anti- inflation program he wanted then but now has abandoned because, he said, of changed con ditions. (Continued on Page 5, Column 7) Poles Stampede To See Portrait Warsaw, Poland, July 14 W) The official Polish press agency blames the Roman Catholic hierarchy for circumstances leading to the death of a woman and injuries to 19 other persons in a stampede to witness a "weeping virgin" portrait in Lublin. , - The agency, organ of the com munist-led government, said yesterday Catholic leaders had "deliberately" encouraged a mass pilgrimage to the eastern Polish city. A throng of 100,000 Poles from all over the country, be lieving that prayer before the portrait would bring miraculous cures, swarmed around the Lub lin Cathedral, the agency report ed. In the stampede a wooden stockade collapsed, killing the woman and injuring the others, the agency said. Government officials said persons spreading rumors about the reported miracle would be prosecuted. The agency chareed that the Catholic hierarchy had allowed nuns and priests to lead the pil grimage. week bv Rerj. Walter Norblad on the proposed substitution of that of United Airlines in Ore increased UAL business in the city. The editorial ended with the suggestion that West Coast not be substituted for UAL but be permitted, possibly, to serve aalem along witn United. In support of the CAB sub stitution proposal, West Coast Airlines officials have asked the Chamber of Commerce that they be given a hearing locally. A meeting is to be arranged for some time next week. Request for the meeting was made by H. A. Munter, execu tive vice president of West Coast in Seattle, who asked that he be permitted to tell the city more about West Coast Airlines The meeting, time for which is to be set by the West Coast officials, will be attended by Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom, City Manager J. L. Franzen, mem bers of the city council, mem bers of both the airport commit tee and the board of directors of the Salem Chamber of Com merce and by newspaper rep resentatives. ran " ' I J f CP Wreckage of Crashed Dutch Airliner Indian rescuers probe the crumpled wreckage of the Royal Dutch Airlines Constella tion which crashed north of Bombay, India, carrying 45 per sons, including 13 American newsmen, to their deaths. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Bombay via London) Fire Menace in Oregon Extremely Dangerous Portland, July 14 W) Fire jumped over cleared trails on Gunbarrel creek today and roared out of control beyond 5000 already-blackened acres of south central Oregon pine forests. The 200,000-acre Tillamook burn of northwestern Oregon often-burned powderkeg of the Pacific northwest was closed to entry . as temperatures soared' and humidity fell. The Gunbarrel creek fire Malheur national forest, 35 miles northeast of Burns, was one of 34 set off by a Monday night lightning storm. It was the only one in Oregon not con trolled quickly. Guy Johnson, forest service regional fire dispatcher, said the Gunbarrel situation was ex tremely serious." Little mer chantable . timber,:1 however, ... is in the immediate area. ' ; "We are sitting on a powder keg throughout the state," he said. :, v The weather bureau, which sent its mobile forecasting unit to the Gunbarrel creek area last night, reported "high to ex treme fire danger in Oregon for ests all over the interior of the state today and tomorrow, with increasing fire danger in the coastal range." Five hundred men were on the fire lines today in Malheur forest 220 of them sent last night from the Nyssa farm la bor camp. Johnson said communication with fire fighters had been poor and that a radio team had been sent in to set up reporting sta tions. However he said fighters re ported today's weather was "a bad burning day" and the only hope lay in light winds. The winds have been variable. Most of the fire's shift has been toward the southeast since its start. If it moves north or north west, valuable stands of mer chantable timber will be in haz ard, Johnson said. Jap General Gets Hard Labor for Life Manila, Philippines, July 14 (U.R) Lt. Gen. Shigenori Kuroda was sentenced today to life im prisonment at hard labor for the more than 2800 atrocity deaths of Americans, Filipinos, and other allied nationals while he was Japanese commanaer-in- chief in the Philippines. A Philippine military com mission, in passing sentence, held him responsible for 2873 specific atrocity deaths and countless additional cases of murder and torture between May 1943 and September 1944 The thin, graying, 65-year-old general pleaded innocent. Sheriff Goes to FBI School; Hits' Cowseye' Centralia, Wash., July 14 VP). Lewis county Sheriff Frank Thayer recently returned from the FBI school at Washington, D. C, where he grew very pro ficient at hitting bullseyes. Yesterday he chalked up a cowseye. A cow being unloaded at a packing plant near here, scat tered plant employes, jumped the fence and headed for the city. Thayer brought the galloping animal down in one well-placed shot. Yangtze Valley Land Submerged Nanking, July 14 (IP) The populous, rice rich Yangtze valley from the mouth of the river 300 miles inland today was under water in its worst flood since 1931. : :.- J s. Farm lands on both sides of ftne huge Tiver in some places 40 miles wide were submerg ed. Authorities blame the flood on .heavy rainfall rather than on poor drainage west of China's mountains. There were no figures avail able here on crop damage, the number of homeless and casual ties officials said they were loo busy strengthening dikes to bother gathering statistics. Anhwei province was hit hardest. The river was about 40 miles wide from Wuhu, 65 miles southwest of Nanking, to An king, 90 miles further south west. The rice crop appeared a to tal loss in that area. In North Anhwei from An king to Tsao lake, a distance of 100 miles, the countryside was mostly under water. Ten thousand peasants were reported marooned at Haikow, just west of Anking. No Relief in Sight From Heat Wave The season's first real heat wave for the Salem area con tinues with prospect the mer cury will hit 95 Friday. The thermometers registered a maxi mum of 92 degrees here Wed nesday, and Thursday started out as if to better the mark, the morning minimum being 55. Forecast is for continued fair weather and warm temperatures tonight and tomorrow. The Wednesday mean was 72 degrees, five above normal. Meanwhile, Salemites seek to find ways to keep cool. Swim ming parties for the youngsters, picnics for everybody, and cer tainly plenty of time alloted to water gardens and lawns are keeping loyal folk busy. Russia Withholding Manganese. Chrome Washington, July 14' (IP) Rus sia withheld manganese and chrome shipments to the U.S. in May for the second consecu tive month, the census bureau reported today. Both metals, essential in turn ing out high grade steel, are considered so vital by the gov ernment that it buys them for stockpiling against a war emerg ency. A Russian cut-off of mangan ese for the U.S. in retailiation for the 15-month U.S. ban against shipment of "war poten tial" goods to Russia had been threatened since last fall in So viet dealings with private importers. Low Flying Caused Crash Los Angeles, July 14 VP) Ci vil aeronautics board . officials say that low flying and not a fight caused the crash and ex plosion of a non-scheduled air liner which cost 35 lives and in juries to 14. Stewardess Charlotte Grenan- der, 23, told authorities yester day that the scrap aboard the Standard Airlines' twin-engine C-46 Commando was only e one-punch affair. She said it oc curred an hour before the crash in the rugged Santa Susanna mountains 30 miles north of downtown Los Angeles Tuesday. She named Frank Conway, Albany, N.Y., who was killed as the man who struck his seat- mate. Miss Grenander added that there was no trouble after the pilot, Capt. Roy G. White, came back and talked to Con way. .;, .,(".. -: ' James N; Peyton, regional CAB chief, said the aircraft was on course for an instrument ap proach landing at Lockheed air terminal, Burbank, but was 2000 feet too low. He said a smashed altimeter registered 1940 feet. Peyton added that low fog may have obscured the pilot's vision, although fog was not be lieved to have been abnormally heavy. Salem Banks to Keep Open Saturday Salem banks will not take ad vantage of the Saturday closure permitted under a law passed by the 1949 legislature. Officials of both the First Na tional and the Ladd and Bush branch of the United States Na tional banks said Thursday that the banks of the state had not yet reached a decision as to whether the Saturday closing would be adopetd. It was stated at the First Na tional bank that there might possibly be extended hours rather than any curtailment of hours and it was not contem plated to take advantage of the Saturday closing law. M orse Balks on Dulles For Foreign Committee Washington, July 14 VP) A proposal to place New York's freshman Senator John Foster Dulles on the senate foreign rela tions committee kicked up a political storm in republican ranks today. Senate leaders are discussing mittee to make room for Dulles, GOP foreign policy expert, un til his appointment expires in December. But Senator Morse (R., Ore.), has served notice he is "fight ing mad" and will call a special party conference to oppose any such move. He insists, friends say, that he is in line for the next seat on the foreign rela tions committee. Senators would not discuss the stormy situation publicity but in private they gave this account: , Democratic leaders apparent ly had agreed to make room for Dulles on the appropriations committee one of the most powerful groups in the senate. Some members of the demo cratic steering committee thought the matter was settled But then a proposal to put Dulles on the foreign relations com Truman to Set-up Steel Fact Finding Board if Big 3 Cooperate or Not Senate Group Approves Four Hoover Plans Washington, July 14 (IP) The senate expenditures committee today in effect approved four of President Truman's plans for re organizing government agencies. The members looked over and raised no objections to plans for: 1. Strengthening the top man agement of the post office de partment. 2. Transferring the national security council and the nation al resources board to the execu tive office of the president. 3. Making the chairman of the civil service commission respon sible for the operation of the ci vil service programs, within re gulations made by the commis sion. 4. Revamping the operating activities of the maritime com mission by vesting executive authority in the chairman. The plans will go into effect August 19 unless the senate or house votes disapproval before then. Democratic leaders tried to day to get an agreement for a senate vote Saturday on the North Atlantic pact. Senator W a t k i n s (R-Utah) blocked it. Watkins said he would not agree to a vote before next Wednesday. (Continued on Paje 5, Column 7) Russians Clear Army Convoy Berlin, July 14 (U.R) -The Rus sians, ending their slowdown of western traffic, cleared a 60 truck U.S. army convoy for Ber lin in quick order at the American-Soviet zonal border today. The convoy reached Berlin this afternoon without incident Soviet authorities suddenly ceased their slowdown tactics at the Helmstedt check point on the super-highway to Berlin late last night. It looked to many like a Soviet facing-saving ges ture to avoid an embarrassing showdown when the U.S. army convoy arrived. When the convoy arrived at the cheek point, a Russian sol dier took a paper handed him by Maj John L. King, Jr., of Carrollton, Mo., gave is a cur sory glance, returned it and waved on all 60 trucks. A 10-truck British army truck convoy also was waved through after guards glanced briefly at the commander's papers. Unarmed American military police were escorting the Amer ican convoy along the entire 110-mile route through the Sov iet zone of Germany. They were in constant radio touch with American headquarters in Ber lin. The food carried by the trucks totalled only about 125 tons a drop in the bucket toward meet ing the real needs of the 4,500, 000 persons in the western sec tors of Berlin. enlarging the 13-member com mittee was made. One senator said Senator But ler (R., Neb.) chairman of the republican committee on as signments went to Majority Leader Lucas of Illinois to ask about Dulles' committee assign ments. "Lucas suggested if Dulles was only going to be in the senate until December," he said, "then perhaps the foreign relations committee should be enlarged to 14 to make room for Dulles." Butler then went to Senator Morse, it was said to see if he would accept this proposal and Morse exploded an angry "Nor Morse has long wanted to be a member of the foreign policy group and has insisted that the next appointment should be a senator from the west coast which has no representative on the committee. Strike Order to Be Issued to Apply to All: Firms Rejecting Truce Washington, July 14 VP) The- White House said today that President Truman will set up a steel fact-finding board to-. morrow whether or not the "big three" producers yield to nis ' pressure for them to go alung with his plan to avert a strike Saturday. Charles Ross, presidential press secretary, announced this after saying nothing has been heard from Mr. Truman's latest message to the three companies. There was no hint from Ross , as to who the president has in mind for the board a group whose findings and recommenda tions -may be decisive on the issue of whether millions of American workers are to have a fourth round of post-war wage increases. Truman Urges Plea Asking United States Steel, Republic and Bethlehem to re consider their rejections of his plan to submit the wage-pension dispute to a sp e c i a 1 inquiry board for a recommended solu tion, Mr. Truman told the three: 'Surely you are not afraid to . have your side of this dispute examined in the public inter est." While some smaller steel firms and the CIO United Steel Work ers union accepted Mr. Truman's plan, the big three had contend ed it by-passed Taft-Hartley law procedures for strikes imperil ling the nation's health or safe ty. Philip Murray, president of the CIO and its steel union, said, he will issue a strike order to-, day to apply to all steel firms ' rejecting Mr. Truman's plan for a 60-day strike truce. Refuses to Use TH Law Mr. Truman, in asking the three to reconsider -yesterday, said it was his opinion the pres-- ent situation "does not const!-, tute such an immediate peril to the national health or safety"'. nr. J ...... t . .. rri ri .. 1 geney strike clauses. An inquiry board named un der Taft-Hartley lacks power ; to recommend a dispute solu tion, as the president said his three-man board will have. However, both the president" and Cyrus S. Ching, director of' the federal mediation and con- ciliation service, stressed neith-. er the companies nor union would be expected to accept any solution suggested by Mr. Tru man's board. Ching said it was hoped the recommendations could form a basis for settle ment. Britain Slashes Dollar Buying : London, July 14 VP) Britain' today sliced 25 percent off her buying from the world's dollar areas for this year. Sir Stafford Cripps, chancel-. lor of the exchequer, told the house of commons Britain's im ports from the United States and- other dollar areas would be lim-w ited to $1,200,000,000. In 1948 Britain spent $1,600,000,000 on imports. Cripps announced a cut in purchases of U. S. tobacco. He also said the sugar ration would; be lowered from 10 to eight . ounces weekly and the recently -derationed candy would go back , on ration Aug. 14. The weekly - candy ration will be four ounces' per person. Cripps knocked off $800,000,-;. 000 of the $440,000,000 origin--ally set aside for the purchase of tobacco. He said this would mean a. reduction of about five percent to British users. Cigarettes al ready are scarce here and lines in front of tobacco stores are a common sight. Jake Bird to Hang; Loses Final Appeal ; Washington, July 14 (Jus tice Black of the supreme court refused today to grant a stay of execution to Jake Bird, convic ted slayer scheduled to be hanged tomorrow in the state of Washington. Bird had asked for the execu tion stay on grounds that he had been coerced into confessing the crime and that he never had been permitted to have a full trans cript of the trial proceedings.