THE WEATHER HERE PARTLY cloudy tonight, be coming cloudy with scattered showers, Thursday, No impor tant change in temperature. Low est tonight, SS; highest Thurs day, 74. Maximum yeilprda?, ?K; minimum to day, M. Total 24-hour precipitation: 111 for month: .S6; normal, Seaion prerlpl tatlon, 42.23: normal, 37.12, Hirer height, -3.4 feet. (Report by U. S. Weather Bureau.) C apital Jonriaal HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 189 Bntered u econd elur matter t ftalim, OrtfMt Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, August 10, 1949 (32 Pages) Price 5c 15 Persons Die In Flames of Wrecked Bus Greyhound Car Smashes in Bridge Abutment in Indiana Bloomington, Ind Aug. 10 UP) Fifteen persons died in the flaming wreckage of a grey hound bus that burned after smashing into a bridge abutment near here early today. The bus, bound from Indian apolis to Bloomington, hit the bridge on a winding, hilly road shortly after midnight. Seconds later it was in flames. The bodies removed from the bus were placed in six ambu lances and a hearse and, accom panied by a police escort, were 'brought to the Indiana national guard armory here to await identification. -Tire Blows Out Driver Wayne Cramer of In dianapolis, one of the survivors said a front tire may have blown out, causing him to lose control of the bus. After striking the abutment it skidded 150 feet down winding Highway 37 ,and came to rest on its left side, blocking the emergency door. Flames enveloped the vehicle almost immediately. The driver said he and "two or three" pas sengers got out the front door The other survivors escaped through a rear window which a passenger kicked out. Tells of Flames Blen Van Horn, manager of radio station WTTS of Bloom ington, said one of the sur vivors told him he walked "through' five feet of flames" to get off the bus. The survivor, Wells Richard son, 18, of Evansville, Ind., told Van Horn he was dozing when the bus struck the bridge abut ment. Van Horn said Edgar Davis of Indianapolis, a Negro, was cred ited by other survivors with kicking out a rear , window, through which most of the sur vivors escaped. Davis suffered a knfll. .!.. . J . I t-L 1 uain. mjuiy emu was uruugni to the Bloomington hospital. 1050 Fighj Fire In Idaho Forest McCall, Idaho, Aug. 10 VP) The worst fire in the Payette na tional forest since 1934 raged out of control for the fourth day today. Fire dispatcher Slim Vas- sar said "It just doesn't look good at all." Bad burning weather high temperatures, strong winds and low humidity confronted an army of 1,050 fire fighters bat tling the 5,100 acre blaze along the Salmon river north of here. Vassar said reinforcements are going out to the men now on the fire lines. The crews are working in such rugged terrain that all supplies, .including food, are being dropped to them by parachute. t A new fire in the Boise nation al forest on Archie creek above Lowman was reported quiet by Lynn Knight, fire dispatcher. About 200 men are on this blaze. He said crews are optimistic regarding their chances of hold . ing their lines around this 300 acre blaze which broke out yes terday. This was in marked contrast to the Salmon river situation where a sharp wind came up ar ound midnight, causing two "blow ups" last night. Sawmill crews and loggers helped in this fight. Power saws and tractors have been moved into the area, backing up the pick, shovel and axe squads. No Beer Sold at State Fair Grounds No beer will be sold on the Or egon State Fair Grounds during fair week this year, officials of the annual big show which opens Sept. 5, announced today. Several concessionnaires had offered sizable amounts for the franchise rights to sell beer in the grandstand during the after noon races, they said. Admission prices to ground and shows of the Oregon State Fair opening here Labor Day will remain at 1941 levels, Man ager Leo Spitzbart said today. There has been some agitation to increase the outside gate charge above the current 50-cent mark but most exhibitors have ' expressed willingness to assume slight increases in commercial space charges instead, he ex plained. Truman Signs Armed Services Unification Bill Defense Secretary's Control Extended Over Military Set-up Washington, Aug. 10 UP) President Truman today signed the new armed services unifi cation bill. He said that this will permit the United States to pro gress toward "a balanced and ef fective national defense." Mr. Truman signed the meas ure in a ceremony in his oval room office. Senators and rep resentatives who handled the legislation, the heads of the de fense establishment and top ranking army, navy and air force "brass" loked on. The legislation, which streng thens Secretary of Defense Johnson's control over the en tire military setup, drew one criticism from Mr. Truman. One Backward Step "It is unfortunate that in this generally progressive legisla tion, at least one provision rep resents a backward step," the president said in a brief state ment. "New and cumbersome re strictions are placed on the mem bership of the 'national security council." White House officials explain ed that under the previous law the president could add to the security council heads of any department and of certain agen cies when he needed them. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 6) To Cut Cash in Arms Program Washington, Aug. 10 UP) Secretary of Defense Johnson told senators today the military department is willing to accept 80 percent in cash and 40 per cent in contract authority to launch President Truman's arms program. It is agreeable to the mili tary, he said, to spread the cost of the $1,450,000,000 program over two or even three years. America s three top military men the joint chiefs of staff waited for Johnson to conclude his testimony before they made their report to the senate for eign relations and armed ser vices committees. Senator Vandenberg (R., Mich.), yesterday proposed a 50-50 split in the cash and con tract authority to carry out the re-arming of the north Atlantic pact nations. But Johnson said his staff has advised him that 60 percent of the $1,160,000,000 for western Europe must be in cash. The re mainder can be in authority to make contracts which will be paid for in cash later, he said. Senator Saltonstall (R., Mass.) asked Johnson if this authority would mean a firm contract to be paid for in fiscal 1951-52. Johnson replied it would be. Saltonstall asked if the re arming of Europe will mean any reduction in the U. S. defense program. Johnson said no, it would not. He said he would not agree to any plan which would reduce the ample security of the Unit ed States." New Sears Store Will Open Here Thursday (Sec Special Sears Section in This Issue) Prnmntlv at 10 a.m. Thursday Sears, Roebuck & Co. will be gin doing business in its new store at North Capitol and Marion streets. The Sears building is the largest unit of the Capitol Shopping Center project of Pacific Mutual Angeles. It is designed in size and departmental organization to meet the demands of the trading area of the Willamette valley. There will be a brief ceremon ial when the doors open. Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom of Salem and Mayor Walter Musgrave of West Salem will be at the ends of a ribbon across the entrance. The ribbon will be cut by Mrs. Harold Heiserman, honored as the average Sears shopper. Gardenias will be distributed to the ladies. Present for the opening will be men from other cities who stand high in the company's or ganization. Fowler B. McCon nell of Chicago, president of Sears, Roebuck & Co., will not be here Thursday, but is dated for arrival August 30 when he will inspect the new plant. Whe ther A. T. Cuchman, vice pre 7 Ex-President Herbert Hoover 75 Years Old Hoover Gets Greetings From All Over World Stanford University, Calif., Aug. 10 VP) Herbert Clark Hoover is 75 years old today, and tributes for the country's only living ex-president poured in from all over the world. Late today Stanford university will honor its most illustrious graduate in the Frost amphitheater. A crowd of 12,000 to 14,000 was expected. The program will be climax- ed bv a major address by Mr Hoover, beginning at 6 p.m. (Pa cific daylight time). His topic will be "Think of the Next Gen eration." Even Mr, Hoover, who once said, "I have had every honor to hich any man could aspire," probably was surprised by the stir created by his birthday an niversary , and by; the congratui. latory letters by the thousands: Two states, Arkansas ' and Maryland, proclaimed today 'Hoover Day. Governor i.ari Warren of California issued a proclamation in which he said: Few men anywhere nave uvea more useful-lives, and none with greater devotion, both at home and throughout the world." The governors of Oregon, New Mexico and Vermont ex tended greetings to Mr. Hoover in proclamations, and personal congratulations were sent by the governors of Idaho, Alabama, Virginia, South Dakota, Kansas, New York and Washington. Mr. Hoover, born in Iowa and a member of the first graduating class of Leland Stanford univer sity, was the 30th president of the United States from lm to 1933. At 75 he is, as always, a hard worker, usually putting in a 16- hour day. His chief concern for many years has been for na tional and international affairs. Search On for Plane Bremerton, Wash., Aug. l6 UP) A search spread throughout the northwest today for a light plane with four persons aboard, missing since it left the Kitsap county airport here Sunday on a flight to Santa Fe, N. M. Air port officials here said the plane was last reported at Pendleton, Ore., where it refueled Sunday afternoon. Life Insurance company of Los sident- for the Pacific coast re gion, will be here is uncertain. He was here recently. 1 Company officials whom it is known will be here for the opening are: S. A. Epstein, Los Angeles, assistant to Vice President A. T Cushman; S. W. Donogh, Seat tle, district manager; Claude Walter, Seattle, merchandise manager for the Pacific north west; Harold Grisdale, Seattle, operating manager for the north west; R. J. Begey, Seattle, su perintendent of construction and real estate; Orville Lee, Seattle, in charge of setting up new stores and maintenance of all displays. In addition to these high of ficials numerous department supervisors will be here from all northwest states. Searing Heat Wave in East (By the Associated Press) The searing heat wave ap- pears to have settled down over the eastern half of the nation for an indefinite stand. . Federal forecasters said today -uiorA.is,.ftpuiingnap)ng up.any where ' on . the. weather map which promises any relief. The narrow band of cool air which was moving across the northern plains states yesterday has stalled over northern Min nesota, Wisconsin and the upper Michigan peninsula.. Only extreme northern New England had a taste of cool air as a Canadian cold front shoved early morning temperatures to 48 degrees at Caribou and Houl ton, Me, . From the great plains to the eastern seaboard, the mercury was soaring again into the high 90s. Many New York City stores closed yesterday when the mer cury soared to 97.6 degrees in the downtown section. It was the highest reading for the date there in weather bureau records and 2.6 degrees above the pre vious August 9 maximum set in 1900. Jobless Due to Three Industries Lumbering, construction and food processing were the indus tries responsible for more than half the initial claims that help ed increase unemployment pay ments in Oregon during July to the highest midsummer total yet recorded, with the exception of July, 1946, the state unemploy ment compensation commission reported today. In 1946, commission spokes men pointed out, veterans and war workers were looking for peacetime jobs. State benefits in July of this year reached $809,013, an in crease of 18.3 percent over June and more than double those paid for July a year ago. Sears, II.... T new iremors m ccuaaor aqi Fear and Pan,, Pillaging by Unruly Indians in Progress 6000 Death Toll Quito, Ecuador, Aug. 10 UP) New earth tremors and pillag ing by unruly Indians spread fear and panic today among the thousands of survivors left homeless by Ecuador's destruc tive earthquake. Official government estimates of the death toll in Friday's quake rose to 6,000. But the truth is no one knows for sure how many perished in the great piles of rubble that litter some 50 demolished towns in the pop ulous Andes mountain region south of here. Fresh tremors yesterday tum bled weakened walls in Ambato and other cities, adding to the terror of some 150,000 homeless. Rescuers Burled Groups of workers attempting to dig their way through the blocked highway to Pelileo, 100 miles south of Quito, were re ported buried under a landslide loosed by the new tremors. Shoot-to-kill orders were is sued to troops guarding Pelileo against looting by the wild tribe of Salasaca Indians. Defense Minister Manuel Diaz Gganados said one band of Salasacas had been driven off when caught ransacking the ruins. The Salasacas have been the fiercest warriors in the Andes region for 400 years. Driven out of Bolivia by the Incas cen turies ago, they have harassed Ecuadoran settlements even in modern times. Landslides Continue Continuing landslides and sul phurous fumes oozing from jag ged crevices have terrorized the country folk' who escaped the worst effects of the shocks. (Continued en Pare I, Column I) Drafting New Chinese Policy (Br the Associated Press) The United States government tackled anew today the problem of working out a new policy for the Far East. Ambassador to Chine J. Leigh- ton Stuart was reporting to Pres ident Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson on the com plex situation resulting from the communist rout of Chinese Na tionalist armies. His report coincided with Can ton dispatches which said the communists were throwing fresh forces into drives toward the Nationalist provisional capital. Acheson went before a secret session of the house foreign af fairs committee to discuss his program for working out a new approach. His department in a white paper last week wrote off aid to Generalissimo Chiang Kai- Shek's Nationalists as a costly failure. A new policy planning group, headed by Ambassador-at-Large Philip C. Jessup, was reported almost ready to start a broad survey of the problems facing the U. S. in China and elsewhere in the far east. Acheson and his aides with held official comment on the ap pearance before congress yes terday of Elpidio Quirino, pres ident of the Philippines. The island leader appealed for at least moral support from the U. S. for a new anti-communist pact proposed recently by Quir ino and Chiang. Latest Addition to r Racetrack Permit be Hurried City-County Plan Drainage Project The county court following a conference with City Manager J. L. Franzen and City Engineer J. to cooperate with the city in its project northeast of the city which will take care of surplus flow of water from as far as the Four Corners district down to Clag- Albania Claims Greek Invasion London, Aug. 10 UPl Albania said today she is being invaded by Greece and that fighting is in progress along a 30-mile front. A broadcast by the official Tirana radio said bloody clashes with Athens government troops began four days ago. It added that hundreds of Greek soldiers have been kill ed or taken prisoner. A spokesman for the Greek information service in London said "there is certainly no in vasion." He said the Albanian report probably referred to the new offensive launched by the Greek army against the communist-led guerrillas in the Grammos mountain area not far from the Albanian border. Senators Ask Recall of Mac Washington, Aug. 10 UP) A group of 10 senators today "urg ently requested" Secretary of Defense Johnson to recall Gen eral Douglas MacArthur from Japan. Mine republicans and one democrat Senator Byrd of Vir ginia said in a letter to John son that the pending $1,450,000,- 000 foreign arms aid bill deals with "a problem which is global in character." Noting that the chiefs of staff have visited European countries but are not likely to have time to go to the far Pacific, the sen ators said they want the views of MacArthur and Vice Adm. Oscar C. Badger, naval com mander in that area, before vot ing on the arms measure. Senator Knowland (R., Calif.) and 12 other senators have pro posed that $175,000,000 of the bill's funds be earmarked for military aid to non-communist China. Those who signed the letter urging MacArthur s return in cluded Knowland, Byrd and re publican Senators Bridges of New Hampshire, Smith of New Jersey, Hickenlooper of Iowa, Morse of Oregon, Wiley of Wis consin, Saltonstall of Massachu setts, Baldwin of Connecticut and Gurney of South Dakota. Attempted Rape Kills Cripple Aged 65 Portland, Aug. 10 UP) Emo tional shock from attempted rape by a teen age boy has been determined the probable cause of death of Mrs. Hatti Davidson 65. a cripple. She died yesterday, soon af ter complaining of dizzyness. A physician had sent her to a hos pital on diagnosing her trouble as irregularity of the heart. Deputy Coroner Myron Cost- ley said "emotional shock" from the Saturday night assault had probably caused her death. Capitol Shopping dsSays Vaughan Urged H. Davis with the court agreed plan for a 1000-acre drainage gett creek just past the Pacific highway north. The specific request of the court made by the city officials was that a culvert under the Sil- verton road between Fairhaven and Hollywood avenues which now carries a 36-inch flow be re placed by one or more sufficient to care for a 54-mch flow to ac commodate water to be carried under it due to a major program of ditch deepening and possibly widening. The court agreed to go ahead with its share of the pro ject whenever called upon by the city as a measure to protect its own road system. It was in dicated there may be other cul vert changes in the offing as the work progresses. Uity Manager Franzen ex plains that because of the insuf ficiency of the present culvert the water backs west instead of east at times of overflow and runs into the Capitola district. While it was not mentioned in this area is a new school of Sa lem school district which is threatened with school yard flooding. Franzen said that it is neces sary to increase the size and depth of the ditch and that the city is now securing easements to open and clean the ditch to give a run oft which will be largely outside of the city limits, though being done by the city to protect Us own citizens. The ditch will be deepened as far as the Pacific highway under which it runs into Claggett creek where the city engineer said there is sufficient room for the acceler ated How. Council Splits Over Germany Strasbourg,' France, Aug. 10 (Pi Former French Premier Ed ouard Herriot said today a di vision of minds exists on the question of admitting Germans to the new council of Europe. In a prepared address to the opening session of the council's consulate assembly Herriot in dicated western Germany would have to work her way into the organization with proofs that she no longer harbors aggress ive intentions. He told the 101 delegates from 12 nations that the assembly would deal with "Problems of Life and Death" for Europe. 'A closer association of Eu rope presents itself as a matter of urgency," he said. Many political leaders of wes tern Europe hope that the dis cussions here will mark a long advance toward the goal of full unity of that portion of Europe outside the Soviet orbit. There have been proposals to include western Germany in the organization as soon as the new west German government is functioning. It was thought thai Herriot's statement on the ques tion perhaps reflected the point of view of the French delega tion. France has a deep-seated fear of German aggression bas ed on experiences of history. Center aja Order Issued Following Day By Expediter Washington, Aug. 10 (IP) Housing Expediter Tighe E. Woods said today he recalls that Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan asked him to "hurry" along a construction permit for the Tan foran race track. Woods told a senate investi gation subcommittee that Vaugh an, President Truman's mili tary aide, came to his office Jan. 12, 1948, to make the plea. He said Vaughan was accompanied by Eugene Mori of Camden, N. J., listed as Tanforan's presi dent. Woods previously had told the subcommittee only of being call ed to the White House Jan. 9 last year by Vaughan to discuss the Tanforan matter. He quoted Vaughan as .telling him at the White House meeting that''some of my friends" wer inltreetetf in the case. Might Lose Franchise Woods said that at the meet ing three days later he believed that Vaughan asked him to "please hurry" along the per mit because there was "some thing" before the California race track commission which would make Tanforan lose its franchise if the construction work could not proceed. Woods sent letters to the jus tice department the next day urging modification of a court order issued against the former owners of the track to stop con struction. (Concluded enPayeS, Column 5) Hunt Got Fee Of $86,000 Washington, Aug. 10 U.R) Senate investigators reported to day that "five per center" James V. Hunt got an $86,000 fee for helping former owners buy back for $635,000 a Long Island hotel they had sold to the navy for $1,300,000. Hunt was put on to the deal by Albert W. Lewitt, secretary of then Sen. Albert W. Hawkes, R., N. J. but under sharp ques tioning Lewitt steadfastly denied suggestions that he got a $5,000 fee of his own. The story, told by a senate in vestigating committee official, disclosed that the purchasers sent Hunt a $5,000 down pay ment for his services while he was a $50-a-day consultant to the war assets administration. WAA is the federal agency which disposes of surplus gov ernment property. Hunt sent the check back after keeping it three months without cashing it, left the WAA, set himself up as a "management consultant," and accepted a second check for $5,000. His total fee for the deal was $86, 000 $71,000 in cash and $15,- 000 in notes. The transaction, involving the Swank Lido Beach hotel, was detailed on the witness stand by Francis D. Flanagan, commit tee investigator. Iron Lung Sought For Salem by Eagles Action to provide an adult size lung, porta Die respirator and all accessories, for use in the Salem area, was taken at the meeting of the local Frater nal Order of Eagles, Willamette acne No. zubi, last evening. The decision of the lodge was another step in the local pre paredness program should a polio outbreak occur in the Sa lem area. The goal set for purchase of the equipment is $4000 and Vic Withrow was named by the lodge to appoint a committee of members to work with him in securing the equipment. Purch ase of the equipment is to be at the pleasure of local physi cians and hospitals who will des ignate the type needed. Weigh for Ring Fight New York, Aug. 10 (Pi Ez zard Charles, recognized as the heavyweight boxing champion in the 47 NBA states, weighed 180 pounds today for his title fight tonight with Gug Lesne vich, who scaled 182.