Capital A JfeMal THE WEATHER HERE INCREASING CLOUDINESS to nijfht and Friday. Slifhtly cooler afternoon temperature Lowest tonight, 38; highest Friday, 62. Maiimum ytiterday, M: nlniman da;. M. Tolil 34hour prclpitlim t; Ur month: ; Be)rmil, .45. 8cr prtrlpiU. lion, S.M; norm!, S.M. Birar helfhl, -S Icet. (Report J U.S. Wtttatr Bartta.) HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 262 ,V,W,'.YS Salem, Oregon, Thursday, November 3, 1949 (30 Pages) Price 5c 10-Year Plan Outlined for City Projects Program Outlined by Franzen for Salem's Improvement By STEPHEN A. STONE City Manager J. L. Franzen Wednesday night outlined a 10 year city improvement program which he will offer to the coun cil by the first of the year. The program is so shaped that it will put on an orderly basis the necessary projects that come up in various city departments, and so that it will keep the pub lic fully informed at all times, which is important because the program will depend on public cooperation. The plan was revealed at the first of a series of conferences that the manager will have with members of city departments. The conference Wednesday night was about public parks, and meeting with the manager were representatives of the city park advisory committee and the park committee of the long-range planning commission. Airport Development Thursday night the manager will meet with the airport ad visory committee and represen tatives of the state board of aero nautics and the civil aeronautics administration to talk about air port development. Franzen has prepared pro gram forms on which will be listed proposed projects for each city department. The forms are in 13 columns. The first col umn lists the projects, the sec ond the method of financing, the third the estimated cost of each project, and the other columns are for estimated yearly expend iture on the projects for 10 years, from 1950 to 1959 inclusive. The years are paired, so that at the May election of each even numbered year the people may vote on the financing for projects of that and the following year, and if approved, the funds may be entered in the city budget which is effective in July. Program Flexible The program will not be so rigid that it can't be changed and a project may be shifted from one year to another If ad visable. A summary form is being pre pared by the manager- to show the overall 10-year program ana total estimated cost from year to year. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 7) Group Seeks to Buy Senators A group of five business men headed by Howard Maple u ne sotiatine with Bill Mulligan, bu siness manager of the Portland Beavers, for the purchase of the Salem Senator franchise, west ern International league. In making this announcement Thursday, Maple said the deal did not involve the immediate purchase of Waters park, home of the Senators. He stated that present plans called for the leas ing of the plant. No announcement was made concerning the money involved in the negotiations which have been transmitted by Mulligan to George Norgan, Vancouver, B. C, principal stockholder oi me Portland Beavers who have op crated the Senators as a farm club since the war. Maple ex pects a reply to his offer within a short time. While here early in the week Mulligan disclosed that the Port land parent club had placed its local holdings on the market. At the same time he said that negotiations with a Salem com mittee which had sought to raise funds with which to purchase both the franchise and the park had been terminated. Maple, a graduate of Oregon State college where he was pro minent in baseball and football, later played professional base ball with a number of clubs in cluding the Washington Sena tors. He was business manager for the Senators for a period early in the war. Later he went to Alaska where he was i mem ber of an organization which was engaged in building i rail road for defense purposes. Gamblers Arrested Portland, Nov. 3 UP' Thirteen men and two women were ar rested yesterday in a basement room on charges of operating a policy "timbers lottery. Detec tives seized numbered slips, re ceipts and $401 in cash along with a "case" used for the drawing. Big Reservoir For City Wafer On Turner Hill Survey and Tests Being Made for 50 to 75 Million Gallon Storage A reservoir storing from 50,- 000,000 to 75,000,000 gallons may be built by the Salem wa ter department on Turner hill at Turner. City Manager J. L. Franzen said Thursday that a decision probably will be made by the first of the year as to whether the project is feasible, and if it is the city will immediately start moving toward the development. Survey and tests are now be ing made at the location. If and when built the reservoir will lie in a horseshoe shape around the hill and be about 200 feet wide. If the ground formation is found suitable it could store, says the city manager, up to 75,000.000 gallons. Use Detroit Dam A bigger water supply to the city of Salem has become a nec essity. The present pipe line to Staytoh island can carry only 20,000,000 gallons a day. At the peak period last summer the city was using 26 000,000, which caused a heavy drain on the 10, 000,000-gallon reservoir on Ru ral avenue. Source of additional water for the Turner reservoir would be the Detroit reservoir, the city having been promised the neces sary water rights by the army en gineers. For the Turner storage the water would be carried from Detroit by the channel of the North Santiam river as far as Stayton, and from there would be piped to Turner (Concluded on Pan . Column 6) No Canadian Deals by Nehru Vancouver, B.C., Nov. 3 IIP) Prime Minister Nehru of India said today he has made no fi nancial deals with the Canadian government and indicated that none had been completed yet with the United States. At a press conference, he said it would be "convenient for us" to get needed capital goods and food for India, paying for at least part of it by credits from blocked sterling balances. Either country can help, he added. He refrained from saying specifically that he knows whe ther he will get that help. Following the conference, the prime minister reviewed a color ful parade and attended a cere mony at the city hall. At the meeting with the press he did not say how far he would go in collecting Britain's big debts to India in the form of imports from Canada, the Unit ed States and Britain herself. Nehru told questioners India would oppose any effort from the outside to impose a settle ment of conflict between Indo- Chinese communists and anti communists. A settlement, he said, should be made by "the people themselves." The people should have the opportunity to decide their own fate. His information was that the regime of the non-communist leader Bao Dai is "not a very successful one. . Japan Nearing Independence Manila, Nov. 3 W) Japan has moved closer toward indepen dence in the last few weeks than at any time since the end of the war. This trend gives added impor tance to the recent scries of re ports a formal peace treaty may be near. Occupation headquarters in Tokyo now is in the process of turning over a wide range of lo cal authority to the Japanese. The latest move was the an nouncement that private trade would be re-established on Dec. 1. Equally important, perhaps, the new eagerness of Japanese officials to take over control and assume responsibility. A year ago they refused several chances to gain more autonomy. At the same time the Japanese e conspicuously anxious to please the United States. No one has explained completely why the coal production quota is be ing met when for more than three years the output of this vi tal commodity has lagged badly. This sugests the Japanese have been told, or have decided, now is the time to put forward their best efforts for the big push to regain domestic pojyer. There is new emphasis on speed in this overall trend which can not be explained in terms of local development. Right Wing Forces Control Bridges Union San Francisco, Nov. SOT Right wing forces have gained control of the executive board of one of Harry Bridge's largest local unions. Continuing a trend set last week when four right wing business agents were elected by the International Longshore men's and Warehousemen's un ion in San Francisco, right wingers have captured all 13 executive board seats of ware house local 6. This local, claiming 18.000 members, has divisions in San Francisco, in Oakland, Crockett, Petaluma and Stockton. Search Goes On for Crash Victims Men in rowboats comb the bed of the Potomac river near Washington D. C, with grappling hooks for the missing among the 55 persons killed in history's worst airplane tragedy. In the foreground are crumpled pieces of wreckage from an Eastern Air Lines plane which collided with a Bolivian fighter craft a half mile south of National airport. (AP Wirephoto) Pilot Told He Killed 55 No Longer Wants to Live Washington, Nov. 3 (U.R) Eric Rios Bridoux has been told that he killed 55 persons in Tuesday's air disaster here and he no longer wants to live, the Bolivian pilot s physicians said today. The doctor, who asked that his name be withheld, said the rightful knowledge caused a relapse which brought the stricken "flyer near death late last night. He took a turn for the worse Hog Prices at 3 Year Low Chicago, Nov. 3 UP) Uncle Sam soon may have to add some pork meat to his hoarded gro ceries. . Hog prices are slipping. They are now at the lowest level in more than three years. They are not far above the point at which the agriculture department must buy pork to help hold up the farmer's price for live hogs. Uncle Sam s hoarded grocer ies include eggs, milk, potatoes, grains and many other items. But there's no meat in the larder. Many livestock traders think the last thing Uncle bam wants to do is buy meat, taking it out of the consumer's market. However, he won't be able to help himself if prices continue to slide. . The top prices for hogs here yesterday was $17.00 a hundred pounds. That was the lowest since OPA ceilings were removed Oct. 15. 1946. The old ceiling was $16.25. Falling prices have spurred meat interests to action. A nation-wide educational and adver tising campaign promoting the use of pork will start next month. Charles Shuman, president of the Illinois Agricultural associ ation, which is backing the pro motional campaign, says, We arc interested in heavy consump tion of park because it means we can convert our large grain supplies into meat and find a market for our product." Hopes of Early End to Steel Strike Collapse Cleveland, O., Nov. 3 (OR) Striking CIO Stcelworkers have up- ped the cost of settling their pension fights, dashing all hopes, to day that the Bethlehem pension agreement would bring a quick end to the 34-day steel strike. There was no rush of steel companies to accept the Bcthlc hem settlement as a pattern today and has developed a lung congestion. Although his tough body still is fighting on, rallying from the relapse, the 28-year-old Rios now seems to prefer death to re covery, the physician said. Until yesterday afternoon the 28-year-old South American air ace did not know that his P-38 fighter on Tuesday had sent a packed eastern air transport crashing in history's worst civil aviation disaster a disaster of which he is the sole survivor. The strictest orders had been issued to keep the grim knowl edge from him while doctors fought to save him from the ef fects of a back fracture and other severe injuries. Rios knew his plane had hit something and that he had come to struggling in the water. But he was able to tell officials in vestigators and others little else. Civil aeronautics board officials hope to learn more from the mer cifully drugged flyer when and if his condition improves. When, rousing from his fre quent blackouts, Rios would ask what happened to the plane he hit, doctors tried to turn his thoughts to something else. All visitors were ordered to do the same But yesterday afternoon one of them perhaps it was a slip of the tongue said the forbidden words Rios almost immediately be gan failing. Last night he near ly died. Bolivian officials were hastily called to his bedside Today the flyer's personal physician learned what had caused the relapse. The Bolivian whose condition had been prom ising before, had discarded his desire to survive Government Likely to Act In Big Strikes Indiana Operators Re ject Separate Peace Offer Made by Lewis Washington, Nov. 3 UP) Re ports that the government may soon step into the coal strike revived today with word that Indiana operators have refused separate peace talks with John L. Lewis. One highly - placed official closely watching the steel-coal strike crisis said: "We can't let Lewis go much beyond this week-end." He indicated that unless there is some progress toward settling the 46-day coal strike the gov ernment will invite Lewis and operators to Washington nego tiations, probably some time next week. Failure of such federal talks would put the coal problem up to President Truman. Up to now Mr. Truman has held that neither the coal nor steel strikes has reached the national emer gency stage. Rejected in Indiana The Indiana operators last night turned down a proposal of Gov. Henry Schrickcr of In diana for a separate coal pact covering that state. Lewis had accepted the idea, saying he could submit any tentative offer to his union's policy committee at its meeting in Chicago Monday. The Indiana operators dis cussed the idea and rejected it. Harvey Cartwright, secretary of the Indiana Coal Producers association, said: "The issues in volvcd are national in character and cannot be reconciled to dis trict negotiations." This evident decision to stick to industry-wide bargaining was a blow to Lewis' strategy to make a separate deal with Indi ana or Illinois mine operators in hopes the rest of the soft coal industry would go along. (Concluded on Pace 5, Column 6) Pearson s Bill For Printing Paid by State With a big grin on his round face, State Treasurer Walter J. Pearson announced today that the state had paid the $160 bill for printing Pearson's statement of the duties of his office. That is the bill which Gover nor Douglas McKay had refused to approve. It caused a quarrel between McKay and Pearson at last week's board of control meeting. The claim was honored by Secretary of State Earl T. New bry, who ruled that his office could pay it without approval of the board of control. Pearson said today that if the state hadn't paid it, he wouldn't have paid it, either. Jail Pickets of Pineapple Ship Portland, Nov. 3 UP) Fifteen CIO longshoremen, indicted in the Sept. , 28 pineapple riot at The Dalles, were in jail today as police sought nine others missed in a night-long round-up. Thirteen of the men spent the night in the Portland city jail and one, refusing to cross the state line, was jailed in Van couver, Wash. The fifteenth man was arrested this morning. State and city police, hamper ed by faulty addresses or by finding no one at home, contin ucd the hunt for the other nine men named in secret grand jury indictments, resulting from wat erfront violence that halted un loading of a pineapple barge at The Dalles. They started the roundup at nightfall. All were held under "fugitive" warrants from Wasco county Bail was set at $2500 but offers by members of a longshore de fense committee were rejected None of those arrested was a top officer in the Portland Longshore local, which picketed the unloading operation. To Free Top Reds on Bail New York, Nov. 3 (P) The U. S. court of appeals ruled today that the 11 top communists con victed of conspiracy may be re leased in bail pending appeal of their case. The court ruled that seven could be released in $20,000 bail each and four in $30,000 bail apiece. The government originally asked that their total bail be set at $1,000,000. Shortly after 11 a.m. three of ficials of the bail fund of the civil rights congress posted $260,000 in negotiable 2Vi per cent U.S. treasury bonds in $5, 000 denominations. The civil rights congress has been listed by the U.S. attorney general's office as subversive. Their release was delayed, however, when the U.S. attor ney s office raised the question of whether the fines of $10,000 imposed on each of the 11 should be paid today in addition to sup plying bond. An opinion handed down by Judges Learned Hand, Thomas W. Swan and Jerome N. Frank said that bail was being set be cause the government "conced ed that the appeal herein raises a 'substantial question.' " Bail of $30,000 was set for Eu gene Dennis, John B. William son, Jacob Stachel, and Irving Potash. A $20,000 bail was fixed for Robert G. Thompson, Benjamin J. Davis, Jr., Harry Winston, John Gates, Gilbert Green, Carl Winter and Gus Hall. Previously the government asked $100,000 bail each for Dennis, Potash, Stachel. Wil liamson, Hall, Green and Thomp son. It recommended $75,000 bail each for Davis, Winston, Gates and Winter. Ballentine to Get Sherman's Near East Post Joint Chiefs of Staff Meet to Consider Future Navy Plans Washington, Nov. 3 IIP) Ad miral Forrest P. Sherman moved swiftly today to tighten ship under the new navy top command by assigning Rear Ad miral John J. Ballentine, Pacific war hero to his own old post in the Mediterranean. Sherman, pulled out of com mand of the Sixth Task fleet in the Mediterranean to take over as chief of naval operations, was sworn in only yesterday after a shakeup growing out of the inter-service row over war roles. Shortly after the announce ment of Ballentine's assignment. Sherman attended his first meeting of the joint chiefs of staff where the quarrels over unification policy had centered. Bradley Presides He was introduced to the oth er members of the joints chiefs by the chairman, Gen. Omar Bradley. One member was absent. Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, air force chief of staff, left last night for an inspection visit to Eglin Air Force Base, Florida. As CNO, Sherman succeeded Admiral Louis Denfeld, an out spoken backer of the admirals' coterie that had contended the navy was being frozen out in strategic decisions. Ballentine will have the rank of vice admiral in the Mediter ranean assignment. He has been serving on the general board, the navy's policy advisory group. (Concluded on Page S, Column 8) Dutch Grant Amnesty To Political Prisoners Batavia. Nov. 3 IIP) The Dutch government today granted amnesty to "practically all po litical prisoners" in Indonesia, a government spokesman, said, as a follow-up to the agreement signed yesterday between the Dutch and Indonesians. He said several thousand will be affected. At the same time the Dutch army commander in- the islands told his troops they all could count on being home In The Netherlands by July, 1950. The USW spokesmen were confident however that large independents would fall in line, one-by-one within a few days. Chances for piece-meal set tlements were good. Although the union has not heard from U. S. Steel Corp., which ap parently is standing by and watching the maneuvering, a half-dozen other companies have contacted the union. Executive board members of the ClO-Unitcd Steclworkers met with President Philip Mur ray last night to hear details of the Bethlehem settlement. They were told that it should be used as i basis for settling other steel strikes and that negotiators should use the employes bene fits, not the cost to the compan ies, to gain uniformity of pen sion benefits in the industry. The union's drive to bring the big Independents into line ap parently will pick up steam af ter the close of the CIO's 11th convention here Saturday. The union's strategy appears to be to wean Jones & Laughlin, Re public, Inland and Youngstown Sheet & Tube into the fold. USW officials figure that U. S. Steel would be forced Into settle ment or lose customers to the independents. Murray admitted that his un n negotiators are trying to work out "tentative agreements" to offer strike-bound companies to get the workers back in the mills while the pension details are worked out. The hitch here, evidently is Murray's insistence that the "tentative agreements" embody a guarantee that the companies will match Bethle hem's offer of a minimum $100 a month pension for 23 year men, aged 65 or over. case Bans on Tito's Suonlies Washington, Nov. 3 IIP) The United States and Britain have eased their ban on the sale of commercial planes and aviation equipment to Yugoslavia. The first shipments, limited quanti ties of gasoline and lubricants, were cleared by the slate de partment today. Diplomatic officials, reporting the U.S.-British move just be fore the fuel and lubricants sale was announced, said it marks the latest step by the west to bolster Marshal Tito in his fight with Moscow and her eastern European allies. The state and national defense departments are reported to have decided on the move as another of the "calculated risks" oi me com war. .,,r,n-i. nn H lhr The matter was agreed upon L- ..- Hrrk In addition to the with the British. Then the two actua pcopie counters. er western governments of their action in the hope that they will; do the same. One idea is to clear the way for an "airlift" to Yugoslavia if that rebel against Moscow domi nation of world communism should be cut off by guerrilla at tack from normal transport. Census Office Located Here Salem will be the seat of one new office of the census bureau when the feneral census is tak en next year, it was reported Thursday from Washington. The other office will be in Astoria Existing offices in Oregon arc in Portland, Eugene, Bend and La Grande. The census bureau announced establishment of new field of fices on the west coast in prepa ration for the 1050 census-tak ing. Bureau spokesmen said they hoped the new offices would be srt up by the end of January. Their staffs will consist of a Truman Again Campaigning Minneapolis, Nov. 3 IIP) Pre sident Truman arrived here at 1 p. m. (CST) today by special train. He will take part in a "Truman Day" celebration in connection with observance of the Minnesota Territorial Cen tennial. Crater Lake Visitors Washington. Nov. 3 UJ Crater Lake National park and Oregon Caves National monu ment drew a record of more than 414.000 visitors during the year ended Sept. 30, the National I Parks Service reported today. m I II I is II I I I I! Visits Bolivian Pilot Ambassador R. Martinez Vargas of Bolivia visits Erick Rios Bridoux, Bolivian pilot in an Alex andria, Vs., hospital. Bridoux was the pilot of a fighter plane which collided with an airliner near Washington with a loss ol 53 lives. Bridoux. told of the S3 dead, no longer wants to live. He has a broken vertebra, two broken ribs and lacerations of the face and scalp. (AP Wirephoto) Aboard Truman Train, En- route to St. Paul, Nov. 3 UP) President Truman, making his first rear platform talk since the election, told a crowd at Savan na, 111., today he is trying his best to carry out democratic campaign pledges. A crowd of several hundred turned out in the cold at 7:40 a.m. to greet the president aboard his old campaign train on the anniversary of his great est political victory. He carried with him what he jokingly described as a "non- political, bi-partisan" speech for delivery at St. Paul, Minn., at 7:30 p.m. (PST) tonight His aides said it was a re newal of his blasts at "reaction- aries and of his championsmp of the "fair deal" program for which he campaigned in 1948 and which he presented to the 81st congress last January. And they emphasized he will send the program back to con gress again in January and back to the voters in next year's con gressional elections. It was a year ago today the result was long in doubt in the November 2 voting that Mr. Truman received the news of Thomas E. Dewey's concession of defeat. European Arms Negotiations On Washington, Nov 3 UP) Tho United States opened negotia tions with eight western Europe- allies today on agreements under which this country will furnish them $1,000,000,000 worth of arms and military sup plies. Diplomats of each of the eight countries called at the stale de partment in a day-long succes sion. Each received a copy of the agreement which the Unit ed States proposes his country should sign. There was no gen eral conference bringing them all together. Officials said the texts will not be made public until they are finally aRrccd on In detail. rtrcp nuiin as i Hfiiai Bonn, Germany, Nov. 3 OP) The West German Federal par liament today decided to keep the Rhlneland city of Bonn as its capital. Bonn received 200 votes and its rival, Frankfurt, 178, In the secret vote.