THE WEATHER HERE CLOUDY WITH RAIN to night, Wednesday. Partly clou dy Wednesday, scattered show ers. Slightly warmer tonight, low near 42; slightly warmer Wednesday, highest near 47, Maximum yffiterdar, af: minimum to day, 80. Total Jti-hour precipitation: .00! for month J.lfll normal, 1.07, Season pre cipitation, 10.04: normal, 11.83. Rver height, 2.8 feet. (Report by U.S. Weather Bureau.) C apital Journa HOME EDITION 6 1st Year, No. 290 SEffAStf Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, December 6, 1 J0 9iaM . . ages) Price 5c Stale Building To Be Occupied On February 1 Delay Caused by Shortages Cement Block Plant at School By JAMES D. OLSON p The new $2,500,000 state of fice building, scheduled for com pletion January 1, will not be ready for occupancy until Feb. ruary 1, Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry Informed the board of control Tuesday, Delay in obtaining necessary materials for interior work is i largely responsible for the de- lay, Newbry reported. The tvard authorized pay ment of $63,449.74 to the Sound Construction and Engineering company, contractors on the building, for work performed during November. Cement Block Plant James Lamb, superintendent of the Woodburn Boys' school was authorized to establish a cement block plant on the school campus. Lamb informed the board that the cement blocks could be used in the construction of a number of small buildings planned at the school. However, he said, the main object of the plant was to provide work for boys in the segregation section of the school. Machinery for the project can be purchased at a low cost, Lamb said, and money is available in the institution's budget to cover the cost of setting up the proj ect (Continued on Page S, Column 4) Want Chiang To Take Office Chengtu, Dec. 8 VP) Clamor for Chiang Kai-Shek to resume presidency of nationalist China , became noisier today as the Eeds pushed within 90 miles of Chengtu, , . (From H6h:X6ng, Associated Press Correspondent -Wayne Richardson radioed that Presi dent LI Tsung-Jen ordered na tionalist officials in Chengtu to carry on under his orders. Li, flying to the United States for treatment of a stomach ailment, said he would "telegraph" in structions and would return within a month.) Meantime, the war situation was worsening. One Red force, striking along the main highway from recently deserted Chung king, approached Neichiang, a ferry crossing 90 miles southeast of Chengtu. Another thrust along a more northerly highway towards Sulnlng, 90 miles east of Cheng tu. (A broadcast from the com munists' Peiping radio said the Reds captured Yungning, a stronghold in southern Kwangsi province. Yungning is only 90 miles from the Indochina bor der. It was the provisional cap ital and headquarters of nation alist Gen. Pal Chong-Shi. (Hong Kong newspapers said provincial army units mutinied at Yuki, 30 miles south of Kunming. The mutineers could threaten Kunming's rear. Their strength was not given.) .Ward Leaves Mukden Enroufe Tientsin Washington. Dec. 6 VP) An gus Ward reported today that he and his American consulate staff have arranged to leave Mukden at 3:45 a.m., Wednesday (11:45 a.m., PST, today). About 23 members of the con sulate staff and their dependents expelled with Ward by the com munists. are expected to board a train for the 700-mile trip to the north China port of Tient sin. Ward's latest report was tele phoned to U. S. Consul General O. Edmund Clubb in Peiping and relayed to the state department. Storm Warnings Flying on Coast Seattle, Dec. 6 VP) Southeast storm warnings were ordered along the Washington and Ore gon coasts at 9 a.m. today, south ward to CaDe Blanco. Southeast winds of 33 to ou Ues on hour were forecast for e Washineton coast this after noon, with 30-to-40 mile winds along the Oregon coast. A vel ocity of 25 to 35 miles was fore- east for the strait. Elfsfrom Plans Chang es in Cily Bus Schedules Special Committee to Work for Relieving Traffic Congestion By STEPHEN A. STONE Changes in Salem street bus schedules that will popularize bus riding, and benefit the city by relieving traffic congestion. is the purpose of a special com mittee appointed Tuesday by Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom. On the committee are Mai Rudd, chairman, Edward Schre- der, Fred Gahlsdorf, Mrs. Ralph E. Moody and Mrs. Mona R. Yo- der. The mayor said he wanted a committee that would represent both the downtown business men and the bus-riding public. Authorized by Council The committee was authoriz ed by the city council Monday night, Nov. 28, on motion of Al derman Albert H. Gille and on request of the mayor. This fol lowed the reading of a letter from G. G. Wendt, general man ager of City Transit Lines, re questing permission to extend the bus terminal space on Com mercial street south of Court to the north property line of the Salem Hardware company. This, said Wendt, was necessary to avoid double-parking the buses. If the council could not grant the request permanently, he ask ed that it be done as a trial through the holiday season, and that the council did. "As your chief of police will confirm," said Wendt's letter, the present loading zone does not have sufficient length to ac commodate the number of buses scheduled. As a result one or two buses are forced to stop in the traffic lane, thereby congesting traffic, with particularly bad re sults during the hours of peak traffic flow. Nominal Changes "With the Christmas shopping season approaching, the relief to traffic congestion by this move would be of particular aid to your police department and to the traveling public ... In event you have any doubts regarding public reaction, may we suggest a temporary trial during the Christmas shopping period." As schedules now are buses all arrive at the terminal at ap proximately the same time and line up at the curb on the east side of Commercial In the ap proximately half a block allotted by the city. The space does not give room for all buses. One means of relief suggested is that bus schedules be changed so arrivals at the terminal will be scattered and not simultane ous. The committee will confer with the city manager, the may or and with bus line representa tives. "I think," said the mayor, that we can relieve a lot of the congestion downtown if we can make bus riding more attractive. have received many com plaints." Airmen's Bodies Remain in Snow Mr.riinrrl Air Force Base. Wash., Dec. 6 OT The bodies of six airmen who died in the uri-rirap-0 of a C-54 on Mt. St. Helens will remain amid the snow and ice until next spring. The decision to postpone fur ther nrobins of the treacherous slopes high on the mountain was announced last night. Simulta neously, air force officials dis closed that a 12-man rescue crew located three of the six bodies Sunday but was unable to bring them down the mountain. The three airmen whose bodies were found were identi fied as Lt. Richard M. Fanning, originally of Portland; 2nd Lt. Thomas C. Hardisty, Sarasota, Fla.; and SSgt. Richard C. Hsmer, Rt. 1, Burton (Vashon Island), Wash. Searchers found the bodies at the 8,000 foot level of the south- urpst Washineton peak. A pro- neller and a wheel section also were found. The nubile Information office here reported the search party onont Kunrlav nicnt on tne moun tain at a timberline base camp and did not arrive here until late yesterday with word that three bodies had been found. Eighteen Convicts Await Jobs T-iahteon convicts at the state Itentiarv could be released if they had Jobs waiting for them, Gov. Douglas Mcrvay saia ta-v Hp said all 18 nave Deen paroled on condition they get jobs. I HNi I r fill. Truman Plans Drive on Doctors Washington, Dec. 8 VP) Dr. Ernest E. Irons, president of the American Medical Association, said today the Truman adminis tration is getting set for a "re newed assault on medicine and free enterprise." He told the association the administration is "sending a bur eaucratic mission to Europe at the taxpayer's expense to search for new destructive ammuni tion." AMA official said Irons was referring to a trip that Federal Security Administrator Oscar E. Ewing and several aides are making to Europe to study na tional health plans in England and elsewhere. In announcing plans for the trip, Ewing said it was intended to get information to carry on a full-fledged drive for passage of President Truman's compul sory health insurance plan in the next session of congress. The AMA is fighting the pres ident's proposals, which Irons de nounced as "socialized medicine" in a prepare address at the open ing of the association's four-day clinical meeting. The group is considering a move to collect more funds from doctors to carry on its campaign. Irons, a Chicago physician, said that "under the cover of the welfare state the nation is being led down the road to so cialism with all its blighting ef fects on individual incentive and personal responsibility." Lindy to Receive Aviation Trophy Washington, Dec. 6 VP) Charles A. Lindbergh will get an award this month for "signifi cant public service of enduring value to aviation in the United States." The National Aeronautics as sociation said Lindbergh will get the Wright Brothers Memor ial trophy at a dinner December 17 sponsored by the Aero club of Washington. He was picked for the honor by a group of aviation leaders. m t ill School Fraternity Ban Case Set December 28 New strategy is in the offing in defense of the case of Lebold vs. Salem school board No. 24 and others in circuit court here. It is expected that three answers will be filed Immediately in which general denial will be plaint which charged the school arbitrarily and without author ity in the suspension of the 18 plaintiffs from Salem high school for alleged affiliation with secret societies. These answers will In effect brush aside a motion heretofore interposed by the defendants which demanded that the plain tiffs make election as to whether or not they are attempting to question the constitutionality of the law which bans secret soci eties from high schools in the state and also asked that parts of the complaint be made more definite and certain. Objective of the defendants in substituting the answer for the motion is to avoid delay. By fil ing answers makinggeneral de nial the necessity of the plain tiffs filing a reply to the answer is obviated and the case may then come up directly on its merits instead of being delayed by arguments on the motion, fol lowed possibly by ' filing of briefs and awaiting a decision of the court as to the motion. The case has been set for De- jcember 28 to be heard before Excavation Starts for Highway Office Building Monday afternoon shovels owned by Salem Sand & Gravel company, subcontractors, started excavating 18,000 yards of earth to be removed for the 145 by 235 foot basement beneath the new state highway office building. The excavation will be 11 feet deep. Four shovels and about 12 dump trucks will be employed on the job. Legal Battle Renewed Overldanha Election By DON UPJOHN State Senator Allan Carson launched a verbal barrage at District Attorney E. O. Stadter in Judge Rex Kimmell's court Tuesday morning as arguments were under way in the second case seeking to enjoin an election being held December 9 to vote on the question of incorporating Idanha. Truman Aides Flock to Keys Key West, Fla., Dec. 8 VP) Presidential advisors came thick and fast today to swim with President Truman and help him draft all-important messages to congress.-' :v. ., ,.- . . . They left the chief executive with a personal housing prob lem. And no navy , man under the rank of captain felt secure in his herth as bunks' were provid ed for the incoming guests. The overflow spread to the presidential yacht USS Wil liamsburg, . anchored near the temporary "White House" at this naval submarine base, and to "quarters L", another resi dence of this naval submarine station. All thought of feeding all of them at the president's quarters was abandoned and each had a different place for chow. The gulf, where the presi dent takes his daily swim, seem ed big enough' to accommodate everybody, and the beach af forded plenty of room for the volley bailers and sun bathers. Presidential Press Secretary Charles G. Ross identified five of those who arrived yesterday as Presidential Assistant John R. Steelman, administrative as sistants Charles S. Murphy, Don ald Dawson and George Elsey and Brig. General Wallace H. Graham. But White House associates said others got off the incoming planes at Boca Chica airport, eight and a half miles away. made to allegations in the com board and school officials acted Judge Victor Olliver of Linn county, assigned to it by the su preme court. Had the motion stood as filed then the argu ments on the motion would have been heard on that date. With the answers on file evidently the case will come up for trial on the 28th, instead. In the meantime the boys are back in school under a tempo rary Injunction order filed by Judge Earle C. Latourette of Oregon City who was holding court here for a day when the complaint was filed. He receiv ed the original assignment to the case but withdrew and Judge Ol iver was named in his stead. Appearing as attorneys in the case are Reginald Williams and Lawrence Osterman for the plaintiffs and George A. Rhoten Robert DeArmond and Donald A. Young for the three sets of defendants. Ralph Moody, prominent Sa lem attorney, appears In the pleadings as guardian ad litem for all of the minor student plaintiffs. - rnrsnn sr-nrprl Srfirlfp.i -for nn. pearing in the first case as coun sel for the defendants county clerk and county court and then in the second case appearing as an attorney for the plaintiff in his capacity as district attorney. He further scored him for put ting his signature to the com plaint which charges the county court with "acting in an arbi trary and unlawful manner," in calling the special election for December 9 and further charg ing the county court "with pre meditated design to disenfran chise plaintiffs and deprive them of the right to vote." He called attention -to the fact that Stadter was acting as legal adviser for the county court when it called the special elections. The argument arose when Al lan and Wallace Carson, appear ing for the defendants, attempt ed to have the second complaint thrown out as defective because it named Edison Vickers and some 58 others as relators, when under supreme court rulings the district attorney only can ap pear as relator for the state. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 6) Admit Failure To Oust Tito Belgrade, Yugoslavia, Dec. 6 (P) Yugoslavia's leading com munist newspaper declared to day the Cominform by inference has admitted failure of its 18-months-old attempt to promote an international revolt against the rule of Premier-Marshal Tito. This, said Borba, was implicit in the new blast against Tito's government in the form of a res olution adopted by the Comin form (Communist International. Information Bureau) in Hun gary. In a long front-page analysis of the resolution, the first in the official press here, Borba de nounced the new resolution as part of a plot to make workers of the world "tools of the non-peace-loving policy of the Sov iet government." The resolution had called upon all communists to work toward the overthrow of Tito as a heretic from Marxism. This new action of the Comin form, Borba said, will "only deepen and increase" the mass es' disapproval of Soviet tactics. 'If the first resolution (which ousted Tito from the Cominform in June, 1948) at least by form and content looked like some kind of Marxist document, the second resolution reminds one more, by its form and content, of the sentence of some court- martial," the editorial said. Borba chided the Cominform for describing Yugoslavia as " a fascist country and for promot ing the crusade against Tito. Gov. Stainback Visits Portland, Dec. 6 UP) Gov. In gram M. Stainback of Hawaii was a guest of the Portland East Side Commercial club today. He arrived by airliner yester day and will speak at the club's annual banquet tonight. Secret Radar Equipment Ripped from Russian Planes Wallace Eyed For Connection With Russians Washington, Dec. 6 VP) The house un-American activities committee eyed former Vice President Henry A. Wallace and many others today in a sudden ly revived hunt for people who pushed wartime uranium sflilp ments to Russia. Wallace commented that a statement that he was involved is false, and a part of "an un remitting effort to tarnish the name of Franklin D. Roosevelt." Chairman Wood (D., Ga.), promised there "isn't going to be any avenue left untouched" as the, house committee digs into the story that persons in high places helped Russia get uran ium and atomic information. Only Seek Truth For the sake of the American people, Wood told reporters, 'the story must either be corro borated or disproved." Much of it is old, particularly the part about several shipments of uranium compounds to Rus sian back in 1943, by way of Great Falls, Mont., and the Alas kan air route. But now big names are being brought into it: Wallace, who was fired from the cabinet by President Tru man for siding too much with Russia on international policy, and Harry L. Hopkins, the late intimate and adviser of Presi dent Roosevelt. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 6) China Bitter Over Lake Success, Dec. 8 (P) Na tionalist China's chief delegate to the United Nations lashed out bitterly today at an American Supported move which he said is designed to stop U. N. action in the Chinese-Russian dispute. The Chinese, representative, T. F. Tsiang, said the new pro posal, submitted by the Philip pines with U. S. backing, pre supposed silence will solve the Far Eastern crisis and said: "That silence means unconditional sur render to aggression." Tsiang said this amendment in effect says "We have done enough." Then he went on bit terly: "There are those who say Chi ne is dead. Free China is not dead. It is unthinkable that this assembly should pronounce not only China dead but the case of China dead. If that is the case we might as well close our doors. This amendment is nothing but escapism." Wrangling delayed final com mittee action on the question. Shirley Temple Wins Divorce Shirley Temple, with, At torney George Stahlman at her side, tells a judge in .Lot Angeles that her marriage to Actor John Agar was "turbu lent" because he paid too much attention to other woiricn. She got the divorce. She and the handsome actor married in 1945 when he was an army sergeant. (AP Wircphoto.). fflj s rip tN " U Tsung'-Jen, president of the Chinese Nationalist gov ernment. Li Interviewed At Honolulu Honolulu, Dec. 6 UP) Li Tsung-Jen, acting president of tottering nationalist China, ar rived by Pan-American Airways today from British Hong Kong. Through an interpreter in the early hours before dawn he said his sole purpose in coming to the United States was to obtain me dical aid for a severe stomach ailment. He has been in a Hong Kong hospital. Li will go direct to New York, arriving in San Francisco later today. There had been specula tion in some quarters his trip was to try to raise American aid to fight the communists in Chi na. The U.S. state department approved his visit and granted him a diplomatic visa as chief of state. " Lt. Jen Wang-Chih, Li's mili tary aide, said the acting presi dent could make no comment on political or military events in China of the past few days be cause he was not abreast of de velopments. Wang said Li was too tired and ill for a news conference But after Li, Madame Li and their two sons greeted amiably a Chinese delegation at the air port, 'they went for a drive around Honolulu. Wang was shown an Associ ated Press story quoting Gen eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek in Chengtu, China, as saying Li had been expected to return to China from Hong Kong to help cope with the communist situa tion but had left the country )n stead. After reading it Wang said: "Dr. Li left the country as the acting president of China and he is still acting president of Chi na." (The Hong Kong Standard yesterday had said Li made a dramatic bid to retain his pow ers of office by advising Nation alist Premier Yen Hsi-Shan and other politicians he is still their president. Jordan Snatched Apparatus from 4 Soviet Craft New York, Dec. 6 VP) Former Air Force Major George Racey Jordan told today of ripping sec ret radar equipment out of four planes bound for Russia in the war but said a fifth with the same material reached the Sovi et union. Jordan told a news conference he snatched the equipment from four planes at the Great Falls, Mont., air base. But another plane made it to Russia from Washington without stopping at Great Falls and balked him, he added. The former air force officer touched off a new investigation of secret material allegedly ob tained by the Soviets in a broad cast last Friday. Found Radar Parts He charged that the Soviets obtained uranium products in , the war and repeated the aciu- sation before a congressional committee yesterday. Uranium is used in making atomic bombs. Jordan was an expediting of ficer for lend-lease supplies to Kussia at the Great Falls base in the war. He told the news conference he found the radar equipment, which he never had seen before, in a C-47 transport destined for. the Russians. (Concluded on Page 5. Column 5) Insignificant Say Professors Chicago, Dec. 8 (IP) Univer sity of Chicago atomic scientists" today minimized the Importanca of uranium exports by the .Unit- ed States to Russia in 1943. They commented on the dis- closure by the state department that licenses were issued for the export of urano-uranic oxide, ur- -anium nitrate, uranium metal " and "heavy water" (deuterium). The men and their comments were: Dr. Harold Urcy. a leading nu clear physicist who helped make the first atomic bomb The ur anium listed in slate department reports were stable compounds of "virtually no interest, inter nationally, for explosive purpos es during 1943. "In addition, the weights al lowed by the export licenses" were so small as to be insignifi cant in relation to the amount, needed to produce a bomb. "I think we had to keep a tri ckle of all those chemicals flow ing during that period. If we had shut them off entirely we - would have told the world they had some new value which sev eral years earlier they had not. not." Dr. Thorfin R. Hogness, di-' rector of the university's Insti tute of Radio Biophysics All the materials listed by the state de- . partmcnt were common chemi--cals before the war and "we sent ' all kinds . of that stuff abroad then." . ! Dr. Samuel K. Allison, a key atomic scientist and professor of physics at the university 'Those chemicals were fairly standard items of trade in 1943. ' If they had been extremely puri fiod, some idea 01 our cxper: mcnt might have been exposed. The amounts, however, wouldn't even get an atomic enery p gram started.' 1 Killed, 2 Injured Corvallis Wreck Corvallis, Dec. 8 (IP) Ronald A. Dixon, 17, route 3, Junction Cily, was killed and two others were badly injured when their car crashed into a mud bank about two miles south of here at 1 a.m. today. Injured were Floyd Cotrell, 20, Monroe, and Phyllis Carson, 15, believed to be a route 3, Cor vallis, resident. Attendants at Good Samaritan hospital here said both arc expected to re cover. Police suid the car in which the trio was riding, driven by Cotrell, came west on Richland lane, a country road leading to highway 99W. The lane ends at the hU'hway but they failed to make the turn, plunging on across the road and into the bank on the west side. -I