THE WEATHER HERE PARTLY CLOUDY with scat tered showers tonight, Saturday. Little change in temperature. Lowest tonight, 34; highest Sat urday, 45. Maximum yesterday, 44t minimum to day. 34. Total 24-hour precipitation: .41 1 for month: l.TO: normal, 3.23. Season pre. clpltatlon, 11.33; normal, 18.97. River helrht. .B of a fool. (Report b7 U.S. Wea ther Bureau.) Capital Joiaraal HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 299 SSSiSSiiSS: Salem, Oregon, Friday, December 16, 1949 (24 Pages) Price 5c Truman Tells of Friendship for Eisenhower No Objection to Anybody Running For Anything Key West, Fla., Dec. 16 VP) President Truman today made it a matter ot record that he and General Dwight D. Eisenhower are "good friends and always have been." Apparently concerned about stories out of Key West that he regards the former army chief of staff as a candidate for the pre sidency, the presidential press Secretary Charles G. Ross told reporters: "The president wants it to go on record that he and General Eisenhower are good friends and always have been." Ross himself described the stories as "souped-up" and said he knew of no intimates with whom the president has discuss ed the possibility of Eisenhower becoming a candidate. Ike Denied Candidacy The White House reaction came after Eisenhower, now president of Columbia univer sity, said he was not a candidate, no matter what any one thinks, and will not be talked into be coming one. "Does the president regard General Eisenhower as a can didate in 1952?" a reporter ask ed Ross. The secretary said. "I don't know what is in his (the presi dent's) mind. The president is not talking about it along those lines." v ."Poes the president object to Eisenhower running next year?" Ross was asked. Simply Good Friends "The president has no objec tion to anybody running for anything." Eisenhower has made speech es regarded in administration quarters as critical of the Tru man program. Ross volunteered the com ment that the president had no ticed the story out of Fort Worth and simply wanted to make it clear he and Eisenhower were good friends. A reporter asked: "Is this an attempt to kill an Eisenhower boom?" "I'm not trying to kill or start any boom," Ross said. "I'm just telling the facts as I know them." Ross said he feared the Key West stories had "embarrassed" General Eisenhower and that was far from any intention by the president. Ross said, "certainly nothing official has come from the White House." Salem Facility In Aviation News Naval aviation men all over the world this month had an opportunity to learn-, of Salem's Naval Air Facility. In the December issues of Na val Aviation News, published monthly by the chief of naval operations and the Bureau - of Aeronautics in Washington, D C, is an article telling of the es tablishment of the Salem facili ty. Accompanying the article, which points out that the facil ity is "Oregon's first Naval Air , Reserve activity" and local J headquarters for more than 800 otlicers and men In the Willam ette valley, are two pictures. One of the pictures was tak en at the commissioning service in Salem in August, the other is a picture of Lt. Comdr. Wallace Hug, officer in charge of the fa cility, and a group of the Sa lem station keepers, taken in Seattle. The article not only tells of the commissioning service and the appearance here of the na vy's Blue Angels, but of the ac tivities to be conducted at the Ealem Naval Air Facility. It also gives information on the number of planes assigned here, the location and lists the officer in charge giving a bit of his background. In addition it notes that there are 21 enlisted station keepers at the facility nine of them being rated as na tives of Salem. Quirino Faces Operation Manila, Dec. 16 VP) President Elpidio Quirino is scheduled to enter Johns Hopkins hospital in Baltimore January 9 for an oper ation. The nature of the opera tion was not disclosed by the Malacanan palace announcement f his impending trip to the Unit- td States. KuKluxKlan Jury Still Out In Mass Trial Rome, Ga., Dec. 16 VP) A federal jury passed the 11 hour mark today still without a ver dict in the government's civil rights charges against 10 Dade county men. The jury went back to work at 9 a.m. after spending seven fruitless hours last night. The defendants Sheriff John W. Lynch, three of his deputies and six private citizens wandered aimlessly in the corridors. Each is accused on the first of a two-count indictment of con spiring to have seven Negroes arrested falsely and then sur rendered to a Ku Klux Klan mob of SO to 75 men for beating. Indonesians Elect Soekarno Batavia, Java, Dec. 16 VP) Radio Jogjakarta announced to day that President Soekarno of the Indonesian republic has has been elected first president of the new United States of In donesia. He is to be sworn in tomorrow morning. The new nation in the rich East Indies is to come into for mal being shortly after Christ mas, when the Dutch turn over to the Indonesians the reins of government they have held for three centuries. Soekarno, a fiery orator, has been Indonesia's top nationalist figure for nearly two decades. He was unanimously chosen president of the U.S.I, by the electors from 16 Indonesian states. When the revolutionary lead er moves into the Dutch gov ernor general's palace, the ac tion will symbolize the birth of a new nation to Indonesia's TtS,- 000,000 people. In fact, that move will mean more to them as proof of independence than all the written agreements and an nouncements. Less than 10 per cent of the people can read and write. A year ago, Soekarno and his cabinet were seized by Dutch paratroopers in the second "po lice action." Shave Despite Water Shortage New York, Dec. 16 VP) Habit proved too strong today for New York City men. They shaved. Few stubbly faces could be seen as subways and biases un loaded their passengers at of fice opening time on this "dry Friday," a one-day experiment to conserve the city's fast dis appearing water supply. Failure of the men not to fol low a "no shave" admonition was not considered a test of the scheme, however. There were other suggestions to save water. City residents were asked to forget tub baths and showers for the day, do all family launder ing at one time, wash dishes in one batch, and even to drink one glass less during the day. Talk around town indicated New Yorkers were taking "dry Friday" the climax of many curbs on water use in the same good humor that most of them exhibited under wartime re strictions. Check of the reservoir meters after the experiment ends at midnight will show how many actually obeyed the "don ts" during the 24-hour period. If the saving is big enough, dry Friday" will be a weekly holiday until the emergency ends. . Yeater Candidate For Either Mayor or Senator Douglas Yeater will be a candidate for mayor of Salem or for the state senate. He made that statement today, and said he would not announce his decision until after January 1. He will not, he said, be a candidate for re-election to the Ore gon house of representatives, Yeater was a member of the house in the 1947 and 1949 ses sions of the state legislature. His decision is being waited eagerly because of an unusual interest in contests for the office of mayor in the 1950 elections, and the question being most oft en asked in local political circles is: "Will Yeater run for mayor?" So far two men are in the race, and have announced themselves as candidates. First to announce was Alfred W. Loucks. Then came the announcement of Wal ter Musgrave, who was mayor of Wesl Germany Regime Hit for Rearming Plan Parliament in Uproar Over Charges Against Chancellor Bonn, Germany, Dec. 16 VP) For the second time in three weeks a session of the west Ger man parliament broke up in an uproar today over charges that Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's government is a puppet of the western allies. Tumult broke out on the floor when Communist Leader Max Reimann bitterly accused Aden auer of fostering a German re armament plan "backed by Ger man and American imperialism." 'If it were left to the German people, this puppet government would be finished off in 48 hours," Reimann shouted. At this, members leaped to their feet, shouting angry objec tions. The parliament president, Dr. Erich Koehler, recessed the session, but Reimann continued shouting over the uproar for several minutes before he strode from the chamber. Socialist Leader Kurt Schu macher also disrupted a parlia ment session November 25 when he called Adenauer "chancellor of the allies" during criticism of the chancellor's decision to end west Germany's boycott of the international Ruhr authority. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 6) Big Steel Hikes Prices of Steel Pittsburgh, Dec. 16 VP) -Big U. S. Steel Corporation hiked its steel prices about $4 a ton to day. Other top basic steel produc ers 8re expected to follow the leader. However, congressional inves tigators are trying to head off a general steel price increase be cause they say it threatens Am erica s economy. Senator O'Mahoney (D. Wyo.), chairman of the joint congressional economic commit tee, said he expects the commit tee to approve opening a probe of Big Steel's action after Christ mas. O'Mahoney declared the price raise is unjustified and will have an inflationary effect on the na tion's economic system just when business leaders should be strug gling to hold the lid on prices. Watching the developments si lently is the consumer. He'll ul timately have to pay more for: hundreds of articles if a general price increase develops. How much will such things as auto increase? No one knows but guesses range from $7 to $60. And will the price increase re sult in more wage demands from the CIO United Steelworkers? That seems almost certain. Big Steel's action wasn't a sur prise. 11 Transients Dead In 2-Room Shack Fire Rotan, Tex., Dec. 16 0I.R) Eleven transient cotton pickers of Mexico burned to death Wed nesday night or early Thursday when fire destroyed a two-room shack on a farm north of here. A wood-burning stove, in which fire was kept flaring all night as protection against 20 degree cold, was listed as the tentative cause of the blaze. Sheriff R. L. Wilkins said no body escaped from the house. West Salem when that city was merged with Salem. Sidney Stevens, often men tioned as a possible mayoralty candidate, hasn't yet made a def inite decision. The office of mayor in Salem is non-partisan. If a candidate in the primary election receives a majority vote over other can didates he is considered elected, but his name must appear on the November ballot. If no candidate receives a majority in the pri mary then the two highest have to contest for the office in the fall election. j : '-: ' ?; J Is. :rf Mother Greets Ruth Longview, Wash Both Happy Mrs. William Aberle, Sr., who with her husband, never lost faith that her daughter, Ruth Aberle, 16, Kelso school girl, would be found fondles her daughter's hair in happy reunion at "Cowlitz county hospital Thursday night. The girl was the ob ject of a five-day search in nearby forest. (AP Wirephoto) Scout Training Saved Life of Lost Kelso Girl Longview, Wash., Dec. 16 U.B said today that her Girl Scout the 96 hours she was lost in the The Kelso, Wash., high school would have died in the woods if B-29 Crashes, Burns, Killing 6 Roswell, N. M., Derrt6 -VPh- On the edge of Roswell; an air force B-29 crashed and burned late yesterday, killing six. Three crewmen were seriously injured. Five others walked away from the flaming wreck age with cuts and bruises. None of the dead or injured were from the Pacific northwest. The bomber, roaring in to a landing at Walker air force base where it was stationed, sheared off a windmill and tumbled to the ground. Cause of the crash was not made public. Air base officials, however, said there appeared to be "no indication of engine trou ble." Flames shot up from where the plane crashed, two miles north of the field and four miles from downtown Roswell. City and military ambulances, rescue crews and fire equipment work ed for two hours cutting bodies ard survivors out of the twisted wreckage. A smoke screen from the burning ship spread over miles of prairie west and south of, Roswell. The B-29 was returning from training flight. The Roswell dispatch said the pilot apparant ly undershot the field, judging from the clipped windmill which is near one of the runways. The plane was a modernized type of B-29. It was the first super-fort to crash since some of the B-29s were grounded No vember 18 for overhaul after a series of crashes that killed at least 120 men. Stresses Aid for Middle East London, Dec. 16 VP) Britain is pressing the- United States and Canada to help launch a giant new aid program for the middle east and southern Asia, responsible British source re ported today. He said the idea has come up "inthe most gen eral terms" at top-secret, three power talks now going op in Washington. The three-fold aim of such a project was said to be: 1. To save these strategic, po tentially-rich regions from the spread of communism. 2. To help western Europe mainly Britain close its debit gap between dollar buying and dollar spending. 3. To take off Britain some of the load she claims she's carry ing in paying off the wartime sterling debts, accumulated by countries like India, Pakistan Egypt and Iraq. Sixteen-year-old Ruth Aberle training saved her life during wilderness. sophomore said she probably the Girl Scouts had not taught her to find shelter and stay there until rescuers reached her. Ruth was found in a deserted cabin yesterday by sawmill oper ator Charles F. Smith and his 16-year-old son, Philip. The res cue came after up to 1,000 men had searched the brush and sec ond growth timber in a 10,000- acre section eight miles north of Kelso. Ruth became separated from nine of her school companions Sunday afternoon while hunting for Christmas trees. She was exhausted and suf fering from shock, but able to walk a mile and a half to the nearest road where an ambu lance brought her to the Cowlitz county General hospital here. "She's in pretty good shape," Dr. Clyde Duvall said. "She's exhausted and a little feverish, but she's come through it pret ty well." Ruth stumbled 11 miles through the forest Sunday aft ernoon to the 12 by 12 foot cab in where she found shelter from snow, rain and freezing weather. To keep warm while she slept in the cabin, Ruth propped a door in a corner to stave off cold drafts. The cabin was more than six miles from the area where the main search for her was centratcd. She had no food but drank water from a nearby stream "I wondered if anyone would ever find me," Ruth said. "I wasn't very cold; in fact, I was a little bit warm. I got awfully hungry, living on lust water Ruth's Girl Scout training also kept her faith up. I wasn't scared just hun gry, sne said, wny, I never realized how many people were looking for me. I'll have to read the papers to see what hap pened." The sheriff's office reported that all searchers had left the woods. Lt. Edward Ringle, command ing officer of the Longview-Kcl- so Salvation Army corps, said food donated by local merchants and .residents to the corps for the hundreds of searchers reach ed a staggering amount. The sheriff's office said the search was the largest single hunt in state history. Egg Prices Decline 2 Cents in Top Grades Egg prices went tumbling again here Friday morning in most of the produce firm lists. The cuts, amounting up to 2 cents on top grades, followed similar ones in Portland. Buying prices now list large AA at 37 cents; large A at 34 37 cents; medium AA .at 31 cents; medium A at 29 cents. During the past six weeks, egg prices have dropped as much as 15 cents a dozen on the top extra large grades. Plucky Ruth Aberle Tells Story of Being Lost Plan Session of All Protestant Churches in U.S. Greenwich, Conn., Dec. 16 VP) A permanent body aimed at eventual organic unity of the Protestant church in the United States was formed today at the conclusion of a three-day con ference on church union. Delegates from denominations with 14,000,000 to 16,000,000 members joined in summoning the balance of America's 47,000 000 Protestants to work for "an organic union." Bishop Ivan Lee Holt of St. Louis, Mo., president of ' the Methodist World Federation and of the Methodist council of bish ops, was named chairman of the executive committee. Conference Body The new, continuing body was named rne L-omerence on Church Union." Bishop Holt said: "The confer ence is one of the most import ant Protestant meetings ever held in the United States. "We are not ready yet to draw any blueprints of a new church but we are very sensible of the fact that we are being led in that direction." The next meeting of the new conference should be held "not later than the early months of 1951," according to the amount of progress made, the statement said. The Rev. Dr. William Barrow Pugh of Philadelphia, stated clerk of the general assembly of the Presbyterian church of the U.S.A., was appointed vice chairman. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 1) Dedicate New Umpqua Dam Roseburg, Dec. 16 VP) Call fornia-Oregon Power company's $7 million project, the first unit of a five-year $50 million post war building program, was for mally dedicated here last night. The ceremony' was attended by Oregon and northern California dignitaries and civic leaders from town in "Copco Land." Copco President A. S. Cum mins flipped a switch illuminat ing a huge diagram of the north Umpqua river development pro gram, which will eventually in clude eight hydroelectric plants supplying 145,000 kilowatts, more than doubling the com pany's present supply. Governor Douglas McKay formally accepted the project in behalf of the people of Oregon and gave the principal address in a half-hour broadcast over a seven-station mutual hookup. The broadcast, with Glenn L, Jackson, Copco vice president, Medford, as master of cere monies, included talks by Cum mins, Bonneville Administra tor Dr. Paul J. Raver, Copco Construction Supcrinte n d e n t John C. Boyle, Congressman Harris Ellsworth, Public Utili ties Commissioner George H Flagg and the mayors of Rose burg, Klamath Falls, Grants Pass, Dunsmuir, Calif., Yrcka and Medford. Women s Clubs Back Garbage Disposal Plan Every man, woman and child in Salem has a rat. That makes nearly 60,000 rats. When a plan for universal city-wide garbage disposal goes before the city council, which is of all of the 37 women's clubs That word came out of meeting Thursday of the Salem Council of Women's Organiza tions, which is made up of dele gates from all of the clubs. The meeting yesterday was told that there is a rat in Salem for every person, and elimina tion of the disease and filth car rying rodents was stressed as an important public service. It is one of the main objectives of the movement started by the women for universal garbage disposal. The move was started by the Salem Woman's club, which had a letter before the city council last Monday night, and the club was also rcprcsenled by several of its members. Wednesday the project was put before the Coun LA .XL ) Witness Latest witness in the San Francisco perjury trial of Longshore Chief Harry Bridges is Paul Crouch (above), who will testify for the government. Crough, a supervisory employe of a Mi ami, Fla., newspaper, was a communist party organizer for 17 years, was in Soviet Rus sia in 1928, at which time he was given an honorary colo nel's rank in the Red army. (Acme Tclephoto) Ex-Red Asserts Bridges Commie San Francisco, Dec. 16 CP) A former red leader, once impris oned for trying to communize U. S. soldiers, says Harry Bridges twice was elected to the Communist party s powerful central committee. Bridges is on trial in federal court on a perjury charge ac cused of lying when he swore, to obtain U. S. citizenship lr 1945, that he never had been a Communist. Australian born, he is president of the CIO Interna- t i o n a 1 Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's union. The witness who testified that Bridges was a member of cen tral committee was Paul Crouch. He testified that Bridges was elected to the committee in 1936 under the name Rossi; and that he was elected again in 1938 un der the name Dorgan. Both times. Crouch said, the Communist delegates cheered wildly when Bridges asserted nom-de-red names were plac ed before the convention. Crouch said he was high in U. S. communist circles 17 years until he finally withdrew. He was a district organizer in 12 states, editor of party magazines and newspapers; a leader in nu merous communist front organ izations. Denfeld Indicates Will Offer Resignation Washington, Dec. 16 (U.P) Adm. Louis E. Denfeld, ousted chief of naval operations, has in dicated he will resign from the navy rather than step down to a lower command, it was learned today. Friends quoted the former No. 1 naval officer as saying he would not accept the post of commander of U. S. naval forces in European waters which was offered at the time of his re moval. expected, it will have the backing in Salem. af - cil of Women's Organizations, and the delegates will recom mend to all the clubs, 37 in all, that they back the plan. The vote was unanimous. A plan has not yet been drawn up. It is said, however, that it will not be detrimental to the concern that now handles Salem garbage under contract with the city. The women inlerestcd have heard of methods of garbage handling by people who do not subscribe to the garbage col lector's service that give the matter a wider importance than rat control. Instances were men tioned of garbage beinng thrown regularly into Mill creek. in Woods Girl Occupied Deserted Cabin In Wilderness Longview, Dec. 16 VP) Ruth 5- Aberle told her story today. The 16 year old Kelso girl, found yesterday afternoon after having been lost in the foothills of the Cascade mountains since noon last Sunday, looked rested and happy as she talked to reporters. She spoke from a bed in the Cowlitz General hospital here where she was brought by am bulance shortly after being found by C. F. Smith, resident of Rose valley. "I was with the other kids who were hunting Christmas trees about six miles up the Os trander creek road Sunday," she said. "I stayed with them most of the time. Then I thought if I hurried I might get to the road ahead of the others. Heard Kids Whistle "I heard the other kids whis tle once. I whistled back, but, I guess they didn't hear me. I went on. Soon I got on a real long road. I followed the road. Then I found a group of roads that seemed to go in circles. "After dark I saw a light. I thought it was probably a home. I left the road and started down a hill. I slipped and fell quite a bit. Soon I heard water. Aft er getting a drink I saw a cab in," she said. The cabin which Ruth saw was the one in which she stayed most of the time until she was found by Smith. It is located approxi mately one half mile east of Go ble creek and the Rose Valley road. It was from five to seven miles from where search head quarters had been set up on the Ostrander road. (Concluded on Page 5, Column S) France to Get U.S. Flat-Top Paris, Dec. 16 VP) France will get a U.S. aircraft carrier as part of Atlantic pact aid, National De fense Minister Rene Pleven said today. He made this disclosure in a budget hearing before the na tional defense committee of the lower house of parliament, the national assembly. Pleven insisted on 1950 mili tary credits of 420 billion francs or $1,200,000,000. This is only 18 percent of the total budget, he said, while comparative figures for other countries are: Great Britain, 23 percent, the United States 33 percent, Holland 19 percent, Italy 19.5 percent, and Russia 19 percent. Pleven said he would Insist on help from other Atlantic pact nations for the French air force, which now totals 60,000 men. Pleven did not specify the sizo of the carrier. 6 Army Fliers 'Hit the Silk' Reno, Nov., Dec. 16 VP) Six military passengers "hit the silk" at 12,000 feet and landed safely in a lava bed cast of here early today when their air force "flying boxcar" developed mo tor trouble. One received a broken leg, another an injured arm and the rest bruises. But all agreed they were pretty lucky. "This is a pretty good Christ mas present I'd say," comment ed Pfc. Joseph Leptlch, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leptich, of Portland, Ore. Leptich injured his arm when he landed on a boulder but he said he didn't think it was brok en. The pilot, second Lt. George Dumont, 26, Showhcgan, Me., and his crew managed to bring the big C-82 to an uneventful landing at Hubbard field In Re no. The men bailed out aoout iu miles northeast of here. The CAA here reported tho craft took on a heavy coating of ice and that the pilot order ed his passengers and radioman out when the left motor started to fail. The motor kicked in again, however, after tho six had bailed out.