THE WEATHER HERE CLOUDY WITH rain tonight, Thursday. Continued mild tem peratures. Lowest tonight, 46 de grees; highest Thursday, 50. Mailman) yeiterdar, 61; minimum 4. day, 47. Total 24-hour precipitation, trace; for month, 4.40; normal, 8.11, Season pre cipitation, 18.94; normal, 18.33. RUer tiflfht, S.4 feet. (Report by U.S. Weather Bureau.) Capital MTDial HOME EDITION 61st Year, No. 308 ESrWSTMS Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, Dec ..-cr8, 1949 (16 Pages) Price 5c Warning on Pollution of Willamette City Given Until January 1, 1952, to Comply with Order By STEPHEN A. STONE Salem, along with other Wil lamette valley cities, is given until January 1, 19S2, to quit polluting the Willamette river by its sewer system. This notice was received in a notice from the Oregon state sanitary authority to the city council Tuesday night. City 5 Manager J. L. Franzen said to- ay the sewage disposal plant should be completed by that date. It will take care of indus trial waste from the canners, he said, but the mill of the Oregon Pulp & Paper company poses a problem. Waste from pulp and paper mills can't be taken into sewage disposal plants, the manager said, because i t contains sul phuric acid, which eats out rap idly any metal it contacts. Formal Order Coming Franzen said the industry, and not the city, would be held re sponsible by the sanitary author ity if the pollution is not elimi nated. But the paper mill indus try has a problem because it has no way, except one of almost prohibitive cost, to eliminate the waste. Karl Heinlein, manager of the Salem mill, said the in dustry had been working on it for several years through the state colleges of Oregon and Washington. A formal order to the city of Salem, says the letter from the sanitary authority, will be is sued after the next regular meeting of the authority. The letter read Tuesday night was signed by Curtiss M. Everts, Jr., secretary and chief engi neer. He said in part: "On numerous occasions since Jt was first-organized in 1939 the Oregon state sanitary author ity, in an attempt to obtain vol untary cooperation, has direct ed to the attention of the Salem city council the necessity of pro viding adequate sewage treat ment works for the city, of Sa lem. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 6) Seek to Build Apartments Another major apartment house project, for which prelim inary plans are on file with the city building Inspector's office, will if approved, be located in the heart of the proposed capi tol zone on the west side of Summer between Marion and Union. It was the subject of an ap plication to the city council Tuesday night for adjustment of set-back lines. The building would be seven stories high, contain 36 apart ments, and cost around $300,- 000. Approval by the federal housing administration has been given. The application was signed by Don Byers, Portland archi tect, on behalf of the Prescott corporation, Capitol Plaza cor poration, and Coates Construc tion company of Portland, Pro perty transfers in connection ith the project are being handled by Grabenhorst Bros. The application asks waiver of the building code regulation that requires a set-back of four feet from adjacent property lines. The builders want to ex tend the first story to the pro perty line to give ample space for car storage for tenants, since the ground floor will be used for that purpose with al ley entrance. The floors above would be 10 feet from property line,' the application said. Chinese Planes Bomb Commies Hong Kong, Dec. 28 W Nationalist planes today bombed communist troop concentrations in Liuchow peninsula of south ern China. The planes, American built B-25s and Canadian built Mos quito bombers, took off from Hoihow, northernmost town on Hainan island and 10 miles from Liuchow peninsula. Other nationalist planes ybombed strategic Red bases long the coast from Canton fnorthward to Swatow. A government communique said hits were scored and large ares started. McKay Names Aides to Jobless Governor Douglas McKay Wednesday announced appoint ment of a state-wide committee to combat the growing unem ployment problem in Oregon. With approximately 55,000 unemployed listed by the state unemployment compens a t i o n commission, the governor set up a 10-man advisory committee in conformity with terms of the Wagner-Peyser act requiring states to establish advisory em ployment councils drawn from labor, management and the pub lic. He named Dr. Calvin Crum- baker. head of the University of Oregon department of economics as chairman. Others on Committee In addition to Dr. Crumbaker the members named to the coun cil included Jack Jennings, Port land, chairman of the Portland labor-management commit tee; David Blakeman, Portland, na tional executive committeeman of the American Legion depart ment of Oregon and Milan Smith, Pendleton, representing civic or ganizations as the public mem bers. Labor is represented on the committee by M. E. Steele, Port land, secretary of the bakery drivers, A. F. of L.; George Brown. Portland, secretary ol the state CIO council and Alice A. Bissell, Eugene, secretary of the cannery, .warehousemen and food processors union. (Concluded on Page 5, Column I) Anthony Adverse Author Dies in Miami Miami, Fla., Dec. 28 W Hervey Allen, 60, author of "An thonv Adverse" died today at his home of a heart attack. Dr. Frank Stewart, local heart specialist, said the noted author was stricken with the fatal at tack early this morning. Indonesian President Urges Dutch Friendship Ratnvia. Java. Dec. 28 (IP) President Soekarno, who headed the rebellion that led to independence for the New United States of Indonesia, told his people today to show goodwill and hos- nitaiitv toward their former Dutch masters. About 200,000 cheering Indonesians jammed into the square before the government palace tc greet Soekarno as he arrived to establish the capital of the new nation that officially came into being yesterday. Calling for "work and work and work," to build prosperity for the U. S. I., Soekarno added: We now are on peaceful terms with the Dutch and other foreigners. They are all our guests. Show hospitality toward them." His speech echoed the appeal for Dutch-Indonesian coopera tion voiced yesterday in Amster dam by Queen Juliana as she signed the papers making the United States of Indonesia an independent nation. The U. S. I. remains linked to the Nether lands by recognizing the Dutch crown as a symbol of Dutch- Indonesian union, much like the British commonwealth of na tions. Soekarno flew to Batavia from Jogjakarta, capital of the rebel Indonesian republic whose lead ers fought in guerrilla warfare against the Dutch for four years. The republic now is one of the 16 federal states in the U. S. I. Indonesian police lining the four-mile route from Kemjoran airfield to the palace were un Fire Survivors in Dallas Hospital Hospitalized in Dallas today are Homer Lowery, (left), and his daughter, Fay Jean, 9, seriously burned in a of the Lowery children at Falls Jean was rescued by her father. City Transit Lines May Abandon 2 Rural Runs Indications were strong today to abandon several of its suburban runs after January 1. On that date jurisdiction over the lines, under a new law, passes from the state public utilities commissioner to the city. That law is effective for a radius Record Snow Blankets B. C. Vancouver, B. C, Dec. 28 (CP) Record snowfall sealed mountain passes in central in terior British Columbia today isolating the coast from eastern Canada, Heavy, packed snow blocked the $12,000,000 Hope-Princeton highway, where slides tumbled down the mountainside. Scores of motorists were re ported marooned between Hope and Princeton along the 183- mile road link to the interior. Seven buses and 150 private cars were on the "missing list," but many would be able to shel ter in road camps during the night. Others were stranded in their cars as giant rotary plows bat tled to clear the roadways. Princeton, where more than 30 inches of snow have fallen in the last 24 hours, was packed with travellers. The Trans-Canada highway, blocked by a slide between Whilliwack and Hope, 100 miles east of Vancouver, was cleared early today. The slide had cut off the Fraser Canyon route. The heavy, wet snow and sleet snapped communication services to the east and train service was disrupted. No trains arrived in Vancouver this morn ing. able to hold back the thousands who enthusiastically cheered their slim, black-haired presi dent. Soekarno, dressed in a white naval uniform, was accompanied by Sultan Hamengku Buwono vice premier and minister of defense. The president stood in the open car, waving and re sponding to swelling shouts of Merdeka" freedom. "This is the first time after four years I am face to face with the people of Batavia," he de clared in his brief palace speech. Soekarno fled from Batavia to Jogjakarta when Dutch troops took over after the In donesian republic was proclaim ed in 1945. Washington, Dec. 28 W) The United States today formally recognized the new government of Indonesia. H. Merle Cochran was named as the first ambassador to the new republic. As U.S. representative of the United Nations commission for Indonesia, Cochran had a major hand in bringing about the agreement that created the new republic in the East Indies. fire that took the lives of two City early Wednesday. Fay that City Transit lines intends of three miles outside the city limits. At the PUC it was said that Carl Wendt, general manager of City Transit Lines, had said unofficially that the company expected to abandon the Fruit- land and the Auburn road runs. In Salem Wednesday there were similar rumors about the subrban service. Persons in the habit of using the suburban service were arous ed. At the Salem office of City Transit Lines Manager R. J. Davidson said he had no def inite information and was not in position to confirm the ru mors until he hears from the Portland office. City Manager J. L. Franzen said the report had not reached him. Oregon Escapes Predicted Storm The expected stormy weather passed by the valley regions, Wednesday, most of the morning here being featured by some sunshine coming through the cloud patches and mild temper atures prevailing. The morning minimum was 47 degrees, fol lowing a maximum of 51. Press reports stated the storm hit the Washington and Brit ish Columbia areas but left Oregon untouched except for some brisk wind yesterday and scattered rainfall. In the Salem area the 24-hour precipitation in the period end ing at 10.30 a.m. Wednesday amounted only to a trace. Forecast is for cloudiness and rain tonight and Thursday but with the mild temperatures con tinuing. 40 Hour Week 'Fool's Paradise' New York, Dec. 28 W A Columbia University marketing professor questioned today whe ther this country can continue a self-maintained and surplus producing economy under a 40 hour, five-day work week The point "has never yet been proved or demonstrated," Prof. Paul H. Nystrom of Columbia's graduate school of business told the American Marketing associa tion at its winter conference here. "There has been no attempt to measure that possibility," he declared. "The effects of this artificial brake on our economy have never been assessed. The unions, the government, the busl ness men and the people of the country are living in blissful hope that this policy may not land us in the wreckage of fool's paradise." The 40-hour week was con ceived as a spread-the-work measure during the depression, he declared. Winter Hits at (By the AASocl.ttd Press) King Winter opened a verit able Pandora's box of weather today marooning travelers with snow and slides, snapping com munications lines with blizzards and whipping winds, and threat- ing to bring a half dozen west ern Washington rivers to flood stage with soaking rains. One death was reported in southwest Washington, but prin cipal storm damage seemed to be centered in British Colum bia. The victim was Burnis Mc- Henry, 28, a Long Bell Lumber company logging railroad work- He was struck by a wind- snapped tree near Ryderwood. In British Columbia, highways to the east were closed by snow Six Canadian Pacific trains four of them crack trans-con tinental passenger trains were halted east and west of Revel- oke, B. C, by snowslides. Re- velstoke is 400 miles east of Vancouver. Heavy sleet broke down tele phone lines, - necessitating all calls to be rerouted through Seattle. Three feet of snow cov ered Kelowna, 375 miles east of Vancouver. Twenty-six inches of snow blanketed the Princeton area. In Washington's Cascade mountain area, a blinding snow storm all but halted traffic west of the Snoqualmie pass summit Approximately 150 skiers and returning holiday vacationists were rescued yesterday noon af ter being marooned in Stevens Pass overnight. False Spring Hits New York New York, Dec. 28 (IP) New York City coasted to its third heat record in a week today when the first reading at 12:01 m. showed the mercury at 59.6. The old mark was 58.1 set in 1936. At the same time, warm rains eased temporarily the chronic water shortage. The city shared a "false spring" with New England and states to the south which the weather bureau said was caused by warm Gulf breezes moving north between high pressure ar eas. New York also set a heat rec ord last evening of 62.1, and an other of 62.2 on Dec. 22. It was lilac time in Massachu setts. Middlebury, Vt.. reported hay ing. Maple sap was running in Vermont, and hornets usually asleep at this stage ol tne win ter were on the wing at Bidde- ford, Me. Gardeners were worried lei plants and trees start to bud in the unseasonable warmth, only to be killed by a sudden freeze. This condition is extremely dan gerous for fruit trees. The forecast was for a slightly cooler day in New York City, with highs up to 55, and for con siderably cooler in Boston. Enjoyment of . the warm Christmas season was limited in New York City because of rains and continuing drizzle but it was Just as welcome to the wa ter-shy residents. Children's Nursery Burns Chcrryville, Ore., Dec. 28 u. Fire late yesterday destroyed a frame building used as a chil drens nursery for skiing par ents. The building was empty at the time. A defective oil heater was blamed for the blaze which temporarily blocked traffic I the Mt. Hood Loop highway, 2 Children Burned to Death In Fire at Baby Princess Born to Rita and Prince Aly Khan Lausanne, Switzerland, Dec. 28 (IP) A baby princess was born today to Rita Hayworth, the glamorous red-headed movie star who married IVroslem Prince Aly Khan last spring. The baby, weighing about five and a half pounds, was born about eight hours after Rita made a pre-dawn dash to exclu sive Montchoisi clinic. The new princess' name will be Yasmin, the Arabic spelling for the fragrant jasmine flower used in southern France for making perfume. Prince Aly, unshaven, hag gard but smiling made the an nouncement to newsmen outside the clinic doors. Tough Time for Rita 'Rita had a very tough time,' he said but added with a smile: It has gone off all right. She is very tired." The prince said the birth was natural one, delivered under gas. Rita's first daughter by a pre vious marriage was delivered in 1944 by Caesarian section. Yasmin was born at 9:45 a.m. (3:45 a.m. EST). prince Aly, whose marriage to Rita took place at Vallauris, France, May 27, has said that premature babies are not unsual in his family. Messages of congratulations were pouring into the hotel within an hour after the an nouncement of the birth. (Concluded on Page 5, Column 4) r 5 Boys Escape Training School Woodburn, Dec. 28 (IP) Five boys escaped from the State Training school this morning after hitting a supervisor on the head with a broom and taking his keys, but two of the group were recaptured. James Lamb, superintendent of the school, said the boys are serious offenders. They escaped from a detention cottage con taining 30 boys. Lamb said the other 25 could have escaped, but they didn't try. He said the escape occurred at 6:45 a.m The supervisor, Vern Neal, received a cut on his head, but wasn't seriously hurt. The boys were dressed in overalls but had no shoes. Ten cars from the school were patrol ling the highways in an effort to recapture the boys. The boys are: Walter Leroy Forbes, 14 Roseburg; Richard Henderson, 17; Omaha, Neb.; Robert Hughes 15, Portland; Richard William Kirkel, 16, Vallejo, Calif.: and John Simon, 16, Portland. Henderson and Hughes, both colored, were nabbed by school officials. Jetmobile Exhaust stacks are shown protruding from a jet turbine and a ram jet engine mounted in the rear ot an old model car by John R. Mitchell (shown kneeling), a Chance Vought aircraft employe at Dallas, Tex. Mitchell says his Jet mobile costs only two-tenths of a cent per mile to operate, and is capable of generating 800 pounds of thrust, equal to about 200 miles an hour. But Mitchell explains it isn't practical for city driving, "it makes too danged much noise." (AP Wirephoto) Falls City Bull Escapes Slaughter Pen Stages Rumpus Manheim, Pa., Dec. 28 (U.R) A 1,600-pound bull crashed out of a slaughter house pen here today. He terrorized housewives by peering in windows and snort ing. Then he spotted three-year- old Judy Martin. She was play ing in her sandbox. The bull charged Judy and tossed the little girl and a neighbor who ran to her aid over a fence. They escaped with bruises and shock. Next he charged 16-year-old motorcyclist Durrcll Brock. The youth's father jumped between the bull and. the cycle to freight en off the animal. From there the bull galloped into the American House hotel. Patrons ganged up to shoo him out. Then he ambled into the hear ing room of Justice of the Peace L. W. Musser, who was taking evidence in an assault and bat tery case. Police officers drove him out and gave chase. Four hours after his break for freedom the bull was lassoed by an electricians helper on Fer dinand street. Undecided on Loan to Tito Washington, Dec. 28 JP) The world bank said today it has not made any decision" wheth er a loan can be' made to Yugo slavia. "The matter is still under dis cussion," a spokesman added. Dispatches from Belgrade said Yugoslav officials told their par liament yesterday that the bank has "agreed in principle" to lend Yugoslavia $25,000,000. It was surmised here that the Yugoslavs were putting that con struction on the fact that the bank has entered into negotia tions for a possible loan after sending an economic mission to Yugoslavia last summer. But bank officials said the fact that negotiations began a few days ago does not assure that a loan will be made, or mean an agreement "in principle" to make a loan. Yugoslavia put in a general application for a loan of about $250,000,000 some two years ago when the bank was in its form ative stages. Since then the bank has set tled on a pplicy of lending only for specific projects. When the U.S. government began warm ing to Marshal Tito after his break with Moscow, Yugoslavia began seeking funds for specific power, mining and agricultural projects. Walk Out in Protest Rome, Dec. 28 (IP) Bus and tram workers struck for two hours from 10 a.m. to noon- this morning putting thousands of workers, shoppers and pil grims afoot. Home Another Child And Father in Dallas Hospital Falls City, Dec. 28 Two Small children were burned to death early this morning in a fire which destroyed their home and sent the father and another child to the Dallas hospital with severe burns. Neither are be lieved in a critical condition. Dead are Betty Louise, 5, and Mary Frances Lowery, 7, daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Low ery. Another daughter, Fay Jean Lowery, 9, has burns about the body and face. Lowery was ournea irom the waist up in his attempt to save his children. Neither M rs. Lowery nor two other children. Alvin James, 3, and Delores Jean, 1V4, were in jured. Bodies Found in Quins Bodies of the two girls were found in the ruins after thev had cooled sufficiently to per mit search. Lowery was awakened bv the fire shortly after 1 o'clock. The family occupied two front bedrooms in the small house just south and outside the city limits, ine rooms were on op posite sides of the living room which separated them. The parents and the two youn- ger children were asleep in one bedroom and the. rest of the family in the other. Lowery was able to carry Fay ' Jean from the burning building but flames prevented him from saving the other two. The bed room had only one small win-, dow, about 30 by 30 inches, lo cated rather high in the wall and it is believed the two children suffocated as they would have been unable to leave the room by way of the window. (Concluded on PAfre 5, Column 8) Churchill 'Man Of Half-Century New York, Dec. 28 (IPh-Win- ston Churchill Time magazine editors say is the "Man of the Half Century." The portrait of the wartime British prime minister by Am erican artist Ernest Hamlin is on the cover of the Jan. 2 Time, which contains a 16-page sup plement "The Half-century." "No man s history," Time says. "can sum up the dreadful won derful years 1900-50. Churchill's story comes closest." Describing the British leader as "one of the half-century's greater politicians," Time says: "Sometimes wrong, often right, he fought his way toward the heart of every storm. "In 1900, Churchill, like his contemporaries, looked forward to pleasant years. Like his con temporaries, Churchill was to struggle through depths and rise to heights unimaginable to 1900." In summarizing the period. Time weaves Churchill's career into the international picture. "His chief contribution was to warn of rocks ahead, and to lead the rescue parties. He was not the man who designed the ship; What he did was to launch the lifeboats. That a free world sur vived in 1950, with a hope of more progress and less calamity, was due in large measure to his exertions." Time adds that Churchill "as mobllizer of two great national defense efforts "Two World Wars" unwittingly contributed more than all the Fabians to the triumph of the socialist state." Miss America Weds School Sweetheart Litchfield Park, Ariz., Deo. 28 (IP) A high school romance has blossomed into marriage for Miss America of 1949, Jacque Mercer, the national beauty queen, exchanged vows with Douglas Cook at the non- denominational community church here yesterday after noon. They have gone steady for the past five years. The marriage was a surprise affair. Only last Friday the cou ple had announced their en gagement and set the date at the altar for next July 4. The new Mrs. Cook is a resi dent of Litchfield Park, She will be 19 next month. 1