Valley Newi Eighty correspondents for The statesman located in all mid Willamette valley, com munities write newt of event In their area. (iPI iiMlttiii tti POUNBDO 1651 The Weather , Unsettled today and Sat nrday, occasional showers. Little change In tempera tore. Max." Temp. Thursday 55, Hln. 44. River -.7 feet. SSW wind. EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, December 30, 1938 Price Sc; Newsstands St No. 238 Youi TTN O J P TTh o After Amazing Airline Route To Open Salem Service Today Daily Passenger Service on Oregon Air Lines Is Announced 1st Plane From South Is Due at Airport Early - This Mornin Dally passenger and express air transport service will be institut ed for Salem today on the Marsh-field-Portland run of Oregon Air Lines, Leo Arany, associate of the -firm and. lessee of the municipal airport here, announced las' night. ' The local air service, which has been In operation with stops at ' Marshfield, Eugene, Albany and Portland for two months, is ex- ' pected to be the forerunner of the . city's first direct air connection with Pacific coast and eastern air mail routes. First Plane Dae At 9:35 o'CIock The first plane from the south. will reach Salem at 9 : 3 5 o'clock this morning and Arany, flying his Fairchild four-passenger cabin monoplane, will start the Marsh- field run at 2:30 this afternoon The line's present schedule calls for daily departures from Harsh field at 8 a. m., arriving at Eugene at f,T Albany at 1:25, Salem at 9: 35 and Portland at 10:15, ane from Portland at 2 p. m., reach ing Salem on the southbound trip at 2 i 30, Albany at 2:40, Eugene at'3:15 and Marshfield at 4:10. Arany said. Swan island airport is, being utilized at Portland. . . t Arany', ; who has been work in g with a chamber .of commerce com mittee here to secure a direct air mail connection for Salem, said last night the effort's success seemed 'almost certain.". 4th Man Is Held In Coster Probe Michael Petrella j- Among Four Accused of Plot to Blackniail .NEW YORK, pec. 29-pV-The government late today announced the arrest of Michael Petrella. 40, the fourth suspect accused of hav ing systematically- blackmailed the late F. Donald Coster-Musica .through knowledge of his past as convict Philip Musics. Petrella was described by fed eral agents as active "in a small way'" in local politics. They said, too, he had succeeded Coster-Mu-slca. . the indicted head of the 187,000,000 drug firm. of McKes son Robbies, as a partner of Joseph Brandino in a small drug company formerly doing business in Brooklyn. . - ; T -. v He was booked on a charge of conspiracy to blackmail Coster, an identical complaint having already been made against Bran dino. his sister, Mary, and Walter H. Cragg, disbarred lawyer, who are held in bail. Federal law pro Tides a maximum penalty of 20 years Imprisonment &, v- f -Police Lieut James Pyke said Petrella admitted writing letters to Coster-Musica in behalf of Cragg, Brandino and Ben Simon, the other defendants charged with general conspiracy. The letters, he said, referred to the manufacture of an electric cooker. Detectives Sleuth For Bombing Clue PORTLAND, Dec. 9-)-Two Portland detectives who were leading figures in the labor ter rorlst investigations earlier this year, today were assigned to the Job of Solving the attempted ex tortion and bomb-threat made against the Sears, . Roebuck A Co. store last Saturday. - - " . They were Detectives C..E- San ders and Paul 'Mumpower. They drew the assignment when they told Detective Captain J. J. Kee- gan they had "uncovered a few leads." The department store was clos ed at S p.m. Sautrday after a note demanding 32500 and threat ening a bombing 'was received. The bombing failed . to material ize and no money was paid, but the store management evacuated the building of 5000 customers and SM employes. . - r ' - M.l I II Timberline Lodge Has Snow Blanket PORTLAND. Dee. 2 9-ff-3now fell at Timberline lodre on Mount Hood today, but Portland continued to enjoy comparative ir mild weather ' with the tem- rerature rar ging tout degrees tpward from a low of 69. . Only .05 of an inch of rain fell in 12 hours. At Timberline, 62 Inches of wet snow covered the-ground. - - .-..- - CHINESE AERICANS JOIN TO STOP WAR T i . ! Y TrivfT0R!s;r f ; i i STOP ss) ST0R mm Negri o Confesses Slayings of Five 25-Year-Old Man Captured With Victim' Clothes in Possession SAVANNAH. Ga., Dec. 29-(4V Sollcitor General Samuel A. Cann said tonight Marion Hunter, 25- year-old negro, confessed the slay ing of .five persons here on De cember 21 in a robbery in which he obtained ouly dimes, nickels and pennies from slot machines, a shotgun and bits of clothing.' Special Deputy John G. Miller said Hunter was captured in the negro section of the city today with clothing in his - possession that belonged to the victims. J. S. Tillman, his wife and two young daughters were bludgeoned to death with an iron pipe as they slept In their two room home. Thomas Chester, watchman at a nearby filling station, Vas 'found shot to death. : - Deputy Miller said Hunter took officers to the scene of the crime following his arrest and reenacted the mass murder. Police said the negro was given a four year sentence on a robbery charge in 1932, later served two years for automobile theft. OPart of the group of 27 Chinese from Portland and nine Salem per sons wno Joined forces on the streets here yesterday and got nearly 8500 signatures on their petitions protesting against shipment of war materials and arms to Japan. The local group will seek more signatures here today and Saturday. Ross States Path - Cleared for Line PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 29-(,ip)-Bonneville Dam Administrator J. D.' Ttos3 said the path had been cleared for immediate construc tion of a power transmission line to Salem, Albany and Eugene with the signing in federal court today of an authority to use Oregon Electric Railway right of way. The action assures Willamette valliy communities power by early fall, Ross said. He deposited a check for $104,092.80 with Fed eral Judge James A. Fee for the privilege. Applications for blocks of pow er already have been made by Canby, Monmouth and Eugene for distribution over municipally- owned systems, Ross added. Right of way clearing in the Salem and Albany districts has been started. "btop waif Appeal Gets 3500 Signers in Drive Governor Martin's Name Leads Signatures Asking Cessation of Shipment of Munitions From US to Japanese Nearly 3500 Salem citizens, including Governor Charles H. Martin, yesterday affixed their signature to petitions in circulation here protesting against shipment of war materials and arms from this country to Japan. The petitions will be f orwarded, together with signatures gained today and tomor row, by air express ta President Franklin D, Roosevelt and the department of state. . . O- . - The large number of signatures came with united efforts of Chi nese and Americans, 27 Chinese from Portland Joining with nine Protest new, For Sewage Plant PORTLAND, Dec. 2-P)-Ma-jor industrial water users here told the city council today that they could' not afford to pay an additional water levy to finance a sewage disposal system. T ' Portland voters in - November approved a plan to charge a third of the Normal water bill to fi nance the sewage system. The in dustrialists complained that such heavy water users as sawmills would find It impossible to meet the extra cost. - . . Representatives of packing plants, ice plants, laundries, woolen mills,; milk distributors and hospitals also protested. local people in circulating the "Stop War'; call on the streets of Salem. , - - ' . The local people will carry the work on , here today and Satur day while the Chinese group, fur nished by the Chinese Society of Portland with Dr. T. D. Lee as chairman, will go to Oregon City and Portland for. circulation of similar petitions. " ; Local sponsor for the move is Richard Adlard, student - who spent part of last year in Canton. China, and saw the horrors of the undeclared war In that land. The International Relations class which meets at the TMCA each Tuesday night has assisted Ad lard in the petition work. - Abandon all Hope FoTrapped Pair KIRKLAND LAKE, Ont., Dec. 29-(Canadian Press)-R e s e u e workers tonight abandoned vir tually all hope for" two miners entombed since Tuesday behind a rock wall a half mile under ground in the Lake Shore gold mine here.. ft : , - Despite the slim hancesv of finding the men alive 'drilling crews, working in half-hourly relays, dug frantically into piles of debris in an effort to reach them. "'-y'" - r ' 4The miners, John Houlbec, 33t and Vito Claisevgevich, 40, were imprisoned Tuesday ' night when an air blast caused v the collapse of shaft wbere they were work ing. ; s "" Train Shears off Rear End of Auto ALBANY, Dec 29-flVL. .C. Baldenweck of Cottage Grove re vealed to police today a close, call with an electric locomotive last Tuesday. . He said the locomotive sheared the spare tire,' tall light and li cense plate from the rear of his car as It rolled over the crossing. Back-Firing Furnace Causes Fire at: Allen's Fruit Plant Damage estimated at from $5000 to 18000 occurred to the W. G. Allen Fruit company's plant at-Front and" Chemeketa streets shortly after noon yesterday when fire, presumably starting from the backfire of an oil-burning boiler, burned Its way up the walls to almost destroy the roof. Prompt action by. the Salem fir department had what first ap peared to be a dangerous blase under control within 45 minutes. ? The fire started within five minutes of the time wniiam Weaver, employe, had started the main, v first-floor boiler ; from which the flames spread. After starting the burner Weaver "went to the basement to attend to an auxiliary, booster boiler. . When he returned the first floor, around the main floor, was In flames. Yesterday's preliminary check revealed little damage to the $20,000 worth of equipment, and W. G. Allen said he believed the insurance sufficient to cover the loss. The building, owned by the Southern Pacific Railway compa ny, was fully Insured. Homer Smith, sr., insurance man. estimated the loss at , be tween fSOOO and $8000. K The city building ordinance un der which buildings in nre tohe number one must be rebuilt to conform with building restrictions if damaged 20 per "cent by fire does not apply to the AUen build ing, as was thought possible yes terday. The ordinance concerns wood frame buildings, while the Allen building Is of concrete wall construction - w 1th interior of wood. ... Midwest Readying For:2d Cold Wave Loyalist Lines Break Bef pre Rebel Offense Threat to Strong Point in Northeast Spain ; Becomes Great French - Italian Friction Continues to Occupy Attention (By the Associated Press) Spanish Insurgents were report ed, last night to have Increased the threat to the government strong hold of northeastern Spain by breaking through government lines on the center of the Cata- Ionian front and rolling back the right flank. Insurgents were credited In dis patches 'reaching the border with opening a gap at the Balaguer Bridgehead on the Segre river front and capturing Granadella, to the south. Whether they could use the Balaguer opening to break down the entire front re mained to.be determined. French-Italian . , Friction Grows ? - French-Italian friction over north African colonies, mean while, continued to occupy the center of attention In Paris, Rome and London. A person close to the French government said France was willing to grant some colonial concessions to Italy without actu ally yielding land. Italians Insisted that British Prime M 1 n i s t e r Chamberlain would be unable to avoid the role of mediator between Franco and Italy when he visits Rome Jan. 11 to 14. - The French declared, however. that French-Italian problems must be settled by direct negotia tions between ' Rome and Paris. France put. np a strong military front to discourage fascist ambi tions for territorial expansion at hf expense of the French empire. Loyalists Warship Goes Aground in Try to Run Gauntlet for Freedom Fire From Insurgent Cruiser and Shore Batteries Force Destroyer to Give up Attempt j to Leave Gibraltar ' GIBRALTAR, Dec. 30 (Friday) (AP) The Spanish government destroyer Jose 'Luis Diez was forced aground near here early today after attempting a desperate dash for freedom through a gauntlet of insurgent warships. Seven of her crew were killed and 11 wounded. Before running aground, it was reported here., the vessel rammed and sank the 1500-tonO . Insurgent, mine-layer Jupiter. titt.ii ra Insistent gunfire from insur- J I , l.a., IV- II Jn,r gent land batteries at Ceuta and J lUlUCiS W AAA A rt V arias and other insurgent vessels NJ99J, 9ft in 'TflYAC stroyer aground on eastern beach. roughly fifty yards from shore. She had been undergoing re pairs in the haven of this British port ever since last August 27, when she limped in after a pun ishing battle in the straits with insurgent warships. Thirty - two men, including 26 insurgents held aboard as prisoners, were killed In that engagement. A British destroyer was dis patched to investigate the short lived firing In the inky blackness of Europa point. It was believed the Jose Luis Dies had attempted to reach her naval base of Carta gena, more than 200 miles to the northeast, on the Spanish govern ment coast. Insurgent shells struck two houses of villagers living on Cata lan bay. Injuring some of the occupants. The houses, which were in Brit ish territory, were destroyed. Thirty Deaths Attributed to Cold and Exposure Through Nation (By The Associated Press) Middle westerners stoked up furnaces and tossed more blankets on their beds last night as the second cold wave in four days spread out of Canada. By the time the chilling spell, part -two of the wave, that came earlier in the week, reaches New England - and the Atlantic sea board, probably over the weekend, light snow win bring rising tem peratures to the midwest, fore casters said. ' . At least 30 deaths from expo sure or other causes attributed to the week's cold were reported. Fatalities occurred as far south as Georgia and North Carolina. The subzero spell that struck the plains states and Minnesota yesterday morning was expected to overspread the north central states this morning and continue eastward. " Warroad, Minn., a Canadian border town and Icebox of .the na tion this week, reported 45 below yesterday morning. Readings un der 30 below were taken else where in Minnesota and North Da kota. ' Farther west, a sleet storm changed to heavy rain near the in ternational boundary in Washing ton state after disrupting power and telephone lines. " The Canadian Press at Vancou ver, BC. reported a thaw of heavy ice coating cut all Canadian Pa cific telegraph lines east and south of Port Coquitlam and Mis sion, BC, but that service was re stored partly. z v7 t Xew Map Change I Possibility In Belgrade, the possibility of another change in the map of Europe, involving Italy, Hungary and Yugoslavia, was discussed with ' the announcement that the ItaUan foreign minister. Con at Galeazzo Ciano, would go there Jan. 1) on an official visit. Diplomats said Yugoslavia was being won over to the Idea of making a "symbolical cession" of a few border villages to Hungary and would receive in compensa iton the Italian port of Zara, on the Dalmation coast. Hungary would be expected to give up for ever her demands for territorial revision at Yugoslav expense. Italy, diplomats said, would gain close cooperation with both coun tries, perhaps based on a Yugo slav-Hungarian pact. In Shanghai, the international relief committee received a report that "armed chaos" existed in the Nanking region, which Japanese occupied Dec. 13, 1937. The re port was made by M. S. Bates, American professor of history in Nanking, university, who investi gated conditions for the commit tee. Rider Is Crushed When Horse Falls EUGENE. Ore.. Dec. 2$-JPi-Miss Elizabeth McMah: n. 46, was killed instantly late today when a horse she was riding shied at a passing log truck and fell on her crushing her skull. ' The - accident occurred nine miles east of Springfield on the McKenrie highway. State Po lice Sergeant Lowell Hirtzell, who investigated, said the truck driver, John ' Stafford,, reported he passed the horse and rider, saw the 'animal rear up. When he looked back he saw the horse lying on , the : highway with the Tider underneath. The horse's hind, legs were caught beneath the log trailer wheels and were broken. ; Late Sports PORTLAND, Ore., Dec 2HfP) -Portland -Buckaroos hammered six goals into the iet here to night to -beat Vancouver, 6-3, and win their 15th Pacific Coast league Ice hockey game of the season. The Bucks scored three goals in each, of -he first two periods. - Wreckage Cleared From Rail Tracks PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 28- -Splintered wreckage -of 26 cars and a locomotive was cleaned np today and the Union Pacific rail- read resumed service over a sec tion of track ripped ont by the derailment 32 miles east of here about midnight Tuesday. . - The wrecked cars were part of an 86-car freight train derailed when it struck a 6000-pound bculder which smashed - down from the towering Columbia riv er gorge walls. . . Wrecked cars contained most ly eastern Oregon and Washing ton wheat. Road officials were busy compiling cargo and equip ment losses. Two members -of the highway patrol .averted a more serious wreck by. sighting, the rock and warning the engineer with flare. . Prodigy Is Going" Strong at Mature Age of 9 Months PORTLAND, Dec 2MV-Pht lip David D e v 1 n , Portland! "wonder .'baby" .who walked spoke four ' words - and - drank without aid from a - glass at. the age, of six months, . Is keeping his gtrlde. : - Now : nine " months old. Philip wearing a snow salt' sized for i three-year-old, pumps around on sturdy legs, unlaces his own shoes, brushes his. teeth, eat spinach., and raw carrots, and sleeps only a half-hour - during the- day. - He makes' himself easily 'un derstood, pronouncing the names of persons he knows and saying many words. He has four teeth end three or four more are com ing through. ;. : ' . , ; , . ,eap Woman Takes I From Gate Bridge Fishermen ee Body Drop 200 Feet From Span Across Bay SAN FRANCISCO. Dec, 29.-P A slender, brunette young wom an Identified tentatively as Rath Nathlngheimer died in a 200-foot plunge from the Golden Gate bridge, today. Authorities sought further Identification.' Deputy Coroner Tom Gavin de scribed the . case as a suicide the tenth death leap from, the bridge since its construction. Two fishermen saw the body plunge into the waters of the har bor entrance at a spot about 100 yards off the Fort Point rocks, di rectly beneath the bridge. Fog Obscures View They said afterwards their vis ion was so obscured by fog they were not sure of what they had seen until the body floated to the surface. . Deputy : Coroner Gavin said partial identification of the wom an was established by the name. Ruth Nathlngheimer, on an arch support in one of her shoes, and was further corroborated by the Initials, R. N., on her sweater. "I have no doubt that the wom an was Ruth Nathlngheimer, but mat is about all I know now,' said Gavin. "She was about 23 years-old, wore a dress that might have been a house dress or a waitress uni form, and on her ring finger she had a gold band wedding ring." ,4 -1 Second Death 1 Blamed On Canned Food Poison MEDFORD, Dec. I9-(Pr-Law lence Grant, ; 72, died - today, the second death in two days from what an attending physician said was food : poisoning caused by eating home-canned vegetables. : His sister. Miss Maggie Grant, 92, died Tuesday. Qty of Salem and Salem School District Are Beneficiaries Public utilities will pay $224, 238.74 in property taxes in Mar ion county in 1939, Assessor R. "Tad Shelton announced yester day. Largest beneficiaries of -the utilities' tax bill, aside from the county Itself, will be the city of Salem, which win receive 1 35, 38.41, and the Salem school dis trict, which will share to the ex tent of $34,283.86. The Portland General Electric company will continue in the roll of largest utility taxpayer in the county, with a biU for $73,245.- 87 facing It next year. Of this sum. $12.61&.55 will go to the city of Salem and 412,601.57 to the local school district. Other utilities' taxei were listed as follows: Southern Pacific company, to tal $67,735.84; Salem, $5172.75; Salem schools, $5S31.$7 Paelrie Telephone Telegraph tompany, total-' $43,708.81: Sa lem, $12,807.44; Salem schools. $11,437.36. ;VV; Portland Gas A Coke company, total $16,590.01; Salem, $4021. 28; Salem schools, $3745.78. ; Oregon Electric Railroad com pany, total $9329.58; - Salem, $748.25; Salem schools, $863.49. Removing Pinballs In Clatsop Asked ASTORIA, Dec. 29-flVCnrift Paul Kearney and District Attor ney Garnett L. Green fell into line with other Oregon counties today by ordering removal before mid night, December 31, of all plnball, slot' machines and punch boards from Clatsop county. : The devices were outlawed by a state vote in November. The city of Astoria, which asked a restraining order several months ago to prevent confiscation of city licensed devices "for amusement only," announced It would co-operate in law ' enforcement and would issue no new licenses.. Buchanaii Granted New Appointment Governor ! Charles" - H. ' Martin Thursday reappointed , Roy : Bu chanan, Pendleton, a member of the state Industrial accident com mission for the four-year " term ending January 2, 1943. ' Buchan an originally was ap pointed a member of the accident commission December 1, 1937,' to succeed Albert Hunter, who re signed because of ill health. He previously served as district aud itor" for the commission with headquarters at Pendleton. ' -Buchanan is a democrat. Teachers to Ask 40 Percent Increase for State Minimum PORTLAND, Dec. ' 2 ?-(ff)-The state legislature will be asked to give, Oregon teachers , drawing minimum pay a 40 per cent raise. State Superintendent of Education Rex Putnam disclosed before dele gates to the state teachers', asso ciation convention today. ' The minimum now is $600. A bill Increasing the base pay to $1000 a year will be introduced. "It's high time we start going to town on this thing," Putnam said, pointing out that Washing ton's minimum ? was ,$1200 and California's $1350. t . - - . . .. Putnam. : also , advocated ade quate teachers' retirement, legis lation, a reorganisation. bUl to fa cilitate consolidation of. school districts and equalization of school tax- revenues by pooling school funds ' within ' separate ; counties and re-allocating them' on the ba sis of classroom units. v These proposals already have association endorsement. - " Putnam emphasised that1-neither the equalization nor reorgan- ixatlon : bins Involve the contro versial county unit plan, which at present is an optional feature of the state school system. He called the proposed teach ers' retirement bill an ideal one and said "We know the answers, and we're prepared to present them in a way the legislature will understand." J. E. Edwards, assistant super intendent of Portland schools, ad dressing the social science teach ers, declaredthat "formulas of the ' past won't solve America's problems of the . future" and charged the schools were spend ing "too much time teaching the history of our country-and not enough time teaching what we believe to be a. sound economic and social theory v .. ,- the future Is not to be decided to any extent on our past. ' .Dr. David Snedden, professor emeritus . of teachers! college, Co lumbia university, "New. - York branded --contemporary training for ',. citizenship - as ."childishly idealistic a n d naively . goody- ooj.".; . . Ml Pair Abducted; Killing Threat Made Officer Silverton Boy Dies in Hospital After He's ; Found by Police " Tells Deputy They Will Both Die as He Draws Loaded Gun Robert Thomas, about IS, ot Silverton, djed a self-inflicted death by pc'son in a local hos pital at 11: i0 o'clock last night to close a night In which he ab ducted a young Silverton couple, forced them to drive him to Sa lem, held up the sheriff's office and threatened to kill Special Deputy Wayne Parker. He died less than three hours after he had accosted Joseph Erpelding, 23, Silverton route two, and Velma Hopfer, 21, ML Angel, who were sitting in a sedan parked near the Silverton theatre at. 8:25, and demanded at gun point that he be brought to Salem, City Patrolman Claud Litchfield declared. . "You're going for a ride," be curtly advised as -he pointed a .45 calibre army revolver at th pair, Erpelding told Salens police. Announces He'll .- . Take His Life Approaching Salem, Thomas announced he was "goJ.ng to commit suicide." When the cou ple -parked the car on Stat street near the courthouse at hit direction, th youth gulped dow four red capsules and water from rwo bottles he pulled front his pocket, and left them, heading ... across the conrthouse lawn, Er pelding said. While Erpelding and Miss Hopfer were driving hurriedly to city police headquarters, Thomas entered - the sheriff's -office torn tfce second ; floor - ot the' court house and poked - his . revolver across the counter at Deputy Parker. - r ryf ' "I'm going- to die In about It minutes and you might as well go with me,", he told Parker. The officer, stalled. "Just a minute, wait a minuta and then you can shoot." Parker said he , told the youth.;. "What about: that man ' over y there?" . pointing toward ' Night Deputy H. H. Daniels seated at a desk. . Stall Diverts Boy's Attention The stall diverted Thomas' at tention while Parker b a e k 4 away, drew his own revolver and demanded his assailant lower they big army weapon, Parker said. But Thomas, -refusing to drop tao gun to the floor, backed out of the office and fled down the halt. He had left the courthouse by the" east door by the time the two dep uties reached the corridor. -A few minutes later Parker and City Patrolmen Litchfield; Harold Deacon, Herman Done , and W. M. - Overgaard tosnd Thomas sitting, violently ill,, oa ine city nau steps, tie mane ne move to resist as they remove his still cocked weapon from his belt. - ' Yonth Removed TO Hospital " - . - First aid officers and a physi cian called -by" police , removed Thomas to the Deaconess hospit al at f :30 where he was given ox ygen and artificial respiration ta ' an unsuccessful attempt to save hit life: " : : ' A partly Indecipherable letter found scrawled on a piece of not--paper In Thomas' pocket Indica ted, he had been despondent for some time and "looking for am -excuse to commit suicide," Police Sergeant J. L. Cutler announced. The note, part of which apparent ly had been written after he left . the courthouse, also contained , confessions of having some year ago set fire to a barn, stolen mon ey from the Silverton ball park and put poison in milk ; at a Sil verton house. Cutler was inclined to question some of the material in the note. .-:-:- State police were notified of the note's contents.; v :-- y,v -Also in Thomas, pockets were 43 spare revolver cartridges. " The attending physician was un able to Identify the poison taken by the youth. First Aid Captain . Percy L. Clark of the fire depart-: ment report ed.t midnight. Thom as' actions mav have been caused by a brain injury. Indicated by depression, as from a blow suf- fered long ago, noted In the back -of his skulL Clark said. Thomas was the son of A. IL Thomas, f 10 Oak street, on Sil verton route two. The father, with whom Sergeant Cutler talked by telephone before the boy died,' ax pressed -a belief the red caps a lea were "cold medicine." Portland Holiday Safer This Year Than Before " PORTLAND, Dec. . 29-AV Hugh E. Rosson, state director or traffic safety, said today Portland ' traffic , accidents dur ing the two-day Christmas hoik day totaled -224, compared to' 275 for the same . "period V la 1937. . Accidents Involving in ju- -rles numbered 51 to 61 last Christmas. .... "