plienthal Resigns ! As Atomic Energy IC Co ? WASHINGTON, Nov. 23-)-David E. Lillenthat te foe of ex treme secrecy on the atom, today resigned as chairman And member f the atomic energy commission partly, he said, iri order to speak out "with greater latitude." I t i ! F President Truman accepted the resignation, effective December 31, With the "utmost regret" He named no successor for the commission. Lid DAVID ULIENTHAL KesifJM A-Board Position rmra UUULD This is Thanksgiving day, but Americans seem so unhappy the question arises as to whether they are thankful or ought to be. Here wage are the highest of any country in the world but we have strikes to push them higher. Here profits are still in high al titudes compared with prewar re-r turns but manufacturers and busi nessmen are worried and damning the government" for taxes, regu lation and socialism. Pi Here we are producing .more foodstuffs and cotton than we can consume, and unhappy because we are shipping away twurt of the ex cess, storing (or destroying) an other part and applying acreage controls on future crops. Nobody Is satisfied: the- farmer who grows the stuff the consume who pays current prices, government that staggers In supporting prices. We have more automobiles than any other country, and then grouse because of traffic Jams.' Wt consume more- electricity than any other people and then crumble because of seasonal brownouts, and because investors In private utilities make a profit In the business. With comfortable homes In great mr number than for any other peo ple we can't sleep o' nights, and i ill so consume more steeping puu amd sedatives than any other . We are Just about the healthiest people on earth but' we run our a ifAJ doctors raggea, ana we pouueuw want us to go in for (Continued on editorial page 4) Fog Blocks C-54 Search PORTLAND. Nov. 23 UPh Sev eral clues appeared today to the t possible faU of a military plane, lost with six air force men aboard, but the ; weather i remained too foggy to track down the leads with an air searcn. , The" four-engined C-54 troop transport vanished after its pilot, n earing Portland, radioed jor in structions.. Most of the clues seemed to point , o tha Davis Peak area, near .Woodland, Wash. Several loggers trvi other residents near Davis Peak reported hearing a low-flying plane and an "explosion" about 11 a. rev 13 minutes after the last radio message. Animal Cracftcrs By WARREN GOODRICH ' "l futt out-tnrurted fie ootcn evt. liif'l aL" LTUJ ission Chief In congress, starting point' of most of the Lilienthal battles that have splashed controversy over the front pages, therb was regret at his departure and praise for his career, but it was not. unanimous; Now 50, Lilien thai sprang into the public eye as chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority. On Oct 28, 1946, he was appointed chairman ; of the atomic ' energy commission. He stayed three action-packed years, climaxed j by last summer's investigation of a charge of , "inctediblel mishanage ment" in AEC. j I ; - j . A majority of the ienate-hbuse atomic committee cleared, the agen cy of this accusation, made by Sen. Hickenlooper (R-Iowa. Questioned tonight on the pos sibility of his entering law or poll tics, Lilienthal told a'f reporter "I don't know what 2 ant going to do. "There's ; only one time when a fellow can quit this kind of job and that's when it is going welL" "This is; that kind of time," he added. -;.-! ?: s i DES MOINES, Nov. 23-;p)-Sen4 aior Jd. a: Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) sharp critic of Chairman David Lilienthal and the atomic energy commission, said! today on being informed of Lilienthal' resigna tion: :t J I), I J "I look forward to a new stim ulation in our atomic program." irable 'I ii i Toys Needed By Jraliub An appeal ! for repairable jtoys went out Wednesday from the; Sa lem Exchange club which, launch ed its annual campaign to repair toys and distribute them to needy lamuies ai L.nrisjmas time. nve depots were used toys may be dropped off by t the public were announced Wednesday at the club's meeting. They include Marion Motors, 333 i Center st.; Interstate; Tractor company, 3055 Silverton rd.: Home Fuel ! Oil company,!; 1710 N. Commercial st: Borkman Lumber company, 2460 State st,. and the AI A. Siewert warehouse, 1250 (Howard st; Members of the Exchange club will repair and repaint the toys at the Siewert warehouse. Dr. Lewis P. Campbell is In charge of the program i this year, which ' is the club's third annual campaign. on Free of Rats, Shows REDMOND. Nov. 23 -tfVCen- tral Oregon has an unusual claim to fame. It hasn't any rats, j So reported Milton H. Beuhler Jr rodent control expert of the UA. public health service, after a survey here. He expected to find at least 10 rats per person a mild Infestation, j M !i: ' The nearest he could find to any sign of j a rat j was a report that once a - rat arrived here In a carload of feed and was killed, ' Beuhler said most areas with this climate and! geographical sit uation would have plenty of rats. And the absence! of them, he fig ured, was worth nearly $400,000 a year In saved merchandise, less disease, andi lack of rat damage. He complimented , the area on its ratlessness, and advised resi dents to keep an eye out for any intruding:: animals. 7 You could af ford to spend a lot more than $500 apiece to km just lone pair," he said. "You'd i be Justified in arm ing your! whole Chamber of com- merce wiin ciuos ana starting a ' - - .. . M hunt juntll you find-them." ; He blamed rats j toot only for chewing up ; furniture and dam aging merchandise, i but also for carrying such ailments as bubonic plague, diarrhea and a form of jaundice called Well's disease. Police Students Battle At Panama University PANAMA,1 Nov. 23-flVA gun battle between students and na tional police flared tonight at Na tional university and first reports said two policemen and two civil ians were wounded It was the second successive night of violence I in Panama, where two meet have laid claim to the presidency. 1 . 1! !1 Statesman Kwt Service ALBANY. Nov. 23--A blind AI bany farmer was killed Wednes day night whetll two cars struck him as he crossed the road to milk his cows 1 I 1 II i Silvy Oscaf Goodman, 84, idled on the same spot where his father, also blind, perished When hit by a motorist 11 yeats ago. I The .Goodman home and barn yard, three miles east of Albany, is separated byU. S. highway 20. Deputy Coroner Walter Cropp said Goodman was first struck by a car driven by Mrs. Margaret O. Blatcheley, Lebanon, who was Repa Central Urea Survey Like Father 11 Years a 99th YEAR . I , - . i Storm 'Pilgrims9 j Mdians Celebrate Thanksgiving at Wc 4R karr-'rJ nr! - ' Garfield school students captured the spirit of the first Thanksgiving in the scene above depicting the Filsxims at Plymouth inviting the Indians to their . week-long ThsnJugiYlnr- festival. Feasting and x ceremonies dedicated to piety and peace marked the first Thanks giving. Fifth graders who participated and prodaced the alar frem Which the scene is taken ineladed Betty Aston, Donald i Wricht. Chinese Reds Order Leave -r-4' WASHINGTON Nov. 23 -Wl- American Consul General Angui Ward, held for a month in i tora- munlst jail at Mukden, China,ha been released and ordered to leave the country, the state department announced today. n j Four consulate employes jailed with Ward also were freed. A com munist "People's court" convicted them along with Ward but de creed that they too be deported. The state department, which has indignantly denounced the treat ment of the American official as "barbaric,'' immediately relayed instructions to Ward to get out of Mukden and bring his entire staff with him "forthwith." j This j latest action in the "sensa tional case which has attracted world attention Came with light ning speed after 'the 56-year-old diplomat himself reported 'that his four weeks imprisonment4iad end ed in a communist conviction and deportation orderi , He added that jhe and the four consulate employes arrestedheld, convicted and ordered deported along with him were able to be "up and about." ; j j . Russia Denies Recognition To Nationalists NEW YORK, Nov. 23-(!ffVRus-sia called the Chinese Nationalist delegation a bundh of pygmies to day and said Moscow no longer recognizes their right to represent China in the United Nations. Andrei Y. Vshinsky, Prime Minister Stalin's top diplomat, told the 59-nation general assembly the Nationalists here couldn't rep resent China even if they wanted to because he said 350,000,000 of China' 450,000,0.00 people have recognized the communist regime headed by Mao Tze-tung In ret ping. : M i Chieh-Hou Kan, personal advis or to Li Tsung- dent of Nationalist China who now is in British Honk Kong, angrily replied that Russia had perpetrated serious international crimes in China. l r ai ti iu (Biintrv Farmer Killed on 1 Cropp said she told him she was headed east, thatishe had not seen Goodman, but Tiad ! stopped and tried in vain to flag the other car, was the culver ox tne wesi-oounu car which also Fran i over Good- man's body, the! coroner said. No charffM were filed. M i Charles W. Goodman, father of the totally blind victim, was Jelli ed Jan. 28, 1938 under virtually Identical circumstances. 1 Surviving are tha widow and several children.! Services will be announced later by Ekman's mor tuary. I; ' I ' i f M - . - . . - - i - . i i ' ; i - -'it 2 Scflons 32 Pagan Dumps Reasons for Obrerving Thanksgiving Weren 9t Always So Numerous One Oregon Governor Couldn't Find Anything for Which to Be Thankful By Conrad G. Prange Staff Writer. The Statesman Willamette valley Thanksgiv ing day observances haven't al ways included turkey and foot ball A preview of early Oregon Thanksgiving indicates that pio neer families often ; had to thankful fo They not only didn't have the bounteous tzTK feasts, which developed in later years, but they felt thankful if they had a table to put their feet under. Oregon officially began to ob serve a day of Thanksgiving in 1852. On November 3 Of that year Territorial Governor John P. Gaines issued the first pr lamation. Asked for Holiday Gov. J6hn Whittaker was prodded into issuing a Thanks ."Jgiving day proclamation in 1859 (the year Oregon became a state) by a group of women knows as "The 1776 Ladies" who said, in part, that times were troublesome, but "there is enough to be thankful for if you give us the chance." Gov. Whittaker's 1859 procla mation was extremely short, simply stating that Thursday, Dec. 29, 1859, be "kept as a day for public thanksgiving." Some newspapers of the day criticized the governor because he failed to mention the diety or whom thanxs were owea or lor iui wiiai. nuuuici new syavi fended the governor and men tioned an unnamed governor who, on the previous j year, is sued a proclamation stating "he could not see anything to be thankful for." By 1873, however,! Thanks giving day was fixed in Novem ber. President Abraham Lincoln officially proclaimed t Thanks giving day a holiday in! 1863 and set it on the fourth or last Thursday in November Gov. Sylvester Pennoyer, an early Oregon democrat: and des cribed as "a man of strong con victions" brought out an unus- Fire Ruins Stock Of Turner Store Statesman Nsws fryU TURNER, Nov. 23 -(ffj- A flue fire at the Turner Variety store today left the building I virtually undamaged, but resulted in a complete . loss of stock; through smoke and water. The owners, Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Mack were on their way to Tillamook for Thanksgiving when the blaze broke out about 10 ajn. The Turner volunteer fire department brought the fire under control. No estimate of the dam- oc- V age was available. ! Tha Orecjon Statesman, W aw TT IT y TTh & 7 Inches of M Margaret Bolt, Donald Walton, Jerry Bray, Geraldlne Browning. Jerry Brnnelle, Fattj Evans. Bob Bornside, Earl Eyre, Doris Hein Beth Hoffman. Batch Brwckway. Fiord Hashes, Larry Kofner, Helen Manke, Edgar Martin. Dick Mason, Teddy Medferd, Craig Phillips, Bonnie Kuoom. Rex Sims and Marjorie Simila. Ins tractor is Mrs. Elenor Pierson. (Statesman photo.) ual proclamation In 1893. j Instead of waiting for the us ual proclamation from President Grover Cleveland, Pennoyer rushed in with his and set No vember -23 as Thanksgiving day in Oregon. A.? few days later Cleveland fixed November 30 as the official day. Fiuanciflll PrflVCr i! Gov. Pennoyer then issued a statement in which he hoped the people would observe the presi and "what few can afford it dent's day in religious worship, will eat turkey." But he asked that his day be used "for med itation on the unfortunate fin ancial condition of the govern ment." I Gov. Pennoyer's proclamation at year was , further unusual ik that he implored the citizen ry tp "return thanks to God and devoutly implore him to dis pose the president! and congress to restore silver as a full legal tender." . ' j Early accounts jsjhow that pio neer Thanksgivings usually were observed in a mild sort of man ner with a roait or boiled 'din ner, to which the gathering of relatives and friends donated. The pioneers were mostly thankful for being alive. Most Of them had just completed the long 2,000 mile trip across th continent in wagon trains. D;!! Dani, Wl,n s-rvf"-' "uij A far cry from the groaning was the simple fare of the pio table of this Thanksgiving, 1949, neers. Many families lived on boiled peas and boiled wheat. Salt and sugar was scarce. They lived In crude cabins and wore coats made out of wagon covers and tents and deerskin. Thanksgiving to them 'was a time to return thanks to God for what they had and thanks that they were not worse off. As the first proclamation noted, "the year drawing to a close has been one of general prosperity; to the citizens of the Oregon territory," Vote Defeats J Lebanon Expansion Proposal LEBANON, Nov. 23-(P)-Two square miles of suburbs southwest of Lebanon will not be merged with the city. ' P In a special election yesterday, the suburban voters defeated a consolidation measure, although Lebanon approved it HUXSBORO DECONTROLLED WASHINGTON, Nov. 23-tfV Housing Expediter Tighe E. Woods today ended rent control at Hills boro, Ore. th Salem. Oregon, Thursday, November 24. 1949 Garfield School Hooked Safety Belt Saved Boy In Plane Crash OSLO, Norway, Nov. 23-W) Twelve-year-old Isaac Allal ex Dlained today he was the only sur vivor in the crash of a plane load of refugee children because he was fastening and unfastening his safety belt for run. Thirty-four persons were lauea in the crash Sunday, including 27 Jewish children from- Tunisia, three nurses and four crewmen. When rescuers found the plane yesterday, Isaac was pinned on the ground under his seat, a scratch on the nose his most prominent in jury. .. . - "I was only fastening ana un fastening the security belt for fun," Isaac told his friend Gabriel Banon today. "The others didn't have theirs fastened. When it happened, I didnt have time to become afraid. Isaac said he was conscious for about five minutes after the crash. He could hear "people crying and whimpering all around me, then everything went black." v Finally he Woke up because he was cold and hungry. He couldn t-move much but "I remembered I had some apples tucked away somewhere. I found them and ate them." For 42 hours, the boy lay with' his face pressed against the ground by the seat to which he had strapped himself and thus saved himself from being hurled across the cabin and probably killed. Scio-Silverton Bus Run Cut A change in Pacific Greyhound bus service which eliminates the Scio to Silverton run is now in ef fect, following an order by the state public utilities commissioner,: Greyhound was authorized to establish a new run from Jeffer son on Mhe Pacific highway to Scio, from where the bus will pick up itk established loop via Sweet Home back to the highway at Halsev. Service between Silverton and Salem remains unchanged. 2i Christmas Cheer At Liquor Storey Limited to Botth Christmas decorations will barred from Oregon state liquor stores this holiday season. The Uquor control commission asked State Budget Director Har ry Dorman to bow to tradition by approving a $10 Christmas decor ation allowance for eacn state auv pensary. -Dorman turned down the re ouest as "an unnecesary expense'! and his action was upheld by Gov. Douglas McKay. h "Sentimentally. It Is a fins idea," Governor McKay said, "but it would seem to ma that tha llauor stores have plenty of Christmas cheer already." aim on Rainfall Relieves : 5 -Month In Central Orego More than an inch and a half of rain washed across Sauem Wednesday setting the city drainage pumps to work for the first time this season. The same storm which carried rainfall across the Cascades in-; to central and eastern Oregon, was hailed as a, "million dqljf&rj storm" in those areas, where winter wheit was in need of too$s- ture. ! The weatherman promised some relief from the heavy rains in the Salem area today with scattered showers and some sunshine on the Thanksgiving day menu. Wednes day saw 1.57 inches of rain fall oa Salem. The city- pump was in operation for three hours at Myrtle and Col umbia streets Wednesday after noon :o divert flow from sanitary to storm sewers. Clean-Up Campaign ' (City officials here announced Wednesday that a city-wide cam paign to clean sewer pipes was under way using a recently-pur chased machine. ! Patrol crews have started a 24 hour vigil against flooded areas in the city, and 10 pumps are avail able when needed this season. I The storm, which had drenched coastal Newport earlier with 1.20 inches of rain, brought .49 of an .57 to La Grande, and .55 to Red inch to Pendleton, Jl to Baker, mond. Thanksgiving Present i It was the perfect Thanksgiving day present to farmers who had sown their winter wheat, and had waited gloomily for it to struggle up through the parched soil. It was equally welcome to farmers who haven't planted. They will be gin sowing as soon as the weather clears. The rainfall was the first sub stantial one iff'' central Oregon in five months. Prineville got .38 of an inch and it's only had 3.5 Inches all year long. Despite the rain, -western Ore gon remained blanketed in fog. V- ii : Washington School Plans Open House Open house at the new Washing ton school will be Thursday, De cember 1, and will start at 7 JO p m,, school authorities announced Wednesday. :" The big. new structure on Lan sing avenue In the Ca pi tola district was occupied by students but re cently and schoolmen felt it was not ready for a public debut dur ing American Education week, No vember 6-12, .when open house was staged at most other Salem public schools. A meeting of the Washington school Mothers club, originally scheduled for the same date, has been cancelled. Detroit Legion To Operate Job Service Statesman News Strvles DETROIT, Nov. 23 This city now has its own employment Detroit post 141, American Le gion, announced today it will ope rate a service for the unemploy ed of this area. The post will send cards to employers, notifying them of the service. Job seekers may obtain Information on avail able employment by telephoning the post. The post is also sponsoring a move to collect Christmas money for "the Yanks that gave." Con tainers for donations have been placed in local business houses. First Aid Car Hospitalized Salem's shiny, red ambulance was "hospitalized'' for repairs Wed nesday, but first aid men can still rush to the scene if junior falls and cracks his noggin. City ambulance attendants, who work as members of the fire de partment, related Wednesday that Police Chief Clyde A. Warren had volunteered his radio-equipped po lice car on learning that the first air car had broken down. The first air car is expected to be ready Monday, after new gears have been installed in the differ ential. -, TRUCE IN PHILIPPINES MANILA, Thursday, Nov. A two-day truce was reported to day to have halted fighting be tween government forces and re bels south of Manila. Press re ports said 29 men were known to have been killed In the two-day battle. 3 Times and Out?,, Maybe! But Barry Bridge Weathered two previous cornmttfw 1st hearings. The back, the current case in San Franc and some! of the little-known de tails of Bridges life, will be jtold in an exclusive story - in fTtm SUtesmaq's feature section, 8 use- day. . ! I" PRICE 5c 50 . jj Drought I I I Salem ria 1 i Curiousity paid off for a Sint man this week. But now he saya he's more curious than aver. ; I When K. D. Woodrow, paint nd auto supply store proprietor, ssw an airplane being crated tor over seas shipment at Mcwary neioi tucked in his cam mm for the receiver to crop him a line. . - . HI 1 Woodrow disciosea weanespay that he had received a letter fton a man in the Free State ot Hral requesting a maintenance maituel. presumably for the airplaneich: was not mentioned. ',' I; r The jcraft in mention was. a P-Sl Mustamt which was given to Salem schools by the governsent at the j close of : World Warf li School authorities finally decided to sell the plane and got a U.500 bid on jthe plane (which cost th government about 50 times thkt). But they learned tnai saues wsa restricted to another public du- cation agency so had to settle lor a $100 offer from a uauiprpi school. I I J i Woodrow says the plane went directly overseas from .Sfclem, however, which is tha reason, ha. enclosed tha cardfil ' Now he says he would -like to. know Where the California school got authority to sell it fori export purposes. Meanwhile, he has an swered the letter, enclosing Jwnn information about tha "state Of tha union") in this country ratherthan a handbook on the care off air craft. ... . j !-J; Woodrow said ha hoped; ; his correspondent would reciprocate with information about tfasKFreo State of Israel. He said the facts sored, .tha 'airplane had not Jbeen mentioned, and tha man s asm was proceeded oy a numner qiqn i sound very "free " to hinv j Bridges' Trial j u Settles Dqy 1 SAN FRANCISCO. Nov.f23-fJP) Calm returned to the Harry frid ges' perjury trial, today after yes terday's uproar. Mfi! -U Prosecution and defense" attor neys got down to arguing sj key legal point, The atmosphere Jjb jthe federal courtroom again was ftuiet and dignified. So was Bridges'; fiery thief counsel, Vincents Hal linan. .. "" I ij jf :S ' U. S. District Judge Ge6rgB. Harris; yesterday gava liallidah a severe tongue lashing, dted him for criminal contempt of court and sentenced him to six monthi; Hi later relented to let Halllnad fin ish out the trial before goiig ta Jail. I l if V HalUnan said that ha would ap peal the contempt sentence the United States circuit court ojCj ap peals. i j i f f Bridges was indicted on enlarges of perjuring himself in denying in a 194S naturalization hearinf th he was a member of the c 1st party. Mrs. Luce Notes Talco Atomic 'Pearl Ilarbr' i NEW YORK, Nov. 23 HV Clare Booths Luce said today in formed Europeans believe that, in the event of another wan tha Soviet! Union would launch : an "atomic- Pearl Harbor" on; Amer ica before any move In Europe. . The former Connecticut ;Repub-: llcan congress woman mad Etna statement in an interview, return yesterday from weeks abroad, Max SI CI M 9 Mln. se 44 O S9 1? ?-ia. Salei 1J7 , iOO ; A I Portland San rrancisco Chtcaroi New York WUlamatU river 2.7 f set. J rORCCAST (from V. S. weather bur eau, UcNary field, Salem) J . jParUy cloudy Hwlth scattered showers today and tonight; high today near Sfc ilow toniaht near 43. ''iff SALEM PRKCtPTT ATIOM ' t 1 This Year Iaat Year A Kormal 1J 10.S3 9 Saltern . i Mir Schools 17 111 ne Einus mv - - ? - Holy Land! ml ' - ,,.ti. I. emmun-' iii! I She J