Whi Mldkmm "iro With Wmm Mmt j0 I . ' i V' f (''''' ''' - ' A . 1 rfx rf r! ' - l I Li U x.ft v " v - - w " v - N,' 5 R J i I t I I II ! I - x V-witS i am m aw- i . k i i a-;: ,vo- . .- . - - . . : . a )',...,',.,. . -v. The firstarticle in the Novem ber Header's Digest, by. Lester Velie, is headed "Our Shabby "Welcome to Foreigners." From his account it is worse than shabby, it's deplorable. "Incredi ble acts of bureaucratic bungling by our consul abroad and by officials at our port of entry" are giving the USA a plenty bad name among travelers. Much of the complaint which Velie reports arises from treat ment not of ' isitors to the United States but of those touching our soil en route by air or otherwise j to a foreign destination. He re- j lates how an Italian businessman , for lack of a transit' visa when: he stopped at LaGuardia Field j en route from Portugal to Mexico j was held overnight under guard j and then shipped back to Portu- j gal. - Two days later he returned j with his proper visa; but the im-' migration officials demanded a surety bond to. guarantee his de-! parture on schedule. It wouldn't take currency, insisting on a sure-' ty bond or U.S. treasury bond i which he could not furnish on j short notice. So he was locked up j at Ellis Island over night Other instances of very callous treat-! ment are cited. Part of the trouble may be at- ; tributed to plain stupidity on the part of officials, part to the j stringent text of the laws, and j part to the spasms of fear which , have enveloped all officialdom in j the present climate of fear. ; Whether the McCarran act is di- rectly responsible or not I do i not knowr but it certainly . (Continued on Editorial pagej 4.) ' Gales Slow Arctic Search REYKJAVIK, Iceland (ft Icy "gales swept mile-high Myrdalsjo kull Glacier Saturday night, hand icapping efforts to rescue three"e ported survivors of the crash of a U.S. Navy Neptune bomber on its snowy wastes. A U.S. patrol plane striving to pinpoint the wreckage, first spot ted Friday afternoon, was obliged to turn back at 4 p. m. because of the wind. - The dangerous weather hint ing of - another blizzard, like that in which the twin-engine Lockheed bomber cracked up with its crew of nine on a patrol flight Thurs day immobilized at least one of the three Icelandic parties as signed to the ground search. - Boehnke Seeks . '. GOP Chairmanship PORTLAND VFi Ed Boehnke, Eugene, said Saturday be will be a candidate to succeed Robert A. Elliott, Medford, as state Repub lican chairman. Elliott has announced he will resign Jan. 16. Elliott : defeated Boehnke for the position In voting of the party's state . central com mittee in 1932, 33-27. 103RD YEAR 3 Young Life Group Brings Spirit of Christmas X i" '17 1 'vN far i 1 1 " 1 JL ,V,?rVrl Members of Salem's Young Life sweep and his 11 children as a Christmas goodwill project. Cleaning ceilings at the Carnett mime (upper left) prior to applying a coat of paint are Ruth Nalley, 795 N. Winter St., with broom and Joan Maguren, 525 Locust St. Sharon Beard, 79 S. Liberty St., Nancy Willard, 481 Cascade Dr.. and Diane Ferguson. 1145 Columbia SL (upper center, left to right) thread a spring on new kitchen curtains. At upper right (left to right) Larry Newson, 1153 Narcissus St., Neal Scheidel, 1035 Fair view Ave., and Ken Rawlings, 810 Ratcliff Dr., find that brooms fit their hands as well as foot balls and basketballs. Tommy Carnett, nearly 3. (below) admires his "new" suit in his bedroom, newly painted and carpeted by Young Life members. Two sisters, Betty, and Lule, 5, look on. (Statesman Photos.) i UllULJ III M.HVULOVU it JUCWOO X UlilllJ UJ j 1 3 With Newly Redecorated House By TOOMAS G. WRIGHT JR. Staff Writer, The Statesman Young Life put some new life into an old house Saturday and gave a family of 13H a promise of a merrier, brighter Christmas. Rare Snowfall Blankets City Of Jerusalem JERUSALEM. Israel Sector ; A rare December snow blanketed the Holj City Saturday night. After a day-long snowfall cov ered the city's seven hills and new and old buildings,. a bright full moon broke through the clouds to reveal the white-mantled scene oft en pictured on Christmas cards but seldom seen in fact. Snow is unusual in Palestine and very rare in December. It is ex pected to melt away by Sunday and a white Christmas in the Holy Land was considered highly im probable. City Mail Delivery Scheduled Today Salem postmen will make regu lar deliveries of incoming mail today, according to Postmaster Albert C. Gragg, but no delivery will be made on rural routes. The main post office general delivery window will also be open from 3 to 5 p. m., he said, so packages can be claimed by per sons who were not at home when carriers calle'd. SPRINGFIELD MAN DROWNS COOS BAY UT) Asbury Warren Hull. 37, Springfield, Ore., drowned in Coos Bay Friday night after falling from the dredge Olympia. Fellow workmen said they heard him shout for help, but were un able to reach him in time to save him. SECTIONS 36 PAGES Th Club turn out in force to redecorate Scores of Salem High School ' students, members of the Young 1 Life Club of Salem, swarmed over j the old house at 1211 S. Liberty j St., now the home of the C. W. I Carnetts, with brooms and paint ibrushes and when they were through little Mrs. Carnett had a completely redecorated house. And besides that several of the 11 youngsters, ranging in ages from 14 months to 17 years, had new clothes, a toy or two, and new beds and mattresses. The twelfth is expected early in 1954. Oreration Redecorate beean witn brooms, putty,' plaster and paint remover about 8:30 a.m. Saturday. By mid-afternoon brushes started spreading paint contributed by several Salem firm. At intervals during' the day mattresses, . clothing and more helpers arrived. By night-, fall paint had been applied to most of the house, new linoleum was going down on part of the kitchen fldor and counters, and curtains were going up at the windows. Somewhere in between, overflow help had found time to patch the roof, take the hazard out of a heater stovepipe and clean up the yard. , - Carnett, operator of a chimney sweep business which . has . been "going very slow", voiced his re peated thanks for the contributed today's Statesman Section 1 . V General news .2, 5, 8, 12 Editorials, features ",'.4 Sports ..10, 11 Section 2 . . ' t , Society, women's .1-8 .Garden, home.., 9 Valley" news J...i.-10 Toymaker Yule Story 10 TV, radio.. 11 Crossword puzzle.... -11 ..Classified ads 11-13 Section S ' Full-color comics l-S POUNDED Orocjon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Sunday, December 20, the home of a workless chimney ey.-vw rm . . . , . efforts of everyone m the proj- ecL On relief, the family had ; slenderhopes for a happy Christ mas until the club took over. (Additional details on page 6, sec. 1.) French Recess From Balloting For President - VERSAILLES, France W) The unprecedented deadlock in the French Parliament over election of a new president of the republic held through the sixth ballot Sat urday night. The weary parlia mentarians then put off the next rollcall until Sunday. Splitting as before along right, left and center lines, the deputies and senators sitting in old Ver sailles Palace left France's busi nessman Premier, Joseph Laniel. 56 votes shy 'of the majority of votes cast on the sixth ballot. The rightist" politician received 397 votes, 23 more than he got on the fifth tally. Marcel-Edmond Naegelen, the Socialist who is supported by Com munist votes because he is opposed to the European army plan, polled 306, a drep of six, and the third candidate, Jean Medecin, radical socialist (moderate) mayor of Nice, gathered 171, a decline of 36. Bars Asked to Close On Christmas Eve' PORTLAND UH Taverns and cocktail lounges Saturday were asked by the executive board of the Oregon Licensed Beverage As sociation to close Christmas eve at 7 p.m. j The association represent more than 800 holders f liquor and - beer licenses. 1651 McCarthS'! i Confers With Ike WASIJJ'S.'GTON The flam- ing issue of subversives in govern- ment and elsewhere was focal point of attention Saturday on the final dav of President Eisenhow- er"s three-day whirl of conferences with Republican legislative lead- he added. ers. Lishts Blown Down The last day of unprecedented a tree blew over and blocked talks on the 1954 legislative slate the street in the 2200 block of brought the President and Sen. Liberty street, city police re McCarthy R-Wis together, along ported. A crew from the citv en with Rep. Velde (R 111 . top GOP gineer s office remov-d the "tree, leaders in Congress and Atty. Hjgn xvind bjew down a string Gen. Brownell. 0f Christmas lights which were Eisenhower said they concen- hanging across Commercial street trated on several proposals for at Court street, police -reported, "more effective investigation and The storm also caused an esti prosecution" of subversive ele- mated $400 worth of damage to ments in American society as well a new warehouse under construe as criminals who take advantage tion at 1115 N. Commercial St. ff Ipoal lfWinhnlfS. Voith R TarL-cnn rnntraMnr fx r McCarthy is chairman of the Senate permanent investigations j subcommittee, Velde of the House 1 Un-American Activities Commit- tee. The Wisconsin senator left the White House saving "he wasn't I displeased at anything he heard. He wouldn't say whether he had i talked alone with Eisenhower or had made any suggestions of his own on legislation relating to sub- versies. Dictates Statement Later on, he telephoned the j White House press room and die- tated this statement: "This is the first time that 1 nave nao an opportunity to watcn ; the President in action over a per- j iod of time. I was tremendously 1 ' imDressed hv his handlin? of the edge of every subject or piece of proposed leg.slation that was dis- cussed" V U93CU. Brownell Proposals On the list of talking points Sat- urday were proposals Brownell made last month to: Legalize use in federal courts of evidence obtained by wire tap ping in espionage cases. Deprive witnesses in special cases of the right to refuse to an swer questions on grounds of pos- sible self-incrimination. This would ; be done by granting them immu ity from prosecution arising from anything they might tell congres sion investigators. 'Story on Eisenhower legislative program on page 2, sec. 1.) Two Floors Ready in New IT 1 H77 nosDitai wins: I Two floors of the 42-bed. three-! story addition at Salem Memorial j Hospital were finished Saturday after nine months of work and : ,..;n lx.. vrrxlo., n J 1 1 IJX XTX U U1X U luuimaj, The third floor js slated tQ bfi fi:.hpH in ,hn,. thrpA wppk A day-long job Saturday of un- packing, moving and assembling 36 beds and hospital equipment was assumed by 13 i members of Salem's Knights of Columbus Council 1748. The equipment was stnrrt in rratps in th( hnsnital's I boiler house and the volunteer help made the new rooms and wards ready for occupancy. Cost of the new wing at the hospital is $350,000. Top floor of the wing will be used as a mater nity section. The lower two floors will be for medical-surgical use. The basement will hold a dining room, nurses lounge and storage and other rooms. On hand all day Saturday to make the new rooms ready for patients Monday were Carl Jung blut, Walter Heine, "Roy Green, A. . L. Elvin, Ed Tobin, Lisle Dempewolf, Roy Marker, Jerome Eppinf, Henry Kropp, Adam Lefor, John Nathman, Joseph Mozena and Richard Lefor. Elizabeth Sits Cross-Legged Eating Pig With Tonga Queen MUKUALOFA, Tonga Islands W Britain's Queen Elizabeth - sat cross-legged Saturday in' the palace of her friend. Queen Salote on Tonga, and ate roast-suckling pig with her fingers. Elizabeth and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh en route to New Zealand on their world tour stopped over at this British pro tectorate in the South Pacific to visit 6-foot-3- Salote, the only other woman ruler in the British com monwealth. High spot of the day was ' the luncheon feast at Salote' s palace. In accordance with the traditions of Tonga, known as the 'Friendly Islands, the royal guests sat cross legged on cushions before long ta bles and partook with their fingers 1953 PRICE 10c m.p.h. Gale Brings Heavy rain and high winds hit Western Oregon Saturday and ing up. Five were caught within caused some cases of power failure in the Salem area. Gusts up to"; three hours as State Police fiO miles an hour were recorded at McNary Field shortly before ' pumped bullets into their careen 6 P m- ing stofen car and it went into The storm claimed one life in Oregon when a tree was blown ditch, across a car near Glenwood west of Portland killing William B. ; A sixth was found in the wreck 21, of Glenwood, Several power poles were blown over at Spong's Landing northwest of Keizer, L. M. Flagg, line superintendent of Portland General Electric, said. Service was restored late Saturday night, tx- i i 1 1 . v . wv.xi.'xri, vx.. ux. xa , . -. vx i the wind snapped two braces and I permitted a section of wall form- J ing to crash down. The Lester j DeLapp Trucking Company owns the warehouse. Power Failures a few cases of power failure werti reported south of Salem 4 and in the Silverton Hills, but service was restored a short while later, Flagg said'. T) - , . ' . Power failures and overturned trees were reported in several parts 0 the state as the storm swept in from the coast, A total of 1.88 inches of rain fell in Salem Saturday and high : rainfall was reported elsewhere e iinuicne River is expected to crest at Sa-; ln early Tuesday morning at 18.5 feet, weathermen said. The ' crest at 19 feet at 7 o'clock this morning, six feet above flood stage. W eathermen predict continued toda-v nd Monday in the S1 arca- Egyptians Find Step Pyramid Near Another CAIRO. Egypt to - A medium- sized step pyramid has been dis - covered in the sands of Sakkara only about 170 yards from the great pyramid of Pharaoh Zoser. long one of ancient Egypt's most famous monuments. The Egyptian Antiquities De- partment announced the find Sat- urday. The long job of digging it out is still to be done. Mohamed Zakv Ghoneim and j French archeologist P. Lauer said i their workers uncovered a wall of the buried structure during a search around the wall of the j Zoser monument at the village of ! Sakkara, 15 miles south of Cairo, ! AH of Egypt's great pyramids ; arc sten nvramiris that is the r i- - - , huge stone blocks that form the ; outer sides are fitted in the forms of steps. They were built as the tombs of kings. Lauer said the base of the new find is calculated to cover about 13,000 square yards. Though that is the equivalent of a city block, several of Egypt's pyramids are larEer ; Sen. Ellis Sells Portion of Ranch PENDLETON (J) - State Sen. Rex Ellis, Pendleton, has sold part of his large ranch near Board man. Mr. and Mrs. E. . McCor- mack, Hillsboro. bought 1,500 acres for an undisclosed price. They are j ers were being invited. stocking it with high-price Here- i McKay will arrive in Oregon lords. Sunday to spend Christmas here. Ellis said his remaining range, land may be irrigated for asparagus-growing He said he had been , Gordon Dean Weds conferring with Stockton, Calif., men about it. ; POTOMAC, Md. i Gordon of Toast pig, lobster, duck, chicken and an assortment of native fruit. As the feast proceeded, Tongan girls brought around gourd finger bowls. Natives fanned the guests to ward off the tropical beat. Afterward, hundreds of . spear wielding warriors and graceful young girls staged a dance in Eli zabeth's honor. There was an embarrassing mo ment this evening when the elec tric lights failed while Elizabeth and her husband were dining at the British residency. Kerosene lamps were hurriedly substituted. Saturday night the 'royal pair slept at Salote's palace while 400 Tongans with flaming coconut fi bre torches stood guard. j No. ?B5 1 r . Career Ends x .j, f" PSAmA' C,ir ",DI Ro!rtl A. Millikan, dean of American imijsh.si, aDU iuiaoruy on cosmic rays, died Saturday at a rest home. He w: tas 85. (APi Photo.) Dr. Millikan. Nobel Winner. -p-k . TV PlVClPlCt" I MAC m. Aft y ijittui y ivo ; a wnia V u 1 1 ;! .. . on r J r r , r"" . -. 7 Z rave Hid1 Vanrrta7 at hie hxmA Tn'e worid ren0wned scientist! who for years was head of the California Institute of Technology. I succumbed after a long illness at bis residence in neighboring San Marino. He was 8.5. The dean of American physicists. I an authnritv n rnmir rav was once described as the "billion- j seven,f?t ,ouJ ,n Jckn. It waj volt sparkplug" of the California ! flYef the latter group that abductt Institute of Technology here. As 1 edwt.V, women chairman of the Executive Coun-' . M,.""na.n ,car was jumped bj cil. he was Caltech's chief admini-; sheriff s deputes on MaO near Na strative officer for 24 years. Pleon- 12 m'le,s southeast of Jack u v, iqoi vki r;, ; son. Two state troopers to th physics for his isolation and meas - urement of the electron and for his 1 photo-electric researches. ; Work on Electron , His Nobel Prize-winning work on ' the electron enabled scientists ac- tually to count the number of mole- ; cules in any given weight of any i simple substance with great cer- tainty and accuracy. j He held 25 honorary degrees from various universities, seven of 1 th m fnrpi an ) Many Books. Papers Millions of hieh school and col - j lege students have studied his text books. He authored 18 books and hundreds of papers. From 1920 to 1940 he probably knew as much as any living scien tist about cosmic rays, electrical ly charged particles of great ener gy that originate outside the ! earth s atmosphere and continual- ; iv bombard the earth from all di- ; rections. Their origin is unknown, I 1 n Wr T j fartV Workers tO i,"..! r Tr lalk witn lucivav PORTLAND () Oregon Repub lican Party workers will meet I with Secretary of Interior McKay ! here Wednesday. ! Philip Englehart, Multnomah County Republican chairman, an nounced the meeting, and said all county chairmen, state legislators. members of the Republican finance I committee and other party work Dean, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, and Mary Benton Gore were married Saturday at the 40-room home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Grady Gore. This was Mrs. Dean's first mar riage. Dean was divorced from his first wife. Max. Min. Preclp. . 58 45 IBS . 99 45 1.13 . 62 51 Trac 43 22 .00 35 21 .00 Saleaa Portland San Francisco . Chicago , New York WillamerU River S.7 feet FORECAST (from V. S. Weather Bureau. McNary Field. Salem): Partly cloudy today with scattered howers. Colder with a high near 48 and a low tonight near 38. Cloudy with rain Monday.' Temperature at 12.D1 a. m. 48. - . " ' .. i - ' SALEM PRECEPITATIOX , ftlitre Start f Weather Year Sept. 1 This Year - " Last Year Normal 18.21 - 8.S1 15.49 6 of 13 Escapees At Large JACKSON. Mich. Five des. perate convicts grabbed a 23-yearw old housewife and a 31-year-old l nurse as hostages Saturday night ! ia a wild flight following their e ' cape from gigantic Southern Mich igan Prison. . Thirteen escaped and all terror i ized one household, stealing a gua : and an automobile, before break age vicinity an hour afterward, and sliil later a seventh was pieke up in downtown Jackson. The sixth still missing was believed holed up here. Escape as through a prison sewer in which the band of con cicted murders, robbers, burglars and kidnapers used a makeshift acetylene torch to cut barred steel gratings. Other Uprisings They left from the same yarJ i thai was the scene of two blooey and costly convict uprisings it 1952 at Southern Michigan, tha I world's largest walled penitentia. ry. It has a population of approxj mately 5.000. I Mrs. Mary Lou Watts and Mis 1 Helen Gilbert were grabbed as hos tages by the five who invaded th ! Watts' Jackson home. They had a gun taken from the home invaded by all 13 a mile from the prison. i Joe Wattsv the hostage's hus ! band and a Jackson service station ; owner, was at home, but power Ipse tn intprvpnp arrainct th five and their gun. The home was ran, acj;ed for civilian clothing an4 valuables before the desperadoes ned in Watts- 1952 befee-colorpJ rariiiiar Cadillac. Phone Call Awaited Ominously as they left the con. victs told Watts the women woulj be released unharmed "if nothing happens to us." The women prom ised to telephone the minute ot I their release, but two hours aftei they had been snatched Watts ; telephone still was silent. The felons first fell upon thj home of Glenn Milliman, a 28-yeai ! old automobile salesman and one-time guard at ine prisoa Brandishing crude, prison - madi ; Knives i tney lorced their way il 1 terrorizing Milliman ana his wifl . . 1 and rans acin the house. T wGu";"lhe' ... hey found a .32 calibre pistd) and at least lour outfitted Uwmi SC1V" .up ."" mans and aU 13 drmn2 ln automobile. 1 maing 13 too many for one can ; west l"ickl-v ,urne. the'r ' ' a.cro;ss . the road- us,n ,l as blockade, ! Ignored Signals ! The careening car of convicti refused to heed light signals t stoP and tne troopers started fin ing- The car swerved into a ditc in an attempt to avoid that of thj : troopers. Two bullets had piercc i ts windows, but none was in I jured. i Four were seized immediately scrambling out of the wreckage tj ' Milliman's car. A fifth was caugli in: a chase. These five insists they were alone, but a sixth wa picked up within an hour in thf same vicinity. It was more than an hour aftei the shot-punctuated capture tha) Watts' frantic alarm was sounded The hunt for tfie women anl their captors quickly turned tot ward Indiana. The Cadillac wat seen heading out on M60. Indianj and Ohio police were alerted. 52 Police Car ' Michigan state troopers fronj six of the lower Peninsula's sevei districts were 'sent speeding toi ward the scene in 52 siren screaming cars and at least 6 local law enforcement officer! were enlisted in a widespread blockade. Others cruised highwayi and byways. A deputy sheriff at Moscow( Mich., 20 miles southwest of Jack son. reported" he spotted a beig( Cadillac with five men and twj women headed west on M112. a Detroit-Chicago trunkline, but hal been unable, to overtake it. Prison authorities were makini a routine' check for 10 men the) ; couldn't account for after a 6:2 p. m. check-up. when State Pouci advised them of Milliman's terror izing report. An armed guard quickly wat thrown up outside the walls, thf check of the cavernous cell blocks speeded. Quickly an outside guar spotted the sewer opening ajaf outside the walls. Reds to Resume Talks With PWs PANMUNJ0M m The Indiai Command Sunday announced that the long-stalled Communist ezpla nations to Korean War prisoners would resume Monday. But Allied efforts to make "come home" talks to 22 Americans, 1 Britoa and 77 South Koreans still wen stalled. - Apparently the Indian Command had talked the prisoners into ac cepting explanations to half the it. mates wt a cuuipvuuu m a smgiaj day. ' a a v I ivudlj Ml- t ft m V4 St fused to permit part of a corn, pound to go out for interviews. '