X 1 oiaitimaxu ocusm. Center Street Span's Lights Get New Year's New lights oa the C e n t e idee west on tor tne lirst time shofTi t before 5 o'clock Thursday evening. v - Lawrence Flagg, superintend ent of the Willamette division of Portland General Electric, ex plains the lights are turned on "and off automatically by a sun switch located on Union , Street Ex-Prisoners 1 . " ' Term Gamps As Hell Holes - By TOM REEDY ' BERLIN Two American ex-prisoners one a World War i II veteran and the other a merchant seaman who calls himself a cured Communist described Soviet pris on camps Thursday night as "hell - holes" where men died daily or worked without 'hope amid brutali ty and chaos. The veteran, Pvt. Homer H. Cox, 33, of Oklahoma City, said he was drugged in West Berlin Sept. 5, 1949. and apparently abducted into the East. The merchant seaman, Leland Towers, 28 of San Francis co, said he entered the Soviet Un ion illegally in 1951 "to see what it was like" and spent almost three years learning. . Released by the Russians Tues day after longi negotiations be tween the State Department and the Kremlin, the two were pre sented by the Army and the State Department at a news and- televi sion conference. : . " Cox reeled off the names of five Americans and a half dozen other Westerners he said were being held in Russian camps on trumped-up charges that turned them into slave laborers. Ramoz Held, Gun Victim Very Critical Statesman News Service GRAND RONDE Johnnie Ramoz, 47, waived preliminary hearing in Valley Junction Jus tice CourJ Thursday afternoon on a charge of assault with intent to kill and was !ound over to Polk County Grand Jury. : " Ramoz was arrested after his brother-in-law, William E. Riggs, 30, of Grand Ronde, was wounded twice Wednesday afternoon by a .22. caliber rifle. !The complaint against Ramoz was signed by Hattie Strom, Riggs sister. Riggs is in McMinnville Hospi tal where his condition was re- acribed as "very critical" Thurs day night He was shot in the left elbow and left side. State and county police said the shooting occurred about 3 p. m. in Ramoz's home here. Ramoz is being held in lieu of $2,500 bail at Polk County Jail, Dallas. ' . WORKER CRUSHED JOHN DAY UP' - A Canyon City man was crushed fatally at the resaw operation of the Blue' Moun tain mill here Wednesday. He was Richard Bridgesl 29, who left a widow and three small children. NEW YEAR'S PAY DINNER 12 Noon to 8 P.M. ROAST TURKEY OVENBROWN STEAK BAKED SALMON -with- V 30 Buffet Foodi to Help Yourstlf to . . . V Hot Entroo with tho Fixins' V Coffco. by tho Silox Full V Choice of Dessert ALL YOU CAN EAT 99 for (of anything and everything) (Kids under 10 44c) FAMOUS BUFFET Downtown on State- DIFIM at Roast Turkey I And Dressing ! f '' ;'' ' ! Sour Cream Cole Slaw ; Potatoes & Giblet Gravy Home Made Hot Rolls j and Butter J I 1 Tee-Coffee-Milk, i , Dessert 1.C0 Stmt br mm Wen Year's Special 1 1 -' i ; We Invite Yew te Visit SALEM'S MOST COM FO UTAH! DINING ROOM vsrovon. rnaaj job Eve Sendoff The switch also controls lights in the Marion Street area near the Marion Street bridge, he added. The bridge lights, 30 in all, are of the mercury vapor type similar to lights .on South Commercial Street, Flagg said. Each light has a 400-watt tube emitting 21,000 lumens. A lumen, Flagg said, is a unit of light similar to one candle power. Lights are placed-j on arms overhanging the bridge. The State Highway Department paid for the Center Street bridge lights, according to R. H. Baldock, highway engineer, because lights were on the bridge before it was rebuilt Lights for the Marion Street bridge will be financed by the city, he added. J. Harold Davis, city engineer, said lights probably will not be installed on the Marion' Street bridge until after July, 1954. Lack of city funds to finance the proj ect will delay it until after the end of the fiscal year, he explain ed. French See '54 Victory In Indochina By LARRY ALLEN ' HANOI.' Indochina U) The French High Command pre dicting a surge in 1934 toward Jtnai victory over ine communist led Vietmnih announced Thurs day a minor success in the cam paigning near Dien Bien Phu and a minor defeat in the Red River delta. A communique said French ground units, backed by war planes and mobile artillery, fanned out from entrenchments on the fortified plain of Dien Bein Phu near the Laotian border 180 miles, west of Hanoi and routed "a battalion of the rebels' "iron" division, No. 316, in an hour-long fight that left 54 Viet minh dead. French ' losses were reported light in the action, staged four miles south of the town. On the other side of the picture, the French admitted one of their patrols was ambushed by the reb els in the delta 55 miles southeast of Hanoi, with "appreciable" French losses. But reports of stepped ' up French activity came from all quarters. Elsewhere in the delta, the French-held wedge regarded as the key bastion of Indochina. French Union troops continued to mop up infiltrators. They reported killing 30 of the rebels and cap turing 45. In central Laos, French patrols made their first contact in five days with troops of the Vietminh division which surged last week from Viet Nam bases westward to the Mekong River frontier of Thiland at Thakhek. The French said six of the reb els were killed in two clashes. Mines killed two of the French patrols' Laotian guides. French planes ranged up and down Indochina, strafing and fire bombing Vietminh supply bases. Gen. Rene Cogny, Trench conv mander in northern Indochina, predicted the moment was near when the French Union force could deliver blows from which the Viet minh would not recover. "The enemy is worried and speaks of negotiations." Cogny said, referring to repeated peace overtures by Vietminh chief Ho Chi Minh broadcast over the reb el radio. "We are here to win." Matinee Today Cont 2:00 THE MOONLIGHTER" Barbara Stanwyck Fred MacMurray - - -Technicolor Co-Hit -"MASTER of BALLANTRAE" With Errol Flynn pmoni s-Mer Kathrya Grayson Howard Keel in "KISS ME KATE" Also -- Rhonda Fleming in "SERPENT OF THE NILE" WORTH'S Prime Rib Roost Of Bee! Whipped Potatoes and Brown Gravy j Parsley Buttered Carrot Home Made Hot Rolls x and Butter Sour Cream Cole Slaw Tee-Coffee-Milk Dessert 1.25 n 1 Vc--7 J6? ? , r t. Mrs. T. Brabee (left), president dent of Post 136 Auxiliary, look Dimes collection containers to be distributed Saturday and Monday police department. The new containers feature a test tube in place years. (Statesman plygo.) j Multiple Death Mishaps Get afety Study State traffic safety division of ficials reviewing Ore son's traffic accidents for the year 1953 here Thursday referred particularly to five smashuprf in which a total of 19 persons lost their lives. Two of the multiple death ac cidents were in Lane County. One occurred when a driver lost control of his car at high speed and struck another vehicle. Five persons were killed in this acci dent and both cars were reduced to wreckage. dent occurred j when a driver traveling at nign speea sxiaaea in loose gravel and catapulted across the highway into a lake. The driver and three passengers were drowned. 1 Four other persons lost their lives in a Yamhill County colli sion following a driver's disre gard for a stop sign. His car col lided with another vehicle. The driver at fault later was arrested and convicted pf negligent homi cide. , ' Another accident in Jackson County resulted in the deaths of three persons.! This accident oc curred when a car, out of con trol, skidded off the highway and plunged down an embankment Two occupants of the car were killed almost instantly while the third died in a hospital a short time later., u Twenty-seven other accidents brought death to 54 persons dur ing 1953. to boost Oregon's multiple-death collisions to a total of 73. AGED CYCLIST ACTIVE WICHITA, Kas. () C. N, Horner, 82-year-old cycling j en thusiast, has piled up 3,000 miles at the pedals since the autumn of 1952 nearly 7, miles a day. He recently made a pleasure jaunt on his bicycle to the Fan River reservoir 78 miles each of Wich ita.- ! STMTS WiHIOEG But i CX ' a ili lr Readyfor Marolil of r m or 'k-..-. . .v.. ill i of the American Legion Auxiliary on as Patrolman Robert Keefer Might Fit in Well JDuring New Years EAST JORDAN, Mich. () A totally blind man was fined $10 Thursday on a charge of driving an automobile without a license. Arlow Ebenstcin. 23 and blind, wasn't caught driving but he ad mitted he had drive several times in the last week or so, with, a 16-year-old telling him whether he was going straight, to the right or left and what was approaching. Rain Ushers Out Third Wettest Year The year 1953 had the distinc tion of being the third wettest year on record. Rainfall hit 52.99 inches 13.4 above normal. It was beaten out by slightly sopping 1937 when the Mcmry Field Weather Bureau measured a fall of 63.5 inches. In 1950 rain fall tallied 56.55 inches. Greatest rainfall in a 24-hour period Jan. 19-20 when 2.48 inches fell. Other statistics for the year were not unusual. Mean tempera ture was 52.7 degrees, just a shade below normal. Aug. 11 was the hottest day of the year' when the mercury boil ed' over at 95. The two coldest days were. Feb. 24 and March 1 when the thermometer read 24. Only a trace of snow fell here during 1953. It was noted on sev eral days. The month of December was a near normal month weatherwise. Rainfall totaled 7.80 inches--.68 above normal. Seven days it was 32 degrees or below and the low mercury reading was 26 on the 22nd. High est was 58 on the 19th, the day when the most rain fell in a 24 hour period 1.88 inches. There were no clear days In December. Three were partly cloudy and 28 cloudy. The prevailing work day in Japan Is nine hours. ' TODAY! IT'S A , STEAL... TN Ymt's liggtst Fva and Lough lorgoia! I'M wIM'J-ns,JIEII Dimes 9, and Carroll Robinson, presi unloads three boxes of March of by the Legion auxiliaries and the of the iron lung used in previous Publication By Romanian Embassy Cut By WILMOT HEIHR WASHINGTON W - The State Department took the Romanian legation out of the magazine busi ness Thursday with a note ban ning further publication of "The Romanian News" and miscellan eous Communist pamphlets. ' A department spokesman sajd the ban was in retaliation for aic tion taken by the Red Romanian government last Tuesday, when jit ordered the American legation jln Bucharest to discontinue "News from America," a monthly pub lication printed in Romanian. The exchange of bans appeared to hurt the Communists more than this country, since "The Roman ian News" has been coming out once a week here for more than five years. "News from America" nrsi appeared m October with a circulation of 1,600, and there have been only three issues. j Rep. Overton Brooks (D La) lis sued a statement wis week pro testing distribution of "The fto manian News." but the State Pe- partment said- the i ban was hot related to this. j . The department had issued bans agaipst the publications of two other Communist governments;' in recent years. In July. 1952. m department suspended distribution of the Russian Embassy bulletin after the Soviets banned the Aroer ican magazine "Amerika". i In August, 1951. The Polish i in formation offices in New York were cjosed and a ban placed on all its publications. This followed the forced closing of the 3 S. information office in Poland, j Boys 'and Girls Tomorrow at 12:30 SPECIAL KIDS SHOW See The Great Adventure of; CAPTAIN KIDDj - And i 3-Color Cartoon Also Kathryn Grayson Howard Keel j' "Kiss Me Kate" - Also RHONDA FLEMING 1,1 of the Nils" "Serpent o MMNt a-MM Now Playing Regular prices Plus 10c for Viewers ...They called ' him Ml .3C- K Swtnro Uladr Fury Filmed la Georcia's! rrimltrfe Okefesokef in if re Frankieand Ava Back Together, Toast ear ! ROME un Crooner Frankie Sinatra and: his wife actress Ava toasted in the new year at a fashionable Rome restaurant, i It was their first time out in pub lic lince they arrived from Spain two days i ago amid signs of a reconciliation. Since then Ava's cold, caught in Spain had kept her confined to her Corso d'ltalia apartment; where Frankie is stay ing with her. Con Blocked Jn Tunneling Out! Scheme WALLA WALLA Uh A state prison- inmate, locked in isolation since early this year, was stopped in an abortive attempt to tunnel out of the institution, Warden John Cranor said Thursday, j The warden did not identify the prisoner jbut said he was one of five who had been placed in isola tion as punishment for producing the bomb that last February claimed the life of one prison offi cial and injured another. Cranor said officers have been investigating the incident for some time but had no Way of knowing how long: the tunnel digging has been going on. i The tunnel started in the man's Cell in isolation where thp nd stppl or iron floors are fairly-soft. The4 prisoner! Cut a hole 10 by 18 inches through the floor and then through an inch and a half layer of con crete. He bad started digging in the dirt when the hole was discovered but he Was allowed to continue, Cranor isaid. The dirt he removed was wrapped in cloth. When he was not digging, the man would put the I cloth-wrapped dirt back in the hole. . . Officers watched him for two days, then put a stop to further burrowing. Had he continued, the officers said, the tunnel would have come up in a small exercise yard which apparently was the last thing he needed. a Boat Upsets, Dunks Driver In Willamette A Salem man got a chilly dunk ing in Willamette River Thursday afternoon when his 12-foot out board motor boat flipped over off Mjnto'a Island. Within minutes after the upset, John Gordon, 185 S. 24th St, was pulled 'from the water by a Sea Scout! and his craft was saved by Willard Taylor of Salem Boat House; The Sea Scout, Sterling Willi- ver of 1970 Maple St was operat ing his own outboard nearby when Gordon flipped over.; Taylor went to the scene in his towbpat and rescued the speed boat just as it was drifting under a log raft. The boat and its 25 horsepower motor were valued'at about $1,000 by the owner. Witnesses said Gordon had a case of knocking knees and chat tering teeth, but apparently suf fered no other ill effects. The incident occurred about 3:45 1 p.m. Savings Received On or Before Jan. 11th Earn From. Jan. 1st. v irst-Is arningi - 129 N. ComfnorcUl j MORE )) ei u AccouriTS Insured jj j .tw-ziM TO $10,000 r I Savings Building V. 1 1 '' ' '' 1 " : ' J r ! Little 1954 Rides in on Wind Storm Old man 1953 rode out (of lem astride a driving wind and rainstorm Thursday night and little Mr. 1954 arrived just in time to get ! a taste of Oregon mist i I H About 20 minutes before, the New Year bounced in, heavy rains and winds slacked off and gave the new youngster a break. Downtown : Salem rocked to horn blasts and car backfires, at the count of 12 as traffic got on the. heavy side, but police said just plain noise seemed to! be the only disturbances. !- J . The weatherman says the mid valley is starting off 19541 with a few showers. 1 Salem night spots reported good crowds on hand to bring; in the j New year. : , Senator and Marion hotels were hosts to several private j parties and business in their lounkes was brisk. j The community's five dancing clubs all held parties jfour of them formal dinner affairs. Spots where public dances were held included the American Le gion Club, Crystal Gardens Ball- xrciir rr.il Most of the city's fraternal or ganizations celebrated the New Year. There were scores of watch and dinner parties at private homes. Fifteen Salem churches and the Salvation Army held' worship and walchnight services and many of them early evening socia: hours. RESERVE HOUSE . ASTORIA W) A sixth house has been moved from the sliding West Commercial St hillside here and property-owners plai to move two others. j r MEETING SCHEDULED MEDFORD UPi ThelOrder of the Arrow, a senior Boy fScout or ganization, will hold its annual state meeting here, Sept. 12-13. START! TI-IE NEW YEAR At The HOTEL MARION Dining Room an Marion Lounge Open at Noon Oak Room At 5 P. pen M. Bowl i Games Televised HOTEL MARION Downtown Salom Current rate I mmmmmmm Savings at First Federal Are: afe - Each saver's funds art insured to $10,000. vailable - No waiting years for full earnings. '' f ' a ' federally chartered and Are i to 1 more at FIRST i FEDERAL, SAVINGS 'jj .vi, Opposito locld JL tush lank "Whoro Thousands Aro Saving Millions- J ' ! Special: Fried Eggs PORTLAND l Fire destroyed a semi-trailer loaded . with eggs on the Columbia River Highway east of Cascade Locks Thursday. The blaze broke out after the truck driver. had pulled the rig off the road, apparently to go for help in fixing a flat tire. Complete Hew Year's Dinner Roast Prime Bib Of Beef AUJUS Extra Thick, Tender and Delicious ' THE RANCH 3260 Portland Road Phone 2-9887 For Reservations Hew Year's Dinner AT THE SAN SHOP Roast Turkey and Dressing. Gole Slaw with Sour Cream dressing, Mashed Potatoes and Gib let Gravy, Cranberry Sauce; Hot Biscuits and Butter. Roast Veal With Roast Potato, ! Gravy, Cole Slaw, Hot Biscuits and Butter. i BRING THE FAMILY Sorrico in tho Dining Rooa or Sorvico in Your Cot lAJoodroffe'j San Shop Vi Mil N. of tho UndorpoM supervised. First Federal. it . I I-.1 i