By ROBERT HAKADOTE. JaDan (JPt Bodies Maru were still washing up on the beaches here Tuesday. The huge vessel overturned Sunday in a savage typhoon that killed possibly 1,600 persons throughout Japan, most of them in the northern ipart Eighteen Americans soldiers, their dependents and, civilians were among the known dead. Some 40 others were listed as missing and DtP RKD At last there has, been an offi cial finding of reprehensible con duct on the part of Sen. Joe Mc Carthy. A select Senate commit tee after hearings held with strict decorum recommends t h a t the Senator from Wisconsin be cen sured on two counts in the list of five charges which were consid ered; and its report voices stern rebuke on the other three i with out a recommendation of censure. . The report goes to the Senate which will reconvene on Novem ber 8th to consider the! report Meantime senators, usually so lo quacious when approached for an interview are for the most part adhering to the policy of r.mum's the word." Naturally they want to read the full report and to re flect on it before sounding off. The meeting date is neatly placed after the election, by agreement of the majority and minority lead ers. While the postponement till after election spares campaigning members from being put on the spot, the recommendation of the committee is itself a standing in dictment of McCarthy. It should hold him in check until the matr ter comes before the Senate.,, t The fact that the report is sup ported unanimously by the six senators, three Republicans and three Democrats, adds further to its weight. Chairman Watkins handled the case like a judge, holding strictly to the business at hand and permitting no side ex cursions or distractions. It will be pretty hard for the Senate to re pudiate its , (Continued on editorial page, 4.) T Tl? Traiti in o Sessions Set AtYWTo day Instructional meetings for resi dential and rural workers In the forthcoming United Fund Drive will be held at 10 a.m. and 8 p.m. today at the YWCA, it was an nounced Monday by Campaign Di rector Elmer Berglund. ; All workers are asked to attend one of. the two meetings., A nurs ery for children will be available at the 10 a.m. session. Nearly 800 residential and ru ral workers have been enlisted to aid. V - At Monday's UF cabinet meet ing in the Marion Hotel came re ports that 97 chapter have been organized in Salem business firms. Some of these, in addition to early-starting canneries, are as much as 80 per cent complete in their: solicitations, said Berglund. Fund leaders axe now pointing their- efforts at next Tuesday's formal kickoff meeting, when a civic luncheon in the downtown armory will feature an address by H. Roe Bartle, Kansas V City banker, educator, youth leader and public speaker who is this year kicking off 20 United Fund drives in many part of the U.S. Bus Drivers Vote to Strike SAN FRANCISCO 11 Pacific Greyhound drivers and station "enr ployes in seven Western, states have 1 voted "overwhelmingly" to strike If necessary to obtain con tract demands, a union official said Monday night. Herman B. Markley, business agent for Division 1225, AFL. Amal gamated Assn. of Street Electric Railway and Motor Coach Em ployes, said more than 3,000 driv ers and station employes in Ore gon, Washington, California, Idaho, Nevada and parts of Utah tnd Texas-had voted in the strike au thorization mail ballot ; ; The present contract between the union and Greyhound expires on Oct. 16. It was reached after 79 day strike in 1952. ANIMAL CRACKERS "Trouble melterl mora "'- 'my '0 EUNSON from the sunken ferrvboat Tova presumed dead by the U.S. Army and Japan National Railway head quarters. I The Aemricans died in Japan's worst maritime disaster Sunday when the typhoon, which had ! been hea&ing ,out across the Sea of Ja pan, , turned and struck Northern Japan with winds of 100 miles an hour.; , f The Toya Maru with an estima ted 1,200 persons aboard, had an chored off Hakodate Harbor when the rush of wind and water, hit. It t capsized and only 163 persons were: known to have survived. Others Sunk I Four other ferries from Hako date were also caught in the un expected lash of the storm? and sank.; The tides still Were washing in bodies.! Rescue w o r ke r s searched the beaches and debris in the hope of finding more ilive. The Marine Safety Board j said that throughout fjhe storm area, 12 steamships, 23 motor ; schooners and. 312 other vessels were funk. TOKYO MP) A light earth quake shook Southern Hokkai do Island early Tuesday in the same area devastated by Sun day's typhoon disaster. No dam age was reported. ' : j It 3 listed 1,532 persons dead or missing from sea 'disasters alone. The board" , figures . cover; an area from Southern Japan, Where the typhoon first struck,, to North ern Japan. It, said never before in history had a typhoon Wrought such damage in the seas around Japan. .; : : ' j Search for Survivors ! J Two U. S. Navy ships and planes from! four U.'S. 'bases in Japan launched a search for any other survivors but stiff winds andjhigh waves kept rescue work at apnin imum. . J m The typhoon's winds whipped up a great fire that within mieutes destroyed 3,000 of 4,300 houses at Iwanai, a city of 23,000 population 99 miles north of Hakodate. Po lice said 32 were dead there and 56! were missing. f l Police and Coast Guard officials estimated 600 bodies had washed ashore by Monday night About 500 bodies were believed caught in the hull of the Toya Maru, which sank only 150 yards from the shore. When the great seas swept In, the 1 anchor chain broke, engines went dead and several dozen rail way cars in the hold apparently broke; loose, causing the ferry to capsize. i Fire Destroys Silverton Area Home, Cash j f: i lUttimn Newi Service SILVERTON Tragedy struck again early Monday morning at the Theodore Sweeten home on Route 2, 1 Silverton. Their, home an all contents, including clothing j and cash received so far from thej har vest of their cucumber crop, iwere destroyed by fire. I Three years ago their eldest son, Theodore Sweeton. Jr., 16. was drowned in the river Which crossed their property. i A Just what caused the fire Sweet en said he did not know although he belived it originated in the basement. The family was awak ened at 3:30 Monday morning by smoke and dashed for freedom, al though Sweeten; stopped (long enough at the telephone to call the Silverton Fire Department. S I The fire fighters arrived prompt ly! but were unable to chetK the flames which had gained rapid headway. They managed, however, to keep the Hre from spreadinig to other farm buildings which kere in the way of the strong breeze blowing at that hour. i Mr .and Mrs. Sweeten and five children came to the small farm on Pudding River, west of Silver- ton in the t Bethany district, in 1946. They had completed a. 13.000 remodeling 30b on their home this spring. The home and furnishings were partially covered oy insur ance ' . . I Twins Born to Girl, Age Ml - NEW YORK W A 14-year-old girl was the proud mother of twin daughters Monday. '1 'Mrs. Beatrice Pierce gave I birth toE the twins at New York Hospital Ftfday. 'Health Department! offi cials could not remember a young ec mother of twins in New York's hfetory. ' She is the wife of Arthur Pierce, 21, of Teterboro. N. J. ? The twins weighed in at 14 pounds, 4 ounces, combined weight Gloudv Weather Forecast Today ! .Plenty ' of clouds are on their ray to the Salem area, the Mc Nary Field weatherman reported early Tuesday, but probably they'll keep their moisture to tr.emselves, No rain was forecast, although partly cloudy skies are expected today and Wednesday. Thej pre diction called for high tempera ture this afternoon 01 about 68, with the low tonight near 40 104TH YEAR 2 Public Rebuke of McCarthy. Senate Divided On Issue WASHINGTON GrV- Wide and starp splits developed among Sen ate members Monday night over a special committee report recom mending that Sen. McCarthy be censured for his conduct. The range of reaction foreshad owed a rough and tumble floor scrap when the Senat" recon venes Nov. 6 to take up the issue. An Associated Press survey cf senators who could be reached promptly in various parts of the country showed this division: Senators apparently inclined to approve censure, although not com mitted 11. 1 1 Senators criticizing the - report and apparently inclined to oppose censure, although likewise not com mitted 3. Senators praising the committee membership for its work, 'without indicating how they will vote. Senators who were noncommittal -29.' ' v.:-: - Total senate membership is 96. Sample comments: Sen. Welker I tR-Idaho) said hr disagreed "unhesitatingly with the committee's recommendation and declared he would vote "em phatically no" on censuring Mc Carthy. Now Clear Sen. Lehman (D-Lib-NY): "It Is now clear that Sen. McCarthy should no only be censured but should be removed immediately from his chairmanship of senator ial committees." , McCarthy himself was quoted by the Chicago Tribune as saying: "If the senate upholds this report and all its implications, it will have gone a long way toward abdication of its constitutional right to investi gate wrongdoings in the executive departments. . Sen. Carlson (R-Kan), a mem ber of the six-man special com mittee, served notice that be would fight for adoption of its report, and Sen. Robertson (D-Va) said: "My present feeling is that I shall vote to accept its report" But most senators reserved Judg ment on the committee's recom mendations, product of a nine-day hearing held after' Congress ad journed in August. Chance to Defend Some indicated they wanted to give McCarthy a chance to de fend himself on the Senate floor be fore making tip their minds on how to vote; others declined to com ment until they had had a chance to study the committee's 40,000 word report. ; Sen. Jackson (D-Wash) com mented: "The high caliber of members and the great faith and' confidence that other members of the Senate, both Democratic and Republican, have in them would indicate, their report findings and recommenda tions will carry great weight in the final action taken by the Senate.' No Room for Doubt Sen. Morse (Ind-Ore), who had contributed to the charges against McCarthy, along with ., Sen. Ful bright , (D-Ark.), said the re port "has left no room for doubt about the fact that McCarthy has conducted himself in a manner un becoming a senator." Sen. Cordon (R-Ore) was among 29 senators who refused . to say how they felt about the report. Sen. Magnuson (D-Wash.) was unavail able for comment, as were 47 oth er members of the upper chamber house, s 1 URANIUM BOOM STARTS BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (J) Fresh indications that uranium ores in the Kern River Canyon country East of Bakersfield may be commercially Valuable have touched off excitement reminis cent of the early days of this re gions fabulous-oil boom of 20 years ago. - ' ' Eden Proposes Allies Hurry Arms Agreement By ARTHUR' GAVSHON LONDON UB British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden proposed Monday night the Western Allies speed up their timetable to get an agreement within 50 days on free ing and rearming West Germany, Eden's proposal was the latest In the behind-the-scenes maneuver ing on the eve of the fateful nine power conference opening here Tusday to bring West Germany Into the Free World's defense set up. U.S. Secretary of State Dulles, following a three-hour talk with Eden Sunday night and a 90-min-ute conference with French Pre mier Pierre Mendes-France Mon day afternoon, was reported insist ing on ''substantial progress in 1954." ; But it the last, minute," the French cast a new and disturbing SECTIONS 16 PAGES Salem Bypass, Due to Open . if 1 f , , -I'--.- I -v .'! - . - J ' -. 1 State Highway surfacing crews connected one lane of the new Salem bypass route with Highway 99E south of Salem Monday as it H. Baldock, state highway engineer, predicted the $2,150,000 project 1 to divert through traffic around Salem : would be open Nov. 1. AFL Urged To Seek New Wage Boosts By NORMAN WALKER , LOS ANGELES UB The Amer ican Federation of Labor wound up its annual convention Monday with a call on its unions to seek "substantial" new wage boosts and not be "deceived" by employer claims they cannot afford them. 3 The convention adopted a batch of resolutions at its final sessions. many voicing new criticism of President Eisenhower s administra tion and saying the economic pic ture is worse than the administra tion will admit. . ;i I However the convention caution ed its unions against believing that unions should forego wage increas es or "being deceived by employ ers in a basically sound financial position who attempt to maneuver unions into abandoning wage in crease efforts on grounds of the general economic down turn." ! I j Saying ''only a relatively few unions" have failed to negotiate new pay boosts, the resolution said "even in a depressed, and uncer tain economic atmosphere and with a relatively stable cost-of-living, wage , increases' are warranted to improve worker living standards and keep pace with the economy's constantly ! rising level of produc tivity." ! . . j AFL President George Meany and ether j top AFL officers were all re-elected to new terms in con cluding sessions. ' Max. Mia. Freeip. i It 42 .! ! 6? 51 .tO so as .oo 1 84 47 .00 ! &I St - .W M 43 .00 6S 52 .CO W S3 .U 1 58 .00 74 60 .CO Salem Portland j Baker j Medford i , North Bend ftoseburf U- San Francisco Cblcaco New York i Ijoi Anseles : Willamette River; -11 tett 1 FORECAST (from V. S. weather bureau. McNary field, Salem): ' Partly cloudy today, tonight and Wednesday; Not much change in temperature, with the highest today hear 68 and the lowest tonight near 40. Temperature at II :0l a.m. today was 43. j ! . ' SALEM PRECIPITATION Since Start, of Weather Year Sept 1. This Year ! Lait Year Normal i 1.38 i . .10 1J9 element into the coming conference by spreading word they wanted a Saar settlement under Brussels Pact auspices as a condition for their acceptance of West German rearmament.' I i Eden's new plan proposed post poning the meeting of the NATO Council of Foreign Ministers, set tor around Oct i 15. to give the Allies time to grant West Germany its sovereignty ia it could become a partner in the Atlantic alliance ' Mendes-France. whose Parliam ent is most wary; about seeing the Germans' march : again, has told Eden privately he will stake the life of his government on getting an agreed plan through the French chamber thu year. : Eden circulated his plan presum ably with the clear aim ot emphas izing the Vnow or never urgency which London and Washington it- tach to quick German rearmament. "The Oregon Statesman, , L City Council Rejects 300 Parking Meters By ROBERT E. GANGWARE f ' s j i City Editor, The Statesman Three hundred of Salem's parking meters were rejected after a year's trial, by action of Salem These are the controversial Ummatic-label meters of Karpark Corp., Cincinnati, purchased last year on a low-bid basis but contrary to the administration's recommendation that the city continue to use the, Park-o-Meter variety of another firm. I Council members voted at City Hall Monday night to cancel their agreement with Karpark Corp.'on rrounds that the Unimatics are subject to moisture damage, eas ily broken springs, and other dif ficulties requiring more mainten ance . work and ' servicing tune than thej Park-o-Meters. The action was by voice vote on a Council resolution, but Alder man Chester I. Chase put his op position ! v o t e into the record. Chase had been one of the lead ing advocates of purchase of the less expensive meters. Study Made ' Following complaints of JJnima tic operation, city officials made a thorough study of comparable sets of the two types of meter in places w'here they received com parable juse. City Manager J. L. Franzen cit ed this survey and earlier main tenance Reports in Tecommending last night that the Unimatics be returned to the company and Park-o-Meters used instead. The city has paid some $4,000 to Karpark, toward the contract price of $13,302 to come out of meter revenue. Inventory of Meters The city manager said an in ventory of meters and use shows that next steps should be pur chase of 116 Park-o-Meters tnd' removal of meters from little-used area of i State St between 13th and 14th. He predicted next me ter order after that would come in years when the Meier L Frank development is completed and streets nearby would require meters. ! ; ! (Additional Council news on page 2, sec. 1.) State Garagei Opening Told State Pinance Director Harry S. Dorman said he would hold open house for the public Friday at the new $185,000 state garage at 13th and Ferry Sts. The public is Invited to come and take a look from S a.nu to 10 p.m.i. , , 1 ! The new state car pool will be housed in the garage. Dorman said he expects to start using it Fri- Heart Attack Uncalled For LODI. Italy if) Cesare Pfc- toccheri. 49. looked at the results of Italy's major league soccer games and dropped aeaa ot a heart attack Monday. He had picked every game cor rectly and won the weekly to tocalcioT soccer pool, which some times pays off in millions of lire. Perhaps he would have lived if he had known the rest of the story. A total : of 137.B90 other persons picked all the games, too. So Piz xoccheri'i , shara vis only 1,233 hre about $2. Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, September 28, 1954 Nov. 1, Joins Highway 99E J 1 7 t .. t i - x it :.:--'.,. '-- - : Above photo shows crews pouring way as northbound traffic (left) Salem. (Statesman: Photo) I City Council Monday! 200,000 to Search for Boy In Midwest SIOUX CITY, Iowa Wl A mass search which authorities said will involve more than 200,000 persons in Iowa, South Dakota and Nebras ka will be undertaken Tuesday for 8-year-old "Jimmy Bremmer, who mysteriously disappeared from his home here Aug. 31. The searchers will include three National Guard units and Sioux City Police Department personnel. City officials Monday asked that business and industrial firms search their immediate premises and unoccupied areas adjacent to their establishments beginning at I p.m. . ; And all residential and apart- ment dwellers were asked to look over their premises carefully be ginning at 5 p.m. Search officials said they would ask that the same policy be fol lowed throughout ; Woodbury and Plymouth Counties, Iowa, Union County, S.D., and Dakota County in Nebraska. j Sioux City' Chief of Detectives Harry Gibbons has described the disappearance of Jimmy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bremmer, as "the most baffling missing per sons case in Sioux City Police his tory." j; ; ,r : : . ; . - The boy had been out playing in the evening on the day he dis appeared and the last anyone saw of him was when a playmate bade him goodnight, about 8 p.m.. only 40 yards from the Bremmers' modest home. i Melon Hurled From Auto Hurts Youth A melon thrown from a speed ing car sent a 12-year-old Salem boy to the hospital Monday night for treatment. I The youth, David Philip, 1940 Breyman St, was a passenger in an automobile driven by Harry Santee, 1880 N. 24th St He was hurt when a melon thrown from another car shattered the Santee's car windshield, showering David with glass and pieces of melon. He was treated at Salem Gen eral Hospital Hospital ' authori ties said pieces of the melon had to be removed from his eyes but that be was not seriously hurt He was released after treatment The Incident took place on North Lancaster Road. Santee's car was moving south and the other car was going north, v TRANSPORT ARRIVES SEATTLE UH The Navy trans port James O'Hara arrived here Monday with 804 pusessers from the Far East ; s v v s f MM ., , .. . . black-top surface en the new road- travels Pacific Highway route into Flames Jump Fire Barriers In California SAN BERNARDINO. Calif .(JtV- Stiffening winds sent flames crack' ling over firebreaks and sparked a dozen new outbreaks Monday on steep slopes of the San Bernardino Mountains. Most of 850 fire fighters battling the 5,500-acre blaze were massed on the critical northwest corner ot the fire, where the resort town of Cedar Pines was threatened. Each time the flame famned the firebreaks crews managed to cut new breaks around the blazing acreage and tie the lines in again. Control Forecast If fire crews hold the line, the three - day - old blaze could be brought under control Tuesday morning, spokesmen said. I Thirteen bulldozers clanked up 23 per cent slopes to gouge new firetrails ; on the line, where 45 pumpers' were massed In a fight to contain the fire. In places where terrain was too steep for machines, men with shovels and axes hacked firebreaks by hand in the near-100 degree heat. One thousand persons were eva cuated from the Cedar Pines area over the weekend. Greatest damare so far was Inst of much valuable watershed. Two Northern California fir were still out of control; a 2,000 acre crass fire 13 miles southeast of Monterey, and a 1,688 acre blaze near Kelseyville. in Lake County. Youths Hurt In Gar Crash Statesman iriwi Service SILVERTON Two Woodburn youths were receiving treatment in the Silverton Hospital Monday night as the result of a high way accident Sunday near the Pudding ' River bridge . on the Woodburn-Molalla Highway. The injured youths were Stan ley Johnson, 20, and Raymond Meininger, 17. They were hurt when their car left the road as it crossed a short bridge over a low spot 1 State police said the driver of the car apparently fell asleep. They said the car was totally demolished by the impact, which ripped heavy timber from the bridge. Hospital authorities reported Monday night that the youths were not in serious condition. PATIENTS DIE v MEXICO CITY U). Officials Monday night blamed the deaths of 10 patients in the city insane asylum on overdoses of insulin used in shock treatments. Today StatcsaSaT SECTION 1 . Editorials, features 4 Society, women's news 6-7 Valley news 8 SECTION Z Sports ..... 1-3 Radio. TV 4 Comics . 4 Crossword Puzzle ...........5 , Star Gazer 5 Classified ads .-6-7 PRICE 5c No. 185 Asked All Si Solons Concur By J. W. DAVIS WASHINGTON ( - A public and official , reprimand for Sen. McCarthy was recommended Mon day by a Senate committee of three Democrats and three Repub licans. The committee said the Wiscon sin Republican should be censured for conduct it described as con temptuous, contumacious, denun ciatory, unworthy, inexcusable and reprehensible. A censure vote carries no penal ties other than the indirect effects a i rebuke from fellow .senator might bring about. - The report, which surprised many by its vigor, set the stage for what promises to be long and bitter debate in the special Senate session convening Nov. 8 to con sider the recommendations. In voting unanimously for cen sure on three counts, arising out of two of the five main categories ot charges against McCarthy, the investigating committee headed by Sen. Watkins (R-Utah) held that: McCarthy was ''contemptuous. contumacious and denunciatory" towara a senate subcommittee which Investigated his finances in 1952. Statements Made , He made statements about fel low senators on the subcommittee that were "clearly intemperate, in bad taste and unworthy of a mem ber of this body." He treated Brig. Gen. Ralph W. Zwicker, whn the general was a witness before him, in a manner that was "inexcusable and "ren- rehensible." The Watkins committee said other charges brought against the controversial senator "do not, un der all the evidence, justify a res olution of censure." These were that McCarthy had sougnc to incite federal employes to break the law to bring him gov ernment, secrets, and that he had improperly received and used con fidential information from execu tive files. Grave Error But while recommending againft censure m these Instances, the Watkins committee said the evi dence in them did show McCarthy had "committed a grave error" and acted improperly, showing "a high degree of irresponsibility." Whether ihe Senate will vote censure remained very much in doubt Monday night When half of the Senate s 96 members had been polled informally by the Associa ted Press, 29 of them were not saying how they might vote. Eleven senators apparently were inclined to approve of censure and three were inclined to oppose it Six praised the work of the committee or spoke well of its members, but went no further. The Chicago Tribune quoted Mc Carthy as saying: "If the Senate upholds this re port and all its Implications, it will have gone a long way toward ab dication of its constitutional right to investigate wrongdoings in the executive departments. Establish Precedeat "I do not care whether I am censured or not but I will fight against establishing a precedent which will curb investigative, pow er and assist any administration in power to cover up its misdeeds." Edward Bennett Williams. Mc Carthy's lawyer in the .Watkins Committee hearings, said the sen ator, will make a vigorous defense on the Senate Door that will re quire "quite a considerable time," The White House kept out of the picture. Murray Snyder, President Eisenhower's assistant press sec retary, said in Denver: "That's strictly Senate busines. The White House will have no comment" The committee found no grounds for censuring McCarthy for hav ing said of Sen. Flanders (R-Vt): "Senile I think they should get a man with a net and take him to a good quiet, place." Highly Improper This "highly Improper" remark, the report said, was provoked by speeches Flanders made en the Senate floor against McCarthy and by Flanders dramatic appearance at the McCarthy-Army hearings to give McCarthy notice that he was going to attack him in a Senate speech. ' The 68-page report was signed by Sens. Watkins, Johnson ID Colo), Stennis, (D-Miss), Carlson (R-Kan), Ervia (D-NC) and Case (R-SD). The committee. In ' addition to what it had to say about censur ing McCarthy, made two other recommendations to the Senate: 1. That no one-man committee hearings be permitted, except up on the authority of a majority vote of committee members. 2. That no testimony taken Sn a closed session be disclosed pub licly unless authorized by a ma jority vote.