2 Capital Journal, Salem, 3 Students Die Dormitory Fire Norman, Okla., Dee. 3 Fire whipped through a wooden dormitory on the University of ' Oklahoma campus early today burning to death at least three students. More than 300 escaped the burning former navy barracks but 19 were injured, two crit ically. The three bodies were remov ed from the ruins but were un identified. An offical in the office of Dr. George Cross, university presi dent, estimated the damage from the loss of the . building and equipment at approximately $500,000. The building was a two-story wooden structure, built by the navy in 1941 at a cost of $412, 000 and used as a navy barracks during the war. Starting about 2:30 a.m. (CST) the fire spread quickly through the sprawling wooden building. The students, aroused from sleep, made their way to the ex its or jumped from first and second floor windows. Many former GI's, unable to take the time to dress or gather up belongings jumped to the ground wearing only their GI shorts but clutching their first-of-the-month GI subsistence checks, received only yesterday. It was the fourth destructive fire in this state in three days and the second at the University Df Oklahoma in two years. Prostitution Issue in U. N. New York, Dec. 3 W United Nations members had before them today a general assembly demand that they stop register ing prostitutes. The demand was part of new world convention unifying existing international treaties on traffic in persons and exploita tion of prostitution. The ban on registration is a new feature. The assembly adopted the convention 32 to 2, with Britain and France voting "no" and the United States among 15 nations abstaining. U. S. representatives said they didn't believe the senate could ratify the treaty because the federal government, would have 1 to enforce most provisions. Britain objected to automatic application of the convention to her colonies. The British said the colonies are self-governing in sucn matters. . For France, Mme. Paul Bastid opposed the ban on registration of prostitutes. France, she said, has abolished police registration but keeps up medical registra tion as a health measure. Russia voted for the conven tion. Alexander S. Panyushkin said prostitution doesn't exist in Russia because there's a law against it. But he said his gov ernment recognized the need for International action to sup press traffic in human beings. Nations ratifying the conven tion agree to punish anyone lead ing peprsons into prostitution, and anyone managing or financ ing persons into prostitution, Ing properly for prostitution purposes. The treaty comes into force for the signer? 90 days aft er two countries ratify it, American Girl And Shah Dance Phoenix, Ariz., Dec. 3 (U.R) His imperial majesty, the shah Df Iran, shed his imperial ditfnity when he had his first dale with an American girl since arriving! In the United Stales on Novem-! ber 15. Showing the good taste attrib uted to kings, the shnh chose willowy Joanne Frakcs, 23, as his partner last night at dinner and a square dance. The blonde, blue-oyed Oak Park, 111., girl wore a red rose, the national Rower of Iran, In her hair. $$ MONEY $$ FHA rIi ' 4 V4 Real Estate Loans Farm or City Personal and Auto Loans State Finance Co. 153 8. High St. 1,1c S-216 M 222 1 SUNDAY -MONDAY Tonight "Painted Desert" "Mexican Hayride" i liiii Oregon, Saturday, Dec. 3, 1949 The young Northwestern uni versity graduate admitted she was thrilled. "What girl wouldn't be," she said. ' Alter all, I've never danced with a king before. "He's a good dancer dances just like an American man." Miss Frakes, public relations director for the hotel where his majesty stayed, received the din- ner invitation through one of the shah's retinue. The courier car ried the added suggestion that his majesty would very much like to accompany her to the square dance thrown by the hotel in his honor. Envious American males con ceded he was smooth on his feet and seemed to have a snappy line of chatter. Joanne said the shah "talked about nothing in particular about the murals on the wall about what he liked and didn't like. Just the usual things you talk about. "He's very nice," she said. Russians Deny Tito's Charges Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, Dec. 3 (P) One of 10 white Russians charged with operating a comin form anti-Tito spy ring for the Soviet Union today admitted he had collaborated with the nazis during the war. But he denied he was a Soviet spy after the war. A former captain in the Rus sian Czar's army, Vladimir Og niev, told the district court, how ever, he had conversations after the war with officers of the NKVD, the Soviet secret police, and representatives of the Sov iet consulate in Belgrade. Tall, bald and with a bushy brown mustache, Ogniev was the third defendant to appear before the three-man court as Yugoslavia strove to prove the soviet union has had spies in side Yugoslav borders in an ef fort to overthrow Marshal Tito's independent communist govern ment. The only woman defendant. Kscnia Komad, a white Russian school teacher, yesterday admit ted that she had helped recruit fellow countrymen who had fled from the Russian revolution for the nazi occupation forces in Yu goslavia. She was the only one of the defendants who apparent ly was not charged with espion age. The court had already heard gray-bearded Rev. Aleksei Kri shko, a Russian orthodox priest, testify he felt "partially guilty" to the long list of charges in the indictment linking him with the Germans during the war and the Soviet union afterwards. Uranium Fire Still Burnina Berlin, Dec. 3 (IP) An east zone uranium fire which report edly killed hundreds of miners, was still burning this week, the British licensed newspaper Tele graf said today. Telegraf said it got its infor mation from an east zone miner who had fled Johanngeorgen stadt last Thursday. It declined to identify him, but said he was present when a fire broke out 10 days ago in mine No. 35, near Johanngeorgenstadt. According to the miner's ac count, Russian and German of ficials are continuing wholesale arrests in the area in an effort to prove the fire was caused by sabotage. Telegraf reported that a worn mine cable caused a short cir cuit which set the workings on fire. Flames spread to two oilier mines, and an explosives dump blew up, according to the ac count. COMING! DANCE Glenn Wooriry Presents Wed., Dec. 7 "Battle of Dixieland Jazz Bands" Direct from the Portland Auditorium LOS ANGELES' Nappy Lamare and the (Bob Crosby) "BOB CATS" vs. PORTLAND'S Monlv Billion's "CASTLE JAZZ" Band 25 Great Artists! GLENWOOD BALLROOM Wed., Dec. 7 Tickets Now on Sole at HEIDER'S First Come First Served! Only 1(100 Tickets ami with a new all time low price for name hands 75c Only Plus Tax DON'T MISS IT! TT Library Warns Against Reds Washington, Dec. 3 U.R) The library of congress, in a study of defense plans, warned that a "disciplined army" of commun ists agents is ready to sabotage America in event of war with Russia. A public affairs bulletin, pub lished by the library s legisla tive reference service, caution ed against complacency based on the fact that attempted sabotage by nazi agents here at the start of World War II was success fully thwarted. "The numbers of the latter (the nazis) were small, their techniques crude, and their identification easy compared with the disciplined army of communists, many of them American citizens, who may be expected to work against the nation in the event of war with a communist power," the library said. S. Arthur Devan, a national defense analyst of the reference service, prepared the report, a 105-page analysis of the "funda mental considerations" on which this country's defense plans must be laid. The report warned that there can be no complete security in military sense and that the atomic bomb is not the "abso lute weapon." Peron to Sue Newspapers Buenos Aires, Dec. 3 (fl) President Juan D. Peron an- nounced today he intends to pro secute La Prensa and La Nacion, two of South America s biggest newspapers, for reporting a speech which said he had be come rich while in office. The president summoned for eign correspondents to a news conference for the first time in two years to defend himself against the charge. In a drama tic statement, he declared he had been maligned by an unnamed politician and that La Nacion and La Prensa, "to a certain de gree, supported this uncalled for calumny." I The official transcript of thei president's remarks made iti plain that he intends to prose cute the big opposition newspa pers under a law permitting jail sentences of up to three years for an insult (desacato) to the president. The president also j made it clear he intends to J bring charges against responsi-j ble editors of both papers. Peron told the correspondents he had been accused of dipping into the public purse to enrich himself. He did not specify who made the speech but said he would bring the accusers into court to obtain redress. Presumably he referred to Congressman Atilio Cattaneo, retired army colonel. Cattaneo last night announced he had been ordered before a military court of honor because of a speech he made saying Peron has more money today than when he en tered the presidency, three and a half years ago. A "dead spot" is an area in which reception of a radio signal is extremely poor or absent. ENDS TODAY! (SAT.) W. C. Fields "Never Give PH. 3-3721 CONT. FROM 1 P.M. STARTS TOMORROW! eiram;is.,.uoiesii;nis! TSkV B"""' The Fabulous Technicolor Story of America's St'r rSb'v- Mt Fomovs Troubadour! vffm? mnmiSTEUEHS 4 msfuo - COLOR COLOR CARTOON Fireboat Endangered A fireboat (right) was endangered fighting a fire aboard the freighter Hawaiian Rancher (left) at Alameda, Calif., when it suddenly listed from one side to the other and threatened to capsize. Shortly after this picture was taken lines holding the ship to its pier snapped and the fire boat cast away. Two crewmen jumped into the water and others were taken off the ship on a fire .department aerial ladder. (AP Wirephoto) Dr. Butler of Independence, Leading Valley Citizen, Dies Independence, Dec. 3 Dr. Maurice J. Butler, one of the leading citizens and professional died Saturday morning at Salem He was a native of this community, the son of Dr. and Mrs. O. D. Butler, who were pioneer residents of the valley. His mother is still living. Dr. Butler was born December 21, 1891. He graduated from In dependence high school and was a student at the then Columbia university in Portland and at Portland academy. He was grad uated from North Pacific Dental college in 1915. For 11 years he practiced at Monmouth and then came to Independence in 1926 where he practiced for 23 years. He was a member of Lyons lodge No. 29, AF & AM for 37 years and of Al Kader Shrine for 21 years. He was a member of the Tri-County Dental asso elation. Dr. Butler was mayor of In dependence from 1940 to 1946, and life long member of Calvary Presbyterian church, of which he was an elder at the time of his death. He was first presi dent of the Independence Lions club and had served as presi dent of the Chamber of Com merce. He was married October 1, 1914, to Laura Craven of Inde pendence. He is survived by his widow; his mother, Mrs. O. D. Butler; a son, Marlowe D. But ler of Independence; and a granddaughter, Leslie Ann. Services will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Calvary Presbyterian church with Interment in Mt. Crest Abbey mausoleum fn Sa lem. "THE BANK DICK" AND a Sucker an Even Break" f WONDER M0$ WBt Motr wirl MARTHA STEWART REGINALD GARDINER IEN0RE AUBERT WRUAM FRAWUY CO-HIT! Paulette Goddard C0108 BY TECHNICOLOR . LATE NEWSI men of the Willamette valley, General hospital. Rescue Crew Leaves For C-54 Wreckage McChord Air Force Base, Dec. 3 A mountain rescue crew left a timberline base camp on Mount St. Helens today en route to the wreckage of a C-54 air force transport plane which crashed 10 days ago, killing six men. The men, under the command of 1st Lt. Edmund G. Gulzynski of Mattapan, Mass., are attached to the 14th regimental combat team of Camp Carson, Colo. The rescue crew was guided up the ' treacherous mountain side by a B-17 dropping smcke bombs. The shattered C-54 was located Wednesday. Best passer on the 1949 Michi gan State freshman football team really was a thrower Wil lie Thrower, halfback from New Kensington, Pa. ENDS TONIGHT 2 GEMS FROM MGM "THE RED DANUBE" HOLlYWonrv. CLICKING' HERE'S ANOTHER GRAND HIT' Errol V Women Dies in Alaska Crash Petersburg. Alaska, Dec. 3 VP) Five survivors and the body of a tentatively identified woman victim of yesterday's crash-landing by an Alaska Coastal Air lines flying boat were to be re moved to Wrangell today. The plane, piloted by Mike Fenster, was forced down in a snowstorm shortly after leaving Petersburg for Wrangell yester day. A wing and an engine were torn off the plane, which wound up on the beach of Farm island near the moutn oi tne oiiKine river. Survivors were taken to the Barland Breeze cabin on nearby Dry island, where they were treated by Dr. Harold Banger man, who was flown in from Petersburg. Most seriously injured of the survivors was A. "Zeke" Dale, who suffered two broken legs, according to sketchy reports from the isolated crash area late last night. Others received scratches and bruises. The fatally injured passenger was listed both as Margaret Bell and Margaret Annis. She was a nurse en route to a job at Wran gell. A report from Juneau, where she boarded the plane. said her name was Bell. A Wran gell report said it was either Bell or Annis. President Li To Fly fo U. S. Hong Kong, Dec. 3 U. Na tionalist China's acting Presi dent Li Tsung-Jen will fly to the United States Monday, tensibly to enter a New York sanitarium for medical treat ment, it was announced today. Communist troops meanwhile pressed a two-way offensive against the new nationalist "war capital" ot Chengtu, where Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek is directing the defense. A communist column driving along the highway from cap tured Chungking was reported to be threatening Lungchang, 115 miles southeast of Chengtu. You Are Cordially Invited ! . . . On Saturday Evening, December 3 The Willamette University Players Will Present "OUR TOWN" by Thornton Wilder at the SALEM HI AUDITORIUM Curtain Time Is 8:30 TOMORROWI Continuous from 1 P.M. Sunday! Greer Garson in ft Flynn's embrace- in the exciting story of a woman many men loved! I GREER L J mFm3 I Ml rT.l tm mm m v mm m m ""m. m bIbV u - m. - m - " JANET LEIGH with HARRY DAVENPORT Fun-Loaded Companion Hit! "Jiggs and Maggie in Court" with Joe Yule Renle Riano EXTRA! WARNER COLOR CARTOON FUN Latest Warner News Chinese Crowd Refuge Haven Chengtu, China, Dec. 3 ()- Chinese nationalist leaders watched the inevitable Red shadow spread into their last major mainland haven of west ern China today. The nationalists tried to get their government going again in this hopelessly overcrowded new refugee capital. But the com munists may not let them stay here very long. The Reds, plunging deep into East-bound mail buses from Chengtu were forced to halt at Lungchang. Regular buses went only to Naikiang, 95 miles from Chengtu. Other reports said a second communist column driving down from Shensi province in the north was nearing the Shensi- Szechwan border some 285 miles north of Chengtu. Reports from Chengtu said Chiang was engaged in a deci sive conference with two emis saries who have returned from Hong Kong after an interview with Li Tsung-Jen. It was understood the emis saries carried a request from Chiang asking Li to return to Chengtu and resign his post as acting president. ENDS TODAY! 'YOU'RE MY EVERYTHING" with Dan Dailey, Anne Baxter Also "PITTFALL" with Dick Powell, Lteabeth Scott arts Tomorrow Cont. 1:45 BOB H0E BAIL ..V. ..Ja moo ww MM m mu a paramount rtciute SECOND FEATURE "I SURRENDER, DEAR" . Gloria Jean, Don McGuire Tickets will be on sale at the door and at Miller's at 60c per person. AND "BORDER INCIDENT" C2 II .1 SD - m 1 i , BOoK On - OAf or western China, cut the highway between Chengtu and Kunming, 390 miles to the south. This of ficial report followed informa tion that the communists also had cut the route between here and Chunking, 170 miles south east. Chunking fell to the Reds; vv euue&uay . The government acknowl edged the Reds had pushed into Suyung, 180 miles south of Chengtu and on one of the three highways linking Chengtu with Kunming. Posthumous Awards Made Paris, Dec. 3 VP) France's of ficial journal today announced the posthumous award of Chev alier in the Legion of Honor to two famous victims of the French airliner crash in the Azores Oct. 28. The decoration was conferred on Boxer Marcel Cerdan and Violinist Ginette Ne veu. Both were en route to the United States when their plane crashed. The late John L. Baird in Eng land is credited with being the first to demonstrate color tele vision, the year being 1928. JAMES CAGNEY VIRGINIA MAYO AND! "YES SIR, THAT'S MY BABY" Color by Technicolor with Donald O'Connor Gloria DelTaven c I CLOSING TONIGHT For Winter Season, Watch for Our Re-opening Date! (1 Mat. Daily From 1 P.M. NOW! WHOOPIE! Ends Today! Cont. Shows! Bing Crosby "CONNECTICUT YANKEE" In Technicolor o William Gargan "DYNAMITE" TOMORROW! Ray Milland "ALIAS NICK BEAL" o William Holden Glenn Ford "TEXAS" Pol, Q It Silverto heat re 0reroB ENDS TONITE "The Doctor and the Girl" STARTS SUNDAY SONGS! RN.'KlOES! 'M-G-zi Big new fECfiNICOLOR. m mrarauosEiTM. ETHEL 8ARRYM0RE keenan wtnm mario mu AND INTRODUCING HANDSOME LAST TIMES TONITE! I' f-B STARTS AT 6:15 P.M. B- 1 1 Burt Lancaster I I 1 1 Claude Rains I J 1 1 Corinne Calvert I I II "ROPE OF SAND" If ill Peggy Cummins Iff III Charles Coburn III 111 "GREEN GRASS I 111 OF WYOMING" III jj(J3lTitoJl ZD.CAiiio (JECHNfcoYoRfl Owriw COIUHH TTSSTSS--1 THRILL CO-HIT!