susoiJJS2w:2aeaesa5 Capital A Journal THE WEATHER. MOSTLY CLODDY, scattered Ibnren tonight. Cloudy, ecca aioaal rain, Satarday. Coaler tonight Law, St; high Satar- FINAL EDITION 65th Year, No. 283 Salem, Oregon, Friday, November 27, 1953 18 Pages Price 5c Great Flames Sweep Over Pusan, Korea Army Supplies, 3000 Buildings Destroyed, 300,000 Homeless Pawn, Korea MS A treat lira burned through the heart of teeming Pnsaa Saturday driving possibly , per sou from their homes, and de stroying the headquarter of the U. 8. army command which operates this vital port. Hours after the fire broke , out in a squatter section of this city Jammed with war ref ugees, thousands of U. S. and South Korean soldiers still had not brought the raging flames under control. The flames had swept more than a mile throu swept more than a mile through the business section. The U. S. army had no re ports of deaths, but it was be lieved almost certain that the flames, driven swiftly by 30 mile winds, had overhauled - some of the sick and aged ref ugees in the squatter section. , Whole Blocks at a Time The flames ate swiftly through the tinder-like shacks and hovels, gulping whole blocks at a time. Then the fire spread to the business section. I ' Thousands of Koreans with their pitifully meagre posses sions streamed acros bridges to . (Continued en Pace . Column 7) Crash Victims Said Improving , McMinnville (IP) Two of three Willamette university l students from Newport injured ' in a Wednesday night highway accident showed slight im provement Friday. The third remained in grave condition. The accident took two lives - -that ol Irvin Monroe Nicho las. 18. a student, and an infant girl. Gay Carol, 7 months, the i daughter of Mr. and Mrs. AT- ; - chie Aldropp of Langlois. In grave conditino is Frank. lin O. Bud Parker, 18. He re- mains unconscious with skull fractures and other serious hurts in a hospital here. Kith erine Carol Litchfield, also in the hospital here, showed a lit tle improvement Friday and was conscious at intervals.. " The third injured student, Joan K. Curry, 18, was taken to a Portland hospital where at tendants said she was slightly improved although still uncon scious and in serious condition, The car in which the four students were going home for the Thanksgiving holiday col lided with the Aldropp car. AWruDD suffered a law frac ture and other facial Injuries, and is in a Dallas hospital. Mrs. Aldropp. treated for shock and cuts, was released from the hospital Thursday. Her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Good rich, live at Dallas. The Aid ropps were en route there for the holiday when the accident occurred on Highway 18 some eight miles west of Willamina. Coroner Paul Bollman said he would investigate because - - there was no clear story of how the accident happened. Deafhloiiof Holidays 163 HIT United Prcti) The Thanksgiving holiday was marred by scores of traffic deaths as snow and freezing , rain turned many highways Vlnto glazed traps, accident re ports showed today. But for most Americans the first peacetime Thanksgiving in four years was nearly per fect, with typically nippy No vember weather in northern states. Traffic took 122 lives in the , 30 hours between 8 p.m. Wednesday and midnight Thursday, a United Press tab ulation showed. Miscellaneous mishaps killed another 41 per sons, making a holiday total of 163. California led in traffic deaths with 12. followed by New York. 10; Florida. 8; Il linois, Indiana and Ohia, 7 each. Although the National Safety Council issued no prediction of the .death toll because it was one-day holiday, it had warned that wintry weather would make driving extremely hazardous. A one to three-inch blanket of snow today covered the eastern Dakotas, northern Illi nois, most of Indiana and Ohio and eastern Pennsylvania and western New York. Even heav ier snow fell on Iowa and the northern great Lakes states like Minnesota. , Arresls Loom For Armored Car Robbery Race Track Said Watched by FBI For Accomplices Boston ( A federal offi cial said Friday the Federal Bareaa at Investigation ex pects to make mora arrests la the 6Sl,7e robbery from a parked armored ear ia Dan gers 2t months ago. Assist. U.S. attorney Ed ward D. Hassan said the FBI "seemed to know who they were looking for and they told, me they expected to make more arrests soon." The FBI refused to com ment. A family of three is under arrest in connection with the second biggest cash robbery in U.S. history, the bold theft (Continued ooParoS. Column () Willamette Pass Road Closed The rains - of last week n ef- continued - to have a feet Friday on Oregon high- ways but the Willamette Pass route was the only major road closed. The Willamette Highway had major washouts near Oakridge wnicn suu nava not been re paired. The- state highway depart ment reported Friday that high water and debris continues to keep the Wilsonville ferry in operative and the South San tiam Highway is open only to one-way light traffic because of a washout. Other major routes were in normal condition. Cold and Snow In Midwest (B Tin AuocUUd Pmi) ; Cold and snowy weather. with temperatures near zero in some Midwest areas, extended over wide sections of the east ern half of the country Friday. The cold air extended into the southland except for the western Gulf states. Tempera tures dropped below normal as far south as Miami, Fla. which reported a low of S3 early Fri- aay. it was in Tampa. But the early morning read ing was 8 above in Cadillac, Mich., and 15 above in Interna tional Falls, Minn. Freezing weather covered most of the northern half of the country. Snow fell early Friday in Southern Michigan, Northern Illinois, most of Indiana and Ohio, Western Pennsylvania and New York. Nearly a foot of snow was on the ground at International Falls and Bemld Ji, Minn. Occasional Rain Week-End Forecast Nearly one-quarter of an inch more rain came down in Salem over the holiday, bring ing the month's total to (.66 inches up to 10:30 a.m. Friday. The five-day' forecast is for some more occasional rain and near-normal temperatures. The Willamette river con tinued to drop through Thurs day, the gauge at Salem meas uring 14 5 feet Friday morn ing. Immediate forecast is for cooler temperatures tonight along with cloudy skies, and some rain for the week-end. Pair Rob Hotel, Flee, Soon Nabbed by Police Two would-be gangsters en' Joyed a short-lived career when they robbed the Salem Hotel, 161 South High Street, of approximately $7 about 12:30 Friday morning. They were in custody of Salem po lice within five minutes after the holdup. Under arrest on charges of robbery by fear are Virgil Mulford Barker, 24, Snoho mish, Washington, and Wil liam Robert Boston, 26, Long Beach, Calif. They were slated to appear in Marion County District Court Friday after noon for arraignment. Police reconstructed the ev IKE cm' .. Find Victim of Rabid Dog Bite Chicago UJ9 A Cherokee Indan attacked by a rabid dog was located early today with seven days left to save ' him from a certain and horrible death. The 43-year-old restaurant worker, Harry Snarr, walked into the offices of the Chicago Sun-Times and said he had eeen newspaper accounts warn ing "Mister X" of his peril. He xald he wan the man bit' ten by the rabid dog at dusk last Friday. The victim hurried away be fore the collie's owner could get his name and thus he did not know that he was doomed without quick inoculations.' Snaar was turned over to police for the night and pre pared for the first of a series of inoculations in the Pasteur treatment today. Dodd May Run Against Cordon Portland M" 'peculation in Rome that Norris E. Dodd might seek tii a democratic nomination for the 1854 Ore gon senate race added a new element to the conjecture over what Sen. Guy Cordon plans to do. Cordon, the republican in cumbent whose term expires next year, said some weeks ago he wanted to retire from the senate. He added, though, he would run again If he conclud ed he had to to keep a dem ocrat from winning. 'Whethei Cordon considers Dodd a ma jor contender, should Dodd ac tually enter the contest, might hold the key to his own decis ion. Monroe Sweetland, Oregon democratic national commit teeman,, said he had been in correspondence with Dodd for some months about the possi bility of running for office. Weather Details Mlileama vnterJr. Mi MakisaaaB U lu Tt t4-hW gWMlpiUtUa,. .Ml far bmU. IMi rsasl, S.ta. sMWisHUtiNL. IUIi sarsiftlo Kim Msght. 144 ft. (aUpavl Dp V. S. Wat- ents from stories of the par ticipants as this: The two pulled in front of the hotel in a car driven by Boston. looked in at the empty lobby for a moment and then drove off. A moment later they drove by again and shortly after that one of the pair entered the hotel and walked up to Clerk Milford Merle (Bud) Stull. 775 Center Street, and said tersely: this is a stickup. I mean business.. Fork over all the money. He held his right hand in his pocket as if holding a gun, Stull said. (CwKladed aa Pag k Cotamn 1) 7P I CARVES THE TURKEY -.- t -V . Saul - Augusta, Ga.-All eyes are on the turkey as Presi dent Eisenhower does the carving for the family at their Thanksgiving dinner. L. to R.: Mamie, Susan, Ike, John, David, Barbara and Little Barbara. (AP Wirephoto) . 1 1 n . i net port Location in City Center By STEPHEN And now it's a heliport lo cation the city of Salem will be looking for. It will have to be somewhere in the city center. Know what a heliport is? It's a landing place for heli copters operated either priv ately or on a commercial basis. Some time next month, with the endorsement of the city administration, the Chamber Revolt Quelled By Churchill London W Prime Minis ter Churchill's conservatives beat down a rebellion in their own ranks last night, winning approval in the house of lords of cabinet plans to introduce commercial television in Brit ain. The peers by a 157-87 vote defeated a motion opposing the government's scheme. A full debate is now1 slated for the house of commons. The nation's present TV and radio are a monopoly of the publicly-owned British Broad casting Corp. Under the new plan, some advertising would be accepted to earn money for improving and expanding the service. Government sources claimed a moral victory in last night's vote in the upper house, con tending that between 80 and 150 members abstained from voting. Leading conservatives opposing the plan include Lord Halifax, former ambassador to Washington, and the Archbish- op of Canterbury, Dr. Geoffrey turner. 30 Escape in Crash at Sea Tokyo W Twenty-five pss- sengers and five crewmen Thursday night climbed out of a ditched Army transport plane five minutes before it sank In the Japan Sea. The Air Force said the C46 was coming in for a ground controlled blind landing at the U. S. Air Force base at Mlho, on the southern tip of Honshu, missed the landing strip, ar.d was forced to ditch about three miles off the coast. It sank 10 minutes later. A crash boat picked un all 25 passengers and five crew men and brought them back to the base. One crew member received a broken wrist. Three others had minor bruises. Among the passengers were 10 members of a USO troupe. The plane was on a scheduled courier flight from Iwakuni Air Force base at Miho. RETIRED DEAN DIES Moscow, Ida. UK Herber E. Lattig. retired deaa of men and director of student affairs at the University fo Idaho, died in a Moscow hospital last night at tn age ox fL 1 1 r. y . tl ... Vr Sought A STONE of Commerce, and the State Board of Aeronautics, the Bell Aircraft Corporation will put on a demonstration of two or three days to find a suitable location if a heliport is estab lished here. That would mean that Salem could be a regular stopping place for helicopters operated commercially on schedule, or that the heliport could be used by 'copters doing a local mail carrying or delivery service, a taxi business or even craft as privciely-used as automobiles. The top of a building, the unused space on public grounds like the post office or the courthouse, or parking lota are suggested as possibilities. But the spot must be in the business center. (Continued on Pare s Column 1) Cardinal Said In Moscow Jail Vatican City W The Vati can Radio reported Friday that Cardinal Stefan Wyszynskl of Poland has been transferred in secret to a Moscow Jail to await "typical Communist trial." The radio, quoting informa tion from Vienna, said the cardinal is locked in a Lu bianka prison cell near that of Lavrenty P. Berla, ousted ex-chief of Soviet internal se curity. The Vatican did not further identify the source of the in formation, but it is known to have its own sources behind the Iron Curtain. The broadcast said it was believed the Polish primate is being put through the long. gruelling preliminaries to the same type of Communist trial to which other Catholic leaders have been subjected. It said wcrd of his transfer to Moscow came iq repudiation of Polish announcements that the car dinal is "confined" in a Polish monastery. Storm Stops Duke's Polo Kingston, Jamaica Heavy tropical rain caused the cancellation Friday of a polo game which would have put the Duke of Edinburgh on the field with this island col ony's best polt) players. Several thousand spectators who had waited patiently for the rain to clear, straggled from the field in disappoint ment when the match was called off. Gov. Sir Hugh Foot would have headed the team opporing the duke. The Duke of Edinburgh and Queen Elizabeth II sail on the liner Gothic Friday afternoon for the Panama Canal and the next stage of their round-the- world Commonwealth tour. They have spent three days in Jamaica. T3 IF Iri LA . wnnaao aNSona caame win u jo AjuuaAiua o Russia s Premier Lanie! Wins 275-244 ConlidenceVote Paris () Premier Joseph Laaiel woa a vote of confi dence la the National Assem bly Friday. The vole was 275 - 244. . He announced Im mediately that be would go to the Bermada conference as planned. . Lanlel and Foreign Minis ter Georges Bidault will fly on December 2 to Bermuda for the meeting with President Eisenhower and Prime Minis ter Churchill. - One hundred deputies ab stained in the voting on a weakly worded resolution on European policy which gave qualified support tor the Eur opean army. The action came after a tense day in the Assembly, where the lawmakers had not only the Bermuda conference to consider but also a Soviet offer to meet with the West ern powers to discuss easing of world tensions. -(Concluded on Pan S. Column I) West Skeptical Of Atomic Brag United Nations, N.Y. WV Western diplomats were skep tical today of a hint by Andrei Y. Vishinsky that Russia may have types of atomic and other weapons that the West hasn t The chief Soviet delegate to the U.N. dropped his intimation yesterday in the General As semby's 60 - nation Political Committee just before that group rejected every proposal in his package plan for easing world tension. Some delegates suggested privately that Vishinsky bad timed his remark to distract. attention from his defeat, which he could foresee. The Vishinsky peace pack age called for a ban on all atomic and hydrogen weapons. a one-third reduction in the armed forces of the big powers. the abandonment of all foreign bases and the elimination of propaganda of a hostile nature. Probe Shortage Washington W) Investigat ing senators today called Sec retary of the Air Force Harold E. Talbott for questioning on a report that U. S. military air superiority is threatened by a shortage of a tough lightweight metal. The metal is titanium, de rived from ilmenite and other abundant ores and used in al loys to replace stainless steel in jet engines and airframes. Its heat resistance and light weight are coveted by designers of faster-than-sound aircraft. Sen. Malone (R.. Nev.). cnairman oi a subcommittee in vestigating availability of criti cal materials, said he wants to question Talbott on earlier tes timony by Air Force Brig. Gen. Kern D. Metzger. U.S. Sergeant Admits Killing Colonels Child Tokyo, ( A married U.S. sergeant has confessed he kill ed Susan Rothschild, pretty 9-year-old daughter of a col onel, the Army announced Saturday. An Army , announcement identified him as M. Sgt. Msurice L. Schick, 29, who lived with his wife and two adopted Japanese daughters in the same sprawling U.S. Army housing area as his vic tim. Schick broke down Friday night after prolonged ques tioning and admitted it was he who strangled the girl and left her body in a drainage ditch in the Sagamlhara Army housing area 30 miles south of Tokyo, the Army said. While the child had not been raped. Army investiga tors have ssld this appeared to be the motive behind the brutal attack and her attack Parley to Reply m. f- r arm . as mg 4 Proposal Dean Hopeful Of Setting Up Peace Parley Panm union-, Kara a A American envoy Arthur H. Dean said today he saw a "dis tinct possibility" his prelimin ary talks with the Communists would succeed in setting up a Korean peace conference. Dean emergeu from his 28th negotiating session with (the Reds in . the most optimistic mood since the talks began more than a month ago. He asked the Communists to give a "world weary of war a tangible ray of hope" by try ing earnestly to set a data for the long delayed meeting and seat Russia by her side as a full participant Dean said the Reds suggested Dec. 26 kS a tentative starting date but dung to demands on inviting the Soviet Union as a non-bellgerent "neutral" In the Korean war. Limit Time of Red PW Quiz Panmunjom, Korea U. The Neutral Nations Repatriation commission damaged the Allies' chances of winning . reluctant prisoners back to democracy today by telling the United Nations today that five plainers" must do the job. U. N. repatriation officials had sought 15 interviewers for the task of reasoning with 351 prisoners, including 22 Ameri cans and one Briton, who re fused to go home last summer. The commission ruled, how ever, that the United Nations was entitled to only five ex plainers e. under -the Korean armistice agreement, which es tablished a ratio in accordance zjlb'tb number of prisoner. As a result of the commis sion's decision. Allied inter viewers will have to talk fast, as each prisoner will have only four minutes tn which to hear an explanation and make up ma inula. . Rhee, Chiang Meet af Taipeh Taipeh, Formosa Syng man Rhea and Chiang Kai- shek, two Asian leaders bond ed in hatred of communism, to day began a series of talks ap parently aimed at tightening their unofficial alliance against the Reds. The South Korean president flew secretly to this National ist Chinese fortress only two days after conferences with top U, S. officials In Korea. Chiang and Rhee clasped hands warmly at the door of Rhee's borrowed transport, wheih belong to Gen. Hull, U. w. rar ast commander. Knee said nut trip was a friendly visit but added that "something may be brought up tor discussion ... The surprise visit started immediate speculation that the two nations both ravaged by Red forces may Join in a new anti-Red bloc. er may have been frightened away. Schick is the chief ward master of the U. S. Army hos pital at Camp Zama. It was re ported he was being held by military authorities there. The Hospital is near the housing area where Susan's body, a gag stuffed In her mouth, wss found by her fath er. Army authorities said Schick told them he had no at tention of raping the girl and did not plan the murder be fore meeting her In a lightly populated area only two blocks from the home of her parents. Col. and Mrs. Jacquard Roth schild. Army officials and Japanese police have been working around the clock on the case since the pretty little red- haired girl was found dead Saturday evening. Viewed Move To Block Allied Unity in Europe Washington V-The TJatt. ed States Friday branded Raa. sla's latest aota aa a Big Few meeting aa aa abvloaa effort to slaw progress aa the de velopment af "greater Eore peaa natty and strength.'' A statement released at the state department also describ ed the note aa "a tactical re treat" by Russia in the sense that it is in effect "to gloss over the uncompromising na ture of Soviet policy" toward the west - The real substance of the Soviet note shows that Russia has not in any sense changed Its basic positions on world Issues and from this stand point, therefore, "the not if disappointing," the depart ment said. Call for Berlla Heet The statement forecast that the Russian message, which was delivered Thursday night and called for a four-power foreign ministers meeting at Berlin, would be discussed at the Bermuda conference of the government chiefs and for eign ministers of the United States, the United Kingdom and France beginning ia a week. (Continued on Pm s, Columa ) Russia Leaves eh Moscow, W) The Soviet Union has proposed a meet., ing of the Big Four foreign ministers, in Berlin to discuss both ' European and Asian problems. ' " .. The proposal was contained hi a note delivered to . the unicra Biases, striusn. ana French diplomatic representa tives here Thursday night. Its contents were disclosed Fri day. .:' r- . -, The note said a conference In Berlin was suggested be cause the Russians had con cluded that the West pri marily the United States as well as the Soviet Union ia in terested "in striving for peace and international security and thus must be interested m the urgent examination of the question of relaxing interna tional tension." - The Soviets insisted, ' how ever, that if China is not ad mitted to the Berlin meeting "at least the rights and in terests" of China should be discussed. The note said that participation of China in in ternational parlays "is com pletely necessary and natural." See No Change In Red Attitude London, The British Foreign Office cautioned Fri day that Russia's willingness to talk things over with the West does not necessarily mean a basic change in the Soviet attitude to world prob lems. A foreign office spokesman said a Soviet note expressing such willingness emphasized also the Russians would press at Big Four talks for a wider conference to Include Commu nist China. The Russians, the spokes man added, gave no indication what level they sought for any five-power meeting. The British spokesman said he wasn't ready to comment directly on the Soviet note it self until London consulted with Washington and Paris. Anti-Red Booklets Sent N.Y. Schools New York, W Forty-eight thousand copies of a booklet citing reasons why Commu nists should be barred from teaching will be distributed to New York City public and parochial schools and college faculties. Dr. WiUlam Jansen, super intendent of schools, said the 40,000 copies needed for' the public schools would cost about $2,000, and would be paid from public funds.