H I j t: : Capita jfcJ ournal THE WEATHER BAIN TONIGHT, beeemiag . ahewery Indir with mm clearing. Little change la ten. era tare. Lew Uoight, tl; alga Sasmay, . FINAL EDITION 1 i 65th Year, No. 290 Sa!cm, Oregon, Saturday, December 5, 1953 Price 5c J! ' t ;' f ki lt i ; i P 5 Two Hospifals Of Slate Will Be Inspected Thorough Check Ordered in Salem - .And Pendleton By JAMES D. OLSON . Oregon's tw mental -pltals the SUU Hospital l Salem and the Euttn Oregoa Stat Hospital U Pendleton, will be given b thoroagh ga ins; -ever by s central Inspec tion team at tha America Fsyehiatrle Aawclatlea early next year. Arrangement! war con cluded for the Inspection by the State Board of Control, acting through William C. Ryan, tuperviior of state in stitutions, who announced Saturday the surveys would probably be made next spring. Dr. Ralph M. Chambers, chief Inspector of the associa tion'! central Inspection board, who will direct the survey. In a letter to Ryan said that the board hai inspected mental hospitals in 20 states during the last five years. Detailed Check Made During the year of 1954 the board will make Inspection! In Massachusetts, West Vir ginia, Arizona, South Dakota, New Hampshire a well aj in Oregon. The purpose of the inspec tion is to check on personnel, food, facilities and new build ing plans to be covered by detailed report following the Inspection to the state board of control for its future guid ance. Psychiatric certificates of approval are to be given 'to states where mental hospitals are found to be operated in accordance with the standards required by the association. The state will pay S2300 to (Continued en Pan , Col ran 1) Valley Rivers Rising Fast River were running fairly high through valley section! again, Saturday morning, but no major flooding was in pros pect immediately unless tor rential rains should suddenly come to add to the intake. At 11:15 a.m. Saturday, the Willamette was up to 12 feet at Salem, coming up from a mark of 11.4 feet measured earlier in the morning. The Santiam at Jefferson waa up to 16 feet Saturday morning, three feet above flood stage. Main damage in that area during flooding is exten sive washing through pasture and other lowlands along the bank. For Salem, Saturday was a typical blustery winter day, light rain falling and winds reaching a velrrity of 28 miles per hour in peak gusts, aver aging 21 miles. Precipitation in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Saturday amounted to .21 of an inch here. Snow and colder tempera tures were listed from all high regions. Freezing temperatures are expected to hold back addi tional runoff of water. Weather Details Mavitmuta rttttrtH, 44 1 galmlnarB to lar, 41. Twlal Mh.r mlttiUUtm: Jli It Mth: l.ttt itrmgl, .M. mm pro. tlerlUtlM. U.Hi awna.1, It.SS. BlTr bright, it fMt. rUlaf. (Bo-rt tw O.t. WnlMf Bvrt. Italy and Yugoslavia Normalize 'Frontiers Rome W) Italy and Yugo slavia Saturday agreed to take Immediate steps to "normal ize" conditions along their frontier. Both nations had reinforced border troops during recent tension over the disputed Trieste Free Territory. The agreement was an nounced by the Italian foreign ministry following meeting of Italian Premier Giuseppe Pella with Yugoslavia's minis ter to Rome, Psvle Gregorik. It was the first positive step taken by the two countries toward solution of the thorny Trieste issues. The communique said Pella and the Yugoslav minister had considered possibilities of nor malizing the- Italian-Yugoslav frontier. During their conference both government! agreed It was opportune to proceed Im McCarthy Says While House Figure Wrong Senator Claims ' More Wires on ' Issue Than Reported w..kirt f-iTh White Sum mU KltmrdaV It BSS 1"- eclved 4,34 telegrams as a ra mi! at fin. McCarthy wrlte- er-wtrethe-President appeal, bat the Wloeenaln KepnDuean aald the figar sheald be nearly twice that For tha second day In a row McCarthy complained that the White House figures were far below those' he said should have been used. - - ' The White House ' figures annoMed bv Murray Sny der, assistant press secretary. in ivMrunr ioui ox rjiu telegrams, aa of 11 a.m. EST Saturday. Snvder aald the count showed 2,992 were fa vorable to McCarthy aemana for a eraexdown on Awes iraa in with RmI China, and 1.354 were opposed to the senator's position, snyaer saia hbktp Union informed him there was a backlog of S.50C mesaagea yet to be delivered to the White House. (Conuaaed "on Pago t. Cehnoa I) Ex-Con Held For Robbery A 24-year-old former Ore gon State Penitentiary inmate was arrested In Seattle Friday night in connection with the recent burglary of the St. Paul Market and Copeland Lumber company in St. Paul. John C. Goddard, formerly of Eugene, was arrested by Seattle police for Oregon state police after investlgatora trac ed him to the Tacoma-Seattle area. State police Captain Ray Howard said Goddard and an accomplice stole a pickup truck from Newberg the night of November 17 and drove to St. Paul, There they entered the two establishments and made off with 41 cases of liquor from the agency in the market, numerous cartons of cigarettes from the store and a quantity of power and hand tools from the lumber com pany. They left behind a spare tire from the pickup. Near Vancouver they a ban doned the pickup in a field and rented a U-Drive truck to haul the $2,350 worth of loot to Tacoma and Seattle. There police have been watching for Goddard for some time and spotted him Friday evening to make the arrest. The Seattle report did not say if any of the loot from the burglary was recovered. Lt Farley Mogan and Sgt. Roy Baker left Saturday morning for Seattle to pick up Goddard and to see if they could find any lead! on his accomplice. Goddard was released from the Oregon State Prison last July where he served a three year term for burglary in Lane county. He has. been living and working in Seattle. Captain Howard said God dard would be questioned to see if he knew anything about the burglary of Worley's drug store and liquor agency in Mt. Angel this week. However, police believe there li no con nection between the two cases he said. mediately upon simultaneous action which will be complet ed "within a short period." Presumably this would in volve withdrawal of some troops from the frontier. Both countries have separately sug gested this. Saturday's meeting was re quested by the Yugoslav min ister. Premier Pella aaid shipment of strategic materials to Yugo slavia blocked since tension between the two countries mounted, would again be per mitted. . Both nations had made withdrawal of frontier troops a prerequisite of further study of the involved problem. The long feud came to a head with the. B r 1 1 i b-American an nouncement of October I that U.S. and British troop would be withdrawn from ion A and Its administration turned over to Italy, PRESIDENT EISENHOWER GREETED ' O 0 b4 21 Die in Crash Spanish Plane Madrid. Spain V Twenty- one Dersons were feared dead Saturday in the wreckage of a Spanish transport plane which crashed and burned Fri day night in the mountains north of Madrid. An airline company spokes man announced that 10 of the survivors, Including . Paul J. Douglass, 26, a courier for the U. S. embassy In Parte, bad arrived in Madrid and were hospitalized. Doctors forbade anyone to talk with the sur vivors, and the extent of their injuries was not immediately disclosed. Douglass, whose home is in West Roxbury, Mass., is a son of the late V. S. Rep. John J. Douglass, congressman - from the 10th Massachusetts district from 1925 to 1935. He had been stationed in Paris since last March. Also listed among the survi vors is Jose Marie Oriol, prom inent Spanish industrialist and developer of the "Caterpillar train." Those hospitalized also included the pilot, co-pilot, me chanic, radio operator, and four passengers, all Spaniards. - j . Cuts Capers Over Equator On Board the Liner Gothic Uf The Duke of Edinburgh, togged out in a butcher's apron, cut capers as assistant ship's barber ' in traditional ceremonies when this royal liner crossed the equator. Queen Elizabeth II watched the antics yesterday from the bridge as King Neptune came aboard to hold court. Nep tune, Inspector Frank Kelley, the duke's personal body guard, was quickly doused in the swimming pool, . long white beard end all. But his green-robed .queen fought off attempts to snatch her cab bage bouquet. Charges were read against more than a dozen members of the royal household and staff. The queen and duke were exempt from the shell back Initiation, however, be cause they had crossed the equator before. The world-touring Gothic, en route to New Zealand and Australia from the Panama Canal, crossed the equator in mid-Pacific. Liner Aleutian Delays Sailing San Francisco Iff) Sailing for Honolulu of the liner Aleu tian, center of a bitter union jurisdictional dispute, w s I postponed indefinitely Satur day. A spokesmen for the Hawaiian-Pacific Steamslp com pany told news men "the Aleutlsn is not sailing Satur day. We hope it will sail later, but lt will not be Sat urday." The Aleutian had been scheduled to depart or Ha waii with some 300 passen gers. Inaugurating a casual service to the islands. The - company spokesman said negotiations seeking solu tion of the union dispute which caused cancellation of the sailing were continuing. The company Friday night made a proposal to the unions to settle the dispute, but de tails of the offer were with held. Toe Aleutian was moved Friday night to Pier 50 from Pier 19, scene of violent out breaks. President Dwight D. Eisenhower' smiles broadly as i he is greeted by British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill following arrival by plane at Bermuda's Klndley : Field for the history-makinj Big Three conference.' At left is French Premier Joseph Laniel. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Bermuda.), Salem Man Night Auto By VIC Fatal Injuries wer suffered by 47-year-old Lester Peter son, 205 South 22nd street, when the car in which he was riding collided with another at the Intersection of Liberty and Columbia streets shortly after 8 o clock Friday night. Peterson was the second ac cident fatality in Salem in 1953 and the lflth in Marion county Power Meeting Called Monday Seattle vD Governors of four northwest states will meet with public and private power producers Monday to work out a cooperative program for de veloping additional electric en ergy in the Pacific Northwest The session opens at 10 a.m. In the Olympic Hotel here with Gov. Len Jordan of Idaho as chairman. He will be flanked by Govs. J. Hugo Aronson of Montana, Paul L. Patterson of Oregon and Arthur B. Langlie of Washington. The governors' proposal, as outlined at a preliminary meet ing in October, ts. in effect, President Eisenhower s "Part nership" plan on a regional basis. The object of the meeting is to figure out ways and means of getting more kilowatta. After the October meeting the governors said they be lieved it was practical to set up design snd construction of a number of power and storage dams in the Columbia River svstem through the coopers tion of federal, state and local agencies of government and private agencies. NIXON'S VISIT GAIN New Delhi, India The Hindustan Standard, one of India's leading independent newspapers, said Saturday U.S. - Vice-President Richard Nixon's visit to India "has surely been a diplomatic gain for the United States." The Nixon party left here Friday for a visit to Afghanis tan before going to Karachi, Pakistan's capital. Salem Home of More Producing Muny Varieties of Commercial Goods This la the tenth f a aeries tl article pabllahed la the Satarday Isaacs f the Capital JearnaL Thai mmy el tnduitHal. eanunerela! and enltaral aruttUee tn Balem an Marloa couiiit will be baaed ea faeta te abow the stability of moareas and otonoaiical conditions. Tha eariTinf ant of thla edacatkinal aerlea haa beea nude poaiiblc by the support that has been aeeorded It by repreaenUtlre indoatrlal and commercial firms who are demonstrating their renfl .enee In the future of thb reilon. Each of these firms haa aa uitereatlnf maasafM ea pagoa 14 and IS of this tease. By R. KENNETH EVANS Salem is a city of diverslfed Industry. It hss more than 100 manufacturing establishments producing a variety of com mercial goods. In showing the important factors that contribute to the success of industry in Salem lt is Imperative that the major component parts thst mske up this industrial structure be brought to the fore. Too often, perhaps because of its obvious ness, many residents of a city fail to sens the importance of industrial operations such as exist in this city and the immediately sur rounding region. Foods, paper, textiles in cluding woolen! and linen, lumber and wood working products, batteries, hestlng equip ment, carnival machinery, agricultural ma chinery, light fixtures, refrigerators, trailers, garden tools, Irrigation and drainage pipe are a few of these manufactured products.. The lumber products consist of wooden boxes, cabinets, Venetian blinds, handles, furniture, boats, toys and a ducts. Foods include meat puking, fruit, berry and vegetable pacaing, wun twelve large car.neries producing some B-milllon esses of canned food products AT BERMUDA Dies After Collision FRYER for the year. Two other persons were hos pitalized as a result of that ac cident and a mother and young son were hospitalized when struck by a car In another acci dent. Peterson died about six hours after the accident in which he was riding in a car driven by Chester F. LaFave, 49, 380 River street. LaFave waa also hospitalized after the accident aa was Eldon G. Mull, 44, Independence, driver of the other car. Both were reported in good condition at Salem General hospital Saturday noon with non-serious injuries. Mrs. Joyce Huntley, 26, 2441 State street, and her 3-year-old son Bruce were, hospitalized after they were struck by a car as tney crossed Bute street at the intersection of 24th abont 8 p.m. Bruce' waa the most seriously Injured with a head concussion arid possible internal Injuries but was improving rapidly and described as in good condition late Saturday morning by at tendants at Salem General Hoi ICenunaed fy a. Cehuna I) Postpone Shift Of IV Channel Washington Uf A shift of television channel I from Sa lem, Ore., to Yakima, Wash., replacing it with channel 2 at Salem, was proposed here to day as one means of giving Ya kima a very high frequency channel. The Federal Communications Commission said today the pro posal came from KIT, Inc., of Yakima, which contended that Yakima's rugged terrain has a more "adverse affect" on UHF than on very high frequencies. KIT now has a permit for t TV station on ultra high frequency channel 23 in Yakima but seeks assignment of a VHF channel. KlTs suggestion of a switch of channels between Yakima and Salem was one of two pro posed alternatives to an out right assignment of a new VHF channel to Yakima. E Braart Kvm variety of duId and Daner pro annually, Salem is rated as the I Mooxuo XMaona esaait mn jo )ruAun U.ll. Recesses Korean Debate Over Week-End United Nations, N. T. UW The U. N. political committee deelded Saturday to recess Its Korean debate ever the week end la an effort to avoid showdown betweea India and the western powers aver pro cedure. Trie-adjournment was voted 55-0 after New Zealand's Les lie Knox Munro noted that delicate issues had been rais ed In opening speeches by In dian delegate V. K. Kirshna Menon and Brazil's Mario de Pimentel Brandao. Menon urged support of an Indian proposal which would permit some debate on the Korean problem now and then recess the session until Feb. 9 or thereabouts, Bratillan Proposal The Brazilian delegate, with the backing of the United Stales and its titles in Korea, urged that no debate be held now and that the assembly re cess Indefinitely. Under his proposal the assembly would be reconvened by the presi dent whenever a majority of the 60 member nations thought development! w a r- ranted a meeting. ICeneraded ea Taie g. Celaam 11 Iran and Britain Making Peace Tehran, Iran WV Britain and Iran announced resump tion of diplomatic relations -to day following a break of more than 13 months as a result of the disDute over Iranian na tionalization ' of properties of the British-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. First announcement of the move, foreecast earlier by in formed Iranian sources, was made by an Iranian govern ment spokesman. A communique issued short ly afterward in London, said with the exchanging of ambas sadors Britain and Iran "will proceed at the earliest mutual ly agreed moment to negotiate a settlement of the oil dispute which has recently clouded re lations." The Iranian acceptance came despite strong Internal oppo sition, particularly on the part of Ayatoullah Kashani, a pow erful Moslem religious leader. Gen. Yandenberg Said Seriously III Washington W Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, who will be 55 in January, is on the "seri ously ill" list at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Vandenberg, who retired last April after five years as Air Force chief of staff, un derwent a serious abdominal operation in 1952 for causes never officially atated. He re-entered the hospital last October (. gm -m mm n nn - proposed mo y Meet Than 100 Industries second lsrgest canning center in the nation, and the first largest in the Pacific North west. A brewery, a winery, cold storage and Ice plants round out the major indus tries with dozens of smaller in dustrial service Institutions such as laundries, cleaning plants, body and fender plants, etc., that are also im portant. Creates a Large Payroll It is conservatively estimat ed that aome 12.000 workers are employed in these Indus tris the year around, while in additional estimated 4,000 people are employed in the canneries from 8 to 10 month! out of the year when the can ning sesson is at Its peak. There are some 1,000 workers employed in the pulp and paper inudstry, 250 employed in the linen and flax plants snd the balance of some 10, 000 workers employed by these miscellaneous Industries. This employment crestes an annual payroll of well over eeto "o eskii 40 Pro-Red PWs Refuse Home Return Panmunjom MV-Allied ex plainers today whipped an ap parent maneuver by 40 ,-ro-Red war prisoners to disrupt the U, N. Command's Interview timetable, but failed for the fourth straight day to win back a single one of the con verts to communism. South Korean army officers blocked the slowdown tactics by fellow countrymen who refused to return home and talked with 40 prisoners be fore the 4:30 p. m. deadline But their score remained zero with a total of 130 South Ko reans. Interviewed. Another 198 remain to be called. The Allies will start meet ing with the 22 reluctant American and on British cap tive in eight or nine days. Meanwhile, negotiation! to arrange a political conference were In recess while American Envoy Arthur Dean conferred in Seoul with South Korean President Syngman Rhe. Red Targets in United States Austin, Tex.- (A Maurice Malkin aaid Saturday Alaska. Pearl Harbor, California and Texas are considered by the Reds as main concentration points." Malkin, on of the original organizers of the Communist party in tha United States, made his statement to the Tex as State Industrial Commission, which ia investigating charges made by the state attorney gen eral of Communist domination of three unions. . . Do yoi know of any specif- t Communist party activity now being conducted in Tex as?" asked Chairman C. E. Ful gham. - ' "Not at first hand," replied Malkin, "but from what I know, Texas is actually one of the points considered at the last secret meeting of the central committee of the Communist party." - He listed "Alaska, Pearl Har bor, California and Texas", as places considered by the Reds as "main concentration points." Cuban Ex-Prexy Free on Bonds Miami, Fla. () Cuba's for mer President Carlos Prlo So carras and his interior minis ter were free - under heavy bonds today, on a charge of con spiring to export arms and im plements of war from the United States without a li cense. . Prio, SO, and Segundo Curti, 43, his interior minis ter until Fulgencio Batista overthrew his regime in a bloodless coup on Msrch 10, 1952, were taken In custody Prio's home-in-exile here yes terday following their indict ment in New York. a conservative estimate of $75 million. One of the prime factors in creating a favorable Indus trial condition in Salem is the intelligent, high class, and skillful personnel connected wtlh this Industrisl structure. Workers here sre tolersnt, loyal and industrious and the absence of turmoil, now and in the past, supports this state ment. Progressive manage ment, trained and loyal work era, products of a basic char acter, and the recognition of the rights of workers snd management, are some of the contributing factors which make for the successful oper ation of Industry in Salem. Expansion Corns from Within It is quite generally recog nised by authorities on indus trial subjects thst the indus trial expansion of commu nity comes from within and It ia, therefore, evident that the future of Salem' Indus trial progress depends upon (Centiaaed ea Page t. Column 1) Russia S ing Some Points in ReplyRemainto Be Dealt With Taekera Tewa, Barmada ! Tha Halted States, Britain aad France wen reverted her Saturday to have reached sub stantial agreemeat a a reply to Russia agreeing t tha pro posed Big Keur foreign minis ters meeting.. Spokesmen for the three delegations to the Bermuda conference said the three west, ern foreign minister reached full agreement on the points they envcred in their hour nd 43-mlnut meeting - Saturday but that ao me more point! still remain to be dealt with. The spokesmen refused ta disclose what the agreed point are, but aald the ministers had as the basis of their discussion a draft proposal based on ao ceptanc of four-power meet ing. ; - . i . Foreign Ministers la Session ' The three ministers are U.S. . Secretary of Stat John Foster ' Dulles and British and French foreign ministers Anthony Idea ana ueorgea Bidault . The foreign ministers' meet ing vu to be followed by a 5 p.m. meeting of President Eisenhower and Prim Minis ters Churchill - and Laniel, which waa due to continue work on tli not to Russia . then resume discussions, begun ' Friday, of the whole rang of Soviet relations. . . , (Centiamd Pag . Colas, 41 Hoover Fears i r ; V ' ? kVMM JjkSM I 4kl IICCUUIIILUil ! Hew -York 'Former Pre. sident Herbert Hoover grave ly declared Saturday that only a "cataclysm" eaa bring, freedom to peoples behind th Iron Curtain. A witness before the House commttte probing the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states, the former President said only through the growth of self government among peoples can the world bop for peace. ' - The committee asked Hoov er what he thought were th chances of th Baltic states Lithuania, Latvia and Estho- nia and others behind th Iron Curtain of gaining their freedom. Hoover replied: ' "Some day, out bf iom cataclysm, these peoples may rise again. "That's the only hope." Hoover told of his experi ences in the Baltic area after World War I, and of the "as tonishing" strides made by the three' tiny nations until the Soviets moved In during World Wsr II. . Adm. Parsons Dies Suddenly Washington WW Rear Adm. ' William S. Parsons, who set the trigger for the first atomic bomb used in combat, died sud denly Saturday. Parsons, 52 year old native of Chicago, succumbed from a heart attack shortly after ar riving at the Bethesda, Md., Nsvsl Hospital for a checkup. He was a pioneer in the de velopment and use of atomic weapons. As a Navy captain and member of th Manhattan District,, secret wsrtime atom bomb organization, he set th trigger on the "bomb dropped on Hiroshima In Japan on Aug. 6, 1945. Huddled in the bomb bay of a B-29 bound for the target. hampered by an oxygen mask and fingers stiff from sub-zero cold, Parsons made the deli cate, last minute adjustment on the bomb a trigger. A year later Pawns waa deputy commander of th Bi kini atomic bomb tests, in charge of technical matters. Then, in 1943 he served in si milar position lor the weapons tests st Enlwetok Atoll. At the time of his death he was deputy chief of the Bureau of Ordnance. FRENCH CAPTURE VILLAGE Saigon, Indochina W Th French high command an nounced Saturday that French forces have captured the forti fied village of Muong Khoua, 62 miles north ef th royal La otian capital of Luang' Prabang. r 111 r1 I! - '- ... V- - , ..