) a-4 (I I THE WEATHER IXCstXASING CLO MUXES with nla tonight TaeaaUy. Little ekaage la tetaaaratare. Law tonight, ; high Tuesday, 4. alley Rivers using Again IfierSforms ; i Weather Bureau Pre ; diets Another Series x Of Storms Looms Valley riven were running high Monday neraiac follow, r . ' -. lag renewed ititni over the ? week-end, bat Be major flood- ; tags are la prospect bnmediate- flj naleai more torrential ralas f cone . . f Monday morning brought . . some respite from rain, but the i weather bureau Is calling for v another tenet of storms. . f Colder temperatures were re- ported as holding back much of . the runoff from snow piling up ' in the mountains, j' " To Crest Tuesday Evening f '. The Willamette river at Sa ' lem measured 1S.T feet Monday 1.1 morning and ii due to continue V riling slowly during the next t 24 to 36 hours, a crest of 16 to JT 17 feet due here by Tuesday - evening. Flood stage is 20 feet 1 here. The high water Js due to remain around the 16 to IT foot level at Salem for a time. The Santiam at Jefferson was falling again Monday morning aitnougn suit tiigntly above flood stage. It topped 16 feet were bunday. Cascade Passes Closed " Three Cascade mountain highway routes in Oregon were closed by snow, Monday Mt. Hood loop, West Diamond lake and McKenzie pass routes. It is presumed they are closed for the season. The highway de partment warns chains are needed in all ether pass routes. (Csatlnaea a face i, Columa 7) Bride-ioBe Jilts Dempsey New York () Mrs EsteUe Auguste, who Sunday night cancelled plans to marry for mer heavyweight boxing cham pion Jack Dempsey, left Mon day by plane for Florida. "I wish you would tell Mr. . Dempsey I have left," she said as she boarded an Eastern Air Lines plane for West Palm Beach. "I understand he want ed to sleep until 10 o'clock. Well, it s better this way, it's easier to break an engagement uian get a divorce." The rich and pretty widow appeared in good spirits as she boarded the plane. She announced the breakup Sunday night with a statement that "oil and water simply won't mix." We're Just too different," she said, three days after she had announced she would marry the former boxer. 4 Pilots Crash To Insian! Death Lawrenceville, Ca , () Four Thunderjets in tight for mation shot through low-hanging clouds near here early yes terday and slamned into a pine thicket, carrying their pi lots to instant death. Officials at Dobbins A i r Force Base in Marietta, Ga., home base of the single-seater planes, theorized that they got lost in rough, rainy weather. They crashed only a few min utes before they were schedul ed to land at Dobbins after an sjtinstrument flight from Miami. The pilots, all members of the Atlanta Air - National Guard unit, were identified as Capt Idon M. Hodge Jr., 30, Atlanta; 1st LI Samuel P. Dix on, Chamblee; 1st Lt. Elwood C. Kent, 28 East Point; and 2nd Lt. William A. Tennent, 25, of Atlanta. Bodies of the pilots were found several hundred yards irora me wreckage. Ask Industry For A-Plarif Washington MV-The Atomic Energy Commission Sunday in vited private Industry to Join forces with the government to finance construction of atomic plant. . An A EC announcement said industry is being asked to sub mit proposals for investment of risk capital to build steam tur bine and electrical generating portions of the project previ ously estimated to cost "many tens of millions of dollars " The AEC said it also is con- siaenng private operation of . the entire plant The commission first told of plans for an atomic power plant Oct 22 in an announcement which listed the Westinghouse Corp, as the prime contrsctor. 65th r Public Works If Necessary Washington Secretary of Labor Mitchell pledged on Monday that the administra tion will be ready to step in with public works and other measures to help maintain high employment if the nation's ec onomy falters. - Mitchell addressed a confer ence of the CIO United Auto Workers Union called to study plans for combatting growing joblessness in auto and other industries. . The Eisenhower administra tion is developing plans to help keep the economy growing steadily, he said, and the pros pects lor continued prosperity in 1054 appear good, although there might bo some weak Spots. r "The present dip from last springs peaks still leaves us on a very high plateau," he said. "It also leaves us in a position for sound . economic growth. "This administration is com mltted to the use of every use- iui measure, public and priv ate, to roster economic stabil ity and rising living stand ards." Shoulders Asks Police Guard St Louis (ff) The police of ficer who broke the Bobby ureemease Kidnaping case wants police protection. I. A. Long, president of the St. Louis Police Board, said Sunday Louis Shoulders has re quested protection because of threats he has received. He said officers would obtain detailed statement from Shoulders on his reasons and. if justified, protection would be given. Shoulders submitted his res ignation during a Police Board inquiry into the arrest of the kidnap- tlllen of 6-year-old Bobby Greenlease and the re covery 4 about half the $600, 000 ransom. The Inquiry still is it progress. The inquiry followed reports of discrepancies in police . ac counts of Shoulders' arrest of Carl Austin Hall and Mrs. Bon nie Brown Heady, the doomed kidnap-killers and recovery of part of the nnsom. More than $300.000 still is missing. Weather Details Mulmaa mtr4r. 41 1 BlalHSV u 47, tt. TU1 !4-fcMr melplUUM! Ml It ..U: LMi urasl. 1.41. kin tIUttM. 14J4 atnial. M.7. Bl?r Mrti. lit m. .!. (anri k? ca. Court Upholds Firing Of Disloyal Workers Washington UV-Nothin l the Taft Tartley labor laws bars the firing of workers for "dis loyalty" to their employers, the supreme court ruled Monday. The 6-3 decision annlini Charlotte, N. C, television technicians who had distributed leaflets critical of their sta tion's TV programs. Justice Burton, writing the majority opinion, said: 'There is no more elemental cause for discharge of an employe than disloyalty to his employer." Justice Frankfurter wrote a Capita Yeor, No. 291 5yMM.arSS Solem, Oregon, TORNADO Vicksburg, Miss, Dee. 7 This is what is left of a section of the downtown area after it was hit by a violent tornado last night Over 25 persons were reported dead and hun dreds injured in this Mississippi River city as a result of the storm. (AP Wirephoto) 30 Killed, 230 Injured In Vicksburg Tornado Vicksburg, Miss. wD Res cue gangs worked in freezing weather Monday in a grisly hunt for additional victims of Saturday's vicious tornado that took at least 30 lives. The temperature dropped to 31 degrees in the heatless city Candles Used By Hotel Guests Vicksburg, Miss. W) Guests at the tornado-blotched Vicks burg Hotel were given candles Sunday night to light their way to oea tnrougn the shambles of a half million dollar wreck' age. j Most considered themselves lucky to have a place to sleep. The 11-story hotel, VIcksburg's largest, was side-swiped by aaturaay s Dounaing tornado. It was accepting no reserva tions, except from Army high brass with VIP status. Guests already registered for the week-end and permanent residents were allowed to stay. Some were shifted to other rooms on the less damaged side of the house. Many of the 250 rooms had nu wiutluws. Some had no fur niture beyond a hastily in stalled day bed and carpet of crumpled plaster. There was no electricity, no hot water, no elevators, no room service. Hoodlums Beat Man to Death Los Angeles (UJ5 Two teen agers were charged with mur der today in the death of wealthy manufacturer William D. Cliff who was attacked bv a hoodlum gang when he went to the aid of two Marines dur ing a street brswl. Arrested and booked on murder charges were Richard venegas, 18, and Robert Mar quez, 17. An unidentified third youth also was taken into custody. An autopsy will be held today to determine eaiua of death, police said. dissenting opinion in which Justices Black and Douglas joined. Burton" was joined by Chief Justice Warren and Justices Reed, Jackson, Clark and Min ton. The critical hand bills were passed out during a dispute at Station WBTV over a collec tive bargaining contract. They attacked the quality of the sta tion's programs and facilities but did not make any reference to the labor dispute. (CeaUaaea ea hfe (, Cehuna I) AFTERMATH i t (. 1 4 and frost covered lawns and other open ground in outlying areas. ' National guardsmen o n guard duty built fires from the debris that littered the streets. The two latest victims died In hospitals Monday and au thorities said at least eight other persons remained on the critical list , Dawn brought the noise of steam shovels, bulldozers, and shovels after a heatless, shiv ering nijht fof the 28,000 res idents. Seventy to 73 of the 230 injured were crowded into Vicksburgs' four main hospi tal, xney were warmed by blankets and electric- heaters from the city's homes. (Continued an Pae (, calanta ) Unable to Sail San Francisco UP) Pickets marched past the liner Aleu tian Monday as officials at tempted to reach a compromise between two rival unions that would allow the passenger ship to sail on Its maiden voyage to Hawaii. The Aleutian, center of a bit ter jurisdictional dispute that flared into waterfront violence Thursday and Friday, was scheduled to leave Saturday but she was tied up because of the labor trouble. Hugh Bryson's Independent National Union of Marine Cooks and Stewards began picketing after the Hawaiian Pacific Lines contracted with Harry Lundeberg s AFL Ma rine Cooks and Stewards to man the Aleutian. Harry Bridges' indenendent international Longsnoremen s and Warehousemen's Union, backing Bryson, was scheduled to go to court Monday seek lng a permanent order barring any union other than the ILWU from loading the Aleutian's stores. Strikers Call For Meeting New York ( Union pho to engravers Monday called a membership meeting for Wed nesday in their 10-day-old strike against six major New York City daily newspapers. Denis M. Burke, president of Local 1, AFL International Photo-Engravers union, an nounced the call as he arrived for scheduled talks with the publishers and federal media tors. Burke said the meeting, the first membership session in a week, would be held "even if only to make a report to the members." At the meeting a week ago the union membership reject ed arbitration for a second time, but scaled their demands down from a f IS to $7.50 week ly pscksge. Mor - doy, December 7, 1953 - 24 Ptfjej rr 17,629 Wires On McCarthy Washington W The White House said shortly before noon Monday that 17,620 telegrams and an uncounted volume of mall had come in as a result of the appeal by Sen. McCar thy (R.. Wis.) thst the public ask President Eisenhower to halt U. S. aid to free world na tions which trade with Red China. 7 Assistant White House Press Secretary Murray Snyder said he understood Western Union has a backlog of telegrams pos sibly totaling 1,700 or more. Snyder told reporters the telegrams have come in so fast it has been impossible to break them down into those which fa vor McCarthy's China trade de iiud and those who support u president s stand. : raeanwue, Republican con gresslonal leaders maintained discreet silence in the Eisen. bower-McCarthy controversy. Crippled Plane Lands on Island t Honolulu ) -Forty six pas sengers ana crew aboard a four-engine Stratoliner sweat ed out 350 miles of wobbly, tense flight to a tiny Pacific Island Sanday after an engine explosion crippled their huge airliner. The passengers hurriedly donned life jackets and sat calmly for almost three hours the big Fan American plane iimpea to safety at Johnston Island, 700 miles southwest of Honolulu. The Queen of the Pacific was at 10,000 feet 350 'miles north west of Johnston when a blast shattered one propeller and ripped through its engine. The airliner was flying from San Francisco via Honolulu to Tokyo Hong Kong and Kara chi. A number of Chinese and Japanese were among the pas sengers. The big plane finally snuggiea aown to a safe land' lng at 5:33 A. M. Bells Ring in Marian Year Vatican City UP) A Joyful noon-day pealing led by the big master bell of St. Peter's Ba silica Monday marked the start of the Marian Year to honor the mother of Jesus. One by one, the bells of Rome's nearly 200 churches Joined in the 13-minute med ley. Catholics throughout the world will observe the Marian Year to honor Mary upon the 100th anniversary of the dogma that proclaimed her immacu late conception. This established as Catholic faith the belief that Mary was born without the stain of orig inal sin to which all other men are heir because of the dis obedience of Adam and Eve In the garden of Paradise. In midnight services here and in towns, hamlets and ci ties everywhere. Catholics Monday night will begin a year-long crusade of prayers and pilgrimages. WINDSORS IN PARIS Paris, 4JB The Duke and Duchess of Windsor returned to Paris todsy from a visit to London. I! Join in Atomic Control Plan Red China Asks UN Repudiation Of U.S. Policies Tokyo, WW Red China Mon day called ea the United Na tions to repudiate what.it termed a "criminal" Ameri can policy In Korea that It said has led to "the present critical sitnaUoa." In a caustic, free-swinging aitaca, roreign Minister Chou En-Lai . charged the United States with ''attempts to wreck the Korean armistice agreement to forcibly retain prisoners of war and to ob struct the peaceful settlement of the Korean question for the purpose of maintaining inter national tension. mou's charges came in a message to the U.N. General Assembly in New York, which was broadcast by the Red Peiplng radio. He warned the UJT.i "If the . . , General Assem bly should evade Its responsl bilities . . . and condone the actions of the U.S. govern ment the seriousness of the Korean 'situation would be in creased and the UJ4. would (Cmtlaaof ea Pace a, Celama f ) in Vladimir Jail Tokyo W) A Japanese pris oner of war recently repatri ated from Russia said today he saw "American prisoners" in a prison southeast of Vladimir. - Tadashi Maeda, 88, a former Navy captain and military attache, made tb state ment in toslimony befura th Repatriation Committee of Ja pan'a House of Representatives. Maeda is one of 811 Japan- ess returned from Russia last Tuesday. He reported the Vladimir prison, from which ha was re leased, confines only "foreign convicts. "The largest population in the prison was Germans, fol lowed by Japanese, Finnish. Polish, Turks, French, Britons, Dutch, Estonian and Ameri can prisoners of war," be said. ne gave no details. 2 Killed in Riot By Iran Troops Tehran, Iran W) Iranian troops fired into a crowd of anti-British demonstrators at Tehran University todsy. kill ing two persons and wounding anouier. It was the first public vlo. lence in Iran's heavily patroll ed capital since Premier Fa- zollah Zahedl announced Sat urday that his government had resumed diplomatic relations with Britain. inirty demonstrators were arrested. Following the announcement the powerful Moslem leader. Ayatullah Kashani, threatened to order a campaign of "na tional mourning" the wearing of black arm bands, display ing of black flags and shout ing of anti-British slogans to protect the action. UN Asks Reds to Permit Search for United Nations, N.Y. ) The General Assembly asked the Soviet Union end Red China Monday to open their doors to a speclsl commission searching for hundreds of thousands of prisoners from World War II. In a resolution, it noted a report from this commission setting out thst these coun tries plus Albania, Bulgaria. Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Po land and Romnais had with held official Information on German, Japanese and Italian war prisoners they are believ ed to hold. The resolution was approved by a vote , of 46-5 with six nations abstain ing. It was sponsored by the United States, Britain, Austra lia, Brszll and Thailand. The Soviet bloc voted against It Price 5c 'fffffaW. Tff-I liriWDf Iff I si kisia barer a t, is it tariar sjg a Ike's Atomic Issue Address 'Sensational'. United Nations, N.Y, (?) President Eisenhower will out line dramatic new proposals concerning the issue of atomic energy in his speech to the U.N. Assembly Tuesday, a high diplomatic source at the U.N. said Monday. This source said the speech will be the most important made In the U.N. on the atomic problem in years. ' He would not disclose any details of the speech but promised that It would be "sensation. President Eisenhower will address the Assembly only a few days after lt instructed the disarmament commission to make a new start on the problem of atomic control and disarmament Dean and Rhee In Conference Psnmunjom () The chief U. S. delegate unexpectedly skipped today's negotiations with the Reds on a Korean peace conference and instead met with South Korean Pres ident Syngman Rhea at Seoul, possibly to talk over the drag ging talks. As Ambassador Arthur H. Dean talked with Rhee. aide Kenneth Young sat in for him at Psnmunjom in a meeting he termed "a move forward." ' Young said all points of the negotiations were discussed by both sides but gave ne indica tion of any concrete progress, Before Dean met with Rhee, he talked with EUU O. Brigss, U. 6. ambassador to Korea, en what Young termed Urgent business. Young declined revest the subject of discus- Withdrawing;; FroopsatTriesfe Udlne. Italy () Yugoslav and Italian troops pulled back Monday from their emergency positions along the Yugoslav Italian border in a new move to ease tension over Trieste. ! This came 48 hours after the two nations agreed to "normal ize" their frontiers as the first nearcfnl strn toward resolvlna their lengthy feud over pos session of the Trieste Free Ter ritory. Italy was the first to an nounce withdrawal and Italian roads leading away from the border were filled with troops, tanks and other military ve hicles. Tanjug, the official Yugoslav news agency, announced the pull-back of that country's forces. Premier Giuseppe Pella and Psvle Gregorlk, Yugoslav min ister to Rome, reached agree ment on the withdrawal in a Rome meeting Saturday, In Belgrade Sunday, envoys of Britain, the United States and France met for SO minutes with Foreign Secretary Koca Popovic War P0W In the committee debste lsst week, observers from West Germany, Jspan and Italy, which are not U.N. members, gave their statis tics on POWs. These showed 102, .58 Ger man ex-soldiers and 133,000 German civilians in Soviet custody unreturned by Sep tember 1, 83,000 Japanese prisoners In the Soviet Union and communist China unrepa triated fir August 1 and 63, 000 Italian troops listed as missing on the Russisn front In reply, Soviet-bloc nations said all POWs had been re turned by 1SS0 except those that were sick or were sen tenced for or suspected of war crimes. They said many in the latter category had been sent home since. FINAL, EDITION Speech Planned On World Wide Tuesday Tacker's Town, Bermada (I) President Ksenhower fUea di rect to New York tomerrvw to -deliver a dramatic aew West era challenge to Basala to tola la working out a plan ef dla amuunent and atomlo eeatrul tor a world periled by the hy drogen bomb threat. With the backinc of Brit ain's Prime Minister Church- ' ill and the French leaders here for the Big Three conference, Eisenhower in a major address to the United Nations General Assembly la 'xpected to sug gest a fresh approach to the knotty international atomic problem which has been eauatt in the vise of a Soviet-Western deadlock for seven yeait. Perils Confronting World ' The announced subject for the speech is ."Perils that Con front the World in this Atomta Age." Major radio and tele vision network in the Unit ed States made plana to carry un aaoress. It is scheduled for 4 n. m. EST, ;- - -t f- ' (Cntlnne tm Page t. Cstsaaj I): U.II. Plans for Long Recess United Nations. N.Y. UV. India and tha Western now ers agreed Monday on a plan for an Indefinite recess of tha U.N. General Assembly later this week without a debate on tha Korean peace conference. Under tha compromise plan, worked out over the week-end tha prssictest, Mii. VXia Lakshmi Pandit uat .India, would be authorized to recoO tolvene the Assembly,' with .the concurrence of a maloritr the 60 members, when aha felt Korean developments i war ranted actions ...;! The new plan drops any- ref erence to a specific date for reconvening. An Indian-. res olution submitted last weak called for resumption ef tha session on February . 0 or thereabouts. t:s. L.- n The Korean Question la tha last item of business befora the 60-nation political com. mlttee. French Beat Off Hanoi. Indochina (At The French army command said to day its forces beat off a Viet mlnh attempt to destroy Gia Loc, a key French stronghold near the highway linking Hanoi with the seaport of HaiDhona. The French claimed they in flicted "extremely heavy loss- " on the communist rebels. The French acknowledged however, that French and Vietnamese troops manning the post and the armored column sent to their aid suffered "se rious losses" in the five-hour battle yesterday. No figures were given. . Crack Vletmlnh Reslmenl 42, reinforced by regional bat talions, blasted the fort with heavy mortar and machine gun fire Just before dawn. An in fantry assault followed. A French relief column fought its wsy through an am bush on the road with the aid of French fighters and bomb ers. The Vletmlnh fled when the column finally drove through to the fort Adenauer Approves Big Four Meeting ' Bonn. Germany un West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer Monday approved the text of the Allied note to Moscow accepting a Soviet bid for a four-power conference. The draft of the Western note, drawn un bv tha Bl Three at Bermuda, was shown to Adenauer Monday morning by French High Commissioner Andre Francois-Poncet It was ' submitted in accordance with an Allied agreement to consult Adenauer on ' international move directly affecting' Ger many. , t 1.5 ! I i ? 4 i A i ) I i'j i k . 4 Si