4v 1 ill 1 THE WEATHER PARTLY CLOUDY tonight and Tuesday. Little chant In tem perature. Low tonight, 15; hl(h Tuesday, 41. re Menaces Wrvalory l tit. Wilson 136 Cabins Destroyed Forcing 2000 to Flee Flames L Angeles W Wlndwhlp- jfUn.ts r- Tin out ol con j trickled less than a mile a iirotil Mt Wilson obser- Monday after presnm I, destroying 136 cabins and tM more than 2,000 per- Irom incir BBim. ir large-scale evacuation! , from residences in half a tn communities along the ;nills 01 me loresuea Dan jnel mountains some 12 :a east of here. Menaced alon with the in- Lable observatory is the four lion dollar television trans fer area wnicn adjoins it. but one of the Los Angeles I) ttlcvision transmitters are uted atop s,87-ioot Mt. Wil- Lod Fire Raging tbout 20 miles to the east uih?r fores fire burned out control. It also is In the San ,-riel mountains and has Ltd evacuation of 300 per- the late season fires have iiimed a total of more than 000 acres of timber and pa, rntinaed on race 3. Column 0) 5 Rescued in olyoke Fire Holyoke. Mass., VP) A pre- Bnre raged through a of apartments and stores ay endangering the lives 7S persons Including many (men and children before it i brought under control. Four hours after the flames Isted through the four-story Noctures four connecting tidings forming a city block, High Street all the occu- aiti were accounted for. Aproximately 35 were car- led down laddars. Thirty were ken to Providence hospital tUtring from varying stages moke inhalation. Doctors lid none was burned seriously. Police called the operators ill businesses near the scene toe lire to help wet down bir respective locations to tip prevent the spread of the Ft Capital jL Journal DFC 2 9 1963 65th Year, No. 308 " "4 '" ci r i i i in -. . :m.on,m juicin, wreggn, ivionqtjy, uecemoer zo, nsi m rages Price 5c HO EDITION HAPPY ABOUT WITHDRAWAL PLAN PL W" I STY "- -- .V McKay Appoints Dr. Pearl Bonneville Administrator ibWkinnfn IwiotfoDo WSC Engineer Win Bi-partisan Foreign Policy !lip Splits Apart 143 Rescued Sew York, VP) Forty-three ersons, forced to lifeboats hen their ship split apart iu lie storm-tossed Atlantic, fere aboard two rescue vei- 'li Monday. But raging winds still whip- Ei the sea into such fury that ! of the rescue ships was ible to proceed. I Crewmen of the wrecked Ktdish freighter Oklahoma, fi drifted for hours in life pti on the icy, rolling sea pre being picked np Sun- The freighter, split in two puedgehamer ocean waves, fa believed to have gone to ft bottom. But the search for ' wreckage continued. He dramatic rescue opera- N hampered by a heavy P. Werp rnmnletliH hv the 'S. Militarv Sea TransDOrt p Bluejacket and the Fln P freighter Orion. Holiday Death Toll Totals 712 (By Thi AuocUted Preu) The nation counted a toll of 712 accident deaths during its 1853 Christmas holiday week end. The final tabulation Monday listed 520 traffic victims, 81 who died in fires, and 111 vic tims of all other types of fatal accidents. Lives lost on the streets and highways exceeded a pre holiday estimate by the Nation al Safety Council. The council had calculated that 510 fatall ties would occur during the 78. hour period between 6 a.m. local time Thursday and mid' night Sunday. This year's traffic toll fell short of the 1950 record of 545 for a three-day Christmas pe riod. The greatest Christmas traffic death total ever record ed was 556 during 1952's four day holiday. Nevertheless, it meant one death every nine minutes during the holiday this year. The rate of deaths In traffic during the Christmas weekend was more than 50 per cent greater than the average daily toll of 102 for the first 11 months of the year. Idaho Slots on Way to Nevada Boise, Idaho W) With only four days of legal life left in the state, more than 700 of Id aho's 3,600 slot machines were reported Monday en route to Nevada, their last refuge in this country. The State Supreme Court has ruled the slots illegal and they have been ordered out as ol midnight, Dec. 31. Some coun ties which clamped on an im mediate ban were caught up in legal controversies. Operators in Bannock and Bonneville counties got court injunctions to prolong the we of the slots until Dec. 31. Two deputy sheriffs who raided a slot club in Bannock county were arrested. They said they staged the raid before a copy of the court order was received. These American soldiers in Korea clasp hands in antici pation of possible soon returning to homes and families after receiving news of President Eisenhower's announce ment that two U.S. divisions will be withdrawn from Korea. Left to right: Pfc Joseph Jech of Cleveland, Ohio; Pvt. Murlyn Blue of Des Moines. Iowa; Pvt. Cameron Breitung of Pepin, Wise; Pvt. Thomas J. Guthier of Troy, N.Y., and Pfc. George Paich of Trafford, Pa., from the 2nd and 25th Divisions. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Tokyo) GIs Cheer Withdrawals But Koreans Gloomy Seoul (F) South Korea's President and foreign minister conferred privately Monday on U.S. plans to pull two divisions out of Korea, an authoritative source said. Foreign Minister Pyun Yung Tai flew to Chinhae where Pre sident Syngman Rhee is vaca tioning after voicing South Ko artly Cloudy Skies edicted for Valley Considerable t n Sunday rj u8ht rain during the night "riy morning featured "Hey weather to start the ' Week. Snma rnintv winds Fjnipanied the rain. "uuook for over tonight and P! the rains abating for a "t mow m rcnnrtMi for h TnmtnialM ArtlMna All f i new snow was record' f Timberiine lodge. QC blffhurnw MmmlHlMi M. f U roads in good shape t ate, although icy spots P listed for some of the pass L , Eastern Oregon report- L.T. temperatures. Baker ' rcro. PON'S FATBt-n fSn lL-n'x. Ariz. MV-Frank A. C- uther of the vlce-pres- kau. ,? 'onger is listed as ? ill at St. Joteoh'f Augusta, Ga. (AW President Eisenhower, seeking a bi-pir tisan unity on foreign affairs and national defense, will give n.mn.Mll, MHMHI...I 1 ers a preview of his State of,g0.hmj. With 22,000 Korean PWs Panmunjom W A three member majority of the Neu tral Nations Repatriation Com mission today turned back to the U.N. and Communist com mands the question of what to do with more than 22.000 war prisoners who have refused to QUAKE SHAKES GREECE Athens WV-An earthquake shook Western Greece eariy Monday. The island of Kep hallenia Cephalonia, off west ern Greece which was devas tated by an earthquake in Au gust, reported 10 violnt tre mors. Liquor Agents to Be Disciplined Portland W) Thomas J. Sheridan, assistant administra tor of the Oregon Liquor Con trol commission, said Monday disciplinary action will be tak en against two investigators in volved in a fight in a Roseburg night spot earlier this month, The investigators, William Holier, Jr., and Dean O. Mor ris, both 26 and of Portland, did not appear for trial sched uled at Roseburg last week and Monday on charges of drunk enness, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. Each forfeited $100 bail. Sheridan said he and the at torney for the men told Rose burg officials at a conference last Monday that the men would not fight the charges and would forfeit bail. It has not yet been de termined what disciplinary ac tion will be taken, Sheridan said. The men were suspended after the fight earlier this month. Douks Threatening Dr. Emmet Gulley Nelson. B.C. U.R) Emmi.'tt r.ullev. former president of George Fox college at New berg. Ore., has been the latest to feel the wrath of the Douk hobor religious sect in British Columbia, Nelson police said today. Officers said gasoline was spread on Gulley's home but that the arsonists fled before igniting it. Two Doukhobor suspects were arrested rea s displeasure over the pro posed troop withdrawal. President Eisenhower's Sat urday announcement brought cheers from most American soldiers here, and there were enthusiastic speculations as to which divisions would leave Korea. But Gen. Maxwell D. Tay los, 8th , Army . commander, stressed that "it can be safely assumed that the departure of these divisions will not take place immediately." Taylor also warned that sol diers with considerable time left to serve in Korea will be transferred to other units. Their places will be filled by men whose tours of duty are virtu ally complete. The armed forces radio ser vice Monday broadcast hourly (Continued on Pate S, Column 8) Party Leaders Reach Capital Washington (IP) The Repub lican and Democratic party leaders of the Senate arrive in Washington today for confer ences that may largely decide whether controversy or coop eration predominates in the 1954 congressional session. Aides said Senate Majority Leader Knowland (R., Calif.) and Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, the Democratic leader, will hold conferences in ad vance of the congressional meeting date, Jan. 6. It is an election year ses sion. Voting in November on all 435 House seats and 35 of the 96 senatorships will deter mine party control of Congress, Tension therefore is bound to be greater than in 1953, when Knowland and Johnson worked Dewey Probes Dock Election New York, VP) State au thorities, on orders from Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, Monday be gan a round of conferences to explore whether fraud and force influenced last week's waterfront election between two unions. Members of the State Media tion Board went into session first with officials of the old International Longshoremen's Association, ousted from the AFL on grounds it was gangster-ruled. The state officials, includ ing Board Chairman Merlyn S. Pitzele and Mediator Jay Kramer, were to meet later today with representatives of the. new AFL-ILA, foe of the old ILA in the recent election A third meeting will be with the New York Shipping Association, representing ship ping and stevedoring firms. Police Commissioner George P. Monaghan called a meet ing of "those of my chiefs familiar with the waterfront' to plan action on Dewey's order." the Union message Jan. 5. Announcing this Monday at Eisenhower's vacation head quarters here, Presidential Press Secretary James C. Ha gerty said leading Republican legislators also will sit in at the Washington conference then two days before Eisen hower delivers the message to Congress in person. Eisenhower is working here on that message and two oth ers which will go to the capi tol early next month. He also is drafting a Jan. 4 television and radio address on the ad ministration's first year in of fice. Consults Democrats Earlier this month the Pres ident conferred for three days at the White House with Re publican leaders. They held preliminary discussions on the administrations 1954 legisla tive program. At that time, some Demo crats in Congress complained that Eisenhower was seeking cooperation of the Democrats in putting through his program but apparently was unwilling to take them into his confi dence in advance. (Continued on Pare s, Column I) An Indian command spokes man said that if the two com mands reach no agreement by Jan. 23 "we do not appear to Successor to Dr. Paul Raver By JAMES D. OLSON Dr. Wlllara A. Pearl, director of the Institute of Technology at Washington State college, Monday waa appointed Bonne ville Power administrator by Secretary of the Interior Doug las McKay. Dr. Pearl will succeed Dr. Paul J. Raver, who resigned to Ex-Spy Says Hundreds Of Red Agents in U.5. embassy at Ottawa. He smug gled out documents which led to the cracking of an atomic espionage ring. Since that time, he and his wife and two children have ...... . . w,n iivins quicuj ii A"?rrrv with T he ada, "umed name' copyrighted interview with the government protec. magazine Washington W Igor Gou zenko, whose testimony crack ed a Soviet spy ring in Can ada says he thinks there may be hundreds of Red agents op erating in the umwa Mother Sees 2-Headed Baby Indianapolis VP) Mrs. Mar garet Hartley took her first look at her two-headed baby Sunday and decided to take him home when he can be released from Riley hos pital. The 27-year-old mother and her husband, Cecil, 44, have three daughters, all normal, in their small home on a back road near Petersburg, Ind. They range In age from 2 to 5. The Hartleys came to In dianapolis to see the baby and were admitted to his room alone. They showed no emo tion when they came out in a short time. The baby's con dition remains satisfactory. The hospital indicated the baby, born by caesarcan sec tion December 13 at Washing ton, Ind., may be released ffnnn F v o rr Inol innc hatA KWm 'on' i periodic oxygen treatments have been given because blood circulation hasn't been normal on the left side. Each of the baby's heads is set squarely on a pair of shoulders, set at the normal shoulder position on each side of the single body. The baby has four arms. Claims Kremlin On Defensive Washington VP) Secretary of State Dulles says the f r e e world has put the rulers of Rus sia "on a diplomatic defen sive" and that "we are ready to talk to the Soviet leaders about any concrete points of difference, wherever they may exist." In his report on the State De partment, Dulles said, "our pol icies are proving successful," He wrote: "We have, you might say. chased Soviet Russia across the map of Europe and of Asia in our efforts to get its rulers to negotiate. Now it is beginning to look as if we have caught them." Seattle Light department. Dr. Pearl will take over the admin istrator's office on January IS, Secretary McKay said. The new Bonneville admin istrator has a long background of mechanical engineering and research experience, being a registered engineer in Oregon and Illinois. He owns a farm in Oregon. Dr. Pearl ii grad uate of Washington State col lege and for one year he served as acting president of the col lege. Noted Engineer For ten years Dr. Pearl was with the Whiting Corporation of Chicago. He started there as chief engineer in the Stoker division of the company and went on to become vice pres ident in charge of manufac turing. He returned to Wash ington State college in 1946. Simultaneously with the Whiting service he was on the staff of the Illinois Institute of Technology as professor of mechanical engineering and director of the engineering shop laboratories. He also waa in charge of major projects at the Armour Research Founda tion. (Continued on Fate 5, Column 1) French Postal Strikes Spread technicians up French Paris J. A strike which tied aviation for a week ended to day, but a communist led postal workers strike thraten ed to spread. Control tower radio and ra dar technicians were ordered back to work after the Air Navigation Union and Action committee announced that agreement had been reached with the Ministry of Aviation on wage demands. The aviation strike Koreans Told Aid Continues Taipeh, Formosa, VP) Adm Arthur Radford, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, today assured Nationalist China that American aid "will be continued as presently planned. Radford and Asst. U. S. Sec retary of State Walter Rob ertson wound up conferences with top Nationalist lenders and left for Manila to attend the inauguration Wednesday of President elect Ramon Magsaysay. Government sources said the statements by Radford and Robertson tended to allay fears that American aid to Nationalist China would be cut drastically. Apartment Fire Out in Portland Portland. OJ" Fourteen pieces of fire equipment and the Jay W. Stevens disaster car sped to an apartment house fire in Portland's east side early today None of the caused occupants of the building was U.S. News ana j ana snnrt maae pubuci i Monday, that the government "make it worth while for some of them to quit and come out with their documents. That Is what Goutenko him self did in 1945. He was then a code clerk in the Russian The senste internal security subcommittee is now arrang ing to interview Gouzenko in secret, in a search for leads in its search for subversion in the U.S. government fContlnetd on Pago (, Colasan ll heavy financial losses to French and foreign air compa nies, and all rushed to restore cancelled flights and get serv ice back to normal. A walkout of postal sorters which has piled up mountains of mail at distribution points since December 22 threatened to spread to prevously unaf fected local post offices. injured Firemen fought the stub born blaze for 30 minutes. They estimated damage to the two-story structure and its contents at $15,000. Six per sons fled the building in their night clothes after rooms were filled with thick, pungent smoke that hampered fire fighter's effort. have any legal right to hold come Tu"?rintendf nt ' them the prisoners." The majority report was signed by the Indian chairman and by Czechoslovakia and Poland. Switzerland and Sweden fil ed a minority report saying it was "appropriate" to refer the prisoner problem back to the two commands. But the Swiss and Swedes said they could see no reason for a formal report at this time. They refused to sign the 44-page majority docu ment wnicn also charged South Korean Interference in anti Communist compounds and cri ticized the U.N. Command. Indian Reds for Peaceful Policy Madura, India VP) India's communist high command told the first party congress in five years yesterday that it must Keep trying to win power peacefully at the polls, rather than through the terrorist tac tics used until two years ago. The Moscow-backed policy directive was put forward by the convention's steering com I mittee headed by the party sec- i retary general, Ajoy K. Ghosh. Ghosh arrived in Bombay less than three weeks ago after a six-month visit to the Soviet capital for medical treatment This peaceful action program continues a policy adopted in October, 1951. The committee said "experience has proved its correctness." The program rejects terror ism which ousted Secretary General B. T. Ranadive had ad vocated as unsuited to India's Gandhian tradition of non-violence. The party committee called for a "broad based unit ed front able to establish a government of democratic un ity." Uses Spoon to Dig Out of Jail Eugene, Wl The first es cape from the 26-month-old city jail here occurred early Monday morning. George Fenton Townsend, 18, awaiting trial on a burglary charge, broke out of the maxi mum security cellblock. He dug a hole with a spoon and an iron rod in the floor so he could reach out and open his cell. Then he got out of the cell- block by hacking a hole in walls, riping loose a ventila tion pipe and climbing to the second floor from where he walked out. The youth's freedom was short-lived. A city patrol man captured him an hour later after stopping him on a routine check. New Report on , Snake Dam Site i Washington (IP) An army engineers' report on recent I surveys of potential dam sites on the Snake r.vcr and its ' tributaries, including contro versial Hells Canyon, is ex pected next month. Sen. Dworshak (R Idaho) . said Saturday the Corps of Engineers will send the report to congress in January. He told a reporter: "For the first time, as a re sult of these investigations of additional .-"'3, it will be pos sible for congress to have a basis for comparison and to determine which constitute the next possible sites for de velopment of the upper water shed of the Columbia river basin. "It would be imprudent and contrary to public interest to concentrate on one site without giving consideration to the po tentialities of all possible sites for multiple purposcp rejects." French Air force Bombs Red Invaders of Laos Saigon, Indochina VP) French fighters and bombers plastered the Communist-led invaders of Laos Monday and French ground defenders of the little Indochinese kingdom 155 Death Toll In New Zealand Auckland, New Zealand VP: Authorities reported Monday that 11 persons previously un accounted for after New Zea land's tragic Christmas eve railroad wreck have been found safe. The announcement trim med the possible death toll to 153. Officials previously had list ed the probable toll as 166. The revised figures on the disaster now stand at: Persons on the train 278. Known survivor 123. Bodies recovered 114. Missing 41. The announcement came as New Zealand scientists said measuring instruments being erected on the summits of vol canic peaks here may warn to future disturbances like the one believed to have- caused the had lost two companies of their own and North African troops' iu the Victminh attack. The scouting units reported, how ever, they were rounding up wr(,t soldiers of former garrisons in, Th ir.m ih w.iiinatnn. hastily strengthened key bases, the area who had fled into thc Auckland Night express crash The French were reported Jungle at the Vietminh ad-f1 ,fter , Ilood which swept concentrating south of Viet- vance. .down a gorge from a crater The Vietminh radio, mean- i,KP a(op 9,125-fnot Mt. Rua while, claimed that the "great-j v... whed out a railway of the Laotian troops DndKc. minh-hcld Thakhek, on the Thailand border. French recon naissance units moving north from their base at Seno report ed they had been unable to make contact with the rebel forces who lunged across Laos last week, cutting Indochina In two for the first time in the seven-year-old war The French announced they er part' under French command had deserted and joined the Red force. The radio claimed also that the 100-mile invasion had been carried out by the "Laotian na tional liberation troops," but (Continued en rags t, Column f ) 1 Weather Details Mailiain iUtit 471 wlalMM to 4r, 41. Trial 14-haar r-rtclilUliMl MI far at owl at 1 Mi aaratal, 4. rtflIUIta, Iff.Ml rmal. I1.fi. Blnr kolfkl. ft I. (ttttfl ar VB. Waatfeaf Haraaa. tv" - M