Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 14, 1954, Page 1, Image 1

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    Jomrim
THE WEATHER
PARTLY CLOUDY toalfkt Fit.
dayi (cattered skewer. MOtty
rata, bat xmiIm al rala-aw
mtxr. CMitr. Lw Uaigfct, i! ',
high Friday, .
FINAL
EDITION
1 V
v,
66th Year, No. 12
Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January U, 1954 (32 Pa
220regonians
House Group
ITS SNOWY IN CALIFORNIA, TOO
Ike
1 1 .
runs wr
ansion or
To CoTo While Approves Cut
r coram f
Capita
al
mp
joaai security r
I-
H
f
11
HouseMeeling
Governor Appoints
, Delegates to High
way Safety Session
Bjr JAMES D. OLSON
At the personal request of
President Dwight D. Euenbower,
22 Oregon citizens have been
named by Governor Paul L. Pat
tenon to attend the White
Haute Conference on Highway
Safety to be held in Washington,
D. C, Februar. 17 through the
19th, it was announced by the
governor's office Thursday.
The governor will head the
Oregon delegation which has
bees called by the President to
"focus more public attention on
the problem and stimulate active
leadership in reminding of mo
tor vehicle accidents in every
community in the nation" the
President's letter stated.
Many Groups Represented
The President's conference will
bring together groups represent.
inc business, labor, agriculture,
women's organizations, service
dubs, fraternal, religious and vet
erans groups, public officials and
repreaentatves of various public
information sources.
Appointed to the Oregon dele
gation by the governor represent
ing the League of Oregon Cities,
Mayor Al Loucks of Salem; Agri
culture, Ben Robinson, Imbler,
Farm Bureau, Lowell Stockman,
Pendleton, former congressman
from Eastern Oregon; Labor,
George Brown, executive secre
tary of the CIO of Oregon and
Clyde Crosby, Teamsters Union,
No. 162, Portland; business, E.
C. Sammons, president of the
United States National Bank, Ray
Carr, advertising, Harold B. Lar
son, Archie Pierce, all of Port
land and G. C. Knodell, Albany;
Portland Federated Women's
clubs, Mrs. J.' V. Springer, past
president of the same organisa
tion, and Mrs. R. H. Walter, a
leading woman personality in
traffic safety in Oregon; Public
(Continued on Page S, CoL 4)
Income Taxes
v.. ..
Ways and Means Says
Revenue Loss Less i
Than $240 MillfonV
WASHINGTON I The House
Ways and Means Committee
Thursday approved sharp cuts ia
personal Income taxes on income
from dividends. Experts' said the
revenue loss would be 240 million
dollars the first year and up to one
billion when the program takes full
effect
The proposed changes would ap
ply to some four million persons
who receive income from divi
dends. About one third of these
would be relieved of any taxes at
all on their dividend income.
This was the second major step
announced in a complete overhaul
of tax laws launched by, the com
mittee Wednesday. The first agree
ment would provide SO million dol
lars in tax savings for about 700,
000 single heads of households.
Democrats Oppose
Democrats were reported to have
raised some opposition to the pro
gram of relief for dividend recip
ient. ., ' i
The proposed new law provides
that individual pay no income
taxes on dividends up to $90 an
nually received in the taxable
years ending from next July 21
to Aug. 1, IMS.
For taxable years ending after
Aug. 1, 1953, individuals would pay
no Income taxes on dividends re
ceived up to 1100.
(Continued on Psge S, CoL t)
Extra Session
Frowned Upon
PORTLAND, MV-Gov. Patter
son said here Thursday that he
would first exhaust all regular
remedies for meeting the state's
unemployment problem before
considering a special legislative
session.
Democratic party leaders Wed
nesday reieaseu ... - .I Carteret NX.
governor urging the session "rtcret, n.J.,
meet tne Deepening ...........
crisis.
Patterson, who was in Boise at
a power mecUng Wednesday, said
he had only read newspaper re
ports of the request and "at first
blush I can see neither the advisa-1
bility nor wisdom of calling a
special session of the legislature.
He said he had been In con
ference with business and labor
leaders and pointed to his request
to the Oregon Development Com
mission, made public Wednesday,
for plans to provide jobs.
On the Democrats' proposal
that the special session also take
... k. x.isdinn of oower devel
opment and rates. Patterson said
he preterrea w won um
his own wsy. He said he and other
Northwest governors were work
ing on plans to have dam build
. big carried on by both private and
public agencies.
Ships Collide
In East River
NEW YORK m - A cargo ves
sel and a tanker collided in the
Eas River Thursday, injuring six
men. Police and the Coast Guard
hunted five hours before locating
uie slightly damaged cargo ship.
The 2CS foot fully loaded tanker
Verdon, meanwhile waa maneu
vered to the sea wall on the Man
hattan side of the river when ahe
settled to the bottom n about 2
feet of water.
Police said the cargo vessel, the
Beth Coaster carrying a crew of
24, continued on after the crash
and later was found at anchor off
Staten Island.
The vessels collided in p re-down
darkness about 4:15 a.m. (EST)
near the Williamsburg bridge, con
necting Manhattan and Brooklyn,
apparently as a result of a mis
understanding of signals.
All the injured were crewmen
aboard the Verdon, owned by the
Ira S. Bushev Co.. of Brooklyn.
She was carrying fuel oil from
to west iiaven,
. . ' . "S'W'I ,arT-T x " , tX 1 3
w ma mm
. LT T .if l '--'"a
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f'' J- . "''V?'? .v 'r- .''VomJ :.:A
':'. .'-..., ,,H sf.. . . . $i
: : -. :,' ""'' --jH. -; -'a: - v Jr4 j
''v'li,;k''
Astoria Slide -Houses
Moved
ASTORU on - Activity on Con-
mercial street hill now is a race
to get slide-damaged houses to
level ground before heavy rains
start again. ,
There was no noticeable move
ment of the earth Wednesday,
the first full day in which the
slippage apparently was at a
complete halt since sliding start
ed a week ago.
About one house a day can be
moved. They are being put in a
parking lot while the city land de
partment trie to find suitable
sites. It has not been determined
bow many of the affected 26 houses
will be moved. All but one are be
lieved salvageable. .. . - . .- -
The Red Crosa is checking on the
amount tt financial heln the nemo-
less families will need, including
cost of house teovtng and jetting
resettled.
Fraxier Park, CaL, Jan. 14 The freezing Midweslerner can
take comfort during current cold wave that it's cold and
snowy in California, too. Here's Tommy Chigwidden, 2, making
snow balls on the road leading to this mountain community
on the Los Angeles county line, just off the ridge route to
the San Jouquin valley. The snow cam during Tuesday'
storm. (AP Wirepboto)
Possible Snow,
Rain Tonight
Seek Scope of
Power Compact
BOISE (UP) The power com
mittee of the Columbia Inter
state Compact Commission to
day sought to determine' the
cooe of the permanent agency
whether it shall be regulatory
or enter into financing and con
struction. Committee member Howard
Stinson. legal (.tinsel for the
Boise office of the Bureau of
Reclamation, was asked to de
velop preliminary plan which
would outline the scope of the
rnmmission.
The Commission openeo its
twiMiiv meeting with separate
mmmittee meetings. Other
groups in session were the exec
utive, legal, pollution and engi
neering committees.
The full Commission meets tomorrow.
Hearing Set for Deeti
Milk license Request
Elmer Deetz, tanby dairyman i
who is fighting the state milk
control law, was asked by the
State Agriculture Department
Thursday to show cause on Jan.
20 why It sho'tldnt deny- nis
application to use a - Grade A
label on raw llaio milk.
The hearing will be held In
the eanitol here.
The hearini ofder. aimed by
O. K. Beals, chief of food and
Hells Canyon
Dam Costs High
WASHINGTON (UP) A reclama
tion Bureau engineer said today
that land and other incidental
costs of a high government dam
in Hells Canyon would run about
10-million dollars more than sucn
costs for three smaller dams
which the Idaho Power Co. pro
poses to build. .
The cost comnarison wa made
at a Federal Power Commission
hearing by Ed Koessner, project
engineer in the bureau's Boise,
Ida., office.
Koessner said it would cost
about 35-million dollars to pur
rhine land and land rights and
build necessary roads, trails, and
bridges for a dam such as pub
lie nower advocates want Simi
lar expenditures for three low
dams would run about 25-million,
he said.
The FPC staff is studying the
nuhlir v nrivate Hells Canyon
ripvelnnmeni controversy mj uciu
the commission determine wheth
er to live a license to loano
Power.
IRANIAN EMBASSY OPENED
LONDON OB A top Iranian
r.ir, arrived here Thursday
and reopened the embassy closed
15 months ago wncn lormer no
mier Mohammed Mossadech sev
ered diplomatic lies wnn unmin.
WEYLAND, CHANG CONFER
T11DCU sTArmMi UR Gctl.
iMihV mixed snow and rainl,- p w-yiand. commander of
tonight and Friday is predicted by
the weather Bureau, ourer"'"'
outlook is for scattered showers
mostly of rain.
Sll;htly cooler temperature are
In the offing.
c.,iK,orrlv winds blew in
strong over Salem area Wcdneday ,
pight, bringing ram.
period ending at 10:30 a m. Thurs
day. M of an inch of rain was
measured for Salem.
The snow storm predicted for
the area failed to arrive and tem
peratures mounted late Wednes
day The morning minimum in
Salem Thursday was 42 degrees.
The weather bureau caU for a
alow-moving storm headed thi
.. .ii nriiiih Columbia, this
storm likely to bring at least the
mixed snow ana run.
the U.S. Far East Air Forces, ar
rived Thursday to comer wnn
President Chiang Kai-Shek and
other Chinese Nationalist leader.
Weather Details
igr. . TUI rflpUllp:
I. ,V .m.L in.
tmi.iuiMa. n.t mhi si.s ' i Carraa
k.lHii. tJ Int. (.. kr V. S.
t nrta.l
No Support
For Strike Vote
WASHINGTON (UJSA poll of
the Senate Labor Committee indi
cated Thursday practically no
support for a proposal calling for
strike votes among employes who
have tlready gone on strike.
Some advocacy of a ballot to
take place before a strike could
be called was noted, but even that
appeared to fall short of the seven
committee votes needed to send
such a proposition to the lloor oi
the Senate for a vote there. The
mmmittee has 13 members.
President Eisenhower told his
news conference Wednesday he
wants Contrres to decide the
question of when the strike vote
should be taken by the govern
ment He said all he had in mind
when he recommended in his
special Taft-Hartley message se
cret, government-supervised elec
tions in strikes, wa me princi-
ple- V
Surpluses lor
Overseas Bases
WASHINGTON (UP)-Sen. Her
man Welker R.. Ill ) said today
the eovernment is "looking with
interest" at a proposal to use some
of the government's huge food and
fiber surpluses to neip pay uie
cost of building overseas military
bases.
He said the state, defense and
agricultural dtpartments are ex
ploring the proposal. Welker said
it would get rid of surpluses and
"save money."
German contractors, who con
tacted Welker and Sen. Pat Mc-
ID.. Nev.) initiated uie
WASHINGTON U Rec. EB.S-
'" Jr?Ji'?-?" worth R-Ore) held out hop Thura-
w" "f Irtav (hat the Denartment of Aeri-
dairies, lists fivt reasons why
the department intends to deny
his application.
The reasons are:
The milk house doesn't have
two rooms separating
ing, bottling ana capping
milk from tne wasmng ot uten
sils and cauiDment in a manner
to prevent contamination of milk
and eUMned caulaMBL
- The saUkhouao I not equippM
with a tr-coniprnnw
lot washlne: and sanitUing uxca-
. Window openings of the milk-
nous are not screened.
The milkhouse it not equipped
with an anoroved Doming ma
chine to prevent water or -other
condensation fluids from drip
ping into the final delivery con
tainer. The milkhouse doc not have
mntahle bottle capper.
Beals said that Deetx would
be denied the application unless
he can present evidence to dis
prove the department's charge.
India to Return
22,000 POW to
Their Captors
PANMUNJOM. Korea (UP)
innia announced looay in wiu
return mora that) 22,000 unre
patriated war prisoner to their
captor next Wednesday, three
day ahead of their scheduled
release.
Lt Gen. K. S. Thimayya,
chairman of the Neutral Nation
Repatriation Commission, in
formed the V. N. and Commu
nist commands the men will be
sent back as prisoners and it
will be illegal for either aide to
free the men.
Reliable informants said the
U. N. command will reject the
Indian claims and ship 14.000
anti-Communist Chinese to For
mosa and 8000 anti-Red North
Koreans to South Korean area
for rehabilitation.
Want Explanation
Communist China' Feiplng
radio had unleashed blast at
any kind of prisoners release,
demanding that the captives be
held until 82 more days of "ex
planations" are concluded.
Thimayya, who previously had
favored releasing the men a ci
vilian Jan. 23 in accordance
with the armistice terms, said
he acted without consulting oth
er member of hi commission
after the decision had been
made by Prime Minister Nehru's
government at new Delhi.
(Continued on Page S, Col. B)
Attempt to , :
Revive Peace
Treaty Fails
PANMUNJOM, Tnursday, Jaa
14 0P) The first formal attempt
to revive the planning talk on a
Korean peace conference ended
In failure todiy but another try
wilt be made tomorrow. ,
. The Communist aaked for a
reopening Saturday of the pre
liminary talk, broken oft Dec.
12 in a hot dispute over Red
charges of perfidy against the
United States.
Instead, the Allied command
sought to have the controversial
accusation stricken from the
record. -.:.
Edin Vartin, State Department
official who represented the U.
N. Command at a meeting of liai
son secretin ee today, said later
the Reds had insiisted on talking
only about a data for resuming
the ruptured talk. -
He said the Reds opened the
session with a 30-minute state
ment calling for resumption of
the talk Saturday. -
n't have a a ' ' I " i V'S
llew Purchase
, - . . .
Looms of Pears
'IT
culture" may soon undertake a rfew
near nurchaxe program to relieve
surplus winter pear stocks Ja the!
Pacific Northwest - I
He met with deDartment official I h m ...k
weoncauay wh wnuw umjr wuuiu i t 'nm. mmlA t
not stat nauy mat sucn a pro-lphu would be a "aerer defi
Red Artillery
Pounds French
HANOI. Indo-China (UP) Com
munist artillery believed to have
been snipped from Bed . tnina,
pounded French position at Dies
unen rem tooay, wnue commu
nist suicide squad probed the
outer defense of the beleaguered
fort real.
The Red scoots advanced
through a shower of flaming gaao-
line-leuy nomba, giving credence
to ute Frencn neiiei mat coramu-
nlat Gen. Vo Niuveo Gian la pre
pared to sacruice "uiouaana
troon to take men Bten nwu
(,n. HeiM uienv. rrcnen com
mander In Indo-Chlna. said the
Rao have (utlerad ItJM casuaV
uoa, WOm mom kulM aaa al.tao
casturad. in the past alx month.
JtcUofc at Dieav Biea- Pbu (till
ia on a relatively amall scale, but
tha Reds are believed to be man
ln for a all-out attack on- the
outpost captured by French air-1
10 Millions, of
People Soiiohl
WASHINGTON If) - President
Eisenhower Thursday prupueed
bringing 10 million mora Amert'
can under social security, increa -
ing benetiu au along tne line, and
raising to M.20 the amount of in
come subject to social security -taxes.
r - .,.
In a special message to Coagres.
tne President said the average
benefit payment to retired work- '
era is now 50 a month, with, a
minimum of 25 and maximum
Of $85. , . , .
For social security to "fulfill Ha
purpose of helping to combat decti- -tution.
these benefits are too low," .
Eisenhower said.' .
Propose No Figure
Both the maximum and mini
mum ahould be increased, - he '
aid,' but proposed no figure. A
formula on that will be presented i
later by Secretary of Welfare
Hobby, be told the kglilatora. y
Well-potted congressional source
told reporter they understood the '
increases Mrs. Hobby ia to propose
would range from a minimum of ..
13 a month in the lowest bracket i.
to more thai 10 ia tha upper i
bracken, f . .
Mrs. Hobby called a now con
ference for Friday to dlscua the ',
administration plan.
, Boosting to S4J00 tn amoua ot
income subject to social aecurlty
taxes, a Eisenhower proposed, '
would mean a ImmedlaU l a :
year tax incraaa for worker :
earning was nmcn or more, a ,
(Continued oa Pag t, CoL i
Good Uc:tSha
TO t:C132 z
WASHINGTON ttV ' CoMreot
gave a generally cordial reception
Thursday to President Einnow
ar- mvmmU for nadtat-
del securMy coverage and inert- '
- ing It benefit. '
Cogny said the low of Men Beta Summed up. the rectuoa among-"
eat" 1 1
" ''-.VI
JUon ' " ,
rkev lefislaton aooarentlr war
gram would Be undertaiien, tne I e aafd the Red river delta 11 1. Cangnu certauUy will enact
congressman saia, uiey uwivaieai ujjj sey a rraacli poeiuon ia I Mm new leguiauoon ia in neid.
Clue Indicates Missing
Guard Worked in Illinois
proposal. They offered to do part
of the construction at imiwn "r
siallations in Spain on a subcon
tract basis and accept up to 20 ptr
cent of their pay in surplus crops
instead of dollar.
Plan to Outlaw
Communists
WASHINGTON. UP) Alty.
Gen. Browncll says the Justice,
Department, at President fcisen-.
howcr's direction, it studying j
proposals to outlaw the commu-i
nist Party In the United States.
Bui Brownell, who discussed
the matter In an -NBC radio lnter
viu Wednesday night, indicated
he personally does not favor such
proposals. He said the depart
ment "wouldn't have any opinion
to express until the rtudy had
been comlcted.
The attuney general wa ask
ed whether he thinks "we have
reached a point where the party
should be outlawed."
-The President referred to us
Juit within the last few dsys the
question of studying these pro
posals that have been made,"
Brownell replied and said the
studv would hsve to be completed
before opinion were expresed.
McCarthy Sees
Alaska Graft
the door'was not closed to such a
possibility.
Earlv this month the department
announced purchase of Its carloads
of wuiter pear for th school
lunch program and other outlet.
Grower have advised Ellsworth,
however, that they have a surplus
of 50 carload over last year.
Ellsworth said he met also with
representatives of the department's
foreign agriculture service seeking
information on the pear crop, har
vest dates and possible quantities
of pears which might be shipped to
this country from Argentina. He
said he expects to nave tni imor
mation shortly.
northern Jode-China. .
--"...-y.'VM
Ex-President
In Auto Crash
KANSAS CITY, Mo. tUPl-Car
driven by former Preident Harry
S Truman and a irans-wona Air
ways employ collided at n inter
uv'tinn here today, and both driv
ers blamed t third car for the
mishap.
Mr. Truman told police he was
almost around a corner making a
turn when a ca.' truc'. the rear of
his automobile and spun it around.
The car that struck th Truman
car was driven by Johnny C. May
all. Mr. Truman and Mayall both
told police a third car obstructed
their vision. The third car did not
stop.
There were no injures.
50 Warships
For Mothballs
WASHINGTON W) The Navy
savs it i- laying up the cruiser
Quincy as the first of SO ships to
be put into mothballs.
Almost simultaneously with
this announcement Wednesday,
Secretary of the Navy Robert B.
Anderson said Russia Is outbuild
ing the United State and otner
North Atlantic Treaty Oroganlx-
ationa NATO nations in cruisers,
destroyers and other high sea
warships.
The Navy' budget ha not been
disclosed, but it is expected to
take a substantical cut as part nf
the new-look program In military
expenditures, festuring more re
liance on airpower and economies
in other direction.
The Naw said the lS,800-ton
Quinty, "the, least modern ot the
Naw'a active cruisers" and now
at Long Beach, Calif., navy yard.
i t. The p
IpnelmUr th
I bower out.
pattern mar Dot follow "
that laic? down by Kiaea- ,
his ideas. - " ' " -fvMl
tn. ... ..a Mrtniln-. annuuM .
for the President' advocacy of -liberalising
the present provision
denying retirement benefits to per-
sin between the age of (5 and . .
7J who make t much as 7S
monthly In prt time covered em
ployment. , ' ,'
Sen. Cse. R-SD, celled that pro-
posal "a very constructive thing."
He added: "It Is not constructive ' ;
to discourage the people from
helping themselves." . . ' ,
To Reorganize
Army Services v
WASHINGTON (UP)-An advl-'
ory committee act up at President
Eisenhower's suggestion today pro
posed top to bottom reorganisation
of the Army to overcome costly ;
weaknesses and prepare It for the
demands of modern war.
..... - Ai.lllnajl '
i ine live iiwm im vmm.mm
win .r"Vn" measure for rtrengthenlng over-
BURMA FACES BICE imsis
RANGOON Burma I fac
ing a rice crisis with a surplus
oi hetween sno.eoo and 1.000.-
no ton left over from last year's
cop. A bottle-neck has b ee a
created in finding accommodation
(Veson State. Police Tbursdy
received ( telegram from Mercy-
ville Sanitarium, a tainouc insti
tution at Aurora, 111., saying that
Victor H. William, Oregon State
prison gusrd who dissppesred
last April S, employed at
that place during July nd Aug-...
Thi is th firrt clue to Wil-i
it.i nwMMmenta after the dis
appearance, and cam Just after
investigstlon os nn ".
from Portland tnai wmi.....
might have been murdered and
his body thrown into a well near
D II
The telegram received today
k. William wu employed
farmer, but contained no lnfor-i
mation about where h went fter :
leaving there.
The institution wa contacted,
when Williams' father, who liveai
t Turner, informed State Police
that he had received the son'
withholding tax statement from
there.
On the night of hi dUappear
ance William, who had a good
reoutation as prison officer, le!t
his home on Route . wnerr nis
wife and children now live, pre
sumably to go to work. He did
not report to the nison. Then
nme nf his clothing wu found
alongside state highway in Polk
County and hi car in Portland.
(Continued on Page 5, CoL S)
the other ship will be Isid up
during th next 18 month. j
REDS RELEASE II POWs
VIENNA. Austria uh A group
of 1 Italian' war prisoner held
for many years in the soviet Un
ion, arrived in Vienna Thursday on
their way home. They included a
military chaplain and a Catholic
priest. ' '
$27,500 Salary
For Congress
WASHINGTON A substan
tial majority of th commission on
Judicial and congressional salaries
was reported Thursday to favor a
227,900 salary for senators and representative-
112.50 Py boost
Th commission, set up by the
au Conerees to make recommend-
turn on the oav of federal Judge
and member of Congress, is to
submit it report to President El
senhower at th Whit Houae rn-
'lav
llmW the law. Centre must
r im the resort by Marck 13k In
i41mi Mr hka this one. the
aihWrt la ticklish. I them.'
ujisHiNfiTOV UP) Sen. McCr-
ihv R.wis . said Thuraday he Is
..ivtiinn ih FBI of evidence that
"graft, corruption and attempted
bribery" occurred in government
spending in Aiasxa.
McCarthy told reporter ataft
member of hi 8nU lnvetig
tion Subcommittee have given
him ah Dm) ohotozraohic cop
ies of letters end other document and all
n.rn,na nivraiinna of what he killed.
urmxl an interlocking network of The big
companies in Alaska.
He said the subcommittee prob
ably will require a month of prep
aration before tuning puouc near
ing. Meanwhile, th staff Is prepar
ing a chronology of event de
scribed In the document, Mc
Carthy aid, adding: .
"Thi will go to th Justl' De
partment a oon a It I ready.
The allegations ar such that th
FBI and the Justice Department
ought to. be fully Informed about
16 Killed in Crash of
Airliner Near Rome
U civilian control, tightening
Army purs strings, making mm-
tarv men responsible for actual .
operation and modernising con
tinental Army comraanua ana sup
ply services.
Headed by raui u uavios, pres
ident of tha Food Machinery and .
Chemical Corp., San Joae, Calif.,
the committee was set up by Army
Secretary Robert T. Steven laat
August (Iter Mr. Eisenhower had
called for "badly needed" Im
provements in th Army, Nvy and
Air Force. .1 s
tlv of Boston who ha lived tn
Rom ever! yer.
The pilot-chief of th nine-man
crew aboard wa Ira Broom of
Wrren, Ark., heed pilot lor tne
airline. The co-pilot wa identified
a William Rose of Alton, III., who
friend said lived with bla wif In
Rom. Mr. Rose reportedly u ex
pecting a baby.
V wa tne nrsi iiai atx-uum
th airline international opera
tion. The Philippine Alrlino w
given a safety award last October
at an international air conference.
Airline official said th cause
of the crash was as yei unsnown.
i inuntinatioa was launched Im
mediately. The officials speculated
th pilot chose to plunge ma nra
ROME Uf A smoking four
engine Philippines Airline plane
crashed ana cxpioaea in yvyv
lou outskirts of Rom Thursday
lt person (Doara were
net hit a vacant lot
not far from a big apartment build
ing. It was coming tnrougn a orrv
ing rain for a landing on flight
from Beirut. Lebanon, one leg in
H regularly cheduld trip from
Manila to London.
An eyewitness said th left en
gines were tmoklng a It ap
proached Ciampino Airport outside
Rnnv It anneared to be heading
for th building, then banked and
plunged Into th lot with tro-
mendou roar. i- "IT rr.M ,.ih several
'manager, nojai n. - 7 ... -
Australian Red '
Hideout Bombed
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya UP
Roy: Australisn Air Fore
planes carried out furious st
uck oa 1 suspected Communllst :
hideout 10 mile from th heart
of thi capital city today.
The Australian Lincoln bomb- '
era unleashed 60,000 pounds of
bomb. - - - ,
Sounds of the exploding bomb i
were clearly audible in downr
town Kuala Lumpur and cltixena v..
living o high ground could tea j .
pillars of smoke rising from the ;
target are.
Officials believed shout (0 T
r. f . ' - liuhJUa .
lOmmuniH mniiiiw, iiMuuiin .
Red state eommitte
it
for the new crop which I
ready.
at the llliDOia sanitarium a a
X
7"