Capital jhiJournal THI WEATHER. MOSTLY CLOUDY with occasional rain tonight, Saturday. Slightly warmer. Low tonight, 44; high Saturday, 58. 2 SECTIONS 20 Paget 68th Year, No. 262 Salem, Oregon, Friday, November 2, 1956 SlTTotiZ Price 5c British-French Troops About to T Yi? de Suez; J"- ojn eueSnq ' bjq eueSna Russ Mass to Re-take Budapest; Said Out D.J Legations Evacuate Families Cardinal Appeals For Assistance From West BUDAPEST, Hungary (UP) The United States, French and . British, legations prepared today to send the wives and children of their staffs home in the face of reports that Russia has decided to retake Budapest by force. There are about 20 wives and children of American Legation members here. (In Washington, Monsignor Bela Varga, Hungarian refugee leader, said Communist Premier Imre Nagy has resigned. Varga said Vice Premier Zoltan Tildy, chief of the anti-Communist Small Hold ers party, had succeeded Nagy. Varga said "tremendous" Russian armies were re-entering Hungary to seal the borders and try to starve the Hungarians into sub mission: City Surrounded Many Budapest residents were planning to flee to the west at tne first sign of attack from Sov iet troops which were reliably reported surrounding the city 10 to 15 miles from its center. How ever, the capital' was quiet this morning. No sounds of firing that would indicate the outbreak of fighting were heard. (The Austrian radio quoted an announcement by the "Hungarian Nationalist Hcadouarters" this morning that two columns of Sov iet tanks and motorized troops were advancing on Budapest from the northeast. The report said heavy Soviet bombers ,and jet fighters had crossed the northeast ern frontier of Hungary at Zohany and were heading toward airfields near Budapest.) Josef Cardinal Mindszenty again took the spotlight as the potential leader of the almost lcaderless revolution. He appealed to the West for help "in this critical sit uation." He said all Hungary de mands that the Russians leave the country because the Hungarians "want to work for themselves and (or their own nation." Soviet Troop Movements An editor of fhe official Hungar ian MTI News Agency said Soviet armed units had occupied the Soviet-Hungarian frontier station of Sahony this morning, according to reliable reports. There have been unconfirmed reports for sev eral days that the Russians have poured hundreds of tanks and trucks across the Russian, Roman ian and Czcchoslovakian borders. Budapest Radio broadcast con tinuous appeals to employes of firms in the shattered city to re sume work, but life was slow in taking on any aspect of normalcy. Food was dangerously short, street cars were stalled by lack of power and buses by a gasoline shortage. The last Russian armed units abandoned the cily to the revol utionaries Wednesday. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 5 Convicts Join Wash. Search For Tecn-Ager rEN'DLETON (UP)-A holicop ler from Geigcr field in Spokane was expected al Walla Walla. Wash., to airlift honor prisoners from the state penitentiary who have volunteered to help search for IS year-old Allen King of Walla Walla. Th youlh has heen missing since Tuesday in the Umatilla National forest northeast of Walla Walla. At lnacl lyi men were encaced in the search today but forest rangers said they were beginning to lose hope that King would be found alive. A search of mountain cabins in the area failed to show any trace of the missing man and foresters doubted mat nc wouia have been able to survive three davs In the snow covered terrain without shelter. At least two-and-a-half feet of snow covers the mountains in the search area. Bloodhounds flown to the scene from Dallas, Ore., proved worth less when they lost King's trail in the snow drills. Weather Details Maximum vnifr. Si: minimum Inday. Tul 24hr pfrlpiu tlon : tt mni: .K: itnrmal. .V.. Human prfripi. 1:S: normal. Willamette Ll'.ii ; ifli ii iiiiiiti i i 'i Tin -t i Reds Appeal to Polish People Not to Revolt WARSAW, Poland Ml The Pol ish Communist Party, warned that a Hungarian-style armed rev olution might burst out here, ap pealed to the nation Friday to maintain calm and discipline. "Reactionary elements are try ing to raise their heads," the party's Central Committee said in a manifesto. The committee deplored what it called the "bestial murders of Communists in Hungary" and said Poland should not have the same kind ofthaos. It urged that there not be any armed revolt to get Russian troops to leave Poland. At the same time the Manifesto, widely published and broadcast, said Poland should maintain its alliance with Russia and attacked what it termed the 'Anglo-French aggression in Egypt." . CREMATORY ALSO Hungarian Rebels Find Torture Cell BUDAPEST, Hungary W A! mysterious house on a wooded hill ! in Buda was opened Friday by i rebel partisans. They said they found it equipped with a "torture chamber" operated by the secret police. It is located on what Is called ."Freedom Hill." Often neighbors ' had seen closed automobiles driv- ! ing to the villa and disappearing into the garage. Friday it w as discovered that I a door from the garage led di-j rectly to three cells. One was plain, evidently for detaining cap-1 tives, the second was equipped with a powerful electric light: beamed on a chair apparently for interrogation and the third was padded and soundproof. The nationalist rebels said It was believed the villa was used for the brainwashing of important political prisoners such as Josef Cardinal Mindszenty. It is only five minutes walk from the group of plus former residences of Mat j as Rakosi, Ernoe Gcroc and. Leaf Raking Starts Early The student body at Willamette university was up early Friday to begin a big Homecoming weekend, but the real early birds of the campus were these freshmen, who started raking leaves at 5 a.m. Here Dale Dcnnem (left) and Roger Berg get a pile started while Ron Walker works on more behind them. In the background members of the Beta Thcta PI house work on their Homecoming sign. (Capital Journal Photo by Jerry Claussen) FIRE SET PREMATURELY Students Skirmish As OCE Raids WU A fight between, two groups of ri val college students Thursday sent two students to Salem Memorial hospital for emergency treatment and left others with black eyes and other injuries. Two Willamette students are in the Bishop Memorial Health center on the campus today. One Oregon College of Education student was released from the hospital after emergency treatment. Injured Willamette students, all reported as freshmen include Ted Cook, Grants Pass, possible broken nose; John Van Cleve. Silverton, under observation to determine ex tent of injuries and William Fair banks, Honolulu, who had a tooth EXPOSED other leading members of the Red regime. Within the area was a big guest house with comfortably furnished suites and bathrooms for visiting Communist dignitaries. Several of the villas had swimming pools and were lurnished with radio, tele vision, thick carpets, and all the costly things the Hungarian people rarely enjoyed. GYOER, Hungary UP Western newsmen were shown Friday a secret crematory, said by anti Communist rebels to have been used by the state police for vic tims who did not survive their interrogation methods. The crematory was discovered by insurgents after Gyocr. r r ital of this western province, hid fallen into the hands of the rebels. It was set up behind the central healing installations of the slate police headquarters in the city's most modern building and was equipped with technical facilities Hitler s Gestapo would have ad mired. knocked out. Cook and Van Cleve are in the health center. The injured OCE student is Joe Griffy, Monmouth, treated for a cut eye. Police said lhat a gang of about 50 students from Oregon College of Education at Monmouth raided the Willamette campus and set fire to Ihc Willamette homecoming bon fire fuel heap in Pringlc park. Willamette students rushed to the defense and the battle followed. The pile of crates, boxes, car Ions and other rubbish lhat goes into a bonfire was only partially burned, and the homecoming cele bration will go ahead Friday night as scheduled. Freshmen got festivities under way at 5 a.m. Friday with a gigan tic leaf rake of the campus. The bonfire will be at 6:30 p.m. and a jazz concert by Monte Ballon is slated at the Fine Arts building at 8:15. Major events Saturday will be a law alumni registration at 9 a.m., returning alumni registration at 11:30 a.m. in the gymnasium, a barbecue at 31:45 in the gym, the football game at 2 p.m. between the Bearcats and College of Pugct Sound 1-oggcrs and a homecoming dance at 9 p.m. in the gymnasium. Citv Covers 10 Squares Miles The cily of Salem now covers an area of more than 10 square miles. C. A. McClurc, engineer of Ihc Salem planning commission, an nounced Friday that with Ihc re cent annexation of a tract east of Lansing avenue and south of Sil verton road the area inside the city limits is 10.1 square miles. The Willamette river accounts for slightly more than a half square mile of the total area, McClurc said. HOARD MAN CRASH VICTIM PORTLAND An automobile plunged off a highway and over-! turned a half mile south of Bra-. I verton early today, killing John I.i uilyeu, 40, Tigard. Coal Mine Explosion Traps 113 13 Dead; Hope for Others Wanes in Nova Scotia SPRINGH1LL, Nova Scotia m The known death toll of a Spring hill coal mine explosion mounted to 13 Friday and hope waned for 113 men still trapped in tunnels more tban a half mile below the. u.N. Secretary General ling Ham Surface. ImnrsktnlH PriHnv nnnnlntiul n Two of the known dead were it-nun uinflrnrs If i linn hv mnl Pal rescue workers killed by coal gas alter entering the mine to search for the missing men. Gas and fallen rock hampered the rescue operations. In addition, a section of the shalt leading to the trapped men was lo be sealed off for "two or three hours" lo control a fire burning there, said Harold Gordon, a mining corpora- lion executive. . Gllnv.itcr of Hope Rescue crows found a fire at 3,200 feet in the No. 4 pit of the Cumberland Railroad and Coal Co. They could go no closer to the point where the men had been n, . , , ,u i ,,' Irneli-Arab cease-fire in 1049. The The town of 8,000 still held a;othcr mcmbcrs Undcr5Ccrc. glimmer of hope that the trapped n... ti ......, men might have survived Jhurs-1 uity 11111111 a vauiusiuii auu uiu gasscs but veteran miners were not optimistic. The Springhill mine is one of the deepest in the country, with lower workings more than 6,000 feet below the surface. Hope for survivors hinged on the possibility the trapped men were in these lower depths?-! ,...,V Planes Hunt 3 Newport Men Lost on Flidit r-oin DCAmr in A-:l ennrrit . ,,nrinr,i.o Prirf,. along the foggy Southwest Oregon ' and Northern California coast line j for three Newport residents, miss- ins since Ihursdav aboard a:; small private plane. One plane from Hamilton Air Force Base in California and two or three private planes were searching the area. George F. Douglas, state director of aero nautics, said many more planes will be sent up when the fog lifted. Douglas, en route here from Salem, said the plane is believed down between Gold Beach and Brookings. Pilot Louis Janscn, 45, operator of a trucking company at New port, reported by radio about 2:30 p. m. Thursday lhat he had en countered fog near Brookings, Ore., and was unable lo climb over it. That was the last heard from him. Scouts to i L- ..fjUlXi. :.- .... ;iA fl I lit. ..ft i JU-i I i This will he th scene at thousands of homes around Salem Saturday when5 hoy senilis do their part In reminding voters to he it the polls neil Tuesday. The srnutu will hang small liberty bell voting tinns on doorknobs. Practicing their work UN Orders Cease 2nd Ship Sunk in Dag Appoints 3 to Check on Reaction By MAX HARRELSON UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. W - three-man committee to check oniurdnv on the UN call for i: 1 1. - n f '... compliance with the General As- sembly's Middle East censc-fire: House of Commons was told Fri and ordered it to make its first ' dav. - report by 6 p.m. Friday night. His action came soon after an unprecedented emergency meet ing of the Assembly overwhelm ingly approved an American sponsored c e a s c-firc resolution during the early morning hours. The secretary general acted as dispatches reported continued mil itary attacks on Egypt by Jsrqcl, Britain and France. , Tim Unmmnl.lnM n (. cllHcs u.N. Undersecretary Ralph j. BunchC( w)0 ncsolintelll(! o(ndal ,n ,he aN mi fconstan- tine A. Slavropoulos, U.N. legal counsel. , . Police Force Talked Meanwhile, Canadian sources indicated Canada's Foreign Sec retary Lester B. Pearson was try ing to work, out a plan for an in ternational police force to move into the Middle East. U.S. Secretary of Stale Dulles expressed interest in such n force in the assembly Friday morning alter J'oarson suggested It and ex pressed hope Pearson would look further into the idea. Britain, France and Israel op posed the cease-fire and weary delegates privately expressed doubt the three countries would comply. CM 1J ll f:l j- "um uiuj inn w uu .u, me expectation was that a further pro- pa' w0," c introduced for sUon.fr f1"'"' Dulles' resolution "r0.vldrs for ,hc Assembly to re .: : J. i"-,,u ing compliance but no lime was set for the next meeting. 64-5 Vole The vole was 64-5 with 8 abslen tions. Britain, France, Israel, Aus tralia and New Zealand voted against the resolution. Canada, South Africa, Belgium, Laos, the Netherlands and Portugal ab stained. Luxembourg was absent. Among those voting with the United States for its proposal were the seven-nation Soviet bloc, the 20 Latin-American nations, the 2.1 country Asian-African group and Scandinavia. The decision, shortly before 2:30 a.m., got 27 seconds' applause from the floor and gal lery in the bigh domed Assembly hall. Remind Voters on a neighbor's 7M E. Enald, and both members Photo) CONSULTS CHURCHILL Eden Will Reply To UN Saturday LONDON m Prime Minister Eden will make statement .sal- rense.M In ihp MiHHln Kii ilm Richard A. Duller, leader of , Eden's Conservatives in the House, announced the prime min ister would be ready to make his statement before a special meet ing of the House after overnight consultations to include French Foreign Minister Christian Pincau. Pincou made a special trip from Pnris. Sir Winston Churchill, World War II prime minister, lunched with Eden Friday, presumably to discuss the Egyptian crisis, A bclier was voiced in some parliamentary quarters that Eden's government, shaken by Britain's defeat in the U.N. and Ike, Adlai cigri Polls Show Crisis Hasn't Swayed 31any Votes By UNITED PRESS Presideat Eisenhower and Adlai E. Stevenson clashed in a crucial battle today on the Middle Easl crisis and conduct of U.S. foreign policy, Ihc final and key Issues of the 1956 presidential campaign (Detailed Stories on Page 2, Sec. 1) The President lashed out Thurs day night at Slcvenson as a polit ical opportunist trying lo get into he While House ty taxing a 'political profit" on Ihc Middle East lighting and offering Ihe nn- lon a design for disaster in the guise of a peace plant. Stevenson charged the President and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles Thursday night with "cata strophic failure" to prevent war in the Middle East. Both spoke over national tele vision and radio networks, tne 'resident from Convention Hall in Philadelphia, and Stevenson from Bulfiilo, N.Y. Thn Long Island, N.Y., news paper Ncwsday, which is support- of Duly house are Lennarif IlHrst' tlefl), Rlrhard Margnilan. 2l S. 12th, of Troop Is. (Capital Journal growing criticism' at home, now hopes to nava the U.N. take over policing of the Middle East after British and French forces have accomplished their mission. . The Labor Party had warned that unofficial strikes might sweep Britain if the prime minister kept silent. Eden's refusal to commit him self at once on the U.N. actions touched off another angry scene in the House of Commons the second in as many days with Laborilcs shouting for him to "re sign.'' . Britain's organized labor move ment launched a nationwide "stop the war" campaign with the an nounccment of a massive rally Sunday in London's Trafalgar Square. Protest meetings in score of other major cities will follow. ' : in Ciuicial ing Stevenson, said Its own, sur vey in seven cities and its circula Hon area showed the Middle East ern crisis will have little effect on voting. Newsdny said Ihe crisis appeared to have strengthened the convictions of voters on both sides of the fence. It said some shifts In votes were noted but that they were too slight to affect the re stills. The New York Times, which is supporting President Eisenhower, said a 12-city survey by its own correspondents showed the crisis apparently has strengthened Mr. Eisenhower's chances. The Times said tho President may lose votes in areas where pro-Israel senti ment is strong but will otherwise benefit. Hagerty Says Dulles to Stay After Election WASHINGTON (UP)-A White House spokesman said loday he does not expect any Cabinet changes after the election. While House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty made (he state ment In denying that Secretary of State John Foster Dulles may re sign. Hagerty wns asked about a statement attributed to Sen. George II. Bender (ROhiol in Cleveland that he had heard Dul les intended to resign. "I haven't ever heard that men tioned, and t know Ihc secretary very well," Hagerty said. llaecrlv added lhat he believes hi will "hum lhi nmn nnswer next Wednesday (alter Ihc dec - lion i and Ihe next four years.' School Sued For $10,000 In Spanking Alleging that she was "severely mistreated" and "wrongfully abused" as Ihe result of an alter- ration last May 10 Virginia Sher- rill, through her father Ambrose, Sherrill, has bough, suit lor .10.000 1 damages against Ihe West Stayton Grade school district. Principal Mru Ar nnil Plnvarnnn.l ... Dcrvisor' Verna Tellec'k. According lo Ihc complaint filed in Marion county circuit court, the plaintiff sets forlh that she was engaged in a hall game on the school ground when an altercation developed with Patricia Coleman. Both ore West Stayton pupils. Defendant Telleck was not on Ihe ground at the lime of the argument . Ihe complaint stales, hut upon her return she is said to have wrongfully abused Vlr glnia and then took her into Ihe school home where she was spanked. Virginia savs she was wrong- fully blamed-in the incident, Policy - Fir e; Canal Israelis Grab; All of Gaza Section LONDON bfl British and French invasion of the Suez Ca nal Zone with ground forces was reported Imminent Friday night. The French Defense Ministry said in a communique the stage was set for occupation of the ca nal area. The ministry said aerial and na val preliminary attacks are over, and air and naval actions hence forth will be directed at supportipg occupation of the Canal Zone. The announcement came sev eral hours after Israel had report ed gaining complete control of the Gaza strip and scoring smashing victories in ground action against Egyptian forces. '. Skies, Seas Cleared The French communique, pre saging ground action by British and French troops, said the pur pose of the air and naval bom bardment of the past three days has been to knock out EgVDtinn air strength and clear tho seas north and south. of the Suez Ca nal. This objective has been virtual ly achieved, It said. ; At about the same time, Egyn tlan army- headquarters reported the southern-entranceCto". the tv nal had been blocked by the sink ing 'of A fishing' vessel-during an enemy air bombardment.. Thin was the second vessel reported sunk in the 103-mile waterway, An Egyptian warship went down near the middle of the canal Thursday. ..... i A spokesman at Israeli army headquarters in Tel Aviv report ed the surrender of Gaza City, Egyptian headquarters for the Ga za slrip, after a lank-led Israeli task force smashed Into the city. Fighting Ends The surrender nut the entire slrip in Israeli hands and ended a 24-hour fight for the region. Is raeli troops Thursday captured Rafah, the only other major can ter in the strip. ihe Gaza territory, a 25 bv.l mile finger of land separating the southern end of Israel from the Mediterranean, has long been a center of Israeli-Egyptian border trouble. Elimination of fedayeen (commando) bases In the area was one of Israel's announced objectives in its thrust into Egypt Monday. The British Air Ministry in Lon- don said Royal Air Force heavy and medium bombers were keep ing up tneir nonstop strikes ngalnst the Egyptian air bases Friday. None Lost. "None of our aircraft has heen reported missing," a British spokesman said. A later communique said Brit ish bombers had knocked out Egypt's propaganda station, Voice of Arabia, seven miles west of Cairo with bombs chalked "Rock V Roll for Nasser." (Continued on Page S Column 1) News in Rrief Friday, November 2, 19.16 NATIONAL 'Ike. Adlai In Crucial Foreign Policy Hassle Sec. 1. P.l Details of Ike, Adlai Speeches Last Night Sec. 1, T.2 LOCAL New Citizen Values Right lo Ballot Sec, 2, P.5 Ad Executives Open Meeting . .. . . Sec. I, P.5 Students Tangle at WU Sec. 1, P.l STATE ,3 Newnort Men Lost nn Plane Flight . Sec. 1, P.l FOREIGN Anglo-French Troops' About , Occupy Suez Sec 1 P 1 nK M.m to RcCapture Budapest Sec. 1, P.l ,. SPORTS lTnc Bi8 Game: North vs. South Salem Sec. 2, P.l Eugene Signs Luby Sec. 2. P.l Willamette Homecoming Game Saturday Sec. 2, P.l REGULAR FEATURES Amusements See. 1, P.2 Sec. 1. P.4 Sec. 1. P.S Sec. I. P B.; 7 ... ... Sec. 2, P.4 Sec. 2, U Sec. 2. P. 1. ,'!) Sec. 2. P.l Editorials . Locals Society Comics .... Television Want Ads . Markets Personal Problems See. I, P. JO Crossword Puzzle Sec. J. P.4 Farm .... Sec. 2. P.3 School . 5m. . PI