Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 26, 1956, Page 1, Image 1

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    Capital AJoMry
THE WEATHER
MOSTLY CLEAR through Tuesday.
Little change In temperature. Low
tonight, M; high Tuesday, 54.
art
2 SECTIONS
24 Pa$e
oJ0 it an
68th Year, No. 282
Salem, Oregon, Monday, November 26, 1956 J,"
Intend second elssl
tter st Sslem. Oregol
Port Said
Opens for
UNGuard
Norse Patrol City
As British Let
Ships Enter
LONDON (tip) Norwegian
forces of the U.N. police army
took up patrol duty in Port Said
today in the first actual move to
take over from British and French
occupation troops and hasten their
withdrawal from Egypt.
The Anglo-French command an
nounced today it had cleared a
. sunken dredge from the harbor
mouth leading IntoJic Suez Can
al, permitting passage of the 10,-000-ton
Liberty ship size.
It will speed the arrival of U.N.
Emergency Forces, the first ot
whom to arrive by sea will be
700 troops from Communist Yugo
slavia. They will pass through
Port- Said to an as yet undis
closed destination.
Uneasy Cease Fire
Ninety nine Swedish troops for
the UNEF command arrived by
Canadian airlift this morning a'.
the Abu sweir Barracks near ls
mailia, half way along the canal. I
Both Israel and Egypt reported
&UI1IC HtllUII 111 IIIC UL'll
and by Fedayecn commandos in
part, the uneasy cease fire pre
vailed and most of the action had
shifted to the diplomatic front.
Moscow and Cairo joined- in at
tacking U.S. policy in the canal
dispute.
The canal, however, was not the
only center of discord in the
troubled Middle East. Syria and
i.aq, both allied with Egypt in the
Canal dispute, exchanged angry
words among themselves over the
weekend. -
Syria accused Iraq of "collu
sion" with Israel against her and
or supplying arms to would-be
revolutionaries in Syria.
There were predictions that
Syria, with arms supplied by Rus
sia, would move new forces into
tiny, neighboring Jordan to fore
stall a similar move by Iraq.
The United States found itself
the man in the middle in the Suez
Canal dispute, under verbal at
tack by Moscow- and Cairo and
criticized by British Conservatives,
its normal allies in Britain.
.' Blasts at America '
Conservative member of Parlia
ment, F. A. Burton suggested in a
speech that with the "unwitting
cooperation of America," U.N.
(Continued on Page 5, Column 3)
Vice Jury May
Probe Purcell
At AG Behest
PORTLAND UH The Multno
mah County grand jury may again
be put under direction of Atty.
Gen. Robert Y. Thornton for
further investigation of Portland
vice matters.
The Oregon Journal said Mon
day it had learned that Dan
Dibble, a Thornton aide, had re
quested the grand jury for Tues
day and possibly for Thursday and
Friday of this week. The news
paper speculated that a statement
by Police Chief James Purcell,
read into city council records by
Mayor Fred Peterson just before
the election, might in part be the
subject of investigation.
Purcell's 'statement was critical
of Sheriff Terry Schrunk. In the
election, Schrunk defeated Peter
son for mayor.
A grand jury in the summer,
directed by Thornton, brought in
numerous indictments charging
Dist. Atty. William Langley with
conspiring to permit gambling,
Purcell with failing to act against
known law violators, and others
with various offenses.
Yanks Widen
Olympic Lead
With 4 Wins
(Aim see storv an sports page)
MELBOURNE tf - Record
smashing performances in weight-
lilting, superhuman efforts uy
Tom Courtney in the 800-meter
run and an amazing pole vault
by the Rev. Bob Richards gave
the United States four more gold
medals in '.he Olympic Games
Monday as Denmark's Emil Dan
ielsen hung up new world s
mark In the javelin.
Long after Courtney, Richards
and Danielson had thrilled a ca
pacity crowd In the Olympic Sta
dium, Paul Anderson, of Toccoa,
Ga., hailed as the world s strong-1
est man, lifted a total of 1102 1
pounds for an Olympic record and
his second straight heavyweight
championship.
Earlier, Tommy Kono of Sac
ramento. Calif , esianlished a light
heavyweight division record with
a total lift of -J8S2S pound'-
When the days activities had
ended in the wee small hours, the
United States had picked up M
more points and the Russians had
added only 19 to increase the U .S.
lead in the unofficial point total
vtr thf Soviets to 171-107.
It's Official:
OSC to Play
In Rose Bowl
LOS ANGELES MB The Ore-I
eon State Coileee Reavers Mnn.
day were unanimousl) selected as
the Pacific Coast Conference team
to meet Town of tho Rio Tnn in
the Pasadena Rose Bowl game
Jan. 1.
The confirming vnte hv tho nine
PCC schools, nnnnnnpprl hv Pnm.
missioner Victor 0. Schmidt, was
naraiy a surprise.
Oregon State .-linphpri thn nnn.
ference title Nov. 17 although the
Beavers had 3 nairow squeak that
day over lowly Iowa 14-10, A 14-14 j
tie with Oregon Thanksgiving day!
did not hurt the Oregon State:
chances.
Oregon" State finished with a
6-1-1 record in the PCC. The next
three teams, Southern California
and UCLA tied at 5 ? and Wash
ington next at 4-4 were ineligible
for the PCC championship or the
Rose Rowl hprniisp pi pnnfprpnnn 1
sanctions for improper financial!
President
Hungarian
Calls Deportation
'The Ultimate
In Tyranny'
WASHINGTON Twelve
Hungarian refugees met President
Eisenhower Monday and heard
him describe as he "ultimate
tyranny" the exilin& of thousands
of Hungarians at bayonet point.
t
Ike Flies to
Georgia for ,
10-Day Rest
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UP)-Presidcnt
Eisenhower flew here from Wash
ington today for a week or 10 days
of golf and rest.
The presidential plane Colum
bine landed at the Augusta Air
port after a two-hour flight from
the nation's capital.
The -weather was warm and sun
ny as the President and his party
arrived. The Augusta trip is Mr.
Eisenhower's first vacation since
August.
Plans for the trip remained ten
tative until about an hour before
the takeoff because of the tense
world situation. With no new inter
national complications in sight,
Mr. Eisenhower gave the word
and the White House announced
the trip was definitely on.
He and Mrs. Eisenhower and a
group of White House aides flew
south in the government plane
Columbine.
Pres. Secretary James C. Hog
crty said Mr. Eisenhower would
remain at Augusta for "a week
or 10 days." ,
Until Hagerty's announcement,
officials had held out the possi
bility that a last minute change in
the international situation might
force Mr. Eisenhower to cancel
his trip and remain here.
Prep Gridiron
Finals Slated
PORTLAND ifl The Oregon
School Activities Assn. announced
Monday that the class A-2 high
school football championship game
will be played Saturday night nt
North Bend and the B champion
ship game the same night at
Corvallis.
Silverton and Reedrport are the
A-2 finalists while Monroe and
Stanfield seek the R title.
The site for the A-t game be
tween Marshlicld and Medford
was scheduled earlier for Multno
mah Stadium in Portland Friday
night.
60,000 Dockers Return to Work;
Ships Moving After 9-Day Tieup
NEW YORK IB - Brigades of
longshoremen 60,000 of them
in ports from Maine to Texas
went back to work Monday, loos
ening the grip of a nine-day strike.
Ships and cargo tied up during
the period, started moving.
Along the miles of wharfs In
New York rinrnoi, operations
were bustling mo described is
back to normal, leading and un
loading crews rwarnied over piers
servicins more 'nan a dozen shiiw
Dock hands Mid tney were glad
to be back on the job. but dis
appointed no settlement had been
reached in the dispute. No dis
orders were reported.
A federal court restraining or
der issued Saturday ended the
wbIVmiI fnr temnnrarv "coolinff
off" period. I
aid to athletes.
The Oregon State over-all record
this season was 7-2-1.
Within the PCC the "Beavers
beat California 21-13. Washington
State 21-0. UCLA 21-7, Washing
ton 28-20, Stanford 20-19 and Idaho
14-10; lost to Southern California
21-13 and tied Oregon 14-14.
Outside the conference Oregon
State beat Missouri 19-13 and lost
to Iowa 14-13 at Iowa City.
Thus this will be the first re
match in the Hose Bowl of teams
which met during the regular sea
son. The Big Ten conlirmed selec
tion of the Iowa Hawkeyes Satur
day night. It is the first Big Ten
title for Iowa since 1921 and their
first trip to ihe Rose Bowl.
The Hawkeyes finished their
season last Saturday with a re
sounding 48-8 win over Notre
Dome. Iowa nad a 5-1 Big Ten
and an 8-1 over-all record. -
Greets 12
Refugees
The dozen fled their homes be
hind the Iron Curuin, along with!
scores of others already in this,
country, and were selected to
meet the President at the White!
House something they exclaimed!
joyfully couldn't happen in Hun-,
gary.
Eisenhower shook hands with!
each of the 1?, including 3 who
were kept unidentified so as not
to endanger their families back in
Hungary.
"I want to tell you," Eisenhower
said, "that oui country feels priv
ileged in inviting you to the
United States.
"Many thousands ol your people
nave been taken from their homes
by force and sent into-exile at
bayonet point. This is .the ultimate
tyranny. . . to a people. I want to
tell you that this country not only
resents it deeply but we will never
agree that this is the kind of thing
one country may do in justice to
another.''
Eisenhower promised that
American efforts will continue on
behalf of those fleeing Hungary
and that offers of food, medicine
and other help for those that re
main there still stand.
Eisenhower chatted for 10 or IS
minutes with one of the unidenti
fied refugees who speaks fluent
English and heard an eyewitness
account of what happened in Bud
apest after the Russians moved in.
Budapest Says
Curfew Slows
Industry Start
VIENNA m Radio Budapest
complained Monday a Russian
imposed curfew is hampering at
tempts to get industrial produc
tion started again- in Hungary.
The broadcast claimed more
workers reported in plants, mines
and other enterprises Monday,
presumably in response to a back-to-work
promise. But it acknowl
edged continued difficulties in re
storing commercial life.
Radio Budapest said the curfew,
which extends irom 8 p.m. to 7
a.m. interferes especially in the
Tatabanya coal mines. There it
said, workers can only manage
one shift Irom 8 a m to 4 p.m.
"and then have to concentrate
chiefly on repair work."
Lack of public transport is
another handicap, the broadcast)
said. Lack of power also keeps a j
big tractor factory at Kispest;
closed.
Success of the back-to-work
movement was a paramount test
of the Soviet-imposed regime of
Premier Janos Kadar. Widespread
dissatisfaction with Kadar's ex
planation of the disappearance of
former Premier Imre Nagy cast
doubt on its effectiveness.
Several thousand members of
the striking international Long
shoremen's Assn. hurried back to
the piers over the weekend. Work
ers returned to their Jobs in New
York, Jersey City and Hoboken,
N. J.; New Orleans, Hampton
Roads, Va., and Portland, Maine.
The strike starten Nov. 15 in a
contract dispute btween Ihe in
dependent U.A anr the New York
Shipping Assn. The employers'
group represents 17d shipping and
stevedoring 'irms
The walkout immobilized more
than 200 ships in East and Gulf
Coast ports tnd cost the national
economy an estimated 20 million
dollars a day.
Last Thursday Present Eisen
hower initiated invocation of the
Taft-Hartley law. Ht said contin
10 Oregon
People Die
In Wrecks
2KilleTbyFire;
3 Non-Staters
Victims
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
At least 12 Oregon residents died
in violent weekend accidents in
Oregon, Washington and Califor
nia. Two of them were fire victims.
The others died in highway mis
haps. Two Washington residents and
one from California also lost their
lives in Oregon accidents.
At 1 a.m. Monday, John L. Soto,
34, of Klamath Falls, and two of
his children, John- Jr., 2 and
Evelyn, 9, were killed near Mt.
Hebron, Calif., 36 miles south of
Klamath Falls, when their station
wagon and a large truck side
swiped. 3 Seriously Hurt
Mrs. Solo and two other daugh
ters, Phyllis, 6, and Anita, 8,
were in serious condition in a
Klamath Falls hospital.
Margaret Juanita Underwood,
13, and Jacqueline Rose Michcle,
5, were trapped in a bedroom of
a house that was destroyed by a
wind-fanned lire at Grcsham Sun
day. Their bodies were found on
the floor, and Dave McMillan,
Grcsham oolice chief, said the
girls apparently died from suffo
cation. Jimmic Marti, 15, Berkeley,
Calif., was injured fatally Sunday
when a car driven by his father,
William J. Marti skidded on ice
and crashed into the railing on a
300-foot-high iiridge un Highway 26
about 25 miles northwest ol
Madras. The car did not go
through the railing, but State
policeman Walt Stai- said the boy
apparently was thrown out. Mr.
and Mrs. Martin were taken to a
Redmond hospital.
Roseburg Man Killed
Andrew E. Paimer, 31, Rose
burg was killed Sunday when his
car went into a ditch, overturned
and rammed a, power pole. Coro
ner t. L.' Powers said Palmer had
passed one car aro leu me roaa
to avoid hitting an oncoming auto
mobile headon. The accident hap
pencd on the North L'mpqua Road
about three miles east of Rose
burg. Survivors include the widow
and two daughters.
Sam Stigcrs, 51, of the Douglas
County community of Curtin, died
m a two-car collision Sunday three
miles north of Centralia, Wash.
He was in a car driven by Charles
Brown, 65, Cottaee Grove. Brown
and his wife, Dolly 54, were in
jured and taken to a hospital.
Oregon's two worst accidents of
the weekend occurred Saturday a
few hours apart at the same ice
sheathed curve on l .S. Highway
99, six miles south of Canyonville.
Killed in the first accident were
John Leroy Ambuehl, 20, and
Dennis W. Estcpp 20, both of
Portland. Their ca plunged off
the highway and down a 230-foot
embankment. They were on their
way home from the Medford
Bcnson high school football play
off game at Mcdlord.
That accident was not discov
ered until another car went down
the same bank some time later,
killing two Seattle residents. Dead
in the second wreck were Enoch
Alexander Kroon, 73, and Anna
E, Kroon, 43.
Earlier Mrs. Jacqueline Scott
Baxter, 23, Gilchrist, a former
woman professional wrestler, died
when her car left Highway 97 and
went over a bank about five miles
south of Gilchrist.
Ronald Gibbs, 21, Joseph, Ore.,
was killed when his car failed to
make a curve near Vancouver,
Wash.
Vaughn Shclton. 46, Portland,
was injured latally along with
James Bceler, 29 Sequim, Wash.,
when thrown from a car on a
county road near Sequim.
Weather Details
Mi kIhi urn yMtrdiy, 51; minimum
today, 21. Totil 24-hour precipitation:
; for month: 1.13; normal. 5.01. Kf
mn prerlpltatton, S.40; normal, 10.11.
Klvrr rifle hi. J of i font. (Report
by U. R. Weather Bureau.)
uance of the strike would "imperil
the national health and safety."
The government injunction Is
for a 10-day ncriod. Before the 10
days are up, the government is
expected to press for extension ot ,
the order for the lull 80-day "cool-;
ing off" period provided in the
Toft-Hartley law. !
ILA President William V. Brad
ley ordered his me.1 hack to work
shortly after the injunction ws
issued.
Meanwhile, both s.dis said they
are "willing and riady" to resume
contract negotiations.
On a local television show yes
terday, both hradlev and Alexan
der P. Chopin, chairman of the
shipping association, agreed the
strike had bf "unnecessary."
11 Men Die
Forest Blaze in
Teachers
FPC Asked by
PAP to Block
Intervention
WASHINGTON Ut - The Fed
eral Power Commission (FPC)
was nsked Monday to refuse to
let public power groups intervene
in a hearing on a proposal for
two private utility dams in the
Snake River.
The turndown was urged by
Allan Smith, attorney for the Pa
cific Northwest Power Co. (I'NP),
which seeks a licens; to construct
dams at Mountain Sheep and
Pleasant Valley on the Snake be
tween Idaho and Oregon.
Smith made his request after
lawyers for Ihe National Hells
Canyon Assn. ana oiner p u o 1 1 c
power groups completed presenta
tion of their case against Ihe PNP
plan and for federal dams in-
He argued that the public power
6 ... . ...
. mm ilj3l3
i i -mm. tin t . u
i imiimi i v - -
croups, which uic rru aamiuca ; r '
os interveners earlj this year, had'Pram s usual on Monday noon
not shown they w qualified ,0 or the reason that 50 or more bus
"ntcrvenc under the Federal Pow- , industries were
cr Law or under FPC rules.
Smith asserted the inlcrvenors
hod failed to prove the allegations
made in their petitions and that
their further participation in the
hearing would "serve no public
interest."
Evelyn Cooper, attorney for the
intcrvenors, ignored the motion.
Examiner Edward Marsh, presid
ing, said a ruling on Ihe motion
would bo deferred
OSC to Send
Band by Air
To Pasadena
CORVALLIS l Oregon Stale
College got the ollicial word
Monday that it would represent
the Pacific Coast Conference in
ll.- t ..I lnll .11 .fnn.A n nit
promptly mailed ticket applita-
tions to its alumni association
members and fa:uh
It anno-inced, too. that its 100-
piece band will o flown to Pasa
dena Dec. W by Boeing Stralo
cruiser, wilh Ihr college rally
squad, athletic board and college
officials following in a smaller
plane.
The football squad will resume
practices here Dec. 14, and will
fly Dec. IB to Santa Monica to
complete the permitted 16 prac
tice sessions for its New Year's
day game with the Stale Univer
sity of Iowa, a tepm to which it
lost in regular season's play, 14-13.
Coach Tommy Prothro and
Mrs. Prothro flew Sunday to Ha
wail (or n brief .-nralum His part
lw! advice to 'he squad was lo
"stav in pretty swid shape, don't
et overweight anil don't think
about the Hose Howl " He said
later "I know they can t" keep
their thoughts Iron- Ihe New
Year's Day game.
OSC registration for the winter
term will be delated two days to
allow students to return from the
gums in Pasadena.
Get Education in Newspaper Plant
, . About 400 Marlon county
cerning -business In Snlem Monday when the Chamber of Com
merce sponsored its annual Business-Education day. Here a
group of more than 20 teachers look over an automatic type
setting machine In .(ho back shop of the Statcsinan-Journni news-'
paper plant. Other teachers went through business of their own
selection. (Capital Journal I'holo)
400 HERE FOR B-E DAY
Businessmen Host to
Teachers
By STEPHEN A. STONE
Capital Journal Assoclnte Editor
Marion County's 400 or more
school teachers outside of Salem
were guests Monday of Salem bus
inessmen and the Chamber of Com
merce for the third annual Business-Education
Day.
Previously the day has been ob
served mainly by the teachers of
the Salem school district, hut for
this occasion the Salem district
teachers carried on class activities
as usual and gave right of way to
'he other educators of tho county.
Nor was thnri n Ch.imhnr lunr iffin
hosts to teacher groups with lunch
eon arrangements made at plants,
stores or hotels.
llolloway Speaker
The day's program started in
the Norlh Salem High school au
ditorium where Charles ft. lfollo
way, Portland business man and
member of Ihe slate board of
higher education, spoke on "A Di
ploma by Default," concluding
wilh the suggestion that a new
approach to educational processes
could be made whereby the num
ber of persons needed in various
classifications of industry, business,
labor and the professions could he
determined, anil youth trained in
the schools accordingly.
Of grammar schools, llolloway
said that no group ol youngsters
"have Hie same menial capacity,
the same home environment, the
same receptivity, anil no curricu
lum can be devised that will be
inclusive of all. The primary and
EAItNIMGS SET RECORD
Living Costs Edge
ToNewHighPeak
WASHINGTON The gov
ernment reported Monday that liv
ing costs rose 'd of 1 per cent In
October lo another new record. It
was the fourth new peak reached
in a ldjO climb.
The Increase means pay raises
for about I'l million workers in
auto, farm equipment, aircraft
and melalworking industries
whose wage rates are geared in
Parl 10 ,nn governmeni innex.
f'"r """I 'h''"' workers, the
nmoiim oi wie pay raise win oc
10 rents an hour,
Nearly oil consumer spending
categories except food went up in
i October. Food remained un-
changed from September. Prices
for new carstfosc nearly II qtt
cent in October, reflecting higher
Pnc 'S' on 17 models without
While Fighting
teachers got some education con
of County
secondary teacher," he said, "must
'divide his charges into at least
three categories those not so able
who must be aided and abetted;
those of average ability who must
be encouraged to work up to and
beyond their capabilities: and the
(Continued on Pdge S. Column 3)
U.S. Settles
Troop Hassle
With Iceland
WASHINGTON W The State
Department reported Monday "a
tentative afireemonl ' has been
reached with Iceland which de
manded last March that Ameri
can forces be withdrawn from the
big air buse at KcNavik.
A spokesman declined to say,
however, whether the agreement
provides for 'nntinued U.S. opera
tion of the air facilities which
Iceland first irnnted in MM. In
reply to questions, he said:
"This agreement is now being
reviewed by the respective gov
ernments and until Ihe review is
completed I can't discuss lis na
ture.
(The New York Times said Mon
day in a dispatch from Reykjavik
that Iceland had agreed to let
U.S. forces retain their control of
the air base but tinder a direct
arrangement bypassing the Norlh
Atlantic Treaty Organization.)
the dealer discounts that had pre
vailed on the 1956 cars.
The index kept by the Labor
Department's Bureau of Statistics
rose to 117.7 per cent of the 1047
49 average, the base period. This
is '.4 ol I per coot higher than
in September and J. 4 per cent
above October last year.
Ihe bureau reported also a new
' record lor worker earnings
j inc agency sain nei spenunnie
earnings ol factory production
workers their total pay less
federal tax deductions reached
an average for workers without
dependents of US146 a week. For
workers with three dependents. It
was $74.87. These amounts repre
"a toro Of ' cents over
September and' s-j roximatcly
I2.H over, ear jo.
California
Soviets Halt
Berlin-Bound
British Train
BERLIN (UP) The Soviets
havo blocked passage of a West
ern Allied train from Berlin to
the West for the first time since
the Berlin blockade was lifted, a
British spokesman said today.
The spokesman said the Soviets
nt the East-West German border
refused to allow the British mili
tary train to enter West Germany
and sent it back 110 miles to Ber
lin. The train was refused passage
because of "new documentation
procedures," the spokesman said.
Earlier, an American spokes
man said the American military
train traveling to Berlin from West
Germany was held up by the Sov
iets today at the East-West border
for two hours before it was al
lowed to pass.
It was such interference wilh
Western Allied military trains that
led lo the 1048-49 blockade of Ber
lin. The Western Allied ambassadors
In Bonn today discussed the new
Soviet interference and In Berlin
Western allied officials discussed
the matter wilh the Soviets.
Salem Bright
As Fog Cloaks
Near Regions
There was fog to north and
south of Salem Monday, but the
capital area continued to enjoy
some of the week-long sunshine.
Plunc travel was halted in some
areas lo both the norlh and the
smith, but not here, and highway
traffic has been slowed consider
ably except in the central region
The forecast Is for more of the
clear weather here through Tues
day. Again, minimum tempera
lures were below freezing Monday
morning, Salt-in listing a mark of
211. Tiie period of sub-treezing
temperatures with bright sunshine
through the day began a week ago
for Salem.
Five-day forecast Is for fog
over a wide area, decreasing the
last part of the week, with some
chance there will be a little rain
by Friday. Temperatures arc due
lo bo slightly below normal,
Tom Dorscy
Is Found Dead
GltEENWICII, Conn. MV-Bnnd
i leaner lominy uursc) was mumi
i dead in bed at his home here
Monday.
Police Chief Oavid W. Robins
said the cause ot death w as not
immediately known,
He said Dorsey's wife, Janie,
who on Oct 24 sued for divorce
in Suit rlor Court at Bridgeport,
charging cruelty, was at the
Burn to Death
When Pinned
Under Clif f
SAN DIEGO, Calif Wl Eleven
fire fighters were driven back
against a sheer cliff and bupied '.,
to death by flames which raged
through the third day in the Cleve- ;
land National Forest Mnndav.
Tho doomed eleven thre.
U.S. Forest Service men, a coun- ;
ty prison camp guard and seven '
prisoners were trapped Sunday '
night.
Thoy perished as they tried des
perately to climb the cliff some
sliding back oeforo the flames ,
reached them and others clinging '
to the rocks until their clothing
was alirc.
Six Escape
Six other fighters who managed
to escape the trap told of the fate
the eleven.
They said they were operating -
small unit of (ho force of
more than 1,400 men battling the
wind-whipped fire.
The wind, which one described
as "crazy," suddenly lashed up a
i-uu;uu ivauuig uui" me ury san
Diego River bed near Eagle Peak.
It brought the fire crackling and
roaring with it.
in an attempt to escape.., the
eleven men fled into. a ravine.
There they were trapped and per
ished. I
The sheriff's office identified the
Forest Scrvico men as Elbert An
derson, San Diego, and Forest
Maxwell and Howa.o Lingo, Irom
the Shasta-Trinity National Forest
In Northern California. ; ......
Bodies Close Together
The others were: Leroy Wen-'
rung, employe ot the county Vcjai
camp prisoners: Joseph O'Hara,
mucs uanicis, joo UDDeis, L,on
nio Shcpard, George Garcia, Vir
gil Hamilton and William Fallin.
Joo F'lynn, Evening Tribune
photographer who reached the
scene, said: ' ;
"All the bodies were In an area...
no larger lhan 10H square feet.
Five were lying under an over-
hanging ledge, widen they appar- -ently
had died trying to reach."
Eye-stinging smoke lay like a
blue haze over the city and drift
ed seaward.
The fire, roaring along a 44
mile front, had reached to within
six miles of the San Diego suburb'
of Lakeside. But James Fcnlon,
chief ranger for the State Divi
sion of Forestry, said the fire's-
approach toward the city had been
pretty well contained.
U.S. Forest bcrvice officials es
timated that 40,000 acres of tim
ber, mostly pine, and heavy brush
had been destroyed ,'
Court Asked to
End Bus Tieup;
SEATTLE III Mayor Gordon'
S. Clinton prepared to go to the '
courts Monday in a new attempt '
In end a strike of Seattle Transit
System workers, now in its fourth
day. '
Clinton said he would file a pe-'
titlon in Superior Court asking a
temporary injunction tq end the
strike and return the municipally-'
owned buses and trolleys Seat
tle's main means of public trans
portation to service.
However, barring a resumption
of negotiations and an agreement '
between the t'ealtle Transit Sys-
tern and the striking Street Car.
Men's Union, it appeared the
wnlkout would continue through
Thursday because of a required
thrceday notice ol a Superior
Court hearing on the petition.
News in Brief
Monday, Nov. 26, 1958
NATIONAL
Ike Goes to Georgia
For 10-Day Vacation Sec.!, P. t
60.000 Longshoremen
Hcturn to Work Sec. 1, P. 1
LOCAL
Youth Leaves for Rare
Operation Sec. 1, P. S
Salem Businessmen
Host lo Teachers ...Sec. 1, P. 1 ,
STATE
12 Oregon Residents
Victims of Accidents Sec. 1, P. I,
OSC Beavers Get Rose
Bowl Bid .....Sec. 1, P. I
FOREIGN
Port Said Opened to
UN Troops Sec. 1, P. 1
SPORTS
Yanks Win too Meters,
Pole Vault Sec. , P, 3
Silverton in Finals ... Sec. 2, P. 1
Pin Palter Column ...Sec. 2, P. 1
REGULAR FEATURES
A-i,vn,nnl c I n 4
j Editorials Sec. 1, P. 4
I Locals . Sec. 1, P. S
I Society Sec. 1, P, ft, 9, 10
Comics ..Sec. 2, P. 8
Television Sec. 2, P. 8
Want Ads.. Sec. 2, P. 10, It
Markets Sec. 2, P. I
Personal Pcnblrms ...Sec I, P, I
CrossMrd Tuziit Sc. 1, P.