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Show PARTLY CLOUDY TELEPHONE 495 FOR Few showers in the mountains; high 75, low 52. Richest temper-tar- e recorded la ProTo area 63, lowest Saturday Frld:rwas ' morning 43. Herald Advertising Sports, Editorial, iCircutation . Society Phone: ,432' VOL. 32. NO. , Allstate tires 6.00x16, 2 for 528.S3 and your old tires. SEARS, (adv.) ' PROVO; UTAH COUNTY, UTAH 1 -- mm . j- - Hv.UlI I 1.111 1.1 1 HI? A I ill UP Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON The (UP) United Nations command has directly charged the Communists with .violating the Korean armistice by moving war planes and other military equipment into North Korea, it was disclosed --r Saturday. The charge , confirming press reports from Seoul was made in a letter from MaJ. Gen.i J. K. Lacey of the U. S. Air Force, senior UN member of the Korean military armistice The letter dated commission. April 15, went to a neutral nations supervisory commission responsible f or checking fre-que- nt four-memb- er Seven More New, York, Connecticut More Party Leaders WASHINGTON (UP) The Justice Department Saturday announc ed the arrest of seven more Com munist Party leaders in a roundup in Ney York pity and Connecticut. Three of the seven were rounded n. when FBI agents swooped down on a secret Communist Party in a third floor rented art meeting studio- - in New York City. Three were arrested at their homes in New'Havpn. fVmn.l and one at w est Hartford, Conn, ...j Conspiracy Charge The arrests were announced by Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell Jr., and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. All seven were charged with conspiring to advocate overthrow -- violence in violation of the Smith Act. Those arrested ln New- - York were Simon Silverman, alias Sid Taylor, chairman of the Connecticut Communist Party; Robert Champion Ekins, 46, secretary of the Connecticut Communist Stae Committee; and Jacob Goldring, :! . 39. New Haven Reds The other Communists arrest ed were: Joseph Dimam, 34, arrested at his home at New Haven. Alfred Marder, 32, chairman of the New Haven Communist Party, arrested at his New Haven home Sidney Sussman Resnick,32, de scribed as chairman of the Labor Youth League of Connecticut, ar rested at his home at New Haven. James Sherman Tate, 43, of Hartford, Conn., arreted In West liartford. The arrests brought to a total of number leaders rounded up on Smith Act charges to date. 109 the Warren to Receive Honorary Degree 111. JACKSONVILLE, (UP) Earl Warren, Chief Justice of thS United: 'States, will be granted an honorary degree of doctor of laws at MacMurray College commence -- ment exercises President announced. armistice violations. The Defense Department made the letter public Saturday along with other documents on operations of the supervisory commis sion. In an accompanying statement, it accused the Communist members of the NNSC of follow ing "obstructionist tactics to pre vent disclosure and investigation of the military buildup in North Korea." ' : L- - Poland and Czechoslovakia are the two members chosen by the ; communist side. i' Violations Charged Lacey accused North Korea and Red China of several armistice violations." He said of one: ''Reliable in formation available to the United Nations command shows that the Korean peoples army and Chinese peoples volunteers have intro duced operating combat aircraft into the territory under the mili tary control' of the Korean peoples army and the Chinese peoples volunteers and are introducing combat equipment In such a man ner as to bypass and evade-- the neutral nations Inspection teams at the ports of entry in the terrii mi DUif mi June 6, college Louis W. .Norris Indoch ma Gease-Fir- e By RAYMOND LAIIR (UPJ Two Re Senate leaders publican Saturday rebuked Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy on the "secret information" issue feud hearin the ings, one saying the Wisconsin senators statementsare "Beyond - Both Sides Agree To WASHINGTON Start Military Talks To Start Drawing Line Army-McCart- Damages Crops - doing to - j s e, Geneva Steel in reresulted worker Saturdays Delma two of convicts, capture Jack Mealer, convicted robber, and Henry Perkins, 43, convicted of incests The Geneva man, whose name was not learned,' alerted Pleasant Grove police on his way to. work A a admin- the-Eisenho- i"-;"; ... j One-Ma- one-ma- ... N. -- i ..;- , one-ma- l employes to give him secret information on wrongdoing, despite security regula tions. s Ike Hits Back The White House hit back Fri day. With approval of Mr. Eisenhower, it issued a statement saying! the executive branch's responsibility "cannot be usurped by any individual who may seek to set himself above the Jaws df 000,000-federa- EXAMINE DAMAGED CARRIER Captain William F. Raborn, USN (left) commanding officer of the USS Bennington, shows the damage area to Admiral Robert B. Carney, USN j (right), chief of Naval operations. Behind them is Rear Adm. Edgar A. Cruise, USN, Commander Carrier Division 6, who was using the Bennington for a flagship. They are in the bow of jthe damaged carrier. ;4 Death Total 99 AROUND THE WORLD Probers Elicit. Cause of Blast Lone Civil War Vet7l 107,-ToTo 'Take It Easf On Bennington QUONSET POINT, R. I. (UP) commander piy pomtedTthe port catapult Saturday as the probable source of the ex plosions and fire which tore through the aircraft carrier BenAn Air-Gro- up nington killing 99 men. Commander Michael J. of Norfolk. Va.. told a Navy boan of inquiry he was in bed directly below the catapult the" morning of the tragedy when he beard an "unusual noise as the last let was fired. : ."It was an unusual noise, much louder than what you get ac customed to," he said. "Then as I started to get up I heard a hissing sound and brownish yellow, smoke began to appear." Hanley said the corridor outside was filled with smoke. He stuck his head out a porthole of his room and "in a couple of minutes I heard the first of three explosions each about, a minute apart." ; Army-McCart- hy f-- Pvt. -- Knowland conceded that Con Weilenmann Named State Demo Head SALT LAKE CITY Saturday was re - elected -- Democratic State Chairman of Utah jiuring the party's organizational convention in Salt Lake City. Weilenmann, a restauranteer and former personnel director of Salt Lake General Hospital, was elected to his second two-year term as Democratic State Chairman by a vote of 430 to 209 over Walter H. Anderson. Anderson, , former Salt Lake County Commissioner and U: S. Internal Revenue worker who retired last year, has served as District- - Ward Chair man and as a member of the Salt Lake County Executive Com mittee of the Democratic party. Mrs. Charles C. Gardner of Bountiful was elected State Vice Chairman without opposition: She - gress sometimes Would be handicapped without "leaks." But he belief that any official Albert Woolson, at 107 expressed would be on "highly dangerous DULUTH, Minn. (UP) doubtful ground .ihi giving y ear s the lone survivor of the Union Army of the Civil aandsecret document to a member War, obeyed orders "like a good soldier Saturday. of Congress rather than supplyHe was under strictlommand to take it easy during ing it through official channels to r succeeds Mrs. Algie Baliff , who this Memorial holiday weekend and participate in only a not seek did Smith, in a statement, went . few observances. Denouncing the educational pol V 4 - His daughter said Woolson would take part in the further.. ot uo v. j. uracKen iee, icies 'The senator, as an individual, lemorial day parade Monday and review jDuluth's Re- - has no authority, . expressed or Salt Lake attorney John S. Boy-de- n Saturday characterized the to demand or receive serw-4Jiiice- r iraining orps juesaay. nui, sne saia, implied administration classified information or executhat wasal of one as rather showmanship tive confidences from executive than economy. employes," Smith said,As keynote speaker for the Di- Prime Minister Smith said that ! McCarthy's ennial r CANBERRAr Australia (UP) Democrat f state - organiza as - an in- implication that-he,Robert G. Menzie 'conservative government appears to Jdividual convention tional here, Boyden told can call for disclosures have won a parliamentary election victory, expected to or classified 962 delegates Utah is "witness the or confidential infor a government by negatives. It strengthen its hand in dealing with the threa tof com mation from the executive de ing is against education, It is against ; munism m southeast Asia. , partment, must be based on a It is against taxation, it spending. of his Latest returns from Friday's voting for a new House misunderstanding by him interference. It re- -. federal deplores . . of Representatives gave the government coalition of the authority." to fuses proclaim a United Nations Smith said tartly that "The Liberal and Country parties 58 seats to 55 for the La- day. But what is it for?" " Boyden, a candidate for the Dem bonte re-electi-on. 1 - . : , . -- -- Utah-Republ- ican -- " - " opposition. i , MCCARTHY'S TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP) Former Ku Klux Klan leader Bill Hendrix said Saturday, he will run for gpvernor of Florida this year on a platform of white supremacy. j Hendrix, a Tallahassee contractor, said he wouljd run in the November election as an Independent, write-i- n candidate against Democratic - nominee Republican-nomine- e J. Tom "Leroy Collins" :Watson. :. -- Hanleys testimony followed that of Capt William F. Ttaborn Jr., commander of, the Bennington, who said an "explosive mix ture earned by the ventilating system may have touched off the blast. . Hanley said the smoke "defi nitely had an oily smelt like you might get in a cockpit (of a Sen. Estes Kefauver COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (UP) plane) when you have a malfunc announced as a candidate for a tioning hydraulic system." (D Tenn.) Saturday -- J our laid." j The issued at first only a sidehearlight to the ings on the "treatment" G. David Schine, is over a secret document McCarthy - received from what he said was a young Army intelligence officer. The document contained ver batim quotes from a secret FBI ld report.-- . Attorney General Her bert JBrownell Jr., and the White House ruled against its disclosure. -- . : ad : I second term, declaring "My platform is my record. In seeking the Democratic nomination, the "senior Tennessee senator said he wants to return to the Senate to "continue" a three-poiprogram seeking to end war means as a. of international fare disputes, to pre settling serve the Tennessee Valley Authority in I its "present American Fork Police Nab 2 Escaped Convicts -- i junior senator from Wisconsin is one of 96 senators "He serves on a committee of the Senate only by authority of the entire Senate. Every member of that committee is entitled to access to all evidence and to all information that the chairman is entitled to receive. n Government n "We cannot tolerate a execuneither the in government tive or legislatvie bodies.""-Smith said he protested with all the vigor at my command any senatorial defiance of the executive in this crisis I will have istration before running to ' Con is gress. And Sen. H. Alexander Smith (R-J.) said he was shocked by no part-oMcCarthy's statement "defying He-- f it." said that if there is a the President of the United constitutional (executives-legislative- ) States." contest, then the Senate's McCarthy first hurled the chal must be determined by its position lenge to President Eisenhower action ana n ac"not oy when, he invited all of the 2,- tion." ng .'"-- hy belief.- "Senate GOP Leader William F. Knowland urged government em ployes to take evidence of wrong- Weather Ufarms After Frost A tip from n. CCiniDirQdl, Action Seen By EDWARD M. KORRY United Press Staff Correspondent GENEVA (UP) East and West agreed Saturday to start military talks "here as soon as possible to lines for start drawing cease-fir- e Indochina. French officials an nounced Saturday. The officials disclosed during a tory under the military control recess in the afternoon s session of the Korean peoples army and that invitations have already been the Chinese " peoples volunteers. sent to the French and Communist an oi wmcn are aeimerate voia- - high commands. tions of the armistice agree They said the first meeting of ment." 1 the military teams may take place Lacey said he has requested as early as next Tuesday. an investigation of the violations First Concrete Action but the North Korean and Chinese The report was the first con Communist members of the crete action to be taken by the (Continued on Pafe Two) nine nation conference in five weeks of negotiation to end the long and costly war. Earlier, authoritative sources said American delegate Walter Bedell Smith" suggested an early meeting with Emperor Bao Dai of Viet Nam to impress upon "the playboy monarch the need for more forceful leadership of his embattled nation. armers Dreatnea easier m The 11th session of the Indochina Utah County today!) with the un- - peace talks got under way with seasonai cold speu of Friday and Soviet Foreign Minister Vyachefe Saturday mornings apparently lav M. Molotov in the chair, s Qjspersea lor tne present. Smith broached the idea of a Temperatures, w,hich dropped talk early next week at nearby to crop-nippilows Friday Evian, France, where Bao Dai morning and hovered near freez made his headquarters during a ing Saturday moraine, were ris brief stay in the early stages of the ing Saturday and 4' the Weather conference. The Emperor returned oureau preaicted warmer weath- to Cannes more than two weeks er for today andjMonday, with ago and has remained on the some showers., j Riviera since. Farmers and gardeners were Displeased With Bao still assessing the damage from Western diplomats have not dis the spotty frost which hit Friday. their discontent over the The damage ranged from serious guised to almost nil, depending on the continued absence of the Emperor both from his homeland and the location. Agricultural officials said Sat conference. urday considerable! damage was The United States, a strong sup found in the Pleasant View area, porter of "Viet Namese survival as with serious damage to apples, an independent nation, is pouring one billion dollars early in pears and sour cherries. There almost was spotted damage on the lower to the defenses of the country. Orem Bench and j in the river The nine nations attempting to in Indochina negotiate a cease-fir- e bottoms region. There was considerable dam called off a meeting of Far East age also in the Pleasant Grove experts and put the responsibility . for ending the shooting on the for ; area.: j Some damage to raspberries eign ministers themselves. was reported, the j first time in " The experts, two from each naclose to 25 years that raspberries tion, held their first meeting Frihave been frozen,1 to any ap aaytm an attempt to draft a of agreeto document listing-point- s preciable degree, Taccording ment and disagreement in rival j one source. ' There was spot damage to peace plans. French Political Crisis gardens all over the county; also to beans. peas. Corn and to Another meeting was scheduled ! matoes. for thi-- t morning but it was can In the south end of the county, celled suddenly when it was de considerable damage to canning cided the differences were so great crops was reported in West Pay that they would have, o 'bet arbi sonT Benjamin and Lake Shore trated at the highest level. Apples were hit heavy in regions Western observers considered worst. There tne afternoon closed session a where the frost-wawas some frost bite in Mapleton critical one because it could decide to apples and tomatoes. A slight the fate of the French government amount of damage was also found of Premier Joseph Laniel as. well in tne sweet cherries. as the future of Indochina. The French National-Assemb- ly opens debate on Indochina Monday and unless Foreign Minister Georges Bidault can confront the deputies with good "prospects of a cease-firLaniel's' government will find it difficult to remain in power. . . p n s Commies Arrested ' FIVE. CENTS vlolsfingi Mm I PRICE lUmm Cofflfi innjsfs w SUNDAY, MAY .30, 1954 nt the welfare of the struggle for survival," and to promote citizens of his home state. , man posse Friday "just across the crick," but the men had not WASHINGTON (UP) An authoritative source said seen them. The creek Is believed to have Saturday that the J. Robert Oppenheimer security case been! Bull Holler creek which will leave lasting wounds "no matter how it turns out." runs down the foothill area from to be is he said.: ocratic gubernatorial nomination in the 1948 primary, has been men tioned for his party s nod in 195. Tracing the recent history of Utah's school problems through school the report of the r60-ma-n survey commfttee, Boyden said a special session tefconsiderjts findings was called ohly'by "fear of a total collapse of our school system coupled with the persuasion of past supporters ofjthe governor." -- WHEREABOUTS DEEP MYSTERY " f WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's whereabouts were something of a mystery Saturday.' The Wisconsin Republican told reporters, Fridaye and" his wife, Jeanr"were; going to Land 0' Lakes, Wis., for the weekend. They didn't show up, and the resort where McCarthy said he would stay reported it had noLreserva-tion- s for them. s McCarthy's office was cios- ed, and no one . answered his ,; i'J A member of his subcom mittee 3staff said, "He's out of town.. All I can say is that he's notiin Wisconsin." - - LeadershipAbsent During the session.ie said "the leadership of an executive was pitifully absent and the most important bills were passed only-raft- er the governor found himself down that Road of No Return," and both . own par- Houses,controlledby-hi- s ty, overrode his .veto." . home-felepho- - 7 . Paraphrasing Mark- - Antony's speech in "Julius Ceasar," Boyden said "But he comes to bury learning, not to praise it.lHere. ...come 1 :4 speak in education's funeral." (Continued on Page Two) ne. j : , ths Rise Slowly As Skies Clear Over Nation "Nobody going happy," one Dr. ; of the prime developers- - of Oppenheimer, Participating in the search SatBy UNITED PRESS in World War II, was suspended last 'Decemurday were six Utah County depu- the rate was At the time, thiTdeatb deaths mounted Traffic after he saw twomen Saturday ties, American Fork and-- . Pleas- ber as an Atomic Energy Commission consultant and today as skies cleared over slowly. I'lll les - mau uiree much a uiue. running morning on the ioo thills a mile ant Grove police and a large barred from further of the nation and - motorists an houribut-- a Safety Council accessjsecret data. : south of American Fork Canyon. number of prison guards. this often noted Me that the for the spokesman jammed highways Later Saturday morning, the The convicts Saturday were re" was tne case on long holiday morial holiday. escapees were, arrested by turned to the which result in high traffic K survey showed 99. persons AKRON, O. (UP) Delegates of the 250,000 ' American Fork police officers. prison, from which they dug totals.- -' death K ' in killed traffic during the first member United Presbyterian Church j of North 30 Police Officer Boyd Adamson their: way to freedom Tuesday was One killed and man three the of ht)urs holiday period America voted Saturday to submit to its 51 Presspotted the pair, who twice evening. at 6 p.m.! Friday. Ten were injured Ayhen a beginning. in escaped Utah State prison, in The prison clothing which the byteries a proposal to merge with twa larger persons were drowned; one died military p 1 a rfe 11 gully brush, as he climbed a hill pair were wearing when they near the diec woodlands an in new and crash a of Municipal airplane bodies, creating organization 100 yards east of the highway escaped was flushed from an irFill River, Mass. in miscellaneous accidents for a followers. 2,500,000 nearly which leads from Pleasant Grov rigation ditch near Alpine Friday Helen 121 Mrs.' accidental deaths. total of Mbntenier, 50, wife Alpine to Lehi. -- A-bo- ' 11 - X1 ! - r - weeK-en- i ds Point-oMhe-Moun-t- ' COLOR ! two-engi- Presbyterian V Air-port-- at Marna Clarissa Schultz, 22, of Takoma Park, Md., is the 1954 color girl at the U. S. Naval Academy. Chtfsen by Midshipman George B. Parks of San Francisco whose was judged best in brigade, she will reign over June Week activities. GIRL com-jfpa- ! ne crash-lande- d ny to the mouth of American Fork , Canyon. "We've got them," he shouted to Thell Meacham, another Amer ican Fork police officer, and Utah County Deputy Sheriff Ross Kay. The convicts came out of the brush and surrendered to the American Fork police officers. They told the officers that they had seen searchers from a 100- - !t morning, a few hours after the men broke into the Dan Greenland home near Alpine, and stole clothes, bedding.Tfood and knives. Friday morning a posse, including two horse units, an aircraft, dozens of prison guards and city and county peace officers concentrated search for the convicts in the foothill area around Alpine. 100-m- an -- Ned H. Dearborn, I president of WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D., the National Safety Council, , was rate of, deaths apprehensive as-tLa.) said Saturday night there is "little doubt that began a slow begina after rise Guatemala has become, the hub of a widespread Com- ning. T" -. munist network which covers South f America." "The holiday traffic death toll He saidthe United States, by "practically ignoring is moving tragically close to South America," May have "invited to our own neighbor- is maintained, the,;toll by he jpt.from the Western Hemisphere. 1 i I.I: . Bar-ringto- n, 111. ir;-- mid-schedul- that very evil which, thankfully, has so far vmcago cosmetics manuiaciurer. was killed in: the collision of two automobiles Friday night at William A. Salzmar, Meadowdale, 111., driver of the other car, who had just learned; of son the death of his from measles, also was killed. . rate this said. "If he been night Monday will reach even son, Dennis, were injured critically. pass the grand total. of 340 deaths -- hood : of Dr. Jules Montenier, 59, wealthy 1 jr ' 7 e," 37, -- two-year-o- ld |