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Show - , - , -- , - , , , . , . ,. , ... ,, , ,: ,, i..,..,,,,,, - ... - WEATHER - 'VOL. , , Occasiona l Showers ' , .., 341 ,Nso. - , '. - - ', -- A4 REPOAT,-PAG- ' - - ' .: '. - ' ...' ., ' ' ,,,',:r - I:AKE CITY, UTAH ',' ' ','- ' - ,' -- ' 2, It. i ' MOUNTAIN THE , Siding . ,.....,,. ....,..... ,. , .... .. , ....,.........,, .: ... ., .. .. . .. ..,, On Truce, ........ .... '''''''''''',''''':::: :,,,,;;- .. , ,'' .. PANMUNJOM 1A1- -11. N. ne-- ..; it ,:.... gotiatorsTuesday threatened to ,,12reak ait-th-e renewed Korean armistice talks unless the Corn- - munisturonteup-sootrwitir-- It--- ,.,. ''.;.--7,ti; a ..:::: - concrete Proposal for exchang ing prisonerslast big obstacle to a truce. - ' k ''' ; ' .., fil;4. t?' - ::,'- - ,, ' ': .... ,t :,,.w-,- :..:: '..,,,.',',. ' .- Neutral State The Allies asked the Reds to name a neutral state which , . would assume custody of prisoners unwilling, to return to Communist rule, but received to definite answer. The Cornmunists , have indicated they Poland or might name Red-ru- n Czechoslovakia,neither of which would bp acceptable to the U. N. command. The Corn. inunists rejected Switzerland. The lull, delegations met for 39 minutes and will meet again .Wednesday at - five-memb-er - 11-- ,- (8 MST). They were hung Won three Main points: 1. The neutral state to handle balky prisoners. 2. The length of time after an armistice necessary for disposal , of prisoners. 3. Whether prisoners will be r. shipped to the neutral state or be held in Korea while their fate is decided. Nothing New , ?forth Korean Gen. Nam offered nothing new in lengthy statement Tuesday. It was nothing in the world but a rehash- of what was said before," Ilarrisop told ' men. ; N. Nam once more called for de. bate on deciding the neutral state and he described the six- point proposaLbe, advanced at the opening session Sunday as reasonable. This proposal called for re patriating within two months , after an armistice prisoners wanting to go home, and for sending to it neutral state those Within refusing repatriation. the following six months, representatives of Red China and North Korea - would - be- - permitted to visit the prisoners in neutral custody and give them explanations" to quiet their apprehensions" about return-I- n home. .. ::... .4: :, A ". -- ''''' -- ' .,i "'''""',2- '', , '''' --, ,, so., , ' ment Mason said his espionage took place between September, 1943, and juhe, , 1945, at the Cleveland branch of 'General Motors. Sen. Welker (R., Ida.) termed Mason'i story "most -- t fantastic." The witness said be was able , t ... :!-- 0 TUIPIIONI ' ..,. .. , - .. 4.2 ' - , .. TUESDAY, 'APRIL ' 7 28,1953 5c , 1 - ' 35 ' . - ,. 0 r1, , t Me - for - a , - is d mit u G-1- C-4- er I WASHINGTON of Commerce Sinclair-- Weeks said Tuesday there will be "no sudden nosedive in defense proAnd there is no duction." reason to fear a business inist when and if peace comes, be Added. 13-ho- "StockZbart6tThittlittlons,' - of course," Weeks told the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. "Adjustments during transitions following later reductions in defense 'spending, sure. Some downturns in business activity in. specific lines after ends, yes. "But no depres- Via litins, Others er y fund. Senators generally applauded Cold the plan, althotigh fear was ex- psychological pressed that the warfare Move- - might backfire. Chair in n Saltonstall (R-',;Massof the SenateArmed WASHINGTON (UP) Con- 1Services Committee said in an interview he regarded the offer gressional leaders gave a cold as a bold stroke. reception Tuesday to President "Any step, however unusual Eisenhower's plea ,for legisla- and unprecedented, that leads tion to, remedy "injustices" of in the direction of a satisfactory Isolution of the war in Korea is the McCarron-Walte- r Immigra- worthwhile and should tried," he said. Rid The initial response in both Sen. Morse the offer furnishes indicated ex. "another House Senate and the Mr. Eisenhower will have as ample of taking the initiative in demonstrating to the people little success as former Presi behind the Iron Curtain that the dent Truman in seeking revi- Western nations are seeking sion of the law. only peace and to bring the war Eisenhower listed 10 in Korea to an end ,without , Mr. "injustices" in the law Monday bloodshed." But Sent Sparkman (D., ie.) V. ,a letter to Watkins (R., Utah), chairman of a member of the Senate Foreign rest to Ike on "The administration would not stt twirling its thumbs if at some far-of- f date it shobld be confronted by a sizeable economic emergency." s, - Awaiting them at Hickam Field are ark Air Force band, hula dancers, lel bearers and leading military and civilian officials.. , flight back over the Pacific, were under the care La crew of hospital corps. men and four nursesone of them a luscious, blonde. The wolf whlitles started when the boyr saw her at the se here. Immigrant Lau sion, ANN -- d among livestock." Asked If he knew the for.' mule was going .to Russia, Mason replied: "irs, considering Russia was our seemed no more than right they have all the enmeans to fight emy and the preservation of livestock was as important as manpower. He said he 'dia not know how Mosthe formula was set we were not alCOW because lowed to ask our (Communist) superiors too many questions." It n - , IWO an . , , ' - - wolf-whist- N.Doctor,Aboard .) . 1 ,, ., Sen.-Arth- - On , --4 s i s ', , , 3 , alidelands Bill rat : ' , r oes - 1111110 4 :, Onllote Date ' :, - , I t - I , 4 long-debate- Hurl t t , - - r ' , - '' - ; ' ; . : , , - : , n - ; -; all-nig- ' , ,,.:- ----- Threat ' , -- 7 An , - 0 28-e-i- - ip. 1(orea Rail Ace ' . I , .. , ?, .. , . . Vedis Call 2, I uri fr-2- 13; 1 M' 11rUCEZ r passenger train to he rerouted a stalled gasoline transport near Derby, a North Denver , via Denver.- Both deaths occurred in the suburb. , He was one of three who rode , Wyoming derailment. Trapped throtigh a blazing, inferno after andAilleras--a big: steantloco- - the gasoline exploded aad let motive toppled over were engi. fire to a mail car from which neer Leo G. Murry, 42, and post office workers frantically , fireman Lawrence Endres 23, dumped sacks of mail while, it , both from Rawlins, 43 miles still coasted to a halt- east of Red Desert. Suffering burns Along with ; Zrakeman James R. Ander. Moore were engineer ,Charles ton, 37, of Rawirns, also was R. Roush, 67, and fireman Virgil in the locomotive. 1Coleman, 36, also of Laramie. , pinned Workers using torches and hack They escapect serious injury. Harold Nicks, 26, of Denver , saws finally freed him more than 10 hours later. Ile suffered said his big transport, loaded burns and an injury to the leg with 5500 gallons of gasoline, by which he was pinned, but stalled on a crossing minutes was said to be in fair condition 'before the passenger train rounded a curve. He tried to at is Rawlins hospital. "It , was a miracle any of Us flag the streamliner, ,saw it ". , got out of it alive," Edward couldn't stop and , dived over ' Moore, 60, of Laramie, Wyo., a an'embankment to safety. Nicks Union. Pacific road foreman, blamed a 'dead -battery for haltr said atter the streamliner hit ing the truck. - t a 0 - - j , - - , i - i 1 Carrier; -- - - , - - Boiler Explodes TODAY - , dents Pocatello Pilot - ... .::,:-::--:--- -- -- , - , .. Five" peace conference. Chinese Communist Foreign Minister ; Chou En-la- i joined Molotov in calling for the conference of the world's Big Five. State Department spokesman! I , Michael McDermott Issued I 'statement expressing : the proposed discussion of war issues might "degener- - P n all OA Oak ate. into- - a mere propaganda ' ! III The proposal was battle!' branded the "standard Stalinist- Communist proposal for many years." - Soviet Russia declared its sup- , port for negotiations for a peace pact among the Big Five, ,WASHINGTON (MISenate ' ' including Communist China. opponents of the tidelands bill, who have fought the measure Chou Voices Support ., New China through 21 days of debate, Shortly after to start agreed Tuesday voting 4 News Agency, monitored In London, repqred Chou as ex.. next Tuesday. The "surrender" offer was pressing his support of the pro. : posal made by the Communist made by Sen. Clinton P. Ander- N. M.), In the U1 leader "international Committee of the SOn (D., battle- - against the d , Peoples for Peace." Molotov accepted 1nthe name bill to award states the owner. : the ship of submerged coastal lands. t otthe Soviet government11 Ki lied,-- 1 fOr such proposal meeting as He said the bill's opponents put forward by the committee. will agree to limit arguments to WASHINGTON tillA boiler (The organization is part of four hours on each amendment, : Tuesday, and to start explosion in the aircraft carrier the "World Council of Peace," - beginning or- voting on amendments and the Communtstdominated la Benningtón Monday ki4d 111I ed about a year hill at 2 p.m.- - next Tuesday, enlisted men and injured seven ganization May 5. ago.) others hear .Guantanamo Bay, his reply, published Tues. ':1. Accepts Offer day in all Moscow newspapers, der setiatio,Repubucani, ' The 'Navy said preliminary Molotov said: Robert A. Taft accepted the ; exindicated the that reports "The Soviet government eon- offer and presented it to the plosion was caused by a "fail- elders there are no such eontro- - full Senate for formal agree. ,,, ure of boiler tubing in the 27e venial or unsolved problems ment Such agreements require ' 000-to- d carrier's' nutnber two that could not be Solved by unanimous consent of pleMbers ' ' boiler.; , peaceful means. present The Bennington was, under the Soviet gov- - The agreement came after "Accordingly', shake-dowon a way training ernment has declared its connotice at Tues.- run in the vicinity of the naval stant readiness to collaborate Taft had servedthat the Senate day's opening base off the southeastern Coast with the governments of other see. be kept i n of Cuba when the accident oc- states for the achievement of would some such agree. imlest lions curred. the high alms of strengthening ment were made. of the injured, six suffered peace and understanding," The agreement would stretch ; second degree steam burns, the I Carried debate on the bill to five weeks. Editorial condition said. The of the Navy The same issue of Pravda It first came to the Senate ' seventh man, similarly injured, L was listed as 4dsertous. All of ,which carried the Soviet note, floor April -Vaiilshis-the injured have beenMoved signed"bst instruction of the Sen. Wayne Morse (mnd, from the ship to the Naval Hos- Soviet governmentblolotov,", 28- which whose record editorial said: an carried at Guantanamo. Ore.), pital "The people realize if the Big minute speech featured the The Bennington was recommissioned at the New York Five powers whose population talkathon, admitted that ther Naval, Shipyard last Nov. 13. makes up almost half of man- "little band of liberal? fighting The commanding officer is kind will live in, peace, then the bill; used the "filibuster Capt. D. B. Yotulg, Alexandria, universal 'peace would be guar- - technique." But he and the , others had uid frequently they teed. were not trying to keep the Reports from the ship said a inal , fromcoming-tiydamage wts "slight." A full in- 2 Unions Attempt vestigation is being conducted , threat of by the liavy. To Sign Up Garagemen vanished with the , on a voting' time. WASHINGTON 01 Two of mewal MacArthur Plans Trip the APL's largest unions have , ' embarked on a Joint campaign Dismissed To Philippines Soon Jury to sign up an estimated million f. -- -- A MANILA, April garage employes as union morn. criminal grand jury investigat- - . Douglas MacArthur plans to ben. ' visit the Philippines soon, his They tried to get such a drive ing an alleged global oil cartel former pilot said Monday. started a few years ago, and it was dismissed at the govern. ,: Col. Anthony Story said Mac- - failed, but now the A I? 's Ma. merit's request Tuesday but 41,,,, Arthur told him of his plans chinists and Teamsters Union administration left the d in New York recently. say they mean it. open for another such probe. 1 4- tu "t.-- Combined INS and IJ.F. , There were no doctors on the planeproof that the G. Ls have made an amazing come. back since they were freed in I Korea last week. , Army bands blared in front of the two hospitals where the G. Le went through final Procur essing- as they came out and piled into shiny black staff cars for ride through the a Senate-Hous- e immigration Relations Committee, said he streets of the Tokyo. if wonders the He committee. psychological "watchdog" s'ire.-onilin'o::,'.K.it..":e,asked for prompt bearings On warfare move might boomerang no if Communist remedial legislation. pilot takes up But Sen. Watkins told a re- the offer.''', I DENVER (RI TwO train porter that it is "too early to 300 miles apartone in- start writing amendments to a BASEBALL wrecks . law that has only been in Opervolving a passenger stream. Becomes-To- p ation two or three months." linerkilled two Union.Pacific NATIONAL be-b- as no: present Railroad 'crewmen and injured plans to schedule committee Milwaukee at New York, ' others Monday. on four Mr. Eisenhower's hearings night. A much graver disaster was request. Cincinnati at Brooklyn, eight. narrowly avoided as the pas. Re- p- Francis E. Walter (D., Chicago at Pittsburgh, night. of the act, said trikAn Idaho pilot senger train, the Union Pacific's Pa.), St. Louis at Philadelphia, Mr. Eisenhower had "'joined night. become the top rail ace of his westbound San FrancisccrOver. crashed into a . t who have the army of critics bomb 4,ing in Korea Monday. land Limited, outside Denver ' AMERICAN' failed to read the act they critgasoline truck " . , night, icize." and spewed flaming fuel over Washington 001 000 2xx Col.. E. B. LeBailly;- - 536 E. two cars. Another car carrying He said none of the 10 "in- Chicago ....230 000 7xx justices"- actually exist and that Masterson, Nixon (2), Far, Bebtón St., Pocatello, e'arned a cargo of explosives hastily be .given a( ,rieles (4) and Grasso; - Johnson the distinction was towed out of danger and the law when, be knocked chance to operate before lany and Lollar. all 200 passengers escaped in. out a Red locomotive, ru'nning, changes Care considered. jUry his score to seven engines de: The first wreck, a pileup of 000 Olx Jr ,Watkins and Welter sherply Boston 000 00x xxl , a Union Pacific 'freight train disagreed with Mr. Eisenhower Detroit stroyed, McDoslibtt and White; Hoett on the first of his ,objections to at 'Red flesertin Southwestern a caught locomotive Eellailly , the billplat its regulations and Batts. Wyoming, led in part to the New York at St. Louis, night. and estring Of freight cirs.'Mon- second. It blocked the railroad's covering the crews of foreign at Cleveland, .day night near Hungnam on double main line, causing the Philadelphia ships In U. S. porta are much too strict. the NortheaSt.,Korea coaAt. nfght. ' Francisco No. 27 Chicago4o-Sa- n , i,1,, , , : - ame---- :. .' t -- to steal the blueprints because he bad succeeded in getting a file job. He said the blueprints were tor an engine used in the maritime landing craft. He thought he had managed to steal all the 100 blueprints-,involvein the craft's engine but later learned from a "comrade" he had nbt obtained all of them. Ma 3011 said that before going. to General Motors, be worked for a time in Du Pbnt chemical plant in Cleveland where he stole a formula "which 'had to do v.rith prevention of disease - ....., . , : an s fa. , , and . injured 60, erupted again TuesTOKYC( day with a rumbling roar. No P) -- Thirty-fiv- e one was reported hurt. rican soldiers, jubilant ;Observers said the volcano, freed. from C mmunist prison on the southernm9st Japanese camps, took off for Honolulu, ',island of Kyushii, shot red I California and home Tuesday rhot rocks 600 feet into the air: inthe &ILI:light ottlicArmy's, Huge columns of smoke r up over the crater.- .4, "freedom airlift." Those killed and injured They ate due in Honolullu Monday were on an excuision day afternoon and at Travis In connection ith their grad- among a Cal., Wednesday. Then uation. They large group w idh scampered the blast-for shelter were no Mountain ing cone. ottside prisoners of war listed , to aboard Tuesday's flight.) olons Praise Peace Won', ,, as ing ort Declares ''' .: lo .school s liu anti-Frenc- Weeks Asserts. . ' WASHINGTONThe State Department Tuesday virtually volcano, which reawakened' Minister Molotov's proposal for a 'Big Monday arid killed five high rejected Soviet Foreign - 0 .rt . - will be sped by, plane to Vietminh they HANOI, homes in 21 states. their armies overran French positions northeast of Luang Prabang Eight of the boys' who same and pushed spearheads Tuesday within 12 miles of the Laos back were on stretchersbut all royal capital. h The- - advancing Reds, helped by Laotians, In- were homeward bound from thehorrors of the Communist hellstalled local representatives of camps in which thousands bf "free Laos govern- the their comrades perished.. in ment" of Souphanou Vong S Planes each center captured. - AnotheuDaily Advance elements of two plane load Av111 um Communist columns marching low them over the Pacific on Luang Prabang Monday Wednesday; weather permitting, a I reached Sopvi, 30 miles to the and others will leave here on west. Tuesday, Communist succeeding days. It is hoped that all 149 Amer.- spearheads were spotted around T ,B- y., 4. the outer defense perimeter of icans treed in the exctiange ' the city 12 miles away. , of sick and wounded prisoners WASHINGTON ihiThe' Air win be able to make the trip. The Reds also captured Pak-The G. 1.11 to Tuesday's first seng, 40 miles northwest of Force has fired its first "silver Luang Prabang and one of the bullets" in an effort to get what freedom flight took off at 3:55 last solid barriers before-- , the gunfire hasn't bagged in Korea p.m. (2:55 a.m. Tuesday EDT) A live Communist pilot with from Tokyo International AircltY- , French commanders of scat-- a flyable M I 5 or other mod- port under a hot, bright sun double-deckter- - ern Soviet warplane. 7 tered outposts In Red-hel- d in an immense ritory throughout Laos were In offering rewards to Red transport plane, military ordered to fight to the last man pilots who land their planes on version of the Boeing Strati,- to delay concentration of enemy allied airfields, the United Na- cruiser, on the flight tions command has come up to Honolulu. , troops before Luang Prabang. A French command spokes- - with a letlge yerston Of an seThey wore new uniforms, with men said the battle for Luang cepted tactic in the gaudy era Eisenhower jackets and with the insignia of their old outPrabang might start "within of Chinese warlords. two days if not earlier.". ,.The announced price scale for fits on their sleeves. the first man and aircraft is Stopover $100,000 .anctfor, each ,subse! On- their- - anival (pent pilot and plane, half as I 'much. Any rewards will be paid Field, Honolulu, they will be takenArmy Hospital out of anAir Force contingent for a one-dastopover and some (UP)Commtmist-le- A ,. , .. h.11. TOKYOW.-Moun- I Wot':1.46s,..-CE;ii4.t.0.INDO-CHIN-A .., 44 ., ., :: ' z ,, 5 Freselertlisit Time pg I - Reds Push Drive - ,, Jap' anVolcapp, Homes intlii S -- '',..,. - - . ... .,, , , .,.... . Ex-PO- Ws tave- 77 ed fl I. 'LUC' ,RETREAT NEAR CAPITALA detachment of Viet Nam troops pulls back id the Ind. 12 miles of Laos' China kingdom of Laos as Red Vietminh troops advance --- -to within 777.7777..:77. capital city., (United Press Photo.) Police-towthe- - extra car to a parking lot, where it wat claimed later by a man who '' had reported it stolen. o'T , - -' c, , , '''''''''''''. ,...,... . . . , LOUISVILLE, KY. 1M Mrs. Susie Deibel, alarmed because another automobile was followirm hers too closely, stopped Monday night to find out what it was all about She found that the bump-- era were locked and concluded that she had pulled the empty vehicle from the curb in driving away, ,,. ) , ,1q0,00,-i,.01'fi.-0-6)- - SALT. LAKE TILIG p, .. A., , Rji.l..Re i:l.':..Eita.i10-0.::,-:'.- -- ' , , , (Ind.-Ore- -- ,, , , Woman Driver Learns Why Carls,So Close 0 - ' . -Pont forWASHINGTON (INS)--- A .4 met Communist testified Tuesthat be stole numerous -- day blueprints from the diesel en- gine divison of General Motors during World. War II for transtnission to Moscow. Thad Mason, 49, of Walling' ton, N. J., told the Senate In, ternal Security Subcommittee ow lie ,aneakedthe blueprints out of the plant under the eyes of guards by rolling them in a which he pretended - newspaper Jo read during lunch at an ad. joining cafeteria. Actually, Mason said, he the newspaper to slipped "Nick," a counterman at the cafeteria who was a "comrade." lie said Nick gave the blue ,priiits to a dishwasher who photographed them in his base ' ,. ' I , l''".----- -- .. - 4 .. ,.... ': , ,..... - silo Business - , '.....1 ,..',,L ,.. ; - ', 10314,'Il1All! , ' ,. , . , 1 , ., ..,. , - ITS - - - '' Lt. Gen.. William K. Harrison said the U. N. command "does not intend to become invtilved in protracted and useless argu-rnents." And he warned the Reds that they "should be well iware, that we mean what we The session at Panmunjom Ivas the third since the negotiations were, revived Sunday- in an effort to decide what to do with prisoners who refuse to go home. a IN NOW ,. ,,, . NEWSPAPER. .......... :'. - :':'-- 1.' .....:.., :''.., ,.., .. ''''''''-'.'- ' ': :,::::,,z:,..,,,::,..,,,,;.,..:.: ,:,,,,,.,.:,.;....;,,....,::::.,,, ,,,- 'FIRST Lf .4p .. , 'Still Blocks 'Way .' .....,To Korean 'Pets' ie' wesrs . , Prisoner Issue I.1 ... ..., ,. ...., .. ... .. ;, 1--... 1 , -- NEWS': .,,.,,DESERET , ,,,, '' ' . .., , . Slop ii 011' - , , T 101,-.SAkt- VIS , , ,... , 'E' 'S D-- - - Mostly- Cloildk, - .. . , ,...,,,,:,.,,.,,,...THE.,,,EATHER,,,,...,. .; ; . n- - ..,,, - , ,b- - ,ezt.l.',Apv,--t- . ,..s. .- ' |