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Show - ,, , -- - 4 '' 7 ' - - - wtATHEI' - ' ' . - - - MOSTLY CLEAR SOMEWHAT WARMER' , . ' - - . - - I , - --- . , , 102nd,yea-- : THE,MOUNT AIN WEST'S,111LST NEWSPAPER::: - r - ,it- - ' 'i Irt. ... .. :: r , ,... 4 .., - . , ,,.. ., , .v ..m. tt. '. '.1661. ' .... ,'. 41 , N ' . ' r 4, Ir , )' ' ',. , ' it.. ., 1 1 . -- Pledges Renewed Fight For Price Controls-- . ' ti ; , , ,, , '4''.4, xIt , 2' t ; -- , ' ,1 -- -- ': -- - i I ' ----- ' t : .. - .,, . ,I , ,: - - '' ,' if - ,' . , 0 4:7 , Ni . 7 - "' , , - - : . - ' ---- : ,. . , - ASSAILS SPECIAL - - - -- , - N i , -- ,,, ' They ti J-gus- - 4I a ., lArilliam-Greent7- s.- - - - - - '' ' - ' t lect Princess i Talces ' ' rain Diiiié - ' - . t , . - ' - Members - - - ex- : -- of jr - - ' - , , nn ,Iiiilling I e...,, y " - 1949.' , Vs. - - . ' ea 111 ' Guili - - , WASIID(GTON (17P) - Gen. ' Hoyt S. Vandenberg ;reported Saturday that all ' organized gambling has been halted in the B.11oxt, Miss., area where fair.men from Keesier Air. Force Base had been dumping $500,- ., 000 monthly into winked-a- t slot :- devicemachines and other gambling - ' .-- . Two Air Force lieutenants were reported to have killed themselves in despair over their losses, and other airmheir were unisaid to have p forms for money to cover their losses or try for a comeback at slot machine or dice table. Vandenberg said that Maj. Gem James F. Powell, Keesler : Tbe Air Force Chief of Staff commander, appealed Ss Biloxi , rebuked local officials for fail- community leaders more than . 18 months ago to join him in ure to crack down on the ; - ' , - - ' correctingconditions 44: . - ' .), , monthly payroll Into 7 one-arm- ed , 1421 devicesmostlf one- armed banditsthat flourished gambling , ' hi the law nuking of ill.. gambling - I , . in, And Gulf re'around the wide-op- en sort town. Later, Vandenberg said, Powell "forcefully" brought the facts- to the attention of city law enforcement officials, as well as the mayor and Gov. Fielding H. Wright From his conversations with the mayor, Powell got the impression the situation would be corrected, he , ' said. 4 2'' De03411g Powers failure to declare Biloxi gambling joints off limits to servicemen, Vandenberg, said the bandits lined the walls In legiproate businese places likt drug stores, hotels, bus- stations' and ' eating places. "To have declared all such establishments offlimits virtuwould have ;4' quarantined ally elliFirmum I air base," he 'S 'id: the fluor rackets long ago. In the same prepared statement be 1 prabed a Senate preparedness subcommittee for its investigating at Biloxi which he said - prompted a 'belated" local ' , , , cleanup.. : Vandenberg said be has been - Wormed by Sen. - Lester C. acting chairman ilunt of the subcomtnittee, that the - sheriff of IHarrison County. , bliss.. has closed SW gambling activities bs the county. , Witnesses told the subcommittee at bearings in Biloxi early this week that Keesler airmen were pouring up to one- of their . $4,000.000 eighth t - - - There ' ' - was no -i- - - tri"Cril ndication when . - - the Soviet group will depart for Paris. There also ' was some b a th a ritiskirulky wq otddben win Pails for the opening sessions On Nov. I. Vishinsky usually gives a reception In Moscow for the diplomatic corps on Nov. I the day of Moscow's traditional Red Square parade to mark the anniversary of the founding of the Soviet regime. , - . , - - ' ' $..iti6e'r-I(i110-,...- 1 - home-- - . .. . Plaie Plunges ' : , - . mid River; I . : . , 5 Feared Dead KAN, Kan., (VP) --An Air Force with one of its engines out, plunged into the Missouri River near the B-2- 3, Airport Saturday t;ras h of , Fairfax tempting an emergency landing. Two men were known to have crash. Ch a r te -re d B u b Yore. 11 Allb n, In at- . ' .t. ' - - survived-th- e --- A KAUFMAN, Tex. (AP) girl entertainer was killed and a Cuban orchestra leader was bilured slightly ht the crash of a chartered bus into a bridge abutment Saturday. ,-- The dead girl wig Delia Rotherti,' 19, Latin ' American singer and dancer. Peres Prado, well known 11 the Mambo King, ' suffered bruises. . ' '- :Be VMS taken to a 'ICauhmin hospital with 12 other:members 6f his troupe of 21. None was injured tnitkally, the hospital reported. Most seriously hurt was Ramon Santamaria. His foot and hip were fractured. lower right front of the bus was shorn off, killing the - -- - Carson, girl. The 1 s.Ireceivki - Scott-A- - ir boPee It can win the - ' ,, peace. Churchill Is expected to move ,,,, , for - r.''' I. es. , t.ater ,,,,...., ain ;terms- - .. , . ....1.-- --, ...- - - . ' JA,..e....L, ...a .41 L , , . .. ., , . . . . aillar -- - - . - ' :left -- - - -- - - - - ' '' I - ' - . 4.0i4!;..001.0.-4- 00i0.',FO(P0.4.(0' - his - wife- YORK-(1.1- Iranian special under. secretary of finance for oil, arrive4r Saturday by plane en route to Washington for high level 'conferences which-m- ay bring about a fiettlement of the Anglo-Irania- n oil dispute. Hassibi said his hurried trip Ihere at the request of Iranian Premier Mohammed Moassilest was "soma indication"- that the situation arising from Iran's oil nationalization b being ironed out in Washington. Mosaadeth hat 'conferred' with officials in nte.esPitel for th.41 past week. - is-m- on theked Hasse ' 'Uncle' To Nip Gamblers For 110 Per Cent of Take who , 1UP)--Sta- rt. gave birth to a boy early Sat- - int next Thursday, bookmakers and other gambling operator- sin a besd-o- n 1 collision Saturday about 330 whether In business legally or p.m. 23 miles north of here on illegally -- - will have to start Highway IGO. Another Bland- handing over 10 per tent of injured. their "take" to the Treasury. ing man was seriously Deed: , Keith Harvey; 27. Blimding, died of a skull fracture. ' Iniurpt: ilv13131coutvr . LeRoy likamway, about 27, 1Blanding, in Moab Horpital in 'serious condition. Trooper Howard L Cooper investigated. ' He reported the vehicle in which the two Blanding men were traveling attempted to pass around an oil tanker-traile- r. The ear met head-o- n with a truck driven by Arthur Knight of Monticello. ' Idr. Harvey is survived by his widow and two children. ' ' - , -- - - , - -Jant,04 Ero-1111-e)71,-A- - , A NAHANT, Mass. (UP) distraught physician was found i dead under mysterious circumstances Saturday ten days after a baby sitter Ind her two school chums stole $13,000 from his home and squandered it on a spreelnNewlork, . t - i , " -- , "In" t- ' -- -- , he-ma- , - , - IL - - - - - - l' I In One Action ' TWO NOTES SENT . The ' charges, were- made In TOKYO, Stmday (livr) "- A one of two notes which EgypAllied' tail gurtner-pce- d tian:Foreign Minister Mohamed airmen in a major vie- Saturday 'to. the Sala's. El Din Bey-seover a mighti Communist British embalry Saturday. The tory air fleet climaxing a full week of intense air battles over north. Britain 'of 'Egyptian abrogation . wed Korea. of the AegloEgyptian treaty Thi United Nations claimed and the Sudan Control agraiIt. airmen shot down or darn- , menta. - . ', aged 12 Communist lila Egypt also charged that Brit- er planes in able separate ale ish troops Jorced their way battles hivolving more than 3lt, into customs warehouses Saturof. three...mations. Three planes day at Port Said,- northern an- Mica were s h ot down, three chor of the'? ' embattled canal more were probably destoyeet zone,: and .seised food stored and 13 were damaged. 'there. On the ground, Chinese Corn. An Interior ministry an- - muniet troops stepped up their nouncement said the tr000,e oretNiee 7:t ', - - ' - . - - ' - - - . - fat. -- - lines. They -, - - - " - '", 4..--"--- raidina the weyeboutts .1.a.. ; shots to the str," but matte no mention of casualties. It said the British took a quantity of "potatoes, onions and lentils" from the warehouses and posted sentrieo at their doors to keep Them open for future use - -- - -- , 14kir s 1etine.E-- 1 sssueshek,, tral front. ' "That wit tzLini I la teem than usual," an Allied ef:cer sain.terney, have reorgani,tel .alter our last offensive and now at. coming back." .,TROUBLE . , ONLY , - The The heaviest attack tame - warehouses and other southeast of the once important Egyptian anenied es I n Bth e zone Red town of Kum-headquarters had been d as the an where Cam. estimated song, part of Egypt's policy of "non- munist company hit U. N. posi- . cooperation." 'tions at Z a m. The attack ennThe Port Said raid was the tinued for a half hour before the Only trouble reported in Egypt Reda were driven off by Allied tenamid Saturday, mounting mortars and artillery. sion Inspired 1 by Winston officer - mid the - - Churchill's return to power. Reds suffered heavy casualties Police , were massed at key during the last U. N, offensive i in central Cairo under and points had retreated lkquit a new "state of emergency"' reg- ways" to the rear. ' ' ' . ulations to guard against riots: 1.11ied 3 a to rda T infantry but the expected outbreaks "pushed" Chines defenders elf failed to develop. a strategie hill mass southeast of The note demanding troops Kumseng while other patzoii withdrawals British probed into the outskirts of the "provocation"' for 'the riots Of" city. A briefing officer mid the Ismailia and Port four-da- y Oct. IS fight ended when 11.N. Said., It said British armored troops "pushed rather than I vehicles were circulating in the stormed" up the summit in aft ' two cities while crowds were attempt to save lives Allied demonstrating their , rejoicing figured would be lost in over the treaty abrogation. , I ttorming attempt. t .- - - , - , -- - - - - -- - ' - -- - - The-All- ied - ' t - - - , : ' st , of-lit- - , - oc L, LLL41,) , rle-"- -- ens, -- -- ,, itt-pli.- i u t.....--- rir ..,,iai 1.4 , Li N., ht h.-- -- r lifn sp-- k Irt D) ,nn LI1 U ro,.. , , , . PO 1 N - " - - , ,-- -- .... . ...,..1 , t : , 0 r--.- i sen 1, J L0 .....d i . , N , , - L.o 1 - ! ' for a day or two,'" he said. Re tad bees reported MU, A bottle of nitroglycerin was 1111 Friday night by his brother-in-found beside the body of the 1sec, after telling a turnphysician, whose prominent ber of that ha Win gopersons afterdeath came at a tragic math to the theft of the cash blg away Sot' 'a while. There which the girls used for a fling was no explanatioa of what he on Broadway. They spent $3000 might have been doing In the for fine clothes, food, and drink, secluded epot when his body and ''Broadway characters" ap- was found,. the On found 'body police, parently stole the rest of it. . I The doctor, I heart specialist a wallet containing 'a who 'himself suffered from a sum of mone)," and a nevi. heart ailment, was reported to paper dipping. They refused to have been "visibly" disturbed disclose the content of the clip-this week by publicity follow-tri- g ping. . Medical examiner Thomas the, theft by the baby-sitt- e who ran away with ,twe Devlin said there was so evi- - , other. Massachusetts girls for dence of foul play. Polkt found a big time in Manhattan. no note with the body,. A medical examiner said North Reading Police Chief there was im Indication of vio- E. nucleon Rogers said the body lence on the hods.", but it was was noticed first early Saturtaken to an uillertaker's parlor day morning by a by w,ho for further examination. thought 'it was a druen.k." 1111 The absence of marks of vio- did not. report his cliscovei7 , Ilence and the indications that until the boy hunters chanced - have suffered upon It later. - the doctor-mig- ht a fatal heart attack, merely 411e looked serene, Eccers heightened . the mystery of his said. "as if he tad ff.,' -1 death. saleep:1 4 ; 1 ' , , t ; 1 , r ' , ' -- , , . - . ,, , , . . I i - , ' - Three boys who were huntfound the body, of , nrAtlbert H. Covner, $1, in a le'd ,a,,a 1, wooded lane at North Reading "1' .41T, , 1$ miles northwest of hers SatO . , urday morning. There was no , I cl, ' etidence of violence and invesII t ' v tigating authorities added to . . the mystery Saturday, night by ,IA' it,,J refusing to disclose the results , of an autopsy on the body of . the 'doctor who disappeared 4 . from his home Pride) night. v-,1- 1 Medical , examiner Thomas -I 1,6 , confirmed that the Devlin , 1:ge.mlb St;ti autopsy bad been performed, if Millet gets srowid a let hi but he would not comment on his "Round kbout' collo" talk,. the possible cause of death. -n everything He said the dottor's vital 'fig from stymies to iiirsightortria., been..xentto...the lorganshael. ,.. the $tay Harvard Medical School for ' ted..... further study. . .'" ii,e' sports pogo ' , "The results won't be known .) , - les Dit i"n . ing rabbits I- Ira i , -- P) NEW HassibL ay et minister. Winston Churchill, with a formal demand Saturday demanding the Conservative government withdraw Its troops from positions .they recently occupied in thit Suez canal zone. - The Egyptian ' government de-scribed recant British military , it II moves hic the , canal area as H I G "flagrant aggression against Zgypt't territorial Integrity, In1 dependence and sovereignty and against Egyptian armed forces." It alsotharged, the British ac- - - -' bons violated the United Na. tionsrharter. ' , - o, S6elleitli Son Hospital-to-s- . - tified -- - , t B-2- - , - nt . ,. A BlandMONTICELLO ing, San Juan County, father who was rushing to the Moab CA1110-Irryz----tg,p- s . -- 1 1..t.'00.11.;:Cliit.0S:'-- -- .77 . , . County A man identified as Wayne Peterson of nearby Woodland died of a gunshot wound eerly Sunday. to reports received 4 El- -' . here by Deputy Sheriff mo Atkinson. , t Early reports said a woman who gave bet nanie is Mrs. Wayne Peterson called '" the deputy and reported. 'Tire shot my husband. Be was drunk and began to . a beat the children. Then - -shot him with deer rifle."'1, Deputy Atkinson : Kamm shortly before mid, night to investigate. - : one - - ,. ' rt.,,:s..94.,L 13111,1b11 , Mil - ' , lel iOttitCctna . , , rilh. L4,,,k,:- , 11 k akil 1 .., - , . -- .: , , ,,,, 4 , . , . r 11P i WOODLAND MAN :,,,i1.7tileb WE( REPORTED SHOT , , . -- Anglo-America- n- Blanding -- . 9t', - ( for defending the British Isles in case of war. He hasn't forgot' ton Hitler's blitzes.. of the 2. general-impressitom- - ....st r wartime me to come bined chiefs of staff for better that if some setcan obtain here, they coordination between the two tlement of their difficulty, l'' he ' -- , Cautioned! ea Pete A-- 2 said. to -- L, refineries nationalized the have e back in - operation next week with int- output of 2,500,000 gallons daily, lae said this was , ' .. 10 per cent of their over-a- n . nearly . a 1 capacity. r staid lihrgovernment had 1 on- -not attempted to enure the , - -' " services of Russian technicians to replace British personnel who have left Iran. m- rs said that three crew members and four pasaenters were aboard the plane when It left that base at 11:43 am. (MST)-e- n route to Lowry AP'S at Denver, Colo; - - ' One of the two known survivors, PleC Nolan T. Lederle. St. Louis, hitchhiking a ride on the plane. said be taw two other men in the water after the plane plunged into the river. One other man, a sailor, Leo Elvin Ricks, reported to be from Dupe. M,, was found floating - a mile downstream. ' There was no trice of the other five men said to balm been aboard. Although no official statement was made. they were presumed dead. The plane became completely submerged two hours after it fell. s upon-M- . thin , . - , . -- - ' his old friend and colleague Lord Wooltoe to be lord preal- of dent-the council in charge of food and sericulture. ' They held the same lobo in Churchill's wartime' cabinet ' Thut, the' core of the new British government la Ilse same team that won the war. Chur- - kw ,,' 0 - heir apparent. Anthony Eden, to be foreign secretary and deputy prime minister. He called on Churchill called - et)04.1110.:..rJ.4..o.t.ls. ' Work-'''" e' I , ' s bled - - ,,: -- , -- ------ immediate and at home abroitr ' crises To Head Russ , - - " , - ' , .. - . It ,.tany - at ' Itge Program: ' , To cope with ' - ---- - , .. , said loyally that she was "a good woman driver. She got the train off te a smooth start at Yates an equally smooth - ' (Alta.) 3and at Peers," 141.4 miles await. stop -The sight of a train driven by ' a princess and stocked by a prince confused the people of e a r. Ont., avillage ' through which . the red and 4 green train passed. The princess, clad In a light blue raincoat, kerchief and black rubber ever: shoes, waved gaily from the,lo- emotive cab as the train passed slowly through the town. ' -- it WaUlia magnificent perienci." death-thre- , -- skid - e.:. Pi. (UP- )- blecadon, a United Mine ' EDMONTONAlta. (UP) . Princess 121r4betiftook over the throttle ettpt royal train for 20 ' while ber minutes - husband ':lt6rde1'' fireman, and . - E, - In his first day in office as prime minister the statesman again assumed the role of First Lord of the Treasury- anti of Defense Minister. he boss Britain's will I meaning 6134160.000.000 .... rearmame n t , - kl," .,.... ' d11.11:1serrli I ' im -- - ; ...,......1 -- , ' Vishinsky , ' A. , . - - - , , - - - , . BY1)EEVRIFLE - - - --- 4 . ---- situation.,,---- :: extortion nota rs official who was killed by a I gave police their only clue Sat- bomb I planted in his automobile. i Sunday (UP)The urday to the slaying of Charles The blast in the moving au-1.. 17T0,- . truce subcommit- , , .. . , tomobile Friday night injured again Sunday, and the three children 'who were playAllies put it up to the 'Com--1 ing nearby.- Thseoncsussion munists to make any major ton--- 1 -: . knockeddowniseverat-sathe- r' lire-lin' ' . ' '' cease-cessions' who were walking persons :' across Korea.. . along the sidewalk and spewed United Nations spokesmen ina wide area, nar-,.. debris sisted that "only minor refine-- 1 rowly .rnissing- a score or more -, , . , : pedestrians. ments eta be accepted" on the s tease-fira othlthec.strdnoint tor elmainhiraloprtettesrisdet Mlitd proposal . , line genetallr alortg the present ten years and - a Republican sisoscavr (AP) Foreign battlefront. turned over to ' Andrei 'Vishinsity is leader,- had just Minister The Allied position left it up authorities the extortion te ' to' the Communists, who, have slated -to head1 the Soviet del.-- demanding 12000 when the blast to- - the' United,- - Nations ripped his car apart. The blast already abandoned their Previ- gation shattered more than 30 windows In Paris. general ously adamant Insistence on the . His assembly to the U. N. and shook buildings in a quarter-planned trip to 31th varallel as the truce line, -area. , meeting became knows Satur- mile make further concessions. Deputy Fire Chief Edward day after his passport was sent -- At Sunday's to theTrench embassy for a 'Jacobson described the bombing as the "worst thing I ever saw,", where '"no tangible progress" Trench visa which was expected ' Re aid the mangled victim was to be granted quickly. ' forwas made, N. delegates (Secretary of State Dean Ache- pinned to the seatwnby the automally rejected the Communists' son will head the American mobile dashboard-blo,back new proposal. It called for :a delegation. He sailed from New against him. Despite his numer- ' ous injuries. Mecadonlived sev- demereation - line -t- hat- would York Thursday.)- mean a IL Detectives said the bin erg said Anthony Eden probably Heartbreak Ridge , and other will lead the British delegation, parently had been planted , In of after his expected appointment the automobile a few minutes heights gained at the colt t much blood. ' ' as foreign secretary of Church- earlier when Mecadon stopped , at a cafe three blocks away to ill's new cabinet.) sestenthsubcommittee The The Russian delegation will telephone an unidentified per- fourth renewed of the sion, include Jacob Malik, a deputy son. Re was on his way to the t! series, ,u'gan in the Panmunjom foreign , minister, and S. - K. home of his ' married eon, Fran. , circus tent. , Tsarapkin, who has been a mem- cis, to babysit with . ber of the Russian United Na- grandson while - the parents; tions delegation ' sines .March, watched a television sho Continued en Page A-- 2 - - - . WILKES-BARR- , , omb . , - ' ' ow MakI eItücitöh'cétoh -- - , , . , -- . , h ll Churchill ' ,, ' , - - - , I ta, Jobs i -- - , Prime LONDON Win(UP) Minister , Churchill took on all his old war-tim- e jobs .Saturday night as the tint step of his plan to restoreBritain's - world position in the face of the grave International I 2! - , PRICE. 15 CENTS -.. .. . . - rea zo , - ,' " Mr. Truman spoke to a labor at ceremonies dedicat- ;-- Ing Gompers Square here,. a tract at a busy lateisecBon near headquarters of the . of Labor. American Federation , The square is- named for the - - ' " late Samuel Gompers, founder and first president of the AFL. -" In Joining ,the president , - - , .. Assumed , - , . By. INTERESTS-Presi- dent -- . ' price-control- wagn-earne- r It said. - - ,- , , s, - - , ' , - i -- - - - - e -- - 't-N -- 31 ' , ' ,,, - wut l- -- ,' , - Vicir II ,I ' . ' ,0"; . - 4- ' -, '- k at ' l' .-- - - ' g, . - t 1 , - - 1 , : , , renewed fight for stronger con' ' trols. He said real income per per- lofts up 40 per cent since .1939after taxes and taking Into price Inertia. By clear ' Inference, he claimed ,eredit for this increased Income -- , .or.'"Iii...;-'.- f '- . Truman served notice' Saturday that he with Congress nextyear for tougher ItelleW forth. Democratic party--ahitleyit k shown with the .. president of president at ceremonies dedicatihg, Gompers though. be didn't mention the - party by name. - , - Square, in WmAtingtonwhere Mr. Truman spoke. (Acme Wirephoto.), . 4 that if the , - "We have proved --t and the farmer --T- 7 ' are prosperous and secure,' the I , rest of Ithe people will be pros. perotts and secure, too,' He . , , , -- - , '. ''' , , a, , - ' ''.. , :. 1 : ' a in this connection pledged ; ,,,,,, ( ., I ,Ilk; - . . -- , , , 1 a - '',,,, tt,, history but warned that "spec- -, tal biterests" - still ere out to scuttle labor's gains. In his "special interest" group !he. lumped profiteers who, he said, want price controls for everybody but themselves. Ile --- - -- N.,,.,,, (ITP)--Pres'd- - ..,,, J 1' ,. N. , ilisitl -- ent WASHINGTON Truman said Saturday the American worker now b better off than any other worker. in - ,..."- ,. k, - --- ' , 10,, .0 - , ... ,. 4 - 9.00) . ( 4". It 'r''' ,, I )1, . - - ETRO P 0 LITAN EDITION- -:":, OCTOBER ,28, .1951 MORNING, $ . . , - . INTEREST ,, ,. aril li; '. - i .. . ,, ' ' . SALTIAKE.C.ITY, LITAH.,- SUNDAY ' 1 i , : , ' -.:- & , .,,' , - - ' ,, ,...,....,.. PRESIDE' BLASTS A - : , - , No. 28. VOL13371 i- ;- ' , , - A,- a , . , , ' - , ; -,-- ....: -.- , .. , , . . ...-- .. - -- ,- --- . - - - ... 7 , -- .... '. E ' 4 ' - , Irtill'1171:-ILIPOIM7TAGIVA- ' - 1 ' , - - , , I , I , ' , |