OCR Text |
Show 1 ; , 4AIDESERET NEWS, Scat Lake City, Utah, , ' Friday,. November - I ESTONIAR 6dit S. I. L N. v , ueoos - -- kLL 1t0Ka' , 4 t WHITE RUSSIAN , ' - -- - -- - - - 1111111SA ro,16, 44 go- - '. ) - - , U. S. l'ItOBES MASSACREUnited States Congress bas ordered a probe into the massacre at Katy!' during World War 11, in which nearly 11,000 Polish officers wets slaughtered and buried in mass sieves. Map shows how dose Katyn is to the Russian border,. WHO WAS TO BLAME? , - Will Probe 1(alyn Massacre t WASMNGTONA slonal committee has begun inm (vestigation of the Katyn mama-cresulted in tha 44. slaughtering U. 4000 to 111100 Polish officers and their burial , In mass graves, The Investigation of one of the most infamous of World War U atrocitlei has strong possibities of international repercussions, because it may lead to the Inescapable conclusion that It was ,committed by the Rua , , , ofti- United States government uency Is investigating an event with which Americans have bad only an indirect connection. However, millions of Amer- leans of Polish descent want iho - truth made public about what happened In the forest sear Smolensk ll'yearit ago. l" WAR PRISONERS , The murdered Polish officers were mdoubtedly war prisoners captured by either the Germans or the Russians. The Polish government-in-exil- e declared in 1949 that they were prisoners captured by the Russians durins the 1939 campaign. When Germany sought an internatioatal Recl Cron examination during the war of the mass graves, ,Runia denounced the move S.211 attempt to blame the Soviet Union for a crime. In any event, the Intern.. tonal Rea Cross did riot Visit the scene. Instead, bl 1943, the Germans flew a group of Amelean and British war prisoners It b unusual In that an dal , ' ' , - ,, ' Nast-committ-ed , ' r, nl as a "Board of Inquiry." t The senior American officer was Lt Col. John van Wet, , who Is now In Tokyo. Van Viet wrota a graphic account of what ' be saw. He told brat how they were flown to Smolensk from ' their German POW camp and then bow they motored to the sit. of the 'messier, about 13 It nibs distant ' DRIVEN' TO . 1 , Van Viet subsequently 'wrote a second account of his trip to Katyn on May 11,1950. The Committee will launch public hearings In January, The Lion Okth group is headed by Rep. Ray J. Wins' Madden, (D). Indiana and he WASHINGTON Thi (UP) has been directed by the House Rural Electrification Adminito rePortitctindingubi-Jan-l- l. atratiotiThuradify approved 1 ' One of the inembers. Rep. $33000 loan to Overtop Power District No. 5, Overton, lie!. Daniel 3. ?hied , said the group will definitely arrive at a conclusion and will state 10, Truckload whether it thinks the Germans or the Russians committed the atrocity. - it was nearly king , t. E overpower: - - Sunday. 5 1 ' a- ' 1 SE $ t . , . ' , . , - . , --- , ;',; , , k ; GAY 10; J MUS stout hisqbciothimmoot 9 Ij I! GEHIJIHEBRAHDY left-win- OA , II 14er ' 1 'Ada '14r' A!!! 1-::- 1 I a I V it e. - gl r El j U 7.'; , , 0 -- -- k , mei , - - . Mew t6 1 .( I 0 , , . . , A 17 - ', 7.1,-Its1- A -- , ,,,,, 1,1. ea Kletresee I. ewe mob et asertiekt Oleo ego. ' .,.r f .., ,,. ,, , ,- ............................- I , ,- - ; ....".. , -. 1; . t. , , , , k X' ' - ..I.,t-i- l t,A... (,,., , ' ( ' . Now Going On At Budes War Surplus 'SU!'p ,:,:yqt. iwasie ilitv , . , t'-,,.- : :.' ...---'--, .' ' ' :! :: :7' ''' . ,V,, , ' ":. ' ' .': : - -- - . lizrril Get yoors cow to Petite:1 toriily 4 , - , . 41 , 1' . ---7- --- - - s , A t: , : , . I. ,, - Ll av4.,,t ,f.ttes t , -- -- II '''. , - Cxit, Iva att!' 3 Ve:taining a sutv & , . , - StbePat:tt. im,..n1 ''''-- e t136 lin aonera sena .t, i .;i--tb- -- -- - - - - 'is , 1 I ,J11.1400.1,, e I 1 0 fr'k Ca ' ' itl;' ,ttttw'öw your best Amour Distributed by Mob Foolery A I T - 1t , ,..1. ,- p 4 1 - Itis t . Oat 11 reacirfor-theave- rt tiorbsee , turkey . 1, . the choice el Utah's finest birds :b U. S. graded and Inspected .'s assuring you tender, tasty, tempting turkey very time., !,,Lit's --- -- ', ' - ss '111 Pal I11 lIrtlycustIree r gereteinbe sc' 0 filldnittt of W.este ersgeth plus 7-- 1;11 Jfree , - : . To ,P , , : , I - r ' -- - just-cooke- d, , " Get - , youriree roll of Wanton today! Don't wait! This offer Is for a hmited time only! Only on free roll of Wantoxto a family! 4 '0,1 oke 31 t raz!t17,2 - -- ' save pretleus leftovers! it - ?ackate,Sna saarees,,ill:nano' ting eatt!,,. ' aloni In.."' 1B0IL 122 a3leto...tile to. a yo'l arot of svistes to lhaltel' of 3Ce vigl ,.0 tetaa ?rice a for Vt)6tage. 111,11INIerS, ' ' , We're making this seniational offer right at holiday- feast time when you need Waxtex most! Because we're; sure that once you try it, you'll never be without it. The year around you'll find Waite. a wonderful time; - work, and money saver; For instance, during the holidays, heavy protective Waxtezt keep,,the feastiiig foods you buy really fresh tit yott cook them. It saves time and dishwashing, when you do your boll-- , , day bakingit's perfect for (1011T sifting, covering work : for rolling out Surfaces, lining 'baking sheets and pie tins - dough 'between Wastex sheets. And after the feast, count on Waxtez to keep your leftover turkey and other foods - precious ' imtil every last scrap is eaten. tvz?atel 1101101 - t,Na , , , TUR1EV - , s . . --- is atyvOlIDLST ' . 11111t.1 ft N 3 - It DULASLE d; effrD : leer pore 1 W1 I U vita's , , ),Z31 0,t goodwilko lotagt 'i N,..,.( e . .4 4 ,..!.o 1 r uAi. L01,1;,1...4goluf I Sem veer bowls k gnaws ' tifts el loomed-e- a (7,...1 t)eason ' i- , be-to- , 'EM 7- oil Mai - SALE Mishap Kills Boy, 10 mita. Nity. (UP)Sharitts- Prof. I DON7 THROW 'Mt , FURIIITURE "There were several graves. Herr Dokter Butz (Bootz?), a German exPert forensk medicine, was present, together with other technicians. Several Polish Red Cross workers were present Civilian labor was being used to remove bodies from the graves' "Each body was searched very carefully, examined, Identitled and reburied In a nearby mass grave which .was to av-- national shrine with suit ble monuments," Van Vbet lkdded. "rhe search of the bodies was very thorough, ineluding removal of shoes or boots When Tit was possible. Smetimes the whole leg from the knee down came off with the boot. GO Drr0 GRAM "'We followed en guide right Iota each of the graves, stepping on bodies that were piled like cordwood, face down usually, to a depth of bout five to seven bodies covered with about Eve feet of earth. "About 300 bodies were laid out beside one of the graves. ; - . , - (D-Pa- .), et t graves J.--G- R-E- SMI "'We were driven,' Van V'llet reported that a 10stated, to the site where there deputies Shoshone Indian hay. yeapeld was a gate, guarded by young accidentpoldiers bt Polish imiforms. A Floyd Ray Darrouab, sickly-sweodor of decaying ally shot and killed himself , bodies was everywhere. At the near lila remote home ranch ' , (UP)--Hea- ct OtCARl: ed it - .orYe:a7telld":- ed Katyn la now In the Soviet Union. During the war. Worts held first by the Russians, then by the Germans and finally by : the, Russians again. RELIEVED RUSS WORK - Who oommitted the ghastly crime? Van Vliet in a report to the Wu Department stated: believe that the Russians did The rest of the grouv that visited the site stated to me that they believed that the Mustang ' did it" ,' However, Van Vliet admitted that "there never was presented to me any single piece' of evi deuce that could be taken as an absolute proof." One of the tMage the committee will seek to deterinlnei is what became of the original Van Vliet report to lima War Department It ; was marked "Top Secret," but the Defense Department says it can not be fotmcl.- - crnr- , behind them with cord. The rest appeared not to have been tied. Aiibod1ee'bad a bullet bole In the back of the bead near the neck with the exit wound of the bullet being in the forehead or front upper part of tbe . -CollectorRANCrcickCISCerri' r the (North American Newspaper Alliance) The Russians VERSAILLE could count on nearly 25,000,000 partisans in any chive against Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's Atlantic Pact defense forces. More than 1,000,000 western Germans, 124.000 Danes, 40.000 Norwegians. 282,000 Dutchmen, 11,000,000 387.000 Belgians, Frenchmen and 14,000,000 Italians would line the streets to cheer the Red army, help take over local' governmental offices and public works, provide Quislings to draft "Fascists" for forced labor on the Russian line of communications, and provide secret policcrto 'suppress any resistance movement ' This strength of the Red fifth column of organized Communists fellow travelers, secret sympathizers and "sheep" has been - compiled by military analysts from official Russian Partisans figures of the 800,000. of Proc.. SIGNED MANIFESTO The Partisans of Peace are those who signed the recent Russian-sponsorStockholm manifesto., The world peace council that organized the ginserhig of signatures,has been disclosed as a statistical bureau for the Cominform. An estimated percentage of those who may have signed the petition In good faith has been deducted from the foregoing figures. Communist district organizers are believed , to have polled everyone they could count on In time of war to follow their leadership. In France, they have orders ,to redouble their efforts to get more sympathizers and fellow travelers. The figures show much greater support for Communist leadership than bee been disclosed In electoral returns.. This support Includes those who do not want the Red army to come, but could be counted on to collaborate if It did. In some countries, this support is five or six times greater than has been estimated from other sources.' A, , WEST MUST GUESS No 'corresponding poll of partisans Of the west has been made or could be made behind the Iron Curtain, military experts- pointed out. U. S.' and allied intelligence officers are obliged to guess the number of Germans, Poles, Czechs and other nationals who ed 'Mesa all had their hands tied itADIOND WILCOY Central Press' Correspondent , rumbas' ire Scan-Wash-- -' Europe ' U S - Tax.Aid FaààI Charge . By GAIrLT MACGOVIAN 7 7,1 Seattle' and Portland, OM, Mac- - state governmen Arthabouturthesaldreprt4,--: met recently witbrPur NEWARK. N. Doug-l- a; lie also declined to iommgmt revenue at Mho, Nev.; is will-- chasing Agent- - Nemeth Usti)x MacArthur refused to comto return to Nevada to face to discuss contract$ tor the am ment Friday on the disclosure on congressional demands that ing tube purchases. , embezzlezner7it -. charges. Tivied In that 6270 American war pris- the atomic bomb be oners had been murdered by halation on Chinese and North Communist troops in Korea. Korea Communist forces ta could be counted on to - work Arriving ar Newark airport with the west In case of con-- 1 ' I filet, Western Europe's only de- DANNY DTANSHINS SA'tS fense against this quickly organizable fifth column would be to arrest the national and district leaders in cue of war. OUT! WEAR r.,,,,,...... In Trance and Italy, where thoothloo Polish makes the number' are largest, plans look Aims lost loops -', -have been made 'to do this. Who booms 1 . V Aware of it, local Commtmist oeColots $coffed slid Pooled 11 organizations have appointed ; Sloes A secret deputies to function in Hord Pond godly to their absence. Trench Commu&nese Shine Shoos et Sisk bolt nists. have reported to Moscow 'that their work becomes daily ot yoot more difficult. In Italy, COMMUnist reports indicate no interlortlAZ ference, directly or indirectly, 1 I with their activities. has In Great Brtain---whic- h i the lowest average of Commu0' nist tYmpathizersthe Reds 'I :i polled 102,780 votes in the 1945 8S elections, when the party had flisvored with Its best turnout. It's fifth coI g lumnwhich includes & SHERRY Socialistsis given as more than 0 RID raits in t L LATVIAN S. 1001COM , t atter a two day visit M'Arthur Withholds Opinion on Slayings ugelled 5th Column , - - 16, 1951 Eray wand pmr.. A pc et orMalathila Ccrperativa, Lienasho, I ' Wisconsts: -- uyt.-------7. Pennon ,Clielk ,A. ' , 1: , - - , , , |