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Show , . - . '. - MAN-THE-PUM- . PS.r ,,, - -- SALT LAKE CITY AND VICINITYPartly claudyWanda y night dnd Tues- - - . day,. with, ofternodn' showers. (For tajle4 weather report, see page , , . , - . - fr - - )-- t de- 1; Nob... s.--- . ' . -- 11 -- ; - '. ' - ' n d ..', - THE - t Mil $5., , . . . ,, , , , FkM11.--T- ik Is . .,., ... .. s , -- -Missouri s, ' Mon-ma- who drafts top to Congress yds suspended because the l'BI... questioned his loyalty. - When Hickehlooper tossed this ouVat a Senate House . ' , - ed. , ---- - - - ,'." '..1 ; '''''''' ''': t''''' ''.- '' - 4 4 ',4- , ! ' I.: ''. 7 .o. '- i r. ,,,,,, -- 1 '.-- - ,i- '' , ,,, : ;.z, - iti Co,, g ,,,... .'"-- 4. - ''- , -, ,,,,' - 7, I t' ,; . ' 7," i ,: - ;''', ,' A'''''' ,..- - - . - 4. " - , - -- . ..,,,)i r: ok. ."- - 01. 1 ' , ' - ", Witnesses ' , - -- ' . . Secon . Helper Identi led By Chain' bers ' . ' 'i - theLDS - 14EW YORK - (AP)Whittaker Chambon, former Red spy emir- ter, Monday named a "Julian Wadleigh" as a "collaborator" in , I1 the alleged filching of Pecret papers. Department , II statement was made in the under ' trial of Alger Hiss, former State 1 Department official accused of perjury. Chambers, key goVern- in the case, has I claim Hiss fed 'him secret goy- - erment papers for passage to a I . 4 Communist SPY ring. . . 't . Els reference to another ali leged collaborator in government circles came when defense coun- sel referred to earlier testimony Monday in which Chambers said 'f be had another State Department ' i, "source" who was not Hiss. The attorney, Lloyd Paul t Stryker, asked him: "Ms man who was collaborati', ing with you in the State Departanentcan you tell us his dnlaei geh?,: "His name is Julian a replied Charnbelv. . (Henry Julian Wadleigh, a . former State Department man, 1 was accused last year in testimony before the Hopse activities committee of car'pying IL S. secrets to Communist agents. Wadleigh later declined l1 , to comment on the charges.) ' E a lie r, Chambers admitted , under questioning that he testi, fled at one tme be had no "in- 1 dependent recollection" of who gave him microfilms of secret government papers. The micro- films are considered major evi- dence in the Hiss trial. . I , i IState 1 , , ' ement . , 1 .;- ! , . i - I 1 ,. i I : ts '' .. 1, - - BASEBALL ., ', .. NATIONAL . ,. .. . No.-66- 99th Year ,,Vni..1127. : r - ,., tlf - 14- . ' ' - . :',f1 s, -t yi - ilk- - -- - - ,1 ' . , .'''''''''",)'''' , ' , - - ' r'..--- 1 ,'4,75 : . - Woos-Cios- ... , II .,''''''''''-)''' Mon- -of JclialliliStEk . , A---- ewls , Pres. Clark nal - ,. ''titude - - , approximately 100 yards before rescuers were able to reach him. Thicache connty resuscitator crew worked with the child tor almost sa hour before giving up hope of reviving him ' - , - - ., - . . - . , t VERNON, Tex. (AP)-Do- nnie Woodward died Monday. The plucky farm lad, who had amazed doctors by - surviving horrible burns, suc- cumbed at 5 cm. - His parents bact been called to his bedside in the Vernon Hospital where letters and gifts bad been arriving for weeks' as i ' tribute to his courage. The toung soft, of a tenant farmer had been hovering be- tweet life and death since May 10, when 70 per . cent of his body was burned. - , For weeks the boy had alternately rallied and then weakened. Only Sunday he bad revived enough to talk to his parents. Be asked about his pet cow ,"Old Jersey" and his dog. He worried about "Old Jersey" and didn't 1 to milk her. want anyone else -- .4- pre-wor- imm.oftuvmommm y, ,,..,,' ..W '; ' '5 '''s : ' ' ' 2 '' ,, - ' - - ., t., , ''- - -- , . , , , ,, 1 , ,, , t i f , , "' , .,, I s' , ';' - - . . . , ,, le 1( ' ; IW , i 1 , , i - - ' 1. ',- ..,,, ., eattlele e , . - - Utah's junior senator, inthe state for a series of conferences with local officials, declared he "had not read the contenta" of a compromise suPpsediT reached by the Senate commit- tee considering the pact and so "didn't know whether I agree or net with such a compromise." "I do not care so much what the wording might be, but there intuit be a definite reservation to the effect that Con itt ese will have the sole power to' send war- In case of attack on one of the other na , - - , , - - -- --- -' , - tions Involved inthetreaty,. , the senator reiterated. - , - - '' ment on a report recornmending ratification of the pact by the ' ' Senate, Connally- ' Is id the report' will -- be made public Tuesday. : The committee 'went over tha report at a morning session but put off a decision because some. . members were absent - ' : ' , :- ' Chairman Connally said during the morning; be was confident the committee will be able to work' out its differences (D-Te- ". . ,, ' .. - -- , 1,, , - ,,,-- - a - , : . --- 'Congreas. ess The Constitution the sole right to declare war. George said some senators believe 1 - the , , presidentas ggr commander-i- l --- --: : .... - , . : . . , n. chief of the armed forcesnow has the power to dispatch tom- - .,, , . - : ,, firy-The- . - (D-G- four-year-o- ld - . - - -- - - - , , bat troops,into battle. Called Imperfect i ., . George ham argued It is tre.. ' mendousiy important "to brie a , clear understanding written into the report declaring the president will not take any such action ...without approval by, Congress." t is eager to get the apConnally all 13 members of , ' his committee. The group has beeh unanimous In its, -decisions for, the-p- ut several - . ; . , , Unless a reservation to the effect that e ill y Congress will have the power to declare wu Is included In Senate ratification of the North Atlantio Pact, be cannot be satisfied - wall the treaty, Sen. Arthur V. Watkins said in Salt Lake City ' , , 1 , , ., t.,,, Watkins Says Clause On War Power Needed war-maki- ng ,, 1 ' - , 'I , . - ' ,,,,o- - . ' - the committee. , Chief Problem Told The chief problem to reaching Unantrimus accord has appeared to binge on an interpretation ot what powers, if ant , the president will - .have under -the treaty.-,- ----- -said Senator George 'approvingly Sunday that the cornImittee report has been rewritten to make clear that the president 'is given no new powers to pro- ceed with the use of American armed forces without content of . - A--I , , . f ,,, - 1 ' t- '4 , . ' ' ' - '' $i, . , 7- , - , , - . , , , - re. to produces port. His feeling was shared by Senktor Vandenberg-oMichigan, ranking Republican member- of t l - ' ' - ' t : , ',..' '- ,.,,,----- 4 ,, - , ' 'rho . ' - ' - ,vv..4,0,,,,..vy,,,,,,,, - , -- . ' ,. ' - ' - . I tee also reached complete agree.. - , - Woman Saves Children, Dies 'Under- Frelociht.T.rain - ' , Burn To Surstive ' A , . . Monday. Boy Loses Fight - eon-duc- - ' - k .! .4.4 , - tumbled into Smithfield Creek near the home of John Barkley on the east side of U. S. Highway 91 about 11 a.m. The baby w a s swept under a highway bridge and downstream 1 ' . elx3.-).- A, - churches, and he said he has ways told them all the truth and good you have in other churches are' embodied in the PARIS (AP),--- A responsible Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y LW European diplomat said Saints, and there is much in Monday Soviet Deputy Prime addition that has come by reve- Minister Vyacheslav M. Mo lotov has been placed in charge of lation from God. Rain storms that hid occurred Russia's policies in China and during most of the afternoon,- - elsewhere in the Orient - cleared shortly before time for The informant forecast an early ' of the baccalaureate services, and they were held under perfect clipilomati aloofness toward the Communists. weather conditions.- - A band concert under the baton of Dr. John The informant- said Molotov R. Hallidiy, preceded the regu- was given the task of shaping an;1 lar services. carrying out a Soviet "big brother" attitude toward the emerging Led By Master Group Red Chinese regime. , The march of the graduates, fac- - In effect, the move could mein , culty-an- d trustees began at the the Kremlin has initiated a policy PIIPe!" ' , ' Maeser Building and was led by of giving all possible help in Explabis Good the large group of men and wom- political and economic. fields to L. Rec.of The Clifford Raynor en who are to receive masters de- the Chinese Communists in an efat Ellensburg, published ord, grees at the commencement serv- -, fort to turn industrially floor, eonducted ,thc luncheon ices Tuesday. The usual order sprawling China into a modern Wash, program. of the academic procession was state. ' ' President Clark was introduced ts by Richard L. Evans who Word" pro. "The Spoken , 1 graniaach Sunday morning.. ' ' The - subject of the address, ; .! ' "Doctrine and History of the e Church:" had been requested by the NEA convention coMmittee. . se ' lExcept for a brief refutation of A The other. two began to run. some widespread falsehoods that MALONE, Wash. (AP) grandmother died on Mrs. Merryman gays chase and have persisted through the years, a trestle before ' an oncoming the leader's remarks were strictly overtoolt them' near ..the end of fartual narrative. He pa ekes:- . freight train Monday, momenta after pushing two - stepsons and the bridge. She pushed them 'off ly pointed out parts of the "Mortwo grandsons off the bridge to the trestle and they landed on the mon", faith that are distinctive. ' "The restored Gospel is more iprevel below. yhey were hospisafety. The heroine wu identified hy talized with minor injuries. than is generally embraced in the By then, it was too late for word, 'religion'; it is Si plan of sal.. Deputy Sheriff Knute Womberg as Mn. Ruth Merryman. He iden- Mrs. Merryman to escape, and she vation--apl- an that began before tified the boys as Larry Harvey, was hit by the oncoming train, mortal life and looks toward an 12, of Oakville, Wash., and Ron- and knocked off the span. She infinite future," he explained. some of President Clark read ny Halie,- - 6, of Maloneher died moments later of a broken , ' , , grandsonsand : Pet. Merrymon, ceck. See EDITORS On Page Al The train ground to a stop 8, and his brother, , ' ' about 210 feet beyond the end John;her adopted sons. C Burns ti as . - The four were ap walking across of the river crossing. the engithe trestle when trapped,. by an neer said the five probably were TOKYO (AP)FukuYama Ca s-unscheduled c, Northern "Pacific. caught by surprise because the tle, a. Japanese nafreight train. Mrs. Megrymiin train was making an unscheduled tional treasure, was destroyed by ' pushed ' her two grandsons of the run. it was reported here Mon- trestle Into ths Chehalis Diver kW-- Illessyman lived 114- a lawn at Tukuyarns, . .ovr. Thar 'were unhurt. ., bided eit, on liokkaida Island, hem acI - . -of - ,1 ' . good-deal- Hayden. -. E:7- le - - . --- . , of - ., :.. - . Mrs.JoelCNaylor -'- oy - - Thecceidentleaccuried,afit..30 - - tee Monday unanimously sp.. am. The baby is survived ,by the proved the North Atlantic Seouri - parents, Joel C. and Elno;ii Mann ty- Pact. -- - Chairman Connally Naylor : Woods Crirao;410; taZI brothers: M. ' 1 r lannouncing the committee's Joel Dean Naylor, and four vote In favor of the historic 12- grandparents, Mr. and Mn. Jo- nation treaty. predicted it "will seph F. Naylor of Bountiful, and have a tremendously beneficial - Mr. and Mrs. DavidMann of effect on the world situation." Woods Cross. " Fines - - forem,r- : Contempt - .': . - phen, saw him tumble into the old stone irrigation ditch at Pal.: ies Lane and Second- - West St. Mrs. Naylor ran to the spot and after- - searching a few minutes found the baby in the four-fowide ditch. She administored ar1 tificial respiration and Chirles A. Trump, Ufu1FIreDepart: 111 ment chief, applied .a respirator until a physician the WASHINGTON pronounced (AP) ' Senate baby dead4 elations - . , Committee American. newspapers . Lewis, from a stalsipoint of professional- lpholds iilitorial- workyriewe' trafLsinen; ir-IlI ship and caSh register balances; -he same said the advice to gave editor and the business man. I ' g ,, , - the ' ager. T Ed I 1 Distressed By "Promotion" n A paper will not be prosperous' in a backward .,community. A BI , paper, that seeks to promote its 1 , ! , own ends will hardly be of great . N WASITINGTIt-)The (AP) service in the field of business, By D. S. ideQuatiTe S. U., Court Circuit ef he Appeals said, I simIn language of Biblical MOnday upheld the contempt of plicity, Pres. J. Reube&Clark Jr., "I have been distressed by the court convic of John L. first counselor in the First Presi- way publishers refer to'' their Lewis and tion the United Mine. as promoprojects of comurntk Church of Jesus Christ dency, :Workers for failure to call off Latter-da- y Saints, Sunday nar- Um'? a strike last year. This word and others disclose rated to the The court orderedt the UMW Association's delegates Wand guests the cash register kant, he aschief and the union to pay fines . the story of the Church. serted, adding; fines $1,4120,00(1.The President Clark spoke at the '',A paper benefits-fro- m general totaling concert and or- community imprOvement. But the were imposed by Federal DisTabernacle Choir ' ' Alan Goldsborough tan recital; The NEA was gum, leadership and guidance must not trict Judge T. ". , of the Church during the pro- be exercised with a view to gains On April 20, 1948. The fine Lewis against a concluded with which in gram,. profits and prestige." amounted to $20,000.The union luncheon at the Hotel Utah, with was 1I,400,000. Occupy Delegates fine The Deseret- - News host to the the imposed convention. '' Meetings, most of them strictly - Goldaborough fines because Lewis refusedto ' J. Spencer Cornwall conducted busineu, occupied the delegates the famed Tabernacle Choir, with from 8 &Mt until 1:30 otil. M on- - carry out. a court Order to halt miners' pensions. Alexander Schreiner at the or- - day when they resumed their a strike over It was ' the second contempt g an. Richard P. Condie was so- motor' tour, of Salt Lake and loist for the concluding number, toured the Geneva Steel Plant..2 finding against Lewis and the , union.7 "0, My Father. ' They -were guests at breakfast 1946 Goldsborough lined the In the United of States Breweries uhion Tour Welfare Square $3,500,000 and Lewis 910,- Between the Tabernacle serv- Foundation with Robert Murphy, 000 for contempt. On an appeal direttor of advertiaing relations, to ices and the lunch hour, conventhe, Supreme Court, the untion delegates and their guests reprmeining the foundation. Wil- ion'S fine, was cut to 9700,000. were conducted on a tour of We- liam H. Long, Brigham City, con- Lewis' penalty was left unlfare Square. Elders Harold al vention committeeman, presided. changed. Iri the. secondzontempt printer(----InLeeand Henry- - D. Moyle of --the' action, Goldsborough . doubled Council of the Twelve, supervisor, shop talk prevaded eessions Mon- both fines. on when committees day printing chairman the in committee and vast welfare organization; Elder' and engraving reported. A.' D. Tokyo StreetcarMarion G. Romney, assistant to Bradley. and Otto Worley pre- ' the Council of the Twelve; W. E. sented, survey findings. Strike Chiefs 'Jailed memclub Service of Salt committee Lake welfare Ryberg, TOKYO (AP)-No- tices of disber, and others explained the op- played host to the male members eration of the plant for receiv- - of the convention at a Hotel Utah missal were issued Monday for 10 big storing, manufacturing and luncheon while the women at- alleged leaders of a four-da- y processing and distrilmtine food, tended a "Seagull Luncheon" on strike which has tied up 97 streetclothing and a great variety of the Roof Garden as guests of Mrs. cars on nine Tokyo routes. consumers' goods. 1Rhoda Port Graves of Port PubThe dismissal notices were is, Mark E. Petersen, general lishing Company. The women sued after the strikers ignored an manager of The Deseret News, during the forenoon attended a ultimatum of the Tokyo metrold presented to the - luncheon guests premier of Bob Hope's politan government to return to a card bearing on one side a Ilatest picture, "Sorrowful Jones," work Monday. facsimile of- - the first page of the '' , . .,f,,S.4, A.,,,.. first edition of The Deseret News, '.. ., . ,., .... t , 10, - .....'14,,,, 1.M...00,09$ ... ,,,,f, ' . 7 ' dated June 15, 1850, and, on the . ;. t I '. ' ' other side, a- brief. history of. the , ' , i mon - . ot - .. dH. flitte-Y- . ,' $ . , Approved coal workers' uriicv. seeted . of Mr. and Mn . Cecil 19 inonins,-so- n w a riderred- -o of the house while MS mpthir Witswashing-H- is oldest brother, Ste- - .;,,,,,:. Lois - 1 Aor--b- - . Mondaylif-Ttahl- - - 8 L - in - Cache County and a ---- 7 - - of - - -- D , 4 ) ' -- Two babieg, a19,:month-old-bo- y : old . swollen streams. --- - -- , e a i David Naylor, 2, son of Mr. and . Val s. . . Boys - -- - 24t a r ---- . ,r':: ... , " . - ' . - , , . , Die;. Respiration Efforts Fall' - ,,,, . , .4 - k ... . 9 - tthheeplieoopwistit.hien- 1 - - '"!-,i,1,--,r'"- ',- 4, - , souti7S-Choo- . , sea-io- .4- . . : y- . ,. , , , , i - NI 404:t U . II. link lorkon .,, on NO eie..-- a t i 181 11001 $am; ". '"Manial lakbaid. Itsal 801 . - Molotov Gets. Far East Soviet Task-- s superior-to-other- al- . , . -- a, , Told After-Lif- e T . . - . in Streams Win .1 I community-service-v:- . - . , . . ,'-- ' ' , ., . serve, asEerted -- Frank Mott,- dean örthe University,oL,Mis Lurch:His ory i PROV- O- , Educate yourselves hroken when the faculty and adnot , only for time but for eter- ministrative group followed nity," - Elder - Joseph Fielding rather than led the procession. Smith, member of the Coun- Meading this group wax Prei ell of the Tweive, Chu r ch of H ow'ard S. McDonald ,an d Elder , ' Saints Smith. ' Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y admonished graduating students A special feature was the of Brigham Young University in playing of the recently installed his baccalaureate sermon de-- new or ga n by J. J. Keeler. He livered Sunday night in the Jo- played as a processional number, - - "Grand Choeur id B Flat" by seph Smith Auditorium. Addressing nearly 800 feu- - Dubois, and as a recessional, from Sonata. dents, the largest graduating class ta the history of. the BYU, Elder I," by Mendelssohn; ----7, Smith- - told -- of - the - purposes of Music P rov ided rN,rT,' man's life' on earth, and warned studenta that the part they play Other musical numbera were in this world work is an impor- given by the Brigham- Young University Symphonic Chorus, tant one. A pleasing surprise to the ca- Or. Franklin Madsen director. It two anthems, rBlessed Be pacity audience was the appear!. sang ance of Pres. George Albert the Lord" by Gerrit de Jong Jr., Ramona McClure, soloist; Smith, who arrived too late to with and- - Lord of All Being," by No- participate 4n the march Of the bi e Cain. I The 'faculty string' graduates and faculty, but who quartet, of Leon Dal- eomposed was graciously escorted to the - stand where he sonducted the - See BTU On Page A4 ' exercises. . : Appearing quite hale and ' his recent after illness, hearty I President Smith told the stu- ' dents they have a great heritage to uphold. He said people often asked him what it is thitimakes . . 1.0 .the Dean Mott n speaker diiiing the general k ' 4 of , the National 'Editorial Association's annual convention ,0404:11.(1 at the Hotel Utah. "No paper can be classed as professional unless it is a ieacter ' - .. and guide in community prob.. FINE UPHELD Couit u Phe declared. .ems," holds fine,Nagsainst. John- L. : hara dis- The educator,--wh- - , . Be said the board called 15 wit- maws auggetted by the suspend- ed --employe,- and - reeomn?ended unanimously that be be given se- 'writ,' clearance. This was done in what Hicken- looper described as a speed-u- p process on June 18, 1948.. Before Hickenlooper brought this up, 'Lilienthal had testified that the AEC is keeping some per- sons with doubtful records on the payroll because that seems safer than firing them. Ho said some . 'got their jobs When the Army wes'ininning the atomic projects. i .... ' , . 11 s AS SERVICES BEGAN SUNDAY FOR THE BACCALAUREATE AT .BYU Left to right dre Dr Sidney J.Will,,Knight, Elder Joseph Fielding Smith. -who gove the sermon; Pres. Gear g e Albert Smith, Pres. Howard S McDonald i and Or Christen Jensen: Stresses ge Caled . . - - - - - , -- yet. ! persons were men- Although 24 FBI report tioned in the sis giving derogatory information about the suspended person, Hickenleoper said, only two of these were called for testimony, acid a third was interviewed over . the phone.. 7 - v41---- 1 v,...10., r-- 1 .- .- - ,, , 1- ,,,,,,,ts:14, - - , " ..,,,,-;- - - - . - i- - ' - - , -- The best tpenrlesticys,tosittbh-rhoseerga- . 4.v '1- AN- It'. t .,4 ! Hickenlooper - ,ti.,..,1 .).,44.444,'VIN trivolved - w" -- . per ormed ' by. those newspaDer, that rbow.Ttly, and as ' t'ke4 , 44'.....-,-,- . ;,t ,,4,4 , 4 - - '0'' - . , " 0 - U. 'Dean Tells Need For 'Service Above Self' e 4 '1,. - I tt i.,-'- ' 1 , , ,.,.....-- ,''' '1' - '1.!"."4-1",t;44'- 'i. ,Z 2 , t,s1 - 7 - k.'4, , .' .',.'s ; :'., - '$' f i , , 4w - . ,...;,,. ,,, '4 .,-- -.- .,,. t '',,,,, f , f.,- PIM,,,,,,': .: ,,,, Ar." - ,,,,, - i' 4 1 g - saidthe person was 'furnished with , a statement of the charges agerist him and suspended inAprit --He was given a hearing in May, the Iowa senator continued, before a board of three AEC employes, in- eludirg- two scientists and a law- - - I ' 44,.- - ,..--,- , It was not until March, 1948, tliat an FBI check turned up "seri- ous derogatory information" about the individual. Hickenlooper add- - . i - -- ' Check in 1942 i. '...;Ak'.:','' It''' ....i4 .,,s, 4 , ';.',.,,, ..' -- 4., - - , ,iN. 14,.kt, , 7 .:,..".41Nt :' ,.. IA. ',.. 4A ,,,: , - - le -E. ." - .. ii, - Lilienthal demanded that the per- son involved be summoned for testimony. Hickenlooper told his congres- aional colleagues that the AC employe had been hired originally under an !."emergency" security on Aug. 8, 1947. clearance , - -.- ' n secret-al9nnetetio- rts -- ' -- ' day-that- -the ,. -- '''' ' : ' ,..' ' ' I' I,. r? ,,..,':,,, '. ' ,,,,,,,, (AP)Senator - Hickenlooper-(R-Ia.)--s- aid .,. . . , . , . , - Public interestr - , WASHINGtON - . . ,,,,....,,,,,,.... , AssistantQuistioned , 6, 1949 - 4 . ... -. enter-it- . . 4," .,.. -- will . For 4'.:' 8 '',..' 4 4 ' ,.,, Fired AEC Aid ... - - - -- s - . . ': ,, of ...-- ik ' Deseret News, Utah:s first,news PapersUrilwo :llUli.h Babies , Hickenlooper-Asiert- . - . , - hundredth year of i June 15., publication on . ,. . paper, - Monday Evening, June' SenatorSays - The- , - - ..., ,.. - '' '''' SERVICE - NEWSPAPER' - - , F .. CENTURY-OF- - - 1 o 011 -- Salt Lake City, Utah . ' . ' .; .,,, Price: Five Ceti P -- .. ,, .. ' , :st L--, - . 41 .. - - 4.' . . - I - 41 - ... . TABERNACLE INTERLUDEMr., end Mrs. ,Orrin R...Toylor. chat with 'Pros, ..L. Reubeh Clark Jr., first counselor in the First Presidency, Church of Jesus Christ of, Lotter-da- y Soihts: Mr. Taylor is presiderit of Notional .Editorial Aosociotion, and ottending.S: L meet - - .. - Years.- -- ' - . , ' ' , ' ' . . |