Show lid"0011011411rnallgOPMRS - 1P - e ' ' - - - r - - - 1 - -- THE SALT LAKE TarBvNE Sathrdayt April 25 1953 ------- -e — Gun tight Enlivens Bank Holdup Try Aslis Warning of Red China Bombing Continued from Page'One would dread risking the event malty Of a Red China debacle and rich a hazard might well settle the Korean War and all other pending global issues on equitable terms just as soon as it realises we bave the will and the means to bring them to a prompt and definite determination? The testimony to which Sen Byrd asked Gen MacArthur's reaction was given by Frank '''Pace Jr former Army secretary Pace said that Gen MacArthur then commander in chief in the Far East believed In the autumn of 1950 that the Korean fighting would be over In a few weeks Blames Optimism Pace placed part of the blame for the tardiness in starting am munition production to this feeling of optimism "The labored effort made by the former secretary of the Army MacArthur's letter said "to create without the slightest foundation of realism some sort of relationship between me and the ammunition short Riddled Thug Operated On By Carpenter CMCAGO April 24 (INS) A carpenter told Friday bow be operated on his brother with a razor to remove bullets nearly cutting an artery which would have caused fatal bleed - Chicago detectives said Angelo Calabrese 28 performed the makeshift surgery on bis brother Cosmo Cosmo was identified by a Southaide tavern owner as the bandit he shot in a holdup it tempt March 8 The Calabrese brothers were held on SA open charge Angelo Calabrese the cameo-te- r said his 'brother told him be bad bees shot In a knee and shoulder In a 'private nu ment" and pleaded for help The carpenter related he strapped his brother to a kitchl en table and put him to sleep With soalum pentathol he bought in a drug store Angelo said: 01 worked only with a straight razor which I sterilized in boll lug water I just bad to cut through the skin to get the bullet out of the knee' Ilk said be cut a gash four Inches long and an inch deep In the shoulder but failed to lo- t ' cate the other bullet Angelo said be sewed up the Wounds with steel thread and checked his °patient" about a week with temperature reading before deciding the operation was a success - DEVI - ke- age in Korea during the last two years since I left there Is completely fantastic Starting with the summer months of 1950 when the 8th Army first was committed to the Korean battlefield Mao Arthur told of desperate ammunition shortages during the period when United Nations forces were driven back to a small beachhead surrounding Pusan Shortage in 1958 As I recall" he wrote "Gen (Walton G) Walker at one stage was down to five rounds per gun His heroically successful efforts under unparalleled shortages of all sorts tonstituted an amazing military ex- '"--- ' 1 e ' ) I 7— 41 -' ' -- '' i 4P- ? ' " r - '''' 10 ' ' ' - '""7 11 ' ' -- ' '''''' ' t'‘ 04t v AO 'cog' t if 4 —1— e 1- 2fr - t le' vr L '' 0 N - dot - 1 4 —00f I '11L!"' '—Ellgr"-- iN Mak: A41111004'''' 1 1 ' r i 4 1 ' - 'Pigeonholed Somewhat? Hit recommendations - Mae-Arth- continued to bomb milltary installations north of the Yalu to blockade the toast of China And to employ Chinese Nationalist troops from For mesa although approved by the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Jan 12 1951 were pigeonholed "somewhere between the offices of the secretary of defense (then Gen George C Marshall) the secretary of state (then Dean Acheson) and the President" (Mr Truman) Wirevhets YORK—Peter Prodis 7 Long Island in costume of a Greek Evzone gets the drop on Raid Practice Success in Central U S CHICAGO April 24 (UP)— Air raid sirens wailed from the Great Lakes to the Rocky Mountains Friday as civil defense machinery was put to a test in "Operation Wakeup" The exercise started at noon and by evening spokesmen for the defense organization- said the test had gone smoothly There were weak spots boweverSome aircraft warning eenp tens were reported "swamped with calls from ground observars while others showed "holes" In the air warning net with little response In one of the more realistic exercises at Joliet lit downtown streets were emptied in three minutes as motorists parked their cars and beaded for shelter Classrooms were vacated in twe minutes as students filed Into the basements of school buildings The operation was designed chiefly to test the civil defense corps administrative and communications facilities and few citizens were required to participate Sirens shrieked in Chicago's Loop and pedestrians looked to the sky but made no attempt to take cover The defense control warcenter was manned on time basis for the first time ARRIVED! 1 Gem James A Van Fleet during a parade marking 13211d anniversary of Greek freedom WORKS ON CHICKENS Iron Compound Alay Halt Har4ning of Arteries By Rennie Taylor Associated Preto Writer SAN FRANCISCO April 24 — Experiments suggesting that a simple iron compound ferric chloride may be able to control hardening of the arteries have been reported by three University of California medical researchers The dramatic action of the chemical was discovered in testa on chickens There is no would take place in humans although the chemical steps Holy Land Aid Of U N Quits New York Times Service NEW YORK April 24—Lt Gen William E Riley 58 has resigned as chief of the United Nations teams that have been supervising the keeping of the t r u ee agreements between Israel and Arab states The resignation of the retired Marine Corps officer accepted by U N Secretary General Dag Bammarskjold will become effective May 15 Hammarskjold has started to look for a successor to Gen Riley who is now in Jerusalem In 1948 Riley worked with Dr Ralph Bunche in negotiating armistice agreements between Israel and the Arab states On Aug 11 1949 the Security Council set up a truce °Nervation organization and Riley became its chief of staff proof yet that the same thing in the process are similar man and fowl in Prevents Absorbtion Previous tests had shown that the absence of bile prevents the blood stream from absorbing cholesterol from the intestines Cholesterol is a sub stance necessary to life and is formed mainly in the intestines out of fats and other components of diet It also is sttongly suspected of being the principal part of a substance which starts the arterial hardening process by depositing itself on the inside walls of the blood vessels like scale on the inside of a pipe Dr M The experimenters Superstein Dr C W Nichols Jr and Dr I L Chaikoff knew from experience that ferric chloride would separate the bile from other substance when mixed together in test tubes appals in Chickens This they believe is what hap- pened in the digestive systems of the chickens The iron compound apparently kept the bile from promoting the intestinal formation of cholesterol There is no absolute proof that cholesterol is the main lac involved in arterial harden ing but it là known to form a large part of the fatty sub- stance which gathers on art- rial walls to start the disease Ferric chloride kept the cholesterol content of the blood stream at a low level even when cholesterol and bile was added to the diet of the chickens Russians Send 'Peace Dove' 111P I Y I The Russian delegation to the United Nations Friday gravely returned the copper mascot of a Harvard humor magazine that tpe diplomats were duped into thinking was a "dove of peace" in a campus 4111PP MOVIE CAMERA stunt "THE 1344711 We're pleased to announce that We have received the first ship mint of the popular "134W6 cameras to arrive In Salt take City since last Nottemer Quart tities are still severely limited so we suggest you see this popular Movie camera as soon Os pos s I able - t- outstanding movie camera Isthe economical ronfill type that Is extremely easy Is loads MB The camera also features a built-i- n exposure guide and carries Howell's Ben and famous "LIFETIME GUARANTEE' Only $7993 This The lens is Filmococtted - Ho Down Payment Yours for Only $15° a Week tandansal4 273 South Main in Salt take a7a City Neither side thought there was anything funny about it The Harvard Lampoon's ilsacred ibis" was presented to the Russians Monday by the Lampoon's campub rival the Daily Crimson as an American version of the famous Picasso peace dove Lampoon representative John Goelet of Newport IL L spent ball an hour explain the situation Friday to Semyou Konstantinovich TsarapiRussian U N kin dour-face- d delegate Goelet the' beir to one of New York's greatest real estate fortunes was met at the door of the Russian embasy on Park Avenue by First Secretary Nikolaevich Svirin To avoid any more tricks Svirin asked for Goelet's driver's license and selective service card before fes Rid Your Lawn of Ugly Crabgrass With PAK CRASOIASS a WORM Kalil PION me KellyMestem Seed Div WAN COOMATIVI 110 W 1316 lowth AUK kin's office "I told him I was sorry for the confusion" the Lampoon representative said "The Lampoon doesn't believe in diplomatic incidents and we've always manager to keep fairly well out of any political incidents" The Russians thoughtfully provided Goelet with brown paper wrapping for the ungainly copper bird When photographers asked him to smile as he left carrying the ibis under his arm he replied: Back to Lampoon "I'm unsmiling" The youth brushed past re' porters to get into a taxi he had kept waiting throughout his interview with Tsarapkin "This" he said indicating the bird "is going back on the roof of the Lampoon Bldg" The ibis Is a wading bird with a long cylindrical bill bent downward The Lampoon's ibis has adorned ' the top of the magazines building for 20 years and has a grimy Patina of age bt ' ail fakt Zribunt 143 South Math home se morainic Darned at the trice it gait Lake City as second matter runlet act et Mardi L One rate Wyoming $L ilea BEIESEM3 Values to An 2495 (0) SALE S SALE t(3 Valm to 4493 2995 4995 Sizes 8 to 15 SALE Values to 8995 Sizes C - t:i ( 10 to 18 SHORTY COATS tattoos to 2695 EP LONG COATS 14414 r:4-7- 41 ' '' Fro IPark Valois to 77 6995 0) 993 SALE !erar "'"' -utak Idaho NV daily and Sunday! in advanee622400i Lally end Sunda' elsewhere in IL S Kent SIAM The tribune le a member of the Ammo elated Prose 'rho esooetatod Prom b entitled exclusivep to the gee for ro fruidirottne of all load Deere printed to this Dew43444 he wsZi as all £2 In dlipastbas I 963 SALE i a 'P of $ S Richards 1J Until 9 Imo of Salt Loki Kok Opon Alloodays Shoot While Shopping SATURDAY AT ANDERSON'S! I4A7 Come in! Let us serve you a free cup of made fresh before your eyes in coffee t et the i t I is ' I NEW SUNBEAM COFFEEMASTER MINER MRS Factory representative will be in our store all day to dem- onstrate the sensational new Sunbeam products to you - - 00 turtFan IRONMASTER Heats quicker stays hotter irons faster floe In 30 seconds! Thumb-ti- p heat reg- ulator in handle cool easy-to-s- conveniently marked for all type fabrics Available in two 4 lbs or lighterweight k 1 $1495 weights—lightweight lbs $4650 littra k1111rAlito 11 111001L 10 Pillii MIXMASTEI Only th new Model 10 Mix master has the ea clusle BOWL-FI- T I ire for EVEN W-Mill" textured cakes 1111frat ditllpetertla COFFEEMASTER 111:611 Its automatic! You can't miss! 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All you do is WTI an the arena ' No watching—no worry All gem-lik- e chromium plate No glass bowls to break 4 tom mix- greater AERATION and light-s- r higher finer ing 4Wnban every time—I cup to IN 1140111 larger best- - 1111(11411W she WAFFLE BAKE1 woo evet7 dm exactly as you like them—all automically Very soft medium In between 6 egg caNcitY Automatically makes 4 delicious good-size- d ( murian 11"""ollossuuna- - wafiles eye exemanstin f $2850 at ono time No confusion waiting or delay between 'ems 4 people with one baking: 1 Dial 14511 Peet Naas Subscriltion ' 11 Istprt ' ad Ind Month MAIN TODAY IS SUNBEAM NEW YORK April 24 (UP)— corting him upstairs to Tsarsp- FAMOUS 8MM - system and the officers' quick response Apparently some one among the numerous employes set off a signal which alerted a police dispatcher The bandits entered the bank at 10:15 am three of them armed with shotguns rushing in from various entrances A customer Armand Cantino told of their arrivaL Cantino was in the lobby with his wife and a friend Miss Eva Hammond who later became a living shield for one of the bandits Police CpL Robert Heitz who was shot in the bead and his patrol car companion were the first policemen on the scene The two policemen were cruising two blocks from the bank when they received the radio alert of the bank holdup Wounded-iSide They sped to the bank and Heitz went to the side entrance but was felled almost immedidately by a shot fired from the bank His companion Patrolman M F Stein who ran to the front door returned the robbers' fire "1 crouched down by the entrance as the man who had been firing at Heitz came toward the front door pushing a woman in front of him" Stein related "He was carrying what Back to Harvard Lampoon -- SOUTH 01 Using Shotguns The timely arrival of police was a credit to the banks alarm NM 14 END OF MONTH f there coin-mende- the Army" &M i ' ing - 1 6 ii ploit" The Inchon landings in September turned the tide he recalled adding that these were "only grudgingly approved on my desperate insistence over tho most serious professional doubts from higher authorill° MacArthur did not believe the Chinese Communist would risk intervention in Korea because of the risk they would run of having their forces cut off from supplies and annihilated He blamed the State Department's listening posts abroad and the central intelligence agency for failing to obtain advance information of Chinese Communist? intention to enter the war Truman's Story President Truman after he had relieved Gen MacArthur from the Far Eastern command said the general told him at their conference on Wake Island in the autumn of 1950 that the Chinese Communists would not intervene When the 'Chinese forces started pouring across the Yalu River from Manchuria in late November 1950 Gen MacArthur said he ordered the river bridges destroyed and that this order was countermanded from Washington "I realized for the first time" the letter went on "the extraordinary decision which had been made to deny me the use of my full military power to safeguard the lives of my soldiers and insure the ufety of d ' when the contributions bandits drove up She said she saw several men leap out of a car and run into the bank then she looked in a window and saw one of them standing on a counter and waving a gun She told of seeing one of the bandits trying to escape by a a using Miss Hammond Police reinforcements shield had arrived by this time and the bank was filled with tear gas they had pumped into it Continued from Page One looked like a sawed-of- f shotgun NI fired a shot Into his right ' I which be escaped bore Illinois side He slumped to the sidej! license number 2 walk and was struggling to get The IP B I and Illinois and St a pistol out of his pocket but — v Louis state police Friday night I got it away from him" ‘:--- te ''" I 11 were A moment before Vito shot engaged in a widening - himself he was heard to say All the highsearch for fugitive 41 years is the same as ' Ways and bridges near St Louis "Seventy t life to me They're not going to were being watched particular- get me I'll kill myself" Mrs Mites Howard a Salvaly in the expectation he would tion Army "lassie" was standflee toward Chicago Bank officials declined to ing in front of the bank seek give the amount of the loot the bandits bad crammed into a !! large brown canvas bag but left inside the bank when police interrupted their departure estimates However polic lig ranged up to $150000 A said he saw a tabulated sum in six figures and a bank official said the bank usually ' started out the days business with $200000 in cash if It was reported the bandits bad scooped up most of the currency in the numerous tellers' cages before police got i e I t ''' SIIIPmEntJUST & - A I $1 w000kly Dr St S Toy Im Optontootriet Lower Floor )511 - C1713ri Guaranteed t 1 r '41 e watch repek by our skilled I mis — melte mot welch like new )1 iii2115x7 rafts vgaINIIIIIIb - Amor diet 44 d 0 (411) 1 - R A a |