Show The Weather Tempercxtin Temperature for tha nding t ipvtn a m today:) Max Mis! v UTAH— Partly cloudy today toContinued night and Tuesday v arm da vs 8 High both da v lim- tonight 8 and near 51 in JNpfe Wxto Ogden and Logan— P rti v f loud v today tonight and Continued Tuesday mild High days near 70 Lowa tonight 45 ur S3 AlbuqucrqiM A' 01 asunnss Bismarck 49 n 68-7- Jg-4- 5"lt Cheyenna Chlcjo If faa Unittd AaaaolataS OGDEN CITY Praaa F III I Arrests 10 in Mass Roundup of Alien Communists — — 86 Persons Russians Preach Peace " I i i 1 Facing Still Move Toward War Deport ation William L Ryan Jr- ''-- UTAH MONDAY EVENING 68 Slain in Tunnel by Fleeing Reds Survivors Owe ' Lives to Bold Officer OCTOBER 23 1950 By — i-- - Pair Found Dead It's Santa Time For Teacher of Kris Kringles ProbeUnderWay Co-re- na Guided Missiles Looms lf pre-seas- i Court to Review Og-de- day-to-d- j Red Conspiracy ay em-poas- is Report Favorable tJjBPrjS ay arjaatas a iSFWaHak agsa wSi ''feaanajiajaMi aTSfPa fJSSSSk tZ3f sjaag Sja ? 7 sT'-flfBaas- i Haw P3a JB JifgBrA f sfl k EiSawi awaaMBasgaa on While line abovei are Spring 40iSatt Laic 53 San Diego 3SSaa rrn 71 75 73 43 S4 54 JMUmt is at 73 SO " SB u hl rlur urging compliance with the t But the Del C 73) Lomt 4(wEhington RNAl 40 at 54 EDITION W 7 Korea Oct 23 (AP)— South Korean forces 50 within miles or less of the Manchurian border today swept Shattered remnants of the red Korean army were fleeing frantically toward the mountain triangle north of Kang-gy- e It was there that the red chieftain Kim II Sung carried out his guerrilla war against the Japanese before Russian occupation forces installed him as premier of North Korea after World war IX i Kanggye is about 20 miles from the Manchurian border in the center of the peninsula J Tjfc H iiofl KT am 4m' u Three South Korean ROK visions were driving for the Man churian border to finish the four- c-- awl HpSSSJBSJSJSB Body Indicates Murder in Idaho HAILEY Idaho Oct 23 (AP) — A possibility of murder is being investigated here today on the discovery of the body of a man Tsouth of Bellevue yesterday Blaine County Sheriff L E Outsz said the body had a bullet hole in the back of the head Earlier he had reported the side of the face had been smashed Papers on the body indicated the man's name was LeRoy Reems 55 Sheriff Outsz lately of Montana said be had no further information on the man's identity Drivers today were ignoring the two white parking stripes along downtown Washington boulevard painted yesterday to keep wheels of vehicles clear of gutters City Commissioner William Stowe appealed for compliance "The stripes paralleling curbs are there to remind drivers that their vehicles must go no closer to the curb than the white lines" he said Can't Clean Well Gutters cannot be effectively cleaned when cars are parked against the curb he emphasized h The wide stripes were painted yesterday as an emergency measure They are on both aides of Washington between Twenty-sixt- h and Twenty-secon- d Grant Thomas chairman of the retail merchants' division Ogden chamber of commerce urged "main stem" merchants to refrain from sweeping refuse in the gutters dur-- g early morning hours Store sweepings should be gathered up and placed in trash cans of the owners he said property Thomas complimented city commissioners for arranging a crew to do the whole painting job yesterday U S Shifts month war Observers said the ROKS who can make 30 miles a day in forced marches were capable of reaching the Yalu river on the border some time Tuesday MacArthnr Silent Gen Douglas MacArthur's headquarters in Tokyo was A spokesman said that WASHINGTON Oct 23 (AP) fc the army "had several only estimates of when allied troops were ex- The United States probably will be pected to reach the Manchurian able to dispatch quickly a substan border") On the north bank of the river tial part of any air strength to North Atlantic allies at red China Hroops guard Manchuria forthcoming European defense talks The desperate red Koreans were here fleeing northward so fast that they Indeed there are indications the no longer could herd all their allied prisoners along with them buildup of United States air force Many POWS were escaping to strength in Europe already is well the safety of allied lines Other prisoners Were massacred under way The explanation is that the air by the reds in a brutal last show of defiance force unlike the army has not been Five hundred South Koreans virtually all its were reported murdered at Yong- - compelled to put into the existing strength cnung on norm Korea s east coast war An army intelligence officer in Tokyo said the rod Koreans had Series of Meetings rests up "no real put In the series of meetings of tance in the last 24organized hours" committee and defense military Ancient Walled Cities ministers of the North AUsntic organization here during the Fleeing reds were reported turn- treaty next seven days the United States ing inland in their retreat before will agree to its contributions to the I advancing United Nations the mutual defense ?g? the forces Officers said they were enmenace of Soviet aggression — on tering an area dotted with ancient the ground in the air at sea in walled cities These will not offer much de- providing war equipment for the fense a spokesman said "With other 11 treaty nations The guess has been that evenwhat we have learned already we can take care of those without any tually the United States may provide from five to ten of the 70 or trouble" The spokesman said American 80 srmy divisions of the combined forces had learned much in as western European defense force saulting the walled city north of Working Feverishly Taegu in southeastern Korea United States army officials have Air attacks "will take care of them" he explained But ground been working feverishly to find assaults may be necessary to flush some -- ay to provide the first of out all enemy resistance the divisions There is no of tending ten divisions now That As the allied tide rolled northward the bag of red Korean pris- happens to be all the army has oners swelled past the 120000 anywhere — in the reserve at heme in Korea in Europe mark The navy is in somewhat the poUnited Nations forces captured 26000 North Korean troops in the sition of the air force Even though it has built up the Seventh fleet in past 24 hours the far east from an original handMeet Stiff Resistance ful of craft to a force that South Korean Eighth division of the total 400 United troops met the stiffeat red resist- Nations warships it has an ample ance of the day An enemy battal- stockpile of vessels and is getting ion supported by artillery attempted the men to man them to slow the ROK advance in the Pukchong area 50 miles northeast of Pyongyang the fallen red cap- New Canadian Pact ital OTTAWA Oct 23 CAP) — A CaBut a spokesman at U S Eighth army headquarters said a ROK col- nadian government source said toumn had thrust north of Huich-on- g day a peacetime version of the waralmost another 50 miles north time Hyde Park agreement to of Pukchong in the center of the mesh the economies of Canada and the United States for defense pro- peninsula This column was within 50 miles auction will be signed in or less of the Manchuria border ington Thursday Air Power HariBW To Europe non-commi- ttal Found Bodies At Sunchon we had heard the report of a massacre at a railroad tunnel No one had any specific information and this appeared to be just another rumor But Allen was determined to run it down "I'd never feel right about it" he said "if we don't do all we can to find out about this" The South Koreans provided a guide and we headed for the tunnel A South Korean colonel found the first seven bodies Men who had starved to death had been laid beside the raiieoad track And then we began the survivors and the bodiesfinding of the men murdered by the Koreans Allen directed the job of getting litter bearers to carry the wounded across a ridge He walked among the men patting them on the back encouraging them and assuring them their nightmare was over Knelt in Prayer Slowly the men moved over the ridge — pitifully emaciated figures whose clothing hung in folds from their starved bodies The wounded were carried in litters improvised from mats and poles and taken to an improvised hospital An American chaplain with the paratroopers —Capt James A Skel-to- n of Hannibal Mo — came to the hospital to see the men They asked Skelton if he would lead them in prayer The men knelt in the campfire light and repeated the Lord's Prayer They told Skelton that each day on the long march from Seoul and on the train ride northward they naa Kneit once each day to repeat in unison the prayer - SEOUL At least 68 American prisoners were slain by their red guards Friday night near the Sunchon railway tunnel 10 miles north of hero They had been led from a train into nearby fields under the pretext that they were being taken to supper The guards machine-gunne- d x them Sixty-siprisoners died on the spot Two outers died during the night of their wounds At least 21 many of them wounded lived massacre through the hour-lon- g Had Brig Gen Frank A Allen of Cleveland Ohio not been so persistent many of the wounded undoubtedly would not have survived the bitterly cold night six-inc- The car 43 33 41 Gd Junction 7 Laa Vcsaa 44 Tl SECTIONS WO 53 SO Many Prisoners Escape To Allied eds Flee to Kanggye ! Drivers Ignoring New White Parking Stripes Downtown dSs PAGES-T- Bortlnd V — the Sunchon tunnel massacre To President Truman's proposals'- J mat nussia mena her ways to pro Those already in custody were mote world peace Pravda answered aganda directed toward Western described as "the most important" that it is not Russia but the United Germany in particular and western of about 86 persons scheduled for States which must change its Europe in general prompt pick up and deportation if policy To the face to face peace talk They Know Better deportation is possible The Prague declaration of the Officials said the 10 are those proposal of the 1848 Republican who have been most active in the pngttdential aspirant Harold E Soviet and satellite ministers anStassen Pravda replied in terms of nounced over the week end points fields of communist propaganda ridicule at the suggestion of any the direction of the political and Drivel Coast-to--C oast change in Soviet policy propaganda pressure Pravda devoted its lead editorial to that decIn the case of most of this 10 Same Old Stuff laration saying it would the arrests mark the first time the The new Soviet peace offensive "peace partisans" the worldinspire over Justice department has moved to now is in full blossom but Pravda to struggle agaihst the west deport them The Russians! are not so However the department said leaves little hope that it means any Soviet concessions as to think that any part ofnaive that many on the proposed deten- real the The indications are that this program for Germany as outlined tion list of 86 are aliens oreviouslv offensive peace will center once in the declaration would be acordered deported but who have not again on the generalized Soviet pro- ceptable to the west Russia's proleft the country which have been rejected posals for a unified The roundup extends from coast posals Germany aim before: Reduction by a third of to thwart western Europe to coast from reworld armaments which wnniri still The department acted under the leave the Russians arming Western Germany while and a cover for the Sov1950 internal security act paramount they provide This law enacted pver President Big Five peace pact Added to this iet's own program of rearming East would be terms the Stockof the Germany Truman s veto permits the attorney holm of the com The proposals: also set the stage general to keep- subversive aliens munistspeace petition for calling outlawry of the for a stalemate in the- Big Five against whom deportation is pend atom bomb peace talks for which- 59 nations ing in custody for as long as six Soviet peace offensives have been in the U N bolitical committee monins a communist means of marking have voted The Russians Seek Riddance time while" getting ready for new make this a noisy stalemat would for moves apparently- the ears of Germany which pas- cannot If the alien be deported will be This offensive coupled with terrific prop- sionately wants unification within that time the law directs that they be kept under close supervision by the immigration service Heretofore many aliens ordered deported have been able to remain free and in this country because of difficulty in getting any other nation fo accept then In the current pick ups of per sons already ordered deported but ALBION N Oct 23 (AP) — suil ftere officials admitted frank Kris Kringle Kollege opens toly that a prime objective is to spur the efforts of such persons to ob BEAR RIVER CITY Box Elder day —and if you think that's tain travel papers from some coun anywhere in the world willing County Oct 23—Espiridion Loreto early try Charles W Howard dean of to accept tnem 25 Mr Alien Texas and Mrs the school for Santa 33 ElElwood Box Trujillo Clauses is thinking ahead more der county were found apparent400 shopping days He plans than ly dead in an automobile here to travel by fast plane in Deabout midnight Sunday under what cember 1951 to the of Sheriff Warren W Hyde said were Nyra in Lycia Asia bishopric Minor by way of The Netherlands Germysterious circumstances The sheriff said the two were many and Scandinavia returnSpeed-U- p found just one-hablock north ing here on Christmas eve of the Bear River city school by Howard's school will have three WASHINGTON Oct 23 (AP) — persons living nearby The autoterms this year imA decision to name a special guidmobile had gone off the road into parting "know-how- " to prospeced missiles consultant as adviser a borrow pit and through a fence tive Santas from as far away to Secretary of Defense Marshall However the automobile was as New Orleans raisec speculation today that a only slightly damaged and the in the program may bodies bore no evidence Of injury major step-u- p J Sheriff Hyde said The sheriff be under way H T Keller president of the withheld any opinion that there Cnrysler Corp wag disclosed to may have been foul play but said have been working with the armed that apparently the two died from forces on a special guided missiles carbon monoxide or from some study The automobile firm said poison W Glenn Garner director of n he will not sever his connections with Chrysler city laboratories was making WASHINGTON Oct 23 (AP) — it is customary for special con- tests today to determine cause of The supreme court today agreed ''tto sultants to the defense ' secretary to death The two were taken to Brigham review the New York retain their outside connections conspiracy early today by Evan Green conviction of 11 top communist and serve on a basis City Tremonton Utah state pahighway Ti when needed Sheriff Hyde pro- leaders trooper The fact that Keller's extensive trol two nounced on arrival the dead The principal point at issue inbeen in the field of at Science has Brigham City production brought was not known whether they volves the constitutionality of the It speculation that the guided misdead before being taken from 1940 Smith act That law makes siles program which has high pri- were their automobile it a crime to advocate or teach ority is about ready to shift Loreto had been working as a overthrow of: tie government to output of weapons To farmhand by Box Elder county for force date so far as is known is has about two in and violence The communist months been principally on research and leaders were convicted of violating The sheriff said ' V I development from all angles wouldinvestigation be pushed the act In Box Elder 16 Serrte Omaha Phoenix M 65 43 Mk S3 M Korean Dri ve Nears Manchuriotn Border WASHINGTON Oct 23 — If the voice of Moscow's Pravda is the voice of authority were saved because a brigaand it speaks for the ruling communist (AP) — The justice departarty — any new dier general dared to push Five talks on big Big as will far as most western into communist territory to peace ment today disclosed it has get — nowhere talks with Russia check a report that American a begun roundup of top On two occasions in the few days! Pravda has an- prisoners of war had been alien communisms in the past United States and has ar- nounced there will b- - no change in Soviet foreign policy killed by North Korean reds I aVP By Don Whitehead SUNCHON North Korea Oct 23 (AP) — Survivors of I rested 10 NfA Seme 32 York 11 °aa Prem Nw Orleana t New 43 38 Provo 5! Reno 3 V°n The : S 48 ' George S Eccles Ogden banker and economic consultant for the EC A to the Marshall plan countries of Earope looks over a report he brought back showing definite improvement in the domestic status of Europe's countries outside the iron curtain Marshall Plan Helps Europe To Develop Eccles Reports Back from a whirlwind 20000-mil- e flying trip to Euhis second as in rope many years George S Eccles president of the First Security corporation has definite proof of the improvement in Europe's economy "They have progressed in Europe to the point where they have reestablished their civilian economy and are now ready to develop themselves politically and militarily" he said On his trip a year ago Eccles said he found there was plenty of food and that standards of living were higher He felt at that time he said that the only way these be made permanent gains forcould was these countries receiving aid from the Marshall plan to help themselves "They have made a real effort to do this" said Eccles With Robert Hinckley In his tour of the beleaguered Old World continent Eccles served with Robert H Hinckley noted Ogden business man and vice president of the American Broadcasting Co as economic consultants for economic cooperation administration One of the principal problems In Europe today is that of convincing the west European people that they Can develop a defense program Without uprooting their domestic economy "The people of Europe have memories of both World wars that ire much more vivid than ours" Marriner Eccles Called 'Dictator WASHINGTON If Oct 23 (AP) — Giannini president of Bank of America asserted today that Federal Reserve Board Member Marriner S Eccles of Ogden has a dictator complex" The San Francisco banker alee told the board at an anU-truheara ing against the bank holding Corp that testimony given earlier by Eccles in the case "was not true" He referred to Eccles' testimony that Giannini's father the late A P Giannini founder of Bank of America and had made —and then broken — a "gentleman's agreement" they would not acquire more banks Giannini a director of Eccles tried to charged a force in 1943 to "submit to an arbitrary and discriminatory" requirement to that effect but its officers would not L st Trans-Americ- two-year-o- ld Trans-Ameri- ca Trans-Ameri- ca Trans-Americ- do so "Mr Eccles has a dic- tator complex" he developed said "He seems to forget a public official in the United States is a servant of the people and not their master" Eccles was chairman of the reserve board when the board lodged a Clayton Act case against in June 1948 accusing it of building up a banking monopoly in the west chiefly through control" of the 500 branch Bank Trans-Ameri- of America ca he said "They still suffer from the results of disrupted economy and bomb damage from the last war r France Remembers "France remembers her lesson only too well from World war I when she feared the entire economy to the production of defense the building of the Maginot agd line undergoing terrific inflation and the other hardships of carrying a military burden Then along came World war II and even the Maginot line failed- Thus they are very hestitant about restoring their political economy" Eccles said the situation as seen by the Europeans themselves was like this: "France did not have the will to fight Italy believes the Russians would not attack her France and England are against all proposals that would reaarm Germany or recreate her industry" He said the U S must exert more pressure on France to rearm that Italy had the potential to become an ally because of her strong opposition to communism and that England can and will make a stronger effort to rearm without upsetting her domestic economy "Turkey and Greece" be said "are still very poor countries but they now have plenty of food and their standard of living has improved They will make potent allies because of their strategic location south of the satellite countries and their hatred of communism" Fall Partnership Eccles said that in the stabilization of Europe Germany must be restored to a full partnership in the west with a full German army organized and integrated into the armed forces of the west "EC A can be well proud of the record it has made in Europe as a comparison of production figures and standard of living of one year ago will indicate "From here on out we must adopt a more aggressive attitude in dictating the reforms necessary for rehabilitation of Europe" he dev - J clareev Meets Fred Taylor In his stay in Berlin Eccles met another former Ogdenite Fred Taylor who is in charge of RI AS the American state department s radio station in the west sector of the city It was Taylor's program over the station which was credited with urging East German citizens to mail in their ration cards as protests against the communist inspired elections in the bombed out former German capital Eccles left New York Sept 21 and returned Oct 18 after having visited every major city including Berlin and Vienna behind the iron curtain MNew York he and Hinckley met William C Foster chairman of the ECA where they delivered their report on the European situation rnf com-prisesmu- eh Errol Flynn Weds Again 'For Third and Last Time' MONTE CARLO Monaco Oct 234 The crowd in the city hall court (AP) — Movie Actor Errol Flynn threw rice at TT the couple m was msmed for the third and they enteced £or ceremony The last time" today in an Miss Wymore wore civil ceremony in the Monaco City tall hall Actress Patrice Wymore was a light street length wool dress la thebride shade She carried jan — of and whit bouquet pink Mavor than 100 guests watched snd a ers crowd of 3000 chartered excitedly fen Flynn wore a dark blue suit and the city hall courtyard a black knit tie Itwas a typical Riviera day — Mrs James Wymore Patrice's with a warm sun and the beautiful mother wore a mauve suit with an blue Mediterranean for a back- orchid color felt bat trimmed with ground gold sequins' fi Istr'Yachtsman Best Man Bouquet The best man for the Australian The only thing approachinsr asm Fllynn was his fel- - incident occurred born when nm low countryman Yachtsman Fred French photographers tried to push McEvoy McEvoy's wife Claude into the city hall ahead of the of honor for the 24-- ding Police shoved them d Into the party and Patrice's year-olbride from Salina Kas rback party There was no mob scene at the bouquet was slightly crushed After the wedding the party tnougn Monaco s police weaaing had been mobilized to handle drove in four limousines trimmed persons Newsmen and photog- with white ribbons to the Hotel de the Pans and separated Flynn to have raphers far outnumbered guests at the ceremony on which lunch on his yacht with McEvoy the Monte Carlo radio station Patrice to have lunch with her par m en IS uniting account This afternoon the couple was to The religious ceremony will be drive to Nice 20 miles away for followed by a wedding at a religious wedding in the Luth- - the Hotel de Paris andreception a private eran Church of the Transfigura- - farewell for members of the wed-Uo("ding party on Flynn the JSS Neither Prince Rainier 3rd ruler Zaca Then law new lyyacht weds will uonaco nor oi ranee igor itoud- tax a honeymoon on estranges nusoana oi tsar- - aea ciinuy Hutton bara snowed up for the Flynn is due to ctvsl ceremony Both had been ex on his film "Bloodline" on the Riv peered iera Friday -- j red-head- V' SZte " f off-whi- ed te - j 10-0- iuii 00 i n- -- 4&-no- i |