Show 6 mmmam at Otonaa second cSb a March a 1879 Ogden Member or taeUttOClated to Act of SertiM nJ Subaaclptton price MBA us t p oo montix -- sutler according vuivea rrera per year enutied to tb ciunei or not to use for npnUtattnn at otoarwiM creaitwj in tais paper ana it THURSDAY IVENDIC NOVEMBER ikSstHoom "Mobilizing )t Of All US Discussed 9 1950 Horn? mmc- gill-O- US-Russ- ia fx 3KBjjw& 'H'V?' Jjjf'X' gfl aaam JtfltjaaM bbbbW laflxL Prew Pearson casionai however fee' politic WASHINGTON Nov 9— The ft- - secret service does good fife i Ml decision as to how far the RusMarines' Birthday alliance will go toward Tomorrow Nov 10 happens to all-oworld war will depend be the marine corns' 175th hirth- "argely on one factor—how many day That's a lot of years— and atomic bombs we have compared glorious years— to have been fightwith the number Russia baa ing for the country So it might The preponderance of atomic te a good idea for radio stations across the nation to an Ocweapons in our favor continues to casional reminder of play the marine be the moat reassuring In corps' stirring hymn in commem- thing the otherwise unhappy internation oration of a great birthday ai picture Problem for U N sap I - By Joseph sail Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON — The highest American policy-makeare now seriously discussing all-o-the pros and cons of immediate national inmobilization The tervention of the Chinese communists has In fact created grave danger that the Korean war will turn into a world war The situation is so confused that the known facts are worth summarizing "Peace Preservation Corps" At the moment when the North Korean armies were in the last stage of disintegration Chinese troops appeared in Korea under the guise of "Peace Preservation Corps'' These "Peace Preservation Corps" were formed from the crack Fourth route army of Gen Lin Piao redeployed for this purpose from the Yangtsze valley region to Manchuria By now one full Chinese division plus a number of independent regiments and even battalions amounting in all to an estimated 25000 men are in action in Korea Across the Yalu river much larger Chinese forces are waiting to be sent into battle As General Mac Arthur clearly implied in his recent statement further reinforcement of the Chinese in Korea cannot be passively tolerated If many more Chinese come in the only possible response will be to order intensive air attacks on the enemy's whole rear area beyond the Chinese border Thus the immediate danger of the new situation is the danger of war declared or ' undeclared with communist ut rs M eaning of Election ut last-minu- If you would like to take a flier in exploring public mm own ion ask your friends and neighbors this question: What the meaning of the 1950 congressional election results? Here are some answers encountered: It means a slow down in the drift toward socialism in ift It means that the labor unions will have less influence ' fa Washington -- y A woman said she hoped it meant that food prices in the grocery stores would be lower and the farm price sup-fo- rt system modified It means a tougher foreign relations policy If you press for particulars the replies are varied It means a reduction in expenditures of government 'UIt means business will get a better deal Responses to the question reveal that the declining purchasing power of the dollar is recognized and the subject of concern but we the people are vague when it comes to recommending methods for improving the dollar's value Although everybody is conscious of the present war and the threat of a much bigger one the meaning of the election with respect to peace seems elusive to most of us We put faith in United Nations and in the rapid upbuilding of our military might Jtmt should we accept the communist challenge and strike with might and main now or should we proceed with caution in the hopes the crisis will ease? If every voter had been asked to write on his ballot one of two instructions — "strike now" or "wait awhile" — what would have been the American people's verdict as revealed by the poll? ' non-milita- ry - Chinese Intentions Secretary of State Acheson did right of course in tellworld that the United States takes no stock whatever the ing in the Russian suggestion that the Chinese communist troops now arrayed against United Nations forces Sin North Korea are "volunteers" in Korea of their own accord The red Chinese soldiers are in Korea because they were sent there by the same authority which armed and supplied them and which directs them as part of grand communist strategy The United States government wants to know what the Chinese communist government is up to but it is not certain that we shall find out from Mao or any of his spokesmen Although the United Nations security council voted for a resolution inviting Mao to send a representative to listen to General Mac Arthur's report on the Korean situation and to testify as to Chinese intentions and policies what will happen is not known The invitation means that red China is offered a voice if not a vote in United Nations This could be viewed as an entering wedge which red China should accept On the other hand Mao doubtless will think the invitation over For if a spokesman from the "people's government'' comes to listen the world Will think it strange if he hesitates to speak The red Chinese policy of the moment seems to be to act but not to say anything as witness the Tibet invasion and the lack of communication about it with China's good friend India Law Enforcement It is possible to find in Tuesday's voting evidence that the American people can indeed be sufficiently excited by news of crime and corruption as to take action at the polls te Tse-tung- icans Desired Risk of War This was why one of these cor respondents writing from Tokyo recently reported the unanimous belief of the experts that the Chinese would not enter North Korea unless the kremlin "positively and actively" desired to risk a general war Because the experts also believed the kremlin had no such desire the Chinese intervention took the American policy makers utterly by surprise And this in turn is why the gravity of the sit uation has not yet been publicly Bunwiea ana wny no final policy decisions have as yet been publicly announced The fact of a risk of war still remains The fact general of the Immense danger of most of the available American divisions being tied down in Korea also still remains Even calloused Chicago and Cook county reacted to Senator Kefauver's crime investigation committee's disclosures by rejecting a candidate for sheriff who seemed proud of his title as the nation's richest cop and electing his Republican opponent Arizona and California were among the states where the people refused to approve of licensed gambling Nevada retains its monopoly as the wide open state Montana which dearly loves its slot machines nevertheless refused to make their operation legal There is little doubt that the Kefauver committee revelations are contributing to increased interest in law enforcement matters If the committee has done anything it has impressed upon many Americans the fact that smiling toler- Showdown Discussed ance of a few brothels a few bookies and a little gambling At the moment while mobiliza is a mistake For all these things are part and parcel of oper- tion is being discussed there is reluctance to resort to it beations by rich and ruthless crime rings who accept corrup- great cause of the absolute panic it would cause in Europe At the rimmim tion of public officers as a major part of the overhead while a showdown with Moscow is 1 -- Two Russian Jokes Henry Hazlitt author and journalist who was oemg aiscusseo there is reluctance to move for it great because of our own terrible weakness except jji atomic But if the new crisis in weapons Korea swells rw deepens the remorseless logic of tvim mm tet mimy put me arguments for national mobilization in arsjew light and may have results town Tuesday lecturing at Weber college told a couple of Russian stories gJ aver ana more lar reaching He said a sergeant and a corporal were walking along a Russian road pointed west The sergeant asked "What are OH Producer Dead you thinking about corporal?" The corporal replied The BRADFORD Pa Nov 9 (API— same as you" Thereupon the sergeant exclaimed "I thought Don Thornton Andrus 61 one of a leaamg on producers so therefore I am placing you under arrest for treason whowMuujr was born in Ashland Ore The other story told about Stalin sneaking into the back died yesterday seat of a ' Moscow picture show to check up on the comrades' So Much in Service ia ueiiaviur x view oi oiannjr was snown tvervDoav hut ssta m 111 stomped and cheered Stalin's neighbor who of course didn'tlSO Stalin poked him with an elbow shouted ym dam fool do you want to get all of us into -- M m mm in- - trouble" It Happened U S Doesn't Aim to Send in Ogden- - Troops Into Indochina 50 By Peter Edson Years Ago Little Mc-Vick- er intervene here the of French and stop the support red march down the Malaya peninsula Recent Developments Fifth ward fair was the place Half a dozen recent developments for excitement enthusiasm and have made such a course of action likely: 1 — The ambush and happiness at the fair Large crowds seem massacre of 3500 French Foreign thronged the rooms In the opera Legion Moroccan and native Viethouse block and the lunchrooms nam troops at Caobang 2—Subseespecially were a place of life dur- quent withdrawal of the French from half a dozen forts on the Chiing the dinner hour nese border 3— Increased Chinese communist arms aid to Ho Chi Four new Pullman cars had been Minn's guerrilla forces 4— TrainDenver-Ogden put into service on the ing of Ho's army by the Chinese run over the Rio Grande and their possible reinforcement Western and Denver and Rio by units 5— Growing resistance in France to Grande further support of the Vietnamese 6— The absence in France From four to five train loads of of Bao Dailong the Vietnam "playearth from the Kaysville cut were boy" emperor now recognized by being used by the Rio Grande France the United States and other Western in filline in the hollows major powers Bao Dai hat only recently rewhich had marked the topograph of tneir yards heretofore from Wall turned home from the Riviera The avenue to Washington avenue The explanation given for his absence is that he has stayed in France to filling in had been nearly com- be the Pau conference where pleted and the crossing of Oregon his near ministers have been and still Short Line main track west to the are trying to negotiate with the river bridge French government for greater inMrs Emma J McVicker state dependence By staging what has strike it had amounted to a superintendent of schools been in Ogden visiting public is believed that Bao Dai has won schools under escort of Superin- final approval for creation of a Vietnamese national army tendent Allison Bao' Dal la a Shrewd Leader Bao Dai's supporters sometimes called his apologists insist that he 20 is not the playboy he is painted Instead he is said to be a shrewd Women's smart felt hats in new tough Oriental who realizes that styles were selling for only 186 ha can't defeat communism until coats $23: dresses two for $15 and he can remove the taint of French colonialism from his country In hosiery $1 per pair" other words he wants to get the as out Professor A N Sorenson of the French of Vietnam just she Utah State Agricultural college was Indonesians got the Dutch out of to deliver a pep talk at the Hotel their country This is of course a long range Bigelow by Ogden Boosters of the Farmer football team which was objective It couldn't conceivably to meet Brigham Young university be done this year or next But what Bao Dai apparently wants is a players French agreement to give him Judge James A Howell addressed promises of full autonomy and conthe Kiwanis club on recent Ameri- trol over his country's economy taxes and can Legion convention at Boston foreign trade customs military forces — then build on Jess W Wade secretary of the that Today his government Intermountain Grain Growers Inc wouldn't last 15 minutes if it were had returned from Idaho where he not for French and U S military conferred with W E Shepherd assistance president of the Idaho state cham Tactically Necessary ber of commerce and president of Withdrawal of French troops tne xsortn side juand and water from northern Chinese-bordforts company on the organization of the is explained now as tactically necJerome district of a 'cooperative essary because of the changed milgrain sates agency itary situation It does not necmean that the French are J Cecil Alter meteorologist re- essarily being defeated by Ho's communist ported fair warm weather had guerrillas As long as Ho's forces numbered prevailed following much cooler temperatures and that fall farm no more than 5000 divided in work was retarded poorly armed small bands with one rifle to five men and the other Ogden had turned collegiate with four with bamboo spears the the seventh annual local college football treat corning to town — Brigham Young university of Provo was to meet the Utah State Aggies of Logan at tne ugden stadium state superintendent schools was also present J battle-hardened-Chin- ait-do- Ago er - I I CoSf I 4 The stories could be true For as Hazlitt said the joke is the only reasonably safe instrument available to the Rus J ' sians for In'mu environments a joke has more social signifi I self-expressi- ROSE CHAPEL MORTUARY 533 26th Street Dial Ogden Utah on cance t han most of us suspect W do not want we abhor general war but prudence our national existence demands that we be prepared That we be ready as if we expected it That is the best guarantee William rlalsey We just don't have any water Every time we drill for water we strike oiL— Prince Fahad Al Salim of Arabia -- j j r bor- - - 8897 advantage French Have Edge in Air The French now have 150000 trooDS in Vietnam About a third are Frenchmen and Foreign Leg-- ! another third are Morgionnaires occans and the rest native Viet namese Opposing them it is esti mated no has from 150000 to 175000 men armed with everything the French have except aircraft A special mission of officers and officers ia now en route from France to Vietnam to train the new national army It will be built up at first not by iransier ox Vietnam troops now under French command but by re cruiting the village defense units and local war-lorforces A Viet nam army of up to 200000 Is con templated The big qnestion is whether there defense against the communists is time to build up this force for American military assistance to Vietnam was promised right after the U S recognized Bao Dai last rived in May They have been rainy continuous since then Some Shipments During the Korean war some shipments were diverted from Vietnam to Korea Now that the Korean war la practically over diversions are being made in the other direction But sending U S fighting troops to Vietnam to support the French is not considered necessary and is not now contemplated E now COMPLETE ADULT FUNERALS al wire-pullin- g) Paragraphs By Carey Williams Q—Who is the U S high commissioner for the American occupation sane of Australia? A— Walter J Donnelly Q— What is a "fire stone?" A—It is labradorite a beautifully iridescent member of the feldspar family found on Canada's northeastern coast Used in jewstone it elry as a has a brilliant sheen and within its depths gives the illusion of vibrating shades of blue purple green and red semi-precio- Q—Are there more illiterates or college gradaatea ia the U 8T A— Illiterates who total two mil- ed A parrot repeats what It hears A human does the same bat always adds a little to it er ten-fort- "Europe touched America mil- st A aaaa that Is Immune to noise Is the one that lives ever a bowl- thick-head- a ry ed It was different in the old days A president never traveled eat Of the boundaries of the United States 1 When all the world was young things weren't so complicated You could read the news without having someone to analyse it for you PITTSBURGH Nov ft (AP) — The Rt Rev Chrysostom John Kelemen 68 former private counselor for the regent of Hungary and Arch abbot — ordinary of St Martin's archahbey in Pannonhalm Hungary died yesterday W FLOORS FOR OLD Rent-a-Clar- floor send- ke er from Gateway Glass and Paint Co In no ttzne you can transform dull discolored t raffle ejgtoe areas beautifully gleaming Sit floOttV Just follow the simple GATEWJW PAJNflfe waa'J8sd fh 88 If GLASS AND 3 I I I ' 1 can't exphm it Rupert the salesman teM M HmWi Spot Shoes an so comfortable ' Jfl Mke j Phone) 6214 I SHOES op- erating instructions and you can do a professional We have everything job you need tevi $3!7a95 2317 Washington Blvd kilo-wat- lion in this country still outnumber college graduates Q—Who Is the ruler of Persia? — Shah Mohammed Reza Pah- - ELKTOJC BLANKET rs ter lions of years ago says an arche-ologiAnd they have never quit since §245 §395 US0 Telephone 8897— Day or Night do-live- big-wi- gs With Errol Flvnn out or clrrula tlon the girls will have to hitch meir wagons to another star The nation Is retarning to normal The hammer murder is being revived Simile: As hard as trying to suppress a sneeze thin-skinn- ed Answers Korean-Manchuria- broad-caste- Acheson says public life in America is no place for anyone who is Or and n The North area is an Ideal one for United Nations cooperation— if Moscow would permit it Reason is that the Japs which once controlled both Korea and Manchuria developed power and industry regardless of international boundaries just as Grand Coulee and Bonneville dams rerve several states regardless of state boundaries Seven dams are reported on the major Yalu river between Manchuria and North Korea The Suiho dam one of the largest in the world ia 328 feet high 2788 feet long has a reservoir 40 miles long and 700000 kilowatts of power Another dam Mamposhln delivers 234000 ICS? 10 Operate Industries The total system when completed will produce 2000000 te and will operate industries as far south as Port Arthur at the' southernmost tip of Manchuria Two other reservoirs are south of the Yalu river wholly in North Korean territory and about 20 miles north of the present U N front It was about the time U N troops approached these reservoirs that Chinese troops crossed the bar-oThe only possible way these power projects can be operated Is under some form of United Nations control since they are located in and supply power to two countries Behind the Iron Curtain Scientist Escapee Bruno Ponte-corv- o the Italian-bor- n British atom scientist had the full cooperation of the OGPU in escaping behind the iron curtain Pontecorvo drove his car to Open 'iag en and left it there while he and his family took the north ex press to Stockholm From Stockholm they flew by plane to Helsinki The Russian freighter had been scheduled to sail y at a m September 5 It waited until five p m and sailed the minute the Pontecorvo family was on board Red Army Chiefs Meet— The American legation reports that a mysterious meeting of eastern European communist bosses is now going on at the Russian resort town cf Sochi in the Crimea This ia Prime Minister Stalin's favorite hideaway and it's believed he may be present A number of Polish and Rumanian generals are known to be present and American mats believe the subject beingdiplodiscussed is how to bring greater coordination between the satellite armies Tension In Iran Tension in Iran—U S Ambassador Grady has cabled from Teheran that the Russian radio acrocs the border in Azerbaijan is warning Iranians to get ready to welcome a Russian army The which continue no longer say "If the Russian army enters Iran" but "When the Russian army enters Iran" Meanwhile the Moscow diplomatic set has been buzzing about the way all Soviet turned out for a party at the Iranian embassy a week ago Soviet Tanks— The U & army In Germany has reported to the Pen- on that Russia's tanks and ar-eand even the of her troops far surpass firepower those of the United States This report based on detailed examination of Rus-sa- n weapons says that the United States has no heavy tank that will compare with the Josef Stalin HI tank mounting a powerful gun Even more disturbing the report says the firepower of the Russian divisions of only 11000 men is almost equal to the firepower of our much larger divisions of 18800 men v round-the-clock- ing alley Questions Save $1500 G es five-percent- er ds Every Myers & Foulger funeral is complete in every detail and includes 65 separate and essential items of service $125 I French could hold mountain plain-cloth- WASHINGTON— Assurances are der forts They were like the old frontier forts in the days here that the situation in American of Indian fighting Now that the County public school teachers given Vietnam —formerly French Indo- communists have mortars and arwere guests of the city teachers china — is not as bad as spot reports tillery and are better trained in and both bodies to the number of and surface events may indicate units the regimental and Fear has been expressed that French have tolarger 150 teachers met at the high school their change Vietnam would be the next point method of warfare building and listened for nearly cf The French are therefore withcommunist advance in Asia the two hours to an address by Miss Korean aggression having failed drawing from the mountains to the M Adelaide Holton supervisor of Some conclusions have been drawn Red River delta plain northwest that the United States and other of Hanoi Here they can fight a primary work in the Salt Lake United Nations forces would have more orthodox warfare and have Dublic schools Mrs Emma J some to to - ad For definite information has been obtained that Russia has been able to manufacture only 24 tomic bombs and is making them only at the rate of two per month Atomic Stockpile Greater On the other hand the American stockpile while a secret is vastly greater Furthermore our rate of production is much faster This of atomic has been the main factor strength superiority deterring the Soviet from world war ud to now and the ehsnc r i will continue to be a deterrent in the future It is also why the Russians have adopted the policy of wearing down American resources by ways of attrition in which satellite nations not the red army do the fighting In brief it is likely that the kremlin will not risk a major war in which Russian troops must do battle and in which Russian cities are exposed — until there is a bet-tbalance between our atomic stockpile and Moscow's Guarding the President Until the recent attempt on his life President Truman had little thought to his personal given safety He once told my assistant Fred Blumenthal that he had out what he would do if anfigured assassin came into the room Most assassins he said would expect the president to get under the desk but he was planning to reverse things and attack the attacker-j- ust as Andrew Jackson did when attacked in the halls of congress When last week's shooting started Mrs Truman rushed into the president's bedroom where he was napping to tell him a secret service man was lying wounded on the street Actually she mistook assassin Collazo for a man une secret service man was In front of Blair House at the tune of the shooting the others were in the rear eating lunch Brunt of Attack The Whit House police which bore the brunt of the attack are under the secret service The ocrei service nave been under aume criucism in recent years for having become partially political ataj Gen Harry Vaughan inter vene©: in tne early days of the Truman administration fired Mike Reilly who operated under Roosevelt and gave the impression he wanted to run the service This wuuia not nave been tolerated in the old days of Chief William Moran Later during the senate probe Reilly nhind °d given a ?1?J?lly job in the interior department (He knew too much about how the secret service gave a special pass to Vaughan 's friend John Maragon and about other polit-lcDespite oc- ar China Air War Can't Win But this is by no means all As experience in Korea has shown air attacks will not win the battle If really important Chinese forces are sent into Korea the immediate result will be to tie down there almost the whole of the American army And this ofexisting course is the real aim and the greatest danger of the sudden Chinese intervention In plain language with most of America's available divisions committed indefinitely in Korea the way will be open for all sorts of krsmlin adventures elsewhere What is at stake is not Korea but Indochina and southeast Asia Iran and all the Middle East Berlin and Yugoslavia and the rest of Europe What has happened in Korea vastly increases the betting on a new kremlin onslaught against one or more of the world's numerous vital soft spots some time during the next six months Reasons Important The reasons for this conclusion are important First there is very little doubt that 'the kremlin rather than Peking has been the real prime mover in this affair It is now well established that Mao 's government resisted pressure to send Chinese troops into Korea for a considerable period There are good reasons to believe that Molotov had to go to Peking in person to secure obedience from the Chinese There are also reasons to believe that the Chinese had to be paid off by restoration of their local control in mancnuna which has till now been a Russian province in all but name If the kremlin was the prime mover kremlin interests must have been the dominant considerations Second there is also the timing of the Chinese move In July or August very little aid given the North Koreans would have broken our grip on Korea In September preventive occupation of the region north of the 38th parallel would have paralyzed the United Nations Instead the move was until the North Korean delayed had army been virtually destroyed and the certain result would be armed con flict between Chinese and Amer War DeMlMfeon AsJomb Ratio ut walking on clou |