Show The Weather Temperatures to- UTAH— Partly cloudy today tow night and tomorrow wttll towers over northern mountain to m ! north - t Huh today and 75 to S5 In southeast except 10 to 50 M In Dixie Low innu-h- i Ofden ur Max Min tonight and tomorrow with law eveninr hower In nearby mountain High today M 1W tonight 46 lifjMiOtfc to p CaltaS Meist4 rrcti OGDEN CITY Press GOP Solons Strike Should Be Settled Win Compromise By Hugh A Wilson SALT LAKE CITY June 6 (UP)— Republican legislators today froze the budget bill in a last - minute try to gain ftrength for a compromise in the appropriations committee of the special legislative ses- sion Miffed Democrats scheduled Ogden Transit company bus strike should be brought to an end quickly by whatever means are necessary doesn't know all the facts of ' The Standard-Examine- r the case but it knows there is general agreement in public opinion that the wages paid the operators are too low We understand the management is on record as saying the company can't raise wages to the amounts demanded and continue to operate profitably and that work "fringes" not common in other transit contracts obstruct attempts to increase the local wage rates more than a nominal amount We believe that no one expects the owners to operate at a loss We also believe that a solution does not lie in a further increase in bus fares Yet it is necessary for the business health of the community that the bus system resume and maintain operations If this can't be done under private enterprise the city should take over the operations the company surrendering its franchise and selling at fair value the buses and other facilities required for their operation by the munici- fhe Stall Measure In Effort to an- other meeting of the committee for late this afternoon after the G O P minority stayed away en masse from a scheduled morning meeting A Republican senator said the strategy was to work for a five percent cut for appropriations to the State University of Utah and Utah and a two perAgricultural collegefunds for Junior cent reduction in colleges The trading point he added would be to try and get Gov J Bracken Lee to go along with a sizable appropriation to the Utah water and power construction fund This move if successful couldappick up enough votes into the revise committee Eprtations Democrats repeatedly tried to entice Republicans into the morning All they got was icy meeting tares and a few grim smiles As vetoed appropriations stand now Lee will receive a carbon during the copy of those he vetoed ion desoite his "oth ronbr special session call for reductions on those specific items The Joint appropriations committee yesterday restored all in-of the funds it had granted to the attentions of higher education then went down the line In refusing Lee's request for more money for the state prison the finance commission and a k evaluation survey of college faculties On motion of Rep Victor comlt Lake City Sagers mittee members voted to make a their action final and to prepare The measure was bill today scheduled to reach the senate and house when they convened late this afternoon Meanwhile Lea continued meetfrom ings with a special committee both houses to consider more items for the agenda The governor suggested 12 subjects including disposition of the vacant crippled children s disease hospital and the amount of land needed for This Is the Place Monument committee inThe the cluding 10 members from was house and six from the senate expected to recommend for action only those matters of a nature in an attempt to make the special session as short as possible (D-Sa- non-partis- No Progress Made 300 GIs Due At Depot Here In For Training Two companies of GIs about 300 in all are coming to Utah general depot about the middle of this month They won't replace civilian workers Colonel F C Holbrook said they're coming here for training only of-th- e The troops will be the first sizeable contingent to be stationed at the Second street installation since the graves registration detachment left in January 1949 Less than a dozen enlisted men have been assigned at the depot since then An advance detail of 10 men and two officers is setting up mess facilities requisitioning supplies and planning company areas and billeting for the arrival of the main body of troops The units arriving are the 53rd quartermaster base depot headquarters and headquarters company commanded by Colonel Frank C Stoner and the 523rd quartermaster subsistence depot company commanded by Captain Forrest C The troops will be here for an "on the indefinite time getting spot' training in managing and operaUng a quartermaster supply depot Some 142 communications workers in Ogden have voted to heed a Strike call against Mountain 8tatea Telephone and Telegraph company if it it sTUftddV Duane Kearl president of the local union Communications Workers of America C I O said today bargaining committee of district No 8 comprising seven mountain state aaiWtlHy t meeting with management gin Denver in an effort to reach a satisfactory settle- ment Throughout the state about 1200 woffceia voted their readiness to follow strike call Vice President Neil R Hood of the Salt Lake local No 8304 said unionists there voted 40 to 1 in favor Besides Ogden and Salt Lake City other strike votes were being taken in Logan Provo and Cedar City The Salt Lake local includes workers in Murrav Holladay Park City Bountiful and Tooele SALT LAKE CITY June 8 (UP) Elmer W Pratt Utah director of enforcement for the office of price stabilization said today that he feared Utah wives were buying inferior cuts of meat Pratt said the department of agriculture had informed his office that some Utah salughterers Nvere not conforming to the meat grad ing requirements of the OPS regulations and some meats which are not U S grademarked are being sold at a higher price than the law allows Bus Stoppage No progress has been made in settling the strike of Ogden Transit Co bus drivers officials said today Landy Norris general manager said the company is ready to cooperate if any "reasonable organization" cpmes forth with an offer to provide drivers and thus give the city at least temporary relief He referred to a statement made yesterday by City Commissioner William Stowe Mr Stowe said the disputants owed a moral obligation to residents to arrange a temporary service pending settlement ' wage dispute Meanwhile Mayor W Rulon White in a telephone call from Washington D C said he has been keeping abreast of—developments — or lack of them and that he would be home late Thursday if air transportation could be arranged Mayor White has been in the nation's capital since Sunday urging congress to appropriate money to enable start of work on the Weber basin conservancy district His date before the lawmakers was made prior to June 1 when 45 fcua drivers went on strike Bulletins TEHRAN Iran Jane 6 (AP) A top Iranian army source who has been reliable in the past said there are "unprecetonight dented concentrations of soviet troops on Iran's northern border WASHINGTON Jnne 6 (AP) The house ways and means committee voted today to snake the effective capital gains tax rate for corporations 28 per cent same as for Individuals It now la 25 per cent Get Poor Meat Strike Threat WASHINGTON Jnne 8 (AP) Seth W Richardson resigned today as chairman and member of the subversive activities control board He said he was leaving the post because he had to undergo "critical surgical attention" " WASHINGTON June 6 (UP) The supreme court refused today to stay the execution of seven Nasi war criminals doomed to hang tonight in a German prison Flier Sweetheart Rescued From Crash Near Salt Lake SALT LAKE CITY June 6 (AP)fl would pull it apart The nose A young Oregon flier and his 'teen of the ship came up but the alti meter kept going down" age sweetheart were carried out "I don't remember the crash of the rugged Wasatch mountains much" he stated "I pasted out last night after their plane I guess" smashed into a canyon side a day Walkemeyer reported that he and Miss Archer crawled out of earlier A rescue party scrambling over the plane and waited to be resjagged rocks and marshland on cued didn t try to build a fire foot brought out the couple more than 24 hours after they crashed but I think I said a few pray-e- n "From the way into a mountain slope above City he stated By The Associated Press these people have treated Creek canyon me I Both Darrell Walkemeyer 22 of guess they paid off" '' 100 Cincinnati 000 103—5 1 Portland fi and his Walkemeyer credited the rescue New York 023 000 000—4 4 ancee Jodie Archie of Vancouver to two little strips of snow on Ramsdell Erautt Peterson Byer-l- y Wash were reported in a "fair" the slope near the smashed plane Black we 11 and Pramesa: Ken- condition this morning ajt'L D S Search pilots had mistaken the snow for distress signals But hospital y nedy Jaaat aad Westrum Walkemeyer suffered a fractured Walkemeyer said he "didn't have ankle a serious leg laceration the strength" to put out any sigChicago at Philadelphia (night The girl suf- nals 000 002 000— 2 7 0 hock and exposure St Louis "I thank God for those two 020 100 OOx—3 5 S fered a crushed cheat other fracBrooklyn patches of snow" he kept repeatStaley Boyer and Rice: Branca tures and severe shock ing while strapped to his basket and Campanella "Pilot Erro- r- Blamed Mid-va- le f Baseball Today r--5 stretcher Pittsburgh at Boston (night) Aaaerican asssstea eoi 001 Detroit Taylor and Moss: Cain and ooo 000 Gins- - State aeronautics officials blamed to Butt "pilot error" for the crash about Clings 15 miles east of Salt Lake valThe girl spoke only once after searchers battled for five hours ley The pair on a flight from Port- over five miles of underbrush to land to Fairbury Neb to visit reach the plane and clinging to relatives crashed Walkemeyer's Monday at four p m Wreckage the one pearl button left on her of the small plane was not spotted pretty flowered blouse Miss Archuntil yesterday morning It was er gasped for water She was able at the 8000-- foot level near Red to drink only a few drops at a Bluff mountain in the Wasatch time through swollen lips Semi-conscio- York at St Louis (nighf UTAH WEDNESDAY EVENING JUNE M 6 1951 AP Service 20 terries t3 us Washington 000 110 000—2 4 0 100 200 lOx— 4 Chicago The plane was a heap of twisted range an estimated 18 miles from Marrero and Guerra Kretlow Salt Lake Cm metal and torn canvas However ' As we started to lose and Masi altitude f one wing left upright by the crash a sort of odd feeling hit me" the protected the injured couple from at Cleveland young pilot reported "I pulled the entiling winds during their Philadelphia 9 ' back on the wheel until I thought long ordeaL (night) 47 70 64 89 67 70 88 Max Mm i 45 Minneapolis 43 Omaha 46 Phoenix to 30Provo 77 S3iPortland : 49 75 T2 Ml 61 BO S3 49 36 46 77 Reno 48 Salt Lake 62 San Fran 42 Seattle 58 Sheridan 72 ! Washington 74 57 64 80 70 50 50 41 56 FINAL EDITION PAGES— TWO SECTIONS Firm Insolvent Badger $554140 Audit Shows Broker Short $137000 on Day of Suicide Report of Red Move Doubted By Mac Arthur Out in the Cold Combined UP & AP SALT LAKE CITY June 6 Broker Richard C Badger of Ogden and Salt Lake Citywas approximately $137000 short in his accounts when he pality committed suicide several Before this drastic step is taken however the company weeks ago a special audit and workers should be brought together in conference by a disclosed today The audit filed in Third discommittee appointed by Ogden City and another committee com- trict court here added that be appointed by the Ogden chamber of commerce The tween the time Badger died and settlea for facts strive the date the authorities suspended all should learn mittees pertinent trading in Park City Consolidated ment and inform the public of the entire situation Mining stocks — this stock — in which Badger had invested heavThis should be done right now fears Housewives Ogden Phone Workers OK S3 Logan Los Angeles Miami 44 Hold Up Budget Bill OS Butt Cheyenne Chicago Las Vegas today Nc 71 Ogden Billings Boise Boston and Provo — Partly cloudy T period ending at §veit (For a m today) - ily—dropped from 78 cents to 26 cents a share This drop the audit said de creased the value of Badger's ac counts by an additional $554140 by May 26 the day of the audit Deficiency Grows Since then the stock has declined another 6 cents increasing the amount of the deficiency However the audit did not take this into account Tka lunori were filed bv Edear t n con ottAmpv for the admin istrators of Badger's estate Zion's Savings Bank and Trust company Administrators said Badger's principal assets consisted of about 900000 shares of Park City Consolidated stock- - They said much of the stock was pledged as sewith J A Hogle curity for loansFirst Security Bank ti Co brokers of Utah in Ogden and Commercial Security bank also of Ogden The audit said that Badgers company "may" have given as loan which acpledges some securities custually belonged to individual tomers but it added that auditors were "unable to determine the exact status thereof" Th rnort sairl that Badeer had not followed usual brokerage pracof tices separating securities bought on margin from those owned entirely by customers Observers said that the shortage to might bring financial injury persons who had ordered securities from Badger but who had not received them and to persons who had sold the broker's firm securities but had not been paid for them Account Overdrawn The audit report said that at the time of his death Badger's account with First Security bank in Ogden was overdrawn by $10033 Auditor sairi there was "no evi dent segregation" of stock which the Badger firm held in trust tor customers The report explained that stock held by a broker for a customer buying on credit is available for pledging by the broker to Stock held bv a loans asMir broker for a customer buying for cash is not available for sucn pledging Ttio audit rcriiu-- qaiH that nitris- Ings of securities by the Badger firm have in some instances Deen miH nut of srooimts of customers who owed no money to the nrm Attaches in the district court clerk's office said the next step will be the approval of the audit Thereafter report by the court the administrators will be instructed to conserve assets of the firm pending final settlement of the es- f f t " tate Employes Absolved The report said that employes of the Badger firm were not responsible for the deficiency "We are informed" the report said "that securities at all times were in the sole custody and possession of Richard C Badger personally" The report added that a personal note of $79000 from Badger to his wife Mrs Daryl B Badger was not included in the listed liabilities of the brokerage firm Acheson Says Warning Of Attack in June Received 90 Days Ahead WASHINGTON June 6 (AP)— Secretary of State Ache- son said today Gen Douglas MacArthur's headquarters had a report three months in advance that the North Korean reds planned a June invasion of South Korea but refused to be v lieve it Acheson's testimonv at the MacArthur inquiry came after Republicans put into the record a statement from Adm Roscoe A Hillenkoetter former head of the U S central intelligence agency that he was never given a copy of the 1947 Wedemeyer report warning of possible communist aggres- of the Weber county cherry crop wet weather got this spring by an indirect route Chilled bees stuck to the hive in d blossoms failed to produce fruit H'A most cases and Macfarlane who orchards at 1137 Twelfth are typical compares an unpolllnated tree with one the bees visited under fair skies Cold ds pollen-starve- Fruil Farmers Blame Numbed Bees for Bleak Cherry Outlook — ed Even though it will be a betterthat south year than last the consensus is oneInquiries of growers in this harvesting will drop to about almost uniform rearea brought third of normal varieties would all that cherry plies Experts explained today the rich short orchard flowering brought to full beMr Woodfield said the Fruit Exfavorable temperatures blossom - by unfertilized was wasted when and died for blooms shriveled want of pollination Howard Woodfield manager of the North Ogden Fruit Exchange said not more than a handful of its 65 members can show a "decent crop" Only a weak percentage of the trees will be worth picking above easily reached bottom branches he said The few trees that bear fruit were pollinated the few mild days when bees and other insects were fairly active An identical situation was bv the Utah Fruit Growers' association which numbers in itan membership most of the remaining growers in this area Artificial Methods Doubted Association President W H Warn North ren himself a Ogden grower said it has been four to five years since cherry trees produced a normal crop and is a explained that pollinating problem yet to be satisfactorily solved Artificial methods rely heavily on insects to transport the pollen dust from flower to flower and have proved only partly successful Confirming that the crop would be substantially lighter than early L expectations County Agent A one Christiansen said he knows of fruit farmer who figures only 50 of his 1500 cherry trees can be picked 0 change normally ships out carloads of cherries besides sending 40 to 50 tons to canneries and meeting local market demands Last year when a destructive cold wave all but cleaned out cherries peaches and apricots only part of one car — 300 cases — left by rail from the exchange and about three tons were processed at factories The outlook this season is somewhat brighter Mr Woodfield said five to six carloads may be shipped in addition to 10 tons for canneries This does not include cherries to be marketed in and near Ogden Others Plentiful As for apricots and peaches everyone connected with the fruit industry agrees they'll be plentiful and of high quality Only a driving hailstorm and a temperature sag below 30 degrees could damage one of the finest stands in recent years In this respect the county is much more fortunate than fruit areas in surrounding states which fell victim to late frosts Manager Woodfield said the market both should be locally and excellent He predicted that early cherry varieties will be ready before the month is out In July later pickings will begin apricots should be available about July 20 he believes profitably Peaches are harvested about the Weber county's cherry belt is bound by Utah Hot Springs on the same time as tomatoes in the early north and Twelfth street to the fall 15-2- well-know- out-of-sta- te Sun-ripen- ed Killed as Plane It's OK to Kill Progress Made Crashes in Texas Singer li Tune In Wage Talks As Bad as This! SAN ANTONIO June 6 (AP) — — This TOKYO June 6 (AP) Nine airmen were killed today in music critic was really critical the crash of huge 7 A soldier wearing a South Koa block from San Anrean uniform strolled into the tonio's City limits & tank The four engine craft capable command post of aHeU was singcompany m Korea of carrying 60 passengers plunged level ing a South Korean love ballad to the ground from house-to- p "Audi-Donshortly after taking off from KelThe tankers paid scant attenbase force air ly The plane exploded once in the tion But an infantryman fired sudair again on the ground after denly The singer fell dead striking a filling station gas pump "Why did you shoot him?' and then burned It ripped down two high volt- asked Pfc Melvin E Moore of age electric wires and sheared off "He's a Chinese" said the GI a utility pole before plowing Into whose name was not reported a tavern Identification papers proved the Most of the bodies were hurled Explosives were clear of the wreckage in the 300 GI correct yard swath it cut The bodies were found on the corpse Korean sol"I've heard South badly mangled One woman in a car near the diers sing that song every night scene was slightly burned on the for months" the GI explained "That's the first time I ever right arm The crash site is only about a heard anyone butcher the tune mile south of Kelly air force bast like be did" Strato-freight- er g" WASHINGTON June 6 (AP)— Economic Stabilizer Eric Johnson indicated today he and the wage board are making stabilization progress in efforts to' shape a new general policy to govern wage increases Johnson talked to reporters after leaving a morning session with the board to attend a meeting with Mobilization Chief Charles E Wilson and other defense officials He explained he was referring to a decision on the overall wage stabilization program rather than the separate phases such as productivity bonuses and special cases involving textile shipbuilding and other industries Critical disputes are brewing in shipyards and northern textile and woolen mills over negotiated wage increases n j mm """"" f - f ianK rairois Pound at Red er By Charles Carver Cherries will be scarce in Weber county again this in spite of abundant spring blossoms and the fact that year-orchardists squeaked past a late frost scare without noticeable losses Soggy weather and a prolonged cold snap when bees kept close to the hive cost the Ogden area most of what appeared at the outset to be a bumper crop chill-numb- This was a report Lieutenant General Albert Wedemeyer made to President Truman after a survey of the far eafct Report Kept Secret proSenator Bridges duced secret testimony from Hillen-koettto a senate appropriations subcommittee last year that so far as he knows the Wedemeyer report was "kept secret from every body Acheson then told the senators l investigating MacArtnur s aismis-sathat an intelligence report from MacArthur's command dated March 10 1950 carried this note: " 'Report received that peoples army'— referred to as PA— 'will invade South Korea in June 1950'" Acheson went on: "To that was attached this comment: Ready to Invade The Peoples army "Comment: will be prepared to invade South Korea by fall and possibly by spring of this year indicated in the current report of armed force expansion and major troop movements at critical 38th parallel areas Even if future reports bear out the present indication it is believed civil war will not necessarily be precipitated so that intentions in Korea are believed closely related to communist program in southeast Asia "'Seems likely that communist iurt TTiiiitarv measures inatKorea least will be held in abeyance until further observation mane oy Soviets of results of their program in such places as Indochina Burma If the Soviets are and Thailand satisfied they are winning the struggle for these places they probably will be content to wait a while longer and let South Korea ripen for future harvest 'Peoples Army "'If checked or defeated in their in operations in these countriesshare Asia they may divert large of their effort to South Korea which could result in a peoples army invasion of South Korea' to Bridges broke in on Acheson remark "Well that was a pretty definite statement that they had attack was coming word that the in June" " Acheson: "Pretty definite statement? They said a report was received they would attack in June Then the comment said 'We dont believe this statement' " Acheson then went on: "On the 25th of March that is 15 days after this report was sent the in G-- 2 (intelligence officer) ofconfar east command stated his clusions that: No Civil War "It is believed that there will be no civil war in Korea this spring The most probable or summer course of North Korean action this of spring or summer is furtherance its attempt to overthrow the South Korean government by creation of chaotic conditions in the republic through guerrilla activities and psychological warfare" Bridges told Acheson: "Well Mr Secretary the record shows— even the record that you read here shows—that they reported there was to be an attack in June even though they did qual-be That would ify it afterwards a fair analysis would it not? irhMAit' "Not onlv Qualified t they said it is believed that it will not occur That la little more than m (R-N- 9 C-9- """ sion in Korea two-thir- a qualification" Before the exchanges over intelligence Acheson had defended the United States support last January of a futile United Nations' move tor a cease fire in Korea Some critics of the move have called it "appeasement Acheson said the state department backed it because "we thought the sound thing to do was to vote in favor of this resolution Stronghold TOKYO June 6 (AP) — Allied tank patrols today hammered at the gates of Chorwon and Kumhwa southern anchors of the communis? central Korean stronghold A tough and confident United Nations army "is standing at the front door now hammering at the lock" AP Tokyo bureau chief Robert Eunson reported for Eighth army headquarters in Korea Tioht ponsnrshln hlackerl out the exact distance aUied troops were from the reds strategic The bastion Eighth army reported gains up to two miles except on the bitterly defended eastern front Eunson reported official estimates place 300000 reds on the He said 120000 North Koreans hold the eastern and western flanks with lftO 000 Chinese in the center defending their vital unorwon-Kumhwa-Pyongg- an bat-tlefro- nt triangle Eunson indicated the Eighth armv is trvini? to nrovoke another communist offensive and if it does not come the allies may overrun the g area without a bitter ngnt Hints of a possible new type of warfare in Korea came in an rpnort from Taineh The China Union Press said 30000 Sov iet satellite troops arrived in red Korea The Chinese nationalist agency said 1000000 conscripts are dig to air ging deep tunnels immune nrtillorv attack link inp strong points from which this new force will fight Thirty thousand red guerrillas still are operating in South Ko rea a Korea republic spoKesman said He reported 110000 have been killed or captured since October Chorwon-Pyonggan- State Employment Jumps to 234000 rrrv catt Utahjxw Timo iAPi department of employ ment security saia toaay mat tne number of persons working in this state has increased 17000 in the past year The number employed was listed as 234000 Approximately are registered job seekers com pared with 19400 at the cor responding time last year The agency said employment in h nnctnwf inn inriustrv is 2100 ahead of last year manufacturing is up 3100 and transportation communication and utilities are employ ing 1900 more The" 10-9- ' INDEX Dr Brady Colby Comics Dr Crane Dorothy Dix Edltoriala Gallop Poll Peter Edson Major Nlal Lippmann Obituaries Drew Pearson Radio TV Pros rams Sports 29 5 Tears Age Theatre Vital statistic A! 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