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Ogden Standard Examiner

   Ogden Standard-Examiner (Newspaper) - September 25, 1950, Ogden, Utah                                The Weather today and row Slightly warmer High both days and 92 in Dixie Low tonight Light southerly winds humidity 15 per cent in southwest and 25 per cent elsewhere Temperatures ending at s M Ogden Atlanta Boise Boston for even a ax Min 67 49 E 69 46 80 56 84 60 56 38 73 m today M Minneapolis New Orlean Omaha Phoenix Pocatello Portland Prove Reno Rock Spring Salt Lake San Fran St George St Louis Seattle West ax Min 67 49 1 52 42 71 48 97 61 72 48 63 58 69 38 83 39 57 87 75 44 66 60 90 57 62 40 60 54 6T 25 Cheyenne Chicago Denver Gd Las Vegas Logan Los Miami 38 55 42 70 44 69 45 92 61 68 43 60 90 91 75 Seventy-ninth 255 The United The Associated Pre OGDEN CITY UTAH MONDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 25 NEA AP 16 PAGES FINAL EDITION American Prisoners on March a New York picture agency which distributed this photograph says it came from the China Photo Service of Peiping China with the caption describing it as showing a group of American prisoners of war in Korea on their way to a P O W camp in Pyongyang Pyongyang is the capital of North Korea Red Feather Drive Raises of Quota The first report of the 1951 Red Feather drive of the Ogden Com- munity Chest today showed a total of which is 15 per cent of the goal The report was made at the Ben Lomond hotel ballroom at noon today before the largest attended report drive in history Val P Campbell chairman in a brief Nothing succeeds like cess and it is succeeding The next report meeting will be at the hotel Thursday noon The luncheon was sponsored by the Mountain Fuel Supply Co Utah Power Light Co and Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co Individual totals Industrial 4.7 per cent of goal commercial 5.4 per cent of quota military 36 per cent public service 6.3 per cent of goal public em- ployes or 6.3 per cent of quota transportation or 1.5 per cent men's division 25 17.1 per cent womens 32.5 per cent clubs Weber county division Car Crashes Into Kitchen Window The front portion of a sedan crashed through the kitchen dow of an apartment house at Twenty-sixth and Adams in a spectacular accident at noon today Driver of the car Mrs Nellie C Warby 49 472 Thirty-first shock and bruises She was taken to the Dee hospital in a city ambulance said Mrs car northbound on Twenty sixth smashed into the side of a bound car driven by Melvin F Shreeve 16 of 2636 Liberty Force of the impact changed the tion of the Warby car and it reened over the parking and into the kitchen window of Mrs old Jensen Marilyn apartments Mrs Jensen and her daughter were within a fey inches of the kitchen table when the car into the window The left front part of the auto projected through the dow Korean War Starts Big Boom in Marriages Here The Korean conflict has ently given Cupid a hearty assist in Weber county Clerk Lawrence M Malan re- ported today that the number of marriage licenses issued since June 25 opening date of the war has been climbing steadily In fact the marriage license ness boomed in July August and September 1950 as compared with the same period last year when the cold war was in progress and the draft only standby machinery The number of marriage cations issued during July this year totaled 81 as compared to 71 sued during the same month last year August 1950 broke all pre- vious years with 141 licenses being issued to put in the shade the August 1949 record of 91 Still Going Up And it does not stop there The score for the first 25 days of tember this year has already passed the number issued for the entire months in 1949 Clerk Malan reported He said 86 licenses had been issued this year as compared to 78 for the full month last year August of this year even put to shame the bride's month of June which only logged 116 marriage licenses this year In checking over license cations it was revealed that a high percentage of the applicants were particularly those in line for the draft Uncertain of Future But Clerk Malan said that Cupid has worked both sides of the fence in the current war situation In recalling those making cation since the war Clerk Malan said many of them had already re- their call while others were already in the service This report coupled with the fact that a change in marital status after July 1 had no effect on your draft status indicated that the rush was not inspired by an attempt to beat the draft It seems Clerk Malan commented that it is a matter of young people being in love and at the same time being faced with an uncertain future Pilot Knocks Out Red Tank With Only Dirty Look WITH U S DIVISION Korea Sept 25 young New Jersey pilot has the tation of knocking out a red tank with nothing but a dirty look Lt James E of Red Bank N J flies a small un- armed aircraft used to spot my targets for American He saw an enemy tank going over a bridge and decided to throw a scare into the communist crew He zoomed as if in attack And he made as angry a face as he could The startled tank driver looked up and lost control His tank ran off the bridge and was wrecked To celebrate ground crew painted a tank on the fuselage of his tiny plane Crime Probe Slated WASHINGTON Sept 25 Chairman Ester Kefauver announced today that his senate crime investigating tee will start three days of public hearings Thursday at Kansas City Mo He would not disclose names of witnesses will be heard It's a Cinch for Nevada To Win on Gambling Vote SAN FRANCISCO Sept for new industries harm its UP California and will vote on gambling tourist business hurt legitimate business and create an atmosphere corruption in government corruption in tne goverr lives in their November elections Church groups Catholic and but it's odds on that easy money will still buy tickets to Nevada to bet on the spinning roulette wheels Church groups the chamber of commerce and John Q Public have shown little enthusiasm in either state for the initiatives which would give all comers the right to legally lose their shirts In Arizona the measure is known as tax reduction by state control of gambling If passed the would permit ation of all gambling games under licenses and an under a one-man bling czar appointed by the Backers Are Mystery But the citizenry in the Desert state does not even know who is I committee investigating the the drum for the measure sors of the initiative charged that Protestant have universally con- the measure from their pulpits with the Baptist church at its Arizona convention the first to attack it Surprisingly Inactive The committee in Arizona has been surprisingly in- active in it since the secretary of the committee liam Eden resigned a month ago In contrast the com- with groups in every ty has lambasted the measure daily with advertising radio grams and a violent newspaper campaign The public seems to be climbing aboard the same bandwagon in California In the state senate a Its sponsors had announced ing by 31 prominent Arizonans but none has been identified since the initiative months ago was filed several The Arizona measure has been attacked from all sides the Phoenix chamber of commerce and the peoples committee against gambling spearheading the campaign They charge sanction of gaming tables would outlaw Arizona as a enactment of the initiative would attract thousands of gamblers to California and that professionals like Mickey Cohen would ally gain control of the legal chinery The committee headed by Sen Ralph Swing said in its preliminary Gamblers and hoodlums are the only beneficiaries of legalized gambling They will flock to the state by the thousands Want to See Look At Moon Tonight If it isn't cloudy tonight go out- side and look up For the earth and the moon team up tonight for a heavenly show It's an eclipse of the moon and if the weather is favorable it will be visible all over North America At seven thirty-one p m tain standard time that is the first bite will be noticed on the moon Then at eight forty-five p totality begins that means the black shadow will cut across the face of the moon like a knife slicing cheese Should Be Copper If the sky is clear the moon won't be black during this period but a copper color If it's cloudy the moon will probably appear black At p m will be the middle of the eclipse when the shadow of rhe earth completely covers the moon's face This is called by astronomers the umbra The moon will begin emerging at This sight will be a glowing bit of the curving edge of the moon moving out of the black All Over by 12 By midnight the moon will be out of the umbra and even out of the which will end the spectacle not only for you watching the event from the ground with the naked eye but for astronomers as well looking through powerful telescopes The last total eclipse Visible over all of North America occurred last October The next one after night will not appear until Jan 29 1953 Last Witness of Gold Spike Dead RENO Sept 25 T Stevenson 91 believed to be the last man to witness the driving of the Golden Spike which linked the Central and Union Pacific railroads in 1869 at Utah died last week at Coronado Calif it was learned here today Cremation services were to be held at the California city and the pioneer's remains were to be sent here for burial Stevenson was a founder of the Reno chamber of commerce Bulletin WASHINGTON Sept 25 AP Justice Jackson of the supreme court today allowed freedom on bond pending an appeal for 10 of the 11 U S communist ers convicted of conspiracy to advocate overthrow of the government Congress io Face Rent Tax Issues Hawaii Alaska Statehood Also on Docket WASHINGTON Sept 25 on swollen ness profits statehood for waii and Alaska and possibly rent control look like the big issues when congress returns to Washington two months from now Even those problems may be too big to handle in a quick session be- tween Nov 27 and the Christmas holidays They were the major leftovers when weary lawmakers knocked off work late Saturday with a slap at President Truman a thumping rejection of his veto of a stiff anti- communist The was put on the when the senate voted 57 to 10 to override the veto That was 12 votes more than the two-thirds majority needed The house had overturned the veto within an hour after Mr Truman sent it to Capitol Hill Triday The vote there was 286 to 48 Waging Losing Fight The senate vote came late day after a small group of senators had talked the almost around the clock waging what they acknowledged was a losing fight They said they hoped that word from people back home might change a few senator's votes whether it did was questionable Sen Lander collapsed from exhaustion on the senate floor after speaking for five and a half hours against the He was taken to the naval hospital at esda Md and is reported to be doing well Called Mockery Mr Truman had denounced the roundly calling it a mockery of the of rights So did At- torney General McGrath But Grath announced last night he is creating a special unit to enforce it vigorously Because of complex ery provided and the announced de- fiance by the communist party it appeared likely that months or even years would elapse before anyone could be punished under the law It calls for registration with the government by communist groups and fronts and provides for ment of reds in time of war sion or insurrection Another major enactment of the adjourned congress will have most immediate effect Tax Boosts Sunday Starting next Sunday Income tax withholding will jump for most of the nation's in- come taxpayers The tax boost estimated to duce about yearly was approved by Mr Truman about the time congress was winding up its chores The tax writing house ways and means committee decided to start public hearings Nov 15 on a ond tax increase which congress has pledged will include an excess profits tax on corporations mates are that it will produce from to a year House and senate set Nov 27 to get back to the legislative grind Some members are bound to return as defeated lame as all 435 house seats and 36 of the 96 in the senate are at stake in the November election The new congress will open Jan 3 Work to Start On Grade School Contract has been signed and work will start immediately on con- struction of the new Southeast school Polk and ton Dr T O Smith superintendent of schools said today The new building will be built by M Morrin and Sons Ogden and will be completed by Aug 15 1951 in time for use in the school term The Morrin company was ed the contract on a base bid of Theft Charged to 12 Phone Girls MIAMI Fla Sept 25 The theft of hundreds of thousands of dollars over a period of years from the Southern Bell Telephone Co here was disclosed today and 12 persons including girls with well modulated telephone voices are under arrest Two pretty girls admitted they took as much as a day each All the thefts were fjom the ing room where torrents of silver from pay stations poured in each I R Mills safety director of West Miami broke the case when Rita Orr 18 reported some money stolen from her home Mills investigated He found three suitcases full of money in an auto- mobile in front of the house Two of the suitcases contained in quarters Marines Take Heart Of Seoul's Defense Korea Areas Regained AUKS LAND AT INCHON K Black areas detail territory won South Korea by allies In September assault sparked by amphibious landing at Inchon Sept 15 A week earlier the North Korean advance had been stopped by a firm stand in the river beachhead after more than two months of withdrawals Allies driving northwestward out of beachhead are within 85 miles of their companion forces in the sector Broken arrows show main routes to Seoul from southeast Whistler Is Hoax Inside So Sheriff Declares PARADIS La Sept 25 AP Sheriff Leon Vial said he had more evidence today to support his contention that the whistler who frightened Cadow to-be is an inside job and a hoax The sheriff's statement came after Mrs Clifford Cadow the girl's mother disputed his de- duction that the reports were a If it is an inside job I don't know how it could be or why anyone would want to do the mother said Vial added that he was ing up his investigation and ex- to make a full statement possibly by tonight That he said without elaboration would be the the tler Meanwhile preparations con- for the wedding next Sunday at nearby Taft about 25 miles west of New Orleans for Miss Cadow End Herbert Belsom state trooper The whistles around the Cadow began as wolf calls last February changed to mournful funeral dirges when Jacquelyn's engagement was an- two months ago Mrs Cadow said yesterday the whistles had not been heard for several nights now and her dis- traught daughter who required medical attention last week is feeling better Madman Marries Television Star LAS VEGAS Nev Sept 25 AP Earl W Madman Muntz 36 cago and Los Angeles television dealer and Joan Barton 25 dio and television actress are today They flew here from Los les yesterday They said they would fly back to Los Angeles then go to Chicago and make their home in 111 Miss ton gave her real name as Mary Ann Bock and her residence as Winnetka Helicopter Ready To Rescue 16 On Wrecked HALIFAX N S Sept 25 AP Parachutists have been dropped to begin rescue operations for 16 United airmen whose bomber crashed Thursday in the Fort air base reported today The stricken bomber was ered last night after being missing for three days and a U S air force team immediately took steps to evacuate the men by helicopter The helicopter will move the men to a nearby lake where a ian amphibian plane will pick them up Lost Plane Spotted The Royal Canadian air force said an Lancaster spotted the plane some 95 miles southwest on Goose Bay The 12 crewmen and four sengers were forced down on a routine flight from Goose Bay to Tucson Ariz None of the men was from the intermountain west All are military personnel Finding of the missing air giant climaxed a vast air search ing from the wilds of Labrador to the Arizona desert Scores of and American planes took part in the hunt Smoke signals attracted the caster to the area where the 16 survivors had constructed a ter Signs on the rocky ground asked for food and supplies No medical supplies were requested Officials interpreted this as no one was badly hurt Muffled By Static News of the discovery came over a shaky air force wireless service muffled by static Officials had suspected all along the plane was down not far from the start of its flight since it had not reported to any station after its takeoff Army Drawing on Airborne Troops for Quick Blows WASHINGTON Sept 25 on a friendy airstrip There The army is beginning to draw on the core of its quick striking bile reserve airborne force in massing strength for the all out blow to annihilate the North rean communist enemy How long that would take was still a question Pentagon officers while liking the look of the rean picture say it to make predictions is too early American paratroopers showed up yesterday at Kimpo airfield on the Seoul battlefront and a few hours later were committed to action On the basis of news reports which said 150 plane loads of from 16 to 17 men each arrived at po an airborne regiment slightly under full strength appeared to have been sent in initially These was no spectacular airdrop of men into enemy territory in a cloud of parachutes But also there is no reason why the paratroopers used for the ment as regular foot soldiers may not show up in the days ahead in the role for which they are trained behind the enemy line to establish airheads Early reports from Kimpo counted for about 2500 men in the airborne outfit arriving there The regular organizational strength of an airborne regiment is men Such a regiment mally is equipped with 4.2 inch mortars 3.5 inch bazookas 75 and 57 millimeter recoilless rifles and long-range guns This gives the present airborne ment nearly double the firepower came into battle in sedate fashion j of the average World war II riding in transport planes which I borne regiment Old Glory Also Flying Upon Ancient Palace Allied Forces Unite TOKYO Tuesday Sept 26 S Seventh di- vision troops late Monday captured South Mountain main red defensive position inside Seoul while marines reached Duk Soo palace in the city's center a U S army man in Tokyo said today The spokesman said LVS army and marine patrols had made contact inside the Korean capital but he did not know where or strength He said a late report placed marines at Duk Soo the ancient Korean royal palace but he did not know if they had captured it from the communist defenders The red invaders who seized from Korean republican forces June 28 were being hard pressed by four allied columns spearing deep inside the capital Marines Seize Height One U S marine column that crossed the Han river Sunday morning seized a commanding height in the southwest and plunged on to link up with American and South Korean marines from the northwest and north Then a column of Seventh sion doughboys stormed over the Han at dawn Monday from the south and struck at South tain immediately That 700 foot height ing much of crowned by a city park was defeated by well dug in Korean reds Then a Seventh division boy column stormed over the Han in dawn mists Monday and fought to knock the red Korean ers off the commanding heights of South Mountain a city park Two other columns of American and South Korean marines stabbed into the capital from the west and north Heart of Capital AP Correspondent Don White- head who crossed the Han last Wednesday with Fifth regiment marines and Sunday with First regiment Leathernecks said Duk Soo is considered the heart of the capital The other government buildings are slightly to the north Combat commanders said they were confident the allied force would win Seoul within hours While the drive into the city pushed ahead a U S First cavalry armored trol sweeping up from the south sped into This put them only 40 miles from the Seoul beachhead Its swift miles in four soon to close the gap between the two fronts and seal tens of thousands of red Koreans in the south Sharp Gains Scored Allied forces scored sharp gains all along the southeastern front from on the Sea of Japan to Chinju on the southwest But allied commanders were throwing the greatest weight of manpower into the battle to cure symbolic Seoul The reds captured the South Korean capital three days after they invaded across parallel 38 June three months ago The U S and South Korean in- of the Seventh division swept eastward across the Suwon road and jumped the Han southeast of the city Artillery barrages temporarily silenced red gunfire on South Mountain a hill looking over the south approaches to Seoul Col Lewis Chesty First regiment marines who had crossed the river from near suburb on the southwest joined in the barrage from southwest city heights Fresh reinforcements poured into the beachhead to throw their power into the climactic battle for the city Airborne Troops Airborne infantrymen landed Sunday at Kimpo airfield northwest of Seoul One hundred fifty planes shuttled the airborne troops complete with battle kits from Japan They had just arrived there by ship from the United States At Inchon 22 miles west of Seoul a fresh South Korean division landed Both outfits were started inland without delay to join in the ing Fight Within Seoul This was the picture within The Seventh division fought toward South Mountain the main red defensive position in the southern section To the west the marine First regiment seized the highest points in the Tong Mak Sang district From these they poured mortar and artillery fire into red tions in South Mountain and into the sprawling Seoul army racks Marines searched a city house in this southwest district of Seoul for American reported held in Seoul But an underground operator said the reds had slipped them away eral days ago The marine Fifth regiment which crossed the Han last Wednesday drove into the city from the north and west against strongly defended ted positions Beaten Reds May Have Another Try By Harry Ferguson United Press Foreign News Editor Any soldier will tell you that the over-all military position of the Korean communists is hopeless day Their chief supply une from North Korea has been cut and their main army is caught between two good-sized United Nations forces But there probably is at least one good fight left in the com- and there is a fair chance that they might even a limited offensive As every hunter knows a wounded animal is ble of lashing out with great ty Hitler Did It Adolf Hitler taught the allied generals a lesson near the end of World war II He had broken out of our Normandy ton's tanks were riding roughshod across France and the end seemed near Just at that moment Hitler every soldier tank and plane he could scrape up and struck one mighty dying blow His of- fensive is known in the history books today as the Battle of the Bulge and coming as it did at the Christmas season when allied hopes were high it dealt a hard blow to our morale Gen Dwight D Eisenhower got the situation straightened out in 10 days or two weeks but not until the Germans won many and inflicted heavy casualties on American troops The advantage the communists have is that they are on the de- fensive and they know it They have abandoned hope that they can push down to the southeastern port of Pusan and throw the mies into the sea Their new strategy will be to inflict as much damage as possible on our troops dig into well fied positions and try to drag the war into a winter stalemate Malik Suggests Truman Stalin Talk It Over NEW YORK Sept 25 AP Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob A Malik told a delegation from Baltimore today he favors a meeting between the top leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union to negotiate their differences to help achieve full peace Malik did not explain further but it was presumed that by top ers he meant President Truman and Prime Minister Stalin A spokesman for Malik said he received a delegation from what he described as the Maryland tee for Peace of Baltimore Today's Baseball NEW YORK Sept 25 New York Yankees edged closer to the American league pennant day by defeating Washington in the first game of a doubleheader New York stretched its lead over Detroit to three games in the final week of the season American Washington 001 110 9 1 New York 003 130 1 Consuegra Harris Haynes and Grasso Reynolds and Berra Boston 2 Philadelphia 000 000 3 1 Parnell and Batts ray and Tipton Only games scheduled National New York Brooklyn 000 000 7 2 001 200 7 0 Jones Spencer and Westrum Roc and Campanella Philadelphia 1 3 Heintzelman and Seminick Spahn Roy and I   

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