Yuma Daily Sun, The (Newspaper) - October 11, 1951, Yuma, Arizona Ar Yuma Heather Nut Available YUMA 241 Nut TIN II Telephone Morgenthau Urges UN Buy Iran Oil Co Plan Calls for UN Purchase of Britain's Share In Company To Solve impasse YUMA ARIZONA THURSDAY OCTOBER II 1951 YORK of n Nations Authority to interest in uu Iranian Oil Company was today 1 Map Plans For Hallowe'en Parties in Yuma and 1.1 Plans ror Hallowe'en Kilt at til 11 n ai inc Hull where club ves and committee met with Wayne ham recreation director A b c Marcus and Geraldine Furrow stall members Parties will be held at the Air Base City Park Doan Field K of C Field and Mesa school on October 31 Plans for high school parly arc still not complete The window art contest will be held Saturday October 27 Puns call for more than 200 prizes for costumes and window art contests Response from t h e merchants in furnishing prizes has been unusually good according to Cunningham who has already re- promises of more than 100 prizes without any personal allon Clubs have been generous i n cash donation for refreshments so everything points to a good time for all Yuma children on en It is hope of all concerned that parents and children alike ill participate in the planned and refrain from the I to hear Premier Mohammed trick or real visitations which next Monday have no place in the proper Council President bration of Hallowe'en Heal cabinet I lint the deal I the World i issue bonds proposal thai its oil and thai this be used as for the World Hank bond World Hank could be i-d as a swap for the stock who in was chairman of the at which the World Bank was formed that a similar pattern couH be worked out for by the Nations of the Canal These proposals eame while Iranian Premier Mohammed await an appearance before the United Nations ity Council heie and alter Great Britain had notified that it Would not recognixi1 a unilateral denunciation of their IMG treaty allegiance and I heir agreement for joint control of the Sudan UNITED NATION'S Oct -A high Iranian source ARIZONA Helicopters Fly Entire Marine Battalion Into Battle In Korea negotiations with tain might be reached before the Security and Bub aren't scanning two new for lie Junior MI thai can pass the Jackets and sombreros nn ship by nil tile list Sun Staff THE FORRESTAL 1948 World Crisis Finds Nation Short of Troops Hi Diaries NIL II nl e days after the receipt of The taking deferred until Thursday when Marshall will be the first witness Muniz of Carlos postponed th u tii M in j 11 i no Airbase school was represented session originally called for today by Everett G Givens principal I until Monday at p.m EST at the bio yd E Faulkner president request of the Iranians who P and James A Melton I pleaded that their chairman Hallowe'en celebration government leader was represented T Hollin A Carver school by Mrs James dent of Mesa school was represented by Mrs Wm E Barcus Jr dent Post was represented by C E principal Jim Clayton general chairman committee Ernie Allen publicity and master of ies Raymond H Seitz anil cis E committee Second Avenue school was re- presented by Mrs F H Johnson president Fourth Avenue school and school had no present i Clubs were represented by Mrs Clayton H Barry Eagles iary Eliza Welch Camp Fire Girls McCain Yuma Jr Women's club Ivan Carter Zonta and B r Eleanor Leaver Society Yuma Little wer Eva Junken Lodge Dora Harris and Leona Fugate V F W Auxiliary needed more rest At New York hospital degh went through more tests yesterday but his physicians bulletins said his condition was good An earlier bulletin reported that Iranian statesman was suffering from no serious ailment was expected to leave the hospital for the first line since his arrival Oct 8 to attend Monday's meeting has prepared a page speech but he was expected to speak in Persian for only five or ten minutes All Gholi Ardalan Iran's permanent representative to the UN then will read the prepared speech in French so that his premier's strength will not be overtaxed But while remained his six-room suite overlooking the East river diplomats headed by U.S Assistant Secretary of State George C shuttled from his bedside to British gation headquarters in an effort I to bring him together with Sir Britain's chief 1 delegate Britain insisted on putting a a weak and watered version of its original militant proposal the Council The Iranians op- pose any such measure nn the ground that the UN has no right to interfere in the Clay's telegram of March 5 1018 expressing his that war might be imminent the Senate Armed Services which had been looking very on proposed UMT lation voted to proceed forthwith lo start hearings on the measure Forrestal had been planning to call the Joint duels together for a meeting outside of Washington to settle the growing service rels over their assigned roles and missions This on March 11 in the seclusion of the Key West Naval Base before It ended on Sunday the Mill it had not only reached agreement on the missions but had also concluded that it is now necessary to ask Immediately for a restoration of Selective Service and that an In Tanks Thrust Deep Into Red Positions in West STIl j Korea Oct II an entire battalion of U S Marines into battle on the Kasten today and lank simultaneously struck deep ml Red positions to the west I The helicopter the largest i in military history was I in six hours and 15 minutes within mortar range of list defenses However the Reds made no attempt lo interfere The blebee was to reinforce Marine lines In the I mountains for a renewed attempt to break North Korean resistance the approaches to the east pori of The Marines first used ters lo move men lo the front three weeks ago but only about men were shuttled north on that occasion n the iu American tank battalion Ms way SK the Mlh Parallel In u In weaken on The Tank Battalion rolled through ineffectual communist re- up Valley Avoid miles north of H North beat back the urgency maximum uf solemnity and effect The news of Monday afternoon that he was the unusual course of addressing a joint session of the House and ate two days laler in addition to making an important policy speech In New York the same J F Lassiter 87 Dies At Somerton Home Joseph Franklin Lassiter retired minor died at today at the home of his son Robert at Somerton it was an- which U nt the Johnson Mortuary eminent regards He had resided in the ley for the past six years Born in Mo June he spent most of his life in Ark Surviving arc two sons Robert of Somerton and Thomas E of Memphis Tenn a daughter Mrs It B Richardson of Ark a stepson J KF Chrisco also of 11 and eight grandchildren The body will lie shipped Friday lo Ark for funeral services and burial Yuma Dinner Club To Hear Williams Jeff Williams humorist and opens the season the Yuma Valley Dinner club tonight at p.m in the mar school cafeteria Mr Williams an Oklahoma at- torney dubbed the Sooner has chosen as his topic Getting Hack to the American i Way He nurtures a solid belief j and to the old fashioned virtues which he expounds with Tehran as a quarrel within its domestic immediate examination of atomic energy mailers is required ing the decision on whether or not now is the time for turning custody of the weapons over to the Armed Services And il was also decided lo ask the President to request a mental appropriation from Con- gress to raise our total armed strength lo a as Forrestal later put it where it more nearly met the realities of the world When Forrestal reported back lo the President on Monday March 15 he found that Mr Truman ready advised of the Joint Chiefs conclusion that a revival of the draft was necessary had reached a dramatic decision 15 March WITH The President said he was going lo deliver n message lo Congress on Wednesday going all out f o r Selective Service and UMT He said lie original idea had been that he would make reference to this in the St Patrick's Day speech in New York I evening but shall had felt that that was not a proper forum We have arranged to have the initial a sensational impact 1 The U S 23rd It is reflected in diary note of the 16 March 1948 Papers this morning full of mors and portents Wallace in New York interview yesterday charged thai United Stales was fomenting war ami the Czech coup was an act of desperation by the Communists to which they were driven by threat of a Rightist coup could be sillier but such statements even from lace will have their effect The fact is that this country and its government are desperately to avoid war It is simply a how besl to do it If all Europe lies flal while Russian mob tramps over it we will then be faced with a war under difficult circumstances and with a Round-Up on to take northernmost peak of the task force cut west up the ley lo support other 2nd Division troops on Kim II Sung Ridge The Yanks on this ridge were more successful inking a key hill from fresh Chinese troops Another armored spearhead ed up Valley east of Ridge and blasted enemy blinkers from that side The task forces to the main Allied lines at dark Infantry ment's latest Heartbreak Ridge was launched after a rage by cannon of massed U S Sherman tanks of the enemy bunkers Border Section Roundup Is Set For Saturday London Is World's Most Worried Capital As Troubles Increase good chance of losing it Next day March 17 Forrestal section of Scout District will for the the Eastern be conducted with rest of the Cabinet joined I aL le grammar school the President in the Oval Room I October at of the White House and to 0 L Carlisle him to the The message was remarkably forceful chairman All Scouts of the Somerton and For first time and all Cubs of identified the Soviet Union as le one nation that was blocking all j c efforts toward the writing Of are to attend Par cnts a invited to at- peace and was aggressively A worthwhile program has been ening the free world We must he and all boys of Cub and Swim age wishing to know more about the attend said ace Th meet growing m en- day after the President's message Forrestal found proof of program are urged to may be its effect for membership during the Round Up 18 March 1918 E C commissioner for Eastern district will represent OX AM and will assist in the VICK Continued on Page C I program humor Home Burglarized Sheriff's officers are ing the burglary of another Yuma homo The latest victim is Kred Koch on street near Avenue B Re- ported taken were a camera a wrist watch and other j elry and nf Wave of Hot Checks Hits Yuma Area Yuma merchants were warned today to be on the lookout for hot check artists who have been ing their trade lately at the ex- pense of businessmen I Police Chief Harold Breech said a wave of bad checks in the past I two weeks has hit the city and urged merchants to exercise a great deal of caution in cashing checks for unidentified writers Arraignment of Billy Cook Set For Saturday Kl Calif I UR of Hilly Cook for the Oct II mass killer murder of a salesman was postponed Seattle for time and re- set for Oklahoma City Attorney John Connolly who helped the killer in his trial for murdering the Carl family of 111 requested he arrival of Smith Smith also an I homa City attorney will join Con- in Cook's defense Connolly who arrived last night said he had not had an opportunity to question Cook who allegedly killed the salesman on his yi by The to The sun British Empire Now It has to he changed lo It never II pours on the British Pours trouble that Is Three things arc happening lo Britain and any one of them would big enough crisis tor one nation with Put them all and it Is easy to sec the moment Is the World's most worried cap- ital nation is going through in election campaign At a time united front on foreign icy needed to face external crises there division and ways in Britain to remove her roops the Suez Canal zone to I ish Navy ruled the seas the Canal a vital link In the empire stretching from the Thames to India 3 Some 300 British technicians have just Iranian town I r i- a I y by Millions In Under that agree were allowed In along the It was u thl because Miller u n il Mussolini were Idea of aggression which led to World War II u k Unit gel was so much belief off Hitler and Mussolini are dead the la alive and has four more years lo run At least it was alive Egyptians denounced II Whether the British can bring it back to life remains lo be seen The Idea of ending the treaty didn't come suddenly to the tians They have been talking aboul some two years from their own standpoint their timing was excellent They chose a ment when Britain was pied an election and already up to her neck In the Iranian oil f r o m b a c they were ordered out by the Iran Ian The British now are preparing to take their case before the United Nations Security Council and try to salvage thing out of their oil interests in Iran The technical device by which the latest blow In Britain WHS the of crisis The fact that Lor ed to an Iranian moved her oil technician Abadan stiffened Egypt's b o n c What Britain and all other lonial powers are up against Is a surge of nationalism throughout the Middle and Far East Nations reed the in that part of the world want the Abadan because foreigners to get out no matter what the consequences Iran may not be able to refine oil for lack technical experts bul she would rather have it that way than allow the British to remain Egypt may not be able to protect the Suez Canal against say Russia but apparently she would rather lose it than let the British guard it for her U S May Soon Use Atomic Weapons in Korean War WASHINGTON Oct 11 Congressional speculation that the Chinese Reds may Ire hit with atomic warfare built up today following new Pentagon talks on atomic weapons Use of this country's new cal weapons in Korea would depend informed sources said on whether truce efforts collapse altogether and on whether the enemy under- takes operations that ripe A-bomb targets There was even some conjecture moves warranted atomic attack might be launched against Chinese Red tions in Manchuria Thai however appears to be based entirely on hypothetical ture developments such would have to be of so serious a nature that the United Nations forces would be willing o counter with methods that might expand the war far be- IV I f he yond its present limits Services Committee yond its present limits speculation was an tin usual laic yesterday II between Defense Secretary A all be cil forces ami Chairman Cordon of thi Atomic Energy Com- mission Atomic V Smyth ami T JUKI AKC ager H W ever by what Dean has said in the recent past that the talk dealt with the new atomic weapons going into the nation's arsenal and on how and in what situations to use them They also presumably discussed proposals voiced recently in Con- gress tn expand atomic production six lo ten fold Dean said in Los Angeles last Friday that the time has come when this country should consider use of atomic weapons on the battlefield lo stop such nibbling aggressions as the Reds under- took in Korea The in Con- for hitting he communists with atomic weapons whenever the military thinks such warfare would be effective summed up by Carl T Durham D X C Durham is of the Atomic Energy Com and is a member of the UN and Reds Deadlocked On Neutral Zone UN ADVANCE Korea Oct to re- open the Korean snagged for the second today on question of a eneo zone Unison officers at Pan Mun Jom for nearly and finally ad- journ until 10 tomorrow 8 Sounds of whal might a were heard during the servers said they saw In the sky and heard of machine-gun and rocket ire Planes if any bo discerned The 5th no reports of any and msl fighters BOJ far south that the sounds Iranian oil n fcw the question fix the talks and It- be seemed to be holding sumption of conference aimed ending the Korean The liaison officers were stood already lo have the armistice talks should-be held In the vicinity of Pan Muu Join and to have arranged tails for a renewal ot the However the UN liaison team was believed to be insisting that the conference neutral zone lie de- lineated before the armistice con- ference is resumed while the Beds want to leave the question to the truce delegates themselves Most of the information on the liaison meetings was coming from the communists The UN Com- mand would confirm only that an- other meeting had been scheduled for I favor use of the atomic bomb in Korea as soon as the situation he told a reporter He added that We can afford to use the bomb there out of the stockpile we have now Durham said he assumed that Gen Omar N Bradley chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff dis- cussed atomic weapons among Asked what they discussed all i Dean would say was atomic en- made K noo ther things during his recent visit to the Korean Theater Any final decision as to use of atomic weap Party Saturday Night announced today for their annual party Saturday wnich ates the landing of the City of the plane which carried two to the world ce flight record In 1049 Odell Stafford Jaycee in charge of the affair this year announced that the endurance flight celebration will again be family affair and Invited the public to attend Last year's party was a weiner roast held On the runway where the endurance plane was refueled during its 1121 continuous hours in the air This year however with the in operation and the weather unstable tht will b- held in the clubhouse patio Jaycees said this location will offer more opportunity for entertainment and protection in rase of cold weather The affair will again be al and carried on like a picnic will provide music for dancing cm that cares to and movies and other special en- tertair.ment is being planned both youngsters and adults Stafford said the party will begin Korea can however be at 7 p.m so that the small fry can by President Tinman eat and get in on the their time