Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Greeley Daily Tribune from Greeley, Colorado • Page 1

Location:
Greeley, Colorado
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Nonstrikers Try To Break Picket Lines at Docks New York. Oct. 29. tfl A big t'juad of stevedores edged their way onto strike-bound pier today, while 'some 200 polk-eroeu held back a surging, angry throng of some 250 pickets. It was the first move today by con-strikers to back their threat to break 1 thru picket lines that have paralyzed the miles of docks along the vast New York harbor.

Some 100 non-strikers, supporters of AFL Longshore Boss Joseph Ityan. filtered hastily past the massed pickets at pier 90 on the Hudson river where the Queen Elizabeth Is docked. Police, who a few minutes earlier had doubled their foot and mounted guard at the pier, formed lines and shoved back the press of pickets, keeping the rival factions The pickets shouted strong taunts, but there was no violence. The backvto-work maneuver was only isolated, however, and left the" rest of the vast -waterfront here --except for military piers--closed tight. A total of 123 ships were strike-bound.

In Albany, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey said was "intolerable" that an Intra-union fight should tie up the docks, and ordered the state mediation board to step Into the dispute. Federal mediators already have Ktven up trying to solve the bitter fight between the rebel strikers dissatisfied with a new contract, and Ryan's administration. Until hrcak-thru at pier 90, Hyan had failed to make good even partially on a threat to send' non-strikers "thru or over" pickets to put the piers back In operation.

Ryan said his "men tried to go to work this morning" at some piers, "but there were too many pickets." He said his men were outnumbered by the revolting strikers. Great Western Top Officers Visit Mill Here Written by Horact Greelej In 1(71 AND THE I A VOLUME 44--NUMBER 61 GREELEY, COLORADO MONDAY. OCTOBER 29. 1951 WEEKLY TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED 1870 Screaming Reds Repulsed near Kumsong Sun. Medium-sized A-Bomb Blast Over Nevada and director! of the Great Western Sugar company visited the Greeky, Eaton and Windsor factories Saturday on their annual tour of compay plants In Colorado, Nebraska, Montana and Wyoming.

This picture ihowa Frank A. Kemp, president of the company, ind D. J. Roach, executive vice president, inspecting the Greeley factory with local Left to right, C. T.

Carney, superintendent of the Greeley factory; Roach, John Edmiston, manager of the Greeley-Eaton districts, and Kemp. Photo by Robert Wldlund. Carbon Dioxide Gas Wells May tie Used for Recovering Oil Allies Must Stay Korea After iring Ceases By SAM I Somewhere In Korea, Oct. J. Lawton Collins, U.

S. rmy chief of staff, said today al- ed forces "will have to stay in orea for some time if a cease-fire arranged." Collins told newsmen it would not he practical" to pull allied Glenwood Springs, 'Oct. 29. ---(fft--Carbon dioxide gas In wells In Mesa county may be used to complete recovery of oil from the Rangely and Wilson Creek fields. Leslie Parker, official of Rocky Mountain Oil and Gas association said laboratory tests have shown carbonated water forced through oil sands can wash oil from sand He said this process could he used for the secondary recovery of oil, Parker said such a process may not be necessary for several cades but will be valuable since chances of any major new oil fields in Colorado are extremely iilim.

John Vanderhoof, state represen tatlve from Garfleld and Rio Blanci counties, told the tourist; trave and industrial development confer ence here of synthetic fuel plan possibilities. He mentioned Durango, Delta Montrose and Craig as possibl Colorado sites. Vanderhoot said Colorado ad vantages In such a plant over th project slated for Illinois by th Ederstadt Syndicate include lowe prices for coal and that qolorad sites would not require an expen Bive filtration plant for water construction of a railroad. lie said the Colorado delegatio seeking the plant in New Yor earlier did not know that a larg quantity of natural gas is needed. Mrs.

Kafherine Wolf of Windsor Is Dead Weather Mrs. Katherine Wolf, 73, of Windsor died at Weld County Public hospital at 12:25 p. m. Sunday, She was born at Denhof, Russia, and came to the United States in 1913. Since that time she had lived In or near Windsor.

Mrs. Wolf is survived by the widower, Henry Wolf, and by seven children: Mrs. Henry Walker of Windsor, Mrs. Tony nreiling of Gilcrest, Mrs, Howard Arden of Brainerd, Texas and Mrs. James E.

Kelsey of Iowa and William Wolf of Gilcrest and Carl and Reuben Wolf of Denver. There are 17 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Funeral services will 1 he held al p. m. Wednesday at the Congre gatlonal church in Windsor witl Rev.

H. Becker offlcialing. inter ment Lakeside cemetery, Wind Bor. roops out of Korea Immediately If greement on an armistice Is eao.hed at the Panmunjoni negctla- Ions. He said the South Korean army 'needs our help for some time to tame'." "We want to get our men home as soon as possible, but it would not be done immediately." In Tokyo, Mrs.

Anna-Rosenberg, assistant secretary of defense in charge of manpower, told a nows "onference that 12,000 to 15,000 U. S. combat troops will he brought out of Korea by the end of next month under a new formula. She said army, navy, marine corps and air force men can go it they have accumulated 37 points and if their replacements are on hand. She Ihe policy applied to combat troops, not rear echelon men.

How Points Are Figured This is hmv points are figured: 1. Four points men in the combat zone and at division headquarters. 2. Two points monthly to men on belilnd-the-lines duty and at corps headquarters. 3.

One and one-half points monthly to single men in Japan since July, 1950, and to all men, single or married, on Okinawa, Guam and in the Philippines. 4. One point monthly to married men in Japan whose dependents in Japan. Point credit is given wounded en 1 during hospitalization and for time spent In confirm- i prisoner-of-war or missing-in- ction status. Guardsmen Come Home Individually Mrs.

Rosenberg said National uardsmen promised discharge ithin two years -would start go- ig home after 16 or 17 months a individuals, not as units. Local for 24 hours ending at 8 a.m. Sunday: high. 54: low, 28. Ending at 8 a.m.

Monday: high, 64; low, 26. Colorado--Generally fair Monday, Monday night and Tuesday; warmer east Monday; cooler northeast Tuesday. Wyoming Partly cloudy Monday, Monday night and Tuesday; few showers or snow flurries northern border and northeast late Monday night or Tuesday; cooler northern border Monday night, and east of divide Tuesday, windy Monday and Monday night. New Mexico--Cloudy, occasional light drizzle southeast Monday morning; otherwise generally fair Monday, Monday night and Tuesday; warmer east Monday, and southeast Tuesday. Dies of Heart Attack Salida, Oct.

L. Wilson, 34 Leadville, died of heart attack while hunting will two other men yesterday In the Tin ret district, 10 miles from Salida He was the fifth Colorado hunte to die ot such attacks since th current season opened Oct. 15. Wi son was the husband ot Mrs. Fran ces Mnsely Wilson.

38 Deaths in Atlanta Fail lo Scare Drinkers Atlanta, Oct. th biggest part of a poisonous. 98-ga Ion batch ot still covered by police, most AtlantJ.n turned to legal liquor for the weekend drinking. Drinkers were, not scared off. how.

I hy the 3S deaths caused a week by imbibing a methyl (wood) alcohol and water mixture. Police declared yesterday that, weekend drunkenness arrests were no lighter than usual. Detective J. K. Holms said only 4U gallons nf the deadly sliifl had been recovered and warned that deaths from drinking the brew might occur for the next two years.

One of five Negroes brought, lo Grady hospital Saturday night with symptoms of alcohol poisoning died early Sunday to raise Atlanta's death toll to 3fi. Two olheri died last week in nearby Winder. At his warfront news confer- nce, Collins brushed aside a cor- espondent's request for his opin- Tuesday Final Day To Register Tf you want to vote in the Nov. 6 election, you must be registered at the city hall by Tuesday afternoon. The city clerk's office will be open until 5 p.m.

After that it will he impossible to register or make any changes of any kind in registration. No matter how you feel about the proposed Chamber of Commerce building in park, and no matter how you plan to vote, you cannot do so unless you are registered. Registration was still continuing at a fast pace Monday morning, City Clerk Mdrt Balch reported. But there are thousands of persons In the city who are not registered. Only once every two years do the Greeley voters have the opportunity to select a city council and to vote directly upon issues affecting the city.

That chance to vote will come Nov. 6, for Greeley residents who are registered. You are registered only if- (1) you voted in the 1949 city election and have not moved since then; or (2) you voted in 1949 and moved, but have notified the -city clerk's office of your new address; or (3) you have registered- at the city hall -since the 1949 election. Both registration and the correct current address are important. If you cannot get to the city hall to 'register, another member of your family may do so for you.

There are only a few hours remaining to get your name on the voters' lists if is not already there. Voting as you please is the By Bill Becker Las Vegas. Oct. dazzling new weapon in America's atomic bag--a medium sized bomb with a laiy after-cloud was dropped over the Nevada desert Sunday. The bomb, apparently dropped from an air force B-29.

exploded with a high flash and after glow, visible on Mt. Charleston, 50 miles away. The ball of fire seared against a purple mountain background at 7:20 (PST), (8:20 a.m., MST). For several brief moments It put thei bright morning sun to shame. Tills was America's 1'Jth atomic explosion, unofficially.

With Russia's known trio of blasts, it brought the world's total to 22. For purpose of handy reference, it could well go down aa the "Lazy bomb. The AEC declined to verify that the bomb was dropped from plane, Issuing only its routine nouncement that there had been a nuclear explosion at the Nevada test site. But, from Mt. Charleston, this Is what I saw: The B-29, from the air forces strategic weapons command at Kirtland Air Force Base In Albu- (luerque, N.

swooped over the test site accompanied by two other planes. There was a sudden flash, white hot at the center. It subsided as quickly as a photographer's flash bulb, hut a red glow persisted in the bright morning sun. Then, llkJe a genie's trail, a grey column of smoke shot upward and outward. It climbed hundreds of feet Into the sky and erupted Into the large mushroom usually asso elated with atomic explosion.

The mushroom was purple. From its center, in one continuing swirl 01 smoke, rose what can only be de scribed as a purple doughnut. The base column of grey was perhaps as thick as a half mile in a few minutes of the actual blast. The column with very littl help from wind then begai stretching at both ends and hen at two points. Within 10 minutes it assumed a twisted shape.

Th lower section was grey, agonal bar turned brown and th top section glowed pink-purple. The spread lazily. Fifteen minutes after the blast, it coul Fort Collins. Oct. --A report by two hunters that ley came across a wheel and ther small parts of an airplane in ough country 4U miles north of ere touched off a search today or the rest of the craft.

Larimer county sheriff Ray larger said he would visit the rea this afternoon. Lawrence Webster and Harlan IcQualn of Wellington, re- orted to the sheriff that they Ighted the wreckage late Sunday Haygood canyon near the Colo- ado-Wyoming line. Barger said two or three persons ive been reported lost in the parsely settled area in recent ears. wo Hunters Find 5 art of Airplane Nest of Ft. Fort Lupton Air Force Corporal Missing Aboard B-25 That Crashed into the Missouri at Kansas City i Lady Godiva in Pink lights Does Her Stuff at Calif.

Horse Show (eenesburg Man Is Found Dead Walter Sailer, 72, a long time resident of Keenesburg was found lead on his bed in his small home at Keenesburg Saturday evening. Coroner Ross Adamson of Greely said Sailer died from a heart ailment and had apparently been dead since Friday noon. He was an old age pensioner. The coroner said that Sailer ap- parenlly had no living close rela- The body was brought to tile Adamson mortuary at Grecley. Fred Bath, an acquaintance of Salter, had missed him from his usual visiting places and went to Salter.home to see If the elderly man was okeh.

He notified Keenesburg authorities and they notified the coroner and the sheriff's office. Sacramento, Oct. 2 9 ijfi-- Now we have "Lady Godiva" doing her In pink tights-- at a horse show. The with the traditional knee-length blonde wig and spiel against high tuxes, featured Mrs. Thelma "Snug" Coburn, riding sidesaddle at the show staged here yesterday by the Sacramento County Horsemen's association.

i a is three a an allk-d-heid hill mass o' but failed To the positions al- lied took ago. A fi-ontlinf said the pre-dawn a a kicked off in comp a strength ami built to battalion size hour? later. Whooshing i 1 pounded lied i a a as the reds 1 rolled down a facing the I U. X. held hills on the central I AP correspondent Milo Farnetl reported the central front a allied officers lielieve the reds a shifted a fresh division to the area to reinforce a red division badly mauled earlier tills month.

On the western front allied forces sloped forward as much as i 1.2«0 yards. Knudsen said Monday In the east they seized a hill "neers had placed and sained up lo l.OijO yards after i hack three separate night attacks. lietweeu SO and 90 communist jets were sighted Monday over northwest Korea hut a i air Corp. Dan K. Kuudsen of Fort Lupton was aboard the Air Force U-25 which crashed into the Missouri River at Kansas City Saturday.

Corp. Knudsvti. 19. was on bis way home to spend a short leave with his parents. Mr.

and Mrs. Louie B. Knudsen. 145 South Park avenue, Fort Lupton. His lather Is in the implement busineus in Fort Lupton.

Louie B. that army cables around the plane and were trying to lift it out of the water. Two men. Leo Hicks, a navy enlisted man from Duplo. and Pfc.

Nolan F. Lederle of St. Louis, After her ride, the blue-eyed Including Corp. Knudsen. were be- blonde made her way to the micro-' llevwl to have lost their lives when were rescued, but the other five, force officer said the reds "weren't phone and started urging people to "write your congressman." But the racket from a low-flying plane rowncd out the rest.

The crowd ever did find out what she wanted tiem to wrile. Zimiflf Coring More Oil Saturation Red Cease Fire Plan Edges Up from Parallel 38 on on prospects for peace in Koa. "I'm sorry, that's out of ray field ntirely," ho said. In Tokyo he declined to answer uestions on progress of the arm- slice talks at Panmunjom. "You probably know more about hat than 1 do," he told a news- Board Rules Pearl Must Leave Best's Cnnon City, Oct.

Colorado's parole board ruled today that Mrs. Pearl O'Laughlin, paroled Denver slayer, must leave Warden Koy Best's residence at once. She has been a housekeeper at the Best home, taking up her duties great American privilege tor those who are registered. Wofi13fi Dies of G3S While Watching Film at Outdoor Theater Pueblo. Oct.

29. W) While Mrs. Helen Torbitt, 43. and John J. Welsch, 54, watched movies in the Pueblo drive in theater last night, death joined them in their automobile.

When the last show was over nt midnight their car remained and investigation showed the woman was dend and Welsch was unconscious from carbon monoxide fumes which had seeped into the closed coupe frolii a leaking ex- hausl pipe that passed thru the trunk. Sheriff John Krutka said that the motor had been running, apparently lo keep ihe' couple warm. The exhaust pipe, had been wrapped willi insulation, hut heavy tools in the truck had rubbed have easily measured two mile from one point the diagonal be to the 'other. The fantaslc flgur was by this time drifting severa ihousand feet into the air. The to bar was well above rr.y eye li 8,000 feel up.

Riding the very tip of the top bar was the little doughnut which had by this time broken into a virtually Independent hlob of pink cloud. A half an hour after the burst, the had settled its bottom bar down on the floor of the test site, forming a thick brown blanket, perhaps four or five miles long. The top bar was beginning to trail off In pink 1 wisps. The cloud was finally flattened and dissipated by slightly increasing winds three hours later. One observer estimated the cloud was stretched to a -width of nearly 50 miles by then.

Flight radiation was reported by tho AEC! radiological.safety unit in the area between Beatty and Lathrop Wells, 35 miles southwest of the test site. But, said the ABC, the radiation was barely measurable and was in no way harmful to humans, animals or crops. Miss Anna Peterson Of Auit Is Dead Miss Anna Peterson, 77, of Ault died at the Island Grove Hos pital Sunday morning following a long illness. She was born in Sweden November 4. 1874.

In March 1903, she came to the home of her uncle, Pete Lundherg at Ault where she made her home until his death. Since that time she has made her home with her sister Mrs. Oscar Bhn. She. has been a pallent at the Island Grove Hospital since August Arrangements are in charge Waldron Mortuary of Eaton.

Muusan, Korea, Oct. and communist negotiators failed again today to make any progress toward agreement on location of an armistice buffer zone in Korea. "Today's discussions were com pletely inconclusive," the officia N. spokesman announced. Subcommittees of the main armistice delegations met 3H hours in Panmunjom.

'They scheduled their xth meeting for 11 a.m, tomorrow p.m. Monday MST). Each side has proposed a demar- tion line. The U. N.

wants it gen- ally to follow the current battle ne mostly in North Korea. The Reds want the allies to pull ack as much as 15 miles, giving up hard won positions as the Iron riangle, the Punchbowl and Heart- Ridge. In exchange, they of- red the Ongjin Peninsula in the est. The U. N.

says that has little Hilary value. Allied negotialors rejected the immunist plan and said it could ot be considered "any further." There were, however, two en- ouraging signs. The communist was the first departure by 10 Reds from their previous de- lands that any demarcation line lould be centered on Parallel 38, rewar political boundary in the ivided country. The communists also have shown willingness to determine a line contact, which the U. N.

insists lould he the basis for the buffer one. Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols, U.

N. spokesman, described tonday talks as "a fruitless effort arrive at" a solution. there at the time the warden was in a hospital after a heart attack. The warden told reporters he vigorously disagreed with the board's ruling. The rehabilitation of the paroled murderess, he saio.1 "can be accomplished best hy leav ing her in her present, position in Fremont county." In ordering that Mrs.

must leave the county in which the state prison Is located, the board rejected a recommendation of State Parole Director Wayne K. Patterson. Patterson told newspapermen yesterday he would urge thnt Mrs. O'Loughlin he left In her housekeeper's job at the warden's home, it was Patterson who granted her permission for her to return to the Ilrst residence (luring the warden's illness. i Slated To Lead Demos Washington.

Ranker Krank McKinney is reported to be the Xo. 1 man on a list of persons under consideration lo head the democratic national rommltlee. meeting Wednesday to pick a chairman. hole In the insulation and exposed a crack in the metal pipt'. First aid crew from the fire department was unable to revive woman.

Welsch is in fair condition in Parkview Ksplcnp.il hospital. British Admit Egyptian Woman Killed by Gunfire Cairo. K.cypt.. O'-t. British military spokesman said today an i a woman was killed and her male companion wounded by British troops who fired In the embattled Suez Canal zone.

The spokesman said an Kqyptian officer immediately made- an official protest against the shootinc. which occurred last night a a weekend lull in Ihe canal zone. Kgypt a i moved toward a war footing. The i a a which has the status of a supreme court, yesterday approied general mobilization of manpower and drafting nf all F.syptlans between I a 50 "in case of war or threat nf war." Denver Man Is Badly Wounded In North Weld Bernard Willis. 43.

of Denve was critically injured, while targe shooting in preparation for poin deer hunting, at Dover about fh miles north and four miles west N'unn in northwestern Weld conn ty Sunday forenoon. Willis wits i out an ol Japanese riakn of rifle, act-ordin lo witnesses. A shield on Ihe gu i i to protect the user wr no! in place. There was an plosion in the chamber of the gu ami the mc-tal cap ol the a i struck Willis in forehead. retained consciousness hut was able to a cohrrenlly.

The I mnn was brought Adamson a a to the Five feet ot core was recovered toni tho Zlmlth Oil company's Alice G. Nay well Monday morn- ng. Well location is 14-9-5S. it is 1114 miles north of New Raymer, A spokesman for the company said tho core waft Maturated with oil and "quite a bit of gas." To date, a total of 29 feet of core has been taken. The lower 13 feel was sat- irated with' oil and the remaining 16 feet was saturated, but not to the extent of the lower 13.

The total depth of the well is 6285. A drill stem test was scheduled for Monday afternoon. The Zimith spokesman said future action at the well would await a core analysis from a Sterling laboratory. The analysis was to be available Monday afternoon. Henry C.

Hobbs ot Lonemout is geologist for the Zlmlth well. He made the location and is sitting on the well for Zlmlth. Hobbs Is the son-in-law of W. E. Letford, president of the First National Bank of Longmont.

The J. G. Dyer well at Grease- vood recovered three feet of Muddy core at 2 p.m. Sunday. Part of the core was lost, hut the bottom six nches showed oil saturation and oil was visible to the naked eye.

The the bomber split apart after hilling tho water. One piece of the has been recovered. The water Is about 12 fert deep at the point of the crash. The plane was enroute to Denver. Corp.

Knudsen, who entered the air force last February, was stationed at Andrews Field near Washington. D. C. He was assigned the control tower at the field. The Fort Lupton serviceman took his basic Iralning at Lackland Air Force base.

San Antonio, and allended an air force school at the University of Connecticut. He had been stalioncd at Andrews Field since the middle of the summer. Liberals Will Support Churchill on Issues of National Import London, Oct. 29. The liberals conditionally promised their six House of Commons votes last night to holster Ihe narrow conservative majority, hut Liberal Leader Clement Davies said "no" to a cabinet bid from Prime Minister Winston Churchill.

The liberals said their six members would swell the Tories' 18-seat majority on "measures clearly conceived in the interest of the country as a whole." aggressive and went out of their way to avoid tangling with our pi- lols." 11 was first time In days Ihe reds have refused a fight. fire, however, knocked two allied planes out of the air. There was no chance ot the pilots surviving, the air force said. Only Few Pounds aved Collector rom Land Mine Hollywood, Oct. Roy 'rinz, a movie director who col- ects firearms as a hobby, is glad le's wached his diet.

Prinz carried a land mine--a Korean war souvenir--Into the po- ice station Saturday for a checkup. He was afraid it was still alive. Before be became suspicious of the land mine, however, Prlnz used for various purposes around the house. For a time, it was a step stool. Police told Prinz he didn't know how lucky he was.

The land mine was designed to explode under 200 pounds of pressure. Prlnz weighs 173. State's Traffic Toll Reaches 285 core was very tight. The well is' being drilled for J. Dyer of Denver and Glfford 3 arker of Tulsa by the Colorado- Wyoming Drilling company.

The Dyer well is about miles north of he Briggs well drilled by Continental Oil company. Shell Oil company has moved its rig and crew which drilled the C. E. Williams well, seven miles south of Greasewood in NE NW 24-5-60, to Nebraska where it will drill the Rex Jacobs'en well In NE NE which offsets Gulf's Sisson well on the west. The location is just half a mile north of the Weld county line in Nebraska.

A cable drilling rig is being moved in to complete the C. E. Williams well of Shell cemented casing in this well at COOO feet. Total depth of the well was 69S3 feet. Production will be from the Muddy and the top bench of the Dakota.

The A a a ivoll in NF, NM of section 5-8-60 at Keota was drilling below 2300 feet Saturday afternoon. Well is being put down by the Rine Drilling company for the C. J. corporation of Eldorado, Ark. New Retail Car Hike Effective on Thursday Detroit.

Oct. iiike In retail auto prices, ranging From J30 to $135. becomes effec live Thursday of this week. Also going up at the same time will new car accessories, with auto niatic transmissions advancing an average of SG at retail. Automotive News reported till today in i i the effect of tin three per cent advance in the an tomobiie excise tax.

included in the new federal tax bill. The ex else tax. heretofore set at sevei per cent, becomes 10 per cent 01 Nov. 1. Missing Pueblo Hunter Is Safe Colorado Springs, Oct.

29. since 8 a.m. Sunday on a hunting trip, William Perry, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.

W. Perry, Colorado Springs, was reported safe this morning at Howard, near Salida. Perry left Colorado Springs with his parents at 3 a.m. Sunday to hunt. The three agreed to meet at le car eight miles south of Harl- el, in South Park, at 8 a.m.

When le Bon had not arrived at noon, an ppeal for aid was made to Sheriff ester Law at Fairplay. A search of the mountains was nado thru the afternoon and night as well as this morning. U.S. i Army Headquarters, Korea. Monday, Ocl.

29--UPi--Chi- nese Reds hurled new assaults today ill a hill mass southeast of strategic Kumsong, after the Allea had reported that central Korean city "neutralized." Some 1,000 screaming Reds attacked the hills In the predawn durkness. A pooled news dispatch did not report the outcome. An earlier assault In company strength wus reported repulsed. The fresh attacks underscored an Allied briefing officer's report Sunday thai Ihe Chinese had regrouped after being driven northward in the recent U. N.

drives oft the central front. On the eastern front, officer! said the Reds had built five bridges across the Pukhan river north of Yanggu and were rebuilding their forces in that area. Heavy fighting raged Sunday north of Kumsoug. An Allied armored task force ramming be- ond the rubbled clly fought out of a communist artillery Irap, but 'our 17-ton Putton tanks were crippled. AP Correspondent Milo Farnetl reported the Reds shelled' the armored column two and a half hours at a road junction northwest of Kumsong.

He said Allied casualties were, light. Three new jet battles raged Sunday high over "MIG alley" In northwest Korea, County Public hospital here. A first aid here the ambulance service rushed him to the General Rose Memorial hospital in Denver. Accident happened on the Kd VanWhy ranch where Willis was i Denver address is 4.116 Vrain street. Prrxl (See earlier story on Page 9) Three i a deaths were reported by the state patrol Sunday as the toll this year reached 2S.i.

31 less than at this time a year ago. The victims were Mrs. Elmer Sharp, about fiO. of Cheyenne Wells. Charles K.

Pearson. 61. of Pncblo and A Jensen. 17. Hum.

Pearson died in a Pueblo hospital Weld yesterday of injuries suffered In an accident Friday night on Colorado 96. nine miles east of Pueblo. His car collided head-on with one driven by Peoples, 56. Pueblo. Peoples was injured seriousl and his wife Ruth.

was killed Pearson suffered head Injuries ant two broken IPRB. 'ueblo Major Gets Congressional Medal I A Washington, Oct. lent Truman today clasped the due ribbon of the Congressiona Medal of Honor around the neck if Marine Corps. Major Carl Sitter of Pueblo, and called him a "very brave man." The ceremony took place in the garden of the White.House vitli high ranking officials of the defense department, navy and ma rine corps present. With Sitter, now stationed at Quantico.

were his wife, their son. Michael Stephen, two, and his father, William S. Sitter, of Pueblo. Major Reginald P. Myers.

31, Boise, Idaho, also was presented the honor medal. Churchill-Truman Meeting Rumored Washington, Oct. 29 (ft White House declined to comment today on the widespread runiora and speculations that there may an early meeting of. President Truman and Winston Churchill, back in again as British prime minister. However, Presidential Secretary Joseph Short said in response to question that the only tion he knew of between the president and Churchill was Mr.

Truman's message of congratulations to the British statesman ou his election. He didn't know whether Churchill had sent a reply. Short was told there were re. ports the president and Churchill might confer at Key West, where the president is flying Nov. for some sunshine and work on his three major messages to be sent to congress in January.

Short said he had nothing to say about any of the reports. Short did not know how long Mr. Truman would stay at Key West. Heart Attack Victim Found In Stream Buena Vista, Oct. Churchill, 77, was found dead in a stream near his cabin yesterday, the apparent victim of a heart attack.

Officers said he had been dead about a week. A search was begun after the cabin in which he lived alone was found empty. Churchill's only known relative is Woodworth of Dorechester Senter Woodworth of Dorchester Center Mass. Denverite Says His Wife Wounded Him Denver. Oct.

Far, ris, 37. of Denver told police liib (The increase, of course, wife, 30-year-old Verleane Karris, only to cars sold to dealers on and a N'ov. 1. Dealers with substantial inventories of cars received from the factories before that date still will be able to advertise deliveries at "old prices." Many have done this in trying to clear up stocks of 1951 cars before new models are introduced, foregoing recently authorized general price advances.) West Slope Beet Payments Made Grand Junction. Oct.

payments are being made for the 1951-51 sugar beet crop on the western slope. Holly Sugar Corporation officials said growers are averaging about $235 I ncre, or $14.70 per ton. Police Won't Tolerate Property Destruction on Halloween Night Chief of Police C. C. Hunter stated Monday his department would not tolerate destruction of private or public property on Halloween night, Wednesday, Oct.

31. won't insist that hoys and girls go to the Jaycces' Haloween party." Hunter said, "but the party is for the kids and they're Invited to attend." He also said he did not advocats widespread use of the tricks or treats' stunt, but thought it was all right for smaller youngsters in their own neighborhoods. Fireman Drops Dead at Crash of Plane Sacramento. Oct. A n-29 crashed at McClellan air force base last night, spun around, prounrf broke in two and canqM fire.

The 11 men aboard escaped with injuries. A i i i a fireman dropped ilead of a heart attack i put out the flames. shot him in the buttocks today i i i a Judges at Duroc Show with a small caliber pistol. I A ro( sa llore rdaT ld rs th1a high i i i a in order of plac- a Roydon Pearson; Stow Witwer. Carol Wit- John Clark: Jim Kram- Larimer 4 block clutching ills wound hi? i hot on his heels.

Farris said he escaped into i sister's house. Police are search- mers. ing for his wife tonight. member wlvi was a i i a for His sister. Mrs.

Alberta Brown. the rnntf.it: Julie Witwer; Gerald railed police and Farrls was taken Apple. Plaltevillo 4-H; Lloyd Berli- tn Denver General hospital. Attendants at the hospital said the wound was painful but not serious. The bullet went through his buttocks from side to side.

"One thing I'll tell you." Farris said at the hospital, "this marriage is all over. That's one thing a wife should never do to her huf.band." cr. Kersey veteran trainee: and Robert Gaskinp. Hrighton FFA. Second team in the FFA division was Grecley, composed of Joe Ross, W.

Weber and B. Solomon. The Greeley veteran trainees team wat second In that division: member! Lowell Strait. Raymond Mosier and John Cravrn..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Greeley Daily Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
251,094
Years Available:
1916-1977