Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 70, Decatur, Adams County, 24 March 1953 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Rep. Martin Hopes Tax Cut Possible ■' ; ■ .. • 1 ! ' ' ' v House Speaker Says Economy Is First \ WASHINGTON, (UP)~4speaker Joseph W. Martin, • Jr., tsld the United Press today that he hopes congress can reduce income taxes this year. He said that governv nient economy comes fir«yt, / j “That is what we are trying to do,” Martin said. “We hope we I, cah reduce Appropriations; enough I to ihake a tax cut possible in ' 1953.” «- i Martin and chairman ’ Leo E. Allen pt the house rules committee can make or break any effort to cut taxes. They have firm alliance. Allen told theji United Press,' also, that the budget must baJapce before taxes are reduced. ! Allen, a representative from llf linois and a Republican, is chairman of the most powerful comipittee in congress. Allen’s rules committee determines what shall I and what shall not be brought to the house floor for action.*. There are ways of getting around the a J rules committee, but they are thorny. Chairman Daniel A. Reed,'! RN. Y„ of the house ways and means committee was threatening to bypass Allen to. get ja.'T9s3 tax reduction bill before y the house. Reed has been 1919. He is pne of the powerful men in congress. But whjen the time came to challenge Allen’s rules committee autjprity, Reed backed down. y Allen is getting some mail from angry taxpayers. They would do better to center their fire] on the house and senate appropriations committees and on President Eisenhower. Allen will tell you he wants a tax cut as much as anyone, and he means it, J- ; “But we must balance th,e budget first,” Allen said. “We must
' ' " -1 1 v. J r±- -r , ■ - — ■•■■ ~ —-- • • 1 "'"""' ' : ;-r ~T..' 1 j ■'■'■' ;,, :,,, ,■, , j, EE --•:•■■ ■ - - ■ I *X- : ~. *'■" „ '"" ■ '.] '! ' j ... - . p.j J- j-' ' ~ '’'' ~fsEllfllll'" ' 'v" " ' ■■■■■ l i 1 3' - . . -•"■' ■. ::: "." j ';- ~ x — -• » ~ j; ' . - i ;Lp> ~ |i 1 a =::_■"•....' ! ~"T~ " p ''' ' 'j ' ' Bjyp 1 ■ '■ ■ 1 "' 1 ;, '", ' '!rJ„' p.'l '- I; 11 ;11 •' '' ' j i : ~ BBuMOr rZraZslbaL ~ WWBI ■ . ' -u ■ Poor Little Hill I “ \ ' ■■' • t ' ' I ' ' ' ' I ; i ' - .»- i i . :•■ ! ■ • ' I \ .
You’re looking at a very discouraged hill! f Ever sitice that ribbon of paving outlined itj it has been a challenge to motor cars. For miles and miles it winds up the side of a mountain; and it has sharp curves, and, steep grades \that spring out of the curved so a driver'can’t get a start. Half-way up\ there’s a watering place—put there so drivers can stop *and refill their radiators. Yes—it has been quite a hill. But not any more! The driver of the car in the picture above off at the base and sailed\right up to the top —and never gave it a thought. You see, he’s driving a 1953 Cadillac—with its great high compression 210-horsepower engine—and its vastly improved Hydra-Matk Drive. \ v • We heard recently of two pien who drove from Florida to DetriSit—in a 1953 Cadillac. p ° The driver had made this trip before—and as they left Knoxville he said to his passenger: “Man, are we going to find a hill between here and\Lexington!”
ZINTSMASTER MOTOR SALES CORNER FIRST & MONROE STS. \ PHONE 3-2003
1 Jg| 3 he ■ \ \ ' hy ( I ' 5 i ■ t ■ i ■ I : s h U. • 7-YEAR-OLD Christine Dwyer smiles through bandages which cover 16 stitches in her face following an attack in which an 8-year-old girl slashed her with a broken bottle in Chelsea, Mass. Christine was on an errand when the attack occurred. (International) appropriate less for the executive departments to spend if taxes are to be reduced. j'i ■ Ay-' “Cutting taxes and men borrowing rijoney *to cover a deficit should be out. Borrowing iis all right in war or in a depression. But full employment, high wages, substantial profits, and generally good farm prices, there is no reason for running a treasury deficit in Washington. “I shall not be a party to borrowing any more mopey to pay government costs.” 1 Allen has been in congress since 1933. He knows tax reduction is popular. But he is' a team player and as chairman of rules, intends to hold the line against a tax cut until that balanced budget is in sight. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results
More Fireworks Is Expected At Probe Velde Committee In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES, UP —An unAmerican activities sub-committee hearing, which turned up charge that Communists slanted musical comedy songs and sketches to ridicule the late Franklin D. Roosevelt, resumed today with mofe violent fireworks expected. The opening session of the subcommittee’s hearings in southern California broke up in disorderly shouting Monday, Rep. Harold ( Velde . (R-Ill.) finally adjourned the hearing in desperation to stop the verbal brickbats., Before (“unfriendly” witnesses and attorneys brought the»testimony to a close, the congressmen heard television dance director Danny Dare tell how a musical comedy he directed in 1940 was altered to “ridicule FDR and his politices.” ; “We had a song called >'Mr. Roosevelt,. Won’t You Run Again? l in the show but it was cut when FDR backed Finland in her stand agaihst Russia, ’’ Dare, a reformed Communist, testified. “In 1941 we slanted sketches in the show,” Dare said. “The musi-; cal was a (Hollywood Theater Alliance called “Meet the' People,” he said. ; * ! The disorder broke out Monday when Rep. Donald L. Jackson (RCalif.) introduced a resolution previously adopted by the Los Angeles bar association, admonishing bar ! members to maintain good manners during court appearances.- . r- ‘ William Esterman and Daniel Marshall, attorneys for Some of the Witnesses, violently Objected to the resolution introduced by the sub-committee niepiber and demanded they 'be allowed to an-! swer. Heated arguments ensued.
After an hour or so, the passenger said: “Where is the hill?” And the driver said; “Just) wait!” So they waited—and presently they saw a sign ] which read: “Lexington. \ , The driver was dumbfounded. “I can’t understand it!” hei said. “There used to be a hill there—a big one! I kinow from experience.” Naturally, this great car gives you more than the ability to master hills. v Whten you float along with a tremendous reserve like) this, you have the ejasiest ride imaginable. .It gives you confidence, too—and helps you to relax—for ypu know you have the power for Any emergency that may iftse. It makes the whole car a symphony in motion. In fact, the ride is so smooth and soothing that, not infrequently, passengers sleep as they ride. Come in and try it for yourself. The car is waiting —and it’s an experience you oqght not to forego.
* * 1 i ■ ■ DECATUR DAILY DFtfOCRAT, DF.(* A tUR. INDIANA
K. P. Lodges Plan Courtesy Campaign rd Knights of evary county and every lodge in the state, will attend a meeting in Indiaijapo; Its, Friday night to launch ; the Knights pf Pythias continenUwid’le highway courtesy campaign in Indiana. Elton L. Marquart, Fort Wayne, Alien epunty clerk of courts arid grand-chancellor of the order, said that the dinner meeting? will be the highlight of the 85th annual state convention of the Knights of Pythias to be held in the Claypool hotel, Friday and Saturday, March 27 and The campaign is designed tq?.ehlist the more than two million members ot Pythian families throughout the United States, Canada, Hawaii and Alaska in a drivfe to promote safety through highway courtesy. Supreme chancellor Sheldon] M t Roper of Lincolnton, N.C., will speak at the meeting which will be attended by many state oft’iqtals, leaders in safety organizations:and Indiana insurance meh. !.'• ; i ■ .’I." DOWAGER QUEEN. <Continued From Page One)! causing some anxiety.” \ A solemn littl ecrowd (stood jpiltside the old red bride mansion reading this, a few yards, off >th.e, mall whei;e the'coronation patade stands are being erected, when a second and' graver bulletin/Was posted: ■! , “During the past hours Queen Mary’s condition has become grhve. There has been a serious weaken-. Ing of the heart action, which gives rise to increasing anxiety.” j The bulletin was signed by (Sir Horace Evans and Lord WebbJohnson/' Queen Mary’s | physician and surgeon, respectively, y I Useful Con Game KNOXVILLE, Tenn. I}P —; A finance company official,(Aloe Williams, capitaized on the "Spariiri£ prisoner” confidence game by ’using three letters he received : in connection with it to teach his |on” to read Spanish.
fl '■ '* . i * ■* ■* ' l It! .... HP - Mrs. Elaine Hagedorn, 26, and 4th set ot twins, a boy and a girL v - v r HClji Xi W • L- ** ] .Louis Hagedorn, 29, and the other three sets: rear, Diane and Donna, 6j on his lap, Louis and Lois, 2; far left, far right, Jerald and John, 8. . \ * IT'S THE 4TH set of twins in a little more than six years for the Louis of Neillsville, Win Papa is finding his hands full taking care *rf first three while mamma is in hosoita|. t International Soundohotoa >
Hearing Is Opened On Color TV Block *I J . House Committed Launches Hearing WASHINGTON, — The house comerce committee opened hearing today to find out whether anyone is “deliberately” denying color- television to the American public. \ iE. W. Engstrom, president of the Radio Corporation of America in charge of RCA laboratories division, called as the first witness. \ Committee chairman Charles Wolverton RN.J. launched the public inquiry as the administration prepared this week to remove the last remaining controls on production of ccilor television sets. Color TV set production was banned in November,, 1951, because of a shortage of critical materials needed for the defense buildup. The ordet 1 was relaxed in June, 1952, to permit manufacture of color sets if the producer could show his Work did not hinder' defense production. Industry sources have said, however, that removal of all controls still will not kick pff large scale production of color sets. They claim manufacturers are awaiting perfection and approve! of a so-called “compatible” electronic color TV system which would allow present sets to receive color programs in black and white without an adapter. \ - The system developed by th<A t Columbia Broadcasting System and already approved by the federal communications commission requires an adapter for present sets to< receive color programs in .black and white and a 1 converter to receive those programs in color. Give the handicapped a chance. Use Easter Seals.
Hr nil * fißr COLONEL Royal ft. Bakeri 34. of McKinney. Tex., knocked down his 12th Russian-built MIG in the stir war over Korea to become the worid’s top jet aee. The flier , scoffed at reports that the VS. Air Force is now using a new “miracle”, gunsight. (International)
Warrant Issued For Failure To Appear - A warrant has been by Mayor John Doan for Ronald G. CUftoh; 17, Wren, 0., for failing td appear to answer charges of reckless driving on Mercer avenue last night at about 7 o’clock. He was to appear In mayor’s court morning at 10 o'clock. More Major Posts Filled By Governor Harvey Stout Named To Veteran Service INDIANAPOLIS UP—Two\ more major posts were filled by Governor Craig today with the appointment of Harvley B. Stout as a veterans service officer and the reappointment pf Wendell Tennis as Democratic member of the public service commission. Craig also named- the two deputy budget, directors authorized by the last session of the legislature. They are Republican Robert W. King, Indianapolis, and Democrat J. Kenneth Moulton, Franklin. Stout,-45, a Carmel resident and acting director of the . present veterans’ department, will head the veterans service department created by the 1953 will teplace the present department of veterans’ affairs May |l. A veteran of both World Wars, Stout was named by ex-Governor Gates as assistant director of veterans affairs and became service officer under former Governor' Schricker. 4
Tennis,' a Sullivan attorney who was named to the PSC by Schrlcker, formerly served as clerk of the Sullivan circuit court. ' Republican members previously named to the commission are M. Elliot Bedshaw and Warren Buchanan, chairman. King was employed as a state budget examiner for six years, and Moulton has been a member of the state board of accounts for five years. ASKS SENATORS L (Cewtlaned From Tare Owe) called because the information, favorably or derogatory, is in unevaluated form. Although Dulles and» Brownell made an evaluation of derogatory material in Bohlen’s file and pronounced it unbelievable, some senators have f insisted that legislators, too, be permitted to study it. Taft was not present at today’s foreign relations committee session. f Republican leaders still are confident Bohlen will be confirmed by a large majority. HEAVIEST RED i (CeitissM Fr<w Pw— Q—) west-central front. The ~A|Mes repulsed all the attacks or, regained lost territory except on Old Baldy. There the Red commanders apparently had regrouped and strengthened the regiment that participated in the earlier attacks and threw the entire force into the fight ■ ■ ’MI ' ■ ‘
Czech Pilot Flies , Plane Jo Freedom Disked Attacks By atrolling MIGs FRANKFURT, Germany UP — The anti-communist Czech ' pilot! and navigator of a Czechoslovak j airliner, risking attack by trigger-1 happy pilots of patrolling Czech! air force M’lG’s, flew their plane to freedom in Wtest ! Germany Mohday night. k \ Three of the planje’s 2t> passengers joined the pilot, navigator and' the navigator’s wife in requesting political asylum in the west- ■ ; l ' United Sta-tes high commission and American air force authorities announced the daring escape today. U. S. high commissioner James B. Conant told a -press conference ip Bonn that the pilot was engineered by a fciviliari mechanic at the Skoda armament works who had been an RAF navigator and | radio man during World War 11. “Both thia man anil his wife had been trying for two years to find away to flee from Czechoslovakia,” Conant said, i “But it wa? not until recently that they succeeded in making contact with a pilot willing to make the flight.” The high commissioner said], the navigator apd a fourth man who was in on the plot entered the flight deck of the C-47 passenger plane while it was flying between Prague and Brno. They slugged an uncooperative radio ( operator, he said, and ordered the co-pilot to remain in his seat and not interfere. , Then, Conant skid, the pilot dived down to tree-top height, swung the plane from its eastward course and headed west. The navigator manned the radio and', as soon as the plane crossed the border into West Germany, contacted the ’Rhine-Maine !|’. S. airbase and reported the plane was escaping from Czechoslovakia with refugees seeking political asylum. Several women were'said to be among the 25 passengers. A U. S. high commission source in Bonn said there wjere no prominent Czechs aboard the plane. He added that the Czech; military mission in Berlin asked permission to go to Frankfurt to inspect the plane and talk with the passengers. ' \ ( I, Mpny of the passengers seemed to know- nothing about the escape plot until the plane : was already across the Iron Curtain. Some of
RODEO TICKETS ' NOW ON SALE MAIL ORDER SAIZES ■RODEO TICKET' OFFICE SEX’D ORDERS AND s - ROOM 218 j- MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE \ . HOTEL VAN ORMAN TO RODEO TICKET OFFICE TELEPHONE' E-3441 HOTEL VAN ORMAN (OPEN DAILY'S TO 5) FORT WAYNE, IND. BIG Mar. 27 rl SI.BO i Shows Mar. 28 ■ $3.00 11 T Specify Date on Mail Orders An entirely new type of Wail Paint SCRUBABLEFLAT ...FOR CHUNGS, WALLS ANO WOODWORK... BICAUSE IT'S SCRUBABLE! • ■ ■ H- . Here at last is a really scrubable flat paint, to give matching color, texture and sheen on ceilings, walls and woodwork. Use it on plaster, pvood, brick, concrete or cinder block and wallboard. Kyanize Clingcote H Scrubable-Flat is self-priming, contains no water, does not streak and is easily applied with a brush or roller... comes in a wide range of luscious, self-smoothing magazinefeatured colors. Odorless. [ J t^! h Kffwnxge CLINGCOTE ’ St*UBABI.E-H.AT I book, or call EVertt® I ; .... | |EE I 7-5000. j ADVERTISED IN LIFK KOHNE DRUG STORE
JUBSDAY, MARCH 24.
them appeared stunned as they stepped out at. the Rhine-Main airport. U. I S. air force officials said there was no indication the plane was picked Up on the Red frontier radar screen or intercepted by the MIG fighters that patrol the Iron Curtain, As far as was known it also was not intercepted by any U. S. fighter planes. r , Hope Vishinsky To Have New Proposals Relations With Reds Reported Improved MOSCOW UP — Western foreign observers in Moscow said today they were hopeful Soviet United Nations delegate Andrei Y. Vishinsky may return t,o New York with " new proposals to settle international problems. . , The western sources said Vishinsky, who returned here for Josef Stalin's funeral, without doubt has conferred with his old chief in the foreign ministry, Vyacheslav .Molotov, and received- new orders. ■ At -the U. N.. Vishinsky ably-will re-affirm Stalin’s tneory of coexistence of capitalism \and Communism. He also is expected by western sources'to repeat new Soviet premier Georgi M. Malenkov’s statement that all controversial questions—including those between the U. S. S. R. and the United States — can be settled peacefully. Diplomats wha have talked t > Soviet officials in the past week< or two report an “extreme cordiality.” This includes Americans said the Soviet authorities ave been thoroughly polite and ©operative in day by day matters normally arising between any diplomatic mission and local oSßials. For example the Americans reported that the Russians have been working literally day and night to complete a new American embassy building into which U. S. officials expect t 6 move early > next month. .Soviet architects, engineers and jburlderg have been receptiv to ; all American suggestions for al- : teratons and decorations of the ; building, the diplomats said. * \ ——— L. A St, Louis chemical companv | has developed a water-soluble fertilizer said to minimize the risk es f leaf or grass burn. Trade In a Good Town— Decatur.
