Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 206, Decatur, Adams County, 1 September 1953 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Tito May Seek To Claim All Trieste May Soon Reassert Territorial Claim ? BEIXJ’RADE, Yugoslavia UP — Yugoslavia may soon reassert a /.claim to the entire Trieste free territory, | reliable sources Said to- / day. * ! •* But it was emphasized that any reassertion of the 'tlaim,.| Which dates back to the esd of Wrfrld War 11, will be made on a political basis without the threat of military force. _ •; It is believed that Marshal Tito may outline Yugoslav policy, at least in part, in an important speech he is to make next [Sunday. :■ ''lnformants said z that government leaders are thinking in terms off“a return to 1945.” That means to the time just afteKthe war wh’pn Yugoslavia the entire Trieste - territory) and claimed it. Informants said the government now is considering how to .carry out a policy cit claiming Trieste in practical terms. I It j was suggested that the government might decide;: | . 1., To ask fbr| a revision; |>f : the Italian peace treaty, in wj|ich it was specified Trieste should become bn ‘international neutral j territory. I ' J r ' ts I 2. Tp raise the issue in the United Nations, at the risjj of a ) Russian veto or of Eastolfo-bloc support of Italy: |I The Ydgoslav view is QdjiSMar- ,
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Howard W. Watts Is New DAV Commander Howard W. Watts. Indianapoflis, was elected national commander of the Disabled American Veterans. at the national convention held in Kansas City. Watts, who has been adjutant of the Indiana department, DAV, since 1946. has been granted a leiny of absence while serving as national commander. ■ 1 Watts is well known here, having been one of the principal organizers of Adams county chapter 91, the largest chapter chartered in the nation In 1949. The new cornmander is a World War II amputee, having lost an arm while serving with-the 36th division In Italy. The local chapter has expended an invitation to Watts to visit here during his tenure of office. shal Tito has made 'every possible concession to settle the troublesome Trieste \Jssue in a friendly way. The.reply, in the opinion of Yugoslavs, has been an increasingly nationalistic attitude by Italy. As a result, informants said, the government feels that how it should let the world know that it stands on its original claim to all of Trieste. F~ . Informants reemphasized that Marshal Tito’s policy remains 1 one of anti-aggression and that any move he makes will be in the diplomatic field If you have \something to sell of fooma for rent, try a ' Democrat •• Want, Add. It brings results;
Sees Compromise 11 ' : • ■ ■ ! . i ’ i , 11l On Corporation Tax j May Limit Tax Cut II To Four Per Cent | WASHINGTON UP — Rep| Richard M. Simpson R-Pa. ' saiml tod.iy congress may limit corpora* tions to a four per cent ; tax cut next April 1. Simpson.’ a ranking member offl [the tax-writing house Ways means committee, said the ‘prog posal is a likely compromise in new tax battle brewing betweerß the Eisenhower administration an® key Republicans in- congress. 1 Undeit present law, corporations! would get an automatic 10 perl |cent cut on\April 1. the rates being¥ [reduced from 53 to 47 percent off their taxable income. • |‘ Simpson’s “compromise” would! fix the rate at 50 per cent, or an§■ fctual reduction of four per centi n the amount of tax paid. g Involved is the tax on so-calledW '•normal" corporation profits. C'or-g porate earnings subject to the cess profits tax are now taxed [rate of 82 per cent. -But thlss urtax. which congress reluctantlyf xtbnded for six months at they idministiation’s urgent request,! ill expire Dee. 31. i \ «. Miami County Youtli \ I Is Named Champion | [ INDIANAPOLIS UP — Tom | Dubois, 11, Converse, Miami conn- £ t|y, was today as Indiana's 4
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REMORSEFUL THOUGHTS seem to be in the mind of Mildred McDonald, 25, as she sits In New York police station after telling how she, killed and tried to cremate 14-year-old Mary Di Rocco, sister of the-man who jilted her, in the Di Rocco home in Somerville, Mass. Miss McDonald was recogriizfed in the Times Square area by a policeman who had seen her photo. f/nternationol
unior chiokeii-of-tohiorrow chaindonj Tlie youth, whose White Rock mtry was judged best of jsp
groups sent here, will be honored at the Indiana state 'fair Thursday- • > :
Report Brass Fires Throughout Indiana Serious Drought Is Nqw In 24th Day , INDIANAPOLIS UP — Fire departjnefets fought grass fires all aroubA| Indiana today in the 24th day oti' a drought so serious it threatened-dozens of square miles of crop& and »forests. i\ But, Snoqt of [ the blazes were minor. State conservation o&cials said the state was “very |ortunat4” J ’ that there has been n&J forest fire of any consequence!: 'iL _ f l i / Cigars tossed from passing autos -parted fires whjch blackened dty grassy areas dlong highways. none of serious proportions w%s reported. Consqtvation j pointed out a motorist can be fijned np to S3OO flipping a cigatiet out his car window, of whether it causes a fire. •Outdoor sporjs virtually were halted t>\ the drought and heat. offici|hs said the Weather had ‘'reduced squirrel hunting to nothing,’’ Most squirrels were not very active and hunters found it impossible to make a noiseless approach -to game because of crackling of dry brush. \ [ Fishing also was reported poor. The water in streams and lakes was so warm the fish werfe not biting. , , The drought probably meahs the foliage display in state forests will I be less* polorful this fall, officials said. |
Southern Democrats Disagree On Pledge May Stage Battle In Loyalty Pledge - WASHINGTON UP -- Southern i>< niocrats dtsatjreed today on stag\tng a “loyally pledge*- fight at a party meeting to bfi held in Chicago Sept. 14-15. Any xweh fight would destroy the harmony party .officials hope to display at the big rally planned in conjunction with homecoming ceremonies for Adlai E.-Stevenson, i the 1952 presidential nominee, i Gov. Hugh White of Mississippi ' and John S. Battle of Virginia rfaid •they ifitend to seek repeal of the l>ai ty loyalty pledge adopted at the 1952 ' r national convention. The I pledge commits all delegates to I I)emocqi™j conventions to promote the condidacies of the convention s nominees. Sen. Lister Hilil of Alabama opposed the mo|ve to repeal the \p|edge. He said “those who sit in the Democratic party cburicils and who enjoy all the benefits and honors of the Democratic party should be loyal to the party and its nominees.’\ •' i The loyalty pllrdge was written into convention rules after a bitter fight and was inten|ded to prevent dissident from putting Republican nominees on their state ballots under the Democratic party's label. A study of party rules fe on the agenda ,of the Chicago meeting. A Special committee, tncludfhg eight members of congress ajid four governors. was named by ’party chairman Stophen A. Mitchell last May. Mitchell intended only a study of the national committee's rules and by-laws. The national committee is the governing body of the party between national conventions. S 1 But southerners opposed; to the loyalty pledge seized upon the opportunity to make a pitch for repeal of the controversial convention rule. ' ® ' Battle, a 'niehwer of the rules study group, saidAie feels national party leaders realize they made a "serious wjstake" last summer. He said he Expects the rulds group to adoptjii resolution to throw out the pledge. The Chicago cannot repeal the loyaltii*pledge. Only a national conven4|| has that power. The national committee could, how ever, submit a recommendation for the next coßvenwtii, which meets in 1956. t —"W — 11 Youth Fellowship At Planning Conference S rd The youth of the First Methodist chur<|| licit <Sun<i<iy as i ternoou for al pMinjrg confdrcto ? T*r at the cliurclh cottage on Lake Webster* wherefth'Jiy *lll attend sessions in planing for their prograih events fall and winter period. ' | Those- attending were: Judy Locke, .Mary Jan||£mith, iDana Dalzell, Vera Judyj Dedolph. Sharon Anita Smith, Linda Pollock. David Jack »La'Ason. Ted 'Schrot k.Jl’ony Kelly. Joan Dorwin. <4cnr ‘Bill Smith, ■Peter Dalzell, [®a Brewer. Bob Oehsenrklcr, 'Mil|c Beery, and Charles Judt. : x Adult counselors include the Rev. atrtl ’Mrs. Samimi Emerick. Mrs. Alva Lawson and Mrs. ‘Malcolm Lodku i
uwF 1 < a « fl 4T’ > ■ 811 ® WB - rflfl WBR f wißKt HI " Bi ■ Ji rii j i riF I M/J ; A W . •JJ flwt A ft 1 Im-flflfl ; WORDS CAN hardly describe the joy of these Gls freed at Panmunjom, but their faces .tell the story plainly. Upper left, Cpl. Homer ,F. Gregory, 24th Infantry, Tampa, Fla.; right, Pvt. Harvey D. Jordan, 7th Infantry, Rensselaer, Ind. Lower left, Sgt. Kenneth D. r' i Heitkamp, 2nd Infantry, Route 5, Menomonie, Wis.; right, Pfc. ' • David A. Dawson, 24th Infantry, Babee, Tenn. (InternationalJ
28 Men Are Added To I ■ i■ . I: " ■- "■ .• .' 4 State Police Force New State Troopers INDIANAPOLIS UP Twenty-1 eight new state police troopers will vbe sworn in today in a ceremony at tile state supreme court chain beis, Supt. Frank A. Jessup Announced. 4, The men. 2<> of whom werA huthorized by the state legislature : an 1 eight replacements for fonner troopers, raise the number of troopers to 3?3. the largest in the department's 'history.' • .< “Further increases..in the size of the fofco arp indicated.’’ Jessup said, “If traffic and crime problems in Indiana continuekto mount at the present rate." *' . The appointees, who completed a two-morith training course at Indiana University last month, include the following: George Kern. Cedar Lake, and Hairy Young. Chesterton, assigned to Dunes Park post; Raymond Sheets. Ockley South Beni post; Algie Nacke. Minamac. and Don* aid Gustin. Indianapolis. Ligonier post; AVillmr Rash. Hagerstown and Lester King. Frtrt “Wayne, For: : Wayne post; Forrest Cooper. Brazil; Evansville post: Raymond Horner and Donald Carlisle, both
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1953
of Indianapolis, Indianapolis post. .Trade In a good Town-r-Decatur- ' ' - " ’ - -I Patronize t Local Business F ’■ 7 ’ SHOP at HOME !. 7 /■ • ■ V i - ■ I WELCOME WAGON | PHONE 3-3>96 or 3-3966'
