o"q ;9pn,ooo oddo 6a QDDo'a oDO ODD ODD O OD O DO OO O O 'Q AFL Requests: Cooairft it mm Erase Tax! Dncrease - A suit seeking a court order ! declaring void two 1947 Oregon ! legislative acts, which increase i income tax and create a with-j holding tax, was filed in Marion county circuit court Wednesday j by James T. Marr, executive! secretary of the Oregon State i federation of Labor. The acts under fire are: New income tax law based on credits or exemptions of $500 for ; a single individual or one not living with husband or wife; 000 for head of a family or mar ried individual living with hus band or wife, and a credit of $300, fori each dependent indivi- t dual, other than husband or; wife. . ' ' - A measure, withholding one per cent of an individual's wag es and bonuses, to apply on in come tax. The suit stems from the defeat of the 3 per cent sales tax issue Grain Traders Demand Congressional Hearing CHICAGO, Nov. 5 -(Ph The nation's three ! largest grain ex changes, disclaiming responsibility for the recent rise in grain prices, today asked for a "sweeping" congressional investigation not only of their activities but also of the government's grain buying program. The exchanges, already unaer mvesugauun uy mc uujikcu after a presidential charge that -gambling in the marketf had eral The League of Oregon Cities held its annual meeting in La Grande last month. Besides elect ing Mayor Bob Efstrom of Salem president and choosing its other officers the league adopted a good many resolutions. Naturally these relate largely to city problems, ut they are of interest to sow lie .trend of thinking among exe cutives of municipalities. The League has had a hard row to hoe to get recognition, par ticularly 1 from agrarian-minded I legislators,; but It is a patient or ganization.; I By dint of years of lobbying it; finally succeeded In getting a "substantial split in re ceipts from highway revenues. This year resolutions for. once re silent on the subject Ever on the hunt for more reve nues, the League now is picking up the scent of surplus income tax receipts. JtJ belated however for the schools haft already put in a line to tap that reservoir. Legislators worry lest there will not be enough receipts to take care of state and school needs without taking on more .mendi cants. " In brief here are the resolu tions of the Oregon League: 1. To have representation en a committee to study methods of distributing income tax surpluses "which would be of benefit to the state of Oregon and its political subdivisions." . 2. Cut off at the pockets through loss of , anticipated revenues from licensing of pinball machines as many cities were, the League pro poses by constitutional amend ment or legislation means by which "these devices may be pro perly regulated and the menace of racketeering . . . may be sup pressed." What this means is .that "(Continued on editorial page) Dewey Backs Aid to Europe NEW YORK, Nov. 5-UP)-Gov. Thomas . Dewey, in a speech enthusiastically applauded by 1, 000 top American business execu tives, took : a stand tonight in fa vor of full-scale United States aid to western: Europe but demanded "business like administration" of the program. After describing the "cold war" in which he said "we are being at tacked by all means short of war" by soviet Russia and after out lining the ("spiritual and physical devastation of six years of total war" in Europe, Dewey declared: "It Is devastatingly dear that we have only one choice and that is wisely to aid those who stand with us in the world in the hope that they will rise again as bul warks of the institutions of hu man freedom."- Animal Crachcrs By WARREN GOODRICH . "V m getting so can Ukeit or leave it.?, m yuumue TPCDCDOLg in the October 7 election. De feat of the, sales tax automatic ally "placed into effect the other two measures. Declaring that his organization is made up of over 50,000 mem bers, most of whom are taxpay ers, Marr asks for a declaratory judgment on the, constitution ality of the two acts passed by the last legislature. Marr and the AFL state that the acts are invalid because their taking effect is jnade to depend upon an authority other than action of the people, and because the voters were denied the. pow er of referendum in connection with the acts. Mi- Defendants in the' suit are Earl L. Fisher, Carl Chambers and Wallace S. Wharton, constituting the state tax commission. I Re cently Attorney General George Neuner ruled- the acts were valid. SKyrocxeiea grain prices, uu uicy would "welcome and request a hearing "at the earliest possible date." i ; Their statement said the special investigation had been requested "in order that the American peo ple may be furnished facts1 from , which it can draw its own conclu sions as to whether the" rapid iise in commodity prices has been oc casioned by illegal and improper practices on the part of the ex changes, on one hand, or by the government's buying program for export, plus bungling and lack' of planning on the other hand." The request was addressed to the congressional joint committee on the economic report by the presidents of the-grain exchanges in Chicago, Minneapolis and Kan sas City. Sen. Taft (R-jOhio), joint chairman of the committee, said in Tulsa that he had received the request and would recommend "further hearings." j Marshall Plan Details Stump Solon Group WASHINGTON, Nov 5 - () -Two closed door sessions of the special bouse foreign aid commit tee today faijed to ' produce any agreement on a program for the special session of congress j open ing November 17. " 1 , Vice Chairman Herter (R-Mass) who led . thei 19-member group on an extensive Investigation trip abroad during the.! summer, told newsmen after the second session that "some progress", has been made. He added the pope that the committee would reach an agreement tomorrow or Fri day. ' i - I . ' . But other j members, who de clined to permit use of their names, reported the group at Loggerheads ; on these major points: j j 1. Who shall receive aid and under what restrictions should it be granted. 2. Who thall administer the aid program. - j " It They said the committee j has all but given up hope of working out any long-range aid program and is concentrating on writing a stop-gap plan. Portland May Play Host To National CIO Meet PORTLAND. Nev. 5-GTVStan- ley Earl, executive secretary ; of the state CIO, today predicted that next year's national I CIO convention would be beld in Portland. He said Harry Read, executive assistant to James Carey, national CIO secretary, recently looked over Portland's convention facili ties and assured him that they were satisfactory. Unpleasant Surprise Awaits Whisky Thief 9 i ' i LONG BEACH, Calif, Nov. S WP--Police have been expecting to see a wild - eyed pedestrian come to a screeching stop- some where on a' Long Beach sidewalk.' Mrs. L. P. Grindtnger reported a thief took a whisky bottle from the glove compartment of her au tomobile, parked in front of her house. -The bottle contained brake fluid. . " PLANE CRASH REPORTED SAN RAFAEL, Calif.. Nov. 5 - - The sheriffs office said tonight an , airplane had crashed near Muir woods, In southern Marin county. An army rescue party from Hamilton field was disypatched to the scene.' There was no immediate information as to the type of the plane or ; the number of occupants. ! WELL DESERVED REST WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 -W) Marcel Foubert, the photographer who successfully snapped pictures of micro-organisms in the stom achs of fleas, has retired from the government after more than 29 years service. GOV. HALL APPOINTS J. P. Gov.. J ohn Hall Wednesday ap pointed F. A. Cornell of Sweet Home as justice of the peace for district 8, Linn county. He fcuc seeds J. F. McGlothern who re signed, - i NINETY-SEVENTH YEAB 14 Scoffs WASHINGTON. Nev. 5 Charles E. Wilson, president of General Electric, whe told s senate com mittee teday that while vice chairman ef the war predic tion beard be had . branded as "silly" Howard Hughes' plan to build reconnaissance planes. Solon Asserts Hughes Owes $6 Million Tax WASHINGTON, Nov. $ A demand that an additional tax assessment of almost $6,000,000 be slapped on Howard Hughes, mil lionaire Hollywood plane design er, was made today by Senator Williams (R-Del) as the senate war investigating committee re sumed its inquiry into Hughes' $40,000,000 warplane contracts. Williams, member of the com mittee, declared that a study of tax records of Hughes and the Hughies companies showed a "tax deficiency of ,$5,919,821." He asserted in a statement that the records showed profits of $15, 528,000 were made after tsxes during the wartime period, but that only $1,000,000 was paid to Hughes, the rest being retained as undistributed profits by the Hughes Tool company. The sena tor added that a statute called for taxation of wartime corporation profits not distributed to stock holders. Earlier, Charles E. Wilson branded as "silly" Hughes' war time program to build photo re connaissance planes, and an air force engineer testified that El liott Roosevelt, who recommended the planes, was unqualified to pass judgment on them. Wilson, president of the Gen eral Electric- and former vice chairman of the war production board, said he was opposed to the program because of his belief that the planes could not be produced in time to help the war effort. He testified that a stop-work order he issued in 1943 on Hughes 200 ton flying boat "didn't stick." New Automatic Parking Meters Said Satisfactory Salem's new automatic parking meters are giving satisfactory service, with virtually no mechan ical failure to date. City Manager J. L. Franzen reported Wednes day. He added, however, that many drivers using the meters here have called in complaints, only to learn from maintenance men that they simply did not push their nickel or penny hard enough. Franzen called Attention to the fact that coins must be pushed horizontally into the slot at the side of the meter. Coins do not "fair Into the slot but must be pushed in far enough to set the timing machinery in mo tion (accompanied by a whirring sound), Franzen said. ' EGG PRICES DUE FOR DROP PORTLAND, Nov. S -W)- The budget worried housewife gets one slight break tomorrow when eggs are due to drop another two cents a dozen on the wholesale market, below 1946 levels for the first timg since spring. : ,.: ::' A' " '. .1 : ':V'":'";r V,' x rr, r AP Correspondent Guinn Pleads Innocence to Spy Activities After Being Evicted by Hungary (Editors note: Jack Guinn, Associat ed Preia correspondent at Budapest since January, IMS, was notified by the Hungarian government on Monday that be must leave the country or face charges of "espionage and smug gling out of criminaJs." The following dispatch tell of his and his iamily's arrival in Vienna.) v By Jack Gown v VIENNA, Nov. i-VP)-To avoid arrest on Hungarian charges of "espionage" and smuggling anti communists out of the country, I have been forced to bring my fam ily out of Budapest into Vienna. The Hungarian foreign minister, Erik Molnar, a leading conynunist on Monday morning gave me until .Tuesday midnight to leave the country or face trial. He told United States Minister Selden Chapin that Hungarian political police had "incontrovertible evi dence" that I had. engaged in spy-. PAGES Hospital Goal Set A 150-bed $1,500,000 new Salem General hospital is the goal of a building fund drive to be launched within the near future. The hos pital's board of directors an nounced plans for the campaign and ah architect's services Wed nesday. Subscribers need raise only two-thirds of the total cost of construction if plans for the hos pital are approved by the state hospital commission and board of health, William Gahlsdorf. hos pital business manager said. He explained that the board of di rectors intends to apply to the federal security agency for a third of the cost , payable when ' con gress appropriates funds for the $75,000,000 a year program ap proved last session. The bill pro vided that the government could help build hospitals okayed by state agencies. Adjacent Te Present Hospital Location of the proposed build ing will be adjacent to the present hospital on East Center street on a site already owned by the hos pital. The present . building will be kept for auxiliary use, con nected to the new institution by a tunnel. Cost of the campaign planned to run over half a year will be met by a group of underwriters who plan to employ a profession al drive, director. The main ap peal Is the urgent need , for im proved hospital facilities In Salem. Population growth in this area has far outstripped .the space and equipment which was adequate SO years ago. Overcrowding in present hospitals has necessitated use of beds in corridors and other emergency measures which cut ef ficiency of operation end slow pa tient recovery. Board Of Directors Members of the Salem General Hospital board of directors are M. L. lleyers, president; Mrs. Madeline Dyer, . vice-president; Elizabeth Putnam, secretary; George Riches, treasurer; Mrs. G. a Bellinger, Justice Harry H. Belt, Rev. George Swift, Judge E. M. Page, Mayor Robert Elfstrom, Allan. Carson, . Douglas McKaj, Ralph SkopiL John Humphreys, Thomas A. Windishar and W. L. Phillips. Superintendent of hospital Is Lillian McDonald. the Tito Blocks Solons9 Visit LONDON, Nov. 5-0P)-Ai con gressional committee chairman said today his group had been told, by American military officials in Germany that if it tried to fly into Yugoslavia without visas to visit the American embassy the plane "would probaply be shot down." John J. Rooney (D-NY) chair man of a. house appropriations special sub-committee on state de partment expenditures, said the committee had tried in vain to ob tain visas from Marshal Tito's government . The soviet union refused in Sep tember to permit entry into Rus sia of a senate appropriations committee which said it wanted to visit the U.S. embassy In Mos cow. There was no explanation of the Yugoslav refusal. Where There's Life There May Not Be Hope NOG ALES, Ariz No. I The Nogales Herald today waived its ban on one-month home de livery subscriptions in the case of IS. M. Brown. Applying for a monthly sub scription. Brown told the circu lation manager, "I would be p re sumption if I took a whole year's subscription." Brown is 96 years old. FARMER CRUSHED OREGON CITY, Ore, Nov. 5 (JPy- Leonard W. Spain, 41, was crushed fatally today when a tractor rolled on him at his tur key ranch at Carus, five miles south of here. ' ing on Hungary and that I had smuggled the communist party's enemies into Austria. Officials allowed my wife and two small daughters, Sally, four years old, and Susan, one month old, two days in which to leave. I arrived in Vienna Just before midnight My family arrived by airplane at 10:30 a.m. today. Molnar did not explain to Min ister Chapin exactly what I was supposed to have done. An offi cial communique issued by Inter ior Laszlo Rajk, another leading communist said that several Hun garians, all of them my friends and one of them my secretary and fel low American citizen,, Miss Eliza beth Pallos, had been arrested for providing unnamed persons with "confidential Information," The official announcement said that Building POUNDDD Tlx Oregon 'Statesman, Salem. GDOOtiDl) M Safe Renders Section of Gutted Building Unsafe A heavy safe, balanced pre cariously on a section of badly burned floor of the Guardian building,; Wednesday prevent ed fire investigators from searching through a spot in the' basement where it is believed Monday's $500,000 blaze orig inated. Fire Chief W. P. Roble said late Wednesday night It was a case of playing heavy, heavy hangs over thy head," or not checking the charred section, and Roble. said he was forced to prohibit any one from probing beneath the huge vault although other sec tions of the building are being investigated. The safe was re moved late Wednesday night and the Investigation will" con tinue today. Meanwhile city firemen are constantly patrolling the build ing and burned - out tenants continue to move salvagable equipment and records from the scene. Red Dubbed i Czechoslovak 'Strong-Man' PRAGUE. Czechoslovakia, Nov. 5.?M2oinmunist Premier Klem ent Gottwald emerged tonight from a political crisis as Czecho slovakia's new strong man with complete authority from the na tional cabinet to rebuild the gov ernment of semi-autonomous Slo vakia. . ; The Slovak,! democrats, predom inantly conservative, are the ma jority party in Slovakia, and Gott wald's new authority was consid ered a major communist victory in his party's avowed drive to gain complete control of the whole country. A government communique is sued after an all-day meeting said the 50-year-old former blacksmith had been given power by the eight-party national front coali tion to deal with the three-day crisis in Slovak politics. Gottwald conferred with Pres ident Eduard Benes, Vie nation's elder statesman, who had been waiting word of a solution in the communist-Slovak democrat fight. The Slovak democrats have been under bitter communist attack in Prague and Bratislava, with some of the party secretaries accused of making "reactionary" plots against the government Mercury Hovers Near Freezing in Mid-Valley Area Temperatures dipped near" the freezing point in the Salem area Wednesday night but warmer weather and continued rain today will end the short-lived cold snap, the U.S. weather bureau at Mc Nary field predicted late Wednes day night . The bureau reported a low of 34 degrees was recorded at the air port weather station just before midnight Wednesday, contmuous rain and a low of 43 degrees was forecast for tonight Meanwhile the first packed snow of the season was reported Wednesday in the Cascade moun tain passes. The state highway commission said that several inches of snow had fallen on Sun Mountain pass on The Dalles-California highway, and near Meach am on the Old Oregon Trail high way. Chains are required on all mountain passes. More snow was expected to fall Wednesday night with tempera tures drboning to 20 degrees in the mountains and in some parts of eastern Oregon. in connection ! had been expelled from Hungary "forever." Many persons in Hungary have given me information in the 21 months and seven days. I spent there. Much of it after being ver ified from other sources, developed into news stories which I am sure did not please the communist dominated regime. Mr. Chapin said he did not "understand how a reporter's news dispatches could be classed as espionage.'' Some of these news stories con cerned the flight from Hungary of some prominent men and some or dinary little men who said they were afraid they would be arrest ed on various charges. Perhaps my prior knowledge of their plans to leave the country is what the Hungarian government meant when it accused me of smuggling Hungarians oat of the country. iray Dii noa btj cfl Bm9 I05I , Ore. Thursday, Nor. 6. 1947 aOem; Wlm Med), S KIoaD-ft U. S. Version of Korean Issue Gets U. N. Sanction LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 3 - (JF) A United Nations commission to "facilitate and expedite"; Korean independence was .approved to day by the general assembly's po litical committee in the face of a new Soviet bloc boycott on American-sponsored proposals. The 57-nation committee voted 46 to 0 for the Korean commis sion which was proposed origin ally by Secretary of State Mar shall and opposed vigorously by Russia. ; Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Bolivia abstained, the Soviet group did not vote and Yemen was ab sent The question goes to the as sembly in plenary session prob ably late next week for final ap proval. . Russia's boycott notice brought forth immediate speculation that she would refuse to admit the Newbry Reappoints 3 State Officials Secretary of State Earl T. New bry Wednesday reappointed Har ry S. Schenk as assistant secre tary of state. Schenk held the po sition under the late Robert S. Farrell. jr. Newbry also appointed two de puty secretaries of state, Harold Phillippe and James B. Young. Young has been with the depart ment for 36 years, and Phillippe has beaded the accounting divi sion for 24 years. 4-H to Receive Prizes Tonight Marion county 4-H club achieve ment day will be observed at 8 o'clock tonight at the Salem Chamber of Commerce rooms. Two special Marion county prizes, the Denver Young sheep award and the Elmer Klein Ayrshire award, will, be announced at the program. With Friday a school holiday for the Marion county institute, a good attendance of club mem bers from over the county is an ticipated by Anthol Riney, county club leader, who is in charge. Miss Helen Cowgfll, assistant $tate club leader who retired July 1, will be honor guest at the pro gram tonight State fair . checks, fall show awards, Spreckle canning awards and winners of the Oregon State Bankers prizes, will be presented. Gerald Mason of Portland will present Doris Lane of Liberty with her award in the better methods contest. Mason is a field man for Portland General Elec tric company. , Commons Votes to Free Burma, De8piteWinnie, LONDON Nov. 5 -)- The house of commons tonight approv ed a government bill granting in dependence to Burma despite a statement by Winston Churchill that Burma, like India, would be plunged into a "blood welter" as soon as she is free from British ties. The vote on the decisive second reading was 288 to 114. New Material Boon to Absent-Minded Doctors TOKYO, Thursday, Nov. -A Japanese chemist 24-year-old Kazuyosbi Endo, filed for a patent today on a process, which he said would end all fear of doctors' leaving surgical dressings inside patients on whom they operate. His process utilizes seaweed for such materials, and his friends said that samples left inside ani mals "disappeared in three months." Nevertheless, I have never smug gled anybody or anything either in or out of Hungary. Later in the flurry of official announcements, Ivan Boldiszar, undersecretary of state for the for eign office, stated that the charges against me did not involve news dispatches.! He also stated the Hungarian government was not angry at the Associated Press as a news agency and would- take no action against its incoming news reports. " The implication is: that I .re ceived what the government calls "confidential information" and passed it on to somebody else by some method' other than cable or telephone, i I have worked in Hungary as the representative of the Associ ated Press. 1 have never been a spy. Price 5c TTrac&MR'lHIwd-Oiii commission to North Korea and would not cooperate with it. Russia has stayed away from a sub-committee which drafted a chart for a year-round "little assembly" asked by the U. S. and she had refused to take part in a U. N. Balkans watch commission J already being set up by decision of the assembly. The committee resolution on Korea called for elections In that country not later than March 31, 1948, for representatives who will constitute a national assembly and establish a national government It recommended that this govern ment constitute, its own security forces, dissolve all military or semi-military formations, and ar range with the occupying powers for the withdrawal of their armed forces "as early as practicable and if possible within 80 days." The commission Will i supervise all these steps. Gov. Hall to Fill Emergency Board Posts Gov. John H. Hall, who came to Salem Wednesday from his home in Portland said he would have no meeting of the state board of control until next week. He added that he would appoint two mem bers of the emergency board within a few days to succeed him self and the late Senate Presi dent Marshal. E. Cornett Hall said he would spend at least the next two days in Salem, as he finds it hard to drive back and forth between Portland and Salem every day. Gvemr Uneeefcde The new governor said he has not yet decided whether to move his family to Salem, that he thought it would take him two or three weeks to find out what his new job is all about . Hall received I Wednesday the resignations of Oregon's three li quor control commissioners and said he had asked them to re main at their positions until he appoints a new commission. The goverqpr said he hopes to be able to name the new members in three weeks. I Te Give Answer Teday Commissioner Hugh R. Kirk patrick, Lebanon, the democratic minority member of the com mission,, said late today in Port land that the answer to the gov ernor's request may, be made sometime today. . Mentioned prominently among possible successors to Kirkpatrick was Harry Boivin, Klamath Falls attorney and democrat He is a close friend of the governor. Among those mentioned from Multnomah county . were George Buckler, Portland contractor, and State Representative Alex Barrv, attorney who served as the first liquor administrator. Salem Food on Way to Europe PORTLAND, Nov. 5 JPh- A carload of foodstuffs from Salem and Halsey and a carload of wheat from Pendleton, plus 71,000 pounds of canned goods, flour and sugar from Portland, moved out of Oregon tonight to be connect ed onto the nation's "friendship train." The cars will be attached at Og den, Utah, to the transcontinental train of food being sent to Europe by Americans. Two carloads of wheat contri buted by Gilliam county will be shipped east next week. Underground Turns On China Communists NANKING, Nov. 5.-(-A mem ber of the communist under ground, angered at a division of funds, turned informer and led government agents to a secret ra dio station and the -arrest of 50 communists who were charged as spies. WELFARE CHECK8 MAILED PORTLAND, Nov. 5-;p-State welfare checks went out today to Oregon's 25,000 on relict. The checks had been delayed four days by the vacancy in the secretary of state's office, ended with appoint ment of Earl Newbry. Weather Mas. . -. 61 Mtn. P reel p. M .11 49 . .14 45 .00 Salem Portland San Francisco rhtrAfo S3 59 Mew Yom w Willamette river it teet. Forecast (from U.S. weather bureau. UrNirv fild. Salem): Mostly cloudy today and tonight with oceaaional light 1 rain anowers wrougnoui me ay ana continuous rain throughout the night. High temperature today 58, low tonight 4X No. 191 Truck Driver Dies in Wreck Near Midway A truck driver was dead today and four bus passengers in hosp- , tals. one with serious injuries, HT lowing a bead-on collision of m Greyhound bus and an Oregoa Journal truck on tbe old Pacilic ' highway at Midway, IX mile south of here early Wednesday af ternoon. Driver of the truck, Don Bill ings. 43, of S724 N.E. 39th st, Portland, . was killed instantly, state police reported. His body was) brought to Salem. - Mrs. Maude Mawhinney, 3555 S.E. 63rd st, Portland, a bus pas senger, is in Salem Deaconess hos pital where an attending physi cian late Wednesday night de scribed her condition as "fair." She is suffering from severe face lacerations, a fractured left. k nee cap and a fractured right ankle, the doctor said. Driver of the bus, G. W. Jones, Eugene,- is in the Albany General hospital suffering from compound fractures of both legs. In the same hospital were two other bus pas sengers, Mrs, William Carpenter, Albany, and Jacob Nemec, Gard iner. Ore. Hospital attendants raid none of the three was in serious) condition. All were taken to the hospital by the Albany ambulance. Fractured Neae Another bus passenger, Mrs. Velma Lenchner, 1395 Taylors Ferry, Portland, was treated at Salem Deaconess hospital for a fractured nose and released Wed nesday night but stayed on at the hospital because she was unable to find hotel accommodations here. State police said the accident oc curred at 1:50 p.m. on the Che hupura creek bridge about 100 yards north of Midway. The bos was traveling north and the truck south at the time of the collision. The bus was apparently on wrong side of the road when the two vehicles met according to the state police report Pavement Wet Slippery -Investigating officers said they had not determined how the acci dent occurred, but "reported the pavement was wet and slippery from a heavy rain which was falling at the time. Eleven persons were riding the bus at the time of the wreck, but Billings -was the only occupant og the truck. Bus passengers who es caped uninjured were Mrs. J. P. A. Hansen, 835 Water st. Silver ton; Mrs. Lyle Gibson, Jonfer. Ore.; W, J. Ruttehge. 847 W. llti st, Eugene; a Mrs. Smith, 976 E. 20th st, Eugene; Mrs. Fred R. Hair nd Shirley Ann Hall, bets of box 154, Gervais: and Kenneth W. Martin, Myrtle Point Tax Cut Still I s Debate ; WASHINGTON, Nov. Income tax reduction . 5 -trS remained still in the question mark stage today as leaders of the rival groups prepared for the third bat tle this, year at the special ses sion of congress. Even a the 'republicans were polishing final plans to introduce legislation for - an immediate "quickie'' reduction of $4,000 -000,000. Rep. Doughton (D-N.C.) brought up the possibility the move-would evoke a presidential veto once again.' Doughton man aged tax legislation far the dem ocrats during the years they con trol led congress. "Unless , the republicans crri show that 'we can meet our do-v mestic needs, pay for foreign re-" lief commitments and pay on the debt, it is my opinion that' they cannot override another presi dential veto of their tax biU," uougnton told reporters. DEMONSTRATION IN PARIS PARIS, Nov. S -WV Usina; their rifle butts, steel-helmettd mobile guardsmen halted a march on the city hall today by 2.000 civil service trade unionists who had been called upon by the com munist newrpaper L'Humanile to hold a demonstration! for wage raises for Paris garbage collect ors. ' QUICKIES 'Are yea going to patch It with babble gum again or shall I . look la Tbe Statesman Want. Ads for a plumber?" " Bring 1 9.1 , . - .