J v j i : i ' 1 uj l-.-.li il.jj ; '!7ljr. ;..!.';: .' ,,1-7:' !. SI I.- ;;!;'.;; : t i -, i J '!- ) J . ! liiiiiL-kiir'iiii'! -.1 1 i III ' !' .? ! ' .iii i I tt r ' '! t : ' t f i t t I J I t J y-.-v ww.w.'.sy.y;.-.H y ffv ibiisjWsbbswbm""1i ijpmimmmtaH "m AS, 4 New Budget For Britain BRITAIN'S new budget, due for announcement Wednesday in Parliament, is about to chain the nation to another year at hard labor with high taxes. ; Unwritten law! forces the Chan cellor of the Exchequer, Sir Stafford Cripps, and his aides to keep abso lute secrecy on the budget until it is presented to Parliament. I That secrecy has not been broken but there are enough tea leaves lying around for observers to read a reason ably accurate picture. Tax collectors still must rake in about 40 per cent of the national income to keep the government and its far-flung services going. t No Big Tax Cuts It is already clear that no big tax concessions can be made. There is some speculation; that Cripps may have a few small concessions up his sleeve, for the hard-pressed working man on a salary in a bid to save the government's wage-freeze policy. Estimates for the 1950-51 fiscal year, submitted to Parliament last month. ' show government costs run ning about $8,400,000,000 a year. Also the Treasury declared in its annual economic survey some time ago that the financial and economic policies worked out in the last three years must be kept intact. That means Cripps still is com mitted, among other things, to his policy of holding down wages and profits. This policy has been pursued more than two years' with a twin goal: to help hold off inflation and to keep down prices of hard-to-sell export goods. .! Unions Hard Hit The powerful Trades Union Con gress (TUC) seeks tax relief for work ers. The TUC general Council has worked hard to help enforce the wage ceiling policy. Rising prices, have brought strong pressure from rank and file union menand some of their leaders-rfor more wages. TUC chiefs now feel unless they get relief through taxes che pressure ior more pay may blow its top. There is not much room to loosen up on income taxes. Previous conces sions have made income taxes fairly light upon the blackcoated worker and the working-class family man. A married man with two children . earning $22.40 a week (considerably above the average) pays only 28 cents a week in income taxes: Sir I Stafford i might cut .purchase taxes, which also has been urged by the National Union of Manufacturers. He could lower Jaxes on beer and to bacco. He could extend the children's allowance of 70 cents a week to the first child; at present it is granted only . for all children after the first If Sir Stafford needs to raise more revenue to finance concessions to labor he also may impose a capital gains !tax. : Capital gains such as earnings . from successful stock market specu lationbear no vtax in Britain al I though such a tax has been imposed in the United States for a number of . years. . . . ! I , v . ' STRIKE: Billion The Case of Homtramck I The Chrysler strike, which has idled 140,000 workers across the na tion, is estimated to have cost more than a billion dollars in direct losses to Chrysler, supplier plants, dealers and employes. j - Chrysler, one of the Big Three in the automotive industry, and the CIO United - Auto Workers Union have been deadlocked since January 24 over methods of financing a plan to provide $100-a-month pensions, in cluding federal Social Security. What big strike does to national economy is hard to visualize but its Impact is sharp and' drastic in Ham tramck, "a community of 50.000 in the heart of Detroit Most of its people are of Polish ancestry, thrifty and hard-working. S.00t Affected : ' About 8,000 of the community's gainfully employed are affected by the strike. i The strike has. partly paralyzed ; business in the community. Business men, salesmen and landlords are re calling the doleful days of the 1930 depression. Retail business is off nearly 2$, perl cent Residents are cashing in US savings bonds. . ! In Short ... Subpoenaed: Louis F. Budenz, for mer Communist leader, as the "mys tery witness" named by Sen. McCar ' thy to support his Charges that Owen Lattimore is the No. 1 Soviet spy in the United States. : - Ratified: By the Indian Parliament new Indian-Pakistan agreement to protect minority groups and end com munal rioting which has taken thou sands of lives. Predicted: By the Federal Reserv e Board, Americans are going to keep on buying homes, automobiles and television sets at & record rate this year. ! Coafinned: By the Senate, W. Stu art Symington, as chairman of the National Security Resources Board, a post vacant 18 months. Resraed: By a troop of Georgia Boy Scouts with -Explorer ratings, a for mer Air Force veteran pilot who had spent a week wandering in the Oke fenokee swamps after a plane crash. NATION: Truman's Sixth Year HARRY S. TRUMAN began his sixth year as President of the United States last ! Wednesday. Tanned and refreshed after a month-long Florida, vacation, -he faces the prospect of having to settle for a half-loaf of his Fair Deal program in the present Congress. At conferences with Administration leaders, the President was told the Senate might have time to take up only about eight major issues before Congress quits on July 31 to go home and campaign. These, include the omnibus money bill, foreign aid, So cial Security, rent control extension and an effort to get action on the Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC) bill. Out in the Cold The list by Sen. Scott Lucas (D-Ill) the Majority leader, left out in the old several major Fair Deal pro posals. These include 1 the Brannan farm plan, compulsory health insur ance, federal aid to education, repeal of the Taft-Hartley Law and expan sion of unemployment coverage. The President seems relaxed, fit and confident for the coast-to-coast stump ing tours in behalf of Democratic candidates for Congress. White House intimates say it will be in the "give 'em hell" manner of his own 1948 campaign. ! But Mr. Truman will make imme diate use of the olive branch, too. He is trying to revamp the bipartisan ap proach to foreign policy and confine party potshots to the "water's edge" of this country. Somey impartial observers feel the President's attempt to patch up two party cooperation on foreign policy 'may have come too late to prevent its becoming a major issue in the cam paigns this fall. A sizable segment of the Republican Party is all but com mitted on trying to capitalize on what it calls Administration ; "blunders" in foreign affairs. Vandenberg in Despair Cooperation in foreign policy had reportedly deteriorated so far that Sen. Arthur Vandenberg, its chief Republican advocate, was said to have Quotes Gen. J. Lawton Collins, U.S. Army chief of staff: 'Turkey could give an awfully good ac count of itself. With additional aid, it could give an excellent account." Robert B. Douglas, president of the American Society of Tool Engineers: "While ; Russia -is probably alueady experimenting on industrial application of atomic energy, we are still going around suspecting each other rather tham doing something about it" Dollar Loss Strangely enough, only about 10 per cent of the Hamtramck strikers have asked for welfare aid and only about four per cent received' it Cat on Food Bill Most families concentrate on cut ting down on the food bill. One grocer who caters almost ex clusively to Chrysler j workers said, "They eat moderately just soups, potatoes, lunch meat: They try to keep their bills down but at today's prices it doesn't take long to run up a big bill.- She spread out a stack of adding machine tapes. j "Some of these ruh to $150-$160. How long can a neighborhood grocer keep it up? "You can't turn them down. What can you-do when ' they plead with" you?" T JM (tut ,Af !rt Aro iU.iT miAi .i .r r r t r . - v THE WEAKENING DONOR ' ? I 1 -! WAITING FOR MORE ELEPHANTS despaired back. of being able to bring it The key-man in President Truman's new effort to jevive the bipartisan ap proach is John Foster Dulles, recently named as adviser to Secretary of State Acheson. , As a trouble shooter at the United Nations charter conference in San Francisco, Dulles showed diplomatic stature. He lived up to that reputation at international conferences as ad viser to Secretaries of State Stettinius, Byrnes and Marshall and for a time with Acheson. But Dulles has a political future of his own to consider. Appointed to the Senate by Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, Dulles was defeated in a special elec SUBS: Underwater Marathon Snorkel Feqt American . interest in submarine and anti-submarine devices has been spurred by reports that Russia is building the world's mightiest under sea fleet estimated currently at 250 to 300 vessels. Just a month ago a U. submarine quietly filled its tanks and submerged in the Pacific off Hong Kong; it sur faced 21 days and 5,200 miles later at Pearl Harbor. The Navy revealed the trip last week. It did not claim a record but officers said it was the longest under water run they ever heard of. A German Device The sub, one of the "snorkel" type, has a short breathing tube that sucks air from the surface. The Germans had the device on their submarines first but now both the U.S. and Rus sia have them. The snorkel enables a sub to run just below the surface for long periods on diesel engines. Formerly, undersea craft when sub merged had to run entirely on elec tric batteries which required recharg ing frequently. To do this,1 the sub had to surface. With the snorkel, a sub can stay down as long as its supplies includ ing fuel hold out. Batteries still are needed whenever it submerges more than a short distance below: the sur face. Fleet-Type Craft The 1,850-ton Pickerel, which made the run, is a standard fleet-type sub marine only streamlined and with higher propulsive power than others in her class. The 67 enlisted ; men and WORLP ECONOMIC BLOOD BANK .4. York. Leuiwillt TioMt tion last fall by Herbert Lehman. Dulles has hot committed himself yet as to whether he will oppose Lehman this fall for j a full six-year term. Momentous Decision , Friends insist Dulles is determined to give his best to the job of advising Acheson. These same sources say, however, that when Dulles is con vinced he is: not being consulted fully he may step! but and run If or nomina tion as senator in New York. Unless he went out of his way to make it unmistakably clear such was not the case, any decision by Dulles to- reenter tlip political ring would be generally interpreted as evidence of a breakdown on two-party; cooperation on foreign policy. ; eight officers aboard the 300-foot craft grew beards and mustaches and saw 30 full length movies for relaxa tion on the 21 -day cruise Asked whether the! submarine could be seen at the periscope depth at which she traveled, the commander said, "We had indications to the con trary." I; f. " The Navy, is pushing pork on an atomic power plant for submarines, which would lift present limitations on underwater range. For all practi cal purposes an atomicpoyered en gine could operate forever without refuelling. H OdX Middle Easl Plant If The august New YorkTimes pub lished a Tehran dispatch datelined April 1 last! week detailing the ex ploits of one Robert (or Roger) T. Lincoln, known throughout the Mid dle East as America's topi-drawer spy. The dispatch said suspicious Rus sians and Atabs had woven a legend depicting Lincoln as ia mystery shrouded figure who spoke many tongues and hobnobbed with U.S. Supreme Court Justice j William O. Douglas and! top American diplomats. One Tehran paper wifote of Lin coln's activities as "by far more ac tive, more clever and raore skilled" than those of the late Lawrence of Arabia and; said he worked to neu tralize Soviet influence in the north Iranian province of Azerbaijan. Actually, the Times said, Lincoln was invented by U.S. Ambassador to Iran, John jC. Wiley, about, a year after the Soviet radio had mentioned activities ofi a mysterious American of that name. Wiley's ispoofing job was thorough, when he set his mind to it , 1 1 ' . j- An official biography was drawn up crediting Lincoln with six languages and giving him the rank of lieutenant colonel. 1 1 The biography solemnly described him as an eX-rum runner, confidence man and cOUnter -espionage agent It said he was the son of the noted American waiter "Booker T. Lincoln," and had studied Yogi under the noted Tibetan scholar "Hi-Lung Hung-Lo." His political faith ' was given as "Dixiecrat j These papers, the Time said, were "lost in a public place jby an Ameri can diplomat and it is known they fell into both Iranian and probably British hands. f One of th "lost" papers contained the following "top secret" message to Wiley from! Maj. Gea. William J. Donovan, wartime chief of the Office of .Strategic Services: r "For publicity purposes my Visit (to Iran) is! pleasure; actually I am out to investigate Lincoln's activities. Reports of his excesses among the Kurdish women haven reached the President and while hej is one of our best operators, yet he's got to get on the beam morally." i Dates Tuesday, April 18 Anniversary (first), Irish He- public. National Noise Abatement Week starts. New Jersey primary. Wednesday, April 19 Patriot's Day (Mass. & Me.). Anniversary (175th), Paul Re vere's ride. Friday, April Zl Anniversary (52nd), start of Spanish-American War. Appomattox Lee & Grant Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant are to meet again at Appomattox, Va., this Sunday afternoon under more pleasant circumstances. The occasion, 85 years after the first historic meeting, is the official opening of the restored surrender housei The guests of honor are Brig. Gen. U. S. Grant, IH, of Washington, and Robert E. Lee, IV, of San Francisco. 1 The direct descendants of the famed Civil War generals, ere to cut a ribbon across the porch of the reconstructed brick farmhouse. Restored by the Na tional Park Service, the building is to become a public shrine. Led by Lee and representing the Confederate forces, the Virginia Mil itary Institute band is to march into the McLean House yard from the final Southern positions. Representing the Federal troops and led by Grant, the U. S. Marine Corps school band from Quantico will march into the yard from the site of the Northern encampment. The reconstructed house stands on the exact site of the former McLean farmhouse, torn down in 1893. Nearby are several other original buildings of the old town of Appomattox Court House. I I f k 1 W: 0 V V FIRE Steeple of St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church at Hamlin, Me., crashes during blaze Which did more than $20,000 damage. v . I 1 j -v. : , r H ' i p in ii in mf?-rrt ' f , TIN FISH U. S. Navy submarino Pickerel, vqulpped with a snorkel, cruised underwater from Hong Kong to Hawaii, a distance of 5,200 miles in 21 days. The crew grow boards and saw 30 full length movies to help pass time on record jaunt. WRECK-More than 100 persons disaster when a bridge collapsed over the flood-swollen Tangua Dos Indios River near Rio do Janeiro. Many passengers drowned. A CH TUNG! Germans in Red-sponsored "Free German Youth" movement repair gliders at a carpenter shop in East Germany. After World War I, Germans kept alive the spirit of militarism by drilling youth in massed work battalions with spades and rakes. Congress Has Right To Hold Red Probes DELICATE legal points in the shadowy area between the powers of government and the rights of individuals are being defined Iby the Supreme Court these days as probes of Communism reach full tide. In one of the first of these, the Court has held that certain civil rights of individuals, guaranteed by the Constitution, can be abridged Dy congress u me nauonai weiiare Tito Spring in Belgrade Spring in Yugoslavia brings warm sun and hot rumors about possibility of a Cominform invasion against the country which dared say "No!" to the Kremlin. In some ways the situation is similar to last fall when coffeehouse gossip reached a peak in reports of Soviet and satellite troop movements on Mar shal Tito's borders. Tito finds himself in a somewhat siruoger posiuon TITO man last year 10 meet such an attack. He has largely offset the eastern boycott by obtaining about 50 million dollars in American loans and by negotiating about 30 trade agreements with the west The recent parliamentary elec tions give Tito added prestige. His support was greatest in areas consid ered most vulnerable to Cominform attack Macedonia, for instance. It was lowest in areas where Russia would have least benefit Croatia. Perhaps the weakest point in Tito's armor is that Russia and Czechoslo vakia are closed to him as sources for new military supplies. Most of his present equipment came from those countries. There has been some hardship and resentment among the people caused by rigid efforts of the government to shift Yugoslavia from an agricultural and industrially backward country to a more balanced economy. in this Brazilian train 1 died is inreatenea. Congress has full power to, ask whether you are a Communist or be lieve in Communism. If you refuse to answer, the penalty may be jail plus a heavy fine for contempt of Congress. That's the practical effect of a Su preme Court decision rejecting ap peals of two movie writers, John Howard Lawson and Dalton Trumbo. They now face a year in jail and $1,000 fines because they refused to tell the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities whether they were Commu nist Party members. Test Case for Ten Eight other prominent Hollywood figures also refused to answer the same question for the committee; over the head of each hangs a charge of contempt of Congress. In Hollywood, J one of he ten accused issued a state ment in behalf of alL It said: "By. its refusal to review the cases of Lawson and Trumbo, the Supreme Court has welcomed governmental censorship, political blacklist and thought control into our system." By its refusal to act the Court up held without change the unanimous opinion of the U.S. Court of Appeals that: "When legislating to avert what it believes to be a threat of substantive evil to national welfare. Congress may abridge the freedom of speech and the freedom to remain silent" The appeals by Lawson and Trum bo involved no question of constitu tional privilege against self-incrimination. In a number of other 'in stances, witnesses refused to testify on these grounds and were not prose cuted. 'j Conviction Set Aside The Court did, however, set aside the conviction of Richard Morford for refusal to show the House committee - records of the National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, Inc. j The Court said Morford's lawyer was not allowed to question govern ment employes on the trial jury panel as to whether the President's loyalty program would influence their ver dict - In a recent opinion, the Court held a Communist could get a fair trial be fore a jury which includes govern ment workers. But the Court said de fense lawyers at trials must be per mitted to raise questions as to possible bias. Medicine Wonder Hormone ACTH ACTH is an abbreviation for adreno corticotropic hormone, made by the pituitary gland at the base of the brain. It stimulates the adrenal gland to produce some adrenal hormones, including cortisone. ACTH and cortisone bring dramatic relief from rheumatoid arthritis. Fifty two reports in a new book called "Clinical ACTH" describes this use plus experiments on a host of other diseases. The studies say ACTH proved effec tive in treating delirium tremens of DTS of alcoholism, brought relief in some Cases of asthma and other aller gies and was of some help in treat ing virus and bacterial pneumonias. Other tests were made on infantile paralysis, tuberculosis, mental ill nesses, muscular disorders, high blood pressure, several types of cancer and some skin diseases. The early results were not conclusive. Dr. John R Mote, director of Ar mour Laboratories, Chicago, says the significance of the reports is not ia hope of immediate curative use of the hormones, but in understanding how and why many diseases develop Much more study will be needed, he said, before doctors understand the role of ACTH and the adrenal gland in health and disease. Sidelights Three and a halt years ago, Ken neth Lyons of Fort Lee, N. J, pumped six bullets into his sweetheart after a quarrel. She visited him every Sun- . day in prison and last week on hi release they were married. In Syracuse, N. Yn a housewife . cut open a chicken she had purchased from the butcher and out rolled 20 eggs, three the size of duck eggs, eight of normal size, the other nine small but completely formed. A poul try expert said the bird apparently had a jam on its production line. Off Okinawa, things looked black when a 20th Air Force C-46 plane lost its right engine 300 miles at sea. The crew jettisoned cargo and radioed for an escort A voice broke in on the radio: "I know you fellows would rather have another engine but wo want you to know we are pulling for you." U was the Air Force chief of chaplains.- The crippled 0-48 landed safely at the airbase. At Elizabeth, N. J, an excited motorist telephoned police someone had climbed over the rail of the Goethals Bridge 150 feet above the waters of the' Arthur KilL Rescue crews swarmed to the scene and found ,a slightly startled man suspended under the bridge Sure, he said, he'd gone over the railing "do it every day. I'm the welder." - L. r ;,