Transcript
Page 1: JAmgtctfmm $5 btnmg ^tfortw Several Potent Election ... NY...including Montgomery Cou A. Campbell, have cited the f this"1 state to grasp the nat ires now awaiting action by islature

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Publi*hed every KCfltd»v Int-» Gardiner Kltn»\ presid Wil l tun B. L«F»vour, secret) ItertUm, N.Y., M »*ccr>d cl —• r — s ^

BT CARRIER—In Ajnstor Sin

BT MAIL—in Montgomer Fulton, SchenwUdv, Saiai

and Schoharie Countlej One Tear :. Six Months Three Montba pna Month

(Above i ','••.• apply on The Afsoclatcd Tres ' i

publication or all local iiewi

Disintere Many legislators,

Assernolyman Donald abil i ty of res idents o of most of the measi New York S ta te Legi

T h e local Assembl . of public interest , or

number of c o m m u n i a Assemblyman C a m p t ceived fewer l e t t e r s . "

Wi thou t examini i migh t feel t h a t th is Legis la tors point out wi th more than 3.31 2,800.

But is it d is in ter which has produced | p roper word is disn wonders just who is I

The Legis la ture i the Diefendorf Con which h a s recommei to t he people, along gasoline.

A r e fe rendum on indica ted the public i defeated. T h e public it w a n t h i g h w a y moi but t h a t a t ax s a t u r

Also awa i t ing ac t ax cu ts . T h e voter* and Republ icans a re s t a l e m a t e could resu

And t h e r e a r e m Legis la t ive sessions, pened to compulsory safe ty inspection of

No. it is not pub in the lack of mail n it is d i smay at hea h a s produced m a n y A sessions of t he Legi

Those who u expect to get bl

To Yc In an effort to 1

p r epa re the i r s t a te ii sen ta t ives of the St rooms of J a m e s T. B< week.

T h e tax depar tme daily from 9 a.m. to on S a t u r d a y until 11

T h e tax represoi t axpaye r s a re not in at present , it would prepared correct ly a:

The impor tant pc it takes the guess-w income tax. By let with the s ta le r e tu r will be no difficulties tu rn .

At the same tii acquainted with the sis tance might mean

If you h a w any tions, etc.. visit the A feu minutes s|>er in the [>enod just !>

,Voi( • ' / ) ' / / II

dent .Vi.ron Ht t i/ui .vf ion mm k.

Better i In its monthly i

pan\ of New York ] thinking inevitably

The unintended p i v e s for f ann pro

production of price 'si net ions. The resi

famiei and eon sum Rent contiT>ls, ii

too - liiyh housing rotn apod normal m to h \ e in antiquated

Subsidies in tin and loan cu.iipijteo: t h e \ have solved. ( loade<l and sent bu result, housing in 1 < families got boyont

The passage of : fill in most cases. P

$5 btnmg ^ t fo r tw Daily Democrat • except holidays t>y Wm. J Kline A ent: m i e n K. LeFavour, vice progid *ry-tre*aurej. Entered In poet office. aaa niattfr.

btrrlption Rate* dam and suburban areas. 40c per wee] gl« copy. 7 centa. v ELSEWHERE IN THE

togs UNITED STATES: One Tear $

11100 Six Months 6.00 Three Months 3.V'. One Month 1 in1 i Payable in Advance)

ly where tt.<>ie is no carrier service).

s f-nutifd exclusively to the use foi i prmled in thi.* r.ew*pap*i.

st or Dismay? including Montgomery Cou A. Campbell , have cited the

f this"1 s t a t e to g rasp the nat ires now awai t ing action by islature.

lyman has claimed tha t the 1 • awareness , is reflected by Uions received from const i tuc >ell expla ins : "I have never

ig t he s i tuat ion closer, pen public dis interes t is undeser

that the S t a t e Sena te is fj X) bills, and the Assembly '

es t . o r a lack of understanc public a p a t h y ? We feel not. l ay—dismay by a public w :>eing represented in Albany.

is still s tudying the proposal imissioh for Highway Fine ided submission of a bond i wi th an increase in the ta:

th is issue last November ck i t t i tude as t he proposal was I

had indicated tha t not onlv ley " e a r m a r k e d " solely for « at ion point had been reache(

:tion a re the on-again, off-a ? a re well a w a r e t ha t Demcx pushing the i r pet bills and tl tit in no t ax reduct ions .

any more . . i n t roduced at pre^ but never passed. Wha t

>• au to insurance and mande vehicles?

lie d is interes t tha t is \showin r e i v e d by our legislators. R; r ing the s a m e old record w A'brds but little action at pre1

islature.-

r-ant a place in the sun must istercd now and then.

>ur Advantage ielp as m a n y persons as pos ncome tax r e tu rns , contact r< a te T a x Depar tmen t a re at ergen Post , Amer ican Legion,

?nt worke r s a re at the post r< 5 p.m. They will also be avai I noon. n ta t ives jK)int out that eve a position to m a k e the i r pay; be a good idea to have the •> soon as possible, irt about this free service is ork out of p repar ing your ting experienced pei*sonnel n. you can Ix* cer ta in that t s resulting from e r ro r s on th

ne. the representa t ives are deduct ions allowed and thei

i a tax savings, doubts al>out your taxes . d< office in the Bergen Post IT

it now max save much conft efore the s ta te tax deadline.

ci has sai<t "Y(s." ViVv prcfti

)ns to inn t \ntit i ih (I tin bit

n the Long Run review, the C.uaranty Tnis t •oints out how superficial ccoi leads fo national headaches ,

result of the effort to insure ' •ducts has IKVII an increase i •-fixed crops, despite impose ult has l>oen de t r imenta l to icr. •itende<i to protect t enan t s ai costs, have in m a i n case!

laintenance. forcing m a n y fn 1 <t i uc tures .

1 form of public bousing pi s have (Mealed more problem: 'oust ruct ion indust ry became ilding costs to new heights , ended for middle and low-ii 1 thei r reach. min imum wage laws has l>eei Uit t h e r e have IXMMI instances

Son. ent; Am-

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Several Potent Election Issues Await Decision

Bv <;EOK(;K K. SOKOI>SKV

Come hell or high wa te r , as the express ion goes, whenevt-r leap y e a r comes upon us . so (K>e* a pres ident ia l election and then we a r e required to face those (acts o/ life which a re not suppressed hy diligent b u r e a u c r a t s who m a r k them "Top Sec re t . "

The 1936 president ia l election is going to be a tough bat t le as the Republ icans d a r e not lose because they m a y not have another c h a n c e ^ and the D e m o c r a t s need to win or they will be taken o \ e r by the Social ists .

While there might he some reason for going to the Chi­cago convention of the Demo­c ra t s , it neeinR to me alto­ge ther foolhardy to go to the Sun FraneiHco c o n v e n t i o n where nothing will happen . Pres ident Elsenhower has re­nomina ted himself by radio and television and the San F ranc i sco convention will not only endorse his action but will a c c o m m o d a t e him by selecting a vice pres ident ia l candida te of his choice.

The assumpt ion that the election was over when Ike m a d e his ac­cep tance speech on rad io and television is bred by a radiant ojv t imism. Actually, be tween now and November , the D e m o c r a t s will d e \ o t e themselves to proving that b u r e a u c r a t s know how to govern be t te r than bus inessmen do and a r e on the whole m o r e honorable . It may be a difficult thesis to p rove but the effort will be m a d e and the Eisenhower admin i s t r a t ion will be forced to defend not only its conduct but also its personnel . It will be eas ier for the D e m o c r a t s to a t t ack the bus ines smen who have governed Amer i ca dur ing the pas t four yea r s than it would be to a t t ack Pres ident E isenhower personal ly . As a m a t t e r of fact, he will not. accord ing to his s ta te­ment , c a m p a i g n for reelection' which m e a n s that when the going gets tough, o the r s will have to do it because the Democra t s .will force it upon the Republ icans to defend their record .

(iood Manne r s

Had the Republ icans no; been so ro sea t e alxxit Russ ia and Com­m u n i s m , they might have , hy, now. uncovered another Alger Hiss or H a r r y Dex te r White to label the D e m o c r a t s as the pa r ty of t reason, bvit good m a n n e r s and fine breed­ing caused the m a n a g e m e n t of the Republ ican P a r t y to seal the files and to s e p a r a t e themse lves from such d iggers in red muck as Joe McCar thy . If a bad e r ro r of this sort is uncovered between now and c a m p a i g n t ime, it will l>e done by one of two D e m o c r a t s , by ei ther Sena tor McClellan or Senator E a s t l a n d . And it is to be expected that despi te the seal ing of files and the refusal to testify, the D e m o c r a t s will continue to dig in the hope of proving that the Re­publ ican P a r t y and not the Demo­cra t ic P a r t y is the p a r t y of t rea­son. Or m a y b e , some corrupt ion will be found, and corrupt ion is these days juicier than t reason and much more in teres t ing . At any r a t e , we can expect that what ­ever becomes avai lab le will be disclosed.

The question does ar i se as to what will be done about the great .<Mies which no! onlv face txit beset the Amer i can people. Nei ther par ty can say vers much about ' NATO. SEATO or METO because both pursued the s a m e foreign policies which brought these inter­national a l l iances into being and if we ana lyse the whole range of foreign re la t ions very, closely, we a r e a! bos! functioning under I U r r v T i n m a n ' s "Conta inment Policy. - ' with the Russ ians skill­fully hopping across the lowered Iron Cur ta in into the te r r i to ry which we des ignated as ours .

Methlnks this subject will be avoided during the c a m p a i g n , a s will tbf ver i t ies of our Mid­dle Eas t e rn Oil policy except in the Nor theas te rn s t a tes where the Jewish \ n t e r s a r e more n u m e r o u s tlmn the Arab nod Syrian voters put toge ther . Tlie Arabs only hnve oil, but In a pres ident ia l election year . It Is votes that count , a s every politician knows. Why did they hnve to send those

' anks to Saudi Arabia frrtm Brook­lyn? Could they tvot find a port where such ca rgo fo; such A pur­pose vvxmld rv>t be «> offensive or is there IKIIKXIV >ff m the State D e p a r t m e n t who kiv*vs what the composi t ion of Brooklyn's p^jxiln-lion is? Do the Republ icans ex­pect to get any votes m Brooklyn?

So, the campa ign will move in all these direct ions and until al>oot the m i d d l e of OctolwM. ivobodv will

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l u \ e m u c h of an nle> of ho\v it is go ing The )v>IUt»-:: v will con­t inue to pi ov e what evciyl*>dy admit* , n a m e l y , that Eisenhow er is poiMilar but the w h o l e siMiation is s o compl icate<l by the Pi est-d e n t ' s o w n a c c e p t a n c e s p e e c h that it it now a doubtful e l ec t ion

( '< ip \ r i g h t l r ' " ^

KmK Frstt irn S\n<1lii«te Inv"

Washington Report

Global Shak Policy Very

By D

WASHINGTON -Th i s is a and j umpy world if the nev pa tches a re a reflection < moods of s t a t e smen and al ike.

Guy Moilet. F rench Prem finding it neces sa ry to wi F r e n c h Communis t s "in his ment^-fo keep a major i ty .

Br i ta in ' s P a r l i a m e n t is \ up to the fact thai the grea ish E m p i r e can ' t just crai whip any more in rhe Middh So the re ' s i r r i ta t ioh and ag with a cry of " le t ' s do son alxmt i t " and d e m a n d s tha eign Minister Selwyn Lloyd back to his desk from his - h e ' s in Asia at the momei Sec re t a ry Dulles .

In U.S. Congress

A m e r i c a ' s Congress is and touchy. I f a sh ipment o to Saudi Arabia is held up hours -to find out whe the r ping license that was ap m a n y months before Is res right and then the shipm allowed to go forward , the b o m b a r d the State Depa and call it "on again , off ag,

Sec re t a ry Dulles is pr> assai led, and the cr i t ics s this wouldn't happen if the i merit were clearly led and admin i s te red from the top any president of the United can spend his t ime ins] routine author izat ion of l icenses. 'Die impor tance episode was grossly exag j by the pa r t i s ans .

J a p a n ' s Socialist party-la rges t in the country is fo the Communis t line in try get nuclear tests banned Pacif ic .

The Philippine govern has an applicat ion from Communis t P a r t y there fo thori ty to function ns a ] cal par ty .

Bri tain has decided, five months of fruitless tliitions, to s t a m p out tf Ism in Cyprus . This 1ms cd to Increase the tension the d r e e k government . The truth LS that , undei a

c i r c u m s t a n c e s . Amer ican policy is a difficult thing min is te r nowadays , for tw pie reasons first, military cannot be used and. seco Soviets a r e infiltrating countr ies whe re Conimun botage is t rea ted either a or as some abs t rac t right c cal belief. Unfortunately, ter concept has m a n y ad even inside the United' Stat

As foi the t rave ls of tlv tary of State , it isn't how impor tant personal can be today, especially v smal le r countr ies , whirl sensi t iveness when t h e n -ments a rc not consulted on irgion.i l affairs .

Publ ic I/>sc* Sight Somet imes the jniblic lo?

of these ma in lines of i*>li( so easy to foi get that '". m e a n s Southeast Asia T n gani /a t ion and that . "NATO. ' ' the North

, , i i i .

.Slalom Starts

es Making Foreign Hard to Administer (AVID L A W R E N C E

j i t tery AS dis-of the people

tier, is oo the Par l ia -

.vaking ,t Brit-ck the ? Eas t , i tation. ic thing it For-i come t ravels nt with

res t ive -f a r m s

for 24 a ship-iproved illy all lent is cr i t ics

r tmen t a i n . " ompt ly ;ay all ijovern-

firmly as if

Sta tes port ing export of the rera ted

second Mowing zing to in the

m e a t I the >r ati-|>olitl-

af ter nego-*rror-tend-

: with

11 these foreign to ad-

*o sim-y' force n<I. the

m a n y list sa-is legal >( politi­the lat-Ivocates es.

s Secre-rcalized contact

vith the i show gov'ei n-directly

Glancing Backwi

Over The Recorder FU

merely following up what the free world decided to do in 1954. A m i c e was a r r a n g e d then in Indo­china, and the Western nat ions be­gan to build up the s t rength of South Vie; N a m as an axis in Asia.

The in t r icacies of regional pnets needed to keep the peace a r e hard for m a n y obse rve r s , especial ly the capt ious ones, to b e a r in mind. For the United Nations is effective today only as a forum for deba t e . It can ' t enforce peace . Tha t hope died In the Korean War when India joined hands in playing the g a m e of Red China behind the scenes and the C o m m u n i s t s s aw the Western nat ions fail­ing to let the United S ta tes ap­ply m a x i m u m power to win a w a r a l r e a d y begun.

Today the Communis t reg imes of Peiping and Moscow a re call­ing the turn, and the free world is hand icapped in m a k i n g policy because of internal politics. The Red Chinese actual ly a r e holding Amer i cans as hos tages , but there is little that can be done about it as long as mi l i ta ry force is not to lx1 used.

But. even if mora l force were applied, would the Brit ish and F r e n c h s tand with the A m e r i c a n s ? What would some of the Asian na­tions say if a firm hand were shown with the C o m m u n i s t s 0

Thus , it is possible to tell Peiping that for every month each Ameri ­can is held in l>ondage. at least a y e a r must e lapse before any con­s idera t ion will l>e given to lifting the e m b a r g o on any products de­sired by the Red Chinese . ,

Economic Res t r a in t s

T h e r e a r e also ways and m e a n s to adopt economic r e s t r a in t s that can bring lxMh Red China and Soviet Russia to t e rms if the free world wan t s to employ them.

All these m a t t e r s a r e compli­ca ted because the D e p a r t m e n t of State has to keep its eye not only on what Amer ican opinion wan t s done, which means also wa tch ing what the poli t icians here m a y do to distort the pic ture , but on what the allies themselves a re willing to do.

Running an a l l i a n c e , whether In war t ime or in peace t ime , Is at best difficult. The United S ta tes , a s a single m e m b e r of the allied g roup , does not get a free hand tn ndopt Its own j>ollcies even though it supplies the bulk of the trooj>s nnd the money. What is needed in this jumpy

and j i t te iy world is first of all less superficiality among the cri t ics , inside and outs ide P a r l i a m e n t s and Congresses , and move r a r e in examining avai lable information be foi e leaping to conclusions and s tar t ing to b l a m e someone on ovir side for something the enemy init iates or c a r r i e s on. For with­

ies si^ht out the use of mi l i ta ry force, little ry. It Is c an be done, and the only a l t e m a -SFATO" live is a will ingness to use eco-paty Or- nomi r and financial sanct ions and

as in to be ready to res t r ic t t r ade , i rre-Atlantic spectivc of the cost.

r> h s c i r Tn ni!»We fA-rMCMi tvVlirv tivlav re .

T w e n t y Years Ago

M a r c h T. 193b— Attorney Rosencranz . Bla i r s town. N. became widely known as t her of the staff of the com Bruno Richard H a u p t m a n victed of the kidnap-rnui Char le s A. Lindbergh Jr . . A m s t e r d a m visitor, being tli of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hov and Mr. and Mrs. H. Louis

D e a t h of Mrs Edwin E. back ; Wil l iam H. M. Hall of Glen: F ranc i s T. Burns .

Mar r i age of Victor "Br West Day. and Miss El Kronfo th , A m s t e r d a m .

Ten Years Ago

March 7. 1946- -The Rev Knight C h a l m e r s . D.D.. n of t he Broadway T a b Church of N e w York City. the third annua l Len ten s< the Firs t Methodis t Churc

D e a t h of Irv'in W e r t ; Al Ca i rns . Cana joha r i e ; Fra Murphy .

T h e m a r r i a g e of Car l A m s t e r d a m , and Miss Co Stel la . .Schenectady, w?. nounced.

One Year Ago

March 7. 1955—The West P T A honored five member ; West Spr ing School facu long teach ing se rv ice : P Schuy le r V. A. B a r k l e y . 4C Miss Je s s i e Ca i rns . 35 yea Miss Angela Aleck. Mrs . Man and Miss Mar ie K< yea r s . *

Guest Editor Atomic Air Pol lut to

Maybe in t he next w a r bombs don' t get you the r will. This is implied by t e ra t ion of Amer ican Sc which is openly worr ied al d ioact ivc s a t u r a t i o n of thi a resul t of successive h and a tomic explosions, g a n i / a t i o n recen t ly w e n t s to issue a plea to the Uni te and the Uni ted N a t i o n s t a comprehens ive s tudy problem and a t t e m p t to w h a t e v e r sa feguards a r e ir

Tlie sc ien t i s t s a r e nol monger ing , but they a re concerned. They seek s d e t e r m i n a t i o n of a tomic r effects on t he h u m a n r a e it may be too la te . A S t a t e s rc|>ort says to ta l r to which people of this have been exposed sinf equals about one chest X-i if the t h e r m o n u c l e a r test oe s tepped tip. here and accord ing to t he scienti* "could u l t ima te ly reach which CAU be shown to b ous t h r e a t to t he genet i of all the people of the

Even wi thout loosing a wa r . the world could s a tomic blight If the predi

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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

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