The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 4, 1954 Page: 2 of 6
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Wft — I'VM* D\I1Y SI W> I truina \»fMl 4 IIM
EDITORIAL COMMENT
Pacitier
IIUIIIIMU lit
(Ea»t) BREEZE
In Kuk.
Wfcm RalktUi a*4
( »«(•! rwM* MM
Ui %k» I MI IMH
T^u
In*
Cities and H-Bombs
A 'l.irlimit thought
hut hut* 1 to think ubuut-
wlilu d«> by Civil Itftr
Vai iMvrwin, Said he r 71 .
vhiclt \n*' knew,
W#f* viIviikchI the
"«* Administrator
, it the tiuje-ian'
M
StlfciMlif Ml* -aid iliut tlu I’SA is well
v>wi ih tlu1 )iivi - jiid*t>ikv tieid—lake fi'um
fjtyl tu\p.t>ei' and give tu the World. Hut We
can't ttwn* it >tt jaat hke that While sonw v.f
it ha." been cast vkfwu the drain, for sure,
suftie ul it ha.' *k»w<td down Cimiuum-m—
uiij ut that w»‘ have no doubt at all.
It tuh* ju-t a little powder on your
sh* aid*i to start a lair* tX|/Ki»iou.
Some people can’t drive afely to save
their live.'.
attack us rip hi now a id catch the American
|*co(dc ui the bit' cities that will tie bombed,
the disunities will run into millions.
Kletsuli einpliasi/ed his apwncv 'a pfo-
Kiin aimed it traininr XiiH'iican citizens tu
evneuHte cities in the e\*ut of enemy attack
in testimony to the Semite appro]»iiation
committee.
"I am convinced," he said at another
point, "and I am certain this information is
correct, that the Hits; ians have the capability
of attacking the United States today Ixith in
aircratt and in bomba, that this capability
will increase with the passage of each six-
month period.”
Let us ask you this question: Aren't you
glad you don't live in a big city? That idea,
is going to intrigue a lot of folks now !
w V
V
J>i
§>V^
Sen. Way See Another Atom Filibuster
lut Washington mlkry-go-round
Hv IHMfW |>K ARSON
Washington.—i liancea are that Con-
gress has not seen the last of the record-
making lH-day filibuster over the future
control of atomic energy. Another filibuster
may be just around the corner.
Despite the hot weather and the hot air.
however, nothing could be move important
to you and your children. For this hill spells
out a pattern for the energy that will turn
the factory wheels and power plants of the
nation beginning perhaps in less than 25
years.
.* *
■ Reason for a possible new filibuster is
t£j0A congressional conferees, are now hag-
gling to adjust tlie differences between the
House bill and the Senate bill—especially
t,he important amendments which the Sen-
ate put into the A-bilJ thanks to the harass-
ing force of the 13-day filibuster.
The House conferees are determined to
knock these out. Furthermore, the predomi-
nant majority of the Senate conferees are
old school reactionaries whose neck-bristles
are already up over the Senate amendments.
’ “ To understand what the haggling and
filibustering is all about, here is a thumb-
nail sketch of the more important disputed
amendments and what they mean to you and
the future economy of the nation.
Water Power Sites and Atomic Energy
—One vital amendment introduced by Sena-
tor Humphrey? “Minnesota Democrat, Appiios
the rules of the- Federal Power Commission
to the leasing ol' federal fissionable ma-
terials.
Wjiat this means is that since-falling
water whicli tieiierates witter power is reg-
ulated by-’the ^^bvernnfieirt, the neutrons-
which have been, developed by the govern-
ment at a cost of twelve billions likewise are
to be regulated under the same rules as» the
leasing of water pu\w sites.
The Federal Power Commission has
built t'o through the yetirs a tried-und-tested
set of wiles for'leusing dam sites to private
utilities. Power rates are based on costs, and
the Power Commission has a set of rules to
prevent the padding of costs.
Such pudding is even more important
regarding atomic power, since the private
atom plants will sell plutonium back to the
government, and the price they can charge
the government is all-important. If they are
permitted to charge a high price they can
pay for the entire cost of their plant in a
few years, meanwhile using a government-
developed patent,
House conferees and some Senators
would like to knock out this Humphrey
amendment applying Federal Power Com-
mission niles to atomic energy. They don’t
want the big business firms which will gen-
erate atomic pow'ei* tied down by the rubes
of the Federal Po,wer Commission.
Government Construction of Atomic
Reactors—An amendment introduced by
Senator Ed Johnson, Colorado Democrat,
permits the government to build an atomic
reactor, in other words, a plant for generat-
ing psuice-tirmi atomic power
In contrast, Congressman Sterling Cole
of New York introduced an amendment pro-
viding that the government cannot build an
atomic reactor. Cole wants no competition
with private A-plants.
Senator Johnson, on the other hand,
argued, and the Senate finally agreed, that
jtU»t as tlie government built Boulder Dam,
Grand Coulee, Bonneville, etc., to serve as a
competitive yardstick to private power com-
panies, so tlie government should also build
its own atomic energy plant to serve as a
similar yardstick.
Senator Hickenlooper, Iowa Republican,
in charge of the Senate bill for Eisenhower,
at first introduced an amendment directly
contrar to Johnson, providing that the gov-
ernment could not build a reactor. Then he
withdrew it, when Senate infighting got
tough, He will undoubtedly vote in the con-
ference committee*’-however, to knock out
Johnson’s safeguards.
Anti-’Monopoly—Senator Langer of
North Dakota, the only Republican success-
fully introducing a modifying amendment,
tacked onto the .bill a safeguard against vio-
lation of tin* Sherman Antitrust Act. If uny
company producing atomic energy shall be
convicted of violating,,the antitrust laws,
Langer specified, its /license automatically
reverts to the United States, which shall li-
cense it royalty free.
When this proposal came up for debate,
Hickenlooper was inclined to favor some
kind of anti-mouopoly safeguards, but ob-
served: “Perhaps this is too important to act
on in a hurry. Perhaps we should hold hear-
ings on this provision."
"That’s exactly the point we’ve been
making,” replied Longer. "We've beeu try
lag to tell you that this whole bill was too1
important to be rushed through Congress in*
record time.” |
Wliat Langer referred to was the fact
that the Senate received committee prints,
of the atom bill only one day before debate |
started. It was obviously impossible to study i
such an important bill in one day; on top of I
which Senator Know land expected to pas» it i
in one additional day of debate.
Opponents of the bill suspected that it
had been purposely saved until the last min-'
ute in order to ram it through in tlie hot andi
hectic closing days of Congress without too;
many Senators realizing its significance.
Patent Protection—One ol' the most im-
portant amendments of all, though a compli-
cated one, was introduced by Senator Bobi
Kerr, Oklahoma Democrat, providing for the)
compulsory licensing of patents for a period | miss
of 10. years. j CON'1
The Eisenhower administration hud, M.*a Lucy Brush bid
.Stated OwitmuUlou BN*
) NW» CHAPTER N’lmtui
", i; a M \ sc t>m Au*
tiu»i 5
R tiK Adam- H I*
K. M,C.« S»«Vg
tit* Judf I*- III
City Judn (Wury* Davit it* ill at
hw> tawm.
Si
KING WHISKERS-Postman
William Welch, 32, of Kcwanec,;
1 1., appears very proud of
hi* bushy beard which won
him the title, "King of the!
Kewunee Centennial." Accord-,
ing to the Jury of three women,
BUI had the handsomest whisk-|
♦ ho °00 ront£$tr,r'tR i
iik re* r *nmt
m
f
mm
ft
PU2A
LAST TIMES TODAY
M-C-M's Bid TOPICAL ROMANCE
BLACKWOOD
-on-
BRIDGE
BKASH BRINGS HOME
CONTRACT WITH LUCK
In typical
Shoplifting Gang
Operating at Ft.
Worth Captured
What’s Doin’
GRAND
LAST TIMES TODAY
Double Feature
Adults 25c - Childr*n 10c
Appointment
with
MM
A i AN LA01I tnd PHYL1 IS bAilflRI
Also
A HIW KIND Of LOVi
AMD
VIOISMCII
South Dealer
— RADIO —
LISTED AS FOLLOWS:
(tj WFAA-WBAP—820. ;
12) WFAA-WBAP—574.
(3) KRLU—1080.
I Fort Worth, Tex., Aug. 4 (DIP).—1 WRR—1310.
1 A gang ol shoplifters who boldly 1 _
l carried huge quunitiea ol groceries Man J lieu < l0' ,
. , , . . , . , . .from two Safeway Stores in Fort1 Jtl*m Yn“dereook., tJ-> Humble o-
recognized tliat new patents developed by j fashion in today's hand and ell- ■ Worth early this week lias been niau' '4l Fultou Lewis Jr.
private enterprise must be made available Joyed some typical luck to bring kroken up With the arrest of three 1(,:30 -U) News; M. Beatty, (2) !
homt l»er contract. mtchhers. The trio was arrested last. The Lone Rangtr, (3) P. L. Llayes, j
night after clerks at u Safeway i**) Gabriel Heater
: Store on Camp Bowie Boulevard <a, Just!
recame smpicous. They overpow- FBI In Peac, & War, l4j ,
ered one man, a 28-yeur-old San gports
Que*tiu prison parole, and police
captured his two companions about 7:30—(1 > Spend A Million,’<2) Just
a block from the store Easy, <3i 21st Precinct, i4i Base- |
Pull.
The suspects told ixrllce that
.Monday nlglit tliey got 165-dollars 8:00— <li Orouchn Marx, (2) !
• worth of grocers from the Camp Sammy Kaye, <3• Clime Photogra-
Bo-wle Store and another Safeway pher, (A) Baseball.
Store on East Belknap. Their 8:30—(1) Theaxer Royal. (2i Paul
technique was uncomplicated. Each Whiteman, (3> Jack Carson, <4»
would simply load up a sack of ...
mtrchuncUse and wulk out the front •J,I:*®T7(1) ^ !^er an.f YJui y’
, door. 'I heyhit the East Belknap »*»»««. Hi Mr. Keen.
; store again yeaterday ulternoon ^ u ; 8 orchestra,
,and were at the Lamp Bowie store Roadshow Roundup. (»<
wf.en tliey were c-uught last night. 8ports; 0,.'h (4) ^uneball.
--------- 10:00—11) News, (2) News, (3)
A K 9 5 3
tB— Q 9 ti
4 8 0 4
* y 5
East
iMr. Abel)
Q 10 4
U-10 5 4
4—0 7 3
* -A K J 6
East Gasoline Truck
Pass
Pass
News; J Hogan, (4) Ne.wa,
10:30—(t) Talk: Tex. Quinn, <.2»
J Musical N.tecap, (3) Hillbilly Hi:
,Jarade, (4) Squad RM
UiOO—<1) T. Nlghtwatchman, (2)
News; Muslcu) Nitecap, (3) News; j
| Uillb'Hies, f4) Rhythm Caravan.
_ „ , 11:30—(1) T. Night watchman, (2) I
Dallas, Texas—A gasoline truck, MUSical Nitecap, (3) Herniun1
Hits Industrial
Plant, Fires It
be made available
to other private ccmcerng for a period of five
years. Keir extended the peiod to 1U years.
Theory behind this is the same as that' ades'""vulnerable
existing in the uutomobile industry, where | " North iMx. Dale)
auto patents are pooled and each company <
has a right to the patent of his competitor.
This is one reason tiie auto industry has.
made such progress.
Likewise, atomic patents so far have West
been pooled, with Uncle Sam owning all the J Mrs. Keen)
patents. In the past eight years, the U. S. | 4—J 8 6
government lias filed GOG patents on atomic. *—« 2
energy, and this pooling of patents, in turn, ♦—A J 10 6
is why atomic energy also hus jumped ahead] A -lu a 7 2
with such amazing lapidity in tile ]»ast eigliti south (Mias Brash)
years. There has been no strangulation of j 4—7 2
new processes. I a k j 7 3
However, with tlie turning over of these 4—k q 2
patents to private industry, Eisenhower • 4—943
draftees of tlie new hill recognized that some Tne Bidding:
of tiie big companies which have been work- south West North
ing with the U. S. government might be 1—4* Puss 1—4
nursing new secrets up their sleeves, ready | 2—if Pass 3-4*
tu bring them out after tlie passage of the |4—V A11 Pass
| Mrs, Keen opened the deuce of
Several Hi# Private l*irms—Monsanto j clubs and Mr. Abel took th^ first
Cvhemicai, Babcock and Wilcox, Union Car-J two tricks with his ace und king. ... .... . —.—
bon and Carbide, Dow Chemicals, Westing- Then he shifted to the nine of dla- °,ut “fhcontro-l. |Waldman’s Orch. (4> Rytlun Cwa-
house, and General Electric- have beenjmvi^s. The queen lost to Mrs., ln >Koutll 13.01^ U1K) crashed into, itfijo—(D Sigr.-Otf, (2) 3fgn-Off.
working with the government. So it was Keen s Ute and the Juck of dt*- f another car. The truck tlien smasli-1 3» Sign-Off, (4) Sign-Off.
argued that they should not get any advant- moutls wtu‘ ,elun,t'u edlnto the Verson Manufacturing -
age or head start over other firms in de- Miss Brash won this trick and Company Uiid set it on fire. Six — MOTION PICTURES —
veloping peacetime atomic energy. now cashed just two hearts, the . companies answered tiie alurm. I’iasn "Latin Lovers Also Fal-
That was why ike-ad vises specified a «-t, and king carefully preserving 1 l,e driver ol the gasoline truck, stall Fur Cout
five-veal- milent uool J the queen in dmnmy. Break num- !u- J- wyim- suffered a minor liead( Grand - "Appointment With
However this was considered too “so- I Utr one; everybody followed to the lnJury He was taken to Methodist Danger Also 'Durk City.
However, this was consum ed 100 so- Hospital. village Drive-m-"So Big."
cialistic by some House Republicans, par- 1 ' .
ticularly Congressman Sterling Cole, chair-1 Next.. M ss Brush took dummy's
man of tlie joint atomic energy committee. I ace und king of spades and leu a|
He introduced an amendment in a secret,1 third spude, ruffing it in her hand,
closed door committee meeting knocking out number two: the vspadts
the five-year patent pool. But he got re-1were dlvicJtd 3_3-
bulled by Hickenlooper of Iowa. _ serves dual purpose — !
“You can’t go on the floor of Congress At this point the queen 0f heart*
and oppose the President,” warned his fel-jon the board served the double!
low Republican I pnrpose of pulling the last out- I
Inthe end,’ Cole was voted down 7 to 1. 'Ending trump and providing an
But Senator Kerr went further than i ^t,y or d^n,y 8 ^od
Eisenhower. He extended the patent- pool to dtscaI.(lt,(1 htfI. los-1Ig cUlU and Jos.
ing diamond. Quiet fortunate re-
sult. I
10 years, on tlie ground that it would take
four to five years to build a reactor, and that
the patent pool should continue for five years
oft ' fUyt But tlltl contract could havn
d , , .1, n M been defeated -- and should have
It was also argued on the Senate tloor | bten The opento|{ lettd of ^ce\
that sniullei turns will liave to pay thiougli 01 clubs should have told Mr Ab*:i 1
the nose tor tlie head start obtained by a ais partner had started with exact-
few of the big companies tliat have had the iy fuur clubs. That is, it wa» ob-1
inside track with the Atomic Energy Com-1 vicasly a fourth highest lead. ,
mission. Thoerfore, all are entitled to a 10-j Thftf „„„ lw„ t.,uU> duram>
year patent pool to cateii up. I Mr, Abe] lllmself hud four und I
A majority of tlie Senate agreed, and. therefore Miss Brash had three. (
this is another of the hutlv contested points Mr. Abel had tlie spade suit stup-
now being debated backstage in joint con-|ped and lie had as many u> three
ference between tlie House and the Senate, j trumps.
It's a pretty complicated debate, but it’s
one which will affect tin* history of the U.S.
for many years to come.
■Mlflf DAILY MBW1
IN SIXTY-THIRD YEAR
**“*? /T^.TICHnTcOLOR
AO MAT NO. m 1 COt. * l" |U LINES)
ALSO
CALLING SCOTLAND YARD
"Falstaff Fur Coat"
Slarriny Paul Douglas
Plus Shorts
THURSDAY - FRIDA Y j
INSIDE ‘THE TORTURE CAGE'!
wHuwung «i*b mitiNii
CNAMf044 UIAtlTH VIVIC*
HESTON • SCOTT • tlHOFOHS
OIAN DON
MGGER • DiFORE«
. mi wins
Directed by WILLIAM OlfURlE
A Pmmounl Pic lux
FLUS SHORTS
Thursday Only
Plus Shorts
nrr~
I
Tut-mlav - Wednesday . ThipradAY
KW989BS8
JANE WYMAN
O
PAUL Kftiy MAUREEN OSifUIVAH
|m WARDE N DUFtY i .4 ,u ••
I who mod* • model priiml bOhn.tR WMill I i.hn l*
j Of 5»ll (kHnldl 1 wera—tt.. lUftl 0^ rjtk]
*' '>*•*« > YfLy
mU4 if' w«44 »Mif H Cu><M» I IM4| *>4 Ctm )*».«•
PLUS SHORTS
Sterling Hayden - Muncy Olson
r^-
— POSSIBLE OUTCOME —
Now what if lie had led the
jack of club* ut the third trick? ]
In that caae Miss BiHsh would have
hod to ruff on the board, leaving
only two trump* hi dummy. |
Now let her try to se.t up the
Telephone 14 (BualneM) or 44 (New*) 212 N. Dallas St, spude suit und end up m dummy '
Published dally except Sunday by tbe United Publtah- wllh the trumps out. It couldn't,
Ing Co., Inc., which also publishes The Knnle Weekly . ,,, _uHu oll(.
Local and The Palmer RusUer. huve ^ . . P
Entered at the po*t office In Knnla, Texas, a* second could still have been set up all:
claaa mall matter under the Act of Congrees of March i right, but MUs Br ash would have
____ _ _ ' found it impossible to p ek up all1
nSfiCuJSSnlrr ......................... .............. 'three of Mr Abe,’« trunuxs and
All communication* of business and item* .of.Mtl, (Copyright, 1954, General Features
to
should be addressed to the company; not to Individual*. I r.
Any erroneous reflection upon tlu character, standing.
or reputation of any person, firm or corporation, which
may appear in the columns of this paper, will be gladly
and duly corrected upon being brought to the publish-
er’s atti
By Mall
motion.
Outside Oouu
Carrier
ty flame >ates as to Ofty by
Bing, ------
(is Copy Is.
Returns Heme
Dr. and Mrs. E. F McDonald
hav ereturned from their vacation
In Red River, New Mexico.
CHARGE.S MARSHAL!.—Sen. Joseph McCarthy, top,
displays photostut of letter from former Secretary of
War Harry H. Woodring, lower right, that he inserted in
the Congressional Record. The letter contained a state-
ment by Woodring that Gen. George C. Marshall, lower
left, “would sell out his own grandmother for personal
advantage.” (NEA Telephoto)
fDNIG¥T~Pi
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it ll II
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Casebolt, Floyd. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 4, 1954, newspaper, August 4, 1954; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth782721/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.