Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Dec. 19, 1953, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR <&hv Jiailig Jteurd VRXMW rp^^B^ :| COMPA»ni Mt CAUIHI „ *4iT«**; » *rr-op-^Whtatt m £5!^ ■£»£*?»*i****»«»*- •» attend •» «eond-cl*a* matter in toe Poet Office to Diuau*, (Tc£ under ttot tow* of Ccmfnsd, Act of March 3, 18»# gvery dfternsoa, today throwgh FridAy How Does A Town Gef Industry; (The Johnson City (Tenn.) Press-Chronick) 1 How docs a town get new industry, anyway? Is it by offering tempting tax concessions? Is it by providing a ready-made building for the plant? Undoubtedly, these things have played their part. But the results have not always been satisfactory. Anyway, many forward-locking industries are getting away from the idea of holding themselves up to the high est bidder, so to speak. They are not necessarily looking for artificial “inducements.” Charles R. Mason, plant manager Os Monroe Calculating Company in Bristol, made some mumblWiwlicmHrks iivan address to the first an nual Tennessee industrial Development Conference in Ste Played down the old idea of “concessions” lend played*# the theme that- a town’s community spirit, Übor-maha#meht relations, and the quality of its people aye of major importance to industry. Here are §ome of the things he told the Conference, a'hew Tennessee agency seeking to promote Tennessee’s industrial advantaged: Contrary to the often expressed belief that new indus tries are attracted into a community because they are giv en scone tremendous tax advantage or given a new plant dr something else handed them on a silver platter, I have yet to ran across one of those .. . And wages are a declin ing factor in point of-attraction. New industries moving South today, in my opinion, are not drawn because of low wage rates. We in industry know that low manufacturing costs are obtained through increased productivity and not through low wage rates. Our company today pays among the best wages in our whole area. We always intend to be up there. I happen to be one of those who believe that this •O-called traditional North-South wage differential is de stined gradually to diminish until Ultimately it will disap-' near. And I think H will be a good thing when it does, be cause we don’t need that wage advantage to outproduce Our companion industries in the North .... For nearly 40 years our company confined its opera tions to one plant in Orange, N., J. It had grown steadily miring that period until by 1945’it occupied about 350,000 ST ft. of factory apace. The end of World War II found us with a tremendous backlog of unfilled orders, produc tion of which had been curtailed very early in the war. Ffeefing the need of expanded industrial faculties and not having the space there, our company chose to gamble on a proposed location something ft had never done be fore Md something which, incidentally, our competitors have net yet done .. • We looked for a town -that had a proven record of frie«dßncss totadustry. We also sought a community that sura that you all know that no industry today wUi will- - ingly enter a communitythhh, has a record of long, costly, and tmpfeasant strikes. That Is what ! consider the great est b?** 1,1 se ®^ n ® new^indue- Jy U j? 1 need*/ a city which could provide the 500 workers , **** *• huUt the original plant of 100/00 sq. ft.; Ip Itel, w» doubled ep*c«. & 1046, we came down here to build just one product adding ma chines; today, we build cateutatan, as w«B as adding ma* pypSTfe the £3k compamr’s defense items dot the armed services. w e have demonstrated titat oitf prodaction «*ts are eonsideraWy teataifeords in safety, ap yrentics teaming, and deployment of physically handl- W* ]?*** obtained ai|;anyiaWe record for quality of pradoets with our sales organisation ... II * OiC great Sat qtta single resource this area * peotfle, and we h*ve demonstrated in our taetary we ean outproduci otir fellow workers in North •P Ivery 1 very if we can do that g JSEP-JQ*?*. .I** Su«: that in the next seven we can is that the *htoc«i*v mrs. x oung tun jWhM « w.£», iwdM «*■ Cftk-lr* ; & junto, irn : - rfT^Tl Awn- Stan ssasrlntendent, with a *te . ww . pf vW . { %% ». • . these Days amk fop *y The archeologists, anthropologists and other specialists have long la bored to discover the origin of Man, avoiding, of oourse, the hypothesis that he wee created by God hi His image. These scientific folk have dag in the debris of the past for skulk and bane* and stones and potteries, hoping eventually to come upon the first ancestor of us all. They have found some bone* in Heidelberg in Germany, in Java, in the south of France, in the vicinity of Peking in China, and in Pilt down in Sussex, England. And out of these bonce, th-v rccon-t-"''*-') frightening caricatures of manhood to which they gave various name?, such as Pithecanthropus Erectus and Cro-Magnards, etc., all of which at school we had to memoriae and believe, Just es the theological students in the Middle Ages were required to Know the detnils of the lltes of angels. l*o sceptic dared to raise even an eyebrow because science is infallible and each scientist stands above the norma! errors of man until another scientist proves that the contrary of any hypothesis can be as correct as the original. Thus, we poor mor tals, knowing onlv the tart* of «<«*. can never tell, whether Einstein’s correction of Newton is perfection itself unto someone in this intell ectual elite corrects Sinstefn. which may or mav not happen white we ate alive, for swh genius doc- Sot often beset the human race. At any rate, the viftdown Man. of whose existence I was required to believe nearly 40 years ago, is no more. He has been undone bv chemistry, which wore away his patina and proved him to be a peroetratfd bv a humorist, who while unknown has achieved im mortality. Os Piltdown. that pooulartn-i of science and history, H. O. Wells, wrote: “The bonv remains discovered at Piltdown in Sussex display a crea ture still ascending only very gradually from the sub-human. "The first scraps of this skull were found in an e*cav»tion for road gravel in Sussex. Bit by bit other fragments of this skull were hunted out from the quarry heaps tints moat of it eenld be pieced to gether. It is a thick skull, thicker than that of any living race of men. and it hag a brain capacity in termediate between that of Pithe canthropes and man. This creature has been panted Eoanthropus, the dawn naan... ‘There wag moreover g jaw-bone among these scattered remains. Which wag at first assumed nat urally enough to belong to Eeanthrapua, but which it was aft mwards suggested was probably ' that of a chimpanzee. It is ex traordinarily fee that of a Chim panzee, bat Dr. Keith, one of the greatest authorities in these ques tion*, sarigne it, after an exhaust er analysis tn his “Aattadtp of Mmr «««,) to the Sktffi with Which Kie found. It it. as a jew bone, far lass human in character «.*» ”*** to f the teeth are in some respects more Uk those of brine asm.” Well, tt Wjte^wMm With artistry an skull, pasted s lot of OCM> and tads together amt did a Job on the scientist. t W. *e who know nothing-eot having Ph. D.’s ought not to badfrr (he scientific elite, because one error does not prove Mint they *cr s» oven if the thm, there for the* to See. My complaint it (hat they ridi cule those who believe what We do g** am or -bear or smell or tooah ®e*suraM**by tastramenU* discovered Zippert had made miMUELf || q ' 1 “Smithers, I suspect that clerk's been too long;, In this department—transfer him to Current' Liter*ture!” Washington Presklsnt Eisen hower held two emergency Cabi net meetings plus a regular Cabi net meeting to whip his legislative program into shape before he sat down test week with OOP Con gressional leaders. The program his Cabinet came up with in the end was surprising ly liberal. Some said it was more live the New Deal than what the Republican party stood for, and this was the chief reason for the clash with old guard GOP leaders However, the program i atlexible and Ike advisers went into the closed-door sessions prepared to (five. Here is a rough summary of what the AdmmistreHrtn rvopoees: U»FWNBE mmc,WT Secre tary rtf Defense Wilson has finally produced a three-rear program for trimming down defense spending. It calls for the reduction of the Armv-Naw bv JMO.OOO men next year and by 990.000 men during the three-year period. The Nary will lose M ships. Including tiro battle ships. but no airplane carriers. The Air Force. Which was Cut too dras tically test year, win be given seven new group* but not to be com pleted before . June 1. 1167. This win make a total of 137. The defense bod..-* for nasal year 1959 will be 139.900 000 000 eg ex penditures or of ap nroortatsd money. The difference is accounted for bv money left over from the previous year. This cut is drastic, but not as drastic aa those ordered bv Louey Johnson. Unfortunately, Undersec retary of Defense Hager Kves fail ed in his attempt to revamp the defense establishment along mo dern atomic lines, instead the three services sliced a little, but basical- : ly stuck to conventional weapon* such es warships end foot soldiers UNBALANCED BUDGET BUDGET BALANCING ThS budget will not Tie balanced next year. Reluctantly, secretary of th* Treasury Humphrey has bowed to 1 the inevitability of an eight to nine Mllion-dollar deficit He still thinks the proposed new budget is too high and doesn’t see how he’s going to raise the money. TAXES The tax outs scheduled to go into effect la January will < be made. No effort will be made to stop them, tbeugh that is the only Way the budget can be balanced: The President proposes to cut excise taxes by about 50 per cent; : ajs« wants to drop the menses* in •#dal security. There will be no tttempt to put across a sales tag ■ in Am tom eS a memsfeeturns' ■ sales tax. ANTI-RECESSION PROGRAM Ike’s economic advisors have set up a public works program not unlike New Deal days, in case the business economy turns sour. FARM PROGRAM Price sup ports continue automatical? next year. But for next year AgXUMture Secretary Benson piWpoges flexible price supports differing aoretd tag to different cnmeMdtflee - aad CUTW 0H * r I A. m, ftJlJ 77 millsllß 11K1W 1 ! Ixtliwv / ft' t , ■>. “He MMCticee teefa w iS" ~: g ” ° lu * now * • *'mgw Jw Oft, •U \ * accoumant when ts/. ' -C.<- a-T ‘ ' ' much more effort to e*E term pro duce abroad! Congressional lead ers don’t like the flexible or slid ing scale angle. They favor rigid price supports. AID TO EDUCATION Seme Ike advisers definitely favor fed eral ahl to education, te order to alleviate the desperate problem of overcrowded school*. Flaw! out come will depend on eongreostonul leaden. TRADE AND TARIFFS ThM Win be put off until after the Randall Cttnmuitoh reports kt March. LABOR PROGRAM Revision of the Taft-Hariley Act will be proposed, bat will, not gw nearly far President Elsenhower will battle hard for his legislative program ht the next Congress. 1«* he won’t use the big stick OB GOP Congress men . from closely contested dis tricts if they tfenT Support him aO the tons. “1 realize that those fellows in the marginal district* have 0 tough tone getting elected,’’ Ike told GOB Congressman WOllsm It. Ayrat, who himself ettneb from lbs mar ginal district of AAfbn, dhld “Th*y have to follow a middle-of-the-road policy most of the time. Without veering to tbe right * toft, if they want to rautotw la Congress next November. 1 understand then problems and plan to be sympathet ic." Ayres’ district. WMsh be oer rled by to,ooe votes, to MM. is dns of the meet variegated fcf the godli try, and is sometimes calM TAB America,’’ the Ohioan told Ike. '«/ 466,000 consutueats include 85,000 memben «t organised later 87 organised nationality groups of various etude origins, io.ooo negroes and 3fX)O fanners,” repor tod Ayres, rftfey can’t all get to see you, but they Want me to act as their agent in expressing their views to you. Ode thing I can say confidently is that-they want Congress to enact your legislative program.” *Tt will be a contrastive pvoßram. aimed at doing the moot good for the notion ae a whole,'’ replied the president. “That’* th* kind Congress should enact, without catering to any pressure group* 1 am for a oonstrnettve revhton of Am Tafi- Hartiey tew, but we can’t aeuttte the entire law to appease some labor leaders. “The same objectivity must apply to the sane program. W« cant go over boazd for farm satatflee Ag Am expense of harming consumers.” Ayna said he frit confident that the next session of Congress would support Eisenhower’s legislative proposals, adding: “If Congress doesn’t support you, it’s cooking its own goose.” OAiftAh NEWg CAPSULES TOUGH TALK - The British bitter!* resented Secretary of State Dulles' blunt WMSilhg that the United States would stop all mlli- AM? aM aMSto-the Fitoch approve Mm York F m aaoAEWAT umm S First-Nighters: TKMaM,* starriag 1 Alfred AiMl XSwMfttn Mofroiy opened at Am fdgMf Hmreday night oner paying 1* perfemaa ees to the tryout towne before ahal teagm* the Broadway erities , , . 1 a*M Iftti ftdMf nOWlfrlv Mt9| "Madam, Win Too Walk* (at the Phoenix Theatre) wae welcomed My s the reviewers, who bed 00 neva papers in which to salute it. Seme of them gave quotes to radio news men. They acclaimed the twtnking of Jemiea Tandy and Hume Cronyn. • The show’s success has tronle over tones. It was oriffeMtlly produced In lets grith oeorte M Cohan as < tile star. It pertehM trying out .’ . . Tidings from okay* and nokays. Franohof Tone’s sfefrer. “Oh, Mtof Oh. Men!” (to few Haven) ; gad ’’ *'■. % Mft,! In th# Mpgto: ' W»t toy&l to yoTeven 0 || one pate 1 H^ywood^^ putting on.wlilghtf” ••’».’ j mil’s Carnegie copbert was a hyp- 1 cai. He noted thpt she “fraotuwd” ■ agent reported that "Wri#)'** Oor rilyal" proved to. Ife amuriag, draw- I lnv not .only chuckles out delighfed bellyteughs.”. Then lie flipped eye- 1 Brows with: “The show tort good enough for Broadway.**- . . . Baltl- ( more revieweia appreciated “Born testerday" add Mi Sugar Hay RobinW lnTth*usuie Dawn rdti . . T3ttitte<.wr Gibbs (The New ar^h^riteu't BoJer’g M womanouveis . Why % the lerit theatres ere reluctant to in stall bars: How many drinks can you sell ip a P*lr of lPohlnote intermissions? -u* v The Claeipatie: “Flight to Tan gier” a conventional melodrama, is piloted by Jack Balance. Joan Fan- , * taine Is his 00-pilot t . . A BHtUhir named “Trent’s Last Case” pas the 1 tlue-chaser and killer pteylnc hare and-hounds. ft Aa gtqferior film ~ > 1 •The Stand at Apache Blverl* i -te d J tomahawk-Waver from Old Hokmn , Reservation . . . "Veils of Bagdad” j Unreels the gee-whte brand of ad- j venture . - - Lea MdOvapi tt th* tea zoom gßd BBgto gteM* Ato dd- l telopment of-let*. H»e story, you \ might soy; hgg iflbgf ’... . - i James Rstd” te Blng-Bpng-Bteh. 1 V' u” r' I The Tstohrigtoi, ] theatre gavaTthe l»«*«f J)bfafiofis to Verdi ItgAnUa Ptorlete-Hewte j Wae the prime .donna gayfe,. < . J saih , ir..R.saafeg < toershlte seem dbwnright gfctfWM 1 . . Studio One’s merry -oommvth- * ique on Pteywrighto to Critics ex leevy idteugdriU. with 1 charm. She woe enchanting through* 1 Out. The Story ,we» entertaining 1 some of the thhe . The surprise * Os the week was hSm«- 1 spun Hamlet . . . ®ti> Most llterato Ooniedy acrlot of . the “lAAHf tv vtojto • ttled to p muttfiiv kmumfruM irfTiTM#riT is 195 V i S JBv Dr. Geora* W. Crane ] Pemeto tteagte* her metiae woe belew par a* a parent, flu* Am due wae •a «M sites feei •* ntemte mted ‘‘Tfecr >*m" s* ■ey ise-potot *Be tmriav whetaM teW Mother rated “Average op the BT DR. GEGEGt W. ORAN* Cess J-374: Pamela J, aged IT, te i dtotof M BAB ***** "But i don’t get ak*g very wbu with my fflother, she began. “She Mtotoe itouSd rnZu to Biy gstof out on dates. I tell her site Is ola-rashtoned. 'ip -So rd like to take home your Test tor Pdfeht** and let nor see how AH# rmtes. -Really. I don’t think my mother U up to avenge. BEHAVIOR Iggyi then are twe sMse to eucn argument*. Pamela may be correct m her' **f*iginrtti' of maavm. But Ate also possible that Pamela is hot up to average, eitner, as a inmim *«*—tetn-ager. 80 I patently constructed a ISO-point •BSUevier TWrt for Teea-Agors," wtueh 1 reoomassaa to you peiwue end teaeners, as Wen as young peopte. toederft psyuhoiagy demand* tost we get down to brass tacos and test etneetvm sgemm social yertiNtes or Hating itfu* On this “Behavior TbeV therefore, you Will find ttw su most common fstum Os teehte««r» tt fgu Sa UW W m«m important assets or virtues. > White W*ek is rgung her ntotner ori toe “Test for id «ug*estMiqt her reciprocate and foM Ksmem on the corivsponu- an some of the fauttr.'tef 1 Uotieni youth, some to ISew U^ShSlt^) ST'emoOe or ga&etii , or-accept looiien oares itMuta thwr own wajr.,v , • fl -—— liSkd'S XrTuvir* m am fr ' waß • ® ##lr M nl * ht «<• the ba« w» or swur-* - - tafeta tiitor eeeoeiete* undUiy, Or they pw off ilr tdr rood at toe tame instead of poms* tt ) up Moot the table wtihdut eekmc <0 be excused. me tomato .BKMI-eWB * “ineni you,” end hor- W toU- MMto tom toJifllt dtav' risen #4 totoCsMm mStaKb Daa fir they ArhtaVMtts wWMu't SSfSd&eT^fS^ Hlattf Hawrtk fail tt the theatre’s brightest hours to his hew book, “Some Enchanted Evenings.” t, toeatre^^piestjand very happy, started with -OktehjW mat" which was about 30 yelps after Dick and Oscar met . .TBS author reminds us that things mtgto have been . different. . XI He Theatre Guild hadn’t needed a MW tapestry (and aet up its. own tor sion of Amateur Hour) RoApßb might haVe become a islindto of babies’ underwear.. “Garricd Oafe tlto" (for the Ouild’s todMtotam: gave Dick Rodgers and iMAfIpM their start. lt 'S“h3K i a i S*JX was too gostly-U BMtoBA to dMfe - tlnu^on^a B> , Tbs te*Bm. top BBißito'i - MN.“ 7 * ' JtoAr Jtofll'. to. Hollywood gave as’iftnsna.’aw A A ito-AT«t tßridm. mlin ■ I firiim dl. -lm*m it Hodrtri nti ] s IfrMlid ttMk for tdAMter wee tte flfst shew hi WhMh they provided their own took, fellowed R “Betee in fm - Ifefrfrn mm* . rh* Umoy OUW' (a ****** If: . -- tllit •
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Dec. 19, 1953, edition 1
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