Show t Temperatures The Weather i today and tomor 75 Low to 65 row tonight 35 to 45 OGDEN —Partly cloudy with scattered showers or thunder showers today and tomorrow t 84h BUllac! Balsa Batta Chlcat Las Versa OGDEN CITY UTAH No 116 Year l r Wants! Income Taxes Given i First ' Priority two-fifth- WASHINGTON (AP) — A business group which often reflects Eisenhower administration tax policies strongly suggested yesterday that taxes can be reduced next year by three to five billion dollars ! all-nig- - Prepared Report The report was prepared by the CED’s research and policy com mittee Both Republican and Demo? cratic congressional leaders hav indicated they expect tax reducj-tionin Congress next year Th big fiht is likely to be ovef whether cuts should be concentrated) in low income brackets as demanded tby (Democrats s f (The CED Report has special significance in the light of clos ties between (the CED and the Eisenhower administration es pecially on taxes President andi Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey are formed er j Secretary Humphrey mean- timej is reported to have given other business leaders hope for tax £uts andi a balanced budget j nextiyear Busito the spoke Humphrey ness Advisory Council of the Commerce Department at its spring meeting in Hot Spring f Ogden Rooming House Arson? A smouldering fire believed to have been started by an arsonist’ damaged the floor and burned through an accumulation of wallpaper and other rubbish in an upstairs rooming house at 330 24th St last night Fire Chief Clyde L Peterson said fortunately the four elderly men w)io live in the apartments were "absent “or a serious tragedy might have resulted’ He vfas to conduct further in- vestigations today The f ire was started in two separate rooms by somebody who poured fuel oil on the floors and then ignited the oil with a match the chief said Turned in Alarm Jim Burton about 60 one of the tenants arrived home about 8:20 pm and turned in a fire alarm He then closed the jdoors This act likely prevented grafts from sweeping in and causing a major fire firemen said Firemen climbed through a second story window facing 24th Street to get inside They doused the flames and smouldering material and then remained at the scene for a couple of hours There are 10 or 12 rooms on the second floor The structure is owned by Douglas Edwards but some of those attending gave newsmen a (partial account The secretary qualified Optimism with “all kinds of ifs one informant said but based I on the upsurge of business a tivity which— if continued— will increase income and corporate ) tax revenues CED officials said that as usual they consulted Treasury officials in preparing their report Yesterday’s report mentioned no specific figures for an income tax cut but said continued economic growth should produce more revenue than originally estimated jby the Eisenhower administration for the fiscal year beginning this July 1 ‘ I 2 Profs Invent $4 ' - Uranium Detecting Kit for Amateurs LARAMIE Wyo (UP)— Two University of Wyoming professors have invented a $4 uranium detecting kit for amateur prospectors which features a “long wave black light device’’ that will detect the valuable mineral The professors Dr Carl A Cinnamon head of the physics department hnd Warren M Mallory associated professor 0f ejec trical engineering call the kit a “uranitector” and said it will fold up compactly into pocket " size Mallory said the uranitector was invented for the weekend prospector The uranium detector in the kit uses a principle of harnessing the ultra-violrays of the sun for detection purposes The kit includes chemicals and other paraphernalia which will enable the prospector to determine whether the ore is of commercial value Mallory said he developed he outfit because of his own interest in prospecting et West He had been unconscious since he was struck and carried 141 day The Public Health Service which is headed by Dr Scheele said it will be based on the recommendations of a group of experts called in to review the whole situation as well as “other information” j ! Minnesota's Growth MINNEAPOLIS (UP) — Minfeef' as he crossed busy Wdst nesota’s 1955 population is esti35th South a main highway (to mated at 3138872 by the state Magna Friday shortly after 8 registrar of vital statistics Dr A J Chesley The 1950 federal pm His death brought Utah traffic census placed the state’s popula-tol- l for the year to 50 jtion at 29$2483 j I Taking part in last night’s conference with Dr Scheele was Dr Jonas Salk of Pittsburgh who developed the vaccine and other experts Dr Scheele who heads the U S Public Health Service declined to comment when told that unconfirmed reports were being broadcast that there was nothing wrong with the vaccine but that existing supplies should be reexamined Basil O’Connor whose National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis has played a leading role in the campaign to provide free inoculations for school children was asked if he had lost faith in the Gleaming Tabernacle Ready Soon for Dedication t Only unfinished iexterior feature of the gleaming Ogden LDS Tabernacle above is the tower being encased in white cast stone The $625000 structure will have a seating capacity of 160-foo- I 2500 Dedication ceremonies are planned for July 1000 Scouts Scour 2 Counties ‘ Injuries Fatal To S L Boy 3 SALT LAKE CITY (AP) boy died late yesterof injuries inflicted when he day was hit hy a car the night before The little victim was Robert Worthen son of Mr and Mfs Don Worthen 3411 SoutlL 43id dealt with “scientific problems and programs” In response to reporters’ questions he said he thought today’s statement would clear things up so that people will “know what to do tomorrow morning” Timing Uncertain The timing of today’s announcement in Washington was left uncertain but indications were that it would be late in the j i Ga (The session was closed Surgeon General Leonard A Scheele had suddenly urged a halt in the mass inoculations after an meeting of top level scientists Friday night He said the inoculations should be postponed pending today’s statement the contents of w’hich he refused to forecast He said last night’s conference ! 20-pag- e! CED trustees1 i anti-poli- o Blaze Damages The Committee for Economic! Development (CED) in a report on federal tax issues said firs priority should go to a gen-- j era! income tax cut for every--! body The CED added that the big--! gest percentage cuts should be) given high income brackets to! provide added incentives for j economic growth And if the expected reductions do turn out to be possible the CED said smaller cuts should be made in corporation income taxes and In excise rates oil liquor tobacco and autos Eis-enhow- seconds This was only of a second slower s 10 Cents (AP) — Amid nationwide perplexity a group of experts worked in shirt sleeves around a conference table last night on what to tell the American people today about the Salk vaccine program 12-A- it W' WASHINGTON than the race record established by Whirlaway in 1941 Nashua was a 6 to 5 choice (A full account of the thrill) ing ride is on -- r jJ four-fifth- i' '65 Odd P1d® d i vj 14 4 St Near lark X5 Salt Laka SI 46 BS 45 Saa Fraaelaea 47 66 46 44W- - TeUawsL 41 SS mg Nashua finished strong but colt put the California-owneon a burst of speed going down to the wire j In winning Swaps came close to setting a Derby record at Churchill! Downs The time s was two minutes one and ' 44 wod LOUISVILLE Ky (AP) — The Rex Ellsworth colt Swaps yesterday won the Kentucky Derby by a jsingle length over Na$hua the! heavy favorite to1 win the $152500 event I 46 44 Aar'le 3 Sections 40 Pages 1955 t i For Tax Cuts r MAY 8 California Colt Upsets Favorite To' Win Derby Top Business Group Looks 4 SUNDAY MORNING Max Mia 4 M M 4S Max Mia) M UUt Oflta UTAII-i-IIig- h Project Litterbug' Big Success ( p By ROBERT CROMPTON Scouts of the Lake Bonneville Council 1000 strong gathered up tons of roadside and park debris yesterday as they carried out huge “Project Litterbug” About 600 of the Boy Scouts Cubs and Explorers also topped oft their “conservation good turn” by planting about 5000 evergreen tfees in the Snow Basin area Warm sunny weather allied with the Scouts as they cleaned up virtually the entire “back yard” of Weber and Box Elder Counties Overwhelming' Turnout Dr Odell Juland chairman of conservation activities for the cbuncil and other Scout leaders were over' whelmed by the giant turn-ou- t The youngsters spread along the highways and throughout the two counties early yesterday morning and gathered up sack after sack of beer bottles and beer cans paper and a variety pf junk and even an assortment of old shoes Scouts of Rocky Lomynd Pine View Mt Ogden Gateway and Morgan districts who cleaned Ogden and Weber Canyon gathered at noon after a hard morning’s work at the Weber Basin divide to “chow down” Cookies for Lunch The lunch included 125 dozen cookies given the Scouts by Ogden District Federation of Women’s Clubs Following' lunch Ranger Clark Anderson passed out armloads of young pine treps for the Scouts to plant The whole operation was worked out in detail by representatives from each of the seven districts which make up Lake Bonneville Council Chairman Julander said The maneuver was set into motion in the dearly morning hours ! Names in News Debbie Wants Time to Think vaccine “Don’t be silly” he said “Of course not” He said it was “not my field” however to say whether the vaccination program would continue Doctors in Fort Worth Tex said they would refuse to give any more inoculations until they had assurance that every batch of vaccine received there had been comprehensively checked “The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis can come down here and give the shots if they want to but the doctors here aren’t going to do it” one physi- Debbie Reynolds said yesterstint enterday her two-wee-k Korea will in taining troops give both her and Eddie Fisher “time to do a lot of thinking Ogden to Resume Vaccinations !f Today's Report Favorable Although local health authorities have received no word yet on the outcome of tests on polio vaccine being conducted at the University of Utah plans are to resume mass inoculations In Weber County and Ogden City schools tomorrow Dr R N Hirst medical director of the polio immunization program here said results of tests by1 Dr Louis P Gebhardt professor of bacteriology at the university are expected to be made public Sometime today Confident that the report will first shots were not given be-be favorable resumption of the fore the program was tempoimmunization program has been set for tomorrow due to the rarily interrupted the vaccine short school period remaining it will be given tomorrow and Tueswas explained However if the day Clinics in each of the schools report is unfavorable the prowill start at 9 am First grade gram of course will be canceled anstudents Meanwhile regarding an attending school in the nouncement yesterday the fed- afternoon will be expected to eral clearance of Salk polio vac- report to their classrooms at 9 cine has been halted for a few am for their immunizations The schedule was announced days Dr Hirst said this may have some effect on the second as follows: series of shots scheduled for Monday: Wasatch Church inchildren of the area cluding children at Grandview vacAcres School who are expected to There is only sufficient on cine hand for the first series go to Wasatch Church for their shots Roy School North Ogden he explained Gramercy Washington Terrace Take First Shot and Lorin Farr schools However Dr Hirst said even Tuesday Burch Creek School considering the remote possibil Madison Horace Mann Lewis ity that additional vaccine may Lakeview Wilson and Wasatch not be immediately forthcqming schools Dr George A Spendlove Utah it would be advisable for youngsters to take the first shot director of public health said In any immunization program yesterday the state’s mass antirequiring a series of shots some polio inoculation program also benefit is gained from each in- will be resumed tomorrow iJ dividual injection he explained reports of the security test an In all schools in which the reassuring i Brain Hemorrhage Threatens Life of Surviving Brocfie Twin He has learned to throw a ball and ride a toy car His vocabulary had 'grown" rapidly But the operation of Dec 17 1952 had left its marks There was a slight drag in Rod ney’s left leg his left shoulder was stiff and he had lost the power to recognize objects by touch with his left arm and leg However his mother Marjorie said his condition was improving steadily Rodney’s brother Roger died 34 days after the separation operation without regaining consciousness The twins were born Sept 16 1951’ Rodney and Roger shared a common key vein which drains blood from the brain Rodney had shown the greater strength during the operation and appeared the better prospect to survive so the vein was given to him CHICAGO (AP) — Rodney Dee Brodie’s long-sho- t chances of attaining a normal useful life flickered yesterday The plucky cheerful 3V4-year-o- ld boy first Siamese twin to recover from a separation operation was in head-joine- d i grave condition at the University of Illinois Education and Research Hospital He was in a coma suffering from a mysterious deep brain hemorrhage which doctors had about our marriage” been unable to halt but which “This is a decision about “may have stopped” spontaour whole lives and we just neously last night He was getting regular transfusions can’t make it right away” she Rodney was stricken while told a reporter with his family at their down-stat- e Debbie said she and £ddie home in Ferris The first must decide on whether to be cian said sign something was wrong was Wait See and when he became lethargic He married as planned in July or most however the For had part difficulty getting around to wait to be one and stopped running and playthe reaction appeared Debbie leaves Friday for of ing with his brothers and Korea With some exceptions the few sisters areas which had scheduled inocu- Hurried to The movie world repreCar lations yesterday called them off sented at the Cannes France His father Royt hurried him Film Festival was buzzing with One of those exceptions was in rumors yesterday of romance Detroit where Wayne County of- by car to the Chicago Hospital between Grace ficials said their clinics would Tuesday The same surgical inocuto team that separated him perremain e open yesterday Kelly and French star who a 1 hour exploratory late children formed previously Aumont missed turn their Since the American star’s aroperation Thursday morning Many health officials continued They found the seat of bleedrival here several days ago to express confidence in the vacing too deep to reach the two have been seen at variA spokesman for the hosous points along the Riviera cine while others showed an inclination to await further assur- pital which revealed Rodney’s coast condition Friday night said Yesterday Grace lingered so ances from Washington Ottawa health Canadian At that “as far as was known long over their luncheon at La Salk the there was no apparent injury decided authorities that Napoule near Cannes that she that could have caused this missed an appointment she had vaccine used on Canadian chilat Vallauris with artist Pablo dren is safe and there will be condition” s no change in the countrywide imAbout of RodPicasso munization program ney’s head top is unprotected President Eisenhower took Health Minister Paul Martin by bone He wears a plastic of a summer-liksaid about 500000 Canadian chilhelmet for protection advantage day yesterday to play golf at dren have been inoculated so Rodney seemed fairly well the Congressional Country far and there has been “no evialong toward the hoped-fo- r goal Club He usually plays at Burndence whatever of unfavorable of a normal life until this unreaction” ing Tree expected setback wait-and-se- 4 -- e 4 Oscar-winnin- g Jean-Pierr- -- three-fourth- e C v 1 1 V1 H I X --S'5 4 ' 'vvn I 7 ' V o a X & Vt jUV ( 4 r ‘ T ' ? &&?: t fc v A - ' v t BRIEFING j j v ypv if v x v- r 2 ' v p j t L' fv Kx ' VNT C x r- - -- j ' K v v f SESSION— Clark Anderson (tack to camera) gives Boy Scouts attack orders fore the “Project Litterbug” gets in high gear r’ just be- HIT THE BEACH — Scouts slick up the beach at Pine View Reservoir in the olean-u- p campaign 31 OP-U- P OPERATION — David Ellis assistant Scoutmaster Art Coppin Larry Richardson and Ingo Sass (left to right) rid a Huntsville roadside of debris - |