TELEPHONE ssos meets seller layer Want Ads. Dial with Guardian 8506 ask for classl- flad ad taker, for quick results. 16 PAGES aasani-tsansaIocoudCIanIatiwthaPoIotflaa Dunlrlnaul. Ottawa om @l1IflI?’l0li®1illI “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" Death This Morning Of 0 Hon. Dr. W.J.P. MacMillan lion. Dr. W.J.P. MacMillsn. 76, appolllled lieutenant governor of 'lI(‘ Province on Nov. 22. died early this morning in the Char- lottetown Hospital. He entered hospital Nov. 26. Death came at about 1.45 a.m. it was only a few days ago that l)r MacMillsn had received the higtiest honor in the gift of the (tovin. Prime Minister John Die- lcttbaker announced his appoint- ment as Lieutenant-Governor of the Province to be effective Dec- cnibcm l t . |)r. MacMillan's entire life was d('\t)led to public service from the time that he entered politics as a member of the Provincial l,t'glsla!lll'E for Charlottetown in 1023 to get a grant for the Red tlllas Society, one of his favorite charities. lie was Premier of the Pro- \'Illt'€ from 1933 to 1935 after hav- lllL’ been acting premier for a _\c.tr previous to that. He was l.t‘fld€l' of the Opposition for fif- teen years and serv as a mem- ber of the Legislature continuous- lv from 1923 until 1955. with the exception of was to 1989 when the Liberals held a solid block of 30 scats. lie was the first min.ister of Hcalth and Education in the pro- tince. HIGHLY IIONOUIIED l-‘or his outstanding social work atid devotion to the work of his church. he was honored by His lloliness Pope Pius XII who in 1948 created him a Knight Corn- , tnander of St. Gregory the Great. For his outstanding service on the home front during World Wai- the (‘lermont March 24. 1381. An hon- or student at Prince of Wales Col- lege. he won the coveted Holmes Gold Medal at McGill University where he graduated in M 'cine. The medal goes to the member of the graduating class who is a class leader during the course. llighly regarded by fellow members of his profession he was chairman of the Medical Board ty th S()('l(‘iy, Anti-Tuberculosis rue and other organizations. He was a long time member of the (‘harlottetown Rotary Club. held high office in the Knights of Col- utnbus and was honorary chief- tain of the Caledonian Club. A former President of the Prince Edward Island Medical Association. Dr. MacMillsn was it em r of the Canadian ‘tlcdical Council for twenty-two years. He was elected a member of the board of Governors of the American College of Surgeons in I945 after having been a fellow the College for more th twenty years. He was also a fel- llcnns and a fellow of the Interna- tional Collegepf Surgeons which Dr. . married was established in 1935 . _..... . "flilasinoalha PIT‘ ‘II nuncp-rt -nl avalan- ‘W dAI.NIC- an iWales College became a . low of the Royal College of Sur- bl‘ COUGEC llndef D5 M3°M‘l' ' . or -....t.- THE LATE HON- INSPIRING SPEAKER Dr. MacMillan was regarded as one of the most effective speakers of the House where time after time he maintained the rights of Prince Edward island as they related to Federal Tax Rental agreements. When he took over the office eizif I, Premier. the Province was fiic with two of the greatest fire losses in its history. Within 8 month I-‘alconwood Hospital and Prince of Wales College were levelled. with characteristic energy. he was instrumental .in ‘ aaatoi-ad his greatest achieve- ment was his success in secur- ing from the Corn c Found- ation an endowment for a cha Ecbnosnlcs at Prince ir in of Wales College and at St. Dun- stan's University to the extent of $88,000 yielding F0- venue of $4.400 per year. Provincial Library sys- tan with headquarters in Prince of wales College and twenty - six branches through- out the Province was made slble by a Carnegie Contribut- of 8105.000 Prince of Ian’: administration. . . MacMillsn was twice His first wife was "-,.V'!".. mills Diaaal power unit (can- sc Fdlllruusli '39‘ U it upward the south wall of tho jun- Th DR. Mao Christina MacDonald of Bos- ton. The second Mrs. Macmillan is her sister. Letitia MacDonald, daughters and three sons. The daughters are Mrs. C. St. Clair Tralnor and Mrs. Alban Farmer. both of Charlottetown. Nora. Mrs. B. Bohan. Smyrna. Georgi The Millan. and Stephen liottatown and e- Joseph who r aides in Goose Bay, Labrador. 700 Conudiuns - Roach Halifax From Overseas HALIFAX (CPl The lin- er Scythia docked here Fri- day with 700 of the 2.70() Can- adian NATO troops and farniles due in Canada weekend after two years service in West Germany. The liner Queen Pi-ederlcc is expected here. Sunday. and the Empress of France is due in Saint John. N.B.. Sunday night. ey carry a total of 2.000 and dependents soldiers. Six drips will make cross- on a. spa: are Dr. Allan Mac- of Char- :beir this lugs before the rotatt pro- gram is completed. CHARLO'l‘TE'l‘OWN CANADA, Income, Corporation And Excise Tax On Cars Cul CONSTRUCTION CONTRACT AWARDED Work On Naval Barracks Expec’redToSiar’rMonday" Cars Will Be Cheaper WINDSOR, Ont. (CPl-—Chrys- ler of Canada announced Friday night that prices of its 1950 Ca- nadian - built models will be re- duced to the “full extent" 7% per cent reduction in the fed- eral excise tax. in the case of some of die Ply- mouth and low - priced Dodge models this will represent a sav- ing of approximately $42. For the more expensive Chrysler and De- Soto reduction will amount to approximately 370. C. 0. Hurley, vice-president in charge of sales. said "it should be borne i O - -o :- to n mind that the tax was levied on the manufacturers’ selling price to the dealer rather than at the retail level." SA"I‘URDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1957 Eisenhower ls Disappointed GETTYS B U R G, Pa. (AP)- President Eisenhower Friday ex- pressed disappointment over fall- of anguard sat ' launching and asked the defence department for a full report. to '5' 3 Press Secretary James C. Ha erty reported Eisenhower's reac- tion after talking to him at his fann home. Eisenhower’: request for a re- port on — as Hagerty put it- “what happened" at Cape Cana- veral, Fla.. was relayed to the defence department by an aide on national security matters, Brig.- n. . paster. When Hagerty first was asked for comment on the launching failure. he replied neither he nor Eisenhower's reaction. the press etary said- "Thc praident expressed dis- . appointment and asked the de- fence department for a full re- “Ill Asked whether Eisenhower was "mad or angry" about the fail- ure. Hagerty id sa : “I think I'll stand on my state- nt." Says Fleming Should Have Resigned Post OTTAWA (CPT - social Credit leader Low said Fri ht that Finance Minister D o it a I d Fleming should have resigned as soon as he the mentdidnotlnteudtoproducea budget at this session of Parlia- n . Speaking in Commons debate on taxation changes announced by Mr. Fleming, Mr. Low quoted the minister as saying soon after assuming office June 21 that he intended to produce a budget. Canada would never know. Mr. Low added. whether Prime Min- later Diefenbaker had advised to the contrary. or w caulfid Mr. OTTAWA (Speciall — Official confirmation that the contract for the naval reserve devisioti building. “HMCS Charlottetown" is awarded to the Atlas Construc- will begin on December 9 The contract for the structural steel for the new naval station been awarded earlier to the York ' Steel Company of l-‘red-- tion Company of Montreal for $321,000 came Friday when Fish- had examined and ratified the COIIITECL MOSCOW (APl—Nikita Khrush- chev declared Friday night that part of the carrier rocket of Sput- nikl fell in the United States Sunday and the Americans won't give it back. The Communist party secre- tary emphasized he meant the United States itself. not simply the North American continent. “We relied on them. trusting in their decency. but they did not live up to our trust." he remarked to correspondents at a Finnish Embassy reception. ‘'If an Am- erican Sputnik ever falls on Sov- iet territory we will return it promptly to the United States.” . . ssador Llewel- n Thompson was informed of l(.hrushchev'a charge and said: This is the first I have heard of uxl, (In Washington. a state depart- bfl ‘aptllissniaii disclalmed any knowledge of the rocket hitting U.S. soil. A spokesman for the Vanguard satellite project said there is no evidence the fr - ment hit the United States. (The state department spokes- Ford Says Disappointed TORONTO (CPl — The execu- l Fleming to change his in‘ . “But once the minister of tive vice-president of Ford Motor (‘Mr-p-fly Canada Lim‘ . I nance said he was going to pre- sent a budget this session he should have gone ahead and done no. and if he was out of harmony with his leader he should have re- ned " sig . The country was entitled to a balance sheet. “which would show a greatly different picture from the contracted statement the min- ister has given tonight." “The government is afraid to bring out a balance sheet. I chal- lenge them right now to get busy and finish one before the minis- ter has spoken for the last time in this debate. “Th overnment k n c w couldn't fill its election promises of tax reduction. "lt didn't want to put facts and. pie with these tax reductions." WASHINGTON (AP) — Van- aign faults — first satellite - bearing rocket to lode two seconds after take- off Friday. But the curtain-raising flop is not likely to impair a planned U.S. rate of putting other satel- lltcs into the air. he said. Van- guard will go ahead with another launching “jun as soon as we possibly can." He gave no hint of a likely date. same time. the Nova born Hagen expressed a future lhunc-hing attended by same expectant publicity that has hinged on every move toward Fri- day‘: launching. He said It should be made plain 5 0 able. F lays the whole auto industry is disappointed by a 21/2-per-cent re- duction in the special excise tax 8 0 Theodore J. Emmert said man- ufacturers, dealers and their em- ployees had 0 ‘ r some- thing more worthwhile" than the reduction to 7% per cent from 10 per cent -— something which would give "a real shot in the arm" to sales when it is badly needed. Comments on the reduc- tion from other members of the industry were generally favor- Mr. Emmert said his company hopes to continue production at its Oakville and Windsor plants on the reduced schedule \\'lll(‘ll‘ began this week. but “we have less assurance that e can do no in light of tonight's announce-1| nt." the undertaking in the first place but he had been overruled by oth- the "others" were but indicated "a lot of Hagen spoke at a mid-afternoon press conference In his Vanguard control centre. w he r e a pre- launchlng bustling of happy ac- tivity had quickly taken on a fun- or appolntcd, of con r it e," the 49- year-old native of Amherst. \ S . acknowledged. But he said he is confident the next firing will go off all right. "Nuts." was what the pipe- smoklng Hagen had said on I telephone line to the Cape (inna- that the next effort of this sort is a last rather than leaving an "unfortunate" Impression among millions that the end result was nceaaarily sup to be a satellite whirling around the world like Ruada's "We had warned that it might ' rector sald. -hicosta dsnassooa veral test centre when the word of the ll:45 am. EST failure flashed from the test site block- house. Th. Vaunarl chief said he and associates now will have to track down what was “undoubt- adly a failure of some individual part" in go rocket. That would bal safctywoddpcr-I nnnsaaa It is expected that actual con» construction of the ‘ struction of the naval barracks barracks has been applied to gov- the initiative of Mr. MacLean. Khrushchev Says Sputnik Rocket Fell In The U.S. -“excuse for a budget." at a phere. l "wfiaie all tremendously dis- launching attempt. he said. "will‘ the date of Friday's launching at-4 -‘WHY lasaealagpadhdgadnsncaaaiailllavitbb ericton in order that the contract- ing company would have all its. cries Minister MacLcan was ingmatcrials on hand and work could Commons on Thursday. many of formed that the Treasury Board begin without ay. Pressure by Prince Edward Is- an members of Parliament for new naval liasl man said the department [ seen press reports a fragment may have landed in Alaska or Germany. This referred to a U.S. army statement at Fairbanks, Alaska. saying the rocket was believed to have fallen Sunday at. Fort reely reservation. 1 miles south of Fairbanks. But‘ nothing was reported found. Wit- nesses also reported seeing flam- lng objcets falling during the weekend in Saskatchewan. Maine and Montana.) N SOUTH PACIFIC? (Dr. Fred L. Whipple. director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Cambridge. Mass. said the rocket probably plunged to its death Saturday night. possibly in the South Pa- cific far from land.l had of ernnicnls at Ottawa for some years. it resultt-d in the purchase a slit.’ some time ago. but final decision to proceed with the work was made by the present govern- ment. As revealed in discussion of National Defence Estimates intlie proposed armorles and naval sta- tions have been deferred. This fate was escape b " MCS Charlottetown" chiefly through Khrushchev said the Soviet gov- ernment will make an official an- nouncement that the fragment landed in the United States and then will ask the United States to return it. Correspondents asked Khrushchev whether he was jok- in . 1 ‘‘I am absolutely serious." he said. “We know it fell on the United States " ‘ Until just before Khrushchcv‘s laccusation. Moscow Radio had been insisting the rocket still was whizzing around the earth despite Western scientists‘ belief it had disintegrated. Khrushchev spoke about two hours before the official news agency Tass announced the U.S. earth satellite rocket blew up on its launching pad in Florida. OTTAWA (CPl — CCF leader try. He had never expected that C ld ell F ‘d l ht ‘d Fi- th’ uld b d b ' - ngncvev Minilslteiy Dlhifiiald slfleming mi-slitwheadcde by?nl"rin);e.lVTi0iiVi£s‘i”cr-1r.°r"l f°"°°a5'* °f ‘5-013-000-000 ll‘ presented Parliament with an e described M . Fleming,'s ggecast of a budgetary surplus of year as a “bookkeeping trick—a bookkeeping entry." The CCF leader. speaking in ob- vious heat. said a reading of Ca- nadian and British history would show tht the new Progressive Conservative g o v e r n ment had‘ done something unprecedented in‘ two ways. It had refused to bring down ayl budget. it had introduced tax changes in a way which pre-l vented the Opposition f r o m amending the proposals. I House was confined to dts- 000000 cussing the first item on the esti- mates of the finance dcpartmcntl Mr. Coldwell did not elaborate; on his statement that the surplus is a bookkeeping trick However, he apparently was re- ferring to $l0(t.000.000 in with- drawals from two reserve funds. Failure of the government to present a budget would be re-‘ garded with the utmost serious-‘ ness by the House and the coun- formation were gathered tip Movies and still pictures werel ers. He declined to specify who being flown by jet plane to Hagen . between the test vehicles in Washington Hagen said he; (‘anaveral for it personal inspec- uii uitic FUNERAL . um, FAILIJRI-2 MI-2CHA.\ll(‘/ll. Hagcn said the failure in\ol\cd was mct-hanical and "not the kind of thing that would cause usl go biic k in the drawing And failure of the- not destroy the rate at which the‘ others will come along, except for damage to the pad itself " While it would take it t-nttple of monllm or more to build a new launching pad. 0 said. ’I don'll think the damage will be that .I¢-‘ < ‘D -1 1 The U S 9 a rt h satellite pro- gram. part of the l'fllllll~nflll0fl In l ternational Geophysical Year cf-i fort. calls for the launching of up to 10 baby moons by the end of ‘"0100 and not used 158 Four of them, or l(‘KS. would be tests likc the 64inch vzplicrcsi unsuccessful rocket. The first launching of a full- Vanguard Rocket‘ Explodes Just As Starts To Move Hagen said he was against tlieiwhcre the 72-foot rot kct MI. and, strtittictils and at ll.t..',l‘ll \.t!(l. H kind of publicity that was given movies and rocket-tclemetred in-t still scheduled for some time next luf one w it s t'.irown _clear C. C-.-F. Leader Coldwell Has 3- Heated Criticism Of Fleming Oocaslonalralntniilibrtlouflierlywllfli Zoshiftingintheavonlng weatlfi. Low-high st Charlottetown to sound“- "°',,,‘5,‘,’."‘ FIVE CENTS l Individual Tax Payers Will Reap Bi ggest Benefit OTT.\W\ (CPI—Finance Min-,own corporation tax. istcr Donald Fleming Friday; night fashioned a $178,000,000 an} nual tax reduction—m0st of it in‘ Qnd 13”“ a delayed-action cut in personal “I and corporation income taxes starting.n<-xt Jan. 1. new which will cost the federal trea- sury an estimated $20,000,000 in year. The biggest benefit announced in the minister's statement — in effect a budget speech although; the government said it wouldn'tl be~goes to individual income tax‘ payers. Mr. Fleming spread an annual $86,000,000 tax abatement thinly to help them all by paring the tax rate on the first 82,000 of tax- able income. He gave up another $60,000,000 a year to benefit some 1,750,000 taxpaying parents by boosting the basic exemption for children and other dependents by $l00. Those personal income tax changes. and another 812,000,000 annual reduction in corporation taxes. will affect only 1958 in- comes. Taxpayers filing returns early next spring on their 1957 in- comes will pay at the old rates. Those were the only major tax ch although the minister said he plans to introduce — for consideration at the next session of Parliament——a complete revi- sion of the Succession Duty Act which will boost the basic exemp- tion on estates left to widows and children. 'I‘() COST $25 MILLION He estimated the tax reduc- tions will cost the treasury $26’.- 000,000 in the current fiscal year. Mr. Fleming forecaa he will and this fiscal year next March - in ared surplus forecast last March 14 by the then Liberal finance minister Walter Harris. Revenues of $5.170.(l)0,000. foru- cast then. would be shrunk by Diefenbaker. lTORlES ONCE CHAMPION I No one had talked more aboutl3210-00°-000 ooo for the current fiscal the supremacy of Parliament and‘ by the new P|‘08l‘€SSIV¢ Conserv- the necessity of restoring the rights of Parliament. finance minister. Mr. Cold- well said, had made no mention of the possibility of any federal contributions to the provinces for hospital insurance. Yet Mr. Dief- enbaker had sai only recently a hospital insurance plan would be in effect sooner than ex- pected. '‘If it is to be soon why not tcll in how much it is going to cost?" he asked. How much of the $80.- would go the provinces during the next few nionlhs? WANTS STAMP OTTAWA I(‘Pl Postmaster- neral William Hamilton said Friday in the (‘omnions he will take undcr ctiiisltlcration gcstiun that his department a stamp depicting the 0 (‘.luli. Tlic .\‘lll.’i.!(‘sll0n ('alll(‘ from G. .\li-William bcrlaiid-Mirimachi >. March. Hagen made a clear distinction (Fri- day's shot was known as TV3) people" were involved. himself might also go down toland the series of six launching: to conduct scientific cxpcrimcnts programmed to begin in March IS “Tl-ZST VI-‘.HlCl.l-Z" “We should treat this a< a lost vehicle and not give it too much publicity." he said Hagen s a ld the Russian Spill- niks did not cause a speedup in tempt. A questioner suggested this might have led to the tech-, nlcal difficulties. I "That df'i'l\‘l0n ‘as to date of- flrmgt was made back in .luIy."| Hagen said The first satellite was launched Oct Hagcn said the first two stages the satellite launcher l-‘ridiiy, were destroyed while the third But he said the third stage would be de‘ ' -s-tn. last to be safe There is ii possibility that ‘he stage of thccarricd in the nose of Friday‘: "ill? 5-4-inch orb that was to beg come the satellite itself might be It cent to any a firm sz5.ooo i used again lfltturnsoiltubc lucoriieliisteaddflrat$fl.w.ef- dint: m usavosaagius. i —"| A technical change in the cor- ll. --Nnrlhiini-l 326000.000 in tax cuts. The Lib expenditures would be boosted an estimated l Mr. Fleming said an exu- in outlays incurred lative administration would be 1 partly offset by $6-1.000.000 in sav- ings and by $100,000,000 in with- . Mr. Fleming's statement He took an immediate slice out “*8 3“ °l C3“3d3'5 4v500»°°0 V of me ,0_peH.em excise ‘ax on ers of personal income tax will auwmob-1;es_ dropping the be carried out by a paring of I levy to 71,‘ per cm“ in 0 move tax rate on the two lowest ran ' I00 drawals from two reserve funds. cit ‘ red from a full-fledged budget lspeech (wide v a r l e t y of other small ic h a ii 5: e s and adjustments. it {made only two. iwill not taxed on living ex- penscs paid by his employer. ‘N0 ONTARIO AID ‘poration income tax will ensure Jtliat Ontario corporations won't ;get an abatement in their fed- eral tax on 1956 income. FISCAL Hl 0'l"l‘AVl'A ((‘l"l —- Highltglils of I-‘inancc Mitiislcr Donald Flem- ing‘s fl\('Rl stalcnicnl to the (‘om- mons Friday night- ‘ Revenues for i957-38 fiscal year -estimated at 85.144.000.000. with tax cuts of 526.0001!!!) from the $5.l70.000.00 forecast by the Lib- eral government. l liixpcndilurcs for 1937-58 fiscal lyear estimated at compared to Liberal estimate of $5.()lll.000.000 in last springs bud- l of ‘ Surplus for i957-58 fiscal year now forecast $ll0.0(l)_ com pared with spring budget forecast of SI52,000.000. No ll1(‘f'¢‘aS(‘l in taxes I Changes made in the corpora- tion tax <lru(‘lllI‘(' to benefit cer- tain small corporations Room, board and transporta- tion allowances to workers on - from - omc construction <ites to be tax-free. Personal income tax exemption for dependents increased Sim, ef- fective Jan I. I950, Basic personal and marital eic emplions unchanged at 81.0!!! and 82.000. respectively. Rate of tax on first 81.000 of taxable income reduced to ll per cent mm 13 per cent; rate on second 81.000 reduced to 14 from 15 per nut; both effective Jan. 1. Ilsa. Corporation income tax of It in that it did not make lt0VCl' 825.000. l IS POLICY SWITCH But there were no changes in the general range of sales taxes duties normally made a u get. No new taxes were imposed. T e reduction aimed at benefit- P8)“ of income. The rate on the first 51.000 of taxable income—the income fig- ure after all exemptions and de- ductions are c0unted——will be re- duced to ll per cent from 13. The rate on the second he pared to 14 per cent from 15 . Seventy per cent of all taxpay- ers bave taxable incomes—after all exemptions-—of less than $2.- 000. The change will mean a 15- per-cent cut for those with tax- able incomes of less than 81.000 and an 11-per-cent reduction for those with taxable incomes in the $1,000-$2.000 bracket. The change works out to a flat $1!)-a-year saving for all with tax- abla incomes over 32,000. EXEMPTIONS WILL HELP A further easing of the personal income tax load will be carried out by the boosting of personal exemptions that a taxpayer can claim for children and other de- pendcnta. Although the basic exemption of 81,000 for a single person and 82.‘ 000 for a married taxpayer is un- changed. the exemption for chil- dren receiving family allowances —up to age l6—will be raised to $250 from 8150. The exemption for other dependent ' and other dependents will go up to $500 from 8400. It is expected these changes will relieve about 100.000 present taxpayers from having to pay any tax at all on 1958 income. Au- o_tlier 1.750.000 would get a mea- urifuf relief. The corporation income tax will be altered by widening the ranga of income on which the basic an percent tax rate applies. At present the rate is 10 par t on the first $20.tl)0 of tax- able incomc and 47 per cent on all profits in excess of that level. This basic evel will be raised $25,000. The change will benefit only those corporations earning more than $20,000. The tax on a corporation earn- ing exactly $25,000 in l958 will be to $5 from 36.350. The same $1.350 reduction will go to all corporations with profits of Mr. Fleming's announcement of l A "°"5"“°“°“ "°|‘k9l‘ 1iVin8! the cut in the auto excise tax in- away from a home where he sup-l lports a wife or other dependent] l volved a change from past policy. He said the reduction in the tax. which is applied at the man- ufacturer's level. will apply to all new cars in dealers‘ hands on which they have already paid the x The planned revision of succes sion duties will involve replacing Art} the present Succession Duty Act abatement took effect‘ for 19.57% with a brand~ncw measure called ~- V ‘with .0Antario_s imposition of its‘ the Estate Taxation Act. GHLIGHTS l Corporation income tax rate ;47 per cent on all profits in ex- ; cess of $25,000 unchanged. . Special excise tax on autumn j biles reduced to 7‘: per cent from ‘ l0 per cent. effective Dec. 7. i957 Tax reductions in fiscal ycat ending March Ill, i058, aittmint to in a full year to SITR 000.000. Expected surplus in l!l.’i7~38 fis- cal year. aflcr tax (‘llallEf‘.<. drops .000.000 from Sl06.000.000. 1' Ontario corporations not in get abatement of federal tax on 1956 ,profits on which lhcy are not l paying provincial r‘orp(irallt)n lax Total personal lfl('(lnll‘ la\ rc ductions amount to SI46 000000 in ; full year. Sl7.0u0 000 in l'tr<t three months of I058 tip to tho end of t the current fiscal year. March 3| Repeal of Succession Ditty Act to be started at this session of Parliament. completed latcr New estate taxation act will eat- lempt all estates up to $50.00); widows" estates to get 860.(¥l'l ex- l emplion plus $10,000 for each child under 2l I Corporation income tax reduc- 'on to con‘. ‘:~eascr,\- Sl2.000.(I)I lu ftill year; $1.0tIl.000 in current i fiscal year. Reduced excise tax on cars to coat treasury Sflllllltlll in full year; 8.000.001 in current fiscal year. Auto dealers and distributors to Rt refund on excise tax ans G now can b