I f "You're Kidding!" EDITORIAL PAGE La Grande Observer PUBLISHED BT TUB LA ORANtlE PUBI.IHHINU C'OMPANT Robert W. Chandler. Prealdant J. U. MvOlnllaod, Jr., Vies president tuetday, June, 9 1959 "A Modern Newspaper With The Pioneer Spirit" RILEY D. ALLEN ..'.... Publisher GKOIMJB S. CIIAIJ.IS Adv. Director TOM HUMES .T.. . Circulation Mgr. I One Approach, But Is It Right? Representative Herbert Zelenko of New York and Senator Richard JVeubergor of Oregon again this year are sponsors of identical legislation to give a tux break to older federal income tax payers. . On the face the proposal, is attractive, particularly to those over 4f. Hot we doubt it is the right answer to what has become a problem. 1 . The proposed bill will allow increasing tax deductions after the age of 45. Start ing in that year a taxpayer would be able to take a ''depletion allowance" of one per cent per year. A taxpayer of 55 would get a ten per cent allowance, for example, and on up. . It is true that human beings do not re tain their full mental and physical vigor until the ends of their lives. In this re gard the Zelenko-Neuberger proposal has ds only merit. In effect, it would give the individual taxpayer some of the special treatment given the much larger corpor ate taxpayers. Rut the removal of the special treatment is the basic problem, and that ii where the attack ought to come. It makes more sense to remove the inequities from our present lax laws than to add new ones. Two wrongs still do not make a right. -, ,. The special treatment for corporations and large taxpayers and those engaged in various businesses was applied by Con gress to soften the impact of present high tax rates. But there's no real reason for oil com panies, for example, to be allowed a 27 per cent depletion allowance in the first place. And it most certainly should not be continued after the facilities have long been paid out. ' Nor. is there any reason why capital gains provisions should be applied in the normal .course of commercial activity, as they are in some case. Doing away with the special treatment for everyone, rather than adding more special --treatment for new classes of tax payers, is the better answer. Only To The 'Wise Is It Sufficient . .There's an old proverb to the effect that "a word to the wise is sufficient." If that's (rue, Oregon's population con tains far fewer than normal wise people. This thought was occasioned by a tele phone call from a doctor friend. He read1 a paragraph from the back page of the state's weekly repprt on communicable di seases. It went: . One new case of paralytic poliomyelitis was reported this week, bringing lo seven the number so far this year. This is more than twice the number reported for the corresponding period last year. Of further significance is the fact that six of the nine polio cases of all types this year have been reported since the seasonal low about April 1, and Jour of these six cases have been paralytic. Hoth Type I and Type III polio viruses have been isolated by Die state laboratory rece ntly. Such information suggests that we shoold intensify our efforts at polio immu nization as rapidly as possible' if we are to avoid .'outbreaks of paralytic polio this year. The 'danger period for polio runs to ae 40. Still, only fewer than one-third of the persons in this age bracket have had the fullf ourse of three shots required to produce maximum immunity from polio. Only.'a sudden upsurge of vaccinations will prdve the old adage that a word to the wise is sufficient. Is This Courage Misplaced? rm . i' r ! . a 1 .. 1 1 1 1 1 . .. ine iNauonat coxing Association nas taken his championship away from Sugar Ray Rpbinson, on the ground that he didn't defend it often enough. But, the NBA hasn't bothered Floyd Pat terson, the heavyweight, champ, who doesn't fight as often as Robinson. Nor has the NBA done anything about Jpltiint tho o.'inifclorc nut rtf hnYinf?. Fran- kie Carbo still seems io be a big shot in NBA territory. Some boxing writers have said it took courage to take the title away from Rob inson. We would have preferred to see the courage used on someone bigger, if the NBA wanted to make a test. WorkersShould Check Earnings Record Often Do you know that you have an individual social security account with your name and social secur ity number on it? This account shows all wages reported for you by your employers during your lifetime and all self-employment net earnings you have reported when you filed your income tax return. Tills. record is kept by the Ac counting division of the Social Security Administration in Balti more. Your record accurately shows what your employers have reported, or what . you have re ported as a self-employed person. But, if your employer has made an error on his tax returns, or you have made an error in filing jour income tax return, this error may affect future benefits to you or your family. You should take steps to learn about it. You can get a special post card for this purpose at your local so cial security office to send to Bal timore for a statement of your earnings After you receive the statement, check it against your own records. If they do not aijree, contact your local security office and they will take action, to cor rect it. Hemember, there" is a lime limitaton firr correcting your rec ord,' and for this reason you should check your account at least once every three years Auldin Preseott Buys Purebred Shorthorn Auldin Present t of La Grande has purchased a purebred Milking Shorthorn from Lester hnciton, The animal is Shelton's Flower l2li(i352, a heifer calf sired by Sterns' Thief 12th P209120, and out of Shelton's Constance P225- i.on lleenrH of the transfer of own ership has been made by the Am erican Milking Shorthorn Sociey at Springfield, Mo. FRENCH KILL 471 ALGIICHS. Algeria (UPD - Krench forces killed or wounded 471 Algerian rebels and took 211 others prisoner last week, the French army reported Monday night. French losses were put at M killed. DREW PEARSON Atlantic Congress Talks Can Bring Understanding luiuu.n. I nave attended a great many international confer ences as a newsman, but this At lantic congress is the first I have attended as an official delgate. I hope it won't wreck the confer ence. . If so, the only consolation will be that other international confer ences have ended in pieces of pa per called treaties which were torn up shortly after they were signed. This one won't end in a treaty because the some 600 dele gates from 14 NATO countries can't sign a treaty. But they can ?mve at a better understanding which is something that can't be torn up overnight. One of the first big conf"ren- ees I attended resulted in the Kel logg pact to outlaw war. The sun shone very brightly into the Salle Horloge that August day in 1928 es the statesmen of the world gathered In Paris to put their signatures on the solemn pact pledging their governments to outlaw war. It was a day of hope, but only three years after that Japanese troops fanned out over Manchuria in violation of the pact, six years before Mussolini's Black Shirts marched across Ethiopia and 10 years before Hitler invad ed Poland. Stimson Power Out At a later conference, in Lon don in 1930, I watched Henry L. Stimson, secretary of state under Herbert Hoover, struggle valiant ly all winter to persuade the world's naval powers to a limit of 10,000-ton cruisers. He failed. His failure was because his chief in the White House cut the ground from under his proposal QUOTES FROM THE NEWS EDWARDS AFB, Calif. Test pilot Scott Crossfield, on landing the experimental rocket ship X-15 after a powerless glide from 38 000 feet: 'You still fly an aircraft by the seat of your pants. WASHINGTON President Ei senhower on his proposals for new economic legislation: "This is a fight to make sure that a dollar earned today will to morrow buy for the housewife an equal amount of groceries. PHOENIX, Ariz. Nato Manuel Gloria Jr., driver of the truck in which 16 migrant farm workers were killed and 32 injured: ' "I fell asleep at the wheel. When I woke up, the truck was on fire and the guys in the back were screaming." LONDON Evaneglist Billy Gra ham, on the dangers of the world's preoccupation with sex: "I think the new generation coming along is far better ac quainted with Jayne Mansfield's statistics than it is with the Sec ond Commandment which orders that 'thou shalt not make unto thee any image.' " Truck Accident Kills Laborers PHOENIX (UPD At least 11 cotton farm laborers were killed at S a.m. yesterday when their truck crashed into a tree in South Phoenix and caught on fire. Thirty two others were hospital ized at Memorial Hospital here. The driver, Nato Manuel dor ian Jr.. Mesa, Ariz., told Phoenix radio station newsman Bob Scott of KRIZ he fell asleep at the wheel. Manuel said the truck was on fire when he awoke. He suf fered multiple injuries, serious but not critical. Glorian was one of the few imburncd. .. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Burris, residents of the area, were first at the scene. Burris, a rural fire man, unsuccessfully battled the blaze with a garden hose. He said two explosions occurred while he was there. He and his wife, a hospital technician, rendered first aid. The truck belonged to Garin Co. of Mesa. The men were Mexican contract laborers on their way to the garlic harvest in Tolleson, near here. of a consultative pact agreeing only to consult other nations in case war threatened. There was no pledge to help, merely to con suit. Yet leaders of the Republi can narty and Hoover wouldn't agree. Yesterday I walked by St. James's palace where Secretary Stimson had negotiated so patien tly for three long months to bring about that naval agreement. Outwardly, nothing has ccangea Her majesty's guards, in Scarlet jackets and bearskin headgear, still pace up and down as in the chorus from ' The Chocolate sol dier." . Naval Vessels Outdated But actually, everything has changed. The naval vessels that -Stimson tried to limit are now -ut-cf-date, automatically limited by modern missiles. The consul iative pact Hoover balked at has been replaced by the hard-and-fast NATO alliance pledging not slow, deliberate . consultation, but in stantaneous mutual aid with U. S. armies stationed in Europe on the alert and ready to enforce that aid. It has been only 29 years since Hoover refused to consult our Allies in case of war but, in that short period of little more than one generation, American isola tion has become well out-of-date It's only 10 years since President Truman pledged instantaneous aid through NATO, but already it is partly out-of-date. NATO Weakened NATO has weakened, which is one reason why 600 peoples' dele gates from NATO countries are here to strengthen it. The reason why the alliance has weakened is not so mucn because ot r ranees withdrawal of troops from NATO to Algeria nor British economy in withdrawing her troops from Ger many, but because of a Russian Sputnik that went beeping across the heavens Oct. 4, 1957. That began the missile age. It began the realization in the hearts of West Europeans that the next war would not be fought by land armies at the Marne, the Rhine or along the hedgerows of Normandy, but high in the air across the Atlantic. And the probable targets would not be London, Rome and Paris, but Mos cow and Washington, Chicago and Petrograd, Kiev and Los Angeles Seattle and Odessa. Europe will be looking up watching the heav ens as these herculean long-range missiles zoom across oceans at tv- Herculean enemies. - Strength In Peoples' Hope That is the basic reason why NATO has weakened. That's also why Khrushchev has been talking tough over Berlin and why Gro- myko has been so hard to budge at Geneva. However, Russia has weaknesses too. The weakest point in the Soviet armor ana - simultaneously oui rreatest strength is the ardent de sire of the Russian people tc avoid war. This is something ev ery American observer, official or unofficial, reports as a fact. It nrovided the most important foundation of all on which to build for Deace. Already we have built on it with the exchange oi cui tural and scholastic sports groups between the USA and the USSR. One goal of this conference will be to build further and at the same time to strengthen and unify the European community. This is not an easy task. When you solidify and strengthen West Eurooe vou automatically scare Moscow, especially wnen it s aone bv governments. However mis Atlantic congress is a comerence f neonle of all walks of life members of congress and parlia ment, scientists, teacners, dusi nessmen, farm leaders, labor leaders. They aren't negotiating any treaties which can be torn up to morrow, but they are strengthen- ng this time the basic founda tion for better unaersiananiB hich can't easily be torn up. Prince Philip May Be First To Fly Saucer COWES, England (UPD The chances looked good today for Prince Philip to be the first mem ber of the royal family to fly a flying saucer. The Queen's husband was visit ing the Isle of Wight, where the Saunders-Roe Hovercraft first flew over the weekend, and offi cials of the company expected ihm to visitt heir testing area to day. It would be a simple matter for the Prince, an expert pilot, to learn the controls of the saucer and to bring it up to its maximum altitude of about one yard. The craft flies on the ducted fan prin ciple, without wings or convention al profilers. Buckingham Palace declined to comment on the Prince's plans. J Chuckles In The News United Press International MEMPHIS, Tenn. UPI A finance company called off a con test to guess the amount of mort ey in a horn of plenty display when a thief walked off with the window-displayed coins. The right answer, the company sam, was about $20. LUTON, England (UPD It rained blue rain here Monday. The unnatural tint was attributed to dust in the air from the dem olition of an old dye works. CHICAGO (UPD City Archi tect Paul Gerhardt, who is also chief of maintenance for the mu nicipal central office building, solved one of Chicago's traffic problems Monday. He eased the congestion in the fifth-floor men's lounge by suspending 10 city jani tors he found lounging overtime. CHICAGO (UPD The Illinois State Employment Service is hunting jobs for 315 office work ers. They are claims examiners and clerks for the Unemployment Compensation Division, scheduled for release because of a drop in claims. SHARING AMERICA'S ABUNDANCE Foreign Aid Many Church Selfish;? Too Leaders Think By LOUIS CASSELS UPI Staff Writer At a time when critics are de nouncing foreign aid as a "give away," it is a bit startling to hear somebody say that the real trouble with the U. S. aid program is that it's too selfish. Yet that is precisely what some American church leaders are say ing. They are appealing to Congress to overhaul the aid program thor oughlynot to save money, but to make it a more effective instru ment for sharing America's abun dance with the two-thirds of hu manity that lives in chronic misery. These church leaders who in clude spokesmen for major Pro testant and Catholic organizations believe the government has made an historic mistake in "sell ing" foreign aid to the American public on the basis of national self-interest. They would like to see less em phasis on buying or building allies against Communism, and more emphasis on helping people sim ply because they are people. Moral Obligation That is what Dr. Donald C. Stone tried to tell the House For eign Affairs Committee when he appeared before it recently as spokesman for the National Coun cil of Churches. Dr. Stone is dean of the University of Pittsburgh's graduate school of public and in ternational affairs, and a member of the National Council's depart ment of international affairs. He said the U. S. aid program, as presently constituted, is con spicuously lacking in "moral and religious" motivations. A nation can hardly claim to be acting out of unselfish generosity, he added, when it "furthers the economic development of other countries primarily in the interest of its own security and as a means of obstructing the outreach of an enemy." Dr. Stone argued that America would be "infinitely more success ful" in creating conditions for peace if it were less obsessed with getting a practical, political "return" on its foreign aid invest ment. A similar stand was taken by the Catholic Association for Inter national Peace in a recent policy statement entitled ."A Christian Position on U. S. Foreign Aid.'.' foreign economic- assistance should be . . . motivated by our sense . of moral obligation," the Catholic statement said, adding that moral motives are "unfortu nately obscured by , the present structure of the aid program. "As a country blessed with an U.A.R..LEBANON PACT CAIRO (UPI) The United Arab Republic and Lebanon signed an economic agreement Sunday. U.A.R. Finance Minister Abdel Moneim Kaysouni said it would "promote our aim of establishing Arab economic unity and an Arab common market." The agreement slashed customs duties and re duced by half the fees on the movement of persons between the two countries. abundance of resources, we must recognize economic aid as simply our particular contribution toward the enhancement of the commoiM good or general - welfare of the community pf nations. 'Economic1 ; assistance should therefore be channeled to under developed countries, whether al lied with us or not. for the pri mary purpose of promoting their social and economic develop ment." Military Aid Backed U These church organizations are not opposed to military aid piab grams designed to strengthen al lies against Communist imperial ism. The Catholic statement, for example, says, explicitly that "so- long as there exists a major threat to the peace of the world, by military aggression and armed subversion, the United States must continue to furnish military assist ance to its allies..." jf What Jhe church leaders do seek is a clear distinction between mtHH tary aid, extended for the sake or our own security, and economic aid, extended as a recognition uf moral obligation toward those liv ing in chronic want. 1 ;; They believe that the distinction is deliberately played down in the present program, because of Ad ministration fears that Cong -ess or the . taxpayers would rebel against any aid spending that was essentially unselfish m purpose. The churchmen may be over optimistic about the American people. But they are convinced that most Americans really, want to be generous toward less fortu iate people, and that they .would be shocked if they realized, not how much but how relatively little they 7 are presently spending on economic aid. The total comes to- about 1.5 billion dollars a year, or four tenths of one per cent of the U.S. gross national product. PITTSBURGH sun PAINT LASTS LONGER Miller Cabinet Shop v. to 2 & Vied.. U a.w. v, o 7 TAKE IT FROM KEDSO, here's something you shouldn't miss.-Xhe big new Keds Clown contest at our store. U. S. Keds for prizes. Come in today, bring your pals, too! Find oflt how easy it is to win. Theri's'nothing to buy, just lots of fun. You'll find all j (ha simple details at Ernie's Shoe Store 1304 Adams WO 3-3079 SPRING INTO . , SUMMER SAVINGS WITH THE LOWEST PRICED V-8 If A lTblfT You save when you buy the lowest priced V-8 on the market and then you keep right on saving! For example-economy. 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