and CENTRAL OREGON PBESS - Th Dand BulUtin (Weekly) 1908-1M1 Thii Bend Bulletin (Dellr) Eat. 1911 PuMlcfced Every Aftwwon Accept Bundiy and CerUIn Holldw by The Bend Bulletin Tae.lSf Wu Street - Bend, Orcvon Entered u Second Clata Matter, January , 1917, at the Poetoffict Bend, Oregon Under Act at March . la! ROBERT W. 8AWYEB EdUex-Uaneuer MBNKY N. FOWLER Awoclate Editor eVa Independent Mewipaucr Standing tor the Square Deal, Clean Buiinew, Clean PollUce . and tha Beet Intereeu of Bend and Central Oregon MKMiJLR AVJiT BUBEAU Or CIBCULATIONS By Mall - By Carrier - One Year ..7". ...J, 18.60 . One Year U.OO Biz Month! 4.5t Six Months , 16 00 Threa Month $2.60 One Month 91.00 All Bunecriptione are DUB and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Pleaaa notify ua of any change of auurew or failure to receive tne paper regularly. PAGE 4 FKIDAV, FEBRUARY 6, 1B5S TAX BILLS IN CONGRESS Most ofthe many tax bills introduced for consideration at this session of congress are written about the single basic idea of tax reduction. To attain the objective they would travel almost as many roads as there are measures. They seek both changes in rates and in exemptions and deductions. One would advance the date of already scheduled tax cuts by an entire vear. One would reoeal the war excise rates. One would exempt pension and annuity payments up to $ 1,440 a year and another would allow deduction from the tax base of annuity and life insurance premiums up to 15 per cent of adjusted gross income. One would make farmers' soil and water conservation expenditures deductible retroactively through the tax years back to 1944 and another would shorten the holding period for draft, dairy and breeding livestock which is required to qualify profit on sale for long-term capital gain classification. One would change the deadline , for filing personal returns and declarations from March 15 . to April 15. There are others but these are sufficient to illustrate the variety of approach in seeking to satisfy the nation-wide demand for lower levies on income. How many of them will finally make their appearance as new law is, of course, con jectural. It is especially so in view of the belief held by top legislators and administrators that budget balancing must come first, that expenditure reduction must be the basis for tax relief. ? The amount of expense paring possible in the first, and even in the second year of this administration may not be too great; it has been closely limited by the commit ments made by the outgoing administration. Some will be possible, however, and there will be some tax reform as a result. ., I As interesting as this possibility is the idea exemplified by another tax bill which, differing from the others, does not propose reduction. Its purpose is to reimburse employers for their expense in acting as the government's tax collector. Since the Ruml plan of pay-as-you-go personal income taxation was put into effect, employers have had the job and the expense of doing it. They have been required to com pute the tax on each employe's pay, withhold the amount from his check and provide him with a statement of the 4- rrun.. u i ; i x i i 4.1 debits and, at. stated intervals, turn over the "take" to the government's fiscal representative. They must make quarterly and annual reports to the government. At the end of the Vear they must provide the employe with a memo of the total of wages or salary earned and the amount withheld. This is de manded as a part of the individual's annual tax return to the director of internal revenue. For all this the employer re ceives nothing. Now and then there have been protests and even refusals. The best known of these was carried through the courts by Vivien Kellems, eastern manufacturer, after her bank ac count had been seized to obtain the withholclincrs with whieh Bhe was charged. Miss Kellems won her suit against the col lector but lost in an action airainst the government. In noithor did the question of constitutionality, which she sought to raise, receive recognition by the court. That has never been decided. , If the measure now in congress i(H.R. 321) is enacted, it . would be one way of settling the question which otherwise, sooner or later, is almost bound to be raised again. What is more important, simple justice would be done and our federal government would no longer be in the position of chiseling valuable services under the mandate of a law. They Send a Boy to Do a Man's Work Bend's Yesterdays (From The Bulletin Files) THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1018) Dement's grocery has just put in a timelv display In which are exhibited a number of substitutes for fJour recommended by tne war food administration. Out of 155 men from Bend who took physical examinations last week, 93 were found eligible for class I. Blanks for the registration of Germans have been received at the local postoffice. Bend has been suggested as the site of an aviation school, to train fliers for service In Europe. A sunny place where a school can be established is being sought In the northwest. The new teacher for the West End School at. Mlllican, Maude Hubbard, arrived here yesterday and left for Mlllican. Survey Studies Science Students ST. LOUIS, Mo. (lit Most super ior science students come from middle-class families and small communities, according to the con clusion of E. G. Williamson, pro fessor of psychology at the Univer sity of Minnesota, based on a sur vey to identify the characteristics of scientists. In a report at a conference on scientific manpower here, William son said his findings show research workers are more individualistic than other persons, although the need of teams to carry out projects of modern experimentation have made the "lone wolf" researcher a thing of the past. Crook Chamber Favors Pelton Bill PRINEVILLE, Feb. 6 Citing that it represents sentiment of a cross section of Crook county and PrinevUle's labor, industry, agri culture and business, the chamber of commerce here has forwarded to Mark O. Hatfield, chairman of the House State and Federal Af fairs committee of the 47th Ore gon general assembly, Its endorse ment of House Bill No. 160, along with an amendment which elimi nates application of eminent do main to rights lor tne Deneiiciai use of water for municipal, do mestic, livestock or Irrigation. The endorsement of the mea sure, which Would change various features of the Hydro-electric Commission of Oregon and allow the right of review in the courts to its decisions, the latter the most drastic departure from for mer legislative enactments per taining to the commission, was accompanied bv a statement from President Stuart MacDonald of the chamber in an "expression of hope that enactment of the mea sure will oave the way for a hy dro-electric development of Pelton and Round Butte dams on the Deschutes river in Jefferson county in accord with plans of construction by the Portland Gen eral Electric Co." , "Such development," Ma'cDon- aid's comment continued, "will provide central Oregon cities and counties with an aaaea ana un interruptible volume of hydro electric energy. Such a change in the power situation in central Oregon Is much to be desired, in that It will prevent interruptions such as have occurred the past year, which have proved costly to Industry, business and home owners and created emergencies of inconvenience and hazard." Tne statement of the Prineville Crook County chamber, however, asks for a preservation of the rights of irrigationists when the Jefferson county Deschutes river dam3 are built. The final para graph of the statement of en dorsement of House Bill No. 160 was: "The Prinevllle-Crook County Chamber of Commerce has been consistent in its support of pro- nosed development of hydro- JSTSiX electric energy on the DenuiH """"KJg" now" vested or to be river in Jefferson county since with rtgms now gh plans for it were initiated In 1948. PP"tredn bly recognition of Through the tefntshfe"r frmP priorities. We now most support, however there has ever firm pri warnmg run tne uueau u X the rw' ts Sfisn in CHARM 895 Thtrt hertl Th shoe! with the colly look, littla pricl ...th btautifut Spring ConnlM you've been waiting fori Delicate nylon m$h, gleaming patent, toft imooth leather, in the newett itylei and lovelleit colon. Choose yourt today! 4 "Germans Plan Revolving Cafe" says an Oregonian news story caption. That's what we are going to have in Oregon when the liquor-by-the-drink bill is passed. Washington Column By PETER EDSON (NEA Waehlnirton Correeiwndent) WASHINGTON (NEA) One of the- most unusual facts about new Republican National Commit tee Chairman VVes Roberts Is that he has met President Dwiglit Eisen hower only five times, face to face, though bolh are .from Kansas. The first time was at Abilene, when Eisenhower came back from Europe. Next was at Denver, where Ike made his headquarters. Then at the Chicago convention, and once again briefly! at Washington, when the presidential candidate came through during the campaign. In December Mr. Roberts went to New York for a mceling wilh the President-elect. It was at this meet ing mat Eisenhower gave his blcss ing 10 me election ol itonerls as national chairman. There is one other most unusual fact about Mr. Roberts. In an ad ministration that Is now character ized as eight millionaires and a plumber, Wes Roberts is one or the least wealthy men, and chairmen of political parties are traditionally big-money men. lie will gel handsome $32,500 annual salary plus expenses as GOP nalional chairman. But this will be the most money he ever made. And his modest assets are said to mark and to prove another of his greatest altribules. He is called that rarity among rarities a completely honest politician. e But he is a politician. It's in his blood, lie was born Dec. 14, 1903. at Oskaioosa, Kans. the stale from which political hell has always come, lie was the youngest son of a country newspaper editor. He took, journalism when he went to Kansas Slate. A dollar was hard to come by in those days, and he made a few on the side wriling for his dad's string of Ihree weekly papers. After he left collceo. he became editor of one of them for a 10-year period. Then he got Into polilics. His fa ther had never been a Kansas reg ular, and Wes became identified as one of the young Turks. He backed Carl Friend against Gov. Al Schoep pcl, now U. S. senator from Kansas, and lost. In IH.Ifi he was campaign manager for Will G. West in Hie gubernatorial race, and again he lost. for the next two jears Wes The Mississippi river dumps 2,' 000,000 tons of soil into the Gulf ot Mexico every 24 hours. Roberts served as executive sec retary of the Kansas Republican Committee. In that time he built up the organization that hasn't suf fered a defeat since. He went on to become assistant stale chairman and secretary to Gov. Payne Ratner for two terms. In 1943. Wes Roberts was com missioned a captain in Ihc Marines' Intelligence. He rose to become a major in a Fourth Marine Air Wing bomber squadron which saw action in the Pacific. Discharged in 1910. hp came back to Kansas and polilics. He did publicity for the slate highway commission, and from 1947 to 1950 was stale chairman. He managed Sen. 1' rank Carlson s successful campaign that year. The great mystery ot the Wes Roberts career if it is a mystery Is how a politician with only Kan sas acquaintance could zoom to nat ional prominence in a year. The answer to his success is thai he applies grass-roots, precinct-level, Kansas polilics to every cam paign. The delegates to the Chicago convention were mere voters to him. He learned who they all were, who they were for and where Uiey could be reached. Wes Roberts was married in 1929 to Ruth Patrick, a high school classmate in Oskaioosa. They have one son. Patrick, a junior in high school at llollon, Kans., where the family has lived since Hie war. The family will eventually make a home in Washington and Ihen. may tie, it will be possible to gel Wes Roberts away from that telephone and out of that bolel room. Through Every Shadow This Light Shines Brightly No darkness so deep as to quench the light of the spirit . . . it shines on forever. That every funeral service shall elo quently express the beauty of the life everlasting is our steadfast aim. PHONE 118 for Ambulance Service Niswonger and Winslow Morticians KKDMOM) HOSPITAL Redmond. Eel). B Mr. and Mrs R. V. Povey. Redmond, are par ents of a son born Thursday morn ing al Cciilr il Oregon District hos pital. New patients at Ihe hospital Thursday included three out-pa- tienls treated and dismissed, and three children entered for tonsillec tomies and dismissed Ihe same day. A half-million dollars worth of damage to agricultural crops re sulted from a recent seven-day siege of smog in southern California. ffiS Gift Mfirt Srore ' "WEDDING PRESENTS" When the occa sion nrtses and a "wedding present" must be Kurchased. it always seems to e a problem. If you need to buy such a gift. now. why not give something really practi cal? Wo can save you money on these practical gifts: Two only Julce-O-Matic fruit Juicers, reg ular S5.9S now S.ttS. Three only good quality 2-picce Carv ing" Sets, regular 4.23 now 2.03. Two only Flint 3-plecc carving sets, regular $10.93 now 11.90! They are in our window drop by and see them. BRUCtTS Gift & Art Store "If you need a lifl, give a gift" Phone 13 123 Oregnn K' ' how to take a poke at the high cost of living "What with the abominable High Cost of Living these days, my dears, a lot of people are either going broke or are flat-busted. I am neither. "Would you like to know why I'm so heavily stacked, I mean to say with all these sparklers, so dear to a girl's heart . . . why I'm in the black instead of the red . . . why I just reek with prosperity. All right, come closer . . . I'll tell you. "I'm a conservative young matron and one of my many admirable money-saving habits is patronizing the Brandis stores, where you save as you shop because the prices are always rock-bottom, day in and-day out. I'm thrifty at Thrift-Wise, I economize at Economy, and I'm saving my green stamps I get at both stores, too. "In closing, let me say YOU JUST CAN'T BEAT THE BRANDIS STORES when it comes to giving your budget a break. Really, you can't." The Friendly Brandis Stores THRIFT-WISE DRUGS 1020 w.n Phone 371 ECONOMY DRUGS, Inc. 801 Wall . Phone 323 We Give Green Stamps