Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 06, 1954, Page 11, Image 11

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    Batnrfay, TeBruary B, 1951
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Your 1953 Income Tax
Taxpayers visiting the local
Internal RAevnue Service office
at 201 Post Office Bldg., for help
with their federal income tax re
turns should bring all necessary
data and records with them, Mr.
R. C. Granquist, District Direc
tor of Internal Rcvnue, said to
day. Mr. Granquist explained that
Internal Revnuc agents, when
asked to help prepare a return,
must have all data and records
pertaining to the taxpayer's 1953
income, exemptions, and deducti
ble expenses.
"It is especially important that
the taxpayers also bring all tax
withholding statements they re
ceive from employers," the offi
cial said.
"Our agents will render as
much service to each taxpayer as
time and personnel limitations
permit," he assured the public.
"But taxpayers can do their part
by filling out as much of the tax
return as they can and bringing
with them full and accurate data
and all withholding statements."
Mr. Granquist stated that the
aim of the taxpayer assistance
program is "to help the taxpay
ers to help themselves." He add
ed: "Of course, we cannot give a
blanket invitation to all taxpay
ers to have their returns pre
pared by our personnel."
He advised taxpayers who seek
some assistance at the Internal
Revenue office to bring mathe
matically correct data. If some
expenses are part business and
part personal in nature, the tax
payer may deduct the business
portion on Schedule C of Form
1040, but he may not deduct the
personal portion of those ex
penses in Schedule C. Some per
sonal expenses are, however, dc
dcductihle on page 3 of the re
turn, Mr. Granquist said. '
Taxpayers whose income con
sists entirely of wages often do
not have any allowable business
deductions, he said, in which
case they arc limited to deducti
ble personal expenses only.
The tax official listed the prin
cipal kinds of personal expenses
which may be deducted, as fol
lows: Contributions to recognized re
liRious and charitable organiza
tions. Medical expenses of the tax
paver and his dependents, which
arc deductible in full if the tax
payer is 65 or over, and other
wise arc deductible to the ex
tent that they cxecccd 5 of his
adjusted gross income, subject
In all cases to maximum limita
tions. State and local taxes and auto
mobile license fees, but not fed
eral taxes.
Interest paid on personal in
debtedness. Nonbusiness losses Hue to
casualties such as accidents, fire,
storm, and shipwreck, or due to
theft.
Alimonv payments made
periodically and reported as tax
ahlc income by the person re
ceiving them.
The tax official pointed out
that instead of itemizing their
personal deductions, taxpayers
mav accept a standard deduction
which is usually equal to 10 ol
one's income. Mr Granquist said
that about 45 million of the 58
million taxpayers who filed last
year found it to their advantage
to accept the standard deduction.
"It not only reduces the tax
liability of many taxpayers, he
said, "but it makes filing a tax
return much simpler.
VOIR
NORGE
DEALER IS
CHERRY OTY ELECTRIC
339 CHKMEKETA
FIVE GENERATIONS
c4 - vV5
This five-generation picture was made . at a recent get-together
at the home of Mrs. May Carson, Route 2, Dallas. Seated,
Mrs. Cora Whitlaw, 88, Falls City, great-great-grandmother; and '
from left, Mrs. May Carson, great-grandmother, who is matron
at State Office Building; Clarence Young, Tillamook, grand
father, holding little Debra Montgomery, one year old; Mrs.
Barbara Montgomery, of Foster Ore., mother of Debra.
ird Concert of
Series Tuesday Night
Featuring Rosl Schwaigcr, col-
orature soprano of the Munich
and Vienna State opera compan
ies, and Elfriedc Bachncr, violin
ist, the Vienna String Symphony
of 15 instrumentalists will be
presented in concert at the Salem
high school auditorium at 8:15
next Tuesday night, Feb. 9.
The concert is the third of the
four Distinguished Artists series
sponored by Associated Students
of Willametet university. Kurt
Rapt is the director for the Vien
na group.
Miss Sehwaiger will be heard
in two groups of songs one by
Mozart and the other by Franz
Schubert.
The orchestra will open with
the suite from "King Arthur" by
Henry Pureell. During the bal
ance of the concert they will
play selections by Tschaikowsky,
Beethoven and Mozart.
Bachner will play Rondo in A
Major for violin and strings by
Schubert.
Silverton Gets $1972
For March of Dimes
SILVERTON Latest count of
returns from the Polio March of
Dimes released by the general
chairman, Leonard Kephart, to
tals $1,972.88.
Group donors listed show Jun
ior High, $28.55; Eugene Field
grades, $110.10; high school,
$62.41; Dime Hop, $35.32: "Test
Tubes," $236.26; Junior Chamber
and Rainbow, $274.95; Rotary,
$425.81; Moose $116.25; Mothers
March, $336.00: Mac's Pl?ce
$53.00; the remainder, individual
gifts.
There are still one school, in
dividual promises and auctions,
to add to the present sum.
PARTY BOOSTER
tV B .MMsk J
Ralph Harvey, Republican
congressman from Indiana,
who will be Lincoln Day
speaker here.
SURGICAL SUPPORTS
Of all kinds. Trusses, Abdomi
nal Supports, Elastic Hosiery.
Expert fitters private fitting
rooms. '
"ASK VOI R DOCTOR"
Capital Drug Store
405 State Street
Corner of Liberty
Sill Green Stamps
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South Salem
SOUTH SALEM Activities
planned in the Liberty Salem
Heights area this week arc meet
ings of the Liberty Mothers and
Dads Club, Salem Heights Moth
ers Club, and the Little Garden
Club of Salem Heights.
The Salem Heights Mothers
Club meeting is scheduled for
Tuesday, Feb. 9, at 1:00 o'clock
at the Salem Heights school.
The group will make plans for
the clubs annual chicken dinner
which is slated for March 5, at
the school. Mrs. John Ramage
will be the chairman and Mrs. L.
A. Clinker the co-chairman.
Mrs. Elma Baker's second
grade will have charge of the
program and Mrs. Thomas La-
Duke Jr., room mother for Mrs.
Arvilla Boyer's fourth grade, will
be the hostess chairman and
will be assisted by the mothers
from that room.
The Liberty Mothers and Dads
will meet on Wednesday, Feb. 10,
at 1 o'clock at the Liberty school.
The group will discuss helping
purchase some equipment for the
kitchen. They also will discuss the
recommendations made by the
Parents Council regarding safety
for children.
Captain Walter Lansing, of the
State Police, C. E. Mundingscr
and Judge Rex Hartley suggested
that all parents could school
their children in safety, and have
their children finger printed, car
ry identification at all times and
treat their rain clothes with
scptch light.
Mrs. John Turner, Mrs. Rex
Shelton and Mrs. Lewis Clark at
tended the parents' council from
the Liberty school.
The Little Garden club of Sa
lem Heights will meet at the
home of Mrs. Kenneth Zwickor ;
on W. Madronna Ave. on Thurs- ;
day for a 1:00 o'clock dessert j
luncheon. Mrs. Virgil Sexton will !
be the co-hostess. j
Mrs. Joe VanClcave will be In !
charge of the program aid she
will talk on fuchsias. i
Christian Convention
Held at Lebanon
LEBANON First Christian
Church of Lebanon last Sunday
was host to the Christian church
nt the central Willamette val
ley area for the quarterly dis
trict convention. Rev. B. Ross I
Evans of Sweet Home, gave the
afternoon address.
Sessions were held after a cov
ered dish luncheon which at
tracted 185 persons. Otto Lance
of Albany, president of the or
ganization, presided at the meet
ing. The group accepted the invi
tation of Crabtree to held the
next meeting there on April 25.
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BUY
STATE
'FARM?
CONTINUOUS POLICY
Tou rattia the staa, original 3titt
Farm autoraobtia issuranr policy at
long as your csr, coverages and condi.
tioai rammn lha iri . . . saving yoa
tht cett ot s atw policy etch rtntwtl.
vu mm tor rrrra laiormtnon ,
Si" Olson
2fi N. High
Phone 4 2215
Ml ' Mwf Mmm0i Ihm to
THE CAPITAL JOURNAK, Salem, Oreson
Indiana Congressman to
Spark GOP. Next Week
By MARIAN LOWRY FISCHER
Republicans of Marion county
strut their stuff next week with
their bis Lincoln Day rally sched
uled for Friday evening, February
12. at 8 o clock in Bush school au
ditorium.
Congressman Raton Harvey (R..
wu.i. meijiDer 01 me Mouse com
mittee on agriculture, will be the
speaker, his talk to deal with the
Hoover School
Meeting Place
The Salem school board will
hold its February 9th meeting at
the Hoover elementary school
building at 7:30 p.m. instead of
the customary place in the ad
ministration building.
The directors decided to meet
at Hoover after receiving an in
vitation from the Hoover PTA,
although it will not be the policy
of the board to conduct meet
ings elsewhere than at the offic
ially designated location because
of legal obstacles.
A number of Mothers club
meetings are scheduled to be
held next week. The Bush and
Salem Heights Mothers clubs will
meet at their respective build
ings at 1 p. m. Tuesday. The
Rosedale Parents club will as
semble at the Rosedale building
at 1:30 the same day.
Other Mothers club sessions
are booked as follows: Liberty, 1
p.m. Wednesday; Highland 1:00
p.m., and Grant 1:15 p.m., both
Thursday.
The Hayesville PTA will meet
at 7:45 p.m. and the Morningside
PTA at 8 p.m. Tuesday. The
Halls Ferry Community club will
assemble at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Salem senior high school PTA
will sponsor a no host PTA din
ner in the cafeteria at 6:30
Thursday night. This will be fol
lowed by a meeting in the school
library.
Deadline Nears
For Lebanon Paving
LEBANON March 1 is the last
dale for receiving petitions for pav
ing of city streets this summer.
Councilman Kenneth Fuller said
this week. The city established the
deadline to allow ample time to
advertise for bids and get the
work done during the good wea
ther this summer.
The deadline was first announc
ed more than two months ago, and
as of this week, no petitions have
been turned in to the city recorder,
LEGALS
CALL FOB BIDS
Sealed bldi will be received by tht
iiai, ill omuu, oujira or scnooi Dis
trict No. 24CJ. Marlon County, Ore
don, up to 9:00 p.m. on Tuesday.
February 23, 1B54. ror furnishing and
Installing stage equipment in audi
torium to be used by Leslie Junior
High School and South Salem High
School.
Bids must be accompanied itllh ac
ceptable bidder's bond equal to 5T0
of the amount of the bid.
The right to reject any or all bids
is reserved by the Board.
Specification and hid blanks mav
be obtained from and bids shall he
filed with the District Clerk at 460
North High Street, Salem, Oregon.
Dated at Salem. Oreann. this lath
day of January. 1054.
CONNELL C. WARD,
District Clerk.
F.
Free estimates on Custom
made
WINDOW SHADES
CAPITAL SHADE & DRAPERY SHOP
260 S. 2U St. Photw 4-1856
Federal ,od State
Income Tax -Returns
Prepared
Leon A. Fiscus
1509 N. 4th Ph. 3-5285
Tbermo-Rite
-GLASS-Fireplace
Front
CLEANLINESS
No More Smoke and Soot
Smudges on walls, rugs, drapes
and upholstery!
COMFORT
No Floor Drafts Just evenly
radiated heat through GLASS
to all parts of the room.
PROTECTION
No More Fear of Spark Kire
Hazard . . . Retire in Perfect
Safety!
ECONOMY
No More Expensive Furnace
Fuel going up the Chimney!
Guaranteed to Beautify, Satis
fy! Send Fireplace opening
width and height for price and
other complete details.
ZUMWALT
EQUIPMENT CO.
1.160 Woodrow Salem
Ph. 34828
farm problem. A farmer, business
man. and veteran public servant,
Harvey is described by his home
state press as "an intelligent con
servative" and a man "unbeat
able" for the House seat he holds.
He is credited as being among
agriculture committeemen initiat
ing the so-called "grassroots hear
ings" on the farm problem even
before Congress concluded its first
session in August of 1953. Harvey,
.1:, has spent a quarter of a cen
tury in public life and served his
home county for six years in the
Indiana state assembly before go
ing on to Congress. He is a fourth
term member of Congress and is
rated by the republican national
committee as one of the key men '
working with the farm problem.
- The Salem address wilt be his
second in the valley next week.
Hep. Harvey will talk in Corvallis
Thursday and will visit officials at
Oregon State college before com
ing to Salem for the Lincoln day
event.
Winton Hunt, Woodburn, chair
man of the Marlon county repub
lican central committee, will pre
side at thct Lincoln Day program
and will introduce Harvey.
Other features on the program
will include a 10-minute film of
President Eisenhower in a recent
address and singing,, and conclud
ing the evening will be spotlighting
two large pictures of Lincoln and
Eisenhower.
Parly officials and state dignitar
ies are to be introduced.
Invitation is out to all republi
cans of the valley areas to attend,
members of the Polk county re
publican central committee to be
special gucsls.
Preceding the program at Bush
school, Congressman Harvey will
meet with party officials and lead
erst at a no-host invitation dinner
at the Senator hotel at 6:30 o'clock.
Leonard Rowan is acting as co
ordinating chairman with all
groups working on the Lincoln day
event. Co-sponsors for the Lincoln
Day program are Marion county
chapter, Oregon Republican clubs;
Marion county republican central
committee; Salem unit, Oregon
Federation of Republican Women;
Marion-Polk County Young Repub
licans club.
Eisenhower Gets
Portland Invitation
WASHINGTON Ifl President
Eisenhower was invited Saturday
to attend the Portland, Ore., Home-
builders Exposition later in the
month.
Rep. Homer Angell (R-Oret ex
tended the invitation for the city
of Portland and the Portland
Homebuilders Association. The in
vitation is inscribed on a large
piece of Oregon plywood,
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nt ii '"''-JI.ImI, V.'.YU,i.f..1'..',. , $ y-f j-- fr'TllMIIM iiimi .
Above is shown an accumulation of prizes offered by the
Salem Downtown Merchants Association for babies born dur
ing February and March at the new maternity wing of Salem
General Hospital. They may be seen at the United States Na
tional Bank. Later they will be taken to the First National
Bank for further display. In the picture are Douglas Ycatcr,
left, stork shower committee chairman, and Dick Schlup, pres
ident of the Downtown Merchants Association, :
Astronomers Not Alone in
Pondering Things Celestial
By J. HUGH PRUETT .
(Astronomer, Extension Division,
Astronomers arc not the onlyf
ones who observe and ponder
over celestial phenomena.
Quite recently a correspondent
stated that he had noticed sun
rise came later each morning
for sometime after December 22
(some years Dec. 21), the winter
solstice and shortest day of the
year.
A few years ago an office
worker wrote as follows: "I dis
tinctly noticed that Jan. 12, three
weeks after the solstice, it was
very much lighter as 1 was going
home from work than on Dec. 1,
three weeks before the solstice.
Please explain." Similar ques
tions have come from others.
It is generally known that the
days begin to lengthen immcdi'
alely after the solstice, although
by only a matter of seconds at
first. Almanacs giving sunrise
and sunset to the nearest min
ute often seemingly show irregu
larities. But keen observers find
that old Sol shows his face above
the horizon constantly later and
later each morning for fully two
0
Salem Citizens
Salem, Oregon and Vicinity
Dear Customers and Future Customers:
We want to thank you all for making our individual
business' such a huge success. As you know, we are indi
vidual businessmen just the same as the store merchants,
t only the trucks which we own are our stores.
We are not peddlers, but individual merchants
representing the wonderful bread and pastry products of
the Famous Marckx Bakery.
You are all our personal friends, and our business
is built upon the best of service, quality, and friendship
that we can possibly give.
"We bring the bakery as close as your door with
out you spending a penny more," and don't forget . . .
the products you buy from us are GUARANTEED!
Thanks again for making our business' such a huge
success.
Your Neighborhood Marckxmen
P. $. If you art not customer at the present lime, but would
like to try our service, just clip out the coupon and drop it
In the mail, or phone Salem 2-0774.
9
MERCHANTS STORK
Oregon Hither Education System)
weeks after December 22 and
that it is three before he appears
as eariy as on mis shortest day.
using aaia l compiled a few
years ago for 44 degrees north
latitude on a standard time me
ridian, we find that Dec. 22 had
the sun above the horizon 8 hr.
54 min., and both Dee. 1 and
Jan. 12 were of equal length, 9
nr. iu min. liut on Jan. 12 both
sunrise and sunset occurred ex
actly 20 min. later than on Dec.
1. So Jan. 12 had a darker 7
a.m. and a lighter 5 p.m. than
Dec. 1.
The complete causes of this
seeming irregularity cannot be
tuny explained here. The 23Vi
degree inclination of the earth's!
axis to the plane of its orbit
makes the sun appear very low i
in the south in winter. After
Dec. 22, it rises and sets slight
ly farther north along the east
ern and western horizons each
succeeding day. This tends to
result in earlier sunrises and
later sunsets; day longer at
Dotn ends.
I If you do not have our home delivery ierv
' ice, juit fill out this coupon end drop it In
! the mail and your neighborhood Marckx
! man will call on you to explain how his ser-
. ... i uj ...... .i ...
A.
V
vice wonts. Maarvn your vnvviusi- iw.
MARCKX BAKERY, SAIEM DIVISION,
AT
NAME
ADDRESS
PHONE ..
PageU
SHOWER
But since the earth moves
most rapidly on its orbit around
the time of New Years when
nearest the sun this makes
the sun seem to move most ra
pidly eastward among the stars
it is charging through snaca
throughout December and Janu
ary with greater than its average
speed. At clock noon it is far
ther cast by a greater amount
over the previous noon-position
than at any other time of year.
This delays both sunrise and
sunset. It shortens the day at
one end: lengthens il at the
other.
The tendency toward the sun's
earlier appearance due to rising
farther north each' day, is for
two weeks after the solstice
more than neutralized by its ex
cessive eastward shifting. But
these two effects add together
favorably at the other end,
causing abnormally delayed sun
sets. There is enough to spare
to make the sum total of day
light hours increase immediate
ly after the solstice.
'WtJMOTCfS
2715 So. Commercial
Ph. 4-6313
52
GRESHAM, OREGON
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