> 94 POSTAL SAVINGS the bill, if passed, would encourage tax dodging through the withdrawal of money from ordinary banks just before assessment day and its tempo- raiy deposit in postal savings banks. 38 The tax dodging argument apparently did not make a very strong appeal. The fact that the interest rate proposed to be paid by the Govern ment was but 2 per cent on the first thousand dollars, and nil on the second, the proposed limi tation to $2,000 on the total amount that could be deposited, the ease with which a would-be tax dodger could dodge taxes on cash funds without recourse to postal savings deposits, and the fact that Federal, State and city bonds paying higher interest rates than postal savings deposits were exempt from taxation—all of these facts weak ened decidedly the appeal of the tax dodging argument. As to the argument that the raising of the de posit limits would encourage evasion of debt, the proponents of the higher deposit limit argued that there had been very little evidence of such evasion under the old limits, and that the new ones were not high enough to make the danger a serious one. Furthermore, said Senator Bryan, of Florida, who was sponsor for the bill in the Senate, the question whether the additional de- 88 Ibid., p. 7304.