Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 250, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 February 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
FAMILY HEAD DEFINED FOR TAX PURPOSE Supporter of One or More Individuals Allowed Exemption. 'With thr rlfarilinfi for thf film* of frrirral income lav return* *et for arf h IV The Tim** i* ptihli*hinr a *erie% of article* explaininc to the taxpayer hi* obligation* under the income tax law Thi* I* the *econd article on the *uhjert.) Who is thr of thf* family? For taxing purposes it is convenient that thr answer to this question be clearly fixed in the taxpayer's mind. A taxpayer, although single, who supports and maintains one or more individuals in his household over whom he exercises family control is the head of the family. As such he is entitled to an exemption of $2,500. He may claim also a S4OO credit for each dependent. Minor Children Exempt The SIOO credit, however, does not apply to the wife or husband of the taxpayer even though one may be totally dependent upon the other. A taxpayer who supports in his home minor children over whom he exercises family control is classified as head of the family, even though the children may have income of their own sufficient for maintenance. If he does not support them, by virtue of their own income, but doe exercise family control, the taxpayer can not be classified as head of the family. Only One Family Head There can be only one head of the family and the exemption can not be divided. For example, two members of the same family ran not put in claims for the $2,500 exemption. A single person, whether or not the head of the family, is required to file a return if his net income for 1933 was SI,OOO or more. This holds true, even though the return is nontaxable by reason of the $2,500 exemption. Under certain circumstances, it is not necessary for the taxpayers and his dependents to live under one roof for the entire taxable year, in order for the taxpayers to claim his exemption. Common Home Sufficient If the parent is away on business or the child away at school, the exemption is allowed, provided the common home is maintained. Also, if the parent is obliged to maintain his dependents with relatives or in a boarding house while he lives elsewhere, the exemption still apples. The same ruling applies to husband and wife "living together.” As long as the common home is maintained, the exemption is allowed. If the husband continuously makes his home in one place and the wife at another, they are not living together within the meaning of the revenue act. 2 CITY YOUTHS GIVEN AUTO BANDITRY TERMS Frankfort Man Also Sentenced for Kidnaping, Robbery. Jin I nilnl Press FRANKFORT. Ind.. Feb. 27.—Admitting a series of kidnapings and robberies, three men were sentenced in Clinton circuit court here yesterday to serve fifteen years each in the state reformatory. Daniel Ludlow. 18, and Francis Bright, 21, both of Indianapolis, and Morris Herring, 25. Frankfort, were those who pleaded guilty to auto banditry charges. They admitted perpetrating a series of filling station holdups, kidnaping attendants, and using a stolen taxi in the crimes. U. S."WHEAT CONTROL CAMPAIGN REOPENED Farmrrs Given Chance to Share in Benefit Payments. /*’ u I nit s #/ /*> ism WASHINGTON. Feb. 27. The government wheat control campaign was reopened today to permit participation by farmers who have not signed reduction contracts. Chester C. Davis, agricultural adjustment administrator, announced that farmers signing would become eligible for the second and final 1933 benefit payments and the 193435 payments. LENTEN SERMONS SET St. l.ouis Rector to Occupy Christ Church Pulpit Here. The Rev. Earl Morgan Block, rector of St. Michael and St. George church. St. Louis, will be the noon lenten speaker at Christ church tomorrow. Thursday and Friday. Dr. Block will speak also at the interparochial services at 8 tomorrow night in All Saints' cathedral.
Whose Fault? If * CIM Won't Play w/th Others? Parents who understand children There are happy, healthy boys and know where to place the blame girls who have never known the when a youngster mopes, keeps to bitter taste and violent action of himself, or is "ugly” toward others. castor oil—or similar cathartics. Sluggishness ruins any disposition. The only "medicine” they ever get and that’s what is usually wrong. —or ever need —to help the bowels But it’* just as wrong to dose that is plain California Syrup of Figs, child with sickening cathartics. The senna in this fruity syrup has Until IS— or older —a child’s bowels the natural laxative action that need but little aid —a very’ mild assists Nature as it should. Next form of help. Stronger things often day, the child feels and acts himupset the stomach or weaken the self, and has a normal appetite. But bowel muscles. For the happy use the real California Syrup of solution of this problem see wnat vCr Figs, with the word “ California" to do, in the next column: eflPfc' on the label and on the bottle.
BLACK AND BROWN TURN RED IN AIR MAIL FLAREUP
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It was a colorful set-to when Black met Brown in the senate's air mail investigation. Working toward a heated climax, marked by bitter verbal exchanges. Senator Hugo Black is shown, left, debating
Indiana News in Brief a tt tt a tt tt a tt tt Interesting Stories About Events in Lives of Hoosiers Written and Assembled for Quick and Easy Reading.
fin Timm Special PERU, Ind., Feb. 27.—Charges that’politicians are seeking to dominate Peru school affairs are being made as preparation go forward for a mass meeting Thursday night to protest against action of the school board in removing Gene W. Youngblood, city school superintendent for eleven years. Mr. Youngblood, a Republican, has been succeeded by J. Paul Crodian, who was promoted from high school principal. Heads of Parent-Teacher Association groups are leaders in the mass meeting movement. However, Mrs. Fred Wackerle. Parent-Teacher council president, stated the organization was not taking, officially, any part in the controversy, as its constitution forbids such action. Two of the board members. J. Homer Jenkns and Arthur C. Baldwin, both Democrats, asserted the change was made to effect economy. They indicated the new superintendent’s salary would be less than paid Mr. Youngblood; that principals will be required to do some teaching and that one less teacher will be employed for the next school term. Roscoe Coomler. third member of the board, who is a Republican, opposed removal of Mr. Youngblood and declared the action “an injustice.” n a tt tt tt tt
Widow Seeks Office f<n 1 1 m cm special LEBANON. Feb. 27.—Mrs. Laurel Rayl, widow of Byron R. Rayl, is a Democratic candidate for the nomination for circuit court clerk of Boone county. Mr. Rayl, an employe of Indianapolis Railways, was killed in an automobile accident in 1932.
Dicken’s Manuscript on Christ Left Son’s Wife Sir Henry Directed Widow and Children to Decide Upon Question of World’s Publication.
The considerations which moved the owners of the manuscript of Charles Dickens's “The Life of Our Lord” to permit its publication, although this permission had been consistently refused throughout the sixty-four years since the author's death, are revealed in the words of the will of Sir Henry Fielding Dickens, son of the author and the last surviving member of his immediate family.
It was the death of Sir Henry Dickens last December which led to the publication of the famous manuscript. The will reads: “I give and bequeath to my wife the original manuscript of my father's ‘The Life of Our Lord,’ which was bequeathed to my aunt, Georgina Hogarth, in my father's will, and given by her to me, to hold on the foliowing trusts . . . “Being his son I have felt myself constrained to act upon my father's expressed desire that it should not be published, but I do not think it right that I should bind my children by any such view, especially as I can find no specific injunction against such publication. "I therefore direct that my wife and my children should consider this question quite unfettered by any view of mine and if. by a majority they decide that the manuscript should not be published. I direct my wife to deposit it with the trustees of the British museum upon the usual terms. “If they decided by a majority that it should be published, then I direct my wife to sell the same in trust to divide the net proceeds of sufli sale among my wife and all my children in equal shares.” Sir Henry’s estate amounted to 19.892 pounds. He bequeathed it to his "beloved wife." saying: "I desire, in this my will, to express to her my deepest and most affectionate gratitude for her loving and unfailing devotion, which together
across the committee table with Ex-Postmaster-Gen-eral Walter F. Brown, on charges of "favoritism” in awarding air mail contracts, which Brown angrily denied and which Black contended were true.
Cancels All Bills Bp Times Special ELWOOD. Feb. 27.—With the statement, “I am tired of having people owe me,” Charles McGregor, Elwood restaurant man, announces that he has cancelled all. debts owed him and has invited the debtors to come to the restaurant and get bills marked, "Paid in full.”
with the love of all my dear children have made my life one of constant and unqualified happiness.” By a majority decision Lady Dickens and her six children decided to permit the publication of "The Life of Our Lord.”
RFC ASKS LOANS TO HELP EXPORT TRADE
Broadening of Powers Is Urged in New Bill. (Copyright. 1934, by United Press) WASHINGTON, Feb. 27. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation has decided to ask congress to broaden its powers, primarily for the purpose of building up the nation’s export trade, it was learned : today. A proposed bill, approved by directors of the great federal lending agency, is ready for submission, to the appropriate house and senate committees. Passage of the legislation this session will be sought. The legislation would enable financing of exchanges of commodities with foreign nations, authorize establishment or use of export or import trading agencies, and permit RFC loans “to facilitate exports and imports.” t The proposed measure does not carry provisions for direct loans to cities or to small industry, types of advances which have been strongly urged at congressional hearings. OLD HICKORY CLUB TO HOLD SECOND ROUNDUP Democratic Organization Meeting Scheduled Thursday. The Old Hickory Democratic Club will hold its second ••roundup" of the year at the Eagles clubhouse next* Thursday night, according to announcement of Thomas McGee. P'-esident. An invitation is extended to all Democratic candidates to be present and to deliver • short" addresses. There will be a musical and vaudeville entertainment during the evening, and organization of a women s auxiliary 7 will be completed. Otto P. Deluse will act as master of ceremonies. The general public is invited, there being no admission charge. The Old Hickory Club is experiencing a boom in membership, it is said, and plans are being made to take an active part in the Democratic campaign. Syracuse 17. Appoints Dean By I nitrft Pr> ** SYRACUSE. N. Y„ Feb. 27.—Appointment of Dr. Matthew Lyle Spencer, former president of the University of Washington, as dean of the school of journalism of Syracuse university lias been announced.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Church to Celebrate Bp limes Special GREENFIELD, Feb. 27.—Congregation of the Christian church of Greenfield will celebrate the thir-ty-eighth anniversary of the dedication of the present church building. an tt Addresses State Meeting Itii Times Special CARMEL. Feb. 27.—Mrs. Laberda Lamb Graham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Lamb, Carmel, was a speaker today on the program of the New Jersey State Home Economics Association in session at Newark, N. J., where she resides. Mrs. Graham, graduate of Shortridge high school, Indianapolis, formerly was a school teacher in that city. tt a a Oldest Resident Dies Bp Times Special KOKOMO. Feb. 27> Funeral services were held yesterday for Mrs. Elizabeth Mader, 99, Kokomo’s oldest resident, who died Friday after an illness of two weeks. Born in Germany Sept. 4. 1835, Mrs. Mader came to America with her parents when she was 10 years old. She became the wife of Mathias Mader at Cincinnati. He died twenty-three years ago. Mrs. Mader had lived in Kokomo sixty-eight years. tt tt o Fall Victim Buried Bp Times special CICERO, Feb. 27.—Funeral services were held here yesterday for Mrs. Mary F. Collings, 80, widow of W. Z. Collings, who was engaged in business here fifty years. She died in an Indianapolis hospital of injuries incurred when she fell from a chair a week ago. tt tt tt Six Would Be Mayor Bp l imes Special ELWOOD, Feb. 27.—John Seright, former city engineer, is the sixth man to announce his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for mayor of Elwood. He has lived here forty-two years.
Stepfather Sentenced for Deserting Children
Defendant to Serve Term Suspended in 1931 for Good Behavior. A stepfather who left his children without food or warmth Sunday will go to prison to serve a sentence, which had been suspended on good ' behavior for burglary and grand larceny. The stepfather. Alonzo Whitlow. 24, of 531 Kentucky avenue, was admonished sternly by Judge Frank Baker, who said, “You were away and left your children to freeze to death." The plight of the children, Vernon Whitlow, 11; Robert, 8.; James, 5; Betty Jean, 3. and Chester, 8 months, was discovered last night when James hailed a pedestrian with, “we're cold." They were sent by police to the detention home. Whitlow has been a fugitive from justice since March, 1932, when he failed to make his monthly report to officers after his sentence was suspended Sept. 8,193 L His sentence is one to ten years. Judge Baker indicated that swift justice \Vould be passed on the mother, Mrs. Amelia Whitlow, 30, if she appeared before him. NOMINATE ACTRESSES FOR 1933 FILM AWARD Katherine Hepburn. May Robson, Diana Wynyard Named. By United Preen HOLLYWOOD. Feb. 27.—Katharine Hepbrun. May Robson and Diana Wynyard were announced today as nominees for the academy of motion picture arts and sciences awarded for the most outstanding bit of acting among film actresses last year. Leslie Howard. Charles Laughton and Paul Munt were nominated for the prize award among actors. Awards will be made at a banquet March 16. PINCHOT OPPOSES REED Pennsylvania Governor to Seek G. O. P. Senate Nomination. By United Preen HARRISBURG. Pa.. Feb. 27. Governor Gifford Pinchot entered the Republican primary campaign yesterday for the United States senate, announcing his candidacy in opposition to Senator David A. Reed.
UNIQUE LOANS PLAN ADOPTED BY CjH FIRMS Move Is Taken to Increase Capital: Meeting With Success, Is Report. Seeking increased capital to nance inventories and to replace goods, many Indianapolis merchants have joined in a unique system of liquidating the obligations of their cusI tomers. City merchants are pointing out that while they are gratified with price advances, they are faced with the problem of financing and assert that if their receivable accounts were paid they would have ample funds. It has been estimated that the department stores, apparel shops, furniture, variety and general merchandise stores of the nation have approrimately $160,000,000 on their books, owed by customers for six months or longer. H. I. Kleinhaus, general manager of the controllers’ congress of the National Retail Dry Goods Association, recently urged that these debts be wiped out by loans from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, I the merchants in each city arrang- | ing independtly with the R. F. C. ! for their collective needs. Many local merchants, however, have taken advantage of the plan offered by the Indianapolis Morris Plan Company, it was revealed to- | day by W. B. Harding, president of the company. Under the Morris Plan arrangement, said Mr. Harding, loans are made to customers owing the store, the store acting as co-maker of the loan. The loans, it was said, are made over a period of one year or less, with repayments suiting the borrower’s income. The program has operated very successfully, said Mr. Harding. Stores which have adopted the plan have notified their customers of the service and report an encouraging response. LOCK COMPANY HEAD BUYS M'CRAY FARM .. Former Governor’s Holdings Bring $106,250. Sale of the Newton county farm owned by former Governor Warren T. McCray to Arthur R. Baxter, Keyless Lock Company president, for $106,250 at federal receiver’s sale, was announced today. The former Governor sought to buy in the 2,513-acre farm, but dropped out when bidding passed $105,000. His plea for continuation of biding to a later date was refused. He will have another opportunity to submit a bid when the Baxter bid is presented in the northern dstrict federal court at South Bend. SENTENCED IN SLAYING Thomas Outlaw, Negro, Gets 2 to 21 Years in State Prison. Thomas Outlaw, 38. Negro, was sentenced to serve two to twentyone years in the Indiana state prison yesterday by Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker after he had changed his plea qf not guilty to a murder charge, to a plea of guilty to voluntary manslaughter. Outlaw admitted that he shot and killed James Sharp last November when Sharp attempted to halt a quarrel between the slayer and his wife.
SERVANTS’ MORNING MEAL GOBBLED BY WHITE HOUSE PUP
By l nitrd Preen WASHINGTON. Feb. 27. Winks, the new White House dog, is in disgrace. He violated the free luncheon provision of the restaurant code. Winks, a setter pup brought from Warm Springs, Ga., two months ago by President Roosevelt and a general favorite in the mansion, found an unattended table in the servants’ quarters which had been set for breakfast. He went from plate to plate and ate all the bacon and eggs. He cleaned off nearly a dozen plates before he was discovered. The prank amused the President, but not the servants. The President, commenting on Winks’ appetite, observed: “The only reason he didn’t drink the coffee was that it had not yet been poured." FIRE DAMAGES HOME 53,500 Loss Reported in Blaze Caused by Sparks. Damage estimated at $3,500 resulted from a fire which nearly destroyed the two-story brick residence of William Hines, at Fortysixth street and High School road Saturday afternoon. The fire was caused by sparks on the roof. Indianapolis fire companies fought the blaze.
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America Must Choose ■ Nationalism May Call for Direct Compulsion L T nder Such Conditions Traditional American Spirit May Burst Dangerously in All Directions. This is the elrhth of a series of articles written for the Foreign Policy Asso- j elation and the World Peaee Fonndatio n. BY HENRY A. WALLACE Secretary of Agriculture CAN WE STAND DISCIPLINE? THERE are certain satisfactions to be derived, no doubt, from a strict overhead discipline. Troops and officers in the late war seem, for all their complaining, to have recognized that. I hear veterans now recalling with a certain yearning how simple everything seemed in those days. In the army, everything was arranged for them; the question of sustenance, of choosing clothing, of mapping journeys, of deciding who was important and who was not. Everything right down to dental work, medical attention and bedtime was arrange for them, as for a child.
Beyond all that, though the work was murderous, the citizen in arms was illumined with a glowing purpose; he had a mission without the dollar sign marked visibly upon it; and the nation accorded him signs of awe and admiration which, generally speaking, he has not enjoyed since. Mad as it sounds, I think that thousands of men were happier in the army than they have ever been since, and the same thing extended in a measure to the civilian population. All felt themselves part of something greater than themselves. The ruthless development of nationalist peacetime programs permits much of that same exalted frenzy, and generally requires more and more of the same as it goes along. I am aware of the higher possibilities of such a ferment. William James wrote most persuasively of the need of "a moral equivalent for war.” Cautiously and tentatively, the new deal in America has already evoked a little of this spirit. If we go on trying to keep things whirling within nationalist limits, it seems certain that we shall count less on social discipline voluntarily aroused and more on direct compulsion. Under such conditions the traditional American spirit would soon be, it seems to me, as a spring, tightly coiled, and ready to burst out dangerously in any direction. I wonder if we could stand the strain. a tt a A SURPRISING number of farmers after a year of voluntary production control are writing me letters insisting that hereafter the co-operation of all farmers be compelled absolutely; and that every field, cotton-gin, cow and chicken be licensed; and that the strictest sort of controls be applied to transportation and marketing. I believe they mean it, but I wonder very seriously whether they are ready for such measures, and if they really know what they are asking for. Nations still in their pioneer stages of development are never forced to make decisions of this sort. All their energies are devoted, on the one hand, to exploiting their unappropriated resources, and on the other, to paying off the debts owed to older settled regions. The older nations have always been faced with the problem of developing a definite national policy, backed up by an educated, determined public opinion. In the United States we have changed so suddenly from a debtor to a creditor nation that our people are only now becoming aware of the need for a definite program of long-continued action which will continue without great changes no matter which party shall be in power. The facts involved are such that there should be no great difference of opinion between Republicans, Democrats and Socialists. The all-important thing is to recognize the fact that two plus two can equal six only so long as the time factor is taken care of by placing a burden on the monetary system which eventually passes human endurance. tt tt a GREAT prosperity is possible for the United States if we follow the strict',, nationalist course, but in such case we must be prepared for a fundamental planning and regimentation of agriculture and industry far beyond that which any one has yet suggested. To carry out such a program effectively, with our public psychology as it is, may require a unanimity of opinion and disciplined action even greater than that which we experienced in the years 1917-1919. Nevertheless, the national path remains wide open to us. We can travel it if we want to. We can get along completely on sugar
greyhound CUTS RATES Lower than ever before! Effective NOW • reduction from Ic ko 2c per pttlo, every doy on First Closs cooches. Plan your trip ot once while these amoxing reductions lost! Hundreds like these* NEW YORK $10.50 Buffalo 18.50 Washington . *19.50 Boston 13.00 Cleveland 8.00 Louisville 2.30 Baltimore ....10.50 (Round Trip *3.45) GREYHOUND BUS AGENCIES ® Traction Terminal Tel. LI-2222 Illinois & Market Tel. RI-450X Fletcher Trust Cos. .Tel. RI-1554 Bankers Trust Cos. .Tel. RI-4307 English Hotel Tel. RI-0414 ' ACID-KNOX INSTANT RELIEF From INDIGESTION jm GASTRITIS f \ C M SOCR STOMACH Ui C GUARANTEED ■ VT ON SALE AT ALL HAAG DRUG STORES L- i „ speciaT Tffl^EXfdACTIQWiJj^ THE PEOPLES DENTISTS I 36h w. Washington Sr.
i raised at home, even though the cost may be twice what it other- | wise would be. We can completely substitute the use of rayon for ; silk. We can raise our own tea and get along without coffee. We can even raise our own rubber for perhaps 30 cents a pound. If the national will is completely bent in this direction we can arrive together at a self-contained life, but the process of transition to this self-contained Utopia is certain to be extremely difficult. It may require a great amount of governmental aid to take care of people formerly engaged in import and export business. It will mean the shifting of millions of people from the farms of the south. But these are minor considerations in comparison with the extraordinarily complete control of all the agencies of public opinion which is generally necessary to keep the national will at a tensity necessary to carry through a program of isolated prosperity. Tomorrow—Approach to a world neighborhood. CEMETERY ASKED TO WAIVE $4,500 CLAIM City Anxious to Construct New Boulevard. Recommendation that the directors of Crown Hill cemetery waive a $4,500 claim against the city will be made by Hugh McK. Landon, according to an announcement made today. Mr. Landon will make the recommendation with the provision that a permanent boulevard on Conser avenue, from Thirty-eighth to \ Forty-fourth streets, be constructed. Attempts have been made by the city administration to bruild the boulevard with CWA labor, but it has been hampered by an agreement which the works board entered into in 1925, whereby the city was to pay the cemetery $4,500 for a seventy-foot strip of land which would make the boulevard possible. The construction of the boulevard would give an important traffic inlet to Butler university, eliminating hazards that now exist because of heavy traffic along Forty-sixth and Forty-ninth streets at Capitol avenue, Illinois street and Meridian street. City officials probably will hold a | meeting this week to consider the j improvement.
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FEB. 27, 193 T
MASON TO FACE DEATH TRIAL IN MARION COUNTY Alleged Jones Slayer to Be Brought Here From Noblesville. Herbert E. Wilson. Marion county prosecutor, announced today that William H. (Willie) Mason, suspect in the machine gun slaying of Sergeant Lester Jones will be returned to Indianapolis from the Noblesville jail to await trial here. New indictments were returned yesterday by the Marion county grand jury against Mason. Ernest (Red) Giberson and Edward (Foggy) Dean in connection with the murder. Mr. Wilson's announcement was made after a defense attorney named by the court refused to defend Mason again because he had not been paid by Marion county for the first trial. His stand was upheld bv Judge Fred Hines, who refused to permit the trial until the defense attorney is paid. Mason was tried by a Hamilton county grand jury last fall. Although he was voted guilty, three jurors refused to impose the mandatory death penalty despite their oath to do so if the defendant were found guilty. Giberson, who had been held in the Noblesville jail to await trial, walked out of the prison several weeks ago and still is a fugitive. Dean, the alleged “trigger man” of the gang, is held at the Marion county jail here. GIRL, 2. IS SUFFOCATED Child Trapped in Clothes Closet as Farm Home Burns. Bp I nilni Press WABASH, Ind., Feb. 27.—The 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Carl Yentes was suffocated yesterday when the family farm home was destroyed by fire. The child had been playing in a clothes closet when the fire broke out.
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