Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1938 — Page 10
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TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1938
CANCER CONTROL MONTH NDER authority from a joint resolution introduced by Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts and passed by Congress, President Roosevelt has dedicated April to the cause of wider education for the control of cancer, and Governor Townsend has issued a special Indiana procla-
mation. Surely we need té6 know more about this mysterious
human scourge. Next to heart disease, it is the biggest
killer among the diseases, taking 150,000 American lives |
last year and causing slow torture among many more. Science is at work seeking out its cause and cure, but so far neither has been found. Funds have been made available for research by Congressional action and by a $4,000,000 gift to Yale by Starling W. Childs. Great strides have been made in understanding the disease and in applying treatment that can cure it in the early stages. How little even some members of the medical profes- - sion know, however, is shown by the. recent deaths from serum treatment of six cancer patients in Orlando, Fla. At present there are only three known methods of treating ~ cancer—surgery, X-rays and radium, either singly or in combination. There are no serums or other specifics. The best defense is early diagnosis. A cancer caught in its early stages is curable; not so in its later stages. It is the purpose of a nation-wide campaign to educate people in detecting its first signs and to act on the advice of reputable physicians. The American Society for the Control of Cancer estimates: that, with such knowledge widely disseminated, at least 75,000 lives can be saved annually.
SOAKING THE LITTLE MAN
OME members of the Senate who go in more for demagogery than for statesmanship criticize Senator La Follette’s plan to broaden the income-tax base as a scheme to soak the little fellow. But what are the facts of his plan? And who are the little fellows? The present law exempts incomes of $2500 for Married couples and $1000 for single persons. The La Follette plan is to reduce those exemptions to $2000 for married couples and $800 for single persons. That wouild add about 1,500,000 persons to the roll of Federal income tax payers. And here is how it would work in individual instances — each case being a married man with no dependents: Net income, $2500. Tax under existing law, nothing. Tax under La Follette plan, $10. Net income, $5000. Tax under existing law, $80. Tax under La Follette plan, $100. Increase, $20. Net income, $10,000. Tax under existing law, $415. Tax under La Follette plan, $600. Increase, $185. ~ Net income, $50,000. Tax under existing law, $8869. Tax under La Follette plan, $12,224. Increase, $3355. - And as the income goes higher, so does the La Follette tax increase—not by boosting the upper-bracket surtaxes, but by starting the normal tax and surtax rates on the lower portions of the income.
2 2 NOW let's talk about the “little fellows.” The man with $2500 income is a little fellow, compared to the few big fellows who get $10,000. and $50,000 and $100,000 and more a year. But compared to about 90 per cent of the married men in this country, the man who ‘gets $2500 a year is a big fellow. At least, compared to them, he is a very fortunate fellow. : ut for purposes of argument, let us consider the man with [$2500 income as a little fellow—and think about what taxes soak him. f he smokes a pack of cigarets a day, he pays the Federal Government $21.90 a year in cigaret taxes. f he buys a $600 automobile, he pays a Federal sales tax of $18) If he buys three new tires a year, his Federal tax is $1.71. If he drives the car 10,000 miles a year, at iles to a gallon, his Federal gasoline tax is $6.66. pace forbids mention of a myltitnde of other hidden Federal taxes. e wonder why the Senators who are such electionyear] champions of “the little fellow” never get around to repealing these invisible taxes. Can it be that they think the little fellows are so dumb they don’t realize that the hidden levies take far more money from them than ever would be taken by any broadened-base income-tax plan. The La Follette plan points to the fairest of all revenue systems—one which takes from each citizen according to his ability to pay, in taxes that are openly assessed and directly collected. And building such a revenue system is the only possible way to get rid of the hidden taxes that pick the pockets of the poor.
REASON FOR OPTIMISM TIRING after 10 years as chairman of the Unit States Steel Corp., Myron C. Taylor told his stoc hol ers that he is confident of the future of the nation an - the corporation. ‘One of the most interesting paragraphs in Mr. ‘Taylor's : final report dealt with the controversial move he made early last year when he signed a contract with the C. I. O. Steel Workers Organizing Committee. He said: “The union has scrupulously followed the terms of its agreement and, in so far as I know, has made no unfair effort to bring other employees into its ranks, while the ~ corporation’s subsidiaries, during a very difficult period, "have been entirely free of labor disturbances of any kind. The cost of a single strike—to the corporation, to the public and to the men—would have been incalculable.” i We share Mr. Taylor's optimism. And one reason why we share it is found in what he points out in the paragraph abové—that the country’s biggest industrial corporation has found it profitable to deal with a labor union, that the union has lived up to its agreement, and that the emoyer, the _employees and the public have all benefited. There is an example which, generally followed by other mployers and othér unions, will help to make the future r the nation .and for bus i
Fair Enough By Westbrook Pegler : Mr. C, Taxed on His $3000 Income,
May Be Irked if Mr. A, Who Calls His Profit 'Gain,' Pays Nothing.
EW YORK, April 5.—Like the touchback and the safety in football, inconte and capital gains look
so much alike that ordinary people can’t tell them |.
apart. We are told that income is safely taxable, but that if capital gains be taxed the capitalistic system will die. Ee By a mental concentration that is downright muscular, some of us can follow the argument as far as the place where the franctic Mr. X. wiscovers that
when he dies the Government will not only take his entire estate, but his unfortunate, busted heirs for $149,000 deficiency caused by the forced liquidation of his property and the inclusion of bad debts as taxable assets. In conceivable cases, what with one tax and another, pitched in the topmost register, the widow
of a penniless man may be better off than the relict
of a dead magnate. 2 8 = a ? HAVE been reading, however, a hypothetical case, intended to raise alarm, which leaves me calm and also convinced that a mere definition might be used to excuse from taxation persons who by any rule of justice should not be allowed to ride free.
Here is the case--
Mr. A buys some shares of stock for $200,000 and in |
the same year sells them to Mr. B for $400,000. A few months later, however, Mr. B doesn’t like the looks of the market or needs some money and sells the stock back to Mr. A for $200,000. Plainly Mr. A has made a
profit, or gain, as he insists on calling it, of $200, 000
within a year on which he would have to pay a tax of $97,000. He thinks he shouldn’t pay this tax not merely because he wants to keep the $97.000, but also because he says there has been no increment. Mr. A has $200,000 more, but Mr. B has $200,000 less, and Mr. A thinks that the $97.000 taken from him repre-
sents a living, quivering hunk gouged out of the eco-
nomic body of the nation. ” 2 2
* OW it is my point that whether this $200,000 profit is income or gain makes no difference as long as a, man making $3000 a year and working for
it and producing wealth by his work is required to |
pay an income tax on that. Mr. A. makes the point that in his dealings with Mr. B there has been nothing produced. But, whatever the economics of the case, justice demands that Mr. A toss his fair, proportionate dues on the blanket along with the $18 contribution of the $3000-a-year man. If he didn’t work for
. his $200,000 gain, and if nothing was produced, that
was a pretty soft touch for Mr. A, and he ought to be glad to get over the fence at the end of the year with a profit of $103,000.
While he was sitting in the broker’s trap and while he was dining on fancy meats and heavy gravy all year long and worrying about his country, our $3000-a-year friend, whom we will call Mr. C, for
chump, was punching the clock, fretting about the kid’s tonsils and the payment on the jaloppy and
-gnawing the stringy ends of the tough cuts. How do |
you think you are going to sell Mr. C the idea that he ought to pay an income tax because he is a producer, but that Mr. A may be taxed only at the peril of the
" nation because his $200,000 gain represented no in.crement? Si
I understand that in certain phases the capital gains tax is a terrible thing and should be fixed while the star-spangled banner yet waves, but Mr. A’s case and = others like it call for a special clause to bar e door.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Just Around the Corner P—By Herblock
p
TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1938
“BUSINESS
CHART
‘The Hoosier Forum
1 wholly disagree with what you say,
defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.
but will
PROPOSES SETUP FOR SOCIAL MEDICINE By W. L. Ballard, Syracuse
many nowadays, : know its import or what it could be?
added to the President’s Cabinet, his department surgery, nursing sciences, etc., having na- i“ tional, regional, district and local councils, each self-perpetuating.
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Make your letter short, so all can A Secretary of Medicine could be| have a chance. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request.)
Social medicine is on the lips of but how many
embracing medicine, dentistry, veterinary and
Indianapolis like this and nothing
Doctors’ pay could be at about [iS done about it.
Business By John T. Flynn
The Survey in Oskaloosa Shows Who Pays the Taxes in a Typical Town.
EW YORK, April 5.—The magazine Fortune has made a survey of a small American town— Oskaloosa, out in the heart of what O. Henry called And the picture it reveals is re than a passing glance by those who are now preparing to tell us how to get out of the de-
the ru worth
agos circuit.
pression.
their present average. It would come from patients until the average was reached, deficits to be paid by -the department, thus giving rise to-a vast amount of leisure for preventive practice. "The national council should have limited judicial powers, have charge of departmental schools, asylums, public health, pharmaceutical and mortuary institutions, hospitals, laboratories, etc. Medicines and surgical accessories would be free, as would funerals. There should be free hospitalization for mothers and public servants.
Regional © councils could have charge of regional epidemic and contagious diseases, of industrial
-to grow up into healthy, strong and
What does a little boy of 7 mean to politicians? But there may come a day when such children, who have not been given a fair chance
good citizens, will protest—and who knows but that this same boy may be their leader?. ” ” ® READER SAYS OFFICEHOLDERS SHOULDN'T SEES NEW POSTS By BR. G. L. ~ » ‘There io .rumor that Governor Townsend may run for U. S. Senator to oppose Senator VanNuys. There is nothing wrong about that, but in my estimation there should be
Most intelligent economists believe in that happy expedient known as “soaking the rich.” That is, they believe in high taxes on those with large incomes. Most rabble-rousers believe in the same thing. But there the agreement stops. The rabble-rousers think you can soak the rich and let the rest of the population go comparatively free. Also they believe that soaking the rich is the cure of all our economic ills. Now this survey shows who it is that pays the taxes in a typical American town.
There are 2679 families. All put together they have incomes aggregating $2,615,000. All together they pay in taxes of all sorts, State, local, Federal, $158,000. There are 61 families with incomes over $5000.. Actually they average $8000. This group of 61 families pays one-third of the taxes. All the others pay twothirds of the “taxes. In other words the great bulk of taxes are paid by the people with incomes under $5000. Now it is proper that this upper group should
diseases and injuries, and of wartime activities and nursing.
charge of all traffic accidents, public calamities, floods, fires, etc., and all funerals and cemeteries.
would have more security, more opportunity for service of their own choosing and for earned advancement. Benefits to society would multiply and would speed up.
SAYS NOTHING DONE TO AID CHILDREN LACKING FOOD By A Subscriber
a rule that no one holding office should be prevailed upon to give it up in midterm for another office. “We do not think highly of the woman who discards a husband simply because she sees a more eligible man she could marry. An officeholder is held in no higher esteem when he abandons his oath to serve in one capacity because a better opportunity comes into view. We congratulate the recipient on his achievement afterwards, naturally; but for all that there is a deep disappointment in the man we have elected. : During election campaigns we-are asked not to change horses in midstrea Why then, should we be
District councils should have
With such a department, members
scientific progress
» 8 s
pay one-third of the taxes. - Lesson in Sales Taxes
There are those who believe that large incomes
should be wiped out by taxes. If
then the incomes less than large would have to shoulIn the end, however, vou manage it, the great bulk of the taxes will have to be paid in this small town and everywhere else by the Therefore the notion that when the Government spends it can get. the money out of the rich is the most futile of all illusions. For those who like sales taxes there is also a In this town the people spend $314,000 on In many states and towns there is now a sales tax on clothes and other things. The people with incomes over $5000 buy $34,This means that they pay 6.9 per
der the tax burden.
bulk of the people.
lesson. clothes.
tax? 000 in clothes.
cent of the sales faxes on clothes. 93.1 per cent of the sales taxes on clothes are paid by people with incomes of less than $5000. It is practically the same with house furnishings, food, shelter,
entertainment, fuel, even luxuries.
A Woman's Viewpoint
by Mrs. Walter Ferguson
OU can grow old triumphantly, eagerly or defiantly, but you
Last Wednesday during my lunch hour I had occasion to talk with a T-year-old boy. I asked him why
he stated that they don’t eat at noon over at his house. I asked when he ate last. The little fellow said at 8 o'clock and they wouldn’t eat again until 4 or 5 that evening. _ After I had asked him more questions I found out that his dad is out of work and they are living off the township trustee.
that were done,
ceries is received and that must last until the next Monday. There are five children and the father and mother make seven in all. The ages in this family run from 1 to 18. Little children who have done nothing to deserve such’ inhuman treatment are being deprived of. proper nourishment. There are many more cases in
Who pays the
The remaining
he didn’t go home for lunch and.
‘When the night has found its way,
Every Monday a big box of gro- |
made to change horses in midterm? Governor Townsend has been an able executive and is personally pop-
AT EVENING TIME By ROBERT O. LEVELL
Throughout all the livelong day; That's when we. enjoy. to he | Where we are so glad and free.
With a friend we know so well, Some good place Where we can dwell; J For consoling words will then Be the joy of some good friend.
DAILY THOUGHT
Let all things be done decently and in order ~1 Corinthians 14:40,
RDER is heaven's first law.
: Pope:
New Books Today
Public Library Presents—
ular. It would be. a great disappointment to many qf us if he heeds the behest of those in -the Democratic organization counseling him to run for Senator. : » » ” . CENTRALIZED SYSTEM OF TAXATION SUGGESTED By L. 8. H. « The tax problem is" one that is burdensome when the public is overcharged for what it gets in retyrn. This overcharge is stupendous if we figure how much of it goes for duplication, waste in excessive administration and lack of competent personnel to get dollar value for dollars spent. :
A simplified method of levying
taxes is' to eliminate all local tax|
units and substitute the internal
revenue department as the sole col- |
lecting and distributing agency for
all taxes. This would wipe out the |:
unnecessary overhead in Serving the public needs. 5
. 2 2 CLAIMS RELIEF SPENDING WILL NQT AID. COUNTRY By a Democrat Five years ago Congress met: to cure our national ills with a New Deal. Something was wrong with our monetary system, there were obstructions. everywhere preventing
the natural flow of money in: the |
channels of trade. Figuratively, the wells all over the country had gone dry and there was a great drought. The Administration primed the pumps but no water came from the the dry wells. Water was then. taken from the reservoirs in great quantities and poured into the wells. The pumps began to work without being primed and many people thought the water was confing into the wells the natural way ang would. run on forever. Now the wells have been pumped 0y and another depression is the res
There has- been much talk but
little "done about our economic |-
and social troubles. It is unthinkable that Congress continues from year to year trying tc cure a disease by healing its effects without removing the cause. Is there a physician in the United States who would do that and expect his patient to get well? . Will.the nation’s ills ever be cured by borrowing and spending ‘money on relief without removing the cause which has made the borrowing necessary? Will Congress be aroused and enact laws which will
{remove the obstructions in our
monetary system, put an end to depressions, and bring joy to a suffering people whose patience has
long been worn to a frazzle or will |
this great body of lawmakers adjourn, go. home 40d acknowledge erent?
Gen Johnson
1 Bays
War Is. Unpredictable, and It Is Impossible in Peace to Write a : Suitable Economic Control Measure.
TEW YORK, April 5.—There is a bill in Congress,
introduced by Rep. May, which would give the
: ‘President the powers of a dictator in time of war. | He could fix all prices, conscript labor and manage
ment, and take over every factory or piece of property
in the country. There are other war measures which “| propose to tax away almost all profits and incomes.
These are supposed to be a means of defense, but the real idea is to make war so much of a burden that the nation will never stand for its declaration. The
- purpose is praiseworthy, but it should not prevail.
It is true that, before the end of the World War,
‘Woodrow Wilson had almost as much personal power
as is proposed in this legislation. It is also true that it was, at that time, clearly necessary to national defense to grant these powers to the President and if there had been power to clamp a ceiling down over prices, the war would have cost less money. It is on this ‘experience that the present legislation is proposed.
» 8 =
TUDIES of all possible economic war-time cone trols should be made. Drafts of appropriate legislation should be ready. But the trouble with attempting to foresee what war will bring and writ-
‘ing it all down in a trite little statute, is that war
is unpredictable. You don’t know what turn it will take or when or where or how, For a war like the Spanish-American War it would be perfectly absurd. to put our whole economic pattern into a straight-jacket, upset all business relations, conscript men or impose confiscatory taxes, The job could not’ possibly have required more than 250,000 soldiers and could have been carried forward with hardly apy more dislocation of the peace structure than the mobilization of the CCC camps. The World War was an entirely different matter. It was an economic struggle between the industrial giants of the world. The nation which could mo-
‘| ‘bilize the most mountainous masses of munitions was
sure to win. There was only one way to do that— to treat this nation as a unitary production machine, which, in. turn, could be done only by one-man Bovertiment with dictatorial control.
* » 2
N any other similar struggle, the same kind of legis« I lation will be necessary. But such a condition ine volving this country is almost impossible to imagine. The change of a peaceful nation to a monstrous war machine—such as we were in 1918—from the farthest farm, village and factory to the most forward trench--requires a tremendous dislocation, For example, in 1918 we had to step up our production of wheat from roughly 600,000,000 to between 900,000,000 and a billion bushels. It almost ruined our agriculture in the post-war period. It resulted in ripping up the natural ceverage of the Western great plains and created the dust bowl. The great white elephant of Muscle Shoals—a war baby—bequeathed to us TVA. ' xamples of that kind could be multiplied. The case scarcely needs argument. You cafl’t jump from
‘a free economy to a planned economy as lightly as
children playing hop-scotch. The idea of attempting in peace to write a law automatically and instantly making that revolutionary change on the immediate event of any war, is abortive. Instead of strengthening the country for defense, the result rhight be paralysis for defense—especially in the confiscatory tax provisions.
It Seems to Me
¢ By Heywood Broun In “Politics as Well as Football, Good Offense May Be Best Defense.
EW YORK, April 5—~The word “smear” is being used too freely by partisans of both sides in present political controversies. I don’t exactly know what it means. Here Ihave before me “for immediate release,” a communication from the. National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government. And it begins, “The Nation’s No. 1 lobbyists attempt to ‘smear’ all citizens who dare raise their voices in protest against his grasp for more power is an unprecented piece of effrontery.” . Now, as long as the word “unprecedented” remains, that is all stuff and nonsense. It might be an excellent idea if the American political tradition .imposed some restraint upon the language used in tough campaigns. We might arrive more readily at solutions of our problems if personalities were avoided. But that is not the American tradition. It is not the tradition now and it never has been. Very sharp and biting things were said about the first President of the United States when he came into power. And surely there was “smearing” ini the days of Theodore Roosevelt. He called some of his opponents “malefactors of great wealth.” And they replied in kind, This may be just too bad, but while “smearing” is comparatively a new word, it is a familiar practice in the American scheme of things. This being so, it is generally held that a President of the United States must learn to take it. It is not a job for wincers.
Both Come Out Fighting .
Politically speaking, it is not a bad thing for a national executive to get mad. In public controversy, as well as in football, a good offense may be the best defense. Of course, errors have: been made by Franklin D. Roosevelt and others when they were incautious enough to let critics get their goat. Pose sibly it would be a good idea to build a small addie tion to the White House. This might well be a solid steel stable in which the animal could be" tethered. But if the President of the United States is to take everything which comes his way “without blinking, certainly the same rule should hold for those who set themselves up publicly as foemen.. Some day I hope that we will reach a level of public discussion in which the debate will really be restricted to the issues. Ir that age no one will attempt to confuse the effort to achieve governmental efficiency with a drive toward fascism. And in all fairness I suppose I might add that in that same golden age no President will say anything which can be interpreted as a eharge that the Snposition has been “purchased. Ma at
Watching. Your Health
By Dr. Morris Fishbein
world—the reality of poetry, of beauty and of growth.
MILLION cats’ the world over,
etables, 1 serving; meat, ‘3 ounces; :
some friendly cats fed and
cannot grow old gracefully.” Wil-| liam Lyon Phelps speaking, ladies and gentlemen, and what a grand man of letters he is! He puts you in mind of .a sound apple mellowed by seasons of sunShige and rain, filled with its young Juices, yet all the tastier because |. it has reached a full maturity. The
Change is the: inexorable law’ of the universe. How then can we pre=sume to believe it js possible for
even the most fortunate among us ‘to remain ageless and gay? Why indeed should one wish to become petrified into that static. state?
If there is such a ‘thing as per-
loved by’ their mistresses, others poor stray pusses scared of their
‘alley or scurrying across a busy street. Each has its own story, and each has added its bit to animal life, ‘Frances E. Clark in her collection | CATS—AND CATS (Macmillan) has compiled ‘some: of their stories
own shadows, slinking down a dark
struck it rich. Today the name and fame of this young man, Winfield Scott Stratton, sre perpetuated by the internationally recognized Myron Stratton Memorial Home in Colorado Springs, founded “and richly endowed by. him and named
book MIDAS OF THE BOCKIES
THE serious nature of chronic colitis should make the patient
potato, 1. ‘medium sized; gravy if realize the necessity for having
careful and scientific treatment. The treatment involves not only the elimination “of infection but rest, suitable diet, nursing care, proper measures for maintaining the blood ‘in a state of health and numerous
{other factors Far too many ‘people believe that { OF
to control or cure co-
Yale . professor, whose name is known wherever books are read, believes that the secret of the good Jife is to possess the mind of an adult and the heart of a child. It has indeed worked well in his case,
and it is plain to be seen that no
one who possesses that magic com-
bination of qualities would ever use
life in a futile attempt to resist age. Yet how many, many women of
our time do use time for that pur-|
pose! This year multitudes of them have the opportunity to hear Prof. Phelps, who is taking his classroom wisdom to the lecture platform. There they sit, perfect ladies ‘wearing correct gowns and no doubt
of course, under their correct hats, correct thoughts while they | tragedy
petual youth, men like William
Lyon Phelve have discovered its secret. It a simple secret, as a matter of’ + % One merely has to be more interested in. other pevple
How many times have we » ‘resid those words? So often they have
than in one’s self.
become tiresome. Yet I'm sure we
still have not their real
grasped ‘meaning. For the plain truth is
that the person who is afraid of age has lost curiosity—that childlize wonder about ‘the world. which is the very essence of youth. ; With so much to be discovered about the strange mysterious heart of humanity, gy such ans of transfiguring poetry unread, with so much work to be done, is it not for a woman : 4
| Hearn; “Do Cate Think?” by W. H. Hudson; “The Ca
as written by wellknown authors. The collection includes: “The Cat’s| Cruise,” by Mazo de la Roche; “The Boy Who Drew Cats,” by Lafcadio
in Music,” oY | go Carl Van The at. There is the| oo story of the “cat whose forbears dwelt in temples long before the he ‘ Christian 13 cat that |
nd SE and SPIT ont. ot left his millions in a the world he left a
(CovleD traces torus tia’ uslentlo
building mansions’ ; buying 3 yachts and aving | mis ed unobtrusively in
litis by attention to the diet alone. - A. proper. diet may aid the body to overcome the colitis but unless the actual source of the condition is atSacked, 1t i 1wé likely to clear up. Previoi the best available diet for ordinary colitis had hey Pub. ere
8 | lished these columns. have béen so many requests for the
list that a similar list is given here. It should be emphasized, however,
‘cessory in vention and hygiene of this condition. . Diet—Breakfast:
desired; bread, white or rye, 1 slice; butter, 2 squares; bland dessert, without fruit, 1 serving; cream, 2 tablespoonfuls; tea if desired; sugar; concentrated yeast tablets, 2.
Shipper: Steamed rice, 1 serving; .
Seat or fish, 3 ounces; bread, white rye, 1 slice; butter, 2 squares; bland dessert, without fruit, 1 serving; cream, 2 tablespoonfuls; tea if desired; - sugar; concentrated yeast tablets, 2. Order of additions: One banana, very ripe; orange juice, 14 glass; vegetable . puree, 2 tablesponpfuls; - milk in the form, gream soup - or milk toast;
that the diet which follows will not | baked: in itself cure or perhaps even alle- | crea viate colitis. It is merely one ac-}
and ‘half cream; tomato juice, % glass; _ Whole cooked Vegetable, : gs. Ne 3
