Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1943 — Page 2
rte LS 4 res MEE
tains Syrup Pepsin. Insist on Dr. Caldwell’s PE ive Dit bined
5 D tive
0 :
day is the Day and Nation 1s Expected to: Come| Through as Usual; Those Who Honestly Can't’
_ Pay Must Arrange With Collector.
4 : - ne i : > Times ASHINGTON, . March
Specidl iL : 1 10.—The ‘treasury expects
y taxpayer to do his duty by tax “M” day, next Monday.
ohn L. Sullivan, assistant treasury secretary, expressed| dence today that the American people will year, as usual, despite the greatly increased ta ause they know jt is necessary to win. the war.
he treasury has ‘taken 'y ‘precaution to be sure that-every taxpayer is advised his obligation. Treasury officials recognize there nay be some difficulty in scraping ip the money in some cases, and hat some will actually be unable 0 pay on March 15. Some few res already have been received pithout the tax, Guy T., Helvering, internal revenue commissioder, said # But everybody can file a return on #942 ihcome—and must, under the w., . ! What of the taxpayer who just have the money? ‘Treasury officials emphasize that only thing to do is to deal ditly and honestly with the govern-
Collector Gives Help
~ Such ‘a taxpayer must include in the envelope, with his return a sworn statement to the effect that “he can’t pay. Then he awaits a nob from the collector advising him hen he can see him about his case, | the appointed date, he must te with him complete information about his financial status, with a of what he owns and of the
debts he owes.
The collector—and he is flanked by a large corps of assistants to
help—becomes the adviser of the
taxpayer, and: will go over the case and arrange how payments can be
made. Installment payments can be “arranged for so much a week to ‘elear up the indebtedness.
If this is done, the taxpayer signs
_ &n agreement and must live up to it.
Few to Get Extensions In case there is no income, then
_ the collector under the law can take over possessions of the taxpayer and spell them to eet the obligation.
Such a course, however, probably
would be delayed to see if there were
Pull the Trigger on Constipation, with Ease for Stomach, too
When constipation brings on discoms fort after meals, stomach upset, bloating, spells, gas, coated tongue, and bad
dizzy breath, your stomach is probably “crying
‘your bowels don’t move. It calls for Laxative-Senna to pull on those lazy bowels, com-
“bined with Syrup Pepsin for perfect ease to your
stomach in taking. For years, xany Doctors have given pepsin prepagations in their prescriptions to makd)
" medicine more agreeable to a touchy
stomach. So be sure your laxative concom with in. See how wonderfully the Bie nyo ane ts ee es in your in es to welrelief from ipation. the this laxa-
Commissioner Helvering issued 8] Patricia Flick public notice this week that there! Credited with being the first
would be no blanket extension of the wAVE vocalist in the nation, Pa-|
date for filing, March 15, to set at trieia Flic augh Mr. and rest rumors which seem to have got| yrs Oo, i Pope 1 a: ave.,
around in some way. Local collec-|yac heen spen two~ tors do have authority to make ex-| uit) her Spending B:iusWesk leave
tensions up to 60 days in meri-
torious cases, but that is up to them. In the case .of delihquency, the penalty of 6 per cent interest covers the whole amount due for the year, not just the quarterly instalment which is due on March 15, the commissioner pointed out.
Bond Redemptions Negligible
A hopeful sign that delinquencies will be comparatively small is the bulging savings accounts today, which leads to the belief that many people have been laying aside money to meet thelr taxes, rather than buying bonds up to the limit. Redeeming of war bonds has increased at a great rate in recent weeks, obviously in part for meeting income taxes. Redemptions for the first five days in March totale $24,005,000, as compared with $5, 143000 in the same period last March, while redemptions this Jane uary were $62,973,000 as compared with $15,408,000 January a year ago, and, in February this year, $76, 352,000, compared with $15,774,000 in February, 1943. : There are, however, $10,000,000,000 more in war bond§ this year than a year ago, so that reservoir has been tapped only negligibly.
Advertisenients ‘have been ‘appearing lately from small loan companies for loans for paying income taxes. The rales in some cases are exorbitant. ‘The taxpayer would be well advised io sting sub Joan oposals-most car , 80 Foes not get into the hands of loan sharks, 7 ia. Cog oe mm ' The treasury has given no indorsement to any income tax payment loan plan whatever, though many companies, large and small, as well as banks, have sought treasury approval, If ‘any’ claims of treasury approval are made, they are false.
Free Advice Provided
Aside from publicity and information ‘campaigns on: 4 scale never before approached, the internal reveriue bureau has greatly enlarged its facilities for the taxpayer. The number of colldetors’ offices and division offices has been increased from 94 to 260. . The force of fully trained fleld deputy collectors has grown from 5600 to approximately 8000, and in addition the revenue agent force of about 3700 also is available to
d |the general public during the filing
period for assistance, making & total of about 11,600 experts ready to help the taxpayer. Offices are being kept open at
. |night, and expert help also is being
Pos
One gallon 9% “does over’ a room!
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aan ¥ too 05 OF
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Komaons ROLLER-KOATER J
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FINISH
ONE COAY COVERS | WALLPAPER, pointed wills; wallboard,
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SEE KEM-TONE This Week In 383
ve WE
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vr Three Neighborhood Stores N. Iliinois—4221 College Ave.—802 E. 63rd
DEMONSTRATION
oD
{made the target of an attack by
A premedical student at Indiana university extension before enlisting Dec. 15, Miss Flick recently completed her training at the United
States naval hospital in San Diego]
and has been rated a third class pharmacist’s mate.
SENATOR FEARS
ANTI-NEWS PLOT
Administration Seeking to Discredit Papers,
Brooks Fears.
WASHINGTON, March 10 (U, P.). — Senator C. Wayland Brooks (R111), charged yesterday that administration forces are seeking “to supplant the free press of our country by government dominated, ‘news.’ ” .
In a senate speech, Senator Brooks called on congress to friquire whether “newspapers ' are being
enemies of America—saboteurs who seek to destroy the newspapers and through them to destroy one of the} most treasured rights of American citizens.” LAE Over a 10-year period, start with the codes of fair competition under NRA, Senator Brooks said, the administration has been employing “sly, indirect methods” to limit press freedom. There been, he added, a per-| sistent effort to brand newspapers “as pariahs, to smear and assail them, to separate them from their government and the people they serve.” “Fach restrictive step,” Senator Brooks continued, “shrewdly progressed under the cover of some ascribed emergency, but always short of a showdown, and always with a passing, soothing assurance of only this and néthing more.”
Says Government Uses More Paper
‘Citing charges by senatorial colleagues that the government, while limiting newspaper consumption of newsprint, was itself using nearly 10 times as much paper as it did in 1941, Senator Brooks said: “I believe that a full disclosure of this increased use of paper by the government would show a determined desire on the part of some men in our present government to supplant the free press of our coun= try by government dominated ‘news’
through the use of handouts from
the various bureaus.” Asserting that in axis countries destruction of press freedom was the prelude to dictatorship, Senator Brooks said untrammeled newspapers were essential war industries. “A newspaper is not a warship, a plane, a tank or a battalion of infantry,” he said, “but it serves in its field just as fittingly and importantly.” ass Cites 8 Pieces of - Evidence Senator Brooks cited as “evidetice of the progression of a restrictive hand reaching out to limit and ‘curtail” the press these points: 1, The “attempt to limit the press under NRA.” SEAT 5.2 2. Opposition by the federal com« munications commission to: opera: tion of radio stations by newspapers. 3. The justice department's suit against. the ‘Associated Press. ~~ 4. Office ‘pf defense transportation restrictions on truck use. : } i 5. The “arbitrary : censorship o: the news and orders from the office of ‘war information.” -
6. Rationing of rubber, gasoline, '§
metals and other materials. 7. The first" 10 per cent cut in newspaper use of newsprint and.a projected “which threatened: order was with« drawn when a demand for a justification was made.” - -/ 8. The “failure of the wap man. power commission to declare the
10 per cent cut]
press of the nation an essential in-
dustry.” ou CO 3. 52 “The movement should be seen for what itis,” Brooks said. “If
I,
8
ie
Veterans’ hall on business meeting and or BAave. ~~ |8 p. m. tomorrow G District: 24 wardens will hear a|Mrs. Lucille Johnson will
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