Show -: 6 :ncome Tax Ruling Aids C D Staffs Postal Losses OCD Handbook Answers BrinoPurge Of Magazines Queries on War Jobs - WASHINGTON Aug 30 (R)—Painters can offer themselves for camouflage work Carpenters can teach classes in home repair Dodr-to-dosalesmen can take housing and other surveys Taxi drivers barbers and bartenders can be mindful of their responsibility for not spreading rumors Miners can offer themselves for demolition and rescue work Cleaners can care for rugs and curtains in service clubs These suggestions were offered by the office of civilian defense in a new citizens' handbook for war designed to Workers May Deduct Cost of Auto Fuel or o' WASHLNGTON Aug 30—Civilian defense workers engaged in protective activities may deduct expenditures for gasoline used on assigned tasks in computing their federal income tax Internal Revenue Commissioner Guy T Helvering ruled Sunday night In a report to the office of civilian defense he said the fuel deductions may be listed as contributions but he added that no allowances can be made for the depreciation of the vehicle While his opinion related specifically to those in the U S citizens defense corps OC D officials interpreted it as applicable to members of the aircraft warning service civil air patrol the forest fire fighters service and others doing civilian protective work under federal state or local govrnment supervision An 0 C D spokesman emphasized that defense workers doing salvage work or selling war bonds —an estimated 4000000—are considered service and not protective workers He said there are about 6000000 persons who would be affected by the ruling such as air raid wapdens and auxiliary firevien and auxiliary policemen Elsewhere on the home front: Chairman James E Murray (D) Montana of the senate committee on small business disclosed that hearings will begin September 28 on a series of proposals for the relief of small concerns hit by the answer the question: "What cans I do?" The pamphlet was compiled said 0 C D Director James M Landis to help Americans "get in up to the shoulders" instead of being only "ankle deep" in the war The booklet represents the first official–compilation of opportunities for volunteer war work and was prepared Landis said in response to "thousands of requests" booklet lists specific Separate chapters in the and Others offer spare-tim- e women and for for girls boys jobs activities for more than a score of or working-tim- e these three rules On the subject of conservation at large: were offered the for others population among "Get along with less Every time you decide not to buy something you help to win the war Be tough with yourself in making each decision "Take good care of the things you have Most of the comforts and conveniences you now enjoy will have to last you for the duration "Save to pay your taxes Don't let tax day find you unprepared" - 48-pa- Spending Tax How Spending Tax Would Plan Nears Senate Study Affect Family war effort Wallace Hails Mexican Town (Continued from Page One) rived at he then could make additional deductions for payments on debts (including insurance premiums and taxes) purchases of government bonds investments in capital assets (such as a house but not a fur coat) and other expenditures the treasury may specify later Still another deduction would be allowed the taxpayer for hiesavings calculated by subtracting that portion of his cash on hand or in the bank that exceeded the amount he had on hand a year previously After all these deductions had been made the resulting figure would represent the amount of money he had spent on which he would have to pay a percentage WASHINGTON Aug 30 (N Y Times)—Vice President Wallace In a broadcast in Spanish and English Sunday night hailed the action of the little Mexican farm vSlage of San Geronimo in changiFg its name to Lidice in honor of the similar small community Czecho-SlovakIn where the nazis executed the entire civilian population in revenge for the slaying of Reinhard Heydrich the nazi ia ' gestapo "hangman" "Seven weeks ago today a littie town in Blinols in a great public ceremony changed its name from stern Park Gardens to Lidice" Mr Wallace Alaid "The of this town will be an evertriumph lasting memorial to theover nazi of the human ppirit infamy "And now today in Mexico the tovm Of San Geronimo a village of farmers like the original Lidice tax Expresses Belief George expressed the belief that no one with an annual income of less than $1000 would have to pay any spending tax Without indorsing the proposal in size and type of population is in he said it had been free- the any wayof much raising the flag of human by treassubject dom by changing her name to ury experts as well study as discussions between Secretary 241orgenthau and "representatives of other government agencies concerned with the problem of inflation" "Such a tax" George said in a statement "is intended to serve a Efficiency dual purpose It would place a end check on consumer spending and would thus help to meet the inA '4-- 1 Experience creasing danger of a further rise In the cost of living It would also Are produce a substantial amount of revenue" WAR TIME I Revenue Goal Questioned about the revenue goal George said he thought the treasury would make proposals involving an increase of $4000- 000000 to $5000000000 in annual iNecessities F ' VOTE FOR A receipts He said the proposed levy might also be linked to postwar rebates to individual taxpayers with the treasury taking the full amount of the tax immediately but arof it in ranging to pay back part the war annual installments after TRUSTWORTHY VETERAN LAWMAKER P S (PETE) MARTHAKIS for STATE SENATOR )4mbr House 1935 '37 tives Floor header 1937 !11:1dG- - Neurologist Dies of Representa'39 Miority Z'illitela1731d0artstillrbot CHICAGG Aug 30 ()—Dr Stephen Walter Ranson 62 neurologist and director of Northwestern university's neurological institute since 1927 died Sunday uttly DON T ASIC YOUR FRIEND - ' 1 - - - It' ' ' 's- - - 4" 1- - - '' ' - - ' k '' "' '4E ' NIi NN4 -' ''s -- - - - '- - 1 't 1k11 1 101 4 A ' ' - - ' t '- ' k 4 N ' N k N - ' - -0 ":- - ‘ '41- WO I ''''' 000 Vt - SN- - tt V1N c '4 ' 44 : kqt'-- - '4 44 464k- - NY'0- '' 0:1 NE ' :- 't E 1 o ' skEyt14:4 s 4 :4 - -- 4‘ "'-- ' ut ' ' dignified busi- ness transaction : ' 14e:ks' loan from us represents a clean-c- te F4: :N tl-Ss- '- :' r '-- I le' v N- - - ' LoNIMS '' '' : l-A - ' ' i - AMR 4 du"m - 11v ' go ge $I0 ibilt: to $30'0 1- :''''' ' gat - 3 lista '7 k i C -- 0 l'A pA NY 21 EAST SECOND SOUTH Tel Beason Building Salt Lake City 5-46- 04 Moral Reforms Denied as Motive of Actions SEamilies Navy Medical Cofps Face See Gain Task on Big Anniversary In Income Mayor of NY Urges Use Of Spaghetti - - WASHINGTON Aug 30 (2P)— A picture of a girl with pretty legs and pretty much of them showing may brighten a magazine occasionally but aa a standard decoration it isn't what the post office department wants to carry at an 80 per cent loss And that officials said Sunday is why you may see on the news stands fewer and fewer magazines fronted with risque pictures and filled with more of the same In the past two months the department has barred the second class mails with their low ratesto more than 20 periodicals some of them widely known In some cases the second class privilege has been revoked in others current issues have been barred and the publishers have been ordered to show why they should not lose the privilege and in a few the department has refused admission to the mails Now In Open Fred A Ironside Jr right-han- d man to Postmaster General Walker explained that what appears to be a campaign against obscenity in the mails is nothing more than bringing into the open a type of action which heretofore had proceeded in private Orders involving the second class mall privilege had been entirely secret with no official record of the testimony and arguments Now the entire proceeding The comhas been formalized plaints are published hearings are open and testimony is officially recorded This reflects the Importance the postmaster general attaches to the second class privilege Ironside said in an interview It cost the department $108144994 to handle second class mail in the 1941 fiscal year while revenue was only 824- 309630 a deficit of $83835364 Text of Law Congress established the second class rate more than 50 years ago with the provision that It apply to periodicals "originated and published for the dissemination of Information of a public character or devoted to literature the sciences arts or some special industry" Ironside said the department was insisting that the special privilege of fast handling and low Hundreds of Nursys and Doctors Strive to Keep Guns Alarmed Pearl Harbor Crisis Proved Mettle First Quarter of '42 NEW YORK Aug 30 (N News)—Pass the spaan ghetti sister and bend ear while Mayor Fiore llo LaGuardia gives you another warning of meatless days to Y ' 191: Augtto4t 31 gakt Zeiburte Zlic ?Salt Monday Morning Brings Avetge Up to $1540 a Year WASHINGTON Aug 30 UP)--family income of Mr Average Citizen rose from $1480 in 1941 to a rate of $1540 in the first three months of this year But the family tucked away 65 per cent of the increase in savings much of it war bonds and come The quantity of meat shipped to New York City last week was 15 per cent less than the amount the week before the mayor informed his listeners Sunday in his weekly broadcast over station WYNC He left little doubt that he expected that trend to continue Meanwhile he urged all citizens to report any instance of overcharging He advised that households accustom themselves now to such dishes as spaghetti and cheese so the meatless days In prospect wouldn't be such a change The stamps These were among the findings of a nation-wid- e survey of family and saving in wartime spending made by the bureaus of the agriculture and labor departments which disclosed new patterns of purchasing saving and taxpaying Less for Cars The typical consumer spent 26 per cent less for automobile buying and purchasing in the first quarter of this year than he did in 1941 and 25 per cent less for house furnishings and equipment Other signs of the impact made by the conversion of consumer goods industries tightened credit PrTTSBURGH Aug 30 UPI— controls rationing and cost of livThe Aluminum Company of Amer ing shifts were reported by the of labor statistics and agriIca announced Sunday night it is bureau bureau of home ecoculture's willing to meet with representa- nomics as follows: tives of the C I 0 Aluminum WorkClothing expenditures were 35 ers as soon as the union has ac- per cent lower despite a rise in clothing prices this was attributed cepted the war labor board direc- to unusually heavy buying late in tive which refused a general $1 1941 a day wage boost in the vital war Recreation spending including Alcoa Agrees To Confer With C I 0 Aids WASHINGTON Aug 30 (Wide World)—Faced with greatest challenge to thesaving of human life iii its history th United States navy celebrates Monday anniversary o sez-ice the founding of its medical President Roosevelt is scheduled to speak in commemoration of the President Roosevelt points wit event But aside from that few more than a little pride to thi by his corps of hol of the thousands of men and wom- demonstration to meet an emergency of en working under the bureau medicine and surgery throughout Peacetime Load Similar critical situations ma the world will pay more than passthe event occur in any part of the worl ing attention to They will be too busy—surgeons where the American fleet is oper doing difficult operations and tak- ating 'Under peacetime condition ing delicate stitches on a wound- the medical personnel of one bat ed man in a pitching ship nurses tleship treated 20000 patient- doing the work of three men for took care of 4500 dental cases an days on end caring for the injured provided 10000 prescriptions i in battle areas yeomen serving One year as physicians surgeons nurses Under wartime conditions the and pharmacists at one and the numbers may be double or tripl same time in the narrow quarters for the ships company alone am of a rolling destroyer army and marine corps casualtie brought aboard put an additions-- Naval Traditions strain on the medical facilities These are4the men and women of During the last tradition of the century the bureau quarter of medicin carrying on theservice—"to keep and surgery has readied itself fo navy's medical as as many men at many guns as the present emergency many days as possible" No one knows better than these men and women what a bitter war i ' ' i this is They can't get a crack at rlr'k"ci i 41 the enemy But they can do their utmost to mend the wreckage he 1 f causes and if possible get the -- III eg'44----wounded men back into action D Their work goes on night and day '"' C e 7 on shipboard in airplane ambuii 111cf'z' ezio ---: lances and hospitals ashore : e‘-Their work and ability to meet 1 '111S: s -- v 117 i emergencies was never better illustrated than in the bombing of ' I Pearl Harbor There hundreds of Distinctive t techninurses and doctors navy Luncheon i Place cians within a few hours were An atmosphere of elefi' called on to treat almost 1000 per- Di '' and cept sons injured by bullets bomb fragg 1371g l it rue rest: ments and burns y le mar pilritwil the-100t- v -- F :-- - - - - -- !- '5 - 4 " a 1 - 221--k- r -- radios went down—attributed to evenings spent on air raid duty The company said if the union In canteen service and first aid accepts the order it would "study classes and give consideration to local More for Food adjustments if any are needed" Increased outlays for food housStatement Monday ing medical care and miscelNick A Zonarich president of laneous items slightly more than WASHINGTON Aug 30 the union announced from his offset the reductions in cars clothHere le how the proposed spendprices you New Kensington Pa headquar- ing recreation and furnishings 0 tut i recognition The savings figure was 47 per Two Corps Cooperate ters Saturday night the union !!tional ing tax might affect a married value Hours: i was last cent comthan 2 to it man with two children and a $3000 moved to meet noon medical The with the naval year higher p m corps "planned scene Lto of A the rural was in immediately to cooperate with study income: pany" early this week He not available for comment Sunday showed farrners in the middle in- the army medical corps in taking His head of family credit under a union spokesman said come level spent more for automo- care of the wounded and by midbut night bill now before the senate finance ri he probably would issue a state- biles clothing and medical care night every injured person had 1 ' g'f '! A" 4 31? committee would be $1200 He ment Monday than city dwellers and less for been cared for at least temporarC I 0 workers in the seven food housing recreation tobacco ily The navy's new mobile hoscould claim $600 credit for his two I Y) Itacioe Aluminum company plants voted and household operation ' pital arriving only a few days bechildren—$300 for each—as the inFarm dwellers with money fore went into action and a navy almost unanimously last week to c 't ! ''l 1 0 : committee has amended the bill war labor board direc- comes of $500 to $1000 saved about hospital ship anchored near by the reject In addition he might have $100 cost should be available only to tive Zonarich said the action em- 5 per cent of income while city moved in swiftly to provide addi- ri --4 f 1 h i 'In other expenditures which he those publications which satisfied powered him to take whatever residents showed a deficit as great tional bed space and supplies Admiral Ross T McIntire chief but Above the MOO level the farmers action he deemed could deduct in figuring his regu- the congressional specification s Guy rtp There has been no intent he said after meeting withnecessary union saved "very much g r ea t er of the bureau of medicine and sur- IIISEIVATIONS other lar income tax fiat tireri Maesgiog to use the law for a moral crusade officials gery and personal physician to Saturday he reiterated his amounts" Thus his total credits for income a peaceful settlement for hopes tax purposes would be $1900 In Statement Quoted 0 computing his spending tax howThe Aluminum company stateever he would be allowed addir4 ment prepared by M M Andertional deductions I son 'personnel director in charge Suppose he paid WO on his of labor relations said: home mortgage during the year "The Aluminum Company of of life $100 insurance paid preAmerica has notified the war labor '"7"a miums and bought $300 worth of 7-7board of its acceptance of the war bonds The total of these or 1 ' $800 then could be added to the NEW YORK Aug 30 (UM— directive order in case No 84 It has already complied with the $1900 giving him an exemption of Earl Browder general secretary of provisions of the order insofar as $2700 in establishing the spending the Communist party in his first the company is concerned As soon tax basis ry If he had on hand at the end of public address since release from as the union has accepted the 1 the year the same amount of cash prison Sunday flayed James A board's order the company is will1 J't1 to meet with P he had when he started the year— tix ILL 1 ing representatives Li Li Farley and the major political of the union at the various local that is if he had saved nothing parties for "politics as usual" and study and give considerduring the year—he would have demanded "the highest form of plants toto local to pay the tax on $300 the differ- capitalism not socialism" in the ation adjustments if any TA are needed" ence between the exempted 2700 war effort V The Aluminum company plants and his total Income of $3000 ft) Browder who last was ‘1spring New are located at 10 rate were If the Kensington per cent released from the prison sentence his spending tax would be $30 Bauxite Ark Baden N C he was serving for passport fraud Pa Alcoa Tenn Bridgeport Conn by an order of President Roosevelt Edgewater N J and Detroit In the interest of "national unity" Indian Dancers Wait spoke at the Communist party convention which indorsed a full :: Denies Rumors Moon Ceremonial :1'1 6 Communist slate for state offices Vichy ()E11—The 30 VICHY govIt also set up a committee "to ernment Aug q LA JUNTA Colo il Aug 30 Sunday published a dethe possibilities of achiev- nial of current (UP)—Indian summer will be of- explore rumors French that i political unity with other workmen were ficially ushered in next week when ing to being obliged around the patriotic groups crucial Koshare Indian dancers celebrate Issues of enlist for labor In Germany under the campaign" their harvest moon ceremonial at threat of having their food ration "We are being given one of the cards La Junta additional thousands of The war can't stop for holidays The rumors withdrawn Handling most t deexhibitions of disgusting 150 A total of dancers will pargeneracy eating at the heart of our were denounced as "counterpropabut YOU can postperne a pleasure passengers over Labor Day means ticipate in the 12 - dance cereganda" monial which will be led by Ko- political life in the politics-asusuincreased strain on already overt election maneuvering of the trip! Over this Labor Day war share Chief Loren Ingersol major parties engineered by deloaded transportation facilities workers must get to jobs as usual featists in New York state" Browder said Veteran Engineer handicapping vital traffic upMilitary traffic must roll regardt"Such leadership as the t PLEAwhich less all on That's We must reklize: depends victory t camp offers can lead Slates Retirement only to disaster It plays into the we say: "DON'T TRAVEL A IS NOW TRAVEL SURE why DENVER Aug 30 (UP)—After hands of Hitler and the mikado" PEACE-TIMOVER LABOR DAY" LUXURY Browder accused Farley state riding more than 1000000 miles in the cabs of locomotives on the Democratic chairman of "frivolous Chicago Burlington and Quincy playing with the life of our naRailroad system C W Jacobs tion" which he said was even 60 of Denver will retire Monday more dangerous than "Dewey's lip MUST In more than 37 years of serv- service to the war and brazen exice Jacobs said he had piloted ploitation of war strains to gain r locomotives 1115000 miles partisan political advantages" ti (Spur i 1 Horse-Draw- u 1 Get full Information on your trip in advance 't ‘ 101 frrik ANT Purchase tickets NOW to avoid last minute rush at the depot Industry -- '4--z- 11 ojlr 1 - i- 1 re r - xi 111 ytk - 11 eV 1 1 t':- emoiimmoo Browder Raps - Farley for Polities hi War )" r 1 traf L A )- r---- Li ! - i al anti-Roosev- II Auto Hits Rig Kills Veteran Stage Driver PALO ALTO Cal Aug 30' UP) — The same instrument which put "Uncle Dan" Wood out of the business to which he had devoted nearly half his 80 years took the old coachman's life Sunday An automobile ran into the rear of Uncle Dan's horse-draw- n buggy on a country road near Woodside Wood was thrown 60 feet Into a ditch Ile died' Sunday at Palo Alto hospital Thus ended a colorful career stretching back to the early 18805 when Uncle Dan first came to California For years he drove stage coaches through the Mother Lode mining country: often carrying large shipments of gold Later he was on the coast run from Woodside to Pescadero Mechanized transportation eventually forced the old stage driver into cattle ranching but he refused persistently to bow to progress so far as his own travel was concerned He was still behind a horse on his last ride ) cr' J E A But—if you travel—help avoid crowding and delay ivid) :) ''' OIX 4 4' i—11 c7" 's ' ' 4 - --- (' OP 0 ir o WITH go4l CANADA DRY baggage as possible Take a shirt trip in preference to a long ono If you can possibly arrange It leave before Saturday and return after Monday I " ' Tok as little I :1:r11( Listen to - ' T MAY WITHE S 0 ver Radio Station KUTA Monday Night at 8:45 p August 31st WAR BONDS INSTEAD Postpone pleasure trips—BUY :' ''''' d - 11169 N' '1 - 4'! T:i 1' I '' - ' i ' --'-- I 1L ( 1 1 : - k - '"''':':"'''"'""'"''''s - :4:ez'')t161c44'0iik4t11- :r 1:77- -- ' ' "1"--'7--- " - - '''-- '"''- -- - -- --- 73 - |