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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
4 EDITORIALS, ~ (84 gr ay s= }> Group Medicine Still | --- c c ne = (aB ' Fol , - RRR (In Formative Stage Larger Social Security Payments |@N ~ J 4, we C § R. w. Regarded As Certain During 1949 An analysis of the status of Fed-[at the subsistence level. This is the eral Social Security 12 years after the group that would benefit most of all law was enacted shows that it has | from the proposed increase in Social txiled to achieve its goal and is being | Security payments. discredited by the fact old people on Less than half of those who are relief receive about twice as much as | to retire under Social Secur- P the Editor those who are getting retirement in. ity have done so, the principal reason with . ceive would be inadequate to provide Federal Social Securi into. the tx a decent standard of living. System. Went Press news The 1 per cent Social Security tax v, papers as well as papers The fortunate retired worker who p ou dusting Dr. Dan router has independent means may take his has yielding approkimately three popular 5 the Health of Greater times as much asthe cost of annual small Social Security payments cheer- payments. As a result a surplus of too. adv-aha- alequats \nge 22. Sb0ut $10,000,000,000 has been built may pared up. If payments were increased 50 to but \Group medicine\ :means a kind of medi- tired worker who has no means what- } i 100 t the cost ofthe syStEeM cries pesetitioners specialist each field ever cansupp an inadequate Mw’mmh reven Don! Mom-Whammmm wmwwamm’ * the \ wo man may save the patient ths inconvenience of for relief. About one-tent} dmofthnlpamthxbmthein- being sent to different places before & final crease would encourage thousands to take advantage of it who as yet have not elected to do so: creased to 1 t and - people who have their own home, in- mummmfio‘xy surance policies, etc., but hot enough | during 1949 are regarded as excel- Mfwtmforhhlelifig,m lent, since Presiderit Truman has gone with Social Security. In order to Ob-| on record as favoring both and the 2° beaup, - a to deed their mm” the i j T of present payments are! jockey up, can' hear what's wnit of from PE and crit A “Ti.“‘ifiei ‘umfi‘fi‘éflfi new which they timited amount of relief for l cal gov- ain't-mm“ gran st by obtained relief. They would have to ernments will be an incidental } fit assign i policies as well, incr mm C. o meo oe. ak him an old nag their insurance as of any i AI for a milk route; &a or they would be barred from relief. payments, for that 1 Security Mfua'htumofmfixd from local relief Tolls many who are workers in this class who are living) now getting supplemental relief. @ American General Doubleand Trip & » * » le Might Save Chinese Taxation is Common _. The proposal of Dr. Son Fo, the new| The future course of local taxes is indi- prime minister of Chiang Kai-shek's govern-| cated by experiments and experiences in bild. ment, to appoint an outstanding American many cities throughout the country which ot because they lost, for they lost many Nationalist government, makes more sense| budgets from traditional sources of revenue, d than most of the acts and statements that| Chiefly the real estate tax. coma out of Nanking. NnYotKCltrlbpfi-dndtynluhx- It has beep apparent for a long time that Dumber of years ago. In Philadelphia they China doesn't get the results the size of her| collect a personal income tax to supplement artaies wirrant. This has been attributed) the city budget. Four Ohio cities -- Toledo, to their poot equipment, but it is obviously Columbus, Youngstown and Springfield -- dus in part to poor training and poor leader- bave instituted payroll taxes patterned after ship: tBe Federal Social Security tax. The rate General MacArthur could take the man-| has been small -~ it is .3 of 1 per cent in power of the Chinese Nationalists plus} Youngstown -- but the levy has boon suc- hmumhmumfimafimnmwmmmdomnh a oes % by the United States and make things pretty Year in larger cities that have tried it. » : who fair and Tor the Chinese Reds. We hope General| A score or more other Ohio cities are said fla’fif‘ffiéfimwfifsm- (Editor's Note - It Will not be MacArthur is not available, as he is still{ to be on the verge of adopting the same| pion when he's down; or a favorite they ©X*| practical to reproduce~this entire nseded in Jipan, but there must be some apt| tax as their budgetary problems become moo-ugw is man's. fallure to give pamphlet. However, its nature is in- pupil of his who might take over the Chinese more complicated. whim“! deeds be couldn't begin to Ac- \ g4g answers. which are Jok. An aspect of so. many taxes tried by himself. The rankest, most ridiculed | ~ Question 1, What is Communism? We lke General Clare Chenault's idea of| municipalities is that virtually all of them performer in any contest can do his Angwer: A system by which one recruiting a new volunteer flying force to \M‘s-mummwunm- mflffifnmmmmm' ngauflupmutzznuumworu, «tlp. Chins. An able American general with ernment many states levy income taxes. Tos americans boa. a nation .\: amy nation ever gone such an air force to supplement his efforts | In Cities which undertake this tax it may be “W'LdmIfisf‘w‘f‘” na Communist in a free election? whould be able to take the Nationalists ar-| the third personal income. tax a man has % mmon pow do the Communists mics and slow down the alarming gzins| to PSY in addition to the Federal Social © being made by the Reds, if not turn the tide Security tax. «entirely in the other direction. , Many states levy sales taxes, which are The Review-Star has statedly repeatedly duplicated at smaller rates by cities. If pay- that m good American general could have| TOl-tax becomes prevalent this means two taken $$10,000,000 worth. of equipment in| deductions on nearly every worker, as one 1986 and prevented the Italians from captur.| is already demanded by the Federal gov- ing Ethiopia. We qualify this by pointing ermment. A ttee on Un-Ameri out that $10,000,000 would have bought a lot| While the return from these taxes has gun. nous: of MW; more equipment in 1936 than it would today. 284ally proved favorable, they inflict still| $54 question?\ M. F. L. ‘ Nevertheless, the Italians could have been D0tber tax on employer. The typical| A. The \$64 question\ originated in the U persons who are receiving Social Se- relief. The real sufferers are thrifty old a??? if - THE OPINIONS OF OUR READERS No Free Election and give the hiring hall the one,, of the imagination could be called & two, three? #, congregation_ of Christian m Ever Went Communist | wonder what is in store tor us as | -_ GENEVIEVE LOCOMPTE, Editor, Nassau Daily Réview-Star: |a demonstration of the spirit of[-. . : ; L The United States House of Rep- istmas i been: st Hoy November 22, 1948 + menuummmuednwhmcm ne on une booklet which it designated as \100 the way up, but because their pub- Things You Should Know About deserted them. They realized, At] Communism in the U.S.A.,\ and its lic last, that people cheer the winner, not the| influence o+ religion, education, 1:11:11. football squads of strong Ye labor and our government, . 've seen foo sq OUDE 'The Nassau Daily Review-8 . lads, with all of life before them, break Into aways in the Adv-rice guard or?! mi; Aree s fame icts feeling of being at a vital question or problem concern- - Christian: people there ing the public. It will, therefore, I yul bout the f am confident, cons:nt to publish as ® ioe i © public service, as a Whole or in serial form, some or all of the 100 things everyone should know about who are Communists, how they work, what they want and what they would do to us if they: could. a glove curse the crowd ; then stagger dazed and fants-at defeat. . I've seen seasoned pitchers in professional baseball choke and hide a tear when they lost a tough one; and had listened to the slurs of fans who yesterday carried them on their shoulders. I even saw Christy Mathew- son do it. And I heard Al smiftn's husky voice tremble. cry P Hp U.S.A.\ was published by the Com- E f the difficulty, es- stopped if there had been suything there to| Company today has *staff which does oc nenas n nie mores and fot say parse a ¢ stop them. nothing except try to keep a recordof all a wm‘m‘w ”autumnal-mm | By the same reasoning we believe the vast th® taxes the company must pay on its Wlmlmhm help “hf-mm,\ ¥ ; wikmpower of China properly led and with| OWD and all it must collect as . The. méci‘iuu\°*f'wm.“ “Msmhlfim‘ s a iinimam of first rate armaments and air| 4€¢nt for the government. The smaller em- ; ; Editor, Nassau Daily Review-Star: 'little Ones whose ~pesch| A APH w d9 8 106 ; protection could hold its own against the| PlOFers find this particularly irksome, be-| %, C Philip Murray is going to get rid gungWWW-wgmmmmg hue § Chimese Communists, who are receiving as.| ©425¢ in many cases the owner either has a of those communist controlled un- alowty » and steadily in 'power - by » w sistance from Moscow. to handle this routine himself or pay a . tons. Indeed be is. Why? They, the setting them <a\ good-. example, % The United States would be justified in substantial fee to an accountant or tax gag m “Imminent out?! ‘hgmflu‘lumwu‘umw m‘m‘ officially encouragine China to name such| *XP®It to do it. Many small businesses are ~ '| Workers, failed to get all the rest ing 'them ' with 'an: atmosphere of am adviser if for nothing else than to see| 20t in a position to support a full-time f . . of .us organized! . affectionate, \calm . understanding. that the funds we make available for aid *X Clerk: _- Do you feel that lasso round your spegot expert. help tllose § throat? Those handciiffs on- your wrists, as your ankles are chained together for the lock«step? Lock- Chinn are used where they will count the| \1 1, there is nothing more thrilling than a pressure cooker explosion unless - means to nab and major step to 'freedom\ - hep, hep, hep. the smedern mother, Dr. . It is hard to believe that man is telling} it is a boy's first car wreck -Buffalo (Mo.) police mafiqggbénm’“mb\ Whichonhonmz'ttthnhu wan-pumas.- the truth when you know that you would lis] Reflex. Therefore a policeman was called a \copper us all fixed up on the water-front ® znn‘b‘tllpbhtyul how if you were in his place.-Dexter (la.) Sen- a oe % soon shortened to \cop.\ and railroads for oUr National 'de it in 'big leaflet P-21, \Talk- ip finel. Remember when there was only one car in Nowmwum‘tnbennpmhnn “fl-“mill. .‘l\- - * ® 0+) a garage instead of two families! -Clarks- some of our loyal ans, who . r Several cases are emerging of generals Ville Sentinel. are caught in these so indus- is .the: task of s\ 9 who may have dropped battles but never lost trial unions, call theif own revolu» pert, one (who- devotes \his life- to paper, P. a memoir -Kansas City Star. - I Me 0 L stock books tion and take over the waterfronts such patients. The difficulty mayd New a Frederick Bettes of Rockville Centre DIED NOVEMBER 29, 1942 Thomas. B. Clark of Freeport DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1928 Mrs. Armenia Gelder of East Rockaway , - DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1928 C Mrs. Emma E. Evers of East Hempstead DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1928 Ada.Gertrude Allen of Rockville Centre DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1928 Mrs. Emma L. Otten of Valley Stream e \ # DIED NOVEMBER 30, 194+ Ml o, haus Jj his office . | . «a>. - NASSAU COUNTY 25 YEAR . From Bound Files of Nassau Daily, Maul ams - 25 YEAKkS AGO mun theatre apencs its doors and gere | Freeport what is now one of the most popular amusement centers on Long. Island. All day long today Major Robert T. Rasmussen has been receiving congratulations and > is heaped: high with ' Nassau county's E Mrs. Julia Shannon of Malverne P alk ._ qf towers. & ok , $35fo . . e oz *t A DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1942 $2 'To the strains of JaSper's Novelty I w. 1 Tog] e 6 Samuel Longman of Hempstead i a # \All , archestra one of the liveliest and otc sale'), 7 Tip oitiner of Occemmige. - ) {[ | I | smcopation in the profession today | grade orgsiinge ellmifiated \I% Otto Gilmer of Oceanside 4 the Plaza Danceland will open ook y* i DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1942 R ' Saturdhy night at Olive boulevard © s t - a Wiliam 8. Combe of Cedarhurst f and Grove street on the site of the f f o a 4, ~. DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1942 former Plaza Theatre. - © < _ Charles Arthur Schlief of Inwood 'The board of supervisors Wednes- DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1942 day at a speci trifle-grim: “Imam-“MW” J f are wonderfully wise |_ Charles A. Crossman of Rockville Centre a hearing on the report made to it cent of the ,500 quota, cam- not with, but through, your epes) by the Nassau county charter com- paign workers are'continuing their F. by an act of fat reclaim DIED NOVEMBER 30, 1946 mission, decided to receive the re-| canvass with renewed. efth i t world 'in chlldhood's happy name: William Lang of Baldwin Reprinted from Christian Science port, tile it, continue the commission after hearing one of the est firs DIED NOVEMBER 29, 1942 Monitor until 1928, appropriat@ $3,000 for its night reports in the 'history of 'the. ¥ t * + .