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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1907)
! V. m . m ' : PORTLAND OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING,, JULY 2t, 1907 Si 1CTU1 )TTl 1 IBS1 mam fiimmilimimmmiiHiimjii -i' . ni 'tiiuifwiii UiitTii O niiiiiiiiiiiiniinrnnmimitt'H ii N. AC mrw Arcf been dwelling to-, gether in organ ize d- communi ties it has been necessary for them . to contrib ute of their means for the support of the sheltering government. But just how this tax for government tupport should be levied in the way nearest equitable has been a cause of contention for the same length of time. How get money' to run the govern ment? To the butcher, baker, candlestick tnaker and citizen unit generally this ques tion is apt to be overshadowed by that of meeting individual debts. To the men Messrs. Butcher, Baker & Co. sent to Con gress or the state Legislature to make laws for them, however, it arises with perennial persistence. 'President Roosevelt on June io, at the Jamestown Exposition, foriihadowed the "reshaping of our system of taxation so as to make it bear most heavily on those most capable of supporting the strain," and vir tually expressed himself in favor of the in come and inheritance tax. So the whole country has been set to talking about and investtgaiing these pro posed methods of rendering unto Catsar the things that are Caesar's. More than half the states in the Union have already adopted some form of inheritance tax. By those interested in the subject of An income tax, the taxation methods of France, Germany and Great Britain are being studied. France is now working out a new form of income tax which its sponsors asseit will prove the best solution of the problem yet discovered. mi m r a 7ZZaT I' ll I . f 1 " II! iHi! : 'I 'Hi ' i' i ..I" ilhi!,, ll I !! I' !l! i! ' f 7 I V I 1 11 v a--' 7V ' . f III! ! li I' ill i W I. III! 1 I", 1 I !" ill ' p ii! I! i i iMV il'j l1 iilll ji MM 1 1 ' 1 1 ' ' i 1 1 1 1 H(i i i I' N'lil I 1 . n IM ll'llll! ill' fH , i m it I Vi it it' ML' i! 4, . 7 I II 1 1 1 ,'rv S t1 n A );a"i i , 4 I' 1 . 5 1 r ! I'ln 1 HH (lll'l III I,'! 11 1 Vl' I'lhl 'lif t1,'! I n!1 if Hi hi i;" ,1 Tl 1 i !l i' i Hi 1 l) ,1111 ",1111,111,1,11 ll,l" l'l III II I, ii , ii i 'i,ii ii i H Is n if i j ii''i 1 l'l 4 ih'i iii I'liuD ,ii ' i ii i i i i if if V s Ml l m1'1 1 1 j''1-'"'! ii I l'i H 'Li 3b ft v 1 ' Li II ill -2 pi q. 7j .wivrU A. i V 7 I Nj"Vj"v , 'A )l,A k'- .11 'ff'jr'-vr'A RTAnllt Viom Viio Anm fAdQAna frtF ATltTlHinff til ft t I '. V-i1'.-r' - .V f I - I everv citizen, no matter how humble, should contrihute his share toward expenses of state. Fine are the distinctions that may be drawn ; infinite are the arguments, pro and con, which seem to make this one of the most puzzling of economic problems. How have other enlightened nations settled the same question to their satisfaction? This is a case where republio may be com pared with monarchy, for in both cases exist the 'same need for finances, and it must all come from the public. Only in autocracies, where the people are so completely repressed that they may have no say in the amount or method of taxation, has it been found possible to avoid the issue. Some time ago France found itself called upon to give serious study to the problem of tax revision And the greatest puzzlo was to adjust taxation to an individual basis. ' X any plans to revise or improve the taxing Not that it had no system of personal taxa- system in the United States, possessors of tion at all, bui, it had none that was popular ,v H' ri ,,1 personal taxation. That a man will not "stand for" being taxed for the privilege of living, but will submit to indirect taxation that answers the same purpose,' has been the contention of the majority of taxation experts. Tet Frenchmen ho would lead a revolu tion rather than be taxed for breathing have unprotestingly paid so much a year for each avenue to their homes of light and cir, which are life. No one can compute the disease, the loss of life, in France on account of taxation of doors and windows. For it is well known that where light penetrates in volumes disease germs can not live, while in partial darkness they thrive. But provident persona would say, "If I have two windows in each room I must pay so much more one will do ;" or, "After all, why have' a back door when one can make the front door meet hid needs!" This waa one branch of almost direct taxa tion practiced in France ; there were others. But all of them, after a hundred years' opera- hrief review of what the old system has yield ed. For one thing, the tax on doors and windows alone last year was $13,380,000. This was what the government got 41 would be impossible to say what the doctors got because of the saving on doora and win dows. And then there was paid into the treas ury for unimproved land $21,000,000; for improved land, $18,400,000. Taxes on per sonal property amounted to $20,000,000. Patents were taxed $28,041,240. Communes were required to pay into the national government $49,000,000, and depart ments $43,000,000. From all these and a few minor incidental sources the French government last year re- . ceived about $195,321,980. It would have liked more. It expects to get more, with less trouble, if the new measure becomes law. ' - Primarily, it is proposed to tax real estate, whether built on or not, according to value , never more than four-fifths of the value. ' - " Income from 'personal, property, such as dividends, annuities, pensions or profits arising from shares, partnerships, securities ' and in vestments, generally must pay their : share. Even incomes arising from interest on money in banks or loaned would be subject to tax. There are exempted, however, saving-fund deposits, this in order' tq encourage the saving 1 habit among the masses. ' ' . . All bonds, excepting French" government bonds, are taxed.- tt;';;:,v; .j.1 : 'h'. Small farmers . are shown this considers- tion, that if the valuation, of. their farms b less than $300, they are not taxed. ? t ci" 1 . , : 1 -. t f it - oaiariea employes are taxed on tneir sal aries -But here again is drawn a fine distinc- ? frtAB T fn&t linna avis). Ishm i as ama ati tin -o Ta a a 1 1 Avi as nani a 1 1 r an 4tAt haoaaIIh t n aj-Ism-I riavn tn 1 1 to be made the subjects of careful consid- American, there was much of the ludicrous in their usefulness, to have fail-d in tho purpose . based on the theory .that Jiving expenses j eration. France's way. of making the rich bear their share; and so the ' That these "should be forced U pay heavily Suppose, for instance, that in the. United Chamber of Deputies, at the instigation of the -'i4 ; au9 fn own of 30OOJnhabitanU or un-( for the' protection given them" was the une- States you were taxed so much a yar for the minister of finance, has promised the people,, aerpersona receivina fmorea year aro quivocal statement which, eominar from the lira doors and windows in vour hornet Thia is ex- an imnroved nd un-to-date income tax. . i!2l'W?el J.-' Ut't.ommunes.. -pt 60W to , 10,009 ,inhM-, of a president, could not other than give im- actly what Frenchmen have been and are sub- France atudied the systems of, taxation thevi ! 0 0f DetUS tO tax' diaemurion... mitinir rnAinir nKanirM'ln 't.h1a nn am f nrmnlnti'nir votm whioK ; ly.WU 10 ,OU,UUU, IDOSe .WnOSO SUnua ' f - " - . , l uawa.Mfk V vwvuk -wihumv - M -r , - J Yet, before one gets through with the big about to be agreed upon. ; i-X-'l subject of ' taxation, he finds that the man of Here " wm' pebuliar attempt ( : " - ' -, . i ' f-. ' , , i , , .. t--Q r-r j :, - f - .-' " i j - , v re -- - - ; - -in 'the claw now world over before formulating a system which .VW00 to ''l60J-whti ' s - U to be either adopted.or rejected mul; ,?-?S?llr4 V1 M, npt at evasion of ' But' before" describing the newv plaVjwt v ': ' v-j' C0NTUnrso CM. INSICS TAor