Word: pensionable
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...personal holding companies so as to claim the interest as an income deduction; 6) creating trusts for wife, children and relatives so as to divide family income and keep it out of the highest surtax brackets; 7) taking wives and children into partnership for the same purpose; 8) creating pension trusts, which pay reduced taxes, for the benefit not of ordinary employes but of a few high officers of a company. To these dodges Mr. Morgenthau added three others "which the law itself permits": 1) claims for depletion by oil and mining companies, which are allowed as a deduction from...
...income from $200,000, about $7,500 a year. To Ramsay MacDonald this windfall is happily not so all-important financially as loyal, generous Sir Alexander had thought it would be. By an act of Parliament, passed after the will was made, Mr. MacDonald is entitled to a pension of $10,000 a year as a onetime Prime Minister. Moreover, because fortnight ago he decided to stay in the House of Commons rather than accept an earldom (TIME, June 7), he will get an additional $3,000 a year as long as he is a member of Parliament...
Referring to one cat, Minnie, on the payrolls of the Standard Oil Company (TIME, April 12), I recently met on the island of Rhodes a bewhiskered and short-legged canine named Bippo who is not only the publicly-recognized assistant guardian of the local museum, but actually receives a pension from his government for 13 years of loyal ratsmanship...
...unemployment insurance law, Justice Cardozo went on to the old-age annuity section. This was an appeal by the Government from a lower court decision in favor of Stockholder George P. Davis who sued Edison Electric Illuminating Co. of Boston to restrain it from paying old age pension taxes on its payrolls. This time Justice Cardozo carried seven members of the court with him in approving the law, leaving Justices Butler and McReynolds to dissent. Finally Justice Stone read a decision upholding (5 to 4) Alabama's unemployment insurance law passed to conform to the Federal law. The Court...
...week's end came two more headlines, fillips to the case. In the same day 78-year-old Justice Willis Van Devanter, one of the Supreme Court's most stalwart conservatives, submitted his resignation, effective June 2, under the new Pension Law, and the Senate Judiciary Committee, as expected, cracked out a 10-to-8 adverse report on President Roosevelt's Court Reorganization Bill...