OCR Text |
Show THE CITIZEN bridal designs. twenty-four- Moreton, Charles King, 0. W. Ewing, your guns on Washington and help restore the government to the people. W. Mont Ferry, J. C. Lynch, Eugene Editor Citizen, Salt Lake City, Utah: Study your work. Learn how a large Moser, O. R. Dibblee, Paul Keyser and L. W. Sowles. Dear Sir: Supplementing my rather part of the public debt, on which interest must be paid, has been created securities long letter on without the investment of a cent on with a promised revelation of the bigEXIT STRAWBERRY PIE1 If of bondholders. the the the I tax of shall steal the briefly part gest day, recite the facts wtihout comment. peopel could be convinced of the actual During the past season large shipThe income tax law as originally' truth as to the manipulation of affairs ments of strawberries from Florida passed provided for surtaxes against at the caupital of the nation, there and North Carolina enabled northern would be more Magnus Johnsons electexcessive dividends paid shareholders consumers to secure rather superior ed to office. in corporations. berries at relatively moderate prices. To evade this tax it became the Sincerely yours, M. T. WOODRUFF. Some of these consumers doubtless Dearborn, Mich. practice to declare only normal divithought that the millennium had ardends, passing other earnings to surrived, but they were right aobut one plus, not taxable under the law. NEW PARTY GETS BUSY. thing, it was a temporary condition. To restore the surtax, congress The honorable Interstate Commerce passed a law placing a specific tax of H. C. Allen has been chosen camCommission finds that railway rates 25 per cent on surplus in excess of the paign manager of the American paTty, between growers and consumers are legitimate needs of the business. with instructions to establish headtoo low and they are arranging to inJust as the time came to enforce quarters and to appoint a central comcrease them. this law, the treasury department mittee. First it is prohibition, bobbed hair, made a ruling that earnings taken The campaign from now on until the short skirts, and then elimination of from surplus and distributed as stock election in November is to be earnestly strawberry pie. dividends are not taxable as income. conducted, to Herbert R. according Thus do mere mortals conspire. Then began the flood of stock divichairman of the organizaMacmillan, Financial Review. dends, and about four billions were detion committee. With the establishclared in 1922. Not a cent passed from ment of headquarters and the readi Utah will have 138,000 cattle for fall the corporation treasuries, but the surness of the central commitee to get plus account was created with the into action, strenuous efforts will be marketing, of which 105,000 will be grass fat and 33,000 stockers and feedstock issued, and the same sum chargput forth to attain the partys triumph ers. ed to capital account. at the polls. Union Pacific railroad men in one Here is a clean steal of a billion dolA series of mass meeetings at differ branch lars by the trickery of stock manipu- ent points in the city is to be. held. The week built a from Lund to Cedar City. lation. United States Treasurer Anfirst meeting will take place soon, acdrew J. Mellon, chief propagandist of cording to plans of the commitee. Othto 7638i said is Office Phone 8384 the exemption amendment, ers will follow throughout the cam- Rea. Foona Waa. Rea. 555 Weat lat North be interested in some forty big corporpaign. ations which declared stock dividends. The organization committee, which He made no effort to collect the special Faraitara ead Piaao Moria gave impetus to the partys movements tax which would have met every de- is 4 Larf e and Small Neaa Buildinl composed of the following members : Auto Vaaa Salt Lake Citjr, Utah mand on the treasury for the year. Herbert R. B. Macmillan, chairman; J. Standard Oil benefited by nearly half 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111: the agregate steal. A woolen company in New England divided 1,500 per cent of its invested capital. It must be borne in mind that this E WEEK immense sum had already been collected from the people in anticipation 1 YVETTE of having to pay the tax, so the burden AND HBR 5 would not have fallen on the interested E E New York Syncopaters corporations at all. It was as much E theft as if the conspirators had taken IN A STUDY IN LIGHT HARMONY AND MELODY the money from the treasury. I like your frankness, your evident JACK STROUSE sincerity, and your zeal. But there is OYER THE PHONE bigger game for you to hunt. Dont waste your energy in fighting a phanCORRIDINIS ANIMALS tom. For get the industrial bond, the FASTEST CIRCUS ACT public obliagtion, and even the mysIN VAUDEVILLE terious red propaganda starving Russia is charged with financing. Train NADA NORRAINE WITH A PHENOMENAL Covers were laid for COMMUNICATIONS. . Miss Marion Mack, a young actress formerly of Salt Lake, otherwise Miss Joey McCreery, who is in the city, was the guest of honor at a dancing party given Monday night by Miss La Von Vincent and Miss Glade Vincent at tax-exem- pt their home in Gilmer Park. Dancing was enjoyed on an pavilion and supper was served in a pergola. Japanese lanterns orated the garden. In the house orchid gladioli and pink asters decorated the rooms. The hostesses were assisted in receiving the guests by their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Vincent. Assisting 'in serving were Miss Ethel Hogan, 'Miss Genevieve Greenwood, Miss Marion Gallivan and Miss Dorothy Lynch. Punch was served by Miss Dixie Morris and Miss Cecelia Gibson. The guests numbered seventy. out-of-do- or , A meeting of the Elks Ladies' club has been called for Monday night at 8 p. m. at the Elks clubhouse. The coming years program will be outlined and-wilinclude dates up to June 30, 1924. All Elk ladies are invited to atl tend the meeting and take part in the proposed functions of the year. thirty-three-mi- Mrs. Charles Allelo, Mrs. Claude Al- lelo and Mrs. F. W. Megginson, all of Trinidad, Colo., arrived in the city this week. They intend to spend several weeks as guests of First Lieutenant H. Paul, U. S. M. C., who is in charge of the local marine corps recruiting station. Mrs. Charles Allelo is the mother of Lieutenant Paul, and Mrs. F. W. Megginson is his sister. C. - le HENDERSON 213-1- -- I Thomas A. Edison is not much given to humor he is far too busy for that but he has one pet yarn that he is never tired of repeating: A man from the country one day came to town and hotel, asked puting up at a first-clas- s the clerk what were the times of the meals. Breakfast, seven to eleven, answered the clerk; lunch, eleven to three; tea, three to six'; diner; six to eight; and supper, eight to twelve. What! shouted the astonished visitor. When am I going to get time to see the town? Pittsburgh Christian Advocate. SALTAIR- 9 i this ' VOICE AT NIGHT LA FRANCE & BYRON PARTY OF THE SECOND PART TING LING TOY WITH A CAST OF SALT LAKE FAVORITES POLA NEGRI IN MAD LOVE ALL AT Dancing will continue at Saltair on special occasions for some time. While the resort season has been closed, patrons of the resort will find that are limbathing is still good, the water being warm. Patrons, however, trains will be run on dance nights. ited to the regular train service. Spe-cial ( IPAMTflCBTS EiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii? |