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Show Thursday, June 9, 1938. iTape Four THE PARK EJECORD The P ARK RECORD PUBLISHED THURSDAYS THE PARK RECORD CO. Subscription : : $2.00 Per Teai PCCLISUIR9 S. L. Bad don, Editor Entered In the Park City Pos tofflce as Second-Class Matter Letter h'umfcer Seven From Charles Moore jli' TONIGHT THURSDAY June 9th Doors Open 6:45. Show at 7:15 P. M. Would you like to see a detective's wife beat the detective at his own game? Would you like to see the predicament the wife finds herself in when she's accused of the murder she's trying to solve? Would you like to see an entire police force wear itself out trying to give this girl the "third degree?" Would you like to see a detective obtaining a search warrant so that he can search his own house? Would you, In short, like to see one of the funniest romantic comedies ever made, Columbia's "There's Always a Woman," showing tonight only. Joan Blondell Is the ambitious wife and Melvyn Douglas is the harassed de tective, and Mary Astor and Frances Drake are there to complicate matters. It's a scream at the Egyptian Theatre tonight. The Paramount News Note This Is the seventh article or letter in a series of eight articles or letters, the first of which was printed In The Record of March. 3rd. CHAS. MOORE. Dear Tom: the characterization of Ben Guhn, ma rooned pirate, by Chic Sale. Chapter 8 of the Flash Gordon serial and comedy are the added attractions. SUNDAY, MONDAY and TUESDAY Sunday Starts 7:00. Feature at 7:07 and 9:22 P. M. Monday and Tuesday Starts 7:15. Feature Fea-ture at 7:22 and 9:37 P. M. "GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST" WITH NELSON EDDY AND JEANETTE MACDONALII Co-starring Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy "The Girl of the Golden West," a musical panorama of early California, plays Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Based upon the original stage play written and produced by David Belasco thirty vears ago, the picture is presented . .i. t oooiTict. tVio rnmnntln haekeround Of the ine raramouni rews ana a rewiB"" - " - ,. Smith specialty are the added short colorful gold mine camps of I860, the 'j.. r 1 mmant a m Ksions and villages with subjects. FRIDAY and SATURDAY June 10-11 Open 7:00. Show Starts 7:15 P. M. WALLACE BEERY AND JACKIE COOPER IN "TREASURE ISLAND" FIRST SHOWING HERE romantic missions and villages their gaiety and music and dancing, the high Sierras and giant redwoods and bandit camps. Under the guidance of William Anthony An-thony McGuire, the producer, and Robert Z. Leonard, as director, the new musical Is abundant with a beautiful original score and inspiring new musical numbers by Sigmund Romberg and Gus Kahn. On Sunday night the feature starts at 7:07 and 9:22 p. m., and doors open .1 early at 6:45 with show starting at 7:00 p. m. On Monaay ana luesuaj The generations of people both young and old who have been thrilled by "Treasure Island," Robert Louis Steven will find the vivid story-book experiences nlShts 15 mlnutes later of their youth created on the screen in the picture that plays Friday and Saturday, Sat-urday, with Wallace Beery and Jackie Cooper In co-starring roles. With Beery as Long John Silver and Jackie Cooper as Jim Hawkins, boy adventurer, ad-venturer, a cast has been assembled to bring each rover of the Spanish Main to the screen with living reality. Lionel Barrymore's blustering Billy Bones Is one of the most entertaining characters he has ever played; Otto Kruger is forceful force-ful as Dr. Livesey; Lewis Stone's personal knowledge of sailing ships gives convincing convinc-ing background to his role of Captain WEDNESDAY ONLY' June 15 15c SALE PROGRAM A MEMORABLE DRAMA IS "OF HUMAN HEARTS" Here, is America's great romance with the human drama of yesterday, today and perhaps forever. It is a new picture, "Of Human Hearts," which brings us Walter Huston from his triumph in "Dodsworth;" James Stewart, one of Hollywoods finest flaw. The highest tax he could be asked to pay on this real estate wouia oe jive thousand dollars a year, or two per cent of its actual value. No tax on his machinery ma-chinery or equipment or raw materials or finished goods. No taxes on the merchant's mer-chant's stock or fixtures or equipment if he lives in a city or incorporated town; no tax on anything if he lives outside of the city limits, except the ten dollars dol-lars a year for new license plates for his car, or cars and trucks. Th Rfii tax would cover all legiti mate expenses of an economically run As I have already stated, there are ' government, state, county, city ana a many things to do, in order to be able , federal government, except the taxes cn i v to create sufficient new capital (say' imports (tariff taxes;) and also, ten two hundred billions of dollars of new ' dollars a year on every auto (truck orjx capital) and create sufficient new,wnat not,) and real estate taxes on tne wealth and cheaply enough so that every i residents of incorporated towns and one may have a great abundance of real cities, purely for the extra costs of city j wealth. All taxes must be taken off of government, and not to exceed two dol- T production and put on consumption, inrs on the hundred of actual valuation, j 4, where they belong. So called "cut throat" , if people did not like this small extra j competition must be-en waged and tax on real estate, alone, they could ; laws must be devise tff?i T-eeth in them move outside the city limits with their T (prison and not ftr.J V- prevent any , factories and families. (X combinations of conspiracy in restraint j The post office department should i of free so called "cut throat" competi- i carry the mails at exactly cost, so that tion. ! it can balance its budget (approx.) each T We must see that the man or corpora- year. This is not a tax. You simply go : X tion that creates wealth cheaply and to the post office and ask the postmaster 4 ever more cheaply and devises plans for t xq carry your letter or package a thou-! its distribution to the public cheaply, san or 80 miles and deliver it for you, 1 7 and ever more cheaply is not hampered anQ he does so, charging you a very j 4. cr interferred with, in any way, by any , sman fee. The states, counties and cities I one who seeks to limit output and com- j have many sources of revenue, besides petition, in order to raise prices, or keep ' taxes, such as the sale of lands, fees, from reducing prices. ! f in8Sj inc0me from the liquor business, ; To the average man and to the poli- as m Utah, income from city owned wa- j tician and to many so called economists, ter works, income from license fees, etc., the idea of taking all taxes off pro- etc. License fees should be very low Ijjj ductlon and putting them on consump- SEVy $5.00 to $10.00 a year for each busi- j 4. tion creates a condition similar to nesg house and f actorv. 1 hydrophobia in -a dog. They sputter and j There should be just four taxes, in-foam in-foam at the mouth and shed crocodile ' stead of four thousand taxes, as at pre-tears pre-tears of sympathy for the poor, "down-' sent. These four taxes should be: First, trodden" consumer. This is good vote a saie tax of approximately twenty per catching political bunk, but anything ' cent, to be paid by the consumer when else but sound economics. j he buys the article, and paid by no one If all taxes were taken off of produc-! else. Second, import taxes (tariff taxes.) tion and put on consumption, prices I Third, ten dollars a year on every car would fall at least twenty per cent in j and truck for new license plates, five years, or by the time the new law Fourth, a small real estate tax on real went completely Into effect, or more -estate and nothing 'else, paid by people likely, twenty-five or thirty per cent.; living in cities and incorporated towns, Later, or within ten years, prices would j and for the extra expenses of city gov-f gov-f all forty per cent or more. ernment, as distinguished from county Let us see how this would work out. or state government. The cities would , Prices have now fallen twenty per cent, 1 also get their share of the sale tax and let us say. The base price of the article I auto tax, of ten dollars a year. Sales is now eighty cents instead of one dollar. ! taxes on tobacco and tobacco products, The sale tax Is twenty per cent, or gasoline, beer, wines, whiskies, etc., etc., Palace Meat & Groce PARK CITY'S QUALITY MARKET Prices effective Friday and Saturday flour $1,15 Pnn Extraiarse AQr -3JO Strictly fresh, 2 doz TC BUTTER 28c SUGAR 2B5ee,t ,..$1.49 23c Hill's Bros., Blue Package, 1 lb. SODA CRACKERS ElT 23c Miller's, 2 pkes. BOWL FREE rvD jrac 200 size, COFFEE WHEAT FLAKES 2 dozen GRAPE FRUIT ASPARAGUS 2 Ibs. 15c Arizona, Large size, 6 for 25c t 29c I 19c I I vmine stars: and Beulah Bondi. distin Smollett; Nigel Bruce is a ruddy and ' guished on the stage and screen, in what typically English Squire Trelawney; Dromises to be their most remarkable touches of quaint humor are put into Bortly McDonough ATTORNEY AT LAW Office at 419 Main Street Phone No. 5 picture Briefly, the story tells or a circun-rlding circun-rlding clergyman, his son, who wants to be a surgeon, and the glorious woman who was wife and mother to these meD. Father and son quarrel, as they do today to-day they part bitterly. The father dies. The son becomes famous. In the high places of his new success he forgets home i and all that it represented. Then it is, j that Abraham Lincoln restores his bril-I bril-I liant mind and his fine soul. Here is the unforgettable panorama of great love in the American scene, a story LETTUCE CREAM 2 for Two y2 pints Whipping Cream, Park City Dairy Saturday Only 15c 25c sixteen cents. Total cost of the article ninety-six cents, thus saving four cents on the dollar. Later, the base price comes down to seventy cents. Sales tax is now fourteen cents, thus saving sixteen six-teen cents on the dollar. Later, In about ten years, the base price of the article is sixty cents. Sale tax is now twelve cents, and the saving is twenty-eight cents on the dollar. Twenty-eight dollars dol-lars on every one hundred dollars is a big saving for the "poor devil" working for one hundred dollars or one hundred twenty-five dollars a month. A thirty-five thirty-five dollar saving on every one hundred twenty-five dollars is a tidy sum. But by that time, wages would go up, i result of taking taxes off of production due to the unheard of prosperity and I and putting them on consumption, thirty-five dollars a week for five days If the principles explained here and work, or one hundred fifty dollars a the taxes explained here were announced month would be about the average to begin going into effect within two wage, instead of one hundred to one; years, WITHOUT FAIL, and to go corn-hundred corn-hundred twenty-five a month, as is the pletely into operation at the end of five case at present, if you can get a job, at j years, there would be such an upsurge present. A twenty-eight per cent saving j in business within thirty days as no one and on certain luxuries would be higher than 20 per cent. But I hear some loud mouthed fellow with more lung power than brain power shout, "Outrageous!" "Moore, do you mean to tell me that the Utah Copper mine and the Silver King mine would pay no taxes of any kind, except a sale tax on what they buy?" "Yes, that is exactly what I mean to say, and I might add, WHAT OP IT? Well, I'll tell you some of the "what of it," although al-though a great book would not be large enough to tell of half of the blessings that would begin to shower on the poor' man and so called laboring man as a MEAT SPECIALS I LEG OF LAMB Sfg. 25c I SLICED HAM 35c BEEF STEW Z.. ,, 20c I I GROUND STEAK , a 17 k f ! LIVER 52 lb. 20c I I SLICED BACON ..,A 17c f I SPRING FRYERS fZZX 23c on one hundred fifty dollars is forty two dollars. Does this look like oppression oppres-sion for the poor man, especially, when he has no taxes to pay except a small has ever known to occur in so short a time. Within five years, when the entire tax and all these principles would be going into effect in full force, and long tax on his home, if he lives in a city or ; before the end of five years, there would oiiu lui mc cAua cAcuoca ui txic i-ijr i never seen, nuwever, mis would De only or town. jthe beginning. As real capital accumul- If he should live outside of the cityjated with which to produce an ever and limits, there would be no taxes for him : ever increasing volume of real wealth to pay, except ten dollars a year for his j and distribute it at an ever and ever new license plates for his car. Suppose lowering of the cost to the consumer, CITY GflSS! MARKET 311 Main Street Phone 252 BUTTER 28c Brooklawn or Banquet lb. SUGAR 10 lbs 56c 10 lbs. PAR &oap - Powder T.nrap si7f MILK tZ, 15 cans $1.00 Pink Terrapin Tall cans 2 for or Libby's . . can Toilet Tissue 3 for Breakfast Club 1 lb. can STRING BEANS, CORN or TOMATOES 3 cans SALMON rnDMiun RirTrs Angi0 JAYTEE COFFEE PEAS ! PORK 8 BEANS Sf FLOUR JAM Strawberry 32 oz. jar TOMATO TT TTrP c.h.b. vyuii x a. vx vj jlvjl l5oz. tin ! TOMATOES RADISHES Fresh 4-4- bunch 25c 19c 10c 23c 25c 20c $1,29 23c ..5c 10c 5c cans lb. LETTUCE IS 2 fM 15c he is a manufacturer of automobiles or something else and has a factory located within the city limits. The land is worth fifty thousand dollars and the building two hundred thousand dollars, total, two hundred fifty thousand dol- as modern as it is tlmeless the story cf mother-love and vast understanding. You will see a star cast cast indeed, in the mold of Americas heroic builders. But beyond the scenic splendor and the thrilling romance, we see a story that will live in memory for a long time. It wins immortality for this poignant story of a mother, a father and a girl who waited for a man who forgot. An BKO musical "Latin Rhythm" completes a 2 hour show. QUALITY MEAT BARGAINS VEAL ROAST lb 17c ! LUNCH MEAT GROUND BEEFpresa Choice assortment ...lb. 22c 25c STEWING HENS Sce and , 19c RIB ROAST a 21c f . - -A h 1 - V . . .. iff . J , , y - .1 v, - ; - i V, v., f I NEVER KNEW i PEOPLE COULD DE SO CHAHfAlNG .2 lbs. ROLLED PRIME RI s BOILING MEAT B 10c SHORTENING Pearl 4 pound package 45c FREE DELIVERY .lb. pkg. 12c 5" ?! 1 ! 4- ' Si $ ?! ft i I A natural leader, intelligent and sociable, a new member of the Neighbors of Woodcraft was delighted de-lighted to find in the Circle "her kind of people". She takes pride in her associates ... the outstanding outstand-ing men and women of the city, leaders in their walks of life, molders of community thought. She enjoys the fellowship and good fun of the regular Grde meetings, and appreciates the security sec-urity and protection afforded her by the Neighbors low-cost insurance insur-ance on standard legal reserve contracts. NtighborsolWoodcrift, M vital font in community com-munity Jiie, welcome to membershio lorwtrd-Jooking lorwtrd-Jooking men and women of chsracttr. NEIGHBORS cf WOODCRAFT CU0 IOK fcATlfcMT.(lTt fOUmOTtCTO prosperity for all would be so much in evidence that we would surely say that the "millenium" is "just around the corner." Just think what it would mean to the rail roads to take that great burden of taxes off their shoulders which are now breaking their backs. No more taxes for them except on what they might buy, and except a small tax on their real estate, owned In cities and incorporated towns. No tax on their machinery, equipment, equip-ment, rolling stock or furniture Just the real estate taxes, and nothing else. Just think what it would mean to the electric light and power companfes and tens of thousands of manufacturers, mines, and a million other producers of wealth. I like to talk these matters over with brainy men, with no political leanings and no prejudlcies. Such men are almost al-most as scarce as hen's teeth. Recently I had the great pleasure of discussing this subject with one of the clearest headed men I have ever met, and the least prejudiced and most open minded man I have ever met. Like nine persons out of ten, or ninety-nine out of a hundred, he could not see it all, at once. His first reaction was that it would put the bulk of all taxes on those least able to pay. When I had explained at great length that It would reduce the cost of living at least twenty-five per cent in ten years, instead of raising the price twenty per cent, he said he wanted time to think the thing out to a finish. We had been discussing the matter for about four hours, and he stated that while he had intended to take a plane for the east next morning at nine o'clock, he had decided to stay over another day and think the whole subject out, from A to Z. He said he would retire early and think and think until two p. m., the next day. At two p. m., next day, he told m-that m-that he had done some of the hardest thinking of his life, and he said: "Moore you have certainly got something there." He said: "I can now see but one bi? grisley bear in the path, where I saw a hole flork cf them yesterday." He said: "I fear that the producer, when freed j of all taxes would get so d d greedy I that he would not try to pass the great I benefits on to society in general." Well, we discussed the matter for an- other four hours, and I finally convinced I him that it was merely a matter of ! good, honest government that would 01 ; would not punish the man or Corporation ! officers that allowed any conspiracies : la restraint of trade and froe so called "cut throat" competition. With free, so iied "cut throat" competition assured, the man or corporation that failed to pass on to the public the inestimable blessings and opportunities showered on him would soon find himself bankrupt ana out 01 Dusmess, and probably, in In t? 8riv r'aySi the die hards tried to g'l r "'Ui tj keep the price cf cars no to $ TOO and up to $7500.00, but rora kv.-- m reducing the price, improving im-proving t,K product and raisin? wsees. and the die hards hid to follow in hir iooi.e ? or k.o out of business, and many aid t:o out of business. remember that the -poor mar. (the man with an income cf $500.00 to Tio.u.'.u a yp'-f for r-'mwlf and family is now paying the equivalent of a twenty-two per or., sales tax and he don't know it. and instead of its helping to promote butir.c?ss activity and increase prosperity and reduce the cast of livlne, this tax is helping to retard business and increasing the cost of living and making Fire-FigMters Jobs scarce. The first professional fire-fighters-, Remember that it is not necessarily fa 1fa v n d s, t f k ft more dollars in the pay envelope but , .. . . .. ,. more purchasing power "and more Jobs autxs in Cincinnati, Ohio, Hi 1853.. that we want. If $5.00 a day purchases They were members of the first twice as much of everything as it now j paid municipal fire department to purchases, we are Just as well off as we be organized. Previously Cincin- would be with ten dollars a day, with nati every otner town in the country, had only yolunteer firefighters, fire-fighters, usually unorganized. present prices prevailing CHAS. MOORE LITTLE PAL OF MINE Although your hair is silver And vour eyes no longer shine You'll always be my sweetheart Little Pal of Mine. The time will come along some day When peace and love will shine, Along your narrow path of life Little Pal of Mine. Although in years we've parted We'll meet again some time, When Angels play around, us Little Pal of Mine. FRANCES O'KEEFE, Ninth Grade. Use for Earth's Hot Water The earth's hot water has its uses. In New Zealand housewives utilize hot springs for cooking. And in Japan, near the summit of a snow-crowned peak, rises a hot spring in which Japanese bathers are to be found all seasons of the year. Java Has 223 Storms a ". ear On an average of 223 days a year Java has thunder storms. THE WORLD'S GOOD NEWS : will come to your home every day through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper SifT?' for,yo.u the world'! clenn. constructive doings. The Monitor does not exploit ertae or sensation; neither does it ignore them' ?i,iwa ? c?"ectlv!Iy "h them. Features for busy men an" all I thi family, including the Weekly Magazine Section. T1rtf h,?st,an sien:e Publishing Society One. Norway Street. Boston, Massachusetts loiV mJ iubscrion to The Christian Science MoSor for Name.. Address . Samplt Copy"oRiquisi' .fijiaijlil' k w- v ' on f :i ? i i ft J if . .' " 0 JJ-H f '0 D I, S T R I B U ED xMcPOLIN Park City, Utah TED B Y A |