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Show THE face mo uu-Aiumr- atr Uaurd Every Thursday Jiy tt. liabing JO.MFII FublUber I- - Caibnn Cou-t- lub- - any AKBIRY. r. nd VAI. II. COWLES. Editor and Subscription, $2 00 Adrtiinf tU Yrsr SUniftr. In Adumie. Phone No. 0. Entered ha Second Clas Mall Matter At the JWoffice At Prlre. Utah. Under the Art of March 3. 1879. ADVIRTISI.no KAILS Display Matter IV r Irtrh Ter Issue, 4(e, Transient, 50c. Special position, 25 JVr Cent Additional. Ten CenU the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Legal Word to Line. Summons, 112 50; Water Ajplico-tio115 00; Final Proof, $10 00. Readers Fifteen Cents the Line F.ath Insertion. Count Six Words to the Line. Blackface Type Twenty-Fiv- e Cents Additional Fat h Insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc,, At Reading Notice Rates. Count Six Words to the Line. Tor Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., Two Cents Fer Word Each Issue, No Chaise Accounts, Address All Communication to CARIJON COl NT V PIBLISIIING CO. n, TRICE, UTAH SPLENDID KKDITTION STEP A Rutrytion of JoM jih D. Ha.stman, federal co cirdinator of tranjiHrtntin, that Knlaries of the executives he reduced is a Mop that should Le taken, one that is lung overdue. Huge salaries have been paid to those who act in executive capacities for the lailroads for many years and this has played an imiortant part in the breakdown of the tranjmitation sy.sterm of the nation. The request for a reduction in such salaries is in line with the program which those of judgment have urged for some time, a more equitable distribution of the nations income. Those who have received large salaries as railroad executives for many years have served largely in the capacity of buffers to absorb the shocks caused i.e the public gained knowledge of the manner in which the transportation systems have served pimply as the field of operations for the financial racketeers. Ills of the railroads of the country could largely be traced to manipulation of their stocks by these financial racketeers, not to lack of real earning power on actual investments. And the same disease as it invaded other lines of industry and agriculture, has been chiefly the cause of the economic upsetting which has been experienced in this country during the past few years. Railroad workers have repeatedly been forced to accept cuts in their salaries and it seems but the proper balancing of the scales of justice that the executives should be called upon to accept some share of the burden which has been too long permitted to fall on the producers and their associates who play a necessary part in our system of distribution. high-salarie- d NO WONDER MITCHELL W AS DAZED REPORTERS at the trial of Charles E. Mitchell, tiN-Ai-vocA- riicrj'JL. it HELPER JUNIORS m ownership. Of course there was no chanye hell is MR, that mid ownership. Dut a jury has not guilty; and la Ah he and the country ate dazed. Mitchell had one of the most expulsive law yers in the country, Max Stour. Meur mariay, to get before the jury men familiar to every New Yorker, who testified that Mitchell always had !ornc ft good reputation. Former luerriur Alfred E. Smith was one of them. What Mitchell's reputation had to do with the matter dies there not appear; as has Ucn remarked n was a time when Judas had reputation Dut the influence worked, and Mitchell is free. And this kind of thing is the rule in wealthy circles. J. 1. Morgan has jaid no income taxes for two years in America though he paid in England. His whole house has paid no income taxes, and some of them have followed Mitchell D example, and sold securities to their wives. C. Forbes, a market reporter, wrote a year or two ago that be knew most of the lich men of Wull .Street, And that everyone he knew was establishing lossesi" by trick sales to avoid I aying income tax. A hasty, admittedly unfinished investigation by the house ways and means committee, has convinced its members that the government from $300,000,000 to $000,000,000 a year in rev enue through such evasion of income taxes. The first duty of congress when it assembles in January is to plug the holes in the law which make ruch evasions easy. Dut there is another duty that need not wait for January. Whatever the technical excuses, such tricks as that of Mitchell are contrary to the intent of the law, ami the department of justice should con tinue prosecutions undaunted by the verdict in the New York case. Exchange. le l',t p Ut! rt'l, l! PROFESsjgi Dr' J,S.,.!ub.bjri. I 1! It-- c ! t- 1S-- 7 r ng tTm . r' K- pu-h.,- 'l h C Walter 1 vv I - I v f es . C Hampton. O.iillaid. Vecchio, The Fi ! lay Building and Loan com i any filed suit in district court Tu, day again-- : Mr. and' Mrs. Argy-rw- s Oojml, s to recover $2090 due .IX pi tricip.il, interest and other corts on a promissory note executed by the defendants May 15, 1929. The plaintiff corporation asks foreclosure of a projK-rtmuitgage to satisfy e sS Cullauav. p S, hiu s. lb Eisner. 2b-i p YOU CAN HELD WITH RECOVERY S.h.vm. rf-- Marl. all. tf-l- ef f citizen in the hardly a United States hut who admires our fearless, aggressive and intelligent president, regardless of his political affiliation or moral creed. Franklin I). Roosevelt is really doing things and it appears that his unprecedented program for industrial lecovery of this nation . and perhaps the world will work out succe.vf;-!!;;However, there is something more than that we can do to help out with this program besides sit on the sidelines and cheer for our administration team. We have it within our own power to make our conftnunity prosperous under reasonable conditions and that can he done by strict fair-minde- tuf .i.J u,, C'l.aib PUCE well-know- n is l.UI.Olj 1 J Williams nos bound urt Tut m! ay after Ui Il f d.iturt btfoje Justice J. healing U, IN TOURNEY ,V e !,d ol a complaint tliaig- ,,a tufflaty in tbf scond dcgit-- and as Ofhr, ILTT,. Tbf defendant laUrti.V i in if statf .A I't IlliuO, which he Flow 2SOJ. bond r Ltiid, in jar i Ilia j ti nh Ctaft El1 Mf all l.n.r- - placed I k." ItallU.tt was uiiat le to farms!' Am, man la fc:.n junior uf accutfd as u being Williams fluim III Mrt.,1a sit in the burglary of the Ft ice Tins "as cLau?h! 5 Commission tompuny on July 13. toi y for IWi-- r In to the complaint, two bags of , hampiuiiship jila)off 10 u. nu woo), alutd at J123 18. were stolen Hour. . inmn., tWf lr Ihoh, CVanaerrUl iUk uu.Vlrt. -' tU!r J Vue M-OI RT IMPOSES I INF. ON MAN Kood buU.c At the OF POSSESSION LIQUOR I OR he l'u t nil's 'ulr C. Gcase, ov.r one !!.!ir TuesCl.oliis guilty Emus pleaded ! ,ie V, Atiarntj A I L in the to a chat go of liquor possession uM in day "Uil d the Knott, Offtw I fVim,, , as fmed $25 by Justice J. 5V, in thur i,nl lull ff tl f srun'B iruAt-uTrlf. I 'fet, w accused of having Hammond He at 'he l.u'.f of tbf U o' jo g.,11, os if whiskey in his possesvoi.,1 fool tuns and f , on July 21 Shtnff S. M. 111ns L. A. McGee, 1,4 sion u! s.n n. t ft was the complaining witness. Alloforj At Lit Em f iKbna- a nt to 'iur " V Eo att i.nd J foul Raotes 5 and B. li , FINED DIUVIR a, KICKI.ISS Bt, r's oln main , s m H, Jus-Utt r f hits S.h ai'iil fined was out $25 f by Kit.,. E, ie politano ir, PC after B. H S, Robinett Tuesday lun-line f. fnur Tht''V V. Dalton, foi r.i reckless driving. hono! pleading guilty Juisnlif Judf, I KICK Fobtaiio v, as ai rest, d Sunday by r Attorney At Lit U Night Marshall William McIntyre. Phoae 3.X 3b Aren 27Rjt S SUIT TO ITI.I OMPANY If LOAN Euan, KICOMR SUM DI E ON NOTE H. J. Bincli, S.iXf.v, if gd THERE lilig Burglary Complaint DEFEAT PRICE TO U-for- lo-- Man Bound Over On d Kiwanians Defeat Wholesale Grocers Jude p. ii Attorory 13 UuiMing. JaPK-.- j Fruw, l(ab Wallace Mortuary, LlrroM-- Ambulnnc Pbone 13$ Embalm, Srrnet, Im, Funeral FlynnLWcmxI x Hoei Quality Serrio, Rmou& 1 tubulin? 8rrict. The Kiwanis entry in Class A of the American Legion junior league Fboa Prv, 4 nosed out a victory over Zion's Wholesale Grocers Thursday. The Tested score was tied as the winners went to and GLASSES TOTH) bat in the last half of the fifth inning. Tangaro, first man up, lived on an error and circled the bases on subAny Lense Duplicated la Tj Minutes or Less. home town and home our county. to sequent misplays. loyalty Walsh chalked up two hits in two This loyalty may he of various kinds. No one LEWIS OPTICAL CO. should live in a community for which he feels Summary: Errors, Aramaki, Egan, times at bat to take hitting honors for hitVecchio Theater Kiwanians. the Star MarBldg. captured is something Gaillard 2, Vecchio, Callaway, that he has to apologize. There stolen asis J. an Tezak; 2, Couri, no and like to shall, Cory person about every place hits, set to his community unless he thoroughly be- bases, Gaillard, Taylor; Schauers, lieves in and loves it. Nothing quite rankles our Tezak, Fossatt 2, J. Couri, play, J. Couri tc soul so much as to hear a person knock his place Silvagni; double out struck Eaquinta 11, Calof residence in an effort to make us believe that Cory; 2; bases onby,balls, off Callaway he is superior to it. Instead of boosting his stock 7,laway 2, Eaquinta 5; hit by pitch-Brynor with us he sends it tumbling down to a mighty R. Rachcle by Bryner. low level. c 15-1- Eyes two-ba- se r, Along that same line, we can better our communities and greatly help our peace of mind if we will patronize our home town in making our purchases. Every dollar you spend at home will come back to you in part. Some people think that they are smart when they send away forit.their We merchandise or go to a larger city to buy reasonlike is if the price claim that anything able, you should buy from your home merchant, whether it be clothing, furniture, dry goods, hardware, paint or printing. In most instances you will get as good or better value from your friends and neighbors right here at home and at the same time you contribute to the general prosperity of your community. Everything we spend here adds to the wages and purchasing power of your fellow citizens while if you spend those dollars away from home they are gone forever. This is the part you can play in our nations big program of industrial recovery. Richfield Reaper. freed by a jury of the charge of cheating the United States government out of income tax payments, said that Mitchell seemed dazed at his aequittal. Small wonder. The American people were dazed, too. Mitchell was head of the National City bank, one of the most powerful of the great financial institutions of New York. He grew rich on the opportunities which his country afforded. He whipped up the fever of speculation which ended in the stock market crash of 192D. He evaded paying his income tax by selling stocks to his w ife, and thus taking a loss. On its very face, this sale was a fake. Mitchell got no money from his wife. Later, he bought Voters of Oregon put the bee on a proposed sales back the stocks which he had sold; and still no measure last week, defeating it by a vote of aptax money changed hands. The stocks were pledged Mor& Co. and the for a loan, proximately four to one, according to news dispatches, with J. P. Morgan in of double informed indicating the unpopularity of such taxation schemes. the not were change gans SunAdvocate Takes hitting attack in the third inning, which accounted for four runs, A a 4 vicgave The over tory Kelley Drug V.ednesday of last week. Prior to that frame, the two teams were tied at 2. Successive hits by Draper, Gaillard and Vecchio, combined with two errors, were responsible for the victors runs in the third-innin- g rally. Vecchio and Gaillard were the leading hitters for the winners with two out of three apiece, while Silvagni had the best average for the Druggists. Hampton, Kelley Drug hurl-e- r, secured the best blow of the contest, a three-baggMarshall limited the losers to four hits. Buckleys work in right field for the winners; was the defensive feature. 7-- Sun-Advoc- 2-- at Indianapolis I er. Our idea of a prudent man is one who never sees one of those feminine vampires without thinking of a buzz saw at the same time. with the new fatigue -- proof raced28 cars offthe track Game From Druggists Kelly-Springfiel- Out of 42 entries only 14 finished Studebaker powered! 5 were 85 ds cost no more than ordinary tires 6 TIMES FORTIFIED against wear and failure 1 CORKSCREW COTTON discovery . carce, expensive, fsr kinkier iiL ordinary cotton . . . used only in these Urea. IKeUy-springfie- ld 2 PLIES enormous improvement in t building. Pure rubber componn nnder tons of pressure, are ' right into the weave! PRIME FIRST RUBBER only used in these tires (there are 5 grade of raw rubber), none of the cheaper, inferior grades nsed in oilier tires. D 3 RUBBER 1 Iew deeper, thicker Newmproees.!. before-know- n mileage. mx.SKID9556 than next best leading mak- e- also, the most silent tire non-ski- d T sVsTFMbyft.neW M?MTK controls every .ma.'rr?. ,nd eTrr7 process then world mountain fleets n the toughest testing grounds. five Studebakera 7 ws stock Studebake-whic- went through entire race without and two privately a reps! entered cars with Studebaker engines finished in the first twelve. Not a repair was made to any car inother Studebaker team throughout the 500 miles. No test proving ground in the world could give a car the the Studebakers took in this fastest race in SpeeJ'1 history. Why not come in today and drive a new Auto 1 matic Studebaker so that you can see for yourself Studebaker engineering is so flawless and Studebalrt stamina so superior? Biggest June Sales Since 1930! Studebaker Jut sales were 147 greater than March in fact than any June since 1930. And sales already record show that July will substantially surpass June. P I0 o money on a winner. Come in and let us put a price your present car today. ever made. ALL OTHER SIZES EQUALLY LOW ... and Western Auto Carbon Ave. Co. Price, Uti REHB R20T0R COMPANY 129 Main Street BUILDER PRICE, UTAH PIONEER up, it (Ac factory OF CHMltI1 OF FREE h |