PAGE EIGHT THE UNION PRESS-COURIER. Thursday, July 13, 1939. SAMMY KAYE IS SUNSET ATTRACTION — oy. EEE ——————y The THREE_ BARONS “Swing and Sway with Sammy famous radio personalities: Tom Ry- Raye” will be the attraction at Sunset, | an, Charles Wilson and Jimmy Brown, the world’s most unique ballroom on | better known to the radio public at ‘Wednesday, July 19th. “The Three Barons.” Sammy comes direct to Sunset from Ss K ill b the Commodore Hotel and the Essex |, a ay € guest Srehgs. House, New York City, where he has | NEC Blue ies ey Ei been featured over a nation wide radio Mond Jul by ine ucing ? network for the past ten months. onday, July 17th, 6:30 EST. Sammy Kaye is undoubtedly riding Dancing continues every Friday, the crest of a well earned popularity | with the ever popular Baron Elliott wave and is considered one of the na- | and his music on July 1th, and on July tion’s big three in box office attraction i 21st, Wally Stoeffler comes direct today. With him at Sunset will be his : from Boston. ROOSEVELT DEPRESSION” | companies are the result of great ac- or MONOPOLY DEPRESSION | cumulations of capital. In good times they overproduce to make high profits : : and in bad times they underemploy to Here is an excerpt from the article | preserve profits which are still very on CORPORALS OF INDUSTRY, by | considerable and which smaller and E. D. ennedy, printed in the book, | more competitive companies cannot “America Now,” by Harold E. Stearns, | register at any time. They are exactly Which ought to be read by every intel- | like the railroads, the light and power ligent person in the country: companies, and the utilities, and like “The monopolistic nature of com- | these so-called ‘natural’ monopolies panies like-Anaconda Copper, United | they should submit to regulation. States Steel, General Motors, Owens That regulation mignt take the form Illinois, United States Shoe Machinery, | of limitation of income in the shape General Electric and many another, | of maximum prices—just as railroad should be clearly recognized. These | and other utility prices (rates) are a regulated in the general good. More IN Cou \ TY RA E effective, however, because less de- flationary, would be a stiffly graduat- ed income tax with the rates on cor- porate profits applied on the same ba- sis as has been long established with 4 rates on personal incomes. The growth of some of our mammoth companies would undoubtedly be somewhat chec- ked, but it is precisely their excessive growth that has made our corporate (let alone our social) structure such a lopsided and one-sided affair. Meanwhile, the spokesmen of the monopolists have adopted the techni- aque of identifying big business “with | all business—of pretending that any- { thing which might damage the Alumi- num Company, or tke present Standard of New Jersey is just as damaging to the neighborhood butcher or the corner druggist. They call upon economic ‘principles which they themselves have made no longer applicable, They ap- | peal to an industrial way of life which began to weaken in 1890 and which | was almost entirely destroyed by 1929. 1 v [They ignore the fact that they were 5 completely in the saddle during the Michael C. Chervenak | days of Harding, Coolidge, and the Michael C. Chervenak, Jr., Portage first year of Hoover. They forget that Township, announces his candidacy they were still ‘unregimented’ during for the Democratic nomination for the the last thre years of the Hoover ad- office of Prothonotary of Cambria ministration but did nothing but watch County. | depression deepen info disaster and Mr. Chervenak seeks the nomina- | then look for a cyclone cellar. They . . . . ale po + ”. tion on his record of public service, | also do not remember that they were especially on his record as a member | glad to have Mr. Roosevelt close the of the State Legislature. He has ser- | Panks and establish the NRA; and that ved two terms as a member of the | their hostility to the New Deal dates Portage Township School Board, Boro | from the time when Mr. Roosevelt's Auditor, and a member and Secretary | M20ney-spending restored consuming of the Board of Health. He was the ' Power enough to give them a large Democratic nominee for County Treas- | measure of restored profits—which i¥er four Vears ago. Mr. Chervenak’s they refused to shgre, however meag- : : ; oY ly, with the unemployed whom they experience in business and public life | TY» J J p had themselves created. Today they are well qualifies him for the position he : ; ke P | ranting about ‘dictatorship’, and they GET A BETTER USED CAR NOW! Avoid the expense of repairing your present car. Trade it now while we are able to give you more on your present car than we ever will again. PRICES ON THESE CARS ARE THE LOWEST EVER! 1938 FORD DELUXE FORDOR 1937 FORD DELUXE FORDOR 1937 FORD TUDOR 1937 CHEVROLET TOWN SEDAN 1936 CHEVROLET COACH—RADIO AND HEATER 1936 PONTIAC SEDAN—RADIO AND HEATER 1935 PLYMOUTH SEDAN 1934 PLYMOUTH COACH 1932 CHEVROLET SEDAN 1931 FORD SEDAN 1935 FORD 131-INCH TRUCK CHASSIS 1933 CHEVROLET 131-INCH TRUCK CHASSIS STOLTZ MOTOR CO. Harry O. Stoltz, Prop. PATTON, PA. —————————— GRAND THEATRE PATTON, Friday One Day Only hi NO. 1 PUBLIC COWBOY BRINGS A NEW BRAND OF SCREEN THRILLS HE WATCHES WITS AND SIX-GUNS WITH A BAND OF FOREIGN SPIES! VT 7 I dll Ll e AA ADE tr 111 “Baby, oll you meon io me is thot $100,000 reward...” ised to marry me?" WALTER WANGER presents FREORIC MARCH - JOAN BENNETT TRADE WINDS RALPH BELLAMY . ANN SOTHERN SIDNEY BLACKMER - THOMAS MITCHELL - ROBERT ELLIOTT ATAY GARNETT Production * Released thru United Artists PLATT - LOCKHART OPERA OR OPERATION? The woman doctor never knows when the call of duty will come. Her work is her life. Must she always forgo her birthright as a woman? Must she always submit to that most unreasonable of all masters, her profession ? FRIEDA INESCORT HENRY WILCOXON Wednesday - Thursday The Season’s Most Amazing Blundering Family! “THE FAMILY NEXT DOOR’ Hugh Herbert, Ruth Donnelly, Tom Beck are trying to label as the “Roosevelt Depression” a period of acute crisis caused largely by their overproducing and overpricing last winter and last spring. Left to their own devices— which include the election neihter of a Republican or a reactionary Democrat, like Garner, as our next President— and they will produce a condition of chronic depression with all the attri- butes (particularly mass unemploy- ment) which killed the German Re- public even before Mr. Hitler started doing business on the corpse. And they will try to do all these things by appealing to the medium siz- ed and small business man as if they were his brothers instead of his op- pressors. They will pose as the defen- ders of American democracy; they will call upon the good old days when Am- erican business men went out to build up the country in the process of build- ing up himself. There is a case to be made out for monopoly, provided it is regulated mo- nopoly. But at least let us not mistake the monopolist for a poor boy trying to get along: In 1929—when the most corporationis paid the most dividends to the most people, about 18,000 people got about $2,000,000,000 and less than 40,000 people got over $2,500,000,000, which was over 40 per cent of all the dividends declared. A very small group of very large investors own American industry—no matter how many insig- nificant stockholders may appear on the corporate books. There are some- where around 360,000 stockholders in General Motors, but one stockholder— E 1 duP ie N s—Oowns more of common. In 1931 the late Andrew Mellon submitted evidence in an in- come tax evasion case that he and his immediate family had title to one and a third million shares of Gulf Oil, out of 4,500,000 shares outstanding. The big corporation of today is not the pro- duct of a big man, it is the product of big money. Capital, not management, determines the important decisions of business today. From a social standpoint, the oldtim- ers did not amount to very much. But with all their imperfections, they fre- quently did start from the bottom, they did get to the top, and however unin- tentionally, they improved the general standard of living while they were on the way up. But do not confuse the captains of industry of yesterday with the corporals of industry today. The modern corporation executive is inter- ested only in cutting every cost except his own—usually exhorbitant—salary. He is not an owner. He is a hired man. The people who appear in the top brackets of our personal income tax returns derive sometimes as high as 85 per cent of their incomes from cor- porate dividends, and from dividends which, during the last ten years, less than one per cent of the American cor- porations- have been consistently able to declare. When it comes to a choice between protecting these dividends—not from elimination, but: from reduction—and impoverishing the rest of the country, 43,000,000 shares ! h ople do not hesitate. Neither yrporate presidents whom they ired for the job. come and the stresses and trials of life bear down upon the soul, there is a source for the solace, comfort, strength James A. Turner, pastor. od encouragement that are then nee- Church school at 9 a. m. Preaching . at 10 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Mid-week Bible class on Wednesday evening at It is said that Queen Victoria once presented herself before the keeper of ———————— the treasure chamber in Windsor cas- tle with a request for the richer of the two small caskets in his custody, each made of solid crystal, exquisite in workmanship and very costly. Select- ing the richer and finer of the two, she drew from her pocket a copy of the Bible, and locked it in the casket, which was then returned to its place, richer than ever for the new treasure it contained. The Bible stored in that shrine was General Gordon's. It had been his daily support and solace, and was with him at Khartoum. It was worn and marked with the thousand notes of daily use and daily study, which indicated the relation of its he- . is ro owner to it and what it had been to Joseph C. Wess him. It was not a new copy of Secrip-| Joseph C. Wess of Croyle Township ture, frseh, unsoiled, and unused, that | announces that he is a candidate for was thus royally set; it was not selec- the Democratic nomination for Clerk ed for the beauty of the binding, the [of Courts of Cambria county at the richness of the material, or the excel- | primaries on September 12th. lence o fthe workmanship. I was cho- “I am seeking the Democratic nom- sen because it had once borne the re- ’ PATTON METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH ination for Clerk of Courts,” states Mr. lation it did to a heroic life. It had { Wess, “believing that I am qualified to helped to create that life, to raise it | serve the citizens of Cembria county high, to make it pure and strong, to! in that capacity. I can assure the citi- fill it with faith and light and hope. zens of the county that my services Happy the person who has hidden | will be constantly at their command the Word in the jeweled c t of his | if IT am successful in attaining the of- hat when the hard SB 1 Mg 3 Wo Pro aga dist hon approve July pq The « mining len into be sold ton real sale, est per cenf to purcl The bu prices, 1 The n one tim the con never v pany’s less