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Show THE HELPER TIMES, HELPER, UTAH 000 and those for the first quarter, ending March 31, well above News Review of Current Events the World Over $000,-000,00- 0. At least of the total tax due was paid with the Income tax returns filed, bo that collections for the first quarter will run somewhat above the average for the four quarters. Indications are that the higher tax rate for 19,'SO Incomes will fall to offset the losses caused by the economic depression by around President Iloover on Business and Pleasure Trip to $100,000,000. Porto Rico and Virgin Islands Mayor Walker Under Fire. CO VARIED one-fourt- h r are the Interests of O different countries that the tar By EDWARD W. PICKARD DRESIDENT U 1 "stag party" galled from Norfolk, Va., Thursday morning on the reconditioned battleshipy Arizona for a trip on which the Chief Execu-- t I v e planned to combine rest and pleasure with business. Included In Gov. Theodore the party were Secretary of War HurRoosevelt ley, Secretary of the Interior Wilbur, Cupt. William Furlong, who handles navy Island matters; Capt. Charles It. Train, naval aide; Col. Campbell Hodges, army aide; various other officials from the White House, and a bunch of newspaper men and pho- -' tographers. Capt. C. S. Freeman was In command of the Arizona and the vessel carried a full complement of 90 officers and 1,244 men, for it was making a shaking down run after being rebuilt. The first stop was at San Junn, PoMo Rico, and the President for two days was to be the guest of Gov. and Mrs. Theodore Uoosevelt at La Fortalewi, the old mansion In which governors of the Island have resided from the early days of the Spanish regime. It was planned that Mr. Iloover should make a tour of the Island tn order to observe industrial, agricultural and social conditions, meet the leaders of the political parties nnd gain a general Idea of the success Governor Roosevelt has attained in meeting the problems of the Porto Rlcnns, which are many and se- - . rlous. The governor In his official reports and In communications to the American papers has given detailed pictures of the distress obtaining In the Island. Sixty per cent of the people are out of work, he said, either all or part of the year. The population density is exceeded by few countries. It is 410 to the square mile and even Intensive agriculture would not support this So it Is Industries that population. Governor Roosevelt says must be More than 35,000 perdeveloped. sons are suffering from tuberculosis, 200,000 from malaria, and 600.000 from hookworm. From Porto Rico the Arizona was to proceed to St. Thomas, principal port of the Virgin Islands, where Mr. Hoover was to be met by Dr. Paul M. Pearson of Philathe recently appointed delphia, civil governor, and Waldo Kvnns of the navy, the retiring governor. With them he was to study the problems of the group, which are as serious as those of Porto Rico. The Virgin Islands used to prosper on the manufacture of rum and the transshipment of European cargoes for the entire Caribbean region. The prevailing economic distress Is the result of prohibition and the conversion of coal burning vessels to oil consuming ships. Only a few days ago the control of the Virgin islands was transferred from the Navy to the Interior department, and now in Washington It Is suggested that one result of the President's visit may be the amalgamation of the group with Porto Rico as a single political unit administered by, one governor. DEVELOP-mentcampaign s to clean Dp New York city politically are coming rapidly. During the week formal charges of neglect and unfitness were filed against Jimmy Walker, the dapper and debonair mayor of the metropolis, now ia trates. by In police and magis- The speaking calendar for the President as arranged Is: April 13 American Red Cross In Washington. 14 April day, Union, Washington. May 4 International Chamber of Commerce. Washington. May 21 Fiftieth anniversary of the Red Cross, Washington. May 30 Forge, Pa. Memorial day, Valley June 15 Republican Editorial association, Indianapolis, Ind. June 10 Dedication of Harding Memorial, Marlon, Ohio. June 17 Dedication of Lincoln Memorial, Springfield, III. In addition to these engagements, the President Is to review veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic at their reunion June 10 In Colum- bus, Ohio. THEODORE G. JOSLIN, of the Boston Transcript, has been made secretary to President Hoover to succeed George Akerson, resigned. Mr. Josiln is a close personal friend of Mr. Hoover. His main duties will be arranging the President's calling list, handling visitors at the executive offices and maintaining contact between the Presi1 dent and the correspondents. The new secretary Is an experienced political reporter and has a wide acquaintance among public men. He Is a native of Massachusetts and Is forty-onyears old. e SENATOR of California, who Is one of the most Independent tu e of the upper house, thinks the recent conference of progressive leaders was a "fine thing" and that the leaders of the party should call a similar meeting, addJohnson ing: "Only good can come from such gatherings." He Is convinced that "something is radically wrong Senator somewhere" with the Republican party. Mr. Johnson gave out a statement In which he agreed with some of the progressive doctrines and disagreed with others, but said that "public consideration, study and discussion constitute the contribution and value of the conference." He asserted .the country was naturally Inferested In unemployment, representative government, the power question, monopoly's encroachments and public utilities, adding: "Some of our Republican brethren not only belittle the effort but would transmute it Into the one public matter of concern to them politics. Rut a philosophic onlooker who long ago marked hia own course, and prefers In his own way to follow it, might suggest that only progressives, in the interim between sessions, bring these vital questions up in public meeting for public discussion. Can nnynne imagine the standpat wing of cither party meeting together with earnest and able experts and publicly discussing economic problems?' EATH once more has chnnged the politienl make-uof the house of representatives which will In December. James I!. assemble Aswell of Louisiana, Democrat and ranking minority member of the committee, passed agricultural away at his apartment In Washington after a heart attack. He was sixty-twyears old and had served In congress for nine consecutive terms. Mr. Aswell's death leaves In the house 217 Republicans, 215 Demo. crats and one Representatives John F. Quiiyle and David J. O'Connell. both Democrats of New York, died last winter. Their successors, Matthew V. O'Maley and Stephen A. Rndd, are both Democrats. Representative Henry Allen Cooper, Republican of Wisconsin, died Inst March 1. Ills successor has not been chosen. o Farmer-Laborlte- Governor Roosevelt had let It become known that he would not respond to any public clamor for a Investigation nnd that he act only upon specific would charges, such as led him to appoint Seabury to Investigate the conduct of District Attorney Thomas C T. Craln. Previously Seabury had been put in charge of an Investigation of police framoups In vice cases and of the conduct of city city-wid- e magistrates. The governor was asked by Craln to revoke the appointment of Seabury on the ground of bins, but refused, and Craln was summoned to appear and answer the charges made against him by the City club. Republican members of the state legislature were sflll trying to put through a resolution for a general Inquiry Into New York conditions, but were blocked by several members of their own party. recnl-cllra- DURING the next' Washington. p himself Samuel California. The Seabury charges were pre sented to Governor Roosevelt by leaders of the city affairs committee and were said to he of such a nature as to compel the governor to take some action toward widening the Investigation now being conducted by Samuel Seabury and confirmed and making nine public appear ances. Besides this, he Is contem plating a trip to his home In Palo Alto, Calif. The subjects of his speeches have not been announced, but It Is understood he will take the opportunity to set forth his own estimate of the achievements of his administration so far and his aims for the future. Thus he will be In a measure taking up the challenge put out by the progressives at their recent conference in throe months, announced at the White House, President Iloover will carry out an extensive shaking program, delivering eight addresses brother of Attorney General Harry M. Dangherty, was sentenced at Washington Courthouse, Ohio, to ten years In prison and n fine of He was convicted recently $"),OO0. of abstracting funds from the now defunct Ohio State bank of which he was president and was refused new trial. MAL DAL'GHERTY, one has now filed his In E1VERY come tax return, or should have done so, nnd the exports In Washington are busy figuring up how much Uncle Sam will receive. Treasury officials could not yet make definite predictions as to the collections for the first quarter, but they hoped that the receipts forMarch would run above $100,000.- iff armistice convention called at Geneva by the League of Nations Is forced to report that it has failed to reuch an agreement, though It has hopes that within a few years enough nations will ratify the pact to make it effective blown up in White bay, Newfound land. Of the survivors 118, many of them badly Injured, managed to reach little Horse Island, where few Inhabitants tried to care for them with Inadequate food and no medical supplies. Several others were picked up by vessels that sped to the rescue, called by the messages of the young girl radio op erator on the Island. Besides th large crew the Viking carried th members of a moving picture ex pedition. H 1 VLI if?1 rr for Euroje. The conference was called by the league In an effort to secure a truce on the raising of tariffs and later to obtain a general reduction of tariffs. Only eleven countries ratified the truce clause and all fleven made Important reserva tions. The usual reservation was, "If surrounding countries would also ratify." DROBAELY twenty men perished wnen tne sealer viKing wa abash. 3 rtn r, by the National Geographic Washington. U. c.) the disturbed of the past year Afghan border of Baluchistan, a short distance URING tlons D' the south another potential condi along India, to the trouble zone for Great Britain has been relatively quiet Only on one or two occasions were there minor dis turbances in this western frontier province. The customs of Baluchistan are vastly different from those of the West, and many a strange compro mise has to be made by the British mother, had suffered the loss of bis father also. For this he deserved The blood recomcompensation. pense for plain murder Is 3.000 rupees; but, as the case was complicated by the fact that the man's son and heir, not his enemy, had done, not a murder, but a manslaughter, the heir ought not receive as much. Hence the elders decreed that the lover should pay Adam Khan 500 rupees and besides provide him with two girls as wives. The English agent confirmed this Solomonlike decision; the lover paid the rupees, gave one niece to Adam, and promised a daughter, yet unborn,' when she should be of marriageable age. All was acceptable to both parties and they have lived In love and harmony after this happy union of their families, ever since. Not always, however, does the English political agent comply exactly with the judgment of the elders. In the case of Miriam, for Instance, the political agent found her with her nose slashed off and bound up with a dirty rag. He asked who had done this. "My hus band," said she. So the agent sent for the hus band, Ilalim, and asked why be had mutilated his loving wife. "Oh, because I thought I saw her speaking to Sharbat Kahn," said he. But did she do so?" Inquired the NE of the earn political agent In dispensing jus est hopes of tice among the natives. Fed American the The British do not own Quetta, Labor eratlon of though they conquered a small re the affiliation of gion north of it. They hold It un the Brotherhood of der a perpetual lease from the khan Railway Trainmen of Kalat. Formerly the ferocious with the federa tribes of these barren mountains tion Is soon to be and beyond used to depend largely realized, according for their existence upon raids Into to dispntehes from India, and for a time they lived Washington. Rep upon the spoils of resentatives o sumptuously Delhi. Horde after horde of these both bodies and o savage warriors established tempo certain affiliated rary sovereignties over the rich citSecretary workers' ies of the central Doak railway plains, only to be unions were en overwhelmed In turn when they beIn week gaged during the drafting came soft under the Influence of the terms of an agreement for the luxury. Representing the amalgamation. It Is to prevent this sort of thing federation in the conference were that the British occupy Baluchistan President William Green, Secretary and the North West Frontier provV Frank Morrison and ice Preslden ince to the northeast. They do not J. M. Bugenlazet, who also Is sec depend altogether on armed forces, retary of the International Brother but attach great Importance to agent. Who knows? Perhaps not," said hood of Electrical Workers. Sit their political agents. Halim. ting In for the trainmen were Pres In these agents are combined the Well, but I really cannot let you Ident Albert Whitney and James functions of executive, judge and cut off your wife's nose for nothing Farquurson, legislative agent But they do not attempt at all," said the political despot. agent. The drafling conference was the to western notions of law You must go to jail for one year." culmination of negotiations that and Impose on the wild Mohamjustice Halim Preferred the Jail. have been in progress for a year, medans under their jurisdiction. In which Secretary of Labor Doak The elders came to the agent and Much Trouble. Cause Wives In his former capacity as legisla remonstrated against such severity. trouble the Much of the among or of tive agent the trainmen's Perhaps It would not have been concerns ganization, is said to have played natives in Baluchistan amiss," said they, "to put Halim In wives. Girls are not of as much jail an important part. for three months. Yet a man's consequence as boys, and their par- wife Is his own. She Is bought with beM warm and coats ents the give de- a great price. Why should he not I UNEXPECTEDLY henvy mands by World war veterans food to the sons; so that the death cut off her nose if he pleases? It much is high Is, after all, his own loss. Surely, for loans have made It necessary rale anion? daughters with tlie result tnnt there are Sahib, you will let Halim out of for the treasury to raise $200,000, er, not to wives go around, es enough 000 In less than a month. Secre"Tomorrow," said the agent, some of the richer men jail." as pecially "1 will give my decision." a Mellon announced request tary avail themselves of the Prophet's The next day he pronounced this by Veterans' Administrator Ilines for Slino.OOO.tXH) to cover payments permission and buy more than one judgment: "I will release Halim on on 1.372,00(5 applications received helpmeet. either of two conditions. Either he Wives, like camels, are bought at must restore his wife's nose safe up to March 1f. It hail been estl mated $3(10.000,000 would suffice, high prices, and, like camels, are and sound or he must cut off his The girl's preference own nose in exactly tne same k Per cent treasury certift often stolen. and cntes were issued to get that sum. s not consulted, and as her be fashion of hers." The elders were Hines said, however, the $."00.0(K), trothal in many cases has taken amused greatly by this alternative. place before her birth she not 'n They withdrew their protest. Halim 000 w ould be needed by April 11. frequently prefers another to her served his term In jail and was re husband. Woe to her, however, If leased without retaining rancor been has her unfaithfulness is discovered or so just a sentence. TADJIKISTAN of Soviet So suspected, for It then becomes the agnlnst In another Instance the Moham cialist Republics as the seventh duty of her husband, her son, her medan Mnhmud, Instead of con constituent state, the action bein father, or her brother to kill her himself with the girl chosen taken by the sixth biennial all- - without mercy, and to kill her tenting by his mother and sisters to be his union Soviet congress in Moscow lover, too, if he can be found. wife and first, to be seen by him just before adjournment. The Tad Adam Khan was sixteen years after the marriage ceremony, found last jikistan republic, organized One night he was wakened for himself a pretty Hindu girl and old. July, was formerly a part of Vz- - nd went to the tent door, but found persuaded her to be his bride. But It comprises slightly no one. It happened a second time. he could not make bckstan. up his mind to more than 00,000 square miles with hut even the camels were unless she should first her quiet. marry a in a population of 603,000, lying So he lay and listened, and the profess his religion. cove formed by the frontiers of Af third time he saw a man So Mnhmud consulted the mnllah whisperghanistan, India nnd Chinese Tur ing to his mother. Amlna. As Adam of his village as tc how she might kestan. Its capital is Stulinabad, roused his father. Dost Mohammed, become Mussulman!. The mnllah formeily Dushambe. the lover, Nasho, escaped. made no difficulty of It. All that Rvkov, former premier, nnd oth Dost Mohammed loved his wife was so he said, was that ers who were removed from office nd shrank from killing her. Nay the necessary, lovely Hindu girl should say be to favor were restored recently, he even tried to protect her against fore him: "There Is no God but during the session of the congress the vengeance of her son. So It and Mohammed Is the prophet and mnde members of the central happened that when Adam tried to God, of God." committee. executive hoot his mother it was his father "But stay," added the priest who first fell. Afterward she, too "You must pay for your bride, of was slain. Then, while it was yet course. As It would be sinful to PIETRO archark. Adam hid In a nullah (gully) give a great sum for her to the ear the horn of her lover, with his worthless Hindu, her father, you bishop of Pisa and one of the most gun pointed and cocked. may give it to me, my son." eminent members The lover, however, had become The young man easily perceived of the sacred colto return home, and the reasonableness of the first part too crafty in dead Is when Adam Khan shot the first of the priest's proposal, but he lege, Pisa at the age man who came out of the hut, In could by no means see why his -t of seventy-- hree 3Sr wife's dowry should be given to the , the gray twilight, it was the lover's years. In his earfather, Karim, who fell groaning. priest. In his perplexity he con lier years he gained s he was desperately wounded. suited the chiefs of the wazirs. fame as an astron"The priest." said they, "is quite thp old man of his own accord omer and teacher raised his head that another bullet right In telling yon not to give the of philosophy ; he might end his suffering. dowry to the Hindus; but It should Cardinal Maffi archwas made When day was advanced and the come to us, not to him. We are the bishop In 1003 and English political agent had fin authorities." four years later was raised to the Ished his breakfast, Adam Khan Billiard Table Instead of Feud. But before this was done the eld purple by Pope Pius X. The same sought him and demanded lustlce. pope. It was rumored, considered Perhaps you would think Justice ers of the mahsuds heard of the deposing him because he supported would begin by hanging Adam. Far transaction. While approving, like the modernists In a contest with from It I That would have started the wazirs. the withholding of the the reactionaries In the church. a feud which would have lasted money from the Hindus, they let It Twice, afterward, Mafll was con- perhaps, forever, and many yet un he known that, being the superiors sidered a papal possibility. He born would kill each other because of the wazirs, the elders of the was always a great friend of the the balance of justice had. In this" mahsuds were the proper recipients Italian royal family, and he Instance, kicked the henm. The in this Instance. last year at the marriage of English political agent, wise from All parties appealed the Crown Prince Humbert of Italy long experience, summoned thp vll to the British political agentquestion After and Princess Marie Jose of Bel lage elders and laid the case before mature consideration he rendilv gium. For this he was given the them. foresaw that either of the disposiCollar of the Annunzlata, the highDecision in Complicated Case. tions proposed would most probably est gift of the crown. Well versed In the customs ot lead to a feud. Hence. In the In Cardinal Math's death reduces their forefathers from timp lm terest of peace and as represent the Italian membership In the sa- memorial, tl.e elders easily arrived Ing thp real topnotch superior pow Had thp casfr er or the whole region he verx cred college to 2S. against 30 for- at their decision. Therefore It Is ex- been simple, both the unfaithful reasonably decided that the dowrt eign members. pected in Rome that a consistory mother and her lover woiiM havt should be paid over to him. will be held before long at which been slain nnd the rasp ended. In As there was no appeal possible the pope will create a number ofj lieu of the lover, however, the Int this was readily coiiiiIIpi with nau ranen nno me so Italians at, hitters tattier cardinal and the political agent, not knowing ami, give a better disposition, made It ovet least equal strength with the for fur, all was well. In Adam. But the boy accomplish- to the rltlb as a contribution for the clgriers. (A 1321. Woatarn Ntwioapor Union.) j Ids the necessary killing of his new billiard table! w . u Beets for Stock Feeding Value of Tops and Pulp Is Especially Pertinent Depart(Prepared br the United State WNU Service. ment at Azrlcalture.1 THE LAXATIVE WITH HIGHEST ENDORSEMENT When you get up headachy, slug. here 8 bow to gish, weak, half-sick- , feel yourself again In a jiffy. Take a little Phillips' Milk of Magnesia In a glass of water or len onade. Taken In lemonade, Phillips' Milk of Magnesia acts like citrate of magnesia. As a mild, safe, pleasant laxative, Phillips Milk of Magnesia: has the highest medical endorsement to correct sour As an anti-aci- d stomach, gas, Indigestion, biliousness, It has been standard with doctors for of Agriculture, Farmers' . Sugar Beet Culture In the Humid Area of the United States. Where drought has reduced forage supplies seriously 'as was the case last summer In much of the area to which this bulletin ap plies, the facts brought out as to 50 years. Quick relief In digestive and feeding value of beet tops and beet ellmlnative troubles of men, women, pulp are especially pertinent The bulletin says that live to eight tons children and babies. of forage may be obtained trom an Modern Advantage! ordinary beet crop. "Seems to me you and your wife Designated Area. The area designated as humid have more scraps than you used to Includes Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, have?" Minnesota, "Yes, you see we can quarrel now Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, and part of Nebraska. About and the folks in the other apartments 80 per cent of the nations sugar-beewill think they're just hearing a ra acreage is In this region, dio drama." About 60 per cent of the beet acreage Is In the Mountain states area NERVOUS AND TIRED ? and the other 10 per cent In the Pacific coast area. "An adequate supply of moisture Here is Relief during the growing season, soil of Las Animas,! a proper type, and a long, moder Colo. "The last es are season cool growing ately few years I have sential to success with sugar beets, n been in the bulletin says. "The adaptabil health, nervous, beet has of the lty sugar permitted and tired all the Its culture on a wide range of time. Dr. Pierce"a-Goldeare best gen soils, but the yields Medical on the heavier types." erally made Discovery was' Intensive Measures Necessary. recommended to me. I have taken In the culture of sugar beets In five bottles now tensive measures are necessary, the will fine. I cannot recom- -' bulletin says. Careful preparation and say I feel mend Dr. Pierce's medicine too high- -' of the soil, proper planting prac ly." A. C. Conover, Route 2, Box tices, liberal use of manure and 58, Las Animas, Colorado. fertilizers, and frequent cultivation All druggists. Fluid or tablets. are necessary for success with this Y.rprj package contains a ajmptora ' crop. blank. it ont and mall It to Dr. The bulletin discusses diseases Piero'a Fill Clinic, Buffalo, N. for tree and Insect enemies of sugar beets. medical advice. Send 10c if yoa want a trial package of any ot Dr. riwce'i and gives the best methods of con t medicines, trol, as determined by experiments of the Department of Agriculture Even Death and state experiment stations. 'Well, old Bill Emptyhead has Farmers' Bulletin 1637-may be obtained free from the Office of In played his last practical Joke." "So? I hadn't heard." formation, United States Depart ment of Agriculture, Washington, "Yes; he died, bequeathing his d. brains to science." Pathfinder MagBulletin Block House In Baluchistan. . ' successful In found Methods growing sugar beets In the numld 3tates are outlined In a new publication of the United States 1 (Prepared Way of Growing 1637-F- t ' run-dow- j n i a Sanitation Is Woefully Weak in Some Stables Sanitation In the mangers and drinking cups Is woefully weak in some stables. One farmer was heard to complain recently that his cows were not doing well, that they didn't drink as much water as they should and always left a certain amount of meal In the bottom of An Inspection of the mangers. the mangers and drinking cups will locate the source of such trouble almost every time. The smell of either should indicate what is wrong. The drinking cups become fouled with chaff and spoiled silage and when left for even a day the water Is filthy. Naturally cows will not drink such water freely. Anywhere from a quarter to an Inch of hard accumulated filth, originally feed, can sometimes be scraped out of the manger, left over from many feedings and seldom cleaned out. It, too, has a stench which makes the animal quit eating long before it has had enough. Drinking bowls and mangers should be kept clean. azine. 1 Bothered It witK Backache? Mag Warn of Disordered Kidneus. with backache, fV If troubled : i .; H.jj viduuci ii i lutuuus, ttiiu gelling up at night, don't take chances! Help your kidneys at the first sign of disorder. Use Doan's Pills. Successful for more than 50 years. Endorsed by hundreds of thousands of grateful users. Uoan s today. Sold by deal iers everywhere. m &3S ills mmriA DIURETIC M Better Milk Cows Need of Average Dairy Farm The present low averages of the nation's dairy cows Is a serious handicap to customers as well as to producers of dairy products, says Boschee'sSvrup soothes instantly, ends the bureau of dairy industry, irritation quickly! GUARANTEED. Never be without United States Department of AgriBoschee's! For young culture. Because of the low prorffy and old. duction per cow, many dairy farmers are working for a very low wage and are actually feeding their cows at a loss. With fewer cows and a higher average production At aH per cow the net profits of the averdruggists Incould be farm age dairy greatly creased. If Is estimated that the Pa Knows Everything average yearly production per cow of the 22,.r00.0O0 milk cows In the "Daddy, what is a raconteur?" United States Is 4.(00 pounds of n "A very man who tells milk containing ISO pounds of but- very jokes." ter fat No one who Is not pompous can STOPS oschee's Syrup r well-know- well-know- n Care in Feeding Silage Required for Results ever leurn to be. Silage is an extra good feed If It is not abused. Two kinds of abuse are to feed too much and to let the surplus accumulate In the mangers. It should not he forgotten that silage Is largely wnter. If the cows are encouraged to cram themselves with silage at the expense of grain and hay they will not be getting enough nutrients to sustain their hoilies and a profitable flow of milk. Preferably the grain should be fed un top of the silage so that It will be eaten first nnd then not more silage than will be eaten readily. If there is a surplus It should be cleaned out of the mangers dally. We don't mind obeying laws that Jon't bother us. Feed Consumed by Cows of Average Production chew it. A cow will conxiitne about 35 pounds of silage a day and 15 pounds of hny. If her annual yield is 210 pounds of biitterfiit and her milk average 3.5 per cent of fat. her milk feed will a vein ire fi.tHKi pounds for .'!00 days a year, leaving her 0") days for a dry period. This means that her average production would be only 20 pounds of milk a day. Such a cow will not need a heavy !f tdie is fed two grain ration. pounds of grain a day of a mixture composed of 400 pounds each of ground barley and outs and lmj pounds of linseed meal she should do very well. DON'T S7l W WITH COLDS Sluggish Intestinal systems lower resistance to colds. Cleanse them with t, the modern chewing gam laxative. Gentle, safe, More effective because yoa Feen-a-min- WW O H "fST.JI Tht Chewinq Gum LAXATIVE HV No Taste tl I Bj Al I - HlBuMhcMintj 'Li 1 I till VIII BUCBMaWdk'i FOR CONSTIPATION JT I -- V |