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Show JL TIIE LEIII SUN. LEHI, UTAH . i I i WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS BY JOSEPH W. LaBINE Dewey Campaign Gains Steam With N. Y., Wisconsin Victories Third Term Grows Less Likely (EDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) -;ReleaMd by Western Newspaper Union. POLITICS: In the Spring From coast to coast in early April the grass roots were turning green. For politicians more than anyone else, the fresh spring air was filled with anticipation. Congress grew restless, prompting Senate Majority Leader Alben Barkley to forecast adjournment in June Just before the national conventions. More pointed harbingers of an election year were primaries In New York and Wisconsin, which sent youthful Tom Dewey's star a -soaring and left Cactus Jack Garner's aupporters hanging on the ropes. In the Empire state, whose delegates will be uninstructed, G. O. P. Hope- MICHIGAN'S VANDENBERQ Dewey also beat Roosevelt. ful Frank Gannett was nevertheless pigeon-holed in the public mind. In America's Dairyland, Tom Dewey not only outpointed Michigan's Sen, Arthur Vandenberg for G. O. P. del egates but also got more votes than Franklin Roosevelt got in the Den ocratic primary. If third termites thought the Pres ldent's Wisconsin victory over Jack Carner was a favorable sign, they also saw signs to the contrary. In Los Angeles Eleanor Roosevelt spoke her personal opinion; she was against a third term "except in ex traordinary circumstances." If Eu-rope's Eu-rope's war was such a circum stance, Sumner Welles had probably proba-bly convinced the President that the White House can never bring the Allies and Germany to peace At Monongah, W. Va., meanwhile, C. I. O.'s John Lewis threatened to start his own third party unless the Democrats choose a platform and candidates suitable to him. Defl- nitely not acceptable, C. I. O. has already intimated, is Franklin Roosevelt. And Montana's Sen. Bur ton K. Wheeler, whom John Lewis would like to see President, made it plain at San Francisco that he does not expect the President to run, that he himself is not a third party candidate, but that he would become Democratic candidate should the party invite him. CONGRESS: Fraud? Mad as hornets were New York's Rep. Ham Fish and North Caro lina's Sen. Bob Reynolds. By bundling Ambassador Bill Bullitt back to France aboard the clipper, Secretary of State Hull had cheated them out of an investigation. Sub ject: The German "white book' charges, intimating Bullitt had promised Jerzy Potockl, Polish am bassador to the U. S., that America would fight along with France and Britain against Germany. Meanwhile the enterprising New TREND How the tvind is blowing it 7 ' : fir -v MriMMAtiBOMaitik ammmii, MlleftiMifelltfllkltMigi CHAIN STORES-Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace raised opposition to the ruinous chain store tax bill Introduced by Texas Rep. Wright Patman. Said Wallace: The bill would "discourage and prevent" efficient methods of marketing by driving larger, interstate chains out of business. LABOR Consenting to consider another phase of the question over whether U. S. anti-trust laws apply to labor unions, the Supreme court agreed to review an A. F. of L. protest against an anti-picketing injunction in-junction which restrained Chicago milk wagon drivers for alleged violation vio-lation of anti-trust statutes. AGRICULTURE Compared with December 1 forecast of 399,000,000 bushels, winter wheat prospects are now placed at 450,000,000 bushels by unofficial statisticians. WAGE-HOUR At New Orleans, the fifth U. S. circuit court upheld constitutionality of the wage-hour law, refusing to set aside a minimum mini-mum wage order for cotton mills. TAXATION March income tax receipts of $065,486,000 were 31 per cent above the same month in 1939. COMMUNICATION'S A. T. & T. reported a gain of 82,000 telephones in the U. S. during March. York Pi'mvi branded as frauds the papers which Germany claimed to have taken from Polish archives when Warsaw was seized. Basis for the News' charge was the testl mony of three translators who indi cated that "the German propa ganda ministry has slipped some new words into the Polish Ian guage." Two translators "com' mented that the report was written in such poor Polish that no states man could have been guilty of its authorship." Two words, they said, were not even in the Polish language; lan-guage; a third was archaic. Also in congress: 4 By limiting debate, the senate expedited approval of a bouse resolution reso-lution to extend for three years the administration's reciprocal trade program. Biggest stumbling block W8s the attempt to retain senate ratification power over such treaties. trea-ties. C. Economy, already blasted by a $300,000,000 boost in the farm bill, went by the boards again when the senate appropriations subcommittee added $44,000,000 for civil functions of the war department. Still ahead was the relief bill, which spending forces hoped to boost $500,000,000 above the President's $1,000,000,000 request. CThe farm credit administration got a going-over in both houses. In the senate, National Grange Master L. J. Taber appealed for a bill to make FCA independent again, re moving it from the agriculture department de-partment where it was placed by governmental reorganization last year. In the house, farm leaders opposed a bill to liberalize FCA loans to farmers. Reason: It might stand in the way of parity prices. The treasury, which saw interest rates going up, opposed a flat 3 per cent rate on FCA loans. WHITE HOUSE: Week's Work From Grangeville, Idaho, 67-year-old Mrs. Elva Canflcld set out on horseback for a six-week job, counting count-ing noses among the hardy souls who live in a 1,000-square-mile area in the Seven Devils mountains. Throughout the rest of the nation 120,000 other canvassers did likewise. like-wise. In Washington, Sen. Charles Tobey of New Hampshire ushered in the sixteenth decennial census with a radio address urging Arneri- NO. 1 AND NO. 1 'A mortgage on the White House? cans not to answer questions which "violate the constitutional right of privacy." The day It started. No. 1 Census Taker William L. Austin counted the nose of America's No. 1 Citizen, Franklin Roosevelt (see photo). While photographers blazed away, the President asked and was assured as-sured that his census form was confidential con-fidential Skipped over lightly was the Question on whether he held a mortgage on his residence, the White House. Pet project of the week, however, was Franklin Roosevelt's third gov ernment reorganization order, to become be-come effective in 60 days unless specifically spe-cifically rejected by either house or senate. Main aims: (1) Creation of a federal fiscal offi cer, a permanent civil service em ployee with rank of assistant treasury treas-ury secretary, who would rule the public debt service, commissioner of accounts and deposits, and U. S. treasurer. (2) Assumption by the treasury of Jurisdiction over the quasi-independ ent federal alcohol administration. (3) Creation of a "surplus mar keting administration," composed of the AAA's division of marketing and the federal surplus commodities cor poration. MEDICINE: At Cleveland Death from coronary thrombosis is really caused by suffocation ol the heart, which fails to receive oxygen. At Cleveland, where the American College of Physicians met, a past president told how bay-win dowed business men can avoid thrombosis. Dr. William J. Kerr of San Francisco pointed out that elastic elas-tic belts which hold up "adiposities" raise the diaphragm, thus drawing i iWftmjt ! N. .1111 I IIIJ . Il IBIIIJ ":. V.'..-.. ."'.''.W 'I ; 1 I ' ' I Y ' t V i , 'f 7 " f 7 ? more oxi'gen into the heart NEWS QUIZ Know your news? One hundred points if you antuer all the following follow-ing questions. Deduct 20 for each question you miss. Score of 60 to 100 is good to perfect. n m Patoekl I ador 8 r. 1. What controversy did the above signature arouse? 2. True or False: The earl of Athlone has been selected governor gover-nor general of Australia. 3. Has the U. S. recognized the new Chinese regime just established estab-lished at Nanking by Wang Chlng-wei? 4. True or False: Women's new spring fashions accentuate the hips. 5. Choice: According to testimony testi-mony of a WPA timekeeper at San Francisco, 13 cabinet makers' mak-ers' helpers, 6 cabinet makers, 2 carpenters and 5 painters repaired re-paired two high chairs. It took them: (a) 2 hours; (b) 46 hours; (c) 194 hours. Neivs Quiz Answers 1. Potockl, Polish ambassador to the U. S., was alleged by German sources to have placed this signature over an account of his conversation with William Bullitt, U. S. ambassa-dor ambassa-dor to France, In which Bullitt allegedly al-legedly promised V. S. aid to the allies. Some experts call the signature signa-ture a forgery. 2. False. Governor general of Canada, Can-ada, not Australia. 3. No, and the Wang government is consequently angry. 4. False. Carmen Snow, editor of Harper's Bazaar, says of the new skirts: "Your hips melt away." 6. (C) is correct. The Job cost $.190. EUROPE: Czar Churchill In the World war a British landing land-ing at Gallipoli was turned into bloody defeat. Whipping boy for this catastrophe was Winston Churchill, then as now first lord of the admiralty. In defense, Minister Churchill has always maintained the Gallipoli attack would have succeeded suc-ceeded if he had been running both army and navy. By early April Adolf Hitler's spring offensive was getting underway. under-way. Hermann Goering boasted his air force was ready for a decisive blow "in the west" while at sea his planes bombed Scapa Flow and British convoys. To offset these attacks at-tacks the allies tightened their trade noose around Germany, calling home envoys to neutral nations for conferences designed to block Nazi commerce channels. The showdown show-down was obviously near. Dramatically, Prime Minister Chamberlain suddenly satisfied both the British people and Winston Churchill by naming him head of a three-man inner "war cabinet." Others: Sir Kingsley Wood and Sir John Simon, lord privy seal and exchequer, ex-chequer, respectively. Next day, while Czar Churchill polished his brass knuckles, Premier Pre-mier Chamberlain boasted he was "10 times as confident" of victory now as when the war began because be-cause Adolf Hitler "missed the bus" by failing to use Germany's arms superiority last autumn. This confidence was contagious. At Paris, Premier Paul Reynaud left a conference of his inner cabinet cab-inet and military leaders to speak via radio to America. Said he: "France will sign no 'phony' peace." UNAMERICANISM: King Pelley I Head of the pro-Fascist, antl Jewish Silver Legion is goateed Wil liam Dudley Pelley. At Washings ton, when the Dies un-Americanism committee opened its latest series of hearings. Fascist Pelley found himself well smeared by a blonde named Dorothy Waring. A secret agent, formerly with the McCor- mack committee, Miss Waring told the Dies investigators that Pelley once came to her New York apart ment dressed in uniform, black boots, shoulder strap and pistol. What he wanted, she said, was f inane i a 1 support for . v N- the Legion. I j n i iure aay ne promisea to lead a march on Washington Washing-ton which would make him V. S DOROTHY WARING dictator, King-wrecker. "the country's coun-try's white king." Meanwhile Dies agents were concentrating con-centrating on Communism. At Philadelphia they raided party headquarters and got away with a truckload of membership lists and financial statements. MISCELLANY: Submission CAt Rome, Gen. GiuserjDe Carl. baldi, eldest son of the Italian pa triot and voluntary political exile in the U. S. for Iti years, retumpd home to visit his ailing mother. So impressed was he that he wrote Dictator Dic-tator Mussolini, making a public act of submission to Fascism. C At Helsinki, Finnish men and women voluntarily surrendfrml their jewelry to raise $6,000,000 for pursuit pianes. r a Bruckart't Washington Digest Government Ownership of Land Creates Serious Taxing Problem Revenue Formerly Collected From Private Property Now Unavailable to Local Units Because of Extensive Federal Holdings. By WILLIAM BRUCKART WNU Service, National Press Bldg., Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON. Through some six weeks, the house committee on military affairs has been holding hearings on a question that is vital to the entire nation, but yet it has attracted little attention outside of the areas directly concerned. The problem is one of taxes which six southern states are not collecting. That is, taxes which they used to collect from private property but are not available to those states now because the federal government has taken over the property. To be more specific, these taxes once were a fine source of revenue for running the state and county and city governments and the schools and the policing and the building of highways and such like in the states of Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ken-tucky, North Carolina, Mississippi and Georgia. But along came the idealism of Sen. George Norris of Nebraska, who wanted the government govern-ment to drive out all private ownership owner-ship of electric power, and along came TV A, the Tennessee Valley authority that has grown like stomach stom-ach ulcers within the economic body of the southland. When it came, it took over millions upon millions of dollars of property that had been taxed by the state and local governments. gov-ernments. So, after some seven or eight years, the governments of those states and cities and counties want money with which to pay the cost of legitimate government. The original TVA laws provided that this gigantic government-owned octopus should contribute to those state governments certain sums in lieu of taxes, but this was directed only in the case of Tennessee and Alabama. The others were not mentioned. men-tioned. Those states were to receive re-ceive 5 per cent of the gross proceeds pro-ceeds of the sale of power by TVA. As stated, the money was to be paid to the state governments, alone. Nothing was said about the counties or the cities or smaller towns that must have tax revenue upon which to live. Operation of TVA Program Would Set Basic Power Rates But the omission of the counties in Alabama and Tennessee was only one phase of the trouble that was to come. You see, the TVA boys and the dreamsof the eovernment-own- ership crowd wanted td" expand the functions and the capacity and the scope of TVA. It was to be, in the words of President Roosevelt, a great yardstick by which the country coun-try was to be able to measure the cost of electric power. From the TVA were to' come basic rates by rwhich you and I were to know whether private electric companies were charging you and me and the rest of us too much for lighting our homes, etc. So, it was only natural that the TVA and its backers soon were promoting pro-moting something bigger and better in the way of its operations. Like some dread disease, the pressure of TVA on privately owned power companies became too heavy to bear, and they were swallowed up. In one gulp, for instance, the government-owned TVA took over the vast properties of the Tennessee Electric Power company for $100,-000,000. $100,-000,000. I understand that TVA got quite a bargain, but the sale of the property to TVA was no bargain for the taxpayers in the areas it served and, moreover, it was a terrible blow to the state and county and city governments In those regions. They had been receiving vast sums each year as taxes on these properties. prop-erties. In one scratch of a pen, the TVA almost put the local governments govern-ments on relief, for all of the millions mil-lions of taxable property became non-taxable when the federal agencythe agen-cythe TVA took title to the property. prop-erty. The government ownership crowd which is driving hard now for government gov-ernment ownership of a lot of other things were as happy as a kid with a new toy train. But like that same youngster, they did not stop to figure out just where their train was going. Certainly, the honeyed-words honeyed-words of the TVA promoters in the southland did not disclose to the taxpayers of those areas what the deal was going to cost them, ultimately. ulti-mately. Taxable Property Reduced In Areas Served by TVA It took several years of operation, actual practical experience, for those taxpayers and the officials of LOST TAX DOLLARS Government ownership of land in six southern states is causing a serious tax situation for state, county and local taxing bodies, according to this article by William Wil-liam Bruckart, Washington correspondent cor-respondent Taxes formerly collected col-lected from private property (now owned by the federal government) gov-ernment) are now unavailable. Congress is at the present consid-sidering consid-sidering remedial legislation. their state and county and city governments gov-ernments to get hold of the horrible facts that are now being faced-the faced-the same facts that have broughl scores of officials and others before be-fore the house committee on military mili-tary affairs, seeking relief. The cold facts are that scores ol those counties in the- six states mentioned have had their taxable property so reduced In quantity by the continued expansion of TVA that they are almost underoing tax starvation. star-vation. The committee record is replete with testimony showing tax rate increases in almost every area served by TVA, and evidence of expectation of further tax increases. It is a simple statement, in most instances. The witnesses governors, gover-nors, county judges, mayors, spokesmen spokes-men for groups of citizens told almost al-most Identical stories. TVA had taken over so much taxable property prop-erty that there was nothing left to tax for use of those local govern ments. The governments had to have running expenses. Thus, the tax rates were increased. Members of the committee on military mil-itary affairs are quite well aware of the job that confronts them in try ing to write legislation that will solve the tax problem for the vari' ous areas. The states want the money paid to them; the counties want a share paid direct to them, and the cities are squealing, too. But there is much more to the problem than just the TVA area. You see, the government ownership gang has fought for and brought about construction of scores of other publicly owned dams and power projects. On the West coast, in the inter-mountain area, in Nebraska, where Senator Norris lives, in the eastern and southern sections ex actly the same tax problem confronts con-fronts those taxpayers or will come up to haunt them, soon. Whatever the committee does, it is present ing to the house of representatives a precedent-making legislative pro posal. No one can envision its far- reaching possibilities. Legislation Will Provide Compensation for Tax Losses There will be a bill of some kind, undoubtedly, that will provide that TVA pay more money to the regions re-gions where it operates. They ought to have it. But the thing that makes my blood boil is that the people of those areas have been lied to and propagandized so thoroughly that they were not able to understand how a scheming group was selling them down the river. That is, they did not see it until too late. Right now, they are in the position posi-tion where they cannot run their own affairs. They must come to congress and beg on bended knee for help which they ought to be able to give themselves from their own resources which are their own no longer. They have surrendered again to the federal government which, in the nature of things, is very difficult for them to reach for expression of their needs and an explanation ex-planation of their own wishes. TRere was included In the committee com-mittee a set of figures which I am going to list here. The figures show that 441 of the principal, privately owned power and light companies paid $317,742,200 in taxes in 1939. This tax, the record showed, amounted to 15.5 per cent of the total to-tal revenue of those companies. Here are the amounts, by states, that these companies paid: Maine, $2,189,000; New Hampshire, $2,484,-300; $2,484,-300; Vermont, $1,226,500; Massachusetts. Massachu-setts. $17,017,400; Rhode Island, $1,-824,200; $1,-824,200; Connecticut, $5,324,000; New York, $61,996,900; New Jersey, $17,-494,900; $17,-494,900; Pennsylvania, $25,002,100; Ohio, $16,960,200; Indiana, $7,988,-100; $7,988,-100; Illinois, $26,422,000; Michigan, $10,624,000; Wisconsin, $8,817,000; Minnesota, $4,904,700; Iowa, $1,892,-900; $1,892,-900; Missouri, $5,859,900; North Da-kota, Da-kota, $721,400; South Dakota, $509,-500; $509,-500; Nebraska, $1,731,600; Kansas, $1,862,700; Delaware, Maryland and District of Columbia, $7,120,500; Virginia, Vir-ginia, $3,152,200; West Virginia, $4,-294,200; $4,-294,200; North and South Carolina, $8,971,000; Georgia, $2,392,800; Florida, Flor-ida, $2,461,000; Kentucky, $3,093,200; Tennessee, $4,374,400; Alabama, $3,-734,800; $3,-734,800; Mississippi, $1,212,600; Arkansas, Ar-kansas, $1,353,500; Louisiana, $3,-557,300; $3,-557,300; Oklahoma, $3,311,000; Texas, Tex-as, $8,237,300; Montana, $2,009,900; Idaho and Utah, $3,383,500; Wyoming, Wyom-ing, $263,100; Colorado. $2,419,300; New Mexico, $154,800; Arizona. $678,300; Nevada. $285,200; Washington, Washing-ton, $3,850,900; Oregon, $3,443,800; California, $21,134,000. Study of these tax payments (and they do not represent all of the privately pri-vately owned companies that are paying taxes) ought to show even the most stupid person that gradual expansion of government ownership means the slow but sure destruction destruc-tion of another source of funds for paying the cost of government. And this slow destruction is taking place at a time when every government unit from the small village to the state and federal governments are in debt up to their necks and the taxpayers are being bled white by current taxation methods. IMMIMI.HI.. ; 'A i . jiiini iifflislJ WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON (Consolidated Features WNU Service.) NEW YORK. Paul Reynaud, who was asked to form a new French cabinet, and successor to Premier Daladier, put through the . . French Brit-Premter Brit-Premter Desires isn monetary British-French and economic and, even before the start of the war was an advocate of a close financial union between the two countries as the first bulwark of their joint defense. For several years, he has been studying English Eng-lish finance and history, Insisting that both nations must abandon their old plan of remaining apart in the matter of monetary and economic relationships. He Is a lawyer, financier and economist, minister of finance since October, 1938. In the chamber of deputies, he represents repre-sents a "big business" section of Paris and has contended vigorously vig-orously against "governmental meddling in business." In 1935 and 1936 he made a courageous fight for the devaluation of the franc, an issue which is always loaded in France and always sidestepped by more cautious politicians. His business sagacity sagaci-ty was demonstrated In the summer sum-mer of 1929, when he warned all and sundry that a big smash was coming, and withdrew all of his securities from the market. mar-ket. He is as direct, decisive and fiery as Daladier is ponderous and meditative, medi-tative, and for many years has been making prophecies more gloomy than cassandra's foredoom of Troy, as he urged France to prepare for the worst He parts his hair in the middle, strings with the Alliance Democratique, a center group, and has never been classified as either right or left. He is said to be "too intelligent to be liked," and does not seem to mind. He is small and alert, only slightly gray at 60, carefully care-fully groomed and the master of a verbal short jab which seldom invites in-vites a return engagement for anyone any-one inclined to mix with him. He was a holdout on Laval's deal to give Mussolini a green light in Ethiopia and in this connection warned France that it had better be looking to its empire. In politics poli-tics since 1919, in the chamber since 1928. he was previously minister of finance in Tardieu's cabinet. He comes of a family hieh in the moun tains of Barcelonnette, of a clan which has extensive holdines in sev eral foreign countries, including. Mexico. t) UILDING more stately mansions " for his soul. Fritz MandL1 the Austrian munitioneer. runner-uD for Zaharoff, was interrupted by Adolf NewArmsPlants fYoA Are Being Built municipal By Fritz Mandl court, an Austrian Aus-trian architect archi-tect sues Mr. Mandl for payment for designs for a new wing on his Alpine castle, when he was married to Hedy Lamarr, the screen star, now the wife of Gene Markev. Holly wood producer. The castle and the plans were a war casualty, but Mr. Mandl is sitting pretty in Areentina. the hidalgo of a great estate, and getting a fast running start with new steel and munitions rjlants in the land of the pampas. He fooled Hitler. His great arms plants, including the Hirt-enberg Hirt-enberg plant, were supposed to be worth about $60,000,000. That was a nice, fat grouse for the Nazi nimrod, but when Der Fuehrer moved in, he found the great plants just a hollow shell, the securities long- since liquidated liqui-dated and Mr. Mandl at a safe nose-thumbing distance with his former fortune remaining more or less intact. Now 40 years old. rnnnrl.farort tA merry, he was a playboy in his youth; but stayed on the job in his later years. The munitions works were a family holding, founded by his grandfather, Sigmund, and expanded ex-panded by his father, Alexander. He was an associate of the faUen Prince Ernst Ruediger von Star-hemberg Star-hemberg in the Vienna putsch of 1934 not at all interested in political politi-cal ideologies, and smarter than the prince in both making a get-away "UUI vuer ana lepm Germany as well as being able to save his fortune. for-tune. NOT a refugee fortune, but the maWinne i a new une appears in the ODeration nf am ts stein, who also found a hole in the Nazi line. A freighter of the Americanized Ameri-canized Arnold Bernstein shipping lines burns at Baltimore, but it was insured and his newly recruited ships are running cargos to Europe and his fleet is (inuring o here last October, from a Nazi jail. 7UC a lanS'e over the mysterious blocked mark w: . wuucu ujjii. . 51. a teD. pale, thoughtful man, fe -v-vd a new siaru I I WW If I V .' 'i .r.V. ' . ' -" Hi', -Vr. I decorative features SL? porated in the duck h? bcf- ness alone is thtg Bunbormet girl Thes? lJ course. r v. " oeSignj. n be used to cut them out, and wha painted they become attracts ornaments for your lawn. Outlines for the 19-bch dud and his "Keep 03 Grass" sign 1 itTT TTTH . A use waus- sign is also given. In about 24-inch sizo th ... popular sunbonnet eirl v.! sprinkling can are on patten .auoo, m cents. Select one or both of tj clever cutout fieures. cutout directions, as well as spe- cinc painting suggestions come wnn. eacn pattern. Send order to: AUNT MARTHA Box 166-W Kansas City, Si Enclose IS cents for each patten desired. Pattern No , Name Address , Kangaroo Court in Jai About 1,700 of the 3,100 count; and local jails in this couitty allow inmates to hold kangaroo courts, or mock trials presn over by the tougher prisoners, for the purpose of "maintaining discipline," dis-cipline," which consists merely of delegating distasteful jobs to those they dislike and extorting money from others through ridiculous fines. Collier's. CONSTIPATED! Don't Let Gas, Kerve Pres sure Keep You TIRST: Accumulated wate iwell up it bowels and preea on nerves in tba.diiotn traot. This nerve preaaure often cauja ha ches, a dull, lazy feeling, los of ppeUJfc and diianess. SECOND: Partly digaW food starts to decay forming' GAS, bnncuc on sour stomach, acid indigestion, ana burn, bloating you up until you wmetiM gasp for breath. Then you cant eat. w can't sleep. Your atomach a soar, ion tired out, grouchy, and miserabla, ANCED Adlerika containing three tows nd five carminatives rives ivou D0LWJ ACTION. It relieves that awful GAS aim at once, and usually clears the bowels in , than two hours. No waiting for ovemitain So!I at oil drug storts Exaggeration We are never so happy, nor unhappy, as we suppose ourselves to be. La Rochefoucauld. Many Insects ON FLOWERS VEGETABLES A SHS Demand orlSi' bottles, fromyourd 4031 Salt Lake's NEWESTHOTEL mm . 1 TEMPLE SQUARfc Rates $150 fc3-3!, ar this Pea"Xri8. board, plywood or toS Jig. coping or keyhol, sa7 1 . , wI j, 1 VST- i - j v . . I |