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Show t HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD t Says Cream Applied in Nostrils J Opens Air Passages Right Up t Instant relief no waiting Your clogged nostrils open right up. rhe air paRFRges of your head clear and v cm can breathe freely. No more hawking, anuffling blowing, headache, dryness No struggling for breath at night, youi cold or catarrh disappears Oet a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now Appl h little of this fragrant, gntlaeptli h'allng oream in your nostrils It pent trates through every air parage of i! head, eoothes the Inflamed or IWOlh mucous membrane snd relief romeF i If stantly. It's Just fine hon't tay stuffed up with cold or nast rstarrh Adei I tisemenu I HARDING ON PROHIBITION I I "I am not a prohibitionist, Mr President, and never have pretended to be. H k. I I do not laim to be a temperance man. I do not approach this question from a H K 1 do not claim to be a temperance man i sec it as a great mora! question Sena- H M S lor Harding, Republican Candidate for President, discussing the National Prohibi- B K Jj tion Amendment in the Senate, August 1 , 1917 Eg LIKE VIEWS, LIKE PvECORD B During Senator Harding's 6 years in the Senate HE VOTED WITH THE 8 R I "WETS' 30 TIMES OUT OF 32 ROLL CALLS ON WET OR DRY ISSUES. H f IN PARTICULAR W 1 He voted against prohibition for the District of Columbia. F1 K'- 2 He voted against prohibition for the Philippines. 3. He voted against the Cummius amendment to the espionage act, pro- Wfi hibiting the use of any cereal, grain, sugar or syrup in the production of W-intoxicating W-intoxicating liquor And he voted 5 times with the "Wets ' on attempts to. R weaken the Cummins amendment. wr 4. He voted against prohibiting the ' importation of alcoholic beverages m and the withdrawal of distilled spirits from bond during the war " w 5 He dodged by absence an amendment to prohibit the use of the mails vjr . for liquor advertisements 6 He dodged by absence Senator Reed's Bone Dry Amendment prohib- m-itmg. m-itmg. the shipment of liquor into Dry States H 7 He voted for an amendment to the national prohibition act paying ja; (1 images to property employed in the manufacture of liquors. About 3775,000,- E, 000 was invested in liquor property at this time Senator Harding himself ffr owned stock in a brewery, in Marion, Ohio. F.1 The one exception to this deluge is Senator Harding 'a vote for the National B e Prohibition Amendment. He jumped on the tail-end' of-the water wagon just in B time to get out of a losing fight and only after he had spoken against the prin- B i H ciple of prohibition, joined in every effort to weaken the original bill, and himself t 'Vi sponsored a last chance "wet amendment," making the act invalid if not ratified w &a by enough state legislatures within 6 years the first time limit ever written into j g H a constitutional amendment and a clause which the "wets" believed would finally K flj defeat it. WHY SENATOR HARDING VOTED "AYE" "J M f "Ever since I have been in public life in a small way. I have seen men con- !i; tmually measured by the wet and dry y ard stick and the submission of this t I amendment is going to measure every candidate for public office by the wet and t dry yard slick until the final settlement so then in spite of its uritimeliness, in ! f spite of the lack of prudence in submitting it now (the National Prohibition v Amendment). I think this submission is a sort of compromise between the con- I tending forces and I am willing to be counted as a compromising agent." ' WOMEN VOTERS REMEMBER M The National Prohibition Amendment was passed bv DEMOCRATIC I VOTES m a DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS. As Governor ol Ohm. James M. C ox enforced the Sunday Closing Law and, 9 later, the Eighteenth Amendment, in spite of bitter opposition. As President he gives his pledge to enforce National Prohibition. & WOMEN VOTERS I H Measure Well Before You Vote J Voce for COX and ROOSEVELT 1 H WEBER COUNTY DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEE I M. P. Brown. Chairman, E T. Spencer, Sec'y- ! LBsBHnnBflHBBBBHBLVBB |