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Show HIR PAGE TWO News Review of Current Events the World Over By EDWARD W. PICKARD i drys derive any wholeantlsfac-liohearted from the of the Wick-Tfilllll- forcement ' v" I 1 ll en- commls-Nilll- l, which win handed to I'resl- dent Hoover mimi io con:; Unit t re. Nr ho commis- George W. sion Itself run Wlckersham liuve uronl any pride In the bulky document. The one wholly honest member npiicurs to be Monte l.emunn of New who refused to sign the majority reMirt. The other ten attached their names to It itnil gnve out atntemeiils showing tlint no one of fin Agreed with ill) find Inns In their entirely. This iimjority report I against repeal of the Klirhteenth amend-meiit- . mid. admitting tlint prohibition has not been enforced or observed, recommends thut it be given further trial, with tin enlarged force of fluent!). Bciiiovul of the restrictions on the preserl-tioof liiedlclntil liquor hy Is mlvlged. If the dry oineiidiiieiil Is to be revised Ht nil. the coiiiiniKKlon is agreed on certain phraseology which would empower congress to deiil with the liquor trallic us It sees lit. Modi-lirtion of the Volstead net so us to permit the manufacture and sale of light wines and beer Is opposed. In a separate report the plan for revision giving congress the power to regulate or prohibit the manufacture mid sale of liquor was set forth in detail by Henry W. Anderson ol Virginia, find it was 6igned by Commissioners Ander son, Kenyon. I.oesch, Pound, Mc Cormick and Mackintosh. of t lie Individual Statements commissioners appended to the general report showed that of the eleven members, six consider It hopeless to expect that prohibition can be made to prohibit. Two of these six former Secretary of Wnr Newton I). Baker of Ohio and I'rof. Monte M. Lemann of Tuiiine university, Louisiana udvoeate repeal of the eighteenth amendment. The other four of these six Mr. Anderson, Ada U Comstock, president of KadcJitTe college; Prank J. Loesch of Chicago, and Dean Roscoe Pound of Harvard law school favor immediate revision of the Eighteenth amendment to confer the power of regulation on congress. Five of the members Chairman George VV. Wlckersham. United States Judges William S. Kenyon, Paul J. SI and William I. Grubh, and former Chief Justice K. M. Mackintosh of the Washington Supreme court stood out for a further trial. Judges Kenyon, Mackintosh and McCormlck said furtliet the If that experiment failed they would favor ndmtun mm of the A n 'Ur3'fl- - d " ' 1 pliyKl-chin- piwll Ol Ulltioinii emulation or uquor. In transmitting the report to congress. President Hoover said he was in accord with its stand dry amendagainst repeal of: the ment, and added "1 do, however, see serious objections to. and therefore must not be understood as recommending the commission's proposed revision of the Eighteenth amendment which Is suggested by them for possible consideration at some future time If the continued effort at enforcement should not prove successful." Senator John J. Blaine of Wisconsin was quick to Introduce a modification amendment on the general lines of the plan offered by Commissioner Anderson but confining congressional power to l.ike regulation of liquor traffic, the Anderson scheme. It would permit each state to decide whether It desires prohibition or a government-controlled liquor supply. STANDING by 1 that the funds of Cross the lied be obshould tained by private subscription. Preshas Hoover ident named a commit tee of leading citi zens to push the drive for $10,000, 000 for the rellel of the drought suf Calvin Calvin Coolldge, his predCoolldjs ecessor, has accepted the honorary chairmanship of this body, and Al Smith, his opponent In 1tV--8, Is a vice president, ns are John W. Thivis, Democratic candidate for the Presidency In 3024; Gen. John J. Pershing, and Abel Davis of Chicago. John Barton Payne, head of the Ked Cross. Is the active chairman of the com mlttee. In a letter to those Invited to serve on the committee tiie Presl dent said that "It is essential thai we should maintain the sound American tradition and spirit ol voluntury aid In such emergency and should not undermine thut spirit which has made our Bed Cross the outstanding guardian of our ieople In lime of disaster. , . . The American way of meeting such relief problem has been through voluntary effort and for many ferers. years this effort has been centered in the American Ited Cross, created by the people themselves to act la Just tticli emergencies." re-xi- ri luw I n In the OBSTRUCTIONIST tactics the Interior department bill, to which had been appropriaappended the tion for the Ited Cross for food but the meiisure wus paused. The Semite also had further relief plans. The agriculture committee approved h measure to donate -- 0. (HHP, M0 bushels of farm board wheat to feed t lie hungry, the cost of the grain to be credited to the board's revolving fund; uud the appropriation committee lidded to a pending deficiency bill g'jn.txxi.-(mm- j for Immediate public Improvements. Wet meiaheis of the house engaged In it filibuster against prohibition enforcement appropriations, attacking especially funds for employment of informers, for purchase of liquor evidence and for tapping the telephone wires of suspected luw violators. before foreign relations committee mid eloquently defended the protocols for American adder ence to the World court which he His arguments were negotiated. forcible und his replies to ques tlous seemed adequate, hut hi ad dress did mil appear to have much effect on Senators Itorah, Moses ami Johnson, memliers of the committee and opiMinents of adherence even with the senate's EUHU KOOT appeared senate I I 1 It VSINKSS In the United States is now on I he upgrade, the peak of the financial depression naspassed before the beginning of ttie year, and the prospects for restored Industrial prosperity are nt good. is Such, the least, opin- of James A. J. A. Farrell Farrell. president of the United States Steel corporation as expressed In an address to the National dinners and the National Wholesale Grocers' associations In He Joint convention In Chicago. depreciated the suggestions of revision of Inter allied war debts as a measure of relief, and urged that we il the things thai we can. "Let us cut down the volume of undigested talk thut rarely helps but always hampers," he said. Granting that unemployment Is considerable and that the national Income has been reduced, the steel magnate contended It was essential for prosperity to maintain 4ie pur chasing power of the working classes, adding: "It is my deliberate Judgment that n general reduction of wages in this country would set back the Impending recot co' oy at least i.w years. The agricultural situation Mr. Farrell described as a most serious one. But, he said, no lasting gain will be made for agriculture by resort to "quack nostrums and unsound economics." ion - BICES of bread. D 1 and oth- sugar er foodstuffs are being Investigated on order of the senate, by an agri cultural Senator ators 1 which Arthur Kansas Capper of Is chairman. Wagner March ami men who Insist on going there In search of employ meat are advised by the United Slates employment service to be prepared Utah Legislature Now REl'KKSKNTATIVK ouFISH'S Communist activities bus reported, recommending strengthening Hie laws whli h would enable the authorities to curb those activities In the United States. The Itussiao Soviet pre heaps ridicule on the report, declaring U is Impudent and Insolent and thut it indicates the "rrlght or the bourgeoisie" that the Soviet republic will succeed In Its industrialization plan. Soviet officials announce that Kussla Is about to resume the dumping of grain on the world markets, her supply lurgely exceeding the needs of the Hussian The Utah legislature In Its nineteenth session bos moved In a deliberate fashion and at the end of the second week of the session still bad delved but lightly Into Its program. The subject of new amendments to the constitution bus been considered to some extent. Four questions have been under consideration. These are: Affecting trial by Jury, schools lu the five cities of the first and second classes, qualifications for membership In the legislature, and prohibition. The assortment of subjects la interesting, but none of them has much to do with taxation. Two taxation bHIs buve appeared Oue has been In the legislature. Introduced in both houses. It is the In Sen- of find York New Brookhnrt of Iowa, Sen. Capper who were the au thors of the resolution calling for the Inquiry, first appeared before the committee and explained their views and their reasons for thinking current prices to be excessive. of Afterwards representatives the big bread baking companies were called and other tradesmen In to tell the facts as they see them and lo Justify, if they could, the maintenance of present prices of bread in view of the low price of wheut. away from Las Vegas. Is warning to Jobless workers who seek employment on the Boulder dam project given out hy Labor, the official organ of rail road labor organizations. The pu KEEP per says: "Despite the fact that contracts on the Jlfio.OOO.OOO government project have not been awarded. flooded with Las Vegas has been thousands of Johless and destitute unfor men. Hundreds of these lunate Job seekers were deceived by roseate reports circulated hy tin scrupulous employment agencies. In the opinion of Francis I. Jones, general director of the United Slates employment service. "Capt. Itonert M. Grllliti of the Salvation army nt Las Vegas re cenlly declared lliul Las Vegas has the longest bread line in the United States, nccordinn to population More than 7.000 Jobless workers were given h!-- by Hie SalvaT'on army In one month, Capialn Grlttin reports " The tirst contracts for Bouldet dura will not be awarded until If HhA v , m- - fc. .. V- : .. . JfTZSUo i ......V-.- u ' - i. '. v people. and PACIFISTS advocates of B 0' JZh. His , i ... I . '3 i . "J adequate national defense came together In Washington in the sixth national confer- ence on the cause and cure of war, The big meeting was attended by egates 44 from the demobilization of what lliey call "the war muchlne." One of the speakers on the program was Kcar Admiral Mark Bristol, chairman of l lie executive committee of the navy general hoard; and his arguments for defense were nbly seconded hy Admiral William V. Pratt, chief of naval operations, and Kd ward p. Warner, former assistant secretary of the navy In charge of aeronautics. Among the pacifist speakers were Miss June Addatiis International of the League for Peace and Freedom, and Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt. DISPATCIIKS from French-speakin- French-speakin- k Gevenn say opium hoard of the League of Nations was compelled, by objections from representatives of France and Yugoslavia, to delete from its report caustic criticism of the "abnormal'' narcotics consumption in Japan and France, the inference being that drugs supposedly for medical purposes had escaped from regular channels and been made available to the illicit dope dealers. The expurgated report read to the league council merely mentioned "certain countries,'' but at the iisme time unfolded to the council the fact that seizures of opium illicitly were now In tons transported where heretofore they bad been In ounces. The league commission to study l!i land's United States of Kuropu scheme decided, after a warm debate, to invite Russia, Turkey and Iceland to participate in the discussions of the economic phases of the plan when It Is taken up again probably next May. The invitation to the Soviet government was Insisted upon especially by Dino Grandl of Italy und Julius Curtius of Germany. one-fourt- h VON PAUL presi- dent of the German republic, was the chief figure in the rtJiiiifinto enthusiastic tb celebration anniver sixtieth sary of German the and unity; warrier seemed nlmost as vigorous as he must have been on January 1S71. when as - President Von Hindenburg a lieutenant he stood in the Hall of Mirrors at Ver- sailles and heard Bismarck proclaim the federated states of Germany an empire. The ceremonies In Berlin opened with a solemn assembly of all members of the government In the relch-stawhere Chancellor Bruening made nn appeal for mutual understanding and repeated Bismarck's pledge that the nation would seek wealth through peace, not war. Then President von Hindciihurg attended a reunion In the Berlin Sportpalust where about 12,tt00 former officers and soldiers gathg ered. a skeletonized giving India dominion status, the round table conference In London Hdourneil with most of However, the delegates satisfied. the Gandhi adherents In India are not at all pleased with the scheme and immediately began attacking it In various ways. National congress newspapers denounce It as a sys tern of camouflaged Independence designed to provide safeguards for Great Britain. HAVING adopted wearing BAREHEADED andclothes. Col. Charles A. Lindbergh went to a gathering of distinguished otliciiils and diplomats in Washington and received from the hands of Ambassador Claudel of France the cross of of commander of the Honor In presenting the cross. Ambassador Claudel said the westward lllght of Oistpund Bellontelast September was a success largely Lindbergh hud mapped the transatlantic course. It wus In recognition of IhlR service to the two Frenchmen as well as his own record making Might that the medal was awarded, he said. Among those til ine presentation Adams. Senator were Secretary Morrow. Lindbergh's father-in-law- , and Chairman Wlckersham of the law enforcement commission. I'EV IVM Wpxtern Floating Logs at Thres Rivsr. and homes with a deep affection. More than 200 families still occupy the same farms that were first THE plowed by their own ancestors Io the Seventeenth century. Families Cling to Their Land. On paper, their home, Quebec province, sprawls with tremendous acreage, yet It is small. Otlicials have under their direction at the government buildings in Quebec an area more than twice the size of Texas; actually they concern themselves chiefly with s narrow, popu laled corridor with many brandies The St, Ijiw rence unrolls a beautiful blue ribbon on which French Canadians have strung farms, vtl luges and cities like pretty heads Civilized and cultivated Quebec Is at the hold of the French-stocCanadians. Quebec a necklace; the rest of the provcity, seemingly more French than ince Is. as they say. "hush." of Paris, appears to be Impregnable to The second explanation the English Mood. Here is a sep- French Canadians resistance to the arate people, with distinctive lan- North American melting pot can be found In birthrate figures. guage and customs. But the deepWhile er one delves into French Canada, France itself has a very nearly the more one wonders how long It stationary population. New France. can live In the "sea of English." In America, has one of the highest The changing present can be rates of natural Increase among found in metropolitan Montreal; in civilized countries. Three Rivers, grinding mountainA few years ago the provincial ous piles of logs into newsprint government embarked on a policy stock; in Thetford Mines, dusty as of encouraging colonization in un a nii'ler with white asbestos pow. developed valleys of the Lauren-tidder; nt Lake St. John, where new mountains. As an Inducement, pioneers fell old forests; In Arvlda. it at one lime offered as a gift.100 where waterfalls and a new com acres to any prospective colonists munlty have been dedicated to aluwho had 12 children. I.and office minum; and at Rnuyn. luring men clerks were confronted by some with gold ambitious fathers demanding 200 The unchanging past enn be acres, claiming headship of famfound In Quebec, the old capital ilies of 24 or more children. of New Frnnoe; among the NorCanada held some OO.iNHl French man cottages on the Beaupre road; when General Montcalm surren and In the pnstornl serenity of the dered. This severed colony, which Isle of Orleans. from IO.im) immigrants Quebec, though consecrated to sprang in North America to another age. houses a busy people, ahas increased people estimated to number 3. as well as shades of a glorious 500.000. They comprise more than What Is more, the people past. of the population of all one meets, the - storekeepers and Canada and more than half of the government ofliclnls. all claim kin- population nt the iNuiiinion's larg ship with the shades. est city. Montreal Thpre are about Shades of the Psst. LtMl.ooii French Canadians In the From the Place d'Armes, near United States who were horn Ity the Chauienu Frontenac, walk past Canada and othersaiig v;,i',ing""evthe Anglican cathedral, one block LI-f- " Tier children are one of down Rue ile Ste. Apje 'M,'1, chief exports. Quebec pincnea the 81in. . History at the Quai du Roi. llgni libiiii vtllo Iclto hum One sets foot on the shores of purlr One ennnot fail to see the history at the Quai du Rol, near splendid stntue of Louis Herbert where ferries dock every the framed there against the granite the traveler entrance. Of Herbert, the Parisian fifteen minutes. Let the ferry and pretend In forget his mortar left who pharmacist a ship's decks and pestle to become Canada's first stead that he treads with landing in 1K08 to farmer, citizens of Quebec are very found Cbiimplnin. Once on shore, he Quebec. fond. Itn But one should see especially a prudent and leave Champl.-iifor of his ciunnny. niediateJy, bronze plate on the hase of. Herbert's statue bearing 71 names, numbering 2S in all, 20 died before Franch Canada's Mayflower list. spring. Wait on the Quui as the years The first 11 names are of those pioneer farmers who came to New pass, until another boat arrives France between ltoo ana ltm. with a passenger list worthy of They are: Noel Lnnglols. Charles the front page. All Quebec gathers on the dock. Quebec opens wide Le Moine, Pnul de Riilnville. Nich rJns Bellinger. Caspar Boucher. Its arms to that most distinguished Jean llebert, Jacques Gourdenii. arrival. Bishop Laval, who has re Abraham turned from France with renewed Conlllard. Guillaume resolution to put the governors in Martin. Jenn Cote and Jacques their daces Seel e. Hard on the bishop's heels comes The other fit I came within the 25 years following 1041. The names on a stout priest. Father Louis Henthe bronze plnte, one soon dis- nepin, uttering maledictions on his covers, are the names on stores fpllow voyagers because on the and offices lining the streets of way over they danced and sang Quebec; a Latiglois Is a dentist on Hennepin's protests inand even tin lost ttimultuoui. Hue de St. Jean ; a Bellinger's sign. bishop gel Marchnnds de Nouveantes, faces shouting and cheering, as a cnrgi Rue de Ntitre Dame; a l.e Moine. ol girls pours over the ship's sidi titles iu rol. daughters of tin Sir James Le Moine, wrote charmIn king French girls sent to Que ing tales of Quebec displayed the bookstores; a Conlllard Is a bee. then a man's world In need ol grocer, and a llebert runs the St. wives. And who danced with them' Malo gnnige. Who sang with them to Hennepin' In the Quebec telephone directory one may find listed citizens distrust? A young man with curly hearing the names of each of the hair Hiid the face of a boy. Rem Robert ("livelier. Sleur de La Salle original 11 settlers save Jacques Scelle. Testing the whole list of arriving In New France, hound foi the mouth of the Mississippi. 71 names bv the directory, It Is Now we shall leave the Quai to found that AO fathers apparently snpplv l.fioo names out of I3.000 In walk through the market square to the Quebec section. There are 170 Rue de Notre I lame. Canada's old est street Is a gloomy way. be Cotes. i Belangers. to The cause over the narrow itassage fait 4.'1 Bouchers and 21 Heherfs. two shadows, one from the grim Cotes are the Smiths of Quebec. f old buildings and one Families do not die out In walls Camore threatening, from the rock Every French French Canada A who were cliff. brlet tilock and one nadian. It Is said, knows the emerges Into the most European his ancestors In Amerlcn. If was town from which they square In North America French sailed on. and the business center and the social came, the ships-theIn New colonial center of France, fot the date on which they arrived here Cliainplaln set up his head Quebec col their met the market llriw have they kept quarters nnd here in days cone hy. ony Intact through H00 years? families in Lotil XIV the Is metal answer that looked One down on bis colonists from a pedestal li brought over by Samuel de ChumJean the Inteii'laut ol center On tin square. Hapliste flip plain and Talon nave neen content io oc- west side the church Notre Dami which the In a Victories des has over English tht presided cupy region have not been square since IlIKH In October end In North Amerb-Interested at least not until for year citizens still observe in Notn Dame I tie celebrations first held li est and water power suddenly inNeither thanksgiving foi the rescue of Que quired roseate values. gold in California nor wheat in hec from siege hy Anglo American the colonial forces under I 'hips, forces could stampede Manitoba known to as le French 'anuillans French Canadians love their land Uostonnais. N'aUnnftl OeoirrtDhle (Prepared by tb Socltty. Wuhlimtun. D. C.I province of Quebec strives hold its French fluvor and Is In some ways more French than France. There is an ludlca tlon of this In a recent edict of the council of Su llya municipal cynthe. Canada, that the word "parqtiemeiit" be used In place of "parking" In connection with traffic regulations. In France the Eng llsh term is In wide use. Quebec and Its Inhabitants have been described as "an Island of people In a sen of English." Waves of Industrial progress steadily eut at the shores of this "island. Go Into the province and you will be surprised, at tirst. st a teg. and wus Admiral Mark held limler the ausBristol pices of 11 nation al women's organizations whose aim in this respect Is to complete 18, subcom- of mittee Thursday. January 29, 1931 NEPIU. UTAH S. to take cure of themselves for at least four months. Remarkable Report on the Prohibition Problem Made hy the Wickerbham Commission J. A. Farrell Says Prosperity Is Coming Back. N EITUKIt TIMES-NEW- NmMlrl l'lo. I French-Canadian- s Nineteenth Session state tux commission's personal income lux measure. The commission forwarded it to the legislature Friday. January 1C It apiieared for the first time in the bill, tiles of the legislators in printed form Monday, January 241. Another bill from the same commission wag submitted to the legislature Monday. If it does not make better progress than the first, It will not le la the bill files until some time iu February. There are at least five more bills to come before the state tax commission. The other taxation bill Is a mea- sure dealing with penalties for false or incomplete reports of property assessed. It was Introduced by Senator Paul II. Hunt of Keetley. It has been printed, but so fur bus not received much attention from the committee so fur us announced. Monday was the fifteenth day of a session of sixty days, so that at the close of the day of the present session was passed. Ho fur the legislative mill has ground out and completed one senate resolution, which provides a for the governor ; one messenger house bill and a house memorial to congress. The house bill spends $SO,000 of the state's money for the of the legislature ; the expenses memorial favors the Jones maternity and child aid bill, which the uutionul senate passed without the urge from the Utah legislature, und which Is now before the national house. This memorial awaits' the signature of Governor Bern. The first quarter of the session finds twenty-sibills and resolutions introduced in the house. If past experience is a guide the total number will be about ten times that number. In the senate there are also elghteeen bills nnd resolutions :i small part of what may be ex- Healthiest a bad case of measles," says Mrs. Clara Gilliam, 4137 Row-dol- n St., Dea Molues, Iowa. "lie was having a hard time until I gave hlra California Fig Syrup. It regulated bis bowels, seemed to give him new strength and energy. "I have since used. It for all bis colds or upsets, and It has helped make hlra the healthiest boy I know." For over fifty years, mothers have Docpraised California Fig Syrup. tors advise Its use when children are bilious, headachy, constipated ; and to keep bowels open during colds) or upsets. Every child loves Its rich, fruity flavor. It Is mild In action. Look for the name California when baying. That marks tbe genuine. "Arthur had 1AXATIVE-TONI- Delay in Banking Check Costly h x pected. Of the eighteen, one, as noted, lias of; the remainder are ill alive, and two have reached tbe tenute second reading calendar. They must be debated two times in ieen disposed for CHILDREN C to Cartoonist In these days when every one Is talking about the dearth of prosperity in this country, there is food for thought in the story of the cartoonist who received a check, but was so busy reading a book at the time that lie forgot all about it and left It Iwtween the pages. Some time later the artist married :l widow with a sou, and the boy, browsing through the books one day, found the check. Not only did he find it, but he deposited it. But In the meantime the firm that had made out the check had transferred its funds elsewhere and the check came back -- throe-figur- "No funds." the firm made tbe check but informed the artist that Inasmuch as he had so much money lie would, in future, have the price of his work reduced 50 per cent. Los Of course good Angeles Times. Garfield Tea Your Was Grandmother's Remedy For every stomach and intestinal 111. This good he senate and run the gauntlet of he entire bouse process before hoy become laws. herb I.c;e remedy for c 'iTuX'i'sKftr aPos8-sslo- n stomach ills and of no senate bill. The scuother derangete has one house measure, and ments of the sys mother is on its way to the sentem so prevalent these days is in ile, having been passed by the even greater favor as a family medmuse, but not yet appearing on the icine than in your grandmother's ientite floor. day. Eight senate bills mve not yet been ordered printed, ind seven are in committee. Song "Caught On" House committees still have sevThe "Bosary," one of tbe most enteen of the twenty-simeasures popular songs, sold 1,990 copies its Of the first year, 1S9S; quickly jumped to presented to that body. seventeen, hive are resolutions or over 32,500 per year, reached if memorials and twelve are bills. Of maximum sales of 261,561 In 19B.'. the six remaining, oue, as noted, is .'87,267 in 1913, and 228,324 In 191-1- . on its way to the seuate, one is in and sold 48,735 copies in 192S. bringithe senate, one hasibecu sent to the ng Its total sales to that year t governor, one signed, while two are 2,670,750. already dead. Of the two one was Knew Hi Minion withdrawn by the author, while tbe committee drew a substitute for the Neighbor Is Mr. Jones at home? other. Maid No, sir; but I'll tell him you Of special interest Is the joint called. What shall I say you wanted to borrow? resolution introduced in the senate by Knox Patterson of Moub which would submit to the voters of Utah the question of whether they desire to repeal the section which writes prohibition Into the constitution of Utah. The section the Moab senator would repeal was approved by the people In the general election of November 5, 1!)18, and became effective January 1, 1019. Utah, however, had state-wid- e prohibition before that time, having passed the law practically in its liresent form iu the legislature of 1017. Prohibition was effective stuto-wid- c in Utah before the famous eighteenth amendment was RUB Mu sterols well into your chest adopted. throat almost instantly you Senator Patterson does not profeci easier. Repeat the Musterole-ru- b once an hour for five hours . pose to alter the present prohibiwhat a glorious relief! tion laws of Utah. The resolution Those good cold remewould simply take prohibition out diesoil of mustard, menthol, camphor of the basic law of the state. are mixed with other valuable ingrediThis, the senator from Moub ents in Mustcrole to make it what docpoints out, leaves the qusetion entors call z" counter-irritant- " because in it is of the action bunds tirely and not just a salve. the legislapets It penetrates and stimulates blood ture. r.'rculation and helps to draw out infec-io- n "Those persons," he said, "who and pain. Used by millions for 20 supported the constitutional amendears. Recommended by many doctors ments of last November, which ind nurses. Keep Mustcrole handy relieved the legislature of limitatjars, tubes. AH dniKijists. To Mothers Mustcrole is also ions covering taxation, and who made in milder form for babies claimed that the legislature could md small children. Ask for Chil and should be trust li with its dren s Mustcrole. powers, shoi.ul rally to the support of this resolution. It simply makes the constitution more flexible, and permits the legislature to enact a law in keeping with the needs of the occasion. It places the control lu the huuds of the '1 hewirffrme onstipatlon. x Cold in Head,' " Chest or Throat? W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 931. f 0 |