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Show vww r; m.jjuhi rvwrtvivr.v w- -- y " -- '' 1 HMMT ' w V rP tf i,' 4 .tv'. " PAGE EIGHT What the Women Of America Say . About Prohibition wt I Ul 11 tl IiKhC ilvin C, oUli womens clubs, who had an anonymous telephone andica11 threatening her with harm should she appear in favor of .the c nfjaUoi oJ '-- Prominent Club Ladies Appear Society . . IJe lore llOUSe Jlldl-- j ciary Committee dry laws. Mrs. Ford and Mrs. Edison agreed m favoring prohibition "I stand for the law that has proved a blessing for one station in life and would be an Views. equal blessing to those enjoying greater privileges in this world if Washington, March 12 (API they would give the law a fair More than a score of prominent chance, the inventor's wife club and society women from all wrote. sections of the county were musI am heartily In favor of the hibiliuu laws fndlTbv rirvVadl Mrs. Ford s stateets presenting testimony before modificatiorr, ment It is a law of the the house judiciary committee in United read. States and should be obopposition to the appeal of the served by all of us. In my opineighteenth amendment. ion it has been of untold beneiit with prepared to the women as well as men of They came statements intended - to show a our country in improved living cro.vi section of the opinion of conditions and a more prosperAll said American womanhood. the majority of their sex was in ous nation," Mm Pekbody explained that Brief favor of the dry laws. was affiliated statements from Mrs. Henry Ford her organization and Mrs. Thomas A. Edison, were with organizations having12 an ag000 000. gregate membership of submitted. These reat organizations," her Under the leadership, for the in day, of Mrs. Henry W. Peabody statement said, "have stood and of Beverly, Mass., chairman of support of the constitution the woman's national committee its laws for eight years since for law enforcement, the claim 1922 when organized opposition was presented that 12,000,000 wo- - began. They concentrate efforts on the eighteenth amendment men favor continuance of of prohibition Opponents A prominent witness was Mrs among women do not ring true, statements in John F. Sipppl of Baltimore, regarding their president of the general feder- - sudden discovery of the awful1 I Present 4 A ".'Al THE JOURNAL. menace to. youth t through , alcoshe continued, and their hol, inconsistent demand that it therefore be restored to a legal status. Youth has not changed essential- ly. We have always had flaming by youth, the flame increased new alcohol. Today we have a tno , LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, Carrle Chapman Catt, the - New York suffragist. Mrs;. Catt said: I give my testimony that In my own considerable circle of ac- quaintances and friends, with two exceptions, I have found no man, woman or child, who drinks Arrives In America' st eighteenth Last evening , at the Second ward Mutual meeting, Dr. Sher-wi- n Maeser of the U. S. A. C. gave an interesting lecture on chemistry to the adult class. He Introduced the subject by stating that chemistry Is fundamental because it takes tip fundamental things and uses fundamental .units. The .history of chemistry was taken up and it was shown that in the early history of the world, people took things as they found them. Tools, weapons, etc., were . made from the materials of the earth Just ' - . jr r 'AS? vx '.. x ; ? ' 't Z -- V v ; st' - Associated Prtao Phot Henri Matiese, French pioneer It the modernistic school of painting arrived in New York on hia wa around tha world, e came the stateFrom . K. Landes, forBertha ment of mer mayor of that city, holding that the prohibition, law can be in the enforced reasonably" same proportion - as - other restricted laws. This, she said, she knew from her own experience, adding that the failure of those in power to carry on honestly and efficiently Is the cause of a ercat deel of our present dlfficul-- t ' :s. g -- er Dr;Maeiser Gives' Chemistry Lecture yet brews, smuggles, purchases Nsells type, flying youth and most likely to dispens. i ..h or distributes any form' of alco-- ; alcoholic stimulants. , ic liquor. These enormous dry The advocates of personal libstretching from ocean to erty, she said, did not rebel ocean appear to m- - to represent against prohibition of opium, but the climax of normal civilized the alcoholic taint from pastj growth. Those who still crave alcohol generations persists in rebellion law must acquire self -- discipline bethis necessary against x x fore civilized against the alcoholic traffic x wothey attain the Here are twelve million for them standard. Therefore, men pledged to Joyal service of prohibition Is necessary. this government. They hold conIn all, some three dozen women victions and conventions and in- presented their statements. stead of depending on the hatRuth Bryan Representative chet of days to oven of Florida, reaffirmed the enforce law, they use their bal- platform on which she was electlots to secure loyal representa- ed to the house, pledging herself will tives. Women cheerfully to uphold the constitution of grant to men management of the the United States and the amentariff, fiijmcet problems on tran- dments thereto. sportation, and water power. Men Referring the federation of need the help of women to conmission board of North foreign trol the alcohol power." America, Mrs. F. I. Johnson said. Mrs. Sippels statement said: We are not a church lobby. The general federation Is an We are compelled, however, t m clubs of 14,500 organization combat the persistent unending 2,500 of the 3 000 counties of this lobby of men pledged to the liam I and country," she said, quor traffic for their own gain expressing the will of this group or their own destruction." when I say they wish the eighMrs. Robert E. Speer, teenth amendment carried out." of the national board president of the The federation had gone on young womens Christian associarecord since 1918 as favoring tions, called the committees atprohibition she added, and ex- tention to resolutions adopted by plained that at later conventions that organization in 1924, 1920 It had reiterated its stand. and 1928 pledging support of law Mrs. Peabody presented to the enforcement and emphasizing committee statements from many prohibition. favored Mrsr Henry Marshall Kendricks prominent women who amendment-Amonof Washington, D C. re.'sent-in- g the the National ''Itncil o, fed- them were Kepresentative rl , rhnrrh dec! women, at, r for enforcement of the eig Florida ; Mrs. Percy V. Penny-backof Austin, Texas, former teenth amendment with no repea and For the Volstead act without president of the general federation of womens clubs, and Mrs. modification. i.r.-- Wednesday, MarcK 12, 1930. UTAH -- Modern as they were found. chemistry Is concerned with making new kinds of substances out of which can be made things which could not have been had before at any price. Dyes were taken up as an example of what chemistry has done for Industry. Purple was the sign of nobility because it to travel great was necessary distances and use a very hard process of obtaining that color from a certain shell, fish which contained a very little bit of it, several tons of the fish would be used for a few yards of cloth. Analine dyes were discovered in Germany In the middle of the 19th century and many new colors were made from them. Hie speaker next took up explosives and showed how the first that were obtained were taken from nature and for several centuries the only explosives known were taken directly from nature. Now they are practically all made aftlflcaUyAHKTAre-us-ed for many more things than war. In fact, the manufacturers claim that they sell - more explosives and . make more money in times of peace than In times of war. Practically all of the explosives Peaceare made from cotton. time products are: films, silk, phonograph records, immitation Ivory, and many other useful things. Oat hulls, which weie useless and which considered were thrown out, axe now made into hog feed, paint, rubber, explosive,, phonograph records, wall Fining, paper and chemicals. Chemists have been able to find a use for most waste which they have woikcd on, skimmed milk which w,i once thrown out Is made into buttons, imitation ivory, etc. An example of the good that chemistry has done for the eartii Is shown In the artifical manufacture of nitrogen compounds. Sodium nitrate or Chile Saltpeter was once shipped from Chile at a great expense. Stock in the Saltpeter beds dropped from $3 in, less than 600,000 a drop was not due to speculation but the demand for the product dropped to almost nothing, At the conclusion of his talk. a dirty Dr. Maeser displayed looking yellow rock and said that it had changed theories of matter. .This was radium ore from which Is taken the radium. - pio-duc- -- s year.-Thi- - . A method of treating eggs with carbon dioxide to keep them fresh without refrigeration; has been developed by a scientist at Cornell University. - j rir 1 i r rv2tSoniM mmo O McCormick Rudy Yallee Johny Marvin op 0 Leopold Stokowski1. . ilelen Kane Jimmie Rogers .... And Other Famous Artists I i VICTOR i n , RADIO VICTOR RADIO ELECTROLA RE-4- 5 The complete modern musical instrument. Victor Radio and record reproduction through same matchless amplifying system. 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