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Show T THE DESERET NEWS MAJOR PROBLEM OF LEGIONAIRES California Syrup" of Figs' Childs Best Laxative Memory and to Get First Hand Information From Persons Who Have Known Both Men Since Their Youth. Question of Organization's Entering Held to be Burn ing Issue at National Con rention This Month. Written for The Deseret News By HERBERT COREY timent throughout tho vor of reconsideration of the political restriction clause la tha coostltu-'tlo- n of tha legion ia tha most striking feature of a nation vkU survey Just cempleted. "Tha sentiment is widespread that of the a too narrow interpretation present political - restrictions "clause will work Injury to the legion by -It from public affaire of the fa- country-i- Nr country,- Thg present clause provides that the legion "shall ba absolutely and ahalt not bo used for tha dissemination of partisan principles or for the promotion of the candidacy of at 'any person seeking public office or 'preferment." Attention le called by the legion's lofgaa to a resolution adopted by Us department of Indiana to tho offset it hat each post in that stats should oTitaln and disseminata data regarding the stand taken by members of tha Indiana leglelatuie and other public officials on all matters pertaining te 'the welfare of the American legion. The Indtana resolution recommended that similar action ba taken by the national convention concerning the imembers of Congress and national public , officials. To show tha views of Franklin the national commander, tha laglon'a weekly quotes a measaga he 'sent to Basil Stockbrldge, commander lof tha Georgia department, concernhas ing a fight the legion in GeorgiaWat-aobeen waging against Thomas E. candidate for United States senator. Mr. DOller said: "Members of the American legion of Georgia owa It to themselves and to tha memory of the fallen comrades to use the full power of their ballot to keep out of publla office any Individual. regardless of party, whoaa record during the war was disloyal or unThis can ba done without patriotic. .conflict directly or Indirectly with either the letter or spirit of our constitutional restrictions against partisan political activity." jD'OUsr, n, At I No Immediate Decline in j Lumber, Declare Dealer I (By Associated Presa ) There is no prospect of an immediate decline In I tha price of lumber, acoordlng to the delegates to the fourth annual of tha National Retail Lumber Dealers' association, which opened here today. Charles A. Bowsn of, Detroit secretary . of the organisation, said that lumber prices have dropped slightly In the last two months, but expressed .the opinion that the bottom had bean reached and that .prices soon .would reascend. Jj ST. LOUIS. Sept. 7. con-ventl- on Warren G. Harding Secretary of State Can See No Reaon Why EvjU 6f Mexican City U Cauie for James Middleton Cox Monroe Law (Student, Editor, VII - Baptismal Insurance Agent Became Middleton. -- Ohio. Jamea M. Cox Harding to Congress by th start In was first hialsctsd friends and of tha old vote of MARION, Ohio, fiept. I. Accept "California Syrup of Figs oaly look for tha name California on mad Just a many falsa sure tha package, then you are your Child lo having tha boat and moot harm- buslenas as the average youngster less phyolo for tho llttlo otomaoh, liver doe. - Thar is cheer in that thought nod trowels Children love Its fruity for many father who have almost taste. Pull directions on aach bottle. cee4 doting on son who fall to Tow must-ea- r Ce.lUorata.lyn.AdvarUsar start thsir engine readily la tha mont morning of Ufa I hardly knew what I wanted to do," ho said one. "My father wanted m to be a lawyer." . Meantime there was - tha - daily broad Mo earn. During his stey at tho Ohio Central College At Iberia h had lived at a collage boarding house board eng - room coat two dollars and a half a wotk after h had so m s bHahgd himself as a house, sign (By International News Berries.) 7. Re and door painter that h could earn BILLINGS, Mont., Sept. money. Prior to that ha and Gar-bclamation of 20.090 acres of seeped the and Daily had boarded thsmoslves land In tha Tellowetone valley by lnrMt7amb house. , 1 means of an extensive ditch system How Lanier Wa Kept Stocked. the objective of tha Yellowstone w "Every third Monday at sroald os .Harding walkingmorning formed into tqsrn Drainage. .. association with a hug sack over hla shoulder,1' Laurel, Mont., 'today. Tha project U hi elasamatso "In it wr the expected to i norease production la tha pie and cake gay, and chlckan and ham alley approximately $100,000 annu- - and baoon and butter and broad and tho other food neoary to sustain ally. Tha following officaro wara alactad three hungry youac" mo for on woclt. .It wgg up to th othor two to by tha association: .Presldan'-- , F. B. Connelly, Billings; vies prasidant, B. provldo tho austonanco for tho next M. Harris. Park City; secretary; Fred two waska" t f But when be graduated a bachelor T. Lincoln, Billings. Tha association voted to ask tha of science in a class of four h stopnext Montana legislature to change ped naturally into a position a school tha stats law to legalise tha isauranoa teacher. Every young man or woman of bonds for tha purpose of drainage who had soma education taught work, replacing tha present method of school in those days while looking warrants. for around tha right angle from which issuing drainage to conquer tbs world. The echool was two miles from Marlon, and he used to walk in and out aach day, carryCENSUS REPORT. ing hi lunch in a tin pall. Many a tim he ha been glvsn big red apples by admiring pupil Thar seem(By International Nswa Bsrviaa.) ed no particular goat ahead In achool WASHINGTON, Sbpt 7.r Prelim- teaching, however, and at the end of inary population figures wara an- the year he got a foot Inside th door nounced today by tha census bureau of journalism. as follow: Editing and Insurance. Gainesville, Tex., 1130 population His father was than part owner of I. Ml; Increase since IJ10 '1,024, or , th Star, a weekly gossip paper in 114 per cent. Marion of th most uncertain fiBeloit, Wla. 1120 population out onoa a lncreaae since 1110 1,111 or 40.7 nances. It usually cam weak, but it sometimes missed a few per cent. 10.111: wek without occasioning any com' Herrin, in., 1130 population increase since HlO 4,125 or 0.1 per- motion. Young Harding settled down to read law and adit tho Star.. H cent ; i D Rio, Tex,; 1120 population. 10,-S- liked th law, too. and If fat had kept her aclasor off h might have Magnolia Park, Tex., 1120 popula- become waauocaasful lawyer. But his income not sufficient to meet his tion 4,010.. heed and his father' suggested that ValVarda County, 1$20 12,701; since 1110, 4,011 or 47.B per h become an insurance solicitor on th side. In tho days tha average oent. oountry-tow- n lawyer also represented a Mns of insurance Famous Artist And Now things begancompanies. to happen. - Being quite guiltless of any knowledge Newspaperman Married of tha insurance business unaware even of the fact that there was - a News International Berrios). board of (By in town which - NEW - TORE, - Sept. 7. Mis Nell fixed ratesunderwriters and protected th insurance Bruca and famou buyer from .saving any money artist, Brinkley, McRae, Jr., a newspaper man and when he bought Harding wrote th aon of Bruca McRae. wall known ac- policy on th new Hotel Marlon. This tor. wars married an last Saturday was th big prix on whiqh all th evening at Navr Rochelle, N, Y-- . it wa other agents had fixed their eye. learned here today. Harding quoted what he was a fair price and got th thought business. It netted him $100. This was the first time that h had aver suapsetad that money could be mad in such enormous sum Underwriters Indignant. But ha had undersold tha looal board of underwriter and seethed with Indignation. In th they end h had to rive th flOO back and th board took th buaineaa iwwy from him. But he had aean th possibilities of th Insurance business and persuaded his father to buy him a half interest in an established insurance agency.. , . Now he was fairly launched though his bark seemed to be in three different direction He lag' wa reading law,, trying to write insurance, and editing tha Star. Being an arone-b- ut. dent Bleln man and this being 'th Blaine year, h determined to go to th Chicago convention at which Blaine was later nominated. In those days railroads furnished transportation gladly to all persons whs could establish a mors or less actual connection with a newspaper. H managed to scar up a few dollars, filled hi pocket with railroad passes and set off gayly for tha convention. He did not' get to see th Fanned Knlrht 'nominated. He was a Boy of II, without money or connections and no on cared whether he got in the convention hall or not. But- he did hang around town and see th sights and aoakad up th politic When hla money was exhausted h rode in a day coach back to Marion 'to find trouble watting for him. HUGE DRAINAGE PLAN PROPOSED ar T 31.-21- 4; lt. FILLING THE wealth-produci- ng HUNGRY-BOY-- A? OF HA JUANA Passport Revocation.- . ed Frees.) NEW TORK. Sept. 7. The attitod which the American Legion should take toward politico and political can dldataa will ba one of tha paramount liaeuea to bo raieod at tho next nation al convention of that organisation to jb held In Cleveland, Ohio, Sept ST, ear an announcement made today by tho American Legion Weekly, after a canvas of tnarobers of that bods.. The weekly aaeerta that "etroo sen- 1020 7- - TO CENSOR ILLS A Scries of Biographical Sketches, About Twelve in Number, By a Correspondent TVho Knows Both Men Personally. II Ha Written Thees Articles After Going to Ohio to Refresh His - 1 TUESDAY SEFTEMBER Your Candidate for the Presidency COLBY REFUSES MOTHER! POUTICSISNOW ' It is a hopeless task also a costly it is a joy to s ee him eat. It is easy to fill him with Shredded Wheat Biscuit and you have ssmi-oocaalon- the satisfaction of knowing that it is full of nutriment-an- d will build for him a strond.robust body. Shredded Wheat is all food -- the most real food for the least money.Two Biscuits with milk make a nourishing meal for ' a growing boy or girl. COLUMBUS. aoJdiara of th Soldiers Home. Every aad on knew him, most liked-hi- m, he had th following that a young, clean, and forceful youngster usually weetr rehas. But h might not eled ted if hla aye had not alighted on day upon an item in tha appropriation bill for tha feeding of animals at th National Zoological Garden ap-in Washington. It was a Republican propriation bill and Cox is a Democrat. "Tha coat of thla food I outrageous," h said .in .one of hi brief speeches. ' 'What do you know about It?" hi opponents asked. sneerlnglf. '"Th coat of food Is going up everywhere. Being a Democrat, you would try to reduce the farmer's profits. Got Fund for Soldi era. Jamea M. Cox got Congressman H began a etody of food angry. course of which he costa. In 'th learned that tha cost of feeding . monkey was more than that of feeding a veteran of th dvil war. That was enough. H played that alngl string upon his harp until th members of th appropriation committee compromised with - him 'ttot being legally able te kUl him end every old soldier in every otd aoldlera' home looked upon him aa the one friand tha old soldiers had in th rising generation. He got $210,000 more appropriated to feed the old soldiers." said a commentator of th day. "but h did not interfere with th monkeys'" To which Cox's rapty was tjyit th monkey food was really wortbuall it cost. At thts time h was perhaps aa poor a publla speaker as Ohio haa ever known th average Ohie public man being afflicted with an Itch for oratory and being quite unable to demand more gravy for his aauaages without tucking th finger of hi right hand in hla vaat. But Cox was a phenomenally and atrociously peer speaker.. He and hla friand remain, her with humiliation th first speeches he made, in which hi grammar sank without bubbles, hi vole capered sidewise through th gamut, and h habit of sitting down formed th about half way through hla talk because ha was utterly unabTe to go on. No Epigram or FerocationA "But there wa on thing about hi hearer of Jimmys speeches. those days recall. "H always had something to say. If h eould stay on hla feet long enough and his voice did not run out on him h said someNothing elothing to remember. quent, you know no epigram or aa a stamwlndsr But h when it cam to-- aettlng hard facta before us. Hi talks of today recall th comment. H la not eloquent, and though h haa th newspaperman's habit of packing' a good daal into a sentence on occasion, h is not epigram matlo. Hie affect are gained by hard work And tha use of th plainest language. What h ha to ay la said concisely, the words are well chosen, and ha says it with an air of believing It himself. No one can say h is an orator, but he leaves a far better Impression on th average crowd than does tha average spellbinder. It was about this time, by th way, that ha won th middle name of Midname was dleton. Hla baptismal James Monroe Cox, the Monroe being of the United President Monro State for whom his mother felt a real admiration. But he always signed himself James M. Cox in. the bhint middle weet fsshlon. whlch deprecated any undue prominence being given to a third name. James Monro Cox would hav entered politics under a handicap, and J, Monro Cex would never have been heardjoffn southern Ohio. nv -- old-time- Far the So UpHft Is More N oticeable in Fees.Than in... Results . , - Profession so decadent or incompetent tnat it must look to the medical profession for inapira- tion, or has the medical profession decldecrto'take over the practice of dentistry and put it on a hitrher (?) 1 "Th department does net deem, it adviaable to refuse a border permit eahd nor to revoke uoh a card after issuance on th mere ground that th bearer ia performing an act in Mexico which Is legal under tha laws of Mexico but which would bo illegal oo till alda-o- f tho border. "In this connection X beg to say alnc th data of your latter tbsrs that haa been a change of government in the northern district of Lower California and recant statement given to tho administration now functioning in Mexico indloae a disposition oa th part of that administration to oanaal tho prmita hold by immoral and disreputable enterprises operating along frontier and to tho Calif Inaugural a reign of law and order in that section. "It 1 not deemad advisable to r- vok permit card on th mere ground that tho conduct of tho traveler a violation of good morals, a the department doe not wish to on-kttItself a censor of morals Th determining factor mutt bo violation of law rather than. a violation of -- Plane? t When the profession which has popularized removal of appendices and tonsils advocates the extraction of all pulpless teeth, and coaches4 the dental profession in new ways of. getting business it is time for both dentists and the public to look'well into the motive. For years dentistry gave satisfaction to millions of people, but in a day, through medical suggestion, dentists reversed themselves and condemned things they had done and began to do things formerly condemned. Another evidence of medical, influence is seen In i 4 i I "surgical removal of teeth. ' This operation calls for considerable techniiue ( I"" and is painful and expensive, but it is the medical way of . extracting teeth and it gets the money. jp - - Next we have prophylaxis instead of cleaning H i teeth,- - This sounds more mysterious, and paves the way for bigger fees, even though results are no better. - Pyorrhea, while ngver easy of relief, has always been pretty wellhandled by the dentist, but now comes the M. D. with a new line of thought anfi we must now submit -: to vaccine therapy. .. Dr. McGehee (whoever he is) - gravely informs us that 50 PER CENT OF PATIENTS SHOW 'DECIDED IMPROVEMENT after injecting 750,000,000 germs into . ' ; Here is his little remedy forpyorrhoea ! Streptococcus, 50,000,000; pneumococcus, 100,000,-00- 0; bacillus colis communis, 100,000,000; staphylococcus, ut After he began to rattle dry bones In Congress however, in hi unorator-lea- l but efficient way, James W, Faulkner, th political writer of th Cincinnati Enquirer, began to refer to him as Cox. Jsmea-Middletow- eom "That's wrong, eeld to himself on - -- ' ' the system.'' eon-titut- en morals" - -- ornla-Mexic- In a circular which ft hag given nationwide distribution tho Methodist board described Tta .Tuan a aa "a city of vie, boox and gambling, run by Americana and supported by Am si cans which could ba closed in tw weak by a change of policy of th American state department. "Th town 1 now th Mecca of booxa sellers gamblers and others. Most of them live in Ban Diego and cross th line each morning to carry on nnmoleated th vicious jrarmttf which hav been outlawedln, th United States "Everything goen st Tie Juans Thera ar scores of gambling devleeo, danca' halls hop joints bull fights prise fights, robberies and Indescribable obscenities. - M 600,000,000. ? - . - i Can you imagine taking an injection of that kind, when the best he can promise you is that 50 per cent show decided improvement. Every dentist must take his own stand, but this office is pretty well satisfied withA its record of RESULTS year after year with hundreds of thousands, of cases, and the people seem to be satisfied, too. - ' The profession of a million medicines and few spe--, cifics, which nas reversed itself time after. time, had. best confiine its efforts to improving medicine .and. let f dentists work out their own salvation. Regarding the craze for extractions, we stand just ? where we have always stood. If a tooth is diseased and beyond hope, "or if there is unmistakable evidence of sys- temic poisoning that tooth is extracted painlessly and at h little cost; If, on the other hand, there Is no evidence of I S trouble, and the tooth can be saved, WE SAVE IT. It wilhnot do you a particle of harm and may do you lots of good to accept our standing invitation to call for a f f i free frank and unprejudiced examination of your teeth. f indicated. where all cases y service in t r r proofreader night. That's a funny bull for Faulkner to make. Hed oughts know before. The man's nemea Middleton, of course. Jim Just had the town name In hla mind when he wrote it." Bo, ilka many another quaint quip of journallstle genius, it was defeated by- - a, proofreader's ...cant .toward a deadly and dueiv accuracy, Cox Jsmea Middleton Cox to etay. Faulkner struggled agslnrt th tide for a time, but the proofreader ware toe atreng for him. Jimmy Cox had pl'jry been yechrlstenrt. f Fi be-ro- 'fyours to 6p.m.--$unday- 9iol $ 4 " 4 W- . - k cup of cofee. Just pouf hot water on the coffee. Strength ALWAYS a perfect needed. Scienno waste no. coffee It dissolves instantly pot tifically prepared by Mr, Washingtons refining process, in soluble powder form. Absolutely pure- -r always delicious. Send 10c for Special Trial Size. -- aa -- COFFEE tangle-of-charre- sre ha e-- r-'- iaKC'1 4 reisr4 ti. . i X-ra- The Easier Kind of Coffee-E- ach Cup Made To Order Charred Bodies Removed From Hotel Fire (By Associated Press) KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. 8ept I Ten bodies bad tonight bean removed from th ruins of the Houston hotel which burned to th ground early today. Four other bodies fiev been located in th timbers but because of Intense heat firemen have been unable to reach them. Sevan persona were bet nr treated In for burn and Injuries suffered jumping from tha Oullding - F.ight In to ad dittos the hqjl buildings Jo consumed and sal estimated at 1100. 00.-- , Th fire started beneath a stairway in the. hotel, a three story frame thlrtv-elgh- t structure - containing room 1no which gues's estimated to number 100. mostly visitors bre for a labor eeWsaltoe Code v. had v crowded-T- h fir had fra her n- - - fl era his headway when it was discovered st I nclock. , Firemen sipreeeed the -- p'ril'n in the ihs bodies rema-r-lfilm n mild exceed foer a they had shat a epee red he be porft-in- a of o' her ties- In the twhrta f an- sons however, (By. Universal Ferric ) WASHINGTON, Sept. I. "No matter how wicked a foreign city may ba It la apt th business of th United State government to act aa a ceneor for morals or to refuse permission for American citizen to visit that ' place." Fery. Colby has made this ruling in reply to a letter from th Board of Temperance, Prohibition - ana- Public Morals of tha Methodist church which conducting a nation wld crusade against Tie- Juana, Just over, tha Call, fornla lin in Mexico. Ha aaye: te acknowledged ef -- "The receipt your letter of Aug. II relative to th passage of Americans across th Mexican line between San Diego,' CeL, and Tie Juana. Mexico. "In reply you ar informed that th passport regulations applicable to all points on th border must be uniform. There is a strong and insistent demand from business Interests near th Mexb can border that bprder crossing should be facilitated in th interests of American trade aad commerce. "For this reason cltUsns identify and border permit card are now authorised under th passport regulations In all casss where there la reasonable and legitimate need for oroao-in- r. MADS IK THE CUP AT THE TABLE IN 1909 0HIG1NATED BY G. Waihingtoo Sek Co.. lac 522 fififi Ave. Is'.Y. dUL Jr FiniinQf tl OD Dnvnf Dindlnfi and All Kinds o! Ruling Done al lhc BId rQ-lctUr- 3 on You? Work -- .hHJ |