Show THE OGDEN STANDARD - EXAMINER the first gun in the war will be" fired if that has not already occurred Men of j Ethiopia are mobilized as the Italians advance to the frontiers of that country Unofficial reports have lit that the Italians have crossed the border between Eritrea which is Italian territory and northern Ethiopia From now on we shall read of the slaughtering of human beings with all the horrors of the battlefield UT PUBLISHING COMPANY A L GLASMANN Fnnt FTancls and Will EDITOR AND MANAGER Bowman W ate Assoc Editors AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published Every Evening and Sunday Morning Without a lluzzle or a Club Members of The Associated Press united Press NEA Service and A B C f The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use tor v republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news I (Copyright King Feature Syndicate Inc) j A A Platform Standard-Examiner- 's Modern City and County New City High SchooL ' Bulldiot council-managgovernment for Ogden Control of a Pure Water Supply to Accommodate 150- M 000 Persona Vigorous Campaign of City and County Road Improvements Scenic Road to Mount Ogden and Road From Ogaen Canyon to Weber Canyon l Another North and South Arterial Highway IAn Improved Highway to Great Salt Lake A Central Place On A Transcontinental Air Route A i i i er "' ? OGDEN STOCK YARDS DURING September 401416 head of sheep through the Ogden Union stockyards which is a record unequaled by any September in the past The local yards now rank in sheep re- i i t i j uiv oiu11uavc givcii w vgucu-- i the distinction of being one of the most important livestock centers in the United1 i 1 commander-in-chi- j " j unen- - 'world that American will remain tangled and free regardless of the repeated States attempts made to induce the United States !to take part in the' controversies elsewhere WARNING TO MOTORISTS courts have held that a motorist r The present European situation offers TEXAS 1 who is blinded by the headlights of an ample proof that this country would be Jacting unwisely if it were to get involved approaching car while driving ati night and With all the intrigues and jealousies that who hits something while so blinded is exist across the ocean it would be folly for guilty of negligence us tothrust ourselves into tne mess puuuvCu tmo tuiiu6 j a arose motorist after traveling at 35 nules :i There is nothing but selfishness oper- hour crashed into a parkedtruck which Z''Hnr blocs which ian U T O to linp nn the different are making for another devastatin r con lie was uuauie iu see ueuause approacumg headlights had blinded him He was killed flict his heirs sued the truck's owner and the defendant replied that the dead driver had I 'EUROPE INFLAMED h failed tr pyprrisc nrnnpr rart 'i Geneva at of the correspondents This contention the court upheld and h ONE t: in a bold manner tells of the is wortn notning A driver it its ruling under currents which are making for a held must nntirinate- the nrpsspnA of oK lagger war than that m Ethiopia He says Jf a headli ht tUnds him hig on the heard roar cannon s the is :when him glow down orjst - borders of the Red Sea the reverberations hetg tQ his H he' doesilt do s0 - will spread to the Baltic That means all and inssomethin it is his fault JCLiirope win ue suneu anu me war caanui The is a timely warning to all be localized He declares the reich is al motoristsruling ii ready preparing to contest the legality of 2 the Memel elections The premier of Hun- - DICTATED JOURNALISE Z gary receives the ambassador of Italy in AN American choral society gave a con'Berhn Can any system of alliances now cert in Moscow In their ad- n prevent the junction over vance announcements recently of the event the Mosde- will be next Then what Austria? the Mi cow newspapers declared that among the marids of Italy and Germany on France and ' " " Britain? Will the western powers form the °T "7 ' ' same lineup as they professed to establish lr !i' ramous artists ndne of whom was within "-- at Geneva? pml visualizes Britain lifting h ree thousand miles of the olace1 Stile mask of the league which if it hap- j J ! J 1 -- : ' i - ( - : 1 f ! - Italo-Germa- - "r i XV' i not be localized in Africa - nouncements still conform Z Z vi ujr — J muuv VWlUiJt niUCi- nd Muscovite patrons very sore and State responsible 'for pub- ?? S°Vle hcity in the newspapers felt called on to The British pro- completely to the needs of her own empire Rigid! sanctions b r even war mav now ho the lrnniral hut nnlv h ' J X "Z Y ra viously did not possess even rudimentary knowledge in their field" and blaming the peace mistake on their "abysmal ignorance" ' The criticism of course wad perfectly - WAR DRUMS BEAT But such mistakes are jwhat you 117 AR " DRUMS are beating in far away proper let yourself in for when you chain your f 1 Ethiopia the echoes of which are heard newsoaoers to a ricid na rtv rWma — in and throughout the TTnitpd btates make them "V l the tools of a dictatorship The On the voice ofj Mussolini newspaperman's competence becomes less - reached Wednesday Ogden proclaiming the spirit of important than his doctrinal soundness in n war and virtually declarine War! The die- - such rasps — nnrl n W mx whilA tV 1111 UL1 J V4v Al v tator an excitea toia nis twenty mimon become excellent sources of propaganda followers that a solemn hour had arrived they cease to be reliable as mediums of m and Italy had decided to go forward to ' plain everyday news d the overwhelming of the Ethiopians regard- - i'v ':' V '1 ryv---to-tless oi wnat tne rest 01 Hiurppei might do According papers Haile' Selassie TT j even announqeat tnat so lar as sanctions contributed $800000 to the ne war are concerned he would meet war with war fund He has probably beenEthiopianit for saving That is a mst defiant attitude and it a dry day directly challenges the British who have-saiAfter going crazy Kankakee 111 man they will not allow Ethiopia to be out-- plays thle stock market That reverses the raged without moving to prevent the wrong It is now only a matter of hours before usual process i r - : - j Os-de- j — —"-r T T V UCJL j j ! - he 1 - o m i ! ef n - v - REAL DEFENDER OF THE CONSTITUTION (New York TimesV Could It be possible that the administration subscribes to the hackneyed and conventional lie that poets must experience privations and hardships to produce master pieces — E A Cuevas after his league's poet relief project failed to win official approval i TIxere are laws' t0 forbid use of the American flag for advertising purposes or ifor purely partisan displays The constitution j cer-tain- j 1 i cor-recti- ng l ! - i i They (veteran who died in the Florida hurricane) were! in Washington lobbying or pleading under their constitutional rights i when they were sent down to the There are other lobbyists insandpits Washington Why not deport them too? —Gen Smedley Butler ouwiufli iiic ui i vr V '1 -i- f- Heavy uuuiu rom an airplane could do it The admiral once commander of all the battle fleets of Japan thinks battleships will soon be obsolete Why do nations continue building them? Well habit is strong returning The yen has dropped but will buy as much as ever in Japan like our dollar worth 59 cents al- though we do not know it xne admiral visited the Erripire State building in New York went to the 80th story bought ai little ash tray in a shop there turned the tray over and read "made in Japan" That seemed not to hurt sltting-and-bed-roo- m tip-to- 1 j 1 a? rw"' A "You should be proud that Tm the first one the company thinVa of when the v have a little overtime work to be done " The Inside of Washington Old Guard Still Rules G P Resurrects "Back To Normalcy" Huge Campaign Fund Will Be Sought For 1936 Ballot ttJattle Knox to Cut Some Figure Ghosts Flit At Committee Sessions In Washington his feelings O By RODNEY DUTCHER fof Connecticut who owns utilities If Japan ever builds an Empire Standard Examiner Washington insurance companies and banks— State building in Tokyo and you the two most powerful Republican correspondent climb to the 80th floor and buy an bosses in the east WASHINGTON Oct men 3—The ash tray you will not find "made who run the are Republican party in the United States" written on a NEGRO VOTE IMPORTANT crew It is virthe back of it Then there was Committeeman tually unheard of for a correspondent to be able to get one of them Perry Howard of Mississippi colJapan's admiral then young was off to a quiet corner and persuade ored long an expert deliverer of stationed in Washington during the him to secrets party1 under southern delegates Perry presumspill Russian-Japanewart was intimate the ably was looking for money with influence distilof mellowing with President Theodore Roosevelt which to wean back colored voters or lation brew and with a famous Japanese juijitsu who left the party in 1932 politicians incline io expert helped the president learn be Democratic Judging from his complimentary a more bit chummy that Japanese manly art1 to "General" Knox he's references President Roosevelt was so deepJust the same there Is news to also drumming up trade for the ly interested that his daughter be had out of the secret sessions of Chicago candidate He had been in Ethel had to come and play the the Republican executive commit- 22 states his busirecently mixing tee here: j piano to remind him to stop ness as national attorney for the The Juijitsu Professor Yamashita The G O P machinery is in the Elks with Republican poliwas "the only foreigner who ever hands of the same staunch crowd colored tics threw a president of the United which in type has changed little The colored vote Is so important since the Old Guard States over his shoulder" d in many states that he's likely to The admiral spent last night at Teddy Roosevelt out bf Chicago in be a considerable campaign figure Sagamore Hill with Theodore 1912 on the theory that It" were "Yes sir" said Perry ''The boys Roosevelt second and Mrs' Roose- better to lose an election with Taft are anxious to come home if we velt widow of the late president7 than to lose grip on hat party maa them give candidate good They Admiral Takeshita and General chinery all know party is their home" This means "that another conser- - (Copyrightthis1935 Ninomiya visited the United States NEA Service Inc) as representatives of the Japanese vative "back to normalcy" campaign —j war veterans a or is much more likely than a candidate and platform tainted by liberganization of great importance-analism or compromise with the New power numbering 3000000 Deal is to educate young "s purpose The party chiefs are obsessed with Japanese not merely to: fight but tOl the idea of raising a walloping big vj umift iUlU rectly and specifically to teach the campaign fund Some of them are young to detest communism and sure it will be the biggest ever col" lected everything it stands for Japan has a constitution as we Tentative plans call for heavy exBy Olrv Roberts Bsrton have but it comes "from the penditures in Individual congressional districts with the aim of reemperor's royal will" It does not say that you can talk capturing the house (The G O P as you please No speeches on com- knows it can't possibly win the sen- PERSISTENT CRITICISM HARMFUL TO CHILD munism allowed in public in Japan ate next year) without jail for the speaker No "Billy I told you not to dig a communist organization permitted CUT BAIT FOR JOBLESS hole in the rose bed I showed you And when they say a The unemployed who have been a like at the back iof the yard place that in Japan they meanthing it something of a problem will be may have for your own Now The Japanese mind avoiding lost told they're victims of Roosevelt you motion takes an idea like commun- - policies which are bound to keep fill this up and dont touch it again" OT a°es not bother them in the serfdom of work ref'Don't take your engine out on wnn n wnen intelligent Japanese lief or the dole unless Republicans the sidewalk Billy Tommy Tay'visit a country they really visit it reassume command lor is outside and hell walk right Second place on the ticket will off with mcreiy gxancmg irom car it Here's your old wagor getting information in din not be given to a Democrat barring on Be sure you don't let him have room of some fashionable hotel a sharp reversal of sentiment ing it" The Japanese admiral and wn Most of the big shots in the party "The red jelly? You don't want hnth well vr ii seem- to be aiming ' prat 1U for another that This purple tills jcaio went to "smoke-fille- d Jelly is just as vlsifc to the United states room" nomination At San Francisco Sacramento Berke- least few minds are now made up good" "You brushed the wrong The candidate will have to be one way Here let meyourliair ley jLos Angeles not foreettinp fix it" Hollywood San Diego New Orleans who will represent the dominant Thus ends the first chapter vvnere mey stoppea Jive days Wash- forces in the party and yet not con ington D C and now New York firm the Impression that the "Goodness alive child' it doesProm here to Boston Buffalo De- is primarily representative of party make any difference what sweatn't huge troit Chicago Kansas Citv Port corporations and multimillionaires er you wear Make up your mind land Ore Seattle San Francisco It's yet to be decided how much Billy" and home visiting on the way the independence and progressivism he "Don't moon around here and x uhemice vauey They come to see should be able to profess 'At this vrorry about what movie to see America and they see it writing it "doesn't seem that Borah Decide right away and get along will enter the picture formidably with you The League saying to Mussolini The platform will be largely one MORE INDECISION "if you fight Ethiopia the League of protest Attack strategy as to "You'd better be getting that map will fight you" waited until Musso- specific New Deal measures Is lini had gone too far to withdraw largely dependent on supreme court finished It's almost bedtime What? decide whether to make the wunout disaster decisions and there's still an ach Can't mountains red or blue? You've a serious decision rests with ing space for the bright boy who been an half hour with fiddling Mussolini A most serious step has can think up a good plank for the that Close crayon and your eyes already beentaken bv England nnn iarmers pick up a piece any one at all not taken in the case of Japan's There — green Now use it You iviancnuKuo contest Italy and other TOO HOT TO HANDLE certainly dont seem to be able to European nations may learn from Chairman Henry P Fletcher re decide anything for yourself Billy" wise Japan that the is to porting on committee sessions: "Yes thing Thus ends chapter two march in first take what you want we gave the potato act an honorana men iaiK about it able mention In our discussions The Intermission Is four years Had Mussolini savins nothw Girl correspondent for Maine Note the difference in ttds mothcumulated his troops and airships newspaper "Tell us er's method today ' excitedly: vciiituiics and about itP Biilly now nine years 'old Is bemoved in at aajommg the end ihiopia of the rainv Fletcher:' "Did you ever drop a coming a great reader Books and season aU would have been over hot potato? movies fill his life He puts off wiorc xngiana coma have finished And he did lessons and won't play games his making the first few noble speeches with the other hoys He Is taking An editorial published in MussoKNOX TO BE HEARD FROM an easy way out of problini s newspapers probably written One heard plenty abouti the can- lems and thinking forfacing himself It by him reminds the League of didacy of Col Frank Knox of Chi- is not only hard for him to drag Nations that it did nothing when cago but what one heard oftenest himself to a duty but he has little Japan took Marlchuria although was that the party wasn't very: like- confidence in his own judgment condemned that step it did ly to nominate a man who hadn't On the base ball team last sum nothing "uc" "uuiaa rearm ea in spite of held public office mer he couldn't drop the bat quick the Versailles treaty defying Nevertheless Knox has what looks enough and run or think fast the league Mussolini reminds England like an active widespread organiza enough to slide for base He never that she holds India Egypt and tion and will figure in the conven- knows what to do In that split secIraq "ancient civilization" and tion ond that lies between success and reasons can be brought forth failure Decisions of any kind irk to show that Ethiopia a nation him extremely and after they are GHOSTS IN CORRIDORS under conditions of anarchy and Various "ghosts" of other year made he is sure he should have slavery cannot be reorganized in were flitting on the fringes of the done the other thing accordance with a system adopted O O P meeting— "Larry Richey INITIATIVE TAKES ROOT by England in Egypt India and Hoover's Man Friday: EARLY Iraq? Jim Watson of Indiana Dave Reed His Is trvlrur her best mother Now a whole ship load of Italian or Pennsylvania— now a national to rouse him with every means newspaper men will embark for committeeman — and Hiram Bing- within her but Initiative power Africa which probably means acham of Connecticut and such once cannot be grafted this way It tion puissant congressmen as John Till-so- n has to grow its own roots early of Connecticut and Franklin in life f BilW can learn another WAYLAND Mass — (UP)— EngiFort of New Jersey way by a few bitter failures that neer Frank McLean was not stumpinsiders Included will sting his pride to action but Conspicuous ed for Jong when his locomotive Committeemen Hilles of the conflict between escape and re ran out of water here He stopped New York who Charlie wants the candi- sponsibility may make him cross the train sounded a fire alarm— date picked at the conventionand and unhappy and got water to spare not before and J Henry Rorab&ck In the first chapter the boy's -- -- close-mouth- ed - -- se ' steam-rollere- ! - Lloyd George - A man married Is entitled to at leastgetting one peaceful day —Hoyt Haddock union head vetoing striking radio telegraphers' suggestion that they picket the wedding of a steamship executive i Viow tVio xt-- v i m izen Louis Brcmfield did it IX the reporters who worked with him there are to be believed he was no great shucks as a news gatherer That he has become one of the leading novelists makes them shake their heads But the truth is that when Brom-fiel- d was recording the goings and comings he was dreaming of greater things When he finally quit he wrote what many consider his greatest book "The Green Bay Tree't And he was just a gangling cub The Cupola' Ernest Hemingway's old Paris hangout is now the busiest sidewalk cede in Montparnasse It was taken over by the head-wait-e- jf of the once ace rendezvous of the Latin Quarter— Du Dome next door Like Jacks it is without end never closes The Select keys and Rotonde across the street are a ghostly array of empty white table tops But trade has a pendulumlike habit of swinging back and forth The saltiest of sea yarn William McFee threatens tospinners become one of the town'? literary lions He has the loll and the brawniness of the mariners who go around the Horn on windjammers and when he barges into e studio everybody waits for his roar As one critic observed: "There's no false hair on his chest'' Thingumabobs: Billy Rose was once Bernard Baruch's stenographer Young Alfred Vanderbilfs racing tables are In the black a rarity among millionaire horsemen James Hazen Hyde play boy of 25 years ago took 410 suits with him for his Paris exiled Mark Sullivan gives his column so much thought that when he sits down at at years It will be noticed some of the orders just had Lloyd Osborne relays to Rob Wagto be We can't have children ner from Spain the story of the lorg-nett- ed English lady trying to start ruining things or falling out of windows or doing exactly as they an S P C A branch in a Spanplease They have to learn to ac- ish village She went - to the local cept telling and must get used to mayor who with a swirl of the cape a certain amount of routine and and deep bow agreed to start off nre-scho- ol that regimentation v ! TOO MUCH CRITICISM IS UNWISE r On the other hand the little flower of independence' and confidence (the secret behind snappy thinking and decisive t behavior) cannot be blighted or it will not Too much criticism of a grow small child's 'judgment is unwise A few such episodes as the above won't matter they happen In all " families A daily bombardment of criticism will kill the child's faith In himself Let him feet as - often as possible that his ideas are as good as anybody's Let - that take - the fuad with a bull fight McNaught Syndi-- t 1935 (Copyright cate) Rag Driven In Chest By Shotgun Charge j root Then train the sprout OMAHA Neb (UP) — Joe Sesto's pain In the chest was caused by a piece of white shirt driven under the skin by a shotgun charge two years ago physicians found Infection set in and the cloth was removed -- 44- FLOODS RUIN OYSTER BEDS GALVESTON Tex — (UP)—Oyster beds along the Texas gulf coast have been reduced greatly during the past summer because of inland flood conditions In east and west Galveston bays alone approximately 20 per cent of the oysters prune" it guide it - Broken spirit is not alwaj's a result of beatings Quite as effectual is the system of usurping the child's every choice ourselves when decision is trying to grow v (Copyright 1935 NEA Service Inc) were Killed by rresh water w hat Price Your ' Child's Life ? -" YOUR i tlnue to Wonder his typewriter he finishes it without a pause Dorothy Stone aca bob-cA pencil-lik- e welt ran companied the to CalRogers irom nis cnest up almost to one ifornia where all thefamily now Stones hip another trophy ofl the fray are S J Kaufman in Hollyfirst time thinks it Back in Mansfield OJfthey con wood for theHe's headed for glorious A semi-offici- al Children 2 ' A I ri°' r i " v"- -- i 5 - asks-"wh- The writing Is on the wall The small villages are deteriorating and uie cities are growing — Mayor Adam Kornig of Spencer Neb If the league must die then let it die a reputable death' Let it be remembered at worst for harmless ineptitude but don't let it be used for an- ac of turpitude — David : - yh?real hi r 4 r 4 at i ors l i iWVVtVVlV Take Nobody's Advice Except Your Family Doctor's oh Which Remedies are MEDICALLY APPROVED : - is not similarly protected Some of the speeches and statements made on Constitution day were oven the limits of good taste ly and were so extreme and shrill in tone as to stir the sus- picion that selfish and party ends were more their object than the preservation of the bill of rights "When it comes to a question kc that there 'really little in the record of one of our great political parties to make it appear better than that of the other Eacn of them in turn denounces the other for trampling on the constitution and for with individual liberties Yet both of them stood as one interfering for years in upholding by means of the pro- hibition laws the most outrageous infringement of the lihprtips nf the citizen and his rights in the courts Just now in the prelim- binary heat of the coming presidential campaign it seems to be the Intention of certain politicians to take over for their own party alone the defense of the constitution That will probably not last long Its impropriety is manifest defense of the constitution is not In but in Judicial hands The place of the supreme court inpartisan the tion together withi its work for many years in interpreting and applying vit should be prominence in all the celebrations an memorial addressesgiven in connection with the writing and ratification of the constitution We have had within the past year several instances of the judicial power restraining and the executive and legislative branches of the government wubwmo wc anAii nave £cveiui more in ine near iuture The calm ?voice of ajudge-wilhave more weight and be of more comfort to the nation than all the shoutings of partisan orators "The power to tax will not be the power to destroy" said Justice Holmes occasion v"so long as this coiirt sits Americans may be confident that their institutions willmot be overthrown or gradedt nor their fundamental individual rights thrown to the ground so long as this court its h European wars at all" was the admiral's reply to "will Japan become involved in the Ethiopian matter?" A hidden mine can put a battle ship out of commission' a torpedo k PINIONS of the- PRESS w white-haire- r That English and German fleets came out only once in the big war and ran away from each other is a memory that slightly amuses the j 1 ( ' -- : latter "We do not like to meddle with i ROOSEVELT made a timely P RESIDENT address when he served notice on the mm and General meet Ameri The vr' ton Square remains one of the untouched shrines of an older aristocracy — that is architecturally On the north side stand stone gateposts with carved roosters and sheep heads The little band stand for weekly concerts has the weather-staine- d look of antiquity"' The beginning of a "Rooms for Rent" invasion however has begun And many believe another five years will change it Into "a Boarding House Row The home In front of which David Graham Phillips was slain by a madman is just as it was at the time of the tragedy- Through tiny slits in curtains of upstairs windows are glimpses of d those ladies who seem to spend their entire day gently rocking On their mantles ere framed pictures of soldierly gallants men they refer to fondly as "The Colonel" or "The 'i Major" Washington Square has a lost air a vague something that speaks of better days brighter hopes Somehow the shouts of children at play ere not so loud The vegetable hawkers do not cry so noisily The metier e is as though waiting to carry the corpse eway I saw a satiny old hunting dog crated in front of an express office today He had been up in the Maine woods and was on his way back to Texas" One ear was a thrp-nlrbit of fringe slit bv the slashes of : manage it j OUR NEUTRALITY 5 retired was of the United fleets of Japan General Ninomiya was ranking officer in Japan's Kwantung army in the Manchurian campaign Silent dignified! deep are these representatives of! high J apanese ability They would like to make themselves more shallow to fit American ideas but cannot i The 1 Chojiro Kuriyama representing in America the Tokyo Nichi-JJic- hi and the Osaka Mainichi invited Ad- miral Isamu Takeshita Harushige Ninomiya to can newspaper men learned something Admiral Takeshita £3 NEW YORK Oct 3— Washing- Gentlemen of Japan pLAYING with other children! around a bonfirela little child in Fillmore Utah approached too near the flameslj Her dress caught fire and she was fatally burned That tragedy must deeply impress parents Thousands of children especially little girls in flimsy dresses have been sacrificed ii to the bonfire — iMclntyre Grave Deep Thorough Mussolini's Decision He Writes a Piece BONFIRE TRAGEDY CALL 252 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS — 1933 i SUBSCRIPTION PRICES ' 5e a Month By Mall— Must Be Paid in tiy Carrier — advance 65c a Month $700 a Year In Utah Idaho — Ail Other States (100 a Month Nevada and Wyoming ! By George Clark By ARTHUR BRISBANE ' ! SIDE GLANCES ODAY ' ij THURSDAY EVENING OCTOBER 3 1933 JJTJY "bargain" clothes shoes pkytbings for your child if you wish But before I you bring unknown bargain close-out- s in drugs for your child to take-ask your — V doctor Any doctor any child authority will tell you this Tell you to know all there is to know about any medicine your child takes internally Do this about any drug you buy for your child And do it: too for your sake as well as ours about tie frequently used "milk of magnesia" given children ' " - for Children' Zrf'Eacb tablet contains the exact equivalent of a teaspoon of the liquid form tastes like peppermint and they are easy to get children to take A big box costs only i$) at drug stores1 But—-- see that the word "GENUINE PHILLIPS MILK OF MAGNESIA" are printed ea any box or bottle you accept Safety For You and Yours i F"ii i Ask Him About "Phillips" Ask particularly about Phillips Milk'of Magnesia He will tell you we know that for over 60 years doctors have endorsed it as SAFE for your child One of the finest that men of science know The Jdnd of remedy you feel secure in giving to your child ' '''!'- AW Also In Tablet Form Phillips' Milk of Magnesia! is now made in two forms 'Liquid and tab- - 1 ' You can assist others by refusing to accept a substitute for the (enuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Do this in the interest of yourself and your children — and in the interest of the public l in general |