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‘W BRITAIN DAILY ur First Sensational The Bigger, Better Busier Store Men’s Shirts PARKER and BESSE-SYSTEM Makes. PERCALES—MADRAS—SILKS A Most Wonderful Assortment At Pre-War Prices WOVEN MADR!/ CORDED MADRAS and SILK STRIPES $1-85 Sizes 1315 to 18. 27 STORES SUPRENE COUNCIL TO MEET FRIDAY George and Briand Aim to Keep Entente From Falling Apart Cannes, France, Jan. 4 (By Asso- clated Press)—To save Hurope from complete economic disintegration and keep Entente from falling apart are the big tasks to be undertaken here by Premiers Lloyd George of Great Britain and Briand from France. Opening private conversations today soon after the arrival from Paris of M. Briand and Minister of Liberated Tegions Loucheur, the two premiers began to lay out the program for the allied supreme council which convenes here Friday. Mr. Lloyd George intends that this shall be the last meeting of the su- preme council if there is any way, of bringing pending questions to a point where they can thereafter be dealt with by the ambassadors of the allied powers. Since his arrival here he has prepared himself for a strenuous week of work during which he is going to try to raise the discussion above all individual differences between the members of the Entente and apply a remedy from which all Europe will derive benefit. M. Briand Is understood also to favor adoption of a broad understand- ing as to what is needed to save the situation and then to let the work proceed through regular diplomatic éhannels, details as to the applica- tion of the terms being left to the council of ambassadors. Experts regard as an encouraging sign the progress made by the British project for organization of an inter- national financial corporation to deal with credits and exchange and pos- sibly currency. This is the greatest gain yet made toward settlement of Europe's woes, in the opinion of financial experts. The two premiers were ed from interruptions as their convi tions. No pedestrians or motorists were allowed {o approach the place unless they could satisfy the guards they were expected by Mr. Lloyd George. The train that brought M. Skin Clear well guard- they began Briand | containing the Irench premier also carried copies of the newspapers dec- aration regarding an alliance between France and England, quoting him as declaring it the best solution of the European problem. In the absence of officlal comment there has been plenty of talk in and around the Brit- ish delegation during the past few days on this subject, and the British appeared to be convinced on their ar- rival here that the FFrench policy was to seek an effective alliance. Fear was expressed however that the prospects of such an alliance had been compromised by the effect on British public opinion of France's position on the submarine question. The arrival of Lord Curzon, Brit- ish secretary for foreign affairs who came soon after Premier Briand was supposed ir. quarters close to the con- ference to mean that, contrary to ex- pectstions, the DBritish objections to the Angora treaty between I‘rance and the Turkish nationalists would be dis- cussed here instead of being left for ssion by the conference of for- eign ministers in Paris. RAIN OR SNOW TONIGHT Warmer Weather Is Also In Predic- tions Issued At New Haven Bureau This Morning. Haven, Jan. 4.—Forecast for Connecticut: Rain or snow tonight and Thursday; warmer tonight, in- creasing east to south winds. Conditions: The western ances now forms a well defined storm ar central over Missouri. Tt causing a decided rise in temperature with rain in the central and southern and snow in the northern and western districts. The temperature ls above the normal in the Ohio valley and southern portion of the Lake region, but falls rapidly from Illinois north- westward to Minnesota where it is below zero. Conditions favor for this vicinity increasing cloudiness with rising teri- perature followed by rain. New disturb- IRS NOMIN Jan, 4.—F ted to the senate by President Harding today included: Joseph P. Downey, Miami, Ari George M. Clark, Galesburg, TIl.; James H. Walsh, Leominster, ass., George I. Kemp, of Philadelphia. Russell Bros. Best butter 59c¢ —advt . e —— and Flesh Firm With Yeast Vitamon Concentrated Tablets Easy nndi Economical to Take—Results Quick. Every man or woman who has heard of the wondrous health and beauty-making power of the lets vitamines (A, thousands who app e and quick results, MON mixes with your food, ¥ and provides the health-givin ven nourishment tha firm tissue, keen, active brain upset the stomach, but, great ai constipation. 1 geom to vanish as if by magic complexion clear and glowing wi sure to remember the neme- - Do not accept imitations or You can get anl.iu"l) VITAMON Tablets at all good druggists. Get_That Firm Flesh, ol and H-ullc( Glow uth—Take Mastin's VITAMON Tablets. MON 1 i TAMON ™EORGIAL TIAEE_'ETS | GenUINe DICKINSON vitamines in yeast, fi other raw foods will be glad amazing results concentrated yeast v These supply a proper dose of all three d in overcoming resh vegetables and to know of the being obtained from the highly Mastin's VITAMON tab- B, and C) and are now used by sreciate their cconomy, con- Mastin's VITA- welps it to digest , strength-building your body must have to make strong nerves, rich blood and a They will not cause gas or on the contrary, are & ing indigestion or ch-onic skin eruptions, leaving the th health. Bs' stin's VI-TA- substitutes, Pimples, boils and Are Positively Guaranteed to Put On Firm Flesh, Clear the Skin and Increase E:ergy When Taken With Every Meal or Money Back' ) DRUG CO. CLARK & BRAINERD AND CITY DRUG STORE WOVEN MADR! SILK STRIPES Including soft collar attached. - $2.15 izes 131 to 18. SE-LELA HERALD, WEDNESDAY, PARKER SHIRT $3.50 to $5.00 Including soft collar attached $3.15 Sizes 1315 to 17Y;. 1 JA ARY 4, 19 Guaranteed Fast Colors and Full Cut FANCY PERCALES WOVEN MADRAS, PERCALES and SILK STRIPE SILKS Including Parkers $4.15 Sizes 131, to 17. Always More Value For Less Money DEVALERA HAY NOT BE HEARD Parliamentary Ruling Will Ex- clnde President’s Amendments Dublin, Jan. 4-—(By Associated .)—The question agitating mem- of the Dail Eireann at the close of this forenoon's session of debate on the Anglo-Irish tr s wheth- er Eamon De Valera would be able to bring before the Dail his alterna- tive proposals for a treaty of amity and association between Ireland and the governments of Great Britain and of the other states of the British com- monwealth. Rising to protest that he was per- fectly willing to make public these proposals contained in “document number two’, Mr. De Valer i intended moving his morrow as an amendment to the rati- fication motion. Br and | Members immediately made the point that under the rules of the de- bate the republican president having already spoken, could not speak sgain. The prevailing view to be that speak- er MacNelll would sustaln the ob- jection. ANOTHER Club Sale Of Sellers Kitchen Cabinets “The Best Servant in Your House” $1.00 Puts this Cabinet in your home—-with weekly [ payments so small you will never miss them.l | FREE—$12.50 Worth of High Grade ALUMINUM WARE 12 Pieces guaranteed 20 years. Free with every Sellers purchased during this sale. $1.00 DOWN—COME TODAY! C. C. FULLER CO. 40-56 FORD ST.. Sharp tilts again enlivened the de- bate. IFive speakers were heard at the morning session, among them be- ing Mrs. Pearse, the aged mother of | Patriek F. Pearse, first president of the Irish republic, who was executed in 1916. She opposed the pact. Liam Mellowes, whose speech I showed he was an out and out repub- licun, intimated that the alternative proposals of De Valera would be no more acceptable to him than the treaty itself. His impassioned appeal to the republicans to continue to fight for their ideal was followed with the closest attention, and when he sat down he was warmly applauded, both by supporters and opponents of the treaty. Another speech which held = the house throughout was Owen O'Duffy's argument in favor of ratification. TS LETTERS. ~—The let- HARVARD G Cambridge, Mass., Jan. ters dnd business records of the late Henry Villard, covering his entire ca- camship exe- retirement veer as a railroad and st cutive from 1874 until h in 1 have been presented by his family to the Widener memorial li- brary of Harvard university, it was announced today. The papers are said to torm a remarkable record of the railroad development of the Pa- cific northwest. 2 th best butter, $1. Russell Bros. DOWN Absolutely § 1981 KILLED BY AUTOS IN N. Y. LAST YEAR National Highways Protective Society Shows 835 Fataltics, 281 Dy Trucks in New York City New York, Jan. 4 the National I ciety, 1,081 per automobile truck According Protective s were killed and passenger cars () So- HURRY!HUI Only ThreeMore Days! EXTRA! Hartford Including Parkers $1.35 Sizes 14 to 18, SILKS alues to $9.00 $4.85 in New York state, including New York city, in 1921, est number of motor fatdlities ever |recorded in the state. The total in- |cludes twenty-five cases in which the cause of death was apparently an automobile, though it had not bheen definitely established pending inquest. Colonel 15dw itary of the soc |that fatalities in than in 1920, In the city of |biles caused the death of 835 81 of whom were Killed Colonel Cornell said, New per by trucks, adding Sizes 131} | that the incre This is the high- |tics since | York was nearly 60 York automo- to 17. se of automobile fatali- 1919 in the state of New per cent. In 1919 the number of deaths was 1270. The report of the socicty shows that in Deccmber last 185 persons met death by automobiles in the whole state, IFourteen of these vietims were occupants of automobiles when the, chaufteur of the car failed to stop at a railway grade cro; g. During the same month seventy-one persons were d by automobile truck in New York ci Killed six and wagons ¢ death of one. .DERBY DAY!! THURSDAY-12to1P. M. ONLY Lot No. 1 Knox $6.00 Derbies Men, you can’t afford to pass this opportunity up. $5 and $6 Knox and Dunlap First Quality Derbies the ridiculous price of All our go for One Hour at$ 1 9 5 ® Lot No. 2 ‘Heath’ $10.00 Derbies Wise men will profit by these falien prices. All our Silk Lin- ed Imported He Lined Dobbs Derbies go for One nry Heath and Silk g Hour only for $4.95. Values to $10.00.$4 ® 9 5 THE HOUR-12to 1P.M. CITY HALL WILSON’S NEW BRITAIN