New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 12, 1923, Page 10

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DGE AWAITED ; ’ £ 1 ~ More Aggressive Attiude Than Sinoe 1914 Is Anticipated i By HARRY B. HUNT NEA Bervice Writer | Washington, Oect, 12.‘Development by the Coolidge administration of & more clearly defined and aggressive forelgn poliey than®the country has| known since the World war is anticl pated in officlal government circles. | The first moves toward charting this poliey, it is understood, already have been taken, and the full program probably will be revealed within the | next three months, Such steps as are not diselosed in the meantime ar - peoted te be presented in Presic Coolidge's first address to Dee, olicies as they are understood te have been outlined, fall into two major groups; the first dealing ex- | clusively with relationships on the weatern hemisphere, ineluding Can- | ads and the Latin Americas, the sec- | ond covering world relationships, with particular application to the nations | of Europe. | World Court Up Consldering the second group first, because of the popular and political | interest that will he aroused, this is | expected to present, among other mat- | ters: | 1. Advocacy of American adher ence to the world court, without insistence on t perhaps NEW BRITAIN DAILY HEKALD, FRIDAY, Were presperovs, harmeniows Bur L For Closer Ties For the western hemisphere, the attempt will be fto foster closes tconemic, commercial and poliical understandings which will bind the while of the three Americas in distinetly progvessive new.-world re. lationship. Beoth the partments of state and eommerce will be utillzed in s effort’ Amo the possible oY es VAll-American’ trade & political eontre- versies. Possible reciprocity arrange- ments are also belng studied. The desire for a mere closely uni- fied western weorld, with South Amer: iea, Mexice and Canada looking mere and more to the United States for manufactured produects with the U, 8 providing & market for thelr raw ma- terials, has been increased by the growing opinion here that no likely | settlement of Kuropean affairs will provide any eensiderable additional European market for American goods. A settlement in the Ruhr, for in- stance would more than offeet, ulated industrial produe- nta that might come to the 1 purchasing power, The only big mar- ket for America in Kurope that would result would be a market for money, not for American commodities, Burope s already underselling American manufacturers in their own market on goods which carry & 5 per cent tariff, notably laces and em broideries, and European manufactur. w«rs, assisted by thelr governments, are netively seeking markets other than the 17, 8 for raw materials, Rel. glan cotton mills at present, for in. stance, are using only 40 per cent American cotton, The 60 per cent s obtained in India, It in increasingly apparent that no States from increased | i el & Jeotion 1o & Canadian ambamador (o | whose papers showed he bad held an the U, B is thet Treland, now on an | army commission during the werld Y | war, and on the same ship with this AR went & negre weman, stranded | in Havans, whose son in New Orieans | had been logated by the secvelary of | the "M, M. ¥, | identioal satus with Canads, doubiedly would immediately follow ing the development of an ol foreign policy by Cool- idge, it will be necessary hereafier to bear In mind the new pesition which | | Pan.Ameri affairs b ined factor in Unele Bam's future st { fconomically and politically, & | Bt and tight little western hemis- | Infant Wellare Society Statistios Tns | phere is becoming recognized as no | leas mportant 10 the future than ®| dieate Steadily Decreastng | peaceful and reconstructed Europe | (Copyright, 1933, NEA Bervice, Ine.) Rirth Rate There { Chicage, Oct. 12.—With a steadily | declining birth rate, Chicage | “short” 6,647 habies since 1916, ae: | cording to statisties issued by the In- | fant Welfare soclety of Chicago. In 1816, when the population of the eity was only 2,517,172, habies were born population fg placed at 2,» 830,000, anly 56,724 babies were born, The rate during those years had fal- len from 22.4 a thousand to 20,02, Usi these figures as a basis, Orlo F, Ki extension ' secretary of the In. | fant Welfare society declared lhnt; “f" WORKERS IN HAVANA EXTEND FRIENDLY AID | Secrstary and Wis Wife Go Outside ’ Regular Field To Help The Needy, Havana, Oct. 12.=The Merchant | Marine Y, M, C, A, is here primarily to deal with American sallors, make | Chicagn is short 6,447 bables their days better and help them when | “The falling of the birth rate,” sald | they are in need, but from time o] Arn King, “lIa foreibly driving home |time the organization finds opportun- o the publie spirited citizens of Chi ity to leave its regular field and A0 eagn the fincreasing necessity of #ood in hroader pastures. Karnest guarding the human lite that is given Hrateel, the secretary, and his wife | us each yeas more zeulously | always weicome such chances, | than fn the past. It is all the more Recently Mr, Bratsel inaugurated In | important that we exert every possi- the Vivac, the great jall in Havana,|hle means to preserve the infant II\'M" Protestant religlous services in Eng- in this community when we believe, lish for the benefit of the 40 or 50 and with good reason, that the birth ! deliniquent Americans and English-| rate will continue to drop as it hay men bahind the bars of the ancient since 1898, | hullding. Not long ago two more' Statl hoys came to Havana from Maryland, | last ye when it cared for approxi- | put up at an expensive hotel, and be- | mately 12,000 bables, an nctual sav- gan looking for jobs. Their small|ing of 480 lives was credited to the oven of the society show that | ourt being | tariff will be adequate to protect Am- gayings malted away in a few days, | socioty beeause the death rate among | divorced from the League of Nations, [ #rican manufacturers In (he face of lang while the American consul wa 2. American economic assistance to | European industrial co-operation and | seeking n chance for them to work | Europe, covering both the matter of | debts owed by European nations to | the United States and advances of new capital to assist in reconstruction | and industrial development. The extent of American help in these matters of debts mnd invest- ments, however, would be made con- tingent on Europe's willingness to further reduce expenditures for arma- ment. A wsecond conference on dis- armament, to extend the limitations set on npaval preparedness by the Harding conference of Nov, 1021, wauld be necessary under this pro- sram. Pressure for such a conference, albng the lines urged by Sanator Borah last winter, already is develop- ing and is expected to grow as se | tors and representatives who have studied the FEuropean conditions at firet hand during this summer get | bagk to Washington. Already pre- | liminary “feelers,” to sound the senti- | ment of European nations toward u | second Washington conference, have | | been discussed. Possible further naval restrictions | which could come before such a con- | ference might cover: Submarines, their size, armament, numbers and use in warfare. Mflitary and naval aircraft. Land armaments, while a big fac- tor in Europe's economic as well as | | | | her peace problem, are scarcely like- ly to be on the agenda. Reductions in the land fighting forces would be expected to follow, not precede, a ask tor Horlicks The ORIGINAL Malted Milk expansion, Ameriea First Cannda’s freedom to enter reciprocity or other special into trade | agreaments with the United States will be one of the questions before the Tm- perial conference of the British Em- pire, which convenes in London in October. Another will be the sending of a Canadian ambassador to Wash- ington, This already has been authorized by the Canadian parlifament but the Canadian premier—probably at a hint from 10 Downing street-—never has made an appointment. England’'s ob- | thelr way home on a ship, Mr., and/ | Mrs. Bratzel were keaping the lads | out of mischief and in food. An- | other undertaking was ‘the return {home of an American drug addiet — Announcement — THE MODEL BARBER SHOP (Five Barbers, No Waiting) Of 52 Church Street, is to he conducted under the management of Oliver Dominis, from Atlantic City, N, J. Guaranteed up-to-date Service, Special Attention to Ladies and Children Specialize in Peroxide Steam to Clear the Skin OUTOBER babies wnder 2 years of Sge cared for & these stations were only 14 & thausand, while throughout the eity Fenerally it was four times as great: First photo ever published in this country of Feodor Alexandrowskl, leader of the Bulgarian Macedonians, He has been the bitter foe of Serblan yule, and figured prominently In the Iast Bulgarian uprising. SAY “BAYER” when you buy-gnuine Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Headache Toothache Colds Pain Lumbago Rheymatism “Baver” packa —— ns proper directions, " boxes of 12 tablets Druggists. Neuritis Neuralgia Accept onl which con Handy “Bayer Also bottles of 24 and 100 Amiria 1 the trade mark of Bayer Masufacture of Monosceticacidester of Salieyliescid MANY CANES FORGOTTEN. More than 300 walking canes and umbrellas are taken daily to the Lost Property _hnplrlmm! of Bcotland Yard, London. Thousands of them are never reclaimed but they remain there for the claimant who may turn up even after several years. Recent- ly an American jokingly asked if the officlals had heard of a cane he had left in a taxi cab In 1920. In two minutes the missing stick was handed to him. We: Are After The TO WARM TRAFFIC POLICE, An electrie plate of sufficient heats p_roducln; power Lo comnpete with out. deor cold and other weather elements, has been originated in Holland and tested gp satisfactory that an adapta- tion of it Is planned by German traffic policemen, says the Berlin Tageblatt, The warmer is a large iron .plate, heated by electricity and it has definitely proved its value as an out- door foot warmer, it s said, Open Saturday Night Until Nine - Thirty iness deras Tabletforms, Nourishing-Nocooking. L s Replenished! We’ve had such a tremendous demand Largest By turning our store inte an exclusive Clothing Store we now occupy more selling space than any other store in town. othing In The Coun;y We have the store—We have the Merchandise and we cer- tainly have the' Values—with- out a doubt the best Values in New England. Bus All we ask you to do ig to come look—compare, we'll leave the rest to your own judgmnt. l\’Ve know what your answer [yill e. b for Hickey-Freeman suits that certain sizes and colors ran short. Suits Overcoats Topcoats Wonderful Assortment At Each Price : ( $24.50 $35 $40 $60 FANCY PLAID-BACK OVERCOATS If fine Quality, right Price and big As- sortment is any inducement you surely will huy your Coat here. Come and see for yourself—that’s all we ask. Special showing $35 $40 $45 (Others $24.50 and better) But some more came yesterday—truly beautiful suits, each shipped usonits own hanger. PRECIOUS ASSETS “Happy” feet are precious as- sets in girlhood and young womanhood. Corns, bunions and arches, caused by shoes, ruin poise, and health. Scientifically correct, Educa- tor Shoes “let the fect grow as they should.” They are the ideal footwear for growing girls. WE ARE SPECIALIZING ON 2: TROUSER SUITS More than half of our Suit Stock con- sists of 2-Trouser Suits. gMen’s and Young Men’s models, finest All Wool and Worsted fabrics—Special value $29.50 ** $35.00 (Others at $24.50 to $60.00) painful incorrect personality Now we have a full assortment, once more. - Will you be in, today? Hundreds of pairs Fine All_ Wool and Worsted Pants. Fancy and Blue Serges — many patterns to match suits. Sizes up to 50 waist. Separate Trousers $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 KAMBER Featuring All Wool 2-Pant Suits in the newest shades and models at wonderful values. Boys’ Suits $8.95, $12.95 $14.95 FITCH-JONES CO. —CITY HALL— “Where Quality’s the Rule” Hartford, Conn. 82-90 Asylum $St. I SR ST AT Vogue Shoe Shop 236 WMain St. Opp. Monument

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