New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 28, 1923, Page 12

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GHURGHES INVITED 10 UNION SERVICE Nine Will Join With Rev. Dr. Abel A. Ablquist The ean, whicl colony at Ply ving the ast he the In ctories business wil ohserve New w1 nkagivi o wi Thanksgiving Ahlquist A specia ng St. Matthew's German Lutheran and Reformation Luthera hold their own m., in the irches at 45 speet their re meeting places. There services church tomorrow and the other at Advent church Thanksgiving service forenoon will be two 7 Mark's morning anksgiving at St Episcopal one at § o'clock The Second wi own City /onm;z Committee Is Reported \clectcd Mayor A. M. Pao to selected pr tire mittee uthe e wet personnel of the appol tment srized & commo be mad & bankers AWy sions a v commissio fator Don’t Suffer Pile Torture Send Today for a Free Sample Packe age of Pyramid Pile Suppositor- ies. The National Relief. Remember that for 25 vears Pyra. mid Pile Suppositories have heen the family relief for itching, hleeding, pro- truding piles or hemorrhoids. They have saved hundreds from operation and a single box h sufi many ca that had s fered for years, No wonder you can get these biessed suppositories in any drug store in the U. S. and Canada at §0 cents a box. But do not take any substi- tute. Send vour name and ad: on coupon for free trial package, FREE SAMPLE COUPON DRUG COMPAXY, Pyramid Bldg., Marshal a Free sample , in plain wrap; Pyramid WATSON SNAPPED AS HAT FELL IN RING Energetic Photographer Gets Trick Picture of Indianan ashington, Nov Indiana candidate 28, —Senator may not publicar sident-—1 on of may or o the re pre ws photogr nomix for wont today got mo first sinc cement into and sinee that he ring ent the republican candidatorial lists. Whe 1 he was as silent Dbefe he prospects of was consid \er as his an n a onference was o had d the pavement tie ge whilg outside t had on m It then had e Watson his big hlack sensed t apher on Hou: s and photograpis it When Sen- he was phe cirele White ny n erased, office of out came per side of d hold in pose iust te one had been ar his hand fedora The wrong T be something i, “that senator paying more attentic to me and the the ring the pictures ¢ Watson My were pleced 1o w anghing when he NEW BRITAIN DATLY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, CITY ITEMS. Qulekasank e “Gets-” Ends Corn Pain | The“ Gets-It" ever is milcs ahcad of any thing Mr. : 1 Mrs. 0. Dechan ar Mrs, A. Providence, It L, will spend 'y Reddell Fairview s Mapic giving with He metrist of 19 Abel Je Loms« 1 is the hnson of DOA o painless way to end corns fore clse, Tryite eta Sigma fraternity will | wanksgiving dance hanksgiving night been born at the ral Mr. Biedermar 279 hold it the ¥ A danghter New Brits and Mrs Charles street. A son terday to Mr. and Mrs, hardt of 20 Brook street Joseph Wratschiko through Attor- Harry H. Milkowitz has brought $450 against Carl Ander® Papers have beer ed by Ired Winkle auto- has has Gene 1 fulius of was born yes- Adolph Burck- ney suit for son. Constab mobhile Lady wil and an attached, No. 2¢, D. truck been Walla Baptist McCabe, a will it with his paren school, ng Spe recess Juni formec Fhres ar Achieveme imply apply two or three drops to any corn or 1 At b i ous. In two minutes all pain will have stopped completely. Soon you can peel the comn or callous right off with your fingers, root and all. Costs but a trifle. Satisfactory re- sults zuaranteed with your corn or money back. E. Lawrence Chicago. Sold everywhere. ca e e JAPANESE MILITARY AUTHORITY IS DEAD visiting with Rix Ve n Hom me.]\«nh ing, will do rubt take up b Mrs. Al L C and one wi My jam B and avenue BRITISH GOLFERS PLAY WITH OLD STYLE BALLS General Otani Was Former Com- - mander in Siberia Famous Golfers of England Stage Unique Contest With Ancient Gutta Percha Bail the tee vention core ball Acompetition w “Hasbeens™ and the the grey ! the game and the younger men the appearar LIt izo Otani and dis- Japanese the rising sun, «s8 of the order of of the highest Tapan the Al in verwase of school ired with the those of he had learn old gutta was born at Kukui- cntered the military cutenant in 1879, the hig eneral in 1916 uron cnough the day und genius, Roger Wy year-old amatuer ur 1 witk his golf life irfously prov triumph roexpe or youtl rather rience ther, A inspector gene president o military technical er of the fifth army the gar- purt as we hewd ina war, and eighth infantry the nperial fourth army in WOULLD ABOLISH BOARD NOVEMBER 28, 1923 FRANCO-BRITISH ~ STRAIN GROWING ;Friday's Statement in London May 1 Alfect Situation By The Associated Press, | Lond Nov, -England’s rela- | tionship with France on thegrepara tion is will be put to another se- “riday when Sir John | Bradbury s his government's | | views on the Duesseldorf agreement |and the intention of France and Bel- gium fo retain part of the Ruhr pay- | ments and deliveries for their own | | occupational accounts, Whether the | ue truce recently arrived at between the { London and Paris governments in the ; | couneil of ambassadors will weather ; | future storms depends largely upon | the resuits of Friday’s meeting. John and British government experts including Sir Eyre Crowe, Sir William Tyrrell, Sir Warren Fisher and Sir Cecil Hurst continued thei study today of questions arising out of the Duesseldorf agreement and of the adjustment of administrative matters in the British occupational zone to the new conditions created by Ger- many's cessation of passive resistance None of the officials of the for Sir Tasty, CREAMY CocoaNuT CAKE with its frosted coat of rich icing—there’s never enough. Bake it BESTwith. DAVIS BAKING POWDER lin view of the fact that America’s | |cign office would say whether there | priority rights in respect to army oc- | likelihood of Great Britain's | endorsing the creation of the expert committee suggested by Premier Poin- care to inquire into Germany's ability 0 pay indemnity, nor would they say what if any prespect there is or an agreement being reached among all the allies regarding epportionment of the payments and deliveries pro- | {ceeding from the Duesseldorf agree- | ment | In llu‘ connection Great Britain Is herself in an uncertain position, realizes that any claim for her the Ruhr payments might if ow ance was any fir 1 ; Rritis} nsistently discountenunced John Bradbury who is leaving for Paris tomorrow, will present his gov- ernment’s views on this point Friday, | and it is expected this will reopen the vexatious question of the legality n( the oceupation British political observers hold that the Duesseldorf agreement, which was | signed betwean the Franco-Belgian | unthorities and the rman indus- trialists, means something more than | reparation payments and deliveries, | They say in it a move toward the ceonomie separation of the Ruhr and Rhineland from the rest of Germany, with t two arcas having. a rela- tionship to the central government something like American slu!l‘! does to the Washington government British Jominion to the British empire. Those French, AT Si W an that the political sep- concentrating ohservers declape realizing that s failed, are industrial ssion of the whe and Rhineland from Berlir England views this latest move with ¢ disapproval, and it is regarded of many indications that two countries are getting further ipart 1 the question 1" seor only one every on of cupation costs are considered to b seriously prejudiced by the intention of France and Belgium to apply the Ruhr payments and deliveries to the expenses of their own armies in Ger- many. Attack Paris, Nov, 28. don of Sir John delegate on the sion, is explained in editorial with reparations for on the j umber of e Expected —The visit to Lon- Bradbury, British reparation commis- today by the temps being connected attack on the an as commisssion ic th it says a ing unde ‘inspira British Marquis Curzon. The Tempts predicts that the attack will turn upon the question of the Franco-Belgian right under the treaty of Versailles to occupy the Ruhr and that the commission will be invited to interpret the article of the treaty upon which this right is based by the occupying powers. The editorial rep- resents the British as arguing that a correct interpretation will establish that no such right exists. foreign secretary, HARVEY GO TO VERMONT Washington, Nov. 28.—George Har- vey, American ambassador to Great Britain, who has been a guest at the White House for the last week, left Washington today for Peachem, Ver- mont, to spend Thanksgiving with the folks of his native town. The trip will bring realization of the hope he expressed several months ago in Lon- don when he said he wanted to clean up the slate of matters before the embassy so as to eat Thanksgiving dinner iy, Plachem. La DPaz s an or- When a coffin-maker capital of Bolivia, 8. A takes it personally to his cus- Photo was taken by a recent the South American country in jer he tomer visitor in WhatA BEECHAMS PILLS are good for . Indigestion, Biliousress, Constipation, result from er- rors of diet and carels irregular habits of elimination. ick Headache, Nervousness, Depression, Insomnia, Bad Complexion, areoften traceable to the same causes. For prompt relief, take Beecham’s Pills. They a: ply the concentrated corrective elements of natural medi- cinal herbs. They begin to act,full strength, as soon as they are swallowed. Beecham’s Pills—tasteless, effec- tive and SAFE for children and adults alike—have been used for years to make digestion vigorous and keep the body internally clean—the real foundation ofgood health, At All Druggists: 12 Pills=10c 40 Pills=25¢ 90 Pills=50¢ FPRER TRIAL-Try Beecham's Pills at our expense, Send your name and address for FREE Packet and Books Jet “The Way to Health”. Address: B, F. ALLEN CO. Dept. 16, 417 Canal St., New York. N« Abolitic commii to the propost ow to deal with Germany. It is expected here that the observer on the will take part in and lepart- | cq Amer| reparation com- more than ar Friday's discussion com i ihmits missior John- academie tro- nm He nning § Britain s May« oning proached morning for i deels ommission’s nefite the wd worth be Paones ared to. Mistrial Is Declared in Case of Accused Chauffeur age Deland, Fia, Nov. 28,—A tria ¢ Lol in the case Burns, Others Matters n alls with murder | ) death of Howard 1'she today, waw The jury Charles Brown « convicted here gree murder after Brown testified Killed 1 swamp. ace |, . of Lxecutive Having Vinishod Mes. be istr to Congress Turns to tta spines 8, S = & | f vdded, could mi ymerce department ed on 4 — THRAFLIC MAN DIES THRAGEDY MYSTERY N apolis, Nov, 2 « first Iy en y it b AW leliberats Two Sides of Turnover Helen Hager lustri York N. C Kknow N Pines, of w consumer preference. With this de- mand as a fact all selling plans have a chance to succeed. Without it they fail. The only chance for salesman- ship to succeed without an existing demand is for salesmanship to as- sume the task that belongs to ad- vertising—the task of creating de- mand. If the present efforts being put into selling were amply supported by a corresponding -ffort to create consumer demand through Advertising, the business conditions of this country would be, rapidly changed into an era of great pros- perity—in spite of Old World condi- tions and everything else. The alert business man dealing with present day conditions knows that the big word today “Turnover.” Whether he be a merchant, manufac- turer, jobber, or banker, he sees that one thing with a clear vision unbiased by the limits of his own business. It is in the air, and on the tip of every tongue. And yet many of them—entirely and other ag N ;i o bkl » too many—are thinking on only one t made par i P side of Turnover. They think of it as rapid selling — pulting money in and getting it out quickl; and at a profit. They realize that they must put gieatly increased ef- forts back of all their plans for selling and distribution, o intry MAH JONG ARRIVES, the Game o Thi= Country Pour Tons Chinese Arrive in New York, No sand pou today Francis v Boxe that are e cargo of the ste » Kre : : 2 " meaning The proof of this is in the fact that right now, under these very con- ditions, the manufacturers who are putting proper emphasis on creating a demand for their product, as well as selling it, are doing a big business and are actually getting the high turnover that others are trying so strenuously to get through intensive selling. half of Turnover is the consumer. All selling plans and ef- forts fail if the consumer doesn't want to buy. His desire for the piro- duct must be created. He must meet the seller half way. THe must be in a mood to buy man HELD The other Macy o arrested state o M ReNNER ¥ as today Ar and e lper Iyn Jo his b New with before the sa'e meets him across the counter. That is the funetion of Advertis- ing—to create consumer demand and SOLD TO GERMANY World's Largest Preight Ship, 1die War. Will Be Put Into MaPine ervice i Very Near Putare The Herald is a member of the A. B. C. and would bhe pleased submit a copy of the latest circulation report 10,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ANY NEW BRITAIN NEWSPAPER t balkline billiard *® champion, ago when Bos was Havwood. w an expe Ar e romance player, in Aldan, playing Katheiine and amateur arvied Bos, former 1ol T has 1 Pa " hegan twe If you have a Cou;{h Cold or Bronchial attack, you can get quick relief and prev- ent far more dangerous sickness by taking kerr's FLAX SEED emuLsion THE FOOD MEDICINE-SWEET2s CREAM AT ALL DRUGGISTS - 50% 0?1 90 BoTTLES —DANCE By ladee €. G THANKSGIVING BV 780U NITED HALL Ambassador Novelis Admicsion. Tadie Including Tax SATALINE'S SOCIETY ORCHESTRA Dance Work a Specialty Phone &363-3 Orchestra Gente Demand Circulation Proof When Buy: $5 EXTRA DIVIDEND Nov. 2 e Amers clare]

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