New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 7, 1924, Page 3

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0 obligation to interfere with 'mlili-l‘ will be held Tuesday evening at 8 | cal que mis of policy or internal ad- o'clock. | ministration of any foreign state. | Plans are being made for a parish Monroe Doctrine fair to be held from February 9 to 16, In uniting itz efforts with those of REV E v fiRIKIS A meeting of the committee was held last night. g e e he Boy Scout troop will have a THE HERALD, NEW BRITAIN, CONN. Yes () Do you gpprove the winning plan No () in substance? vesterday’s masses, Rev, Edward V ikis, pastor of St. Andrews Lithua- Mail promptly to ‘llI blic Opi bstituted For ¥ " y d ¢ Opinion Substituted For Foree THE AMERICAN PEACE AWARD e OUT IN FORMAL PROTEST nian If you w jeet To Punishment Metod year Out For Hazing The Herald presents for its readers pon) the text of a plan submitted to the jury of award for the $100,000 prize ofiered for the best practicable plan by which the United States may co- operate with other nations in an ef- fort to prevent war. On the same page as the text will be found a cou- pon which the reader is urged to use in checking his approval or disap- proval of the plan, mailing it to the address given on the coupon. In this school's present Stutes proposes 10 GEI $100 m l RlZE |other states for the preservation of ’ peace and the promotion of the com- — Name .... ting Friday evening at 7:30 AL not abandon its traditional attitude ), l o'clock. bl F it L il O |the 01 World and does not consent lished between Albert Casellino R 2ovvinsirsoneaas inte to submit its long established policy I Y fviti and Emilia Peretta; Esposito Rug- ¥ v Flock of Year's Activities 1zino na Rafariine sabetino. Herald 20ilan ol e plagl g WL be mendation or decision of other pow- | Secret— era Read- ture and sale of all materials of war, | Elihu Root, chairman; James Guthrie ers May Vote Ap- Baruded) Fvare B Alonme. Hllen 342 Madison Avenue, New York City no obligations under Article X, in its church .told the congregation < l_hmAl’t‘l'I.en.W;g"fl B;l‘:d W*::ll:"h h to express a fuller opinion also, please write to in any particular case congress $5.830, making it $22,000 and altera- | Virginia Military Institute Boys Ole roval or D“a roval uthor's Name Rey the American P Award | authorized such action. tions were made to the amount of $8,- pp o In order that the vote may be eace The United PR no | 000 during the year. ] taken solely upon the merits of the ebligations under Article XVI, ita The ordinary revenues of the “‘:“:”f;.’“c':f :":e'":]‘::v ":“' "‘;‘"f)’gi its amended form as now proposed, | NArY revenues were Lexington, V., Jan. 7.—The entire nev Lo Aisolpy orshib of the | gemics commission or the league in- | decide for itself whether a breach of |unless in any particular case con- @ fotal of $14.530. Expenditures sophomore elass of the inia mir- lan until after the referendum, or ¥ P! ly in Feb: * ’fh id t " ¢ quiry into conditions of the traffic in [the covenant has been committed. ygress has authorized such action. including the costs of alterations I tary institute is in Lexington, dete. SRINY 30 - FRuruarE € dentity of | women and children, | The second assembly adopted a The United. States proposes that payment of church debt were $14.- mined, according to its spokesmen, ;;’;’;rorc;::m;'l‘::: o:xr;:wlardo:‘:mde'l,:’l:‘ The United States being already so | XVI from which was removed all altogether or so amended and changed | tions to the amount of $500. vigilance committea {2 dy = oo T \t. | far committed to wunited counsels | reference to the possibility of empl as to climinate any suggestion of a Announcement wes made that il remains in power i J"}"c’"“‘;"'n ol g :1_1’“""‘ league-agencies for the common | Ing military force, and in which the general agreement to use coercion for order to mect the increasing expenses, The class numbering 113 men and i John Dv. Davia, Learned Hand, | ocial welfare, all of which have some | Abandonment of uniform obligation |obtaining conformity to the pledges |t rent has been increased from | including three members of the var- ;“‘m! m‘o'mhorml’v; “:""';'l"? ’:)‘:“’"":' L. | \vorld peace, the question before us |ish government has since proposed to | Assume No Obligations at the door will cents, instead | 1:30 o'clock this morning as a protest b iy ml"; Mrs. Franklin D. 'Roose. | may take this form: weaken the form of requirement still | 1L The United States will aceept | of 10 conts against punishment imposed by the way it may be determined whether |EUCT Sk, b "‘Mpi e | How can increasing cooperation be. | further. Ino responsibility and assume no obli-| There were 53 buptisms, 16 wed- | vigilance committee upon Thomas ko Bire-s ol B Phcas sy Vardeelip, Article X and XVI, in their origi- (£ation in connection with any duties Crowder, of Texas, one of its mem- rroval, or otherwise, -, " | ganized world for the motion of | nal forms, have thercfore been prac- In making public the text of the|Corneliue N Bliss, Jr. treasurer. |l R, 0™0 |0 be. amured, i | tically condemned by the principal or- | peace treaties, unicss in any particu- walkout was deseribed as the euimin- winning manuseript the name of the | . FWC HeMt OF R | forms acceptable to the people of the |&ans of the league and arc today re- | lar case congress has authorized such iting incident of long standing dif- author is withheld, for obvious rea- 8. camplets MANUROK | United States and hopefully prac- [Juced to something like innocuous |action. ferenc between sophomore and senior classmen over the hazin ciety making the award of $100,000 between the United States and other R |slon which nations can freely engage Self-governing State e m .. dollars makes the following state- | nations “to achieve and preserve the Can Extend Cooperation | 0 apply to each other in the name of | IV. The United Crowder's alleged offense was de- ment: peace of the world” is given below, | Without any change in its pr-wvnt,p,,ufi",, that which arises from .'.....'A that Article I of the covenant be con- clared by his classmates to be insut- With deep satisfaction 1 present for | Including the author's reasoning: policy, already described, the United | terence, from moral judgment, from |strued and applied, or, if necessary, ficent reason for the punishment fixed i for h recently by the committee, American people the plan selected by | One Organization For International |its willinguess (o cooperate similarly public opinion. {league shall be assured by any N Ty mivad g iha the jury as entitled to the American| . = Ooopeestios =~ = e oy, MLMMAG. B recdes Leadership Recognized [governing state that wishes to nalty was exacted they would leave » " ive-sixths of all nations, includ- | tive Pneies * league. - {and salCon Pha e g Fp 8 P dy. § Fin AWaHG uRde ihe Songifion. - ing about four-Aifths of mankind, |four of thesc agencies that govern-| Another significant development |1 that receives the favorabic the campus tn & body. NAigr GNSeS The Award brought forth 22,165 11 v !in the constitutional practice of the | °f two-thirds of the assembly. al E. W, Nichols, superintendent of the institute, is said to have been noti- composite work of organizations, uni- |ization, the purpose of which is “to |advisory pows It could as prop- |lcague s V. As a further condition sl i versities, ete., a single plan often | promote international i cooperation (t;“rl)l b.u-..' ptl'1|:_\):lallolxs tto nm'-rcdn1:;Bel:;e“t;‘ou&c’:l'r;?rr:.;urx:;‘» ::m::f" participation in the work and counsels after they walked out, but it is under- Y iew: and to achieve international eace | mbers with like powers to each one | . « e leg . X 5 e N represented the views of hundreds or H Rt P lof the other welfare commissions. It |1l States in the New World excopt | o the league, the United Muu_~ ask stood he took no immediate action thousands of individuals. There were |and security, e [that the assembly and council con- because of the early hour. sand of letters which, while they did |abandon this system which has now‘wlwu of the latter, 9 This ro{unl became evident in (!:. ir ey el Ay e not submit plans, suggested In almost | been actively operating for three| It is sccondly, immediately practi- | Panama-Costa Mica dispute In 1021 ) G “or iniemational law. ent- 4 g | 3 . ¢ v nile, " each instance & solution of the peace [and a haif years. If leading members [cable to extend the same Kind of co “‘"“ el ”“m‘ml & quasrel which im. ploying, for this purpose, the aid of a commission of jurists. This com- man welfare, the United States decs Banns of marriage have been pub- T Man (] counsel and cooperation among the | . d i concerning questions regarded by | mitting USCIIPt @ vations which it resuit from the || o o SR i L e g , Fitz Pendleton, Roscoe Pound, Wil- present form in the covenant, unless that the church debt was reduced by o X plan, the Policy committee, with the | present form in the covenant or totalled $6,771.74 and the extraordi- TR RULHoR 8 URKNRNID S0 His memy Increasing Cooperation Plan radically amended form of Article |Article X and XVI he either dropped | 700.69. There were diocesan collec- | ot to return to the campus while the William H Johnston, Esther Bverett | (00 F Lo & he preservation of | Was dircctly provided for. The Brit- |of the covenant. w year and the contribution sity football team, walked out about the award meets with popular ap- Samip s | tween the United States and the or- Stone, Mrs, Frank A, imposed upon the Jleague hy the bers, on charges of hazing. The sons. E. W. Bok, sponsor of the so- [NO. 1469 providing for cooperation | L i, | desuetude, The only kind of compul- Membership Open (o Any | | freshmen the consideration and vote of the Plan Number 1169 Btutes government, oould, first, show | g y"ibiiiry. and from the power of | redrafted, so that admission to the and they served notice that if the plans. Since many of therh were the |have already created a world-organ- |/ment had aircady sent delegates with the unwillingness of the | Development of Internationa fied of the sophomores’ action soon also rocelved several hundred thou-| Those nations cannot and will not has already reccived invitations from |three are members of the league. 4 (0 00 SEEEVE S, (OUREE © problem, of the United States government ever |operation. whenever asked o do it, The jury had therefore before it an index of the true feeling and judg- ment of hundreds of, thousands of American citizens, The plans came had serious hopes that another associ- ation of nations could be formed, such hopes were dispelled during the Washington conference by plain inti- mations from other powers that there 0 as o wde participation in the Iwork of the commissions and techni- al committees of the labor organi- {zation. The record shows that such jcooperation is already begun. [ pelled the last two states to absent themselves from the third assembl wherein a Chilean was chosen to pre- side, . Obviously the league intends to | mission would he directed to formu- late existing rules of the law of nations, to reconcile divergent opinions, to consider points hitherto | inadequately provided for but vital to Declares It Is Tmpossible To Arouse Public Sentiment in Favor of the Volstead Act Washington, Jan. Representas amnd in general to define the so- " . <~ tive Hill, republican, Maryland, replys BRGNS EDWARD \s (Resin ing today to the plea for dry enforce- great powers 2 s J s propor- [ ment made last week by Representa- s during the year.|tive Upshaw, democrat, Georgia, from every group in American life, 1 | ¢ The recognize the leadership of the United Some were obviously from life-long |is not room for more than one or- The single common purpose of all ™ o b | ; these committees is the collection and | States i the New World precisely gludents of history and international | ganization like the League of Nations, » 4 ¥ | tice law. Some were from persons who The states outside the organized [ study of information, on which may | &% "'"hl"“"‘-' States claims it. This | o & ospredally wher have studied Mttle, but who have|world mre not of such a character be based subsequent recommendations 18 nOthing less than the observance | T (i Tl themselves seen and felt the horror |that the United States could hope- |for national legisiation. | SE. 0 NNESRG thw HOULRE I8 DOW- | oy o “iive cacliibons, Bio sspiolon | dings &nd A7.rung of war—or who aro even now living [fully cooperats with them for the| All conventions and resolutions, |rs and duties of the league council. | Lot to, L0 BICHREEE 0 FUSPICIE | dinis ¢ g on these figures, Iather | charged that violations of the Vol- ut its tragedy. purpose named. {recommended by the first three con- [defined In Article XI of the covenant, | 1 riltodlompen 8o A Koottt i enth drosipall bt g s g e gl ¥ Howevor unlike, they almost all | Therefore, the only possible path |gresses of the Intornational Labor | Lo uestions that scem to threaten the | ™*COMMendations of the commission | Grikis said there should e Alar ivery | BAEIAS BA4 cpttisnias express or imply the same conviotion; |10 cooperation in which the Unisel |Orgunization, have already been laid |eace of the Old World. When the | NOWE bo Prosented from time to time, | riages. (e year's figure being very | flagrant and continuous. = 'hat this is the time for the nations 'States can take an increasing share |Lefore the senate of the United States | United States is willing to bring the mbly a8 10 & recommending |67, L o | aloon leaguers” Repressntative Kill of the earth to admit frankly that [is that which leads toward some form (and, without objection, referred to |two haives of the world together for lawmaking bods 71" Announcements in the catholic |declared, “can not enlist public senti- war is a_crime and thus withdraw the {of agreement with the world as now |the appropriate committee, No dift- | friendly - consideration of common | = 0 L B SRR e L ARROROEIERTE e e ment in Georgia to enforce the Vol legal and moral sanction oo long rwr-!(mnluxl. called the Leaguo of Na- | ferent procedure would have been fol- | dangers, dutics and nceds, it will be |, FEORE TIE SRCHONR BUIOSES | churches w el B | stead act.” mitted to it as a method of sottiing | tions, lowed if the United States were a ’l".f:nilhl 1“:0 ..O.»u.n*." it bl: l* ;l o | Number I1T is a logical consequence 1l be no requiem mas Mr, Hill asserted that the Georgia international disputes, = Thousends| By sheor force of social interna. |Womber of the labor orgunimation of | o & runitations and the Pan. |O! the refusai of the United States|this week, yosterday being tho Feast|representative was not qualified 'to of plans show a decp aspiration 10 |tional gravitation such cooperation lllw league. { . & ” " |senate to ratify the treaty of Versaile [of the Epiphany speak for the “majesty of the law" i the maintenance of international jus- | mside if not Tave the United States tuke the lead | becomes inevitable, Adherence to Vermanent Court | AMerican union, already a potentiul | nd of the settied policy of the Men of the parish will go to con- | because “he sits in the house in direct in & common agreement to brand war United States Cooperation A third immediately practicable | Teglonal league. It is concelvable States which is chamoterized | fossion next Saturdey cvening and | violation of the fourteenth amend- fn very truth an “outlaw.” The ' Usited Btates government, |step is the smatc's approval of the | (NRS the famlly of nations may cven- | W0, g™ Lopervation. Concerning |communion Sunddy morning. ment to the constitution.” The plans shows a realization that | theoretically maintalning a policy of |proposal that the United States ad- |{U4ll¥ clearly dofine certaln powers [ 5 ™y (s ay be said 0 Officers will be gnataled at u meet-| *In making this charge” Me, Hill no adequate defonsc against this|isolation, has actunlly gone far, since | here to the Permanent Court of Iner. | 410 GUUES 0f relutively local Signifl- | ay gy Jou than a world-confer- ing of the Ladies T. A. & B. Socicty said, “T am not making an attack situation bas thus far been devised; | March 4, 1921, toward “cooperation |national Justice for the reasons and ,;’:;;:l"nzfl')j‘fl"l";“"' ""'"'I""‘(‘,‘"""']'f‘ Ui lof heing an allimnee, rather than a Thursdiy cvening. against the suffrage laws of the south v sy W framily of nation The United Rev. Raymond J who has which are acquiesced in by & majority nhd that no international law hu}wuh other nations to achieve and pre- | under the conditions stated by Secre- \ X busines 1 f & beeh developed to control It. They [gerve the peace of the world.” tary Hughes and President Harding | ¥orld © e o piqanct 18 21| States can vender service in empha- boen i1l for sceveral weeks 18 reported of the nation, but I am charging that point out that sccurity of life and | The most famillar part of the story |in February, 1923, <"‘“‘i ““'Ijj‘ 2 ’; ,“"""‘;";Y SCICD" [ oizing this lexson, leamed in the to be rogaining his health, He will be those who sit as & result of acquics- property is dependent upon the aboli- {js the work of the Washington con- | These three suggestions for ine | U pdediagn. dobb-emdlomguis it ":" 4TC | Hague oon w, and in thus helps obliged to take a long rest after being ced-in-nullification should not impro- tion of war and the cessation of the |ference, wherein President Harding's |crcasing cooperation with the family |Ieurly so. Msolation of any kind s [, %00 ronncitute the family of na- discharged from the hospital. During perly charge law violation to those manufacture of munitions of war. |administration made a beginning of | of nations are in barmony with poli- | Mereasingly impossible, and world |tlons ax 1t really is. Such a confer- his absance the La Salette missioners who by entirely legal means seek to Some of the plans labor with the | nayal disarmament; opened to China |cles alreudy adopted by our govern. OTEmnization, alrcady cemtralieed, s | . 0" 0o ic miiet obviously bear are filling the vacancy at St. Mary's remedy the intolerable condition of problem of changing the hearts of |a pospect of rehabilitation and joined | ment, and in the last case with u pol- | M0 more lkely o return o dison- |\ 5 00 LS 0L PR T e charch Volsteadism.” mien and disposing them toward peace | with Great Britain, Japan and France [icy so old and well recognized that | Pected effort than the United States | (00 000 05T LT (0L SO0 St. doseph's Church Mr. Hill said he was elected to the and good will; some lubor to find @ |to make the Pacific ocean worthy of (it may now be called traditional. [la Mkely to vovert to the Calhoun | o0, "d0iived to fit changed and| The Holy Name Soclety will attend |house with one of every five persdhs practicable means of dealing with the | jts name. They do not involve a question of |UWCOFY OF state rights and soveeelon. |, i "conditions, to extend the communion next Sunday morning at | in his district voting while the ratio ceonomie causes of war; some labor Later came the rgcommendation | membership in the League of Nations Leagne Realizes Principle way of justice, and to help in pre- the 7 o'clock mass. in Mr. Upshaw's district was one of with adjusting racl animosities, [that the United States should adhere |as now constituted, but it cannot be of The Hague | verving peace A mecting of the Ladies Aid Society | cvery forty-four, or “2.75 per cent,” with producing a finer conception of 1o the Permanent Court of Interna- | dented that they lead to the threshold The operation of the league has | rationalism, ete,, ete, tional Justice, of that question. Any further step to- | theretore evolved a council widely Through the plans as a Whole run | Not long after that action Dresi- ward cooperation must confront the different from the body imagined by these dominant currents, dent Harding wrote to Bishop Gallor: | problem of direct relations between the makers of the covenant. It can That, it war is honestly to be pre- | [ go not belicve any man can con- | the United States and the assembly cmplo; p foroe but that of persua- vented, there must be a right-about- [rront the responsibility of a president and council of fifty-four nations in | shom @ woral influence, Its only face on the part of the nations in their | or the United States and yet adhere | the league actual powers are to confer and ad- attitude toward it; and that by some |4 the jdea that it Is possible for our (Fifty-seven states, including, Ger- | vise, to create commissions, to exer progressive agreement the manufac: | oountry to maintain an sttitude of 'many, are members of the Interna- clse inquisitive, conciliative and arbi- ture and purchase of the munitionsyiuiation and aloofness in the world.,” (tional Labor orgunization of the | tial functions, and to help clect | of war must be lmited or stopped. But since the proposed adhesion to leagne, There ure about sixty-five n- | judges of the permanent court That while no political mechanism |0 yermanent court would bring this dependent states in the world), In other words, the force of circus alone will insure cooperation among | ountry imto close contact one time Leagne Employs No Vorce stances s gradually moving the the nations, there must be some MR- 1,5 1oint with the League of Na- The practical experience of the leaugue into position upon the founda chinery of cooperation if the will 10 {gian0 4nd since such action Is strenu- |lcague during its first three and w tions so well laid by the world's lead cooperate is to be made effective; that |,y gpposed for esactly that rea- half years of life has net only crs between 1869 and 1907 in the mutual counsel among the nations 1€ | o, " s pertinent to inquire not only | wrought out, in a group of prece- | great international councils of that the real hope for bringing about the ),y much cooperation with the |dents, the beginnings of what might | period. The assemblies of the league disavowal of war by the open avowal league and its organs has been pro- |be called the constitutional law of and the congresses of the interna of its real causes and open discussion | ,.,..q during the life of the present |the league, but it has also shifted the | tional labor organizations arc suc of them, administration, but aiso how much emphausis in activities of the league cessors to the Hague conferences, Finally, that there must be s0M© |0 peon aetually begun, and toreshadowed important modifi- I permanent court has at least means of defining, recording. I guprasented On League Commissions cations in its constitution, the cov- begun to realize the highest and terpreting and developing the law of | ygo iniied States government has | enant. purpose of the second league con nations, |accredited its representatives to sit | At its birth the covenant of the | ference, The Jury of Award unanimously |, . mombers “in an unofficlal and con- league bore, vaguely in Article X he secrelariat and the labor selected the plan given below as the | g capacity” upon four of the land more clearly in Article XVI, the | cffice have beeome continuation com one which most closely reflected 56V |y 00 important social welfare com- impression of & general agreement to mittees for the administrative work eral of these currents, ;. |missions of the league, viz: Health, enforce and coerce. Both of those | of the organized world, such us the The Honorable Eilthu Root, chalf-|gpny,p - traffic in women and chil- |articles suggest the action of a world- | Hugy man of the Jury of Award, then BFe- |0 0 " ung anthrax (industrial hy- state which never existed and dovs | to create but would have pared the following forward-looking o .o, not now cxist. How far the present |see satement indieating that the mutual '™ 6,0 povoinment s a full member | leag Is _actually removed from | The council, resolving counsel and _cooperation among the | o0 "o "1 urnutional Hydrographic | functioning’ as such u state is suffi- | large theorles into cleancut and mod nations provided in the selected Plan |y, \\ 4n organ of the league. Uur [clently cxhibited in its dealings with | est practise, has been gradually ree tay lead to the realization of another, o\ pynunt wus represented by an |Lithuania und I'oland over Vilna and | onclling the league, as an organized ~-and not the leust Important—of the | L 0. 0 ohuerver” tn the Hrussels |their common boundary, and with | world, with the 1dcals of fntornational dominant desires of the Amerlean | o . .nce (finance and economic Greeee and Italy over Corfu, interdependence, temporarily obscurcd | public as expressed in the plans: commisston) in 1920, 1t sent Hon. Experfence in the last three years 1 by the shadows of the | “it I the unanimous hope of """vm—pn-n G. Porter and Bishop Brent has demonstrated probably insuper- Jury that the first fruit of the mulnl_ |to represent it at the meeting of the able difficuitics in the way of fulfilling counsel and cooperation among the | Lo ast May. in all parts of the world the flan league have brought 1o the sery nations which will result ""'"m':"' Our public health service has taken |promise of Article X in respeet to of the forees behind those ideals adoption of the plan sclocted will be | " "0 "0 o ogical congresses of |either its letter or its spirit. No o efficiency, scope and variety of up- |l a general prohibition of the m:;'lhfl cpidemics commission and has now expects the league council to peal that in 1514 would have scemed facture and sale of all materials |helped in the experimental work for 'try to summen armies and flocts, | ineredible { war. " [the standardization of serums. since it utterly failed to obtain even | It is common knowledge that public The purpose of the 4\m'rr|f'un lrm""{ Our government collaborates with |an international police force for the opinion and official policy n!" the Award is thus fulfilled: To reflect Inj, "0 Lo, T calth organization | Vilna disteict, Unitex] Siates have for a long tim® # practicable plan the dominating the | through the international office of | Kach nssembly of the leagie has withowt distiution of party. heen tional sentiment as expressed by the o Bo i at Paris, and with the vigorous «fforts to inter- favorable 16 Wermational conferenoes | jarge cross-section of the Am"l'""" agrieuiture committee of the league prot 1l modity Article X. In the for the common welfare, and to the public taking part in the Award. =, o "o o, ization through the inter rih assembly an attempt to adopt establishment of conciliative, arbitral . T g o B g ‘”Tm?f rational institute of agriculture at an Interpretation of that article in amd judicial means for settling inter- strain on the hard-working kidneys. The ommended by many New Britain people plan a8 unanimously sciected, Py e | Rome. essential agreement with the senn- national disputes, kidneys are apt to fall behind in keep- Ask your neighbor! """.°';A&:':;;"dor;}:w7.,'h’, ‘“L In Webruary, 1923, Secretary |torial reservation on the same sub- There is no reason to belic s ment of - Hughes and President Harding form- | ject in 1920 was blocked only by a the judgment and policy ha “Us ¢ ay ¢ N itai D : tained by the counsel and cooperalion |, "o ommended that the senate |small group of weak states like Ter changed. Along these same lines the Use Doan’s” Say These New Britain People: provided in the plan. to (Re IWETERE |, orove our adhesion to the perma- |sia and Panama, which evidently at- beagwe #e wow plainly crysalliving. and the widest possible vote of nent court under four eonditions or |tributed to Article X a protective s hms deen shown, and at touch American VW:’iJW)\l‘D W. BOK reservations, one of which was that [ power that it posscsses only on paper. of the nited States the process can *9 » s the United States should officially Huch states, in possible fear of un- | e expedited. Statement of Jury of Award participate in the eleetion of judges friendly neighbors must decide in no other way ecan the organized 4 The Jury of Award reallzes 1hat by (40 qesembly and councll of the whether the preseriation of & form world, from which the 1nited States there 18 no one approach 1o world ... sitting ss electorn! colleges of words in the covenant is more vital cannet be peace, and that it i necemsary 10 1o, yhat purpose to thelr peace and security, and 1o the ally separated, belt the power of put recognize mot merely political but! y.omicial cooperation from the | peace and seeurity of the world, than | le opinion 16 the new machinery, de also prychological and economic 8- 1 nieeq States with the work of the the presence of the Unfted States st vieed for the pacific settlement of con tors. The only possible pathway 10 |j.ague inciudes membership in five |the council table of the family of na- troversies betwesn nations and stand- intarnational agreement with refer- | or ha social weifare commissions or | tions ing always ready for use enee to these complicated and AIi- | 0 iees of the league, In one on As to Article XVI, the couneil Should Participate eult factors is through mutual coun- | weongmie reconstruction, and in one |of the league ecreated a blockade | The United States gosornment sel and cooperation Which the plan | (aajand isiands) which averted a war. |commission which worked for two should bs authorized 1o propose co- selected contemplates. It s therefore | smerican women serve as expert as- | years to determine how the “economic | operation with the leagwe and par the unanimous epinion of the jury sessors upon the oplum and traffic | weapon™ of the leagus could be effi- | teipation in the work of s assembly that of the 22,165 plans submitted, i women commissions. |ciently used and uniformly appiied. 'and council under the following ton- Plan Number 1469 is “the best prac- | Two philanthropic agencles in the | The commission failed to discover | ditlone and reservations ticable pian by which the United |'nited States have hetween them |any obligatory procedure that weaker | 1. The United States -socepts the | States may cooperate with other na- | pledged more than $400, {0 sup- powers wonld dare 1o accept. 1 was | League of Nations a« an instrament | “aus to achieve and preserve ihe |part either the work of the epi- |finally agreed that each state must of mutual counsel but &t will assume ' Clabby Winter Find You Tired and Achy? Do You Suffer Constant Backache—Feel Old anq Worn Out? Then Follow the Advice of These New Britain Folks! 0 YOU get up the winter morn- ing the blood-stream pure, and poisons D ings feeling tired, weak—achy all accumulate that well kidneys would over? Are you so lame, stifl and conferene acke resources rejoiced to loose and have filtered off. miserable it seems yvou can never get back in trim? Does your back ache with a dull, constant throb? Shaip. 5 ic tiiere are headaches, too, with 1-)\»'\lr‘u.‘|H(‘ pains torture you at every g 7ziness and distressing kidney irregu- step larities. Nerves are “jumpy”; one feels Then you siould bx giving some at- 14 all worn out. {fention to vour kidnevs Winter, vou know, is danger time for Give the kidneys, That's because exposure to they need. Use Doan's Pills—a stimu colds and chills wears down body resist ant diuretic to the kidneys. Dean's ance and throws an unusually ave helped thousands. They are rec Racking backaches come with stab- ¥ that the organs of | bing pains; muscles and joints ache con- vour w kened kidneys the help nitnessed heavy reonomically ar pirity Doan’s Pills Stimulant Diaretic to the Kidneys At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y.

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