New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 9, 1924, Page 14

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republican national committee, whose ertheimer claims he accepted the| peal to the government to start a husband, the late Colonel Battelle, as horses merely on trial and turned | cimpaign against the disease tra- | them over to Wugene Leigh, Ameri-|coma, which he says affects thousands his friend Warren G. Harding for the | can trainer, with orders that they be | of. victims in Spain owing to the lack | presidency { | of precautions against it such as are []Hl[] ARE FUR GAL l« Col. William Cooper I'roctor of Cin- ci lof Mr. Andr iyean, the gen- | eral secretary of the reparation com- mission. The time of the committee Pierre Wertheimer, Leading French ’ taken care of until Brindley disposed common in othér countries. The doc- nnati, is another ecandidate from l'of them. Leigh was unable to collect either from Wertheimer of Brindley | tor says the discase affects most wide- this state for delegate.at-large. He is | ly the districts of Barcelona, Valen- the only one of the lot who was not | for the amount of the horses’ board and finally sold the racers to a Paris | cia, Alicante and Almerta, where .n is a pre-convention Harding man four Paris, April 9.--A verdict in favor | butcher shop, The court today upheld | spreading in alarming proportions. vears ago. He was one of the most | of Pierre Wertheimer, leading French | M. Werthcomer's claim that there was | Even in Madrid and its surrounding prominent backers of the candidzcy | racing man, was returned today in the | no proof of sale to him, | provinet an increase of cases recently of General Leonard Wood. snit brought against him by David | — Rac Man, Gets Verdict in Suit Over Sale of Horses. “In speaking of my colleagues and | Tells Washington It I5 Metbod 0 vore e it bt oo | Primaries Toere Will Be Held on as bearing upon the value of this re- "~ Nid Buvopean Rebiabiltation 15" 7 "8t e | has been reported, and in Valladolid the officials returns are alarming. !ings, has been given largely to inves- { tigation and study. | Not Hampered Ragta et | port, I feel that I should make known in no case limited their complete in- | Brigadier ( the unofficial on fhe first which examined into the economic and finuncial sithation in Germany, in a covering lefler to the report of his committee tells the rep- aration commission that the comrnit- tec's recornmendations “must be con- sid d not as inflicting penalties, but as suggestive means for economic recovery of all people and the eniry upon a new pe- rlod_of happiness and prosperity un- menaced by war.” The covering Dawes. follows “To the president of Paris, Charles American conrmitte April 8. G. Dawes, presentative letter of General the reparation “Your commiltee has unanimously adopted a report upon the mcans for balancing the German budget and the measures to be taken to stabilize its currency which I now have the honor responsibi to your commission and to the universal conscience, the com- | mittee bases its plan upon those prin- ciples of justice, fairness and mutual | interest in the supremacy of which | not only the creditors of Germany | and Germany itself but the world also | have a vital and enduring concern. | “With these principles fixed and accepted in that commongood faith which is the foundation of all busi- | ness and the best safeguard for uni- | versal peace, the committee's recom- | mendations must be considered not as inflicting penalties but as suggest- ing. means for assisting the economic recovery of all Eurogean peoples and | the entry upon a new period of hap- piness and prosperity unmenaced by war, | Pay To The Limit | “Since, a8 a result of the war, the ereditors of Germany are paying taxes to the limit of their capacity, #0 also must Germany be encouraged to pay taxes from year to year to the limit of her capacity. Thil is in ac- | eord with the just and underlying | principle of the treaty of Versailles, reaffirmed by Germany in its note of | May 29, 1919, that the German ! wcheme of taxation must be ‘fully as | heavy proportionately as that of any | of the pow represented on the | commission.” More than this Nmit could not be expected and less than | this would relieve Germany from the common hardship and glve to her an | unfair advantage in the Industrial eompetition of the future. The plan | of the committes emhodies this prin- | eiple. “The plan has been made to include | flexible adjustments which from the very beginning tend to produce =& maximum of coutributions conslstent with the eontinued and increasing | productivity of Germany: the con- servative esatimates of payments to be | dependence of judgment and action, feither hefore or after their appoint- eral jment by the reparation commission. | {Limited only by the powers granted the commission, each of my col- gues has performed his work as a free agent: these men seagching for truth and advice thereon ' were an- {swerable only in their consciences, In granting this freedom, the govern- ments have on the same lines follow- od the cdmmission’s spirit and intent Lut in o doing they have paid the highest tribute which governments for advice, the committee called fo can bestow, namely complete con- fdence in a”time of crisis in human affairs, 5 ‘In their vision, in their independ- ence of thought, and above all in their spirit of high and sincere purpose, [ which rises above the small things over which the small so often stum- bie, my colleagues have shown them- sclves worthy of this tru “That their which 1 now place in the commission’s hands, may assist in the discharge of the commis- sion’s great responsibilities is their ayer and the knowledge hereafter that it has done so will be their full veward, (Signed) “CHARLES G. DAWES, “Chairman.” wor WASHINGTON SILENT ONDAWES' REPORTS Will Study Recommendations Before Making Any Statement Washington, April 9.—Officials here will study in detail the reports of the speclal committees set up by the yriparations commission before at- tempting to comment. There is no attempt, however, to conceal the hope of the American government that the reports will be found acceptable to the allied powers and that in them the.key to the settle- ment of he reparations tangle will be discovered. Tt 18 realized ‘that the crux of the European situation lies in the settle. ment of reparations and no adjust- ment of other problems, however im- portant they may be from an eco- nomic standpoint can be effected un- til & definite and accepted basis has been found for tlie discharge of repar- ations claims, If the European pow- ers reach an agreement on the ex- peris’ plan for reparations settlement, it is assumed by those in closest touch with the administration’s forelgn pol- icy that BEurope will have arrived at 1he point described by Secretary Hughes in his New Haven speech $n December, 1922, where “the avenues v | Mr Rpril 29 Columbus, April 9.—1f President Coolidge is victorious in Ohio in oh- taining pledged delegates at the April 29 primaries, he will have behind his candidaey In this state virtually the ’”‘l‘" : e same organization that helped Mr, | Managing the Coolidge campaign in Harding to victory in 1920, With few ny_n Buckeye state is Mr, Harding's old exceptions, it ix the Harding home. [Fi*nd and neighbor, Hoke Donithen state forces that constitute the Cool. . ©f Marion, and the of candidates idge pre-convention or; zation. for delegates to the convention from Heading the Coolidge list of candi. e 22 congressional districts of the dates for delegate-at-large to the StAl® is replete with the names of Cleveland convention is the name of | . HArding” men and women and’ of |the most faithfnl of all “Harding | “0rsanization republicans.” | men,” Attorney General Harry M. g Daugherty. Next is the name of the man whose thundering speech at the Ghicago con- vention of 1920 placed the Ohioan in the lists for the nomination, U, §, Sen- ator Frank B, Willis, ¢ Another candidate for delegate clusing of the c sea by an im |large under the Coolidge banncr is incuse ice which 1h> most ames Gordon Battelle of Colum- powirful ice hrealers have found im- bus, associate member for Ohio of the possible to pens‘rate. The Coolidge list of delegate-at- large eandidates is completed by U, Senator Fess of Ohio, Charles 1 Knight of Akron, former congress man, and Mrs, David Tod of Youngs- Winter Severe Sweden has. exper- need the st winter in a cen- Cowmlditions along the seaboard, ch. have for ny weeks e ex- al, now o culminat-«i in the ftockholm -- Hyntin’ and Fishin’ Great on New Park | Above photograph is of Chicken Bone lake. Lower left— A map of Isle Royale. Lower right—A Moose taking his daily bath, Uncle Sam's going to have another national park. It is Isle Royale, 58 miles out of Houghton, Mich., in Lake Superior. The land comprises 132,000 acres of virgin forest. 1t abounds with remarkable and rare specimens of American wild life, 1t is the habitat of 1800 moose and 400 unusual woodland caribou, sharp tailed grouse and other wild fowl. On it are 21 inland lakes ¢ of Dublin. Brindley saked ancs as payment for, two Irish jumpers sent to Paris with the inten- tion that they become stublemates of Wertheimer's great Epinard. Domino Pow- dered Sugar to sweeten cereals and fruits. It tastes better and is correct. Sweeten it with Domino™ Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown; | Golden Syrup Cinnamon and Su Molz ar; Sugar-Hopey . TRACOMA SPREADING IN SPAIN. Madrid, April 9.—Doctor Jenaro Gonzalez, the famous Spanish oph- /thalimie physician, in an open letterto | the newspapers, makes an urgent ap- Lowell, Mass.—*‘I am sending you a few lines to let you know what good your medicine has done for me. I want Kou 1o let every one know that it has helped me in nervous troubles. 1 have four children and you know there is a lot to do where children are, They would come in from school and they would start telling me about theif little troubles but I could not stand it. I had to send them away. I could not even walk on the street * alone I was so nervous. I found one of your books and read it and then I saw in the paper about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. 1 ot it and had taken one bottle when saw a change in myself. 1 was sur- prised. The children can talk all they want to now and it does not bother 1 am still taking the Vegetable Compound.’'~Mrs, JOSEPH 34 South Street, Lowell, Mass, Felt Like A New Woman Springfield, Missouri.—*‘For four or A’ve months I was run-down, ‘ner- vous, my back ached and I did not feel like doing a thins. Sometimes my legs ached and felt like they |- would break and I had a hurting in my sides. I had been reading in the newspapers the letters of other wo- men who had taken Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound and the advertising of it appealed to me so ight some and suw results in al- There are 618 colleges and univer- sities in the United States. m NERVOUS & HALF-SICK WOMEN Relieved by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound These Three Letters Prove It - most no time. I had hardly been able to do my own work and after the Vegetable Compound I felt liles & new woman. I recommend it to m; friends who have troubles like I did, and hope they will find the same re- sults,”’—Mrs, M. CARPENTER, 607 W. Chase Street, Springfield, Missouri. 40 Years Old, Feels Like 20 igerstown, Md.— ‘I was very bad off with backache, a bearing-down feeling in my body and a pain in my left side. I could not be on my feet at times and once I was sv walked bent over to oneside for threo weeks, My sister read of Lydis E. Pinkham' {Iegeubln Compound end ot me a bottle. I got so much relief at I took more until I was well. I am 40 years old and feel like 20. I am sure this medicine will help all women."--Mrs. MARY E. BANDY, 436 W. Franklin Street, Hagerstown,Md. Over 100,000 women have so fur replied to our guestion, ‘‘Have you received benefit from taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetab! nd?” 98 per cent of these replies are “Yes ' Thut means that 98 out of every 100 women who tuke this medicine fur the ailnients for which itis recom- wnended ure benefited by it. Al druggists are having increased sules of this medicin Isn’t This Pleasant News For Every Woman? And about it cluster 100 made in the near future are dictated | by business prudence in outlining the | open Thopefull basis of a loan and should not destroy | Thev fewa: outlined hy Becretary the perspective as to the effects to be Hughes at New Haven when he pros, reglstered in the aggregate eventual posed that a small group of men ..",' payments which will ennually In- | (he highest authority in finance in ® 0 work out a ure whic' er- and with productivity restored in many eould pay md'- financial “1.'" Germany, the most hopeful estimates | ¢qp making the payments, are held by of the_amounts receivable are justi- 'him virtually unchanged by develop- fled. Without such restoration, sueh ;m-nu- which have since taken placs, paynients a8 may be obtained will be | myen rejection of the report by the of Iittle value in meeting urgent | paparation commission, it I8 felt, Reeds of creditor nations. [ would not take away ite value, since it Ensures Permancnce ' | will have served to enlighten public “To ensure the permanence of the | OPInIon and have given the world the mew economic peace belween the al. | Sdvantage of an impartial opinion. Med governments and Germany, which | That Vie® was expressed by Seere- involves the economic adjustments | fary Hughes in New Haven in these presented by the plan, there are pro- | WoOrds: vided the counterparts of those usual 1f governments saw At to reject economie precautions against de- | {Ne récommendation upon which such moralization which are recognized as * body agreed, they would be free to essential in w1l busiriens relations in. =90 50, but hiey would lave the advan- Yolving express obligations. tage of impartial ld\-_h-a and of an “The existence of safeguarde in no | ®NIEhtensd public opinion. Peoples Ay hampers or embarrasses the cyse would be informed, the question of ordinary business contrmcts The | WOUld be rescied from Assertion and thotough effcctiveness of those safc. | “OUNter assertion, and the problem guards should 1ot embarrass the nor. | PUL UPON it way to solution. mal economic functioning of Ger many and is of fundamental import- | ance to Germany and her creditors. Great care has been taken in fixing | J 2514, premier and foreign minister, | he conditions of the supervision over | 'A% offered the site for an American Oormlny‘l internal organization o as | embassy at Angora, the new Turkish #o impose & minimum of interference | CAPItAl, to the American high com- eensistent with proper protection, The | Miksioner. Rear Admiral Bristol plan shbmitted is fair and reasonable in its nature and, If accepted, is likely to lead to witimate and lasting peace. The rejection of these proposals by | the German government means the deliberate choice of a continuance of - economie demoralization, eventually involving her people in hopeless misery. of American helpfulneas cannot fail to |and several swift trout streams. # smaller islands. One of the most admirable chancrer. istics of the American Woman is her ready acceptance. of mprovement pertaining to the welfare of her home o §ITITA and family, N Tell her a piece of news and her first expression is *‘ never knew that before—your suggestion is good—I will follow it,"” And it is just this constant desire for improved and economical cooking methods that has made Mazola so popular for snorTENING-—-and why it has taken the place of butter in so many homes, . ¢ & Tt is the ('.\”pt‘fl't’llff of thousands of women that Mazola shortens cake so that it is better grained, light as a feather—without crumbling. In richness, a Mazola-made cake is equal to one made with butter, yet without your having a feeling, after eat- ing, that it's “wo rich.” e | iy - OFFERS EMBASSY SITE Constantinople, April 9.—Tsmet And, not only does Mazola cost less—but you use less. Mazola contains no moisture-— so you use !4 to 15 less than the amount specified for butter. Mother Love OTHER love demands aHeywood- Wakefield Baby Carriage—be- cause 98 years of cxperience have shown Heywood-Wakeficld designers every re- quirement for baby's comfort and pro- tection, Look for A Quality Seal on Every Wheel. 1t is a Red Hub Cap with the letters H-W in gold, distinguish- ing Heywood-Wakefield Carriages from all others, and assuring you of a carriage built to fit your baby. There is no particular *‘are’® wou using Mazola for making any kind of a cake-—<cith any recipe. Merely use 14 to 15 less Mazola than you would use butter, The same applies for making pie crust-—for which Mazola has a national reputation. Just follow your recipe—and use less, Covers Broad Field “In the preparation of this report the committee has ecarefully covered & broad field of investigation, It haa had the constant cooperation of able . #taffh of experts in gathering informa tion. - Digesting it and presenting it The committee has conducted on the ground an examination of off the German government and sentative of German labor. agriculture and Industry. It has received from the German government and its rep- resentatives veluminous and satisfac- to written connection with varions report, both for the ng information and When you think of shortening—think of Mazola, Use it once and you will never go back to using butter or lard. T T T T LT T of A Better dealers everywhere are showing beautiful, new models in a wide variety of designs and colors. They are priced within the reach of every purse. repre- PLEASE DON'T FORGET “Masola is as delicious and good to eat as the corn from which it comes,” tory answers in response We Carry a Full Line of Heywood- Wakefield BABY CARRIAGES John A. Andrews & Co. The Big Furniture Store 132 Main St. L 72 inquiries. In Ask your desler about Hey. avood-Wakefield Reed and Fibre Furniture, Wood Chairs, Cocoa Brush Door ‘Mats and other products— backed by 98 years of sue- cessful manufacturing ex- features of purpose of tor advice s aseictance on rational reports and statement of worM-wide standing have fta hands. 1t has had accumulated an The commitiee ealled to ide experts of Inter- The published of economists been in reputatior alen the bemefit of the | rma heretofore gathered sion In fta work the full committes has Peld since January 14 1 forty ®ight meetings. The sub-committee on the stabilization of currency, com posed of M. Parme gir 1 N Kindesiey. M. Emile Franqui and Pro fessor V. Fiora. assisted by Mr. Henry M. Robinson and under the chalrman #hip of Mr. Owen D, Young has held SISty -cight meetings, and the sub- committce alancing the Germa Budget. composed of M. Alix, Houtart and Dr. Pirelli, under the | ehairmanship of Sir J. C. Stamp, hn‘ L e T tier A T Ii(lllllilll(lllll(llllllll“lllllll""fl“llIII(Il(lll(ll!("(lllllllllllfll(lllllHlllllll(lllllu Lok for A Quality Seal on Every Wheel The seal is a red hub cap with gold letters O O O e S OO T RS aron " N Boid sixty mectings. These sub-com- Mittees g e aizo had the assistance

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