New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 27, 1925, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1925, J :: FRFN[;H PAYMFNT S —————— credible to a nation that eannot at- l '"' 4 4 No 9 ” Approves Generosity 4 3 a‘ On the other hand the Dally News asserted that the governmi : HINGESONL.S. A~ @ mus st dse FUNDING TERMS st | . treme gonerosity” and thinks it : S ——— | sPec‘ialbr ds ought to he recognized “that no e iy 3 i papeoea < debtor in the whole history of the | Pt f} Y 3 Will Pay England if Negotiations for g&la {world ever haa been treatea o ve- | FiISL Redction to- Proposal Is L e . fore," R, L Here Succeed LL of that delicious, ple | THI® newepuner jide M. Callinux's Favorable : quant, appetizing mus- | offer as the most definite advance g tard " taste—such taste a8 |over anything yet suggested. “It is e London, Aug. 27. (M —Cansiderable only the world's finest mus- a gentleman's offer and 1t deserved | Paris, Aug. 27 P—The first of- 18 Furprize, #nd not altogether pleasyr. tord seeds can give. Mixed the consideration it received,” it cial reactlon to the tentative debt 2l able, has been aroused here by the with rich olive oils, vinegar |adds, | runding agreement reached by tarms of the of the French debt to Great Britain, as arranged yeste uy between \Win ston Spencer Churehill, « of the exchequer and Jose provisional settlement aneellor | aged in wood like port wine, spices from far seas, Gulden's newmild Saladress- ing Mustard makes an in- While remarking the diserep- | ancles {n the statements of Mr. Churehill and Mr, Calllaux regard- ing the proposed settlement, which | Vinance Minister Caillaux with the Rritish chancellor of the exchequer is favorable, although no officlal communication on the subject will t h Caillaux comparable touch for salads, it says must he cleared up, the | he forthcoming until after M. Call " the French minister of finance | entrees, sandwiches. Deli- Morning Post declares the result “Is | |aux's return from London this eve : “Each of us had to put a little vious as a sauce for fish. An sufficlent to justify a feeling of re-| ning, f water in our wine " said M inestimable aid to good cooks Haf. If not complete satisfaction.” Tt A general note of relfef that theie i in discussing the terms of the everywhere. adds that the whole situation has | fas been no “French surrender” fs 1. ment, ‘under which France would | At all grocers. 15c. heen changed for the hetter, expressed in both official and pews 4 pay her debt of £25.000,000 pounds | The Westminster Gazetfe, MWke | paper circles. Tha suggestion thut 8 in sixtyv-two annual payments of 12 others of the newspaper, lays em- | England have an officlal observe . 500,000 pounds each, If France's | asls on the influence of the United | iy Washington when the IFrenc -8 fiagotiations for wip to the United § tary and if the Irench government £ives its approval British Opinion ont he s prove salisfac While r ] opinion that the dilution deferred to Ly M. Caillaux will prove good for both countries, there are others who very strongly ex D that Great Britain is getting too much of the water and 50 much of the wine ever, has not yet been finally mixed, and the people N awaiting to <ee whether the fort heoming Franco- American 1 about a prohibitory influence cuggested composition of the French debt A2 Yearly Payments some P ns are of Press the vie I'rance gotiati hring on the Anglo- One adverse criticlem of the pro- posal that France make the ¥- two annual payments s that if this basis epted, it would impose npon the British taxpayer the pavment of a larger proportion of the Interest on the Freneh war debt and this is re- lon than on the taxpayer garded as an imposs from the British standpoint Another ol n 13 fo t posed for 'rance 1930 French tre would be relicved of aiding the Bank of -France fo liguidate its debt of 0,000,000, francs to the B England. It is considercd as th tive moratorium was in M. Caillaux's statement 1 the tentative 4 ment and that Mr Churchill's gtatement did refer pro moratorium until when the 1S planation apparent of the een the and question, n winfster while tl ments of M. Caillaux Charehill on the which the French mentioned a moratorinm chancellor of debt finar the exchequer mad arrange- circles no reference fa such an ment, was given in officlal today 1t was an understans hetween goternments by which Great Brit- ain wonld at first receive enly small payments on the Trench account Under the tentative arra ment feached here, however, these wonld he increased to such an extent that Great Britain would be compensated later. and the average would work out at (about $60.000,000) yearly Anyiety 1s Felt Anxlety s agarters lest the provisional settle ment if ratified, should Brifain in the position of from Aebtors to meet her payments to the United States. This possibility is commented on by the Times, which assumes that potitical, rather than finaneial, con been the tw had alwaves pavments £12,500,000 espres i some put Great recelvn leht | . The potion, how- | Mr. | less than enough | hew SALADRESSING MUSTARD silerations decision influenced to scale the British the British This newspaper thinks there may be 4 reason for this sinee s in the interest of both Irance Great Britain to remove an rd and thorny problem. But it sts on the importance of main- taining the condition attached to the Dritish that relatively larger payments by France to the United States shall antomaticaly be wccompanied by similiar payments to Great Britain. down sou off any Important Reseryations The Daily Telegraph, laying stress npon the same point and approving Mr. Churehill's reservation that Great Britaln cannot accept less favorable treatment from TFrance than ehe wually conceedes to the United remarks that this reservation the Anglo- I'ranco purely hypothetical, The [newspaper sees the danger that “this rather rious Anglo-French agre ment may be misconstrued in Amert- whole ca into a jolnt attempt to place the United [if she shonld d reneh request and res settlements Belginm in Anglo-French conditions.” “Should cline the the recent tain and to grant with Gre aceord America,” the Daily Tele | &raph “insist her standard rate of 314 per cent inter- st on the Erench debt, the situation continues on Great whieh rassing to Tritain {wonld bhe hound the pre 2 per cent, 1o 3'3 per cent, a strong France the to raise | ent the risk of arousing a clamor of indignation 1n Viewed from this standpoint { provisional agreement does not seen advantageous any | more than | Rritain." | calls Tt Bad Rargain | The Daily Chronicle eavs Mr | Churehin rushed inta a had bar- gain which fs paralieled | premier Baldwin's precipitated |agreement Secretary of the | Tre: v Mellon | “We had not conceired | ble.” declares the Dafly Telegraph, “that in thls mement of financial stress tha government would have gone further i than themselves and predecessors already had one. to averburden diplomatically financially for only with it possi- | generosity | their ! 1 15 an Injustee Tritish the tax- The Dally pew surrender | fnanclal wea Fxpress “This (B AR T O hardly saye ness which tes in an mnvidious position | with the | created would be especially embar- | Great | ates on the entire situation. Tt Cireat Britaln, France and the Unifed {thinka 1t extremely ineanvenient that | the matter cannot he settled between | | #and Americans discuss their deb! settlement is recelved without en thuslasm, {t being felt here that the Unlted States may desire to deal | States together, “There will b finallty untll Lendon and Washinz- understand ene another” the newspaper declares, | toan the partial moraterium ralates to a serfes of small graduated annuities, etarting with one from 2,000,000 pounds te 3,000,000 pounds, Ac- cording to the Marning Post there is z0ad reason to belleve that M. Cafl- lanx's disenssions of the situation Iwith &r Montago Norman of I Rank of Fngland. and Reginald Me Kenna. director of the Landan Cify and Midland bank, may lead tn oventual lean hy the Bank of Fng 1and to the Bank of TFrance, the Frost Nips Blossoms in Wellesley Farms Garden Wellesley Farms, Mass, Aug. 27 (P —Y¥rost tipped the gladiolis in Mrs, Joseph J. Glaney's garden this morning, the day after the ther meometer had touchs it highest point on Aug. 26 since 1900, Men nho vesterday railed at the dictates nf fashion that demand coats were with topoecats on the Boston commuters' traing today <een TRADE AGREEMENTS Yarsaw, Aug. 27 (P-—Tha "Poi- A TPolish company organized wde with Russia, has completed reement with the soviet “vnie- | or effica for foreign trade. ta combine in a syndicate fo es-| plait what amounts ta a monopely af the trade between the two coun- tries. The syndicate will he empt from mast of the vexatious formalities and restricts imposed | upan erdinary trader: Tt will have a eapital nf ens mil ana-half of which the storg,” o moviet rables il he held by com each of panies WAITE VISA FEE! Reyiin: (P—Throvgh 2 ~xchange nf notes between horman. and ths for. farmal Ambassador & ¢ign office, the non-emigrants heginning October 1. Although visas will hni required as heretofore, they will be fested hy both governments mithout s for charge. INVITED TO RUSSIA | Paris, Aug. 27 (P—The Soviet gov-| Frnment has telegraphed Invitations| to the general federation of labor| and the communist federation of la- bar, hoth of which are nox meeting in Parie, to visit Russia The Daily Telegraph understands | ‘\un to London, has Unifed States and | many have agreed fo waive visa | directly and exclusively with France | without outside Interference or ob | servance M. Caillaux is returning to Paris |at £:30 this evening. A speclal | | council of ministers has been con- | voked for 0:00 p. m. to hear his ac | count of the Tondon negotiations. { and another will be held tomorrow | morning at ten o'clock. | The ministers met this mornine uuder the chairmanship of Presi. | ent Doumergue but refrained from liscussing the proposed debt st lement. in the absence of the financc | | minister, Only routine matters and the Moroccan and Syrian questions | were taken up. | Finance Minister Catllaux, by his | made A real rd settlement of the debt | puzzle, This Is the general senti ment of Krench opinion as voiced | in the newspapers of moderate tone and large circulation. Le Journal | goes even further, to say that M aillaux has achle one of the| greatest successes of his career. Nevertheless in the last resort, it | 15 held that everything depends on the U, §. The British condition, thas | if Trrance gives better terms to the . & than those offered to Great Britain fhose conditions shall anto matically be applied to the Franco Rritish debt, affords a moral argn ment of great to M Cafllans in the coming Washington \egotiations, the papes believe, The Petit Parisian. however, ob serves that no arrangement can he definite until the Unite States has | agreed to caleulate the amount of the French annual reduction pay ments at the same rate of interest as Great Britaln has done. Tt asserts that it 1s hard to be- that, when the Washington | gavernment s informed ac tn the to pay, it il refuse to take this into account in the same degree as “our English friends.” step tow impotance leve better French capacity Oplum in T Washington, | Aug (A—That teature ‘of the Anglo Trench debt settlement which involves the ques tion of the French abillty to pay is regarded here as having an impor- | tant hearing on tha forthcoming Franco-American debt discussion Acting Secretary Winston of | treasury sald that obviously | amount Franee agreed tn pay the Londen govern il | have to be coneidered by the Amer- fean debt commission when it an alvzes the capacity of the Trench nation to liquidate ts obligation here, Mr. Winston added the relationship of this overnr which owe i money here, the the has ant hawever, that t tn those nat! I{s strietly that of a creditor, while Vice-President Docs Tittle Announcing the reign of Brown as a Fall favorite Woodland Browns Deep in every man’s heart is a regard for the deep, warm tints of tan and brown. This Fall he can indulge that taste to his heart’s content. Woodland Browns are the newest, the smartest, the liveliest of shades. on one of these Kuppenheimer Suits N. E. MAG & SONS YE COLLEGIATE SHOPPE MAIN AT EAST MAIN DAWES 15 0 To Ob Just how smart you'll see when you try |ONE WONAN ENTERED ‘ [N-MOTOR ROAT RACE resume work Mon hoit promise whi tain the er Jay under a is consider when she was thrown from a oner and Into the path flr Vhich the director pursuit of a wagen lirector, Al Rogell, pes cerve Annfersary—Takes Care of ; oy : e i i G e oA Cromwell Will Pilot “Nuisance T alrea 2 ka2 Chicago, Ang. 27 (@—Vice "y"": in : ml”“l\" PERMITS, ~ C'harle G. Dav gave ttie Haberski nas grante er. ]’.a]:r:'wv‘(o];”v!cga:' (r} !‘V‘s §0th bir | hassett Bay Saturday o w:‘v~lv‘~g-;’;-‘.f “ He went to his offices and later was | e street, ost $16.000, and treated “exactly ax any for- [host at an informal Juncheon to fhe en m permit eign debt,”” and will ask far pavment | Japanese ambassador, Tsuneo Mat ; i L ° E houss at 113 {in full of princtpal and interest. He |sud 8 ] g s i L1000, | | was unable fo indicate In the afternoon he afte what amount wauld be regarded as [funeral of Edgar A. Banc the total eollectible, American ob- [ambassador to Japan, and ligations of the T'reneh gavernment [honorary pall bearer. He . {as ecomputed heretofore are larger lonly a small part of the dav with bv abont one-fourth than the amount |famjly and prepared to leave ton |the French Great Rritaln. for Mauston, Wis | Sama officlals feal that if the United invited to attend | States s to ba offered na mora pra- feounty fair led an invitation to speak |vetn, N. J., October 10, pices of elvic organizations. He nill g thers from y has a speaking en October 15, Prior to |trip he will visit the Pa START OF TTIGHT Rome, Aug. 27 (P11 1 the relationship betaeen the allfed | debtors and creditors is complicated in his opinion, by questions confined strictly to Enropean affairs The treasury will insist, Mr. Win ston said, that the French debt be Annual Frent at Man ACTRESS BURNED wood, & £ 27 () ew York AUTOMOBILE SALE other Dead man will however. 1000 USED CARS BETTER VALUES TO PICK FRO} where N Awe 1 bean the COULD NOT GIVE YOI Ford, Buick, Dodge, Chevrolet, Maxwell, Studebaker, Nash and many others THE CAR YOU WANT IS IN THIS SALE SATISFACTION—Drive the car 5 days. Tf you are not entirely satisfied at the end of that time BRING IT BACK. We will allow you every dollar paid on it to apply on the purchase of any other renewed car in stock. BRING YOUR WIFE TONIGHT AND GET THE CAR YOU HAVE ALWAYS WANTED sident Dawes has at ¥ {portlonately in annual pa {than Great Britain. the {artheoming negotiations with the will meet a hard obstaels The treasury expects the French negotiatians te begin abaut Septem- ber complling mas by the American eommission. Mr. Winston expressed the opinion today that Latvia scon would offer {acceptable terms for aays that Count Ewge debt which amounts in principal and [gran 1e. member of the ¢ intarest to about $6,550,000 |deputies and one of Ttaly's w |wil start on his 2 IR Lo {fiom Ttaly to Ar RATR CURLERS SAVE LIFF |10 T2l PR | Cushion Woman's Fall From Second Story as She Lands on Head. | New’ safe way ‘ : ‘ To Remove Hair —FOREVER No need now to undergo painful electric treatments to remove super- fluous hair; nor to apply ordinary in- effective hair removers which only re- move surface hairs. | Modernacience definitely proves that | the safest and surest way to remova | superfluous hair forever is by the re- S peated removal of the hair roots them TRAIN HITS TRUCK selvea. Since the discovery of Karma, Patchogue, L. I, Aug. 2% the marvelous new root-extracting n i) = il balsam, thousands of women, in the Trenn, 33 years old, was killed and ' ; Ernest Bruee, 18 vears old of 73| PTVECY of their own homes, have been Sweser street was serlously infured | 3bi€ to banish unsightly hair from face, G armsand legsaseasily and permanently in which ¥ TS ae the most expert beautv specialist. THGE wan Mnck yesterduy “| For Karma'smarvelous ingredients, noon by a Long Island raliroad train Y o T 3 > 4 applied almost as easily as cold cream, |hetween Patchogue and Riverhead. | peqeteate directly to the hair roots, jine Saiel Gl speedily loosen them, and gently lift | ) annuity under Dalf & mile down the tra them out—leaving the skin clean, e wi the engineer stop the train smooth and even lovelier than before. | No fuss, no bother, no growing back REPORT MINE FIELD of hair stronger than ever. The causs Bennett Motor Sales Co. { %, " 0“-’{[_ 250 AICh Street, New Brlta'ln, Conn' — (P—The Danish naval authorities| Get Karma today and try it! Itis given @ & S ’4 claim to bhave information that the | poeitively guaranteed to remove super- > | tatvian government hs laid a | fluoushairsafelyandforever—ormoney | I field between Libau and Steinort | refunded.Soldbyallgooddealerssuchas: (along the coast of Courland on the Farr Baltic sea). French under Atlanta a Al\E 3 you? If g0, come h .Ourregistered op you. Ca Wbt 1ot sxnerts herstare es of records for use MICHAELS, Ine. 351 Main St., New Britain, Conn, e N ran projected tina ahont § Lake Compounce Ballroom Friday Night, Aug. 28 Ed Kennedy and Miss Phyllis Wood In ““THE DANCING FOOLS” Also A NOVELTY PRIZE FOX TROT 3 Preliminary Contest for and State Championship With Ed Kennedy as Master of Ceremonies Camden, N. J. Aug. 27. (P—014 fashioned paper curlers and her long | halr saved the hife of Mrs. Wilhel mina Howard, 40 vears ol4, of 560 Spruce Street day morning, when she fell out of a second-story window and landed on her head on a brick pavement The somewhat antiquated styvle of | night headdrass €0 cushioned her fall that physicians at Conper Hospital eould find nothing but a slightly lanerated scalp. HIGGINSON ESTATE Wil Provides That Ranker's Widow [ i 1 [ I and Children Reccive Practically Entire Amonnt—Tofal Not Given “Frisco” T OPEN/SUNDAY when the truck truck was more than er this a esidne of the trust f O N = will b i Into equal shares f . Higginson's seven children. The fotal the estate Hivide value of METAL WORKERS BACR Brussels, Aug. 21 P—Metal work mine have strike for a month, today voted to Dwpt Aruggisa Store Lrug Lept. ead a

Other pages from this issue: