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) NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1929. 15 ';‘ul\llu(m parly in the south in process. It had been agreed to | lo demonstrate ihe fulility of the ) 1 Lot ST R T I | 2 5 | 1n torelgn attairs . Hoover hay[by most lcading powers. Ar|pact rvather than to strengthon it ) it e and that e Djuirement of « thice scar, contrass | Bgyptian Cabinet Quits; Hoover staged impressive White | 'Fhis interpretation. how e U A 3 ; ARSI NE S San R nCctCas R torR tho Rinat s e be extremely active. B 2o + ¥ g Lhaickads not |1 o A( 1 g i34 was announced | 3u s 4 " f [been estremely active. He taa re-| ;i CRCE iChionian " when: the mac |agreed (o by Seerstiry St = . TR e inciny | Slitent Ministry Only Temporary J [ [limitation which resulted o the| a8 officially proclaiucd Mr. Hoover is sccking fo ir ‘U RFMA'N | i “‘""”}’”‘ *| It is understood that the price or| Calro. LEgypf, Dec. 31 (P—The 5 L e § te 7 1 0 il 5 Re ‘ub ewsp f e last half a5y | B th y ¥, ‘ visit to the United States of Prime His first attempt to give it t ‘w :.Hum— in Haiti and ther b Ul figher i :vnflh;.”z;n::n.ll?\ : i;\al:-“‘ of 1634 K:lrio ;:.n nunistry resigned today. | Minister MacDonald and the calling | practical application came during |° clsowhore in latin-Anmerica he B ¢ o nent At el 25 hing, Bl will surmmoihusandy D : T‘ of the London arms conference for|the recent Itusso-Chinese trouble. | o7 m‘ oid (he st of forc . . committee ] i : fhie committe's announcemen{Nahis Bashas tades b the ol 0mestic loubles LO(}[]] Ahefl[lhu\n month. This achievement, if | Rut when Secretary Stimson call e R s Gl P[H)i]sl]e]‘s Heal‘ l[]C]‘efiQe ]01‘ S]X £ as understood fo imply that butlity party to form a Wardist jcal 2 Se[}[}fld Year A b ‘(.n'lmi through to a successful con- |the altention of lLiussia and China 7% ON¢! L sentment it A T R dog i lorer o annnt PEosuclis coms inat foac es clusion will end one expensive and {to their obligations under the pact s L St 1 o daned dia aper & Power 3 »any has not agrecd to retain the L o i he Iricc Brothers rice S : Adly Pasha, w ? m potentially dangerous kind of naval|Russia accused the United States of S Honths Abandoned " F ) RUC I b T fls ani e B0 el e e e e e e WOULT ELLL SHE CA e produccrs of newsprint and members w]»,] ubsequent price to be determin- | formed only a temporary cabinet for Washington, Dec (UP)— The | of serious disagreements with Lng-[so stinging that in many quarters' Migni Pla. Dec. 51 (--To pro- > wr) S caa e Anstiuto jeERS S the interim between resignation of 1w year will bring new worries o |land for years to come probably. |comment was made that the United |tect Dirds, s cment has been e o : e e g e tapthal a the Mahmoud Pasha cabinet and | J 1 as in- FCPEICSN0 ould be cou- 1 You hay ¢+3d all of the Her. {the general eclections a I'resident Hoover, Ir. Hoover came into office with [States had not been successiul in staric sell ¢ T Coconitl: S _ ! ; . . y . | few days He has only ten months of his, the Kellogg antl-war pact already |the incident and that ft bad served Grove, i i N ““"‘ s x rst six months uld until you have read the Classi- [ago. These resulted in a victory for i ikelihood of ¢ 1sc in the pries | Of 143 he previous re- | fi the ' @imBhehindShim-#EutitF hasibeeni| i S “nough to reveal that he has a| ractious Congress on his hands. } A\nd next spring and summer the | congressional elections will be held with every indication that an even | nore obsteperous Congress will be chosen Congress has been the source of | most of the worries which Presi- ient Hoover has struggled with in his first ye Succumbing to the wiles of Senator Borah in a per iasive moment, Mr. Hoover, while | | | | | ( Wil a presidential, candidate, | promised. if clected to call an| stra session of Congress to deal ! with farm relief | I sion met the second | month Mr. Hoover was ['resident | nd from that time his major rll(-i icultics began. Industrial interests | demanded some tarift incroases in | s much as agriculture to bel helped at the special session. Mr. | Hoover a at some industries | in special need of additional mmri protection should be helped. FBut | o did not speeify details. The | louse ways and means commit- | tee dratted a tariff revision bill | which granted hundreds of in-| creases provoked stronz dis- sent the farm belt Re- publicans Parm Reliefl Victory Congress had heen the farm relief bill The s . over the President's protest, added the farm debenture plan of relicf to the Administra- tion bill. The house refused to ac- ept it enabling Mr. Hoover to come ot victorious r much grum- bling in the Senate. The house followed this up by passing the tariff bill within a few days without any detailed consid- vation of its provisions on the floor. Democrats laid down heavy barrage of critici Jublican insurgents in the ipported them. The senate fi committee made =0 e House bill. But in the absence of any dircct word as to whether Mr. Hoover favored wholesale re- ision as the House had under- aken, the senate committee did not | ttempt. to climinate the numerous increase wholesale vas st wrestling \ the bill, | down on various iter the coalition of Democrats lican insurgents. The lexible tari(f provision which Mr. foover specially wanted to retain was stricken out hy the senate Senator Miram Bingz- Conn.. ¥ discovered e of the Con- cticut manufacturers’ association zovernment payroll and his sccretary into ons of the Senate jinance commiittee while ates | were being r 1. Bingham w; censured by formal vote of the or this deception. Lobhying Probe o incident led to w senate in-| tigation of lobbying which un- - 1 all manner of alleged usc ence and brought into thel i - = P oreground the picturesque and aged lobbyist, Joseph Ii. Grundy.| head of the Pennsylvania Manu- talk “durned s ‘0 the consternation of these ou ged senators Grundy wa ay pointed Governor Fisher as a L rom DPennsylvania after William Vare was unscated Tt 19 no dari prediction to say that| in th campaign next summer Democrats will attempt to make | Thtrdaveithioaore 1 fhe Tiepublican party answer for | ¥s this store is open unii TVVERY nicce T SRR S O } 1ol Duringl Novembes M0 20Mdes Sl e oR DM (o e i ) \ rl[\ piece of Watkins Furniture is handpicked by our own buy- R :_m e promises to hecome a political ot hoftannatish: e ers. Ulmost care 1s usae SN0 e Choicestbils eeiren ks 4 Wl o i e « shop during th ) - imost care 15 u ! m tg Lhe choicest bits of all the great Tty 9 (it (7 P e off furniture markets. Each is carefully weighed, so to speak, in com- countiy. Lvery month the list grows parison with similar pieces. It is the best in design and conztruction at 1's longer! ire viewpoint. It iz an issue ( which Mr. Hoover wil have {v con- 973 E N2 i . ) tend with just as Wiiliam Howard ‘j & price? Does it meet the needs of our customers: ‘-/_Jj Lk_\J raft had {o contend with it fol-| lowing the enactment of the One of the first model homas ta y\-‘,’:m-f“ ‘{m‘.:. ‘.““, ‘.-‘n’v‘: ",','f“ kf built into a store in the New At the end of cach six menths we check our stock. cre and there Ba ! jrelt Lingland States was at Watkine el was wdded to the smoulder- | Brothers. These rooms are still pe o industrial publicanism inst the rival western | I'he ficst antique depariment ta = s A e f be included in a furniture store 1n are groups and individual picces which have remained after the majority New England, outside of Boston have found new homes. Here also are }w‘cu‘: left from larger groups . . was at Watkins Brothers. No ma 1o whether it is modern furniturs, western insurgents as “sons of {he correctly interpreted : i . S 5 r=productions of the old, or the an- Wil fachaRs" " This futterancad] R a bedroom cnsemble. Too, there are pieces in upholsterings which can- tique, you'll find it i our variow made at a dinner of N 5 X 5 BT 14 o S L N %E&J not he II\’IIHIL]'I(.‘(J. and other groups and picces which the manufacturers will $a0ps ihroughout the west as a con- B not make again. 3 temiptuous reference. 1t has done otmake again %j “b\‘) much to arouse a feeling of hostil- Watkins Brothers were the first in ity fn a section of the party which g g e flns‘parl of the country to offer pro- Shop by ’'phone! IFiom points L e et — fessional decorating service to its All these fine things are included in our Semi-Annual Sales. Thurs- cast of the Connecticut River dial e B e customers without charge. Our dec- v opens the winter sale. The largest assortments and, of cowrse, the 5171. From points west, use our \‘ongress which have met heen | m(flrfi will };:IP you during the sale choicest things, will be readv for thoze who shop carly. So we urge direct Hartford wire; dial Hartford appy on the whole, President as well as other times. . Solerssesy T e Eaatig L 10} AT { Al Hoover found his job very much you to visit us Thursday, if possible! o273, like the cxecutive work he has al- avs done. Only now it is on a reater scale. When the stock mar- ket decline caused apprehension in the husiness world, Mr. Hoover | —— moved with quick. bold Aegy ¢ 1 and summoned series of business conferences here which included 11 key men in American ’ * practically industry. These conferences dis- closed building programs totalling perhaps ten billion dollars for the | 55 Y rrom industrialists not to cut wages and from labor not fo start strikes for higher wages. They stimulated m;,“; m“ = riodically changed to present the industrial Republicans A ; ; < ; very lalest in interior decorations, pmhaps a wing chair from a [iving room suite or a bed and dresser from the reference of Senator Moses fo nation-wide optimism and kept lusiness moving. The outcome still i to he determined but in the weeks following the conferences. | they were hailed as one of the out- | standing achicvements of the Presi- | dent's carcer i The President has grappled with exceutive political problems. 1le | replaced Tubert Work as man of the [Itepublican Nationa) | Committer with Claudis Huston. | e 18 trying to reorgunize the Re- |