OCR Text |
Show - V X MAIN NEWS SECTION Second THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER Part. Starting 16, 1924. 13 The Event KEITH OBRIEN CO. TOMORROW Every Woman Waits for! Certain Bureau Closed, Personnel Reduced, and High Salaries Disappear I , Failed in Important Mis-sipn Through Lack of Activity, Writer Says. t By ANOH Famous throughout the length and breadth of the land as the greatest of all millinery-offerings- , the Eyerywoman announcement brings welcome news to hundreds and hudreds of women who have learned what it means in style and value! a TARDIEU. Salt Lake (Copyright, 124 by The Tribune ) PARIS, Not. 15 A few tinea In the t -newspaper, Without oomment. nounce, if not the death, at leant the definite putting to sleep of the reparations commission. Certain bores tie have been closed and otbera reduced sharply Inatse. gold Princely salaries once paid In, marks hare meked In the, autumn Ashtittriottf quarters In the few ia4 sorts hotel will be vacated In a months. The reparations commission had so counn many enemies In may be tries that It revisionthe for considered a victory ists, a ho intend to destroy, bit by bit, a hat remains of the treaty of NersaiHe. One might add that the commission itself has a large share f the responsibility for the present misfortune Had M Bart ho u, now president, takfen charge earlier, he might have avoided this affliction, but he came too late, and hie vigorous qualities could not sav an inatitu non that had been a recked by Ahe inaction of hie predecessors. SIMPLE AND JUST IDEA. The reparations commission occu a third 'of tKs whole 'Ires mreOian text of the treaty of Versailles, yet la'k of it is a very simple and a verv just Idea. $ucheur, Montagu and Ijsmont, who cradled it, wvmwsfced to devise a permanent organisation for collecting thq German debt. The figure then talked about' was 200,000,-0- 0 000 gold marks, as a minimum, and obviously it would tgke time to colto place this question lect it. apart from changing parliamentary situation and ephemeral ministries, the reparations commission was created Originally It had two principal misone to fix the total of sion debt and the other to collect Germanys first payment of twenty billion gold marks beforeMay I. 1921 Kverybody at that lime agreed that Germany could pay this: but the commission fulfilled neither of these duties very brilliantly. " ' It , A Wondrous Collection of the New Dress and Tailored Modes m At irresistible prices, a supreme variety of all thats new hats .for which you would ordinarily pay twice as much! And every hat new! Hats for miss and matron, $0.85; radiantly new and different! Anglc-Saxo- quaei-demte- e In satins, faille silks, f t Every style representative of the latest Parisian nd gros&rain ribbons, metal cloths, gold and silver laces; all colors; shapes for every individual preference. They Would He Marked Regitlarly Up to $ 12.50 Metropolitan Fashions! N 1- - , Tr-man- TOO MANY LAWYERS. It soorf developed that the reparations commission had too many lawyers fuD of legal ifblbblee, too many statisticians buried under tangled e t worms figures and too many trained in goernment offices. frac-hability was singularly lacking Ther year '1930 should have been demoted to wavs end means of jollertlng those twenty billions, but instead it was wasted 4n- - discunaions .about theory. There was an argument aver whether Frances first mortgage on the resource of the Germen empire and the several ate tee applied to private property The legal mind of Raymond Poincare argued for five months with Financier Bradbury on the stiver teapot whether the Germane' dining fable qould be seised in foreclosure. said no; Bradbury Polnoare said yes. Meanwhile they all Gerabout from forgot collecting many. and when the first of May came the repraratipns commission had to report the money unpaid. J'he commission also fixed the amount of the debt on the same date with the same ill fortune. The governments Immediately held a conference and rejected its report, but, as l he commission under the alone, treaty, had the power to fix the figure. It waa summoned to London' Like a dog answering his master's whistle, It went, and signed a document completely stultifying itsHP From that date the commission waa finished, without realty having got started. DIES INONOMtNlOUS DEATH. Still its members continued receive ng ro al salaries JA gold, and they were reproached for thinking of nothWhen the franc rose the ing else i ommissioners feared a reduction in i heir salaries, and so they stabilised and fixed the rate Later xhange they even asked advances from the bermin treasury to insure their own existence. To be Just, it must Ire added that this was not France's fault It waa England that insisted on immense salaries whhh scandalised parliaments. The commission returned to favor ' soon afterward, thanks to AL When the Ruhr was occupied, but M Poincare diminished its prestige by calling it onI to decide on special defalcations, such as failurs to deliver certain coal shipments or telegraph poles, instead of on genHence the commiseral defalcation sion quickly lost prestige atros the channel ana its doom sealed. M Poincare acquiesced in advance. M. Herriot ratified the action. Thus a bodv which might hive been su- premely useful dies an ignominious death and there' la none so poor as to mourn Its passing. al get-ahe- Exquisite Fifth Avenue Models, Actually Worth $12.50 and $15 Model Hats Individual Designs Paris-Inspire- d Choice of the latest things every detail of fabric, trimming and shape perfect. Exquisite creations that call for prices of $18.50 and $20 are yours for this low .price! The finest producA tions of the, season. collection that, will thrill every woman wlio loves fineTthinga and beauty in Tailored Hats Dretty Halt Suit Ileti Small Dance Hatt Metallic Turbans Formal Hatt Embroidered Hatt Flowered Hatt . Mattorn1 Hatt Satins, Silks, Brocades, Velvets Featured in This Group at One glance is all youll need to tell you how remarkable are these smart chapeaux at this sensational underprice! You save what you pay on each one! .In all colors; all head sizes; all shapes. A variety that makes choosing a pleasure. - Sale Start t at 9 Store Open Till 6 Many extra salesladies and wrappers will be in attendance all dav! Bar-tho- f WINDOWS will be devoted to the display of these hats repre- u sentative- styles from Former Utah Pioneer It Dead in Gem State Rp.Mi! ENTIRE each group! to Tb. Tribune. REXBl RG, Idaho, Nov. 15. Mrs. R. Jensen died Monday at her In Hibbard ward, where she lived for twenty-nin- e had years. She uould have been 78 years of ace on . November 2e. Mrs. Jensen was the wife of the of Hyrum. Utah late Rasmus Jensen He died thirty ar aito. She came from Denmark when about 20 yeare of In and located ngu Hjrum. She chureh In her na.joined the Mormon tive lard She te survived by thlrty-eiffh- t. grandchildren and twelve great- elm le survived K ROBERT grandchildren. She i sisters tn- - Denmark and the two by Mrs. J. C. Jeneen following children: Salt Lake of Tacoma, --We eh.; Mrs. David Rock. Mra. Harry Rock. Mrs. James A Mra-- Er( I Deg and two -- The last election divided Itself some. tone. Walteh and ltto, all of Hibbard what into thercomebacka and the c ard didnt comeback." The list of the latter la quite bit longer and illustrates anew the difficulty a politician ha of making good after once ha haa been defeated or has ratlred. in the manner of the stage luminaries, OK COSTS YOU NOTHING who always expected their "publle to from sufferer piles demand that they return to their Imny can 'how be matter long standing, io poverished drama Thor"hwfaftetTtrTome baik in tulckly - heeled without - jrrniy: end I a illriklng.a. 5 send you the last election are in no way to he home treatment confused with the lame ducks, who t combination hack. .They, too. in 1. are just glP FREE. If satisfied send ttherwlse you owe absolutely nothing. their turn, will attempt tn fomt back IGnd to much O ARLINGTON, K Kufo Bid,.. but fateis tAdvJ high endeavors. Mary home HUNDREDS OF THE SMARTEST TRIMMED AND READY-TO-WEAHATS R This is really one of the most remarkable groups in the sale! Imagine choosing new winter hats right at the start of the season at this price! Youd, never believe it were it not for the price tag, plainly marked. Not a Hat in This Group Worth Under $5 next-to-nothi- ng y-- Men and Affairs atW ashington - V Piles Cured ebno-Ute- 4 L ly T. SMALL Among the comebacks ones can the volatile Cole please of South Carolina, who is likely to make thins hum on the hill in color and Hell and language that will put Marla Dawes to blush foe his sheer Then of expression. Incompetence there la General T. Coleman du Pont of the Wilmington pu Pools, a ho make powder in wartimes and sell shellac and other commodities In the piping da v of peace. The general doesn t make an awfuf splash in Congress sHe 's ft sort of silent member of the senate. HewenLqt.Ai toiitly wwnrTSrtTffln ago and now 11) he slip back with A sort of Annette Kellerman dive that will leave scarce a ripple an the surface of the placid senatorial water. General dir Pont has the Unique Idea that a nator should be seen and not beard. 8 lrineen Former Governor Cha-I- es of Illinois is another comeback In politics After nerving two terms aa chief of Illinois he wax said to executive be c through Our old friend, MefLR-'MedHe sometimes called wishes that had been no, for Dineen came out of his retirement last spring and knocked Mr, McCormick, of the reaper McCormitks. for a whole row of haymakers in the Republican primaries After that all doubt" of his ability to come hack was gone He made the rest of the journey In comparative blows nobody good There isn t such an awful lot to ne said about those who failed to come back Former Governor Jack Walton of Oklahoma, impeached as chief executive. tried a personal comeback Instead of a Various one and got sent bark to the study hall of politics few a few more years of reflection upon the vanities of Rfe Former Senator William K. Chilton of West Virginia thought to ride in on the Davis groundswell in the old home state, but the ground failed to swell. It didnt eveti pucker, and Mr. Chilton Is left to gaxe upon the safetv Pa Ferguson the husband of mountains and the coal mines instead Ma Ferguson, feels that he. too of the glased asphalt and the maghas come ,raek; for If he couldnt be nificent distances of the national governor again after his somewhat ca pital. rr sensational impeachment it is nice to Little T .llJUir-comebackfeel that the' Mm JE-step forward, in hi Tn ir-tiWgTT governor's nathe Empire state, hut just as his mansion again and aubsist. if he election special was running its pretchooses, upon the gubernatorial pay tiest down the Hudson river, with There was a time whistle blowing and kittlng-oand allowances six. In Pa s life when he proiably didnt the A! Smith superheterodyne special favor equal suffrage or the right of started from the Battery tn New' York , a woman to hold high public office-- City and somewhere above the Her- but he has learned in his salad dav em river there was a calamitous colthat it U an ill wind, indeed, that lision wbfcb left4 the young colonel - r tuned out. distorted and no longer able to register on the lood speaker The static, tpo, was something terrible The colonel has the solace of exuberant youth, however, and-"- he know AI cant run for governor perpetually He has oniv dons, It four thinks times so far Little T R g there are " other good days for hack how to classify One hardly know William Alien hith. who ran a distinguished third In a field of three candidates for governor in the fair stats of Kansas Buteither he didnt In eome back or he didn't arrive. any event.- It is difftcutt to shed tear over suth- a cheerful loser. One sort of hopes WtUtam Allen will run ssaln com-Iri- f countrymen! The Hon William II. Butler, the new senator from Massachusetts, is said to be is unloquactsua as his most Intimate friend In the White House, despite the fact that the publicity equad at Republican headquarters during the campaign had the national chairmen Issuing statements verr half hour crso. Virtually aR of the statements Were canned. Ur Bitler would took there over and nod. That Is expected to be" bis role in the agree. If he to to he the administration spokesman at the eaptto). the administration will have little or nothing to say. . BOOKCASE PRESENTED. handRUPCRT, Idaho, Xov. IS. some bookcase, made by merffbers of the American Legion, has been presented to - the tow n librfcy-b- y Marshall post of tbq le- ami. again- Harry L, IiaviV tDhlo a governor of two years ago, tried to come back this vear, hut despite the Coolidge KOO.OO0 in the Buckeye state Davis wak swamped. Then. also, there wga James Lucer of Northampton. Mass. Mucey, friend of Cqi and cobbler philosopher 4tm thought, by heck, that' be would run along with Cak this time and go to Caiseemed to run gion. thgUfisUture i! RHEUMATISM all right in Northampton, but Qtne-thin- g was handed te Jim- - It waj had enough for a friend of the president to be beaten, but to go down before a men named OShea! Oh, my g Stopped in 24 Honrs, With, out a Penny Cost New, remarkable home. Treatment achieves Instant relief. Thousands re-of cases now testify to the wonderful sults this new home treatment has given. If ou suffer from rheumatism, lumbago, gout, neuritis, stiff joints, sore or contracted muscles, this wonderful treatment will be aexu-o- w abu!rtI7 free, without coat or obligation on your parL You do not even pay postage. Ro wonderful te this new home treatment that many people. who have suffered for years now twi of com-gie- te cure: you risk nothing to try U. If you suffer, don t hesitate to accept this generous free offer.-- All you need do te send your name and address a card will do to Mr. A. B. Grant, tare Reliable Products cumrmuvi slfHt-Gateway FTafum, Kansas ( itr Mu, ami the treatment wlU be mailed p, you. (Ada A ' |