i Cooldige Urges r r Economy in Note 9 to Congressmen Foregcrg Prosperity Ahead for America; International Relations Now Excellent. (Continued From Fin Tend tire. I believe It would be for the advantage of this country and helpful i to the stability of other nations for 1 us to adhere to the protocol estab lishing that court upon the conditions stated In the recommendation which is now before the senate, and further , that our country shall not be bound , hy advisory opinions which may be i rendered by the court upon questions which we have not voluntarily sub I mitted for its judgment. This court i would provide a practical and eon j venient tribunal before which we i could go voluntarily, hut to which we could not he summoned, for a de termination of justiciable questions when they fail tn he resolved by dlp '. lornatic negotiations. DISARMAMENT CONFERENCE. Many times I have expressed my desire to see the work of the Wash ington conference on limitation of armaments appropriately supple mented by further agreements for a further reduction and for the pur pose of diminishing the menace and waste of the competition in preparing instruments of International war. It has been and Is my expectation that we might hopefully approach other great powers for further conference on this subject as soon as the carry ing nut of the present reparation ’dan as the established arid settled policy of Europe has created a favorable opportunity. But on account of pro posals which have already been made by other governments for a European conference, ft will be necessary to Wait to see what the outcome of their actions may he. I should not wish to propose or have representatives attend a conference which would con template commitments opposed to the freedom of action we desire to main-1 tain unimpaired with respect to our purely domestic policies. INTERNATIONAL LAW. Our country should also support efforts which are being made toward the codification of international law. We can look more hopefully, in the first instance, for research and studies that are likely to be produc tive of results, to a co operation among representatives of the bar and members of international law Insti tutes and societies, than to n confer ence of those who are technically rep resentative of their respective govern ments, although, when projects hav* been developed, they must go to the governments for thslr approval. These experts professional studies are going on in certain quarters and should have our constant encourage ment and approval. OUTLAW OF WAR. Much interest ha* of late been manifested in this country in the dis cussion of various proposals to out law aggressive war. I look with great aympathy tipon the examination of this subject. It is in harmony with the traditional policy of our country, which is against aggressive war and for the maintenance of permanent Hiid honorable peace. While, as I have said, we must safeguard our liberty to deal according to our own ‘ judgment with our domestic policies. we ran not fail to view with sympa ! thetic interest all progress to this de sired end or carefully to study the measures that may be proposed to at " tain it. LATIN AMERICA. While we are desirous of promot ing peace In every quarter of the globe, w« have a special interest in the peace of this hemisphere. It is our constant desire that all causes of dispute in this arpa may be tran quilly and satisfactorily adjusted. Along with our desire for peace Is the earnest hope for the increased j i prosperity of our sister republics of ' | Latin America, and our constant pur pose to promote cooperation with them which may be mutually bene {| fil ial and always Inspired by the must cordial friendships. FOREIGN DEBTS. About 112,000,000.000 is due to our govornment from abroad, mostly :| from European governments. (Ircaf Britain, Finland. Hungary, Lithuania and Poland have negotiated settle ments amounting close to $5,000,000. 000. This represents the funding of over 42 per cent of the debt since the if creation of the special foreign debt commission. As the life of the rom (;! mission is about to expire, its term 8 should be extended. I am opposed to the cancellation of these debts and believe it for the best welfare of the world that they should he liquidated and paid as fast as possible, I do J not favor oppressive measures, but unless money that is borrowed is re paid credit can not he secured in time of necessity, and there exists besides a moral obligation which our country can not ignore and no other country can evade. Terms and con dilions may have to conform to dif formers In the financial abilities of w Do you yearn.1* 7 for a clear V complexion? ’ Try the Keainol product* a week and eatch your skin improve 1 Resinol ioapthoroughly cleanses the tin; p»re« Nnd rid* them of impurities. Resinol Ointment aoothea and heal* the’in lamed, irritated apots. The most ag gravated case* of akin affection hav« readily responded to this treatment Caa be abuincd from all druatM** Resinol I d the countries concerned, but the principle that each country ahould meet Its obligation admits of no dlf fereneee and Is of universal applic.i tlon. It Is axiomatic that our country can not stand still. It would seem to he perfectly plain from recent events that It is determined to go forward. But 1t wants im pretenses. It wants no vagaries. It is deter mined to advance In an orderly, sound and common-sense way. It does not propose to abandon the the ory of the declaration that the people have Inalienable rights which no ma jority and no power of government can destroy. It does not propose to abandon the practice of the constitu tion that provides for the protection of these rights. It believes that within these limitations, which are imposed not by the fiat of man but by the law of the Creator, self-gov ernment Is just and wise. It is con vinced that it will he impossible for the people to provide their own gov ernment unless they continue to own their own property. These are the very foundations of America. On them has been erected a government of freedom and equali ty. of justire and merry, jtf educa tion and charity. Living tinder it and supporting it the people have come Into great possessions on the material and spiritual sides of life. 1 want to continue in this direction. T know- that the congress shares with me that desire. I want our Institu tions to be more and more expressive of these principles. I want he people of all the earth to see in the Amer ican flag the symbol of a government which Intends no oppression at home and no aggression abroad, which in the spirit of a common brotherhood provides assistance in time of dis tress. W. J. Nolan New Foreman in U. P. Shops at Sidney Sidney, Per. 3.—W. .1. Nolan, for mer general foreman of ilie I’nion Pa rifle shops at Green F*Vrr. has ar rived In Sidney to succeed the late .!. N- Mahr, who was kflled two weeks ago by being run over by a switch engine in the yards here while in speeting another engine. Mr. Nolan was stationed at Green River for IS years. Last Barrriston Civil Vi ar Veteran Dies at Age of 80 Beatrlee, Dec. 3.—Ifenry F. House man, said to be the last civil war veteran at Barneston, died at his home there after a lingering illness, aged 80. Me is survived by his wife and a number of children. Petroleum Coke Southern Clean, Hot, No A»h Phone AT. 2700 Aik for Our Coal Chart Sunderland Bros. Co. A D V RRT18RM R N T. TRY SULPHUR Dll III Em n Any breaking nut of the skin, even fiery, itching eczema, can be quickly over come by applying Mentho-Sulphur, de dares a noted skin specialist. Because of its germ destroy ing properties, this sulphur preparation from skin Irritation, soothes snd heals the eczema right up and leaves the skin clear and nmooth. It seldom fails to relieve the tor ment without delay. Sufferers from skin trouble should obtain a small Jar of Bowles Mentho-Sulphur from any good druggist and use it like cold cream. ,\T>V KBTIKKMKNT. Mothers, Do This— When file Children Cough, Rljh Musterole on Throats and Chests No telling how soon the symptoms may develop into croup, or worse And then's when you're glad you have a Jar of Musterole at hand to give prompt relief It does not blis ter. AS first aid, Musterole Is ejcellent. Thousands of mothers know it. TbU should keep a jar ready for Instant use. It is the remedy for adults, too. Re ileves sore throat, bronchitis, tonsil' Itla, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neural gia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, chilblains, frosted feet and colds of the chest (It may prevent pneumonia i. To Mothers: Musterole Is also made in milder form for bailies anil small children \*k for Children's Muslerolr. 3f>r and dftc, jara and lubes. | Better than a mustard plaster Today Edison on Flying. II ell Rr Paid Slowly. ( heaters Never Prosper. IT hen Diamonds Rore You. By ARTHUR BRISBANE, v_/ Edison has his mind on flying. May it be many years before he ■starts his great flight. The helicopter will let men rise straight from the earth. Eagles can’t do that. We shall fly at speed undreamed of now and the flying machine will revolutionize civilization. All that he says is true, and much more. Rut, the revolution in civilization will come in men’s brains, and come slowly. It won't come through machinery, although that will help. Men invented machines that ought to have freed the slaves. Rut they fastened wage slaves to the machines. They invented flying machines, and their first real use kcanav < was dropping TNT and poison gas on other white men and on sav ages. Science moves slowly, the brain moves slowly, and civilisation moves slowly writh it. We may not get our money from Europe so fast. France asks for terms better than those we gave England. Ten years more before beginning payment, is one sugges tion from France. And then, in 1935, when pay ments begin, if they begin, their amount will depend on the amount of real gold that France gets from Germany in reparations. French statesmen, of course, will make the best bargain they can for their country, and we admire them for it. But England says no one should have better terms for pay ment than she has, for she financed the allies, while borrowing from us. And what’s more, says England, before France pays us anything she ought to pay all she owes to Great Britain. We shall probably wait for that money. The most recent convert to the “rheaters-nevor-prosper” theory is Captain Arthur, British “aid” of the Indian prince who was robbed I of $750,000, frightened out of the m—mm ■wiimrwmmml money. because of his own; acquaintance with a young Pritish marn 1 woman. ('apt. J. C. Arthur, the aid, got $200,000 of the loot and took it to Pari*. There the rard sharper*, more cunning cheaters than he, took him, and got the money away from him. ’He is in poverty; says he lost everything. The poor rajah, Hari Singh, also has his troubles, apart from money troubles attached to the young lady to whom he was attached. He may lose the throne of Kashmir, and that isn't the worst of it. His fanatical followers don’t like the thought of their rajah handing out lumps of money to a female Giaour. His plight is sad. He has lost his blonde lady, and his $750,000, lost, his reputation, will probably lose his throne and may lose his life. And all for one young English woman with a little straight nose, blue eyes and curly yellow hair. Helen of Troy and Cleopatra come hack reincarnated and not im proved. When you can afford diamonds, you don’t care about them. Samuel H. Lefknwitz of New York got pretty rich and had a French dentist put some diamonds in his front teeth. Now he's riehpi and hi* glittering smilp hore« him. j He says he wishes to he "more exclusive” and will have the ilia | rnnnds removed. , Fitzsimmons, the prize fighter.l had diamonds put in his hack teeth. | He never got rich, and always en joyed pulling back hi' cheek to show the diamonds in his big back teeth. Here, the other day, it was amr gested that some inventor would soon make fighting airships more deadly by doing away with the noise. Now England announces thn* the thing has hpen done. Noise from exhaust and propeller have been overcome. In the big war, noise overhead sent city dwellers to their cellars-. In the next war, fliers will come in the night, released from the holds or decks of great ships off our coasts. There will be no news from these silent marauders, until the bombs begin bursting in the city streets. Our government really ought to lake the flying machine, for attack and defense, a little seriously. This story comes from Ann Ar bor, concerning the magnificent University of Michigan. Twenty year* ago m mining property at Al ,-ome, 6nt., was Heeded to the uni versity. The giving of the mine was then loooked upon a* a joke. It hadn't, any value. But thr hoard of repent* of rtr. university will mon sive detail* of the discttvery that the mine i' worth $m,ooo,oon. if*oi*yrl»h» 1 ® - * '_— Sick? Upset? You're Bilious! Take a Laxative! Dizzy? 4 Breath Bad ? Clean the Bowels! I For Constipation. Biliousness. Headache -’--==-II n I Gift Sale of Boxed Jewelry W f^T >/> e Gift Sale of Beautiful Pearl. n II $1.50, $2.00 BOXED JEWELRY—Gold fini.h, ^ |> ^k^ ■ ■ T^kl 1 P gf 30-inch Pearl* || baby locWrt and chain. Lingerie cla.p., cuff t » SC. IT > ■ W M. ^ ^Yv Inde.tructible pearl., .terling .ilver cla.p, pint, novelty bar pins, broaches, . 50c . $2.98 [1 f |“Januarv Sale Prices” in D cember i n /^HAYDEN’S “STORE FOR MEN" ANNOUNCE THEIR FINAL CLEARANCE fi ‘Reduced Prices’ Starting Thur., Dec. 4 , £ feA mmFftll Here Is Your Chance M BbvI h Wm W Contrary to the Usual Custom WMm. |H» fl^Fl B !■ ■ We Will Start Our January(jgss| BB? III IB 111 Sale—30 Days in Advance' V lO’COATSSsUITS; Our Entire Stock of High Grade Tailored Garments Including the || jpiifl Best Known Makers in This Country Will Be Included wma Three Reduced Priced Lots to Select From || Store for Men \ Men’s Two-Pant Suits—Overcoats and Tuxedos n 0 The Best Clothing Made DThis clothing is the pick of the market the entire American market! The lead f) 1 ing makers have given us their best. And II in selling these two-pants suits, overcoats Dt and tuxedos, we are performing a real service to the public. n From Makers of Clothing of High Quality The Overcoats j The 2 Pants Suits Double Breasted Overcoats. Single 1 Single Breasted Suits. Double Breasted Overcoats, Box Back Overcoats, Breasted Suits, Conservative Suits, Town^ Ulster . g™ English Type Suits New Two Overcoats, Plain or Yoke Back*. Set-in or Button Suits, New 3 and 4 Button Raglan Sleeves, Imported and Domestic Suits, New Pencil Stripes, New Rug Back Fabric*_■_Unfinished Worsteds_ High Grade Woolens S The woolens are solid and serviceable. | The tailoring is thoroughly well done. II The details of finish and the linings are H strictly first class. The variety of pat- || terns and colors is so large that it seems jfj that EVERYTHING must be here. || ‘ ' n j 1,000 Doz. Shirts at a Sensational Price | E From the Great E. and W. Shirt 3 U Together With Others From Equally Known Makers ( ■U|iiiipn 11 ^L^*4U§IM Sale Starts at 9 a. m. \ jQ —Choose From Endless Varieties— | Clean Fresh High Grade | Shirts Materials Q $2-50 Up to $2.50 Up to If $3-50 Values $3.50 Values || This sale presents a big pur D chase of the famous E & W. Collar attached and neck Shirts, samples and floor band style, sixes 14 to 17*2, stock, including woven ma y^f « but not all sixes in each nia fl dras, silk stripes, English yy y» y% teria.1. No man should miss || broadcloth, repp elolh, high m C this opportunity, $2 00, $3.00 D count percales and several and $3.50 values. Your other different materials. choice, $1.00. ^ ^ ■ ..- . S2.50 Men’s Gloves 3,000 pairs men's gloves and mittens, sample lines bought at hOc on the dollar, lined and unlinesi, unfinished suede, English Cape, Buck and Horse Hide. Values to $2 50. V. - ■ I