1 ? Chicago boy scouts on a pilgrimage to the tomb of Lincoln in Springfield. III. i!? Fleet submarine \<& pno tographed just after her launching at Portsmouth navy yard, where Mrs. D. E. Dismukes christened her. 3 ? Mrs. F. A. Wellman and her two daughters, of Monrclair, X. J., ice-boating near the Lake I'lacid club in the Adiron daeks. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Uncle Sam Lets France Know He Won't Stand for War Debt Repudiation. By EDWARD W. PICKARD THERE was considerable excitement in government circles In Washing ton vrhon the publication of the I' reiieh budget revealed the fact that it did not Include France's war debt to tin* I nlt ed States. A spokesman for the ad ministration stated in rather blunt language that this country expects France to recognize the debt and to make immediate' arrangements to fund it. pointing out that repudiation would seriously affect international credit, lie said the position of this government is that, while we do not wish t<> be ojh pressive. we recognize no grounds in law or equity why the debt should be reduced or canceled. On the question of the validity of the debt, the. ?gov ernment spokesman pointed out tli.it $1.(KI0,<KKU>C0 of the loan had been turned over to France nfrer the war was over and that $40rt.0U>.0i*? more had been credited to France for the purchase of war surplus supplies. In both the senate and the house the matter came.' up ami die supposed atti tude of France was severely criticised. Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, speak ing for Secretary Mellon, chairman of the war deh: funding commission.- set forth the necessity of collection of the debt from France to relieve American taxpayers of that portion of their bur den. asserting that repudiation would destroy French credit and intimating that the French attitude would put an end to French borrowings of American bankers. The French embassy in Washington promptly issued h statement explain ing that the American debt was not in cluded in the budget because the law j does not permit the Inclusion of inde terminable items for payment of which no revenue is provided: and both there and in Paris it was reiterated that France had never Intimated that she would repudiate the obligation, itiis was not enough, however, and Ambas sador Herri ck conferred with Premier Herriot and Finance Minister Clctnen tel. both of whom repeated the expla nation and the assurance that trances intentions were honest, and telegraphed this assurance also to the l.ritlsh go\ ernment. The truth appears to be that the Herriot government is glad thus to have the French people disabused of the prevalent idea that the dent will be either canceled or materially reduced. In this both political and financial con . slderations weigh largely, for. until ^he French public is brought to realize that the American and ISritish debts must be paid, any government that under ~ takes to pay them will be politically dead: and. in addition. American cred it and American tourist trade mean a tremendous lot to I* ranee. According to Washington dbAtches, the administration leaders i^Pmgress are formulating a plan by whiter I' ranee will be given about thirty days to dem onstrate her intention : <? fund the debt, unci if she fails in this it is their pur pose to ask the senate to adopt a res olution condemning the attitude of France and expressing disappro\al ot any further -loans or extensions of credit by American bankers or other individuals to the French government or to French citizens. President Coo!* idge, of course, knows all about this plan and is said to approve its impor tant features, but he has come to no hasty .conclusions and still assumes that* France intends to propose a fair settlement of the debt. GERMANY received in sullen and threatening mood the notification from the entente nations that the Cologne bridgehead will not be evacu ated on January 10, as was provided in the treaty of Versailles, because of her own failure to observe the terms of the treaty in the matter of disarma ment. Foreign Minister S reseniann declared that, unless a compromise were reached, peace in Europe would be dealt a terrible blow, the reconcilia tion of nations postponed and the fui iuiuieiu ol uie itttw c* yliui gieutl} eu . dangered. He warned the allies not to overtax the patience of Germany, which was interpreted to mean that Germany was prepared to reply by making harder trade treaty terms. lie .said that the machinery in the Krupp gun works had not been dismantled because it was busy on American or ders. The German government has de manded that the alleged facts on which the allied control commission based Its report and recommendation that the Cologne region be not evacu ated should he made public at once. The commission was asked by the al lies; to rush to Paris all its information on the German failure to disarm, so that they can justify their action in the eyes of the world. This should make most interesting reading. The most important part of the report deals with the methods by which Ger many is said to have at least 7<K),(KK) men trained and equipped for war. A Paris paper is publishing a series of sensational articles revealing Ger many's alleged gigantic preparations for the next contllct. One of these tells of a new and devastating war gas ' developed by a German scientist, and says great quantities of mustard gas and suffocating gas are also being made. The Gorman reichstag meets Janu ary 5 and Berlin dispatches say Chan cellor Marx, Foreign Minister Strese mann and Finance Minister Luther plan to form a nonpolitlcal directorate with extraordinary powers to deal with the situation temporarily. GRKAT BRITAIN'S invitation to] the premiers of the dominions to i a conference in London in March to I discuss the empire's policy in the mat ter of the Geneva peace and disarma ment protocol, has met a chilly recep tion in the dominious and their atti tude is worrying the government in London not a little, for it amounts to a practical declaration of their com plete independence of Great Britain, the only connecting link being a com mon crown. Australia. New Zealand, South Africa and Canada have been exchanging views by cable and mail, trying to arrange to present a com mon front against Croat Britain in the dispute that all feel is certain to come. As for the Geneva protocol, they feel ! that their own parliaments can decide I their stand, and each of them has a ?! membership in the League of Nations, j Pit KM I BR MUSSOLINI of Italy is lighting desperately and so farsue } cessfully to maintain his position in ' the face of the bitterest kind of at | tacks against him and the Fascist!, j Tiie latest development was the publi | cation by the opposition of a menio | randum written by Cesare Rossi, for mer chief of the press bureau of the I interior department and now under ar rest for connection with the murder .* !' j Deputy Matteotti. The document <\- 1 rectly imputes to Mussolini the critics committed by the Fascist! recently, as serting they were committed by his I orders. It is generally believed the j Rossi charges are unfounded, but i they stirred up great excitement and ! complicated the difficulties under j which Mussolini already was laboring, i Some of the premier's followers have ! deserted him and others have urged him to resign, but he still has suflicient support- in parliament to retain his po sition. * SPAIN has succeeded, at considerable cost in lives, in withdrawing her j troops is^Morocco to the prepared line j connecljR the coast towns, and hopes i to Remain there. Ab<l el Krim, leader ; of the rebellious tribesmen, last week ! issued a proclamation in which he said the Riff republic would treat with Spain only on equal terms, "since we are the victors and they are the van quished." His peace conditions, he said, were: "Recognition of the republic of the Riff, whose frontiers will be formed by the mouth of the River Kert and the River Marti, in which territory not a single Spanish position must remain nor warships of the vanquished nation exercise vigilance along the coast. "Spain must agree not to engage Musselmen troops, transferring those in the service here to the borders of the government of the Rift* republic; delivery of all Moroccan prisoners without ransom, at the saniv? time pay ing a heavy sum for the ransom of Spanish prisoners we captured during i lae ia&t gioiious cuiupaigu in witicii t our traditional enemy lost more men and materials and suffered more hu miliations Hum three years ago." CO.MK three thousand savants gath ^ ered in Washington for the ses sions of tiie American Association for the Advancement of Science, divided themselves into 15 sections and pro ceeded to discuss a varied menu of scientific subjects. One of the ad dresses that attracted popular atten tion was that of I)r. Edward L. Rice, professor of zoology in Ohio Wesley-, an university, in which he character ized the views of W. J. Rryan on evo lution as "dogmatic" and "dangerous to religion," and urged more unpreju diced co-operation In scientific and re ligious study. Mr. Bryan's arguments, lie said, were deduced "from the as sumption of the literary accuracy of the Bible in general and of the first two chapters of Genesis in particular." This assumption was "not Biblical." nor was it "accepted by leading Bible scholars of today," he said. Pr. W. 1*. I)avey of the General Electric company's research laboratory told of the production of a new form of copper that conducts electricity with 1,'t per cent more . efficiency than the ordinary copper. I ?r. K. C. Rose riow of the Mayo Foundation reported the discovery of bacteria that appear t< be responsible for the present epi demic of hiccoughs. Favorable results looking toward the control of diabetic symptoms by means of insulin admin istered by Hie mouth, instead of liypo | dermically, as at present,' were report ed in a .paper by Dr. John It. Murlin of the University of Rochester, To overcome the problem of the destruc tion of insulin by stomach juices, Doc tor Murlin said he had prepared in sulin tablets which pass through the stomach unaffected and are dissolved in the intestines. ILLINOIS especially Is Interested In the result of the civil suit to recover from Gov. Leu Small the interest on state funds which he Is charged with withholding when he was state treas urer. Judge Burton at Springfield held Small liable to the state for all interest paid by Chicago packers on state funds lent them in 11)17 and 1U1S and referred the case back' to a mas ter In chancery for determination of the. amount of indebtedness. Since the Illinois law provides that no one In debt to the state can be elected gov ernor, there was some question whether or not the second inaugura tion of Small, set for January 11!, would be blocked. WORKING rapidly, the house passed the treasury-post office supply bill, carrying , a total of ST(xl, (J(KI,(KK?, and sent it on to the senate. Among other items in the bill are $11, j (>00.000 for prohibition enforcement; $"0,000.(100 for the coast guard service, of .which half will be available' .during the coming year to check liquor smug-' 'glin;:; .$",()( to.ono for Hit* transebnti I ncntal air mail service ; $1<>,(?."(>,"00 for the customs service and .?!).10H,101 for the public health. . service. -The Ivouse at the close of the week was consid ering the army appropriation measure. Senator N orris,- chairman of the ag ricultural committee. introduced a resolution directing the federal trade commission to conduct an 'inquiry into the doings of the "power trust," which, lie charged, is attempting to dictate disposal of the Kuscle Shoals prop erty. NOTABLE among the deaths of the week were those of Leon Bakst. celebrated Russian painter and stage scenery designer, who succumbed to pneumonia in I'aris; William Archer, the veteran English dramatic critic i and' author, and A. Henry Savage-Lan dor. famous artist and explorer, whose sensational experiences in Tibet were related in his book. "The Forbidden Land." NOTRE DAME .adversity made good its claim to the intercol legiate football championship by de feating Leland Stanford at I'asadena, I Cal.. on New Year's day. the score ! being -7 to 10. The University i California eleven beat the University of Pennsylvania by a score of 1<1 to o, the game being played at Berkeley. Both contests were witnessed by im [ Cl'UVt (Is. NEWS BRIEFIYTOLD 0I8PATCHES OF IMPORTANT HAP. PENINGS GATHERED FROM OVER THE WORLD. FOR THE JO READER fhe Occurrence Of Seven Days Qlve? In An Epitomized Farm For Quick Reading Foreign ? A despatch from Honolulu says that the Red Star Liny was fined $400 for tranporting Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Buteler, of New York between two American ports. Berta Kuebbler, Gemany"s oldest woman, is dead at Walberbcrg, Rhine land, at the age of 106 years and three months. The Havana university football team defeated the Florida All-stars by a score of 13 to 6. at Havana. Premier Mussolini of Italy, has tight ened the noose of censorship about the opposition press and Italy is virt ually without newspapers exccpt those that approve or the Fascist govern ment. / Leon Trotzky, Soviet war minister, who was reported under arrest and confined in the Kremlin in Moscow, is in the Crimea, far to the south, more than a thousand miles from the Rus sion capital. Trotzky went to a Cri mean resort to recover from the ill ness which attacked bim in Novem ber. It is understood that Rajah Sir Hari Singh, named as the victim in the re cent London Robinson blackmailing case, has been asked by the govern ment to go to England in connection with legal proceedings against the al leged instigators of the plot. Cardinal Creste Giorgi died of pneu monia at his residence in the Palazzo Aitempts in Rome, in his 09th year. He was born in Valmonte, Italy, and was created a cardinal December 4, 1916. He held the office of grand pen itentiary of the Holy Roman Catholic church. Editions of all the principal opposi tion newspapers in Italy have been seized by carbineers by order of Pre mier Benito Mussolini, Fascist com mander-in-chief. Thousands of black-shirted Fascist! stirred to feverish heat by the exhor tations of their leaders recently con verged Florence, Italy, defying cor dons of carbineers and sacking the plant of an opposition newspaper, the Nuvo Giornale. The p< ?;e recently gave private aud ience to the Rt. Rev. Edward P. Allen, bishop of Mobile, Ala., who pre sented a report of the diocese. The bishop expects to remain in Rome for the beginning of the jubilee year. the name of Christiana, Norway, has been changed to Oslo, which was the name of that city in the middle ages. Washington ? A bill to permit S. M. Adams of Iva, Anderson county, South Carolina, to construct a bridge across the Savan nah river near Sander's ferry or Craft ferry between Iva. S. C., and Elberton, Ga., has been introduce! by Represen tative Dominick, Democrat, South Car olina. As a climax to the recent bints of a miniature Teapot Dome scandal in volving the alleged use of money to aid the postal employees' pay-increase bill, six responsible postoffice officials in as many different cities have been suspended until further notice. The bill to convert the military res-y ervation at Camp Benning, Ga., into a national forest, has been passed by the senate without objection. Rear Admiral Henry J. Ziegmeier has been detached from command of the Norfolk navy yard and assigned to command battleship division three in the Pacific. His successor has not been decided upon. Urging more unprejudiced co-opera tion in scientific and religious study. Dr. Edward L. Rice, retiring vice pres ! ident of the zoological section of the ' American Association for the Ad ! vancement of Science, in a paper pre pared for the meeting of that section recently, characterized the views of William J. Bryan on evolution as "dogmatic and dangerous to re ligion." A bill granting a pension of five thousand dollars annually to Mrs. Edith Boiling Wilson, widow of the late war president, has been passed by the senate, and has been sent to the house. The future of the American navy has taken on a new aspect with simul taneous expressions of opinion from both the white house and the house naval committee as to what should be the first step in -that direction. Inhabitants of Mars are either cave dwellers, or they hibernate in winter l'ke polar bears, in the opinion of Dr. W. W. Coblentz, physicist of the bu reau of standards, expressed in a pa per recently read to the American Physical association. The bill of Senator Smith, Demo crat, South Carolina, to require the director of the census to include in the cotton ginning reports the names of the owners of sinn^ries with the quantity of cotton ginned at each ginnery was passed by the senate ? Itlicut o' jccticn. An agreement has been reached by the Joint congressional postoffice sub committee to recommend ihat provi sions of the administration bill In creasing postal rates and salaries be effective for one veai- onl\ * ending further hearings. John A. Johnston ias l? r-n nominat ed by President Coolidg-j i ? . be post j master at Petersburg, Va. The future of Americanism in the United States will be safeguarded un der the provisions of existing immigra tion laws according to findings of a third biological study of thir. question made by Dr. Harry H. Laugh n of the Carnegie Institute. Announcement of a gnu:; of $350, 000 to the American As- . at ion for the Advancement of So t.- <? by the Rockefeller foundation #v ado here by officers of the as ? a. A plan for a bigger and i.. ;t<?r year, designed to unscramble ?!; present hit or miss calendar tin simpler one, which wonh. every year, has boon j v Americaafn Association > vancenient of Science r They propose cutting tl thirteen months of 28 stituto a he same d by the the Ad on here. ? up into each. Domestic ? vizard ,x Klan. hospital ?s an at' of the n nit Ste. ?i. whose ?<".va river i Decem of eight j. is home i railway ill, d by ?r brake Springs, rnv York, .oral fin a bandit Dr. H. W. Evam i: of the Knights of t }?? i> underwent an operation in Dyesburg, Tenn foil* tack of acute append io", Hary J. Colweel on : Minneapolis. St. Pari ai Marie railway pass -nc- r rear coach fell in* tin; Sn near Shippewa Fa. p. \VJ ber 20, resulting in the ki pesons, commited s- iwiil - in Minneapolis, Minn Albert C. Sides, a So ?? brakeman, was shot nm! Charles L. AbernatJiy, an man. in a fight in f'onr. N. C. Mrs. William J. Fox - started the new yea: wit1 gers badly lacerated ?i bit the rings from he f. Rupert Hughes, novolis. and motion picture director, and Mi"- ""lizibeth Paterson Dial, were rn.- r-.-.J in Loa Angeles, California. William Newborn f ? J., was elected hon >r ?r rior of the Phi Ep^;lon at the closing of its ami: in Philadelphia, Penn. was selected as the no 1925 convention. In Chicago squadf o ? the city in a vain Accadio, wanted - connection with tl .wm., of Russell Dieko;- n> ? :?> Chicago and Nor Ir^ s'-r was shot during an.: :<-i by a robber a:, ihe t'rar cago. Four killings, one nr> shooting, only fvn arr-s' enness. packed hotel d cabarets and res'aunu ands of private limi the birth of the nc -,v >?? :i Fighting their way thr storm borne on the wing tain gale, fiv? intrepid oil j. the heights of Pike's Po. k the tradition of the Adam organization which for ye. ebrated the coming of ea< by staging a display of fire the brow of the pepk. say from Colorado Sprint' Rupert Hughes. novlist picture director, and fame was recently married *o both Patterson, known or at Patterson Dial, t.t Lo. Calif. They immedi:- .:ei> to New York on their ho:. The New York World that its price has been r cents. It has been setlii. cents. Thomas N. Harris, forme of the United States Vetera In Atlanta, Ga.. wa- re cot cd in Memphis, Tern.. charging him with the th ords from the bureau, but released on a thousand He was working in Meinph: ? dry wagon driver at tho arrest. Approximately four ini'lio:. treos were in the Missouri s; ?*if December IS and su?f> r damage and destruction. th. public utility information mates. The Kr.w Valley State b City, Kan., was held up :;:n of $7 1 .(.GO the other day by tltf-o men They just missed getting thv Armotu payroll which had been mad ? up r few minutes before their entrance and taken away by messengers, Tho ban dits got away. I The toll of dead from acoi<i. ital gai poisoning in St. Louis. Mo., the las' few days was increased to I vo witl the death of Mrs. Martha H>att. 70 Eighteen others had been overcome several of whom are still in hospitals The Maryland public service com mission declares that the Chesap and Potomac Telephone company's ro quest for increased telephone rat?r is unjust and unreasonable and would constitute an unfair burden upon th* telephone users of the state, and or ders that existing rates be maintain ed in the future. At Milwaukee, Wis., a warrant has been issued against Joe Jackscr.. far.v ous baseball player, and formerly s member cf the Chicago White Sox ol the American League, charging hin r;ith oeriurv fi' Id, N. Lini supe fr. ornty ? ntion mi a. Ga., pla e for ? so nired >: Angolo ng in to death i on a : iin who t holdup red Chi ve fatal r drunk ropms, .1 thous h raided a ehicago. h a snow >f a moun ? rs scaled to uphold i c'mb, an 1 has eel new year rks from dosnatch ? Silo. ,d mot lot agnostic ? iss Eliza he screei Ang jlea lbernated moon, nnouncei cod to ; for tw( mpioyet bureau arrest warrani l of rec as lat?ii ar bond i.s a latin e of his orchard :m am llfl'.V} ? Iis^our ill ? est i > ansa! robbed / r SICK 3 YEARS WITHOUT BELIEF finally Found Health by Tak ing Lydia E. Pinkham'a *? Vegetable Compound Colombia, S. C. ? "Your medicine has done me bo much good that I feel likeA^ owe my life to it. three years I wassick and was treated by physicians, but they didn't seem to help me any. Then I took Lvdia E. Pinkham'e Vegetable Com pound and got strong enough do my housework, where before I was hardly able to be up. I have also taken the Vege table Compound during the Change of Life and it has left mo in good health. I recommend it as the best medicine for women in the Change of Life and you can use these facts as a testimonial. Mrs. S. A. IIoixey, R. F. D. No. 4, Columbia, South Carolina. Why suffer for vcars with backache, nervousness, painful times and other ail ments common to women from early life to middle af/o, when Lydia EL Pink ham's Vegetable Compound will bring relief? Take it when annoying symp toms first appear and avoid years of suffering. 6 Bell-ans ' 1 Hot water v y Sure Relief .25$ AND 75<t PACKAGES EVERYWHERE FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a world wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. CAPSULES correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. Don't wait for time to heal that itching rash ^"EGLECT of even the slight est skin rash, roughness, chafing or soreness may have serious consequences. Painful, disfiguring complaints like ec zema. ringworm, etc., all start in a small way. The safest plan is to keep * jar of Resinol Ointment ready to use at the first sign of skin trouble. It promptly stops itching and reduces' inflamma tion and burning. The tiny pores read. !v receive this sooth ing ointment, and its healing influence is carried far below the surface of the skin. Resinol So? is a favorite with thousan-'s who like ito - generous lather, so refreshing and cleansing At all druggists. Resinol Rodi: ^s Bursal Enlarge ments, Thickened, Swollen Tlssu'. s, Curbs, Filled Tendons Soreness from Bruis e or Strains; stops Spavi: : iimeness, allays pain. Does r ; : blister, remove th? [ hair o: uy up the horse. Only a few cV ps required at each | applica" (2.50 a bottle at druggists or deli d. Book 1 A free. W. F. TOUNG, lac., Sb Lrmu St. Sprin.fieM, Mi*. | In a recent cwrtry-wlde canvass of purchasersof Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound over 200,000 replies were received, and 98 out of every 100 reported they were benefited by its use. The Better the Day Maudle ? Arc y.ii in favor of Sun day sports? Pansle ? If they're willing to spend a little jnek ?u Mils baby, I'm for 'em. ? Outing Silica/ rn?. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION inpigestkW/ uum^couos

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