Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, August 19, 1919, Page 9, Image 9

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    Text of Speech
fContlnued from Hrst I"a sc.]
naval or military force we shall i
maintain or what our policy with
regard to military training is to br I
until we have peace, not only, but
also until we know how peace is to
be sustained, whether by the aims
of sfngie nations or by the conceit
of all the great peoples. And there
is more than that difficulty in
volved. The vast surplus properties
of the Army include, not food and
clothing merely, whose sale will af
fect normal production, but great
manufacturing establishments also
which should be restored to their
former uses, great stores of machine
tools and all sorts of merchandise
which must lie idle until peace and
military policy are definitely deter
mined. By the same token there
can be no properly studied national
budget until then.
"The nations that ratify the
Market No- <;_a.-,3,g,
Store Open All Day Thursday
Specials For Wednesday, Aug. 20,1919
Steaks, any kind, lb 30e
Sliced Bacon, lb 40c
Lincoln Butterine, 2-lb. rolls, 60c; lb., 32e
Lamb Chops, lb 25c
Smoked or Fresh Sausage, lb. 22c
Choice Chuck Roast, lb 18e
Sliced Liver, 2 lbs. for 15c; lb. 8c
Corned Beef, lb 15c
Hamburg Steak. 11). . < 22c
Cooked Pigs* Feet and Tripe, lb 10c
Picnic Hams, any size, lb. 27c
Compound, used as lard, lb., 30c
All kinds of Cheese and Canned Goods
at very special prices.
65 Markets in Principal Cities of 15 States
Main Office, Chicago, 111.
Packing House, Peoria, Ilk
All Meats U. S. Government Inspected
f Get Ready For Section No. 2At f
LAFAYETTE
I Harrisburg s Newest Sub-Division Located on 19tli St. A
i ietween Sycamore and Park Terrace, South of Derry St.
Salesmen on the Grounds evenings. I
xHj IL q I nJi - Jlftr , i iR
Is Your Blood Starving For Want of Iron?
Modern Methods of Cooking and Living Have Made an Alarming Increase in Iron
Deficiency in Blood of American Men and Women
Why Nuxated Iron so Quickly Builds Up Weak Nervous, Run-
Down Folks—Over 3,000,000 People Annually Take It in
This Country Alone to Increase Their Strength, Power, En
ergy and Endurance.
"Is your blood starving for want of iron? If you were to go without
eating until you became weak, thin and emaciated, you could not do a
more serious harm to yourself than when you let your blood literally
starve for want of iron—iron- that gives it strength
and power to change food into living tissue," says
Dr. James Fr; "cis Sullivan, formerly physician of
Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor Dept), New York, and
the Westchester County Hospital.
"Modern methods of cooking and the rapid pace
at which people of this country live has made such
an alarming increase in iron- deficiency in the blood
of American men and women that I have often
marveled at the large number of people who lack
iron in the blood, and who never suspect the cause
of their weak, nervous, run-down state. Lack of
iron in the blood r.-ot only makes a man a physical
and mental weakling, nervous, irritable, easily
fatigued, but it utterly robs him <yf that virile force,
that stamina and strength of will which are so
necessary to success and power in every walk of
life. It itiay also transform a beautiful, sweet
tempered woman into one who is cross, nervous and
irritable.
"I have strongly emphasized the
jrr*=at necessity of physicians mak
ing blood examinations of their
weak, anaemic, run-down patients.
Thousands of persons go on year
nfter year suffering from physical
weakness and a highly nervous con
dition due to lack of sufficient iron
in thier red blood corpuscles without
ever realizing the real and true
cause of their trouble. Without iron
in your blood your food merely pass
es through the body something like
corn through an old mill with rollers
so 'wide apart that the mill can't
grind.
'for want of iron you may be an
Aid man at thirty, dull of intellect,
poor in memory, nervous, irritable
and all 'run-down', while at 50 or
60 with plenty of iron in your blood
you may still be young in feeling,
full of life, your whole being brim
ming over with vim and energy.
"As proof of this take the case of
Former United States Senator and
Vice-Presidential nominee Charles
A. Towne, who at past 58 is still a
veritable mountain of tireless en
ergy Senator Towne says: 'I have
found Nuxated Iron of the greatest
benefit as a tonic and regulative.
Henceforth I shall not be without it.
I am in a position to testify for the
benefit of others to Che remarkable
and immediate helpfulness of -this
remedy, and I unhesitatingly recom
mend Nuxated Iron to those who feel
the need of renewed energy and the
regularity of bodily functions.
"But in my opinion you can't make
strong, keen, forceful men and
healthy rosy-checked women by
feeding them on metallic Jron The
old forms of metallic iron must go
through a digestive process to
transtorm them into organic iron
N'uxated Iron—before they are ready
to be taken up and assimilated, by
the human sustem. Notwithstand-
TUESDAY EVENING,
| Treaty, such as Great Britain, Bei-
I giuni and France, will be in a po
| sition to lay their plans for con
j trolling the markets of Central
Europe without competition front
us, if we do not presently act. We
have no consular agents, no trade
representatives there to look after
our intereats.
Markets Cannot Proceed
"There are large areas of Europe
whose future will lie uncertain an I
questionable until their people
know the final settlements of peace
and the forces which are to admin
ister and sustain it.
"Without determinate markets
our production cannot proceed with
intelligence or confidence. There
can be no stabilization of wages be
cause there can be no settled con
ditions of employment. There can
be no easy or normal industrial
' are you ?
ing all that has been
said and written on
this subject by well,
known physicians, thou
sands of people still in
sist in dosing them
selves with metallic
iron simply, I suppose,
because it costs a few
cents less. I strongly
advise readers in all
cases to get a physi
cian's prescription for
organic iron Nuxated
Iron or if you don't
want to go to this
trouble, then purchase only Nuxated
Iron in its original package and
see that this particular name (Nux
ated Iron) appears on the package.
If you have taken preparations such
as Nux and Iron and other sitgilar
iron products and failed to get re
sults. remember that such products
are an entirely different thing from
N'uxated Iron."
_ In commenting upon the value of
N'uxated Iron as a means for cre
ating red blood, strength and endur
ance, Dr. Ferdinand King. New York
Physician and Medical Author says:
"Scarcely a day goes by but that
I see women whose careworn faces,
dragging steps and generally weak,
tirtd appearance show unmistakable
signs or that anaemic, run-down
condition usually brought on by lack
of iron in the blood.
"There can be no strong, healthy,
beautiful women without, iron and
inasmuch as refining processes and
modern cooking methods remove the
iron of Mother Earth from so many
of our most common foods this iron
deficiency should be supplied by us
ing some form of organic iron Just
as we use salt when our food has not
enough salt.
"iron is absolutely necessary to
enable your blood to change food in
to living tissue. Without it no mat
ter how much or what you eat your
food merely passes through you
without doing you good, and as a
credits, because there can be no
confident or permanent revival of
business.
"But I will not weary you with
obvious examples. I will only ven
ture, to repeat that every element
of normal life amongst us depends
upon and awaits the ratification of
the Treaty of Peace; and also that
we cannot afford to lose a single
summer's day by not doing all that
we can to mitigate the winter's suf
fering. which, unless we find means
to prevent it, may prove disastrous
to a large portion of the world and
may, ht its worst, bring upon Eu
rope conditions even more terrible
than those wrought by the war it
self.
Doubts Stand in Way
"Nothing. I am led to believe,
stands in the way of the ratification
of the Treaty except certain doubts
with regard to the meaning and
implication of certain articles of the
Covenant of the League of Nations;
and I must frankly say that I am
unable to understand why such
doubts should be entertained. Yon
will recall that when I had the
pleasure of a conference with your
committee and with the committee
of the House of Representatives on
Foreign Affairs at the White House
in March last, the questions now
mostly frequently asked about the
League of Nations were all can
vassed, with a view to their imme
diate clarification. The Covenant of
the league was then in its first draft
and subject to revision. It wis
pointed out that no express recog
nition was given to the Monroe Doc
trine. that it was not expressly pro
vided that the league should liavo
no authority to act or to express a
judgment on matters of domestic
policy, that the right to withdraw
from the league was not expressly
recognized, and that the constitu
tional right of the Congress to de
termine all questions of peace and
war was not sufficiently safeguard
ed. On my return to Paris all these
matters were taken up again by the
commission on the League of Na
tions and every suggestion of the
United States was accepted.
Wording Not Vague
"The view of the United States
with regard to the questions I have
mentioned, had, in fact, already
been accepted by the commission
and there was supposed to be noth
ing inconsistent with them in the
draft of the Covenant first adopted
—the draft which was the subject
of our discussion in March —but 1.0
objection was made to saying ex
plicitly in the text what all had
supposed to be implicit in it. Theie
was absolutely no doubt as to the
meaning of any one of the resulting
provisions of the Covenant in the
minds of those who participated m
drafting them, and 1 respectfully
submit that there is nothing vague
or doubtful in their wording.
Not to Interfere With Doctrine
"The Monroe Doctrine is express
ly mentioned as an understanding
which is in no way to be impaired
or interfered with by anything con
tained in the Covenant and the ex
pression 'regional understandings
like the Monroe Doctrine' was used,
not because any one of the con
ferees thought there was any com
parable agreement anywhere else hi
existence or in contemplation, but
only because it was thought best to
avoid*the appearance of dealing in
such a document with the policy of
a single nation. Absolutely nothing
is concealed in the phrase.
"With regard to domestic que:--
consequence you become weak, pale
and sickly-looking Just like a plant
trying to grow in a soil deficient in
iron. Pallor means anaemia. The
skin of an anaemic woman is pale
the flesh flabby. The memory fails]
and often they become weak, nerv
ous, irritable, despondent and melan
choly. Give such a woman a short
course of Nuxated Iron and she often
quickly becomes an entirely different
individual—strong, healthv and rosy
cheeked. I have used Nuxated Iron
widely in my own practice in most
severe, aggravated conditions with
unfailing results. I have induced
many other physicians to give it a
trial, all of whom have given me
most surprising reports in regard to
its great power as a health and
strength builder.
Manufacturers' Note: Nuxated Iron
which is used by Dr. Sullivan and
others with such surprising results
and which is prescribed and recom
mended above by physicians is not a
secret remedy, but one which is well
known to druggists everywhere. Un
like the older inorganic iron pro
ducts. it is easily assimilated, does
not injure the teeh, make them
black, nor upset the stomach. The
manufacturers guarantee successful
and entirely satisfactory results to
every purchaser or they will refund
your money. It is dispensed bv
Croll Keller. G. A. Gorgas, J. Nelson
Clark and all druggists. OB
EARRISBUHG TELEGRXPH
tions. Article 16 of the Covenant
expressly provides that, if in case of
any dispute arising between mem
bers of the league, the matter tn
volved is claimed by one of the
parties 'and is found by the Council
to arise out of a matter which by
international law is solely within
the domestic jurisdiction of that
i party, the Council shall so repoit
! and shall make no recommendation
|as to its settlement.' The United
j States was by no means the only
government interested in the ex
plicit adoption of this provision and
; there is no doubt in the mind of
i any authoritative student of intci
j national law that such Wiatters as
immigration, tariffs and naturallza
j tion are incontestably domestic
! questions with which no interna
j tional body could deal without ex
i press authority to do so. No enum
eration of domestic questions wt3
I undertaken because to undertake it,
; even by sample, would have in
j volved the danger of seeming to ex
| elude those not mentioned.
Article Is Explicit
j "The right of any sovereign state
Ito withdraw had been taken for
j granted but no objection was made
|to making it explicit. Indeed, so
| soon as the views expressed at the
{White House conference were laid
; before the commission it was at once
I conceded that it was best not to
i leave the answer to so important a
j question to inference. Xo proposal
j was made to set up any tribunal to
[pass judgment upon the question
i whether a withdrawing nation had
! in fact fulfilled 'all its international
j obligations and all its obligations
j under the covenant.' It was recog
| nized that that question must be
| left to be resolved by the conscience
of the nation proposing to withdraw;
j and I must say that it did not seem
j to me worth while to propose that
; the article be made more explicit
' because I knew that the United
| States would never itself propose to
\ withdraw from the League if its
l conscience was not entirely clear as
j to the fulfillment of all its interna
! tional obligations. It lias never
j failed to fulfill them and never will.
Can Only "Advise Upon"
"Article ten is in no respect of
doubtful meaning when read in the
light of. the covenant as a whole.
The Council of the League can only
|'advise upon' the means by which
'the obligations of that great article
I are to be given effect to . Unless the
United States is a party to the policy
lor action in question, her own af
| Urinative vote in the Council is
1 necessary before any advice van be
| given for a unanimous vote of the
Council is required. If she is a
party, the trouble is hers anyhow.
And the unanimous vote of the
Council is only advice in any case.
Each Government is free to reject
it if it pleases. Nothing could have
been made more clear to the con
ference than the right of our Con
gress under our constitution to ex
ercise its independent Judgment in
all matters of peace and. war. No
attempt was made to question or
limit that right. Th 0 United States,
will, indeed, undertake under Article
ten to 'respect and preserve as
against external aggression the ter
ritorial integrity and existing poli
tical lines of all members of the
League' and that engagement con
stitutes a very grave and solemn
moral, not a legal obligation and
leaves our Congress absolutely free
to put its own interpretation upon
it in all cases that call for action.
It is binding in conscience only, not
| in law.
Article Ten the Backbone
"Article ten seems to me to con
! stitute the very backbone of the
whole covenant. Withcait it the
! League would be hardly more than
an influential debating society.
Embody Plain Meaning
"It has several times been sug
gested, in public debate and in priv
ate conference, that interpretations
;of the sense in which the United
i States accepts the engagements of
I the covenant shoul.d be embodied in
; the instrument of ratification. There
: can Ik- 110 reasonable objection to
[ such interpretations accompanying
the act of ratification provided tlicy
. do not Torni a part of the forma!
ratification itself. Most of the inter
-1 pretations which have been suggested
| to me embody what seems to me the
J plain meaning of the instrument lt
j self. But if such interpretations
i should constitute a part of the for
j mal resolution of ratification long
I delays would bo the inevitable con
sequence, inasmuch as all the many
! Governments concerned would have
j to accept, in effect, the language of
! the Senate as the language of the
treaty before ratification would be
complete. The assent of the Ger
man assembly at Weimar would have
to be obtained, among the rest, and
I must frankly say that I could, only
with the greatest reluctance ap
proach that assembly for permis
sion to read the treaty as we under
stand it and as those who framed
it quite certainly understood it.
"If the United States were to qual
ify the document hi any way, more
over. I am confident from what I
.know of the many conferences and
debates wlfieli accompanied the
formation of the treaty that our ex
ample would immediately be fol
lowed in many quarters, in some in
stances with very serious reserva
tions, and that the meaning ami-op
erative force of the treaty would
presently be clouded from one end
of its clauses to the other.
"Pardon me, Mr. Chairman, if I
have been entirely unreserved and
plainspoken in speaking of the great
matters we all have so much at
.heart. If excuse is needed. I trust
that the critical situation of affairs
may serve as my justification. The
issiJes that manifestly hang upon
the conclusions of the Senate with
regard to peace and upon th'e time
of its action are so grave and so
clearly insusceptible of being thrust
on one side or postponed that I
have felt it necessary in the public
interest to make this urgent plea,
and to make it as simple and unre
servedly as possible.
U. S. Ship, With Wounded
Czecho-Slovaks, Ashore
Sattle, Wash., Aug. 19.—With 1,-
100 wounded Czechp-Slovaks aboard,
the United shipping board steamer
Heffron Is ashore off Rokurean, Ko
rea 'strait, according to cable ad
vices received by the Pacific Steam
ship Company from Its agent .at
Kobe.
The Heftron is said to have been
bound from Vladivostok to Trieste
with soldiers. Two holds are re
ported full of water. A warship and
salvage vessel are standing by and
it is thought there is no Immediate
danger of the vessel sinking. The
Heffron sailed from here June 22
for Vladivostok.
Cutlery Workers
Strike in Newark
Newark, N. J., Aug. 19.—Six of
the 16 cutlery plants In this city
are affected by a strike of employes
who walked out to enforce demands
for a 44-hour week, a 10 per cent
increase In wages and recognition
of the Brotherhood of Metal Work
ers. Union leaders said 1,500 men
were out, while the manufacturers
placed the number at 900.
WHOLESALE FARM
PRODUCE MARKET
GETS UNDER WAY
City Hopes to Induce Farmers
to Bring More Pro
duce Here
Preliminary steps looking toward
the establishment of a wholesale |
farm produce market in Harrisburg,
where retailers and consumers alike
may go to buy in quantity lots, were
taken by the Fair Price Committee
appointed by Donald McCormick,
Dauphin county Federal Food Ad
ministrator, at a meeting in the of
fices of the Chamber of Commerce
yesterday afternoon, which was at
tended by Mr. McCormick, Frank L.
Cook, chairman, Stanley G. Jean,
Mrs. J. C. Jessup, Jr., H. G. Niesley,
Col Edward Schell and G. M. Stein
metz.
It was brought out In a discussion
of the wholesale market' proposal
that in Buffulo, Philadelphia and
elsewhere the thrifty consumer is
greatly benefited by the fact that
the grower is encouraged to bring
large quantities of produce to mar
ket, knowing that he can dispose of
them, and by the privilege which the
consumer lias of going into the
wholesale markets himself and buy
ing in basket lots at correspond
ingly low prices.
The idea of the Fair Price Com
mittee is to encourage production
of farm produce and to induce
farmers and big growers to bring
more to the city than they now do.
This would enable the grocery stores
to carry at all times a larger and
better variety of fresh vegetables
and would permit the housekeeper
to get better prices and quality or
to go into the wholesale market,
especially during the canning sea
son, to take advantage of the basket
prices. Xo goods in quantities
smaller than a basket, a bushel or
dozen lots would be sold on this
market and it is likely that a rule
will be necessary fo keep the for
cigp buyer from coming in to gather
up vegetables and fruits to be ship
ped abroad. •
Stanley G. Jean, H. G. Xiesley and
George Xebinger, city sealer of
weights and measures, were ap-
VETERAN STURDY
IT IT; TELLS WHY
"Although 87, I am as strong and
vigorous now as I was thirty years
ago," said Charles Bobbins, 3741 X.
Fifteenth street, Philadelphia, a Civil
War veteran.
"However, stomach trouble was
gradually getting the best of me un
til a few weeks ago when I started
to take Tanlac. Tanlac improved my
appetite, increased my strength and
endurance and restored my energy
and vigor. 1 work at my trade as
gardener every day now and never
feel all tired and worn out as be
fore."
Tanlac is just the tiling for old
folks. Nervousness, headaches, de
pression of spirits, lost appetite,
backaches, listlessness, sleeplessness
and that run-down feeling are char
acteristic symptoms of their troubles,
and Tanlac acis like magic when it
brings back restful sleep,'sound di
gestion. more vitality and drives
away that despondent feeling sc
quickly that it actually astonishes
you. Tanlac is sold here by all lead
ing druggists.
Get out on the open, road in
an Atlantic-propelled car
The joy of the open road, with the cloudless blue above and
the ribbon aheac *, leading to you-care-not-where—that joy
IP**! is increased to the point of sheer ecstasy with Atlantic Gasoline
Atlantic—that marvelous motor-fuel that clips figures from
your gasoline bills and transfers them to your season's mileage;
that applies power to your driving-wheels with the ceaseless
urge of a mighty force that will not be denied.
When you see the sign with the non-committal "Gasoline"
on it, drive on till you meet up with the important prefix
' "Atlantic". That, Sir, IS gasoline. You try it
THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY
Philadelphia Pittsburgh
ATLANTIC
Gasoline
Puts Pep in Your Motor
A.
pointed a committee to call upon,
the new chief of the State Bureau '
of Markets, Guy C. Smith, to get his
ideas before going ahead with plans
"The idea is to encourage farm
production by offering the grower
a certain market for his goods with
out the necessity of peddling them ; i
about the streets all day and to help >
the consumer by providing a place !
where he, as well as the retailer can !
buy in quantity lots, particularly
during the preserving season, at
prices belcw those charged for fruits
and vegetables in small amounts,"
said Mr. McCormick, "of course, it
the plan goes through, it will be
necessary to limit the wholesale
market to such an extent that it
would not interfere with the retail
Every Home Should Have
a Good Piano
costs but little more to own a
VT ' jLtjll good piano than an inferior instru
l t ment. It is so vital to have a good,
f I uf\pTtsEiL $ dependable piano because a piano is
PftjN one t * le most important factors
* or educating your children and
ic giving unlimited pleasure to every
: member of your household.
'The Sigler S4OO
is one in which you will have com-
Of the same high grade is plete confidence. Its beautiful tone
c- I m . oonr and honest workmanship stamp it
the Sigler Player at $675. at first trial as a worthy pianos and
the years of service it will render
~~~ - ; will bear testimony to its excellence
Victrolas and Victor Rec - and bring conviction that it is a
ords. Red Seal Records good piano at a moderate pric^
at Halt Price 0 ~ U1
Sold on reasonable terms.
C. M. SIGLER, INC.
Harrisburg IhmToTthe Millersburg
30 N. Second St. Celebrated Steinway Brubaker Block
j ... . h
AUGUST 19, 1919.
markets on Wednesdays and Satur
days."
M •••. Cook announced that he will
at once reorganize his subcommittee
on prices and will begin to publish
fair prices on staples withiri.the next
few days.
Tug Saves Crew of
Barge as It Sinks
Lewes, Del., Aug. 19.—The barge
Xeosho with a cargo of coal from
Norfolk to Xew Bedford sprung a
leuk yesterday and sank on Fenwick
Island shoals. The crew was saved
by the tug Xorfolk which was tow
ing the barge.
Mag Rhu
Stops Stomach Trouble
Guaranteed to relieve all stomach
miseries quickly and harmlessly.
Contains no harmful drugs or alco
hol.
Sold by Croll ICeller, the druggist,
405 Market street; the Kennedy Drug
Co., and by all other druggists. If
your druggist cannot supply you,
write direct to Mag Rhu Company,
and a box of Mag Khu will be sent
postpaid upon receipt of SI.OO. Ad
dress Mug Rhu Company, 207-208
Fitzsimmons Building, Pittsburgh.
Pa. State if you want Tablets or
Powdered form.
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