»‘72¢» _...nr- t -ZF i ._ .P THE _§7HARLou“_rsrowN GUARDIAN ,_ _ __ -- _ i = _ i .i i _mf '; .. I#-1 _ ' . ' _.....»__ - f Cascara is Good for the System _ What do you do when a slug; with. an urilainted breath, uu- glsh system tells ou the bow coatectongue, and elearhcad. need a little help; functioning as they should. palate, and pleasant in their ac- tion. You eat them just like candy. They work while you sleep. Gentle, but thorough. Cas- bowels in one comfortable, thor- tem clean and sweet; leaves you V moming-and for days afgter, _ _‘___ _ ` . _ ' ,a canavcaruaarie ` ii I 'V ni" Wonx wiiitEY°U’L _ _ f .4-i ' "i Cascarets are made of eascara The best thing yet discovered **l°“8_\’°§ll"d¢_d °l1'¢'°f ¢h¢»m'°l¢ lor the purpose is still the little §¢“°5Cl3l 3X3l\V¢_!kUQ\Yl1¢° “Nd- tandy Cascaret! Ta-ke one _when- 15?] 5°i¢“¢¢- Th_°Y' °"° *W°¢f¢“°d ever the liver and bowels are not with PFW “UC WK” Ind MV' ored with real licorice; Children Ca!tarets are pleasing to the t5;¢éd:n;"u°i:l:‘¢‘;,°‘°3‘\;- when consti ation threatens? Whenever a dull headache, las- siftude, or sick stomach .wi_th_ loss careto don't stir-up the stomach glimaiglxitgtni 5" 3351353: of ftwlzoi-ig _°f “P5” U16 System; But "WY the most harmless form of’help cleanse the entire thirty feet of youfouid give 3 iagging 5y,¢_¢m_ _ _ Take a candy Cascaret tonight ough action that leaves the sys- and see how fine'you’ll fe l in the Waltz The Troubadours 21073 _ Vocal The Melody Three 21028 ‘Vox Trot Nat Shllkret and The ` 21004 Vi cto C ..@.. Records ` Here We Are A P and His Orchestra Moaniri’. Low from the musical comedy "Tha Little Shonr - » _ , ~ Hia Orchestra ._ _ I Lift Up My Finger , and I Say “Tweetf 'l'weet!" Fox Trot Jack Hylton and His Orchestra 22067 Lovable and Sweet 4 , from the motion picture "Sfraef Glrlff ' Fox Trot Gus Anaheim and I-la Orchestra 32054 _ Vocal i' Miller and Farrell 33078 ' . My Song of TheNile' _ from the motion picture "Drag" - Am l Blue? _ _,am the motion picture "On With the Show" Victor 0|-cheetea _' ll the latest Red Sed! records lui famous Victor Jflllfl ///' _I ‘A view'-rome / _ \_ ¢¢uc_;‘o;:`. Mi1¢h|_hQ_CO.. ( '_ im f , _ -- _ _ A ____ ._ ii|f3r~11\_‘,ir.u<.vi.iiri l"'f“ rox 'ri-at 'rea wana :mr Fox Trot Leo Reiaman and _ 22067 i P __ THE l11vr1MA Ta PAPERS . ~ _ _oF coL~o1vE1. _Hausa _ .Friend And Adviser Of President Wil- ._ son ' Recounts in His Diary The Great ' ' Events Of The \War ln Which His Country Was Concerned. (Copyright) _ , Continued from`Page 4 I To a certain extent the complaint was liaiiuiad. 'nie Pie.iideni'ii pie- occul7I_-_bibn with the Covenant although lt took comparatively little time, mononolised his mental and nerv'ous enem¥.~ Hia. mind was so completely eng`a¢ed'w'lth propiema relative to league that other issues became of secondary importance for hlml It aa proceed to meet the issue which the Allies hayl endorsed ‘the lwrhen Points . When he later met issue he stood upon less secure so that the contest he waged t_ of the League, so far from post- poning the _settlement actually has- tened and facilitated lt. There were w ,»_t.hus that he did not' 1 it came to be called, appointed by the Conference to present a plan for a League of Nations was the most distinguished of the Peace Conference President Wilson had chosen himself with Colonel House to represent the United States, and was in the chair for all the February meetings of the Commission except -the last. The two ablest of the British advocates ol the League. Cecil and Smuts, were selected by Llc/yd George. The importance of of pre--_American Agreement ini the Commission was further enhanced by the presence of the Italian Prime _Minlsten Whom House had discovered _to be an ardent and open-minded sup- .partezl of the League idea andmore was complicated and long-dravm-ouhtthaii anyone else ready to sink per- _In ar_ioth_er sense._ however, the crea- `sonal opinions in his desire for speed ion ` ‘and unanimity I It was in Colonel 1-Iouse’s ,office at the Crillon-on the third Premier M. Clemenceau ` for a less hectic etmoshere, many arrangements which would for some time demand international supervision. If -it had not been for the existence oi' the League, to which control of problems might be and was tur ing so thee with one exception they .h~ a ple time to consider the specific is- lnaudc. .. gug rgiguv, no ¢,heGei-mim'1‘i-sary, ii. ‘Baron Maklno and Viscount Chin maiuy. problems which could not begfloor-'writes Mr. Baker. ‘that this solved at the moment, but iiiusi wait .iiieetuig or the nations to make B new iworld constitution was held... It 'was Colonel House who cuririingly :staged the meetings. The Prfsldenl sat at the head of the table. Ori his right was Orlando, the Italian Pre- mier, the only other chief of a Greet these - nedover, agreements upon the trea- |Po\ver. On his left sat Colonel House ties would have been postponed in- himself, active, bright-eyed, watchful definitely, Furthermore, the meetings isllent, In a chair just behind and be- of the. Commission that framed the _' tivccn them, leaning forward to whif- Covenant did not directly prevent the i per, was tlie American legal adviser Council from attacking the economic l :-f the Coninilssion. David I'1'l1-filler and territrxial questions. These meet- | Miller. On Colonel I-louse's left were ings were held in the moming or even- 'the British members, Lord Robert Cecil and General Smurs. This was F _ _,__ 'revu- ~»L . ife nsurance ?” RW!-[EN john was with us, I fought against: Life Insurance. It seemed such a slow, unexciting way to invest money. I wanted a new house, a. new car, fine clothes and the things that money could buy . . . ‘ .But john insisted. He took cn more ° ,e Insurance than I ever dreamed of. Sometimes we had to make ' little sacrifices because of it. and joan would explain ii0w` ' _ large an estate would be ne- ' e¢'»;` "W hat do ou think of cessary to provide an income 'for the children and myself. _ "Now, since john haLs_been‘taken from us, how bitterly have I regretted my st-ubborri opposition.. . _. .how deeply grateful have I been for :his living fore- thought which, even spite' of my own efforts, now protects `us`and provides for our every need. _ ' '_ "It is, a fact,»myfdar,' that if , . every wifeknew-what every ` widow knows, every man would carry suilicicnt life '_ _,,_‘i_,__‘ ,il Insurance.” __ , .iii . iflriiiiii) ' did conflict with the sessions of what may be called the pro-League - _ \ ii_1i ,_;\_;_\£C t e council. The einen sr state, iii- . bloc. Farther aww Sli the 1"r¢r1°11 - ' /i ' 7* eiurnng Mr. wusori, were ieri wiuildsiesates. M. Bourgeois md M. IM' T in life lInsur#l”l..;lee §'crvic . Bethune Hardware. __0o‘.`f1Lld-1 l i ~_; ________,_____ ___________,___ ____ _ in ii "“"'"'”"'”""""' . , .- 'The _ - i s Newer Mode in Ranges »‘ ' ` -APEX I _ C . ’ P ‘RANGE il fi A |eaameeae\healanag0N'F|.'°.'°‘_ ¢aaiyi:°i::»innnaut¢»vh|aa»sr¢\\°I¢**° _ ¢a»\yn»aowiavo\ra°l»°°'“°'|°¢°*°*l‘l0\'*"‘;*-°"' _ < ‘ cinemas f non 1? - ,.w°°m%m"“ _._f - _ t _ ~ it _ ‘__~ . is “Ir ` \ l . _ _ _ .. . _ if _~ __ ‘ ~; ~ . . ._ _ . A .-. . ._-. , ., ._-, ____ _._ ,.41 _.e - .. N fl h e it fi! R to fe the X Ui’ _M ll_!\ll-ml BRINGING UP i=A'i'Hi-:R _ _ paratlons the disarmament of Cer :spoke much more than the Japanese me Love Thi' my, it was riiuier that the counc1i`i>\1l together and ww “wer l-h°_ ¢/,ver ph, '- first to be educated by the re- American position than- any othe- povrts of investigating committees, and _ delegate. _ _ __ _ _ L_,” xt. that they spent much of their BRITISH “AVE six VOTES _ - _ time upon questions of executive __ policy; composing qunrrcls between 'February P8, 1919: The meeting of Brigflrcan “md smug hor Do'ém_ Caecha and Poles; discussing the_tlie League of Nations Committee ions (sepante) yepresentanon in me uaeian impasse; Pllnlllllg WSW Rims 'last night broke up earlier than usual. Leagum no one shmld obkcm be imposed upon Germany ln the We did noi. sit, later than eleven. This news] of the Armistice: d¢bf*i~U\E was by the request of one of the w||,50N-5 DEFARTURE raising of the blockade. |f~‘i~encli Members who lives out of »p,b,-“ry 14, 1919: Gordon wrote 3 ' town and has difficulty in catching cable ¢o_Tumu]iy fm. the p,es|dent.s| approval, inviting the Foreign Rela- lfli 01 °°°l“\\m”Sl °“d“““°“a1i”“° ‘No one seems io have thovsht that tions committee oi both the senate \\b°l'l»¥\°¢2 il' W1'\1i°d» f°‘/eflsh “lid the British in a general conference of and the H¢,use'¢0 ami, with his as goon cited, for the S¢ifU¢m°“"' whether ‘he I-“Que of Nations will have six as practicable after his arrival, and not the treaties proved lBll8fBCl01'Y. totes to the other Crest Powers’ one; i requesting them to refriitii from com- was villa! that wmethins Shwld be that ls, the ariusii nies win have one ment in congress upon the League or decided and lhtl the \‘€81m6 Of Un°€l'~ and there will beone each for Canada, Nations until he had an opportunity . “”“W< F” “Fd” The “°“‘°“d W” S°“lh Africa. Australia- New ,Z°=1=nd. io dismiss it with uieni. when 1 first ard at Paris. but 110% lmlfll thc bfi- and India. when this dawns cm the proposed this several days ago, he of February was its incl-Siem! Conference I am wondering what they declared he would not do lt and that 260081111166. will do. As far as I am concemed,"'I the most he would do would be to the Foreign Affairs Committee ofthe. Europe was hungry and torn by the ii-ain5_ ll? ex qu notni-aftingof the Covenant which i dn were there for japan: . _ _ / prevented the Council from taking 'up uneinotional. Wt watchful: rising _ ‘.__i_~~,, \ ir ' u-is question of the left biinii of the i with power only when their Own 1°- _ _ V” Rhine, the Scar, 'the principles of -terests were affected. Koo. for China, I sk- A;-,,`. ad _ I / would not please Congress, since they would take it that he had called them together as 'a scheoliiiaslcr, as they claim he usually dose. There ivoulrl be no chance for discussion, consulta- tion, or explanation, and they would not regard it as a compliment but rather the contrary. _ ‘He read the cable that had been prepared and changed only one word. It was sent immediately; ' ‘Last night the Coirunittee of thelthgs Constigugign by eagh mg Conference charged with the duty oi ,m,_Ccmmm_eE_ There 15 5 g drafting a constitution br I Ls-raw _sufficient reason for me pin oi Nations concluded its work and this and subggame of ¢p,¢h"`i{i¥i,1¢l afternoon before leaving for the Uni- lquest that 1 be permitted to ted States if. is to be my privilege and iwmf y»_-,U B,-“C19 by m-gms ii duty to read in a Plenary Session of ‘sntuiion reported before uns the Conference the text of the twenty- img work i-,f gm cimfei-enge six articles agreed upon by this Com- ‘the subject of debte ln Congre. millee. (this iii view 1 request that i ‘The Committee which drafted these lwith me at the White House THE PRESIDENT T0 MIL TUMULTY (CABLEGRAM) Paris, February 14. 1919 Please deliver to each Member of _ CHAPTER 35 shall not bring it up and for reasons make an address to Congress. This Senate and the House the following The Committee, or Commission sswhich seem to sufficient, xt Q; n i ii _ _ _ mc Nt seemed U..c».iy L=i__dequete because it message for me. articles was fairly representative' of the world. Besides the representatives of the United States, Great Britain. France. Italy. and Japan. representa- tives of Belgium, Serbia, China, Greece. Rumariia, Czccho-Slovakia, Poland, Brazil, and Portugal actively participated in the debates and as- sisted materially in the drafting of after I arrive in the United my engagements will permit. asked Mr. 'Tumulty to flii the the dinner: _ 'Pima manga thu aim date as soon' as practicable I arrival. . Q To Be Continued ' -By ‘George .a.i`.-is V ._ _ ~ _ ‘ sure: iarro rr- ~rc>u Aiwf com: e>'rii_\..Nol 1*' f NO' _,I comoab asse- \»~/ONDERX an-~. "黑?/‘éR°.‘-i-"1 »; _L 1.. _.__ l' r '2."}? i . l li: l li ii if U ___ ii.. l. % 11? a' f Y s ‘i .':*¢f»~1-asia".-\¢-.~ ji ri ’ r ‘.' _ sg, gl' he _V \ i. -’» i i ‘ if ‘l fi ;i‘, ii 5 ., i_ i ‘bs \‘ . ~..\~»- Ns.. ""3 §~>\;‘%‘-I>`_ !l_ if Q] .f ~l "il ___ ll_ il J- »-:L __L.a _...__