GERMAN PATENTS.
TROUBLE IN AMERICA PRESIDENT’S ORDER DEFIED. By T®iefraph-—Press As-m —Copyright. Received July 17, 5.5 p.m. New York. July 16. Mr. Garvin has formally refused to surrender the German patents. The Government is now expected to institute a suit for their return.
A previous cablegram stated that President Harding had ordered the alien property custodian to reclaim all German trade marks and patents which the former custodian, Mr. Garvin, during President Wilson’s administration, granted to the Chemical Foundation, a private-owned corporation now headed by Mr. Garvin. The President desired the Government to resume the ownership of all past profits as well as the patents andd trade-marks themselves. ’ad been made by Senators that these valuable rights, valued at twenty million dollars, were sold for a quarter of a million.
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Taranaki Daily News, 18 July 1922, Page 5
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130GERMAN PATENTS. Taranaki Daily News, 18 July 1922, Page 5
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