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4 COMBINE OF NATION REQUIRES SACRIFICE Viviani Asks How Can America Expect to Form Association Without Yielding Something. | the a THE SUNDAY Britain's New First 5 Lord of the Admiralty e of aggression or threatened ession the league council ad the English text has recommendatiops; neither BY RENE VIVIANL Former Premier of France. Sy Cable to T it Kes of | m PARIS, February 19 —France awaits | which m quite the same thing the installation of Senator Hardin _\?"‘:‘_ dr[-aiu?:;":n;p:nl'r:;',f"‘llhgfi"}.} i as President of the United Stat can critics—audl *showed - the | with impatience, but without anxiety X ‘:; 02 its ‘Appll(f‘il.'i!]nn, |ln fact, i & > i . when the question of the admission We have not judged his character by | 5¢ tpe Baltic states arose I remarked the intervie he has given nor by | that in case bol#hevism menaced their the newspaper articles about him fmn;&m; no mcml;cr of t:;ul u»a];:m- = < & o Would e in a position to help them We know by our experience in Po-|,,4 that common honesty required Jemics that we cannot always trans-|that no promises be given to nations. late accurately the opinions of thos. o S D about whom we are concerned. We ' not fulillica. Artlae X 1o realiy | wink that there is still time to dis- a treaty of alliance, and alliances oan. &5 certain problems which are not not be formed except between indi- settled in Amer nd which uals or states which are able to teresting to —especial P one another reciprocal LORD LEE France. As was said in my | something quite different must be/of Fareham, whose appointment as patch, an exchange of views i found for those states unable to Pro- |first lord of the admiralty has been than silence, even if it results inltect themselves. o pproved by King George. cceeds Walter Hume Long. who has held the fmportant office for more than a year. FRENCH AND POLES disagreement : The greatest of all these problems is| Reciprocal Obligations. the league of nations. France. or at| This being so, the natural que: least French statesmen, en | tion is, How does the pact limit blamed for accepting this pact f nal indcpendence? Let us sp: President Wilson without first inquir- [ P1ainly. Whatever may he one's con- ing whether it was approved by the|CCPtion of the league and whatever United States Senate. It is well Vu;l_"”“T““ ther le or as- | socia 7 have k { { again repeat that we. the |l it ! have no right to concern | tio; i with problems which arise | ien two individuals form a part- Cncri Constitution. « irrership they s to incre their | out of respect f separate stre in collective | tion itself, we cg strength, but 'y unde Wilson's right to spe = certain _ Obligation: try. 1t is to be regr that this | Other, without which no cor n | juristic political misunderstanding, [ Would be possibic. 1f we do not wish Tesulting from our very respect for o do this it would be far better for _— the Lnvs sk officials ot the Umited|us %o remain separate. Conscauently whatever sort of combination is posed—if it really is to be nation—there must be an exchange of duties and rights by thc associates. Poland Will Take Place of Russia in Forming Euro- States, continues. Pact Subject to Revision. The league of nati act has been Tatified by France, ind. Taly and |So. if Americans desire to form a Belgium. ~ We hope that America, while | combination, and if thev realize the e satisfied herself, will appreciate the | human problems involved, the ques. pean “Equrllbrlum.” s e countrics have accom- | tion is, How will they form an asso- plished an act which they cannot Te- |ciation without commitiing. thoiar pudiate. It is that the pact proclaims | selves to anything or without receiy. itself subject to re Perhaps | ing commitments in exchange? PRINCE SAPIEHA IN PARIS Americans may ask whether such re- vision, when made, may not be complete to annul these sections which are unac- ceptable to them and which would thus meet their v Here we must em- e the capital point, which is that act no longer belongs to govern- Copy ght, 1921.) PAPER NATION OF Expect to Form Political, Military and Commercial Agree- I | the b ments, but that the league alome is Sovercign and alone has the power of ments. modification. _ While this is written more than forty amendments have been proposed and will be studied by a spe- cial committee which the council will name next week. We, at Geneva, noted with concern and regret the absence of America and we agreed unanimously that her co- operation was indispensable to human- fty. 1 remarked at the time tht America’s presence was always desir- able at any meetings of minds and con- sciences. Bu American statemen seem determined ow the destruction of the covenant. They declare that it is not acceptable becuuse it creates a league which is a superstate and a_super- government. The old spirit of inde- pendence in America, which fought its BY P. By Cable to Th: COTT MOWRER. Star and Chicago Daily News. opyright, 19: PARIS, February 19.—With the re- turn to Paris of Prince Sapieha, the Folish foreign minister, the conclu- sion of a Franco-Polish alliance des- tined undoubtedly to play an im- portant role in Europe seems to be definitely in sight. The final accord jwill comprise four par 1. A political declaration which will be published. A military agreement. . ARMENIA IS GONE Only Few Mountain Districts Remain of Country Set Up by Sevres Treaty. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 1921. TIFLIS, February 19.—When Henry - : A commercial agreement. oy m;;:gl;'a ‘brl]‘;_odahn:f‘;(il‘ggonétpr‘o‘; Morgenthau arrives to adjudicate| 4. A special pulrolougm agreement. autonomy. the borders of Armenia on be-| It is now possible to give for the first time more or less definite details of this long projected alliance. The political declaration will proclaim Franco-Polish collaboration, thus con- firming what is already an accom- plished fact. Indeed, since the six- teenth century France’s constant pol- icy has been to séek in eastern Bu- rope support first against the house of Austria and then against Germany. Francis 1 inaugurated this so-called “eastern system" by his alliance with the Turks. Until the middle of the eighteenth century Poland was the pivot of this combination. the aim of which was to take the Germans in the rear by grouping under the French aegis the powers bbrdering on Germany, notably Sweden, Poland and Turkey. = The disappearance of Sweden as a political power, the decadence of key and the partition of Poland, coi 1 h the rapid rise of Russia rance to seek at St. Peters-{ burg_the support no longer available in Warsaw. Louis XV inaugurated this new policy. Napoleon realized it for a brief period and the third re public brought it to completion be- tween 1893 and 1598 with the Russian alliance. _ Russia having now temporarily van- ished from the political and military map of Europe, France is seeking to confide to Poland the part heretofore played by Russia in the maintenance of the European equilibrium. In Au- gust, 1920, France made a partial ap- plication of this kystem, on the one hand furnishing the PoleS with means of defense against the bolsheviki and on the other by warning Germany that a French attack on the Rhino would be the French reply to a Gere man attack on the Vistula. Political Alms. The political declaration will note the identity of the political aims of the two governments and assert that they will support one another. in cer- The military half of President Wilson and the| league of nations he will find there | is nothing to do. Armenia, as en- | visaged by the treaty of Sevres, is finished, apparently forever. Of the | former paper nation of propagandists’ tdreams, with Tribizond as its seaport, nothing now remains e a few mountain districts like Erivan and Karaklis. The Tugrks have annexed the district and fortress of Kars, in former Russian Armenia, and the re- mainder is a bankrupt soviet republic under the Russian aegis, constantly menaced by the relentless Turks. To restore from this mess the Ar- menia ‘of the treaty of Sevres would require an entente army willing and capable of fighting the bolsheviki and the .Turks. “The entente, which has been unwilling ever to send a single soldier to save Armenia, certainly will not send an army now. ' No one in th near east takes the Wilson adjudica- tion seriously, save a few of the Turkish nationalists, who imagine that President Wilson will send an army to_defend the boundaries he {names. The only hope for Armenian national 'life lies in the protection given by Moscow to its new proteges. Armenian Soldlers Mereiless. Meanwhile Georgian troops are oc- cupying the neutral zone northwest of Armenia. What is now left of that fcountry is struggling against cold, starvation, typhus and smashed mo- rale. The American Near East Re- lief organization continues at twork, though its technical status is uncer- tain, and no orders from the New York office have been reccived to date. | Americans from Armenia say that |much of the present misery was caused | by the Armenian troops during the re- jtreat. Kars was not captured; the Turks simply walked in. The principal |Port was taken by forty men. The Armenians ran at the first shot and! tain definite cas. |Fetreated across the country, looting | negotiations concern the. appiiosciny | Srmamihere and sometimes bayoneting | of this agreement. There 18 no. pro- | Villages and 1ot notaFoPbed whole | posal for an official military alliance. I hed Sthe Amercas roi8; «They rob-{ which moreover, could not be realized { Karakiis oo rmppolief station at|so long as Poland’s eastern frontiers iacacailis flixhol ) ot mas- | are not definitely fixed and so long as 153 by ¥, but apparently adopted a | Poland’s army remains in its present g oer & bolicy of destruction. steal- | embryonic state. For the time beine imt :P:r.\mnr-n;ri:;lualhle‘.‘ l:- luding; Poland can provide only the human ans uster ratn The ALng. which | material. Moreover, France considers Vilian pepulation fled in droves hefans abe et L ReEe T Egland ;.h\;;k;iuz‘nblfd peril of Armenian and|when the safety’ o§X(:;:JEdn:x;'¢§ sh soldiers. and communications has been as. Belshesikl Lends Ald sured by ‘agreements with the Ru- bl o 3 _ manians and the Czechoslovaks, he situation is better. Twenty | Howeve the Teschen affair the encampe: elaty g - : Alexandropol and - many - ace &s‘:“:f{:"l\av::mns between Warsaw and Prague Obligations of Article Article X is cited as containing a threat against national independ- ence. This article provides .that in Busin (2.1 Opportunity We offer for sale in Mt. Pleasant, east of Columbia Road, south of 17th St, a vacant piece of ground 150 feet front, containing about 22,500 square feet. Section s zoned first com-- mercial. Fine location for large public garage which the neighborhood needs. Price and terms upon appli- cation. William S. Phillips Realtor 1409 N. Y. Ave. Phone Main 98 That is a question that only a skillful dentist is able to decide, when it comes to a trou- blesome tooth. In most cases, it can be treated successfully and be saved. Bat if it has to come out, we perform that task—without pain or inconvenience to our patient. That's what ecxpert, modern dentistry does. Easy Payment Terms to All Dr. White, 407 7th St. Opposite Wool- worth's Sc 10e Store. Hours, Dally, i N thou 8:30 8. m. 10’8 b, B uted among the villages. but the been somewhatist Sunday, 10 to 1. ar East Relief feeds 8,000 2 day in : Phone Main 19, raklis. Medical and other supplies | Thecrc a limited Dr. J. K. Frelot, are running short. The Near It ey concern, first, the or- [l workers in Erivan are buying flour. in Ta2nd eventual extension of rench military mission to Po- land: and_sccond, the furnishing of war material with which to equip the Polish army. The commereial agres. ment has required prolonged diseus. sion. The object is a double one, the first beinz to facilitate exchanges between France and Poland and the second to insure as far as possible the security of French enterprises especially in the textile mills estab. ished in Poland. Difficulty in Commercial Profects. Scveral ‘difficultics have retardeq the progress of these negotiations The Poles desired to associate witl; the commercial treaty the floating of a great loan w the French mar- ket is not now able to bear. This do- mand accordingly has been dropped On the other hand, France demangy, that a certain amount of coal should be reserved for the French textile mills. This demand has been granted, Finally the Poles felt that the quan- tity of goods France wanted the right to export to Poland was too large France replied that if Poland wished to build up her industries she would require machines and must open hee frontiers to them. An understanding satisfactory to both parties is ey Dected in the near future. The Petroleum Questioh. The petroleum question is a compli- {the open market while awaiting in. | structions from New York. The local |bolsheviki government donated 50,000, 000 rubles (normally $25,000,000) to the American relief work and alog placed the British Jord mayor's fund in American hands for adiministration he bolsheviki sent twenty-seven cars of grain and six cars of fuel il to Karaklis, with a promise of mow They offered Capt. Grant, the Amers can”director in Karaklis, $200.000 in American curreney for the relict wory s moncy was captured from the 15 of ‘the old Armenian govern. while they were attempting to UALITY Workmanship ured when P! Paperhanging does the o Up Ty 2 big stock of fine 1325 14th St. PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It 0, the red commander ‘)n K s, is scrupulously regardfyl of American rights. He pays in kind for all supplies requested from the Ameri. cans and ruthlessly punishes dishonesty in his ewn ranks. — SPANIARDS FLEE TERROR. Outrages of Syndicalists'in Cata- lonia Force Natives to Emigrate. By the Associated Press. MADRID, February 19.—Unofficial negotiations between Spanish authori- Yics and the syndicalists of the prov- h 5 cated one. e . Pays 4 Per Cent {ince of Catalonia, with the object of | vestea " nearly 1000 mmormod2Y¢, In- ending the constant terrorist agita-| (normall .000) in francy : Yy $200.000,000) in the P 1 tion between rival syndicates, are{oil flelds. Part of this lnv@s‘t:‘;;‘: St e dates from before the war, but sinee on shares withdrawn be- STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FEBRUARY 20, 1921—PART 1. SAYS U. S. SHOULD WARN EUROPE TO GO TO WORK “Do Something Constructive, Then I May Help You,” Would Be Sensible Advice to Old Werld, Says Harden. BY MAXIMILIAN HARDEN. Germany's Foremost Publist. By Cable to The Star. BERLIN, February 19.—Would a man, when a surgeon had split open his stomach, do such a thing as learn algebra just after the operation had been performed, thereby depriving himself of rest which he needs for his conva- lescence? Would he start a quar- rel with the man lying in the next bed and bombard him with bandages torn from his own wounds because the other hap- pened to be of another nationality or religion, or possess another sort of patriotism or fanaticism? If he did, we would call him a fool, and the director of the hospital would say to him: “If from now on you do not de- vote yourself entirely to the re- covery of your health, I shall have only one choice—either put you out’ of the hospital or into an isolated cell.” Old Lady Europe, exhausted by a serious operation, acts as sense- lessly on her sick bed A man of this sort. Instead of trying to get well as quickly as possible, she devotes her time to all kinds of things which are perfectly for- eign to her condition of today or tomorrow. and she quarrels with God and the world. The principal illness of this con- tinent is that it is suffering from two wounds, a big one in the east, a smaller but very painful one in the west. Does a single person, who knows the world other than through the cinema, believe that this sickness can be healed by drawing up paper documents by a few well dressed elderly gentle- men? People who calculate what they owe one another and who, because of their failure to agree, start calling each other such name “perfidious swindler, im- perialist, cap t. Hun and boche.” ‘are hardly likely to ac- complish anything construct e. This display of words, now tw years old, produces neither bread nor coal, mneither cement nor bricks. The whole world is suf- fering because the European sick- ness continues. Europe must return to work. Her double wound, however, can- not be healed by mere renuncia- tion of her voluptuous standard of life. When, in 1914, she decided to mutilate’ herself she did not waste time over rhetorical in- CHINA WOULD END ANGLO-TOKIOPACT Is Displaying Unusual Diplo- matic Vigor in the West- | ern World. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 1921. LONDON, February 19. — Chinese diplomacy is displaying unusual vigor in the western world. Not for a long time has it been so energetic and able in Europe ad now. One of its| clearest-headed and most-trusted ex- ponents 1s Saoke Alfred Sze, for six | years Chinese minister to London, who sails for the United States to- day on the Aquitania to assume his diplomatic duties in Washington. An- other is Wellington Koo, who suc- ceeds Mr. Sze in London. In type of mind and character, these men are like tke other diplomats China is sending out to advance her in- terests throughout the world. China cherishes hope not only of great internal development, but of an important role in the promotion of general civilization. Her purposes, according to her occidentally edu- cated representati are entirely pacific. She believes in the lcague iof nations and will devote to its succe: every form of influence she command: Sees Help From Dominions. In a dispatch sent February § there was reported a movement 1ooking to lthe formation of a_quadruple agree- {ment by Britain, Japan, China and !the United States to secure peace lin the Pacific and the far east. It is now possible to describe the gene- | sis of this movement. It arose from j objections go the Anglo-Japanecse al- {liance. CRina objected. Australia i objected. Canada regarded the al- liance not as an imperial {but as an imperial disintegrant. vices from America indicate better relations between Britain and the United States would follow a ter- mination of the alliance. China saw her opportunity. She saw tbat in I geeking to have the Anglo-Japanese treaty ended she would carry with her the influence of the British do- minions and would have the benefit of the desires of the British govern- ment and people to get rid of every- thing prejudicial to good British American relations. A ke Saw more. She saw that the leaders of British industry and com- merce with special interests in the far east would support an effort to free the soil of China from forms of endeavor supported by undue politi- cal pressure from without. So China has been pleading for the suppression jof the Anglo-Japanese alliance. She has based her plea primarily upon the thesis that no arrangement affecting China should be made by outside na- tions without China’s consent. She has said: “Get rid of this special treaty and let the questions it pre sumes to deal with pass under the governance of the general principles of the league of nations. No Snub for Japan. This is what China wants. If she cannot get it. she would accept some- thing else. She would accept an agreement bearing the sigmatures of herself, Britain, Japan and the United tates. She believes that an agree- { ment could be drafted that would i guarantee justice to all the nations concerned. and put peace in Asia and the Pacific on a permanent basis. China_ desires close relations with the United States. She desires close relations with Britain also, and her spokesmen assert that nothing is any farther from their minds than any wish to offend or wrong Japan. They declare that their diplomacy is direct- ed wholly to_ the realization of the ideals of the best minds at the Paris peace conference. Militarily, they ad- mit, China is almost impotent. ~ But economically, they hold, she is a pow- erful world factor. ernment has espoused the cause of the French investors and is request- fore maturity Assets Nearing $7,000,000 Surplus More Than $600,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N,W. JAMES BERRY, President JOSHUA W. CARR, Secretary 1919 the French seem to of the leaders have consented to send |, large number of arnuh”fl?a?&’ffif representatives to this city for the London, where they seem t 3 o have purpose of discussing the matter. less confidence in Poland's economic The recent stream of emigration of [ future than they have here, the best workers in Spain to America | However, the dislike of foreign and France, in order to escape out- | Commercial enterprises recently man- rages. has convinced authorities that|ifested in Warsaw, particularly by Catalonia is confronting a grave|the socialists, is so great that many crisis, which may be increased by the | French investors have now begun to closing of many plants, owing to un-|doubt whether these oil wells can be favorable conditions. The governor|Worked profitably by foreigners. of the province. however, refused to|Some have even begun to sell their advise the government to enter into |Polish shares to German companies negotiations, believing repression the [financed in Holland. Considering best means of ending the reign of [these sales as infurlous to French terror, influence in Poland, the French P &aw-"the continent.™ ing an importagt part in the Galiclan oil production. None of these Franco-Polish treea- ties has been signed yet, but all a approaching conclusion. France's next step will be to try to effect a rapprochement between Poland and Rumania and Poland and Czecho- slovaki “Thus,” as a leading French diplo- mat recently remarked, “will be re- constituted under a new form the eastern system, which is one of the best traditions of French diplomacy and which will soon give this diplos macy greater freedom of action on EES P RO trigues and conferences which then might have been more useful than they are today. Twenty to thirty millions of the strongest men were called to arms, the agricul- tural interests of huge countries, aged men and women and children all worked for naught but war. Towns sprang up as if by magic and railways, factories and ship- ping wharves shot up out of the ground. Why is it not possible to heal wounds with these same means? The world does not benefit at all by one minister showing another a carload of papers which contain the obligations of a defeated And, because the final i never be settled without help, I longingly hope that she will not wait, but speak now, proving that she is the heir to that majestic common sense which formerly was old England’s prerogative. What will America a I can just about imagine Thus “Whether you come to terms in the London meeting, or four weeks later-at Geneva, or, for a change, have your next conference on an ocean’ liner, is_perfectly indiffer- ent to me. I don't care anything about those terms which you ara drawing up on paper. What I de- e are real results which make it. possible for me to resume hon- est trading with the whole world. We Americans have not sacrificed our blocd and our billions so that your foolishness, old or new, shall afterward shatter the mighty body of our state, socially and economically. “England has 1.000,000 unem- ployed, Germany many hundreds of thousands. Let us mobilize at last for a sensible purpose. Draft your workingmen into armies, let them build houses for the people and help give back the purchasing power to 300,000,000 consumers, of which the world now is in need. “Are you willing? Then, willing- 1y will we help you in financing and delivering materials. If, how- ever, you continue your confer- ce and quarrels do mot reckon with our help. We will then have to make arrangements for a very long time to do without Europe, and this will keep us so busy that we cannot waste our time with lunatics.” : Short and clear speech like that would act quicker and more thor- oughly than ten congresses of the cleverest theorists, who are only proving to one another the impos- sibility of the fulfillment of their demands. (Copyright, 1921.) PROGRESS MADE IN AID OF AUSTRIAN REPUBLIC Belgian Financial Circles Show In- terest—London Bankers to Enter Negotiations. PARIS, February 19.—Rapid prog- is being made toward' bringing aid to the Austrian republic, Louis Loucheur, minister of liberated regions, who is directing the negotiations, con- ferred with French bankers and finan- ciers on Thursday, and with Italian Both received the French government's suggestions favor- ably, and Belgium financial circles are also’ declared to be taking a lvely in- ress financial says the newspaper Eclair. financiers on Friday terest in the question. Negotiations with the British govern- ment and London bankers will be begun next week by M. Loucheur, who is seck- ing to arrange a.common plan. of ac- It is said that it united action cannot be decided upon, ch power can be counted upon to give in the form of tion by the allies. financial assistance c the Soap and hot water on rising and of Soap, best applied with the hands. Smear any signs of pimples, redness or roughness with the Ointment and let it remain five minutes before bathing. Finally dust on a few grains of the ex- quisitely perfumed Cuticura Tal- cum, it takes the place of other perfumes for the akin. Lopuipns st St B Lift Off with Fingers | 3 MDO_'Q hurt & bhllnhm‘ H ne” onm en ing oorn, stantly that cotn stops burting, then shortly you Lift it right off with fin- gers. Traly! . Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard cern, soft corn, of Unemployment. BY GEORGE N. BARNES, Former Labor Leader of the British War Cabinet. By Cable to The Star. LONDON, February 19.—Lord Rob- ert Cecil has gone over to t The reconstruction of se of lords is made dependent Two Dixturbing Questiona. il this the writer concludes ther mmediate prospect oppo- | t is no. SV T Sy, e e a seneral election. During the : Sl 25 rly part of this ion, parliament ers say, a rival coalition including more concerned about hap- Viscount Grey and former I'remier < under old laws than it will Asquith. At all events, the govern-| King new ones. There is much ctude about the Irish ment's difficulties have both Lord Cecil has Llovd George has reconstructed his | cabinet. Walter Loug and Lord Mil- 3 ner have disappeared, but Baifour, !Revealed British Effort i and the other chief figures remain ASSIGNED TO CAMP MEADE. To Cancel War Debts| BRITISH LABOR ~ V ILL AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN, nd Winston Churchiil has becon whone announcement that Great Brit- | parjjament opened this weck with n proposal to cancel war loans |51 irappings of « leisurcd age Maj. Joseph G. Fermbach, Medical }eign goods, prom ncreased, for and Irish problen its worst rent. Although a growing following. the ed and preparation: et up a pa alxo is a more hopeful atmos regarding some agreement with insur nts elsewhere. It difficu rwever, to give a reason - this feeling and to.make the rea- n tent with surface appear- ances, unless one should attribute it o thi temptation confroming Lloyd ¢ of stealing the thunder of the new pariiam tary combination men- tioned above. 1 still believe that the ons of the new act, wWiXh_two d on Fifth Page.y Dhere the spes pected to Cause Lively Discussion e of for- regarding in- ployed 0- British chancellor of the exchequer,|colonial secretary. ain had approached the United States |41} the old world pomp. circum created an intermational furor. heard the king's thron. ch, Corps, at Camp, Dix, N. J.. has been|surance benefits for the un {Amendments to the Throne Specch Ex- contained but a me: assigned to duty at Camp Meade, Md. |and the reguiation of the sal 4 LSV By AN g The 3-piece suite shown above is upholstered in beautiful tapestry. Its deep, comfortable spring ° construction insures gen- uine relaxation. The reg- - ular price is $395.00, but tomorrow you may buy it for only $298.00. & A" > Z It is hardly believable to find such magnificent up- holstered furniture in- cluded at one-quarter off regular prices. But values have built our reputation and February Sale is add- ing to it daily. T A handsome golden oak Duo- | fold that makes a bed at night ircassian Walnut-finished | and a hanasome piece of turni- ture during the day. This Duo- fold holds the mattress, pillows Elegant 4-Piece C Bedroom Suite, as Shown This suite as illustrated consists of a Chiffonier, Wood Bed, Tripie- mlrm\; D&o&.‘l‘lnlg "l;zbl%;ind a D‘resalcr with a largfle plate mirror. You | and covers when not being used cannot afford to buy bedroom furniture without first in- specting this big value... $169.50 ! s A bed. . Spocil 349.75 price IS EASY TO PAY MAXWELL'S WAY. 9-Piece dolden Oak Dining Room Suite, as Shown, $119.75 ‘This suite consists of a 48-inch Buffet, large plate mirror, lined silver drawer and large and roomy cupboard space, 6-foot Round Extension Table and 6 box-pad imitation leather-seated Diners and a Square China Cabinet to match. You cannot afford to miss this $119.75 opportunity in a dining room suite ol IT"S EASY TO PAY MAXWELL'S WAY. Now you can buy a fine crib for the baby at a new low price, all metal, in white enamel and a good Wwoven-wire spring; i New prices start at Two-Inch Continu- ous Post Steel Bed $12.75 Two-inch, continuous post steel bed in white enamel, in different sizes. This same bed has been selling for a great deal more money elsewhere. Come early, as they won’t last long— $12.75. 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