Evening Star Newspaper, October 21, 1921, Page 36

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‘They’re processed so they won’t grow brittle. And a net that isn't brittle seldom breaks. Try a dozen sndjsee. - . “ Trvo Styles: “Scli-Adjastitg, Cap” Nets and “Fringe” Nets. Both single and double mesh. 15¢ each—2 for 25c and up Yow'll find them at leading shops THEO. H. GARY COMPANY 169 Irving Placs New Yerk ; ARE-THE h CHIEF-CAUSES-OF | PYORRHEA .HavE i US-REMOVE <THOSE i CAUSES., | STITCH in time saves nine. Let us examine your teeth for pyorrhea at once. An examination takes only a few minutes. Pyorrhea gains a hold on the teeth very rapidly and does not show to the av- erage eye until in the ad- vanced st DR. SMATHERS DENTAL SPECIALIST 927 7th St. N.W. Phone Franklin 7596 Hours 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunday 10 to 1 ‘WINDSHIELDS OR BO! Installed While You Wait. Taranto & Wasman 1017 NEW xmmAgY:. N.W. AUTO GLASS COLGATES RIBBON DENTAL CREAM Laege Sise, 25¢ Medium Size, 10c “Brush Before You Sleep” " Blackheads, Pimples And Similar Skin Blemishes Quickly Fi-appear. vw smed Benuty Bleach enthusi- iz .z o _wonderful blemih ye- veautifier. sl s delightfully fragraot. pink-tinted cold is Tightly applied at bedtime. at remains on overnight. ug the skin is cleansed with Black Soap, with the addition of a Httle hite Cleansing Cream—if the skin ¢k and White Beauty Treatment is most_delicate puriment stor e Plough, Memphts, Tes your Birthdsy Book and leaflet which tell about Bluck and Write Toilet Preparatiol | Leaders Say Competition an a can. le at your favorite drug Miss May Martin Tells How Cuticura Healed Eczema “Eczema broke ont.in [HOPES CENTERED *ONARMS PARLEY Widely - Different British Spells Ruin. BY HIRAM K. MODERWELL. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 1921, LONDON, October 20.—Further Brit- ish comment on the disarmament con- ference came to the writer from two widely differing sour but in strik- ingly similar sentiment. . “The hopes of all sensible men are centered in the Washington confer- ence,” said Stephen Leacock, who, be- sides being a humorist, is a professor of political economy in McGill Uni- versity, Montreal, and has received during his present visit to England marks of high.respect. “A situation has arisen in the world which threat- ens clvilization itself. . Competitive armament is no longer possible; it spells ruin. -As I see it, however, thé great nations cannot resign their sovereignty and independence in favor of an international board. We are not ready for that. We are done with ‘scraps of paper.’ One square inch of good will is worth acres of treaties.” We are probably on the eve of one the most mel rable events in lomatic i ¥ declared J. L. Sunday Observer, rienced and 1 dents of forei and expect tablish his fame amonx America Presidents by taking the strongest step which has been made since the armigtice toward the redemption of the world and the salvation of future civilization.” Invisible Color Pictures A New One Every Day, Wrapped in Each Large Loaf of Dorsch’s Bread. Make a Collection. Directions on the Back of Every Card. it was a year ago. it—with the Pe: Hundreds of thousands are economizing on coal By using Perfection Oil Heaters The cost of Aladdin Security Oil, the finest kerosene you csa b is but a trifle more then heif what And with a Perfection there is ab- solutely no wasts of feel, noashes, 00 bother. Comfort-point hest in an instant, just where you want riootion. ®Rushing your coal heater to make 98 ortwo rooms warm or fotake o service, Bive or that's what eats up the coal. You =qth-memnluhl e minutes by using Pecloction furnishing and tores. Oil Heaters. .';hybmbub-l Look et n‘- m::';:‘_:m“‘ ; STANDARD OIL COMPANY ew Jersey) PERFECTION O Hestors THE EVENING BTAR, WASHINGTON, D. U, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2f, 192L' SEEKS $50,000,000 LOAN. |25y Bie appoinement of zor.| ROYAL RELICS CHEAP. |, /tosiea tarmiies tntmurtyoorem cor- Peru Minister of Tressury Would [minister the Peruvian customs house, | gy.Hawailan Queér’s Horse and SnSfuIacR LIVers) iusiin e Daied Phaston Sell at’ Low Figure. By the Associated Press. result of tiat] gotiations recently carried| HONOLULU, T. H. September 21 LIMA, Peru, October 21.—Minister |on in New York between Fernando|(By Mail).—Royal relics may be of the Treasury Rodriguez Dulanto|Fuchs, former minister of the treas-| ., o5 with the rosy hue of romance, but their monetary value, especlally i oty i, crrcal | ELK GROVE here recently, when a phaeton and a princesses and other | carriage, which had belonged to the Bm-k, per b.. c ; ty are maintaining | stables of Queen Lilluokelayl, last of themselves by working at various| the native monarchs, were 8O al respectively. 254 11th St. S.E. FOOD IS SO PLENTIFUL IN TURKEY THAT WHOLE SHEEP SELL FOR 60c The territory over - ‘which the Greek troops made their recent remarkable detour in order to catch Kemal's army is made up largely of desert land and barren hills, with water only at distant days the . weary soldiers had to march under the burning Asia sun without a drop of water to relleve their parched By the Associated Press. WITH GREEK ARMY IN THE FIELD, September 24.—Americans who find life expensive would se- cure unbounded rellef if they could come to Anatolia. In the area through which the Greek army passed in its advance on Angora, lambs sell for 60 cents each, chickens for 12 cents, whole cows for $9 and eggs for half a cent. Everywhere food is found in great abundance and at Dprices such as America never heard of even before the war. The fertile fields of Anatolia rival those of the most productive American state. Wheat is the principal commodity of the thrifty Turkish and Kurd farmers. They raise sufficient quantities to feed & continent. When King Constan- tine's army made its memorable 300-mile advance from Ushak into the heart of the Kemalist country it found hundreds of thousands of tons of wheat and grain. It is the plan of the Greek government to market this huge treasure in an effort to bring the Greek currency back to par. The Greeks also found incal- culable numbers of cattle and sheep. Cows, oxen and water buffalo swarm the plains of Asia Minor, while the famous Angora goats and Caraman sheep are 8o numerous that they sell for about the price of a pound of mutton in any American city. It is this great cornucopia that has made it possible for Mustapha Kemal's army to subsist so long without outside a ce. Tt is also this great abundance that has kept the Greek forces &. Their onw march to Angora would not have been possible upon the meager food supplies they have been able to transport from Smyrna and Greece. The only thing scarce in Ana- lia, pawticularly in the southern to! Joun DoucH Is a royal good fellow. Women admire him, men seek him, children love him and all can find him in oor without nickeled trimmings. Get Funds in United States. représentatives. today Introduced a bill in congress| ¥ which would authorize the Peruvidn| ' government to negotiate a loan in the United States of $50,000,000, to be se-| Many Russian cured by customs receipts and to bear [ women_of nobil interest at 8 per cent. Another bill, introduced on Septem-l occupations in France. elgn experts to reorganize and ad- This bill is pending in the house of Both measures are sald to be the ury, and the Guaranty Trust Com- —_— auction for $6 and $5. students- enrolied in sixty-eight col- Special BROAD CREEK CITIZENS MEET Special Dispatch to The Star. October 21.—A de- parture from the procedure usually followed, the monthly meeting of the Broad Creek Citiz held at the Silesia business with a musical and literary The business part of the meeting || with road improveme: of Washington gave 1k on insurance. ith his humorous stories and . The entire program was interspersed with selections by the Silesia Orchestra. Oh! jaded appetites new cheese with the genuine, old-time Roquefort flavor. New, Coated, Sanitary Wrapper ANCRE Wirh the Genuine Roguefort flasor CHNEESE Made by SHARPLESS, Phila. 1= ten hours on one gallon of ofl. %Y Moreover, the Perfection will go in those comfortable reading cor- ners where it is hard to drive the heat from your furriace ;' in that favorite bay-window for instance. It is easy to care for the Perfeo- ‘tion, s0 simple is its smokeless wick adjustment. It is light, et- tractive, and built for many years $5,000.00 in prises. Sold by 'most hardware, house- A Remarkable Value in a Bedroom Suite of Solid Oak—Finishefl in Silver Gray This attractive, durably constructed and well finished Suite is just the thing for Guest Room. It comprises a Large Dresser, Three- wing Dressing Table, Man’s Chifforobe and Square-end, Full Size Bed. We are featuring this Suite and have marked it very special for Saturday at......ccieeeeevioeccecscscocccosoccsccscsnnes HAVE_IT CHARGED IF YoU wigy, FURNITURE co. NINTH STR S O TS 512 LIUS LANSBURG EET H Can France Disarm? “France must remain armed as long as her security has not been assured,” announces Premier Briand, who is expected to head the French delegation to the arms parley. “No country more than ours desires to limit military burdens,” he declares; but he goes on to make it no less em- phatically clear that any reduction of the size of the French army must depend upon the elim- ination of the German menace—in other words, an Allied understanding for the protection of France. Says the Paris Temps, expressing a point of view echoed in dozen of its contempo- raries: “The security of France means the peace of Europe. It is a basic condition of economic and political solidarity in the world.” President Harding’s call to the Washington Conference says that the question of naval armament will “naturally have first place,” altho “it has been thought best not to exclude ques- tions pertaining to other armament.” How naval disarmament can end war on land seems to puzzle the French, who recall that Belgium and France were not invaded by a navy in 1914, and who at this moment see the jealous nations of Europe facing each other within easy march- ing distance. “France has not the slightest intention of abandoning what she considers her just right to security,” says Paul Scott Mowrer in October Current Opinion. Unless France can be assured of the moral support of the Allies, “the French delegates will not discuss the reduction of land armament,” declares the New York Tribune. The uncompromising attitude of France in this instance finds considerable support among American editors. But while we find the general attitude of the American press toward France’s position to be one of sympathy, in many instances this sympathy is mingled with misgiving. If Premier Briand adheres to his stand, avers the New York World, “then, so far at least as land armaments are concerned, the Washington Conference fails from the start.” Equally pessi- mistic, but less sympathetic, is Mr. Hearst’s New York American, which proclaims that it may confidently be taken for granted that neither Japan, England nor France has the remotest intention of abandoning imperialism or militar- ism at the Washington Conference,” and insists that “the United States should not make any sort of alliance with any other Power or Powers.” There is “not a chance” of the United States entering into any such alliance, declares the Des Moines Register. In the leading article in this week’s LITERARY DIGEST, Octboer 22nd, all shades of opinion, as voiced by the French and American press, are given. Other equally interesting news-features in this number of THE DIGEST are: Britain’s Two Million “‘Surplus Women” Power at a Million Volts How the Falling Mark Hits America | Motoring and Typhoid Favoring Our Ships at Panama Nineteen Big Rail Systems Central America’s Three-in-One North Dakota’s Political Twister “Must Austria Die?” Unemployment a World Condition Russia in Transformation Hitch Your Engine to a Volcano Cleaning Up the Oil Camps Recreational Defects of the Movies More Suicides—Why? What Children Laugh At Why so Many Pulpits Are Empty The Czech Break From Rome Christianity’s Advance in Japan Armenia a Vast Orphan Asylum Investments and Finance Personal Glimpses of Men and Women Topics of the Day Best of the Current Poetry Many Interesting lllustrations, Inclading Humorous Cartoons October 22d Number on Sale Today—Newsdealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year yDigest " PEOPLE'S MARKET

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