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| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, FROM MINE TO CONSUMER . 'Coal Comfort Cold has no terrors when the coal bin's full. ' You are late in plasing your eoal order now, but we are ready to make up lost time by prompt service, We offer coal in unlimited quantities, M. Tardieu begins today the revelation of the imeldents whieh led up to President Wil- son and Lisyd George offering France a treaty of guarantee agninst further German ag- gression, The nanouncement of this treaty—never considered by the United States Semate—was ome of the big surprises of the peace conference, and the story behind it is one of intemse in- Rhine’s Left Bank Arises as Issue at Conference. By ANDRE TARDIEU. Osptain of the French Army. French mmissioner to Amaries. Clemenceau's t the Confereace of Versallles. igh SECRETS OF WORLD WAR France Insistent on D. ¢, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, ‘1921 - IFEDERAL TESTS OFFERED. Demand to Oc- cupy Area. on the certain revolt of French opin- ion against a peace which would.not include the occupation of the Rhine 0al for imm . o TaraMhaal e Diots murvender of the sntire Ger- Coal for ediate delivery. CHAPTER XXV, man fleet permitted her to do away Coal at “from-our-mine-to-your-bin” prices. ‘H§W THE LEPT BANK OF THE RHINE. | baore $ist her iingneiar er ot et dinlt" that the partial earmantnt her that her morikot war has taugh!| ,f Germany on land—partial, because ~ The left bank of the Rhine was one | ‘00 Iof “““;‘4“,1":%"‘" t'k:'onuehrx is '-"lli for twenty years, she will have af i Mty 51 T e e e e | B ImBCrIARE o e Uikn oLl | ek AaOS F e mesceny 3 ght out more elearly) canal or the Himalayas. of v 4 | |difference in national psychology, the| “You say that the Rhineland will| like asking Kngland and the United OrriIc£8-809 MaTsonaTions Bio6. Yanos-Finer ano N 0rs. ME. diffieulty that governments and peo-|revolt. Our answer s that fear of | States to sink their fleet of battle- plés have in understanding one an-|bolshevism and dread of war taxes | iBwe ooyl oiuse; sigt o ——— . srstsmcree—cmmall |other, albelt they are loyal allles,|dominate the Rhinelander, and that | wamy omr heoncit ar ommsline the united by vietory and by sacrifice. The | {J0TCXSE We are not threatenint | question a vital one, and I do nof occupation of the lett bank of the|ing them independence. Other peo. | YeN need to consult M. Clemenceau Rhine and of the bridgeheads was for | Ples—the Germans of Bohemia, for | L5, J5CIare: In his name, that wé. in us French both an indispensable | instance—will, under the treaty, have | ®.5¢ upon our deman; [3 ntee dlar the enforcement of the to"‘l‘?cinl a Il:'rellgn‘ .wemlgniw' (Copyrighted by the Bobbs-Merrill Company.) peace, an & necessary assurance you objec 0 a possible re- againit invasion such as had oe sistance of British opinion, we rely | 20TH INSTALLMENT TOMORROW curred twice In fifty years. To others, associateq though they were hehrt and soul In pur perils of the past and 8 soul In our perils of the past and| FACES BRIBERY CHARGE. AWARDED $2,500. = & different light, this occupation, no pactstalhainle matter what its form er duration,|Patrick J. Bligh Accused of Offer-(E. N. Ford Gains Verdict for In- unjustifiable, uselegs and dan- : fering Money to Dry Agents., juries When Hit by Auto. Stressed by Marshal Foch. A charge of attempting to bribe| Eldridge N. Ford, a machinist, was Ry B oy e L i had | Prohibltion enforcement agents was|awarded a verdict of 32,600 .damages Foen O Burely ey BT em, | preferrad against Patrlck J. Bligh. [against Edward . Masmullo by a laying' stress on the necessity of [thirty-five years old, 1019 7th street jyry before Justice Stafford in the making the Rhiné the western fron-|Bligh was under bond on charges of ! Hor of Germany. On January 10 fol. | violation of the Volstend act and his|Supreme Court of the District of er o GO ok Teate Which he |cuse was scheduled to be heard before | Columbia. Mr. Ford, the plaintift in T I emmmanderc-in.chief of | United States Commissioner Isaac R.|the case, sufféred, among other in- the allied armies, Marshal Foch hag | Hitt yesterdny.afternoon. juries, the loss of two fingers from e e T e mnts and summed | BliFh, anxious to get the case set- (his right hand by being run down by developed e ving coriclusion: | t1ed. I alleged to have made an offer |the automobile of the defandant and : Marshal von Moltke placed the mili- [0 pay M. O. Icksten, Linton S.|thrown under the wheels of a p: ® Al day long—in the office or shop, in the cars, the cro T O Germany at the Rhine [12vans and Harold R. Stephenson. |ing street car. tores—you have been i sore throat, tonsi e i prohibition enforcement agents, $360 | The attorney for the plaintiff was i e breathing in s of gare throat, J and at the end of one of his papersi,; ., ¢or fajlure to prosecute the pend. . W, 1 12 el influenza. In the warm crevices of throat and mouth they multiply Writes: “There can be no doubt about [ £A¢h for fa P « the pend- | John C. W. Beall, and the defendant rapidly. the ordinary strength of our theafer ‘“,fih;“f“"f"dnm o bered ety | YA represented by Howard Duckett. ¥ 2 f ‘operations on the Rhine. One thing |, efen d revenud agen nssibiiatiudloiind yin The folks at home may be less able than you to resist these onl 1q endanger it—a prematurc | met at John Marshall place and D armies of ill-health and the home-coming kiss may bear the dread oftenaive by us on the left bank with :L’g“;:;"‘:‘“f;“:‘-t ‘;fl\{:“m"“’:‘m iolien WILL LEAD BOND DRIVE. germsof disease, \ Insufficlent forces And elsewhere be | until settlement of the' ponding case. | Wi M i 3 o P : e s Hi ited, and issi £ ing of the Terence Mac- b o) Pleasantciviont candydlike—Formaaint dimolved ja the Prussia against France is the Rhine | it Tecly (0 Bond of Swiney Council of the American As- mouth now and then during the day makes the meuth fuids anti- with its fortresses. This line 18 S0, ,n.arance. He also was required to|8ociation for the Recogmition of the septic, keeps gorm-growth within bounds, and forms a strong de- strong that it s far from requiring | GRS ONE" 11 e “gum of $1,000 to|Irish Republic in St. Dominic's Hall fenceagainst disease. all the forces of the monarchy.” | in|#walt the action of the grand jury on | Tueaday night the following commit o : ! If't:e throat is lllb‘ad sore, 'I‘:uu'mm use of l‘clmlinkh t tavor of ca:ll:‘l:‘:\. The coalition can- the second ofternse charge :,‘}f.:l’};"“'{{l': k{0 direce the Irtah bond keeps the membranes bat! ia_thi antiseptic, ye not renounce its advantages, the city: inflammation, infection the tissues & chance relinquish its buckler of defense in ey ¥, Dast, @iatpman; Miurioe heal i prwvesis sew lal Bives the . that region—the Rhine—without seri- GOES TO TORPEDO STATION. F. Flynn, treasurer, and Miss Ger- fohetl ously compromising its future. The| Commander Earl R. Shipp of the|trude Marsden and Miss Nellle Bro. $ Childre lad them and shovld do 8o freely, as crowded Washt am Rheln' must be 1ts slogan. | bureau of navigation, Navy Depart- |erick, secretaries. Mr. and Mfs. Ja 'nare, to use an 30 x “Wacht am Rhel “| burcau of nha , D - | erick, se 3 . m . 3 n_assigned to duty at|J. Forrester, recently return school-reome “'%’“"M fields for the spread of throat Jecfin- x.“:::::‘u«:n';zh?:a e be the | the naval torpedo station, Alexandria, | Ireland, spoke on the Trish situation, by throst western frontier of the German peo- [ V2 Joseph T. Fitsgerald presided. m-'::: ples. Germany must be deprived of all access to or military utilization ” of it—that is to say, of all territorial o sovereignty on ‘;heflefl h,,;k fl[‘; is F river—in s word, of every facili . o reach by sudden Invasion, as in 1914, 3 of Belgium :nd L«xemsulr';‘:. :n« . beg"""ng Of the STAINS, h f the North sea an reaten . SERM-FIGHTING THROAT TABLETS T gt e e aewana Franees || Social season finds us sup- Foemamit is our rade mack. Itidvatifies our produst, Bauer Chem. Ca., Ine., N.Y.! atural defenses, the Khine and the Meuse; to conquer her morthern . FINISHES, ns and approach that of Paris. p ylng or L The Rhi a milltary «frontier m;‘ o FURNITURE 1 dispensable for the maintenance o Perter“ahien' 15 the aim of coaiition. [l FIAMY dmmg tables—also bkl l offers no lr;';rl[orlnl advanlug{al l':‘) ‘l'l‘{‘ 1 AND try. here is no question, o " Geed.of annexing the left bank of for buffets and serving tables. POLISHES. the Rhine, of increasing the territony . of Frauce of ot Delgiut, Lot simely f1Is your precious mahogany thus pro- AUTO i i i on e ine . -Indigestion Gases Heartburn | Sommon. barier of security easential tected? If not, we suggest you let us call ENAMELS. to the society of democratic natione to measure and fit tops—Plate Glass or fine Sourn There s no question of intrusting s 2 ess Flatulence Palpitation | Tn Fuardianship of this common bar- grade window glass, whichever you prefer. oLp stanf Fler 50 4T one BOTe material sup- ENGLISH = _by the moral and m: - 3 5 1 oo, Instant reliefl *-No waiting! A few tablets of harmless, pleasant port of n;'me’aeflmcrmg powers the - rugon ¥ i in®? g " 3 defense of their lives and futures - o Pape’s Diapepsin’® correct acidity, thus regulating digestion and | forbidaing Gormany.'ence’ for all, 1o r spirit of - . making sick, upset stomachs feel fine. Beststomach correctiveknown. | &Y war 290 Pele HUGH RE" ,l ,Y‘ O. WINDOW Funetion to Fix Status.. g:A::Dcet;T ot , it will be_the function g ) of m:ol:;er::e treaty to fix the status 1334 N. Y. Ave. of the inhabitants of tho left bank A o f t Rhine not inclyded wi n e - P, Tad Belgian trontiers. Wholesale PAINTS Retail PAINTS. The Rhine policy advocated by France had from the beginning: been misunderstood by the British min Isters, There where Fraice saw an essential guarantee—a guarantee of execution and of security—3Mr. Lloyd George and his colleagues, obsessed by memories of Napoleon and by the | intemperance of part of our press, feared as early as 1917 a menece to the peace of Europe. It was in 1917 that Mr. Balfour In two speeches energetically repudiated the idea of a Self-governing Rhine state which M. Aristide-Briznd had suggested the . preceding January in a confidential i . p fetter to M Paul Cambon, French am- : . ° 5 ‘bassador at Lopdon. The British min- - That Noise in Your Gears - .&.c58 o Electr; g that an agreemen etween e e8| P . hi er contemplated the creation of A N W l W h 5 - smplated the crestion of ectric asher You Can’t Explain e et setsi . &3 , , added, ever ontered into thel} ' i : > 3 p 2ol e Etih goverament articularly Desirable for the Larger Families & My. Lloyd Geo: or his part, had Oh, the Joy of Motoring, when cayses that grind wears them often repesgted: 6 must not create the gears slide in and out with- out faster ag it inoreases. - another = Alsace-Lorraine.”” H oué a murmur. S, Your gears n-.h best insured n;:; ':5”»}"‘&?,“5:.{"’3""’?;‘ made ut how often 8 hars) - sgainst wear with “EBONTTE.” u ing noise spoils the trip. It s mot m n,....;‘.'. a Com- was the statue of Strassburg ve‘l.lked ini Can you explain this noise? pound—it ts Pure Ol—shredded mourning. Do not let uf make it Grumbling, grating gears! —oyr oWl . 2 ngulble{ for, Ggrmlrlw to e;;ct a 8 mk- i Gears complain when they're The oil shreds act as & cushfon ~ &8 | 187 "‘"d“‘ e Y oTtiae o Four worn or abused, just like a man, between every moving pat. -, 8| Fererle R A i and that noise in your gears is 1t completely buries the gears ;:d et Jrotd itselt a warning signal, it indicates | in its rich sdhesive mass, which 3 poor lubrication always; it is carried to and held at every Echoes of Fear, should be stopped at omce, for point of revolving contact until The first conversations brought us when gears once wear enough | its full function has been per- echoes of this fear. It was unre- to grind, the extra play that | formed. . . . | servedly admitted that we meeded | 4 guarantees. But the means proposed by us caused alarm. All talk.of sep-: 1 aration between Germany and the left bu‘x‘g‘." ol' mflltt‘ul'y &eeupl-u::uol the A - latter, of participation im. occu- FOR TRANSMISSIONS & DIFFERENTIALS pation, wes extremely repugmant to STOPS swear, friction, grind, noise and trouble * 3| Cuhasiica the'tact that other securi: SOLD AT ALL GARAGES AND DEALERS' ties were possible, such as disarm in five and twenty-five pound cans he league of N s ASK FOR IT BY NAME. JUST SAY the complete de- “EBONITE” TO YOUR DEALER—THAT'S left bank of the YOUR ABSOLUTE assurauce of best results. Bayerson Oil Works Mangfacturers, Erte, Pa. Pennsylvania Petroleum Products OF AUTOCRAT MOTOR OILS gan. President Wilson at the m on_ the ocean e route for Mr. Lloyd George has just returned to Paris. It is decided to prepare the work of the heads of by “a conference of I represent France, Mr. Philip . Great Britain, and Dr. Mezes, the United States. ' I explain_ ver- bally, in all details; the French pro- posals. As my explanation proceeds, I become conscious ‘of the psycholog- ical barrier just mentioped. I oftered a strengthening-of the dis- armament claus I am offered a reinforcement of those dealing with demilitarization. As soon as I return to the question of occupation eppo- sition bécomes more marked. xu.mx it Heurs of Dialogume. Saya little. - Thesa eight hours om-c sion are a dialogue ?:tw Mr. T MAKERS GENUINE and myself, and it that through the voloe 8] cigate In sych an also, it would caus op France sought to undertake 1 reply. recall th landers are not Prussians. that the ch proposal excluding annexations is the reverse of impe- rialistic; that the control of the league of nations gives every facility for evolution; that fter such up- rlul_dwl s, has a right to nsist upon cceptance of the :neum - torCOLDS Warning! Unless you say “Bayer,” you may not get che genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 21 years . \eu'iaRemtic? Fubile epinion Suse lightened. It hag already 1 - ‘Bulh d o *war-" a0 “Beat and proved.safe by millions. 2 mady a.%;z » ecpt enly an ke “Bayer® pckago wheh eontis o e - proper directions not only for Golds, but for Headache, Pain, . Haady i bomas of 13 tedleie—Bollles of 34 auil Ampicn 14 On ade mark of Baper . WAL y Clvil Bervice Commission to Give Examinations for Vacancies. The Civil Service Commission yester- day announci examinations to fill va- cancles as follows: Grain exchange supervisor, $2,400 to $4,000 a year; as- sistant grain exchange supervisor, $1,800 to $2,400 a year, Department of Agriculture; structural engineer, $3,- 800 to $4,600 a year, associate struc- tural engineer, $2,500 to $3,600 a year, assistant structural engineer, $1,800 to $2,400 a_year, junior structural engi- neer, $1,200 to $1,600 & year, economist, $3,600 to $4,800 a year, associate eco- nomist $2,500 to $3,600 a year, assist- ant economist, $1,800 to $2,400 a_year, junior economist, $1,200 fo $1,500 a Exact Copy of Wrapper. IFLILI) LT I ICLLLELYY There is only one IRONIZED YEAST. Do not ' aeccept substi- year, administrative assistant, $2,000 to $2,600 a year, bureau of standards; il and gas well plugger, Osage Indian agency, $1,800 a year; apprentice fish culturist, bureau of fisheries, §600 to $960 a year; domestic solence teacher, Indian “service, $760 to $840- a year, with furnished ~quarters, heat. and light: telegraph ~operator, depart- mental and _field services, $300 to $1,600 a year; stenographer, typist and stenographer-typist, fleld service, $900 to §1,200 a year. in addition to the basic salaries named above, the bonis of $20 a month will be allowed for most positions the salary of which does not exceed $2,500 a year. Full information and. application blanks may be obtained’at the office of the commission, 1724 F street northwest. —_— In Persia the wedding service is always read in front of a fire. BANKER ADVISES THRIFT. E. E. Mountjoy Speaks Before Local Credit Men. Emphasizing the importance of ihrift to prosperity, E. E. Mountjoy, Washington representative of the American Bankers' Assoclation, ad- dressed the noon-day meeting of the Washington Association of Credit Men. Mr. Mountjoy spoke of the conve:- tion of his associatior, recently held in Los Angeles, and outlined the cam- paign now being carried out by the American® Bankers' Assoclation, to drive home to the people of the coun- try the necessity of saving. He wp- pealed to those present to assist in educating the public in this respec:. MM’ SRSt Contents 15 Piuid Draokn False Claims. 'WE hope there is no Mother who thinks she can. treat her sick baby without calling in a Physician, or with remedies that she uses for herself. Most Mothers know that Baby requires remedies especially prepared babies, yet there are some who think that what is good enough for them is good enough for Baby, and it is to these Mothers we appeal to give nothing to their ‘babies, that is not specially prepared for babies or recommended by their Physician. False claims may kill, but false claims can never restore your child. For over thirty years Fletcher’s Castoria has been aiding in the reduction of the deaths among infants as Mothers have become more and more acquainted with it. Always keep it in the house. for Children Cry For Mothers Must Use Care. wng do we so often call your attention to imitations of Fletcher’s Castoria? Because it is a baby’s medicine and imitations are always dangerous, particularly imitations of a remedy for infants, Your druggist may not keep an imitation but they are to be found on drug-store shelves. Reliable druggists think only of the welfare of their customers. The other kind only of the greater profit to be made on imitations. X YD!I! own judgment tells you that Fletcher’s Castoria having for over thirty years at great expense held up its reputation, must jeal- ously guard it. Then, it follows that this company must use the very best of material. Must employ experts in the selection of the herbs. Must retain skilled chemists in its manufacture. ‘Your same good judgment must tell you that these irresponsible imitators are trading om your credulity and the reputation built up by Mr. Fletcher, during all these years, for his Castoria. HOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHEI'S CASTORIA GENUINE CASTORIA ALwars Bears the Signature of THE GENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY. 0 Build Weight Quick Take Yeast with Iron New Yeast Tablets—IRONIZED YEAST— Bring Results Often in Half the Usual Time To Build Fil'll'l Flesh, Beautify Your Complexion _ Increase Your Strei Try This Great New Tonic. WatchtheQuickReu_l!ts! Energy Nerve Force shattered nerves. Iron is needed to make your b and strong, Both these essential.substances are lacking in the avesage modern diet. Yet both arc absolutely tant. [ m‘o)lum Y‘lufil‘ htplun!.ut to u}o .ml ® not in any way upse! 5 form, the highest | };tzmm. m '”Wl: to that found in cb. 7e' treatment 24 Soais onty b1 IRONIZRD l":fl not accept uins ibstitutes o pafkage. Soid at all People’s Drug Stores snd good drug- rections for children in eacl wists evs (RONIZED YEAgy izorze . Tablets on a money- back