Evening Star Newspaper, December 4, 1921, Page 33

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' SEES WORLD AFFLICTED WITH “MENTAL ANARCHY” A 7 IN PORTUGUESE AFFAIRS l Spanish Foreign Minister Denies His Country Will Take Part CONTROL COMMISSIONS - COSTLY TO GERMANY Up to October, Total 1,250.000,000 Marks—With- Reaches | Nova Scotia Rum Ships Dodge Revenue Fleet in Dash for U.S. - - ; By the Associated Press. :iu]rxy“!c of purc ~ hl';‘;{vlgu:: 1 i i M \ rawal Urged. SYDNEY, N. S. December 3.— |delivery ¢ tike to Andre Tardieu Wonders if Washington Under- in Movement. | 4 8 o Lok : -a. | Canadian States” “bootles 7 P By the Associsted Press. Steamers that ply between North Syd- | Can: by 0c) Press. 1 . . ¢ 3 ; 2 oy - {ney and those attractive isles of the | ‘It iy common talk MADRID, December 1.—Foreign Min- | 'BERLIN, December 2.—The inter-|ney ar * is_con ta stands Extent Of. General COIlfllSlOfl | rateri T onarias s as e tades e allied control commissions, which were norta Atlantic—St. Plerra and Mique-| folk hereabout that lan aens fuchatigs the report of the London Times yester- appointed under the treaty of Versailles lon—are carrying ever-increasing num- skippers and_ crews of small craft will- “W > 2 / | i hich Has Engulfed Us All day that the quéstion of forcign inter- to watch the carrying out of the dis- |bers of very busy American “business [ Yool FFG, R 00 SO0t SO e out- r.,m,‘.;fimt'..,f."’;’;'“;‘;,";:,’,,‘;',’,f‘“;“‘;“'{:‘;:| armament terma of the pact, Cost Ger- men” these days. Ship owners com- |lers emploved in the enforcement of the 2 S P RS T S Spain was among the nations favorable many 1,250,000,000 marks up to October, | ment on the paseenger business as a|jaw. And there is il BY ANDRE TARDIEU, tations aimed at France. There is| (o this IovemonL. dectaved ; | according to newspapers which caarge | post-war boom, but the customs officials | 30" o " JEA0 [ s Wormer French High Commissioner to | Germany, which after two years of > Spanish government has neither that the commissions are exceeding|do not comment—they merely wonder. |flashy dressers. America. tenacious efforts has succeeded at last | Feceived nor proposed any conversation their authority and interfering with i : story i Several of the small craft have been B Cable to The Star. in organizing her own bankruptey to | Whatever respecting the Portuguese sit- divers industries. 2 There {s & persistently told story In | | iiT, thing liquor and pitched bat- PARIS, December 3—The world is | €SCaP€ her creditofs. There are the gf_st";‘dflfi"!fi""’;‘: Somviction lasthat lh; The Allgemelne Zeitung asks that the | customs agency ranks that the coming |0 = 0% yrred, but officials here AT Voth. | Successive journevs of Hugo Stinnes| e tote yyap S toned members of the commissions be with-|and going of these businessitke folk |state that the revenue fleet Is far 100 §n a state of mental anarchy. Noth-land Herr Rathenau to London—re- |Ner salvation, therefore, by her own en- 1 as quickly as possible, as, it says, toadi )40 ‘cope. with' the o wag fng else can account for the gegeral |lated perhaps to the Weisbaden in. | °r8les and decisions. | Shetr veal worl 1s Bnighed. o> |hes to do with intoxicating lquors, of | I, D UL RN, chooner over- ®onfusion which has engulfed us all. | [eTYiews. There is the French accord In some political quarters it is- de- | Which there is quite a store at St. Plerre | oy0q" g captured « dozen have es- {in Angora which is stimulating a fer- clared that the commissi re med- and Miquelon. It is said taat Dar-|caped, to land their carzoes on a thou- 1 wonder if Washington understands the extent of this confusion? Per- Baps there. everything may seem €lear. But viewed from this side of ®he Atlantic, the world—including Washington—is in a maze. The Washington conference opened with a clap of thunder from a clear ky. Mr. Hughes made his remarka- vid debate betwee: of the Quai ' Or: and the British fareign office. There are the articles in certain English and French jour- nals, the excessive stupidity of which finds eady echo in the American press. the bureaucrats Classed as “Symptomm™ All of these are the symptoms of , the disease which I have termed | mental anarchy. | ., MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, December COMMUNISTS DISPERSED. Demonstration Staged Before Gov- ernment House in Montevideo. 3.—Several persons were injured yes- terday when police with drawn sa- bers dispersed a demonstration staged before Government House by com- munists protesting against the con- Frits Kreisler, world famous violini; talked of ax Austrin’s next diplomati nd Mrx. Kreisler. representative to the KETSions 1S Mr. Kreisler is nited States. 5 dling in numerous industries in an at- tempt to make a saowiyng 8o as to hold their jobs.” TURKEY WOULD STOP WAR Leader Says Nationalists Willing for Peace With Foe.’ ties of well dressed, black-cigar smok- ng gentlemen go to the for the MANILA, P. L, October 4 (by NATIVE CHIEF CARES FOR LONE SURVIVOR OF SHIPWRECK IN 1901 A year and a half ago a stroke of le speech. We have no direct- | ™ . OP c r 2— i s 3 his is the new method of diplom-|in& law, no general agreements, no | Viction for murder in Massachusetts 20- Y’E‘AR JOURNEY FOR AUTOGRAPHS CONSTANTINOPLE, !_)ehcenj‘::""al +| Mail)—Shipwrecked and marooned paralysis made Howard almost help- we read. broad lines, no far-seeing eyes, but | Uff\,flwo '-Irrl Vanzetti. Yussuf Kemal, the Turkish natio flieq | for twenty years on one of the Caro- less and unable to work. Since that ut three days later Mr. Balfour|We are aimlessly floating about with he police acted' when the com- 1 | foreign minister, has sent to the allie ine Islands is the jence of an time he has been taken care of by eomplained of the indiscetions aof ihe | the currents. Show me & land know. | munist orators began to use viel 7 \ i g aveibe x || linedzlandd.ds the expear “hief Nampei of Rt 10 has : 2 miticcionaat e | b St o' ek Al | manie Sraioed beka o WS | NEARS END AS MIKULEC. SEEKS FARM e cmmsoncrs who vave e en. | i It is he experence of s | {1 ML bt it 0l given him food, clothin. i fon and e ddlegatas ol tWo or three contradictory ends, and | thoritles and the leaders refused 1o |deavoring to securc peace belween| . . riyo American bark Horatio. | cine. 'aris in 1919. T am accusing ho one,|I Will admit that I am mistaken. But | Suspend the meeting. N (o | Greece and the nationalists a note stat- | yyich went on the shoals of Kusai “Chief Nampei has American blood ut frankly the public has been dis-| |1, the Present stite of growing in- BY HIRAM K. MODERWELL. |devotion to his work. He hobes 10|, . ¢ Turkey is anxious to become a | Island in 1901 The news of How- in him, speaks i h wel Bppointed. e ne Daltan ool T | Speclul Correspondence of The Star aud Clicage, reach Washington in time for the| . inrument: that she does not de- ! condition was brought here | u man of sterling integ Then Came Briand's Address. [noble effort to define an objective | G€rmany. rather than on secondary| papis, France, November 15— | spmeiment conference. Then he Wil 1o prolong the strugsl. which in; Lhis week by Lr Willaw b Mobps | Dr. Hobbs. Howard Then came the Ereat discourse by | Which might bring the remebiiuny |Questions such as Angora. - France, Nove il | conslder hlsiwork finished. merely a defensive one, and expressing | of the University of Michizan, who O ioUbs hiore stngofor ®he Fyénch premier, M. Briand. Yet!and democrats together on & foreign | Object of England's “Pin Prickns |/0S¢PN F. Mikulec has almost finish-| Some day he hopes to sell his book. | the hope that England and Italy may | Cearch work ot the ‘Caxolitie sroup. | Sulliopiscet mbo has sepeestst 1o ne did not have the feeling that M. | BOlCY: DUt the means to the end are | After all, ¥hut seeks England from | 0 his life work. In a few weeks he | but only to one who will promise to | come to terms with Turkey by means.of A Ry S et e BB st g 0 ! M. § contradictory. International | sol il 2 ¢ill work his way home on an ocean | care for it and to place it_eventually | mutual concessions. > e i ] - bl riand said all that he had to say.|{ions are sought without interaa. | NeT Pin vricks to France at Tangiers | Vi1l Work his ina great public library. He will not | The moment the Grecks accept a pact | for by the hatives and finally be. nese be arked to furnish transpor- or did one feel that he received re- | (ot ‘engagements. and In Mesopotamia? And whet te|lin€r, buy a farm in the United States | [} £ STent ublic liorary. | with the mationaists Turkey will cease | came agent at Panope for a German | tation from Panope o Yokohama poonses that were entirely frank. On| " ‘England's laudable desire for an |gai PR i 3 and spend his remaining davs in | qt iu 4 very waloabie book.” is all |to be an obstacle to the conclusion of | trading concern, which place he ' for Howard, xo that he may take Rop of this came the false TeDOrt of | enduring . peace ety iy Hon rgetting the grand truth . neswilltaay | peace, ‘adds the note, but Turkey will | held until the Japanese took over ' passuge on an Army transport and @ clash between M. Briand and Sena- | mercantile activities. France's im- | “Englandy Geemm tron g Javs ago: | peace. at ne | "Perhaps he means a thousand dol- | Insist on reparations. as the Greeks in- | the Islands, under the mandate from | finally reach his home in Utica. for Schanzer, the delegate of Italy.|provisations in the orient conflict |same as that which separaibs Braun | Lt Was twenty yeags ago (hat N ljars, or perhaps he means a million. duiged in “unjustifiable devastations. the league of nations. Ohio. &vith such pleasantries—either tru fnvested or denatured—on sardine Hishing from cruisers and the use of ghe submarine In the study of flora. With all this goiug on the public msks itself where it stands. Europe Wil not disarm without precise guar- America wants no entangle- . but America will not disarm Avithout Pacific accord. Such accord is fmpossible without entanglements with England and Japan. Is there a way out? No one knows. In Europe we have the Curzon peech. which France finds excessive- ¥ doctrinnafre, and Italian manifes- Sold at $25 to $49. 514.75 319.95 Con French in the popular br INCORPORAT ED 1316 %1324. 7 ST.N STORE FOR THRIFTY PEOPLE—SEE THE TOYS IN TOYLAND CHRISTMAS SALE SALE! FUR SCARFS FARRY TAUE " Reduced ¥/5 Price and Less An ensemble of finest Fox, Manchurian Wolf and black effects—exquisitely silk lined and georgette with a policy of continued vigilance for the entente cordiale, dictated by her need of security and reparations. Would you wish more concrete ex- amples of contradictions? In mat- ters of capital importance we have England ceding Germany's repara- tions payments last May. After that it is difficult to understand her ap- plying her failing energies to the Kem- alist accord. England’'s objections to the Angora policy. of the French is puzzling, to say the st. We all realize that it is necessary to be firm at times, but why not be firm on such vital matters as our dealings with 75 523.98 own, taupe and Fur and Cloth Collar COATS 142 hich separatés France with Germany.” (One_ 1= inclined to quote the old phi and see wHat fools King Edward VII and M. Delcasse created the entente cordiale by agreeing to the simple principle that France should not hamper England on the road to India, and that Eng- land should leave France alone in western Europe, in the western Medi- terranean and in western Africa. Where are the statesmen capable of such constructive views today? (Copyright, 1921.) Double-Bed SHEETS, 04c Made with 3-inch hem and double- welded center seam: extra heavy muslin. . “Run of the mill” of $§1.25 grade. Full size. started from America on his globe- trotting journey, which has taken him over 175,000 miles, much of it on foot. Under one arm he carried a book weighing thirty pounds. That book, together with its successors, contains 50,000 autographs gathered | Among the f Presidents ison, Caruso, from fifty signatur countries. are those Wilson and Harding, E Carnegie, the Prince the Duke of York, Admiral Togo and many high dignitaries of China, Korea and Burma: Lloyd George, Curzon and 4! others. The other day, just after the explo- sion of the bomb at the American embassy in Paris, Mikulec appeared there im his tramping clothes, a red bandanna around his neck and a big black thing under one arm. The as- sistant_secretaries and the girl ste- nographers looked at the big black thing. It was their idea of what an infernal machine looks like the in- stant before. Mikulec asked to see Ambassador Herrick. uses Bomb Scare. “Just wait a minute, if you will be so kind,” said the chief assistant secretary, trying hard 'to smile. Then she whispered something to an of- fice boy, who made a bolt for the door. In a moment two French gen- darmes appeared and led Mikulec away to the police station. There the gendarmes, with all the usual precautions, examined the big blatk thing after removing the water- proof covering, and discovered the book. Mikulec still hopes to get Am- bassador Herrick's autograph. Mikulec has done his_twenty-year hike without capital. Sometimes he does odd jobs to get a little money. Sometimes he gives lectures. “And sometimes,” he adds, “public-spirited citizens assist me financlally in my work."” He spent five and a half years tramping the United States on foot, visiting every state in the Union. He has the autographs of forty-elght governors to proye it President Harding. while candidate “Greetings an for election, wrote; of Wales and | ) TR v e Ay o G ~ G0 & I8, Open Evenings Till Xmas sents a real opportunity. Two Dollars 2, CK-] 4\ R Jordan’s Christmas Club Enables You to Buy a Magnificent Player- Piano and Take THREE Years to Make Your Payments Are you one of the many who say “what a wonderful Christmas this would be if we could only afford to have a player-piano?” For folks like you, our Christmas Club pre- It enables you to have your player-piano and still feel no hard- ship in paying for it. Under our Christmas Club Plan, it is necessary for you to pay only to join the Club and be eligible for all the advantages we offer in it. You then can select your piano any time before Christmas, and make your own terms about lined—eott; Tuxarions Tur. soatfe marel e Tt Sizes for Women, Misses Ebodywillies, tor I MIHEASY Hekedle the jent. Then you have three NXmas present for mother, wife, sister or sweetheart. and Extra Sizes up to 56 its progress—the personal full years in which to pay your balance, in —————— FUR CAPES 9.1 and_necessarily better understand- ing.” Encounters Few Difficultfes. Mr. Mikulec says he encounters few contact l A big special Monday sale of 150 Fur Coats, in_ black, brown, navy and_ beaver, designed with large muff collar; loose and belted models; small or monthly payments, that you will not feel at all. These are only a few of the advantages we offer through this Christ- some silk embroidered, others tailor- difficulties in his work. “I walked up A " Were $59.50 and $69.50 ed. Fully lined throughout. A to 10 Downing street, London, the mas Club. Note the balance in the list below. . > o i wonderful _ offering of January other day,” he relates, “and knocked Women’s beautiful black and brown soft Capes, prices. in December. ' Values ' up <t at the door. I sald I wanted to see iastefully button trimmed, silk lined; smart ciicie $29.75 included in this bargain Lloyd George, and his secretary told and shawl effects, with high storm collars—sampl ithat we purchased at a mere fraction of their actual worth. Girls’ Fur Sets Reduced - §4.98 $5.98 ' $6.98 Three special lots of White. Taupe and Brown Scarfs and Pillow or Barrel Muffs: French Coney and Erminette Furs of soft, elegant quality: cord finished; a delightful gift for the child’s Christmas. And greatly underpriced. me Lloyd George was in conference. So 1 left my book until the next day. When I came back the autographs of most of the cabinet were in my book, and there were ten photographers waiting to snap me on the way out.” The truth is that Mr. Mikulec suc- ceeds through a personal talent, the chief element of which is his profound belief in himself—his whole-souled spectacle. A Great Sale of 2 to 12 Year Girls’ Coats All-wool Velour Winter Coats, in smart navy blue and brown models, with large collars, belts, pockets, etc. —ideal school or play coats, designed to -give long wear and smart style. Fully lined. Formerly sold to $§9.95. 19c Check Di 18¢ | | Gingham .~ You Have Choice of These Following Well Known Makes Chickering, Behning, Lyon & Healy, Marshall & Wendell, Francis Bacon, Cable Nelson and Meldorf Player-Pianos DUTCH CALL OUT GUARDS. Police Take Action gainst Demon- " strations of Communists. Special Cable to The Star and the Ohicago Daily News. Copyright, 1921. AMSTERDAM, Holland, December 3. 29¢ Fine Plisse Crepe. . . Pink, blue and white crepe of excellent quality for underwear, $1 Women's Gloves 59¢ 72x00 Comfort Size Cotton Batting. . 59¢c Clean. white cotton. sterilized. 123c Your Home Should Possess Music Variety Made 27 inchen wide. of fast color checks, stripes and plaids in all tie wanted colors. . . ° @pens out full size in one plece. | | Xeelle 1 —The action of young Dutch com- Kayser's perfect A big special for Monday. SRSt P QueH iom ulls piece | Yl g munists have become so serious that ou we l o our lre a chamoisette "and the chief commissioner of police has other = = = = = ordered that strong measures be tak- chamoisette, — all g‘-lnehs;ll-wool $l 19 -kfi:l"" 1 l4c E-rd—“ ide 18c en to protect life and pmpen{. :tler her wanion celare . Outing Flannel. . the recent bomb outrage at the house 5 ToLall, slueyaels torm Serge . . g retonnes. . .. of Maj. Verapyck, a member of The No one can afford to underestimate the power of music. There :: both GExuRgbeany. (feeced on Hague court-martial, the communists stitched. Purchase of 500 yards of fast Big lot of floral and drapery ” s Y —_— color” mavy lue serge. Perfect | | giden. Large Tariely of PRk and | | geignn on light and dark grounda. | || isaucd a bogus newspaper bearing the 1s no greater “influence for good” known. It is an educational, Bzl Teady or e Heruiar 33 vae. | | Made 22 inches wide—trom fuli | | CRSCESL Ee Cinded in thie | fname of a leading Amsterdam Journal, refining, recreational, restful influence that is almost as import- Boudoir ant to your family as shelter. Compare the home with minister of war. had been kidnaped and taken to an unknown destina- tion. The police quickly learned that the sheet was printed in the office of a communist weekly. —_— EARTH SHOCKS SEVERE. People Abandon Homes in San Lo- renzo Nuovo, Italy. PARIS, December 2.—A news agency dispatch from Rome today says earth shocks of such violence have been felt at San Lorenzo Nuovo that the population there has abandoned its houses. San Lerenzo is a name frequently encountered among the towns of Italy and Sicily, but the only San Lorenzo Nuovo listed is in Rome province, about sixty miles northwest of the capital. 2 music, to one without it. There is a difference. 2 Why not bring music into your home of the best possible kind, through one of the wonderful Francis Bacon Piano- offered through this Christmas Club Plan? Each instrument i a player piano, second to none and absolutely guaranteed f- workmanship, durability and satisfaction. It is to your Advantage to Buy Through this Christmas Clab By buying in large quantity for our Christmas Club we can buy player pianos to advantage and by selling them in large numbers, as through this Plan, we are enabled to offer you a real saving in price and extend to you the m: advantages of this Christmas Club. But, to “get in” this Christmas Club, you will have to act immediately. Thrifty buyers are quickly taking up the membership. Mske up your mind now. Join today. Call at our store and sign your application blank. Or, Phone or Write Extraordinary Sale of WOMEN’S = High:-Grade Shoe; Sold from 2 98 $6 to $7.50 Hundreds of pairs of Shoes, Oxfords and Strap Slippers. Pat. colt shoes, with peart or also black or tan s, Louis heels, in! and tan and tan p silppers with low heels; sizes 3 to 8. Standard makes only. ‘Women’s Felt Slippers $1.50 and $2 values, in purple, blue, ne, brown, taupe, black and gray. Sizes 3 to 5—warm and comfortable. Boys’ $8.95 Suits : °’w_ With 2 Pairs ' Pants 6.95 The practical gift for the boy—your choice of snappy striped and mixed patterns in full-cut sizes, 7 to 16 years; 2 pairs of lined pants and the new. pleated back styles. One and two of a kind left from lots of higher ‘Women's Pretty Silk_Caps. Tace trimmed—b i g va- riety of colors—in Xm: Xes. practical gift. Silk-Mixed Scarfs Women's orchid, yellow and blue rfs, with hem: stitched bord e r Worth a great de more. 59%¢ Tam Lineme is all it costs to be- come a member of this Christmas Club s . Three Years to Pay the Balance Crown of Hungary Well Worth Fight Nemo, La Resista, C-B, Royal Worcester and Bon Ton grades, Of Former Empeéror and we will send it to you. | eer onaay CORSETS FITTED - LONDON, November Je—tne ecrown eof edly worth the struggle mat by former Emperor Charles of Austria-Hungary to obtain it, being ome of the .most Y and most curious of the royal dindems now in existence. It is made up of two The first crown wi only. $1 Women's Thread Silk By Our Expert Corsetiere A 1.50 Up to o . $A $1.25 complete line of Pink and White, Boys’ $8.98 Heavy Mackinaws $L.95 Arthur ordan Piano Co. lain _or Brocaded Cor- Varlety of bi ets, in medium, low and high Warm, shawl collar Coats in rich plaids— the Pope to Duke PR L end d ::.:'...mpdl'.!:'-: s:l"m?:':& 'oi?- with belt all around—sizes 7 to 18 years— e year 1000; the "“;‘um ——— — — — ————— L Lopg individual fgure. Your particaiar | a sale just in time_to buy a serviceable gift §! iven by the Emperor hael iy THE ARTHUR JORDAN P o co ‘ to Duke Geisa in 1072. This Intter crown hore a ca- rious inscription which spoke of the duke as the king of the Turks. Duke Gisa had the two dindems welded together, ' the papal crewn forming the lower part and the Bysantine jewel the upper-part. The danl crown was jealously guarded in the Royal Museum at Budapest, and was only taken from its case for corona- tion ceremonies. JIn 1849, n the courne of the rising, when Kos- suth endeavored to In the independence of his country, he came {ato possession of the royal crown, which he buried need is bere in corsets. Our prices are lowest in Washington. Priced —and easy money, too. specially Monday only. | THIRTEENTH AND “G” STREETS WASHINGTON, D. C. ‘Without any obliga on my part, please send full particulars and application blanks of your Christmas | Player-Piano Club. | G Streetat Thirteenth ABAress. ... .cooneeiiitttiitanictainiisnreinanane finish, flat top. The secret, however, was not well kept, and the Austrian gov- erament fimally discovered: the erown 1n its hiding place. _

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