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:1L0YD GEORGE SEES 1" British Politicians More Alert - Than Since 1918—Kaiser Still ‘Unhuny,” Critics Say. BY EDWARD PRICE BELL. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. Copyright. 1t LONDON, England, January 5.— = Great Britain is buzzing with general election talk. Politicians, male and female, are more alert and active than they have been since Decgmber, 1918, when the present coalition govs ernment achieved power on the cry “Hang the kaise: and “Search the jermans’ pockets!” Independent and IRRLTHTHTE VICTORY ATPOLLS| OLD-TIMERS:OF WEST ° SPURN PEACE:DOLLAR AS USELESS IN STACK Special Dispatch to The Star. DENVER, January 7.—Western- ers think well of the “almighty dollar,” but they prefer the old 1878 model. Not a single old-time Dioneer of the west here who saw and fingered the new silver peace dollar, which arrived here from the Philadeiphia mint, but ex- ° presscd disapprobation of the new design, both as a detriment to commerce and as a possible check to an art developed to its highest point in the early camps of the west. ¢ Old-timers declare it is impossi- l ble to stack the peace dollars se- curely or to rifle them readily. Old-time bankers, businessmen and gamblers here took pride in their ability to plunge either or both hamds into a heap of loose dgllars and draw them like magic into even stacks of twenty. It is a mark of the pioneer to be able to take two stacks of twenty and shuffle them into one shining cy- linder- with one hand. But the Do WELL, VNE GRADUATED FROM HIGH SCHOOL . NOW t s'PosE VLe ! HAVE o Ak ouT A PROFESSIOM AN'ISETTRE Down.To MAKING LA LWING . WHAT © <o Do ! WHAT To 1 Does' T 8 A Oocl . THey HANE To &€ UP AT ALL HOURS OF TH PUGHT AN Go ouT N ALL KIND 5. OF WEATHER THAT'S CERTALLY. . JURY RGES NEW RULE N BALTIMORE Probe 5rings' Recommenda- tion to Change Form of Mu- _ nicipal- Government. Special Dispateh to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., January 7.—A commission form of government for Bal- timore was in the minds of members of the grand jury when John P. La ber, the foreman of the body, made report yesterday. The report reads: “He (the foreman), therefore, rec- ommends the earnest consideration of plans looking to the changing of th is BEHOLD THE MUSTACHE! PROMISES TO BE STYLE; NOTABLES SET FASHION Special Cable to The Star. LONDON, January 7.—The great mustache question Is being re- | vived ‘once more, and we may ex- { wect to hear a good deal on the I gubject this vear. There are gari- ous impelling cirdumstances. hose gushing young persons who are still torturing the English lan- guage for new phrases of delight over the royal engagement. have of course, that Lord Las- i the possessor of a real ashioned mustache, and the heroes of newspaper serials should be destined, therefore, to be equipped. with mustaches for some little time to come. To this must be added the thrill- ing discovery by our indefatigable protographers, that one of the king's sons is now cultivating a mustache, and that neither he nor Lord clles is a supporter of the appalling toothbrush variety. Further, we have in the public eye In_ order to quickly estab- lish ,{is new location in thel minds of his friends and Washin public, offers these very low prices. Set of Teeth $ That fits and givescomfort and service. They look like natural teeth. Gold Crowns—Bridge Work $5 7. NoMore—No Less liberal critics point out that the) . kaiser Is still unhanged and that the ‘ Germans' pockets are unscarched, at least in the sense of the coalition's}, Yet there seems no doubt 1 DOrSY WANT To BE A CONGRE SSMA™ OR A SENATOR « PoLITIC'S BORES ME STIEF. BE1NG PRESIDENT OF A just now such eminent wearers of the mustache as M. Briand and Mr. Lloyd George, on whom the eyes of the nation are turned; and Formerly Located 7th and K Sts. Now at 933 G St. N.W. Near Cor. of 10th St. Over Peariman's Bookstore Phone Main 3695 . 1 DON'T WANT To 8E An AUTHOR OR A SAILOR DR A SHOE MERCHArT 0R form of municipal government to de-| termine what advantages a different | system would possess over the one now | new coins have projections on face and back which tend to send them toppling when placed one on top another. =3r cry. &% o L 3 that Lioyd George and his unionist In the old days,” one banker RAILROAD DOESM'Y APPEAL (T— AN ACTOR OR A TooTH- _ in vogue to prevent a continuance of | that other popular hero, Mr. Mi- - ¢ t before the! here declared today, “when the | s hi s | chael Colling, is also mustached. R e B e faro bank antl the dunce hall were To ME EVTHER- BRUSH MANUFACTURER the" practices ‘or | ‘which-levery ome| chael Collpk iy ‘sieo euisieciol country eiiher in a few weeks or at the latest next fall. ‘Will Ask Mandate. They will ask for a fresh mandate 2 pensive ustont in these hard N on economy, trade and Luropean| BENN cus Bl o e % st what was meant|FATTY TO BE TRIED AGAIN. ‘ by that, Mr. Lauber said: Homer sl policy. They will define their atti- tude on the grave questions of un- employment and -taxation. Legally, the coalition has no reason to ask for the votes of the people now. The present parliament has two years to run in order to complete the five| - years of life stipulated by the parlia- i theatérs or to undertake other enter S i) ment act. Independent liberal i prises in the city would not be better ¥ to k0 on trial for 4 second time : some other eritics assert that than the present system. £ charge of manslaughter in con- 5 -‘_A al Kovernment is throwing the country | U ! ey el e meaais: e e e emi nnu into the turmoil of a general election | Skt O e | ReDDE, motion pic rexs. = el for purely party reasons, whereus. ;H e (‘,,“,a'i',;,"('{.';‘"_‘,’;,’“f,‘;‘i‘;{:il‘,‘,‘l",‘",',,’,',"?;‘ wlas jones sxuale el caliatn earance ale should be attending to its job of end- | ¢ s 1 v-ltne trial cour ot ould be attending s job i ernment because we merely had 1hu‘m.m““) begin until Tuesday or Wed- ing government waste, solving the problem of unemployment and push- ing on the work of agreeing with France and the other allies as to the reconstruction of Europe. Lloyd George Sticks to Unionists. Frime Minlater Lloyd George will y stick to the unionists for the present.] (po \yireless to The Star and New . York KYSCRAPERS + i 1 . % His - coalition liberals and all the| B¥ WIros o A eright, 1622.) 5 c;%dn‘;‘,‘fflw‘;;g‘"‘fl:::fie B1o] g':{e o Sunday or Monday. independent liberals they can attract will form the liberal wing of the coalition _army in the coming cam- paign. There will _be two parties with one program. These parties will unite in_action against independent < L liberals, laborites and any other can- | Lenin and Trotsky he will have op- |the latser did anything wrong. Mond didates who may take the field inlportunity to take up immediately his 7 s daituation iwas inaicsted n fvgosmnn; ll_}; ”ljt"";“*'wl"_'il': _m propaganda for the release of po- FhleTigthersigw ereRtwoR different ; core or more women|as his future activity in life on his those who do not. That should not be. | A proposition should be tion, and among them will be Lady Astor and Mrs. Min-|jsentiary. tringham, who are now members.| ppe jails of soviet Russia still hold Lloyd George andh his gtflcml family | (1.ousands of political prisoners. | will not admit that they want anyprincipally socialists and trades 5 % S N remsomel THEVATE ] ¥ i : down. Regular religious services are election mow for party reasans. They | ynicnists, who are occupying cells suspended for many months. say they want a fresh mandate forl patriotic reasons. They face MANY ampesty recently granted by the bol-ls . 3 DUS . 10 difficulties, some actual and imme- shwm’go‘,er"mem e avertibaa! lr:;lffl :;r) sb;flg:vin;«:m&r:aa;vzf;il;qu:ae_ diate and some contingent. 1If France) yroughout the world as another ditional galleries are built and the cannot be won over to what the Brit- ish government regards ad essential to the restoration of European pros- perity and to Anglo-French co-opera- tion the British government will be|jearng in authoritative socialist cir- confronted by the question whether)cles that, should Debs cn‘me }\01 3D TlME |N TWO YEARS far“;:‘:‘::pll{n"llse clzs ’:“.;w(;;.ge{‘tlanfi be- it shall ac ne. Moscow, he W e ca i o . How- and how it shall act alol Eurepe en route to Mosco v ever, the entire building will be Feels He W Be Stromger. Lloyd George feels that with a great; electoral victory he will be infinitely stronger for the heavy burdens he and his government are trying to carry. It is clear that the prime min- ister's plans for an early election do not please the conservatives. Austen Chamberlain, their leader, and Sir George Younger. their chief organizer, together with the principal conserva- tive newspapers, favor the coalition's “carrying on” at least until it can reform the house of lords in a man- ner designed to curb the “confiscatory predilections” of the labor party should the latter gain power. Lloyd George is not afraid of the i papirs of Berlin, recognized parts of the social life of the west, what rolled to the floor went to the sweeper. The pew dollars would make that an ex- DEBS MAY STRIVE Plenty of Oppertunity There to Gain Freedom of Po- litical Prisoners. BERLIN, January 7.—When Eugene V. Debs, who, according to reports in the newspapers here, intends to visit Moscow, reaches the land of recent release from an American pen- and dungeons, in spite of the alleged | proof positive of a radical change in! the direction of moderation on the| part of Russia’s present rulers. The Star and Tribune correspondent be met by delegations. of European socialists and requested to use his influence with Lenin and Trotsky to| obtain the release of the socialists and labor leaders still languishing in soviet jails for daring to disagree with the opinions of the red poten- tates at the kremlin. 3 Debs’ efforts, it is declared, mightj be directed first to obtaining the ri lease of several hundred socialists and trade unionists in Butyrky prison, in Moscow. who, according to n\for-l mation from Moscow printed urom!—i nengy today in the leading socialist] went on a hunger| strike in protest against ghe deporta- tion of thirty-five of their fellows to WRONG TREATNENT, OR A BAMKER | | KNOW WHAT. 'LL BE A HUMAMN e FLY AN CRawe uP TH' SIDES OF OF CUBA CHARGED Head of American.Committee | on Isfand Affairs At- tacks Tariff Bill. Provisions of the Fordney tarifl bill, which would amount to abroga- 2 AT FACES MURDER TRIAL South Carolina Man Charged With Killing Three—Acquitted Once, One Indictment Quashed. ORANGEBURG, 8. C., January 7.— | For the. third time in less than two | years Carlos Corbett is to face trial here Monday on a charge of murder. Corbett killed three men and blind- ed a fourth in March, 1920, when the four stopped an automobjle in front of his home in the western part of Orangeburg county, according to the state. The men Kkilled were Bryan Salley, Julian Cooper and Hugh Fan- nin, while Jones Salley lost his eye- AND HERE claims to have knowledge, whica every | one says they deplore and all condone, and no one seems able to prévent, and which do not seem to come within the “We meant to suggést that the peo- ple of Baltimore study the question of whether a municipal form of govern- ment, with men of high type as the commissionesr in charge of the grant ing of permits to build moving-picture in mind in a general way, and had not had an opporunity to study its ad- vantages or disadvantages. We meant to suggest that perhaps such study would be profitable to the city. “The grand jury's investigation in connection with a theater case showed that in some cases persons who in- passed, while others who were familiar h the manner in which some things lawyers had no difficulty in getting them passed. 1 do not mean to indi- were done and.who employed certain | prophets in such matters foresee a return to the later Victorian model. _———— {Faces Court for Second Time on Manslaughter Charge. | PFRANCISCO, Jan “atty”) Arbuckle, nesday. —_— ZITA’S JOURNEY DELAYED. Former Empress to Arrive in Basle BERN, Switzerland, January 6.—Re- ports received here from Madeira are to the effect that the journey of fo; mer Empress Zita of Austria-Hungary has been delayed, and that she will Dbt b Sire "The P-B %W YOI”y on / “Jhe Avenue at Ninth ., HE 1S cate that the lawyers employed by not rrived in Basle until Sunday or onsidered | and acted upon on its merits.” v So numerous are those who would ordinary seating capacity of 3,000 is doubled. i Whole Building to Be Used. Such preparations cannot be made 402 and 404 7th St BRITAIN AFLUTTER OVER ROYAL EVET Frequent Rehearsals to Pre- cede Wedding of Prin- cess Mary. BY EDWARD PRICE BELL. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily N Coprright, Toz o o N requisitioned from the high altar to | the west door, including that aerie | point of vantage, the triforium. At the wedding of Princess Patricia and Commander Ramsay the royal per- sonages occupied the space known as the sacrarium. This precedent will be followed in February. | At a coronation the choir is drawn from all parts of Engiand and the | singers are accommodated in the spa- cious galleries in the north and south aisles. Four hundred singers can thus be accommodated. Noi 80 many will be present next month, but ',he‘ { abbey choir will be reinforced by the chapel royal choir and the music will | be magnificent. | Store Will Be Closed on Monday on ° Account of the Death of, Mrs. Addie Sigmund. | . i horities, labor party. e views its imposing | Turkestan by the soviet autl .| tion of that portion of the treaty of g ¥ o Rost. of pr SO ;:h'c:‘nisn:hga;igtlhmmmoum to send-} o iprocity between the United States Bt e > pentrica Monday R:p;\m:, Ensland, Jamiacy: 7o N T complete comggaure. | holding | thating (hE man socialist -gireles the!and Cuba under which Cuba is grant-| charged with the murder of Fannin, 3E g aitonatlc moclele b i Grea! T ; is expressed | ed preferential rates of duty on sugar | /& Was acquitted of the murder of tensely excited over the forthcoming cratic and npt & 'class country. Mr. Younger argues that an election would disturb _ bus Lloyd George's friends answér that it would not. be- cause all the po#lings are now held on the same day.cWhereas they used to go on for a mofth. They also argue that the house-pf lords can be re- formed as' quickly and with more au- thority. after-eletiun than before. doubt that howeéver strong an argu- ment Lioyd George and his friends think they can.produce for an imme- diate election, they speedily ‘would discover a contrary argument if they did not deem the present the proper moment to catch tne political tide. RATLROAD MEN RECALLED. RICHMOND, Va., January 7.—Or- ders were posted in the Southern Rail- The Northelitfe newspapers call the tarift bett o e oncerin e of New Yoek. and made public yes |2 large array of counsel on both / proposel 15-{;3-':;- e itaes o[ T iPe expelied terday. Mr. Rubens is chairman of | Sides. andra and George and Mary. . the American committec on -Cuban —_—— Princess Patricia’s Wedding Last. Wl — J e Standard of the Worl, way Company’s shops in South Rich-(valued at the | room above the restaurant. mond today recalling some of workmen -who were temporarily dis- | declared the liquor was charged shortly before Christmas. | i | | probably would land in jail himself] greatest astonishment that the American socia erals. while demanding | of Amerjcan political prisoners, re main indifferent to the pligift of sim ilar victims in soviet Russia. Some,; of the socialist leaders here declare. | howevér, that should Debs launch a| propaganda campaign in Moscow for: the release of political prisoners he lists and lib-{ “JACK’S” JURY DISAGREES. NEW YORK. January 7.—A federal jury trying John Dunston, head of “Jack's,” widely known tenderloin restauraunt, on a charge of violating the Volstead act, was dismissed by Judge Knox today, when it reported a disagreement. During. the trial yesterday, prohibi- tion enforcement agents seized liquors $100,000 in ‘a raid of Dunsto his own pri- vate stock. o 3 e With the Capital - If you want the folks back home to be fully in- formed on the vital events which are on the program in Washington this winter—history-making events— @he Foening Star The Sunday- St have . : Mailed to them regularly S : ing Car $34 2 g : Y Commission _Dislikes Way! L H e s Touring S0 Ptk de de 75 The special staff of cofrespondents, tagether with a < NSt = = - Phaeton - - - - - $3475 corps of writers of international.reputation, will make First Leipzig Trials Have: | . Washington Home of the Kodak - Roadster - - - - - $3425 the current issues of The Star intensely interesting and ) Been Conducted 3 : f 7 Two-Passenger reliably informative with their reports and expert opin- een & ey ; HARR i C. GROVE INC o Coupe & % $4230 ions, to those who want to keep in close touch with the By the Assoclated Press. - ? P e » 4 2 s Victoria -° - - - - $4230 happenings in the Nation’s' Capital—and the world. JEA s‘?fi';;:.:; :7;:’:;&: e e'n;:;i‘ L - 1310 G St. N.W. X Five-Passenger Coupe - - $4280 P sion, wi o > _ That there maybeno [if{two asys, has heen_ considering re; - . Sedany s, ~iei s ay —a " $4465 interruption in the re- O Rty ot wer chimos, when Tt SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY Suburban ceipt of the papers the cgmcmde‘ its wn‘rk at .:‘he éac-m. ul - - - - $4620 ¥ g:;'; g,ft.exniratipn of :o?y;;l:‘:nm?.:f‘:l:y{:;l‘%erexz; i:m'o“;l F L ‘ ' R l D p A Limousine - - Sh X $4935 ‘ mmiss| . . . i the E.q;;:rl 51:;223:13 \ '°,}f;h:";‘:’dgz‘°?:':’,;’Z,;’.,”‘:‘: puo | ——mimwE —Woo Wew1—Wo3—%o3 ) Pinehunst, N. C. Imperial Limousine - - . $4985 jcorner; and the date of supremte. °°““°“"'r‘“ s Sirlos Gu BpL Syl Sias Wal e 8 SouthernPines,N.C : original subscription in lg“:eng’yl’f:;f,‘n;;'&’flhe “t‘ft,’ of oW, > ] N 3 L.C. The above prices include all war tax, cord tire equipment, freight charges, ap- the right-hand corner, e resolutions before they.ar maie e Camden, S. C ~Broved headlight lenses, bifiex bumpers, motometer, windshield wiper, insite mirror, of ‘the l?bel on the APUR i Ietiznod, However, a‘p:woll in- 3 f'"m"‘:'f;é‘.:.'c'x‘m:: :fidm&c‘:flh:?wmmmwm h; wrapper ‘in which the’ Tormed et eles e e I 'of ‘tools, full tank of gasoline, antifreeze solution, and your District of Columbis paper is -mailed—as :{.c?r,fi%'}mfm:gn_::,m affeot, thar ar- * Heense tag. 3 . : : shown jn the picture. entorced. “This 1, |qury:n'm-'u’;{er-] \ : WATCH TP‘I(IS DA;I'&' cutting (laqt that portion of the. commisaion,” these cisplés 28, 1t0:the wrapper, write on it the renewal instructions and send maduer 13 v Leipsis it to us with remittance. \ f,‘:.“;..‘,'.’::fi% e at B ; ; Germany. conduct future trials e ) ARndolph:ue. aqflhg In Maryland .4 and Virginia ....... In All Other States........ All the recipient of the ! per has to do is 70¢ a month \ 85c amonth. Wgol'nfl.q building. and other products over similar com- reversal of the traditional policy of the United States toward Cuba and a breach of ‘the clear and undoubted duty which the United States gov- ernment owes ‘to Cuba,” declares a legal opinion sent to the Senate finance committee, now in charge of the tariff bill, by Horatio S. .Rubens. Bryan Salley after the first trial on the release | modities from other countries, is a | that charge had been halted by a successful motion to quash the venire, and later when the state sought to try him on a charge of the murder of Cooper a plea of former jeopardy was_entered and that case now is pending before the United States Su- preme Court. The cases against Cor- bett have been hotly contested, with emergency. . . Nation's Duty, He Says. The opinion declares the .Fordney Bl is an “express and direct viola- tion of the letter of the treaty,” and “violates and offends the spirit in which the treaty was conceived.” It calls attention to the support which | former President Roosevelt, then Sec- retary of War Root and Military Gov- ernor Wood gave to the need of Cuba {when the treaty was made in 1902, and asserts that it still should be re- garded by the United States as a “superior duty and necessity to in- sure the economic stability of a free and prosperous Cuba.” “The right of Cuba to commercial - reciprocity with the Uaited States is not predicated alone upon the treaty of commercial reciprocity,” the opin- | ion argues, “but would seem to be also founded .upon immutable princi- ples of ‘moral duty and sacred honor. “Bound to Foster. Interests.” “The United States,” it adds, “has irrevocably bound itself to foster to the greatest possible extent the com- mercial interests of Cuba and cannot enact tariff legislation detrimental to Cuban interests without its being a serious breach of international law, | a reversal of its traditional policy toward Cuba and a breach of a and undoubted duty toward Cuba.” ALLIES MAY TRY CERMAN WAR CASES mitting Germanyvrto-try, her oWn war Bu i A e ifty. Vel Exception: has' been take a similar “nmanner ‘the’ alliés hdvé: the right to enforce 'article '229, which calls for' the trial of uilty “before mmu{y‘tflbum. of members of the military ‘tribunals of the P :dncér: % S in: i .. The two. principle : towers. of: the préposed " Hudson : river m bridge, - connecting -New New Jersey, will be-as high as the clear { HARDWO00D MJEX TO MEET. MEMPHIS, Tenn., January 7.—R. M. Carrier, president of the American Hardwood Manufacturers’ Association, today called a meeting of, the direc- tors of the association to be held in Louisville, Ky., January 14, to wxe- view the recent Supreme Court deci- sion, holding illegal the “open compe- tition” plan operated as a statistical auxiliary of the Hardwood: Associa- tion, and outline a future course for the organization. . i " Eastman Kodak Co. Have Reduced all a good Folding Kodak ' -as low Get Our New Low Prices on the Entire Line wedding of Princess Mary to Lord Lascalles in Westminster Abbey. Fre- quent rehearsals will precede the bril- | liant event. The great abbey will be crowded from the floor to the roof. Its appearance on the wedding day will not be unlike that which marked the coronation of Edward and Alex- Westminster is not aceustomed to royal marriages. No ceremony of this kind took place within its walls from 1269 to 1919. In 1319 Princess Patricia _of- Connaught "and ‘Com- mander Ramsay ‘were married sthere, but it was only three months after the armistice, when England was in no mogd to celebrate .such an event with the wonted énthusiasm and em- bellishment. At .the‘time of a cor- onation.the abbey is—turned. upside CADILLAC Reduces Pricas This year again, by a wider margin than ever before, Cadillac is conceded first place for high grade cars at the New York Show. This position is given in recognition of the greatest sales volume during the preceding fiscal year. Only three cars of any type are placed ahead of Cadillac and these sell for approximately half of the Cadillac price. The substantial price reduction announced recently is therefore not forced,.for Cadillac stands higher than ever before in point of sales. The new prices are predicated upon the planned output for 1922—a far greater _ production than ever before undertaken by the manufacturers of any high g:;ioe car, émd made gosstl:fl% lllyly the uz}e;xcel]ed facilities of the new Cadillac ry. Consequently, Cadillac purchasers are now given every be ‘of the anticipated decreased costsl.) y . : _ 1. We advise an early placing of your order. Kodaks 107 to 209, You can now buy $6.50 The ."W-ashiligtofi Cadillac Company NoEay : 1138;1!40 Connecticut Avenue ¢ 2 i : Telephones Franklin' 3900-3901 daten). Geo. W. Vierbuchen, District Passenger . Agent- 714 14th St. N.W. Phone Main 337 New York Office - 142 W 4204 St