Evening Star Newspaper, March 19, 1922, Page 10

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ey THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MARCH 19, 1922—PART 1. (4 ANNOUNCING —the new home of the Stutz at 1507 14th street, where an en- tire building will be devoted to the exclusive sale and servicing of Stutz Motor Cars, represented by . STUTZ MOTOR SALES CO.,, Inc. During this week the salesroom will remain open evenings and the new model Stutz Cars with the detachable -head type . of motor will be shown for the first time in Washington. E BY MAXIMILIAN “-‘HBE" Germany's Foremost Publiciat. By Cable t0 The Star. BERLIN, March 1§.—The proposed Genoa conference is more threatening than hopeful today. Only the United States can change its outlook. What does Amerlca want? Could the government at Washing- ton immediately make public condi- tions under which it would co-operate in such a gathering, all dangerous pitfalls would be avolded. The out- come must be a substantial strength- ening of the entire economic struc- ture of the world rather than the creation of a mere judicial frame- work for future International law- suits. . Mr. Hughes is right when he says that results only are possible! through a strictly economic council. To sum up: Must Heal Economic Ilis. First—A way must be found to heal the economic ills of the world with- out touching upon treaties or na- tlonal prejudices. Second—Such a plan. when found, must be sufficlently comprehensive to be applied to all existing commit- ments. France, for instance, wrongly as- sumes that only German bad faith prevents easy collection of 132,000,- 000,000 gold marks (today, 6.800.000.- 000 puper marks), and would like to treat this “law suit” like a private one whereln the duty of the debtor is above discussion. Yet, in southern Europe and in Asla’Minor, she is willing to abandon her paper treaty for a reality because it is to her ad- vantage so to do, Therefore she re- joices over the Reading-Montagu- Curzon eplsode which, it isepossible. may result in the restoration of Con- stantinople, Thrace and Smyrna to Turkey, meaning that large and im- portant districts would continue un- der a sterile Turkish rule merely be- cause Britain's Indian Mohammeédans PLEADS FOR READINESS, DESPITE HATE FOR WAR President of Military Institute Tells Alumni Nothing Can Re- | move Peril of Conflict. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, March 15.—Abhorrent as war js to thc American people, there is neither justification nor ex- cuse for the country cver again to! be found unprepared, Charles A. Plumley, president of Norwich Unl versity, a military institute at North. fleld, told the Norwich Alum. Stutz Cars since 1911 have had a reputation for speed, power, durability and appearance. Because of the new O. H. motor used this year, Stutz Cars more than ever enhance their previ- ous reputation. You Will have to ride in one to 'fully appreciate the. difference in tha car of today over that of yesterday. Make any test you choose; make any compgtison you please. The Stutz with the new O. H. engine will make you revise any previous opinion you may have had about what a motor car can be made to do. We particularly call your attention to the manner in which the new 1922 Stutz cars respond to the throttle. The acceleration is something rémarkable. Right or Left Hand Drive Optional .- STUTZ MOTOR SALES COMPANY, Inc. 1507 14th Street N.W. Telephone Main 520 Dr. J. K. Freiot, President Sidaey Prince, Sales Manager James E. Alexander, Secretary and Treasurer B R R N Y SO SO S W= - ot s e S e e N s e s R SN S e R Ry e ni Association of New York at its annual dinner tonight. “No one belleves for a moment,” he said, “not even the distinguished gentlemen who participated in and are responsible for the pronounce- ments of the international arms con- lterelloe. that any covenant entered into between them and among the na- tions will ever provide or prove a panacea or preventive of war. No plan has been or can be promulgated which will change human nature or bring about the millennium by’ con- - The Giant That Shoves Your Car Along! | |Hasnns Sick and tired of war as we are, ave not forgotten what the policy of the pacifists and the lack of preparedness cost us in _lives and treasure, and we will not forget. | We are opposed to war or to any- thing which looks like another war, but the average citizen is just as bitterly opposed to anything and everything which looks like such a Willful lack of preparedness as that with which we were confronted at that date when we ought to have been prepared to have entered and to have then ended the war.” ] Lightning Motor Fuel is the unseen giant that transports your car over all roads—rough or smooth—at a steady, even speed! Lightning prevents carbon trouble — it means freedom from spark plug fouling—greater power and more miles per dollar! The more experience you have had with common gasoliné. the greater will be your appre ciation of Lightning. LIQUOR IN HOME LEGAL. Tennessee Court Rules Possession Per Se Against Law. | | By the Associated Press. NASHVILLE, Tenn., March 18.—"The bare possession of such & quantity of | liquor in one's residence Is not an offense under the laws of Tennessee,” the Tennessee supreme court an- nounced today in reversing and re-| manding a case from Davidson county in which the defendant had been con- victed of unlawfully possessing such | Hquor. The defendant. Lightning is the supreme iotor fuel—bar none—and is sold cheaper in Washington than elsewhere. USE LIGHTNING MOTOR FUEL. There’s a Filling Station Near You. PENN OIL CO. "Telephone West 166 the supreme court said, might have manufactured the quart of liquor involved, himself, or .he might have personally transported it to his residence. He was not charged with either of these offenses; and he could not be convicted of an offense with which he was not charged. The fact that defendant was liquor laws of the state, but the! possession of liquor pér se under the ! Circumstances appearing was not de- nounced by the statutes. i Rosslyn, Virginia. MAIL TO BE EXAMINED. Inspection to Be Made to Discover Typhus Germ. i NEW YORK, March 18.—Hereafter mail from Russia and all typhus in- : | fested ports will be examined by health department inspectors before; it is removed from ocean liners ar- jving here. e e mmissioner Copeland, in' anbouncing today such an arrange-: At "with postal authorities, sai ]similar inspections made last year of {ail on ships sheltering "typhus: | patients aid not disclose any evidence | | D afection, and he declared it doubt- ! ful if typhus could be conveyed by the mail provided it was in transpor- tation three or four daysi i Typhus is conveved by the body ! louss’and in no other way.” he said.: ke it away from the human body, the louse will not live more than couple. of days. We have demon strated that fact tlme__nnd again in the health department. Mother! Your Sick Child / is Bilious, Constipated. g W \ VILLAGE OF 1,000 NOW 70. relfef service of the Friends Society, tells of one village where the popula- tion has decreased xln a few weeks from 1,000 to .70 people. “There was no g:le to bury the dead, and the starving crawled to this charnal house to get portions of the dead bodies for food.” she wrote in a letter received by her parents today. “We have been held up owing to the food not getting here, but now that it has arrived we are caring for 28000 children and 10,000 adults,” she added. ~ Give “California Fig Syrup” : Harmless Laxative for Your Child’s Liver and Bowels . Hurry mother! A teaspoonful of “California | laxative” is often all that is necessary. Fig Syrup” today may prevent a sick child to- Children love the “fruity” taste of genuine morrow. If your child is constipated, bilious, | “California Fig Syrup” which has directions | feverish, fretful, has-cold, colic or if stomach is | for babies and children printed on bottle. Say sour, tongue coated, remember a good “physic- ! “California” or. you may get an imitation. \ . | MENNONITES GO SOUTH. CLINTON, lowa, March 18.—Travel- ing on a special train of thirty-two cars, 180 Mennonites, sixty-two of them between five and twelve years of_age, en route from Canada to the-new Men- nonite settlement in Mexico, passed through Clinton, via the Milwaukee rail- { | 'of Milton, Wis., now a | ASKS U. S. CONDITIONS "TO JOIN GENOA PARLEY Harden Declares America Would Render World Service by Stating Terms Under Which It Would Become Member. and France's Islam empire otherwise might rebel. =) Negatlve proofs of the weakness of the treaty of Versailles are useless to the never would abandon his creditor's right. cisive factor in French polities. In- stead of explalning to him how theo- retical realities cannot be forced into treaty formulas, he must be shown in a practical way how concessions will make for his own and his' coun- try's. prosperity. nection Germany's daily bursts of tri- 4 communist administration had umphed completely over capitalisni, questions, and to us it seems entirely political. America does not wish to mingle in European politics, neither does she desire to acknowledge the Russlan soviets as equals.” Simultaneously the representative of the United States filed the clalm for the expenses of the American army of occupation on the Rhine. Voice of Lenin. From Moscow came the voice of rage over the treaty injustice equally ara worthless. iz Miniature U. S. ™ President Mazaryk of Czechoslo- vakla today is the wiset ruler of a European state. With Premier Benes, he has reached the right conclusion. Economic unity is being worked out between the ~Czechoslovak, Serbo- Croat, Rumanian'and Polish nations. Naturally, this is the fnitial sten to- ward & system of reasonable modern [.Lenin. He tells the world that should | politics from which something like a | the proposed Genoa conference be | minature United States yet may be|postponed or abandoned, therc must | formea. .| result danger of renewed war. His Europe must abandon her prodigal-| associate, Trotsky, passed the word ity in expenditures for government, |through his subordinate commanders in the maintenance of her fleets and | to emphasize this to every soldier of armies, if she desires to secure out- | Russia, adding: side credits or International consider- | “We are not afraid of the capital- atlon. Until she does this she cannot | istic threats. We only laugh at them. hope to recover frum the effects of | The capitalistic states need us as the war or ever to become strong|much as we need them. But we enough to defend herself against the | won't be tricked. We refuse to ac- arts of the Moscow government. cept conditions which give us a| The duet from America and Russla | worse position than any other nation | has been registered throughout Eu- |in the world.” | rope. True, it has not sounded so{ Unless the world powers shall sweet as the strains from the throat of Mme. Jeritzas or from that of En- rico Caruso's heir. The voice of Mr. ‘Hughes very frankly says: “We cannot accept the Genoa Invi- tation, because your program ex- cludes certaln important economic nothing can be expected (rom Ge In the absence of such united ac the Italian gathering simply would be a boxiug matgh. Danger to Russian Ostracism. It would be equally futile to oppose cither the admission of the bolshevists to the conference or to force them iato a defensive position. It would be a world calamity were the Russian economic ruin to continue. It certainly will continue if the two continents are to erect u wall between themselves. Bolshevist Russia ix no more vulncr- able from without today than it was wheh the czar's empire survived the investments of the Tarters, the Polex, Charles X1I of Sweden and Napoleon. Nowhere is there an heir apparent who could defeat bolshevism and restore order. Even the rovalists admit this There are 140,000,000 peasants who would resist any one suspected of de- siring to take from them the land they were given by the soviets. The Moscow | rulers, who have made secret trade | agreements with, and doue business with the European bankers. know their P | strength as masters of Itussia's re- | sources, and that no world boycott ever would stop profit-seeking capitalists from trading with them. (Copyright, 1922.) Frexch peasant who, after all, And. in_the end, he is the de- unitedly make it plain to Moscow in polite "but unmistakable language that Russia has no right to ask world charity for thirty miilion starving people and offer 750,000 soviet roubles for a dollar, while simultaneously In this same con- Pt 000000006606 6000000000666006600600000060000000006000000004 | : found with a quart of whisky in his| residence might be cvidence of a transgression against some of the DO00000000000000000000 00000000 00000000000 0 000022222222222220000606000000600000000000000060000000 004 talking arrogantly, as though the| Economy Corner mund’ 736-738 Seventh Street v Corner of H Street Making this store famous with these incomparable values in Sport and Dress Coats It has been hard for us to keep our stocks replenished—so great has been the demand— prompted by the exceptional qualities and the unp! ented prices. But our makers are stand- ing by us loyally—and co-operating to the full- est extent—to the end that we shall place on sale Monday morning 3 Special Groups— Compare with $25 Coats L e e e E e e e assEessessasssns esestenteessessentsesssnssesssessstssesssnssssssesssssses Tweeds-;-Hdmespuns - Herfingbfmes - Velours—Sport Cloths—Chinchillas, Etc. They are in the smart Sport models—in Capey models—in Dressy models — plain tailored; embellishéd with embroidery—skeleton or full lined with Silk; carefully tailored in every detail. All the season’s popular shades—light colors and staple tones. 2 Record-breaking Values—to Continue Our Record-breaking Selling An appreciation : We are deeply mindful of the responsibility which rests upon us—through the response you are making to our announcements—but we are sure we shall measure up to your expectations—for we really are in a position to give you values that are not commonly offered at such prices as we are quot- ing. And this is true throughout the whole store—in every department. That’s our practical way of showing our appre:iation of generous patronage bestowed. or Wonderful Values in Easter Hats A big variety of the very latest shapes — in all the season’s pre- ferred colors — Periwinkle, Jade, Gray, W Henna, Flame, Black, Brown, Navy, etc.— brilliantly trimmed with ribbons, flowers and 5 8 Ostrich feathers. ° Becoming shapes. : - $5to $7.50 actual values. . ... 2383 mm:zmwzmmzmmxxzmmzmzzzzzzzz:zzzxzzzz;zzézzzz:z:zzxzuzzzz o 7 i + »

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