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LW MARK BOOST 10 CERMAN TRADE ‘Manufacturers Able to Out- bid Other Nations Through . Subsidies. Moderwell’s dny condi- 1 BY HIRAM MODERWELL. | ~(Special of The Star and | News.) BERLIN., . May 14.—I¢ an;| rican goes to South America and | ries to obtain a construction con- tract he will probably learn that a German firm has underbid him. If he goes to Tabriz and buys a pair of socks he will probabiy find a German trade mark on them. If he goes to! Spain and tries to ell 3 pewriter | he will almost certain!y be told that such and nch German firm is al- ready supblying excellent typewriters | at a lower price and on more favor- able credit conditions. One of the of all the eco- nomic par: alting from the war is this active prosperity of the| vanquished in the face of the indus- trial depression of the victors. The Germans, deprived of some of their richest t . of nearly all their shipping tically” all their | vealth abroad, and laden with huge cial obligations, are prospering. fruits of the ished stands Bex pardon, Whence the 1 in England, i mumbling their pitiful crisons on the streets of Lon- | don. Whence the 60 per cent of smokeless chimneys belonging to the blash furnaces which ¥ nce has acquired in Lorraine. ence the ade slump in Ameri with her ions of unemployed, and her in- abi@ty to export her surplus produce. | Depresved Mark. What has plaved this trick on the victors? In the first instance, of | urse, the depreciated’ ma The | iermans. finding it impossible to | meet all their obligations without | printing paper money, made a weapon out of their burden, and more or less deliberately went on printing marks in order to disturb the world economy to their advantase. SHIl the view held by some that th mark itself is the explamation, is the mark is worth only | former value, ic does | that Germ can produce | xtieth of the former cost. ves the German manufac- turer an advantage In cheapness of production Is not the low value of the mark, but its long-continued fall While the mark is fallms and likely | false. Becau a sixtieth of i no follow to fall farther, speculating foreigner: will be shy of it, and will accept it at only a half or a third of its inland value. Or to look at it_another way, when the mark falls, German prices rise less rapidly than it falls. Here rst important element In the low of German production | —the en_the inland | und the - of the mark. Within t broadly speak- | ing. the Ge acturerer un- | dercuts h nd makes | his profit. i German prices ; approach worid . manufacturerer will not willing at home much more ¢ ¢ than he | can sell abroud. And 1y musi pay world pri for the things she imports. thus forcing up her domestic costs. If the murk were stabilized (it makes absolutely no difference at |% what fisure) German prices would | presently become approximately equal to forcizn. Hut when fresh billions of paper money issued each month | de. the mark must continue to sink, and foreigners will again discount against | its bad prospects, and wages and; prices will tag along well behind. Who Pays the Subsidy. Sstill, explanation looks | difference between $15, | of i a suit difference in real v it _cannot | te unted for by s of book- | keeping in marks. OF cou the _truth Germa nufacturer i to enable him to produc 1y. uebody is swe mebody pays part of his e usually without intending it. often without knowing it. The government sub- sidfes on railroads aml bread, ofi which the allies complained last vear, are the least part of them. The rail- | ropd subsidy covers only a fraction | of the freight costs, and these cover | only a fraction of the manufacturer’s | cost of making and delivering the | daods. The bread subsidy repres-| .am only a part of the family budget. ¢ cannot account for a reduction 9 to 65 per cent in production deprives himself of values to le the manufatturer to put these his goods without cost imself? First, probably the work- | class, to the extent to which | uffers.a reduced standard of liv- | if®. The exact amount is difficult to determine, but at a rough guess| one might say that the munufacturer is enabled to cut 10 or 20 per cent in | real values off his wage budget due | /o then pays the rest, or rather, | i es into to the w diminished consump- | tlon. He t a further consid- | erable amount off on the score of Cecreased rents, since the controlled able workmen to_live a for perhap: erly pai@ for them. In this instance | it is the landowning clats that pays which it pays once more diminished of retail | hop rent. aid off | reciated | reduced = middle which pays “German Efficiency™ Again. | Finally it is probable that the manu- | facturer subsidizes himself out of his capital. His huge mark profits tempt him to think he can safely cut his price still further to et foreign! competition, and he does not always, realize that he Is cutting his profits | 00 low, in real money, to replace his | lant. 5 The remaining’ factor in the cheap-! of German production it is sheer is unquestionably im- | ency in the workman, ency. portant. E o in technical process, effi- | industrial organization—all these work to eliminate waste in pro- duction It is the continue that puts thes Jast) into ope Wvords, that "k » sidizing the industrialists. is mo magic in If you could per- suade American workingmen to give'; up 20 per cent of their food and Amar- ! jean real estate owners to give up nine-tenths of their rent and Amerin] can bondholders to give up fifty-nine-+ Sixtieths of their interest and hand it| all to big business, America could produce as cheaply as Germany. HYATTSVILLE. HYATTSVILLE, Md., June 24 (Spe- ciul).—A tableau, “The Court qf #Mowers,” n which Miss Margaret' Gorman of Washington, beauty con- [test winner, will be queen, will be | one of the features of an entertain-| ment to be presented Friday ning | At 3 o'clock in the state armory for the benefit of the building fund of St. Jerome's Catholic Church. Fancy { dancing by Miss Alicia Darnall and | songs by Madeline Halloran, four- vear-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.| John A. Halloran of Washington, will e among ~other attractions. The program will be under the, direction of Mrs. Matthew F. Halloran, and Mrs. Joha Fainter will be stage mau-l axer. b P isc ileaders of the basic industries. inext reform was nproving the con- jonly fthe operation moral i e wdle s T Lambert Hillyer, athletic movie an India just after the director jumped. Had in which he waxs supposed to land was going te bre; hin camera on that instead. Hillyer #ot a masty fall, but the Indian got natisfied. Hiilyer ix known as the director the idea of the scene and he w: “who doublex for hix doubles. in dangeroux scenes lone the! Wh RUSSIS ADVANCE INRALWAYREFORM Through Travel Between Moscow and Chita, Is Announcement. BY F. A. MACKENZIE. By Cable to The Star and the Chicago Dally < News. Copyright, 1922, MOSCOW, June 19.—Russian rail- way reform reached its first stage last week when the through service be- tween Moscow and Chita was re- sumed. The reform is under the di- ction of F. G. Dzerzinsky, better known as the organizer of the cheka, Russia's political police, with which be connected from the beginning until last December, when he left tribunal to assume control of tran: portation. Dzerzhinsky. often de- bed here as one of Russia’s “great five,” who direct her new policy, gave the writer an interview today upon the railroad situation. Gentle, blue-cyed and idealistic, it is difficult to believe that this was Rus- sia’s most denounced bolshevist. ld me the story of the hard cam- ign for the betterment of the rail- undcr almost impossible finan- nditions and under the handi- famine. Cites the First Step Takem. “Our first reform,” he said, *“was entralization. In place of one cen- tral body directing everything the railways 'in the different areas were tormed into local groups under the !direction of boards chosen from ‘the The ditions of the personnel. Our work ers suffered considerable hardship: jur outlays greatly exceeded our The staff was as large as in while the total trans- only one-third. The m was to increase duce the staff. The ralsing the income. the olden days portation way The general railway a cut of 26 per cent num- 0.000 umd the number will soon be $00.000. This cnabled us to {provide better for the actual workers ! “Corruption among employes Ww: one of our problems. When tran portation was frec of charge it was very difficult to fight this abuse. Now that the system has been transferred pay basis the problem is ifficult. Ncw Locomotives Bought. “We ordered in other countries 1,700 new locomotiv Of these 220 have been delivered, “Traffic in Glands” Denounced . As Violation of Laws of God » ecial Dispatch to The Star. MILWAUKEE, Wis, June 23—A bitter attack on what he termed the ‘raffic glands” was made by Herbert Noonan, president of in ue they form-iyrarqudtte University. and one of the | Lest known educators in the state. He denounced the practice as a vio- lation of the moral law, not alone by the person who submits to the op- eration, but by the surgecn, Who, for 2 fec, transplants the glands. His atement is expected to arouse dis- | sention in the medical ranks, because of the recent operation upon. Harold ¥. McCormick of Chicago and his own 1Y, standing as president of the largest medical school in the state and his professional rank. in an operation of transplanting is a grave violaticn of the moral law, he said 'he moral precept, ‘Thou £halt not kill,'.forbids not alone mur- r or suicide, but likewise mutila- ion of the human body. »v member may be amputated only when the good of the entire body de- mends such _an operation. An op- crution _involving the removal of a gland from one person anll trams- anting it in another is not lawful « anothcr, that consent does not make A good inten- tion does not charge the:fact. that man is contradicting God’s dominion over lite and death. Such a gland cperation is intrinsically wrong and [ {a,/good intention does not transform vice into virtue. -If it did-every -evil deed could be .made virtuous. The action ‘itself, the intent and the cir- cumstances all must be considered. It any of the ghree determinants of morality -be.bad. thé action becomes evil. * o “The principal involved is'God's su- preme dominion ever human life. And the willingness of the victim to dis- pese of his glands for a considera- tion cAnnot be used as an argument that the ‘operatiom is ‘proper. Even the direst poverty would be no ex- cuse to earn money in this manner. “Should these people who submit to the removal of such glands from their body take couiisel with a moral- ist they would have to refuse 'such requests, even though all the gold in the wo;-:l were_offered as an al- luring bribe” Recently Dr. Noonan Plighed wi! Profs. Shea and Ross of the Un! sity of Wisconsin on- the question of birth control, insisting that-the doc- nerve, Hi Resumed | He | seventy coming |ever happens.” “Buying and selling human glands: direetor, did not quite like the way actor did a fall ffom n eliff in a recent picture, no he proceeded to nhow the red man how it should be done, This photograph was snapped the photographer known that the met , he would have trained the stunt men who replace the syars er takes their place. Proposes to Revive Chain Gang to Work . s : Winchester ‘Drunks’ Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va. -Revival of the ol xang, minus the bal | is to be proponed to ber of arrests for publi enneas, or making jail prison- crs pay for their board and lodging. ‘The mayor proposes to semd Jall prisoners to the “tone quarry of a specinl officer. It now I the city $1 per day to board prisoners at the jail. Drunken- | mexs continues to be the prin- | cipal charge on the police court i blotter, and the mayor said that it men insinted upon getting drunk in public he proposed to make them work in public in- stend of whiling away their time in jail. E from Sweden and the others from Germany. Five hundred petroleum | {tank cars have been received from | | Canada | “Qur railroad system was disorgan- | ized last winter because everything had to yield te the transportation of grain into the famine regi entirely reversing the i rection of the traffic. .We transported 40,000,000 poods (1,600,000,000 pounds) of grain for the sowing campaign. This finished, we are now able to re- sume our ordinary activities. For ex- ample, 900 cars are now being hauled daily from the Don disfrict. The railways are divided into_three cate- gories. The first receive 100 per cent | of their needs, the second 50 per cent, | and the third 30 per cent. The last| two classes must cover the remainder | of their needs by increasing their | productivity. “Qur future is more hopeful, al- | though without foreign credits it is| more difficult to restore our economic | | life. But we are bettering, little by | { little, our industries, transportation | | and agriculture. The United States| could help us more than any other| | country, as she did not suffer eco- | nomically from the imperial war. She | hax machinery and locomotives to! spare. and we need them. Then, too, she might change her attitude toward u When asked about Lenin. M. Czer- ! zhinsky replie i “Lenin's doctors agree that he is now out of danger, but must have a ! long rest before he returns to active | work. They speak of this time in| terms of months; some of them say | two months. ile Russia | Would suffer from the loss of a lead- | | er. it is a mistake to suppose that our | i W policy would' be changed. 2 ‘s future does not depend upon S ine man, Bowever great he may | be. It will go steadily forward, what- | trines along that line promulgated at the state univenpity were atheistic | in character. (Copyright, 1922.) ALEXANDRIA ALEXANDRIA, Va., June 24 (Spe- cial).—Miss Margaret F. Gorman, beauty contest winner, autographed a base bail this afternoon in the benefit game between the. Dread- | Club of Washington, which she tossed fo Mayor James M. Duncan, who auctioned it. Kirk E. Wallace of the . M.. C. A., bought it for: $6. The game resuited in a score of 16 to 2 in favor of the Dreadnaughts. A crowd of about 2,000 attended. Miss Gorman was presented with a huge bouquet of Richmond roses by little Miss Mary Catherine Wal- lace on behalf of Alexandria admirers. Robert Cochran presented her with a button which maie her a_member | ot St. Paul's Troop No. 1, Pioneers, !ard Miss Andrey Allen presented her | with a Girl Scout button and made iher an honorary member of Alex- andria_Troop, Girl Scouts.- A prize of a fielder's glove wad)| presented to First Baseman Morris, the winner in the base circling. con-/ | test, he haying made the circuit im {fitteen seconds. The presentation was made by K. E. Wallace. What probably will be the final | meeting of the present city council fwill be held Tuesday night, after | which it is expected the council will adjourn for tho summer, and in Sep- tember the new city council. com- posed of five members, will take charge of the affairs of the city. {The old ocouncil is composed of twenty-four members, sixteen being members of what is known as com- { mon_council, and -eight members of the board of aldermen. Deeds of conveyance for the follow- ing pleces of property have just been placed on record in the office of the clerk of the court: Gustave M. La- : gergren and wife to Earl B. Brant and wife, house and lot 10, block' 4, section 1, Rosemont; Mrs. Stella G. Link and husband to T. Harvey Hen- shaw, house and lot 512 North Wash- ington street. s The work of improving the road at Queén City, Arlington county, has been compléted by the bureau of pub- lic roads. This road is used exten- sively by Alexandria motorists. C. E.”Winfre is here in the interest of the Children’s Home Society of Virginia. He seeks to have thé sum of $2,600 raised in Alexandria-for this work. The campaign to raise funds jis now in_full swing and will close next Tuesday. . - * VIR AR S HGILR * THE SUNDAY STAR, WAS NERVY MOVIE DIRECTOR SHOWS HIS ACTORS HOW TO DO DANGEROUS STUNTS. naughts and the Manhattan Athlstic HINGTON, ~ Consensus of Th BY PAUL SCOTT MOWRER. By Cable to The Star and the Chicago Daif News. Copyright, 1022. THE HAGUE, June 24—The poli-| & cles of the western powers toward Russia seem to have ‘evolved consid- erably since the close of the Genoa conference. At Genoa there were two | ¢ points of view, both rather extreme One view, represented by the French ‘which, held that practically nothing could be done with the Russians until the sgviet regime has fallen and the right of.private property has been fully re- stor®d. The other, represented by the tl British and Italians, wanted to.ex-|s tend to Russin de 'jure recognition and full co-operation immediately, | thereby following the example set by Germany. ‘The trouble with the second policy. Box attractive box. Regular, $1.00. fresh, new and perfect—the biggest candy value in years. @ Deliciously rich Jordan Almond: clal at, Ib........... Sumptuous Homemade Chocolate Fudge, Choice large Marshmallows, in air-tight 39 c tins, Ib......... best. With a delightful long filler of Big, iuscious Cordial Cherrles, richly Porto Rican and Havana and a per- coated, 1t 49(: fect imported Sumatra wrapper. We i e ey think_they're the finest we've ever Iced, Chocoiate-covered Al Economic Recognition of Russ as potnted out by Edouard Benes, the premier of Czechoslovakia, is that it Blves encouragement to communism, tends to delay Russian evolution and working people. Russia, increases the distress of the Russiah people and leads almost in- evitably to new troubles and anarchy. and supported by the United Statee.| . o if this pollcy of abstention though absent, was ever felt,| could have hastened the downfall of bo'sherism it might have been the beb. tuing, provided Genoa had never opened Now, however, practically every one agrees that to break off the negotja- dent and provocative and might lead advanced-from the negative attitude maintained at Genoa, Regular $1.00 ASSORTED CHOCOLATES >~ 5%¢ Luscious hand-dipped Chocolates in a wonderfully Imonds, . Pe D. C, JUNE 25, 1922—PART 1. the her, have retreated somewhat from an overprecipitate advanoce. ‘The whole British delegation here is L 15 ° ‘A-4 IS SAFE WHEN CREW REPAIRS ENGINE TROUBLE erty,” but are willing, in effect, to re- construction. The question of private property sim 1Y poonservative as - compared | (s delicate. It fs understood that the wii 'rime Minister Lloyd George at | Russians object to the word “prop- Genoa. Leslie Urquhart has Insisted | erty” but are willing, in effect, to re- repeatedly that nothing can ba done | store -foreign progorty in the form of wi ussia until the bolsheviki mod- | “concessions,” which .eem to come ify their regime. Sir Philip Lloyd- Bmllully to the same thing. The Greame declares flatly that “Russia| British and Belgians are disposed to needs the west more than the west|make concessions to the Russians in needs Russia,” supporting the state-|the matter of words. .The French ment with the fact that of Britain’s | still express doubts but suggest that re-war foreign trade imports|rather than attempt a general agree m Russia formed only 6 per cent|ment on property nDYlyln :::Lexpor'-l to Russia only 3% per! whole of Russia a small region might be selected for an experiment to see Reservation on Principle. K ow the compromise offered by the All the western powers apparently Russians actually works. agree, therefore, that the proper pol- ® ane commonjiimpression that lcy /at The Hague is one reserving ¢ven ll“tlhu cm‘e{xm? at The Hague questions of principle, such as that ETharkr e nafla pethaps "indiviama, of de jure recognition, and offerin, perhaps weneral, perhavs 'individui N 12 ssia’s reintegration into Russia not political but economic col- | the family. of Rations. i laboration, thus helping the Russian | question o ne At pationve Y & geopla and Ferhl 8 avolding new out- “ reaks while assisting that evolution of the Russian system toward sound-| CHERRY CROP VALUABLE. er principles which every one con- Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. sigers inevitavle in the long run. " n the French view the question of v gredits is the most important and the _fi‘,‘,’f&‘:“l’jfifg}m;‘i W L = e e e TS ¥0acredits, | Northumberland county, in the north ern neck, shipped recently cherries l?e argue, nodzollvteneyi no ?lym!l’llfl of lamages ani nterest m_loans; no’| & SAfdence 1o | gathered from two trees on the Folly farm which sold for $213.30, nettin, payments, no foreign confidence in $177.72. L . e Hague Session Langley Field “Pet” Returns After Several Hours’ Delay—No Alarm on Board. By the Associated Press, HAMPTON, Va., June 24.—The Army dirigible A-4 arrived safely at Lang- ley Field this afternoon after having experienced engine trouble which caused a délay in her trip of several hours. Members of the crew repaired the motors and the return was made without incident. The A-4 is a pet balloon at Langley Field, and officers there say they “have her eating out of our hands.” No fear was felt for the safety of those In recent weeks the o have b used as the fleld runabout, taking officers on one occasion to Virginia Beach, where she was anchored whil 3 played golf, having been down by caddies and tied to a tree. increases the moral chaos of the First Pelicy Hindrance. The trouble with the first policy Is hat it implies a sort of blockade of negotiations with Russia ions already begun and renew Rus- ja’s isolation would be both impru- o new wars in eastern Europe. 1f the French, on the one hand, have property rights; no confidence, no for- eign aid; no production, no Russian re- the British, on Peoples Low Prices on CIGARETTES Greer’s STORI No 1-TRE K Sh. N. W. No. 2-7th & E 8. N. W. No. 3-144 & U Sts. N. W. —Nationally known and advertised cigarettes at a decided saving at all Peoples Cigar Depts. 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