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.ll_!llll.l.l.fllllllll.lllilllIlllllllllIl é e PALAIS ROVAL 11th and G Sts. . Est. 1877—A. Lisner, Pres. Lt WZARD o Your Fall Housecleaning WZARD POLISH The most scientific polish made for fur- niture, woodwork and floors. It dries quickly, without stickiness, and gives surface a brilliant and very permanent polish. Four-ounce bottle ... Twelve-ounce bottle QuartCan ..... Ha¥-galion Can...... Gzllon Can WZARD CARPET CLEAN A sweeping compound that lays all dust and makes sweeping e: It leaves carpets cleaner and colors brighter than is possible with ordinary sweeping. Contains no injurious ingredients. Large WIZARD POLISHING MOP Keeps floors looking well, because it not only cleans them, but gives them a hard, dry brilliant luster. - The secret of the effectiveness of Wizard Mop is its treatment with Wizard Polish, the polish. Wizard Mops are built for durability; have adjustable handle; are easily renewed. Prices, $1.75 to $2.75. ‘WZarRD WALL DUSTER Made of the best yarn, chemically treated to gather dust from walls, moldings, picture frames, etc. The chemical treatment is per- manent. Washing does not affect it. 66- inch handle. Prices, $1.50 and $2.00. Polishes and preserves the finish on floors, furniture, woodwork, leather, li- noleum. Wizard Wax Paste is especially adapted for use on floors. 1 Ib,, 75¢; 2 Ibe., $1.50 wzaep WAX Wizard Liquid Wax is recommended for polishing furniture, pianos, woodwork, automobiles, etc. 8 oz. 16 oz.. ENENEC N NEEEEE R EN NSO NN NI NN R R R NGNS NN E RN N NN RN R RSN NN ARNEE IR AN IR N AR~ 32 oz. B Wizard Dancing Wax, in powdered form, 1-Ib. can, sifter | top, 65¢c. $1.25 Polish Mop, 89¢ $1.00 Furniture Duster, 69¢c 60c Polish, 49¢ 20c Dustcloth, 9% [ A RN ERERRERRENRER:E.] TO CERTAIN - < INSECT_PESTS, by L JioisiN FecTsy Galons 4222 DEOPORIZE SONOlMthEMth‘“‘QMfle» —also destroys thew egga Drnves rats and mice away. 3 lothing ever before known like it. It is a germicide, insect ide, disinfectant, deodorizer—all in one, powerfully effectiv ‘et delightfully refreshing and pleasant to smell. Read ho -aried are its us.s—how simple to apply—how. necessary t rave ever ready in your home. . ROACHES Bono Liquid sprays into the smallest crack and deepest recesses. Kills erever 1 touches roaches or their eggs. Bono Liquid is their deadliest efemy. Do- not harm furniture, metal, or stain bec clothes. : or Bono Liquid drives them out of the house Spray ‘in holes, in. closets or wherever th. rodents stay or run. Spray in e cans, sinks, todets, sic: rooms. germs; dispels many bad odors SED BUGS on fu : /. man RANCE IS BLAMED FOR AIDING TURKS British Writer Declares She Has-Opposed England’s Peace Moves. 3 ° BY ANDRE TARDIEU. By Cable to The Star. PARIS, September 16.—Clemenceau's decision to go to America to make Franice's voice, heard and to express his opinions regarding the rights and duties of the allies has aroused in France and elsewhere profound -interest. Nobody should be more l!!entlvfle.lx listened to, for nobody has.maintai ‘more rigor- ous stlence during the last three years. FEARS KEMALIST POWER Sees’ Franoo-Moslem Pact as Possi- ble in Near East Im- - broglio. 4 % T | BY A. G. GARDINER. By Cable to The Star. LONDON, September 16.—The events of the Europea . drama shift with the suddenness’ of the, scenes of a film play. But, however they shift, they turn upon the relations between Eng- 1and and France. Wherever one looks, ‘0 Russfa, to Germany,. to-the Bal- kans, he ‘finds the two countries op- posed. For the moment Germany is out of the picture. The Greek catas- trophe in Asia Minor has revealed the | alarming possibllity of a new rupture. | Undoubtedly Lloyd George's thought- | less words encouraged the Greeks to | suppose Great Brifain would support them. On the other hand, France has assumed the German role of the friend of the Turk. Kemal's triumph is no- torfously due to a large supply of French “war materials, and the as- tonishing outburst of French enthu- siasm over the affair was an' undis- gulsed demonstration of anti-English What follows?’ The Turks, flushed with victory and experts at the old game of playing off one Christian na- tion against another, aim at closing the Dardanelles. This was the only solid achievement of the treaty of Sevres. The straits only can ‘be kept open through the united action of England and France. If French popu- lar passion against England prevalls, and France leaves the ‘Turk a free hand, a grave situation Involving Mesopotamia and India confronts England, A~ Turkish revival also ultimately threatens French interests in Syria and elsewhere, but in the present in- flammable atmosphere of Parls, where every music hall rings with the gross- est insults, England's position Is full of peril. Al best the gravity of the Turkish situation puts powerful cards in the hands of France. She can say: +Do this or we leave the Turks a free hand. The League Insu In the clrcumstances the visit of Lloyd George to the assembly of the league of nations assumes increased importance. It will be the first time the executive head of a great state icknowledged the authority of the assembly by his presence. It is most significant because of the comment on the dissolution of the supreme coun-! cil. It can transfer its power to the league. But can the transfer be made in the present attitude of France? Tha league attitude and the mill: taristic position of France hardly can be reconciled. The situation is re- In‘alled by the remark of Gen. Smuts Wito me prior | President B | conference. to my Interview with Wilson during the peace “Tell the President,” he said, “the : B | establishment of the league depends @} UPon America. England canmot carry jthe project alone in the face of hos- g itilitles.” " 1f America returns to her isolation, England also will be driven ito such a policy, and the continent jwill be left to drift to shipwreck.” . . -; Efforts to have the league live with-" jout America continues. But while @/ the league excludes great powers it ! s doomed to be largely an academic {pody. = Tts existence depends on’ ex- | ternal storms over which it has no icontrol. The fate of the league ix W wvith France The attitude of her representatives at Geneva is not um- peful, but it is useless to ignore [the fact that the main current of the B! French opinion is one of negation to the aims of the combination. Lloyd George's Position. Will Lloyd George's intervention help or hinder? Once the most popu- lar person in France, today he is the most reviled. In nailing his colors to the league mast he issues an in- vitation which may be a challenge. It may make or break the league. He realizes the enormous disaster that has followed the policies of the last four years and is anxlous to re- verse the engine. But is he the man for the task? Unfortunately, he is so discredited | by events that I fear ha is unequal ; to carrying through so vast an op- eration. Europe wants new men to salvage the wreck the old men have made. She wants new men with new {ideas and a new spirit. But where will we look for such leadership? War and peace has destroyed every | reputation. Europe seems a voice-s H!iess bankrupt of statesmanship, a; ;derelict without a captain. Only today is it being realized what @ |on enormous disaster the murder of | ithe French soclalist Jaures in 1914 @ 'nflicted in Europe. That tragedy Is {comparable with the slaying of Michael Collins in Ireland, where no ‘\commanding figure is left. The meet- ng of the dail brought out strongly he deficiency. If parliamentary gov- crnment and the treaty are to sur- vive in Ireland the rebel movement must be. vigorously suppressed. While De Valera is free and issues his ultimatums anarchy will continue, which will bring ruin to Ireland and idisaster to the Free State. i (Copyright, 1922.) a!BISHOP HOLDS UP | L3 BALLOON PROTEST [ ] ¢ B m | Sanction of Aero Club of America .I» Awaited by Contender for ! = First Prize, | .] PARIS. September 16, — Cortlapt | Fleld Bishop, European representative B {of the Aero Club of America, who pre- pared a protest against the award of M | the first prize to Lieut. Ernest de Muy- ter of Belglum in the recent interna- 8 tional - balloon race for the Gordon -iB‘ennelfl cup‘,his A!lm’ awaiting instruc- tions from the-Aero Club’s headquar- m | ters in New York. dq { "Unless he ‘hears something of what ' course he is to follow he will leave on |8 trip through Spain tomorrow. He { will remain in telegraphic communica- tioh with Paris, and will return should M| the Aero Club favor a protest. Balloon {experts here doubt the advisability of B trying to invalidate the award use iof the difficulties of procuring reliable L} ! evidence regarding de Muyter's land- mjin& Which occurred in an uninhabited Rumanian mountain region. [] =|GIVEN ‘MIXED’ SENTENCE. | Special Dispatch to The Star. 2 GRANTSVILLE, Md., September 16.— | Following pl of gullty, Henry Metts and Joseph -Roupe, charged by pt. C. Bledsoe of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad police department with dynamiting a rallroad bridge on the Whites Creek branch of the Bal- timore and Ohio near Confluence on the night of May 1, Judge Berkey, at Somerset, imposed rather a mixed sentence. Each. is to pay a fine of $100 and costs, to be worked out at the rate of $1 a day at the county poor farm. Following payment of fine and gosts In the above manuer, both are ‘to undergo a term of two years in the Alleghany county work- ouse. The dynamited bridge.connected a siding leading to the -plant of - the feeling. Land he is the man to fulfil it. Addison Coal Company, just over ‘bl— The men who directed during the war, and espectally through the terrible crisis of 1917-18, can never be resigned to the present spectacle of coilective impuis- sance on the part of the nations whose complete unity five years ago accom- plished such great things. We were convinced then that no_difficulty could resist co-ordinated effort and action of the powers uped, against German aggression. Clemenceau, ‘Who retired swearing he would never speak publicly again, could not resist this spectacle. That 1s the psychological origin of his action. i & Interprets Present Impression. Moreover, it seem to me he interprets exactly the present impression of the American people when ~he addresses them directly in the name of the French people. Everybody there. as here, is disgusted with empty gestures and sterile talk dispensed by officials who never accomplish anything. The people don't clearly understand who is respon- sible, but they will approve any Initia- tive from an unoffictal source. Clemenceau, with whom I have just passed two days at his fishing camp In Vendee, does not go to America' as a semi-officlal negotiator. He believes in the business of governments and he be- lleves when governments perform badly it is the business of the people to change governments. His business will be to tell Americans what poiicy seems to him necessary to restore the moral equilibri- un after victory: to show what was the situation in 1919 and how we have arrived at our present situation, which satisfies nobody. The program is huge Dificulty In Understanding. The difficulty which Frenchmen and Americans experience is of un- STEP MAY LEAD 10 CHURCH UNITY| Episcopal Session Told of ~ Relations Proposed by Eastern Orthodox. PORTLAND, Ore., September 16.— Hope that relations between the East-; ern Orthodox Church and the Protes- tant Episcopal Church in the United States may be the foundation upon which the unity of all churches or! Christendom may be bullt was ex- pressed by Meletios, patriarch of Con- stantinople, according to a report to the house of bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church in general con- vention today, by Rev. Dr. Willlam | Chauncey Emhart, field director of the national foreign-born American divi- sion of the Episcopal Church, who has Just returned from the near east. Dr. Emhart brought with him a let- ter from Meletios, addressed to the Protestant Episcopal Church through the - Archbishop_ of Canterbury, in hich the Eastern Orthodox Church head formally accepted the “valldity of Anglican orders and recognized the apostolic succession of the Protestant Episcopal Church. Reply to Be Prepared. The effect of this action on the part of the Eastern Orthodox Church, Dr. Embhart Informed the bishops, would be-that clergymen of the Protestant Eplscopal Church in the United States hereafter will_be authorized to min- ister to all Greek members of- the Eastern® Orthodox Church. The bishops directed a committee to pre- pare a reply. Dr. Emhart, who recently visited Chrysostomos, metropolitan of Smyr na, who was reported killed in Smy na a few days ago, sald in an inter- view that the -Mohammedan revival “which is sweeping the near east and: threatening Europe again as it did a thousand years ago, scems to be the result and not the cause of the onset of the Turks, who are making a drive to regain the political and territorial position lost during the great war.” The house of bishops refused to accept the resignation of Bishop Lo- gan H. Root of Hankow, who had ask- ed to be rclieved of his jurisdiction in order to become head of the newly organized national council of China. The bishops adopted a report, which declared that while they were in sym- pathy with the movement, they con- sidered that Bishop Root's first duty was to his diocese. Expand Contribution. The house of bishops, by a bare| constitutional majority of sixty-three afirmative votes, adopted an amend- ment to the constitution of the church offered by B!*hnn C. P. Anderson of Chicago, in effect making it possible for Episcopal bishops to ordain cler- gymen of other denominations, the amendment requiring the promise of conformity to the doctrine and dis- cipline of the Protestant Episcopal Church only from those who are to officiate in that church. This amend- ment first was adopted at the general convention three vears ago. Effective- ness of the amendment, however, will depend on changes in the canons re- lating to the concordat. ‘Bishop W. F. Nichols of San Fran- cisco prevented the kiling of an amendment to the constitution which would give women the right to sit in the house of deputies. The mat- ter was left open for further discussion. l MOTORISTS IN TROUBLE. Eight Charged With Violating Maryland Speed Laws. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, September 16.—The names of eight Washingtonians ap- derstanding each other despite thelir readiness to love one another. This ruck me the other day when 1 d a list of questions, which were mitted by those intelligent women who - composed .the Good Will dele- THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER. 17, 1922—PART 1 Clemenceaw’s Long Silence - - |GERMANY FACES Afouses Interest in U 5. Tour| cor sl Wh sation, and by letters received -from | members of the American Legion. Even after seeing France many do not comprehend the reason for «cer- tain fundamental differences between French and American life. Our cult of past, which is.eo much longer with us than with you, of frontlers, which are so much nearer and bloodler in the old world than in the new, give a certain turn to our l""h‘“o-l'd" which American minds do not readtly grasp. Clemenceau, besides having played a great role in hi ry, has the ad- vantage of speaking English like a native If any man in the world can se ‘the veil covering ithesc mys- teries, it is he. . Paying the Piper. Vacation’s end approaches and our great men will indulge in the luxury of more eloquence at Geneva &nd elsewhere, while the people, as usual, pay the piper. Also, we must see how near eastern affairs will be se tled without the aid of diplomat The problem of German payments will be found at the eame point as two years ago, and there’ll be more talk of the high salaries of the reparations commissioners, for which they render small service. Lioyd George will repeat his belief in Wirth's good faith and Poincare will repeat he Intends to be paid willingly or by force, but nelither the confidence of the first nor the imprecations of the second will modify ihe situation. and people who read newspapers wiil say we are go- ing backward. Then Clemenceau will speak. As the people listen they will remember. He never has spoken without saying something, and he has had s taste for solution That may induce fruitful reflections among those who almost everywhere were in such a hurry to unseat those-who won the war. Their successors have not done better—far from it. . g ¢, 1922) AMERICAN SHIP ON ROCKS HALIFAX, N. S, September 16.—The American steamer” Fort George, with a cargo of saltpeter, from Philadel- phia to Montreal, is ashore at Indian Island, near Petite Riviere, wireless advices said today. The captain and crew of twenty-nime men are in no immediate danger, it was stated. A number of fishing vessels are stand- ing by. The steamer struck early today during a heavy ralnstorm and is on the rocks in an exposed position. and our ideas S It’s Time to Be Thinking of Wool It will only be a matter of days now when you will be taking up your light sum- mer rugs and replacing them with the heavy wool ones. The comfort and attractiveness of your home will depend largely upon the kind of rugs yvou lay. Heavy Axminster Rugs . Protestants Weakened Dur- ing War—Sharp Fight in Catholic Church. PRUSSIAN BISHOP FLED Also Before Germans as Win- ter Approaches. BY MAXIMILIAN HARDEN. By Cable to The Star. BERLIN, September 16.—Two fights are beginning in Germany—a quiet one In the church and a loud ome in the market place. War defeats and tumbling thrones hitherto” have produced little effect on Germany's two churches, and the Pope’s declaration that “the church stands firm even in an earthquake” reflected the situation even in the face of some opposition in the reich. After the 1870 victory Rome be- came more powerful than sever and after the 1918 defeat the Catholic center party held the balance of power. "It produced three chancel- iors and filled many high posts de- spite the loss of Alsace, Posen, Upper Sllesia and West Prussia. Further- more, the Fope was represented for the first time by a nuncio in Berlin. Return to Obedience. . The Protestant clergy’s power meantime had been weakened be- cause of thelr being obliged in the pulpit to support the war loans, the surrender of metal money and super- fluous foodstuffs. But the peasant's wife, whose love of churoch and re- spect for the consecrated clergy never tails, now has made her husband re- turn to blind obedience of the church. The fight within the Catholic Church is one of sharp divisiohs. In north Germany the priest exhort their congregations to respect the republican constitution, while the Bavarian cardinal, Von Faulhaber, calls that constitution “a combina- tion of perjury and high treason.” Meantime the lower Bavarian clergy, under the leadership of Premier Lerchenfeld, are endeavoring to ,-e,l Land Struggle in Market Plaoe { store the monarchy and place a Wit- the throne, first of a ach on 9x12 $45.00 & ‘Bigelow Hartford Velvet Rug pear in the list of weekly violations of motor vehicle laws made public by / 9x12 $39.50 bile Commissioner Baughman y 2 n foday. All of the elght were penal Bigelow Hartford Wilton Rug jzed on a charge of speeding in ex- 9x12 587'w ceeding the speed limit of thirty-five 2 % 4 miles an hnur’nng( lo-} !I:‘el;' rlfl-‘te:: 2 Axmmm Rm Oriental operate a car in Maryland for a8 e motorists thus penkalized are ! _ patterns, .9"12 $35.00 €. R “Baker Southern " puilding: | Whittélls Anglo-Persian Rugs E. ran. -stree g;:‘!‘::vnen;h IA‘)’IEIIJ “gro;ké. 600 :;Y‘IE 2 9x12 slzs'oo “southwest; John J. Cannon, 5 < S Bth Street northeast; Leen S. Gordon, Whittalls Wilton Rugs, fringed 321 N street southwest; Max Heer- 9x12 7 656 12th street northeast; Bioni man, H B. Libby, 2201 Gonnecticut avenue, and Ralph A. Lee. —_— SLAYER IS 87 YEARS OLD. Civil War. Veteran Shoots Coal Mine Superintendent. KITTANNING,. Pa., September 16.—. Davis 8. Moxon, superintendent of the Beacon ‘Hill Coal Company’s mine in Armstrong. county, was shot and killed today by an eighty-seven-year- oM elvil war soldier, Andrew Davis. Davis telephoned Moxon to come to- his home. As the latter stapved { to the door Dayvis opened fire with ‘his shotgun. € . . o _ ‘The aged prisoner refused to dis- cuss- the crime when taken o jail His sanity is quest! Moxon was thirty-eight years old. % R etisme — 'fs’f’."”' fsweef . Mayer @ CO. Betweea D & E Furniture I than the.south does not prove they are not seeking the same aim. Since the kaiser's fall little has Elected As Chief. of the Irish Free State|ueon sear trom the Protosiats whe still use that name, although ceasing to protest against Rome, like Luther or Calvin. But socession ffom the church is not %0 rapid as was ex- pected, as the people have feit the need for religion, just as they do after great catastrophes, snd ex- pressed this need also by run- ning after theosophists, concert-room prophets and the Ifke. The working masses see in Chris- tianity only the beginning of a soctal movement to make the poor inherit the earth. The Prussian church, rep- resenting the military and officlal class, upheld submarine warfare with- out arousing public protest, but lost its point when the Prusslan king, its highest bishop, fled and the people be- came soverelgn. This new church constitution, like the state constitu- tion, 'fs 'belng attacked becuiuw £ives too much liberty, although thi liberty follows Luther's teaching tBat Christianity allows no supreme ee- thority. Most Germans know nothing of €3is quiet struggle and wish to kn.w netn- ing. They also do ed notice the louder struggle in the market place The first attempt to find guarantees for the treasury notes which Germany must pay Belglum failed because the German = government wanted three times as much breathing space as the commissidn allowed. The Lubersac- Stinnes agreement was much more productive than the thirteen confer- ences of statesmen. It grants France help for rebullding the devastated re- glone and guarantees Germany against dangerous unemployment when stag nation begins. It forms a bridge | whereon two nelghboring peoples can { meat and realize lucrative labor with- i out customs restrictions. With a Russian market similarly opened, financial sanity may be re- stored. But even this welcome news of a feeble beginning of a Franco- German understanding seems to inter- est only communists, who loudly pro- {claim that Stinnes will make billions { while German workmen will bear the j yoke of French slavery. Materialism has terribly ravaged the hearts of the peoplein_their sud- | den fall from the heights. Everybody ! thinks only of himself and his famil ihigh living costs and the possibilit: of making money by speculation. If the Saviour should again come to i earth, He would not be asked the pur- pose of his mission, but whether He thought the dollar would rise or fall formerly minixter of local government, { before Christmas. Such is post-war who was recently chosen head of the | life. dail efreann by the new parliament. = U. S. WARSHIP AGROUND. Destroyers Driven on Bar by Ty- phoon That Sweeps Guam. By the Assoclated Press. GUAM, September 16.—In a typhoon the U. S. S. Pensacola went aground in Apra harbor, near here. She is not seriously damaged. The barometer still is droppin WILLIAM T. COSGRAVE, i ! (Copyright, 1922.) south German state and later to gain the imperial German crown. The south German state would be com- posed of Bavaria and Austria. Can Adapt to Any State. Centurfes of experience, culmi- nating in the bolshevist Tchitcherin's conversations with the Archbishop of Genoa. show that the church can, if necessary, adapt itself to any form of state, and the fact that its north- ern army pursues different tactics Rugs If you are needing or only slightly interested in a rug this Fall, you surely ought to see the wonderful patterns on display at Mayer’s Lifetime Furniture Store. If you will call, we'll gladly show you these good-looking-rugs. They possess excep- tional beauty and durability. Our tre- mendous stock makes a selection delight- fully simple. s