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through? Always, the blessed relief from the aches |§ and pains of housework in iy BAUME BEN (ANALGESIQUE) Just say Ben-Gay at any drug store and the clerk will know you want the famous Ben-Gay Remember thatlast house cleaning — with its + ding and lifting— and ow your back ached long before you were ere is French Baume. Rub well the back and aching muscles with Ben-Ga Keep a tube handy. JBrBackAche HOUSEWIVE 0, y and the next morning you will get up — limber as a cat. Thos. Leeming & Co., N. Y., Amer. Ageats \ Z i Electrical P :‘Wlnu for complete b Beer e Stands,Hangs or Clamps Anyw sonal lightin EMERALITE GLASS reaf lamp—not a toy. here THE EVENING .STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 'MERALITE JR. Lamp Every Home Needs a JUNIOR EMERALITE Junior is the most useful per- service you can imagine. A Mothercanuseitforsewing; sister, brother or father for reading, writing or any other kind of work or study requiring a concentrated light. The strong clamp hidden in anyarticle—] mantle, sewin, theweighted, felted base attaches to finnlnlly ed, chair, ma- chine, window ledge, wall, etc. The adjustable Emeralite glass shade gives you just the kind of a light you want at any angle. Ideal for those dark corners where other lights do not reach. The lamp ufju!u jtself to your needs—not you to the lamp. You'll never know real personal lighting comfore till you own a Junior. H. G. McFADDIN 32 Warren Street & CO. New York Mabers of Lighting Doviess sinca tbyg Woodmarh & Lothwoy VEGIE L SRR RIS, DOl T BTook Your Christmas -~ Victrola Buy It Here on Our Convenient Club Plan You pay for a limited number of records Victrola No. 100 *150 Victrola 100, equipped with record al- bums, $155; Special Outfit. $10 for records of your own selection; $10 7 . .- H. -F® monthly thereafter without interest. i Victrola No. 210 *100 $10 for records of your own se- lection; $9 monthly thereafter without interest, Twenty soundproof rooms in our beautiful VICTROLA GALLERIES, where you may choose your Victrola and Records with pleasurable sat- isfaction. of your own selection and begin the small monthly payments 30 days later WITHOUT INTEREST Victrola No. 80 *100 Victrola 80, equipped with shelves and record albums, $110; Special Outfit. $10 for records of your se- lection; $9 monthly thereafter with- out interest, Victrola No. 280 200 Equipped with record al- bums. $12.50 for records of your own selection; . $1250 monthly there- after without interest. Victrola No. 111 *225 Victrola 111, equipped with record al- bums, $15 for records of your own selection; $15 monthly thereafter without interest. Victrola No. 260 *160 Equipped with record albums, $10 for records of your own se- lection; $12.50 monthly there- after without interest. Victrolas Selected now held until delivery is desired. | ieriTza N “Toscar | | { were stilled, ||ARMS SMUGGLING FOILED. | |{ With Quantity of Contraband. | | By the Assoctatea Press. j'tlon aboard the China mail steamer % C., TUESDAY, NOVE 14, 1992, FRENCH FINANCE F;Mlnlmmmmmln;muunmumum e ‘n|uumm||mmmunmmnnnunmnuu:: , MINISTER SERENE — Sees Deficit and High Taxes, But Says Germany Ulti- mately Must Pay. By the Associated Press. PARIS, November 14—Charles de Lasteyrie, minister of finance, yester- day told the chamber of deputles that a deflelt of four billion francs in the ordinary 1923 budget dld not worry him, because he was confildent that better tax collectfon would yleld 1,500,000,000 francs more than was es- timated on incomes and inheritances, with a like amount on the business turnover tax, while 1,000,000,000 moro would como from an increased yield over taxes. The minister added that it was the 20,000,000,000 francs to be spent and ble to Gcl'mun_\'.l for which there was no income, that ought to give parliament concern. | Stabilization Discussed. Everybody with bad exchange, sald the finance minister, desired it {lized. “But what does that mea: he asked. “It means the stabilizing barometer of exchange is simply an indication of conditions. It is an effect. not a cause. What ought to be sought arc methods for influenc- Ing that Indication of conditions” Besides various technical remedies, it was largely a question of confi- ! dence. M. de Laste been said tha Making the Home More Homelike It is hard to realize what a vast difference a few well-chosen pieces of Karpen Furniture can make in an ordinary living room. Clothed in comfortable furnishings, home takes on a new mean- ing. Instead of a deserted place during that brief span between dinner and bedtime the living room becomes the center of family life. ie recalled it had France would go bankrupt If Germany failed to pay. | but he declared he refused to.c sider such a possibility. “We ha to ask the French to bear a hea On displa_v at Mayer’s Lifetime Furniture Store are many good-look- ing and comfortable Karpen Suites and single pieces in a wide variety of magnificent coverings. All are reasonably priced. Why, there’s a beautiful three-piece Karpen Over-stuffed Suite in blue, taupe, walnut or mulberry, brocaded mohair that’s an wnusual value at pay and until, at least, France had her hands on adequate guarantees. Future Germany Must Pay. M. Lasteyrie sald it was possible the Germany of today could not pay, but it was less certain that the Ger- many of 1925 or 1930 could pay. It would be intolerable {if Germany should be freed from debt through bankruptcy while Franco was (HClngl | | bankruptey. X, 1 i Deputy Bokanowski, in suggesting : . A . || economies to wipe out the deficit in| Llfetlmc Furnlture IB MO!‘C T]’\an a Name the budget, told the government that | May er & Co. s395"’=0 There are others for less, too. We'll gladly show you. expenses could be cut If the re-| || sponsible heads of departments were | ring nomies or your | | resignatton.” Betweén D' & E remained pre-war d despite a reduction 150,000 forced by pariiament. —— | GIVEN BIG OVATION 1922-23 Metropolitan Opera Sea- ¢bn Opens With Usual Brilliant Social Attendance. November 14.—To | he sensational colora- | ured New | fell the ng the ! 1922-23 Metropolitan Opera season. Singing the title role in “Tosca,” | he traglc opera for many years ed with the name of Geraldine| the newer star carned a_tre- ! ovation from the first- loving standees—and the claqu || This time there were not any C |1 flappers in the claques. Or. if there were, they were silent hefore Jemza.l who had risen to the place of their | idol. But if the voices of Gerry flappers e_of the followers | of the vivac Wi £ lwere not. Hers w | tion—a tribute to th { Tosca, whose voi I found all the | { music Puccini the grim Sardou p! © The Sell ShoeCo., 192: | i { Honolulu Chinese Merchant Held New ldea in Shoes that is 2000 years old [ 7] N the days of old Rome the people wore sandals—natural shoes—that kept the feet HONOLULU, November 14—An at- empt to smuggle arms and ammuni- ] Nile Saturday was frustrated \vhel;; \federal officers seized seven cases of I'revolvers and 8,400 rounds of ammu- Nature plans that the foot rest on beel, ball ::’;: "imr‘;w‘:;'én";\?r‘rh}xw:" Mx:lubgl‘:;: | well, because they gave all the advantages of and outside areh. held pending an investigation, ac- going “barefooted.” Then Civilization adopted %".:3’2;?..%".&“?&‘,“: \'rgye"‘c«ffsrnflér?g; the heel—allowed the foot arch to sag and be- the Chinese rebels. come strained—and today 90%, of all women e have foot trouble as a result. w11 No English sovereign has ever died o — in the month of May. sation ‘The Arch Preserver Shoe—a new idea in shoes Mat Reeliand lesehiibe that is 2,000 years old—has revived the sandal comfort and healthfulness. Its concealed, built- in arch bridge gives “barefoot” advantages— keeps the arch from sagging while the heel is raised. Yet you can have the smartest styles The Arch Preserver in the Arch Preserver Shoe. Let us show you this new idea in fine footwear. THE ARCH PRESERVER SHOE GOOD-LOOKING Shoe for supreme com fort—NOT a “corrective shoe. Recommended by physicians and physical cultur- | Throat hygiene is ‘ vital to health cieaN throat defies in- o e ists. Fitted by specially trained cians and dentists r i - d "i"f;cl e 1sts & 1tted by specially traine tain germ-destroying action. experts. ‘Tgese delightffil little P tablets dissolve slowly in - the mouth and release a : doid 2 5 KidiOsiords anid e : potent, yet harmless 3 BlackKidOxfords rown Kid Oxfords an Nlack Kidskin Lacec icide that mixes wir.gat.‘ll:e and f’umps senesemse $9 Patent Leatfler Pumps... $10 BOOLS s snismmpssos $12 saliva, thoroughly disinfect- ing every fold and pocket of the throat. Three “‘Foot Comfort” Departments of Cor.7th& K 1318 G St. 414 9th St.