Evening Star Newspaper, November 27, 1922, Page 5

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. Secure your Thanksgiving Dinner Sets. o . remains of the victory won on the | TEeting tomorrow night at 8 o'clock. 3 Ahrenfeldt Dinner Sets—100 pieces ; small rose war had developed 1 in thelr respective | battioflelds of e e ODcertwiis be elected and commit- and spray decoration, with gold edge. nomic and materialistic viewpoint, ex: | urks are once again in Thrace in 2 $126.00. Hours—8:45 to 5:30 L . remarking that if payment of debt is an obligation of honesty, such oblig: tion should be as imperious for Ge®- many as for all other countries. Quite a lot of people don’t seem to reason that, when they lavish advice on peoples who are creditors of the coun- try which Lord Balfour christened with spirit three months ago “the greatest international debtor.” I fail to see which part of the world has un- dergone improvement as a result of the materialistic thesis of Mr. Keynes. I see, on the contrary, signs almost it | everywhere of the supplementary / Better igestion Few of us chew our food enéugh. Hasty meals are harmful, but Wrigley’s will make up for much of the lack '~ of mastication. care of its d. Owing to the death of Mrs. W. H. Martin, sr., our store will be closed until noon tomorrow A ¥ "A 5 lf Dinner Set from our wonderful line of Open Stock or from our Special Priced 1215-17 F Street and 1214 to 1218 G Street Wrigley’s stiydulates the flow of saliva that h the stomach take Eat less, chew it more and use Wrigley’s after every meal. It keeps teeth white, breath sweet and combats acid mouth. The Flavor La ‘THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, bD. C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1922. = he Thanksgiving China || s i o Theodore Haviland Dinner Sets—Spray dec- oration. 52 pieces, $23.00; 100 pieces, $43.90. French China Dinnér Sets—Tulip and rose decoration; gold handles. $40.00. is now reproached with creating eco- nomic disorder because she lacks the spirit of solidarity. A Feeling of Insecurity. L () Considering the memories of 1919 sts N Exfier_ienced Advertisers Prefer Thé Star CI e & T p- B > ECONOMIC MATERIALIS 9 - (Continued from First Page.) WANT TO MURDER AN ORGANIZATION? HERE ARE 10 WAYS . The North Capitol and Eckington somewhere, and /n a definitely fixed I'Citizens’ Assoclation is_circularizing form. “:|members¥thls’ month with inform Instability a Menace. tlon containing ten various ways in When no ome can be certain]|Which to become organization-mur- whether engagements signed yester- | derers. In letters arriving today this |. day will not be opened up again for | bulletin was includea: debate the very next day, it is hard| .Ten ways to kill an organization.” ‘Don’ to expect a return of confidence, | “But ff yan an ectilEY fundamental condition of a renewal of | “If the” weather doesn’t suit you, business. Take, for example, & busi- | don’t think of coming. ness man who in 1919, relying on the| “If you do attend a meeting find war aims of the allies and on the|fault With the work of the officers terms of the armistice, developed a jand thé members. ¢ business in Constantinople employing | “Never accept an office; it is easier large capital. Do you think that|(to criticize than to do things. when he reads the Turkish papers ‘Névertheless, Bét sore if you are today—papers which daily announce |not appointed on a committee: but if pression of this mechanism. The in- |.m fact that when Constantinople Is | You are do not attend the meetings. Those who preached this doctrine had not dicovered its virtues on the mor- row of the armistice. At that time, on the contrary, they refused to adopt it. }ess of winning the war. The neces- | sity for a common effort had been un- derstood. Raw materials, cereals, ships, even money—all wers pooled. Interallied committees concerned with foodstuffs, munitions and shipping as- sured the proper functloning of this iglgantic pool. But as soon as the war i had been won the Anglo-Saxon coun- | trles insisted on the immediate sup- { terallied' committees disappeared one after thé other. Soon, only to give one example, the wealth, the exchange of the continental countries collpsed. Decries Keynes® Theory. The United States and Great Britain, however, held on their course, con- vinced that the return of commercial liberty could alone furnish an outlet given back to victorious Turkey there | “If asked by the chairman to give will be no more place for a special | YOUr opinion on some important mat- regime of guarantees in favor of |ter tell him you have nothing to say. Christians—do you think that that}After the meeting tell every one how business man would not be sorry that | things should be done. he had placed such confidence in the | “Do nothing more than is absolute- word of the government; Y, hecessary. As a fact, such Instability manifests | “Hold back your dues as long as itself almost everywhere, bringing in | P988ible, or, don’t pay them at all. its train the same insecurity. No onel| ~Don't bother about getting new in Europe is certain of the immediate m,}"l ers, ‘Let George do it! " political future. Practically nothing | The association will hold its mext for the intensive production that the the selfsame conditions which ren-{ememee . dered possible their entry into the = 7 war in 1914 agains the allles and |, § with all the inevitable consequences. | ‘0USht for liberties and for frontiers The western victory (in France) has | Which are dearer to us than life. So been widely assailed, and the futur {when people come and tell us that actly parallel, in its origin, to the sys- tem of Mr. Keynes and his friends. |Events have preved this solution to be erroneous. ‘The European client. the continental consumer, left to him- self, has not been abfe to keep pace | ich Anglo-Saxon " production. ‘The §rounines announced by the treaty of | becauso of the location of an fron or - . - = hange crisis as ninished By 2 o 2 A < 4 . |coal mine we must change our coun- ; Japanese Dinner Sets—S52 pieces; border dec more than half the purchasing power Dietely, 4t case. That wuch @ condiry. our whole heing rises. asainst et oration over tinted background. $23.00. of the continental nations. Engitsh | O Of Exents bas been fostered bY lsuch an inhuman theor: Ching Rooms coal and American corn have equally he treaties of 1919 in mZ name of Whether one wishes or not, the B 5 : . suffered. Here and there strikes and | aconomie materialism. and its exi.|8reat war of 1914 was more political ‘o offer unlimited Japanese Dinner Sets—100 pieces; ivory and crises of stocks have been the direct | cenoleg ‘cannot be. contested. = That | LhaR economic, and our victory was 7 selection ich border decoration. .50 value. Spe- reaction to the financial chaos of the | such o condition of events has aided | pne,°f, hatlonalities. ' Tt is on that o Continent = Economic =materlalisin |;r can aid toward a revival of busi- | JASts of fact that we must work. We Second Floor cial at $65.00. which demands the revision of the | neo *"\f.5' will ‘dare to suggest such | 2ouLd restore, over and above the . L - treaties, holding them to be responsi- |, “thing as possible? e e os te.ithe ?ld relations affect- S French China Dinner Sets—Rich scroll border, Dle for 2l the chaos, was born of the! The Keynes system seems, there- | |t 5 a e are ready o 4o 1o By i old handles. 100 pieces, reduced from Snforeseen development In afmairs. - | 0%, t0,be eondemned by experience. | iposo same- {rontiers ‘are sonstantly : z v recons 3 . 5105.1!) to $65.00; 116 pieces, from $140.00 o the e elewporre cneidered | countries those which have worked | will Tagiiitate the moaeiony ik that y P most efficaciously toward a readjust- | tion? M = to $85.00. rialistic economy. They made a mis- on any Anglo-Saxons thought - - he system of excessive com. | MeRt Of economic interests are the|so. They made a mistake. Events 3 takes -n¢l|tJ e O acessive com: | states of central Europe. prove so. Europe has found a basis Theodore Haviland Dinner Sets—100 pieces; e e D I L o One s ety o of political equilibrium. Perfect? No. ion: 1 isted. It 1d not u er, very surely, than that of apple blossom decoration; gold stipple edge B e o PAndlness i werahinelco e b ozel| 151 and gold handles. $171.00, reduced to var. But it was augmented and (o | frontiers were the most profoundly [, JVe Wust Install ourselves in the i i e 2 ¥ B 3 : ut things $125.00. Same decoration, plain gold edge, e e ETec ny the egotistical Tigor | modified by the peace treaty. What|generally in order: that in selt-onmes is to be said unless it is that the}stood. But if people tell us tae whol: tries against erstwhile allies ana “associates.” The repercussion of this error having manifested itself where it was least expected, arguments have changed and dontinental Europe resolute acceptance of a state of af- | e 10 tear the house down i order the label tru , how 0} fairs, admittedly heavy with difficul- | work of saapiasion me pamiinc, /ong 1\ MADE. ESPECIALLY FOR. tles, but conforming to the nationalleconpmic doctors are wise men, but \ > ) aspirations of a people, i not incom-1they' are risking killing the patient. patible with a regrouping of economic { Anq the patient desires to live, pay- ' : forces; that, on the contrary, the more | ing scant attention to the formula of | \WASHINGTON.D.C. a country accepts with resolution, as | my regular medical man: “Never fear. | —— definite and unalterable, the statute {all my patients die cured.” born of the victory, the more it’has a chance of adapting itself to the un-| P. S.—French people do not neel forseeable exigencies of production | to be convinced of the ideas set forth and of the exchange. in the above article. GC I do not desire to throw suspiclon ——— on the intentions of any one, and I bear in mind only results. The sesult | RITES FOR HENRY H. BLISSi that I have just conjured up, it must be admitted that the reproach is at least somewhat unexpected. I would add that in envisaging the present, things appear somewhat par- | Of & political creed exclusively eco- adoxicai, for this sokdarity which it | nomic, and which may have had such is insisted Europe shall develop, thisjsuccess in the Anglo-Saxon countries, | Services Held Prior to Forwarding indissoluble union of economic inter- | must be judged by experience. In ests over and above frontiers, which tsls’mll:lv political creed adfded' to the Body to Lewisburg, Pa. Europe is charged with disregarding | inevitable consequences of the war = = people no longer think of I¢ whes | when It rudely broke the Interallieq| Funeral services for Henry Har- it is Europe herself that might bene- | bonds that had been tled during the \man Bliss, a brother of Gen. Tasker fit. T have not the intention to dis- | war. Since then it has impregnated | H. Bliss, former chief of staff., United cuss in detail what is known as the | political conditions in Europe with an Siatoe S e popularity of this establishment debt problem. I will confine myself to | uncertainty which has, in turn, ex- |>t&tes Army. who died at nis apart- cited repercussion on_ general eco- | ments in the Rochambeau apartments when men and young men are in - ic conditions. e past. Ba Thursday night, were held yesterda R e e R L U | S et e el search of the clothes that have 1 I will k. dertaking establishment of Gawler's, . o e . ; Tt 1o st true e pod finance 8 F 1730] Pennsyivania averue naci:| P the air of distinction—whether Concerning the possibility of securing the right suit or over- coat: Have you ever no'lced t}le 18 2% Threswest, Rev. Dr, J. d. Muir. chaplain . 3 . L O I o O O O | o e i e R plain serges or tweeds. solid col disastrous effect on our economic well [ tor of Temple Baptist Church, offi- ors or overplaids, belted models being. No one dares to contract en- | clating. 2 > or double breasted? agements because no 1 The body was taken to Lewisburg, fonger certain of anything, . '~ ®™ | Pa. the family home. for interment. At bottom this theory, all theorles | He was seventy vears old and was a which have been recommended to;S°n of Rev. George Ripley Bliss and continental Europe (including those |Mrs. Mary Ann Bliss. He graduated = which at times it has even been|from Bucknell in 1875. For many 9 sought to impose upon her), have the|years he was prominently identified drawback of having been manufac-{With the local bar. tured for the benefit of the European —_— continent by men who do not be-| mThe first woman's press club in 5 long to that continent. Our own con-| America was founded in New York city 1331 F Strect tinent of Europe, so cruelly battered | in 1893, with Jennie June, Mrs. Frank by centuries of conflict, differs £o|[eslie, Mrs. Sidney Rosenfeld and other radically from insular England and | well known woman authors and Jjour- from far away America that English | naliats among the charter members. | ¥ and American brains will always be r 1 | i | trouble which that thesis has created. That thesis, which demands a revision of the treatles, has propagated in -ef- fect & feeling of insecurity through$ out the world. In other times, once a treaty was signed, one executed it. , | That has all been’ changed. Lord Bryce has written that the democratic form of government in déveloping itself runs the risk of becoming irrec- oncllable to an honoring interna- tional engagements. The three years which we have just lived through would seem to justify*his deduction— if, however, it had bsen demonstrated that democracy really does exist very hard put to It to legislate fo! her. 3 ‘War Was Political. Our passionate and sanguinary his- tory impregnates us. Our fathers ‘We Serve- - to Guests in Our Dining Cars ocean flavored sea food from the waters of | the Chesapeake, fresh vegetables from the truck gardens o?Marylan ’s Eastern Shore, peaches from Delaware’s finest orchards. See Big Victor Ad, Page 7. Let Us Place a Victrola in Your Home for Thanksgiving Purchase few records and we will deliver any machine you select at once. Style No. 80 $100.00 10 75¢ Records e 1.50 $107.50 The territory served by the Baltimore and Ohiois nfi?& for the excellence of its food products. They are for you by chefs of exceptional ability and served by alert waiters, under the constant super- vision of courteous The pricas, too, are ingly rate, The special seven course tabled” _: din- - ner is but $1.25. The Commer::al Trav- eler’s meal—a tasty combination: of a meat or fish order, two vegetables, a des- sert, bread and butter, and tea, coffee or milk—is but 75 cents. Ofcotgse,cxnellent a la carte service is available if you prefer. . | Style No. 240 $115.00 Special Features of Service Our Travel Bureau— 323 Homer Buildis 1 QFSum,;z e, ‘ . . long experience, Our dining car is planned to m’z“""?’dfi”@““”‘ makethenaveler}g at home so that his e e e journey will be one of comfort and pleas- RS | ire—plnsany $122.50 But $10 places either of these genuine Victrolas with ten Victor “Records, of your own selection in - your home. We leave no stone unturned to make Bal- timore and Ohio dining car service popular with our travelers. We pride ourselves on the standard we have set. It is main- tained for you—we invite you to enjoy it. BaltimoreOhio \ ) g = 2 Balance to Suit Your Convenience Liberal Terms—No Interest Our Guarantee Goes With Every Victrola ‘ Hugo Worch 2 . Pianos c7s

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