Evening Star Newspaper, December 1, 1922, Page 39

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, V. U, FRIDAY, DECEMBER I, 1922. $3.50 Philadelphia $325 Chester $3.00 Wilmington AND RETURN Sunday, December 3 SPECIAL TRAIN 1“". 'm (Union Btation) A Wilmington 10:06 AM., 025 * 2, " Fatinacionia Excursien ef the Seasen, ‘ e 1, L R Pennsylvania System The Route ef the Broadway Limited sum from 100 tp Our annual Certificates of Deposit are backed by gilt edged first mort- gages on improved real estate, the safest known security. We do busi- nessunder state supervision. Interest checks are mailed quarterly. Chatham Savings & Loan Co. Savannah, Georgia. 'Youy nameand addressonapost card wwill bri Jascinafing JUST RUB, and beautiful colored pictures appear WEAT...J"N‘I«!I’— “Just rob, and beanutifal eolored picturss appesr.” Never- theless, every word s trwe. The statement refers te ART- ‘What bappeuns? Pick ap a little =it Artoraft welect one of the ARTCRAFT patented steocils (coaled with @ Bard eolor which ‘does not smudge, muss, or dissolve in water), then just RUB the color of the patented stencil, through the design, on to the paper. Simple. Learped almost instantly. 1t is NEW, patented late this summer Won't you call st the toy ecanter of one of the stores to see Artoraftd Three sizes: S0c, $1. $2. Durable e e | ———— IR | m—— ‘ TCR 2 rtment asd Toy Steres. Heat oL .. RED PEPPER Stops . “Red Pepper Rub” will ‘ bring almost instant relief from the pains of rheuma«' tism, pleurisy, colds, lumbago, neuritis, backache, strains, } sprains, sore muscles and stiff, aching joints. ; * + Penetrating heat immedi- i ately frees the blood circula- “ tion that carries off the con- ; 111 ge: on and pain is gone. ,' ¢ u Nothing has_such concen- ! trated, peaetrating heat as red peppers. The moment you }° § apply Red Pepper Rub yon [} feel the_tingling heat. ~In | 1} three minutes it warms the " "icongestcd spot through and i through. = lief known awaits you. Use ‘”n always for colds in chest. “ e = L) When you are suffering so - you can hardly get around, } Just get a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers. It costs little at any ‘!dnxg store. The quickest re- Ik Physic WHEN NATURE WON'T PLUTO WILL § WOULD DROP PART OF DEBTSDUEL.S. Princeton President’s Plan to Show World War Was to End Wars. By the Associated Press. HOUSTON, Tex., December 1.—De- !claring that America should cancel jat least part of her war debt from | the allles in order to make sure that ithe world war was a war to end | wars, Prestdent John Grier Hibben of Princeton University, in an ad- dress at Rice Institute here, asserted hat “now Is the time for the United | States to gauge whether the war sac- rifices of the country have been in El s great toll,” he sald, “was pald by the allies in the year when we were In preparation to enter the war, Sces Debis Twice Paid. “If we exact further payment in money we will be demanding that the allles pay the debt they owe us twice over. It may be said by some that while this is a generous &olution on our part of some of the difficulties of Europe, it is not right that the nation should forego a contractural debt: that the government {8 the trustee of the funds of its people and must safeguard the financial inter- ests of its citizens. But if the people themselves demand it. they have the right to sacrifice their own interests {in view of a higher end posible of realization. 'A_similar action now on our part would not only give new oourage and hope to Europe. but would bring to our American people again the same elevation of spirit which we experi- enced in the year of 1917 and 1918 during the world war. It is a great day in the history of mankind ‘when a powerful nation shall rise up and prove to all the world that it has a soul. ‘Would Safeguard Gemerosity. ~If we are wise enough and great enough to do this thing we should very carefully safeguard our gene- rosity through the demand that the nations of Europe should balance their budgets so as to wipe out the present annual deficits. They cannot do this, however, without a very sub- stantial reduction of all their army and navy appropriations. “I do not know whether to regard it as a tragedy or a comedy that we should, in the present world situa- tion, be represented at the various conferences abroad by one whose function 1s that of a spectator. We are the osly nation of the world that can act with striking power, and yet we are satisfled to look on. “We may delay, and delay, and de- lay taking those steps assuring us that the world war was a war to end wars until it Is too late to avert such a war and too late to guard ourselves from participation in it or from the disastrous effects upon us and upon the generations yet to come of an- other world war." U.S. OPPOSES DELAYING PAN-AMERIGAN PARLEY Expresses Hope to Chile That San- tiago Meeting, Set for March, ‘Will Not Be Postponed. Br the Associated Press. SANTIAGO, Chile., December 1.—It has been learned that the State De- partment at Washington has express- ed the hope to the Chilean foreign office that there will be no delay or postponement in the opening of the pan-American conference, Which Is to be held in Santiago in March, and that the delegates from all the American countries will be present at the gathering. The desire also was made known that the conference be held prior to the commencement of the arbitration proceedings on the Tacna-Arica ques- tion. In certain diplomatic circles the be. lief is expressed that at the San tiago conference the various boun ary questions pending betwaeen diffe ent South American countries might be examined aside from the subjects on the agenda of the conference. The state council yesterday gave its assent to the Tacna-Arica protocol complementary act, which thereby be- comes the law of the nations. e CHINESE RULER ACCEPTS RESIGNATION OF CABINET New Officials Named to Succeed Ex-Premier Chung- Hui. By the Associated Press. PEKING, December 1.— President Li Yuan Hung has accepted the resig- nation of the cabinet, headed by Wang Chun-Hul as acting premer. Wang Ta-Hsleh is named acting premier and minister of finance and C. T. Wang (Wang Chénk-Ting) foreign minister. Wang_Chung-Hul was impeached by the house of representatives on Monday, together with Foreign Min- ister Wellington Koo, on the ground that he had participated in signing the agreement with the Sino-Ttalian Bank under which a commission is alleged to have been paid for the pro- posed flotation of a loan of £6.000,000. HELD ON GIRL'S CHARGE. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., December- Charged by Indictment with criminal assault upon a thirteen-year-old girl, H. W. Hobson, president of the South Texas Oil and Development Company, and Mrs. Ella Hobson, his wife, were arrested and lodged in the Bexar county jail late Wednesday. The girl {8 said to have visited the Hob- sons at their home here, and after returning to her home in north Texas reported the case to her parents. BTy Tt B Ut N T il i it There’s Something Interesting to ‘EverybodyA in - he Swndy Stac Above all, of course, is the news—and of the utmost reliability. ALL the news while it is news; gathered by the Associated Press, staff and special correspondents who know what news is and are constantly on the alert for it—that Star readers may always be fully informed. R i AR T T il - The Unique Editorial Section Always a notable interview, or an original article from the pen of some important personage, on topics of timely interest. Fach issue of the Sunday Editorial Section has its special feature. . g A With Europe in a Turmoil —the cabled reports that are printed in The Star from trained correspondents, who are keeping in touch with events over there, are of great informative value. RSB "l TR T T R T D G P G T R R T It’s Interesting to Read —\William Allen White's comments on passing events in his weekly articles under the caption, “As I See It.” They ‘are always forceful; always to the point—with, of course, the reader’s right to agree or disagree. E o ORI A = TRETHEER T AR, A RS T TR T R PPl Ex-Vice President Marshall —in that wonderfully attractive style of his, speaks his mind and counsels with experienced judgment on things that are engrossing the public thought. bilitll 1T RN A Next to Visiting Europe Yourself —nothing can give you a more comprehensive view of the existing conditions than these articles now appearing in The Sunday Star from the pen of Frank G. Carpenter. He is seeing the “New Europe” with keen eyes trained to observance. HEERRTIO PR %l ’IE.’!IIIE What’s to Be What in Fashion —is concisely told by Anne Rittenhouse in her weekly Parig Fashion Letter. 1f anybody can forecast fashion, Anne Rittenhouse is in a position to do so from her close asso- ciation with the famous studios of the fashion center. M T P VTN i = ’ E!WHIW! TR e R A Rt o 1254 T Society is Busy These Days —and if you want to know who’s doing things read the | Society Section of The Sunday Star—and you'll get all the E social news. = gt R o W R gy ARG : And, too, there is the host of special features, with the personal appeal, touching every phase of thought and individual taste—graphic, but not sensational—instructive, entertaining, amusing. The Star is a newspaper for the home—that can go into the family circle uncensored—be- cause it is clean and wholesome in its tone and character, The Clemenceau Special Articles Whenever a distin- guish foreigner visits this country and writes for public reading, as is being done by the “Tiger of France,” it’s The Star that gives these messages to the Wash- ington public. Supple- menting his platform talks, M. Clemenceau is going into interesting details in the articles that are appearing here exclusively in The Star. Watch for them. Read What’s in Store for you in The Sunday Magazine Note This List of Writers Who Contribute to The Star Magazine: Frank G. Carpenter Ring W. Lardner Dr. R. W. Shufeldt William Slavins McNutt Sewell Ford Atne Rittenhouse Sophie Kerr § J. A. Waldron E Dr. S. S. Marquis & E QT T 2 T T Elsie Robinson ® Sterling Heilig EWMMWMMM l AL AL A A e RS P L T AL g T T o lisi “‘:‘W”LI‘HMM ake The Star Popula NG s i S SR S R AT wiaiuu‘d’g % Philander Johnson’s Talks H of the Theater = understanding of them and what they are doing. A feature —are highly enjoyable, telling us things about plays and players that we didn’t know and giving us thereby a better of The Sunday Star. Dl il PN o T o WG G AR T A Page for Girl Readers g In it are discussed by a girl those things that are en- S grossing the thought and attention of the girls themselves. It's a page “all their very own.” - The Pink Sport Section —fins the latest news of all the Sports events everywhere— at home and away from home; professional and amateur. O e o T T e T e e T i . . e The Store News is Interesting Washington merchants have much to tell these days of E Christmas shopping interest—and you'll find their unabridged ; store news printed in The Star. News of the Money Market In your Sunday Star bricfed for ready reading are the things you are interested in knowing about the money market. il NG % The Rotogravure Section This wonderful process which enables the faithful repro- duction of news pictures is a regular feature of The Sunday Star—sometimes twelve or more pages, as circumstances war- rant—but always eight interesting pages. N AT O e T T T R T A E 3 bt L g i The “Funny Paper” Four colored pages of ludicrous pranks and grotesque situations that old and young alike will enjoy—a weekly treat with The Sunday Star. i g e G 0 T AT You’ll Enjoy Every Issue of The Star —Daily and Sunday— and to make sure that you get it regulé.rly have The Star Carriers make delivery direct to your home. 60c a month. Phone Circulation Department—Main 5000

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