Evening Star Newspaper, November 27, 1925, Page 45

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE TEVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C.. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER BUREAU OF TRADE NEEDS OUTLINED Klein Says Expansion of His Field Abroad Will Aid Commerce of U. S. ial Treatie ESCAPES FROM SING SING Unarmed Convict Bluffs Two Jail- ers—One Is Suspended. s raging in ng the recent ber of Moslem Florida WINTER HAVEN and Return “The City of 100 Lakes” SPECIAL 6-DAY Personally Conducted Round Trip TOUR We are running a Special 6.day mber 1, whicl ALL EXPENSES Make Reservations No This is the last Lxfllrslon At this price Phone Main 10180, 10181, 10182 OFFICE OPEN EVERY EVENING Haven Villa Corporation 220 Investment Bldg. Washington, D. C. Haven Villa Corporation | 220 Investment Bldg. 1 ington, D. C. 1 full informa- | ]vn of Dec. 1st. ] 27, 1925. o Wins or Loses By | Coprrighted by the Nationa! Industrial Conference Board, Inc., New York City. A COMPARISON WITH EUROPBAN COUNTRIES. Seye an articls 1a the New York Times, “‘reveals the fact that Ameri- cans pay over three times as much in taxes per year as the Italians, over twice as much s the Belgians, and balf again ae much as the French.” who would like to paint Uncle Sam in the role of Shylock, remarks the Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph, they will be disappointed at the news of vember 14 for the payment of Italy’s war debt to the United States. or canceling the principal as well, the agreement gives Italy about all that a debtor willing to pay would expect to receive from a considerate cred- itor,” agrees the Chicago Tribune, while the Balti- more Sun hails the debt-funding agreement as “an- other milestone along the road to international economic stability.” “Short of throwing off all interest | Debt Settlement? IF THERE ARE ANY EUROPEANS LEFT | “The American people will lose heavily on the debt settlement with Italy, but it is a wise settlement for all that,” declares the Springfield Republican, and this conclusion is also reached by the large the agreement concluded at Washington on No- : majority of representative American newspapers. Three well-known Washington correspondents— David Lawrence, of the Consolidated Press Associa- tion; Clinton W. Gilbert, of the Philadelphia Public Ledger; and W. W. Jermane, of the Seattle Times, | agree that there was no alternative but to grant Italy what amounts to a 75 per cent cancellation of the principal and interest charges combined over a period of 62 years. Read all of the interesting de- | tails with press comment in The Literary Digest for November 28. Should the Submarine Be Outlawed? bol, to the popular mind, of the submarine’s war-time terror. And the fact that in time of peace the undersea boat is so often a death-trap for its crew makes many gravely question whether it ought not to be abandoned. The loss of the American S-51 off the New England coast in Sep- tember, and of the British M-1 in the English Chan- nel seven weeks later, are only the latest of a series of post-war submarine disasters that have afflicted the navies of the United States, Great Britain and Japan. THE TORPEDOE® LUSITANIA is the sym- ! pered with doubt as to its feasibility. The tragic and mysterious sinking of the giant submersible monitor M-1, with its entire crew of sixty-nine officers and men, has aroused vigorous popular agitation in England for the complete | abolition of the submarine. In America the prevailing sentiment toward such a proposal seems to be one of sympathy tem- In Japan the Minister of the Navy calls it “good in principle,” but fears that it is not practicable. In France, where the submarine is regarded as a very necessary weapon of defense, the idea finds scant favor. Read this interesting article in this week’s “Digest.” Here rAre Some of the Other Striking News Features in The Literary Digest for November 28th ALL NEWSSTANDS TODAY—10 CENTS A Ledgue of New England | Why Jolt the Passengers? States The Lesson of a Tram Wreck Damascus After the Bombardment Russia Returns to Vodka Hard Times in Japan Radio for Women Needles and Pins Worth 20 Millions Watier's Foremest Book of Health HOW TO LIVE Now B Q9M) Eaitton (Fowt Published By Prof. Trving Fiher of Yale Universtty and Dr. Fugene Lyman Fisk, in Collabo- ration with the Hygiene Reference Board of the Ldfe Extension Instttuts. REWRITTEN RESET ENLARGED Almost every question one conld msk about how _to mmnl or rfll!'l physical suffering is piainly answe: LEARN TO KEEP WELL How to Avold CoMds, Blood Pressure neamenis Insorania Boards of Heslta nu-w 1t Tuaiversities anq Live e 6 text-aok 1o uunm hy ne, Large bustness concerns euch s [ Steel Corporation and the Am ecican ol ing Mill Co., buy it for thetr employees. 13mo. Cloth, 641 pages, Iilustrated, 32, net; $2.14. post-pald. Booksellers, or Funk & Wagnalls Company, Publishers 306 Fourth Avenue, New York Theliter FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of-the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary) NEW YORK Have We Grown Up in Art? to Climb Higher Color Reproduction—“THE ARTIST'S DAUGHTER™ A Host of Interesting Half-Tone Reproductions, Graphs and Humorous Cartoons Are Volcanoes Safety-Valves? The “Hick”-Controlled Films Teaching Second-Story Men More Dampening for the Wets “‘A New Al Smith’’ in Detroit Entertaining Japanese Royalty Chasing the Scotch Pill O’er Syrian Sands Do Football Players Really Dislike the Game? Jazzing Up the Plow-Horse to Win Races Florida Boom’s Effect on Shipping Department of Good English How to Say It in French —By Titian (and—Comment 1s Dire en Anglais) ‘words— | Cassell’s | FRENCH DICTIONARY Payne, Assistant Bxaminer fn French at the University of London words snd military. e ch and Enflllh mmm-ry of an ordinary size in exist Crown 8vo. Clof AT BOOK STORES OR FROM Funk & Wagnalls Gompany, Publishers 386 Fourth Avenus, New York Hers's & wonderfully usefol dictionary. Halt of it tells you the French of Eoglish words and the otber dalf tells the English of French A Standard Work of 1.230 Pages. Compilad by James Bofelle, B.A. Revised by da T. Payen- This revieed and calacged edition Fhrases ., salc. sclentifc o derea and French u g ¢ on French ] French noun ble _gender. Irrsgular and Datective 2 7 c arba; separate vocabularies Lam of Proper and Geographical Pronunciation names in a0, hausend $2.50, pet; thumb indexed, Tl crushed levant, $12. Post.

Other pages from this issue: