Evening Star Newspaper, November 4, 1928, Page 64

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THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, 1. conference on the cause and cure of | houses, to declare war. but it is very | on the cause and cure of war can sc- | war, to be held in Des Moines, Iowa, | much more difficult to secure a treaty | complish marvelous results. November 14 and 15, and on November i of “We did not hestitate wi SCI’VICC tioned in Moscow, and elss-Zoeres A T W BT R e e e our coun e the shops every morning. patiently wait- Make Pound Gifts to|iNg in the cold to get inside and buy | their share. A little more than a third Friends, Who Celebrate. |of a poum’! is the limit fixed for each MOSCOW (). —The way to say it in customer in the government and co- | Russia s not with flowers. but with | °Perative shops. be here. | })u:‘mr,d P'lnwers;}r;(“ pAentlful and butter tribute at | is hard to get. s Autumn it has be-| More than 4,000 men and wom | come a token. A pound of it is some- | served with the British forces o vg:? times presented as a gift when people | loniki during the World War recently 10 she will be the Armistice day sp: try was at war to give them our very | Russians towoe, Wis. | cure thousands and thousands of resoly- | Pest service: we did not consider either | | Speaking recently at the convention | tions and petitions asing the Sen: time or money. We surely sould be | | of the Minnesota Federation of Wom- | (o ratify this treaty, becatse of course | [USt A8 ready to give our service in | e .S‘I'l?mbs' :\K 3 Hm\-ermsaidc in parc: | no sane person would dream of refusing | ReIPing our country to secure perma- | e Conference on the Cause an ‘ 3 nent peace. | Cure of War, as you already know. (O SIRIEUE p bawe ey e o | "Argm ce day will soon ver 30 years the Senate has changed g made up of niné affiliated organiza- | fuogrm Can you think of a better | e #hs %of "which is the General | the treaties coming to them for ratifics- | ¢y; fime to pay the men who offered i ; jon, ntil they wers barely recognizable | Pederation of Women's Club | ae wa Bith et their lives to put an end to war than | EReir Program of work for thix rail | 80d tnere wsrg treaties whiclh were pre have enormous numbers of resolu- | Call on Kin or friends who are cele-| attended the annual muster of the Sa- brating the day of their patron saint. ' loniki Reunion Association on the Horse ! sents he administration »f : the ratification of the multilateral | Sehted during t n Of | tions and petitions signed indorsing the | th ireaty presented to all the great powers ;r;chsfll”lr’c:r;vxrl;‘ ':ffé'n:?f (::;;1:;:: | multilateral treaty renouncing war?” For scveral weeks butter has been Guards Parade, Whitehall, England. E s zed | “You may say it is necessary to se- Leaguc of Women Voters to Inaugurate New Voters' Program—General Federation Chairman Finds Wide- spread Intercst in International Relations. Democratic Club Notes. BY CORINNE FRAZIER. Election day will not mark the ces- sation of activities on the part of the League of Women Voters in instructing | citizens as to the political situation with a view to stimulating a permanent in- msibility for of the vote. A new series service programs will bs inaugurated in December by the league. which since last January hes conducted a weekly radio campaign information service for voters. The new series, according to an en- nouncement by Miss Katharine Lud- ington of Lyme, Conn. chairman of the league’s radio committee, will pr sent programs designed to “carry over the interest in campaign issues a period when Oongress and a administration are embodving the wishes of the voters in legislation and policies. The “Voters’ Campaign Information Bervice,” which has been broadcast every Tuesday over a network of 22 st tions under the joint sponsorship of the league, and the National Broadcas ing Co., was temporarily discontinued lest Tuesday night. The final program of this campaign series took the form ©of a last appeal to “get out the vote In discussing the launching of a new series, plans for which will be announ ed more fully after election day, M Ludington said: “Early n Jenuary the Nationa' Broadcasting Co. and the Nationa! League of Women Voters launched an edventurous experiment dedicated to the service of that portion of the elec- torate which listens to the radio. It was the first attempt, on 'a nationwide scale. to broadcast political education and the sponsors were nons too surec how radio fans would receive it. “This experiment has had nearly 1¢ months’ trial and all uncertainty as tc its success has passed. The public clearly likes it: more and more stations ere carrying it; educators, press and political experts praise it; and now the question is, What next? Do our listen- ers want more?> Will the public care for talks cn politics and government in & non-campaign year? “A second experiment is to be tried December we shall launch a ice desij to carry ov “inte | | | MISS KATHERINE LUDINGTON, | Of Lyme, Conn., chairman of the radio committes of {he League of Woman | Voters, whe is orzanizing a new voters' service program fo begin in December. our interest in campaign issues into the period wheg Congress and later a nev | admmistratfon are embodying thc wishes of the voters in concrete legis- lation and policies.” | Miss Belle Sherwin had a bucy day.in | New York City last Tuesday. In the afternoon she was the presiding officer at a meeting conducted by the Colony Club. and devoted to the discussion oi | candidates and issues. As president o | the National League. Miss Sherwin fill- |ed the role of an “impartial listener” | and presented the following speakers to a large audience: Mrs. Vernon Kel- | logg, speaking in_behalf of the Hoover | candidacy: Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt for the Smith-Robinson ticket: M | Mary E. Jagoe of Texas, a Democrat | supporting Hoover. ‘and ' Mrs. Joseph Swan, a Republican, who will vote for | Smith. In the evening Miss Sherwin pre sided at the final pre-election vouers | service program broadcast frem statior | WEAF. New York Cit. The speaker: | included Mrs. Maud Wood Park, a fo | mer national league pesident. who i itizted the idea of a “get out the vot: campeign back in 1923: Mrs. Meriin B | Avlesworth, president of th~ Naticna® Broadcasting Co.; Mr. John Hays Ham- | mond of Washingion, D. C., one of the very vactive supporters of the get-out- the-vote movement, and William Churcl Oshorne of New York City, high ir Democratic circles. Since the promulgation of the mul- | tilateral peace treaty, Mrs. Ben Hooper of Oshkosh. Wis., chairman of the de- partment of international relations of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, has been kept busy with speak- ing engagements before State conven- tions, other club gatherings and on the air. Interest in international mat- ters was never greater, according to Mrs. Hooper, than at the presont time. She relates an unusual ex which she had recently in Erie, that pointed significantly to the gen- eral inte taxen by both m-n and women now in international relations. It wes on the occasion of her radio talk from the station of the Erie Dis- patch-Herald. In order that she might finich her talk smoothly, Mrs. Hooper asked the voung man in charge to hold up his | hand two minutes before her time was |up. When she began ta'king he went {to an adjoining room to make sure that her talk was “going over” all | right. He failed to come back. and she | talked on and on. Finally, feeling sure | that she must have used all the time allotted her, she stopped. whercupon the young man returned to the studio, apologized profusely and said he be- came so interested in what she was | saving that he forgot all about his | promise. Mrs. Hooper was extended an invitation to broadcast from this sta- | tion at any time she is in that part of | the country. During her visit in Pennsylvania Mrs. Hooper addressed the Woman's | Club and was the honor guest at a luncheon given by the club. She also addressed a meeting of the Y. W. C. A. cociation of Uni- speaking at TIRS. BEN HOOPER. .| Of Oshkosh, Wis,, chairman of interna- tional relations, General Federation of Women's Clubs. who is kept busy ad- dressing women's groups on the move- ment for international peace. | of the world by our Secretary of State. Mr. Kellogs. “The general federation voted unani- mously to adopt this program at its biennial convention in San Antonio in June. We heing the largest of all the organizations comprising the conference on the cause and cure of war, have a tremendous responsibility in this work. We are also very largely an organiza- mothers, and for that reason cork should appeal to our members being the mnst vitally important e of work to be done this Fall “WWe, as a country, have offered this treaty to the rest of the world. It )= our treaty, and we have invitsd ail other countries to sign with us. All the great powers have already signed end ma of the lesser ones. This treaty will not become effective until it has been rati- fied by the United States Senate. rust not forget that we are the only country in the world which requires a two-thirds vote of the upper house to ratify a treaty. It only requires 2 ma- vote in thiz countr: of bhotn that the Presidents considered them | worthless and dropped them. | “For the honor of our great Nation | we cannot afford to take the chances of a few men in tie United States Senat holding up a treaty which was formn- | lated and presented to the world by vs | and that will be so far-reaching in the ! securing of peace in the world. f “It is not. onlv vitally important that the Senate ratify this treaty just as we | have presened it to 21l other countries, | but that we shall b in a position 13 | t3ay to the whole world: ‘The people of th» United States want this treaty and | are angious tn do their part in renounc- | ing war among nations.’ “Thiz is the most important piece of the women of the United States have ever undertaken, and this is our | zerat opportunity to demonstrate tht | we are ready and willing to not only | give our support but to give hard. - | tensive work toward securing real con- | structive legislation which will bring | the world cioser to a realization of ths | time when international troubles will | | Wk I\/]’ RS. WOODROW WILSON paid her first visit to th> Women's National Democratiz Club headquarters since her return frem Europs. when she attend- ed the final regional tea held Wednes- day afternoon. Mrs. Wilson sovent a few davs in Washington before return- ing to her home to cast her ballot. Tomorrow the last of the open house ecampnrign luncheons will be held at the New Hampshire avanus clubhonse. The weekly program luncheons for club members will be resumed th~ following Mondav and will continue throughout the Winter months. FRENCH WINE CHEAPER. | Warm Summer Produces Growth of Grapes. PARIS (P)—Wine, which shares with bread the horor of being the. staff of iife in France, is going to b cheaper Tinest be settled in the same manner in whicl: | this Winter and the man in the street | we now settle our national troubles. | “We must not think that when the, multilateral tieaty has hcen ratified | that, alone will secure permanent peace | for the world. We must continue to dc intensive work until public opinion has been so educated that every country will | feel its honor depends upon scrupulously | carrying out both the spirit and the let- | ter of the treaty. | "“I ask you not to forgst that we sent | the flower of the youth of this country to France to fight 2 war to end war,| and we premised those boys from every | platform where any one spoke in these United States that if they won it should | be the last war. They did their part | most_nobly. | “We learned in that war that war | will not end war, and that no matter | whn wins everybody loses, and the kill- | ing of milliens does not settle anything Our boys did ail that soldiers could do ! to put an end to war. It now bscomes our responcibility to work out methods by which all disagreements and misun- derstandings between nations shall b2 “ettled through peaceful means. The responsibility for changing the sysiem is ours: and if we fail to do our part, the responsibility for those who die in the next war rests upon us individually. A few people cannot secure permanent | peace any more than they could wage A successful war, but the five million women represented in the confarsnes |renowned in history, according to ex- ly_brought him some fame. is rejoicing. A warm sunny Summer, with rain a* just the right time. produced one of | the finest growths of cranes Franes has known for vears. Both in aquantity | and quality the vintage of 1928 will be nerts. Ordinary wine, a tab's ac-ompani- ment in the home of almost every aver- age Frenchman. will henceforth cost | iust 10 cents a bottle. Last ysar it was | oetween 12 and 13 cents | “Gal," a miner artist of London, is | hnsy making porfraits since his pictures of Pavlova and Rudyard Kipling recent- Permanent Wave W. B. Moses & Soms Public Confidence Since 1561 F Street at Eleventh Main 3770 COATS grow more lavish with FUR $135 We consider this a most dis- Z ) tinguished col- £ lection of Win- ter Coats for women and misses. A model of established chic is of majora, with hixurious shawl collar and cuffs of Ca- nadian wolf. Unustal in line and detail. O\ N\ /AN NAARDDA Starting Tomorrow /A W. P. Toses & Sons 9AM.to6P.M. F Street at Eleventh Main 3770 “New Apparel Always” %5 No Other Charge! OVER 25 THOUSAND wom- en throughout the South are praising the naturalness, the lastingness and the beauty of Maison Victoire permanent waves! Maison Victoire. Inc . Phone Franklin 6965 203 Westory Bldg. “Shops Over All the Southland” W. B, Moses & Sons Public Confidence Since 1561 F Street at Eleventh For Women and Misses Sizes 14 to 44 . In a season where smartness is measured by a lavish use of furs, it is exceptional to find coats at this price that are so extravagantly and richly furred. s : Shawl collars, Patou collars; Tuxedo fronts. Deep cuffs, fur borders. Wolf, civet cat, skunk Black, flagship blue, subtle half tones. Beauti- fully lined and interlined. The Apparel Shop, Second Floor This sets a new stand- ard in radio value and sweeps aside all com- petition. NEUTRODYNE and Phonograph Pick-Up chk Compare Value Here is the supreme gift of the radio world at a stupend- ous saving to you. b“[:l.ll‘fl( Push Pull Amplification hthsselinentingd T T AT RRNA] Main 3770 9A.M.to6P. M. Beautiful Walnut Cabinet With Rosewood Sliding Doors Nothing has ever been so convincing and good to induce us to make such a gigantic purchase. In fact, we have never been more enthused. We believe, and those who have heard Radiotrope tell us, that we are offering the greatest value in the whele United States. 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