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B—10 PEACE BY RELGON URGEDBY HABRD Norwegian League Leader . Sees “Weariness of Na- tionalistic Politics.” Religious principle will solve the problem of war, and nothing else can. The golden rule in public as in private affairs is a practical law which, once adopted, will establish | peace and harmony in the world. Such is the judgment of Dr. Carl | Joachim Hambro, president of the Parliament of Norway and a member | of the Supervisory Committee of the | League of Nations. On a flving visit to Washington, he explained his philosophy to several hundred diplo- mats, Government officers and re- porters at the Hotel Carlton yester- day afternoon. “I have just come from Geneva, where for the past few weeks Europe’s | leading statesmen have been grap- pling with the most serious crisis | which has faced them since the World War,” Dr. Hambro said. “In their own countries, statesmen realize that politics and politicians no longer | grip people’s imaginations, because | their causes no longer grip their | hearts. In the international world, there is weariness of politics built on | a nationalism similar to party politics or even narrower. But the dispute between Italy and | Ethiopia is only a comparatively minor symptom of the disease which afflicts our civilization. What we are facing today is not an economic or a political crisis—hardly a crisis at all in the ordinary meaning of that word. The truth is we are in a huge spiritual decline, an epoch of degen- eration, if by degeneration we under- stand the process whereby a culture s being destroyed by its own prod- ucts.” Dr. Hambro, in closing, paid tribute | By the Associated Press. to the Oxford Group movement which, acles of spiritual change” in recent years in Great Britain, Scandinavia, Switzerland and elsewhere in Europe. “The golden rule,” he argued, “is the only effective rule. I believe in absolute standards of right and justice among nations as among individuals. Let us meet frankness with frankness, honesty with honesty. I know from ample experience that such a policy pays.” The visitor was introduced by Rev. Dr. Anson Phelps Stokes. canon of Washington Cathedral. I charge of arrangements for the meeting was a committee including Albert W. At- wood, Elisabath E. Poe, Edwin N. Lewis, Herman Hagedorn and Charles Scoville Wishard. Among others present were Francis B. Sayre, Sir Willmott Lewis, Leander McCormick-Goodhart, Canon Albert H. Lucas, Rev. Dr. Ze Barney T. Phil- | lips, Owen Maynard Williams, Mrs. | Mary MacCracken Jones, Carter Field, | George Henry Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander B. Trowbridge, Clarence | Phelps Dodge, Frederic William Wile, George A. Benson, Martha Strayer, Robert D. Heinl, Gerard Ten Eyck Beeckman, Rev. Dr. R. R. Miller, Win- ifred Mallon, Mr. and Mrs. Erich Bentley, J. A. Reichmann, Oswald F. Schuette, Laurence Todd, Vella Al- berta Winner, J. R. Wiggin, Franklin Waltman, jr.; John B. Hayward, W. M. Ritter and Rev. Dr. Karl C. Ras- mussen. NOTE TO WHITE HOUSE TRAPS LIQUOR SUSPECT 0Ozarks Women Write Mrs. Roose- | velt to Learn Source of Whisky Husbands Drank. PINE, Mo, November 8—Clayton | Arnold was over im the Poplar Bluff jail today, a victim of feminine curi- osity. The women of this small Ozarks community had been wondering for some time where the menfolk got their liquor. Finnally they wrote “Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt, White House, Wash- ington.” " A revenue agent got Arnold. He ls! awaiting trial. on a charge of pos-; he explained, has “accomplished mir- | sessing untaxed liquor. THE EVEXI'.\'G STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, T935. STATUTORY OFFENSE DENIED BY WRITER | Liggett, Unshaken in Cross--Ex- amination, Gives Lie to Accusations. By the Assoclated Press. ST. PAUL, November 8—Prompt denial, unshaken during cross-exami- nation, was Walter Liggett's retort in District Court yesterday to accusa- tions of the prosecution that he com- mitted a statutory offense against a minor girl in a Minneapolis hotel in March, 1934. “That's an unqualified falsehood. That's & lie” were frequently re- peated answers by Liggett, magazine writer and newspaper publisher, to questions put him by Arthur Markve, prosecuting attorney. Liggett is charged with having committed the offense in a hotel room occupied by Frank Ellis, labor or- ganizer, and two minor girls, who came to Minneapolis with Ellis from Austin, Minn., a year ago last March. Broken Nerve. When Germany began suing for peace in October, 1918, although her armies had met with defeat, yet her front had not been broken. What was broken was the nerve of her com- manders and Emperor. On Meats BIG SAVINGS:::- BEEF SALE Round or Steak, Ib. ____20c Chuck Roast, Ib., 15¢ & 17¢ Rib Roast Beef, Ib. Plate Beef, Ib. Fresh Hamburger, 1b.- 14c Beef Liver, Ib. 3 Cor. Roast Beef, Ib.._18c¢ | Fresh Shoulders, 1b._19¢ | Shoulder Spareribs, 1b._12¢ Pork Loin Roast, 1b. Sauerkraut Sliced Bacon, Ib. pkg.__38¢ Eresh Chickens, Ib. —___28¢ Homemade Sacusge Meat, 1h. ... 19¢ Save! Green Kale, Collards, Rape, Mustard Greens. Choice, 3 = 10c ----3 Ibs. 10c --5 Ibs. 10¢ Finest Spinach __ York Apples 8 pounds Ripe Tomatoes Caulifiower, New Green Cabba, 1bs. 10c -KIDWELL’S ™™ IT'S 0 BE FRESH VEGETABLES LAMB SALE Leg O’ Lamb, Ib. £ Shoulder Lamb, Breast Lamb, Ib. Loin and Rib Lamb Cho Loin Lamb Roast, Ib Veal Cutlets, Ib. ___ Shoulder Veal Roast, Ib., 18¢ Boneless Breast Veal, Ib. 18¢ Roll Table Butter, Ib.__31¢ Yellow Cheese, Ib. Smoked Hams, Ib. ____ Lge. Sm. Shoulders, Ib., 21¢ Compound Lard, Ib. Select Eggs, doz. Save! _ 10 1bs. 19¢ Family Size Potatoes A Real § Snap. 100 ™ $1.30 Sweet Apple Cider, full gallon ____ _ _ Scant 12 G Pure Cane Sorghum Syrup. large Yellow Onio String Beans._ No. 1 Irish Polatoes ______ Sc Ib. SMART THRIFTY 214-316 SEVENTH STREET N.W., (BETWEEN D AND INDIANA) No Wonder . . .We’re Doing the Coat Business of the Town . . . WITH SUCH VALUES AS THESE!! A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANY GARMENT Every one a WINN v SIZES 14 to 20 38 to 46 ER! 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