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BROADER POLITICS | URGED BY RITCHIE I Maryland Governor Says 1928 Campaign Will Re align Old Parties. ■ lb the Asm, taied Prr»*. I XKW V' IKK, December 11.—Gov. I ' Albert O. Ritchie of Maryland voiced I last 11 Ik lit jit the annual dinner of llk Southern Society of New York a conviction that the time had come for the Republican and Democratic Varties to •’rekindle some of (he be lief which vitalized them In the past and to divide once attain on prin . elide.” Traditional differences between the major parties have quite disappeared, said Oov. Ritchie, adding that there never were more than two —the tariff t and States’ rights. All others, he said. w>re minor issues created for campaign purposes- and only distantly related id fundamental party plat forms. Gov. Ritchie did not believe there • v. as any one who thought that If the Democrats had won the 1924 elec ts..ns there would he a. tarff for rev enue only. 11< said the Democratic platform made no such promise, for tha t strlct ful llllmeiit would be impractical. V lews Similar. As for States' rights, the speaker contended that both parties had come to champion or combat certain Vueasures which affected the principle of local self-government, and “both parties include persons who want to make an exception in the case of something in which they are inter ested—child labor or Federal control over education or prohibition or health or State aid for internal im provements or something else.” • Is there, then, nothing in the pol ities of the country upon which the people really divide?” ho asked. •Must the parties continue on their opportunistic careers? Is there not somethting to rekindle the historic differences between them. In which in days gone by made them parties >.f principle, not expediency?” There is not, he said, if the country has become so vast as to take its politics aectionally, so that national insti tutions and national questions of no longer come first. Nor is there “if it is true that the forces In control of national conventions and party platforms are afraid of Issues, because to he on one side of an issue makes you sure of losing the votes of those on the other side. Time for Realignment. Gov. Ritchie believed he voiced the conviction of millions of American citizens when he said the time was ripe for the rekindling of traditional beliefs and the realignment of par ties according to basic principles. “Certainly enough power and au thority' and bureaucracy is central ized in Washington to make this a I rallying point for those who believe in decentralization and the autonomy of the States,” he said. Individual rights could be another issue for the 192 S campaign, said Gov. Ritchie, ”for we must admit , that never before has law restricted ' (he freedom of the individual us much as now.” BANKER WEDS WIDOW. Andrew D. Maloney Marries Sec ond Time at 61. NEW YORK, December 11*.—Andrew D Maloney, Philadelphia banker, and Mrs. Martha Lynott of Scranton, Pa., were married yesterday at Ht. Je rome's Roman Catholic Church, the Bronx. They will spend a month’s honeymoon I at Palm Beach, later making their home at Philadelphia. Mr. Maloney, who is i>l years old, is a director of s.-veral public utility corporations In Pennsylvania and a papal chamber lain as well. { A Sure I Winner/: 11 I product As EBONITE “Strings” to a Stick, So It Winds Around the Gears < i f NOT ALL I ALIKE EBONITE IS NOT A GREASE. IT'S ALL OIL, I in shredded form. No other gear lubricant can perform like it. It will not leak out. It 1 stops noise and grind, J lengthens the life of your I car. One 6lling with EBONITE is enough for all season. *** At dealers’ in five pound cans, and at service stations from the t Checker - board pumps, I T as g history of 6 0 years of success Ninety-Five Pound Girl Is College's Premier Athlete Live Normally and Laugh [ Is Advice to Those Who W ould Be Fit . I I Special Dispatch to The Slar. | SOUTH HADLEY, Mass , December 10.—Miss Dorothy C. Pyle, 25, of W est Grove, Pa., is this year's winner . of the Sarah Streeter cup, which is 1 awarded each year at Mount Holyoke : ! College to that member of the senior : I class who- is found to be in the best .; physical condition at the time of her ; I physical examination. . j Just under five reel in height and | weighing only 95 pounds. Miss Pyle . | is probably the smallest person to ( whom the cup has ever been awarded. , i Her quick movements and trimly { compact figure suggest her outdoor 'activities. She attributes her physical i fitness mainly to field hockey, which , she played as a member of her class ream since her freshman year. Perhaps cheer leading had some thing to do with it as well. Miss Pyle has been song leader of her class through its four years in col lege, and last year was elected to lead the college singing, a position which she still holds. “Live normally—and laugh.” This is the only advice Miss Pyle has to give to others who would be as fit as she is. She has no special rules of diet or exercise. The honor came to her as a result of ordinary living combined with outdoor exercise—and plenty of laughter. . Short brown hair tossed hack, and blue eyes alert. Miss Pyle is equally at home racing down the field behind ' the hall in the final games of the - interclass field day or leading the college in the singing of the alma Mater at the close of the annual com petetlve sing, and she puts the same amount of enthusiasm into both. She has been a member of the college choir and of the specially selected junior choir. In addition to hockeylng and singing, she finds time to play the violin in - the college orchestra and is the au j thor of the words and music for the original song presented by her class |as sophomores for the competitive ' sing, as well as chairman of music j for the great outdoor pageant pre ! sented on May day of the same year. ■ a dramatization of the Odyssey. She Is a member of the college ' dramatic club and played an Impur- I rant part In her class Junior show. \ That the class has faith In her Judg ment is shown by the fact that It ! chose her as its member of the nomi i nating committee of the community i government. She has chosen history \ and political science as her major subjects and is taking her minor work in the department of English. “SHOP EARLY” SLOGAN ADOPTED IN VIENNA I ! Stores Bring Out Christmas Dis plays Weeks Ahead of Time. Correspondence of the Associated Press. VIENNA, November 22.—The Ameri can slogan. "Do your Christmas shop ping early,” has reached Vienna and Is proving its worth. Stores brought out their toys and other Christmas goods weeks earlier this season than formerly. This move to stimulate business la attributed to an enterpris ing merchant who heard of the Idea from an American friend. The dealer says the proposal has taken exceedingly well with his wom an customers, considering the fact j that this Is the first year the plan has j been tried In this country. For Fifty- two \ears a Christmas Footwear Gift Store # j The New 1925 I Southern Tie . As Introduced by the FAMILY SHOE STORE Christmas Mr J 4 'A • Cbddre n n IbO f §■ T Put up in individual >■■}} ■ ■: In til cilf , . r T»SJ| 71 "1 if tongue We* Chnstmas boxes of two, ‘”th b Wn s,l kid three or more pairs, ] ( “SGS 2% to «. daintily tied and com- AA 10 D Wi<,<> plete to the greeting " 1 $2, $3 and $5 Our original creation developed into a I “ nobbier' brand-new style—shorter vamj>, ** rttlTS two-tone effect, boyish—with “class" writ- S 3 and More ten all over It. McCallum, Phoenix, Kayser and other na- tionally known makes. Specials for Christmas Every new shade, in S ' \ silk, wool sport, or lisle. Men's, 35c lo $1.50 66C *1 nr** h nr, r OUICII 8 JZZZ.„„ , ■ O P" a " . SI.OO to 82.93 model of this popular In .tan calf—with me- walking oxford In f't .11 , tie. Toned up dlum Spanish heel— black and tan Russia Children S frith new perfo- I/" 60 ranart to the l/T-60 ealf. military $/: .60 v*U. OS a O'! O" rations ....... O letter O or lojr heels... ft 35C lO "1.2,1 . fAMIDf/HOE/TORE 310-312 Seventh St N.W. INDIVIDUALIZED SERVICE SPECIALIZED DEPARTMENTS THE EVENING star. WASHINGTON. D. C„ THURSDAY. 'DECEMBER 11. 192?. 'ASSERTS UNBELIEF I MODERNIST BASIS j Pastor Declares Love of Pop ularity Tempts Gospel Diluters. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, December 11.-—Many of the restatements and reinterpreta tions of Christian doctrine today are hut sheer unbelief when stripped of their disguise, declared Dr. Clarence Edward Macartney, moderator of the general assembly of the ITesbyterian Church, In an address prepared for delivery before the students and faculty of McCormick Theological i Sepiinary, incident li> the session of j the Presbyterian National Conference. I Unbelief, the love of popularity, and the menace of agnosticism were called some of the adversaries of the minister by Dr. 'Macartney. Love of popularity, he said, "tempts men to dilute the gospel and to delete the Bible until the grand and peculiar accents of the Christian religion are entirely lost and the voice ol the preacher becomes only a lovely sound.” Sees 'World «* Tenement. It is a figure too spacious to speak of the present world as a great neigh- i borhood, said Mrs. Charles K, Hoys' of New Y'ork, foreign executive sec- i retary of the ITesbyterian board of j forelgti missions, in an address pre- j pared for delivery before the national ■ conference. "It is more accurate to think of i the human family,” she said, "crowded together in one great tenement house, uneacapahly bound up in one bundle of life. The world of great distances and secure isolation, in which past generations lived, is forever gone.” Modern industrialism and national consciousness she termed the forces j If Food “Disagrees” in Stomach Instantly! End Indigestion, Gas, Heartburn, Acidity Whenever food or drink upsets I harmless tablets and the distress is the stomach or causes Indigestion gone! or Gases. Flatulence, Bloating. Sour A 60 cent package will keep the Risings, Heartburn or Acidity, re- entire family free from digestive member you get relief as soon as disorders for months. Druggists “Papes Diapepsin” reaches the sell millions and guarantee each Stomach. No waiting! package. Just chew a few of these pleasant. challenging Christianity In mission lands. Whether they will bring weal or woe depends on their foundation on Christian principles of justice and honesty. “Christianity faces an unprecedent ed opportunity," she declared, “to work out an enVlnrlng. harmonious life for the nations of the world.” Youth, 21, in Commons. (orreapondeace of The Associated Press. LONDON, November 25.—The young est member of the new House of Commons is Sir Hugh Lucas-Tooth, 21 years old, Conservative. He won the Isle of Ely seat from his Liberal opponent. Sir Hugh recently left Cambridge University and had never made a public speech before he was nominated. —■ J _j wonderful BOY an Models *1' 7S to •!! i mSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSm ig _ M The time of Good Cheer is fast ap preaching, and that means that the H if housewife must start preparing for If /MlDll ravishing holiday appetites—and the I RED FRONT STORES can be of t Jl more help to you now, possibly, than _ a t any other time of the year. jcir ~nni - ■ - =inr- inj n IONA Vhat do you want most in an SOAP Sliced ° rail S e sweetness, juiciness, thin- soap market has ness of skin? Then these delicious some time > hu } we’ve c j ap> r m ' been abe to avoid charg- C TliL fruit ripened on Florida trees will in s y° u more. Now it f n p # looks as though the . surprise you with their lusciousness. market will go still (Contents, 1 lb. 3 02. ) ' higher, and that we will d er-i have to increase our r: n M /"\0 A price. Therefore we ad E 1} I }({''* S M IfX 1 ..m Ia •» gHi vise you to buy as much j «i.Js J? JL JL '4 kjl as possible now, before prices advance. Soap i improves with age. I KIRKHAN’S QQc Doz. P&c, S1 cakes, 25c I ni Star, 5 cakes, 25c I I * Kg. _____ Octagon iW Bothfor 4 cakes. 26c 11 Powder Fancy, large, full of juice and Pels Naptha i| pi T] r flavor FLORIDA tree ripened cakes, 24c \ I F Kg. /I Clean Easy UrZ GRAPEFRUIT,4f«r2Sc u«**- l Bc L 3 Clil P S 4 cakes, 24c E I “i 4 ?" zszrtfT ™®i I - .... - Carefully Candled Suitable for the Finest __i_ |U u “‘ BUDWHSEI t Delicious, Pure, Delicately Flavored $1.75 12 bottles 111 I s i® ded or Seedless CREAMERY Jl ~ lo Raisins __ _ __ Abner Urury s t Full Size 15-oz. Pkg. 11 I I | I ' IT* il Aged in Wood \ 2 pkgs - 2 3c oUi IHilx 14 Boni„ 25c •“ 1 n CURRANTS “r“ .. rr leiio Wheat [ 23c I LO. jjjljjC I The Heart of the Wheat | J —o_ 19c Pkg- 5 i SUNNYFIELD | “ - bacon FLOUR £oo ™i J Delicious, Rindless, Lean * APPI BQ R 38c lb. I Discount an Advancing Market by Buying Now I it iblLu^ * for Future Needs S Q S ABSOUJTELY [GOLD MEDAL 5Lb,. 12B». 241 b.. , ftPPlr tm U y FRESH pillsbury OT. fi7 ,tnoli LOFFIER S R fl Sunnybrook CERESOTA - ’ ’ HAMS ;U EGGS WASHINGTON—3Ic, 65c, $1.24 j lb c Gathered from nearby . M.MkdP farm. ! A&P 30C, 62c, 51.19 Succulent, tender Sugar y y Cured young pig hams. B Convenient sizes. Bdrwwrt.POTATOES "‘SU i ■ atn..%jkpk., a. 1 C lb. peck O CORN : A3 2c«.35c r ni— ■ ■ inr= —ihl - iHt ■ ■ -i =inr=^—=inr= in HI in [==■.»■ in 27