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Sty The Ounce of Prevention | Transacting business with relations or close personal friends is often awkward and embarrassing. The prac- ! tice of appointing an individual executor, trustee, ad- i ministrator or guardian too frequently leads to an un- I pleasant break in a long period of friendship. How | much better it is to avail yourself of the calm, imper- i sonal judgment and business-like methods of this pow- i erful company, organized for this very purpose. The f service of our expert staff never costs more than that of the inexperienced individual—often much less. The Washington Loan and Trust Company Established in 1889 DOWNTOWN OFFICE: WEST END BRANCH: 900-902 F STREET N.W. 618-620 17th STREET N.W. John B. Larner : : President HARRY G. MEEM Vice President and Treasurer i ANDREW PARKER Vice President and Trust Officer THOMAS BRADLEY Vice President and Real Estate Officer Assistant Treasurers BOYD TAYLOR CHARLES H. DOING, Jr. CHARLES R. GRANT Assistant Trust Officer Il ‘WM. H. BADEN Counsel t PETER THE EVENING STAR, ‘WASHINGTO! Out with the flivver Heart all a-quiver Off for the “heavy date!” Plenty of gas A loxtryeable lass And Chiclets— PEPPERMINT (Yellow box) R e delicious Pink bor) " candy coaled ' ' e 10 for 5¢ American Chicle Co. chewing gum ? ,C _ WEDNESDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER 27, 1922, WILSON PRESENTS |l WAV SHOP FORCES 5 ER ENTNRMA CHURCH A TABLET Road Executives Report 212,698 SEES SOVETRULE BENG DIPLACED Bakhmeteff Finds Hundreds The Onward Sweep "SALADA' THA. e r into every home in the United States working forces in the carriers' shops on | i & silent compliment toits Delicious Jaturday reached 85 per cent of normal Flavor and Hi‘h Q“‘li". “;:l.;‘r};nds in the eastern district, com- BMC—?’M(O.-{EDI b‘;:é%;fli?}‘tt" TO HONOR FATHER BTAUNTON, Va., BSeptember 27.— Former . President Woodrow Wilson has presented to the congregation of the First Presbyterian Church of this clty a bronge tablet in memory of his Men Than t.‘:"{.er. the Rev. Dr. Joseph . ?v:}-un. More at Work on! . who was pastor of the church from T thl)n “msmke 1856 to 1857. It was during the Rev. en y < of New Governments in Dr. Wilson's pastorate hers that MR T A Woodrow Wilson was born. The tab- let will be placed on one of the in- slde church walls near the pulpit. Rural Communities. The association of railray executives innounced yesterday that reports from he raflroads of th& country showed that HOLLAND AND NORWAY END FIGHT OVER COAL Ami prising the territory morth of the Ohio icable Settlement Reported to 2] [Potomac rivers and east of Pitts. burgh, the association’s announcemen Be Result of Visit of Queen . J378D 01 68 per cent of normal shop RED LEADERS HELPLESS Ex-Russian Envoy Here Says Situ- ation Resembles Days of French Revolution. i Imina. forces on Saturday and all of the rail- AL roads reporting had 212,698 more men By Wireless to The Star and Chicago Daily|at work than they had on July 10, ten By the Associated Press. News. Copyright, 1022. days after the strike began. AMSTERDAM, Holland, September 7.—As a result of Queen Wilhelmina's visit to Christiania it is reported that the differences between Holland and Norway over the Spitzbergen coal in- terests have been settled amicably. Un- der the convention signed soon after the war an International commission was formed to settle disputes arising over the Spitzbergen properties. As Norway's negotiations for sales to British and Swedish investors seemed detrimental to Holland's Interests, the Dutch threat- ened to convoke the international com- mission, This threat has now been withdrawn as the result of conversations during the queen’s visit. Meanwhile Norwegian commercial circles are looking with some uneasiness at the growing success of Dutch firms in the exploitation of Spitzbergen coal mines. One firm has already produced more than 100,000 tons. Holland, therefore, 15 looked upon in Christiania as Norway's most danger- ous rival in Spitzbergen. PARIS, September 27.—Boris A. Bakhmeteff, lately Russian ambas- sador at Washington, 1s sailing today for Amer- ica, after an ex- tended trip of in- quiry end obser- vation which led alm to the belief that the present bolshevik govern- nent of Russia is N seing_slowly dls- placed from below by the growth of self-governing peasant communi- Jes. “The peasant populations of the >1d _communities ind ‘volosti of Russgig,” sald M. Bakhmetefr, “ha; succeeded in wcitrF. tablishing se t governmer —_—— 8-YEAR-OLD WARD MISSING. Eight-year-old Pauline Nicholson, ward of the board of children’s guard- ians, 18 reported missing from a Ber- wyn, Md., home, where she was placed by the board. The police were The New Hits First The NEW EDISON ~ Chalet Model $5 Down—$ 5 Monthly “¥ou owe it io xourself 1o hear the Marzelous New Edison before deciding on any Phono- graph. € Mr. Edison spent $3,000,000 on wonderful musical tnstru- before he was satisfied with the results. told that Mrs. 1da Nicholson, mother! of the child, visited the ward in Berwyn yesterday, and the child dis- appeared later in the day. CASTORIA' For Infants and Children tnUse ForOver 30 Years Al'umu' bears Rignature of WE MAKE IT RIGHT- “ WE SELL IT RIGHT- m se peasant groupings have popu- latlons of from' 5,000 o 50.000, with the Jocal administration in the cen- volosti), composed usu- g to-do, mature and easants, who are he committee by some sort _These committees ud- er justice, do the policing and are of all local functlons. The strength and efficacy of their govern- ment varies from place to place. It is usually stronger where the popula- ton is better off. Somttimes the gov- nment is in the hands ‘patriarch’. “fiatioesl | [Hundreds of New Governments. These local rudimentary govern- ments have sprung up by hundreds all over Russia. They are an evolution trom below. They are not what one S Now you can become the owner of the New Edison 95—on terms a Month. tent, all the is at your command_and_on terms never before oficred. ction, BUT THOSE WHO (¥ DRINK P DY RO o0 I AR O IDECAR onla L3 MO L S TS o A SR S S L T (SR e B T TR e TN In our New Phonograph Shop you will find the most complete stock of New Edison Re- Creations in Washington. Try us for that “Hard- to-Get-Record.” You will like our SERVICE. LORD CALVERT could cail a revolutionary opposition 2N Optici to Moscow, but they are really inde- > “I/,/é/ - * pendent of Moscow. The communist — commissaries have been pushed out and forced to leave. The same things have happened to the younger ruffian el nts that went about robbing and ARE THE ONES WHO SAY IT'S RIGHT— uthorities are pr: to combat t rs sent out by the the taxes in kind turn. Something hap- They simply disappe: It is imp. 16 to send troops against these formations. These local au- thorities are not in ‘open’ rebellion to the soviet regime. Moreover, these communities are so numerous that the central authorities would have to maintain garrisons or ‘conquer the whole of the iand. Lenin has long sinco realized this new and uncon- querable ill foe of communism—the Deasant. Calls Red Policy Failure. “All the so-called ‘new policy’ has been an attempt 1o ‘win’ the peasant. It has not worked. The peasant dis- trusts the bolshevik official and will not co-operate. The peasant has grpnly intrenched himself, leaving ntral power to shrink and die. The sources of the central power are consequently drying up month by moenth. The left, or extreme wing, is again in control in Moscow. But thera is a violent feud between the factions within the party itself. “The situation in certain respects muy be compared to the French revo- {lution ut the time of the fall of Robespierre. Robespierre was over- thrown by the more mod: the tion, who saw in ‘Robespierre’s nd terrorism. t phase of events in Moscow. Bakhmetef concluded saylng that the basls of the présent peasant movement was the right of property and respect for law, new movement. railroads are being run by the old cials and personnel, while the Soviet commissaries for local admin. {irations are slowly disappearing, he | declared. 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