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“BORDER STATES" MENAGE T0 PEACE Neglected by Great Powers, They Are Potential Trouble Causes. Correspondence of The Star and the Chicago Daily News PARIS, France, September 10.— Before sugzesting pos e for the menacing inscability ern Europe, would be we the are: 1. The weakness border sta 2. Th ried on in the by the dic warld conspira . Russ against stabi eny frontiers. 4. Insufficiency of existing aad guaranttes, as evidenced by gontinuance of negotiation ouritv—an insufficie chiefly to the divergent or wavering policies of the great powers respecting world peace. Really a Matter of World Peace. So T can judge from personal observation, there is no reason to doubt the vitality and national spirit of the border st: many of thei newness of the os. olutionary - border st . as ordered of the communist in Moscow. znd German zation with tiviti the pre pacts the 1t they need chief economic readius ments and relief from the atmosphe! of menuce in which they have had to organize. They feel—not without rea- Son—that they have not been accorded the material and moral support which their strategic political situations war- yant. They think, not illogically, thi this indifference and neglect are in- directly ement to the enemies. States have ) nd small in il afford the Tuxur mistikes. But the ques erits and de- tes: it 1 of world peace. To unde difficulties of the vest of the Soviet to give them a measure of . of moral support, and to help them' with money whenever pe ble—these are measures which tafnly do mot exceed the capacity of western peoples and would as cer- tainly do much to further the consoli- dation of the border states, thereby partly ecliminating one factor of in- stability. Need of Police Co-Operation. The best direct defense against in- ternational communist agltation is i ternational police co-operation. This has been realized to some extent in Eastern Europe. It could and prob. ably should be extended to include al non-communist countries. Largely it tukes the form of a prompt and confi- dentinl exchange of information. For the rest, the revolutionary activiti of Moseow in the border states would be negligible, as far as results go, i the menace of airect armed att: were not added. Against the Russ two sorts of remedies may be en. visaged. First, efforts to_dissociate Germany from the Russo-German al- | liance Leinz made under the leader- ship of Britain and not without suc- cess. The attempt to reassure Ger- many, to restore it to the fellowship of Western peoples, to have it enter the league of nations, to mollify it with credits, £ advised. There is here, however, a line which it would be dangerous to overstep: No ssions should be made which aken rather than to stll ic and_ bellicose ambitions, and there should be no thought of pacifying Western at the expense of Eastern Europe. For Europe is a unit and there can never be lasting Ppeace that is not based on respect for treaties and for the solemnly ratifled word of honor. Communists More Active Than Ever. As to the second sort of measures— those tending to concilliate and mol- lify Soviet Russia—thev have been attemp'ed by several great govern- men‘s_but withcut the slightest suc. r has the conspirative Third onale been more generally ac- at pesent. There are no indi- cations that anything can be done with the fierce and embittered Mos- cow dictators. They understand and helieve in nothing but armed force. The only wayv, in my opinion, by which they may be deterred from try- ing to execute their sinister designs against the existing international order is by convincing them that, be- cause of the solidarity of their ad- ersaries, aggression by ‘he red army nd navy could not possibly succeed, and, indeed, would be suicidal. Finallv, the ques'’ n of the solidar- ity of peaceloving nations with re- spect to the problems of Eastern| Europe is most important. From the Leasue of Nations, in case of emergency, much is hoped, but noth ing is certain. The rejection of the Geneva protocol, which all the border states favored, increased their doubts as to the efficacy of the league, so long as Russia, Germany and the United States are not members. The negoti- ations looking teward a Rhine pact, and seemingly excluding KEastern Europe, have filled the border states with an alarm that is only half as- suaged by French and British reas- surances. Untll France and Britain make clear that they are interested no less in the stabilization of Eastern than of Western Europe the situation there will remain a source of weak- n to the whole ne European tem. Attitude of the United States. The United States has done as much 4s any nation to help the border coun It fed them in their famine To Finland and Poland it has loans. And alone amonsg great powers, the United States has refused recognition to the arch-enemy, 11 that the any consist Suropean policy or that it as done as much to stabilize Eastern Europe as to help Germany. A study ht be made as to whether America should not grant to the little Baltic states the loans they nly ask., The ted States might consider entering into confidential police relations with the border states in international communist con- spirative plots. In at least one respect it may be said that the United St tending to_prolong instabi se of its refusal to recognize the new status of Bessarabfa. What does this refusal signify? Daes it mean that this prov- ince, inhbited in majority by Ruma- nians, should be handed back to Soviet Russia, or that the United States would approve a Soviet attempt to retake it by force? The question is worthy of urgent reconsideration in the interest of justice and peace. Copyright, 1025, by Chicago Daily News Co. Deer Still Are Plentiful. From time to time there is some agitation for the further protection of deer, but a recent survey shows that there are at least 1,000.000 wil& deer in the United States. Each yvear about 75,000 are killed in the Eastern and Central Western States alone. Minne- sota kills about 20,000 deer each sea- son and 8,000 were slain in New York in 1924 | "R |What's the Use g —of making interior : under a defective roof? As an initial step to- ward your . Fall over- hauling, let us put the roof, down-spouts, gut- g tering, etc., in first- @ class shape. Colbert B service means best work at REASON- ABLE PRICES. 2 Maurice J. Colbert Heating—Plumbing—Tinning Phone Main 621 F Street Piotc N e e o [ Yol quickiytrade for Studehaker repairs to a house ol RELIABILITY Our customers tell us that they have absolute confidence in what we tell them about our goods. Consult us about gless Funsded 1908 HIRES TURNER GLASS COMPANY BERNHARD W. SPILLE. (Rosslyn) vmim You Are invited to an Interesting FREE Lecture on “The Home Beautiful” By Benjamin Streeks Famous Authority on Lewis Saturday, October 3, at 8 P.M. MR. STREEKS will show how any home may be made to display the very acme of good taste and beauty at a very small expense. BENJAMIN STREE! Infernational Authority on Interior Decoruting. In fact, knowledge, not money, maker who follows Mr. Streeks is Women of Taste and Refinement Taught How to Earn Big Incomes as Commercial Interior Decorators It is hard to imagine a more de tful pursuit than that fol- lowed by the Commercial Inter- for Decorator. His or her serv. {ces are in demand when palatial homes, hot, clubs, theatres, high-class department stores, etc., need expert advice on the selec. tion and arrangement of draper- ies, pictures, rugs, objects d'art, etc. Her foes are large and as soon as she has become known her advice is in constant demand. The LevAs Course in Commerc- jal Interfor Decorating equips You to enter this fascinating pro- jon. It includes lessons on the Fixed Background; Walls, Windows and Lighting Fixtures; ucgestion may have a home whose interfor will cause the admiration and envy of friends who may have epent hundreds of dollars without obtaining results nearly so attractive. Interior Decorating At Hotel Training Schools the chief requirement. The home- Color and Color Schemes; Choice and Arrangement of Furniture; Decorative Textiles and Hang- ings; Choosing and Furnishing the Apartment; Historical Back- grounds; Furniture Types, etc. This course will appeal to the woman who wishes to use the knowledge in her own home and the homes of her friends as well as to the woman who wishes to make this knowledge the basis of a splendld income, After the lecture, let us tell vou of the money-making possi- bilities of this profession which you may learn in only four short months, devoting only one even- ing a week. Lewis Hotel Training Schools Pennsylvania Avenue at 23rd St. Washington, D. C. (Out of Town Readers Write About Correspondence Course) THE EVE FLYERS, NOTFIELDS, ISADVIGETOU. &, Night Air Mail Across Europe Discussed at Parley on Aviation. BY F. A. MACKENZIE. By Cable to The Star ind Chicazo Daily News, STOCKHOLM, Octol lishment_of a. night ac Curope w International Air M. Juhlin, head of scribed the satisfuctory working of ir mail between New York and Chicago, where traffic regularity has reuched the 90 per cent demanded, while the states of Europe have not even begun te organize such traffic. He suggested the institution of one main night air route for northern Europe connecting France, Englund Belgium, Holland, north Germany anc tab- route by the FEDERAL CLOTHING STORES NG STAR W Scandinavia, with branch lines radiat- ing from it. To create this, intimate co-operation between the countries was absolutely indispensable, he sald. While no American delegates are present at the conference, America's spurt in acrial activity this year is glven great attention, delegates gener- ally recognizing that America's re- sources and ingenuity are bound, once they are seriously applied, to have a great effect. The main criticism of American flying here is that Americans are de- voting too much attention to construc- tion of fine flying fields “If you want to make rapid progress in flying, fly, famous _flying to_the writer “Any old field will do for a start. Fine flying fields can come Stockholm we have done e in a litle weedincumbered creek. Now, having proved from it that we can conduct s holm muni ing half a better acrodome. (Copyright, by Chicago Daily News Co. CLR i The new radio station at Rio de Ja-| neiro has a normal range of 4,500 | miles, and efforts are to be made to| communicate with radio stations in the United Stat i ASHINGTON, D. ¢ DINGMAN WILL GIVES ALL TO HIS DAUGHTER Charities and Many Friends Bene- fit by Testament of Mrs. Clistie H. Hammond. The will of Harrison Dingman has been filed for probate. He died Sep- tember The will directs that his entire estate go to his wife, Sarah k. Dingman, for the “benefit of herself and our daughter, Sadie Laws Ding- man.” Mrs. Dingman died only a few hours after her husband, and the es- tate will go to the daughter. Lewis H. Wayne, by his will dated June 23, 1925, gives his sister, Ellen 1. Wayne, & half interest in premises Capitol street. Bequests of Bonds Firse Mortgae Bo .H.Smith &Cg- 0 smith mfi;’m 52 YEARS NO LOSS TO ANY “ “THE HOUSE OF SERVICE” 5 MONTHS TO PAY! and “if you can buy it better or cheaper elsewhere bring it back” New Dress Tomorrow? You'll want the latest style from New York — won’t in New York. We buy cheap for 50 stores. And we'll Some folks can’ understand how our prices can be lowest in the city, when other storeshavelower prices than we have. After they see the wonderful high grade mer- chandise we carry—thenthey admit we told the truth. Ifyou’llcompare our quality and our prices—you will find our values are wun- beatable. DRESSES FOR LARGE WOMEN ill find it easy to pick out dress MILLINERY Beautiful hats for women, just arrived from head- you like m your right size. . Federal 1896 Open Saturday Evenings 621 7th St. N.W. quarters in New York. $3.49 up Stores from Maine to Texas Until 9 P.M. RIDAY, OCTOBER : $100 each are made to Elaine Mor- gan and Lewis, Dorothy and Theodore Jackson, jr. The remaining ate is devised to the sister, who is to act as executrix. Numerous relatives and friends are remembered with legacies ranging from $5 to $2,000 by the terms of the will of Mrs. Clistie H. Hammond. Among the charitable bequests aro $1,500 to the Metropolitan Presbyterian Church and $250 each to the Home Mission and the guild aid of the church. Rev. Freely Rohrer, the pastor, is to have £100 and the poor of the church an- other $100. A sister, Lillic L. Phil- ,000, and Joseph Me $1,000. After all are paid, the estate goes to the hus 1, Witliwm | contre >, Hammond. Deaths S totaled 12 CHOLERA UNDER CONTROL MANILA, October 2 (#).—Health the Lanthorities declared yesterday that the remaining | epidemic of cholera here was under the last 43 hou new cases, including _ uspeets, ‘The authorities belie Yellow potatoes with nutlike flavor | (he mmber of ne ses 10 be re- are belng introduced into this country [ ported will be on . decreasing scale from Peru. hereafter. Half the world is half asleep ([ Many people are considored lazy when they are really suffering from the world's most universal constipation. disease— It is & dis- ease which robs you of your energy, your interest, your desire to do things. Only ALL-BRAN brings sure and eafe relicf from 1s discase. “Poor Beity! She akoays looks tired BETTY was the office mystery. Once pretty, her beauty now lay masked wholesome complexion. Once vivacious, she now seemed eternally tired—a drooping figure of disappointment and dismay. bad she didn't realize that it was constipation which was stealing her strength. But many men and women have rid them- selves forever of this devastating disease, have regained their charm and renewed their old- time vigor and vim. By the simple means of eating two tablespoonfuls of Kellogg's ALL- behind an un- KNOW THE TRUTH ABOUT BRAN bran fiber must go through ¢he ive processes without submitting to any of . It must pass through the entire alimentary tract without its form being changed What happens when a bran food is eaten? After the saliva has acted upon it, it passes fhrough the atomach and Into the intestines, where evory part which is not fiber is absorbed. In ALL-BRAN the guantity of fiber is eo great that it furnishes bulk enough to prevent and relieve constipation. In & part-bran food. the quantity of fiber fs so that there is only a puny amount to do & herculean task. ALL-BRAN brings sure results, To Too Demand it. BRAN every day—or in chronic cases, with every meal. As Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN journeys through the system its fiber remains unchanged. It is what doctors call a bulk food—a bulk food which sweeps the intestines clean—a bulk food which absorbs and carries moisture through the intestinal tract, stimulating natu- ral, healthy action. Something habit-forming pills and drugs can never do. Serve Kellogg's ALL-BRAN with milk or cream, sprinkled over cereals; cooked with Warning: Be sure to get Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN. Only ALL-BRAN brings sure results. A part- bran product can only be partially effective. Kellogg's is the one, only and original ALL- BRAN. All grocers sell it. Leading hotels and restaurants serve it. Buy a package to- day. If eaten regularly, it is guaranteed to bring permanent relief or the grocer returns the purchase price. The original ALL-BRAN—ready-to-eat ho!. ceru.]s; in soups, or made into the many recipes given on the package. Doctors recom- mend Kellogg's ALL-BRAN. after a few days’ trial. You will, too, You'll become an entkusiast when you feel the surge of vigorous bloed in your veins again. COOKED-KRUMBLED READY 10 EAT Fi e “; LRERST colbany N worth knowin b AIT A MINUTE. You don’t need to open up that vacuum tank to fill it after you have run completely out of gas. D’ll show you an easier way. Just step on the starter and spin the motor for half a minute or so while I plug this vent with my finger. Your engine will suck the air out of the vacuum tank and fill it with gas for you.” Justanother handy trick the Fleet Boss has learned from experi- ence. Nowonderheis full of such stunts. He hasbeen working with automobile engines for twenty years. Maybe that is why he always recommends “Standard” Motor Oils for they have two generations of experience in re» fining behind them. Experience counts in refining as in every- thing else. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey) “STANDARD” [Polarine] MOTOR OILS A RESULT OF 55 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE IN REFINING