Evening Star Newspaper, March 10, 1926, Page 7

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ST, ALBAN COUNGIL Be Held in Northwest. Tsiand, Mich.. 1wy ha 48 w = | places Burleith Association, Third to |f\i fte Join, Makes Agreement : Effective. mittee were the guests v Coolidge at luncheon under advisement un With accession of its third con i S lattend the conference. stituent body Mount St. Alban Council of Citizens' Asociations e ality last night. i) Lapics) economy and _efti peration of State G heritance taxes will CHICAGO, Al = walls and ficemen as Pren NATIONAL VAC 1515 U Se. Naw, and a rinse. That's all, when you use these soft pads N Nostis S | o - o partici n of the question. | COLLIDES WITH CAR. Man EKnocked Unconscious From| Motor Cycle in Accident. Thomas Barnes, colored, was | nocked of ospital ind him | alive when he arr i on > to =0 home for suppet at the OUR ENTIRE BUSINESS | Now Located in Our Own Blde. ahont INE AND ANTITOXIN INSTITUTE he choice hetween the two| as been left to a referendum | ate chief executives, ' decided upon yesterday at u meeting here of the committee of the governors' | . It was decided to hold | tive com. esiden taken H: 5 invitation te | The President was told that among | | the principal topics to be discussed | at the 3 rights , in the | Mit In- |} MAN MISSING IN FIRE. THE . KEVENING | LEFT TO REFERENDUM. |LAW ENFORCEMENT |7 | Governors' Next Conference May | ADHERENTS TO0 DINE ,h,,';h‘ vard and Others Will Speak at | Potomac, Md. Special Dispateh to The Star, CHEVY CHASE, Md., March 10. | A dinner has been arranged by the t| United Law Enforcement Clubs of 1| Maryland to be held at the Congres- *| sional Country Club, Potomae, Md.. G, A 6:30 T liated with the N ment ‘om ry Peobody n an. . Chace man of Montgomery County. hace will welcome the guests 10 ) —Totter- | el For the final a new Topcoat. you'll be with “ours.” X At bbb b b A A b A b 7, v SREGISTERED STAR. [aml introduce Mrs. George H. l,amar’ 1| new motor more than of Rockville, who will preside. Sen- 3 Bratton of New Mexico, 0. Clark, pastor of Mra. Jesse Nicholson, chairman of the 'Sul‘ "ederation of Democratic Women: Mrs. William H. Chase of Riverdale, of Representaties: president of the Maryland Federation of Republican Clubs: Bishop William F. McDowell of the Methodist Epis: copal Church, Dr. A. C. Christie of silver Spring and others will speak. The United Law FEncorcement Clubs of Maryland s non-partisan organization composed of mi 1 Women. supporting candidates in the next election who declare themseves for law enforcement and the uphold- ing of the Constitution. The commissioner of police of Lon- don recently refused a license to a hus having four-wheel hrakes hecause “a car so fitted might pull up ton quickly and a vehicle be- hind perhaps crash into it. ontside touch— And we know pleased Rogers Peet and *Haddington Topcoats, $65 to $25. And the Spring Four-Forty Hats to top it all at $4.40. Exclusively at EYER’S SHO 1331 F Street PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE AT SEVENTH The Largest Men's and Boys' Wear Store in Washington TOPCOATS interpreting the Spring style notes 22 14th St. i OU know the long service you can posite Franklin Park CLAFTLIN Est. 1889 Formerly Opticians Bth and F and cin e Optometrists BLAmfltAuS B - cannot be hidden. Get rid of them now by regular treatments with Resinol [ASEBONITE Strings oastck |, lubrication is the very life of your car. For that reason you can't be too careful. “EBONITE,” the best, costs no more. But be sure to get it. EBONITE | 3. (ITS SHREDDED OiL ) | R ISSIONS ¢REAR AXLES ! BAYERSON OIL WORKS : COLUMBIA 5228 When You Catch Cold ub on Musterole Musterole is easy to apply with the fingers and works right away. Often it prevents a cold from turn- ing into “flu” or pneumonia. It does all the good work of grandmother’s mustard plaster without the blister. Mustero'e is a clean. white oint- ment, made of oil of mustard and other home simples. It is recom- mended by many doctors and nurses, Try Musterale for sore throat, cold | on the chest, rheumatism, lumbago, | pleurisy, <tiff neck. bronchitis, asthma. neuralgia, congestion, pains and aches of the back and joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil- blains, frosted feet-—colds of all sorts, To Mothers: Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Children’s Musterole. Jars & Tubes _ Better than a mustard plaster English Topcoats A wide range of English coats in a choice of patterns that will appeal to most any taste. Grays, browns and fancy gray over- plaids—especially made for Saks—they embody all the requirements of the Saks standard for their apparel for men. Every coat is weatherproofed. instance, the Models Priced ~ $27.50 Saks—Third Floor get out of a topcoat—warm days of early Spring, cool days in Summer— b ancll?‘ then a lot more in the Fall. or : weave cheviot with wide lapels, new smart length in the tubular body. A topcoat that appeals to smart dressers. blue fancy Single and Double Breasted mi $35 3 ase Baptist Church: Wil liam Tyler Page. clerk .of the House | BEGUMES REA['IYI“H‘;"“; h'm'|-.-fi|':.\|IP‘R'",:'G\.ni:'u.':r‘{?:::iScnntor Bratton, Bishop McDowell & { inac or Cheyenne, | WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1926, YOU ONE OF THE 4000,000°? FOUR MILLION men and women walked up to the polls at the last presidential election and voted for a party whose platform called for Government operation of railways, of pub- lic utilities, of power companies, and for a Government-operated marketing corporation. AT THE time they were voting, a great experiment in government opera- tion of business was going on, not in distant Russia, but in our own state of North Dakota. The State was building $5000 homes for workingmen to be paid for at $28.65 a month. The State was operating a mill and elevator, a bank, an insurance company, and a packing plant. What happened? Fifty homes were built at 61 per cent more than the estimated cost. Who got the fifty homes? Not the workingmen! The State has charged off, to date, a loss of $300,000 on its home-building scheme. The mill and elevator, built at a cost of $3,044,000, could be duplicated for $1,500,000. Its operating losses in four years were $1,000,000. The packing plant failed and 20,000 citizens turned out the other day in zero weather to welcome “big business” back on the packing job. Likewise, the bank and insurance plans failed. Citizens of the state paid dearly for the experiment of turning over business operations-to politicians. They paid in taxes, they paid in lost illusions. ] The dramatic story is told by an eye- witness in the March number of NATION’S BUSINESS. F YOU were one of the 4,000,000 who voted for Government operation of business, and are open-minded, you will want to read the story of North Dakota’s return to sanity. The same story has been written many times since Diocletian, but the golden promises of “the friends of the people” still have their lure. At this moment the legislature of a great state is considering a similar housing plan; Congress is debating subsidized marketing on a grand scale and the operation of a gigantic power project. If you are one of those who see clearly that the real purpose of government is to protect political liberty and to preserve fair play among its people, and leave the hazards—and rewards—of business un- dertakings to the individual, you. too, will want to read the March number of NATION’S BUSINESS. ) OUR form of government is the best mechanism ever designed by the brain of man. It protects the individual in his right to try for leadership, whether he be a politician, a doctor or a business man. When we ask that mechanism to doctor its people, or to manufacture, buy, sell, and transport for its people, it breaks down. It wasn’t built that way The checks and balances necessary to .nsure political liberty make for lost :otion, delay, postponed decisions, anc waste, when applied to business operation— which is fatal. Most important of all, when govern- ment steps in, it destroys the very indi- vidualism our Government was set up to foster and protect. NATION’S BUSINESS treats these timely questions of government and business with fairness and good humor, not in the sesquipedalian language of dry and heavy economics, but as one business man talks to another. It is viv- idly illustrated with pictures, cartoons, charts and drawings, and despite its active belief that the profit motive is vital to all business, it has an abiding conviction that anything which is not for the public good is not for the good of business. 219,856 business leaders, who read it regularly, are finding NATION’S BUSINESS of inspiration and value. 9 ® MERLE THORPE, Editor ,#) v PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT WASHINGTON BY THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE OF THE UNITED STATES ]

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