B -«m«\ ) What Waffles! Ask your grocer for Log Cabin—and know the ‘wonders this matchless maple flavor works with waflles. LOG CABIN SYRUP © 1929, P. Co..ine. Serve Domino ‘Powdered Sug- ’a -with cere- als and fruits. hey taste bet- er and: syou will rrect. Al- Mothers—Try Mild Of cou you .know good old Musierole; hew quickly, how easily it relieves chest colds, sore throat, rheumatic and neuralgic pain, sore oints and muscles, stiff neck and lumbago. We al: CHILDREN'S MUSTEROLE Musterole in milder form. Un- excelled for relief of croupy coughs and cold and relieves without the blister of hioned mustard plaster. Keep a ja It comes ready pply instantly, without fuss the available. \ Best Remedy for Obstinate Cough Made at Home You'll never know how quick- 1y a stubborn cough or chest cold can be conquered, until you try this famous recipe. It is used in millions of homes, because it gives more prompt, positive relief than anything else. It's no trouble at all to mix and costs but a trifle. Into a pint bottle, pour 23 ounces of Pinex ;ithen add plaiy granulated sugar syrup or Straimgd honey to make a full pint. This saves two- thirds of the money usually spent for cough’medicines, and gives you a purer, better remedy. It never spoils, and tastes good—children i 3 flanud fll’ant‘ o It also promptly ]m‘shs tfi,-afi-flnum philezm, and; at the s e, it is absorbed :into’ the re it acts directly om thé bFopehial tubes. Tk thrcovlo?dn cti ius why it brings ‘suéh gui even in bronchial coug inex §8 & tompounhfiwfl.fl; containing:the gctive; sote, in a refined; and gno‘wn as nn:“ of est healing age ousls, hest colds a8 broo- chial troubles. Do not accept a substitute for Pinex. It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or 3 money refunded. !{Pen your cnildren Ciy for It Mothers, who take one simple precaution, are seldom .worried. With a bottle of Fletcher's Cas- toria in the house they can do what their doctor would tell them to do, when baby is fretful, fever- ish, colicky, constipated or stuffed- up with cold—give a few drops of this pure vegetable, pleasant- tasting preparation. It coml’ons Baby and soothes him to sleep in a jiffy. It’s perfectly safe for the infant. Use it freely— and as often as needed, special- s advise. . A more liberal dose is all it takes to comfort and re- lieve older childreh, when fever- ishness, bad breath, no appetite, colds, etc., show they need a good The mark of genuine is the Fletcher signature on the wrapper. Lcok for it to avoid imitations. Chiidren’s Musterole | want you to know| OIL ROW DECISION 1S DUE THURSDAY [Victory for Either Party in Preliminary Clash May " Mean Court Fight. By the Consolidated Press Association. WHITING, Ind., March 4.—Big busi- ness' “battle of the century” goes the { full route to a decision this week, when the champion heavyweights in the oil world clash here to determine cantrol lof the gigantic Standard Oll Co. of Indiana. The two battlers—Col. Robert W. Stewart, chairman of the board, and John D. Rockefeller, jr., whose name symbolizes oil—stand ready to uncork all the tricks of the game to push any advantage, This means that it is not at all certain that the encounter here March 7 will be the final clash of the two oil glants. When the verdict is given by the 9.000,000 proxies, if favorable to Col. Stewart, the Rockefeller forces are ex- pected to announce that they have just begun to fight. They may claim the right to select a minority of the board of directors and dig in for further ef- forts to unseat the chairman. . Court Fight Held Probable. In the event that tM'RockeXgl]er forces come out on top .of the scramble, then a long-drawn-out court fight may ‘ensue. The Stewart forces are rumored to be re: to seek what is being termed a “billion-dollar injunc- tion” to prevent a vote on a change in management. The report is that a Kefeller would be used as the basis a claim that this oil family had violated .the Federal court decree of May 15, 1911, forcing & break-up of the Standard Ofl Co. as & monopoly in restraint of trade, _'ghe Supreme Court decision then said: : “We construe the decree, not as de- priving the stockholders of the cor- porations after the dissolution of the combipation of the power to make nor- mal and lawful contracts or agree- . it penetrates, sno:hes,menu but as restraining them fr by any device whatever, recreating rectly or indirectly, the.illegal combi- nation which the decree dissolved.” The attempt would be to show that Rockefellers were seeking again to obtain control of the individual Stand- ard Oil Co Whatever the outcome, the stockhold- ers are so eager to get ringside seats for the big battle that the arena has heen moved from the Standard Ofl a ministration building here to the com- munity hall. There are 1,500 sea May Know' LM- Today. ; Fairly’ definite” information on the final line-un, indicating the outcome of | the fizht, should be had by officials of the company today Wwhen all proxies must be filed if the holders- want to g2t in on the battle. Whether all of them are to count or not is another question. Prelimi- nary contests on Thursday will involve 8 decision on this matter, with Charles Evans Hughes, former justice of the United States Supreme Court and former Secretary of State. taking the Rockefellers’ side. Stewnr! himself and his attorney, A. Hopkins, will up- hold the side of the board. The Rockefeller group enters the final struggle claiming 57 per cent of the total possible proxies and 16,000 out of the 57,000 stockholders on its side. Should this prove true, the battle would be all over but the $houting and the court procedure. But it is rously | denied by the Stewart forces, who con- tend that their opponents can't know i what their status is because they do not have the proxy books. Stewart claims ;hnl 32,000 sl:c‘kholg‘c)roso m already <hind - him, ha; faied to vony: e 4, The. bitterncss of the antegonism be-| {ween the {wo contending:groups prob ably seldom has been rivaled in an dustrial fight. Each side has lmflud bmadslm; m.bn:i& lxihe ofl:ex cha) moral and men! CIM g Ilfll mincing of ™ Senbeflll!znm To the victor in Thursday’s fight | ht be: in m virtually -all of the board- of o e present dlrecwn In that case three mfi. possible chairmen, favorable to the oll kings family, are mentioned—K. R. Kingsbury, president of the Standard Oil Co. of California; W. 8. Farrish, (President of the Humble Ofl Co., a subsidiary of the Standard of New 1 Jersey, or James Moffatt, ucc president of the New Jersey company But Mr. Rockefeller, jr., hns publicly commended .E, O. Seubert, president of the Standard of Indiana, who is porting Stewart. If the move is ply to oust the present chairman, then Mr. Seubert is expected to Teceive the chair nmmg u control of the com« sought by the mkefe)len. then cne or the other men mln be named. _ (Coprrie WOMEN TO CONDUCT COMMERCIAL WEEK 52,000 to Celebrate Business and Professional Achievements March 10-16. mmwggm NEW YORK (#).—Fifty-two thousand business women of the country will cele~ brate the achievements of business and professional women during the past quarter of a century with the second annual National Business Women's week, March 10 to 16. In nearly 1,000 communities attention will be called to the fact that 9,000,000 women go to business dally, in prac- vically every vocational field. The National Federation of Business and Professional Womens’ Clubs, the largest business women's group in the country, is sponsoring the week. The organization has 52,000 members lnd local clubs in 47 States. It has 500 scholarship loan funds thre llt the United States, which give high school educations to young girls expect- | ing to enter the business world. A p: gram will be presented jn each c r:uni where the federation has a ranc Admmmrnuon of loan funds and an occupational survey of the members of the organization, more complete and scientific than any survey of business ‘women ever before undertaken, will be emphasized on the program, Each com- munity will set aside one day as Thrift day and devote the program to budget- ing, sayings and investments. A public relations dinner will be featured Thursday -evening, Match 14, in each communlty Plague Ia Being Eradicated. The demand for plague vaccine in| India has shown a very marked de- cline during the past year, being little more lhan' a third of the l:’evlous year, indicating a lower incidence of plague throughout India. More than half a million rats caught in Bombay City were received during the year, Their examination is the largest of the kind in the world and Bombay in this respect is frequently quoted as a model. The statistics suggest that both infected rats and human plague are undergoing progressive diminution in the city. A serum has been found which has a record of curing 80 per cent of the infected animals which it has been tried upon, but it has yet to be tried upon man, would mean the retirement of | THE._EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. .C.. MONDAY,. MARCH . 4, 1929. _— e e ———— PACKARD PRICES REDUCED ALL STANDARD EIGHT MODELS E HAVE just been advised by oelegram from the Padmd factory that effective March 4, 1929.all modeh_of;‘the Shndard Elght lre reduced $160. The new prices are-as 126-Inch Wheelbase Models The SEDAN, 5 Passengers o e The COUPE, 2 Passengers & e : The CONVERTIBLE COUPE, 2 Passengers . . 133-Inch Wheelbase Models The RUNABOUT, 2 Passengers The PHAETON, 5 Passengers. .. The TOURING, 7 Passengers . The COUPE, 4 Passengers . The CLUB SEDAN, 5 Passengers The SEDAN, 7 Passengers : The SEDAN-LIMOUSINE, 7 Passengets (Prices at the factory) . $2275 o . 2350 2425 $2375 . 2375 2475 2575 2575 2575 2675 Since the introduction of the Packard Six, forerunner of today’s Packard Eight, $40,199,000 have been expended for facilities “useful in the manu- facture and distribution of Packard cars. Because of this huge expenditure incomparably better cars have been developed, step by step, and now are offered for less than half the price of the original Packard Six. Packard has concentrated its millions and its experience on one name and on one ideal. The public has been most gracious in its support. And as Packard has prospered, it has shared its prosperity with those who buy its cars—giving better cars at constantly lower prices. These new low prices follow the price reduction announced but a few months ago on Packard’s Custom line, They afford the public a more favorable opportunity than ever before to have the many advantages and features found only in Packard cars. . 7 14 '”‘.1 When may we demonstrate these featum to you? Your used car will be accepted as cash, and if of average value will more than make the down payment on a new car. Then—a profitable and enjoyable ownership last- ing four or five times the payment period, an ounership more advantageous now than at any time during Packayd’s thirty years of fine car building. Packard Washmgton Motor Car Co. CONNECTICUT at. S 0.COOLICAN, President ADAMS 6130