Evening Star Newspaper, April 7, 1937, Page 27

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, [MPARTIAL UNPIRE URGED BY SIBLEY Junior Board of Trade Hears Speaker Stress Rules for Business. Individualism under the Constitu- tion, played according to the ‘“rules of the game,” and impartial umpirage is the course to be steered in this country in the future, Harper Sibley, president of the United States Cham- ber of Commerce, told the Washing- ton Junior Board of Commerce at its third annual banquet last night at the Mayflower Hotel. Sibley told members that, although the movements of democracy might be slow, they are possessed of a sure touch impossible to militaristic gov- ernments, especially in business. “Business needs to be played ac- eording to rules and the rules must be interpreted by an umpire. How- ever, business men want a ‘say’ in making the rules and umpires not controlled politically or otherwise,” he said, and pointed out that only under a democracy can this goal be accom- plished. Urges Theories Be Welded. “We are now groping for means to co-ordinate and satisfy employe, em- plover and stockholder. Sit-down strikes won't accomplish it; neither will politically controlled arbitration or ‘rugged individualism’ The solu- | tion lies in welding their good points | into a code passed on and indorsed by the American people as a whole.” | Sibley cited quasi-legislative, quasi- | executive trade bodies, such as the | Federal Trade Commission and the Interstate Commerce Commission, as the most satisfactory solution to the problem yet hit upon, their greatest | asset being freedom from polm('al‘ control | Sibley concluded his speech by say- In the Hunt i Country | BY NINA CARTER TABB. | R. J. P. JONES won his first | start of the season in the | first race of the day at Bowie yesterday when his | Miss Oak came in to win over seven | other 2-year-olds. “Doc Jack” Jones | of Raccoon Ford, Va. (near Culpeper) is one of the most successful trainers’ of race horses and steeplechasers in the country. He was graduated in medicine at the University of Virginia some years ago, went to Niagara Falls and hung up his shingle, and was do- | ing well. But. as he says, “I had been riding and jumping horses all my life, and I heard the Virginia horses calling | to-me way up North.” Back he came, for he just couldn't keep away from horses. The late “Billy” Garth was his father-in-law, and every one knows what a good horseman he was. | On February 1. “Jack” Jones brought his string from Charlottesville to the Comdr. J. K. L. Ross place at Laurel, Md., at one time the most noted train- ing farm in America, the Ross place was sold about six years ago and now is owned by “Ral” Parr of Baltimore. | Jack Jones is training Mr. Parr’s s!rmg along with those of other owners in- | cluding Mrs. Louise Viau of New York, Mrs. Van Cleef of Buffalo, N. Y., and Charlottesville; Mrs. Ellsworth Augus- tus of Cleveland, W. H. Lipscomb of | ‘Washington and Leesburg and P. H. Faulconer of Charlottesville. | The set-up at the old Ross place for training horses couldn’t be better. A quarter-mile indoor track, glassed in, surrounds dozen of box stalls, all well- kept and neat as a pin. Around this track the horses are galloped and worked during the Winter, on bad days, | and there is a beautiful outdoor mile track for good days. Dr. Jones' stables have been a pleasure for all horse-lov- | ing people to see this Spring and many visitors from Baltimore and Washing- ton are on hand in the early mornings to see the horses go. Some others of the Jones training will start at Bowie this week, then Havre de Grace, | Pimlico and on to New York. | | { THE Middleburg Hunt race meeting will hold its firsteday of racing Saturday, and the second next Wed- | nesday. The course and stables are ready at Glenwood for the many good | horses that will be here to run in the | #ix races each meeting. There are over 130 entries for the Saturday meeting. The feature race will be the Middleburg Cup, a timber | race over a flagged course of 4 miles, | for 4-year-olds and upward. The entries in this race include: Wel- | bourne Jake, owned by Paul Mellon, winner of the Deep Run Cup Steeple- chase last Saturday, ridden by Jack | Skinner; Career, by Henry Frost; Gigolo, by Bill Street, and Fugitive, by | | “Mike” Kerr. Middleburg will be overflowing with | visitors this week end and until after Wednesday. Among the entertain- | ments will be a large luncheon by Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. V. Cushman | at their place, Windsor; a luncheon | for officials and judges of the races by Mr. and Mrs. Danie]l C. Sands at Benton, and a luncheon by Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Iselin. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bkinner are giving a tea and cocktail party after the races and Mrs. Ray- mond Belmont and Miss Winnifred Maddox are having an afternoon party. The Riding and Hunt Club hunter trials, to take place at Bradley Farms, Md.,, on Saturday, have a long list of | the best hunterrs around Washington entered. Among those who will ride | are Mr. and Mrs. George Greenhalgh of Berryville, Va.; Mrs. Robert Gug- genheim, Mrs. Ernest Smith, Mrs. Roland Riddick, Mrs. L. T. Hundt, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Hanson, Mrs. N. L. McDowell, Miss Robin Riddick, Miss Margaret Hill, Miss Elaine Mc- Dowell, Gen. Kromer, Col. A. M. Miller, Col. P. J. Johnson, Claude Owen, John Paulding Brown, Rase and Gibson Semmes, “Mike” McConihe, Dr. Joseph Horgan, H. H. Semmes, Fenton Fadeley, Comdr. William Justice Lee and Marshall Exnicios ADVERTISEMENT. Stomach Sufferer “Double Checks” Acids and Wins Relief No wonder KALIN Antacid Powder i 30 popu- lar—it works two ways. First, it gives the delicate lining or membrane of the stomach a ‘protective coating—which stops the over-active 2cids from aggravating the iritated tiomes. Then it neutralizes the excess acids and thus aids in restoring normal digestion. If you suffer from sour stomach, heartburn, belching, gas cramps, acid_indigestion or othes caused by hyperacidity, over- mdulie faulty diet—get a package of KALIN !mm “your druggist today. The first dose should §| ou relel. Generous size package only *our !mm\ey bfl(’kt—l‘ yauh > 't agree it does more for your sick stomach than anything yos ever used. Ask for genuine KALIN. A x disorders ing there is room in every city for li Junior Board of Commerce to add the “enthusiasm of youth to the wisdom of years” in business organization. Nev. Officers Inducted. The Junior Board's new officers for the coming year was inducted at the banquet: John Bleeker, jr., president; Arthur H. Clephane, first vice presi- dent; C. Oscar Berry, second vice president; Minor Hudson, secretary; Charles L. Carr, treasurer, and A. Z. Foster Wood, general counsel. Albert E. Conradis, outgoing presi= dent, was the first speaker of the eve- ning, followed by Bleeker and Charles C. Clark, chairman of the Membership Committee, who told how membership of the Junior Board has risen from 225 to 420 in the past year. Two round-trip airplane tickets to Cleveland were presented to Lyle O'Rourke, toastmaster, and Ben M. Morgan for bringing in the most mem- bers during the year. Prominent guests at the banquet in=- cluded Senator King, chairman of the | Senate District Committee; Edgar Morris, president of the Washington Board of Trade; David A. Skinner, executive secretary of the United States Chamber of Commerce; Eugene Meyer, publisher of the Washington Post; Robert Cotrell, executive secretary of the ‘Board of Trade; John Saul, presi- dent of B. F. Saul & Co., and Clarence Phelps Dodge, president of the Com- munity Chest. Entertainment followed the speeches. PEOPLE’S LOBBY TO MEET Senators Wheeler of Montana and Frazier of North Dakota and Repre- sentative Coffee of Washington, will discuss “What Can Congress Do Now?” at a luncheon meeting of the People's Lobby at the National Press Club Saturday. Wheeler will speak on taxation, Frazier on farming and unemployment and Coffee on public ownership. The public is invits WALL PAPER 100 Beautiful patterns to_ select from. Enough for rool sl. 10x12 feet ORGAN’S Paints and Hardware 421 10th St. NN\W. NA. 7888 delightfully bridal, demure of neckline, wholly feminine in its ivory satin and embel- lishing lace. $16.95. NEGLIGEES, THIRD FLOOR. sy Slip and Panties match gleaming beauty of ivory satin and lavishly applied ecru lace. SILK UNDERWEAR AND COSTUME SLIPS, THIRD FLOOR, And Gown + « . in lustrous satin, exquisitely, lavishly laden with lace. With tiny buttons down the back just one of the en- gaging details. $16.95. S1LK UNDERWEAR, THIRD FLOOR, W e in the £ Underlying . . the sweep, the perennial chic of the wedding gown, a Bien Jolie foundation of persuasive white satin and elastic topped by lace. $12.50. Corsers, THIRD FLOOR. Y 1 Footnote by Daniel Green, white satin, rosette trimmed, high-climb- ing, for bridal leisure, GARBER FUNERAL TO BE TOMORROW Art Dealer Will Be Buried in Reading, Pa., After Rites Here. Funeral services for Paul Greenwood Garber, 72, art dealer, who died yes- terday at his home, 1210 Eighteenth street, will be held tomorrow at the Alcohol 19 to 219 by Volume ROMA WINE & LIQUOR CO., WASH., D. C. When all the world D. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1937. Covenant-First Presbyterian Church. | The time will be announced later. Burial will be at Reading, Pa. A native of Philadelphia, Mr. Garber came to Washington in 1907. He was manager of the rug department at Woodward & Lothrop’s and later at W. B. Moses before he established the Garber Galleries on Connecticut avenue in 1911, Before coming here, he was con- nected with M. Thomas & Sons, Phila- HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE Lowered Distressing Symptoms Relieved in Many Cases, Reports Prominent Doctor . . .. .| Dr. Frederic Damrau, eminent physician of Park Ave., New ‘York, reports 26 cases of High Blood Pressure treated by himself and Doctor Associates with ALLIMIN Essence of Garlic Parsley Tablets. At the end of period of observation, reports Dr. Damrau, the systolic blood pressure was lowered in 19 cases and the diastolic bldod pressure was lowered in 21 out of Headaches, reports the Doctor, were completely cleared or_considerably relieved in 82.3% of the cases in which it was the 26 c: present at the start, and dizsiness was com- pletely cleared or considerably relieved in 100% of the eases in which it was present at the start. In summarizing his report, Dr. Damrau says: “In 84.67 of cases, ALLI- MIN proved beneficial, either by lowering blood pressure or relieving the associated symptoms of headache or diaziness.” delphia art dealers, and subsequently with Costikyan Bros. of New York, oriental rug importers. Surviving Mr. Garber are his widow, Mrs. Margaret R. Garber; a son, Paul E, Garber; a daughter, Mrs. H. Newton Blue, and a sister, Mrs. John H. Lofland, of Philadelphia. e Peru has sbolished all road and bridge tolls. ALLIMIN Essence of are being used by thousands of High Blood ure Sufferers in all parts of the country | with highly satisfactory results. ALLIMIN Tablets e tasteless—odorless—and posi- | tively guaranteed free from dangerous drugs | of every kind. At good drug stores every- | where. 50e per box. At PEOPLES and other good drug stores. is young—and in love with life, the il W ...seems the inevitable expression of the season’s joyous promise, its fresh and eloquent beauty. Silver for the Bride Exquisite expressions of your good wishes— are typified by these gifts from our outstand- ing collection in Sterling silver: A Gorham Bowl with pierced rim $22.50 Three-piece After-Dinner Coffee Service, $60 Snvir RooM, FRst FLOOR. Royélty—:a .New Style for Wedding Engraving A style especially designed. for the bmfe who is to be married in this Gotonation Spring. Samples will be gladly sent you upon request. A Wood- ward & Lothrop service to the bride is the erss- ing ob‘invelapes ot a slight additionaf” chmqe‘ mvxm Room, Pmst FLOOR. Ve BEFORE vYOoU BUY ANY HNEW (AR Compare Our Rates! A substantial amount of money may be saved by financing your new carthrough First Credit Corporation. Ourrates are based on only 5% ($5 per $100 per year of the original unpaid balance plus the cost of insurance at manual rates). Write or phone for monthly payments (up to 24 months) on the car of your choice; r and insist upon this low-cost finance plan. 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