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- URGES INDUSTRIAL EXPANSION f CIT Leese Soes Bxg Opportu mzty‘ Ww for Capital Commer« monthi (In(ul R through allowed second vice body. ceiversh + Habilitic OIN THE CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CLUB of the FEDERAL- A\" RICAN your 4 super-lubrication w use THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ©. Indians Give Deer to Virginia Governor Pamuntey Indinns presenting deer to governor. ol- ;| get along EK METROPOLITAN GREETED BY PRESIDENT bishop Polycarpos in Formal Robes Presented at White House y Greek Minister. , ‘the ven- Xanthi, nding hero in the nian and t-reek the World War, and | expulsion rom Tur- of about 1,400, nted to Presi- by the Minis- , made an the White talk with the :d the thanks the extensive in saving ipment to G can fowl, a3 n the reju- 3 ]mulll\ supply of the contemplated ient of prize American pigs and ir Lumber BOARDS OFFICE-6and C Sts. SW. P MEIGS-5tand Fla. Ave.N.E. Sutden draughts, {n @ Kot room causs ne: Relieves Stiffness Caused by Chill Pressman tells how newspaper worl n working in a news- at Dorchester, Mass., great trouble with ness owing to fre- draughts of cold loors were opened - in rolls of paper. ir number began iment, and now to kcep Sloan’s id for the entire work I rub a owing warmth- as »d is brought to the and soon the achin bottle today. All [ IJEENT States and Foreign Countriss, d in tin boxes, FPiles which every~ NY, Besuront and Pine Streets, St. Louls, Ma, Since 1689 | Gov. Harry Flood Byrd, at the execu- | tive ma In the Fall or Winter months Indians come with turk: . ducks, rabbits, quall, fis * | This time it was a [ much as two of the counciiors could with when they from the train and made the |the streets to the mans T hm hl o are devoting themselves to the welfare of the race. Gov. Byrd accepted the gift, assur- ing the Indians of his interest in their general good and commending them for their good citizenship. Chlef Cook is seen at the left of the picture and Gov. Byrd and his son at the right. The picture was taken in front of the governor's mansion. Kathleen™ Norris, Peter B. Kyne, H. C. Witweg, Arthur Somers Roche, W. 8omerset Maugham, B, Phillips Oppenheim, Lella Warren, Edgar Wallace, Ernest Poole. NORTHEAST OPPOSES Salary Clause Turns Citizens Against Measure—Indorse Children’s Court Bill. Vigorous opposition to the )mnm rule” bill commissioners, 1,000 for commis mpose too burden 1 ed that work to on the city. its” indorse- » bill which would 4 s court in the District. The fh pndemnation ction on land or the purpose eriticism was duuua of the of deeds, at the the bill, = hitects in the city after a Another fight developed measure amending the pres tive act to provide for the holding of persons suspected of crimes for a longer period than provided in the present law. The dis postponed until the n after there scemed no pros tion at last nlght's seseion President Evan H. Tucker presided. ' More than 50 muscles in the body receive a slight impulse during a declares a delentist, ect of ac- SHORT STORIES L4 “I'm the ManWho Broke the BUNK at Monte Carlo™ By IRVIN S. COBB ‘_A Story which explains “IT" by the inventor of the term— ELINOR GLYN /A Little Woman Who Won Half a, Million Dollars, By 0. O. McINTYRE TUESDAY, JANUARY 171, 1927, BOY DIES OF LOCKJAW. Gordon King of Warrenton Fatally Injured by Toy Pistol. Gordon King, 11 years old, of War- a., died from lockjaw in his mother, Mrs. Inez King, lay jil in the same hospital. Physicians have withheld from her the knowledge of her boy's death. Tetanus developed from a slight wound sustained on the hand 10 days ago when Gordon was playing with a toy pistol which fired blank cy Hospital Sunday, while cartridges. How the Employer and the Solving Aencas Greatest Business Problem | Worker By the New Plan Explained in W. JETT LAUCK'S Book POLITICAL and INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY | “d book that was much needed. I shall commend it to my classes.” — FrankuiN H. Gmopines. Professor Lauck tells the story of certain big concerns that have found a way to | G seriven andios get every employee to do his best—by applying the principles of democracy to business, through cooperation. FOR THE __ T58 toif st INDUSTRIAL cessful concerns that LEADERS have adopted some form of employee rep- resentation—of _active eooperatic employer and employes in Funning !he firm’s affairs. In every case the new plan has banished strikes and caused the workers to increase their effi- ciency. The detailsof the different methodsare given, so that other employers can compare and judge them, choosing such features as can be applied to their own companies with profit. Thie book bl g not to fight capital, bat %o work in partnership with it. t tells of thogsands of workin men who have willlngly increased the qua FOR THE ORGANIZED WORKERS ity and quantity of their product, because | by so doing they knew they could raise thelr own wages. have a share in the con- trol of the bus tatives. A bool vast new field and an_era of greater usefulness for the laboe union. Every labor leader will find it useful. 384 pages. $2.00, net; by mail, $2.14, poit-paid. At All Bookstores, or Direct from the Publishers, FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, 384 Fourth Avenue, New Yerk I IERE is, perhaps, the most dramatic chapter in the recent history of this nation. It is told in February Hearst’s In- ternational-Cosmopolitan by Elizabeth Jaffray, for 17 years housekeeper of the White House, the one person who knows all that wenton behind the jealously guarded doors of the Executive Mansion. She tells of Woodrow Wilson’s sudden return from the speaking tour on which he hoped to force the Senate to accept his peace treaty. Of the mistake which, she thinks, Dr. Grayson made on the first evening at home. Of the An Important New Novel By REX BEACH In “The Mating Call,” the author of “The Spoilers,” “Padlocked” and other studies of American life tells a story of dangerous love amid the kaleidoscopic " scenes of the Florida land boom., s through their represen- | Enjoy MildWlnter Months It's springtime there all winter f&mlirdgolf co:’uflh.‘ « » Mountain for riding and hil + + « a congental social life . . . > Invigorating mineral baths, famous the world mr l:orl .}l:;,l; l:’e‘-lth -bullding qualities; a delight- ealt inter awaits in Hot Springs National Park! Ky Quickly Reached via Missouri Pacific Lines FOUR FAST SERVICES DAILY Lv.Be.Louls. 6:4Spm 1045pm 2:00am 9:05 am . Little. Rock AT Sorimes 700 S3oem 1ism soenm Standard drawing room slee Reclini c:\l.h cllm and coaches. Dininrp::nr nr:unf: all meals. Secure tickets, reservations and ilustrated literature from Erlaot Rt b AOTO RAT ROAD B, 811 Brokaw Bldg., 1457 Broadway, - . New York, N. Y. = “A Service Institution” Hot Springs is the Home of Healthful Mountain Valley Water Behind # Veil 4 Mystery When resident Wilson Lay Paralyzed manner in which the President was fou.nd\unconsa\ous' in his room the next evening while guests were at dinner below., rpee & Then of the days when his life hung bya thread; how: the thread frayed, held—but left him *a figure pitiful beyond words.” And then, in this absorbingly important memoir, Mrs. Jaffray reveals to us for the first time who it was ewho ran our government for a year and a lla{f(. “My love and respect for Mr.Wilson are unbounded,” says she, “but the last year and a half he was in the White House, he was no more himself mentally than he was Physically.” ey ON THE ROAD TO HOLLYWOOD ‘These cartcons by Charles Dana Gibson are a feature.of each issue of Cosmopolitan SERIAL NOVELS L4 Robert Hichens, suthor ¢ “The Garden of Allab”; Anne Dougles Sedgwick, amshor of “The Little Prench Girl”"y Adela Rogem 8t Johns, aushor of “The Skyrocket.® ‘A new story by the author of “The Constant Nymph” =" 'MARGARET KENNEDY » A Complete Drama ot Life Told i) 939 words, By ZONA GALE A Spinster Tells Why Most Wives Are Failores, By