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gg . 'Overcoming ' Bad Breath | Here are ways and means for re- | Bieving this embarrassing condition, f due to constipation. The bomels wnust move daily; he intestines Imustbe relieved of their waste matter n order to enjoy good health. Brregular’ elimination many times wroduces bad breath. The poisons wmust escape somewhere—either in a natural movement, or the offensive form. Try ronight CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILI.S. Druggists, 25 and 7 Scred packages. #intel Emhassy Broadway at Seventieth Street New York City D. D. PHELAN. Manager vou find comfort, exclusiveness, .New York's nd vet but five min- re and the theaters. AII Room -mh Bath 3 50 85° RENT YOUR PIANG ,1 25 WORCHS 1110 G EST. 1879 “Somebody Ought To Tell Hm‘:gl;f . These Facts “The Motorist Who Doesn’t Use ‘ Ebonite Is Missing a Lot! Ebonite keers a heavy film of oil | @bout the gears which absorbs shocks, prevents friction, and makes gear shifting easy at all times in Joday’s congested trafic. | One filling will last 2,500 miles. EBONITE (Combination of Pure Oil) 20 Cents a Shot At Filling Stations and Garages BAYERSON OIL WORKS Columbia 5228 Mission de la Con- | cepdio " SUNSET ROUTE The Ideal All-Year Route | PRICES UNCHANGED IN'LOCAL MARKET : Merchants Say Texas Green Corn Is Not Yet Up to Standard. 1 s being received from quality is discounted by <, who are reported dis: shipments until the condi lo improves. morning reported a of strawberries | wally send heavy | 1 quote 1 T the butter ms terial chanse Luncheon | | Eruit apd Vegetable Review. . eport on frult I o California ! UMMER or wi rv'r—(’m' n no more 8 comforable Southern Par im»mr d Orleans sorge. Then # California route of charm Plan yourtrip at lmrrl headquarters . Genersl Agent A Sweet/Stomich' u1d viality What @ pity when yout) ®re vt 0t whination of and the rercne | ragnesia, « The targe siee for 60 otx e, B A eweet soms b il ynhers, peppe 'CAFRITZ AT HEAD OF JEWISH CENTER Prominent Realtor to Preside O\ey Community Organization—Other Officers Chosen for Service. of the realt s name, Jast sident of the Alf of 1hie b Centers enilent canysigne - ‘ THE EVENING STAR., WASHITINGTO D. O, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 11, 1928. “2% soooooo rows seew 3. PAUL DECISION PROSPERITY NOTE NEW YORK, January 11 (®).— will reduce its sugar crop this on to 4,000,000 tons, or 500,000 |tons less than season's crop, lead. nts were Informed ables from sources in to be close to administra- No official confirmation was re- ceived, but the figures were in line with trade expectations of the Cuban government decree supporting limita- tion pla YOUNG IS ELECTED HEAD {OF ECONOMIC FOUNDATION NEW YORK, {Owen D. Benefit for Northwest in Reorganization. BY J. C. ROYLE Special Dispatch to The Star, NEW YORK. January “[proval by the Interstate” Comme . | Commission of t reorganization for the Chic: Milwaukee & aul Railroad ding Thomas W. member of the board | whose term Psychological and Material | - continental miles of trans hip, had a m: 000 abor, road from recelv man, and Ru | psycholozical effect on 3 elocted to fill Mr, | throughout the northwes | Lamont's place as a trustee to repre: sent hanking. R business taday » n the Jast proved passer {and has done by no n | recard to freizht revenues. effect of the receiv ! “oundation is a trust ) But the | ) | the country, he limitations W 1 on_the company ons. als, towna where shops are loe and division points suffered a dimuni. tion of buying power owing to dimin- ¢ | ished construction and maintenance field of | or industrial science. York Company. anuary 11 (#) e | ‘ts for the sa ‘0. to the Mid Associated Oil ¢ State Ol Co., for more | 000 were signed here yes of employment, | N thwest Is Prosperous. 0 fitle part of their profitx ire_denendent_on_railroad_rates and Don’t Endure Slipping FALSE TEETH Do your false tecth drop or siip uhen vou talk. eat, laugh or snee Don t be ' annoged and. embarraseed & _minute jonger. Fasteeth. a new powder .fo aprinkle on sour plates holde teeth firm fine feeling of security and com: 0 _gummv. gooey. Dasty taste or Get Fasiceth ioday at Peoples tores —Advertisement esenting the (hroul were said to be ||l ess_of §6,000.000, | amount to be determined | by final audits, which are to be made | at once. bt _— fort The man with a business mxmn [Aselin < own busines: OU may not have realized it, but after that slipper ep- isode led the Prince into such a hasty marriage, he found that Cinderella was—well, let us be kind and say, ‘‘impulsive.” He wished Cinderella wouldn’t call him Rex. She had an uncomfortable fondness for nicknames. He asked her to explain why she always ad- dressed their daughter as Cer- eus. He knew it was a plant, of course, of the cactus family — not a flattering idea—but she laughed and said something about the flower, and when 1t .| ness of the actizities and consequent low levels | & railroad service. Consequently they the railroad wille Iy ir territory and they weleome the wnrestricted op- eration “of the o The ca heen el freight vy al produets, v farmers this move bitterly and th competition y ratiafod with ft hond e | which will mean, however, (- expenditure GENERAL ELECTBIC co. NEW YORK, its freight and |n|< id have asked per- wi b abjecting to this 4 s | the v therefore desfined to play an import- | March. At part in the business life of the FOUNDRY IRON RISES. woare in contempla | mergers extend from one country to another and tion corner Wil affec town in hiave an influe ¥ Nation, since t} wore workers than near endeavor of the Tnterstate ¢ mmission in the St. Paul surprise, It had } Le Bourget 2127 California St New i ments of woreh G Anything Into A LAMP Bring Us Your Vases,' Etc. “Reasonably Done” + MUDDIMAN § 709 13th St. N. W, Main 140—6436 Larze rooms w Apartments, $35 Open und lighted eve: Until 9 o'clock, See Resident Manager FLOYD E. DAVIS 733 12th Street N.W. Main 352353 From the short story, “Cinderviia’s Daaghter," ia Febryary Cosmopolitan cast for some time, but it is likely that 10 of the partics at issue were en- The commiss by the Ilmnr\ 11 (P).—0Or- | 1 fbr Soczalnlzgw ernoon caller - -a cup of tea, - a cheery talk deh d fi’xend zs with "SAI.AI]A" AN OPTORIAL By Edwm H. Etz HOW sou see : jeet, i’n“‘d‘:‘;:i‘l:ginr features ot eve isely the same, b object are id Shdibe are right— becoming. Jee Etz and See Better® POPTOMETRIST] 1217 G Streets CANSETRAN Cinderella and Her Husband Horred a Lot Abour 1heir DAUGHTER! Hloomed. A brilliant woman, out difficult. The daughter became a problem, or -ather the central occasion for debate between them. Shelooked like Cinder- ella and acted like the Prince. So each thought she needed rescue and con- tended for possession of her soul. Now who, we ask, would dare so whim- ically to bring up to 1928 a fairy-tale we have reverenced for so long? Bernard Shaw: Per haps. But he’s too old to give it so 192§ a touch. Ah! John Erskine, of course—the man who dared to tell us the (as we say today | low= lown on Helen, Galahad, and Adam and Eve. Of course, he wouldn't dare do this, unless ae were sure of his audience, and that—equal- lv, of course — is why he does it in Cosmo= politan. Because he knows that in the readers of Cosmopolitan, he addresses an audience which can understand —the largest audience of intelligent readers in the world. Are You Willing ro Listen to the TRUTH? For ten vears America has been waiting for someone to i Who (An Tell a Story of Love and Dar- Jan Our Own Rex Beach? we should answer without hesitation, **No one.”’ in “Don Careless” complete —a treat for lovers of red-blooded fiction such as no other magazine could—or would—afford. ing as ( here we have ID YOU KNOW that General Pershing had to fight to have an American Army at all? That he had to fight to keep this army from being used as mere replacement troops and laborers in British, French, and Italian Divisions? THAT THE BRITISH went behind Pershing’s back direct to President Wilson and sought to have Pe rshing's power broken because he refused to accede to their wishes? THAT CLEMENCEAU CABLED to Washington that Pershing could not get along with the French General Petain? THAT IF IT HAD NOT BEEN for Pershing’s courageous determination to have a real American Army the Allies might have lost the War? And a short novel that of Cosmopolitan, Otherstorics and features by E. Barrington, Ring W. Lardner, Fannie Hurst, Leonard Merrick, Owen Wister, George Ade, Heywood Broun, O.0.Mclntyre, Royal Brown, W. Somer- set Maugham, H. C. Witwer, i. Phillips Oppenheim and Charles Dana Gibson and, in addition, three serials by Adela Rogers St. Johns, Meredith Nicholson and Peter B. Kyne. tell the TRUTH of our part in the World War. Cosmopolitan selected BRIG. - REILLY as the man best titted to do this. the gallant Captain Reilly, Killed at the gates army officer of Peking during the great l%n\cr upris soldiering one way or another all his GEN. HENRY ]. \nn of a regular Reilly has been A vear ago Cos- g life. umpohmn sent him abroad to get the basis for telling YOU the TRUTH. He begins it in February Cosmopolitan. You may not enjoy what he tells you, but you'll be in- tevested, believe us! Emil Ludwig told the “Inside” About Na- poleon, but that was Tame — compared to what this scintillating biog I"Iphfl' tells about HIM- SELF in his aumlunkrapr litan. A feature so unusual it could be addressed only to an audience as intelligent, as understanding as hy 1in February Cosmopo- Irvin Cobb Wouldn't Want That Demp- sey-Tunney Referee to Cook Eggs tor Him “Because,”" hesavs, **1like mine soft-botled.’ And that'sonly one of (he wisely humorous—or hume orously wise — comments he makes on the great nationalevent, in *“Tae Batle Hims of the Repui sts ternational 0SIMop combined with olitan February — Just Out )