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Seeing Stars A danger signal: it T oeyes are helng str ng before it is (oo late. Opticians—Optometrists 922 14th Street “Vision Not Visionary Reyn When You Catch Cold Rub On Musterole Musterole is easy to apply and works right away. It may prevent a told from turning into “flu” or pneumonia. It does all the good work of grandmother’s mustard plaster. Musterole 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 Musterole for sore throat, cold on the chest, rheumatism, lumbago pleurisy, stiff neck, bronchiti asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pain and aches of the back and joints sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil- biains, frosted feet—colds of all sorts. To Mothers: Musterole Iso made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Children's Musterole. Jars & Tubes Better than a Mustard Plaster SAYS KIDNEYS CLOG AND NEED FLUSHING Drink Water Freely and, Often, Also Take Salts if Back Hurts ‘When your kidneys hurt and your ‘back feels sore, don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys. Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which helps to remove the body's urinous waste and stimulate them %o their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, 50 we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidne active, Drink lots of good water—you can't drink t00 much: also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts. Take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before bre each morning for a few da your kidneys may the This famous salts is made from the arid of grapes and lemon Ju bined with lithia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimu- late clogged kidneys. also 1 neu- tralize the acids in the system 50 they are no & source of frri- ving bladder Jed Balts is fnexpensive; cannot injyre; makes a dzlightful efferves- cent lithia-water drink which every- one should take now and then W an and up the 0 Goult kiéney trouble and backache. vertisemen! Ad- o plan. O weekly amounts, - reduced $28.75. /\pril and EISEMAN’S Seventh and F St OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT —on our liberal credit Pay overcoats FEWKES RETIRES AT SMITHSONIAN Ethnologist to Devoter Time to Research—Has Had Noted Career. Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, chief of the | Burcau of American Ethnology af the | Smithsonian Institution for the past | 10 years and one of the outstanding | figures in American science, has retired | | as administrative head of the bureau. | | it was announced today. | Dr. Fewkes has been in feeble health | { for the past two vears. He will main- | tain a study at the Smithsonian Build- |ing and devote himself to research work. i Dr. Fewkes h; | three fields of been prominent in nee. He first work- {ed in physics at Harvard Unive and published the results of s | original researches 1 electricity. he became a student of Louis Agassiz and for 15 years devoted himself to zoology, specin n the lower in- 5 - studied at Leipzig. d in France. | Studies Indians. |, A frip to California in 1887 turned | { nisinterests to the ethnological prob- | lems afforded by the Pueblos and since | then_all his time has been taken up in | popularize [ | the study of the American Indian, past | | and present | | Dr. Fewkes has been initiated as a| priest into the secret rites of the Hopi. was the first man to make use of | phonograph in recording Indian He transformed the excavation t Indian monuments from a | looting_operation to one of preserva- | jon. - His work made the Mesa Verde National Park a center of pilgrimage | | for thousands. He gathered one of the | | largest collections of Indian pottery ever brought out of the Southwest. He founded and edited the Journal of | American Ethnology and Archeology. He started field work for the Smith- | sonian Institution in 1895. His work iled to a long series of publications on the Southwestern cliff houses and | | pueblos. He has found several buried settlements and_has rebuilt pictures of | the culture of the people. Research in Florida. He also has conducted researches on the native peoples of Porto Rico, | Florida, the Gulf coast of Mexico, the Lesser Antilles and the Alabama coast. In 1894, he published what stands as the classical account of the famous | Walpi snake dance. He was deeply in- terested in primitive religions and spent | four vears in the study of the ritual of the Hopi. These Indians gave him the | name of Naquapi or Medicine Bowl, be- | cause, they said, “they alw were | pouring information into him. o THREAT OF STRIKE HITS APARTMENT DWELLERS { Employes Considering General Walkout in Simpathy With | Group Claiming Grievance. ! By the A ated Press | NEW YORK, Februzry 6—Residents lof several new ap- ‘tment houses in { fashionable Park avenue today faced the prospect of chilly rooms and the | doubtful advantage of a nice, brisk walk | upstairs—all because of a threatened | strike of -employes. The Building Service Employes’ In- ! terntional Union meets Thursday night {to vote on whether {t shall call a | sympathy strike in connection with the | walkout of eight employes of the co- | operative apartment house at 1009 Park avenue. | The two doormen, two elevator oper- |ators, two firemen and two pofters at 11003 walked out last Wednesday, when, |they charge, the supreintendent was | fired because he joined the union. MAYOR IS NOMINATED. Pollard for ‘Williamsburg, Va. WILLIAMSBURG, Va., February 6.— The Democratic committee met last {night and declared Dr. John Garland & [ Democrats Name Dr. { Pollard the Democratic nominee for | mayor for four years. The leading | eitizens of the city realizing that many !questions would arise in connection | with the restoration of Willlamsburg, | |drafted Dr. Pollard, with the present mayor, Dr. J. M. Henderson, joining in the request. | The foundation engaged in restoring the town, headed by Dr. Goodwin, has spent nearly $2,000,000 in acquiring | property, and many of the historic | structures are to be rebullt, including | the Colonial Capitol, the Royal Palace | and the famous Raleigh Tavern. The Il)merll Assembly has passed a law authorizing the city to convey some of | i1s historic property to the foundation, The city 15 to have a new courthouse |and a public library, as well as a new | public school | i Chlefs of the army and navy of Great Britain marry ter in life than poli- |ticians and {awyers, according to fig- ures just given out in small r monthly Suits and arc¢ now $19.75, Buy now— (] pay during March, Ma v | numby THE _EV] Leaves Smithsonian I HAZRIS: EWING. DR, J. WA R FEWKES. .WILL IMPORT GLIDERS. | German Ship Line to Popularize Motorless Flying in U. S. YORK, February 6 motorless count: the nounced The steamship less Avia nautical last 1 man liner Columbus. d gliders in Germany id at the dinner, than 10,00 today, it low cost them K. flying Groelich, in (#).—To this representing orth German Lloyd line, has an- it is planned to import a of the movement, line, tion orgs at 00 1 was en! best German g sponsored by liders. the the American Motor- Club and zations, was other lau aero- nched dinner aboard the Ger- There are more the and relative safety making popular. Driver Captured After Fatality. BALTIMORE, February 6 May of Raleigh, N. C., an emplove of the Conowingo Power Dam Co., was struck and killed yesterday by an automobile, which police said falled r the accident. After a chase 1 blocks, police arrested Ray- ance, 24, who was charged with th of Ma; | Dallas F. _a e ,_,e,aaESESESsSSS NS NSNS —_— N i (). — NING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 0. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1928 Army Sets 15,000 Feet as Altitude Limit - For Flyers Without Oxygen Equipment By the Associated Press. Having limited to 75 feet the mini- mum altitude at which Army aviators may fly over people, Maj. Gen. James E. Fechet, chief of the Air Corps, has set the limit for high flyers, without oxygen equipment, at 15,000 fect, or ap- proximately 3 miles, and at 35,000 feet with such apparatus. ‘The reason these maximum altitudes have been set is that plloting a plane above 15,000 feet without oxygen equip- ment is dangerous and may be fatal to the occupants of planes. The average man in good physical condition, says Gen. Fechet, can reach altitudes of 15,000 feet without danger and can re- main there for a few hours without impairing his efficlency. Above that height artificial respiration is neces- sary. Future battles of the alr may be fought many miles above ground, Army officials say, and, anticipating this, the Air Corps has worked toward perfect- ing oxygen apparatus which feeds air FIRE SQUAD REVIVES WOMAN, 69, GAS VICTIM Fear for Recovery Still Held for Mrs. Catherine Allman, However. Quick work of the fire rescue squad may have saved the life of Mrs. Cath- erine Allman, 69 years old of 329 C street southeast, who was found over- come by illuminating gas in her room at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon, and was returned to rartial consciousness by the squad before being taken to Emergency Hospital. It was feared, however, that her changes of recovery were slight because of her advanced age. “Ml’ Allman was found unconsclous by C. T. Davis, a roomer at the house, who traced the odor of escaping gas to her room, and who told police he found a jet partly open. e New Cemetery Planned. Special Dispatch to The Star. LYNCHBURG, Va., February 6.— Capital is being subscribed here for the establishment of a new cemetery, to be located on the Natural Bridge highwa: a mile northwest of the city. ‘There are four white cemeteries here, one of them, the Methodist, having been practically closed to burials; Spring Hill, Presbyterian and Holy | Cross. to the pilots and observers, and super- chargers, which feed air to the motor. Pursuit planes recently ordered by. the y carry both of th strength that I was able to place them are stronger than ever.before. 1 learned of the | personal experience. |to health when he T haj Mrs. Preston Sa;ysrsfihe‘ Has Proved the Value of Father John’s Medicine Graduate Nurse Has|| Dr. W. E. Griffis, Author, Dies. NEW YORK, February 6 (#).—Dr. willlam Efitet} Grifis, 85, of Pulaski, N. Y., Iécliifér, educator and author, died yesterday at-bis Winter home in Winter Park, 'Fla, it was announced here. His second wife, Mrs. Frances King | (‘:{Ifll}s‘si two sons and a daughter sur- v to Build New Health Used It For Colds and Mrs. Helen G. Preston, who con- ducts the Boston Employment Agen- cy at 56 Melrose Boston, has | proved the value of FATHE R JOHN'S MEDICINE, not only in her own family but in dealing with many of those who come to- her for| help and guidance. No pralse could be stronger than her own letter, which is in part as follows: 1 “For eighteen years I have owned | and managed an employment agency | in Boston and many thousands have applied to me for positions. Some of these are in poor physical condition | either through neglected colds or be- ing generally run down as a result of laborious work or worry or serfous 1line From my previous experience as a agraduate nurse, 1 always recommend FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE to such persons and as a result many, who are not strong enough to do hard work so built up their healdh and without much difficulty. Mothers to {whom I have recommended it report that their children gained weight and erits of FATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE through always used it myself and it restored my son as in poor physical condition after his war service. This |18 why I so gladly recommend it to thos who need something to build up their failing strength. who seek relief from colds or I have always found fFATHER JOHN'S MEDICINE the foremost medicine for colds and body | building.” Guaranteed free from alcohol or nerve-deadening drugs.—Advertisement. OUR FAMOUS GREEN BAG-" COFFEE and Strength || CITY CLUB MEMBERS AND INVITED GUESTS SPECIAL MEETING WASHINGTON AUDITORIUM MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 8:30 P. M. WILLIAM B. BURRUSS Speaks on “SHAKESPEARE, THE SALESMAN" City Club Syncopators and Other Organizations on the Program §0nduma under the auspices of the City Club Forum and Ex- ansion Committee. Membership and guests only. Admission by Card. RUDOLPH JOSE, r: President. The City Club 4% Picot edge! Style PE, Extra niffon; all A beautiful woman studies the fine relationship of her stockings to her costume. The perfection of Dexdale colorings and weave surprise you in your search for fine stocking effects. Exquisite showings at the Dexdale Hosiery Salon, 1348 F St, N.W., Washington, D. C. You're invited! lt;s the Coffee with the Appetizing 'Fragrance and the Satisfying Flavor We don’t believe you have ever tasted Coffee you'll like as well as GREEN BAG. It’s a blend of our own—with a flavor that is ideal. There’s none of the harsh, violent tang more like medi- cine than a beverage you are drinking for enjoyment. Instead, GREEN BAG COFFEE is mild and mellow; with just the natural sweetness of scientific cultivation. The enormous sale of GREEN BAG COFFEE through our stores insures perfect freshness at all times. Itis a steady, ceaseless stream from the roaster to the thousands of consumers who know its delicious flavor—and prefer it. GREEN BAG COFFEE isn’t ground until you buy it; then it is ground as you want it. Sold Only in Our Stores 37c a pound QU v )/ Sanitary Grocery Co., Inc. Stores Everywhere One Near Your Home 52 2% o