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Ave, Just Off Boardwalk centrally located. win L CIAL WEEK-END _ RATI Enjoy 'mpting food, sea-water hath: viting ths: invit S;'rmnndlnn. HOTEL SENATOR, Atlantic ity. MARYLAND. o The Gateway Int Phone 4020-J HAGERSTOWN, MD. “Your Summer Home Away from Home’ Modern Hotel ® Famous for Good Food Spacious Grounds ® Week-End Rates Awning-Screened Porches ® Always Cool BALLROOM, AMUSEMENT PARK SWIMMING, DANCING, HIKING Direction of Earle A. Reid Accommodations for 50 guests One of the beauty spots of Maryland * mountain _ resorts. Wwhere you have the picturesaue View of the gateway between the Allegheny and Blue Ridge Mountains, cooled Nature's way by and mountain breezes. A leisurely 2-hour drive from Washington. “Gres- hound busses pass our door: low bus fare. TO REACH—Wisconsin. Ave. o Rock- ville, U. S. R oute 240 to Frederick: U. . Route §0 to Hagerstown, continue #iz miles west, No. 40, direct’ to hotel. Special Holiday Rate Includes 2 ni ham and chicl tennis, soft In the mountains, Springs, Va. Shenandoah Alum Springs Hotel For reservations call Emerson 1181 6 meals. Plenty Vs. Soft beds. Swimming. musie, dancing, ete. 3 miles from Orkney COLONIAL BEAC! COLONIAL BEACH HOTEL. Now open for its 40th season. Enjoy Decoration day _here. Excellent food. Tunning artesian water in all rooms. pri- Az the Committee for Industrial Organization renews its drives in steel, in the automotive industry and in other flelds, the public is asking: Where does John L. Lewis g0 from here? In the character of the C. I. O. leader, in his back- ground and in his political and economic philosophy should be found the answer. This is the sec- ond of a series of articles present- ing objectively the story of his career and aspirations. BY IRA WOLFERT. (Copyright, 1937, by the North Americaa Newspaper Alliance, Inc ) O OFFICIAL census has ever been taken, but if there aren’t & couple of thousand little Stanislavskis, Palelevitches, McGurks, Petrowitzes, Briggses and Popolopouloses, all with the first names “John Llewellyn,” running loose along the ridges of the Alleghanies, then the coal miners aren't miners any more. | { pulling his ear. | The miners see no incongruity in a | John Llewellyn Popolopoulos. For John Llewellyn Lewis is their hero. They call him “Big Boy” and {put his picture on the wall. Up and down the hut-shingled hills | of Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Vir- | ginia, Kentucky, Tllinois, along the | banks of the Warrior River, in the | Rockies and the Sierra Nevadas, in Saskatchewan and Cape Breton, | when the kids get together and make a sliding pond in the kitchen out of ing to tell Big Boy on you.” When | pa comes home Saturday night, foun- dering in a wash of beer, he thanks yate baths. Peninsula-Greyhound Eus 3 times daily. or_motor. Frank D. Blackisione, Owner-Msr. * SCHWENKSVILLE, PA. (PRING MOUNTAIN HOUSE i 8L 250 m. {r. Wash. Ask Foster Travel Ser. A RESORTS. #FREE—New England _Vacation Guide, es. Fully illustrated. Write 0w e e copy ) New Bobiaid Gomns n xil._Dept. Beston. NORTHERN RAILWAY GRE + Route of the Empire Builder Between Chicago_and_Pacific_Northwest N TRAVEL. i R AVER 'EAMSHIP TICKETS E STESYRTIN Ther “ Travel De X artment. AMERICAN E. SS_COMPANY. g STEAMSHIPS, “BERMUDA VIA FURNESS, $60 up, T ound rip. with private bath on Monarch_of 5 ?flludl and Queen of Bermuds. e ent sailings. Ask your travel agenmt. “Mr. Ford’s plant at River Rouge is an arsenal,” John Lewis in Pittsburgh on April 8 as the camera caught him ma’'s cheese cake, ma says, “I'm go- | freasure a snapshot like this @s long as you live. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, The Story of John L. Lewis the picture on the wall for the eve- ning's entertainment before throw- ing his shoes at the closet. Called “Lincoln of Labor.” John, Zohn, Yon, Hwan, Big Boy, Beeg Boy, Pig Poy, Peeg Poy. The miners’ poets and speechmakers, wound up for suitable occasions, call him “the Lincoln of labor" (his birthday is also Abraham Lincoln's), “the Great Emancipator,” “Labor's Rock of Gibraltar,” “Labor’s Rock of Chickamauga” and “Labor’s Rock of Ages.” They call him “the Jack Dempsey of Labor” and “the John L. (Sullivan) of Labor.” That, by the way, is Lewis’ favorite platform Jjoke. “Lewis is the name,” he roars and bulls his large head around be- fore adding, “John L.” Everybody gets the point. He does not need to utter the immortal follow-up, “I can lick any man in the house.” However, there are men who have other names for him. William L. Hutcheson, boss of the American Fed- eration of Labor’s carpenters, head of the labor division of the Republican charged —A. P. Wirephoto. National Committee in the last cam- paign, called him a heel, and other things. Place: Atlantic City conven- tion of the A. F. of L.; time: October, 1935. Or, to locate the time more exactly, the description was uttered about a moment before Lewis lifted his ham of a fist from the floor and deposited it on the jaw of Hutcheson, followed it up flailing, butted the | table, was pulled down with him and | rose a moment later the winner by one bursted lip and one mangled nose. Those whom Lewis calls “my peo- | ple"—the miners—have called him |in print, dishonest, disloyal, an in- bigger, burlier man backward over a | grate, a hypocrite, & foul-minded conspirator, s brass-brained dema- 80gue, & transparent fraud, a ferocious sham, & crook, a jackass. Brush With Hurley Recalled. Hoover's Secretary of War, Patrick Hurley, appearing at an N. R. A. coal code hearing in Washington, said, “I have known John L. Lewis for many years and he has always had his stomach against the pie counter.” But Mr. Hurley had been prodded to it. A moment before, Lewis had sald of the former cabinet member, “It is a source of pride to see a member of the United Mine Workers go out into politics and make a noted name for himself. But it is a matter of pro- found sorrow to see a man who has made such a name betray the union of his youth for 30 lousy pieces of silver.” Hurley had bristled his waxed moustache at Lewis, and Lewis turned to the stenographer and boomed, “It seems the gentleman is to be soothed “GEE, DOC, YOU NEVER KNOW WHEN YOU'LL BE CALLED.” Nature has the first say.. if work is to progress. Strike out ‘lousy.’ Whether you see him at his large, paper-piled desk in his office in Washington or packing his bulk be- hind the steering wheel of the little Ford he uses to drive Mrs. Lewis into the country these pleasant Sunday afternoons or pursuing his favorite entertainment—attending lectures by reactionaries, overflowing a front row seat and attempting, with considerable success, to scowl the speaker into blowing up in his lines—Lewis looks like what he is, the voice of labor shouting. A great big rough-hewn slab of male, no more than middling tall, but nearly as wide as a door, weighing 230 pounds, light on his feet as a dancer, spry in his attitudes. His face is like & bulldog's and has the same golid, square beauty—the jaw excessively firm, the full cheeks round- ing below the jaw line, the mouth large, his chin is a dimpled little tuft of flesh, < Hair Also Extraordinary. Surmounting this extraordinary face is hair to match. A mist-colored mane that goes pouring back over his head D. C, THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937. and is hacked off abruptly at the neckline. Two black, sweeping mous- taches on his forehead, so thick they shroud his blue eyes. His hands are meaty mitts. But when, as is his frequent habit, he runs one of them through that tide of hair, the hair engulfs it and you can't see any more of the hand than you can of a mouse running through a field of wheat. His face and the large, violent atti- tudes he strikes add up o practically & day off for the caricaturist. They can have fun with his jaw, fun with his hair, fun with his cheeks. But his attitudes give them hysterical de- light. When he is angry he darkens like & thunderhead. When he is pleased his jaw, big as & bruiser's fist, thrusts forward. His cigar thrusts upward almost parallel to his face. He throws out his piano of a chest and lets it lead him down the street, strutting after it like a darky on hi® way to chicken. He has been accused of being as subtle as & hunk of steak. But he has & sense of humor and gets a mature and subtle pleasure from his own small-boy tricks. When, in casual conversation, he erupts one of the “NO, BUT I’M SURE OF GETTING THERE SINCE 3y 3 | SWITCHED TO RICHER % RICHFIELD!” .and every advance inscientific refining is employed to make Rich- ficld Hi-Octane* the last word ... in gasoline performance. For those who need it...awhen they nced it... Rich- field holds an extra rich reserve of ready power. Drive into a neighborly Richfield dealer and switch to richer Richfield today! *Reg. U. S. Pat. Of. "Some holiday_ FROM PENNSYLVANIA'S RICHEST OIL FIELD Pennsylvania produces the finest motor oils, but even Pennsylvania oils vary in quality, and it is the crude oil from the rich Bradford- Allegany field from which is refined RICHLUBE® “ALL-WEATHER" MOTOR OIL Fr wing . . . Heat-resist o Jasting wnder all tempera EST evidence in the world, the snapshots you bring back. You're sure to have some grand snapshot opportunities. But if you forget to take them s 3 Think what you miss—the sport of shooting them. Your own eager first look at the prints. The chance to show them to others. And the sure, vivid, ever- lasting reminder. So take the camera, and plenty of film—three or four rolls won’t be too many. The snapsho ts you’ll want tomorrow, you must take today. Kodaks as low as $5; Brownies from $1,atyour dealer’s. For new picture opportunities—against emergencies—do you carry a Kodak in your car? “She's the grandest seout.” You knew ene like her—be sure te got plonty of plctures. SAVE $24.48 A YEAR Certified mileage road tests with Richfield Hi-Octane, compared with the average mileage 10,391 mo- torists report from other gasolines, show ings of $24.48 o year with Richfield gasoline! % / CRACK SNAPSHOT PAIR=Six-20 Brownie Junior and Kodak VERICHROME Film “Brownie” —there’s a lot in the name. As you'd expect, the Six-20 Brownie Junior is simple . . ; certain. Menis- cus lens and Eastman Rotary shutter, with “snap” and “time” actions: Two extra-large ground-glass finders: Decorative metal front, nickeled fittings. Pictures, 24 x 3% inches. $2.50. Six-16 Brownie Junior has the same features—makes 2/5 x 4%-inch pictures. $3. By far the greater number of snapshots are made on Kodak Verichrome Film because people have found that “it gets the picture”—clear, true, lifelike —in sun or shade. Any camera is a better camera, loaded with Verichrome. Don’t take chances—use it always .. . Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N. Y, sentences for which he has become famous—“They smote me right mer- rily and I smote them back' hip and thigh”—he cuddles the words. They drop into the air slowly and you can see him looking slyly at each word as it drops. He knows you'll think him odd when, if you ask him how he manages to keep 30 healthy without taking exer- cise, he replies: “My ancestors be- queathed me a framework rugged enough to withstand congenitally the bufiets, blows and belaborings that are attendant upon the ordinary vicissi- tudes of life.” WILL RECEIVE MEDALS Mary A. Thompson and Catharine Hayden, sixth-grade students at st. Teresa’s School, who won a recent Americanism essay contest, will re- Celve medals at exercises tonight a$ the school hall, Thirteenth and V streets southeast. Preceding the awards, which are presented by the McKenna Main Post of the American Legion, the Catholis Action Club will hold & symposium on communism. TAn a few minutes now toget ready for better holiday snapshots. Bring in your camera for cleaning and minor adjustments; no charge for this. And while you're here, show us some of those snaps that didn’t quite “turn out”; a hint or two from one of our trained salesmen has put many a snapshooter on the road to better pictures. We've the type of Kodak Film you'll need, of course—and Kodaks of all styles at all prices. Kodaks from $5; Brownies from $1. Our finish- ing service includes the care and attention which mean so much. . . [ Interested in a trade-in? Perhaps we can arrange an allowance. Bring in your old camers and let us see. gest this original “‘open in picture maker. For 214 x 3' Fix up those aching BURNING FE enly rub containing Aspirub drives out foot agony no feet may be—it PENETRATES night the sorensss goes Big jar costs but little at any live gets in—aches, pain and soreness ge! JIFFY KODAK SIX-20—1t you need 2 new camera—simple to operate and inexpensive—we sug- fy” %-inch ‘ A;;;l Kol STORES... 607 -14th Street N. W. Just givg them a good, rubbing tonight with As- pirub and so strong, re- freshed and happy will Your feet feel tomorrow you will walk with pleas- wre. Aspirab works such wonders because it's THE menuine a pirin which fs 90 marvelous o relieve muscular aches, pains and soreness. ‘matter how miserable your iftly and deeply over- 't is antiseptic, clean and stainless. drugstore. When Aspirub ont. /// flyw:?k’ae ' In such @ fitvle white theyN leek differont. It pays to got saape