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18 T HE SCNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. AUGUST 8, 1926—PART 1. G. U. APPLICATIONS NORETHAN UOTA i 100 More Register for Fresh- man Class This Fall Than ALL SET FOR A DAY’S OUTING NATIONAL U. NEW LAW COURSES Many of Latest Classes Will | Be of Pioneer Nature in Office, who is also a_graduate of the GRADUATE LARGE CLASS | 1 | areangoments are proposed for a dip | National University Law School. ! | onstration, to he armnged by Tral | Dr. Charles F. Carusi, chancellor of | Director Eldridge, on how to han | National University and dean of thé |t ing a_fice { law school, returned last Monday from » 1o thbse WAl He 'rbibrvice | White Sulphur Springs. W. Va., where com he has been spending the Summer, to fis continue arrangements and make an- prizes in the nouncements concerning the opening | n fire companic of the Fall term of the university mipaniess and busie October 1. —— s —e -~ 3 n to rope off the Avenh. | LEWIS HOTEL SCHOOLS Forty Volunteer Departments | bkl §pielilpnlio sl and Business Firms Asked Buried in Gold Coffin. Masazine . A - e o ¥ pper’s & | 7 nzton, used to unusual sigh Are Admissible Lega' E.ducat'on' | Asst. Supt. Stephen E. Krnmer‘\ to Partlcnpate Shidine e I”"‘l'“w“ ‘\ 5 saw an unu nera AT St = Stresses Importance of Voca- | T en of gypefes, was burled With quarters provided for 225 ad- A number® of new courses on vari R Plans for the larmest firemen’s pa Iay in e for a weng Bitiandl A fents mt_Georgotown Col- (SR e oFi Activiny ot meichL IR tional Training, in Address. - | . ever held in Washington. to pre-' and g all parts -of Jege Aduring the next scholastic term, i i al Gradiation * exercises of students | cede the Tolice-Fire Depa ent ha 14 eame tribute. Washinge L admission this Fall portance to the legal profession, many i 3 game Keptember 11 fa the b place of all gypae applications for admission thin T of them of a ploneer nature In the |from the Lewis fiotel Training Schools |}, "gergt, A, J. Bargax t dnns was buried in :I\“v..w:|v):‘u~;“(: the freshman class. | field of Amerdean lexal education, will | Wete Lol f";“"}""‘,l“ ok ‘nh:' hairman of the parade commn Y e i rech e e e uota allotted hman T, be offered in addition to the usual ard Ho st_Friday evening. | oy ad ual t 1 \lassroom congestion, an acute prob- | { n to the usual | W ifford st This parade is an annua <ides other high-prii ol S vear. will be somewhat al-| studles In the curriculum of National Ll hoke on the ltion. but hitherto re 1 Now Her tribe ix abil - A t N on of | ity leading to t hachel of g = T 5 s N rticipants. « stan: it ver levinted, however, by the addition 0 [1aws and doctor o \.,ri’.cp,,u-‘:fl:l;-::r.n- |clon when preparing tor » vacation, 1l B L nstant watch ove seven lecture halls provide odeibE ] { s, It was announced resterday. | Assistant Superintendent of Schools ‘This r. in addition to floats from new lmlhhnx\ .;1 Ilh‘\m'.mm"l" | 1% The university has eatanlisned. this | Stephen E. Kramer stressed the im- |each : n\lln\\,p\\]«hhlf} ton_husi e ———— of the Old > h By 3 A A e s | portance of vocational traini as a |ness houses & requested. to ef & Al previous enroliment records | vear an undergraduate department of | Portance of rucationsl (ain® A% b lqc.te, and invitations have heen sent A Family Plant. ¥ Jtember, said civil and comparative law leading to | means to o4 S Titeer: five’ depart i will be broken in vt IR aseies ottt ot © | economic prabiems, both at home and |to 40 volunteer_five departi sgresaive Grocer Magar Dean Louls 1. Gallag =Py object of this new department is to |abroad. Henry J. Stalex. registrar, Maryland and Virginia towns g nt.* said the gardener, “ba. $44 bhoarding students QUSFCEIC O Bive the stadent et e e o |and Mary Catherine Lewid, vice presi. |ers of fire apparatus have been asked | jongs to the hegonia family the Hilltop. Arransements have hett ing in the principles of common law, | dent of the school, pictured the future | to enter demonstration floa 1 se | Indy How kind I e but alse to acauaint him. with the | caveers of the graduates It is planned to stage spectac of you (o it ‘while they re maximum for which there ar s legal systems of other countries and | The graduates included the follow- | fire-fighting stunts alon > way, opd away m;u\v.ux.? ‘1,.»- e 1::" N e especiaily with Roman and civil law | ID§ members of class No. 22 in hotel | cilities will jpevmil ‘0% °3 o alreads and their develo t is expla 1. | management the number of day puplis Preseni e e, | O shetty Adwis, Iemueeh| considerat and ‘lvwl “',..‘;!L"(x..i» Official on Faculty. | Raynes Adams, Mrs. h Auguste | We Wire Well and Reasonably! total enrolliment at the coll S The professor of Roman law and | Bowly, Margaret A. Boyvle, Fdward | to 7 S—_— modern civil law i Charles S. Lob- | Morgan Rridwell, Mrs. Araminta P. . Indications are that the downtown ingier, assistant United States At-|Brown, Anne Greene Buchanan, Jessie | Em lo Elech-lcal departments of the university W torney General, who for 10 vears was | Mae Cadel p y also have ‘"'"‘,‘”“",'}"'”m:m:'h, ol judge of the United States Court in | Gertrude . The New North Building, as . China, organized under treaties made | Mrs. Kathrs ray Dills, Attion at the colleze i8 to be known, by America with that country, and | Richard Ielt, James Trwin Joyce. ervants at ome adfoins tha old structure of that was also judge of the Court of First | Kendall Knoch, Evelyn Louth Te | el g2 3 with msde name. and is to he dedicated in Sey Instance in the Philippines and a | Wich, Helen J. Lehnert, James Si A home well equippec Lt moaern tember. It u,max-vel rtmm!hf'fi!;‘ - | member of the Net S\xnr»m(-“ififlézfi MecCulloch, Albert »s«nhwai clectrical appliances is easily kept clean seniors, four large lecture halls, ac Court Commission. Before he enter- | Curdy. jr.. Ram M. evitt. Ellen t ¥ " rudgery 5 | commedations for the R. O. T. C. od the service of the Federal Cev.|M. Patterson, Marguerite Petty, Harry and neat and there is no drudgery attached | unit and a large a 'mmhhh' hall ;”r;"' ernment Dr. Lobingler was professor | M. Phillips, Walter P. Plymale, Mrs. to the work. wall equipped stage. The general de of law at the University of Nebraska. | louie I. Richardson, llelen Stevens . s slgn of the buildi which conforms 116 15 h6 Suithor of “THa People’s | Roberts, Mrs. Effle Sua Robinson, Mar- We Sell G\{arnnleed Elfl'-h"'“l AQP“'MC‘ architecturally to the old North Law.” a scientific work dealing with | tha Alma Schuette, Harriet E. Skid at Their Lowest Possible Prices. structure, was made by President the origin and nature of popular law- | more. Mrs. Bass Mc(: Mth, Mrs. | i 3 2 Charles W. Lyons J., who put 5 : | making, of a work on legal practice | Madge B. Stephenson, Mrs. Mary B.| Washing Machines Electric Percolators Vacuum Cleaners through the recent building program Group of youngs n I v Day Nursery, 519 Fourth street, prior to embarkation for picnic at |, the Philippine Islands and of a | Temple, Anne Scott West. | Electric Grills Electric Laundry Irons Waffle Irons at Boston College. o Alta Vista, Md., in “truck tr: Friday morning. | volume on “The Evolution of Modern | This group of students i]" Hotel Elect-ic Toasters Electric Urns Electric Fans It is eapected the 20 or more ~—— = S & ke IR S ——— | 'tvil Law.” Among other of Dr. Lob- | countancy Class No. 2 alse 1 s . " cancies in the dental school fuculty. | ingier's numerous Jegal works are ar. | their diplomas ut this time: Wilma M. | Electric Curling Iroluvnnd Hair Driers s a resull of the recent strike of the ! Rather Impressive. ticles on internationul law, territories | Baxter, Mrs. Nellie Grinnell Clark, | THE Adjusto-Ray—The Violet Ray formcr staff and the acceptance of From the Furrow Magusive, lund extraterritoriality in the famous | Floyd FEugene Hedges. Thomas S. | A uperior Collection of Fine Lamps and Shades their resignutions, are to be filled} A . pleading his first | legul encyclopedia, the “Corpus Juris.” ! [lubbard, John 13. Jenner, Helen J.| soou. ‘The new dean, Dr. Willlam N. | chge, ained by a mer | H Lehnert, Mrs. Christine Ramsdell, Ar- | 9 Cogan, | N, retired, was appoint- | | to_ prosecute a railway company fc New Courses Planned. thur 11. Stevens, Herman R. Strobel. | v Gy % ed before commencement in June. An i Killing 24 hogs. e wanted to impress | One of the additional new features| The Misses Laura V. D. 1fanson and m assistant regent was mmmnut»mkm | | the jury with the magnitude of the |of the courses offered by the law |Anna 1..Hl{ rvey '\v}?rm’}r‘n«? the ex cently in the appointment ev. inju ‘hool this year will he a stndy of | tension division of the school. " Joseph D. Didsusch, S. J.. of Shadow | rwenty-four hogs, gentlemen, |land and mining law. The lecturer gt ks 517 10th St. Joseph D. Campbell Main 6549 brook College, West Lenox. Mass | Twenty-four: twlce the number there | will he Thomas G. Havell, assistant Getting into the band wagon is a Two of the' forelgn service S e e in the jury box.” commissioner of the Ceneral Land |favarita &port with most politicians. | members, Dr. James Rrown Scott a . EEi . < T et ave in Eurane. | TTAffic and Alimony Cases in| Inventor of Movable Frame Dr. Scott -1s attending the interna- ‘ ¥ tional law sessions at The Haz\w.{ Chncago Handled Success- to Have Memorial at while Dr. Wright left recently with 50 other unive professors for a Y Medina, Ohio. vears study a d. He was given a fellowship award in international law hy the Carnegie dowment which provides for studies at several of the leading universities in | | Dr. Edmund A. Walsh, 8. 1., ! of the foreign service school, i leave later for Willlamstown. Mass., | to attend the sessions of the Institute | of Polities, where severul of the| Georgetown faculty members have | been in attendance sines its opening inciudiug Leo S. Rowe, director gen- | eral of the Pan-American ¥nton. | G. W. SUMMER SCHOOL| T0 CLOSE SATURDAY Final Exams for Arts and Science Department Scheduled for Thursday. Summer schonl activities at George Washington University will he con-| cluded in the department of arts and sciences on Saturday. Final exam fnations are scheduled to begin Thu announcement v, director according 1o the £, Blmer Louis Kuys mmer schoob Wishington University hool setivities will continae | until September 14, at which tme the second half of the Summer ac ities will cease. In ail departments | of the university Summer school un usual fnterest Las been shown this | veur. In the department of arts and selences 1,178 students were envolled. | The ool had its usual quota. | “The Summer school appears to have become unusually attractive to out-of-town students, jidged from the | growing numbers of students of other enrolling,” said Prof k offered here. | W advantages of the | hington a wlents of isin- | The un has dvawn to \ rable number institutions. vearl Niversity is number asing 1 au in Humber of courses each sea <on s the demands for broader work ge numbers of Wash has off s e s Hty "':;: ¥ ave ke | courts are muking their way from the | this country, in 1863 roll and work durfug the Summer, in | STt (Copyright, 1926 order to nu‘i‘e up work or galn ad . e = Open-Air Study London Fad. vanced standing | . President William Mather Lewis is| Not Regarded as Dangerous. In London the vogue of open-air expected back in town this week. It is expected that several faculty ap pointments will be announced. The snecessor to the late Dr. Herm: Set d prohably will be announc the week. Dr. Schoenfeld was long identified with the univer <ty and the field has heen thoroughly canvassed for the strongest man for the department. With the conclusion of the Sum mer school am the nniversity will under v repairs and im provements. Particular attention will be paid to the biological laboratory, with special women stu- dents. Ot will be made in ¢ ories tollowed lust ot registering all departments in ihe university gym nasiun will probably be followed this veur A ulty appointments in all rents tor the vear will be rent ist sessions. depa new preser the additions have Summer. the been made latin Was. Who Fram the 1 Gal o Wha was Albert Gallatin for whom it is proposed to erect a statue, the Nation tn furnish the site and the funds to be raised hy popular subscrip- tlon? Bet vou can't sav—right off the reel We! Albert llatin wae a fa- mous Secreta of the United States Treasury ur Madison and Jeffer son He came v Switzerland, was member of Congress, etc He was a tremendous inte was he who helpe He died ned un appointment when he was 2 At Calbinet Thus did the) discretion in wse davs. Ile was a great e onon snd he decreased the nationai deb He idolized Thomas Jefferson: opposed Hamilton, Jay and the Federallats. & hundred vears later Pennsylvani® 8 to have his statue. In some paris of France e coun- try people, upon the approach of & thundersiorm. adorn their hats with £prays of hawthorn lsaves in the he «f that, thus protected, they bear charm against lightning. | of the Traffic Court. | source of revenue.” those made at | Many during the | abpreciate the ages of | fully by New Groups. By the Associated Press. COLUMBLUS, Ohifo, August 7.—The much de n whose inventions are credited by ork, exper!. | Deekeepers with having revolution worl, eXPEUH | ed the Industry was taught and he- i ne u Congregational minister | 1w abundoned the pulpit, his life's Tor beekeeping. Lle dled at the 35, ohscure and virtually pen Special Dispateh to The Star. CHICAGO, August 7 plans for relleving courts of tall mented with in Chica 1. Two definite | | and administratiy b, are prov highly sucd The special administrative weeks ago, he expectations. A slgned 1o help wives ¢ flic bureu & urt, really et an up a few more than come up to n Alimony Bureau, de llect from for | work age of niless Little known incidents in the life of | Rev. L. L. Langstroth, whom his bi- uier husbands as well as 1o tuke detuil | ographer asserts made possible the work off the Court of Domestic Rela- | commercial aplury industry of today, tlons, has functioned so well from the | are being brought to light prepa; start that an increased force is needed Iready. Where formerly the minor t violator was compelied to go to ¢ waste a day and probably be saddled | with the expense of a lawver. he now merely sends over to the Traffic Court the cash to cover the charge on which he was arrested Bureau Aids Public. “The public has found the new bu reau a_great help.” advises the clerk ““Charges for vio- | | tions go forward for a memorial in his | honor at Medina, Ohio, September 21. | Perfected Movable Miss Florenee Nalle, of the Ohio Beekeepers' Association, is | in possession of rare. original records | of Langstroth's career. According to Iher, his principal invention was the | movable frame for hives, which he | brought out in 1851. That gave the beekeeper absolute control of his in- sects, a thing never hefore possible. Up to that time, when it was neces- lationg are low, ranging from $1 up. | ¢arc 1o take honey from the hive, the B e P o 1, At 1o fec |bees were smoked ent and most of T i present| hem killed in the process. With his B slip :\m:l make the payment | [0 v roe Sl it e required for that particular offense. | <l FEC & 5 el we b bl o U b | e ry was to lift out the frames, { made in’ sections. utor or by thi one is happy Ly the vic and ever, policeman, lurged “We are handling from 400 to 500| Langstroth discovered the “bee cases a day in this one bureau. Col-|space” -he learned that bees would lections range from $800 to $1,000 a | not deposit propolis in a space ap day, so that the court is proving proximately three-eighths of an inch i y in width—und his frames were based The Alimony Bureau is proving a|on that principal. Before that time boon for wives and for children of df- | (he bees had deposited tt Sedie vorced couples. tions, seuling tightly the hive, Letters Briug Response. , | ile'also cither helped, or himself in- a real l Iy,” Mrs, Margaret Donar, in charge, | perts O She ok “that we have litemily " beer | IO L CUE SRS (DK MR ©F wamped. Hundreds of wives have | s A e The i appealed to us, and every one of our | letters to hushands about hack alimony | has brought a response. The men are | paying up. he bureau attempts to reconcile differences between husbands and | wives and when that fails to get the | men to make regular payments acts as sort of a clearing house alimony payments. Both schemes will mark the completion of the first « national campalgn to estab. ngstroth memorfal seetion in v at Cornell University, the only gaduate school of beekeeping in the world. Eventually, if funds permit, & Langstroth fellow. ship also will be established there, Langstroth is said to have written the first text on beekeeping in vear of for book for relieving the classrooms has hecoma so prominent that secluded corners in parks, aban From the Dallas Times-Herald | Pat T hear ver wife is sick, Mike. | doned churchyards and all manner of Mike She is that available open spaces are being used | Pat Is it dangerous she is? for the 137 open-air classes that the | Mike Divule a bit. She's too weak | London County Council plans to to be dangerous any more. operate during the Summer. Equal to the Situation. Work of Art Took Time. | : acher—Make a sentence with the| The bronze gates of the baptistry { defense “defeat” and ‘‘de- | of St. John the Baptist Church, Flor- | ence, took Ghiberti, their designer, | ommy- De cat jumped over de |21 vears to make—1403 to 1424, They fence and de feet got ngled up wid | were erected in thanksgiving for de. de tail. livery from the plague of 1400, Low in Price High in Quality ‘August The Month of Summer Specials We expect to win many new friends by offering carloads of Good Furniture at more than reasonable prices. Tt will pay you to have us furnish your Summer rompt service home delivery—or sent pre- nd and Virgin cottage. T paid to all parts of Mary Closed Satunday afteruovns during A Thompson Brothers Furniture—Stoves—Floor Coverings 1220-26 Good Hope Road Anacostia, D. C. | Lincoln 556 Unlimited Parking Space | Large quantity production’ has‘?ong been standardized — quality standardization has beenaccomplishedforthefirst time in motor car manufac- turing by Walter P. Chrysler. Merely bpilding several cars is one tting. Building four lines of cars under one name and one management in one unified group of plants on a rigid system of quality stand- ardization is a totally differ- ent thing. Chrysler manufacturing, like Chrysler engineering, is dif- ferent from ordinary manu- facturmi—radically and im- measurably different in prin- ciple and practice. 50,60,70,Imperial 80—These car numerals attached to the name Chrysler mean miles perhourand theymeansome- thing vastly more important than that in creating value. They mean a common basis of quality for all four lines of cars—a rigid system of close measurement and fine manu- facturingapplied alike to each and every one of the four CHRYSLER *“60” — Towring Car, lines—a common source of engineering skill—a division of overhead and operating costs—a combination of buy- ing resources—a ificent system of special machines and special processes devised to insure invariable accuracy in the manufacture of all four lines of cars —a positive pro- tective process of guarantee- ing the owner exactly the same basic guality no matter what price he pays or which Chrysler car he buys. Certainty of unsurpassed per- formance is thus built into every Chrysler car, no matter what its price classification. The Chrysler plan makes possible greater value tfor the investment than has hereto- fore been dreamed by the automobile buyer. Atonestep iteliminates “pur- chaser’s risk” and makes pos- sible the purchase of either the lowest-priced or the high- est-priced Chrysler with the positive assurance that the quality in each is equally unquestionable. $1075; Roadster, $1145; Club-Coupe, $1165; Coach, $1195; Sedan, $1295. CHRYSLER IMPERIAL “80” — Phaeton, $2495; Roadster (wire wheels standard equipment, wood wheels optional), $2595; Coupe, mmta $2895; Coupe, four-passenger, $2895; Sedan, seven-passenger, $3195. Cabriolet, $3495; Sedan-] $3095; Al prices f. o. b. Detroit, subject to current Federal excise tax. Chrysler Model Numbers Mean Miles Per Hour H. B. LEARY, JR,, & 1612 You St. Branch Salesrooms— Connecticut Ave. at E. R. KEENAN, 10th and I Sts. N.W. of theNew Trend The production of the Chrysler “70” marked the first step in Walter P. Chry- sler’s great plan of standardized quality. It immediately assumed a leadership that is more emphatic today than ever before ~despite the fact that there is scarcely a rager car o imporiancs tat doce ot ect in design or practice t! of Mr. Chrysler and his engineers. Certainly not one of its hundreds of thousands of owners who have experi- enced the extraordinary results it gives in brilliant performance, in riding and handling ease, in safety, in economy of operation, in dependability and in proved long life will ever again willingly accept less than Chrysler “70” offers. A demonstration of these superiorities will readily add you to the new thou- sands every week who are securing in Chrysler “70” the greatest satisfaction and value which the Chrysler Standard. ized Quality plan makes possible. CHRYSLER “70" — Phaeton, $1395; Coach, $1395; Roadster, $1525; Royal Coupe, $1695; Brougham, $1745; Sedan, $1545; Royal Sedan, $1295; Crown Sedan, $1895. k3 BROS. North 4296 and 1321 14th St. N.W. Q St K/