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EDUCATIONAL. Emerson Institute 76th Consecutive Year 17381740 P St. Decatur 551 Day School for Bos Late Afternoon School—Co-Educational Accredited in the U. S. and Foreign Countries Fall Term Begins September 17 Preparing for College and University— West _ Point—Annapolis—Coast Guard. Special classes preparing for examina- tions for Direct Commission in U. 8. Army; also for Flying Cadets, U. 8. Corps. W. H. Randolph, Principal Poteet’s coriver onal Bank Blds. Commercial N: . Main 4717. 1ith & G Sts. N.W. Emerson Institute 76th Consecutive Year 1738-1740 P St. Decatur 551 Day School for Boys Late Afternoon School—Co-Educational Accredited in the U. S. and Foreign Countries Fall Term Begins September 17 Prepating for Collere and Ualversits— Army: also for W. H. Randolph, Pri - THE TEMPLE SCHOOL A Secretarial School of Individual Instruction DAY—AFTERNOON—EVENING ' Enroll at any time QP K 5t NW. Main 3258 George Washington University Law School Member Association of American Law Schoels Approved by American Bar Assoclation Established 1865 Academic Year 1928-29 begins September 19 Registration Days September 15-18, Inclusive STOCKTON HALL 720 Twentieth St. West 1640 s ee National School Fine & Applied Art FELIX MAHONY, Director Interior Decoration, Costume Design Commercial Art, Poster, Color Dynamic Symmetry Professional, Cultural, Fundamental Courses, Personal Instruction Children’s Saturday Morning Classes Day and Night Classes Connecticut Avenue & M 1747 Rhode Island Ave. NORTH 1114 ACE COURSES ay and Ei Bulletin on Rea BENJAMIN FRANKLIN Transportation d B Main el IVERSITY ing wo-five-nine 'NATIONAL UNIVERSITY Fall Term Begins September 29, 1928 SCHOOL OF LAW—SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND GOVERNMENT Registrar’s Office 818 13th St. N.W. Tels. M. 66 r. 7964 Open for registrat! m. to 7 p.m FAIRMONT School for Girls—20th Year ‘ 1711 Mass. Ave. NW. | | College preparation. Eight two-year Junior College di- | ploma and special courses. Athletics. Boarding and Day Students Fall Term Opens October 3rd. Phone Decatur 1328 LINTHICUM INSTITUTE 3116 O St. NNW. Night School for young men and boys. Free-hand and Mechanical Drawing, Type- writing, Mathematics, Penmanship, Spelling, Reading, Etc. Everything Free 53rd Sesslon Begina October 1, 1928, AL 330 PM. 10 HICKMAN SCHOOL of SPEECH and EXPRESSION International Building. 1319 F St., Bet. 13th & 14th Established 1904 A School of Self-Expression Teaching only subjects of SMITH'S CHARGES DECLARED UNTRUE Attack on Public Utilities in Denver Speech Challenged by Judge Davis. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 24.—Judge Stephen Davis, director of the joint| committee of National Utility Assocla- tions, said in a formal statement last committee by Gov. Smith at Denver contains so many absolute misstate-| ments of fact that it is inconceivable | it was based upon any personal inquiry.” The record of the Federal Trade Commission investigation of public utilities, he said, still is' incomplete and the utilities’ side has not been presented, | adding that “Gov. Smith must have relied upon some one else for his in- formation, and whoever furnished it was either utterly careless or untruth- ul.” Specified Statements Denied. The statement denied that the joint committee circularized New England high schools with pamphlets urging op- position to the Walsh resolution, the Boulder Dam development and develop- ment of Muscle Shoals. Judge Davis said no such pamphlets ever were cir- culated by any one representing the electric utilities. The statement said “Gov. Smith im- plies, if he doesn't say,” that the joint committee had advertised in newspapers so that they might get into the news columns material they were preparing against Federal or State ownership of water power. Judge Davis said the EDUCATIONAL. < ol 1305 Seventeenth Street Cor. Massachusetts' Avenue A resident and day school for girls. Primary. Intermediate and High School Opens Sept. 24th The T Washington School for Secretaries Now located in the National Press Blds. 14th F Sts. Day and Evening Classes PRINT. Course, weeks: Bookkeeping 12 weeks. position guaranteed. Ne Shorthand in 30 School Days, d ew, Register today. B in. S Y- credited.”” Est. 8 yrs. 1338 G Main 2338, Herman C. Rakemann Artist Teacher of Viol Indorsed by Prominent Musicians Studio and Residence 1928 Biltmore St. Phone Col. 9599 A TR RES.. . WO0O0D’S SCHOOL Established 1885 311 East Capitol St. i AL COMMERCIAL mRANCHES ° FNROLL NOW FOR FALL TERM Ample Parking Space for Students A s COURT F. WOOD, Day Rates, $165 Moath: 1o Somih Evening_ Rates, 10 Months, $100 a_Month 10 Months, 5 60 to $50 COLUMBIA KINDERGARTEN TRAINING SCHOOL. TAL - pens October 3, 192 Reopens SARA K. LIPPINCOTT, 8. Principal, _The Westmoreland. North ¥14, Chevy Chase Country Day School Resident Department Specializing in the Pre-Adolescent Child Tenth Season Opens Sept. 26th District of Columbia College (¥. M. C. A.) S-year Evening Course Leading to LL. B, Degree Tuition, $100 & year Catalog upon request CHARLES V. IMLAY, A. B.. LI.. B., Dean 1736 G Street N.W. Main 8250 THE SERVICE SCHOOL CO-EDUCATIONAL CONSTANCE C. TUTHILL, Principal 1860 Mintwood Place, Adams 1443 Kindergarten and Grades. Boarding and Day School. Through unfoldment, devel bill Tiont Ehinking and. dotsg, Prus atiainley the true development of character. Winter Sessions, Summer Sessions. Catalogue, Art Interior Decoration Costume Design nol'!.nun‘ml to a paying position. Register LIVINGSTONE ACADEMY 1517 R. L Ave. (At 16th) North 9434 'WOODWARD SCHOOL FOR BOYS Accredited Men Teachers Only Sixth Grade through High School ENROLL NOW 1336 G St. N.W. Y. M.C.A.___ Main 8250 night that “the attack on the joint| F| Mrs. - THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, MONXDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1928 committee “never placed an advertise- ment of any kind in any newspaper and has never spent a cent for any such purpose.” “Gov. Smith stated” Judge Davis sald, “that Mr. Clapp receives $25,000 a year as secretary to the joint com- mittee. The fact is that Mr. Clapp re- ceives no compensation whatever from the committee.” He said the committee “does not maintain any ‘committee of education for the purpose of censoring or pre- paring text books or for any similar purpose,” that it “has never circular- ized owners of public utility stocks for any purpose whatever” and that it “has never sent an ounce” of “boiler- plate” to “any newspaper anywhere.” The governor's address, the state- ment said, “grossly exaggerates the committee’s expenditures for the pres- ent year, adding that “at the close of this fiscal year it will not have spent during its entire existence the amount he charges as expended during the Apparentl; the statement said, “Gov. Smith’s informant went througl: the maze of testimony before the Fed- eral Trade Commission, picked out here and here bits of evidence without ref- erelité to the persons by whom they were produced or the organization to which they referred. put them together. connected as though all applicable to the joint committee, and then added material of his own creation. “Much of it is untrue in every re- spect and to whomsoever applied.” Y. W. C. A. CONFERENCE TO HEAR MISS DINGMAN Fall “Setting.Up” Meeting to Be Open at Headquarters Wednesday. retary of the world committee of the Young Women's Christlan Association. is to be the principal speaker at Wednesday evening's sesslon of . the annual Fall “setting-up conference” of the local Y. W. C. at headquarters, Seventeenth and K ets. Plans _for the two-day conference, Wednesday and Thursday, with sessions both days and on Wednesday evening, are being completed by the local com- mittee, which includes Mrs. Albert H. Putney, Miss Elizabeth Eastman, M Edwin B. Parker, Mrs. Gilbert E. Saul ders, Miss Mary Temple Hill, Miss Edith Dawson and Miss Hettie P. An- derson, general secretary. Miss Dingman will discuss the recent Budapest world conference attended by 350 delegates representing 34 coun- tries. All volunteers and staff members of the local Y. W. C. A. will attend the sessions this week. for which registra- tion is being made at headquarters, under_direction of Miss Mabel Chare: SICAL 5 Isabel Garvin Shelley 1824 H St. N.W. TEACHER OF SINGING SIGHT READING PIANO Primary and Adult Classes in Piano Instruction Franklin_8991 24 - Mme. Regina Vicarino PRIMA DONNA SOPRANO. Leading Opera Houses of Furope, South ‘America and the United States. Voice Training Opera and Song Repertoire Operatic Acting and Tradition ST. N.W. Miss Mary Dingman, industrial sec-| SEES SMITH GOAL AS NULLIFIGATION Rev. D. A. Poling Says Tam- many Tiger Is Major Cam- paign Issue. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, September 24.—Rev. Dr. Daniel A. Poling, .president of the International Society of Christian En- deavor and pastor of the Marble Col- legiate Church, told his congregation last night that he believed Gov. Smith’s prohibition program, including the Ca- nadian plan of liquor control, involved “nullification by evasion.” Asserting that “moral, constitutional and patriotic considerations 1lift this national campaign out of partisan poli- ties,” Dr. Poling said that “because of prohibition and Tammal he could not remain silent and “be true either to his own conscience ar to the tra- ditions of his pulpit.” “We believe that to release the ‘tiger’ upon national affairs would be a crime against American democracy,” he de- clared. “It might result in irretriev- able disaster. “Not by crying ‘bigot. not by intol- erance, nor by the sinister warnings of any public official shall we be silenced in our attacks on the multiplied evils of Tammany Hall. The ‘tiger’ is knocking at” the door of the White House. He shall not ‘pass." Expressing his belief in the princi- pie and the practical results of pro- hibition, Dr. Poling continued: “It is proposed now, by a responsi- ble political leader and presidential candidate, who has a perfectly frank record in support of the liquor traffic and of opposition to the eighteenth amendment, to amend the eighteenth amendment, to change the Volstead act so as to legalize wines and beers and to substitute for prohibition the so. ml}cd Canadian plan or state con- trol. “We believe this program involves nullification by evasion, in practical operation—if it could be put into op- eration—it would lead inevitably to pandemonium in government.” For Proper Glasses for the Proper Occasion See CLAFLIN 922 14th St. Big Steak Sale These steaks cut from the very finest grain-fed cattle and will eat tender and delicious. Round Steak . . Sirloin Steak . . Porterhouse Steak . ai'e Lb. 4 8¢ Lb. 58} :: Small Regular Sugar-Cured Hams of the Finest Quality .« ."“Thhis morning and every morning, of course!”’ That’s the sort of answer you’d get from millions of Westclox owners. Dayafterday, monthin and month out, Big Ben De Luxe, Baby Ben De Luxe and Ben Hur, like all Westclox, render trustworthy service. They tell you the correct time—awake you just when you wish. Dependable, attractive, long-lived. These handsome new models and a variety of other famous Westclox are sold everywhere. Some have plain dials, others luminous dials. And there’s Tiny Tim— FLOOD PERILS CITIES. Torrential Rain Swells Waters of Mexican River. MEXICO CITY, September 24 (#)— A dispatch from Torreon to El Univer- sal today said that raging waters of the Nazas River, which was swollen by a torrential rainfall, were threatening Lerdo and Gomez Palaclo, two impor- tant cities in Durango. Policemen with megaphones were warning the residents of the flood T danger while men labored feverishly to strengthen the river banks. le were seeking safety on neighboring hills. —_— Le Mont-Parnasse is the Paris Latin quarter’s new multilingual weekly news- All Nature Is Now Preparing for the Cold Blasts of Winter Coming Soon! . The birds are flying southward; squirrels and other animals are hoarding up their Y/snter's supply of nuts, etc.; plant life is undergoing many changes—in fact, all Nature is in agco.rd with the changing season. This is a good time for Homekeepers to look to their Food and Pantry Supplies before the approach of inclement weather. Buy canned fruits and vegetables by the case and other needs in quantities. It is not only cheaper this way, but saves time and many unnecessary steps when the snow begins to fly. It Pays to Trade in the Stores Where Quality Counts! Specially Priced for This Week! High Art Coffee Lb.45¢ You will enjoy every drop of this heavier bodied Coffee Reg. 49¢ pound tin Regular 21c ASCO ASPARAGUS STALKS Tall 50c Cans The Loaf, Gaining Hosts of New Friends Daily! Victor pan ) Bread Loaf A Suggestion List of Savings! ASCO Pancake Flour. . ASCO Buckwheat . . . .. Maypole Table Syrup. ASCO Sliced Bacon. . . ASCO Sliced Dried Beef. 1Y Lbs. Karo Syrup. . . Swans Down Cake Flour . . Minute Tapioca New Pack Peas and Tomatoes! Red Ripe Tomatoes, 3 Asco Solid Pack Tomatoes Camii .o Farmdale Peas, 2 Cans. . .25¢ New Pack Peas, Can. .18¢, 23c Regular 19¢ Orange Marmalade 17¢ Jar Meat Market Specials to Begin the Week! Small Lean Regular Hams (whole or shank half) _ ]b, 29¢ Sliced Ham . . . . lb.55¢ | Butt Ends Ham. .Ib. 35¢c These Hams Are Sugar Cured, Very Mild and Delicious Lean Plate Stewing Breast Lamb for ASCO or Del Monte - ASPARAGUS TIPS — Lile 8 Cans, 50c Big Popular Pan 5c¢ .2 10 o g W (- L 4-1b. pkg. 196 Yictb pke- ] 5¢ v 2210c L [ med. cans 25¢ Snowdrift .. .. 12¢, 19¢ Sour Pickles Gold Seal Rolled Oats 2 pkes. 156 Choc. Fig Dips. .. ...lb. 19¢ Fig Bars ........2lbs. 25¢ Ginger Snaps ......lb. 10c Fall Cleaning Reminders! High-Grade Brooms.=" 53c, 63c, 73c Scrub Brushes . . .<*" 10¢, 14¢, 17¢ Dust Brushes . . ........ Skidoo Creamy Cleanser . .. 3 ™ 25¢ Young’s Borax Powder . . . ASCO Washing Soda. . ..."= *= 10c Black Flag Sprayer &Liquid ™"t 59¢ OctagonSoap . .......... Butterine Regularly 25¢ lIb. A Pure, Wholesome Butter Substitute for all cooking and table OUR NEWEST MARKET 401 E. CAPITOL ST. Will Be Open for Inspection Thursday, Sept. 27th, 7 to 9 P.M. Oysters “R” in Season! ASCO Bread Crumbs. . ASCO Chili Sauce. .. New Pack ASCO Catsup. .. Trenton Crackers Lee & Perrins Sauce. ASCO or Del Monte ASPARAGUS S 85¢ Square Cans .22¢, 40c . P 10c akiGe b. 21c G O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0,0 0,0, 0,0 ,%,% vv...2 Phes. 15¢ Wheat Cereal 15¢ Pkg. practical value in everyday life Courses _in _Self-Expression and Public Speaking for Business and Professional d Women. Sidwell’s Friends School For Boys and Girls 46th Year Begins September 18 City School, 1809-1819 I St. N.W. All Grades and High School Poise, ete. The Suburban School, 3901 Wisc. Ave. Special Courses for Clergymen, Kindergarten and Grades I, L, v Teachers, Lecturers, Readers ||| Counirs ciub, ‘Grunasiim,” swimaias, Cliss: ot Privatesdnstraction, Thos. W. Sidwell, A. M. Day or Evenin, Phone Franitin' 2318 Phu::hfi?x:.l S5 a dainty little timepiece, without alarm, for home, office or travel; the popular Westclox watch, Pocket Ben; and the new Auto Clock. Prices—$1.50 to $5.00. WESTERN CLOCK COMPANY La Salle, Illinois Braising ........Ih. 18¢ Shoulder Lamb for Roasting .......Ib. 33c Shoulder Lamb Our Own Make Sausage Chops .........Ib, 39 Meat ..........Ib. 40c Finest Selected Hog Liver, Ib., 18c; 2 Ibs., 35¢; 3 Ibs., 50c Fancy Milk Fed Fowl (315 to I Fancy Milk Fed Frying Chickens 4 lbs. each) . . Ib., 35¢ (2, to 3 Ibs. each) . .Ib., 45¢ ASCO Cranberry Sauce, jar,122c | Smithfield Apple Sauce. can, 15¢ Fancy Milk Fed Roasting Chjckens | Genuine Wisconsin Long Horn (31 to 4 Ibs. each) . . .1Ib., 45¢ Cheese ..........lb., 35¢ Fruits and Vegetable We Endeavor to Serve You Well 2:19¢ heeirs. . 3w25¢ Virginia’s best varieties. These Prices Lffec Beef ...........Ih.22¢ Fresh Ground Beef. .Ib. 32¢ Big Ben De Luxe, Baby Ben De Luxe and T'iny Tim are also made in beautiful shadesof green, blue or old rose. Ben Hur too is finished in colors. Nickel or colors— prices are the same, HEAD OVER HEELS in work at the office or at the university? And yet you need stenography? Then take a special intensive course in Shorthand and Typewriting Tuesday and Thursday Evenings Hours as follows: Shorthand—6 to 7:30 P.M. Typewriting—7:30 to 9 P.M. Class Forms October 2 Register Now STRAYER COLLEGE - 3 5 > Quickly qttached on dash EymT ; or above windshield, Fits any car. = = TOKAY “Baby Ben De Luxe $3.75 WestcloxX Another offering at this price. Stark’s Delicious or Golden Delicious “Naney-Hall” SWEET POTATOES. . 721 Thirteenth Street Main 1748 Regular Day, and Evening Sessions, Too