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6 " THE EVENING EDUCATIONAL. EDUCATIONAL. - "COLUMBIA KINDERGARTEN TRAINING SCHOOL. Reopens October 3, 1928. SARA K. LIPPINCOTT. Principal, The Westmoreland. _ North 4134, King-Smith Studio-School Announces a Course in THEATER ARTS with ROBERT BYRNE Formerly of Rams Head Theater and Neighborhood Play House, New York City. The course includes stage and costume design, stage lighting, mask making, make-up, etc. North 10385 1751 N. H. Ave. N " Shorthand in 30 School Days, | D easiest learned, _reads like | PRINT_ rapid. Stenographic | Course, 12 weeks: Secretarial, 24 weeks: | Bookkeeping 12 weeks._Graduates in demand. | osition guaranteed. New Classes now form- | ne. Register (od: oyd School ~“Ac- credited.” Est. 8 338 “G.” Main 2338. | r;?Vhal Other LANGUAGE Would YOU Like To Speak? It's a simnle matter to learn to our conversational method. e Free Triol Lesson BERLITZ LANGUAGES 1115 Connecticut Avenue Telephone Decatur 3932 Southern Brotl;ers Steward Business University 1333 F Street N.W. Main 8671 “Special School for Secretaries” Short Intensive Courses Positions Certain LINTHICUM INSTITUTE 3116 O St. N.W. Night School for young men and boys. F nd and Mechanical Drawing. Type- | £3 Mathentatics, Penmanship, Spelling, Reading, Etc. Everything Free B3rd Srssiun“B HOME STUDY COURSE N Self Expression Public Speaking For professional and business men and women. organization and club members, salesmen, etc. Not to make orators of you. but to give you CONFIDENCE to get up and talk at any time if called upon, and 1o do 50 with g0od effect. Those ¥ho can speak are always LEADE] BE ONE. It will advance you in your business. It will help you in your social intercourse. A valuable course for any one Send for Descriptive Catalogue HICKMAN SCHOOL of Speech and Expression INTERNATIONAL BLDG. 1319 F Street bet. 13th and 14th A School of Resident Instruction " Established 1904 Phone Franklin 2318 Herman C. Rakemann Artist Teacher of Violin tndorsed by Prominent Musicians Studio and Residence 1928 Biltmore St. Phone Col. 9599 Fall term, offering superior courses fa SECRETARIAL TRAINING, begins OCTOBER 1 T'wenty-fifth Successful Year Pay and Evening Sessions Strayer College 721 13th Street Phone Main 1748 for Catalog WOO0D’S SCHOOL Established 1885 311 East Capitol St. Lincoln 38 ALL COM: ERCIAL BRANCHES ENROLL W FOR FALL TERM Ample r.rkn‘:‘x_ Spa for Students Cars i . WOOD, Principal R 10 Months, $100 Evening_Rates, £5.60 a_Month 10 Months. $30 to $30 District of Columbia College (¥. M. C. A.) SCHOOL OF LAW 3-year Evening Course Leading to LL. B, Degree Tuition. $100 a sear Catalog tpon request CHARLES V. IMLAY. A. B. 1336 G Street N.W. Emerson Institute 76th Consecutive Year 1738.1740 P St. Decatur 551 Da Late Afternoon Aceredited in the Fall Term Begins September 17 Prevaring for College and University— West Polnt—Annapolis—Coast _Guard. Special classes preparinz for examina- mmission in U. S. Cadets, U. S. Corps. 3 y W. H. Randolph, Principal Art Interior Decoration Costume Design 8 months to a paying position. Register w '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 GSt.N.W. __ Y.M.C.A. Sidwell’s Friends School For Boys and Girls 46th Year Begins September 18 City School, 1809-1819 1 St. N.W. All Grades and High School Suburban School, 3901 Wi Kindergarten and Grades 1, I Country Club, Gymnasium, Swimming, Bus Service Thos. W. Sidwell, A. M. Principal Phone Main 284 Main 8250 'file Easifilén. School 1305 Seventeenth Street Cor. Massachusetts Avenue A resident and day school for_girls. Primary, Intermediate and High School. Opens Sept. 24th Accountancy: B, C. S. and M. C, 8. degrees; C. P. A. Preparation Day and Evening Classes Bulletin on Request BENJAMIN FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY D ti Buildin, ortation 3 eight-two-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. M. 6617, Fr. 7964 9 o 7 FAIRMONT School for Girls—29th 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 i K. of C. SCHOOL LAW SCHGGL Regular three-year course leads to the LL. B. degreec. An additional year of gradu- ate work leads to the LL. M. degree. Sessions held at hours con- venient for students who are employed. Instruction Excellent, Tuition erate An unusually well equipped FACULTY _offers instruction in the following courses: College, High School, Account- ancy, Business. Open to both men and women. High school and college credits recognized by the Catholic Uni. versity. Salesmanship & Advertising Tuesdays and Thursdays Tt 9 Classes Now Forming 1314 Mass. Ave. Frank. 4696 AR OO OAE . America’s Tea Rooms, Restaurant are Earn $2,500 to $10,000 a Year in 3rd Largest Industry! OTELS, Clubs, Apartments, In- stitutions, Schools, _Colleges, Cafeterias daily calling for Lewis-trained men and women. Over 70,000 high- class $10,000 open annually positions paying $2,500 to in hotels alone! Without cost in acle—and you need with Previous E the pos: tion of Assistant intendent of ce.” ing employment, rs in the Greater Hot Let ns show YOU how bl n aquick promot otel Industry. & common s the famous Lef Age hool education is all wis System of Training. Experience Unnecessary Amazing_success and high sala- ried won by Lewls er where can new way. | tions Open'" Linited cla details at o gan 6 months ago.” 1da Hart- n, Stamford. Conn —“I am Housekeeper at 23rd St. Pennsylvania Ave. | aduates evers- OURSL this oks— “Your_Bi Hotel now forming—get Write or Call Lewis Hotel Training Schools 3 LA Join now for easy. fasci. tions. “Employment service free of extra cost. | EDWARDS ASSAILS MRS WILLEBRANDT {Says U. S. Should Oust Her for Political Utter- ances. By the Associated Press NEW YORK, September 25.—United States Senator Edwz:l I Edwards, Democrat, of New Jersey, issued a statement today asserting that Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt should be ant Attorney General by both President | coolidge and Attorney General Sargent because of her political utterances. “Her address Sunday night,” statement continued, “before the North- Episcopal Church is a disgrace to the department of which she,is a part. If the Department of Justice is not a mockery of the very thing for which it was instituted—fairness and justice to all men—Mrs. Willebrandt should be driven from office so that she might spread her poisonous anti-Smith propa- ganda unsupported by ‘the present Republican administration.” ‘Wants Her Ousted. CHICAGO, September 25.—The Chi- cago Tribune in its morning edition printed a letter from Benjamin Fuell- man, a member of the Republican Wis consin State central committee, ad- dressed to James W. Good, Western manager for Herbert Hoover, which says “unless Mrs. Willebrandt is muz- zled Mr. Hoover is sure to go down to defeat.” The letter was prompted by the re- ports of strength of Smith in Wiscon- sin. The letter continues: “Political observers in this State, if they are fair, will tell you Gov. Smith would carry this State if the election | were held now. He is getting stronger since Mrs. Mabel Willebrandt has taken the stump. This State is opposed to prohibition tactics as practiced by Mrs. Willebrandt and it is also opposed w0 the kind of campaigning she is doing. “Unless Mrs. Willebrandt is muzzled Mr. Hoover is sure to go down to de- feat. If she fails to heed this request President Coolidge should call for her resignation. By doing this he will do more to insure the election of Mr. Hoaoyer than any single act hr could | perform for the Republican party.” Protest Her Speech. NEW YORK, September 25—M. Louise Gross, chairman of the women's division of the national committee for the repeal of the eighteenth amend- ment, said yesterday that protest would be made to Washington against Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt's “use of her political job to further the interests of the Anti-Saloon League.” The immediate occasion of the pro- test, she said, was the speech made last night by the Assistant Attorney General a Methodist Church at Lorain, Ohio. “The majority of the Episcopal churches, to which I belong,” said Miss Gross, “as well as the majority of the Catholic churches, do not espouse pro- hibition. Just because a few Metho- dists and Baptists do, does not guar- antee all the churches of America. “The women of the country want temperance, such as we had before prohibition, and not politics in the churches.” . HITS DRY FORCES AGAIN. Mrs. Willebrandt Defends Prohibition and Renews Smith Attack. WARREN, Ohio, September 25.—Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, Assistant Attorney General, continued her attack upon opponents of the prohibition laws in an address prepared for delivery before the Westminster Men’s Club here last night, directing her fire chiefly upon Gov. Smith and Tammany Hall. “When some leaders, industrially and politically, press upon the American | public the thought—the state of mind— that they, the American people, are incapable of enforcing the prohibition law, or any law,” Mrs. Willebrandt said, “then such leaders are inflicting upon the American people a wound and a hurt beyond the power of such leaders to calculate. ‘“Whenever we get to the point that we really believe of any national job, nobly and honestly undertaken, that ‘it can't be done,’ we will have reached the apex of America’s achievement. That is why there has been so tremendous a recoil against Gov. Smith's policy of retreat on prohibition. “This retreat and effort to restore the beverage liquor traffic is in line with his years of Tammany training. Tammany always protected the saloon. “One serious reason for opposition to the Democratic nominee is his Tam- many connections. A man's horizon is always limited by his contacts and the EDUCATIONAL. e e S National School Fine & Applied Art . FELIX MAHONY, Director Interior Decoration, Costume Design Commercial Art, Poster, Color ‘pynamic 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 George Washington University Law School Member Association uf American Law Schools Avproved by American Bar Assoclation Established 1865 Academic Year 1928.29 begins September 19 Registration Days September 15-18, Inclusi STOCKTON HALL 720 Twentieth St. West 1640 MUSICAL INSTRUCTIO! Mme. Regina Vicarino PRIMA DONNA SOPRANO. Leading Opera Houses of Furope, South Merica and the United States, Voice Training Opera and Song Repertoire Operatic Acting and Tradition 1612 20th ST. N.W. AT CONNECTICUT AVE. Phone Potomac 6052.J “The Institute of Conservatory Preparatory Courses Courses Musical Art Graded courses and most mod- ern methods used in all branches. School orchestra under direction of Dr. C. E. Christiani and vocal chorus under direction of Prof. Otto T. Simon open to students. Catalogue Mailed on Request 813 18th N.W. Frank. 2511 asked to resign her position as Assis(-‘ the | east Ohio Conference of the Methodist | STAR, WASHINGTON, . i for Albany astride his old gray mule, presidential candidate and then cast a ballot in New Jersey. yesterday and was nearing Baltimore today, going strong. —Underwood Photo. D. ., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 5, 1928.° WILLIAM PATTERSON, Democrat and Indian fighter, who resides at the Soldiers’ Home here, starting to pay his respects to the Democratic Patterson started persons whom he serves and the enter- prises he undertakes. “All honor to a man born humbly, | whether it be in the tenements of New York or near a blacksmith forge in Towa. Humble beginnings are laudable, and no man has a choice as to where the beginning will be; but the test when men submit themselves for the highest public office in this land is whether they have enlarged the horizon that may have surrounded early life. Those who oppose Gov. Smith believe he has not done so.” R HECKLERS OUSTED AS CURTIS SPEAKS Neminee to Discuss Farm Re- lief in Omaha Address . Tonight. | By the Assoclated Press. EN ROUTE WITH SENATOR CUR- TIS, IN NEBRASKA, September 25.— ‘With almost a full day of travel ahead of him today, Senator Curtis, Repub- lican vice presidential nominee, was reparing a statement on the Republican Susmon on farm relief to deliver to- night in Omaha on the same platform from which Gov. Smith discussed this issue a week ago. The Senator also was taking as much advantage as train travel affords to get in some rest during the day’s trip across Nebraska from Denver, where he spoke last night. He spoke also yesterday at Cheyenne, Wyo., and upon crossing the path of Gov. Smith in the West took occasion to make some references to him yesterday. Partisan politics were at high tide in Denver, where the Democratic stand- ard-bearer had appeared Saturday and Republicans crowded the huge audi- torium to overflowitg for the Curtis meeting. When the Senator referred to Gov. Smith as “the man who marches to the tune of ‘The Sidewalks cf New York,’ " a heckler got into action, but he and a woman who shouted at the speaker were quietly led from the hall by police amid considerable confusion and with the Senator protesting. “You would tear down the Statue of Liberty,” the speaker in the audience shouted, “and put one up of Andrew Mellon in its place!” “Andrew Mellon,” Curtis replied, “is the best Secretary of the Treasury this couhtry ever had.” As the police rushed toward the man, a woman on the other side of the hall shouted over and over, “Don’t say that about ‘The Sidewalks of New York.'” She, too, was escorted out. The crowd cheered when the Senator followed up a _minute later with the statement that “I tame here to talk to men and women who prefer to’' march to the music of ‘The Star Spangled Banner.’” Curtis emphasized his promise for a higher protective tariff and declared in favor of “full protection” to the beet sugar industry. After his speech here tonight, Curtis turns south, speaking in Springfield, Mo., tomorrow and then going into Oklahoma for the rest of the week. Your New ATTACH TO YOUR ELECTRI CHANGE FROM RADIO TO ‘Tasy 'Tcrm,s at 1330 G STREET ROBINSON TO RENEW HIS CAMPAIGN TOUR Democratic Nominee, Ending Rest Period, Will Speak in Springfield, Mo., Thursday Night. By the Assoclated Press. HOT SPRINGS, Ark., September 25. —With only six weeks remaining before the election, Senator Joe T. Robinson today entered upon what probably will be his last day of vacation until the campaign is over. He expects to leave his retreat in the Ozark Mountains, tomorrow in time to reach his home in Little Rock several hours ahead of his scheduled departure for Springfield, Mo., where he will de- liver the first speech of his Western tour Thursday night. While the Democratic vice presiden- tial nominee had hoped to keep his whereabouts a secret, so as to have as complete relaxation as possible from the campaign, it proved a futile wish. Although it ,was not announced until yesterday afternoon by newspapers that he was staying at Couchwood, the Sum- mer home of a friend, nearly everybody in Hot Springs knew where he was. The cottage overlooks Lake Cath- erine, a lake formed by the Remmel Dam of the Arkansas Power & Light Co. Just about a year ago the cottage held another distinguished visitor—Her- bert Hoover—who rested there a few dayi while in Arkansas on flood relief work. The Senator tried his luck at fishing in the beautiful lake yesterday and landed 11 of the 35 bass, crappie and perch caugt by his party of four. e Rapid progress is being made with the British government plan for the transference of boys from districts where unemployment is large to places where they may find work. 1818 Kalorama Road N.W. Washington Heights 5 rooms and bath. . $55.00 4 rooms and bath.. 52.50 3 rooms and bath.. 47.50 ' All Outside Rooms. Will refinish to suit tenant. Open for Inspection A. S. Gardiner 932 Investment Bldg. Main 334 PR IBIHE $ 2 The Hecht Co. q % Features % Victor S Electrola Radiola S%a Another Nationally éf Known Product (4 S RTINS TTREZ I IVICTOR Elect}-}%‘%diola C UGHT SOCKET. YOU MAY™ ,RECORDS BY A TWIST OF THE WRIS ASKS VOTERS TO LET CONSCIENCE BE GUIDE Atlantic Monthly Editor, in Radio Talk, Takes Rap at Re- ligious Issue. is joined one issue and only bigots and fanatics bring it to debate, for it is deep beyond reason and its elements are primal. ‘Thou shalt have none other Gods but me,’ spake Jehovah, but the people parodied His commandment, ‘thou shalt have none other Gods but mine’ has become the outcry of the age.” d Tt ‘Thousands in the rural districts of Cuba are out of work. Air Pilots Killed in Crash. MILES CITY, Mont., September 25 (#).—John Nockels of Billings and for- merly of Carroll, Iowa, and Robert Moore of Wolf Point, pilots, were killed here Sunday when their ‘monocoupe, a plane participating in the dedication of the local airport, crashed. Nockels was flying the plane when t) pmitin el he accident By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 25.—The plea “Let us vote as our consciences dictate” was mdde last night by Ellery Sedgwick, editor of the Atlantic Monthly, in a radio talk. The Democratic national committee, in making public the text, said Mr. Sedgwick wished to emphasize that “Studies in Temperament,” the title of his paper, expressed his personal views and not the position of the publication. “Let us vote for Hoover or for Smith as men,” the editor urged after con- trasting the personalities of the major parties’ presidential candidates. “Let us honestly prefer the Republican promise of good business or the Demo- cratic plea for fair dealing. Let us vote to continue our experiment in pro- hibition or put mere temperance first. Let us save the farmer by what way we prefer. But let us not try to fool our own souls by voting before the world for a secret reason which the more decent of us dare scarcely even murmur to ourselves.” “A strange campaign it is,” said Mr. Sedgwick. “On the surface are issues casual almost and not exciting, but be- low the issues are two contrasting per- sonalities, each strong enough to sail the ship on bold new courses. And be- neath the champions themselves, far below their political convictions, there DROOP'S CHILDREN OF GENIUS "Ro% AMAZE THE WORLD... A great stir was caused in the world of research when the Victor Talking Machine Company and the Radio Corporation of America united their efforts and produced the wonderful new ORTHOPHONIC VICTROLA. ELECTROLA-RADIOLA Nothing better has ever been produced—each model is the “Last Word” in today’s accomplishments respect- ing quality and performance. 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