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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, SE PTEMBER 28, 1f COLUMBIA KINDERGARTEN TRAINING SCHOOL October” 3. ns 1929. LIPPINCOTT. Princtpal. 'North_3494. $200000000000000000900000 | Felix Mahony’s Complimentary Life Class A _Few Vacancies Remain for My oFormer Students and Professiona! Artists Phone for Information 1747 Rhode Island Avenue | North 1114 1 10000000041 o000 The VGeorge Washingt‘m University Law School Men.ber Association of American Law Schools. Appioved by American Bar Asso- clation. Established 1865 Academic _year 1929-30 begins September 25. Registration days, September 21, 23 and 24. 720 Twentieth Street Stockton Hall West 1640 N(.‘ON ‘.7/10“3&‘!?)01 " SE(R[‘ A‘“u &€ 518 5 BLOG, Higoes NATIONAL FE TG 1S DAY < eeessesresrsesseseserss THE SERVICE SCHOOL, 1860 Mintwood Place CONSTAN . TUTHI Principal Kinderzarten and Grades Boarding and Day School, n hot B taund C > reek Service ay Rates. S2 535 month. including noon meal rding Rates. 80, including and schal supplies. ren_are privileged fo come before § and remain till 6. Catalogue. Adams 1443, 280 190000040000 000000 week. 85, The Eastman School || 1305 Seventeenth Street Cor. Massachusetts Avenue A resident and da: schoo) for irls. Srimary. Intermediate and High School. Opens Sept. 24th Sidwell’s Friends School For Boys and Girls 47th Year Begins Sept. 17 City School 1809-1819 Eye St. N.W. ‘ ANl Grades and High School } Suburban School, 3901 Wis. Ave. Kindergarten and Grades I. II. MI 1V Country Club, New Gymnasium. Swimming, | Bus Service Thos. W. Sidwell, A. M., Principal al 0284 I INTERIOR DECORATION You can now receive a complete urse in interlor dec been 1 eesstal eity. or interior school in Washington only. actual practicing The condueted by an interior decorator. Daisy Belle McCoy | 1816 Belmont Road Adams 10286 ;‘ Call only in the evening | SOOI QW, Stenography. typewriting, speed dictation compiete secretarial course. 35 per | "The Civil Service Preparators School, 12(h and ¥ sts. n.w._ Met. 6337. ¢ | e, cor | | Prepare for College ” in the evening at | Washington Preparatory School | Co-educational — Accredited Member || Association of Colleges and Secondarv Schools of the Midale States and Mary- lana | 26 Complete High School Courses l | 'NATIONAL UNIVERSITY 61st Year Begins September 28, 1929, at 6:30 P.M. LAW DEPARTMENT Three-vear undergraduate course for employed students, lea ing to the degrees of Bachelor of Law (B. C. L.), and Doctor of accepted for iull course only. Graduate school offers one and lowing graduate degrees in law: Master of Laws (LL.M.), Master of Pat- ent Law (M. P. L.), Doctor of Jurid of Civil Law (D. C. L.). depariment: Interstate Commerce Law Patent Law and Practice Admiralty and Maritime Law Public International Law Private International Law International Relations and Organization Evolution of Modern Civil Law Modern Civil Law—Analytical Jurisprudence and Legal History Comparative Government and Public Law—(A) Governments of Europe and (B) Govern- ments of Central Europe. Students may register for any School of Economics and Government ‘This School offers a standard nomics and Government leading (A, B.) and Bachelor of Sclence (B. S.) in Economics and Govern- The following courses are offered: ment. Corporation Finance. Business Finance. Investments. Business Organization and Ad- ministration. Money and Banking. Money and Credit. Federal Reserve System. The Stock Exchange. Development of Banking Services. Banking Practice. Trust Company Management. Auditing and Legal Accounting. Principles of Economics. Industrial Relations. Government and Business. Public Utilities and Trenspor- tation. Economic Geography. Interstate Commerce, Federal ‘Trade Commission, Trusts and Monopolies. English and English Literature, five courses, including Jour- nalism. Principles of Political Science and Government. Government, two Comparative courses. American Government. Municipal Government. Party vernment. Students may admission and info Tegistration 9 a.m. o 7 P. 818 13th CONVENIENCE WALLACE ENGI $O4-121h Sereet S.E. cor. 12th & F St The following courses are offered in this riculate for less than n upon apulication. Street N.W. Invest in First Trust Notes Yielding Interest B GEN RADFORD ASKS ETIRENENT New Marine Corps Quarter- master Desires to Enter Banking Business. Money to Loan on Real Estate J. LEO KOoLB 23 NEW _YORK AVENUE 923 NSSTRICT 5021 Ash Furnace Tools FRIES, BEALL & SHARP 734 10th St. N.W. Natl. 1964 Cans nd Brig. Gen. Cyrus S. Radford of the | Marine Corps, recently appointed quar-| termaster, has filed application for re- | tirement December 25, upon the com- pletion of 39 years of active service, | | Marine Corps headquarters anriounced | | today. President Hoover must approve the | application. i Gen. Radford plans to engage in the banking busiess. | Gen. Radford, who is credited with | bullding up the great quartermaster ! depot of the Marines at Philadelphia during the past quarter of a century, | will be transferred to the retired list if | the officials agree upon the expiration of his accrued leave, December 25. The general's reqiest came as & surprise. Gen. Radiord expects to become a vice presiden: of the Bankers' Trust Co. of Philadelphia, Gen. Radford is a graduate of the | | Naval Academy, class of 1890, ' He was commissioned as second lieutenant of the Marine Corps in 1892 and served | aboard the battleship, Texas during the | battle of Guantanamo Bay during the | destruction of the Spanish fieet in the | war with Spain in 1898. He was a! member of the Marine expeditionary | |force to the Philippines in 1901-2, sorved in Panama in 1904 and in Cuba | in 1906. ® | The Philadelphia_depot has become, | under Gen. Radford's direction, one of | | the great commercial establishments of | the country, with more than ten mil- | | lion dollars” worth of “supplies handled. | | Gen. Radford has become a manu- | | facturer, merchandiser and financier | in the course of his duty in Phila- delphia. For Oil Heating COMFORT ECONOMY Be sure to see the per Oil Heator ERING CO. “EDUCATIONAL. GIN TODAY Special Preparation for ensus ce Exam. Civil Service Pre ry Schoel Sts. N.! t. 6385, ¢ The LEARN INTERIOR DECORATION E T. Dickinson, teaching Placement training and experience with W. B. MOSES & SONS Positions for Graduates Ask for New Catalog Livingstone Academy 20 Years in Washington 1333 F St. Opp. Fox Met. 2883 ~ Maret | 18 Kal "TOURISTS INVITED T0 SPECIAL SERVICE Y. M. C. A Sponsors Religious, Ceremony at Camp in East Potomac Park. s Road. Opens September 30. 1 Combines the advantages of American <chools Wwith 50 that of & sojourn in France Eient grades for bovs and girls. High_School for_sirls ‘Tourists are invited to attend a spe- | cial religious service tomorrow afternoon at 5 oclock in the recreation hall of the tourist camp in East Potomac Park, under auspices of the Washington Young Men's Christian Association. Rev. George G. Culbertson, assistant pastor of the New York Avenue Pres- ! byterian Church, will give the sermon. | |'The Christian Endeavor Society of Luther Memorial Church will assist in | the program. ' | The religious department of the Y. M. | C. A. has arranged for speakers at other | | services tomorrow. | Page McK. Etchison, director of the | department, will have charge of the morning service at the First Reformed Church at 11 o'clock, and will speak at | the evening service of the Mount Ver- non M. E. Church South at 8 o'clock. Luther H. Kinard of the Y. M. C. A. will have charge of the morning service | at the Mount Rainier M. E. Church South in the absence of the pastor. | Kenneth Buker will preach tomorrow morning_at the Community M. E. | Church South at Aurora Helghts, Va. MORE PAY || EVERY WEEK Prepare &t night for & better job and bigger pay. Practical courses in Typing, Short- hand, Book- keeping and Accounting. Individual courses arranged to fit your needs. Write, phone or call for free copy of “A Bigger Salary Check for Yo Classes open every Monday evening in September. STRAYER COLLEGE 721 Thirteenth St. Natl. 1748 {RETIRED U. S. EMPLOYE ENTERS TYPING MATCH Mrs. Anna B. Cushman Is First to| Enroll for Exposition National School of Fine & Applied Art FELIX MAHONY, Director Interior Decoration, Costume Design, Commercial Art, Post- ers, Color, Dynamic Symmetry Profe. al, Cultural, Fundamental Speed Contest. Mrs seven years ago from Government se retarial work, but has “kept in touck with her typewriter, was the first en- trant in the District typewriting speed champlonship which will be held in dustrial exposition, sponsored by the Washington Chamber of Commerce at the Washington Auditorfum October n 21 to 26. Cour Personal Instruction Persons wishing to enter the contest should address their communications to the Chamber of Commerce headquar- i Anna B. Cushman, who retired | | conjunction with the fifth annual in- | Day and Night Classes Children’s Saturday Morning Class |\ . "yl Byilding. The typing con- test will be a feature of the business Connecticut Avenue & M| o e 1747 Rhode Island Ave. = North 1114 Begins October 1st See Our Student Exhibit 0000000006000000000000000 ' The Columbia National Bank 911 F Street Capital & Surplus $650,000.00 3% Paid on Savings Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.), Students Jurisprudence (J. D). . two year courses leading to the fol- ica! Science (S. J. D.), and Doctor Medical Jurisprudence Federal Trade Commission Roman Law—(A) Analytical, (B) Historical Community Property Law Practice Courses Advanced Moot Court Foreign Commercial Laws Public Utilities Government Contracts and Claims Auditing and Legal Accounting Federal Procedure Land, Mining and Irrigation Law Federal Tax Laws Law of Trusts and Monopolies one or more of these cqurses. Accounts Senator Tells Expert On Tobacco He Doesn’t Do as Well as Flapper By the Assoctated Press. James C. Stone of Kentucky, who represents tobacco on the Federal Farm Board, calculates ‘that even if a person smokes a package of cigarettes daily it would take 42 years for that in- dividual - to consume a single hogshead of the raw product. ' He told the Senate agriculture committee that a package a day was his own quota. While that might seem a lot of cigarettes, he felt he had to do his share “to keep the industry going. “Even at that,” put in Senator, Smith, a Democrat from the to- bacco-growing State of South Carolina, “you don't do as well as the flappers.” §500 FINE IMPOSED INNUMBERS GAME Walter Hall Gets Penalty at Marlboro as Operator of Betting Plant. Special Dispaich to The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., September 28.—That war on the numbers game in Prince Georges County is going to be pushed with vigor is manifest today following the fining of Walter Hall alleged operator of such a game at Suitland, Md., by County Police Justice J. Chew Sheriff in Police Court here yesterday. Hall was given a fine of $500 after pleading guilty to setting up and maintaining a gaming table. Hall was arrested in a raid Decem- ber 17 by Sheriff Charles S. Early and other Prince Georges County officers. The house where Hall was arrested | along with 15 other persons was listed in the name of Joe Freeman, well known in Washington sporting circles. Mrs. Freeman, his wife, was in another part of the buflding at’the time of the raid. The others arrested besides Hall were charged with “playing with a game with a fradulent device or trick, to wit, by the use of numbers.” They were re- leased on.payment of court costs of $350 in each case. The charges were nolle prossed by State’s Attorney J. Frank Parran. In fining Hall, Judge Sheriff sald that while gamblers and like persons ap- pear to shun Montgomery County and Virginia because of the strict watch kept on them in those sections, they appeared to believe they should take liberties in Prince Georges County and implied that he intended imposing heavy sentences in future cases of the type brought before his court. In the raid on the Suitland house. adding machines and slips, such as those used in playing the numbers game, were seized, as well as consider- | able cash. $77.50 SMALL APARTMENT Livine Room. 2 Bedrooms, Kitchen and Dinette Or_slight Alteration Living Room. Bedroom. large Dining_Room. Kitchen and Breakfast Room ALL LARGE ROOMS SMALL CASH PAYMENT TOTAL Monthly Payment... . $113.3% Int. and Operating. Monthly Saving.. Net Monthly Outla; $77.50 Also One large, one small unfurnished apartment FOR RENT by owners unable to occupy same. Above Anytime or Evening See_the Today M. & R. B. Warren 1661 Crescent Pl }‘- Open at 8:30 A.M. Daily WEALTH —says the idealist, falls far short of being life’s highest goal, but it's a symbol of success with which most of us like to be on close terms. fRegular Payday saving affords you the surest means of accumulating a fund to invest or put to other timely use. fOur Savings Dept. is ready to second, your thrift efforts. One Dollar or more will open an ac- count, 2 four-year collegiate course in Eco- 0 the degree of Bachelor of Arts American Political Theories. Constitutional Law. Jurisprudence and Legal History. . International Law. International Claims. International Relations and Or- ganization, Roman Law. Modern Civil Law. Ancient History. Roman Civilization and 1Its Survival in the Modern World. Medieval European History. Modern European History, Early American History. American Hislory, 1829 to the present. History of American Foreign Policy. y. English History. Latin American History. Economic_History. General Psychology. Applied Business Psychology. Social Psychology. Principles of Sociology. Elementary Biology. Criminology. Latin, introductory. Latin, intermediate. French, introductory. French, intermediate. full B Chesapeake Bay. property. rements for fMice open for 1400 H St. NW. cou Registrar’s Tels. National 6617 Open Until 5 P.M., Sept. 30,0ct. 1& AY RIDGE ON CHESAPEAKE BAY NOW IS THE TIME TO VISIT BAY RIDGE And select a location for your summer home, so you may enjoy it mext season. lots are offered at $750 up on easy terms. A BEAUTIFUL NEW BUNGALOW PRICE $5,000 Contains five rocms and bath; all modern con- veniences; beautiful porch, with splendid view of Easy terms. Beautiful shaded DRIVE DOWN SUNDAY Call at our office on the grounds and our repre- sentative will gladly show you over this splendid Bay Ridge Realty Corp:; Owner WM. H. LANHAM, Washington Representati National 0366 PEACOX GONVIGTED IN SECOND DEGREE Given Mandatory Sentence of 20 Years to Life Term “in Prison. By the Assoclated Pres WHITE PLAINS, N..Y, s«ptember’ 28.—Undble to convince a jury that his| mind had been buffeted into irresponsi- | bility by an emotional storm when he killed his wife, Earl F. Peacox stood convicted today of murder in the sec- ond degree. 4 His story was that when his wife spoke sarcastically of his apartment as a “dump” and slapped him in the face on the first anniversary of what she once referred to in a letter as their make-believe marriage, “everything went black,” and he regained his senses to find her lying dead at his feet. ‘The jury took the case late yester- day afternoon after being instructed that if they, believed the temporary in- sanity plea, they should acquit; but if not, they might return a verdict of first | or second degree murder or of man- slaughter. F Street at Seventh STUDY BENEFITS FOR COLORED RACE T Increased Employment and Recreational Facilities In- cluded in Proposed Survey. |! A committee appointed last night at a meeting of the Federation of Civic Associations todav beean a study of | plans to increase the employment of colored persons in the District. The committee will work with the Young Men’s Christian Assoclation. The meeting also resulted in a re- quest that constituent organizations in- vestigate recreational facilities for col- ored persons In their territory. Each association also will take part in a sur- vey being made to determine the type of material used in local public schools | which gives the history of the colored | race in America. Resolutions praising the late Dr. Charles H. Marshall for his accomplish- | ments as a member of the Board of Education also were adopted. Dr. Marshall_was eulogized in speeches by John E. Bowles, Dr. George H. Richard- | son and C. A. DeVaughn. | Membership was granted to the | People’s Civic Association of Potomac | ark. | Court against Mrs. Detroit motor car manufacturer, and MRS. DELPHINE BAKER resides i the Wardman Fark. Hote rou Aty A Ne: IS SUED FOR $125,000 | w.ocien 3. mercin sm oo, & Yeswit the court is told that April 27, 1928, the Suit to recover $125,000 and mterent‘\—';’-]mf: ‘go,l :‘éfi“l’&i"rfio"fifir‘&f r?’aeul been for two years on a promissory note was | paid on it since November 24 - . 1927, filed today in the District Supreme | = - = Delphine Dodge, COLORFUL DRAPERIES WILL Cromwell Baker, wife of Raymond T., BRIGHTEN UP YOUR HOME Let us consult with Baker, former director of the United | of your new aranectes. Cwa” s maKine States Mint under the Wilson admin- | TX/E them to order.” Pactory brices save 211 P st istration. The sulc is filed by Marie 5 i I I Edith Grosby Burnham to the use of lNICDEVl Distriet 351 the hI:vmiz Trust Co. of New York. o nof said to have be 2% % November 24, 1925, at. Fort Tm'.'hi‘ff! U dale, Fla, when Mrs. Baker was the wife of James H. R. Cromwell, son of | Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury, a prominent | and wealthy Philadelphian. Mrs. Blkpr“ Round Trip NEW YORK Sunday, September 29 Special Throush Train Penna. Station, 1th Ave. 8t is & daughter of the late Horace Dodge, ‘ %, 277 7% Organized Responsibility . Use Yellow Cabs and Black and White Cabs Owned and Operated by Brown Bros. Dire 227777 77 7 72 2z York s:is (Market Bireet) 5:38 PA ALL STEEL EQUIPMENT \| Pennsylvania Railroad 72777, % 77 - In October o o HECHT MONTH I2 Washington The final in a series of articles leading up to the event—Hecht Month in Wash- ington ® Being the magnificent effort of one of America’s truly metropolitan department stores to present our services, our conveniences, our worth to the community ® A magnificent event in which we offer authentic modes in wearing apparel . . . desirable articles for personal needs . . . articles for the home, for enjoyment or utility ® An event in which economy rules ® Everything is in readi- ness ® We have assembled merchandise from every part of the globe ® We have marked the prices so that all who need may purchase and save ® 10 pages in the Sunday Star and 2 pages in the Sundny Post will carry the details. - - THE HECHT CO. 0000 illllllllllllllHlIlllIIIlIliIIlflllmIIIIIlIlIlIIIIIII\IIIIIIHIllllllilIlllll[llllllllllIIIlIIIlI(IlIlIIII||I|II|||II|I|I|II|lllllllllllllIIIIIII|I|III|Il|li|I|I|I|lI||III|||||||||||||III{HIIIIII|I|II|I||I||II||IH|I|||I1II|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllll