Evening Star Newspaper, September 17, 1930, Page 10

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D. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1930. YOUNG BANK ROBBERS GIVEN LONG SENTENCES Boys Get 10 to 14 Years at Hard | Labor, Girls Get 5-to-8-Year Terms. THE EVENI EDUCATIONAL. Art—Advertising Interior Decorati tion Costume Design Life Class NG STAR, WASHINGTO 'HOOVER-PERTINAX EEEE, | TIT BROUGHT 1P levgngdlogee puisher Says Lewis 1333 F 5t. NW. ME. 2883 Charge President “Took™ COLUMBIA SCHOOL \ Insult Is Untrue. A-—10 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. EDUCATIONAL. TORY GRADUATE nzsmu CoNsERvAToRY GRunnATE DESTRES | —COLUMBIA SCHOOL Dec. 0‘71 1763 P st. n.w. ‘(near Iklhl ‘ENGINEERING AND DRAFI'ING Paul J. Leverone, President Engineering Classes Begin Sept. 29 Drafting Classes Enroll Any Time Day and Evening Sessions Send for Catalogues [1319 F St. N.W. Metro. 5626 Walton Courses Day and evening classes leading to B. C. 8. and M. C. S. degrees now forming. Call or telephone National 1748 for catalogue STRAYER COLLEGE OF ACCOUNTANCY 721 13th Strekt Enrollment Week I, inatruction for Fall Civil service | examinations SPE | RO ENROTIMENT WEEK, ~ Prepare far Clerk Promotion. Statistical Clerk and | Flie Clerk examinations. Classes 5 days and | 3 mights cach week, The Civil Service Preparators Schaol SE. Cor. 15h & F N.W. Met. 6333, _* * Headaches + Warn of Trouble s Try Yeast « Grete Lorleberg von Bayer Pianist and Teacher Studied piano with Carl Leimer { Director, Hanover Conservators. | Erofessor Marle Bender Rool for Music, Berlin-Charlotten- by The Chevy Chase Apartment Cleveland 5215 By the Associated Press. SALISBURY, N. C., Septeber 17— Ted Honeycutt, 19, and John Ellis, 20, of Charlotte and two girls, tried | here with them for robbing the Bank | of Rockwell on August 18, yesterday | were given long prison terms. Presiding Judge Jonn Clements sen- tenced each of the boys to from 10 to 14 years in Sfate's prison at hard labor. Both had pleaded guilty. Mabel Yarborough of Charlotte, who entered a plea of guilty to a charge of being an accessory to the robbery, | received a five to eight year sentence. Mary Prick of Rockwell, the only one of the quartet to fight the charges, | was given a sentence of six to eight years. A jury found her guilty yes- terday. Honeycutt and Ellis were arrested in Clearwater, Fla., after the robbery on | information given by the girls. “EDUCATIONAL. erSH ~ SCHOOL OF WASHINGTON Prot. from Spa Rapia m"m L Engineering & Drafting e BLUE PRINT READING Estimating, Plans, Bullding Regulations. Permit Drawings. Enroll Any Time Correspondence Instruction | Send for Catalogue B. P 10 ¥ . W BY DAVID LAWRENCE. An incident that keeps bobbing up |from time to time, namely an_unpub- |lished encounter between Pertinax, French political writer, and President | Hoover at a banquet of the American | | Society of Newspaper Editors in Wash- | ington last April, now has been brought into the Illinois senatorial campaign by former Senator Lewis. ir. Lewis charges that the French rnalist made an attack on the pol- icy of the United States in the pres- ence of Mr. Hoover and that it was not resented. Presiding Officer Answers Lewis. Walter M. Harrison, editor of the An accredited school in Was which stresses Cc Board and preparat Point, Nav a Guard and Air \r vice. on request Il ter tember 17 per year 2961 Upton Street N.W. Washington, D. C. _ Metro. 5626 Sidwell’s Friends School For Boys and Girls 47th Year Begins September 22 City School, 1809-1819 I St. N.W. Al Grades and High School Suburban School, 3901 Wisc. Ave. Kindergarten and Grades I, IL TIL 1V Country Club, Gymnasium, Swimmine. ard, $200 Standard Brands, Incorpe o ““ ” . . . e s e WASHINGTON NOTE OF RED GRANGE THOSE HEADACHES are l ARISING HERE. Intestinal Fatigue h ! BY EATING three cakes often warnings of trouble the cause . i i Correct this condition MOUNT PLEASANT SCHOOL for SECRETARIES TIVOLI THEATRE BUILDING TELEPHONE, COLUMBIA 3000 THE SWAVELY SCHOOL Nationally Known Preparatory School for Boys 28 Miles From Washington 31st Year Opens Sept. 15 eation adapted to Golf course. For Catalog address Registrar, Swavely School, Manassas, V: College of Music =l Twentr-Seventh year. An &) institution for all branches children and practice rooms, 09 8 St. PR hmcrmn Institute 78th_Consecutive Year 740 P St. North 10359 N.W. Potomac 1846 1738, Day_School—Late Afternoon School— Ce tional—Accredited in the B S. and_Foreign Countries rm _Begins September 15 paring for College and University s Annapolis_—Coast Guard for Information Farmwa@mrmm@fl principal £55 BADG. “‘um- Dist. 2480 - | The Temple SCllOOl, lllC. ‘»’0000005000000003000“"« Emphasizing Individual Instruction in Business and Secretarial Training Enroll for Fall Classes 1420 K St. NA. 325 WASHINGTON COLLEGE OF LAW Co-edu Thirty-fifth Year cational Three-year course leading Four-vear course leading {0 L. and M. P. L. 2000 G Street MOUNT PLEASANT SCHOOL for SECREVARIES TIVOLI THEATRE BUILDING TELLPHONE, COLUMDIA 3000 STUYVESANT WARRENTON, VA. AN IDEAL SCHOOL FOR BOYS INTENSIVE TEACHING VARIED ATHLETICS RIDING A SPECIALTY : Send for Catalog Edwm B. King, M.A. Headmaster iF elix Mahony’s \National Art @chool " ART j Students Work Exhibition | Sept. 15 to Oct. 1 | of | Color, Interior Decoration, Costume | Design, Commercial Art, Posters and | " Children's Saturday Class Work {1747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 Classes Begin October 1. Register Now D000000000000000000000000' G2, STRAYER COLLEGE “A Collegiate Institution for Business Training” Twenty - seventh successful year. Enlarged faculty, Im- proved courses. Classes now forming. Day and Evening Sessions Registrations Now Belng Made For Catalogue, Call or Phone National 1748 721 Thirteenth Street Aewrss Graduates WA I’ll Train You! I say that with confi dence, because thou- sands of others have proved to their satis faction and PROFIT that my Course does all that I claim for it and more. Now let me prepare YOU. diiiais.> FREE Employment Service Employ is 1 Y o Our ment Depart [ of a s e . Wilson William thur Moore, sanad Schoo Jame D, Room Clerk ue Keller, White 1all Ilotel Kendall, Assistant Man. Wiscasset Tnn; Mrs, field. Hostess Elinore; and many roh Manager Gerald Hotel others. NTED For Positions at $1,800 to $5,000 a year in Hotels, Clubs, Restaurants, Tea Roams. Only 10 More Students Accepted l EWIS HOTEL TRAIN- + ING SCHOOLS are being called upon constantly for more trained men and women to fill important, positions at $1,500 to $5,000 a year in Hotels, Restaurants, Clubs, Tea Rooms, Cafeterias, ete. You can qualify either for a good executive position or to go into business for yourself. No Experience Needed lack of experience need not prove a handicap. e at the Lewis Schools > give you a' comnlete and guh bockgronnd for the f iion that anpeals Age or Only 10 Kiore Students Accextad Two out of three of our fall classes in Hotel Training are already full, and only ten more students can be ac- cepted for our evening class, which will apen at once. You must act quickly if you wish to avail yourself of this valuable training this fall. Call at our huilding anv {ime hetween 8:30 A, M. and 9:30 P, M. Ask for Mr. Douthat. Or else write or nhone, at once, for complete information. Lewis Hotel Training SchooLs 23rd at Penps. ain Aye, (¥ .iom Cirele), Phone—West 2192 e, ———————— The Fine & Commercial Art 1624 WSt NATIONAL UNIVERSITY Fall Term Begins September 27, 1930 Registrar's office open for resistration n M. ACCOUNTANCY Benjamin Franklin University | Dist. 8259 Post Office Bldg., 14th & Park Rd. for eM- | was not assuming full responsibility in BOYD S;,:;;','M:"j;;,‘";; resuits, | World effairs, notwithstanding the Kel- tation classes. Start today. 1 IT'SHERE Bus Service Thos. W. Sidwell, A. M. Principal Phone National 0284 Daily Oklahoman, who was president of the society, and who presided at the dinner, sued a statement Monday night from Oklahoma City in which he said | "My atiention has been called to a Abbo(t School of |speech by former Senator Lewis in Wwhich he is quoted as saying that Per- tinax came %o this country as a visitor and, at a reception in Washington, in | the presence of the President of the United States, Senators, Representa- | tives and cabinet officers, attacked the | United States as ‘too cowardly to us- ne Tesponsibility in world affairs and & unworthy of international friend- | nroll Now _NAL_8054 SCHOOL OF LAW—SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND GOVERNMENT the President the speech which Mr. Hoover | reply to Pertinax was not made because of a previous understand- | at the President’s remarks were | formal and not for publication. | view of the misstatement which | Lewis has made, it seems to be| appropriate that the public should know that on that occasion Mr. Hoover did resent what was said by the foreign speaker and also on a later date at an- other dinner told American newspaper men that he hoped when abroad they \unuld have better taste than to attack the policies of a foreign country in the presence of the Chief Executive ‘of the nation they were visiting. Hoover Replies With Vigor. “No transcript of the President's speech was taken, but I recall definitely | that the President abandoned his manu- script_and replied with vigor to the rema r French guest. Further- more, 1 sat through the evening at Mr. Hoover's side and know that™ he felt Pertinax had gone away out of bounds in_his address The speech of Pertinax was made pub- lic at the time, and it does not reveal any charge that the French writer re- garded the United States as “cowardly.” His point was rather that the United States was isolated and provincial and 818 13th t. NW Trlephonps Nat. 6617, Met. 964 B.C.S.and M. ; Day and Eve- ; Coeducational. Ask_for Bulletin Pace Courses; 314 TRANSPORTATION BLDG. 7th and H Secretarial Training by the Individual Method Columbia 7078 The school Gregg and Boyd Short- hand, Civil service subject | logg peace pact. There was aiso present at the same function Wickham- Steed, British pub- licist, whose address was also made pub- lic and in which eriticism of American foreign policy was severe. By virtue of the fact that the speeches of the two foreign journalists were printed, the public had no knowledge of what the President said or did, and were it not for the statement by former Senator Lewis as to what happened, there would not have been anything said .about it even at this date, because when the President Teposes confidence - in the aper men, they do not publish what he says. Lewis Declared Misinformed. In his campaign speech, Mr. Lewis sought to bring out that the Prench government in true nationalistic spirit had resented what William Randolph | Hearst had written about France, but when & French writer atacked America’s policy in the presence of Mr.~Hoover, no resentment was expressed. - Unques- tionably former Senator Lewis was mis- informed about the incident, for on few occasions in recent history -has an American _President_acquitted » himself s> forcefully as did Mr. Hoover_on the sion to which Mr. Lewisthas re- ferred. No stenographic record exists as to what was said, but if it had been printed at the time i would have caused . Display a stir through the world. at Gibson’s _ The income from rabbit breeding in Prance in the last 12 months was nearly $150,000,000 Buy Your New RCA Radiola On Our Convenient Budget Plan typing. — book- ing The New RCA Super-Heterodyne Radiola on Radio Department Fourth Floor Radio Department Fourth Floor $IO Delivers the New RCA Radio (Radio Salon—Main Floor) THE HECHT CO. F STREET AT SEVENTH $10 Delivers the New RADIOLA Super-Heterodyne LANSBURGH &BrO 7th, 8th and E Sts.—Natioaal 9800 RADIO SALON-—-FOURTH FLOOR r. Lewis states that this b notonly $20 at auction, although its face Unfortu- | yalye ‘was $12,446. FOR $20,278 BRINGS $50 of Fleischmann’s Yeast daily it Headaches — A Danger Signal Signed by Pyle, Sells for $20 as Bank Is Liguidated. One of the first signs of Intestinal Fatigue is 2 Headache! How to combat it. By the Associated Press. EWARE of headaches, men! The for of phantom halfback of the Um\ersltv‘ of Illinois a few years back, brought | only $50 on the auction block yesterday. | The note of C. C , his’ manager | after he turned profe: country derby promoter, richin these indispensable vitamins. So turn to yeast when you grow conscious of sluggishness. Eat it three times a day . . . Fleischmann’s Yeast in the foil package. Eat it regularly, following the directions on the label, and see what wonders it can_perform in even a month or two. Begin today to eat it. You can get Fleischmann’s Yeast at grocers', restaurants, soda foun- tains everywhere in this city. Eat FLEISCHMANN'’S YEAST for Health 3 Times a Day NEW RGARADIOA Splendid Contribution 1o the art of radio” says MARCONI Now comes a sensational new RCA Radiola so highly developed, so far advanced, so scientifically excellent, that it has won the generous praise of Marconi himself . . . the genius who invented radio...the great creative mind who has been at the peak in radio science for 36 years! CHAMPAIGN, invariably the sign y of bodily distress. And all too often ... in a majority of cases, in fact... they come from an internal con- dition that must be corrected by all means. Indigestible foods, irregular hours, combine to halt proper digestion and cultivate intestinal In.guhness Fortunately, the answer is at han Medical science has found xhn fresh yeast is highly effective withoutbe- ing habit-forming or dangerous in other ways. was worth Yeast, you see, adds a food ele- ment that stimulates normal diges- tion and elimination. It softens accumulated wastes and helps the body carry them off. , it adds the often-m The two bits of paper, almost worth- | less now, were among the remnants of assets sold to complete liquidation of | the defunct Illinois Trust & Savings Bank. Police Break Up “Red” Parade. BERLIN, September 17 (#).—Police dispersed & Communist, procession in the east side of the city Jast night and arrested 28 of the participants. The paraders were singing forbidden party hine” vi cake of Fleuchmmn s Yeu( is very Here is a musical instrument so thrilling in perform- ance, so superb in tone, so exquisite in beauty that it sets an entirely new standard of performance. It is the finest instrument that ever carried the RCA trade-mark—the symbol of the greatest radio organization in the world. Senatore Guglielmo Marconi, famous pioneer in radio, photographed with the new Radiola Super-Heterodyne at bis home in Rome, Italy. A Success Overnight RCA has always been the acknowledged leader of the industry—the creator of practically every great develop- ment in radio. Today, as the climax of 7 years’ develop- ment of the Super-Heterodyne principle, RCA Radiola offers you the finest instrument for the home that engi- neering genius can create and RCA resources perfect. In this remarkable new instrument the degree of sensi- tivity and selectivity has been set-at the scientifically correct point to receive the full width of each goverament assigned broadcasting channel—no more—no less. Hence its startling realism, its alert performance, its freedom from hum, noise and distortion. Such is the remarkable instrument which thousands have bought— which in less than two weeks has become one of the outstanding successes in radio history. Remarkably Low in Price A great part of this immediate nation-wide acceptance is due to the amazing new value! Four years ago, a Radiola Super-Heterodyne cost $570. Today, this exquisite model, with all its revolutionary improvements, comes into your home for only $142.50, less Radiotrons. These may seem to you like sensational statements, but it is so easy for you to prove the facts for yourself. Hear this unusual instrument! See it today! And be sure it car- ries the RCA trade-mark— your guarantee of satisfaction in the years to come. NEW’ RADIOLA SUPER-HETERODYNE model 80 illustrated —with screen-grid, nine tuned circuits, latest electro-dynamic speaker, illuminated precision dial, push-pull amplification, improved “local-distance” switch, no A. C. hum, and beautiful new cabinets by famous designers. Copyright 1930 RadiolaDivisionRCA VictorCo., Inc. GO TO YOUR RADIOLA DEALER TODAY! He's a dependable merchant selling the world's most dependable musical instrument—the Radiola.

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