Evening Star Newspaper, September 20, 1932, Page 26

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5499-J. EDUCATIONAL. SHORTHAND English. Spelling. Dictation Sh ou’ can any speed in _dictation. only. Price for entire course (1, 2 or 3 subects). $2.40 PER MONTH —for 2 evenings a week. moain for. 3 tveninyy pey Fefinded it “distatished. O an advertising feature. ~If instructions were other than_the best it would be poor ad- vertising. For further information apply in Ison onlv. (No leiters. no phone calls.) Batice Afth floor. National Press Bldg.. the Washington Employment Exchange SPECIAL . REDUCED RATES $25.00 for Three Months Learn easily and inexpensivel famous Berlltz method_ French. G Spanish. Italian. Experienced Teachers TRIAL LESSON FREE 1115 Conn. Ave. N.W. Telephone Sterling 9769 " Cleveland Park Coaching School Gleveland 3634. I attention. e Tour. brogress National University Fall Term Beging September 26, 1932 OOL OF LAW School of Economics and Government Registrar's Office Open for Registration % a.m. te 7 p.m. 818 13th STREET N Tel. Na. Columbia University Sehool. Dr. Supt . 1024 8th nw. Prep. langua science: class, individ day. night [ LIVINGSTONE math.. moderate rates; Advertising, Interior Costume Design Course_In Surveying and Mapping 1333 F St. Met. 2883 ACCOUNTANCY Pace Courses; B. C. S. and M. C. S. degrees: Day and Evening Classes: C. P. A. preparation; Co-educational. Send for 26th Year Book Benjamin Franklin University L tion Blds. .\Irl.A Peabody Baltimore, Marsland Musical Education n ches to MT. VERNON PL. & CHARLES ST. Phone Vernon 5398 Preparatory Department 21 E. MT. VERNON PLACE Phone Vernon 0066 Fall Term Begins October 1st Class and Private Lessons Abply Between 11 A.M. and 4 P.M. Circulers on Request “DEVITT SCHOOL for Boys A fully accredited boarding and achoo! specializing in_training for Co Elame. Preparaiion | for Bimi " Naval Academs and the Coast Gua Supervised athietic (raining. Grammar and High School Grades. School opens Sept. 21st. Catalog on request Junior Department for Youns Bovs in separate buildine. 2961 Upton St. N.W., Clev. 1911. Chevy Chase COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL 14th Season Opens Sept. 28 Unusual academic progress. Careful supervision at all times. Conveyance from Washington. Small Residence Department MR. & e & STANWOOD COBB Phone Wisconsin 2673 LEARN SPANISH New Conversa- hods. Rapid progress. _ This aside from private lessons, is ntly forming new clastes at resular Professors from Spain. tor Only school in Washington exclusirely dedicated {0 the teaching of the Spanish anguage 32 WEEKS, $30.00 FOUR ECONOMICAL COURSES Two are for Begiumers. one tor Inter- mediate und one. for Advanced sudents Tiese cotirses berin Octoner lst and last ing two les- ch. The num- lasses is limited. approximately 8 months, sons weekly of one hos ber of students in the: Spanish School of Washington 1338 H St. N.W. Phone Nat'l 9369 * e T o A Fede i Felix Mahony’s National Art School ight-Month Professional Courses Accent ' Position” in Coler, esic See. Now Forming. _ Nat. 2656 A Leading Preparatory School for Bovs Accredited—Exceptional Athletic and Men Teach- Throurh High Fall Term Begins 1336 G St. N.W. (Y. M. C. A. WOOD’S Secretarial SCHOOL Founded 1885 311 East Capitol—Lincoln 0038 Individual Instruction Day, Four Weeks, $16.00 Evening, $6.60 i _ Court F. Wood, LL. Sept. 19 A NA. 82 Principal _ Critcher School of Painting and . Commercial Art Open Monday, Oct. 3 1726 Conn. Ave. Pot. 2539-W l $1oi,5oo,ooo Project to Link | h.. |8 member of the Senate Foreign Re- LLINOIS TO OPEN GIANT WATERWAY Lakes With Gulf Is Near Completion. B/ the Assoclated Press | CHICAGO, September 20.—The Illi- |nois waterway from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico—down which will float a half million tons of freight a month—appeared today to be assured of completion by November 15, six months earlier than had been expected. Constructed at a cost of $107,500,000, ithe waterway's opening awaits only the ! construction cf movable bridges at five | points in and near Joliet, Ill. The canal | |1tself will have been completed by the | | Federal Government within a month. Bridges Must Be Built. The bridges must be constructed by {the State or Illinois, and upon speed |in that work depends the opening date | |of the waterway which Pere Marquette | ! first visualized 260 years ago. | Water to ate the first section of {the water s taken from Lake Michigan at Ch::ago into the sanitarv district canal, down which barges will | travel to Lockport, Ill. From Lockport to Utica, IIL, the route is 3 Illinois waterway, and from Utl the Illinois River to the Mississippi at Grafton. Fears that the treaty Canada for the St. Lawrenc at Lakes | waterway might hinder or preve cr- | |ation of the Illinois channel have been ispelled, in a measure at least, by | Gen, Lytle Brown of the United States | Army Engineers at Washington. | “The flow of water from Lake Michi- | gan permissible under the treaty will {be more than adequate for operation of Ithe Illinofs waterway,” said Gen. Erown. with eal Treaty to Be Studied. United States Senator Otis F. Glenn, | lations Committee, and others, however, have announced they will “look care- | fully into the provisions of the St. Lawrence treaty” before it comes up for | ratification by the Senate next De- cember. “We in this section of the Midwest have a closer interest in the Illinois vaterway than in the St. Lawrence | channe! said Senator Glenn. “Chi- cago and Illinois have spent $100,000.- 1000 to make the waterway to the gulf a reality.” Traffic on the Illinois waterway will be limited to barges requiring no more than nine feet of water. L PAIR, CAUGHT IN CHASE, HELD ON RUM CHARGE Brothers Run Down by Policeman Dayoe Are Bound Over to Grand Jury. Bernard Cole, 31, and his brother George, 38, who were arrested by Po- liceman George Dayoe after a lively foot chase Saturday night, were held for grand jury action by Police Court | Judge Gus A. Schuldt vesterday on | charges of transporting liquor. | Dayoce, who said he had received a | “tip” on’ their activities, was waiting in an alley in the 1700 block of P street | When the brothers drove up in a truck. | When they saw the officer, he said, they | leaped out and ran down the alley. | Dayoe pursued them to the end of the | blind alley, where an 8-foot fence loomed. Bernard failed to scale the fence and was arrested by Dayoe and turned over to another officer. ther brother, however, scram- vard of an O street house. ed_him through the house and out the front door. Crossing O street, the fugitive entered an apart- ment house. The policeman followed him to the third floor, then down two | flights of steps on a fire escape. When ! Cole sumped the remaining Story to the ground, Dayoe leaped after him and landed on top of him. Police said they found 20 gallons of liquor in the truck. | ARRESTED MAN GIVES ADDRESS AS THE JAIL ]Su Judge Given Sends Drunken Of- | fender There for a 60- | Day Stay. | ; | James Colbert, 51, wa: | ahead of police who | being drunk Saturday night when he | gave his address as 200 Nineteenth street southeast. For that's the number of the District Jail, and Colbert went there yesterday for a 60-day stay. ‘The man who has been arrested many times, received his sentence while mak- ing & brief appearance before Judge Ralph Given in Police Court. He regu- larly gives the jail as his address and once, when police refused to lock him up, he pounded on the institution’s front_door to gain admittance, Police- man R. R. Klotz told the judge. Upon this occasion, Colbert was stand- ing on the corner of H street northeast reciting “The Shooting of Dan Mc- Grew” before a large audience when Klotz came along and escorted him away. el DENIES LIQUOR C;'lARGE Robert Lee Lamb Held for Trial Under $500 Bond. Robert Tee Lamb, 26, who was charged with possession of liquor after police, in raiding a house in the 1300 block of Four-and-a-half street, found a coat with his picture in it, pleaded not guilty in Police Court yesterday and was held under $500 bond for jury trial After making & purchase at the house, fourth precinct police went to the place Saturday and raided it. They found Lamb, who claimed he was a visitor, sitting on the front porch. When the officers in ransacking the place found the photograph, Lamb, they said. admitted he rented the premises. The raiders reported the seizure of three half gallons of liquor and 15 bot- tles of home brew. In consideration of Great Britain having placed Arg:ntine produce on the free list, the Argentine government has decreed s 50 per cent reduction in_the duties on whisky from Great Britain and Ireland. EDUCATIONAL. Bar Review Courses In Preparation for December Virginia Bar Exams Class will_meet three_times a week, beyinning v day. Sept. 21, 8 p.m. HERBERT R. GROSSM. 613 Investment Blde. SIDWELL'S FRIENDS SCHOOL. For Boys and Girls 50th Year Began September 19 City School, 1809-1819 1 St. N.W. All Grades and High School Suburban School, 3901 Wisc. Ave. Kindergarten and Grades I. I, IV. V Country Club, Athletic Field. Gymnasium, Swimming, Bus Service Thos. W. Sidwell, A. M. rincipal Phone National 0284 THE EVENING & AR, WA JI'ON, B, @, Tt Nominated FORMER YALE COACH CAN- DIDATE FOR CONGRESS. T, A. D. JONES, Former Yale foot ball coach, who was unanimcusly nominated at a Republican convention at New Haven, Conn., Sat- urday for the seat in Congress held by | Representative John Q. Tilson, who re- | cently announced his rctirement. Til- son placed Jones' name before the | delegates. —A. P. Photo. FREED IN SLAYING Absolved Brick Killing. | A coroner’s jury yesterday absolved John and Walter Givens, brethers, col- | ored, of blame in the death of Cyrus | Shinpen, 26, also colored. of the 1900 | block of Twelfth street, who was struck on the head with a brick Saturday night during a three-cornered altercation in Cedar court. | John Givens, it was testified, re- | ceived a stab wound in the arm at the hands of Shippen, and the jury found justifiable self-defense.” Givens was treated at Freedman's Hospital after the fight Shippen was taken to the same hos- pital and died there about 1 pm. Sun- day. Brothers of Blame in| Copr.. 1938, The American Tobaceo Co. OLD GOINS START NOVEL GOLD RUSH Serbians Drop Other Work| When Lost Treasure Is Found. By the Associated Press. PIROT, Jugoslivia, September 20.— | the heart of old Serbia every man hopes to find his golden fortune in his own | back yard. Instead of weaving their famous digging & foundation found & pot of Roman coins worth a fortune. Since then almost weekly finds of Roman, Byzantine and ancient Serbian gold and silver have kept the populace intensely excited. Like all gold rushes, this one has its tragedies and comic relief. Two digging a well struck two b vases fuli of fat golden coins of Con- stantine, Emperor of Byzantium. In a fight over the division, one of them was killed and the other, loading up a bag with all the gold he could carry, disappeared and has not becn heard from since. A poor old spinster dug up a lot of old Serbian coins, and &t once re- buried them to conceal them from the | government, which takes a lion's share of ownerless property excavated. Nev- ertheless, the news of her luck leaked out and reached the gendarmes ears. | Let the Americans have their Califor- | While she was being kept in jail for | nian and Alaskan gold mines—here in | questioning, somebody lifted the cache | and got away with it. The village coppersmith, however, has yard lottery. He excavated his entire | drawn nothing but blanks in his back- | Oriental rugs, all the Pirot workmen |cellar and yard without finding even a | | recently have been digging for hidden treasure. town, and even the rich tradesmen are digging, too. The gold-fever began when laborers THE COFFEE TASTES EXTRA GOOD,) MARY. I'M GOING TO HAVE A IFIT KEEPS ME AWAKE ALL NIGHT. SANKA COFFEE .. A fr :fl\Ar\/fic»j__ SR lost penny. Then he got the bright All the farmers around the |idea that his well might show traces of | petroleum The local apothecary did an analysis for him, and a chemist from Belgrade DONT WORRY! IT WONT! I'M GET- TING SANKA COFFEE NOW-97% CAFFEIN~- FREE.YOU CAN DRINK IT| AND SLEEP. REAL COFFEE : % CAFFEIN-FREE 1 also took tests. The minute traces of oil found were enough to make the co) persmith disdain the finders of a few | | mouldy old gold coins. He's happy. times are cutting down the number of | and convinced he’ll die richer than church weddings in Australia. Economi- Rockefeller. S g Chinese Send Fair Building. CHICAGO (#)—The building the Chinese government is erecting for the | 1933 World's Fair in Chicago first was built in China, then broken down into 288 pieces, shipped to this country and recenstructed. Civil Marriages Gain. ADELAIDE, Australia (#).— Hard cal couples prefer the simple civil rite and registry office business is pick- ing up. French Army Buys Wheat. PARIS (#)—The French Army is buying its wheat direct from farmers this year, thus saving money by elimi- neticg middlemen and also alleviating the plight of many peirants. | FINED $15 FOR ASSAULT Prisoner Accused of Striking Po- liceman Thompson. Charged with assaulting Policeman E Thompson Sunday, James E. Gross, colored, 40, was fined $15 yés- | terday by Police Court Judge Gus A. Schuldt. Thompson said Gross struck him on the forchead with his fist when he was attempting to place him under arrest for drunkenness Just like Quaker? impossible, Madam! Quaker Oats is richer, better, because it's made by an exclusive process and Quick Cooking this process includes— 1 —The use of choicest oats. 2— Better flavor due to roasting through 10 different ovens. 3 —Further enrichment by the use of modern ultra violet rays. U. S. Patent No. 1,680,818, And 30 to 40% more oatflakes than some millers pack. Now at lowest Cooks in 2% minutes OUTLAW OF THE JUNGLE... “Nature in the Raw”—as por- trayed by the great animal painter, Paul Bransom . . . inspired by the leopard’s fierce fighting power and relentless hunt for prey which makes him the terror of every beast of the African jungle. —and raw tobaccos prices in 20 years -n have no place in cigarettes They are not present in Luckies ...the mildest cigarette you ever smoked E buy the finest, the very finest tobaccos in all the world—but that does not explain why folks everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest ciga- rette. The fact is, we never over- the Raw is Seldom Mild”—so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, are then given the benefit of that Lucky look the truth that “Nature in “If a man write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a better mouse-trap than his neighbor, tho he build his house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door.”’— RALPH WALDO EMERSON. Does not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike? Strike purifying process, described by the words—"It’s toasted”. That’s why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such mild cigarettes. “It's toasted” That package of mild Luckies

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