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A—12 EDUCATIONAL. " LIVINGSTONE Art, Advertising, Interior Decoration, Costume Design New Course in Servaying ‘and Mapping 333 F St. Met. 2883 LEARN SPANISH Pmlmm Jrom Spaln, Ntl Cmml- forming new in Washington exclusively dedicated 1o the teaching of the Spanish language. 8 MONTHS, $30.00 FOUR ECONOMICAL COURSES ‘Two are for Beginners, one for Inter- mediate and one for Advanced students. These courses begin October 3rd and last approximately 8 months, haying two les- 2ons weekiy of one hour each. he b Serof Students Th these cinsses is Nmited. Spanish School of Washington 1338 H St. NN\W. Phone Nat'l 9369 * ACCOUNTANCY Pace Courses; B. C. S. and M. C. S. degrus, Day and Evening Classes; P. A. preparation; Co-educational. Send for 26th Year Book Ben amin Franklin University portation Blde. Met. 2515 National University Fall Term Beging September 26, 1952 SCHOOL OF LAW School of Economics and Government Registrar's Office Open_ for Reistration 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. 818 13th STREET N.W. Tel. Na. 6617 Columbia School of Engineering Classes Begin Oct. 5th Complete 9-Month Units Register NOW. Evening Classes. A\"udnmn\cs, Stress Analysis Airplane \(ml\nn cal Engineering. Architecture. Patent Office Specification Writing. Electrical Engineering. Machine Design Rmnn‘ralmh Engineering. cat Yeptilating Engineerine. mpiation: “Engincering Arithmetic. Malhrmaurs D. C. Building Columb Individual Instruction—Day and Evening Classes COLUMBIA ‘TECH “SCHOOLS 1319 F St. N.W. Met. 5626 No Academic Requirements for Entrance VSlDWELL’S FRIENDS SCHOOL For Boys and Girls 50th Year Began September 19 City School, 1809-1819 I St. N.W. All Grades and High School Suburban School, 3901 Wisc. Ave. Kindergarten and Grades L, 1v. v Country Club. Athletic Field. Gymnasium, s-m.mm Rus Service Thos. W. Sldwell A M. pal Phone National 0284 ~ SHORTHAND Typing, English. Spelling. Dictation v speed. Shorthand Review' can at any point in the Gresg Manual or z eed in_dictation. Evening courses only. ‘Price for entire course (1. 2 or 3 eubjects) $2.40 PER MONTH 2 evenings a week. or 3240 per haif nonth for 3, evenings ber week. Tuition Tefunded if “dissatisfied wn advertising feature. If instructions were than_the best it would be poor ad- For further information apply in o(No_letters. ‘no phone calls) National Fress Bi fon_Employment Exchange. SPECIAL REDUCED RATES $25.00 for Three Months Learn easily and inexpensively by th famous Berlitz method, g, Y Germar, TEachers. TRIAL LESSON FREE ERLLI’ LANGUAGES BCHOOL. 1115 Conn. Ave. NW. Telephone Sterling "WOOD’S Secretarial SCHGOE 311 East Capi®l—Lincoln 0038 Individual Instruction Day, Four Weeks, $16.00 Evening, $6.60 __Court F. Wood, L.L. M. Principal ourses given as g ol xpericnced Ralive Critcher School of Painting and . Commercial Art Open Monday, Oct. 3 | - Pot. 2539-W l Felix Mahony’s National Art School Our Eight-Month Professional Cour: Fit You to Accept a Position in'Color, Interior Decoration, I Art. s-nnrdn Class. New Classes Now Forming. Besin Oct. 1. 1747R. I Ave. Nat. 2636 1726 Conn. Ave. Strayer College of Accountancy WALTON COURSES offered in day and eve- ning sessions leading to the B. C. S. degree. H Classes form SEPTEMBER 26 and OCTOBER 3 Evening courses in graduate re- search for C. P. A. preparation ST. LAWRENGE PACT | 10 AID MIDWEST =====11Allen Sees New Destiny for Lake Ports as Trans- oceanie Termini. Former Senator Henry J. Allen who, while Governor of Kansas, took a leading part in the council of States, out of which grew the Great Lakes Tidewater Association, of which he is mow president, looks upon the recent signing of the St. Lawrence deep-waterway treaty as an evochal step on_the part of this Government and Can. He was appointed one of the advisers of the State Department regarding the treaty, upon which he here sets forth his views. BY HENRY J. ALLEN. CHICAGO, September 27 (N.AN.A). —It shouldn't require much imagina- tion to enable one to catch the mean- ing to Chicago and all its potential area of transferring the head of deep water ‘:?m the Gulf of St. Lawrence to this city. Kh’efldy the water-borne traffic on the Great Lakes has run as high as 70,000,- 000 tons a year. This is substantially twice as much as the tonnage which goes through the Panama Canal. It is equal in round numbers to the com- bined tonnage of both the Suez and Panama Canals. That water-borne traffic has no out- let to the sea save in lake boats whose cargoes are transshipped to ocean ves- sels at Montreal. The lake traffic is not all ocean-bound, of course, but much of it is and more of it could be if ocean vessels could be loaded at lake ports as they will be when this project is completed. The Midwest is the surplus food- producing area of the United States. When normal purchasing power returns to Europe we will again be sending abroad a great share of the surplus production of our fields, orchards, pas- tures, stock pens, creameries and pack- ing plants. This realization of water transportation to the sea, of which the Midwestern producers have dreamed all these years, means more than can be stated in brief. These midwestern producers have been operating upon the longest rail radius of any agricultural producers in | the world. To have the Atlantic Ocean { brought 1.200 miles inland releases them | from a land-locked situation which | made transportation the tragedy of their toiling lives, * It will save the producers from 8 to 10 cents on every bushel of grain sent abroad; it will save a life percentage upon meats and the other surplus food products sent abroad; it will save in a like degree upon materials brought from the seaboard to the Middle West. Bringing the seaway 1,200 miles into this Midcle West will make the Grest Lakes a veritable American Mediter- ranean. It will bring to Chicago and other Great Lakes ports a new meaning, a new power, a new destiny which comes from being ocean ‘ports in direct connection with the seas of the world. It will not only increase our agri- cultural prosperity, it will multiply our industrial life; it will make Chicago one of the greatest industrial and export centers of the world. Benefits Are Equitable. Those who raise objection to the | treaty have sought to point out that the treaty makers have yielded an undue advantage to Canada on the subject of water diversion and surrendered a point of alleged sovereignty by seeking to place a limit upon the amount of water that might be diverted from Lake Mich- igan into the Chicago canal for naviga- tion purposes. It is obvious, of course, that no treaty would be accepted either United States - Senate or the Parliament of Canada which was not essentially equit- able. ‘The possibility of diversion which the | might_seriously affect the seaway was not lhmited to Lake Michigan at Chicago. Moreover, on the question of sur- rendering rights the United States has | given Canada no privilege greater than i that which Canada gives us in the free and unlimited use of the Welland Canal. which is located altogether in Canadian territory, and equal oppor- [ tunity in which the terms of this treaty gives to the United States forever. No argument would justify any pro- vision in the St. Lawrence waterway treaty which deprived Chicago not only of an adequate amount of water for her sewage but an adequate amount to make commercially safe the nine-foot barge canal for which the Federal Government has provided and for the success of which the Federal Govern- The subject of Chicago’s right to diversion has already been dealv with by the Supreme Court upon an action brought by her neighbors. Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsyl- vania and New York. ‘The Supreme Court fixed 1,500 cuble feet as the amount of water adequate for proper drainage through the Chi- cago sanitary district canal. To this is added domestic pumpage, which, when this treaty becomes effective, will amount to 1,900 cubic feet and will in- crease each year as Chicago's domestic use increases. It now amounts to 1,700 cubic second feet. This will give a flow at Lockport permissible under the treaty of 3,400 cubic second feet, which is more than three times the average water flow of the Ohio River at Pittsburgh. To operate this 9-foot barge canal the water provided under this treaty is two and one-half times the yearly aver- age amount required for lockages in the Panama Canal, which carriesethe heay- fest shipping of the world. It is 17 times the low-water flow of the Monon- gahela River, which carries an aver- age yearly tonnage of two and one-half times that estimated for the Illinois WaleTway. Emergencies Considered. Notwithstariding the ample security revealed in these engineering facts, the treaty contains the added provision that in the event of any emergency which discloses that the water provided is not sufficient, a greater diversion may be allowed under the direction of an inter- national tribunal on which the United States and Canada each will have a member, the third member, the chair- man of the arbitration board, to be agreed upon by the two representatives of the interested countries. The total cost to Canada of these works is $270,976,000; to the United States, $272,453,000. The cost of the enterprise to the Dominion government is reduced by something like $110,000,- 000, which Ontario gays for the half of water power which is generated as a by-product of navigation. ‘The cost to the Federal Government | ment must be responsible. [of the United States will’he redueed by whatever amount ‘ess requires’ New York to pay for the American half of this power. The entire amqunt of power made possible is 2,200,000 horse- EDUCATIONAL. pe: Accredited and College School for Girls and Boys. Th a thorough knowledge of the Pre guage in addition to the weneral studies. leading to the M. C. S. degree open on October 3 under the direction of C. Vaughan Darby, dean of the graduate school. Call N Ational 1748 for catalog cHool w“mth-ll lnr l I'DIIV THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1932. ol the fiu!y. is divided equally between The umz ghost which has nflun to frighten friends of this treaty is turned locse by a retired naval officer, who calls attention to the fact that in the treaty there is no method of guar- anteeing against the interference With American commerce if war occurs be- tween the parties to the.treaty. Under existing treaties there is a complete equality of navigaticn estab- lished on the 8t. Lawrence and the Great Lakes for Canadian and Amer- 15 con- document known as the treaty of Washe Ington, slgned In 1671, Security in War. If we were at war with Canada Great Britain, which signs this treaty in Canada’s name, all the ordinary treaty relationships would be broken and I assume that there wculd be a suspension of the Canadian rights to enter the Great Lakes as well as the American rights to navigate the St. Lawrence within Canadian borders, There is no means of zuaunuetnz surs thing of this sort in case Wargs The dentar and repudiation of Al international relationships, If we were at war with some third power and not with Canada, our mu- tual rights of navigation on the St. Lewrence and the Great Lakes would not be suspended, but would remain as usual. It might be that in this case American shipping coming out of the mouth of the St. Lawrence would be more_exposed than that coming out of the New York Harbor, but 50, also, would traffic through the Panama | Canal. No war vescels of a foreign enemy, with Canada at peace with us, would’ be permitted to enter the Si. Lawrence. President Hoover in commenting upon this treaty July 18, when the prelim- inary draft was signed, emphasized the real spirit of the document when he said: “The signing of the Great Lakes- St. Lawrence waterway treaty marks another step forward in this the great- est internal improvement yet under- taken on the North American conti- nent. Its benefits are mutual with the great dominion to the north.” (Copyright, 1032. by North American News- e Alliance, Inc.) “Dizzy"” Fash lels Fom', A fish locally known as “tamban” caused four deaths and sent more than 60 persons to bad in the town of Plari- del, in the Philippines. recently. When | eaten the fish causes dizziness. Dr. Juan Vallejo, the only physician in the town, saved many of the sick from death. power, which, according ve the -terms| - U. 5. TO INTERVENE FOR HOME OWNERS Board Invites Appeals From Those Threatened With Foreclosure. By the Assoclated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, September 27.— Members of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, in a stitement sent to United States Senator James E. Watson and made public by State Republican headquarters here last night, urge home owners threatened with foreclosure be- fore the home loan system begins oper- ations, October 15, to ask for a sus- pension that would permit them to take | advantage of the new loan facilities. In event a home owner fails to ob- tain the suspension, the statement said, | “he should write to the Federal Home Loan Bank Board stating all the facts. The board will then use its good offices with the mortgagee to obtain relief, if, in its opinion, benefit can be given | under the law." “The Federal Home Loan Bank System grew out of the urgent need for money to help save homes, many of which_represent the savings of a life- time, but its effects will be far-reach- ing for it will be a part of the perma- nent financial structure of the Nation | and is designed ultimately to enable the | home financing institutions to loan as high as 80 per cent to the purchase of a home,” said the statement, signed by Chairman Franklin W. Fort and the, | other four members of the board. | Foreign-born whites, according to the last census, numbered 13,255,000 | Molnruu ... Avold Phila. Traffic to NEW YORK and NEW ENGLAND | USE THE CHESTER-BRIDGEPORT FERRY 50¢ 6-minute crossing 20 minute schedule “GO0D, NEW JOKE” NEED OF NATION, SAYS HOOVER Would Like to Hear It Himself, He Writes Weber and Fields on Anniversary. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, September 27. — President Hoover believes one of the country's needs is a “good, new joke" lnfl he would lke to hear it himself. gave his views in a letter con- tuht Joe Weber and Lew Pields on the Jubflee anniversary of their ap- pearance in vaudeville, celebrated at a dinner in the Hotel Astor. As published yesterday, it Tead in part: “I do, indeed, believe that such an evening would be as beneficial to me as would the invention of a resoundlnuly good, new joke to the whole country,” he _said. “I"cannot be present at the golden Jubilee banquet, but I will be obliged if you will express my hearty congratula- tions to the honored l’uuu and my es for an evening of joyous laugh- ter and good fellowship to their, hosts. drawal and removal of all frozen assets never will attack a seagull again, It Business Men Co-operate With | gust 3! wford Moore, son_of e L T T R e DD G F S AT VTR by a subscription of $600,000 worth of | capital stock of the bank. | serang at a gull, but missed it, and the the IR founder of the Pirst National Bank of | ¢at knocked it into the water. The sea- R. F. C.—Institution Has Idaho, which was established in 1867, | gull held the feline beneaux the surface Nine Affiliates. IDAHO NATIONAL BANK| ™ on " rien eatie. tor- sequinted with- | oc*Ull Drowns Enemy Cat. The banks, with deposits of approxi- | bird flew away. A minute or two later was head of th until it was drown: The plan calls for regulated with-| One cat at South Quay, England, mately $10.000.000. falled to open AU | it returned and swooping down on the e group. By the Assoclated Press. BOISE, Idaho, September 27.—A plan for reopening the Pirst National Bank of 1daho and its nine afliated banks in Southern Idaho and Eastern Oregon, assuring depositors 100 cents on the dollar, has been drawn up by a com- mittee of leading business men in co- operation with representatives of the SUITS, $18-Pay $6 Monthly| EISEMAN’S, 7th and F = Soft Enough for Baby's Tender Skin . BLANKETS laundered by West End have that pleasing, fluffy softness which makes them look and feel like new. We wash them gently in soft water and pure Ivory Suds, fluff them carefully by hand, returning them unshrunken—fleecy, clean MY HUSBAND ISNT SLEEPING AT ALL WELL,DOCTOR-8UT HE JUST WONT GIVE UP COFFEE, [SERVE HIM SANKA COFFEEJTS REAL COFFEE FREE FROM CAFFEIN EFFECT. IT WONT KEEP HIM AWAKE! and sweet smelling. [ J Wool, single—50c Double—$1.00 Phone Metropolitan 0200 WEST END LAUNDRY o Launderers and Dry Cleaners o 1723-25 Pennsylvania Avenue NW. ; d by the f those who lre affecte ;lend of choice coffees from wlm: A nfleln h.‘ bess “mo'edd. eh!:o:‘:f!;reflflulfl‘!!. i causing sleeplessnell, aisfaction or yous moneY ::‘I:cu(;flm a pound of Sanka Coffee :o-dzy. SANKA COFFEE .5 2remsaer | THE RAID ON THE SABINE WOMEN “Nature in the Raw”— as por- trayed by Saul Tepper...inspired by the story of the Roman war- riors’ ruthless capture of the Sabine village for the express purpose of carrying off its women (290 B. C.). —and raw tobaccos o haveno place in cigarettes the Raw is Seldom Mild”—so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, are then given the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described They are not present in Luckies ...the mildest cigarette you ever smoked 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- look the truth that “Nature in That "I/’:mwinckmrlul,pn«bakmm,oruh-hmmmptbnbfinigbhr, tho be Build bis bouse in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to bis door.””—RALPH WALDO EMERSON. Does no this explain the world-wide acceptance and pproval of Lucky Strike? 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’ of mild Luckies