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POPE GIVES MONEY | FOR CHURCH HERE Naljtican Also to Give Mosaic, Bishop Shahan Announces on His Return. The opening of Catholic University will take place Sunday, October 7. olemn high mass will be celebrated in the gymnaslum at 10:30 a.m. The wrofessoriate and the student body, together with the heads of the va- rious religlous houses and the mem- ‘bers of thelr communities, will be | present. The procession will form at Caldwell Hall at 10:16 o'clock. The discourse will be delivered by the xector. Classes were begun Wedn anatriculation of 500 lay, Er: and undergraduate bluduhls was de termined by the regisration Tuesday Football gathers & great deal of attention about the campus. Tom “has been appointed coach of He is a former George- and freshman coach liere last year. The prefects of the varlous dormi- ve becn appolnted. The dean iscipline is Rev. Francis J. Cas- who will have charge of Gib- Hall. The prefects are Re MacCarthy, Albert Fdwin Ryan, Graduate Hal Walter Daly, St. Thomas' Hal Arthur J. MacRae, St. John's sday. A Bishop Shahan returned from a wisit to the Holy city a few days ugo. He visited Belglum, where he was cordially received by Cardinal Mercier, and France, which country has honored him by making him an officer of the Leglon of Honor. He udience by which audi- enc manifested the eenest interest in the work of the Catholic Unlversity and especlally in the erection of the national shrine ©f the Immac Conception. “It would glve me great happiness,” the Pope said, “If 1 .could one day consecrate that great church.” The Tioly father made a large contribution of money to the shrine. He is also :0nr|bullng a beautiful mosaic, which will come from the Vatlcan factory. { The work on the shrine has gone torward with enormous steps during the summer months and the erypt is 30w almost completed. Bishop Shahan liopes to open the church next Spring. The regular fall meeting of th board of trustees of the universit: was held in Caldwell Hall Tuesday Cardinal O'Connell of Boston presided. HOWARD EXPECTS 10 BREAK RECORD Enroliment Above 2,054 Last Year Seen—Extensive Repairs Made. Pope i i Howard University will begin its fifty-eighth annual session tomorrow with an enrollment expected to ex- ceed that of last vear, which totaled 2,054. A summer session was conducted at the university during June, July and August. This was a new departure by the university, but it proved most successful and will no doubt become @ permanent part of the educational program of the institution. After a years study by a faculty committee composed of Professors Dion S. Birney, James A. Cobb and James P. Schick, a new curriculum, providing for a_minimum of seventy. Pwo semester hours for the three- | vear course, has been adopted. Takes Shreve's Pluce. Prof. Charles V. Imlay. member of the District of Columbia bar commissioner of uniform sta hf the American Bar Association, takes the chair of real property, va- ‘ated by Prof. Shreve, who resigned. Prof. Imlay is a product of Harvard Universl Prof. Edward *11, Georg tafford, Dartmouth, shington University *14, member of the District of Co- lumbla bar, comes as an additional { member, Increasing the faculty to eleven. Prof. Stafford will offer es in equity pleading and torts. Brown Uni- . ‘18, comes as instructor in common law pleading and domestic relations. Profs. Cobb, Birney, Houston, Rich- ards, Schic! Terrell, Wilson "and Waters remain as members of the faculty, but with changed assign- ments under the mnew curriculum. Miss Ollie M. Cooper will ¢ clerk_of the moot cou Mr. Woolsey W. Hall will the official reporter. New Furniture Installed. New furniture has been installed in the faculty room and in the offices of the dean and secretary, and four new tdbles for the library have been ordered The library has been enriched by an addition of 168 volumes, the gift of Mrs. Ada F. Richardson, widow of Mason N. Richardeon, who for twenty-seven vears served the school first as professor and later as dean. Supplementing this gift, the univer- sity itself has already placed, and next month will finish placing, orders 1,400 additional library of again be for volumes, of the law the minimum fixed by the of American Law Schools. The University School of Medicline, after having been compelled to turn away over 165 students, who because of lack of facilities could not be wepted, opems this year with tlasses crowded. Extensive Repairs Made, During the summer elaborate re- pairs have been carried on by the university. These repalrs in the mam: have included the painting of | the exterior of a number of the uni- versity dulldings, the improvement 0!| the university grounds, the palnnng| of hallways and class rooms, the main expenditure being a sum of up-i proximatelv $4,000 to install sepa- rate steam and electrlc light lines. 1 Congress 1 last session au- | thorized an expenditure of $197,500 for a new gymnasium, armory, ath- lotic fleld, etc., of which sum $40,000 as appropriated. During the sum- mer the plans and specifications for these improvements have been made, under the direction of the unlvnnny | department of architecture. As soon ! as the remainder of the money is | available and the plans are properly | approved by the Commission of Fine ‘Arts and the Department of the In- terlor work will be begun. It is hoped to have the new gymnasium and athletic feld ready for use next year, PAN-AMERICAN SCHOOL | OF SPANISH TO OPEN| Annual Economics Course to Have Its First Session of Season Here Tuesday: Evening. ). The Pan-American Sshool of Span- ish will begin its annual economics course Tuesday at 8 o'clock, it was announced last night.. A Jestare of ‘:he‘ P“n Américan - Spanis) 5 s _students’ clhh pown as El Clyb Cervantes. approximatel thue bringing the Association all | High School, school considerably above | === MARYLAND STUDENTS | WILL JUDGE CATTLE K Evenm; School WHundred Varieties of Dahlias Be- ing Tested at University Ex- periment Station. Shor Mathoraties - Radlo — Hiac o Electrie ‘Wiring—Dra Fros io Votareas of e Wond War. Starts Oct. 1. Register Now. EDUCATIONAL. By a Staff Correspondent. COLLEGE PARK, Md., September 29.—University of Maryland will be represented at the Students’ Na- tional Dairy Exhibit at Syracuse, |, N. Y., October 5 to 13, inclusive. A team made up of C. Embrey of Washington, D. C,, E. K. Walrath of Annapolis, Md., and T. P. Rowe, of Fredericksburg, Va., will $ake part in the cattle judging event, which is listed for October 5, and eighteen heifers and calves will be placed on exhibit, in charge of the Boys' Club of the state. All of the four leading breeds of cattle — Jersey, Holsteln, Guernsey and Ayreshire—will be Included. Prof. J. A. Gamble, head of the dairy and husbandry department of tie university, Assistant Professor S. H. Harvey and L. W. Imgham, in- structor and coach of the team, also will make the trip. Nearly 100 varietles of dahllas are being tested out at,the agricultural experiment station of the university, which has been designated as the southern trial garden by the Amer- fcan Dahlla Soclety. These seedlings are being tested for adaptability to southern soil and their merits shortly will be judged by experts in this particular flower. All growers of dahlias are invited to-visit the bods and to submit any plants they desire to haye tested or adjudged. Dr. J. B. S. Norton, professor in botany and plant pathology, and Thofias H. White horticulturist, are in charge of the tests. Robert M. his A. B. has been to Prof. Ric partment of public kins was prominent tivities during _his days. Among oth manager of the team la Those are looking for- ward to the completion of the new gymnasium as well as are those w are more interested in athletics than in dancing. A floor space of 120 b; 70 feet, covered w the best of maple wood, will be available when the gymnasium is completed and all of the various class and fraternity s likely will be held there. It bably not be before early November. W. H. Beal of the United States Department of Agriculture spent three days this week in inspecting the agricultural al #ta tion plant at the un y. He was well pleased as to w. being donc t agricultural interests of the state and with the methods that are being emploved. He ex- pressed his gratification to Dr. H. J. Patterson, the direc EXPRESSlOfl SEAOOL PERSONNEL = e SHIFTS TOMORROW| =" Most Sweeping Changes in Years Due Wehn New Heads Take Office. " _Gregs Shorthn PRIVATE LESSONS Reasonable rates. Day or evening. For fur. formation telephone Adams 822. M, L. 1420 Harvard st. n.w 1 Announcing Lhe Openlnx of HOOL OF LAW to LL.B. Degree Write or Telephone for Catalog Charles V. Imlay (Harvard), Dean Y. M. C. A. COLLEGE 1736 G. Street N.W. Main 8250 CLASSES IN Domestlc Science GUNSTON HALL SCHOOL or_information _call MIS8 WINGFIELD, CLEVELAND 2653 Bofore Noon or After 8 I’ Emerson lnstitute Classes preparing for the Consular Examinations will begin Monday, October 1, 12:30 P.M. Phone Franklin 4463. 1740 P St. N.W. Children’s School Grades T to VIL uL’hSTON HALL 906 Florida Ave. hone North 817 d Lucm Gale-Buber School | Day and home. Girls under fifteen (boys under ten); kindergarten (director two years with Mme. Moutessourl); grades to "high school, following D, ereditéd by i health training Opens_Oct, Mrx, Ma Watkins, who received At the university last June, ppointed as an assistant dson, head of the de- speaking. Wat- in A undergrad “thi s varsity ball will Pd. M. Principal e Col. 7378. 30 Kindergacten a; Reopene Gust ord: ZENITH mgineering end Deatis new way hinj anating. and o equipment fre oiary 2115 ¢ . Coc Bank bidg., #45 h 10220 ate Teseons Course fncludes dram culture. Call “ST. MARGARE'I’S Boarding and Day School and Kindergarten n October First i ara K. Lippincott, Susan C. Baker, Principals 2i 1ifornia See us n regard to our offer o 5 monthe Fall term now open. Tho niath member of one Family and the fourth of another now in attendance. COURT F. WOOD, Pruwpl.l A Free Dusiness Education for All Men and Young Men—dsth Annaal Opening Linthicum Institn ight School) aus o !n'-at Nw. The most important changes in the administrative and supervisory forces of the public school system in sev- eral years will be made tomorrow when Assistant Superintendent of Schools Stephen E. Kramer takes over the principalship of Central Washington's largest secondary institution, and Robert L. Haycock, for many years supervising principal of the third division, takes r. Kramer's office at the Franklin school. Besides th shifting of these two officers there will be other changes in the supervisory staff. Dr. E. G Kimball, supervising principal of the seventh division, will be transferred to the third division and Miss Ade- lajde Davis and Miss Jessie La Salle will take over the supervising prin- cipalship of the fourth and second divisions, respectively. The second and fourth divisions, long defunct, wera re-created as a Tesult of the re- districting of the first nine divisions of the schol 6 Miss La “has been given d small divis geographically and numerically, in order that she may devote a portion of her time to the educational measurement and _re- search work which,she will introduce into the school tem. There are only four schools in_the new second division—Dennison, Ross, Morgan and Cooke. The other divisions are larger territorially and contain many more buildings than Miss La Salle’s district. —_— Tilefish, related to the codfish, lives over a wide area and in enormous i numbers and is considered excellent eating, but fishery of it has never been developed. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. SRS DORIS W, HARTSHORN, TEACHEE | plano and voice. ' Call_Columbla 2125 for ap- | Polntments. Studio, 1746 Columbia rd: Bernard H. Reamy, TEACHER OF Adams St. N.W. Monda include A 0 pm. fecharical and Architectural Denmauship, Work You Can Enjoy Life Lnsurance Underwriting A Practical Course in the Fundamental Principles of Life Insurance and in the Art of Selling it. Begins October § at 6:30 N. E. Ellsworth, Dean Y.M.CA. COLLEGE 1738 G St. NW Main 8250 Oosducational COLUMBIA School of Drafting Roy C. Clafiin, President <5 Are You Sharing in the l Country’s Prosperity? s § DRAFTSMEN are in con- stant demand. The pay is big, the work is interesting. re you during your In 3 to 8 months. il individua night, throughout y ENROLL NOW! Call, write or phone for interesting par- ticular: s 14th & T Sts. N.W. Phone North 272 Stud EDUCATIONAL Fairmont School | For Girls, 25th Year Resident and Day Pup! 2107 S Street N.W. Junior Cellege, High School Specinl Courses Opening Date, October 3rd Enroll Today Day or E;‘e:ill;g School S SSSSSASNRSANNSNN SN Estelle E. Allen ZLeland Powers Graduate Studio, 1614 Eye St. N.W. Caultivation of S DRAMATIC ART xpressic Register Now for Olasses BEGINNING OCTOBER 8th Diploma_Courses Individual and Class Instruction Ofioo Hours: 12 to 9, Phone F. 7781, SHORTHAND BOOKKEEPING ACCOUN' coxumlcl.u, LAW TYPEWRITING SECRETARIAL CIVIL SERVICE All Graduates in Good Positions Washington Business Colleg: (3 1328 Eye St. N.W. Telephone Maln 4959 COLUMBIA UNIVERBITX mflool.—w Thomas Shepard, D.. pm Indiv. instruction suase, m-m.fim nhm Announces her return from her summer study in Paris and the reopening of her studio VOCALISTS INSTRUMENTALISTS ,,_,?_f'.‘_"’:.'.,.sf,’..,.., To Be of Value and Use to the Personality, New Age in Music e pecial (Undenul‘ld) in Expression for children un- SlTm s S Tone Therapy, Science of Breath, Soul Expression For full information concern- A ing class in private instruction For Appointment : phone Frankiin 7731. 1614 Eye St. N.W. Studtes | rat EDUCATIONAL. C Tlass or Frivate Instruction Georges H. Poulin 1517 H St. N.W. ain 4984 CORCORAN SCH@L Oll'" ART 1at 7 m:uln Wil pax ANBEvEN INIH DRAWING_AND P. incipal : Edmund Jastructors: PRichard ker and Mathilde . Leisenri e D entire” wenson us on o Secretary, Mis . s B, Abbott OCONNOR SCHOOL. of | EXPRESSION Distinguished as the leading school of the South in Public Speaking, Speech Developmen Dramatic Art; for professional | .md business men and women., izu xflav'fi'“"‘n?fi’n p s Olass Saturday Mornings MILLS BLDG.. 17th St. llld Pa. Ave. Phones North 8545 . Franklin 3527 " NATIONAL CATHEDRAL SCHOOL Wisconsin Avenue and Woodley Road Boarding and Day_School for Girls 24th_Year Wednesday. October 3rd, Thureday, October 4th. Friday, October from’ Dupont_Circle, 8:2: October_oth, THE TEMPLE SCHOOL 1417 G St. N.W.—Main 3258 Five to Seven Classes Beginners Gregg asd Graham-Pitmax Shorthand. Typewriting and Offios Practice. Begin Monday, October First The American University Graduate Courses Schools of Arts, Science and Religion Ethies, m-uflu. Emu A Pxycho-Analysis, ching of Christ, kespeare, Literary Criticism, History. Schools of Diplomacy Jurisprudence, Government Business Administration Anglo-Ameriosn Legal His- of Eurepesn Diplomacy, Constitutionsl Lew, Tnior: Consular Officers, 'Munici. Advanced Aocounting. Nationai Economies, tory, History Recent Piee of Foreign Trate: Poltiont Barsier Fall term begins Octeber 1t Register now. Central Office, 1801 F St. N.W. TYPEWRITER LOANED FREE Sent to your home if you enroll this month. Shorthand in 30 Days ndividual instruction. Day & evening classs 30-DAY BUSINESS COLLEGE 1340 Lye St. N.W. Phone Main 8485 PANISH Thoroughly taught by experienced ma- tise teacher, Sevor de Gomar. Btray- er's Business College. 721 13th st. B, oe15° National University Law School Obartared by Specisl Aot of Oongress. 55th Year Begins October 1st, 1923 Classes 6:30 P.M. to 8:30 P.M. Secrotary's ofioe n {he butia- Wy L e tolaphons Main 6617 or Fraakils 5008, STRAYER’S BUSINESS COLLEGE Registration Now Being Made for Fall Day. ud Evening Sessions Srerahe ‘mn‘lu, Spanish by mun Teacher Call, Phone or Write for Information 721 13th Street N. (Next door to Telsphone Bulldisg) Main 3430 NATIONAL) SCHOOL FINE! & APPLIED ART; FBLIX MAHONY, Director. Main 1700 Conn. Ave. and M “Study Art With a Purpose” Day and Evening Classes Children’s Saturday Class Our 8th-Month Pnfanonal Fundamental Course fits you to accept a position in In- terior ration, Costume and Textile Design, Color or Commercial Drawing. Open for Registration Daily 10 AM. to 9 P.M. Begins Monday, Oct. 1 FILING A better position will be avallable for you when trained as an Expert Filer. Enroll for our short, in- tonsive oourse in Filing and indexing methods, Day and evening classes. of Flllng & Standard School §f, Xt (The Globe-Wernicke Co.) 1218 F 8t. N.W. Phone Main 7604 "Miss Tomlin’s School 1800 19th St. The Baboel with o, Persensl Touch eumn Class_and Grades “Sidwell's Friends School For Boys and Girls 41st Year Begins September 24 CITY SCHOOL 1809-1819 Eye Street N.W. All Grades and High School SUBURBAN SCHOOL 3901 Wisconsin Avenue N.W. 2d, 3d, 4th and 5th Grades Thos. W. Sidwell, AM., Principal _ ENROLLMENT WEEK Special scholarship rates throughout the year for those who enroll this week. Both m- and women. § days and 5 nights ea ‘week Tvaghont’ the Year. Tustruction 1a an Righ Schoof 'and_college. entrance. s THE CNIVERSITY mxmmm’y" RY SCHOOL L. Kioiph, ictare, M. A COR. 1ot & ¥ TS Pl.one Franklin 2080. method of instruction. — Optional morning cl ¥orenoon ciasses - afternoon clasm 2 Iaformation rith o5 call upen the Becrstary. Taw m‘."lm X li- N.W. {BAISNEE KINDERGARTEN (PRIVATE SCHOOL.) 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Open Oct. 1st. or pnone 107 Maryland ave. Linc. 4928, Enroll Now at Emerson Institute New Term Sept. 17 173840 P Street N.W. Frank. 4463 Women’s Department National University $16-818-820 13th St. N.W. School of Business Administration Including departments of 1. Economics and Aceountancy. 2. Forelgn Trade and Foreign Service. 3. Civil Administration and Government. - courses leading to B.B. d Mice in the schoel lding mow open for registra- tion. For catalog or EDUCATIONAL. The Misses Eastman Scheol for Girls | il Osenm Sept. 8 Irnmq—nm-m to—Collogs Prov: ral 13th Year Bey at Conn: Ave ! EDUCATIONAL. ACADEMY OF AR Dorsey Doniphan, Director SECOND SON Clasaen in Painting, Drawing, I. lustration, Color, Bewinning Meuday, REGISTRATION NOwW OPEN Day and Eveniag Classe: 1624 H St. N.W. EDUCATIONAL. B Colonial School for ®irls 1531 to 1539 18th St. N.W. } Grades for little péople. High school for older girls. | College preparatory for girls going to college. Collegiate courses for school graduates. Home économics for girls who wish a course in home making. Secretarial course for girls who wish @ business training, Music, art and expression. Small classes make possible in- dividual attention. Conveniently located one block from Dupont Circle. Rates, further information, cat- alogue, maibed on request. Appointments made by phone, North 799} Charlotte Crittenden Everett, Principal. New Rd, nigh Accountancy—a new class—Semester A of the Pace Course -meeting on Tuesday and Thurs- day evenings, from 7:30 to 9:20, will form at Pace Institute on Tuesday, October 2, at 7:30 P.M. Pace Institute is now located in new quarters in the Transportation Building, 17th and H Streets N. W. Call or telephone for Bulletin. Main 8260. tele- Washington ART League 1706 G St. N.W. Open Monday, Oct. 1st Classes in Life, Portrait, Modeling, Composition, Com- mercial and Elementary Art. Lectures every Saturday evening in Octo ber at 8 p.m. by H. K. Bush-Brown, on “Comparative Anatomy asa Basis of Sound Construction.” Free to Washington. PAN-AMERICAN SCHOOL. OF The Only School in Washington Teaching Spanish Exclusively The special Aunual Economical Course begins next Tuesday, October 2, 00 1923, at 8 p.m. Tuition for entire course 330' of 36 weeks only = ; Native Teachers, Conversational Method, Social and Literary Activities, Auditorium, Free Library. Graduates in Demand. Full Co-operation. For Information, Sec or Phone THE SECRETARY 1412 Eye Street (Saul Bldg.). Main 7193 R R Anne Tillery Renshaw, A. B. Studio of Expression 1603 Conn. Ave. Phone Norih i = E:ul::h Speaking HOTELS—TEA ROOMS g Story-'l'ellin'_ APARTMENT HOUS Ia W Emploving frem 1 to 10 Le Placed by Our g to Btudent and Emplover New Willard Wardmaa Park Driscell Government Hetels Blessorn Tan Rochean Raleigh Announcing Our Fall Term Classes Now Open ing_our fall term we re- Bu.rroughs Addmg. Bookkeeping, Calculating and Billing Machines Cotomlate prenaration for bamk, merelal and government work. Burroughs Adding Machine School Burroughs Bldg., 724 17th St. L.W, ‘WASHINGTON, D. C. Day Sessionn—FEvening Sexsions PHONE MAIN 2760 com Congressio: Cafeterin “oct. 9, lfl The Third Freshman Class in Accountancy and Business Administration Opens October 9 Selected Faculty of Professional on. Prepares for C. P. A. na- tions, B, C. 8. and M. O, S. Degrees Oranted. Special Course in Income Tax Now Four Months' C time for Income Tax Ret: A Second Class iw Public Speaking Will Open October = Class Limited to Thi Y.M.CA. College 1736 G St. N W. Main 8250 ‘oeducktional ¥ < w b)g Service, Interior b«mr-lmz AM, to 5 Lewis Hotel Tramlng Schools 1340 New York Ave. OLIFYORD LEWTS, Provident. pleted in Miss Madeira’s School 1330 19th Se. N. W. Eighteenth Year Begins September Twenty-eighth Lucy Madeira Wing, A.B., Vassar Head Mistress L Washington College of Law Co-Educational Twenty-Seventh Year Opens September 26 Tuition, $100 Per Annum Sessiona: 10 AM. to 18, or 8:15 to 7 P.M. Confers Degrees LL. B., LL. M. snd M. P.' L Office Hours—10 to 5i30 1315 K Street N. Phone Franklin 4585 The School That Adapts Itself to the C‘M‘ng Evenings Only New Term Sept. 18 Separate from the men. GUNSTON HALL Reudcl! lnd Thirty-second year n-sln lm--mf 26, 001 Lege Froparatory, Academic” and - Gradus courses. xceptions] advantages n all branches of unne. Mt. hpn-lm and Domest Amnu- Fiven to Athletlos, both indoor asd ccepted for one or more subj R Y| FMRs, BEVERLEY R. MASON, Telephone North 8174. 1906 Florida ave. i Georfle ylas!:mgton ; Chartered by -0 . Sessions in all departments Opens September 26 Offers graduate and under- graduate mstructlon in AR‘I‘WS The Chevy Chase Country Day School An Indoor end Outdoor Day and Boarding School. Founded on_the Progressive Method. 17 Grafton St., Chevy Chase, Md. Stanwood Cobb,__H . M., Director. Fall Term Begins Oct. 1. Tel. Cleveland 1374 Free Trial Lesson * We invite you to enjoy a Free Trml Lesson in any modern Let us show you the T A superiority of the Berlitz Cone Versational Method—its sim- plicity and efficiency. Take ad- vantage of this offer. No charge or obligation of any kind s in- volved. « BERLIT Z OUAG Shorthand— e Tymewriting New Classes Begin October 1. EQLW 1788 . 8t XW, The Spanish School of Washington Will Begin Its ~ Twelfth Year of Language Teaching on Monday, October Ist, 1923. CHANCE TO MASTER ONE OF THE GREAT WORLD LANGUAGES WITH OUR NEW METHODS. Noted native professors will teach you in easy conversational lessons just as your mother taught you English. The only true method of acquiring a foreign language is through conversation. Our pupils learn the familiar phrases of everyday life and are taught not only grammatical construction, but to use the lan- guage just as readily and correctly as their own tongue. We teach sentences, never single, isolated words; we urge constant repetition, which is indispensable in impressing the memory and training the ear. ALL LESSONS OF ONE HOUR EACH Hours of instruction from 9 A. M. until 9 P. M. This school is constantly form- ing new classes of 4 or 5 pupils at regular prices. Also private classes and lessons at residence. Special Economic Courses THIRTY-TWO WEEKS' COURSE IN ANY OF THESE LANGUAGES, $30.00 SPANISH CLASSES. Two Courses: One will begin October 1st and meets Mondays and Thursdays at 5 P. M. and the other October 2d, on Tuesdays and Fridays at 8 P.M. FRENCH AND PORTUGUESE CLASSES. One course in each lan- guage. Both begin October 1st and meet Mondays and Thursdays at 8 P. M. To take advantage of these Economic Courses it is necesnrf' to enroll before October 1st. Number of students in these classes are limited. Spanish School of Washmgton R. GRANADOS A. B, University of Seville, Spain, Director. FEDERAL-AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK BUILDING 1317 F ST. N. W. 1 4