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(B 22 SACCO FIGHT STIRS OFFGALDON HERE State DepartmentConcern- ed Over Wave of Feeling in Other Countries. BY DREW PEARSON. The ‘State Department 'is ‘consider- ably worried over the wave of anti- Americanism which' the zett! case has stirred up in every cor- ner of the world, Officials here are amazed at the outburst of~ feeling made evident by boycotts and demon- strations in such remote and unaffect- ed countries as Moroeco, Paraguay end Panama, and it @ppears inevif able that American trade will suffe as a result. Sacco-Van- | Shunned in Films, Contract to End, Says Miss Tayler [> | Coming at a time when world opin- | fon toward the United States was d tinctly on the upgrade, the Sacco Vanzetti agitation is believed .by some officials to have more than wiped out the wave of American enth m started by the Lindbergh, Cha iin and Byrd flights in Europe. The State Department, which keeps carefully posted on each flurry of anti-Americanjsm abroad. has received in the present instance not - only - its usual reports from i own officers, but hundreds of prot from ‘private individuals in foreizn countries, ~ Washington has beel literally deluged. Some petitions have come through the medium of Amer can consuls, some have been mailed or cabled direct to the department and others have come through the depart- ment to be’ forwarded to President Coolidge. Protests Sent to Fuller. All of them eventually have been gent to Gov. Fuller, while the send ers have been notified that the Department could not interfere matter which concerned the State of Massachusett: 3 ‘Although strictly main position of aloofness, -and makin: comments, State Department oll are much concerned over this revul- Sion of feeling, sinee’it may cut deeply into the amount of American commer- cial sales and investments placed in forelgn countries and may handicap the ease of conducting forelsn rela- tions, And’ after having done every thing possible to better' the world opinion of the United States, especial- Iy in China and Latin America, the State ‘Department . hates ‘to sce its work vanish ovef' night. Secretary Kellogg does not sider the labor demonstration capitals of Europe as necessarils rer- resentative of universal opinion in these -countries, - but vabled protests by such people a jof Nansen, President’ Masaryk Czechoslovakia, Prof. quis Guy de Lasteyre, the grandson of Lafayette; Louis Loucheur, Joseph Callaux. and Alfred” Dreyfus make it evident ‘that the upper and middle classes of + Europe on this occasion stand with the working classes. Moreover a resolution by the Uru- guayan Chamber-of Deputies asking clemency is an official act which can- not be ignored. Nor can the fact that the Paris newspapers, radical and con- servative alike, dre devoting columns | of space to the fight of the two men. | con- Leading News Featuredl. i On the morning” the. Geneva naval conference broke up, 12 Paris news papers deyoted four times as much space to Sacco and Vanzetti as to the conference, “Humanite” said that if Saceo and Vanzetti‘are put to death, it wifl be impossible for the American Tegion 16 hold ifs convention in: Paris, while Bowen Elder, head of the Legion national committe¢, has informed his national commander by cable of the deep emetion and excitement by the French people and asked him to in- tervene. - Another French paper prints a picture- of: the Statue -of‘ Liberty holding a gibbet in her hand instead of a scale. 3 The.manner in which the impending death of two men has aroused the fire and imagination of the world is amaz- ing. General strikes: were: called in both Paraguay and Urtiguay, the lat- ter being so Successful that the streets were denuded of traffic except for street cars, awhich were operated only under a guard of the regular army. In Buenos Aires'a general strike was equally successful, the streets being practically empt: . In -Casablanca,- Morocco a erowd hurled stones through the windows of the American consulate and burned the American flag. In Panama, where the State Department is especially anxious for favorable opinion because of a pending - treaty, the Sacco-Van- zetti trial was compared to the Loel- Leopold trial and the conclusions drawn that where the sons of million- aires and Itallan workmen were con- cerned. American scales of justice ‘were unbalanced. - In_Great Britain the newspapers have . recognized, that. the outside world has no right to interfere wi the Massachusetts court, but point out that hostile foreign feeling would be appeased if the prisoners were not executed. In Germany a group of 12 prominent judges and lawyers issued a statement condemnihg the sever vear delay as “Inexplicable,” and ur; ing that the death sentence be com- muted. 1. S. Government Dlamed. Many of the protests make the mis take of blaming the United States Government for a matter in which it his no jurisdiction, but the effect, not easily to be dispelled, is to lump the blame and criticism and ill-will on the United States and the American people as a whole: DENIES SACCO PROTEST. Vatjcan'Says Pops Did Not Inter-| vene With United States. ROME, Angust 13 (®).—The Vati- | can today officially denied a widely published report that Pope Pius had intervened with the United States Government in behalf of Sacco and Vanzetti. It -is true, however, it was s at the Holy See, that' American dinals were “succeeding in calling attention aof the authorities to ted the th: | ease in a fashion which they judge epportune.” RICHARD HARDY ILL. Former Chattanooga Maycr Taken to Hospital in Gotham. NEW YORK, August 13 (#).—Rich- erd Hardy, former mayor. of tanooga, Tenn., and chairman of the board .of the Penn Dixie Cement Co., was taken to the Roosevelt Hospitul today suffering from a heart affliction 1is condition tonight was reported as | eritical. Hardy had been ill for the last shonth, his physiélans said, but his condition suddenly became worse, ne- eessitating mis removal to the hos pital. His wife is in constant attendance @t his bedside. TN Colored Films Claimed. COPENHAGEN, Denmark, #8 (#).—Thé newspaper Kob August enhaver Wil announce tomorrow that Carl Al-| strup, the Danish actor, and Vigko Jensen, an engineer, have succeeded in perfecting a practicable process for the production of colored films and have sold the rights to the Fox Film Co., the American concern. “The paper will state that the inventors are to re- celve $1,000,000. s | 1s in the | s Mme. Curie, ¥Frid- | of | Einstein, Mar-| Chat- | - | ESTELLE TAYLOR. the Associated Pross. HOLLYWO! —Estelle Taylor, film g N ik Dempsey, announced today she would break her contract with United Artis the picture corporation to | D, Calif., wife beea gave her no work | | | | the she compla rly avoided in return, entire one’ producers have ylor her sal nze use of United or N | Artis und: has sinz ar pretext re me in a sin the said. The corpora- ion farmed me out to Paramount one picture, but with that ex- ception 1 have been idle.” hter's wife is planning to a any Dempsey to Chic: his bout with Gene Tunne: inx the title. The break United Artists, she said, will occur late this month, when the first year of her contract expires. 'DRYS WILL WEISH - REPUBLICAN TIMBER | Anti-Salocn League Heads Will Cenfer Next Week on Pos- sible Candidates. By the Associated Press. WESTERVILLE, Ohio, August 13.— Potential Republican candidates for the presidency will be weighed in the balance of prohibition by officials of the Anti-Saloon League of America, during the conference of the world league against alcholism at Winona | Lake, Ind., next week, leagu= icaders | | announced today. * President Coolidge’s announcement that he “didn’t choose to be a candi- date in 1928 brought on tha plans | for a serious discussion as to what prospective G. O. P. candidates the league may support or oppcse in the 1928 campaign The league has already gone record as being opposed to three pr spective Democratic_candidates: Gov. Al Smith of New York. Gov. Albert Ritchie of Maryland and Senator James A. Reed of Missouri: the league has also announced it would opposo Dr. Nicholas” Murray Butler, pre. dent -of Columbia University, 4 pro- | spective Republican aspirant. The league statement said the league's officials construed the Presi- dent’s announcement as indicating a wide open field in the Republican nom- ination race, and declared support opposition of Republican candidat; would be based on 'the candidalr past wet and dry records, both house and private. | Two Army Officers Retired. Lieut. Col. n R. Davis, Madi cal Corps . Albert’ Kalb, | Quarterma cps, have been placed on the retired list on account of dis bilities incident to the service, on vivals at and Sailings From New York. August August Angust August Ulula—Limon August DUE TOMORROW. uthampton | Leviathan. Liverpool H amaria August L Aukust A *lAuzust Tle d» Franc Oscar 1I—Copen | Souti | Sibo Zac Angut iy August August Homeri. August suy i > Auzust | FRIDAY { Aquitania—Southampton | Saueuc 2 | Stava | | Veendam-—TRowe Biexico— i D b Lt wrince 5 SAILING TUESDAY. Washinzton—Bremen. St homas 2 Autwern SAILING WED: Batlin—Hamburg Geors Albert Alberto ra borothy L | » Patii Kochar Cabo Cina | Copenn \! Atrov —-Rutterdan | SAILING FRIDAY AN 00 30 AM. F Lapland—Antw I South M Transy Volendam: M Zacapa —Baerif 'President, as THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, REPRIEVE OF SACCO * MOLLIFIES FRENCH Cause Riot During Legion Meeting Has Passed. BY GERVILLE REACHE. By Radio to The Star. , PARIS, August 13. Nicol Sacco and Bartolomeo etti under the nditions in which it W scheduled to occur th would have been impossible in k s | even admitting their culpability.” rench public opinion therefore | breathed a sigh of relief at the news | of their reprieve, hoping for a final| measure of clemency. | The President of the public enjoys the right of 1 the entire nation: necessary, therefore, for the press to | give long explanations about Presi-| dent Coolidg lack of rights in this matter and to explain that since the State of Massachusetts was not obliged to consult the Washington judiclary, it could the more consider it=elf right in rejecting the suggesting of European and South American States. The French protests assumed a pa ticularly acrimonious character in communist circles and ne; pers. Tt was easy to remind the communists that the numerous cxecutions of un fortunate innocents in Soviet Russia should imbue them with more moder: tion. Nevertheless, public opinion and the press unanimou considered that, innocent or guilty, their long suspense under the death sentence was a flicient punishment for Sacco and anzetti and that the greatest present dunger was that they might be ade martyrs, inciting world anarchists and communists to start serious troubles, resulting in the death | of numerous policemen, sympathizers and outsiders. Press Explains Matfer. ends of the United States in Paris feared most the possibility that | during the congress of the American Legion the communists might stupid- vent their hatred of the great capitalist republic on the glorious war combatants. The press already is explaining to the public that the American Legion eschews politics or interference with administration of justice in its coun- try, and thus is preparing the way for a suitable reception. Riots would be unavoidable £hould the communists utter the least abuse on thé congre 8" march. This illustrates the wisdom shown in convoking the legion congress in Paris a year sooner than was original- Iy planned, as in France even the present agitation reflects preparations for the general elections in April, 192§. 1928. The uncertainty connected with the coming elections adds to the .ncer- tainty in th= firanck situation. At the reopening of Parliament in the Fall, Premior Poincare will face con- sideralle aifficulty in pushing through | the budget prepesals and this pros-| nect is cauginz some surmiss as to “he possikiiity of the Chimber’s dis- solution. There o issue, Execcution of van- | i French Re. rdon over | It was | little possibility of such an Lut 1t is notlle that J resignation from the ench delegation at the League of ati Lut an episode in the strug- gle Letween foreign Minister Briand's and Premier Poincare’s foreign poll cles, showinz that many grudges have | accumulated within the ministry of | union itself, and that its head will | require all his prestige ond skill to maintain his cabinet intact until the | electint. | FAVERSHAM BANKRUPTCY BLAMED ON DISPUTE Actor Says Broken Contracts Were Chief Causes of Financial Difficulties. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 13.—Broken i particularly a | management | v in Hollywood, es”" for the petition aver- M. | | i ¥ Calif., were filing today of a voluntar) n bankruptey by William sham, noted actor, his attorney de- | clared tonight. | No tchedules were filed with the | petition, nor any information concern- ing the amounts of liabil and assets. They will be ready late next week, Benjamin I. Fanger, the actor’s attorney, said. Fanger said that Javersham had | gone into voluntary bankruptcy be- | cause “it was the only fair way to rehabilitate himself.” The trouble between the ment of the pilgrimage play and | Faversham, it was said, began soon | after his arrival on the coast to play | the part of Christus. The dispute finally reached the courts, and in the manage- { erd Faversham lost the role. ‘\ [0ld sheep, who had an eye on D. C, AUGUST 14, 1927—PART 1.~ RAM OF W Leader of White House Lawn Mowers During War Passes Away on Mary- land Farm Tke, tobacco-chewing ram He died of old age, eased b eping powd old dead, dose of During the World War Dr. Ca | Grayson, physician to President W son, bought for the White House lot a drove of sheep—fine grass-eating wool producers—to mow the lawns Wilson wanted the sheep to save n power when labor was scarce. Fourteen, with Ike at the head of the herd, were brought to the inclosure south of the White House. The Wilson sheep became famous for their contributions to the Red Cross. The President donated thie an- nual clip to the cause of that organi- zation, and at public auctions some of the wool hrought as high as $10 a pound. sev different occ s New s and Nebraskans hased bits of it at that price. Given Newspaper Man. In 1620, with conditio normal after the war, Mr, Wilson de- cided to dispensc with the sheep, and gave them to L. C. Probert, then su- perintendent of the Washington bu- reau of the Associated Iress, for his Homeland Farms, near Olney. where all but two, Old Ike and a ewe, still adorn the pastures, bring forth lambs and provide a wealth of fine wool for blankets. to becoming Tke whas 12 years o'd when he died. | confirmed user of never happy without of his e nd h . Probert gave him strons, black tobacco and AW with it in his mouth. This cco-using habit was tauzht to the ram jus the fleld hands in the South teach it to th ns of their by handing them chew ow to take hold, but once the trick, con- for hi e quid. M He had become o, and wa: istence, afte could not v a chew of he passed Ike was s he learned stantly be Ho wopld follow the ba of a ci; + stub about ¢ to do aid ent N un- lighted cigar in his mouth. Finally, in a fit of impatience with the nose- nudszing his heels, Mr. Probert « it. M some 1 but little attention to the pe at OLD IKE. TOBACCO-CHEWING Md.. | .| they were made of the Probert prod- DIPLOMACY OF UL 3. IN CHINA FLAYED Former Official Charges Americans Were Victims of Propaganda. of Old Age. ped Tke. A few minutes later, My, Probert” was struck from behind | and sent sprawiing through the fence. | | Tke resented the punch on the jaw | |and the angry words #nd gave his| | master a blow he never forgot. Tke would chew his tobacco in the old-time Southern fashion and let the amber flow from the sides of his mouth. One would have taken him for a courthouse frequenter of south | Georgia of 25 years ago. After all | the ance was out of the quid, he swallowed the residue. From the 14 Woodrow Wilson sheep Mr. Probert has built up a herd of 70, all descendants of Ike and his mates. By the Associated Press, WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass., .——~American diplomatic work China for the past two years is 4 total los a result of the anti- Chirese attitude of our diplomats in that country, Th F. Millard. for- mer visor to the Chinese government, charged in an address bef stitute of Politics here toda Describing events subseque Vanking incident a ri of de- herate attempts to work up this anti: Chinese feeling on the part of certain foreign residents there, who, for theic own pr comed armed inter Millurd asserted Ivaged at 'l ugh the work of and foreign cor- not from our August in t to the Blankets Sent o Friends, | Last year Mr. Probert had the wool | from his sheep made into_blankets, | which he distributed among his friends and intimates of Mr. Wilson. Tt re- | quired some effort and negotiations [to find 2 manufacturer avho would | contract to convert that { - Americ pondents and of the foreign officials in China surtendered to the panic ps: chology subtly created by certain {clip and return it : selfish private interests there more | proached would give blankets for the tely than American consuls wool, but would not guarantee that |a ion members, Mr. declared. “The American Government is not responsib’e for opinions and utter- ances of private citizens,” he said, “but it can select and dispose of its diplomats, and because of that it held responsible for the impressions | they give in fore ] of ( vorablo it for it | uet. Finally, a manufacturer who has one of the oldest woolen mills in the | | country undertook the job. The ~blankets were distributed in | pairs as follows: A pair to Dr. and | Mrs, Cary T. Grayson. another to Mr. nd Mrs. Joseph P. Tumulty, one to | Barnard M. Baruch, one to John W. | Davis and one to President Cooli | Mr. Probert kept an ample supply for | himself, but lost them several months later when his country residence | burnea down. | President Coolidze telephoned Mr. | Probert and asked him if it was true | that the blankets were burned, and | when he answered in the affirmative | he offered to loan him his pair. The resident sald he liked them so well ¢ he took them to the Adirondacks | lnst Summer, to Vermont on one or | mora visits, and was going to pack | them to the Black Hills. He could not ‘part with them permanently, but | wou!d return them uniil Mr. Probert { could repaiv his lo Mr. Probert is preparing to send away another chpping of wool for a new lot of blankets, In this lot goes the shearings of many of the descend- ants of Old Ike, the tobacco fiend. L to the control of balieves suces 11 mean St movem: that country hee lof the moven ing of hLitherto hostile bar cen Kast and West and gu tees of future security for profi trade relations, Sir Arthur Willert, head of (he nows bureiu of the Bri ish f ign office, told the Institui the ie an- in the Present influen to the eagerness of young Chinese National- ists to experiment with neiv ideas. There is not mu ation to belleve that hol. fund: mental or nece enduring in dient of the movement de: |Davis Earns Right L 3 To Eat With Chief By Caiching Trou By Aha Assoclated Press. RAPID CITY, 8. Dak., Au “If you want luncheon her had better get down to that cre: was the substance of what Pre dent Coolidge told Secretary Davis of the Labor Department today, as he handed him a fishing rod “And if you come back without trout,’ Mr. Coolidge added, vou can eat with the newspaper . you men. jut the Secretary from that horrible orde caught two trout and earned place-at the presidential table. saved He a was ociated Press. T TABOR, N. J., Auzust 13.— | golf won In an election in this | Methodist camp community today For weeks an intensive campuign was conducted in which the issue was ation of rule 10 of the Mount ap Meeting Association char- | ohibits Sunday sports. modernist” faction promised to | about this abrogation, so as to permit Sunday golf, if their five can didates for membership on the board of trustees were clected. The conserva tive clement in possession of the old board, made the plea “that the laws of | (iod and of man should continue to be upheld in Mount Tabor.” | - was settled today by the | mp lots, close to 800 cast- | it the “Dethel.” The but its victory does owners of ¢ ing their ballots wolfing ticket won, not promise golf for Mount Tabor. Th: conservatives have declared that in e of a liberal victory they would oke the State vice and immorality | of 18 inst the first golfer | |a golf ball, i Mot Tabos Methodi;t Camp VOtes For Sunday Golf After Bitter Conflict a club on a Sunday. netions only hymn-sing- ing and church-going on Sunday, hut its enforcement has been a matter of local option in the past, with police, in several instances, forgetting to act on complaints. Patrolman McLennen, Mount Tabor's department, has not expressed his sentiments Mount Tabor has a_Summer popu Jation of 800 and a Winter population of 100. Never, in the 50 years of its existence, it seen such stirrving “encs as took place in the tabernacle % the windup of the campaizn this fternoon. ; Wav head, Jam mentalist g who swings gory, funda o the assem- oing to replace with flag, which typifies righteousness ice and fair 1 ke modernists replied that they merely desired to give the young people recreation on Sunday which they were denied all week Of Silenf:q Whe,“ | stood ssociated P LONDON, Au Coolidge’s proverbial silence him and his_school chums in ©ood stead, said E. W. Gibson of Ver mont, tod discussing the Pres dent’s r statement on the pres dentlal campalgn in 1928, Mr. Gibson, who served as a captain during the World War and is now en route to France to revisit the battle- field convention, wus a President at Black River . Ludlow, Vt “Many persons who didn’t have thc privilege of knowinz the fun-loving red-headed boy full of pranks at th Black River Academy misjudge Presi dent Coolidge and think he is alw: serfous and silent,” Mr. Gibsan said. “It fs true that he doesn't talk much. He didn’t as a boy, but halx not per- gust 13.—President one B Rogeneh Wi Got in School Mule petually his sirong points. ‘I recall when it served him well as A student. A jackass found its way night into a classroom on an up- floor of the academy. The long- ed animal didn't like the classical oundings and played havoc with the desks, tables and books and roughed the place up generally, to the great displeasure of the facuity. Cal Coolidge and several of us other stu- dents were repeatedly grilled. The faculty felt pretty sure it had the cul- prits. but failed to get a word out of Coolidge and the rest ¢f us, and it was never established who was sulilty.” Mr. Gibson expressed the opinion that «Mr. Coolidge would accept the presidential nomination if the Repub- lican party tendered it to him, and that the President’s recent statement merely meant that Mr. Coolidge would not make the race for renomination. serious and silence is one of | _____EDUCATIONAL P00 0000000000000000 000000 | Nationa! School \Fine & Applied Art | FELIX MAHONY. Director Interior Decoration, Costume De: sign, Commercial Art, Posters, Color, Dynamic Symmetry Catalog NATICNAL UNIVERSITY Chartered by Special Act of Con SCHOCL OF ECCNCMICS AND GOVERNMENT Opens Sept. 39, 1927, at 5:30 P.M. e conrses of colleziate <rade Political_Science. Govern- History ation Or <a 1. Languages. ete Dekrees of B. A and B. S. award- ed upon completion of requiréd work. | | Connecticut Avenue & M e | Main 1760 818 13th St. N. i Main 6617 [sscsessssserarsos Washington College of Law Thirty-second Year Cpening Date, September 12 Sessions, 5:15 to 7 P.M. Admission Requirement: Four Years High School 3-Year Courses Leading to LL. B. 4th Year Leading to LL. M. or M. P. L. Special courses in Patent Law, Trade Mark Law, Constitutional Law, Public Utility Law, Jurisprudence, D. C. Code and Taxation. Tuition, $50 a Semester il 2000 G St. NW. Frank. 4585 | GRACE HAYS RILEY, Dean MARY O'TOOLE, Judge of Municipal Court, Acting Dean i R R iy R TR CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY | OF AMERICA SCHOOL * LAW Founded 1895 Exclusively a day law school located on the University campus at Brookland. Fall term begins September 28th, 1927. Member of Association of Americat Law Schools. Rated Class “A” by American Bar Association. Registered by the Board of Regents of the State of New York. For Information Inquire administration office on campus or 213 Denrike Building, 1010 Vermont Ave. PHONE NORTH 4181 1 | | i | re the In—‘ aip- | Millard | ‘ REVOCATION SEEN | SUMMER SCHOOL BY LONDON PRESS SESSION CLOSES d Vanzetti Believed Examinations Held in Various Classes of Washington College of Law. | Sacco an More Dangerous Dead ‘ Than Alive. | oo ] GARDINER. | © The | mer six-week of the chool of Washington Co BY A. G By Radio to The LONDON, August The late | development in the Sacco-Van: i | drama is regarded here as the prob- | | able prelude to commutation of their sentence. The press is almost. unani- mous in expressing the opinion that, | | even the unque: snable | guilt they have paid | | the full penalty for the crime charged against them, and that their execution | ; | now would revolt world sentiment. | the six weeks interver | 3t 1s aamitted that a reprieve, in | between the closing of the Sur | view of the Communist demonstra- | Session and the opening of the « | tions and outrages in America and|for the Winter term. the offi | throughout the world, would look like | b€ open for rogistration of stude | surrender to violence and political | Many are enrolling daily for the revolution, but some risk must asses. taken, and even the mos opinion here holds the vie | ¢o and Vanzetti would be more dan- gerous dead than alive. The demonstrati against the Americ | don Wednesday to the authorities. The protection of foreign emba: from outrages |always the most responsible duty of the police, and the gravity of the sit- uation was indicated by the fact that the chief commissioner of police him self took the unusual course of per. sonally directing the measures of defense. The demons in tha most | from charge critical_poin ulted. Public interest in the case cerned less with its merits than with the revelation of the inefficiency of { American criminal processes, which | in aiming ring the utmost pro- | tection for the prisoners culminates lin such a prolonged and humiliating | fiasco. | Law closed last Tuesday when t examination in the Summer sch was given. Classes in negotiabl | struments, contract plead properts included in tions, equity L sonal the Dean Riley Dean ( panied by her husband fleld Riley, sailed from Tuesday on the President Harding a short trip abroad. They will ngland, Switzerland and and will attend the American I convention in Paris the week of tember 19. Duri the absen Dean Riley, Mary O'Toole, 1 ¥ the Municipal Court of the Distri of Columbia and a member of the hoa {of trustees of the colle: as acting de: (tion was kept “im.i?,':[’ f;;‘"""_;_'“' rigid limits, and_apart | [0 SEROT il S made by the police at|BioT! Fonduated. from - Washine , o untoward Incidents | Cofioge ot Law tn tho ame clans Addition to College Staff. A recent addition to the staff of college is Miss Carrie E. Hunte the class of 19 and a member of Tennessee bar. Miss Hunt also i graduate of the State Teachers lege, Johnson City, Tenn. Dean Riley expects later to develop a pre-legal department, and Misa Hunter will un dertake to outline plans alc lines. A letter from Mussey, honorary dean of the e tells of the pleasant days she is en- joying in the mountains of Pennsyl- for Europe. Riley, Maj. Hays \ccom- anized in Lon- anxiety is . will s O'Toole wil s in damages fo during the is cor the A (Covyrizht, ans had in the southern advance Dr. Ellen Spe vear,” he said. “In the headquarters of no political party in London, nowhere in fact. cept among the treme Conserva- es of the type who regard every thinz new as dangerous, will you find | much sympathy with the all too com- rv of the whil resident of t that it is little more apon formed by Moscow 3 t western institutions in | 11 and at the British- Empire in | i particular COLUMBIA KINDFRGARTEN TRAINING SCHOOL Reopens Octoher 5 SARA K. LIPPINC The W, Attitude of Britain. ¢ h public and especially politi 1 opinion is by no means happy | about our relations with China since the war. The more it studies the Chinese situation the more uncom- fortable it is when it tried to imagine what the relatively few Chinamen who | attend at all to such things think of the failure of the powers to live up to the prom | the assurances which they have made | | Chin; with the Ru sines Toteh tyon placed 1 ihe bhest nositic t now! 0d. 1 instu F TRIAL Nutive | ¢ SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES 18 Years £ S16_11th St N.W. 10003 etel Positions Operg Hotels. Chibs. Apartn etitutions. haols. Colle Rooms. Restaurants rained n n treatment of China | a EDUCATION: Shorthand, “the N Sstem iown mutieits. | frzine | s wveed inedusty 0 oof 1% & demand Annen ¢ term of fonr weeks el i taurd e i Vol D Art. Public Speakin« earned ghy hundreds of For 'the beneit of those unable to encol in | Teamed" men and women | e Fall term. | | ESTELLE ATTEN STUDIO,| et ooee B35 dsntt 0 e | Cultivation of Speaking Voice, P NILING v 014> | _ Pennsylvania Ave. at 23d of vhe- am: t o AMERICAN UNIVERSITY School of the Political Sciences A senior college with courses leading to the degrees of Bachelor of Political Science (B. P. S.) and of Bachelor of Science (B. S.) in Commerce. Special courses in preparation for the Foreign Service examina tion and for foreign trade positions. Pre-legal course. Course in preparation for the C. P. A. examination. Among the subjects in which courses will be given during the college year 1927-28, are the following: urses) Unitod States Contitutional Law. Comparative Constitution Law. History of the U S Supreme Ci Roman Law a1 Economics. Feonomics Advanced Economie Theory. ocraphy of Comtierce. Industries and Resources of the United States b Europe. h Latin America. b the Far East na’international Finance, jon Law and Procedure. Federal Taxation American Diplomatic History. Suropean Dinlomatie History Dinlomatic History of Latin America. Dinlomatic History of the Near East Ameri Political History. «nterstate Commerce Law Ameri Government State Governments Colonial Government izn Trade (1 the fleld of forelen lanzunges courssa will he given in elenentars and ad sanced French and Spanish and. in addition._ any of the following lanzuages for h_there are sufficient registrations: German Polish Russian Czech Itatian | rtustese Chinese [ i For catalog and, further pactl ddress the Registrar. 1901 ¥ St. N.W. Washington. Telenhone e months of Juue July and Auust the Director of the Schinol bt may be consulted by prospective students at his office. 1907 F Ahe followinz hours: Tuesdavs 4.6 P.M [EN ) During Albert H St N W. duri Saturdays 1. Thursdays NATIONAL UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL (Incorporated by Special Act of Congress) 59th YEAR OPENS SEPT. 30, 1927—6:30 P.M. Undergraduate Department Standard three-year course of American and English Common Law leading to degrees of LL.B. and J.D. __Three-year course consisting primarily of Roman and Modern Civil Law, designed especially for Latin-American students, lcad- ing to degree of B.C.L. Graduate Department One-year course leading to degrees of LL.M., M.PL. and lsi%lt Two-year course (ons in residence) leadinz to degree of Courses Offered in Graduate Department Admiralty Modern Ameriean Church Law International Law Jurisprudence and Legal History International Claims : Community Property Practice Medical Jurisprudence Auditing and Legal Accounti Government Contracts and Claims Interstate Commerce Law Patent Law Land, Mining and Irrigation Law Federal Tax Laws Roman Law Federal Trade Commission Trusts and Monopolies Modern Civil Law . Classes in Undergraduate Department commence 6:30 p.m. in Graduate Department, 4:45, 5:35, 6:30 and 7:45 p.m., except Interstate Commerce course, which is at 7:30 a.m., Mcndays and Thursdays throughout the year. . Apply Secretary Tel. Main 6617 3 818 13th St. N.W. = : ;