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g e den . THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C. SEPTEMBUR EDUCATIONAL. . Army and Navy oficers: Columbia 7744, SCHOOL ienced for Apt. 2 311 Fast Capitol S ALL COMMERCIAL With C. COURT F. WOOI Day Rates. 316 a Mont Evening Rates, 10" Months. S50 to £50 District of Columbia College (¥. M. C. A} SCHOOL OF LAW 3-sear Evening Course Leadink to “atalog upon request CHARLES V. IMLAY. A. B.. LI B.. Dean 1336 G Street AW Main #2350 8t la ST.. dip” COLUMBIA UNIV. SCHOOL. prep.. lang ath.. sciences office exa ring: ce-ed. 102 on 3 ndi day, cvemng; special Athletic Pin Open October 1 2344 Massachusetts Ave. N.W. FRA 7 oK. Principal Sidwell’s Friends School For Boys and Girls 46th Year Begins September 18 City School, 1809-1819 1 St. N.W. All Grades and_Righ School Suburban School, 3901 Wise. A Kindergarten and Grades 1, Country Club. Gymnasium, Bus Service Thos. W. Sidwell, A. M. Principal Phone Main 284 CHILDREN'S Saturday Morning Art Class National School of Fine and Applied Art FELIX MAHONY, Director Connecticut Ave. and M (1747 Rhode Island Ave.) NORTH 1114 Miss Estelle Allen announces the removal of her studio of Cultivation of Speaking Voice from 921 13th St. N.W. UL U Swimming. . bt o the Ballroom of Stoneleigh Court Private Entrance. 1306 L St. Registration Office, 1617 Conn. Ave. Until Sept. 28th. Anne Tillery RENSHAW of Opens September 25th at 1739 Conn. Ave. N.W. CURRY METHOD Impersonation Public Speaking Dramatics English Fundamentals Backgrounds of Literature Vocal Technique Conversation Story Telling Writers’ Class Children’s Class A School for All Vocations in Which the Spoken Word Is Bignificant. WOODWARD SCHOOL FOR BOYS Accredited Men Teachers Only Sixth Grade throush High School ENROLL NOW Y.M.C.A.___ Main 8250 1336 G St. ASHINGTON COLLEGE OF LAW Co-educational Thirty-third Year. Fall Term Begins ON IN ENGLISH FOR ALLG U, CLASSES FLLED O LT !Schools of Medicine and Dentistry Will Begin Wednesday. | _With all classes filled to capacity, the | Georgetown University Schools of Medi- | cine "and Dentistry will open Wednes- day for the first semester. By October |1, opening date for the School of For- leign Service, all departments of the university will be in operation. | From 1,100 applicants for admission |to the medic® school, Rev. Walter G. Summers, S. J.. the regent, announced that 150 students had been selected to enter the freshman class. Tn the dental school the incoming class | limited to 45 students, chosen likewise ! from a large list of applicants. | A committee of the medical faculty will be appointed soon to function as {an s:ccutive body until a successor to |Dr. George M. Kober, now dean emeritus, is named this Fall. Dr. Kober resigned as dean, afipr a service of 25 years. | Plan Dental Clinic. An important service in behalf of Catholic parochial school childrer will he started Tuesday morning at the Georgetown University Hospital, when {a dental clinic will open for the first ‘time under the supervision of Dr. Wil- liam N Cogan, U. S. N, retired, dean of dentistry. Volunteer dentists will sxamine and care for the teeth of all ! children who apply. Four chairs have |been provided for the clinic with all necessary apparatus, including X-ray, land the hours will be from 9 to 12 | o'clock. Instructions also will be given children and their parents in the care of the teeth. Dr. Cogan recently was elected a fellow of the American College of Dentists as a reward, not only for his work at Georgetown, but for his long service as a dental surgeon in the United States Navy. November 17 will see Washington crowded with alumni who will come here from all parts of the East for the home-coming game, an annual reunion affair at Georgetown. First of all the classes to make extensive arrangements for the reunion is the 1923 class of the law school, which met last week at the call of Stanley De Neale, president, in the office of Ira Ewers, 1308 F street. Headquarters for out-of-town mem- bers of the class will be established probably at the Occidental Hotel and a committee was appointed to arrange for the reunion banquet at one of the | country clubs. Al Keane will be toast- | moster at the banquet. and speakers will be chosen from members of the { local bar. | A committee, consisting of Jack White, mayor of Colmar Manor, Md., Jack Hegarty and Tim Daly was ap- pointed to make arrangements for entertainment and ' another committee designated to provide transportation facilities. The members of this com- mittee are Robert Dennison, Lou Helmuth, Joseph Malloy, William Gro- gan and Austin Canfield. The com- | mittee on speakers comprises Joseph | Conolly and Gregory Cipriani. Committees Named. | Other committees were: Finances, Ira Ewers, A. A. O'Donnell, Charles | Valaer, Henry McNerney and Stanley | De Nealg; tickets, David Smith, William | Hogan and Fendall Coughlan, | Several changes are being made in the faculty and courses at the medical | school. Dr. Wilfred M. Barton, head of [ the department of medicine, will have {as a full time associate this year, Dr. | Wallace B. Yater, who is at present fin- | ishing a post graduate course at the | Mayo clinic, where he is specializing {in internal medicine. Dr. Yater is a | graduate of Georgetown. Several other members of the George- | town staff have returned from attend- | ing courses at the Mayo Clinic, among | them Dr. Brockbank, who specialized {in neuro-psychiatry and Dr. John J. | Shugrue, who has just finished a course in neuro-surgery. The latter will be at- tached to the surgical staff at George- | town this year. Announcement also was made that Comdr. P. P. Dickens of the Navy Medical School will give a course this | year in pathological-physiology and Dr. | Daniel F. Lynch will teach the prin- |ciples and practice of anesthesia in | the school of dentistry. Dr. Lynch has just returned from the Mayo Clinic where he specialized for two-and-a-half years in the X-ray and anesthesia. In view of the growing importance of commercial aviation much interest has been aroused among physicians in the course in aviation medicine which will be resumed at Georgetown during the second semester which opens in Febru- ary. It was established at the school last year by Dr. Lewis H. Bower of the Aeronautical Bureau, Department of Commerce, as the first course of its kind in a medical school in this coun- try. The course is designed primarily to instruct physicians in the examina- tion of pilots not only from the view- point of civilian aviation, but military aviation as well. ! 400 Freshmen Enroll. Both the college and law school now |are in full operation, the former hav- ing started last Thursday and the morning law courses on Wednesday. Registration at the college was par- ticularly heavy, the freshman class numbering over 400 students. Several years ago the entire registration at the MOST WESTWARD | | The United States Native School | Francisco as New York is east of the G SCHOOL OF U. | at Atka, Alaska, as far west of San | olden Gate. | ALASKAN ISLAND BAS .. CHOOL Farthest West Institution Located in Aleutian Chain. Uncle Sam's farthest West school— located as far West from San Francisco as New York is easterly from the Cali- fornia metropolis—is found at Atka in the Aleutian Island chain. In this little village of some 73 souls there are 21 children. enrolled in the school, which comes under the direction of the Bureau of Education of the Interior Depart- ment Dr. William Hamilton, assistant chief | of the Alaska Division, Who is a veteran of many trips into the Arctic, explained yesterday that the Bureau of Education has four schools in the Aleutian Islands, in addition to many other schools in other parts of Alaska. The climate in the Aleutians is not the cold, fFigid land of sub-zero temperatures popularly im- agined, Dr. Hamilton pointed out. In Land of Peaks. i The farthest West school over which | the American flag floats is located in an untimbered Jand with characteristic sharp peaks. The chain is volcanic | and in the Summer, it is intensely green with shrubs and moss and there is a wealth of wild flowers, pond lilies, irls, the California poppy and the rest. The great industry is basket-weaving and the rudiments of this art are gleaned in the American school that is nearest to the setting sun, for baskets made in that part of the world are highly prized, Dr. Hamilton says. The Atka school is verily off the beaten track, for there is no regular line of ships that makes contact with that point and transportation depends upon voyages of a small, privately owned schooner that picks up supplies for the school at the main station of Unalaska. It is not necessary for the pupils of | that school to wear furs in the Winter | time, Dr. Hamilton recailed, but terrific winds sweep through the islands. As |is customary with Bureau of Education teaghers in Alaska, the teacher at Atka acts as advisor to the natives and assists them in managing the co-operative | store, which was one of the very first cstablished in the territory. Parents Raise Foxes. ‘While the pupils at Atka are striving to get an education, their parents assist in the thriving industry of fox-raising, for in that region there are numerous farms on the uninhabited nearby islands. The blue fox, one of the rarest varieties, is raised and this, with the fishing industry, enables the inhabitants of this lonely land to have some of the comforts of modern life. The Atka school is almost north of Honolulu and a visit of a Coast Guard vessel is a treat, although, Dr. Hamilton explains, the isolation of the place is being re- | duced by the use of radio that is | spreading its munificence through the | | Far North. | | —_— Competition of bus lines has caused | the Philippine Railway Co., operating | in the Island of Panay, P. I, to cut its passenger and freight rates in half. e CATIONAL. | Poteet’s SooESS | Commercial National Bank Bldg. 14th & G Sts. N.W. Main 4717 Fall Term Beginning Now Commercial, Secretarial —AND— Civil Service Courses Individual Instruction Day, Afternon and Evening W. C. Poteet, Principal NAMED CONTEST JUDGE. Lewis Moneyway to Act in Short Story Competition. Lewis Moneyway, director of the Moneyway Studios of Short Story Writ- ing, has been designated a judge in the annual short story contest now be- ing conducted by the Newport, R. L. branch of the National League of American Pen Women. Mr. Money- way will address the Newport League on the current contest at an early date. Now established in his roof-bungalow studio at 912 Nineteenth street, Mr. Moneyway is receiving registrations for his second class in story writing, daily from 5 to 7 p.m. RO T SOUTHERN U. TO OPEN. 323 Students Enrolled for Term Beginning Tomorrow. With an additional enrollment of 34 students during the past week, the Southern Brothers Business University will begin its official Fall semester to- morrow with a total student body of 323 day students and 78 night studen Lee P. Southern, president, said ye: terday. Several changes in the faculty of the university were announced including the addtion of two new shorthand teachers, Miss Theodosia Willis, gradu- ate of the University of Maryland, and Mrs. Elizabeth Nolan, graduate of the University of Kentucky. Lee P. South- jr.. former bus manager of chool, has resigned to assume the management of the Southern Business College at Miami. C. C. Hitt, registrar, has been named to succeed Mr. South- DUPONT GRADE SCHOOL Exceptional Children Boarding, Day 1408 N. H. Ave. Trial Day Fi ' North 6244, S SSEASSESNASSSTENNSS EARN MORE MON EY— Y s ACCOUNTANCY H £ Start right_Study the WALTON COURSES § $Ask_Dr. Newson or any other C P A. § 7 Woodward Bldg. Main 961 § S5 SSSSSFRSSSSSSIIITFSSFESSISIISSEILLSS Southern Brothers Stewurd Bosiness Universits 1333 F Street NW. Main 8671 “Snegtal Schonl tor Seereturies” . s SSSSSS “LEARN TO WRITE ||| SHORT STORIES ||| Late afternoon classes with individual| eriticism. The Moneyway Studios 912 19th Street N.W. _ Main 3510 Call_or_phone 5 to 7 daily. Plann New classes now forming The knowledge of another more enjoyable. successful for 50 years. free trial lesson. Situated Now in BERLITZ SCHOOL | dents t Fall | Overseas Trip? You can learn to speak any modern language in the simplest manner, by the Berlitz conversational method, Write for descriptive catalog and take advantage of the Quarters Adjoining the Mayflower CARUSI T0 SPEAK * BEFORE STUDENTS Will Address National Uni- versity Groun Next Sat- urday Night. Charles F. Carusi, chancellor of Na- tional University and president of the District of Columbia Board of Educa- tion, will address the students of the university at the opening exercises for the sixtieth annual Fall term at 6:30 o'clock next Saturday night. In addition to Mr. Carusi. members | of the faculty, including Associate Jus- tice Charles H. Robb and Robert Put- ney, dean, will speak briefly. With the opening of the regular ses- sions the tollowing Monday, the re- cently appointed members of the fac- ulty will face their classes for the first time. These will include Judge Charles S Hatfield of the Court of Custom Ap- peals, who will lecwure first-year stu- on “Agency”; Representative Ernest W. Gibson of Vermont, who and George F. Wells of the Board of Tax Appeals, who will lecture on pub- lic utilities law. Dr. J. F. Couch of the Bureau of Animal Research will present his first loctures in biological science in the School of Economics and Government. Registration up to yesterday in both schools of the university showed an_in- crease over last year’s enrollments. The new courses in history and those in Romen civilization and its survival in the modern world, American history and American biography are largely re- sponsible for the increased enrollments, officials of the school believe. The university has adopted for the Fall term, in addition to final examina-, monthly written examinations. have appeared to have had a very excellent effect in encouraging stu- dents to keep pace with work as they go along rather than awaiting intensive preparation at the end of the school term. This will result in nine written examinations each school year instead of three. ‘The_monitor system of EDUCATIONAL. aminations, F.T. de Berriz Director Private Evening, ses Now Forming. Lessons and at Residence. B e e Bt Bt B Theatre Arts School 1726 M St. N.W. Telephone Decatur 2140 Maitland Le Grande Thompson ° Harmonic Gymnastics Voice Culture Platform Reading Readers by Request Impersonation LUCY ANN ROGERS Stageeraft Costume and Make-up Singing Lessons Play Ceaching Training for Movietone and Radio Class and Private Lessons Private Instruction for Public Speakers R S T S N I N, Corcoran School of Art Reopens October 1, 1928 Tuition Free ¢ Annual Entrance Fee, $15 Day and Evening Classes In Drawing. Painting. Seulpture Lectures on Compo- sition_and Artistic Anatomy. Ofice Opens for Registration September 24, 1928 Tor prospectus and, further information MISS AGNES MAYO. Secretary ing an language will make travel New and Larger OF LANGUAGES ill | 5 instruct in trial practice and procedure, | 1115 Connecticut Ave.—Telephone Decatur 3932 TEN GOALS in ACCOUNTANCY which was put into effect four years ago. will continue during the year. While student activities ceased with the closing of Summer school last At gust, the various organizations will be- gin their first meetings immediately upon the reassembling of classes. It is expected that the students will make an early start on the annual year book of the university, the Docket. ADVISORY COMMITTEE NAMED FOR ART SCHOOL | Body Chosen by Felix Mahony In- cludes Experts in Aesthetic | World. Ar advisory committee including | leaders in their respective fields pertain- | |ing to art was announced yesterday as | |a functicning body for the Nfltlonnl: | School of Fine and Applied Arts, which | opens its fourteenth year tomorrow. The personnel of the committee in- | cludes Charles W. Hawthorne, N. Au; painter; J. H. de Sibour, architect: Richard F. Bach, associate in industrial Metropolitan Museum, New York William H. Holmes, curator, National Gallery, Washington; Louis | Pedler, commercial art counsellor, New York: Lelia Mechlin, art critic: | Charles E. Bellew, president, New York | Society of Craftsmen; Elsie Cobb Wil- James True, g counsellor; Inez Hogan, il- lustrator; Madelain McCandless, in- terior decorator; Lester Douglas, art di- | rector of Nation’s Business, publication of the United States Chamber of Com- merce; Charles Dunn, painter and il- lustrator; Arthur R. Brown, editor, and C. F. Moore, direct mail advertising | manager, all of the Nation's Business | staff. The National School at present is | showing an exhibition of the work of | its students in last year's classes. This show is open to the public and is illus- | trative of the work taught. Felix Ma- hony is director of the school. The elevator in_the French govern- ment telegraph office is exclusively for women. Man émployes must take the stairs. __EDUCATIONAL. Southern Brothers Steward Business University 1333 F Street N.W. Main 8671 “Special School for Secretaries” Short Intensive Courses Positions Certain George Washington University Law School Member Association uf American Law Schoels Approved by American Bar Assoclation Established 1865 Academic Year 1928-29 begin September 19 K Registration Days September 15-18, Inclusive STOCKTON HALL 720 Twentieth St. West 1640 School [ Nation Fine & Applied Art FELIX MAHONY, Director Interior Decoration, Costume Design Commercial Art, Poster, Color Dynamic Symmetry Professional, Cultural, Fundamental | Courses, Personal Instruction | Children’s Saturday Morning Classes H Day and Night Classes Connecticut Avenue & 1747 Rhode Island Ave. TR T LT TCRLTTL LR IR flmlII|IIllIIIIIllll||llmmmllIlIlIlIllI‘lllillIlIlllIlIlIIlIlIlIlIlI|Il|l|lllll|lllIlll!: 1314 Mass. Ave. Frank. 4696 H WWMWM }\\\\‘\\\\\\\\‘\\\\“\\\\“\\\\“\\\\\“““\\““2 NORTH 1114 R From Garage Man to Hotel” Manager | “f shall never regret the day I | enrolled for the Lewis Hotel Train- | ing Course. After completing about | one-third of the course your Em- ployment Department assisted me in a clerk's position. After spending less than four months I | was offered a position as Manager of | & hotel under the same management, | With an_increase of 907 in salary. | My success is due to the knowledge | , through studving your . L. CUMMINS, A L U anapetls, Ind. 4752 Lewis students in touch with well paid positions in six months. qualify! EDUCATIONAL. . of C. SCHOOL LAW SCHOOL Regular three-year course leads to the LL. B. degree. An additional year of graduate work leads to the LL. M. degree. An unusualiy well cquipped FACULTY offers instruction in the following courses: College, High School, Account- ancy, Business. Open to both men and women. High school and coliege credi recognized by the Catholic Uni- Sessions held at hours con- % venient for students who are versity. employed. Salesmanship & Advertising Instruction Excellent, Tuition Tuesdays and Thursdays Tt 9 Moderate - Classes Now Forming Cheby Chase Accredited Junior College Regular Freshman and Sophomore College Courses Day Students Enjoy All College Campus Opportunities Academic Athletic Social Facilities for Luncheon and Afternoon Study at School Fall Term Opens September 27th Unusual Opportunities for Washington and Chevy Chase Young Women For further information, apply to FREDERIC ERNEST FARRINGTON Chety Chase Schoo! 6410 Conn. Ave. The American University Chaftered by Congress, 1591 College of Liberal Arts Massachusetts and Nebraska Avenues N.W. GEORGE B. \YOODS, Dean ("Phone Cleveland 798) Registration September 17-18, 1928 Opening Classes September 19, 1928 School of the Political Sciences 1907 F Street N.W. ALBERT H. PUTNEY, Director ("Phone Main 3323) Register on or hefore September 26, 1928 Opening Lectures September 27, 1928 Graduate School 1901 F Street N.W. EDWARD T. DEVINE, Dean (Phone Main 3323) Register on or before September 26, 1928 Opening Lectures September 27, 1928 LUCIUS C. CLARK, Chancellor HOUSANDS of high-salaried po- sitions open in hotels, clubs, restaurants, schools, college: hospitals and institutions. Shortage acute. Our National Employment Bureau placed Position in 250 Room Hotel “After three days' return home {rom school YOU can R ST SN S SRR my had my position, g E H I S e e e R R R A " Get Ready Now' for a Better Job and Bigger Pay! Previous Experience Unnecessafy ‘Without cost or obligation on your part let us tell you how big pay, fascinating work, quick advancement can be yours in the great hotel and institutional field. Age is no obstacle. Young and old alike have equal chance for success. Common school training is all you need. ting myself in readiness for it. &8 1d have made good without MRS. VIOLA GROGEL. Detroit, Mich. college did not exceed that number. September: 17 Resolutions were adopted directing Art Interior Decoration : ’ An Outline of the Requirements for: Three-year course leading to the class to transmit a letter of con- . B o o ians. || icion o Fuber Sops pm b | | Costume Design | T pSpecial Courses e fo Rev. Vincent 8, MacDonough, S. 7, || LIVINGSTONE ACADEMY Auditor Public Accountant aten’ aw, onstitutions 1 for years of services rendert - 5 4 and Business Associations. leties at Georgetown, ~William H. || 1517 R.L Ave. (At16th) North 9434 ‘C:M:I'A;»;MM“M grrhged 1.7';.”’“ Accountant s O s R hfi\lbonlsh is the recording secretary of _—-—_—-—H e P e e Crt "” anager de pecia 'aAt OW Orm1ng or Cata e class. ontroller overnment Accountant . . .. G s 3 Information, Inquire at c evy Chase Country Day School = Lewis Graduate Opens Is Given Preference Resident Department Specializing in the Pre-Adolescent Child Tenth Season Ovens Sept. 26th 137 Grafton St. _Cheyy Chase. Md. ____Tel. Wis This new booklet may be ob- . tained without charge or obligation e Phone or Write Benjamin Franklin University Exclusive Tea Room tea Qver Experienced Men “I have secured a position as room clerk in the R h the same day and on the Tuesday | following was asked to call. I had & brief interview with the manager and arrangements were made for me Two_experienced 1,050 AT EASTERN HIGH. | Enrollment Practically the Same as Last Year. ‘With a total enroliment of 1,950 stu- Office of the Schdol 2000 G Street 1 Franklin 4585 ~g> UNDREDS of Lewis Students all over the country. are win- ning quick success. A. L. Cummins, Mrs. Viola Grogel, M. N. MacPhail, Henry J. Trilling, jr., Mrs. Jane Sat- room, | 'rom vour school I have received. am very proud of it and it will' be placed where all my guests can see to assume duty. ‘“THE r,macl‘Af DIcTION QICE | dents, including 850 boys and 1,100 | THE it Long may your school prosper terthwaite, Mary B. Gochenourt-these and men had also beén intervie ESTELLE :”’ 5 e 15;52"313%’5&?;2{’13:2; O’CONNOR SCHOOL Main 8259 Transportation Bldg. 17th and H Eg}?‘géfimfimmeflr “wileh 1 have ?.'l?‘l’:;;‘éfl’y;xfofl;:&?nfliéfll;“g.fi T;%u:tln?g M Ninnper 3 < reloreicome. | g g 3 it is | . THWAITE. positions the finest an st hotels, el 2 e . s s on o e ‘-] VOF JEXPRESSION IANE L ST Win. | i, schools,‘coleges. hospitls and inet- I . . | spite the fact that the Stuart Jumort begins its fifteenth year at tutions in the country owe their success' to ey, o eparaion i | High, which previously supplied the | 1024 Vermont Avenue Lewis Training. YOU can do as well! for | first year pupils to a large degree, is this year operating a ninth grade. Two additions to_the physical train- ing stafl, M. G. Kelley, formerly of Central, and H. P. Sanborn of Emerson NATIONAL UNIVERSITY | Incorporated by Special Act of Congress 60th Year Begins September 29, 1928, at 6:30 P.M. plaiform Tead ers. | kshop Play Production. | id_plays will be given Seenery, costumes and under the direction class Franklin 4441 CALEB O’CONNOR. Director THE SERVICE SCHOOL Limited evening classes of specialized training in this uncrowded billion dollar fleld now forming. Get details at once. No obligation. Handsome free book yours ess Secy.. 3 fMice, Institute, were presented at a boys' as- CO-EDUCATIONAL Adaress Somn Phone North 9427 | sembly on last Tuesday. i CONSTANCE C. TUTHILL, Principal LAW DEPARTMENT ;:a v:}‘le asking. Come in for it today— Ballroom of Stonicich Court Miss Dorothea Boyd, librarlan at|1gg0 Mintwood Place, Adams 1443 Three-year undergraduate course for employed students lead- - Eastern for 25 years, has retired and i rre: o of Laws (LL.B.) helor of Civil | her successor, Miss Nellie A. Payne, Kindergarten and Grades. ing to the degrees of Bachelor ¢ ) ‘| ke I‘_““ Wit Colbor Toltiah ) The Abbott School of 'com:s to, Eastern from the Hyattsville Boarding and Day School. I.A(:u;m((la. :g'}li"u‘il n(l(\;:]rliuk;"“l'lr\' of Jurisprudence (J. D.). Students rite, Call or Telephone . . High School. 1. develops ability for AOCEPLRELT) FolERs ShT- i The Eastern cadets will begin the| Throudh umicldment. jtecelops o0 ta Graduate school offers one and two year courses leading to the fol- " B Fine & Commercial Art | rnc master companies. Tt & the plan | "0l nking, and, dotis, tius, atiann® |l towing graduate degrees in law: Master of Laws (LLM.), Master of Pat- Bocawe CIubi Staviard Schools Open 8:30 AM. to 8 P.M. Daily Sun't;/ryumz Matron to organize a sixth in. February. The it ko ent Law (M.P.L.), Doctor of Juridical Science (S. J. D.), and Doctor 0% s b ins Success | unit will again be under the supervision b c of Civil Law (D. C. L.). The following courses are offered in this a % More Pay v I thousht T would write and tell GRS b o bl SRS e Sorsrnen crun, POl 8 Sl Tk ed Bore e the' MaSants ‘Home which s e, executive committee of the Catalogue. Interstate Commerce Law Medical Jurisprudence | Club. W g ! . | Alumnl Association will meet in_the RIS e R Bate i st Dt Federal Trade Commission | IR0 Y°Heve B Seen. with'this i Ameiics. as you” pow "} Tave principal’s office, Thursday, October 4. 5 Roman Law—(A) Analytical, | Institution 3 months, they have given had a position as Matron here for i i e Lou‘s Pott r Admiralty and Maritime Law (B) Historical | me an 807 increase in salary. / nearly a year. | SEFTON DARR NAMED. | g Private Toiermationa La Srucioe Coursare 1A% ; A SRR . N 3 3 val nternational W ractice Courses Teacher of Piano and Organ International Relations and Advanced Moot Court President Organization Foreign Commercial Laws = | Appointed Assistant Dean of the!] Downtown :::ml:* f::;l:n; (Tuesdays fiv ‘gr:m'bfllmlfemfw]"&mf Gocv ]el;nment e i Architectural Drafting K. of C. Law School. odern Civil Law—Analytical aims " it, Lif ! . N.W. Jurisprudence and Legal Histo Auditing and Legal Accounting Cottume Besign; Tliustration s el 132%[9"51:32“ Comparative. Govergment and Feceral Procedure Interior Decoration, Normal dean of the law school of the Knights | Mount Plessint Studio Public Law — (A) Govern- + Land, Mining and Irrigation ° ° L] S Saturday Classes of ?olumfus“Evenmz School ad‘fm% the | °;!' e :: di0sis, ments of Europe and (B) 5 f,‘“’, o past week, was announces ean nal s Governme) u- 'ederal ax WS 1624 H Street NW. William E. Leahy. % Calvary Methodist Church, Sy s e Law of Trusts and Monopolies ers 0 e ralnln c OO s - airendy s mehier - of the evening || et with ohe veal oy of ife Snte A L o 0 Tl RS e == 1 gl i i ssion Wi atormation w 3 s ICAL_STUDIO. School's faculty, holds the degree of || Music with the real joy of its ration, 9 a.m. th 3 . Pennsylvania Ave. and 23rd Street Hawaiian Musie Studios. doctor of laws from Georgetown Uni-I} . . message” . Tels. Main 6617 . 1254 Co- Versity, from which institution he was graduated in 1916. tage, record the best principles of modern technic. 8 Rumbia rd. Cal 818:13th Street N.W. and radio artists. Franklin 7964 . 6561 k