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R e £ e e e 6. U. GLEE CLUB 10 OPEN SEASON Concert Tonight in Gaston Hall at 8:15 Opening Program of Year. The Georgetown University Glee Club, with its supporting orchestra, the Collegians, will give the first concert of the season this evening at 8:15 o'clock in Gaston Hall Tonight's debut of the 1929 club will attract a large number of local alumni and students, besides many of the young woman students of Trinity College and the Georgetown Visitation Convent. Prof. Edward P. Donovan, the director, has selected a program that will have 2 wide appeal, including some of the famous selections of many eras. Under the capable management of Henry Deane Benson, Hilltop senior, Who is also leader of the R. O. T. C. Band, the Glee Club is said to be one of the best musical clubs produced at Georgetown in years. It has a chorus of 48 voices, most of whom had train- ing with last year’s club. Edmond Fish is the director of the Collegians, who have earned popularity by playing at most of the student social functions. Patrons and Patronesses Listed. Arrangements for the concert were in the hands of Mr. Benson and Prof. P. X. Walsh, 8. J., moderator of the Glee Club, who announced a list of patrons and patronesses, which included the following names: Dr. Frank E. Duehring, Senator David I. Walsh of Massachusetts, Dean George E. Hamil- ton of the Law School, Dr. and Mrs. R. 'T. Holden, Mrs. Harry A. Bruce, Dr. George M. Kober, dean emeritus of the Medical School; Jesse C. Adkins, Mr. and Mrs. J. Eris Powell, Abdon V. Piskorski and C. E. McCullough. 5 ‘The officers of the Glee Club, in addi- tion to Mr. Benson, are: Frank J. Wenz- ler, vice president, and William J. Mc- Larney, secretary-treasurer. Robert Bruce is the accompanist. The members of the Glee Club were announced as follows: Tenors, Gerald Berger, '31; Charles P. Chapman, jr. *31; Matthew N. Cheshire, jr,, "31; J. Collins, jr,, '31: C. Robert Corcoran, *31; Leonard J. Gilhuly, '30; A. Paul Gagnon, ’32; John C. Hayes, '31; Ray- mond A. Joyce, '31; Donald Kissinger, ’31; Charles E. Lieberman, '31; Edward J. Luke, '31; Thomas A. McDevitt, '29; Charles E. McCafferty, jr., '30; Joseph J. Morrison, ’31; J. Leo_Owens, '3 George A. Payne, '32; Frederick Quirk, '32; John T. Reddan, '32; Wil- liam A. Sullivan, '31; Frank J. Wenzler, *30, and Richard H. Wilson, '31. The basses are Henry Deane Benson, *20; John B. Behan, '31; James C. Bern- A. Joseph Blommer, '31; Blommer, '30; Malcolm J. Brady, '29; Theodore W. Brehm, '3 William P. Cannon, '32; Samuel Col man, '29; James A. Corbett, ’2 Francis X. Degnen, '29; Frank-J. De Janey, ’31; Ernest L. Duhaime, '29; Charles Gleason, ’29; John T. Hazard, ’31; Richard K. Hungerford, '31; Al- bert W. Keller, '30; Peter J. Little, '31; Francis P. Larken, '31; William J. Mc. Larney, '30; George A. Milne, ’3( Joseph P. O'Relly, ’31; Austin A, Phil- bin, ’30; John H. Porter, ’'31; Albert J. Trimpert, '31, and Frank Wolpert, '30. ‘The members of the Collegians are Edmond_Fish, director; John Butler, Barnet Breeskin, David Clark, Robert Newman and James Vanderbeck. Program Features Set Forth. Features of the program will be piano solos by Prof. Donovan and violin solps by Breeskin, who is an accomplished musician. Opening with the Gregorian chant, “Veni Creator,” by the Collegians, the program includes a wide range of numbers, ending with a French carol by the Glee Club. Included in it are two Negro spirituals. :* Announcement that two R. O. T. C. Infantry companies, including a band of 30 pieces, have been entered in the inaugural parade of March 4, has given an impetus to the cadet battalion at the Hilltop. Since the companies are to be selected by competition, each company commander is putting his men through severe paces these days. The competi- tion exists also among the bandsmen, as there are about 45 pieces in the Hill- top band and the parade regulations permit only 30 pieces to be entered. Lieut. Col. Augustus F. Dannemiller, U. S. A, in command of the R. O. T. C. unit, has impressed upon the student officers the necessity of making a smart appearance on inauguration day, since many of the crack military units of the country, including R. O. T. C. com~ mands, will feature the parade. Hoover Once Addressed Graduates. President-elect Hoover addressed the graduates of Georgetown at their com- mencement exercises four or five years ago, on which occasion the then presi- dent, Rev. Charles W. Lyons, conferred upon him the honorary degree of doctor of iaws. Practically the entire faculty of Georgetown College attended the serv- ices for the late Rev. William J. Brooks, 8. J, first assistant rector of St. Aloysius’ Church, who died Monday at —_— EDUCATIONAL. SPANISH ,scooor Prof. from Spain. Conversational Method. Rapid Progress. 1338 H St. N.W. Nat'l 9369 Ferax Yanonvs WATIONAL SCHOOL @F FINE AND APPLIED <4 ART » Connecticut Avenae and M Street 4747 Rhode Island Avense) North 1114 L £ ‘orming . .. Day and Eve- aturday Morning Classes Instruction by Mr. Mahony and Staff. v We teack you 0 become an asset in the ercial Art. Send for our catalog. New classes begin February lst. STRAYER COLLEGE A Collegiate Institution For Business Training 721 Thirteenth St. Main 1748 ‘Washington, D. C. Send for Catalogue THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., JANUARY 27, 1929—PART T. Georgetown University Hospital. The services were held Wednesday and Father Brooks’ body was interred in the faculty cemetery at Georgetown. During his many years of parish work {in Washington Father Brooks was well known at Georgetown among the stu- dent, body. As a student he was gradu- ated from the college years ago, and | never lost interest in his alma mater. Examinations Under Way. With the approach of the second semester, the first weck in February, students in all departments of the uni- versity ar- in the midst of their mid- year examinations, which started last week. Owing to many inquiries made at the Law School, it was announced that new students may register for the new semester on February 4. Two years slon to the Law School. The Philodemic Society at the col- lege, it was announced, will hold its election of officers February 5. Arrangements are being made for the junior prom the evening of February 8, at the Carlton Hotel, followed the next day by a tea dance at the Willard Hotel. These are the biggest social events of the college, and arrangements are in the hands of Willlam J. Mooney, Aloysius Harney, John Geary, Allan Geis, Paul Liston and Willlam D. Mooney, chairman. Scholar Brevis will be held at the college February 4 to inaugurate the new semester. At this meeting, usually addressed by President W. Coleman Nevils, S. J., and Dean R. Rush Rankin, testimonials will be awarded for ex- cellence in studies. The midyear ex- aminations end at the college Febru- ary 1. FACULTY ENLARGED ATY. M. C. A. SCHOOL Preparatory Evening Classes Ar- ranged to Complete Standard 4- Year High School Course. The Washington Preparatory School, an evening school affiliated with the Y. M. C. A. College of the District of Columbia, will open its second semester of the year January 30 with a number of additions to the faculty, it was an- nounced yesterday by Prof. R. O. Elia- son, principal. Thirty-five classes will be offered in evening hours, so arranged that those employed during the day may com- plete the standard four-year high school course. Mid-year examinations in the school, which is coeducational, were held dur- - |ing the past week, the examinations covering the past semester’'s work and being of three-hour duration. A course in psychology will open with the Spring semester under the direc- tion of Dr. Herbert A. Grossman, just secured as a new instructor for the school. Other additions to the faculty are William H. Fry, formerly an instructor at North Carolina University, who will teach mathematics, and Karl Treubig, instructor in fine arts, who will return from Europe early in February to re- sume classes at the school. The Spring term in the Y. M. C. A. College will open tomorrow, while the new semester in the Woodward School for Boys, an affiliated institution, will open February 1. KIDNAP PLOT SUSPECTED Two Held on Theory They Planned to Release Convict. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, January 26 (#).—What officers here believe was a plot to kidnap Roy Dickerson, no- torious jail breaker, from two officials of Kilby Prison, Ala, here to return him to serve the remainde of a 25-year burglary sentence in that in- stitution, was frustrated today with the arrest of two men giving their names as Willlam Hunter and L. C. Marshall, In their possession deput. sheriffs found five pairs of handcuffs and two pairs of leg 1rons, declared to have been stolen from the hotel room of the Ala- bama officers. They also had the key to the officers’ room and were heavily armed. . Experts declare that railways of Europe have reached their maximum developmen! EDUCATIONAL. Estelle Allen Studios Cultivation of Speaking Voice DRAMATIC ART, PUBLIC SPEAKING, PHONETICS Stoneleigh_Court Ballroom Entrance, 1706 L Street N.W. Nat. 2266—North 9427 Residence Hotel Roosevelt Girls, 4 to 14 years, Boa » Day DUPONT 'GRADE ~ SCHOOL 1108 New_Hampshire Ave, N. 6214 2nd Semester Feb. 1st Exceptional Children Also _ Free Trial Lesson —in any modern lan- guage you wish to speak: French, German, Italian, Spanish. Classes and Individual Instruction LANGUAGES 1115 Connecticut Avenue Telephone Decatur 3932 of college work is required for admis- | 20 GET DEGREES AT CATHOLIC U, Sacred Theology and Canon Law Honors Conferred With Solemn Rites. Twenty students of the Catholic Uni- versity School of Theology received bac- calaureate degrees in sacred theology and canon law last Friday when the feast of, the conversion of St. Paul, patronal feast of the theological‘school, was observed. , Solemn high mass was sung at 9:30 aim. in the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception by Rev. Dr. Arthur A. Vaschalde. The faculty and the members of the theological school were in atlendance. Following the mass the baccalaureate degrees were con- ferred by the vice rector, Right Rev. Mgr. Edward A. Pace, D. D, on the 20 candidates, who were presented by the dean of the School of Theology, Very Rev. Franz J. Coeln, Ph. D. Those who received the degree bachelor of sacred theology were John Daniel Collins, Albany, N. Y.; John Dunne, Los Angeles, Calif.; John Mi- chaei McFadden, St. Columbans, Nebr.; Lawrence Edward Scheu, Bruchsal, Ger- many; Edward Harold Smith, New N. Y.; Edward Joseph Sweeney, , N. Y.; Joseph Leo Tully, . 1, Boston, ; Mass. Get Canon Law Degrees. ‘The degree bachelor of canon law was conferred upon Edward James Cou~ ran, Philadelphia, Pa.; John M. Costello, New York, N. Y.; Eugene Aloysius Doo- ley of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, John Dunne, Los Angeles, Calif.; Mark Ebner, St. Louis, Mo.; Xavier Fernan- dez, Camaguay, Cuba; William A. Ferry, Philadelphia, Pa.; Urban Adam Koval, Washington; Michael Nicholas Kremer, St. Cloud, Minn.; John Patrick McEn- tire, Altoona, Pa.; William Henry O'Neill, Seattle, Wash.; Bonaventura M. Pauliukas, Dominican College, Brook- land, and Albert Wagner, Lincoln, Nebr. Catholic University has arranged a second series of public lectures on varied subjects to be given during the months of February and March. The lecturers are eminent and widely known authori- ties in their respective flelds. All of the lectures will be delivered in the auditorium of McMahon Hall at 8:15 o'clock on each date. The program is as follows: February 4, “The Crusaders in the Holy Land,” by Prof. Dana C. Munro, Princeton University; February 11, “The Spirit of Spanish Literature,” by Dean Henry G. Doyle, George Washington Univer- sity; February 18, “George Washington the Man,” by Dr. John G. Fitzpatrick, Library of Congress; February 25, “The Discovery of America and its Influence on International Relations,” by Dr. James Brown Scott, Carnegie Endow- ment for International Peace; March 11, “The Present Status of the Evolu- tion Theory,” by Dr. Cornelius J. Con- nelly, Catholic University of America; March 18, “A Naval Battle of the Day.” by Rear Admiral Luke McNamee, United States Navy. Lecture on Washington. ‘The concluding lecture of the first series is to be delivered tomorrow eve- ning at 8:15 o'clock in McMahon Hall Auditorium by I Charles Moore, of the Washington Fine Arts Commission. gis topic will be “Beautiful Washing- n.” Seven pledges of the Uptopian Club received the final degree and were —_— ____ EDUOARIONAL. The Woodward School An Accredited Day School FCR BOYS New Classes beginning Feb. 4 Sixth grade through high school; conveniently located and unusually well equipped with light, airy class- rooms, gymnasium, swimming pool, game rooms. MEN INSTRUCTORS ONLY G. L. Parker, B, S., Headmaster Y. M. C. A SUCCESS? YES! With Standard Systems of Shorthand—G re g g and Graham-Pitman With Scientifically Taught Typewriting With Business English With Secretarial Book- keeping With Office Training Beginners’ Classes Review Classes Dictation Classes Individual Instruction for Civil Service Temple School, Inc. 1420 K Street M. 3258 We D> o Solicit GEORGETOWN LAW SCHOOL 1928—1929 Second Semester Opens February 4, 1929 For Information Apply to GEORGE E. J.U.D, LL. D. Dean HAMILTON Georgetown Law School 506 E Street N.W. Telephone Main 7293 initiated as Utopians at a meeting held recently in the clubrooms in the gym- nasium. John J. Budds, Supreme Utopian, made the address of welcome to the incoming men. They were: James Markey, Little Falls, N. Y.; Louis Gioffre, Port Chester, N. Y. Matthew Mullaney, Cumberland, Md.: William D. Connor, New London, Conn.; Patrick Coyne, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Jere- miah Buckley, Bridgeport, Conn., and John Blumette, Orange, N. J. His eminence, B. Cardinal Cerretti, recently paid a visit to the Catholic University bringing with him a mes- sage from Pope Pius XI to the effect that His Holiness had in readiness for presentation to the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception a_splendid mosaic of Murillo's “La_ Purissima Bionda,” version of the Immaculate Conception. The selection of this Im- maculate Conception of Murillo, which is in the Prado Gallery at Madrid, was made personally by the Pope. The pre- sentation of the mosaic is in fulfillment of a wish expressed by Benedict XV shortly before his death. new campus institution, the Economics Club, has recently been formed. Joseph Bell, president pro tempore, announces that the first reg- ular meeting will be held at the con- clusion of the examination period, Tuesday, and that a program for the remainder of the year will be mapped out at that time. The purpose of the club is to foster interest among the students in special branches and fea- tures of their work, and to bring to the university prominent men in the field to address the club members. MONEYWAY TO ADDRESS GUNSTON HALL STUDENTS Technique of Short Story to Be Subject of His Talk This Evening. Lewis Moneyway of the Moneyway Studios of Short Story Writing will ad- dress the students of Gunston Hall this evening on short story technique, giving them a “45-minute course in short story writing.” Mr. Moneyway spoke last Wednesday night to the short story group of the League of American Pen Women on the plot of the short story, emphasizing plot sources. ‘The Moneyway Studios have an- nounced a new five-month course in the technique of the stort story for be- ginners, registrations are being made at the studios, 912 Ninteenth street, daily from 5 pm. to 6:30 pm. This class will meet at 5 o'clock on Mondays and Thursdays, and will assemble for the first lecture on Monday, February 4. In this class, as in all other classes at the studios, Mr. Moneyway empha- sizes the writing of the short story from the commercial and not the academic point of view. > 1.4’ BUSINESS eet's corLecE Commerclal National Bank Blde. 1ith & G_Sts. N. Main 4717 1624 Hw-Nw. Abbott School students won the Bal Boheme Poster Contest, designed the costumes and paint- ed the scenery. HINE JUNIOR HIGH CONFERS HONORS Joseph M. Gammell and M. 7T. House Address Students at Assem- blies Wednesday and Thursday. The Hine Junior High School con- ferred honor awards, consisting of the Hine H, at, assemblies last Wednesday and Thursday afternoons. The first as- sembly was addressed by M. J. House of the Hine faculty, and the second by Jo- seph M. Gammell, president of the Lin- coln Park Citizens' Association. Music was furnished on both occasions by the Hine Orchestra. The honor awards were as follows: Scholarship—Charles Orcutt, Lobert Lee, Abraham Seidenberg, Jean Hilde~ brand, Beatrice Rosenblum, Mary Jer- rell, Una Joy, Florence Stopsack, Lois Talcott, Abram Iroff, Suzanne Rolfe, | Winifred Chick, Nellie McNeil, Byrd Hall, Jessie Bussey, Dorothy Millar, Ed- ward Frazier, Lex Golden, George Her- bert, Hoburg Lee, Bernard Muenzer, Mary Bryde, Bertha Wilkinson, Hazel Miller, Helen Saks, Doris Scala, Virginis Hickernell, Bulah Orecutt, Bernard Hunt, Samuel Lubing, Wilfred Page, Ethel Blumberg, Eleanor Darling, Elsie Har- riman, Emma Norris, Harry Bovey, Mil- dred Walden, Helen Au, Dorothy Holmes, Dorothy Norbeck, Clare Penn, Beverly Riston, Dolly Schwenk, How- ard Fitch, Greydon Edelin, Florence Cuozzo, Jack Poole, Frank Wise, Jean- ette Feldman, Dorothy Griffin, Claire Kessler, Eleanor Wilfond, Lillian Wy- ville, Helen Silver, Yetta Simon, Lillian Sims, Mildred Warner, William Martin, Herbert Thom, Walter Wood, Marion Taylor, Ernest Caton, Marie Hudson. Samuel Kahansky, Charlotte Neal, Paul Nicholson, Helen Brockman, Howard Fitch, Greydon Edelin, Alta Lewls, William Gateau, Helen Green, Frank Wise, Eileen Doyle, Domenic De Giorgio, Gladys Murphy, Jack Yates, Knights of Columbus Evening School For Men and Women ACCOUNTING B. C. S. Degree and Individual Courses C. P. A. Instructors SECRETARIAL AND COMMERCIAL Gregg Typing. Business Letters English Penmanship Arithmetic HIGH SCHOOL & COLLEGE JOURNALISM, SHORT STORY All Classes Begin Feb. 1 Registrar 1314 Mass. Ave. Speedwriting Bookkeeping Fr.4696 FeLax YWanonvs NATIORAL SCHOOL OF FINE AND APPLIED 4 ART > Connecticut Avenae and M Street 1747 Rhode Loland Avenue) North 1114 v New Clusses Now Forming . . . Day and Eve- ming...Children's Saturday Morning Classes We teach you to become an asset in the COMMERCIAL ARTS Professional Fundamental Course fits you to aceept a position in Interior Decoration, Coa- ¢tame Designing, Dynamic Symmetry, Color and Commercial Ast. Send for our catalos. New cla: HICKMAN scxoo. of SPEECH and EXPRESSION International Bldg., 1319 F St., Bet. 13th & 14th Established 1904 A SCHOOL OF SELF-EXPRESSION Teaching only subjects of practical value in everyday life Courses in Self-Expression and Public Speaking for Business and Professional Men and Women, Organiza- tion Members, Salesmen, etc. ing. English (Spoken and Written)." Self-Development Courses for Confidence, Poise, etc. The Arts of Expression. Special Courses for Clergymen, Teachers, Lecturers, Readers Class or Private Instruction, Day or Evening Voice and Speech Train- Phone Franklin 2318 tume Designing, and Commercial \ FeLax Wanony NATIONAL SCHOOL OF FINE AND APPLIED 4 ART ) Connecticut Avenue and M Street (1747 Rhode Island Avenue) North 1114 v New Classes Now Forming . . . Day and Fve- ning...Children’s Saturday Morning Classes Individual Instruction by Mr. Mahony and Staff. \4 We teach you to become an asset in the COMMERCIAL ARTS Professional Fundamental Course fits you to accept a positien in Interior Decoration, Cos~ Dynamic Symmetry, Color Art. Send for our catalog. New Classes Begin February 1st i Beall, Giibert Suser, Josephine Curtin, Ethel Hamilton, Engh Royal and Helena Kelley. Faithfulness—Wallace Norwood, Ar- thur Divver, Roger Bell, Eileen Doyle, Daniel Gevinson, Dorothy Griffin, Char- lotte Neal, Frances Bradley, Gilbert Schroth, Eleanor Morgan, Elizabeth Themas, Walter Wood, Victor Snyder, Louis Moschetto, Alexander DeSimone, Stanley Pearce, Harry Fonoroff, Daniel Gevinson, Benjamin Zola, Bertha Wil- kinson, Audrey Kelley, Alma Tipton, Alice Crow, Hazel Miller, Doris Beall, Zelda Weightman, Mary Ellen Kettler, Vivian Smith, Dorothy Millar, Rose Thornton, Helen Stauffer, Francis Mitchell, Lawrence Morris, Virginia Hickernell, Wocdrow Basil, Nettie Rubin, Charles Gottenkieny, Willlam Mirguett, Joseph Turano, Raymond Pascoe, Evelyn Murphy and June Best. Athletics—Bertha Wilkinson, Mary Williamson, Isabel Lowery, Frieda Ricketts, Helena Kelly, Ruth Kalden- bach, Betty Arth, Gertrude Tew, Mae Chamberlin, Margaret Hayden, Margle Spittle, Evelyn Glascoe, Doris Mackey. Mildred Conover, Margaret Talbert, Mildred Absher, Dorothy Hall, Martha Crouch, Mary Frances Perry, Benny Zola, Martin Snellings, Edward Murray, Joseph Turano, Joseph Swetnam, Lewis Johnson, Charles Mostow and Helena Kelly. Leadership—Bulah Orcutt, Lex Gol- den, James Young, Hazel Miller, Charles Orcutt, Mae Chamberlin, Stanley Franck, Ethel McGuire, Walter Kimball, Elsie Sockrider, Billie Bresnaham, Nellie McNeil, James Miller, Marian Higgs, Charles Harvey, Elsie Morris, Magdaline Ritter, Benny Zola, Mary Bryde, Doris Edwin O'Callaghan, Virginia Owens, Edward Murray, Jessie LeFevre, Irving OIliff, Barbara vpood. Henry Raskin and Flerence Sherman. Excellent Protestant Private School All Grades from Day Nursery through High School, Boarding or Day. Second Semester Begins Monday, Feb. 4. For information phone Wis. 2694 or wiite 11 East Lennox St. Chevy Chase, Md. ~Ir)_oniphan Acad;x;; 1462 Harvard St. N.W. Commercial Art Professional Instruction 4-8-Month Course Graduates Assisted to Positions Day and Evening Classes You Can Learn COMMERCIAL ART Tllustration, Life Drawing, In- terior Decoration, Lettering, Post- ers, Costume Design, Fashion Drawing. Get into the uncrowded professions. Ask for Art Catalog. MODERN METHODS The drawing was made by Stu- dents Margaret Stewart and Jack Rogers, after only two months. We teach actual commercial work right from the beginning. PRACTICING EXPERTS TEACHING 20 Years in Washington Livingstone Academy EUGENE T. DICKINSON. PRESIDENT Member Association Colleges and Secondary Schools, iddle States . NEW ADDRESS OPPOSITE FOX THEATER 1333 F St., Adams Bldg. BUSINESS HIGH AWARDS HONORS Eleven Given Medals, Two Girls Presented Letters for Rifle Team Work. Awards for scholarship and student activities attainments were made at a student assembly at Business High School last Wednesday. Medals were given to the following: Myrtle Pigg and Helen Sorensen for business efficiency, Virginia Calvagno, Hattie McIlwee and Marle Miller for school betterment; Mary Bleicher, Lois Horsnell, Marion MacDonald and Doris Rizzo for literary efficiency; Evelyn White for music, and Margaret Weber for dramatics. Margaret Bennett and Angela Myers were awarded letters for their superior work on the rifle team. Lynn Woodworth, foot ball coach, recommended the following boys for certificates for their outstanding work on the foot ball team: Jack Lewis, Jo- seph Brown, Albert Duryee, Edward Duryee, Linwood Jones, Sam Levy, Jack Reichardt, Morris Denniberg, Nathan Rosenberg, Charles Rich, Fred Finley, Hugh Mahoney, Ivan Koontz, Roland Hargett, Louis Kengla, Robert Anderson and Harry Hopkins. ‘Wednesday afternoon was calling day _EDUCATION For Practical Results Study at The Master-School e cof egme Interior Decoration Specializing in Interior Decoration and offering an Accredited, Practical and Professional Training Course.in all the Branches of the Interior Arts. Rudolph de Zapp, Director Representing Arts & Decoration, New York 25 for the junior and senlor cadets of Business. The boys were given the permission of the principal, Davis, to visit thelr teachers of the junior high and graded schools from which they entered Business. The object was to establish an “entente cordial” be- tween the schoois. PAPER FACES BOYCOTT. China May Bar American Publica- tion From Mails. SHANGHAI, China, January 26 (#).— The ministry of communications of the Nationalist government announced to- day that it is planning to deprive the North China Star, an American news- paper published in Tientsin, of its mail- ing privileges. The reason given was that the paper had “published rumors detrimental to the Koumintang and the Nationalist government.” The publisher of the newspaper is Charles J. Fox, a former correspondent in Washington. Shorthand In 30 School Days, | easiest learned, _reads like PRINT _ rapid. | Gourse, 12 week: EDUCATIONAL. Lavtals Bh. weokst Bookkeeping 12 'e::n..‘gr.- luates in demand. District ?g C‘ulmlnbi: College PSYCHOLOGY New Course ’ltnflllrlfli.l February 5 Herbert R. Grossman, Ph. D., Instruetor. Fee, $15.00 a Semester Y.M.C.A. 1736 G St. N.W. The Washington School for Secretaries National Press Bldg. 14th & F Sts. 1206 Conn. Ave. North 5236 only. Evening Classes, Y.M.C. A. Day and Evening Classes District of Columbia College Spring Semester Begins January 28 Washington School of Accountancy—Beginning and Advanced Courses in Accounting, 5:30 and 7:30 Classes. Evening Classes School of Law—Morning Classes, 7:00 to 8:40; 5:30 to 7:30. Washington Preparatory School Complete accredited four-year course. Evening classes only. Spring Semester begins January 30. Telephone for Schedule of Classes Main 8250 who is looking for an ideal “little one. —individual progress and Bus Phone Metropolitan 2883 ~Bradford Home School “The School for Young Children” A school that is attracting a great deal of attention be- eause it is something new and just the place for the mother three-fold environment for her Small classes with that personal direction so much needed latest educational methods as- sure the highest standard of study. A healthful outdoors with a real pony to ride, pets, jungle gym, tether, “Toonerville trolley” and four acres of one of the oldest farms in Maryla beautiful new building, makes school Nursery—School—Kindergarten—Primary— Natritious Midday Meals—Supervised Afternoon Play d, combined with a joy. Service Brookville Rd. at Taylor St., Chevy Chase, Md. Phone Wisc. 4078-4071 Director, Mrs. Mildred Fonda Barnum Foreign Trade Diplomacy 431 6th St. N.W. Georgetown University | SCHOOL of FOREIGN SERVICE Complete Courses in Int Interna Consular and Trade Commission Work Accounting and Business Administration Political Science Degrees of B. F. S., M. F. S. and Ph. D. OPEN TO HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES A new, interesting, remunerative and not overcrowded profession. Approxi- mately 100 courses taught by 60 practical specialists. drawn from practically every State and 20 foreign countries. Graduates now holding responsible positions in 50 foreign countries Morning Courses Start 9:00 A.M. Afternoon Courses Start 5:10 P.M. Semester Opens February 1 New Students, Whether Part or Full Time, Can Enter Now REGISTRATION NOW OPEN Catalogue and Complete Information Can Be Obtained from the Office of the School Tglephone Main 9040 ernational Law tional Shipping Student body