Aies from 16 to 66· Oler Free Movies for Stucleat Jouiialilta HelP Children at the Muaeum ;, Night Classes at Get Out Real Newapapen J~umalism '!f Northwestern university will. get a g~mpse of real newspapering Students of the Medill School · of ou can apprecla t e t h e · value you ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FH~~g~ ~~M~~ a~ oom~· BIG NEWS get 1 n a ABOUT RUGS good u·sed car when you com· Watch It par e I t S Mestjian Brothen, lac. price and performnee with F!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!"For Fuel-Use Oil"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l the best new ca r that money would buy few years I o. You can buy milege at a · n ne strategic location of this ..tem efficient Wk plant puutees prODIPI deliveries of ba r g a 1 b y consulting the ~~ Correct Grade for Eaich &mer" CLASSIIn this paper, next week, will appear the most important announcement of our twenty years of rug business on tbe North Shore· For nations of nationalities were listed by the 820 American born students wh4> did not c:laim American nationality at registration. Two hundred eighty-nine students are foreign born and 35 countries were li'sted as birthplaces, the four highest being: Canada, 44; Germany, 38; Scandinavian countries, 36 and England 30. Of the 289 foreign born, 142 obtained their secondary education wholly in the United States. More than 300 of the students in the night classes are now working in executive capacities, including proprietors, general managers, departmental managers and office managers. Others are cashiers, auditors, treasurers, accountants, editors, advertising managers, teachers, engineers, lawyers, dentists, pharmacists, salesmen and clerks. 511 :Main St., Wilmette lVIIJaette lt.Jt Ualverslt)· ·Mil durmg thetr Easter vacation when they will fill jobs as reporters and copy-readers on forty weekly and · daily newspapers. The student-reporter is required to wor.k during his · vacation in or~er to learn . ·something o{ the discipline of th~ caty-room and !he way in which edators manage thear news and features. The vacation assignment is a part of a required course in field trips ~nder the ~ire~tor of Philip D. Jordan: mstructor an JOUrnalism. During the past semester the students have visited the Chicago offices of the Associated Press, the United Press, the Western Newspaper Union, and the Chicago Tribgne. Five moving pictures are on the program of the free entert~inment for children to be given under the provisions of the James Nelson and Anna Louise Raymond Fund at Field Museurn of Natural History Saturday morning, April i. The films are : "An African . Adventure," "The F a 1c on Hunt," "Chicks," "The Lynx," and "Wonder Book No. 3." They will be shown in the James ~impson th.eatre of the museum, r~nnmg contm'!ously from ~0 a. m., untal noon. A~l c_htldren of Chtcago and suburbs are mvated. Newspaper editors have been enthusiastic in making a place for journalism students on their· staffs, and many have written the school· stating their satisfaction at the practical experience which each student is to have. N. U. Chicago School AU ages from 16 to 66 are included among the 4,166 students of both sexes attenc;ling night classes of the schools of commerce and journalism of Northwestern university· o~ the Alexander McKinlock campus, Chicago, accordiing to a survey just c:ompletetl by the personnel department of the university. The women enrolled have an average age slightly above that of the men. The oldest man is 61, and the oldest woman is 66. The average age for men is 23.04, while that of the women h 23.59. Fifty per cent of the men are between 20 and 26 years old and 50 per cent of the women between 20 and 28. These averages are considerably higher than the averages of full time collegiate groups. · Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Walton and daughter, Alice, of 1607 Forest avenue, left on Thursday of last week to spend a week at Hot Springs, Ark. · I I I l THE LATEST PHOTO OF OUR WINNETKA BULK PLANT · I I'UEL OIL 'lelepboaes FIED ADS I D · t h i ape r · 8 BRAUM BROs.· OIL CO · Wlaaetka S02.0·2.1 Blghlaad Pic. S2.90