present member of the Committee on Education of the Chamber of Commerce. ELLIS SCHOOL, The Ellis School was opened at its present location, 1860 Ellsworth avenue, September, 1916, with an enroll- ment of only 40 pupils. The aim of the school primarily is to prepare girls for college, and to give those not going to college a thorough training in an elective course of study. The first class of three girls was graduated in June, 1918. Since that time 64 girls have been graduated from the school and 42 of these have entered college. The French Club composed of advanced French students, meets monthly, and in this way its members become more conversant with the French language. The children of the primary grades are interested in their work through projects, hand work and industrial art. There is also a successful Art club and the annual Art tea is one of the interesting social events of the school. The Geography club adds interest to that subject and the work planned and carried out by the children. This year the eighth-grade has published two issues of the Ellis Chronicle, and one issue of the Freshmen Flurries has also been published. These magazines add much interest to the English work. A large gymnasium and a study hall were added to the school building last summer, and have been of great value to the school work. Sara Frazer Ellis, head mistress, and Marie Elder Craig- head, associate head mistress, are assisted by a teaching staff of 14 women. OUR LADY OF MERCY ACADEMY A four-story brick building on Penn street became in 1843 the Mother House of the Sisters of Mercy; and it was there, the next year that Mother Francis Warde furnished two of its rooms and opened a select school for girls. In this humble beginning was laid the foundation of the present Mount Mercy Academy. To a new structure. erected al