Quarterly Bulletin then you will understand why the Carnegie Foundation's generosity is so welcome. It will not only permit the publication of a general handbook by our Society covering the material presented in the lectures, but also a series of illustrated monographs on little-known and neglected early painters. Well, that's enough to give anyone sufficiently interested to read this communication up to here an idea of what we are striving for in these classes presided over by Mr. Sawitzky. His knowledge is the culmination of twenty-five years of diligent research and in view of his discoveries and interpretations, which we have only now found the funds to present, one can easily appreciate its instantaneous success, and the reason why the course has been labeled by graduate students and curators alike as one of the most stimulating and informative they have ever attended. The class has been in session each Friday afternoon since September 27th and will continue through January 17th, making a total of fifteen lectures. In 1941 and 1942, this series will be repeated at The New-York Historical Society, and the schedule of Mr. Sawitzky's lecture subjects will again be published in the announcements of The Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and of this Society. George A. Zabriskie