Evening Star Newspaper, June 12, 1924, Page 15

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MARYLAND UNIVERSITY CLUB PRESENTS OPERA Presentation of “Carmelita” Opens Series of Commencement Week Exercises. peeta) Dispatch to The Star. COLLEGE PARK, Md., June 12.—A merfes of commencement week activi- ®ies was ushered in jast night at the Tniversity of Maryland when the re- ecrtly formed Opera Club made its webut in “Carmelita”” This little =ipsy opera, which was well given and “nibmstastically received. was followed sater in the evening by the junior- serdor german. was to be another busy day with an interclass track met this morn- g, class luncheons, senior class tea A4anee for the underclasses, the senior- junior class exercises and the senior «iass play tonight in the auditorium. Temorrow at 10:30 in the momming <here will be a final assembly of the iaculty and students, at which Presi- “cnt Albert F. Woods will speak. This ~iTi be foilowed by the inspection of %he laboratories and shops by - the wisitors. There will be a varsity- alumm lacrosse game at 1:30, and an four Mter the varsity and alumni will ~lash at base ball. The Alumni Asso- zlation (College Park graduates) will ©c in session from 5 to 6, and at 6:30 the president’s dinner to the alumni will be served. The president’s recep- tion to the faculty, alumni and stu- “ents will be held from 8 to 9, and at the Iatter hour the commencement ball il begin. The degrees will be awarded Sat- mrday at 11 am. with Albert S. ook, state vuverimendem of schools, :xuv- hzddremh The president's et Bancheon to the visitors will en Zho femtivities. . HYATTSVILLE EX-MAYOR, “H. W. SHEPHERD, DEAD | - Banker and Real Estate Operator ‘Was Nephew of Former Maycr of Washington. @pectTDispaten to The Star. HYATTSVILLE, Md., June 12— g w. Shepherd, nephew of A. R. mayor ' of Washington TRy years ago, died this morning At the age of ffty-four vears. Ha Bad been confined for several | ok &t the sanitorium, 1417 Rhode | avenue. \Washington, suffering Sro cxiications o th Stomah - Un & Two months ago he was cashier of | e Firmt National Bank of Hyatts. | ~ille, becoming a vice president of | the fastitation upon leaving to en- &=2> In realty business Mr. herd was born in_Was éneton and made his home at Hyatts- | willa when & young man. He served | “wo as mayor of this com- Zmity. He lived on the Baitimore- Washington boulevard in a home | Built Just a year ago. Besides his wife, | ~who was Miss Clara Smith of Ken- “ucky, he is survived by a som, Ed- ~verd, and a daughter, Margaret, who 39 a stodent at Marysville. Tenn. The body was removed to Hyatts- ~ille and placed in the First Presby- dertmm Chareh, where services will held Saturday afternoon, with g A e T Fredericksburg Re-Elects Mayor. Spechd Dispatch to The Star. 5, Va., June 12. ing was re- +he haviog o opposi- councilmen elected are pper . Gouldman, jr.; Eimon Hireh, Joseph W. Rixey; lower ward, George W. Heflin, E. G. Heflin, Or. B J. Payne R L. Biscoe and T. 4. BeGbee, incumbents, were defeated ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md., June 12 (Spe- cial).—The largest graduating alass in the history of the imstitution received | thing diplomas at the annual commence- ment of the Rockville High School, held in the school auditorium last evening. It numbered thirty-nige and included the following: Academic department, Mary Margaret Rome, Nellie May Poss, Isabel Rennebsrger, May Louise Wood, Minnie Eudora Gardner, Olive Speake Edmonds, Elizabeth Colburn Markland, Ema-|tyo genc Porter, Myra G. Hicks, Elizabeth Edmondston Hicks, Virginia R. Nor- man, Horace Wiison Bennet, Harry Spiliman Burns, Julian Upton Bow- man, Clifford Aldis Robertson, Her- bert E. Ward, Joseph Harris Stome- street, Enoch Wellford Mason, Doug- las W. Long, Albin F. Knight, Thomas Lee Robey and William Summers Shoemaker. Commercial department —Mary Grace Clagett, Edna North Chiswell, Katherine Rebecca Benson, Eleanor Caroline Bean, Alma Lucille Hutchinson, Avylynne Dorothy Carey, Lottie Beile Penn, Dorothy Merle Magruder, Elizabeth Shaw Virts, Ruth Louise Thompson, Bessie Thompson, Loretta Jane Umstead, Harriet S. Kimpton, Lillian Alpha Hamke, Helen Majorie McLaughlin, Roscoe Feld- man Garrett and Russell Lee Bogley. The exercises were conducted by the principal. Prof. Harry S. Beall, who gave a short talk and presented | the medals and announced the honors. Prof. Edwin W. Broome, county su- perintendent of schools, presented the diplomas and certificates, and_other features of the program were: Essays by Lee Robev, Miss Edna Chiswell, Julian Bowman and Miss Avylynne Carey; several chopuses by the senior class, piano selections by Miss Louise Reynolds, and the invocation and benediction by Rev. S. J. Goode. pas- tor of the Rockville Christian Church. STUDEBAKER Just Drive It; That's All TRY LEMON JUICE TO WHITEN SKIN The only harmless way to bleach the skin white is to mix the juice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which any druggist will sup- ply for a_few cents. Shake well in a bot- tle, and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin whitener, soft- ener and beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach into the face, neck, arms and hands. It can not irritate. Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear, youthful skin and rosy-white complex- ion; also as a freckle, sunburn and tan bleach. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It cannot be bought ready to use because it acts best imme- diately after it is prepared. Orchard White e “Schick™ test. That is, thcn to detérmine their to diphtheria. Some- per cent, said to be an large. propertion, were Susceptible to the disease. ext day or two Dr. Pratt will again visit the school, this time to give the susceptible children Injections, which will it is said, m immune from diphtheria. “The naual banquet in honor of the senlor class of the high school at Poolesville, this county, was held in the school auditorium last cvening: It was given by the junior class an was attended by the members of the classes, the members of the fac- ulty and many invited guests, the large hall being completely flled. Hall, president of the ju- toastmaster, and toasts were responded to by Arthur Elgin, president of the senior class, and several other students, Prof. Themas W. Phyle. Prof. Cissel, Miss Mary Aldrich and Miss Genevieve Bor- deaux of the school faculty: Lawrence A. Chiswell, Mrs. T. Randolph Hall, Mrs. Lawrence A. Alinutt, Mrs. Julius Hall and others. Licenses have beem issued By the clerk of the circult court here for the marriage of the following: Samuel J. Rohde, aged thirty-three, and Miss Eulalia Sapp, twenty-fou ‘Washtngton: Benjamin Than seven, of Barrett, Minn., and Miss Lillian M. Spreckelmyer, = twenty-six, of Washington; Leonard C. Plasted, twenty-two, of East Orange, N. J., and Miss Florence L. Miller, nineteen, of Washington; Almen & twenty-three, Takoma Park, Mias Rn” Morrin Washington: J. D. Faber, thirty-six, of Takoma Park, Md., and Miss Agnes L. Minnick, thirty-eight, of Washing- ton; Gilbert S. Taylor, twenty-two, and Miss Nelllo L. Brown, nineteen, both of Baltimore. Elliot B. Robertson, a lifelong resident of this county, died yester- day morning at the home of his brother, Hesekiah Robertson, near Rockville, aged eighty-two years. He never married. Two brothers—Heze- kiah Adam Robertson, both of this vicinity—survive him. As a result of a raid at an early hour Tuesday morning at Ingleside Hotel, on the Rockville pike, three miles ‘from Rockville, which was con- ducted by Chief of Police Charles T. Cooley and several of his men, Thomas Gardner, colored, proprietor of the place an ‘orme in_charge of the Oid Dutch Mill, Washington, will have to angwer a charge of keep- ing a disorderly house and two gharges of violating the local option law of the county, it being alleged he assisted in the sale of intoxieating liquor. He furmished bond in the amount of $500 in each case and was Viola Posey, colored, of who was in Gardners Parks, Alaska withastopoverinGlacier Park. Allexpense Park tours—1to7 days longes If desired. Circuit tours Glacier-Yellowstone Parks. Free trip to Vancouver, B. C. and return if you wish from Seattle. The New Oriesta! Limited, brand new from locomotive to gb- servation car, an all-ycar, all-steel train, is the last word in de luxe transcontinental transportati M. M. HUBBERT. GENERAL 516 Longacre Bl i 1. WHITLOCK, TRAV Low Faves vig *® Finance Blds. Philade GREAT NORTI‘IERN RY. Rowxtz of the NEW Oriental Limited Finest train to Pacific Northwest Prices That Remind You of the Sale Months o B R M W MR A MM VAM K . . A . fm AETOE wanmzachy £fm ofn exry s Cem ewmae Em rxry mxexs Lifetime Seventh Street If We Were Governed By Our Prices Instead of Our Policy, We'd Call This a Sale Furnisture 1 A Quarter-Million-Dollar Lifetime Furniture Repricing Through a succession of years, Mayer & Co. has adhered to its policy of holding but two sales a year—in February and August — even though something unusual takes place at some other time. Yet, with a repricing of a quarter of a million dollars’ Lifetime Furniture that has made values NOW commensurate with sale-time prices, we feel that you should know about it. Distinctly different from the February and August sales, the Mayer & Co. repricing does not include everything in stock. Yet there are hundreds of fine suites and single pieces at prices as low as any sale has ever offered. s MO’¢ MAYER & CO. Than worth of genuine A Name Neison, and twenty-two, of employ, was arrested at the time of the raid, and as a result two charges | |li of selling intoxicating liquor are pending against her. She, too, fur- nished bond in the amount of $500 in | each case. On_a charge of manslaughter Don- ald Walters, son of Mrs. Frank Wal- ters, wealthy resident of Chevy Chase, this county, will be given a preliminary hearing in the police court here on Jume 21. “The charge is the outgrowth of a motor cycle accident on the Rockville-Darnestown pike, near Rockville. Tuesday after- noon, which cost the life of Miss Helen Adamson, sixteen-year-old daughter of- Herbert Adamson, and student at the Rockville High School. FOOD FOR THOUGHT Grow up with our community in Wesley Heights —where valses ave comstantly increasing with our rapid prog- ress of development, and at the same time give yourself and family aw opportanity to esjoy life in a real home. Act mow. W.C.& A.N.MILLER Realtors 1119 17tk St. Main 1790 | Lifts Out Hair— . Roots and all! No need now to undergo painfal electric treatments 1o remove superfinous hair; nor to apply ordinary ineffective hair removers which remove gurface hairs. 25 pew oriental balsm has | wards tbe gen jout™ every Sbjectionable bair. | all, Deateny and soft as velvet. No me s highly recommended by prom| ment beanty speeialista.. and is sold by all | §0od ‘dealers guch a3 Feoples Drug Stores. ive Styles—Men'’s \New Magnetic Balsamw - for the entire year Victrola No. 50 (Portable) $50 Mazhogany or oak There is but one Victrola and that is made by the Victor Company trademarks. WEEK’S REMNANTS THE “CLEAN-UP” BROKEN LINES They Were Good Values at $7.50 to $11.00 Black & Tan Oxfords Were $10.00, for $8.00 Friday Only—Children’s and Misses’ White Canvas and Tan Calf Strap Pumps at Y2 PRICE EDMONSTON & CO. (Incorporated) Advisers and Authoriti 1334 F Street Ar; Foot Troub!ues iy ANDREW BETZ, Manager Victrola production larger than ever In order to insure the test possible production from the Victor factories— the largest in the world d%rv&;ted to musical products—manufacturing have been approved earlier than usual. They ca.ll for 48% more Victrola instruments than we made in 1923. Present and future Victrola owners can share our satisfaction in knowing that Victor quality has made such plans possible. Twenty-one Victrola styles from $25 up. schedules Out tomorrow New Victor Records Red Seal Records DM ‘F..—l.o.-m‘r_uylm-m) In French 1009 $1.50 'ourquoi dans les bois Lflmnh (Why Do Thas Love to Saray) ) In Freach P e i e ey S kel me. 'wo - opl:-nbcnun:.o {mlme! (Huydo Frindberg) Piite Sals Friz Krenler} 1010 Old French Gavolte (CuiFichay it s FritzKreisler BB g ey ke ks T i e b wldioes- Light Vocal Selections !l'heCl:udtheFm (Veaghas-Radeey) Royal Dadraun Gipsy John nua-_a-) ”‘I }454“' — records -.*n' also bein demand. '"'{':mmb..' {'l'he Sidewalks Maggie Milrphy’a Hnne ] Melodious lnstrumenta.l 'H..fit Oll"— C-'l e Paul Whiteman (1) Where is That Old Girl of Mine? ox Trot and —FexTrot (2) Mandala; 33144 i and it Every lover of dance music will want it. {de Lindo (Beautiful Sky)—Waltz }luDoh s La Golondrina (The Swallow)—Waltz Orchestra Wonderfully beautiinl and romantic waltzes from Mexican of the fantastic element. Two of the best any dancer cver waltzed to. °""‘~"’“""~';:“°"....“:..4"" e Me in rot You Left o - flnfi‘vihnvoul fi‘ Vlct rola }10320

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