Evening Star Newspaper, June 18, 1925, Page 14

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14" HIGH MARKS MADE BY CENTRAL CLASS Nine} Graduates Averaging 100 Per Cent in All Studies Honored at Commencement. “Education i{s what we have left after we have forgotten all that we learned in school,” declared Rev. Dr. William S. Abernethy in an address before the 518 members of this year's graduating class of Central High School in the school auditorfum last night. At the same time he empha- sized the importance of an education as a part of character molding. “A person does not lose character and other finer things of life that he has gotten while attending school,” con tinued Dr. Abernethy He defined life as “the process of absorbing knowledge and: givis t hose things that are good. To *» s to enjoy To live is to serve, he said. Bradford Sherman Abernethy, a son of Rev. Dr. Abernethy, was a member of the graduating class, while Stanley Robbins Durkee, also a mem- ber of the class, is the son of Rev. Dr. J. Stanley Durkee. president of How- ard University, who delivered the in- vocation. The importance of character build ing and of a person deciding early in life what is to be their life’s calling was emphasized in a brief address by James T. Lloyd, president of the Board of Education % Nine Average 100 Per Cent. Announcements of the scholarship awards and honor students were made by Alvin W. Miller, principal of the school, while diplomas were awarded by Stephen E. Kramer, first assistant superintendent of scho The re- mainder of the program included sing- ing by the sraduates and selections by the school orchestra, under the di- rection of H. P. Hoover. Nine graduates received an average of 100 per cent on all studles, while 41 had the distinction of making 100 r cent in 24 points out of a possible Scholarship awards and honor grad- uates were as follo The following scholarship awards made by George Washington ity through competitive exam mong the candidates of ‘Washington high schools: Kendall scholarship to Margaret Wheeler, sec- ond university scholarship to Ralph Staubly, jr.; fourth university schol- arship to Ksther Garland Iglehart, sixth _university scholarship to Fir- man Powell Lyie, and seventh univer- sity scholarship to Elizabeth Marga- retha Hewston. The freshman scholarship to - Har- vard University, awarded by the Har- vard Club of Washington to the can- didate among the Washington high schools having the highest record, was won by Hope Massie Smoot. The &cholarship to Wesleyan Uni- versity, Middletown, Conn., awarded by the Weslevan Aulmni Association of Washington to the candidate hav- ing the highest record, was won by Ed- ward Clark Stephan. The District of Columbia scholar- ship to the Colorado School of Mines was awarded to Robert Jerome Alpher. Competitive Awards. The following scholarships were awarded on record in competition be- tween graduates of the Central High School: To American University, Janet Sto- rey Broadbent and Thomas Leonard Mikules; Catholic University, Paul xz Neil; Colgate University, Otto Louis Veerhoff, jr.. Georgetown University (Pro-Medical School), Sig- Lafayette College, Ross E. University of Vir. ginla, Winfield Scott Macgill, jr.; Pace Institute, Mildred Winifred Yates. The scholarship ot Strayer College for Central High School was awarded by competitive examination to Caro- Iyn Steward Ball. Three of the foundation scholar- THE EVENING STAR, W ships offered by the American Uni- versity to the various Btates have been awarded to students of the Cen- tral High School as follows: Florence Elizabeth Fellows, Lucille Beatrice Imlay and Lillian Anne Peters. The following students in’ the grad- uating class made a perfect scholar- ship record by receiving 100 per cent Es out of the 32 points required for graduation: Arthur Deming, Elizabeth Fallon, Marion Hall, Emily Herzog, Anna Kimball, Robert Milans, Mar: garet Moreland, Philip Stone and Ralph Young. The following made a record of 75 per cent Es to their credit—24 or more Es out of 32 required points: Katherine Allen, Wellington Barto, Mary Betts, Malcolm Beville, Joseph Blanton, Harvey Boudinot, Naomi Crain, Mrytle Crouch, Kenneth Dunn, Harriett Edelin, Grace Farrow, Henry Gibbs, Minnie Graves, Elkins Hale, Willard Hammer, Frances Harlan, Elizabeth Hewston, Helen Huhn, Esther Iglehart, Lucille Imlay, Wil- liam Kidd, Harrlett Little, Robert Lothrop, Louis Ludlow, Kathryn Mc- Lane, Winffeld Macgill, Mary Maca- tee, Thomas Leonard Mikules, Ruth Nickles, Anita Peters, Helen Prentiss, ‘Wilbur Rosenberg, Hope Smoot, Janet Rutter, Ralph Staubly, jr.; Virginia Strickland, June Thomas, Winona Van Ammon, Agnes Wharton, Mar- garet Wheeler and Virginia Wise. ‘The graduates were as follows: Girls. Irene Pearl Aaron, Zelda Abramgs, Dorothy Theresa Achterkirchen, Alice Antoinette Adams, Janett Adelaide Albert, Katherine Virginia Allen, Nina ETLEYS Iced Tetley’s on a warm day is real enjoyment. Orange Pekoe Tea Makes good tea & certainty as your motor INDIGESTION ? Gasoline, your motor’s food, must be rich in energy and easy. to “digest” ? . . TR BT e IT'S easy to diagnose a case of motor indigestion. The symptoms are loss of power and sluggish operation —followed by sharp motor knocks. The immediate effects are excessive carbon deposits, cutting of the protective oil film, and reduced gasoline mileage. In acute cases the motor must be sent to the shop for carbon cleaning, valve adjust- ment and repairs. It’s also easy to remedy motor indigestion. motor on a Tydol diet. Tydol—easy to “digest” Put your Tydol is so carefully refined before it leaves the Tide ‘Water refinery at Bayonne, N. J., that when it reaches the combustion chamber of your motor it is completely vaporized —practically “predigested.” Instantly the spark transforms every molecule of Tydol into energy—that is why Tydol always gives power. There is no waste—that is why Tydol gives more mileage. Your motor is never sluggish on a Tydol diet. It starts fast, picks up with a rush, and has a keen appetite for hills. Thousands of dealers endorse Tydol. Tydol pumps aze nearly everywhere. Have your tank filled toda y. _ Taylor-Korman Oil Company | . Rosslyn, Va. T Y Economy GAasouine Distributors Tel. 'DOL West 3045 For full Tydol economy use Veedol motor oil SHINGTO D. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1925. Audrey Kleeblatt, Frances Jessle Knowlton, Dorothy Roselma Lake, Juliana Elfreda Lange, Florence Law- beth Dyer, Margaret Eacho, Julia Dib-| ine Hines, Esther Grace Hobbs, Adah blee Eckel, Harriet Ophelia Edelen, | Horton, Viola Grace Houston, Evelyn Alice Holmstead monds, Emma | Margaret Howard, Dorothy Selby Stabler Edmonds, Sylvia Louise Ely,| Howell, Mary Hughes, Helen Chris- Florence Allen, Isabel Elizabeth All- mond, Gertrude Ellen Anadale, Dorothy Charlotte Anderson, Katha- rine Reeme Appleman, Mary Hall son, Mary Elizabeth Leama | Fregericka_Lehman, 1 (Continued on Fifteenth Page.) Armstrong, Juliet Christian Arnold, Florence Evelyn Askin, Margaret Virginla Balley, Rebecca Sara Baker, Mary Cordella Baldwin, Carolyn Steward Ball, Gayle Ballard, Annie Homan Barlow, Martha Averill Bar- rows, Virginia Beach, Helen Van Fossen Beachley, Dorothy Iola Beall, Caroline Elizabeth Bebb, Edith Vir- ginia Beeson, Katherine Virginia Ben- nett, Mary Elizabeth Betts, Vonnette Louise Bogan, Helen May Borland, Helen Margaret Bowers, Mildred belle Brashers, Ruth Cecilla Breen, Janet Storey Broadbent, Mabel Eliza- beth, Brown, Mabel Viola Brunnmer, Helen Buchalter, Georgiana Ruth Buddeke, Madeleine Marie Burleigh, Marion Burns, Beatrice Olive Bur- roughs, Gwendolyn Glanville Burton, Frances Caroline Butler, Susan Ruth Cannon, Isabel Sara Carney, Inez Myrtle Chadwick, Sylvia Rustelle Clarke, Sue Clara Cochran, Georgia Marguerite Coker, Rachel Garner Col- lins, Dorothy Elizabeth Compton, Naomi Virginia. Crain, Olga Dolores Crandall, Myrtle Vines Crouch; Muriel Birchfield Davis, Dorothy Elizabeth Dean, Julla Lee Denning, Ruth Marian deOtte, Virginia Dixson Dewey, Eveline Lilllan Dickinson, Mary ' Eleanor Dickson, Elizabeth Evelyn Mildred Esch, Frances Eliza-|tine Huhn, Esther Garland Iglehart, beth Everhart, Elizabeth Loraine Fal-| Lrcille Beatrice Imlay, Polly Atherton 16n, Mary Virginia Faris, Bessie|Irland, Verona Marle Jackson, Farmer, Grace Isabel ¥arrow, Mary | Dorothy Reed Johnson, Marie Alice - Barnes Fearnow, Gertrude Mary Fer-| Johnson, Emma Magdalen Kammerer, man, Mary Loulse Flynn, Marjorie | Frances Mary Kennon, Anna Ferris Theodora Folson, Lucille Foreman, | Kimball, Alice Ruth Kitchin, Lilllan Bessie Frankel, Virgi Ruth Free i man, Mildred Pulsifer Fre 5 1 ta Ruth Friedberg, Jennie Friedman, Lillian Frieda Fulden, Ruth Biller stop mat Sneezing khouser, Helen Agnes Furey, Rinex Banishss Rose Fever in One Day GUARANTEED e of Rose Fever wields to Rinex. Rellet SHERWOOD FORES HIGH ON THE SEVERN RIVER “A Summer Colony Under Club Control” R Invites you to examine into its clatms ta distinction. —porches unscreened. - For those not caring to keep house 5 Community Dinigg Halls Katherine Gordon, Ma Claude i G ith, K Dt lizabeth Dickerson Griffith, velyn Griffith, Mary Ernestine Gross, Helena ‘Whitlock , Phyllis Hariton, Goodall, Irma Louise 3 Minnie Adams Griffith in hot weather, A dplendid Bathing Beach and Pler 1s safeguarded duringbath- ing hours by a lifeguard. The matchless Eighteen-Hole Sher-, wood Forest Golt Course—adjacent. Furnished Cottages by the Season—$300 and Upward Proportionate rates for shorter periods. 3 For Further Particulars Apply 503 Fourteenth St. N.W. Telephone—Main 7523 Beautiful drive by way of Marlboro. Road in excellent condition. 0 of the trouble— Harbaugh, _Rose Kok oo Frances McNeer Harlan, Nancy Wolfe Harnsberger, Lorna Jean Hawk, Vir- ginla Hefty, Frances Evelyn Heid, Ruth Marion Heflig, Hadassah Hamil- ton Hellen, Elizabeth Mills Helm, Ella Flora_Hennig, zog, Elizabeth Margaretha Hewston. O R.PLATT'S Sibewr Situated on very high land, it is swept by prevalilng. breeses. ||| Nights are proverbially cool and mosquitoes & negligible factor | Croft Drayton, Delora Ruth Dunning | Dorothy Heyl, Julia Martha Hiley Mary Elizabeth Duvall, Hazel Eliza-| Marianne Felipa Hilgard, Sadie Paul SLLLLHVELLLLANLLARMLLLRLLIDRL2RD 3 King’s Palace REGRVBRVLRBRDIBRI2EL VL VS IVLRBBRRRL2D5 King’s Palace New, Trimmed Sale! 1000 ~ White Summer Hats “Famous King’s Palace Quality” % Twenty-One Models Illustrated o Actually Worth*5 and °7 Score of Beautiful Styles The Newest Mediums The Choicest of Summer Colors— with WHITE predominating An event of. outstanding importance from every possible angle, price, value, fashion and scope for choice. Hats for all occasions and for all types of wearers. All head sizes, small, medium and extra large. Dress Hats Sport Hats Business Hats Specially posed for us by Miss Elsie Davenport, who has just returned from Hollwood, California, where she won the recent New York-Hollywood Beauty Contest and posed in motion pictures. Street Hats Travel Hats The wonder event of the season—made by one of the finest millinery creators in New York—they bear the stamp of chic and newness. Materials Swiss Hair Braids Azure Hair'Braids Leghorn Taffeta Bengaline Crepe de Chine Novelty Straws Lyons Velvet and Hair Braid Colors White Citron Flesh Pink Pablo Orchid Ashes of Roses Sand Wood Black Styles Capelines Pokes Turbans Roll Brims Off-the-Face Picture Hats Drooping Brims Small Hats Large Hats - When Ordering Hats By Mail or Phone Please Mention Numbers Marked on Each Hat Street Floor Satisfaction First Since 1859 are conveniently located and arranged with an eye to comfort || 4

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