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Fenge,. % Re . s An Invitation Art Students’ Exhibition of their work at the National School of Fine and Applicd Art (Felix Mahony's). _Open June 2nd daily from 3 to 9 pm. to and including Sundav, June 9th 1747 Rhode Island Avenue OUR BEST ART AS FLORISTS Is Developed in FLORAL DECORATIONS for WEDDINGS —whether at Church or at Home. Consult us plans and prices. 1407 H St. between 14th and 15th Streets Telephone Main 370 about HCN fumigation kills moths in furniture. If you have had trouble with moths, beetles or other pests in furniture, rugs, mattresses, an _overnight stay in our fumigation chamber will kill the pests without fail, SBeruritp Storage 1140 FIFTEENTH ST A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR 38 YEARS CAASPINWALL . PRESIDENT Science’s Most Perfect _ Refrig- erator. Finished in White Porce- lain and a variety of colors. Easy to own—Liberal Terms and Moderately Priced. DOMESTIC SERVICE CORPCRATION 1706 CONNECTICUT AVE. PHONE POTOMAC 2048 WM.H.GOTTLIEB - MGR. For CO00 its ) 't.he complete seasoner 9 GULOENS . Mustard ‘ 10 O F. session of “the Grand Lodge. of the District of Columbia will the 1. O O. F. Temple, 419 Sev- w., on Teusday. June 4, 1929, at v '(7:30) o'clock for the purpose ng appropriate action on the death of wster and Past Grand Scribe MILLARD F. ZEPP. Attest: Grand Master. HARRY L. ANDRESEN, Grand Secretary ock D.m. TRIPP, Secretary. * PAINTING —LOWEST pri Call Le Preux. Lincoln 6017. - T N.W. WEATHER § ther strippers, carpents your own equipment ish plain, corrug 2 brass thresholds. saddies and spring channg el bar. caulking compound. in- RA’ ETAL WEATHER STRIP CO. 11 Good Hope Rd. S.E. = WANTED «=To haul van loads of furniture to or from New York, Phila. Boston, Richmond and points South. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co., 1313 You St. North 3343. FLOORS pnped, ettt ok ok N R S " COLUMBIA 31i. Planned and Executed —with fine discrimination and sl . That's N. C. P. Printing. ‘The National Capital Press Ta0ani2 D st Nw THINK IT OVER! The “handy man less cost than we charge to repair it right ut when rain comes our work will hold and Why_take chances? Roofing 119 Company RIPPERS. and builders. D p you_dry Main 93 _ Atlantic 1315, ! will “fix your roof” at | 3rd 8t BW. 3 (COMPLETE ENTRIES | . FOR GARDEN SHOW Clubs Will Compete for Star Cup in Horticultural Society Exhibit. Ten Washington and suburban gar- | den clubs will compete for The Star | cup at the annual exhibition of the | nerican Horticultural Society at the ! rd Frid The complete list of entries, now in | the hands of Mrs. John Ihider, chair- | man of the garden club competition committee, is as follows: Burleith, Hyattsville, Takoma Horticultural Club, Battery Park, Woodridge, Fairfax, Georgetown, Chevy Chase. Md. and | the Garden of the Forest of Glendale, Md | Al the clubs will be on an equal footing, for the competition will be for a special garden project, the planning arrangement for a bird bath or sun dial. Each club will work out this problem in its own way. Nearly all will use the bird bath instead of the sun dial scheme. There are an almost infinite number of variations in which such plantings can be arranged. Only living plants will be used. Competition is | keen among the club membership, for | the winner will receive 75 points to- {ward the cup. It is almost certain | that this will be equivalent to winning the cup itself, but it is pointed out that | there is a theoretical possibility of some | other club walking away with the prize. | Each exhibit staged by a member which | wins a prize, and which has been desig- {nated for the club competition, will { count to the credit of the club and the | membership of some club might roll up { enough points to overcome the lead of | the club winning the bird bath problem. | | The planting: anged ar- tistically about the hall lighting effects and in equal spaces. | Thus the award will depend entirely on planting design and execution. There will be no opportunity for one club to pile up an advantage by & larger and more colorful display, as has been the | case in past years when the clubs were | confined to no particular project. | "The unseasonable cold snap played | into the hands of the American Horti- | cultural Soclety and the American | Peony Society, which is holding its an- | nual exhibit at the same time and place | Due to the lateness of the season and | other causes, the date of the show was | placed near’ the limit of the Spring blossoming season, and some flowers, | especially roses, are falling rapidly. The | | cold weather does not injure them, but [ tends to preserve the blossoms in good | condition. It also sets back buds a day | or two in opening, so that the blossoms { will be at their best the days of the | show. The great mass of peonies now in cold | storage seem to be holding up well, ac- | cording to Dr. Earl B. White, chairman of the local committee of the Peony | Society, and the display seems certain to fulfill its early promise of being the most, gorgeous exhibit of these flowers ever seen in America. 100 ARE GRADUATED IN JOINT EXERCISES Students of Dunbar and Armstrong Evening Classes Finish Courses. One hundred students of the Dunbar and Armstrong High School evening classes were graduated in joint exercises last night in the Armstrong High School auditorium under the chairmanship of Dr. J. Hayden Johnson, member of the Board of Education. The graduates included boys and girls who had completed the prescribed courses in dressmaking, art, printing, millinery, carpentry, auto mechanics, machine shop work, shoe work and academic subjects. Rev. J. W. Mitchel pronounced the invocation, while Camp- bell C. Johrison addressed the graduates. Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assistant su- perintendent in charge of colored schools, presented the diplomas to the graduates. The 100 graduates, according to school and course, follow: Armstrong High: Dressmaking—Doretta Banks, Cath- erine Bruner, Lilllan Blanche McCoy, Anna Laura Mixson, Irene McWaine, Lucille Murphy, Edith Elizabth Roberts, Mary Elizabeth Stewart, Charlotte Elizabeth McGee and Henrietta Burns Wright. Art—Ella, Elizabeth Broadus, Donie Wilma Dodson, Ella M. Gibson, Bettie Beatrice Henderson, Ione Zenobia Mon- roe, Georgianna Robinson, Cordelia R. Jernagin and Rachel Josephine Sim- mons. Printing—Charles Ronald King, Gor- don Cornelius King and Howard A. ‘Walker. Millinery — Carline _ Austin, Mary Rouse, Grace Clarke, Rebecca Howard, Hattie Griffin and Lucille Warren, Carpentry—Lawrence A. Paige. Auto mechanics—Lawrence Briggs, Phillip J. Dandridge, James Lincoin Dial, Robert Alexander McGaha, Ed- ward Augustus Peterson, jr., Edward Lee Scott, Joseph Todd, Alva Harold Thurston and James E. Richardson. Machine shop—Fred Eugene Banks, willlam C. _Bennett, James Porter Bourke, jr. Willlam Brawner, Burton Elwood Cox, Edward Johnson Davis, ‘Thomas W. Fields, Huberta George, James William Helms and Hillyard Syl- vester Moore. Shoe work—John Daniel Dillard. Sherman Thomas Dent, Louis W. Eas- ley, Doulphia Harris, William James Hill, Julius Howard Lee, Alex Here- drich Strickland and Theodore Roose- velt Vowels. Dubar High, academic course—Wal- lace Preston Abbott, Eugene Lawrence Beasley, James Andrew Brooks, Walter Brooks, John Glenn Chapman, Alex- ander Chase, Gilbert Lincoln Everhart, John Lawrence Green, Joseph Cyrene Hackett, John Lee Holloway, John Handy, William Thomas Jasper, Joseph Ira Lucas, Hubert Rudolph Newton, | Leslie Sterling Perry, Harry Roland Pratt, Carolyn Taylor Mahoney, Beat- rice Agatha Thompson, Daisy Mae Tol- liver, William Leonard Dulaney. Eva Gertrude Morton, Joseph Allen Miller, | Verdi Mae Jefferson, Alfreda Blackwell Brackett, Edna Mae Fletcher, Susle Couch Furr, Gladys Hortense Hallback, Bethsaida Marie Harris, Mattie Louise Harris, Mildred Myrtina Hearne, Eliza- beth Annette Holman, Isabelle S. Wal- ton Hurd, Grace Thomas Jackson, Mary Elizabeth Jenkins, Jennie Eva Johnson, Addie Theresa Marshall, Mar- garet Magdalene Moore, Ethel Blanche Moten, Alease Ernestine Pollard, Mary | Elizabeth Robinson, Margaret Julia | Swann, Lillie Moates Tyson, Dorothy Mae Lee, Ellis Albert Beck and Anne lizabeth Valentine HENRY E. KANE DIES. Henry E. Kane, retired District fire- man, died at his home, 133 Webster street, yesterday afternoon. He retired from the fire service December 16, 1927, having served continuously since No- vember 25, 1918, his retirement being for physical disability. The deceased, a native of this city, | was born February 23, 1883, and ap- | pointed to a position in the Fire De- partment November 25, 1928. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Catherine | Kane, and two children, a son and | daughter. | Funeral will take place from' the home of his mother, 4705 Fourth street, at 8:45 o'clock Thursday morning, followed with a requiem mass at St. GabrieVs Church at 9:18 o'clock. Interment will be.in §t. Mary's Cemeisrs s P PUPLLS AT HINE GIVEN “H" AWARDS fficer and which EEEE THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1929.° COLONEL LINDBERGH’S HONEYMOON MOTOR- YACHT This is the double cabin motor yacht Mouette in which Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and his bride spent their honey- moon cruising in Long Island Sound. —Associated Press Photo. Guilford S. Jameson Urges Representation for District in Junior High Address. Obtaining the vote for the disfran- chised citizens of the District and thus upholding the American ideal of rep- Tesentative government presents a chal- lenge to youth as well as adults, de- clared Guilford S. Jameson, clerk of the judiclary committee of the House of Representatives and member of the executive committee of the Citizens’ Joint Committee on National Repre- sentation for the District, speaking before an audience of pupils in the Hine Junior High School this afternoon. The occasion was the annual presenta- tion of awards for leadership, scholar- ship, faithfulness and athletics, The school letter “H” was given. Mr. Jameson urged the pupils to study and be faithful to the principles and ideals of America as represented in the United States Constitution. Honor Roll Given, Scholarship—Thomas Caposella, Eliz- abeth Keim, Shirley Shipley, Harry Cox, Francis Grimes, Aleda Gates, Eleanor Darling, Marjorie DePoy, Ngomi Wilson, Anna _Price, Florence Sherman, Elsie Harriman, 'Charlotte Neale, Gilbert Statler, Mildred Walden, Claire Penn, Dorothy Holmes, Douglas Phillips, Clif- ford Proctor, Helen Au, William Martin, Robert McRae, Charles Orcutt, Marion Lee, James Campbell, Robert Dougherty, William Kieffer, Raymond Linthicum, Ferdinand Pfohi, John Sullivan, Jean- ette Feldman, Bella Goldenberg, Robert Campbell, Walter Guy, Jacqueline Montgomery, Rozena Gray, Ruth De Butts, Jack Poole, Leonore Sands, Yetta Simon, Lilllan Sims, Mildred: Warner, Betty "Craig, Kathryn Galiher, Mary Jerrell, Mary Ellen Kettler, Eisie Mae Sockrider, Florence Stopsack, Lois Tal- cott, Josephine Welk, Nellie McNel, Jessie ~ Bussey, Hoburg Lee, Edward Frazier, Lex Golden, George Herbert, Bernard Muenzer, Gertrude Evans, Vir- ginia Ladd, Mary Lou Bryde. Leadership—Thomas Caposella, Eliza- beth Keim, George Chappelear, Helen Sobotka, Harry Rosenbloom, Geraldine Davis, Edward Thompson, Ruth Drury, Edgar Grigsby, Mary Bradley, Harry Brady, Aleda Gates, Fred Bishoff, Naomi Wilson, Eldridge Kendrick, Grace Dygert, Joseph Berlin, Julia Draper, Robert’ McConnoughy, Doris Licarione, Gllbert, Stotler, Jessie Gray, - Douglas Phillips, Dorothy Holmes, _Greyden Edelen, Helen Au, George Furmage, Dorothy Walton, Alden Sisson, Eliza- beth Fletcher, Charles Orcutt, Mae Chamberlain, Ferdinand Pfohl, Jean- ette Feldman, Charles Hayes, Columbia Mazzucco, Ralph Weed, Eihel McGuire, Raymond Clark, Margaret Kelley, Mel- vin Clark, Gladys Murphy, John Rodter, Lois Talcott, Byrd Hall, Mildred Harper, Dorothy Millar, Charles Harvey, Helen Axmar, Ben Zola, Lex Golden, Mary Lou Bryde, Edward Cox, Evelyn Mur- phy, Sam Hall, Thelma ‘Herbert, Hern- don’ White and Gertrude Tew, Rewarded for Fidelity, Fairthfulness—Lawrence Leer, George HUd. Louls Speare, Florence Sherman, Virginia Gaylor, Helen Altman, Henry Brooks, Joseph Galasso, Agnes Smith, Thelma Greene, Eva Simon, Thomas Hicks, William Gateau, Robert Kend- rick, Raymond Robertson, Julia Draper, Irene Padgett, Edwin Miller, Gertrude Geller, Jerome Schlossenberg, Wallace Norwood, Clara Beane, Margery League, ‘Willlam Mirguet, Hoburg Lee, Wayne Pollard, . Charles Tarrant, Winifred Chick, Bertha Wilkinson, Marie Baruch, Elleen Doyle, Rose Cohen, Yetta Simon, Edith Wallenstein, Dorothy Griffin, Dorothy Millar and Mary Del Vecchio. Athletics—Olive Burns, Muriel Staub, Leona Bosworth, Melvia Miskell, Vir- ginia Gaylor, Blair Gray, Dorothy Des- sez, Catherine Thom, Lorraine Farren, Howard Williams, Dorothy Boyd, Marion Johnson, Doris Licarione, Charlotte Neal, Alta Lewis, Robert Brown, Car- roll Kuhnert, Margaret Talbert, Lois Loeffler, Charles Orcutt, James Martin, Anna Capanelli, Edward McReady, Wii- son Glll, William Bell, Harry Fonoroff, Beulah Bayne, Melvin Eicher, Stanley'Pearce, George Bont: Victor Caron, John Mullady, Leo Divver, Charles Corcoran, Helen Southall, Vir- ginia James, Doris Mackey, Thomas Hayden, Sydney Sugarman, Magdelin Ritter, Stanleigh Bowers, Elmer Kim- mell, Margaret Hayden, Bertha Wilkin- son, Morris Wolfe, Gertrude Tew, Mil- dred Conover and Guy Little. POLICEMAN fiECOVERING. When Horse Was Struck by Auto. ‘The condition of Policeman William R. Sheets of the thirteenth precinct is much improved, it was reported - this morning at Walter Reed Hospital, where he was taken following an accident Sunday night on Riggs road whep agy automobile erashed into the horse he ‘was riding. An X-ray photograph yesterday dis- closed no internal injuries as were at first suspected. The officer is suffering Sustained Injuries from a dislocated right shoulder, severe | head lacerations and brulses and lacer- ations to his hips. Police have not yet learned the name of the woman who was in the auto- mobile of Stewart K. Hill of 3509 Fourteenth street when it struck the Edwin Miller, | Will Rogers Says: | | | BEVERLY HILLS, Calift.—We ‘ crossed States yesterday just lke you crossed street intersections— | Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and | Califorpia. Into the airport at 4 in | the afternoon. After being away a | long time how can any one stand to | come home any other way? I never | saw as much airplane activities in | my life as I have seen from St. Louis west. Millions of dollars being spent on fields and hangars and equipment. Lindbergh officially opens the line July 8, if they find him Well, what do you think I come home and run into? The Shriners' convention is being held in Beverly Hills this year. It's worse than a Democratic convention. Haven't seen any papers. Did Congress help any- body yet? WARRANT IS ASKED - AGAINST OFFICER lllegal Entry Laid to Vice Squad Leader, but Judge Fails to Act. Sergt. Oscar J. Letterman, commander of the vice squad, again came into the limelight yesterday after a brief period of comparative inactivity. made by Judge John P. McMahon in Police Court, when Attorneys James A. O'Shea and John H. Burnett, counsel for Palmer Sowers, requested that a warrant be issued charging the squad commander with “illegal entry.” The request followed the appearance of Sowers in court, presented by his attorneys, who invited Sergt. Letterman to take him into custody for an offense with which the vice squad commander previously had tried to connect him. 1t was said that Sergt. Letterman con- ducted a raid in the 1600 block of U street last Tuesday on an establishment in which games were suspected to be in progress. Despite the fact that Sowers is said to have been in the place, Let- terman failed to take him into custody and preferred charges. ‘When Burnett and O'Shea attempted to surrender Sowers to Letterman yes- terday, the sergeant would not arrest him, and following his refusal the at- torneys iftimated that Letterman was not armeg with a warrant when he entered the U street premises. Assistant _ United States Attorney Joseph C. Bruce was informed of the situation, but refused to issue a war- rant and suggested that the matter be brought to the attention of Judge Mc- Mahon. The attorneys appeared before the court and informed Judge Mc- Mahon that a recent decision of the Court of Appeals made it necessary for judges to sign all warrants that were issued, but McMahon refused to act. Burnett and O’'Shea then intimated that a complaint would be filed against the officer before Maj. Henry G. Pratt, chief of police. = GORDON JUNIOR HIGH WILL BE DEDICATED Commissioner Dougherty and Other | Prominent Citizens Will Deliver Addresses at Exercises Thursday, The new James Holdsworth Gordon Junior High School, at Thirty-Afth and T streets, will be dedicated with formal exercises at 8 o'clock Thursdsy night, at which time Commissioner Dougherty and other prominent citizens will de- liver dedicatory addresses. | Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superintendent of schools, will preside at the cere- monies, The speakers will include, with the chairman of the Board of District Commissioners, Henry P. Blair, former president_of the of Education, and Dr. H. Barrett Learned, member of the school board. Dr. Luctus C. Clark, chancellor of American University, wil deliver both the invocation and the benediction. Music will be furnished by the Girls' Glee Club of Gordon Junior High School and by the choir of Christ Church in Georgetown, where Mr. Gor- don was a vestryman for many years. The Gordon Junior High "School, A refusal to “act at this time” was SHIPLEY LEADING - FEDERAL GOLFERS |Runner-up Two Years Ago Traverses Manor Club Course in 75. | M. A Shipley of the State Depart- | ment, who is & member. of the Argyle | Country Club, took the lead in the | competition among employes of the | Federal Government departments at the Manor Club today for the inter- departmental golf league championsBip. Traversing the tortuous Manor Club in 75, Shipley, who was runner-up for the title two years ago, led J. D. Boger of the Post Office Department over the first round of the 36-hole competition by three strokes. Both Shipley and Boger were expected to surpass the score of T. M. Belshe of the War De- partmnt, who turned in a 36-hole card | of 161 yesterday. Shipley, alded by his handicap of five strokes, also-led the field in the net compeétition with a net | score of 70. Other low scores for the first round follow: John R. Miller. Treasury, 79; J. J. Lynch, Treasury, 83; R. H. Brown, Post Office, 84; C. M. Whitman, Patent Office, 86; C. C. Heath, Patent Office, 87; C. L. Shelton, Patent Office, 87; J. R.'Wannan, Interior, 87; A. F. Wilson, ‘War, 87. Boger also was tied in the net com- petition at the conclusion of the first round, with his score of 78—6—72, in a tie with Wannan, who had 87—15—72, and Whitman, who had 86—14—72. The results of the team championship for the Mellon trophy will not be known until later in the day, as all the players had not finished their first round early this afternoon. |APPEALS COURT UPHOLDS | WOMAN’S $6,000 VERDICT' Mrs. Bauduit Again Wins in Legal Battle Over Amount She Says Was Promised Her. The District Court of Appeals has affirmed a judgment for nearly $6,000 jgranted by the District Supreme Court in favor of Mrs. Emma Bauduit, 1913 Thirteenth street, for services rendered the late Sarah V. Dunlop, wiho died in November, 1923. Mrs. Baudujt claimed that the deceased promised to remem- ber her in her will, if she took care of her, but all the will left her was a set of dishes. She then instituted suit for her services against Dr. Reuben M. West, the executor of the estate, and was award & judgment for $4,285, with interest from November, 1923. Attor- ney Alvin L. Newmyer appearcd for the plaintiff. Apartments For Rent 2920 Ontario Rd. N.W. 3 rms, kit. and bath. Electric Refrigeration, Resident Manager 2530 Que St. NW, 3 rms, kit. and bath. 4 tms, kit. and bath. Resident Manager.... - -$60. 2300 18th St. NW. 5 yms, kit. and bath..$55.00 1809 Belmont Rd. N.W. 3 rms, kit. and bath..$60.00 1715 Oregon Ave. NW, (for Colored) 3 rms, kit. and bath..$50.00 931 G St. N.W. 2 rms, kit. and bath..$35.00 National Mortgage & Investment Corporation M. 5833. 1004 Vt. Ave. completed last Fall, was opened-for its first classes in October, after its student body had been organized in nearby ele- mentary school buildings. The late James Holdsworth Gordon, for whom the institution is named, was a promi- nent lawyer here and was a member of the. 1900, until June, 1906, during part of which time he was chairman of the board. - A portrait of Mr.- Gordon, painted by Richard S. Merryman, local painted and principal of the Corcoran School of Art, hangs in the corridor of the school building. Following the dedicatory _exercises Thursday night the building will be open for public inspection. Australia, with an area nearly as large as the United Btates, now has A ition, o Board of Education from July. 1, |. LINDY YACHT SAILS FROM WOODS HOLE S | Mouette Spends Night at| Port on Bay State Coast, | Tied by Wharf. i By the Ascociated Press. WOODS HOLE, Mass., June 4.—The | yacht Mouette, on which Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and his bride are believed to be passing their honeymoon, sailed from here today after anchoring in the harbor during the night. | A tall, slim, fair-haired young man, | attired in white duck trousers and a blue sweater, appeared on the deck of | the cruiser a few minutes before she | hoisted anchor and headed out of the harbor. ‘Through the green silk cur- tains, drawn completely across the plate glass windows of the deck house, could be seen a silhouette that bore every resemblance to the outline of a young woman. Light Burns Late. The Mouette slipped into Woods Hole Harbor about dusk last night and pulled up alongside the fish wharf. A light | burned late on board and the anchor | light burned all night. Early this morning, a rowboat put out from shore and the occupants ap- prached the Mouette, and then circled the craft, which bore its name and port “New York” in letters on her hull, As the skiff circled the cruiser, the blond young man ducked out of the cabin, bounded to the stern and raised a naval ensign. He then ran to the bow and hoisted a small pennant, bear- ing a peculiar insignia of interlaced loops and knots in red. He then re- turned to the cabin. Underway Soon After Halil Hailed by the occupants of the skiff, he responded from behind the curtains of the cabin. In a not unfriendly, but somewhat imploring tone, he_sai “Oh, won't you please cast loose? The request was repeated and the skiff pulled away. Within 3 minutes of the hafl, the Mouette was under way. LINDSAY BACK HOME. Poet Intends to Stay There as “It's Man’s Business.” SPRINGFIELD, Il (#).—Fame at- tained, Vachel Lindsay, the poet, is| back to live in Springfield, because it is | “every man's business to come back to his home town to live.” For years he has lived elsewhere. Poet of Abraham Lincoln's home | town, Lindsay says: | Evans Staley, Margaret Bennett Brim- “All my books repeat my belief that it is man's business to come back to his | home town to live, to his birthplace, | I have done, if possible. Here I intend | to stay until the cows come home.” | The poet's household consists of his wife and two young children. School Hauls Water. 10S ANGELES (P).—Five hundred gallons of salt water, dipped from the ocean 4 miles off shore, has been hauled to the marine biological laboratories of the University of Southern California here to provide students a natural con- dition in the study of marine life. As evaporation occurs. the tanks are Te- plenished by the same method. DIPLOMAS ARE GIVEN TO 33 GRADUATES Holton Arms School Also Awards Prizes at Annual Commence- | ment Exercises. Save Half Your Rent! “BUNGALOW” Co-operative Apartment in Cleveland Park $5,800 Splendid corner apartment in fine bullding, best residential section of Cleveland Park, Just west of Connecticut Ave. | > iss Breck-*| Reception _Hall, Thirty-three girls of the Holton Arms School received diplomas of graduation vesterday afternoon from Mrs, Fred- erick A. Holton, director. Special honors were received by Elizabeth Breckinridge, daughter of | Col. Henry Breckinridge, who was | awarded the alumnae prize for ‘“char- acter, influence and leadership.” and | Kathieen Carmichael, daughter of MaJ. Gen. Roderick L. Carmichael and pres- ident of the graduating class The graduates, besides M inridge and Miss Carmichael, were: |} ~ Bedroom. Eleanor Crain, Frances Carter, Dora | ; White, Laura Barkley, Catherine Har- | rison. 'Dorothy McMaster, Jane O'Neil Wallis, Betty Beggs, Frances Breadon, Jane Crockett Gilman, Catherine Cam- eron, Katherine Braxton Hall, Mary Ingraham Henry, ~Carlotta Patrica Joyes, Jane Craven McHarg, Martha William Tuttle, La Verne Delphine Wal- lace, Betty Beale, Elizabeth Dotterer Gamble, Alexandra Lee, Cora Louise Mclver, Nina Harrison Randell, Frances Living Room. ath, Dinette and Beautiful outlook. R d Highlv desirable 100% Owner- ship® Neighbors. ~Convenient to Churches, School and Shops, and to Bus and Street Cars. * Small Cash Payment and Terms s Than Rent. A Genuine Bargain! * Don't fail to inspect this de- lightful _co-operative _apartment bome. Phone National 9770 for appointment. M. and R. B. Warren 925 15th Street N.W. mer, Mary Elizabeth Brimmer, Gertrude Fulton Price and Marie Elizabeth Price. An open-air theater and recreation park are being included in the national ‘memorial for Dr. David Livingstone, the missionary-explorer, at his birthplace Scotland. 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