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DIPLOMAS GNEN | i T0 68 AT LANGLEY | Rev. R. J. Clinchy Addresses Class at Midwinter Exercises. Diplomas were presented to 168 stu-| dents who completed the course at! Langley Junior High School in that institution’s annual mid-year com- mencement last night. i Robert C. Shipley, president of the gradusating class, formally launched the exercises with an address of welcome, after the invocation by Rev. slmwn, B. Daugherty, minister of the Church of the United Brethern. Asron Singer presented the valedictory and Rev. R. J. Clinchy, minister of the Mount Pleasant Congregational Church, fol- lowed with the address to the graduates. | Margaret M. Hohman, recording sec- retary of the class, read the members records, and Marion Myers, correspond- ing secretary, read the class honors. Ernest Hauser, class treasurer, pre- sented the class gift to Chester Holmes, principal. Music by the school orches- tra completed the program. Dr. Stephen E. Kramer, first assist- ant superintendent of schools, presented diplomas to the following: Charles W. Adams, Jack Omar Aylor, James R. Bale, Lilliau D. Barr, Sarah C. Beavers, Bernard T. Becker, Blanche G. Beckert, Virgiria L. Bergman, James E. Bond, Helen Brown, Florence K. Burnside, James R. Carroll, Anthony G. Chacos, Nellie B. Clark, Helen C.: Conard, Carl F. Cooley, Clara F. Cooley, leonard C. Cranford, Joseph M. D’Anna, Carlos R. Darling, Mary C. De Neane, Helen G. Donaldson, Robert J. Downey, Dorothy G. Easterday, Rich- ard E. Farr, Gertrude Fitzsimmons, Mita M. Forti, Louis L. Fox, Adolph By INSTALLMENT XV. ARLY in September Joyce Wis- ter Allenby came to town to see her dentist. At 1 o'clock, through with drills and cring- ing, she dropped in to Michael's rooms for sight of him and luncheon. He had for luncheon, of course, every- thing she liked; Michael was that wi “Thought you'd never get here,” he said, as his sister returned from the room where she had tidied her much ruffied hair. “You have been yearning to see me, haven't you, Love?” she questioned ironically. “Haven't been near me for positively dozens of weeks! Long bleak ones, too, let me tell y She sounded a little gayer, Michael realized with great relief. “I've been frightfully tied up,” he said shamefacedly. Had he really ne- glected her, he wondered, unhappily. “Why? There isn't a thing you can’ leave to some one else; you know it!” * | she_questioned and stated. “I've had Carroll on my hands,” he explained. “Oh, for heaven's sake!” she mur- mured, with a rueful smile, which turned warm as she added, “I love that child and I don’t resent your interest. I have reason to care for her, you know; it was she who saved you from Marcia Terrill's frantic clutch!” tilxsfib!efore. At ey move the dining room he explained that there was nomo‘ie else to Dorothy E. Krause, Jerry Kroutil, Mary M. Lakeman, Charles W. Lawyer, Theo- dore E. Linthicum, Lucien D. Loveless, Alsace Lorraine Lowen, James K. Ma- horney, Venizelos Mallis, Ella L. Mavers, Mildred Anne Maxey, John L. Mc- Carthy, Carson A. McCrea, Kenneth H. 'W. Orndorft, Joseph E. Owers, John G. Perry, Helen S. Pickens, Norfleet W. Pope, Raymond Pouget, Charles S. Pratt, Margaret A. Ramsey, E. Carroll ‘Thomas, Jane I. Vrooman, Richard E. Wagner, James W. Walden, Sara B. ‘Walker, Charlotte K. Walling, Thomas S. Ward, Josephine E. Wightman, John L. Wilson, Thurlow L. Wilson, Thomas Jacobson, Jessima Knapp, Clarice I. David Bass, Paul V. Bell, Betty J. Dille, Ernest F. Hauser, Arnold A. Heft, Elizabeth B. Johnson, Louls vy, Francis D. Osgood, Melvin M. Pollack, Henry D. Selfon, Robert C. Shipley, Constance E. Spurr, Marie T. Catalano, is to be broadcast. 7th, 8th and E Mixes, ‘Whips, Stirs, Blends, Extracts Juices . .. Does a Thousand- and-One Jobs “Oh, why bring that up?” asked | Michael wearily; he had heard it a few | Lansh (%ayawfl ./mFEBRUAR / . /NGHTCLUBDAUGHTER ¢ Katharine Haviland-Taylor help Carroll and that she particularly needed help and that he had gone through hell. “Explain,” dropped to the chair pushed under her. “Well,” said Michael as he sat down, “she’ engaged to young Norris, Joyce ordered . | and—" “Really, Michael?” Joyce broke in, obviously surprised. “I've heard noth- ing of it!” “You can bet haven't,” Michael assured her grimly. ‘“He's making it & back-stairs affair and the child can't, or won't see it; I can't tell which. She’s | very obstinate.” “You poor darling,” murmured Joyce casually. “I've_talked to her,” said Michael, “and I've told her exactly what I think, and as a result she treats me as if I were a leper. The other day I went there and I know she was in, I happened to hear her speak, but— Theresa reported that Carroll was out, and I could tell by Theresa’s manner that she resented doirg it.” “But really, Michael, considering everything, wouldn’t it be rather a good marriage for her?” Joyce asked. She had almost forgotten the 4th of | July as celebrated in the good old days, |but Michael's manner of rejoinder | brought #t back. He inhaled a deep breath. “A good marriage?” he exploded. “I do not, I must confess, quite see what you mean. A good marriage? Why, you know, you must know that young Norris is a Without Additional Cost This. Regular $19.50 Magic Maid Mixer as she that Michael | gq, STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., P point me. lfly one, !:o\lld call 'ahlt a riage. my mind a good riage—" She began to laugh. “You poor dnlt lh: l':ld. Then, to her m; ment ant chagrin, lm at him to ueepthll his ‘clock supper nursery she said breathlessly. not to be a damned but I don’t know that confided, uncertainly. “Nor did I until it was too late. Of course, I'm years older—" “Only a very few,” Joyce comforted, ‘which will seem less as the years roll on; and the difference is a great com- fort to a woman as she accumulates a series of chins!” “It might as well be 50,” Michael stated morosely. ~“She’s but 20, you see, and she thinks I'm Methuselah, jr. Tells me I can’t sympathize because I've {orlot'un those years during which one oves.” “Oh, Michael! And you, the young- est thing I've ever known! Every one speaks of it, dear, and our whole fam- ily—you know we stay young—" “Carroll doesn't seem to know it,” said Michael morosely. He paused and Joyce knew that the pause subdued a sigh. He said next, “It’s been the rot- tenest Summer I've ever put in, Joyce; everything’s gone wrong! begin with, I put up bail for Todd—you know he defaulted in the Western National— and he lit out. I didn’t mind the bail, but I minded his sneaking off; I liked him. Then her mother"—it was ob- urgh vious that he now referred to Jersey— “well, there is an apartment in the ™, 8™ and § Y To Everyone Who Buys a Porcelain Frigidaire / —we'll give the new 1933 model During February they will not last long—so come :9 | hich am at loss, at moments, to understand | this other women, and, Joyce, frankly, you disap- | out; and it's good mar- | har- what a good time we had Ing around the Balkan states with Aunt Oassandra?” Michael smiled. “We could run over to Paris, dear,” Joyce went on persuasively. “France in Autumn, you know, Michsel, is en- trancing!” “I had been thinking of going off somewhere,” he answered, “and really” —his volce grew somber—“there is nothing to tie me here now. It was Carroll who had severed Michael's ties, and once and again Car- roll cried a little, thinking of Michael, because he had changed so. He simply didn’t appreciate Arch and he was glum and he wouldn’t understand that Arch wanted to tell his mother of TUESDAY, JANUARY ‘31, 1933. because mother's heart was And she, all the Smmer, had thought Arch would tell his mother; she had it Arch would tell her by A tle of the maturity it is made by hurt crept into her as the days and weeks rolled by and Arch nothing. She had, in her, a niceness Arch could not have understood; it would have been impossible for her to nkhlmlmuuonmtmeemedhn welfare or that even faintly approached his privacy. So she waited and she said fervent prayers, and she twisted the ring that was held on her finger by a fi“’“u' amount of tightly-wound Ing. ‘Theresa said, “It’s her nerves, that's why, she ain’t herself; it's her nerves.” ‘This had followed Carroll's leaving Jersey’s presence, a la Lady Vere de Vere, when Jersey told her “not to get herself into no jam with that boy.” (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) . 5 Keeps $50 Order Since 19086. their en- Mass., gagement, but that he couldn’t “exact- | among his papers. mportant Notice An uncashed money order for $50 Issued to him in 1906 was found the sther day by Oscar T. Hathorn, Prentiss, merchant, while rummaging did |t BY PONY TO INAUGURAL f | Georgia Boy, 7, to Ride 800 Miles to Ceremony. CHULA, Ga., January 31 (#»—Toby Cook, 7-year-old boy, shaggy He m}g:?hm leaving here about the middle of February. He is looking to semw:; Richard B. Russell, jr., of a phne!orhlml.ndlpmymm~ augural parade. 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