Evening Star Newspaper, June 4, 1933, Page 7

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armchair uphol- stered and cover- with s loose spring-filled seat cushion, Exactly as Pictured Here's What You Need for That Small Dining Room A cozy seven-piece, genuine wal- mut dinette suite consisting of a s buffet, china closet, extension table and four attractive, upholstered seat chairs. $5.00 Down! Brides of Today, To- morrow and Yesterday— Use This Ad As Your Buying Gov. Winthrop Desk 142 Fmany Gov. throp genuine ma hogany i rop-lid desk Genuine Mahogany with fine in- terior and PDuncan Phyfe Table roomy drawers: Whis obleng- §op, gemine $2-98 50c a is only... e Week! Exactly as Pictyred 3-Piece Maple Living Room Suite $24.75 is of maple in natural finish. hintz-covered seat cush- vacks to match. This vill furnish that den or sun a delightful manner and most inexpensively. 50c.a Week! Phone Set Streets N.W, THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JUNE 3%, 1933—~PART ONE. The HUB—The Store of Smiles, Service and Satisfaction (Exactly as Pictured) Furnish Your Bed Room to the “Queen’s Taste” With This Elegant $129 4-Piece Bed Room Suite $ To make your bedroom suite a worthwhile investment we have chosen this one to fea- ture in the June Bride Sale at a saving on the regular price of $40.00! Constructed of genuine walnut vencer on gumwood. Vanity, 4-post bed, dresser and chest of drawers. The triplicate-effect plate mirrors are one of the many attractive features. Pay as Convenient—At The HUB (Exactly as Pictured) Add Another Room to Your Home With This Mohair 3-Piece Bed-Davenport Suite If you wish to make your living room more than just another room, furnish it with a suite like this, combining the utmost in comfort and design plus the con- venience of sleeping accommodations. Upholstered in mohair, serpentine front. Loose spring-filled seat cushions. $109 VALUE Philco Thanai PHILCO Model 89 Highboy Comeplete With Philco Tubes 50 An outstanding value! Automatic control, tone control, electro-dynamic speaker, latest type Philco high-effi- ciency tubes. Handsome hand-rubbed cabinet. 5 Cents a Week! Now! You May as You Ride Complete and In- stalled’ to your aerial. Federal tax paid. Radio ——— ! s R ST v Federal Tax Paid Here It Is! A New Philco with Philco Tubes 15 Receives regular broadcast and police calls—a great radio. 50c a Week Philco Transitone Auto Radio N b: gt it's ALL- ELECTRICI Nothing. in ‘sight s; ;9,95 except the convenient steering Skl column control. You get the pro- grams as clearly as in your home. Installed While You Wait! AL GRADUATES $ (But Holton-Arms Question- % | graduates of the Holton-Arms School ¢ | Friday night, Mrs. Jessie Moon Holton, awarded to Thelma Patricia Benton, & | Gregg, Mabel Claire Hoskinson, Caro- JAMES C. INGRAM, Director of the boys’ department of the Y. M. C. A, who will be director of Camp Letts, Y. M. C. A. vacation re- sort for boys on the Rhodes River, which opens June 23. PREFER MARRACE naire Reveals Distaste for Runaway Weddings. Marriage entered into between the ages of 18 and 22 is much preferred to & career by a majority of the girl who received their diplomas at the in- stitution’s thirty-second eommencement principal, declared in the commence- ment address. . ‘The girls, who expressed their opin- ions in a pre-commencement question- naire, condemned run-away marriages, Mrs. Holton said, although one gradu- ate asserted that such a marriage “with some parents is the only solution.” With only three negative votes, the class characterized current motion pic- tures as so “low and useless in stand- ards” that aftendance at the perform- ances “is a waste of time.” ‘Those receiving diplomas in the junior college course were Nancy Lesh, cum laude, and Helen Virginia Sacks, cum laude, both of this city, and Miss Vie- toria Jenkins of Savannah, Ga. Diplomas in the general course were Alice Marie Fleming, Charlotte Ward line Schroeder Johnson, cum laude; Emily Maddox, cum laude; Sarah Lee Perot, cum laude; Jane Esther Platt and Ordway Whitford, all of this city, and Octavia Evans, cum laude, Mem- phis, Tenn.; Margaret Pruden Lewis, Durham, N. C., and Elizabeth Carolyn Rust, cum laude, Saginaw, Mich. Diplomas in the college preparatory course were presented to Emlen Knight Davies and Bambie McKenna of this city and to Florence Hardy, cum laude, Murphy, Battle Creek, Mich. General course ites were awarded to Janet Van de Carr Danford, Fitchburg, Mass, and Alice Parker =0 ae CANP LETTS STAFF F 215 CHSE Y. M. C. A. Vacation Haven "for Washington Boys to Open on June 23. A group of 22 college and high schoel graduates, headed by James C. Ingram, director of the Boys' Department of the Young Men's Christian Association, will the staff of Camp Letts, the Y. M. m Vemtb'n haven for Washington boys, on the Rhodes River, in Anne Arunde; County, Md., which opens e 23. Ju?nmu, a of the Southern Y. M. C. A. Graduate School, affiliated with Vanderbilt University, will be di= the camp. J. Sidne; graduate of George versity Medical School, will be physician, and W. E. Hartgen, of Penn State, will be camp steward. In addition to'these executive officers there will be 11 senior counselors, all college men, and 5 junior counselors with high school educations. All of the leaders distinguished themselves at school in athletics, crafts or other ac- tivities of value in camp administration. ‘The senior counselors, with their alma mater and their camp assignments, fol= low: John J. Hengstler, Catholic Uni- versity, nature study; Warren E. Moore, Dartmouth, fleld and track activities; Bernard Phillips, George Washington, athletics; Robert Claflin, George Wash- ington, tennis; John' Hain, Geol Washington, water sports; Mark D. Woodward, William and Mary, Indian crafts; Arthur D. Bridgers, Duke, crafts; Russeil Herbert, Duke, dramatics and entertainments; Paul B. Osgood, Y. M. C. A. poummn, crafts director; James' P. k, jr, Lafayette, water sports and ; Willilam Duvell, Da- fayette, wood carving. Junior counselors will include Charlie Wenrich, Central High School, 5 William Wi and publications. OPERA TO LAUNCH _ FESTIVAL SEASON “Pirates of Penzance” to Be Pre- sented Wednesday Night on Monument Grounds. d through A: A Other events include the Evelyn Da- vis Dancers, assisted by the Band, on Thursday, June 15; a con« grove d Kenzie of this city and to Barbara Elizabeth Goodwin of Yellowstone Park, Wyo., and Anne Greenberry Han- son of Baltimore. NEBRASKAN DEPORTED AS COMMUNIST WORKER Omaha Mayor Takes Up Collection to Send Family Along on Trip to Scotland. % | By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, June 33.—Deported for % | alleged Communistic activities, George Stalker of Omaha, Nebr., accompanied by his wife and their three children, sailed today for Glasgow, Scotland, on the liner Caledonia. Stalker was placed on board the ship Priday night and kept in seclu- sion until sailing time. ‘When Stalker was ordered deported, Mrs. Stalker protested to Mayor Met- S | calfe of Omaha that this action would >, | wreck her home. The mayor privately S | obtained $500 by contributions to send % | her and her children to Glasgow with Stalker. EISEMAN’SF SEVENTH AND F Cool, Comfortable . SUMMER SUITS ERE 'NOTHING DOWN| Just Pay - . $4.50INJULY $4.50IN AUG. 1$4.50 IN SEPT., Fine Tropical Worsted Suits of the better grade. Cool, stylish and very reasonable at $13.50. Linen Suits, $10.50 Pay $3.50 Monthly Starting in July Sport Coats, $10.50 Pay $3.50 Monthly Starting in July D. C. TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS KILL 6 AND INJURE 386 Violation of Parking Rules Results in Majority of 3,981 Arrests in Month. Six persons were killed and 386 in- jured as a result of traffic accidents in the District last month, according to statistics released today by the police degrtment. . May, last year, 15 were killed and 404 injured, and in the same month of the year before, 5 deaths and 352 uries were reported. olice made 3,981 arrests for traffic offense during the month, Jost of them Xca violation of different pariae vegu- lons. PLAN PICNIC IN PARK Washington State Society to Hold Season’s Last Gathering. A Rock Creek Park picnic. will be held by the Washington State Society om Saturday afternoon, June 10, f the season’s last gathering. The affair will be held near Military and Ridge roads and automobiles are to meet the street cars at Connecticut avenue and Military road from 3 to 4 p.m. Officlals of the organization said to- day that reservations for the complete picnic lunch, to be furnished at small cost, may be made by telephoning De- catur 2877, except on Sunday from 2 e tal will be provided and games and contests are being planned. Those desiring, may bring their own lunch. Capt. Emmett R. Carroll is president of the sgciety. Social Revolution Is On, Ickes Tells W. & J. Graduates |Cabinet Member Admits His Generation “Made Mess of Things.” By the Assoclated Press. WASHINGTON, Pa., June 3.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, told graduates of Washington and Jefferson College today that they . are nexp,alnx from a college campus into “the nyidst of a social revolution. “Men of my generation * * * are in no boastful spirit when we face an audience like this,” he said. “Instead of offering you platitudinous advice we are standing before you and confessing, frankly and humbly, that we have made & mess of things. 5 “In the name of self-government sardonically enacted laws only to them openly and flagrantly. Prohibitis were an incitement to boot- legging. Income tax laws * * * were put into the books only to be evads We jeered at our legislative bodies; scoffed at our courts.” Declaring that a new social order is in the making, Ickes told the gradu- .':i' that “my generation needs your help.” Ickes was awarded an honorary LL. D. degren,

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