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" ENTRAL AWARDS | DIPLOMAS T0 219 Dr. Joseph M. M. Gray De- livers Commencement Ad- dress to Graduates. Dr. Joseph M. M. Gray, chancellor of American University, told a class of 219 boys and girls who graduated from Central High School last night that American recovery “shall be not only economically sound but morally right.” i “Keep in mind,” Dr. Gray told them, “that the one great funda- mental appeal for government, busi- ness and culture alike, which is ef- | fective across dividing lines, is the appeal which arises from the convic- | tion in the public mind that the ulti- | mate purposes in view are justice, richness of life and an equalizing of the opportunities of ‘personal experi- ence—in a word, that the ultimate purposes are moral.” Dr. Gray was presented to the grad- uating class by Dr. Hayden Johnson, chancellor of National University and president of the Board of Education, who presided. Max Leiderman was announced by Dr. Harvey A. Smith, principal, as the winner of a Southeastern Univer- sity scholarship. Twelve girls and seven boys were cited as members of | Alpha Chapter of the National Honor ! Society. They are Jean E. Apple- baum, Helen L. Davis, Alice H. Ed- monds, Leonora B. Gordon, Ruth J. Haycraft, Edith C. Kramer, Edith A. Kuenzel, Alice K. Leake, Dollie D. Murnan, Mary E. Sommers, Natalie Sternberg, Mildred E. Walder, Cyrus Katzen, Joseph M. Marzolf, jr.; Wil- liam L. Mastin, Henry S. Nowell, O. W. B. Reed, jr.; John B. Shaefer and C. G. Yeonas. The diplomas were distributed by Dr. Stephen E. Kramer, first assistant superintendent in charge of high schools. Members of the graduating class follow: Jean Evelyn Applebaum, Bertha Athanas, Marie Bailey, Betty Burdette Bain, Frances M. Barnard, Mildred Elizabeth Bishop, Beulah FPrances rennan, Edith Elizabeth Bryant, Viola May Burns, Gertrude Aileen Cairns, Hazel Louise Clark, Clara Juanita Claxon, Nellie Clements, Mary Elizabeth Cochrane, Kathryn Eliza- beth Cogswell, Ruth Estelle Cohen, Betty Ann Craig, Jane Cunningham, Dolly Darhanian, Helen Louise Davis, Genevieve Dawson, Clara Louise De Lawder, Mary Frances Durst, Alice Holmead Edmonds, Jane Emery, Ze- nobia Elaine Evans, Jane Frances Finn, Nancy Carol Fitzwater, Betty Louise Fuller, Margaret Eugenia Gar- land, Eleanor Radcliffe Garner, Chris- tine George, Shirley Evelyn Goodman, Leonora Beatrice Gordon, Barbara Graham, Eleanor Margaret Harris, Ruth Joanne Haycraft, Dorothy May Heddings, Dorothy Lorraine Hellman, Mary Alice Herbert, Ruth Matilda Herman, Charlotte Tallulah Hewett, Margaret Louise Hill, Jeanne Marcelle Hiser, Betty Holbrook, Frances Eliz- abeth Hopkins, Evelyn Marie Ireland, Virginia Hassler Johnson, Dorothy Kalleva, Lynn Rae Kaufman, Kath- erine Audrey Kellogg, Martha-Byrd | Kemon, Harriette Elizabeth Kenyon, | Jane Frazer Kephart, Virginia Mae Kerr, Emma Thomas Knight, Edith Constance Krammer, Evelyn Kras- nick, Edith August Kuenzel and FPrances Rita Kunna. Betty Hall Law, Alice King Leake, Mary Kathleen Leigh, Prances May Linthicum, Elizabeth Rivers Lucas, Alice May Mahoney, Elizabeth Frances Marino, Marie Kathlyn McNitholas, Gloria Mercedes Montes, Marguerite Benton Moreland, Dollie Doris Mur- nan, Gladys Winifred Murrell, Con- stance Mareta Nash, Elizabeth Ann O'Brien, Mildred Irene Patterson, Mary Elizabeth Peck, Florence Plot- nick, Dorothy Marie Plugge, Rose Lillian Pollan, Dorothy Ratner, Anpa Louise Hartley Rice, Doris Rosem- bloom, Lillian Rosenbloth, Edith Pau- line Rowles, Peggy Schmid, Virginia Schrivener, Charlotte Arletta Sheads, Hazel Marie Smallwood, Norma Mitchell Smith, Mary FEsther Som- mers, Roseann Ellen Stapleton, Na- talie Sternberg, Ellen Elizabeth Tal- cott, Eva Rose Mary Teel, Marjorie Hazel Thomas, Hilda Lucille von ‘Thyrring, Fannilynn Wilkinson ‘Tompkins, Elizabeth Virginia Truitt, Mildred Elizabeth Walder, Beatrice Warsaw, Marie Margaret Wester- | meyer, Ethel White, Joanna Linwood | Womeldorph, Vivian Elaine, Wood- worth and Ellen Mary Wright. James Lawrence Allnutt, Charles Robert Aughinbaugh, Robert Wallace | Bailey, Wesley Baldwin, Dominic | Mimi Barranca, Horace Buchanan | Bazan, Joseph Jeffre Berkow, James | Walter Bernhard, Lewis Julius Brown, ‘Thomas Wilbur Brown, Everett Lee Burns, Roland Earle Burns, John Philip Buscher, Paul Erskine Carr, Stephen Louis Chaconas, Joseph Ray- | mond Chavoen, William Henry Clarke, . Stanley Clayman, Arthur Westphall Clime, Charles Franklin Coffey, jr.;: Donald Raymond Compton, Thomas Errett Cook, jr.; Forrest Leslie Crom- well, George John Dassoulas, Leon Elwood Deacon, John Raymond Dem- orest, jr.; Albert Joseph Dolan, Earl Seay Duffel, William Francis Dunn, De Witt Clinton Felter, Hugh Alden Ferry, Morton David Finn, William Herbert Fischer, Joseph Gilbert Fowler, Frank Cale Frantz, Robert Woodland Gates, Charles Gerstein, | Irving Gertler, Nat Ginsberg, Silvio | Nicholas Girardi, Henry Grady Gore, Jr.; William Lawrence Gorman, Rob- ert Camp Grimes, Layton Charles Groves, Edward Harrison, William Ed- gar Hart, Robert Pearce Hawthorne, ! John Allan Hoffar, Albert Irving Katz, | Cyrus Katzen, Robert Myers Kautz, Edward Walter Kern, Samuel Klaben, Robert Edgar Krafft, Paul Charles Kundahl, Harold Lewis Larash, Joseph Charles La Salle, Philip Morton Lass- well, Ralph Andrew Lauxman, Robert Leroy Leasure, Max Leiderman, Har- | vey Martin Lenderman, Jack Joseph Leonard, James David Leonard, Louis Levathes, John Warfleld Linthicum, Charles John Lomedico and Albert | ‘Warner Loring. . Ernest Salvatore Marcellino, Erwin Marks, Lester Marks, Joseph Mossler Marzolf, jr.; Willlam Lowe Mastin, Michael Frank Meenehan, Joseph Martin Mehl, jr.; James Hooper Mellichamp, jr.; Wilbur Stevens Met- calf, jr.; James Thomas Mitchell, Harold Palmer Moody, William Rad- ford Moses, Hamilton Moy, Dudley Forest Munns, Henry Stubbs Nowell, George Nash Page, Ralph Allan Peake, Btanley Sedgwick Peck, Nicholas An- thony Pedone, Carl Wendell Pierce, Raymond Wallace Radcliffe, Ascar ‘Wellington Blucher Reed, jr.; Otis Nicholas Sebastini, Jay Loeb Samuel, Douglas Loane Saunders, John Brin- ton Schaefer, James Edward School- fleld, Armond Schreiber, Wilton Mathew Schrider, Cyril Augustus Schulman, Robert Dorsey Sefton, Joseph Oscar Shapiro, John Davis Snyder, Carlyle Marvin Sole, Max Bpiegelman, Curtis Walton Spiker, Prank Schuman Stewart, Leon- ard Summers, Malcolm Charles ‘Thomas, Ambrose Joseph Walsh, jr.; Paul Willlam Warren, John Critten- ‘Whi Yeonas and Ear] Francis Yingling. | Martha Woodson. | Fatally Shot VICTIM OF BANDITS IN ILLINOIS. A. L. VONSAR, Deputy sheriff of Bloomington, 0., former secret service man and bodyguard to several Presidents, was shot and killed Monday dur- ing a gun fight with three men suspected of being about to hold up a bank and teiegraph office in Bloomington. One of the men was wounded, a second captured and the third escaped. e IR AT WESTERNHi Dr. Allen A. Stockdale De- livers Address at Com- mencement Exercises. Western High School graduated a class of 51 girls and 26 boys in exer- | cises held yesterday afternoon at the high school auditorium. Dr. Allen A. Stockdale, minister of the First Congregational Church, de- | livered the commencement address. He was presented by Dr. Frank W. Ballou. superintendent of schools, who | presided. Class honors were shared by Robert Weisz, who delivered the valedictory, and Edgar Shawen, the salutatorian. Dr. Elmer S. Newton, principal, as- sisted by Miss P. Edna Thonssen and Norman J. Nelson, assistant principals, presented the diplomas. { John Craighead was president of the graduating class; Anne Turner, vice | president; Jean Shuler, secretary, and | Frank Craighead, treasurer. Members of the class who received their diplomas follow: Ethel Middleton Archer, Sallie Maury Archer, Harryette Mae Bailey, | Mary Elizabeth Bennett, Barbara | Stewart Bennion, Lou Borden, Jose- phine Cogan Brashears, Bernice Bailey | Calvert, Ruth Virginia Case, Mary Elizabeth Crawford, Emily Richardson Doores, Glenn Mae Drury, Virginia Mae Duehring, Georgia Helen East- man, Lydia MacMullan Evans, Roma | Mary Falcone, Dorothy Agnes Fergu- son, Carol Stephanie Fries, Laurie Olive Gilkes and Irene Givotovsky. Helena Holman, Frances Elizabeth Hunter, Audrey Jennings, Marionbetty Kadin, Ruth Kelly, Ann Marie Kill- | mon, Sheila Eileen Kitel, Frances Ann Kydd, Shirley-Birch Manghum, Sally Love McCormick, Mary Elizabeth McDowell, Ingeberg Luise Merz, Jean Madrine Messner, Katherine Lee Miles, Nancy Frances Mills and Mary Eliza- beth Nooney. Virginia Lee Parker, Marjorie Jean Pettus, Jean Jordan Pliler, Mary Agnes Ready, Grace Williams Rey- | nolds, Alyn Angela Rosasco, Florence | Ada Seguin, Helen Kathryn Shugars, | Jean Harriet Shuler, Virginia Eliza- beth Simms, Mary McLure Smith, Kathryn May Taylor, Anne Gluyas Turner, Ruth Charlotte Wood and | Sterling Ruffin Bolling, Bernard Chew, Frank Cooper Craighead, jr.; John Johnson Craighead, Antonio Dispenza, Edward Washington Drink- ard, William Greene, William Hanna, Donald Francis Kernan, William Earl Krouse, George Max Lear, George | Waine Love, Fenwick Rodney McLeod | and Charles Frederic Newburgh. | Edward Pohost, Robert Milton Riley, | Edgar Cornelius Shawen, William Francis Smith, Robert Stephen Weisz, | Bennett Willls, jr.; William . Wood, | Robert Woods, William Howell Wood- | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1935. ARNTRONGHEH | HOLDS EAEREES Campbell C. Johnson Deliv- ers Address to Graduating Class of 88. - Seventy-eight members of the Feb- ruary class and 11 who completed their courses at the end of the Sum- mer school last August, received their diplomas of graduation from Arm- strong High School, in the school | auditorium, last night. Campbell C. Johnson, executive sec- retary of the Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A, delivered the commencement address and the diplomas were pre- sented by Mrs. Mary M. McNeill, member of the Board of Education. A brief address was delivered by Gar- et C. Wilkinson, first assistant su- :e:inundent in charge of the colored high schools. Rev. Arthur D. Gray, r of the Plymouth Congrega- tional Church, delivered the invoca- tion and benediction. A short musical program was pre- sented by the All High School Or- hestra. ; August graduates were Philip N. El- more, Webster G. Johnson, Lorenzo Logan, Raymond W. Stewart, Povent- ed P. Taylor, Stephen Wiggins, Charles R. Williams, Louis A. Williams, George H. Wilson, Evelyn H. Bullock and ' Hattie M. Price. ! Members of the February class fol- | low: Lawrence C.. Arnett, Clarence Barnes, Sumner Beverly, James W. Bishop, Henry A. Briscoe, James A. | Carter, Albert V. Cavanaugh, Aaron A Crowe, Edward W. Culpepper, Er- nest E. Edwards, jr.: Ralph C. Fox, | John Gray, Charles W. Green, Irving | D. Green, Everett A. Hewlett, Theo- dore D. Hill, Carlton C. Hughes and Erias S. Hyman. Charles E. Johnson, Morgan H. Langston, James W. Murray, Bernard L. Newsom, Charles H. Parker, Wil- liam T. Parrott, Alonzo L. Penix, Leon W. Puller, Harold H. Putman, Louis R. Robinson, Walter A. Roots, James M. Tompkins, Walter A. Thompson, Otto L. Tucker, I. Dorsey Watson, Ed- mund A. Wilson, Virgil J. Wilson and Paul Woodward. Catherine R. Anderson, Jane M. Boston, Margaret E. Brown, Mary C. Butler, Vivian L. Carson, Lillle M. Cheatham, Helen V. Coleman, Chris- tine R. Colston, Ellen E. Cooper, Veronica A. Crew, Elizabeth L. Davis, Sylvia J. Green, Carrie E. Hal, Annie Harris, Helen L. Harris, Beatrice M. Hawkins, Jennie Holloway, Gertrude B. Hunter, . Katherine T. Hyman, Alva J. Jackson, Dorlis N. Johnson and Ruth H. Johnson. Mahala F. Lewis, Helen A. Light- foot, Catholean V. Lowry, Anna G. Lucas, Noretezel C. MacRae, Mary L. Matthews, Mary M. Mattingly, Mary V. Mitchell, Theo E. Murphy, Sadie M. Muse, La Verne C. Robinson, Elaine E. Russ, Emma M. Smith, Julia E. Sprow, Carrie L. Svber, Geneva M. Wallace, Carol &. Wallace, Thelma A. Waters, Helen L. Williams and Alice L. Wilson. JUNIOR SCHOOLS ADVANCE PUPILS | 800 Sent to Senior High Schools | in Graduation Exercises Yesterday. Six junior high schools held tHeir graduation exercises yesterday after- noon and the seventh presented di- | plomas last night, bringing to a close the midyear commencement programs in the Washington public schools. More than 800 pupils were advanced | to the senior high schools. The exercises held yesterday after- noon, along with the presiding offi- cials. were Deal Junior High, George M. Whitwell, member of the Board of Education; Gordon, Charles B. Degges. secretary of the board; Paul, Dr. Stephen E. Kramer, assistant superintendent; Powell, Mrs, Henry Grattan Doyle, vice president of the board; Stuart, Miss Jessie La Salle, as- sistant superintendent, and Shaw, Dr. H. H. Long, assistant superintendent. The last junior high school to close the midyear term was Jefferson. Mrs. Philip Sidnev Smith, member of the board, presided at the exercises son and Charles Brown Wuest. WOoODWARD 0™ II™F anp G Streers Next Week—Bring Your Beauty Problems to ; ’ Frances Denney’s Personal Representative A Parking Service —is maintained by the Capital Garage, at the curb adjacent to our G Street en- trance. Upon re- quest, a uniformed employee of the garage will take your car there for parking and return it when wanted, at the garage’s regu- lar parking rate of 26c for the first hour, 5c¢ for each additional hour or part thereof. last night. & LoTHROP Prione DisTri Let Miss La Ploof an- swer your beauty questions, and tell you how to ward off signs of age—or help to banish those already visible. No charge is made for consultation. TorLETRIES, AIsLE 18, F1rst FLOOR. Stockings Will Run —but something can be done about. it. Here, for only a few cents, runs can be made to disap- pear, and pulled threads relegated to their proper places. Runs mended for 15¢ to 20c fbr the first thread, Sc for each additional thread. Pulled threads repaired, 10c an inch. Hosmery Rzramr DESK, 117THAND G STREET CORNER, Fmst PLOOR. Woodward & Lothrop chooses from the great wealth of new fabrics—and confidently decides on the supreme smartness of these— —supremely smart because pure silks have such great importance now. Plain colors are distinguished by the most interesting textures, surfaces and weaves. Stiff silks appear for both day and evening wear and prints, as ipevitable as Spring itself. Notable: REGENCY PRINTS, minute patterns, subtle colors $1.95, $2.50 TAFFETA PRINTS, small, gay, flowered patterns $1.95, $3 FRENCH PRINTS, stylized, colorful flower patterns $4.50 REGENCY CREPE, wool-like weave, gloriously colored $1.95 SILKS, SECOND FLOOR. /] (J —go on to even greater glories, priding themselves on looking like woolens and linens. Peasant weaves are ex- tremely chie, and sheerness is the news in plaids, stripes, checks and prints. Everything in the cotton picture is gloriously colored. Notable: * PEASANT CRASH, bold prints, on natural grounds ... 58¢ TWEED-LIKE COTTON SUITINGS, peasant colors $1.75 SHEER PLAID TISSUES, in Tahitian colorings 50c, 58¢c PRINTED VOILES, crease-resisting finish 58¢ to $1.50 CoTTONS, SECOND FLOOR. / ' —bigger and bolder grow the checks and plaids, coarser and coarser the weaves. But there are smooth linens, too— plain colors and prints that boast a new crease-resisting treatment (this is the news in linens). And they all have a vivid, cheerful quality. NUBBED, TWEED-LIKE LINENS, natural grounds . ... .= $2 DIAGONAL-WEAVE LINEN SUITINGS, colored stripe. . . $3.50 PLAID LINENS, coarse peasant weaves. . . CREASE-RESISTING LINENS, plain or printed CorToN DRESS GooDS, SEcOND FLOOR. —have a soft, lovely feel, a feather-weight quality—some- thing interestingly different about each weave. Tweeds are classics, country woolens are bright and bold, and even con- servative town woolens have a flair for color and pattern. And checks are very, very good. MATELASSE WOOLENS, fashion news in weave. . .$2.50, $4 TWEEDS, monotoned, multicolored, checked . ... $2.50, $3 COUNTRY WOOLENS, bright, bold plaids .$2, $2.50 nsti —very much in the Spring fabric picture. They are the modern fabrics, the “new race of materials” and they pro- vide as much interest in their surface and texture as in the variedness of their patterning. In the collection: CELANESE TAFFETA, in huge plaids or checks...$1.25, $2 ACETATE MATELASSE, in coloYs of great depth. . ... .$1.35 RAYON PRINTS, interesting, varied in design. . . .78¢c, $1.25 FABRICS, SECOND FLOOR. /] Smart Aids to Your SPRING Dressmaking Our Cutting and Fitting Service— simplifies the business of cutting out and putting together, so that you have practically nothing to do but the simple sew- ing and finishing. The charge is very moderate. SecoNp FLOOR. Machines bring back the chic and beauty of these Dressmaker Details— Shirring Ruffling Tucking Stitching Button-holes Button-coverings Hemming Monogramming Picoting Frast Froos, 1176 aMD G St. Connma, O —and a complete PATTERN and PATTERN-BOOK SERVICE BUTTERICK— Spring Quarterly. Paris Forecast... 35¢ Making Smart Clothes.25¢ VOGUE— Pattern Book.... Spring Fashions. New Needlework Kanitting Book. ... Dressmaking Made asy ... Quilt Book . PICTORIAL— Spring Fashion Book.25¢ PARIS— Style Fashion Book..35¢ SzcoNp FLooR. OODWARD & LOTHROP I0™ ]™F AND G STREETS PHonNE DistricT S300