VoL 19, No. 21 School Getting Ready for Its Final Exercises Baccalaureate Sermon by Mr. Culbreth; Address by R. B. House on Graduation Day INSTRUCTION PROGRAM PLANNED FOR SUMMER The Chapel Hill high school announced yesterday its com mencement schedule. The school year, prolonged because the influenza epidemic compelled a recess last winter, will extend almost to the middle of June. The pupils don't like this, but there’s nothing they can do about it. The state educa tional authorities are hard-boil ed about the requirement of a certain number of school days in the year. The senior class will assemble in the Methodist church, Sunday morning, June 1, to hear the bac calaureate sermon by Rev. J. M. Culbreth. The graduating exercises will be held in the Hill Music hall on the evening of Thursday, June 11. The address will be deliver ed by Robert B. House, the Uni versity’s dean of administration. The senior class has 83 mem bers. The president is Douglas Eubanks. A party is to be given for. the seniors next Thursday, the 29th, by Superintendent and Mrs. Honeycutt and Taylor Hogan. Mr. Honeycutt has announced that the high school will give courses in the summer for the benefit of boys and girls who need special instruction. Class room work will begin the week after commencement, probably on Monday the 16th. The teach ers will be VV. E. Conrad (Eng lish and history) ; Miss Virginia Simkins (Latin and French) ; and Miss Anderson (mathe matics). Vaccination Clinics Health Office to Give Diphtheria, Smallpox and Typhoid Vaecinea The health department’s an nual vaccination clinics will be gin Monday. They are designed primarily for the prevention of typhoid, but diphtheria toxoid and smallpox vaccine will also be given. This year the department is offering the one-dose vaccination against typhoid fever to those who have been vaccinated with in the last five years. This one dose should be repeated annual ly. Vaccination time at the health office here will be from 9 to 12 o’clock every Saturday morning. The following rural clinics will begin next week, with others to be opened later: On Mondays, May 26, June 2, 9, and 16: Orange Grove church, 9 A. M.; Cooper’s store, 10:16 A. M.; Chestnut Ridge church, II :30 A. M.; Gravely Hill school, 1:16 P. M.; Crossroad church, 2:80 P. M.; Lloyd’s service sta tion on highway 54, at 8:46 P. M. On Thursdays, May 29, June 6, 12, and 19: Wilson’s fliHing sta tion on highway 54, at 9 A. M.; Carrboro school, 10 A. M. ; Mt. Carmel church, 11 A. M.; J. U, Pearson's store, 12 noon. Baseball Team Wins Title * The University’s baseball team captured the Southern Confer ence crown last Saturday after noon when they beat V.M.1., 8 to 2, in their last game of the sea son. Their final Conference standing was 11 wins and 8 losses. Duke was second with 10 wins and three loesefc. The Chapel Hill Weekly LOUIS GRAVES Editor Majority Leader in Congress Will Be Speaker Here Tomorrow Evening The public is invited to hear Congressman John W. McCor mack of Massachusetts, major ity leader in the House of Repre sentatives, when he speaks here tomorrow (Saturday) evening in the Hill Music hall at the Anal program of the Institute of.Gov ernment’s training school for law-enforcement officers being held here this week. The program will, begin at 8 o’clock, after Governor Brough ton’s presentation of certificates to those who have completed the Town Manager Caldwell ID, in Watts Hospital Town Manager Caldwell faint ed at his desk last Friday after he had been inspecting some town work in the hot sun. His assistant, W. S. Swaim, called Dr. Hooker. When the physician ar High School Seniors to Appear in Play, “June Mad,’’ Next Week “June Mad,” a comedy, will be presented by the' high school seniors at 8 o’clock next Wednes day and Thursday evenings in the school auditorium. Admis sion prices: 50 cents for adults, 25 cents for children. The cast: The Tale of a Garden Corner -J Said Dudley J. Cowden, asso ciate professor of economics, to his wife, in a tone of Christian Resignation: “I see you're hot going to have time for anything else in the next four days, and I’ll have to be eating around in cafeterias.” What he was talking about was Mrs. Cowden's activity in pre paring a Garden Corner for the Flower Show. This layout, on the stage of the ballroom of the Carolina Inn, was to he an impor tant, perhaps the most imjior tant, feature of the whole show. It couldn’t be flung together—it had to be worked on. Mrs. Cowden enlisted Mrs. Sonntag as associate, and to gether, theyjtoiled over the de tailsybf the scene. Upon the stage they spread a covering of made up grass which you could hardly tell from the real thing, and they fashioned an equally realistic brick wall. They hud a table shaded by a big umbrella, and drinks on the table, and chairs, and a tree overhanging the brick wall. The scene was adorned here and there with roses and other flowers. The enlistment rate set ever built for the Forint Theatre, it provides five acting levels and areas. It has a color scheme of white, gold, and pink. Ora Mae Davis, the Playmak ers’ costumer, has designed for the actors a collection of richly colored costumes in styles of the Middle Ages. Lighting is under the com mand of Harry Davis, the Play makers’ technical director. An appropriate musical background for the play has been arranged by Earl* Wynn, and special dances for the ball scene at the home of the Capulets have been arranged by Elsie Lawson. Chapel Hillians in the cast are Miss Josephine Sharkey, Mr. Davis, Mr. Wynn, Robert Finch, and Mrs. William Meade Prince. Planting at the High School The biology students of the Chapel Hill high school, who are improving the .ground between the school and the fraternity next door, have been pruning the trees and getting rid of the undergrowth. There will be a rock garden and a hedge of japonica, spiraea; and forsythia along the sidewalk. Bulbs will be planted along the path going up to the school and in the yard. The students have transplanted some of the dogwoods. More plants and bulbs are needed. If you have any to spare, the boys will call for them. Telephone Mrs. Fuller, 8391. J. E. Wadsworth An Outdoor Band Concert An outdoor band concert win be given at 4 o’clock Sunday af ternoon under the Davie Poplar by the University band and the Chapel Hill high school band. The first half of„the program will be ‘played by the University band, directed by Earl Slocum; the second half wifi be played by the combined bands, directed by Kimball Harrtman. Hubert Hen derson, a member of the Univer sity bend, will give a comet solo. I Rvervbodv in invited $1.50 a Year in Advance. 5c a Copy Question Is; Who Gets Money, Payer of Levy or Man to Whom He Sold Later? TOWN TO BE DEAD SURE BEFORE IT DISBURSES If Citizen A paid the street assessment, laid back in 1928, upon his west Franklin street property, and if he later sold the property to Citizen B, and if after that the town decided to make a refund because the as sessment had been proved exces sive, who should receive the re fund, A or B? *. For a while after last week’s meeting of the board of aider men, when a list of the refunds was made public, it seemed that differences of opinion on this question might lead to lawsuits. But the latest word is that the rival claimants will come to some peaceful agreement. - On legal advice, which is but tressed by many'court decisions, the aldermen hold that the buyer, Citizen B, —provided he still owned the property when the aldermen