Evening Star Newspaper, February 4, 1928, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TRAINING SCHOOL CLASSES OPENED Bible Courses Begin Second Semester Monday, With 12 Subjects Offered. The Columbia Bible Training School announces the beginning of the second term Monday evening. at 814-816 Mills Buflding, which will continue to June 10. The general Bible training course offers 12 courses. Monday and Tuesday evenings. 7 to 9:30. of each week, as fol- lows: “English Bible Old Testament.” *Bible Doctrine.” “Evangelism.” “H tory of Christian Missions.” “Bible H tory,* “History of the Christis Church.” “Public Spesking.” “Teacher Tratning.” “The Life of Christ,” “Bibli- cal Introduction.” ete. The School of Language, offering courses in beginners' and advanced Eng- lish and New Testament Greek. is open 1o students each Wednesday evening, 7 to 9 oclock. in the classrooms in the allding. Mrs. Florence W. Noffsinger, head of the speech beg: Tuesday eveni zation of Stories,” in Sunday_school teachers and Chris- tian workers, especially among younger students. will be pa interested and are invited to this cou! icularly oll for DR. LAMBETH ANNOUNCES TOPICS FOR TOMORROW Mount Vernon Place Church Pastor .to Speak on Temptations to Sin. Dr. William A. Lambeth will preach At Mount Vernon Place Ch h at the 11 o'clock service tomorrow Going & Little Farther. is subject for the evening service will be “Tempting O ers to Sin." Rev. J. W. Rustin, assistant pastor. at | 11 oclock will preach to the junior congregation in the Sunday School Au- ditor: on “The Power to See It Through.” At this service the Boy Scout troop of the church. with W. S. Warren, scoutmaster. will attend in a body. At the Senior Epworth League, the subject for discussion be “Christ, the Center of All Our Young Peopie's Activities.” The meetipg will be led by | Herbert Corley. At the Thursday evening prayer serv- | jce the first two chapters of “New ‘Tasks for New Times” will be presented in addresses of 15 minutes each by the Rev. J. W. Rustin and Mrs. A. F. Har- lan. The remaining four chapters of this book will be presented on the two Succeeding Thursday evenings. CHURCH HEADS ELECTED. Albright Memorial €ongregation Names New Officials. The following officers were elected &t the annual congregational meeting of the Albright Memorial Evangelical Shureh, Fourth and Rittenhouse streets: s, E. M. Taylor and Emmet E. Jester; class leader H. S. Beltz; as- sistant superintendents of the Sunday school, E. H. Pullman and E. E. Jester; Sunday school secretary, J. D. Smoot. sunm{l school treasurer, Herbert Wil- son; church treasurer, R. E. Borts. The Woman's Guild of the church | ¥ give an oyster dinner at the church 29 from 5:30 to 7:30. ASCENSION SERVICES. Program for Tomorrow Announced by Rev. T. W. Cooke, ‘The rector, Rev. Thomas W. Cooke of the Church of the Ascension, ane nounces the following services for to- morrow: 8 am., holy communion; 9:30 am, church school: 11 am. holy com- munion and sermon: 3 p.m. Chinese school; 6 pm., Young People's Society; 7:30 pm., evening prayer and sermon. ‘The Parish Aid Bociety will meet Tuesday at 11 oclock in the school- Toom, under the direction of Mrs. Chamberlin. Thursday there will be the regular midweek celebration of holy communion at 10 am Friday evening at 8 o'clock the Young People's 3ociety will give a pre-Lenten social in D¢ schoolroom. — RALLY TO AID COLLEGE. Bishop Caldwell to Preside at Mass Meeting Monday. A mass meeting and ral interest of Livingstone Colleg bury, N. C stitution of the A M Z1on nominatior., will be held at John We ley Church Monday at 8 o'clock un- spices of the local A. M. E wrs' Alllance. The address Miss N of Bishop J. B in the Balis- ational Cald- presids Bishop £ D. W the needs of tne coliege, PASTOR IN FLORIDA. Dr. BB Melun, pastor Bireet Ciristian Church is ho evangelistic meeting in We: Beach, Fia Rev. W. L. Darby, secretary of W, inglon Federation of Ch he pulpit guest tomorro will have for his subjec Adventure” and G. O Natiors wil be the pu end nis pubject will be 7 & DR. BVRIGGS.TO PREACH. preach department. offers a course. the the class- the | LUTHER LEAGUE A farewell party was given last Tues- day evening at the home of Miss A. Bar- bara Weigand, 465 Maryland avenue | southwest, for Miss Ethel Tussing, retir- ing life service secretary of the Luther League of the District of Columbia, by Misses A. Barbara Weigand, Virginia Wise, M. Dickey, Rebecca Long, Edith ! Lawson, Margaret McDonald, Enuna Holzer, Dorothea Wassaman, Katherine M. Schickler, Clara C. Schickler, Messrs, Paul L. Brindle, Irving L. Koch, Bert- ram Reichter, C. Bertram Gelston and Fred L. Schickler. Miss Tussing was pre- sented with a traveling bag and depart- ed for New York on the 1:35 aum. train to assume her office as executive secre- ary of the Eastern Ridge Luther League, District of Columbia Luther League president. Paul L. Brindle, announces Miss Monica Snyder of the Church of the Atonement has accepted the ap- pointment to the office of the Junior Luther League secretary of the District and will attend the conference on Junior Luther League work to be held at Phila- delphia_February 11. The joint missionary meeting of the Luther League of the District of Colum- bia was held last Sunday evening at the Church of the Incarnation. Miss Emma Holzer, District missionary secretary. presided. The program included an opening service of song. Scripture and prayer, followed by the pageant “Under | the Southern Cross.” presented by In- carnation Leaguers: and the ingathering of the contributions of the various local leagues toward the District's apportion- | ment of $160 for erection of the Luther League Hall of the Religlous Educa- |1ional Building. Buenos Aires, Argentina, South Americ: LUTHERAS SHON GAN N ENBERS Evangelical Synod Reports| 247,773 in 1926, Against 164,968 in 1916. There were 872 churches of the Evan- gelical Lutheran Synod of Ohio and other States in the United S 1926 with 247.773 members, to a consus report announced by Department of Commerce. This is an increase shown over the report of 1916, when there were 826 churches with 164.968 members, rent expenses and improvements, $722.- 071 for benevolences, missions, ete. The total _expenditures reported churches n 1916 were $1 The value of church edifices (includ- Ing furniture and equipment), as re- ported by 832 churches for 1026, was $15.646.708, which may be comy ed | with $5.718.462 reported by 776 churches in 1916, churches reporting in 1926 5 located in urban territory of 2500 inha 577 were in rural 9 there wer | incorporated places {ants or more) and 1 |areas. Of the total membership, B | were in the urban churches and 1 in the rural church, and of the expenditures 203 urban churches ported $2.310.008 and 572 rural church $1.392.251. The value of church prop- erty reported by 282 urban churches was $10.510,273, and that reported by 550 rural (‘h\u'(‘l‘wq was $5.136. 313b o8 J ) Sunday schools were reported by 76 Friondl Chuerh, Eadchstor of the | churches of this denomination in 1 dressed the District Luther League at|®ith 7604 officers and teachers and 8t. Mark's Church at a quarterly meet. | 88.622 scholars. The number of officers ing. will be the speaker ab the umlon | $00 teachers 1 the Sundey schooks, s Lutheran meeting to be held at Luther | FeRorted for 1916, was 5641, and the Place Memorial Church, February 17, [ Bumber of scholars, 66.7¢ Sister Mabel, deaconess in charge of o e E the Lutheran Home for the Aged, will be the speaker at Zion's League tomor- | PRESBYTERIAN SERVICES. when she will present the | e pen to Young Women | Rev. This samé topic will | d at St. Paul's Luther League tomorrow evening, when Miss Edith Stowell will lead the meeting. “Ideals for Choosing a Life Partner” was the topic presented at St. Mark's Luther League last Wednesday evening | [ by Thomas Morgan | " An executive committee meeting of Zion's League. followed by a social, was | teld at Zion Hall, Second and Upshur streets, last Friday evening. GIRL EVANGELIST TALKS. Dorothy Kunzman Will Tell Story of Her Life Tomorrow Night. Miss Dorothy Kunzman, the girl evan- gelist from the Aimee Semple McPherson Temple of Los Angeles, who has been | conducting meetings at the Full Gospel Tabernacle, North Capitol and K streets. | will speak at 11_am. tomorrow on the theme “Carry On.” at 2:30 pm. on “The Magic Circle” and at her farewell message. at 7:30 pm., on “Arrested for “Speeding,” when she will tell her life story. A reservation will be made tomorrow evening for those healed or benefited in her healing services. An amplifying speaker has been installed to care for the overflow crowds. SPECIAL RITE PLANNED. Greek, Ruseian and Syrian Clergy to Attend Anglo-Catholic Service. Clergy of the Greek, Russian and 8y rian Orthodox churches of the city are | expected to take part in the procession and be present in the sanctuary, upon 827 | Duting his brief sojourn in Washing- tia Herb Fischer. recording secretar: {of the Luther League of America, was ! the guest of honor at a reception held by St. Mark's Luther League. Mr. Fischer was also a dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Martin of Luther Place Memorial Church Joseph Bizoo Announces Topics for Tomorrow. Rev. Joseph R. Sizoo will preach to- morrow in New York Avenue by- terian Church. The sacrament of the Lord’s Supper will be administered at | the 11 o'clock service. He will have for his theme at this service, “The Eternal Offer.” At 8 o'clock Dr. Sizoo will preach an- other of his series of Sunday ev sermons on the general t Small Towns in Palestine.” ject for this week will be “Tabor—Je: on a Village Mountain” Thursday 8 o'clock he will deliver a stereopticon lecture, entitled, “Landmarks and Cor- ner Stone: HEALING SERVICES. Rev. Clarence P. Parker W Easter Series Tuesday. Rev. Clarence Prentice Parker, rector of St. John's Episcopal Church, Wi consin avenue and Bradley L hold services fo spiriti day evening at 8 o will continue every other week Easter. Holy communion will be celebrated tomorrow at 11 o'clock. The first meet- ing of Chapter No. 6 of St. Ja id will be held Thursday at 6 pm. Suj will be served, and officers elected There will be a meeting of the Every Member Canvass Squad Tuesday at 6 o'clock. Supper will be followed by a short business meeting. Ch h school convenes at 9:30 am. and the Y. P8 L have the regular service in 8t. John's Hall at 7 pm. Begin | the chief educational ln-l E. 7 d le H. | Jones will tell of the evening, Judge guest the miraculous | Church to- | Februa the invitation of the Anglo-Catholic teenth street, February 13 at 8 pm. ERecial ervicen. ‘The pastor, Rev. J. L. S. Holloman, will | CHEVY CHASE SERVICES. At 3:30 pm. there will be special The ordinance of the Lord's Supper | ©f the Wicked” The Bible school will | “A Pocketful of Gold” will be the medal began at ary | giving _Bible lecture on the life of | 7:30 Will CONstst of prasers o s | votional meeting is held at 6:45 p.m. ey — Club of the Diotese of Washington, at a service of choral evensong, to be held The preacher will be Rev. Shirley C.| Home Mission day will be observed Hughson of the Order of the Holy Cross | tomorrow at Second Baptist Church, preach at 11 am. on “The Victorious | Kingship of Christ and His Baptists to Observe Lord's Supper | services under the direction of the | | Men's Club. At 8 pm. the pastor will | will be held at the Chevy Chase Baptist | MC¢t at 9:30 am. and the B. ¥. | Church tomorrow at 11 _o'clock. The |t 6 Pm. liver a brief communion meditation on : izn- theme, “The Bread of Life.” New Novena Begins |title of an ilustrated Jecture on Assam | day and will {at 8 pm._ The public is invited. 12 Dally mass {Christ. The Bunday School is planning | benediction. Edward M. Farrell !a father and son banquet for February | of the Congregation of the Misslons will Sund: | ———e- Second Baptist Church to Have in St. Stephen’s Church, 3017 Four- of West Park, N. Y. Third street between H and I streets Kingdom " | | Tomorrow. { have for his subject “The Destruction | pastor, Rev. Edward O. Clark, will de- embers will be welcomed. A novena in honor of { _Every Thursday evening the pastor 18 | o'clock am. The evening servic |24 at the church. The B. Y. P. U. de- | conduct the novena { WILL PREACH ON TRUTH. ASelect School 'WASHINGTON SCHOOL FOR SECRETARIES Washingten D.C. | Rev. Ellis. C. Primm Also An-2 | mnounces Double Night Sermon, “If T Forget” will be the sermon | subject tomorrow night of Rev. Ellis C Primm, pastor of the Second Bap- !u Church This sermon will ached twice, 4t 6:30 o'clock at East apitol street branch, Beventeenth and East Capilol streets, and at 8 o'clock | #t the church ginla avenue sout | . The moruing won th e will be th ‘That Walk: The Lora's sup-! ber will be otmerved at this service. | DAY o EVENING “United States in Prophecy “The Unied Btates in Prophecy” 15 | s which Dr. B G. W n- ooy, Washington ma Park, wili 8 oclock in Fourteenth rrow the Arcadia A slreet and Park night 8t Light | semi-clandes | father, the ternal | |} INSTALLMENT IIIL ET'S eat here,” sald Jenny at i« sundown the next day. They had found the town eating places so dull—at least she had—that they were ecating now by the roadside. It was always awkward, with that Torsten, walking into strange cafes. He looked so em- barrassed! And there was a spirit of adventure, a frank comradeship in these unorthodox meals by the great open road. She had persuaded him to buy a coffee pot and a frying pan just for a lark. but with the serious inten- tion of really making Torsten carry on with them. It was a struggle. It was far more embarrassing for Torsten to eat these ine meals by themselves than it would have been to walk into the Blackstone in Chicago. There was no way of concealing such a sight from the men. And, like many men, Torsten had an insane fear of doing anything that looked silly. He re- luctantly slowed down the truck. look- ing backward, dubiously, at the line of their cavalcade “Here,” she urged. “Here's a good ace. What's the matter with this?” He shrugged his shoulders. He suf- fered agonics over these pienics. The other men, anxious to get on to the town ahead for their night stop, were velling for him to go on. No road grub for them: they wanted to sit on a chair and thrust ‘their legs under a regular table. He drove the truck off on the side of the road and waved for them to come on. They did not say anything as they passed It was quite evident that he had had a talk of some sort with them, threats probably of what he would do if they made any more funny remarks. And he eved them now, savagely, as the reus” drove past. It's like this” heé explained. “It 't look right—you and I—eating ere in the dark. Makes people said haughtily. | t people say? ! <he care ‘em!" do 1 wh | Don't be silly.” He gave a wry smile “Sure. nd ‘what will your father say—when he hears about this?" | “I don't know.” she said with a little ip of her head. “Why worry over She did not want to think about her father, not if she could help it, of Chauncy O'Malley—or anything con- | nected with her old life at Cory's wharf. | She knew that this enchanted pil- grimage would soon have to end. and that she would have to return to her | and Chauncey O'Malley, and eventually to Cory's wharf—but why worry over such things just now? In these two days she had been able to| forget them for hours at & time. An ectible relief. “Let's go!" she y down from the cab. laughed. jumping “Start the forsten with a grim smile took a | board from the body of the and delil tely shattered “J st the frame. If they kept this Iding fires with cement her would have to | lumber. A thought either of them to g, it added to their | whiltled the ex-frame and asked her to find She went, smiling, in Torsten into shavings, When she came back he was lighting the pile of white kindlings. He placed stone Across the end of a little ugh he had scraped for their fire and put on the coffee pot, He was very easy and supple for all his great e as a cat. Squatting heels. a cigarette dangling from If-smiling lips, he spread bacon to_the frying pan. thing vou got to learn” he said, adding more fuel, “is not to fry nything over a fire when it's going > that. Got to get a bed of hot embers. See?” Jenny. in green tweed and shirte waist, had taken off her hat. She ran her hand now, upward. through the clusters of her hair, rufing that amazing little bang. She raised her OF LAW (Co-Edueational) A3rd YEAR R AR COU BSES, EAR COURSEN LF M 3.¥ -y | and o information may be obtair The (ffice of the School 0 G ST FR. 4585 0000000000000 000s0000000 National School Fine & Applied Art FELIX MAHONY, Interior Decoration, Costume Desi; Color, Dynamic Symmetry nal, Cultural, Fundamental s, Personal Instruction Children's Saturday Morning Classes Day and Night Classes Connecticut Avenue & M 1747 Rhode lsland Ave. MAIN 1760 Begins February 1st 19400040000000000000000004 Direetor Managesfi Two-Million Dollar Hotel | Says: “Lewis Training Did It” —~ _ You, too, can prepare > for Hotel, Apartment, Club or Tea Room Posi- ( tions through Lewis . Hotel Training Schools. Pay is large; work de- tful; opportunities un- A First-Run Novel By Negley Farson 9 shrouding them with its secrecy. Thelr fire made a little amphitheater of gilded branches and trunks on the edge of the woods; and from the depths of that outer rim of night came queer little rustlings, secret movements, a strange trilling that tokened the prel- ude of Spring. It was in the soft night air, this passion of natur they felt it. A strange awkwardness came between them. And, suddeniy, they were uneasy. “Bmoke?" asked Torsten 8he took & cigarette and leaned over as he held the match, looking into his work-roughened palms. | “Thanks.” “He was a swine,” sald Torsten sud- denly. “A big bum. He only got w was coming to him™ And. witho walting, as if talking to himself, b went on swiftly, vividly, telling her of his voyage in the ill how he came to America blood, on his knife. She was a windjammer, the P a square-rigged sailing shi took them 184.days from Hull to 82 Francisco—round the Horn He spoke of the Polaris with all set, driving southward through t trades like a great white bird. Ra days. Scudding seas—a white w down across the blue shingles of Atlantic. Flying fish. The gu atream, warm and soggy, and its lor lanes of vellow weed. The rolling helplessly in a misty the Atlantic where all the time, driftini faint puff of air, sl do something so he could piug me. I used to have to grind my teeth when I looked at him—because I didn't want to miss. When I saw San Prancisco I thought he'd got off.” part of t “And the He was cr stepped FLO b RIDA LIMITE cai oo pen | murk like a gray ghost. She was enthralled Off the Horn—"Cape called it—disaster smote warning. The captain’ casket, lined vith pickied her,” sald Torsten, “He told how, with the co! just forward on the wheel, tried to beat round the Horn. on black nights they had peering over that silent bod: began to break the men’s n The captain, prostrated by kept to his cabin. A bucko ma HE CROUCHED THERE AS TENSE AS A FRIGHTENED ANIMAL. arms, stretching on tip-toe, full length. | Then she laughed. “You're always laughing, aren’t| vou?” grunted Torsten. “What you | see that's so darned funny to laugh about, I don't know.” “Neither do I—but why not?" Torsten_grinned and held the over the fire. “Sure. Maybe notlaugh?” He had placed the cab seat beside the fire, and she sat down on this now, her arms wrapped round her knees, staring at the dance of the flickering vellow flames. Her dark eyes were wide. Her cheeks flushed with the warmth and glow of the fire. “It'd be grand.” she sighed, “if peo- ple could go on like this. It's so friendly.” Torsten grunted. “Can't be done. Anyway, vou can't do it around here— not if you want to get on. That's just the trouble.” “But you've done a lot of it, haven't you're right—why | “Bure. I'm used to this kind of stuff 1 used to be a timber-cruiser once out—out west.” “Out in San Francisco?™ Torsten nearly dropped the ng pan into the fire. He crouched there | as tense as a frightened antmal. star- mng at her across the embers It shocked her to see the way her words had upset him—that question that had popped out of her mouth almost before | she knew it. him. She hastened to reassure Dan‘w | off right then.” | & man being forced to run fro s all right.” she sald quicklv father told me long ago. You needn’t worry—not with me.” She wanted to comfort him. He looked so ghastly ooked hunted! He stared at ments, sizhed did he don't know why." that her fa ing something “on™ him. Torsten nodded. “I thought so. I knew trouble was going to come out of this. I should have kept my fool mouth shu ught to have pushed her had boasted ‘But—where would you go?" “I don't know—no more than I knew I was headed for place. I just g0 on—and then stop. That's all.” “I see” It was horrible to think of m hiding his Iife to_hiding_ place he asked in and She passed died the bacon reached for the them to him and he on to one, covering {e adjusted these care y fire and began to break the eggs into the hot fat of the frying pan. “There must have been a good rea- “I'd do son “There was," it again." He removed the coffee pot, put in a little cold water, and placed it at said Torsten. quist, yan the ship. driving he |The icy seas off the cape, and b coated vith ice, the Polaris lost | foremast. One man side, Torsten received the head” and the veteran She could not teil | {“And that licked u: of him. I'm not makin I was as bad as the was fust waiting for |a bullet into us. It's no good | walk up to an officer wit ! volver in your hand and swear it was mu | He explained that th watch old Saul die cursi < were. It got on ¢ made them . Correct lubrication is conservation—the preven- tion of wear, the saving of undue expense, the lengthening of the life of your car. Nothing is more important than thorough lubricaticn. AUTOCRAT—TEE OIL THAT IS DIFFERENT FROM ALL OTHERS Beware of Substitutes. Bayerson Oil Works Columbia 5228 This publication co-operates with and helps support the Better Business Bureau. “THE PROMOTER MAKES MONEY regardless of the success or failure of his promotion™ A questionable stock promoter wrote this in a letter in a rar He further Have you ever thought when you were appro - wrote, " Remember, of the business they promote wromoter I'hey make i 's make money—re, in advance, ar ached by Men” oeries Bermons .90 ited; field uncrowded. One graduate made $150,- 000 in three years. stock salesman who claimed that he was going to make vou o he was ter all—primarily interested in getting his commissior Fenior B ACCOUNTANCY Kexinter today for the second sen ter couraes in Ac Eacellent instruction, THE K. OF C. EVENING SCHOOL Some fake stock salesmen in Washington have mad of the money paid for the so-called investment. rag Wi o ¢cash Grace Ford Puckett, Manager of Orange Courts, two-million-dollar hotel at Orlando, ¥ ya. "My Lewls Walning accomplished 1t all.” And the 1s just one of many. Lewls graduates are found managing hotels or important hotel departments everywhere. Onetof them, J. P Johnson, In manager of Virginia Dare Hotel, Klizabeth City, N, ©. Others who specialize i Tea Room munagement are in charge ofy the largest tea rooms throughout the country, I Made $150,000 in Three Years On Memory uster ot ution m M Whitting- ’ ; vt e Dare Eeren Biuie clase for aquite ol as The promoter makes money. The investor often loses. , 1314 Mass. Ave. N.W, “Where Is Happiness Found 1" AL Linosin Ter Comorrow mor Yo W Brooks | Wil speak from the suiject, “Wiere Is Happlness ¥Founa e B C K Bociety will meet 61 € 45 pm The sub MU be Gisrused lue of oung Pe ¢regatonsl ) BEFORE YOU INVEST—INVESTIGATE 20° doafata wnd Grenn Hotel Posi Commercial National Bunk Bldg J4th A G Sis NW. Main 4717 WOOD’S SCHOOL 311 East Cepitol St. i ¥Queer Story” Is Swem's Topic “h Queer Bury 1 Nearvy Merylsrna” wi oW Ll sl 8 E. Hez Swem, postor st Churen. The o start ot up (o % The Better Business Bureau of Washington, D. C. 336 Evening Star Building Main 8164 oY 0 150w $400 G Slanrdiatt » whero hotel Galned execu b pelated 1, e by By winiel Bep 0 over ‘the oo e Wit Astaria N Jhatos ot i Eetatlished 1885 J Tt stildents b UL OB CLANSER NOW FORMING Lewis Hotel Training Schools shington Circle at 23rd St. N.W. », 0 ad plhers iy dent (Kyentng aen ear fon . n N Court F. Wood, LL. M. Frincipal CLIFFORD LEWIN, ¥ Open B30 AM. te ® P. M) Note—Out-of -town readers wr about correspondence courses . " * P

Other pages from this issue: