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KERMIT RODSEVELT TELLS ADVENTURES Capture of Panda and Other Rare Animals Heard by Geographic Society. Kermit Roosevelt last night told a National phic Society audience at the Washington Auditorium of his 1,900-mile trek through the China- ‘Tibet borderland and Indo-China, dur- ing which was captured the glant panda, the golden monkey and other rare animals. "The expedition also brought back pic- tures of little visited areas, which are warrens of strange tribes, museums of scenic beauty, gardens of botanical specimens, and offer many perils, rang- ing from precarious bridges to roving bandti ‘The meeting was the first of the season and was attended by a dis- tinguished audience, including Murs. Hoover, . Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor, president of the National Geographic Society, be- fore introducing the speaker, announced the culmination of one of the society's expeditions which has been studying the chronology of Indian ruins of the Southwest United States. By match- ing cross-sections of living trees with ancient timbers from numerous ruins, Dr. Grosvenor said, a chronology has been established, which will soon be tully reported, that carries the pre- Columbian history of the United States back to 700 AD. Tribute to Late C. J. Bell. Dr. Grosvenor also paid a tribute to the iate Charles J. Bell, who had been associated with the National Geographic Society for 41 years, having been one of the 10 founders of the society. Other current exploration work of the society, he said, included appropri- ation of §30,000 toward the Byrd South Polar expedition, and he annaunced that it is hoped to have Comdr. Byrd lecture on his Antarctic expedition be- fore the society the coming Spring. . Roosevelt. related a pictorial story, using both slides and motion pic- tures, of the journey he and his brof Thedodore, jr., took, with a party of scientists, that ranged through Burma, into Scchewan, Yunnan, and along the wild border of Tibet. The gorges of the upper Yangtze resemble the canyons of the Colorado, and some of the moun- tains have the aspect of our Rockies. In the wilder part of Yunnan Mr. Roosevelt came upon a National Geo- graphic Society expedition which has been in the field for some years, that vheaded by Dr. Joseph F. Rock, famous naturalist-explorer and discoverer of chaulmoogra oil, palliative of leprosy. The Agukcr gave views of the rhododen- «dron forests, whence Dr. Rock has been sending back many specimens, some of which are now growing in Western na- tional parks of our own country. Strangest of Pictures. Among the strangest of the pictures obtained were those of the p\pe? mache horses, used in the ornate funerals of the more primitive Chinese, and also the highly decorated hearses. Many types of the bridges were illustrated, including intricate wooden ones, which are bullt without the use of iron nalls. ‘The le is a major item in the livell- hood of many Chinese communities. “‘Often,” Mr. Roosevelt said, “the pigs literally pay the rent—and -more. We slept with them in the huts at night, they blocked our progress by day, and between times we ate their meat.” Other customs he described included the use of brick tea, flavored with ran- cid butter, and further fortified with salf, if the user was able to afford that delicacy, Open-air barber shops, strange types of beggars, g&mu of Chinese chess and mammoth tan prayer wheels, run by water power, also were caught by his camera. —_——— MORE RAIN EXPECTED _IN FLOODED SECTION Scant Hope Foreseen for Recession of Alabama Rivers at Danger Stage. By the Associated Press. MONTGOMERY, Ala., Novembeyr 16. ~Predictions of continued rainfall over | the Cooja and Tallapoosa waters] today afforded scant hope of an early recession in the waters of Alabama rivers, already dangerously swollen, fhe SYNOPSIS. rtin_ Fordes meets Rhoda in a public s known as Rhoda White. having geen @ blind ad in the jumnof his_paper asking for ormation regarding Rhoda McFarland. conversation between Leuis end ¢ woman. that Rhoda Whit hoda McFarland and that these people think %0 too and Neey ¢ sveciel intarest i veri- fying this belief. He tells Rhoda of this. She refuses to ‘admit that she is Rhoda Mererignd_pad gisse him to understand in that his interest in her afairs is unwel- come. I : her affairs pried into and he had deserved exactly the treat- ment he got. She enjoyed, after a fashion, the consciousness of his glar- ing at her from the edge of the dance floor, but when she perceived that he was no longer there and came to the conclusion that he'd really abandoned her, she found suddenly that she was tired of the Alhambra and wanted to go home. And althugh she maintained that Martin’s suspicions of Max Lewis were wild nonsense, she was rather glad that Leander Higgins offered to take her home. Their trip, mostly by trolley, was without incident. Of course, it would be! Martin had made up the whole thing out of his own head. She was a8 friendly as she knew how to be to Le- ander all the way to the studio door, but at that point she said night to him firmly, It had been only by the exercising of a good deal of resolution that she'd kept her mind on him up to that point. And until Babe came.home she wanted to be let alone. She hadn’t yet made up her mind i After overhearin o man “Called M Forbes is sure SECOND INSTALLMENT. HODA tried to tell herself she was glad she had snubbed Mar- tin Forbes, She didn't want €T, | what she'd say to Babe, whether she'd tell her anything of what had ha pened tonight, or even whether she'd ask her any questions. She took Babe absolutely for granted as a loyal friend and conceded her the possession of & fund of shrewd wisdom. But once started, could Babe be stopped? The thing her mechanism conspicuously lacked was brakes, She couldn’t think- ably be told the whole story, and it would probably be safer to tell her none of it; be in bed and sound asleep when Babe got home. And yet she would like to know whether Martin had said any~ bout his discoveries. As she glanced around the studi after shutting the door on Leander Hij gins, her eye fell on tonight's News, scattered about the floor as her room- mate had left it. Was that advertise~ ment reaily in the paper, or had Mar. tin Forbes made that up, t00? No, there it was in the personal column, just as he’d said: “Rhoda McFarland will learn something to her advantage. . . .” She dropped into Babe's chair and the sec- tion of the paper slid from her hand back to the floor. It had given her a surprising shock to see her discarded name in print like that. It brought things back t she'd thought she was done with forever; some things that she hadn't thought about in years. Their yard at home, with the vener- able live oak in the middle of it, in whose branches she and her three in- separable friends to scramble about like voung monkeys; the three As they. used to call them, because their names all began that way—Ann and Alice and Amy. And she had used to wish - passionately that her name be- with an A, too. They were all in same grade; seventh it was, when her father told her one morning that she wasn't to go to school any more for the present. For the present! She had never gone to school ; not since that day, And Amy and Alice and Ann faded out of the picture, They didn’t come to play in her yard any more. And she had understood that it was because of something that was Spoken of, when it was mentioned at all, as the trial, her father's trial—Prof. Walter Whitehouse McFarland. She'd had a glimpse of his name once in headlines. Her father had stopped bel hethe: it was days or weeks she couldn’t re- member—they’d made a sort of pre- tense of having school at home with him for teacher, Interrupted, harassed days those were, with people coming to The Alabama River was several feet above flood stage here this morning, though still safely below the level whis might endanger homes along its banks. ‘The level was preserved by the shift- 1::{ down of flood gates at hydro-elec- tric plants above the city. ‘The Cahaba was falling at Center- ville; the Warrior at Tuscaloosa also ‘was falling, but the Tombigbee was a| proaching a threatening stage at De- mopolis. The State highway department b many telegraphic reports of road damage in all parts of the State and he cutting off of traffic on some thor- oughfares. W. Gist, State and Fe eral agricultural statistician, expressed belief that 90 per cent of the State’s cotton crop had been picked. He did not think oats had suffered except through washing. So little Winter wheat had been Znnud. he said, that the damage to this crop was negligible. About 200 families, most of them Ne- groes, have been forced to leave their hz:u by high water at Birmingham, where property damage has been esti- mited at $100,000 by authorities. T DEPORTATION OF GREEK Jdstice Wheat Rules on Petition ! F¥iled Against Government Officials by Uncle. Jsmes J. Davis, Secretary of Labor, Harry E. Hull, commissioner gen- of tion of the United States, enjoined in injunction proceedings Justice Alfred A. Wheat of the local Court from taking into custody g to Greece Nicolas Kara- , & Greek student, residing at ling, W. Va. Mr. Karafolias, in petition filed by his uncle, Peter J. , prominent business man of the lace, states that he entered the States lawfully as a student a Greek passport which does not until February 1, 1930, and that is financially, ysically and tally able and willing to pursue a of studies at the Lindsey Insti- at Wheeling, but that the immi- tion authorities arbitrarily decided tal deport him. He says that he was n led last Monday night by special delivery letter to surrender himself at at 3 o'clock Thursday after- noon and that therefore he had not enough time to arrange his personal affairs. The restraining order signed by Justice Wheat states that deporta- tion at this time would result in ir- ble loss to Karafolias and would see nim and being sometimes told that he was out, even when she knew he wasn't, There were a few days toward the end, just before they left California for good, when he had been away - home all the time and she had known, somehow, that the trial was going on. Also she had known before she saw him on his return, though again the source of her knowldege eluded her memory, that the outcome of it had bered her disappointment and perplex- ity, when she saw him again, over the fact that there was nothing triumphant about him; that he had been, if = ble, whiter and more bitterly silent than ever. She'd hoped he would tell her what the trial had been about. He had never, even in after {enrs, told her that,” Only once, thal she knew of, had his spirit flashed Ilg.‘ This had happened when her Uncle Wwilliam—he must have been her dead mother’s brother, he couldn't have been her father'’s—had come to see them after the trial and before they started East. She couldn’t remember ever hav- ing seen him before, but she did re- member the falsely genial ile with which he had reproached her for hav- ing forgotten him. He'd been an ogre to her ever since, and even now, when she told herself that he probably had not been as tall ulzhe ce‘lll'n[, ;ven l|.l the udvul:g. m ceiling of the bungalow, an fluhifn teeth couldn't have been un- naturally Juminous, she still clung with a ’{;fl"" to her childish recollections of 3 e N Sent her Trom the afraid of him. He'd sent he: Eamufha Ui, ey St er father could pi he'd come to “ebuht‘m ?bwt. rstw'a obediently gone, only as far as her bedroom, and the boom of the ogre’s volce had come through the thin WHEN = POPE COMES ~> WASHINGTON Deeper Plans of the New Papal King Hear the Thrilling Story scene fil:n't.m”'l.l‘u ‘when the Pope comes to Washington. seriously interfere with his studies. Attorney Godfrey L. Munter appeared for the petitioner. THE POPE KING. ugh tl ey o P "Sich evening. \hrouen. the I3 mes. in the lignt of Seri 2 ires lustrated by stereopticon pi Sunday Meetings th 8 ture. ures, 1 wae! THE SECULAR LEAGUE usiclans’ Hall, - Bunday, “ghz ntrol r. Elnora Admission Fr.s 006 E St. N.W. I PM. of _Caneer” 3. Folkmar iseussion) Bible Prophecy Fulfilling ARCADIA AUDITORIUM # 3132 14th N.W. (Near Park Rd.) Musical Program, 7:30 P.M. Prof. H. A. Miller of Washingten Miss. College Medical Talk, “Avoiding the Flu” 7:15 P.M. N Ry N Sunday, N e A Red-Headed Girl By Henry Kitchell Webster Copyright 1929, North American Newspaper Alliance and Metropolitan Newspaper Service. HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, NOVEMIER 16, 'IL79 walls all too clearly. He'd come to try to make her father give her away, for ever, to him. He'd spoken of her, ter- as “the child”! But her fa- uiet and conciliatory at ly defied her uncle. After her uncle had gone, her father asked whether she had heard any of their talk. She told him she had not. She hadn't understood much of 1t at the time, beyond her uncle's assertion that her father had disgraced himself and wasn't a fit person to bring up a child. - 8he must, though, have stored up & good many uncomprehended hrases of that talk, or how could she ve been so sure, two or three years later, when she read in the newspaper of a sensational prosecution of anotier gmnsnr, that this was the kind of trial er father had had. Her father, of course, hadn't: been sent to prison. He had “got off.” But why, if he hadn’'t done the horrible thing, hadn't he gone back to the col- lege and she to school and Ann and Alice and Amy come to play with her again? Probably because people had thought he'd done it, anyhow. Their departure from the little uni- versity town out in California had seemed like running away to her and, she was sure, to her father, also. She could have got the idea from no one but him, and it must have been pretty strong to have quenched the pleasur- able excitement she'd otherwise have felt over her first long ride on the train, They'd had a compartment and her father, she remembered, had hardly left it. She’'d been warned not to talk to people and especially not to answer questions. ‘There was one incident she vemem- bered very clearly. Her father's voice had flagged and she'd looked up to see if he'd fallen asleep. He wasn't asleep, |/ but staring out over the desert with such & look of pain in his face that | she’d burst into tears. 5 i He'd comforted her and had sald the | only thing that he'd ever said in direct reference to the catastrophe: “I've got you," he told her, “and they agn't take you away from me. And I'm going to see to it that you shan't be the loser by this thing that's happened to me. In the long run, it may be just as well for you that it did happen.” - At the time she’d no idea what he'd meant by that. But the events of the later years made it clear, He'd had a scheme for making her rich, A scheme that he'd never brought off, to be sure, but one that, down to the very night of his death, he'd never lost hope about. She couldn’t doubt, now, that he had ‘undertaken it for her. Nothing that he'd ever said or done made it seem that he cared anything about wealth, except for the secure, happy life that it would bring her. Yet, as it worked out, it was that hope of his, always on the point of coming true, that had been the cause of most of her unhappiness during the four long years had lived in that Chicago hotel. She didn't know that she had regretted them now. That made a pretty hard sort of problem to work out. Most people, certainly, would say i was a hwrrible way for a child to be hrou‘ht up. itself .was all right, one | the new ‘The hotel of the less guunumu ones of regidential y{n Her first impression of it, especially after the rather dingy g house where they'd lived for the first little while upon the in CI , had been one of unbridled and incre e luxury; walls and pil- lars downstairs that she assumed to be marble; swift elevators run by boys in maroon livery; a headwaiter in a per- petual dress suit, ‘Their own two rooms up on the tenth floor, furnished in imitation black wal- nut and taupe upholstery, especially the floor lamp with its hea been favorable to him, that he had |to per, silk Imde. had carried out the idea that they'd come to live in a palace. ‘The kitchenette, with its electric stove, had seemed a marvelous toy to her; and their white tile bathroom, with its modern plumbing and its never-failing abundance of hot water, had been a luxury. She’d taken it for granted, during those first few days while breathless she explored the wonders of the -hotel, that the wealth her father had hinted at was already in his pockets. It wasn't until he expressed concern over her loneliness—it was beginning to strike in a little—that she asked him why, now that he was rich, he had to work so hard and couldn't take a lttle time off to shy with her. He'd smiled and told her he was not rich yet, not rich at all, but that he thought it wasn't going to be long, nof more than a few months at most, be- fore he was. As soon as that happened he'd stop work and they’'d go roaming the world together. Meanwhile she was be patient and get along as best she could. (Continued in tomorrow's Star.) amitideiliabby Articles of great historical value were recently stolen from the National Li- brary in Manila, Philippine Islands. ose Famous Cooking Classes £ Brides and Others Open this week at the 5 ot. 2102 LTI LI LI LI LT ALY 107 “THE INTERNATIONAL NEW THOUGHT ALLIANCE At The Playhouse, 1814 N Street N.W. ‘Wednesday, November 20, at 8 P.M. SPEAKERS: Mr) L. B. Elliott, President. + Mrs, Mary E. T. Chapin, Mrs, Elizabeth Towne and others. toll ALL WELCOME. FREE WILL OFFERING. PASTOR'S SERMON TEXT ANNOUNCED Rev. M. R. Lovell Will Preach on “Miracles in Massa- chusetts.” “Miracles in Massachusetts” is ‘the topic tomorrow morning at 11 a.m. of Rev. Moses R. Lovell of Mount Pleasant Congregational Church, 1410 Columbia road. Church school meets at 9:30 a.m. Dr. Arthur Deerin Call, secretary of the American Peace Soclety, will speak to the adult discussion group on “Minori- tles” at 9:50 a.m. The Young People’s Forum plans to develop its studies in Ig:ycholasv at 5:30 p.m. Miss Maxine vel will conduct the service. The young people’s discus- sion group will have a question box at 6 p.m. under leadership of Mr. Lovell. Staff Consultations Scheduled. ‘The Washington Life Adjustment Center will be open Monday evening from 7 to 10 o'clock for staff consulta- tions. Appointments should be made through Miss Helen M. Treudley, direc- tor of the center. At the meeting of the Woman's Guild Wednesday at 11 o'clock Rev, Page McK. Etchison of the Y. M. C. A. will speak on “Egypt.” Supervised play for small children whose mothers wish to attend guild meetings will be under di- rection of Mrs, Marian Knight. Dr. Porter to Address Women's Group. Dr. Willlam C. Porter, psychiatrist at Walter Reed Hospital, will discuss at the Mothers’ Round Table Wednesday at 8 pm, “The Influence of Heredity and Environment on the Child.” The Men’s Club will elect officers Wednesday at 8 p.m. Refreshggents will be served. Dr, Lovell will give a stereopticon lec- ture on “Our Pilgrim Fathers—From Scrooby to New England” Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. IN PASTOR'S PLACE. Dr. Duncan to Preach at Grace Re-| formed Church. the American_University, will preach at the Grace Reformed Church tomor- rTow at 11 am. The pastor, Dr. Henry H. Ranck, is in the Episcopal Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital for an operatjon on his eyes, R ‘The subject of Dr. Duncan's”sermon will be “The Joyfulness of the Chris- tian Religion.” SERMON TO CHILDREN. Takoma Park Baptist Pastor An-| nounces Special Service. At Takoma Park Baptist Church Rev. Willlam H. La Rue, pastor, will preach tomorrow at 11 o'clock a sermonette to the children on “The First Y. M. C. A.” Representatives of the Baptist Home for Children will also speak, At 8 p.m, there will be “A Pilgrimage to the Holy Land,” with an address by Page McK. Etchison, fillustrated with 120 pletures, most of which were taken by the speaker .on a recent trip to Palestine. S e RALLY DAY SCHEDULED. Program Announced for Tomorrow at Second Baptist Church. Rally day will be ohserved tomorrow at Becond Baptist Church, Third street, between H and I streets. The pastor, Rev. J. L. Holloman, will preach at 11 am. on “The Church and Race Re- lations.” The Helping Hand Club will conduct a special service at 3:30 p.n. Rev, Charles H. Johnson, pastor of Capital View Baptist Church, will preach, At the evening service the pastor will preach on “Our Church and Its Pro- gram.” The reports of the rally will be made at this service, The Bible school will meet at 9:30 a.m. and the B. Y. P. U. at 6 pm, Announce Two Services. Dr, Aquila Sayles, pastor of the Providence Baptist Church, M street between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets southwest, will preach tomor- row at 11 a.m. oft “ g in Tears— Relmng in Joy.” The B. Y. P. U. will meet at 5:30 pm. Rev. Theodore Pe- ters will preach at 7:30 p.m, on “Build- e D e i AMBASSAIDOR, WASHINGTON'S NEWEST! 500 ROOMS HAND BALL COURT - SWIMMING PoOL Complimentary fo Guests HEALTH CLus RADIO IN EVERY ROOM RATES FROM $300 EFFEC . Fas Dean of Incolors, Wash. Mise, ¢ ‘| Donald Leathe; ‘GOD AND THE INDIVIDUAL IS SUBJECT OF SERMON| Rev. John D. Gregory to Give Dis- course at Church of the Covenant Tomorrows Rev. John D, Gregory will preach at the Church of the Covenant tomorrow morning on the subject “God and the Individual.” All departments of the Sunday school will be in session at 9:45 o'clock. At 11 o'clock the kindergarten in the church house, 1229 €onnecticut avenue, will take charge of small children so that their parents may attend the church service. At the Christian Endeavor services at 7 o'clock Rev. James M. Barnett of Princeton, N. J., will speak on the topic “Our Vision Christ.” A tea and will be held at 6:30 o'clock. The Men's Soclety will meet at 8 o'clock Monday evening in the chapel. The monthly meeting of the lety of the Covenant will be held Wednes- day at 11 o'clock, at which the subject, “Are Missions No Longer Needed in Al::l"?m w& be fll.lckuuem Dr. Charles Wood Wi speak. A dinner and social will be held Thursday at 6 o'clock, followed by classes in religious educatjon at 7 o'clock, At the mid-week service of praise and thanksgiving at 8 o'clock, Mr. Gregory will speak on the subject “Christ's Teaching Regarding Vows.” PASTOR IS ON VISIT. Missionary to Fill Pulpit of Eastern Presbyterian Church. Dr. A. E. Barrows, pastor of the Eas- tern Presbyterian Church, is visiting his mother and will then attend a meeting of the allocation committee of the gen- eral council of the Presbyterian Church in Chicago, he being a member of the committee, ‘The pulgh will be occupied tomorrow morning by Dr. R. R. H. Goheen, & medical missionary in Venguria, India. In the evening, Rev. Alton B. Alt- father of Falls Church, Va., will be the | food speaker. ‘The Women's Bible class will meet at the residence of Mrs. George Kerns, 911 L street northeast, Tuesday at 2 o'clock. The Good-Will Bible class will meet/ in the primary room at the church Wednesday evening at 7:45 o'clock. JESU_S’ Lll';E IS THEMEs | | Dr. P. C. Reynolds to Present An- Dr. George 8. Duncan, professor in | other Sermon in Series. Dr. F. C. Reynolds, pastor of Wesley DISPENSARY AIDS 2909 N OCTOBER Board of Visitors Gets Re- ports on Activities of Children’s Hospital. Reports on the activitizs of the Chil- dren’s Hospital, with special emphasis on the work of the chlld welfare de- partment and dispensary, were heard yesterday by the Board of Lady Visitors, meeting at the hospital. The work of these two departments, according to Miss Mattie Gibson, superintendent of the hospital, is increasing fast and there is urgent need of additional space. Last month 2,509 patients were treated in the dispensary and 1,13¢ in the wel- fare department. daily average number of chil- dren cared for was 111; the total num- ber of hospital days, 3,460; 775 social visits were made, 230 operations were formed, and 147 children were eated in the dental clinic. Mrs, Prederick H. Brooke, president of the Board of Lady Visitors, who pre- sided at the meeting, reported a gift to the hni;itll of a new hydrotherapy tub, used for special treatment of hel) less children. Dr. Lucille Dooley, who gives a great deal of her time to the hospital, was the T, Mrs, Cuno H. Rudolph, Mrs. Reginald Walker and Mrs, Frank 8. Hight, made reports on the satisfactory physical condition of the various wards in the hospital. Mrs. Arthur O'Brien, chair- man of the thrift shop, made an ap- peal for articles so that the record of the shop might be kept up during the coming season. A special feature ef the shop this year will be the Saturday sales, every Saturday bein designated as “Children's Hospital day.” Immediately following the meeting, the board entertained at luncheon in the nurses’ recreation room for the board of directors and members of the Community Chest budget committee, Cuno H. Rudolph, chairman of the ex- ecutive committee; Thomas Bell Sweeney, Dr. John A. Talbot, N. Burchell, Dr, Frank Leech, Frederic William Wile, Robert V. Fleming, E. C. Graham, Henry W. Sohon, Simon Lyon and James A. Counselor. Following the luncheon members of the board with Miss Gibson took the guens on & tour of inspection of the ospital. Methodist Episcopal Church, Connecti- cut avenue and Jocelyn street, will con- tinue a series of sermons tamorraw at 11 o’clock based on the life of Jesus. His subject tomorrow will be Controlling Motive Life” At the 7 o'clock eveming service Mrs. F. C. Rey- nolds, who is in charge of our mission work in Porto Rico and Santo Do- mingo, wiil make an address on the subject. “A Glimpse at Missions.” Her message will be based on the experi- ences of & visit to those countries last year. ‘The annual turkey dinner and bazaar by the Woman's Guild will be held at the church Thursday and Friday from 3 to 10 pm. REPRESENTATIVE TO TALK Bible Class to Hear Address of Carroll L. Beedy of Maine. Representative Carroll L. Beedy of Maine will address the Harrison Bible class of Congress Street Methodist Prot- estant Church, 1238 Thirty-first street, tomorrow at 9:45 o'clock in the audi- torium of the church. His subject will be “Living With Pe of Other Races.” will have charge of the lesson and give a short talk on it._ All men are welcome, Rev. H. A. Kester, pastor of the church, will conduct the regular services at 11 am, and 8 pm. . Visiting Bishop to Preach. Right Rev. Arthur C. Hall, Bishop of Vermont, will preach tomorrow at 11 o'clock at Trinity Episcopal Church, ‘Third and C streeta. Fireproof garage or ware- house, about 30,000 square feet. - National 3000. PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION PAYS Semi-Annually ‘Assets Over ~ $20,000,000 Surplus $1,000,000 Cor. 11th & E Sts. NW. JAMES BERRY, President JOSHUA W. CARR, Sec'y TIVE Yet Tasteficl VERFRESH is the most pleasant-tasting Citrate of Magnesia ever developed. The tang of its citrus-fruit content sealed-in by Sanitizing. The exclusive Sanipure proc- css EVERFRESH is makes ncreasingly ef- fective and de- cidedly superi- 4 or. 4 e e VERFRESH (ITRATE or MAGNES! In Brand-New Bottles—Always Sanitized Citrate of Magnesia—U. S, P. Will Present Two Topics. Dr. Milton Waldron, tor of the Shiloh Baptist Institutional Chureh, Ninth and P streets, is delivering a se- ries of nine sermons on “Prayer as ‘Taugh in the Bible.” His sermon upon this subject at 8 p.m. tomorrow will be “Prayer as Defined in the Holy Serip- tures.” The subject of his sermon at 11 a.m. will be “Some Suggestions for the Proper Study and Understanding of God’s Word. Dr. Edward Philbrick Dies. MIAMI, Fla., November 16 (#)—Dr. Edward Philbrick, 72, native of Parls, France, for 50 years a physiclan af ‘Tall 3 la., Wl was sald to have made the first discovery of phos- phate deposits in Florida, died yester- ay. | WHERE TO MOTOR AND DINE GRAY’S HILL INN On Old Mt. Vernon Estate Betwegn Woodlawn and Fort Hum- hreys. © Overlooks the Potemae from ining porch. Phone Lorton On Richmond Road * 2 v /essmdre Home CéoKin ‘Luncheon or \Supper-’ 85t~ 4190 Dinber 1128 #9150 juint Oven Bvery day in the Phones 560-703 Silver 8 Luncheon 11:30 A.M. to 2:30 P.M. k Dsy Dinner 75 Cholce of Meaty I 9C SPECIAL DINNERS Sunday 110 § P.M. CENSUS OFFICE - Examinations—3 hre. instruction esch day d 3 hrs. each night. 5 days and 5 nights k. _Prepare’ now. The cm,i Service Preparatory School '0"07: 22 o004 Felix Mahony’s National Art School Color, Inte Decoration, Costume Design, Commercial Art, Posters 1747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 New Classes Now Forming 1000000000000000000000000¢ | PREPARE NOW Clerk, Statistical Clerk, Census. Service Preparatory School & F Sts. N.W. Moi. 6337. % Commercial Art Advertising * Interior Decoration o et LIVINGSTONE ACADEMY 1388 ¥ 80, Over For 0" ke, 2ens CO., INC. 618 EYE ST.N.W.+ DIST. 2010 in ing. 8IS ‘warehouse o o J o Y MOVE Yitheus worry or Risk. Re- " l;’“! % me. and up, pe! ortda Al pert B e ‘NORTH 104 w. [ |RAIN DRENCHES 10,000 AT GRAVE OF PRIEST Hundreds Remain Throughout Night in Cemetery Seeking Miracle Cure of Infirmities. By the Associated Press. MALDEN, Mass, November 16.—A heavy downpour, which fell throughout the night and most of yesterday, drenched more than 10,000 persons who thronged to Holy Cross Cemetery, many of them carrying, or otherwise assist- ing, their crippled or maimed loved ones to the grave of Rev. Patrick J. Power, reputed to possess miraculous curative qualities. Hundreds had remained in the dark and dripping graveyard throughout the night praying at the shrine and kneel- ing in the cemetery chapel, where for the past two weeks there has been ac- cumulating a varied collection of dis- carded crutches, canes, and.leg braces. Scores of those who yesterday trudged through the mud of the narrow cem- etery pathways and, after long waiting in the rain, knelt on the wet grass at the grave's edge, claimed to have been cured of their infirmities. BRITAIN TO OPPOSE COAL STRIKE MOVE Official Declares Macdonald Would Fight Settlement Involving Pay Cut. By the Assoclated Press. that another coal mining strike woul be a catastrophe and expressing the belief that the government would not rmit the miners to be sacrificed, A. J. k Thursday night told an audience' here that e Minister Macdonald ‘would oppose any settlement of the coal | LONDON, November 1&—Declll‘ma' question involving a reduction in wages. We invile YOU America’s Famous Maker of Advance—Can admission charge. Mr, business. helping others succeed. success in business and in situated just like you. and respect. that is rightfully yours; if cash, Don’t miss it. glad you did. Admission Free. 9 AMERICANS WIN RACE TO BE FIRST OVER SPAN Ambassador Bridge Between De- troit and Canada Is Opened to Traffic. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, November 16.—A Tace of pedestrians and motorists from both sides of the Detroit River marked the opening to general traffic of the mew Ambassador Bridge between Detroit ana the Canadian border cities at 10:3> a.m. yesterday. In the race to be first across the new span the Americans emerged the victors, with & margin of one minute. Crowds of contestants, afoot and m automobiles, began gathering at the bridge as early as 7 p.m. yesterday to await the opening of the gates this morning. By 6 a.m. today entrances on both the American and Canadian sides were jammed. Although the bridge was dedicated Armistice day, general traffic was held up pending completion of arrai ents by customs and immigration officers. 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Tonight, Monday, Tuesday 8:15 p.m. No Collection Masonic Temple 13th St. and New York Ave. Cooyright, 1920, National University Society, America’s Great Organtyation Helping Men and Women to Win Success in Busitess and im Life, Y A T S 5 o 5.5