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SUNDAY 8 Wb S CHURCH TO CELEBRATE 150TH BIRTHDAY Episcopal Church to Draw 35 VWorkers for Campaign Lasting Week. For eight days beginning next Sun-| day 35 missionaries from as many mis- + slon centers ‘will conduct the Diocesan | Preaching Mission of the Episcopal | Church in an attempt to reach spiritu- | -lly the people of the whole diocese of | Washin, ‘The mission will op!n at a iblic meeting in Constitution H: p.m., when mhop R. E. L. Strider of West lel and Dr. William C. Bturgis are to make addresses and will be introduced by Right Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop of Washington, who will vrulde The 35 missioners will be | Mission Growth Rapid. ‘The diocesan preaching mission is the outgrowth of & suggestion made by Bishop Freeman a year and a half ago, carrying on the work of the bishop's crusade into the diocesan life. The | mission was organized by the Dioce- san Commission on Evangelism, of which Canon Anson Phelps Stokes is chairman. Emphasis is placed on the esentation of the foundations of hristianity and the Christian life with a view to meeting the spiritual needs ©f men and women of today. Arrangements have been made by which Episcopal Church choirs will lead the at next Sunday's service, under direction of Edgar Priest, or- nist nnd choirmaster of Wi Among these choirs lre those of sL Mark’s, St. Johnl Lafay- ette Square; St. John's, town; St. Paul's, Church of the Goo Shep- herd and Washington Cathedral. To Use 35 Churches. ‘That evening the mission proper will in 35 Trepresentative churches, the missioners including representative hdmot;nschooho“.ho t in the ‘Episcopal cnure ‘There I be such Cook of Delaware, rep- Jesenting the National Commission on the chaplain of uhllh anvflflty the Rev. John Rathbone Oliver, weli known suthor and psychiatrist, and many mhslon wul end Sunday evening, !ovmber have bem u- Strider is, to f week. l-"lu from 12 to 12:30 ocman;n"h b Mlnmu for conferences the m De. John Rathbone Oliver, : 1l known will Gm[etown Presbyterian Church, which on November 30 will celebate its 150th birthday. S. Nll-‘ the pastor. Inset, Rev. Frank —Star Staff Photos. G.0.P. MAJORITY T1 AT SHORT SESSION Eight Election Changes Will Take Effect in December. Although three “of the net gain of eight Senate seats which went from the Republican to the Democratic column in last week’s election will change over | ices immediately upon the reconvening of Oouras December 1, the Republicans will still have a substantial margin of membership for the remainder of the first Congress, ending March 4. ‘When all the changes resulting from the election uke place in the Seventy- the Senate line-up session, hmmler, wlfi\ only ihroe seats clungg one party another, upvmbe.unmmxch«.u Republicans, Democrats and which occur im- hanges mediately, because :::n ?crmhenumm serv Dfl a or une: et ave, “Revert 3. Buikley. 0 defeated Senator Rob- for the m Hzm ican, in Ka ‘Three of the newly alec'nd Re) ubllc- 'uunn-mhe Senators WOODRING LEAD 879 FOR KANSAS GOVERNOR .| Absentee Vote Yet to Be Counted in Most Counties—Result to Be Enown December 1. Prank tion test for wvernor of Kansas. The ‘countHaucke, 218,313; Wood- 2. g 'areuumultg;me | e of e St. Andrew'’s, Coum Park—Rt. Rev. T. Dallas, D. D., Btnhop of New Colemsn Jen- 3 '.anme—nm Calvert E 'm. ‘Takoma Park—Rev. Richard %‘Honmmery. Ala. St. 's, Laurel—Very Rev. John Moore MeGann, Boston. Christ Church, La Plata, and Durham . William Smith, Worcester, Al JS Packlr ey Otiacies Ot man, f Boaides, Eimien. ) Trinity Church. 8t. Mary's City, -nd and Mary, Valley Lee—Re John J. Queally, Washington. it r Mariboro—Rev. A. A. D e - ™ , Minneapolis. St. Paul's, Aquasco—Rt. Rev. Samuel Bishop of Vermont. :;‘:%-bler , Collington—Rev. Ed- DARR TO BE SPEAKER Yery “tiosely the. unotttal followed cf count W pfeviously by the As- sociated Press, but are not final, for in most counties the absentee vote is yet to be added. It has been estimated that there will be about 2,500 absentee votes which are to be counted next ‘Tuesda! o the inter-county mail vote, the vote of Kansans outside the State will be added later and the final result an- nounced by the secretary of State on December 1. Most of the semi-official figures were received at tabulating headguarters by telegraph and are sub- Ject to po-lble correction. FORMER JUDGE WEDS Jacob M. Moses Has Civil Cere- mony in Municipal Court. judge of Baltimore, came to Washing- ton yesterday with Mrs. Sally Clary, 34, of Towson, Md., and took out a license to marry. He explained that both parties had been divorced. A civil cere- mony was performed by Judge Robert E. Mattingly of the Municipal Court TO DEMOCRATIC WOMEN ———— Moeting of Educational Council Will Be Held Tuesday at Stoneleigh Court. Oharles W. Darr, former president of gl-mbel ‘Commerce, borrowed you agree to deposit $70 & month for 12 months in an account, the pro- ceeds of which may be used to cancel the note when due. De- posits may be made on s weekly mu..‘ Jacob M. Moses, 57, former juvenile | HITLER FOLLOWERS TO MOURN ON REVOLUTION'S ANNIVERSARY National Socialists of Germany to Meet in |won “Citizen's Beer Cellar™ i M\lnl Cl‘l for Observance. By the Associated Press MUNICH, Germany, November 8.— In the same “citizen's beer cellar” where Adolph Hitler hatched his abor- tive plans for an overthrow of the ernment in 1923, the National Socialists will gather tomorrow in mot serv- commemorate the twelfth anni- the German revolution which established t.he republic. t was planned for a band of * !hlrh" t» march through ',he cl'.y, as Hitler had hoped to march Ludendorft -cven years ago, and m hold.:rfleu the cemetery where lie those who tell in the revolution of But the police forbade such a tration, and the Hitler followers turned to the storied old beer cellar. Hitler Not Mentioned. Advertisements of tomorrow’s meeting have not indicated whether Hitler him- ‘plan to - dra) the City Hall in deep mourning, with the monarchial and Ba- varian colors flying side by side. In Berlin, however, not even radio - | broadeast programs. include any services which would remind republican Ger- many of one of the most profound changes in the nation's history. So far as the capital is concerned, tomor- row will bring nothing unusual to & typical German Sunday. “Day of Disgrace.” The newspaper Achtuhr Abendblatt th today carried an article by Philip Scheidemann, Reichstag Soclalist who in 1918 proclaimed the republic from the steps of the Relch.!tu in which ap- pear the assertion, “Had net the demo- cratic republic been proclaimed in 1918, the Spartacists on that day of Ger- many’s breakdown would have made our nation a branch of Soviet Russia. It would have been easy for them, for the notices | Spartacists had arms in plenty, while make it not be ercises. nnu—umm: sentiments of the Pascists. t Coburg in Bavaria, the National soemnu who control _the municipal dmmmad to-gq the | a) the Social Democrats had only umbrel- las. Fortunately for the nation, the Spartacists were content merely to br:ndhh their weapons and deliver ‘The Nluunll Socialist organ Angriff the date 3s “a day of PATRIOTIG GROUPS * INSTALL OFFIGERS Sons of 'Union Veterans of Civil ‘War and Auxiliary in Ceremony. Newly elected officers of William B. Cushing Camp, No. 10, and Cushing Auxiliary, No. 5, Sons of Union Veter- ans of the Oivil War, were installed by Dr. A. A. Taylor, commander of the Department of Maryland, at ceremonies Friday night in the Pythian Temple. Officers of the camp included J. H. |} Beckwith, , commander; Willlam N. Garner and J. R. Wells, senior and Junior vice commanders; F. A. DeGroot, H. E. Gurney, secretary; Percy Mr color bearer; George L. ; Charles S Davis, chap- broder, patriotic instructor; Baths) | Y. M {Y. M. C.A.-Y.W.C. A, ‘GROUPS WILL JOIN Third Annual International Friend- | s ship Service to Be Staged Today, The Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. of this city will partibipate in thef¥ third | G annual international friendship service at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon at the Mayflower Hotel. The principal speakes is to be Fred B. smlmpgmlrl?rdmno{me Executive '‘Committee of the World Al- tional Priendship forelgn Countries WAl b Presea ot the loreign countries present. a service, in honor of the hundreds of men and women engaged in work. in the two participating mfl organi- zations in their réspective c A special llunyurmewfllbemed arranged \‘ortb.wuhdnydthe week of being celebrated thmu.houtmemrldbym Y. W. C. A., Huston Thompson, president of the C. A, will lead in this service, umury Charlotte Beckwith, chap- | be Sadie P. Woltz, guide; Jennie Melde‘r inside guard; Mary Holt, out- side guard; Elsle Dern and Gertrude Grimstead, color bearers, and J. L. Bateman, counselor. Miss Celeste Geentieu, president of the National Auxiliary, Sons of Union Vet- ergns of the Civil War, assisted with the installation. DR. SWAN TO LECTURE Social Hygiene Society Will Spon- sor His Talks. Dr. Eugene L. Swan of the American Social Hygiene Soclety will deliver sev- eral lectures here next month under auspices of the Social Hygiene Society of the District of Columbia and will speak December 1 and 2 in the audi- torjum _of the Department of the In- terior Building on “The Father's Place in the Life of His Son.” The Terms of Morris Plan Loans Are Simple and Practical — It is not Necessary to Have Had an Account at this Bank to Borrow For each $120 [EASY TO PAY ling application— with few excep- tions. Deposit for 12 Months $10.00 $15.00 $20.00 $25.00 MORRIS PLAN notes are usually made for 1 year, though they may be given for any period of from 3 . to 12 months. MORRIS PLAN BANK : Under Supervision * 1408 H Street, N. V. of U. S. Treasury . Washington, &C and Earning Power Are the Ba: Glee Club, led by . Mrs, Thomas Edwin Brown, president of the Y. W. C. A, will preside at the meeting. SEES ROME IN DOG CART RIVA DEL GARDA, Italy () —You American tree sitters and long distance m::“"lhmAan:elll 60, mhj“ t cturned to arlo h just r this northern Italian “town after a journey in a -cart to Rome, where he was received by the Pope. distance roughly is 500 miles each wly An American Radiator Co. First Quality Product3 2 5 3 Years to Pay ... Install Now I'l-rc is a lu-\nm plant that will give you a lifetime of satis- lhh‘.. ll-h. hllor ‘r“l:"lam”-r“h!hl. . graduate heating | Priday evening at 8 o’clock. T50TH BIRTHDAY Anniversary Celebration Nov. 30 Planned by Georgetown Presbyterian Church. The Georgetown Presbyterian Church, believed to be the third oldest church in Washington, will celebrate its 150th anniversary on November 30. ‘The anniversary of the church, which during the week fol- commence , November 30. with a 3 enson, of the the Presbyterian Church, U.'S. Sunday evening at 8 o'clock the Rev. J. Albert McCartney, D.D, pastor of the Church of the will con- duct the services. m Wednesday, December.3, at 8 Dr. William Knowles Cooper will dellver a historical address. s will be followed by & reception in Cissell Chnpe ratory service in the church 'fll be conducted by the Rev. Joseph | R. Sizoo, D.D., pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian churchmon v. James T. Marshall, D.D., will be in charge of the Sunday mornlng com-= munion service on December 7. First Bridge Street Church. The church was founded In 1780 by Dr. Stephen Bloomer Balch. It was known originally as the First Bridge Street Church and then as the West Street Church. Many names prominent in American history have figured in the development of the church. Thomas Jefferson, when President of the United States, and Albert Gallatin, then Secretary of the Treasury, contributed to the bulldihg flmd Tased during Jefferson's term. Andrew Jackson had a pew the church while he was Senator from ‘Tennessee. Dufln ‘the early stages of Washing- ‘wth it "I’l the leading church ln the city, and for a nnmber of years in | 8t. Louis; Rabbi was the onxy church in Georgetown. ‘While Rock Creek Episcopal Church h the oldest congregation in ashington, and & Lutheran Church wl.l in existence in town ‘when Dr. Balch founded the First Presby- terian -Church, the Georgetown Presby- terian Church has played a most promi- nent part throughout the longest period of years in the growth of the rel side of the city. Tn 1805 St. John's Episcopal Church was bullt, and Dr. Balch not only en- couraged it, but contributed, with other Prmbywruns to its building fund. In 1828 the Methodist Protestant con- gregation was formed in and it was actually organized Presb; Church and used that church as a place of worship untfl it could erect m own structure. The same ing was true of the parent Methodist church which was organized in 1806, which destroyed Dr. Balch's hmlnllllennmmodul harmrd.l ol the church and little is known -of the handful of Presbyterians who estab- lished it. There were but seven mem- bers and for years but one ruling elder, James Orme, formerly the pastor of the ‘;Por'ubymhn Church' at Upper Marl- 0, M Dr. Balch first ?.me '? h?:ouelown 88 & missionary and one of first acts was to establish a classical academy for boys. He ht hll school for mnny years in addi congrega did much to shape A graduate of Princeton himself and a student of the famous Dr, John Wi , Dr. Baich conducted his church in Georgetown for 52 years. He built two and perhaps three places of The first permanent location was purchased at Br! and Washington streets (now and M) and & small frame church was erected thereon. lnlnxl.hhwuwnldmuldlbflck In 1879 th‘ church was again moved this time to its present llh at first and P streets. As much of e material of the-old church as could be reserved was used in the bufldl.u of new one. The chapel wolnm' churcha'uflmlm:;tg . T. Cissel of n. He is a native of Nebraska, a gradu- ate of Princeton and was from 1913 to l!hdl“mhdmry to ::hm.“m. father, ran great-grandfather ither g were to ministering to e ition, and during mt.hn perlod he River Survey Gets ;26000 ‘The War Department has made an| allotment of $25,000 for the exploration and survey of the project for the lm- Vovement of the Kanawha River, W. larger dimensions in connec- tlon with the development of hydro- electric power in the river. | Modernize Your Old Gas Heater to an Automatic Save Y5 on Your Gas Bill Free Estimate Star Electric & Improvement Co. Adams 8855 4927 oth St. N.W. 0 ater Heat For 6-Room House $ acturer .and ves. CHURCH OBSERVES | [ in lnlhlch. w plain’s uuh has the popularity of , the re- '-hlt “eivilian e?- chun.h showed the Regul Co";:“lndlldcd 120 ehnphlm of Tanks and that there are 1,120 in the Reserve Corps. CHURCHES 10 GlVE DAY TORED ROSS Leaders of All Faiths Issuel Public Appeals for Sup- port of Drive. [ In preparation for the annual Red Cross roll call which opens Amuuoe day and closes Thanksgi morrow has been dedicated %o the Red Cross in services in thousands of churches throughout the Nation. Many of the Washington churches, Protestant, Catholic and Jewish, will join in the observance. ! ‘Three prominent churchmen, Most Rev, John J. Glennon, bishe i Irving ¥. Ref the Congregation Emman-U-El of S8an Francisco and Dr. Ivan Lee Holt, of 8t. John's M. E. Church of 8t. u yesterday Cross in its campaign for mcrened membership to take care of special needs this year call. Service When Needed. “The Red. Cross,” said Archbishop Glennon, “is a soclety that seeks to serve when service is most needed and the quality of its service is never con- sclously deflected by considerations of race or creed or color. “I hope that its clientele will g': until_everyone that is able Ip and I make a special appeal Jun now because of the many shadows that hang over the mfim re h 50 much unrest and soren: the peoples town | as to demnnu ntcmulnun and pre- the Red soclety ition which offers so ac- ce table a common meeting for religionists as does the Cross, “XV. is religion in action,” he said. “I cannot see how any American citizen m-‘e helpless- to hzlpml to othen And the Ammn Red Cross makes and meaningful ‘the articulate K:'.y and love of fellow man that dwells hearts.” Dr. Holt declared that he recognized “one of the finest idealism, can Oroas on cess of the enlist 5 Rooms and Bath' $65—8$75 SAVOY 2804 14th Street | Announcement A limited number of rooms, each with private bath and shower, offered on monthly basis to de- sirable guests, at most attractive rates. ‘The price asked bears relation to our regu- tariff end will per- mit your enjoying, with economy, the excellent service and appointments of one of Washington's fine hotels. Your personal eall, for inspection of our appoint~ iments and rooms, is invited. THE LEE HOUSE 15th and “L” Sts. N.W. P. S.—Convenient and quiet lo- cation. You ‘can walk to work. A Point of. Interest in the Nation’s Capital Ciro’s Itallan Music by Ciro’'s Italian Vil- lagers at Lunch Dlmur Supper . Dintier, 75¢. AlsOarte Service Lunch, 50c Supper, ala 19 pm. to carte close No Cover Charge at Any Time 1304 G Street N.W. e g, g Sy MARJORIE A. WALKER. KATHERINE E. WELLS. Entered as novices in the stenographic contest at the Industrial Show, Miss Walker won the shorthand competition and Miss Wells that for typing. 1,200 VISITORS COMING Legion of Homor of Lulu Temple to Place Wreath at Arlington. About 1,200 members of Lulu Temple 1pl wlll-ppeninunllorml‘dwflln at Union Station by * Leglon of nmmormmwmw by Jlnrrym_w h and Capt. BUSINESS CONTEST PRIZES AWARDED Industrial Exposition 1931 Planned Following Current Success. Indu: 1 ‘Washington Chamber of Commerce; which closed a week's showing last night. - Certificates were awarded to runners-up. Miss Eunice Graham, 104 Park av- enue, Takoma Park, Md., won the senjor typewriting contest, nllnhlmn. a speed l'/; otroku n: second during & 30- nnn iss Graham, a Wash- ington Mhuhnnry College student, i mfl the lennth-a.y Adventist Pl House in Takoma Park, » A rtecord of almost perfect Wwas made by Mrs. Anne B. Ourum“nl:’ 5428 Hawthomne street, who won the 1 hamplonship, while Mh Alma Gemeny, 31 Pranklin street norul- east, also of Strayer’s, took honors in the junior shorthand mm | _The winner of the novice chmplomhip was m- Kmlnam: ‘Wells, Cherryds lan been decorated EN'I'ERPRISE SERIAL 7th ‘St. and La. Ave. N.W. 65th Tssue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money loaned to members on easy monthly payments James E. Connelly James F. Shea ‘President Secretary THE AVENUE AT. 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