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A-10 [HE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGION, D. C. OCTOBER 25. 1931—PART ONE. CHURCHES TOHOLD ‘MSSONSINDAY” | Anniversary Banquet Is Told | Central Union Relief Set; New Records. | [ [ Today being set aside in many Protestant churches as “Central Union Mission Sunday” for the first time in five years, a score of Washington pastors and visiting evangelists were included among the 200 or more friends of the “mission of the churches,” w:o joined last night in observing its fort;-seventh annivershry. With mission speakers at services in | 16 churches, there also will be two| large public mass meetings under the| auspices of the Central Union Mission. | These will take place at 3 pm. at| Calvary Baptist Church and at 8 p.m. | at Gunton-Temple Memorial Presby terlan_Church, Rev. “Mel” Trotter, of | the City Misslon of Grand Rapids, Mich., one of the leading evangelists of the country, wil speak at both pro- | grams. Homer Ro:eheaver, song leader, | and Mrs. Ruth Rodeheave: Thomas also will take part At last_night's anniversaiy banquei ng, Supt. and Mrs. Joha 8. Ben- neit, who aie i year et the Ce A e ported cn the work done for the wel- fare of destitut> men and under-privi- leged children during the past year. All | the mission’s former records were siat- tered, Mr Bennett reported, by the in- creased demands made by reason of the unemployment situation. Included among the work of the past year, he sald, was the serving of 109,504 free meals and shelter provided for 45745 men. A great increase also Was reported in the religious attendance at the mission meeting, the number being 54,845 compared with 29,179 the previ- ous year. E. H. DeGroot, jr., president of the board of directors, presided, and mem- bers of the Ministerial Council were among the guests. Dr. Paul Hickok, of | Newark, N. J. former pastor of the| Metropolitan Presbyterian Church in Washington, was - the principal speaker. | As president of the Ministerial Council | 16 years ago, it was he who brought | Mr. and Mrs. Bennett to the mission. | Homer Rodeheaver and his sister, Mrs. | Thomas, old friends of the mission, pre- | sented a musical program. KING SEES EARLY | SILVER CONFERENCE Bays Financiers Are Convinced | Monetary Elevation Is Becom- ing Inevitable. By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK, October 24.—United | States Senator Willlam H. King of | Utah, after conferring with bankers here, today predicted the early organi- gation of an American Central Com- mittee of leading financiers, industrial- ists, statesmen and economists to pro- mote the proposed establishment of sflver as basic money. Before leaving for Washington Sen- ater King declared, “Many financial Jeaders who heretofore have opposed any elevation of silver are now con- vinced that such a move has become Senator King said the efforts of all interests favoring bimetallism are now ‘being focused on the calling of an in- ternational silver conference. “If the gold standard is persisted in,” he warned, “the populous countries of .China and India are certain to under- take the ‘same kind of industrial ex- pansion that Russia is now attempting.” CHINESE TOLD TO TALK | ONLY MOTHER TONGUE $tudents Who Use Foreign Lan-| guage Branded as “Denational- i ized Intellectuals.” NANKING (#).—Chinese proficient in & foreign language and fond of using it are branded as “denationalized intel tuals” by a government order prohibit- ing the free use of foreign tongues. The government holds that Ching who use foreign languages simply be- cause they fiad them convenient are Dot patriotic. | Of all the forelgn languages spoken | by the Ohinese, English is the most | pular. It is the language of business | n China, and one can travel into most any section and find it in use among merchants. An Economical, Modern Heating Plant Will Assure Your Comfort THIS WINTER! NO CASH NO PAYMENT Lowest Prices NOW! When Winter comes, prices soar! Now you get thor- ough service, without any inconvenience as to the shutdown of your furnace! Let our representative call! There’s no obligation! Mission Heads JOHN S. BENNETT. MRS. JOHN S. BENNETT. PROVINCIAL INSTITUTE IN HAVANA IS BOMBED Blast Follows Orders to Police to Shoot if Suspected Ter- rorists Flee. By the Associated Press. HAVANA, October 24.—A bomb ex- ploded yesterddy evening in the Havana Proyincial Institute, a half block from the newspaper Diario de La Marina, in the heart of uptown Havana. Police, machetes drawn, refused to permit any one to enter the building. Examinations of students, who have been privately instructed since the in- stitute was closed by presidential de- cree last year, started yesterday. The bombing occurred a few hours after Octavio Zubizarette, secretary of the interior, announced that police had been ordered to fire on any automobile believed to contain terrorists if their orders to halt were not obeyed. The secretary’s order was the result of frequent bombing outrages in Havana recently. SLREEE TP e Nearly 20,000 deer were killed in New Zealand in the last 12 months. Thinking About Evergreens Shrubs, Roses, Hedges, Peren- nials, Rockeries or Lily Pools? Call us for complete landscaping service— designing,_construction, planting. TREE WORK of every Kind—tr transplanting, spraying, soil revital ete. Plans and estimates without cost to you. HYATTSVILLE || ROBIN HOOD COFFEE SHOP 0th and K Sts. 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In making this anouncement yester- day the department said the selection board to recommend lieutenant com- manders of the line for promotion to - |the grade of commander will be ap- pointed later in the year. Officials explained that previous se- lection boards have complained the work of choosing captains for promotion to the grade of rear admiral and com- manders to the grade of captain has been so strenuous that the task of v choosing* the new commar lers lhouul be left to a subsequent bod '. The selection board consists of these | officers: President, Admiral Richard H. Leigh; Rear Admirals Thomas J. Senn George C. Day John R. Y. Blakely, Henry V. Butler, who is commandant of the Washington Navy Yard; Wil- liam H. Standley. Wat T. Cluverius, Arthur J. Hepburn and Willlam D. Leahy. Lieut. Comdr. William I. Causey, j has been named recorder of the selec tion board. Owns 15 0 Prayer Book. EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. (N.AN. A prayer book printed in 1560 is in the possession of Anthony Penn of this city, who says it has been in his family for generations. The book is 2 by 4 inches and has 426 pages. Lichfield, England, recently celebrated the 2224 anniversary of the birth of Dr. Samuel Johnson, the mayor placing | a laurel wreath on the doctor's statue and the cathedral choir singing hymns | outside his birthplace It'scheaper in the long runtobuy Tuttle & Bailey Radi- ator Cabinets. They're built especially to fit you ators—no waste of heat circulating through an i stock cover The heavy pauge furniture steel will long outlive flimsy sheet steel. The finish can not peel offi— it's heat proofed to last for good. The wood finishes are an exact reproduction of the natural woods, artistically grained by hand and rubbed down by a special expen- sive process. And the humidifying pan means healthful moist airall the time. Beauhify your rooms—and econo- mize with Tuttle & Bailey custom made radiator cabinets. 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