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MASONS HEAR TALK ON FIRST PRESIDENT Sol Bloom Is Guest Spedker at Joint Visitation in Temple. Representative Sol Bloom of New York ‘was the guest speaker at the joint grand visitation Friday evening, in Ma- wsomic Temple, Thirteenth street and New York avenue. by the grand master ©of Masons in the District of Columbia, ©. Fred Cook, accompanied by the off- eers of the Grand Lodge, Representa- is a Master Mason, di arding the de- talls of the plan for the bicentennial , from Washington's birthday until E nksgiving day, 1932 Prior to the joint visitation, mxomc;:l 0. 20, Lodge Room Decorated. Trinity Lodge, No. 41, Russell M.: Brown, master, joined with St. John's No. 11,% Theodore C. Lewis, , for the joint visitation. St. John's Lodge was chartered in 1845, ‘while the charter of Trinity Lodge dates from 1924. The lodge room where these | tions met was specially e, Vo, : Lodge, No. 32, to be a gala event, it bel ‘master's “mother lodge.” .. Chanters Give Selections. A joint. grand visitation was made ‘Wednesday evening to Chevy Chase Lodge, No. 42, and William R. Singleton , No. 30, meeting in the home of Lodge at Mascnic Temple, 4511 Wisconsin avenue, Tenleytown, ‘D. C. Robert E. Kline, jr., is master of Chet Lodge, and John A. Lodge. Todge. No. 14, o, 44 and Cotumbta, 1odge, No. 3, Lodge, No. 7, and. Justice No. 46, Friday evening. TWO GYPSIES HELD Police Arrest Pair on Charges of Flim-] &. | MRS. HENRY GRATTAN DOYLE. | Board of Education, a past president Guest Speaker WILL. ADDRESS VOTELESS LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS. Mrs. Doyle, vice president of the of the Voteless District League of Women Voters and regional director of the National League of Women Voters, will be the guest speaker at the semi- | annual meeting of the local league, to be held at the Hay-Adams House Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Pheasant hunters in England are re- season. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. NATION REGISTERS - MEMORIAL TREES &= Association Lists 8,000,000 on U. S. Roll of Honor for Bicentennial. Eight million lanted indi- even in forest trees—pl vidually, in go;u lots—have r‘;&ured on the national honor roll of the American Tree Assoclation in its program for marking the 1932 celebration of the 200th anniversary of the birth of George Washington through tree plant- Schools, women’s clubs and civic organizations in all parts of the coun- try thus are paying tribute to the first President, the association reports, and groups in many States vie for honors in_contests for most plantings made. More than 640 acres of land will be planted with trees by the Wisconsin Federation of Women's Club, it was voted by that tion recently, the American Tree Association, which has its headquarters here, reports. Saratoga Battlefield Planted. Planting of a memorial grove on Saratoga Battlefield was registered on the national honor roll yesterday by Mrs. John H. Irons of Saratoga Spnnr, N. Y. This battle is rated one of the decisive battles in the. history of the world. ‘The planting and dedication was done by the Saratoga Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. ‘The memorial grove has trees for Gecrge Washington and the American officers who féught in the battle. On the honor roll -are trees listed for Gates, Morgan, Schuyler, Ten Broeck, Baylis, Arnold, Wolcott, Dearborn, Poor, Scan- nel, Stark, Whipple, Learned, Patterson, Nixon, Fellows, ~Brickett, Warner, Glover, Lansing, Van Vector, Knicker- Electric RADIOS Cabinet Models SOME AS LOW AS Jordan's Represent Philco R.C. A. Majestic Atwater Kent Stromberg 1 dbown 1 Weekly Special Terms - Monday Only MONDAY ONLY All Floor Samples and Rebuilt Sets 1239 G Selling Off Price Some of Monday’s Prices $18, $33, $37 () AOAIN 1215 CONNECTICUT AVE. bocker, Von Schoonhoven, Wemple, Wilkinson and Armstrong. After being registered on the national honor roll of the American Tree As- sociation by Mrs. James H. Dorsey of land Daughters of the Ameri- can Revolution, a George Washington memorial elm was dedicated by the Anne Arundel Chapter, at Rising Sun Inn, Md. The dedication wasg on the his- toric Generals Highway near the Severn Crossroad. This section of the high- way is part of the road that Washing- ton traveled on his trip to Annapolis. Penitentiary Gets 54,000 Trees. ‘Thirty thousand trees have been planted near the New Western State Penitentiary of Pennsylvania to mark the Bicentennial and are registered on the national honer roll. At the New Eastern State Penftentiary 54,000 trees have been planted. The trees were dedicated to Washington's memory on the Arbor day proclaimed by Gov. Gif- ford Pinchot. At the ceremony Harry G. Eby, forester of the Pennsylvania Department of Welfare, directed the placing of a bronze marker, by the men in the penitentiary, along the main ?ul&wly from State College to Belle- onte. In Florida, Gov. Doyle E. Carlton issued a proclamation calling on_the people to co-operate with the State Forestry Department and the American Tree Association and named a three- month tree-planting period. The 4-H Clubs in New York State, through the Department of Conservation have re- sponded to the plan with thousands of rations. Gov. Franklin D. Roose- velt has.registered 100,000 trees as & memorial forest. _ Pittsburgh, Pa., 'will establish a Wash- ington memorial planting in the Spring of 1932 with 111,500 trees. Dedication exercises were held in the Cook State Forest Park, where 10,000 trees have been planted. Boy Scouts will plant 4,000 seedlings along Licking Creek drive in Juniata County. The State ‘Teachers’ College at Bloomsburg and several organizations in Columbia County will join in another planting. Turkey Sets Out Memorial. A plantation has been established in the Penn Forest district in which the Jetters W. M. P., Washington Memorial Planting, are outlined with trees on a hillside facing the highway. The letters JORDAN’S 13th &G Sts. ARTHUR JORDAN PIANO COMPANY Corner 13th Open Evenings IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT WASHINGTON IS OFFERED THE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE OUR NEW YORK COLLECTION OF FUR COATS OF QUALITY at Drastic Reductions To facilitate the financial reorganization of our New York shop . . . the entire col- lection of Fur Coats have been placed for iminediate disposal in the Washington shop. For Three Monday Nov. 16th Nov. Tuesday Days Only Wednesday 17th Nov. 18th This is a Rare Opportunity to Purchase a High Quality Fur Coat at LESS THAN COST - C, NOVEMBER 15 | are 86 feet wide and 60 feet high. The Inumber of trees used in the pattern is |1.752, and this living memorial will be one of the outstanding of the country. In , the upper Pexinsula has :"ovxaew forests dedA!clLBd to the memory . t Kansas City, Mo., tree planting has been made the major projeet of the Bicentennial program. Joseph C. Grew, United States Am- bassador to Turkey, has registered with the American Tree Association the plant- ing of three black walnut tfees to mark the Bicentennial. Ambassador Grew is the first representative of the United States to report such planting in a for- eign country to Charles Lathrop Pack, president of the American Tree Asso- ciation. 1 ‘Will Plant Bridge Approach. Plans have been put under way in New Jersey for every Boy Scout troop in the State to plant and dedicate trees to the memory of Georgz Washington as part of the Bicentennial program. Another big project of Nation-wide interest un- der way in New Jersey is the plan for planting the approach to the famous George W n_Bridge with memo- rial trees. e Bergenfleld Garden Club and Mr. W. T. Kessler of the State Forestry Department of Trenton, N. J., have taken up plans for landscaping the approach. Free Book Offered. One of the biggest dedications thus far reported from New Jersey was at the Four-County Young Men's Christian As- sociation Camp Ockanickon, Medford, when 12,000 trees were dedicated to the memory of George Washington, By arrangement with I. T. Bode, the 1931—PART ONE. extension forester at Ames, Iows, the Association American Tree announced a Bicentennial tree-) hnfln‘ el.ll“ th the hun of 4-H Chul the State of Iowa. 1“1.::-‘m lan uw 'i\"m. from ¢mly sec- anting pl coi - '?lon of the country, and from various parts of ths world.” The American Tree Association will send any Scout leader, school teacher or tree chair- man a tree-planting book. B COL. WISE TO TALK ON RED RACE AND U.-S. Influence on Nation to Be Topie for Lecture on ‘Wednesday to Interior Employes. ‘The influence of the red race upon American civilization will form the theme of a lecture by Col. Jennings C. Wise, special assistant to the Attorney General for the Post Office Department, to be delivered before Department of Interior employes at the Interior audi- torilum Wednesday evening at 4:45. The general subject on which Col. Wise will speak will be “Pre-Columbian America and the Indian in the Mak- ing of the Nation.”” It will be illus- trated with numerous paintings by fa- mous artists. Col. Wise will give the same lecture before the Red Cross November 20, and in_December will npgleu before the School of History of the University of Pennsylvania and the Anthroj Society of Philadelphia. you are 15 Joweled Ollendortf $52.5o Here is a famous make at a low price! like its fine appearance as well as its accuracy, too! 50¢ a week! $22.50 Set $417-95 No Money Down! Four pieces in a smart d:m‘:irm finin;:‘tl‘nt will s e your tal t's & it valuel have a D._C. PATRIOTIC GROUP -TO HEAR D. A. R. HEAD Sons and Daughters of the Republic * Will Gather Dec. 12 at Wilson Teachers College. - Mrs. Lowell Fletcher Hobart, president general of the Daughters of the Ameri- can Revolution, will make the principal address at a meeting called for 2:30 o'clock on the afternoon of December 12 atthe Wilson Teachers trict of the Sons and Daughters of. the Republic, with members of Nathan Hale, Mount Vernon, George- town -and Betsy Ross Chapters in at- tendance. The program will be pat- terned after that of the local State con- ference of the D. A. R, and the busi- ness session will be followed by musical and dramatic entertainment. The conference, which will be made an annual affair, will be addressed by Mrs. David D. Caldwell, vice president general of féuoDlsterD. A. ?.,!l&: Mrs. Harry C. Grove, vice regent of District D. A. R. 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