Evening Star Newspaper, January 6, 1942, Page 26

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teamwork of all of the parts Nation. g Church of Epiphany Lauded by Bishop as It Marks Century Foresight of Parishioners 4n Resisting Pressure To Move Is Praised The courage and foresight of the parishioners of the Church of the Epiphany, who have resisted at times “stern” pressure to remove their church from its central loca- | tion- at 1317 G street N.W. were praised on the 100th anniversary of | the church today by the Right Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop of Wash- ington. The morning prayer service at the | church’ was conducted for the last | time by the Very Rev. Ze Barney T. Phillips, who has taken up his du- ties as dean of Washington Cathe- dral. He will be succeeded by the Rev. Dr. Charles W. Sheerin. Refused to Move Church. Dr. Phillips himself succeeded | Bishop Freeman as rector of the church nearly 18 years ago. Bishop Freeman paid tribute to Dr. Ran- | dolph H. McKim, who preceded him | as rector and served the church for | ® third of its 100 years. The parishioners of Epiphany, gaid Bishop Freeman, have consi ently refused to move their church to a place of retirement away from the passing crowds on G street. The greatness of the church, he continued, lies in the spiritual re- freshment it has been able to give to these passing crowds. Thou- sands of persons pause, he said, to worship for a moment. Troubles Only an Incident. ‘The survival of Epiphany through 100 tumultous vears of history. con- tended Bishop Freeman, is only an ndication of the passing quality of the troubles of war and production which now plague the Nation. As Ephiphany illustrates the “triumphant, unchanging. unbroken history of the church.” he said, the _country’s present troubles will some day be only an incident in the long history of a great republic. Dean Phillips preached his last germon as Epiphany rector Sunday. | Guest preachers will conduct serv-| ices until the 1st of February, when Dr. Sheerin, who is vice president of the National Council of the Epis- copal Church, assumes the rector- ship. The Epiphany choir, under the di- rection of Choirmaster Adolf Torov- £kv. furnished special music at both gervices today. Forum (Continued From Page B-6) tributing our man power. This fact must be understood by all agencies uising man power. It must be under- stood by all who have a responsi- bility in deciding how man power shall be distributed. T have said that our Nation has & vast supply of man power, but the needs are great. If these needs are to be met, there must be accurate and systematic appraisals of our supply and our needs There must be intelligent and orderly processes by which the sup- ply is allocated to the needs. It is to be expected that each of the using agencies will caleulate | present and future needs liberally. Our historical experiences indi- cate that these agencies will at- tempt to assure future needs, some- times remote needs by earmarking individuals now. This frightens other users of man power and causes them to believe they are losing their future share of the most desirable part of our man power. The immediate reaction is to in- stitute some form of earmarking. ‘Thus a vicious circle is instituted ‘The result of these practices is con- fusion over supply in some agencies, | shortages in othe icion where trust should be, disunity instead of unity, and inevitably inefficiency in the use of our man power. All Sections Must Be Used. Some p: of our man power are more desirable than others, but all parts must be used and each using agency must accept some part of the less desirable portions. This is no time for selfish grasping methods of any of the numerous agencies which need men. This war cannot be won by any one part of this Nation. It can be won by the It can be Jost by any part which fails in teamwork, We must estimate our several needs, inventory our supply and then allot the supply to the need. Ualess the process of procurement is controlled, there will be duplica- tion, unfortunate competition, mis- understanding, promising that can- not be fulfilled and the inevitable creation of prefer classes inside and outside of the armed forces. When there is order in the alloca- tion of our man power and the in- dividual is not forced in any emo- tional atmosphere to determine the part he should play, then we shall stand on the threshold of an effi- cient use of our man power. Then we can expect the maximum | in productive effort because the in- dividual will know the part to which he has been assigned. He will not be buffeted by doubts as to what he should do in the na- tional effort for victory. He will know that he is doing hi part, be it on the farm, in the fac- tory or in our armed forces, as an American in total war for total vic- tory. Monfgfir? Votes $3,500 For Police Equipment By & Staff Correspgndent of The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md. Jan. county commissioners appropriated an additional $3,500 for police equip- ment in response to & request by County Chief of Police Andrew M. Newman, An appropriation of 2,500 had been approved previously. Chief Newman told the commis- sioners the price of some equipment, such as ammunition and guns, has increased as much as 50 per cent in the last several weeks due to the inability of factories to obtain ma- | terials. Police asked that the type of the equipment be not disclosed. but indi- cated it was for emergency defense purposes. The county now has a total of 76 policemen. including the 15 special school policemen ap- pointed in November. Kit Carson’s Kin Enlists DENVER, Jan. 6 (#).—Kit Edward | Carson, 26 grandson of Kit Carson, famed Western scout, joined the marines vesterday. “I want to help get this war over with,” he said THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, ‘Wren' Stationed Here to Wed R. A. F. Squadron Leader A military wedding January 23 at . at Christmas that they arranged for St. John's Church in Lafayette | their marriage by the Rev. John G. Square will climax the thoroughly | Magee, pastor of St. John's. American romance of two Britishers | Miss Webber keeps a picture of working on this side of the ocean. the handsome 6-foot pilot on the They are Royal Air Force Squad- | mantle of the apartment she shares ron Leader Stafford Pulleine Coul- | with three other “wrens” | son, 25, of the R. A. F. fighter pilot [ 2627 I street N.W. Since the en- training station at Debert, Halifax, | gagement of the couple, his family Nova Scotia, and Miss Phylis Mary | from Wincanton, Somerset, have Webber, 25, & “wren,” or member of | Visited ‘with her family at Ports- the Women's Royal Naval Service, | ~ stationed with the British admiralty | at the Grafton Hotel. Squadron Leader Coulson and Miss | Webber met on the 10-day passage | from England to America last June. They have seen each other only | three times since, but she spent all | | day sterday looking for a “goldy | | beige” wedding frock to harmonize | | with his air force blue uniform. | Last summer the flying officer visited Miss Webber here. She flew to Canada for 10 days in October. | | Tt was during his Local & Long Distance Moving ® Fur Storage ® Rug Cleaning @ Silver Vaults ? ® Fumigation @ Service - for l erations | SMITH’S TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. 1313 You St. NW. NO. 3343 WOODWARD & LOTHROP Forever Elegant—White Kidskin Evening Gloves Fashions come, fashions go, but a few are forever fresh, forever a symbol of the ex- quisite. the constant drama of white Witness: the immaculate beauty, 16-button length kidskin gloves—you wear so § elegantly ‘Groves, AIsLE 18, FIRST FLOOR. at| D. C, TI mouth, England, ‘and both sides “approve.” il Though Miss Webber hopes to make her home near Debert after her marriage, her war duty may keep her here as much as his war duty holds him in Canada. She even had to apply for the wedding license alone, as her flance has already returned to his squadron. In the absence of both families, Miss Webber will be given away by | British Admiral J. W. Dorling. She lieutenant’s uniform she wears when | on duty at the Grafton. She herself | feels a wedding frock would be more becoming. In addition, she doesn't “think he would like it.” will not be married in the blue sub | TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1942. New Disfrict Grand Jury (Being Selected Today. Justice T. Alan Goldsborough in District Court today was selecting the personnel of the new District grand jury, and with its prospective swearing in tomorrow the, Capital will have three grand juries sitting at one time. ‘The regular District grand jury, which was due to cease its work yesterday, found itself continued as an additional body, so @at the Justice Department might delve into I reputed violations of the Sherman Oh, Such Luscious Colors in Nighties and Slips Gowns, 33°° anti-trust law in the bullding in- dustry. this. THis group will be under the, direction of Assistant Attorney Gen- Continued also as an nddmonll]eral Thurman Arnold, who is in grand jury is that group that be- | charge of the Anti-Trust Division gan service last July and was ex- |of the Justice Department. tended so that the Justice Depart- | ment might pursue an inquiry into | alleged foreign propaganda in the | United States. This grand jury is | | slated to reconvene on January 15, | so that Special Assistants to the | Attorney General William Power | Maloney and Edward J. Hickey, jr., fmight continue their investigation | into charges of illegal propaganda. | _The grand jury sworn in early in | October was ~continued in service | yesterday, when Justice Jennings Bailey signed an authorization for Spain’s shipyards are rushed with repair and construction work. 100K of the MONTH LEAGUE Fast losing members. They now use Chi- chesters Pills for reifef from functional discomfort and pain. Ab- solutely safe. Contain no habit-{forming drugs. AL a1l druggists. and 1p CH!EHESTERE PILLS “THE DIAMOND W BRAND” "WOODWARD & LOTHROP V/j W/J/ ‘ 7flz —Perennial Charmers their basic shapes are tried and true famed for their flattery to most faces A—Fur-feit with the youthful visor brim that shades your eyes so becomingly. A froth of curling feathers and a veil to net you compliments. All black; black with ice blue, black, navy or brown with natu- ral. Headsizes 22t023 ___ B—Beret—practically a synonym for becomingness —of synthetic straw cloth, softly draped. Veiled for frivolity Black, brown, navy or refreshing ¢ eoR i e o s 1 () C—Fluted fur felt, rising charmingly to halo your candid brow. City black, spring-minded navy ¢ sg or smart brown. Headsizes 2112 to 22%2__ 6 MnLINERY, THIRD FLOOR. Slips, $2° Butter-soft yellow, gentle blue, becoming petal pink—how you will enjoy their flattery. Soft, sweet trim, too—cut- work embroidery (by machinery) at the gown's square neckline and midriff—at the fitted-slip’s vee top. Triply soft—ijust finger that rayon crepe. Sizes 32 to 40. UNDERWEAR AND COSTUME SLIps THIRD FLOOR. Kleinert's Clever Garment Grippers i . have your waistbands “Popinjay’’—Your Clever - “under control” 1942 Double-duty Hair-do You wear it prettily, conservatively for day- time—you fluff it up glamorously, femi- ninely for evening. Its secret—careful tapering by our skillful shears—then a softly natural permanent. Do enjoy its “magic’’ in this busy double-duty year. Call District 5300 for an appointment. BrAUTY SALON, SECOND FLOOR. Gone are the days of waistbands part- ing company with your skirts, slacks, _ski-trousers — Kleinert has provided you with a rubber garment gripper that keeps you securely “held together’’— with comfort. Wear it with 50 c MISTOL DROPS WITH EPHEDRINE [ J “FoR PEOPLE WHO ARE SUFFERING THE DISCOMFORTS OF A HEAD COLD even your sheerest blouses. Have it in white, black or gray Nortowns, Aisir 21, Fmst Froom,

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