CHURCHSERVICES LOYALTY INOIYTOMORROW …

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CHURCH SERVICES ! INOIYTOMORROW Musical Programs and Special Sermons to Mark Day of Thanksgiving. PLANS OF CONGREGATIONS Once again in the Washington Churches tomorrow will the people gather to give diligent consideration of the mercies of God vouchsafed dur' ing the past year in observance of Thanksgiving, 191<5. Sermons appropriate to the day are to be delivered and a special feature of the services will be music of praise and thanksgiving. That Thanksgiving lifts up the soul from the things of the earth to the King of Kings various clergymen will point out in their sermons of the occasion, and Washlngtonians will ponder on the question as the psalmist expresses it: "What shall 1 render unto the Lord for all His benefits towards me?" And to those more familiar with the Scriptures will come a splendidly able answer, it is pointed out. in the words of St. Paul: "I beseech ye. therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice. holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service." <k * ROMAN CATHOLIC. 4i St. Pauls. The high wass in St. Paul's Church tomorrow at 30 o'clock will be celebrated by Rev. William J. Carroll, while the sermon of the occasion will be preached by Rev. Hugh Curley. Both are of the assistant clergy of the parish. The first mass of the day in the parish will be held in the Convent of the Perpetual Adoration at 6:30 o'clock, other masses will be held in the church at 7, S and 9 o'clock. Nativity. The only mass of Thanksgiving day at the Church of the Nativity. Brightwood. will be held at 9 o'clock. It will be celebrated by the pastor. Rev. Frank N. Bisehoff. At this service the mass will be a low one, and the prayer for the authorities will be read, after which the benediction of the blessed sacrament will be given. St. Anthony's. Rev. Thomas P. Williams, pastor of St. Anthony's Church, Brookland, will celebrate the only mass of the day tomorrow in that church at 8:30 o'clock. He will read the prayer for the authorities and give the benediction of the blessed sacrament at the close. St. Martin's. Thanksgiving day a special low requiem mass will be celebrated by Rev. Kugene Hannan, pastor, in St. Martin's Church at 9 o'clock. He will also preach the sermon of the occasion. A special musical program will be furnished by the choir of the church. This mass will be offered for the deceased members of the Catholic Relief and Beneficiary Association. Immaculate Conception. Rev. M. J. Riordan. pastor of Immaculate Conception Church, is to celebrate the Thanksgiving mass in that church tomorrow at 9 o'clock. He will also preach the sermon of the occasion. The mass of the occasion will be a hich nnA a nil tVio nhnip nf the i-linrnh will furnish a special musical program. St. Matthew's. A solemn high mass will be sung in St. Matthew's Church Thanksgiving morning at 9 o'clock, with Rev. Father Cooper of the assistant clergy serving as the celebrant. There will be no sermon, the prayer for the authorities being read and being followed with the giving of the benediction of the blessed sacrament. St. Patrick's. Mgr. M. F. Foley, pastor of St. Paul's Church of Baltimore, is to be the celebrant of the annual pan-American mass of thanksgiving in St. Patrick's Church tomorrow moriiing at 10 o'clock. Revs. Thomas F. Kenny and James F. Nolan of Baltimore will be the deacons. The sermon of the occasion will be delivered by lit. Rev. Dennis J. O'Conneli. Bishop of Richmond, whose chaplains will be Rev. William J. Kerby, professor of sociology at the Catholic University, and Very Rev. John F. FenIon, also of the university. Cardinal Gibbons will occupy a throne on the right of the altar and give the blessing at the close of the eervice. The assistant priest to the cardinal will be Very Rev. Dr. George A- Dougherty, vice rector of the Catholic University, and the chaplains Very Rev. M. F. Dinneen of St. Charles College. Catonsville, Aid., and Very Rev. Edward A. Pace, director of studies at the Catholic University. In the sanctuary will also be Bishop Corrigan of Baltimore, whose chaplains will be Rev. J. J. Murray of Baltimore and Rev. Paul Griffith, pastor of St. Augustine's Church of this city; Bishop Shahari, rector of the Catholic University, who will have as his chaplains Rev. Francis P. Doory of St. Martins Church, Baltimore, and Rev. Joseph Mallon of Westminster, Aid.; Algr. William T. Russell, rector of St. Patrick's Church, and lie v. Thomas E. Mcduigan, Kev. James A. .Smyth and Rev. John M. McNarnara, composing the assistant clergy staff of the parish. The master of ceremonies of the occasion will be Rev. Martin 1'. Eagan of ist. Patrick's clergy staff, while his assistant will be Leo Mud;Kan. The following" musical program will be furnished by the sanctuary and mixed choirs, with organ and full orchestral accompaniment; March, Rornain, orchestra and organ; lntroit, figured music, by R. M. Sllby, i sanctuary choir; Kyrie and Gloria, Haydn's Sixteenth Mass, mixed choir; gradual*. Kalsibordone. s a n c t u a r y choir; Alleluia. Gregorian, sanctuary choir; Veni Creator. Wareham, sanctuary choir; offertory, Haydn's Sixteenth, mixed choir; offertory motet, Hosanna, Granier, mixed choir, Sanctus, Benedlctus, and Agnus Lei, Haydn's Sixteenth; communion. Kalsibordone, sanctuary choir; Ran-American March, organ and full orchestra. The church will be elaborately decorated with American flags intertwined with the flags of the Latin American countries, one flag being placed at each of the pews ami several being Intertwined about the pillars. * r* UNION SERVICES. < > Metropolitan Memorial. Hishop John W. Hamilton, chancellor of the American University, will preach the sermon at the union services to be held at the Metropolitan Memorial M. E. Church, John Marshall place and C street northwest, tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock. The service will be known as the "Na- tional Protestant service," and is held at the "National Methodist Church," as the Metropolitan Church is called. It is expected that this will be the inauguration of an annual custom. Dr. Harry D. Mitchell is pastor of the church. Churches and their pastors taking: part in the service will be: Waugh M. E. Church. Dr. Francis A. McCoy: Wesley Chapel M. E. Church. Rev. Howard Downs: Hamline Church, Dr. Lucius Clark: Trinity Church, Rev. J. Phelps Hand: Ryland Church. J. H. Jeffries: McKendree Church, Rev. Morgan Chambers, and Gorsuch Church, Rev. J. R. Esaias. President Wilson, Vice President Marshall and members of the cabinet have been invited to attend the services, together with members of the Junior Order of United American Mechanics and Daughters of America. Bishop Earl Cranston will assist in the service. Lincoln Road. Churches of Bloomingdale and Eckington are to unite in services to be held tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock at the Lincoln Road M. E. Church. Other churches besides the host church include the Eckington Presbyterian, the Memorial United Brethren, Bethany Baptist, the Rhode Island Avenue Methodist Protestant, and the St. Paul Methodist Episcopal South. Rev. Hugh T. Stevenson will preach the sermon. Rev. H. E. Brundage will read the President's proclamation. Rev. G. A. Luttrell will pronounce the benediction. The services will be in charge of Rev. C. E. Fultz, president of the Bloomingdale and Eckington Ministerial Association. Wallace Memorial. A community Thanksgiving celebraion will be held tomorrow morning 10:3ft o'clock by the coi gregations f the Wallace Memorial Presbyterian 'hurch. New Hampshire avenue and Randolph place northwest, the Petworth M E. Church and the Petworth Baptist Church at the former edifice. Rev. F. Paul Langhorne will preach the sermon, and Rev. Alvin Campbell will read the President's proclamation. Rev. G. Ellis Williams will preside. Sixth Presbyterian. I Rev. Earl L. Douglas, pastor-elect of the Sixth Presbyterian Church, MaryInnil QvantiA on/1 C c tract nnrtVinaot will preach the sermon at union Thanksgiving services to be held at the church tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock. Other churches and their pas- tors to join in the services are Marvin M. E. Church. Rev. J. J. Ringer: West- minster Presbyterian Church. Rev. T. E. Davis. North Carolina Avenue M. P. I'nion services of the North Carolina Avenue M. P. Church and the First M. i\ Church will be held tomorrow morn- ing at 11 o'clock at the former con- gvegation, North Carolina avenue and Sth street southeast Rev. C. Morgan Compiler will preach the sermon. Special music by the choirs of the two churches will be a feature, John Martin will be soloist. The con- tribution will be given to the Casualty Hospital. Western Presbyterian. The I'nion M. E. Church and the Western Presbyterian Church will unite in services tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock at the latter edifice, H street near 19th street northwest. Rev. John MacMurray, pastor of the Cnion Church, will preach the sermon. Douglas Memorial M. E. Thanksgiving day services of six churches will be held at Douglas Memorial M. E. Church. 11th and H streets northeast, tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock. The other churches include the Eastern Presbyterian Church, Rev. A. E. Barrows: Ingram Memorial Con- »S« i\ju<xi v-uuiui, xj. r*. i ui dum; Keller Memorial Lutheran Church, Rev. S. T. Nicholas; Epworth M. E. Church South, Rev. B. V. Switzer, and the Ninth Street Christian Church, Rev. G. A. Miller. Rev. C. C. McLean is pastor of the host church. Dr. Miller will preach the sermon. The Douglas Church Epworth League will hold a sunrise service at 6:30 o'clock tomorrow morning, to which all young people's societies are invited. Tomorrow night at 8 o'clock Dr. McLean will give a travel lecture on "The Big Trees of California and the Yosemite Valley." Anacostia Baptist. Union services of the Anacostia Baptist, Garden Memorial Presbyterian and Anacostia Methodist Episcopal churches are to be held in the Baptist Church, 13th and W streets southeast, tomorrow morning. Rev. Dr. Lonier, pastor of the Anacostia M. E. Church, is to give the sermon. Rev. H. T. Cousins, pastor of the Anacostia Baptist Church, is to preside, and Rev. George M. Cummings. pastor of the Garden Memorial Presbyterian Church, is to speak. Special music will be given by the Baptist Church choir. If f PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL. .f> St. Andrew's. At St. Andrew's Chuprch, New Hampshire avenue and V street northwest. Rev. J. J. Dimor., the rector, will preach the Thanksgiving sermon at the 11 o'clock service! A program of special music has beerij arranged. The Cathedral. Thanksgiving services at Bethlehem Chapel, Mount *8t. Alban, will include holy communion at 7:30 a.m.. morning prayer at 10 o'clock, festival service, holy communion and sermon by the Bishop of Washington at 11 a.m., and evening prayer, without music, at 4 o'clock. Emmanuel Church. Rev. William Oscar Roome, rector of Emmanuel Church, Anacostia, is to preach a special Thanksgiving sermon at the 10 o'clock service at the church, the discourse being based on the President's proclamation. Special music Is to be furnished by the vested choir, under the direction of William Scantlebury, choirmaster, with Mrs. Bcantlebury at the organ. Fruits, vegetables, etc., are to be used to decorate the church, the offerings to be distributed among the needy after the service. Epiphany Chapel. The Thanksgiving sermon at Epiphany Chapel, 12th and C streets southwest, is to be preached by the vicar. Rev. Charles F. Edwards, at the 11 o'clock service. The following program of special music has been arranged: Hymn, "Come. Ye Thankful People": hymn, "Our Father's Ood, to Thee"; "Te Deum," Calkin; "Jubilate," Tours; anthem, "Rejoice in the Lord," Elvey; hymn, "Praise to God, Immortal Praise." Church of the Epiphany. / Services at the Church of the Epiphany, G street between 13th and 14th streets northwest, will Include holy communion at 8 a.m. and service and sermon at 11 a.m., when the rector, Rev. Randolph H. McKirn, is to preach on "America's Stewardship." The full choir is to render special music, including Kipling's "Recessional," and a special offering is to be taken for the Epiphany Church Home. fit. John's, Georgetown. At St. John's Church. Georgetown, the choir, under the direction of Samuel A. Leech, will render thft *ol- lowing selections Thanksgiving morning at the 11 o'clock service: Te Deum in B minor, by Buck; Jubilate Deo in B flat, by Schubert; "O Lord, How Manifold," by Barnby; holy communion service, by Lloyd, and Gloria in ExcelBis, old chant. St. Mark's. Thanksviving services at St. Mark's Church, 3rd and A streets southeast, include holy communion at 7:30 a.m., and morning prayer and holy communion at 11 a.m. Festival service rendered by the male choir of forty voices. Fruits, flowers and vegetables used in decorating the church are to be sent to the Episcopal hospital after the service. Special intercessions for peace will be said. St. Alban's Parish. Thanksgiving services at the five chapels included in St. Alban's parish are to be as follows: St. Alban's.7:30 a.m., holy communion; 11 o'clock, morning prayer, holy communion and sermon. St Columba's.11 o'clock, morning prayer, holy communion and sermon. St. George's.8 a.m., holy communion; 8 o'clock, evening prayer and sermon. St. David's.11 a.m., holy communion and sermon. St. Patrick's.9 a.m., holy communion and sermon. All Souls' Memorial Church. Rev. J. MacBride Sterrett, rector of All Souls' Memorial Church, is to preach the Thanksgiving sermon at the 11 o'clock service, when a program of special music is to be rendered by the choir. Elaborate decorations, consisting of fruits, vegetables, etc., are to be removed from the chancel immediately after the service and distributed among the needy. All Saints' Chnrcli. "The Duty of Being Thankful" is to be the theme of the sermon at the 10:30 o'clock service at All Saints' Church, Chevy Chase, conducted by the rector, Rev. J. W. Austin. The following special musical program has been prepared: Processional, 193; Te Deum, Willard Foster; Jubilate, Elvey; hymn, 464 Kyrie, Barn by; Gloria Tibi, Anon; hymn 196; offertory anthem, "Ye Shall Go Out With Joy," Barnby; Sanctus, Stainer; communion hymns 219 and 220; Gloria in Excelsis, old chant; Nunc Dimittis, Gower; recessional 192. Congress Heights Church. Thanksgiving services at Congress Heights Church. Esther Memorial, are to include holy communion at 10 o'clock, with a sermon by the rector. Rev. C. K. P. Cogswell, Rev. W. G. Davenport attending. A special musical program is to ue given oy ine cnuir. Grace Church, Georgetown. Rev. George VV. Atkinson, jr.. rector of Grace Church. Georgetown, is to preach the Thanksgiving sermon at the 11 o'clock service. The musical program for the service includes: Processional hymn, 191; Benedic, Anima Mia, Elvey; Te Deuni, Westbury; Jubilate. Hodge; hymn 196; offertory .anthem, "God Planted a Garden," Nlchol; recessional, 193. St. Thomas* Church. The 11 o'clock service at St. Thomas' Church on Thanksgiving day is to include matins, sermon by the rector, Rev. C. Ernest Smith, and holy communion. A program of special music will be presented by the solo quartet and the vested choir of thirty voices under the direction of L. B. Aldrich, choirmaster and organist. Musical numbers are to include: Benediction, Foote; Jubilate Deo, Dudley Buck; offertory anthem and A Prayer of Thanksgiving. T. Tertlus Noble. Chapel of the Nativity. At the Chapel of the Nativity the Thanksgiving day services will include holy communion at 7:30 a.m. and communion and sermon at 10:30 a.m. At the latter service the choir Is to render an elaborate program of special music, and offerings of fruits, vegetables, flowers, etc., given by members of the congregation and used as decorations, are to oe aistriDutea. Chapel of the Resurrection. Thanksgiving services are to be held at the Chapel of the Resurrection at 4 o'clock p.m., when a special offering is to be taken for the relief of indigent, infirm and disabled clergymen. Special music for the service Is to be in charge of S. P. Minnick. Advent. Rev. Edward Marshall Mott, rector, will preach the Thanksgiving sermon in the Church of the Advent tomorrow at 11 o'clock. Under the direction of Miss Walter, organist, the choir will render an interesting musical program, including: To Deum, by Millard; Jubilate, by Bridgewater; Harvest Anthem, by Collcott; harvest hymns and America. * £> PRESBYTERIAN. > * New York Avenue. Rev. Dr. Wallace Radcliffe will preach on "Playing the Harp of the Nation," at Thanksgiving services at the New YQrk Avenue Presbyterian Church, tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. Following an annual custom, the boys and girls of the Protestant Orphan Asylum will attend the services. I There will be a special musical program, including organ music and vocal solos. An adaptation of the Russian hymn will be a feature. The collection tviji WWS uiviucu ueiwci-u me ITOlCfliant Orphan Asylum and the Presbyterian Home for the Aged. Fourth. Following cervices at l* o'clock tomorrow morning, representatives of the Fourth Presbyterian Church, 13th and Fairmont streets northwest, will visit local hospitals with offerings of fruit and other delicacies for the sick. This is a custom of thirty years' standing at the Fourth Church. Thanksgiving observations will be commenced at the church tomorrow morning at 7 o'clock, when there will be a prayer meeting, participated In by young people from many of the churches In Mount Pleasant. The regular Thanksgiving service will be held in the church auditorium at 9 o'clock, Rev. Joseph T. Kelly, the pastor, preaching the sermon. There will be a special musical program. First. "American Watchflres" will be the subject of a sermon by Rev. John Brittan Clark, pastor, at services to be held at the First Presbyterian Church, John Marshall place, tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. Members of patrlotio societies have been especially invited to attend the services. The entire offering will be given to the Presbyterian Home for the Aged. The church choir will be assisted in a special Program by Mrs. Louise McCarver, violinist; Miss Luch, cellist, and Roger J. Whiteford, baritone. The choir will sing Brown-Eager's "Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers," with solos by Miss Leckle and Mr. Whiteford. Schubert's "Serenade" will be played by Mrs. McCarver, Miss Luch and Mrs. Schutt. Miss Leckie will sing the offertory. Washington Heights. Special Thanksgiving services are to be held at the Washington Heights Presbyterian Church, Kalorama avenue and Columbia road northwest* tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. The musical program*, arranged by i i Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith, organist, is as follows: prelude, "Thanks Be to God." from "Elijah:" quartet, "I Will Extol Thee, O God," Mrs. Bode, Miss Moran. Adolph Werner and Edwin Callow; response, "Lord, I Confess to Thee"; offertory solo, "A Psalm of Thanksgiving," Mrs. Bode, and postlude, "Unfold Ye Portals." Central. Rev. James H. Taylor will preach on "Some Reasons for Thanksgiving" at services to be held at the Central Presbyterian Church, 16th and Irving streets northwest, tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. Mrs. H. G. Wilbur will preside at the organ. Earl Carbaugh will sing "Thanksgiving," by Cowen. Gurley Memorial. "The Chimes of Thanksgiving" will be the subject of the Thanksgiving serI mon by Rev. Bernard Braskamp at services to be held at the Gurley Memorial Presbyterian Church, 14th and Meridian streets northwest, tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. The service will mark the second anniversary of the meeting of the congregation in the present building, There will be special vocal and instrumental music by Mrs. Ethel Holtzclaw Gawler, William Braithwaite and Harry Waller. Several other Presbyterian churches joined in union services, the features of which are noted elsewhere. METHODIST EPISCOPAL. <* ; Waugh. An early Thanksgiving service will be held at the Waugh M. E. Church. .'!»! and A streets northeast, tomorrow morning at 0:30 o'clock. Rev. K. C. I'owers will preach the sermon. Following the service a Thanksgiving breakfast will be served in the dining room of the church. At 10 o'clock Waugh Church will join the union service to be held at Metropolitan M. E. Church. Rev. F. M. McCoy is pastor of Waugh Church. St. Paul'? South. Members of St. Paul Methodist Church South, 2d and S streets northwest, will hold a musical and literary celebration tomorrow night at 8 o'clock, followed by a reception. St. Paul will unite with the other churches of Bloomingdale and Eckington in a Thanksgiving service at the Lincoln Road Methodist Episcopal Church tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. At the evening celebration Clyde A. Copson will give an exhibition of cartoon drawing. The Mothers' Club, of which Mrs. B. E. Hair is president, will contribute musical ana literary seiec- tions and receive after the entertainment. The following committee chairmen have the arrangements for the evening in charge; Mrs. J. Benson Hayes, Mrs. Hoy H. Wiseman; Mrs. B. H. Bair and Mrs. G. Ernest Waesche. North Capitol. Rev. William Harris will preach the sermon at services to be held at the North Capitol M. E. Church, K and North Capitol streets, tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. A special offering for the Methodist Home of the Aged will be taken. Several other Methodist churches joined in union services with other congregations, the programs of which are noted elsewhere. Foundry M. E. Rev. Wallace Mac-Mullen of Madison. N. J., is to preach the sermon at services to be held tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock at the Foundry M. E. Church. 16th and Church streets northwest. Special music by the quartet of the church will be a feature. <* * LUTHERAN. j _ * St. Mark's. "Our Heal Thanksgiving" is to be the subject of the sermon of Rev. W. A. Wade at the services at St. Mark's Lutheran Church, 8th and B streets southwest, tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock. Prayers for divine guidance in church and national affairs will be offered. as well as special prayers of thanksgiving. The church choir, under the leadership of George M. Leimbach, is to sing Come, Ye Thankful People, Come." Concordia. Services at the Concordia German Lutheran Church are to be conducted in German at 11 o'clock. The theme of Rev. Paul A. Menzel's sermon is to be "National Humiliation.National Thanksgiving." Raphael Koester, the organist, is to play several special numbers. Selections also will be given by Miss Marie Menzel and Emil Menzel on violin and flute, respectively. Zion. Rev. Richard Schmidt is to preach on "Positive and Negative Reasons for Gratitude to God" tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. at Zion Lutheran Church. Mrs. F. Duxbury, organist, will be in charge of the musical program. Miss Elsie Werdig is to sing. St. John's. Special services are to be conducted by the choir at St. John's Lutheran Church at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. Rev. Paul D. Leddln is to be in charge. Epiphany. Rev. Dr. Charles F. Steck is to conduct the observance of Thanksgiving day at Epiphany Lutheran Church tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. Appropriate anthems are to be sung by the choir. Church of the Atonement. The usual Thanksgiving exercises are to be held at the Church of the Atonement tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. The sermon, music and decorations will De in narrnony with the occasion. Union Lutheran services are to be held at St. Paul's English Lutheran Church, tomorrow at 11 a-m. Rev. Henry Anstadt, paetor of Luther Memorial Church, Is to preach- Special musio will be given by the St. Paul's choir, and Rev. John T. Huddle will preside. <2 * BAPTIST. & Following' a custom of many years, union Thanksgiving services of the white Baptist churches of Washington are to be held at Calvary Baptist Church, 8th and H streets northwest, at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. Rev. F. W. Johnson, pastor of Grace Baptist Church, Is to deliver the sermon. A special musical program is being arranged by Louis A. Potter, jr.. organist at Calvary Baptist Church. Rev. Samuel H. Greene, pastor of the church, is to preside at the services if he Is physically able to do so. Rev. A. F. Anderson will preside in event of Dr. Greene's absence. Members of the congregations of all the Baptist churches, with but two exceptions, are expected to attend, according to the various Baptist pastors. Anacostia Baptist Church is to hold a community service in Anacostia, and the Petworth Baptist Church is to participate in the community service in the Wallace Memorial Presbyterian Church in Petworth. The offering taken at the union service will, as usual, be turned over to the Baptist Home for Aged Ladies. It is expected that about 1,500 persona will attend the services. Calvary. The usual Thanksgiving prayer meet- ing at Calvary Baptist Church is to be held at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening. Short testimonials by members of the congregation are to be given. Congress Heights. Members of the Congress Heights Baptist Church are to participate In the Baptist union services at Calvary Baptist Church tomorrow morning, and in addition union services with the Congress Heights M. E. Church are to be held at 7:30 o'clock in the evening at the Congress Heights Baptist Church. Rev. A. T. Perkins, pastor of the M. E. Church, is to deliver the sermon, and Rev. E. E. Richardson of the Baptist Church is to preside. Metropolitan. A "summarized praise servicers to be held at Metropolitan Baptist Church, 6th and A streets northeast, from 7 until 8 o'clock tomorrow morning. Rev. John Coinpton Ball, pastor of the church, is to lead the service and make a short address. Following: l^a talk half-minute testimonials of thanks from members of the congr^gattion are to be given. The affair is to be given under the auspices of the Christian Endeavor Society of the church, and has been a feature at the church for the past eleven years. Members of the congregation will participate in the services at Calvary Church in the forenoon. Shiloh. Rev. J. Milton Waldron, pastor, is to preach at Shiloh Baptist Church. 1630 L street northwest, at the Thanksgiving services beginning there at noon tomorrow. taking as his theme. »"Christian Optimism." Other numbers on the program are to be the reading of a Thanksgiving poem by Miss .Josephine Carroll the reading of a Thanksgiving psalm by Miss Willie A. Coleman and the reading of the !'resident's Thanksgiving proclamation by William J. Scott. The church choir is to give a number of special selections, closing with "America." Zion. The fourteenth annual Thanksgiving day dinner is to be held at the Zion Baptist Church, F street between 3d and 4 Vn streets southwest, beginning at 1 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Inmates of the Stoddard Baptist Home and of the government home at Blue Plains will be the special guests, but all deserving noor ner- sons are invited to come to the affair. Preceding: the dinner there is to be a prayer meeting: and a sermon by Rev. W. J. Howard, pastor of the church. Miss Alice Wayne is to be in charge of the dinner. « .* MISCELLANEOUS. > Universalist and Unitarian. Union Thanksgiving day services by the Church of Our Father, Universalist, and All Souls' Church, Unitarian, are to be held at 11 o'clock at the latter churcn building, 14th and L. streets northwest. The sermon is to be given by Rev. John Van Schaick of the Church of Our Father. Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, pastor of All Souls' Church, is to preside. A special feature of the service will be two vo vaI selections by Charles Trowbridge Tittman. Christian Science. "Thanksgiving" will be the subject of the services in the Christian Science churches at Columbia road and JSuviid street northwest, and at 15th and R streets northwest, tomorrow morning. William F. Campbell, first reader of the First church, will speak there, and Walter M. Hummer, first reader of the Second church, will have charge of the services in his church. Mrs. Flora Reefer is to sing at the First Church, and Mrs. Ralph Barnard at the Second church. Following the talks In both churches short testimonials of thanks will be given by the congregations. New Church. Special musical numbers are to mark the Thanksgiving services at the Church of the New Jerusalem at 11 a.m. tomorrow. Rev. Paul Sperry is to take for his subject "The Spirit of Thanksgiving." Musical selections will include the following: "Come, Ye Faithful People, Come," "O Lord of Heaven and earth and Sea." "O Con., How Manifold" and "Ein Feste Burg." Congregational. "Thanksgiving for Life's Inherited Ideals" is the subject which Rev. Clarence A. Vincent is to take for his sermon at Mount Pleasant Congregational Church tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock. The Mount Pleasant chorus is to sing Lord. How Manifold Are Thy Works. Rev. Dr. J. L. Gordon is to take for his subject at the services at the First Congregational Church, tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock "The United States Among the Nations of the Earth." A special offering is to be made for the benefit of Central Union Mission. Bruen Home, Friendship House and Florence Crittenton Home. The musical program is to include O God, Our Help in Ages Past, The Heavens ^A.re Telling. O Lord, How Manifold Are Thy Works and Fix'd in His Everlasting Seat. Y. M. C. A. to Celebrate Quietly. Special services will not be held at the Young Men's Christian Association, various workers there being scheduled to participate in the services in the churches. A quiet "at home" for the members of the association will be the order of the day. m n wiu iv uvuio vnornii Your vacant house is costing you $25 to $75 monthly all the time that it is vacant. A four-line Rent House ad in The Star ^ill cost you $2.52 per week, and probably will secure you a tenant. REPORT SALE SUCCEEDING. More Than $1,000 Expected in Benefit for Home for Aged. More than $1,000 is expected to result from the Christmas sale for the benefit of the Presbyterian Home for the Aged, 420 M street northwest, in the ballroom of the Raleigh Hotel Monday and yesterday. Those in charge of the sale, representing local Presbyterian churches, include Mrs. A. R. Quaiffe, president of the board of managers of the home; Mrs. B. H. Warner, Mrs. Charles B. Bailey, vice presidents; Mrs. William Henry White, recording secretary; Mrs. O. B. Brown, corresponding secretary; Mrs. M. J. Vaughan, treasurer; Mrs. M. R. Stetson. A. Graham, Mrs. A. McElroy, Mrs. G. F. Schutt, Mrs. I,. Smith. Mrs. M. Boal, Mrs. Harvey S. Irwin. Mrs. R. C. Williamson, Mrs. James Fisher, Mrs. M. A. Skinner, Mrs. Thomas Taylor, Mrs. John C. Palmer and Mrs. M. R. Kistler. Miss Alice O. Dalger, sixty-six, committed suicide by hanging herself in the bedroom of her home in Baltimore, to which she had been confined by illness for several months. Prescribed bv Dentists to be used with Sanitol Liquid Antiseptic in cases of Pyorrhoea. » it's WMteBu iwlfrfy 4 LOVE AND LOYALTY I TOCOUNTRYURGED Rev. L. J. O'Hern Addresses Employes of the Government Printing Office. SERVICES AT LUNCH HOUR "Love and loyalty.love of country and loyalty to her every interest." was defined as patriotism by Rev. Dr. Lewis J. O*Hern. C. S. P., of St. Paul s Col- lese. Catholic I'niversitv of America, in an address at the Thanksgiving exercises at noon today at the government printing office. The exercises were held on the massive marble stairway of the big print shop and were attended by all the employes, who munched their lunches during the speeches and singing by the choir. As to this definition of patriotism the speaker said further: "Love tender as that of a son for his mother, 'strong as an army set in array'; loyalty, generous and disinterested, shrinking from no sacrifice, seeking no reward save the nation's honor and the country's good." Patriotism Binding Duty. Father O'Hern said it is not a matter of mere sentiment, but a duty binding in conscience, impelling to faithful service. "It is the very essence of unselfishness, for the patriot puts aside his own interest when the welfare of his country Is at stake." The address was opened by the speaker in congratulating the employes of the place on the magnificent object lesson they were offering the community of obedience to the voice of "our chief executive" in assembling there today. "For it is in response to the proclamation of his excellency, the President of the United States, that you are gathered here to render thanks to God for the manifold blessings received during the past year, as individuals and as a nation," he said. "And after all how fitting a thing, is it not, that our President should set apart one day out of the three hundred and sixty-five on which to render thanks to Him from whom all blessings flow? And if so, should not each one of us respond heartily to that ap- peal and cry out from the bottommost depths of our hearts, with the royal psalmist: 'What shall 1 render to the Lord for all the things that He hath rendered unto me?' " Continuing Father OTTern said: "He has given us all. What are we but mere beggars who have been clothed from His wardrobe, and fed from His table? All we possess has come from Him. The talents He has given us, the food we eat. the water we drink, the glad sunshine in which we bask, the pure air we breathe, the happiness and contentment that have come to us in life. They all belong to Him. God has lent them to us. How fitting then that we should return thanks for every blessing, great or small. Should Be Thankful for Peace. "Last and greatest of all, we should be thankful that we are at peace, in the midst of a great world war. The firebrands of war are now upon the earth, spreading death and destruction as never before since brother first lifted up his hand against brother. These burning brands have not yet reached our shores. God grant that they may not! God grant that America may yet be permitted to play the role of peacemaker, and that it may J. ( M!r«* L ||k J\JjSjj 3 ^3 T ^1 ^ykr Jeffei Kei Practically never second-hand column Should an owner has to advertise.an This, after all, is evidence that the "America's most reri Public recognitic greater and greater 1 the same wonderful materials and finish ' the beginning.at i While other cars remains.always a you can invest your service.amazingly a high re-sale price l$1095g Hurlc 829 14th St. U. .. be said of us: 'Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God.* " Father O'Hern then spoke of the responsibilities resting? on each individual to help in the preservation of these blessings. "The duty rests upon each individual." said he. "to help his country by personal morality and patriotism." The address closed with an appeal for righteousness in the lives of all true Americans as the only foundation of national stability. Program of Music. Cornelius Ford, the public printer, presided at the exercises. Mrs. Delphine W. Brown sang a solo; "Praise the Lord, O My Soul," was sung by the government printing office male chorus, and Maurice Fitzgerald sang a tenor solo. "Praise Ye" was sung by the government printing office male chorus, as was "Praise God. From Whom All Blessings Flow." The chorus, under the direction of Benjamin A. kineback. with Mrs. I>elphine V»T. Brown as accompanist, was composed of Misses Kate M. Kills. k. Uansdell. M. Walsh. K C Morell. M. Geisenderfer. F. k. Miller. Bessie Sweet. M. K. Regan. K. Donneberg. Km ma Green. M. J. Beach. G. Stevens. Evelyn Sims. Mrs. J. I,. Thornton and Mrs. <*. B. Hollinger. and the Messrs. M. Fitzgerald, J. L. Holland. C. W. Bridwell, k. B. Fete. C. <\ Covert. J. M. Montgomery. W. H. Parker. C. J. Brantley. J. H. Ingram. H. J. Redfteld. Cyrus Cook. C. W. Ruhl, W. K. Martin. W. J. Gouid, Li. C. Johnson. G. R. Merriam, G A I.nnir T. W Plnu-mrin T A dleford, It. I). Morgan and J. H. Phillips. mmWIN LAUD SIMON WOLF Praise Washingtonian at Banquet Given in His Honor in New York. PRESIDENT SENDS MESSAGE NEW YORK, November 29..Simon Wolf, one of the most prominent Jews in the United States and a leading citizen of Washington, was honored here last night at a dinner given at the Hotel Savoy in celebration of his eightieth birthday anniversary by the Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Sopi pf v of" *i" Vi 11*Vi A y V\ .. y U wi " ' k *' Abram .Simon of Washington and others spoke in high tribute of Mr. Wolf for his services to Jews and to the United States. Mr. Wolf was characterized as "the leader of American Jewry"; President Wilson and Col. Roosevelt sent him telegrams of congratulation, and Mr. Wolf was presented with a Bible trimmed in gold and silver. Among those invited to the banquet in honor of Mr. Wolf, who has been for many years Washington representative of the Sheltering and Immigrant Society, were James Speyer. Adolph S. Ochs, Oscar S. Straus, Jacob H. Rchiff. Samuel I'ntermeyer. Henry A. I)ix, Samuel Koenig, Herman Bornstein, Irving. Lehman, justice of the supreme court of New York city: Judge Otto A. Rosalsky, Judge Julius M. Mayer, Borough President Marcus M. Marks, Dr. J. Lee Magnes, Rabbi Edward N. Galisli. Charles Shol and others. Mr. Wolf was alluded to as "the savior of the Jewish immigrant." speakers declaring that during his j'ears of service he had saved 100,000 Jews from being deported from the S jI^|i11I-1 y Four O1 3p Their C will you find the Jeffery Fo s. Jeffery Four owners keep wish to sell he finds a read d he invariblv gets a remarkaJ the final test of a motor car. Jeffery Four fully merit! aarkable Four." >n of these facts has built Jef volume. Today you can buy high-speed motor, every de of the same high standard 10 advance in price! 1 :. 4 j arc licjLiig auvanccu. m pj standard car at a standard p< money with positive certain! low gasoline, oil, tire and ma when you finally wish to seU iES £ ° f Seve StS _pas^ ;y & Earley, N.W. Tel. WASHINGTON, D. C \ United States and returned to the land of their birth. Mr. Wolf's Address. In his address Mr. Wolf said, in part: "Prejudice still exists, it is true, hut as President Wilson in my year book so truthfully said. 'Prejudice is provincial: truth and justice go hand in hand in this blessed country.* So. while here and there the flickering light of the medieval lamp tries to ignite into a higher flame differences of faith or politics or nationalities, we can be perfectly confident that, as the years go on. the evolution of science and the spirit of international commerce will bring- about the solution of all our problems, and hand in hand with each other, striving; for a common goal, we will illustrate to the world that the recognition of all men on a basis of equality is the only form of governmerit that should he permitted to exist. "We do not fully appreciate the opportuni this great republic offers. not b* cause we are .feu s or Christians. hut because we are Americans who have been inspired by the loftiest conception of duty, and thus men of our faith, as Americans, have been in the forefront in every walk of civic life. "It would be 'carrying: coal to Newcastle' to recount the names of the men and women who have glorified the nation by virtue of their work, their I intellectual and moral merit, and who Island today among the foremost in the Walhalla of America's great men and women, and nearly all of them are either {migrants direct or the descendants of such. Tribute to Worth Generous. "No class of aliens who by force of circumstances, or voluntary, have made 'his country their home, have assimij lated uoirker or grasped the opportunities with more anil alacrity [than the Jew. and from all parts of the country there com**1* the welcoming (appreciation of genet ous tribute t«» their worth, then loyalty and their patriotism. "Much has been said because one or the other have been im miters of the cabinet. judges of the federal, state and local courts; ambassadors and ministers; attorney generals, and mayors; world famous philanthropists, whose liberal bounty has reflected honor and credit not only upon the individual, the faith, hut upon humanity itself; and last, though not least, in the Supreme Court, the last judicial resort of our great nation. But to mo these are hut the natural result for work well done, fnr clean and unsullied lives, and unless some unforeseen accident or terrible affliction brings me to the final arbiter of all lives. I should not be surprised to pee an American cinsen 01 uewisii faith occupy the White House. "If. as history shows, we were kings in the early days of our history, giving philosophers and poets, warriors, scholars and scientists under adverse conditions there is no reason in the world why in this great republic we should not finally reach the highest point of true republican and democratic ambition. and this dream, not of the ghetto, but thhe dream of tHe optimist, may sooner or later be made into a living reality." SMALL FIRES OF ONE NIGHT. Damage From Three Blazes Little Over $350. A man in charge of a bread wagon this morning about 2 :3n o'clock stopped lti front of the store of Otto Botsch. 501 4th street southeast, to deliver bread and discovered a fire in the store. He aroused members of the grocer's family and then hurried across the street to the fifth precinct police station and sent in an alarm of fire. The fire was of unknown origin, and the damage amounted to $200. The loss Is covered by insurance. Fire in the chimney at the residence of John H. Gould. .">.'{3 20th street, yesterday afternoon about 5 o'clock claimed the ati t.ention of several companies of firemen. The house and contents were damaged to the amount of $15o. No. 15 engine company yesterday afternoon extinguished a small fire in a s'i©d on the premises of Harry S. I >ean. 13:19 T street southeast. Tim fire was caused by burning grass. Slight damage was done. tvners 'ars ur advertised in the their cars. y market. He rarely blyhigh re-sale price. It is the conclusive s its reputation as Fery Four sales into this famous car, with tail of construction, of quality set from ice, the Jeffery Four rice.a car in which y of long continuous intenance cost.and L = .$1260 Inc., Main 6159 i

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CHURCH SERVICES! INOIYTOMORROWMusical Programs and Special

Sermons to Mark Day ofThanksgiving.

PLANS OF CONGREGATIONS

Once again in the WashingtonChurches tomorrow will the peoplegather to give diligent considerationof the mercies of God vouchsafed dur'ing the past year in observance ofThanksgiving, 191<5. Sermons appropriateto the day are to be deliveredand a special feature of the serviceswill be music of praise and thanksgiving.That Thanksgiving lifts up the soul

from the things of the earth to theKing of Kings various clergymen willpoint out in their sermons of the occasion,and Washlngtonians will ponderon the question as the psalmist expressesit: "What shall 1 render untothe Lord for all His benefits towardsme?"And to those more familiar with the

Scriptures will come a splendidly ableanswer, it is pointed out. in the wordsof St. Paul: "I beseech ye. therefore,brethren, by the mercies of God thatye present your bodies a living sacrifice.holy, acceptable unto God, whichis your reasonable service."

<k *

ROMAN CATHOLIC.4i

St. Pauls.The high wass in St. Paul's Church

tomorrow at 30 o'clock will be celebratedby Rev. William J. Carroll, whilethe sermon of the occasion will bepreached by Rev. Hugh Curley. Bothare of the assistant clergy of theparish.The first mass of the day in the

parish will be held in the Convent ofthe Perpetual Adoration at 6:30 o'clock,other masses will be held in the churchat 7, S and 9 o'clock.

Nativity.The only mass of Thanksgiving day

at the Church of the Nativity. Brightwood.will be held at 9 o'clock. It willbe celebrated by the pastor. Rev. FrankN. Bisehoff. At this service the mass

will be a low one, and the prayer forthe authorities will be read, afterwhich the benediction of the blessedsacrament will be given.

St. Anthony's.Rev. Thomas P. Williams, pastor of

St. Anthony's Church, Brookland, willcelebrate the only mass of the day tomorrowin that church at 8:30 o'clock.He will read the prayer for the authoritiesand give the benediction ofthe blessed sacrament at the close.

St. Martin's.Thanksgiving day a special low requiemmass will be celebrated by Rev.

Kugene Hannan, pastor, in St. Martin'sChurch at 9 o'clock. He will also preachthe sermon of the occasion. A specialmusical program will be furnished bythe choir of the church.This mass will be offered for the deceasedmembers of the Catholic Relief

and Beneficiary Association.

Immaculate Conception.Rev. M. J. Riordan. pastor of ImmaculateConception Church, is to celebratethe Thanksgiving mass in that

church tomorrow at 9 o'clock. He willalso preach the sermon of the occasion.The mass of the occasion will be a

hich nnA a nil tVio nhnip nf the i-linrnh

will furnish a special musical program.

St. Matthew's.A solemn high mass will be sung in

St. Matthew's Church Thanksgivingmorning at 9 o'clock, with Rev. FatherCooper of the assistant clergy servingas the celebrant. There will be no sermon,the prayer for the authorities beingread and being followed with thegiving of the benediction of the blessedsacrament.

St. Patrick's.Mgr. M. F. Foley, pastor of St. Paul's

Church of Baltimore, is to be the celebrantof the annual pan-American mass

of thanksgiving in St. Patrick's Churchtomorrow moriiing at 10 o'clock. Revs.Thomas F. Kenny and James F. Nolanof Baltimore will be the deacons.The sermon of the occasion will be

delivered by lit. Rev. Dennis J. O'Conneli.Bishop of Richmond, whose chaplainswill be Rev. William J. Kerby,professor of sociology at the CatholicUniversity, and Very Rev. John F. FenIon,also of the university.

Cardinal Gibbons will occupy athrone on the right of the altar andgive the blessing at the close of theeervice. The assistant priest to thecardinal will be Very Rev. Dr. GeorgeA- Dougherty, vice rector of the CatholicUniversity, and the chaplains VeryRev. M. F. Dinneen of St. Charles College.Catonsville, Aid., and Very Rev.Edward A. Pace, director of studies atthe Catholic University.

In the sanctuary will also be BishopCorrigan of Baltimore, whose chaplainswill be Rev. J. J. Murray of Baltimoreand Rev. Paul Griffith, pastor of St.Augustine's Church of this city; BishopShahari, rector of the Catholic University,who will have as his chaplainsRev. Francis P. Doory of St. MartinsChurch, Baltimore, and Rev. JosephMallon of Westminster, Aid.; Algr. WilliamT. Russell, rector of St. Patrick'sChurch, and lie v. Thomas E. Mcduigan,Kev. James A. .Smyth and Rev. John M.McNarnara, composing the assistantclergy staff of the parish.The master of ceremonies of the occasionwill be Rev. Martin 1'. Eagan of

ist. Patrick's clergy staff, while his assistantwill be Leo Mud;Kan.The following" musical program will

be furnished by the sanctuary andmixed choirs, with organ and full orchestralaccompaniment;March, Rornain, orchestra and organ;

lntroit, figured music, by R. M. Sllby,i sanctuary choir; Kyrie and Gloria,Haydn's Sixteenth Mass, mixed choir;gradual*. Kalsibordone. s a n c t u a r ychoir; Alleluia. Gregorian, sanctuarychoir; Veni Creator. Wareham, sanctuarychoir; offertory, Haydn's Sixteenth,mixed choir; offertory motet, Hosanna,Granier, mixed choir, Sanctus, Benedlctus,and Agnus Lei, Haydn's Sixteenth;communion. Kalsibordone, sanctuarychoir; Ran-American March, organand full orchestra.The church will be elaborately decoratedwith American flags intertwined

with the flags of the Latin Americancountries, one flag being placed at eachof the pews ami several being Intertwinedabout the pillars.

* r*UNION SERVICES.

< >Metropolitan Memorial.

Hishop John W. Hamilton, chancellorof the American University, will preachthe sermon at the union services tobe held at the Metropolitan MemorialM. E. Church, John Marshall place andC street northwest, tomorrow morningat 10:30 o'clock.The service will be known as the "Na-

tional Protestant service," and is heldat the "National Methodist Church,"as the Metropolitan Church is called.It is expected that this will be theinauguration of an annual custom. Dr.Harry D. Mitchell is pastor of thechurch.Churches and their pastors taking:

part in the service will be: WaughM. E. Church. Dr. Francis A. McCoy:Wesley Chapel M. E. Church. Rev.Howard Downs: Hamline Church, Dr.Lucius Clark: Trinity Church, Rev. J.Phelps Hand: Ryland Church. J. H.Jeffries: McKendree Church, Rev. MorganChambers, and Gorsuch Church,Rev. J. R. Esaias.President Wilson, Vice President Marshalland members of the cabinet have

been invited to attend the services, togetherwith members of the JuniorOrder of United American Mechanicsand Daughters of America.Bishop Earl Cranston will assist in

the service.

Lincoln Road.Churches of Bloomingdale and Eckingtonare to unite in services to be

held tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clockat the Lincoln Road M. E. Church.Other churches besides the host churchinclude the Eckington Presbyterian,the Memorial United Brethren, BethanyBaptist, the Rhode Island AvenueMethodist Protestant, and the St. PaulMethodist Episcopal South.Rev. Hugh T. Stevenson will preach

the sermon. Rev. H. E. Brundage willread the President's proclamation. Rev.G. A. Luttrell will pronounce the benediction.The services will be in chargeof Rev. C. E. Fultz, president of theBloomingdale and Eckington MinisterialAssociation.

Wallace Memorial.A community Thanksgiving celebraionwill be held tomorrow morning

10:3ft o'clock by the coi gregationsf the Wallace Memorial Presbyterian'hurch. New Hampshire avenue andRandolph place northwest, the PetworthM E. Church and the PetworthBaptist Church at the former edifice.Rev. F. Paul Langhorne will preach

the sermon, and Rev. Alvin Campbellwill read the President's proclamation.Rev. G. Ellis Williams will preside.

Sixth Presbyterian.I Rev. Earl L. Douglas, pastor-elect ofthe Sixth Presbyterian Church, MaryInnilQvantiA on/1 C ctract nnrtVinaot

will preach the sermon at unionThanksgiving services to be held atthe church tomorrow morning at 10:30o'clock. Other churches and their pas-tors to join in the services are MarvinM. E. Church. Rev. J. J. Ringer: West-minster Presbyterian Church. Rev. T.E. Davis.

North Carolina Avenue M. P.I'nion services of the North Carolina

Avenue M. P. Church and the First M.i\ Church will be held tomorrow morn-

ing at 11 o'clock at the former con-

gvegation, North Carolina avenue andSth street southeastRev. C. Morgan Compiler will preach

the sermon. Special music by the choirsof the two churches will be a feature,John Martin will be soloist. The con-tribution will be given to the CasualtyHospital.

Western Presbyterian.The I'nion M. E. Church and the

Western Presbyterian Church willunite in services tomorrow morningat 11 o'clock at the latter edifice, Hstreet near 19th street northwest. Rev.John MacMurray, pastor of the CnionChurch, will preach the sermon.

Douglas Memorial M. E.Thanksgiving day services of six

churches will be held at Douglas MemorialM. E. Church. 11th and H streetsnortheast, tomorrow morning at 10:30o'clock. The other churches includethe Eastern Presbyterian Church, Rev.A. E. Barrows: Ingram Memorial Con-»S« i\ju<xi v-uuiui, xj. r*. i ui

dum;Keller Memorial Lutheran Church,Rev. S. T. Nicholas; Epworth M. E.Church South, Rev. B. V. Switzer, andthe Ninth Street Christian Church,Rev. G. A. Miller. Rev. C. C. McLeanis pastor of the host church. Dr. Millerwill preach the sermon.The Douglas Church Epworth League

will hold a sunrise service at 6:30o'clock tomorrow morning, to whichall young people's societies are invited.Tomorrow night at 8 o'clockDr. McLean will give a travel lectureon "The Big Trees of California andthe Yosemite Valley."

Anacostia Baptist.Union services of the Anacostia Baptist,Garden Memorial Presbyterian

and Anacostia Methodist Episcopalchurches are to be held in the BaptistChurch, 13th and W streets southeast,tomorrow morning. Rev. Dr. Lonier,pastor of the Anacostia M. E. Church,is to give the sermon. Rev. H. T.Cousins, pastor of the Anacostia BaptistChurch, is to preside, and Rev.George M. Cummings. pastor of theGarden Memorial Presbyterian Church,is to speak. Special music will begiven by the Baptist Church choir.

If fPROTESTANT EPISCOPAL.

.f>St. Andrew's.

At St. Andrew's Chuprch, New Hampshireavenue and V street northwest.Rev. J. J. Dimor., the rector, will preachthe Thanksgiving sermon at the 11o'clock service! A program of specialmusic has beerij arranged.

The Cathedral.Thanksgiving services at Bethlehem

Chapel, Mount *8t. Alban, will includeholy communion at 7:30 a.m.. morningprayer at 10 o'clock, festival service,holy communion and sermon by theBishop of Washington at 11 a.m., andevening prayer, without music, at 4o'clock.

Emmanuel Church.Rev. William Oscar Roome, rector of

Emmanuel Church, Anacostia, is topreach a special Thanksgiving sermonat the 10 o'clock service at the church,the discourse being based on the President'sproclamation. Special music Isto be furnished by the vested choir,under the direction of William Scantlebury,choirmaster, with Mrs. Bcantleburyat the organ. Fruits, vegetables,etc., are to be used to decoratethe church, the offerings to be distributedamong the needy after theservice.

Epiphany Chapel.The Thanksgiving sermon at EpiphanyChapel, 12th and C streets southwest,is to be preached by the vicar.

Rev. Charles F. Edwards, at the 11o'clock service. The following programof special music has been arranged:Hymn, "Come. Ye ThankfulPeople": hymn, "Our Father's Ood, toThee"; "Te Deum," Calkin; "Jubilate,"Tours; anthem, "Rejoice in the Lord,"Elvey; hymn, "Praise to God, ImmortalPraise."

Church of the Epiphany. /

Services at the Church of the Epiphany,G street between 13th and 14thstreets northwest, will Include holycommunion at 8 a.m. and service andsermon at 11 a.m., when the rector,Rev. Randolph H. McKirn, is to preachon "America's Stewardship." The fullchoir is to render special music, includingKipling's "Recessional," and aspecial offering is to be taken for theEpiphany Church Home.

fit. John's, Georgetown.At St. John's Church. Georgetown,the choir, under the direction of

Samuel A. Leech, will render thft *ol-

lowing selections Thanksgiving morningat the 11 o'clock service: Te Deumin B minor, by Buck; Jubilate Deo in Bflat, by Schubert; "O Lord, How Manifold,"by Barnby; holy communionservice, by Lloyd, and Gloria in ExcelBis,old chant.

St. Mark's.Thanksviving services at St. Mark's

Church, 3rd and A streets southeast, includeholy communion at 7:30 a.m., and

morning prayer and holy communion at

11 a.m. Festival service rendered bythe male choir of forty voices. Fruits,flowers and vegetables used in decoratingthe church are to be sent to theEpiscopal hospital after the service.Special intercessions for peace will besaid.

St. Alban's Parish.Thanksgiving services at the five

chapels included in St. Alban's parishare to be as follows:

St. Alban's.7:30 a.m., holy communion;11 o'clock, morning prayer, holycommunion and sermon.

St Columba's.11 o'clock, morningprayer, holy communion and sermon.

St. George's.8 a.m., holy communion;8 o'clock, evening prayer and sermon.

St. David's.11 a.m., holy communionand sermon.

St. Patrick's.9 a.m., holy communionand sermon.

All Souls' Memorial Church.Rev. J. MacBride Sterrett, rector of

All Souls' Memorial Church, is to

preach the Thanksgiving sermon at the11 o'clock service, when a program of

special music is to be rendered by the

choir. Elaborate decorations, consistingof fruits, vegetables, etc., are to beremoved from the chancel immediatelyafter the service and distributed amongthe needy.

All Saints' Chnrcli."The Duty of Being Thankful" is to be

the theme of the sermon at the 10:30o'clock service at All Saints' Church,Chevy Chase, conducted by the rector,Rev. J. W. Austin. The following specialmusical program has been prepared:Processional, 193; Te Deum, Willard Foster;Jubilate, Elvey; hymn, 464 Kyrie,Barnby; Gloria Tibi, Anon; hymn 196;offertory anthem, "Ye Shall Go Out WithJoy," Barnby; Sanctus, Stainer; communionhymns 219 and 220; Gloria in Excelsis,old chant; Nunc Dimittis, Gower;recessional 192.

Congress Heights Church.

Thanksgiving services at CongressHeights Church. Esther Memorial, are to

include holy communion at 10 o'clock,with a sermon by the rector. Rev. C. K.P. Cogswell, Rev. W. G. Davenport attending.A special musical program isto ue given oy ine cnuir.

Grace Church, Georgetown.Rev. George VV. Atkinson, jr.. rector of

Grace Church. Georgetown, is to preachthe Thanksgiving sermon at the 11 o'clockservice. The musical program for theservice includes: Processional hymn, 191;Benedic, Anima Mia, Elvey; Te Deuni,Westbury; Jubilate. Hodge; hymn 196;offertory .anthem, "God Planted a Garden,"Nlchol; recessional, 193.

St. Thomas* Church.The 11 o'clock service at St. Thomas'

Church on Thanksgiving day is to includematins, sermon by the rector, Rev.C. Ernest Smith, and holy communion.A program of special music will be presentedby the solo quartet and thevested choir of thirty voices under thedirection of L. B. Aldrich, choirmasterand organist. Musical numbers are toinclude: Benediction, Foote; JubilateDeo, Dudley Buck; offertory anthemand A Prayer of Thanksgiving. T. TertlusNoble.

Chapel of the Nativity.At the Chapel of the Nativity the

Thanksgiving day services will includeholy communion at 7:30 a.m. and communionand sermon at 10:30 a.m. Atthe latter service the choir Is to renderan elaborate program of special music,and offerings of fruits, vegetables,flowers, etc., given by members of thecongregation and used as decorations,are to oe aistriDutea.

Chapel of the Resurrection.Thanksgiving services are to be held

at the Chapel of the Resurrection at 4o'clock p.m., when a special offering isto be taken for the relief of indigent,infirm and disabled clergymen. Specialmusic for the service Is to be in chargeof S. P. Minnick.

Advent.Rev. Edward Marshall Mott, rector,

will preach the Thanksgiving sermonin the Church of the Advent tomorrowat 11 o'clock. Under the direction ofMiss Walter, organist, the choir willrender an interesting musical program,including: To Deum, by Millard; Jubilate,by Bridgewater; Harvest Anthem,by Collcott; harvest hymns andAmerica.

* £>PRESBYTERIAN.

> *New York Avenue.

Rev. Dr. Wallace Radcliffe will preachon "Playing the Harp of the Nation,"at Thanksgiving services at the NewYQrk Avenue Presbyterian Church, tomorrowmorning at 11 o'clock. Followingan annual custom, the boys andgirls of the Protestant Orphan Asylumwill attend the services.

I There will be a special musical program,including organ music and vocalsolos. An adaptation of the Russianhymn will be a feature. The collectiontviji WWS uiviucu ueiwci-u me ITOlCfliantOrphan Asylum and the PresbyterianHome for the Aged.

Fourth.Following cervices at l* o'clock tomorrowmorning, representatives of

the Fourth Presbyterian Church, 13thand Fairmont streets northwest, willvisit local hospitals with offerings offruit and other delicacies for the sick.This is a custom of thirty years' standingat the Fourth Church.Thanksgiving observations will be

commenced at the church tomorrowmorning at 7 o'clock, when there willbe a prayer meeting, participated In byyoung people from many of thechurches In Mount Pleasant.The regular Thanksgiving service

will be held in the church auditoriumat 9 o'clock, Rev. Joseph T. Kelly, thepastor, preaching the sermon. Therewill be a special musical program.

First."American Watchflres" will be the

subject of a sermon by Rev. John BrittanClark, pastor, at services to be heldat the First Presbyterian Church, JohnMarshall place, tomorrow morning at11 o'clock. Members of patrlotio societieshave been especially invited toattend the services.The entire offering will be given to

the Presbyterian Home for the Aged.The church choir will be assisted in

a special Program by Mrs. Louise McCarver,violinist; Miss Luch, cellist,and Roger J. Whiteford, baritone. Thechoir will sing Brown-Eager's "Landingof the Pilgrim Fathers," with solosby Miss Leckle and Mr. Whiteford.Schubert's "Serenade" will be playedby Mrs. McCarver, Miss Luch and Mrs.Schutt. Miss Leckie will sing the offertory.

Washington Heights.Special Thanksgiving services are to

be held at the Washington HeightsPresbyterian Church, Kalorama avenueand Columbia road northwest* tomorrowmorning at 11 o'clock.The musical program*, arranged by

i i

Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith, organist,is as follows: prelude, "Thanks Be toGod." from "Elijah:" quartet, "IWill Extol Thee, O God," Mrs. Bode,Miss Moran. Adolph Werner and EdwinCallow; response, "Lord, I Confess toThee"; offertory solo, "A Psalm ofThanksgiving," Mrs. Bode, and postlude,"Unfold Ye Portals."

Central.Rev. James H. Taylor will preach on

"Some Reasons for Thanksgiving" at

services to be held at the Central PresbyterianChurch, 16th and Irvingstreets northwest, tomorrow morningat 11 o'clock. Mrs. H. G. Wilbur willpreside at the organ. Earl Carbaughwill sing "Thanksgiving," by Cowen.

Gurley Memorial."The Chimes of Thanksgiving" will

be the subject of the Thanksgiving serImon by Rev. Bernard Braskamp at

services to be held at the Gurley MemorialPresbyterian Church, 14th andMeridian streets northwest, tomorrow

morning at 11 o'clock.The service will mark the second

anniversary of the meeting of the congregationin the present building,There will be special vocal and instrumentalmusic by Mrs. Ethel HoltzclawGawler, William Braithwaite and HarryWaller.Several other Presbyterian churches

joined in union services, the featuresof which are noted elsewhere.

METHODIST EPISCOPAL.<*

; Waugh.An early Thanksgiving service will

be held at the Waugh M. E. Church..'!»! and A streets northeast, tomorrow

morning at 0:30 o'clock. Rev. K. C.I'owers will preach the sermon. Followingthe service a Thanksgivingbreakfast will be served in the diningroom of the church. At 10 o'clockWaugh Church will join the unionservice to be held at Metropolitan M.E. Church. Rev. F. M. McCoy is pastorof Waugh Church.

St. Paul'? South.Members of St. Paul Methodist Church

South, 2d and S streets northwest, willhold a musical and literary celebrationtomorrow night at 8 o'clock, followedby a reception.St. Paul will unite with the other

churches of Bloomingdale and Eckingtonin a Thanksgiving service at theLincoln Road Methodist EpiscopalChurch tomorrow at 10:30 a.m.At the evening celebration Clyde A.

Copson will give an exhibition of cartoondrawing. The Mothers' Club, ofwhich Mrs. B. E. Hair is president, willcontribute musical ana literary seiec-tions and receive after the entertainment.The following committeechairmen have the arrangements forthe evening in charge; Mrs. J. BensonHayes, Mrs. Hoy H. Wiseman; Mrs. B.H. Bair and Mrs. G. Ernest Waesche.

North Capitol.Rev. William Harris will preach the

sermon at services to be held at theNorth Capitol M. E. Church, K andNorth Capitol streets, tomorrow morningat 11 o'clock. A special offeringfor the Methodist Home of the Agedwill be taken.Several other Methodist churches

joined in union services with othercongregations, the programs of whichare noted elsewhere.

Foundry M. E.Rev. Wallace Mac-Mullen of Madison.

N. J., is to preach the sermon at servicesto be held tomorrow morning at11 o'clock at the Foundry M. E. Church.16th and Church streets northwest.Special music by the quartet of thechurch will be a feature.

<* *LUTHERAN. j

_ *St. Mark's.

"Our Heal Thanksgiving" is to be thesubject of the sermon of Rev. W. A.Wade at the services at St. Mark'sLutheran Church, 8th and B streetssouthwest, tomorrow morning at 10:30o'clock. Prayers for divine guidance inchurch and national affairs will be offered.as well as special prayers ofthanksgiving. The church choir, underthe leadership of George M. Leimbach,is to sing Come, Ye Thankful People,Come."

Concordia.Services at the Concordia German

Lutheran Church are to be conductedin German at 11 o'clock. The themeof Rev. Paul A. Menzel's sermon isto be "National Humiliation.NationalThanksgiving." Raphael Koester, theorganist, is to play several specialnumbers. Selections also will be givenby Miss Marie Menzel and Emil Menzelon violin and flute, respectively.

Zion.Rev. Richard Schmidt is to preach on

"Positive and Negative Reasons forGratitude to God" tomorrow at 10:30a.m. at Zion Lutheran Church. Mrs. F.Duxbury, organist, will be in charge ofthe musical program. Miss Elsie Werdigis to sing.

St. John's.Special services are to be conducted

by the choir at St. John's LutheranChurch at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning.Rev. Paul D. Leddln is to be incharge.

Epiphany.Rev. Dr. Charles F. Steck is to conductthe observance of Thanksgiving

day at Epiphany Lutheran Church tomorrowat 10:30 a.m. Appropriate anthemsare to be sung by the choir.

Church of the Atonement.The usual Thanksgiving exercises are

to be held at the Church of the Atonementtomorrow morning at 11 o'clock.The sermon, music and decorations willDe in narrnony with the occasion.Union Lutheran services are to be

held at St. Paul's English LutheranChurch, tomorrow at 11 a-m. Rev.Henry Anstadt, paetor of Luther MemorialChurch, Is to preach- Specialmusio will be given by the St. Paul'schoir, and Rev. John T. Huddle willpreside.<2 *

BAPTIST.& <»

Following' a custom of many years,union Thanksgiving services of thewhite Baptist churches of Washingtonare to be held at Calvary BaptistChurch, 8th and H streets northwest,at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. Rev.F. W. Johnson, pastor of Grace BaptistChurch, Is to deliver the sermon. Aspecial musical program is being arrangedby Louis A. Potter, jr.. organistat Calvary Baptist Church. Rev. SamuelH. Greene, pastor of the church, isto preside at the services if he Is physicallyable to do so. Rev. A. F. Andersonwill preside in event of Dr.Greene's absence.Members of the congregations of all

the Baptist churches, with but two exceptions,are expected to attend, accordingto the various Baptist pastors.Anacostia Baptist Church is to hold acommunity service in Anacostia, andthe Petworth Baptist Church is to participatein the community service inthe Wallace Memorial PresbyterianChurch in Petworth.The offering taken at the union servicewill, as usual, be turned over to the

Baptist Home for Aged Ladies. It isexpected that about 1,500 persona willattend the services.

Calvary.The usual Thanksgiving prayer meet-

ing at Calvary Baptist Church is to beheld at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening.Short testimonials by members of thecongregation are to be given.

Congress Heights.Members of the Congress Heights

Baptist Church are to participate Inthe Baptist union services at CalvaryBaptist Church tomorrow morning, andin addition union services with theCongress Heights M. E. Church are tobe held at 7:30 o'clock in the eveningat the Congress Heights BaptistChurch. Rev. A. T. Perkins, pastor ofthe M. E. Church, is to deliver the sermon,and Rev. E. E. Richardson of theBaptist Church is to preside.

Metropolitan.A "summarized praise servicers to be

held at Metropolitan Baptist Church,6th and A streets northeast, from 7 until8 o'clock tomorrow morning. Rev.John Coinpton Ball, pastor of thechurch, is to lead the service and makea short address. Following: l^a talkhalf-minute testimonials of thanksfrom members of the congr^gattionare to be given. The affair is to begiven under the auspices of the ChristianEndeavor Society of the church,and has been a feature at the churchfor the past eleven years. Members ofthe congregation will participate in theservices at Calvary Church in the forenoon.

Shiloh.Rev. J. Milton Waldron, pastor, is to

preach at Shiloh Baptist Church. 1630 Lstreet northwest, at the Thanksgivingservices beginning there at noon tomorrow.taking as his theme. »"Christian Optimism."Other numbers on the programare to be the reading of a Thanksgivingpoem by Miss .Josephine Carroll thereading of a Thanksgiving psalm by MissWillie A. Coleman and the reading of the!'resident's Thanksgiving proclamation byWilliam J. Scott. The church choir is togive a number of special selections, closingwith "America."

Zion.The fourteenth annual Thanksgiving

day dinner is to be held at the Zion BaptistChurch, F street between 3d and 4 Vnstreets southwest, beginning at 1 o'clocktomorrow afternoon. Inmates of the StoddardBaptist Home and of the governmenthome at Blue Plains will be thespecial guests, but all deserving noor ner-sons are invited to come to the affair.Preceding: the dinner there is to be aprayer meeting: and a sermon by Rev. W.J. Howard, pastor of the church. MissAlice Wayne is to be in charge of thedinner.

« .*MISCELLANEOUS.

>Universalist and Unitarian.

Union Thanksgiving day services by theChurch of Our Father, Universalist, andAll Souls' Church, Unitarian, are to beheld at 11 o'clock at the latter churcnbuilding, 14th and L. streets northwest.The sermon is to be given by Rev. JohnVan Schaick of the Church of Our Father.Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, pastor of AllSouls' Church, is to preside. A specialfeature of the service will be two vo vaIselections by Charles Trowbridge Tittman.

Christian Science."Thanksgiving" will be the subject of

the services in the Christian Sciencechurches at Columbia road and JSuviidstreet northwest, and at 15th and Rstreets northwest, tomorrow morning.William F. Campbell, first reader of theFirst church, will speak there, and WalterM. Hummer, first reader of the Secondchurch, will have charge of the servicesin his church. Mrs. Flora Reefer isto sing at the First Church, and Mrs.Ralph Barnard at the Second church.Following the talks In both churchesshort testimonials of thanks will be givenby the congregations.

New Church.Special musical numbers are to mark

the Thanksgiving services at the Churchof the New Jerusalem at 11 a.m. tomorrow.Rev. Paul Sperry is to take for hissubject "The Spirit of Thanksgiving."Musical selections will include the following:"Come, Ye Faithful People, Come,""O Lord of Heaven and earth and Sea.""O Con., How Manifold" and "Ein FesteBurg."

Congregational."Thanksgiving for Life's Inherited

Ideals" is the subject which Rev. ClarenceA. Vincent is to take for his sermonat Mount Pleasant CongregationalChurch tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock.The Mount Pleasant chorus is to singLord. How Manifold Are Thy Works.Rev. Dr. J. L. Gordon is to take forhis subject at the services at the FirstCongregational Church, tomorrow morningat 11 o'clock "The United StatesAmong the Nations of the Earth." Aspecial offering is to be made for thebenefit of Central Union Mission.Bruen Home, Friendship House andFlorence Crittenton Home. The musicalprogram is to include O God, Our Helpin Ages Past, The Heavens ^A.re Telling.O Lord, How Manifold Are Thy Worksand Fix'd in His Everlasting Seat.

Y. M. C. A. to Celebrate Quietly.Special services will not be held at

the Young Men's Christian Association,various workers there being scheduledto participate in the services in thechurches. A quiet "at home" for themembers of the association will be theorder of the day.

m n wiu iv uvuio vnornii

Your vacant house is costing you $25to $75 monthly all the time that it isvacant. A four-line Rent House ad inThe Star ^ill cost you $2.52 per week,and probably will secure you a tenant.

REPORT SALE SUCCEEDING.More Than $1,000 Expected in Benefitfor Home for Aged.More than $1,000 is expected to resultfrom the Christmas sale for the

benefit of the Presbyterian Home forthe Aged, 420 M street northwest, inthe ballroom of the Raleigh Hotel Mondayand yesterday.Those in charge of the sale, representinglocal Presbyterian churches,

include Mrs. A. R. Quaiffe, president ofthe board of managers of the home;Mrs. B. H. Warner, Mrs. Charles B.Bailey, vice presidents; Mrs. WilliamHenry White, recording secretary;Mrs. O. B. Brown, corresponding secretary;Mrs. M. J. Vaughan, treasurer;Mrs. M. R. Stetson. A. Graham, Mrs. A.McElroy, Mrs. G. F. Schutt, Mrs. I,.Smith. Mrs. M. Boal, Mrs. Harvey S.Irwin. Mrs. R. C. Williamson, Mrs.James Fisher, Mrs. M. A. Skinner, Mrs.Thomas Taylor, Mrs. John C. Palmerand Mrs. M. R. Kistler.

Miss Alice O. Dalger, sixty-six, committedsuicide by hanging herself inthe bedroom of her home in Baltimore,to which she had been confined byillness for several months.

Prescribed bv Dentists to beused with Sanitol LiquidAntiseptic in cases of Pyorrhoea.»

it'sWMteBu iwlfrfy4

LOVE AND LOYALTY ITOCOUNTRYURGED

Rev. L. J. O'Hern AddressesEmployes of the Government

Printing Office.

SERVICES AT LUNCH HOUR

"Love and loyalty.love of countryand loyalty to her every interest." was

defined as patriotism by Rev. Dr. LewisJ. O*Hern. C. S. P., of St. Paul s Col-lese. Catholic I'niversitv of America, inan address at the Thanksgiving exercisesat noon today at the governmentprinting office.The exercises were held on the

massive marble stairway of the bigprint shop and were attended by allthe employes, who munched theirlunches during the speeches and singingby the choir.As to this definition of patriotism the

speaker said further: "Love tender asthat of a son for his mother, 'strongas an army set in array'; loyalty, generousand disinterested, shrinkingfrom no sacrifice, seeking no rewardsave the nation's honor and the country'sgood."

Patriotism Binding Duty.Father O'Hern said it is not a matter

of mere sentiment, but a duty bindingin conscience, impelling to faithfulservice. "It is the very essence of unselfishness,for the patriot puts asidehis own interest when the welfare ofhis country Is at stake."The address was opened by the

speaker in congratulating the employesof the place on the magnificentobject lesson they were offering thecommunity of obedience to the voiceof "our chief executive" in assemblingthere today. "For it is in response tothe proclamation of his excellency, thePresident of the United States, thatyou are gathered here to render thanksto God for the manifold blessings receivedduring the past year, as individualsand as a nation," he said."And after all how fitting a thing, is itnot, that our President should setapart one day out of the three hundredand sixty-five on which to renderthanks to Him from whom all blessingsflow? And if so, should not eachone of us respond heartily to that ap-peal and cry out from the bottommostdepths of our hearts, with the royalpsalmist: 'What shall 1 render to theLord for all the things that He hathrendered unto me?' "

Continuing Father OTTern said: "Hehas given us all. What are we butmere beggars who have been clothedfrom His wardrobe, and fed from Histable? All we possess has come fromHim. The talents He has given us,the food we eat. the water we drink,the glad sunshine in which we bask,the pure air we breathe, the happinessand contentment that have come to usin life. They all belong to Him. Godhas lent them to us. How fitting thenthat we should return thanks for everyblessing, great or small.

Should Be Thankful for Peace."Last and greatest of all, we should

be thankful that we are at peace, inthe midst of a great world war. Thefirebrands of war are now upon theearth, spreading death and destructionas never before since brother firstlifted up his hand against brother.These burning brands have not yetreached our shores. God grant thatthey may not! God grant that Americamay yet be permitted to play therole of peacemaker, and that it may

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be said of us: 'Blessed are the peacemakers,for they shall be called thechildren of God.* "

Father O'Hern then spoke of the responsibilitiesresting? on each individualto help in the preservation ofthese blessings. "The duty rests uponeach individual." said he. "to help hiscountry by personal morality and patriotism."The address closed with an appeal

for righteousness in the lives of alltrue Americans as the only foundationof national stability.

Program of Music.Cornelius Ford, the public printer,

presided at the exercises. Mrs. DelphineW. Brown sang a solo; "Praise theLord, O My Soul," was sung by thegovernment printing office male chorus,and Maurice Fitzgerald sang a tenor

solo. "Praise Ye" was sung by the governmentprinting office male chorus, as

was "Praise God. From Whom All BlessingsFlow."The chorus, under the direction of

Benjamin A. kineback. with Mrs. I>elphineV»T. Brown as accompanist, wascomposed of Misses Kate M. Kills. k.Uansdell. M. Walsh. K C Morell. M.Geisenderfer. F. k. Miller. Bessie Sweet.M. K. Regan. K. Donneberg. KmmaGreen. M. J. Beach. G. Stevens. EvelynSims. Mrs. J. I,. Thornton and Mrs. <*. B.Hollinger. and the Messrs. M. Fitzgerald,J. L. Holland. C. W. Bridwell,k. B. Fete. C. <\ Covert. J. M. Montgomery.W. H. Parker. C. J. Brantley.J. H. Ingram. H. J. Redfteld. CyrusCook. C. W. Ruhl, W. K. Martin. W. J.Gouid, Li. C. Johnson. G. R. Merriam,G A I.nnir T. W Plnu-mrin T A

dleford, It. I). Morgan and J. H. Phillips.

mmWINLAUD SIMON WOLF

Praise Washingtonian at BanquetGiven in His Honorin New York.

PRESIDENT SENDS MESSAGE

NEW YORK, November 29..SimonWolf, one of the most prominent Jewsin the United States and a leading citizenof Washington, was honored herelast night at a dinner given at theHotel Savoy in celebration of his eightiethbirthday anniversary by the HebrewSheltering and Immigrant Sopipf v of" *i" Vi 11*Vi A y V\ .. y U wi " ' k *'

Abram .Simon of Washington and othersspoke in high tribute of Mr. Wolf forhis services to Jews and to the UnitedStates. Mr. Wolf was characterized as"the leader of American Jewry"; PresidentWilson and Col. Roosevelt senthim telegrams of congratulation, andMr. Wolf was presented with a Bibletrimmed in gold and silver.Among those invited to the banquet

in honor of Mr. Wolf, who has beenfor many years Washington representativeof the Sheltering and ImmigrantSociety, were James Speyer.Adolph S. Ochs, Oscar S. Straus, JacobH. Rchiff. Samuel I'ntermeyer. HenryA. I)ix, Samuel Koenig, Herman Bornstein,Irving. Lehman, justice of thesupreme court of New York city: JudgeOtto A. Rosalsky, Judge Julius M.Mayer, Borough President Marcus M.Marks, Dr. J. Lee Magnes, Rabbi EdwardN. Galisli. Charles Shol andothers.

Mr. Wolf was alluded to as "thesavior of the Jewish immigrant."speakers declaring that during hisj'ears of service he had saved 100,000Jews from being deported from the

SjI^|i11I-1

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United States and returned to the landof their birth.

Mr. Wolf's Address.In his address Mr. Wolf said, in part:

"Prejudice still exists, it is true, hutas President Wilson in my year bookso truthfully said. 'Prejudice is provincial:truth and justice go hand in handin this blessed country.* So. while hereand there the flickering light of themedieval lamp tries to ignite into ahigher flame differences of faith or politicsor nationalities, we can be perfectlyconfident that, as the years goon. the evolution of science and thespirit of international commerce willbring- about the solution of all ourproblems, and hand in hand with eachother, striving; for a common goal, wewill illustrate to the world that therecognition of all men on a basis ofequality is the only form of governmeritthat should he permitted to exist."We do not fully appreciate the opportunitiesthis great republic offers.

not b* cause we are .feu s or Christians.hut because we are Americans whohave been inspired by the loftiest conceptionsof duty, and thus men of ourfaith, as Americans, have been in theforefront in every walk of civic life."It would be 'carrying: coal to Newcastle'to recount the names of the

men and women who have glorified thenation by virtue of their work, their

I intellectual and moral merit, and who

Island today among the foremost in theWalhalla of America's great men andwomen, and nearly all of them areeither {migrants direct or the descendantsof such.

Tribute to Worth Generous."No class of aliens who by force of

circumstances, or voluntary, have made'his country their home, have assimijlated uoirker or grasped the opportunitieswith more anil alacrity[than the Jew. and from all parts ofthe country there com**1* the welcoming(appreciation of genet ous tribute t«»their worth, then loyalty and theirpatriotism."Much has been said because one or

the other have been im miters of the cabinet.judges of the federal, state and localcourts; ambassadors and ministers;attorney generals, and mayors; worldfamous philanthropists, whose liberalbounty has reflected honor and creditnot only upon the individual, the faith,hut upon humanity itself; and last,though not least, in the Supreme Court,the last judicial resort of our great nation.But to mo these are hut thenatural result for work well done, fnrclean and unsullied lives, and unlesssome unforeseen accident or terribleaffliction brings me to the final arbiterof all lives. I should not be surprised topee an American cinsen 01 uewisii

faith occupy the White House."If. as history shows, we were kings

in the early days of our history, givingphilosophers and poets, warriors, scholarsand scientists under adverse conditions.there is no reason in the worldwhy in this great republic we shouldnot finally reach the highest point oftrue republican and democratic ambition.and this dream, not of theghetto, but thhe dream of tHe optimist,may sooner or later be made into a

living reality."

SMALL FIRES OF ONE NIGHT.

Damage From Three Blazes LittleOver $350.

A man in charge of a bread wagon thismorning about 2 :3n o'clock stopped ltifront of the store of Otto Botsch. 501 4thstreet southeast, to deliver bread and discovereda fire in the store. He arousedmembers of the grocer's family and thenhurried across the street to the fifthprecinct police station and sent in an

alarm of fire. The fire was of unknownorigin, and the damage amounted to $200.The loss Is covered by insurance.Fire in the chimney at the residence of

John H. Gould. .">.'{3 20th street, yesterdayafternoon about 5 o'clock claimed the atit.ention of several companies of firemen.The house and contents were damaged tothe amount of $15o.No. 15 engine company yesterday afternoonextinguished a small fire in a s'i©d

on the premises of Harry S. I >ean. 13:19T street southeast. Tim fire was causedby burning grass. Slight damage wasdone.

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