P'JSCidGS:hbeILtcHu. | r;Seeks Out Little Church. £It was on one of those hot July dayswhen tne - mercury had gone on an airplane excurjion that I -sought out the little Greek church on North \Vc3t ' street, across from one corner of the Military . park. The artist came too, with an interpreter;, for, notwithstanding he had learned to speak Greek, r g ^‘j Roumanian and Turkish, besides* his t' ‘ ~ ” ‘ “ rav-iy01U3.jne 1 native tongue, Bulg.irkun he has a r” .! funny notion that 4! is too advanced,uri-s. ofjirn-n-v-an age to learn English. The interpreter i wits eg accommodating and, withal, so Intelligent that I am going to give his name, at the risk of tripping up the printers -with it- Dime Btoiano-vich. if was, who oid my English into Bulgarian for Mr. Stoycheff and ga/e his replies hack to me ii very good ad j English. Aud not only «n hi3 spoken ig. English, bat in the careful manner in ds^hich-hc-cpelled.. ouL_tiie__natiies_ and dr. addresses and telephone numbers with he I my lead pencil, he put to shame our I own people with *heir careies3 nand-of j writing. The spirit of American patriotic | i2m evidenced by bothr foreigners waa in | delightful. And Mr. Stoianovich cx-nd [ pressed hla appreciation of the interes*; he j taken in the Foreigner's house by Jn • he | diaiiaDotis women* among tnem my j Irvington neighbor, Mrs, Demarchu:i • ted Brown.St Trias, the Greek Orthodox church whose interior h.-is been decorated by Mr. * StoychefT, is built with a square room, in the front ,of which a rood screen reaches from wall to wall, shutting off the sanctuary and the altar, •while the cack has a small balcony extending lom side to side. The celling arches gradually to meet the side walls,, and it 'would seem that every square inch of plaster has been covered with pictures.6yiyhe ist .u • in h-i ib-;ed