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$047,000 S NEEDED IN CHEST CAMPAIGN Fate of City’s Needy Hangs on Success or Failure of Final Drive. (Continued From Pirst Page.) devised for welfare and relief organ- izations, they said. Bishop McDowell urged that every man and woman in Washington take an inventory today of his or her own obligations to the community and in- crease his or her pledge. “There are many who have given,” he said, “who could give twice as much. There are others who could add a penny a day to their pledges. Your own conscience and your love of your fellow man must make you decide whether or not you will make the last supreme effort for the sake of those who depend upon you for their very bread.” Tumulty Joins Appeal. In the fourth and last “Community Chest Party of the Air,” conducted by Joseph D. “Radio Joe” Kaufman, chair- man of the Chest’s Publicity Commit- tee, on Station WMAL from 7:30 until 8 oclock last night, Mr, Tumulty made an appeal that Washingtonians swaken in these last few hours of the campaign, show their love for their fellow man and banish sel ess from the Nation's Capital. As master of ceremonies, Mr. Kauf- man introduced Bob Hall, rapid-fire rhymester, now appearing at the Earle Theater, who made an appeal for the Chest, and added an appeal himself, saying: “Qur welfare agencies are at the end of their resources if the Community Chest fails them now. It isn't what we would like to do that is the question now, but what we must do. You wouldn't like to be hungry and cold. (BLACK TOM PROBE - RIGHT ATTACKED German Attorneys Hold Ex- plosion Claims Case Had Been Concluded. 1 By the Associated Press. An attack on the right of the German- American Mixed Claims Commission to reopen the Black Tom and Kingsland cases, on the ground they already had been concluded, was made by German | attorneys today at the final hearing of ! the commission. ‘The cases involved the destruction of the Black Tom terminal of the Lehigh Valley Railroad in New York harbor and the Kingsland, N. J., munitions |plnnt just before the United States entered the World War. The commis- | sion two years ago decided in favor of Germany on the claims against her aggregating $40,000,000. The cases were reopened on the piea of American at- torneys that they had more conclusive new evidence to offer in support of the contention German agents were respon- sible for the destruction of the plants. Wilhelm Tannenberg, German agent, challenged the authenticity of a series of alleged secret spy messages submit- ted by the United States in an effort to prove German complicity. He cited an opinion of his govern- ment that the agreement of August 10, 1922, establishing the commission lim- ited the commission’s authority to re- hear- cases. The documents submitted by the United States have been with a view to proving that Michael Kristoff, claimed by the United States to be re- sponsible for the Black Tom destruc- tion, was a German agent; and to dis- credit previous testimony of Theodore Wozniak, at whose bench the Kings- land fire started. The controversy over Wozniak's tes- timony centered around his statement You would want somebody to help you out. So lets get behind this campaign in its closing hours and put it over. ©Our neighbors are depending on us.” $1,572,705.56 Pledged. subscriptions reported yesterday, bringing the total of the campaign to date to $1,572,705.56, left just 128 black on the welfare and relief calendar d. Chairman Noyes this morn- called for every man oOr woman 0 has taken part in the campaign attend the meeting tonight at Ward- man Park Hotel, and urged those work- who have completed their task, to ive early and turn over their reports the Auditing Committee, that cam- ign officiais may know as soon as ‘what Washington's verdict has Those who will not have completed their work by the time the final meet- Among gifts of $1 were: Twelve thousand five hundred dol- , Mary mous; $520, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney L. Hechinger; $500, Mrs. Eleanor M. Tal- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Sundlum, ‘William F. R. Hitt, Willard Hotel, Harry G. Meem, Col. and Mrs. Wrisley Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Page Hufty and James C. McReynolds. Four hundred dollars, James Sharp 3 Mrs. Clarence A. Aspin- George E. R. Hitt, Mr. and Mrs. William L. Universalist National Memo- rial Church, Hotel Continental, G. W. Fosberg, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Arshton, Fort Myer; Benjamin N. Cardozo, Mr. 4nd Mrs. Charles M. Thomas, F. Trubee Davison, Mrs. H. A. Sellhouser, George ¥. Walker, Inc, and Lucia Beverley Hollerith, $240, McCambridge & Mc- Cambridge and Dr. Wirfleld Richmond. ‘Two_hundred dollars, T. H. Kearney, H. G. Taylor, Mrs. Annie F. Farby, the Stockett-Fiske Co., Inc; Mrs. G. K. Richards, Phillipsborn & Co., Saks Fur Co., Jack Shulman, Mrs. Gibson Fah- nestock, Mrs. Archibald Hopkins, Mrs. James W. Wadsworth, Col. and Mrs. Paul Henderson, Rudolph & West Co., Mrs, H. J. Allen, A. G. Pratt, Geoghe- gan, Thomas Denton and Ellen Spof- ford, Willlam King & Sons, Miss Mary G. Riley, Mr. and Mys. C. D. Drayton, Very Rev. and Mrs. G. C. F. Bratenahl, Elizabeth Wilson, Mr, and Mrs. Reeve Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Fair- fax, W. R. Winslow, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- lam A. Slade, Mrs. Maud F. Gibbs and William H. Donovan; $180, George Van Horn Moseley. One hundred fifty dollars, Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Wilson, Sidney H. Rel- menstein, Thurston Hughes, William A. Taylor, Dr. William A. White, St. Rose’s Technical School, Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Macatee, Kempton Cadillac Corpora-| tion, Rev. and Mrs. F. Bland Tucker, Mrs, Christian Sommerville and Ed- ward F. Don, jr.: $125, Dr. and Mrs., Frederick W. Perkins, Washington Rapid Transit Co., Mrs. R. V. Eccleston, E. D. Merrill, Emile, Inc.; Barry-Pate Motor Co., Inc.; Albert Sigmund, Federal Services Finance Corporation, H. W. Kearney, wife and sister and C. E Waters; $120, L. W. Gillette, W. C. Kendall, National Laundry Co, Mr. and Mrs. John S. Barbour, M. E. Swing, H. S. Cummings and G. T. Dunlop; 811050, F. E. Wright; $110, Saul; $109.50, Hariet O. Johnson and N. D. Conner; $108, St. Vincent’s Home and School. One hundred dollars, Mr. and Mrs. Mamilton Pish Kean, H. P. Somerville, Arthur A. Ballantine, Mrs. Martin B. Madden, F. V. Killian, Miss I. C. Wells, Col. and Mrs. C. D. Herron, Capt. E. H. Van Patten, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Sternhagen, F. S. Holbrook, Lieut. Col. C. M. Wesson, Chauncey G. Parker, John Jay Hopkins, Lieut. Col. G. L. Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. William D. Mitchell, Arthur M. Hyde, William J. Flather, George C. Pumphrey, Koss . Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Scott, 2d; Edwad L. Hillyer, Standard Brands, Inc.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward N. PFin- kelhar, G. F. Seitz, W. N. Freeman, Clark G. Diamond, John B. Clark, T. Gibbons, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Gormley, Miss Anna Blouvelet, Nannie Belle Maury, Mrs. Rose Saul Montgom- y, Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Morris, Gen, and Mrs. Harts, Central Auto Judge Daniel W. O'Donoghue, 3 ers, Mrs. McCook Knox, ohnson, Col. and Mrs. Wil- bert, Standard Engineering & Risher, Inc.; Japanese Em- George C. Shaffer, John Korman, ittl, Dows, ~ L i wf H 5 o> ¥. G § 9 also 5 | fcan " | cone Mr.| whim took that turn, the United Hat- .| couldn’t settle all by themselves. he was in the Adirondack Mountains at the time he was alleged by the United States to have written letters from St. Louis and Mexico City. ' . HELP TO CHINA SEEN UNDER ROOSEVELT Judge Paul Linebarger Says New President Will Work for Good of Both Nations. Belief that Franklin D. Roosevelt as President will provide leadership in movements designed to be of mutual benefit to the American and to thej Chinese people in improvement of eco- nomic conditions is held by Judge Paul Linebarger the legal adviser to the Nationsl goverrment of China at Nanking. “The fact that our President-elect does not claim to be an internationalist will make his usefulness in this new fleld particularly valuable, for he will approach ach problem from the broad American neutral viewpoint,” Judge Linebarger declared today. In discussing the matter Monday night at a meeting here of the Academy of World Econcmics, the legal adviser to the Chines: National government predicted the Roosevelt administration wou'd take early action in Far Eastern mattrs. President Roosevelt, in the opinion of Judge Linebarger, will survey Amer- jcan problems not only at home, but as they are associated with Amer- markets generally in their overseas cept. g, e'penm labor in mechanized Amer- ica, cannot survive unless it has an outlet to the markets of China, for China comprises one-fourth of the pop- ulation of the whole globe,” Judge Line- barger declared. “I am sure tl;tuthehl’ruibo dbeynt-elect will protect Ams n r open- ing the door again in unmechanized China. Abolish the unequal treaties and China will be in a position to advance American labor interests on the Pacific. “In China, we believe that the Presi- dent-elect will pull both China and America out of the bog at the same time; for Chinese trade means Amer- ican prosperity, and Chinese freedom will bring a golden age to America.” Judg> Linebarger, although an Ameri- can citizen, has been associated with Chinese affairs for a quarter century, having aided Dr. Sun Yat Sen, as legal advisor, during the overthrow of the old dynastic system in China. The legal advisor to the Chinese Na- tional Government is in Washington on a mission from Nanking. (. A R R, GYPSIES CAMP IN SNOW 14 in Michigan Await Birth Rul- ing to Enter Canada. SAULT STE. MARIE, Ontario, No- vember 23 (#).—Fourteen gypsies, claiming they were en route from Win- nipeg to Toronto, are reported en- campzd in tents set up among snow- | drifts in a tourist camp at Sault Ste. | Marie, Mich.,, awaiting decision of | Canadian immigration _authorities | whether the gypsies’ children were born in Canada. The band, sald to number about 25, including the children, claim _ they | entered the United States at Noyes, Minn., October 15, and reached here in cars. £ A 60-day toruist permit will expire the middle of next month. “Little Felt Hats” Create Dispute in A. F. of L. Meeting When Milady Discarded Flowery Style She Started Trouble. By the Associated Press. CINCINNATI, Ohio, November 23— When milady discarded her “picture” hat and went for cute styles in felts she handed the American Federation of Labor a problem that hasn't been settled yet. “And that” commented President William Green as differences between two York union groups were aired at the federation’s convention today, “was eight years ago, or more.” The dispute is over the manufactur: ing jurisdiction in that lately lucrative field of tricky felt hats. “Felt hats,” chorused members ol the United Hatters of North America, "‘comu under the head of our business.” “Not,” reported the Cloth Hat, Cap ,and Millinery Workers of the Inter- | national Union, “if we can help it. The Jjob is ours.” It seems, the president explained, that women were liking their hats “big and flowery, until several years ago.” It seems, that as long as woman's ters and the Cloth Hat, Cap and Mil- linery Workers had no differences they “But then,” Green caid, “the women | staried taking to these little felt hats™— THE EVE NG STAR,. WASHINGTO. D. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1932. REPORT OF THE COMMUNITY CHEST CAMPAIGN Including Number of Subscribers, Amount Subscribed and Per Cent of Quota Secured to 12:30 P.M., November 22 Clarence A. Aspinwall, Chairman. Under Each Unit. | te. | % o Givers.| Amount. [Quota. See Below. TETET [ E T., Chairman. ‘Total s, 457,547 127 12,852 459 $719,778 | 13,311 | $257,008.27 351,489.98 $608,498.25 79.78 76.64 | 78.03 Groap Solicitation Unit. | Areas B. Wilson, | Special Gifts : Total $270," 329, 1736 | 28,141 245 | 155 $236,361.38 297,827.39 \".ZI 90.46 AREA IV—Chairman, Archie K. Shipe. Team 411—Co-captains, F. M. W. Lee and P. Team 412—Co-captains, J. M. 174 Amount Pledged. $856.25 1,370.10 3222635 ta. 812.60 1,579.24 $2,391.84 Division 2—Co-Chairmen, Miss L. Burkiin and Mrs. J. P. S. Neligh. Team 421—Co-captains, Mrs. W. S. Davis and Miss L. Barghausen... Team 422—Captain, A. W. Boehringer Team 423—Captain, Mrs. E. Hough... $599.f 981 | 28,296 | $534,188.77 89.03 Governmental Unit. ‘Thomas E. Campbell, Chairman. ‘Total Divisions | Special Gifts| $966,408 I 39,599 | 56,074 29 $373,757.60 37,499.60 31.022.“2' 39,628 $411,257.20 38.67 66.87 40.22 - Schools Unit. Harold G. Moulton, ‘Total Chairman. ‘17,550‘ [ 209 | | $7,408.15 :7 4221 Grand Total SPECIAL GIFT UNIT. C. A. ASPINWALL, Chairman. Committee. Al—Coleman Jennings, chairman . A2—Mrs, C. C. Glover, jr,, chairman. A3—Mrs, Chas. A. Goldsmith, chairman A4—George Hewitt Myers, chairman... A6—Charles C. Morgan, chairman.. A8—Mrs, William J. Flather, chairman A10—C. A. Aspinwall, chairman Undistributed Quota... Total ..uviivenensannnisnnieanannns No. Pledges. 106 8 13 89 90 120 47 Amount Pledged. $120,118.50 49,334.75 76,050.45 123,099.15 65,870.43 135,905.45 116,438.2¢ Quota. $131,253.41 67,425.01 88,637.52 146,251.84 85,380.82 157.542.27 161,750.54 4,625.00 [$2,419,787 | 81,534 | $1,561,352.37 | 64.52 % of Quota. 91.51 73.17 85.80 84.14 7114 86.26 643 $686,816.97 METROPOLITAN UNIT. H. L. RUST, JR., Chairman. AREA I—Chairman, J. B. Wyckoff. Division 1—Chairman, J. 8. Gorrell. Team 111—Captain, I. B. Nordlinger. Team 112—Captain, E. Pardoe. Team 113—Captain, Miss E. Mac! . Team 114—Captain, Mrs. L. P. Shippen.. Team 115—Captain, J. Leo Kolb, jr..... Team 116—Captain, Mrs. R. V. Russell Team 117—Captain, Col. W. R. Pick Team 118—Captain, L. Jordan.... Total, Division 1.......ccceuveenane No. Pledges. Amount Pledged. $1,315.20 1,523.20 3,601.00 4,605.70 1,134.30 1,321.90 1,230.60 420.00 $842,866.41 Quota. $2,865.00 1,562.00 2,582.00 3,328.85 1,797.00 1,248.05 1,016.00 500.00 Quota. 4591 97.52 139.47 138.36 63.12 105.91 122.33 84.00 626 Division 2—Chairman, C. Chester Caywood. Team 121—Captain, Mrs. J. H. Davis.... Team 122—Captain, Mrs. F. J. Freeland. Team 123—Captain, Miss B. Marsh . Team 124—Co-captains, Dr. C. M. lun and R. R. Erway. . Team 125—Captain, W. D. Harris. . ‘Total, Division 2 30 16 61 129 57 $15,151.90 $1,018.70 2,013.60 1,646.00 2,441.40 779.80 $14,898.90 $1,605.00 1,443.05 1,062.00 1,486.61 1,428.00 101.70 63.47 139.53 154.99 164.23 54.61 353 $7,899.50 Division 3—Chairman, Major Charles Demonet. Team 131—Captain, J. R. McAndrews... Team 132—Captain, P. Cranford.. . Team 133—Captain, Mrs. C. G. Lee, jr... Team 134—Captain, : Team 135—Captain, : Team 136—Captain, Team 137—Captain, ‘Total, Division 3......c0ciiievnnnans 34 kid 166 93 70 204 41 685 Division 4—Chairman, Mrs. Donnel Hewett. Team 141—Captain, Mrs. A. Kahn...... Team 142—Captain, J. R. McAndrews.. Team 143—Captain, Mrs. T. E. Robertson Team 144—Captain, Mrs. F. Kerby, . Team 145—Captain, R. C. Bowker, . Team 146—Co-captains, H. Friedman, T. E. Lodge.. Total, Division 4. . . Division 5—Chairman, E. M. Graham. Team 151—Captain, Mrs. H. Hull . Team 152—Captain, Mrs. C,/W. Hayes.. Team 153—Captain, Mrs. C. B. McVay, 3d Team 154—Co-captains, Mrs. C. C. Moore and Mrs. W. H. Bayly..... ‘Total, Division 6.......... 95 143 63 169 % 12 760 $565.25 2,078.85 5,541.81 6,116.81 1,850.75 5,611.00 1,356.25 $23,120.72 $2,012.20 2,265.85 1,031.66 3,725.69 1,264.60 463.25 $10,763.25 $8,581.45 1,531.00 6,576.30 2,936.35 $25,625.10 Division 6—Co-Chairmen, Mrs. Charles P. Stone and Max Team 161—Captain, Miss F. McKenney. Team 162—Captain, Mrs. J. H. Franklin Team 163—Captain, E. C. Parker....... Team 164—Captain, Mrs. Adolph Wey! ‘Total, Division 6.......« 359 274 87 208 $10,091.92 8,047.95 2,544.00 9,698.85 $7,024.66 $643.33 2,474.83 3,112.28 4,993.50 1,543.00 2,828.00 665.00 $16,259.91 $2,001.50 1,495.25 1,168.50 1,752.07 823.00 678.00 $7,918.32 $9,394.00 6,717.10 1,712.00 4,521.00 $28,344.10 Weyl $10,948.78 9,877.50 2,074.00 9,154.00 112.45 87.86 84.00 178.06 122.50 119.94 198.41 203.95 142.19 100.53 151.54 88.29 212.65 153.66 68.33 135.93 91.35 11212 85.27 64.95 90.41 92.17 8148 122,66 105.95 1,018 Division 7—Chairman, Bowdoin Craighill. Team 171—OCaptain, G. L. Hall Team 172—Captain, Geoffrey Creyke, Team 173—Captain, C. L. Alello.. Team 175—Captain, H. W. Walker.. Total, Division T.eeeveereneccnnnans Total, Area I......cecevvenenannas AREA II—Chairman, Frank A. Birgfeld. 319 $30,382.72 $7,158.56 7,090.80 944.65 3,034.85 1,032.20 $32,054.28 $16,514.22 7,7117.53 1,239.50 4,22250 1,221.66 94.79 4335 91.88 76.21 71.87 8449 4,884 Division 1—Chairman, Mrs. J. V. Brownell. Team 211—Captain, Mrs. L. Olree...... Team 212—Captain, Mrs. A. S. Wolfe. Team 213—Captain, E. H. Pullman.... Team 214—Captain, Miss A. Payne. Total, Division 1............ $19,261.06 $132,204.25 $1,978.82 1,084.90 899.05 1,813.59 $30,915.41 62.30 $137,415.58 $1,337.50 888.00 778.00 1,416.00 Division 2—Chairman, William C. Hanson. Team 221—Captain, Maj. H. L. Gessford. Team 222—Captain, S. Melnicove. Team 223—Captain, W. F. Stickle. Team 224—Captain, M. L. Arnold. Team 225—Captain, R. E. Gable.. ‘Total, Division 2 Division 3—Chairma; Team 231—Captain, Team 232—Captain, Team 234—Captain, Team 235—Captain, Team 236—Captain, ‘Team 237—Captain, ‘Team 238—Captain, ‘Total, Division 3 Division 4—Chairman, F. E. Rogers. Team 241—Captain, C. Krey. Team 242—Captain, R. M. Mayhew. Team 243—Captain, Mrs. D. G. Sale.... Team 244—Captain, W. F. Studdiford.. Team 245—Captain, Dr. R. B. Hutchinson Maurice Mases Miss N. Lake. M. Maser.... A. O'Dwyer.. J. H. Lawson. ‘Total, Division 4.....c00eeeaeancass Total for Area II.....cceeeeeveenes 128 $5,776.36 $3,463.55 241.65 1,996.45 394.50 42445 520,60 $2,234.50- 2,014.10 738.80 559.30 3,028.58 2,830.50 1,925.85 $4,419.50 $3,108.00 1,437.00 1,359.43 1,857.50 704.50 $8,466.43 $2.620.00 1,927.50 878.00 1,051.50 2,508.00 2,658.00 2,508.00 148 115 104 310 406 1,083 2,540 AREA ITII—Chairman, Thomas J. Groom. Division 1—Chairman, Carroll A. Warthen. Team 311—Captain, Dr. J. F. Manley... ‘Team 312—Captain, J. M. Stockard. Team 313—Captain, W. H. Luers. Team 314—Captain, F. A. Rapp Total, Division 1.. Division 2—Chairman, Louis B. Arnold. Team 321—Captain, W. B. Putnam. Team 322—Captain, G. Hayes......... Team 323—Captain, Mrs, V. P. Simmons Team 324—Captain, T. Keane.......... Total, Division 2.......cccvveennns Division' 3—Chairman, George J. Cleary. Team 331—Captain, 8. Lichtenberg. Team 332—Captain, W. J. Toomey Team 333—Captain, D. A. Fulton. Team 334—Captain, J. McCarthy. Teamn 335—Captain, J. A. Farrell. ‘Total, Division 3 Division 4—Chairman, Edmund O. Carl. Team 341—Captain, E. C. Wilson....... and there the difficulties started. . Robert Chew, Georg> L. . Samuels, Paul Sleman, Pcace was in sight today, however. The groups agreed to have their Team 342—Captain, Mrs. G. F. Stringer. Team 343—Captain, G. Gude. 4 55 11 29 $13,340.63 $1,947.15 1,872.40 1,675.65 3,400.25 7,899.55 $16,795.00 $42,432.59 $50.00 575.35 242.00 432,50 $15,357.35 $2,704.00 1,055.00 10,644.33 4,569.50 9,103.00 $28,075.83 $56,319.11 $427.00 870.00 892.60 872.60 102 $1,299.85 $1,370.15 1,204.07 1,312.70 663.00 $3,062.20 $1,045.50 1,288.00 656.00 500.00 $4,639.92 $937.65 1,162.75 251.65 355.10 167.55 $2,874.70 $2,599.00 5,218.50 4,309.18 $3,489.50 $2,099.00 2,114.25 597.50 797.00 305.00 $6,420.75 $4,001.00 8,526.00 2,689.00 Team 424—Captain, Mrs. W. Krechting. Team 425—Captain, Miss L. B. Willis... ‘Total, Division 2.. 239 $3,115.04 1,709.68 897.10 1,003.00 315.55 $4,547.55 2,349.39 1,339.00 553.00 182.00 % of jota. 105.37 86.76 93.08 68.50 72.11 67.00 181.37 173.38 Division 3—Chairman, John W. Hardell Team 431—Captain, Mrs. H. Jaffe...... Team 432—Captain, Mrs. E. A. Cafritz Team 433—Captain, Mrs. H. Roller.... Team 434—Co-captains, G. Harris and William M. Aitchison ‘Total, Division 3. Total for Area IV ... Adjustment of Metropolita: REGION II—Dr. Kelly Miller. . SCHOOLS UNIT. DR. HAROLD G. MOULTON, No. Pledges. $7,040.37 $8,366.94 11,939.20 12,819.80 5,502.77 $8,970.94 $12,436.33 17,730.00 16,578.65 11,602.25 78.48 67.28 67.34 7733 4743 1642 $38,628.71 $58,347.23 6620 2.330. Unit Quota. 1,722 299 $9,657.15 Amount $7,408.15 GOVERNMENTAL UNIT, THOMAS E. CAMPBELL, Chairman. Division. No. Department. 500—Department of Agriculture.. 501—Department of Commerce. 502—Department of the Interior 503—Department of Justice...... 504—Department of Labor. 505—Department of the Navy 506—Washington Navy Yard . 507—Post Office Department. .. 508—Department of State.. 509—Department of the Treasury... 510—Department of War.... 511—General Accounting Office. 512—Advisory Committee for Aeronautics 513—Allen Property Custodian.. 515—Commission of Fine Arts.. 516—Am. Battle Monuments Commission 517—Botanic Gardens... . 518—Bureau of the Budget 519—Public Buildings and Parks. 520—Civil Service Commission.... 521—Employes’ Compensation Commission 522—U. 8. Bureau of Efficlency. . 523—Federal Farm Board. 524—Federal Home Loan Bank Board... 525—Interndtional Boundary Commission 527—Interstate Commerce Commission.. 528—Library of Congress... 529—U. 8. Board of Mediation 531—The Panama Canal. 532—Pan American Union . 533—Federal Power Commission 534—Government Printing Office. 535—Federal Radio Commission.. 536—U. 8. Railroad Administration. 537—Reconstruction Finance Corporatipn 538—Federal Reserve Board.. 539—U. 8. Shipping Board. 540—Smithsonian Institution . 542—U. S. Tariff Commission. . 543—U. 8. Board of Tax Appeals. 544—Federal Trade Commission. 546—U. 8. Veterans' Administration... 547—Fed'r'] Board of Vocational Education 549—White House.,... 550—District of Columbi 551—U. 8. Attorney’s Office. .. 552—Court of Claims of the U. 8. 554—U. 8. Marshal's Office. 555—Supreme Court of D. C 557—Court of Appeals, D. C.. No. Amount $47,805.43 Chairman. Pledged. $69,710.01 $8,720.00 $10,467.40 Quota. $17,550.00 Pledges. Pledged. Quota. 2,407 1,982 1,158 353 1 1,320 2,048 1,838 638 8772 2,309 1,305 44 120 3,034 48 42 4,113 30 31 86 28 21 $24,361.26 22,857.91 11,407.99 4,209.92 6,080.11 15,039.63 12,245.47 14,666.85 8,686.42 74,568.99 25,248.23 11,707.33 77094 2,195.16 29.00 74.00 136.75 510.45 5,056.52 3,938.24 1,336.55 498.80 1,249.84 724.10 228.00 14,940.66 331585 207.54 709.49 1,045.90 1,238.25 12,312.37 776.70 342,00 3,687.90 2,495.05 3,863.12 1,575.93 3,157.95 1,609.70 2,395.04 24,872.02 990.18 861.15 43,785.59 196.00 33610 513.90 388.75 312,00 $79,520.00 72,226.00 33,330.00 15,988.00 9,760.00 51,442.00 49,488.00 45,225.00 11,289.00 155,062.00 62,128.00 23,680.00 583.00 2,424.00 20.00 74.00 413.00 1,358.00 14,265.00 4,416.00 1,527.00 1,240.00 4,021.00 1,525.00 218.00 26,800.00 8,436.00 1,232.00 1,078.00 1,300.00 1,813.00 54,101.00 2,632.00 342,00 11,149.00 4,150.00 8,765.00 4,826.00 6,035.00 68.71 9226 % of Quota. The number of families aided through S eneral relief and special allowances 55.75 39.31 16.85 65.82 80.45 68.30 2276 29.51 100.00 33.08 59.99 44.07 32.65 52.33 3,741.00 43.03 8,138.00 75,335.00 2,441.00 802.00 112,869.00 655.00 1,348.00 817.00 550.00 442.00 2043 33.01 40.56 107.38 38.79 29.92 2493 62.90 70.68 70.59 ter . . 39,699 $373,757.60 $986,981.00 Adjustment of Governmental Unit Quota . i GROUP SOLICITATION UNIT. LLOYD B. WILSON, Chairman. AREA I—S. Percy Thompson, Chairman. Section Chiefs: 1001—D. McKinstray. 1002—C. H. Pardoe. . 1003—Grant Leet .. 1004—Howard J. Jackson 1005—A. E. F. Horn... 1008—Thomas Eagan.. 1009—A. P. Reeves.. 1010—Robert Dougan. ‘Total for Area I.... AREA II—Ben T. Webster, Chairman. Section Chiefs: 2001—Charles W. Clayton. 2002—Charles A. Goldsmith. 2003—R. Kelvin Shivers. 2004- -Herman F. Carl. 2005—Louis J. Grayson 2006—Russell P. Freeman 2007—David 8. Bethune. 2008—Donald L. Luxford 2009—Arthur C. Smith.... 2010—Reginald H. Pledger. 2011—C. W. Handley ‘Total for Area II No. Pledges. 218 282 343 326 276 769 519 140 38 1,158 Amount $2,163.50 2,538.92 3,201.27 2,648.93 2,525.37 7,868.05 6,352.12 1,493.50 214.75 5,768.00 $1,550.00 Pledged. Quota. $3,202.22 1,684.36 4,459.72 2,947.83 3,242.86 6,641.20 3,458.51 3,215.94 538.55 8,636.49 37.87 % of Quota. 87.55 150.68 TL78 89.86 .87 118.47 183.95 46.44 39.87 66.78 4,069 96 754 124 418 122 405 181 366 195 87 243 $34,784.41 $648.25 6,922.01 2,640.35 2,762.30 704.75 1,401.55 2,361.30 5,746.66 2,072.68 4,070.45 1,854.55 $38,027.68 $1,935.87 6,445.47 5,072.11 4,039.79 1,005.69 1,428.04 2,955.711 4,045.12 1,969.70 2,445.15 2,513.80 91.47 3348 107.39 52.05 €8.38 70.08 98.08 79.88 142.03 105.23 166.47 73.77 4,201 AREA III—William W. Everett, Chairman. Section Chiefs: 3001—Lee Eynon.. . 3002—W. S. Pratt, jr 3003—W. N. Freeman. 3004—H. J. Rich.. 3005—Harry Blak 3007—S. H. Talkes. 3008—C. H. Frame.. 3009—Sidney Hechinger. 3010—F. M. Fadeley. 3011—O. T. Wright. 3012—William E. Russell 3013—J. E. Anderson .. 3014—Dr. G. E. McCann... Total for Area III.. 463 2,032 552 2,876 1,855 19 598 263 349 417 13 957 397 10,991 AREA IV—William Montgomery, Chairman. Section Chiefs: 4001—Frank Bell . . 4002—Harry B. Pitts. 4004—Daniel L. Moorman. 4005—T. P. Dowd..... 4006—T. P. Kingsbury. 4007—C. L. McCrea... 4008—John A. Remon. 4009—Harry J. Plankinton. 4010—Edgar Morris. 4011—H. H. Kidwell... 4012—Arthur D. Marks 4013—Fred Buchholz.. 4014—Clarence P. Norment, jr. 4016—Rudolph Santelman. 4017—John Payette and Julian Brylawski AREA V—George Vass, Chairman. Section Chiefs: 5001—F. P. H. Siddons. 317 140 256 244 333 241 265 3,189 g $31,184.85 $4,468.16 25,664.82 3,635.75 21,205.33 9,578.48 625.70 2,117.60 1,868.90 2,895.45 3,981.70 2,750.50 6,206.30 1,217.80 $33,856.45 $9,057.53 18,979.74 3,927.70 22,262.75 10,966.24 1,071.27 4,057.84 4,262.87 6,095.20 4,031.05 6,232.59 7,115.00 2,669.53 $86,216.49 $104,656.79 $2,343.05 986.75 2,519.25 1,568.35 1,984.70 1,393.77 6,469.45 29,468.42 1,334.80 941.50 1,296.45 2,815.35 84.50 1,583.85 4,808.79 264.20 793.95 200.00 $3,208.13 3,261.45 1,626.00 2,178.58 1,450.64 1,245.81 6,371.65 18,342.49 3,089.28 1,075.00 4,014.04 2,604.12 379.57 2,323.01 7,677.07 2,682.95 4,803.57 52426 $6085713 se694n.03 $5,531.62 3,316.94 3,781.10 2,477.80 2,857.49 $3,258.68 3,102.87 3,610.29 2,537.64 2,841.87 92.11 49.33 135.22 0.C RELEF OUTLAY UP 2 PER CENT Increase in Expenditures for| 12-Month Period Surveyed by Children’s Bureau. Relief expenditures in the District have increased 245 per cent during the last 12 months, the Children’s Bureau of the Labor Department said today | in compiling relief statistics reported to the Government from 978 relief-giv- ing agencies in 124 citles for September, During that month, the 11 reporting agencies in the District sald their direct | and work relief expenditures amounted to $165,091, a total of $131,880 more ;);fix was expended during September, | For the 30-day period in September | the relief agencies reported their ex- penditures increased 4 per cent over | August. In the latter month a total of $143.529 was paid for direct and work relief here, while in September a total of $165,091 was expended. In September, 1931, a few months before work relief was inaugurated in the District, the total expenditures for galrecta i relief work amounted to only Eleventh on Relief List. A survey of the reports sent in from the 124 cities shows for the 12-month period Washington was eleventh on the list of places having the largest re- lief expenditures. Birmingham, Mobile, Kansas City, Erie and Reading, Pa.; Roanoke, Va.; Tacoma, Chicago and Cicero, Ill, and New Rochelle, N. Y., werx;: 'tll‘le lle:clers. e latter city, relief expenditures during the year have increased 705 per cent and for the 30-day period ent September 30. expenses arising from unemployment in the New Rochelle area were up 11 per cent. Based on the full r , the bur estimated that ex; itures thmu;.n‘: out the Nation were up 1 cent in September over August. slight in- crease follows & boost of 8 per cent in August over July. The September expenditure of 581,469 {:?resen:; an increase of per cent from the total expended ;}::ru.mz agencies in September u'i’l The rise in relief e ditures has been mainly in general relief, which increased 2 per cent from August to September, while special allowances from public funds increased only 0.5 per cent and work relief decreased 3 per cent. Aided Families Increase. $22,- 90.6 om public funds continued to rise more rapidly than the amount expend- . Reports showed an increase of 4 per cent between August and September in the number of families receiving general relief and an increase of 1.2 per cent in the number of those re- celving special allowances from public funds. Prom September, 1931, to Sep- tember, 1932, there was a rise of 144.2 per cent in the number of familles aided through general relief and of 27.2 per cent in the number receiving special allowances, Cities reporting increases of 20 per cent or more in relief expenditures in % A5 JOB SHARING URGED BYMRS. ROOSEVELT Holds All Must Go Limit to Aid Others in Order to Weather Slump. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, November 23.—Mrs. Pranklin D. Roosevelt, wife of the President--!-ct, called for a spirit of mutual helpfullness last night to meet the unemployment situation, which she termed the biggest problem facing the country today. “If all of us share and make up our minds that we are going to do to the limit whatever we can do for other people,” she said, “I know that we are going to weather this depression.” Mrs. Roosevelt, who spoke as a repre- sentative of the Emergency Unemploy- ment Relief Committee at the Prudence Penny Institute of Home Economics, also expressed the belief that people are going to insist that our statesmen study the reason for economic troubles such us we have been going through and try to prevent them in the future.” Declaring a large part of her x:r?ili whlzh’ she ;ndnsu.s a vflmd:tnxg case, is made up of appeals help. Mrs. Roosevelt sg.\d: s They are appeals primarily from people who are out of work, though few of them want charity. Th~y want work, and somehow it troubles me more than anything else, because I have grown up with the feeling that in this country any one who wanted work had a right to have work. So, faced with the situation which we have today of not being able to find work very often for the people who ask for it, I have been more and more of what each one of us, as individuals, can do in this erisis. “I feel very helpless sometimes, be- cause, of course, I could never meet the requests that come in to me day after day, but I have tried to do one thing. I read every single appeal my- self, because it seems as tI h now ld one.” Mrs. Roosevelt added that she has DENTAL SOCIETY GIVES COMMUNITY CHEST $300 Action Follows Talk on Need by Dr. Cole—Gold Inlays Topic of Papers. The District of Columbia Dental Society last night appropriated $300 from the society’s treasury for the Com- munity Chest, following a talk on the needs of the Chest by Dr. Charles D. Cole, president of the organization. The meeting was held at George ‘Washington University. Gold inlays were the subject of papers by two Washington _dentists, Dr. ‘Thomas Rice and Dr. Charles R. September as compared with August | Dr, are Kenosha, Malden, New Orlea: Philadelphia, mfld’?‘ Teg.; O]mnl: Terre Haute and Wichita, while Al- toona, Chester, Fall River, Fort Worth, Lawrence, New Haven and Oak Park reported decreases of 20 per cent or more during the same period. The number of lolggznp furnished homs sf persons were higher in ber than in August, but the total of 944,609 meals served represented a rise of only 4.5 per cent, as compared with 18 for ge s:me tm’ ago. The num. T of 's reported in Sep- mber 'fhx"l year to?led ’EA.'”I' an in- crease of per cent over » while last year the increase ror“‘m same period was 15 per cent. This year’s total for September represented an increase of 79 per cent over last year. PROMENADE TOMORROW D. C. Bection, Council of Jewish Juniors, Schedule Event. ‘The annual promenade of the Wash- ington section, Council of Jewish Juniors, will be.held tomorrow evening in the Washington Hotel. Miss Ann Donzis is chairman of the Committee in Charge, which also in- cludes Ruth Kohner, Jeanette Rod, Jeanette Naiman, Mrs. A. Gilden, Mrs. Barnett Breeskin, Rose Plotnick and Ann Rosenblatt. night's and tran- Sej of Relatively high cost of foreign goods in terms of Venezuela currency has compelled people of Venezuela to buy EXCURSIONS $3.00 Philadelphia $3.00 Chester $2.75 Wilmington Sunday, November 27 Leave Washington 7:35 A. M. eor *11:45 A. M. turn_same day. *Does not stop at Chester, $1.50 Harpers Ferry $¢ Martinsburg ~ $3 Cumberland Sunday, November 27 Leave Washington 8:35 A, M. Return same day 45q Reduction in Round Trip ‘0 Fares to all B. & O. points. Friday moon to midnight Saturday. Retorn until midaight n those made at home. s. Cabin and Tourist Class . aebRASaE + from New York to Vige and Le Havre . . . Deliclous Prench cooking . . . Ask your travel agent. Alse: $. 8. Paris, Dec. 9; Champlain, Dec. 23 DEC. 6th French fine 92.57| James F. Nolan, Gen. Pass. Agent, 1129 Eve St. N.W., Washington, D. C. Tel. Met. 1440 bt it s sl s oot dhac b bbb o o R L P BBt 95.25 87.35 58.41 52.18 4384 47.50 59.32 44.13 87.23 _45.62 82.38) 80% OF ALL START HERE Doctors are agreed that in- testinal stoppage, commonly known as constipation, is the cause of 80% of all human ailments. Sluggish liver, auto-intoxica- tion, tired feeling, biliousness, coated tongue and lack of vigor and pep are signs of faulty elimination. These conditions must be overcome if you wish HUMAN ILLS 3 e TR GG . g your system to work at top efficiency. Guard Against Intestinal Fatigue Of course, if you are satisfied to feel half sick all or part of the time, this message is m{.for you, : .. but if you wish to rid your system of poisonous waste matter, regain your old-time energy, and really feel good again, we strongly recommend that ou_follow this simple method of Lmshn‘ constipation. 3 (Simple Remedy Relieves Constipation One ' little E-Z Tablet takenlany time settles upset i coated and livens lazy liver, it e are blets are ‘wooden e the ina s 3,871.70 $16,004.38 'Wll’ 3 Mrs. Clyde D. | presidents each name ‘“three repre- | Team 344—Captain, Mrs. D. G. 5,428. Dr. G. W., sentative labor men” from whom Prpen- % = Rupk, Benoit dent Green will pick two and add a ‘Willilam A. third as a committee to settle the dis- pute by arbi 5,353.55 5,046.96 3380 sa0sea |sggsse gt