Evening Star Newspaper, March 21, 1935, Page 7

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PHYSICIANS URGED 10 RESIST TRENDS Positive Action Against Loss of Identity Asked—Ruh- land Honored. Necessity for preserving and | strengthening the individuslity of the physician and his personal relation- ships with his patients was stressed | by Dr. A. B. Bennett, president of the | Medical Society of the District of Columbia, in the annual presidential | address last night. | The occasion was a reception ten- dered by the society to Dr. George C. Ruhland, new District health officer, and Mrs. Ruhland. This constituted the first introduction of the new health officer to the organized physicians of | ‘Washington. Co-operation Asked. In brief remarks following his in-| troduction, Dr. Ruhland stressed his | hope of making public health condi- | tions here a model for the rest of the Nation. The possibility of doing this, he said, depended largely upon the co-operation of the individual physician. The practitioner of medicine, Dr Bennett warned the society, rapidly is | losing his individuality as a result| both of his own modesty and of tke| rapidly changing social conditions | with the steady drift toward more and more socialization of the profession. | The public, he said, seems to be gradually losing its right of choice in jts relations with the medical profes- sion and to be making little effort to preserve this right. Reception Committee. ‘The reception to Dr. and Mrs. Ruh- land followed the presidential ad- dress. In the receiving line were the officers and past presidents of the society with their wives. They in-| cluded Dr. J. B. Nichols, Dr. H. C.| Macatee, Dr. Luther H. Reichelderfer, Dr. A. C. Christie. Dr. Prentiss Will- son, Dr, D. K. Shute, Dr. Joseph Wall, | Likes ’Em Big THEFT OF LOCOMOTIVE CHARGED TO MAN. Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. MURRAY BAKER, The Long Island equipment con- tractor,- shown in court at New York after his arrest as a fugitive from Jersey City, where a grand larceny charge, accusing him of stealing a locomotive, awaits him. He claims he carted away the engine on a huge truck because he was not paid for it. Dr. H. H. Kerr; Dr. Frank Leech, Dr.| = Francis Hagner, Dr. W, H. Hough, Dr. | Thomas Groover, Dr. William Gerry | Morgan, Dr. O. B. Hunter. | Ladies' Aid to Serve. DAMASCUS, Md.. March 21 (Spe- ial).—A chicken and waffle supper THE EVENING STAR,” WASHINGTON HEBREW SESSIONS OPEN TONORRDH Three Organizations Repre- sented by 1,000 Delegates From All Over U. S. The triple convention of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods and the National Feder- ation of Temple Brotherhoods will open at 2 p.m. tomorrow, with ap- proximately 1,000 delegates expected to attend the sessions at the Willard and Washington Hotels. Brotherhood delegtaes will be wel- | comed to the city by Allen V. De Ford of Washington and Sisterhood visitors by Mrs. Morris Cafritz, president of the Sisterhood of the Washington Hebrew Congregation. Responses will be made by Jesse Cohen of Brooklyn on behalf of the brotherhood and Mrs. Albert J. May of New York, speaking for the sisterhood. Separate Headquatters. . Headquarters for the union and sisterhood will be at the Willard and for the brotherhood at the Washing- ton. The three allied bodies have 285 congregations, with a membership of 64,000, and represent organized Re- form Judaism in North America. Lo- cal leaders to address the sessions in- clude Mrs. Abram Simon, Mrs. George Levy and Mrs. Harold Ganns. The union board will hold pre- convention sessions at the Willard Hotel at 8 o'clock tonight and 9:30 am. tomorrow. The sisterhood’s Executive Board will meet at the Wil- | lard at 8 o'clock tonight and the| brotherhood will hold a board meet- | ing at thegWashington at 9:30 am. tomorrow. A luncheon in honor of the board of the sisterhood will be held by the Washington sisterhood at 12:30 p.m tomorrow at the Willard. | Religious services have been planned for delegates at the Washing. ton Hebrew Congregation, 816 Eighth street, at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow. | ‘The sermon will be preached by Julius Gordon of St. Louis. | The conventions will be climaxed Sunday with a banquet at the Wil-| lard, at which the principal speaker | Leads Session MRS. MORRIS CAFRITZ, President of the Sisterhood of the ‘Washington Hebrew Congregation, who will have an important role in the coming triple convention of national Jewish religious organiza- tions. Catacomb Discovered. Believed to be an anclent Venetian | cemetery, the ruins of a catacomb containing marble tombstones have been unearthed near Constantinople, Turkey, by workmen building & road. MEDIATORS ENTER OHIO STRIKE ZONES Two Settlements Sought in Seven Areas Where Vio- lence Occurs. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, March 21.—Mediators sought to settle two of seven Ohio strikes last night after a day marked by several instances of viclence. Tear gas bombs were thrown and trucks overturned in one of several clashes between striking and non- striking employes of dairy companies in Toledo. Later, however, Federal mediators submitted a peace proposal to the strikers and the companies and said they were hopeful of an early set- tlement. Other peace efforts were conducted by Federal mediators in the strike of electrical union workers at the Dayton Power & Light Co. Protest Discharge of Foremen. One of the walkouts on the Ohio labor front, involving 600 members of the Juvenile Wheel Workers' Union in Toledo, was called teday in three plants of the American National Co. Labor leaders said it was in protest to the demotion of several foremen. Arnold Bennett, vice president of They’re Here! THE NEW STYLES THE NEW FABRICS - D. C.” THURSDAY, - MARCH 21, -1935. the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, said 425 men quit work in the Dayton strike “because the company refuses to recognize the union.” ~ Company officials said only 35 quit work and that they had been replaced by other men. So far as the company is concerned, there is no strike, said O. H. Hutchings, gen- eral manager. Other Ohio strikes involved the Steel & Tubes, Inc., plant at Elyria; all household furnishings movers and the National Screw & Manufacturing Co., both in Cleveland, and bus drivers at Canton. Higher wages are being sought by the strikers in Cleveland, Canton and Elyria and by the milk company strikers at Toledo. . City patrolmen continued to watch the picket line of strikers at the Steel & Tubes plant. The pickets, however, were kept at a distance of 200 feet by order of Sheriff Clarence W. Dick, Royal Composition Played. ‘The Royal Caledonian Schools Bag- pipe Band, at the Albert Hall, Lon- don, recently gave the first public performance of the march “Mallorca,” composed for the pipes by the Prince | of Wales. LAWMAKERS TO FLY Members of the Senate and House naval affairs groups will fiy from the Naval Air Station at Anacostia to Norfolk, Va., tomorrow to inspect the new aircraft carrier Ranger. Secretary Swanson made this an- nouncement yesterday, telling news- paper men that he wanted the legis- lators to get a close-up of the service's | newest development in airplane ecar- | riers. They will have lunch aboard as the guests of Capt. A. L. Bristol, dr., commanding the Ranger. Calcutta Likes Film | will be held in the social room of | will be Right Rev. James E. Freeman, | | Damascus Methodist Episcopal Church | Bishop of Washington. - § A motion picture recently ran for | March 28 under auspices of the| Joseph D. Kaufman will be toaste ! THE NEW SHADES or 'm—o“ e es 11 weeks in Calcutta, India. | Ladies’ Aid Society of that thurch. !master at the banquet. | ¢ FAIGIOAE IS HEADQUARTERS IN NORTHEAST FOR THE NEW GEORGE’S RADIO CO. 816 F STREET N.W. Kindly have your Frigidaire representative call with detailed information about your no money down plan. ADDRESS CITY .... 2139-41 Pa. Ave. N. W. 2015 14th St. N.W. PHONE DISTRICT 1900 All Models featuring the exclusive SUPER FREEZER The Super Freezer is that part of the Frigidaire '35 which directly provides the cold to preserve food and freeze ice and des- serts. PRICES RANGE FROM of OWH PAY AS LOW AS 15. 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