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A—16 MANY TOATIEND [ Toses Job CHRIT CHLDNT THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, APRIL 28, 1935—PART ONE. “forgotten” children. | ment. ‘ erl:‘g::i‘l‘.,m:fie‘lmt‘rx;m::‘“nieml’hni‘ls Other Offcers of Society. | 10 SXPL o, ool A0 et on | Officers Selected at Newport and| Levin L. Gareer” ana amiiip lerbert Other officers of the society, besides | nection with the meeting, opening at | with James M. Herbert as b Mrs. Mullen, are Miss Mary Virginia | 7 p.m. Hughesville Churches. I arden. 2 as junior Merrick, founder and president; Mrs. S Special Dispaich to The Star. P e Joseph Tumulty and Mrs. Frederick LEONARDTOWN, Md,, April 27—| — O e bered with gifts 1.927 of the city's | as being the head worker at the uule-| TWO VESTRIES FILLED FRIAY CEREMONY Bl Colorful Program Arranged? in Honor of lane Addams and Peace League. Colorful ceremonies at McPherson | Bquare are being planned for the | celebration Friday, in honor of Jane | Addams and the twentieth anniver-| 2ary of Women's International League | for Peace and Freedom. Representa- | tives of various schools, colleges and | organizations of the country will gather here to participate in the open- | air program, which will be presided over by Mrs. Harold L. Ickes, wife | of the Secretary of the Interior. The distinctive feature of the af- | fair will be a round-the-world peace | broadcast, the first to be held ju this | country. | Ambassadors to Attend. Ambassadors from various countries represented on the broadcast will be present at McPherson Square to in- troduce the speakers from their coun- tries. Sir Ronald Lindsay, British Ambassador, will present Viscount | Cecil broadcasting from London. and Arthur Henderson, president of the‘ Disarmament Conference from Ge- reva. The Japanese Ambassador, Hi- | rosi Saito, will introduce Prince Toku- | gawa, president of the Japanese- | American Society, who will speak from | ‘Tokio. M. Jules Henry, charge daf- | faires, in the absence of Ambassador | de Laboulaye, will introduce Paul Bon- cour. former foreign minister and at | present a member of the French Sen- ate, who will speak from Paris. Mrs. Ickes will next introduce Miss | Josephine Roache, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, who will present Miss Addams, honorary international presi- | dent of the league, to the world audi- | ence. | The program will be broadcast over an N. B. C. hook-up starting at 3:15 p.m. Owing to technical difficulties, it will be necessary to tune in on Moscow on Saturday morning, when Ambassador Troyanovsky will intro- due Mme. Krupskaya, widow of Lenin, and Mme. Litvinoff. wife of the com- | missar of foreign affairs of the U. S. | S R, who will broadeast to this country at 8:45 am. Miss Addams will reply to them at an early morning meeting at the Willard Hotel. To Talk to Pittman. Prior to the broadcast. the dele- gates from schools and colleges will have an audience with Senator Pitt- man. chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Later, a dele- gation will wait upon President Roose- velt at the White House An informal supper will be held in Barker Hall at the Y. M. C. A. Build- ing. Seventeenth and K streets at vhich the speakers will be Senator Nve, chairman of Munitions Com- mittee: Representative Biermann of iowa. Representative Kloeb of Ohio, and Representative Marcantonio of New York. Plans Trackless Trolleys. Durban, Scuth Africa, will have double-decked trackless trolleys. EFFECTIVE S g Wge P R, o pan RWIT S ey Mrs. Nellie Sheridan Wilson, neice of Gen. Phil Sheridan, shown at her task as postmaster at Somerset, Ohio. Republican, is to be relieved of her job soon, after 29 years’ service. was appointed by President Harrison Wilson administrations, but was reappointed later. SCHOONER TO LEAVE | IN QUEST OF 6OLD Lieut. Rieseberg to Pilot Vessel Down Potomac to Spot Off Haiti. Br the Associated Press. ol A tall-sparred schooner will slip down the Potomac to the open sea in the next few days, hcaded for the Spanish Main and a sunken galleon's cargo of gold, four centuries on the sea bottom. o She is the schooner Constellation, her skipper, Lieut. Harrv E. Riese- berg. formerly of the Navy Bureau of Navigation, her goal the Golden Hind, sunk by a West Indian hurri- cane in 1502 off the Island of Haiti. Reiseberg expects to pluck the gold from the crusted hulk many fathoms down by use of a diving robot. The diving globe is equipped with long and powerful steel fingers. capable of punching through the walls of sunken ships and snaring out such treasure as the Golden Hind might still hold. The schooner’s skipper has charted out what he thinks should be the position of the galleon. lost as she neaded away east from new Spain with a treasury for Queen Isabella Plants Busier in Poland. Industrial production in Poland is increasing. Mrs. Wilson, 65, and a She in 1889 and lost her job during the Democratic Lawyer Dies. SANTA FE, N. Mex., April 27 (#)— Jacob H. Christ, 79, veteran lawyer and Democratic leader, died unex- pectedly at his office yesterday. He appeared either in prosecution or de- fense at more than 100 murder trials. Genuine Optical Sale Est. 24 Years Special This Week KRYPTOK Invisible Bifocal Lenses. One $6£ pair to see far and near. $12 OCTAGON RIMLESS Ienl';::leo?‘:ality clear pair t.o see $6_.£; Cylindrical or Tinu; far or near. $13.50 Not Included 812 F vv. SHAH OPTICAL CO. Eye Examination Included gl TOREVEW YEAR Most Rev. M. J. Curley of Baltimore to Speak at Annual Meeting. Most Rev. Michael J. Curley, Arch- | bishop of Baltimore, will be the guest | of honor and principal speaker at the | annual meeting of the Christ Child | Society, to be held at the Raleigh | Hotel Tuesday at 8 p.m Mrs. Arthur Mullen, vice president of the society, will introduce also Maj. Ernest W. Brown, superintendent of | District police, who will speak on the | need for beys' clubs here. Dr. Joseph | Wall will speak of the needs in care of convalescents, and Miss Louise Mc- Guire of the National School of Social Service alsc will speak. Reports Are Made. Preliminery reports of the work of the Christ Child Society during the last year indicated 3,749 children re- ceived one kind of service or another. At the settlement at 608 Massa- chusetts avenue northeast 979 chil- dren sang in the glee.club, played foot ball, base ball, basket ball, learned to wrestle, learned the nature lore of the Boy Scouts and joined in all the va- ried activities of the boys’ club, the girls’ club and the mothers’ club. A gymnasium Is soon to be built to ac- | commodate Winter sports. The convalescent home near Rock- ville took care of 172 children during | 1934, and the dental clinic gave aid | to 917. The fresh air camp for col- | ored children accommodated many, {and 189 lavettes were distributed. | And at Christmas the society remem- xclusive C-THRU EYE GLASS POLISH FREE Est. 24 Years AT ONCE WE BECOME AUTHORIZED DEALERS PONTIAC SIXES and EIGHTS Dry Worker to Speak. Altemus, vice presidents; Mrs. Charles P. Neill, secretary; Miss Borredell Gower, recording secretary; Mrs. Robert Crhill, assistant secretary; Temperance Union, will urer. position of executive secretary &s well | New Social Order.” ’ N ATIONAL THE Rev. J. Letcher Showell, CLARENDON, Va., April 27 (Spe- Trinity P. E. Church, cial).—Miss Grace Leigh Scott, special lecturer of the Women's Christian | address a | Mrs. Charles Semmes, treasurer, and | mass meeting in the Clarendon Meth- | Mrs. Lewis Watkins, assistant treas- | odist Church tomorrow night at 8 |and J. Spencer Brookbank and Sam- Miss Anna J. Keady holds the | o'clock on “For Corner Stones of a | uel E. Dyson. | At the Old Fields P. E. Chapel. | rector of Newport, 37.50 Charles County, today announced his | vestry for 1935-36, as follows: Senior warden, William W. Wind, DR. VORDERMARK No. | Glandore. N Plate’ work only FURNITURE CO. FIRST TIME SHOWN! This Electric Clock to help make pay- wents easier, . « . and offering enough great features in addition to make any car outstanding. Comesee theservicedepart- ment in which we take equal pride, with its modern Now that we are sales and service representatives for Pontiac, we cordially invite you to come in and look us over. 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