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- PARLEYSLATED ONSOGAL WORK Washington and Maryland Agencies Open Joint Ses- sion Thursday. A joint ~onference of the Washing- ton Council of Social Agencies and the M#ryland State Conference of So- cial Work will be held at the Ward- man Park Hotel Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Mrs. John J. O’'Connor has been mnamed chairman of the £ local committee for the confer- ence, which will open with a din- ner meeting at 6:30 pm. Thurs- | day, at which Dr. Sheldon Glueck of Harvard Law School will speak. Dr. George H. Preston, chairman of the conference, Mrs. 0’Connor. (8 and Rev. Russell J. Clinchy will pre- side. The program Friday will be opened by four simultaneous round table dis- cussions, and in the afternoon a gen- eral meeting will be held, with Elwood Street, public welfare director, presid- ing. Among the speakers at this ses- sion will be Miss Jane M. Hoey, direc- | tor of general public assistance, Social | Security Board; Miss Katherine Len- root, director of the United States Children’s Bureau, and Willlam Wil- liamson of the Bureau of Old-Age Benefits of the Social Security Board. David Cushman Coyle will speak on “New Social Order in America” at 8 p:m. Friday. Dr. Preston will preside at a gen- eral meeting Saturday at 10:30 am. when the delegates will hear a sum- mary of the round table discussions. Sanford Bates, executive director of the Boys' Club of America, Inc., will preside at the closing luncheon when | Paul Kellogg, editor of the Survey, will ; deliver an address on “Forward Social ! Work.” | Frederick Woodward to Speak. Prederick Woodward, vice president ‘ of the University of Chicago, will | speak on “Confessions of a Vice Presi- dent” at the annual dinner of the | University of Chicago Club of Wash- | ington, scheduled for 6:30 p.m. to- | night at the Cosmos Club. THE SUNDAY JEWISH APPEAL BEING ORGANIZED Leaders of Campaign to Open May 4 to Gather 500 Workers. Encouraged \by widespread pledges of support for the United Jewish Ap- Peal, leaders of the Washington cam- Ppaign will begin organizing more than 500 volunteer workers this week, it Was announced yesterday at the drive headquarters at the Jewish Com- munity Center. Every large Jewish organization in the city is being asked to provide workers and contribute to the cam- paign for relief of destitute European Jews and for reconstruction work in Palestine. Drive te Start May 4. Morris Cafritz, Isidore Hershfield and Morris Simon, co-chairmen of the local drive, announced they in- tend to begin active campaigning on May 4. Louis E. Spiegler and Mrs, John M. Safer have been assigned to STAR, WASHINGTON, organize the men's and women's di- visions of the campaign. A message received from Felix M. Warburg, national chairman of the Joint Distribution Committee cam- paign, at campaign headquarters here yesterday cited distressful conditions among Jews in Germany and Poland. The message said in part: “Never was the need greater than this year for the $4,650,000 the Joint Distribution Committee is asking as its 1937 quota for work among the distressed Jews overseas. In Germany the Jews are less and less able to care for themselves as their assets shrink. The same holds true for the refugees, both dewish and “non-Aryan,” who have fled Germany. In Eastern Europe conditions among the Jews are worse even than they were during the war and -post-war years. Millions are helpless before the savage attack of anti-Semites in Poland, Rumania and other countries.” New Home in Palestine. Another message received from Morris Rothenberg, one of the leaders of the national United Palestine Ap- peal, read: “While the doors of most countries of Europe and elsewhere are com- pletely shut to them, the persecuted Jews of Germany and Poland have found a new home in Palestine, “Palestine, reclaimed from barren- | ready is arriving. D. C, APRIL 11, 90,000 homeless Jews during 1935 and 1936. “As world Jewry faces the supreme task of & mass exodus, Palestine stands ready to welcome the largest number of those unfortunate Jews who are the victims of tyranny and despotism.” 11 ARE CANDIDATES FOR 7 D. A.R. POSTS Vice Presidential Places Gon- tested in Forty-Fifth Congress. The Forty-sixth Continental Con- gress, Daughters of the American Revolution, which will open Monday of next week, will be forced to decide among 11 candidates who have an- nounced for the seven vice presiden- tial posts. In addition, there are two candidates for honorary vice president general. They are Mrs. W. B. Burney of Co- lumbia, 8. C,, and Mrs. William Hyde Talbott of Maryland. The advance guard of national of- ficers, State regents and members al- Mrs., William A. ness and sterility, absorbed more than | Becker, president general, will open 1937—PART ONE. the session on the evening of April 19 in Constitution Hall. Vice presidential candidates, repre- senting all parts of the country, are as follows: Mrs. George Baxter Averill, Mil- waukee; Mrs. William Henry Belk, Charlotte, N. C.; Mrs. H. J. Cary, Kearney, Nebr.; Mrs. Prank Madison Dick, Cambridge, Md.; Miss Bonnie Farwell, Terre Haute, Ind.; Mrs,. George Madden Grimes, Washington; Mrs. Charles E. Head, Seattle, Was| Mrs. Gory Hogg, Lewisburg, W. Vi Mrs. Robert Kemp Minson, Tem Ariz.; Mrs. Maurice Clark Turner, Dal- las, Tex, and Mrs. Elmer H. Whit- toker, Pasadena, Calif. CHURCH FEDERATION WILL HEAR DR. DAY Baltimore Pastor to Speak at Dinner Wednesday—Officers to Be Elected. Dr. Albert E. Day of Mount Vernon Place M. E. Church, Baltimore, will deliver the principal address at the annual meeting and dinner of the Washington Federation of Churches, ‘Wednesday, at 6 p.m., at the Hamline Methodist Episcopal Church, Sixteenth and Allison streets. Election of the board of directors for the ensuing year and various re- ports will be included in the b\mmessl provided by Mr. and Mrs. Raymond session. A musical program will be Luskey and Henry Nestor. IT'S HERE...TODAY! AMAZING NEW INVENTION FOR HARD OF HEARING 'OME in—and have s scientific fitting of the new Sonotone audicle by means of the AUDIOSCOPE, abselutely new technique in h . Learn without cost ligation hew weil you ean heas this medern eauivalent of eyegiasses for impaired hearing ard how eonveni- ently you can wear it. or write for our booklet—The Twin Senses. SONOTONE WASHINGTON CO. 901 Washington Bldg. 15th St. & New York Ave. N.W. Phone District 0921 THE ONLY CAR THAT GIVES YOU - o2 T0 &7 MILES PER GALLON WITH SMOOTH V-8 PERFORMANCE, TOO! 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