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THE GARDEN ISLAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1921
3
Social Workers To
Meet in Convention
From April 23 to 29 the social
workers throughout the Territory
will meet In Honolulu In conference.
All meetings are open to the public
and any one Interested In social work
. Is urged to attend.. Following Is the
tentative program covering the entire
session:
8aturday, April 23, 1921.
4:00 P. M. Palama Settlement,
King and Lillha Sts. Registration
and Reception. (Delegates will se
cure tickets here for the luncheons
and banquet, as well as registration
cards.)
4:30 P. M. Demonstration, Inspect
ion.Supper (50c. plate). Evening
moving pictures at Palama Settle
f ment. '
8unday, April 24, 1921.
11:00 A. M. Special church services
with social workers as speakers to be
announced later.
2:00 P. M. Automobile ride directed
by Mr. George P. Denison meeting a"t
Hotel St. side of the Palace. Visits
to Girls' Industrial School and Home
for Feeble Minded Persons, returning
to city by 6; 30 P. M.
Monday, April 25, 1921.
9:30 to 10:00 A. M. Library of Ha
waii, Organization and Election of
Officers.
10:00 to 12:00 A. M. Industrial Ser
vice Section, Mr. S. O. Halls presi
ding. Industrial Relations, Mr. Frank AUi
erton. Object of Industrial Service Work,
Mr. D. S. Bowman
Does Industrial Service Work Pay?
Mr. Andrew Adams.
Does Publicity Help? Mrs. MacMillan
General Discussion.
The Alexander House Settlement
Association and its Relation to In
dustrial Service Work, Mr. Childs.
12:30 to 2:00 P. M. Lunch (tickets
to be secured In advance), Mr. Geo.
P. Denison presiding. Discussion
"The Public Health Nurse."
The Visiting Nurse Miss Mabel
Smythe, Head Nurse, Palama Set-
tlement.
The Tuberculosis Nurse Miss Enid
Kingsbury, Board of Health.
The School Nurse Miss Olive M.
Sill Board of Health.
The Plantation Nurse Mrs. Foster
Robinson . Maui Agricultural Co.
2:30 to 4:00 P. M. Library of Ha
waii, Miss Sterrit presiding. Juve
nile Delinquency and its treatment In
Hawaii, Miss Mary Catton of the Ju
venile Court. Discussion opened by
Mr. S. W. Robley, Executive Secre
tary Honolulu Boy Scouts. A Con
trast In Prison Conditions in Hono
lulu, Mr. Howard D. Case, Star Bul
letin. Tuesday, April 26, 1921.
10:00 A. M. to 12:00, Library of Ha
waii, Mr. A. Gartley, presiding. So
cial Work in the Rural Communities,
Mr. C. S. Childs, Alexander House
Settlement, Walluku; Mra. H. A
Baldwin, Maul; Miss Elsie Wilcox,
Kauai; Miss Kate O'Reilly, Hawaii;
Rev. N. S. ScWenck, Hawaiian Board
of Missions.
2:30 to 4:00 P. M. Library of Ha
waii, Mr. Vaughan MacCaughey, pre
siding The Public Schools as Agen
cies for Social Betterment, Mr. W. R.
Comings, Ex. Supt. Public Schools,
Elyria, Ohio. Discussion Value of
Vision in the Efficiency of the School
Child, Dr. Charles Barton, Occullst to
the Board of Health.
6:00 to 8:00 P. M. Swim and supper
at Outrigger Club (tickets to be se
cured in advance.)
Wednesday, April 27, 1921.
10:00 to 12:00, Library of Hawaii,
Industrial Service Section, Mr. S. O.
Halls presiding.
Plantation Sanitation, Mr. Christian.
Improving Plantation Morale, Mr. E.
O. Long.
Developing Plantation Community
Spirit, Mr. G. A. Young.
General Discussion
Child Welfare Work on the Planta
tion, Mr. H. A. Rudin.
12:30 to 2:00 P. M. Lunch, Mr. J.
L. Hopwood presiding (tickets to be
secured in advance). Discussion at
Table. "Teaching of Nutrition":
In the Public Schools, Miss Caroline
J. Mortmann Social Service Bu
reau, Honolulu.
In Plantation Boarding Houses, Miss
Esttelle Roe, Grove Farm, Kauai.
On Plantations, Dr. H. H. Wood,
Walalua Plantation, Oahu.
Japanese Diet, Miss Grace Potter,
California Packing Corporation.
2:30 to 4:00 P. M. Library of Haw
aii, Mr. J. R. Gait presiding.
Classes, Care and Treatment of Men
tal Defectives, Dr. Geo. P. Bliss,
Supt. Home for Feeble-Minded Per
sons, of Hawaii.
Classes, Care and Education of Phys
ical Defectives:
The Blind and Deaf, Miss Gertrude
Mason, Prin. School for Defectives.
The Crippled, Miss Mary Ferrelra,
Liliuokalani School, Miss Estelle
Roe, Grove Farm, Lihue, Kauai.
Thursday, April 28, 1921.
10:00 to 12:00 A. M. Library of Ha
waii. Program In charge of Y. M.
C. A. and Y. W. C. A.
2:30 to 4:00 P. M. Library of Ha
wall, Mr. U. A. Rath presiding. In
fant Mortality in Hawaii:
An Ounce of Prevention, Dr. Vlvia B.
Appleton, Director Pediatrics, Uni
versity of California.
Dental Service, Miss Florence Angel,
Director Honolulu Dental Infirmary
Hospital Social Service, Mrs. Arthur
Withington, Assistant to Pastor
Central Union Church.
Friday, April 29, 1921.
10:00 to 12:00 A. M. Library of Ha
waii, Industrial Service Section, Mr.
S. O. Halls presiding.
The Plantation Visiting Nurse, Miss
Ada Paul.
Day Nurseries, Dr. Eva. D. Missner.
Work with Women, Miss Mary M. Ba
harrell. Playgrounds and Club Houses, Mr. E.
L. Damkroger.
Organized Sports.
Visual Education, Mr. J. C. Cohen.
2:30 to 4:00 P. M., Library of Ha
waii. Recent Social Legislation.
The Place of Psycho-Analytic Con
cepts in a Social Program, Prof. A.
L. Andrews, University of Hawaii.
Control of Venereal Diseasos, Dr. F.
E. Trotter, Pres. Territorial Board
of Health.
6.00 to 8:00 P. M., Banquet. Pres
iding. (Tickets to be secured In ad
vance.) Report of Committee on Organization.
Election of Officers for 1922.
Round Table Discussion.
The Social Worker and the Commu
nity, led by Prof. Romanzo Adams,
University of Hawaii.
The First Pan-Pacific
Educational Conference
From the Pan-Pacific Union Bulletin
The Secretary of State of the
United States has issued and signed
the invitations which he has sent out
to the governments of the Pacific to
participate in the first Pan-Pacific
Educational Conference called by the
Pan-Pacific Union to meet in Hono
lulu August 11-21.
The initial step in the calling of
this conference here was taken at
the request of the Pan-Pacific Union
by Dr. P. P. Claxton, United Status
Commissioner of Education, and his
assistant, Dr. Frank F. Bunker. The
Secretary of the Interior, John Barton
Payne, gave his approval and cooper
ation, and It was at the request of
the Secretary of the Interior that the
State Department issued the formal
Invitations. '
These formal Invitations are being
sent out by the Pan-Pacific Union to
individual educators, universities and
educational Institutions to send dele
gates to take part in the deliberations
of the first Pan-Pacific Educational
Conference.
The local committee in Honolulu,
the Ocean's Crossroads, with the as
sistance of Dr. F. F. Bunker and
Commissioner of Education P. P.
Claxton, is outlining the ground
which the conference will cover. This
committee Is also making arrange
ments for the entertainment of the
delegates who attend the conference.
It Is expected that each government
will send its official representatives
and that many of the educational
bodies In Pacific lands will also send
delegates. Arrangements are now
being made with the different nation
alities In Hawaii to house as their
guests a certain number of delegates
from each country. The Hawailans
are eager to have as their guests in
.Honolulu one Moarl educator from
New Zealand, a Tahitian educator, a
Samoan educator, a Tongan educator
and a Raratongan educator; the lan
guage spoken by the people of these
Islands Is similar to that of the Ha
wailans and easily understood by
them. The Chinese, Japanese, Fili
pinos and Koreans are inviting a
number of the delegates from their
countries to be their house guests,
and it Is probable that the Canadians,
Australians and New Zealanders will
follow this example. A number of
the school teachers in Hawaii will
throw their homes open to educators
from the United States, and the
Latin-Americans expect to do some
thing toward the entertainment of
delegates from Central and South
America. ,
It is proposed to hold the confer
ence in the Iolani Palace in Honolulu
for the ten days from August 11 to
21, after which there will be an ex
cursion to the ever-active Volcano of
Kilauea. The expense will not be
over $45.00 per person, and there will
be considerable entertainment in Hilo
and at the Volcano. In Honolulu all
of the clubs will be open to the edu
cators, and many of them, will tender
entertainments that will be unique
and interesting. The old Hawaiian
canoes at the Outrigger Club will be
kept in readlnesB and the visitors will
be treated to the royal sport of surf
riding. The Hawaiians will see that
the delegates are entertained at a
real native luau, and there will be
Japanese, Chinese, Korean and Fili
pino feasts for the visitors.
It Is probable there will be two
sessions at the Iolani Palace dally,
morning and afternoon, and possibly
a series of evening papers to be read
and an Invitation extended to the
(general public to attend these ses
sions. Some of the kindergartens,
public schools and Japanese schools
will be open during the stay of the
delegates that they may see some
thing first-hand of the educational
problems in Hawaii, where in one
school there are sometlnmes children
of forty different nationalities. The
University of Hawaii will take Its
part In the entertainment and in
struction or the visitors, and as the
summer school of the teachers in the
department of education will be in
session in Honolulu during August,
there will be a large attendance of
the local teachers of all races at the
sessions of the conference and an op
portunity for the delegates from dif
ferent races to meet men and women
from their own races who are also
educators.
The Pan-Pacific Union invites cor
respondence from any educators who
are interested In the conference and
solicits suggstions from the teachers
in different lands about the Pacific as
to the scope of the First Pan-Pacific
Educational Conference.
SVi
R. BOB
High School Play
Saturday, May 7
Tip Top Theatre
Tickets - $1.50, $1.00, $.75
TERRITORIAL MESSENGER SERVICE
TAKES ORDERS FOR ALL KINDS OF
Dry Cleaning and Laundry Work
SEND BY PARCEL POST TO
1112 UNION ST. .... . HONOLULU
iacoe
JAZZ
BAND
Under the Personal Management of
MR. J. K. ALLEN
TOURING THE ISLANDS
CONCERT
AND
DANCE
MUSIC
DELUX
Played By A Real
JAZZ
ORCHESTRA
Admission with war tax $1.10
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THE ONLY
ORGANIZATION
OF ITS KIND
IN THE
HAWAIIAN
ISLANDS
JOHN FENDER PIANO
GEO. .TAKVIK HAXAPIIONE
(iEO. AYLETT BANJO
GEO. KKA8H VIOLIN
JOK BROWN IJANJO
GEO. McINEUNY TRAPS
Directed by Mr. EDW. CUMMINS, Saxaphone
Admission with war tax $1.10
Friday, Waimea, - - April 29
Saturday, American Legion Dance, 30
Sunday, Concert Tip Top, May I
Monday, Kapaa, - - "2
Tuesday, McBryde - May 3
Wednesday, Lihue Armory, 4
3