Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 121, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 August 1926 — Page 3
AUG. 26, 1926
STATE HISTORICAL * SOCIETY MEETS AT TERRE HAUTE Members Make Pilgrimage From Indianapolis—TwoDay Session. By United Press TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Aug. 26. Members of the Indiana Historical ..Society came to Terre Haute today for their annual summer meeting after visiting points of historical importance on a pilgrimage from Indianapolis. The itinerary for the pilgrimage ■was mapped out by Dr. Christopher Coleman, director of the StateTilstorical bureau. Members of the society left early In the morning on chartered busses, coming by way of Danville and Rockville./ Go to Turkey Run At Rockville the caravan was met by the Parke County / Historical Society and accompanied to the Turkey Run State park for a basket luncheon. After supper at the Terre Haute Country Club, members of the society will assemble in the auditorium of the State normal school for the first session of-the two day meet>ng. Temporary Chairman Judge D. W. Henry, president of Vigo County Historical Society, will be temporary chairman and will be followed by Dr. James A. Wood-
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Mr. and Mrs. E. Grapliman, 1042 X. Tacoma Ave., are proud of the health record of their son. Raymond, who is 8 months old and weighs twenty-eight pounds. Raymond eats all kinds of food, but they attribute its health to a daily quantity of nut margarine. burn, president of the State society, as permanent chairman. Speakers will include .1. A Engleman, superintendent of the Terre Haute schools; Congressman Noble Johnson; J. A. Mac Lean, director of the John Herrin Art Institute, and William Fortune, chairman of the George Rogers Clark sesqulcentennial. A side trip has been- arranged for Friday morning to the Albee mound in Sullivan County'. The paper from which a Bank of England note is made is so tough that, when folded, it can sustain a weight of fifty pounds.
GREEK CABINET FORMED General Condylis Successful—Attempt to Free Fangalos Fails. By United Press ATHENS, Aug. 26.—General Condylis, who led Sunday's revolution which removed General Pangalos from power, today succeeded in forming a cabinet. An attempt to liberate Gen. Theodore Pangalos by taking him away in an airplane, failed today and Pangalos was transferred from the island of Aegina to the prison fortress of Izeddin on the Island of Crete. New elections probably will be held in October. SENATOR IN SANITARIUM McKinley, at Martinsville, Suffers From Rheumatism. By United Press MARTINSVILLE, Ind., Aug 26. Senator Wililam B. McKinley of Illinois, who failed in a try for renomination at the Republican primaries in June is in a sanitarium here, suffering from sciatic rheumaiism. His condition Is weak according to advices o£ his physicians, who-add that there is no immediate cause for alarm. RAISE ENLISTMENT AGE Navy Recruits Must Be 18 After Friday. Beginning Friday, the minimum age for enlistlhg In the United States Navy will be eighteen years, instead of seventeen, it was announced today by Lieutenant Commander Roy Pfaff. Men less then eighteen years, who desire to enlist were aaked to report at the recruiting station, 24 S. Illinois St., today.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
STRESSES FARM PLIGHT Bookhart Says Kansas Tillers Are ‘ln Desperate Straits.’ By United Press KANSAS CITT, Mo„ Aug. 26. Kansas farmers are in __ "desperate straits" according to their own admission, Col. Smith W. Bookhart, former senator from lowa said here on his return from Wamego, Kas., where he addressed a meeting of the farmers' Union. Bookhart attacked Former Governor Henry J. Allen, of Kansas, for the latter's statement that agricultural conditions in Kansas do not warrant government relief and that such would be a government subsidy. THEY WANTED FINERY So Girls Set Fire to Apartment— Both Are Arrested. By United. Press CHICAGO, Aug. 26.—Because they wanted silk stockings and "prettypink things" Betty Paskzos, 16, and her cousin May Paskzos, 14. set fire to the apartment building where they lived. They hoped to steal the finery while apartment dwellers watched the fires. Both are under arrest. FIGHT FIRES LONG TIME Two South Dakota ‘Laddies’ In Work More Than Fifty Years. By United Press SIOUX FALLS, S. D . Aug. 26 A. A. Grant and S. P. Hanson are South Dakota's oldest firemen. Both have been fighting fires for more than fifty years, most of the time being spent in this state.
HELP BLIND IS PLEA OF DELEGATE \ Teacher Asks Better Working Conditions —Pension Opposed. "Help the blind to help themselves,” was the plea of Miss Juanita Cortez, 306 N. Holmes Ave., at the “Boosters for the Blind" convention at Lebanon Wednesday. Miss Cortez, totally blind, was one of the five delegates from Indianapolis. The convention was held to "arrive at an understanding about a basic pension for the blind,” to be proposed to the next Legislature. The Indiana Boosters for the Blind was formally' organized at the convention. A committee of seven members was appointed to invest!-
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Over the road to the country not many motor miles from home —you will find a new world. A world of sparkling sunlight, clean winds and far horizons. A world of beauty and adventure and dreams come true. The joy of living will get into your blood. You will glory in the strangeness of new roads, the freedom of wide, sunny fields, ,the mystery and magic of nights beneath the stars. - Any road around you will take you “half the world away.” Discover the wonder and the rich romance of the Middle West! Here is a list of pleasure places. See what you can add to itl ■ * ' - .
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gat® the pension law/ of the various States and to repost their conclusions at a meeting to be called within thirty days. “Such a pension bill if passed, would put all blind persons on a charity basis," Miss Cortez declared, "it would tend toward blocking egforts of sightless persons to obtain a livelihood through the medium of their own efforts. It would have a decidedly bad psychological effect on the blind themselves; it would also affect employers. "Blind men and women if mentally deficient, should be segregated. Others, capable of eels-support should be aided in their efforts. Industrial conditions for the blind are in a sad way. The Board of Industrial Aid for the Blind, has been annoyed and embarrassed by being practically forced to take into their employe, persons who were mentally unfit to do practical work. This is making a charity institution out of what was designed for an industrial organization." “We cannot Justly ask that the ‘ State of Indiana should continue to
. ” 1— The Homestake Mine, largest gold mine in the United States at Lead, South Dakota. The average annual output is over $6,000,900. Total depth of the Ellison shaft is 2,420 feet. Over SSOO is spent for explosives every day of the year. State Highway No. 30. 2 Maribel Caves, Wisconsin. Curious caves in limestone formations near State Highway No. 16 between Manitowoc and Green Bay. 3 Clifty Falls State Park, Indiana. Rugged, thickly wooded, with many deep gorges. Contains Clifty Falls, ninety feet in height, and a senes of many smaller cascades. Near Madison, State Highways No. 40, No. 26 and No. 6. 4 Old Fort Lamed, six miles west of Lamed, Kansas. On an island in the Arkansas River, a battle occurred in 1870 between the Cheyennes and Arapahoes. National Old Trails Road. 5 The Camels Hump, a two-crested butte near the town of Sentinel Butte, North Dakota. State Highway No. 3. 6 Pilot Knob, Missouri, a shaggy peak rising L6OO feet above sea level, named by Mississippi River pilots when river travel was in its heyday from the fact that its sharp summit was a guide post on clear days. North of Ironton, State Highway No. 21. 7 Piasa Bluffs, Illinois, where Father Marquette in 1673 found the famous Piasa Bird and other weird monsters painted. Piasa Bird has been restored. Wonderfully picturesque district North of Alton, State Highway No. 3. \ 8— Pine Lake, lowa, a pleasure resort of surpassing beauty. Artificial lake fringed with white pine and filled with rainbow trout, bass, and other game fish. Indian Mounds nearby. Near Eldora, State Highway No. 58. 9 Kitch-iti-kip-pi, the Big Spring, in the virgin forest near Man!stique, Michigan. Sixty feet deep, four hundred feet across. The water is so clear you can watch a coin fall until it rests on the bottom, and so cold that no animal life can exist in it. About four miles oft State Highway No. 12. 10—The Gunflint Trail, in Minnesota, a unique thirty mile road built fpr the use of the Forestry Services and opening up the most beautiful part of the Superior National Forest, hitherto practically inaccessible. From Grand Marais on State Highway No. 1 into the wilderness.
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support Industrial Institutions, while at the same time we consider ourselves the natural wards of the State and ask for a pension. "Above all things, the blind need satisfactory industrial conditions, operating under the same rules that govern all other modern businesses." Miss Cortez is one of the interesting blind persons of the city. Graduated from the Indiana School for the Blind, she attended Butler and Indiana Universities. Interested primarily in languages,, especially Spanish, she went abroad foe study, and was in Spain and Central America in 1923-24. She traveled alone. "I get around better by myself,” Miss Cortez declared smilingly. For a time, after her return, she maintained a downtown language studio, but for the past year has taught Spanish and French In her own home. When the plague attacked London in 1665 'there were only four hospitals in the city. Now J 0,000 patients daily occupy beds in London's 250 hospitals.
Indianapolis, Ind.
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