Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 146, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1926 — Page 18
PAGE 18
NEW MAGAZINE t TELLS HOW TIT REAR CHILDREN Sponsored by Sixty Specialists in Child Health. Bu United Press NfjAV i'OKK, Sept. 24. —Under the Sponsorship of sixty .eminent specialists in children’s health, education, and welfare, anew national periodical called “Children, the Magazine for Parents,” has made it appearance. : “TJhis .magazine,” It was announced by George J. Uecht, president of The Parents’ Publishing Association, under whose auspices it is issued, "will have no propaganda purpose, being dedicated solely to fathers and OiOthers for the sake of anew generation of normal, intelligent and healthy children. In this it will have the active cooperation, of the leading educational and child welfare agencies, private, public and governmental.” Editors - Among the editors of the new magazine Miss Julia C. Lathrop, former chief of the United States Cnildren’s Bureau; Angelo Patri, Educator and author of books on child training; Glenn Frank, president of the University of Wisconsin; Judge Ben B. Lindsey of the Juvenile Court of Denver, Colo.; Living.Ston Farrand, president of Cornell •University; JDr. Lee K. Frankel, chairman of the National Health Council; Dr. Hejen T. Woolley, director, Instßute of Child Welfare Research, Teachers College, Columbia University; James E. West, Chief Scout Executive; Mrs. Sidonie M. Gruenberg, director of the Child Study Association of America; Mrs. Jane Deeter Rippin, national direct.o'r, The Girl Scouts and Dr. Bela Schick, discoverer of the Schick test for diphtheria. Greatest Profession •3 "There are magazines on the breeding of hogs and the growing of flowers, the refining of metals,” explained Hecht, "There are mag nzines laboring men, radio fans, barbels, beekeepers—for every trade and profession, except the egrea. test of all —parenthood. "Billions of dollars are spent on schools; but practically nothing is spent to teach parents how to rear their children. Os 96,000 hours of a child’s life between the ages of 5 and 16, only 7,000 hours are spent in school; the other 90 per cent of the time is the parents’ responsibility. The new magazine will have nothing for children to read; it will consider with parents all the vital problems of banging up children jfrom the edib to college.”
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KING IS SPEED DEMON Cops Bewildered as Captive’s Permit Shows Him Ruler. Bu United Press i BRUSSELS, Sept. 24.—King Albert, hurrying to save the Belgian franc, was speeding on his "motorbike” from the royal palace at Laeken to his new “office” in Brussels, at the tidy rate of thirty miles *n hour. “ Two scandalized gendarmes trapped him and brought the impatient monarch to a stop. They demanded his driver’s permit which he promptly produced. It was made out to “Albert of Belgium.” Tableau! Profuse apologies. But tho. King shook hands with them and insisted it was all right. The help-y our self plan of a cafeteria enables the finest of foods at “odd penny prices” to be served at White’s Cafeteria “On 7e Circle.”
_THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
NERO HAD A CALLIOPE Instrument of Famed “Fiddler” Played With Water Power. ROME, Sept. 24. —A circus ‘‘calli-
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ope” played with water, instead of. steam, was one of Nero's playthings, according to Italian archaeologists, following studies near the Golden House of Nero. The “water” calli-
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ferent tones in the callhipe. Sev eral keyboards with a mechanlsnA of strings was used to regulate the air pressure valves in the metal pipe3.
8 KPT. 24, 1928
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