Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1927 — Page 5
JULY 28, 1927
WORLD LEADERS IN MANY LINES AT CONFERENCE Notables From Abroad Reach U. $. for Institute of Politics Sessions. Bu XLn ite.tl Press Mi ILLIAMsTOWN, Mass., July 28. —Lecturers from the United States, England, France, Italy and many other countries were gathered here today for the opening meeting of the seventh annual Institute of Politics, held under the direction of Dr. Harry A. Garfield, president of Williams College. An array of speakers of international reputation promises that this year’s meeting will be one of the most successful ever held. While the question of international affairs will have a big place, such domestic questions as the American Agricultural Policy also will come up for a share of attention. H. A. Wallace of Des Moines, a son of the late Secretary of Agriculture, Henry C. Wallace, and editor of Wallace’s Farmer, will lead discussion of this subject. Mussolini Foe to Speak , Count Carlo Sforza of Italy, a former foreign minister and an opponent of Premier Mussolini’s policy of government, will be one of the leading speakers on international affairs. Sir, Arthur Willert, head dl the American section of the British Foreign Office, will be another prominent speaker. His subject, “British Foreign Policy Since the War,’’ will hold an especial interest to Americans attending the meeting. Prof. Ralston Hayden, of the University of Michigan, will lead the round table dealing with the various Island possessions of the United States, and the tropical colonies of Holland, Great Britain and Japan. Conference Closes Aug. 25 The conference program which tyill close Aug. 25, follows: International Debts in Retrospect by Dr. Joseph S. Davis, Food Research Institute, Stanford university. * The Philippine Islands: Their Political Status by Prof. Ralston Hayden, University of Michigan. Present Problems of the British Commonwealth of Nations Since the War, by Prof. Herbert Heaton, Queens University, Kingston, Can. Comparative Law as a Basis of In-
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Essay Writer Will Win Lot in Le Gore Addition
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A winner in the Indianapolis Real Eastate Board essay contest on “Why Indianapolis Has Constantly Grown in Population’’ will receive a lot in the LeGore-Crest Addition, developed by Dan W. LeGore, 409 Peoples Bank Bldg. The photo shows a modem home in the LeGore Addition. Essays not exceeding 500 words should be submitted before Aug. 11.
ternational Law by Dr. Pierre LaPaulle, Paris, France. Address on Foreign Interests Foreign Interests and National self Determination in Inter-Ameri-can Affairs by Prof. William R. Shepherd, Columbia University. Dictatorship Versus Democracy in Europe by Prof. Henry R. Spencer, Ohio State University. An American Agricultural Policy by H. A. Wallace, Des Moines. A conference on the situation in China will be set up, and announcement made later concerning the leadership of it. The lecture courses are: “The New Spiritual Values in the Near East,” Bishop Nicholas, Ochrida, Macedonia. Foreign Policies of Europe Since the Peace of Versailles, Count Carlo Sforza, Rome. Financial and Economic Policy of Germany Since the War, Dr, Peter Reinhold, Dresden. Addresses will be given by Dr. Jacob E. Lange, of Denmark, Professor John A. Todd, of Liverpool, and Robert Michels, Professor of Economics at the University cf Basle, Switzerland.
“The Bargain Corner of Indianapolis” TOanieteT Corner Washington and Delaware Sts.
Preachers Urged to Disguise Selves Bu United Prow STONY BROOK, L. 1., July 28. “A preacher should dress and act so that no one suspects he is a minister,” the Rev. A. C. Robertson of Louisville, Ky., eminent theologian and Greek scholar, said at the ministers’ conference here.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CHILD HEROINE OF WjLD AUTO Saves Sister’s Body in Accident at Lynn. By/ Times Special LYNN, Ind., July 28.—Mary Catherine Gantz, young sister of Mrs. Earl Simons, is recovering from a lacerated knee received when she saved herself and her sister’s 2-year-old baby from possible death in a runaway automobile. The car stopped near the Simons home after the three had been riding. Mrs. Simons, believing the gasoline supply exhausted, started to push the car, leaving her baby and sister in the car with Mary at the wheel. Suddenly the engine started, the gears meshed and the auto began a mad rush down a street. Mary jumped with the baby in her arms, shielding it with her body. It was unhurt. The car dashed across the porch at the home of Mrs. Acil Teeters, smashing a chair in which her baby was sleeping, but the \ child was uninjured. After wrecking the porch, the auto struck a tree, ending its unpiloted journey. Certain Eskimo tribes kill and bury a dog with each child* that dies. This is done so the dog may guide the child to the other, world.
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1— .Kansas. Leavenworth ondhe bluffs overlooking the Missouri River, is reached by Interstate Highway 73. Established 1827. Fort Leavenworth is oneol the oldest military posts in the West. The army service schools. Disciplinary Barracks, Federal Prison. Kansas State Penitentiary and western branch of trie Home ofDisahled Volunteer Soldiers are located here. 2 lows, dear Lake derives its name from the crystal blue of its waters. Spacious groves of native oak line the shores. Varied recreational opportunities. U. S. Interstate Highway 18. t—North Dakota. Merrioourt. White Stone Hill Battlefield where General A. H. Sulley defeated the last of the North Dakota Indians, Sept. 20, 1863. May be reached by Highway 13 at Kalm or Highway 11 near Coldwater. 4—Missouri. At Nevada. Missouri. is a park historically important because of a spring within its boundaries which was used medicinally by the Osage Indians. Many miraculous cures were attributed to the use of the waters from this spring. Now owned by Osage Indian. Highway 54. (—Michigan. Frankfort atanted in Benzie County, the county of 50 lakes, noted for its fine fruit. State Highway 22.
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A Specialty Shop Within 4 Specialty Shop
•—South Dakota. The famous Pine Ridge and Roaebud Indian icarnations are south of Interior, where the Sioux made their last stand against the white man on Wounded Knee Creek. Here the Indian may be seen in hit native haunts. State Highway 40, Interstate Highway 18. T I —Minnesota. Hackensack Is in the midst of Minnesota's Ten Thousand Lake districton the shores of Birch Lake. There is a taxidermy shop in Hacken sack and two fox farms in the vicinity. State Highway 19. •—lllinois. At Rantoul tsChanute Field, location of the U. S. Army Aviation School- State Highway 25. •—Wisconsin. Near Prairie du Chien is Nelson Dewey State Park. Covers more than 16 hundred acres and contains largest group of undenieted Indian Mounds in the United States. Os unusual interest are Black Hawk Natural Monument. Glen Grotto, and Goat Cave, from which may be teen the junction of the Wisconsin and MiaaiMinpi Rivera. Short distance off Highway 18. 10—Indiana. St. Marys of the Woods at Terre Haute, pioneer educational institution (established m the year 1840 when a sisterhood from France made a foundation in Vigo County, about four miles west of the Wabash River at a spot they named St Marys of the Woods. Interstate Highway* 40 and 41.
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