Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 13, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1929 — Page 8

PAGE 8

ROTARY PARLEY OPENS; 10.000 IN ATTENDANCE Internationa! Clubmen in Session at Dallas: Many From Abroad, Du Press DALLAS, Tex., May 27.—Representatives of twenty-eight nations Tvere ga r hered here today as the convention of Rotary International opened with more than 10 000 delegates attending. Pre-convention meetings were held during the day. The convention proper will open tonight with an international "pageant to be presented by 600 high school girls in the athletic stadium at Fair park. International friendship will be depicted by groups representing each nation. Pre-Civil war days were recalled this afternoon when honor guests at a woman's tea, arrived in nineteenth renturv costume drawn by horse and chaise. Th“ setting for the event xrss a natural amphitheater in front of the Dallas Country Club. Hear Negroes Sine Tb' - old south w ill be brought before the delegates tomorrow nigh’ •alien a massed chorus of 1.000 retrro voices will present. Nezrn spirituals and melodies. School children college gl p e clubs and Negro choral groups will participate in the sineine. Confetti-tossing and oth r r forms of whoopee will be in order Wednesday night when the inaugural ball will bn held to honor the newly chosen * president of the organization. A golf tournament with entries from almost every nation is another event on the program Europeans .Attend The convention is the largest ever held in Daiias and one ol ;he largest, ever brought to the southwest. Included among the delegates are 9.000 from important cities and towns in the United States. Two European delegations were brought to America on ocean liners chartered for the event. On one of them was Dr. Wilhelm Cuno. former chancellor of Germany and more recently head of the German delegation to the reparations conference. On the other was Count Anthony Apponyi of Budapest, an Hungarian noble. Other unusually large delegations came from Latin America and Japan.

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Girl equestriennes, in their pretty pink and white frocks, will occupy the various rings when the Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus stages two exhibitions on June 4. The feminine members of the Homer Hobson Family and the Albert Hodgini Troupe are fearless riders and are graceful and form a picture of loveliness with their snow-white steeds. Many other European acts and troupes will form an essential part of the Hagenbeck-Wallace program this year. One of the most prominent displays will be the Breier Troupe, a direct importation from France that is making its first tour of this country. Austin King and his zebra roundup will be an additional novelty. This zebra group is the largest ever offered by any American circus.

MORROW HOME FOR WEDDING Ambassador Returns to His Jersey Estate, Bu Unit'd Prr*s ENGLEWOOD. N. J.. May 27. Ambassador Dwight W. Morrow has returned to his Englewood home and there was a stir of activity about the estate today as preparations were speeded for the wedding r his daughter Anne, to Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh. The ambassador arrived from Mexico City Sunday in a cheery frame of mind He motored out from Newark after a good-natured session vith reporters, but revealed nothing definite about the time or place of the most discussed marriage of the year. With Morrow's return, however, the- gathering of the family practically was completed and the wedding was understood to have been arranged for some time within the next month. The activity at the Morrow estate took on anew impetus shortly after the ambassador's arrival. A steady stream of automobiles purred

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through the entrance gates. Among them was, one containing Lindbergh and his mother, Mrs. Evangeline Lindbergh. The others contained approximately 150 friends of the Morrow family, invited to meet the famous flier at tea. It was the first time the Morrows and the Lindberghs had entertained side by side. Veteran Guide Is Dead Bu Unit'd Press WASHINGTON. May 27.—Beniamin Cady, 72, who had witnessed the inauguration of twelve Presidents, is dead. He was a veteran guide at the Capitol, having been in service for fifty years. Wlckersham at White House Bus n itrd Press WASHINGTON, May 27.—George W. Wickersham of New York, chairman of President Hoover’s law' enforcement commission, is a White House guest. The first meeting of the commission is to be held Tuesday. SO WEAK, THINr COULDN’T REST Lady Says She Was Much Better After She Had Taken Cardui, “A few years ago, I was a. sick woman and rather discouraged,” says Mrs. H. E. Dunaway, of 821 Fearl River Avenue, McComb. Miss. ‘‘l was so weak and than, I was not able to do my work as it should have been done. ‘‘This made me fret a good deal, and did not help my condition. “I had pains across my back and lower part of my body. My nights were spent in rolling from one side of the bed to the other, hoping I would soon go to sleep. Then, when morning would come, I would be just as tired as when I went to bed. “A neighbor, seeing how r badly I felt, told me to try Cardui. After I had taken one bottle, I was much better. I kept on taking Cardui, and I was stronger and slept much better at night. I have been recommending it ever since.” Thousands of women have written that Cardui has helped them. This well-known medicine is composed of purely vegetable ingredi- i ents. Try it in your case. Cardoseptic, lor hygienic reasons. , should be used by women as a ■ safe, effective detergent. 50 cts.

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GERMAN STAND BLOCKS ACCORD ON WAR DEBTS Hope for Pay Agreement Is Slight; Berlin Tries to Drive Bargain, BT SAMUEL DASHIELL United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, May 27.—With the German delegation still standing firm on its chief reservations, the outlook for an agreement on the reparations problem was darker today than perhaps at any time since the conference of international experts gathered some fifteen weeks ago to fix the amount of the reich’s war obligations to the allied creditor nations. In fact, the sentiment was growing among the American delegates that Dr. Hjalmar Schac.ht and his colleagues on the German delegation were exhausting all their means in an effort to drive a hard bargain. For the first time since the negotiations began some creditor delegates even favored a break in the conference, letting the reich face consequences which probably seriously would affect German credit abroad. Owen D. Young, American chairman of the conference, labored all Sunday in the hope of getting Dr. Schacht to modify his stand. But the spokesman for the German debt commission stood firm, insisting oi

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attaching his conditions to the recently conceived Young plan. Another meeting was scheduled for today between Dr. Schacht. Young and the allied delegations. It was hoped that the Germans would make an eleventh-hour change in their attitude of the%llied counter-proposal, a counter-propo-sal which many believed the creditors would never modify, considering it as absolutely final. The German refusal to allow, in the latest report of the allies, the clause pertaining to Belgium and its demand for German restitution of the gold francs which Germany, durnig the occupation of Belgium, confiscated from banks and factories, was one of the chief causes of contention. Dr. Schacht contends that this

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Belgian claim does not come within! the province of the current reparations conference, that its nature is j purely political. Even the fact that j Belgium had reduced its original claim to only 15 per cent fails to sway the German delegation on this point. i Disturbed Rest Men and women everywhere are using and recommending Foley Pills diuretic for relief from the distress and bother of kidney trouble. Foley Pills A diuretic stimulant for the kidneys. Sold everywhere. For sale b> all Haag drug store.

43 jj “Say It With Flowers

.MAT 21, 1929