Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 167, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1929 — Page 18
PAGE 18
DELEGATES TO LONDON NAVAL PARLEY NAMED \ Stimson Heads Group of Seven to Represent United States. BY LYLE C. WILSON Initrd PrfM Staff ( orrf.pn(lfnt WASHINGTON. Nov. 22 -America's delegation to the London armament conference will include three men whose careers have given them but little acquaintance with naval affairs. Os the six men named with Secretary of State Stimson on the delegation Senators Reed and Robinson and Ambassador Dwight W. Morrow have the least knowledge of naval matters. The.delegation is as follows: Stimson. Robinson of Arkansan, Reed of Pennsylvania. Secretary of NaVy Adams, Ambassador Charles G. Dawes, Ambassador Dwight W. Morrow and Ambassador Hugh S. Gibson. Adams Represents Navy Adams represents the Navy de- j partment on the delegation. President Hoover’s original Intention had not been to appoint him, the United Press understands, but when Rear Admiral Hilary Jones, retired, shiec from connection with the conference unless the navy were better represented, the secretary was added. Dawes, as ambassador to Great Britain, and Gibson, as ambassador to Bellgium, have been identified throughout with the Hoover naval program. Gibson spent several weeks here before the President launched the project May 30. In 1927 he headed the American delegation to the Geneva conference. Jones was a member of that delegation. Jones’ reluctance to go to London ! Vanished with Inclusion of Adams. J who is said by informed persons to ; have won confidence of naval offi- I cers markedly, since he became 1 secretary last March. Admiral Wil- j liam V. Pratt, commander of the ■ United States fleet, will share with Jones duties as principal naval ad- I Viser to the delegation. On Advisory Commission Hugh Wilson, minister to Switzerland, who now is in the United States, will be a member of the ad- * visory Commission, as will Arthur W. Page of New York and J. Theodore Marriner, chief of the department's western European division. The delegation, advisory commission and clerks will aggregate thirty-five tc fifty persons. Tentative plans of the American delegation to sail from New York aboard the Olympic Jan. 11 may be altered to permit them to use the Leviathan, an American ship, if its Sailing date can be rearranged to suit Stimson's convenience. WANT EVERYTHING LONG Six-Foot Club Members Talk Over Handicaps of Height. Bn United Press LONDON, Nov. 22.—A loud cry has been sent up by the Six-Foot Club. It clamors for bigger beds, roomier theaters, higher busses, and ready-made clothes to fit. The smallest member of this club is six feet one-half inch tall, and the largest six feet eight. The club meets *once a month to talk over the unkindness of the world to men of their stature. Fanner Killed by Tractor Itu I niltil Press MARION. Ind.. Nov. 22. -The body cf Joseph Sterling, 38. farmer, was found here in a field where he had been killed while plowing with a tractor. The body was partially covered with soil.
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Under Fire
President Hoover is reported to be contemplating sending a committee to Haiti to investigate the activities of Brigadier-General John H. Russell (above*, American high commissioner there. Haitian patriotic groups charge Russell is lending his prestige to President Borno, who is said to be planning to cancel the Haitian election scheduled for 1930.
350 CITIES IN U. S. HAVE HABIT CLINICS Studies Are Made of Children to Determine Failure Causes. By Science Service WASHINGTON, Nov. 22. The United States has 350 cities in thirty-six of its states where there is at least one habit clinic to which problem children may go to have their troubles understood and adjusted, the United States children’s bureau has found, as a result of a check-up on the increase in these child guidance institutions. The bureau has issued a pamphlet directory listing the 500 psychiatric clinics for children in this country, thus showing the available resources in any given locality. Only twenty years ago the first? clinic, for the study of delinquent children, was set up in connection with the Chicago juvenile court, Miss Grace Abbott, chief of the bureau, stated in comment. The number today still is insufficient to meet more than a small fraction of the needs of delinquent children and the needs of the children who are serious failures at school, or suffer from timidity and other personal handicaps.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
NOV. 22, 1929
