Evening Star Newspaper, July 31, 1930, Page 10

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—10 PU[ITI[}S INSTITUTE STUDIES PROBLEMS U. S. and European Leaders Meet at Williamstown for Tenth Session. By the Associated Press. WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass, July 31.—| The tenth annual session of the Insti- | tute of Politics convened here at Wil- liams College today, with prominent Americans and Europeans enrolled for investigation and discussion of current international probiems. Addresses by Prof. C. de Lisle Burns | of the University of London, who will | conduct & round table on “Analysis of Western _ Civilization,” and by Prof. George H. Blakeslee of Clark Univer- sity, leader of the round table on “The Far Eastern Situation,” were scheduled as features of the opening session. The program also called for an address of welcome by Dr. Harry Garfield, presi- | dent of Willlams College and chairman ©of the Institute of Politics. 300 Attend Session. Admirals, members of the diplomatic service and economic experts repre- senting the United States, England, France, Germany, Japan and Soviet Russia are numbered among the 300 leaders and members enrolled. for the | institute's 30-day session. Their program of round tables, con- ferences and lectures includes. studies of the. problems of Russia, India and nationalism, the Far Eastern situation, g'ln -American problems and ao\ereigmy the Arctic and Antarctic. Among the prominent Europeans who will give lectures and addresses during the session are Lord Eustace Percy of | London, former president of the Board | of Education in Great Britain and member of the British diplomatic serv- ice for eight years: Dr. Paul Mantoux of Paris, director of the Post-Graduate Institute of International Studies at Geneva and adviser of the French dele- gation at the London Naval Conference; Dr. Walter Simons, former chief justice of the Supreme Court of Germany, and Admhl] Sir Herbert W. Richmond, K. C. B, former commander in chief of the East Indies Naval Station. Russian Problem to Be Tackled. Timing its discussions to current | events, the institute will devote its first | general conferencc on Friday to “Do- mestic_ and Foreign Problems of Rus- sia.” It will be conducted by Ivy Lee, New York publicist, and will number among its speakers Peter A. Bogdanov, chairman of the Amtorg Trading Cor- poration; George E. Sokolsky, editor of the Far Eastern Review, and Col. Hugh Cooper, consulting engineer of a $75,~ 000,000 waterpower project in Ukraine, Russia. Other round table and conference leaders during the session inelude Dr. Laura P. Martin of Washington, Admiral A. J. Hepburn, U. 8. N.; Lord Meston of Agra and Dunottar, and Edward P. wniner, editor of Aviation, New York. “The institute’s program is linked to recent international happenings even more closely than we hoped when it ‘was scheduled,” Dr. Garfield said to- day. “The ratification of the London naval treaty by Congress and current developments in the Russian and East Indian situations have allied the insti- tute agenda closely to the happenings of the day.” URGES FILM STAR AID MEXICO CITY, July 31 (#).—Secre- tary of Communications Almazan yes- terday recommended to President Ortiz Rubio that vernment assistance be given to Mexican actors in Hollywood's motion picture colony to preserve Mex- ico’s “hegemony” in Spanish talkies. ‘The minister expressed the opinion that the talkies were proving of im- mense value as a means of propsgunan and that, while Mexican actors apj ently dominated the Spanish speal \ng movie colony, there was great compe- tition between them and Spanish ac- Denmark to “Cut Navy” by Disposing Of Her 2 Warships By the Associated Press. COPENHAGEN, July 31.— Denmark, which owns but_two cruisers, the Heimdal and Niels Juel, has decided to dispose of them. The Heimdal will be scrapped and the Niels Juel, just returned from a royal visit to the Iceland jubilee, probably will be sold to China, naval officers believe, Minister of Marine L. Ras- mussen has confirmed recent, re- ports of intended “naval recuc- ion."” AGITATORS IGNORE LONE POLICEMAN Demonstration by Rival Elements in Faroe Islands Postpones _ Opening of Parliament. | By the Associated Press. | COPENHAGEN, July 31.—The one | policeman in Thorshavn,. Faroe Islands, | was unable to halt a flag demonst |tion Tuesday which resulted in pos ponement of the opening of the L ting, or Parliament. | The demonstration, accompanied by agitation against Denmark, owner of the Faroe group, came on Saint Olaf’s | day. Saint Olaf is the patron saint | of "the island: and a large crowd was in_the capital attending the festivities, | " Poul Patursson, son of the Faroe | member of the Danish Senate, led a | crowd to the Lagting Building and cut down the Danish flag, replacing it with a large Faroe banner. Later the Danish flag was replaced, | but the lone policeman was unable to | | arrest young Patursson because enthu- | siastic ‘supporters carried him away on | their shoulders, The Faroes have the status of a Danish country and the local flag has no official recognition. Premier Staun- ing said todqy that “no responsible Faroe representative ever clatmed the right to a special fiag in the islands.” The Faroe group. composed of 31 islands in the North Atlantic west of Denmark, is inhabited by persons of Norwegian descent. Their spoken lan- guage is a North German dialect, but they write in Danish. Fishing is the | principal industry. Cottonseed hulls, s b)-produtt here- | tofore considered of no_ value, can, by a new process, be made to 500 pounds of sugar from every ton of hulle. This sugar, known to chemists as xylose, has been rare and expensive up to the present. The Daily Bath Feminine agent which Health Demand PERSONAL HYGIENE Thousands of particular women use this reliable prepara- tion in their dally douche because it refreshes, purifies and soothes. Key's Astringent yet it is pure and Tost delicate mucous membranes and tissues. Get & box of Key's from your drussist todsy. S0c AT ALL PEOPLES AND OTHER GOOD DRUG STORES KEey's ASTRINGENT POWDER Safe—Reliable—PI . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. DR. HANS JENSEN SEEKS DIVORCE Kansas City Veterinary Scientist Led Fight Against Bishop Bast in 1928, By the Associated Press. RENO, Nev, July 31—Dr. Hans Jensen, Kansas City veterinarian scien- tist, whose fight against Bishop Anton Bast of Copenhagen, Denmark, led to the latter's conviction on three counts by the International Methodist Epis- copal Conference in 1928, has filed suit for divorce here, it was learned today. Mrs, Jensen’s attorney, George Spring- meyer, revealed that Mrs. Jensen had established resjdence in another county with the intention of flling a divorce | complaint of her own. Dr. Jensen'’s research into serums for catlle diseases has won him recognition | by the Danish government. o P Ttalians are backing the manufacture of macaroni and Germans the brewing of beer, in Ecuador. THE NEW Brunswick Radio NOW ON DISPLAY a Garren’s Music Store 807 H 8t. N.E. Line. 4019 @ THE NEW Brunswick Radio Now on Demonstration . HUGO WORCH 1110 G St. N.W. Is Not Enough! and Charm 's Astringent Powder .. should always be in your medicine cabinet, ready for immediate use. A splendid eleansing and hygienie has many uses in the homs. der 1s & real foe to germ life ... . cannot harm or irritate the nt to Use Nothing BURNS but Reproduced from The Washington Post of July 30. Wood, coal, oil—none of the substances which we customarily speak of as “burning” actually do. It is only the gases thrown off by them when sub- jected to heat which produce flame. Your gas pipes bring to you a con- centrated fuel which produccs a maximum of heat with a minimum of D. C., THURSDAY, JULY Py Designed for distant days when cities tower far into ‘plane-clouded skies, the new Bruns- wick Radio greets the world todayl When styles in cars and clothes and skyscrapers have changed, the Brunswick you buy now will still be up-to-date...For Brunswick's Futura models for 1931 carry a pledge of permanence—guarded against change by their perfected tone and by revolutionary improvements which anticipate the future. Some day ALL radios will have the sensational UNI- SELECTOR-asingle dialfo operatethe set...But only Brunswick has it today. wSome day ALL radios will have the RIGID TUNING SCALE, which perfects selectivity by bringing in stations at invariably the same point on the scale—an ALL-ARMORED CHASSIS, shielding the mechanism from dust, ‘damage and electrical interference —and the TONE CONTROL, which puts bass or treble emphasis at your command...But only the Bruns- wick is completely equipped with all these features of the future now. PY Every quality others offer is at its best in the Brunswick —velvet tone, pulsing power, hair- breadth selectivity, all-weather reception, splendid cabinets . . . 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