1 I i . PAGE TQ6O' THE MICHICA N DAILY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 192q REEVESDELEGATE ATIACHERS' SESSION Society Composed of Prominent Dignitaries from Many Parts of World JICKJNSON GIVES SPEECH Net Meeting of Institute to be Held at University of Cambridge Prof. Jesse S. Reeves of the po- litical science department returned Monday from the meeting of the conference of teachers of inter- national law. The fourth meeting of the conference was held in con- junction with the annual session of the Institute of International Law, held at Briarcliff Lodge, New York. The Institute is a society com- posed of the more prominent men in the world who are interested in the field of International Law. The body was formed over 60 years ago, with a limited membership, and this year marks the first time that the session has been held in the United, States. The regular business mneeti'ng of the institution con- tinued from October 18 to 21. Teachers Attend. Fifty of the more prominent teachers of International Law were invited to meet with the In- ternational Law body. The teach- ers held their conferences in the evening, and in the. daytime, at- tended the meetings of the Insti- tte. Various members of the lat- ter group read papers, and Profes- so Reeves,,n an interview, stated, "We were thus privileged to come in to contact with the Institute as a whole and with it. distinguished Membership" Professor Reeves conducted a round table conference on the sub- ject of the methods and topics of teaching International Law. He also delivered to the conference as a whole the report of the methods accepted by his group. Another member of the University faculty, Prof. Edwin D. Dickinson of the Law School, was also a member of the conference, and spoke before a general meeting on a particular phase of International Law. Has Imposing Personel. The personnel of the Institute of International Law comprises some of the greatest dignitaries of the world. Included in the list of mem- bers are four judges of the Perma- nent Court of International Justice at The Hague. Antonio S. de Bus- tamante y Sirven of Cuba, Sir Cecil J; B. Hurst of Great Britain, Raphael Altamira y Crevea of Spain, and Demetre Negulaesco of Roumania are The Hague judges who were present at the conference at Briarciff Lodge. Three members of the faculty of the University of Paris, and pro- fessors of International Law there also attended the meeting. They were: Jules Basdevant, Gilbert Gidel, and Albert de Lapradelle. Also in attendance was Walter Simons of Germany, who was for- merly the German Minister of For- eign Affairs and who was acting president of the German Republic in the interval between the terms of President Ebert and President von Hindenburg. Simons is at pres- ent the President of the Supreme Court of Germany. The next annual meeting of the Institute of International Law will be held at Cambridge,' England, and will be presided over by Alexander, Pearce Higgins professor of Inter- national Law at Cambridge Uni- versity. CHAMPAIGN-URBAN, Ill.-Fall baseball practice is under way at the University of Illinois, several fast six-inning games having been played already. I, W / IIII M MII, 'SAM HILL) TAKES HOOVER TO LIGHT JUBILEE F SLAPS ADDRESSES LEAGUE THEATRE INAUGURATES NEW TYPE OF ENTERTAINMENTI r Y I U Ii I W IliL LI I I11 I Officials of the Lydia Mendels- theatre work of this university ______sohn theatre inaugurated a new The picture attracted the atten- «::::::U'ing is the theme of his lee-' type of program last night with the! tion of the theatre officials through [ iitre iTennyson's immortal passageI featuring of "Growth of the Soil," its long metropolitan runs by the "I doubt not through the ages, one the Scandinavian epic of Knt distinctive praise which critics have increasing purpose runs; and the Hamsun. This type of presentation the piece, and by the per- thoughts of men are widened, with Iis an experiment for the theater given the process of the suns," Rev. Al- and in all probability will be the sonal contacts of a member of the lison Ray Heaps, pastor of the First established practice for "dark" .tall. Miss Loomis is of the opin- Congregational Church, delivered weeks. ion that the miu is an exceedmn- the main address at the first of a "It is not the policy of our or- ly diligent reproduction of the series of experimentalhdevotion ganization," Amy Loomis, dector novel The photography and e- services sponsored by the Student of the theatre, told a reporter yes- lection of actors was under the s- Chrstin . citio Suda ev- erdy to infringe in any way periino h uhr ing at the Lydia Mendelssohn upon the work of the amateur '"The film is" according to the theatre.me tI dramatic groups of the campus. theatre director, "true in every re- 'graOver four hundred people, the{ The purpose is not a commercial spect to the detail of the book. It . . great erpart, f whom were Univer- one, as we are interested in giving' is a work of art, in all highest which was based an A M E. Hut- the new art movie a place In the meaning of the term," Adun.son'sibook, "One Increasing ssoca tea Press Photo Purpose." Colored slides which (- -- - --- celebration. Also shown above is b.ggage car afire, The baggage car Reverend leaPs used to illustrate This train of the rtyle of 18791 the restored Smith's Creek station. is an exact duplicate of that in the talk were produced by the pas a InT863Edion ws eecte fro whch tetfr himself and have been used yesterday carried President Hoover In 1863 Edison was ejected from which the youthful Edison kept his on similar occasions throughset and Thomas A. Edison from Detroit a similar train onto the station magazines and fruit and, in spare t mcountry. . platform by an enraged conductor moments, conducted his exper- of the oram was to attend the light golden jubilee when one of his experiments set a ments with chemicals. _Te ret1epo grm ewas ____________ __ --made up of responsive service, D fsymposium reading and music by4300 GOLD OF SPAfNISH MINERS REMAINS So far nothing has been found the quartet as well as an offering 4300 4t00 ' D N IN P R VI N H NT R A Dthat would give the exacthni location by the harpist, Dorothy VanZwal- HIof the towns, but several authentic uwenberg. The members iof the That thirty millions of dillars In psd 1o cross Brazil and return to pans aucit aebe quartet were Thelma Lewis, so- MEN'S $0 found describing the expeditions prano; Annis Dexter Gray, con-Caned washed gold lies hidden in thv C zatio they pcannidtto against the rebellious miners. tralto:Paul P. Brainard, tenor Sutsand jungles of Eastern Peru and h leave, the Indians rebelled against ---I Pressed been there since the time of the their taskmasters, killed all the - Overcoats Spaniards has been kinown for Spaniards, burned the towns, and NOW NOW years But exactly where 0 no one left the gold where it was, hidden LSHOWING W ER TH E SHOWINGS knew. in the cellars of the miners' houses._______________________________PaiClad In the decade 1l7301-790, a lroul The Indians were head hunters, aCleaned 25 of Spanish gold miners, rebelling and for years, so fierce was their Dresses and against paying the king's fiftfh of hatred of the white man, they al- Pressed all the gold that they mined, fled lowed no intruders, and it was not I Cots beyond the jurisdietion of Spain in until after 1900 that the country 1THEECoats to the wilderness behind the moun- was again visited by white people.I r tains of Peru. here, they set up In 1920; Prof. A. S. Aiton, of the INBO W , C.O. D. n Deiery their own independent colonies history department, at that time and started to mine gold. Ten working in the archives of Spain,_____--- 'thousand Indians were enslaved received a letter from a well known and put to work in the washings. American mining engineer, who MARIAN NIXON Spain sent expeditions to bring, had just returned after a three FRANKIE DARRO back the mutinous miners but each year sojourn in the back country f u LLOYD INGRAAM time they returned empty handed, of Peru. He stated that he had repulsed by the small band4 who found the washings of the Spanish a 9ranmount AliTALING Gctur fortified themselves in the strong- miners, but that the towns in SHOWS 1:30 TO 11:00 CLs''S holds of the hills. which the gold was hidden were lip'_A__ _ _ _ _ _ _ For three years, the Spaniards in the midst of an impenetrable --_- ~_~_~_~ maintained themselves in Eastern jungle, forty miles square in area,--_ ---__ Peru, while the ten thousand In- through which an expedition would- dians washed gold for them. . Each have to cut its way with extreme - - - Indian was required to wash a cer- difficulty. He asked Professor Aiton tain amount each day. Computa- to help him find some record that tions based on this daily amount would give the exact location of for a period of three years show a' the towns. But he also stated that, total of between thirty and forty whether or not the record was million dollars. Then the miners, found, he was going back to Peru in satisfied with their treasure, want- 'search of this fortune. 1 e I I I i I i I i i a i MEH ®I I On CHAZ CHASE "ENCHANTED Stage In Person FOREST" Fantasy of Dance SEE! HEAR 7=- r Detroit Theatres NOW PLAYING 2:00-3 :40-Te Living Screen Presents-7 :009.:OO A LAFAYETTE "LITTLE ACCIDENT" with Thomas Mitchell A Laugh Riot! Matinees: Sat. 50c-$2.00 Nights: 50c, $2.50 CASS GEO. SIDNEY "KIBITZER" Matinees: Wed. and Sat. 75c, $1.50 Nights: $1.00, $2.50 e. Triumphant Return- Unparalleled in the Realm of Perfect Enter tainment- TAL(See TANGAINGI S 1~~AUGHING Agi M ,.-n e A n d =- + Again t i . I I I