Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1928 — Page 7

MAY 16, 1928.

HOOVER TORNS ATTENTION TO FARMSTATES Sponsors Point to Indiana, Ohio Vote as Proof of Western Favor. BY RAY TUCKER Bu United Press WASHINGTON, May 16.—Figuring that they have won Herbert Hoover’s battle against eastern bosses, his sponsors today launched a counter-attack against claims that he cannot carry western agricultural States. James W. Good, Hoover’s local manager, presented a detailed analysis of the Indiana result to show that Hoover ran well in rural districts and did not make the weak showing advertised by the Watson-Lowden-Curtis coalition. Good also cited Hoover’s rural strength as revealed in the Ohio primary, and in such States as Oregon, Washington and Utah. New York supporters pointed out that Hoover’s strength in that State is centered in up-State rural disricts, where most of the leaders are said to resent National Committeeman Hides’ efforts to sidetrack Hoover. Turn to Farmers The Hoover people believe that the only obstacle between him and the nomination is the attempt of the coalition group to convince party leaders he will not run well beyond the Mississippi. This propaganda has already been raised, but i it will reach maximum intensity after the bosses arrive at Kansas i City. The hope of the so-called farmers’ friends among the presidential contingent is to frighten off such eastern leaders as Secretary Mellon, National Chairman William M. Butler and George K. Morris, New York State chairman. These three have recently declared for Hoover, almost insuring his nomination, obsrvers believe, unless the defeatist talk gains more headway than it has so far. Carried" Farm Counties Good also noted another phase of Hoover’s primary showing which has no far passed unnoticed by politicians. He pointed out that, whereas Watson carried counties which usually go Democratic in the national election, Hoover won populous sections always found in the Republican column. “Secretary Hoover,’’ said Good, “carried a number of agricultural counties. He won some agricultural townships by two to one. “Besides these farm districts i found in the Hoover column, he was defeated in many others by very narrow majorities. If the anti-Hoover group can find any comfort in the Indiana or Ohio re- j suit in country districts, they are welcome to it. * “The Indiana result clearly shows that Hoover has great strength in agricultural sections. That had previously been proved in agricultural States like Maine, Michigan, Kentucky, Oregon, Washington and Utah." LOCAL BANKER TO TALK Will Speak on Mexican Affairs at Y. M. C. A. Meeting Tonight R. D. Jackson, head of the Peoples State Bank foreign investment department, will discuss conditions in Mexico tonight at the Bible Investigation Club session at the Y. M. C. A. “Are American investors justified in placing investments in Mexico; in the light of land title uncertainties and what recent acts of j Mexican courts or law makingbodies jeopardized or clarified titles of American investments in Mexico?” will be some of the questions discussed. The Rev. Edmund Kerlin will talk on “Letter Writing for the King,” and the Rev. P. H. Hughes on “What About Contradictions Found.; in the Bible?”

PLAN KIWANIS PROGRAM Senator Dill of Washington to Speak at Convention in June SEATTLE, Wash., May 16. Speakers at the twelfth annual convention of the Kiwanis International to be held here June 17-21 will be United States Senator Clarence C. Dill, of Spokane, and Dr. Thomas Arkle Clark, dean of men, University of Illinois, according to Henry C. Heinz, of Atlanta, president of Kiwanis, today. The convention office in Seattle, which opened in January, reports an expected attendance of 6,000 delegates and visitors from the 1,703 clubs in the United States and Canada. Warsaw Rejects Fast Time ]t;j Times Special WARSAW, Ind., May 16.—The city council has rejected the daylight saving plan for Warsaw by a vote of 4 to 1. Most of the city’s industries are operating on fast time, but standard time will remain as official.

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Little Paulina Longworth posed very seriously for this picture, for it was taken at a horse show given especially for her and other society children at Washington, D. C. Holding the daughter of the Speaker of the House is Mrs. Medill McCormick, Republican nominee for Con-gressman-at-large from Illinois.

VIKING GRAVES GIVE UPRELICS Find Engraved Bronze Swords on Swedish Isle. By Science Service STOCKHOLM. May 16.—Elaborately engraved bronze swords and other rare relics estimated co be 3,000 years old or older have been unearthed on the Swedish island of Oeland in the Baltic Sea by the archaeologist, K. A. Gustawsson and his associates. The excavations have covered a period of many months. Expenses of the expedition have been met by the Swedish Academy of Antiquities. The most remarkable find comprises 300 ancient graves covering a very large area. Many of these have the appearance of the so-called “judgeseats,” found in various places in Sweden, which seems to indicate that these stone relics had nothing to do with the dispensation of justice in olden times, but were in fact parts of the Viking’s burial grounds. The scientists are surprised at the length of some of these interment fields. One of them measures 3,281 feet. The most magnificent stone mound from the bronze age is the one discovered north of the city of Borgholm. On account of its dominant position, overlooking the Koepings Bay, it is supposed that it must at one time have served as a landmark for sailors. CAST FOR PLAY CHOSEN Indiana State Seniors Will Offer “She Stoops to Conquer.” By Times Special TERRE HAUTE. Ind., May 16. The following Indiana State seniors have been chosen for parts in “She Stoops to Conquer,” class play to be given next month: Floyd Flinn, Sulivan: Donald Bowen, .Tasonville; Bachei Briedenbaugh, Midland; Raymond Price. Sullivan; Charles Hinton, Clinton; Francis Post, Terre Haute: Adelaide Kipp. Greencastle; Grace Winters, East Chicago; Lois Gallaher, Sullivan, and Charlotte Harris, Terre Haute. Robert Strohl Emerson, Plainfield, will act as director, and will give the prologue. I. U. Law Dean to Speak Bn United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 16. Paul V. McNutt, dean of the law school at Indiana University, has been selected to give the address of welcome at the meeting of American Association of- Law Librarians at West Baden, May 29. Rowena V. Compton, librarian of the Indiana University Law School, will have charge of an excursion which members of the convention will make to Marengo Cave.

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BAY STATE, WASHINGTON SOLDIERS’ RATE HIGHEST Army Tests Show California, Oregon Men Also Rank High. Bu Science. Service NEW YORK, May 16.—How soldiers from the different States ranked in the famous army intelligence tests has been claassifled by Dr. Carl Brigham of Princeton, and reported to the Galton Society. Men from Washington, Oregon, California and Massachusetts made the highest averages on the intelligence tests, he found. Discussing Dr. Brigham’s report. Dr. Walter V. Bingham of the Personnel Research Federation, declared that during the war the psychologists of the Army were put to it to fill the never-ending demands from General Pershing in France for men with certain occupational qualifications. Requisitions for carpenters, dock workers, 2,000 men who could speak French, everything, came one upon another, he said. “There were two almost inexhaustible sources of high grade men. Camp Devons, Massachusetts anci Camp Lewis. Washington,” Dr Bingham recalled. CONFESSION HOAX FAILS Broke, Tells Story of “Robbery” to Get Home. By United Press NEW YORK, May 16.—George Chrebanu, 17, of Lowell, Mass., wandered the streets of New Yorkbroke. He waAed to go home so he “confessed” to police that he had staged a big robbery in Lowell, and wouldn't the police send him back there. They would not. He’s held for further investigation.

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PAY HONORS TO PADEREWSKI AT DINNERTONIGHT Nation Joins in Honoring . Pianist After 37 Years. BU United Press NEW YORK, May 16.—America tonight will honor Ignace Jan Paderewski, who for thirty-seven years has been an expression of music to the American mind and heart and for the last ten years the torch of Polish national freedom. Distinguished men and women will assemble at the Hotel Commodore in New York to pay tribute to the famous pianist at a testimonial dinner which will commemorate the tenth anniversary of the independence of Poland. Tribute From Coolidge The dinner is under the auspices of the Kosciuszko Foundation and Secretary of Commerce Hoover is honorary chairman of the National Committee of Sponsors. A bound volume of personal tributes to the Polis hpatriot will be presented to Paderewski at the dinner. President Coolidge and Vice President Dawes are among the notables who have sent messages of congratulation and esteem. The States represented by their Governors on the National Committee of Sponsors for the dinner are: Idaho, Nevada, Maine, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Utah, New Mexico, Ohio, Massachusetts, West Virginia, Georgia, Kentucky, Washington, Arizona, North Carolina, New Jersey, Oregon Maryland, New York, North Dakota, New Hampshire, California and Wisconsin. Many Cities Represented Many distant cities will be represented in the attendance of severa Ithousand men and women at the dinner, according to President Henry Noble MacCracken of Vassar College, who is president of the Kosciuszko Foundation, established three years ago for memorial scholarships and the promotion of intellectual and cultural relations between Poland and the United States.

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FIND WEATHER AFFECTS TIDES, NOT VICE-VERSA Science Blasts All Theory That Ocean Ebb Ruled Barometer. By United Press WASHINGTON, May 16.—The old superstition that tides exert influence on the weather has been blasted by the United States Weather Bureau. Tides ebb and flow at every point on the coasts with clocklike regularity, but nevertheless the weather continues to be fair or foul irrespective of those tides. On the other hand, conditions of a very low barometer pressure and very strong winds from favorable directions cause either unusually low or unusually high tides, as the case may be, and the weather is not the result of any tidal influence.

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