Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1928 — Page 2
PAGE 2
HOOVER WILL GO WEST IN JULY TO PREPARE SPEECH
DOCUMENT TO AIR HIS IDEAS ON NATFORM Candidate Plans to Make Address One of Main Campaign Documents. WORK TAKES Ur DUTIES New Chairman Intends to Put Plenty of Ginger in Efforts. BY JOSEPH S. WASNEY United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 22.—Herbert Hoover decided today to leave the capital early in July for his Palo Alto, Cal., home, to work on his speech accepting the Republican presidential nomination, which he expects to make the most important document of the campaign. The speech, to be delivered late in July at the official notification ceremonies in Palo Alto, will be a comprehensive explanation of Hoover’s ideas as applied to the Republican platform. It will be Hoover’s first speech since his nomination, and since he intends to make only a few formal speeches, it is likely to be the center of the campaign—along with Hoover’s letter to Borah opposing repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. Hoover went to work today to clear up cabinet and departmental tasks and to draft the annual report of the Commerce Department, which is to be submitted to Congress in December. The nominee has decided to hold to his cabinet post at least until after the notification ceremonies, and he would like to keep it until next March, it is indicatedThis will be decided after Hoover confers with President Coolidge at the summer White House in Wisconsin, en route to the coast. Hoover does not want to do much campaigning personally, although he probably will speak in his native State of lowa after the notification acceptance speech. Most of his speaking is to be done by radio. Lining up of the Republican organization has been left entirely to Secretary of Interior Hubert Work, new chairman of the Republican national committee. Work has been in close contact with Hoover for seven years and undoubtedly will appoint a number of the nominee’s close friends to important posts. - Work Speeds Up Campaign BY HERBERT LITTLE United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 22. A peppy Hoover-Curtis campaign, with plenty of emphasis on rallies among workers, Hoover-for-Presi-dent buttons and pennants, radio speeches and lithographs of the candidates was launched here today by the new Republican national chairman, Hubert O. Work. Dr. Work will resign as Secretary of Interior when he visits President Coolidge in Wisconsin in a few days, but meanwhile he is working from his famous “open office” in the Interior Department to start presses rolling, organize anew campaign force, arrange for speeches, and work up enthusiasm. He announced that the campaign will be run as his Interior Department office has been for five years—no guard will bar the door, and anyone may come without an appointment direct to Work to bring complaints, suggestions or support. The national committee has approved the framework of what promises to be the Hoover-Curtis campaign committee, with sectional managers to be appointed from the Outside later. “Junk Man” Steals Tools O. Ray Albertson, former city councilman and proprietor of an upholstery shop at 2943 N. New Jersey St., told police a “junk collector” entered his shop while an employe was out and stole tools valued at sl2.
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Oil Magnate Marland to Wed in East, Says Rumor
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Lydie Roberts PONCA CITY, Okla., June 22.—Departure of E. W. Marland for the East, Thursday, gave rise to rumors that the wealthy oil man was going to Philadelphia to wed his former foster raughter, Lydie Roberts, 28, whose engagement to Marland was announced several months ago, when he annulled her adoption. These rumors, however, were denied by an associate of Marland.
COLLEGE PLOT PROBED Forgery Charged in Alteration of Records Case. Bjl United Press NEW YORK, June 22—Investigation of the conspiracy to alter records in the office of the registrar of the City College of New York, thus enabling students and others to obtain credentials for admission to graduate schools, will end with evidence being presented to the grand jury Monday, acting District Attorney Ferdinand Pecora announced. Indictments charging forger:/ will be asked, Pecora said. Pecora and Dr. Frederick B. Robinson, president of the college, would not go into detail regarding the investigation, but it was said the inquiry involves other colleges and schools where records are said to have been similarly falsified. A gray, lowering sunset, or one where the sky is green or yellowishgreen, indicates rain.
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Outwitted PITMAN, N. J., June 22. When laborers finished digging in front of her home to install a telephone pole, Mrs. Mary Batten jumped into the hole saying she did not want one of those contraptions near her home.” Half of the workmen argued with her to keep her attention while the other half dug a substitute hole nearby and installed the pole.
10 DIE IN TRAIN CRASH Stockholm Express Wrecked In Collision With Lone Engine. STOCKHOLM, June 22.—Ten persons were killed and forty injured in a railway accident near Bollnas today. The Northern Express, which left Stockholm at midnight, collided with an auxiliary engine near Bollnas. The express was running at a speed estimated at fifty-five miles an hour. The first three coaches of the express were wrecked.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ’.
PARK BOARD TO INSPECT ROUTE FOR BOULEVARD Fail Creek Project Still Is Pending; Bridge Plan Discussed. Park board members and Mayor L. Ert Slack plaii to tour the route proposed for the boulevard extension along Fall Creek between Keystone Ave. and Millersville next Thursday morning. Several inspection tours have been delayed because of bad weather. The board will look over the ground needed under the plan presented by Landscape Architect A. W. Brayton, Jr., who proposed property owners donate land for the city voulevard. Mayor Slack has indicated he does not favor the development scheme at present although he has not taken a definite stand. Discuss Bridge Approach Park Engineer J. E. Perry has staked off the property which would be purchased under the resolution. The bqard continued until next Thursday a public hearing on the purchase of two blocks of ground north of the N. Delaware St. bridge, which is needed for development of an approach. It is planned to build outlets to Talbott Ave. and Washington Blvd. as well as Delaware St. Michael E. Foley and Mrs. Mary Hoss, park board members, expressed opposition to the paymentof SIIO,OOO, which is said to be the price asked by Peter Balz of JoseBalz Realty Company. Foley instructed Park Engineer J. E. Perry to check the assessed value of the property and to learn if possible the purchase price-paid by the Joe-Balz Company. Balz declined to reveal what the company paid. Robert L. Moorhead. Marion County State Senator, spoke against the plan. Several residents favored it. Hearings Thursday W. K. Miller, Granite Sand and Gravel Company president, proposed to sell the board a 48-acre tract for park purposes on the west side. Miller said the tract, bounded by Vandalia and the Big Four railroad and Tibbs Ave. and Big and Little Eagle Creeks, nas a fine fish lake. He asked SI,OOO an acre. Public hearing will be held next Thursday on these requests: Dr. John F. Barnhill, $125,000 auto laundry, southwest corner Sixteenth St. and Capitol Ave.; Dr. S. H. Creighton, apartment, southwest corner Thirty-Eighth and Guilford Ave.; Frank A. Throop, apartment, southwest corner Thirty-Eighth and Pennsylvania Sts. Request of M. M. Andrews to build an apartment at southeast corner Meridian and Twenty-Sev-enth Sts. was referred to the engineer. ' Coalition Move Falls Qu United Press BERLIN, June 22.—Socialist Leader Herman Mueller’s efforts to for ma coalition cabinet representing all parties were believed to have failed today, and Mueller was expected to try to form a smaller coalition.
Russian Star Signs to Stay in U. S. Films
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Olga Baklanova Bp United Press HOLLYWOOD. June 22.—01ga Baklanova, Russian actress who was designated as “Worthy artist of the republic” by the Leningrad government, has signed a contract with Paramount, after appearing in several character roles.
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REVOLT ADDS NEW SPICE TO DANCING (RIND Favoritism Is Charged and Actress Gets Writ; Boss Collects. NEW YORK, June 22.—A revolution has broken out among the tnirteen couples left in the international dance marathon at Madison Square Garden, but none of them has time to quit dancing and storm the office where Milton Crandall, promoter, sits counting his ever-increasing gate receipts. The cry of “fraud” sounded above the blare of the orchestra at the beginning of the thirteenth day. Twenty-fuur contestants insisted that the two other survivors were being allowed to loaf on their reputations as the winners of previous marathons. Tommy Nolan and Anna King, Pittsburgh champions, got a SI,OOO guarantee before the marathon Started, their rivals said today, and also charged that the judges, who j walk among the couples and keep them moving, allow Nolan to stand still on the floor while his partner takes a nap. Meanwhile, Miss Winifred Barry, an actress who has an aversion to
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Road Takeoff B.u United Press MARION, Ind., June 22. Clarence Cornisu, Ft. Wayne, aviator, successfully mad ■ *i take-off from State Rd. 9 here, although forced to bank sharp • ly as the plane rose to avoid striking telephone wires strung along the road side.
publicity, “had the law” on the dance marathon and then reluctantly posed for photographers. Miss Barry obtained a writ for Crandall, charging that the marathon was inhumane. Peggy Hopkins Joyce joined her. So did Charles Ray. Crandall grinned, for he doesn’t have to appear in court until Tuesday and by that time one of the couples will probably have won the $5,000 prize. / There were two prize fights in the Garden last night, Jimmy McLarnin whipped Phil McGraw in the main arena, and downstairs, where the marathon has been moved temporarily to make room for the bout, Miss Mary Goddess, one of the dancers, won a decision over her partner, Frank M. Quinn. Miss Goddess said Quinn was a quitter. Quinn said Miss Goddess was a quitter. They exchanged slaps and then quit the marathon. Hercules Mary Promitis of Pittsburgh is keeping William Bush, her partner, awake by alternately tickling him on the neck and putting ice down his back. Miss Promitis is standing the pace well, having soaked her feet in vinegar three weeks before the marathon.
JUNE 22, 1928 /
TWO ARE NEAR 1 DEATH AFTER! AUTOCRASHES Child and Man Reported in Critical Condition at City Hospital. A child and a man are near death in city hospital and many others in less serious conditions in local hospitals as the result of automobile accidents. Betty Jo McMannus, 2, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McMannus, Randolph St., has a punctured scalp and skull. E. H. Stolzenbach, 35, of 935 E. Drive, Woodruff PI., despite a blood transfusion has slight chances of recovery. He was in a Wednesday night collision in which a Bloomington, Ind., doctor and four Riley; Hospital nurses were injured. Betty Jo was riding with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. David Ryker, 1109 Standish Ave., and Miss Genevieve Broadug, when the car collided at Brill St. and Troy Ave.* with the sedan of Curtis Jacobs, 48, Greenfield. Mrs. B. H. Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. Sydney and Hobart Keith, all of 590 E. Drive, Woodruff Place, were with Jacobs, who disappeared after the crash.
