Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1928 — Page 7
JULY 17, 1928_
PLAN PARADE OF 37 MILES FOR HOOVER Vast Throng Is Expected at California Town for ‘Notification.’ RONALD W. WAGONER United Press Staff Correspondent , PALO ALTO, Cal., July 17.—Stanford Stadium, where thousands gather each fall to watch important football games, will open Aug. 11 to a throng that is expected to surpass any that ever attended a gridiron spectacle in the huge bowl. In the southwest end of the horseshoe stadium on an improvised platform, a citizen of Palo Alto —the most distinguished graduate of Stanford—will hold the attention of 90,000 persons. Herbert Hoover, who worked his way through the engineering college from 1891 to 1895, officially will be notified he is the choice of the Republican party for the presidency. His address of acceptance will contain his views on questions vital to the campaign. Prepare for Crowds Palo Alto, accustomed to entertaining crowds, will be taxed to accommodate those who will come to this college town to take part in the event, Already the committee in charge has experts in the art of handling crowds at work on the details of “notification day.” The policing of the stadium, its approaches and the roads into Palo Alto has been placed in the hands of a special committee under the direction of Alfred R. Masters, university graduate manager, who steers the turbulent football masses each year. Shirley Baker, the engineer who built the stadium, will erect the speakers’ platform. Specialists will install a maze of telephone and telegraph wires for transmission of the news. The speakers’ stand will be so located, Baker said, that every person in the bowl will have an unbroken view of Hoover while he is speaking. His words will be carried over a public address system. Those in charge are confident that between 90,000 and 100,000 will attend the ceremony and arrangements have been made to enlarge the seating capacity accordingly. Parade of 35 Miles The notification will climax Hoover’s homecoming to Palo Alto, which will start when he enters the town next Friday. The Hoover special train will be met early Friday at Truckee, a mountain town near thte Nevada border, where Governor C. C. Young, other State dignitaries and California’s entire Congressional delegation will greet the nominee. Brief stops are scheduled at Sacramento, California’s capitol, and at Oakland. About noon the party will cross San Francisco bay on a special Ferry. A caravan of decorated automobiles will file to the city hall, where Hoover will speak briefly from the balcony. Then the parade will proceed thirty-seven miles down the peninsula to Palo Alto. An Encyclopedia Britannica is offered at a bargain in today’s Want Ads.
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Rhythm in Swimming for Speed, Twins Advise
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Phyllis Zitenfleld comes up for air as she nears the end of her stroke.
This is the fourth of a series of articles on how to swim. They are written for The Times by the famous Zitenfleld twins, junior long-distance champions. BY THE ZITENFIELD TWINS. For NEA Service. Stroke and breathe. These are two things you must learn simultaneously if you are serious anout this learning how to swim. Some folks breathe more easily on their right sides. Others on their left. Some can breathe on both sides with the same ease. Your breathing has a lot to do with your physical condition. This is where the person wins who does not smoke or eat candy or other things that tend to create gas. Gas shortens the breath of course, and hinders the swimmer. Breathe Through Mouth Breathe in through your mouth, easily, fully. Turff your head to one side to do it. Hold it as you stroke. Take a full, deep breath for every full stroke. The crawl is a six beat stroke. Kick feet three times to each arm stroke. It has about it the rhytnm of a windmill, and unless you can become as regular in your strokes as the turn of a windmill wheel you cannot hope to do long distance swimming or sprint swimming either. J Coordination is one thing you must achieve. Ease is the next It is a lot like dancing. In fact, the crawl stroke could be done perfectly to dance music. You dance ir. the water, but with' both your arms and legs. Speed in Arm Stroke 'Beginning with your left arm, say, shoot your arm out easily, as far ahead of you as possible. Keep it slightly curved. Turn your head to one side and breathe in deeply as your hand cuts the water. When your left arm extends its farthest, your right arm is just as far behind your head as your left is in front of it. Your arms must stand equi-distant. When you bring your forward hand back, you get your speed. Keep fingers tight together. Use them as a paddle and push the water easily but strongly. The more you cut the water, the faster your stroke. Your speed and your strength both depends on the way you scoop the water as your hands drive downward and back. Strive for Rhythm You must practice until your muscles get strong enough to get all the strength possible on this stroke. But do not exert yourself by perceptibly shoving. It is a matter of practice and getting just the right rhythm and force. The good swimmer has equal strength in both arms. 'But most beginners can make much faster
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strides with one arm than with the other. Concentrate on making your weak arm rival your strong one. And above all, try to feel the flow of rhythm through your body, with your feet and arms perfectly co-ordinated. V. Offers Reward for Missing Bp Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., July 17.—A SSO reward has been posted by Sheriff Frank Daniels of Madson County for information leading to capture of Mrs. Lois Wilkenson, 24, and Miss Lela Whitlow, 16, who disappeared from the home of tne latter’s father, O. P. Whitlow, here June 28. A large colony of apes, owned by Mme. Rosalie Abreu of Havana, has been filmed in cooperation with the department of anthropology at Harvard.
“Money Couldn’t Buy the Health KonjolaGaveMe” New Medicine Banished Her Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble, She Says. Many people of this city who have suffered for years and were never able to find relief, are declaring that this new Konjola medicine restored them to health. In most cases, these people have stated that Konjola so completely ended their ail-
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MRS. DAISY MAYFIELD —Photo by Northland Studio. ments that none of their old troubles returned, and they have been able to quit taking medicine entirely. This accounts for the great stream of public testimonials which are coming from men and women of this city, and received at the Hook drug store. Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where the Konjola Man is personally introducing and explaining this advanced remedy to crowds of people daily. Among those who recently gave their indorsement of Konjola is Mrs. Daisy Mayfield. 1113 North Dearborn street, this city. She gave the following statement in person and also allowed the use of her photograph for publication: “Money couldn’t buy the health Konjola gave me and I strongly indorse it to anyone in poor health,” said Mrs. Mayfield. “It banished the rheumatism and kidney trouble I had been suffering for sometime, and which I didn’t think would ever leave me entirely “I believe the weak and disordered condition of my kidneys is what caused my system to fill with the poison that later brought on so many aches and pains. Frequent night rising kept me from getting the proper sleep and naturally I was tired yid worn-out the next morning. My back, tod, always felt sore and achy from the sharp pains that would shoot through the small of my back and down my hips. At first the rheumatic pains were only slight, but I started doctoring right away just the same. None of the medicines I tried ever helped me and my condition was getting worse from time to time. I began to feel that my age of 59 years was against me. Most of the pain settled in my right arm and the side of mv neck. Sometimes these pains kept me awake all through the night and I wouldn’t get a wink of sleep. “I started to take Koniola for my troubles and it was onlv a short time until I could see a big difference over mv whole system. The miseries of kidnev trouble disappeared and the aches and pains in my body gradually went away. Now. the rheumatism is cone entirely. I have a better appetite. I can rest much easier at night and I am not always feeling tired and worn out during the day. Konjola also freed me of constipation and I am no longer forced to take laxatives like I used to. I can truthfully say that Koniola has done more for me than anything else I ever tried and I am tied to tell others about it.” The Koniola Man is at Hook’s drug store. Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Koniola is sold in every Hook drug store in this section and by all the leading druggists throughout this vicinity.—Advertisement.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ORDER CLOSER COOPERATION DY DRY AGENTS
Prohibition, Coast Guard and Customs Bureaus Given New Orders. BY JOSEPH S. WASNEY. United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 17.—Ogden L. Mills, acting secretary of Treasury, today ordered the prohibition and customs bureaus and the Coast Guard to cooperate more closelyin law enforcement work. He issued a formal Treasury decision directing officers of these three services, stationed in the same vicinity, to meet at least twice a month to exchange information on violations of the prohibition, narcotic and custom laws. The order indicated there has
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been considerable friction among the law enforcement agencies of the Treasury. Mills stressed the “necessity for harmonious and unified action” and pointed out that any difference in opinion “should be discussed and settled in a friendly exchange of views.” Problems which field chiefs can not settle—especially as to jurisdiction on certain investigations—must be submitted to Washington for final decision, Mills said. . To prevent jealousy between the Coast Guard, customs and prohibition bureaus the order said that all officers participating in a case or giving information about a case would receive credit for their activities. The formal decision was Issued to all prohibition administrators who are in conference here with Prohibition Commissioner Doran. At the Treasury it was said it was aimed rather more at the dry organization than at the other two branches. Boy on 2,400-Mile Bike Trip EVANSVILLE, Ind., July 17.—Malcolm E. Aydt, 16, local Boy Scout, has started on a 2,400-mile trip by bicycle. He is en route to New York and on the return trip will visit several other cities.
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LICENSE WAR LOOMS Truck Men Protest Michigan Practice. A license war with Michigan looms as a result of .the attempt of Michigan authorities to force commercial dairy trucks from Indiana operating over the State line to obtain Michigan plates, Mark Rhoads, director of the State automobile license division has announced. Many complaints have been received that Michigan authorities are enforcing their State law which places a ten-day limit on the use of foreign license plates. “A great many Michigan cars pass through Indiana, tut we make no attempt to force the driver to qbtain Indiana licenses,” Rhoads declared. * He left today for Baltimore where the conference of automobile officials of States east of the Mississippi will be held July 19-21. While there he will confer with Michigan representatives. *
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