Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 74, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1928 — Page 5

AUG. 16, 1928.

OFFER HOOVER TO SOUTH AS NON-PARTISAN Backers Link Nominee With Democratic Party to Win Smith Foes. Following is the fourth of a series of United Press articles dealing with the political situation in the South growing out of the candidacy of Governor Smith. BY THOMAS L. STOKES. United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright. 1928, by United Press) Republicans believe they have in Herbert Hoover an ideal candidate for an attempt to break into the soli<J South. . ' Hoover has not been a Strong partisan. He is not identified closely with the old Republican machine. Politicians opposed him before the convention on this ground, but now (hat he is their nominee they regard his lack of prounced partisan coloring as an attraction to the socalled independent voters, and to those Democrats of the South who do not lean strongly toward Smith. His enemies in the Kansas City convention charged that Hoover did not know in 1920 whether he was a Republican or a Democrat. They charged this over and over. Linked With Wilson His name went on the Democratic ballot in Michigan in that year, and he won both the Democratic and Republican presidential primaries in that State. There was a movement to place his name on Georgia preferential primary ballot in 1920, but this was checked. Hoover was closely associated with Woodrow Wilson during the war. The name of the war President is still one to conjure with among southern voters. Republican strategists, while they can say nothing about this, see in it a source of strength in the South among those who do not favor Smith. It is with that background, which favorably inclines some Democrats toward him, that Herbert Hoover goes before the voters in the South. Will Not Attack Smith Republicans will r.ot emphasize this phase of Hoover’s past history. They do not need to. It speaks for itself. But on account of this, and because of other phases of his career which they will emphasize, they regard Hoover as the strongest candidate they could carry before southern voters. They will ,make a positive proHoover campaign. They will not devote any attention openly to attacks on Smith, leaving to southern “bolting” Democrats the spotty, but furious, fire they already are directing against the Democratic candidate on account of his prohibition stand and his former association with Tammany. This can best be capitalized bv silence. Republicans will stress these issues: Stress These Issues Hoover’s work as director of Mississippi flood relief. Hoover’s efforts on behalf of business through the Department of Commerce. Hoover’s record as a humanitarian in relief work in Belgium and Russia. They also will make a special car-paign among women, capitalizing the sentiment they say they find for him among the female voters. They will capitalize, negatively, the opposition apparent toward Smith among the “dry” women and their organizations. They will present Hoover as a militant “dry” to the women. Plans 1,000-Room Hotel ll>l Time* Special ' EVANSVILLE. Ind., Aug. 16.—F. Van Orman, Lieutenant Governor of Indiana, is negotiating for the erection of a twenty-four story, 1,000-room hotel in Chicago, to be added to a string he already owns, the others being here and at Decatur and Chicago and Springfield, Ohio.

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BERLIN CABINET CREATES CRISIS Decision to Build Cruiser Stirs Opposition. By United Brest BERLIN, Aug. 16.—Approval by the cabinet for construction of a new battle cruiser Europa to replace the obsolete Prussia, may create a government crisis that will necessitate a meeting of the Reichstag, well-informed quarters believed today. A semi-official statement emphasized that the cabinet was bound to abide by the passageof navy estimates of the last Reichstag in the matter of the Prussia’s construction. The first installment will be made under the navy budget, while the aproval brought out that future installments will be defrayed on the basis of the most strict economy. The government denied that in voting the new battle cruiser the cabinet had agreed to the replacement of the remainder of the four obsolete battleships, which the Versailles treaty permits Germany to maintain. r No sooner had tjie semi-official announcement been issued than the executive Socialist party and the Socialist deputies in the Reichstag issued a joint statement deploring the Socialist cabinet action of approval. MERMAID AT 86 YEARS Scorns lifeguard’s Warning and Does Expert Dive Into Pool. Bn United Press NEW ORLEANS, La., Aug. 16. Mrs. E. G. Guggenheim will be 86 years old in November, but she still can show younger people a few tricks about swimming. The first time Mrs. Guggenheim entered a local swimming pool the lifeguard warned her not to go too deep. But she proved her ability by diving off a spring board and swimming rapidly across the pool. 666 Kills Malarial Germs and qolckly relieves Biliousness, Headaches and Dirtiness duo to temporary Constipation. Aids In eliminating Toxins and Is highly esteemed for producing copious watery evacuations.—Advertisement.

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Spurns SI,OOO By Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., Aug. 16.—Ollie Secrist has turned over SI,OOO he found in a purse to a local coal company which employs him as a driver. He hopes the owner will be found. “I wouldn’t think of keeping it,” Secrist says, “because I wasn’t brought up that way. It’s too much money for any one to lose, and it doesn’t 'belong to me just because someone lost it.”

PICK THEATER PRINCESS Great French Actress Honored in Popular Poll. Bn United Press PARIS, Aug. 16.—Madame Cecile Sorel, the Countess de Segur in private life and great interpreter of Moliere, has been voted “Princess of the French Theater” by popular poll conducted by , the women’s weekly, Minerva. Woman’s Toe Amputated By United Press BRAZIL, Ind., Aug. 16.—Mrs. James D. Carpenter, wife of Mayor Carpenter of Brazil, will be incapacitated several days through amputation of the large toe of her left foot. Mrs. Carpenter stumbled over a log, fracturing the bone in the toe, while bathing in Walnut Creek. A doctor set the fracture but when the cast was removed it was found the toe had not healed.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BIRTHPLACE OF ICEBERG PERIL IS DISCOVERED U. S. Coast Guard Party Reaches Its Goal in Arctic. B' Science Service GODHAVN, Diske Bay, Greenland (Via Amateur Radio), Aug. 16. —The birthplace of the icebergs that menace the trans-Atlantic steamers has been discovered by the oceanographic expedition of the United States Coast Guard on board the S. S. Marion. The ship is now well above the Arctic circle and has just proceeded across Diske Bay between hundreds of towering ice islands. “We are now viewing the birthplace of the icebergs of the North Atlantic, the entrance of Jacobshavn Fjord which literally is , jammed with thousands of bergs so close that we can not penetrate with the vessel,” Commander Edward H. Smith, in command, explained in nis report to Science Service. The Marion, on its voyage northward in Davis Strait, between Labrador and Baffin Land on the west and Greenland on the east, has noted the number of icebergs. The scientists aboard have also charted the ocean currents that bring the icebergs southward to endanger the steamship tracks. The contour of the sea floor that sometimes allows the great ice masses to ground and be delayed in their southward journey is also being investigated. ! Commander Smith shortly will head a landing party that will investigate the Greenland ice cap at this point. The rate of movement of the glaciers that drop the icebergs into the sea will be measured. New knowledge of the rate at which i icebergs are bom of the ice cap is expected as a result of these studies. Soy Bean Growers Meet B i/ Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind.. Aug. 16.—The ninth annual meeting of the Amerij can Soy Bean Society convened at 1 Purdue University here today for a two-day session.

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HERE IS A CHANCE TO SEE A BIG MOVIE Try Out Your Memory Box and Then Your Penmanship in a Contest to See 'Women They Talk About’ at the Apollo Next Week. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN THERE are lot of women in this world who are talked about, Warner Brothers have named their new movie “Women They Talk About.” To get acquainted with the title of this movie, The Times and the Apollo theater have an idea. For three days, The Times will publish the names of a number of women who are talked about in real life. These women are all well known and they have been talked about

because they are famous. ' Take these names and in one sentence write out for what they are noted. A single sentence to each name. * For the best written twenty correct answers for each series. The Times and Apollo Theater will award a pair of tickets for admission to the Apollo while “Women They Talk About” is being presented. Remember that penmanship and neatness are as essential to winning as the correct answers. Send your answers to The Women They Talk About Contest Editor at The Times. The contest judge will make the awards. The names of the women for today are as follows: Maude Adams Jane Addams Dolly Madison Molly Stark Lucy Stone Gade Corson Priscilla Aid ?n Nellie Bly Remember that all answers must be written in long hand, either ink or pencil. Send In your answers at once’ to the contest editor at The Times. This contest is open to all readers of The Times. tt a u THEATRE GUILD TO PUBLISH MAGAZINE The Theatre Guild Magazine, an illustrated monthly which will aim to record and interpret the most interesting tendencies in the contemporary theater here and abroad, will appear in September. Although it is sponsored by the Theatre Guild and will contain an-

nouncements of Guild productions, the magazine will in no sense be a Guild advertising medium. On the contrary, it will seek to reflect impartially the best work that is being done in all branches and types of theatrical production. It will be published during eight months of the theatrical season, from September to April. The magazine will go to all Guild subscribers in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Baltimore. The circulation of the first issue will be about 50,000. It will also be sold on newsstands. Hiram Motherwell, author of “The Theatre of Today,” will be editor, and Lucien Bernhard, consulting art director. The Theatre Guild Quarterly, which has been published for the past five years, will be discontinued. >t a p Indianapolis theaters today offer: “New Brooms” at English’s; "Warming Up” at the Indiana; Dick Powell at the Circle; Harry Fox at the Palace; DeToregos and company at the Lyric; “Lights of New York” at the Apollo, and “The Street of Forgotten Women” at the Colonial. Oldest County Citizen Dies Bn Times Special YORKTOWN, Ind.. Aug. 16.—Funeral services were held here Wednesday for Joel R. McKimmey, 95, oldest resident of Delaware County, who died Monday. He had voted for every Republican candidate for President, beginning with Abraham Lincoln.

Hoosier Plans Snake Farm By Times Special LOGANSPORT, Ind., Aug. 16. Establishment of a snake farm which would be the only enterprise

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MRS. KATIE JESSUP —Photo by Northland Studio.

store, Illinois and Washington streets, this city, where he is daily meeting the public and telling them of the merits of this celebrated compound. “Only one who has benefited as I have can realize what a wonderful medicine Konjola really is,” continued Mrs. Jessup. "It has done more for me than I ever thought any remedy would do. If I had known before what I know now about this remarkable remedy, I would have been willing to pay $50.00 a bottle for it, because it is the only remedy that has given me lasting relief from all my health troubles. “For years I had a severe case of stomach trouble and my kidneys were also affected. I suffered terribly from the acid condition of my stomach. In fact, the doctors told me that I had six ulcers. At times I didn’t think I would be able to stand the pain. Immediately after meals I would get a feeling that I was going to vomit and there would be a burning sensation start from the pit of my stomach and rise all the way up to my throat. I would eat as often as ten and twelve times a day, trying to settle my stomach. This really made my condition worse, but it gave me temporary relief. About a half hour after meals gas would start to form and bloat me up until there was a heavy, draggy feeling in the pit of my stomach. At times my heart would beat so fast that I could hardly get my breath. Besides all this stomach trouble, I suffered a great deal from bladder and kidney trouble. I was subject to having chills during the night and had to get up in order to warm myself. Between this and frequent night risings, I was never able to enjoy a full night’s rest and consequently I always felt tired and miserable the next morning. I suffered like this nearly four years and during that time I spent hundreds of dollars trying to find relief, but nothing seemed to help me until I started to take Konjola. “After I had taken the second dose, I quit vomiting and that terrible burning sensation around my heart stopped. By the end of the first week I was feeling much better and I could notice an improvement every day from then on. I realized I was in a serious condition and didn’t expect two or three bottles to end all my health troubles, but I was confident that this Konjola medicine was helping me. In fact, it is the first medicine that gave me such relief in such a short time. After my stomach became settled, I began eating my meals regularly again and there was never the least bit of misery afterward. This remedy also ended my kidney trouble. Night risings and chills have left me and that heavy feeling In my bladder has disappeared. All the neuritis pains have gone out of my arms and shoulders and I never feel so tired and wornout like I used to. I have now finished the full treatment of Konjola and the relief it has given me from all my health troubles is really a Godsend. I cannot help but feel enthusiastic about Konjola and I strongly recommend it to everyone who suffers.” The Konjola Man is at the Hook drug store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he IS daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is also sold in every Hook store in this city and by all the leading druggist* throughout this entire section.—Advertisement, J