Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1928 — Page 3

AUG. 31, 1928

HOOVER GOOD AS ELECTED IS G. OPINION Belief Dictates Easy-Going Campaign With Few Speeches. BY PAUL R. MA'.LON United Press Staff Correspondent e ; WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—Herbert Hoover and his campaign skippers •have decided in their conferences here that they can cruise into port election day ahead of the Democrats with only such sails as they already have set. They base their confidence on the Idea that nominally this is a Republican and dry country and they do not intend to do any extra maneuvering which they feel might jeopardize what they privately expect will be the inevitable result. This is the psychology behind their decision to hold Hoover down to three or four speeches and behind their agreement to let each State organization conduct its own campaign free from interference or direction by the national campaign .organization. Nothing More to Say •• -They make no secret in private discussions of their belief that Hoover said all that is necessary in his acceptance speech. They claim to see nothing else for him to talk about. They do not claim a tidal v;ave. Their private reports from the outlying districts indicate the popular vote may be close but. privately again, they claim to feel certain they have more than sufficient electoral votes if they can prevent squalls from arising between now and Nov. 6, the date of election. Hoover is known to concur in this theory and intends to conduct the personal part of his campaign as if he had no opponent. He will run on his acceptance spee;h and such simplifications of it as he chooses to meet developing issues, but it is known he does not propose to answer anybody’s charges about anything. This strategy was so successful in 'the campaign conducted by President Coolidge from the White House in 1924 that Hoover leaders intend to copy it.

Discuss Cabinet The confidence around Hoover Headquarters has grown to such an extent that many of his friends are .gven talking about what kind of a Cabinet he will select. Some Hoover .men, however, are warning against over-confidence. It is generally agreed William J. Donovan, now assistant attorney general, would be the likely choice for the attorney generalship; that Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, president of Stanford University, may be offered a post of prominence, and that Hubert Work, chairman of the Republican national committee, has reason to expect an appointment in the official ■family. *•- The nominee is taking things •easy in his headquarters in the Moran mansion. Thursday he received only a few visitors and today the only scheduled caller was F. W. Boston railroad mgn. Edmund Machold, New York Mate' chairman, and W. H. Hill, head of the New York “HooverGurtis” Club, told Hoover Thursday they thought he surely would carry York State. They said they did not know how his prohibition would be presented by the ‘New York State organization, but .Machold said he considered “the prohibition question will be more “acutely an issue in New York City JEfaan anywhere else.” ** ' NEW RABBI AND CANTOR WELCOMED AT TEMPLE f * Qreeted by Congregation at Recep- * tion Thursday. Rabbi Milton Steinberg and Candor Myro Glass of New York, were honored at the Temple Beth El!fcadeck Thursday. ; ' Members of the congregation were present to welcome their new rabbi and cantor, who have started preparation for the observance of ’Roshashona, New Year services, Sept. 15 and 16. Many communicants from out of ,the city are expected to attend the beautiful services. Rabbi Steinberg is a graduate of the Jewish Theological Seminary and Columbia University, and Can4or Glass was for five years a student at the Vienna Conservatory of Music and engaged in concerts bbth in Europe and Palestine.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to the police as stolen: Walter De Bruler, 1522 S. Meridian st., Ford touring, 625-396. from Riverside Park. * George Stephenson, Zionsville, Ind„ Ford roadster, 448-130, from Broad Ripple Park. £ Mrs. Earl Baker, 1625 E. Tenth 8t„ Ford coupe, from downtown Street. I Bryon Stout, 3663 N. Capitol Ave., I*prd sedan, 33-655, from 21 S. Sherman Dr. • Sergt. Louis Anderson, Ft. Hardison, Ford touring, 701-149, from Broad Ripple Park.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stole automobiles recovered by police: W. M. Manual, Gas City, Ind., found at Sixtieth St. and Norwaldo Ave. 1 Find Lost Ring in Sand * new YORK, Aug. 31.—Three thousand visitors at Rockaway ■Beach joined in a search for a ,$3,000 diamond ring that S. A. Law■ton lost on the boardwalk. Jeremiah Daly, 16, and John McCarthy, T 2, strained the sand and found the ring. They were "rewarded.

Crash Victim

Important news pictures printed in The Times often were flown for NEA Service by “Merry” Merrill (above), New York aviator, who, wiin a companion, Edwin M. Ronne, disappeared during a flight from Buffalo to New York. Merrill frequently piloted planes, too, for NEA-Times photographers taking pictures from the air. The bodies of Merrill and Ronne were found near the wreckage of a plane belonging to Col. Lindbergh, in which they left Buffalo.

LAST CASTS ON BRULEFOR CAL Trout Season Closes Today; Looks to Other Streams. By United Press CEDAR ISLAND LODGE, Wis., 31.—President Coolidge will make his last casts for Brule River trout today. The law will protect the trout from the presidential hook with the closing of the open season at midnight. Hereafter the President must resort to private lakes on the Pierce estate for his fishing, unless he decides to try his luck outside the State. The lakes are well stocked with liver-fed trout, but the President prefers stream fishing because 3f its greater sporting flavor. Mr. Coolidge has found considerable enjoyment in his excursions. Hardly a day passes, except Sunday, that does not find him at the sport. Whereas, last summer he aroused ccnsiderable comment by using worms for bait, he now has become an expert at dry fly casting. He employed it recently to land the largest catch of his vacation—a four and one-half pound rainbow trout. Lately Mr. Coolidge has introduced novelty into his routine by devoting many hours to night angling sessions on the Brule. Today Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge will make a w r ater cruise around the Su-perior-Duluth harbor.

F. J. CARROLL DIES • _________ Prominent Insurance Man to Be Buried Monday. F. J. Carroll, 37, of 226 E. FortyFifth St., died suddenly at 2 a. m. today at his home. Funeral services will be held Monday at the St. Joan de Arc Church, and burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Mr. Carroll has been in the insurance business for twenty years. He was the resident manager in Indianapolis for the Globe Indemnity Company at the time of his death. He was born in Brazil, Ind., and first w’as employed by an insurance company in Indianapolis. He later went to Kansas City, Mo., to Pittsburgh and six years ago to the Globe home office, Newark. N. J. He was transferred here three years ago. Mr. Carroll was a member of the Knights of Columbus and the Columbia Club. Surviving are: The widow; his mother. Mrs. James Carroll, and a sister, Mrs. Joseph Spaulding, Indianapolis; two brothers, Lawrence B. Carroll, Terre Haute, Ind., and John J. Carroll of New York City. BATHING BEAUTIES IN STATE FINALS HERE “Miss Venus” Will Get Auto at Walnut Gardens Sunday. Practically all cities in central and northern Indiana will have entries in a State bathing beauty contest at Walnut Gardens Sunday. Elimination contests are held in the surrounding towns, the winner to be sent here. One elimination contest will be held in Bloomington Saturday night with entries from five cities. The Miss Venus of Indiana, 1928, will be awarded a Chevrolet coach; the second place winner will receive a diamond ring, and there will be pprizes for other placing contestants. CHURCHES VOTE $35,000 U. S. Conference Approves Assessment for Ohio Home. An assessment of $35,000 for the United Brethren Home at Otterbein, Ohio, was approved today by the White River conference in session at Indiana Central College. The Indiana conference will contribute to the maintenance of the benevolent institution on request of the Rev. W. A. Funk, Dayton, Ohio.

SYRACUSE FAIR VISIT GIVES AL HOPE OF STATE • * Outlook Encouraging Smith Feels; Rests After Strenuous Day. BY THOMAS L. STOKES ALBANY, N. Y., Aug. 31.—Governor Alfred E. Smith began today a rest over the week-end from his strenuous trips into New Jersey and to the State fair at Syracuse, preparatory to plunging next week into State business that has accumulated. He returned to the executive man-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

sion Thursday night from Syracuse a weary man, worn with the almost constant contact with crowds in the week he has been away, but he was satisfied with the results of his first appearances before the people since his acceptance of the nomination. Political leaders gathered at Syracuse for the State committee meeting brought him encouraging reports of the situation in the State, and also told him that his cordial welcome by State Fair crowds gathered from surrounding strong Republican territory indicate he may make inroads there. Smith carried Onondaga County, in which Syracuse is located, In 1922, but that part of the tSate usually is safely Republican. The reception of the Democratic candidate at Syracuse was not so boisterously enthusiastic as the almost continuous ovations he received on his New Jersey trip, but it was the most enthusiastic he ever had received there, accordnig to local observers. I

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The started Thursday with a political speech to State Democratic leaders, rallying them to the coming campaign for both the State and national tickets. Then he dedicated the New York State Agricultural Museum, and topped off his day by watching the races. He received an enthusiastic welcome from the crowd when he made a dramatic entrance by riding down the middle of the track in his car. He waved his hat to the stands and Mrs. Smith smiled. He and his party occupied a box just at the finishing line, and the Governor acted as “Bookie” for members of his party, who were wagering on the races. There was a “Governor’s Sweepstakes” in honor of the distinguished guest. The grandstand crowd joined in singing “the Sidewalks of New York.’ The Governor joined in as did Mrs. Smith and other members of the party.

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Italian airplanes circled over Achmed Zogu’s home and dropped pamphlets eulogizing him. Allied With Italy By United Press PARIS, Aug. 31.—Although anew King will be crowned Saturday, when Achmed Zogu becomes the King of Albania, the best informed French political circles today believed the transference of Albania from a republic to a monarchy would make no difference in world politics. It was pointed out that Achmed Zogu has accepted everything asked by Premier Mussolini, even a practical Italian protectorate, because Italy has the right by treaty to intervene in the interior affairs of Albania. This situation naturally is a great aid to Zogu because Italy can send armed forces into Albania to uphold the throne if ever .it is menaced.

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