Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 124, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1928 — Page 2
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HOOVER MAKES FINAL PLANS FOR BOSTONSPEECH Tariff and Foreign Trade to i Be Discussed in Monday Address. BY THOMAS L. STOKES, United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.—Herbert Hoover completed preparations today for his invasion of Massachusetts Monday in question of votes in that sharply contested area. The Republican candidate put the finishing touches upon the address he will make Monday night in the Boston arena, in which he will discuss the tariff and foreign trade and sound the keynote of “prosperity” which will dominate his eastern campaign. The Republican candidate will have a full schedule on his Massachusetts visit. His special train will stop for fifteen minutes at Springfield at 8:30 Monday morning, and for the same time in Worcester, where it arrives at 10:05. Hoover will greet those at the station from the rear platform, but will make no speeches. Welcome by City He and Mrs. Hoover and the official party will leave the train at Newtonville at 11:15 and ride for an hour and a half through the suburbs of Boston. The city will welcome him officially on historic Boston Common at 1 o'clock through Mayor Nichols. The candidate will make a brief speech in reply. State Republican leaders will entertain Hoover and Mrs. Hoover at an .official luncheon. The candidate will spend the afternoon at the heme of Governor Fuller, where at 3 o’clock he will receive representatives of the Republican Service Men's League and various groups of citizens of foreign birth. Fuller on Program Francis Prescott, State Republican chairman, will preside at the meeting in the arena. Hoover will be introduced by Governor Fuller. The candidate will speak from 8 to 9 over a radio hook-up covering the entire country. He will leave for his return to Washington at 10 o’clock, arriving here Tuesday morning. Controversy over the religious issue was brought into the presidential campaign again last night when Senator Smoot, Utah, and former Governor Arthur Hyde, Missouri, issued statements from Republican national headquarters criticising John W. Davis, 1924 Democratic presidential candidate, for a radio speech on religious liberty.
BEATING BY ROBBERS RESTORES MEMORY Crippled World War Veteran Victim of Gang. By United Press PUEBLO, Colo., Oct. 13.—The shock of being thrown from an automobile near here has restored the memory of Harry Devlin, crippled World War veteran who roamed about the world for twelve years while his parents in Toronto, Canada, accepted the report that he had been killed in action. Devlin’s injury was received in an airplane crash in France in 1916. Several nights ago several strangers took him for a ride in an automobile, robbed him, and threw him out. He was found unconscious and taken to a hospital here, yesterday he regained consciousness and his memory. S L. Devlin, father of the crippled veteran, in Canada, was notified his son is alive. IDEAS SOUGHT FOR NEW CITY HOSPITAL City Health Board and Hospital Heads Visit New England Clinics. Dr. Frederick E. Jackson, health Board president, and Dr. William A. Doeppers, city hospital superintendent, are studying eastern hospital systems with the view of securing ideas for the new city hospital unit here. The health authorities attended the American College of Surgeons convention in Boston. Contagious units were inspected at Boston, Providence, R. 1., New York City and several other large eastern cities. Latest improvements in contagious units will be incorporated in the new ward to be built here. Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city sanitarian, is in Chicago attending the American Public Health Association meeting. INDIANA ENOCH ARDEN BACK: WIFE REWED Brazil Man Returns After TwentyFive Year Absence. Bn Times Special BRAZIL, Ind., Oct. 13.—Laverne B. Gunnison, missing from here twenty-five years and at one time reported dead, has returned, a 1928 model Enoch Arden. He found his wife had left for F 1 -rida two years ago and married again. A visit to his son, Lee Gunnison, is being paid here by the returned man. He visited Brazil for the first time in a quarter of a century about a month ago, intending to see his son, but the latter was not at home. No explanation of his absence has been made by Gunnison. .He now lives at Atchison,. Kan., and claims to be wealthy. Former Official Faces Charges /’i< Times Special DANVILLE, Ind., Oct. 13.—Alvin Woodward, former clerk of the Hendricks Circuit Court faces charges of embezzlement and forgery in connection with his conduct of the office. The charges were filed after an investigation by examiners of the State board of accounts.
John D. Enjoys Reconstruction
HOOSIER GROUP AT DAIRY SHOW Purdue Men anc( 4H Members Go to Memphis. Bil Times Special MEMPHIS, Tenn., Oct. 13.—Hoosiers at the international dairy show which opened here today include members of Purdue University’s dairy judging team and representatives of boys and girls 4H clubs from over the State. The Purdue team, headed by J. H. Hilton, is composed of F. D. Boecking M J. L. Foster, R. L. Kawkinson and F. H. Jones. Among 4H Club representatives is the Scott County cattle judging team, of which Bruce Hardy is coach and composed of Lester Lawry, Wendell Arbuckle, Ralph Codings and Turley Mace. Other county groups are: Johnson County demonstration team, Robert Richards and Herman Smith, and coach, J. L. Van Cleave, Olive Barnes, Monticello; Frederick Meeker, Muncie; Aaron Vandivier, Morgantown, and Russell Howson, Lebanon, winners of trips offered by the Indiana State fair board. Marion County’s delegation includes Lawrence Copeland, Bruce Morris, John Bastin, Bruce Sarver, George Dooley, Woodrow Sutton, Manuel Raybourn, Karl Gardner, Herman Schnier and Leo Branderburg. Fred Dixon of Economy, winner of a trip offered by the Blue Valley Creamery Institute, Chicago; Lewis McCanley, Attica, Schlosser Brothers’ trip winner. Accompanying the club boys are: R. J. Plaster, agricultural agent, New York Central Railroad; F. M. Stephenson, Illinois Central; C. J. Murphy, assistant Marion County agent, and Harry F. Ainsworth, Purdue University club department.
CURTIS TAKES REST G. 0. P. Campaign to Open in North Carolina. By United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.—Senator Charles Curtis, Republican vice presidential nominee, arrived here shortly after 8 a. m. today for a short rest. He went directly to his office on Capitol hill to take cave of any urgent business awaiting him and planned to go to his home as soon as he disposes of it. The nominee will leave early Monday morning for Raleigh, N. C., where he is to open a southern campaign that night. WOMAN PRAISES LESLIE Mrs. Ella V. Gardner, Indianapolis, Speaks in Columbus, Ind. By Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., Oct. 13.—Mrs. Ella V. Gardner of Indianapolis, unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination for State Representative in the primary, praised the legislative record of Harry G. Leslie, Republican nominee for Governor, in an address before Fourth District Republican women here Friday. Mrs. Gardner, who was a member of the House in 1927, said she led the fight to elect Leslie speaker because she “wanted a Legislature free from the influence of D. C. Stephenson and Mr. Leslie had demonstrated he was free from that influence.” State Official to Speak By Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Oct. 13. Sanford Bates, commissioner of correction for the State of Massachusetts, is among speakers on the program today of the Indiana conference on social work. Sessions will continue until Wednesday. Recreation Field Opened By Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 13.—8a1l Recreational Field was dedicated here today, the ceremonies to be followed by a Muncie-Marion football game.
Wal-But Nut B.y Times Special KOKOMO, Ind., Oct. 13.Here’s anew one for the squirrels, right at a time when they are putting ’em up for the winter. C. E. Lewis noticed a peculiar crop growing on a butternut tree,- and examination showed it consisted of what apparently is a cross between a butternut and walnut. The hull is that of a walnut, but inside is a butternut shell.
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John D. Rockefeller Jr. is getting a lot of pleasure out of the Rockefeller-financed restoration work in the historic city of Williamsburg, Va., “birthplace of the nation.” these pictures indicate. Below are Rockefeller, one of the world’s richest men, and Uncle Alex Pleasants, one-time slave and Williamsburg's oldest resident. It was hard to convince Uncle Alex he actually was meeting the great John D. Jr., and Rockefeller got a good laugh out of his doubts. Above the millionaire, still wearing a big smile, is greeting Williamsburg school children in front of the George Wythe house. George Washington’s headquarters in the Yorktown campaign against Cornwallis. The pretty young lady with whom Rockefeller is shaking hands is Patricia Brown. At the right of the picture is Rev. W. A. R. Goodwin, who suggested to Rockefeller the restoration of Williamsburg's buildings for colonial days and is uersonally in charge of the work now being done.
URGES ALIEN BAN 10,000 Moose Hear Davis in Attica. B,n Times Special ATTICA, Irid., Oct. 13.—"1f im- j migration bars were let down, mil- | lions from foreign lands would ! crowd around factory gates seeking employment at virtually any price,” declared Secretary of Labor James J. Davis in an address here Friday night. Davis warned against the abolishment of restrictive immigration and praised the Republican party for its record of dealing with immigration j and the tariff. “Every year between 250,000 and 300,000 aliens are admitted to this country, ’ said Davis. “Every year 250,000 come from rural districts to seek employment in industrial centers. Every year 2,000,000 young people come to the age of employment. Shall we add to this enormous number the millions of hungry aliens who line the shores of Europe gazing with longing eyes at America’s mill districts?” Davis’ address at the Republican rally Friday night followed a celebration attended by approximately 10,000 members of the Loyal Order of Moose, of which Davis is national director. EXCHANGE CLUB ELECTS R. B. Espey, Reiring President, Is Given Wrist Watch. Dr. Douglas White was elected president of the Indianapolis Exchange Club at an annual dinner - meetin gat the Lincoln Friday night. White has been secretary of the club for five years and declined further re-election to the same office. Other officers named in spirited contest are: Walter M. Carter, first vice president; Frank L. Thomas, second vice president; Clarence F. Merrill, third vice president; Thomas S. Elrod, secretary, and Elmer R. Bertsch, treasurer. Entertainment and speeches were staged in the interest of the contending candidates. A wrist watch was presented to Robert H. Espey, retiring president. BRAWL IN CIRCLE INN Heat. Waiter Beaten in Trying to Subdue Couple. Police were unable to learn the identity of two men and a woman who engaged in a battle at the Bamboo Inn, Monument Circle, Friday night. Even the headwaiter, said to have been beaten in the fight when he attempted to act as peacemaker, refused to tell police his name. The two men were said to have been drunk. Seeks Divorce Curb Bp United Press VALPARAISO, Ind., Oct. jl3.—lt is going to be harder to get divorces in Judge Grant Crumpacker’s court here. He announces that in the future instead of granting a husband or wife a divorce when only one of the couple makes the plea, he will demand the story of both.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Campaign Log
By United Press Mayor James J. Walker, New York, spoke to a Democratic'meeting in the South side of Chicago Friday night and attacked the Republican campaign. Herbert Hoover finished work on the last draft of his Boston speech today and visited with Postmaster General Harry New, who told him of the Indiana situation. William O'Brien, Communist party candidate for Governor of Arizona, reported to the national organization that Benjamin Gitlow, Communist candidate for vice president, had disappeared en route from California to Phoenix. Governor Smith was en route to Louisville, Ky„ where he speaks tonight. He spoke in Nashville, Tenn., Friday night and said that Hoover gave no arguments that served as debatable subjects. Senator Joseph T. Robinson, en route to Seattle, said he agreed with Governor Smith that the Volstead act needed changing so as to define what is meant by an intoxicating beverage. Norman Thomas, Socialist candidate for President, said the real presidential issue was “plenty, peace, and freedom” in a speech at Marion, Ohio. SPEAKS TO T CLUB Cosmopolitan Group to Hear Butler Professor Tonight. Prof. Gino Ratti, head of the romance languages department at Butler, will speak at the first meeting this year of the Intercollegiate Cosmopolitan Club at th Y. M. C. A., Saturday night, accord ng to J. H. Ehlers, city student secretary. The club, organized in 1921, is devoted primarily It creating a closer relationship between Apierican and foreign students in the city. Establishing Fox Farm Bit United Press BLOOMINGTON. Ind., Oct. 13.—A silver fox farm is being established near here by Dr. W. Harris, Bloomington, and his son-in-law, Dr. G. B, Wolf, Indianapolis. They announced they will purchase twenty of the foxes at $1,700 a pair. B'nal B’rith to Meet Bu Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 13.- ttendance of 100 is expected at t.ie Ighth annual convention of B’nai Brith in Indiana to be held here Sunday.
‘lmagine My-’ V.n Times Special WABASH, Ind., Oct. 13. Joseph Murphy, unmarried prosecuting attorney, of Wabash County, seeking re-elec-tion, called on wives of candidates to stand up at a political meeting. All went well until someone called “Mrs. Joseph Murphy.” Four women stood up. Now the prosecutor knows there are at least four other Joseph Murphy besides h^rnself.
PERFECT MOUNT FOR GUNS TO FIGHH’LANES Ordnance Officers Try Out New Weapon Carrier at Proving Grounds. ■By Science Service WASHINGTON, Oct. 13.—A new type of mount for anti-aircraft guns, which practically will be as mobile as ordinary field artillery carriages and yet as solid and stable a firing base as the concrete foundations now necessary, is being tried out at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds near here. Ordnance officers declare themselves very well satisfied with the new device, whose existence has only recently been made public, after more than a year of secret preliminary work. The mount is a radical departure from the wheeled types hitherto tried for anti-aircraft artillery. These shook and shifted so much under the stress of firing that they were all discarded. The new mount consists of four long steel beams that lie flat on the ground. Each leg is jointed, and is pivoted at the point of attachment to the gun platform, so that it can be folded compactly alongside it, and the whole lifted on rubber-tired wheels to be towed by a tractor or truck. The mount can be prepared for action from march order in about ten minutes. Concrete gun foundations, the only other type giving comparable stability under firing conditions, require several days for their preparation. The gun used on the new mount is the recently adopted standard three-inch army ai.fi-aircraft piece, which throws a fifteen-pound shell to a height of 12,000 yards and an extreme horizontal range of 19,000 yards. Crack gun crews have worked up a firing speed of thirty rounds a minute with this gun, thus enabling a battery of four pieces to attack a plane with something over a quarter of a ton of steel and TNT in the space of a minute. A feature of the new gun is the easy removability of the liner or inner tube when it has become worn out with constant firing or otherwise damaged. The old liner can be taken out and anew one slid into place, under field conditions, in about thirty minutes. This will enable a battery to keep the field constantly, avoiding slow' and costly returns to the arsenal for relining.
JOB ORDER ELECTS Daughters Close Convention Here Tonight. Mrs. Jennie Boswell Thomas, Los Angeles, Cal., was elected supiemc guardian by the Order of Job’s Daughters in eighth annual session Friday at the Severin here. P. A. Roth, Milwaukee, was named associate supreme guardian. Delegates from local chapters of Job’s Daughters representing many States are participating in the conclave which opened Thursday and terminates with installation of new officers and a dance tonight. Other national officers elected today are: Mrs. Ella K. Falkenhainer, St. Louis, Mo., supreme manager; Mrs. Nan Martin, Omaha, Neb., supreme secretary; Mrs. Ida B. Smith, San Francisco, Cal., supreme treasurer; Mrs. Florence M. Christy, Portland, Ore., supreme guide; Mrs. Harriet Hoover, Duluth, Minn., supreme marshal; Mrs. Mary E. Teachum, Washington, D. C., supreme chaplain; Mrs. Parthema P. Douglas, Omaha, Neb., supreme librarian. and Mrs. Mary Abt., East St. Louis, Mo., supreme director of music. CEREMONIES SUNDAY Corner Stone to Be Laid at Tabernacie. Several thousand persons are expected to attend the corner stone laying ceremonies for the new educational building of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church at 10.15 a. m. Sunday. The building will be constructed of Indiana limestone in Gothic design, and will embrace equipment to make it one of the most complete units of its kind in the country. Invocation and prayer by the Rev. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor, and reading of the scripture by Dr. Ernest N. Evans, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Church Federation, will open the services. Edgar H. Evans, chairman of the general building committee, will make the ritual declaration to be followed by speeches and closing prayer. Fred I. Willis will be in charge of the ceremony. The new building will include kitchen, assembly hall, gymnasium, women’s parlors and pipe organ. The Tabernacle Church is the fifth largest in the denomination with a membership exceeding 3,000. MINISTER TO SPEAK Rochester, N. Y., Pastor Will Be Rotary Guest. Dr. Albert W. Bevan, pastor of the Lake Avenue Baptist Church of Rochester, N. Y., will be the principal speaker Tuesday at the regular luncheon of the Indianapolis Rotary Club in the Riley room of the Claypool. Newly appointed committee chairmen of the club will be presented ot the luncheon. GIRL DRINKS POISON Treated at Hospital Following (quarrel With Sister. Following a quarrel w’ith her sister, Mildred Ferguson, 15, swallowed poison Friday night in her home, 1824 Parker Ave. She w’as treated at city hospital and taken home.
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One of Lady Winston Churchill’s first requests when she reached San Antonio for the American Legion convention was that she see some of “your Negro children,” because she thought they were “cute.” Her w'ish was granted.
GUILTY CHIEF STILL ON JOB Kokomo Mayor Makes No Move Against Aspy. By Times Speeial KOKOMO, Ind., Oct. 13.—John Aspy continues to hold his position as city fire chief, despite conviction of violating the liquor law for which he was sentenced to pay a fine of S4OO and serve 150 days at the penal farm. So far there has been no indication from Mayor S. E. Spurgeon that he intends to dismiss Aspy, who plans to take an appeal. The Spurgeon regime is Klan-controlled, according to recent allegations of Charles Etchison, discharged fireman, w’ho led to indictment of Aspy, Lloyd Morgan, a fireman, and George Gibbs, works board member, on liquor charges’. Morgan, dubbed the fire department’s official bootlegger, has been convicted. Gibbs will go on trial in Howard Circuit Court here Monday. DAILEY GETS CROWD Gubernatorial Candidate Scores Traitors. \ Bj/ Times Special TIPTON. Ind., Oct. 13.—“ When men are intrusted with the responsibility of public office and betray that responsibility, they should be driven from office whether they are Democrats or Republican.;,” dec ared Frank C. Dailey, Demccratic nominee for Governor, addressing a crowd which packed the Martz Theater here Friday night. Deploring the fact that “government in Indiana has been the worst in the Union,” Dailey said: “If you are in doubt how Indiana stands before the Nation, w’rite your friends outside the State and they will tell you! “There are not enough Democrats in Indiana to accomplish the house cleaning, and honest, upright Republicans are in a minority in their party. But together we can do it.” Accompanying Dailey on his appearance here were Jap Jones of Martinsville. Democratic candidate for treasurer of State; Glen J. Gifford of Tipton, candidate for judge of the Appellate Court, and Arthur Hamrick, candidate for Secretary of State. County Chairman Claude Louke presided. 1,500 Moose in Parade Z?(V Times Special GARY, Ind., Oct. 13.—A parade of 1,500 delegates to the sixth annual conclave of the Indiana Loyal Order of Moose here today was headed by James J. Davis, Secretary of Labor in the cabinet of President Coolidge. Davis is directorgeneral of the order. Farmer Killed in Fall B.y Times Special MADISON, Ind., Oct. 13.—Alva Jones, farmer, was found dead with a broken neck beside a wagon on his farm, the victim of a fall.
Working With a Purpose Having a definite aim in view adds determination to the desire for success in any undertaking. The habit of saving regularly with this Strong Trust Company—the Oldest in Indiana—with the aim of providing funds for future needs, is a premising plan of working with a purpose. 4% On Savings The INDIANA TRUST Kg ISrpYus $2,000,000.00 Ground Floor Safe Deposit Vault
Making Your Songs a Go _ Sincerity Is Conveyed by Expression This is the second of a series of six articles written for The Times and NEA Service by Rosa Ponselle, dwramatic soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Company, New York. BY ROSA PONSELLE IF reciting the words of a song -*■ slowly, distinctly, with emphasis on important words, and being very careful to pronounce final syllables will help greatly when it comes to singing a song, there is something else that will help. too. That is reciting the poem with expression. By this I do not mean to recite it in the exaggerated way that used to be called “elocution,” but with naturalness just as you would expres those same words in saythem to a cloe friend who understood you fully, and to whom you would unreservedly express your heart. Now, no matter how well you try to express yourself in singing a song, if a word drops out here and there, people who do not know the poem, if asked for an honest opinion would most likely say, “The voice was lovely, she seemed to sing with expression, but what was it all about?” Yet that is one of the important reasons why the singer stands there, to tell what it is all about. IN the first place, the composer was so struck by the beauty of the poem of your song that he was moved to express it in terms of music. Therefore, even if you put expression into the words, yet do not give those words distinctly you give but half the song. To give the whole song demands absolute concentration of mind in practising it. There is another kind of expression that helps a song along, and that is the expression on the face of the singer. Here, again, to exaggerate expression is a serious mistake. The kind of facia! expression needed Is exactly that which you would show in telling the same thing if it were not said to music. Naturalness In singing a song makes the very essence of its heart appeal. In opera, with acting. costumes, scenery, all the paraphernalia of the theater, high tragedy and gentle comedy are required, the dramatic caliber of the performance demands it. But in songs, we deal with another kind of singing, where every atom of expression must lie in the singer’s heart and voice, and show in her face. Sincerely, simplicity and naturalness, in the way she sings her songs, are vital to success. New Lions Club Formed By United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct, 13 Frank Southern has been elected president of the newly formed Lions Club here. Dr. R. S. Parrish was given the office of tail-twister and Dr. Russell Demottee was named lion tamer. The club decid'd to hold dinner meetings each Monday night.
OCT. 13, \ 1928
STUMP URGES SOLUTION OF FARM ISSUE Candidate for Senator Is Speaker at Broad Ripple Democratic Rally. Business and labor generally will be benefited by solution of the farmer’s problem, Albert Stump. Democratic nominee for United States Senator, declared addressing a Democratic rally in Broad Ripple Friday night. “When farming becomes profitable the thirty million people on the farms will begin to improve their living conditions.” Stump said. “Manufacturing will be stimulated by a desire to satisfy the needs and desires of this new market and employment will be plentiful. “The laborer, too, being steadily employed, will improve the standards of his living and further stimulation to industry will come to his good fortune. Industry, now stagnating for lack of its best market, will be vitalized into new activity.” Defend Honor of State Stump supported platform pledges of his party to bring about farm relief. Turning to State affairs, he said: “I have heard some of those whose acts have embarrassed the State of Indiana speak of the honor of our country and the importance of defending its honor against every assault. “Is not the gravest insult to our Nation’s honor to be found in such conduct on the part of those charged with the responsibility of public service that it breaks the confidence of the public in their own institutions of self-government and induces them to regard the institutions of freedom as affording the opportunities for corruption and graft?” Louis Ludlow Speaks Referring to the recent action of the Indianapolis Ministerial Association in calling upon Methodists to pray for the outcome of the election, John H. Aiken, former judge of Ft. Wayne, declared: “I suggest that the Methodist preachers offer prayer to regenerate George Coffin (Republican Seventh district chairman) so he will not swindle them out of their votes on election day.” Louis Ludlow, candidate for Congressman, and Raymond F. Murray, candidate for prosecuting attorney, made brief addresses.
WOOLLEN RAPS G. 0. P. AT HARTFORD CITY Frank C. Dailey Named for Governor During Speech. HARTFORD CITY. Ind., Oct. 13. —“Vote for Frank C. Dailey for Governor in self-respect and good citizenship, to rebuke the Republican party for the betrayal through its office holders and managers of the confidence of the State,” Evans Woollen, Indianapolis, exhorted a large audience here Friday night. “I shall not retell,” Woollen said, “the story of that betrayal. The shame of it is freely admitted by Republicans of the type to whom I am putting the question about their votes this autumn. “We can not expect results under party government unless the party in power is held to responsiblity. We have party government, not personal government, and the guilt of the party’s representative is the guilt of the party.” Dog Causes Eye Injury By United Press PLYMOUTH. Ind., Oct. 13.—Orville Menner. son of Mrs. Allen Goodrich of this city, may lose his left eye as result of a glass cut when his pet dog jumped through a window.
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