Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 9, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 May 1929 — Page 5

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HOOVERS 'HOME BODIES'; SHUN SOCIAL WHIRLS President Goes to Bed at 11 Every Night: Refuses to Make Visits. BV LAWRENC E SULLIVAN I ruled Pres* Staff < orrespondent WASHINGTON. May 22 Presi- - :.t Herbert Hoover is starting the - Seventh week of his administration today without having been away rom the White House after dark to a social function, and therefore capital society ha; another problem. Washington has not know’n so intensive a worker in the White House ;n all its long history and the teaable talk has it that while obvious- ! v something ought to be done about r. what can be done with the President of Hie United States if he elects to the good example of going to bed nights. Nor does the President's failure •o go a-visiting mean the White House is out of the capital':, social whirl. The fact is that it is difficult to recall a comparable period of intense entertaining at the executive mansion than has marked the '■•rek since March 4 Both President and Mrs Hoover slway. have been home bodies. They . njoy having their friends at their 'able and fireside. They have kept heir own entertainment list- so crowded that they have had tittle *imc to con icier invitations from •heir friends. His work hi. home and his • r-j if: make up Provident Hoover's ;.fc, and he ; thriving on the more nr lr ecludcd regime of the White i ion. r. Hr r up by 7 every morning, ••xereisex with his medicine ball caf iiu t for half or lliree-quarter: of ,m hour, enjoys ho! coffee in the g?rd''ii. breakfasts and is at hi; <e i p lev minutes before 9. An hour for luncheon i: the only interruption at the executive offices. Reluming to the White House a little . tier 6 in the afternoon, he enjoys vigorous rub-down at the hands oi a professional masseuse and dines at 3. By 11 p. m.. Hie President usually is ready io call it a dry. INVESTS IN LEARNING ■•pendt- StiO.OOO in Thirty Years to Give Children Education. /; < I ini's Kl'i rnl' LIES MOINES. May 22.- E. M. Wentworth ot Dcs Moines, has in- • rsted $60,000 in education in the last thirty years, and lie is well satisfied with tli° dividends paid. Wentworth has .>ein seven of his children through lowa colleges in the last tiiirt; years, and one was ml tv Olvo State. It was a good investment, Wcnlorlh commented, when asked •tout the expense.

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Reformed Synod Chiefs

Among leaders at the triennial session of the General Synod of the Reformer Church in the United States and Canada, which opens at the First Reformed church here today ore t left to right > the Rev. William E. Lampe. Ph. D., Philadelphia, general secretary of the denomination: the Rev. Charles E. Schaeffer. D. D.. general secretary of the board of missions, and Elder Milton Warner Philadelphia, treasurer of synod

LIBRARY ACCEPTS RAUH HOME GIFT

Formal Program Dedicates New North Side Branch to Entire City. What wa.s yesterday a home today began to function as a place of public service for those living on the north .side. Several hundred persons gathered Tuesday night at North Meridian street to aid Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Rauh celebrate their golden wedding anniversary and dedicate the library building which flic Re uli's have given the city. Nicholson Speaker fhc new north side library branch is the Rauh home. It is to bo known as the Rauh Memorial library. Meredith Nicholson, noted Indiana author: Rabbi Morris L. Feuerlicht.. I . L. Dickerson, city librarian and Charles W. Kern, president of the school board, participated in the dedicatory services. All praised the warm-hearted generosity Oi the aged couple, who gave their nomr that library facilities of the city be more adequate. “We arc dedicating a liou.sc of book and friendship," Rabbi Feueriicht said. "A gift prompted by a spirit of gratitude for what i : they have acquired and a friendship | with the spirit of sharing with others what they have." Busts for Donors The donor made the presentation ; speech and turned the library over to Dickerson, who accepted on behalf of the city. Models of two bronze portrait; busts of Mr. and Mrs. Rauh, which j will be placed in the delivery room of the library, were unveiled by two! granddaughters of the donors, Miss ! Jane Weil, daughter of Samuel D. Weil. Cleveland, and Miss Estelle Burpee, daughter of Mrs. Hortensc Ruth Burpee. Indianapolis. FLETCHER CLUB ELECTS Francis Ahleyer Named President of Bank Organization. Francis Ahleyer, assistant trust officer, was elected president of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Men's Club at the annual meeting of employes Tuesday night. Evans Woollen Jr., assistant to , i he president, was elected vice-presi-dent. Stanley Scroggs was elected secretary and Thomas Connell, treasurer. NEW OFFICERS ELECTED Purchasing Agents Choose Campbell for Presidency. Walter S. Campbell today headed 4 the Purchasing Agents of Indianapolis. Other officers elected Tues- ! day at the Severin: L. M. Fehren- ; bach, vice-president; D. C. Murray, i re-elected secretary, and Fred W. 1 Bakemeyer, treasurer.

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OMAHA GIRL IS BEST SPELLER South Bond Miss. 19. Is ■Game’ Contestant. Bn I nit<<l Bn ss WASHINGTON, May 22.—Miss Virginia Hogan, pretty black-hairecl school girl of Omaha, Neb., is celebrating here thirteenth birthday and her first, day as national spelling champion with a round of festivity in the nation's capital today. Matched against twenty -one champions who had triumphed in preliminary contests in many parts of the country. Miss Hogan Tuesday was the last to leave the stage of the National Museum auditorium, where the fifth national spelling bee was held. Multi - syllabled, jaw - breaking words from obscure corners of the unabridged dictionary had been hurled at her and her fellow contestants for almost three hours before her closet rival. Miss Viola Strbac of South Milwaukee, misspelled ‘ luxuriant." All the others,, including Teru Hayashi. 15-year-old Japanese-American who finished third, previously had been eliminated. Hayashi. the last boy to leave the stage, incautiously put an ‘ S’’ in Panacea. A game battle waged by little Miss Winifred Church of South Bend, Ind.. 10 years old. and the youngest in the competition, ended when she misspelled ‘ catastrophe." Her petiteness and the sly giggle with which she greeted the long words given her by the pronouncer captivated the hearts of the audience and she received an ovation when she descended the platform steps.

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TTTE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FOG SHROUDS STRIKE ISSUES IN TENNESSEE Both Wo r kers and Bosses in Dark as to Intentions of Other. BY JOHN F. MO.VIOIX Times Staff Correspondent ELIZABETHTON, Term., May 22. —Eight companies of national guardsmen are here with rifles, bayonets, machine guns and tear bombs. Between 3,000 to 4,000 rayon mill workers have been out of work for weeks, yet nobody seems to know what the strike is all about. ; not even the representatives of the two conflicting parties, j ‘‘They demand that we reorganize ; the union." said H. F. Marthaus, plant engineer and company spokes- | man in the absence of President ArI thur Mothwurf when asked the is- ; sue of the strike. "We do not ask recognition of the j union," replied Wililam F. Kelly, : vice-president of the United Textile Workers of America. "All we ask is that they agree not to discriminate | against employes who are members 1 of the union. All we want is for the j company to live up to the agree- ! ment which settled the first strike, | and which Dr. Mothwurf signed." No Agreements I "There was no agreement.” said I Dr. Marthaus, "and Dr. Mothwurf I signed none." "We are not asking for more pay jor shorter hours,” said Kelly. "Nor 1 is recognition of the union asked. | The sole issue is whether there shall 1 be discrimination against an em- ; ploye for belonging to the union." "There was no discrimination before," said Dr. Mothwurf, meaning between the settlement of the first and the start of the second strike, "and there would be none now.” “There is no strike as far as we are concerned," he said. "Both plants arc operating almost normally. Before the strike both plants employed 3,205 workers. More than 2.000 are now at work. Eighty per cent of them are former employes. Some are members of the union.” "Which of your former employes would you not take back?” he was asked. Leaders Would Not Be Hired "Those who climbed over the j fence and broke inside the plants at the start of the second strike," j he said. i "And how about the strike or i union leaders?” Would you take j back Margaret Bower., for exi ample?" Miss Bowen is secretary of ! the Textile Union. “We would not take her back,” | lie replied. "We want only peacej ful workers.” | Dr. Marthatis said union leaders j greatly exaggerated their figures. “They claim 4.500 in their union,” he said, “when the total number employed in both plants before the strike was 3,205. In two recent parades. one with 1.100 and the other with 1.050 people in it, there were not more than 250 of our former employes in either.”

PAY ONLY Down and 2sc A WEEK! —Don't Miss It! Be here bright and early!

BOLIVIA BUILDS ROAD South American Country Constructs Modern Auto Highway. Vn L nil'd I'm* I A PAZ. Bolivia. May 22.—As part of Bolivia's road improvement plan, a road has been authorized from Santa Cruz to Port Gaiba on the Brazilian border. The road will be modern in every detail, constructed for automobile traffic and a loan is being contemplated of about $300,000 for construction expenses. CENSUS BILL TO PASSINjENATE Reapportionment Act Also Sure to Win. Bo Scripps-flaward Xi wspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. May 22.—Passage of the reapportionmment and census bills seemed assured today. Senator Hiram W. Johnson has won unanimous consent for limitation of debate in the senate after 3 p. m. Thursday. The vote probably will be taken late Friday. Passage also of legislation to repeal or delay operation of the national origins act seemed assured by this move. With reapportionment out of the way there will be nothing left except this on the senate’s program until it receives the tariff bill a month or more from now. It has been rumored at the Capitol that the reapportionment debate would be extended as long as possible, to try to make action on national origins impossible before July 1. That is the date when the new quotas become operative. The reapportionment bill the senate is expected to pass will be only slightly different from that passed by the house last year and the house probably will approve it again with little debate. MOORE RULING SOON Judge Will Decide on County Councilman's Motion Saturday. Ruling on a motion to quash the indictment charging Grant Moore, county councilman, with interest in a county gravel contract, will be given Saturday by Criminal Judge James A. Collins. Moore was indicted last October, after he was alleged to have received $1,066 from William J. Sparks, gravel dealer, as his share of the contract.

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REBEKAKS DEPART State Assembly Ends After Election of Officers. Officers of the Rebekah assembly were elected and installed at the closing sessions of the forty-fifth annual statee assembly Tuesday in I. O. O. F. hall. Nominations for next year's officers also were made. The session, which opened Sunday,

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closed Tuesday night with a reception in the Denison hotel to new and retiring officers, although many delegates remained to make the annual pilgrimage to the Odd Fellows' home in Greensburg today. At Greensburg anew girls' cottage "ill be dedicated.

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Officers chosen were: Miss M. Raess, Tell City, president; Mrs Mary I. Mater. Rockville, vice-press dent: Mrs. Grace E. Childs. Indian# apolis. re-elected secretary: Mrrj Martha Murray. Indiana Harboij treasurer, and Mrs. Iva Herriotf • uiklin. warden.

laltan ON 111 r, •!!.(. Ihe Rccora L enter ot Indianapolis