Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 75, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1931 — Page 2
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HOOVER NEARS 57TH BIRTHDAY IN GOODJIEALTH Combats Strain of the Presidency With Regular Habits. BY PAUL R. MALLON WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.—President Hoover’s health as he approaches his fifty-seventh birthday next Monday is better than that of the average man of his years, in the opinion of his physicians and associates. The lines in his face are a little deeper than a year ago. The white has spread from around his temples to make heavy streaks of gray in his hair. But his weight, is averaging between 187 and 190 pounds, the same as a year ago, and lie has suffered no illness in that period. Mr. Hoover’s success in combating the strain of the presidential office is attributed by his physicians to what they call “regular living”— regular hours for sleeping, eating, work and exercise. Clock Is His Guide The clock regulates Mr. Hoover’s life. Up at 6:15 each morning, he participates in a round of medicine ball with a group of friends on the White House lawn before breakfast. This is the only exercise he gets, aside from fishing, horseback riding and walking on week-ends at Camp Rapidan. It is enough for a man of his years, according to his physical advisers, because he indulges ?fc rrf vio-jly. At 4 iflo m. each day he is at nls desk. At 1:15 p. m. he has lunch. At 6 p. m. he leaves his office. At 8 p. m. he has dinner. At 10:30 or 11 p. m. he goes to bed. The schedule seldom varies. Heeded Warnings No president since Roosevelt has paid such attention to health. Mr. Hoover was warned by friends when he entered tlje White House that he would have to be careful. He weighed 210 pounds then, ate when he felt like it and slept when he could. His diet did not worry him. But he heeded the warnings. He had seen the presidency break Wilson and Harding, although it had no appreciable effect on the health of his predecessor, Mr. Coolidge. The routine laid out for Mr. Hoover by doctors brought him down to 190 pounds two months after he entered the White House. He has held that weight since. BU RG LA RT LOOT~H 0M E 5500 jn Clothing Boot yof Prowler, Check-Up Shows. Burglars looted the home of Oscar H. Schexenider, 744 Edgemont drive, Wednesday night or early toda, and checkup showed a fur coat, five dresses, a bedspread, all valued at SSOO missing. A cigaret machine was stolen from a poolroom operated by R. B. McKinney, 728 Shelby street, during the night. It was valued at $125.
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STUDENTS TOLD NOT TO CROWD JOB JOINTERS Hoover Commission Chief Deplores Competition With Family Heads. By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 6—Young persons should stay in school wherever possible and not compete for jobs with heads of families in the present depression, the President’s emergency employment committee said today. Acting Chairman Fred C. Croxton announced a program designed
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Charivari Lasts 13 Days; Governor Asked for Aid By United Press . ASHLAND, Wls., Aug. 6.—For thirteen consecutive nights since their marriage, Arvo Juori and his bride have been unable to sleep, so they appealed to Governor Philip T. x.a Follette for relief. “It is the neighbors,” their letter to the Governor said. “Every night they hold a charivari and pound tin cans and toot horns at our farm home from dusk to dawn. “We have appealed to the sheriff, but the charivari still is going on. We swore out warrants, but the sheriff let them all go as soon as he had arrested them. So we appeal to you as Governor for relief.” According to unwritten laws on charivaris, the father of the bride is expected to give the noisemakers a present. Then they quit and go home. The Ashland merrymakers demand sls.
to discourage students from giving up their school work. In addition to the danger of crowding still further an already overcrowded labor market, he foresaw another evil in the idleness that might ensue
among youths throughout the nation. '“During abnormal times like the present,” he said, “the dangers of idleness for young people in the habit-forming age must be reckoned with frankly.”
EXHIBITORS TO PLANJORSHOW Pre-Exposition Meeting Is Called by Directors. Meeting today, the board of directors of the annual All-Indiana Industrial Exposition voted to hold a joint session next Tuesday with all exhibitors who have contracted for space in order to map out definite entertainment and speaking plans for the seven-day show. Sept. 28 to Oct. 4. The joint gathering will be in the form of a general get-together and trading of ideas among the more than fifty exhibitors who already have signed space contracts, and the board of directors, comprised of
Marshall T. Levey, chairman; W. F. Kruger, E. S. Harter, H. F. Fries and W. E. Williams. The general get-together will be in the form of a chicken dinner at McCurry’s farm several miles north of the city. Hemorrhoids Quick Safe Relief Why not relieve yourself of the terrible torture of piles the RIGHT way! The powerfully healing, soothing, medication of Petersons Ointment immediately ends irritation and removes soreness. Peterson's starts right in to heal the affected parts and quickly those painful, embarrassing piles completely vanish. No wonder pharmacists everywhere call Peterson's “greatest remedy on earth for piles.” Big box only 35 cents at any drug store.—Advertisement.
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