Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 39, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1932 — Page 14

PAGE 14

PSYCHIATRISTS USE HYPNOTISE IN MIND CURES its Value in Diagnosing, Treating Disorders Stressed. Science Her nice PHILADELPHIA. June 25—Nervous breakdowns and sexual problems cause more college students to need psychiatric advice than other difficulties they encounter. This was shown in a study of one thousand college student cases made In connection with the University of California psychiatric services by Dr. Sidney Kinnear Smith of Oakland. Cal., and read to the American Psychiatric association here by Dr Glenn Myers, a California colleague. Dr. Smith found that every year about the same proportion of students in college need such help, and that more freshmen and sophomores ask for advice than juniors and seniors. Sexual aspects of life appear to be given more consideration and speculation at the college age than at any other time. Sexual problems in their relation to the student’s social life are of extreme importance, he said. Psychiatric treatment brought about the greatest degree of improvement in the sexual maladjustments, but there were marked improvements also in the other types. Os the total thousand cases, over half were improved by phychiatric treatment, Dr. Smith reported. Study His Personality In treating the student, his personality is studied and if his problem arises from social maladjustments, the psychiatrist tries to fit the student into a social group in which he will be more comfortable. Foi; cases of nervous breakdowns, Dr. Smith unhesitatingly recommends psychoanalytic treatment. Psychiatrists were advised by Dr. Oscar J. Raeder of Boston to make more frequent use of hypnotism both for diagnosing and treating mental disorders. Dr. Raeder described cases in which he found hypnosis a quick and ready means of discovering what ailed patients in whom no physical signs of disease appeared. One complained of blindness but his eye doctor could find nothing to account for his symptoms. At the first interviqw, he was hypnotised and it was suggested to him that after a short sleep he would be able to see He woke up and found to his astonishment that he could look into bright light from a window without difficulty. This, however, '>as only the beginning, and the patient was told to return for further treatment. It was not necessary to use hypnotism again, however, for his confidence had been won and at the next interview thq real nature of the disorder was found to be mental, based on a domestic difficulty. The patient recovered and of course had no further difficulty with his eyes. Lighter States Best Dr. Raeder described suggestibility as a peculiarity of the mind. In hypnosis, he explained, the mind is perfectly concentrated, with no outside distraction at all. In a light state of hypnosis the patient remembers everything that has happened during the time he was hypnotised, but in a very deep state he moves about in a trance and remembers nothing at all. In treating disease, the lighter states are much more valuable- In these states there is a greater degree of consciousness, the patient’s personality exercises a greater influence through ether mental faculties. such as reasoning: and judgment. In the lighter states suggestion must' be given over a longer period of time, but the effect is much more lasting. In some cases, Dr. Raeder observed, hypnosis may be only a quicker way of getting at the patient’s real trouble, but ip other cases he believes that it is not only quicker but actually more effective for diagnosis and treatment. LAST OF MOHICANS FOUND IN MILWAUKEE Indian Aiding Chicago U. in Recording Language. By United Press CHICAGO. June 25.—The last Mohican, Makwa Monpuy, literally “Oneida Springs,’’ has been discovered and now is aiding the University of Chicago department of anthropology in recording the supposedly lost language. William Dick, as he is known, is 75 and lives with his daughter in Milwaukee. He formerly lived with his parents on a Wisconsin Indian reservation and now receives a state pension. * He is an elder in a Presbyterian church, and does not smoke or eat sweets. A drink, now and then, can do no harm, he says, but for him the modern world is too complicated. ’ Dick is believed to be the only living full-blooded Mohican. Until last summer he had not spoken his native tongue for seventeen years. Now he is aiding the university record the forgotten language of the once powerful Mohican nation of the Algonquins. EXILED WAR VETERAN BACK IN OHIO HOME Deserted by German Wife, Man Brings Son to U. S. By United Press CAMBRIDGE, 0., June 25.—After an exile of fourteen years. Homer Tedrick, 42, World war veteran, returned to his home here. At the time war was declared. Tedrick was in San Francisco. He i enlisted, went overseas, and served until the declaration of peace, j Seeking domestic comfort, he mar- ; ried a German girl. A son was born. The economic depression seized j Germany. He lost a position in a mine near Luxemburg. His wife i deserted him. Accompanied by his small son. Tedrick sought work on an ocean liner to pay transportation to the United States, with no success. Recently, through Probate Judge Samuel Schlup of Cambridge, who made arrangements through Washington and the consulate at Luxemburg. Tedrick was given work on the S. S. Coahoma County, bound for New York. Upon arriving in America, his sister sent him money to return to Cambridge.

8-A Graduates of School 33

Top Row (left to right)—George Dirr, Donald Woodard, Dalton Wade, James Rossell, John M. Miller, Walter Reamer. Second Row —Gerald McClain,

JOHN HANSON WAS NOT FIRST U. S. PRESIDENT Carnegie Research Member Says Claim Merely a Legend. By Science Service WASHINGTON. June 25.—The story that John Hanson, not George Washington, was first President of the United States is only a legend without foundation in historical fact, Dr. Edmuiid C. Burnett, of the division of historical research of the Carnegie institution of Washington, demonstrates in a bulletin of that institution. John Hanson was never President of the United States, but was president of congress and as such was merely a presiding officer. He belonged to the legislative and not the executive branch of the government, Dr. Burnett explains. Tl|e formal name of congress was “The United States in Congress Assembled,” so that the president of that body was called “President of the United States in Congress Assembled,” but John Hanson was not even the first to be called by this title. Two predecessors, Samuel Huntington and Thomas McKean, also bore the same title.

PANTS 75c to $7.95 Largest ami Most Complete Stock in the City. PANTS STORE CO. Oldest Exclusive Cants Store in Indiana. 48 WEST OHIO STREET

The Strong Old Bank of Indiana The Indiana National Bank Os Indianapolis

Roy E. McCoy Representing Travelers Insurance Cos. Life Annuities Riley 3334

A GOOD BUSINESS SCHOOL Strong business, stenographic. secre tsrial and accounting courses: Individ ual instruction in major subjects, large faculty of specialists in their respective lines. Free Employment Service. Fred W Case. Principal CENTRAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Pennsylvania and Vermont, First Door V. W. 0. A. Indianapolis. Ind.

Harold Longyear, Ralph Linder, Jay Small, Billy Ball, Russell Joyce. Third Row—Charles Thomas, Frank Mabey, Charles Dougherty, Herman Clark, Richard Hites, Robert Bond. Fourth Row—Gordon Fly, Delmer Fisher, Jack Collier, Gilbert Barker, Jack Jester, Earl Garrison. Fifth Row—lmogene Hinshaw, Jeanette Edwards, Lucille Ajamie, Margaret Culver, Rosemary Holland, Blanche Humphreys. Sixth Row—Merrill Schneider, Janet McDougall, Helen Haney, Marian Morris, Thelma Joyce, Bettyjean Miller. , Seventh Row lona Schlueter, June Hawk, Margaret McAree, Ireva Corman, Beatrice Renfro, Helen Linville.

Jm Ai sTal wm&HFw Hist tin w *V 1 vJt¥•m Mm | W BMir

TAX-FREE MILLER Geared-to-the-Road Tires LOWEST PRICES EASIEST TERMS tuLw

LOANS AT REASONABLE RATES FOB ALL WORTHY PURPOSES The Indianapolis Morris Plan Company Delaware and Ohio Sta. Riley 1534 T

TRUSSES For Every Kind of Rapture. Abdominal Supports Fitted by Experts HAAG’S 129 West Washington Street

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Eighth Row—Margaret O’Connell, Martha Shilling, Agnes Dailey, Jeannette Fickle, Mary Hoffman, Dorothy Rayman. Ninth Row—Alice Packard, Rosemary Roys, Elizabeth Long, Kathryn Hann, Evelyn McDowell, Maxine Pope. Bottom Row—Virginia Berry, Dorothy Crouch, Mildred Benson, Lois Noffke, Edel Thielst, Charles Murphy.

Important Changes in Schedules Effective Sunday, June 26 No. 24—THE KNICKERBOCKER. Daily. Leave Indianapolis 5:00 p. m., arrive New York 12:00 noon, one hour earlier than at present; arrive Boston 3:25 p. m. No. 32—DETROIT-TOLEDO SPECIAL. Daily. Will be consolidated with train No. 20. No. 20— CLEVELAND SPECIAL. Daily. Leave Indianapolis 11:00 p. m. for Cleveland, Toledo and Detroit. No. 4—THE SYCAMORE. Will be discontinued between Chicago, Indianapolis and Cincinnati. No. 18—QUEEN CITY SPECIAL. Daily. Leave Indianapolis 6:00 p. m., arrive Cincinnati 9:30 p. m. No. 7—INDIANAPOLIS—CHICAGO SPECIAL. Except Sundays. Will be discontinued between Indianapolis and Chicago. No. 43 CHICAGO NIGHT SPECIAL. Will be operated dally except Mondays between Indianapolis and Chicago. No. 39 MISSOURIAN. Daily. Leave Indianapolis 8:10 a. m., arrive St. Louis 1:15 p. m. No. 17—MOUND CITY SPECIAL. Will be discontinued between Indianapolis and St. Louis. No. Ii—SOUTHWESTERN LIMITED. Leave Indianapolis 11:45 a. m, arrive St. Louis 4:45 p. m. No. 19—ST. LOUIS EXPRESS. Daily. NEW TRAIN. Leave In- - dianapolis 2:45 p. m., arrive St. Louis 7:58 p. m. For further particulars apply City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle. Phone Riley 2442, or Union Station, phone Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE

1874-1932 Give your surplus money an opportunity to work for you by investing in Celtic Savings and Loan Shares ... an investment that is safely secured by first mortgages on Marion County real estate. * Celtic Savings and Loan Association Member of the Marion County League 23 W. Ohio St.

BUCKINGHAM IS CHOSEN CASTLE OF KINGGEORGE It’s Been a Royal Domicile for Approximately a Century. BY FREDERICK OECHSNER By Scripps-Hotcard Scicspaper Alliance LONDON, June 25.—Visitors to London who have been struck by the modern appearance of Buckingham palace probably do not realize, in most cases, that the palace is, indeed, just what it looks to be; the most recently occupied of the London royal domiciles. Buckingham palace has been the regular abode of the sovereign for only about a hundred years, Queen Victoria having chosen it as her sole London home in preference to all other palaces. Before her time various other residences were favored by particular monarchs Some of these have been entirely swept away, while others survive only in part. Three Still Occupied Os the other royal palaces, Hampton Court, Kensington, and St. James, are still occupied. The lastnamed is still the “official” residence of the sovereign, and even now ambassadors are accredited to “the Court of St. James.” Four members of the king’s family have residences at Kensington palace. They are Princess Louise, duchess of Argyll, Princess Beatrice, Princess Alice and the earl of Athlone, and the Dowager Marchioness of Milford Haven- Kensington was the birthplace of both Queen Victoria and the present queen. At Hampton Court, there are fifty-four sets of inhabited apartments, and fifteen in all at Kensington. Five of the former and four of the latter are occupied by officials; the others are called “Grace and Favor” residences. The official residences are repaired and decorated throughout by the office of works, but the others, having once been decorated for each occupant, must be kept in order by them. A Pump Remains Os the palaces which have wholly or partly disappeared, even Englishmen remember little. Who, for example, recalls that Kensington was once the “King’s Town” and that the Anglo-Saxon rulers had their palaces there? All trace of the building has* disappeared, though the Royal Duchy of Cornwall still owns property on its site. Almost all that remains to recall the Palace of Bridewell, near Fleet street, where Henry XIII lived with Katherine of Arragon, is St. Bride’s well, which is now a pump. Westminster hall, one of presentday London glories, is part of the royal palace that stood for many centuries on the site of the modern house of parliament. The fact is frequently forgotten that the Tower of London was for many years not only a fortress and a prison, but a palace as well. Though the “King’s apartments” and the “Queen’s lodgings” no longer exist, the present weapon room was long the banqueting hall, and the Norman chapel of St. John was the private oratory of English sovereigns until Tudor times. U. S. ACQUIRES ISLAND Islet Was Locals of Civil War Prison Camp. By United Press SANDUSKY, 0., June 25.—Johnson Island, once a Union prison camp, has become the property of the United States. The island, the most isolated spot off the Lake Erie coast, was used by the Federals as a prison camp during the Civil war, at one time quartering more than 3,500 Confederate prisoners. It is the. burial ground for 604 Confederate officers and soldiers who died during their imprisonment. The first monument, commemorating the heroism of southern soldiers in the north, was erected on the tiny isle in 1910.

CONTRACT £1 IT

BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridre Learnt THERE are certain conventions of play that the beginner, at bridge soon learns, such as ‘second hand low," “return your partner's suit,” “cover an honor with an honor” and so on. A play equally important is one which the writer was surprised to find seldom is mentioned and as a result a great many beginners fail to appreciate its importance. The play is this: When you hold four of your opponents’ trump, do not open your short suit, but attack with your long suit, in an endeavor to force declarer to ruff, thus setting up a trump trick in your own hand. The following hand illustrating this point was played by Mrs. H. D. Stahl of Pittsburgh, who has held two women’s national auction titles and who tied for one national contract title.

A None VQ-7-2 ♦ K-9-8-7-6 *Q-10-9-8-2 NORTH! ¥lO-8- 5 ¥5-4 6-3 ixi CD ♦ J-5-4-♦lO S H 3-2 *A-K- DeaJer 4*7-4 6-3 I SOUTH 4K-J-10-9-5 ¥ A-K-J-9 - ♦ A-Q *J-5 2f

The Play Mrs. Stahl, in the South, was playing the hand for four odd at hearts. West had the opening lead. West held four trump and a singleton diamond and made the mistake of leading his singleton diamon, which Mrs. Stahl won with the ace, preserving the queen for a re-entry. Mrs. Stahl now ruffed a small spade in dummy with the deuce of hearts. Realizing that West’s lead was a singleton, she made a nice play of picking up the trump, leading the queen from dummy, followed by the seven, which was won in her own hand with the jack.

GROCER FIGHTS, SUBDUES THIEF South Side Storekeeper Captures Prowler. After a twenty-minute struggle with a thief in his grocery at 1101 Maple street, Friday night, Manuel Kaseff, 32, of 1036 South Illinois street, captured the prowler and held him until arrival of police. The suspect, Russell Lindsey, 21, Negro, of 929 South Illinois street, was arrested on a burglary charge. Kaseff told police that he ran to the stare after seeing Lindsey and a companion enter an alley nearby. Lindary attempted to hide behind a counter as Kaseff entered the store and the other thief suspect fled, police were told. Kaseff said he seized Lindsey, rolling on the floor and shouting for aid. After nearly half an hour Max Smulyan, 34, of 1327 Union street, heard K&seffs cries and called police. Lindsey is said to have confessed he first entered the home of Kaseff’s mother, Mrs. Fannie Kaseff, 119 West Wilkins street, with a skeleton key, obtaining 20 cents and the key to the store. Here’s all you have to do to win as much as SIOO in The TIMES SALES SLIP Contest: 1. Save your sales slip. 2. Write 25 words. 3. Send them to us.

* * tkat JLelepmme? *T3oyi 11 wait’ll I tell tha Gang at home about this catch! HA ill "Won't wait to write ’em, either iii too alow. I’ll use this telephone k TTi call them Long Distance ;:: and give them the details now!*' j So easy to use :;; so quick and * convenient; toll telephone service offers you instantaneous communion s tion with the Gang, or the home- | folks, or your place of business; j On vacation;:; as well as when J t home ::; busy folks use the jj wMooe, always! The Economical Voice ~ 0/ Million, INDIANA BELL TELEPHONE Company

The king and ace of trump were then cashed. West followed with two trump and Mrs. Stahl discarded a diamond and a club from dummy, while East discarded two clubs. The jack of clubs was played next by Mrs. Stahl and won by West with the king. West put up a good defense by returning the three of clubs, which Mrs. Stahl won in dummy with the nine and immediately returned the queen of clubs, discarding the ten of spades from her own hand. West was forced to win the trick with the ace. East discarding the deuce of spades. West threw Mrs. Stahl back into the dummy By leading to the ten of clubs. She discarded another spade from her own hand and now led a small diamond from dummy. You will notice that the queen of diamonds acted as a two-way entry card—if need be, Mrs. Stahl could have used it to enter the dummy, or, as she now was forced to use it, as a re-entry into her own hand. Mrs. Stahl had a count on the East and West hands—she knew that East held one diamond and one spade and that West held two spades, therefore she now made a nice play of leading her king of spades, which West won with the ace, dropping East’s queen, and the last trick was won by Mrs. Stahl with the jack of spades. A hand nicely played for four odd. However, if west had opened his king and ace of clubs and followed by another club, East would have ruffed. Mrs. Stahl could have overruled, but West would be sure to make a heart trick and thereby defeat the contract. (Convrieht. 1932. NKA Service. Inc.)

Another Progress Laundry Service at 7V 2 c Lb. THRIFTY SERVICE Costs Less Than Home Washing SHEETS 'j Wearing . ~ PILLOWSLIPS Apparel AU These j TQWELS I Returned Ironed TABLECLOTHS Ready . NAPKINS J 40 Iron Minimum Charge, $1.02 Shirts Ironed 10c each additional, if requested. Riley 7373 DD APDrCC The Soft Water rKUUKt.OO LAUNDRY

General Banking, at a Convenient Location 111 North Pennsylvania Street KBITmVY Wk f ECOIUtT Checking Accounts I‘MtsA‘fie'- ! ! "' " SSSfilMfl li TPUST CO; Savings Accounts kSkS feSlpW!]! Management of Property =_ [ln K BLwjCjg liLtyf' I- Management of Estates ij | Sale Deposit Boxes ■ > ; Security trust company 3% Savings Memher lndianapolie Clearing House Atsn j|j

-JUNE 25, 1932

AIMEE’S MATE SCORESIN CASE’ Court Adjourned as Pretty Nurse Collapses. By United Press LOS ANGELES, June 25.—Myrtle Hazel Joan St. Pierre cringed, sobbed and collapsed in hysterics. It was rotund David L. Hutton's day in court. His attorneys, defending him from < Mrs. St. Pierre’s $200,000 heart-balm suit, inferentially charged the pretty nurse: Tried three years ago to “frame" Aimee Semple McPherson, evan-gelist-wife of Hutton. Had participated in other alleged extortion plots. And had been intimate with other men. This brought Friday’s court session to a sudden end, while two spectators fainted from excitement, and youthful Superior Judge Lester Roth sent the jury' from the room while he sternly lectured Mrs. St. Pierre and attorneys for both sides. More drama is expected Monday when the pretty young nurse, who claims she was betrayed and cheated by the corpulent chorister, resumes the stand. “Didn’t you say ‘if we can get that Aimee Semple McPherson out here / in a compromising position, we can frame here for plenty of dough?” a defense attorney asked the nurse. “I am the one who is being framed, I am the one!” came Mrs. St. Pierre’s response. Shoulder Dislocated in Fall Dislocation of the right shoulder was suffered Friday by Nobel Coldman, 37, of 1630 Roosevelt avenue, when he fell from a ladder while working in Flant 2 of the Keyless Lock Company, Pike and Hovey streets. He was taken to Indiana Christian hospital.