Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 152, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1932 — Page 10
PAGE 10
HOOVER URGES ‘LOYALTY' LIKE IN CIVIL WAR Calls on Nation, as Did Lincoln, to Support ReElection Plea. (Continued from Page One) war was made at Gettysburg. The turn in the tide in this crisis was made in the last winter. And just as after Gettysburg long months of continual battle were required to bring about the saving of the Union, in the same manner we must continue the fight today to recover our prosperity and to preserve the social and political principles for which Abraham Lincoln stood.” "In 1860 as in 1929," the President said, "the country was unexpectedly faced with a great calam-i lty. Then, as now, the disruptive forces gathered strength, and for a time thei rprogress seemed irresistible. Then, as now, the resources of the nation were mobilized and organized in a car. paign that finally ended the initial retreat. The President denounced the Democratic slogans and platform as "strangely reminiscent of those ♦ words) used by their predecessors in Chicago sixty-eight years ago.” Ho added that “again today, as in 1864, they call for a change of leadership and policies at Washington.”! Democrats Are Denounced The chief executive declared that "in spite of the hardships of the time, the nation in 1864 refused to i bo swerved from a course that had turned the retreat into an advance , “It declined emphatically to turn | aside to untried policies and ex- i porimental leadership,” he added. "The same alternatives are before the country today that lay before it i in that momentous campaign of nearly three quarters of a century ago. "The choice that the American people made in 1864 was made on Nov. 8. The choice they are called to make in 1932 will be made on Nov. 8. My fellow citizens, can we doubt what the choice will be?” The President made public the Springfield speech—his major address in Illinois on his way to speak in St. Louis tonight—several hours in advance of its delivery in order that it might be printed throughout the country in today's afternoon papers. • Million Back at Work t He centered on a reptition of his 12-point farm relief program in the earlier portions of the address. The Lincoln plea at Springfield where Lincoln made his home as a man, generally is regarded by experts cn the train, as one of the outstanding gestures of Mr. Hoover’s campaign tour, which is to end next Tuesday w’hen he casts his ballot in his home at Palo Alto, Cal., the end of his vote seeking trail. He again declared that his program had put 1,000,000 men back to work since congress adjourned last August, and appealed for a chance to show in the next four years w'hat his ground work had done and could do to restore prosperity. Early today, several hundred persons had cheered the arrival of Mr. Hoover's special train at Garrett, Ind„ at 6:35 a. m. The second back platform appearance of the day was made at 7:25 by Mr. Hoover before a large crowd at Nappanee, Ind. Mrs. Hoover joined him in receiving cheers of the citizens. She was presented with a large bouquet of roses. Strenuous Program Ahead One of Mr. Hoover's major speeches of the day was reserved for Springfield, 111., where he planned to remain for an hour, after his arrival at 3:30 p. m. The President's main address of the day, however, was on the program at St. Louis for 7:30 p. m., and after a three-hour evening engagement in that city, he will board the train once more for St. Paul, Minn., scene of Saturday's principal address. Saturday, Mr. Hoover will duplicate today’s strenuous day's program, campaigning in northern Illinois and through Wisconsin, with an hour's stop at Madison, Wis. The schedule after leaving St. Paul Saturday night will include a brief stop early Sunday at Omaha. From there he' will proceed rapidly across country toward California, by way of Denver and Ogden, Utah, with possibly a visit to Salt Lake city some time Monday. Mr. Hoover will reach his home at Palo Alto, Cal., sometime around noon, Tuesday, in plenty of time to vote. COPPER NEEDS lio AID Sitting on Prisoner When Rescue Squad Arrives. "Spirits” played a prominent part in a spirited street fight today that resulted in a policeman sounding an alarm for help and arrest of a Negro on charges of drunkenness and resisting an officer. On report of a policeman in distress, the emergency squad sped to the 700 block, Cleveland street. They found the reverse of the report true, however, because patrolman Russell Chathan, instead of being loser, was winner. The Negro, William L. Smith, 742 Cleveland street, not only was pinned to the ground, but was being sat upon by officer Chathan. PLAN SAFETY RALLY City-Wide Event to Be Held Jan. 26, Committee Decides. Plans for a city-wide safety rally to be held Jan. 26 was discussed on Thursday night in the monthly meeting of the citizens’ safety committee at city hospital. Suggestion for the rally was made by Municipal Judge William H.! Sheaffer, chairman of the advisory committee of the organization. Arrangements will be made by a committee headed by Sheaffer and details will be announced later. Dr. Charles W. Meyers, superintendent of the hospital, and Earl C. Wolf, business manager, were hosts to the safety committee. The guests were conducted on a tour of the hospital, following the dinner meeting.
SOUND BODIES IS BUTLER GOAL
Athletic Program Aims at Remedying Physical Ills
Wmßk C—r~~~7> . , n Vpp Lett—Here* a -rim Si ; W . P C"" T going to town in the hands L.... * Jr ' > / v **■ > w/ j. Miss Thelma Roller. Butler co _ f ' Upper Right—Ready for the “y* 3L / W \ push with the cageball are ML / \ A Jmß Pauline McCarty i left i and Jca on acrobatic bas at Butler t W Lower Richt—Duck! It’s coir .aSßejwjPlßUiHifiljL rieh: at your near! Irom the t Erich Mtiler :n rite
BY ARCH STEINEL THE shrinking violet is becoming the full-blown rose. Though the co-ed of today may be wearing the fashion of puffy sleeves, as did the co-ed of the “Sis! Boom! Bah!” period in 1890, she’s getting muscles beneath those sleeves instead of arm-fat. Her exercise no longer is confined to violet-hunting in the woods, rides on high-seated bicycles, fudge-making and the straining of vocal chords to root the varsity team to score over rivals. Instead, she’s become adept in archery, the flinging of overhand basket shots and the tossing of horseshoe ringers, besides supervised calisthenics and exercise of a corrective nature. Butler university, under leadership of Dr. Walter Scott Athearn, president, is placing itself in the sun of the nation as a university headlining intra-mural athletics and participation of its womanhood in physical exercises. u u n TNAUGURATED this fall, the A intra-mural pregram has enlisted 450 co-eds and taken them from worrying about whether their lipstick was on straight to fretting about whether the swan-dive they made in the university's swimming pool was in proper form. Daily, under direction of three instructors, the “wham” of the cageball and the "clang” of the horseshoe can be heard at the fieldhouse, as the university’s women vie for athletic prowess. Periodic physical examinations are given to determine the advisability of certain types of games and sports for students with specific defects. Posture, the backs that are humped, are being ironed out as truly as if they were sent through a laundry’s mangle. The whole program of intramural sports is based on voluntary participation in games and athletjcs.
Count the Circles, Win Tickets
-low many circles are more m AV So nu s above paragraph? i * Can you estimate or count the Address '
How many circles are there in the above paragraph? Can you estimate or count the number of circles? Try your skill and you may win guest theater ticket in The Times "Red Dust" Contest. Each day for three days The Times will publish a different photograph of Clark Gable and Jean Harlow, stars in “Red Dust," Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s new picture, which
The bloom of health has replaced rouge and muscles ripple under the puffed sleeves. That’s the new era of womanhood at Butler university. With 450 co-eds enlisted in the realm of sport, Butler has led the march to anew university achievement.
THE student who “boned” all the time over his studies and carried nothing heavier than textbooks is urged to try his hand at shot-putting, fifty-yard dashes or tennis. Fraternities and sororities, clubs of the university and classes battle for the honors of their groups with as much vim as a varsity athlete does for his “B’s.” The program is expected to produce material for football, track and baseball for the varsity by tapping the hidden resources of the school’s man power and bringing out those who might be buried by failure to know their own physical attributes or the things they can do best. Due to this program of bringing athletics and play, as well as exercise, to every one on the campus, it has been necessary to enlarge equipment of the university. The sports for co-eds are basketball, volley ball, tennis, handball, swimming, golf, shuffleboard, archery, horseshoe, medicine ball, hockey, indoor baseball, deck tennis, and ping-pong, besides calisthenics. The university's executives on listing these sports found, however, that it had no shufflleboard sticks, no horseshoes, hockey clothing, or bows and arrows for archery. n u u SO, at a small cost, the necessary equipment was purchased and the result was that the co-ed who found herself stumped at handling a cageball or swimming under water discovered in turn that she had the eye of a William Tell or Robin Hood at aiming a bow and arrow, or the right knack in piling ringers on the horseshoe “staub.” Health improvement, through the intra-mural sports, is one of the factors stressed by President Athearn.
starts Friday at Loews Palace theater. In each of these photos there will be a different number of circles and The Times will award daily prizes of ten pair of guest tickets to see •Red Dust” at Loews Palace thea-
WE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Commenting on the program, he says: “We propose to give our .students sound bodies; to teach them how to care for their bodies and give them the habits of physical recretion which will insure their best physical well-being from coming up to graduation with remedial physical defects w T hich in later years will undermine and deplete their physical vigor.” Instruction in physiology and hygiene is included in the intramural program. nun OUPLED with promotion of A class and club athletic contests in the intra-mural program
Contract Bridge
This is the thirteenth of a series of articles bv William E. McKenney explaining the one over one system of bidding in contract bridge. BY W. E. M'KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League CONTRACT BRIDGE is a partnership game, and therefore, to play it successfully, it is necessary to learn a bidding system. Naturally, the most enjoyment will be derived from a system that can be understood by the greater majority of players. This you will find true of the one over one system, as it employs only natural card inferences. A brief summary of The system and some of the finer tactics employed are given in today’s article. A player's skill at contract bidding depends upon his ability to classify correctly the various bids. Therefore, before making a bid, try to picture the message it will convey to partner and particularly whether it will force or invite him to continue the bidding. A brief summary of the one over one system is as follows:
ter, to the ten best and nearest correct answers. Also, state in not more than twenty-five words the reason you wish to see Clark Gable and Jean Harlow in "Red Dust." Send in your answers to the "Red Dust Editor of The Times.
Upper Left—Here's a "ringer” going to town in the hands of Miss Thelma Roller, Butler co-ed. Upper Right—Ready for the big push with the cageball are Misses Pauline McCarty (left) and Jeanne Helt. * Lower Left—Where roses bloom on acrobatic bas at Butler uni-_ versity. Lower Right—Duck! It's coming right at your heart from the bow of Miss Edith Miller in the intramural archery class at Butler.
is the desire of university officials to build a campus spirit that finds for its*orbit the school even after class hours. Seven instructors in charge of the health and athletic program are Paul D. Hinkle, athletic director; Frederick Mackey, football coach; Herman Phillips, track coach; Frank Heddon, freshman coach; Louise Schulemeyer, director of women’s athletics; Martha Alexander and Susie Harman. Founded in 1855, the university was one of the pioneers in the field of co-education. “And I hope.” says President Athearn, "that the time will come when Butler refuses graduation to any senior who has a remedial physical defect.”
THIRST and second hand original bids are made with strong hands and show not only strength in high cards, but also a definite re-bid. Third hand may open very light—it is the ideal position to employ a psychic bid. A fourth hand original bid is made with less strength than that required to make an original first or second hand bid. An original bid of one no trump shows at least three, and probably four, suits stopped. It further shows a hand that will probably gain an extra trick by being led up to rather than through. It does not deny a biddable fourcard suit. It is a constructive bid and invites partner to continue bidding. An original bid of one of a suit shows a hand that is willing to become the dummy if the hand is to be played at no trump, and first or second hands it is a constructive bid inviting partner to keep the bidding open with very little strength. An original bid of two no trump shows all four suits stopped and guarantees partner a five-card suit as good as the A J K with which to work. It is a forcing bid. An original bid of two of a suit shows a hand of tremendous strength and guarantees game even though partner’s hand is trickless. It further hand that can become the dummy, especially if played at a no ’trump contract. It is a forcing bid and places an obligation on both partners to continue bidding until the final declaration is a game-going contract. tt e a A N original bid of no trump shows a hand top-heavy with high card tricks. Rather than asking for information from partner, it endeavors to give partner a complete picture of the hand. However, it is not a forcing bid. An original bid bf three of a suit shows a hand of tremendous strength and guarantees game even though partner’s hand is trickless. It further shows a hand that wants to be the declarer and has no desire to play the hand at no trump. It is a forcing bid, asking partner to show an ace if he holds one, in the hope that a slam may be reached. An original bid of four or five of a suit is made with a hand containing a long trump suit and no defensive strength. It is a pre-emptive bid and is made sojely to shut out the opponents, but it must be remembered that it also shuts partner out. It is a much abused bid and care should be I taken not to make this bid too } frequently. What to do when the opponents i have opened the bidding is always a problem with the beginner at contract, and this will be explained in ; the next article. i (Copyright. 1922. NEA Service, (lac.)
‘LIFE-OR-DEATH' STRUGGLE FAILS TO SAVE BOY, 2 Last-Minute Operation Is Resorted to in Vain Battle Here. After hours of intense suffering. Charles Neff Jr., 2. died Thursday night on an operating table at city hospital, frst as surgeons completed a “life or death” operation. The child, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Neff. 211 North Richland
street, became ill at 7 Tuesday morning and in the hours that followed suffered twertty-two spasmodic attacks. Charles A- a s playing on the floor with his 5-year-old nephew, Robert Ray Fancher, when he collapsed. He was taken to the hospital at 10:40 Tuesday morning. After responding favorably to treatment for in-
s
testinal complications, the boy became worse late Thursday, and the parents were advised that death would come within fifteen minutes, but there was a chance, an operation might mean life. The dead child and Robert, the
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By Unit'd Frrn* NEW YORK. Nov. 4 A courtroom in general sessions was throw’n into confusion late today when a witness for the prosecution positively identified two different men as the actual killers of a policeman. The witness, Joseph Thomas. Negro, was describing the shooting of Patrolman James Burke last June. The prosecutor asked him to pick out the "trigger man ’ who was with three co-defendants. He walked to Alfred Celentano and placed his hand on his shoulder. Five minutes later, he was asked again to pick out the killer. This time he selected Vincent Walsh.
nephew, were pals. Robert attends kindergarten and his 2-vear-old uncle had looked forward eagerly to the time when he could attend school too. Besides the parents, the child is survived by three brothers. Clarence, 34; Clayton, 19, and William Oliver, 1 month; two sisters, Mrs. Lucy Fancher, 32, and Mrs. Virginia Love. 26, and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Parks. Zionsville, Ind., and Mrs. Jessie Neff. Plainfield. Ind. Arrangements for the funeral, which probably will be held Saturday afternoon, have not been -completed. Butler Favors Hoover Hoover won an easy victory in a presidential straw vote conducted at Butler university, it was announced today. Os a total of 762 votes cast by faculty members and students. Hoover received 480; Roosevelt, 213, and Thomas, 69.
Charles
.’NOV. 4, 1932
NEW BANKS ARE SLOW IN START ON HOME LOANS ‘Functioning’ More Than' Three Weeks, but No Money Yet at Work. By Srrippx-Howard \rtn,pnprr AUinnre WASHINGTON. Nov. 4. Although announced about three weeks ago as “organized and func-* tioning” the new federal home loan banks have made no loans as yet. And while the subscription by private interests of the minimum capital of $9,000,000 expected irom them has not oeen announced, it was said at the board's headquarters here that more than this sum has been pledged. Meantime, the home loan boaid* is deluged with more work than at any time since its organizaaon, said one official, who expects the lending of money to start within a short time. Part of this work is occasioned by the scores of applications being received from home owners for loans. The law provides that so long as the government has money in the banks direct loans may be made to individuals, if they can not get money elsewhere. The delay in lending to others than private individuals is explained at the board by the fact that much detailed information has to be had from prospective borrowers. In many cases, this information is ing gathered.
