Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 68, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1924 — Page 3
MONDAY, JULY 28, 1924
FRENCH SCIENTIST AIDES IN BATTLE - ON WHITE PLAGUE Evolves Vaccine Which May Increase Strength of Immunity. ' By MILTON BRONNER NEA Service Writer PARIS, July 28. —French medical men are hoping the name of Rr. Albert Calmette will be added to the galaxy of imrrtortal scientists, by reascfn #f a vaccine for tuberculosis with which he and his collaborators have been experimenting for some years. Following the modest doctor’s own injunctions, and not desiring to raise any false hopes among the world's suffering masses, they are all qualifying what they say and write about the Calmette vaccine with a very big "if.” Increases Immunity Briefly, Calmette has worked out a living 9ulture of tubercular bacilli, so attenuated by laboratory processes that it will not give any animal tuberculosis. On the other hand his experiments lead him to believe that if it is administered to a young anijnal, up to now immune from tuberculosis, the vaccine will confer upon it complete immunity. This wonder worker has briefly been named “B. C. G.” Calmette began his experiments with animals subject to tuberculosis. He Inoculated young calves born of tubercular cattle. Still in Good Health They were unharmed by the vaccine and were thereafter re-vacci-nated once a year. One hundred and twenty-seven underwent the treatment, thanks to the intelligent cooperation of French farmers. All these animals have remained in good health. The testas seemed to establish the vaccine was Inoffensive and efficacious. Calmette then experimented with anthropoid apes whose reactions to microbes and toxins resemble those of man. The same success attended these trials. Emboldened by this and with the consent of the parents, he then vaccinated 247 nursling children. All are in goqd health, although many of them live in localities where children are liable to tuberculosis. It is not claimed that the vaccine will care tuberculosis in adults.
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MY OWN STORY LA FOLLETTE OPENS POLITICAL CAREER BY FIGHTING A ‘BOSS’
"MY OWN STORY” is an exclusive newspaper version of one of the great autobiographies of modern times: La Follettes own story of adventures in politics as written by himself in 1912. together with an authorized narrative of his experiences in the years since then. FIEW young men who entered public life In the early eighties, had any wide outlook upon affairs, or any general political ideas. They were drawn into politics just as other men were drawn into the professions or the arts, or into business, because it suited their tastes and ambitions. My own politclal experiences began in the summer of 1860, when I determined to became a candidate for district attorney of Dane County, Wisconsin, and it- resulted almost immediately in the first of many struggles with the political boss and the political machine which then controlled, absolutely, the affairs of the State of Wisconsin. I was 26 years old that summer. A year previously I had been graduated from the University of Wisconsin, and, after five months’ study of the law, had been admitted to the bar, in February, 18S9. . No Money I had no money—but as fine an assortment of obligations and ambitions as any young man ever had. I had my mother and sister to support—and I had become engaged to be married. * The district attorneyship of Dane County, paying at that time the munificent salary of SBOO a year, with an allowance of SSO for expenses, seemed like a golden opportunity. I determined to make for it with all my strength. 1$ was harvest time and I remember how I often tied my horse, climbed the fences, and found the farmer and his men in the fields. “Ain’t you over-young?” was the objection chiefly raised. I was -small of stature and thin—at that time. I weighed only 120 pounds—and I looked even younger than I really was. Nor was I then in good health. Throughout the university course I had been compelled to do much outside work. Besides teaching school I had become proprietor of the University Press, then the only college paper, burdening myself with debt in the purchase. It was published by-monthly, and I not only did the editorial work but made up the forms ’ and hustled for advertisements and subscriptions. Under the strain of all these tasks, added to my regular college work, my health,
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By ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE"
\-jy £ / ss £. f w ••••*:• t ♦ . • , J
LA FOLLETTE’S BIRTHPLACE—LOG HOUSE AT PRIMROSE, WIS.
naturally robust, had suffered. A marked physical change came to me later and I have grown stronger and stronger with the years. Father From Indiana But there were a number of things that helped me in my canvass for the nomination. I was born in Primrose township, only twenty miles from Madison, where my father, a Kentuckian by birth, had been a pioneer settler from Indiana. I knew farm ways and farm life, and many of the people who were not acquainted with mo pensonally knew well from what family I came —and that it was an honest family. The people of the county were a mixture of New Englanders, Norwegians and Germans. I had been raised among the Norwegians and understood the language fairly well, though I could speak it onfy a little—but even that little helped me. Another thing helped me. Many of the farmers were disgruntled with the record of the district attorney's office, which had employed extra counsel in trying cases. I promised them with confidence that I would do all the work myself and that there should be no extra fees to meet. Up to this point everything had been clear sailing. I was asking the people for an office of public service whica they had the full power to give me; but I had not learned the very first principles of the political game as It was then played—indeed, as it is still played in a greater part of this country. “The Boss” The boss of Dane County was Col. E. W. Keyes, the postmaster of Madison. He was rarely spoken
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
of as the “Colonel” or “Mr. but always then and for many years afterward simply as “the Boss.” I cannot now remember just how long I had been at my canvass before the Boss called me to account. My recollection is that I went in one day to the postoffice to get my mail. I was told the postmaster wished to see me. I had known him, of course, when a student in the university; he was one of the men who had spoken at the reception when I returned from the oratorical contest. I went to him therefore with great friendliness; but I found him In quiet a different mood. “You are fooling away your time, sir!” he exclaimed roughly. He told me I was wasting my money, that I had better go to work, that I had not learned the first lesson in politics. He told me who the next district attorney of Dane County would be —and it was not La Follette! Boss Keyes did not know it, but opposition of that sort was the best service he could have rendered me. It stirred all the fight I had In me. I began to work more furiously than ever before. I kept asking myself what business Keyes or any other man had to question my rights of going out among the voters r,f Dane County, and saying what I pleased to them. And what had Keyes more than any other voter to do with the disposal of the district attorneyship? I remember having had a similar overmastering sense of anger and wrong and injustice in iny early days In the university—and it led to a rather amusing incident—my first experience as an insurgent. Speakers, I recall, were to be . chosen by the students for some public occasion. At that time college life was dominated by two secret fraternities; they controlled the student meetings, and directed ■ the elections. Most of the students, of whom I was one, were outsiders, or "scrubs.” Open Election Well, the fraternities made their slate and put It through. That night I visited every .non-fraterni-ty man in the university, and after several days’ hard work we organized a sort of anti-secret society of some 200 members. Then we called anew meeting. The whole student body was there, Including the fraternity men. We reconsidered the action of the previous meeting and had an honest and open election. The same sort of feeling which dominated me in that boyish fight now drove me Into a more vigorous struggle In Dane County. I traveled by day and by night, I stayed at farmhouses, I interviewed every voter in the county whom I could reach. The Boss was active, to<x but he was so secure in his undraputed supremacy and I was so young and inexperienced that he did not take me seriously nor realize until afterward how thoroughly my work was done. ~ There were five candidates at the convention. Quite unexpectedly, between the ballots, a Norwegian named Eli Pederson, a neighbor of ours, who called me “our boy,” made a telling speech in my behalf. I can se© him now—a big, black-headed, black-eyed man with a powerful frame, standing there in the convention. He was a natu-ral-born leader, and he spoke as one having authority. It was to him, I think, that I owed my nomination, which came on the fifth ballot. Is Elected This failure of his well-oiled machine astonished the boss beyond meastire, and the fight for the was nothing compared with the fight for election. Then, as now, the boss was quite willing to support the candidate of the opposite party rather than to have his own authority questioned. But the university boys went out and worked tooth and nail for me all over the county—without regard to politics and I was elected by the narrow majority of ninetythree votes. In January, 1881, I was sworn in as district attorney. At that time (1881) the country was in a state of political lethargy. The excitement and fervor which accompanied the war had exhausted itself, reconstruction had been completed, and the specie payment resumed. The people had turned their attention almost wholly to business affairs. The West was to be settled, railroads constructed, towns founded, manufacturing industries built up, and money accumulated. In short, it was a time of expansion, and of great material prosperity. But the war and the troubled years which followed it hqpi left at least one important political legacy —one of the most powerful and unified party organizations that ever existed, I suppose, anywhere in the world. I mean the Repulican party. I remember well the echaracter of the ordinary political speeches of those years. Even well down Into the eighties they all looked backward to fading glories, they wived the flag of freedom, they abused the South, they stirred the war memories of the old soldiers who were Ahen everywhere dominant in the North. This unreasoning loyalty to
party, which was a product of the war, drew thousands of young men like myself into its ranks with the conviction that this was the party' of patriotism. It is a notable sign of robust political health in these days that every young man must have his conclusive reasons for voting the Republican or the Democratic ticket; old party names have lost much of their persuasiveness: men must think for themselves —and in that fact liesv the great hope for the future of the nationBut if the old party and tfie thrill of the old party slogans were still dominant, the issues of the new generation were beginginning to make themselves felt. Already there had been severe local political storms. As far back as 1872 there had been a Liberal Republican party organized to ask for civil serviice reform, a?W later a Labor party was organized to agitate the problems of capital and labor, the -control of banks and railroads, and the disposal of public lands. In 1876 the Greenback party came into the field and rose to much * prominence on a radical platform. Progressive Start In the State of Wisconsin the progressive movement expressed/ itself m the rise to powefc of the Patrons of Hunbandry. The Grange movement swept four or five Middle Western'-States, expressing vigorously the first powerful revolt against the rise of monopolies, the arrogance of railroads and the waste and robbery of the public lands. Those hard-headed old pioneers from New England and from northern Europe who thought as they plowed, went far toward roughing out the doctrine in re; gard to railroad control which the country has since adopted. Asa boy on the farm in Primrose township, I heard and felt this movement of the Grangers swirling about me; and I felt the indignation which it expressed in such a way that I suppose I have never fully lost the effect of that early impression. In Wisconsin the Granger movement went so far as to cause a political revolution and the election in 1874 of a Democratic Governor. A just and comprehensive law for regulating the railroads was passed and a strong railroad commission ws instituted. It was then, Indeed, that the railroads began to dominate politics for the first time in this country. They saw that they must either accept control by the State or, control the State. They adopted , the latter course; they began right there to corrupt Wisconsin—indeed, to corrupt all the States of the Middle West. The railroads did not intend to submit to control, courts or no 'courts, and by fallacious argument, by-threats, by bribery, by political manipulation, they were able to force the legislatures to repeal the law which the Supreme Court had By that assault upork free government in Wisconsin and*' in other Middle Western States, the reasonable control of corporations was delayed in this country for many years. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, In£.) (Continued in Next Issue.)
NEW ORDER DIES TAXICAB DRIVERS ‘Cruisers' Now Barred From Fifth Avenue, By Times Special KBW YORK. July 28.—The cruising taxi has vanished from Fifth Ave., that is, from the section between Washington Square and FiftyNinth St. The ord£r issued recently by Dr. John A. Harris, deputy police commissioner, that vacant taxis must turn off the thoroughfare at the first crossing reached after their fares had left, has been strictly enforced by the traffic police. The order applies also to Broadway as far north as SeventySecond St. and to Seventh Ave. from its Intersection with Broadway to Fifty-Ninth St. Those in search of an empty car must look for It on the cross streets or on the other avenues.- , The measure has relieved; congestion to some extent on Fifth Ave. The man who is in a hurry is learning to look around the corner for a cab, .but the drivers think the ruling shows unfair discrimination. In every case they show resentment against the lumbering busses. Canadian Cattle Prospects Good CALGARY, Alberta, July 28. "Barney” Heide, general of the International Livestock Show at Chicago, a guest at the recent Calgary Exhibition and Stampede, declared tha ts the outlook for the Canadian cattle industry must be regarded as highly encouraging. “You have enough land here to feed the world,” was his comment after a tour of the prairies, in company with Thomas Acheson, agricultural agent of the Canadian P a_ cific Railway, "and in fact, Western Canada Is coming to be lpoked upon as the granary of the world.” Trees grown on the northern side of a hill make more durable timber than those grown on the south side.
I Cold Chicken in Jelly I Make a jelly of 2 ounces B gelatine in one cup cold H || water and 5 cups meat broth :i, seasoned with 1 tablespoon- I B ful of Lea & Perrins’ Sauce. B To 2 parts diced chicken I fl add 1 part finely cut celery. I I Serve with a dressing of 5 ■ parts mayonnaise and 1 part ® LEA&PERRINS I SAUCE ■ Bv THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE M
LULL IN CRIME WAVE SHOWN ON' POLICE RECORDS Alleged Filling Station Bandits Lose Nerve--* Other Petty Thefts. A lull in the, crime wave was noted on police reports >foday. Two ficld-up men evidently lost their nerve when they were about to rob Ben Logan, attendant at the Standard Oil Filling Station at Northwestern Ave. and Fall Creek, After buying a quart of oil and Asking change and asking Logan to go inside, the man with his hand to his hip pocket failed to carry through. Police say the two answer descriptions of filling* station hold-up men. *' Wanted in Dayton A man said to have broken jail 'at Dayton, Ohio, when about to be taken to the State prison, was captujed here and his auto seized. '*Sam Patterson, colored, who gave his address as Dayton, Ohio, was arrested at the Canal and Eleventh St. The Wells Detectiye Agency, 1204 N. Olney Sti, gave police information that /Patterson was wanted in Dayton. Charles C&thcart, 830 Daly St., reported to police he was held up when he passed New York and Liberty Sts., by a colored man who relieved him of $l2O. Later he explained he. was in the dry beer saloon neaf this point when he was held up. ■ John Short, 445 Minerva St„ told police while he was waiting with another man who promised to sell him a pint of “moonshine” came up and the two took five $1 bills from his pocket. , William Coatney, a merehant policeman, fifed two shots at a burglar who cut the screen and was working at the door of the Chocolate Shop, 117 N. Illinois St. Mrs. Margret Winters, 1339 Broadway, called police when she heard a growler trying doors and windows. Walter Starks, 2146 Highland PL,
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" Why Pay $5 to $6 for These ATTRACTIVE PARIS J||S\ INSPIRED HATSvJSIk \ v ~ / jpc-gI mw A ,■$ Max Distinctive pi You will find It a very' Models for eas y matter to match Sport, Street ( )B any costume, as there **■-£*£ / and il] are all the wanted V^. Dress Wear aJL summer color*. Vjjlli&ly/
states a string of pearl beads valued at $35 was stolen from his wife. Forrest A. Stamm, 310 N. Alabama St., Apartment 5, repor.ts thirty-five phonograph records, valued at $25, taken. BOSTON STORE TO RON GARAGE EOR CUSTOMERS x Free Parking Space Is New Idea of Service by Merchants, By .VBA Service BOSTON, July 28.—A department store has set out to solve the parking problem for its customers. Here in Boston, where streets are narrow and winding, traffic congestion is so great that the city has been compelled practically to eliminate all downtown packing privileges. Obviously, it has had a discouraging effect tipon shoppers. But the Jordan Marsh Company, realizing the urgent need for a solution of the problem, has announced its plan to build an eight-story garage, accommodating 600 cars, for the exclusive and free use of its customers. Plans provide tor fireproof stairways and passenger elevators as as well as double system motor ramps, from one floor to another, with separate ramps for up and down traffic. It will be just as easy to park a car on the eighth floor as on the first, the architects say. Other features of the garage are waiting rooms, filling washing stalls, supply service and a telephone and signal system connecting ■with the store so that car may be ready on request. Cars will be parked one row deep garaga will be located within three minutes of the store, on each floor and each automobile will have an individual stall. T£e New shoes rubbed with a slice of raw potato will polish as easily as old ones.
! Open Saturday Until 9 P. M.
COMBINED CLUBS TO ALFORD MORE AID MOISTS More Than 90 Per Cent of Country's Motor Bodies Included, 'By NEA Service WASHINGTON, July 28.—Final completion of consolidation between the old American Automobile Association and the rebel National Motorists' Association is expected to result in a combined effort toward greater usefulness to the American motorist. According to Thomas Henry, president of the yew A. A. A., the organization now takes in more than 90 aer cent of the country’s auto clubs whose combined influence will be yielded for the betterment of mo- -, toj-ing conditions. Among the objects sought by the new organization will be: 1. Prosecution of the fake motor organizations, of which there are said to be about twenty-five scattered about the ecountry. *■ 2. Establishment of national ;mer-l gency road service. 3. Solution to the grade crossing problem to decrease the accidents at these points. 4. Formation of, a motor truck owners’ division, anew department' in present auto clubs. Besides these, plans are on foot for anew home for the headquarters here and improvement of the little services the A. A. A. and its member clubs already give to their, members. „ New Ship Record Established By Times Special VANCOUVER, British Columbia* - July 28.—Fifty-seven deep sea ships, net tonnage 184,870 tons, entered the port of Vancouver during the first twenty days of June this year, according to a statement issued by the harbor commissioners. This does not take into consideration the heavy tonnage of coastwise vessels entering and leaving the Narrows on coast runs.
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