Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1927 — Page 14
PAGE 14
STATE DOCTORS HOLD CLINICS r Boston and Chicago Men on I Speaking Program, ,t Dr. Henry A. Christian of Boston and Dr. Edwin W. Ryerson of ‘Chicago, cm 'ms morning’s program, Vere the first speakers on professional topics at the annual meeting of the Indiana State Medical Association at city hospital. Eight special clinics were on the laftemoon schedule, conducted by Drs. L. G. Zerfas and Thurman Rice of Indianapolis; C. E. Barnett, C. G. Beall and A. E. Bulson Jr., of Ft. Wayne; Gordon Underwood of Evansville, E. M. Shanklin of Hammond, and Dr. Christian. , General clinics this afternoon were conducted by Dra. William Mithoefer, Cincinnati; W. C. Moore, Muncie; J. Y. Welborn, Evansville, and Julius Hess and Robert Von Der Heydt, Chicago. Various sections of the association were to elect officers at late afternoon meetings today. * Physicians and their families will attend the annual banquet and dance tonight at 7 o’clock in the Riley room of the Claypool. Dr. Morris Fishbein of Chicago, professor of physio-therapy at Northwestern University, is to make the principal address at the banquet. Visiting women attended a musicale at the Department Club Wednesday night and today were taken on a tour of the city and Riley hospitals, through the north part of the city and about the motor speedway. The session comes to a close Friday noon. CHARGES MALPRACTICE Linton Man Sues Dentist for $5,000 Alleges Jawbone Impaired Bu Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 29 In a suit brought, here from Linton on a change of venue, James W. Page asks $5,000 damages from Dr. William Welch, dentist, alleging malpractice. Page charges that after teeth had been extracted he suffered an infection .that caused loss of part of his jawbone, permanently disfiguring him and impairing his health . Dr. Welch in defense of the suit declares Page would not allow him to extract the teeth in a proper manner and he warned the patient the work was at his risk.
FILM ACTRESS TO WED Norma Shearer Will Be Married to Irving 'Thalberg Today. Bu United Press HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Sept. 29 Norma Shearer, moving picture actress, and Irving Thalberg, prominent young executive of the film colony, will be married late today in the gardens of the Thalberg residence in Beverly Hills. Only relatives and intimate friends of the couple have been invited to the wedding. The bridal party will include Douglas Shearer, brother of Norma; Louis B. Mayer, Sylvia Thalberg, sister of the groom; Edith and Irene Mayer, Marion Davies and Bernice Ferns. Fifty Injured in Wreck Bu United Press BRUSSELS, Sept. 29.—Fifty persons were injured today in a collision between a Brussels-Antwerp express train and a freight train. The accident occurred hear Mechlin, in Belgium. ’ The help-yourself plan of a cafeteria enables the finest of foods at “odd penny prices” to be served at White*s Cafeteria “On the Circle”
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The SNOB
Nancy was pretty, a CAGE, and a blue-blood even though she did live on tlw other side of the railroad trliks. &“•* Nancy Just comldn’t help falKag in lote and becoming engaged to handsome Eric Nolson, whom she had met at Edith Harcourt’s. a rich school chum. Nancy's pride causes her to break the engagement when she finds that Eric’s mother Is a laundress at the Harcourt’s. Nancy Is extremely jealons when Eric starts going with Clarice Jones, her next door neighbor. CHAPTER XVm Nancy crept from her bed to stand, shivering, behind the fluttering window curtain. She could not distinguish either of the figures on the shadowy porch opposite. Only an occasional word floated through the darkness. But there was the sound Eric’s voice, low and controlled, accompanied by soft, little exclamations from Clarice. Then silence A silence weighted with meaning! "He’s doing it deliberately,” Nancy sobbed. “He wants to hurt me.” ' Her teeth chattered-so much that she was compelled to crawl beneath the covers again. But not to sleep. She lay, rigid, tom with conflicting emotions, until long after Eric had gone. Days passed. Nancy no longer attempted to practice. She drooped about the house; went for an occasional walk, or for tea with Edith. In some ways che association with Edith comforted her. Edith had loved Eric, too. And both had lost him. Silas Gage, who appeared not to notice, was secretly alarmed at Nancy’s sharpened face. "What’s the matter with her?” he asked one night as he and Amanda were retiring!! His wife’s voice was reproachful. “As if you didn’t know.” “It’s not my fault she didn’t get married.” “It’s your fault she can’t go away,” Amanda accused. “She’s eating her heart out and nothing’s going to help her but getting out of town.” He pulled off his heavy shoes and snorted, “Why don’t she marry him, if she’s so crazy about him” Amanda faced him like a virago. Her gray-streaked hair fell In wisps about her flannel-clad shoulders. "I s’pose you’d be willing to seo her marry a man whose mother washes for her fine friends?” “Why not?” snapped Silas, "so long as the fellow Is decent!” Amanda turned off the light and got into bed. Her thin voice whined on until he bellowed, “Shut up, will you? I’m tired hearing about it.” But after she was asleep he stole through the kitchen to Nancy's door. As he stumbled back he was inwardly condemning Eric to the everlasting fires of his mother’s religion. For he had heard his daughter crying. And he knew now that something “would have to be done.” In the meantime Hilda Nelson came and went, meekly. Nancy went around the block to avoid meeting her, but one raw day in April she was forced to see her scrubbing the Hollandsbee steps, with her wide skirts flapping In the wind. Two days later Mary Donnelly relayed the news that Hilda was ill. Eric hai called Doctor Waugh. At noon Nancy saw Clarice carrying a market basket covered with a napkin in the direction off Hilda’s cottage. Something flamed in Nancy. At three o’clock, goaded by restlessness, she telephoned Dr. Waugh. “How Is Mrs. Nelson?” “Pretty sick, Nancy. She has pneumonia.” “Is there anything I can do?” she faltered. “Well, I don’t know as there Is. Clarice Jones Is going to stay until tonight. We have a nurse coming In on the train.” Nancy made an electric pad her excuse, smuggling It past her mother, .who had been forced to try it for rheumatism. Nancy’s heart pounded as she knocked for the second time at Hilda’s door. It was opened by Clarice. “Oh, hello, Nancy!” Nancy pushed past into the prim little room. “I came to see If I couldn’t do something. Clarice was sweet about it. “I really don’t know. You might
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ask Mrs. Nelson.” she added, in an undertone, “She thinks she’s going to die.” Like the remainder of the house, the bedroom was spotless. The window, with white curtains pinned back, was open to the tiny expanse of bare front yard. Hilda lay straigljj; in her shining brass bed, as If already in her shroud. Her eyes were terrified. “How do you feel, Mrs. Nelson?” Nancy’s voice was full of pity. “I thought perhaps you could use my mother’s electric pad.”' “I don’t want no pad, no.” ‘Tt would be fine for your feet, Mrs. Nelson,” Clarice urged, gently. “They’re so cold.” But the sick woman shobk her head. Nancy shrank from the animosity of ner tortured eyes. “If there is anything I can do, you’ll let me know, won’t you?” “Thank you very much,” Hilda replied. Nancy sighed, envying Clarice. Clarice looked unusually pretty. Her pert face was softened with sympathy. She wore a fresh, blue glng-
RENEW PEACE MOVES IN COAL MINE STRIKE Conference Tomorrow; Indiana Product 60 Per Cent Normal. Renewed peace negotiations between Illinois Operators’ Association officials and United Mine Workers of America representatives will begin Friday morning in Chicago, according to announcement here by John L. Lewis, miners’ president. The conference broke off in a deadlock two weeks ago. An agreement in any of the four States of the central bituminous field, Indiana, Illinois, Oii.j and western Pennsylvania, probably would end the bituminous mine suspension which enters its seventh month Saturday. Some union mines are operating on temporary agreements, pending permanent treaty. In Indiana 69 per of normal production is being mined," union officials say. TWIN CHICKENS IN EGG Kansu Poultryman Reports Pair Normal and Lively PARSONS, Kan., Sept. 29.—Twin chicks, hatched from one Rhode Island egg, are reported from the Mathis Hatchery here. The twins are normal and as lively as the ret of the brood. They came from an unusually large egg.
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h;>m dress. Nancy could Imagine her fluttering about the sick room “making a hit” with Eric by her ministrations to his mother. His mother, whom she, Nancy Gage, had scorned. As she passed through the front yard she met Eric. His far 3 was set and stern. He would have passed with the briefest of gveetings. But Nancy stopped him. "I came to see if I could help.” “No, thank you.” The curtness of his reply brought tears to her eyes. “I’m awfully sorry, Eric.” , He said nothing. ’Eric,” she begged, putting her hand over his, as It gripped the gate. His voice was like ice frozen over the seething current of his emotion. "If she dies,” he said, clearly, “I never want to see you again.” ' Nancy did not recognize a person she passed. Head, high, she walked proudly, but blinded by tears. An automobile might have struck her and she would not have cared. At the moment death would have seemed desirable—lnfinitely to be
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Sixty-Year-Old Fine Recalls Fistic Battle at Bluffton.
Ru T\mrs Special -I .UFFTON, Ind., Sept. 29 D A fine of (2 with $1.25 interest was paid here this week on the anniversary of a fistic encounter sixty years ago. Ben Bays, now 81, had an argument with Mike Lynch, which ended in blows. During the battle, George W. Davis, now 83, approached as did Dave Woodruff and Davis took sides with Bays and Woodruff with Lynch. Soon the fight Involved all four. Mild Davis, a brother of George, wp constable and he arrested the combpants. They were brought Into court and George was fined $2. After the trial Bays said: “George, I am going to pay the fine. It was my fault that you were drawif into the fight” BOft the years went on and Bays overlooked the debt, which he has now paid with Interest.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
By VIDA HURST
preferred to this wild, unceasing anguish. He ha'i repudiated her in froD s os “the cheapest girl in town.” Hor humiliation was incomparable. She stumbled into the living room of her own home, throwing the pad on a chair as sLe ran into her room. Amanda called, “What’s the matter, Nancy?” < There was no answer. She left the cabbage she was chopping for “cole slaw” and opened the door Nancy had just slammed. Dressers were open. A suitcase was on the bed. “For land’s sake, what are you doing?” “I’m going to San Francisco,” Nancy said. "Grandmother has sent me $50." “But Nancy,” wailed Amanda, “you can’t live on that.” “I know it. But I’ll get a position.” When Silas Gage came home he found an empty kitchen. Amanda was face down on the living-room couch. And Nancy had gone. ' To Be Continued. TIRED OF WANDERING, GIVES UP TO POLICE Wanted for Taking S2OO Cleveland City Funds; Denies Charge. * Bu United Press CHICAGO, Sept. 29.—A youth walked Into the Chicago detective bureau and asked whether "a friend of mine,” Joseph L. McCarthy, was wanted In Cleveland. The sergeant looked through the flies and then turned to the tiredeyed boy in front of him. "Yes, Joe, you’re wanted for taking S2OO of the city funds,” he said. “Do you want to give up?" The youth hesitated and then said. “I didn’t take the money. I worked in the office at the correction farm in Cleveland. There was some money stolen. They said they were going to hang It on me, I ran away like a fool. I’m tired of wandering, I want to go back.”
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PRESS BATTLE ON CORN BORER Hoosier Farmers Continue War on Field Pest. “Indiana farmers are about to begin their greatest fight in history with the most deadly of all pests—the European corn borer,” according to Frank N. Wallace, State entomologist. “The fight against the ’comborer is nation-wide and in order to hold the enemy down, every farmer or other person connected with com fields must co-operate in methods for keeping it under control,” Wallace said. The corn borer, he pointed out, has been ravaging almost beyond control in Canada for seven years. Many people unfamiliar with the borer are Inclined to believe it can be wiped out without a great loss to Indiana. But let them see devastated Canada, talk to fanners who are so discouraged they are reedy to quit the game and travel for miles and miles where they never see a com field and they will realize that fighting the borer is the nation’s biggest problem at present, Wallace said. “Indiana to date,” Wallace said, "has sustained slight loss from the borer, but unless every farmer cleans up his com field by shredding,' or cutting the com close to the ground, in order to leave no stubble, discouraging results in the fight against the borer are going to be obtained.”
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HORSE ESCAPES FIRE, WALKS INTO HOTEL - - 0 Flames Sweep Stable But Animal Jumps Out CHICAGO, Sept. 29.—When fire broke out in Gamer Bros. Teaming Co.’s stable here, it caught Oscar, a horse, on the second floor. Oscar didn’t lose his head, but stepped out an open window to a shed roof and clambered through a large French window in a 'hotel adjoining the shed. Fred Vlcker, startled from his slumbers in the hotel room, leaped through another window and sprained his ankle. The horse was removed with a block And tackle. Speaks at bible club Dr. Harold L. Froppe Takes Place of Dr. H. L. Foreman. Dr. Harold L. Proppe, D. D., pastor of the College Avenue Baptist Church, substituted for Dr. Harry L. Foreman, former superintendent of the city hospital, on the program of the Bible Investigation Club at the Y. M. C. A. Wednesday at 6:20 p. m. Dr. Foreman will speak next Wednesday on “Is Whisky Desirable as a Medicine?” Dr. Proppe spoke on “What Is the Source of a Christian Man’s Reserve Power?” METHODISTS MEET Bu Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 29 Methodist ministers and laymen of the Muncie district held a meeting here today with the Rev. Will' M. Hill, evangelist, of Atlanta, Ga., as principal speaker.
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GIRL SCOUTS MEET Annual Convention Draws 1,800 Relegates. NEW YORK, Sept. 29—More than 1,800 Girl Scout leaders from all parts of the United States assemble *t the Waldorf-Astoria hotel today for their thirteenth annual’convention. Training of the American Girl and her development with relation to her character, social and athletic sides will be discussed by persons of prominence in many fields and the program will reach a climax on next Saturday afternoon when 4,500 Girl Scouts of Manhattan will hold a review at the seventh Regiment Armory. The official opening of the convention on Wednesday morning was preceded on Tuesday afternoon by a tea and reception at the Girl Scout wing of the Heckscher Foundation Bldg., the occasion being provided for “making and renewing firendships.” ' The United States has 22,000,000 of the 27,000,000 automobiles in the world.
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