Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 307, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 April 1928 — Page 4
PAGE 4
SURVEYS NEGRO HOSPITAL NEEDS IN INDIANAPOLIS Study by Dr. W. H. Walsh is Ordered by Council of Social Agencies. Survey of the hospitalization heeds of the Negro population of Indianapolis with the view of recommending a separate Negro unit and nurses training school at city hospital is being made under auspices of the Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies. No steps to persuade the city health board to establish the separate training school and ward at the city hospital will be taken until Dr. William H. Walsh, former American Hospital Association secretary, completes his study of the general hospital needs of the city. Dr. Walsh begun his study of the Negro population needs here last November and was later employed by the Indianapolis Foundation to prepare a general report on hospitalization. Indianapolis is about up to the standard requirements for hospital capacity for a city of its size, Eugene C. Foster, Indianapolis Foundation director, believes. “Our facilities are somewhat taxed by the fact that the State is underhospitalized and many out-State patients are brought here for treatment,’’ Foster declared. The additional unit contemplated at city hospital in the. $1,750,000 building program before the new’ city council, is expected partially to relieve the congestion. The council is understood to be friendly to the program. Council President Edw'ard B. Raub Sr. said a joint meeting of the health and finance committees probably will be held before the next meeting in May. Request of the Keys sanatorium, Negro hospital, for funds to continue the private sanatorium, led the Council of Social Agencies to order the survey. The committee headed by Foster felt that there should be additional hospital facilities for Negroes, in proportion to population, and asked JDr. Walsh to make the study. Either private funds or city appropriation would be necessary before tire project could be undertaken. The committee: Rev. H. L. Herrod. of Flanner House; Dr. Ernest N. Evans, Indianapolis Church Federation secretary; Miss Mary A. Meyers, Marion County Tuberculosis Association secretary; Miss Edna Hamilton, Public Health Nursing Association director; Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city health board secretary; | Dr. William A. Doeppers, city hos-1 pital superintendent; Dr. E. E. Padgett, health board president; Dr. William F. King, State health board secretary, and F. B. Ransom, Negro of the Madame Walker Company.
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Nomination of Hoover Is Predicted by Will Irwin
Candidacy of Secretary •Going Extremely Well,’ Says Writer. Will Irwin, journalist and author, biographer and personal friena of Herbert C. Hoover, secretary of commerce, in Indianapolis today, said he looks “for Hoover’s nomination lor President on a very early ballot” at the national Republican convention at Kansas City. Irwin said he would be in Indiana for a few days “sizing up the political situation.” “I feel,” he said, “that Hoover’s candidacy is going extremely well. It seems the peonle, from one end of the country to the other, sense that Hoover is the proper and logical choice for President. “Hoover ig without talent to adSEEK VITAL FIGURES Birth, Death Registrations Are Urged. i: y Science Service WASHINGTON. April 20.—The United States bureau of the census is waging a campaign to bring every State in the Union into the birth and death registration area before 1930. The resignation area is slowly growing, with some expansion in 1927, but Federal health officials feel that it is extremely important for the country’s warfare against disease that accurate information concerning the birth and death records of the entire nation be available to epidemiologists and health W’orkers. I The birth registration area at present covers forty States and the District of Columbia, which takes in 87.3 per cent of the total population of the country. In the death registration area are forty States, the District of Columbia and twen-ty-one cities in non-registration States of the death registration area. This gives information on the cause of 91.3 per cent of the population of the United States. Students to Present Play Py Timex Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind.. April 20.—“ Tommy” has been selected by Scarlet Masque, Wabash College dramatic society, as its presentation this year. The (May will be given May 11. Try-outs for places in the cast were held Thursday. Telephone Head Dies Py Timex Special KNIGHTSTOWN. Ind., April 20. —Funeral services w'ere held today for Jacob Todd, 74, president of the Ripley Farmers Cooperative Telephone Company, who died Thursday of paralysis.
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vertise himself, but his work for the last fifteen years has spoken for itself and constitutes a lecord that even the politicians can’t ignore. “As the campaign goes on, I am sure he w'ill rise head and shoulders above *the others proposed for the nomination, and I look lor his nomination on a very early ballot.” That Hoover's candidacy is a genuine threat to Senator James E. Watson’s effort to captuie the Indiana delegation to the national convention was borne out in Irwin’s opinion of the Indiana situation. “The attempt to show that Hoover ever did anything to injure the farmer is rather lunny, in view of the fact that in 1919 he fought the European governments blind to prevent a farm panic in the United States and got away with it.' Irwin has been prominent in journalism and as an author for thirty years. n 1914 and 1915 hfe was war correspondent for various publications with the German, Belgian and British armies and member of the executive committee of the commission for Belgian relief. From 1916 to 1918 he was war correspondent for the Saturday Evening Post with the American. French, Italian and British armies. He was decorated Chevalier of Legion of Honor (French), and the King Albert Medal, first class 'Belgian).
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
GUIDE BOOK ON CLIMATEJJRGED Educator Urges Weather Data for Tourists. Py Science Service PHILADELPHIA, April 20.—A guidebook to the world’s weather and climate, that would be as valuable to the tourist as the present guides to art treasures, scenery and famous buildings, was urged today by Dr. Robert De C. Ward, professor of climatology at Harvard University, speaking before the meeting of the American Philosophical Society here. “So far,” said Ward, “no serious attempt has been made to furnish the ordinary tourist,with any accurate information, beyond general directions as to the kind of clothing to be worn, concerning the weather and climate of the regions visited. It would seem scientifically as well as educationally desirable to provide this information by means of a guidebook to the world's weather and climates. “Would not a round-the-world traveler find more enjoyment on his trip if he knew something about the causes of the stormy westerly winds of the temperate zone, and of the famous trade winds of the tropics? Woqld he not find it worth while to be on the look-out for a norther in the West Indies and the Caribbean Sea, or the monsoon of India, or a typhoon in the China Sea? Why not a guidebook to note worthy weather phenomena and varying types of climate?”
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.APRIL 20, 1028
