Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 77, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1930 — Page 18
PAGE 18
STATE ADDS 32 MILES OF NEW ROADJURFACE Several Detours Dropped in Week by Opening of Pavement. Thirty-two miles of new pavement and eight miles of retread were opened to the traveling public on state roads this week, the weekly bulletin of the state highway department announced today. These projects have resulted in the elimination of appproxlmately sixty miles of detour. New work, getting under way, added about eighteen miles, however, the bulletin states. General read conditions are listed as follows: Road 7—doled between Wirt and North Vernon. Throueh traffic detour over state roads. Indlanaoolis-Madison traffic go via Road 39. Road 9—Detour from Greenfl'id to Junction with Road 67 la fifteen miles. Bridge run-arounds at two and one-half and three and one-balf miles south of Columbia CUT. Detour between Columbia City and Merrlam Is ten miles. Detour from one mile north of Howe to Sturgis (Mlch.l is five miles. Road 39—Drive carefully cast grading ■rants between Burlington and Mlddlefork. Detour lust north of Michigan town Is four miles. Bridge run-arounds at three and one-half, nine and eleventh miles south of Logansport. U. 6. Road 31—Bridge run-around at two miles north of Carmel. Road 36—Detour from Dana to Rockville is thirteen miles. Road 37—Unfinished shoulders between
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Ripping Idea By United Prrtt WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Aug. B.—When engineers of the Westchester county park commission appeared on the Job dressed in shorts, laborers drew thetr pocket knives and ripped their own trousers to the game length to make themselves comfortable.
MRS. ALICE W. PEIRCE IS DEAD IN LONDON Former Resident of City, Widely Known, Panes at Age of 80. Death of Mrs. Alice Wheeler Peirce, widow of the late Congressman Robert B. P. Peirce, in London, was reported today ta friends in this city. Mrs Peirce was widely known in Indianapolis social and club life. She gave up her residence here six years ago to travel in Europe. Mr. Peirce was an .attorney and acted as receiver of the old Indianapolis, Decatur & Springfield railway. He died in 1891. He and Mrs. Peirce made their home at 1150 North Meridian street for many years. The house now is the Children’s Museum. Mrs. Peirce was about 80 years old. A daughter and a grandson survive her. Needmore and Bloomington and between Sulnhur and Paoli. V- 8. Road 40—One-wav traffic In places between Greenfield and Cumberland. Road 67—Detour through Switz City Is three-fourths mile. Detour at three miles north of Switz City is one-half mile. Bridge run-around at two miles northeast of Sandborn. Short detour In Redkev.
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EXPLODE MYTH OF 'DOG DAYS' DURINGAUGUST State Figures Show Cases of Rabies Are Divided Throughout Year. BY ARCH STEINEIi Dor days are here again The dogs are getting muzzled again So sing a song of “Bow-Wow” again For dog-days are here again If that> the tenor of your conversation and the august adverbs you er iloy for the month of August, t. n get a rain-maker to tell you you're all wet for as far as “dog days’’ are concerned—“ There ain’t no sech animal.” August may be blamed for birthdays, bad booze and overrun bathtubs, but it ducks being called the specific month when canines go berserk. And it is to Dr. C. F. Adams, director of bacteriology and pathology of the Indiana state board of health, that August can thank for exploding jhe myth*that it’s the dangerous age for “purps.” “It’s just a fairy tale. It was thought by the ancients that the dog star, Sirius, was responsible for canines going mad. The legend was handed down so that regardless of when Sirius was brightest it was thought to be in August that dogs were susceptible to rabies,” explained Dr. Adams. “But,” he continued, “that isn’t
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
true, for we have as many mad dogs in January as in August.” Dr. Adams cited records of his office showing that in January, 1930, thirty-five positive cases of dogs with rabies were reported against thirty-four positive cases in August, 1929. “In both instances the cases were heads examined by our laboratory during the two months,” he said. Daily Dr Adams’ department averages between four and five pathological examinations of heads of dogs thought to be mad. “We have as many in winter as in summer over a ten-year period,” the doctor said.. His answer to the reason for more reports on mad dogs in the summer
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season is that superstition and belief in “dog days” causes persons to report sick dogs as mad when in the winter months they would not fear for rabies. City astronomers laugh off the “dog days” myth with the assertion that dog star, Sirius, is brightest from November to February, and not in August, and therefore has absolutely nothing to do with Fido getting the ‘heebie-jeebies.” SUES ‘LEGGER AS CHEAT lodine and Water “Scotch* Brings Misrepresentation Charge. SAN JUAN. Porto Rico, Aug. 7. —The bootlegger who sold Ramon
Torres what he alleged was pure Scotch whisky found himself confronted with % charge of misrepresenting goods. The “Scotch” was nothing but iodine and water, Torres found, and he had the bootlegger arrested. Instead of charging him with violating the Volstead law, however,
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Poor Teeth—Poor Health Can You Afford to *!** Tour*? Good Work —Moderate Price* The People’s Dentists 36 West Washington Street HOURS—B a. m. to 6 p. m. Sundays—9 a. m. to 13 m.
;AUG. 8, 1930
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