Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 77, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1930 — Page 7
AUG. *B, 1930
GLAND GRAFTING TO DOUBLE LIFE. SURGEON SAYS ✓ ' People In Few Years May Reach 120 to 140 Years, Dr. Voronoff Asserts* Montreal, Aug. B.—The possi*bility that grafting of monkey
glands into thz human body may double the span of human life was suggested today by Dr. Serge VoronofT, noted European surgeon. Dr. Vor o n off, famed for his gland-grafting exI perlments. preI dieted in an interview that in a few years people I might live to be 120 to 140. The process, he
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Voronoff •
said, would not restore youth or fecundity, but might forestall the approach of senility. Voronoff would use the interstitial glands of the chimpanzee, gibbon or gorilla, whose glands, he said, are the same as those of man. “The Interstitial glands,” he said, ,* control the other glands of the -body. More than that, they supply motive power to the mind as well as the body. Therefore, when they -become useless in man, their stimulating secretions cease to flow- into the arteries and old age becomes senescence. “By grafting interstitial glands we merely revive and renew the energy m the individual. “Old age and the physical impotency that accompanies it leads to death. By augmenting our vital energy when we begin to lose it, we 'increase our chances of life and acquire the possibility of living at least 'the number of years to which man has a right. “To be strong and vigorous is the secret of life. To be weak and feeble is the cause of death. The glands from healthy young monkeys can infuse, new energy Into our bodies
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Baloney’s Right By United Press WATERBURY, Conn., Aug. B.—The unorthodox but ingenious naturalist, Lester Green of Prospect, now is trying to cross-breed pigeons, owls and parrots In an effort to develop a night-seeing carrier pigeon which can deliver its message verbally, according to a dispatch to the Waterbury Republican from Prospect. Lester has succeeded in getting a bird that can carry messages and see at night, but the only speech he can get out es it is “baloney,” says the dispatch.
WIDEN SEARCH FORSLAYER Fugitive Suspects Named by Detroit Chief. Bu United Press DETROIT, Aug. B.—With the gang killers of Jerry Buckley, radio political crusader, named by Police Commissioner Thomas C. Wilcox, search for them widened today. The fugitive murder suspects, according to Wilcox, are Mike Morgany, Frank Cammarata, Thomas Licavoii and Ted Pizzino, local police characters. A fifth man. Angelo Livecchi, said to be the “finger man” in tlr slaying, has been held since a few hours after Buckley was murdered in the lobby of a hotel the morning of July 23. The sixth person implicated by Wilcox is a woman who is believed to have put the radio commentator “on the spot” with a telephone call. Rewards totaling $13,500 have been posted for the murderers and photographs and descriptions ot the men sought are to be sent to law enforcing agencies througnout the United States, Canada and Mexico. at the commencement of old age and will, in the future, enable us to extend life to the extreme limit--120 or 140 years.”
AGED RECLUSE IS FUUND SLAIN Robbery Believed Motive; Was Strangled. Bu United Press ELKHART, Ind., Aug. B.—Melvin Violet, 67-year-old bachelor recluse, was murdered at his farm home late Thursday, apparently the victim of robbers who thought that he had a considerable amount of money concealed in his house. Violet’s body was found in the yard of his home near New Paris. The body was found lying in the rear of his two-room house, the hands tied behind his back, with suspenders, and a wound on the back of his head. The house was ransacked, but it w r as not known whether anything was taken. Robbery was believed to have been the motive, but Violet was not generally believed to have had any money. He owned a twenty-nine-acre farm, and was considered a poor man. The murder was believed to have been committed Wednesday night, although the body was, not found until yesterday afternoon. Identify Amnesia Victim Bu Vtiiifd Pro* CLEVELAND, Aug. B.—A newspaper picture of a former schoolmate of his enabled R. W. Dudley to identify James W. Ryan, 28, of Haverhill, Mass., an amnesia victim who was found wandering about I this city yesterday. The two attended school in Franklin, Mass., in 1921. Capture 12-Foot Snake Bu In it rd Pr^p* CLEVELAND, Aug. B.—A twelvefoot black timber rattlesnake has been given Brooksias zoo here by the Knights Arthur, a boys’ club, which captured the reptile while on a camping trip in mountains near Sinnemahoning, Pa.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LIVE WIRE IS BANNED PoLce Order Down Hedge Guard Planned for Dogs. Dismantling of a high-voltage wire strung up on the hedge of Edward Berndt, 45, of 942 Bancroft street, an electrician, was ordered* today by police after residents protested against the hazard. Berndt rigged up the wire to kill dogs which ran through his yard, killing two fine dogs owned by neighbors, police were told. Police feared the current might result in the death of a child in the neighborhood.
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MASS REBEL TROOPS Northerners Plan Crushing Drive on Nanking. Bu United Press PEIPING, China. Aug. B.—A half million troops were massed by the northern rebel coalition today as General Feng Yu-Hsiang and General Yen Hsi-Shan prepared for a crushing offensive against the Chinese Nationalist armies in an
attempt to reach Nanking, its capital. Every soldier the two coalition generals could gather was rushed to Honan and Shantung provinces, where they claimed a "decisive” battle shortly would end the prolonged warfare between them and the recognized government. The northerners, meanwhile, hastened their plans for organizing a rival government here, which would seek foreign recognition ’in opposition to General Chiag Kai-Shek's Nanking government, and uphold the principles of Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, which the northerners claimed General Chiang had violated.
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