Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 73, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1931 — Page 2
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LAST RITES TO BE WEDNESDAY FOR JR. ROSS Medical Society to Hold Memorial for Noted Surgeon. Last rites for Dr. David Ross, 65, prominent Indianapolis surgeon, Tvho died Monday at St. Vincent’s hospital, will be held at 4 p. m. Wednesday at the First Presbyterian church with the Rev. George A. Frantz, pastor, officiating. Burial Will be in Crown Hill cemetery. A special memorial service will be held by the Indianapolis Medical Society at 8 tonight at St. Vincent's nurses’ home auditorium. Dr. Ross, one of the country’s foremost surgeons, died after two week's illness from pneumonia. He was born in this city in 1865, a descendent of Scotch parentage. He attended common school at Brazil and was graduated from Central Normal college, Danville, and the Indiana medical school. Started Here in 1906 Beginning practice of medicine in Indianapolis in 1906, he became active in Indianapolis Medical Association, serving as president in 1915. He also headed the Indiana State Medical Association in 1921, belonged to the American Medical Society, and was a fellow of the American College of Surgeons. Fpr several years he had served as an elder in the First Presbyterian church and was identified with various Masonic organizations, including the Mystic Shrine, Scottish Rite and Ancient Landmarks lodge. He was a thirty-second degree Mason. Instructor at College Besides membership in the Indianapolis Rotary Club, Athletic Club, Dr. Ross served on the board of directors of the Wheeler Rescue Mission. and was an instructor at the medical college of Indiana university. He was on the staffs of St. Vincent’s and the city hospitals. Survivors include the widow, formerly Miss Margaret G. Goodhart, whom he married in 1901; one son, Andrew F. Ross; two brothers, Harry and Hugh Ross, all of Indianapolis, and three sisters, Mrs. Verd R. Mayer, Indianapolis; Mrs. E. W. Leeds, Terre Haute, and Mrs. W. S. Morrison, Waltella, Canada. WALKER GOES ABROAD Mayor Jimmy Sails for Germany, to Take Month’s “Rest.” By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 4.—Mayor James J. Walker sailed for Europe Monday night aboard the Bremen, bound for Germany, where he will take a month’s rest cure. Several thousand persons were at the pier to cheer the mayor. Dr. Otto Kieb, German consul-general, welcomed him “to Germany.” “I accept this figurative welcome to German soil,” the mayor replied, “but I understand that it does not become real until we are twelve miles out.”
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Josephine Roche (above), of Denver, only woman coal operator Invited to the proposed Wihte House conference on stabilization of the soft coal industry, declares she welcomes an opportunity to testify to the benefit of high wage scales and union labor in mines. She controls the second largest coal producing company in Colorado, and has thrown down the gage to John D. Rockefeller Jr., owner of the largest mines in that state. SIGNS CREATE JOSS Unemployed in Campaign to Paint House Numbers. Employment for forty to fifty jobless family heads will be provided by anew campaign, started today, for painting house numbers on curbs, it was announced by J. H. Charnock. Charnock has received authority from the works poard for the campaign and nas obtained indorsement of the Chamber of Commerce for the project. Using jobless men supplied by the emergency work committee, Charnock today began a house to house solicitation for orders. The signs will be painted on both the top and side of the curb and can be seen easily at night, he said. Men employed for the campaign will be paid on commission. Charnock said he has conducted similar campaigns in approximately 300 other cities.
A Railroad Has Many Owners A Message from L A. Downs, President Illinois Central System. Railway plants don’t just grow. They are built up painstakingly out of the savings of thousands of Industrious citizens, to whom interest and dividends often mean their own or their dependents’ subsequent support. Title to the Illinois Central System is vested in approximately 20,000 stockholders. Five out of every six of them own fewer than 100 shares. Two out of every five reside in states in which the Illinois Central System operates. One out of every twenty is an employe of the railroad. More than half the railway investment is represented by bonds, many of which are held by insurance companies, savings banks and endowed .institutions of learning. Through these bondholders thousands of other individuals become indirectly, but none the less really, dependent upon railway earnings. Constructive criticism and suggestions are invited. Chicago, August 1, 1931. • This la Hit third of a series of sketches descriptive of this railroad. Its territory and its plant have been covered; other sketches will cover personnel end patrons. • ILLINOIS CENTRAL SYSTEM DEPENDABLE FOR 10 YEARS t
GERMAN BANKS ARE REOPENED FOR BUSINESS Depositors Shift Funds to Safer Institutions -as Holiday Is Lifted. BY FREDERICK KUH Unit'd Frets Staff Correspondent BERLIN, Aug. 4.—A1l private banks at 9 a. m. today resumed transfers on a normal b’isiness basis after a three weeks’ enforced bank holiday. The various emergency moratorium measures adopted by President Paul von Hindenburg gradually
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
have been relaxed and the reopening of the banks was regarded as a long step toward resumption of a normal economic life in Germany, torn by financial uncertainty. Private depositors and corporations began withdrawing from certain banks and transferring deposits to others in which they had more confidence. Unlimited public drawing from bank balances will be recommenced Wednesday, the government indicated, when the paying counters reopen. Interest today, however, centered in observing from which banks funds were being taken and to which they were transferred, as well as the extent of these transfers. The outcome of today’s transfers, it was emphasized, will be a barometer of the financial nervousness or confidents of the general public after three weeks of intense strain. Earl advices indicated no unexpected heavy runs on any banks. The heaviest withdrawals were reported on the Danat and the
Dresdner banks, both affected by the recent crisis. The bank holiday was decreed by the government three weeks ago in order to give the country a “breathing spell” and permit the people to regain waning confidence in the country's national and private banking houses. International co-operation in the extension of large comparatively longer-term credits to Germany in the meantime has tended to stabilize the situation and the government has relaxed Its grip on the banks. Cloud writing with a huge searchlight of 1,500,000 candlepower is the latest form of advertising in Berlin.
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health is blamed for the suicide by poisoning of Mrs. Alice Baldwin.
-AUG. 4, 1931
29. She leaves her husband Georg* and a daughter, Georgia, 4.
