Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 132, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1932 — Page 5
OCT. 12, 1032.
HOSPITAL BAN TO BE CHARGED BY OSTEOPATHS 1 __ Doors Closed to Patients on Pressure of M. D. Group, Parley Told. Hospitals of Indiana\ will be charged with a “sub-rosa” boycott against, doctors of osteopathy in a resolution being considered today by the Indiana Osteopathic Associat.on at its annual ijieeting in the Lincoln. Dr. Samuel Burroughs of South Lend was named chairman of the resolutions committee at a business meeting today to phrase the resolution. It is expected that the resolution ■ will be adopted by thp unanimous consent of the association's members. • The protest, according to Dr. Ray G. Hulburt, publicity director, is, agaiast public hospitals, church and lodge institutions closing their t oors to patients of osteopaths. No Choice in Matter The osteopath with a patient ran not treat that patient in public hospitals. He is compelled to l rn the patient over to a medical p. actitioner, and remain outside the hospital,” Dr. Hulburt said. "If the patient refuses to permit the change in doctors then he must remain outside a hospital bed.” Hospitals are so closely controlled by the American Collrge of Surgeons and the American Medical Association that they can not permit an osteopath to practice and keep their institution on a standard rating. “One instance in St. Louis can be cited where a football player suffered a broken neck,” declared Hulbert. "Doctors treated him at a hospital but were unable to benefit him. Doctors Enforce Ban “His parents requested an osteopath be called in, but this was refused. It was the boy's last chance for life he died. “He might, have died anyway, but anything that, coul*l have been done for him was denied to him because ,of the hospital's fear of the ire of attending medical doctors.” Dr. Hulburt related how one public hospital in Decatur, Til., lifted the unofficial ban against osteopaths, with the result that the hospital found itself with no patients from doctors of medicine. Election to Be Thursday Dr. Anna Mary Mills, Chicago, addressed the association at the morning's session on “The Value of Analytical Psychology” in practicing osteopathy. “If the patient has had a psychological problem, which has run so long that, it has developed some physiological pathology very naturally, the condition must be taken care of even though psychological aid if required to do it." she said. Officers of the association will be elected at the closing meeting Thursday. BOARD CONSIDERS SITE FOR HOME LOAN BANK Directors Confer Here on Plans to Open Federal Institution. Directors of the board of the home loan hank scheduled to open here Saturday conferred today on a site for the Indianapolis bank and discussed methods of operating the .institution. The bank will open with a capitalization of $8,000,000. A majority of this amount is to be subscribed by the federal government. Total subscriptions by eligible members has not been divulged. Stock has been on sate at par since Sept. 15. Arthur F. Hall of Ft. Wayne, chairman of the Indianapolis bank, is presiding at the session. Besides selecting a bank site the board will have to name an executive vice-president to direct activities of the institution. Indications are that the board will be in session two or three days. ONE-WAY TRAFFIC TO BE EAST SIDE ORDER Step Will Be Taken to Eliminate New York Street “Bottleneck.” Effective with the opening of the widened section of New York street between State and Arsenal avenues, one-way traffic will be established between Dorman street and Arsenal avenue to eliminate ''bottleneck” conditions. East bound traffic will use Marlowe avenue from Randolph to Dorman streets, and the west bound route will be over New York street from Arsenal to Dorman. Approval also was given a recommendation to make East Tenth strict preferential from Ft. Wayne avenue to the limits. * HOW TO GET R. F. C. FUNDS TO BE TOLD Parley on Self-Liquidating Public Works Called for Thursday. How cities and towns can get Reconstruction Finance Corporation fuYids for self-liquidating public ■works will be explained at the conference of mayors, engineers and civic leaders at the stateliouse on Thursday, The meeting was arranged by Governor Harry G. Leslie in cooperation with Dr. John H. HfwUt, state unemployment relief director. Senator C. Oliver Holmes ißep.. Gary> will preside.
Unredeemed FUR COATS Sacks Bros. LOAN C O. 308 Indiana Ave. RI. 5994 I
Tariff Called Hoovers Doom; Watson Held Failure as -Seer
B* J Imrn Special Oct. 12. “Just as William Howard Taft signed his political death warrant with his indorsement of the Aldrich tariff bill in the face of nation-wide criticism, so. thirty years later, does history repeat itself with signing of the Smoot-Hawley tariff by President Herbert Hoover. - This was the message carried to Indiana by Josephus Daniels, secretary of navy in the Wilson admlnis-
tration, who made an appeal to the pro gr e ssiVes to support the Democratic ticket this year at a large rally here Tuesday night. “Like Taft. Hoover was urged not to sign the tariff bill, in a petition from 1.028 economists and experts, who declared it W’ould increase the cost of living and injure the majority of our citi-
Daniels
zens. Darnels said. “These economists, representing forty-six states and 179 colleges, were joined in their fight against the Smoot-Hawley bill by Progres- 1 sive Republicans ami the nation's press. But Hoover listened to the siren voice of Jim Watson, who predicted that business would turn upward in thirty days if the bill was passed. “Hoover, like Taft, hung a mill- ! stone about his neck and started out as a peddler of damaged goods by signing the high tariff bill of abominations,” Daniels charged. a u tt Ridicules Watson as ‘Seer’ Slashing attack was made on the record of Senator James E. Wat-1 | son as a prognosticator" by ClarI ence E. Manion, dean of Notre ; Dame law school and convention keynoter, at a Tenth ward DemoJ cratic rally Tuesday night. "Senator Watson is conducting a | campaign for re-election on the apparent assumption that his predictions and promises with refer- ; ence to effectiveness of the s>o-called i Hoover-Watson program for relief i are to be taken at thdir face value.” he charged. “It must vex the senator to reI member that his previous predici lions are a matter of record,” j Manion said. “He forgets, or he | would like to forget, that in June 1 of 1980 he told the United States j senate that the passage of the ; Smoot-Hawley tariff bill would put us ‘on the upgrade within thirty | days* and bring us to the ‘peaks of : prosperity within a year from that j time.’ j '‘lf present conditions are the | peaks to which the senator referred, | then we sincerely hope he does not show us any valleys or depression.” Manion also criticised Watson for | delay of seven months in acknowl- ! edging his parentage of the home j loan bank law. * V* * Thomas Hits Dole Talk By I nited Press SALT LAKE CITY. Oct. 12. With the cry, “We raised billions to fight a war, why not raise billions to fight unemployment,” Norman Thomas, Socialist candidate 1 for President, presented Tuesday night a program to combat the de- | pression. “There should be a federal main- | tenance wage." Thomas declared, j before an audience that frequently i interrupted him with cheers. "Every worker and his family is ! entitled to maintenance. Some may protest that is a dole. Be | honest with yourselves. This tariff | which you prize so highly—isn't i that dole? Isn't the Reconstruction Finance Corporation a dole for | railroads and banks? Wasn't the $80,000,000 Charles Dawes got for his bank a dole?” Other points in Thomas' program included a five-day week and sixhour day; controlled inflation; abolition of child labor; old age pensions, beginning at 60; and a huge building program, which would include highways and bridges. a an Springer at Rallies Members of the public service i commission during his administration. if elected, would have to be j “fair-minded” and not “utility-mind - ed," declared Raymond S. Springer, Republican Governor nominee, in a series of Marion county speeches Tuesday night. Springer visited several rallies, accompanied by Edgar D. Hart, county chairman, and Harry E. Yockey, head of the speakers’ bureau. He also reiterated his previous stands for governmental economy. o tt tt Harrison Hits High Taxes Fighting all “excessive taxation’’ and outlining plans for relief. William Henry Harrison. Republican nominee to congress from the Twelfth Indiana district, Tuesday night addressed a meeting of Eleventh. Twelfth and Thirteenth ward citizens at the South Side Republican Club. 1320 South Meridian street. Appearing with Harrison as speakers were Judge Harry O. Chamberlin, circuit judge nominee: Judson L. Stark, nominee for prosecutor, and Frank Cones, treasurer nom- , ir.ee. I Harrison directed most of his fire toward "the failuro of the last Democratic controlled house to provide relief about which the party speakj ers now are making so many promises for later on." a a it National Party to Meet Nationalist party workers in Marion county will meet Friday night to lay plans for closing their election campaign. John Zahnd. leader and candidate for president, announced today. Zahnd predicted victory for the party in the county and state, declaring that a widespread demand for return of prosperity has given the party a firm foothold in every corner of the nation. "From the inception of the party, it was realized that this nation would be crushed by the moneylender, and that usury would be the means of the fall o' the nation. The party, therefore, took the stand that money at cost and a taxless government was the only means cf saving the nation after the money lenders had spent their day in tiejmg up industry," Zahnd said.
The Day's Political Roundup
Surrogate* Judge John P. O’Brien , . . the Democrats’ choice for mayor of the nation’s largest city. By \UA Service YORK, Oct. 12. Judge John Patrick O'Brien, plump, round-jowlcd. stiff-lipped son of Worcester, Mass., promises to become New York's most studious and philosophically-minded mayor. They'll tell you that whereas Jimmy Walker was a practitioner of life. Surrogate Judge O'Brien is
a student of life. H is have indicated a tolerance, a penetration and labor which is most rare in political figures. The Charlotte Fixel-Abe Erlanger case decision, for instance, has been pointed out as one “of the most civilized documents” of the time —a task
If 37 4 V J |k\
Ex-Mayor Walker
which involved some 50,000 words j and held that a man and woman can live outside of wedlock when circumstances make marriage imposible and when there is “a proper blending of sympathies.” u a a THE Democratic choice for Manhattan's mayor—and hence the probable successor to Walker—has been an avid reader, from the time when he received a degree of Bachelor of Arts at Holy Cross college. Whereas, a certain mayor, some years ago, was said to be unable to spell the larger words he used in his speeches. Judge O'Brien has a definite literary style, a succinct capacity for turning a phrase. His written verdicts have been quoted widely and after reprinted. | His library, which is an expansive ! one, contains the work of all the j major philosophers. From his po- | sition on the bench, he has observed | the big parade of a great city and acquired a liberal metropolitan attitude. He has become particularly well known for tenacity and thoroughness. The two-volume Fixel case decision is taken as ‘‘just another instance” of the judge’s thorough methods. It was the longest decision on record and required many weeks to complete. a a O’BRIEN'S humor is not of the Walker-esque, wise-cracking type. It is more of the dry, New England school. He is one public figure who enjoys the other fellow's jokes, and is known as a ‘ good listener.” His philosophical attitude is extended even toward golf, for which he has a particular weakness. He says he likes the links sport because : ‘‘Any game in which you keep your own score is a test of personal integrity.” But another of his reasons for playing golf, according to his intimates. is a desire to train off the •'corporation” waistline which is apt to become a target for the cartoonists if he becomes mayor. BBS Hoover May Stump Coast />’;/ Scripps-Hmcard Xctcspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Oct. 12.—President Hoover may go to the Pacific coast in the final drive to save his adopted state, and its twenty-two electoral votes from the Roosevelt bag. The G. O. P. managers are determined to hold California. Chicago headquarters are pouring money and men into that state. If, many of them feel. President Hoover himself wtild wind up the campaign there and make several speeches aimed to won the far west, not only California, but other doubtful western states could be held against foe. At the White House it is not denied that a western trip is being contemplated as a finale. In the meantime, California headquarters, under command of National Committeeman Mark L. Requa. is sending out its best talent to barnstorm the stake. These include: Joe Scott, Los Angeles Catholic orator; Louis B. Mayer, movie magnate; C. C. Teague. Secretary Ray Lyman Wilbur, Henry M. Robinson. Mrs. Ma- , bel Walker Willebrandt, John L. McNab. who nominated Hoover in 1928, and others. FeUow Citizens. Arise! Arise! and Rid Yourselves of Mass Poverty, \ Arise! and Help Yourselves to Mass Prosperity Meet together on the grounds of your State Capitol on Saturday afternoon. October 15, 1932. and demand the calling of a Special Session of | Congress before the November Election i to End the Depression, and to Bring About Fair Living Prices for Farm and Factory Products, and to Secure Fair Living Wages for All Who Work with Hand or Head. The People's Party Platform shows how to get Mass Justice and Mass Prosperity The National Convention of the PeoSle s Party meets at Des. Moines, lowa, rtober 18. 1932. Elect your State Delegates to the National Convention of the People's Party at your State Mass Meeting or Convention. CONRAD RENO. Chairman of People’s Party I National Committee.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Hoover Called Safe By Tim rtf Special NEW YORK. Oct. 12.—President Herbert Hoover will be re-elected by a safe margin “if the new signs can be relied upon." Hubert Work, post-master-general of the Harding cabinet and secretary of interior under President Coolidge. predicted today in a statement issued at Republican headquarters. “Democratic forecasters are claiming Vermont and Utah,” he said. ■ Absurd! They are claiming prohibition Kansas for the ‘ unconditional repeal candidates.' The voters from now on will stop, look and listen. “Jhey fear government of the United States under a changed, inexperienced management. They listened to the President's lowa statement of facts and believe he will be safer than one inexperienced in government affairs at home and abroad.” jar tt * Curtis to Visit Indiana By I nited Press SHERIDAN. Ind., Oct. 12.—VicePresident Charles Curtis will address a four-county Republican rally here either Oct. 31 or Nov. 1. Sheridan, a small village, was chosen for the meeting because it has an auditorium seating 3.000 per-; sons. Republicans from Hamilton, j Boone, Tipton and Clinton counties have made elaborate preparations! for the Vice-President's appearance.; Representative Fred S. Purnell, who is opposed by Mrs. Virginia Jenckes, Terre Haute, Democratic nominee, w'ill preside. U tt it Club Names Officer Appointment of E. C. Rumpler as vice-chairman of the Hoover-Curtis j Club of Marion county is announced by Claude H. Anderson, chairman. Headquarters are on the third floor of the Washington hotel. a o a Borah Offers Program By I itiled Press BURLEY, Idaho, Oct. 12.—Senator William E. Borah, progressive leader and chairman of the senate foreign relations committee, declared here Tuesday night that drastic domestic legislation and international readjustments must be enacted before the w’orld-wide depression can be brought to an end. The fiery Idahoan recommended: 1. Remonetization of silver. 2. World-wide 50 per cent reduction in armaments. 3. Cancellation of w r ar debts if the armament cut became reality. 4. Legislation to “reduce the problems and overwhelming debt of the American farmer.” 5. Immediate economy in government to counteract the “waste and extravagance of public money which approaches a national crime.” Borah reaffirmed his stand against war debt cancellation under present conditions. o a it Van Nuys at Portland By Times Special PORTLAND, Ind., Oct. 12.—“ The people of the United States are looking to the Democratic party as the sole agency for relief from that highly centralized and indifferent system of government which has grown up under the administration of our affairs during the last twelve years of Republican rule,” Frederick Van Nuys, Democratic candidate for the United States senate, said here today. “There is much ground for the repeated complaint of President Hoover and his administration to the effect that the country's chief evil is ‘lack of confidence.’ “Is it not possible the' the ‘lack of confidence’ may be traced to the drab and colorless national leadership of the last four years? *“A highly centralized and, at times, indifferent government is not conducive, to confidence in government, business or citizenship.” $75 Loot Taken by Burglars Loss of jewelry valued at $75 and a revolver was reported today to police by Roscoe Neville, 1809 Barth avenue, who said thieves jimmied a basement door and ransacked his home. Bricklayer Killed in Fall By Vnited Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind.. Oct. 12. George Brown, 50, a brick layer, died here Tuesday night of injuries incurred in a fall from a downtown store roof.
Don’t Drive a COLD in! Drive It OUT With a Remedy That Gets At It From The Inside!
Treat a cold quickly, but intelligently! Remember, a cold is a germ attack—an internal infection—and, as such, calls for internal treatment. Don't attempt to knock a cold merely with local or outside applications. External treatments can’t reach the seat of the trouble and can't prevent the infection from spreading within the system. Don't attempt, either, to relieve a cold with a cure-all. A cold is a cold and calls for a COLD remedy. A preparation that's good for all kinds of ills and ailments besides colds can't be equally effective for colds. Many people take remedies that actually make a cold more difficult to relieve because these remedies are constipating and also make the system acid. The thing to take for a cold is Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine! As your doctor will undoubtedly tell you. he couldn't write a better prescription for a cold if he wanted to. 4 Important Effects! Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine is a prompt and decisive relief for a cold because it does four important things. First, it opens the bowels, gently but effectively—the first step jn
TROOPS CHARGE STRIKERS WITH FIXED BAYONETS Herd 1,000 Miners at Point of Guns in Row at Taylorville, 111. Herd 1.000 Strikers at Point of Guns in Row at Taylorville, 111. B’l Vnited Press TAYLORVILLE. 111., Oct,. 12. With fixed bayonets Illinois national guardsmen charged a gathering of 1.000 mine strike pickets here today, herded them to the town square, and placed several hundred under temporary More than a score of women were included among those taken prisoner. The pickets under detention were placed in the Christian county courthouse. Efforts were started immediately to weed out those from other counties for "deportation” to the county j line. Taylorville residents were freed. The guardsmen acted when the pickets gathered in defiance of an order against concentration in publir* Qtrppf *! All of the pickets w’ere members of, or sympathizers with, the j Progressive Miners of America, new union organization. As they assembled before the organization's headquarters, the national guardsmen formed a line of glittering bayonets, and marched the pickets to the square, without disorder. Those arrested w’ere searched for arms, questioned, then held aw aiting removal. j The guardsmen have been here for three weeks as a result of clashes between the strikers and members of the United Mine workers. STATE EVIDENCE HELPS WOMAN Convicted Sheriff Denies Ever Seeing Bandit Suspect. By United Press HARTFORD CITY. Ind., Oct. 12. —Testimony that he never had seen nor talked with Irene Gentry, Muncie. was offered during her trial on bank robbery charges late Tuesday by Ira Barton, former Blackford county sheriff. Barton was brought here from state prison to testify for the prosecution. He was convicted on charges of conspiring with an Indiana gang to rob a bank. The state contends that Mrs. Gentry and her "husband, Elmer, harbored the bank robbery gang at their home near Muncie. Mrs. Gentry specifically is charged with conspiracy to rob the Citizens bank here, July 8. Barton testified that he had talked with the defendant's husband regarding the local bank, but that he never discussed the matter with her. It was estimated that two days w’ould be required for the trial. ADVERTISES HIS BOOZE Logger Uses Boot on Tire Cover; Sheriff Believes, Finds Rum, By l nitril, Press RICHMOND. Va.. Oct, 12.—A man who gave his address as Richmond and Pamplin, Va., drove into Pamplin with a tire cover on his automobile on which was painted a large boot. Beneath the picture was j painted “leg-ger.” Deputy Sheriff ! Duval Conner arrested the man and j confiscated four pints of W’hisky, a hand machine gun and his automobile. Milk Wagon Driver Killed By United Press ANDERSON. Ind., Oct, 12.—Arlie Collings, 21, w’as killed here when the milk wagon he was driving was j struck by an automobile, driven by I Donald Brown. 22.
routing a cold. Second, it kills the cold germs in the system, drives out the poisonous infection and reduces the fever. Third, it relievec the headache and that grippy feeling. Fourth, it tones the entire system and fortifies it against further attack. This is the treatment a cold calls for and anything less is inviting serious complications. No Bad After-Effects Grove s Bromo Quinine contains no narcotics and is absolutely safe :to take. It produces no bad aftereffects. It does not upset the stomach, nauseate, or make the head ring or swim. Its safety, as well as effectiveness, has made it the standard cold tablet the world over. Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine 1 comes in handy, pocket size boxes, cellophane wrapped and is sold by every drug store in America. A few I of the tablets taken promptly on catching cold will usually expel the cold overnight and banish the danj ger of its settling in your system. Therefore, at the first sign of a cold, take Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine. A wise measure is to keep it within reach all winter. Be suspicious of any dealer who tries to c ell you a substitute.—Advertisement.
Sounds Pica for Economy
/ ' jg sHk -*j $ ;:; &' „. 0 _&|g *c- • j 1&* V %£ fjg?> t g,.: :; \ Jip IM • \ ■ 4 HR •
On a country-wide tour in behalf of the National Economy League, of which he is national chairman. Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd (center*, spoke today at the Claypool. Kenneth L. Ogle (left*, is Indiana temporary chairman, and Charles M. Mills (right*, national executive director, also spoke. Story on Page One.
Leslie Will Take Stump; Stung by Deficit Charge
Governor Changes His Mind: Bush Also Expected to Campaign. Governor Harry G. Leslie, who last week said he did not expect to take to the stump in behalf of the Republican party, will begin campaigning next week, Archie Bobbitt. speakers’ chairman of the G. O. P. committee, announced today. Neither the date nor the location of Lesluie’s first speech has been designated. The Governor said he did not expect to speak, but since Democratic speakers are charging that he will leave the state with a $5,500,000 deficit because of his administration. “I feel it only proper for the people to know that this is absolutely incorrect.” Lieutenant-Governor Edgar D. Bush, who had avowed his enmity for Senator James E. Watson when he was defeated for the Governor nomination, also has volunteered to campaign. Indications aree that he
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will bost thp ticket without referring to the .senior senator. Edwin P. Morrow, former Governor of Kentucky, is to speak at Newcastle Oct. 17 and East Chicago Oct. 13. it was announced today. Four Indiana towns will be visited by Theodore G. Risley. solicitor for the-department of labor. He will speak at Evansville, Oct. 17; Clinton. Oct. 18; Terre Haute, Oct. 19. and Bedford. Oct. 20. Joseph Scott of Las Angeles, who placed President Hoover in nomination. will speak here Oct. 25. WORKS OUT DOCTOR FEE Jobless Father Paints Hospital to Pay for Son’s Operation. UPPER DARBY, Pa,, Oct, 12. Grateful because his 9-year-old son had been given free medical treatment in the Delaware county hospital, Charles Ullman, an unemployed painter, has completed painting the front of the hospital structure. “We couldn’t pay for our son’s treatment,” he said, “but I could give my services to them in return.”
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lOWA FARMERS GLUM DESPITE RECORD CROP Wonder How Bounteous Corn Harvest Will Help Pay Off Mortgages. By United Press DES MOINES. la., Oct. 12Farmers of lowa today looked down the long corn rows which will yield them the greatest crop in the state's history, and wondered what can be done to turn the bounteous harvest of more than a half million bushels into money to pay off farm mortgages. December corn was quoted on the Chicago market at 26'- cents a bushel. There appeared little likelihood any profit would remain after 2 cents a bushel was paid for huskj ing the crop. Many local elevators are bidding I only 10 to 15 cents a bushel for new jcorn. Faced with this great crop—the first time lowa's corn has outstripped the 500.000,000 bushel figure—farmi ers contemplated several methods by which they can add to their return. The gretaest single consumption will be in cattle feeding. Federal and farm organization authorities predicted 80 per cent will be fed to hogs. The other 100.000.000 bushels may be allowed to rot in the fields, or [ gathered into the cribs to be shoveled into kitchen stoves during the winter. In more than a score of lowa cities, women's guilds have been organized to put on canning bees with the men folk as guests. The canned vegetables will be distributed to needy families. HE'S PERFECT ROTARIAN | North Carolina Member Hasn't Missed Meeting Since 1919. By l nited Pn ss GREENVILLE! N. C., Oct, 12. J. C. Gaskins, register of deeds of Pitt county, has a perfect record of attendance at meetings of the Greenville Rotary Club. He has been a member -since Jan. 14, 1919, and never has missed a meeting.
