Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 169, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 November 1932 — Page 3
NOV. 24, 1932
SAFETY FIRST, IS WARNING TO STATE HUNTERS Watch So-Called Trivial Injuries, Guard Against Infection, Plea Says. Safety first is urged upon Indiana hunters in a bulletin issued by the Indiana State Medical Association. The bulletin warns hunters to watch so-called trivial injuries and guard against infection. •'Prevention of accidents calls for horse sense, a rare commodity, as may be seen from the frequent changing of seats in a boat, dragging a gun muzzle foremost over a fence or through the brush or carrying loaded guns in improper positions. So-called trivial wounds often are ignored. Gun-shot shells contain wadding made of horse hair and therefore wounds made from gunshot are liable to contain tetanus germs,” explains the bulletin. "Lockjaw may not infest itself until ten or more days, and then treatment is a serious problem. A life may depend on the immediate decision as to whether anti-tetanus serum should be given to prevent development of lockjaw. "Lacerated wounds, scratches from trees, thorns, wires, should be cleaned and protected by dressings to prevent blood poisoning. Sprains of joints are often more serious than they seem to be, and may call for X-ray pictures to exclude bone injury. "Care should be used in the choice of drinking water. When in strage country remember that w-ater is not always as innocent as it may seem. If in doubt, be on the safe side and drink only boiled water. "By taking these simple precautions hunters may be sure of an enjoyable season,” the bulletin conclues.
SEAL SALE TO OPEN ON DEC. 1 Dr. Evans’ Address Here Will Start Campaign. Warning of dire consequences if the public fails adequately to finance the fight against tuberculosis will be sounded by Dr. William A. Evans of Chicago, noted health authority, at the annual meeting of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association here Dec. 1. The address will be heard by about 100 civic, religious and fraternal groups now co-operating in the annual Christmas seal sale. Dr. Stanley Coulter, state campaign director, also will speak. Address by Dr. Evans will inaugurate the sale campaign, proceeds of which will finance preventive and curative education against ravages of the disease. With opening of the drive, clergymen of the city will observe ‘Tuberculosis Sunday” this week-end with addresses on the life saving value of the seal sales. COUNCIL LIKELY WILL FIGHT GECKLER PLEA Request for $35,000 Additional Appropriation Opposed. Request for $35,000 additional appropriation for care of children, who are county wards by order of juvenile court, probably will be opposed by county councilmen at a special meeting Tuesday. This was predicted today by courthouse budget officials when it was learned that Judge John F. Geckler, •who has clashed with councilmen several times over the cost of keeping county wards, would seek the additional appropriations. The amount is sought for care of children from Oct. 1 to Dec. 31. Geckler ignored action of the council slashing daily cost for each ward from 75 cents to 60 cents, effective Oct. 1. The higher rate continued since that time. * At its fall session, the council appropriated $125,000 for care of county wards, slashing $25,000 from Geckler's total request. BIRTH ANNIVERSARY OF SPINOZA IS HONORED Memory of Dutch Philosopher to Be Honored by State Society. Celebration of the three-hun-dredth* 1 anniversary of the birth of Baruch Spinoza, Dutch philosopher, will be held Sunday afternoon at All Souls Unitarian church, under the auspices of the Indiana Philosophical Association, of which Professor D. S. Robinson, head of the Indiana university department of philosophy, is president. Speakers will include Professor E. L. Schaub. editor of the Monist. national philosophical publication, and head of Northwestern university's department of philosophy. A speech of welcome will be made by the Rev. Frank S. C. Wicks, pastor of the church, and works of Spinoza will be discussed hy Professor Robinson and Rabbi Milton Steinberg. Music will be provided by Mrs. C. A. Brockway and Miss Charlotte Lieber.
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HAIL NEW MATINEE IDOL
Lederer Crowds Out Heroes of Old
Illy Hh . mmMh, • m P Wm K * wm Hi V ■ • * Sat fm - — iffimikpr wHRmHgr t John Drew IMB b ' ~~ ~~~~~~~ tarnish off the silver frame from Francis I ederer off stage | looked down. Anew matinee idol word to all of them. Which is a! jjEjjP has come to town. good trick for a matinee idol to ! His name is Francis Lederer and carry around the world with him. ”■ ! he recently has appeared in New. -ghg must, be beautiful, the worn- v ;,'lf : York, hailed as a cargo more in- an j marry," he said. "But it must j I flammable than any of the matche j,e a beauty from within—not one iMr vmt Sl 3t j^ rr^Ve * rom na<; * ve Czecho- that is made up only of clothes and J l| And when he took a series of bows S q this^” 6 difference life M" JsJsSI before the curtains at the premiere H e thumped a table and likened of "Autumn Crocus,” Broadway to its timbre, as one might thump Wmm critics and audience nodded across a melon for ripeness or ring a coin I|k[ Ifflone another's orchids and said, j or i ead a jj o y j jl door S James ” *’ roU ' s^e or s^a^e ' Lederer's first success was made |J|j| "■■ Young Mr. Lederer. when inter- gigolo in “The Wonder Bar,” which : IivBmB; . viewed had nothing to fear from starred A1 Jolson here . But he re- I MSFb War WMI the cold gray light on the wrong fused to come before his American \\ fW * HPUF MM featu°es th have°somethin HIS f* public in such a part as that - Jt
John Drew By 7’iinre Special NEW YORK, Nov. 24.—Get out the scented sealing-wax and rub the tarnish off the silver frame from which John Barrymore's profile last looked down. Anew matinee idol has come to town. His name is Francis Lederer and he recently has appeared in New York, hailed as a cargo more inflammable than any of the matche that arrive from his native Czechoslovakia. And when he took a series of bows before the curtains at the premiere of "Autumn Crocus,” Broadway critics and audience nodded across one another's orchids and said, “This means trouble for the stagedoor James.” Young Mr. Lederer, when interviewed, had nothing to fear from the cold, gray light on the wrong side of the footlights. His fine Slav features have something pf the intensity of a Barrymore. Outclasses Old Idols But neither Barrymore nor Hackett nor Drew, those idols of an earlier day, had such jet black hair, with eyes to match, nor lashes of a length which would be suspected in the other sex. Mr. Lederer lowered six feet of excellent track material to a chair. Clad in the casual lounging suits he affects during the morning hours and waving the slim hand which never wields a cigaret or pipe, he seemed like a singularly nice young man who was having one hell of a good time every minute of his life. "I am not married, no, thank God I am not,” he said with the curious intensity with which he says everything—with which he would doubtless say, “Make mine a Manhattan” if Mr. Lederer were ever so self-in-dulgent to say such a thing. Wants No Domesticity “Domesticity would kill me—yes, kill me. I want marriage, but somehow, someway, it must be free from domesticity. I want a woman of a warm, human character. I want to adore and admire her, to feel her inspiration as much as I do that of every other friend I make in my life.” But the search for her, he confessed, is somewhat narrowed by the fact that he hates parties. “All my life, every day, I want only things that are thrilling and uplifting,” he said. “I can not stand to be bored. I do not want to be satisfied with a tomorrow that is just like today—no matter how much I may have liked today.” Talks To All of Them Curiously direct and utterly at ease, Mr. Lederer’s fluency is rather one of manner than of words. He does not speak much, yet it is said that in London, when the queues of hero-worshiping girls lined up for him to pass, he saw and spoke a MICHAEL HAUER LEADS ■PANHELL’ ORCHESTRA Columbia Club Dance to Be In Honor of Collegians. Michael Hauer will lead the orchestra which will play at the Coiumbia Club “Panhell” interfrater- ; nity dance Saturday night at the club. Appearing
with Hauer will be Ace Brown, baritone of “Rio Rita” fame. Special entertainment will be a sketch, presented by Butler university co-eds, under the direction of Miss Dorothy Jane Atkins. Jac Broderick will present several dancing numbers. The dance is being given in honor of Indiana
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college students with fraternity connections. It will be an annual event on the club social calendar.
Around South America Winter 1933 Visiting 11 Colorful Countries and 36 Colorful Cities South America—colorful travel—the cruise tour extraodinary—down the fascinating West Coast, an ever changing panorama. The beautiful Caribbean Sea. The towering, snow-capped peaks of the Andes. The beautiful lakes. The ancient civilization. The Inca Empire. Majestic Iguazu Falls. The brilliant East Coast. Its large cities, parks, avenues, theaters. Rio de Janeiro, with miles of beaches. South America has become the adventure of the age—it is the place to see. More than any other roniinent—it is a lard of contrasts, where you will meet the extremes of scenery and civilization. For the American traveler who wishes to escc~e the co’d northern w'n'er climate, there is no finer t:i i to be bad than the South American trip. RICHARD A. KUr.TZ, Manager Tie el Bureau The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis Munion trusts sr?-^L^i 2 o East Market Sfr RI. 5341
Francis Lederer, off stage. word to all of them. Which is a good trick for a matinee idol to carry around the world with him. “She must be beautiful, the woman I marry,” he said. “But it must be a beauty from within—not one that is made up only of clothes and eyes and lips. I see the difference so quick—like this!” He thumped a table and listened to its timbre, as one might thump a melon for ripeness or ring a coin for lead alloy. Lederer’s first success was made in Berlin, where he played the gigolo in “The Wonder Bar,” which starred A1 Jolson here. But he refused to come before his American public in such a part as that. It was only when he could appear as a stage lover, with a real dramatic role, that he set his cap for Broadway success. Likes His Athletics Lederer lives at the New York Athletic Club, rises early to box, takes a swim and sets out for Central Park, where he canters or walks until he wearies of it. The rest of the day is divided between the theater and the gymnasium, which are Eveless Edens for him. After the evening's performance he avoids parties to stretch out with a good book "on history or geography.” The paragon who wins his love, it ‘PIG-HEAD'TRIBE APPEARS MYTH Expedition Into Brazil Is Fruitless. F,y Science Service BROOKLYN, Nov. 24.—Stories of a “pig-headed” tribe of pigmy white Indians living in the jungles of Brazil have ben shaken by the Brooklyn Museum expedition under Desmond Holdridge, which has been working along the Catrimany river toward the primeval Parima area tin the Amazon basin. Although they have been exploring the jungle for months, they have found no Indians matching this Herodotus-like description, nor even so much as a reliable close-up story of them. Twice the party has pushed its way up the Catrimany, hoping to reach the Parima mountains, but the river, instead of swinging westward as indicated on existing maps, continued straight northward. Toilsome rapids were encountered, provisions ran low, the native crews became half-mutinous, and as a climax, fever threatened Emerson Smith, the camera man; so the expedition returned to base in its cabin cruiser, the Rio-mar. A third expedition is now planned, this time to go up the Rio Demini. Government scientists are testing different kinds of turpentine cups, in the hope of finding one which will resist rust better than those in use, and so aid the naval stores industry 4n producing high-quality rosin.
Mothers! to reduce your family “Colds-Tax” follow Vicks Plan for better Control-of-Colds. and PREVENT & cnd L,nv colds
Hauer
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
John Barrymore seems, will have to buy a pair of brogues and stalk him in the park.
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SCHOOL GROUP WILL DISCUSS TAX PROBLEMS 20 Organizations to Be Represented Here at Meeting Saturday. Representatives of twenty school organizations will meet Saturday afternoon at the Lincoln to discuss feasibility of a state tax to provide the minimum requirements of the public schools, thus removing the i burden from local governmental I units. Indiana university research workers have estimated the minimum 1 Indiana schools’ requirements at $21,000,000. Creation of anew tax • to raise this amount would eliminate state aid for the poorer school districts of the state, and remove much of the property tax for tuition. Two methods of distribution have been discussed in meetings preliminary to the conference scheduled Saturday. One method involves distribution by the enumeration system and the other, thus far more favored, on the basis of average attendance. Under the latter system, the number of pupils in a class, twentyfive for instance, would be estabI lished. In the case of elementary schools, the minimum teacher wage of SBOO a year would be allotted the 1 school unit for each class of major fraction thereof. A wage of about SI,OBO would be allotted for high school groups. Sales, excise and income taxation have been discussed as media for : raising the funds. The session | Saturday has been called by Robert j Hougham, chairman of the execuI tive committee of the Indiana ; State Teachers’ Association. M* IN TOSH TO SESSIONS Lambda Chi Alpha Secretary Goes to Intrafraternity Parley. Bruce H. Mclntosh, executive secretary of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, will attend the twentyfourth annual meeting of the national intrafratecnity conference to be held Friday and Saturday in New York and will lead a discussion on “Commercial Exploitation of the Undergraduate,” a part of the Saturday morning program. He is chairman of the College Secretaries’ Association and a member of the conference committee on resolutions.
THME GUESSES
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(Answers on Comic Page) 5-DAY~WEEK IN PLANT Six Day’s Pay Will Be Rule in Southern Factory. By Scripps-Hotcard yetespaper Alliance MEMPHIS, Nov. 24.—Adoption of a five-day week with six days’ pay is announced here by the William A. Webster Cos., one of the largest manufacturers of pharmaceutical supplies in the south. William A. Webster, president, in announcing establishment of the short week, declared that the company "was actuated by the desire to give its employes all practical assurance of continued employment.”
At Sander & Rcckcrs An Ideal Gift ‘Governor Wintrop’ Secretary Veneered Mahogany and Sale Price s39=== pßfj| | Have One Put Aside for Christmas SANDER & RECKER FURNITURE COMPANY MERIDIAN AND MARYLAND
EDITOR TO GIVE SPEECH BEFORE STATEC, OF C. Phil Hanna, David Ross to Be Principal Talkers at Meeting. Phil S. Hanna, editor of the Chicago Journal of. Commerce, and David E. Ross of Lafayette, chairman of the board of trustees of Purdue university, will be principal speakers Tuesday at the annual meeting of the Indiana State Chamber of Commerce in the Columbia Club. Both will speak at a dinner Tuesday night. Meeting will open with a luncheon. Topic of the sessions will be co-ordination of business in legislative matters. John E. Frederick of Kokomo, state president, will speak on the present legislative program of business in Indiana. Reports will be submitted to Lester C. Bush of Muncie. president of the Indiana Commercial Secretaries Association, on work of state and local chambers of commerce, during the special session of the legislature; W. Rex Bell of Terre Haute on proposed broadening of the state chamber’s activities; R. B.
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Coapstick. traffic manager and attorney for the state chamber, and William H. Arnett, managing director. Election of directors for threeyear terms will conclude the afternoon session. The newly formed board of directors will meet following adjournment to elect officers. Present Indianapolis members of the board are Charles W. Chase. G. M. Williams. Irving W. Lemaux and A. M. Glossbrenner. Roots of the jack-in-the-pulpit have an acrid taste when raw. due to sharp, pointed crystals of calcium oxalate in the cells, but Indians used to cook the roots, destroying their pungency, and so make food of them.
ART SAYS:
Reading maketh a full man but stuffed Turkey and trimmings make the best reading. a a a The general idea is to reg a r and the Thanksgiv in g dinner as the last meal.
I -5% V _ k,
ART ROSE
man To Calorie Counters we suggest this old adage: Eat, drink and be merry for tomorrow ye diet. man For some mysterious reason druggists always do a hig business the day following Thanksgiving. tt tt tt And if you’re out riding today and need, gas or oil, or tire, battery or heater service remember we’re keeping our station open all day and all evening for your convenience. For sudden road service just reach for your phone and call Riley 8355. V tt tt ft The Chief *Tire Changer ROSE TIRE CO., Inc. 930 N. Meridian St. MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTORS
