Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 265, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1934 — Page 3
MARCH 16, 1934
96 CANDIDATES FILE NAMES IN PRIMARY RACES Moore and Heckman Join List Seeking G. 0. P. Mayor Selection. Boynton J. Moore and Ed Hpckman yesterday filed their certificates of candidacy for nominations ror mayor on the Republican ticket at election headquarters at the rourtnouse. Ninety-six persons have filed for city, county and township offices since headquarters opened a week ago.
Other filings for major offices yesterday were made by Dr. Austin H. Todd, Republican, for county coroner. and Dwight R. Johnson, Republican, for county treasurer. Dr. Todd was city councilman in the Duvall administration. Leo Kriner in Race Leo L. Kriner. local attorney," will seek the Republican nomination for Marion county representative, he announced today. Mr. Krmer stated that he will oppose, if elected, any measures “which tend to create a czaristic form of state government.” Mr. Kriner is 25, married, and associated in the law practice with George A. Henry. Democrat Club Elects New officers of the Progressive | Democratic Club are Mrs. Rowena ! Buchanan, president;- Henry D. Phillips, vice-president; Percival I Porter, treasurer, and William Mitchell, secretary.
Ward Women Meet Members of the Seventh Ward Womens Democratic Club met in the home of Mrs. Badger Williamson, 1855 North Pennsylvania street, last night. Speakers were Mrs. Williamson. Mrs. Mary Knippenberg. Mrs. Carl Wood and Mrs. Mildred Dugan. Praises Democrats Democratic leaders were praised by Otto P Deluse in an address before the Beech Grove Democratic Club, women’s auxiliary, last night. Other speakers were Superior Judge William A. Pickens, Superior Judge Joseph R. Williams. Juvenile Judge John F. Geckler, Joseph T. Markey. and Chalmer Schlosser, Frank McKinney. Will T. Brown and J. V. Stewart. Italians Organize The Tenth Ward Italian Democratic Club was organized last night at a meeting at 940 East Washington street. Speakers were Frank Martino. Edward Dovle and Dr. Will H. Smith Jr. Joseph Bocchina was elected temporary chairman. Professor Walter L. Slifer, Butler university, will speak next Tuesday night. M’Donald in Race James E. McDonald, attorney here for the last twenty-five years, will seek the Republican nomination for Juvenile court judge, he announced today. He has served as judge pro tern, and special judge in the civil
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HIBERNIAN POLICEMEN DECORATED WITH REAL SHAMROCKS
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Left to Right—Lieutenant Eugene Shine, John Dugan. Charles Haugh, Eugene O'Sullivan, Miss Mary Ann Fisher, Sergeant Anthony Sweeney, Ed Dugan, and Thomas Lynch.
This group of members of the police traffic department got the jump on the rest of the “sons of Erin” on the police force today, when they held a premature celebration of St. Patricks day. Traffic Officer Eugene O'Sullivan and criminal courts of Marion county. He is a member of the Junior Order of United American Mechanics, the First United Brethren church' and the Indianapolis Bar Association. He has served as precinct committeeman and ward chairman of his party. Mr. McDonald is married, has two children and lives at 2507 College avenue. He is a graduate of the Indianapolis College of Law. Democrats to Meet The Eleventh Ward Democratic Club will meet tonight on the fifth floor of Castle Hall, it was announced by President Lawrence Ammon. Principal speaker will be Timothy Sexton, former Marion county treasurer and candidate for the Democratic nomination for state treasurer. G. 0. P. Chief to Speak P.nrrell Wright, state Republican committee chairman and recently named assistant national G. O. P. chairman, will address the Young Republican League tonight in the league headquarters. MeyerKissr building. Joseph E. Hartman, county chairman of the league, will preside. A ward chairmen's meeting will follow. Announces Candidacy Dwight R. Johnson. 2602 North Delaware street, will seek the Republican nomination for county treasurer, he announced today. Mr. Johnson is 43, married, has two children and is a member of the Roberts Park M. E. church official board. Gruner a Candidate William M. Gruner, former chief clerk and deputy asscsssor of Center township, will seek the Repub-
is shown here having a genuine shamrock pinned on his lapel by Miss Mary Ann Fisher, St. \gnes academy sophomore, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Fisher, 206 North State avenue. The shamrock was sent to Mr.
lican nomination for Center township assassor, it was onnounced today. Mr. Gruner is secretarytreasurer of Tax Accounts and Advisers, Inc. He is a member of the First and Second Ward Republican Club and the McKinley Club He is married and resides at 1301 North Emerson avenue. Club to Hear Markun Louis R. Markun, Republican candidate for mayor, will address the Monday Luncheon Club at 12:15 Monday at the Walker Coffee Pot. Markun will talk on “A City for the People.” Dr. Benjamin Asborne, president of the club, will preside. TEAMSTERS DISPUTE BLAMED FOR ATTACK Stoning of Truck Is Believed Due to Labor Troubles. Labor trouble among city teamsters is believed by police to have caused vandals to stone the truck of Ernest Sickle, 1429 Roosevelt avenue, last night near his home. Sickle works for the Kibler Trucking Company. He told police that some of the teamsters of the city have been having labor troubles. Winashield of the truck was broken by the stones. The Greek and Latin churches separated in 1054.
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Fisher from County Kerry, Ireland, by Jeremiah O'Grady, a cousin, with “best wishes for a happy St. Patrick's day.” Officers in the photo are among members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians on- the traffic squad.
LUMBER CRAFTS MOURNPIONEER Robert Alexander Long, 83, Dies in Kansas City After Operation. By U)iitrd Pres ft KANSAS CITY, Mo., arch 16. The lumber industry, from loggers in remote northwestern forests to executives in skycraper offices, today mourned the death of Robert Alexander Long, 83, a modern titan. Mr. Long, founder of the LongBell Lumber Company, died last night, two days after an emergency operation for an intestinal obstruction. After a gallant rally, he took a sudden turn sos the .worse. At his bedside when death came were Mrs. Loula Combs, a daughter, and R. Pryor Combs, her husband. Another daughter, Mrs. Hayne Ellis, made a hurried trip from Washington, but failed to reach here in time. Two Negroes Electrocuted By United Press MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga.. March 16—Two Negroes were electrocuted here today, one for alleged criminal assault upon an Elbert county white girl and the other for murder. .
LIFE RESTORED TO DEAD DOG BY SCIENTIST Animal's Heartbeat Begins After Stopping for 61-2 Minutes. BY ELIZABETH SHUSTER United Press Special Correspondent BERKELEY. Cal., March 16.—1 saw what appeared to be a miracle in a gloomy old laboratory on the University of California campuswhen scientists brought back to life a dog I had watched die. Dr. Robert Cornish, leader of the research group, breather life back into the animal's lungs as the dog's own blood forced liquid steadily upward in a tall tube. I had not doubt that the dog was dead. Dr. Cornish and his assistants deliberately asphixiated him with nitrogen and ether. The animal lay still for six and one-half minutes. His heart stopped beating. Then they cut into a vein and poured a solution into their subject, a small fox terrier. Slowly the injection worked itself into the dog’s veins. Heart Beat Resumed Meanwhile Dr. Cornish was breathing into the dog's mouth, just as "a doctor does sometimes with a new-born babe which is unnaturally still. His assistant rubbed the dog’s body to restore circulation and breathing. For five minutes nothing happened. Then the dog's heart beat resumed. It climbed to twenty, sped up to 200, dropped back to twenty, finally struck a normal beat of 100. I could hear the breath coming back into that still body. Slowly at first, then quickly as if the dog were running. The legs twitched. Later I heard a whine and a feeble bark, noises dogs often make in their sleep. Blood Pulses in Veins Had I not heard the dog or seen its movements, I would still have known that it had been brought back from death, for his blood was pulsing in his veins, forcing the liquid in the glass tube to pulse and throb as the life stream circulated. Dr. Cornish believed that in the use of heparin, a liver extract little known outside the scientific world, lay the age-old secret which may mean “rebirth” to thousands of human beings killed by gas, electric shock, heart disease and similar causes. Dr. Cornish and his assistants selected a dog they had called “Lazarus II” for their first test. Doses of nitrogen and ether were administered to bring apparent death. Five minutes after the dog’s heart stopped beating, they applied the treatments Dr. Cornish had devised in his researches. j The dog's body was placed on a
John F. Engelke to Run for Juvenile Judgeship
One Time Investigator of Court Seeks G. 0. P. Nomination. John F. Engelke. 2818 North Talbot avenue, who served as juvenile court legal investigator for fifteen years, today announced his candidacy for the Republican nomina- 1 tion for juvenile court judge. Mr. Engelke, in a statement accompanying his announcement, declared that in his belief people are dared that in his belief people generally are striving to do what is right, and that children, as a class, are more intelligent and more capable of meeting difficult situations today than ever before. •The exceptions to this general rule, in the main, furnish the problems of the juvenile court and afford the court an opportunity, by kindly direction and wholesome counsel, in many cases, to get them back into the step with society,” he said. Mr. Engelke is a member of the Presbyterian church, is active in the York and Scottish Rite branches of Masonry, is past master of Capitol City lodge, 312, and has held various other high Masonic offices. He is a member of the Indianapolis and State Bar Associations. He is married and the father of two children. teeter-board and was submitted to injections. A physiological salt solution was placed in the femoral vein. The solution had been modified with dog's blood from which all clots had been removed, then had been saturated with oxygen. The heart stimulant adrenalin and the liver extract heparin were included in the mixture. In a few minutes the still form of the animal twitched, and the heart resumed beating. For eight hours it lay in an unconscious state while showing all other signs of life—breathing, blood circulation, heart beat. Impatient to speed the return of the dog to consciousness, the experimenters injected glycogen, a sugar extract. The solution caused a blood clot which resulted in the animal's “second” and final death. A dog known as “Lazarus III” was then subjected to a similar asphyxiation. Dr. Cornish and his associates waited eight minutes after the heart beats stopped before injecting the solution containing the adrenalin and the heparin.
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MARKER TO RUN FOR POST AGAIN Commissioner Asks Return to Present Job: Denies Other Ambitions. Ernest K. Marker, president of the county commissioners’ board, today announced his candidacy for renomination as commissioner from the Second district on the Democratic ticket. Mr. Marker, who was reported to be planning to seek the Democratic county chairmanship, today said he had had no serious thought of seeking the post, but merely had considered it if it “should be offered wholeheartedly and without strings.” He has served as precinct committeeman a number of times, but never before has held public office. He operates a drug store at 801 Virginia'avenue. Mr. Marker is married, has two children, is a member of the Masonic lodge and is a graduate of Angola college and Notre Dame university.
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GAINS SEEN IN NEW FOOD BILL More Protection Given to Consumers. Federal Expert Says. By Scripps-Hoirard yricspaprr Allianrt WASHINGTON. March 16—Th® new pure foods bill just reported b* the senate commerce committee wilt have the enthusiastic support of W. G. Campbell, chief of the federal pure food and drugs he said today. In its final form it is not all thas Mr. Campbell wants, or all h$ sought; it is far different from th® Tugwell bill, originally introduced almost a year ago. But because it does give consumers more protection than they now have. Mr. Campbell will support it.
Mr. Campbell cites seven advance! toward greater consumer protection accomplished in the committee billj, 1. it gives the government som< control over ttie advertising ot foods, drugs and cosmetics. 2. It brings cosmetics under th 4 law for the first time. 3. It provides for the promulga* tion of legal standards for food, and the fixing of one standard of quality*. 4. It strengthens the administra* tion's power to enforce the law. ! 5. It provides for use of the in junction to prevent repetitious off senses against the law. 6. It makes possible the imposij tion of a license method of control in those instances where a product may be dangerous, and where thii danger can not be detected aftef the product goes into interstate commerce. 7. It increases penalties for vio* lations. VILLAGE PRAYS MOVING I MOUNTAIN WILL HAL| 1.800 Defy Warnings as Frencl Soldiers Stand Guard. C B\r United I’rc** ROQUEBILLIERE, France. Marcfc 16. —Eighteen hundred villagers, reS fusing to heed warnings to evacuate their homes, prayed today that moving mountain, whose shifting earth and widening cracks threat* ened a disastrous landslide, might be halted by supernatural means. 1 Army officers maintained tele*scopie watch on the nearby hill, ano were ready with sirens and bells th sound the alarm if the earth begap moving rapidly enough to indicate imminent danger.
