Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 32, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1934 — Page 2
PAGE 2
LEARN HOW TO PREVENT DEATH BY JJROWNING Grab This Opportunity to Know What to Do in Emergency Spots. The Times presents herewith the tirst of a series of five articles by Lewis C. Robbins, director of life saving and first aid at Camp Kosciusko, Winona Cake, on treatment of drowning persons. BY LEWIS C. ROBBINS The number of deaths each year from drowning is alarming, especially so since many persons can be saved from death by prompt application of artificial respiration. There is not time to wait for a physician. Seconds count, for the body can last only a limited time without oxygen. Twelve to fifteen minutes usually is the top limit at which people can be brought back to life with artificial respiration and, since at least five minutes usually have slipped by before aid can be obtained, seconds may mean the difference between life and death. Those at hand, then, are the ones who can bring a life back—if they know how. Every one should know 7 how to use artificial respiration. It is so simple that young Boy Scouts are taught it. With it, scouts save many lives each year. My series of articles will present the so-called prone presure method in such a way that it can be practiced by any one if the simple rules given are followed. Every vacationer should take the time to learn this method. There may be an opportunity any time to save a life. A doctor should be summoned immediateily, of course, but the actual resuscitation should be started at once. An inhalator apparatus —a machine for supplying oxygen with the respiratory stimulant, carbon dioxide—can be sent for while firstaid treatment is being given. But, it is only a supplement to the prone pressure method of respiration. It is incidental, but interesting, that the Indianapolis fire department maintains an emergency crew equipped with an inhalator. Drowning is not the only condition W’hich requires artificial respiration. Gas poisoning, such as monoxide poisoning in closed garages and in houses with leaky jets, and electric shock also can be treated by the prone pressure method. Thus the treatment of asphyxia—lack of oxygen—is not confined to the swimming season. Next—The prone pressure method. WOMAN ASKS SIO,OOO FROM BUTLER IN SUIT Fell in House Owned by University, She Asserts. Suit for SIO,OOO for personal injuries is on file against Butler university today in superior court three. The plaintiff is Mrs. Kathryn B. Hchenberger, 1343 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Hohenberger asserts that she 'rented a house belonging to the university in 1932, at which time she called attention to a stairway, leading to the basement from the kitchen, from which the railing was missing. Repairs were promised, but never made, she alleges. In March, 1933, Mrs. Hohenberger claims she fell down the stairway, suffering a broken collarbone, ribs and severe lacerations. VAN DUYN IS NAMED BUTLER ALUMNI HEAD Assistant State Public Instruction Superintendent Honored. Governor Van Duyn, Greenfield, assistant state superintendent of public instruction, was elected president of the Butler University Alumni Association at a meeting on the campus Saturday. Mr. Van Duyn was a member of the class of 1924. Other officers are Glen Findley, first vice-pres-ident; Mrs.- John Paul Ragsdale, second vice-president, and Miss Sarah T. Sisson, renamed secretary. HAY FEVERfIND ASTHMA TREATMENT ON FREE TRIAL ST. MARY’S, Kan.—D. J. Lane, a druggist at 1413 Lane Building, St. Mary’s, Kan., manufactures a treatment for Asthma and Hay Fever in which he has so much confidence that he sends a $1.25 bottle by mail to any one w r ho will write him for it. His offer is that he is to be paid for this bottle, after you are completely satisfied and the one taking the treatment to be the judge. Send your name and address today, stating which trouble you have.—Advertisement.
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Luckless Hoosier, Dillinger Double; Held 17 Times as Bandit Suspect
Brookville Man Quakes for Fear Officers Some Day Will Shoot First, Ask Questions Later. By NBA Service CHICAGO, June 18.—Doubling for the nation’s No. 1 outlaw is a nerve-racking task and Ralph Alsman is ready to crack under the strain. So closely'does Alsman resemble John Dillinger that he walks in fear that at any moment he may be the target on a police volley meant for the Indiana terror, a victim of “shoot first and ask questions afterward.” Seventeen times has Alsman been arrested by officers who thought he was Dillinger. As many times has he been released, but not without severe grilling that has left him on the verge of nervous wreckage. It’s Highly Disconcerting “I’m a wreck,” declared Alsman as he sat in momentary security in Chicago. “I left Indiana to keep from getting shot, after I had been arrested in my home town of Brookville, only fifty-four miles from Dillinger’s town of Mooresville. “But I wish I were back in Brookville. I’ve been arrested in Lorain, O.; Toledo, Detroit, Pontiac, Sault Ste. Marie, Newberry, Mich.; Marquette, Superior, Duluth, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, as many as three times in some of these cities. “I was standing on a corner in Detroit when I looked up to face three machine guns. At Sault Ste. Marie I was taken from my hotel room in shackles. I was given a terrific grilling by federal men in Marquette—and later made a news reel there. Grillings Get Him Down “At Superior I walked into the police station ahead of the arresting officer and the detective chief reached for his service pistol, just as I yelled, ‘Don’t shoot.’ "I have been seized as I stepped off trains, awakened in hotels to feel a gun thrust against me, grilled till I’m ready to drop. “How do I feel about Dillinger? I just can’t say. But this runaround is getting me down. I wish I was back home.” Alsman is 25, six years younger than Dillinger but he is almost an exact match in height and weight for the outlaw. Both are of dark complexion, both have gray eyes, their hair is of almost the same shade. And. to clinch the resemblance, each has a mole next to one eye, a scar on the left wrist, and a cleft chin. CITY LAWYER WILL TAKE HEW POSITION George Hufsmith to Join New York Firm. George Hufsmith, originally chief counsel to the public service commission in the current Indianapolis Water Company rate case, will go to New York in about two weeks to join the law firm of William L. Ransom, special counsel to the water company in the case. Mr. Hufsmith is to join Whitman. Ransom, Coulson and Goetz, of which former Governor Charles S. Whitman is senior partner. It makes a specialty of utilities litigation. The Indianapolis attorney bested Mr. Ransom and his local associates in the water case, obtaining from Special Master Albert Ward a report which ruled against the company on practically every point and which placed valuation of the company $8,000,000 below the figure it asked. PRESIDENT RE-ELECTED BY ARCHITECTS’ GROUP Warren Miller, Terre Haute, to Head State Chapter. Re-election of Warren Miller, Terre Haute, as president of the Indiana chapter of the American Institute of Architects and a dinner and discussion were highlights of a meeting Saturday. Other officers named were: Kurt Vonnegut, first vice-president; George Wright, second vice-presi-dent; Herbert Foltz, secretarytreasurer, all of Indianapolis, and Arthur Bohn and Joseph Wildermuth, both of Indianapolis, and Carroll Beeson, Crawfordsville, directors.
Indianapolis Tomorrow
Board of Medical Registration, Claypool, all day. American Chemical Society, luncheon, Severin. Architectural Club, luncheon, Architects ard Btilders’ building. Rotary Club, luncheon, Claypool. Gyro Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms. Mercator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. University Club luncheon, Columbia Club. Phi Delta Delta, luncheon, Columbia Club. Indiana Federation of Garden Clubs, Claypool, 10 a. m.
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He looks so much like John Dillinger. whose picture he’s holding, hat Ralph Alsman walks in fear and trembling, dreading a sudden urst of fire from police guns.
A ‘Meteorologist,’ Eh? He May Be That to His Friends, But to Others He’s Just Weather Man, Durn Him!
BY TRISTRAM COFFIN Times Staff Writer THE weather man is a lonely individual constantly frustrated by the very winds which he masterfully is attempting to chart. The Indianapolis weather man, J. H. Armington, is a shy, professional looking man with gray hair and a pleasant voice. Those few who seek him out in his office at 1040 Consolidated building will find him bent studiously over charts of the nation’s weather from which he draws predictions. Determined to discover the “human interest” element in the weather man’s life, the reporter asked Mr. Armington if he had any hobbies.
Mr. Armington finished mapping the curve of rainfall with red ink and laughed. “The weather man’s only diversion is weather,” he said. “We weather men don’t have time to cultivate hobbies. Weather has a habit of running over leisure time. I may have to run back from a ball game or picnic to issue a flood warning.” a a a AS Mr. Armington talked on in his pleasant, quiet voice, the reporter had a picture of the weather man as the victim of a one-sided battle, with no holds barred. The reporter thought of him as one of the last survivors of a race of men who grappled with roaring winds and laughed in the face of the rains. Mr. Armington admitted there was something poecic about being a weather man. “Although,” he added, “most people think of weather men as graybeSrds leaning out of a .window and predicting storms by a tingling in their corns.” Mr. Armington said that he was interested in amateur bookbinding and used to play a comet before the drought took his time. He admitted this rather apologetically, as if such frivolities were out of character with those who deal with the wild winds. The reporter was reminded of the humorous story of a rustic seer in Brown county who gained a nation-wide reputation for predicting the weather correctly. When a curious reporter went to interview him, the aged gentleman hobbled out, spit through his teeth and said: “It's thisaway. I read in them Indianapolis newspapers what a fellow named Mr. Armington writes and then I tell everybody the opposite.” Mr. Armington laughed goodnaturedly over the yarn, but protested that it had “whiskers” on it. a a a THERE is no one subject upon which men differ so violently as the weather, Mr. Armington said. He frequently is called upon in court to settle a case by giving weather conditions upon a certain date. Every Monday morning, women call the weather bureau to ask whether the weather will be suitable for washing. Some years ago, before the invention of sensitive instruments, weather man had to be on constant. duty actually observing weather conditions. Today, the Indianapolis weather forecast is made as the result of an almost world-wide survey of conditions, noting carefully the low pressure centers that sweep over the continents. The duty of the weather office , is to catch the recordings on instruments showing precipitation, pressure, wind, temperature and general conditions. These then are reported to other stations. a a a WHEN it rains, the ladies’ aid societies demand irritably just why the skies had to overpour on the date of the benefit supper. When the sun blazes, as it has a little monotonously in the last few weeks, farmers burn the weather man in effigy. But when the weather becomes meek and even loving, with balmy skies, languid winds and splendid glowing sunsets, the weather man may sit in vain waiting for calls of praise. He would, that is, if he were not cynical of the acclaim and scorn of the world. The weather man hides under the vague anonymity of being a “meteorologist," a term which confuses no one. He may be a meteorologist to l?is family and his scientific friends, but to the public which glimpses him only through the lines in a newspaper, he is “the weather man, durn him.” League Labor Body Invites U. S. By United Press GENEVA, June 18.—Never despairing, delegates to the international labor organization of the League of Nations today voted unanimously to invite the United States to apply for membership, despite its fifteen-year-poiicy of remaining aloof league bodies.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
$173,000 TAX LEVIED ON NEWBY’S ESTATE State to Collect Heavy Inheritance Fee. An inheritance tax of approximately $173,000 will be collected by the state from the Arthur C. Newby estate, Mahlon D. Bash, attorney of the estate, has announced. The announcement followed a hearing with Thomas Neal of the state inheritance tax department. The estate is valued at more than $3,000,000, Twenty-five per cent of the residue will go to charity. Relatives and friends will receive the rest. Mr. Newby, a pioneer in the automobile manufacturing field, died Sept. 11, 1133. He was one of the original owners and one-time president of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
CITY CATHOLICS ARE URGED TO SEAL FATE OF IMMORAL MOVIES
Pledges to the Legion of Decency, new organization of the Catholic church aimed at repression of immoral motion pictures, were issued to every Catholic church in the Indianapolis diocese yesterday by Bishop Joseph Elmer Ritter. The pledges, condemning those motion pictures which “corrupt puplic morals and promote a sex mania” in the nation, are to be signed by chinch members throughout the diocese. The drive, sponsored by the church, is only against immoral type of movies, and is not directed against the motion picture industry, according to letters accompanying pledges.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen Delong to: George Shook. 820 Spruce street. Chevrolet coupe. 99-901. from in front of 820 Spruce street. Benjamin F. Keller, 503 North Broadway. Greenfield. Ind.. Buick coach, 593-354 from Georgia and Illinois streets. Roy Wilmeth Company, 720 North Meridian street Ford V-8 coach, from Sherman drive and Washington street. Howard Keller. Moorcsville. Ind.. Pontiac coach 27-204. from Mooresville, Ind I. Wolf Auto Company, 555 North Capitol avenue. Ford V-8 sedan. M-559, from 3510 North Pennsylvania street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
. Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Herman Flake. 1805 Miller street. Chevrolet coach, found at Harding street and Kentucky avenue. Robinson Auto Company, 1018 North Meridian street, Graham-Paige sedan, found at 700 West Washington street. Red Cab Company, Red Taxi Cab No. 182, found at 1800 Brighton boulevard. C. H. Havens, 1207 North Wallace avenue, Chevrolet coach, found at tourist camp, stripped. Ira Brooks, 920 Buchanan street. Pontiac coupe, found at parking lot G. and J. Tire Company parking lot. Arthur Trefry, 2219 Snelby street. Ford coach found on the Crawfordsville road near the Speedway. Red Cab Company. 739 East Market street. Red Taxi Cab No. 212. found in rear of 621 Birch street. Mathilda Rusch. 2433 Park avenue, Auburn sedan, found at 2500 Pleasant run Parkway. Fannie Lieber, 3142 College avenue found at Boyd avenue and SherP. A. Deery, 2333 North Delaware street, Buick sedan found at 5050 North Meridian street. H. Steele, 1438 Olive street, Nash sedan, found at Kentucky avenue and Raymond street. R. H. Donehew. 4632 Schofield avenue. Plymouth sedan, found at Ravenswood. John Sawyer, Wabash. Ind.. Ford roadster, found on Fall Creek boulevard west of Northwestern avenue. C. McNabney, 4032 East Washington street, Buick sedan, .found at 3167 North Delaware street. Marvin Wells. 3363 West Tenth street. Plymouth coupe, found at 642 Biltmore avenue, stripped.
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KEYLESS LOCK FEE EXCESSIVE, CAPITAL TOLD ‘Monopoly’ Evidence Heard by Group Studying Factory Bill. BY LEE G. MILLER Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, June 18.—New evidence that the government is being forced by “a practical monopoly” to pay “exorbitant and unreasonable” rentals for postoffice equipment was before the house postoffice committee today. The information was studied by Chairman Mead (Dem., N. Y.) and other members in connection with their consideration of the Randolph bill authorizing construction of a government factory at Reedsville, W. Va., for the manufacture of postoffice equipment. An investigator’s report concerning contracts by which the Keyless Lock Cpmpany of Indianapolis leases “screen-line equipment” to postmasters is studded with such phrases as “inordinate rentals,” “harsh and very unfair contracts,” “unrelenting tenacity,” etc. While these contracts for the lease of equipment are signed by the individuals who rent postoffice space to the government, the house committee was advised that “in practically every case the amount paid for rental of equipment by the lessor is reflected in the rental being paid by the postoffice department for leased quarters.” A number of examples of the Keyless Lock Company's practices were reviewed. Examples Are Cited At Van Dyke, Mich., for instance, the postmaster—and indirectly the government—paid $2,988.48 in rental over a seven-year period for equipment which was replaced by the postoffice department with more and better equipment at a total cost, installed, of $1,621.37. At Burkburnett, Tex., the government finally bought for $2,055.47 new equipment which more than replaced the rented equipment on which in thirteen years a total of $12,093.25 had been paid in rent. At Plains, Kas., anew postmaster took charge on July 1, 1932, and “being anew man in postal affairs,” renewed his predecessor’s contract with Keyless Lock, which provided for payment of 5217.80 in annual rental. The ink contract was hardly dry before the company informed the postmaster it had just received an order from the postoffice department to furnish new equipment for the office, and this was installed on Aug. 1. The investigator’s report continues: Example of Leniency “In their letter to the postmaster the Keyless Lock Company called attention to the fact that this postmaster would have to return the old equipment to them prepaid, and that their contract specified he would have to pay the monthly rental of $15.18 on the returned fixtures as long as he remained postmaster at Plains. . . .” However, “to be lenient,” the company offered to release the postmaster from the contract “upon receipt of the usual rent for six months after the fixtures were returned. . . .” Meanwhile, the new equipment was delivered from Indianapolis to Plains by truck, the old equipment was returned to Indianapolis in the identical truck, and the postmaster was compelled to pay the company SIOO to cover the return shipment. The postmaster flatly refused, however, to pay rent on the removed equipment. Further Losses listed Asa demonstration of the losses incurred by the government through rental of equipment by small postoffices, figures were obtained on the rent paid by the government for leased postoffice quarters in Kansas. In those buildings where the equipment was furnished by the department, the average rental was $626. In buildings where the lessor furnished the equipment—this being usually rented by him—the average rent paid by the government was $875. Similar statistics for Oklahoma showed an average rental of $545 where the equipment was govern-ment-owned, and $827 where the lessor provided the equipment. In Texas the averages for the two types of rental were $602 and $797. Chairman Mead of the house committee considers these figures a striking demonstration of the need for such a factory as is proposed at Reedsville—where the subsistence homesteaders in whom Mrs. Frank- . lin D. Roosevelt is deeply interested would be supplied with at least part-time work. Mr. Mead pointed out that the bill now being considered limits the 1 factory’s output to screen-line ; equipment, and does not permit i government manufacture of chairs, | tables, etc. When the Reedsville project was before the house several months ago manufacturers throughout the country joined in successfully bringing pressure on congress to reject the measure. Negro Killed in Plunge William Newbolt, 38, Negro, 42614 West Twelfth street, Apartment 4, died at city hospital early today as the result of injuries suffered last night when he fell from the window of a vacant apartment building at Fifteenth and West streets.
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RADIO COMMISSION DEFIED BY EDITOR ¥ U. S. Spreading Propaganda for New Deal, Says Reid. By United Press NEW YORK, June 18—Ogden Reid, editor of the New York Herald Tribune, today defied the federal radio commission and defended, on the grounds of freedom of speech, his editorial assertion that the government, through its licensing power, had employed air channels to spread New Deal propaganda. In a letter to the commission he announced he would refuse to furnish “facts or other material” the commission had requested to support his charge. MILK DELIVERIES GAIN May Increase of 20 Per Cent Over April, Announced. Deliveries of milk in the Indianapolis area increased 20 per cent during May over the April total, according to statistics made public by Herman Christiansen, federal milk administrator for this area. The district includes Marion county and eight nearby counties. Present prices are 35 per cent a hundredweight higher than the price during May, 1933, he said.
Indiana in Brief \ Lively Spots in the State’s Happenings Put Together ‘Short and Sweet/
By Times Special MUNCIE, June 18.—Six patriotic organizations allied with the Indiana department, Grand Army of the Republic, are holding their annual meetings here in connection with the five-day fifty-fifth ann'ial encampment of the Grand Army, which opened yesterday. The other organizations are Women’s Relief Corps, Ladies of the G. A. R., Daughters of Union Veterans, Sons of Union Veterans, Auxiliary of the Sons of Veterans and Federated Patriotic Societies. An air show was the feature of yesterday’s encampment activities. The annual parade and campfire will be held Wednesday.
nun Fair Outlook Bright By Times Special COLUMBUS, June 18.—Officials of Bartholomew county’s annual fair, to be held the last week in July, expect it to be the best fair held in six years. With the opening day more than a month away, it is announced sale of concession space already has passed all sold last year. u n tt Work to Be Resumed By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, June 18.—Fifty men will be given employment this
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A domestic rift affecting a member of the nation’s first family was apparent when Mrs. Curtis Dali (upper), daughter of President Roosevelt, moved into a home near Reno today, where it was presumed she would institute proceedings for a divorce. She has been separated from her husband, Curtis Dali (lower), New York broker, for more than a year.
week in completing work at the Bloomington airport, started as a civil works administration project and to be continued as a part of the federal emergency relief administration. tt tt * Blue Ranks Thinner By Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, June 18.— Funeral services were held yesterday for John C. Kennedy, 89, Civil war veteran. Only five veterans now remain in Crawfordsville. There are only four others in the remainder of Montgomery county.
.JUNE 18,1933
$500,000,000 MAY BE ADDED TO PWAPURSE New Drive for Recovery Expected After Congress Appropriation. By United Press WASHINGTON, June 18.—The public works administration, already credited with re-employment of 2,000.000 workers, prepared to place additional millions in public circulation today in anew drive on behalf of national recovery. Diminished by allotments which exhausted the original $3,300,000,000 fund, PWA's purse was expected to be replenished to the extent of $500,000,000 as a result of congressional approval of the deficiency bill. Such a fund, if authorized by President Roosevelt, would permit additional grants to political subdivisions for public works aggregatng about $350,000,000. The measure allows the RFC to hold $250,000,000 of bonds offered to PWA as security for previous loans. RFC purchases of these bonds would permit the granting of additional loans. About $150,000,000 of the expected appropriation to PWA will be required for naval construction, new I postoffices, and to continue federal j projects already started. PRESIDENT’S DAUGHTER IN RENO FOR DIVORCE Mrs. Dale and Her Two Children Take Up New Residence. By United Press LAKE TAHOE. Cal., June 18. ! Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Dali, blond daughter of the nation's first family, was established today in a cottage on Lake Tahoe, preparatory to divorcing Curtis Dali, her broker husband. Mrs. Dali and her two children, Anna Eleanor (Sistie) and Curtis Jr. (Buzzie), occupied a seven-mom cottage. Mrs. Dali must remain here six weeks before bringing divorce action. Two Visiting Autos Looted Two out-of-town visitors yesterday reported to police that clothing with a total value of $275 had been stolen from their cars, parked in the downtown district. Spencer Shank, Cincinnati, 0., placed his loss at $100; Slade L. Carr, Covington, Ky., at $175. WOULDN’T IT BE GREAT! —to pack your bag, run into Chicago, then board a “North Western" overnight special to the woods, and waters of Northern- Wisconsin or Upper Michigan? A week-end or longer up in this Empire of Lakes and Pines will do you a world of good. Rail fares, by the way, have dropped to a new low. making this 'North Woods Vacation Year.” Get complete information from V A. Hampton. General Agent. C. N. W. Ry.. 308 Merchants Bank Bldg.. Indianapolis. Ind. Phone Riley 3110. —Advertisement.
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