Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1936 — Page 17
SPRINGER'S TAX POLICY FLAYED | BY SOV. MNUTT
Invades Candidate’s' Home District to Speak at Muncie.
————
Times Bpecial MUNCIE, Ind. Oct. 2.—Gov. McNutt invaded the home district of the Republican nominee for Governor last night with an “open forum” address here. The Governor defended his administration in answering questions from the audience. ; “Let the Republican nominee for Governor promise to close the state colleges and universities, close all state penal and benevolent institutions, close the Statehouse and throw the keys away and his fax program still will be ridiculous,” Gov. McNutt said. ~~ Charges Misinformation “Whoever is writing the speeches for the Republican nominee should ‘ Jook to his figures. I use the official figures of the State Accounts Board, available for the inspection of any citizen. I charge the Republican nominee with a deliberate attempt to misinform the people of Indiana.” Considered normally Republican the Tenth District gave the G. O. P. plurality of 2715 in the senatorial race in 1934. Senator Sherman Minton carried Delaware County by only 557 votes. Raymond S. Springer, Republican gubernatorial nominee, is from Connersville.
G. 0. P. to Operate Sound Truck
A sound truck for campaign purposes has been donated to the
Marion County Republican Committee by Chester W. Stewart, 1911 | E. 38th-st, he announced today. It! will be operated under the direc- | dian of the G. O. P. speakers’ bu- | eau, he said.
Reed to Speak in Lo
State Oct. 16
Buy United Press
_ Malaria Infection Aids Paralysis Care State Doctors Decide
" BY TRISTRAM COFFIN FTER 11 years of malaria treatment for general paralysis, the Central State Hospital today concluded that the malaria infection and not the increased temperature primarily was responsible for cures. Dr. Max A. Bahr, superintendent, said the infecting organisms attacked the connective tissues and devoured the disease forms. “In many quarters it is assumed that elevated temperature alone is responsible for the beneficent effect of malaria,” Dr. Bahr said. “Numerous operations, however, point to the fact that elevated temperature is only one factor of a number of highly complicated ‘and ° separate phases which make up the mechanism of malaria treatment.”
The hospital's research depart- |
ment has centered its main interest on malaria treatment, and the local institution has used the treatment more widely than any other United States hospital, Dr. Bahr said. Before the malaria treatment was used, Dr. Bahr said, general paralysis patients died within a short
‘In order to demonstrate the therapeutic value of malaria, 331 patients | - received malaria only and were not followed up by any other specific treatment. Dr. Bahr's report commented: “In this wa" a most valuable material for clinical and anatomical research hts accumulated which
treatment which brings about improvement aiid not the specific antiluetic treatment with which the malaria treatment is followed up so frequently.”
using an Alpine sun lamp and stovarsol to supplement the .malaria
trezitment in. the belief that addi-
tional treatnient may improve the patient, the report said. Dr. Bahr reported that the suecessful use of the malaria treatment at the Central State Hospital
in 123 instaices citrated malarial blood was ghinped to physicians and institutions in “distant cities.”
shows clearly that it is the malaria |
However, ‘he hospital has been
has become widely: known and that.
WO of the most beneficial therapeutic agents are occupation and
amusement, and every effort is made |
to encourage patients physicaily able to employ themselves in some useful work, the report said. Employment is provided in all forms of occupational therapy in the shops and departments of the hospital. Amusement facilities include games, radio, dancing and motion pictures. In the beauty shop patients are
taught fo take an interest in their |
appearance, Work done in the shop during the fiscal year included
5758 hair trims, 5606 shampoos, 1312 scalp treatments, 720
2988 finger waves and 2427 marcel waves. During the fiscal year average daily population at the hospital was 1826.434 in com to 1768015 in 1935 and 1761.868 in 1934. Of those discharged, 89 recovered, 55 improved ‘and 21 were unimproved.
eyebrow | arches, 1070 facials, 5447 manicures, |
Dr. Max Bahr !
time, and now 40 per cent are cur- BE
| able.
ROM ACE 15, * 1925, to June 30, this year, 539 patients at the insane hospital were treated with malaria.
“A supine Legislature surrendered :
its power and placed it in the hands of Gov. McNutt, making him more autocratic than any other state executive just because Je gave more than 25 members lucfative jobs.” Mr. Chasey, whé was secretary to former Gov. Harry Leslie, charged that the figures given out by the McNutt administration to show economies in state government had been subjected to “trick book-
! keeping” and were not authentic.
Democrats to Welcome
Washington Senator Senator Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
Washington, who is to speak at a |
| Democratic rally tonight in Tomlinson Hall, is to be welcomed at Union Station at noon by a committee of local Democrats. The committee includes Senators Frederick VanNuys and Sherman Minton; Mayor Kern, former Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox, State Senator Jacob Weiss, Earl Crawford, Gov. McNutt’s
| executive secretary; ‘James Penman,
SULLIVAN, Ind. Oct. 9.—James | director of the state speakers’ bu-
A. Reed, former Democratic: United |
reau; August Mueller, Secretary of State; Thomas L. Neal, director of
States Senator from Missouri, will | the county speakers’ bureau, and H.
speak against the Roosevelt Admin- i istration Oct. 16 at Gary or South | Bend, Ernest E. Cummings, state e president of National Jeffersonian | Democrat Clubs, announced today.
State Administration Wasteful, Charge
Times Special | MOUNT VERNON, Ind., Oct. 2.— The burden of all taxable property owners in Indiana was “increased by: a direct mandatory levy when the Social Security Act was passed by the Legislature,” L. O. Chasey, director of the agricultural division of the Republican State’ Committee, told an audience here last night.
| “Extravagance and waste attend
Nathan Swaim.
| Charges G. 0. P. Plans Higher Farm Tax
Times Special
DELPHI, Ind. Oct. 2—Success
of Republican Party doctrines
| would mean defeat of “the long
fight Indiana farmers have made for tax justice,” Lieut. Gov. M. Clifford Townsend, Democratic nominee for Governor, said here last night. : “lI charge that Republican leaders and those who are supporting their tax-crazy program have conceived of a half dozen ways in which to load the taxpaying job back on farm lands and homestead
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