Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1938 — Page 12
PAGE 12
AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT
IS SHAKEN UP
Wallace Shifts Key Men to
Co-ordinate New Deal |
Farm Program. R
WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 (U | Secretary Wallace, in the most dras tice “shakeup” of Agriculture Department personnel in a quarter century, sent new executives to key positions today in a reorganization move to co-ordinate the New Deal's farm Resorting t
hergenci emergencies
program to direct action resulting from farm clining prices, Sec- | al liace ° reo rganized the adtrative agencies of his Department to co-ordinate the marketing and production control features of President Roosevelt's farm program. Most important shift was ‘the transfer of H. R. Tolley of Indiana, Agricultural Adjustment Administration f ad the expanded Bureau al Economics. rill supervise all genacreaage adjustand marketing. | flood control work, | eroand rehabilitadepartment
t0 meet
1T10N
forestry, wi sion control, t tion programs of the A. G. Black, previously chief of the Bureau of Agr tural Economics, was made director of marketing work, an agency to co- ordinat e work of the Federal Surplus Commodities Corp., AAA marketing agreements, the Sugar Act and the Commodity Exchange Act R. M. Evans, assistant to the cretary, succeeded Mr. Tolley as AAA Administrator, while H H. Bennett, Soil Conservation Service chief, assumed responsibility for physical operations in land-use programs The reassignments in executive branches of the Department will be reflected in shifts af personnel and responsibilities in thousands of miculture Department offices yshington and other sections f the country Officials said the
enancy
“icul
and
realighment of tive and planning agenwould result in no immediate n application of the farm
cies changes program “It is imperative that we establish overall planning work for the whole Department in order to provide for proper functioning of the many new authorized in recent vears Secretary Wallace
activities by Congr
Obtains Farmer Reaction He announced the changes after a week's of Southwestern and Middle Western states in which he
tour
na obtained farmer reac-
tion to > the 1938 agriculture program
pers
Oxvgen tents,
1
NEW SERUM AIDS PNEUMONIA WAR
Cheaper, More Effective, Morgan Says; Hospitals Here to Use It.
(Continued from Page One)
in which the pneumonia dozes while he is fed controlled oxygen, are consid-
Research in New York City and in seven other Eastern hospitgls. Compared With & pneumonia serum obtained from horses, which | Ss gained some popularity among | lical ‘men, th rabbit serum showed these advantages, according to Dr. Morgan. 1. Less harmful patient 2. Quicker in, because its ‘antibodies,” or disease-killing parare one- ore h to one-third | the size of the horse serum anti- | bodies, and therefore passed into | the tissues of the body more rapidly. 3. Less expensive and greater] speed in obtaining the serum, since | it can we developed faster in rabbits than in horses Five of 69 Die { Of 8% pneumonia patients treated, | only five died. These were patients in whom the disease was far-ad- | vanced. No patients died, it was| said, when treated within the first| 90 hours of the disease | The sarum had ‘the effect of com-
med
reactions in the |
ticles,
sterilizing the bloodstream BY all cases, and no seunfavorable reactions were obincident the injections, explained The serum is obtained ing pneumonia germs into rabbits] Supply | in Su The rabbits and build up do not die they produce as |
Cotton rowers Dletelv in
Vere
complained that cent below a vear fact that they remillion served
Morgan
seven to
domestic cot by inject- | export gn cord small 5 lon bales— |aontract the dis e than double the 11,100.000 , O
+ - 3} tance to it. but $1 milis
bales cons 3 im which
and exp las Wheat crowers face y ibe esult is a blood constituent in 7 3 oF 3 y antibodies have been manued into human bekills
> ser
problem Inject
411
a t
nas or A
Death Rate High Here
Indianapolis, with its high pneu-| ha, NB ath much of it] MIRON | sharged to smoke conditions here rowed tht induce respiratory diseases, Showed that to benefit more than most
We 1 gh the new discovery,
eo : rate finance bushels
slowly test
Lates fewer than have
are po- |
is, however slight, forerunners of pneumonia, e warned While there are 32 different types of pneumonia organisms which may | se the disease, the ‘ma jori ty of
‘at MOSKINS
nuai
TWO HOOSIERS BEGIN AIR ENDURANCE GRIND
John
and
ielsberger Quigley
1 pick up {wWotime
cans, one at a
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| fying a given case in its early stages.
pheumonia continue until it is too late.
ered important weapons against the disease. Oxygen
also is administered by direct nasal tube.
patient
“
EAN
Times Photos. pneumonia has been typed, the proper serum is There are about 32 types of pneumonia
After the patient's injected intravenously.
cases come from a few types Types | of ‘early medical ‘care. Without it, | I and TI, for instance, which are he said, the pneumonia death rate | most common, cause 40 per cent of (will continue to be high. | pneumonia deaths | Serums today are available for| [treatment of six different types of | {pneumonia Others are sought as | diag- research continues. and| Wide use of the horse serum is | 'prevented by its high cost. Rabbit | serum is cheaper to make, and | therefore will be available in larger quantities. It is not yet available commercially. There are no records of its {being used in Indianapolis. But Dr. If respiratory diseases are to be Morgan believes it will not be long {fought successfully, Dr. Morgan before all sections of the country (said, the public must learn ‘the need will share its benefits.
a ree
Early Care Required
Present-day methods of nosis, both bacteriological X-ray, provide a means of identi-
A deep chest cold, cough and temperature are the warning signals. Failure of the patient to heed them | often results in letting the illness
%
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES® Oxygen Tents Help in Pneumonia Fight
FELON REVEALS VOW TO RETURN FOR LULA BELLE
Prisoner Who Wooed Jail er’s Daughter Says Offi. cials Knew of “Affair.
P).—James ‘Godwin, 19-year-old| Kimel, handed over the keys to hQg father’s jail, admitted today that he promised to return for
tions. The youth, suffering from birdshot wounds received when he was captured, said that jail officials at Lexington “knew all along how things stood between me and Lula Belle.” Godwin was questioned in the presence of Bill (Bad Eye) Wilson, 21, his companion who surrendered to ‘officers and told them whera. Godwin was sleeping in a barn. Detective Sergeant J. S. McMahon said that Godwin implicated himself as trigger-man in the shooting of Donald Moss, High Point mill worker Preliminary hearing for the two was set for Oct. 10. “I didn’t know anything about, Bill's turning me in,” Godwin said in his cell. “I‘ll probably get gassed now in spite of everything Lula did. T really meant to go back and {get her when I got enough money {and told her I ‘wouid during the weeks when 1 was planning my. escape.” Lula Belle was spirited out of the jail when Wilson swaggerad in after his capture.
CUT POLITICAL SIGN, CAUSED FIRE, CLAIM
| ANDERSON, Oct. 7 (U. P)— | Charges of malicious mischief today were lodged against Walter Fisch | korn, 21, and T. J. Lanane, 26, ‘who | confessed, authorities said, to cut- | ting down @& political banner stretched across a street here which it is charged short-circuited a high | tension wire and caused a $10,000! (fire in the Grand Hotel. i | Police originally held the youths | | for investigation when Republicans [whose headquarters were main- | tained in the hotel, charged the | [fire was of incendiary origin. The | | youths denied any knowledge of HOW the fire started.
DIES BEFORE COURT HEARING CONNERSVILLE, Oct. 7 (U. P).! |—Frank Hawk, 56, of Straughan, {who was to have appeared in Henry [Circuit Court today in connection with alleged mishandling of funds {belonging to his grandson, was {found ‘dead of carbon monoxide | poisoning in his automobile parked two miles south of Dublin. Authorities indicated they would return a suicide ‘verdict.
HIGH POINT, N. C, Oct. 7 (U.|f#
prisoner for whose love Lula Belle §
the jailer's H 175-pound daughter when he made | enough money robbing filling sta-|
She was free on | $200 bond pending appeal from her |& 80-day sentence for freeing Godwin. |#
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