Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1939 — Page 7

" THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES EE a : WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1939

Boys’ State Is Calm After Election EATOURWAYTO FIREMAN HAS BAD LUCK [fre sian from his own home

PAGE 6

CONSIDER PLEA |

PASADENA, Cal, June 2l (U.P.).|Neighbors had sent in the alarm be—It was Fireman Edward J. Dunn’s|cause of smoke pouring from the bad luck to be having his day off house. Dunn’s firemen colleagues

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Traffic Count Completed; Safety Board to Get Figures Tuesday.

The safety Board is expected to rule Thesday on a petition for in-| stallatiom of traffic signals at 54th St. and College Ave., sought by residents of the vicinity to halt alleged “race track driving” on Col-| lege Ave. Chief Morrissey said a traffic count at the intersection, ordered by the Board to determine the need for signals, has been complet- | ed and will be submitted to the | Board Tuesday. : | The Chief declined to reveal re-| sults of the count or what his] recommendations would be. Stop and go signals formerly lo-| cated at this intersection were re-| moved several months ago with the explanation that previous traf-| fic checks failed to justify their maintenance there. | A petition signed by several hun- | éred persons was filed with the Board a few weeks ago by a delegation of women who charged mo- | torists were making a ‘‘speed- | way” of College Ave. and that] there have been several accidents) at the corner since the sighals| were removed. | With no traffic signals on College Ave. between 46th and 63d Sts. they said, there is nothing to “slow down” motorists, and children and adults find it dangerous to cross the street.

CHILDREN'S CAMPS GROW ST. LOUIS, June 21 ((U. P.).— More than 2,500,000 children now spend at least two weeks of each summer in the nation’s 10.000 private and agency camps

|

HOOSIERS GRADUATED AT WAR COLLEGE

WASHINGTON, June 21.—Two | infantry majors from Indiana were | among the graduates at the Army | War College here today. They are Maj. Don C. Faith, | Washington, Ind, and Maj. Owen | Summers, Bloomington. Both have long service careers in the regular | forces of the U. S. A. Secretary of |

War Woodring delivered the com- | }

mencement address and presented the diplomas. |

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Now that the election is over,

their State Fair Grounds quarters.

instructs him. »

‘Politician’ Is

against some overenthusisatic set up.

Judge George I. Tremain swore in Richard Merrill Freeman, 17, Crawfordsville, as Governor. A public party has been planned for tonight in front of the grandstand. Legion drum corps from Anderson and Muncie, the Indianapolis Men’s and Women’s Drum Corps and the state championship Richmond band will entertain. Among those who addressed the boys yesterday were State Senator Thomas Hendricks, Speaker James Knapp of the Indiana House of Representatives, and Col. Robert Mcorhead, a former state legislatcr.

45-MILE WALKING RECORD IS CLAIMED

DANSVILLE, N. Y. June 21 (U. P) —A new individual record for walking 45 miles between Rochester and Dansville was claimed today by William D. Power, 48, Chico, Cal, entrant in Bernarr McFadden’s “Bunion Derby.” Power, one of 77 derby entrants “resting” here between a 287-miie trek from Philadelphia and the start of a 331-mile walk to the New York World's Fair, said he did the Rochester-Dansville leg yesterday “just for exercise.” He said his time was 9 hours 2 minutes, 11 minutes under his previous record for the distance.

FAMOUS PERMA

Bring the Children—Come

U. S. mail box with an election poster. Judges who were elected yesterday will take office as courts are

The “State” Senate will be organized today. of Representatives was organized, and last night State Supreme Court

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Times Photos.

the 700 citizens of Indiana’s Boys’

State returned today to the ordinary procedures of “business” life at

Robert Gallatin, Garrett (center),

patronizes the barber shop conducted by Dick Louden, Ben Davis (left), and Lester Ottenheimer, East Chicago. (left), is shown voting as James Brown, Greenwood, junior counselor,

William Palmer, Washington

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Indicted for

Posting Bills on Mail Box

A secret indictment has been returned in the Indiana Boys’ State “political”

campaigner who defaced a His trial will be held today.

Yesterday the House

NEW JERSEY POLL 0. KS PARIMUTUELS

TRENTON, N. J, June 21 (U. P). —Parimutuel betting on horse races, approved in yesterday's state referendum by a five-to-three majority, needed only an enabling act today to become legal in New Jersey for the first time in 42 years. With only 21 of the State's 3601 districts unreported, the vote on the referendum to amend the constitutoin stood: For, 457,419; against, 299,983. - The vote was a victory for Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City, whose Democrat’ machine had sponsored the plan. >

WORKER KILLED BY 13,200-VOLT SHOCK

FT. WAYNE, Ind, June 21 (U. P.) —Ervin Sells, 32, a laborer emploved at the Indiana Service Corp. substation here, was electrocuted early today when he came in contact with a 13,200-volt circuit.

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BETTER HEALTH. DOCTOR URGES

Dr. Heiser Says Victories Over Disease Can Be Won by Diet.

By DR. FRANK THONE (Copyright. 1939. by Science Service)

MILWAUKEE, June 21. —Victories over disease in the past have been won for us by others but future victories will depend increasingly upon ourselves, according to Dr. Victor G. Heiser of New York. The biggest factor in these victories will be our willingness to change our food habits and eat what is good for us, the author of “The American Doctor's Odessy”

and “You're the Doctor” declared in the eighth Maiben Lecture before the American Association for the Advancement of Science last] night.

| community effort.”

“In the past the extraordinary [success in liberating man from the pestilential diseases has been achieved largely in the field of | environmental sanitation,” Dr. | Heiser pointed out. “No great change has been required in man's personal habits. “Typhoid fever and cholera have been controlled through the engineer providing man with safe water. He has been saved from | plague by keeping rat fleas from | him. Smallpox and diphtheria have been made puny enemies by | vaccination, and malaria and yellow |fever can also be prevented by

Tells Story of Beriberi

Now, however, man is confronted with the challenge of increasing his own welfare by his own efforts. Are we, Dr. Heiser asked, ready as whole peoples to wean ourselves away from tradition and custom and learn how to eat our own way to better health? Many of us voluntarily deny ourselves certain {foods for religious reasons; we are | conscientious vegetarians, or we eat {no pork, or we abstain from meat {on certain days. Will we do that {kind of thing for the sake of our health? The answer is not easy, the speaker admitted. He told of the dramatic demonstrations of the role of polished rice in producing the disabling disease, beriberi, among the millions of the Orient, of the equally dramatic disappearance of that plague from groups fed on the unpolished grain. Yet Orientals still blandly persist in their preference for polished rice —and still get sick with beriberi. And vast number of our own countrymen suffer needlessly from pellagra because of a similar dietary stubbornness, he reminded his hearers.

Talks of Dietary Surgery

A really enlightened diet will not only prevent the so-called deficiency diseases, it will ward off many of the | conditions that nowadays make sur- | gical operations necessary. He told | of large-scale experiments with col- | onies of white rats, which lived in perfect health as long as they were given a physiologically adequate diet, but which, when placed on rations of what might be called the “civilized poverty” level, proceeded to develop such surgical conditions as sinus trouble, infection of the middle ear, gastric ulcer, kidney and bladder stenes, gangrene, heart diseases and bad teeth. Correct eating need not be expensive eating, Dr. Heiser urged: “All too often we eat far too much of a substance that is not needed, and still suffer from hunger if a needed | substance is not present in sufficient quantity. “There is every reason to believe,” he concluded, “that the nation that can regulate its food consumption in accordance with scientific principles may not only produce a larger percentage of sound, healthy people, but at a cost infinitely less, and by inference become

DRAFTSMEN SETTLE

10,548 In State Now Licensed to Groom Milady’s Locks.

HE business of keeping Hoosier women beautiful has reached a new all-time peak, according to statistics compiled by the State Beauty Culture Board. There are now 10,548 licensed beauty culture operators in Indiana as compared to 6900 four years ago. Last week 650 more beauty culture students took examinations at the State House and the papers of several hundred more are still to be graded

from earlier examinations. In order to pass the examinations the applicants must answer most of 100 questions correctly and pass tests on practical operations of heauty culture machines.

LIMESTONE STRIKE

BEDFORD, Ind. June 21 (U. P). —Settlement of a three weeks’ strike of draftsmen, which has hampered work throughout the limestone belt, was anncunced today by Alfred A. Beck, chairman of the operators’ | committee. Work is to be resumed | on Friday, he said.

which caused him to miss the thrill found an overdone roast in the gas of responding to the one and only oven.

Terms of the agreement, reached at a conference of labor officials and |

mass meeting of all draftsmen in

There are approximately

draftsmen in the limestone belt, but | many other workers haves been af- | fected by the strike, numerous stone mills being forced to close when supplies of blueprints and tickets |

eral stone jobs which would have! been awarded in this district. Wage disagreements led to the strike.

operators were withheld pending a g

the Bedford-Bloomington area. } 55 &

| 3

were exhausted. Operators claim |. they were forced to turn down sev- | ;

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