Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1940 — Page 6

5 influence of liquor as distinguished

DRUNKEN DRIVER TESTS OF STATE CITED AS MODEL

Report Urges Hoosier Law Be Copied by . Other Legislatures.

As a means of reducing the li-quor-created traffic hazard, the National Safety Council recommended in a report published - today that other states:should consider legislation dealing with the use of evi- ~ dence obtained from chemical tests “modeled from the ‘new Indiana . law. ” The section of the Indiana law dealing with. the. obtaining of evi-

dence from chemical tests is quoted in full in the report, which points out that Indiana was the first state to pass such a law. “The section deals specifically with the definition’ of being under‘ the

To many persons a vase Is something to.put flowers in. To Mrs. Victor R. Griffin, 717 E. 56th St. a vase is something to collect. Mrs. Griffin has 153 vases, according to the present count. By’tomorrow or the next day she may have more, because she can't resist them. All of them are miniature. The smallest is three quarters of an inch tall and the largest is Just four inches. She has one from China that stands on a ‘teak wood stand about a quarter of an inch (igh. A Hawaiian vase is carved out of a nut. Mrs. - Griffin’s idea is that “if you want to be interesting to others and yourself, start collecting something.” She thought of that about a year

from other statutes which read that, - . fo. be guilty, the driver must be drunk. The Council pointed out that the degree of influence under which: the ‘individual drives is important and that legally a driver could be under the influence but not; drunk.

Cites ‘Typical Accident’

; “The report stressed the fact that its study showed “that the typical accident involving the drinking ‘driver is a collision between two motor vehicles, generally at night! and. most frequently on week-ends,! | in which the drinking driver is| guilty of a driving error while the |

non-drinking driver is rarely 4 fault.” Studies showed 9 per cent of the drivers and 13 per cent of the oe destrians involved in fatal acc in 1938 were intoxicated or . Soe drinking.

“Apparently these percentages ince

CITY TO AUCTION Cee LOTS NW. 16TH

tween 20 and 60 per Get of ar a ik at West S St. Will Go been |

injured in cidents drinking,” he a said. “To Highest Bidder Tomorrow.

Violations Mostly at Night “More than half of these drink- 2 ing drivers had more than 0.15 per! The Works Board will sell at open cent of alcohol in their blood and bigding nine patedls of muliioipallys thus were definitely under the in- °Wh€d property a 2 aZOuLAVES fierce of liquor... jcorner of W. 16th and West Sts.

at 10 a. m. tomorrow. “The results of a special study in |

The ground was acquired by the Evanston, Ill, indicated that drivers (City when right-of-way was purwith more than 0.15 per cent of | chased six years ago for the imalcohol in their blood are 55 times | provement of 16th St. Works Board more liable to be involved in per-| members said they would sell to the sonal injury accidents than drivers highest bidder and agreed yesterday with no alcohol. = to determine the high bid by the “A three-year study in New Jer- following method: sey showed that 78 per cent of the| The Board will read the bids in accidents involving drinking drivers public and then permit the low bidoccured between 6 p. m. and 6 a. m.| ders to raise their bids above the whereas only 46 per cent of all high bid in the manner of an aucmotor accidents occured during tion. The sale will be made to the those hours. highest bidder and no further bid- - “Results of a special Evanston|ding will be considered after the study indicate that-there are more hearing. than four times as many drinking{ Several bids to purchase the propdrivers on the road at night as in | erty already have been received, the the daytime in proportian to the] highest of which is an offer of $4550 volume of traffic.” | for the nine pieces. The report gave & summary of| The property is described as “Lots the different types of tests and the! One to Nine inclusive in the Philcourt actions they have become ipine Lather Estates, 16th- St. Adinvolved in. : { dition.”

and. a half ago when she and her

Nn, Griffin’s gollection . von moush to fill a couple of houses,

She Had. 153 of Last Count But There May Be More Now

husband were starting’ on a trip to Australia, his homeland. isn't quite sure why she picked

on vases except that she'd always |

liked them. On the (rip she had many opportunities to pick up odd and

beautiful additions to a rapidly

growing collection. Her husband is a lecturer who travels all over the United : States and he brings home new vases after each trip. The collection, properly placed would. fil] & couple of homes, so she keeps most of the vases carefully wrapped in tissye paper and in storage. Mrs. Griffin is a teacher in the first grade at Nora, Ind. Public School. She hasn’t taken the vases there yet to show the first graders, but she has exhibited them other places and ‘recéived quite an enthusiastic response.

Ickes Proparhs Duck Puztle

WASHINGTON, March 7 (U.P), —Come tomorrow, Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes 'is going to puzzle mightily 12 wild pintail ducks —or will he? Biological survey scientists can hardly wait to get the answer to that question. The puzzlement or non-puzzle-ment of the pintail ducks, they say. will provide the answer to a bird migration problem that the scientists have been studying for years. Migration studies have shown tht wild birds spend their lives flying north and south along one of four major “fiyways” of the United States—the Atlantic, Mississippi, Central and Pacific. Now the scientists are going to find out what happens when birds are taken from one flyway and re-

She /{

BILL IS 1S SOUGHT

Health Counc. Votes 10 Draft Measure for Action In 1941 Legislature.

A movement to get public support for a bill in the next Legislature to regulate the saie of all poison drugs

fessional Health Council of Indiana. At a meeting yesterday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, the Coun-

mediately and conduct a public campaign for its support before the 1941 Legislature convenes. A measure to regulate sale of paisons was introduced in the 1939 Legislature but it was lost in the last-minute jam of bills.

of five representatives from each of the following groups: State MediAssociation, Sal pe Association, = Indiana Nurses Association, State: Hospital Association and State Dental: Association. Other members include

Indiana Universities and he State Health Board.

JUDGE 0 QUALIFY. IN BOMBING TRIAL LA PORTE, Ind., March 7 (U. P.), —Judge Wirt. Worden of La. Porte . | Circuit ‘Court -said today he would qualify as’ special judge of St. Joseph County Circuit Court for the * trial of John A. Marks of Michigan City on charges of conspiracy in connection with the bombing of nine power line towers and. poles last year. Marks, a business agent of the

Mrs. Victor R. Griffin . . . “If you want fo be interesting, start collecting. seveluing®

trical Workers, faces similar charges in La Porte and’ Noble Counties and in. Pederal “Court at South Bend. ne

leased on another which is unfamiliar to them. The 12 pintails which Mr. Ickes will free here are being flown from San Francisco to New York tomorrow in a special compartment fitted to prevent injury to pom birds. The birds will be brought here tomorrow and Mr. Ickes will release them immediately. The Biological Survey then will sit” back and wait to see whether the puzzled birds learn to fly the Atlantic route or head back for! California. Each bird will wear a gold-plated band on his leg, stamped “Noily Bo Survey, Washington, D. C. When those bands start coming back to Washington, the scientists will have the answer to their own puzzle.

MARTINSVILLE CLUB LEADER DEAD AT 85

Times Special MARTINSVILLE, Ind., March 7 —Mrs. I. G. Poston, prominent in club and church work, died yester-|

‘day at her home here. She was 85. Mrs. Poston, who was a member of

the Presbyterian Church, came here from Crawfordsville in 1908. Survivors are her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Bess McFarland, and two sons, E. I. Poston and Emmett Poston.

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DR. HARVEY TO TALK AT DRUGGIST SESSION

Times Special : LAFAYETTE, Ind, March An Dr. Verne K. Harvey, State Board ‘of Health secretary, will discuss’ the a new Indiana’ pre-marital test law} % at the 10th annual Druggists Busi- Lr ness Conference, to be held here Tuesday and Wednesday. About 350 druggists from over the state are expected to attend the

Other speakers include Dean .C. 'B. Jordan of Purdue, on control of | poisons and barbituates; Prof. P. E. Lull of the public speaking staff, | on “Better Selling”; Joseph P. | ace president, and Harold V. Darnell, secretary, of the Indiana Pharmaceutical Association, and Edgar A. O’'Harrow, Indiana Board {of Pharmacy secretary. Je The annual banquet will be held Bonnie paket ’ ; Tuesday, with addresses by Dr. E. C. «your HitP. | Elliott, Purdue president, and Dr. | Frederic B. Knight, Division of Ed- oR | ucation and Applied Psychology di- 3 | rector. Music will be furnished by | the Purdue Men's Glee. Club,

HAYS WILL SPEAK HERE SATURDAY

Will H. Hays, native Hoosier and head of the Motion Pictures Producers and Distributors of America, | will speak Saturday at the Phi Delta Theta Fraternity Founders’ Day Banquet at the Columbia Club. Banquet committee chairmen are Maynard ' Hokanson, banquet: George Horst, dance; William Hart, tickets; George Schumacher, award; James Murray, nominations, and James Roberts, publicity. - *

DOCTOR CLEARS UP SKELETON MYSTERY

SUTTON, W. Va, March 7 (U. P.).—~The mystery of the box of | human bones which were found on lonely Powell Mountain was cleared up yesterday by a 70-year-old physician, who said he once used the skelton remains in his’ work. State police announced receipt : : ! of a letter from Dr. G. G. Lovett 2 te of Bulltown which said his daughter had disposed. of the bones last summer. : SIGNS INSURED PITTSFIELD, Mass., March 7. (U.| P.).—No- smoking signs at the registry of deeds in the court house were taken down because “nobody paid -any attention to them.” “It was a noble experiment like prohibition,” the registrar said, “but it also failed to work.”

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