Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 March 1940 — Page 10
BUTLER FLIERS MAY PLAY HOST “TO STATE MEET
Plan Show at ‘Airport on "May 25, 26; Answers From | Schools Waited.
Student fliers in the Civil Aero- * nautics Authority courses at 10 In-
diana universities and colleges will |*
get a chance to “dq. their stuff” at the Municipal Airport here May 25
and 26, if present plans are carried |
\out. The plans -call for holding tie
; first state intercollegiate air show’
_ in the country. The Works Board has given Butler University officials permission to hold the meet at the Airport. Invitations have been sent to the
other Indiana schools offering the |
Civil Aeronautics Authority civilian flight training courses to partici- . pate in the show. They are Purdue University, Rose Poly, Evans-
ville College, Indiana Tech, Tri-|
State College, ‘Ball State Teachers College, Indiana University, Anderson ' College. and Indiana ‘State Teachers College. Butler student fliers will play host to the visitin #“aeronau Si Competitive events would- include _ the flight problems studied by the students. Butler officials pointed out that no event would be staged without. approval of CAA inspectors. Trophies would be awarded to the best student fliers: in each event and to the school sgoring most points. Plans are as vet tentative, pending answer from the other schools, Bu er officials. said.
T00 EARLY VERDICT RESULTS IN MISTRIAL
PITTSBURGH, March 21 (U.P). —Because the jury foreman kept insisting he wouldn't believe the wife of a WPA worker would carry $528 in her stocking, a mistrial was declared yesterday in the case of Norwood Long, 35, ees with fraudulent conversion Leng is accused of taking $528 from , Stella Pistorius, 38, wife of 5 WPA worker, She is said to have taken the money out of her stocking last Dec. 24 and given it to
Long to hold in safekeeping. But’
‘he is accused of converting the ‘money to his own use, - “Do you believe that a woman, while her husband: was working on the WPA, would be carrying $528 in her stocking? I wouldn't,” declared defénse counsel Samuel Strauss, in his closing argument. | “I wouldn't believe it either,” Snapped Jury Foreman Coleman Malone as he popped up in the jury box. Mr. Strauss cautioned him not to express his opinion while he is in the jury box, but Mr. Malone repeated his disbelief.
On petition of Assistant District’
Attorney: Roy T. Clunk, visiting Judge Jesse C. Long ruled a misri :
Long Hours, Little Pay and
By LEO DAUGHERTY
Men of Mercy are those 50 internes at City Hospital. Day. and night, these men in white serve the cityls needy sick and injured. The call may come at any hour. Quite often it’s a frantic mother’s voice at the other end of the line. “My baby is sick, I have no money.” “The interne grabs, his kit and jumps into a hospital car. He goes to the woman’s hoifle and perhaps saves a life
Make 5900 Calls ‘Yearly
| He and 49 of his fellows at the City Hospital make more than 5000 such calls a year. In addition, they answer more than 3500 emergency ambulance alarms. Daily they may serve as many as 700 patients in the. clinics and help in the treatment of 600 in- the hospital. For that, the interhe receives $5 a month during his first year, $10 the second and $40 the third when he‘ becomes a house | physician— “aristocrat of the internes.” The other "day these “young doctors made 163 calls. to homes.
they will meet. + ‘Just Be Seated’ -
Sometimes -the neighbor lady
| thinks the baby next door is really
sick. She calls the: hospital with the tale of a dying child. When the interne arrives, the startled mother says, “Why, my baby is not really sick. He has a slight cold. But no need for you to come out here.” The other day a man called the hospital- for a doctor. When the interne arrived, the “patient” was shaving. “Just be seated and wait
until I get through,’ he said.
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7 TRANSCONTINENTAL Fhe ond Heston Ae She
They never ‘know what situation
Hard Work Fall to Internes
Here is the history of the average interne: He has spent at least four years in college to earn a degree and after fierce competition for the privilege, has studied another four years in medical school, learning the theory of medicine and -applying it in his clinical clerkship. His average age on the completion of his study is 26. His education has cost perhaps between $10,000 and $15,000. He is a fullfledged physician and already has his license to practice. And then the disgruntled patient will greet him: “Oh, so you're just an interme. I want a regular doctor.” But the Man of Mercy takes that beating.
“Takes a Beating”
The young doctor realizes he must take it' to complete his training and to’ obtain the excellent experience that the interneship. offers.
terne, he begins his role of physician to the poor. He does laboratory work, testing and analyzing body fluids.” He makes examinations, and takes detailed histories of the patients who stream into the adInitting wards. ‘And of course he has to ride that ambulance. Duties. are rotated periodically until the last year 'of interneship when the young doctor takes the last bit of training.to prepare him for private practice. He is permitted to specialize inthe particular field of his choosing. Long hours, little pay, hard work, but priceless experience for a noble profession. -
BUTLER STUDENTS TO EDIT 2 PAPERS
patie University students of jour lism will edit single issues of the Rushville Republican and the Greensburg Daily News on March 23, Prof. Charles Vv. (Kin r, jour= nalism department head, announced today. The Rushville staff will be Edward Cotton Indianapolis, Butler Collegian editor, editor; James Farmer, business manager; William Eggert, copy desk; Miss Ldis' Foreman, society editor; George Welden, sports editoy; William Shipley, city editor, and Liss Isabel Boyer, general n The Greensburg staff will be com-)
Melvin Cranfill, business mana Paul Squires, copy desk; Miss Be Boaz, society editor; Max Stultz, sports editor; Harold Howenstine,
city editor, and Miss Helen Ruegamer, general news.
.
A ONE- PARTY LINE...
. NEVER BUSY "UNLESS YOU ARE USING IT!
\
° Individual Line Telephone Service Cobia: very little more. Call the Business Office today.
|
INDIANA BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 7 — ee —
4
i
From his first day as junior in-|
performs minor operations.
posed of -Robert. Fleetwood editor; )
oN
" “Another auto seach ? says the interne fo the ambiance driver. . . . And they're off.
TEMPERANCE LOSES
TO BEANO, 100 TO 6
IONIA, Mich., March 21 (U. P.).— This central Michigan city apparently prefers beano to temperance by a ratio of 100 to 6. An attendance of 60- persons was reported at a temperance meeting
at which speakers included the state atlorney general and the state AntiSaloon League superintendent. The same evening a series of beano parties were held in Ionia and the reported attendance was 1000.
MOSKIN'S
CR
Another interne examines an ailing child. |
ocal Group Will Aid Poles
Indianapolis ‘Committee of the | Paderewski Fund. for Polish Relief is being organized to raise funds for relief work in Germanoccupied Poland, according to M. D, Carrel of Lebanon, Ind. The Paderewski Fund was organized after the Nazi government consented to the American supervision of relief there. Chauncey McCormick, president of the Commission for Polish Relief, through the embassy in Washington, ar-
EDIT
fo a
DRESSES }e
98
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“|powerful that when sprinkled on a
. |eye. ” | blood.
Dr. Smith discussed, vitamin K.
BSTANCES STOP BLEEDING
NEW
patients on operating table and even, in. many cases, hemophiliacs suffering from the hereditary bleeding disease, can now be saved by two death-defeating substances’ presented by Dr. H. P. Smith, State University of Iowa, at the megting here of the Federation of American
. One of “the anti-bleeding ‘substances is a new preparation so
wound it stops bleeding by clotting the blood “in the twinkling of &n It is obtained from beef
Thousands of new-born and older patients suffering from obstructive jaundice can be saved from bleeding to death by. the other substance
NEW ORLEANS, March 21, —1 Bleeders, i new-born babies to| e
Societies for| Experimental Biology. |.
~ BREATHING a
A\W/HN you Ea breathe through your nostrils because theyare stopped up by a'cold, Insert alittle Mentholatum, Soothing Mentholatum clears the mucuse clogged passages, lets in air, It clears the way for breathing comfort,
Opens 'STOPPED- pup NOSTRILS
due to colds
TT]
COMFORT Daily
Gives
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES,
“THEY WILL BRING RESUL [S.
ranged for Anwricans to be sent there to have charge of relief work, Mr. Carrel said. The Commission wil bé resporisible for the acquisition, shipment and proper distribution of relief in Poland. It will attend to securing shipping permits from governments of countries through whose jurisdiction supplies must be routed, all
in accordance with the Neutrality|
Act and the regulations of the
1 . 0) ORE
i Designs FILL and URIBE SIMPLE TREN UK = | ¢ Sopething GOOD, Something NEW EE EAC
Something EVERY CHILD can do.- Drug Stores be 8 R
State Department, he added.
nen ern
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| SPP PP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPD Py
mosKINS
CLOTHING COMPANY 1’ WEST WASHI
DIRECTLY OPPOSITE I DIANA THEATER
a vr - ~ w : ER Ra AA ES
FTAA TN
BTR Sea ii
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