Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1941 — Page 9
THURSDAY, AUG. 14, 1941
HOTELMEN HOLD STATE SESSION,
Association Members will Gather at Wawasee For Week-End.
Members of the Indiana Hotel Association will turn the tables on themselves and register at the hotels t Lake Watuses this week-end. boauing and dinners “be feat ures of the association's ummer meeting. Hugh Barnhart, recently appointed head of the State Conservation Department, will talk at the business Pletung which is to take place at 10 a. m. Saturday. Al uncheon at the Spink Wawasee Hotel is scheduled for 1 p. m. tomorrow. At 3 p. m. Jap Jones, president of the association, will hold open house at his summer home on Kale Island at Lake Wawasee,
Golf Tourney Saturday
Dinner and dancing at the SpinkWawasee is set for 7 p. m. On Saturday there will be a golf tournanent for both men and women at 2pm = e meetl ng ends at Tp.m. Saturday th another dinner at the Spink- Ww awasee. Other events through the two days will be speedboat and swimming races, diving contests and a bathing beauty contest. iso there will be exhibitions of surf-lBoard riding. Officials for the events are Bernie Cunniff, Elmo Gilliatt, Park Akin and A! Thornburg. Judges of the bathing beauty contest will be Ed Harris, Charles Scholz, Am Jones, Jacob Hcffman, Homer Smith and Lon Martin
Appoint Lifeguards
Thomas Taggart, Oscar Boecher Robert Wilbern, Eldo Wagner and [leo Rogan have been appointed . lifeguards and the boat rides will be given by Glen Warren. and Marvin and Ralph Jones. Officials for the swimmibg meets are: Men—Paul Rupprech: Walter Smith, Austin Cooper, William Wells and Marsh Jo es} women—Mrs. Demas Waterman, N i, Harry Oldham, Mrs. Frank Mrs. E W, 1, Mrs. Dick RE Mrs. hard Zeigler, Mrs. Jacob Kindler. Ram: Mrers and Mrs. Thomas Callen,
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¥ An Unscheduled Thrill
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Den Nixen, Oregon woodsman, is shown hurtling through air from
tions at the Loggers’ Festival in Seaside, Ore. Nixon was uninjured in the fall, landing on his head atop an automobile.
Berlin Scoffs at | HARNESS INSPECTS 1-Vote Majority BASES IN CARIBBEAN
Times Special WASHINGTON. Aug. 14—Rep BERLIN, Aug. 14 (U.P.) —The ong-vote House of Representatives
{ Forest A. Harness (R. Ind.) today is majority favoring an 18-month
fon the Atlantic taking the first leg | {of a combination ship extension of military service in {our of inspection of new Army air the United States, German authorized quarters asserted today. shows “clearly” that a large segment of the American public war-mongering policy Vashington.”
and
all
na Ol “A
| Subcommittee of the House Mili{tary Affairs Committee. The five members of the subc com- | mittee sailed for Puerto Rico and | {after inspections there the junket {will take them to Bermuda, Trini“It makes no difference dad, Panama, Guatemala. Venewhether the United States makes zuela, Texas. California and then = 5 > back here by Sept. 1. it soldiers serve one or 10 years.” | Rep. Dow W. Harter (D. O)
they added. chairman of the subcommittee
AR OVERTURNS ! R, Ind, Aug. 14 (U —Hen \ar n 20, Prancesvili d., died late Yesterday, two hou after his car skidded from a highway and overturned several times nine miles east of here. Andrew! Stoll, 34. his brother, was injured] seriously.
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| George W. Gillie, Indiana Repub- | | lican
DOCTORS, ‘VETS' 1+ | WORK TOGETHER
Dr. Thurman Rice Tells
Convention Both Fill Important Jobs.
By EARL HOFF The days when medical doctors looked down upon veterinarians are over, Dr. Thurman B. Rice, chief of the Bureau of Health and Physical Education, State Board of Health, said today. “Ours is a common object—the prevention and the alléviation of disease,” he told the 78th annual convention of the American vet-| erinary Medical Association meet-| ing in the Murat Temple. The con- | vention will close tomorrow. { “There was a time,” Dr. Rice] said, “when sharp lines were drawn between the work of the doctor of human medicine and the doctor of veterinary medicine or the doctor] of dental surgery. Now all of that] is past or should be past. | “Ours is a common purpose—| ours is the healing art and we welcome physicians, veterinarians, dentists, public health workers, nurses, sanitary engineers and every one else who helps in the great project of keeping disease and death at bay,” he said.
Vital to Civilization Dr. Rice asserted that it is im-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 9
Envoy's Daughter
Maria Teresa Escalante, daughter of Venezuelan Ambassador Diogenes Escalante, makes an exotic good neighbor as she suns herself on a Southern U. 8S. beach.
possible for one to say where the work of one of these groups begins and another ends. “Every activity of civilization depends in its successful execution {upon the health and physical welfare of man or beast. As a matter {of fact—so great is the perversion jof our times—the arts of war and {destruction themselves even depend | upon us to keep the combatants in fighting condition,” the Board of Health official said. Dr. Rice pointed out that not so long ago many men practiced medicine, human and veterinary, who | were poorly trained. This has been {changed by the growth of competent schools, he said. Pointing out that humans often | tare infected by animals, he said it} is “obviously necessary that we un(derstand as well as we may the | diseases of these animals and that we lean heavily upon your profession to the end that communities may be rid of these diseases which {so often are transmitted to human beings.”
Should Work Together He pointed out that he has long urged that every board of health and medical eenter should have a
i
| “You need us and we even more need vou. All of us should work | together with the other branches of the members of the healing art to | the end that our common purpose | should flourish in these times when there is such dire need for con- | struction and healing,” Dr. Rice said
Representative in Congress, | told the A. V. M. A. “it is not possi- | ble for a nation to possess the] wealth, the natural resources and | the glories of America without] being coveted by the forces of | greed.” | Discusses Finances
“That is why all Americans mist | | take part in the defense of the na- | | tion against such greed and ambi- | ition.” the Congressman, who also is | a licensed veterinarian, said. During the morning session, the | A. V. M. A also heard an address | by Orville S. Poland, staff assistant | | in the office of the Secretary of the | | Treasury, who discussed the finane- | ‘ing of the defense program, | The consumer's demand for steaks delicately marbled with luscious] white fat is literally forcing Stock | men to starve their cattle for Vita-| min A, ‘Dr. C. C. Hastings of Wil-| {liamsville, Til, told the convention | | vesterday. { To accomplish this, animals re-| ceive little carotene, contained in| green feed, which is converted into! i Vitamin A, Dr. Hastings said. Night | | blindness in cattle, progressing to| day blindness, often described as] keratitis, is in reality quite often | | Vitamin A defiiciency, he said.
| Guardians of Health
; New development in devices against chemical warfare | for Army horses and mules were | predicted by Capt. Don Mace of the | Army Veterinary Corps, pointing ou that masks and boots used for animals during the last war had not | been satisfactory. Dr. Earl A. Moore presented a pa- | | per that pointed out that quantity | {and quality of rations fed to cattle | are factors in bovine mastitis. which { affects dairy herds’ output. The pa- | per was prepared by Drs. Moore, {C. E. Weakley Jr, A. H. Van Land- | ingham and H. O. Henderson of | West Virginia University. | Dr. Harry J. Boyts of Sioux City. | | Towa, asserted that the veterinarian | {with the co-operation of the phy-| | sician can be called a “guardian of | publie health.” He pointed to the program of inspection and eradica- | tion of animal diseases by veteri- | narians,
protective |
See Special Races
| Drs. R. A. Hendershott and C. B. Johnston of the New Jersey Bureau lof Animal Industry reported that a blood method of diagnosis is being developed whereby cattle infected { with tuberculoscis may be determined sconer than through tests, now in use. The new tests, they| said, should prove of far-reaching | benefit to the cattle industry.” Convention delegates were to see | special races at the Indianapolis | Speedway driven by men who com- | pete in the annual Memorial Day | “500.” At To'clock this evening they | were to be entertained with a floor ishow in the Egyptian Room in the | Murat Temple.
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Whoa! Runaway Prevents a Sale
PLYMOUTH, Ind, Aug. 14 (U P) —Russell Ellis, a Plymouth farmer, hitched up a team of voung horses to demonstrate to a prospective buyer. The horses ran away, throwing Ellis from the wagon and breaking his wrist, He reports “no sale.”
Half Price State Fair Tickets ..........
\
ASKS RECALL OF LIQUOR PERMITS
Blue Writes ABC, Pointing To ‘Voluminous Evidence’ In 2 Specific Cases.
Revocation of the licenses of at| least two Indianapolis taverns on | charges that they have been selling | liquor to minors, was asked today by | Prosecutor Sherwood Blue in a let. | ter to the State Alcoholic Beverages Commission, | Mr, Blue said he turned over to | State Excise Police voluminous evi- { dence liquor sales to minors. Mean- | | while the Prosecutor’s office filed | affidavits against owners of two other taverns charging them with | employing minors and selling liquor to persons under 21. Silas Corbin, alleged proprietor of the Cat and Fiddle Tavern, 900 block Massachusetts Ave, was charged with employing his 18-year-old son in the establishment. The State Liquor Law prohibits employment of any person under 21 in a liquor tavern.
Proprietor Rearrested
Joseph H. Meece, proprietor of a tavern ih the 5400 block Brookville Road, and his daughter. Freda] Meece, were rearrested on a new {affidavit charging sale of intoxicants to minors. Meece was arrested a month ago on the same charge but the case was dismissed because he had been held without a warrant. The case was reopened after a 16-vear-old boy testified in Juvenile Court last week that he bought beer from Miss Meece and that he was willing to testify against the tavern owner
15 SAILORS RESCUED PERNAMBUCO. Brazil, Aug. 14 (U. P) —The Brazilian steamship Cuyaba is expected tomorrow with 15 survivors from an unidentified British ship torpedoed near Madeira, Spain, July 26.
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‘BAN PATENT FILINGS
E.C.Owings Gets Bell Co. Award
THE INDIANA Bell Telephone Co. presented a gold 25-year medal today to E. €. Owings in recognition of his lengthy service to the telephone industry. Mr. Owings, who lives at 5131 E. Walnut St, has had unusually wide experience with the com-=-pany. He has served continuously since 1916 with the exception of one year in 1924, when he was an inspector on the staff of the appraisal engineer in Marion. He returned to the Telephone Co. in 1925, and has been an ae= countant clerk, a lineman, store= keeper, repair clerk and testman, which position he holds now. Mr. Owings has been a Telephone Pioneér since March, 1938.
IN FOREIGN NATIONS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 14 (U, PJ). —The House has completed Congressional action on a bill designed to guard military secrets more closely by prohibiting filing of patent applications in foreign countries without a special license. The bill, which now goes to the White House, strengthens an act of July 1, 1940, granting the Commissioner of Patents authority to maintain sccrecy on applications for
public safety and national defense. A penalty of $10,000 is provided for violations.
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