Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1949 — Page 3

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THURSDAY, SEPT. 20, 1049 __ I Need a Doctor—

Was ‘Physician To Blame for Child's Death?

Press of Duties May Prevent Him From Answering a Call

(This Is the fifth in a series of articles on the Hoosier physician) £0 along,” he said. “Time is short

By ROBERT BLOEMNOT LONG ago a small child died in her father's arms| ining before the strike seadiings! in the ante-room of an Indiana hospital. Government labor experts dis-,

Friends of her family bitterly told and retold the sad counted speculation that the Ford, story behind what still appears to them to have been Ayelet the 3 8 Jeusipe, gresmen i

cruel and needless death. They blame—the doctors. might set a pattern for- basic in-

: ; ‘ dustr, d thus help bring about The little girl became #i-and a doctor was summoned. (32) {00 0 OP PTE

Later she became worse. Her| 0 = os advances toward] The government experts said

: the Ford settlement had been insymptoms were alarming and The ORION: no consequences, be- dicated for days and has had no the parents attempted to re- cause doctor had heard of the old|noticeable effect on the steel call the doctor. Friends’ story is badger game and knew he had talks. : { that he refused to come because|.ajled only an accomplice who As U. 8. Suggested he was in the midst of his office youl be on the scene shortly, The Ford settlement was within hours, attending a roomfull of posing as an irate husband, to the framework set up by the waiting patients. learry the game through to an un-|presidential fact - finding board The frantic parents then|pleasant conclusion. rushed the sick child to a hos-| 8 = and recommended that the CIO, ie pital. They were too frightened] ACTUALLY, private conversa- Steelworkers abandon demands to attempt to call other doctors. tions “with doctors reveal little for a pay boost but that the comEven their untrained eyes and|fear of shakedown, blackmail, panies finance a pension and in- ppea 0 ears told them this was an emer- robbery or other foul play. Most surance program: i gency that would not wait. reluctance to make calls, doctors) Had peace come to the steel

In Steel Dispute | ~ Union Ready To Go on Strike

(Continued From Page One) | shooter of the government mediation service, was assigned to the U. 8. Steel negotiations by Mediation Chief Cyrus 8. Ching. He sald he did not plan immediate intervention, but that he would {keep “In contact with the nego-’ tiations.” : | “We're going to have to play, by ear and make our plans as we

lindig

Tug INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Talks Break Off McMasters Fails to Recover Gambling Devices

forder was 1248 N. Alabama St. $27 (Mr. Pratt denied. that this is his du

» " At the hospital she was refused say, is based ona need for sleep mills, peace probably would have laddress. admission, the reports say, be-(or rest. There are times when come to the coal mines, for John

n cause she was not coming in as Sout phiysieians must consider ik Lewis us | intimated strongly the patient of any doctor. It was their own health. at he wan 0 Wi or a steel} ' a after this that the father, In other instances, they point agreement before signing a Court. Won Y, Release stopped fighting for his baby’s out, such reluctance is hased on United Mine Workers contract Gaming Equipment life. He had already lost. |the fact that to answer one call, with operators. An effort on the part of Wil . "8 {a doctor would have to refuse to|- In Virginia, where Gov. Wil-|, am McMasters. receiver for the DESPITE the fact that the answer another or to leave alljam M. Tuck declared a state of ly VL Club to ain ssession of medical profession can answer Patient he is already treating lemergency and threatened to use| ambling on many complaints against it, ana{DoStors AGU he 310 a oO timate ployces 10 Tyme coal "Tovat a recent raid on the club by| despite the fact that doctors have = ke calls to strange homes be-| what it costs.” {Sheriff James F. Cunningham many valid complaints of thew, they are afraid they won't] There appeared to be no likeli-| Was rejected today in Criminal own, what is the Snswer to this get their fees. Doctors and their hood of the miners returning to | Court 2 by Special Judge Rufus true situation? ; non-professional associates beé- the pits under state operation, |Iuykendall. Does the blame lle with thei, "0 co men receive word-of- : In a previous ruling Judge doctor? If so, other doctors point| +) oibiicity out of proportion] Miners Amused Kuykendall held the sheriff was out, it still cannot be laid-at the, “0, "00 yer | Willlam Minton, president of in error when he raided the club door of all doctors, As for the fees charged, doc- the UMW’s District 28, first an-(and seized the equipment. Basis Or was the hospital respon-|, 0 0 0 they perform services nounced the Virginia miners|for the judge's ruling was the sible? Some critics of hospitals, . proportion. A plumber may/would return to work, but later|fact that the search warrant read charge openly that even had the| ,..c. around $6 for connecting he said the men seemed only!the LVL Club was located at child been accompanied by a doc-|, cag stove. A doctor will call on/amused at Gov. Tuck's directive. |2929 Bluff Rd., when, irl fact, Detor, the hospital might have de-\y}, same home at the same time| The Ford contract will run for!fense Attorney Sam Blum's argunied sdmission unless the doctoriys gy tor 35, a record-breaking 21; years after/ments showed the club located was on the staff. Even the sharp- ra it goes into effect Oct. 1. at 2927 Bluff Rd. est critics feel, however, that it{ pPOCTORS hasten to point out|’' Under its terms, the company! The raid was held illegal. would be an impossible situation that they do not intend to belittle will pay 8% cents per hour to- ‘Evidence’ Produced to permit persons to enter hos-\tne services of plumbers, me-|ward the pension plan which Will y..t before court convened this pitals on their own recommenda- chanics, electricians and others cost the firm about $20 million morning, a group of Pe tion. |whose services are necessary and during the first 10 months of from Marion County jail brought Many actual and potential pa-\ 4) aple, They simply contend|1950. Under the contract, workers ine evidence into court. a dice tients of doctors, admittedly|inat for some unexplainable rea- will receive from Ford that Part'saiie a roulette layout and sev.| watching with interest the de-| : | ' ’ r g son they are the victims of an of the $100 monthly pension that|...} chairs 5 velopment of the controversy ,;reasoning prejudice in many he does not receive under Social \ h over “socialized medicine.” are| l Mr. McMasters, through hs : cases which does not exist] Security. teounsel, Paul Rochford, contended frank to say they will not be sat-| const others who render im-| In addition, the firm will con- that it was his property as reisfied with medical care until,oreant service to families. [tinue its present health Insur-| ceiver for the club things like this cannot happen,” A, other common counter com-|ance plan and institute a $280) In rejecting the receiver's petinot ‘even vecasionslly ' plaint by doctors on expense mat-|per worker “package” medical yon Judge Kuykendall held that GENERALLY, - complaint ters is that they frequently are and hospital plan. since he had already ordered the > plain S[blamed fur the entire cost of a equipment returned to Lovell

| | |

against doctors fall into a few!n.ior fliness. Actually, they say, |. [Pratt, LVL Club manager, the recategories—fees are too high, notlhe hospital bill, nursing wit, [| p Wrecked ceiver had no claim rg court, enough doctors, individual doc-|gryg bills and others incident to| However, Mr. Pratt's victory tors too independent, office wait-lg,, nh emergencies or chronic ill- on was short lived. As he emerged ing times too long, inclination t0| nesses are for services other, from the club he was tagged by| curbstone diagnoses and treat- nan those performed by the doc-| Nn | p Sheriff Cunningham who read to| ment by telephone - to avoid|ior himself making house calls. "

him an order of judgment re| For example, some surgeons) nti From P quiring paying of $275.17 brought It is relatively simple to find charge $100 for an appendectomy. | (Contiivied From Page One) against Pratt by the General] someone who has a story of hiss major overhaul of the brakes| sheriff's deputies used tear gas Finance Loan Co. own or has heard a story of a, an" automobile can cost from to disperse club-wielding strikers, After the order was read Pratt doctor's refusal to answer a house gsi +, $80, other jobs even more. Who attempted to storm busses — —

call, either at night or in the day-| doctors feel, not un- and motor cars carrying non- 2 ond time. Fortunately, the conse-|... sonably . breadwinner will Strikers to work. £ Deserter, Missing

Quences are rarely so extreme as pay the garage bill without ar-| The strikers were stopped short Nearly 3 Years, Held

in th e the littl 18 lhe eas of the little girl WhO gument, feel injured by the doc- When deputies and plant guards A 26-year-old Army deserter, g sought since Dec. 19, 1946, was

as tor’s bill. | tossed the tear gas bombs. ere is another story, also ex-| The complaints and examples A strong wind drove the ga. under arrest by the Federal Bureau bf Investigation today, ac-

ceptional, but which illustrates! among the strikers and they scat-| " on both sides of the argument 4 é " the potentialities on the other side tered into fields, pursued by depu cording to Harvey G. Foster. special agent in charge of the Indi-

of the picture. go on and on. The misunder-| jes. At least 12 were taken into) |anapolis FBI office.

. 8 a standing remains mutual. | eustody ’ | \ AGAIN, fairly recently and still| TOMORROW: Public rela- The cavalcade of workers pro-| Raymond J. Hatz was arrested {ceeded slowly into the plant. No yesterday in his home in the 700

in Indiana, a doctor was sum-| yy lati moned by a young woman who, tions vs. doctor relations.) |one was hurt. ; block of N. Pershing Ave. He | At Jasper, Ala. meanwhile, 8 had been working for the last

said she was too ill to go to work { or come to the doctor's office. This Lodge fo Honor Mason mutual “cease fire” order restored pine days for a local firm under doctor answered the call, although Times State Service [an uneasy peace today at a non-/the name of Ray Johnson, Mr. the woman was a stranger to him.[, NEW CASTLE, Sept. 29—The union mine where a two-hour gun!Foster said, since his arrival from He found her alone, but not ‘as New Castle Masonic Lodge will battle raged yesterday, leaving South Dakota. sick as she had professed. He honor Loring O. Brookshire, re- one union member near death. |

complied with a request to tele- siding west of the city, on his 50, People’s Hospital reported that! phone her employer and tell him years as a Mason at- a special Hershell Davis, 51, of the United she could not report for work that ceremony here Saturday. The 50- Mine Workers Local, was in a day, using a phone number sup- year presentation will be made by “dying condition” today. A volley plied by her. After this, the wom- Dwight L. Smith, grand secretary of shots broke his jaw and struck an made a surprising recovery of the order. op {him in the chest and abdomen.

“IN INDIANAPOLIS

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thy E. Maish, 33, Ander t : 8 Ralph Miller, 29, 1801 | Stanfield; James, Grace Hamilton; Rob-

tiller, 20. 180 NS hay Ivana: Bose, ert, /Helen Zoliner. Richard, Margaret

- VIA + Eastridge; Charle Vv . " orris; Naomi ries. irginia Loflin etch. 30 S18 'N. Alabama. | Richard, Mary Vincent: William, . ElizaHarold F. Brooks. 24. 8 8 Bradiey: Esther| beth Doty; Roy, Margaret Gatewood J. Cunningham, 25, jas oefgen. | At St. Vineent's—Norman, Martha ThompJames Murell, 56. ae uglas; Sue Smith. | son; Wilbur, Elizabeth Shanks; Pierce, . remont. . e mith; Traffa, Thelma LaFave Welton” Hungerford Jr., 23. Manilla: Vir-| payl, Alf sinis Weddie, 23. 113] Tecumseh. ; Ce pawhorn: Prank, Betty Preeman F. Miller, 38,

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*STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION

Figuring prominently in theLVL Club case are, leftto right, Jake Green, court investigator; Spe- |per person. Many excluded all One customer who had four |that investigated the steel dispute’ cio Judge Kuykendall, Sheriff Cunningham and Sam Blum. :

hoy : ee : eee PAGE 2 Governor Meets State Chief Of UMW: 'No Comment’ = / « NO Comment ] (Continued From Page One) ing about six weeks. : “visited” 35 men who Both the industrial and retail were still on the job. After the users are worse off than in pre“visit,” the 35 men joined the vious strikes, spokesmen said. walkout. {This gummer was one of the worst “The state will protect people In recent years for coal «dealers, who want to work,” the governor With only about half the: normal sald. “Law and’ order will be Volume of warm-weather buying. preserved in Indiana.” | The cold snap brought orders Plans Another Parley (from people who had not stocked He added that another con. UP In the summer, plus a flurry of ference between state officials and Scare buying because of the naUMW representatives will be held tion-wide strike, soon in an effort to work out an| A random check of coal compa~ emergency coal stockpile for state nies produced these comments and public institutions, from Indianapolis dealers: State Labor Commissioner! “Our telephone is ringing its Thomas R. Hutson, who would head off. We've got about 100 probably head any such emer- back orders on file and we have gency measure, sat in on the the coal saved for these. But {conference this morning. we're being driven crazy by the Coal Picture Worsens people who are afraid we're going The governor's intervention !© run out before we get to them came as th¥ picture worsened in'a@nd the new orders who don't unIndianapolis and over the state derstand that most of the coal (both on a retail and industrial We have in the yard is already basis. ordered.” i The cold snap and the fear of a “All summer you couldn't knock prolonged coal strike sent many # man down and take an order Indianapolis residents to their/away from him,” said another. telephones to lay in a supply of “Now everyone wants coal at fuel. jonce. We're limiting what we've However, they found most deal- 80! two tons per customer, and ers limiting orders to two tons “hen that's gone that's all

{but regular customers. {tons of coal on order for a week Most dealers said their stock- got only a half-ton delivered to='

nantly denied any knowledge “I live at the LVL Club, 2927 weeks, even on the rationed basis. posing the ration limit on all delof the transaction with the loan Bluff Rd." he said. ‘ (company. The address. on the yt was later learned that the worry about fuel supplies, too.| Several other callers found that 5 judgment had been reduced Most factories have only a four some dealers who a few days ago

ring the last week or two to to six-weeks’ fuel supply. Utilities were giving two to today were ithe amount of $115, | py stving fuk :

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