Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1951 — Page 5

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WEDNESDAY, OCT. 31, 1951

State Medics Pick Evansville A

Schricker Says [Marion Weds Sea Captain

Continued From Page.One |beén married. Capt. Brown said)! he had been divorced in Los An.

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Dr. P.D. Crimm Will Head '52 Convention

Another Story, Photo, Page 20 .

The Indiana State Medical Association today chose Dr. Paul D. Crimm, Evansville tuberculosis specialist, as president-elect for the 1952 state convention. Observers at the voting session in the Athenaeum said the House of Delegates also was set to. confirm James A. Waggener, ISMA field secretary, as new executive secretary, after three months of internal and external politicking.

2

i

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

iii e PAGE 5

a

an As Chief

Welfare Bill Not Worth Veto

Continued From Page One J

|attendants to work a seven-day

week, The teacher retirement change, he explained, would involve about! $300,000 a year. But he announced he would appoint a com-| mittee next year to make a thorough study of the many re-

Dr. Paul Crimm

gress into passing a national com-

Mr. Waggener will succeed Ray|pylsory health insurance law.

Smith, who died Aug. 4. He sur-| vived a screening-committee examination of 35 candidates and beat out two Butler University officials in the final scramble for office.

Chest Surgeon

Dr. Crim has been director and chest surgeon at Boehne Tuberculosis Hosiptal in Evansville for He is a Fellow of the Medical 3

American Association,

|past president of the Vanderburgh

County Medical Society and chairman of the ISMA State TB Committee. . Married. father of two children, Dr. Crim received his AB degree from Ohio Wesleyan University! and his MD from Western Reserve University School of Medicine. He is a veteran of World War 1.

New officers for two of the six ISMA medical sections were chosen at meetings yesterday evening and announced today. The remaining four sections were to elect this afternoon. Dr. Clarence ‘Herzer, ‘Evans-

man of the General Practice Sec-

ition. Others were Dr. Bernard E.

Edwards, South Bend, vice chairman, and Dr. Norman R. Booaer,

| Indianapolis, secretary.

Name Franklin Doctor

For the Internal Medicine Section, Dr. William D. Province, Franklin, was elected chairman; Dr. Richard M. Nay, Indianapolis, vice chairman, and Dr. Paul

Stier; Ft. Wayne, secretary.

After more reading of scientific papers this afternoon, the threeday convention will close tonight with a banquet and dance at the

Indiana Roof. Dr. Alfred Ellison, retiring president, will officiate and be suncceeded by.

South Bend, Dr. J. William Wright, Indianapolis. 5 Existente of a “sytematic plan” to take step” was charged last night by Dr. Ellison: He accused unnamed government officials of building ‘“enourmous bureaucracies” of federal employees in an effort to bring socialism to the United States. Dr. Ellison focused his fire on a “tremendous effort” in Washington to ‘socialize medicine, the profession ‘first to be threatened with complete domination.”

Must Face Fact

“We must squarely face the fact that the socialization of medicine is merely a part of the plan

to socialize all of America,” he

said. Dr. Ellison said former Rep. Forrest A. Harness, of Indiana's Fifth District, while chairman of congressional subcommittee on publicity and propaganda. found government employees back of the campaign to pressure Con-

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“This campaign was planned

Record. Praises Physicians

The ISMA leader praised the physicians of America for resist-

itirement statutes and report to ford

the 1953 Legislature. ‘Solved by Congress’

|

In his statement on the wel-| fare bill, the Governor said:

“The problem (of the loss of

inside the government, on govern- go i , i ’ ment time, supported by the gov-| 00 ilo § year in Welfare ernment’s publicity and propagan-| E da machine and paid for by the taxpayer,” Dr. Ellison quoted Rep.| Harness from the Congressional

has been solved adequately and completely by the recent action of Congress.

“Since there was reason for calling the special session, there was no valid reason for further tampering with the welfare act.”

Describing possible future loss

his son arrived here by plane from Los Angeles at 4:50 a. m.

; 4 {hundred expected. Blocking 47th ‘Halloween Parties {8t. from Park Ave. to Broadway.

| : . | Sugar Grove Ave, —— Blocked To Cut Vandalism from 20th to 21st St. 500 to 1000 expected.

C , , y ontinued From Page One In Lawrence, a party given by

|geles. Sept. 15, 1947, on grounds| A ssociation—Eight thousand ex- the township fire department was

Indianapolis time, and the ceré-iof mental cruelty. Records there pected. Alleys between 37th and expected to draw 2000 parents

mony was performed a shorti, o.q hot Mrs Grace M. Brown, 38th Sts. then 48, former wife of Opera COMa Aves. to be closed to traf- expected at a party in Pike Town-

time later in one of the ranch| bungalows, after they had ob-|

tained a open-around-the-clock bureau.

Miss Davies flashed her famous y, ,ofysed to remain home from smile throughout the ceremony go,

and appeared excited.

|

Eager to Answer

When Squire Down asked her former marriage.

to repeat the wedding vow, “1

will love, honor, cherish and com-Miss Davies nor Capt. Brown vau” she started saying itwould talk to reporters or allow Club -— Six ‘before “the justice finished their pictures to be taken. They emerged from their cotWhen she used the word “obey” tage to go to the main hotel buildinstead of “comfort,” he corrected/ing for a wedding breakfast, but not use beat a hasty retreat Miss saw reporters assembled there to | greet them. h the pleted, everyone kissed the bride yatjeman and Mr. Stuart had pro-| but the Squire. Miss Davies kissed i504 champagne and when the thousarid

her new husband soundly and ...emonv was over Stuart pro- o no. other then threw her arms around his, .4 Ey os ; Pro-iclosed from 11th to 12th St.

even his instructions.

her because he does “obey” in his ceremonies. Davies smiled and complied. When the ‘ceremony was com-

son and kissed him, too. “I'm so proud of my wonderful family,” she said.

license at the city’s/Singer Lawrence Tibbett, sued

and Keystorie and Ta- and children. One thousand are

fic. ship School. ® : 7000 Expected — mem— |Capt. Brown for divorce because . . Northeast Indianapolis mer- ame f hi chants— Seven thousand expected. Tieup 0 S ips Brookside Ave. blocked from . Capt. Brown married her Apr. Beville Ave, to Valley Ave. Ta- Looms in West 112, 1946. His three sons are by a coma Ave. from 18th St. to ited Pri Brookside; 18t ural St. By United Press ; Tookside; J8th from Rural Si NFw YORE, Oct. 31-Pres. the ceremony, neither 10 Tacoma. . h Four and Seven Republican dent Truman prevented the East thousand expected. Coast waterfront strike from

Thirty-second St. to be blocked getting worse today. But on the from Ruckle St. to Park Ave. West Coast CIO Marine EngiTerrace Ave. to be closed from neers planned to stop work on Ruckle St. to Park Ave. -5000 nearly 100 ships in San Franexpected cisco. Forest Hills Association—Four Fears that the Atlantic Coast thousand expected. Forest Lane wildcat strike of rebel AFL steveand Guiltord Ave. blocked from dores would spread to include 58th to 59th St. AFL ships’ officers were dispelled Central Civic League Two before dawn when the members expected. Park Ave. of the Masters, Mates and Pilots (AFL) heeded a last-minute reGuilford Ave. between 20th and quest from President Truman to

when they

cottage earlier, Mr.

“Here is to a long life of love 21st Sts.—Two thousand expected. let federal mediators study issues and happiness!”

| Merchants Civic Club—S8ixt=#1/in their dispute with shipowners.

Gates Brown is in the merchant marine. His brothers are Kendall,|

ing the movement toward social- of federal funds as “remote,” the 19, who is in the Navy, and Rus-

ism,

“If the American Medical Association and the various state

medical associations did not the loss of federal funds during those exist,” he said, “we would have the remainder of my administra- Morning cere

socialized medicine today.” Dr. Ellison admitted that some

Governor declared:

“In the event an emergency should arise which would involve

tion, I will unhesitatingly call a special session to impose the ‘necessary taxes with which to

sell, 16, in school in North Hollywood, Cal. - In addition to young Brown, who atended the early mony were James B.| Stuart of the EI Rancho Vegas) staff, who acted as best man; Beldon Katleman, owner of El

charges against the medical pro--\,..¢ the state's increased obliga- Rancho, and Ken Frogley. Las

fession of excessive fees and unwillingness to make night and emergency calls were justified.

the state must be preserved. “While I am not in full agree-

tions. The financial integrity of Vegas

{ publicity director.

Chamber of Commerce;

Miss Davies wore dark green

“It is obvious that our obliga- ment with certain provisions (of Sun glasses, a tan camel hair coat,

tions to the public... require that we make a serious effort to clean our own house,” he asserted.

“The occasional member Who which would warrant ‘an execu-!|

brings ill repute to himself and to his associates by his unfortunate conduct should and must be brought before his county society for a review of his conduct,” Dr. Ellison stated. Speakers for the evening will be Sen. Karl E. Mi#dt (R. 8S. D.) and Dr. Louis H. Bauer, Hempstead, N. Y., president-elect of

the American Medical Association. the new federal tax bill, which: eontained the Jenner rider releas-| |

YOUR OWN COMMON SENSE guides you to The Indianapolis Times Classified Section when

gains in appliances, cars, furni-

ture or household needs. See the declared the crisis was over and |

Want-Ads NOW!

it), I am permitting -it to become law without my signature because it does nt present a situation ‘tive order.” “ { The Governor called the special session when Federal Security Administrator Oscar R. Ewing ruled Indiana was no longer jeligible for $20 million a year in welfare grants because the 1951 “anti-secrecy” amendment did not {conform with federal law. | This objection was erased by

ing funds to states which made their welfare rolls public.

| - This Congressional action came] you're in the market for bar- mid-way in the turbulent special |

session. Democrats immediately

‘the session should end.

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