Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1927 — Page 14
PAGE 14
SUMMER TIME IN LOCAL PARKS WELCOMED HERE Broad Ripple and Riverside Attract Big Picnic Crowds. Broad Ripple Park, which has undergone extensive alterations and improvements this season, is now in full swing. Visitors to the park would hardly recognize new Broad Ripple Park this season because of the improvements and changes that have been made. Tire midway which is now over one hundred feet in width, and which runs from the loading station and parking space to the big swimming pool, has an excellent array of new and interesting fun devices as well as concessions of every description. Chief among the new fun makers is “Bluebeard’s Palace,” a diuge fun house that brings forth screams of laughter from those who start a pilgrimage through its weird inner recesses. Other attractions that bid for popularity are Custer cars, The Whip, Kiddie Aeroplane, Merry-Go-Round, Rifle Range, Canal of Venice, the Skooter, Ferris Wheel, Miniature Railway, the Ski, the long coaster ride,'new dance hall where music is played for the dancers by Rex Cohee’s “Royal Rhymasts,” Electric Railway, Fortune Telling Camp, Kentucky Derby, Skee Ball Alleys, river trips by the S. S. Sunbeam, canoes, doll racks, anew skating rink, new case and others. One of the first big outings and celebrations of the season is that of the Junior Order of American Mechanics who hold their affair today. They will hold an initiation of new members in the big skating rink this evening as the climax of the all day celebration. NEW BOWLING GAME AT RIVERSIDE "Skee ball,” anew bowling game at Riverside park, is becoming popular and each afternoon and evening the alleys are crowded with players of both sexes, and during the last week most of the Butler College athletes have taken to the sport. Archie Chadd, basketball and baseball star, has become particularly adept at the new game and has been trimming all comers. The alleys used fdr ball are apparently regulation drives, except for a hump in the runway about ten feet from the far end. This causes the ball to fly into the air and land in one of a number of circular, tublike receptacles on the rear wall. These have different values, and an automatic coynter shows the score at all times, in fact, the game is entirely automatic, the nine balls for a game being released to the player when he drops a nickel in a slot. Skee hall is but one of a number of new features at Riverside this summer. No admission is charged to the park this year.
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Air Mail Pilot Battles B laze Above Clouds; Two Die When Planes Fall
rhis skeetch shows the desperate fight against fire made V Pilot Paul . Scott while high above the ground. Inset is Pilot Art Smith, who ed with his plane rather than desert it. At the right is a sketch $&&!£ -• the Catawba City Times and a chain safe? f////f////.L WSMmMQMmMjLi •V/ A S °MfSH “I-I be-beheve you, Diana." W/MA \\MUUWML /. a pulped Lola grudgingly after a long W//,% tv. and through the medium or the moment. She spoke the words With *l/M/i'e, 9 fill WUMmMjKMmmrty mes redoubles his scathing attacks on Hifß Pll n v “AnH mnw now T’ve Os ){■}■: fvwmWMfflU// llticlans of the Ring and the Under- dimCUlty. And ROW—rtf>W tve- Hnr/, V!/to j/||™WH| rid. . . I’ve got to—to make a call. I’ll see l/fr/// A t Later Brooks himself is kidnaped and , . „ II I five days released. When he re-ap- yOU at luncheon. J!f///////\ uy/A. '' tonne* manipulated ''ancT suspect” Diana Brooks was loling indoBrooks’*"’ closest 1 * frimfd r6 *s t ° D<?naid ! entl y in the capacious seat Os a j ''/VA\ iene, literary editor and guardian of large porch swing. The hot July I L, ,■ —i 1 — 1 ddy Farrell, reporter and Sob Sister, i, niir hf>i- ln7v and * fi'l /Tur io Is hopelessly in love with Don. He noon nour made ner lazy ana, f. ;jr lieves himself in love with Lola Man- drowsy- She had been loafing on € -a. Don and Diana go for a motorboat the shady porch since breakfast, / le and are marooned on an island larkinp pvpn the ambition to read er night. They are drawn dangerous- lacKln even lne amoiuon toward each other, but Diana re- “Oh, Joe!” She called to the old nri onri Tlrm thflt. ho \* in * 1
This skeetch shows the desperate fight against fire made \>y Pilot Paul P. Scott while high above the ground. Inset is Pilot Art Smith, who died with his plane rather than desert it. At the right is a sketch showing how a pilot leaves his plane.
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WHAT HAS HAPPENED: DIANA BROOKS, beautiful daughter of Roger Brooks, owner and publisher of the Catawba City Times and a chain of nine other newspapers, had been kidnaped and then released. Her father is engaged in a persistent fight against the corrupt administration of Catawba City, and through the medium of the Times tedoubles nis scathing attacks on politicians of the Ring and the Underworld. Later Brooks himself is kidnaped and in five days released. When he re-ap-pears he finds that his newspaper stock is being manipulated and suspects John W. Walden, who he prepares to fight. Brooks’ closest friend is Donald Keene, literary editor and guardian of Teddy Farrell, reporter and Sob Sister, who is hopelessly in love with Don. He believes himself in love with Lola Mantell, Diana's cousin. Don and Diajia go for a motorboat ride and are marooned on an island over night. They are drawn dangerously toward each other, but Diana reminds herself and Don that he is in love with Lola. Next morning they are taken back to Catawba City. Don tells Diana that he will marry her to save her from scandal. She tells him that she is not afraid of babbling tongues, since she and Don know that they are innocent. NOW READ ON. CHAPTER XXIX “We were caught in the storm,” she began steadily. “I’ll tell Pop all about it!” cut in Don. He Jooked squarely into the eyes of the older man as he described in detail what had happened on the lake and their subsequent isolation on Catawba island. He dwelt at some length on the fact that Diana had saved his life. “Well, I’m certainly glad that you’re both safe,” was Pop’s simple comment when Don had finished. Diana sprang forward with a glad cry. “I knew—didn’t I tell you, Don, that Dad trusted me!” she said tenderly. “And th’ silly,” she added 4.0 her father, “he thought he ought to marry me—because I was compromised”—grimacing at Don. “I’ll drive Don over to his place,” said Pop, disengaging himself from Diana’s embrace. He stepped over and threw an arm about the younger man’s shoulders- “ You can change your clothes,” he told him, “and then we’ll go down to th’ office together.” He turned to his daughter. “So long, Diana,” he said, his voice very tender. - “So long, Daddy,” she replied gently. There was a wealth of sweetness and gratitude in the dulcet tones. Lola had missed this little scene in the library. She was just descending the stairs when she met Diana on her way to her room. “Well!” There was everything that was damnable, condemnatory and discreditable in that one brief exclamation as she ran her gaze down the length of Diana’s figure. The grey eyes met the dark ones squarely, without so much as a suggestion of flinching. “Come up stairs while I change my dress and I’ll tell you what happened,” said Diana easily, ignoring completely her cousin’s implication. Lola sank down against a heap of cushions on the lounge and settled herself to listen. She lit a cigaret with studied unconcern. But in the course of the other’s story her limbs grew taut in spite of herself. When Diana reached that part of the narrative where Don and she realized they would have to remain on the island all night the listener’s eyes were blazing with suppressed rage, suspicion and jealousy. “Do you mean to tell me he didn’t even—even kiss you?” she demanded when the other had finished. Her voice was hoarse with fury. “I didn’t mean to—and I don't mean to tell you—anything of the sort,” replied Diana evenly. “For the very excellent reason,” she added with cold insolence, “that it’s none of your business!” The words were scarcely uttered when the warm-hearted Diana regretted them. If Don loved Lola and she loved Don then It was “her business” to know whether he had kissed another girl. “I take that back, Lola,” she said gently. “I didn’t mean to say it.” ! But her black-eyed cousin’s wrath was not to be cooled by a mer; apology, “And do you expect—the—that people will—will believe your unsupported story that—that nothing —er—happened?” she choked, half hysterical in her fury as she rose and crushed the butt of her cigaret in the ash trayDiana’s temper flared again. “I don’t care whether they do or not!” she retored shortly. “Dad doesn’t doubt me!” i She looked at her beautiful relative steadily for a moment and once more remorse assailed her. “And you mustn’t, either, Lola,” she continued, the quick tears wellI ing up in her eyes. “For don’t you | understand, dear?” she went on ' swiftly. “Don't you understand that Don loves you and that alone,
if nothing else, was sufficient to —well, to make matters absolutely safe?” “I—l be—believe you. Diana.” gulped Lola grudgingly after a long moment. She spoke the words with difficulty. “And now—ru>w I’ve— I’ve got to —to make a call. I’ll see you at luncheon.” Diana Brooks was loling indolently in the capacious seat of a large porch swing. The hot July noon hour made her lazy and drowsy- She had been loafing on the shady porch since breakfast, lacking even the ambition to read. “Oh, Joe!” she called to the old gardener, “you don't have to cut that grass now in this heat. Get into th’ shade somewhere and rest. It makes me still warmer to see you sweltering out there!" The old man ceased the noisy operation of his lawn mowing and mopped his sweat-dripping brow. “Whew!” he breathed explosively. “It is hot, ain’tt ti?” He clattered away and the girl resettled in the swing, enjoying the self-righteousness of having effected at least spme small kindness without much exertion. Her eyes turned aimlessly toward the honeysuckle vines that climbed a trellis alongside the porch. Their scent, mingled with the still hot air reached her once in awhile. But, for the most part there was not even th suggestion of a breeze. “Lunch’on ban rc’ddy, Mees Brokes” , It was Gretta with her atrocious pronunciation. She withdrew silently and Diana rose. She "wasn't hungry. But it wasn’t altogether the heat that caused her lack of appetite nor was it the cause of her listiessness. There was something wrong with the inner woman, she knew. Gretta had set a table in the breakfast room. It was shady in there and breezier than in the dining room. “Salad—sherbet and lemon. Golly! Just th’ kind of a luncheon in this heat —” Lola was enthusing over the food, the drinks, as Gretta moved in and out as daintily as a hippopotamus in a conservatory. “I don't seem to be able to work up any ambition about anything lately,” said Diana wearily. “It’s th’ heat,” declared Lola with fine originality, sfhacking her red lips over a heaping dessert spoonful of raspberry sherbet“No, I den’t think so. I'm not subject to it. That is, I can’t remember ever feeling quite as depressed as this.” “How would a nice cold highball go—with a stiff kick of Scotch in it?” suggested Lola with a view to tantalize. “Ugh! I don't think I’ll ever want another alcoholic drink as long as I live!” replied Diana, wiggling her shoulders in aiv imitation shiver. "Become a tee-tote-ler, Dia?” “O-oh, n-no, I wouldn’t go so far as to say that, exactly. But, y’ know, I came close to hitting th’ other extreme that night of t’ dance, y’ remember, an’ it didn’t pan out so well. A surfeit of sweet things an’ all that, y’ know.” “Oh, yes—about Walden—” Lola's eyes narrowed. “But you can t say you had any fault to find with th’ way Don treated you afterward, can you? He cert'nly was—er—wonderfully sweet and—so comforting, bigbrotherly!” - Lola drawled out the latter part of her speech ending up with a vicious twist of her lip. Diana flushed. “ ’Fess up, Dia- Was that a bigbrother kiss he slipped you when he left you at daybreak at th’ front door?” There*was a taunting sneer on Lola’s lovely face. t “How do—do you know about that?" asked Diana, startled. “Oh, just by pure chance, dearie. I couldn’t sleep and when I heard a car stop down th’ street I looked out. And I saw you two come up th’ walk and—then. . . . Oh, oh! But, tell me. Dia, was it just a friendly caress?” Diana rose from the table with an air of injured dignity she was far from feeling. But she had to declare herself. “Don’t be vulgar, Lola,” she said coldly. The other smiled a mirthless smile, bit her lip and then raised her shoulders in her test imitation of a Parsian shrug- The action spelled out a whole treatise on sophistication, all the snake ever told Eve and what Eve told her best friend. “I’m going to try an’ cool off in a drive,” she said rising. “I’ll take th’ runabout. See you at dinner.” (TO BE CONTINUED \ Is Diana's intuition of disaster justified? Read the next chapter.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Code of the Sky Like Seaman’s Creed; ‘Stick With Your Ship.’ This is the third of ten articles telling of the thrilling experiences and heroic performances of Charles Lindbergn's pals in the United States air mail service. BY RODNEY DUTCHER ,V£'A firrrlce 11 'rilcr WASHINGTON, June *lo.—The attachment of the airmail pilot for his plane and his mail passes all understanding. It is a feeling like the one that made Pilot Lindbergh speak of “us” whenever he talked of his lone flight across the Atlantic. “Us”— ! "my plane and I”—that is the way the airmail pilot always feels. In the nine years since the airmail was established pilots have quit their planes by parachute jumps only four times. At all costs, the airmail fliers fight to the end to save their planes and their mail pouches. Pilots Art Smith and Jack Milatzo died with their planes | when they could have jumped to safety. Lindbergh Jumped Twice Two of the parachute jumps on record are Lindbergh's. Pilots J. S. HU! and Charles E. Widmer are the others. Pilot Paul P. Scott exemplifies the mail pilot's attachment to his plane. The official Postofflce Department report of one of his experiences reads: “Pilot Scott was flying from Reno to Salt Lake City. While flying over ground fog the radiator of the ship exploded and the motor caught fire. Pilot used pressure fire ex- i tinguisher in the air. “Upon landing he climbed on the lower left wing with the hand extinguisher and fought the fire while removing the mail from the pit. “Pilot was exhausted and while resting before attempting to remove the mail further the gasoline tank exploded, throwing gas and fire in air directions. Heat, smoke and fire were so intense that he could not approach the mail bags.” A Heroic Flight The traditions of the airmail do not, however require that a pilot “go down with his ship.” So the pilots do not condemn one of their number who does use his parachute. Pilot Widmer, for example, was completely exonerated by official investigators after his plane crashed and killed Donald Rossiter, a passenger. near Los Angeles in Nover>. ber, 1926. “After leaving the field.” Widmer’s report reads, “we ascended to 3.800 feet and entered the storm clouds I intended to climb through. “Suddenly I became conscious of a draft on my left cheek, which of course meant that I was slipping or skidding to the left. Looking at the ‘bank and turn’ indicator, my instrument told me that my right wing was down and the ship was making a right turn. “My compass holding a true course showed me that this could not be, as did the draft on my left cheek. • • “I cut out my motor and tried to bring the ship to a norrfral glide, and failing even in this I immediately called out to Rossiter to ‘bail out/ He knew that meant jump, If he heard it. The ship was traveling at terrific speed and the noise of the wind was very loud. “I was alarmed lest we strike the Hollywood hills, which are 1,700 to 1.800 feet high. I motioned to Rossiter with my head that I was going over. “He evidently understood,'ter he turned around to the front of the ship and leaned toward the door—at which point I went out. When the parachute opened I could hear the noise of the ship as it descended and then as it crashed. In about fifteen or twenty seconds I was on the ground.” Died in Crash Rossiter had crashed to death. His body was found a short distance from the plane. The rip cord of his parachute had pot been pulled, iCopyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)
ANDREWS HITS SNAG IN WINES MADEAT HOME Fails in Effort to Wipe Out Main Supply Source, Right in U. S. Article four rs this series on Lincoln C. Andrews’ eflorts to enforce the dry law shows California wine growers send their’lawyers io Washington and you still can get plenty of wine. Andrews fails to convince Coolldge and Mellon that Government should buy up the medicinal liquor. BY RAY T. TUCKER With his enforcement organization completed, Brig. Gen. Lincoln C. Andrews paused to take stock before sending his new army into battle with the bootleggers. He took steps to furnish his soldiers with bright and shiny weapons in the form of regulations governing the flow of industrial alcohol, beer, wine, and medicinal whiskey into channels of consumption. He soon discovered an amazing situation. Rum Row and smuggling across the -Canadian and Mexican borders, it appeared, did not provide more than 10 per cent of the illicit liquor reaching jAmericans unconverted to the wisdom or holiness of the Volstead Act. The chief and best brand*, he learned, were made -in - America products. He found that under an ancient internal revenue act the Treasury still issued licenses for manufacture of 200 gallons of tax-free wine annually. Though this provision collided head-on with the Volstead act, legal experts had forgotten it for five years after the nation went dry. Thousands of Licenses Out. But many humble, artless folk knew of the loophole. There were 50,000 such licenses outstanding in California, and 150.000 more in other parts of the country. When General Andrews rescinded the order, there came a storm of protests from California, a state which grows good grapes and good Republicans. Foreign-born Americans. who had voted the. HardingCoolidge ticket in 1920, sent able counsel to argue against the Andrews order. The rescinding order was not revoked, but the complainants went away satisfied that the Government would not deprive them of their wine. The treasury took the position it would not be illegal as long as it did not know of the violation. So home manufacture was and is tolerated. And today one of the chief sources of good 15 per cent Burgundy or sherry are the familiar five-gallon kegs delivered to your door, express prepaid, by fruit companies that add the necessary alco-hol-producing ingredients to the innocent grape. To stem the flow of medicinal 666 it a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It kills the germs
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FREE HAIRCUTS LURE FOR ‘LOOK WELL’ WEEK Barbers Announce Poverty Is No Bar to Good Appearance. Bu United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 11.— Poverty is no excuse for ragged hair or a hirsute face. The National Barbers' Association, in convention here, issued an edict naming June 11 to 18 “Look Well Week,” and offering free treatment to any one with a statement signed by a minister, school or charity official testifying to his lack of funds. liquor into the hands of the bootleggers, General Andrews proposed that the Government purchase, store and supervise the handling of the remaining whisky stock. But President Coolidge and Mr. Mellon promptly stepped on the idea as fantastic and impossible. Such a step toward socialism, they seemed to feel, might provide a pernicious precedent. But now General Andrews is spending his last days In office persuading 90 distillers to form a few corporations to manufacture whiskey under government supervision. The plan is much less satisfactory than his original one, for there is no assurance that courts will uphold the voluntary agreements, should a lone wolf seek permission to set up a distillery of his own. Unfairness Is Revealed. For several reasons General Andrews also suggested that the dry laws should be amended to forbid manufacture of “fruit” beverages of more than one-half of one percent of alcoholic content. Under existing conditions the urban element is cut off from its “cereal” beverages, while country dwellers can make the finest brandies, wines and cider from the fruit of their orchards. But again the dry chief’s proposal was unheeded. It was in his campaign to check the diversion of industrial alcohol, however, that Andrews ran Into his deepest difficulties —and Pennsylvania politics. The Treasury Department’s backings and fillings here form one of the most amazing chapters of the history of prohibition administration. Next: Andrews Clashes With Blair and Mellon Proves a Solomon. All the Credit You Want At Cash Prices PENNSYLVANIA TIRES Consumers Tire Cos. SOI X. Delanare St.
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DEFENDS FARE CHARGE ON DUS Time Not Ripe for Slash in Cost, Says President. Replying to an allegation of Corporation Counsel Schuyler A. Haas, that Indianapolis bus fares are too high, A. Smith Bowman, Peoples Motor Coach Cos., president, said Saturday: “It is not yet time to undertake a reduction in fares, for the reason that bus operation still is in the experimental stage. “I am in close touch with our patrons and believe they are more interested in maintaining good service than they are in reduction of fares. “Any company, to continue good service, must prosper and I am very Sure our patrons are interested deeply in this phase of the matter. I want to aassure Mr. Haas and the public that when the bus business is stabilized thoroughly and the proper rate of fare ascertained that we will be ready to institute voluntary reduction.” EAGLES CLOSE CONFAB Lafayette to Get Next Indiana Meetings. Bn Times Special HAMMOND. Ind., June 11.—Indiana Eagles, closing their four-day convention here Friday night, selected Lafayette as the 1928 convention city. _ Dr. F. J. Mallett, New Albany, was chosen president, Irvin I. Fisher, South Bend, vice-president: Ernest Cole, Noblesville, secretary; Dan Gutgsell, Michigan City, treasurer; Henry Schroeder, Richmond, chaplain; William Stoehn, Connersville, conductor; Louis F. Miller, of Indianapolis, inside guard; Edward Simmons, Hammond, outer guard; Wesley Browning, Anderson, trustee.
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Brain Teaser Answers
Below are the answers to the Bible questions pritned on page 4: 1. The picture represents the Angel of the Lord delivering Peter from prison. (Acts xii:7). 2. Adonijah attempted to set hinfl self up as successor to King David. (1 Kings 1:24-5.) 3. Reuben, firstborn of Israel, was father of Hanocli, Palu. Hezron and Carmi. (Chronicles 5:3.) 4. The Book of Psalms follows the Book of Job. 5. Scholars reckon the date of creation as revealed in the Bible, at 4004 B. C. 6. Solomon is quoted throughout the Book of Proverbs. 7. A purple robe was put upon Christ after Pilate had scourged him. (John 19:2.) 8. Paul was born at (Acts 22:3). 9. Joseph was the son of Jacob. (Matthew 1:16.) 10. Moses smote the rock twice. (Numbers 22:11.) Lifting machines, constructed much like the modern elevator, with pulling ropes and winding drums, were used as early as 236 B. C. STOMACH OT§ET?SL Stomach and bowel disorders , cause sudden pains. You want \i relief quick! Take Chamber- Wa A 11 lain’s Colic Remedy diluted MU Tl with water and soon vou’ll jfifi feel fine. Ask your druggist for this reliable remedy today V For trial size, send 4c to Chamberlain Medicine Company. 703 Sixth Avenue, Des Moines, lowa. Chamberlain'S 4 U” GUARANTEED REMEDY FOR W 0 .COLICS DIARRHEA, [Vhe first aip iwstqmach ache! The help-y our self plan of a cafeteria enables the finest of foods at “odd penny prices” to be served at White’s Cafeteria “On the Circle
