Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1927 — Page 2

PAGE 2

would be escorted to the Washington Monument and there the President would pin on him the distinguished flying cross. “And after that,”' the President said, “Colonel Lindbergh and his mother will go out to our President Is Proud The President seemed most proud to have a guest so distinguished as Slim in his house. The title colonel did nto seem'precisely to fit Slim. He looked more dashing in the title captin. Slim’s path of glory is four miles; flags are draped and lined with throngs in numbers which never before have poured into Pennsylvania Ave. to see anew hero. On Sunday the preachers will talk about Slim in their pulpits. They see Slim as a great moral lesson for young and old. Slim, they say, exemplifies the beauty of character that is more needed in the world than success. Exemplar for Statesmen In this capital where success is the most honored of the gods, Slim is to be set up as the moral exemplar worthy of the emulation even of statesmen. Three weeks ago Slim flew away out of obscurity and today he returns to such fame as never has been seen save by a few men of older years and certainly never by any youth. The hotels are all filled, for from far and near people have come to look at the superb boy. They have gone to no small expense for a glimpse of Slim. CMUME GETS i FLOOO APPEAL 60 Men Place Needs Before President. Bit United Press WASHINGTON, June 11.—Sixty representatives of principal cities in the Mississippi flood area called on President Coolidge Friday to urge further immediate relief measures. The delegation was headed by Mayor William Hale Thompson of Chicago and included Mayor Paine, Memphis, Tenn.; John H. Walker, Illinois Federation of Labor president; Thomas J. Hill, New Orleans; M. W. Thompson, North Dakota; W. W. Cavanaugh, St. Louis; Thomas Van Lear, Minneapolis; William Wrigley, Chicago, and Governor Martineau, Arkansas, and Representative Stephen Porter, Pittsburgh. Resolutions were presented stating that control of Mississippi waters is a national problem and that the sole responsibility should be assumed by the National Government. The conference with the President lasted an hour. Afterward Thompson said President Coolidge had expressed sympathy with the purposes of the delegation and had said that as soon as the Army engineers completed their survey he would be glad to submit their report to the delegation for consideration.

VICE QUIZ CONTINUES Remy, Milner Confer on Gambling, Bootlegging. Ffosecutor William H. Remy and aids Friday delved further into alleged city gambling and bootlegging. Remy conferred with Superior Court Judge Joseph M. Mjlner. Cases against Abe and Isidore Silverman, alleged gamblers, came up in Milner’s court Wednesday. Mark Baruch asserted he had lost the “savings of a lifetime” in the Silverman place. He obtained $2,009 from Abe by court judgment and •settled with Isidore. Remy asked for the case’s transcript. Deputy Prosecutor John Royse. .who led a recent cleanup of aliened houses, conferred with the i t ; /? .3 MAFPY D’Autrsmonts Sing to Dslight Crowd at Jail. Bit United Per* STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, June 11. ,—Roy and Ray D - .Yu.cement, 25, bandit twins captured as the dimax of a man hunt that* lasted three and one-half year', may be taken to Oregon to testify in the trial of their younger brother, Hugh, before being tried for murder in connection with the Siskiyou tram rob'bery. This was indicated when United States Marshal W. B. Bartell, Columbus, instructed United States Deputy Commissioner C. J. Borkowski to temporarily hold the twins, pending arrival of the Department of Justice and postal bureau heads. • The twins continued in high •spirits, singing French songs to the delight of crowds who lined the alley way in rear of city prison. LINDY’S N. Y. WELCOME ARRANGED WITH RADIO Bn United Press NEW YORK, June 11.—Arrangements for broadcasting New York’s to Col. Charles Lindbergh Monday were announced Friday by the National Broadcasting Company. The parade and welcome is to begin at 11 a. m., Eastern daylight saving time, and to continue until 4 p. m. WEAF and WJZ of the National Broadcasting Company, and municipal station WNYC will share the broadcasting, together with an extensive hook-up through the East and Middle .West. The official welcome by Mayor Walker will be broadcast from the city hall steps, as will the ceremony of placing a wreath on a Madison Square Park monument and the official welcome of New York State, with Governor Smith presiding, in Central Park, *

Maxine Moore Scores in Times Girl Contest

Miss Maxine Moore, 601 Buchanan St.

Personality brought triumph to Miss Maxine Moore in the fourth of The Times-Puplix Theaters auditions held Thursday evening at the Circle Theater. From the winners of this week’s nightly tryouts Miss Indianapolis will be selected June 14 and given a nineteen weeks’ contract over the Publix circuit at $75 a week and railroad fares. “Young America,” the personality revue in which Miss Indianapolis will open at the Paramount Theater, New York, on July 9, comes to the new Indiana in September. At that time the girl representing this city will be starred. Miss Moore, 601 Buchanan St., St., was chosen by Mrs. Henry

Opening Markets

Itu United Press NEW YORK, June 11.—Price movements in the early dealings on the New York Stock Exchange today ,were very narrow, with gains predominating. Little attention was paid to the two-day holiday approaching, and only a moderate amount of profit-taking cropped out. Speculative sentiment was in a confused state as a result of yesterday’s irrcglar price movements and mixed character of news developments. Weekly mercantile reviews were cheerful, reporting marked improvement in the retail trade as an offset to seasonal contraction in some manufacturing lines. However, a bearish interpretation was placed on Secretary Mellon’s announcement that the privilege of exchange on Second Liberty 4*4s for the new issue of 3% per cent Treasury bcnrlr, might be extended beyond June 15. This Indication that the exchange was jiot meeting the expected response caused seme selling in early and pivotal stocks worked fractionally lower. Special issues continued •trong, however, with A *rerteen Can exceptionally active. rrl ’.e ’attar reach new high ground f nr the year at up . This , „?taT> J Pd to the operaNew York Stock Opening —June 11— _ 53J; ' ’. 45% h • "Vi l LOSO 222 3 - B. t’. O ii9"s o"' ret- 2". h P. (r. I ■ 87 % & ■Northwestern 82 car e er agi;, < e'-t Pi.-': Tire 15% I'reerjort 72 c. -carpi 12'ecirlc ’O'* 3 ! Cric—.l Motors 2'c'a Oocr’ ic'.i 54 Hudson liotor 83% TJ "iv) Motors 19ft Houston 182 M'Oh 113 Mar I ~nd 35% n. y. OentTi !..’!!.’!!.......7 ...150 n. y„ :j. h. & h 51 h Nash 65 Northern Pacific 87 :, 4 Pan-Amer Pete (Bi 57% Pennsylvania 64 Pure Oil 26 3 A Phillips Pete 43% Redio 50'4 Real Silk no 1; Rock Trk-nd 169% Sears-r.cckuck 57% Standard Oil, Cal 54% Standard Oil, N. J 37% Studebrlr-r 50 1Texas Oil 48'4 U. S. Rubber 41% U. S. Steel 122 >,i Wabash 77% Willys-Overland 18% Yellow True!: 27% - ———•—* New York Curb Opening —June 11— Bid. Ask. Cities Service 46% 46% Cont Oil 17% 18 Durant in 10% Ford (Canada) 430 450 Coodyear 43% 44 C Humble Oil 58% 58% Indiana Pipe 68% 69 ! Int Pete 30% 31 Imperial Oil (Canada) 44% 44% Marmon 53% 55 Ohio Oil 57%- 58 , Prairie Pipe 168% 170 Prairie Oil and Gas 48% 48% Reo 22% 22 >4 Stutz 13 13% Standard Oil (Indiana) 67% 67% Standard Oil (Kansas 1 16 16% Standard Oil (Kentucky) 112% 113 Vacuum Oil 126% 127% Local Livestock Opening Hogs—Receipts, 3,500; market, 15 @2sc higher; top, $9.40; bulk, $8.75 @9.35. Cattle—Receipts, 100; market not established. Calves—Receipts, 300; market, steady; best vealers, $13.50. Sheep and lambs— Receipts, 500; market, little done; looks steady. Chicago Grain Opening Hi/ United Press CHICAGO, June 11.—Wheat— July, up 14 c; September, up %c. Corn—July, up %c; September, off tic. Oats—July and September, unchanged. > ... Provisions steady.

Schurrffann, president Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts, and Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks, All Souls Unitarian Church pastor, who acted as judges. The final choice lay between Miss Moore and Miss Alice Arnold, 2243 Knowland St. Randolph L. Coats, Indiana artist, a judge, was unable to be present. Miss Becky Speed, 124 W. Twen-ty-First St., dancer, and Miss Frieda Holliday, pianist, also were on the program. Contestants for Saturday follow: Saturday Miss Gertrude Clark, 1914 N. Harding St., harpist; Miss B. L. Moreland, 522 E. Raymond St., and Miss Betty Insley, vocalists. Miss Myrtle Jenkins, 1722 Olive St., dancer, and Miss Stein, Vhistler.

WHEAT OPENS HIGHER Start at Chicago % to % above Friday’s Close. Bn United Press CHICAGO, June 11.—Unnatural and erratic price changes in all grains is expected to continue as a result of restricted speculation, because of possible unfavorable legislation at Springfield, but consumers the world over seem ready to take advantage of price declines to make purchases. Opening quotations were Vs to ',4 c higher than yesterday's close. Corn prices are down 13% to 14% cents from the season's high, and while continued fine weather and more favorable reports as to planting would indicate lower prices, there is a belief among those who have been bullish that the liquidation that has been on all week has put the market in better shape and they think a rally is due. Prices opened %c higher to Vic lower than the previous close. Oats continue to lag. Opening prices were unchanged from Friday's close. Provisions opened steady. Chicago Livestock Opening Hogs—Receipts, 5,000; market, steady; holdovers, 10,000. CattleReceipts, 400. Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 4,000. FOREMEN TO PICNIC Club to Hold Dinner at Pumping Station. Plans for a family picnic in July are being formulated by the Foremen’s Club of Indianapolis. A sports program is being arranged by a committee headed by L. J. Hoffman. Final plans have been made for the fire prevention dinner to be held June 24, at the Indianapolis Water Company, Riverside pumping station. Among the fire prevention speakers will be Richard E. Vernor of Chicago, editor of “The Fire Plug;” Frank C. Jordon, fire prevention committeeman, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce; Jesse Hutsell, Indianapolis fire chief; Horace W. Carey, Indianapolis fire inspection bureau chief; William J. Curran, superintendant, Indianapolis salMAZER SENT TO PRISON Bn United Press CANTON, Ohio, June 11.—Louis Mazer, underwold leader, whose confession implicated members of the Canton police department in the conspiracy that resulted in the murder of Don Mellett, editor, Friday was sentenced to five to twenty years in the Ohio penitentiary. Mazer in his statement before the grand jury admitted that he aided in carrying out the murder plot and gave information which led to the conviction of Floyd Streitenberger, former detective, and to indictments against Seranus Lengel, deposed chief of police. Because of his confession, Mazer received leniency at the hands of the court.

Hoosier ‘Lindy’ Bu United Press PRINCETON. Ind., June 11. —Among the million or so telegrams which have been sent to Charles Lindbergh is one informing him that he has a tiny namesake here. Charles Lindbergh Satkamp is the youngstor. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Satkamp.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MANAGER PLAN MEETS MODERN CITY PROBLEMS Old Federal Form Designed for Other Days, Says Speaker. The city manager form of government, advocated here, is designed to meet the modern complex problems of city administration, declared Winfield Miller before the Indianapolis Board of Trade annual meeting Thursday night. Miller pointed out that the old Federal for mwas designed when 90 per cent of the population lived in J rural districts and city problems were less complex. The vast amount of money needed for the growing demands of the city should be expended according to the best business methods and not be made the prize of factional and partisan politics,” said Miller. Samuel • Ashby, former corporation counsel, spoke against the manager form to be voted on June 21. “An important provision of the manager form is the protection it throws around city employes. The spirit of the law is to preserve continuity of service in order that the greatest possible efficiency might result,’’ said John F. White, Federation of Civic Clubs president, before the E. Sixteenth St. Civic Club, Thursday night. Claude H. Anderson, executive manager, announced the manager headquarters, 520 Illinois Bldg., would be open every night until the I election. A pamphlet containing a digest of the manager law and citing the success of the plan in other cities has been prepared by Blythe Q. Hendricks, speakers’ bureau director and Miss Margaret Inman. WHISKY DRIVE HINTED 25 Physicians, Laymen at League Session. A campaign to arouse Indiana opinion to favor modification of the State prohibition law may result from a meeting of laymen and physicians at the Athenaeum, Thursday night, called by Harry M. Franklin, Indiana Liberty League | director. • Franklin today declined to comj ment. Twenty ; five persons ati tended the meeting, j Among speakers were the Rev. ! Joseph F. Weber, rector of the ! Church of the Assumption; Carl H. j Mote, attorney; Dr. Thomas Noble, ' Dr. A. E. Sterne, Frank M. Fauvre . and E. H. Bingham. I Dr. Sterne denounced present ! methods of bringing about modifi- | cation to permit medicinal whisky ! prescriptions. He said the Indian- ; apolis Medical Association should be consulted. Dr. Noble favored starting the fight in the home-town of each | candidate.

The City in Brief

SATURDAY EVENTS Butler University, class dav. National Women's Relief Corp. dedication of monument to Capt. Wallace Foster, Crown Hill Cemetery. 3 p. m. Junior Order of American Mechanics outline. Broad Ripple Park, all day. McGuSeyltes picnic. Garfield Park, all dav. Beta Theta Pi luncheon. Board of Trade. Siama Alpha Epsilon luncheon. Chamber of Commerce. Industrial Salesmen's Club luncheon. Severin. Insley Manufacturing Cos., picnic. Walnut Gardens. Views of 100 business men have been asked on establishment' of an industrial foundation for Indianapolis by the industrial committee of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, Walter T. White, chairman, announced. Thomas Taggart approved the foundation proposal and sent SIOO to aid in expenses of establishing one here. A fund to honor the memory of Martha Howes, for twenty-five years an Indianapolis public school teacher, to be used to aid needy school children, is being raised. Total of $116.17 has been received, according to Miss Mildred Weld, School 8 principal. Trustees are Miss Weld, Mrs. Lucy Metcalf and Misses Elizabeth Downey and Florence Hamill. Theodore Scdam, 2429 X: Alabama St., Eagle Scout, today was named Boy Scout Camp mess hall director, by Scout Executive F. O. Belzer. He will direct camp dramatics and pageantry also. Camp will open Monday for about 200 boys. Discussion of plans for the projected William Jennings Bryan memorial will result from the visit to Indianapolis Tuesday of former Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels, Raleigh, N. C., and Patrick Callihan, Louisville, Ky. Both will speak at the Rotary club. A campaign to recruit members of the United States naval reserve in Indiana was begun today by officers of the Indiana division. The drive, to continue two weeks, is in the charge of Lieut. Paul Akin. The auto of Merle Satre, 1124 Broadway, was wrecked and Mrs. Nellie Weir, 1009 Hervey St., and Charles H. Reading, 517 N. Delaware St., passengers, were bruised and cut when the machine turned over after colliding with an auto driven by Otto Froelick, 2134 Singleton St., Thursday night at New and Raymond Sts. s The Old Gold Serenaders Orchestra, members of which are DePauw University students, will begin a summer musical program at the Columbia Club Sunday. It will play daily in the main dining room from 6 to 8:30 p. m. and will play for dancing from 10 p. m. to midnight Wednesday and Saturday evenings, _

HUNT BURGLARY PAIR Police Report Men Loot House; Family Absent. Police today were investigating a reported Thursday night burglary at the home of John Kincaid, 638 N. Oxford St. R. F. Pruitt, 637 N- Oxford St., reported he saw two men enter the house by the front door and later leave by a window, carrying a box. The Kincaid family was not at home, it is understood. Pruitt said he followed but lost the men. Carl Neisse, 5187 Pleasant Run Blvd., told police a prowler attempted to force entrance to his home Thursday night, but was frightened away. Police have a description of him.

Science Opinions Clash Over Medicinal Liquor Noted Doctor Believes Alcohol’s Value in Acute Infections Is Largely Psychological. Indiana's medicinal liquor controversy has aroused the country. Extreme drvs say alcohol has no medicinal value. What do the best medical authorities say. after scientific study? Dr. Flshbein will reveal the impartial opinion of the greatest medical scientists in four articles for The Times, the first of which is given here. BY DR. MORRIS FISIIBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygela. Health Magazine The great difficulty in arriving at any estimate of the actual value of alcohol in the practice of medicine is the fact that scientific opinions seem to be conditioned invariably by sociologic, economic or persona! sidelights. In 1925, Dr. Roger I. Lee attempted to evacuate alcohol from strictly pharmacologic and therapeutic points of view. In other \vc he was concerned wholly with the effects of alcohol on the various p of the body and its use in the treatment of disease. Before the advent of modern scientific pharmacology, alcohol wa much used in the treatment of acute infectious diseases. Many practitioners of long experience insisted that the moderate use of alcohol was valuable in the treatment of acute infections. It was not claimed that the alcohol had direct specific action on the germs that cause these diseases. It had been observed, however, that in the presence of an acute infection large amounts of alcohol might be taken without producing the alcoholic intoxication that ensues under ordinary conditions.

Alcohol may be used as a food. Although it has long been considered a stimulant %y the public, the clinical laboratory and experimental observations, according to Dr. Lee, fail to disclose its value as measured by any precise test or by any method capable of expressing actual measurement. Lee Convinced Dr. Lee is convinced that the single beneficial effect of alcohol in acute infections is psychologic, rather than a general effect on the body. It creates a state of artificial euphoria. By this is meant a state of well being which brings about in the patient a satisfaction with life and a desire to live that he might otherwise nto have. “I believe,” said Dr. Lee, “that STEVE TOLD OF MUGHAT QUIZ Further Steps After Transcript, Eichorn Says. “D. C. Stephenson talked freely and offered considerable information to the board of charities.” former Judge W. H. Eichhorn, Bluffj ton, board member, asserted Friday ■at the Statehouse. Eichhorn was conferring with Secretary John A. Brown regarding the investigation. Both declared that no further steps would be taken until a transcript of all prison testimony is prepared. Eichhorn conferred regarding charges that Stephenson, former Klan dragon, serving a life term for murder, has been mistreated. Eichnorn preferred the inquiry should be refei red to as private, not secret. The privacy aided, he said. “Stephenson was assured that no prison official would have any knowledge of his testimony and that is why he talked,” he said. In addition to Stephenson, John Moorman, prison trustee, and Warden Walter H. Daly testified, he said. Whether the board would take further testimony was not stated. Report is to be ready for Governor Jackson and prison trustees “not later than July 1,” Morris M. Feuerlicht, board member, declared. The trustees meet as a pardon board at that time. MRS. SIES INSTALLED New Teacher College Head Takes Office. Mrs. Alice Corbin Sies was installed as president of the Teachers’ College of Indianapolis, succeeding the late Dr. Eliza Blaker, at commencement exercises in Cadle Tabernacle Friday. Mrs. Evans Woollen, board of trustees president, was in charge of the installation. Mrs. Sies formerly was director of curriculum Woodlawn (Pa.) public schools. She presented diplomas to 299 graduates. “Culture and the Race” was the subject of the address by Dr. George H. Tapy. Wabash College. The alumni association held A luncheon at the Indianapolis Athlete Club.

Our Summer Saturday Schedule Beginning Saturday, June 25th, and continuing during the summer, our office hours on Saturdays will be from 8 A. M. to IP.M.; on the other week days it will continue, as at present, to be from 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. 4% PAIR ON SAVINGS DEPOSITS The INDIANA TRUST SI surplus $2,000,000.00

Thrilling Air Escapes Credited to Lindbergh

Br MORRIS DE HAVEN TRACY (United Press Staff Correspondent) (Copyright. 1927. NEA Service, Inc.) CHAPTER X During the winter of 1925-26, Charles A. Lindbergh, flying night after night through rain, snow, and sleet, twice saved his life by dropping in parachutes from his disabled planes, making descents which stand among the most remarkable adventures in aviation. On one occasion his plane circled five times close to his parachute, once coming within 300 yards of it, threatening each time to collide as it paralleled his descent.

alcohol properly administered in selected cases in which a mild artificial euphoria is desirable is a valuable therapeutic procedure in making the patient more comfortable.” Dr. Lee pictured the lderly patient convalescent from some mild 1 respiratory infection, depressed and miserable in mind and body, without appetite, with a sense of prostration and weakness. “In such cases,” he says, “the use of alcohol in some agreeable form eases the miseries of the patient's body and encourages him to take nourishment and helps in the establishment of his recovery. When Prescribed He points out that there are occasional cases in the early stages of pulmonary tuberculosis when the fever, the distress of the body and the consciousness of the disease make life appear drab, and that the judicious administering of alcohol in small amounts seems to alter the outlook on life and to make endurable the rigors of the necessary treatment. The patient with chronic heart disease, the person who is passing I into senility with its inevitable dis- [ comforts is also benefited by small | doses of alcohol, since it apparently enables him to eat more and to sleep better, as well as to give him ; freedom from body miseries. In his conclusion Dr. Lee says I that the benefit of alcohol is probably never directly life saving, that i it should not be employed as a rou- : tine treatment and should be used I only in individual cases in which ; the indications for its use are.clear. Next Alcohol Asa Drug. HALF A GAR ONWARD Boys Asleep After Trip From New Mexico. The $45 Ford in which Thomas J. Dugan Jr., 17. and Roger J. Dugan, 15, sons of Dr. Thomas J. Dugan, 2540 W. Washington St., started home from New Mexico Military Institute, Roswell, N. M., Wednesday, lasted to this side of St. Louis. They rolled home aMS a. m. Friday in a second car, for which they paid their first flivver and $5. The transmission dropped out of Car No. 1. En route they picked up Jack Smyer, 18, on his way from a California school to Pittsburgh. The three dropped into slumber after a huge breakfast, one of them sleeping in Car. No. 2. CITY MARKET IRREGULAR Prices Higher and Lower at End of Week. Price changes at the city market have been irregular during the last week. , . Home-grown cherries dropped to 25 cents a quart and peas to 20 cents a pound. At the same time potatoes advanced. Old potatoes sold three pounds for 25 cents, new ones at 10 cents a pound. Head lettuce ranged from 20 to 30 cents a head.

On another occasion he came down first through snow and then through rain, to alight across a barbed wire fence while the wind pulled away at his parachute threatening injury. But Lindbergh was not as much as scratched. That winter probably stands next to the Spring of 1927 when Lindbergh flew to Paris, as the most thrilling of his life. It was on the night of September 16, 1925, that Lindbergh took off from Lambert Field, St. Louis, with the night mail for Chicago. Twenty miles beyond Peoria, 111., he encountered darkness and a blanket of fog began to cover the ground. By the time Marseilles, 111., was passed this fog blanket from an altitude of 600 feet entirely obscured the earth. He attempted to fly under it, but could not. and a flare which he dropped hoping to determine a safe landing place by its light, failed to work. He proceeded on to the Maywood flying field, the air-mail station for Chicago, but the fog was so thick he could not locate it. He then set out to pick up, if he could, the beacons of the Transcontinental air route but this also was impossible. Fuel Ran Low • At last his fuel ran low. He had enough left for seven minutes flying. There was nothing left for him to do but to abandon the plane in -rachute—although he could the ground. 90 feet the engine sputtered 1.” Lindbergh wrote in his report of what was to him ~.y an incident in the life of a flier. “I stepped up on the cowling and out over the right side of the cockpit. pulling the rip cord after about a 100-foot fall. I was falling head downward when the risers jerked me into an upright position and the chute opened. This time I saved the rip cord. “I pulled the flashlight from my belt and was playing it down toward the top of the fog when I heard the plane’s engine pick up. When I jumped it had practically stopped dead and I had neglected to cut the switches. Apparently when the ship nosed down an additional supply of gasoline drained to the carburetor. Soon she came into sight about a quarter of a mile away headed in the general direction of my parachute. "I put the flashlight in a pocket of my flying suit preparatory to slipping the parachute out of the way, if necessary. The plane was making a left spiral of about a mile diameter and passed approximately 300 yards away from my ’chute, leaving me on the outside of the circle. “I was undecided as to whether the plane or I was descending the more rapidly and glided my chute away from the spiral path of the ship as rapidly as I could. Out of Sight “The ship passed completely out of sight, but reappeared again in a few seconds, its rate of descent being about the same as that of the parachute. “I counted five spirals, each one a little further away than the first, before reaching the top of the fog bank. When I settled into the fog I knew that the ground was within 1,000 feet, and reached for the flashlight, but found it missing. I could see neither earth nor stars and had no idea what kind of territory was below. I crossed my legs to keep from straddling a branch or wire guarded my face with my hands and waited.” “Presently I saw the outline of the ground and a moment later was down in a cornfield.” Lindbergh was unhurt. He found the wreckage of his plane two miles away. Lindbergh’s next and his last down from a plane by parachute was on the night of November 3, 1925. Near Peoria, 111., he encountered snow and although he descended to an altitude of only 200 feet could not see the ground. He cltcled and explored, looking for a spot where the weather might be favorable for a landing, for more than an hour. But shortage of fuel forced a crisis.

ifDenverX JsSf * INTERNATIONAL \ JKf AD CLUB CONVENTION \ JUNE 26-29 \ uff Noted advertising men from this country and • 111 Europe will gather In Denver for this conven- 1 Ajf tion —an event of utmost Interest to advertising 1 raf men and advertising buyers the country over. K* Bring the wife and youngsters—Denver assures 0 W you all a royal good time. C See the Colorado Rockies THIS Summer! 1 Colorado—America’s summer play- j . I ground offers you the world's . I most magnificent mountain scenery. / 4 Within short driving distance of * Denver, nestling In the f very shadow of the Rockies. / are y> be found settles of A \' HI I entrancing beauty—snow- Ik clad peaks and misty can- AT \ yons, ice cold trout streams m, I.U IV JWI \, and crystal-clear mountain . A, T \\ lakes. Indian villages. P fljgU tajjVA " > Estes and Rocky Mountain HBSfffl W .77 ureari: J National Parks, the Garden J? B vj of the Gods are reached ■■g rtl ' l Yftvg£a.. over good roads. Climb an -—-If// ley glacier or bask In the clear sunshine —you’ll enJoy COLORADO! 1 For complete. Information on Colo- \ V V '\. 1 rndo’s roads, resorts, hotels or rail- \ roads, write The News Tonr Clalj, H* \ 730 Sixteenth St., Denver. All ser- *. V \ vice free. i Q \ When In Denver Aek for— / . \ C&eMEWS / \ Morning Evening Sunday / AKE \ Scripps-Howard Newspapers / nil I ■■III t DENVER

JUNE 11, 1927

STUDENTS AT 1 M. T. H. S. GET I STUDYPRIZESi Scholarship Awards Made by Principal McComb at Honor Day Program. Scholarship awards were made to Manual Training High School students by Principal E. H. Kemper McComb at Honor Day exercises Friday. Six students were honored for having the highest possible grades average for the past semester. 97.5. They are Marie Miller, Frances Dearborn. Virginia Harris, Paula Meinzen, Mary Stierwalt and Earl Burger. The following others were placed on the “Top Ten” honor roll for high grades for the semester: Red House—Alden Wtlklnc. Robert Brrnd Richard Bauer. Robert Greenberg. Forrest Beeson. William Covert. Rollls Taylor, Rudolph Klinße. Alfred Hollander, Max Spear, Alfred Chandler, Fred Knehrn, Albert Urwltz, Charles jlerzle, Constantin Borshoff. Velma Brazelton. Elizabeth Mocker. Evelyn Head. Ethel Blum, Lillian Orossman. Crystal Gouge. Rose Zeronlk. Sarah Gross, Dorothy Coverdll, Loretta Lausman, Molly Levinsky. Elizabeth Wegner. lona Johnsei Rose Mendelson. White House—Frank Danecki. Herbert Higgins. Sidney Donaldson. Delbert Meyer. William Winter. Edwin Boswell, Wilbur Harris. Philip Wit, Don Schortemeier, Cha-les Stallwood, Thomas Resmussen, Charles Musser. Saul Fogle. Abe Brodsky, Virginia Lawhorn. Joan Boswell, Nornia Amt, Ruth Dawson, Mnrguerit- Emery, Mildred Heed. Lora Meyer. Edna Kirch, Bonieta Klot.zche. Leonore Rundterg, Dorothy Bluemei. Paul Lohss Gets Medal Paul Lohss was awarded ths medal of the June class of 1920 foH having the highest scholastic average in this year’s January graduating class and Mildred Hill for the highest average in the June class. Joan Boswell and Mary Stierwalt were awarded the medals given by the Masoma Club, honorary girl’s organization, to the two freshmen girls having the best grade record. Leroy Allen received an award for having read the most books and Theresa Reed a medal for the best essay on Lincoln. Ribbons for winning the Latin quotation contest were given Helma Kahn and Claska Wit. Book awards in the Vandaworkcr Short Story contest went to William Martin. Paul Lohss and Myrtle Gummel. The Rolnes Club, honorary men’s senior organization, gave medals to the best student-athletes in each of the four classes Jack Turner, senior; Fred Henselmeyer, junior; Alex Burris, sophomore; Robert Coomler, freshman. The John H. Holliday Foundation cash awards were Art—Louisa Bachman, Cleta Marsh. Herbert Higgins. Commercial—Elizabeth Minton. Louis* Schnepf. Louise Carter. Honorary mention—Dora Hastings, Mary Hummel. Clothing—Mary Scale, Leah Sanders. English—Wilma Yats. Food Study, Home Nursing—Ruth Lir.demann. History—Thelma Mac Clark. Dorothy Coverdill. Raymond Brenneman. Lonftu*ce—Robert Greenberg. Josephine Carter, Maurice Heckman, Clara Fasmar.. Mathematics George Fink, Mildred Hill. Herbert Higgins. Doras Paul. Music—Sarah Barlach, Bertha Hertz, Bernice Noerr, Maurlnc Heckman. Ida Levy. Frances Dearborn. Physical Training—Arnet V/heatlev,, Naomi Cornell. Honorable mention J Harold Wllhott. Homer McKee. Johri Wood. Annie Barnes, Dorothy Addington” Maryl Steinmetz. Science— Earl Burger, Fay Kenoyer. Paul Lohss. Shop and Mechanical Drawing—Alvin Aue. Raymond O’Neil. Following military awards wer given: Service Club Gold Medal—Paul Lohss, Service Club Badges—Armon Rles, John StUz. Raymond Bailey, Robert Carlsen, Robert Greenberg, Charles Henzte. Leo , Elliott, Edward Haynes. Charles Ayres, ! James McDaniel. Lossbrenner Medals—Alfred Orantvsmann, Edward Simmons. Sergeant A. Shull and Whitlow Medals— Arthur Braun, George Fink. Elmer Foster. Military Training Certificates Paui Lohss, Alfred Grannemann. Wllford Masehmeyer, Earnest Eaton, Elmer Foster, William Franzreb, Charles Burke. Lewis Moore, Blanchard Smith. Raymond DeJullo. George Tllford, Edvenoll Henderson, Emmett Sponsel. Bruce F. Robinson Post, American Legion Medals—Edna Kirch, Forrest Beeson. BOOK SALESMAN FINED 11 n United Press BOSTON, June 11.—Convicted of selling an obscene book, Upton Sinclair's new novel “Oil,” John Gritz, Boston booksellers’ clerk, was fined SIOO by Municipal Judge William Sullivan Friday. Gritz appealed and the case wtl entered for trial in Superior Court, July 5.