Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 28, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1927 — Page 2

PAGE 2

countless harbor craft, all dressed In holiday attire of flags and pennants. Aboard the Macon. New York’s first welcome was made by a brilliant assembly of the city's representatives. Overhead a “sky writer” soared and circled, writing “Han Lindy” in letters a mile high across the sky. Bands played out on the water and on shore. Airplanes swooped and sailed above in numbers. Aboard the Macon, Lindbergh began his triumphant voyage up the harbor and to the shore, where massed on the lower end of Manhattan Island literally millions of people were on the sidewalks and in the windows of the skyscrapers. Business at Halt All business was at a standstill. Every one, the bankers, the lawyers, the financiers, the politicians, and those who do the harder work, were out to welcome Lindbergh. Just at the moment Lindbergh alighted in the Narrows, Mrs. Evangeline Lodge Lindbergh, his mother, with Mrs. James J. Walker, wife of the mayor of New York, were escorted to the pier where Lindbergh will land. There they stood, surrounded by members of the welcoming committee and with police holding back the crowds which pressed around, awaiting the arrival of the Macon, bearing Lindbergh. _ At airnost the same moment the great military parade, with bands, banners, troops, marines and sailors, started from the Battery to herald the coming of the flier. Thousands Jam Street At 12:31 p. m. the head of the military parade reached the -city hall, before Lindbergh and his escorting ships had reafched the Battery. Thousands of people were massed there, awaiting the coming of the parade and of Lindbergh. They broke into cheers. From the top of the New York Telephone Company’s new building on West St., a United Press correspondent, with a telephone, looked down upon the scene. From the city hall to the Battery it was a mass of people, the sidewalks not unlike a great garden, u*th the bright colored dresses of the women and the flashing straw hats of the men. This crowd milled anxiously, like a wind-tossed field. Over the harbor airplanes circled swooned while the hundreds of craft in the bay were brilliant with their many-colored pennants and flags. “Snowstorm” Rages Over all the lower end of Broadway was the web of ticker tape and streamers, glinting in tfye sun, with bits of paper tossed high in the breeze above the streets. It a snowstorm. / The streets were cleared of all traffic and along the sidewalk edge was a thin line of blue-coated poplicemen, one officer to each five feet, holding the •fcrowds in check. The progress up the bay of the Macom was slow. Lindbergh boarded the cutter at 12:30 p. n>., boats crowded around almost as far as the eye could see. Then went up the screech and bellow of a hundred whistles and there was bedlam. Boat Picks Way The Macom headed for shore, through a lane of ships, small and large, all waving and saluting. But the boats could not restrain their enthusiasm, or rather their masters couldn’t, and the lane was not always clear. The Macom had to weave and pick its way. In the meantime, Lindbergh’s mother and the welcomers at the Battery awaited patiently. Those around had a glimpse of Lindbergh poise. In the midst of it all, Mrs. Lindbergh found time to speculate on the danger of a policeman falling into the water. “He would sink, with all those Runs,” she commented. She insisted a chair be brought for Mrs. Walker when someone offered her a chair. Son Isn’t Remarkable She was asked about her boy. . “He isn’t remarkable,” she said smilingly, “he is just a healthy American lad, and he is purposeful.” As the Macom threaded its way tip the harbor, planes swooped down toward it. ranging from little, single-seaters, to a great, tri--jnotored monoplane, each paying respect to the man being hailed today as the greatest of the nation’s fliers. Two great amphibian planes circled around and around over the Battery awaiting Lindbergh’s coming. Six more wheeled into sight from the lower bay. Crowd Cheers Planes The crowds cheered each plane as it came in sight. It cheered the troops and applauded the bands. In between times it threw more

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“I never'expected to get so much for my money,” said Raymond Ortcig, the man whose $25,000 prize offer started all this Atlantic flying vogue" and which, as the whole world knows, was won by a young fellow named Charlie Lindbergh. Orteig. pictured here with his wife as they returned from Europe, is a wealthy hotel man. ticker tape, which strung in serpentine fashion through the air. The reception committee at the pier began to seem impatient—all but Mrs. Lindbergh. A special mailman came from the postoffice with a letter for her and she stood chatting with him, telling him about the mailman on her route out in Detroit. Maj. Gen. William -Haskell was at her side. City Is Riot of Color Fifth Ave. was a mass of flags, bunting and colorful shields, bidding welcome to the nation's favorite. Stand anywhere in the city, on Broadway, in “Hell’s Kitchen.” j on the East Side, or in the Bronx, | and there would be in sight flags and Lindbergh's pictures. Tony Balducchi of the East Side decorated his house, as did Yip Yee from Chinatown, and at the same moment flags were out from the homes of the Morgans, the Rockefellers and the Vanderbilts. Along Broadway and up Fifth Aves., storekeepers boarded up the ground floor windows for protection. But the windows of the uppe. floors were thrown wide open and people have paid as high as SSO for a chance to sit in them and see Lindbergh pass. Scats Sell High Grand stand '.seats were erected at the City Hall, at Madison Square, on Fifth Avenue at the entrance to the park, and at other places along the route.' Seats were gone before the stands were built, with an average of 25 applications for each available seat. Some have been sold for as high as SIOO. So anxious is New York to claim Lindbergh As its own that it has left him no time for rest and no time for food. From the moment of his arrival until late afternoon, probably 5 o’clock, after he has been loaded with decorations and cheered until the city is hoarse and Lindbergh’s ears are deafened, he will belong to the public. Rest at Last • Only then, with the program completed, will he have a moment to himself. From the Governor’s reception in the park, he Will go to the great estate of Clarence H. Mackay, president of the Postal Telegraph Company, on Long Island and there he and his mother will rest until tomorrow. But the tribute to Lindbergh does not rest in the formal ceremonies, it lies in the countless thousands and the millions who at daylight were working their way down through the subways to lower Manhattan. Mayor, Brayton to Hear Coolidgc Mayor Duvall and Landscape Architect A. W. Brayton and their wivps will motor to Hammond Tuesday to hear President Coolidge.

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DECREES GIVEN 238 STUDENTS AT BUTLER U, Tigert, U. S. Education Chief, Urges Greater Respect for Nation’s Laws. America, standing baffled by an ever-increasing wave crime, divorce, and disrespect for law and authority, needs for her salvation a spiritual and intellectual revival, John L. Tigert, United States Commissioner of Education, told Butler University graduates at commencement exercises on the university campus today. Graduate degrees were conferred on thirteen students and bachelor degrees on 225 bachelor of science and music degrees. America’s application of science to industry and commerce “has completely overrun our discovery and use of knowledge in the sphere of human relations,” Tigert said. Church Torn by Strife “The church and the whole religious structure is torn with dissension, awaiting anew interpretation,” he declared. Unless the large percentage of voters who do not exercise their right are quickened with a sense of civic duty, the Nation will deteriorate into an oligarchy, he warned. Tigert lauded the past contributions of Butler to State and Nation and appealed to the graduates to champion the interests of their alir* mater. The university band played while the graduates and faculty members, in cap and gown, paraded to their places. Diplomas Are Awarded Dr. Robert J. Alcy, university president, presented the diplomas” “Custom has decreed that before the last act of your college course, the conferring of degrees,” he said, “the president shall address to you a few remarks. It perhaps is true that these remarks will not in any way change your attitude or influence your lives. “Wc part company this day. your to go into your various lines of endeavor, and the faculty to remain at Butler to carry on the work of education. Please remember that the fullness and generosity of your service will reflect honor upon your alma mater and make it easier for her to meet the ever-increasing demands made upon hgr. “As college men and women, you are familiar with the common knowledge of the world; you know how to think things through; you! seek to know the facts on both sides of mooted questions; you keep an open mind; you believe in your country and are ready to perform your political duties; you,love your : neighbors and have, a broad charity; you believe in God and will try to perform your obligations to him; these things, of course, you will do. “Do all of them in the spirit of the second mile, and you will bring the millenium nearer.' The Rev. Thomas W. Crafton, re-; tired pastor of the Third Christian Church, delivered the ba laureate address to graduates in the university chapel Sundsy afternoon. John Mitchell. Greenfield, was elected alumni association president dt the annual meeting Saturday night. Miss Katherine Graydon was re-elected secretary and George Schumaker treasurer. Miss Helen Pascoe responded when this year’s class was welcomed into the association. MARCONI GIVES BRIDE RADIO SETS AND GEMS Wireless Inventor and Counter Wed in Rome. Bn I nilfi Press ROME, June 13.—Signor Guglielmo Marconi, famous inventor of wireless, was married Sunday to the 29-year-old countess, Maria BezziScali, daughter of Count Francesco Scali, scion of one of oldest houses of the Roman “black” aristocracy. The ceremony, which will be followed by a religious service, Wednesday, was performed in the Camidoglio, Rome’s city hall. Prince Spada Potenziani, governor of Rome, officiated in his capacity as first magistrate of the city. Marconi gave his bride a diamond studded tiara, two diamond bracelets, a diamond ring, a red enameled cigarette case and two radio sets for wedding gifts. One of the radio sets Is a portable, enclosed in an artistic leather handbag. DREW GAINS SLIGHTLY Veteran Actor Rallies After Severe Relapse. Bii United Press SAN FRANCISCO, June 13. John Drew, 73, veteran actor, who suffered a pronounced sinking spell yesterday, had rallied slightly today. Doctors were in constant attendance with renewed Impe for his recovery. V Drew has been seriously ill of arthritis and rheumatic fever for three weeks. j POLICE HEAD IS OUSTED Anderson Mayor Says Lack of Cooperation Is Basis. Bn Times Special ANDERSON, Ind„ June 13.—Because harmony failed to reign in police administrative circles, Mayor F. M. Williams has dismissed Wilbur Austin, police commissioner. The mayor declared Austin was not cooperating with Police Chief Elmer Nighbert. COLES PHILLIPS DEAD f s I Bit United Press NEW ROCHELLE. N. Y„ June 13. [ —Clarence Cales Phillips, artist | widely known by his last two names, | died last night at Sutton Manor, his home here. Phillips, 42, had been ill almost a year.

THE TXDT.VXAPOLTR TIMES

Record Rush Job Made on Lindbergh Memorial Stamp; Picture Taken by l imes Photographer

To M. J. Ackerman, New York photographer for The Times, and NEA Service, goes the honor of having taken this picture of Captain Charles A. Lindbergh’s trans-Atlan-tic airplane “Spirit of St. Louis,” which was used by the U. S. post

office department in designing the new Lindebergh memorial airmail stamp. The picture was made by Ackerman at Curtiss flying field, Long Island. Ackerman snapped the “Spirit of St. Louis” as Lindbergh started on a short test flight. This was only two or three days before Lindbergh took off across

the Atlantic to unprecedented

Ackerman

fame. In the following story. Rodney Dutcher, Washington writer for The Times and NEA Service, tells how Ackerman’s picture came to be chosen for the memorial stamp and how the stamps were turned out in record-breaking time. BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer WASHINGTON, June 11. The postoffice department has performed one of the fastest rush jobs in its history in printing and issuing the new Lindbergh 10-cent air mail stamp. By the time it has finished proSKYLIGHTS" Bn t nited Press I—7l EW YORK, June 13—Lower ]\J Broadway started getting | 1 I ready to see Lindbergh at 8 o clock this morning. Two firemen were stationed at each fireplug, ready for action if fire started in flimsy decorations or in the carpet of ticker tape certain to remain after the parade passed. Although the Stock Exchange was closed, brokers' offices in the financial district were open early and office boys and clerks were leaning out open windows, watching the gathering crowd and looking lor airplanes. Four women, somewhat over midlc age, wearing the gold stars which showed they had lost sons in the war, took up o position at the curb on Broadway early in the morning. They carried cameras, and explained they wanted to get pietures of Lindbergh to put in their albums beside photographs of their boys. Four farmers in a rickety flivver stopped a policeman on Broadway to ask how they could see a fellow named Lindbergh. They said they had driven 500 miles since yesterday when they heard he was to be in New York somewhere today. They hadn't heard there was to be a parade. * A luxurious limousine driven by a chauffeur and carrying a corpulent middle-aged couple who could have posed wit lout make-up as millionaires in a movie designed to show the superiority of poor young men, parked along the line of march at 9 o'clock. SWgLVE structural steel workers labori •- on anew building on Broadway near the Battery stopped their labors now and then to laugh down at the packed hundreds on the street below. They had the best reviewing stand along the whole line of march, and they were getting paid for it. A dozen early worshipers at Trinity Church prayed while workmen completed building scaffolding under windows so that members of the church could see the parade in comfort. The proudest girl in the city is Ethel Winter, 11, of School 93, who was selected to hand Lindbergh a floral wreath. Brokers waiting for Lindbergh were unable to restrain their enthusiasm, and two hours before he was due here they started amusing themselves by throwing ticker tape out the window. A stiff breeze carried the tape up instead of permitting it to float down, and soon the air was filled with waving strands of paper. Mrs. Aida S. Hayes. 22. Newark, N. J., was’ the first casualty of the ddy. She fainted in the crowd at the Battery at 10:30 a. m. New York’s reception to Lindbergh was decidedly a family affair. Although plenty of detached adults were in lines along the parade's route, at least hUf the crowd was made up of parent and child groups—fathers elbowing their way to get a vantage point for their boys, mothers with sons and daughters. All were anxious for a glimpse of the young man who bids fair to beeome a model for the yunger generation, replacing the cherry tree Washington whose prestige has been somewhat damaged by recent biographies.

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Pictures of “Charlie” Lindbergh's plane have been printed around the world, but none other has been seen by as many persons as this one wfll be. Taken by Photographer M. J. Ackerman of The Times and NEA Service, it is being reproduced on millions of Lindbergh air mail Stamps.

duction of the contemplated 10.000000 or 15,000.000 copies of this issue, it will have given The Indianapolis Times NEA Service photograph of j Lindbergh's plane the widest circulation ever attained by such a news- \ paper picture outside of the newspapers themselves. Ordinarily it takes from three to six weeks for a stamp to be issued 1 from the time the postofficc starts work on it. But Postmaster Gen-

SCHOLL HEARS PLEA FOR LIFE Wife of Children Slayer Mot in Court. Bu United Press VALPARAISO, Ind.. June 13. With his father and mother at his side, but his wife no longer there, Walter A. Scholl, former Indianapolis man, today heard his attorneys plead that he is insane and should not die in the electric chair for murder of his two children in Gary last March. The arguments climaxed the clemency hearing before Judge Crumpackcr in Circuit Court here, where the case was brought on a change of venue. It is left to Judge Crumpackcr to rule what Scholl s fate shall be. Mrs. Margaret Scholl severed her last tie with the slayer in Chicago last week when she obtained a divorce. This lent credence to reports she is to be married again. DIPLOMAS FOR 463 Purdue Senior Class Will Be Graduated Tuesday. Bn Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind., June 13 —Purdue University will present diplomas to 463 seniors at the annual commencement services here Tuesday morning. The class is about 100 below the number of 1926 graduates. Os those being graduated tomorrow. •115 will-receive bachelor of science degrees, the remainder the degree of master of science. Degrees will be conferred by Dr. Edward C. Elliott, president. Commissions as second lieutenants in the officers reserve corps of the United States Army will be given to eighty-nine men. JACKSON IN FLAG TALK Says “Spiritual Preparedness” Will Keep United States Great. “Spiritual preparedness” was urged as the outstanding factor in keeping America great, in a Flag Day address by Governor Jackson, Sunday, at North Park Christian Church.. A patriotic program had been arranged to commenorate the 150th flag anniversary. Prayer was offered by Rev. C. E. Morris, New York, formerly of Indianapolis. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Vibert Gillespie, 815 N. Rural St., Ford, 565-723; from Senate Ave. and Market St. Esther Paulus. 1234 W. Eighteenth St., Ford, 580-127; from Market and Illinois Sts. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Sanford Umphrey. 203 Hiawatha St.; Chevrolet; found at Meridian and New York Sts. ; Edgar Devers, 728 N. Capitol Ave.; I Overland; found at 21 S. Summitt | St.

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cral New decided to make this a 10-day job in order to have the first stamps on sale by tire time of Lindbergh's return. Officials were confronted by the law forbidding the portrait of any living man to be used ou stamps or currency. But it was decided that the law's spirit would not be violated if “Lindbergh Air-Mail” were to be printed on the stamp, if the plane “Spirit of St. Louis” were to

STRANGLER IN CANADA Sought for Two Deaths—Believed # U. S. Murderer. Bn I lilted Press WINNIPEG. Manitoba. June 13. Search continued today over Canada for a man, believed the United States strangler, wanted here for the murders ot a woman and a girl. The body of Lola Cowen. 14, was found beneath a bed by authorities searching for the slayer of Mrs. Emily Patterson, whose battered body also was found beneath a bed. Police interrupted church service broadcasting to send the man's description. BURGLAR HAS PICNIC Thief Has S9BO Inning as Family Has Outing. The family of Anders Hedegor, 331 Hampton Dr„ went on a picnic Sunday. While they were away a burglar had a picnic in their home. Police called by the family at 10 p. m. Sunday were told that jewelry totaling $965 in value and sls in cash had been stolen. Another daylight burglar removed a screen at the home of William Smith, 1134 N. Arsenal Ave., and took SSO in jAelry. He then visited an upstairs apartment occupied by Mrs. A. Yates and her daughter, Mrs. M. Hayes, and took clothing valued at $65. Men's clothing valued at $27 was taken by a burglar who smashed a window at the Tony Alpert store, 2302 W. Michigan St. The store, operated by Joseph Kocjcf, 2710 W. Tenth St., was entered in similar manner and cigarcts valued at $lO taken. The Atlantic and Pacific grocery, 952 E. Thirtieth St., lost S3OO in cash and cigarets valued at $54 to burglars. SEEK AID TO FIND GIRL Parents Ask Police Help to Locate Daughter. Parents of Miss Viola Morgan, 15, of 983 W. Pearl St., sought police aid in a search for her when she had not returned home at 2 a. ni. The mother told officers she left early in the evening to attend a | show. She wore a green dress, white' and blue sweater, and has blue eyes and sandy hair. William Belford, 12, left his home i at 601_Fletcher Ave. Thursday and ■ has not been heard from. His father said he wore blue overalls, j light shirt, brown tennis slippers and was without a hat. 13 DIE IN DANCE RIOT Casualties Result When Police Fire on Festive Crowd. Bit United Press BUENOS AIRES, June 13.—A dispatch to La Prenza today said thir- 1 teen persons had been killed and twenty-four wounded at Nonch, Brazil, when police fired on a dance crowd at the home of Pedro Fentes.

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be shown with the American coast on the right and the European coast on the left, and if New York and Paris were to be specifically designated with a dotted line between showing the course of flight. NEA Photo Chosen The important question arose as to where to find the best model for the Bureau of Printing and Engraving work to copy. All available pictures of the “Spirit of St. Louis” in flight were scrutinized. Finally officials selected an NEA photo of the Lindbergh plane as the best. Artists promptly got to work. Tliey worked Saturday night, all day Sunday, and on into anew week, fashioning the necessary models. The models then were engraved. After being printed the stamps were dried, gummed, dried again, then perforated, then cut into blocks of 50 each, then packed in packages of 5,000 each to be shipped out on postoffice orders. Promise was that the first formal postoffice issue would be at St. Louis on the occasion of Lindbergh’s homecoming celebration. Meanwhile however, it was planned to have the stamps ready for Lindbergh on his arrival here. They will be issued to all air mail route cities and it was expected that about 6,000,000 w'ould be ready within two weeks. Incidentally, postoffice officials pointed out that St. Louis would be “swamped” by .eager stamp collectors who specialized on "first covers” and “first cancellations.” The entire rush job on the stamps was directed by New and M. L. Eidsncss, Jr., superintendent of the division of stamps. KILLER SUSPECT RETURN SOUGHT Worley Seeks to Speed Law in Carter Case. Detective Chief Claude M. Worley today sought a way around the law requiring indictment of a prisoner before he can be moved from another state into Indiana, so the return of Tilford Roberts, 28, suspected slayer ol Patrolman Charles Carter, from an insane asylum at Lakeland, Ky„ might be hastened. No grand jury will be in session until July. Roberts has been identified by two witnesses as the drink-crazed man who killed Carter in a city street duel May 7. He bears head wounds alleged to have been made by Carter’s gun. Detective Roy Peats asked Prosecutor William H. Remy to ask the State Charities Board to petition the Kentucky charities board to turn Roberts over to Indiana authorities on the ground he is feigning insanity and victimizing the Kentucky institution. AUTO OCCUPANTS HURT Homan Most Seriously Injured of Collision Victims. Occupants of two autos that collided near Greenfield, Ind., late Sunday were injured, one seriously. Mrs. C. E. Thompson, 3902 Byram Ave., was in improved condition at the Methodist Hospital today. The auto in which she was riding with her husband collided with one driven by Joe Bochmaker, Covington, Ky. Sheriff Harry Comstock arrested Bcclimakcr on charges of reckless driving and driving while intoxicated. P. P. Fitzpatrick and William Malone, also of Covington, were injured, and were treated at Greenfield.

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JUNE 13,1927

EXILED RUSSIAN NOBILITY SEES NEW HOPE RAY Paris Church Drama Over Prince Hints of Soviet Fall. Bn United Press PARIS, June 13.—Two hundred thousand Russian exiles in Paris, including cx-officers now driving taxicabs, girls who once were princesses and are now 4 cabaret dancers, and former professors now selling newspapers, sec signs of hope for themselves in the wholesale Russian execution of monarchists. The exiles regard the brutal killings of the red enemies as “proof” that the soviet regime is collapsing. A cross-section of their opinions i was obtained by the United Press at the mass for Prince Dolgorukoff at the Rue Daru Orthodox Church. Tribute to Prince Hundreds of Russians were there to pay tribute to the prince, remembered as an ardent pacifist, a democratic member of the Duma, and for his aversion to friendly relations with tlv> czar, although he was a direct descendant of the first Russian emperor; Rurik. A youth garbed as a chauffeur, but wearing a Legion of Honor ribbon, knelt before the bier and kissed the hands of the priest. Then the prelate did a remarkable thing, especially at a funeral. He stepped back and the "chauffeur” stood up, and the priest saluted. “Better Days” “Better days are coming, your highness,” he said. It was dramatic, tremendously so. Dozens of those present, formerly of the wealthiest Russian families, but wearing practically rags, had their hopes of returning to former high stations restored by the priest’s words. Discussion of the incident has spread like fire through Russian circles, j LENDER HEADS GATHER Program Chairman Leaves City for Harrisburg, Pa. W. R. Hancock, chairman of the program committee for the American Industrial Lenders Association convention, to be held at the Claypool Sept. 14-16. left today for Harrisburg, Pa., to confer with national officers. The Indiana Industrial Lenders Association will be convention host. DUMMY STYLES CHANGE Wax Models Are Altered to Appear Intensely Alive. lift I lift id Press NEW YORK, June 13— Styles in wax dummies have changed. Mr. Dummy, in some instances, will be bald headed with a waistline like any middle-aged, successful business man. Debutante dummies will have tinted cheeks, and ears peeping from beneath bobbed hair of the latest modes. Their animated postures will make them appear intensely alive.

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