Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1928 — Page 24
PAGE 24
LET COMMUNITY HALL CONTRACT AT BROOKSIDE Approach and Terrace Are to Be Constructed i at Once. i ' E. C. Strathmann was awarded (the contract to build the Brookside Community House approach and (terrace, Thursday by the park board. Stratmann’s bid of $25,343 was Isecohd lowest. Strathmann agreed to proceed with the work and wait {for his pay until bonds are sold. Charles Remster, attorney who tedvised banks / not to purchase city bonds because of the clouded title of Mayor L. Ert Slack, is said to have advised Strathmann to go ahead with the contract pending the bond sale. Mayor L. Ert Suck approved the deal. E. H. Dolby submitted low bid Df $’3,400. “We want to rush the completion bf the Brookside Community House and Strathmann was willing to go ahead before bonds are sold,” Michael E. Foley said. Sarah Shank golf cpurse, on the Bouth side, was ordered thrown open to the public July 4, free of charge. It was said the course is not in firs) class condition, so no fees will be charged the remainder of the summer. Lack of park funds delayed its completion. The course will not be supervised as are other municipal golf links. The course is at Troy and Keystone Aves. President John E. Milnor said he had received a number of requests to open the course to south siders. Every normal ear ofcorn has an teven number of rows of grain.
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War Veteran Gives Up Air Advertising for Chance to Pilot Plane Over Ocean
-V. . t T ... /
Capt. Le Boutillier, Mabel 801 l and Capt. Arthur Argles are pictured here (left to right) with the Columbia. The photo of their plane was taken at Le Bourget field, Paris, when Charles Levine, the Columbia’s * owner, was touring Europe.
Le Boutillier to Realize Dream in Trip With ‘Diamond Queen.’ By NEA Service NEW YORK, June 15.—Oliver Le Boutillier watched Lindbergh, Chamberlin, Commander Byrd, and sundry others fly away from Long Island on ocean hops, and wished he could go, too. So when Mabel 801 l offered him a job as pilot of the Columbia for a flight to Europe, the tall, bronzed, blue-eyed airman didn’t hesitate a
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minute about giving up his skywnting business for the time being. Le Boutillier already had done rteariy everything else in the way of aviation. He fought with the Royal Air Force in the World War, carried the air mail, took aerial joy riders for $5 and $lO hops, and whirled through the skies spelling out the names of cigarets and motion pictures and such in his air advertising business. East Orange, N. J., is his home. In 1914 he was a freshman at Columbia University. Out of school, he went to Canada and enlisted in the Seaforth Highlanders. But his parents called him back. He then
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
turned flying student at a commercial school. Back to Canada he went as a pilot, and joined the Royal Naval Air Service, which 1 ater became part of the Royal Air Force. Le Boutillier became a pal of Roy Brown in France, and was flying with Brown when the latter shot down Baron Richthofen, the German ace of aces. Both Brown and Le Boutillier had been promoted to captaincies. “I never worry about him,” said Le Boutillier’s mother at her East Orange home when he took off with Mabel 801 l and Capt. Arthur Argles in the Columbia. “Whereever he starts, I knew he will come back safely.”
Oliver Le Boutuner asa captain in the Royal Air Force during the World War. Riley Medal Is Awarded Miss Ruth Young. Broad Ripple High School graduate, was awarded the Riley medal this year for having done outstanding work during the four years.
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MOTORIST HELD AFTER MACHINE KILLSRELATIVE Otis Craig Under Bond for Fatally Injuring James C. Webb. Otis Craig, 46, Lorraine Hotel, today faced a manslaughter charge after fatally injuring a life-long friend and distant relative, James C. Webb, 73. of 2724 W. Washington St., when Craig’s car struck Mr. Webb at Harris Ave. and W. Washington St., Thursday afternoon. According to members of Mr. Webb’s family, the victim stepped from the curb and an approaching car swerved but Craig, who was following the car did not see him. At the residence of Mrs, Charles Carlisle, 26 S. Warman Ave., a daughter of Mr. Webb, it was said her father and Craig were distantly related and life-long friends. Craig Under Bond Craig, on orders of Coroner Charles H. Keever, was charged with manslaughter and released on bond. At the hotel, it was said Craig went to work this morning. Funeral services probably will be held Saturday. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Webb was a retired postoffice employe and had resided here all his life. Since his retirement he had managed the Warman Ave. pumping and distributing station of the Western Oil and Refining Company. He was a member of the W. Washington St. M. E. Church, the Retired Federal Employes’ Union and a charter member of Harris Lodge I. O. O. F. Ready to Attend Fete Surviving with Mrs. Carlisle are the widow, Mrs. Katherine Webb; another daughter, Mrs. Gene Berry of Chicago; two sisters, Mrs. Marjorie Thompson and Mrs. Ida May McGarvey of this city. The famiy was preparing to attend the Technical High School graduation exercises, where a granddaughter, Katherine Carlisle, was to be graduated, when the accident occurred.
ALONE INTO ARCTIC Lone Explorer Sets Out in Motor Boat to Alaska. By Times Special * EDMONTON, Alberta, June 14. A one-man sub-polar expedition is setting out from Edmonton, Alberta. E. F. Mcßee of Eugene, Oregon, is taking a motor boat from there north to the Athabaska and Mackenzie. He will cross over into the Yukon from the Northwest territories, cruise down the coast to Prince Rupert, and return to Edmonton by the Canadian National Railways, where he will pick up his automobile and continue southward. Graduates Boost School Library Mrs. Maude Moudy, principal of School 58, was presented s6l by the graduating class to be used to buy books for the school library. Fiftyfour pupils were in the class. Pyorrhea Stopped Before You Pay 7-Day Free Trial Pyro-Chek Gum Treatment will eliminate bleeding gums, pyorrhea, bad breath and all ailments of the teeth and gums or it is free. Send for our seven-day free trial offer. If satisfied at the end of seven days send us SI.OO. If not, return the unused portion and it costs you nothing. Send your name and address today. Pyro-Chek Cos., 2315 W. 9th St., Los Angeles. Calif., Dept. 3.
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Chance to ‘Go Straight ’ Given State Ex-Convicts
Jobs Are Provided for Many Men Before They Leave Cells. Indiana penal institution graduates have little trouble with unemployment. Contrary to popular opinion that it is difficult to “live down a prison record,” nearly every former prisoner who' wants to “go straight” is not only given the chance, but actually provided with a job to start, according to Secretary John J. Brown of the State charities board. In a survey, recently published by the board, it is pointed out that there were 21,219 men and women released from Indiana State Prison, Indiana State Reformatory and Indiana Woman’s Prison between Nov. 1, 1900, and Sept. 30, 1927. Seventy-five per cent of these were released on parole, Brown points out. That means that they were actually assured of a job, before they left the institution. Another fallacy is that these persons are “hounded” by police, Brown declares. “The first offender, who has served
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his time, is never looked upon as a police character for the remainder of his days,” the board secretary said. “It is the repeater, who has done time for similar offenses during several terms that is naturally suspected. Denies Ex-Convicts Hounded “Should he, or she, be in the neighborhood of where a crime is committed, particularly if it is of the nature of an offense for which the former prisoner has a record, the police of course will call the ex-convict for questioning. “Many important crimes are uncovered in this manner. But that is not unjust to the person who has served a term and reformed.” PUPILS GIVE PAGEANT School 29 Presents “Hiawatha” for Flag Day Program. “Hiawatha,” a pageant, was presented by the third grade pupils of School 29 for the Flag day program directed by Miss Evelyn Christopher, a teacher. Miss Jessie Smith, principal, had charge of the entire program of recitations, songs and a playlet.
.JUNE 15,1928
HOSPITAL PLAN UP Slack Confers Today With City Health Board. City hospital’s proposed building program was discussed today by Mayor L. Ert Slack and health board members. Preliminary steps to the selection of an architect, engineer and hospital consultant were taken. Herbert Foltz, Pierre & Wright, and Rubush & Hunter, architects, and Charles Brossman, engineer, have conferred with Slack recently on the proposed contract. Council authorized hiring of experts but failed to appropriate funds. The health board may net on Slack’s requests Monday night. TAKES UP FRAT DUTIES New Sigma NUu General Secretary Arrives In City. Vernon M. Williams, new general secretary of the Sigma Nu fraternity, arrived here today to assume his duties at offices in the Illinois Bldg. Williams has been assistant dean of student affairs at the University of Minnesota for three years.
