Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 149, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1928 — Page 4
MORE WARSHIPS NEEDED BY U. S„ SAYSCOOLIDGE Deplores Lack of Good Will Between Nations in Armistice Day Speech. Bv United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—Speaking at ceremonies held by the American Legion here Sunday night in observance of the tenth anniversary of the armistice, President Coolidge deplored the lack of mutual understanding between the United States and Europe, and stressed the need of additional cruisers to strengthen the American naval force. “It is obvious that, eliminating all competition, world standards of defense require us to have more cruisers,” the President said. Again, having pointed out the inadequacy of the regular army, and calling attention to America’s long coast, outlying possessions, and foreign commerce and investments, Coolidge said: “Having few fueling stations, we require ships of large tonnage, and having scarcely any merchant vessels capable of mounting five or sixinch guns, it is obvious that, based on needs, we are entitled to a larger number of warships than a nation having these advantages.” Little Progress in Disarming In concluding his allusion to the Washington conference, which reached an agreement for capitol ships and airplane carriers, together with the maximum unit tonnage and maximum calibre of guns of cruisers, the President said: “It no doubt has some significance that foreign governments made agreements limiting that class of combat vessels in which we were superior, but refused limitations in the class in which they were superior. We made altogether the heaviest sacrifice in scrapping work which already was in existence. That should forever remain not only a satisfaction to ourselves, but a demonstration to others of our good faith in advocating the principle of limitations.” Coolidge said little progress had been made in naval disarmament since the tri-partite Geneva conference last year. All human experience seems to have demonstrated that reasonable preparations for defense lessens the likelihood of hostile attack, the President said, and added: “To be ready for defense is not to be guilty of aggression. We can have military preparation without assuming a military spirit. It is our duty to ourselves and to the cause of civilization, to the preservation of domestic tranquillity, to our orderly and lawful relations with foreign people to maintain an adequate army and navy.”,, Good Will Is Urged The United States and other nations, however, had undertaken to induce additional safeguards for peace, Coolidge said, and named the multi-lateral war pact renouncing wars of aggression as the most “effective instrument ifor peace that was ever devised.” The chief executive spoke of the new economic and political relationship between the United States and the rest of the world. He said it was plain that Europe and the United States lacked in mutual understanding. “If we could secure a more complete reciprocity in good will, the final liquidation of the balance of our foreign debts, and such further limitation of armaments as would be commensurate With the treaty renouncing war, our confidence in the effectiveness of any additional efforts on our part to assist in the further progress of Europe would be greatly increased,” Coolidge said. MARMOIir FIRM PICKS NEW SALES DIRECTOR Brooks io Head Companys New Airplane Engine Department. Appointment of Thomas E. Jarrard, Detroit, as new general sales director of Marmon Motor Car Company was made by G. M. Williams, president, today at the oneday meting of Marmon distributors at the Claypool. Jarrard, who comes here from the Durant Motor Car Company, succeeds H. H. Brooks, who becomes head of the new airplane engine company being formed by Marmon offici'.ls. About 150 distributors attended the meeting today. CORNER "stone IS LAID Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity Holds Ceremonies at Butler. Corner stone of the new Lambda Cht Alpha fraternity house on Butler university’s campus at Fairview was laid Sunday afternoon. More than 150 persons, including members and national officers of the fraternity and university officials attended the ceremony. D. J. Lyman, chairman of alumni building committee, officiated at the laying of the corner stone. Among the speakers were: Dr. Robert J. Aley, university president: Hilton U. Brown, chairman of the board of directors and John W Atherton, executive and financial secretary of the institution. 50 IN SKATE MARATHON V. F. W. Post Sponsors Affair Starting Thursday Night. Marathoners will put on roller skates Thursday night at Germania hall, 37 South Delaware street, to enter a “world championship” skating marathon under the auspices of the Convention City post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Fifty couples are expected to start. Fifteen minutes rest periods will be allowed each hour, and a half hour rest session each morning. Prizes total $1,500 and a percentage of the gate receipts. A physician and nurses will be in attendance,
ERICH IS NOT EVIL MAN IN THIS MOVIE 'The Wedding March’ Is a Story of a Sweet Love Affair Between an Army Officer and Pretty Maiden. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN NOT an evil and cruel man is Erich Von Stroheim in his new movie, “The Wedding March.” This time the hard looking Erich falls in love with a sweet little innocent maid of Vienna. In place of treating our little heroine badly, he falls in love with her and becomes very romantic. This is rather an unusual formula for Von Stroheim, because many of his past roles have been of mighty cruel and hard-hearted men of the world, who leave ruin in their path. He is no sissy in this story. He is an officer of the guards to the emperor and his own dad is a powerful man in court circles.
Erich’s father and mother this time decree that he shall marry wealth and Erich forgets his sweet
little playmate in the moonlight and trots to the altar just as his mommer and his popper ordered. You can’t blame Erich this time for breaking our little heroine’s heart. It just had to be because it was ordered. You probably know by this time that “The Wedding March” was not only directed by Von Stroheim but has the
Fray Wray
chief male role, the officer of the guards. This character is a worldly one but in his cold exterior is the soul of the flirt who can act square when he finds real love. That is, he would do our Nell no dirt. He is gay with painted women but when he meets our heroine this time, he sure acts like a gentleman and a good lover. Fay Wray Is cast as Mitizi, the little sweetheart who loved her Prince Charming. Her ma had decreed that she should marry a young butcher, a most terrible uncouth thing who didn’t know that the word romance existed. The work of Fay Wray reminds you this time of Lillian Gish as she has that nervous wistfulness that only Miss Gish seems to know how to project. Here is beautiful work on the part of Miss Wray. Os course, these love scenes are chucked full of moonlight and overdrawn sentiment, but they are beautiful scenes. This story will probably make Miss Wray a favorite for many movie fans. You know as well as I do that when it comes to play a member of the emperor’s guard of old Austria, that Von Stroheim can do it better than anyone, else. He is just the type. Von Stroheim has staged one of his most lavish productions and the scenes showing a religious and state ceremony of old Austria is one of the most beautiful and impressive that the screen has revealed for a long time. The use of a large choir, pipe organ and all that goes with this ceremony when the emperor goes to church, make “The Wedding March” a gorgeous picture to both see and hear. Seme of the scenes are in color, making it very beautiful at times. There will be a lot of talk about “The Wedding March.” Some will think that it is too mushy in its love theme, but when it is all said and done and the vdrdict is in, “The Wedding March” is mighty effective theater. I go on record by telling you that I enjoyed every minute of this new Von Stroheim movie. It sure is a beauty. Now at the Circle. tt u u SHE TAMES SOME BAD BEARS Dolores Del Rio, it appears, is having a hard time of it in trying to get a picture that will enable her to really do something. “Revenge.” the film ab the Palace this week. starts off in a
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beautiful manner. The preliminary scenes are in color and tinged with an fir of romance ‘oh it is sometimes la; king in later parts of the story. Th scene is the borderland b etween Austria and Rumania, a wild country in which the Gypsies are the most frequent visitors. Miss Del Rio is
Dolores Del Rio
the daughter of the most famous lion tamer in Europe, wandering bands of Gypsies stop at his camp each year to hold a sort of fiesta and buy their yearly supply of trained bears. Dolores is thoroughly satisfied with life until the wild bears are all trained. Then she says there is no use liivng any more, she only likes them when she is slightly afraid of them. As is usual in a story like Ohio a bandit, played by Lercy Mason, takes up a good bit of the plot. Jorga the bandit, sees the lion tamer’s daughter and decides that she is just the type for him. So we have a big kidnaping with plenty of scrapping between the hasty lover and his would-be sweetheart. The ending is of course what one would expect and is not in the least thrilling or sensational. There is one spot on the bill which we think everyone was pleased with, it is that of the Movietone presentation with Marion Harris singing songs as only Marion Harris can. Miller and Lyles, who were here recently with their colored musical revue, are presenting a coihedy sketch, “The Mayor of Jimtown.” It has plenty laughs. Lester Huff has an excellent Armistice day organ number and with a film comedy the bill is completed. , At the Palace. (By J. T. H.) a in THE LATEST OF THE SHEIK MOVIES ARRIVES Before the week is over you will probbaly hear that “Fazil,” an all movietone production, is about the hottest modern sheik story that the screen has yet given us. And I believe that the verdict is a just one. Do not get the wrong impression that “Fazil” is a wild animal picture, It is just the sort of story that the late Val-
Little Theatre
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Hardin Callithan
When the Little Theater opens its season Tuesday night at the Playhouse with “The Queen's Husband,” Hardin Callithan will have the role of "Prince William.” entino would loved to have done. Charless Farrell is cast as the Arab chief who marries a modern girl in Paris. He tries to remember that there is no difference between the east and the west, but blood will tell and before the solution is reached Farrell stands in his own blood calmly looking at his wife while she is going to her death after he had placed a poisoned ring on her finger. The sheik could not possess his wife in life because the customs of his people made it impossible. He hoped to be able to be with her in love in the spirit world. Greta Nissen is cast as the European who marries the sheik. Miss Nissen is beautiful, and she shows this time that she is gifted with a fine dramatic sense. The love scenes of “Fazil” are beautiful in their power to suggest romance. The first meeting •of the two lovers in Venice has been giten a beautiful scenic background and the musical arrangement on movietone is one of haunting beauty. It seems that many of the most famous love tunes have been collected to give the right “hearing” to the love scenes. Most of the work of “Fazil” is done by Miss Nissen and Farrell. I would not be one bit surprised if Farrell wins Valentino’s crown as the best player of sheik roles. “Fazil”*is a box office picture, and it will develop powerful drawing power. Here is about one of the best date night movies I have seen in five years. If you love that moonligh, and romantic love-making stuff, then “Fazil” is just the picture. The ending is the sad one, but it is this ending that gives “Fazil” its nighty dramatic punch. You can guess by this time that I am quite wild over “Fazil,” and I consider it the best of the sheik movies. Now at the Apollo. tt u MEIGHAN lIAS NEW TYPE OF MOVIE Tom Moighan has given up the whirring rattle of the gangster’s machine gun and the bright lights of gangland temporarily to make a picture wholly different in theme from his last. ‘The Mating Call," one of Rex Beach's stories, has been made into a most excellent vehicle for Meighan, Renee Adoree and Evelyn Brent. We all know that the three peo-
pie most prominent In this picture can do things on the screen if the chance is given them. In this picture they have their chances, so that settles the question of acting. Meighan is cast as Leslie Hatton, a farmer. Hatton enters the war early and is made a captain. When he returns to his home town cn
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Evelyn Brent
leave things have changed. The captain’s uniform does the trick. Before, he had been unnoticed, just an ordinary farmer with a good sized piece of land. But now the village belle falls in love with the brass buttons and she and Hatton are secretly married. Then the long period of two years, while Hatton is. in France. His thoughts when the war is over are all centered on the home he will find waiting for him when he gets back. But he is disillusioned. The marriage has been annulled by the girl’s father and she has married another man. But Rose, the former wife, played by Evelyn Brent, has grown tired of her new husband and when she finds Hatton home once again she endeavors to renew the short bit of happiness they had during the war. But Hatton .gets sick of the whole business and decides there, is only one tiling for him to do, get a wife who wants a home and is willing to work for it. The procedure followed in acquiring the wife is startling and original in it’s simplicity. He goes to Ellis Island, the first port of call for all mmigrants, and finds a French girl and her family, who are to be deported if aid is not given them by someone in this country. Hatton strikes a bargain with the little French girl, played by Renee
BOAT FOUND IN INDIANA FIELD 150 YEARS OLD Craft Hewed From Tree Discovered Near Clarksville. Bii United Press CLARKSVILLE, Ind., Nov. 12. An old fashioned dugout boat, bearing evidence of being at least 150 years old, has been found near here by Harvey Taylor, aged fisherman. The boat, which was made by hewing the center out of a large tree, was dug from rocks and sand of Goose island, near Whisky Chute, by Taylor and Harry Stein, a friend. The theory was advanced by local l that the old time boat lyiown as a pirogue, probably had ’o:ne French traders, Jesuits or frontiersmen on the Ohio river, when Kentucky and Indiana were wildernesses. The craft is eight feet long and bears the marks of frontiersman's ax or an Indian’s tomahawk. Two feet or more of the upper curved bow apparently had been cut away. Historians say the boat is at least a century and a half old because with the coming of settlers to Kentucky the flatboat replaced the heavy and awkward pirogue. They believe it may date back to the seventeenth or eighteen century when French traders and missionaries came west. The traders brought iron into the wilderness and traded it to the Indians and taught them how to use it. This they believe, migh account for the piece of iron, resembling a chisel, being found in the bottom of the boat. Belief that the pirogue may have been wrecked on the falls a few hundred yards upstream from where it was discovered and swept over them to its resting place was advanced by Herman Rave, Clark county historian. Taylor said he had remembered seeing the dugout forty years ago, but thought then that it was only a drift log.
LIBRARY ASSOCIATIONS TO HOLD CONFERENCES Joint Three-Day Meeting to Start Here Nov. 21. The thirty-seventh annual joint conference of (he Indiana Library Association and the Indiana Library Trustees’ Association will be held at the Lincoln Nov. 21, 22 and 23. Arrangements have been completed for the convention, and programs have been issued. Among prominent speakers who will address the conference are Llewellyn Jones, literary editor of the Chicago Evening Post; Dhan Gopal Mukerejl, Indian author and lecturer, and Virgil Stinebaugh, Indiana state department of public instruction. Adoree, that she marry him and he will take care of all the family. She accepts and they all proceed to settle down comfortably on the farm. But there our former sweetheart and dissatisfied wife enters again and tries to claim the lost love of her former husband. Complications ensue and before the end of the picture we see a murder and a suicide, both of which help in stirring up interest in the r’"t and add to the story. It is a good Meighan picture and with the added attraction of Renee Adoree is sure to prove entertaining to all who see it. The best of the stage offerings are Charlie Davis’ orchestra and their melodies and the rapid fire foot work of Art Frank, as an old man, and Alice Roy, as a cabaret entertainer. To listen to Ginger Rogers arymore is like playing the same old record over and over on the phonograph. Her stuff will not bear repetition and is of the sort that quickly bores when heard too often. She should try something new. At the Indiana. (By J. T. H.) u a tx STUNT DRIVER WILL ARRIVE TONIGHT Blindfolded and guided by his police dog, Jimmy Burns, veteran stunt and endurance automobile driver, is scheduled to arrive in Indianapolis at 7 o’clock tonight, and will make his stop in front of the Indiana theater, where he will be greeted by Charlie Davis, master of ceremonies. Making a coast-to-coast blindfold drive, Burns left New York from the Paramount theater, where his farewell was given by Eddie Peabody, master of ceremonies at the Paramount. Burns wears the uniform of Publix theaters and makes his stops only at Publix houses, planning to close his unprecedented tour in front of the Metropolitan in Los Angeles. Over nfttional highways, paved roads, through crowded streets, guided only by his police dog, Burns is making one of the most unique tours in the history of stunt driving. The tour Is made under the auspices of the Goodrich Tire and Rubber Company, the Moon Automobile Company and the Producers Oil Company. Tonight at the Murat, Ona B. Talbot will open her orchestral season by presenting the New York Philharmonic orchestra with Wellem Mengelberg conducting. Other theaters today offer: “The Silent House” at English’s; Chase and La Tour at the Lyric; “Circus Days” at the Colonial. And “Moulin Rouge Girls” at the Mutual. Night Coughs Quickly Relieved Coughs and colds usually grow worse at nightfall. Most coughing is caused by an irritation of the throat and bronchial tubes, which continued coughing only aggravates. Such coughs are quickly controlled and stopped by Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound. Hold the dose for a time, low in the throat as for a gargle, then swallow. Relief follows at once. Effective alike for children and grown persons. Try it. All Haag Drug Stores.—Advertisement.
Nurse Rejected for War Duty Proves Her Mettle in Crash of Water Tank
Miss Juanita Baldwin an dthe tons of tottering wreckage beneath which North she | when she crawled tinder a mass of "Mashed fingers are the usual I , T 1 t .... tliirirr rant- lioro " ctairl IVTiqc Roldnmi ■ CJtßti!m
Crawls Under Wreckage to Give First Aid to % Injured Worker. Miss Juanita Baldwin, 1736 North Illinois street, wanted to be a nurse in the World war. They refused her because her health wasn’t the best. That was nearly twelve years ago when Juanita was 18. But it wasn’t for want of pluck that she was rejected by the nursing service, and so she went into clerical work for the ordnance department. That Miss Baldwin proved today, when she crawled under a mass of twisted steel and splirtlered timbers to administer first-aid to an injured workman, caught by the crash of a huge water tank at the West Washington street barns of the Indianapolis Street Railway Company. Rushes io Rescue Miss Baldwin was in the office of George PaulH*. paint shop superintendent, where she has charge of first aid, when she heard the crash outside. Grabbing an armload of bandages, she ran to the wreckage, where
SLOGAN WINS SEDAN West Washington Street Merchants Award Prizes. Albert W. Ehlers, 22. of 2748 Ashland avenue won the Marmon sedan offered by the West Washington Street Merchants Association for the / best slogan. The slogan Is “The Best Shoppers keet on West Washington Street.” More than 100.000 slogans wer b entered. Fifty business houses will use the prize winner. Four other prizes were awarded for slogans. Second prize, a cedar chest offered by the Victor Furniture Company, was won by Mrs. Ernest Pennington, 1248 Standard street; third prize, a “love seat” divan, offered by the Fair store was won by E. N. Carter, 5004 North Pennsylvania street; fourth prize, a Cogswell chair, offered by the National Furniture Company, was won by J. R. Freeman, 5607 Broadway; and the fifth prize, a highback arm chairs offered by the White Furniture Company, was won by F. M. Blair, 646 North Rural street. HUNT BANDITS AFTER 4 WEEK-END HOLDUPS Clerks and Customers Held at Bay In Grocery Store. Police today investigated four holdups over the week-end. Fred Ohler, 841 Park avenue, was knocked down by a Negro bandit at Vermont street and Senate avenue Sunday night. Frightened by an approaching pedestrial the bandit fled, grabbing some papers from Ohler’s pocket, but getting no money. Three holdups occurred Saturday night. Several customers and clerks were held at bay in the Standard grocery at Agnes and Michigan streets by a Negro bandit, who took S4O. Chauncey Ruffin, 1807 East Thirty-fourth street, was held up at Thirty-fourth street and Ralston avenue by a Negro and lost SB. A bandit took SSO and a $65 overcoast from A. E. Gould, 237 Brookville road, at College avenue and the Canal. Positively no more \§P ASTHMA suffering Why strangle and gape for > lSßsKgl| SEND *I.OO ONLY Money-back guarantee m/nj BREATHE FREE CO. Box 34, Station A, IndiT anapolls. Ind. "ROUGH DRY 1 (SOFT WATER) Flat Work Ironedt Necessary sPSs. I ye Lb. All the bun- ■ die Dried , 56c Minimum Lincoln 7338 FAMILY WASH LAUNDRY
I workmen were trying to extricate , Pearl Hudson, 38, of Muncle, pinioned, in agony, by a heavy steel beam. Instantly, Miss Baldwin was on her hands and knees, crawling toward the moaning man. “His leg was cut and broken,” she said, “but it was no place to attempt splints. He was bleeding badly from a deep wound above the forehead, so I clipped off the hair and applied a compact and bandages.” The crowd that assembled to watch the rescue work was amazed when, the heavy beams lifted, the injured man was carried out with his head swathed in bandages. Modest After Feat “Mashed fingers are the usual thing out here,” said Miss Baldwin, disclaiming any display of nerve for having crawled under the unsteady wreckage. “I suppose I always wanted to be a nurse because we’ve had a ‘family full’ of doctors and nurses.. I’ve been interested always in first aid work and managed to get some hospital training in the south—but not much.” Asked for details of her war service. Miss Baldwin dismissed the question with: “Let’s not ring that 1 in. The war’s over, you know.”
In the Air
Northwest wind, fourteen miles an hour; barometric pressure, 30.18 at sea level; temperature, 45; ceiling and visibility unlimited. Advertise From Air Five thousand hand bills advertising the dance to be given tonight at the Indiana ballroom by the Indiana Reserve Officers’ Association were dropped in the city by airplane Saturday. Tlie bills were tossed from a Consolidated PT biplane by Lieutenant Charles Cunningham of Schoen field. Ft. Benjamin Harrison, and Sargeant William Corrigan, Eightfourth division. Flying low over the city, the airmen scattered the advertisements above the upturned faces of interested spectators. The plane also attracted attention as it flew over the new Butler university stadium, whene a large crowd watched the Butler-Ulinois football game. GIVE TO ARCTIC WIDOWS Families of Amundsen’s Crew Receive Money Gifts. Bii United Press OSLOW, Nov. 12.—A donation of 100,000 francs will be given to the families of the crew of the French plane Latham in which Roald Amundsen set out to find Commander Nobile of the Italian airship Italia. The Norwegian rescue committee which organized expeditions to search for Amundsen also decided to give 10,000 kroner to the small son of the plane’s pilot, Lieutenant Dietriclison. Michelin Tires On Credit PUBLIC SERVICE TIRE CO 118 E. New York St. Bitter-Water Salts Marvelous tn Its simplicity. Magical In results. Beautifies the skin. Makes thff- flesh 3rm. Reduces adipose tissue in a safe and sane manner. Eliminates toxic poisons. Cleanses, refreshes and revlgorates the Intestines. Renews the worn out cells. Increases the activity of all elands. REMINERALIZE YOUR BODY AND LIVE LONGER AND HAPPIER. Health Research Bureau RILEY 3278 311 N. ALABAMA 8T One Package Makes Ten Gallons | SAVE Regularly and Get Ahead We Pay , 4% on Savings Aetna Trust & Savings Cos. 28 N. Penn. St.
NINE DEATHS AS VIOLENCE TOLL Slaying and Two Suicides on Week-End List. Violence in Indiana over the week-end took a toll of nine lives. One slaying and two suicides were among the causes. The Rev. Obediah Thompson, Negro, was killed at Terre Haute, during a fight at the Sincere Baptist church following his dismissal as its pastor. Mrs. Ida Francisco, 53, Madison, committeed suicide by shooting. She had been despondent over illness. Shirley Jane Mason, 4, Frankton, was fatally burned when her clothing became ignited while she was playing with matches. Miss Lucille Hopper, 19, Coving•ton, is dead of injuries suffered when an auto in which she was a passenger skidded from a gravel road and crashed into a telephone pole. John Gleason, 20, Oanandaaigua, N. Y., University of Notre Dame stydent, was killed at South Bend when a train struck a group of persons gathered to welcome the university football team back from New York. Miss Dolly Uppenkamp, 19, was drowned in the Patoka river near Pikeville when a boat upset. Arthur B. Stern, 44. Michigan City newspaper man, is dead of injuries suffered in an auto accident. J. L. Smith, 23, Muncie, was killed when the auto he was driving crashed into a parked truck. Isaac N. Carothers, 81, Elwood, committed suicide by hanging. Relatives could ascribe no reason .
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MARMON WILL 1 MAKE ENGINES 1 FOR AIRCRAFT _______ * Planes to Be Constructed Later, President of Company Says. Formation here of a company to manufacture airplane engines and later airplanes by officials of the Marmon Motor Car Company has been started, according to announcement by G. M. Williams, Marmon president. H. H. Brooks, Marmon general l sales director, will head the new company. Colonel Howard Marmon, continuing as vice-president, of the ‘Marmon company in charge of engineering, probably will head the engineering development of the airplane engine. The factory will have no direct connection with the motor car com-t| pany. Location of the plant has not been announced. Williams has been associated with aeronautical development since 1915. At one time he was general manager of the Dayton-Wright Company. D&yton, O. - Brooks has been associated with Marion twelve years. He has been interested in aviation for several years and has used airplanes frequently on long business trips. Colonel Marmon was a member of the war department engineering staff which, in 1918, developed the Liberty airplane engine. The Mar- 1 mon company, then Nordyke &- Marmon, permanently was awarded a pennant by the government for exceeding its quota of Liberty motor production by a greater percentage than any other factory. Previously the company had produced the Hall-Scott airplane engine. Auto Racer fakes to Air LONDON, Nov, 12.—Captain Malcolm Campbell, one of Britain’s automobile speed kings, is Britain’s’ latest aviation fan. He has ordered a Gypsy-Moth light plane. plane will be named “Blue Bird,” after Captain Campbell’s famous racing automobile. Campbell intends to use the plane for aerial surveys in various parts of the wwld, and attempt to discover a natural speedway on land, that will permit speeds up to 250 miles an hour. Captain Campbell has had extensive experience in flying. He was a pilot in the Royal Air Force during the war, but has not been flying recently, so will probably take a refresher course and take out an “A” license, which civilians must possess before flying solo.
Stops Here in Biplane Bob Loutt of the Kendall Oil Company, Bradford, Pa., who landed at Indianapolis airport Friday in his Challenger biplane, will leave Tuesday. Loutt Is visiting dealers on his way from Los Angeles to Bradford. Passenger on Mail Plane J. Nathan, Indianapolis, was a passenger on the Embry-Riddle air mail plane from Indianapolis to Cincinnati Sunday. Beats Quinine For Colds [ RELIEF IN 30 MINUTES] Quinine causes roaring head, pimples, nausea. And it ISN’T the best treatment for colds or grippe. If you want to lose that achey, draggy feeling in a hurry, if you want your cold to fade overnight, try LaxaPirin. It contains aspirin, laxatives and other valuable elements. No quinine. Thousands now use it. Pleasant, safe, and there is positively nothing like it for quick results. Just as wonderful for headache, neuralgia, lumbago, and general pains. Insist on genuine LaxaPirin. All druggists. 25c. JbmrSfytisi Aspirin Combination Let Us Show You some of our beautiful modern and semi-modern 5-room bungalows that we can build for you on small monthly payments. $25 to S4O Per Month PURITAN FINANCE CO. 517 S. Delaware St. Lincoln 1964 Indianapolis COMPLETE I.INE OF Braces and Abdominal Belts AKRON SURGICAL HOUSE, INC. 280 ’ass. Ave. Phone Lin. 1122 Music Supplies for the Student and Teacher Standard Sheet Music Harmony and Theory Books Opera Scores Note Books Musical Dictionaries Instruction Books for All Musical Instruments Batons Pitch Pipes Metronomes Music Stands Music Bags Music RoUs Strings for AU Instruments Instrument Accessories Musical Instrument Repairing 27 EAST OHIO ST. Hume-Mansur Building Phone RL 4292
