Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 168, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 December 1928 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Aviation ‘CHP-HAVANA AIR-RAIL ROUTE TO BESTARTED Cuban Capital to Be Day Closer to Mid-West on New Schedule. By United Press CHICAGO, Dec. 4.—Air-rail service between Chicago and Havana, Nassau, and the West Indies, that will save a full day from the fastest existing travel schedules between here and points on the airway system, will be inaugurated Jan. 9, offices of the Pan-American Airways Inc., announced today. The new schedule will provide a fast direct service between Chicago and the Carribean countries over five principal railroad lines and the Pan-American airways system from Miami. Fast trains of the Illinois Central, Chicago & Eastern Illinois, and the Pennsylvania system will link the middle-west with the most direct airmail route to countries to the south. According to schedules arranged, passengers bound for Cuba or the West Indies will board the “Floridan,” Illinos Central train, leaving Chicago at 2:45 p. m., the “Dixie Limited,” of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois at 2:00 p. m. or the “Flamingo” of the Pennsylvania, at 10 a. m., to arrive in Miami on the second morning. Private motor cars will take passengers directly to the airport, to arrive in Havana three hours later. Three days each week through accommodations will provide direct service to Nassau, the British resort center in the Bahamas, and via Havana to Camaguey, Santiago de Cuba, Port au Prince, Haiti, Santo Domingo City, Dominican Republic and San Juan, Porto Rico, at the far end of the West Indies. Study Port Plans Here Indianapolis will be visited within a few days by representatives of the Akron (O.) airport board, whch 3s making a tour of the larger cities having or planning municipal airports, in preparation for erecting a huge municipal port at Akron. Part of the new airport will be occuped by the Goodrich-Zeppelin corporation, with hangars costing from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000, in which it will build in the next four pears the super-dirigibles for the United States government at a cost of about $8,000,000. The party is making the tour in a Fairchild cabin monoplane, and while here will confer with members of the the local citizens’ airport committees. Haul 632 Pounds of Mail Air mail planes of the EmbryRiddle company, Cincinnati, carried a total of 632 pounds of air mail dispatched from the Indianapolis postofice during November, according to Postmaster Robert H. Bryson. Poundage for the month failed to equal that of October, when 75.3 pounds were carried. The planes were unable to make the trip three days because of lack of visibility, and, in addition, were forced to return to the airport after starting on four other days. Ride Detroit Plane Charles Hack of Indianapolis was a passenger on the Capitol Airways passenger ship to Detroit today. Miss Grace Durne, 11, Ft. Wayne, who came here Thursday on the ship, returned to Ft. Wayne today on the Detroit ship. Lewis Hottel, 25 West Forty-ninth street, was a passenger on the Chicago plane of Capitol Airways, Return From St. Louis Major R. F. Taylor, commander One Hundred and Thirteenth observation squadron, Indiana national guard, and Colonel John Fishback returned from St. Louis Monday in a Consolidated 0-17 biplane. They went to St. Louis several days ago to visit officers of the Missouri national guard. Passenger to Chicago Dr. G. A. Stevenson, Harvey, 111., was a passenger on the EmbryRiddle air mail plane from Indianapolis to Chicago Monday. Two passengers from Cincinnati to Chicago to visit the air show were Floyd Prothero, Embry-Riddle traffic manager, and Captain Jack Pattison, Central Life Insurance Company Vice-president, Cincinnati Boy Aviator Here Richard E. James, 17, New York City, former Terre Haute youth, stopped for fuel at Capitol airport, Monday, on his way to New York from Los Angeles in competition for a coast-to-coast flight record for boys under 21 years of age. After eating luncheon James con- | 1 inued in his Travel Air biplane, Spirit of American Xouth, to stop j for the night at Columbus, O. j SSO REWARD soo will bo paid if R. V. Turner’s Quick Relief Salve falls to relieve croup, head colds, catarrh, sore throat, headache, earache, eczema, itch, burns, risings, bruises, cuts, sores, rheumatic pains or piles. One of the most powerful, penetrating, germ-killing, pain-re-lievlni?. healing salves known to science. Removes corns without pain; also seed warts. 30c. 00c, $1 at drug stores. 60c and $1 sizes by postpaid mail. Agents Wanted, write for special terms. R. V. Turner, Box 1122, Montgomery, Ala. — Advertisement.

TIRE® BATTERIES /. motcrr-,7ire | TWBKgCT WSSeBTS motor tire: r\ rm . ,•* *-** 0P f N NICHTS

Flier Fights for Life in Flaming Mail Plane 8,000 Feet in Air

Noted Pilot Relates Gripping Story of Perilous Flight. This Is the second of five stories de scribing the dangers braved by airmail pilots to “get the mail through at any c ost,” written particularly around the career of Major Wesley L. Smith, superin tendent of the New York-Chicago division on the transcontinental route and air mall flier since 1919. Today Major Smith tells of fighting flames in a mail plane m ore than a mile high. By NEA Service FIRE is the most treacherous and the most feared foe of the airmail pilots. Before the days of modem planes, largely of metal, the menace was ever present and many of the airmail pilots have gone blazing to their deaths on aerial pyres |. One of the narrowest escapes which Major Wesley L. Smith, one of the original airmail pilots and now superintendent of the New York-Chicago division of the National Air Transport Company, airmail contractors, ever had was when he fought a blazing gasoline fire 8,000 feet in the air. That was when he was piloting one of the fomaus Junkers metal planes between Chicago and New York. The planes were hailed by the pilots as the first planes in which they felt safe from fire. Soon they looked upon them as flaming coffins. Smith left Chicago August 31, 1920, and his co-pilot, E. M. Haight, now an inspector with the department of commerce, riding as relief in the cabin. Afire at 8,000 Feet Up “We were breezing along, with a good tail wind at 8,000 feet, when suddenly the motor quit,” Smith says. “Those motors had caused plenty of trouble. The burned benzol, and as that fuel ate rubber hose connections, metal connecnections were necessary. These repeatedly had broken under the strain of the motor’s vibration. "When the motor quit I assumed one of the connections had burnt. I shut off the fuel supply. “As I did so a blinding flash of flames shot up through the floorboard of the cockpit, beneath which the motor was housed. It was the first burst of burning oil and benzol in the chamber about the engine.” When the flames burst through the flooring Smith had to do some quick thinking. Two tanks lay between him and the flames, one cf water, the other of oil. He knew if the flames reached the oil supply it meant the end for him and Haight, too. , Dives at Terrific Speed The plane had dual controls, with two pilots’ seats in the cockpit. Smith was in the left seat. His salvation lay in throwing the flames away from the fuel tank, and letting them burn out. “I threw the plane into a sideslip to the right,” he contnued. “That forced the flames away from the fuel tank and against the water tank in front of me. They swept over my hands, my face and my body, but I hung to the controls. I had to, or it was ‘curtains’ for both of us.” The air speed indicator circled higher and higher, passed 150 miles an hour and then broke. The flaming plane must have hit 200 miles an hour in that fierce downward drive. Then after what seemed an eternity, the flames died down. Smith glanced at the altimeter, saw he had fallen to 400 feet and was still diving straight toward earth. Lands in Cornfield “I tried the controls to bring the plane out of the dive, but to no avail,” he went on. “They flapped helplessly in the vacuum created by the plane’s fall. Then I tried the ailerons. They responded and as the plane turned into a spin the other controls took hold. I then straightened the plane into a steep glide. “Close below me lay cornfields, some standing, some shocked. I chose to land in the standing corn; it was softer.” Shouting back to Haight to pile the mail back in the tail of the ship, Smith sw’ept down for a landing. The plane grounded in the corn and plowed through it to a stop. NEXT: Playing “blind man’s bluff” with death In the clouds. IT’S IRVING BERLIN JR. Father of Former Ellen Mackay Still Estranged, Is Belief. By United Press NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—lrving Berlin and his wife, formerly Ellin Mackay, daughter of the multimillionaire head of the Postal Telegraph Company, have decided to make their new born son Irving Jr. The‘announcement was regarded as indication that no reconciliation had been effected with Mackay, who cut off his daughter when she married Berlin. $45,000 FIRE IN STORE Stock at Kokomo Damaged by Night Blaze. By Times Special KOKOMO, Ind„ Dec. 4.—Fire caused $45,000 damage at the Winick department store Monday night. '.The flames, discovered in the > eady-tc-wear department, were inly indirectly responsible for the 'amage. which was due mostly to moke.

In the Air

Weather conditions at 9:30 a., m. Indianapolis airport: Northeast wind, 5 miles an hour; oarometric pressure, 30.13 at sea level; temperature, 34; ceiling, 1,000 feet, visibility, 1 mile.

“A blinding flash of flame shot up through the floorboards. ... I threw the plane into a sideslip to the right, forcing the fire away from the fuel tank. Flames swept ever my hands, my face, my body. The plane shot down like a plummet.”

Women Prove They Have Place in Stock Market

In this, the last of tnree articles dealing with the wild rise of the stock market, is described the part that women can and do play In finance. The author has attained an exceptionally high place in exchange activities and is president and publisher of the Magazine of Wail Street, who writes this article exclusively for The Times and NEA Service. BY MRS. C. G. WYCKOFF (Copyright. 1928. by NEA Service. Inc.) NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—Can women be successful in the stock market? All things being equal, I believe they can. From my observation up to a few years ago, the average man approached Wall Street merely with the idea of “beating the game.” Women, at the same time, were approaching the “Street” through male members of their family and friends not directly. However, the war changed all this, together with many other things. Women went into business like the male members of their family. Having under)"'-en and accomplished other jr they began to strike out on the ;ai, in the handling of their savings as well. Being more careful than men, and not having been accustomed to the possession of large sums, they, on the whole, approached the security market with a desire to know more about the actual facts surrounding the securities in which they interested themselves. Has Shopping Instinct Woman haj a natural shopping instinct and when interested in buying anything, she is willing to spend the necessary time and energy to get exactly what she wants. * The majority of women up to a few years ago confined themselves Dial Twisters Central Standard Time TUESDAY —WFI, Philadelphia (500 Kilocycles)— 6:00- -U. of Penn Drama Club play. —NBC Svstem (WEAF, 660 Kilocycles)— 6; 30—Soconyland sketches. 8;00 —Eveready hour. —WLW. Cincinnati (TOO Kilocylces)— —NBC Svstem (WJZ, T6O Kilocycles)— 7:oo—Sealy Air Weavers. 7.3o—Michelln hour. B:3o—Dutch Masters minist.rels. —WNAC. Harvard (1230 Kilocycles)— 7:3O—U. Band. —Columbia Network—--B:o—Light opera. 9:oo—Simmons Show Boat. —WGN. Chicago (720 Kilocycles)— 9:oo—Musical comedy, ‘'Pirates of Penzance.” —NBC System—--9:3o—Livestock0 —Livestock horse show to KWK, WSW. WFAA, KOA. —KSTP. St. Paul (1460 Kilocycles)— 9:2o—St. Paul police band. WLW/ (700 Kilocycles), CINCINNATI TUESDAY P. M. 3:ls—Club period. 3:3o—Office Boys. 4 : oo—Five O’clock Hawaiians. 4:3o—Livestock reports. 4:4o—Market reports with novelty notions. s:oo—Henry Thiess’ orchestra. s:3o—Dynacoi.e Diners. ;:oO—Hotel Gibson orchestra. 6:3o—Sohio program. 7:oo—Perfect Circle symphony hour with the Cincinnati symphony orchestra. B:3o—Dutch Masters Minstrels. 9:oo—Longine's correct time. 9:oo—Croslev Cossacks. 10:00—Weather announcement. 10:00 —Aviation chat. 10.10—Kahn and Lombardi. 10:30—The Office Boys. 11:00—Hotel Gibson orchestra. 11:30—Henry Thiess’ orchestra. Farmer, 76, Killed by Auto WARSAW, Ind., Dec. 4.—John Snyder, 72, farmer, was killed when struck by an automobile on a highway south of Warsaw today.

IDANCINCI NICHTLY EXCEPT MONDAY mam INDIANA BALLROOM ROOF ATOP INDIANA THEATRE

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

mainly to the better types of securities. Their fear of losses kept them from taking speculative risks. However, with the improvement in their incomes, and the growing of their investment funds, their courage increased and many women of this class have done exceedingly well in the market. Have Advantage of Patience As far as women are concerned they have a great advantage: They know they have a lot to learn about securities, and so usually apply to the most conservative sources for their informatino. And because woman is more patient and less headstrong, and Is willing to wait and bide her time, she should do very well. Patience is one of the greatest assets that a man or woman can have in dealing with the stock market. Simple in Operation The function of the stock market is really very simple in its technique; it is nothing more or less than a market place for the buying and selling of securities. The broker is there to execute your orders, and stocks are nothing but pieces of paper which certify to your partnership in a corporation. The selection of the security itself is the important factor in the situation. The three essentials of selecting a well-managed company in a sound industry with increasing earning power should be the basis for every investment that a woman makes. Avenue for obtaining this fundamental information are open to every one who desires to buy his or her securities intelligently. Just the same as one consults an architect in whom one has confidence, when one wishes to build a house, a lawyer to handle a legal situation, a doctor when one is ill—so does one secure the proper fundamentals in reinvest. In this way only are you assured of the proper foundation for the investment of your funds. Buying securities on a business basis is the only sound, intelligent way to stock market success, and is simple of attainment for women as well as men.

Gets Rheumatics Out of Bed Enables Them to Walk and Go Back to Work. The Rcmarkoble Prescription of a New Y’ork Specialist. DRUGGISTS GUARANTEE IT A New York .Specialist's office, always crowded with Rheumatics seeking relief. made It necessary to put up his Nnrito prescription for the benefit of the public. It is now on sale in local drug stores on a positive guarantee. Those who have tried everything without benefit will find Nurito the most startling discovery of recent times. For the pains of rheumatism, neuritis, neuralgia. sciatica or lumbago the relief is quick and sure. But you can prove this with one package. There is no use in wasting effort with anything that doesn't stop your pain. And if it does that you know you are going to get well. Get a package today. Take two or three doses, and if disappointed take It back and get your money. Try it today. Don’t wait. At all drug stores and Hook’s Dependable Drug Stores.— Advertisement.

DHESS-IP OIM Liberal Credit mt; HUB I 1 + •-UjHINUuV >(Kt.KT

Ask Your Friends About . (Atyedic All-Electric Radio The Radio Sensation

Radio MISSOURI GIRL IS WINNER OF RADIOiAUDITION Detroit Boy Is Victor in Atwater Kent Prize Contest. Gladys Morrison Ball, Kansas City, Mo. r coloratura soprano, and Wilfred A. Engleman, Detroit, baritone, today were adjudged winners of semi-finals in the National Radio audition, over champion amateur singers of all midwest states who competed at Station WMAQ, Chicago, Nov. 24. This victory entitles them to represent the midwest in grand finals of the audition at New York, Dec. 16, and assures each of receiving one of the Atwater Kent foundation’s awards, which total $17,500 in cash and conservatory scholarships, ten awards being offered for the ten finalists. Thelma M. Wallette, Cleveland, O. soprano, won second place in the girls’ division of midwest semifinals. She was introduced as Contestant No. 17 and sang “Charmant. Oiseau.” Phyllis D. Nowak, Milwaukee, soprano, introduced as No. 13 and sang “Una Voce Poco Fa,” won third place. Chester Ewers, Evanston (111.) tenor, introduced as No. 10 and singing "On Away Awake, Beloved,” was runner-up in the men’s division. Emerson W. Brown, St. Louis, baritone, introduced as No. 2 and singing “Eri Tu,” was placed third. Gladys Morrison Ball, the winner, was introduced as No. 21 and sang “Ah Forse Lui,” the same number which Marie Bronarzyk of Chicago used to become midwest champion in 1927. Engelman was introduced as No. 24. He sang “II Balen Suo Sorriso.” Mrs. Ball and Engelman were placed first both by ballots of official judges and thousands of votes from the radio publis in many states, Canada and Mexico. Mrs. Ball, a bride of less than six months, was runner-up in midwest semi-finals of 1927. She is a diminutive brunette, 22 years old, who first thrilled Kansas City v/hen. at 19, she filled the role of Marguerite in “Faust,” appearing as an amateur with the Kansas City Grand Opera Company. Her teacher is Mrs. Ottley Cranston, Marion Talley’s early coach. Engelman, aged 24, attended Notre Dame university and sings with St. Aloysius choir of Detroit. KIWANIS SET ELECTION Two Tickets In Field for Vote to Be Held Wednesday. The Kiwanis Club will elect officers at a dinner at 6:30 p. m. Wednesday, at the Columbia Club. Two tickets have been nominated for the offices. The “Eli” ticket is headed by Eli Schloss as the candidate for president. Others on the ticket: vicepresident, Dr. Erza E. Voyles; treasurer, Dwight A. Murphy: directors, Howard S. Young, Samuel Ashby, A. P. Conklin. The “Otto” ticket is headed by Otto N. Mueller. Others on the ticket: vice-president, Howard M. Gay; treasurer, Robert H. Bryson; directors, Arthur Webber, Alex Barry, Irwin Bertermann. SET CHURCH QUOTAS Apportionment From Presbyteries In Indiana Synod Named. Apportionment of benevolent quotas assessed from Presbyterian churches in the Indiana synod for 1929-30 was made Monday by the church council at a conference in the Hotel Severin. Allotment of each presbytery was announced as follows: Indianapolis, $61,000; Crawfordsville, $29,000; Ft. Wayne, $32,262; Logansport, $46,700; Muncie, $29,172; New Albany, $14,700; Vincennes, $25,112. and Whitewater, $14,500. The total to be raised in Indiana is $342,350.

We Carry a Complete Line of Fada and Crosley RADIOS &£DOWN y J Installs Either. Chicago Jewelry Cos. 203 E. Washington St.

AMUSEMENTS

C!if*l ICU’C TOMTE CWULIon o y g ” Nltes, 50c to $2.00; Mats., 50c to $1.50 —ENGLISH’S—ALL NEXT WEEK SEAT SALE THURS. MATS. WED. ds SAT. The Greatest Musical Romance of All Time IlSt Voices I Romberg DESERT SONG’ With Alexander Gray. Bernard Granville and Bernice Claire. Prices: Nites. SI to $3: Wed. Mat., $1 to $2; Sat. Mat.. SI to $2.50.. No Tax

B MUTUAL,

BURLESQUE THEATRE “GIRLS FROM HAPPYLAND” Featuring CARRIE FINNELL The Girl With the $100,000.00 Legs On the Illuminated Runway

Fishing The Air AU references are Central Standard Time.

THE Vitaphone program to be broadcast from the Apollo theater over station WKBF at 9 o’clock Tuesday night will have as its features A1 Herman, famous blackface comedian, and Richard Ober and company in a hilarious sketch called “A Regular Business Man.” In his Vitaphone act he will sing one of his greatest hits, “Don’t Lean on the Bell” and “Ida.” Richard Ober is an actor long popular on Broadway, who made his screen debut in one of the leading roles in “The Big Parade.” The Vitaphone sketch he is presenting is packed with witty lines and laughable situations, and he has the support of Margery Meadows, Lucy Beaumont and John St. Polis. u tt tt tt tt tt “The Pirates of Penzance,” one of the best known Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas, will be broadcast by the Columbia system Tuesday night at 8 o’clock. It has been shortened and prepared for radio presentation in the limited space of one hour. tt s tt tt % a a a Compositions by Carl Maria Von Weber will be presented during the “Works of Great Composers” period which will be broadcast through the NBC system, Tuesday night at 9 o’clock. , The artists will be Astrid Fjelde, soprano, and Gertrude Lightstone, pianist, with a concert orchestra conducted by Cesare Sodero, maestro T>f NBC operatic and concert productions. a a a a a a Wagner’s “Siegfried Idyll,” written to celebrate the birth of the composer’s son, will be played during the hour of Slumber Music to be broadcast through the NBC system Tuesday night at 10 o’clock.

HIGH SPOTS OF TUESDAYS NIGHT’S OFFERINGS 8:00 —WEAF, NBC Network —Eveready hour. 9:OO—WJZ, NBC Network—Music of great composers. 7:OO—WOR, Newark—Main street sketches. Cincinnati—Perfect Circle symphony. B:3O—WABC, Columbia Network—United light opera company.

“Tempset and Sunshine,” a comedy drama in three acts, will be the next broadcast over stations of the Columbia system Tuesday night at 9 o’clock. a tt a a a a The praises of “Darling Nellie Gray,” which have been voiced for generations by male quartets, again will be sung when a group of the Dutch Masters minstrels presents the famous old ballad during the program to be broadcast through the NBC system Tuesday night at 8:30. a a Two great symphony orchestras every Tuesday play in the homes of radio owners tuned to station WLW for the presentation at 7 o’clock of the Perfect Circle symphony hour under the personal direction of Fritz Reiner, conductor of the Cincinnati symphony, and at 6:30 for the Sohio concert offering each week some great Ohio musician. a tt tt a a To obtain for the listening audience of the entire country a type of dance music which they believe to be not obtainable elsewhere on Tuesday and Thursday night of each week the Columbia Broadcasting System goes to Chicago for its hour of dance music, featuring Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians, playing in the Granada case in the Windy City. The broadcasting of this dance music begins at 11 o’clock and is of an hour’s duration. Tuesday night the following stations broadcast the program: WABC, WJAS, WBBM and KMBC. r a o u tt tt Another thirty minutes of dance music will be broadcast by the Clicquot Club Eskimos through the NBC System Tuesday night at 9 o’clock. “You’ll Never Know,” with a vocal chorus; “There’s a Rainbow ’Round My Shoulder,” a banjo solo by Harry Reser and Black’s “At Dawning” are the highlights of this week's program. "Wagneria.” a potpourri of favorite Wagner compositions taken from his best-known operas, opens the weekly program by The Mediterraneans over the NBC system Tuesday night, at 7 o’clock. „ tt It It It o An Indian maid of long ago will be impersonated in a burlesque skit entitled “Pocahontas Gives a Scalp Treatment,” another one of the “Embarrassing Moment in History” which will be enacted during the Three-in-One theater broadcast through the NBC system. Tuesday night at 8 o’clock.

City Stations WFBM (10.30 Kilocycles) INDIANAPOLIS (Indianapolis Power and Uirht Company) TUESDAY Noon—Corect time; Lester Huff on studio organ. 12:30—Livestock market: farm flashes. 3:3o—Auction bridge game. . 4:oo—Mrs. Farrell's home service period. 4:IS—WFBM studio orchestra. 4:3o—Aunt Sammy's housekeeper's chats and radio recipes. 4:43—WFBM studio orchestra. s:ls—“What's Happening.” late news from the Indianapolis Times. s:3o—Chapter a day from New Testament. s:4s—Santa Claus. 6:oo—Longine's time: weather forecast; dance marathon news. 6:IS—WFBM concert trio. 6:30 to B:oo—Silent. 8:00—WFBM mixed quartet. B:IS—WFBM variety hour. 9:oo—American Legion boxing bouts. 10:30—The columnist: Longine's time; weather forecast. 10:45—Dick Powell’s orchestra. 11:30—Dale Young, Indiana theater organ. 12:00—Good night. WKBF (1490 Kilocycles) INDIANAPOLIS (Bocsler Athletic Club) TUESDAY A. M. 10:00—Recipe exchange. 10:15 Studio program. 10:23—Interesting bits of history, courtesy of Indianapolis public library. 10:30—Livestock and grain market; weather and shippers' forecast. 10:10—WKBF shopping service. P. M. s:oo—Late news bulletins and sports. 6:oo—Santa Claus, sponsored by the MOTION PICTURES SKOURAS-PUBLIX THEATRES

■ l Rend what HICKMAN (Times) I * ■ .. “Dave Apollon and Charlie 1 Davis prove sensations.”—“Best I revue for many months.” ■ AND THAT GOES FOR THE FEATURE, TOO! | MANHATTAN COCKTAIL’ 1 NANCYCARROLL B RICHARD ARLEN tO, X,X e n t s h T,{ , "Br , ! y .' h '‘ ON THE STAGE Charlie Davis in “HOUSEBOAT” H with DAVE APOLLON J 35c to 1

rIS YOUTH JUSTIFIED IN UN- \ CONVENTIONAL MEETINGS? A SOUND Marvel with TALK and COLOR SEQUENCES! “LONESOME” with GLENN TRYON BARBARA KENT A JAZZ SYMPHONY OF YOUNG LOVE! SHORT NOVELTIES—HYAMS and MoINTYKE MARY HAYNES HARRY DELE Fox Movietone News

AMUSEMENTS il. MARYM BELLET and Company in “A WHIRL OF JOY” and 5 OTHER NEW ACTS ON THE SCREEN THE “POWER OF THE PRESS” with DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS JR.

People’s Outfitting Company, fl:3o—Bair's theaters program. 7:oo—Studio program. 8:00—Don Herr program. 8:30 International Bible Students’ Association. 9:00—Apollo theater. 10:30—H. A. C. ‘After Theater Party.” THREE DIE IN BLAZE Two Waitresses and Fiance Are Suffocated In Fire. Bis United Press NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—Three persons. two young waitresses and the fiance of one of them, were suffocated today when fire broke out In a five-story building on Third avenue. p7h7c.hall East and Mich. DANCING EVERY TUESDAY NITE Red Hot Music By Dreamland Syncopator*

MOTION PICTURES

AVENUE SQUARE LAST TIMES TODAY VITAPHONE PRODUCTION with TALK “Tenderloin” Dolores Costello Conrad Nagel Vitaphone Luella Freeh, Presentation Organist. STARTING TOMORROW See and Hear AL JOLSON “The Jazz Singer.”

AMLIO First Movietone Talking Picture “The Air Circus” Thrilling Aviation Drama SUE CAROL, DAVID ROLLINS LOUISE DRESSER ARTHUR LAKE Vitaphone I Movietone Acts J News STARTING SATURDAY Another Grout Vituphone Talking Picture “The Midnight Taxi” With ANTONIO MORENO-HELENE COSTELLO The Apollo Has the Pictures!

L O <-W>o NOW SHOWING LON CHANEY IN A MOST AMAZING STORY WEST OF ZANZIBAR WITH SOUND EFFECTS AND MUSIC METRO MOVIETONE ACTS MOVIETONE NEWS OUR GANG COMEDY

DEC. 4, 1928

FIVE ARRESTED IN TWO INDIANA ROBBERYCASES Taken at Detroit After Newcastle Prisoner Confesses. B.y United Press DETROIT, Dec. 4.—Four men, giving their names as Paul Myler, 23, alias Robert Moore; Russell Johnson, 23, alias Harold Mann, and Forest, 23, and William Wright, 22, are being held by police here today in connection with the holdup of a bank in Newcastle, Ind.,’ Nov. 17. Police say the men have admitted participation in several robberies. They have been living in an apartment here, where police found a quantity of shotguns, revolvers, flashlights, riffles and ammunition for all types of guns. Includes Bank Holdup By United press NEWCASTLE. Ind. Dec. 4.—An alleged confession here by Everett Savage, 24, today was said to ba responsible for the arrest in Detroit, Mich., of four men suspected of participation in two Indiana holdups last month. Local officers said Savage made his confession Monday but that it was not made public pending the Detroit arrests, which were made Monday night. Savage was said to have confessed to participation in the robbery of the Sulphur Springs bank Nov, 17, and the payroll robbery of the Traanor Spring Company here Nov. 3. Louis Wampler, bank cashier wounded in the Sulphur Springs robbery has identified Savage as one of the bandits, police said.

“KONJOLA MADE ENTIRELY NEW PERSON OF ME” Indianapolis Resident, 73, Declares That New Medicine Was Easy Victor in Case of Stomach Trouble. What a world of encouragement, good cheer and hope there is for all who suffer in the innumerable Indorsements that Konjola, the new medicine, has won from those to whom it has brought health to take the place of pain and suffering.

. |*' SISP

MR. JOHN Q. MARLOW —Photo by National Studio.

Konjola—the medicine of 32 ingredients, 22 of which are the juices of roots and herbs—succeeds as ifc does, in even the most obstinate cases, simply because it goes to the very root, the very source, the very causes of the ailment. How Konjola does this is being explained by the Konjola Man at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indanapolis, every day, to all who meet him. The Konjola Man deals in facts; actual experiences, proven and verified. Sufferers want health, not promises—and Konjola brings health when all else has failed. Take the case of Mr. John Q. Marlow, 1125 West Thirtythird street, this city, for instance: “Konjola made an entirely new person of me,” he said to the Konjola Man a few days ago. “Fifteen years of constant stomach trouble made me feel sure that my case was chronic and that I would never receive any relief. There were times when I could eat but the lightest foods. Foods soured, fermented, formed gas and pains. I became so weak that I had trembling spell* from lack of nourishment. I had suffered so long that I felt my age, 73 years, was against me and that I would have to endure this trouble the rest of my life. Os course, I never felt like starting a day’s work. “Finally, after reading so many wonderful things Konjola was doing right here in Indianapolis, I decided to give this new compound a chance. How foolish I was not to have done this long before. Five bottles and all my illness was at an end—think of it, fifteen years of suffering banished. Konjola, as I was told it would, went to the seat of my troubles. My stomach was purified and invigorated; the other organs were stimulated, and at the end of a month I found that I could eat a hearty meal, digest it and suffer not a bit. I am gaining in weight and strength, and, as I said, I fee! like a different person. I have heard that Konjola is a medicine with a million friends. Well, all I have to say is that it has won a life-long friend in me.” Konjola is a Aew and different medicine. It is not designed primarily to sooth and banish pain, but to give permanent relief; new health, anew joy in life, even in those cases that have defied and resisted every other treatment. The Konjola Man is at the Hook Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is meeting' the public daily, introducing and explaining the merits of this master medicine. Advertisement.