Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 33, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1929 — Page 3
eTTSTE 19, 1929.
LINDY RETURNS TO DESK AFTER WEDDING TRIP Colonel Poses With Wife, Avoids Honeymoon in Interview. B" t nitrj prr', MITCHEL FIELD. L. 1.. June 19. Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh returned from his honeymoon to business today, posed with the new "we” —his bride, the former Anne Morrow. and an airplane—and gave the first newspaper interview since his marriage. May 27. He talked nothing but aviation and steered clear of comment on the trip he and his wife took along the roast in their honeymoon yacht. th& Mouette. He gave no hint of hi I plans for a residence. Hatless anct to a suit of blue, he motored to Mitchell field with Mrs. Lindbergh, also dressed in blue, and posed solemnly beside a plane for the benefit of cameramen.
Later, seated at a desk in the office of the Guggenheim fund lor the promotion of aeronautics, he talked, with a trace of his old smile, about the Guggenheim efforts to make aviation safe for the novice. He discussed the airplane safety competition which opened at this field today, with the Guggenheim fund offering SIOO,OOO to the plane least dependent on a trained pilot’s j skill in an emergency. The prime purpose of the competition. he said, was to encourage the ; development of planes anybody; could fly—to the end that airplanes j mjght become as common as auto- ! mobiles. “Commercial aviation, in charge ; experienced operators, is entirely j pmctieal today on a commercial j basis,” he said. "The next step is! to perfect planes and equipmeift that i can flown by inexperienced per-
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Elevator Is Wrecked by Fire
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sons more or less m the manner in which automobiles are used today. "Before that soi„ of flying is universal. planes will have to be more nearh 7 foolproof and generally safer than they are today, even in the hands of inexperienced pilots.” He declared the day of personal planes was still in the future. He agreed that nearly all planes might be termed "everyday planes,” but added, "not in the sense that a novice can always fly them safely.” He smiled broadly when asked if all planes were not “pretty much alike." “Generally that is probably so,” he said. “But there are two autogyro machines—one from Europe and one from the United States—entered in this competition. The idea is to test out the revolutionary as well as the evolutionary 7 with the idea of eventually getting the foolproof machine.”
WORK BOSHED ON FIRE TOWER Drill Building to Be Ready Next Week. The drill toner for firemen will be completed within a week. Fire Chief Harry F- announced today. The five-story tower is being erected at Engine House 30. South and New Jersey streets, at an approximate cast of $1,700. The tower dl be modem in every respect, providing all the facilities for instructing the city's fire fighters. Battalion Chief John J. O'Brien will direct the instruction activities. A ? moke room where firemen can become accustomed to using a gas mask and learn to string lines under handicap will be a part of the equipment. Voshell said work is progressing on the new fire department shops, which have ben moved to Sanders and Sherbv streets, in connection with the old Shelby street mule barn. The building is 120x120 feet, providing ample space for the shop and housing of emergency equipment department keeps two trucks, three pumpers and a hose wagon in reserve. Frank Braun, master mechanic, is in charge of the repair shop. Voshell plans to install a. new heating system, using the old boiler which formerly heated the fire headquarters. T TO OPEN CAMP Forty Boys Start Season Thursday. The seventh annual Y. M. C. A. camp season will begin Thursday when forty boys from 10 to 12 years old leave for Camp Bedford under the direction of I. N. Logan, in charge of boys' work in the Indianapolis Y. M. C. A. Three groups of boys from 12 to 16. consisting of about 150 boys, will attend camp from June 23 to July 26. in charge of E. L. Frost and E. J. Roberts, assistants to Logan, and J. H. Ellers, student secretary. The following week the camp will be given over to the Boy Scouts of America, and then R. L. Konecke. physical director of the Indianapolis Y. M. C. A., will have charge of athletics for the Farm Club camp sponsored by Indiana colleges. Southern Indiana Hi-A* camp will open Aug. 27 and will be under the direction of R. J. Duke, assistant state secretary. Following the Athletic camp from Aug. 27 to Sept. 10. made up of Indiana high school and college football teams in training, the last group, Indiana, university will hold freshman week for the 1933 class at the camp. Long Marriage Ends. MARION. Tnd.. June 19—Mrs. Jennie E. Shinn has been granted a divorce in the Grant circuit court from Homer H. Shinn. Abandonment was charged. They were married April 6. 1899. and separated March 9. 1923.
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Ruins of the National Elevator Company elevator and warehouse in Dakota street, near Morris street, destroyed, with estimated loss of $250,000. by fire early today.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BANK OPENS IN SPEEDWAY CITY Capitalized at $25,000: Only One in Town, Formal opening of the Speedway I State bank was held today in the ! bank building at 1534 Main street, ! Speedway City. Wiliam Rosner, proprietor of the 1 Rosner Drug Company in Speed.- ! way City, was the first depositor and Henry Brunell. an employe of the | Indianapolis Power and Light Company. was the second. The bank is capitalized at $25,000. Emsley Johnson, attorney and director of the bank, declared today that the bank is really the Clermont State bank moved to anew location.
INDIANAPOLIS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY Meridian and 4* Washington Sts. Monument Circle
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‘BRAVE’ SKIPPER FINALLY TAKEN FROM STEAMER Changes Mind About Perishing With Ship Wrecked on Rocks, B’i VnUnt Pre** NORTH HEAD. Wash., June 19. Captain Louis Johnson of the wrecked steamer Laurel, who refused to leave his ship when the crew was rescued, was taken from the derelict today by a coast guard crew. The crew, which observers could not identify, started with the skipper to Cape Disappointment. A white flag dangled from the bridge of the steamer this morning and gave mute testimony that Captain Louis Johnson had changed his mind about going down with his ship. A sixty-six-mile gale which threatened to overwhelm what was left of the vessel as thought to have brought the skipper’s decision.. Monday Captain Johnson refused to go ashore when the last six men of his crew were taken from the stern of the Laurel, which broke in two on rocks half a mile off shore. That night and Tuesday one of the worst gales in the north Pacific coast history raged along the mouth of the Columbia river and sent waves pouring over the bridge.
Drowned
Robert Bailey. 18. of 406 Harris street, who drowned while bathing in Eagle Creek, near the Pennsylvania railway bridge late Tuesday afternoon.
CENTER VALUE IS §OO MILLIONS Township Is Assessed for 1930 Taxation, Center township property, which is assessed for taxation, will reach a valuation of about $600,000,000 this year, Frank Brattain, township assessor, announced today. Figures are in preparation following the completion of the 1929 spring assessment and will be announced prior to filing of tax duplicates in the treasurer’s office for the 1930 payments.
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HELEN WILLS’ SKETCHES WIN CP.ITIJIS7RAISE U. S. Tennis Queen Sells Paintings at London Exhibit. ! 81l rnit-'d PrCSS LONDON, June 19.—Helen Wills, | tennis star and amateur artist, is j beginning to profit from sale of her j sketches. The United Press learned today
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that eight of thirty-five sketches she is exhibiting at the Cooling galleries on fashionable New Bond street, already have been sold for twelve guineas each—about S6O each. A public exhibition of the California girl’s art opened today and will continue throughout, the time she is playing at Wimbledon.
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