Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 49, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1929 — Page 16
PAGE 16
Aviation pj LOW FLIGHTS OVER CAPITAL RAISE STORM Plane Novices Practice Over President's Head, Says Writer. p„ Scripi*-H'tirnr& ,V. uspnnrr Allionrc WASHINGTON. July B—The old squabble about planes flying low over Washington is on again. The City Club, as in the past, is the complainant. H. S. Odenthal. exeuctive secretary of the club and war-time flier, who writes hot editorials lor the City Club Tribune, is of the opinion that the nation's capital is in danger from low' flying planes. In an editorial in the City Club Tribune he says that planes fly over the city at less than 1,000 feet; that students are given dual instructions right over President Herbert Hoover's head, and that solo students with only a few hours in the air, cut their capers above the Capitol dome. The District of Columbia has a peculiar law’ which forbids planes | living over the district at less than ; 2,000 feet The minimum in the i federal aviation laws for flying over cities is 1.000 feet. So the operators of Hoover field ana Washington airport fly their tourist sight-seeing planes in ac- j eordance with federal law, and pay no attention to the district statutes. To do so, they say, would put them out of business. For the tourist joyhops are only seven or eight minutes long, and by the time a plane had climbed to 3,000 feet, all the ; profit would be gone. A survey brought the reply that commercial planes from local fields never fly over the city at less than 1.200 feet; that dual instruction is positively never given over town, but far out over the Virginia fields, and that solo students are forbidden to fly over the city on their practice flights. Air Force Increased John Sutherland, formerly with the Cincinnati office of the EmbryRidddle Air Mail Company office, arrived here today to become assist- | ant to Donald A. McConnell, local ; representative. The additional representative was j made necessary by inauguration of three round trips daily on the air mail line betwen Cincinanti, Indianapolis and Chicago. RAZOR FIEND SLASHES WOMAN ON BROADWAY Street Crowded with Work-Goers; Admits Detroit Murder. By United I'ri .> NEW YORK. July 8 —Carl Delatt, 23, a husky sit-footer, who told ! police he killed a woman in Detroit; fours years ago. was arrested to- j day after slashing Caroline Good- j win, a telephone operator, as she j was walking to work. Delatt. who said his home was i near Dayton, O, slipped up behind ; Miss Goodwin at Broadway and Vesey street, crowded with work-goers, j and, according to the police, drew a long old-fashioned razor across her j back from the left shoulder to the | right arm pit. inflicting a cut twelve Inches long and two inches deep. KIDNEY PAINS AND RHEUMATISM GONE Farmer Is Able to Work Again. After Years of Illness. Trying to work a farm, while crippled and in constant pain for several years, was the hard task faced by Matt Reiland, Route 4, Stockton. 111. He tells of his re- | covery, in the following letter: “I suffered from kidney trouble and rheumatism for several years. My back ached so I could hardly bend. My head ached, and the pains in my limbs were very severe. I was anemic, my blood was poor, and I was so weak and dizzy that ; my farm work was almost impos- j Bible. But today, life looks entirely different. My rheumatism is all ; gone and there are no kinks or j pains in my back. My kidney trouble has disappeared, and my sleep is not disturbed. I am eating hearty meals and feel fine in every w’ay. It feels wonderful to have good, rich blood coursing through my veins. I trace all this change to the day I started taking Viuna. My wife and son are both taking it now, with wonderful results. Viuna has surely been a God-send to our family.” Viuna has worked wonders in thousands of desperate cases of kidney trouble, back-ache, stomach trouble and rheumatism. It may be the making of you. Try one bottle under positive guaranty. $1 at druggists or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis. Ind.
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TIRE AIR FLEET TO 'STUNT' HERE Eight Planes Will Arrive Here From Akron. Aviation enthusiasts of Indianapolis will be entertained Wednesday and Thursday with night, flying maneuvers, upon the arrival here of eight cabin monoplanes of the General Tire and Rubber Company, on the first leg of a 50,000-mile jaunt overt the nation’s airways. The sky fleet will come to this city Tuesday from Akron, headquarters of the rubber company. During the fleet's stay, a limited number of passengers will be taken for short rides. The military maneuvers for the night flights will display the Neon lighting equipment for planes. Each ship in the fleet will have Neon lights on the underside of its wing in the formation of a letter. When the fleet is in formation, the word “General” will be spelled to spectators in letters of fire. The fleet’s itinerary will include important airports of the nation, in addition to Cuba, Mexico and Canada. Purpose of the tour is to determine the worthiness of rubber < equipment used on the monoplanes. The ships are powered w’ith Warner Scarab air-cooled motors of 110-horse power and have a cruising speed of ninety miles an hour. Former army fliers are pilots. The tour is the first the fleet has made since its christening at Bolling field. Washington, D. C. Local arrangements for the fleet’s visit are in the hands of W. J. Coughlin. General Tire Company, 836 North Delaawre street. HELD AS EMBEZZLER Urbana (111.) Hotel Clerk Admits Taking S6OO. With only $25 left of the S6OO he is alleged to have taken from a hotel where he was clerk in Urbana, 111., Ben Emmons, 51. was taken from a train in the Union depot here at 4:35 a. m., today by Indianapolis police following receipt of a telegram from the TJrbana police department. Emmons told Motor Policeman E. Harms and O. Burke, w r ho arrested him. he was wulling to return to Urbana. The officers said Emmons admitted taking the money from the hotel safe when he lost heavily in a gambling game. He said he boarded a train for Cleveland, O, In the Air Weather conditions at 9:30 a, m. at Indianapolis airport: Southwest wind, six miles an hour; temperature, 79; barometric pressure, 30.09 at sea level; ceiling, broken clouds at 2.000 feet; visibility, four miles; light fog disappearing: field wet.
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Aviation TRIBUNE PLANE BELIEVED SAFE IN FAR NORTH ‘Untin’ Bowler Thought to Have Landed at Hudson Bay Post. By United Press CHICAGO, July B—The “Untin” Bowler, Chicago Tribune Berlinbound amphibian plane, was believed to be at Hudson Bay trading post near Cape Chidley today, after a five-hour flight. Although no direct word has come from the Bowler, automatic signals indicating the plane was in the air were heard at the WGN radio station for five hours yesterday. The continuous signal indicated, Tribune officials said, that the Bowler had left Great Whale, on Hudson Bay, and started northeastward toward Labrador, but probably was forced to descend before reaching Cape Chidley on account of bad weather. Radio reports from Port Burwell, via Mt. Evans, Greenland, and Ann Arbor, Mich., said the Bowler had not arrived there. The Canadian marine radio station at Port Burwell, across from Greenland, in Ungava, Canada, reported last night that it had received no message from the “Untin” Bowler throughout the day. The marine station had failed even to hear the automatic signals transmitted by the generator attached to the plane's motors. Despite the lack of news, no anxiety was felt for the safety of Pilots Parker D. Cramer and Robert Gast and Reporter Robert Wood. The Tribune said it was possible the fliers had taken off from Great Whale and in face of unfavorable weather had descended at one of two Hudson Bay’s trading posts, approximately 100 miles from Cape Chidley. New Air Mark Claimed By United Pres* WINNIPEG, Man., July B.—A new world’s nonstop distance record for light airplanes was claimed today by D. S. (Barney) Zimmerly, who completed a nonstop flight of approximately 1,500 miles here from Brownsville, Tex., in exactly sixteen hours. The trip was 753 miles longer than the best previous mark. Zimmerly took off from the southern city at 2:45 a. m. Sunday and arrived at a local airport at 6:45 p. m. Much of the flight was made through clouds and fog.
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Arrivals and Departures R. W. Bruene and C. G. Brodhecker, of the Hoosier Motor Club, flew from Mars Hill to Cincinnati Sunday and returned on the Embry Riddle mail plane. Lieutenant Holmes, flying a Rehaviland biplane from the Fairfield air depot, Ohio, to Brooks field, Texas, stopped overnight at Mars Hill airport. Evans Chatfield. Embry-Riddle official, went to Chicago Saturday on the mail plane. Herman Fletcher of Indiana,Pa., stopped at the Hoosier airport Sunday in the American Eagle, flying from Kansas City to his home field. H. Weir Cook, Curtiss Flying Service of Indiana head, landed at Stout field Sunday after, a trip to Evansville and Louisville. He was accompanied by Mrs. Cook. The Prest-O-Lite plane piloted by Richard Knox, landed at Capitol airport Saturday night, having returned from Buffalo, N. Y., and trips through the east. Joseph H. McDuffee, vice-president of the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery corporation here, w r as among the passengers. Briton Out for Record By United Press LONDON, July B.—The British air corps snortly will attempt to take the world’s non-stop flight record from Italy, which won it by the Rome-to-Brazi! flight of Major Carlo Del Prete and Captain Arthur Ferrarin last year, it was learned today. Plans have been completed for the flight, which will be undertaken by Arthur G. Jones-Williams, squadron leader. Jones-Williams will take off in England and attempt to reach Ceylon, approximately 6,000 miles away. The same Fairey Napier monoplane made a 4.130 non-stop flight from Cranwell airdrome to Karachi, India, last April will be used. The Italian record from Rome to Toures, Brazil, is 4,448 miles. Airport Being Built A new’ eighty-acre airport is being established east of Sherman drive, between Massachusetts avenue and Twenty-first street, by three Indianapolis men. Backers of the new field will be Theodore Roopman, operator of a
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dairy farm at the field; Herman F. ; Roesch and Charles Depha. They plan sight-seeing flights and later to organize a flying club for | private owners. A gasoline service j pit has been installed and a fiveplane hangar and operations building is planned. New Mail Line Planned By United Press RIO DE JANEIRO. July B.—Air mail and passenger lines between | Scandinavian countries and South; America are being contemplated by j a German company, the Brazilian i legation at Oslo re ports to the gov- ! ernment here. The line also would extend to Finland and the Soviet Republic, and would include stops at Southampton, England, some point in Spain; Cape Verde; Fernando, Cape Verde Islands; Donoronha, Recife, Bahia, Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires.
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