Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 191, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 December 1929 — Page 14
PAGE 14
Aviation CITY TO GREET MADISON SPAN FROM CLOUDS Seven Planes Will Shower Flowers During New Bridge Opening. Seven airplanes of the Curtiss Flying service of Indiana left the Mars Hill airport at 10 a. m. today, loaded with greetings and flowers from the Chamber of Commerce and Merchants Association to be dropped from the air at Madison, in connection with dedication of the new Ohio river bridge. Four Curtiss Robin monoplanes and three Command-Aires were used, the pilots being H. Weir Cook, Curtiss general manager; R. J. Barbin, Charles E. Cox Jr., Walker W. Winslow, Earl W. Sweeney, R. L. Stephens and Everett M. Murphy. Text of the greetings was; “Indianapolis sends her congra dilations by air to Madison on the completion and dedication of another artery to feed the life blood of trade and progress in our great state of Indiana, the Madison-Milton bridge* Dec. 20, 1929." Each pilot was to fly low* over the bridge and drop a wreath on the center. Arrivals and Departures Curtiss-Mars Hill Airport—Frank Kern and William Schultz, CurtissRobertson Airplane Manufacturing Company, Curtiss-Thrush monoplane, St. Louis to New York, overnight. Hoosier Airport—l. Vachon, Travel Air monoplane, lola, Kan., to Montreal, overnight. Meetings Changed Luncheon meetings of the Curtiss Flying Service business and professional men’s aviation class have been changed from Wednesnoons to each Friday noon, effective today. General Manager H. Weir Cook announced today. The classes are held at the Columbia Club. In the Air Weather conditions in the air at 9:30 a. m.: Southwest wind, twenty miles an hour; barometrjc pressure. 30.15 at sea level; temperature, 8; ceiling, 3,000 feet; visibility, one mile; three Inches of snow on field.
CUP PRIZES ANNOUNCED Silver Cups Awarded In I. U. Arbutus Contest, By Time* Svecial BLOOMINGTON. Ind., Dec. 20. Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and Alpha Tau Omega fraternity are winners of silver loving cups in the Arbutus subscription campaign. The cups were given to the men’s and women's organizations obtaining most subscriptions to the Arbutus, I. U. yearbook. The sorority team captain was Miss Rozella Smith. Terre Haute, while Lawrence Fulwider was captain of fraternity team. Delta Tau Delta fraternity and the Kappa Delta sorority ranked second. Bates Miller, Brazil, was head of the Delta Tau team and Betty Leigh, Jasonville, of Kappa Delta. LIFE HANGS IN BALANCE Travelers’ Aid Society (lead Is in Critical Condition. Mrs. M. Grace Amorosi, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Travelers' Aid Society, is in a critical condition at St. Vincent's hospital following an appendicitis operation Thursday. Fireman Veteran Hurt fill Time* Siiecfnl ANDERSON, Ind., Dec. 20. - Charles G. Alford, 65, city fire chief ever since 1895, when the fire department was organized on a pay basis, is recovering from a slight concussion of the brain, suffered when he was run down by an automobile. The car was driven bv Leonard Hughes. Negro. Alford will be retired on pension next Jan. 6, Ward Wantz, lieutenant at central station, having been appointed fire chief by Mayor-Elect J. H. Mellett.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to the police bs stolen belong to: D. W. Talmadge, 3446 Guilforn avenue, Hudson coach, 92-945, from Capitol avenue and Ohio street. T. R. O’Donnell. 3761 North Meridian street, Studebaker coupe. 480-202, from East and Louisiana streets.
%&sP==\ p™* Qn >y <! | SILVER PUMPS 1 | For that Holiday I Party and Dance *S K Sdwtloa In Blark Satin, Patent. g Kid. Suede. In Low, Medium and J|■1 2fi CLOTH ell 1 I East G t t™ S Our | Wash. *1.85 Windows g
Perfect 32
Miss Evelyn Odegard, dental hygienist of the Chicago 'isalth department, is the proud possessor—not of a perfect 36, but of a perfect 32, which is even better. In other words, her thirty-two teeth are perfect, and she’s showing a few of them in this smile. At the annual convention of the Chicago Dental Society in January she’ll tell 10,000 dentists how she teaches dental health to school children.
So It Goes Uncle Sam’s Mailmen, at Least, Know It Is Yuletide Season.
“OUT I’m sorry, lady, you 13 haven’t got this package fixed right, and you’ll have do it over. We can’t take parcel post with sealed edges.’’ The woman looked like a top, fumed a bit and then flounced away from the parcel post window at the postoffice. “And watch her,” remarked the window’s clerk; “she’ll come back in a jiffy with her sealed package wrapped in another paper—and I’ll be compelled to tell her to do it over again, far Uncle Sam won’t stand for sealing parcel post and then pretending you haven’t by using an outside wrapper that’s tied.” The clerk was right, both ways. Uncle Sam won’t stand for sealed parcel post package and the woman had to wrap her package the second time. And this is only one of the “mail early” incidents, the subterfuges, that jam the postofflee lobby daily as Indianapolis rushes to send its Christmas dolls to Oshkosh, Podunkville, and points east and west. But if one pities the poor postal clerk one also must distribute kindly thoughts for the postman the past few wintry days. For freezing weather means frozen locks on mail boxes, slippery sidewalks and a possible spill of a sack load of mail with the accompanying skin bruises. So it goes, the ups and downs of the men in gray caps who are trying to make Santa Claus pick up his “dogs” a bit faster as Yuletide draws near.
WOMAN IS SOUGHT Report of Landlady Is Cause for Fears. Fears that Mrs. Givens Lek. 35, has succumbed to cold and exposure somewhere in Indianapolis were recited to police today by Mrs. Selvio Skiles of 226 North New Jersey street, roominghouse keeper. Mrs. Skiles reported that Mrs. Lee has been missing since Wednesday. According to Mrs. Skiles, the woman came to her rooming house a week ago without any money. Mrs. Lee had secured work. Mrs. Skiles found her unable to leave her bed one morning and Mrs. Lee admitted she had nothing to eat for four days. Mrs. Skiles provided food, but said Mrs. Lee was weakened by lack of food and she fears the woman was a victim of the cold. Mrs. Lee’s employer said she has not appeared for work and has not drawn her wages. Orphans to Be Guests Bv Times Special ANDERSON, Ind.. Dec. 20.—Anderson Lodge of Elks will play Santa Claus to the ninety-six inmates of the Madison county orphans home at a party which will be held in the lodge hall Sunday Gifts will be presented to all of the children. E. M.-Vogel, Harry Goldberg, A. L. Phelps and J. O. Plessinger are members of the committee in charge.
ATHLETE WILL SPEAK Grant County Fan-HeLenic Council To Hear Earl Martineau. P.u Time* Special MARION, Ind., Dec. 29.—Earl Martineau, former all-America half back with the University of Minnesota and now back field coach at Purdue university, will address the annual luncheon meeting of the Grant County Pan-Hellenic council to be held at Hotel
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Spencer, Monday, W. C. Coryell, in charge of arrangements, announces. Martineau, considered among potential successors to James Phelan as football coach for the Gold and Black, will greet all Grant county college and university fraternity men, including several undergraduates home for the Christmas vacation. The site of a village dating back to the end of the New Stone Age has been discovered and excavated at Moedling, a picturesque town a half hour’s train ride from Vienna.
BONUSES TO EMPLOYES Max Hosea Telephone Workers Receive Awards at Meeting. Bit Times Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Dec. 20. Bonuses totaling $1,200 were distributed at a meeting here of representatives of thirty-five telephone companies in central Indiana, owned by the Max Hosea interests. The bonuses were distributed to employes. A banquet was held, attended by
employes from Noblesville, Covington, Amboy, Converse, Center, Carmel, Zionsville, Greentown, Greenfield, Whltestown, Sheridan, Lagro, Veedersburg and Morgantown. The largest bonus, $56, was received by Winfield Lowther of this city, who was also presented with a wrist watch. Plant to Be Rebuilt By Time* Special ANDERSON, Ind., Dec. 20.—Di rectors of the Gospel Trumpet company, in session here, announced
plans for rebuilding the Christian Unity Press Company plant, destroyed by fire at York, Neb., thre** weeks ago. The plant is a branch of the Gospel Trumpet Company and produces German literature issued by the Church of God. Mother Found Dead By Times Special TYNER, Ind., Dec. 20. Mrs John Wolff, 70, was found dead in bed at her home here by her son Carl, a victim of heart disease.
DEC. 20. 1929
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