Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 226, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
SMOKE MENACE TO CITY FUTURE AS AIR CENTER Planes Unable to Land on Account of Pall Over All Airports. Indianapolis’ smoke nuisance Is jeopardizing the city’s progress as an aviation center. This was the unqualified verdict today of airport officials, who declared that smoke hovering over landing fields is so thick as to make flying hazardous. Tbe westbound T. A. T. plane made a safe landing at Mars Hill airport this morning, although smoke limited visibility to a half mile. None Attempted Wednesday morning, however, the smoke was so thick no landing was attempted and the plane continued to St. Louis, Charles DeVoe, local T. A. T. manager declared. Both Wednesday and today, visibility was clear beyond the pall of smoke which hung over Indianapolis. There was no fog to aggravate the difficulty. “Indianapolis must do something about the smoke situation if she does not want to lose her airports,” De Voe said. Officials of the Hoosier and Capitol airports reported similar situations at their landing fields. Three Miles Preferable Three-mile visibility is preferable for safe flying, according to officials, and for several da5 r s visibility around Indanapolls airports has been less than a mile, extremely hazardous for flying. If the situation is not relieved in the next few day it may be necessary for pilots to make landings three or four miles away from the city to avoid the smoke, officials said
PRAISE EFFICIENCY OF RAILWAY POLICE Record* at Association’s Meeting Show Many Convictions. Ninety-seven convictions out of each 100 arrests are obtained by railroad police of the United States, according to records exhibited at. the quarterly meeting of the Indiana Railroad Police Association at the Severin Wednesday. Superior efficiency of the railroad police was attributed to the fact that politcis plays no part in their work. Robert T. Humes, state police chief, and Lloyd D. Claycombe, attorney for state bureau of criminal identll.„_.ion and investigation, attended the meeting. W. I. Spitler, Lafayette, Monon chief special agent, is the new president of the association; L. A. Lauderback, Terre Haute, Pennsylvania police captain, is vice-president, and J. C. Molter. Chicago, B. & O. police captain, was re-elected secretarytreasurer. The next meeting will be held April 30 at Lafayette. ASSOCIATION LEADER TAKES NEW POSITION W. P. Shahan Will Be Field Chief of Illinois T. B. Society. Wellington P. Shahan. director of field service for the Indiana Tuberculosis Association, will take over the post of executive secretary of the Illinois association Feb. 1, it was announced today. Shahan has been In charge of field work in Indiana since 1927 He is 26 and will be the youngest executive secretary of state antituberculosis associations in the nation. Donald E. Pratt, a classmate of the new secretary, will succeed him as director of Indiana field work. Both men are former members Cf the junior staff of the National tuberculosis Association and have had experience in several states. G. O. P. Secretary Quits Bv United Prt ** WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.—Franklin Fort of New Jersey has resigned as secretary of the Republican national committee in order to devote more time to pressing congressional and business duties.
RI OU S GAY irdi ras '‘Jew Orleans onally Conduced i \ound trip from.* Cincinnati K ° u^ir ' % *B6- !/// Rex, King of the Mardi Gras, summons you to his gay, picturesque, / / historic court, A luxuriously appointed and attended Pullman ’ ( waits on shining steel rails to take you there—and to be your home while you are there. No hotel reservations to worry you. No unexpected expenses. You board the fine, all-Pullman L. &N. speed train ana from there, until your return, you live open it, with every comfort, every courtesy extended you. Transportation, dwelling expenses and many extra services included in the round-trip fare. (Slightly less if upper berth ia used). Under dire&ion of The Kemdc Tours. Leave Indisnapciis, Cincinnati or Louisville, February 28th; return March 6th. Recuced, round-trip Mardi Gras fares for transportation only, on regular trains to New Orleans, Mobile, Biloxi, Gulfport, Pensacola, etc. An iSuS’afti folder gnrnf information about bfanfi Gras ami S’rw Orleans, aad tnrMmg a detailed irmermry es At trip, -Kid be sent you on request. So obbgatKm. H- M. MOUNTS, Tvnrtnx T’etsngr- Aftm, L. & N. Railroad, t Ji T. CARPENTER. City ¥astcnter Asm. L. &N. Raikoad, : 1 ■ 4 ~ r *-k fi £shr ß “ kß “*- ifpasll
the 1930 Curves ‘Body Roll’ Is Perfect for General Reduction
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The position for the “body roll.”
This Is the flfteenth of a series of articles on proper exercise by a noted authority, health adviser to New York’s •’Four Hundred.” BY JAC ACER Written for NEA Service IN rounding the 1930 curves, no one can be successful who does not take weight off all over the body. For the ideal is the properly proportioned figure. The majority of women thicken through the abdomen and thighs first. Therefore the majority of reducing exercises stress weight reduction in these spots. But, to get the properly proportioned figure, perfect circulation is needed, litheness and muscle control. Therefore certain exercises should be Included that are good generally for reducing, but of primary importance for their circulatory benefits, and the way they teach muscle control. The “body roll” is one of these. In the second position it is the shoulder roll, excellent for reducing both the diaphragm and the extra fat across the back of the neck. B it. as its starts out, it is a fine circulatory exercise, limbers up the hip joints and knees and does a lot toward rolling the fat off the
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back of the thighs. Do It In the following manner: 1. Sit down on the floor, keeping your spine straight and erect. Cross your legs, tailor fashion, and grab hold of your left foot with your right hand and your right foot with yoor left hand. 2. Before beginning the roll exercise, try to flatten your knees against the floor, when crossed, which is a test of the flexibility of your hip joints. 3. Holding your feet firmly In your hands, with your knees crossed, bend forward and then rocs backward, never going so far that you fall over backward. Rock back and forward several times, never tipping over sideways, either. 4. Then try a rotary motion, rocking to the right side, then backward, then to the left side and then forward, rocking in a circle. Do not do this exercise until you get cramped. Until you are used to it, a few times is enough. But a few minutes of this rocking does much to aid litheness and increase the body control that develops poise and grace. NEXT: The Backward body roll I WATCH REPAIRING At Cost of Material WATCH CRYSTALS Ronnd ..Ilf Fancy ...,49c Unbreakable 49c Cleaning (any watch* $lO9 Mainspring (any watch) 99c Jewel* (any watch) $1.19 Rite’s Jewelry Shop 45 S. Illinois St. Severe Coughing Spells Quickly Ended Distressing coughs can not tire out and weaken you this winter if you take Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound. Each dose carries the curative balsamic virtues of pure pine Tar, fresh demulcent Honey, with other valuable cough healing ingredients, into direct contact with the irritated throat surfaces, covering them with a healing, soothing coating, ending the distressing cough. Its quick medicinal action is not hindered by opia tes nor chloroform. Is mildly laxative, quickly effective, dependable for coughs, tickling throat, hoarseness, croupy and bronchial coughs, troublesome night coughs. Ask for Foley’s Honey and Tar. Sold everywhere.—Advertisement.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIDIES
10 ARE INJURED IN BOMBING OF CHICAGO STORE Fifth Blast in 24 Hours Is Laid to Extortion Gang by Police. Kv United Press CHICAGO, Jan. 30.—The fifth bombing in the last twenty-four hours, which blew a two-story Olive oil store into bits, and wrecked several adjoining stores on the north side, was laid at the door of an Italian extortion gang to-
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day by police, as they searched in the wreckage for clews. Ten persons were injured in the blast, which police said was the most powerful in the years of Chicago bombing history. The injured were residents of nearby buildings who were thrown from beds or cut by flying glass. Residents of the neighborhood, inhabited largely by Italians, were terror stricken for hours after the blast, which occurred about 10:30 Wednesday night. John J. Cullota, proprietor of the olive oil store, found terror stricken in his home after the explosion, said he had received three threatening letters in as many cays from an extortion gang demanding that he pay $5,000 or “suffer the consequences.” The olive oil store, not in use, owing to a fire recently; was demolished and the two adjoining buildings were wrecked. Window glass, for a radius of two blocks,
was shattered, and the concussion of the explosion rocked the neighborhood for a half-mile around. Patrolman Edward Farrell, one of the injured, was thrown through a show window near the explosion and cut by glass. John McCabe, a pedestrian, half a block away, was thrown from his feet. Liberty Woman Dies pv Times Speetat LIBERTY, Ind., Jan. 30.—Mrs. Anna Keffer, 79, is dead of paralysis. She leaves a son Justin, Cincinnati.
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DISAPPEARANCE PUZZLE Student Alleged to Hare Hinted at Russ General’s DeathBti United Press PARIS, Jan. 30.—Mysterious disappearance of General Pavlovitch Koutepoff. White Russian leader, who vanished here Sunday, was deepened by alleged statements of a Russian student, ten days ago, that
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Koutepoff "had only eight days to live.” Agents of the Surete General today questioned the student, a man named Otzovitch. Georges Bessadowsky, former Soviet minister, declared today that operatives for the Soviet secret service recently placed Koutepoff under close surveillance. Botling tomatoes or rhubarb in aluminum utensils brightens them.
