Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 233, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1930 — Page 8

PAGE 8

WOMEN FLIERS ARRANGING FOR SPUR FLIGHTS 14 Members of Boston Air Club Eager to Try Long Flights. fly I t l‘r BOSTON. Feb. 7lf a fleet of trim biplanes, piloted by beautiful young girls. drops in at your airport next spring they'll be the Women's Wing ance Prop Club, organized in D-ccmber at East Boston airport with fourteen charter members and nine privately owned planes. The organization. headed by President Lorraine Defren of Newton. Mas:;., the first woman to learn to fly a.t East Boston airport, now has more than a score of members, each of whom is required to spend at least three hours a week at the controls of an airplane. The nine privately owned planes in the club .soon will be augmented. The club is planning an extensive program of c -country flying to st -• in the spring. Two stuclem. 01 Raacliffc school are members. Betsy Kelley of Ft. Smith. Ark., who intends to enter commercial aviation as soon as possible and whose ambition is to pilot a plane across the Atlantic., and Agr“s Wilcox of Colon. Panama, vl. > a mires to be ;he first won. an ii ' r ,- il America to obtain a p .. limn e. . Wil ox and Miss Kelley have one earning ambition right now. “We want to make a parachute Jump." Miss Wilcox said. "I believe we should make one jump from a plane under control, so it will not be a terrifying ordeal if we ever have to leave a ship spinning earthward out of control." Study Airport Charges ST. LOUIS. Feb. 7.—A standardized program of charges for service at airports throughout the country will be developed by the committee on airport management standard and ethics of the airport section of the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce which meets here Feb. 15 during the International Aircraft Exposition, sponsored by the chamber. The committee will propose a uniform rate for plane storage charges and other services rendered fliers at an airport. A code of ethics for airport management will be drafted. Airport Work Started Bp Timt * Special DETROIT, Feb. 7.—Full impetus to the board plans to give Michigan one of the finest airports in the country was provided Tuesday when the board of directors of the De-troit-Wayne industrial airport authorized spending $414,050 for clearing and grading work and building of hangars on the 640-acre site near Wayne, Mich. Affected by Altitude Ptf 7 im< * special CHEYENNE. Wyo„ Feb. 7.—lnteresting data on the affect of high altitudes on planes is given by Boeing Air Transport. The Cheyenne field is 6.200 feet above sea level. Because the density of the air at 6.200 feet is only 83 per cent of that at sea level, the airplane wings' at Cheyenne will carry only 83 per cent of the weight they will at tide water. The lower atmospheric pressure affects the motor carburetion and the power plant develops only three-fourths of the power at sea level. With full load, the Boeing eight-een-passenger transport, which weighs eight and three-quarters tons fully loaded, takes off at Cheyenne in 1.700 feet, contrasted with 1,000 fc~et at San Francisco or Chicago. Get Glimpse of Lindy fill United I’rrsn LEBEC. Cal.. Feb. 7.—School children who refused to remain in classrooms while there was a possibility of seeing Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh were rewarded when the famous flier glided into view across the Tehachapi mountains. This isolated community is having a series of banner days now that Colonel Lindbergh and Hawley Bowlus are conducting glider experiments from their camp near here. The few residents virtually have forgotten occupations and Thursday when the flier neared the schoolhouse, teachers were quite as ready to suspend classes as were the excited pupils.

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HARRY LAUDER HAS EARLY MEMORIES Famous Comedian Will Give Two Performances at the Murat Saturday as Part of Long Tour. SIR HARRY LAUDER'S elevation to knighthood did not bring forgetfulness cf his early struggles or the dour days when, scarcely able to make a living as a singer of comic ditties, he was often threatened with the possibility of a return to the coal pits in order to make a living. .Sir Harry, who comes to the Murat Saturday for a matinee and sight performance, began life as a “pit boy,” driving a Shetland pony and otherwise making himself useful to the miners. When he had advanced to the position of a full-fledged coal miner he felt that he was on the highway to riches. , It was, however, hard work. Often he was up to his hips in water,

with the coal vein over his head, j and compelled to swing a heavy pick I in that avkward and wearisome J position. While at work he often I sane, and in time the other miners j Learned to enjoy nis singing, and contributed to his reputation a*s an ; amateur entertainer. Sometimes, when he sang at local J concerts, he was paid about 50 cents } a night, and even this modest sum seamed to him to be extravagant. His first professional appearance j after he left the mines was at j Lanarkshire, Scotland, with a con- j cert company. After a time he be- j come well known in the provinces, j but it was fourteen years before he made his first appearance in London, where he scored an instant hit. He is a unique character, and is known and popular in all Englishspeaking countries. His friends include scores of the world's leading statesmen, tage players and litterateurs. He is an . honorary member of clubs all over I .he world, including leading or-; ■; nizations in India, China and j South Africa, where he has ap- j peared during the past three years. a b tt ELIZABETH PATTERSON . FEATURED AT LYRIC Eavesdroppers should be out In I force at the Lyric Saturday. Not { of their own volution but because I they can be nothing else when they j sit and see and hear the all talking ! feature picture “Harmony At j Home" which comes to this popu- 1 lar combination house for the week starting Saturday. “Harmony At Home" based on Harry Delf’s stage play. "The Family Upstairs,” takes one right | in the front door of the home of a middle class family. It all but sits one down at the dinner table where ihe home problems are heard; and even takes one into the privacy of the kitchen and sleeping rooms Thus one becomes an eavesdropper and it is guaranteed that no end of , fun will be derived from so being, j William Collier Sr., and Elizabeth Patterson, the latter being a local favorite, having appeared here with Stuart Walker in stock productions, are father and mother of three children, Marguerite Churchill, Charles Eaton and Charlotte Henry. The father’s promotion to superintendent of a steel mill precipitates s plenty of trouble and lofty ambi- ; tions on the part of the rest of the family. How the father surmounts the difficulties that arise furnishes the mighty human and humorous entertainment. Four vaudeville specialties furnish an hour or more of stage entertainment. “Lonesome Club,” a miniature musical comedy playlet presented by a group of seven clever artists featuring Billy Zeck and Venza Stewart. Frances Kennedy, radio artist from station WJKS, Gary, Indiana of which she is also owner is another featured } act. The Six Martinelli girls, sensational European entertainers in! the gymnastic way, are also im- j

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portant stars of the stage program. Dancing will continue in the Lyric ballroom every evening from 8:30 to 11:30. No extra charge is made for this feature. a b a The new show today at the Indiana features Richard Arlen in “Burning Up,” on the screen and Charlie Davis on the stage. Other theaters today offer: “Follow Thru,” at English's; “So Long Letty,” at the Lyric; “No, No, Nanette,” at the Circle; “Sally,” at the Ohio; “New York Nights,” at the Palace; “Evidence,” at the Apollo, and burlesque at the Mutual. Held to Grand Jury Waiving a hearing in federal court Clarence Smitley of Berne, Ind., was bound over to the federal grand jury under $2,500 bond by United States Commissioner John W. Kern for alleged transportation of a stolen automobile from Muncie, Ind., to Sioux City, la.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

YOUTH DENIES PLOT TO KILL MEXICAN CHIEF Rubio Recovering From Jaw Wound: Many Taken Into Custody. BY JOHN R. MORRIS United Press Staff Correspondent MEXICO CITY. Feb. 7.—A haggard youth, Daniel Flores, sat in a prison anteroom today and, nearly forty-eight hours after his attempt to assassinate President Pascual Ortiz Rubio, refused to admit he

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acted as a cog in a political plot against the new executive. He was less dapper than when, on Wednesday afternoon, he fired six shots into a motor car, wounding the president and three others, including Mrs. Ortiz Rubio. , In the meanwhile, police arrested Arnolfo and Pilar Flores, brothers of the prisoner, at San Luis Potos. More than a score of subjects here and elsewhere had been taken into custody. Five others at San Luis Potosi were arrested on suspicion. President Ortiz Rubio continued to improve today. His physicians issued a bulletin stating the dressing on his jaw had been changed and the wound was in good condition. Mrs. Ortiz Rubio’s slight injury also was “satisfactory, 1 the bulletin said. Considerable criticism among congressmen of the new penal cods has been evoked by the shooting. The deputies generally interpret the law as permitt ; ng a maximum of twenty years sentence for Flores.

The president expressed his appreciation of messages of condolence from meny Americans, including President Hoover. SEEK CHICAGO FOND? Official Asks N. Y. Bankers for Needed Money. Pii United Pr. NEW YORK. Feb. 7.—H. Wallace Caldwell, president of the Chicago board of education, held conferences today with New York bankers whom, he hopes, will advance $48,000,000 to pay salaries of teachers and other school expenses. Caldwell began interviewing bankers immediately after his arrival Thursday, offering thdm tax anticipation warrants, which he said they admitted were “the best security in the world.” He expressed confidence that his mission would be successful despite

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Inclination of New York banks to follow the action of their affiliated

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institutions in Chicago in refusing to advance funds.