Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 292, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1930 — Page 6

PAGE 6

WETS LEAD IN POLL TAKEN BY NEWSPAPERSj Drys Are Far Behind in Scripps-Howard Vote on Liquor Laws. B>t Beripps-ftovnrd Xetcspaper AUmnce .WASHINGTON, April 17—First returns from the prohibition poll being conducted by The Times and other Scripps-Howard newspapers shows sentiment overwhelmingly in favor of repeal of the eighteenth amendment. A total of 4.785 persons voted in twenty cities. Os these, 3.701 iavored repeal, 625 voted for modification, and only 459 favored the continuance and strict enforcement of the eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act. The poll is being taken to check the Lterarv Digest's poll, which showed the country overwhelmingly wet, and the accuracy of which has been challenged. Coupons were printed in the several newspapers, and readers were invited to fill them out and mail them or bring them to the offices. Names and addresses were signed to prevent duplication. Additional results will be printed in The Times Friday. The following table gives the first votes by cities: Ens. Mod. Rep. Tot. Akron Tunes-Press .... 11 16 Baltimore Post 5 I s 183 3 Birmingham Post 73 B 4 250 381 Buffalo Times 4 15 69 89 Cleveland Pre?s 27 69 384 480 Columbus Citizens 20 2!) 80 129 £t Paso Post 2 12 26 40 Evansville Press 2 3 60 65 Et. Worth Press 20 24 69 113 Houston Press 32 54 205 292 Indianaoolis Times.... 37 63 456 5;>6 Knovilie News-Sentinel 15 15 '6 106 M'mphis Press-Scimitav 46 69 100 215 New York Telegram... 21 49 577 647 Oklahoma News 6 14 32 52 Pittsburgh Press 51 24 324 399 San Francisco News.. 27 29 251 30/ Toledo News-Bee ..... 21 20 213 254 Washington Dallv News 19 17 170 206 Youngstown Telegram. 20 26 65 111 Totals 450 625 3 701 4.785 TWO HOMES ARE LOOTED Articles Valued at S9OO Are Taken by Burglars. Clothing and jewelry valued at j SBOO was the loot of burglars wlio ! entered Apt. 5, at 2615 Broadway, j Occupied by Miss Beatrice Vickery and Miss Mary V. Keeler, Wednesday. The residence of Mrs. J. F. Murphy, 224 East St. Joseph street, was looted Wednesday night, articles valued at SIOO being taken. Woman Attempts Suicide Mrs. Vera Baxter, 20, of 3659 Rockville road, who took poison in an effort to end her life Wednesday night, was improved at city hospital today. She told police she took the poison when unable to meet payments due on her home.

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-Learning to Fly—No. 4

Times Student Gets His First Take-Off Lesson

BY LOWELL NL'SSBAUM Times Aviation Editor I RECEIVED my second flying lesson in the air today, and after my first hour of instruction, it seems to me that Lindbergh's laurels are safe for awhile, any way. The high point of today's lesson at Hoosier airport was three landings and take-offs of the Travel Air biplane, in which f played a leading part, with my patient instructor. Bob Shank, pulling me out of trouble each time. To my surprise, on the first takeoff, Shank, through . the plane's telephone headset, instructed me to take off. Rmembering his instructions of the first lesson, I pushed the stick forward, then pushed forward on the throttle. With a roar the motor speeded up, the plane began moving, and the tail lifted off the ground, putting the plane in flying position. "Puli back on the stick and put the nose in a climbing angle,” Shank sang out. With a couple of parting bumps of the wheels on the ground, the plane nosed up and we were off. non WHILE I was doing this, Shank was holding the stick to be able to correct my mistakes. Soon we straightened out, on a flying, angle. "Try to keep the nose of the plane on the horizon, the wings level, and fly a straight line down that road ahead of us, the Lafayette pike,” Shank instructed. I got started in the direction indicated, but kept veering to the left, until I was flying at right angles with the road. Discovering the left wing was low’, causing the plane to veer left, I pushd the stick to the right. Then the motor seemed to be racing too fast. That was caused by permitting the nose to drop below the horizon while looking at the wings. n n * “ A LL right,” Shank said, after I got straightened out again, "bank your right wing, then give it a little right rudder, and turn around and fly in the opposite direction.” Again the nose got away from me. After several more turns, first right and then left, my instructor pointed out Hoosier airport on the ground and told me to cut the throttle and try to glide down for a landing. That- was great sport, just coasting along with the nose down a little and the mojtor idling, banking first to the right and then to the left, trying to maneuver the plane so it wmuld land at the proper point on the field and headed in the right direction. * a u AS the trees and fences near the Airport began to loom up pretty large. I was instructed to open the throttle a little, as we were too low to stretch our glide to the airport. As we were about fifteen feet from the ground. Shank took the stick

away from me, as I had the nose too high, reducing our landing speed too much. Under his expert guidance, the plane settled easily to the ground with scarcely a bump, and rolled to a stop. The next two take-offs and landings followed with approximately the same results, and the lesson w r as over. TALLEST SPAR ON BOAT Mast Is Stayed to American Yacht Cup Candidate. 8 1/ T'tiite/i Prf** NEW YORK. April 17—The tallest spar ever carried by a sailing vessel today tops the deck of the Enterprise. America's yacht cup defense candidate. The mast, 168 feet long and towering 153 feet, was safely stayed to the costly sailing vessel late Wednesday. It is an eliptical hollow spar built of nearly 200 strips of Alaskan spruce, glued together, and weighs more than 5,000 pounds. Faces Bad Check Charge Accused of issuing fraudulent checks in Rush county, Clarence Clingingpell, 32, of 903 1 2 East Washington street, was returned to Rushville today. He was arrested by Indiana pblis police Wednesday night

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SLAIN BOOTLEG FOE'S WIGOW VOWS REVENGE •More Lives Periled/ Said District Attorney on Death Bed. Bul nitrdPi MAUSTON, Wis., April 17.—A widow, who vowed veu -ee ovu the casket of her murdered husband, took a hand today in the investigation of the liquor-feud slaying of Clinton G. Price, district attorney of Juneau county. For the first time since Price was killed from ambush last Sunday, as he talked in the kitchen of their home, Mrs. Price broke her silence at the bier. She revealed that Price ip a dying statement ordered her to “get the man who did this or there’ll be more lives lost.” Price, as he neared death from shotgun slugs fired from the bank of the Lemonweir river in the rear cf their home, told his wife not to let a certain prominent Mauston attorney handle the case, she said. The attorney's naicp was not revealed by Sheriff E. H. Hempleman. "Clint wanted me to see justice done,” Mrs. Price said. "And I’m going to work on this case myself. I

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want his murderers caught, otherwise there will be others shot down in the dark.” Lyall Wright, former “boy sheriff,” who is charged with Price’s murder, remained in jail. Wright said he did not kill Price, but admitted that he saw the deed done. He was ousted from the sheriff position when he pleaded guilty to a liquor charge. Three state witnesses in liquor cases Price prosecuted have borne out Mrs. Price’s statements of terror and intimidation by a bootleg gang, members of which presumably murdered Price. Negro Injured by Auto Stephen Dulin, 65, Negro, 1228 Cornell avenue, was cut on the head when struck at Thirteenth and Delaware streets by an automobile driven by Russell Skaster, 40, of 4230 College avenue, on Wednesday night.

FOOD SEEMED TO DISAGREE Gas Formed, Head Hurt and Woman Had To Hold To Things When She Walked. “Two years ago I began suffering with spells of indigestion,” says Mrs. Marshall Smith of Kaufman, Tex. “It seemed like everything I ate disagreed with me. I had gas on the stomach and often my head ■would hurt so bad I had to lie down, "Everything would get black before my eyes, and I would be so dizzy when I would get upon my feet that I had to hold on things to walk around the room. "My food soured on my stomach and I was constipated. "I had often read about BlackDraught and my mother told me it was a good medicine to take, and so I began a course of it. "It was not long until I was feeling better. I took a pinch after meals, and I soon found I was suffering much less. It relieved constipation and I was not any longer troubled with indigestion. “We try to keep it in the house, and I use Black-Draught now whenever I feel a sick headache coming on. It is a fine medicine, and I can recommend it to others.” Get a package today, 25 cents.

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GROTTO PARADE SET FORFRIDAY Ceremonial Exercises Will Be Held at Athenaeum. Ceremonial exercises for 100 candidates to be held by Sahara Grotto in the Athenaeum Friday night will be preceded by a Grotto parade. Clyde E. Robinson, monarch, has

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announced the parade will move at 4:15 from the Athenaeum, south to Washington street, west to Illinois street, north to Market street, east to the' Circle, north to Ohio street and to the Athenaeum. The veiled prophet's degree will be conferred on candidates following a banquet at 5:45. Jack Stone is banquet chairman. The Pirate band, directed by Merrill Henry, head of the music department in Bedford schools, will play far the banquet. Michael E. Sculley has charge of the parade. John D. Rockefeller has spent more than $750,000,000 in benefactions during his long life.

r APRIL 17, 1930

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