Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 293, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
CONDITIONS IN j MIDWEST WILL ! BE FORECAST business Outlook Will Be j Reviewed at Meeting of Commitees. Outlook of business conditions In Indiana, Kentucky and parts of Ohio and West Virginia will be reviewed Wednesday when twenty•three commodity committees of the .Ohio Valley Shippers’ advisory board Jncet in Cincinnati. Arrangements have been made for Jnore than fifty members of the Indianapolis Traffic Club to attend the session. Committee members have been chosen to represent all business interests in the nation. Among the Indianapolis representatives to attend are: W. P Br.sch, traffic club president; H. B. jVfcNeely, Chamber of Commerce traffic commissioner; R. B. Coap6tick, state Chamber of Commerce traffic manager; L. E. Banta, Indianar .s Board of Trade, and J. 3P. Gates of the Lone Star Cement W. J. McGarry. car service division manager of the American Railway Association of Washington, will give a national business forecast. Following the advisory board isc.sslon, the eighth annual meeting of Associated Traffic Clubs of America will meet Thursday and Friday. Speakers at these meetings include W. W. Atterbury, Penn'ty:vania railroad president; C. W. Galloway, Baltimore & Ohio rail-, 3'o-.d vice-president, and T. R. Delil, flVhite Motor Company secretary. Governor Myers Y. Cooper of Ohio J Jsvill be toastmaster, s' Sessions of the advisory board j land associated groups will be held jet the Hotel Gibson. PUMPS TO ELIMINATE POLLUTION OF RIVER: Insanitary Conditions at Bathing j Beach to Be Remedied. Abatement of a nuisance along ty'hite river is plannad this season !*vith the awarding of contracts to the Alice-Chalmers Pump and Machine Company for two sewage pumps at the Westville road and Meridian street station. The pumps will eliminate pollution of the river, resulting in into nit ary conditions at Twenty-sixth Street bathing beach, according to B. J. T. Jeup, sanitary board president. The two 5.000.000-gallon a day pumps cost $3,600. The board asked bids on the cleaning of the channel fcf Pogue s run, from New York to Rural streets, to relieve the insanitary condition in that neighborhood. Estimated cost is SIB,OOO. PLEDGE GIVEN WOMEN Henderson Addresses Meeting of Seventh District G. O. P. Club. Recognition of women attorneys was promised by Laurens L. Henderson, candidate for the Republican nomination for prosecutor at the meeting of the Seventh District Women’s G. O. P. Club Thursday afternoon at the Columbia Club. ”If nominated and elected, I shall expect to give recognition to the Women of this county when it comes to the naming of deputies to assist the prosecutor in carrying out his duties,” he said.
Modernistic \\ Fiery Gems I tifulb < rti r iVn'<‘* n<l l,Wt °* jjjjfc j )// ' Fall value al“Elgin” 4 * Ladies' 15-Jewel “Benrue" il Wrist Band With Metal Wrist Band ORMra graved models, fc SQUARE DEaSSwELRY SHOP *l;°° ' * I OPEN SATVRDAY MIGHT tXTIL 9 O'CLOCK " eeR - ; 43 South Illinois Street—Between Washington and Maryland Streets
Japanese Will Be Hosts
SATURN TOUGH GUY
Seeress Sees 1930 as Bad Year
BY RALPH lIEINZEN United Press Staff Correspondent
PARIS, April 18.—Madam Fraya, famed French seeress who predicted at the first of the year the ending of a European dictatorship, the death of one of the most prominent political leaders in the world and the recent flood disasters in southern France, advises you to take your vacation late this summer if you want to get sunburned. Madame Fraya sees nothing but black clouds ahead. The influence of Saturn dominates 1930, and she does not think much good will come from it. There is even the menace of war in the offing, but Madame Fraya sees it cleared up without bloodshed.
The weather of early summer will be particularly distressing. The spring will be very wet, and there will be miserable times ahead for lowland localities. Good weather will come late, and those who take vacations in August and September will be rewarded with sunshine. Madame Fraya sees Wall street behaving itself for the rest of 1930. The rest of the world will have financial upsets, but as „she gazes into her crystal bowl she sees an accentuating prosperity in the United States. SUN CLOCK PERFECTED Device Keeps Time Accurately as Long as Sky Is Cloudless. SIDNEY. New South Wales, April 18.—Professor W. E. Cooke at the observatory here has perfected a clock that is run by sun’s rays. They pass through a small hole and fall upon a scale geared to hands that register fractions of a minute. The clock is accurate as long as the sun is shining.
Mrs. Mitsuko Nakamura and Hiroshi Nakamura, Terre Haute, and their children, only Japanese family in Indiana, will act as hosts to the four young women of the Japanese good-tv ill delegation at the Columbia Club’s Cherry Blossom dinner-dance Monday night in the main dining room of the club.
PEACE ORATORY MEET SCHEDULED SATURDAY District Winner to Compete for Cash, Scholarships. District winners in the “Way to Peace” oratorical contest sponsored by the Indiana Council on International Relations will meet in Hollenbeck hall, Y. W. C. A., at 10 a. m. Saturday for the state tournament. Cash prizes and scholarships to De Pauw university, Franklin college, Manchester college and Indiana Central college will be awarded. District winners were Charles McBurney, Princeton; Bernard White, Indianapolis; Edythe Coates, Columbus; Velma Pace, Pittsboro; John Langohr, Bourbon; Miriam Moore, West Lafayette; Edith “Stroud. La Porte, and Marian Naden, Rushville. Band to Compete GREENCASTLE, Ind., April 18.— The Greencastle high school band of thirty-one pieces, directed by Medford Maxwell, will go to Muncie Saturday to take part in a district contest.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CITY CHAMPION MARBLE TOSSER TO BECROWNED Elimination Match Victors to Meet Saturday in Tourney Finals. Eight schoolboys, survivors of elimination matches, will meet on roque courts at Fall creek and Thirtieth street playground at 1 p. m. Saturday to decide the city’s marble championship. They are: Harold Kaufman, 12, of 145 South Spann avenue. School 39; Robert Brown, 13, of 2007 North De Quihcy street, school 68; Glenn Jordan, 12, of 3809 East Thirty-first street. School 73; Hugh Finley, 13, of 1402 South Spann avenue, St. Patrick’s school; Charles Sanders, 12, of 2172 North Bosart avenue, School 69; Virgil Calhoun, 13, of 1426 English avenue, School 28; Joe Malad, 13, of 3547 Massachusetts avenue, St. Francis de Sales school, and Carl Mellow, 12, of 1218 Spann avenue, School 28. A loving cup offered by the EmRoe Sporting Goods Company will reward the champion. A prize donated by the A. G. Spaulding Company also will be given him. Run-ners-up will receive prizes from Smith-Hassler-Sturm Sporting Goods Company. The winner of the ’ Indianapolis contest may be entered in an intercity match at Alton, 111., David B. Kilgore, city recreation director, said today. CLEMENCEAU SLAMS IGNORED BY PERSHING Refuses Reply to Criticism by Clemenceau in Book. Bit United Press CHERBOURG, France, April 18. —General John J. Pershing scornfully refused to reply to the posthumous criticism of the forces he commanded in the World war in the late George's Clemenceau’s book, “Grandeur and Misery of Victory,” upon his arrival here. ‘‘l haven’t read, and I don’t want to read Clemenceau’s book,” he declared. “I ignore his polemic against Marshal Foch. It is regrettable that posthumous books should reopen the feud between them. GIVES GARBAGE REPORT During March the city garbage reduction plant handled 1,526 tons of green garbage at a cost of $15,452, according to City Engineer A. H. Moore. In March the plant produced 113,300 pounds of grease; 109 tons of fertilizer, and fifty-five tons of feed, bringing in gross revenue of $8,200, the report said.
French Apparel Stores 32 E. Washington St.-Washington Hotel Bldg. SELLING OUT! To the Bare Walls—Must Vacate April 30 — Nothing Reserved—Fixtures for Sale! COME! SEE! BUY! SAVE! *New Dresses Sacrificed! sk SQ-95 and *fD ' Others el Values to $15.00 Plain AMB ■ ga Values to $19.75 Spring Coats SACRIFICED! Values A Real to $29.50 H H B Bargain! Newest Linen Lingerie Dresses 79c *ii2o Values to $2.49 Values to $2.98
Learning to Fly—No. 5
Instructor Given Thrill by Times Flying Pupil
BY LOWELL NUSSBAUM Times Aviation Editor THIS business of training students to fly must be great sport for instructors. I believe I gave Bob Shank, Hoosier Airport president and my instructor in the art of flying, a thrill as the climax of my third lesson in the air. However, the thrill was not due to my brilliant flying. “We will practice take-offs and landings again today,” Shank told me as we taxied to the edge of the field, “and I want you to remember everything I tell you on these first few attempts. “If you do well, you may try it once without any instructions from me.” All set. Pushing the stick forward and opening the throttle in a slow steady motion, I felt the Travel Air biplane start moving and the tail rise to the flying angle. With frequent coaching from Shank I waited until the plane was rolling along about forty miles an hour and the wheels bouncing a little on the ground, as though eager to be off. n n tt PULLING back gently on the stick to get the nose up into the climbing angle, I felt the earth slipping away. Soon we were up to about 1,500 feet and, following instructions, I circled, banking the left wing a little, around the Speedway, south to Sixteenth street, and back in position to land. “Cut your motor, drop the plane’s nose to the gliding angle, and try to land just inside the field on a line with that white strip,” Shank told me. As we neared the ground, he instructed me to begin leveling off, pulling clear back on the stick as we were about two feet from the ground, in order to pull down the tail and make a three-point landing. In a three-point landing both Wheels and the tail skid touched the ground at the same time. Three times I tried this, and then
GLASSES ON CREDIT! KRYPTOK PIECE BIFOCAL LENSES For Far and Near Vision Regular sls value. QC Our special price y • *'” only Complete 50c a Week! EXAMINATION FREE! CHICAGO Company
, came the order to try a take-off and landing without instructions. All this time Shank had been holding 1 the stick, correcting my errors. a a tt THE take-off was not as good as the preceding ones, but Shank managed to remain silent. Following the same route, I cut off the motor and started gliding as we neared the field. As the ground began to loom up pretty large, I saw we would fall a little short of the field. Imitating my instructor, I speeded up the motor a little, and then continued gliding. About fifty feet from the ground and with the plane, still in a steep gliding angle, too steep, speeding toward earth about eighty miles an hour, Shank was unable to keep silent longer. “Bring the nose up. Pull back on the stick, he ordered. “Pull back more, more, clear back.” This was followed by "I’ll land it,” and Shank managed to pull the plane out of its steep descent and make a good landing. Shank explained that I had failed to level off soon enough. That ended the lesson. I climbed out of the plane determined to make a better showing tomorrow. Mussolini was sent to prison five times between 1904 and 1911 for such offenses as lecturing without permission and demonstrating against the Italian government then in power.
Marott CHALLENGERS nlrut bvfore Easter until 9 p. m. Men’s black or tan calf to $lO ...... . . nUT Shoc h °Shop" l * j Accepted leaders in men’s shoe values . . . Marott CHALLENGERS are an exceptional buy at the price! There’s honest-to-goodness durability in every one of them! Swagger tan or black oxfords! Smart, clean cut styles for men of all ages, plus the famous Marott quality and extraordinary fitting service! DOWNSTAIRS ’JkiioU 18-20 Enst Washington Street Shoe Shop rune In WTBM Monday Bp. m.
EXTREMELY LOW EXCURSION FARES For Your EASTER Visit ENJOY THE WEEK-END WITH HOME FOLKS SATURDAY and SUNDAY Round Trip Fare—£or ONE-WAY FARE Plus 10c Fast, convenient and comfortable Union Traction trains leave the terminal station at almost every hour during the day and evening for ANDERSON, MUNCIE, NEWCASTLE, MARION, FORT WAYNE, KOKOMO, PERU, SOUTH BEND and hundreds of pther cities and towns north and east of Indianapolis; also Van Wert, Delphos and Lima, Ohio, and all other points on Indiana Service Corporation Lines and Ft. Wayne-Lima R. R. Save 20% every day by buy- Experienced ing a UNION TRACTION Travelers Choose $5.00 Mileage Coupon Book JSJI This Economical for $4.00. Good at any time FOR FULL INFORMATION PHONE RDey 4501
CAR COLLISIONS. HURTING 10, LAID TO WET PAVING Seven Injured When Three Autos Come Together on Bad Curve. Wet pavements and rainstorms were held responsible by police and sheriffs today for automobile accidents in Marion county late Thursday in which ten persons were injured. Seven were hurt In a three-auto crash on U. S. 31, north of Nora, Clyde Shotwell, 21, Detroit, suffered a skull fracture in the accident and is in Methodist hospital in a serious condition today. G. R. Shotwell, 43, Grand Rapids, Mich., his father, was cut over the right eye and was treated at Methodist hospital. They were riding in a car driven by Lee Hutchins, 30, garageman, Grand Rapids, Mich. Hutchins’ machine and an auto driven by S. W. Albright, 24, of 5752 Lowell avenue, were struck by a car driven by Dr. Russell C. McGaughan, 40. Kokomo, which skidded on a curve. All of the cars were wrecked. Mrs. Bessie McGaughan, 40, the physician’s wife, sustained a broke# left arm and was cut severely: Dr. McGaughan and Mrs. Glenn C. Bull, also of Kokomo, were cut and bruised. All were treated at St. Vincent's hospital. Hutchins and his wife, Mrs. Dotty
APRIL 18, 1930
Hutchins. 24 were cut and bruised. Henry Apple, 16, Thirtieth street and Pendleton pike, member of the Warren Central high school baseball team, was cut and bruised in collision of two automobiles Thursday night at Thirty-eighth street and the Post road. George Mates, 701 Haugh street grocer, and Thomas Naumsek, 1010 North Warman avenue, city policeman, were injured when their automobile was sideswiped by another car on State Road No. 52, ten miles southeast of Lafayette Thursday afternoon. Mates suffered a fraeftired hip and Naumsek was cut on the head and sustained body Injuries. Hospital Employe Hurt GREENCASTLE, Ind., April 18.John Stiles, janitor at the Putnam county hospital, suffered a broken rib and cuts on the fact when the automobile he was driving collided with another machine. New Comfort for Those Who Wear FALSE TEETH No longer does any wearer of false teeth need to be uncomfortable. Fas teeth, anew, greatly improved powder, sprinkled on upper or lower plates, holds them firm and comfortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Deodorizes. Get Fasteeth today at Liggett’s, Hook Drug Cos., or any other goou drug store.—Advertisement. Make Your Own Screens and Save Half the Cost Knock down frames, easily ptst together, fits all size window* and doors. Wire Cloth, square Q foot Jv VONNEGUT’S 120-124 E. Washington SL
