Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 301, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1930 — Page 5

APRIL 28, 1930_

NEW AIR MAIL TRAIL BLAZED BY LINDBERGH Colonel Completes First Lap of 7-Day Service to Buenos Aires. 8 Unit'd Press CRISTOBAL, C. Z.. April 28. Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh rested here today after blazing anew air mail trail between the United States and the republics of the south. Colonel Lindbergh completed the first leg of the seven-day service between Miami, Fla., and Buenos Aires when he landed a Pan-Amer-ican Airways amphibian plane on 'Yunce field, here, at 4:05 p. m. 5:05 p. m., E. S. TANARUS.), Sunday. The flight from Havana, Cuba, as made in an hour less than hedulcd. Accompanied by Co’ilot Basil Rowe and Radio Operator ?ert Denicke, Lindbergh left Havana at 5:33 a. m. Sunday, and avored by excellent flying weather, ped across the Caribbean at more than 100 miles an hour with only one stop, at Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua. Lindbergh had left Miami Saturday afternoon for the two-hour flight to Havana where he spent Saturday night. He carried 211 pounds of mail adressed to South American points. No Incidents marked the dash across the Caribbean, which Lindbergh had crossed before. The sole stop after leaving Ha ana was made at 11:33 a. m. at Puerto Cabezas for fuel. The plane soared away again at 12:12 p. m. Candidates Will Fly flu United Pres' SAN FRANCISCO. April 28.—The influence aviation will have on politics will be demonstrated in California next August in the state primary. There are three candidates in the field for the most important post, that of the Republican gubernatorial nomination, and indications are that aerial travel will be depended on in campaign journeys. Buron Fitts, Los Angeles district attorney, has been an aerial fan throughout his political career, chosing invariably to fly from city to city in campaigning. Mayor James Rolph Jr., of San Francisco announced his gubernatorial candidacy and said that every county seat in California’s 1.000 mile political battle front would be visited and that airplanes would be used. Governor C. C. Young, seeking re-election, flew during the national air races at Sacramento and was delighted with the ride. It Is likely that, the genial Governor will join his opponents in flying from city to city while making those whirlwind campaigns characteristic of California. Life-Savers in Plane ftv United Press BAKERSFIELD. Cal.. April 28 Kern county, one of the largest counties in the country, hereafter will have a special aeronautical lifetfaving crew, equipped with airplane and inhalator. Tt is believed to be the only rescue outfit of its kind in the country. Whenever or wherever anyone in Kern county calls for emergency medical aid, it will be supplied by members of the fire department in co-operation with a local aviation company. The life-savers will use a cabin plane. The crew will respond to any call, whether it involves ten minutes or ten days work. Fire Chief W. E. Van Meter said. There will be no charge made for any kind of emergency service, he said. Kern county not only is a territory of vast distances, but also has numerous far-flung oil fields wiiere serious accidents calling for emergency treatment frequently occur. Plane Ready for Tour A giant trimotored monoplane was on exhibition at Curtiss-Mars Hill airport today in readiness to take Indianapolis government officials, Chamber of Commerce representatives and newspapermen on flights over the city this week. Eight flights were scheduled this afternoon for the plane, a Stanolinci 111, operated by the Standard Oil Company of Indiana. L. O. Chasey, secretary to the Governor, was to head the party of state officials on a tour, following which the Board of Trade. Chamber of Commerce and three groups of state highway commission employes were to fly. The plane will be at Hoosicr airport Tuesday for Mayor's day when Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and city officials will be taken on a tour over the city. At Capitol airport • Wednesday officers of Indianapolis luncheon clubs will be guests on a flight. Boy Starts Long Hop United Pre * WESTFIELD. N. J.. April 28. Nineteen-year-old Frank Goldsborjugh, son of Bruce Goldsborough. vho was lost in a storm at -ca with Mrs. Frances Grayson on rheir attempted trans-Atlantic flight in the Dawn, took off today ■rom the airport here in an attempt o set anew coast-to-coast junior flying record. Goldsborough of Jackson Heights, Queens, made an easy take-off in his fast biplane, American Boy. and headed for Columbus. 0., his first stop. From there he will go to St. Louis, where he will pass the night. Tuesday he will flv to rucson Ariz.. where he probably will pass the night before proceeding to Los Angeles, the western goal of the flight. City Airports Busy Rain did not stop activities at city airports Sunday where thousands of persons gathered to see air maneuver* and to take airplane rides. Two parachute leaps were made at Hoosier airport by Barney J. Goloski. and Harold C. Brooks, airport secretary, executed a deadstick landing, gliding to earth from a height of 2,000 feet.

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DENY ILLINOIS AGAINST WORLD COURT ENTRY prominent Citizens Minimize Vote Given Mrs. McCormick. if v United Press WASHINGTON, April 28.—Denial that the recent nomination by Illinois Republicans of Ruth Hanna McCormick on an anti-world court platform means that Illinois opposes American entrance into the court, if contained in a letter to be presented to Vice-President Curtis today. It was wirtten by Samuel Colcord. New York City, and indorsed by fifty prominent citizens. Support of the women voters ir Illinois and assistance of the Thompson-Crowe political machine are cited by the letter as the real reason for Mrs. McCormick’s success at the polls. HOLD FUNERAL TODAY FOR MRS. M’NULL Illness of Several Months Fatal Saturday; Resident Thirty Years. Funeral services for Mrs. Charles McNull, 59, of 4218 Winthrop avenue, who died Saturday at Methodist hospital following an illness of several months, were held this afternoon at Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Mrs. McNull. who was bom in Henry county, came to Indianapolis thirty years ago. She was a member of the Contemporary Club. Players’ Club and the Writers’ Club. Tlie husband, a son and daughter survive. NAME ADDED TO SLATE Woman Candidate for Legislature Approved by Dry League. Mrs. Mary Marcum Jacobs. Republican candidate for state representative from Marion county, today was accorded approval of the AntiSaloon League slate, the Rev. C. H. Winders, state superintendent announced. Through an oversight, the name of Mrs. Jacobs was overlooked when the dry league slate was made public last week, he explained. AWARD ESSAY PRIZES Winners in Electircal Contest Are Recognized. Prizes were awarded today to winners in the electrical essay contest which was started during the recent electrical progress pageant given at the Indiana theater by the Indianapolis Power and Light Company. Winners were Mrs. Margaret Siemantel, 1310 Linwood avenue, first; Mrs. George W. Haas. 2184 North Riley avenue, second, and Ralph S. Kinzer of Carmel, third. Card Party to Be Held A benefit card party will be given by Comanche council. Red Men’s auxiliary, at 8:30 Wednesday in the Red Men's hall, Morris and Lee streets.

SHUT-IN CHILDREN TO GET FLOWERS

Flowers and potted plants will be distributed to crippled children and shut-in youngsters in Indianapolis on May day, Thursday, May 1, through the Red Cross, Public Health Nursing Association and a committee headed by Mrs. Robert A. Adams. An appeal for donation-: to simply the flowers and oianta Is being made by the organizations so no shut-in youn.seter will bo mirccd on May day. Fill in the space below, giving your name and address, together with the name and address of the youngster you wish to make happy. Your name will not be divulged. If you do not know of any particular youngster, your contribution wiil be used in the regular flower fund. Your name Your address Your contribution Crippled child’s name ••• Crippled child's address Mail to Public Health Nursing Association, 324 Indiana Pythian building, before Wednesday. April 30.

In the Air Weather conditions in the air at 9:30 a. m.: Southeast w-ind. seven miles an hour; barometric pressure, 30.14 at sea level; ceiling, 1,000 feet; visibility, one and one-half miles; field good. NEW CITIZENS GUESTS Settlement House Class to Attend Patriotic Program Tonight. Representatives of the newly organized citizenship class of the American Settlement House, 617 West Pearl street, will be guests at a patriotic program at 7:45 tonight of the Woman’s Relief Corps and Sons of Veterans' auxiliaries. Clinic at Winchester By Times Special WINCHESTER. Ind.. April 28 The Randolph County Tuberculosis Association will hold a clinic here Tuesday at the Methodist church. Dr. E. M. Amos of Indianapolis will be in charge.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HAYS WORLD MODEL New Movie Code May Be Adopted by League of Nations. Bit United Press GENEVA, April 28.—Will Hays’ movie code, announced in New York recently to govern and uplift the motion picture industry of the United States, will be submitted to the league of nations’ child welfare committee as a means of internationally suppressing scenes of brutality and cruelty to children.

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1,000 YEARS OF BIBLE HISTORY IN RUINS HEAP Mound in Southern Judah Bares Rich Lore to Excavators. Bv Science Serctce PHILADELPHIA. April 28.—A thousand years of biblical history in one heap of ruins. This was the picture set before the American Philosophical Society by Professor William F. Albright of the Johns Hopkins university at a lecture here Friday night. The mound Is known as the Tell Beit Misrim and stands in southern 7 udah. It probably is Identical with he place called Kiriath-Sepher in he Bible. In four strata it contains relics that throw new light on ■ the oldest period of Palestinian history, from the patriarchal age, about 1600 B. C.. to the Babylonian exile. 587 B. C. "The history and civilization of the latter part of the Canaanite period, from 1700 to 1200 B. C., now ; are becoming known rapidly, and i in consequence the age of the Patri- : archs and the Conquest of Canaan appears in anew light.” Professor Albright told his audience. “The I Hyksos irruption, bringing with it ; an aristocracy of chariot warriors, , organized on a feudal basis, and composed mainly of Indo-Iranlans (Aryans’*, Horites and Hittites, was followed by centuries of Egyptian domination. "During this period of Egyptian rule, the highlands gradually were occupied by the Hebrews, and when the Egyptian empire fell at the end of the nineteenth dynasty, the Israelite conquest completed the Hebraeizing process. But before Israel had attained a stable organization, the invasion of the Philistines and other maritime peoples from the 1 northeastern basin of the Mediterranean introduced an important new element into the complicated situation. I “After about a century and a half, I the Israelites threw off the Philistine yoke, but not until they had )een affected profoundly by it. In ilie tenth century, Israel arose to the rank of a first-class state, under David and Solomon, and a definite Israelite culture was established, under Phoenician influence. This culture developed steadily and normally in the period of the divided monarchy, reaching its climax in the century which preceded the Babylonian exile. "Not the least important result of the excavations is to shed a newlight on the social and economic history of Israel, its development from semi-nomadism to a nation of free peasants, who displaced the Canaan!to serfs, and the increasing commercial and industrial activity, without which the rapid and successful adaptation of Jewry to the conditions of the Dispersion would have been impossible.” SIX NEGROES CUT OR j SHOT DURING! ‘PARTIES’ Dave Alexander Wounded Seriously In Dice Game Argument. Six Negroes were cut or shot in fights at "parties” over the weekend. Dave Alexander. 120214 North Senate avenue, is in serious condi- : tior. from a bullet wound suffered in a dice game argument. Theodophilus | Williams, 334 North Missouri street, i is held. Daniel Gash is alleged to have | slashed Glenn Walton, Bright and North streets, on the face in a fight over a debt, Mrs. Eva Buchner, 1214 Massachusetts avenue, was slashed at her home and police are seeking James Walker, 1212 Massachusetts avenue, as the alleged assailant. Oscar Moore, 531 West Eleventh street, was slashed while attending a party at the home of Mrs. Lucus Brentley, 2636 Rader street. Campbell Martin, 1020 West Thirtieth street, is accused.

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—Learning to Fly—No. 13-

Times Aviation Student Learns He Has Faults

BY LOWELL NUSSBAUM Times Aviation Editor Discouraged as i discovered a serious fault with many of my take-offs and landings in my flying flying lesson at Hoosier airport, I was heartened when Bob Shank, my instructor, explained: "Now there’s some hope for you. Usually a flying student appears to get worse just before he gets better. “He begins to think he is prettygood and becomes overconfident. That is why he appears to be getting worse. But usually he learns something from it.” Certainly my demonstration Sunday was bad enough. If I made a fairly good take-off. the following landing was sure to be bad. and the reverse was equally true. Elated over an accidentally perfect landing. I started out again and made a terrible take-off. Shank told me I was getting much better on making steeply banked gliding turns for landing. In instructing me on gliding, he explained: "When you are ready to start your glide in to the field, drop the plane’s nose as soon as you shut off the motor, to give you immediate gliding speed and to prevent a possible stall. tt tt tt "TT is best for you to glide too X fast, at first, rather than too slow, to pre\ent a stall. When you are gliding so slowly that the air does not strike the curved leading edge of the wings hard enough to create the partial vacuum on the upper surfaces, which helps to hold up the plane, it begins to settle. If you do not bother the controls, the plane automatically will nose downward and break the stall. "As you go farther in your ground school work, you will learn that about 60 per cent of the lift is caused by the vacuum over the upper surface of the wing. “Tire air strikes the curved leading edge, or front, of the wing. Some of the air is diverted beneath the wing, pushing up on it. "Other air is deflected upward, force of the impact of the wing edge throwing it up above the wing. It flows back to the wing at the trailing edge. This creates the vacuum along the top of the wing, into which the wing has a tendency to slip upward. "When a plane goes into a stall, caused by holding the nose too high, you should push the stick forward to put the plane in a gliding angle to regain the speed you lost. tt a IN my previous lessons I have learned not to hold the plane’s nose above the horizon, except when climbing. There are four definite angles which the student should learn. One is the flying angle, where the plane is level. Another is the gliding angle, where the nose is much lower than the tail, to maintain a, gliding speed for landing. The third is the climbing angle, where the nose is elevated slightly. The

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fourth is the landing angle, which ! is the position of the plane as it sets on the ground, nose high. Shank doesn’t say anything about it, but I have hopes of soloing as soon as I have had a few more hours’ instruction. Up to now I have had more than five hours flying instruction in eleven lessons. The average student is given about ten hours’ instruction, some more and some less, before he is permitted to take his solo flight, so surely I won’t have to wait much longer. Already I am anticipating the thrill of seeing Shank climb out of the cockpit and hearing him tell me to "take it up alone.” TINY PRINCESS LIKES TO PLAY SHE’S RULER Duke of York's Daughter True to Type in Amusements. By United Press LONDON, April 28.—1n common with all other children throughout the world, Princess Elizabeth, little daughter of the duke and duchess of York, enjoys more than anything else playing “make believe” and living in an imaginary' world of her own. Very' often, when staying wTth her grandparents, the king and queen at Windsor, she is heard announcing to all the world that "i in the king of the castle” and ordering carriages to “drive me to London,” climbing to the driver's seat of idle carriages in the stable to prove that she means what she says.

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OFFICIALS WILL DEBATE CLOSING OF BLDFF ROAD Figures Will Be Presented on Cost of Property, Elevated Bridge. An early conference to aeeic’s whether to continue with plans for closing the Bluff road the proposed south side Belt elevation to be called soon by E. Kirk McKinney. works board president. The works board, council works committee and Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan will discuss figures obtained by M. N. Bebee. track elevation engineer. on the comparative cost of closing the road and constructing another bridge just west of the Meridian street elevation. According tc a survey by the engineering department it wll ec X about $12,500 to acqu re proper..' and construct a roadway from tire Bluff road to Meridian, south of tha Belt. Engineers declare a dead-end street with a right-angle turn to Meridian, less than a block east, would be less hazardous to traffic than the present intersection of Bluff, which is an angle. South side civic leaders have clamored to keep thp Biuff road open. Bebee estimated it will cost about $79,000 to construe, he bride. The Belt railroad is opposed to making further clunvt*. the elevation plans. City' council will release the Bluff road north of Raymond street from the thoroughfare plan if the board decides to continue with the present program.