Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 53, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1930 — Page 10
PAGE 10
FIVE MEN DIE IN MYSTERIOUS PLANE PLUNGE Pilot and Four Prominent Passengers Victims in Texas Crash. ARKANSAS PASS. Tex.. July 11. —A heavy guard was maintained today about the wreckage of an airplane in which the pilot and four prominent Kansas City men plunged mysteriously to their deaths while returning from a fishing vacation. After viewing the wreckage, which was strewn over a radius of a half mile, and hearing the evidence of witnesses, aviators of the section were divided in their opinions concerning the crash. Department of commerce officials announced they would open an investigation at once to determine whether the plane was hit by lightning or the wings crumpled under strain. The guards will remain on duty until the investigation is completed. The men killed were Murat Boyle. ms i C'l Kidney Beans Extra large, dark red kidney beans. So tender, meaty and delicious. Finest beans for salads. Only 15c a large can. At Independent Grocers Only
when it’s one of those ninety-in-the-shade days and you don’t know what you’d like for lunch, just try a bowl of crisp Kellogg’s Com Flakes. With cool milk or cream and a bit of fruit. You’ll notice new enthusiasm from your appetite and you’ll feel better all afternoon. For Kellogg’s are extra easy to digest. They help you keep cool when it s hot CORN FLAKES •> JL J KELLOGG'S Corn Flakes are delicious for breakfast, lunch and supper. Ideal for the children's evening meal. Made of wholesome corn, one of nature's finest grains, g-. Toasted. Crisp and crunchy. —V Always look for the red-and-green Kellogg package. TnTl a A f . Oven-fresh in the inner sealed waxtite wrapper. At all -v >—| flvi/CrLlCijw grocers. Served by hotels, cafeterias, restaurants —on y"L dining-cars. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. The CORN “fe FLAKES *?***£. i§ “S&fc. 1 v* nic * tIK
former president of the Missouri Bar Association: Raymond Watson, lawyer; Eugene Lynn, insurance executive: R. J. Delane, realtor and prominent Republican, and K. E. Gabbert, pilot. “I would have been with them but for love of the sport I was enjoying her?,'' said B. H. Dierks. Kansas City lumberman, with whom the victims had been tarpon fishing at Corpus Jhristi bay for several days. Dierks had intended to return by plane with his friends, but decided at the last minute to remain a while longer. The original theory that the plane exploded was discredited by M. C. Maus, head of the Corpus Christi airport, and other fliers, who pointed out that the wreckage did not catch fire. Several believed the wings collapsed under strain when Gabbert made a fast earthward dive to avoid dense clouds. “The ship was careening along smoothly about 4.000 feet up,” said j. R. Barry; r;.nch owner and one of the few witnesses. “It exploded as if struck by an anti-aircraft shell. There was nothing left but a falling mass of wreckage. There was no fire.”
,) 1 *llni ~r 11 ’fcilll lfll| ||i||l||i[|S(F%|<§WgWßPk Lincoln jjfeu, lOcllssrib iOc| I Creamery OO Pure Pork 1C p Butter OLQ Sausage ltlC Fresh Ground 1 C- Beef 1 C/* Hamburger lOC Roast • n I 4m m* Fresn Stcskj 1 /JL p or 15c Round or Loin. ll^C 1 £Z b 10c * sc and . . Machine Sliced Os A Leg of, 1 C/% Bacon, Lb LtUC. A Lamb, Lb Ivv Rind off
WINE GROWERS OF FRANCE IN FEARJF RUIN Loss of American Trade Is Body Blow: Huge Store Held in Caves. BY STEWART BROWN I'nlttd Pres* Staff Correspondent PARIS, July 11.—France has a surplus of more than four hundred million gallons of wine which she can not drink this year, and which she would like to sell to someone, preferably to the United States. Faced with a tremendous overproduction and a constant shrinkage of exports, the wine growers of southern France are howling calamity and threatening to withdraw their representatives from senate
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
and the house of deputies If the government does not act to remedy the situation. Since American prohibition dried up France's best foreign market, French wine producers have carried a deep grudge against the United States and blame their present crisis on the abstinence of the Americans. They are following the situation in the United States with the gravest concern and their daily prayer is for repeal of the Volstead act or its modification. Unless the United States buys French wines or the French can double their consumption, more and darker days are ahead for ( the French wine industry, the United Press is informed by qualified persons. Every cave in France has more wine than can be drunk for several years and the stock increases every year. Last year fiance produced more than a billion end half gallons of wine within her cwn borders, while
Another Carload Sale Saturday Potatoes Those small 00 size, fine Vl I new Cob*Yß Per biers. ■ 60-Lb. Bushel No. 1 Large Size Cobbler*— (1 PA Per 60-Lb. Bu. Pi.dU Fresh car loads of watermellons arriving daily. Special jobbing prices. Hamill Bros. 230 Virginia Ave. Just South of B. &. O. Freight House
Algeria made more than three hundred ten million gallons of excellent wine. A large percentage of the Algerian wine was shipped to France, and is finding a growing market because of its excellent flavor. The outlook is even darker because the production of Algeria will continue to increase because new vineyards constantly are coming in and new ones being planted. Brotherhood to Give Picnic The Syrian-American Brotherhood will give a picnic Sunday in a grove between Kessler boulevard and Michigan road. A basket dinner, dancing, and races will feature the program.
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ARIZONA CANTALOUPE Delightfully refreshing when served 08 a dessert with your favorite ice cream. _ |“WHERE ECONOMY RULES" | 2 i tor 2S® P6BICII6S Fruit !b ‘ 9^ Washington ibs Some customers Peas Telephone variety St say that A&P * Bananas ** Yellow Fruit * 1 * SC crowded. So are Beefs Home Grown hunch S C good movies, Michigan Celery 3 stalks 10c good baseball games, good i _ summer resorts. BUTTER Silverbrook lb. CAME SUGAR 25 ' Lhbag ~ $ t ,w Maxwell House or J-F Cot See “>• 39e SelOX Solvent Soap Beads large pkgS 25C ■■■■ Quaker Maid Baked Beans 1 ™ f % Dainty Soda Crackers 2 lb - p**- 25c / \ Domino Cane Sugar 5 lb - P k - 9c j Unusua i value!!! ] Peanut Butter Eulk 2 lbs - 25c \ a no. J White House Milk 3 tall cans 15c V* ci “37 Fancy Quality Meats Veal Shoulder Roast 11 21c ,—^ / Wisconsin VEAL CHOPS ib 31C \ Fancy Broilers No Le & horns lb - 39c J i Fresh Dressed Hens For stewing ib. 310 l bull Cream J Smoked Hams Whole or Half lb - *7© V ib. J % a *
PILOT, STUDENT DIE IN AIRPLANE CRASH Falls After Waving to Sweetheart on Visit to Parents. B’l Vnitrd Press GAITHERSBURG, Md„ July 11.— Only a few moments after he piloted his plane over his sweetheart’s home and waved greetings on his first visit here in nearly a year. Leonard Sabine, 23, chief pilot at the Hamden airport near New Haven, Conn., fell to his death Thursday night when the plane plunged 150 feet to the ground. His sweetheart, Miss Eugenia Warfield, witnessed the tragedy, as
did his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester R. Sabine, and two brothers. Sabine was killed instantly, as was Maynard Bennett, 27, New Haven student flier, who was accompanying the pilot from New Haven on a visit to the home of Sabine’s parents, who operated a dairy farm near the scene of the crash.
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.JULY 11, 1930
Library Gets Art Plates The public library has acquired twenty volumes of plates illustrating new phases of modern French and German art. These folios are called “L’Art International D’ Aujourdhm ” and show the modem art tendencies as applied to advertising homes, furniture, metal work, gardens, sculpture, and textiles.
