Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 57, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1930 — Page 16

PAGE 16

HUGE SEAPLANE TO MAKE OCEAN HOPINAUGUST Provide Smoking Room, Bar for 69 Passengers on Palatial Air Liner. Bv t'nitfd Pwi OSLO, Norway, July 16.—PalaUal accommodation*. Including a smoking room and a bar, will be provided for passengers crosssing the Atlantic ocean aboard the giar.t Dornler seaplane Do-X, Lieutenant C. H. (Dutch) Schildhauer, former American naval officer and navigator for the flight, told the United Press In an Interview here. Lieutenant Schildhauer said the flight would start next month if preliminary trials, scheduled shortly at Frledrichshafen, Germany, are satisfactory. The flight will be made to prove the feasibility oflarge flying ships flrfi long hops, and not as a spectacular venture. Lieutenant Schildhauer said. The flight, from Oslo to New York, will include stops at Havre, France; Lisbon, Portugal, the Azores islands and Bermuda. Commenting on the including of a smoking room among the DO-X's accommodations. Lieutenant Schildhauer pointed out that passengers on the dirigible Graf Zeppelin were not allowed to smoke while in the air. The crew and passengers on the flight will total sixty-seven, and approximately 6.000 gallons of gasoline will be carried for fuel. Captain Christiansen, former German

PENNSYLVANIA J % MEDIUM |7 C HEAVY OQ C S. A. E. No. 30 —Flash 420-30 |ggg| J|jßp Fire 480-90, Viscosity at Fire 470-80, Viscosity at 210,60-62 £&| ijpp 210, 70-72 M^ l 1 _4OO W. Maryland 3—N. Capitol and 22nd. 2—2037 E. Washington 4—Greenfield, West s—New York and New Jersey ta.il

Given High Post

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Congressman Henry W. Temple, above, of Washington, Pa., is the new chairman of the foreign affairs committee of the house of representatives, succeeding the late Congressman Stephen G. Portor of Pittsburgh. The new chairman has been a member of the committee since 1913.

military aviation ace and merchant marine captain, will be in command of the DO-X. The DO-X made anew record for the number of passengers carried in the air when it flew over Lake Constance. at Friedrichshafeii, with 169 persons aboard. The plant is equipped with twelve Curtiss Conqueror motors which replaced the original German motors. The motors are set in pairs, on top of the ship’s one huge wing.

EIGHI HURT IN AUTO CRASHES WILLRECOVER Virginia Motorist Who Fled After Injury of Child Sought by Police. Eight persons, including five children, today were recovering from injuries received in auto accidents in and near Indianapolis Tuesday. Mrs. Charles J. Williams, 20, of 1804 East Forty-sixth street, suffered severe head and body injuries when her car collided with another driven by Mrs. H. L. Craig, 40, 5615 Central avenue, at Forty-sixth street and Park avenue. Mrs. Williams was taken to the Methodist hospital and Mrs. Craig and her three children, Emerson. 10; James, 7, and Billie, 3, suffered slight injuries and were taken home. Running into the street from behind a parked auto, Clyde Weaver, 11, of 937 Stillwell street, was struck by an auto driven by Mrs. R. M. Collier, 1017 Newman street, late Tuesday. The child suffered leg cuts and was taken home after treatment at city hospital. The accident occurred in the 1100 block on East Tenth street. Raymond E. Hadles, 23, R. R. 17, suffered head cuts when his car collided with another driven by Gustav Ramsey, 2126 Clay street, Tuesday afternoon at Fifty-fourth street and Zionsville road. Police today sought a motorist from Virginia who fled when he learned a child had been injured

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Doctors 10,000

The physical well-being of 10,000 persons is the responsibility assumed by the young woman pictured here. She is Dr. Katherine S. Hoffman, newly appointed physician of the United States treasury department at Washington. Dr. Hoffman is the daughter of Brigadier-General Charles J. Symonds, commandant at Ft. Bliss, Tex. She is a graduate of George Washington medical school, and her husband also is a physician.

when his car crashed into the car of George Silver, Stop 4, on the National road Tuesday night. Silver’s daughter Mary, 3, was hurled against the back of the front seat, suffering severe head injuries.

GROWN DERRY RACE DEVELOPS INTOJIZZLER Winkler Still Far Ahead; Farb Offers Snappy Platform. BROWN DERBY STANDINGS Sheriff Winkler 5,832 Harry Dunn 2,828 Mayor Sullivan ii,169 Tom Quinn 1,256 A1 Farb 1,037 Charles Sparrow 380 Walter White 360 Charlie Davis 327 Theatening a grand jury investigation and demanding a recount of ballots, supporter.: of Harry Dunn, county auditor, have hired Alvah H. Rucker, barrister, to take, if necessary, the whole caboodle— BROWN DERBY and all into court. Rucker made his first legal appearance in the case of Dunn vs. et. al., when he spoke in the great debate on skull measurements held over WKBF Tuesday forenoon. But his debut before the “mike” drew charges of “high-priced counsel being hired” from henchmen of Al Farb and Sheriff Winkler. Farb defended his right to wear the tan toppiece on a platform of “free beer, free lunch and glorification of the pretzel.’ Deputy Sheriff Harry Bendel hallooed for the sheriff over the ether and when someone called him a Demosthenes he was, like Farb, not sure whether they were

calling a greyhound or a race horse. He brought the ‘Tain baby” and Schroeder as material evidences that his boss would get what he went after. The debate was termed a “triple foul” and all contestants barred from further ping-pong games by Walter Hickman, dramatic critic of The Times. Remember, BROWN DERBYISTS, the last ballot will be printed Thursday. All ballots must be in the office of The Indianapolis Times by 9 o’clock Friday morning. Winner of the contest will be announced in Friday's home edition, with photograph taken in the regal "kelly.” Monarch of Derbyville will be crowned Saturday, when the “Siege of 1918” is staged at the state fairground by the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

ARSON RING CHARGED Kokomo Man Is Accused in Home Burning Plot. Breakup of an alleged arson ring, allegedly responsible for numerous fires at Kokomo, was predicted today by State Fire Marshal Alfred E. Hogston in announcing the arrest of Genesee Smith, who is held in Howard county jail on charges of attempted arson. Arrest was made after John Ray, special investigator for Hogston’s office, sat in on a plot to bum Smith's home, the fire marshal explained. Two others were involved, one of whom turned state's evidence and confessed to fi.'ing three other houses in Kokomo, according to Hogston.

Dog Show Dates Set Assignment of dates for 1931 kennel shows made by the American Kennel Club of Hew York places Indiana’s dog show in Indianapolis, April 1 and 2, with Evansville holding exhibition dates of April 7 and 8. 1931.

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JULY 16, 1930

Injured Patient Sues Hospital GNADENHUTTEN. 0., July 16 Mrs. Clelia Wolf has filed suit against the hospital here for $lO.332 damages. She claims hospital attendants permanently stiffened her ankle with a hot water bottle while she was a patient.