Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 81, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1930 — Page 5

’ATTG. 13, 1930.

COMPANION OF ALLEGED AERIAL BOMBERSOU6HT Man Who Carried Sack Object of Search in Mines Attack. Bv United Preet MURPHYHBORO. 111., Aug. 13. A man who wore “rough clothes'’ and carried a sack was sought by police today as the companion of Paul Montgomery, 26-year-old aviator, who is charged with dropping bombs on nonunion coal mines near Providence, Ky. Montgomery was arrested Tuesday on a Kentucky felony warrant, after three residents of Providence had identified his plane as that they claimed to have seen make the aerial attack. The flier, who has sought backing for two years for a Rome-to-Dallas 'Tex > night, has denied all knowledge of the bombing and said he would fight extradition, Montgomery admitted making a flight at approximately same time the bombing occurred, and two girls said they accompanied him to the field and saw him leave. Raymond Phifer, farmer’s son, told Sheriff William Flanigan he drove Montgomery and the girls to the flying field and saw th£ Hier

MOTION PICTURES

&P 6114 I-ast Times Today \ § Edmund LOWE „ ww. Margaret Churchill TOMORROW Clrve Rlnkrartu Harvard rrixe PIay—“COMMON CLAY” With Constance Bennett Irw Ayrr*—Tolly Marshall

psrerrii CJJSir 'Wktn lit Com Ibrtab*/ COOL t V>^TJ NOW SHOWING Wit " OUR !l \ MUSHING with Anita Tape—Dorothy Sebastian Robt. Montgomery— Ray Hackett Starts Saturday WILLIAM MAINE/ West

AMUSEMENTS

I Biggest Show in Town ■■' ■' . ■ of a barisln counter I 2i'C queen and her boy I TUI I friend., 1 '..t. M J da%°o^ LOISMORAM On the Stage BROWN COUNTY BEX I,LESS From IVKBr <ln person I. LYDIA HARRIS "InKrtn'i Joy Girl. - ' RAY and NOBD Comedian, from “Hello Yourself” DOT MEYERS REVUE "" Saturday &S MISS LEE *SSJ MORSE )in person,*

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For Normal Girlhood

"My daughter Magdalen did not •eem to develop as she should. At times she had no pep at all and couldn't get her school work very easily. For four years we doctored her o 5 and on. Then a friend told us how much Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetable Compound had helped her years ago, so I got a bottle for .Magdalen. Her nerve* are quieting, her general health is better and she is now as normal a* other girls."—Mrs. L RmtaUt Thompson's Addition, The DaUet, o*9*.

.Lyih E, Pinkliam's Vegetable Gonipound l.ji, F Pint ham MeA. t' . Lvnn

SUICIDE LEAP BLOCKED Firemen Wait With Net as Ho-pita! Patient Pace* Narrow Ledge. Bv United Peru CHICAGO. Aug. 13.—'Threatening to jump four stories, a woman patient at the Franklin Boulevard hospital stood on a narrow ledge, shouting a tirade against hospital officials, while firemen waited below for nearly an hour with an emergency net spread. As the patient, suffering from a nervous disorder, tottered along the narrow ledge, the firemen paced back and forth to match her position. Internes finally succeeded in breaking in the door to the roof and rescuing the patient as she was about to leap. Kentucky Man Chosen Bji Times Special GREENS FORK, Ind.. Aug. 13. James G. Wade, Bowling Green. Ky., has been selected as vocational teacher for Greens Fork and Economy schools, County Superintendent A. H. Hines announces. He is a graduate cf Western Kentucky State Teachers’ college. meet a stranger carrying a sack. The two flew away in Montgomery’s plane, a Barling monoplane. Montgomery is the con of a retired coal mine operator.

2 DAYS! I SEE IT TODAY! I POSITIVELY ■ ■ SrTII IAPIf fIAKI? ■ Richard ■ LAST 2 DATS. P WrirJil I sarthelmessl “with byrd I ■ ILJmm ‘ TnE SAP rRO ' I I in I at the ? ! SIMM | | S Q UT H POIE” g

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AN EVENT OF UNUSUALf IMPORTANCE ■ •COMMON CLAY,” THE HARVARD PRIZE PLAY, W ITH CONSTANCE BENNETT, WHICH WILL HAVE ITS INDIANAPOLIS PREMIERE AT THE APOLLO THEATIiE THURSDAY, AUGUST 14TH, IS THE OUTfc NDING DRAMATIC SCREEN SENSATION O* ALL TIME. NO DRAMATIC PRODUCTION SINCE TALKING PICTURES CAME INTO THEIR OW N HAS W ON THE UNANIMOUS ACCLAIM “COMMON CLAY” HAS MERITED FROM CRITICS. “COMMON CLAY” HAS BROKEN EVERY RECORD OF THE ROOSEVELT THEATRE, CHICAGO, FOR ATTENDANCE AND GROSS BUSINESS DURING THE PAST THREE WEEKS. NOTWITHSTANDING THE BLISTERING HEAT! Well Let Chicago Critics Tell You—“COMMON' CLAY’’ merits four stars (the highest possible laurels obtainable by any motion picture in Chicago). It wins your sympathy more than any other film in the running. It’s the kind of a story that happens every day. You'll find a real, an exciting, a conlincing story in this excellently directed and acted heartdrama. Constance Bennett brings all the luster and appeal of a Jeanne Eagles in “Rain.” DORIS ARDEN'—Chicago Times. “COMMON CLAY” opens with a bang. Folks sit on the edges of their seats, following the twists and turns by which the heroine wins her points against the superior odds of power and money and actually burst into cheers when she whacks the other side verbally, and arcuses them all of being .just “Common Clay” after all. You’ll do the same. See if you don't. ROB REEL—Chicago American. “COMMON CLAY” is human, engrossing, splendidly directed, staged and acted and entirely believable. The story is an honest one. Its punches are legitimate, its surprises startling ones. I'll be surprised if you are not immensely impressed with “Common Clay.” MAE TlN'EE—Chicago Tribune. Starting TOMORROW •■WHERE THE BIG O\ES PLAY" /ipigglffii

PAV ANIlf ILLINOIS AND NEW YORK STS. STARTING SAT., AUG. 16th DARING SENSATIONAL The Photoplay That Is Startling the World! UN6UUNU 16 'Weeks in men - C licago ONLY 08811.9 —with— LIVING MODELS

RACKETEERS AT LAKES CHECKED, JIFIELO Movements Are Watched, Declares Secretary in Crime Report. Indiana's state crime bureau operatives know the hangouts of Chicago racketeers in northern Indiana and are watching their movements. Secretary of State Otto G. Fifield, said today. The bureau is one of the numerous activities of the secretary of state’s office. “Most of these criminals, frequenting the lake resorts, are hiding-out from Chicago and are not apt to commit crimes drawing the limelight to themselves,” the Fifield statement sets out. It is based on the monthly report of the crime bureau prepared by Chief E. L. Osborne. “There were two Indiana bank robberies reported in June and one in July. One person was apprehended and confessed to the three

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AMUSEMENTS

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

robberies and was sentenced to fifteen years in prison,” the report sets out. On Aug. 1, the bureau had ninetyseven investigations pending and fifteen cases had been completed during July. There were 1.599 finger prints received during July, which brought the total on file Aug, 1, to 48.542. There were 365 identifications made during the month of July, eight parole violators were identified, one bank robber apprehended and two in custody pending trial. Two forgers were apprehended and three holdup men. One forger was convicted and sentenced and one murderer.

DOWNSTAIRS AYRES PEPENDABUS MERCHANDISE. W AYSES SHWCE • LOW PRICES A Tremendous Sale of 2,000 “Harford” Silk Frocks A t Smart Summer Styles —Fine Fabrics —Made in Indianapolis — Offered at a Fraction of Their True Value —Doors Open at 9

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WHEN you see THIS beautiful group of dresses you’ll agree that Indianapolis is becoming a real fashion center —for, you know, our own Real Silk Mill owns and operates the Harford Frock Cos. At this price you can choose long sleeve or sleeveless printed chiffons, pindot chiffons, long sleeve georgettes, printed or pastel crepes, and very smart polkadot ensembles. Sizes 14 to 48.

BHT ; illi f y ir. i i Miff ail a l ’ksSjS- *H • ,N * rgsgSg JT TV* *■ l VSggyV* *4* ‘¥£BBBB7 a tBBBBBa i „ h • iB88888")r kiln nr w.-te: mtl\\ m 1 lg|>Q ■ .*. tW J \ /~\ m / I * • * I, I V Big IMb * \ : , -L-lllli / MBi / Mr. • •, •.t .mmm I mm / / i mm: •,? •] Wm / iagSgj / / IMi • *4* HW / I / / / \ f&ssssr t f • I I mxssSr / 1 I • • • wSKsS f / / / W n W.-f'v.vW/ / ®ssf / / \ . 1 p f • raw J / / J / L*/ % • •* Jm ' I / Bgwff' / •• J • / \J m

A Brand New Fashion Achievement! Rayon Dull Crepe Hose In These Smart Colors: First Quality —Plage —Gunmetal Bttt fi B —Nude —Champagne §|l k' h —White —Beige Clair H H H O sniu —Pearl Blush If W ~ CX II Again we demonstrate that “fashionable things are less expensive Downstairs at Ayres!” Now you can buy fashionable DULL CREPE finished hose of RAYON—and at half the price of silk crepe! They are woven in very fine gauge; rayon crepe to the tops; seamed back; hemmed top; fully reinforced. Sizes 8% to 10. —Downstairs at Ayres, Where It’s Cool.

END MOUND WORK Discoveries of Expedition Termed Important. By Science Service PHILADELPHIA Aug. 13.—Its return heralded by unauthorized press reports that it had unearthed the skeleton of a prehistoric giant race, which once inhabited America, and specimens of the silk or linen clothing worn by these ancients, the expedition of the University of Pennsylvania museum has just returned

Do Yonr Shopping Where It’s Always Cool!

from excavating an old Indian mound near Wheeling, W. Va. Very important discoveries were made at the mound. Charles Bache, leader of the expedition, stated in his report here. The expedition uncovered large spear heads of stone, some more than six inches long. School Beard Elects The school board of Noblesville has reorganized for the coming year by election of the following officers: President, Mrs. Vem Wicker; secretary, Dr. O. K. Young; treasurer. August Dreher. The latter is the new member of the board. He succeeds C. M. Gentry, who has served sixteen consecutive years.

70013.95

tARFORD” Frocks are well known all over the United States a 1 for their careful workmanship and their fine fabrics and they are made right here in Indianapolis! This fine group at $3.95 consists of beautiful sleeveless georgette frocks, flat crepe frocks in a wide range of pastel shades, and charming ensembles of fine silk shantung. Every dress made to sell at a great deal more! Sizes 14 to 44.

500^2-95 i , • > .

WE BOUGHT the entire remaining stock of summer dresses from the “Harford” Frock Co.—at a price which enables us to offer such bargains as these! Lovely sleeveless models, smart ensembles, and frocks with capes are offered at this price—in shantungs and fine flat crepes. It will be warm enough for summer dresses until October! Why not choose a dress or two from one of these fine groups to wear during the “in between season” period! —Downstairs at Ayres—Where Inexpensive Things are More Fashionable.

LOUNGES 680 HOURS Tree Sitting Champ Stays in Leafy Bower. Tree-time lengthened today for David Smith of Beech Grove as he

At Vonnegut’s Coif Equipment. TennU Supplies. Fishing Tackle. Housewares. Hardware. Paint*. VONNEGUT’S 120-124 E. Washington St.

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PAGE 5

passed the 680-hour mark in his efforts to be champion tree-sitter. He is more than one hundred hours ahead of his competitors in this district. Horse Kick Cracks Skull ANDERSON, Ind., Aug. 13.-James Blakemore, veteran blacksmith, suffered a fractured skull when he was kicked by a horse he was shoeing.

Poor Teeth—Poor Health Can You Afford lo rloct Tour** Oood Work—Moderate Prlro* The People’# Dentist* Wmt Washington Street HOLES—a a. m. to 6 p. m. Sunday.—9 a. ro. lo 12 m.