Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 35, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1932 — Page 3

■TUNE 21, 1932

CAPITAL POLICE HUNT QUARTERS FOR BONUS MEN Negotiate for Barracks; Think Veterans Will Stay. By United Press WASHINGTON. June 21.—Apparently convinced that the bonus expeditionary force is here to stay, Police Superintendent Glassford is negotiating to rent a vacant building that would house 2.000 or 3.000 of the army of destitute World war veterans. Authorities have hoped from day to day that the army would begin to dissolve. Instead, it is their hopes that have faded. Officials are clinging now to a slight belief that the ranks of the veterans may begin to disintegrate when congress adjourns, perhaps late this week. Goal Is 50,000 But leaders of the bonus army assert confidently that this will no more deplete the 18,000 now here than did the senate vote last Friday by which the bonus bill was killed. The leaders have sent recruiting agents to all parts of the country, and confidently expect to increase their forces here to 50,000. They plan also to build up a reserve strength of 150,000 veterans to campaign at home against congressmen who opposed the bonus. Meanwhile, the veterans at their ramps and billets throughout the city have settled down to dull routine. Meals are regular, though meager. There are all the details they became accustomed to during the war —kitchen police, guard min-ute-men lectures. Little attention is paid to the future. What determination exists among the motley throng is directed to hanging on from day to day. Sanitary Conditions Better In spite of bad weather, that has pockmarked their main Anacostia ramp with mudholes. the army has developed a degree of comfort. Sanitary conditions are improved. Trash is collected regularly just as in city apartments. A bulletin on the board, where all official communiques are posted, announces under the caption, “Attention Mothers,” that fresh milk may be obtained for children at “the Toledo tent—follow the fence.” Several families still are living at the camp, despite the efforts of authorities to move thmc to better quarters. Bomb Kills Army Flier By United I'resi t MANILA, P. 1., June 21.—Lieutenant Elwell A. Sanborn, 26, was killed today by the premature explosion of a bomb he released from a single seater pursuit plane at an altitude of 1.000 feet. The explosion set his plane on fire. It plunged to earth. Here’s all you have to do to win as much as SIOO in The TIMES SALES SLIP Contest: 1. Save your sales slip. 2. Write 25 words. 3. Send them to us.

M \ of "Harvest Moon" fame. j Now a regular Chesterfield flr ligllillll. Radio feature #<yr JBSr J&Jff JMHH : : : :: ; 3 JM ::• .gMfBPHi :':f: : 2 . Mm, -••••■ •* Every Wednesday and Saturday night at 10 o'clock E.D.T. Columbia Coast-to-Coast Network The Cigarette that’s MILDER -that TASTES BETTER

FLYING PUTS SEXES 1 ON EQUAL FOOTING

Mrs. Evelyn dr Seversky BY EVELYN SEELEY jllp Time, SUIT Writer ! W.Wj) NEW YORK. June 21.—“ Flying is Ihe only sport where women have wmm&S!! f complete equality." said Alexander < t f p. de Seversky, flier, consulting en- g®|Pw^V^BSBPP’ ’ Wt f j! gineer to the Air Corps Reserve and designer of anew low wing allmetal airplane that will land on -**&&*''^ sea or land, ice or snow. 7 —“— , ... , Mr. and Mrs. Alexander de Seversky “It is brains that count and not J

Mrs. Evelyn de Seversky That’s How War Ace and His Aviatrix-Wife Size It Up. BY EVELYN SEELEY Timr. Stiff Writer NEW YORK, June 21.—“ Flying is I the only sport where women have ' complete equality.” said Alexander P. de Seversky, flier, consulting engineer to the Air Corps Reserve and designer of anew low wing allmetal airplane that will land on sea or land, ice or snow, “It is brains that count and not muscles. Women’s heads are just as good as men’s, if not better.” “Sasha, I think you're right,” said Mrs. Evelyn de Seversky, his wife, and a flier, too. “I think you’re absolutely right.” The blond and pretty Evelyn de | Seversky learned to fly in self-de- ! sense. she said. She had 400 hours of passenger experience. “Nobody wants to be only a passenger all the time,” said Mrs. de , Seversky. “And, then, the house was : always full of men fliers, talking | shop. And I think a wife should ! be able to talk shop with her hus- \ band intelligently. So I learned to | fly” “She likes to fly because it is good sport,” said Major de Seversky. “She has always danced and skated beautifully. Now, flying is another way of interpreting rhythm. “I am very glad she has learned |to fly. It has been a great help to me. She is a very good flier. I fly with her very often, and I feel quite safe. It is very nice to feel safe with a woman these days. “But mostly it is a great help to me because I can talk to her about my 'work. And because she understands she is not bored. Also she gives me feminine advice about designing planes, and that is important.” Major de Seversky, a Russian war ace, credited with bringing down thirteen German seaplanes for the Russian imperial navy, met Evelyn Oliphant, society girl, in New York. Six years ago they were married. She decided to learn to fly to sur-

prise him, but the news of her study leaked out, and he became her enthusiastic co-instructor. He, famed for his daring stunt-flying, taught her caution and thoroughness. He urged her not to attempt to solo until she had plenty of hours of teaching, and not to do any night flying until she was an accomplished pilot. But one night Jimmy Doolittle, their guest, was in a great hurry to get to New York from Islip, L. I. So she, the good hostess, flew him in at night and with only three hours to her credit. Her second passenger was a famous Italian ace, who had never been a passenger before. "He had no ‘chute,’ ” said she, casually, “I was afraid I’d lose him.” Now with 200 hours of solo flying to her credit, she has sold her first plane, because her husband says “it is too meek for her now—she must have a wilder, faster one.” “Everything you have to learn comes after you’ve soloed,” she said. “I can do a few stunts. But I want not to be spectacular, but just to be a good co-pilot with my husband.” Probably she will go with him next spring when he takes the new low-wing land-anywhere plane he is designing over Greenland and Iceland. “It will be technically important,” said the girl, who used to give dance recitals for women’s clubs, but now looks back at that as sort of silly. “Aviation changes a lot of conceptions,” said the major.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WEDNESDAY IS DIRTH DATE OF | LINDT’S CHILD Lad Would Have Been 2 Years Old If Spared; Event Recalls Tragedy. By United Press ENGLEWOOD, N. J„ June 21. Wednesday is the second anniversary of the birth of Charles A. Lindbergh Jr. His little nursery in the Lindbergh home in the Sourland hills is empty. His mother, awaiting birth of her second child, will spend a sad anniversary with the colonel in the Englewood home of her mother, Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow. It is Mrs. Lindbergh’s birthday, too, the twenty-sixth. The joyful joint celebration that would have been held with the blue-eyed, curlyhaired baby, exclaiming over his cake with two candles, has been snatched from the Lindberghs by the heartless kidnaping and murder of their child. World Watched News The announcement on June 22. 1930, that the baby was born at the Morrow home here, went around the world and caused universal celebration. The baby's first pictures, his first birthday, the news that he was learning to walk and talk, were followed everywhere with eager intCThen on March 1, the baby was taken from his crib in the Lindbergh home near Hopewell, never to be seen alive again. The nightmare events of the next three months deepened the tragedy, which reached its climax when the body of the child was found in bushes only five miles from the Lindbergh home. He Tries to Forget The case is finished now and the search is over, except for the hupt for the murderers, which President Hoover has asked to be made a “live and never-to-be-forgotten issue.” Violet Sharpe is dead, a suicide under the strain of the investigation. Gaston B. Means is in jail for fifteen years for extorting money from Mrs. Edward B. McLean under pretext of recovering the baby. John H. Curtis, the Norfolk shipbuilder, is about to go on trial for his faked negotiations with the kidnapers. The police have been withdrawn from the silent Lindbergh home. Lindbergh is trying to forget by burying himself in work in his laboratory at the Rockefeller institute in New York. Calles’ Wife Has Brain Tumor By United Press NEW YORK, June 21.—Dr. Maximilian Ramirz, director of the French hospital here, told United Press today his diagnosis that Senora Calles, wife of the Mexican minister of war, was suffering from a tumor of the brain, had been confirmed at a consultation with Dr. Foster Kennedy, brain specialist.

with HATS --...r.d rmi iiff i gJ| n ' ‘% wk/kB H 88c ■ I M*■f ■-f |B 4| 4 wash Made with wide m 13 '; #f 1 B 13k m SUITS ‘ and materials. " ‘ ” W®'' Sizes 4 to 14 M ** M * '" ■" 1 Sleeveless broad- ■£,■ 311-325 WEST WASHINOTON ST. =H-H l: SEN'S YAMA-GOLF-CREPE .98 PRESSES iranteed Washable]] * SIZES 16 TO 50 • WHILE THEY LAST ill H i A special group of dresses just the thing for ML, yML iMT® vacation and summer wear. Cool, sheer and Mfflk yf Mm IK $5 WOMEN’S SMART IW A f4 \f TWEED COATS \l]a V H $ 1.88 - ■> ® _/) wom. wash 4 GIRLS’ SHEER^C'N ®*F,?S ® WASH FROCKS^^ 1 RATON UNDIES w A Mftff WW A me ft Bloomers. Panties. Chemise, Vests mg vSfi&x j f jSMjaB H sHBjA V V / %s na a 9#o xiii a !>•• / prettily trimmed: reg- MMi; /t't?^ ■ dnr ■■ nd M..„, sizes. REDUCED TO z BIAS CUT SLIPS PANAMAS If®- /^i trimmed. White and ft Mis -turbans IB m m (/l&r^ bsV / colors. Regular sizes. * COLORS g SMART a smart group of chic hats |8 mB H w/4/^ WHITE GLOVES in the newest styles avail- R J Mg OB Jsf v Smart pull-on ** f ble in the eastern mar - jgC J* / . styles. White or J2Jk£ kets - Eggshell. All sizes. W%y ATT UPAIICTVVfi V *-—/ f) 7 7 Child’s Nainsook ALL HEADSIZES X, / Wy * UNION SUITS Cool summer union PURE Wh IP iA 42> Iff ¥ W* W C! ££if" e 8 silk IS lABI tUI alilra 4Girls'Meshßayon. { ~/f?k BOYS' SMART Combination Suits Vl* y* a VI?STPEE Floor 4 .. 1 . 0 . 10 :.. S ' CO . na 88c J l 'T f OO CSITfYS 8 BOXES SANITARY UADvnic • 100% FRENCH SILK / wmßßm > 3 WV/ • BIAS CUT FRONT AND / \JMSBSL %5L%&.4--12 to box aa \| 1/ back (-. mmm BBC aa c /41 •lace trimmed M ,:. T ,H good. © D ATHC t A /J> ''l * Inf HITE, TEA ' / MSXBgSSuLJ We sold over 500 in the 2fr * A7C / \ a n/\pr r/ reu ffißmrnjfjflmi last few weeks. Made of AUVI VT6 /#> \ nL,JC r LCjn SPSSwMffiHI wool and rayon tweeds, V AHhLfiia /f / \ 'SIZES 34 TO 44 IMBM neck vest, pullover style I First quality mesh /4/V/ // 1 .. . ~ , . MMKBBBImSL and full lined knickers, anklets All colors, ]D # 'k I Also chemise, panties and stepins. all sizes ' ■——■——l 2 pair silk ] 4 Pair Ruffled Curtains FUIX-FASHIOHEE Q|( 4 PANELS [WTOM XI U9I!l PRISCILLA OR Cf'.i S-Wi • 1-. gs% na RUFFLED STYLE ftJ A '.I .|4'.Ha- -l-'l'^. MKfi • 40-INCH PANELS J%^%C Beautiful ruffled curtains or fine •:| f •A 1 * V Silk to the top. Reinforced with marquisette panels. ‘l/ -V V*. lisle. Summer colors. All sizes. YARDS CELANESE VOILES . . 88C 1‘ \\\ <LX El ECTRIC 12 Yds. PRETTY WASH PRINTS . 88c 'hfo&r , * I*7 amt i? 5 Yds. (S7c) PRINTED ORGANDY . 88c OW | W At* r Lt, n yds. PRETTY PRINTED LAWNS, 88c ?Fsss I If D£\NT ft 7 Yds. PRINT or PLAIN VOILES . 88c HIVHD 2 Pair EMB. PILLOWCASES ... 88c *• CHROME PLATED ® Yds. kfOSQUITO NETTING ... 88c J ._aL/>n A 5 YARDS RAYON DRAPERY DAMASK . 1 PKaH OO 6 YARDS (29c) CURTAIN MATERIALS . jß&wsaSp" A J%C 2 YARDS (98c) TABLE DAMASK ... I %# ft iEEp| UU $1.50 LINEN TABLE DAMASK Per Yd. Tvith fine 6 (25c) BORDERED TABLE NAPKINS . 15 yards 4q-inch marquisette . . J ■ —i _ /TfK a UV||tc f%H RAVfil j BASEMENT BARGAINS] lolt B c r 1 ° SHORTS 7 RAYON UNDIES Ml CUIHTC * Bloomers lfm MjP fllfjjffvf.U }ttf K*h "HIAIB Panties Cl 1/ '.‘J# 8 FOR A O Step-Ins K JEk C /? 1 g 111 /h I 1 I !\\ S R Made of eood ouali v G| rajon ///. 12 PILLOWCASES for. 88c 3 Boys’ Play Suits 2 PAIR WHITE KNICKERS 15 Yds. Part Linen Toweling . 88 Hickory .tripe pm fiftc 10-20x40 Bath Towels . sM t) <*& C 99 12 .7? r ?f ?°? e M “* ,ln • • I 2 FR. BOYS’ LINEN KNICKERS 12 PAIR MEN’S HOSE 2 Krinkled Spreads ... 88c It 11 * / naw or pimn color,. jt% Fancv Tavon and 6 Yard* ft 1 -Inch) Bleached Sheeting T 9c|C h s obT !. in .: mar£ ®® C 30 Yards Unbleached Muslin ... mJ§ U n — M , —... . 01 . . 15 Yard* Whit. Outing tlflf C 2 PAIR BOYS’ LOBBIES Men's All-Wool Sleeveleu 2 Seamless 81x90 Sheets .... M Made of brown, tan I fik C 3 Bleached 72x90 Sheets ... . J \J\J or grey cooi doth.. 99 c J& JPTSi....

PAGE 3