Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1940 — Page 20

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. iii MONDAY, SEPT. 23, 1940 b Ludlow Lone Hoosier Still ~~ WRECKAGE OF MRMY ~F. Backing Woodrum in House 1

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“PAGES | : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

| FIND WRECKAGE |S: or LUNCH PROGRAM

|

LOUISVILLE, Ky. Sept. 23 (U. . P.).—Inspectors for the Civil Aero- |

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OF ARMY PLANE ghcchrs Old Man Mose Is Far From Dead | yng'y ppgINTED

Head of Searching Party ‘Certain’ Three Aboard Are Dead. |

{ i ~ JACKSONVILLE, Fla, |Sepr. 23 (U. P)—An Army wrecking crew started through the swamplands of southeastern Georgia today to the wreckage of an observation plane

Which was believed to haye carried Brig. Gen. |F. W. Honeycutt and two fliers tg their deaths. | Capt. F. |S. Stocks of Pt. Bragg, Ga. head lof a searching party which redched the demolished plane yesterday, said the plane “apparently crashed at full speed’! and that he was dertain all three men were dead. | The ship had been missing since Friday on a flight from" Ft. Bragg to Jeiatviie Aboard were Gen. Honeycufit, | commander | of Ft. Bragg; Capt. George F. KeHoe, the pilot, and Corp. Robert A.| Schnitz. The wreckage was found buried in the mud of a small island six| miles east of Woodbine, Ga. The force of the impact was 'so great that it dug a crater 20 feet in diameter. Only the tail assembly of the plane—a three-place 0-47-A observation ship—was visible above ground. Water had seeped into the _ crater, Capt. Stocks said, making a detailed investigation difficult. Authorities would not speculate| as to cause of the crash but said, that flying conditions at the time| had been ideal. The wreckage was|

BAR GROUP URGES

discovered yesterday by an Army | flier, Gen. Honeycutt had assumed

command of Ft. Bragg last week. He arrived Sept. 13 from the Phil-

ippine Islands .where he had been| The establshment of a society to

in command of Ft. Stotsenburg for provide legal service to those unthe last two years. : ifornia, he was 57.

A native of Cal- | apie to pay for it has been.recomI mended by a study committee of | the Indianapolis Bar Association. { The recommendation will be submitted te the association at a | luncheon meeting in the club rooms | Thursday. : The committee, after a study of

LEGAL AID SOGIETY|

Marvin Arnold (top), Chester Parsons and Normal Gale (center) and Edwin Beach (front)

Aviation

2

‘ By EARL HOFF

times at Tech High School. So have McCarthy, Roscoe, Geronimo, Old Man Mose, Yehudi.

| several months, said that the need | | for free legal service cannot be | adequately met by the volunteer | services of individual members of | | the association. { The group recommends the incorporation of the Indianapolis t Legal Aid Society, financed by wel- | fare and charitable organizations. The study showed that there are legal aid societies in 60 of the 93 | cities in the country which have a population of 100,000 or more. Jeremiah I. Cadick was chair- | man of the committee which made | the study... Members were Clarence F. Merrell, Carl Wilde. Eugene C. Miller and Thomas D, Stevenson.

i CHOIR MEETS TONIGHT The Indianapolis, Civic Choir will meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Floyd Jones School of Sacred Music, 1564 Park Ave. All new

graduates now,

They'll never fly again. But they

{have become so much a part of the

have given each a personality. In the single-room, high-ceiling airplane: shop pupils are probing into the workings: of the - dozen airplane motors. The” motors’

threads have become worn, some of |

the parts nicked and bent. | But as Carmichael and his like wear out, Tech pupils become more proficient in airplane mechanics. They graduate, receive certificates

|and go to work as mechanics and

aircraft builders. There's a demand for these Tech John H. Haxton, the instructor in charge, says. Until a few years ago most of

them had to find employment in|.

the Air Corps, with commercial air lines or in airplane factories on the est Coast. | Now, a large number are going

C ourse Prepares Pupils for Plane Plant Jobs

| Carmichael II has been taken japart and put together about 50 |

These, along with six othess, are

. « « look on intently as Instructor John H. Haxton of the Tech aviation class points out what makes “Old Man Mose” tick.

2 2 2

pils are instructed in structures and fuselage.

and the pupils learn about aerodynamics, aircraft radio and aircraft welding.

| gines.

have t Many of the boys want to fly. aviation course at Tech the pupils The mechanical and technical train-

a good groundwork as pilots. | go into the Air Corps. | Mr. Haxton has two assistants, R. [K. Offutt and Don Patterson, and

detail of the training, even instructing the boys how to tell at a glance the difference between each” bolt and nut.

A regular night: school class is given each year in the airplane course, but Mr. Haxton thinks the emergency training program. may be substituted this year, using the Tech facilities. Besides the motors lined up in the airplane shop, there is a Corps Observation plane poised in the back; complete except for its “skin.”

The pupils overhaul Old Man Mose |

State Committee to Hold

First Meeting Early In October.

An advisory committee to assist State and Federal officials on various problems arising in the administration of the state-wide free school: lunch program was named today by Governor Townsend. The committee will hold its first meeting early next month at the call of its chairman, Floyd I. McMurray, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, : Ex-officio members, headed by Governor Townsend, are Dudley A. Smith, director of the Unemployment Relief Commission; Miss Mildred Schmitt, director of the Public Service Division of the WPA; Robert S. Richey, State NYA director, and R. M. LaGrange, state supervisor of commodity distribution. Members are Miss Ruth Schooler, state supervisor of Home Economics | Education; Dr. Verne K. Harvey, director of the State Board of Health; Miss Eva F. MacDougall, chief of -the Bureau of Public Health Board; Mrs. Lynn Miller, Montmorenci, state president of Tri Kappa Sorority; Mrs. James L. Murray, Indianapolis, state P.-T. A. | president; Mrs. Lillie D. Scott, Clayton, of the Indiana Farm Bureau. 5 ; Murray A. Auerbach, Indianapolis, ‘Tuberculosis Association, Miss ! Mildred Arnold, Indianapolis, di- | rector of the Children’s Division of the State Public Welfare Department; Miss Lella Gaddis, Lafayette, |

airplane

In the third semester, the course is lengthened to three hours a day

| The final semester is devoted to liam H. Book, vice president of the retired Army Air Corps motors. | “top” and “major” overhaul of en- yndianapolis

| Board of Health. ing they receive at Tech gives them |

SM DETROIT MEN HURT

the three carefully supervise every.

state home demonstration agents’ leader: Mrs. G. W. Jaqua, Winchester, president of Indiana Federation {of Clubs. Dr. Odell Archer, Clinton, presi{dent of the Indiana Trustees Asso~ | ciation; the Rev. Fr. Leonard Wern- | ising, Indianapolis, superintendent tof Catholic schools; Miss ~ Edith Gamble, Lafayette, quantity cookery teacher at Purdue University; Wil-

Chamber of Comimerce, and Miss, Estelle Nesbit, Indianapolis, nutritionist of the State

IN PLYMOUTH CRAS

PLYMOUTH, Ind. Sept. 23 (U P).—James R. Hoffa, 27, and Bert Brennan, 28, business agents for a Detroit truck drivers union, were in- | jured this morning when the auto- |

{ mobile in which they were riding |

left, U. 8. highway 31, near here, | and crashed into two utility poles. Police said Mr. Hoffa, who was driving, apparently fell asleep at the wheel. They said Mr. Brefinan | was sleeping in the back seat of] the car. Both were taken to the Parkview Hospital. : |

Times Special

WASHINGTON, Sept. |23.—Rep. Louis Ludlow is the sole Indiana

Democratic Congressman support-

ing conservative Rep. Clifton A. Woodrum (D. Va.) for| majority leader in the House. | All other Hoosiers are! for Rep. John W. McCormack (D. Mass.) who is said to have the New Deal Administration blessing. Rep. William T. Schulte is circulating a petition to haye a party

Wednesday night. in addition to himself, include Reps. John W. Boehne Jr., Eugene B. Crowe and William H. Larrabee. |

One of the reasons why Rep. Ludlow is supporting Rep. Woodrum is the fact that he is a fellow member of the Appropriations Committee. ‘Should he be selected as majority leader, Rep. Ludlow would become second ranking member of this important House committee.

HURT IN 3-FLOOR FALL Frances . Stratton, 25, of 2705 Franklin Place, Antlers Hotel maid,

caucus to decide the matter next stepped into an elevator shaft there

Indiana signers, |

today and fell from the third floor to the basement. She was taken to City Hospital where her condition was described as serious.

nautics Authority and local police continued investigatiop of scattered wreckage of an Army pursuit plane which crashed near Bloomfield, 37 miles south “of here, killing «the pilot. The pilot was believed to be Capt. Louis E. Massie. Reports from Memphis, Tenn., said & plane piloted by Mr. Massie cleared there bound for Wright Field, Dayton, O., where it was overdue. Witnesses = who saw the plane plunge to earth last evening said the motor seemed to go “dead” suddenly and it dived at & high rate of speed. il

at that!

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Repeated. rinsings ® ® ® ® Each rinsing in pure, fresh, clean soft water ® ® ® ® and mildly warm soft water,

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THE IRONING

We Iron ® ® ® ® and Hand Finish © ® @ @ 3]] your bed, bath and table linens ® ® ® ® in other words, we do the HEAVIER ironing ® © ® ® and return the wearing apparel DAMP @® ® @ ® not wet ® ® ® ® just right for 1roning at home.

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Progress The Soft Water Laundry

ash Vork Ironed

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MA rket 2431 =

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to work at the Allison Engineering

members have heen asked to attend. Jin the nose of the plane, repair and |

; a rts se Co. plant in Indianapolis. ~ “lweld its structure, cover sections ® é | Too mtplong Buse gg n- of the wing and tail with fabric. 3; he gE Spiratio 0 usse nas, macnine | i : Fant . : 3 gr— i y fie fis shop instructor. He held the first | There also 5.8 miniature wind f & VY .v. ® Ee diacses in 1924 tunnel and in one corner of the ee nn 4 9 oe “a ; room, standing on its nose, is a| be] ad rare. “tits size” glider built several years : f Gorgeous FUR COATS : as Terre Haute Airport manager |ago as a class project. The glider 4 ar] i = ’thas never flown because funds | 1} ; four years with the Air Service -Di- | : | i Have that fur coat you've 3d {were not available to cover the] : been longing for. . . . vision of the. Army at Dayton, 0. d ines with. fabri { ‘ 4 Buy now—Save! Luxury 3 and a year with TWA airlines. He| ocy and wings: wi abric, { . 3 furs, :brfliane Sew styles. also has worked in the Allison and | Requirements for the course have | 4 Use Our Layaway Plan 333.50 Lockheed factories. been relaxed slightly and next year| [EEiiiuii EEE na. Yi : Ta To qualify for the course, Tech | Mr. Haxton expects there may be | 3 A Smyl} Deposit Holds Jor, Future De ivery boys must first enroll in a general | more boys applying for the course G : shop course called 4-M. If they | than can be’ taken care of. One The Store 3 make a grade of B or better, they | hundred fifty are enrolled now. Each : . san enroll in Airplane One. |semester also will -be a three-hour | For one and a half hours a day, | class. ’ EERE Lr LL - Airplane Ones study functions and | Interest in the course, although ‘ 146 East WASHINGTON ST. i ||9perations of engines and acces- high since it was started, has sories. Int the second semester pu-|leaped since modern warfare put 5 —-. y |the accent on air power. More and + more importance has been attached ’ to the course, since an inadequate i supply + of competent mechanics ; has made. this a bottle neck in air | | defense preparations, : Meanwhile, Carmichael takes an- : other beating. : And another pupil learns what] makes him and thousands of other airplane motors tick. . SWISS FEAR CRISIS Ste 5 : WITH NAZIS NEAR 8d 1 ZURICH, Sept. 23 (U. P.).—Swit- Pls » zerland, Europe's oldest federal re- ; boas 7 i | public and hemmed in on all sides . 2 RE : . L by German and Italian territory, ¢ A i may soon face a crisis in her efforts 4 : Ce to remain neutral. The first incident arose when © |Swiss President Marcel Pilet-Golaz : TRY A BE E R THAT'S granted an audience to Ernst Hoff- i : A 4 . man, young 30-year-old Swiss Nazi : Gow ; » | . leader and allowed him to read a 4 s J statement on the movement's aims. : : The flurry it caused in Swiss politics was concluded temporarily when » AND the Federal Council issued a decla- : . ration criticizing the President fo : J | the reception. : : i i eceplon. incident came when| EXamine the top burner openings carefully on a | , | the Berlin newspaper Das Reich. in : : t Ja] oo a dispatch by another Swiss Nazi| modern gas range—they’re almost out of sight Take a tip from the Falls City taste- entitled “Switzerland's enmity for fi . B : : the Reich,” warned that Switzerland i i twins. Nest tials yoo'e Aidvsty;, call, for mish soon “Td a new retionshp along the side of the small, streamlined burner , | wit ermany.” . ew ’ famous Falls City beer by name. opted heads where spill-overs can never clog. 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