Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1927 — Page 14
PAGE 14
DRIVER OF BUS ADMITSKILLIN6 Church Teacher Is Slain, Bound With Wire. WOODBURY, N. J., Oct. 3. George Yarrow, 27-year-old bus driver, has confessed that he murdered 18-year-old Rose Sarlo, high school graduate and teacher of a catechism class of St. Patrick s Church here. After hours of questioning, he told** startling story of Miss Sarlo’s The girl’s body was found Sunday at the roadside near here. She had been beaten, shot twice and trussed up with telephone wire. Yarrow, arrested with three others, contended for hours that he was inn?ent. Then, after being shown bits of Miss Sarlo’s clothing and finally taken to the morgue to view her body, he confessed. Yarrow denied that he had attacked the girl and didn’t remember anything about strangling her with a strand of wire. He said in his confession that he shot her to death. LAY DEATHS TO KITTEN Animal Rubs Against Gas Jet and Three Are Asphyxiated. NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—A kitten crawling over a gas stove and rubbing against a gas jet was credited by the police with responsibility for the deaths of three persons in a gas-filled apartment in the basement of the apartment house here. An office employe smelled gas when he entered the huilding and summoned Patrolman John Larkin. Larkin broke in the door of the basement apartment, and discovered the bodies of George Knight, 73 years old, superintendent of the apartment house; his wife, Mary. 45, and their son, John, 14. FLYING TO BE TAUGHT City Company to Give Instructions, Do Commercial Work. Rollin A. Stewart, president of the Indianapolis Aviation Company, today announced the company will offer instruction in flying and do commercial cross-country flying. New Waco 10 planes will operate from Stout field at Mars Hill, with Everett Winnings as chief pilot. Winnings said women students will be accepted.
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SYNOPSIS Nancy was pretty, a GAGE, and a blue-blood even though she did live on the other siie of the railroad tracks. But Nancy just couldn’t help falling in love and becoming engaged to handsome Eric Nelson, whom she had met at. Edith Harcourt’s, a rich school chum. Nancy’s prids causes her to break the engagement when she finds that Eric’s mother is a laundress at the Harcourt’s. Nancy is extremely Jealous when Eric starts going with Clarice Jones, her next door neighbor. unable to stand the tension of her enforced separation from the man she loves, Nancy goes to live in San Francisco. Here she meets a handsome stranger, at a bathing beach, who interests her. CHAPTER XXI. “Gerald B. Hall.” As /Nancy repeated It, he said, gravely, “I see you read the newspapers.” „ . .. “Yes,” she answered, and if you’re half as bad as your reputation I’d better start running.” “Asa matter of fact, I'm much worse,” he admitted, cheerfully. “My wife was compelled to get a divorce, but the poor dear didn’t tell the half of it. She adores me, really.” Nancy was shocked at his frankness. “I suppose,” she said, frowning, “I should feel flattered that the hero of so many amours deigns to cast his eyes upon me.” His charming face became instantly serious. “Certainly not! My interest in you is purely impersonal. Because you looked so gay and light-hearted, dancing alone on the beach. I’m fed up with tears and reproaches. And I’m not wicked at heart. Few men are. “We are just children seeking pleasure and freedom. But the ordinary woman is bom with the instincts of a school teacher. She demonstrates her theories on her husband, who rebels silently, as a rule. Only one in a thousand dares kick up his heels and ecape.” “Yet you Just said that your wife adores you!” Nancy cried, puzzled. “She does. All the more reason for her attempting to subjugate me. Discipline must be observed, you know, even by the most favored pupils.” Ha smiled michievously. “My wife is one of the most conscientious schoolma’ams in the world. Oh, God, what a relief to be free!” “I think it’s awful for you to talk like that,” Nancy said, primly. “Oh, come now! I suppose you’ve never recited that little poem ‘Kick the tables, kick the chairs, kick the teacher down the stairs.’?” In spite of her disapproval, Nancy’s lips were twitching. He was shocking. He had been notoriously unfaithful. But he was. interesting. She hoped he would insist on seeing her again. But she allowed no hint of this feeling to creep into her demure farewell. “You’ve given me something to think about, Mr. Hall. I shall try to quell my school-teaching instincts before I acquire a husband.” He laughed and strode away, and Nancy put the little card into her pocketbook. Not that she could have forgotten him. Jerry Hall’s name was a familia one in San Francisco. Yet in reading the list of his escapades Nancy had pictured some one entirely different. He seemed sad. Not at all the rakish, dissipated youth of newspaper notoriety. Only the smile flashing across his somber face, the smoldering fire in his melancholy eyes, gave any hint of his dangerous proclivities. “I must write Edith about him,” thought Nancy, safe on the bus. But the desire to confide in Edith conflicted with her reluctance to tell how she had met him. She could scarcely admit that she had talked to a man she didn’t know, alone on the beach, sans shoes and stockings. . . . Edith would be horrified. So, as she rode home, she composed a more conventional explanation, using the poetic license permissible to all artists. “Went on a beach picnic today, and you’ll be surprised when I tell you I met Jerry Hall. Yeah, honestly! He comes from a most exclusive San Francisco family, and is even more fascinating than the newspapers give him credit for being. “But a gentleman to the flngei tips. You know the kind I mean He would be a gentleman even in his cups!” Nancy was proud of the phrase It showed quite a little sophistication for a girl who had yet to see a gentleman or otherwise in that condition. “The city is doing a lot for me,’ she thought, complacently. She told herself, of course, she would never call him. But the little card stuck in a corner of her mirror proceeded with its deadly work. It offered an Instant escape from
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the monotony of every-day life. It was also a possible antidote for the slow poison of her love for Eric. She had made a rule now that she could only think of Eric while brushing her teeth. During those unromantic periods she gave her memories free play, clamping the lid down immediately afterward. The result was beneficial to her teeth and mentally. Yet she was always conscious of an aching void, an emptiness which must be filled. It occurred to hfer once during the tooth-brushing ritual that the fire she suspCSted in Jerry might consume remnants of her passion for the other man. It was a desperate thought, born of a night haunted by dreams of her lover. She put the idea from her as unworthy, and she did not call him. But more and more she was forced to recognize his potentialities. . . . In the meantime there were endless opportunities for her to become interested in someone else. One of the new teachers at school, from the East, and lonely, became suddenly attentive. He was slightly bald, stoop-shoul-dered, and carried a cane. . . . But his knowledge of music fascinated Nancy. And he took her to concerts and recitals she could not otherwise have afforded. She was grateful until the night he pawed her hand during the third number of a symphony concert. Thereafter she felt compelled to plead previous engagements—-regret-full, for she had a natural craving for miysic. But the cold moistness of that enforced contact had ruined her evening. There was also a fellow-student—-one who considered himself a genius. Eugene Wood was a temperamental, dreamy-eyed egoist, impractical visionary, yet with such passionate faith in his own future that one almost believed with him. Nancy enjoyed the impersonality of their companionhip. It consisted of dinners at inexpensive French or Italian restaurants, and walks along Fisherman’s Wharf, watching the loaded boats, listening to a smattering of dialects, and sniffing the salt, fish-tainted air, which reeked of adventure. It forced her to think of Eric. That scene! Swept her with an insane longing to jump into a snug little craft and sail into the unknown. With him! Yet well she knew she would never have had the courage. Hadn’t he offered her adventure? And hadn’t she refused? She shivered, clinging closer to Eugene’s arm. “What’s the matter? Cold?” “No! Let’s get a sh.lmp cocktail!” Her conversations with Eugene wer emostly monologues. But they taught her the invaluable art of listening to the outpouring of another soul. The inestimable virtue of concealing one’s own ambitions! The power of silence! Two months she had of this pla-
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
VIDA HURST
tonic friendship, vaguely pleasant, looking back on it. Then came the day when, by her own invitation, Jerry Hall re-entered her life. A letter from Edith was responsible. She wrote, excitedly, that Sybil had brought a friend home from school who had “fallen” for Eric Nelson. “Isn’t it terrible,” wrote Edith, “the influence he has over girls? My dear, she saw him on the street, and nothing would do but she should meet him. Sybil and I tried to reason with her. We explained. . . . But Chloris is awfully spoiled. She comes from a wealthy family in San Francisco. (In her haste Edith neglected to give trfte name.) But she said she ‘didn’t give a damn what his mother did.’ Can you imagine It? “She pursued him, Nancy. Sybil invited him to two parties, but he refused. Finally she actually ex-
AIMEE STARTS WORK First Lighthouse Opened in Fresno, Cal. Bv Times Special LOS ANGELES. Oct. 3—Fresno has been chosen as the site for the first new lighthouse to be established as a branch of Angelus Temple since Aimee Semple McPherson took over management of the church relinquished by her mother, according to an announcement by the evangelist. Mrs. McPherson has left Angelus Temple for the first time since conducting a religious meeting in Chicago last summer, to go to Fresno and take personal charge of a fourday revival. Friday night, at the closing service, Mrs. McPherson will dedicate the lighthouse. Plans also are being made for establishment of a lighthouse in San Diego at an early date, it was announced. It also is reported that plans for founding a Bible college at Des Moines, la., are under consideration. SOVIET BUILDS BODIES Physical Culture Is High in Favor Among Russians. Bv United Press MOSCOW, Oct. 3. Organized physical culture is making rapid strides in Soviet Russia, the membership having increased in the last few years from 2,700,000 to a present enrollment of 3,660,000 persons. The membership is about evenly divided between men und women, while students comprise more than half the total enrollment.
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plained that Chrolis wanted to know him better. He replied that in that case hk would call on her in San Francisco. “But, if he thought he was calling her bluff he was wrong, for the little fool wrote him a note before she left and asked him to come out and meet her brother. She was sure they’d like each other. . . .” Nancy stared at the letter through a storm of tears. This other girl with wealth and social position such as Nancy had never known was not too proud to openly seek Eric’s friendship. She was startled at her own reaction. He would come to San Francisco to see another girl, would he? All right!" She would throw herself headlong at another man. She tore Jerry’s card from the corner of her mirror and deliberately went to the telephone and called him. To Be Continued.
DEFENDANT MISSING Court Opens at Terre Haute Minus ‘Dr. Fouts.’ By Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Oct. 3. Judge Robert C. Baltzell convened the fall term of Federal Court here today with one defendant missing, John Welsey Jones, alias Dr. Fouts, Terre Haute, charged with having sent obscene literature through the mails. A wffek ago, on the eve of arraignment at Indianapolis preliminary to trial here, Jones disappeared and no trace of him has’ been found since Merle H. Jones, his son, facing the same charge, probably will not be tried here, as officials say his alleged operations centered at Chicago. The two-are accused of mailing instructions on birth control. Edison Wagner, former employe of the McKean National Bank here, charged with embezzlement, is scheduled for trial. Liquor law cases form the greater part of the docket.
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DRYS TO CLASH OVERPROGRAM Extremists to Ask Strong Platform Planks. By Times Special WASHINGTON, Oct. 3.—Leaders of the national dry organizations, scheduled to meet in Atlantic City this week, will clash over the question of demanding dry planks in the Republican and Democratic platforms. This became evident today, when dry leaders here dissented from the position of the Anti-Saloon League of America, that a general law enforcement plank is all that the dry forces should insist on. Canon William Sheafe Chase, head of the International Reform Federation, closely associated with the Methodist board of temperance, prohibition, and morals, said that he will urge the dry leaders to demand dry planks in the major party platforms. “With a pronounced wet such as A1 Smith a prominent presidential candidate,” Chase said, “it’s absurd for the Ariti-Saloon League to contend that a mere declaration in favor of law enforcement Is adequate. “There must be a clear-cut dry
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may be tested In the case of the State vs. William M. Turner, Huntington, on tHe docket for trial at the present term of the Howard Circuit court. It is alleged that Turner, after being deeded property by his 80-year-old mother upon condition that he support her. transferred It to another person and placed hl3' mother in a poorhouse. Prosecutor Homer R. Miller announces that If Judge John Marshall of Circuit court declares the support law invalid, he will appeal to the Indiana Supreme court.
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