Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1932 — Page 10

PAGE 10

PLAYLOT HEADS ARE ASSIGNED TO CITY POSTS Life Guards Also Are Given Pools for Season by Department Chiefs. Life guards, matrons and playground supervisors for the city recreation department were assigned Tuesday |.o the swimming pools and parks, of which they will have charge this summer by A. C. Sallee, superintendent of parks, and H. W. Middlesworth, recreation director. Assignments of thirty-one playground matrons, thirty-seevn men .supervisors, thirty-two women supervisors and thirty-four life guards were included in the list issued from the recreation department. The appointees took their posts today. Assignments of playground matrons follow: Bslmont. Anna Anacrsun; Brookside, Desdtmona Hsrryman: Brlght.wood, Marsaret O'Connor; Camp Sullivan. Marv Mulvthill. Flcedna Russell; Dearborn, Minnie Blodgett ; Douglas, Ollle Smith; Ellenherger, Eunice Strickland; Finch, Loretta Anderson; Fall Creek, Hazel Retsner; Greer. Lillian Donahue; Garfield. Luclna Tternan; Hawthorne, Mary Holmes. Highland, Caroline Bader: Oak Hill, Cora Wtlson; Kansas and Meridian, Lena Lucas; Lentz, Winifred Jones; Morris Square. Susan Munn; Melkel and Wyoming Charlene Htbbitt; Northwestern. Lona Pritchard: Norwood. Dardella Worthington. Pleasant Run. Helen McConnell. Rader and Udell, Hazel Winkley; Ringcold, Elizabeth Berry; Rhodlus, Anna Thompson; Riley, Mary Daly; Spring Street, Sarah E. Mack; Sixty-first and Broadway, Mary Norton; Tenth and Ketcham. Sophia Somrak, and Willard, Myrtle Hall. Men and women supervisers at the playgrounds are: American Settlement, James Demetrius; Belmont, George Wade and Katherine Hodge; Brookside. Kenneth Payne and Mary Search; Brlghtwood, Lawrence Feeney; Christian, Oscar Barry; Camp Sullivan, William Sayce and Ella Hahn; Camp Sullivan, Paul Maxey and Elizabeth Cheatham; Dearborn, Ludsom Worsham and Dorothy Shephard. Douglas, Frank Ransom and Jessie Hill; Ellenberger, Howard Robertson and Marjorie Lawson: Finch, Thomas Hannon and Margaret Anderson; Fall Creek, Francis Cullfvan and Mabel Rose; Forty-ninth and Arsenal, Carl Lutz; Greer, Joe Meo; Golden Hill, Ruth Aga*i Garfield, Gus Mueller and Virginia Hildebrand; Hawthorne, Robert Hedge and Eleanor Rtchwlne; Highland, William Boland and Mary Flaherty; Oak Hill. Paul Stanley and Maxine Wolf; Tndianola. Joseph Tynan and Mildred Btlyeu; Kansas and Meridian. Abe JafTe and June Kempf; Lenlz, Howard Young and Helen Shea; Morris Square, Melvin Osborn and Agnes Healy. Municipal Gardens. Lena Lohrman: Meikel and Wyoming. D. C. Dukes; Lovell Miller and Ethel Crawford: Northwestern. Richard Horn and Anna Richie; Norwood. Raymond Raine and Burnetta Bridges; Pleasant Run. Ed Oliger ar.d Helen Adolav; Porter. Amiza Kev. Rader and Udell. John Orr and Dorothy Brown; Ringgold. Hiram Henzel and Geraldine O’Rourke; Rhodlus. William Bevan and Agnes Burnett; Riley. Vincent O'Connor and Anna Thiele; Riverside. Lillian Brown; Soring street Charles Hill and Helen Connor: Sixlv-nrst and Broßdwav. Edwin A. Manouge; Tenth and Ketcham. Robert L Steeeer and Caroline Frankcl: Willard. Francis Kennedy. Patrick Fisher and Ann Zimmerman, and Warfleigh. Emily Pond. Swimming pool and beach assignments are: Ellenberger Pool Walter Johnson, head guard. Paul Brrhtold, William S. Garner, John H. Compton and Marjorie Fowler. Garfield Pool Donald Bnuermelster, head guard; Robert Collins, Robert Jarvis, Sam Klezmer and Madeline Sander. Rhodlus Pool—James Clark, head guard: John Gandell. Russell Mclntire, Donald Pittman and Helen Hawkins. Douglas Pool—Howard Clark, head guard, and Milton Jenkins^ Twentv-Sixth Street Beach Richard Davenport, head guard; Alexander Sabo, William Rehm, George Myers and William Doctor. Warfleigh Beach- Thomas Blackwell, head guard; Robert Barry, Lawrence Simons and John Marsul. Willard Pool—Everett Brown, head gard, Robert Kelleher, and Lois Nelson. Matrons at the pools are: Ellenberger, Maude Heavrin: Garfield, Elizabeth Moisler; Rhodius. Euna Burns; Warfleigh. Nellie Harrison, and Willard, Adella English. PALACE ANNOUNCES CUT IN ADMISSION PRICES Drastic Reduction in Effect in All Loew's Theaters, Drastic reduction of admission prices at the Palace theater, effective Friday, was announced today by Ray Jones, manager. The reduced prices, estimated to save city movie-goers thousands of dollars during the summer season, also will be placed in effect in all Loew's theaters in the country. New price schedule follows: Monday to Saturday from 10:45 a. m to 6 p. m., all seats 25 cents: after 6 p. m„ 35 cents; Sundays and holidays, 12:30 to 1 p. m., 25 cents, and the remainder of the day and night, 35 cents. Admission for children will be 15 cents at all times. "We have chosen this time to revise our prices because it is the beginning of the summer season and we are fortunate in having the mast promising array of pictures released in the last several years,” Jones said. BANDIT ROBS STORE AND THEN ESCAPES Gets Trousers and Cash in Bornstein Establishment. Although surrounded by a police net in the downtown district today, a bandit escaped after robbing a clerk in the Bornstein dry goods store, 333 West Washington street. The clerk, Max Goldstein, 843 South Illinois street, told police he was alone in the store when the bandit entered, purchasing a pair trousers. As Goldstein was wrapping the package, the bandit drew a revolver, holding Goldstein at bay while he looted the cash register of $2.75. He fled with the trousersThe bandit ran from the store into an alley and several police squads circled the vicinity without result. STRAUSS IS RENAMED Again Holds Post as President of Stores Mutual Association. The Stores Mutual Protective Association re-elected Arthur L. Strauss, of L. Strauss & Cos., as president at the annual meeting Tuesday in the association's offices in the Illinois building. Other officers named are W. C. Royer, of H. P. Wasson <fc Cos., vicepresident: V. C. Kendall, of L. S. Ayres & Cos., secretary. A. G. Brown, of the Marott shoe shop, was re-elected treasurer and W. E. Balch, re-named executive secretary. 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.

Ready for Times Mibs Finals

’ 1 '

Above (left to right)—-Mervin Winters, champ of the Oak Hill playground; Martin Masaris, who defeated all comers at Municipal Gardens, and Richard Lentz, leader of the pack at school No. 90.

Orders 2 Miles of Gauze for City’s Playgrounds The lines of John Greenleaf Whittier's which go: "Blessings on thee, little man. Barefoot boy with cheeks of tan are all very well until the barefoot boy steps on a piece of glass. Baseball is the national sport until you slide into one of the bases and skin your leg. And swimming is a great body builder except when you dive too deep and scrape your elbows or slip on the edge of the pool and crack your shin. All these accidents and many others happen many times over at the city playgrounds. Hundreds and thousands of minor accidents, which are mere incidents in the day's play, happen when thousands of children gather to enjoy themselves. The recreation department is starting the season prepared for the worst. Every playground superviser is equipped with first aid supplies designed to take care of the multitude of cuts and bruises which Indianapolis children will suffer this summer. The supplies ordered by Recreation Director H. W. Middlesworth include: ' Four pounds of cotton, almost two miles of gauze, almost a mile of adhesive tape, a gallon and a half of mercurochrome, a quart of aromatic spirits of ammonia, and 1.728 applicators. "Os course, we’ll have to get a lot more of this stuff before the summer is over,” Middlesworth said, "but this will give us a start.”

LEAGUES OPEN IN TWO WEEKS Many Sports Provided For at Playgrounds. Sports of all sorts are provided for at the various city playgrounds. Besides the swings, sand piles, swimming pools, and other play equipment, the playgrounds have space for sports as follows: Twenty-four baseball diamonds, twenty-four kittenball diamonds, ninety-one horseshoe courts, three croquet courts, two roquet courts, and seventy-two tennis courtsActivities in the various leagues in which the different playgrounds compete with one another will open in about two weeks, it was stated today at the recreation office. Determine Players “As soon' as the supervisers find out who their players in the different sports are, we will open the leagues,” stated H. W. Middlesworth, recreation director. In charge of the girls’ baseball league will be Miss Alma Tiefert. Robert Nipper will supervise boys’ baseball and volley ball. Track and field, and games, will be under Miss Ruth Emhardt for the girls, and Clifford Courtney for the boys. Robert Goodwin will be in charge of swimming. Mrs. Norma Koster will supervise pageantry and sandcraft League competition will bp held this summer in baseball, volley ball, track and field, swimming, water polo, and horseshoes. In addition, there will be numerous Red Cross life saving contests and tennis matches. 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.

AMUSEMENTS

f JIM & WALT I Francos Dale&Co. | georg^brienl Film, "MYSTERY RANCH”

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LAST TWO DAYS! GEORGE BRENT Trinmi*i IVit* I/oretta Young—Xorraan Foster—Vivienne Osborne Always Healthfully Cool !Se TUI I r. M. Phone Kl. .*>s4

Below—Edwin Morgan, whose broken left arm proved no impediment to him in beating the other contestants at American Settlement playground, and James Harper, Hawthorne playground's representative in the finals.

PLAY CENTERS WELUOCATED Serve All Sections of Indianapolis. The forty-one playgrounds which were opened this morning serve all parts of the city. Names and locations follow: American Settlement, Maryland and California streets; Belmont, Belmont street and White River parkway, west drive; Brookside. Sixteenth street and Dearborn street; Briehtwood Roosevelt avenue and Olney street: Christian. English avenue and Denny street; Camp Sullivan (white and colored i. New York and West streets; Dearborn. Thirtieth and Dearborn streets. Douglass, Twenty-fifth street and Martindale avenue: Ellenberger. Pleasant Run boulevard and Michigan street; Finch, State and Fletcher avenues; Fall Creek, Fall Creek parkway and College avenue; Forty-ninth and Arsenal, Forty-ninth street and Arsenal avenue; Greer, Greer .and McCarty streets; Golden Hill, Thirtyeighth street and Northwestern avenue. Garfield. Southern avenue and Shelbv street: Hawthorne, Belle Vieu place and Washington street; Highland. Marlowe avenue and New York street; Hill. Sixteenth street and Columbia avenue; Oak Hill. Lawrence street and Roosevplt avenue: Indianola. Elder and Washington streets: Kansas and Meridian. Kansas ana South Meridian streets; Lentz, Traub and Walnut streets. Morris Square. Oxford and Twenty-sec-ond streets: Municipal Gardens. Myers road and Nineteenth street; Meikel and Wyoming (white and colored!, Meikel and Wyoming streets: Northwestern, Fall Creek parkway and Northwestern avenue* Norwood. Earhart and Prospect streets; Pleasant Run. Orange street and Pleasant Run boulevard. Porter English avenue and St. Paul street; Rader and Udell. Rader and Udell and orange Rhodius. Belmont avenue anJ w^H nS Ti Street: P ile - V > River avenue ana wu lv y.J’ arkw *- v * west drive; Riverside. Thirtieth street and Riverside drive* sfvtv S i reet i Walnut and Spring streets: j anci ®. r °adway. Sixty-first street ®i°adway, Tenth and Ketcham. Tenth and Ketcham streets: Willard, State and sTree h i m nrf n^ t n rrFt; Warfl i*h. Sixty-fifth street and College avenue.

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1 Our New Refrigeration riant IVIU Kern Von Comfortabiy Cool APOLLO LAST 2 DAYS 25c ! till 11 r. m. I llf Vml ■■Q ■ Q KAT | |.| 3|f FRANCIS ROLAND Extra—Babe Ruth in ‘ Over the Fence” Starting FRIDAY One man could give her anything; but marriage . . the other’nothing but love! JOAN BENNETT "WEEK-ENDS |KgSg& with K BEN LYON * ’ , '’ l life

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

I Stars of the city’s marble players will gather at Willard Park at 1:30 Friday to figure out who shall represent Indianapolis in the National j Marble Tournament at Ocean City, | N. J„ the last week in June. Twenty-two knucklers, the best j that the various sections of the city have been able to produce, will shoot ! it out to decide the winner in The Times city marble tourney. Harold Langley, 11, of 425 St. , Peters street, trounced his opponents at Willard park Tuesday to become | the home representative in the finals Friday. Twenty-nine marble experts in i the art of knuckling down showed j their wares. Harold came from behind in the final games to take two in a row and become Willard park’s champ. Others who will compete for the title are: | Jack Nevitt. Fall Creek playground; Wilj liam Vauehn. Riley nlayeround; William | Dyer. Riverside playground; Joseph Harbor, \ Garfield playground: George Eyed. Brightwood playground; Billy Bovd, Brookside : park; Paul Dav. Spades park: Jack Fehsenfeld. Butler university playground: Jack Tice. Christian park; Glenn Amich. Rhoj dius nark: Sam O'Connell. Ellenberger S park: Richard Gentry, school No. 6: Salvadorc Bova. school No. 13: Eugene Bornej man. school No.-69: Arthur Adams, school No. 91; Robert Mayes, school No. 32.

BUTLER TO OPEN POOL Beginning Monday, Public May Use Field House Tank. .For the fourth consecutive year, the Butler university field house swimming pool, Forty-ninth street and Boulevard place, will be opened to the public Monday, Miss Louise Schulemeyer, director of women's athletics, said today. The schedule designates Monday, Wednesday and Friday as ladies’ days and Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday as men’s days. The pool will be open from 9 to 12, 1 to 5 and 7 to 9.

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■pur ' FRIDA" fHjKNIW Wjjg AMD 60T WHAT !h| SfDN T EXPjEcf wmam l buomt | \ Paramount drama, with /J] L n TALLULAH /|| t\ Bankhead /J 111 PAUL /j IjLU KASTjj LAST'' j ° e 2 BROWN DAYS! ■ “The

tonights presentations AT YOUR nei&horhood theater/

NORTH SIDE cTVKism T|b ‘ •* ~ n< sc - Claudia Dell in “LEFT OVER LADIES” ,9,h r*l I aril I #*l j. f• B n<t College Family Nlte—Erie Linden in ARE THESE OUR CHILDREN?” ffHR99V Noble at Mil! ■w ■ Familw Site— MHMMN port Neighbor, in “WAY BACK HOME” WEST SIDE ■■■■■■■■■■W. Wash. - * Belmont ll4W?.Mtfcß Family Site ■MHMMMi Miriam Hopbine “WORLD AND THE FLESH"

CITY OPENS 41 PLAYGROUNDS FOR CHILDREN Greatest Attendance in History Predicted by by Middlesworth. Thousands of boys and girls from all parts of the city trekked this morning to forty-one playgrounds provided by the city recreation department for their entertainment and exercise this summer. Greater attendance than ever before is predicted for the year by H. W. Middlesworth, city recreation director. Last summer’s attendance, which established anew high, was 783.858. Brookside park led all other playgrounds in attendance during the 1931 season. Attendance there was 96,785. Also opened this morning were seven swimming pools operated by the recreation department. The pools and locations are: Twenty-sixth street beach. Riverside park, north of Taggart Memorial; Garfield. Garfield park, Southern avenue and Shelby street; Douglas, Douglas park. Twenty-fifth street and Martindale avenue; Rhodlus, Rhodius park. Belmont avenue and Wilkins street; Ellenberger, Ellenberger park. Michigan street and Pleasant Run boulevard; Willard, Willard park, State and Washington streets; Warfleigh beach. College avenue and White river. Total attendance at all swimming pools during 1931 was 549,279. Twenty-sixth street beach, with 163,832 swimmers, led. “Another hot, dry summer should bring anew attendance record,” said Robert Goodwin, supervisor of swimming. “Last year's hot spell swelled the totals at all pools, and we are expecting the same this summer.” Life guards, stationed at all pools, are chosen after a series of Red Cross life saving tests. Playground equipment in the various parks will not be installed completely for at least two weeks, according to Middlesworth. The apparatus can not be erected until after the playground supervisors take their posts because of the danger of injuries, he explained. “We have a large crew of men who started today putting up the swings, the chutes and the other equipment,” Middlesworth said. “If we had put them up earlier, we would have had all sorts of broken bones on our hands. A boy broke his arm last Saturday trying to make a trapeze out of a swing support.” $200,000 IS AWARDED TO SECURITY HOLDERS Cash Derived From Collateral of Defunct City Trust. Holders of fifty-three series of securities will schare in distribution of approximately $200,000 derived from liquidation of collateral covered by the defunct City Trust Company mortgage certificates and City Acceptance Corporation collateral trust notes. The distribution, ranging from 1 to 10 per cent dividend, was ordered Tuesday by Probate Judge Smiley N. Chambers. The money was first cash distribution on securities since the bank closed Oct. 23, 1930. J. Dwight Peterson, vice-president of the City Securities Corporation and secretary of the committee formed to protect certificate holders, supervised the distribution in which approximately 1,000 persons shared.

LOEW’S PALACE SLASHES PRICES! New Low Summer Prices Effective Friday, June 17 ALL seats MATINEE fl mg 10:45 \. M. (Except Sunday and Holidays) Children 15c at All Times • N y ALL SEATS \ Come Early Sunday 12:30 to 1 P. M. 25c—After 1 P. M. 35c L,t s Dav: Starting Friday jackie cooper T . h ;J urpr i:: Flt, r i “ ,h ',',r, r chic sale 4 New Morals for Old ALSO **Whpn a Fp]]pr Special Kiddie®* Show Ts ntra A r CUCr (§ A< M D ail> Except Sunday) Needs a Friend" I “ALICE IN WONDERLAND” tfryrafrj-TTra

Splash! In the Water They Do Go as Boy Scouts 9 Camp Opens

Upper—'The first plunge! The boys shown in the picture were the first of the more than 200 Boy Scouts to dive into the pool at the Boy Scout reservation when the camp opened for the season. Lower (left)—George Murphy. 2751 orth La Salle street, the camp’s official bugler, knocking out the first “soupy, soupy, soupy” of the summer. Lower (right)—For that idle moment. Bob Lipton, 3707 North Meridian street. Apartment 3, took an airplane to camp with him.

208 Lads Are Ready for Dedication of Fieldhouse at Reservation. Layers of tan today were darkening bodies of 208 Boy Scouts who have been encamped at the Scout reservation since Monday, preparing for dedication of the new fieldhouse Sunday. 1 , v Plans for the event were announced today by E. C. Utley, chairman of the committee in charge. Dedicatory speaker will be Dr. Ray O. Wyland of New York, national director of education for the Boys Scouts of America. Invitations have been extended to Governor Harry G. Leslie, Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and other state and city officials to attend the function. Utley will present the building on behalf of the building committee. It will be accepted by E. A. Kahn, president of the Indianapolis and central Indiana council of the Scouts. Dr. Ernest N. Evans, secretary of the Church Federation of Indianapolis, will deliver the invocation. The dedication service will be held at 7:30. The Scouts will give a program for visitors Sunday afternoon. They will have a swimming

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period at 2:30, an inspection of Scouts and quarters at 4, dedication of Troop 9 cabin at 4:30, and a review before Scout, state and city officials at 5. SUES FOR 006 ATTACK Mrs. Hillman Asks $15,000 From Animal’s Owners. Mrs. Leah Hillman, 1417 West Thirty-sixth street, today seeks $15,000 damages in superior court one for injuries she alleges were received when a dog attacked her. She asks judgment against William A. Alkins and Eunice Alkins, owners of the dog. The plaintiff complains she underwent two operations and spent fifty-eight days in the city hospital as a result of internal injuries. The complaint states the dog knocked her to the ground while she raked her yard June 25, 1931.

Always .... The Greatest Entertainment * Bargains in the City * kNEIH SUMMER PRICES STARTING FRIDAY. JUXE IT ALL OCC T SEATS P.M. | ALL OCC *™ S “ TS o*o ML I ALSO REDUCED SUNDAY PRICES 25c Until 2P. M.—3sc After 2P. M. CHILDREN 15c ANY TIME INDIANA —AND—CIRCLE

mill 1 ' liiililffllBIT" \ HUlk

GERMANS FACE QUIZ Lausanne Parley to Determine Nation's Wealth. Hu 1 nited prat* LAUSANNE, June 15.—The reparations conference beginning here Thursday must determine if Germany is “poor" at home and “rich'’ abroad. The nine creditor nations will be faced with the task of estimating just how rich Germany is in domestic and foreign holdings and how much of that capital can be levied without prejudice to the general economic situation. Germany meets her creditors here with the firm determination to pay no more. President Hoover gave Germany the first official relief in the Hoover moratorium. Subsequent meetings of world experts at Basle and Berlin confirmed the fact that Germany was "broke.” SSOO IN CASH A CHANCE TO WIN ... AT NO COST TO YOU! Six Lucky Sales Slip awards to cash winners every clay. Get in this contest today.

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-JUNE 15, 1932