Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1933 — Page 3

.TTN'K 23, 1033

CITY MARBLES CHAMPION WINS DIVISION TITLE Billy Dyer Bests Chicago Rival in National Play at Fair. BY FLOYD BAKKR Timm School Page Editor SOLDIERS FIELD. CHICAGO, June 28. —Playing headsup marbles from start to finish. Billy Dyer. Indianapolis city marble champion, nosed out Bennie Apa, west side, Chicago, in a closely matched playoff for the central league championship today. Billy started out fast, winning two games from Howard Van Vorhis of the St. Paul area. He also won two games from the west side leader. who at the close of Tuesday’s play had a score of 15 won and 1 lost. The scores were 7 to 6 and 7 to 4. Billy tied for the lead when Apa lost two games to William Herbst, of the Ft. Wayne area. Billy then played Herbst and split, going back to second place. Leslie Dillman. Kokomo, who had not yet shown up, appeared, and played each of the other four players. Billy gamed the right to meet Apa, when he came from behind against the Kokomo player with a score of 3 to 6, and won out. Apa previously had lost one game to the St. Paul area champion, after winning the first. Protest Is Upheld The Times correspondent, accompanying Billy then made an official protest against a Chicago official lor the game, and after much discussion and argument, the rules committee voted three to one for a neutral official. Only person against the change was Stew'art Lowe, member of the gommittee, in addition to being Apa's coach. Miss Gladys Ellerman of Louisville was selected as referee and play began. Billy won the lag in the first game and hit the first marble. Apa then hit one and Billy came back to hit another and stick in the ring, where he knocked out four marbles. The game ended a few shots later with the score 7 to 3 for Indianapolis. Second Game: Bill won lag, and the game see-sawed until the count stood 4 to 4, when Apa stuck in the center and took the game. Third Game—Apa won the lag and, both boys being nervous, both missed several set-up shots. The score ran up to 4-all, when Billy stuck to the center and won, 7 to 4. Won 20, Lost 7 Winning of the final game gave Billy a total of 20 won and 7 lost for the league play. He will receive a SSO watch as his prize. Apa, after losing, w r as heart-broken and cried. Billy, in sportsmanship manner offered his sympathy. A protest was set up immediately by Lowe, against Billy’s age, and a wire w'as sent to Indianapolis to determine his exact age. Semi-final play will start at 9 Thursday. Drawings will be held i at the banquet in the La Salle hotel ; tonight.

GEORGE W. MITCHELL DIES: FUNERAL SET City Resident, 84. Was Clothing Firm Salesman 25 Years. George W. Mitchell. 84, a resident of Indianapolis for seventeen years, died Tuesday night at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Lon J. Applegate, 425 South Hamilton avenue. Mr. Mitchell had been a traveling salesman for twenty-five years for Ihe Falls City Clothing Company, of Louisville. He is survived by four children besides Mrs. Applegate. They are Mrs. F. E. BottorfT. of Charlestown. Ind.; E. C. and W. C. Mitchell, of Akron, 0.. and C. H. Mitchell, of Jeffersonville, Ind. He was a member of Scott Lodge. F. and A. M.. of Austin, Ind. Funeral services will be held at 1 Thursday at the J. P. Wilson funeral home, 1230 Prospect street. The body will be taken to Sellersburg, Ind., Thursday afternoon for burial.

LATEST ANTI-CANCER DEVICE IS INSTALLED New Invention Shoots X-Ray Current of 220,000 Volts. Jtu I Hitcd Prrxx PHILADELPHIA. June 28 —Shooting an X-ray current of 220.000 volts through an aluminum and copper filter is the latest medical invention in the fight against cancer. The new instrument, the invention of Dr. W. D. Coolidge, General Electric X-ray expert, has been installed in the Philadelphia Osteopathic Hospital. Physicians say that its installat w ' v > is too recent to permit a definite statement of results, although they are confident it will aid in retarding the growth of malignant cancers after several treatments. ORDER PLANT_ REBUILT 5150,000 Building to Be Put Vp by Alabama Company. bii I mint Prt xx TUSCALOOSA, Ala., June 28. The Pioneer Lumber Company has ordered rebuilt, at a cost of $150,000, its huge plant that was destroyed byfire recently-. Two hundred men will be employed when the mill is completed. Winona Lake Chautauqua Opens if;/ Unitr4 Prc* WINONA LAKE, Ind.. June 28 Band concerts featured the opening here Tuesday of the thirtyninth annual Winona lake Chautauqua. The event will continue six weeks.

S>MLYJP k: y

SATURDAY, JULY Ist A Tim*' Want Ad starts in the very FIRST EDITION PUBLISHED in the morning and appears in ever? edition on the same day. TWA Rl. 5551

A COUPLE OF MEN FROM MARS

'W :

The Piccard twins, Auguste and Jean, are shown here as they inspected the metal ball in which Jean hopes to come closer to Mars than did Auguste, who has been closer than any other human. The view is through a porthole of the gondola, now being completed at Midland, Mich. Jean Piccard faces the camera.

Business Districts Crime Centers, Scientist Says

Indianapolis Made Example for Test; Report Made at Chicago. Bp United Press CHICAGO, June 28—Young criminals commit most of their crimes in the central business districts of larger cities and most of them live within a few minutes ride in a stolen automobile of the stores they rob, according to a report read today before a sectibn of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Professor R. Clyde White of the University of Indiana, speaking before a sociological section, detailed findings of a study of crime and delinquency in Indianapolis, state capital and a typical American city. Older criminals were found to follow the same distribution rule. The city w'as divided into zones 1, 2. 3. 4. The first zone included all sections within one mile of the central business district, zone 2 all sections within two miles, etc. It was found that the offenses and the residences of offenders decreased directly with the distance away from the center of the city. Among adult offenses tabulated w'ere: Criminal assault, assault and battery, manslaughter, auto banditry, embezzlement, robbery, vehicle taking, burglary, grand larceny, obtaining money falsely, petit larceny, Juvenile offenses listed w'ere: Vehicle taking, property destruction, petiit larceny, burglary and, incorrigibility for boys and incorrigibility and sex delinquency for girls. LEPER SCHOOL OPENED Afflicted to Be Taught How to Prevent Disease Spread. By United Press JUAREZ, Mexico, June 28—A school for lepers and a prophylaxis station were started here recently by Dr. Victor Ocampo Alonso, representative of the Mexican department of health. The school will teach those afflicted with the disease how to prevent infecting others. During May six Mexican lepers were deported from the United States to the colony here. Dr. Francisco Espinosa is secretary of the commission ,and Dr. Daniel Quiroz Reyes and Jesus Cuaron are members. Dumped Eggs Hatch Chicks By United Ur ess RUSHVILLE, Ind.. June 28.—Six-ty-five baby chickes hatched from a batch of eggs thrown on the city dump by a local poultry house

Dress up for the 4th ■iflfc SALE hKkSI of Kahn HHH Tropical Worsted a|^SUITS H 13\alues From S2O to $35 Sr Fine featherweight worsted suits in a Wgk , Wm variety of smart styles and patterns. 1-3 Sjf kifllHl Cool—but sturdily tailored to hold if*--* their shape. Extraordinary values. every one! If KAHN v TAILVRINXi Meridian. Corner Washington

‘Gimme’ Army 47,000 Job-Seekers After 3,000 State Posts, McNutt Says.

FORTY-SEVEN thousand persons applied for the 3.000 state jobs since he took office, Governor Paul V. McNutt told members of the Governor McNutt Democratic club at the Claypool Tuesday night. Herschell Goodman is president of the club, which was organized among the Jewish residents of the city by State Senator Jacob Weiss. The latter introduced the Governor. The Governor outlined accomplishments of his administration and declared the state would be bankrupt now' if it were not for the “new deal.” SPAIN’S RICHEST MAM HELDJN MADRID JAIL Kept Captive on Charge of Being Foe to Republic. By i nited Press MADRID, June 28.—The richest man in the Peninsula, Don Juan Ordinas. has completed one year in jail. He has been held without trial. All of his millions could not keep him out of prison; neither could his parliamentary immunity, for the Cortes voted to suspend it. March is a deputy from the Balearic Isles. The tw'o ministers of finance which the republic has had—lndalecio Prieto and Jaime earner—described March as an arch-enemy of the republic. The charges against him are that he bribed the then dictator, General Primo de Rivera, to obtain the Moroccan tobacco monopoly in 1926. Pleas of his lawyers and physicians for his release on bail or to serve his arrest at home, have proved unavailing. WAR NURSE GETS POST By United Press PHILADELPHIA, June 28.—Miss Helen Grace McClelland, who was decorated by two governments for braveiy under fire during the World war, has been named as superintendent of nurses at the Pennsylvania hospital. She received the British Red Cross for refusing to leave a front line dressing station under fire, near Ypres, and later, as a member of American base hospital No. 10. was decorated with the Distinguished Service medal.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PUBLIC WORKS HERE TO MEAN JOBS FOR 1,200 $1,400,000 Federal-Aided Program Is Mapped in County. First surveys and preliminary arrangements for a $1,400,000 improvement program in Marion county, made possible by a federal emergency loan were started today under direction of county officials. Employment was given sixty-six workers this morning on the preliminary details, although the total persons employed before completion of the .project will reach 1,200, it was said. The program includes construction and improvement of 105 miles of county roads and building of seven bridges. The road building program includes w'ork on a belt highway system around the city, linking Eighty-sixth street, the Dandy trail, Harding street road, High School road, Thompson road, Ft. Harrison road and the Hague road. The county will be required to reI pay 70 per cent of the loan, with the federal government making an outright grant of the remainder. Funds, how'ever, will not be available until approval of the project by a state administrator, who will be appointed as a part of the organization for government loans for public works, created by recent act of congress. Approximately one and one-half years will be required to complete the program, with actual construction work not starting until spring. Surveying and other preliminary w'ork will require about tw'o months, it is estimated. An important part of the program will be the construction of a West Sixteenth street bridge over Fall creek, at an estimated cost of $140,000. The bridge will be an important link in the Sixteenth street widening program to provide a

MOKrisonc Itl 20 WEST WASHINGTON ST. LJ New Summer Frocks Sure to Be Snapped Up Quickly - If tht Uul’t-the-ordimmrn Prict _JJI\ 10 | There’ll be a great wave of buying when smart 'j Mp Misses and Women see these stunningly styled y 35 Frocks. They’re “chuck full” of billowy, fluttery Cj. I flounces and frills, bows and puffs. Your Dollar d'yies never bought so much fashion-glamour . . . cool, ~ crisp, chic ... as in this Cheerio Frock Event! Phone Orders Promptly Filled crisp ... c 001... and so fresh looking mfilp® ORGANDIES ... VOILES jffifejL* jff |jjs| bat, STES .. . DIMITIES emfe \| pl : l Flattering Summer Patterns and Shades l p|| I GUARANTEED FAST COLORS . jfijjjjl EXTRA salesladies” ftiP t ..el EXTRA FITTING ROOMS n-i_r*mf u i 'JT /! \\ I y(A EXTRA STOCK GIRLS J ; TA / <fS|j 1 ;v/ )1y (e 'T'j Don't miss thu great event. A I \ \ \hi / A -iM/'ft Lll —*-/ ft jftj / 14 If you can not come, TELEPHONE!

cross-town street capable of Handling a large volume of traffic. Offices for the staff of workers have been established at 29 South Delaware street, rather than in the highway division of the court house offices. CONVICT BANK BANDITS Four Found Guilty by Jury; Three Get 25-Year Terms. By United Press PLYMOUTH, Ind., June 28 —Four Chicago men accused of robbing the State Exchange bank of Culver of $12,600 on May 29 were found guilty by a jury in circuit court here today and sentenced to prison by Judge Albert Shipman. Edward Murphy Jack Gray and Jack Gorman each were sentenced to twenty-five years in Indiana state prison. Joseph Cohen, 19, was sentenced to eight years in the Indiana state reformatory. Butteremilk contains the properties of ordinary skim milk and also the valuable lactic acid.

MORRISONS 4th JULY SALE! /Ite*. WHITE HATS /jiFi ' 69c f^/f -\ CREPES •• • • PI W ES 1V ■/ r~ / .S \ STREET FLOOR. / 91 1 + oa from SI.OO to $1.98. At this special low price, you’ll n** 0 * t. I Zly2 to want two or three to finish out the season. |\ f fA*

STATE HEALTH CHIEF TO TAKE HOSPITAL POST Dr. John Hare Quits Board: Dr. Harvey Will Be Successor. Dr. John Hare, new state health director, resigned today to become superintendent of the Evansville state hospital. He will be succeeded as state health head by Dr. Verne K. Harvey, epidemiologist in the state health department. The shift will take place Saturday, it was announced by Governor Paul V. McNutt, who made both appointments. Hare came from private medical

practice in Evansville so months ago to succeed the veteran Dr. William F. King as McNutt's state health chieftain. It was understood then that he would return to Evansville to displace Dr. C. E. Laughlin, who has been superintendent of the state hospital there since 1903. Dr. Laughlin is 75. Dr. Harvey is 34 and will be one of the youngest state health department directors in the United States. He has been epidemiologist for the last three years. Recently he returned from a year of postgraduate work in public health at the Johns Hopkins university, Baltimore, Md. He was born in Indianapolis and reared on ,a Hamilton county farm. He was graduated from the Indiana university medical school in 1529. Dr. Hare announced that he will take personal charge of supervision of the 1,200-bed hospital and care of the 1.000 acres of land at the institution. He will take Dr. C. L. Williams, associate professor in mental and

PAGE 3

[ nervous diseases at the Indiana university medical school, as medical director at the hospital. Dr. Williams also has been medical director at Neuronhurst, a mental disease private hospital here. Anew kind of adhesive plaster is waterproof, making it easier for the wearer to bathe.

Lucky Woman Find* Relief from Neuriti* Discovert Doctor’s Prescription That Stops Pain at Once Neuritis sufferers sre positively thrilled with joy t the discovery of Nurito. New they have found a remedy that quickly stops the agonizing pain of rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia or neuritis and other torturing aches and pains. If Nurito doesn’t drive away the worst pain with two or three doses your money will be refunded. A doctor was finally induced to put up hie famous prescription as a great public benefit. It works like a charm, fast and powerful, but harmless, no opiates or narcotics By all means make a trial of this remarkable prescription that stops the pain, making sufferers grateful and free. Nurito is now sold in all drug stores. Try it today. I>on't wait. NURITO for NEURITIS Pain At all druggists and HAAG HrtlfC St ores.—Ad vprtt semen'.