Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 88, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1933 — Page 3

AtJG. 22, 1933

NURSE'S ATTACK CHARGE DENIED DY POLO STAR ‘I Acted as a Gentleman/ Is Answer: Court Action Is Delayed. flv f nitl-'l I‘rrt, CHICAGO, Aug 22 Cm] Smith, the T*xan who led the western polo team to victory in the first national contest. today publicly denied charge* that he attacked Miss Eugenia Rase, 23-year-old nurse, in Hubbard Woods last Friday. Hearing ol attack charges filed against Smith may not be held until late in the week, it appeared today. Miss Rose failed to confer with A.s. 'ant State's Attorney Eugene \Varhnw ki on the case Wachowski said .several attempts to reach Miss Rose had failed. Although the hearing wa scheduled for tctlay. Wachow.ski said it may not be held until Friday, when the $5,000 bond Smith posted is returnable. Dr Gary Baker. Miss Rose's fiancee, said her parents had arrived from Cooperstown N D. and that she would retain private counsel. Rally to Smith's Aid Meanwhile, socialite friends of Smith m exclusive north shore suburbs rallied to his side, obtaining at least five witnesses to testify that Smith was not gone from their presence more than an hour and forty minutes. Miss Rose filed her charges the day before Smith appeared in the final an* of the east-west polo series. .She said the attack occurred while Smith was taking her to her home from the Lake Forest hospital where she attended Rub*- Williams, another western star, who was injured last Wednesday in the second game of the series. She said she fought Smith for two hours before succumbing to the attack. “Acted lake Gentleman'' “I drove Miss Rose home Friday night, and did what any gentkman would have don? under similar circumstances.” Smith stated. "That night Rube Williams was transferred to his hotel room from the hospital, where he was confined since his leg injury. “I escorted Miss Rose and Rube to the hot?l room After Miss Rose gave him some pills before taking her departure. Rube asked her how she was going home. She replied tin the internrban. "I offered to drive her home because he had been so kind to Rube. Miss Ru=e and I left the room together. descended to the lobby and got into my car, which was parked outside. “Talked About Polo” "It was then 10:20 p. m. We drove south to Evanston, engaging lit civil conversation, mostly about polo and its fascination. The drive took about an hour and forty-five minutes I delivered her to her door at 2113 C.-niral avenue. "I got out of *h. car. and took her to the door, bidding her goodby and thanking her. She in turn wished me luck in the Sunday game. "There was at no time any play of indiscretion on my part. I can not understand Miss Rose's charges unless they are a deliberate frameup. I will stay m town until I am cleared." Smith added that he is anxious to go east to start training for the international polo matches next month.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to oollcr as stolen belong to: F.ive Kaufmann. 3-n7 firtreland avenue. I Che* rVt roadsirr. 10] -4RI horn gar me i:i iea- ol 34H Gracrland avenue John Schleu* i Si . tfilS Wtnihrop a*enur. Ch-vrolet vouch r. 3-742 from Pennsvlvanta oo South stroet.s Wv 1 S-cio Che vrolet Coinpanv. 2914 \\V:.( ‘ Washington -.tri' t. Wh.iiovt roach no I IT-nse nlntec Irmn tear of West '

I Clearance of All kjs2-$2.50 Pt. WooffeJ Sheer Fabrics I Large Double y £ l9c N 29 f v a l ls - 1 BLANKET & [ • Printed Batistes ® 70\80. Assorted H l • Printed Dimities H with K • Printed \'oilrs s a t e c n Bg y • Pique Voiles B dge s . Cfl B ’ r *’" I§ _ B fe ß oiled. K / OCTAGON 5c Tomato A j A SOAP MC Juice J; 11 |C Wen known 1 sundry JT N ° 1 '"W tall I| | >O.l P limit Itir— can— j 1 pJ S ! Serond Floor Limit 10c Window MBM Hv.ilthint- jn. . a I SHADES Cc TOlitiET Q; fJ fC 1;;"''!..’"::.':,,..; 1 *• soap .1= 111 4‘rOx. B:ir— m. BBBBBBBBftflfe*ai | BIHMIBBBflHBflMMBBHBBBMBBHWX!W& r -^>4CBBBI MESH DISH 50c KOLYNGS CLOTHS JC TOOTH PASTE ]B If V* h '’" r - large tnhe. m ,ler. On -i!e. t.. 1. - M We,ln ,|,i* on I * M M M>||> Floor 93R9E9 ft tul.e— ■B MW rnm 1 athletic KODS kc A lhouts Qc mi in. h *,i,li 1 bracket- K„ h— M hrni.d eIo th. n w V iMr 'v:; ?u„r r“■^AQC| Sss Qt| c fi\ I ton til#- UL W B I in t.‘. Well— ■ a I lot. - .11 ■ mi.lr 1 terinl. Mnin Floor 24c TABLE 4 p I 59c SLIPS OF 1 OILCLOTH 'S Cc| JLC lfi In. i:e oi l- WR ■ >IUI(H1 line *rth •> •orte.l i.lnr., Ir. HZ H H hrm lull cut ■ ■} mar .le .be k. el. WL M ■ ;' h " r Mr ' h ’> "-a ■ f I s'rV.;d r Vuo?° **-

THOUSANDS MARCH IN RECOVERY DAY PARADE

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Part of the crowd of more than 290,000 which turned out to celebrate Indiana Recovery Day. Monday. In the picture the hr*ad of the gigantic parade has turned frem .Monument Circle to march north on Meridian street, in a triumphal trip to Butler bowl, where fireworks and oratory ushered in the President’s big offensive against the depression.

STRICKEN WHILE KE CUTS GRASS Newton Runyan. 83. Dies at Work in Yard of His Nephew. Crouching under a summer sun. laboriously rutting gras* with a pair of scissors, Newtcn Runyan. 83. suddenly slumped to the ground today in the yard at the home of his nephew. C. B. Reddick, at 1346 • Linden street. A few minutes later, he died. afte r being carried into the house by neighbors, while a 91-year-old ; sister. Mrs. Charlotte Reddick, plaintively insisted on being at his side. * According to Dr. E. R. Wilson. ! deputy coroner. Runyan died of heart disease, to which he had been I subject for several years The body was released to the family at once. I To Dr Wilson fell the task of informing the aged sister of the death. Fears of the neighbors proved un- | founded, however, lor Mrs. Reddick, I with the resignation of the aged, accepted the news without demon--1 strat ion. 1 Runyan had made his home with the Reddicks for nearly a year, and previously had operated a store south of the city. A wife and five children, from whom Runyan has been separated for years, arc believed to live in Chicago. Funeral arrangements have not been made. DR. DUNKLE TO SPEAK AT SETTLERS* PICNIC 31st Annual Marion County Event Slated Thursday at Park. Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkle. pastor of Tabernacle Presbyterian church, will be the speaker Thursday at the fifty-first annual picnic of old .settlers of Marion county, in Broad Ripple park. Prizes wil be awarded to the couple married longest: the person i residing longest in Marion county, the prettiest boy and girl babies; the couple married the shortest length of time; fattest man; woman hog-calling champion; harmonica player, the person with the largest number of descendants, the family with the most number of girls, and the one with the most boys, and others. CROSSING CRASH FATAL Youth Burned Fatally After Auto Hits Passenger Train. // I ni/rtl /V# ** RICHMOND lnd.. Aue. 22—Paul Seaney. 22. was burned fatally when his automobile caught fire after crashing into a Pennsylvania radroad passenger train near here Monday. His home was near WhitcI water.

CARPENTERS. JOINERS MASS SESSION CALLED Meeting Wednesday to Be Part of Drive for Members. United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, pressing a membership drive, has issued a call for a mass meeting in Carpenters' hall, 531 East Market street, Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. Invited to the session are millwrights. cabinet makers, planing mill men. furniture factor\ workers novelty workers, and maintenance men A strong effort is being made by the Carpenters’ union to enroll hundreds of workers in the union organization, under thp collective bargaining right assured by NRA. Adolph Fritz, secretary of the State Federation of Labor, will be one of the speakers and several other union men will address the gathering.

CRANKS BOTHER ANTI-CRIME ACE One Letter Suggests Probe of Church Raffle. Hu Srt i /*/*-// oicurtl \cir* paper Alliance WASHINGTON, Aug. 2^ —Crank letters have begun to flow in to Joseph B Keenan, "ace" of the government's anti-crime campaign. One letter writer suggests that he declare martial law. arrest all suspicious persons and hold them until they can prove their innocence. Another wants him to investigate the "racket" of a back-alley dice game, another wants him to do something about a church raffle, still another is interested in prosecuting tiie telephone company for charging him for a telephone call he didn’t make. Keenan asked the populace to send their complaints of crime and he's getting them by the hundreds. After a nation-wide broadcast he received a long-distance call from a midwestern manufacturer. "I want to tell you.” said the excited caller, “about an attempt tc kidnap my daughter.” And he told the story in detail. “I'll get after it right away.” said Keenan. "When did it happen?" "Oh. about two years ago.” replied the caller, “but I thought you might still be able to do something about it.”

Over Labor Day Trip to NIAGARA FALLS $7.50 GREATLY REDUCED ROUND TRIP PULLMAN FARES Going Saturday, Sept. 2 Leave Indianapolis 5:00 p. m., arrive Niagara Falls 8:00 a. m. Returning leave Niagara Falls 9:00 p. m. Monday, Sept. 4. 2 Whole Days at the Falls All-Steel Coaches—Modern Pull--9 man Cars Complete information at 112 Monument Circle, phone Riley 2442 and Union Station, phone Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ISSUES WARNING ON POOR RELIEF Book Tells Townships to Levy Enough to Repay Federal Loans. Warning to Indiana township and county officials that the federal government will not meet more than 50 per rent of poor relief expenditures after Aug. 1 was issued today by William H. Book, director of the Governor's unemployment relief commission. Book pointed out in letters sent to every county that townships should levy enough to reimburse the county for allowances and to repay all federal aid sums advanced during the year, or face the prospect of no further federal assistance in poor relief. He announced also that the state accounts board has ruled that poor relief advancements to the townships must be regarded as an indebtedness of the township, which must be levied for outside the 51.50 property tax limitation. Repayment of federal aid will not be required next year, the letter explained. but the method of fixing the txx)r relief levy suggested is “the surest method of procuring sufficient revenue to meet the township's cost of poor relief. HIT-RUN AUTO KILLS ftii I nihil Pro* MARION. Ind., Aug. 22.—James Swath wood. 76. died at his home here Monday night shortly after being struck by a hit-and-run motorist's automobile.

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JUST SMILES AS FIGHT FOR LIFE STARTS

Alleged ‘Bathtub Murderer* Unperturbed at Trial for Wife Murder. BY DAN BOWERMAN I'nllfd Prf% Staff ( orrp^pnndrnt SAN JOSE. Cal.. Aug. 22—David A. Lamson, accused of beating his wife to death because of an overwhelming and frustrated love for her. laughed frequently as his trial on murder rharges got under way. The 31-year-old minor official of Stanford university was less tense than attorneys and prospective jurors. Prosecutor Allan Lindsay’s reconstruction of the violent death of Allene Thorpe Lamson pictures her husband as a highly-keyed man. intellectual, subject to explosive tempers, and with a mentality that is alleged to have caused him to crush life from the wife he loved to distraction. If Lamson. author, playwright, poet and amateur actor, was playing a part in his coolness today, it rivaled the one the state alleges he played when he found the nude body of his wife in the bathtub of their Stanford campus home last May 30. It was a jovial, neighborly David Lamson who raked leaves in his back yard that forenoon. Smiling, he entered the back door of his home, to admit callers at the front. A minute later he opened the front door. He was deathly pale, near collapse. "My God.’’ he cried in agony then, "Allene has been murdered!’’ The state charged Mrs. Lamson had been beaten to death by Lamson some time before, the body Wrinkles Caused by Sleepy Capillaries Do vou have line.* or wrinkles around vour eves and mouth? Then \ou ahould know that vour skin is dving and growing all the tlm\ If it dies laster than new. healthv skin grows, wrinkles dpveloD and vou look older than vou should To keep the skin growing and healthv. nature carries rich red blood to vour face through one-haif million tinv. delicate capillaries or blood vessels . If vour capillaries net sleepv and slow down, vour complexion darkens, wrinkles come faster, pores clog up and blemishes appear. Stimulate vour capillaries, reinvigorate and whiten vour skin with Lvnn's Skin-Ade. Snow-white and greaseless, it disappears instant;*-, leaving the skin soft, smooth, clear and voting looking. Trv Skin-Ade under the guarantee to satisfy completely or monev bark. Large, economical sunplv costs less than lc a dav at Hook's Haag's. Walgreen and all good drug stores.- Advertisement.

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' placed in the tub by him. and that he was fully aware of her death as he cheerily worked in his yard. Underneath the outward evidences of mutual love that caused Stanford friends to call the Lamsons "the ideal couple." the state alleged, was jealousy alleged to have been caused by Lamson s trips to Sacramento to visit a woman with whom he was engaged in a literary enterprise. Allene, it was charged, resorted to subterfuge the previous night to re* pel her husband's advances. When he discovered the deception in the morning, according to the state theory, he killed her. The defense maintains disc very of her body as he walked though the house was an unnerving shock to him. Defense Attorney Edward Rea and Prosecutor Linsay weaned as they questioned veniremen regarding heir views on the death penalty Lamson remained fresh and cheerful. He frequently whispered to Rea. Twelve talesmen had been disl m i and four, all women, tentatively accepted as adjournment for the day neared.

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GOVERNOR TO BE GUI Georgia Chief Executive to Prison With McNutt. Governor Eugene Talmadgi Georgia will be the guest of

CONCRETE STREETS COST LESS TO DRIVE ON Foe FBtTMfe Information Went Ter Cfment Service Mam Care Os: PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION "Sr

ernor Paul V McNutt Thursday on an iaspertion of the Indiana state prison. The Georgia Governor is making the inspection trip to obtain ideas for con'empla'cd prison construction work in his own state.

EST Tour [e of Gov-

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