Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 54, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1934 — Page 2

PAGE 2

—Playground News — BRIGHTWOOD IS WINNER IN CITY PLAYLOT DRIVE Park Named Cleanest: Boys to Be Guests at Perry Stadium. BY V'U.MAM GIIEY Tim's Stall Writer When the Indianapolis Indians return from their road trip to play Milwaukee at Perry stadium late this month, there will be an enthusiastic group of rooters up in the stands cheering their every bingle. Boys from the Brightwood and Finch playgrounds will be the guests of Norntau Perry, Tribe owner, who has contributed tickets to the Junior helpers at the parks Becau. • the Brightwood playground was selected as the cleanest in the city a week ago, Robert Cave, Norman Goodwin. Everett Johnson and Billy Guillan will be on hand for the rooting. With them in the stands will be W'arren Dwier and John Hitlle of the Finch playground, as a reward for keeping that playlot spick and span this week. Girls Are Honored The girls are to be rewarded, too. Virginia Biker, Betty Donohue, Mane Maled and Jane Tittle from Brightwood are go.ng to the theater with Ruth Goctting. Eileen Goetting, Rosemary Goetting, Ruby Goetting, Katherine Booth and Joyce Hyde from Finch. They'll be the guests of the recreation department for helping the superviser in the cleanliness campaign. ' We have the names of helpers on other playgrounds who dtd splendid work. Although their grounds didn’t win first plarp. well print their names today and wish them luck in the future; Pleasant Run--Mary, Jane Hensley, Walter White. Leroy DiFhey. A G. White, Bobbie White, Helen White and Helen Bauer. Forty-ninth and Arsenal—Leonidas McClure and Bob Jordan. Norwood Florence Jones. John McElroy and Buster Martin. Riley—Blonville Duke, Halton Mahoney', Mary Eystcr and Dorothy Arvin. , Other Squads Named Garfield—Robert Wheatley. Joseph Schwope and Honus Emcrich. Indianola—May Smith. Carl Jordon, Pauline Matthews and Willard Troutman. Haw'thorne—Carl Wolf a. Forest, Jeftrics, Carl Thompson. Ed Henson. Jo Deburger and Eugene Thompson. Oolden Hill—Charles Agan, Mai- j colm Shirley and Deloros Pennington. Rader and Udell—Bob Blue. Grace Nidholson and Paul Hurt. Fall Creek—Jack Stanley, Robert Tuant. Kenneth Raminger and Jack Thomas. Spring—Eriom Howard and Bob Bates. The larruping ladies in the senior girls softball leagues are pounding out hits faster than Maxte Baer throws punches. Here are the scores for the last week. Please note carefully the number of runs in the score column. Calm down, girls, don't take the game so seriously. The scores: Rhndios W Riles I'i f,rw Kit Rincxn!4 S Brihtnd '• Christian ! riraianl Ron 1? Sullivan I" American Settlement 20 Hawthorne 1o The swimming fans are on edge down at Garfield park waiting for 7:30 tomorrow night. Coach BUI Neu is bringing his Shelbyville team here to meet coach Don Bauermeister's aquatic stars in a return match. The Garfield team was nosed out by two points

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HUNT FRATERNITY MAN IN DEATH OF CAMPUS BEAUTY QUEEN

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Death of an Oklahoma uni verity campus beauty, Marian Mills, 19, upper, started a widespread search in the southwest for Neal Myers, 21, lower, pharmacy student. who disappeared the day the girl was found dead in the apartment of Mrs. Hazel Brown, cook in the fraternity house where Myers lived

Mrs. Brown told police Myers IMPOSTOR IS HUNTED IN AGE FUND FRAUD Mulcted Negro on Promise of Benefits, Is Charge. An impostor, posing as an agent of the Indiana old agn pension fund, is mulcting prospective bene- j ficiarics of their hard-earned savings with promises of “benefits.” The man. who, when last report- ! cri. called himscif J. P. Harris, vie- i timizod George Smith. Negro, 523 Harmon street, yesterday. He asked $2 for his services and Smith gave him 51.40 and a wrist watch valued i at sl7. Pension fund authorities state that they employ no outside agents and that they believe the man is j working a confidence game. Smith ' swore out a warrant for his arrest : this morning. in the initial match and the boys are primed for revenge. Here are Garfield's victory hopes: J Fifty-Yard Free Style (under 100 pounds!—Billy Barkett and Clifford Mathews. Twenty - Five - Yard Backstroke i (under 100 pounds)—Billy Barkett; and Joe Brandis. Fifty-Yard Free Style GOO to 120 j pounds*—Joe Hamel, Jimmy Baker, j Bobby Stumph and Joe Barkett. j These boys also will participate in ; the backstroke and breaststroke j events at the same distance. Fifty-Yard Free Style—Jimmy | Bertram. Fifty-Yard Breaststroke Jimmy \ Latham. Mike Montsinger and Jim Montsinger. Fifty-Yard Backstroke George j Linders and Joe Harber. Two Hundred-Yard Relay—Jim Montsinger. Mike Montsinger. Charles Hendricks and Jimmy Latham. Diving—Gene Castle, Billy Rarkett. Tommy Miller and Mike Montsinger. Churn up the water tomorrow night, bovs. we are picking you to come through with flying colors. *

had given the girl drugs to prevent her from becoming a mother and physicians believed an overdose caused her death. Myers was reported seen in Houston, Tex., where authorities say they found his auto and suitcase. The victim was the daughter of a faculty member at Oklahoma university

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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ROBBERY DISCLOSED BY YOUTH'S ARREST Cicero Crime Revealed by Boy, Police Say. Arrest early today of a 17-year- ! old boy after complaints that he ; had been prowling around cars m i the 900 block, Reisner street, led police to the solution of a robbery concerning which they had no previous knowledge. The arrested boy was Levi Cox, Freeman road and Road 67, seized after complaints of prowling by Arthur Braun, 9l 1 Reisner street, and Oren Slager, 915 Reisner. He promptly cpnfessed, according to police, to having participated in a robbery in Cicero. Ind„ earlier in the night and told them the | car in his possession and sls cash on his person were part of the loot.

‘BOY FRIEND' OF CAMPUS BEAUTY SEENJNJEXAS Co-Ed's Death May Be Laid to Heart Ailment, Doctor’s Hint. By L nit id Press NORMAN, Okla.. June 13.—Cause of the mysterious death of beautiful ; Marion Mills, 19-year-old University of Oklahoma graduate student, ; was expected to be revealed today ! in a final report ot an autopsy conducted last Tuesday. “We have found no poison in the i chemical examination, which has | not been quite completed,” said Dr. Hugh Jeter, university hospital I pathologist. j “Having found nothing which w'ould have brought her death, we i are examining tissues to Jearn ; whether she died of a natural I cause.” Dr. Jeter said a heart ailment might have caused death. Meantime. Texas police kept a sharp lookout for Neal Myeref 22, believed to have been the last person to have seen Miss Mills alive. Myers was believed to have been seen in Houston yesterday. A car bearing Oklahoma license plates was found later in Houston. In it was found a Delta Upsilon fraternity p ; n engraved on the back “Oklahoma ’35, Neal Myers.” Pathetic were funeral services yesterday as fraternity brothers of Marion's brother, Joe bore her body to the grave and Bernard Doud, Shreveport, La., petroleum engineer, her one-time fiance, knelt at her bier. Outboard Inventor Dies By United Press MILWAUKEE, July 13.—01 e Evinrude, 57. inventor of the first successful outboard motor, died suddenly of heart disease at Columbia hospital here after a brief illness.

In the Book Nook

BY WALTER D. HICKMAN MANY requests have reached this department for the name of a book which contains information on how to play all standard games. After some inquiry. I received a copy of "The New Hoyle-Standard Games,” edited by Paul H„ Seymour and published by the Albert Whitman Company. This edition includes all modern card games, new laws of contract bridge and new scoring rules, chess, checkers, backgammon, camelot, ping pong, bowling, billiards, pool and many others. The book opens with a complete study of whist and that is followed by a lengthy study of auction and contract bridge. The discussion of euchre also is given considerable attention. The book includes a study of "Sixty-six.” a German game which has gained much fame in the United States from the fact that it is very scientific and it may be considered in the first rank among games.” Among other card games described are Spoil Five. Seven-Up, Pedro Sancho, Draw Poker, Cassino, Vingt-Un (Twenty-One), and Loo. In another chapter, attention is given to cribbage, hearts, five hundred, grand, Russian Bank, Norwegian Whist, Sheepshead, Red Dog, Skat, Cinch, and a number of solitaire card games. This is the most comprehensive and interesting collection of games that ever has come to my attention. I recommend this book without any reservations. a tt tt LAST January, Leland Stowe wrote his foreword to his new book, “Nazi Means War.” The contents of his book, he wrote, “has been shaped by my varied experience of more than seven years as a foreign correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune.” He maintained that this report is “based upon two intensive

Sheila Kaye-Smith Here is a drawing of Sheila Kaye-Smith, whose new novel, "Superstition Corner,” recently has been published by Harper Sz Brothers.

months in Germany” and "represents the discoveries and conclusions of an independent journalist.” The second chapter, “One Million Men in Uniform,” is extremely timely in the light of what has happened in Germany in the last fourt*m days. He divides these “uniforms” +n six groups, giving the membership of each. This chapter also gives an interesting picture of the slain Ernst Roehm's Storm Troops. Mr. Stowe made this amazingly accurate forecast: “The brown shirt and black coat Nazi army and the members of the National Socialist party,” he wrote, "already have become a privileged class in Germany. That this privileged class threatens to become a serious problem in Germany's internal life is- undeniable.” Mr. Stowe saw clearly ahead when he made that statement. In his book, he discusses at length just how much serious military instruction is being given the various uniformed groups.

JULY 13, 1934

W. C. GRAUEL ELECTED NEW BANKERS’ HEAD Merchants National Cashier Is Named at County Group’s Outing. William C. Grauel. cashier of tho Merchants National bank, was elected president of Marion County Bankers’ Associaton at its annual meeting yesterday at the Hillcrest Country Club. Mr. Grauel succeeds George A. Bowen, cashier of the Wanamaker State bank, who became the organization's delegate-at-large. Other officers elected were C. T. Brady, assistant cashier of the Indiana National bank, vice-presi-dent: Robert Huffman, cashier of the New Augusta State bank, secretary, and H. B. Brady, assistant secretary of the Security Trust Company, treasurer. Mr. Bowen captured the golf tournament in the afternoon which preceded the organization’s dinner attended by persons. VOLUNTEERS DISCUSS CAMPAIGN FOR FUNDS Discharge of Theodora Home Mortgage to Be Goal. Plans for a fall campaign to obta: funds to liquidate the mortgage on the Theodora home, 3213 North Illinois street, were discussed yesterday at the Columbia Club at the annual directors’ meeting of the Volunters of America. Praise for the work of Colonel Earle F. Hites, executive director, and his staff, was expressed by advisory board members. Thousands of transients, individuals and hundreds of families were aided by the organization in the last year.