AUGUST 20, 1937 TT, MTCTTTETrAN DALLY aa a. ~. .~. aa rA .A .-a PAGE THE T... _, ., _. . r i NEWS Of The DAY The News Of The World As Illustrated In Associated Press Pictures I 1 - ~IL (By The Associated Press) Investigation Of Ohio Mass Murder Widened. CINCINNATI. Aug. 19.-(/P)-In- vestigation of "mass murder" wid- ened tonight as Assistant Prosecutor Loyal Martin announced that Mrs. Mary Arnold told him she believed: her sister, Mrs. Ollie Luella Koehler, 79, who died today, "was poisoned by Mrs. (Anna) Hahn." Mrs. Hahn, 31-year-old Forver housemaid, is under indictment on first degree murder charges in the deaths of two other elderly Cincin- nati residents. Mrs. Koehler was ill several weeks. Martin asked for a post mortem examination. Mrs. Hahn is the central figure in an investigation of at least eleven deaths that Prosecutor Dudley Miller quickly described as "the biggest mass murder in this country." Martin said Mrs. Arnold, 95, had informed authorities Mrs. Koehler became ill "just after eating ice cream given her by Mrs. Hahn. I believe my sister -was poisoned by Mrs. Propose Award For Dog Who Captured Burglar DETROIT, Aug. 19.-(AP)-A per- manent license was the reward pro- posed by the police department today for Blackie, a collie dog credited with capturing a burglar in his master's home. Stanley Dowell said the dog had the intruder cornered in the kitchen when be was awakened by barks this morning. The collie surrendered his captive upon the arrival of police. The prisoner was registered as Samuel Martin, 22, of Huntington, W. Va. Patrolman George Burke said Martin admitted entering 20 homes in Detroit within the past month. Martin removed his shoes before entering the Dowell home. Dowell said the collie backed the prisoner into a corner and held him there by! nipping at his toes. Polo Is Fast Starting To Be Fan Spectacle Mrs. Anna Marie Hahn pleaded innocent to indictments charging her with slaying two elderly Germans, when arraignced at Cincinnati. Mrs. Hahn sat with feet crossed and hands clinching a handkerchief during the brief courtroom appearance. She is shown here at the defense table during the session. F I f Budge Leading J IClosest Rivals In Tournament NEWPORT. R.I., Aug. 19.-(JP)- The severe slump that has ruined Don Budge's mighty tennis game ap- peared to be waning today when he led his three closest American rivals, Frank Parker, Bryan (Bitsy) Grant and Bobby Riggs, into the semi- final round of the historic Newport Casino tournament. Budge, who showed a marked let- down earlier this week when resum- ing singles play after his brilliant Davis Cup and European campaigns, appeared to be three quarters out of it when he engaged steady John Mc- Diarmid, the Princeton University in- structor, in the quarter finals. The world's greatest amateur, a ragged victory over mediocre rivals in his three previous Casino engage- ments, regained much of his confi- dence during a long first set with Mc- Diarmid and then started hitting the ball with his usual skill and profi- ciency. His touch and timing deserted him several times during the four-set match, but he managed to pull out q 10-8, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 victory over Mc- Diarmid, who played one of the great- est matches of his career against, the strongest opposition he has ever en- countered. That hard drill probably prepared Budge for tomorrow's second-last rounder against Grant, the mighty Atlanta mite who also saw Davis Cup service. Grant eliminated the last of the two Japanese quarter-finalists, 'Jiro Yamagishi, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3. Parker had come from behind against Fumituri Nakano and gained a 3-6, 6-2, 6-3, 8-6 win in another long range contest. DAILY OFFICIAL T(Continued from Page 2) Ahn Arbor property. Interest at current rates. Apply Investment Of- fice, Room 100, South Wing, Univer- sity Hall. Twelve hundred United States marines from the base at San Diego, Calif., were ordered to prepare to sail to Shanghai within ten days to reinforce the regular marine fo~rce there to protect American lives endangered by the fighting between Chinese and Japanese. Machine gun units from detachments scheduled to sail are, shown here in a recent parade. Acting on the brief command to "scatter!'" soldiers in "war maneu- vers" at Camp Ripley, Minn., fell to the ground in spread formation to avoid the imaginary machine gun bullets from a low flying plane. There were no casualties. 47, i NEW YORK, Aug. 19.--(Y')-Polo has become a fan spectacle. Until a few years ago the great figures of polo kept their contests and identi- ties hidden behind the thick hedges of exclusive club grounds. Only the Among the first to congratulate very ultra attended the matches. If nomination to the United States Sup society editors and photographers Confirmation came after a bitterd hadn't covered the swank spectacles Black is shown center. the average citizen wouldn't have known polo existed.- That's all changed, now. TheseWashingto Although the very plush society folk still attend matches, they are out- M -e G o numbered and outyelled 500-to-1 by M Ke Cl the John and Mary Smiths, the un- distinguished Joneses and their friends, who line the velvet turf and WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.-()-! express their enthusiasms and de- Just to prove a point, Rep. Hatton I mands for action in forthright lan- W. Sumners of Texas told a story onI guage. himself to the House judiciary com-l Picked Favorites mittee. He was after money for anl Acutely conscious of fan appeal in investigation. sports figures, the average citizens "I assure you this will be an eco- have singled out their polo favorites. nomical investigation," he said. "I; In the east the "box office stars" are have a reputation for economy atI Tommy Hitchcock, Pete Bostwick, home. Stewart Iglehart and Cecil Smith "Why, recently, as I was stepping with half a dozen others not far be- out of my home, a colored boy stepped hind. up Wand asked me for a quarter." Smith, the Texas cowboy, is one of Sumners says he searched his pock- the most satisfactory of all the play- ets, then told the boy he had none, ers. A 9-goaler, he plays roughly, although it seemed queer because he'd, gamely, and brilliantly. Smith is a had one just a little while before. big man and never spares himself in "Well, Mr. Sumners," said the boy, a match. That's why so many pic- "could you all look agin? If you had tures of him show him sprawled on it, you-still got it." the ground, gingerly rubbing a bruised knee or shoulder. There's a woman wants the picture Iglehart, most promising of the of her grandson placed on exhibit in present crop (he and Hitchcok are Smithsonian Institute for patriotic the only 10-goalers in the world), al- reasons. She says he has red and ways gives a good show. white hair and blue eyes. Hitchcock, at the top of the polo- heap for a decade, is a sure-fire at- On one highroad outside Washing- traction. His magnificent long shots ton are miles of magnificent homes. are as thrilling to watch as any- There was quite a rumpus at one of thing in sport. He plays smoothly, them recently when the gardener saves himself for the pinches, and spotted a stranger snapping up chick- neatly gathers his team for the cru- ens in the poultry yard. He caught cial plays. the intruder and took him to the Bostwick's Field First house, where the mistress was wait- Bostwick, "The Mite," not only is ing in the door. a favorite with the gallery, but his "Now, young man," she said to the field on Long Island was the first-- --- - where the public could pay to see big time polo. Last Times Today With the all-important Open tour- TWO FEATURES nament starting Sept. 11, there is much speculation about America's chances against the beautifully- mounted, hardplaying Argentine- gentlemen. Peak attendance at the matches- scheduled for the Meadow Brook club, Westbury, L.I.-is taken for granted. Watching polo has been removed from the category of things to do "be- BRIAN DONLEVYq Senator Hugo L. Black, of Alabama, (left), after confirmation of his preme Court was Senator Robert M. LaFollette, Jr., Wisconsin Progressive. debate on the Senate floor in which Black's record was assailed. Mrs. 0 :' o le S ll vorite, was lingering in the illness )n Pe p e t that was fatal to her recently, her elephant playmate, Ketchel, was dis- It Ask ' tressed. For days he watched her Op It rsfrom his cage, pacing fitfully up and down. Finally, keepers shut the door so culprit, "if you needed food why did that Kitchel could not see Old Babe you steal? Why didn't you just come and might, perhaps, quiet down. He and ask me for it?" did---in half an hour. "Madam," said the young intruder, - "do you think I'm a bum?" SENTENCED TO JAIL . The daughter of a one-time Negro DETROIT, Aug. 19.-()-Joseph slave is among the 98 men and women O'Connell, 46, of Pittsburgh, was sen- on the National Republican commit- enced to 90 days in jail Thursday tee. She's Mary Cordelia Booze, of after he had admitted stealingchange Mound Bayou, Miss. Two of her rela- a blind man's tin cup. tives sat in on the state constitutional convention of 1890. Young Rush Holt's countercurrent course since he entered the senate from West Virginia is. not new for NOW him. He got his start in World War days when he was a spindle-legged young- She Had the Background, ster and his father was the only man He Had the Foreground in town who stood out against the na- tion's entry into war. Rush had to 'take it" with his father. Boys hurled stones at him on the way home from school." And every month or so the Holts woke up to find thei.r house had been painted a new shade of yellow, and Liberty Loan posters had been plas- tered on the porches.$ There is nothing to the rumor that an elephant never forgets, the Na- tional Zoo reports. While Old Babe, the oldest elephant in captivity and a Washington fa - V Relaxation ... But Not For Your Eyes FOR THE AVERAGE PERSON, reading a good magazine is a well-earned relaxa- tion. There is no relaxation for your eyes, howeverf, even in the best light. They keep right on working. If the light is not right too much of your energy is used up in the effort to see. The result is apt to be eyestrain and early fatigue, which take away much of the enjoyment of reading Even for occasional reading, you should have good lighting, scientifically designed for safe and comfortable seeing. You should have light free from glare and harsh contrasts, to protect eyesight. If your eyes are defective, good lighting will generally aid them even more than it helps normal eyes. But good lighting is not a substitute for the service of your eyesight specialist. Consult him at regu- lar intervals. A check of your lighting with the Sight Meter will tell you if you are getting up