Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1955 — Page 3

The Indianapolis Recorder, June 25,1955—3

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Wife Fires Fatal

Continued Trom page 1 6 p.m. and did not find his supper on the table. When she objected, she said. Jones ordered her to shut up and threatened to “run his fist down my throat.” Mrs. Jones said she already had her mate under a peace bond because of a severe beating he allegedly gave her recently, during which he struck her in the head with a skillet, sending her to the hospital. She said she threatened to call the sheriff and have him arrested. “You won’t live to see them take me out of here.” she said he threatened her. While Jones ate*. Mrs. Jones said, she went into the living room, where she sat down at an ironing board and began ironing. When he finished eating he dumped the remainder of the food in the floor : and went into the living room where he allegedly walked on Mrs. Jones’ clean clothes. She said she objected and. “he hit me in the head and the back and my chair fell over backwards. Then he kicked me in the stomach and said. “The skillet didn’t kill you. but I am going to get something now that will.” He then

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went out of tho lioittr. THE TERRIFIED WOMAN said she called police and asked for help. She was allegedly told that officers could not be assigned to stay at her house and was directed to call back when her husband

returned.

Bernard McPeak, 4138 Rookwood. a friend of the Joneses, was next to be called by Mrs. Jones, who told him of her husband’s threat and begged him and his wife to come to her aid. When the McPeaks didn’t come, Mrs. Jones drove to the home of Jimmy Threat, 2908 N. Illinois, a friend of Jones,’ and asked him to come to her home and talk with her husband. She returned home when she gained Threat’s assurance that he would come. Less than five minutes after she arrived home, her husband stormed in, she sa^d. "He was drunk.’’ she stated, “and said. G— d— you! I am going to get you now.” Mrs. Jones said her husband had the gun in his hand and staggered after her as she ran towards the bathroom. In his pursuit, she said, he dropped the gun and she

picked it up.

He grabbed a lamp. Mrs. Jones said, “and 1 started shooting.” JONES WAS STRUCK under the left arm and fell on his face in the doorway. Two bullets struck a chest of drawers in the bedroom, and a fourth slug was found in the man’s trousers. The housewife called police and then called the McPeaks again and told them what had happened. “I think 1 killed him," she stated. “But I didn’t mean to kill him.

I loved him.”

Friends said the Jones marriage was a turbulent one. They reportedly were married about five years

Regain Control Continued from Page 1

gious leaders of the denomination, the Court said it felt the way was paved for withdrawal of civil authority from the church’s affairs and the restoration of peace and harmony among its members.

others until the issue of a pastor is settled by vote of the church members. Meanwhile. Rev. C. H. Bell, pastor of Mt. Paran Baptist Church and moderator of the Indiana State Baptist Association, was designated to preach Sunday, June 27. Rev. Batts will be permitted to take his place beside Rev. Bell and announce the July 8 business meeting. Rev. Dailey will preach the following Sunday, July 3, preceding the election meeting. THE RECEIVER, Raymond Hill, will handle financial affairs until a new pastor has been selected. The affairs of the church were brought before civil authorities several months ago when a dissident group of members and officials sought the help of the court in an order restraining the pastor from functioning as such. Rev. Batts, represented by Attorneys Frank R. Beckwith and E. C. Boswell, countered with several suits in Superior Court seeking to reinstate the pastor, ousted by a restraining order issued by Judge Norman E. Brennan. Superior Court 3 and. appointing the receiver with authority to take full charge and name preachers for each Sunday’s services. REV. BATTS was given united support by Baptist leaders in his contention that the appointment of the receiver was an unwar-

ranted interference by civil authority with the right of a church to administer its own affairs re-

gardless.

Baptist groups opposing action by the court included besides

ago and divorced after living to- those headed by Reverends Bell

gether a short time, but remarried

in July, last year.

Mrs. Jones complained frequently of being beaten by her husband. it was reported.

and Dailey: the American Baptist Association, the Southern Baptist Association and local and state ministerial and denominational al-

liances and groups.

Reverends Bell and Daily with about 30 other Baptist ministers present, spent Tuesday on the witness stand explaining the doctrine,

Complete Transfer

°, f Simpson Chiireh !rules and procedures soverning Legal tiansiei ot the loimti organization and functioning of Capitol Avenue Methodist Church.! !^ e .^ptist C hurch as a religious

30th and N. Capitol avenue, was ln stitution.

completed at Bloomington, Ind., during sessions of the Indiana Methodist Conference this week. Title to the church went to Simpson Methodist Church formerly located at 11th and Missouri, and | was received by Rev. J. Inman i Dixon the pastor. The purchase price was stipu-1 lated as $40,000 payable over a i number of years. The former congregation that j occupied the Capitol Avenue ! Church for many years, faced with ! the loss of many members who had i moved from the neighborhood i within the past decade, gave up

la^t year.

Conferences between Negro and white Methodist leaders resulted ! in the agreement to transfer the property to the Simpson Church.

In returning to the congregation the right to select its own pastor under supervision of reli-

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DELAY MURDER TRIAL The trial of Mrs. Norma Jean White, 26, 2029 Carrollton, charged with manslaughter in the death of her husband, Clarence, July 20, 1954, has been postponed indefinitely, it was announced in

Criminal Court 2 this week. The mother of two children and expecting a third at the time, Mrs. White told detectives she stabbed her husband when she found him in bed with another young woman, Mrs. Eileen Voss, 21, 1706 Ruckle. She was scheduled to stand trial June 27, but the delay was granted at the request of a deputy prosecutor because trial of another woman on a second degree murder charge is scheduled for that date.

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