Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 182, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1926 — Page 9

KOV. Si 1928

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 9

FEARAND TERROR LEFT IN PATH OF PHANTOM SLAYER Toledo’s Jekyl-Hyde Spreads Dual Curse —Murder, Suspicion. Hu .V HA Service TOLEDO, Ohio, Nov. s.—This city, where women are struck down l>y a phantom clubber, his face dyed with crimson paint, faces a yet graver danger. For Toelo has become the City of Dreadful Suspicion. I Psychology Is the answer, as interpreted by the chief of police, the* coroner, the head of Toledo’s Stale Hospital, and psychiatrists at Toledo University, psychology says that the identity of this maniac may, when learned, stagger the entire city. A Leading Citizen He may be it leader in the community. He may be a public speaker, a man who arises to say, • \Ve have with us today— ’’ llut he is not u man who says, "We have with us tonight.” For it is at night that tho Dr. Jekyll of the sunnj daytime becomes the bludgeon-brandishing Mr. Hyde;. "It is very possible that some esteemed and loved husband and father, a respected citizen by day, is the man who has put the curse upon this town," says Dr. O. o. Forddyce, superintendent of the Toledo State Hospital, and expert on Insanity, on manias. He explains that a sadistic ten dency, rising to a crest at inteivnls may send a man otherwise norma! out on these early twilight sprees of violence. That is why suspicion is •,i;rod ing the heart of Toledo womanhool today; why the popular discussion of pathological tendencies, tiMiallv confined to n.'dical clinics and la I <> calorics, iius sent a tear through Toledo even greater than the feai of being struck to earth. Women Desert Streets The streets of this busy harbor city on the shores of Lake Eric are almost empty of women. Twice did the paint-splotched slayer strike Just a few days ago, The body of a young and popular school teacher, Miss Lily Dale (Toy, 26, was found crammed beneath a tire escape of a schoolhouso not four doors from her own home. The school teacher's skull had t>oen crushed to fragments A bloody trail led across tlie autumn leaves on tho schoolhous > lawn to the spot where the slim young body was found. Curiously, it was just a yea. ago that the clubber of women broke loose before. There were weeks of horror. Then quiet canto again. Toledo breathed freely at last. The ; taxi business fell back to normalcy las women dared walk the streets once more. i Three women were clubbed to death at that time and seven others were | beaten Into unconsciousness. Terror Descends Again But now has come the fiendish clubbing and murder of the girl tjneher. Her funeral had not been held before the police wagons dashed to n home not six blocks from (he girl teacher’s where another woman had been murdered. Hysteria grips the city again; not only over the terror which walks at night, but over doubt and suspicion as well. “The murderer is not necessarily an obvious degenerate," says science, "not a full-time maniac, not u fiend incarnate—he may be a ‘respectable citizen.' " Toledo is a silent.city, only the taxi tius In ess is. good. Women rids for safety's sake. Flocks of taxis solicit their Inisl ness at depot, hotel, movie and stree! corner. Girls forego their rii.doniary "dates." Husbatids Do Shupphi';' Husbands bring home tho provisions for dinner. Tho butcher shops are crowded with puzzled males. No agent can induce a housewife to go to her door. If a woman goes downtown ' by daylight and is detained past dusk, she calls the Medical Service Bureau for an escort. The escort is a Boy Scout—neat, but not powerful. One wonders what the clubber would do to him! I went at dusk through the mile radius region where the clubber strikes. The leaf-dripping elms and maples are thick here. Three girls going home from work w’alked arm in arm in the center of the street, casting wary glances from side to side. Only children lent life to this dis mal section. One tousleheaded boy ran up a step and scratched a Ha! lowe'sn ticktack on the window. A woman laying the supper td>l screamed. Two men rushed out caught the hoy, and whaled him soundly. “I Kill All \V omen" The seven women Who, clubbed by the nocturnal prowler, lived i > tell the tale, say that he s’.v.lslad a them before he Hit—- " Get out of my way. l kill c ! women. I hate you all." • The horror that crouched ovo them babbled, they say, of a hated, faithless wife —of "getting even ” But the phantom ptay he a sup posedly happy husband and fathci and home-tender says science a man subject to these terrible out breaks clever and shrewd enough to cover his tracks perhaps even him self forgetting by day when Mv fit has passed what he has done. 2,000 CLAIM HAIL LOSS South Dakota Farmers Let Insurance for Crop Damage. Bv t7n(te<i Prean PIERKE, K. D., Nov. s.—Two thousand farmers have claimed had losses for 1926, the State hall insui ance department has announced. The-payment will neeessitate th* outlay of nearly a half million dollars. it has been estimate,!.