Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 268, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 March 1929 — Page 3

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KSFE SLAYER GOES ON TRIAL' SECOND TIME I Hearing for Indianapolis Man Who Killed Mate Opens April 4. B’i Times tipcciol GREENFIELD, Ind.. March 29 For the second time in two years, Earl Russel!, 48, will go on trial | here for the murder of his wife, 1 Mrs. Stella Mae Russell, in their I Indianapolis home, Aug. 17„.1926. I In June, 1927. he was tried and /sentenced to life imprisonment by a jury in the Hancock circuit court and went to the state prison to I serve his sentence. Then a motion I /or anew trial was granted be |lfcudge Arthur C. Van Duyn, who also j J. ill sit in the new’ trial. , J Russell was returned from the prison when the new trial was granted and has been here about a year awaiting trial. Killed Her for Love Witnesses against Russell will be his three sons. Clarence. George and Ray Russell and Mrs. Margaret Bakemeier, a sister of the dead woman, who saw' him slash his wife’s throat on the right and left | sides In the kitchen of their home, then at 1069 Eugene street. Russell, according to the evidence, i used a butcher knife in the slaying i and W'hile his wife was being car- j ried t.o the car of Charles Weaver, | 1176 Eugene street, to be taken to ! the hospital, he stpod guard in the house with a shotgun. He surrendered to the police, however, without resistance and admitted the killing. “I killed her because I loved her,’’ he said, “and she was going to leave me,” Pleads Insanity He will plead insanity as he did ’ at the previous trial, it is known. Paul Rhoadarmer. chief Marion county prosecutor, will try the case here with the assistance of Omer Jackson and John Hinchman, local attorneys and Prosecutor William E. Bussell. Van Duyn granted the new trial motion when he 'held that the 1925 j law permitting physicians to testify for the court on the insanity question was invalid because it infringed on the defendant's constitutional rights by forcing him to testify on the sanity matter, which might react against him. Dr. W. R. Johnson and J. L. Allen of this city testified in the previous trial that Russell was sane. A special venire of 100 men has been called for jury service. PREVENTIVE MEASURES MAY CURE PARALYSIS. treatment Must Begin Before Nerve Cells Are Destroyed. BOSTON. March 29.—The best 1 hope of curing the paralysis and j serious crippling which follow an j attack of poliomyelitis, or infantile 'paralysis, lies in early preventive measures. Dr. Lloyd W. Aycock of the Harvard medical school declared here in an analysis of the disease. This means that treatment must be j begun before the nerve cells have been destroyed. Hence the plea physicians are making for early diagnosis of the disease. "The paralysis itself is due to the destruction of the nerve cells in the spinal cord which govern the movement of muscles,” said Dr. Aycock. j “When these nerve cells are de- j stroyed the muscle with which they are connected loses entirely its power to function. It is like a telephone which may be in perfect order itself, but which can not function without a wire leading to it from the telephone exchange.” Once the paralysis has occurred It is too late to cure it, although patient treatment and care and exercise can do much for the affected muscles. •TREASURE’ HUNTERS TO SEEK LIQUOR CARGO Town to Make Effort to Raise Old Whisky Ship. B;t United Press BLAIR. Neb., March 29.—Modern treasure hunters—made still more modern by prohibition—have “prewar” whisky as the object of their search. Old-time citizens tell of the night : of April 1, 1864. when the good ship 1 Bertrand went to the bottom of the j Missouri river a short distance from i Blair. Down with the Bertrand went a large cargo of whisky and mercury, j Treasure hunters became active, . however, when the prow of the Bertrand was found stuck in a mud bank, but that was all that could be found of the ship. However, a workman on a highway bridge construction gang declares he has the j "low down” on where the whiskyJ and mercury could be found. Every Blair citizen immediately! showed interest in the search, and when the spring thaw has emptied the river of its ice. a concerted effort to make the Missouri give up its whisky and mercury is expected to be underway. DRUNK—ON SPOONFUL So Says Nebraska Jury, Ruling on Intoxication. Btf United Press NEBRASKA CITY, Neb., March 29.—How much liquor does it take to make a man intoxicated? A spoonful, according to a district court jury here, which found Garrett Snyder guilty of intoxication. He had offered to pay for a meal for Miss Violet Ovendon. a I school teacher, to w hom he had not been formally introduced. Convicted in justice court. Snyder, who had witnesses to testify that he had consumed but a spoonful of liquor, appealed. Twelve of his j peer* decided the spoonful was sufficient and upheld the lower court, but added a recommendation for | leniency.

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