Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 December 1938 — Page 5

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Leavenworth ‘Suburbanite’ Sticks to River; ‘Corks’ Home

Times Special

3 LEAVENWORTH, Dec. 19.—Henry Small, 66, doesn’t want flood : control because he can use high water in his work—if it is not too high. ce Henry lives in a small green fishing hut in the mud on the bank of : the Ohio River with his two dogs and pots and pans.

‘ He was sitting inside the door

. of his town were celebrating its reconstruction atop a bluff above him.

‘ Henry Small . . . and floatable home.

8 = 2

peeling potatoes while the citizens

‘TWO DOCTORS ~ AIDMRS. DULL

: Subconscious Mind Blamed . In Fatal Shooting of - Employer.

. ST. JOSEPH, Mich. Dec. 19 (U. + P.).—Prosecutor Edward A. Westin . continued cross-examination today of physicians who testified that Mrs. ‘ Fern Patricia Dull might have been acting under the influence of her subconscious mind when she shot . and killed William Holbrook, her : employer and sweetheart. : + Mrs. Dull, blond divorcee and ‘ mother of two children, has maintained that her mind became a total blank shortly before she ran from the Benton Harbor police station and fired the fatal bullets into the back of the man with whom she ® had lived for nine years without knowing he was the married father of four children. ; Dr. Walter Bartlett, Benton Harbor * psychiatrist, supported testimony of Dr. Harley Sears, assistant

medical superintendent of the Kaia-|

mazoo State Hospital that Mrs: Dull might have become the victim of amnesia and shot Mr. Holbrook while’ her mind was unable to determine right from wrong. The case is expected to go to the /, jury tomorrow or Wednesday. Mrs. Dull rested in her cell in the - Berrien County Jail Sunday while . the jury of 11 men and two women : went for a bus ride and attended a movie. For some of the farmers on the ' jury the bus ride was their first and + they said they got quite a thrill out of it, -.

Convivial Guard Faces Ouster - . “ny . . For Losing Charge in Transit

JACKSON, Mich. Dec. 19 (U. P.).—A convivial Southern Michigan ; Prison guard who lost his prisoner in transit faced dismissal today. : Warden Joel Moore said Sgt. John Malaney would be removed from

* the prison staff. Moore, a sad but

. Armstrong returned to the prison after an embarrassing incident in St.

: Louis last week.

®Everyone was washed out of the

old town in the bottoms.in the 1937

flood, so they started : all over/

again. with a new town this week. Some ky to the new Leavenworth were touring the 6ld wrecked and abandoned town when they stumbled on Henry down on the bank. : Amazed, they asked him why he hadn’t moved “over the hill” with the .rest and if he ‘wasn’t afraid of another flood. “Oh, I fish a bit and this (meaning the shack) I fixed so shed float,” he said. “I got to cork her up a little and then she'll be ready when high water comes.”

He said his house floated away without him two years ago but he found it and paddled it back to the bank below the remains of old Leavenworth. “I put her down in a different place,” he drawled. “Ya get tired of just one place.” 7 Henry didn’t attend the celebration up on the hill where everyone is living in ‘brand new houses built by the Red Cross and Federal Government. He could have had one, too, he guessed, but “I mostly fish,” he said. “How high was the water on this bank during the flood?” someone asked. “They said she must have been about 35 feet high,” he said. A‘Aren’t you afraid of another big flood?” “Oh, I don't mind,” he said, “if it isn't too big.”

HOOSIER PRINTER DIES SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Dec. 19 (U. P.).—A heart attack was blamed today for the death of a man identified through a Typographical Union card in his pocket as C. L. Crabtree, Terre Haute, Ind. The printer collapsed in a rooming house Saturday and died: en route to St.

John’s Hospital.

wiser Malaney, and Prisoner W. H.

+ Malaney was escorting Armstrong, : & parole violator, from McAlester, + Okla., to Jackson, but the guard “lost his prisoner while changing « trains in St. Louis. When Malaney : noticed that his charge was no long«er with him he reported the loss to + St. Louis police. + | While forwarding word of the loss tto Warden Moore, St. Louis officers - also said that Guard Malaney walked swith a 3st, and—in brief—was in- + toxicated. + Sheriff's officers found Armstrong on the train en route to Jackson at .Clinton, Ill. He had Malaney’s leg sirons, handcuffs, pistol, railroad s tickets and’ baggage. Armstrong said :Malaney deserted him so he decided ‘to make the rest of the trip alone. Moore said he was having diffi- + culty in reconstructing the events in +St. Louis. He ‘said Malaney failed +to remember many of the details.

{EVANSVILLE COLLEGE, 1. U. MERGER ASKED

Governor Townsend today con‘cidered a proposal that Evansville ; College be combined with Indiana + University, but no decision is ex- : pected until a complete study of the { project has been made. ; Evansville citizens, with President + Herman B. Wells, of Indiana Unii versity, and President G. Marion ! Smith, of Evansville College, talked { with the Governor last Thursday in » Leavenworth, Ind. It was indicated .that Indiana University trustees :may consider the proposal in a : meeting in Bloomington Thursday. + Evansville College is operated by : the Methodist Episcopal Church. It :has 380 students and a faculty of 130 members.

INJURED MAN, 62, SAVED BY CHILDREN

{ FT. WAYNE, Ind, Dec. 19 (U. P.). —Frank Lynn, 62, today is crediting + neighborhood children: with saving : his life. + Mr. Lynn told police he was struck .. by an auto. Despite a broken leg, he managed to get home. Alone there, he was threatened with freezing tp death because he was unable to tend the fire. His cries for help were heard by children playing in . the yard. They called their parents, ' who in- turn notified police.

' . ’ ¢ 4

5 Convicted of Killing Man

BARROOM BANDITS, 2 GIRL DEGOYS JAILED

After Luring Him Away.

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 19 (U. P.). —Three youth and two girls they als legedly used as “decoys” to attract men from bars to be robbed were found guilty today of killing a victim.

The verdict carried life imprisonment, but the jury recommended leniency. It also found them guilty of second degree robbery of Donald Maycock, discharged Army private, who died of a fractured skill. The jury found the five guilty in 14 of 54 possible verdicts. Convicted were: Shirley Kaye, | 20; Laura Bonzani. 30; Patrick Pet= tingill, 24; Nick Cirimele, 22, and William McCord, 18. : McCord’s mother had refused to let him be a State witness, saying that he should stand trial with the others rather than be a “stool pigeon. And so he was, Attorney ‘William Southwell, representing McCord, said he would appeal on the grounds used in defense of James J. Hines, New York Tammany leader, in ‘the Dewey prosecution of a “policy racket.” The defense, he said; alleged the prosecution used evidence of crimes not mentioned in the indictment,

FOUND DEAD, PISTOL AND NOTE NEARBY

Grim Ashley, 37, R. R. 18, Box 361 was dead today, victim of a gunshot wound in the head inflicted yesterday morning at his home. : Deputy Coroner Norman Booher said the body was found on a bed with the gun nearby. He said Mr. Ashley left a wote which read, “I have lived in homes for two months but they are all gone. I love you all, Daddy.” “ Surviving are the wife and two children, Crimie Lou, 8, and

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