Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1939 — Page 9
PAGE 10
‘KISS OF DEATH SUSPECT HELD WITHOUT BAIL
Coroner Checking Whether Boy and Girl Were Killed By Murder Ring.
PHILADELPHIA, May 19 (U. P). —Mrs. Rose Carina, 45 many times married “woman with the Kiss of death” in Philadelphia's fantastic murder merchandising syndicate, today was held without bail on a
charge of poisoning one of her com-mon-law husbands. rested in New York Saturday. Plump and bespectacled,
tured during the investigation ot the
murder ring blamed for more than)
100 deaths. She listened attentively during the proceedings before Judge
Harry S. McDevitt, but said nothing |
Indications that the merchants of death obtained in New arsenic and other poisons with which they killed heavily-insured victims were Attorney General Joseph Hill of New York was introduced to Judge McDevitt.
Hill in Role of Observer
Assistant District Attorney cent P. McDevitt told the jurist that Mr. Hill was in the courtroom as a casual observer and to “help give us leads on druggists in New York, where they ‘obtained their poison.” Mrs. Carina was held specifically in the death of Pietro Stea, her common law husband. “She is involved with Paul Petrillo in the death of Stea,” Capt James Kelly of the homicide squad testified. Authorities asked Hammonton, N. J., authorities to exhume the body of Mrs. Carina’s first husband, and said they would order disinterment of another husband buried in a Philadelphia cemetery. Three other death ring prisoners were arraigned after Mrs. Carina.
Check Death of Two More
the question arose today whether a boy and a girl who died within the last fortnight may have been victims of poison—the
favorite death weapon of the fantastic murder syndicate Coroner Charles H. Hersch began an investigation today. The girl died at York and her viscera were brought to Philadelphia by the York coroner for examination by City chemists, now familiar with the methods of the merciless merchants of death. Mr. Mersch said he had ordered exhumation of tae body of a boy whose death during the last two weeks was ascribed to lobar pneumonia. Dr. I. U. Zech, York ‘coroner asked Philadelphia’s aid in investigating the girl's death. “A preliminary examination,” Mr. Hersch said, “indicates this girl died | of poisoning. I am not at liberty to disclose the circumstances, but they are such tnat Dr. Zech suspected the Philadelphia arsenic ring had a hand in her death “The boy's death was ascribed to lobar pneumonia, but he died under conditions which aroused my suspicions. I will not be surprised if chemists find arsenic in his body.’
Meanwhile,
MINTON BACKS | SPEND POLICY
Senator Contends Roosevelt Had to Turn Wheels Of Industry.
Limes Special WASHINGTON, May 19.—President Roosevelt's “peerless leadership” and the New Deal policies will be the issue in the 1940 campaign and Democrats will not get any place “trying to act like Republicans” Senator Minton (D. Ind.) told the District of Columbia Democratic Club in an address here very pledge made by the Demo- | cratic party in its platform of 1932 has eon carried out to the letter, except one,” Senator Minton said. “That was the plank to balance the budget. “But when President Roosevelt took office in 1933 and found the country bankrupt and on the verge | of revolution, balancing the budget! became a secondary consideration. We had to spend to save ourselves.”
Defends Spending
Minton then cited the New Deal agencies and what they hav: accomplished, and defended the increased national debt incurred by them “Before the crash in 1929, private business had piled up six billion dollars of debt,” he said. “Somebody must go into debt to keep the wheels of industry turning “So it didn't seem so had for the United States to spend three billion dollars to save unbalanced homes and individuals even at the cost of an unbalanced budget.”
Gives Debt
The Indianian explained the 40! billion dollars national debt as follows: Carry-over from the World War 16 billion dollars; Hoover Administration 4 billion dollars; bonus payments 2 billion dollars; stabilization fund 2 billion dollars; cash on hand 3 billion dollars; RFC and other protected loans 4 billion. “That leaves but 9 billion dollars
Senator
Explanation
of the debt spent by the New Deal ;
for relief and Senator Minton declared. In a single month of July during the World War we spent 12 billion | dollars and the total cost was 45 billion for us. So it seems to me that if we can spend such sums to send | our boys oversears to die, we can spend a few millions to save our country make it a fit place in which to live.
recovery,
Our new spring arrivals In quality clothes for all the family Credit terms to suit vour conveniencel!
Julian Goidman Union Store
118-122 N. Penn
She was ar-
Mrs. Carina appeared far from the glam-| orous adventuress she had been pic-|
York their |
seen when Assistant |
Vin-
ran important factor
Toll of Pets Brings Appeal
A fluoroscope, which gives a doctor “X-Ray eyes,” is used on a
Kauvouq dog by Dr. E. T.
Padfield. Kauvouq is a rare breed and | sodelm is found in Indianapolis. The fluoroscope is used by veterinarians almost as frequently as by physicians,
OF HOSPITAL AID
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
NONPROFIT PLAN
HIT AS UNSOUND
Proposals Likely to Explode, Insurance Conference At I. U. Told.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, May 19.—Nonprofit hospitalization and medical care insurance principles were described as “unsound socialistic ideas” at the opening of the first annual Indiana Conference on Fire and Casualty Insurance at Indiana University today. Such proposals “are likely to ex{plode in the very near future,” E. J. Krisor, supervisor of the disability
Co., Chicago, said.
strikes at the very roots of the | American idea of doing business” he declared.
Claims Tax Evasion
Mr. Krisor charged that the or- | ganizers of hospital insurance assolciations were using the nonprofit | classification to evade payment of (axes and agency commissions, He |aaded that “proponents of the plan, to gain free publicity in lieu of payment of advertising costs, surround
| themselves with two or three leading
| dow
| men to
| citizens of each community as win- | their
dressings to put across plans.” Mr. Krisor advised the insurance “fight fire with fire” by increased activities in the field of hospitalization and accident and health
protection. |
|
| |
Joane McGarvey watches Dr. Padfield place a cast on the injured
leg of her Boston Terrier, Buvvy. Mrs. Samuel M. McGarvey, 717 W. = n un
Joane is the daughter of Mr. and 32d St. Buvvy was a traffic victim.
‘ieep Dog Off Street’ Plea
As Accident
“Kee the streets,
today
p vour dog off the traffic toll of pe While hundreds of dogs are Killed maimed by automobiles and neral health of the dog is to be watched according to the
an
or trucks, ge by the pet owner, veterinarians. A comparison of the methods used by physicians to cure humans and the veterinarians’ methods to keep their four-legged patients healthy shows a striking similarity. A dog with a broken leg is treated much the same as a person with the same injury. A dog with a sore throat or pneumonia receives he identical treatment that his master would,
“The main difference between the convalesence of a dog and a human is the confinement,” one veterinarian said. “You just can't order a dog to bed as you do a person.”
The two factors responsible for the most illness of dogs are “overfeeding and not enough exercise.” Apartment and house dogs suffer a great deal from overfeeding and inadequate exercise, according to veterinarians. The amount of exercise > depends on the individual dog |
List Mounts
" Indianapolis veterinarians warned {s continued to mount
as does the amount of food it consumes. The dog’s diet should be a miniature of the human diet. In the summer, light foods with plenty of leaty vegetables and cereals are advised. Vaccination is as much advocated by the “vet” as by the family physician. Rabies, human, given one vaccination a year, inarians assert. Distemper,
much feared by the
veterwhich
claims as many dogs lives as pneu- | monia among humans, can be elim-!
inated by one inoculation which protects the dog for life, the veterinarians add.
NEWSBOYS EDIT OWN PAPER HARTFORD, Conn., May 19 (U. PP.) .—Newsboys and bootblacks of Hartford have their own newspaper—The Street Trades Boys’ News, with a monthly circulation of 1000
copies. Besides a reportorial staff, the paper boasts of a theater critic, feature e writer and cartoonist.
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Dr. The two-day conference is sponsored by the Indiana Association of msurance agents and Indiana Universiiy. by Ross E. Coffin, sociation president; Wells, University George H. Newbauer, State Commissioner of Insurance, The influence of the European situation on American business will be discussed at a dinner tonight by Clifton M. Utley, director of the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
Wells Speaker
Dr. Herman B president,
MURPHY PLEDGES BUSINESS HELP
WASHINGTON, May 19 (U. P). —Attorney General Murphy today pledged the Justice Department to be “genuinely helpful” to businessmen honestly seeking to avoid illegal practices, In a general antitrust policy statement, Mr. Murphy asserted that the antitrust statutes should be prosecuted “faithfully and vigorously, but that practical intelligence
and in a spirit of common sense, to °
the end that their great and beneficial purposes may be achieved without doing unnecessary harm to business and reputable business organizations.” Mr. Murphy reiterated, however, his determination to prosecute “every substantial violation” of the antitrust ‘Statutes.
and | Hartford City, | | —Police today investigated the case
division of the Continental Casuaity |
Legislation permitting the organi- | (zation and operation of such plans §
It was opened by addresses | Indianapolis, as- |
{movie and
A AT A
FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1939
Speak at Insurance Parley
Clifton M. Utley
Clarke Smith
I 0, COED'S INJURY MYSTIFIES POLICE :
BLOOMINGTON, May 19 (U. P)). Indiana Uniroad early
25 lying in a campus
of Mary Brumblay, versity coed, found near the university
yesterday.
to explain, blow on
The girl was unable but was suffering from a the head. She told police she attended a| started to walk home. She turned down a side street. The next thing she remembered, she said, she was lying on some railroad tracks and heard some one say: “It will look like suicide She was found in the road, under a railroad trestle, by Paul McDaniel, of Bowling Green, Kv., Roy Ellis of Gravel Switch, Ky., and Wendell | Kinsey of Bloomington, graduate students. Police said that physicians reported she had been slugged, but had not been assaulted. Her purse was found unopened near the spot where she was discovered.
POLICE HALT CARD GAME | Patrolmen Dale Smith and Ray | Porter reported they found seven | men in a rear room in the 100 block W. Maryland St. playing cards early | today. They made confiscated the property used in the alleged gambling, they reported.
Go:-at a saving to New York for the
WORLD'S | FRIR..
2640
30 DAY ROUND TRIP COACH FARE Indianapolis to New York
(Good on all trains)
30-day tickets te New York are accepted via Washington, DB. C., at ne extra cost.
Prom Pennsylvania Station, N. Y., to World's Fair 10 minutes, 10 conts each way
Special Pullman Fares
(Beginning June 1, 1939)
30-Day Round Trips as low as $40 45 plus reduced upper berth rate.
Ask ticket agents cbout economical all-expense tours with hotel accommo. dations In New Yerk.
TIO LITT
TRY Ww kk are FORCED to close out a complete model refrigerators at sacrifice
group of new T1938
prices . . . to make room for a new shipment of Frigi-
daires.
of the nationally advertised
BRAND NEW
1938 KELVINATORS SAVE $35 TO $80
Choice of 3, 5, 6 and 8 Cu. Ft. Sizes
A group of 10 vefrigerators at a fraction of their former Here is a typical example of the price cuts in this
price. sale
[—$ CU. FT. KELVINATOR
31388 Valwe . «
1938 Model Gibsons SAVE $45 TO $65
One and two of a kind bargains only.
limited supply lasts.
{—6 CU. FT. DELUXE GIBSON
133-135 WEST WASH.ST.
th 90 Days—Otherwise Small Charge
No Carrying
Save from $35 to $830 on the purchase of any
refrigerators.
3095
Shop early while
[by
no arrests but]
|
E. Dana Johnson
Clifton M. Utley, director of the Chicago Council of Foreign Relations, is to be the principal speaker at the Indiana Conference on Fire and Casualty Insurance at Indiana University today and tomorrow, Others scheduled to speak are Clarke Smith of New York City and E. Dana Johnson of Atlanta, Ga.
COUNTY JURY STUDY “MOVE MADE BY BAR
Study of the present County jury selection by Indianapolis Bar Association com=mittee was authorized last night by the Board of Managers. Request for the study Circuit Court Judge Earl Cox, who selects the jury commissioners.
The Board of Managers instructed!
the Association president to appoint
a committee to meet with Judge Cox |
and the Jury commissioners.
| 22, and Ruby Lee Zimmerman, 16, of
Marion a special
was made
POLICE TO EXAMINE | TOLEDO GETS MADONNA ART
TOLEDO, May 19 (U, P).—The
IN ABDUCTION aged relief, “San Donato Madon=
Se . na,” which was kept for more than a: a g PJ.— 1400 years in the Della Robbia family from a Logansport youth at Peru After its completion by Luca Della Wednesday and in which he and a Robbia, has been acquired by the girl companion were abducted was Loledo Museum of Art. held here today pending a finger-| print examination by State Police, The car was discovered here late The couple, Irvin Berger,
BURGLAR LOCKS UP DOG SAN DIEGO, Cal, May 1% (U, P.) ~The personification of precau= tion was the burglar who ransacked the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. MeCurdy. He locked the watch dog | inside the back porch before going "about his work.
RITE'S
No Money Down! Clearance Sale!
Women’s Fitted and Swagger
yesterday.
Peru, said that a man held a gun on them and forced them to accompany him into the country north of Peru.
Amazing Dress Special
2 DRESSES
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00
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SUITS
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90
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and col-
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