Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1946 — Page 1
)CT. 5, 19468
Jesus,’ ‘end
w York, Creative
& in 946 will offend e of Jesus. does violence either 1e followi , by a secret m. on (later murdere , but a fault of the Y. s
Ld » tian will likewise be Graves’ theme that ing but a faithful aic religion, a good
by Mr. Graves, dvanced beyond the lammai and Hillel, risee teachers of the ation. jor insult is upon 1 Mr. Graves puts of Mary Magdalene of Jesus’ “failure” Kingdom—because y and “tried to force om." > not believe that ey believe that the Kingdom has been lack of haste among to follow the teach-
» o S writes novels by he “analeptic ‘thethe e recovery of forgote » has already applied to such ancients as ius and Belisarius, cal novelists start cts and work wid ul lacework of ro
seeks to “train hime wholly in contempeoso put himself inte is intuition gives him all the riddles left by
ire always ingenious, however, cannot read ional British novels of Jesus as uncone ley read his revised man emperors’ lives, ” ” “of Mr. Graves’ reproblem of Jesus is 1sidered equally valid > Gospels, the Taland the apocryphal
it the Gospel accordas “late and propat accepts as valid much later and more
ome excellent pages regarding ancient ren the Mediterranean however, be seriously ny such orgiastic ritrelation to Jewish ) of 30 A. D. or even 5 before that date. ng to be said for the , is sure to make the ate all the more the jospels.
ed « Framing
\ BROS., Ine. the Circle
LI J
tb
he India
FORECAST
: Pily tonight and tomorrow, continued mild.
+
@
polis Ye
® COB iy
i
FINAL HOME
VoLUMK, A NUNEES 180 - MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 7, 1946
Bor
Indianapolis, Ind.
Entered ax Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Issued daily except Sunday
PRICE FIVE CENTS
iets
FLORIDA ALL SET FOR BLOW AS HIGH GALE LASHES KEYS
Ts BRECHEEN Frank Sinatra, Wife Nancy
Part After Family Squabble; Be Divorce Action Not Planned,
SERIES TODAY
Third Game. 5 Be Played | At Boston Wednesday; Open Date Tomorrow.
AND HARRIS IN
{Other World. Series Gossip, ae 10)
PROBABLE LINEUP BOSTON — 8ST. LOUIS | . McBride, rf Schoendienst, 2b Pesky, ss DiMaggio, cf
Williams, If York, 1b Doerr, 2b Higgins, 3b Partee, ¢
ice, ¢ Harris, p Brecheen, p
By LEO H. PETERSEN United Press Sports Editor ST. LOUIS, Oct. 7.—Two left | handers, Harry (The Cat) Brecheen | and Mickey Harris faced each other | lin the cond game of the world | series today with the St. Louis | Cardinals hoping to square things against the Boston Red Sox. Brecheen won 15 games for the | | Redbirds in their drive to the Na[tional league pennant. Eddie Dyer was hoping that he oud 3 gel his club even, The Cards
®
Built in the 11th century, this beautiful Russian Orthodox monastery at Kiev was mined and blown up by the Germans in November, 1941. Nazi vandals vainly tried to strip the gold leaf from the dome. The Soviet has allotted money for reconstruction of the monastery which is now inhabited ey 62 monks. This color photograph, taken by John Strohm, was reproduced by The Times from a 35 m.m. film hiansparehey. Ss
- tp
| the first game yesterday,
OLD SOL 1S OUT Sovist People Want Peace, CHILDREN MARK FOR HEAT MARK
[2 oy pe in 10 innings. While Dyer was calling on the {best he had for this vital second | game, Manager Joe Cronin of the| Red Sox gambled on his 17-game southpaw winner instead of shooting his ace, Dave (Boo) Sout
Higher Standard of Living, A Chance to Build Homes
ESA page ‘of pictures from Inside Russia, Page 18.)
RILEY BIRTHDAY
Read “ T Pp 1 0 Real Our Towss," Pac 10) SophouoEe season, was being saved |
Today the spirit of James ie game at Boston
{comb Riley, beloved Hoosier bard, Wednesds, Tuesday being an open This is the first of six word and picture dispatches by John Strohm, | {roamed his Lockerbie street home | date for travel.
world traveler and editor, on “The People Behind the Iron Curtain,” land grounds again. Count on Dickson based on an uncensored, unescorted tour of the U. S. S. R.) Lovers of his poetry gathered on | By JOHN STROHM the lawn this morning to pay re-|ing on Murry Dickson for the third (World Copyright by NEA Service, Inc., and John Sirohm. Reproduction spects to the late poet on his birth- | here on Oct. 7 was 87, set in 1916.1 cy ol pee ot part De) want [ate. 1% The mercury at 1 p. m. had reached hE, tussian people © NO. wan. ‘war. Traditional services were held in |paseball and the shirt - sleeved 85. They want peace, a chance to improve their stand-|which children of school 9, at 740 crowd began filling Sportsman's)
Biofonn ue Jouists yesterdays ard of living, an opportunity to clear the ruins of world war |E. Vermont = dramatized one of | park early. , 11 and build homes, farms and industries for the future. the svoriie Riley poems, Stan Musial, Country Slaughter
weather bureau reported the highest Presented was “Impromptu Fairy | ang George Kurowski, the big guns mark on record for an Oct. 6. Yes- | Those are my dominant impressions after an unparal- | Tale.” Included in the cast Were|in the Cards’ attack.
terday’s high of 88 beat the old 1o)o4 opportunity to travel 4000 miles through Byelorussia, {Lonnie Lawrence, Scott Moore, Jo- |{icularly good during batting drills. |
record of 85 set for that day in se H | |seph McCoskey, Charles Hanson 1879 and 1935. - (the Ukraine, the Caucasus and Moscow, without official guide |and Alice Murphy. Lor censor.
TIMES INDEX I have talked freely with the people in their factories, HULL 1 MAKES GAINS,
of yarmup on their collective farms, in their markets and in their] |S ‘OUT OF DANGER Sena Stel pare Sent Amusements , 8] |Ruth Millett . 13| homes. WASHINGTON. Oct. 7 (U. P.)— | fms elbow _still sore,
Wiidie Ash a 10 Movies ...... ; ] fled today that for- | EF the fans cheering when he | Business ..... 6| Obituaries gl I do not know what Josef Stalin thinks or what Vyache- | Toe pt State Cordell Hull. | Classified ..20-22 (Radio ....... 23 8lav Molotov thinks. Comics ...... 23|Reflections ., 14] Editorials .... 14] Mrs. Roosevelt 13!
LOCAL TEMPERATURES 6am....55 Mam Ta Mu. 56] m..... 8 | Ba vm. .6840 Noon), , 84 fam... ITam...8
Old Sol busted out this morning and threatened to break the. alltime temperature record for today. Hottest temperature ever recorded
interested in the Cards’ drill. But
their pre-game hitting warmup the |
{ the right field fence.
1 do know what the Russian factory: worker, farmer and |2 Week ago, continues to show im-g JOHNSON GRAVELY ILL
| t and appears to be out of | j common citizen are thinking and sayin jprovemen De a 13 2 | immediate ganger, { Walter Johnson, one-time pitch-
Forum .....,. 14|Serial ......: 13 I realize that mine was a unique opportunity. Few | Mr. Hull rested well last night, | jn0 ace of the Washington Sena-
G. IL Rights., 23{Sports .....10-11/heqgple have ever been permitted to travel without hindrance | bulletin from the naval hospital at| tore “was reported in
Meta Given ,, 17) Weather Map 39 Bethesda, Md., said. The 75-year- | ? ; ; | condition today. Homemaking . 17| Joe Williams o through Russia. To the best of my knowledge no other Sia statesman has been improving | (Continued on Page 18-.C ‘olumn h
Inside Indpls. 13 Wom. News 16- b | steadily since Saturday. {TOR TH Restaurant.
Death Walks With Bride On Wedding March
By LEO TURNER United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. 7.—Her physician said today that 21-year-! eld Angelina Rose DePabrizio died of embarrassment a few feet from the altar while her bridegroom
paced the vestry, wondering what; The confusion was too much for into their new home at Cedarhurst. | was delaying their wedding. her heart, which was almost burst-| Instead, physicians performed an They -became engaged when Mr. | Death touched the pretty, vivacl jing with sheer happiness. autopsy to determine why she died | Manstantuono entered the army | ous girl a few feet inside the church| Today was to have been a won-|as she walked with her father] three and one-half years ago. while her father tried to help her|derful day for Rose and John Mas-| down the “aisle of -the Church of| He was discharged eight months; untangle the train of her bridal | tantuono, 21, her sweetheart since Our Lady of Good Counsel in su-|ago, but they didn’t rush to marry. gown from around her feet. high school. They were to move|burban Inwood, Long Island. \
|
-
Veiled, Miss DeFabrizio church with her father,
The bride-to-be, Miss Rose DeFabrizio, 21, Lawrence, N. Y., as she Mise DeFabrizio places a corsage on dress of her mother, ° enters the
prepared for her wedding that resulted in tragedy at the church altar. Mrs. Louis DeFabrizio, while her father looks on,
i . Ca : ‘ ’ ‘ ~~
¥
Manager |
| Ferriss, who won 25 games in his
It was another perfect day for |
looked par- | The crowd appeared only mildly!
{when the Red Sox came out for
“very grave'™]
OR THOSE WHO > LTRE FINE FOOD. | 144 E. Ohio.—Adv. |
The couple had waited pies
Recent Photo of Mr. 3 and Mrs. Sinatis, Page 3 2)
By VIRGINIA
MacPHERSON
United Press Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD, Oct.
7.—~Frank Sinatra, whose skinny frame and boudoir crooning turned a nation of bobby-soxers |
(into a swooning tizzy, was in hiding at a deserted resort to-
__!day after moving out on his; {no other woman involved, no mat- ~ ter what the gossip columnists say.” |
pretty wife, Nancy. “The Voice” was silent on the tiff that disrupted his nine- year | marriage, long ballyhooed as one
{of the happiest in town. Mr. Sinatras wife, who used to make him new bow ties as fast as the love-sick fans would rip ‘em off, wasn’t talking, either. That left the explaining up to George Evans, the crooner's press agent. He said the Sinatras, both { Catholics, were not thinking about | & divorce, “It's just a family squabble,” Mr.! | Evans told reporters. “The case of | a Hollywood career plus a man-and-wife fight. I think they'll make it up in a few days.” | Mrs. Sinatra, who married the | hungry-looking crooner in 1938 in New Jersey, was in seclusion in her Toluca lake mansion. With her were their two children, Nancy, 6, {and Frank Jr, 2. “Frankie has a few days off,” Mr. Evans said. “So he's gone to a desert.
| ]
{resort for a little privacy. There is
Mr. Evans denied a radio commentator’s report that the Sinatras {hdd split.up after Frankie danced all night with Lana Turner at a| party given by Sonja Henle. “That's just a stab in the dark”
(Mr. Evans added. “Prank moved out
Saturday afternoon—hours before the party. And he danced with a lot of other girls besides Miss Turner.” Rumors of a rift between the crooner and his wife, who stayed in the background while he sang his {way to stardom on a wave of squealing boby-soxers, have been sifting through Hollywood for several weeks. Both Mr. Sinatra and his wife had denied reports of marital troubles. But last night fhey admitted they'd called it quits. Neither would say why. “This is the first public battle
‘they've ever had,” Mr. Evans said.
“And I don't think it's seripus. Frank will be back in three d to work on his current movie.”
{
MADISON, Ind. Oet. 7 (U. P.).—Gray-haired Lottie Lockman, went under grand jury investigation today in
| year-old housekeeper,
Six-Man Jury Begins Probe Of Dupont's Sleep Deaths™ ™ osm
| the strange sleep deaths of three elderly residents of tiny Dupont, Ind.
{ Maintaining her innocenge, Mrs. Lockman remained at the farm For the Cards, Dyer was count- home of her foster daughter at Wirt, Ind., while more than 20 wit-
nesses were called by the Jefferson
a bricklayer made up the six-man | |panel which will hear testimony [from Mrs. Lockman, relatives of
the three old folks who died under -
{her care, police, and “surprise” | witnesses. 3 Bodies Exhumed |
two months ago touched off a sensational investigation which led to| the filing of formal murder charges {and the exhumation of three bodies. First to appear as a witness this | morning was JefTerson
|
Forrest McConnell, son of one of the three poison victims, was the]
He was still present at the noon | recess. It .was the illness of McConnell's | | wife, Mayme, that led to the arrest]
(Continued on “Page 4—Column 2)
to have everything for a perfect marriage. John built up a thriving business | as a gardener, construction brother.
business
had slumped at altar. The doctor said she had a rheumatic heart, pronounced her dead
then went into the found
county grand | jury.
Four farmers, a bank teller and, ——
'DREAMBOAT OPENS
POLAR FLIGHT VISTA|
CAIRO, Oct. 7 (U, P.).—Col. C. 8.
| army Superfortress Pacusan Dream-
mercial version of the Boeing B- 2 over the North Pole route in 28 hours. Col. Irvine explained the commercial possibilities - of the polar!
a 10,854-mile non-stop flight over| the top of the world from Honolulu! lin the record time of 39 hours and
WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 (U. P.).—|second witness called by the jury. | 37 minutes.
HARRIMAN TAKES OFFICE
WASHINGTON, Oct. 7-4U. P.) — W. Averell Harriman was sworn in today as secretary of commerce.
62- |
|- | |
100MILE WIND DUE TO SWEEP —| LOWER COAST
Hurricane « Is Expected ' to Strike Within Next 24 To 36 Hours.
(Hurricane photo and map, Page 4)
MIAMI, Fla, Oct. T (U, {P.).—A strong tropical hur- | ricane slipped to the west of {the Florida keys today.” ° It threatened to comb the Gulf coastline with its driving rains and winds. Two hundred miles of the west ern coast of the state was put on a hurricane basis early today. Later advisories from the weather bureau here indicated that the storm center would sweep up the low, mangrove coast and possibly cut inland and across the state. With winds of 100 m. p. h. shriek~ ing around the placid center of the storm, gales blanketed the lower part of Florida. At noon today, the center was
It was believed the string of keys would feel no higher winds than the 50 and 60 m. p. h. already reported. The storm had cut across Cuba during the night, causing damage Laé yet fully reported. It moved across the Straits of Florida and
There was a strong possibility {that it would cut inland at some time during the night, most likely near Tampa. In that case it would endanger the heavy fruit crop. There was virtually ro chance {that the full force would strike | Miami, but the resort city expects | winds of 50 m. p. h. late today. Few - citizens boarded their windows, | The Red -Cross in Miami an | nounced that it would not open its
| Irvine, commander of the U. s.| shelters tonight unless there is a
sudden change in course. Shelters were opened at dawn in
Mrs. Lockman’s arrest more than boat, said today he believed a com- {Key West, and were prepared in
| Tampa, St. Petersburg, Sarasota, Ft.
could fly from London to Japan avers and other west coast eities.
No residents of the keys evacuated {to the mainland during the night {and morning, the Red Cross said. But some were believed to have gone
county | route in an interview. The Dream-| (drove the first pitch to him over | coroner Sidney Haigh. He remained | og, landed here yesterday atter| my Key Wea.
n the jury room nearly two hours. .|who suffered a cerebral hemorrhage | —— | in ] y
The hurricane was believed to have hit the Cuban coast in the rvicinity of Corrientes bay on the southwestern tip of the island. Its northeasterly course took it | along the Sierra de los Organos mountains, - cutting a 100-mile-long {swath of destruction to emerge in {the vicinity of Esperanza about 100 {miles southwest of Havana,
It was a happy day when
the house, They set a
John |
ready ture, their rugs, their curtains, their and could attend. * |linen and silverware.
|
| Yesterday, the tall, dark-haired Rose pinned a corsage on her mother. Her attendants tucked and
with his |wedding date, but postponed it until admired her dress. She put a last Rose quit her job as a yesterday when her brother, Sera- & | They were old-fashioned, and they secretary and picked out their furni-|fino, 19, would be out of the navy | (Continued on “Page 4—Column ni
(New York Daity News Copyright, 1046, from Acme Telephoto) Firemen are shown administering artificial respiration outside’ the church after young || bride-to-be
boy
placed 130 miles west of Key West,
