Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1947 — Page 5

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(Continued From Page One) “voice, “But I do have a voice that has made people listen, that seemed to make people happy and exhilerated,” she sald, J Her story was that of an Ameri-

ean girl who whs confident she

could do anything she wanted to. .8he was born on the outskirts of Del Rio, Tenn. a hamlet she called - Blabtown, 8he was reared in Jellico, Tenn, ; Sang In Choir . Bhe sang in the church choir and at 13 gave up her ambition to be a missionary to China after hearing Mary Garden at a Nashville concert.

“You're not going on the stage, and that's final” Richard L. Moore. She went to Ward-Belmont col-

lege in Nashville, the Wilson-Green |

Grace Moore Died as She ‘Wanted, at Peak of Career

5 Bart Artin paral mn . BTR ed 10 : pat 3 i Sir u \ as | i ? y i ET hb

Greenwich village. Her voice failed, and her friends told her it was not strong enough. Her family tried to get her to come home, : ; Star Is Born - 8he got a minor part in a musical comedy, “Suite Sixteen,” gnd was stranded in Oklahoma. Arriving bhck In New York, she definitely registered at an expensive hotel with only 25 cents in her purse, and

<iwent looking for a job. She was a

substitute for Julia Sanderson in Jerome Kern's “Kitchy-Koo.”

“A star is born,” wrote the late Alexander Wolcott.

Giulio Gatti-Casazza, then general manager of the Metropolitart, and

sald ‘her father, ATC" Bodanzy, conductor, said no.

“I'll-sing in the Met,” Miss Moore sald,

“Bet you don't,” said Otto Kahn,

school of music in Washington, As' the Jmpresario,

A promising student, she sang with! . the great Giovanni Martinelli in “ within two years," she school concert, and a critic wrote, “the lion and the mouse gave nm Voice study, so she took a job in state radio played only solemn mu- Bernard -M. Baruch.

concert.”

The mouse, then 16, borrowed!

some money and ran away. She got a job in the Black Cat cafe in

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| "She went to Europe last June,

“I'll bet I do. Y'Il bet $100 I do, sald” ” She was. told she needed more

| Trving Berlin's “Movie Box Revue.” But she studied voice, and studied hard, Collects Bet She collected the bet: from Mr. Kahn with two weeks to go. A special train from Tennessee brought her relatives, friends, the governor and his party to her debut as Mimi in “La Boheme.” She took 12 curtain calls and stayed two seasons. She sang before six Presidents and six kings, and six foreign countries decorated. her, She is the only American singer whose name is inh.

{scribed on the golden plaque out-

side the opera Comique in Paris. Next came the films, She crashed Hollywood to popularize opera through the moviés. She withdrew after making “A Lady's Morals” and “The New

y | Moon,” and her friends said, “Too

ibad.” She went to Europe, meeting Mr. Parera.on shipboard. They were married in Cannes, France, on July 22, 1931. She swept back to Hollywood and made “One Night of Love.” It won her a gold medal from thé Academy of Arts and Science. She followed with other 8lm triumphs, “Love Me

crue; Forever,” “The King Steps Out,”

“When You're in Love” and “I'll , Take Romance.”

Had Throat Operation | After her death, Temple univer-

Isity hospital officials at Philadel- |

{phia revealed Miss Moore had an {operation six years ago to have a {tumor removed from her throat. {The operation, performed by Dr.

|Chevalier Jackson assisted by his

son, Dr. C. L. Jackson, left her voice unimpaired. But she returned quietly every year to see if the tumor had returned.

t She had planned to return for an engagement at the Metropolitan this winter, but remained with her husb&hd at their Riviera villa after her serious throat operation. She tried to crowd as much nito her 'time as possible, flying from ‘one

She tried to crash into opera, but|

‘Danes Put Lower Limit| OnDC-3Woeight Loads (Continued From Page Qpe)

tify the mangled bodies. So far| | the next of kin who were here had| not been allowed to see the bodies. Miss Moore's’ husband, Valentin Parera, left Cannes on the French Riviera today for Copenhagen. He said his wife's body would be returned. to New York for funeral services. But he was unable to say when,

Crown Prince Gustav Adolf of Sweden was scheduled to journey by train from Stockholm tomorrow to claim the body of his son, second in line for the Swedish throne, He will take it back by warship. The white cross of Denmark flew at half staff today in national mourning, Feeling of national tragédy was evident throughout Denmark. The

t

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~ BROTHER ACT—Herman B. Baruch, currently U. S, ambas. sador to Portugal, has been named ambassador to the Netherlands, He is a brother of famed White House adviser

| sic. Orders for court mourning were | awaited. ‘ Miss Moore was to sing in Stockholm after an appearance here Saturday night. Her French ac-| gill another C-47 of the Philipcompanist, two of her Danish im-| pines Airlines crashed. into Taitam | presarios and Cerda Neumann, Peak, near Hong Kong, killing four ‘noted Danish singer, were among crew members, including a woman. | the dead. It scattered a $6 million cargo of

The plane was on a scheduled g,4 consigned to the Hong Kong run from Amsterdam to Stockholm. bank, the Belgian bank, the Chase |

It had stopped at Copenhagen fOr pang the American Express, the 25 minutes. Its motors were given Bank of East Asia and several salt |a routine check during the halt. | o¢nanies, Passengers Die Instantly ~| Another, carrying U. 8. naval Prince Gustaf Adolf had flowri in |Personnel, crashed at Dartmouth, {the plane from Amsterdam, where N. 8, injuring seven, three seriously. the had been the guest of Prince| On Sunday, a privately owned Bernhard of the Nethérlands, He |C-45 crashed outside Rensselaer, stepped from the plane at Copen-|Ind, killing five salesmen of the hagen to buy a Swedish newspaper |U. 8. Machine Corp., en route to-a and told newsmen, “I have nothing [business meeting. to say, as usually I do not give Tyrone Loses Plane statements to the press.” Miss Moore and her party stepped Movie Actor Tyrone Power lost his aboard the plane shortly before it Single-engined plane at a picture location at Uruapan, Mexico. But

took off. The plane with its 16 pas~ sengers and six crew members rose [Pilot John Jefferies and passenger Ralph Delara received only minor

by way of Rome and killed 12 per= sons, : $5 Million in Gold

from the ground, faltered, plunged into the snow-covered earth and injuries, Mr. Power was not exploded. aboard. , All the passengers died instantly. A freak accident was the crash All were found in the midst of the , a small plane which ripped debris. fo ’ through four spans of 66,000-volt power lines at Miami, Fla. Pio} : : J. A. Ransdale walked away w ‘Major Air Crashes only cuts and bruises.- But he left * ; most of Miami in darkness for a Kill at Least 65 [ime ; At Rochester, Ind—James CarBy UNITED PRESS ruthers, 20, a Purdue university Airline and military air officials student and former army air force {said today the week-end wave of pilot, was killed when his airplane {DC-3 (C-47) or Dakota transport crashed while his parents watched. plane crashes could not be attrib-| Mr. Carruthers was flying low uted to any mechanical defect of over his Rochester home when the |the craft. They served as the work motor failed. The plane hurtled to +herse of -the- armed forces during! the ground some 300 feet away. | — aid’ there Probab Father, Son Killed ey sy gl tere I y WET€! A 54-year-old New Yorker and | more crashes of this type of plane his Wevensolt son were killed -yes- | simply because more of them are in terday when their two-passenger service than any other type of air- plane crashed near Taneytown, Md. | crash. as they were flying home from a {golf ‘tournament in Florida.

Aircraft Corp. built

iy oT Vy in Wife's | 41, Hammond, Ind. a florist who

‘stockings and a black slip. Her | clothing was in disarray but a medi-

of a Chicago retail store,

. 5) FY J Es i - T . nd oi Death [EE ELEREIL wh . hovial §

(Continued From Page One)

went to the swamp to dig ferns. Mrs, Shaysky wore a gray suit,

cal examination showed she had not | been criminally’ attacked. .. Police discovered her identity through a penciled note found in the pocket of her suit. It gave the telephone number of Mrs. Mary Colantonio, ,who- worked with Mrs. Shawsky in the lingerie department

Mrs. Shawsky’s father said: his daughter had left their home, where she and her daughter, Nancy,’5, had been living for three years, Thursday night. oo : Returns for Work She took nothing ‘with her, he said. When she had not returned on Saturday, Wiebrecht reported her absence to the missing persons bureau. Mrs. Colantonio sald, however, Mrs. Shawsky appeared for work Saturday. i Wiebrecht said a man. whose! voice he did not know called the house and asked for Mrs, Shawsky Saturday afternoon. He said he demanded to know the man’s name and what he wanted. “You'd be surprised”. the voice said, and the connection was broken.

totem am tl

Haven Offered For Work Horses

(Continued From Page One)

arrangement would be made with the . Indianapolis Humane office, to select animals “in the worst shape.” These anirhals would be appraised | and, with the owners consent, sold to Mr. and Mrs. 'Wege. . . y Mrs. - Leona Frankfort, humane officer, said she had in mind one blind horse which is currently being hired out to haul junk, and another animal which is sick but is still being worked. Ohter horses quartered in filthy, cramped stables are under consideration. Mrs, Wege said they would also, offer to care for any animal which | might be taken away from owners| because of gross mistreatment. In the past, horse owners arrested | for clubbing or mistréating horses | have been given only fines or jail sentences. y In no case have the animals been taken away from the owners, pre-

city facilities for caring for the horses. :

0 0 C

. BE. 8, cha ar Nettie Hei ors chapte

ov ign nivond. tha te ac n, rightw 8) iE, Mrs. Ruby Bough, a

sumably because of .the lack of:

more than 10,000 of them during

The small plane piled up in a

i {engagement to another, including|ihe war.

many for occupation troops. Then | were sold as surplus property. But she hurried back to her husband. {it was emphasized that none of

After an appearance in “Louise” | them were “war-weary,” or unfit for

Many planes of this type

rock-strewn pasture during a severe rainstorm. Maryland state police identified the two.as Alfred E. Bates, New Hampton, N. Y,, and his son,

TT 1 SAID constipation esuses many Suman discom{orts—headaches, lack of energy and mental dullness being but a few. BUT DON'T WORRY—

at the opera Comique in Paris last; commercial passenger or cargo servmonth she was awarded the cross ice. of the Legion of Honor. She was| Air crashes during the week-end an honorary citizen of Cannes. [took the lives of at least 65 per- . She was survived also by her Sons. These included Grace Moore, | mother, three brothers, Richard, American opera and concert soJames and Martin, and a sister, (Prano, and Prince Gustav Adolf, Mrs. Emily Mahan. dest son of the Swedish crown | prince,

- 22 Are Killed Wants to Give Away! mn. kum Dutch airliner in

William Henry Bates.

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‘ApeFace’Has New Outlook on Life

(Continued From Page One)

turned a friendly child into a sullen anti-social youth. Mrs. Ruge, a comely brunet who works as a riveter in a Chicago radio plant, wept a little too and said, “the millions of tears my boy and I have shed are forgotten.” David, who was acquired a new personality since Dr. Smith assured him a normal appearance was possible, was full of excited plans. “After I leave the hospital, I'm going to settle down to my job as a machinist in Chicago and go to school nights so I can help repay my mother for all the trouble I've given her,” he said, “Maybe, now, I'll get myself a girl, too,” he said, adding without bitterness, “it will be the first one.” David was arrested after his employer reported the extortion note to police. He was placed on probation and the case attracted wide spread attention and sympathy. A Clyde, O.; industrialist offered to pay for the operation and many other persons wrote to the youth, offering help. He entered the hospital early this month and was operated on Jan, 15. His morale had kept high by a daily flood of letters. Mrs. Ruge, on: leave of absence,

said she would stay with David until|"

he gets out of the.hospital and is

{ready to return to his pob.

‘She was divorced from her husband more than a year ago, David

{was their only child.

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bers when a band of mer room. They h Hilo i The 6-foot il hi hi Wik ad Tee he was married to Cathleen | only daughter of Capt. and Cecil Fitzherbert of Ireland. An automobile beMeved to . been used by the kidnapers Ia was found at Ramat Gan, north of} Tel Aviv. It was in that area , the Gruner holdup took place. Troops were expected to search all ‘of Tel Aviv's 18,000 buildings and screen the 200,000 Jewish resis dents. 8 An anonymous call to police head- | quarters here today said: i | “Halt all these searches in North |" Jerusalem. The house where Collins is held is heavily mined. If} you don’t halt the searches, it will] be blown up.”

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