Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1951 — Page 6

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SUNDAY, OCT. 7, 1951.

THE INDIANAPOI#S TIMES __ ; . | That's tife~~a gamble, There was ot : BD y ille ‘Famil 3 A Rapist Tells en Peas f Drivers Mauled Ridoevive tome | . £ {lucky. One time, a cop had hold . op . | . His Story and ~~ = cos vos wo {Jy Picket Ling [Red Poll Event

|his gun out. row, the Burton family of Ridge-

" 1 His Back round | “There wasn't any reason why At Harvester Plant ville has won top honors ii Red 1 picked on any particular wom-, ) 8 Poll judging at the International

. , R 9

PAGE 6

Father Worried by Medical Bills Kills Wife, Wounds Self

"Continued From Page One walked

| { ‘ oi lan. I don't know why I did it.| Dairy Exposition. | By United Press In the junior Red Poll show

time. I don't know why. Maybe Later, I could remember, but I| pp WAYNE, Oct.’ 6—Deputy ver order. 15-year-old Wanda II didn't krfow no better. Maybe didn’t feel good or bad either sheriffs were removed from the p. 0. exhibited the grand cham|it was the gang I was with. Maybe way. You can't help what hap- International Harvester Co. plant pion female, Laddies Diana. The

Continued From Page One

remained stiff, and he with a noticeable limp.

And another problem faced y he headaches,” he said. ens after it's done. tonight following completion of ‘Wyatt—one that seemed bigger. It yas t agar : P - ily 8 g . P ‘hich Same COW won the open class or ta i over Pretty soon 1 was spending But I never got a thrill while @n equipment transfer Which o. 4 championship in the Red Doctor bills alone totaled ove la lot of time in Juvenile Court. I was doin’ it, I wasn't mad at touched ou a disturbance h Poll show last year when ex: our men were hurt ,;,,i.q by Wanda's father, 8. P.

[The probation officer got tired the world or anything and I Which lof me coming back. He sent me t0 didn't care who the women were. slightly. la doctor who gave me 3 lot of i The deputies were sent to the

$1000, and the young father just

couldn't pay them very: fast. Burton. And Wanda's 10-year-old

sister Melba showed the. grand

“third i the abdomen:

<

Owed More Than $3500 ola oh we Earning only about $50 a week [tests and asked a lot of questions. ont know exactly how Vy ; as a machinist at Mitchell & Stott II guess he told the tin many women I tpok. When they Plant early today after Jour champion female in last year's Machine Tool Co. Wyatt still {officer T was all right. caught me the first time, jdfivess for. the Rtorth Amerinan junior Red Poll contest. owed more than $900. And there |" “When I started to high school, cleaned up. their books (police = Lites Vee may NY ey a 42 was a mortgage on the attractive someone told the kids I was bad records) to make them happy. Bikey Fae s through . YESTERDAY the reserve grand four-room house they had bought. land not to go near me. That made . “I was convicted and I put in pi gt {nes poi transfer engimesr. champion female in the jufior * This preyed on Wyatt's mind. me feel bad. I quit and started some time, then got out on ng Suipment Hom 1ab "Red Poll show was Reel Rose When his mother, Mrs, Mary | working. parole. When I got out, I didn't plant to a new test aboratory. mary, exhibited by Sam Olson Wyatt of 1030 Albany Ave, visited “Anyhow, I was running with want my family to be ashamed The Fiche! linesse Were Sot xp of Altona, Ill, who also won the him yesterday afternoon, she older guys. I got to drinking. of me Anvmore. yesterday as a protest to Nort showmanship award. The junior , American's hiring its own workers champion female wis shown by

noticed ‘the gnawing worry “He was all tensed up. He kept building up like he was ready to pop. I told him to go see a doctor.” Took Revolver Along When his mother left, Wyatt asked his wife to go for a ride

with him. Their two daughters, Joyce. 5, and Judy, 3, were at a children's ' birthday party

the neighborhood wag free to go. Wyatt took along a 38-caliber revolver, which he placed in a holster strapped under his shirt. They drove into Decatur Township and stopped on the High Low Road, about a half-mile west of 4000 S. Harding St. There, according to state police, Wyatt fired three -shots into his wife. One bullet entered her head, one in the left breast and the

Stumbled From Car Then Wyatt turned the gun on himself. firing two shots into his chest, state police said. Although gravely wounded, he . stumbled out of their 1950 car and reeled ‘along the highway Four people in two cars were driving past when they saw him. They were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shipley of R. R..4 and Mr. and Mrs. James J. Hunter, 4717 Roena Ave, i They told state police Wyatt said: “Take my gun and finish the, job. Shoot me.” Instead, one of them kicked the gun from his hand. : At General Hospital, Wyatt told state police: “I thought a lot of her. “I've been pretty nervous the last couple months, and I went all to pieces.” Didn't Discuss Shooting State police filed a charge of investigation for murder against! him. | Given blood transfusions, Wyatt | was expected to live but his con-| dition remained critical. Although conscious most of the time, he did not discuss the shooting, even with his mother. Questioned again by

anything except going for a ride. | News of the tragedy was kept

night. They remained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Miller, 1448 8. Moreland, where Sandra

! career

Pu Meenachs Cast Eye At Doctor's Birthplace

Continued From Page One are Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Meenach,j neighbors of the babies. Since arrival of the five brown - eyed, brown - haired bouncing boys, all born in St. Vincent's Hospital and delivered by Dr. Lybrook, pills have

gone Practically untouched

the Meenach house, said the once ailing Mrs. Meenach. “We have to be healthy. My

husband is coach of our young

basketball team. I'm the referee. We're busy.” Twins are a rarity in the

Meenach family. Mrs. Meenach, former Mary Hawks, is one of three daughters of Mr. and Mrs. William Hawks, 3132 E.

36th St. 8 2-8

MARY MEENACH was a girl for awhile, employed in Sigma Nu Fraternity state. offices here, but homemaking long was her goal. Often the slight 120 pound mothef, whose babies weighed from 6 to 9 pounds is asked if she feels like Mrs. Dionne, Her last vacation? Meenach laughed. It was her honeymoon. First things come first—family, the Hovey St. home they recently bought, a family car, and making dreams come true for her husband, night driver for Film Transit

Mrs.

Co. He wants to be a photographer. Until then, she said, they'll see an occasional u.. wat movie, romp with the children on the floor at play hour, and be content. “The women who don’t stay hore and have -families--are-the ones missing something. I'm not missing a thing,” she said. : “We don't expect to add any Presidents to our ‘team’ but if one arrives, he'll be welcome,” Mrs. Meenach mused- as she bottied the formula, and looked in on her sighing sleepflushed five.

Psychologists Help Boss Pick Able Employees

By .United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 6—Will a big, {robust fellow make a better shop {foreman than a little guy with a {long nose, shifty eyes and a limp (handshake? Drs. Roy A. Doty and Vernon G. Schaefer, industrial psycholo- | gists who are hired by big com{panies to determine such things,

appeared very much in love and/said in an interview that the odds

were a pleasant couple.

are with the big man, but the

“Wyatt was a fine man and a little guy shouldn't be sold short.

good worker,” said Mr. Williams, | ? : ; state for whom Wyatt formerly worked or shortcuts in ‘determining empolice, he said he didn’t remember|,¢ the Williams Carbide Tool & ployee qualification.

Die Co.

They said there are no tricks

They don’t agree with some bosses who think

/ But they had also noticed hisithey can “spot” a good man on from the Wyatts’ children last worry about money difficulties insight.

recent ‘months.

Relatively new on the American

That tallied with the opinion of business scene, industrial psychol-

Wyatt's mother, his brother, Wil-| ogists assist with the employee

Miller celebrated her eighth birth- liam, and other relatives who| placement problems of a growing

day. The Millers and other neighbors, Mr:.’and Mrs. Harry A. Williams, 1502 S. Moreland, were shocked and surprised by the tragedy. They all said the Wyatts

came to the hospital last night. | number of firms.

The psycholo-

Besides her two children and | gists feel that the job of finding

brother of Indianapolis.

husband, Mrs. Wyatt is survived| out who can do what requires a by her mother, Mrs. Estella Coop! great deal more mental exploraof Kentucky, and a sister .and| tion than the average boss has

time or tools for.

Pr rT t——

oes,

Everybody TO THE

sn

benefits . .. Everybody gives

COMMUNITY FUND

Sears, Roebuck and Co.

RIGHT OR WRONG SIDE UP, WE'RE READING—Mrs. Robert Meenach listens. Son Bobby, I (left). Twins, Kurt and Karl, three months, and Gene and Dean, 2.

Welfare Board Re-Elects

| Kinman and Wilfred after women. 1 | Bradshaw have been re-elected I'd think there's nobody home. I should be in a mental hospital.”

|president and vice-president, re- Then’if I'd find a woman there

[spectively, of the State Board of I'd.... Public Welfare.

to the board early this year by day. I could run and jump pretty | Gov. Schricker. He is an attorney good. jand director of the personne {relations department of the Indi- all of them. |ana Chamber of Commerce.

OPEN EVERY MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK (™".7:2™)

Pretty soon I was getting black. out spells. I'd wake up and think IT had a nightmare or something. {The sides of my head would be

“I got a job, but they laid me instead of using Harvester em-

off when they checked my record. I went looking for jobs every-day. | But

everybody wanted to know

ployees for the transfer work. The sheriff's office said it was not known whether pickets or part of a crowd milling about the

some boys and me had a little plant mauled the drivers. There

Leo M.

“That's when me and the others started breaking guess that's when I started going “1 I guess sometimes going to do to keep me in prison. said

“I could get into houses pretty Mr. Kinman is from Val- good. I always liked sports when paraiso and is a newspaperman. I was a little kid. I used to think

knocking. I couldn't remember everything.” Where I worked last. One night He wiped cold sweat from his head. ? dope. I blankéd out.

“When I came to. I remembered

into places. I d had another woman.

don't see what good it's

Next: A story.

child victim's sad

Anderson Indians Win

Mr. Bradshaw was appointed I'd get into the Olympics some Cross-Country Meet

That's 1 couldn't catch me. I could outrun son swamped the field in the third in appliances, cars, furniture or

why the

police

VINCENNES, Oct. 6—Ander-

‘annual Old Post cross-country

“It was all a game of chance. meet here yesterday.

were no arrests. The pickets also were removed when the transfer was completed - North American spokesmen 11 trucks were tampered with ¢ .rlier. They said sugar was poured in fuel tanks, -tires deflated, ignition wires ripped out and headlights broken.

| YOUR OWN COMMON SENSE guides you to The Indianapolis Times Classified Section when you're in the market for bargains Household needs. See the WantAds NOW!

Edwin Snodgrass of. Frankfort, The dairy cattle judging resumes tomorrow with the junior Guernsey, junior Jersey and senior Red Poll shows, The grand champion in the junior Red Poll contest will enter the senior event,

Man Struck by Car On Kentucky Ave. Bridge

A man was critically hurt last night when he walked. into the middle of Kentucky Ave. bridge and was run over by a car. Clyde L. Gardner of the Salvation Army Hotel, 127 W. Georgia St., had both legs broken. Driver of the car was a school teacher, Mrs. Virginia Tileston, 43, RR 3. :

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