Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1951 — Page 9
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FRIDAY, NOV. 9, 1951 . , "Her Death Certificate Already Signed— ~ : —
‘Woman, 60, Pronounced as Dead. ‘Regains’ Life on Way to Morgue
By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 9—A 60-year-old woman who had been pronounced dead 10 hours began gasping for breath as her “body” was being carried into the city ‘morgue. Physicians sald today she had a 50-50 chance to live. Mrs. Theresa Butler was in critical condition at San Francisco ‘Hospital from what physicians sald was an overdose of barbiturates that almost: stopped her breathing and caused her blood pressure to fall almost to zero. Her condition so closely resembled death that a doctor had even signed a death certificate, “The next 24 to 36 hours will, tell the story,” said a hospital physician, “She can go either way.”
| {
Found in Bathtub A maid found Mrs, Butler lying in a half-filled bathtub in her apartment yesterday. Mrs. Butler had lived there since the death of her husband, a San *Jose hospital superintendent, 10 ‘months ago. The ‘apartment house manager
Search Widens For Runaways
By United Press PORTSMOUTH, Va. Nov. 9— Police combed this city today for
h ay New York children,| : oid again after turn- Guy Gabrielson and his Demo-|Pehind the desk.
THE INDIANAPOLIS. TIMES
| i» » > Television Decides Bluff Scares Away
* . { Convention Site | | CHICAGO, Nov. 9 (UP)—Delegates to the 1952 Republican and {Democratic national conventions {will be cool, crampéd and camera-/ jconscious, Republican National Chairman
Would-Be Bandits
A 54-year-old night clerk's bluff saved an Indianapolis hotel some cash early today. Two men armed with knives told William L. Gooding, a clerk at the Seminole Hotel, 920 N. Alabama 8t., “this is a holdup.” Mr. Gooding reached quickly There was no
ing up at their sister's old apart. cratic counterpart, Frank E. Mc-|8un there, but the bandits ap-
ment here.
The youngsters, Ronald, 14, Judith, 12, and Leroy Quillen, 10, left home Wednesday. with $20.
An unidentified woman now living in an apartment previously occupied by Mrs. Virginia Fitzgerald sald the three children of Mr. and Mrs. George Quillen told her last night they were going to sleep in a shack and leave here today. “I don't know why but I think they will morning,” the woman said. She said she had tried to frighten the children so they would go
be back here in the
Kinney, yestérday selected the In-| ternational Amphitheatre nestling alongside Chicago's sprawling]
stockya s the site for next summer's political get-to-gethers. :
The deciding factor admittedly was television coverage. Radio and television represehtatives?argued strongly for the International Amphitheatre rather!
than the Chicago Stadium because! }
|{it provided more space for their jequipment. | They said that if the stadium {were used, they would have to build a special building to house
back to New York. Police began | their equipment at a cost of be-
a search of the city shortly after midnight. and said they had looked into almost every possible place where the trio may have sought shelter. The Pennsylvania Railroad had
summoned a physician, who examined the “body” and called the ceroner. “The body was cold,” said the physician. “There was no detectahle pulse, no reflex of the eye, sand no heart beat that could be picked up by a stethoscope.” ’ He estimated Mrs. Butler had beén dead about 10 hours. Deputy Coroner James leonard examined her, and noted there was no rigor mortis. He believed Butle she had not been dead long , However, rigor mortis is some-
«times delayed if a body has been A Nerve of Steel—
“in warm water
* - eso, Girl, 14, Pulls Man, Boy ‘certificate after Mr. Leonard exTo Safety From Icy Pond
i
|
AFTER DOCTOR Proviounced her "dead," Mrs. Theresa
r receives oxygen and blood plasma.
amined Mrs. Butler The coroner's’ ambulance took
its northbound Norfolk and Cape Charles train stopped and searched at Pocomoke City, Mad., but train crews said they were not aboard. A check of bus terminals revealed no half-fare tickets to New York had been sold within the past 24 hours.
1952 License Plate Tabs Ready Jan. 2
Secretary of State Leland Smith said today Indiana's first auto license tabs, which are expected to -save about $225,00Q a year, will go on ‘sale throughout the state on Jan. 2. The black and yellow 1952 tabs. to be used instead of full-size plates, will fit along one edge of the present plates. Mr. Smith
tween $50,000 and $100,000.
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parently thought there was. They ran to the street sped away in their car, Mr. Gooding told detectives.
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said the numbers on the tabs will Mrs. Butler to the city morgue NEW LONDON, Minn., Nov. 9 By inching her way ‘back she was not necessarily be the same as two hours later, after Mr. Leonard (UP A tiny 14-year-old girl able to pull the boy out. the ‘full-size plates. did a number of errands around pulled “4 man and a small boy. Meanwhile. Mr. Fernelius was|——town. As the “corpse” was moved from the icy waters of a large informed by his wife of the mis-
onto a stretcher to be carried into ‘the building, Mr. leonard and Police Officer James Gleason avere astonished to see her stir. Then they realized Mrs. Butler was gasping. The two men looked
PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE
pond yesterday after they broke hap and rushed out to help. He through the ice into 15 feet of ventured too far out and the ice water. around the hole gave way. Flesland, a freshman| “It was so cold I could hardly high school here, was move,” he said. “I had heavy quiet as she explained in a mat- work shoes on and they Xxept
Connie
at the
. r-of-fac roic 8 had pulling me down.” at one another and immediately ter-of-fact voice how she ) rushed her to an De Bos rescued Jimmy Evanson, 11, and’ “When my hands started getpital ” ~ John Fernelius from the frigid ting numb, I knew the only way I
- waters of the mill pond. was going to get out of there was Theta ga Yen, Blood under an She expressed regret that she if Connie helped he,” he said. oxygen mask and given blood hadn't been able to save James ‘Finally Made It’
eterson, 15, who drowned. transfusions. Her blood pressure. Peterson sald she was skating on Connie said young Evanson which had been so low it could the pond when she saw young held her skates while she lay not be measured, began climbing Evanson and young Peterson down on the ice and pushed the slowly, plunge through the soft ice. stick out to Mr. Fernelius. The pulse fluttered feebly but “TI managed
and
: % to b it : steadily. Her breathing became Grabs Hockey Stick work myself up oe heavier io more noticeable and her skin Connie skated rapidly to shore ice” he said. ‘I got my chest *” warmed. and grabbed a hockey stick from on the ice. rested for a minute. : She was given five pints Of the hands of a boy who Was then finally made it all the way.” ; blood plasma. By 6 o'clock last standing watching the scene. 8he “If she had got frightened or evening, her condition
became rushed back to the hole, flattened lost her nerve I'd be dead right ‘well enough so she could be trans- herself on the thin ice and pushed now,” ferred to Ban Francisco hospital (the stick out to young Evanson.
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he said, Connie's 15-year-old brother, Phillip, said he didn't know his sister was a hero until he heard’ the town fire whistle start blowIng to signal! a disaster.
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much who did it, but why is what puzzles me The window was broken late vesterday while he and his wife were away. “It must have been deliberate,” Mr. Kasper said. “The window is 40 feet back from the sidewalk. Whoever threw the bottle had to come up in the yard.”
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