Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1952 — Page 3
es ce Ey TATE ea TT ly a bt & { . 3 8 2 a] § > > : - f a vi - | yams. THURSDAY, J JAN. 31; 1953 _THE INDIAN APOLIS' TIMES rv] = PAGE 3 ———
> Rugs plode
Mother's Crackup Blamed For Slaughter of 3 “Children
Ends Her Life!
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4 Turn on Lig 6:30 .m.-7:30 1h. High Court Loop Upset :=£ | InCar After on Light Between 6:30 p. m.-7:30 p.m. Weighs Bible By Trail of
suk | Killing Tots |
rk satety | nr a pre | In Schools Horsemeat st into i : | Bil, into | HUNTINGBURG, Jan. 31 § | or Gite Pre ae park falls —+Authorities said today that fess | W ASHINGTON, Jaz. 31 : The, : CHICAGO, Jan. 31 — The naplace of religion in public schools tion's meat packing center was the ries an attractive mother killed is before. the Supreme Court re as ambridge her three small children, then| again. meat investigation Which has led 8. : ! took her own life because she| The high bench scheduled ar- to the closing of one of its most ——— ] feared she would be committed. guments today on these two famous Loop restaurants. — : to a mental institution. questions: Dr. Herman Bundesen, head of i The bodies of Mrs. Virginia | Is it unconstitutional for public | the board of health, yesterday i Baird Rudy's children, Sally, 10; ent school children to recite the! closed the Blackhawk Restaurant * i Kilty, 1, and James Jr. b, were Lord's Prayer and listen to Bible pending an investigation. He i found in her car on Ind. 161, east] | readings from the Old Testa- said inspectors took samples of of Gentryville, yesterday. after-| — ment? meat from the Blackhawk and i noon, { | Is it unconstitution&l for public another restaurant and . found i The 38-year-old mother died a ™ schools to release children for evidence of horse meat in them. i few hours later in Stork Hospital| one hour each week so that they SAVED BY LADY—-Hellmuth “We wouldn't have closed them : here, They lived “in Owensboro, | ‘may receive religious instruction v for just a trace,” Dr. Bundesen Ky. | somewhere outside school prop- Schoenfeldt (above), 44, ‘ grin: said State police ™aid Mrs. Rudy] erty?’ ning through a face full of burn ‘Laugh It ofr Eh aller ola i ones Indjana Attorney General d piniment: iy a das. Lady The other establishment closed piste on the dimdren and wer] |Emett MeManamon has Hed a ( elow), saved his lite Dy Dark: |was the Streamliner Restaurant self, : : brief with the Supreme Court. ing and licking his face whef in the Loop, not to be confused wITEouss sail ‘she ery a arte Bg en rongious a. fr spread through a Mimneap- with “other restaurants of th “They have found me out and dl : oh : olis tenement building. Seven. same name in other sections of are planning to send me to an bs Lo : teen persons died in the blaze. the city. t Taxpayers Object The Blackhawk, which is .feainstitution for treatment. This is, BE } J ‘ a oR Tan best for all, It’s already done . . . Objections to the prayer -and ag 3 a ' over gs al tell daddy and mother to forgive a . : i Bible readings were voiced by It Off, no pen as i me if they can.’ This is the way . . . your porch should , .. be lighted tonight . . . to help fight polio. - two .New Jersey. taxpayers, yesterday morning. It was signed “Virginia.” Donald R. Doremus, Rutherford, Signs on a many A beauty shop operator {and Mrs. Anna E. Klein, Haw- oa y close g Owensboro * said Mrs. Rudy ett Hos ita i t ( H hi D th t 3 thorne, mother of a school child. y Manager Donald I. Roth said P there about 10:30 a. m. after hav- Pp! eq risis roug eq 0 The New Jersey state law re- J y : les ing her hair washed. The beauti-| the Blackhawk had been closed
quiring Old Testament readings The borrowed railroad loc- exposure probably shortened their) Today Dr. Williams freely ad-/was notified of the deaths at the has begn on the books 35 years; despondent and spoke only when ie lives.” mitted that “16 deaths are tooitime they occurred. the one permitting the Lerd's she was questioned. omotives that puffed emer- | The health officer, Dr. W. R. many for one month” but said] «pr Williams said those three Prayer, 48 years. 5 i Ruy 8 car, punciured by gency heat into Richmond Taylor, said the death certificates five happened before the heating patients ‘were very sick and in- The Somiainants Javed in ullet holes, was spotted by a gtate Hospital during a boiler had been filed with the State emergency. (their appeal to the high court
passing motorist, Lattie Warren. | The heating plant broke down Valid ‘before the heating plant that devotions of this kind show The car was stopped in the cen- Preakdown last month, failed to Board of Health. eight days before Christmas. The broke down,” Arthur Campbell, 1a preference for certain religious
ter of the highway. He drove on Save the lives of three elderly! ‘As far as I'm concerned,” Dr. institution was chilly for about Gov. Schricker's executive secre- beliefs. The New Jersey supreme
and-reported to police, patients. Taylor said today, “there won't eight days and temperatures initary, said. “He said they were! court held that the laws merely Spencer County Coroner Roscoe! Their deaths were mainly due be any further investigation. ©. 0 dropped to 50 de-|near death and that the break- show acceptance by the state of|
Metcalf said a vordied of murder to exposure to cold, the Wayne We've officially reported the grees. But Dr. Williams said tem-|down might have stepped up théir [the existence of God. and suicide was returded. County health officer reported deaths. It would be up to the jo. tires in rooms occupied by| departure a day or two."
tires patients was probably near! Tee Escapes Reformatory
7 Hy. / clan said Mrs. Rudy appeared yoy tell you what this does to us,” he said. “This has never happened in-the 32 years
we have been in business,” Expects OK
Mr. Roth said he expected a {“clean bill of health” from city {inspectors and added that the {restaurant buys all its meat from |reputable dealers. | “We've been grinding our.own {chucks of choice or prime beef {for hamburgers for 32 years,” he lasserted. | Federal, state and local officials are investigating reports of the {sale of huge supplies of horsemeat {allegedly sold for the adulteration of beef and pork.
al) >
x
Some Require It
The, American Civil Liberties. Union, intervening on behalf of|
RE today. prosecutor or other law enforce-! Report Ex-Premier -- “A 75-year-old woman died Dec, Ment officials to make any fur-
ther investigation.” 3 : 20. Two other patients, a woman | ® railroad locomotive as Of Syria Assassinated 5 104 ‘man 6 years old, died| The death certificates signed De v PENDLETON, Ind. Jan. 31{ihe objectors, argued that New)
CAIRO, Egypt, Jan. 31 (UP)~— two days later. by Dr. L. A. Laird, chief physi- 200ked up to the heating system 0) “Walter L. Graham, 23, |Jersey “has made man's relation, The Cairo newspaper El Ahram| Hospital Superintendent Dr. cian at the hospital. {during the breakdown. Two boil- IMadison, escaped today from the (0 J God the concern 9 el ch hi Il F reported today that former Syrian Paul Williams said the three were! The deaths were among 16 re- ers have been repaired and the Indiana Reformatory, where he! Be ten besides New Jersey andl urcni aces Premier Nazem El Koudsi had critically ill with maladies that ported for December. Two of | Hospital now {s warm enough, was serving a 2-to-5-year term the 20% esuies Columbia Ea IC fid Vv been assassinated in an outbreak could not be cured. them were due to pneumonia, the Dr. Williams said. A third boiler for second degree burglary. Au-| lrequire Bible reading .in the] on ence ote in Damascus. Fires have broken “They might have been ex- report said. is epected to be repaired by mid-| thorities said Graham failed to| CJ!
cessories in ly detailed,
own, green,
covers, desk out in the Syrian capital, the pected to die within a short time,” Of these 16 deaths. 11 occurred February. return from a work detail at the Schools include Alabama, Arkan-| Qn Austerity Plan : § y : : sas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, 'Fi Kills 5000 Chickens newspaper said. Dr. Williams said. “I felt the after the breakdown. | Gov. Schricker's office said he|dairy barn. {Idaho, Kentucky, Maine, Massa-| s re 3 : chusetts, Pennsylvania, Tennes-! LONDON, Jan. 31 (UP)-—Brit-} WE ODT] Ela. 31 - see and New York. ish Prime Minister Winston) CRA hick rished yes Five others — Indiana, Iowa, {Churchill faces a parliamentary About S000 ehickens pe y
terday when fire destroyed a Je2neas, Norn Daltols Sad Okla vote of confidence today on his/prooder house on the George
| ing permissible. The Bible is also|Conservative government's super-|Swinford farm Regs here. 2k {read in public schools of many|austerity program to cure Brit-/Swinford said the ee
states where statutes ard silent|ain’s economic ills. [chickens were worth $4000. He ju » a vote of confidence. age are needed for The Times seemed assured of Liberal sup-| {5:15 p.m. at the Coliseum. They|Party, wil pose the “no confi-
ion the subject. The Labor opposition party stamens damage 30 he building yesterday denounced the Consery-|2nd equipment at $: lce-O-Rama A vote of non-confidence would |, mean the fall’ of the Conserva-| Ice-O-Rama which will be held|Port which would guarantee his. Thursday night, Mar. 13, in the|majority in parliament. should take their skates to the/dence” vote in the Zovernment| Coliseum. {at the conclusion of today’s de-
The night
the town can't get to sleep
LITTLE LIZ
ative proposed cuts in the welfare Calis Adults | tive government, but this is not Fair Grounds Coliseum. Former Prime Minister Clem- |
{state and challenged Mr. Church-| Adults and skaters above school{®XPected since Mr. Churchill] They will sign up Sunday at/ent R. Attlee, leader of the Labor |
Soretionss you con tell by look Here are other tryouts and re-|bate—the second day of discus- ing at a girl what kind of o post
{hearsals at the Coliseum this sion of the new program. | she is going to have. « gua’ jweek-end: ~~ i | Saturday, 8 a.m.—Tryouts for jall ages through 12 years who did inot sign up last week and relhearsals for those of the same lage group already registered. Sunday, 5:15 p. m.—Tryouts for {those 13 years old through high {school grades and rehearsals for {the same age group who signed lup last week. On Saturday the Ice-O-Rama | skaters will enter the Coliseum on {the north side and Sunday through
STRAUSS
SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW
<
|the south side. Be Sure | Skaters, whether registered or to read : {not, who seek solo or specialty the P, §.
-
Au OVER TOWN people lie awake . . . when a child is lost. Hearts stand still, not alone with sympathy, but with the thought, “There, but for the grace of God, goes mine!” And greatly as the searchers need the newspaper to find
out theudetails, the rest of us in our Suspanss need the newspaper even Hore.
When the lost is found, na matter how we first hear the -
news, we snatch up the paper to get.the whole warming story. Every day — in milder measure, perhaps — there are many
stories that affect everyone of us. Some pieces of news are.
told nowhere .else. Others are never told in full except in the newspaper. You never know when you get up in the morning what the newspaper will bring you. One day’s big news may come from Washington + +» another's from the used car lot down the
|
block. You only know that every day there will be things vou
can't afford to miss. So you read the newspaper every day. And so does everybody else.
* Why do advertisers spend more of their money in newspapers than in any other form of advertising? Simply because everybody reads the newspaper every day. So why advertise only to fractions of the people?
Radio and TV programs reach only” ‘fractions of anybody's market — sport fans, homemakers, kids, or whatever. And even they can’t all listen at the time a commercial is broadcast. Magazines reach only fractions of a market. For each one appeals to some people — not to others. The Newspaper is created fresh every day for everybody. * Only the newspaper is first with the most news . . . first with the most people... first with the most advertisers!
_|Service Bureau, at PLaza 5551.
(parts in the two-hour show, can arrange for tryouts by telephoning Art Wright, Times Public)
The gala show will raise money! for charity through admission ticket sales to the public. An-| nouncement of the date for open-| ing of ticket Sales and how to ob-| tain them will be made shortly in The Times.
A WEATHER FORECAST
Restaurant Man * Swallows ‘Toothpick
An Indianapolis restaurant owner is quite ready to agree
There's a couple of months (almost) until Spring makes its
with: Emily Post that the use of debut. toothpicks is definitely not proper. . |” Pari Rock, 36, owner of the FY There will be sleet and snow and {Wayne Lunch, 801 Ft. Wayne sub-zero—mixed in with
Ave, swallowed a toothpick early today in his restaurant. It lodged’ crosswise in his throat and gave him a bad time until removed by a General Hospital ambulance doctor. Mr. Rock suffered a slightly) sore throat.
warmish zephyrs—and benign sunshine!
But the outlook for all weather will be more pleasant within the comfort of outercoats such as are here—and there will be no "squalls" on the part of the wallet—for many of the coats are clearance priced! Especially you should see the Deep Fleece and the hefty. Tweed Great Coats!
Volunteer Collectors |To Aid March of Dimes
| Volunteers from women’s clubs are prepared to call and pick up your contributions to the March of Dimes tonight. If no one has called at your home by 8 p. m. to! day, call Imperial 6401. A volunteer will rush to your house for the contribution. { Telephone Answering Service. | 325 Bankers Trust building, has donated its Yacilities to handle the calls, Calls will be received between 8 and 10 p. m. tonight,
There are some swell Tweed Topcoats—that are speceacular at their price—$45
For a nice all-around coat—there's a Rayon Gabardine with an all woo] zipper lining at $26
y Second Floor—45 ceconds from : ? the Washington Street Datrten » _ . : via escalator . ' : | 0. ; = » . - ~The newspapers always first with the most Soe To a yrs: | STR AUSS & 0. ‘ : J ¢ | row: . . $! . : ’ ! ’ $s Soe ! | NOBLE ST. from Virginia | ae { Ave. to Maskachusetts Ave.
THE MAN'S STORE
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