Telling Where to Dig Is Test in Potts Story

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yet.

Rush correctly identified

a

city's present sweep against geles homicide men had carefully Guessing why Rush would conmaking no attempt to upset it molesters of children, told poavoided prompting Rush to imfess Cleveland murder, true or lice that he and Rush had done prove his story by their quesa homosexual act once. a fake, Scarborough and Lt. tions. A. G. Hertel said some confess photo of the scene at the end of Rush had been working at a They were trying to let his the Madison Avenue transit line, sanitarium in La Crescenta, near own memory grow more vivid, one crime to cover up another. said Gackowski. That is where here, before he was arrested as he went over the episode. They confess one crime they he insists he got off a street car drunk. Rush's change to "blue over-think they can beat, said the dewith the girl and walked down He got fired from that job!alls" and then "blue pants with tectives, to divert suspicion in into a gully with her. when he set his mattress aflameja belt" and then to "a striped one on which they might rear a smoking while lying, alcoholT-shirt" were all spontaneous, soaked, on his bed. said Homicide Sergt. Larry ScarGackowski said that Los Anborough of the Los Angeles force.

Sex perversion evidence against Rush came to light here. Another man, rounded up in the

TUL

Qualit

of 10

sure conviction.

Some Want Free Trip Some confess a crime in a state where they prefer the way prisoners are treated, they added.

And there are always some who simply want a free trip back to old haunts, Cleveland detectives suggested days ago.

Rush, alias Ruszkowski, haunted Cleveland's skid rows from 1941 until recently, with some time off every so often for a month or two at the workhouse.

His last address in Cleveland in 1954 was on Pear Avenue N. W. That is a block north of the Madison car line on which he says, he took a little girl to a ravine where, when she began to cry, he struck her, killed her and hid her body under dirt and leaves.

C. M. BROWN RETIRES NEW YORK, Dec. 14 (P)Clarence M. Brown, chairman of Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. since 1931, retired today. He was named honorary chairman and will continue as a board member. Harry B. Higgins, company president since 1944, will succeed Brown. David G. Hill, vice president in charge of glass manufacturing was elected president, succeeding Higgins.