Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1943 — Page 28

[Hines Advises

~ Practical

a

3 = : pany subsidiary, its

The Soap of

Beantiful | legion. Women Administrator H

into Hospital Isn't

ans’ hospital was suggested by the Terre Haute American Legion. The, suggestion also was supported by the Indiana department of -the

Now.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 29—Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, head of the veterans’ administration, today in § formed Senator Raymond E. Willis (R. Ind) that the $30,000,000 Vigo = ordnance plant cannot be used as & veterans’ rehabilitation hospital. Built and abandoned by the gov-

ernment, after operation for a short by a Continental Can Com+

use as a veter-

ines, however,

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wrote the | following comment to {Senator Willis regarding the proposal: { “A preliminary inquiry indicates { that it does not appear likely at the | present time that the veterans’ administration has a need for this ! property or that the property is particularly adapted for use for hospital

purposes. “However, the matter is being re-

pitalization tion of the technical committee at one of its forthcoming meetings | with a view of determining whether |

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any of the government agencies can | make use of the property.” | Gen. Hines Also is chairman of {the federal board of hospitalization.

TINSMITH HERE, DIES

| Prank Owen Richardson, Indianapolis tinsmith, died yesterday at {his home, 2118 Sugar Grove ave, after a month's illness. He was 59. | Born. in Columbia, Tenn, Mr, I Richardson had lived here 38 years. | {He had been employed at Ft. Har-| ison for the last 12 years. | Survivors are a son, Frank How-| lard Richardson, . Danville; one | brother, Harry Richardson, Brownsiville, -Tek.. one sister, Mrs. Archie | Mobley, Plainfield, and three grand- { children. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p. m, tomorrow at the Conkle { funeral home, 1934 W. Michigan st. Burial will be in Crown Hill,

'REV. PEOPLES TAKES OVER PULPIT SUNDAY

| Cleo W. Blackburn, who is retir- | ing from the, pastorate of the { Second Christian church, will give | the clrarge té the congregation at { the installation .of his successor, the { Rev. R. H. Peoples, Sunday at 3 | P. m. Mr. Blackburn is the director {of Flanner House, Negro social | settlement. | Addresses of welcome will be delivered by Dr. Howard J. Baum- | gartel of the church ‘federation, the Rev, W, H. Taylor of Baltimore, Dr. | Robert M. Hopkins of the United | Christian Missionary society and the | Rev. Robert Lewis, Dr. Ephraim | howe will charge ‘the minister. Dr. | E. L. Day will preside and Dr, C. H.

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Trapped by His Own Alibi, Lonergan Confesses Killing

NEW YORK, Oct. 20 (U. P.).— admitted the whole story was false | Alter the armistice.

ferred to the federal board of hos-| Wayne Lonergan, calm and unper-| _ne just and will receive atten-|turbed, was held under a formal|, .. 1.4 he killed his estranged

charge of murder today—the mur- |

der of his pretty heiress-wife, Pa-| tricia, whom he confessed he beat

and strangled during a jealous fessed “leaked out” of police head-| =, = { cordi to thése so 8 argument in -which both accused quarters, and it was some time later | AC i. ol 4 Ria B bi] e

the other of infidelity, and she refused to let him see their 18-month-old ‘son. The 25-year-old R.C.A.F. alrcraftsman, for two and a half hours| and in a steady unshaken voice, | told authorities how he bludgeoned | his wife with a candlestick until—| it shattered; how he beat her again with another one, and then when she attempted to rise again | how ' he strangled her with his hands. After he finished the story. he; took a pen and in a steady hand, | signed the statement ‘that send him to the clectric chair or to prison for life. : |

Shatters Own Alibl ~~

The confession by the husky former lifeguard came after nearly 16 hours of questipning during! which he stuck adamantly” to his | story until he unwittingly shat. | tered his own alibi. ; He had told police that his missing RC. A. F. uniformi was stolen by a soldier named Maurice Worcester, whom he sald he had befriended. There was a man named Maurice Worcester, an honorably discharged soldier, working in a Bridgeport, Conn, plant. He never met Lonergan, and voluntarily came to District Attorney Frank Hogan to clear his name. Without mentioning his name, authorities took Worcester before Lonergan and asked him if he knew the man, Lonergan hesitatedzfinally

Opening its dramatic season with a bigtime musical comedy, the Thespian Honor society of Ben Davis high school will present “Best

rie Moore. :

The singing parts of the 3 B's— be taken by, left to right, Pat

{Lought it up—and then

| wife, {

The news that Lonergan con- |

before Hogan formally announced the R. O. A. F. trainee had signed a confession, “Wayne Lonergan stated that he went to his wife's apartment at ap-| proximately 8:45 a. m. Sunday, Oct. |

{24, and his wife admitted him,”|

Hogan said. . Confession Described “She. had beer in bed. There- | after: she returned to bed. He | further admits that while she was lying in bed he struck her on the head with a candlestick holder. | “The candlestick holder broke. He

hit her with another a

holder. She managed to get out of bed. Thereupon he grabbed her around the neck and strangled her. While he was choking her she scratched him. “He admits that his story with respect to ‘the soldier is a fiction, and that the name of the soldier | was an invention. He returned to the home of John F. Harjes and changed his clothes.

Threw Uniform in River

“He then had breakfast and then went to the East river to get rid of the bloodstained uniform by throwing it into the river.” . Hogan declined to elaborate further, and questioned whether another possible motive might involve a $700,000 trust fund set up for the 22-year-old cafe society playgirl by her grandfather, a brewery baron, Max Bernheimer, he said:

shook his héad and said: “No” An hour later, confronted with the

{We might have something big on man's identity, Lonergan broke. “He!it later on.”

“It might create a legal problem.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (U. P) — Esquire magasine has gone to the dictionary to prove it is not “lewd, lascivious, indecent or filthy.” Or rather the dictionary has come to Esquire’s hearings before the postoffice department. de After more than a week Wfpsychiatrists, educators and social workers telling the hearing examiners that the magazine was not obscene, Esquire’s attorney, Bruce Bromley, yesterday brought in the signed testimony of Dr, William Allan Neilson, president emeritus of Smith, college and editor-in-chief of Webster's new international dictionary.

Esquire Calls in Educators To Prove It Isn't Naughty

,

| “the

x

Nazi ‘Clique Plans to - Sabotage Peace. By JOSEPH W. GRIGG United Press Stall Correspondent LONDON, Oct. 20.—Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler and a powerful clique of Nazi leaders are organiz~ ing an underground movement to keep the party alive after Ger-i many’s defeat, and lay the groundwork for another attempt at world conquest, usually reliable sources

said today. These informants, who are in'jge

close touch with Germany, said fear [oes

of an imminent collapse was spreading even through the higher-ups in fs

t will be presented by the

9S

the reich and that a number of|Gua

prominent Nazi journalists have fled to neutral countries recently, or quit ij their newspaper work in anticipa- £ tion of the breakdown, Himmler and a group of high offi- | cials in the: Nazi Elite Guard and] Storm Trooper organizations, these | sources said, have made secret plans) to sabotage the allied occupation! armies during a 10 or 20 year period

Plotting to Rearm

They also envisage a resumption of clandestine rearmament in Germgny, such as occurred between 1923 and 1933.

|

ers already are training specially | chosen groups of fanatical young! Nagis in Hitler youth and S8 train-| ing barracks. At the same time, they were said to be preparing to establish secret arms caches and illegal Nazi military units which, in the post-war years, would masquerade as sports clubs and physical culture organiza~-| tions for young Germans. |= The Nazis have had years of ex-|= perience in these methods as a result of their formation of illegal] fifth columns in Austria, the Sudeterland, Czechoslovakia and Poland before the war. :

| s

T0 HEAR FR. HUBBARD

The first of four programs of the Bernadette forum, conducted by the | Mother's club of Our Lady of S Lourdes Catholic church, will be! held Nov. 26 at Howe high school. | Spepker will be Father Hubbard, | lacier Priest,” who recently! returned from the Aleutians, On .Sunday, Feb, 6, Baroness! Catherine de Hueck ofjBussia will! speak on “The Tragedy of Russia,” while the Indianapolis Maenrer- = choir will. present a concert March | 12. ‘The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen will appear after Easter, talk- |S ing on “Crisis of Christianity: Forum officers are Mrs. Karl L| Kernel, president; Mrs. Lucy K.| Mathis, secretary; Mrs. John.Carr,| treasurer, and the Rev, Joseph P.'S Casey, moderator. Sh

said Mr. Neilson, | Esquire-also brought in the testi{mony of Felix Morley, president of [Haverford college; George Jean { Nathan, critic; Clark Shaughnessy,

head football coach of the Univer- |

sity of Pittsburgh, and Mary Ellen Chase, professor of English literature at Smith college, to support its

tising agent; Alfred Cerf, New York publisher; Miss Marjorie Hope Nicholson, professor of English

literature at Columbia university; Maj. John L. Griffith, commissioner of ‘athletics for the wesfern confer-

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DURING been able to b: the Western c Wildcats won Buckeyes dead

Minnesota w fuled the confer and Ohio State s eleven played five record of five vic Campaign, Unless somet! See A new team State is already once in as many and Wisconsin. . too strong for thy be wrong: At the prese out in front, the tories in as man; i Wolverines with ll western and Mir

| Purdue and M

i PURDUE ha; “oo. Michigan | State. . . , Althou lt weakened within stretch, neverthel gapable of baggi If one oppon | i where alopg the JI six conference g: jj Minnesota, Wiscc

| Possibility of | ~~ SHOULD SU i gan and North i each holding a n | for the title, the | Western conferen | the title with M ” IN CONFER] feated Indiana ar conference game: Wisconsin and 1

Hockey Seaso THE NEW ic ing start last n Biiffalo Bisons ‘a young Caps hust The Caps lo around the rink was aided by thr that there is suffi league through t in the states,

Wins in M MEXICO CITY 8ix out of -eight the winner's cir dromo de Las A RIN