Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 May 1945 — Page 2

"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES oe MONDAY, MAY 28,1948

TRAFFIC CLAIMS PETAIN-PINS HOPES | Shuri Castle a Nerve Center of Okinawa for 4 Centuries EVENS DANGER ] LIVES OF SEVEN ~~ + 4 ON U.S. DIPLOMATS) oxo ass, guts, * ny fe te cote wef, Sup” on othe ae of he sen yee oreo wre cr), 8, ONGE PAGED

: Pape PARIS, May 28 (U. P.).—Marshal| OKINAWA; May 28.—Tenth army| It has been repaired periodically] The one formerly used to receive a few.years ago... Whether the Jap- NY 28 (U. P.)— tel Sanaa | Henri “Philippe Petain has pat his | troops converged slowly today onlevery 40 years since. Until recently [Chinese envoys was typically Chi-{anese bothered to remove them TROY, N. ¥., May 28 (U.

| Because Germany ‘today was a A

Sixteen Injured in tate Sa a | ‘ Sh ; | ) would not betray the secrets of its ings. It has housed the Okinawa |ern fortress with electric lights and | beaten enemy, Undersecretary <of Ms | oy : S e : wd — jgetena him at his trial for Wreason. the. shrine too sacred for mortal] construction. ; museum since 1879, when the (orn lon water hr 5: | war Robert P. Patterson disclosed Auto Accidents. | 3d : fa “2 #1 It has been learned that Petain’s’foot to touch. Every Oct. 18 a semi-religious|tom of paying dual tribute to China | a lthat 20 Nazi divisions could have : : § ¢ «io | attorneys plan to call to the witness) Shuri castle has been the’ nerve festival is held in memory of the and Japan was abolished. DR HINE GETS CHAIR | swept this country if Britain had Heavy traffic induced by summer | 5 Loo . | box Robert Murphy, who was coun- center of the Ryukyus' government, departed kings in the main hall or “King’s Palace ho [been defeated in 1940. .

weather brought death to seven : 3 _ lsellor at the American embassy at culture and art for the last four Rerapaty, a three-storied coral| mye other nal, used for Japanese | OF DENTISTRY AT I. U. Patterson estimated effective U. EJ ie Hoosiers in traffic accident over the | lity i is “| Vichy and now is in Europe as jo les. . ock, 60-foot-high building. | |S. military strength in 1940 at five

: envoys, has small rooms with slid-| BLOOMINGTON, May 28 (U. P.) i ! Ey : | Sapa : SW The floor of main | 8-1; : Nr ORY « Piaf - su week-end. © ; 3 wet FL | adviser to the allied control|, ~APanese defenders Will be able} the main hall meas ling door panels. It was used until | —Announcement of the appoint- haif-strength divisions and some : : . Haden SRST | litical ser {to fight from the castle's under-|ures 98 by 56 feet, but the wood- | Locently for an assembly hall i t of D : d K. Hi +300 modern combat planes. AO Sead trom Incianapols (ff Su commission for Germany. |gsound caverns until they are buried [Work interior is devoid of designs a a [on ot the wag Geritingy at| The undersecretary spoke to 6300 | Petain, meanwhile, is waiting for or burned to cinders by our flame OF Carvings. FONE Bast > the main hall are %an 9 eo —_ hs today | TYOY residents and military guests fo e King's palace and the second | » before presenting congressional wi

are: : Se LEE Char is 5 ROSS IE 4 |an answer to his plea to Adm. Wil- throwers. = Too Sacred for Fete * "|, ioral school of Okinawa. by President Herman B Wells. dals of to the widows of 3 : nr [liam D. Leahy to appear in his de-| The castle’s outer walls of coral{ The festivals—including athletic] . |. "Hine sucoeeds’ Dy. William J; foecais of honor to the wicows oO pr MRS. MARGARET HELEN i { g Pile! Jock f K : | To the north are tombs of an-| Col. William J. O'Brien and Sgt. ba n 3 | fense. Both the American embassy | © ocks are 20 feet thick at the base, contests, dancing and music of the | ient kings. called T. vd Her | Crawford, who becomes head of the Bak Tr ICKERSON, 25, of 907 Marion | Vi £ hw in Paris and the French foreign] i” feet high and strejch ore than | jamisen, a three-stringed, long |g) 1 es, i yas en. Here | entistry school at the university | + nomas Baker, both of Troy. i th ave. ; : oF. in Pan e 80 ‘five miles in circumference around |necked instrument with a box bound | menioHal shrihe 10 Conor Minnesota July 1. Now professor] 1. Was tne frst ume ip 0. 5.0 YH . carved | or periodontia and histopathology Military history that two men of fle

: State dead: £8 : 0 (office refused to dispatch Petain's the 290-acre castle grounds. in snakeskin—were held in the mmin | [UC\US: guarded by lions | Ni : nh |from stone brought from China. at the school, Hine icrmerly served | the same community and the same y | army outfit had been so honored ; Je

; : {Shuri Castle and its Jinja shrine.|the carpenters were killed so they nese in architecture and furnish-|yw hopés on two American diplomats to |The "Japanese consider the floor of sh- when they converted it into a mod-

MISS ROSEMARY WOOD, 20. ME 3 | letter to Leahy. It had to be sent; pike Okinawa itself, Shuri sastle | hal: because the Jinja shrine was A spot on the south wall is known : Hancock county, at McCordsville. Ee ON % {by ordinary mail. is a curious blend of Chinese and loo sacred for such activities. lo rey . |as a faculty member at the Univer-| : ! . 4 E h X b : 3 . | : as “Ronda gushiku”—the calf of the sity of Illinois college of dentistry! fOr valor in the same campaign. ne J. C. COOPER, 60, R. R. 4, {’ % | One of Petaffiis two lawyers, Jac- Japanese culture and architecture.| Okinawans say the music Was eg. It is so named because a and was head of as n of oral! BOth O'Brien and Baker fell last [i Bi Mourésvile, near Mooresville. fod. o \ |ques Isorni, said, ‘Petain consid-| Enonshi, the first Okinawa king, more Chinese than Japanese and princess was said to have plunged pathology befors coming to I. U |July in a Japanese counter-attack Hi pa MRS. MARY SIMPSON, 40, LR ered Leahy much more than just built a few thatched huts on the that the annual festival' usually|to her death from a parapet when in 1944 © | on Saipan. hi Bn R. R. 4. Mooresville, near Moores- Th an official. They were very close present site and called it his “cas- ended with plays depicting famous {she learned the king had executed| He is a graduate of the Univer-| : ville ; | (HN friends. When Mis. Leahy died at tle.” But it was not until 1544 that characters from the island's history. her locer. Her leg was severed ‘by sity of Illinois and received special CUTWORMS ATTACK EARLY ; RY LEWIS, 8 Bedford, in : | Vichy, Petain personally made all the walls and buildings took their| Two dragons stood en top of the|a tree in her fall, according to the training at the University of Ro-| WASHINGTON —Cutworms often 5a a » SEY vis ? the arrangements to return her present form, Ll {hall to guard against evil spirits. |legend. * chester school of medicine and den- attack transplanted plants the first pr a RT oX Po , 11, St # a 2 | body to America. + In 1669 the roofs were tiled and! The kings governed from “recep- Shuri castle and the Okinawa! tistry. ‘ night after they are set out. fo ', near St. Peter. Bl —— — : : age § SES NEN . pe At least 16 persons were injured | in the accidents causing death. i Darius Green and his flying One Critical I machine had nothing on Horace ) : 5 | T.. Pentecost, 36-year-old Seattle, Sri Another person, Thelma Hofman, | Wash., engineer, pictured wear26, of 29 E. Sycamore st. is in crit-| jn his “hoppi-copter” with which ‘ {cal condition at City hospital. She | he hopes to fly. The miniature was injured when the car in which | heliocopter has been. granted a - de

she was riding crashed into a! BAS verfinente of aircraft worth1 *SS. . . 2 bridge end at Raymond st. and Sims aS —————— . . of

“ Sherman dr. Saturday night. / i A passenger, Mrs. Dickerson, was QUISLING REPORTED : killed when hurled fronr a car ‘as Vogue

it crashed in the 1100 block on | AER is : ; : ' tt me 81 White River blvd. The driver, Ir- | MENTALLY BROKEN S\N EY Pattern No. 5417 : ; : ~

vin. Wilson, 23, of 1320 Sturm ave. !. . : ‘ A % ; » = BIE & x 4 SLO, May 28 (U. P.).—Peo : 5 , | 5 A was arrested on charges of intoxi-| OSLO ay 28 : ple : &H) : J Ay : 30e . Ww] cation, operating a motor vehicle ! who used to know him well said to- 2 Re : while under the influence of liquor, | day that Vidkun Quisling apparent- Lo : | yg of 3 & oo Ay 4 cu reckless driving and vagrancy. ly was suffering from delusions .of : ef ” : i 9 1 AE b i sb A resident of this city for 20| oyangeyr ana a persecution com- Eo : 3 : 1d : 1 : th years, Mrs. Dickerson was a native i i . ; : SRT RS . : of Madison. She was a member of | P'¢* the Methodist church there. { At least two prominent lawyers Year's Total 29 | who knew "Quisling when he was:

She is survived bv her husband, a brilliant Nerwegian army officer “ ; ¥ : . 3 i Sgt. Chester, in France; a son, said that he had suffered a mental} » Eg wo F110 : cv ! j A oY ro ; A ; Chester, and a daughter, Marjorie, yreakdown. They based their : ho Negi YY \ ” - — i. _. . both of Indianapolis; her father! ‘ i : : ] : Xia af . \ 3 : : Raymond R. Fancher, » Indian. | °Pinion on his behavior at his hear- . gpolis; her mother, Mrs. Lucy ing Saturday. bs Smith, Washington; a brother. Sea- | The puffy-faced, beady-eyed man Veo ue : 1 " A k pl man Guard Robert R. Fancher, who stood in the small courtroom, ¢ TL ; 5 a : : Corpus Christi, Tex. two sisters, | Pattern f® , 14d : ; “a : To . : H qu Es 28 ron 2 ih sas ve) No. 5367 Ho) CREE LN ; a \ mother; a grandmother: three half-| was a far different Quisling from 50¢- ar & lt. : 3 i : Jie sisters and -one half-brother. | the one of old. = i Sat 3 11 i ; : : i Services; to be arranged, will be] The man whose name. came to. : Eo Cx ELE EY 4 “ \ > | or held in the Moore Mortuaries Ben mean traitor seemed intent on re 2 " ; ee '1% 1% ; / g lf 7 | ca Davis chapel with burial in Floral fighting for his life, probably by TSR : : iy: } } Si A / y ; £¥ { be Park. E trying to shift the blame to Josef Gg : 21 ¢ a : ty] i Her death raised the city traffic Terboven, Nazi governor of Norway. : : : : ; / \ J J & death toll to 29 and the county] Olso- authorities announced that : » El ] . 8 j : total to 43. the body of Terboven, who comCollides With Bus | mitted suicide, definitely had been x i : 22 8 : 1 Mr. Ross was killed shortly be- identified in the air raid shelter ; AYE © ] , a Ey : ie fore noon yesterday when his car at the Skaugum palace of Crown ; al Ce 3 a 3 Ye collided nead-on with a Greyhound | Prince Olaf.. Terboven and S.S. : : : ; ; wer an dE AE ae wi bus two miles west of Harrison. A Chief Wilhelm Reidess blew them- : 5 3 al ? : : ‘ I. 30

heavy fog had made driving haz- | selves up with dynamite on May 9. ; & ; : AF i ~~ ardous. A passenger with Mr. Ross! - The decision delivered Saturday | | ; : ou A i ; ot —_— v ’ as well as three persons on the bus) to hold -Quisling until Aug. 25 gives : 4 2 : Ny oo, $ i’ / ‘ ogue Pattern 3 Te were injured. {the state three months to prepare 1 ss : id 4 N ¢ 3 Mr. Ross was a native of New| its case against him. ) Bad ; i : o. 2376 Br Point but lived here and was em- - \ ; pi ; EE £ 30¢ y ployed at the Schwitzer-Cummins a sister, Mrs. Gladys Koester, Chi- : i 4 : f Co. He previously had worked for|cago, and a step-sister, Mrs. Cecil wey 5 4 : ; | th Delco-Remy in Anderson. { Brown, Richmond. He is survived by his parents, Mr. Funeral services and burial will |. BA ; 4 i - : and Mrs. Chalmers Ross, New Point; {be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday in \ HF ] A : : : z fro & brother, Pfc. Clyde, Pacific area; |New Point. i: 4 : i 4 i : : wi

confused and protesting his in-

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