Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1945 — Page 3
ia IS
] H H
-Black-Dragon Chief
King George, in London, Hi D2 SCFYEQ along Mis Mexiogn bor meant the stifling of true. Greek ast. Sought With the Jot Itentsy x Aimen participated in the occupation ‘of . Germany in 1918. nit Tg ‘Slave Laborers’ in Promoted to brigadier general in : ; i August, 1941, Patch first saw acJapan Stage Riot tion in world war II when he diTOKYO, Nov. 22 (U. P.).~Dis- rectéd American forces which oc-
patches from Akahia Amachi, a coal
mining town on Hokkaido, said t0-| marine
on Guadalcanal, Patch led the a forces into the “canal” and led
day that American military authorities and Japanese police broke up a riot between 800 Chinese and 1500 Korean *slave laborers,” imported during the war by -the Japanese, ‘ The Jiji news service said scores of persons were injured and one Chinese was killed in the rioting. The fighting was reported to have broken out last night when Chinese
Col, H. J. Ballard, Salt Lake city, an official of the 8th army's military government section, said last week that remaining “slave laborers” in the huge Hokkaido coal mines had caused an 80 per cent slowdown of normal production in October. Ballard announced that arrangements already had been made to
- replace these laborers with Japa-|.
nese miners and that the Chinese and Koreans would be repatriated at the rate of 1000 per day.
”
Arrested in JapanTOKYO, Nov. 22 (U. P.).—Baron General Sadao Pos former. Japanese war minister, and Yosihisa Kuzuu, head of the Black Dragon
society, were arrested on war crimes |
charges today, general MacArthur's
jthe U. 8. Tth army on March 1,
} bers gered B
: 8 : : ifs
g
corps from May, 1943, to March, 1944, directing the training of #100,000 men for the fighting in Europe. He was placed in command of
1944 and flew to Italy where he planned and led the opening of the “third front” in southern France. Received Many Honors His forces fought up the Rhone river te the ‘Vosges mountains and, with - the capture of St A breached the Siegfried line. His forces drove into southern Germany in the final days of allied victory, crossing the Rhine last March 26. ‘Numerous -honors- were accorded Patch, including the decoration by Gen. Charles De Gaulle with the Croix De Guerre with palm and the rank of commander of the Legion
tinguished service medal. OILS ‘COLOR FISHES
headquarters announced.
BAUER WILL RESIST DEPORTATION MOVE
~ (Continued From Page One)
many against his will. Bauer arrived in ‘New York from Spain Aug. 24, 1941. He enlisted the following May in the U. 8. army and was assigned to Ft. Knox, Ky. Later he became photographer at Ft. Harrison where he remained for three years. Wife Still Keeps Faith Throughout the recent army-FBI probe, Mrs. Bauer has adamantly refused to believe her husband could have been guilty of submersive activities. She appealed to congressmen, army officers, President Truman and every possible source in an effort to bring the much-delayed case to a clithax. Today, she said she intends to take him some candy bars and books. Recently she has been per-
a week.
by the park board.
No protests were filed.
{juries received in an automobile ac-
tion trial if he is returned to Ger-|.
PLAY WITH MATCHES,
joint’
CITY WILL PURCHASE "BROAD. RIPPLE PARK
--An--appropriation-- of - $132,000 to. purchase the Broad Ripple amusement park was approved yesterday
IN CRIDER | DEATH
Accident” Nov. 14.
"A coroner's inquest today was 10] *
determine whether Roy G. Crider of 250 N. Tacoma ave. died of in-
years, he had retired as an employee of the Independent Concrete Pipe Co. Survivors are his wife, Mrs, Loretta M. Crider, and two daughters, Louise Shaum and Mrs, Jeanall of Indianapolis. be at 2 p. m. Saturday at the Lyman funeral home in Greenfield. Burial will follow in the Greenfield Park cemetery.
2 CHILDREN INJURED
Three-year-old David and 23-year-old Richard Johnson played with matches last night and got burned. Luckily the injuries were slight. Attempting to light the gas stove,
of Mrs. Jean Johnson, 3047 N. Gale st.
Indianapolis Man tnjured in|
started in the 10-year building program of the university, the dormitories will cost approxi mately $3,100,000. Unique features will be a central dining hall
Eggers and Higgins of New York will serve as supervising architects and Burns and James of Indianapolis will- serve as architects,
ave. the new dormitories will be in the form of an “H," three stories in height with Indiana limestone exterior and completely fireproof. Each group of rooms
LOCAL VETERAN, ON WAY HOME, DIES
Just one hour after she received a letter from her son telling how happy he was to be returning home at last, Mrs. Mary. E. Marshall, 33 8. Dearborn st., received the telegram that he had been killed in
mitted to visit him for 15 minutes -
The action marked the fiffal date| "~~ ~ 1 for filing of written remonstrances - a ny opr.
STRAUSS SAYS:
CT SRT
GENTLEMEN! ~~ GENUINE. PIGSKIN!
We o degteined pig — which
soft = i
«inthe
Ws a comforialies sey spon ‘Nice for chores around the house—
great for motoring — — nice to carry
pocket (they roll up easily
and pack into a small space). » In a luggage tan shade sm
Men's 7 Jackets L Pile-Lined Conte , ot Raincoats (a lot of them)
Z
The Hall
“Men
an airplane crash over Sicily.
~ <
Ca Shop — Senior
for the High School
Crowd —, the Grammar Shop ~and the Toddlers Row— Second Floor
_The BOY SCOUTS Square— Second Floor 7
TOYS — with & nice youngfellow appeal. Second Floor
's Furnishings and Gift’
Objects — Wonderful gifts of Leather, Pipes, Tobacco toilet preparations including “Russia Leather” After Shave —and soaps galore—
TIES — (one of the great neckwear stores of America)— Handkerchiefs and mufflers— Sports Shirts — and Wool Shirts — Belts and Suspenders — Jewelry cluding 14-kt. gold Jewelry.
AND COMPANY., ne. THE MAN'S STORE
T-5 John J. Connaughton, 32, ala month ago when he was transformer electrician for the Davis ferréd to Greece. He was flying Electrical Co. here was killed in a |to. Rome and expected to go on to crash in which 24 persons, includ- Naples where he would board a| ing two women, may have been home-bound ship, his letter stated. killed. Only one person is known| He had attended public school 3 to have survived the crash, which and Technical high school. He had occurred on Nov. 9. been cited for bravery in action Entering the army in September, while overseas. An aunt, Mrs. (1942, T=5 Connaughton had served | Katherine Eskridge, and several overseas 32 months. - He was with [cousins of Indianapolis, also sur-
the 338th Engineers Corps until |vive,
STRAUSS .SAYS — — —STORE HOURS SATURDAY 9:30 "TILL 4
THE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Coniiatte will be tes soli anlar Tort 3108 Wee en's darmillotie. Indiana university which will premises where the stoppage ochouse 1000 students. The sketch sbove shows the proposed residence units, which will contain & large din- curred, any of whom are particis ng al, Sowing, Avrkey, Sod ¥liee Jucuioen rr “ety NEW MEN'S DORMITORIES | which will seat 1000, built- in accommodathog 50 students will 3. He has not voluntarily stopped to house 1000 students will be | furniture in student rooms, lounge | have a separate entrance, lounge |working, other than at the direction built early in the coming year at | areas and recreation decks on the | and sun deck, and each group of |of his employer, in sympathy with Indiana university. roofs. 250 students will have a game [employees in some other establish. . The first construction to be Facing 10th st. east of Jordan | room in the basement. ment or factory in a labor
GATES AND PARTY REACH CHUNGKING
CHUNGKING, Nov, 22 (U. P.).—
following Thanksgiving are.days
; THEY ARE the days—when
> attended with: -a lot of activity. ps THEY ARE the ' “sparks; | it seems, a | that set off Christmas Business. So
Winter
needs come crowding info the mind.
WE, OF COURSE, don't infend to
demand. Our place in the
— do anything to stimulate such a. aii od
picture
—is to try to provide the goods in
favor—to keep the qualities up
where they belong—and to
mark
everything on a basis that will ]
uphold and stfengthen the
Strauss creed and performance,
"THE BEST at Your Price No Matter What the Price.”
f, STRAUSS
