Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1946 — Page 2

Tours City KINGSTON, Jamaies, Feb. 19

cor tol, ‘roaming the sirests with ecrowbars and other weapons. Mobs looted a mail truck, comman-

the drivers into the street. European pedestrians, both tary and civilian, were attacked, » - . 3 LIVERPOOL, England, Feb, 19 prov-| (U. P).~Four thousand passengers of the Canadian Pacific of Demo-| liner Empress of Australia had to from elec-| be vaccinated today when a case ; by | of smallpox was diseovereq aboard by tne | oe he stip. . : sn Students Sheer Franco pdraens i MADRID, Feb. 19 (U, P) —8Stuis established around |.o.is demonstrated through the \ arrived. | oumtown streets last night, shoutPeronistas broke | jo for Gen. Francisco Franco and much trouble, and | qenouncing both Russia “and the Po Spanish monarchist moyement. They forced Spaniards, leaving finally scattered the |. ving picture houses, to raise their arms in the Falangist salute .. co. and sing the Falangist anthem.

. 19 (U. P)—BEm-| yy p)._Jamaica was under a ad bombed on state of emergency today following government action tb protect

deered military trucks and threw|

Jack Love, student at: Notre Dame under G. I. bill of rights, reads letter notifying him he is

million dollars left by late great-

uncle, Claude Logan of Olympia, Wash.

HOME PLANNERS

i=

Ist Student's Reaction Is Now

heir to estate valued at more than

a] ue feternamens acti 48 woviee railroad

strike, and to prevent

will by eager American soldiers | American military and civilian photographers, He didn't | personnel have been banned from that street car passengers cgechoslovakia under a new order

Cisorders in an inter-union labor spoke to civilian | gooe,

FRANKFURT, Feb. "19 (U. Pe)

IN FIRST CLASS

Estimate 6000 W Will Attend 6 Weeks’ Course: Here.

uty were on 8 issued by the Prague government, U. 8. army headquarters annouyjced |

‘ace and moved

| Military police Jeep and followed po o4uate Jananese

aphers. SHANGHAI, Feb, 19 (U. Pr | the imperial pal- | Dispatches from Peiping said today | slowly through the [that executive headquarters for

“police and plainclothesmen.

cousin, Prince Morimasa

prison where the [180,000 civilians from North China.

{Seton} for Home Planners predicted lan aggregate attendance of some 5000 persons for the six weeks free course after last night's record start. Some 500 persons turned out for ithe opening session at Caleb Mills |

| streets of Tokyo, where every in- [carrying out the civil war trace hall to surpass predictions of the stersection was guarded by Japanese terms had ordered Nationalist and | Indianapolis school board and civic Communist leaders to help repatri- and allied building organizations, ‘to Yokohama, the party ate 120,000 Japanese soldiers and sponsors of the study.

The second session at Shortridge!

The Japanese remaining in North [high school will be held next Mon- |

He Can Play Football. -

sald he'd heard about the inheritance two weeks ago “but didn't see

great-uncle had left me his entire estate of $1,000000 or maybe $1,500,000.” ‘Favorite Nephew He said he thought someone was kidding him at first but then he contacted his father, Jack C. Love, a Hagerstown,r Md., attorney, who ~- | confirmed the information. Love sald he had seen his uncle several times and used to go on hunting trips with him when he was a boy. But, he said, his uncle never had indicated in any way that he was leaving his fortune to his “favorite nephew,” as he

emperor's ‘Nashimoto and more than 400 oth- | China were described as a - criminal suspects | turbing factor.”

*. =» Republican party chairman in

The defendants are Lt. Gen. an: | {geru Sawada, commander of the | ; P.).—Seven Japanese 13th army at Shanghai at P.).—Police announced today that] hm. hundred striking sailors of the|the time the three American fliers | bodies of 10 inmates have been | * : down the Were killed in October, 1942; Tat-|found inthe ruins of an insane would go home at the end of the American flag in front of the Amer-|Suta Sotojiro, ex-commander of the asylum which was swept by fire | current semester and “look into office Kiangwan military prison;

ing” and “Laundries, Kitchens,

HONOLULU, Feb. 19 (U. P.).— Bathrooms.” A special session of the Hawaiian | legislature to create an official | to work for statehood

Opening at Other Schools

Tomorrow night the first session at George Washington high school

was urged today py Roy Vitousek, wii pe held at 7:30 p. m. Thurs-

day hight the course will be offered {at Technical high. Next Tuesday ‘the session will be introduced at

First session study deals with

early next week, it was announced ing” and ‘ ‘Selection of Home Site.”

FIRE KILLS. 10 INMATES. SANTIAGO, @hile, Feb. 18 (U.

Capt. | ast night. Two hundred women |

described Love in his will. “Uncle Claude told me that if I

|ever needed any money to help me | | through school to call on him” |

Love recalled. “But I never asked |

Backers of the adult Indianapolis him for a penny.” | Love said he was making his way |

{through college on the $132 a month |he received from the government j under the G. I. bill of rights for his

| education and a service disability | | Incurred in Sicily.

Heavy Study Schedule

He said he accepted a “little”

{financial help from his family but did not have time to take a parttime job because of his heavy scholastic schedule.

“But now, with this money, may- |

“dis- |day at 7:30 p. m.. The subject will be I'll be able to go out for the |be “Pundamentals of Home Design- football team,” the 210-pound stu-

‘dent told reporters excitedly. “I've got two more years of school shead | of me.” Love said his uncle, a bachelor: was descended from a full-booded Indian,- “so I guess his rise to wealth started with the oil in Oklahoma.” “Uncle Claude ran away from

that than SHANGHAI, Feb. 19 (U. P)—|Manual Training and Feb. 27 at home when he was young,” Love 2, Nasis have been [Four Japanese officers implicated crispus Attucks. Registrations are removed. or excluded from public 'In the execution of three of Gen. peing accepted at the opening of important business po. |James H. Doolittle’s Tokyo raiders each session at all schools.

and in the American occupa- will be arraigned before an Amer-| mone since the end of the [CAD War crimes court in Shanghai “Important Factors in Home Build- ica, where he became interested tn

said. “In some manner he got sarion] |in the lumber business in Canada! and later he went to South Amer-

' the bauxite mines. Love said. his: uncle. lost » leg in

foi in Soe =

The young ‘millionaire said he |

{this estate business,” then come | | back and get his law degree,

day burned it during a de-|Wako Yusei and Lt. Okada Ryuhei. [inmates were rescued.

sailors seek speedy demobilization, arrangements for peacetime Joge, Jotter pay and improved In-

S45 tod from other ships Joined the

COMMUNITY CENTER PLANNED BY CHURCH

_ Members and neighbors of the ‘Memorial Presbyterian church, 11th st. and Carrollton ave, are planning

* A promotional dinner will be held Thursday at 6:30 p. m. for church officials and interested persons of the neighborhood. Miss Grace , director of the Indiana University school of social service, will give the dinner address. While plans for the new social service project for all ages are still in the formative stage, it is hoped to have the community centér built E in operation within the next

; Memorial church and its pase | , the Rev. Ralph O'Dell, pioneered

WOMAN, 83, DIES AT HOME OF HER NIECE

‘Services will be held in Flanner & ; Left - well, who died yesterday eftingof her niece, Mrs. Fred Henry. ave. Burial will be

Oreek cemetery near |

\

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —

Writer Awarded Ww ilkie. Flight

YORK, Peb, 10 (U. B).— Corwin would make the trip : birthday | sometime later this year, bub that |

night to Radio Writer Nor- | said Mr. Willkie would be remem- } by the Common | bered longest and best

because Council for American Unity and | so many men “of different parties, the Willkie Memorial of Freedom | sects, colors, countries, and in all. house. Ran walks of life became, because they Formér Mayor F. H. LaGuardia | Were his friends, ‘more friendly presented the award at a dinner | With one another.”

LINIMENT DRINK FATAL

NEW YORK, Feb. 19 (U, P)— pient of | Solomon Cohen, 44, was dead today distinctior as the first of the |because he did not read the label velers who will circle |when he reached for a bottle off mouthwash. What he thought was

Ex-Mayor LaGuardia said Mr. | antiseptic turned out to be liniment.

4 LIONS CLUBS oe MEETING TOMORROW

Lions clubs -of this district wil

{hold a dinner meeting at 7 p. m.

tomorrow in the Beech Grove Methodist church. Lions and ladies from Acton, Beech Grove, Greenwood and Southport will attend. A prelude of organ music will be presented by - Neal Parmenter. Music for the dinner hour will be provided by Joseph F. Hoffman, baritone, accompanied by. . Mrs. Hoffman,

Each of the four clubs will provide a portion of the entertainment. | The Lion Tamers of several clubs

5

TUESDAY, FEB. 19, 1948 |

will lead the singing of Lion songs. *

Selections will also be presented by the Foster Hall quartet.

Schricker will speak: on “Service.” . Among the guests will be Howard K. Lewis, district governor, and L. S. Belton, depiity district governor. Officers of the participating clubs are, Acton, Earl Shaeffer, president, and Gerald Johns, secretary; Beech

Grove, Charles Adams, president, and Byron Saunders, secretary;.

Greenwood, Robert Davidson, presi dent, and L. S. Belton, secretary; Southport, Harold O, Burnett, presi dent, and W. G. Kellam, oh pred Lynne H. Hull, zone will have charge of the meeting,

Former governor Henry P

*

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