Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 February 1942 — Page 9
TUESDAY, FEB. 10, 1042
PAGE 9
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
_ WEDN ESDAY AND THURSDAY!
While Quantity Lasts!
Regularly Higher Priced Ironing Boards
® Rigid, Firm! ® | 2x48" Size!
First grade selected wood top, firm, working space. Steel side and back braces. Positive lock — easy to open or close.
PENNEY'S—Downstairs Store
Walnut Finish! TILT-TOP
CARD TABLES
® Very Decorative! ® 7 Patterns!
jos
For use as a card table, fine screen or decorative serving table. Three-ply veneer top covered with liquid resisting material. Attractive subjects . « wainut finish.
PENNEY S—Downstairs Store
Heavy Steel Body
KITCHEN STOOLS
® SPECIAL "DOLLAR DAY" FEATURE!
A comfortable, convenient stool . inches high. Baked enamel finish. and white color combinations. tipped feet.
«24 Red
Rubber
7-Piece FIESTA JUICE SETS ® Gay Colored Kitchen Pottery! % I A very at-
Big 30-ounce jug and six 5-ounce tumblers. tractive set that every household needs!
mT IMMA
Beautiful Colors in These 32-Piece
Stun DINNER SET
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Festive bright solid colors of blue, yellow, red and green! Made of good grade earthenware. Complete service for six—large plates, cups, saucers, fruit dishes, pie plates, vegetable dish and platter.
PENN EY'S—Downstairs Store
® Special for "DOLLAR DAYS" «ou
i Downstairs
Aa sadAIAIATA
Bathroom Scales—
‘Detecto” scales weigh up to 300 lbs. White, ivory, 9 black, green baked enamel 2 8
2-Pe. Salad Sets—
Gaily colored fiesta ware . . . spoon, fork and salad dish. % Looks much more expensive. Set
Shelf Mirrors-—
For bathroom and bedrooms. Adjustable shelf with rust re- % sisting metal parts. Good size...
“Metro” Hand Sweeper
Ball bearing brush, all round rubber bumper. Hardwood handle. Self adjusting to jos carpet. ®
Store Values!
Leatherette Hassocks— Round hassocks—18" high,
172” wide. Solid colors— maroon, dark blue, dusty 298 @
rose. Cord trim.
Smoking Stands— Finished in old English
bronze, trimmed with gold color. Weighted spun base! D8 Glass ash tray
Hand Oil Paintings—
Each picture is hand painted on rayon satin. Fine workmanship, lovely colorings. Natural wood w frames, “
Boudoir, Pin-Up Lamps Crystal lamps, well styled, ai 19
well made. 15 inches tall Assorted color shades. ...
Second Floor Features!
Flour Squares-—
Opened. bleach- % TE 1D tor 81 flour squares
that make grand dish towels. Very abe sorbent.
Giant Terry Towels—
20x40”. Checks, % novelty patterns. for 1 Heavy quality, absorbent. Limit § to a customer,
Lace Dinner Cloths—
Four sizes—70x80", 60x80", 60x 60” and 54x72". Soft beige color, attractive patterns.
Floral Lunch Cloths— Lovely hand printed floral pat- $1 terns . . . gay colors on sturdy cotton crash. Sizes 51x51 inches,
Priscilla Cartains—
82 inches wide overall by 2% yards long. Cream, white, peach amd blue. Cushion dei, pin dots. 1
Marquisette Panels—
ground
Tailored Panel Pairs—
Tri-color panels , , . cushion dot marquisette in smart color = combination. 76x78" long, Pair,
“Mo-de-gay” Prints— A raft of interesting prints
in smart color combinations. Plain colors, 300. J 9e
Good quality.
“Rondo-de-luxe” Prints
Splendid quality fabrics in the newest Spring patterns and colors. All ¢ © guaranteed washable. Yd. “Sorority” Crepes— 39” wide. Hand washable crepes in stripes, dots, florals and novelties. 59e¢ Fine, soft texture. Yard S4-Inch Plaid Coating— A good quality, all-cotton coating for your spring 29 sports coat or suit. A va- I riety of colors. ...... Yard,
“Sandgrain® Sharkskin 45 Inches wide. Washable rayon, ideal for sports- 5°
wear, suits, skirts, ete. New, weave.
a
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33 EAST ® wASH. ST. ©
of L
70x80-Inch! PART WOOL
Single BLANKETS
® 5°, Wooll ® 959, Cotton!
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Warm, fluffy, part wool blankets in a variety of interesting colors. Large size—T70x80 inches. Sateen bound edges. Usually priced much higher. See these tomorrow!
PENNEY’'S—Downstairs Store
i
111s 1 |
Made-in-Americal
Large 52x52-Inch LUNCH CLOTHS
® Colorful Plaids! ® Low Priced!
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They cost so little and they’ 11 bring such cheer into your kitchen, dinette or breakfast room. Part linen luncheon cloths with sprightly plaids on stark white or soft pastels.
PENNEY’S—Downstairs Store
DEMAND GROWS FOR WAR UNITY
High Command Represent ing All Allies Needed to
Assure Victory.
By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—If Sine gapore falls, sweeping changes in allied war planning are regarded as inevitable. A supreme war council supported by an inter-allied general staff may be among the innovations. “If Singapore falls,” the Sydney (Australia) Daily go, os Mirror said some four weeks ago} “Churchill will fall with it. , . .
lied strategy the Pacific. The political repercussions would be cataclysmic.” While few are inclined to dis pute the gravity of the allied posi tion in Australia, the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific generally, no one in authority here believes that Winston Churchill is in any danger of being supplanted as Prime Minister. There appears to be no one who even remotely measures up to him as a great na= tional leader.
Mr. Simms
Demand Allied Council
Nevertheless, just as in the crucial days of 1918, there is a fast-growe ing demand for a more far-sighted, better co-ordinated inter-allied war planning in which all the principal allies would be represented. In the first World War it was not until nearly two years had passed and defeat after defeat had been suffered by the allies that they even began seriously to co-operate on the various fields of battle, Russia's armies had been routed by Von Hindenburg. The Anglo-French offensive of 1915-16 had been stopped without appreciable gains. Serbia had been trampled under foot. Gallipoli had been ingloriously evacuated. The British had ‘been beaten by the Turks at Kut-El-Amara, and the French had just managed to hold their own at Verdun. Effective Action Delayed Only then, as Historian Hayes remarks, “did the Allies lose faith in the precepts of the old intere national anarchy and evince a wille ingness to abandon, at least tem= porarily, some of their individual sovereign rights for the sake of cre=ating an effective League of Nations against imperialistic Germany.” On March 27, 1916, the first gen= eral war council was held at Paris with France, Britain, Italy, Belgium, Serbia, Japan, Montenegro and Portugal represented. In April there was an inter-allied parliamentary conference, and in June an economic conference. Even so, as events proved, Allied co-operation was not as complete or as effective as it had need to be. Only in the conflict's fourth year did the Allies get around to creating a supreme war council and an inter-allied general staff. Some Progress Made
Unity of command under Foch, was not achieved until March, 1918, when the specter of imminent and overwhelming defeat stared the Allies in the face. Today the united nations appear to have reached the point where the allies were in 1916. Or alriost there, There is an Anglo-American joint staff. Some progress has been made in the direction of pooling resources, and in the Atlantic and Pacific there is something like unity of command. According to military realists, a central war planning board is ime perative to allied victory.
MORE FROM COUNTY INDUCTED IN ARMY
The State Selective Service system has announced the names of men who today were inducted into military service from Marion County
Boards 2 and 3. The men are: Board No. 2—Ivan Price, 1902 Central Denton Albert Kelly, Rosswell Farley, 907 E. 27th St.: Hanson Mayo, 1620 Broadway; Herbert Prince, Lavon Kennard. 2426 Carrollton: Raymond Crumbaugh. 2449 College; Jioes e, 2062 Bellefontaine; Thomas William Bugher, 6268 E. 17th 8t.: William Verne Johnson, 1328 Sturm, and Raymond C. Heseman, Prag ille. Board No. 3—Glen H. Huber, 4460 Carrollton; Edward Louis Anderson, 3721 Carrollton: Carter B. Tharp, 137 E. 44ta; Charles Francis Hill, 5 E. Meridian;
Wesi Bahia! Kibler. 3638 Hemlock; John Robert Egan, -2856 Central; Georze Joshua Kinz 2 15. ‘Broadway: Forest D. Pertinper. 3444 E. 26th; william Lancaster Ben ng. 3520 Kenwood; Dale Oswald Moore, 3116 N. Jersey: Frederick Huntington Day Jr., Broadway: Charles Philip Weisenburgh, 912 Edgewood; George Edwin Vi 3114 N. Delaware: 3127 N. Pennsylvania; Small, 202 Washington Aloysius Bartley, New R N. William McLane, 4061 N. Meridian; Arnold Tevis Spencer, 1701 N. Illinois; William Hamiiton, 3290 Fall Creek:
Cranor Lanning. Sheffield Inn; Frederick Charles Pier, 2250 N. Meridian, and Har Joseph Traugott, 4036 Central. 1500 ANZACS GUERRILLAS CANBERRA, Australia (U, P.).—= The War Office has made publie that there are still 1500 Australian and New Zealand troops in Crete who are being secreted by the native population and who are conducting guerrilla warfare.
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