Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 December 1942 — Page 9

= especially

to proceed at the moment of the

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Polish Premicr Suggests Plan of Action Be Laid Before War Ends.

By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Seripps-Howara Foreign Editor: Ww. NGTON, Dec. 16::Ge Sikorski, the Polish. pre this country on &’ highly

aw mier, is in this important mission. The time. has] i

the war ends. He. ; States should take the dead. > It 1s his view this war will end with comparative suddenness. To. alt until then to begin laying the oundations of peace might be gisastrous, Pe i dis At best, the world will find itself , With countless problems the immediate attention united nations. With the Very soundest of advance planning, they will experience difficulty in meeting even the most urgent of these demands. - Failure of the allies to be prebared for such emergencies would intensify the difficulties of post-war reconstruction manyfold.

. Gets Support in U, 8.

Gen, Sikorski has strong support on both sides of the Atlantic; in the United States. The difficulty, however, is not so much |. in selling the idea—which most statesmen’ readily accept—as in get ting immediate action, * a Some seem afraid to raise the Issue now lest the allies start ‘haggling among themselves before they win the war. What seems to be needed Some sort of fixed point from

Mary Frances Rushton

The Thespian society of the Dramatic club at Ben Davis high school will present the play, “Mrs. -Miniver,” tonight. at the school. ; ther Wilson will play the role ‘of Mrs. Miniver. Other parts will be taken by Mary Frances Rush= ton, Bill Rigot, Ernest Grosdidier, Jack Bortz, Becky Rowlisin,: Patricia Bauder, John Plain, Lucille Pickeral, Barbara May, H. R. Miller, Janice Mason, Patricia Grosset, Paul McCoy, Tom Forsha. Assisting backstage will be Betty Joe Miller, Anita Flack, Bob Kellems, Milda Dudriak, Marjorie Vance and Marjorie Moore: The Ben Davis band will play -and Shirley Stonebraker will dance.

RADIO TO ‘INSTRUCT’ CHILDREN IN ITALY

By UNITED PRESS first is| The German radio said today Which | that some 300,000 Italian school

armistice. Frontiers are already children would be mstructed st badly scrambled and may be. more | home by radio while schools are 80 before the axis is defeated. I| closed from today until Feb. 16. have heard a number of suggestions.| In a dispatch from Rome, broadOne is temporarily to accept the|cast in English, the Germans demarcations more or less as laid Trans-ocean News Service explained down by the Paris peace treaties and that the closing of the schools for Proceed from there. : the Christmas holidays “had to be Some Nations Unaffected prolonged owing to a shortage of

coal.” Geographically, at least, this

: - Reports last week from Italy by Would give some fixity, France, the way of neutral Switzerland intilow countries, Norway,

Finland, | mateq that the closing was part of

Bronchitis i

a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are .to have your money back.

CREOMULSION

territorially ‘speaking, would be as|from cities subject to air raids. other territory lost to Japan and lessons by radio. The children were There would be - exceptions, of and all their usual equipment. revert to their status as of Dec. 7, AUTHORIZES EXTRA in 1946. of India, Africa, Burma, Indo-|—Defense Transportation Director Be workedfiout at leisure. Also|Pers, yesterday issued an order auof the Pacific, used by Japan as |before Christmas. the way for the time being, ‘the 2 ay Make none on Dec. 25. Germany, Italy and Japan. Indianapolis wives, mothers and duty through a special service prowith Red Cross field directors -atten by the senders, were relayed to for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis

Poland, the Baltic republics, Czecho- the Italian government’s plan for If nothing had happened. China Trans-ocean said special teachface further adjustments with as- told to sit by the family radio set, course, to the general rule. The They will be given extra work fo be 1941, when, as a commonwealth, | DELIVERY DEC. 24 Final settlements would be made China, Thailand, Malaya, the East|Joseph B.. Eastman, coming to the the problems presented by Korea, |thorizing merchants to make one bases for aggressive war, But he specified that merchants allies would be left with free hands —— LL SOLDIERS OVERSEAS . sweethearts Christmas will receive vided by the Red Cross. tached to foreign military units, the local Red Cross chapter,

slovakia, Austria and the Balkans, evacuating children and others would get back Manchuria and ers had been selected to give the surance. : with copybooks, pen, ink, .textbooks Philippines, for example, would |done “after school hours.” they were awaiting independence i around the peace table. The future| - WASHINGTON; Dec. 16 (U, P.). Indies, Singapore, - Hongkong, eould (21d of last-minute Christmas shopFormosa and the mandated islands |2dditional delivery on Dec. 24, day With some of these things out of | V1© make two deliveries on Dec. to deal with the future status of TO SEND FLOWERS! flowers from soldiers on foreign | to Servicemen placed flower ‘orders These orders, with messages Writ= Remodel Your Watch emodel Your Watc

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"LONDON, Dec. 16 (U, P.) —Andre

* | Michaloupoulos, Greek minister of

information, reported yesterday that about 100,000 of the 1,000,000 resi-

| [dent Athenians have died-of starva-| [tion during the 15 months of axis

occupation. : Thousands more ‘have died at

Salonika . and other cities and towns, lt

“effective operations” against the ‘occupation forces in mountain districts where meager food supplies still are available,

ARCHITECTS TO MEET The annual meeting of the Indiana Society of Architects will be held Friday at the Indianapolis Athletic club. Dinner will be at 6 p. m.

Election of officers and a business assisted by Corp. George S. Wells| John Agnew

meeting will follow.

Stout Fi Stout field, headquarters of the 1 troop carrier command and the 362d army air base, will be introduced in the next few weeks to The Stout Fielder, the newest. army newspaper in the United States. The : paper - will be : semi-monthly - and - will present about 20 nationally ‘known’ features shich have been feature syndicates. : In addition

The: Stout Fielder, Inc. a civilian

enterprise, will publish the paper -

and solicit advertising. Reporters and editors will represent each squadron and headquarters. Art and photographic departments are in operation. First Lieut. Edwin C. Stein, public relations supervise ' production of the paper,

donated by six

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El : Staff members of the new Stout field,

Pvt. Gordon J.

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II, -Pvt. Gordon J. Lawler and Pvt. office.

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; newspaper field as managing editor + of the Newark (N. J) Star-Eagle

and day editor of the old New York American. Before entering the army he was war editor of International News Service. Corp. Wells worked on the Washington Star and was a member of the Washington bureau of United Pyt. Lawler was business

: manager of the International Falls

Minn.) Daily. Journal, while Pvt.

| Agnew was on the editorial staff of the New York Times for 10 years,

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newspaper are, left to right:

Lawler, Lieut. E. C. Stein; Pvt, John Agnew and Corp. officer at the field, will George S. Wells II. Ao) ¢

All are veteran newspapermen. eut. Stein spent 15 years in the

WILL HOLD PARTY

The annual Christmas party of the ladies’ auxiliary 140, National Association of Letter Carriers, will be held at 1:30 p. m. Friday at the Food Craft shop. A program of games and music has been arranged by Mrs. Carl Huffman, party chairman, and her assistants, Mesdames E. Max Smith, John Stettler gnd Otis Bokerman.

commission yesterday to deny ; the petitions of the office of price ade ministration ‘and other government agencies for’ elimihation of rate ine creases previously authorized. “This nation can be strong in peace, and ‘Tost especially in- war, only if it has;strong railroads,” the railroads said in their answer. “I$ is depending .upon those railroads now . for - the - greatest quantity of transportation service ever rendered, requiring their full strength. They

cannot keep themselves in condie tion to meet imperative national needs if, at the first sign of ade< quate earnings, their rates are "to

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low earhings of the past or prose pects of the future.”

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