Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1943 — Page 17

THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1043 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 17

SUGGESTS PLAN Polk Co. 50 Years Old SOVIETS PIERCE Report Greeks Engaged in 'GIRAUD BACKED T0 SAVE PEACE [JIS BO GERMAN LINES ~~ Heavy Attacks on Italians BY EISENHOWER

| LONDON, July 1 (U, P.).—Greek traffic on the Athens-Salonika rail-|

guerrillas have started a series of | road because of continual raids.

i | | in Near : : | In a fight southwest of Prikali Churchill Sa S Yank Chief Noted Writer Warns Chaos Seize River Crossing attacks against axis occupying i.. ouerrillas wiped out 200 Italian | y Asked French Leader

teat CR 3 : : | : ow Hints forces in the belief that allied in-|troops, the bureau said. The other After Armistice Could Be \ : | Smolensk Mosc . |vasion is near and have killed 300 battles were in northern Thessaly . Worse Than War. Major Campaign. Be Retained. 1 (U. P).—-Gen,

| Italians in heavy fighting in the where a German detachment was central part of the country, a Greek routed after losing a large quantity Times Special (U. P.).—A spokesman said today. of spoils and in the Pindus district LONDON, July WASHINGTON, July 1.—The mo- | | Soviet detachment broke through| The spokesman said Italian troops where 55 Italians died defending a pwight D. Eisenhower, supreme ment “cease firing!” sounds, says \ : » - | enemy defenses and penetrated had burned down the Greek villages garrison. : : : allied commander in North Africa, | Dr. Edward J. Byng, former United | . ‘of Mouzaki and Mavromati, exe-| Axis terrorism was reported in| ; : Press manager for continental Eu | ‘German trenches on the Smolensk cuted 37 persons, including 25 occupied lands. | personally intervened in the French rope, there will be so many “catas-| ‘front today as Red army troops hostages, and carried off 170 women | Quoting the French writer Jean Shustion to RE a} Gen. Henri trophic” points in the world that were advised that their reconnois-|and childten in reprisal. Richard Bloch, the Algiers radio Honore Girau e retained as

i , . French military commander to avoid : | The patriot troops were reported said 50,000 Frenchmen had been : A | the united nations will have to move | sance thrusts heralded major of- . sh : ‘ | impeding the war effort, Prim | 5 y , -. | shot or guillotined as hostages and | MI g lhe war + Prime like lightning to prevent anarchy to have blown up an Italian mer 8 .

sive blows. ; . . , | i is Minister Churchill revealed toda: land wholesale loss of life, | fensiv chant ship off the southern Greek more than 400,000 placed in prison. | So convinced of this is Dr. Byng|

Following an artillery exchange, coast and to be raiding railways|Bloch said that in reprisal patriots | Speaking in commons, Churchill that. like BEx-President Hoover, the detachment smashed through communication lines and Italian had killed 858 German officers and ng i ILI former Ambassador Hugh Gibson | [to a river crossing and drove tothe barracks. : : wounded 2500 others. : . seiiUnited States and British gOvern= land other distinguished thinkers, | | German blockhouse and pillbox de- | The Soi) 2 Tatmation btiesn Deen neve, ApeTicY S00 ents and that 3 was made solely | he has worked out what he calls “a | | fenses. | said e Greek patriots forced the: 8 | five-year peace plan,” which Coward- |

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|

3 A MOSCOW, July 1

»

Prussia Must Disappear

Max Stephan From

I ROGRESS | The mid-day communique said occupying authorities to suspend of the Nazis during the occupation. on military and not on political [MeSetin, HIVE. Hv Weth 9) | t1 It while the Germ i | The British government, Churchill in- |the assault while the German posi- eat I 1893, marked the hegin : 5 ) k- |tions were blasted with hand gre- Drop 20,000 To ns DEPUTIES RECOVER said, hd Hot, ta en Sides in tha ning of Polk's 50 Years of Few can speak with a better bac French political arguments adding L ih tok ground than Dr. Byng. He was Governor Schricker is shown here as he presented a memorial |nades. The advance took place . shat. 36 was. hosed. the members of Progress in supplying to | | ARE Of Bombs on Axis BODY IN BIG EAGLE ne new i er : } . |Oxford, master of seven languages | president of the Polk Sanitary Milk Co, which today is celebrating and mine fields. jy : ; and mes) io Natures land has 25 vears of intimate con-| its 50th anniversary. Hint at Offensive dA wm The body of Mrs. Mary Moloney, personal and indiyidual interests for Mo ET nae tact with countries ahd peoples in R. A. F. an merican bombers . ; " the common good of France.” ; y i p ras 20, Speedway City, was recovered | g e. healthful of all foods— uy gous A based in Britain set an all-time | I Eagle creek near 16th st. |. Churchill said that on June 19 MILK! | At the moment of the armistice, | . [Soviet rs 2 an > 2 » record in June by dropping nears from Big Eagle creek near st. says Dr. Byng, the united nations) overnor resenrs ervice Foes Ilr sing 4 early today by deputy sheriffs after | Charles De Gaulle, French co= iiish tle FORAY 10 GEENDY EVEN Dom stronger advances Europe, almost three times the a search of more than three hours. | leader, “for assurance that thera apolis has grown from a | sible trouble-center. Airborne troops . | D . pP id stronge es. Jurope, : 8 the | Moloney. Who had been in| Would be no change in the French 3 ols | “A situation has arisen in which : ; , ira | s. Moloney, who had mn ; . de town of 105.000 citizens | must be held in instant readiness Memoria fo Qiry resi ent all DPeTROrS: hegitor With eh tonnage unloaded by German wie IO ag TE in North Africa at the to be a great metropolitan to take over not only axis capitals | soale reconnaissance thrusts and craft during the entire three- ; Soin 7 o'tlack Just night present time. but every other strategic center as Fifty years ago, Samuel O. Dun-| Charles L. Peggs, Polk's oldest em- | ending with large scale offensive | month “blitz” on this country in Ellen dr. abou o'clock last nig Pus repression Vas nude > y J sv, 4 a € sc § \ a . | . i arv gr © " lion population. Polk's has [well ; ; gan drove the first Polk milk wagon ployee: C. Winfield Hunt, executive operations, must be directed toward| 1940, unofficial observers estimated and when she failed to return her QnA} iary Brounes By p OR kept pace with th th |} To prevent the spread of typhus =... 0 97 gallons of milk to the secretary of the Indianapolis Milk gyercoming the enemy's prepared! today ‘husband, Frank, an employee at is : St . Bis ¥p1 pace wi ¢ grow d similar scourges, there must be| , . : ys p | today. . |hower with full control over the Hv Gv x | RNG. SIN ; Res, ; company’s customers. That was the foundation, and Mr. Dungan. ositions.” the broadeast said esse | Allisol's became alarmed and called| 20 C _ co : 6f wor city over hese oO a general delousing process. Cargo aoinning of a dairy firm which to-| This morning Governor Schricker BD A Gert Wn ih V 1k} Bad weather grounded Britain's | "700 ¥ ' political organization of North : | Yasting } ierman foray in the Volkhov| pig four-engined bombers last |the sheriff's office. | Africa.” Churchill said planes must be ready to rush in de-| 44¢ produces in 24 hours 27,000 gal- acting for the Milk foundation, . t | big 5 | > C said. among the leaders of the hydrated and concentrated ooq- | produce i ok res ’ " sector, perhaps designed as the| night for the second straight | The car was traced to the edge| He said that he and President : : : lons of miik and milk products, represented by Mr. Hunt, presented prelude to an attack trying to close| night and thereby robbed them of milk industry. Every day stuffs The Polk Sanitary Milk Co. is a memorial from leaders in the in- Leningrad’s supply corridor to the int to booth the ton of the creek and Deputy Sheriffs upon the steps taken. in. North of every year it has | | celebrating its golden anniversary dustry to Mr. Dungan, president of north, was beaten off by rifle and| nace over the 20.000 mark. Harry Foxworthy and Elmer Daily on step! began dragging. They saw cr . —— words— AE n oh | of the occasion will be given for sev-| Mr. Dungan, who occupied the a [Yio ' f 5 FRENCH LEADERS MEET peace plan proper, he writes, the : Fooinenribi : alk e | lieved to have dropped 15,800 tons J LEADERS united nations should exercise fo ER a hrawinnnt de office of Secretary treasurer for 18 | of bombs on Germany, Italy, along the shore and a short time ALGIERS, July 1 (0. P). The v joint protectorate over the Reich | 7M a rthietic Ns ya Joa, il one ne was president of TRAITOR DUE 10 | France, Belgium and Holland last later recovered the body. French committee of national libe and Austria. “Three supra-national | Po & : he International Association of | bodies” should be set up—a political | : tos bend klc : force contributed another 3255 [are two children, Nancy, 9, and Gaulle presiding and Gen. Henri ‘board, an economic beard and an dall; Col. Beniamin r Castile, presi=| The Polk Milk Co. employs 300 tons. | Paul, six weeks. Honore Giraud attending. 9 'dent of the Milk Industry founda- persons and buys milk from more “won Paul, six Ww | Honore Giraud attending. J | educational board. tion; Milton Hult, president of the than 2000 producers Prussia, says the author. “must | National Dairy council: Dr. Her- . Y W h » Sh {F alr) 3 . | The firm has two of its own i 5 should be iy St Bavars, |man G. Morgan, secretary of theliuwms-..at Greenwood, Ind. and the shoul © rceled out to Bavaria, | i i © Willi ' 4 he d pa Indianapolis health board: William Crystal Springs farm at Franklin. Only Roosevelt Can Save cities. Austria should become inde- | dianapolis Chamber of Commerce: serv milk pendent, and a “fourth reich” should | —————— ee iy . the breeding and feeding and care of the best dairy herds. the most sanitary handling of our products so they may reach consum-health-building content of nutrition, ALWAYS AHEAD — in tory test to protect pure food values. ALWAYS AHEAD — in equipment and operation to process and pack Polk's Products better. courteous, efficient service to bring every customer the utmost in pure,

rounds. This first day of July, |several prisoners were captured in 8 : " | book form. : . born in Austria, is an alumnus of| from leaders in the milk industry this morning to Samuel O. Dungan, |aCross barbed wire entanglements Indisngpolis [the Jared LONDON. July 1 (U. P.) = tional liberation “will merge their , “ . “Ja | Europe, Asia and Africa. Eisenhower asked Giraud and Gen, In these 50 Years, Indian- | designed to soften the enemy for| ly 20,000 tons of bombs on axis center of over a half-mil-vears, to reach a place Roosevelt were in “closest accord” earned its use of the || A; the outset of the five-year |today. Tonight, a dinner in honor the Polk Milk Co. machine-gun fire. Altogether, the R. A. F. was be- | Sie woman's dress caught on a bush | | Guests will include Mayor Tyn-| Milk Deal month, while the American air | Survivors, besides her husband, eration met today with Gen. Dae sts yn- ¢ Dealers. Saxony and the former Hanseatic | H, Book, vice president of the In-| yng which produce Guernsey and ALWAYS AHEAD — in ALWAYS AHEAD — in ers without loss of any every scientific laboradeveloping facilities and ALWAYS AHEAD — in nutritious food value.

We are thankful to every man and woman connected with the production, distribution and use of Polk's Products—those who are responsible for every development of these 50 Years of Progress —and know they join in this pledge to keep Polk's — “Always Ahead” — today and tomorrow.

Ze POLK SANITARY MILK: CO.

(Established 1893)

1100 E. 15th Street INDIANAPOLIS

Producing and Distributing— POLK'S STANDARD MILK POLK'S EXTRA RICH MILK POLK'S GUERNSEY MILK POLK'S HOMOGENIZED MILK POLK'S FAT-FREE MILK POLK'S NURSERY MILK POLK'S EVAPORATED MILK POLK'S BUTTERMILK

POLK'S CREAMED COTTAGE CHEESE

POLK’S SWEET CREAM BUTTER

POLK'S COFFEE CREAM POLK'S BREAKFAST EGGS

POLK'S DARI-RICH CHOCOLATE

POLK'S ORANGEADE

Baaled by 50 Years of “Knowing How!”

| be set up under a constitution similar to that of the United States. To prevent secret rearmament, the united nations would control Ger- | {man industry and ration out the] needed raw materials. | | Europe should be more or less | federalized, Dr. Byng writes, with | a Danube federation and a Balkan federation if no more. Poland must have access to the sea. The French | empire should become a commonwealth of nations modeled after that of the British. There should be a Pan-Arab federation, a United | States or Dominion of India, and a | | Dutch East Indies federation.

Trading By Barter

Italy should be reorganized demo-, cratically, either like the United States or Great Britain. Japan would revert to the shogunate system, but on a “modern, democratic, | electoral basis"—which sounds like! a contradiction in terms. Trade during the first few years following the war, says Mr. Byng, must be conducted on a barter basis. These are just a few of the high-| lights of the Byng plan. There is much that is unquestionably good in! it as well as a good deal that is debatable—as the author is first to admit. But he has done at least one enormously useful thing. He has helped | to drive home the supreme fact that

: : g y shi i -| whic ras y i 8 bv unless the united nations perfect 2 large supply ship, a medium sup-| h was developed in 1915 bY never yet seen a condemned man

their post-war plans before the war ends, the armistice will usher in a period worse than the war itself.

‘SYNTHETIC RUBBER PLANT IS OPENED

| | PITTSBURGH, July 1 (U. P.).— bound fleet and in support of Amer- | Preliminary operations have been ican and British planes from the y,qianapolis police department, Sgt. | disloyal

{started at the first of four 20,000-

ton butadiene units at the huge! eastern commands seeking to cut yesterday, intends “to loaf awhile at | Kobuta synthetic rubber plants, lo- the sea routes between the Italian home and then maybe get a job in upon Stephan last Aug. 6 because cated in the Beaver valley, near mainland and Sicily, Sardinia and some war plant.”

here, it was revealed today. D. M. Rugg, vice president of the | { Koppers United Co. and general] manager of the company's buta-| diene division, also disclosed that the three butadiene units and the | styrene plant at Robuta will go into | production sometime during the | summer and full production at the | nation’s largest synthetic rubber plant will be underway by fall.

‘SERVICES ARE HELD

SUBS DESTROY 4 OF AXIS SHIPS

British Announce Action In Duce’s ‘Private

Ocean.

LONDON, July 1 (U. P.) —British submarines, supporting allied air

| forces in an offensive to cut off

Italy's island outposts from supply and reinforcement, have sunk four and probably five more axis ships in Itslian waters, the admiralty announced today. The new blows to axis strength came as European advices told of the departure of a new allied invasion fleet from Gibraltar uader strong naval escort and reported that Italy's uneasy King Victor Emmanuel was pleading with Premier Benito Mussolini to declare Rome an open city in the hope that it may be spared aerial bombardment.

Includes Transport

The vessels sunk were listed by the admiralty as a large transport,

ply ship and a small supply ship. Another medium supply ship also was believed to have been sunk, the communique said. The communique indicated tha British submarines now were striking deep into Italian territorial waters in defiance of Italy's harbor-

northwest African and middle-

Corsica. Report Ship Movement

The German transocean agency, n a Berlin broadcast, reported from | the Spanish border town of La ! Liena that 25 allied merchant ships and at least eight large landing barges, all heavily laden with war material, left Gibraltar yesterday during a day of “feverish activity” and steamed eastward. A small convoy put into Gibraltar from the Atlantic, Lhe broadcast

said. Still anchored at the big opnergency squad post vacated by]

One of Four Largest

The Polk Co., according to one of the officials of the firm, is one of the four largest independent [dairies in the United States. The Indianapolis plant has served as a model for others, its style and

Death on Gallows.

MILAN, Mich, July 1 (U. P.).— Unless President Roosevelt intervenes, Max Stephan, an obscure 51-year-old Detroit innkeeper, dies on {the gallows before dawn tomorrow

NEAT STRIPES in Cool Cotton. 3.98-5.00

methods of operation being copied | —a traitor to the United States, his in ‘the building of several European adopted country. dairies. | With every legal recourse exThe 50th anniversary brochure of hausted, only an 1lth-hour presithe company in describing the way dential reprieve can save the stocky the firm started says: |one-time corporal in the German | “The history of Polk's progress/army from being the first person began on the first day of July when executed under the 153-year-old fedJ. T. Polk's son-in-law, Samuel O.leral treason statute. |Dungan, drove the first Polk milk | Although Stephan and his law- | Wagon from a small one-story sta-|yers held hope that executive clemtion, at what is now 16th st. and ency would be forthcoming, arPark ave, over a route covering|rangements for the execution — ‘about three miles, to deliver 27 gal- Michigan's second in 113 years— lons of , . . milk. | proceeded. First Customers

“The name of ex-President Ben-

| Clings to Hope . . { Weary and distraught, Stephan jamin Harris as is bE i : lamin Harrison was on the list of | qnyicted last July 2 of aiding the these first customers—manv of escape of a Nazi prisoner of war (these families are still using Polk's | jisconsolatelv paced his cell in the

{milk today.” : | ig | federal correctional institute here.

| Polk's evaporated milk is now be- | Although he refused to abandon Ing sent to all part of the world | hone he had lost most of the! | where our armed forces are Serving, 'pravado which a vear ago prompted {to army camps and on the fighting him" to sav: 2 fronts WY + S ini “They’ll never hang me!” According to a firm official, Polk's “No, Max hasn't up hope,” (Was the first dairy in the country confirmed Cecil J. Shuttleworth, |to use a brush-type bottle washer, warden at Milan. “But then I've C. W. Desobry, Polk plant superin-|

give up I — il the i ) tendent at the time. 1p hope—until the minute he

|was led to the gallows.” there is no reprieve, it will be 4 fi

es i H SGT | B FORSYTHE the duty of Shuttleworth and U. S. y : % ft 1 Marshal John Barc to announce to = 7 NF 4 ; Stephan that the hour has arrived pS / lin X : RESIGNS POLICE JOB fulfilling the sentence which oh y ai {Federal Judge Arthur J. Tuttle! = Nye

>

After 37 vears of service with the | hopes “will teach a lesson to every | citizen of the United who retired States.” | Tuttle imposed the death penalty!

Leonard B. Forsythe,

|“we have become too soft, to the Sgt. Forsythe, who lives at 2816 extent of being mushy” with our |N. Talbott ave. was the fifth oldest enemies. {man in the police department in| | years of service. | He was appointed in April, 1906, | CIVIC

Fashions with a young air; a pretty flattery; an all-summer-long serviceability. Cool to wear and to look at, they're wonderfully easy to keep spic-and-span because they launder with such con«

stant grace.

Daytime Dresses—Fourth Floor

tas a Democrat and has served in {almost every capacity from patrolman to captain in the interim. Be- | fore his retirement he was emergency squad sergeant, | Patrolman Otto Burk, 2255 E. | Riverside drive, was promoted to acting sergeant by Police Chief Beeker and assighed to the

FOR DAVID E. ROSS xritisn base, it asserted, were the Sgt. Forsythe.

LAFAYETTE, Ind. July 1 (U. P.). British battleships Nelson and Rod- | —Services for David E. Ross, presi- ney, the aircraft carrier Formid-| tjon during .the 1913

Commended for meritorious acflood, Sgt.

|dent of the board of trustees at able and 12 British tnd two French Forsvthe was the last man to cross

| Purdue university and philanthro- | | pist, will be held today, with civilian, | jarmy and navy units at the school {ceasing all activities in his honor. | He died Monday. | Students were to be pallbearers for the 71-year-old benefactor who gave Purdue many of its buildings

|

destroyers.

WOMEN OF MOOSE

| the tottering Kingan & Co. bridge | over White river before it was swept |away. For a week he was in charge of feeding West side refugees from

CARRY ON IN 1944

The Civic theater will carry on | next season, | This was the verdict of the execu- | tive committee last night when 1000 paid and 300 pledged memberships were turned in at the close of the membership drive, ; The committee also decided to (retain Jack Hatfield as director, | Don Finlayson as technical director, {and Mrs. Avelyn Booty as business | manager.

WPA HAS HUGE SURPLUS WASHINGTON, July 1 (U.P).—

|

? | The works progress administration TO MEET TONIGHT | food supplies commandeered from... to an pie at the close of the

Women of the Moose, chapter 11, will hold its first meeting of the

railroad cars.

‘and projects as well as several large |new year at 8 p. m. tonight at the UNITED NATIONS ARE

(cash gifts. The Ross-Ade stadium, | which he and George Ade, Hoosier

(humorist, presented to the school, is gent, will preside. Mrs. Hazel Post- |

‘the only gift which bears his name. |

Moose temple, 135 N. Delaware st. Mrs. Mae Aufderheide, senior re-

ma is new graduate regent.

ON OFFENSIVE—KNOX

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (U. P.).— The united nations, backed by the greatest force of arms ever assembled, now can pick the time and place of the wai’s battles, Secretary of Navy Frank Knox told a Hollywood bowl audience last night as newsboys shouted reports of a Solomon islands offensive. “In military affairs,” he said, “that means a great deal.” The U. S. navy, he said, is the most powerful fleet in the world and by the end of this year will be 60 per cent larger than the 1942

number. “Despite all our blunders and mistakes,” he said, “we have wrought a miracle.”

C. B. KELLAND’'S MOTHER DIES PORT WASHINGTON, N. Y,

July 1 (U. P.).—Mrs, Margaret An-

gelina Kelland, 87, mother of Clarence Budington Kelland, author, died at midnight last night in her home after an illness of ¥nly a few

fleet in tonnage and double in!

| 1943 fiscal year with $130,000,000 to

be turned back to the treasury, officials said today. i

Communiques

NAVY COMMUNIQUE 429 (Issued July 1, 1943) SOUTH PACIFIC: (All dates east longi- | tude). | 1. On the night of June 29-30 Avenger (Grumman TBF) torpedo bombers and Dauntless dive bombers attacked the air fleld, the stores and camp areas at Villa Kolombangara island. 2. On June 30: (a) A formation of Mitchell medium bombers, Dauntless dive bombers and Avenger torpedo bombers attacked Japanese defensive positions and camp area at Munda, New Georgia island, A large fire was started. (b) Commencing in the early forenoon and continuing until late afternoon, an estimated total of 110 Japanese planes comprising Zero fighters, Mitsubishi medium bombers, Aichi dive bombers, and various other types attacked at intervals U, 8S. naval forces during the landing at Rendova island, New Georgia group. U. 8. surface units and air forces destroyed 65 of the enemy planes according to an incomplete report. Seventeen U., 8. planes are reported missing. (¢) The transport McCawley was attacked and disabled by Japanese torpedo planes after landing troops on Rendova. Subsequently the vessel was attacked and sunk by a Japanese submarine. Reports indicate that all personnel were removed before the vessel sank and that there was no loss of life. 3. On July 1, Viru harbor on New Georgia island, was taken by joint U, 8. forces.

Striped pique with pleated white pique accents. Red or blue.

Sizes, 9-15 at 5.00.

Candyv-striped percales with panty lace accents. Aqua, blue, red.

Sizes, 9-15 at 3.98.

Striped chambray classie shirtwaist dress. aqua. Sizes 12-20 at 3.98,

L. 4 S ®

In blue, rose,

AYRES. S oral