Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1943 — Page 2
ee
President Roosevelt waved an
hi on arrived, wearing a robin’s ‘egg blue Chinese gown with threerter lengtii white wocl coat.
e joined the group for several
. =»
There was one other moment
Hadji Alli lived up to his great ‘ moment — perhaps the greatest moment in his life as a dragoman
_ interjected “you understand,” but he never waited for an answer. ~The president and prime minister could no more than open their lips or nod before he was off with rything was built by human
“Get Regular Lecture at Pyramids ~~ ©
ASN'T UNTIL Thanksgiving day that the American. British- ! to sit back, after three solid days and of joint effort, and have their pictures taken.
expansive hand toward the center
if and said to Chiang Kai-Shek: : “vou are the guest of honor—and after «ll, this is your first ¢on-
The cameramen also grouped the United States and British commanders ‘who had served in the Far East and chiefs of staff. Then the combined chiefs of staff and the political conferees tried to look nonchalant while the cameramen took reel after reel and shot aftér shot for 40 minutes. - Then everybody got back to . - .
of relaxation before the five-day
gathering That was when the Anglo-American leaders grove out to the Pyramids. For a quarter hour, as the sun burned down over the Pyramids, Hadji Alli, the No. 1 senior dragoman, took * the spotlight from the statesmen and deélivered—without a word, of interruption—his lecture on those ancient Egyptian tombs.
ds a dragoman at the sphynx and pyramids. “I was offered money urse, 1 did not take it. “1 was very glad to have them
‘| here.”
MOTHER OF SEVEN
(Continued From Page One)
utes after the accident she rushed out, believing the victim to have been a neighbor of her mother. Reaching the scene she ‘found it was her own mother. — : Mrs. Halas died shortly after ar-
She was born in Poland and came to Indianapolis’ with ther parents when 17. Hef husband, Andrew, died eight years ago. She was a member of the Assumption
‘fehurch, 2 Survivor ea an and ‘Mrs. Huhn are” r daughters,
Mrs. Helen Hudnall, Mrs. Rosie Pendygraft, and Mts. Stella Reddy; two sons, Seaman 1-¢ Joseph and Edward; and 16 grandchildren. , The body was taken to the Farley Funeral home. “Funeral services will be held at the home at 8:30 ‘a. m. Monday and at 9 a. m. at the “Assumption church. Burial will be in
KILLED IN TRAFFIC
{Conference in Iran Is pected to Seal Doom +. Of Germany. (Continued From Page One) ’ in his mind was “the statement that this is going to be'a long war against Japan.”
Chiafrman Sol Bloom (D. N. YJ)
of the house foreign relations committee, praised the “strong and emphatic” qualities of the Cairo statement in addition to predicting highly beneficial results from the Anglo-American-Soviet conference.
: nn Report Meeting In Progress nes Chief Honors . | Lisbon and other dispatches re- © : ported that Mr. Roosevelt and
Churchill already were at Teheran,
chiefs have gone into conference with the Russians, but the buildup to such a meeting, countenanced by officials here and in London, has been unmistakable. The North African meeting of Mr. Roosevelt and Churchill with results
have an important bearing on the military aspects of the war on Japan. They will give China renewed will to continue its utmost
Map Jap Dismemberment
In brief, the agreement provided for the wholesale dismemberment of the Japanese empire, leaving Japan little more than the group of islands it comprised when Commodore Perry opened its doors to the world in-1863.-All territories stolen from China will be returned to China. The
which Japan used to extend its greedy tentacles in its present war of conquest will be retrieved. All other territories gobbled up. by Japan will be taken away. The agreement is, in effect, a Pacific charter. : There has been little expectation lin responsible quarters here that | Stalin would join a conference dealling purely with Pacific problems {because Russia is not at war with |Japan. Hence the probable ar{rangement for séparate conferences. {But there was plentiful evidence of close liaison between the two. conferences. .
RY. ied Sra Lt ng ‘the participants in th rival a SOP DogRIAL. oe cel Pn Do oy hie ie
were W. Averell Harriman, Amerjean ambassador to Moscow; Sir Archibald Clark Kérr, British envoy to Russia; Laurence A.:Steinhardt, U. 8S. ambassador to Turkey; British Foreign Secretary Anthony
i
British foreign office, : Harriman Russ Expert Harriman, Kerr, Steinhardt and
completed the successful meeting of Anglo = American - Soviet foreign ministers in Moscow. The ground-
{work done by Eden, Secretary of
{State Cordell Hull and Soviet For-
St. Joseph's cemetery,
efforts in the struggle against its
the Roosevelt-Churchill talk with Stalin was believed also to go into]
Eden, and Sir Ajexi Cadogan, perfangiit’ rf vv ol in the |
Eden are experts on Russia, the! British foreign secretary just having |
psychological blitz against Nazis, complete with new, -strongly ‘worded demands for “unconditional surrender” in lieu of unlimited destruction of the Reich and slaughter of its forces.
post-war fields, expanding the work done by Hull, Eden and Molo- |
tov and possibly bearing on some of the more touchy matters such as territorial adjustments which the foreign ministers did not explore at any length. : Th absence of Russian represen= | tation at the meeting in North Africa seemed to prove again that the
|'Soviet Unionsis not yet in a pose!
{tion to provide bases from whith} .- |the allies can "hit Japan, Allied]
| leaders long have béen fully aware of ect RIB ee , dr 5 nk [there ‘coriceivably” collid ' be some change in’ long-range stratégy
| worked : out between the president] ;
he prime minister and Stalin, - #
| velt, Churchill and Chiang issued made no change master plans {for the defeat of Any as soon {as possible, ° g undoubtedly {went into the meeting with long { understanding ‘of “this "basic allied ! policy. wa Planned Months Ago The Roosevelt-Churchill-Chiang meeting in North Africa was planned | months ago. Some officials Bere believe Madame Chiang, who visited |
in Washington early this year and; {who was at the three-power con
ference, may have paved the way for the meeting ih her White House" talks with the president, |
sued at the completion of the I North Africa conference said: “The ‘several military missions have agreed» upon' future military operations against Japan. The three great allies expressed their resolve! to bring unrelenting pressure against
and air, This great pressure is al-|
It is their purpose that Japan shall be stripped of all the islands in the cupled since ihe. begining of the oy the beginning of the first world war in 1914, and that all territories Japan has stolen from the Chipese, such as Manchuria, Formosa, and the Pescadores, shall be restored to the Republic of China. China. fn x Korea To Be Freed “Japan will also be expeiled from all other territories which she
; i ; LT
The- declaration-which Mr. -Roose- |}
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The text of the communique fs-.|:
their brutal ‘enemies by sea, land!].
no thought of territorial expansion. (|
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