Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1946 — Page 15
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3 NATIONS POOL AIR SERVICES
Danish, Norwegian, Swedish Lines Form System.
By Scripps-Howard Newspapefs NEW YORK, Aug. 14—Three nations today pooled their air services
into single unit. . Danish and Norwegian Airlines
: and the Swedish International Air-|.
lines (SILA) formed the Scandinavian Airlines System and will
ag AUG. 14, 1946
Scottish Baronet ¢ or U. S. Citizen ?
tw
Li
lap 7 ¥ Hr y ia
' pool equipment and personnel for ! joint operation, it w--today by Tore H. Nilert, heading the group’s activiucs aio. Norlin, SILA president, has 'w.cu named president of the combine. Regular service will be offered from the United States to Copenhagan, Oslo and Stockholm. Under | the arrangement the first Douglas | DO-4s will take off, starting regular | Srate-AUantic schedules, on Sept. i" 7 Planes in Starting Fleet { Twice weekly charter service now | 1s being run to take care of heavy | demands for reservations, Mr. Nil- | ert announced from his offices at
| 270 Park Avenue.
The announcement followed meetings between representatives of the three airlines at Oslo, Norway. Scandinair, as the new combine is known, will fly the intercontinental routes of the three airlines and schedules also will be offered to South America via Africa, it was announced. Seven” DC-4s, seating 28 passengers each, will form the starting fleet which will make first stops at Stockholm, with alternate flights
What would you do if you were offered a British title in exchange for your U. 8. citizenship. That's the Robert W. Stirling, Indianapolis
| landing at Oslo and Copenhagen. Stratocruisers Ordered The planes can carry 60 pas-
sengers each but Scandinair an-|
nounced that it is thinking of the comfort of passengers on the long flight. Four Boeing Stratocruisers are on order for next year to augment the service, it is said. Valid for five years the agreement establishes a board of six directors two from each country, and with
the chairmanship rotating annually
among the three countries. Plans | were begun in 1939, Mr. Nilert said, but had to be postponed because of war,
The line maintains reservations |
and information offices at 630 Fifth Avenue, and a city dispatch and ticket office at 47 West 51st Street.
BODY TO BE RETURNED ANDERSON, Ind, Aug. 14 (U. + P).—The body of Cmdr. Harold Atherson, killed Sunday in the crash of a naval plane in Virginia, will be returned here for burial, his mother, Mrs. W. W. Atherton, was informed yesterday.
+| lord-lieutenant of
funeral director, 1422 Prospect st. |He can become a Scottish baronet lor remain an American citizen. Mr. Stirling is heir presumptive {to the title, created in 1668 for Sir George Stirling, Knight of Glorat. It can be held oifly by male heirs of the family, 1500-Acre Estate Now held by Sir George Stirling, Stirlingshire, Scotland, Mr, Stirling's cousin,. the title will pass to the heir presumptive on Sir George's-death. A retired British army colonel, Sir George is 76. | With the title ‘goes a 1500-acre estate, valued roughly at 10 pounds | ($40) an acre. If not claimed by| an heir, the title and estate revert to the British government. Mr. Stirling, now 56, doesn't think much of the idea of giving! up his citizenship.
Son Also Skeptical
{
the title to his son, John, if the| British government will permit, But | John also is skeptical.
Robert W Stirling (right) and son John...
To Be or Not to Be a Titled Briton—That'
problem faced by|
He is willing, however, to pass|
who wants a title?
s the Question
“Even if we can do that,” he says, “let's first see what we get out of it." John tried to visit Stirling castle while he was in Scotland with the army, went awry and got the wrong Stirlings. He thinks the British setup is fine, but doesn't know ‘if he'd like it for a career, Father and son spend many hours perusing the voluminous correspondence and literature concerning title and estate. Some of it dates back to the early 1800s. None of it, however, represents a direct proposition. Their first problem is to find out what's what in nobility.
"TRAFFIC F FINE “TOTALS $152, PLUS 360 DAYS
Mixing drinks and driving cost Clyde Oldham, 130 W. @ourt st. $152 in fines and sentences totaling 360 days at the Indiana state farm. Judge John L. Niblack dealt out {the penalties yesterday in Municipal
| court 4. The tally: Operating a ve-
hicle while under the influence of alcohol, 180 days and $100.; driving without a license, $50; intoxication, 180 days and $1, and disregarding a [trafic signal, $1.
TIMES SERIAL— ‘
STORY: Cecily’s wedding is we T last. But never will I forget the cruel thing I did to her. And Della erilys mother, will never forgive me.
I have adored Cecily since she was a baby—kept on adoring her even after I married rt and
mo Poi gs Corinna was born. Long new that Della was raising il to be an insufferable snob, and that she was Jealous of my love for her. One day when Cecily was 10 and ‘Corinna §, the id little “girls were ogether. Corinna Ab her. It was more than I could stand. Della refused to de anything so I took Ceclly across my knee and spanked her.
CHAPTER 9 I SAW Della standing still, quietly staring at me. She was pale but she let me hold Cecily until my very fingertips were sated with the feel of her small, warm body. At last I whispered to Cecily to run and wash her face and find me a dry hanky. “She'll probably be sick tonight,” Della commented when Cecily had left the room, but that was all she ever said about my explosion. The rehearsals were astonishingly pleasant after that and Della made no obvious efforts to get rid of me while they were going on.
s = = SHE WAS eager for Cecily to appear before one of the town’s major clubs so that the paper would have to call off its boycott and give Cecily a write-up that Myrtle Ralston might conceivably see. I didn’t think that Mrs. Ralston would be impressed, but Della was convinced that an inch of newsprint was as vital very one as it was to her.
ror §-[-R
Unfortunately the first call that came after the children had perfected their act was to the Marlin Playground Annual Festival Della turned up her nose at it. “I didn’t spend a fortune on costumes so that Cecily could dance in, front of those blackamoors.” s ” » I DIDN'T &rgue. Corinna could dance alone—and I wanted to see Della’s face when she discovered who had comprised half the adult audience. However, although she still was not taking the town newspaper she found one in the beauty parlor, read the advance notice of the Festivcal and saw the error of her ways. Patrons of the playground were the town’s elite, among them the Ralstons, and they all attended the annual festivals religiously as their {civic duty. They brought their children, too, many of whom were regular habitues of the .recreation center, as Della would have discovered if she had ever taken the trouble to investigate. ' Because of the news item Cecily and Corinna were introduced together the evening of the gala affair before an audience that packed the gymnasium. ” » » CORINNA’'S WELCOME was assured because of Robert and her previous performances around town. Cecily could not but share in the opening applause that greeted Corinna, but the crescendo was in tribute to her as she followed Cor-
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_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Daughter of Mine + + + + ByR. Louise Emery
inna onto the stage. Even at 10 Cecily had that quality which quickens imagination. But Corinna managed to hold her own, I saw, relieved. She had warmth where Cecily had mystery; Corinna was the earthy and familiar while Cecily's very remoteness challenged and teased. I doubt that anyone who ever saw Cecily quite forgot her.
I'm sure that thousands of people have suddenly and inexplicably recalled her face and wondered why of all faces seen in their crowded daily lives, hers should achieve a sort of immortality within the subconscious.
” » ” NO ONE who saw her that night has ever forgotten her, I know, and
because of her they remember Corinna—two little girls smiling breathlessly behind the colored
footlights, their young faces bright with excitement, their slim child bodies sparkling in brief, skin-tight panties and bras of gold sequins. Over these they wore fitted redingotes of white starched net, made with puffs of sleeves and short, full ruffled skirts. Although we used recordings for practice, Della had hired a popular pianist from the city to play for their public appearance. I was to pay half the cost of that.
» ~ » I felt Robert's, hand gripping mine tightly as I leaned against him in the crowd. On his face was a pride so loving and tender, so eompletely oblivious to what those fragile costumes had cost him that my heart ached with its guilt. Oh, I've paid my ounce of flesh for every moment of Cecily I bought during these past years—robbing those whom I also loved, and suffering because they could not have what I took from them to give to Cecily. Della stood near me, squinting at Cecily, completely absorbed in her. We had no business being out in the crowd, since we were needed for costume changes backstage, but we simply could not forego seeing our small artists make their debut together. At least it was the two. of them that I saw. Della was interested only in Cecily. "" »n ~ I NUDGED Della when it was time to head backstage. She turned absently ‘and almost bumped into Myrtle Ralston, standing with her arm about the shoulders of her 12-year-old son. The boy's lips were parted as he stared toward the stage. It was evident that he, too, had come under Cecily's witchery. ; Della paused a precious instant to take them in with vindictive eyes and then she threw me a glance of triumph which I did not fully understand for several years, You would have thought Pavlova or Isadore Duncan had wandered onto the stage the way the audience stormed and shouted for encores after the girls hed finished their numbers. Even Corinna, accustomed to applause, was round-eyed and a little frightened by the clamor. Della’s color was high. Gratification stuck out all over her, The tension withIn me relaxed.
(To Be s Continued)
~
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