Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1950 — Page 17

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TL MONDAY, DEC. 25, 1950 ____-

Paris Feelings Mixed Singer Is Back On Russ Reactionto (|= German Arms Plan

Diplomatic Circles Believe Soviet Ready fo

State Future Policies on Reich Problem

By PAUL GHALI W PARIS: Dec. 25 (CDN)-—Soviet reactions to the principle of Western German rearmament, unanimously adopted in Brussels, are . awaited here in Paris with mixed feelings of curiosity and anxiety. Diplomatic circles are convinced that the next three days will show whether Russia really wants to come to an understanding with the West or whether it has already chosen to continue its policy of expansionism. } : : - Jf it has decided to expand . whatever may happen—and ne West Cautioned Soviets are fully informed of what will happen—the Brussels ON A-Bomb Sonference las given them an' yoNDON (UP)—A study group dea. prele a i vi 1a- °F the Royal Institute of InterTne aie gn play up nent Rational Affairs warns against ton ot BS Soda a Agree 1a |t00 much reliance by the West on with al | e 7s Set DO |ine atom bomb for defense of the , free world. ad Bn Talos 1 shore Wer TC STOUR cautioned the West , ‘ern democracies that the bomb, with aaffident energy Russia's... ,.hly would prove a decisive! own violallons. {weapon only in the hands of pow-| Other Basis Cited (ers who can hold their own With} ,. jout it. Otherwise, the report said, They San dam Beet should not be considered a sub-| Pp pre parations in the east put | Stitute for conventional - weapons. all too well-informed on Europe’s | The group, headed by Ma). Gen. | military embryo army, that the Sir Ian Jacob, military assistant | North Atlantic Treaty organiza- | 2 the Britiss war cabinet| tion constitutes threat of aggres-i- rousu out tae war, urged that aion { potential AE ET etry be kept m , {doubt on the circumstances in They can also say that the { War ie answer 0 their| Which the A-bomb might be used. J , Much of the bomb's deterrent an Kiepura, well known

tiate on! : : 4 Oct, 3 roa al 15 pe and |¢ffect would be removed if these tenor, is shown as he arrived in {s weighted with too many restric, Circumstances were defined in ad-' New York aboard the 5.5. tions to afford a real basis for ne- | Vance, the group said. | Liberte. Kiepura and his wife,

gotiations. In a publication on “Defense in singer Marta Eggerth, have an- | {

They can say all that and much Bie Sou a she) the} nounced their separation after more. 2d pat ney attelitos Immediate and extensive precau-| |3 years of marriage. They have be. sva ee y setior, of the (tions against atom attack from) two boys, the youngest of which a ¥ BE whose weak the enemy throughout the Atlan-| was born last November, minds clever Communist propa- Lie area on a 24-hour emergency ~~~ or asis. i 3 ganda hammers daily. | The study group, which also in- Lightning Fells Cows Russ ‘May Yield’ \cludes Sir Orme Sargent, former And Milker Is Casualty But the odds are nothing will Permanent under: sscretaty of SEDAN, N. M. (UP)--Bill come from the East during the” ate oF le = rs and Brig- poster intends to be careful about! Christmas recess except more 3° - A D sa , inl assist- milking cows during an electrical] propaganda and more bitter at- 29 Secrs 2fy 0 De ommittee of storm, Foster was milking in his, tacks on Nato and its foundation ln i 8 oii sted its views parn when lightning knocked the| stone, the United States. 5 op ne 2lom bom cows off their feet. One cow fell] Russia is likely to reiterate its on Mr. Foster, who suffered a willingness to talk with the west 175-Year-Old Turtle broken leg. —part of its peace propaganda. | TTT | The four-power meeting could at- Rambles at St. Helena Rooster Takes Over ford an opportunity to drive a; A giant land tortoise rambles ~wedge between the Atlantic na-ifreely about the grounds of Plan. Where Hen Left Off

1

“tions in the course of its discus-itation House, residence of the| MEMPHIS (UP) — Mrs. Roy sions which Russia can be counted British Governor of St. Helena, Smith has a rooster with materupon to make hard bickering. {South Atlantic island of Napo- nal instincts. He's mothering five | Well-informed sources here see jeon’s exile, 1815-1821, Said to be | bantam chicks. He clucks at them, | these three reasons why Russia at least 175 years old, ‘the tame scratches up worms for them and! is not likely to launch Eastern turtle is called the only living/ covers them with his wings at]

o

Germany’s police on Berlin's link in the world with Napoleon. night. Western sectors, or the forces of | its own Balkan satellites on Tito Good Treatmeni—- | “at this juncture, namely: ee : | ONE. Even if rearmamen S Ut § Cr l Cc | Western Germany has been 14 0 enera auses | agreed upon in gepmcipe Rs real > . . | zation may never take place. Gl } k 4 Vv French can be, counted upon So 0 e ain IS oice | low it down as much as possible; : ; by arguing about Chancellor Ade- Sergeant Who Lost Speech in Battle | nauers terme. Futheruioss. 657, Gets Out a ‘Yes, Sir’ to Collins =~ by the French and other conti-| By JERRY THORP, Scripps-Howary Staff Writer nental Europeans that it would TOKYO, Dec. 25-—A 26-year-old American sergeant who lost ‘perhaps be wiser to press the re- his speech when wounded in Korea Oct. 3 is learning to talk again armament of Nato countries and because of Gen. J. Lawton Collins’ recent visit to the Tokyo Army to leave Western Germany for! Hospital. : later : The sergeant, whose name is withheld at the request of medical What the Russians fear isn’t| authorities, was sleeping in a tent near Chunju when another GI i but the effective dropped a pistol. which dis-| - a . Be princie de lcharged. The bullet pierced the} aliawsted i, polite “Yes, sirs . The attitude of the soldier's forehead. |an 0, sirs, Jwe ds who while vituperat-| He was taken immediately to] Suddenly the youth was unable — ! {to speak a single syllable. His ing at Brussels are at the same|a mobile surgical hospital where pe gle sy time displaying an eagerness for/doctors discovered he was unable lips formed words but there was four-power talks which they could |to speak. After preliminary treat- no sound. After a few minutes in dc > if atlowed by the Soviet/ment he was brought to Tokyo. agony attempting to regain his SS here {He was unconscious upon his ar- speech, the Sergent begah crying. ; \ts Times rival here Oct. 6 and underwent| General Mystifie Coomright. 1950. for Th Bo i fan immediate operation. General Collins left the room! : | Days later the sergeant ap- mystified as to how the GI had Total Drink Costs lpeared to be recovering from the recognized him. The soldier in the * Ww (wound, but still hadn’t been able! few moments he had been able to Hit by CTU to peak, Doctors eoticlued he speak apparently had attempted Py — If you put Probably never would talk again. to tell the general he'd known! A hisk a beer Visited Hospital {him many years ago. The chief of gut 3574 Lor On Dec. 6, just before leaving Staff was unable to recall any

last year, you were an average... cen’ Collins, the Army family connection and never had|. (Chief of Staff, visited the hos. commanded any outfit in which

spender. : ’ That was the nation’s per cap-ipjtal, ithe sergeant had been assigned

ita alcoholic beverage bill, accord-| As the general stepped into, during his eight years’ service. | ing to F. E. M. Whiting, president the ward, the sergeant’s eyes The next day the sergeant

of the Licensed Beverages Indus- lighted with excitement. 'again answered a few questions §

tries, Inc. “That's Gen. Collins,” he said. asked by doctors and nurses, alIn 1046, it was $10.42 more. A nurse's aid at the bedside|ways with “yes” or “no.” His Mrs. D. Leigh Colvin, president was the only one who heard the Vocabulary still consists of only of the Woman's Christian Tem- GI's first. words since Oct. 3,|those two words. But doctors are perance Union, takes heart in this The general's party had left the convinced ‘he will talk normally, decrease. ward before she could tell him again. : | She adds, however, that the what had happened. An aide fol-! I stood at the bedside of the $8,550,000,000 Americans spent lowed the general into the cor- blue-eyed sergeant the other day for intoxicants last year, at least, ridor and asked him to return. |and asked: “Do you know you are {5 equalled by “the cost of drink-| The gener'dl” stepped quickly to|going home soon?” assoclatedycrime, disease, insan- the sergeant’s bedside and softly] A smile relaxed the taut lines ity, loss of income; poverty, juve- questioned him. lof his face. nile delinquency, broken homes’ The first few queries were alll. “Yes, sir,” he said. and other human and economic 7 mde » Ne sald also that although o With a Coupla Extra Limbs . eoholic beverages bring in reve-, 1 ki (reportedly $2,947,186,425 last year), drink-caused insanity, | crime and poverty may cost five times more than the taxes. i The WCTU thinks Americans can save money and feel better, too, by correcting a “mistake” | made 17 years ago, when the 18th! amendment was repealed. “BRIGHT AND EAGER | ° SEYMOUR, Ind. (UP)—Wash-| ington grade school pupils ap-|

classrooms after the summer vacation. One hundred per cent ‘atténdance was reported In all grades the first two days.

Repossession Tactics

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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