Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, May 21, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

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    TWO
ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 2 M 942.
i '
urd Do Mr Rvccpt Hundnr hf th
Member of The Amoclated Iraa
Thti Atmoclfttfld Preits In exrlunlv
r entitled to the ue fur republica
tlon of all nuwa dta pate hen credited
to It or not otlmrwUu credited In
thli paper and to all local newt
published herein. All rights of re
publication of upeclat divpatchei
oerem arq ieo reaerveq.
flAitHIS ELLSWORTH Editor
Rntered an second claae matter
Muv 17. 192H. at the onmt office at
Hone burg, Oregon, under aot of
Bepreeentrd br
Nnv Virk 2., Madlnon Ave. Ih-
rnu .ii.u i. Aii-niKan Ave no
friim-liM-o IjO Buh Stieot I
I. mm AnicrlfM 133 S. Bprlnx htrt
urn 1 1 ir ou j aiownri Mireet I'orf.
IiiimI i2() H. W. Hlxth Htreet St,
LoiiU ill K. Tenth Htreet.
Pmi$hlER44$2iJATI0M
8uhrr:iflua Hale
Dully, per yeur by tnuli 15.00
luily. II niontliH by mall 1.60
Dully, 3 month by mat: 1.16
Quit Worrying
TTliE rather complete and some-
what unnecessary confusion
regarding the subject of gasoline
rationing Is unfortunate.. It Is
not a Kd thing for our war ef
loi't. It could, we think, have
been avoided by a little more co
ordination In the higher places of
government.
As this is written we know that
registration for gasoline cards
will be necessary May 28, 29 and
30 unless this plan Is changed
Wo know, or at least think ive
know, that such registration will
be similar in character to the
sugar registration routine.
As a matter of cold calm fact
there Is no reason to become pan
icky or depressed about this plan
to ration the use of gasoline.
There Is considerable gasoline
and crude oil In America. We arc
not short of oil but are actually
short of transportation and the
use of existing rubber : tires
should be curtailed, they believe
.... the "they" meaning the gov
ernment supply experts. We have
not suffered as a result of the
sugai rationing there is plenty
of sugar to go around It via are
careful, f There is going to be
enough for home canning .opera
tions. ; ' i
The gasoline " rationing plan
will undoubtedly take necessity
Into full consideration. Everyone
knows there Is a great amount of
..unnecessary car driving. The ra
tioning of gasoline will put a stop
to that. The tire curtailment Is
of a different sort and for a vast
ly different reason. We simply
do not have and cannot got
enough rubber to supply all
needs. That is not true with ei
ther gasoline or sugar. There Is
enough of both of these commodi
ties If wo use them sparingly. So
we may as well quit worrying
about something that has not yet
happened. If we actually need
gasoline must have it we shall
quite likely be able to get it.
Editorials on News
(Continued from page 1.)
Kai Shck's armies are facing ihc
gravest danger of their five-year
war.
The Japs, he says, are pouring
troops and planes Into Burma. At
the same time, he adds, they are
concentrating forces for an at
tack on Chekiang province (just
south of Shanghai) with the
avowed purpose of destroying any
possible springboard for an at
tack on Japan.
lie thinks a major Jainese of
fensive in China is imniiment.
JJIi tells of a new official Jap-
anese map that has come In
to the possession of the Chung
king government. It shows, he
says, that Japan Intends to "en
gulf China, India, Iran and all of
Russian Siberia."
TllK allied war plan, as far as
It has been disclosed or can
be guessed, Involves finishing off
Hitler FIRST. It Is assumed that
after Hitler Is finished oft Japan
can be handled.
The Japs are obviously plan
ning to get as far as they can
while Britain, America ami Rus
sia are busy with Hitler.
rONT take this Jap map as
' gospel. It may be design
ed to scare us Into stopping help
to Britain and Russia. We have
to remember that we are In a
World war.)
T"
E good news continues to
come from Russia.
Tlmoshenko's yrmiee r still
storming forward at Kharkov,
There are strong indications that
their purpose is to flank Kharkov
to the north and south, rather
than attempting a costly frontal
attack against it.
' The most romantically spec
tacular story concerns Russian
Cossack cavalry advancing under
an umbrella of Russian planes
and followed by long lines of
tanks- These cavalrymen carry
machine guns, rifles, anti-tank
and anti-aircraft guns as well as
sabers.
Balaklava wouldn't know them.
SIMILAR cavalry outfits are op
nrnflns hohlnrl thn Dm. .Ion
lines, shooting and sabering Ger
man parachute troops as they
drop from the skies.
IN Portland the vice-president of
Ihn U.IIah.1 A i-.i
Manufacturers says the U. S. war
production board has halted con
struction on war factories that
cannot be completed by mid-1943.
That, he says, apparently
means that the WPB thinks the
war will end in a couple of years.
He adds:
"Stop 'em In 1942 and lick 'em
in 1943 seems to be the new cry."
Little doubt remains that this
will be the big year of the war.
Gestapo Tyrant
Trying to Crush
Dutch Resistance
Himmlar's Visit to Holland
Prompt! by Flouting of
Noils, Socrof Aid to All!
(By Fred Vanderschmidt)
(Wide World Analyst)
Hitler's decision to let his chief
hangman, Heinrlch Hlmmler, ap
ply the full fury of Gestapo "Pa
cification" to the Netherland Is
evidence of his fears lest this
hearthstone of western Europe
become one of the main routes of
allied invasion. -
Since Monday Hlmmler Is re
ported to have been In the Neth-
crlantls, organizing his horrors,
and cloaking with Gestapo auth
ority even the loutish Dutch na-
as who betrayed their country
two years ago. -
There are excellent tactical rea
sons fop an allied bridgehead Jo
tne Netherlands, when the time
is ripe for a western land front,
and) situation also has arisen
there which might conceivably
give the allied invaders a e-reafer
degree of skilled and organized
assistance from within than will
be available In other countries,
The Germans themselves admit
that the class nrimarilv resnnn-
slble for the steady growth of
opposition to the occupying forc
es Is the officer personnel 'of a
Dutch army which once totaled
400,000. Among the 96 Dutchmen
recently shot by German firlnc I
squads wore nn unstated number
or Netherlands officers accused of
violating their paroles; later the
Germans said that "all 2,000" of
ficers and cadets still out on na.
role had been arrested.
Allies Secretly Aided
Obviously, however, the Ger
mans have not caught all the of
ficers who had so little chance to
fight in May of 1940. or Hitler
would not have detached Ilimm-
er irom his bloody work in Ger-
many and elsewhere. There are
ample indications that these of-
neers are in frequent contact
with their own exiled govern
ment and their British allies
across t ho narrow lower reaches
of the North sea, and that they
are carefully preparing to assist
the first allied forces to set foot
on the moist, lush soil of Holland.
jo anyone who knows the
Hutch there is no douhf thm
these canny and lndnmltahln mon
win neieat the methods of Himm
ier, just as thov defcater) ulth
neu- coniemnt the fiii
fforts of the nazl uroimeandlata
to lure them into a phoney 'Teu
tonic brotherhood."
Puppeta Despised
ine swaggering Hutch nazl
siorm troopers, now responsible
io rnmmier, will not swagger
long. Their lot Is the worst that
can bolall a traitor. Their coun
trymen detest them up to and
incoming tneir so-called fuehrer.
Anton Mussert.
Mussert's followers are weak
lings ami ne'er (to wells who nlav.
ed storm troopers behind locked
noors ami drawn blinds prior to
may ui, isnu, wno sneaked Dutch
army uniforms by the carload
across the German border in the
months before the Invasion and
who fired from the rooftops on
men own people when the Ger
mans came in.
No weapons which Himmler
run give them can save them
from the awful wrath of the true
Dutch.
More than 95 per cent of :S,.
875.000 passenger automobiles in
the U. S. on Dec. 31 las twill be
listed as "used" cars. New cars
arc defined as 1942 models and
all other private cars with less
than l(!d0 miln on thf-lr speedometers.
OUT OUR WAY
f I STILL OH, MO, WHUT ARE . I WAS JUST WAiTlIsi'
Vfil THIMK I'VE ALEC--WE THEV DOIW'? V TO SEE HIM TAKE
BE EM OUT lMEEOTDUCl BHIMGIM' 'ENA I HIS HANDS OFF THE
m OF "TH" GAME If SKILLED BACK OFF TH' OL' BOY "THIfslGS
f TOO LOWS II HELP BAD II SHELF SO HAVE CHAJOGEP SOME"'
Y TO COME AT A TIME V OLD THEV EMOUGH SO HE'LL
'I BACK. TO IT If LIKE THIS l HAVE TO HAVE TO LEARXl TH
'V AT tvY yl YOU'LL FIMD Y HOLD 'EM I TRADE OVER AGAIKJ.'
AGE THItsSGS HAVE I UP A HE'S FORGOT MORE'ls)
X CHAMGED V VVE EVER KNEW, BUT
V SOME y 5 Vfj IT'S BEST FOR.GOT-
"' '- JEMNOW
" ' THE SHELF CnftRFDCL T. Km. it a, nr. wr. ,
Hoover Urges Full
Economic Powers
For Roosevelt
NEW YORK, May 21. (AP)
To win total war, says Herbert
Hoover, dictatorial economic pow
ers must be vested In President
Roosevelt.
'There must be no hesitation In
giving them to him and uphold
ing him In them," the former
president declared last night.
Moreover, we must expect a
steady decrease In economic free
dom as the war goes on.
"We must start our thinking
with a disagreeable, cold, hard
fact. That is, the economic mea
sures necessary to w in total war
,are just plain fascist economics."
Hoover addressed the national
industrial conference board on
the topic "The Limitations of
Freedom in War" and while
stressing the need of "fascist"
measures In mobilizing the na
tion's economy declared an equal
need to guard against their being
frozen Into American life after
the war.
Pleading for the retention of
civil liberties by which the coun
try could so stand guard, he as
serted that "from a philosophical
viewpoint" he would like to see
the sixth columnists given a lit
tle more liberty."
"They are defined as the ones
who discuss the war or speculate
or even criticize in private con
versation," said Hoover. "To a
person who Is reminiscent of
American life It would seem that
particular restraint Is too drastic.
lhe American people have al
ways been a debating society.
They get immense satisfaction
out of gossip.
"And all this cannot be stamp
ed out of them by a hob-nailed
boot. It is not sedition. It comes
irom concern to win the war, and
mcy ougnt to be allowed to gos
sip a little without being sixth
columnists.
Roseburg Scottish Rite
Team to Confer Degree
The RosebuiB degree team of
tne Scottish Rite of Freemasonry
lelt today for Portland, where
they will confer the 18th or Rose
crolx degree upon a class of can
didates at the annual reunion of
Oregon consistory of the Scottish
Rite.
The team from Roseburg con
sists of Ray B. Compton, 33 de
gree, master; Norman G. Olson.
Win. C. Dnrath, K. LeRoy Hiatt,
James McCuan. Clyde B. Fuller
ton and F. M. Compton. The team
was accompanied by W. F. Har
ris, secretary, and by a number
of candidates.
The Portland Scottish Rite
bodies, at this reunion, are hosts
to Roseburg for the conferring of
the 18th degree and to Klamath
Falls for the conferring of the
3'Jnd degree.
Lithia Lounge Denied
Liquor Sale License
PORTLAND. Mav 21 -(API
The Lllhla lounge, prospective
cocktail bar at Ashland, won't get
service license from the state
liquor control commission.
The decision, after weeks of
discussion, was reached at vester
day's commission meeting follow
ing presentation of a petition
with 1322 names opposing the li
cense.
No white man to date has vet
coniplctly explored the miles of
winding channels of the Ever
glades, m hlcU comprises -..000.000
acres.
DAILY DEVOTIONS
DR. CHAS. A. EDWARDS
Some day death, whom I
have met so-often in other peo
ple's homes, .will come to mine.
That day I shall not lose' my
Master for He, too, was holden
of death. I shall have a friend
who will walk with me down
that dark road, which Ha has
walked before. So I shall
trust Him. Some day failure
and disgrace may overwhelm
me, and I may know what it
means to be hated and to have
those I had thought were my
friends condemn me. But that
day I shall have one friend
who will stay by my side and
know what it means, for He,
too, went through such an or
deal. That Is why I shall trust
Him. Some day tragedy un
reasonable and unfair and un
explainable may crush the
poor structure of my faith and
I shall look toward heaven
with my eyes so blinded with
grief that I shall .be incapable
of seeing the face of God. If
that day comes, I shall seek my
Master and hold fast to Him,
for He, too. cried out in bitter
est agony to God. I am glad
that He did. He has shared
with us our darkness that we
might share with Him the
light. Had He not known the
keenest sorrow I would be
alone at life's darkest. When
thou passest through the wa
ters I will be with thee, and
through the rivers they shall
not overflow thee, for I am the
Lord, the God, the Holy One of
Israel, Thy Saviour. Amen.
It Is said that the Tartars ate
books so they could acquire the
knowledge contained therin.
INDIAN
HORIZONTAL
1,7 Pictured
leader of India
12 Sacred bull.
13Elias (abbr.).
14 Laughter
sound. .
15 Angers.
16 Convent
worker.
17 Little bafl.
19 Valley.
20 Respect.
22 Responsible.
24 Near.
25 Belonging to
him.
J8 Suffix.
27 Hide.
80 Fashion.
31 Upon.
Answer to
43 Civil engineer
(abbr.).
44 Prefix.
47 His residence
is in .
49 Net dry.
S3 Painful.
53 Type measure
54 Indian army
(abbr.).
55 Ossified tissue.
56 He leads the
57 Precede.
32 Avenue
(abbr.).
33 Child.
34 Color.
35 Return.
37 Wager.
38 He lives in
19 Electrified
particle.
41 Fragrance.
VERTICAL
1 Hair on
Tm ihiuisisieiyi
V SN E E R -iPtorr ftWte
EE n EfiEELlff i a s E u
AfcTE j. e'steTTRam 0
Epfpl RUTH psgSlS
OtAA P E7 H ASp :- R I TjA
4JN5 E R S ! H A R A 5 g" EP?
T5fe N 5E S 3gt R" C5 OTnT"1
3 4 5 6 """Li7" 8 9 10 n
a I
gi.
i li1 rrsfc?!
jt - Fll
is- r hp wr h -l
LJ & -fjlr l&ff
44 45 46 Sp; 47 "5 so 5
J-iij
By J. R. WILLIAMS
T. KM 6, 11. 9. FAT. Off.
copb. iwj av ttf SEwvice. iwe.
More Sugar For
Canning Granted
WASHINGTON, May 21 (AP)
The office of price administra
tion has relaxed its sugar ration
ing program to take care of the
home canning and preserving in
dustry, the office of Representa
tive Short (R.-Mo.) said yester
day. Short's secretary said she was
advised by the OPA that house
wives would be allowed one
pound of sugar for each four
pounds of fruit to be canned, and
In addition, one pound of sugar
for each member of the family
for preserving jams and jellies.
Sugar rationing officials would
supply blanks to be filled out by
housewives seeking additional su
gar for canning and preserving,
it was said.
The strawberry region in the
Ozark section of Missouri had ap
pealed to members of conuress
for Increased sugar allotments. A I
petition received by Short . from I
Purdy, Mo., stated that because of
insufficient sugar, strawberry
prices were so low that there was
some question whether growers
would harvest the crop.
Civilian Defense Chief
To Tour Western Cities
SAN FRANCISCO, May 21.
(AP) James M. Landis, in a fly
ing reconnaissance next week of
civilian defense activities on the
west coast, expects to confer here
Wednesday with governors of the
eight states composing the ninth
civilian defense region.
Landis will begin his western
tour at Seattle Tuesday and con
clude it Thursday at Los Angeles.
LEADER
Previous Fuzzle
17 Fondle.
18 Placed.
21 Devour.
23 Three times
three.
25 Head coverinf
27 Equal (comb
form),
28 LeveL
29 Loan.
30 In place of.
31 Not in.
33 Rip.
34 Fowl.
36 Measured
with a dial.
37 Male swine.
39 Prince.
40 Vegetable.
42 Is in debt
43 Talk.
44 Tree.
horse's neck.
2 Musical
composition.
3 Suggestion.
4 Like.
5 Think.
6 Total.
7 Entrance in
fence.
8 Pertaining to
snow.
9 Dull-colored.
10 Cure.
11 Small island.
14 Dress edges.
45 Hawaiian food
48 Set eagle.
48 Noise.
49 Sorrow.
30 Finish.
51 Golf peg.
33 British
Columbia
(abbr.).
WASHINGTON, D. C, May 21
Some 15 or 20 Items now on
the shelves of grocery stores in
the northwest are to be rationed,
just as sugar and gasoline are ra
tioned. Announcement of the ra
tioning will come without warn
ing for office of price administra
tion does not wish to alarm the
consuming public or afford op
portunity to start hoarding.
While the list is carefully con
cealed for the time being, it is
hinted that it will include tea,
coffee and electric light bulbs.
Principal supply of coffee comes
from several South American
countries. Those have an abun
dance, just as the United. States
has an abundance of gasoline,
but transportation is the prob
lem. The cheaper teas come
from Japan and this stock is al
most exhausted; the better teas
come from Ceylon and other far
east points now cut off by Japan.
Rationing of light globes is to
conserve the elements in the
bulb for war purposes and, Indi
rectly, curtail the use of electrici
ty where power Is required for
war plants. (There Is already a
federal tax on the bulbs in the
new tax act.) Those who prefer
cocoa to coffee or tea will soon
discover restrictions. Certain
spices will be rationed.
May Even Include Bread
And very, very quiet Is main
tained on another rationing plan
being studied. This would allow
so much milk, so much canned
vegetables, so much bread per
person for the entire population.
There is enough wheat on hand
to feed the nation for two years
and rationing bread does not ap
pear necessary but in the study
under way the bread question is
receiving attention. Also vhere
is all the milk this country can
consume, but powdered milk
must be furnished the United Na
tions. Rationing, milk In Oregon
and Washington will seem like a
joke in those dairying states.
While they are about it, certain
of the OPA staff aro toying with
the idea ot rationing clothing and
considering the British type of ra
tioning wearing apparel. This
would require a book from which
so many coupons would be de
tached for a pair of shoes ( heavy
leather is going up), a suit or a
shirt. Wool suits are a thing of
the past except for soldiers; civ
ilians will have to be content
with shoddy.
Traveling Limit Looms
Hints are circulated that Jo
seph B. Eastman, director of de
fense transportation, may issue
priorities for railroad passengers
before, the summer Is over. These
priorities now exist on air lines
and an officer on an important
mission ousts the civilian from
his scat. Dozens of businessmen
from the northwest, accustomed
to air travel, nave been uncere
moniously left at Chicago and
other stopping points after leav
ing the national capital for home
to make room for ferry pilot
The civilian riding a plane may
nave a priority, or passport
sueu to him If the government
needs his services.
Mr. Eastman has already caus
ed the cancellation of several na
tional conventions; others will
follow. Whatever can be done
to discourage train travel Is be
ing done. The travel bureau
agency in the department of vhe
interior has had its appropriation
reduced to 510,000 and'even ihis
Is regarded as waste, considering
the transportation situation. Con
cessionaires in national parks
will lose their shirts for the next
two years.
Only 50 per cent of the anti
freeze produced last year will be
prepared this year.' This is cal
culated as being sufficient with
the disappearance of motor ve
hicles in the next few months.
Next month when the motor
ist pays his "use" tax to the fed
eral government and places a
sticker on his windshield he may
have to tell how many tires he
has left for his car. There arc
many motorists who undertook to
beat the rationing by buying wo,
three or four new tire. To smoke
out the facts on tires it has been
proposed (but not yet adopted)
that the second federal tax period
be used to make this census, with
a penitentiary sentence for swear
ing falsely.
KRNR
Mutual Broadcasting System,
1490 Kilocycles.
(RK.MAININC. HOURS TOHAY)
THURSDAY, MAY 21
4:00 Fulton Lewis. Jr.
4:15 Johnson Family.
4:30 Confidentially Yours.
4:45 Music Depreciation.
5:00 You Can't Do Business
With Hitler
3.15 Johnny Richards' Orch.
5:30 Capt. Midnight, Ovaltlne."
5:45 Jack Armstrong,
Wheatles.
6:00 Dinner Concert.
6:50 State and Local News.
6:55 Interlude.
7:00 Nova -t. Savold, Gillette.
8:00 Standard Symphony Hour,
Standard Oil Co.
9:00 Alka Seltzer News.
9:15 Hi Neighbor, McKean and
Carstens.
9:30 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
9:45 Joe Reichman's Orch.
10:00 Sign Off.
FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1942
6:45 Eye Opener.
7:00 News, L. A. Soap Co.
7:15 Stuff and Nonsense. .
7:30 News Bulletins.
7:35 State and Local News,
Boring Optical.
7:40 J. M. Judd says "Good
Morning."
7:45 Rhapsody in Wax.
8:00 Haven of Rest.
8:30 Bargain Fest.
8:45 Miss Meade's Children.
9:00 Jim Doyle, Anacin.
9:15 Man About Town.
9:45 Old Fashioned Revival.
10:00 Alka Seltzer News.
10:15 I'll Find My Way.
10:30 News Bulletins, American
Home Products.
10:35 Women Today.
10:45 Your Date with Don Nor
man. 11:00 Cedric Foster.
11:15 Wheel of Fortune.
12:00 Interlude.
12:05 Sports Review, Dunham
Transfer Co.
12:15 Interlude.
12:20 Parkinson's Information
Exchange.
12:25 Rhythm at Random.
12:40 Fiva Miniature Melody
Time, Golden West Coffee.
12:45 State News, Hansen Mo
tor Co.
12:50 News-Review of the Air.
1:00 Sons of the Pioneers.
1:30 Mutual Goes Calling.
2:00 P. T. A. .
2:15 Sweet and Sentimental.
2:30 At Your Command.
2:45 The Bookworm.
3:00 The Dream House of Me
lody. 3:30 News, Douglas National
Bank.
3:45 Musical Interlude.
4:00 Frank Blair.
4:15 Johnson Family.
4:30 Salvation Army Program.
4:45--Treasury Star Parade.
5:00 W. P. A.
5:15 What Price Victory.
5:30 Capt. Midnight, Ovaltine.
5:45 Jack Armstrong, Wheaties
6:00 Musical Fill.
6:15 News, Unical Products.
6:30 Dinner Concert.
6:50 State and Local News.
6:55 Interlude.
7:00 Pastor vs. Mauriello, Gil
lette. 8:00 Lone Ranger.
8:30 Tropical Serenade.
9:00 Alka Seltzer News.
9:15 Treasury Star Parade.
9:30 Frank Blair.
9:45 Hank Keene In Town, Vel
vet Tobacco Co.
10:00 Sign Off. .
U. S.-Seiied Plants
Westered to Owners
WASHINGTON, May 21 (AP)
President Roosevelt directed
Secretary of the Navy Knox yes
terday to return plants of the
Brewster Aeronautical corpora
tion at Long Island city, N. Y.,
Newark. N. J., and Johnsville,
Pa., to their private owners.
Mr. Roosevelt said in an execu
tive order that he had found that
plants "will be privately operated
In a manner consistent with the
war effort."
The three stablishments were
taken over by the navy on April
18, because, the White House said,
of "dissatisfaction with the man
agement." BOTTLED IN BONO
1,
too
low
STRAIGHT BOURBON
WHISKEY
ana
Inlaws Barred
From Sharing In
Pay of Soldiers 3
WASHINGTON, May 21 (AP)
Mothers-in-law, fathers-in-law
and grandchildren won't get any
benefits from a soldier's or sail
or's pay or government aid
to his dependents.
The house military committee
voted such relatives out and sent
the dependents' allowance bill to
the whole house yesterday for
final action some time next week,
after congress decides whether to
raise privates and seamen to a
$42 or $50 monthly minimum.
Aside from ruling out grand
children (which not many dough
boys have) and In-laws (which
more of them are getting), the
committee left the dependents'
bill unchanged. A soldier with
class "A" dependents (wife or
children) would get $20 taken
from his pay check every month.
In addition, the government
would add $20 for a wife, $10 for
each dependent child, $15 for a
child but no wife, and $20 for ,"k
divorced wife legally entitled to'
alimony.
Under this scale, a wife with
four children would receive $20
from her husband's pay and $uu
from the government.
The allotments from a service
man's pay would be mandatory if
he had dependents, but would be
applicable only to lower-grade
men, up to the rank of the lowest
army sergeant and the corre
sponding naval grade.
The payments would not begin
until the fourth month after the
bill became law.
The scale of monthly payments
for class "B" dependents provides
for the government to pay $15 to
a dependent parent, $25 to two de
pendent parents, and $5 to dis
abled or dependent brothers and
sisters. To this would be added
$20 from the service man's pay If
he had no class "A" dependents.
and $5 if he had class "A" de
pendents. A soldier having both
classes of dependents would hajfl
$25 deducted from his pay caun
month.
Puget Sound Search for
Army Bomber Abandoned
MCCHOP.D FIELD, May 21
(API The search for the twin
motored bomber which sank in
Puget sound near here May 8
vith the loss of three air corps
fficers, was abandoned yester
lay after traditional memorial
erviccs were held at the scene
)f -the accident. '
Officers at 'the field' yeported
the plane sank in 350 feet of wat
er and recovery of the ship and
the three bodies was considered
impossible. The cause of the sud
den plunge was not known. A
The three officers lost were
Capt. Angus C. B. MacPhee of
Tacoma; Lieut. Col. Perry O.
Huff of Silver Snrinns. Md.. and
Capt. R. C. Alexander of Seattle.
Legion Head Holds Own
Following Loss of Leg
PORTLAND, Mav 21 (API-
Claude Sherman, 43. Cottacc
Grove American Leoion com.
mander, was "holding his own-
doing very nicely" today, attend-
ints at the veterans hospital here
said.
Sherman lost his rieht leu of
injuries suffered when he at
tempted to aid In the arr&st of
an inebriate. The man drew ;ym
officer's pistol from its holstaP
and fired, the bullet striking
Sherman In the lo.
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