The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 01, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President
Member of. The Associated Press , .
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
Angary
The United States exercised the right of
angary Sunday when it seized vessels of Ger
many, Italy and Denmark lying peaceably in
American harbors. What that right is can best
be stated in the words of the Encyclopedia Brit
annica :
Angary is the name given to the right of a
belligerent to seize and apply for the purposes
of war (or to prevent the enemy from doing so)
any kind of property on belligerent territory,
including that which may belong, to subjects or
citizens of a neutral state. . . . The articles of The
Hague convention of 1899 seem to sanction the
right of angary against neutral property, while
limiting it as against both belligerent and neutral
property. It may be considered, however, that the
' right to use implies as wide a range of contingen
cies as the "necessities of war" can be made to
cover.
) Even this exposition requires a certain
amount of analysis. The right, it should be
noted at the outset, appertains to a belligerent
only a nation already engaged in war against
another nation or nations. Not only that, but
the right of angary applies only on belligerent
territory and a ship was seized in Portland, in
the quiet water of the Willamette last Sunday
morning. .
Moreover, The Hague convention sanctions
the right of seizure of foreign vessels against
neutral property by a belligerent government;
yet the Leme, boarded in Portland, was the
property of a belligerent lying . in nominally
neutral waters. If the United States were actu
ally belligerent, as use of the principle of angary
would seem to imply, the actual transactionwas
nothing more than the seizure of a prize of war.
From another point of view, if the foreign ship
were itself a warship, as might be argued, it
would long since have been subject to intern
ment in the country. Something seems con
fused, badly confused.
Something is confused: the status of this
country in regard to the European war, a status
x which is changing weekly, yet which defies def
inition in ordinary terms of belligerency and
neutrality. This is true; yet the direction of
change is readily apparent, particularly on
analysis of acts such as the seizure of foreign
vessels in American waters.
There should be. in brief, no illusion but
that the seizure of German and Italian ships
lying in American harbors was the act of a belli
gerent, and that it may bring as a justifiable re
sponse from Germany and Italy a formal dec
laration of war. One is inclined to think, in
deed; .that, the only reason why such a declara
tion may not be made, or has not been made
earlier, is that it would be relatively meaning
less so long as neither of the axis powers was in
a position where it could come to grips in any
sense with the United States. Japan is another
matter, but no Japanese ships have been seized.
Weil, and so it is. The act is done, and the
Americans cannot be blamed if they move sud
denly in order to prevent the destruction by
their foreign crews of ships that are already
needed, in spite of the niceties of international
law, in carrying, supplies to Britain. This na
tion is already committed to the British cause
to an extent that makes a formal war declara
tion little more than a formality; evil as this
may be, its implications should be realized, and
" there should be no surprise when it takes sud
den form in acts such as this. ,
It is not, as the captain of the Leme said,
"inhuman," but it is not very nice, either.
Empires .
. Empires are breaking up. Several of the
bigger ones are doomed.
Reference is not to the political empires of
the old world, but to the holding company em
pires of the.new world's power industry.
New deal reforms are out of season in 1941
but the biggest one undertaken is just coming
Into fruition through operation of the "death
f sentence" clause in the utility holding company
act. Under this much-controverted provision
of I the law passed in 1935, utility systems are
required to limit themselves to geographically
integrated units and to simplify their corporate
structures in such manner that an operating
company will have over it not more than two
"decks" of the holding companies.
In carrying out these provisions the Se
- curities and Exchange commission has ordered
dissolution of United Light & Power company
and United American company, a system which
has five holding company "decks."- The com
pany is putting up no fight.
' Repercussions of this trend will reach Ore
gon early. Standard Gas & Electric, with which
Mountain States and Pacific Power & Light are
affiliated, is complying with the policy without
the necessity for an order. Electric Bond &
Share, of which Northwestern Electric is an af
filiate, is not itself involved to date but one
related holding company. National Power &
Light, appears to be taking the same course.
SEC also is preparing to break up three other
large systems: Commonwealth or Southern, En
gineers Public Service and United Gas Improve
ment. Orders for dissolution of still other em
pires are contemplated; somewhere down the
line the SEC will bump into a supreme court
test of the constitutionality of the "death
sentence", clause. ...
. There will be few mourners at the death
bed of the great power empires. The stench that
attended earlier demise-of the Insull empire has
settled upon those which survived. Their cor
porate structure is difficult if not impossible to
defend though-in fairness it should be said that
the system contributed in its heyday, to the
rapid advancement of electrification. One of the
principal items of justification, the existence
of intra-systeru service' companies performing
specialized' functions, is superseded by the de
velopment of : independent, professional com-
panies which perform, the same services for ,
firms with which they have no financial con
nection; If the holding company seem ed "a good
- idea at the . time" the" march' of events - has
sdimmed its usefulness. -. "
At any rate the empires re tailin g. TVTheth-
Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall
From First Statesman, March 28, 1851
be taken too
But as is
cal empire, someone is going to be
nturally, the
the parent companies it seems certain
lot of common stock will be wiped out.
Logic
pocket of "the
users now escape. ,
final decision
Leland P.
his 20th year
Myrtle Point
that his record
Coos county.
less to say, ne
versity.
ITS DONE WITH WHIPS
it is in bogus
of his own hills.
-
; -The nazis
Avie"
er then- collapse will cure most or any of the
evils of power finance remains to be seen. I But
perhaps no one will have a fair opportunity- to
judge;; the further step to public ownership! may
rapidly for that. , I
the case with the fall of a pOl
iti-
hurt
little fellow. In the liquidation
of
that a
The power users are now paying for their
power from Bonneville they are paying more
for it than the project really needs to charge.
Why not, then, a refund to the two states in which
it delivers power in lieu of taxes? It would not
as the statesman avers come DacK out ol
the
consumer. He has already paid
for
it in buying his power.- McMinnville Telephpne
Register. j i
i i
What The Statesman had said was: "Some
how, sometime, the tax would come out of the
same pocket that j of the power users." 1 The
T-R takes issue with that view and then! pro
ceeds to confirm it, after the manner of! Kay
Kyser: I
"That's wrong, you're right." K
If Bonneville is charging more for power
than is necessary, the solution is a reduction in
its rates and not, as the McMinnville paper sug
gests, payments in lieu of the taxes which in
justice the municipal systems and PUDs Ought
to pay.
True, if private1 power companies continue
to be taxed on an ad valorem basis, Bonneville
ought to make payments in lieu of such 1 ixes
upon its power plant, the portion of the dam's
value allocated to power, and its transmission
lines. But if as the T-R suggests, Bonneville
were to make lieu payments so that municipal
systems and PUDs j remained tax-free, out of
what pocket would those funds come? Obvious
ly part of the cost would be borne, originally,
by privately-owned utilities buying power, from
r :n j n a m.
Donneviue; ana eventually Dy me private utili
ties customers." In; other words McMinnjville
wants Salem power users to pay their; own
taxes and half of those that McMinnville power
The champion fence-straddlers are not in
the Oregon legislature. The Tammany-rjuled
New York city council was expected to decide
whether to name a park for Amerigo Vespucci
and thus please the Italians, or for Callihan
and Kelly, a couple j of local heroes, and please
the Irish. The aldermen did their best to please
both by approving both names and leaving: the
to Mayor LaGuardia.
Linn; has signed a contract
for
at
as superintendent of schools
and the Coos Bay Times
observes
of tenure is unprecedented
in
As Dri Baxter would add,
need-
is a graduate or Willamette Uni
Add to the list of epochal decisions that of
the Portland draft board which ruled thfit a
union organizer was not a "necessary man in
an activity essential to the national welfare"
and thus was not subject to deferment.
Editorial Comments
From Other Papers
A correspondent asks us to tell how the nazi
government finances its war upon civilization.
The subject could easily fill a book. However,
some general observations may help. ;
In the first place, the nazi government operates
in pretty much a closed compartment. In that
compartment the people do what government tells
them to do, else they go to a concentration; camp
to be well beaten up regularly.
In effect, all the German people are working
for the government j The government takes the
products of their labor and gives them back rations
of food and clothing. 1 In other words, this means
that the entire German population is working! long
hours under an intense speedup, turning over most
of the-product to the government and keeping
only barely enough to eat and wear. So j long
as the) materials can be found in Germany j and
the conquered countries, this process can go on
unless, indeed, the people crack under the strain.
It was finance our inquirer asked about.1 This
; is a process that requires no stocks of real money.
Paper marks serve as counters or certificates to
show : the individual's j title to his or her share of
the rations and clothes. No financing is necessary,
in the sense that our correspondent probably1 had
in mind. This is a process, of course, that can con
tinue only in a closed compartment When the nazi
government, buys goods or material from Russia,
'it has to. finance those purchases with something
reaL-i For that it uses: a portion of the goods pro
duced by German labor.
This is, to all intents and purposes, a ; slave
system. Given your slaves and a territory capable
of producing the materials for them to work on, no
financing is needed, j '. j
To this picture has to be added another In
the overrun countries.! These have been and are
being systematically stripped of food, goods and
materials for the Germans in Germany. This is not
finance either; it is robbery. In addition, thejeon
t quered peoples are being compelled to work for
Germany, as slaves, for worse rations thanj the
'German slaves get, starvation rations, in fact
For none of this Is "finance necessarr. Where
the nazis pretend to play in the overrun countries'
marks, (costing only the paper!
ink
and printing. ; j . ; . .;
Finance is not the word for the process by
which the nazis are maintaining their warj The'
thong is being done by slavery and robbery.
Cheops financed the construction of his; pyra
mid in just this simple! way. He rounded up la lot
of the population to do the work and to feed them
took grain away from the rest He did not have
to import the stone. His slaves took the stone out
Cheops did the : financing
with
,- , J - . i
are doing; their" financing with Whips.
tan JTrancscoTC-Vonicle. I
: :- .Kjr -, v v-vs. v I
A Coupla Battlin' Ajaxes Defying the (Nazi) Lightning
tfoir BireaEtfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Reprinting some ; 4-1-41
matter from old files
in this column reaching
back over eleven years:
m S
(Continuing from Sunday:)
"Gustavus Hines and his family
returned Ho the United States
(for this was not the United
States then) in order to take the
infant daughter of Jason Lee to
her father but the father had
died six months and one day be
fore the family sailed, Sept 13,
from the mouth of the Columbia.
"Going by way; of China and
around South America, they did
not learn of Jason Lee's death
till they arrived in New York
May 4, 1846. What changes have
come in travel and communica
tion in many ways during the
intervening eighty-odd years!
;
"Gustavus Hines returned to
Oregon and had many preaching
charges here in the early days,
and was for a long time a trus
tee of Willamette University. He
wrote two books on Oregon's
early history and her institu
tions. His body lies in Lee Mis
sion cemetery, (Salem), laid
there in 1874.
"His brother, Rev. H. K. Hines,
a noted early day Methodist
minister, also wrote the 'Mis-
Today's Garden
By LILLIS L MADSEN
P.T.R. Asks when to spray
grapes and with what.
Usually the county agent gives
the time and material as spray
ing time comes on. One spray
program for grapes gives the
first spray of Bordeaux mixture,
one pound to five: gallons, when
the new shoots are about six
inches long; the second spray,
using the same mixture but
adding Ya pound of arsenate of
lead, to be put on just as the
blossoms fall, and thereafter
spraying each two weeks until
the middle of August using the
second spray mixture. Some
grape growers use the dusting
sulphur and some an all-purpose
spray or dust at two-week in
tervals through the season, be
ginning as soon as new growth
has started.
S.B.R. Asks for a formula
for mating cut worm poison.
It is almost cheaper to pur
chase some of the; prepared poi
sons if one wants just a small
quantity. There are a number
of good ones under various
trade names. However . one
'recommended (which will make
: a five pound lot) ; includes dry
i bran, five pounds; Paris green, 7
j Va pound; water; one quart;
molasses, one pint; oranges, one.
Mix the bran and Paris green
thoroughly. Mix. the water, mo
lasses and orange juice and also
; the orange peelings, ground fine
ly. Then mix the itwo together,
stirring constantly. The mixture
' should be made about four hours '
: before using. The poison 'should
be applied late in the evening
so that it wfll not dry out before
the worms start to feed.
W.O. Writes that most bulk
spray materials do not carry the
amount of mixtures and wants
to know how much arsenate of
lead to mix with water and how
much Bordeaux to use. :
! This depends somewhat upon
the season of the year and the
purpose of the sprzj. Usual
strength arsenate of lead Is two
tablespoonsful to one gallon of
water. Nicotine sulphate is one
teaspoonful of nicotine, one cu
bic inch of soap arl one gallon
of , - water. Bordeaux mixture,
usual strength, is 12 tablespoons
Tul of the mixture to a gallon off .
water. -- f " - -
sionary History of the Pacific
Northwest a valuable historical
book. There was another bro
ther, J. M. Hines, who was an
early day Oregon Methodist
minister.
S S
"Another signer of the Histo
ric document was Thomas H.
Pearne. He was Rev. Pearne,
one of the ablest of the early
day Methodist ministers,' and
this goes for the whole church
as well as the then backwoods
Oregon Country.
"He came in 1851 and was at,"
once made presiding elder of
the Oregon district which in
cluded all the United States
territory from the Missouri ri
ver to the Pacific ocean, 1800
miles east and west and from
the Mexican (California) to the
Canadian line, including an area
of 1,700,000 square miles. His
residence was in Salem.
S
"The U. S. census of 1850 gave
the population of Oregon terri
tory at 13,294 whites and 100,
000 Indians, and Oregon then in
cluded what Is now Washing
ton, Idaho and Oregon, with
what is west of the summit of
the Rockies in Montana and
Wyoming.
"There were about 600 people
in Portland, about the same
number in Salem, and 400 in
Oregon City. Late in 1851 the
Oregon district was divided into
two districts, giving Rev. Wm.
Roberts Salem and everything
west to the sea, and Rev. Pearne
the Mary's River district in
cluding six appointments north
and six south of Salem.
s s s
"Rev. Peame'i district re
quired 12 weeks of travel four
times a year, 2250 miles in all,
with a week of rest every round
trip.
"He traveled on his faithful
mule, Cynthiana, 16 hands high,
wearing a broad brimmed hat
covered with oiled silk, and a
Mexican poncho or serape, or
waterproof shawl, with a slit in
the middle for the rider's head,
so that although Rev. Pearne
traveled in all weathers he never
carried an umbrella and never
got wet
The indispensable saddlebags
were covered by the poncho.
Rev. Pearne presided at the' sec
ond Oregon conference, in 1854,
at the log school house in the
Belknap settlement until the
belated arrival of the famous
Bishop Matthew Simpson.
"He also accompanied Bishop -Simpson
that year on his trip
up the Columbia, In 1862, when
that' outstanding high authority
and official of the Methodist
church made his last : visit to
Oregon.
(Long time readers of this col
umn will recall some of the in- .
cidents of the visit of Bishop
Simpson to Oregon, especially
the one of 1854. Pearne wrote
about this In his book, "Sixty
one years of Itinerant Christian
Life in Church and State." Some
excerpts follow: "I first saw Bi
shop Simpson in the Conference ;
room in Oregon, . . in Belknap
Settlement Benton county, about :
120 miles . above Portland.
Steamboating on the upper W- ;
lamette was . suspended. .
There were then no stages nor .
other public conveyances up and ;
-down' the valley. , . . The Bishop
had been delayed by an ; acci- y
dent : to his ocean steamer; he ,
reached Portland on Thursday,
the t day after the - session had
opened, . . . entered the y5 log ;
church on Sunday morning, just V
' as the writer was closing his
sermon. No one there had ever -seen
him. I said: Tf the gentle
x
man whq has just entered is Bi
shop Simpson, he will please
advance to the pulpit He came
forward. . . . The effect (of
Bishop Simpson's talk) on the
audience was marked. Many
wept; some shouted. . . . The
next day, In the same pulpit
and to many of the same people.
Bishop Simpson preached his
matchless sermon on This is the
victory that ,overcometh the
world, even our faith.' The effect
was indescribable. . . . Tears of
joy and shouts of rapture at
tested the magic of his elo
quence. . . . Rev. Pearne told in
his book many things of his as
sociation with the great Bishop
Simpson.)
(He told of his trip to Salem,
over the Sky Line hill, from
which he (Simpson) had such a
splendid view of the Willamette
valley, near the spot where was
the ancient temple for phallic
worship; of his sermon in Sa
lem, in the old First Methodist
church mat became a laundry,
etc.)
(Concluded tomorrow.)
The
Safety Valve
Letters from Statesman
Readers
MORE ON SABBATH
To the Editor:
I noticed a letter in The
Statesman of March 29th, by a
Mr. Ernston, who was making
an effort to answer the letter of
a Mr. Emill Braxling of Falls
City, Oregon. I am pleased to
note that Mr. Ernston admits
that the command to keep the
Sabbath day holy cannot be
found in the new testament.
Since Mr. Ernston has admitted
' this failure to produce the said
scripture, what is the new tes
tament? The word, n-e-w, indi
cates that it is not old, and that
there is a testament which is
older. The word testament is de
fined to mean a will. , Then the
new will does not have the com
mand to keep the Sabbath day
holy. What does this new will
offer? Adoption, forgiveness of
sins and eternal life. But to en
joy the blessings of this will,
man Is not commanded to keep
the Sabbath day holy.
The Sabbath law was a nation
al law. Read Deut 5:1-5. The
nation of Israel was the only na
tion . that was commanded to
keep the Sabbath day holy, and
the only people to whom God
ever made it known. In Neh.
0:13-15 we read that God made
known to the Israelites at Mount
Horeb, which is Sinia, the holy
Sabbath. Had they been keep
ing a day for 2500 years and did
not know that it existed? No,
this would be absurd. Who is
under the new will, or subjects
under it? In the book of Mat
thew, chapter 28, verses 18, 19
we find that all nations are un- '
der the new will. Today we are
not subjects to a national law,,
but a universal law, which Is
the new testament.
: Mr, Emill Braxling did not set
aside a portion of God's word.
But God gave a new will when
the old will became of none ef
fect Since Mr. Ernston is for .
keeping the whole bible, or air
the words of God's word, will
he be so kind as to answer the
following questions? Do you of
fer animal " sacrifice? Do you
burn incense? And do you stone
to death those who do not keep
the Sabbath? Mr. Ernston says
that Jesus kept the Sabbath day. '
What will did Jesus live and die
under? Of course, we all know "
it was the old wCL We find next
By FRANCIS GERARD
Chapter 37, continued
"Aye, Sir John,", nodded the
superintendent. "But :the police
in the execution of theirr duties
must no be denied . a leetle
medicinal stimulant
"True,- 'said- Meredith' and
grinned at the twinkle in the
police chiefs innocent blue eye.
It was at a quarter to four in
the morning that ' the police car
returned to report that they had
located the: suspected farm and
that It had proved to be the neg
lected property of Sandy Bruce
who had taken himself off to
America. -
"Do you know the surround
ings of the farm well?" Mere
dith asked the superintendent
and at the other's nod went on,
"Is there enough cover. for us to
conceal watchers? Again- the
superintendent nodded. "In that
case," said Meredith, turning to
Sir Hector who sat yawning and
stretching at his side, "the soon
er they're posted the better." '
It was in the chill hour before
dawn that Meredith and the
superintendent posted a ring of
watchers. When the sun came up
the farm was under surveillance
from the little hills of heather
surrounding it
Matthew Beef was not a par
ticularly imaginative man but
during the long hours he spent
in the semi-underground cellar
which was his prison, he went
through 'a period of miserable
introspection. Beef had his full
share of that dogged devotion
displayed by the cockney to a
superior who has been tried and
tested beyond all question and
the feeling uppermost in . his
mind was one of regret that-he
had failed Meredith. The fact
that his failure was due to no
fault of his own was not al
lowed to weigh with him. He
cherished uncharitable thoughts
anent Narky Joe Summers but
he blamed himself more. His
whole being 'now was concen
trated, not so much on the perils
D$adio (Prrogramnis
KSLM TUESDAY 139 Kc.
0 Sunrise Salute.
J Don Allen's Orchestra.
8:0 News.
8:45 Tune Tabloid.
S.-OO Pastor's Call.
9:15 The Esquires.
9:45 Melody Mart.
10:00 The World This Morning.
10:15 Today's Tribute.
10 JO Women in the News.
10:35 Jermyr Sears Orchestra.
11 :00 Musical Horoscope.
11:30 Willamette U Chapel.
11:45 Value Parade.
12:00 Market Reports.
12:05 Ivan Ditmars at the Organ.
12:15 Noontime Mews.
12 J30 Hillbilly Serenade.
12 :33 Willamette Valley Opinions.
12 :50 The Song Shop.
1.-00 Harry Horhck's Orchestra.
1 :15 Isle of Paradise.
2:00 News.
2:15 Salem Art Center.
2:30 Two Kings and a Queen.
3:00 Crossroad Troubador.
3:15 Special Program.
3:30 Concert Gems.
4:15 News.
4:30 Teatime Tunes.
4:45 Milady's Melodies
5. -00 Popularity Row.
SmM Dinner Hour Melodies.
6:00 Tonight's Headlines.
:1S War Commentary.
630 Alvino Rey's Orchestra.
6:45 A Song Is Born.
7:1 5 Interesting Facts.
T JO Singing Strings.
80 Europe Tonight. -
8:15 Jessica Dragonette.
8:30 Don Allen's Orchestra.
9:00 News Tabloid. -
9:15 Johnny Messnefs Orchestra.
9:30 South American Nights.
10:00 Hits of the Day.
100 News.
10:45 Let's Dance.
11:15 Dream Time.
KGW NBC TUESDAY Kc.
60 Sunrise Serenade "
6 .30 Trail Blazers. '
70 News.
7:15 On the Mall.
7:45 Sam Hayes. -
8;00 Stars of Today.
S;15 Against the Storm.
8:45 David Haruin.
9; 45 Me and My Shadow.
10:15 Between the Bookends.
10:45 Dr. Kate.
11. -00 Light of the World.
11:15 Mystery ManJ
1130 Valiant Lady.
11 :45 Arnold Grimm's Daughter.
120 Story of Mary Marun.
12:15 Ma Perkins
12 JO Pepper Young's Family.
12:45 Vic and Sade
1 0 Backstage Wife.
1.15 Stella Dallas.
1:30 Lorenzo Jones.
1:45 Young Widder Brown.
20 Girl Alone.
2:15 Lone Journey.
2 30 The Guiding Light.
2:45 Lifa Can B Beautiful.
3:15 News.
40 Maurice and His Musio.
4:45 H. . Kaltenbora.
S:15 Jack Armstrong.
JO Horace Heidt's Treasure ma at
Fibber McGe and MoUyT
70 Bob Hope. -
7 JO Uncle Walter's Doghouse.
8.00 Fred Waring Pleasure Tim, i
8:15 Armchair Cruises.
JO Johnny Presents.
90 Richard Hlmber Orchestra.
9 JO-BatUe of the Sexis.
180 News riashes. -iJirS1
Trin Cat Orchestra.
110 News. .
11:15 St. Francis Hotel Orchestra,
KCX NBC TUESDAY HHKa.
30 Musical Clock.
70 Western Agriculture.
7:15 Financial Servioa.
730 Breakfast Club. .
9:00 Amen Corner.
9 JO National Farm and Horn. -108
News.
1030 Charmingly Wa Lira.
J?:J Associated Press Maws.
1130 Us Army Band.
120 Orphans of Divorce
12:15 Amanda' of Honeymoon wrn
1230-John's Other WifJV
12:45 Just Plain Bill. .
that he turns to Paul for an ax
ample (in Acts 173 and 18:4)
where Paul entered into the syn
agogue and reasoned and per
suaded. Did these people accept
the teaching of PauL The Jews
believed not, opposed them
selves, and blasphemed. -Paul
left them and went to the Gen
tries. Paul entered the syna
gogue because it afforded a place
in which to teach. . In Acts 20 fl
he met with the disciples on the
first day of the week and taught "
Does Mr. Ernston teach on Sun
day, the first day of the week?
If so, does that make him an ad
vocate of worshiping on the first
day of the week?
' I I FREEMAN,
: ' 1 Salem, Ore.:
of his own predicament as on
' - some - means whereby he could
' make up for his failure by some
coup of which Meredith would
approve. How he was to achieve
this, he did not "know. !
The cellar in which Beef was
Imprisoned possessed' a tiny win
dow! not six inches high on a
level with the ground outside.
He could barely reach this and it
. was firmly barred. The door was
of stout oak with an ordinary,
if ponderous, lock. Even if he
had been able to kick this down,
the noise ; would : certainly be
heard by his captors. He had no
means of picking or removing
the lock. So his jsole chance of
" escape seemed id be dependent
s upon his ability to surprise one
of his gaolers when, at rare
intervals, they - brought v him.
something to eat or drink. This
would not prove easy since they
' invariably came in pairsr one"
of whom carried the food, the
other standing in the doorway
holding an electric torch in one
hand and a ' revolver in the
'. other. ""1:- '" ?
Beef had no means of judging
time other than the daylight fad-,
ing through i bia small -window
He had been sitting in the dark
for some hours when he .heard
-footsteps echoing down the con
crete floor outside his cellar.
-They paused before the door.
Beef - looked up expectantly
straining his eyes in the dark
ness. The slamming of a door
somewhere, ' followed by ' the
sound of a man's voice speaking
German, came to Beefs ears
and the footsteps continued past
his door to die away. ;
Beefs tense attitude relaxed
once more. His head ached
abominably. This was not as
tonishing, for he had taken two
severe beatings at the hands of
these' people and these he had
endured with the mute courage
of an ox. They had used short
lengths of rubber hose on him.
(To Be Continued)
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1 JO News.
1 :45 Curbstone Quiz. .
2:30 TTie Quiet Hour. ,
30 Ireene Wicker.
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330 The Munros. . y ,
3:45 Wife Saver. ' ,'
4:15 Mr. Keen. Tracer.
430 Hotel Pennsylvania Orchestra
5:00 Reading Is Fun
5:45 Tom Mix.
6 30 Unlimited Horizons.
6:55 News.
730 Question Bee.
80 Grand Central Station.
830 Ben Bernia Musical Quia.
930 Easy Aces. '
100 Sir Francis Drake Orchestra.
110 This Moving World.
11:15 Florentine Gardens Orchestra.
11:45 Portland Police Reports.
12.00 War News Roundup,
KOIN CBS TUESDAY 479 Ke.
60 NW Farm Reporter.
6:13 KOIN Klock.
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8:15 Consumer News.
830 The Goldbergs.
9:00 Kate Smith Speaks.
9:15 When a Girl Marries. .
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9:43 Our . Gal Sunday.
100 Life Can Be Beautiful.
10:15 Women in White.
3v Right to Happinet
10:4 Mary "Lee Taylor.
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11:15 Aunt Jenny. .
1130 Fletcher Wiley.
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120 Martha Webster.
12 as News.
12 30 Kate Hopkins.
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130 Hilltop House.
1 :45 Stepmother.
20 Singin Sam,
2-" KeLLo Again.
2 :45 Scatters ood Balnea.
30 Young Dr. Malone.
3 Joyce Jordan.
Th Second Mrs. Burton.
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4 30 Second Husband.
0 Newspaper of the An.
S30 First Ntghter.
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The World Today.
6 JO Baker Theatre.
Z ??"1??1 Orchestra, u :
- Zi4 ?ew" ot War.
f 0 Amos Andy.
f:i Lenny- Ross.
Uollrwood Show Case.
100 Five Star Final.
Nightcap Yarns.
11 JS-TNews? strad rchestra,
KAL MBS TCESDAY IIS 1
MM-r Timekeeper.
70 News. ,
iiJ2U3rer Fa'rade.
0 Thia ,nH .,
J3 Jh Woman's Side of the Bf
- - rii m asusic
l tfL B: HughesT
J?ii2y,c ?f American W
il&SewT ,
lTohrn
J 0 American School.'
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2?r Cram Swing,
i:iJ,S:7ly Allen. .
' a SrWy? Williams. ' '
islHewr
2w2MDr!-t - '
2-45m?'' H'lf Hour.
J-ews7
v2rncho,to,flrt Music.
7.4S-Consumers r crura.
5:?-fl of Music. -
' 2Sf Round Table,