mm unxuun stxtssmar; soxam, dragon, TuYsacrr morning, ran tTW, itatesmau resott "Wo Favor Sways Ui; No Fear Shall Awe" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. S PRAGUE. President Member ef The Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication at all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. j9 Sbyi I 1 COM TO MOHAMAD, yv 1 1 ?SKfsA yfe 4 THEN MOttAMMEDMUSfJ SSA , Nisssia KB-aaaw" Cliana nf '1'fiinnra trk Cjmt The flat prediction that air power would determine the outcome of future wars origi nally voiced according to some sources not by Billy Mitchell nor any other military authority but by that genius of constructive mechanical evolution, Alexander Graham Bell has been coming true by gradual stages. In the Spanish revolution, almost forgotten though it ended less than three years ago, air power proved an efficient auxiliary arm but failed as an inde pendent weapon of conquest. To date that has been the history of this war. Combined air and land or air and sea assaults have been success ful. But the Germans while in possession of marked air superiority failed miserably in their project of smashing England exclusively by the overhead method. This last weekend the British introduced a new technique with results which the United Nations are frenziedly applauding. Heretofore bombing alone- even our bombing of Tokyo has been a warfare of attrition, for which per haps a better name is "abrasion." It has been a matter of wearing down the enemy. But this bombing raid in which more than one thousand planes concentrated their destructive potential upon one city, constituted warfare of annihi lation. Cologne is, or rather was, a city of some 768,000 population; more than twice the size of Portland, almost exactly the size of Boston, somewhat larger than Pittsburgh which it re sembled in industrial production. Imagine what the wiping out of Pittsburgh would mean to the United States war effort. Tentative box scores suggest that the con centrated effort was decidedly economical in relation to its effectiveness. More than forty of the bombers were shot down but that meant only about 4 per cent "of the total force. Reasons why it should be economical are not difficult to see. German air defense forces must be widely scattered to protect all of the possible targets. A hundred fighter planes at Cologne, a hun dred more at Hamburg, a larger force at Ber lin and smaller ones at dozens of other possible . RAF objectives can trade blow for blow, more or less, with relatively small bomber detach ments and their protective fighters. But when a huge air armada concentrates upon Cologne, only the defense force there, diminutive by comparison, can oppose it. The effect of such concentration with respect to anti-aircraft de fenses is quite comparable. So the British, with American aid which this time was largely in the nature of materials and supplies but which next time may include a substantial percentage of American fliers, have introduced a new phase of aerial warfare. . The success of such forays is fairly well demonstrated in the smoking ruins of Cologne. The unknown quantity in this equation is the ability of United Nation forces to repeat and repeat again. How often can such an attack be mounted? That is the big question. If it can be done frequently enough, this technique will prove the equal in effectiveness of a major land Invasion. Anyway, the weekend news was good. Salem's Production Curve i School's out for the summer. School boys and girls of suitable ages are turning their . thoughts in the direction of jobs and to a greater extent than ever before, at least within their experience, there are jobs to be had. Berry harvests are beginning and for once there is no great influx of adults and transient families to compete with the young people. There is in fact the prospect that before the summer is over there will be serious shortage of workers in many divisions of the food-gathering and processing industry. The community volunteer turnout for harvest work, begun in Salem last year and now becoming a nation wide program for which Salem has received due credit, will have to be continued and ex panded here this season if the crops are to be salvaged. The truth is that in Salem and its vicinity within the territory from which Salem draws its economic substance there is going to be more work and more jobs than in any given period in the past. This city's permanent indus tries are running to capacity and to their num - ber has been restored, to the gratification of all concerned, the sawmill which has been idle for most of a decade. The state payroll is as large as ever. And on top of all this, there is Camp ' Adair. So long as the Salem residents working at Camp Adair made the daily trip in their private automobiles, their growing numbers were scarcely visible except as the heavy traf fic on the intervening highways was observed. When the Salem chamber of commerce first broached its low-cost transportation plan, even some of the businessmen who pledged financial support were skeptical. What has happened? Within a few days after service was started the busses provided in the original arrangements proved unequal to the demand; it 'now appears that perhaps a dozen or more will be needed. Even after construction is completed there will be need 1 for a vast amount of civilian services to the camp. Where are the lugubrious ones who pre dicted, that wartime conditions would, as they did to some extent in the last war, make Salem a "deserted village?" Exactly the opposite is happeningand- "we ain't seen nothin' yet." Steel and zinc buttons are being substituted for solid brass buttons on the uniforms of en listed men, aviation students and army nurses, . the war department announces. The new but tons are coated with brass andJook exactly like the old ones but use only 30 per. cent of the amount .of brass formerly required. Officers, it may. be judged from the text of the an nouncement, will still wear ,"brass buttons. Oh well, probably they never did have that stultifying effect suggested by common use of the phrase. Hate Schools Anyone with rudimentary knowledge of freshman psychology should have known it would be a flop. And we fear that a good many well-intentioned officers who merely obeyed orders are so mortified they dread the sight of an enlisted man. Someone had the bright idea of starting "hate schools" for the British commandos. Atro city movies, "hate talks" and inflammatory slogans posted all about the place were the means. The idea was to make the men tougher and more savage. It wouldn't have been a good thing if it had worked. A soldier who sees red isn't as effective as one who keeps his wits about him. And it wouldn't have worked even if it hadn't been so patently ridiculous. The Ger mans managed it but only by catching then subjects quite "young and by convincing them of a lot of things that weren't so. The hate schools have been cancelled. ft 'HAM Paul M alios n "Bring your own sugar" will be no joke, with respect to lodge and church dinners. Such institutions unless they serve at least four meals weekly, are not entitled to "institution al" sugar allotments. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro duction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, June 1 Inside congress a demand is arising for a singleheaded handling of gas rationing and rubber, just as strong as the movement which forced consoli dation of war production under Donald Nelson with such excel lent results. Threaded all through the Truman committee report are statements attributing our tire, and hence our gas, rationing con fusion to the division of author ity among many government bureaus. Other mistakes are mentioned in connection with failures in every phase of the problem (stock pile, synthetic rubber, etc.) Bickering has resulted be tween Jesse Jones, the war production board, Hen derson, war department, Ickes and everyone else who has had anything to do with our prime civilian problem. But in every case, the committee goes back to division of authority as the root cause. Of our failure to accumulate a rubber stock pile, the committee says there was division of authority between OPM, Rubber Reserve Corp., the RFC subsidiary, and others, adding: "It is possible that had complete authority and responsibility been centered in the hands of a single agency, the failure might have been avoided." Concerning the inadequacy of our synthetic rubber planning, it mentions the conflict between the old Stettinius advisory committee and the reconstruction finance corporation as causing "great difficulty in obtaining a decision." Of the whole mess today, it concludes: "At the present time it appears the prin cipal difficulties probably result from a lack of centralized and sole responsibility." While the more spec tacular clash of personali ties involved in the committee's generous distri bution of blame has been drawing most of the popular attention, this correctible cause of the whole existing muddled situation has been over looked. Disheartening aspect to the congressmen, how ever, is that a year and a half of agitation was necessary to cause centralized control of war pro duction in Nelson, so ardently do the various offi cials fight to retain their authority. If it takes another year and a half before rubber and gas are put under single control, the war could be over. The unsatisfactory state of rubber affairs in the government was illustrated again when Pres ident Roosevelt promised early solution by manu facturing tires other than rubber. Around the war production board and the other government bureaus dealing with rubber, no explanation of what FDR had In mind was available. It was said politely that the president was probably just talking offhand (meaning he did not know what he was talking about). About 25 or 30 Ideas for making wood, tarred rope or steel spring tires without rubber have been submitted to the national inventors coun cil, but no government rubber authority believes these will solve the situation. The other officials swear the public cannot expect tires of any kind for at least two or three years. They say the only possible solution is syn thetic rubber, because no more than 40,000 to 50,000 tons a year is possible from Brazil. They are pushing the Butadiene process as fast as they can, but if they succeed in all their plants, they say they can furnish only enough tires for military and essential civilian (police, ambulance, etc.) use. Even Donald Nelson was caught short by the president's optimism. His pessimistic statement (founded on above mention d facts) reached the public just before Mr. Roosevelt spoke, and Mr. Nelson thereupon emerged from his political, but not his rubber, difficulties by adding that he also hoped American ingenuity would save the situation. Here again was a perfect example of division of authority resulting in chaos. So also with the administration of gas ra tioning. Practically everybody has been speaking his official piece to the public. Even Assistant War Secretary Patterson issued a public warning a couple of weeks back, although no one seems to know exactly how he got in on that particular subject As matters stand now Petroleum Coordinator Ickes keeps track of oil and gas (censoring the figures also) and then tells Donald Nelson or Nelson's Transportation Coordinator Eastman about it, and this party or these parties of -the second part pass the word on to Leon Henderson, the party of the third part, who does the rationing through his organization. Certainly gas rationing lacks , singleheaded authority, just as rubber. . ; 1 If one man could be appointed to run either or both, and all the rest told to shut up, existing confusion would at least be ended and a straight Bne policy would be possible. A 1500 Years Doesn't Seem to Have Convinced Anybody ffiadio Programs KSLM TUESDAY 1J94 Kt. 6:3 Rise 'N Shine. 7:00 News In Brief. 7:05 Rise 'N Shine. 7:30 News. 7:45 Your Gospel Program. 8:00 Jerry Sean Orchestra. 8:30 News Brevities. 8:35 Music A La Carter. 9:00 Pastor's Call. 0:15 Harry Owens Orchestra. 9:30 SUn Kenton's Orchestra. 10 .-00 World in Review. 10 KM Musical College. 10:30 Women in the News 10:35 Melody in Miniature! 10:40 Lud Glusicin's Orchestra. 11:00 Russ Morgan's Orchestra. 11:30 Melodic Moods. 11:00 Ivan Ditmara. 12:15 News. 12 JO Hillbilly Serenade. 12:35 Willamette Valley Opinions. 12:55 Interlude. 1:00 Lum and Abner. 1:15 tune Tabloid. 1:30 Sing Song Time 1:45 Melody Mart. 2:00 Sing Song Time. 2:15 Salem Art Center. 2:30 Herb Jeffrey's Songs. 2:45 Isle of Paradise. 3:00 Old Opera House. 4 AO Broadway Band Wagon. 4:15 News. 4:30 Tea time Tunes. 5:00 Here Comes the Band. 5:30 To the Ladies. 5:35 Dinner Hour Music. 6:00 Tonight's Headlines. 6:15 News Analysis. 620 Evening Serenade. Editorial Comments DAMNING EVIDENCE Continued maintenance of WPA administrative personnel in Oregon, on a scale comparable to that believed necessary dur ing previous years when the rolls were several, times what they are today, was criticized here this week by David Eccles, former state budget director. Eccles insisted WPA not only clings to the army of paid help in the Portland office but re fuses to yield any of the agency's three and one-half floors in the Bedell building to requests for space from the state price and rationing boards, new agencies created by war demands. Eccles suggested that probably most of the 10,000 persons re maining on WPA in this state could be absorbed by the state and county welfare commission. It is known that many of these people are unemployable, for one reason and another, and may not be assimilated by private busi ness or industry, even though the demand for help is high. Thus it may be assumed there is a place for the federal work agency even today in government, provided that place is Justified by its re lation to other considerations of necessity, expense and conveni ence. However, no matter how tol erant and liberal the view on continuation of WPA, it is mani festly preposterous to maintaain an administrative framework for operation of a program on a high-load scale, when the pro gram itself has been slashed to a fraction of its previous size. The criticism need not rest on ethical or political grounds, but is Justly made from the point of common sense and simple busi ness judgment Furthermore, to charge unnecessary administra tive offsets against WPA proj ects now considered vital to na tional defense, amounts to an unnecessary sacrifice of very vital funds for the job at hand. Incidents such as this add damning evidence to the case against bureaucracy that at tempts to perpetuate itself re gardless of whether or not its existence In government is justi fied by the function assigned to it No one may be expected to believe, very sincerely or for . any length of time, that men practicing this sort tf thing are working in the public interest - Astorian-Budget ' ; GUtSS tlx STICK AROUND Wttlle iOHutK wo These schedules are supplied by the respective stations. Any varia tion! noted by listeners are da t changes made by the stations with out noUee to this newspaper. All radio stations may be cat from the air at any time in the Interests of national defense. 7:00 News In Brief. 7:05 Kenny Baker's Orchestra. 7:15 Lud Gluskin's Orchestra. 7:30 Willamette Valley Opinions. 7:50 Russ Morgan's Orchestra 8:00 War Fronts in Review. 8:05 Bookchat. 8:30 Some Like it Sweet. 9:00 News. 9:15 Popular Music. 9:30 The Roundup. 10:00 Let's Dance. 10:30 News. 10:45 Don Kirby's Orchestra. 11 00 Bert Hirsch Presents. 11:30 Last Minute News. KOLN CBS TUESDAY 970 EC 6:00 Northwest Farm Reporter. 6:15 Breakfast Bulletin. 6:20 Koin Klockv 7:15 Wake Up News. 7:30 Bob Garred Reporting. 7:45 Nelson Pringle News. 8:00 Harlem Hippodrome. 8:15 Consumer Mews. 8 30 Valiant Lady. 8:45 Stories America Loves. 9:00 Kate Smith Speaks. 9:15 Big Sister. 9:30 Romance of Helen Trent 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. 10:00 Life Can Be Beautiful. 10:15 Woman in White. 10:30 Vic 8c Sade. 10:45 Mary Lee Taylor. 11:00 Bright Horizon. 11:15 Aunt Jenny 11 JO We Love & Learn. 11:45 The Goldbergs. 12 :0O Columbia Ensemble. 12:15 Knox Manning. News. 12:30 Joyce Jordan 12:45 Woman of Courage. 1 :00 Stepmother. 1:15 Sam Hayes. 1:30 Joey Kerns. 1 :45 Take it Easy. 2:00 News. 2:15 Siesta. 2:30 William Winter. 2 :45 Scattergood Baines. 3:00 Melody Weavers. 3JS Voice Of Broadway. 3:30 Newspaper of the Air. 3:45 News 4:00 Second Mrs. Burton, 4:15 Young Dr Malone 4 :30 American Melody Hour. 5 :00 Newspaper of the Air. 5:15 America's Home fronts. 5 JO Harry Flannery. 5:45 Bob Garred. News. 5:55 Elmer Davis, News 6:00 Melodies. 6:15 State Traffic. 6:30 Report to NaUon. 7:00 United We Sing. 7:30 Public Affairs. 7:45 Frailer Hunt. 8:00 Amos n Andy. 8:15 Glenn Miller. 8:30 Are You a Missing Halrf 9:00 Duffy's Tavern. 9:30 Bob Burns. 9:55 Dave Lane. Songs. 10:00 Five Star Final. 1015 World Today. 10:30 War Time Women. 10 ;35 Air-Flo. 10:45 SpoUight on Victory. 11:00 Gus Arnheim Orchestra. 11:30 Manny Strand Orchestra. 11:55 News. 12:00-6 An a m Music & News. . KOAC TUSSDAT-50 KM. 100 Review of the Day. 10 AS News. 10:15 The Hommakera Hour. 11:00 School at the Air. 1130 Music of the Masters. 12:00 News. 11:15 Farm Hour. 10 Favorite Classics. 1:18 Variety Time. 1 :5 Pan American Melody. 2 :00 Homemakers' Half Hour. t JO Organ Nocturne. 2:45 News. 3.-00 Sunshine Serenade. 3:15 Seeing the Americas. 3:30 Great Songs 3:45 News. 4:00 Chamber Music. 4:30 Stories for Boys and Gtria. S. -00 With the Old Masters. S -JO Evening Vesper Service. 5.45 All Out to Win. SAO Dinner Concert. 6:15 News. 6:30 Farm Hour. 7:30 Concert Halt 7:45 Safety Quiz. 8:00 Music of the Masters. AO Music of Czechoslovakia. 9:30 Band Stand. 9:45-10:00 News. KKX NBC TUESDAY 116 KC 6 AO News. :15 National Farm and Horn. 6 :45 Western Agriculture. 7 AO Clark Dennis. Singer. 7:15 Breakfast club. 9:15 Helen Hiett, News. JO Kendall Hafl. 8:40 Household Hints. 8:45 Keep Fit Club With Patty lean SAO Children in War Time. 9:15 Jimmy Blair, Singer. 9 JO Breakfast at Sardi7. 16 AO Baukhage Talking. 19:15 Second Husband. 10 AO Amanda of Honeymoon H0t 10-45 John s Other Wife. 11 AO Just Plain. BUI -11:15 Between the Bookends. 11:30 Stars of Today. 11:45 Keep m With Patty Jean. 12:00 News Headlines and Highlights. 12:15 Your Livestock Reporter. 11 JO Market Reports. 12:35 Men of the Sea. 12:45 News Headlines and Highlights 1 AO Club Matinee. , 1:55 Newt .-- 1:06 The Ouiet Hour. j A i S V " Si 1 a. 2 JO A House in the Country. 2:45 Chaplain Jim. USA. SAO Stars of Today. 3:15 Kneass With the Newt. 3:30 Stella Unger. 3 :35 Southernaires 3:45 Beating the Budget. 3:45 Wartime Periscope. 4 AO Easy Aces. 4:15 Mr. Keene. Tracer 4:30 Belen Ortega, Singer. 4:45 Diminutive Classics. 5 AO Flying PatroL 5:15 Secret City. 5:30 Clete Roberts, News. 5:45 News of the World. 6 AO Serenade for You. 6:30 James Abbe Covers the News. 6 :45 Nova time. 6:55 Ramona & Tune Twisters. 7:00 Counter Spy. 7:30 Red Ryder. 8:00 Air Base Hi Jinks. 8 :30 Information Please. 9 AO Down Memory Lane. 9 JO News Headlines and Highlights 9:45 Palace Hotel Orchestra. 9:55 News. 10 AO Cugat Rhumba Revue. 10:30 Broadway Bandwagon. 10:45 Palladium Ballroom Orchestra. 11 AO This Moving World. 11:15 Organ Concert. 11:30 War News Roundup. KGW Tuesday 2 Kc 4 AO Music 6:30 War News. 6 AO Sunrise Serenade. 6 JO Early Bards. 7 AO News Headlines and Highlights 7:15 Music of Vienna. 7:45 Sam Hayes. 8:00 Stars of Today. 8:15 James Abbe. 8:30 Symphonic Swing. 8:40 Lotta Noyes. 8:45 David Hanun. 9:00 Bess Johnson. 9:15 Bachelor's Children. 9 JO Deep River Boys. 9:45 Musical Bouquet. 10 AO Women's World. 10:15 News. 10:30 Homekeeper's Calendar. 10:45 Dr. Kate. 11 AO Light of the World. 11:15 Arnold Grimm's Daughter. 11 JO Guiding Light 11 -45 Hymns of ail Churches. 12:00 Against the Storm. 12:15 Ma Perkins. 12:30 Pepper Young's Family. 12:45 Right to Happiness. ljOO Backstage Wife 1:15 Stella Dallas 1 JO Lorenzo Jones. 1:45 Young Widder Brown. 2 AO When a Girl Marries. 2:15 Portia Faces Life. 2:30 Shall We Waltz? 2:45 Vic 8c Sade. 3:00 The Bartons. 3:15 Music by Schrednlk. 3:25 News. 3:30 Personality Hour. 4:30 Funny Money Man. 4:45 Stars of Today. 5:00 Orchestra Solo. 525 Navy Chat. 5 JO Horace Heidt 6. AO Burns and Allen. 6:30 Fibber McGee and Molly. 7 AO Bob Hope. 7:30 Red Skelton St Co. SAO Fred Waring in Pleasure Time. 6:15 Lum and Abner. S JO Johnny Presents. 9 AO Adventures of Thin Man. 9:30 Battle of the Sexes. 10 AO News Flashes. 10:15 Your Home Town News. 10:25 Musical Interlude. 10:30 Moonlight Sonata 11 AO Swing Your Partner. 11:15 BUtmore Hotel Orchestra. 11:30 News 12A0-2A0 a m. Music KALE MB S TTJEa D A T IX3t Set 630 Memory Timekeeper. T AO News. 7:15 Memory Timekeeper. SAO Breakfast Club. JO News. 8:45 Jerry Sears. SAO Boake Carter. 9:13 Woman's Side of the News. 9:30 This and That 10 AO News. 10:15 1 11 Find My Way. 10 JO News. 10 :35 Women Today 10 .-45 Buyer's Parade. 11 AO Cedrie Foster. 11:15 Miss Meade's Children. 1130 Concert Gems. II :45 Luncheon Concert. It 30 News. 125 Ed Camden Orchestra. 1 SX) Bill's Wax Shop. 1:15 New York Racing Season. 130 Mutual Goes Calling. 2:00 President's Press Conference 2 AS Two Keyboards. 2:15 Sweet and Sentimental. 2:45 Bookworm. SAO B. S. BereovicL Commentator. 3:15 Baseball Roundup. 3:10 John Agnew. organist. 3:30 Hello Again. 4 AO News. 4 J 5 Johnson Family. 4 :3 Confidentially Yours. 4 MS Music Depredation. 5 AO Voices in Song. i 8:15 Jimmy Allen. 30 Captain Midnight. SMS Jack Armstrong. AO Treasury Star Parade 6:15 News. C:30 Kay Kyser Orchestra. :45 Morto Parad. T AO News View. T:15 Ned Jordan. 1 :45 Harmony House. 8.00 What's My Name. S:30 TBA. AO News. . 9:15 John B. Hughes. 30 Fulton Lewis, tr. MS Tom Thumb Theatre. 19:00 Jan Savitt Orchestra 10 JO News. 10.45 King As Panel! Orchestra. 11 AO Ella Fitzgerald Orchestra, 11 JO Jan Savitt Orchestra. n By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Wide World War Analyst For The Statesman A funeral pyre befitting the thousand British dead of Cov entry has been lighted at last by their countrymen in the heart of the German Rhineland to as sure them that they did not die In vein. They waited long, those men, women and children who sleep n common graves in England's midlands. Nazi airpower seemed the unchallenged master of even English skies that November night 18 months ago when death rained down on them from above. Tet this June day the smoking- ruins ef what ence was Germany's great Industrial city ef Cologne, bomb-blasted as no other city has ever been, give evidence ef more than vengeance. They prove that the deadly right arm ef Hit lerism, its air arm. has been matched and exceeded. Cologne was Coventry over again, but trebled or quadrupled. A thousand British bombers freighted with gigantic missiles carried the ruthless war to Ger many as against perhaps 500 nazi ships which shattered Cov entry that November night in 1940 in Britain's blackest hour. And tomorrow, when American battle planes supplement Brit ain's mighty armada, it may be 2000 or 3000 ships a night that wing their way to stamp out Hitlerism in Germany by city. The terror nazism loosed upon a peaceable and unready world is being slowly but certainly rolled back upon its author from the west and from the east. For implicit in the Cologne bombing and frantic nazi ef forts to disguise its true propor tions from the German people Is the same lesson that can be read now on the Russian front and in Libya. The initiative, the power of surprise, has been wrenched from Hitler's grasp. He can no longer mass crush ingly overwhelming power by air to deal swift and stunning 'Crime at By EDITH BRISTOL Chapter 28 Continued The night light burned dimly in the upper hall. That meant they were still out. I closed my door and crept back to the win dow, still straining my ears for the sound below. Now I knew what it was. It was someone breaking into the locked cabinet in Walter Gregg's study. The cabinet where the business papers were filed. How long ago it seemed that I had filed them there. I could feel my heart pound ing so hard it seemed to me whoever was downstairs could hear its beat. My pulse pounded in my ears and my cheeks burned with excitement The upstairs telephone was in the hall If I called for help, the intruder would get away. If I only had that gun Miss Bald win had talked about! The rasping of metal contin ued, now loud, now softer below me. If I was going to act, I must act quickly before the marauder finished his Job and was gone. I acted. I acted but I acted on im pulse. And foolishly enough, as it turned out I tiptoed across my bedroom and carried my bedside lamp, unlighted, to the window ledge. There I tipped it so it would throw a beam straight on the window below and anyone es caping through the window would pass through Its light. Then I fumbled in the drawer , of my dressing table it takes longer to tell it than it did to do . it for something hard that I could throw. Something solid and hot too large. My vanity compact the very thing! Leaning out the window I took careful aim at the pane beneath me there was just enough pale moonlight for that moving so stealthily that I knew I would not alarm the intruder until he felt the crash of my round metal missile. rd smash the glass, he must run out and, as he did so, I'd switch on my light and see who it was. I counted on his leaving, as he must have come, through the window and not by way of the house nor through the long windows of the passage opening on the patio. With all the force I could sum mon I threw the compact I beard it smash the class, the sound of a man's voice, clatter of metal on metal. I reached to switch on my lamp tripped on its long electric cord and fell, sprawling on the floor! As I struggled to pick myself - up, I could hear the noise of someone scrambling through the window below- me. Footsteps blows on chosen front before allied strength to stem bis vic tory tide can be rallied to meet Art Twice new sinee the eemlaw of spring in Earepe the Ger mans and their Italian pas pets have struck eat to regain the mastery that the Initiative fives ta wax. Ia the eastern. Crimea and then la eastern Libya their offensive Mews have aeea alckly snaffled y . allied counter action. The battles in Russia havt simmered away to slow motion to leave Russian armies in thf Kharkov - Krasnograd - Iryum bulge, not the Germans on re conquered Kerch Isthmus, mas ters of the strategic situation in the Ukraine. The door to ths vital Caucasus appears . still firmly closed in Hitler's face. In Libya a nazi-fascist diver sion attack has been sucked into a dangerous British trap, ac cording to reports from Cairo, and. is already seeking escape westward. A broad British counter-offensive is hinted at, al though there is room for doubt that it will be launched in the near future. Such a campaign would draw British forces away from the eastern Mediterranean, and might imperiall Sues. It seems more important that General Rommel's forces be shattered beyond all hope of early aggressive action than that he be-driven out of the Libyan hump immediately. However, surveying the situa tion on all three active fronts at the moment, from Cologne to Libya and to the Ukraine, one thing is becoming crystal clear. Hitler's failure to achieve air , control in Libya and in south ern Russia, even though he transferred large aerial forces from Germany itself and his vast conquered area of the continent, has thus far been his undoing. It is he, not the allies, who seem to be suffering now from dis persion of air strength on too many tasks. And that could prove the beginning of the end for him. Castaway' running across the gravel of the yard. A motor picking up and an automobile moving away. Domino was barking , by this time I am sure it wjas the sound of the shattering glass and not the presence ofj the in truder that disturbed him Mar tha came running upstairs with Ace and Deuce pattering behind her. (To be continued) Today's Garden By LILLIE L. MADSEN Many inquiries concerning calla lilies have been; reaching me recently. Particularly as to their adaptability out of doors. They do very well out of doors in the Willamette valley and even much better at the beach cottages. The cool moist air of the oceanside seems to suit them best. But I; have seen some very good clumps In the valley this spring. Plant them in a rather sheltered spot, give them rich soil and do hot let them dry out during their blooming period usually in May. This last seems rather superfluous this spring, but there are Mays in which ir rigation will have to be resorted to if the callas are to be at their best. There are a number of clumps around which are 15 to 20 years in age, so it would seem they will withstand our winters very well. Good blooming-sized bulbs should not cost over 25 cents and they multiply comparatively rapidly if the soil - is favorable. It should not be too heavy and drainage should be good. H. A. reports that she marked some wild trilliums and wants to know if they can be moved now. Answer: It would be better if she waited until the foliage be gan to wither down. If the bulbs are well marked there should be no difficulty in finding them. Remember they grow rather deeply. And in planting them In your own garden find a place somewhat similar to their natu ral habitat Give them good loose oil filled with leaf mold. How Year l: Ccsgr&snan Voted a Major Measures af f ectlng War Policies will be told ex clusively in The Chrislian r Science Ilcnilor Available Today at the Christian Science ' Reading' ;': '4 Boom ,: j. - . New Laeatioa 148 S. High