The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 05, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

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British Harry
Nazis on Coast
Threat to China Grows
As Allied Generals
Conf er on Moves
(Continued From Page 1)
tare on Tuesday by the British
f Tsjnsr, an axis position mu
' the gas which the Germans had
cut la the, Imperial line run
ning down to Bir Baeheim from
- coastal An El Gasala.
In China big things seemed to
be afoot In the first place, the
top American commanders in
" southeast Asia General Stil well,
General Brereton of the air corps
- and General Chennault of the
AVG Flying Tigers appeared in
Chungking for conferences with
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek.
In the second place reports
were heard in that Chinese capi
tal that the Japanese were mass
ing new troops in Manchoukuo
and the possibility' that the enemy
, might be preparing to try an at
tack on soviet Siberia was again
raised.
The Chinese press, meanwhile,
pointing out that the country was
up against it on several fronts,
urged the United States to take
more aggressive steps in the Ori-
ent.
j "The allies," said one paper,
"should launch attacks against
Japan by land, sea and air in col
laboration with China's war ef
fort." On tho most critical of tho
current Chinese fighting fronts,
that in the province of Chekl
anr, the enemy was within three
miles of the provincial capital
of Chuhslen, although his losses
had been heavy before Chinese
artillery fire.
This area is of great importance
as one of the most feasible for
allied counter air action against
Japan.
Congress Sets
Balkans9 War
(Continued From Page 1)
were preparing to expand their
hostile activities.
The senate votes were 67-0 on
Bulgaria, 71-0 on Hungary, and
T4-0 on Rumania.
Galleries were packed for the
double attraction of congress for
mally declaring war, however
perfunctorily, and tho personal
appearance of Manuel L. Quezon,
president of the Philippines, who
later mounted the rostrum amid
an ovation and urged the Ameri
can people to adopt "still another
slogan of war 'Remember the
Philippines.' "
Quezon said he was not in this
country to ask for an Immediate
drive against the Japanese inva
ders in his homeland, but pleaded
that Americans always have in
Yon Are Cordially
Invilei to Mhsd Ily
1st Anniversary
AND I EARNESTLY RE
QUEST YOU TO COME UP
TO MY SHOP WITHOUT OB
LIGATION AND INVESTI
GATE MY BONAFIDE OF
FER TO
SAVE YOU W
On Men's & Young: Men's
SUPER QUALITY SUITS
Rich 100 wool fabrics, tailored by highest paid ex
pert workmen, smartly styled in the latest fashions,
and guaranteed to fit your particular shape.
SUITS PRICED AT
$20 $25 $30 $35 $40
Regular Priced from (30 to J50
Sporl Coals Priced at
$9.95 $10.95 $11.95 $12.95
Regularly Priced from $13.95 to $17.50
SLACKS MID 0I1ESS PANTS
$5.95 u $8.95
Yean
Of experience in the
me that the road to
vf my aim, ana knowing good clothes as I do I buy
wun my
am able
could wish
dreSS Pants
Z?AcAt "tairway and see how easy it is to
Set Uik beat clothes for less at Joe's.
Tftrs with the Former Brooks Clothiers
; Open Saturday Night Till I O'clock
CPiV& V
V S OAlIIU tfl.
Memorial for
A
' ;t i ; - V
Zr-.Z 1 M
ALFRED O. QUESSETH
CCC Decision
Slated Today
Corps Said Drawing
From Farm Labor;
NYA Also Up
WASHINGTON, June 4.-0P)-
Debating the question of abolish
ing the civilian conservation corps,
the house heard contentions
Thursday that it was drawing
needed labor from farms and that
it should be maintained to help
take care of probable post - war
unemployment.
A decision was postponed un
til Friday when a vote also is
expected on whether the Na
1 1 o n a 1 Youth administration
should be continued.
The appropriations commit
tee eliminated from a billion-dollar
bill to finance the labor de
partment, the social security
board and related agencies an
item of $75,818,000 to provide for
350 CCC camps.
Rep. Engel (R-Mich) seeking to
forestall efforts to restore the
item to the measure, told the
chamber:
"This year 64 per cent of the
CCC enrollment comes from farms
or cities under 2500 population
These boys ought to stay on the
farms where they belong before
the farm labor situation is further
aggravated."
Engel also asserted that in
past years when the camp en
rollments had dropped, the per
capita cost had Increased, "and
no effort has been made to cut
the payrolls of civilian em
ployes." But Rep. Tarver (D-Ga) ar
gued that the CCC appropriation
should be restored "because the
camps will be needed to take
care of young men returning from
the war and unable to find em
ployment.'
mind "that only in the Philippines
has your flag been hauled down
and replaced by the flag of the
rising sun."
Regularly Priced
$7.5 to si&ja
hiffh H-ada tlnthin inrinetrv
success is to sell the best for
upstairs low rent, self service,,
to save rou 110 on the hext
for. Also luoer aualitr imnrt
at Ereat monv.uivin nrirm
Upstairs
, Clclhcs Shop
KNTEANCK NEXT DOOE t
, TO QUELLE CAFE
m ml
IK g
n
Two Sunday
VERDI SEDERSTROM
Rites Recall
War Victims
Special memorial services for
Alfred O. Quesseth and Verdi Se-
derstrom, Salem young men who
lost their lives in war in the Pa
cific early in December are to
be held at the American Lutheran
church in Salem on Sunday night,
June 7, at 8 o'clock.
Sederstrom, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar F. Sederstrom, 845 D street,
an ensign in the navy, was killed
at Pearl Harbor.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Quesseth, 1040 North Cottage
street, young Quesseth was a chief
petty officer aboard a US navy
unit in the Philippine islands.
Army Building
Fire Fatal to
10 Soldiers
STOCKTON, Calif., June 4-P)
Flames bursting through an army
building left 11 persona dead
Thursday and another nine grave
ly burned.
Ten soldiers and a civilian fire
man lost their lives.
An explosion of some kind pre
ceded the fire which swept quick
ly through one of the buildings at
the army post here. Those who
died were trapped in the struc
ture.
The blaze started about 11:30
o'clock Wednesday night and
burned for 30 minutes. Lieut
Col. Floyd H. Tull, commanding
officer, appointed a board of in
quiry to determine what caused
the explosion and fire.
The dead:
Tom Sousa, Stockton, civilian
fireman.
Corp. Lloyd Wisbey, 23, Win
lock, Wash.; Sgt. Robert A. Smith,
21, Davis, Calif.; PvU Ervin R.
Schumacher, 25, Antelope, Neb.;
Pvt. Donale E. Ensign, 20, El Cer
rito, Calif.; Pvt. Porter H. Whita-
ker, jr., 22, San Francisco; Pvt.
Louis Brasesco, Stockton, Calif.;
Pvt. Kenneth A. Zellars, Bartlett,
Kans.; Pvt. Charles G. Massingill,
Wilson, NC, and Pvt. Leroy Frees,
24, Conshohocken, Pa.
Soldiers who were burned se
riously included Corp. Reuben
A. Huff, 24, Cottage Grove, Ore.
Coos Given
Rent Ceiling
SAN FRANCISCO, June
The office of price administration,
continuing its move against in
flated rents in the country's war
production and military training
centers, has added 24 more com
munities to the list of defense
rental areas, the regional OPA
office revealed Thursday.
Coos county of Oregon and Ban
nock, Bingham, Bonneville and
Power counties of Idaho were in
cluded in the list which brings
to 366 the number of cities and
communities thus far designated,
in which more than 89 million per
sons are affected.
Price Administrator Leon Hen
derson recommended that rents in
the 24 new areas be reduced to
levels prevailing on March 1 of
this year. The OPA said Thurs
day's action does not immediately
reduce rents in the new areas.
Seals Sink Hollies : . ,
SAN FRANCISCCv June 4.-(P)
The San Francisco Seals, after
facing apparent defeat for .six
innings at the hands of Charley
Root, Hollywood's venerable right
hander, came from behind in the
last three innings to score a
to 5 Coast league baseball victory
Thursday night.
Hollywood 100 002 101-5 16 5
San Fran. 010 000 212-4 IS (
Root and Brenzel; Jansen, Har
rell (8), Joyce (9) and Ogrodow
ski. Power Men Essential
f WASHINGTON, June 4-(;P)-Se-
lective service headquarters, das
sifying the . electric power indus
try as essential to the war effort,
Thursday listed 88 classes of its
employes who should be' consid
ered for deferment from army
service.
Obituary
Matthews
Dr. James T. Matthews, 78, at
a local hospital Thursday. Surviv
ed by sons, Oliver V. Matthews
of Salem and Donald N. Matthews
of Portland, and a sister, Mrs.
Emma Whealdon of Salem, and
a5 brother, William P. Matthews
of Tacoma, Wash. Funeral n
nouncements later - by Clough-
uarcick Funeral home.
Th OSEGON STATESMAN. Satan
Gestapo Takes
Toll of Czechs
5000 in Concentration
Camps; Exiled People
Joyed at Revolt
(Continued From Page 1)
pistol had been found in the pos
iession "of some parachute agents
who had been dropped by British
planes over the protectorate."
- It warthe bomb, the broadcast
said, which got "Der Henker"
the hangman while he was rid
ing beside his chauffeur on a
steep hairpin curve a week ago.
The two killers leaped at the
car as it rounded the blind curve;
the one man with a pistol missed
and then the second threw the
bomb, a fragment wounding
Heydrich. The bomb, said the
broadcast, was of a type used by
tne British against tanks in Africa.
Whatever the truth of these
details, the British government
long ago promised post-war
punishment for this "bloodiest
of all the bloody nasis." The
38-year-old Heydrich headed
the list of those on whom the
British plan to exact retribution
for nail terrorism In the occu
pied countries.
The hundreds of Czechs who
have died, or who probably faced
death Thursday night because of
the assassination, will be merely
additions to a vast roll begun in
1941 when Hitler sent "the hang
man as reichsprotector for Bo
hemia and Moravia to Prague to
"quiet unrest."
Hundreds of executioners' ri
flea produced a "quiet but failed
to subdue the sullen hate of the
freedom-loving Czechs.
And so, on last Tuesday, the
propaganda minister of the puppet
Czech government finally revealed
what had only been hinted before
the young Czechs, trained
abroad, had come in numbers by
night out of skies with arms and
explosives to strike at the nazi
oppressors. The minister, Emanuel
Moravec, insisted that most of the
'chutists had been rounded up,
therefore no special precautions
for nazi officials had been thought
necessary. But then he admitted a
few had escaped and that these
"sufficed to bring misfortune to
us."
That misfortune, he said, con
sisted not only of the attack on
Heydruch.
"They (the parachutists) were
told that revolution was Immin
ent in Bohemia and Moravia. As a
signal for the uprising, a number
of assaults were carried out
against prominent and Czech per
sonalities and a series of attacks
were made against industrial
plants, public buildings and other
institutions."
Five thousand peasants, teach
ers, housewives and students
were huddled tonight behind
the barbed-wire of nasi con
centration camps.
The convenient German
charge of "communism" put 142
others In jail for 12-year terms.
Even so, to officials of the ex
iled Czech government in London
it was a day of jubilation. They
said that Czechs must die if Cze
choslovakia is to be free. They
added nothing to the German ver
sion of the parachutists, but there
was no hint that their number
would diminish.
Instead, the Czech official
spokesman warned:
"Let Himmler, Goering, Hitler
and others bear in mind that what
happened to Heydrich can happen
to them."
State Officer
Enters Army
State Police Sgt. Farley Mogan,
who had been with the state law
enforcement department since its
founding in 1031 having come to
it from its predecessor, the state
traffic division, Thursday night
was granted military leave and
today enters the US army as a
first lieutenant.
Mogan has for the past two
years been supervising sergeant
n the Salem office of the state
police. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Mogan of Salem.
FDR Son in Hawaii
HONOLULU, June 4.-tiP)-Navy
-authorities said Thursday that
MaJ. James Roosevelt, son of the
president, at present is serving
with the marine corps in tfee Ha
waiian islands.
Detain Engagement
By PopuUir Demand!
Salem Armory
Tomorrow IligHl
- I P. E
tun tlte
Men 75c Ladies 55c
Men in Uniform, 55e
Ilcsic 'A La Eiztj'
Oroyon, Friday Morning, June 5,
Battleship and Carrier
Damaged in Midway Raid
(Continued From Page 1)
peared over Dutch Harbor Wed
nesday dropped no bombs. Its pur
pose obviously was observation
aimed at future attacks or intend
ed to determine how much dam-
Dr. Matthews
re
Of Illness
(Continued From Page 1)
Minnville college (now Linfield)
for one year,, but most of his uni
versity education, as most of his
teaching, was at Willamette.
After a brief public school
teaching career at Ballston and in
Salem, where he was Lincoln
school's first principal, he was
invited to Willamette in 1893 to
teach mathematics, a position he
never relinquished although tech
nically "retired" several years ago.
An alumni endowed chair in
mathematics bears his name, and
he no longer was the sole pro
fessor of that subject at Willam
ette but the school year just clos
ed had seen his classes filled with
students preparing for new tech
nical tasks and his teaching
schedule once lightened had been
made heavier by war industry
calls.
More than half of the univer
sity's graduates have passed
through his classes, for as the
student body and curriculum grew
to Professor Matthews was hand
ed the course in "college life," re
quired of all freshmen.
Purporting to teach habits of
study, of college living and social
development, the course was a
background for his own philoso
phy, touching as it did even his
most intricate mathematics pre
sentations upon how to get and
hold a job or a husband, the
joys to be found in solving diffi
cult problems or in doing simple
tasks, the close relationship of the
planned universe and the plan
ned life.
Here thousands of young per
sons listened with interest to tales
of their school's early days, and
as they heard the humorous de
scription of restrictions placed
upon courtship at the time when
the women's dormitory was a
frame dwelling on Court street
they learned of the sacrifices of
pioneer trustees, presidents and
teachers. No hue and cry was ever
raised on the campus for a new
chapel by students who saw an
cient Waller through the eyes and
the stories of Professor Matthews.
For many years Willis Hawley,
later university president and
eventually representative in con
gress from this district. Miss Mary
. Reynolds and Professor Mat
thews were not only principal fac
ulty members but self-appointed
janitors as well, waiting months
and sometimes years for their sal
aries, it was recalled here Thurs
day night Of the trio, Miss Rey
nolds, who makes her home at
980 Market street, survives.
Although most of his under
graduate and much of his gradu
ate training was in the same in
stitution, a system of education
frowned upon today, Professor
Matthews was considered out
standing in his field. At the in
stigation of one of his former stu
dents who earned wide recogni
tion as a mathematician and
teacher, he for two years taught
in Stanford's summer school. The
master's degree he earned by sum
mer studies, which he never
dropped, and the doctorate was
awarded as an honorarium to him
only recently by - the university
he had served the- greater part' of
his life.
The story of 50 years at Will
amette he told graphically, and
wittily in "Turn Right for Para
dise," published this sorina and
to date available o&ly through the
university's loyalty endowment
office.
Funeral services for the man
whose senior chapel addresses and
freshman glee announcements
were part of Willamette's trad!
tion have been tentatively ar
ranged for 2 o'clock Sunday af
ternoon at the First Methodist
church.
Survivors, in addition to the
brother and sister, include sons,
Oliver Matthews of Salem and
Donald Matthews of Portland,
grandchildren, James T, Mat
thews and Ruth Matthews of
Portland, the latter a Willamette
junior.
Tonight and
Saturday
ret
j
The lovers of "Honeymoon in
Ball" and "Virginia" la leve again.
v r ATxicu ecxucai
IK1IALB IIIIlX
. . . Also v ...-
IWILLlAftV DO YD
Added -;. tusStU HATDEN
Serial- ,
"SEA RAIDERS"
Dead End Kids
Uttl Toag& Gtrrs .
NEWS and CARTOON
"V . Ml
v J I I
age the first squadron had done.
That damage, inflicted by four
bombers and about 15 fighter
planes in a 15-minute attack, was
described as "not extensive" and
conditions quickly returned to
normal.
The situation at Dutch Harbor
is at present quiet," the navy an
nounced. "Yesterday's first raid
by the Japanese appears to have
been made primarily to test our
defenses. High explosives and in
cendiary bombs were dropped
but, as previously announced, our
casualties were light and damage
was not extensive. The few fires
L which were started were quickly
extinguished.
. The second wave of enemy
planes which was reported to
have attacked six hours after
the Initial attack failed to drop
any bombs and appears to have
been engaged solely In reeon
noissanee. "The source of the attacking
Japanese aircraft has not been
definitely determined but they
are thought to have been carrier
based." Anthony J. Dimond, the Alas
kan delegate to congress, said he
feared that "we may have a strug
gle on our hands" to keep the
Aleutian area out of Japanese
hands. He was afraid, he added,
that there were not enough planes
in the area to beat off a big scale
invasion of the type by which the
Japs took the Philippines and
other territories to the south.
However, Rear Admiral C. S.
Freeman, commandant of the 13th
naval district said at Seattle Wed
nesday that the "attack was not
surprise and the station was
prepared to meet it."
Judge Rejects
Final Account
Of Executor
Rejecting the final account of
the Pioneer Trust company as
executor of the estate of the late
George E. Waters, Circuit Judge
L. H. McMahan on Thursday di
rected the corporation to pay to
the estate $8485.63 which his or
der declares it has paid itself as
fees.
"The record in this case shows
that the executor corporation paid
to itself the sum of $1000 on
March 31, 1941, although it was
not appointed executor until No
vember 6, 140; that on June 14,
1941, it paid itself the additional
sum of $3242.84, or in all, $4242.
84, although the final account was
not filed until April 7, 1942, and.
the estate is not yet closed. This
court knows of no law by which
those sums could have been taken
from the estate in advance of
final settlement. The record fur
ther discloses that the total of
the executor's payment to itself
for services of itself and extra
ordinary claimed expenses, is
$8485.68, a sum so grossly in
excess of the value of the serv
es performed that this could
not be justified in approving the
final account," McMahan's or
der, in part, reads.
The question as to whether a
corporate trust company has legal
authority to charge the estate the
statutory commission prescribed
by law for the settlement of es
tates by persons is raised by Mc
Mahan, who points out that the
law is silent on that matter but
that "it is a rule of law that a
trust company, in the absence of
an agreement as to the price to
be paid for its services, is en
titled only to such pay as will
reasonably compensate it for the
services rendered."
- Criticism is also leveled at the
company in the charge that It paid
itself for insurance of the estate
property in the sum of $12.60, to
which allegation is affixed the
statement in the judge's order
"The law does not allow this to
be done."
Gonzaga Head Named
SPOKANE, June 4-V-The
Very Rev. Francis J. Altaian, SJ,
was named to the presidency of
Gonzaga university Thursday by
the Rev. Zacheus Maher of
Poughkeepsie, NY, American as
sistant of the Society of Jesus.
Today and Saturday
Nothing Cut but the
Price
t Shows
Dally
Mat 1:00
40c.
Eve. S.-S0
. 0c .
Kiddie 17e
AO Prices
. Include
. Tax ;
GONE
VlTflTDE
Continuous
-; Saturday
From 12 Neon
a?. Nawv Showing i '
po Not 'Miss TUs Gay Hit!
Time: 1:55 - ltl
Plus Don (Red) Barry
"Two Gun Sherifr
12,000 Men
Said on One
Sub. Sink Six Allied
Ships; Senate
Sets Probe
(Continued From Page 1)
large fires were reported left in
the bombers wake.
Implying that the better part of
a division may have perished
aboard the transport, allied head
quarters said all aboard probably
were lost and added: "The Jap
anese are notorious for overload
ing troop transports. It is known
that they put more than 12,000
soldiers on some 6000-ton ships."
It was indicated that the sub
marine had made its raid well
beyond Australian waters, some
where on the seas between Japan's
numerous southwest Pacific bases.
The news had a tonic effect
on Australians, who had been
sobered earlier Friday by Jap
anese submarine attacks on
southeast coastal shipping, hard
on the heels of the enemy's mid
night submarine stab into Syd
ney harbor.
By The Associated Press
Six more allied vessels were
reported sunk Thursday and a
senate naval affairs subcommittee
declared public hearings might be
held in its investigation of the
navy's campaign against axis un
dersea raiders. Of the six vessels
destroyed, three were American
ships.
With the loss of two Ameri
can merchant ships and one
small patrol boat officially an
nounced by the navy In the At
lantic and Caribbean areas,
Committee Chairman Ellender
(D-La) asserted at Washington
that naval officers might be
called in a public hearing.
Five of the ships reported lost
Thursday were in the Atlantic,
one in the Pacific.
United Nations shipping losses
in the Atlantic rose to an an
nounced 17 in the last five days
and the total cost off the North
and South American coasts
reached 243 since the US entered
the war.
At the same time, Japanese sub
marines sank a small allied cargo
vessel off the east coast of Aus
tralia. The two United States merchant
vessels, one medium-sized and the
other small, whose sinking was
announced Friday, were torpedoed
in the Caribbean area.
The entire crew of 35 survived
the other Caribbean sinking.
The USS Cythera, a 602-ton
former private yacht on patrol "
in the Atlantic area was three
weeks overdue and presumably
lost. 8he carried a normal crew
f 28.
Survivors revealed that a Brit
ish merchantman sank with a loss
of four lives May 27 after a Ger
man submarine commanded by
an Italian officer torpedoed it. The
vessel's crew of 85 included 32
Chinese.
Coast Radios
Quiet Again
(Continued From Page 1)
Broadcasting stopped Wednesday
night from the Mexican border to
Alaska after Japanese planes were
reported over the US naval base
at Dutch Harbor, Alaska.
Meanwhile civilian protection
organizations stood on the alert
along the 'British Columbia coast
for any warning that might set
the province's blackout system in
to operation.
By The Associated Press
Midway was the object of its
first attack on the day of Pearl
Harbor. Throughout the two
weeks that followed its name
appeared frequently in the
navy's communiques.
On December 12 and again on
December 16, it was announced
that both Midway and Wake is
land, which later fell, were "coun
tering the blows of the enemy."
On January 29, two enemy sub
marines appeared off Midway
with the apparent intention of
shelling the island. Artillery fire
from the island hit one of the subs
Joan
Bennett
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and turned both of them back wiUt
no injury to Midway's personnel.
The last reported attack was oa
March 10 when, the navy said,
two Japanese seaplanes were: in
tercepted west of the Island by
American fighter planes based
there. One of the Japanese planeg
was destroyed.
The small Island defense out
post Is 1149 miles northwest of
Hawaii.
Admiral Nlmlts last month
flew to Midway and decorated
fear naval and marine offi
cers. He likewise commended
Com. Cyril T. Slmard of the
Midway naval air station and
Lieut CeL Harold Shannon,
commanding the marine defense
units.
The admiral said excellent co
ordination of ground affairs and!
air forces under Simard had dem
oris tra ted the efficiency was most
commendable. He praised Shan
non for the excellent manner in
which the defense of Midway was
conducted.
Senate Passes
Dependent Pay
Vote to Be Called on
Monday for Boost
In Service Salary
(Continued From Page 1)
his pay while the government
would contribute $28. In addi
tion, the government weuld
contribute S12 monthly to the
support of the first child and
10 monthly for each additional
child.
In another classificiation, t he
enlisted man could elect to con
tribute an additional $5 and the
government would provide $18
more for one dependent parent,
$25 for two parents and $5 for
each additional brother, sister or
grandchild.
Linked with these dependency
provisions, the measure . carried a
section authorizing the . selective
service, under the direction of the
president to set up classifications
which would determine the order
in which registrants would be
called to active service.
Senator Johnson (D-Colo),
sponsor of the bill, said this would
fix the status of the 65 per cent
of registrants he said had been
deferred because of dependency.
Senator Taft (R-Ohio) added that
it ought to result In deferring
married men over 30 years old un
til all other classes had been
called.
During consideration of the fam
ily allowance measure, the senate
heard angry charges that action
on a military pay adjustment bill
was vbeing delayed to "chisel a
few dollars out of the enlisted
man's pay.
Senator LaFollette (Prog-
Wls) served netice he Intended
to move Monday to discharge
the senate conferees who thus
far have refused to accept a
house amendment increasing
the minimum pay in the armed
services to $59 a month, instead
of $42 previously approved by
the senate;
Continuous from 1 P. ML
TODAY & SATURDAY
r
Ail-evt war on the
roots of Now York
fog raocols rwn wildl
tehhy
G0RCEY JORDAN
N..n HAIL
Pius 2nd Smash Hit
News
and
ft
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.:, .:; ctapt. u
Jack Holt as
"Holt of the Secret Service"
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