-5: . ! V PAG2 is") Mian 'Caoc-So'cDtv CXSIBodl a a9 By ANNE BOWE kl THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. ' CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Member of Tht Associated Press :x The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the us for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Mass Production Yankee ingenuity which for a century and a half has been devoted to applying power to do chores for mankind attained a notable if sinister pinnacle in the performance of aircraft in the battle of the Bismarck sea.' The machine, which , as .the. sewing machine speeded, up sewing of textiles, as the cotton gin speeded up the pro cessing' of cotton, the steamboat Which speeded up4 travel by sea as the steam locomotive draw ing cars on rails did later on land, has been perfected for waging of war. In this' great battle of the South Yacific, the allied air arm, at : the - cost of one bomber and three fighter planes, sank or disabled all ten warships and all , 12 transports of a Japanese convoy and knocked down 55 enemy " planes. The estimated 15,000 troops on board were killed or drowned, "almost to a man." ; This is mass slaughter on a most amazing scale. ' ' Consider - the proportion. There were prob- ably engaged fewer than a irmen. vet thv wirwri nut isnnn-of th orpmv uf aa ; and sank or left in sinking condition 90,000 tons of enemy shipping. The airmen,, with planes equipped with precision instruments for aiming and with bombs for destruction, had the powerful surface -ships and the transports completely at their mercy. This must surely have been like shooting ducks sitting on a ppnd. ' - Brigadier General Billy Mitchell should have lived to see this vindication of his views. Though be proved his point in practice the rigid minds of his superiors remained unconvinced, and he itfas ousted from the army because his per sistence in arguing air superiority was offensive. ' The .demonstration of air supremacy over apan is heartening. Undoubtedly the Japs have used up their best planes and pilots and they cannot keep up with American production and training. If we could only spare planes and pilots for China we could destroy the industrial and nerve centers of Japan and speed up vic tory. The battle of Bismarck sea points the way to Tokyo. Stock Market Highs t. After bumping near-depression bottoms a year ago the stock market escalator has been going .up. It's up several flights above 1942 lows; and with a two million share day Monday It looks as though a good many buyers were Climbing on thinking it will go still higher. Well, It still has many stories to climb before it goes ii fst v rrtt Ka 1 41 - mm " me iwi, aim me power may go on to stop the ascent The energy that now propels the lift is "optimism over the progress of the war. Some really bad reverses might chill the peculators; and the taking of profits may put ! a' brake on the rise. To show the price gains look at the reports On averages. In the Dow Jones table industrials touched 130.27 Monday, against a low of 92.92 last year, which was the lowest since 1934. Railroads set a high mark at 32.19, against 23.31 a Vfar itfn anrf titiliioa ..rWiu V I Kicking round the lot ever since the new deal turned the heat ort them, have had a high of 17.47 this year which compares very favorably with a low of 10.58 last year, which was the lowest reported, worse than the depression years a decade ago. V v. The country is coming out of the blue funk that settled after Pearl Harbor aneisaafter the treasury proposals for very high corporate taxes last year. While for most of the large indus- L trial and utility corporations . net earnings are less because of high taxes, they have breath ing space and hopes of survival. Railroads are ti the money, but most of the earnings are going to creditors,' not stockholders. The rail toads are getting ready for the letdown when they reach the end of the war run. i Peace is by no means round the corner, but the stock traders think prosperity is or they wouldn't be rushing to buy stocks. The stock market remain one place free from rationing which can suck up the people's savings as fast as they are poured In. Getting them out is always the problem. Aircraft Wage Increase The minority on the war labor Stabilizer Jimmie Byrnes some sharp raps on .the knuckles for 'interfering with its decision in the west' coast wace aettlmnt fnr i.r workers. Byrnes, whose job it is to hold down wages and head off inflation, evidently whis pered loudly in the ears of WLB members try ng to head off or hold down the increase; As a result it was limited to 4c per hour. While sympathizing with Stabilizer Byrnes in his dif ficult task it is hard to see the disparity in wages from 62 c in aircraft factories to 95c minimum in. shipyards. The traditions are dif ferent of course, the former being low-wage industries for many years, and the latter held to the high inion scale for boilermakers and ahipfitters. Sill the welders and sheet metal workers at Boeing can't help but feel sore when Others in similar work down at the shipyards draw much higher pay, and it all comes from Uncle Sam. ; ; Dean Morse's dissent from the majority de cision seems logical, though we know every wage boost speeds up the inflation spiral. No One has nerve enough to equalize wages by leveling some off the top. iThe Co Gatette-Times. "inanv dairv Viai-H. r h;n -a fmany dairy herds are being sold ruptcy.' At a sale here last, week dairy cows sold at from $175 to $205, which does not indi cate that dairying is unprofitable. :The close outs of dairy herds are usually due to shortage of; help ifor the larger operations. The cows remain in production, being bought by smaller producers. - ... Pres. ; Roosevelt is repeating his pantomime with reference to another term. New I deal marinonettes hail a fourth term, ' but no one I. cars the master's voice. The pattern is the :me as for Term UL. . . - v - r ' . 1 . - Aro Favor Sways Uf; No Fear Shalt, AueV . .rFnan First Statesman, March J8, J831 thousand allied San Francisco." Sir William Pat MAOon board gives more security for by thesf small F-7 Ml am men you may say: Why not increase the allowances and continue to follow the path of Beveridge and our own current j social security system? They are trying to do that now in Michigan. A proposal is pending to have the state pay a base average of $20 a week for unemployment, plus 13 for each dependent, with a protective maximum of $38 per week. That suggests a decent living, but It also suggests tremendous taxation on all the workers and em ployesjo pay to the few who are not good workers, or to those who will R .ki i " dliayor 2ecurity Is a never attained. He will never, attain it because it is ot an absolute thing. There is no security In nature.; J No government or anyone else can guarantee that you will not catch a disease tomorrow, for instance. Uncertainty is an unavoidable factor in human To protect himself, man builds nouses of brick and stone, but to maintain these as securities against the weather, he must constantly kn I up mending, paying taxes on thenv buying fuel to rerxrUj u is never over. to avoid bank which! ha. rt and canever dVaT: " cffBe? U rri.ii It.!T i er ici2irUIUmtln fro,rMto a SiirSSJ? 1 n"mber People by dif- fLmf' uch4 mataining a stable value whmf J3 g00d businesM 't1? IoS SSfV" ernployivaeot. JlJZ:" Beveridge. L-, -T-. " Who's Hoarding? I - From hints! we have picked up in our reading we have a feeling that vast stores of our food stuffs are piled up in government warehouses. The 1941 and 1942 food production was very high, and the government grabbed up large proportions of the pack of such items as canned fish, peas, dried beans, etc. The army simply can't eat: all the stuff that was bought, and the food proportion of lend-lease has been small. The shortage; of shipping will restrict amounts we can ship abroad. ' This paper recommends that Uncle Sam look in his own cupboard to see if his numerous buy ing agents haven't overstocked to the point where civilian cupboards promise to resemble Old Mother Hubbard's by the end of the year. Mayor Rossi of San Francisco made a trip Los Angeles trying to get Twentieth Century Fox to delete "frisco" from the new film "Hello, The mayor feels about "Fris- wc vu auuuv oojcuuics. tut latter word always makes us want to scratch. j News Behind The News By! PAUL MALLON ibutributldn by Klnf Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro duction In whole or tn part ttrtctly prohibited ) WASHINGTON, March 4 The politicians are dusting: off !a new brand of goods called the Beveridge social security plan. Beveridge is coming to this country shortly to promote it and is TV t . mm , aireaay tanung to some ot our meetings on trans-oceanic tele phone. The London press and radio reporters handled the recent debate in parliament on the subject as if this plan was to answer man's historic longing for safety ,.in life. The state was to care for all his ills, from cradle to the grave, providing disability allowance, medical and maternity benefits. Any one who was against the idea was just an old tory. All right thinkers, with the interest of the com mon people! at heart, were for it. That is the pic ture with which we are presented. What nobody pointed out was that the average disability allowance for a man and wife under this Beveridge panacea was $8.08 a week. This la hardly enough to keep body and soul alive. Cer tainly it is not social security. It Is just a pleasant standard guard against starvation, j and hardly justifies the idealistic ad vertising that accompanies it. The American system has provided a similar pittance of $22.94 a month average . payment for old age benefits, and $13 a week for unemploy ment insurance. Whie all people have paid into the fund, very few peopl have benefited. Our experience with social security to date has shown it to be mainly a sly method of collecting more taxes. The tw funds in the treasury have collected $7,000,000,000 more to date than they have paid out, but this $7,000,000,000 can hardly be called a fund because it merely represents a debt of the treasury to itsejf, as the money has been spent on regular government running expenses. It is doubtful if many people will ever benefit, if this government otherwise provides their lives with a decent living standard. The average good worker ,(iir never be out of a job in his life, or should nt be. There was never a time in the worst degression when more than one-fifth of the workers were out of jobs. And if jthe worker is thus provided with adecent living standard, he can make better provisions himself for his old age than the government offers him with! its $22.94 a month to live on. It is evident, therefore, that real social security calls for) something bigger than Beveridge plans. Far more important for one instance, is the price level and the value of the dollar. The $22.94 a month cure for old age fears, was enacted some years ago with somewhat the same glamor bf publicity, prophesying a guarantee of ociaT security for all, at a time when prices of rood were just about half what they are now. A greater degree of social security would have been offered if the government had kept prices stable far more neonla wauM hiv. i . themselves than is represented benefit payments to the few. oH " goal man always has onoht ... - --- rtWIvIrlal V;m.1 M ?a . JLA '' U.JZi, rcrconr the hazard, of WeCertainly the kind of security that the political huckster, now are crying Is a questionableethod w 7 rT"T -""v gooas aoes not re eonteat. therein. ; Paging Mrs. Luce! TMay's Kadi Prograinnis KSLM FRIDAY 1JS Ke. 7:00-hNews tn Brief. 7.-05-HRise'n Shine, 7:lS-j-Rise 'n' Shin. 7:30-New. 7 :454-Morning Moods. 8 XW-Rhythm rive. S:354-Tango Time. S.-OOi-Pastor's Can. 9:194-Dickion'a Melody Mustangs. 8 :30i Popular Music. 9:4S Uncle Sam. World in Review. 10:05 A Song and A Dance. 10:30 Langworth String Quartet. 11 :0O- Maxinc Buren. 11 Sentimental Songs. 11:30 Hits of Yesteryear. 12:00 Organalittes. 12:15i New. 12:30 Hillbilly Serenade. 12:35 Willamette Valley Opinions. 1:00 Lum "n" Abner. 1:15 Rollo Hudson's Orchestra. lJOt-Bright Horizons. 1 :454-SpoUight on Rhythm. 2:004-Isl of Paradise. 2:15 US Navy. 2:30 State Safety Program. 2:454-Broadway Band wagon. 3 00 KSLM Concert Hour. 4:00 Charles Magnante. 4:15News. 4 iSO -Teatime Tunrs. 5:15 -Records of Reminiscence. 6 :00-tTonight's Headlines. 6:15 War News Commentary. 6:20 -Symphonic Swing. 6 :45 Soldiers of the tllsl 7 -OO News in Brief. 7:05--Facts About Taxes. T:15-tCIyde Lucas Orchestra. 7:50 Four Polka Dots. S:00 War Fronts in Review. :30 Treasury Star Parade. :45-4-This My Story. t:00 News. 9:15-HPrize Fight. 10:30 News KALE MBS FRIDAY- 6:45f-Uncle Sam. -1339 Ke. 7 H-Newt. 7:15r-Texas Rangers. 7 JO Memory Timekeeper. 8 i)0 Breakfast Club. :30 News. 8:45 What s New. 9. -004-Boa ke Carter. 9:15 Woman's Side of the News. 9:30 Buyer's Parade. 9:4&-Edgewater Arsenal Band. 19:00 News. lOSi Curtain Calls. 10:30-This and That 11:00 Cedric Foster. 11:15 BiU Hay Reads the Bible 1 1 JO Concert Ge ms . 12:25 On the Farm Front. 1230 News. 12:43 Music. 1:15 Music. 2 Mi Sheelah Carter. 2:15 Texas Rangers. 2:45 Pat Neal and the News. 3. -09 Phillip Keyne-Gordoa. 3 :1$ Wartime Women. 3:29 Hello Again. 3:45 Stars of Today. 4-00 Fulton Lewis, jr. 4:1$ Johnson Family. 439 News. 4:45 Let's Leant to Dance. 5:15 Superman. 830 Norman Nesbitt. 5:48 Remember When. 60 Gabriel Heatter. 6:15 Movie Parade. 630 Candlelight and SUver. 70 Zivic vs. Jacks. 80 Lone Ranger. 830 Music Without Words. 90 News. 9:15 Speaking of Sports. 930 General Barrow. 9:45 Fulton Lewis. Jr. 100 A Son of Bushido. 1030 News. 11 0 Johnny Richards Orchestra. 11:45 Sid Hoff Orchestra. aiXBN FRIDAY Ke. 60 Moments of Melody. 6:15 National Farm and Home. 6:45 Western Agriculture. 70 SmUm' Ed McConnell. J Home Demons tratioa Agent. 2:15 Music of Vienna. 7:45 Gene and Glenn. 80 Breakfast Oub. J-Keep Fit with Patty Jean. S:?2?,eet Your Neighbor. 5:15Wom Worlds Breakfart at Sardi's. 190 Baukhage Talking. 19:15 Uncle Sam. Your Federal Income Tax Ne, S Items Net Deductible personal, living or family ex penses and capital expenditures are not deductible items in the computation of the statutory net income, whereas all the or dinary and necessary expenses of) carrying on any trade or bus iness are deductible. ; In the event a taxpayer is en gaged in an occupation which re wSe eTir AXeS Cl rZ-1 7 " Army officers. quires the use of equipment as SrVennTiuSe ajchl, deducuWotS ;T-me extent 1 that it isrirffL.n. r4LA LlU.&T??? w l " ace not gt place of ordinary cloth- in Thus expenditures for the of cleaning of Jocke?. uhif orms and baseball tuSorms of pmfessional baaebanpbrverl d ets of City firemen policemen are allowable deduc- tioo. whfl. the cost of uniform,' or army and naw officer, tmr es. raflwav train kLT" : " ., . . These schedules are sapplleti by the respective stations. Any varia tions noted by listeners are due te changes snade by the staUons with out notice to this newspaper. AH radio stations saay be eat freaa the air at any time la the interests of national defense. 10:30 The Great Melody. 110 Breakfast Club. 11:15 Current Events. 11:30 James G. MacOonald. News. 11:45 Keep Fit Club with Patty Jean. 12:15 News Headlines. 1230 Cote Glee Club. 12:40 Market Reports. -12:45 News Headlines. 10 Club Matinee. 130 Johnny Doughboy Reporting. 1 35 News 80 The Baby Institute. 8:15 Clancy Calling. 235 Labor News. 8:15 Kneass with the News. . 330 The Gospel Singer. 3:45 Pages of Melody. 40 The Latest Word. 45 Scramble. 430 Excursions in Science. ; 4:45 News. 90 Terry and the Pirate. S 15 The Sea Hound. 5:30 Jack Armstrong. 5:45 Captain Midnight. 8:00 Hop Harrigao. 8.15 News. 85 The Lion's Roar. 30 Spotlight Bands. 35 Little KnowJi Facta. 70 John Gunther. 7:15 Gracie Fields. 730 Your Income Tax. 7:45 Construction Goes to War. 80 Earl Godwin, News. 8:19 Dinalv Shore. 8:30 Gang Busters. 90 Meet Your Navy. 930 News Headlines. 9:45 Down Memory Lane. 10:15 Deep River Boys. 1930 Eye Witness News. 10:45 Modern Music Box. 110 This Moving World. 11:15 Organ Concert. 1130 War News Roundup. S KOIN CBS FRIDAY 979 Ke. 6:00 Northwest Farm Reporter. 8:15 Breakfast Bulletin. 630 Texas Rangers. 6:45 Koin Klock. 7:15 Wake Up News. 7:30 Dick Joy, News. 7:45 Nelson Pringle. News. 6 .-00 Consumer News. 13 Valiant Lady. 830 Stories America Loves. 8:45 Aunt Jenny". 90 Kate Smith Speaks. 9:15 Big Sister. 9:30 Romance of Helen Trent. 9:45-rOur Gal Sunday. 100 Life Can Be Beautiful. 10:15 Ma Perkins. 1030 Vic and Sade 10:45 The Goldbergs. ' 110 Young Dr Malone. 11:15 Joyce Jordan. 11 30--We Love and Learn. II :45 News 12:15 Bob Anderson, News. 1230 Wm Winter. News. 12:45 Bachelor's Children. 1 0 OWL Uncle Sam. 130 American School of the Air. 2 o Newspaper of the Air. 230 Your Friday Date. 2:45 Ben Bernie. , 3:15 Today at the Duncan's. 330r-Keep Working, Keep Singing. l America. 3:49 News. 40 Milton Charles. Organist. 4:15 Sam Hayes. j43 Easy Aces. 4:45 Tracer of Lost Persona. 80 Martha Mean. 830 Harry Flannery. 8:45 News. -835 Cecil Brown. News. i 8:15 Oregon at War. 630 That Brewster Boy. 70 Caravan. 7:45 Nelson Pringle. News. 80 Four to Go. 8:15 Secret Weapon. 639 Playhouse. ! 90 Kate Smith Hour. 930 Adventures of the -Thin Man. ! 9:53 Quiz Quotient. 1 - ' 19:00 Five Star FinaL 19:19 Wartime Women. 1930 Air-Flo of the Air. 1830 The World Today. and surgeons is a personal ex pense and not deductible. r 'Among, other.- nondeductible items of expense paid or incurred by taxpayers during the taxable year there may be mentioned premiums on life insurance pol icies, insurance paid on a dwell ing owned and occupied by a taxpayer, ' amounts expended i In seeking a position or in traveling to I the place of a new position, commuters' fares,' the ' cost of post-graduate courses, bar exam- j i M u ' ma nun xeea, ccsMUMua iui wip maintenance and operation of an automobile used for . personal convenience and not by reason ofj necessity .to connection with a 1 business, penalty, payments , with respect to federal -taxes whether on account of negli- gence, delinquency or ' fraud amounts paid by a parent to tin- I emancipated minor- children for services rendered by such minor children, and amounts deducted and withheld from the wages) or salary of employees as federal old-age benefit Ua -.-;!, 10:45 The Marines Have Landed. 110 Del Courtney Orchestra. 1130 Manny Strand Orchestra. 1135 News. Midnight to 60 a.m. Music & News. IGW-NBC FRIDAY 629 Ke. 4:00 Dawn PatroL 5:45 News. 5:55 Labor News. 6:00 Sunrise Serenade. 630 News Parade, i 6:55 Labor News. 70 News Headlines and Highlights 7:15 Aunt Jemima. 7 .20 News Parade. . 7:30 Reveille Roundup. 7:45 Sam Hayes. 8:00 4tars of Today. . 8:15 James Abb Covers the News. 8 30 House Divided. 8:45 David Harum. 9:00 The O'Neills. 9:15 Everything Goes. 9:45 Kneass with the News. 100 Benny Walker's Kitchen. 10:18 US Marine Band. 1930 Homekeeper's Calendar. 10:45 Dt. Kate. 110 Light of the World. 11:15 Lonely Women. 1130 The Guiding Light. 11 :45 Betty Crocker. 120 Story of Mary MarUn. 12:15 Ma Perkins. 1230 Pepper. Young's Family. 13:45 Right to Hspptness. . 10 Backstage Wife. 1:15 Stella Dallas. . 130 Lorenzo Jones. IMS Young Widder Brewa. 80 When a Girl Marries. 2.15 Portia Faces Life. 830 Just Plain Bill. 2:45 Front Page Farreu. 30 Road of Life. 8:15 Vie and Sad. -330 Snow Village. 3:45 Judy and Jane. 40 Frank -Hemingway, News. 4:15 News ot the World. 430 The Personality Hour. 8:15 H. V. Kaltenbora. 830 Organ Concert. 945 By the Way. J 60 Waltz Tim. 6:30 People are Funny. 70 Tommy Riggs and Betty .Lou. 7:45 Talk. 80 Fred Waring tn Pleasure Tim. i :15 James Abbe Covers tn News, j 8 30 Your AU-Tm Hit Parad. ' 90 Furlough Fun. 9:30 Treasury Song Parad. . 9:45 Oregon on Guard. 10 00 News Flashes. 10:15 Labor News. 1030 Starlight Souvenirs. 1030 Gardening for Food. 10:45 Unci Sam. 110 Your Bom Town New: 11:15 Hotel Biltmore Orche?i 1130 War News Roundup. 180-20 am. Swing Shift. KOAC FRIDAY 49 Ke. 60 Music. 100 News. 10:15 The Homemaker's Hour. 110 School of th Air. 1130 Music of Beethoven. 120 News. 12:15 Noon Farm Hour. 10 Artist In RecttaL 1:15 Today's War Commentary. 130 Variety Tim. 1 :4S Victory Front. 80 Club Women's Half Hour. ,830 Music. 30 News 3:15 Why Nursing? 845 Th Concert HaU. - 40 Treasury Star Pared. ' 4:15 Latin Rhythm. . 430-Storis for Boys and Girls. 50 Private Pet Presents. 8:18 On th Came 630 Evening V 8:45 It's Oregon's War. 6:18 News. 630 Evening Farm Hour. 739 Music of Beethoven. 89 Tn Timber Wolves. 830 Higher EducaUon in Wartime. 30 New. - 945 Unci Sam.' . - 190 Th Jtour of Great Musi. . 1030 Th Hour of Great Musi. 119 Favorite Melodie. Yanks Bring Back Prisoners in I , I- I. i II, ... , ; lt -IIIIIM , f : " Goarded by US soldiers with fixed t th rear f&Hawfn sa sT.lJ rail :T. t mm - "Bruce lias ept? I thou- How; like him! Making me come out in , the! middle of the night and not bother tq be awake to greet me" t . ij ; $: In the door w stopped. On the; floor, right 14 front of us, a gray-trousered leg stuck out stiffly. Ahdjthe foot that belonged, to if was- small, and encased 'In a, high-heeled pump. i My. . eyes traveled lalong the leg in weird fascination Gala was 1 jbrouchih on the floor, in her gray slack suit, her artificial leg protruding at an unnatural angle. Slid wis looking straight at tne, out 'of the sad dest eyes I had ever sten. Tears were streaming down iher cheeks and she. waa holdlngji. man In . "herarms BruceJ I . i! j."- His head was Mtedf far back. His wide-open eyes ( stared up unseeingly. In the j middle of his forehead was a smllvf round hole from which fa thih, drk snake was crawling over ils face,' down --Gala's arm and ort tothe floor. He was quite deadtl f I don't know 1 io long we stood in the door,' staring at Gala and the dead. Brucef Perhapa only, a minute. Perhaps much longer. J. Aunt Millie was the first to shake off the numbing horror and find her voice, j-1 1 "Where's the hjeahest tele phone?" shel asked In a hoarse whisper. '' ' i i 1 1 -' It took a while before the question penetrated Gala's con sciousness. At the Butler farm. iwo mues down thfii-oad,'7 she said at last,1 almost iriaudibly. "In this direcUonlAunt MU lie nodded away from the lake and Gala said "Yes'l fa the same hushed tone.. f I. "All right, Kayl You hold the fort. Ill go tell the ilolice and your father; and Allan," Aunt Millie ' announced wth a re-' assuring pressure of pay shoul der. Then her feet pattered down the porch steps-fttte muffled roar of her motor shattered the stillness changed inio a purr dwindled died away The quiet became absolute again. ;f- :. - II I kept leaning against the side of the door; gazing I at the dead man and living! woman before me, my mind aj welter of con jectures and sudden illumina tion. Until at lasi f my knees buckled iwith weakness and strain and .1 slid fa! a heap to the high doorsill. 1 1 Slowly the sun IWas gaining; force. The landscape f was taking; on stronger, hues, and the Inside or me cabin sprang i clearly in to view as a j window behind Gala -burst iln to J sudden bright ness, turning her hair into i flaming halo. ' j The p 1 a c e was! completely wrecked. 1 ; . M- I r . .. The lids had been pulled off the seat-chests running along the walls. Old fishing-tackle, mag-p azines, tennis j rackf ts all the odds and ends that accumulate in an unused summer camp-strew-ed the floor iafwdd confusion. The upholstery! of a glider couch had been ripped opeii, the draw ers of a desk pulled! out It was the samej Kind of des truction I had (seen in the Bur ton library. The same motive for this second murder? I do not remember; asking the j question aloud. I (only know Gala answered it j j j "All for the miserable radium,' she said faintly, jail !f a sudden. From then t)ni we f talked. Not coherently. In fragments dis Jointedly liinkuii out loud. And yet In complete understand ing of each other and the situa- tion. I said: : "I knew- " think you And she answered, after a long; pause: "Bruce; told; tne Thurs-j day. The first time saw himJ It took bun aj week, finding th wuriif w hr j me. i -. -i i "It would. He was la coward.i It .was dreidfulj I pron judgment, on' a tniuf - who wi lying befqre ne deadL murd But I couldn't help it "No he wasn't. iHt was spoiled." A world ! of fortaving understanding lay j In! the words Hit bUk mood in tboW weeks it was you.! He was try4 i-i I. "Hi-;- i bayeaeta, leas' lln mt (. .ftt... J , X9 i Chapter 2f ; f 1 Tr overs! didnft i ! fhg to forget you, by marrying me," I said next And, a little &ter: "No" w o n d e r it didn't woric- -... .. f j "He hated ugliness. My acci-dentr-it drove ; him wild with i horror and repulsion. He couldn't marry a i cripple a mutilated. Woman. I didn't understand then.3 It made me terribly bitter.". j Avery ' was taking you to nini when It hsnnnH " It ura ht a question. It was a state- Pent -W.:r'- i.'- i -m. i w im nia mm auucruiai or his act of friendship to this . day. First he almost died and ' later you know how his wife acts , - - j "She's a dreadful person. I ont see why he stands It, why aoesn t leave ner "One accident And so much , , for so many people! nice C u r 1 1 s s I and you. nice shouldn't have made you ' fan" ., i : , "Suffer?. ! didnt suffer. Or yes, I did. It was a humiliation. But it's all so long ago. I can't feel anything now. He was my htlshsuul tor thr woV-a mrtA now he's nothing but a dead stranger. It's all wrong. I should ' feel something I must!" I ac- cused myself. luoi.uus ueciarea; "I couldn't feel anything either when he was alive. I'd waited ' five years to tell him I hated him for leaving me to face my wrecked life alone. And then; when we met nothing. It was all over gone burnt out He asked me to marry him after leg didn't matter any more. And I couldn't I couldn't seee him : any longer as a man. He'd be- thrown pebbles at me from the garden next door " we went on in mat vein end lessly, it seemed. Telling the past in rambline snatches that marfo sense only to us. - , . An d then Aunt Millie was -back. ,. -.: . . I: ' "They U be here i as fast" as they can make It" she said, dropping down' on the, doorstep . beside me. "But itH be an hour and a half at best" ' Her return broke our strange . mood and stranger confidences. We fell silent again and sat motionless waiting - All around us the life of the auresi was a;oing on. rsiras twit tered near by, ftittingr in and out from under th porch roof. A squirrel sat on the railing a few yards away, looking at us suspiciously out of shiny black yes and scolding furiously. I tried to watch the small creatures, keep my mind occu pied with them. But after a ) j time they submerged into a great , void, with the rest, of the world, U and I fell into a sort of trance, staring at nothing and waiting waiting :' " ; The noise of several cars turn ing into the driveway pulled me out of my daze; a whole crowd . of men came swarming up the steep footpath. - I The Inspector and Doc Tobie, the Coroner, were at th head. with Sergeants Hatch and Flynn at their heels. And behind them came what looked like the whole CI iff port police force, photogra phers, fingerprint men and all, and oh, joy! Dad and Allan. sPta rtavt WtAfManr T " Dad's arms, and he was stroking "'j c u uiicu uuiie wnen r was a kid, murmuring gently: Tfnvf little V..,f iirv ' didnt you confide in me! Why did you cfrry this burden alone!" And Allan said, close to my ear: ' "I had to tell your father and Inspector Pettengill, darling.' There was no other way no explanation for your being out here." r :;;: . : M: it didn't matter. I merely nod- ' ded my understanding and held - j on to both of them for pro tection and shelter. V But not for long. The Inspec tor's 'voice, heavy with sarcasm . , enaea my reprieve. "So you went i to the Burton . house for a lost cotnpaetr It ; said. "You didnt have sens enough to tell me the truth! Now look what your fool lying and accrei-Keeping aonel cost a man his life. And he your husband ' toor- f';.f',. ;;;. . ;: , I (To be continued) Tunisia v., . . rT" " prisoners u mare: Associated Press Telemat.