The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 28, 1943, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAC2 EIGHT
Th OIXGOn STATESMAN. CcCLna. Oron. Vrdnday Kerning. April 13. IS 43
i.T
JVo Faror Sway Us. No Fear Shall Awe
From first Statesman. March 28. 1851 . :
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGlflE. Editor and Publisher , ; :.,
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all f
ine w.iwu ri . .h.rio rr-rfitd in this newspaper. !
news aispaicnes creujwct uw. .
Art at the YMCA. -v
: Cl&wle Kells, secretary of the YMCA, who
sets everyone else a fast pace in thinking up
things for the good of the community has for a
long time now made the lobby of the Y into
an art museum. One after another of the Ore
gon artists has taken advantage of Kell's in
vitation and exhibited original work. So nearly
always there are some very fine canvases of
paintings' on display at the Y. -
Right now there is an impressive exhibit of
oils done-by Peter Winthrop Sheffers, a pro
fessional artist of Portland, and oi pencu araw
ings by Arthur .Selander of Salem. Sheffers
- came to Portland atoui two years
- so pleased with, Oregon that he decided to
make this his home Striking examples of his
work here are the paintings: November Storm
on the Oregon Coast" a scene at Rocky Creek
state park in Lincoln : county; "Pacific Sym
phony, coast scene near Yachats, and "Ris-
' ing Fog a study of sea and fog off Depoebay.
The Storm" picture catches the power and
. ii . i 1 1 4 Via " l'rtlre
majecty oi ine waves uchmub -
while the "fog" scene shows tne sea in
mood. v ' . . " I . '
" Arthur Selander works lor the state tax com
- mission. His skill with the accountant's pencil is
well known ; and his exhibit "of drawings shows
his talent with the artist's pencil. They too are
, principally of Oregon themes: "The Stockade
Cabin" with Suttle lake as locale, "The Barn-
yard" from a place , near the Metolius, and
. "Cloud Cap Inn" on the Mt. Hood flank are
common scenes which the artist has made
" worthy subjects of his skill. One of the draw
ings won an award at a New York Showing.
Ifs a good thing to have these displays of
high-grade art, and Mr. Kells deserves more
than the conventional "give him a hand" for his
part in arranging them. He passes me creau
on to Mrs. Kells, who is the artist in the fam
ily; tut anyway the public is the beneficiary.
And the artists are helped too, because of the
: recognition and the actual sales which often
follow. It is by this recognition and encourage
ment that Oregon will develop along cultural
lines, as a creator of art, not merely a market
for wares from other parts.--"
Nurseries at Kaisertown
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt finally had her.way.'
Down at Kaisertown (nee Portland) the gov- '
eminent is going , to spend a million dollars
building nurseries for children of mothers who, ' ,
work in the shipyards. Real authorities. m the; ;,
field of child care wanted nothing of the kind J
They preferred, and rightly, that mothers with
small children stay home and take care of their
babies, leaving welding and wiring, to' those .
without such, responsibilities; and if special ,
provision for children was required, that small
nurseries close to home be provided.
But Eleanor, with her zeal for social reform :
. at public, expense backed the tig nursery plan, " .
I so now Portland is to have three' of the na-.".
tion's "largest" nursery and child care centers,
so the Portland paper says. This means the ,
expenditure of a million dollars, the use of criti
cal materials such as' lumber, plumbing, wir-
ing, the employment of scores of workers who
are needed elsewhere; The state committee on
child care opposed this plan; but Eleanor pre
vailed with the maritime commission, so the ,
gentler ib is ordered. This has leen the Russian sys- .
. ; tem pf child care; and we don't like it.
-That was a good gag heard when the prison
baseball team beat the Camp Adair team: the
pen is still mightier than the sword.
."hoy Soil
nil. . m ) i u BBBsatBSHBa a : i wb , ibb bbi bh an m r an ki en n ai l t .,;-... ..". - m . w - - - w u i a. - .. m m
8aBDirG ; EDepCiaaini'a
New Novel by Frederick Hazlitt Brennan
TnTorful sorry about it. Miss
Elnora.- he said. VI an Uenny
sure done wrong to lie to you.
Chapter 21 (continued)
"You behaved very stupidly.- All
vouVe succeeded in doing is to You Just . name whut we should
drive the poor boy back to his : - an we'll do It or. bust." .
vice. Has that horse of bis any Yeah . . . that goes for me,
chance to win the Handicap?"- to0 . .
"Oh, mother-I-rm a-ff?aid . ookcd t Tim an'd
'.A - - then at Benny.
"If that Happens, bot w wm. , . : not .n
in that race tomorrow!" she. said.
Elnora lifted a determinea .
Ci m oin in hannen!" she "M He runs hell winI know he
"It isn t gouig to happen, she . And Mr Sed.jck wni
"khe washed her fa, -put on go back to the turf for. good "
hat and topcoat and .left 'the . , ; "ShucksT Miss, Benny can fix
hotel to have "a heart-to-heart
talk with. Lieut. Commander
Herrick. .... . . ' "
Chapter' 22 ' , :
Next morning, San Diego Bay '
was treacherously calm and the
sun shone like a' Chamber of -Commerce
secretary's smile. ; .
Seaman Linn ' - and Fireman
Dunnevan had got together In'
the midship passageway to dis-V
cuss ways and means o wang-
ling shore liberty. They were in V
a pleasant dither of suspense. No
that .easy!" -. . . ; ; 4-
"'At s simple. Well Jest make V
, Desko that's the Jockpull him,
, sos hell come in last." .
' "Desko . could make ,him Jump
the infield fence; was we to
threaten him good!" j
- "I got a even better idea with
more f inessey, Miss Elnora. We'll
Jest send for Erin Go Bragh an
put him in The Shamrock's piace,
like we was planning to do all
along.' We would of done it yes
terday, but I am iniormed mat
The Pearl hid Erin Co Bragh out
All this was a? sounaing Drsss
wora.naa du rwucu . t pPrr-nt How-
Voice and Ten Percent Had they Voice an .Ten Percent. . How
succeeded In substituting Erin Go
Bragh for his twin brother; The
Shamrock?
"You got an idea, Benny?" .
"I-got brains an with Jorains
you can always get an idea.
"Hurry up.
and tinkling cymbal to Miss
Templeton.
"I'm sorry," she said, firmly,
"but I can't trust you boys with.
S4riSjSlX' methods, compHct.rr
News Behind
The News
'Latest Dope From Washington9
Today's C3acOEp IProgirainnis
By PAUL MALLON
Trade Agreements
The law giving the secretary of state power
to negotiate. trade agreements with other coun
tries expires this summer. Yesterday the house
ways and means committee voted to renew the
authority for three years. Republican members
proposed what Sen. McNary has recommended,
that congress reserve power, to veto any trade
agreement entered into by the department of
state; but the democratic majority voted it
down. -
There is hardly any such thing now as nor
mal foreign trade. Except in dealings with
Canada and Mexico all trade moves with gov
ernment approval, particularly as to shipping.
Most of the freight moving is government stuff.
So trade agreements are of little significance
at the present time: " ! '
- The whole question of tariffs will come up
when the war ends and attempt is made to
restore free commercial intercourse among, the
t nations. This certainly should be the goal of
those who want a durable peace. Cartels, quo
tas, prohibitive tariff duties must be abolished
or sharply modified. This does not mean "free
trade" or even "tariff for revenue only." It
does mean-fixing of tariffs on a basis of en
couraging reasonable commerce among the na
tions; rather than destroying it. .
Since the issue is more or less academic
under war conditions, and since the subject of
? international trade in which ; tariffs are an
important factor must be reconsidered among
all the nations when the war ends, it probably
is ; wise, as Senator Taft says, to extend the
reciprocal agreement authority. There are other
issues of more immediate concern that deserve
. attention of congress and the country. .
ff f
Paal UaUoa
Delivering the Goods
America' is delivering the goods to Ruia
through a safe side door, so fast the Russian
transportation system can't take ,care ,of the
supply. This is reported by two Associated
-Presi reporters, Clyde Farnsworth and George
" Tucker, who traveled the rail and truck routes
from the Persian gulf across to the Caspian
sea. These routes across Iran- (Persia) are in
-effect" a conveyor belt carrying war material
to the borders of Russia. i
It was known that Americans had construct
ed a substantial rail line, and truck routes go
wherever there is freight to be moved. . This is
the first report we have seen as to the volume
'- these routes art handling.- The reporters- saw
lines of tractors pulling seven-ton j trailers in
convoys miles long. .They ! saw American-built
' locomotives and cars handled by American
; railroad workers hauling, war ; freight' Sot ' the
Russian army. Docks and warehouses are piled
high with goods awaiting removal to points
of disposal. . . .
With this delivery Russians should be safe
now from the nazis. . '
auction In whole or In oart itrietlT orohlbHed.)
I Distribution by Kin Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro-
WASHINGTON, April 25 Speaker Rayburn ad
ministered a boxing of the parliamentary ears to
House Ways and Means Chairman Dough ton to
revive the pay-as-you-go tax plans.
Mr. Dough ton's nickname is "Muley, and the
suggestion of stubbornness which it conveys is not
overdrawn. KayDurn is under
stood to have threatened to take
the tax subject away from this
main house committee; unless
something was done. .
The administration obviously
could not much longer stand
the public pressure for some
improvement of tax collection
methods. Even the treasury
realized that a pay-as-you-go
plan would not only be politi
cally wise, but financially
necessary if these stupendous
tax rates are to be collected in
full.
An obstreperous newsman nearly! broke up the
democratic-republican tax revival meetings by de
manding to know of Mr. Doughton:
"Who ate crow?"
Doughton banged his fistr insisting no crow was
present. Republican Representative Knutson rush
ed to the reporter and shushed him into silence,
saying personalities were so frayed inside, that
such an embarrassing question might start the
whole fight over again.
Thus. Mr. Doughton's - paralyzing hold on the
situation has been broken, and some kind of action
will be taken. The only thing certain is that. the.
fight will be wide open and all plans will be voted
on this time.
Agreement was effected on that and only that.
The selection of a plan is likely to be decided by
what the congressmen hear at home during their
i present 10-day Easter recess.
The substitution of Mr. Rayburn for Vice Presi- -dent
Wallace on the nether end of the fourth
term ticket is being discussed among congressional
democratic politicos. The next time Mr." Roosevelt
will need political aid from the not-so-solid south,
and choice of the Texan as a running mate would
restore the severed strings between Mr. Roose
velt and the southern political leaders of the party.
A vice president is usually chosen solely be
cause he can make a political contribution to the
ticket. Mr. Wallace is supposed to have brought in
the farmers the last time.
But the main political weight he carries now
seems largely confined- to extreme liberal ele
ments, which are most violently new deal any
way, and do not need luring.
Treasury : Secretary Morgenthau was snared into
losing the president's devaluation powers. He is
never at ease before congressional committees but
was never more fidgety than when Senators Dana
her and Taft went after him in the senate banking
committee hearing. I i -
At one point, Morgenthau urged Taft not to
make statements disquieting ' to dollar valuation
"in ; the middle of a bond drive." Taft replied
the bond drive could get no better advertising than
for Mr. Morgenthau to drop his request for con- -tinuance
of the president's devaluation powers.
- Democratic Chairman Wagner and Senator Ma
loney became worried about the press publishing
such testimony and feared its possible effect on
-bond buying. Both Wagner and Morgenthau con
sulted newsmen and urged that much of the testi
mony be kept off the record. - ,
The committee; tried,? in executive i session, to
find some way to' keep the whole story out of the
papers, but in the end, Mr. Morgenthau agreed to
drop the devaluation powers . and thus congress,
for what I believe is the first time in the history
of the new deal, has taken back an important
grantof authority from Mr. Roosevelt. : :
. Frankly, the apprehensions .over letting the pub-
v lie in on this debate seemed unnecessarily high-
KSLM WEDNESDAY 139 Ke.
7:00 New in Brief
79 His ! Shin
73 News
7 :45 Morninf -Moods.
8.-00 Stan Kenton's Orchestra
S JO News Brevities
8:35 Tango Time
Pastor's Call
t:19 Uncle Sam.
8:30 Popular Musie
8 :4S Bound-up.
104)0 World In Review
10 .-OS A Sons and Dane
10:30 Music -11
-J30 Willamette V Chapel
12:00 Organali ties
12:15 News ; '
13:30 Hillbilly Serenade
12:35 Willamette Valley Opinions
14)0 Meet the Grange.
1:15 Mai Hallet's Orchestra
1:30 Milady's Melodies.
1:45 Spotlight on Rhythm.
20 Isle of Paradise
1:15 US Marines
2:45 Broadway Band Wagon
. 3.-00 KSLM Concert Hour
40 The Aristocrats .
4:15 News
4 JO Tea time Tunes
5:00 Felipe GU A Jos Navarro
5:15 Let's Reminisce
5:30 Melodies.
6.-00 Tonight's Headlines
6:15 War News Commentary
0 Evening Serenade
:45 Popular Musie
70 News
7:05 ay Burnetts.
730 Willamette Valley Opinions
80 War Fronts in Review
8:10 Interlude
8:15 Hollywood Round-up.
8:30 Treasury Star Parade
8.-45 Three. Sleepy Heads.
80 News -
9:15 Russian Relief Program.
30 South American Salute.
100 Let's Dance
1030 News "
Next day's programs appear a
comics page.
1130 Concert Gems
12 0 Concert.
1230 News.
12:45 On the Farm Front.
1 0 Background for News.
1:13 Music. , .
20 Sheelah Carter
233 Texas Rangers
An Star Dance Parade.
2:45 Pat Neal At the News
30 Phillip Keyne-Gordwa
3:15 Wartime Women - ;
3330 Hello-Again --. ,.;-'.
2:45 Stars of Today ; .
40 Louis Bromfield. -4:15
Masters Entertain. ,
4:30 Johnson Family.
4:45 News.
Johnson Family.
" 5:15 Superman
5:45 Norman Nesbitt. -
60 Gabriel Heatter
8:15 Movie Parada
30 Soldiers With Wings. .. -
70 John B. Hughes
7:15 Music for Moderns,
7:30 Lone Ranger
80 Take A Card.
8:30 Music. .
t0 News
8:15 Today's Top Tunes
9:30 General Barrows.
9:43 Louis Bromfield.
10:00 Manpower Limited. - - ?
10:15 Treasury Star Parada
1030 News
10:45 Music.
11:00 Shady Valley Folks.
230 Uncle Sam.
235 Labor News " -3:00
Music.
3:15 Kneass With the News
S 30 Club Matinee.
40 My True Story.
430 News.
4:45 The Sea Hound.
58 Terry and the Pirates
5:15 Dick Tracy.
830 Jack Armstrong
5:43 Captain Midnight
0 Hop Harrigan
:15 News
8:25 Victor Borge.
30 Spotlight Bands
:55 Little Known Facts
70 Raymond Gram Swing
7:15 Gracia Fields
735 Wings Over the World.
80 News
8:15 Lum and Abner
8:30 Manhattan at Midnight
S0 John "Freedom
' 130 News
:45 Down Memory Lan
1030 Broadway Bandwagon
10:45 Music.
110 This Moving World
11:15 Organ Concert
1130 War, New -
Ke.
KALE MBS WEDNESDAY 1330 K.
:45 Undo Sam. -
70 Around the Clock.
7:15 Texas Rangers.
7 30 Memory Timekeeper
S: Cheer Up Gang.
:30 News
8:4a What's New
80 Boake Carter ,
9:15 The Woman's Sid of the News
30 Buyer's Parade
8:45 Navy School of Musie
100 News
10:15 Curtain Calls
1030 This and That
110 Cedrie-Foster '
11:15 BUI Hay Reads the Bible
KEX BN WEDNESDAY 1159
80 Moments of Melody
8:15 National Farm and Home
8:45 Western Agriculture
70 Smilin Ed M-Connell
7:05 Home Demonstration Agent
7:15 Keep Fit Club.
7:30 News. -
7:45 Music of Vienna.
80 Breakfast Club
S0 Keep Fit Club with Patty -Jean.
9:15 Woman's World
9:30 Breakfast at Sardi's
100 Baukhage Talking
10:15 The .Gospel Singer.
10:30 Andy and Virginia.
10:45 Funny Money Man.
11:15 Science Byways
11:30 Songs. - .
11:45 Your Hollywood News.
12:15 News .
12 30 Livestock Reporter.
12:40 Second War Loans.
12:45 News
10 Blue Newsroom.
20 What's Doing. Ladies.
nterpretin
The War N ews
" By GLENN BABB
AP War Analyist for The Statesman
. .1. n 'III
American Liberators and fly
ing fortresses have just remind
ed Benito Mussolini that every
part of his dwindling Italian
realm now is within range of
the big four-engined messen
gers of destruction for which
the axis has no match. While
the fortresses flew Monday from
one American base to scourge
the airfield at Grosseto, 80 miles
northwest of Rome, Liberators
day, shuddering under the
blows of air concentrations
which daily grow in terrifying
power, shows how , grievously
the builder of the modern Ro
man empire misread the world
situation. It is less than three
years since II Duce made his, fa
tal gamble but in &at relatively
short span the fortunes of Italy
' have tumbled with a dramatic
"completeness seldom matched in
the history of nations. The em-
sprang from another to" smash pire of which n Duce used to
at Bari, on the Adriatic The al
lies now have bases within 800
miles of Italy's most distant
frontier, that in the northeast
above Trieste, and no part of
the peninsula lies beyond the
reach of the big bombers.
When Mussolini decided that
the fruitful - time had come . for
him to enter the war, confident
that he would share, bountifully
in a partitioning of the French
empire and perhaps the British,
too, he had every reason for
confidence, it appeared, that the
boast from his balcony is all
gone except for a few islands
which are - unlikely to" remain
Italian long once the United Na
tions air and sea fleets begin in
earnest the job 'of cleaning up
the Mediterranean. That almost
certainly is on the Casablanca
schedule for this spring or sum
mer. The once friendly . shores
of North Africa . are alive with
the bases ' from' whifh "the big
bombers fly.- , ' ' i
. The raids on Grosseto and
Narf annarently were directed
the horrors of total war. With .
Eugene is to have the dedication of its new
airport next Saturday.' A ' fine I new United
Airlines station will be s opened for public use,
and the initial stop of the new coast-wise ser- ,
vice of the United Airlines with a Eugene call'
will be made. Salem extends cordial congratu- 1
lations to Eugene on khis forward, step. It
means something to be a regular point of call
on one of ' the world's great airlines. Salem r
would like to send a delegationi by plane to -help
Eugene on this occasion, but the airline
reports no planes available for the purpose. So
Salem will have to extend its' felicitations by
press, post or wire, deferring until after the war
the friendly visit which an event of such im-
portance warrants. - s
strung. - With - advancing prices - effecting - a , real
. devaluation of the dollar in every grocery store France' on the verge of "defeat
in the land for the past two years, an argument . and surrender, he felt justified
over executive fidgeting with 20 per cent - of the in believing that soon the Med-.
; gold backing, sounded purely academic. The presi- iterranean "really 'would be It-'
dent failed to change prices by such gold action ? alys mare nostrum, with all its
before. shores in friendly or' submissive -
The White House probably whispered - to Mor- hands except that distant Egyp-
genthau to let, the devaluation power go, and no "Hon comer. . . ' :
cities of Italy would never know " primarily against enemy air-
tears were apparent anywhere.
The supreme rourt shows some new aspects of a
. soap-box debating- society. : New Deal justices -hold
1 such strongly individual opinions that they are
falling into the habit of writing minority or sepa
rate personal decisions, differing only in some
minor legal phases. Old-hands generally keep such
views to themselves, let the matter slide, -
The practice has developed to such an extent that
the work of the court has been impeded, and de
cisions are behind.
- The RAF, hundreds of miles
beyond the Alps, was not to be
feared, even if it survived the
fields and plane concentrations,
new swarms of Hitler's planes
moving southward to take part
In the daily rising battle over
the Sicilian narrows. But some
of these daily blows against It
aly doubtless already are part
of the Softening up preliminary
to Invasion.' Even more rapidly '
the war Is engulfing: the Italian
homeland as it already has ,
swallowed up the empires The
KOIN CBS WEDNESDAY KC.
' Northwest Farm Reporter
a 5 Breakfast Bulletin
8:20 Texas Rangers
6:45 KOIN Klock
: 7d5 New - s 1 ?
80 Consumer News ,
8:15 Valiant Lady .
830 Stories America Loves
8:45 Aunt Jenny
80 Kate Smith Speaks
:15 Big Sister
30 Romance of Helen Trent
H6 Our Gal Sunday
10o Life Can Be Beautiful
10:15 Ma Perkins
1030 Vic and Sade
10:45 The Goldbergs '
110 Young Dr. Malone
H:15 Joyce Jordan '
1130 We Love and Learn
11 .-45 News
12:15 News
1230 William Winter. News
12:45 Bachelor's Children
-1 :15 Green - Valley.
130 Songs. .
20 Newspaper of the Air
- a 30 This Life Is Mine.
30 Let's Waltz.
330 Keep Working. Keep Singing.
. America . , -
2:45 News
40 Raffles.
4:15 Sam Hayes.
430 Easy Aces
4:45 Tracer of Lost Persons
I. -00 Ernie Gill Orchestra
5:30 Harry riannery
8:45 News '
535 Cecil Brown
" 80 Mayor of the Town
30 Milton Berle. -
70 Great Moments in Music
730 Heathman Concert.
801 Love a Mystery.
:15 Harry James Orchestra
830 Dr Christian
835 News
80 Sammy Kaye Orchestra
30 Northwest Neighbors
100 Five Star Final
10:15 Wartime Women ..... ,
1030 The World Today.
, 1030 Air-Flo of the Air. " r
110 Henri Busse Orchestra.
11J0 Manny Strand Orchestra
1135 News
Midnight to ajn. Musie and News
KGW NBC WEDNESDAY 2 Ke.
40 Dawn" Patrol -
535 Labor News
. 80 We're Up Too.
30 News Parade.
35 Labor News .
7:15 News "V .
730 Reveille Roundup
7:45 Sam Hayes
80 Stars of Today . .
8:15 James Abbe Covers the News
8.-45 David Harum
0 The CNeilla
:15 Arden Commentator.
30 Mirth and Madness.
:45 Kneass With the News .
100 Everything Goes.
1030 Homekeeper's Calendar
10:45 Dr. Kate
11:00 Light of the World . f
- 11:15 Lonely Women
1130 The Guiding Light
11:45 Hymns of All Churches
120 Story of Mary Marlin
12:15 Ma Perkins ,
1230 Pepper Young's Family
12:45 Right to Happiness - . . . .
' 1 0 Backstage Wife
1:15 Stella DaUas v
130 Lorenso Jones
15 Young Widder Brown . . -
20 When a Girl Marries
2:15 Portia Faces Ufa
230 Just Plain BUI
- 25 Front Page Farrell
- - 20 Road oi Life
3 J5-Vic and Sade .
" 330 Snow Village .
3:45 Judy and Jane i 7
40 Frank Hemingway
4:15 News of the World v
' 430 The Personality Hour.
S:15 H. V. Kaltenborn . .
30 Allan Sheppaxd.
5:45 By the Way -
0 Eddie Cantor
:30 Mr. District Attorney
Yeoman Webster appeared, a
mocking grin , on his unctious"
face.-' . ' - -
"Hey, you guys. Cap'n wants to
see you in his cabin. Right now!
Fireman Dunnevan gulped.
"God loves U. S. sailors, yerse!
He's gonna give us a liberty,
Bennyr -1
This brought a nasty laugh
from Yeoman Webster.
"He's gonna give you some
thing, but from the temper he's
in it won't be liberty!"
"Pipe down, Webster."
"Hurley's just sore because he .
bet against our horse! Blahhhi to
you, Webster!"
Alas, when Tim and Benny
came face to face with Lieut.- .
. Commander Herrick, they knew
that Yeoman Webster had spok
en true words, not in jest. -v
"Linn . . . Dunnevan!'' .
"Yessir!"
"I'm going to give you men two
days' liberty .
"G-eez, thank you
"Pipe down,' Tim!"
; The captain of the Trimble
looked at them in bitter anger.
"I have just discovered that
you and Dunnevan did more than .
. your usual amount of lying and
conniving ashore. You have ser
iously envbarressed Miss Temple- -ton
and Involved a young avia-' ;
tion cadet, Mr. Sedgwick, in this
race horse business I
"Excuse me, -sir, but "
"Silencer Now. then you will
. report to Miss Templeton.' You
will do whatever she suggests to
make amends for your disgrace
ful behavior. I cannot, of course,
command you to obey Miss Tem
pleton's instructions. All I can
say is that if you fail to adjust
this situation in a way satisfac-
tory to her, you will not be mem
. bers of my crew very long. Dun
nevan may find himself on a sup
ply ship at Guam and you. Linn, -may
be transferred to the Atlan
tic sidcDo I make myself cleart"
"Yessir!"
"Oh, yerse, sir!"
"That is all!"
. . An hour later, two very meek
, sailors in civvies presented them
selves to Miss Templeton, who
was awaiting them on the Ocean
Boulevard walk at a discreet dis
tance from the Coronado hotel.
. They found a desperate young
woman, a girl r who had hectic
spots of real color on her cheek
bones and a deadly glint in her
blue eyes. - ,
"Good morning, Miss. I guess ;
you unfortunately found out that
Mr. Sedgwick bought the wrong
horse on account Tim got stewed
. an' let The Pearl switch him back,
, onto us. But we had plans all set
have my -own Idea." ,
"Yerse-Jest name it!"
Elnora 'did. - )' -
"I want you boys- to steal The
Shamrock and hide him until
after the race!" she said.
Seaman Linn demurred.
. VI an Tim could steal him all
right. But , hidin him that's
somepin elst again. Mr, Sedg
wick would holler copper.". .
"Yerse, Miss Elnora. A race
horse ain't no small thing to
hide." - W .
"I've got that all worked out!"
"Yeah? A good hiding place?"
"Yes! A place where Mr. Sedg- .
wick and the police would never
dream of looking!"
: "Okay!" '. ' - . -.- v
' "Yerse, okay!" - ,
;- ...
From the night street edition
of the San Diego Morning Sun-
beam: ,' : ' l. - '
HANDICAP "LONG SnOT
STOLEN ON EVE OF BIG
DEL MAR RACE!
The Shamrock Taken From Stall
by Two Masked Men
GUARD SLUGGED, HORSE
; : vANisnEs
Bert Sedgwick Revealed as
Owner of Missing Animal
70 Kay Kyser's Kollege
ao rrea warms in rie
8:15 Fleetwood Lswton
; "That will do, Benny."
"Yes'm."
Miss Templeton began by say
ing that she deeply regretted
having been obliged to report
Tim and Benny to their skipper.
Necessity, however, knows no
law. She was not angry with;
them for lying to her; that was
perhaps, to be expected. She had
not done this out of-reveng-s. She
merely- wanted to give them a
chance to redeem themselves. .
. - Fireman Dunnevan's brown
eyes filled with tears. ,
i'. - ..;..,,.:..... v... ...'-. ":
2:30 Memory Book of Musie
30 News . ' . - - -.
3:15 Treasury Star Parade. .
330 Concert HalL
40 Book of the Week.-
. 4:15 Plantation Revival
4:30 Stories for Boys and Girls
0 Swing
:15 On the Campuses ;, w
5 30 Evening Vespers
: 85 It's Oregon war --
:15 News
8:30 Evening Farm Hour i "
. 730 School of Musie.
. S0 Business Hour.
30 Higher Education In Wartime.
1 Independent Colleges.
;. 30 News.
:45 Uncle Sam
DEL MAR Two. bandits,
masked and heavily armed, en
tered the Linn-Dunn Stable's
quarters here at about 7 :45
p. m, slugged J. L. "Silent"
Thomas, a guard, and made off
with The Shamrock, sensa
tional three-year-old' entered
in tomorrow's $50,000 Handi
cap. It .was immediately revealed
by D. T. "Voice" Garvey, Linn
Dunn Stable trainer, that The
7 Shamrock's real owner is Bert
-Sedgwick, millionaire sports
man, who recently forsook the
turf to enter the US navy air
force. ' :t .
Sedgwick . admitted owner
ship of the horse and asked
police to undertake a vigorous
search for The Shamrock. He
also engaged . a score of pri
v a t e detectives. Indignantly
-. denying that this was another
. publicity stunt akiri to the dis
closure that The Shamrock was
a - twin brother to Erin Go
Bragh, : another Sedgwick
horse, the young sportsman re
leased the following statement:
"We will recover, The Sham
rock in time for him to run in
and win tomorrow's race. I
shall not scratch him until the
last moment, so confident am
I that the horse will be found.
This was a foul and dastardly
act, and I have a very good
clue to the perpetrators. I think
I can promise some interesting
developments in the next few
hours." : ..." 1-. '
- Nothing has been heard of
Erin Go Bragh, alleged twin
brother, since it was i an
nounced that he had been "re-
tired to the country."
Track officials could not be
reached for comment.
(To be continued) .
corning t e s against Hitler's ' one' small cloud on the Egyp- d
tJon horizon bade a isw nas
blown up into the most terri
fying storm any nation has had
to face, surpassing even that
which Britain braved after the
fall of France. And this storm
is just the prelude to what will
follow! for Hitler's Germany. ,
30 Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
. 0 Point Sublime
30 Scramby Amby.
180 News Flashes.
10 US Let's B Frank.
10:30 Gardening tor Food
18.-45 Unci Sam
11:15 eVtltmoee Hotel Orchestra
1130 War News Roundup
120-3 Swing Shift
mighty air fleets. The dangers
of United States intervention'
could be dismissed lightly, and .
even if the Americans should -enter.
the war where could they,
find a foothold from .which 'to
harry Italy? "
The plight of his country to-
K0AC WEDNESDAY 55
100 News
18:15 The Hometnakers Hour.
110 School of the Air
1130 Music of the Masters
120 News
12:15 Noon Farm Hour
v 10 Artists in Recital.
1 as Today's War Commentary
.130 Variety Time ;
20 PT A Study Club.
Kr
"Good Morning1
IT'S
, a
1
mm
Km tost that teSs ' - , ;
And vivos Wester Breed faven
Fine inevediente-plu skill :, ,
.Brine; eut ell tke Eeve. T
at Youn GnocEns