The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 01, 1943, Page 4, Image 4

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THE STATESMAN PUBLISHINC CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGVE, Editor and Publisher ;
' . r - -, - - - :
; Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all
news dispatcher credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper.
Invasion by the Fourth?
Young Americans who a few short years be
fore had gotten -up at the crack of dawn on In
dependence day to set off giant crackers, created ;
mightier detonations bn July 4, 1942 when, they
participated in the army; air corps' first raid.
over Europe. ;
Not literally on the eve of Armistice day,
,1942, but shortly before, American forces gave
the home folk .something to celebrate , by oc
cupying North Africa. On New Year's day they '
started bombing the remaining axis .strongholds
in Tunisia; on Washington's ; birthday they :
stopped one of Rommel's major driyes; on Mo
ther's day, a Salem mail was reminded by his
officer son now in North Africa, the drive on
Bizerte was started. ; L'
Morale being a factor not to be overlooked,
the Fourth of July in this year of American vic-
" tory-mindedness might reasonably ( be chosen
as axis propagandists "were guessing the other
day for the launching of an invasion. x' .
" i Sentiment, on "the other hand,; never out-
weighs practical considerations when military
strategy is being mapped. If July 3 or 4 is a pro
pitious time for attack and if all preparations are
complete, ; Well "atlilti'fMiyiftbly,,' .there may
be an assault involving naval units and landing-,
forces on Sicily. '- - : . ,
Adding up all the indices, however, the time
v does not ieem to be ripeifor anything more.
Aerial pounding . of the Italian mainland, and
of Hitler's Europe proceeds but destruction has
not apparently reached the poinf .at which inva
sion is the logical next step. More can be accom
plished at less cost by dealing out "more of the
same." Moreover; the war of nerves has not
reached a proper climax. The, pronouncements
Wednesday of Winston' Churchill and Anthony
Eden were of a sort which might logically be '.
- permitted to "sink in" for a few days, or longer.
There is evidence that Italian moral e is crum
bling. Very well, let it crumble mon The Ital
ians are thinking hard. Give them a little
more time to think of course with the accom
paniment of more bombs, calculated to stimu
late thought; but don't interrupt their cerebral
processes with something that will necessitate
action. ;
No, the situation doesn't suggest an invasion
of the mainland for a Fourth
tion. Sicily, maybe. Meanwhile,
be on the alert against nuisance
from the oriental foe on the west.
Subsidies
i The burst of virtue under which the congress
has voted out subsidies to finance the "roll
back" of prices on certain commodities does not
mean any conversion to a policiy of opposition to
all subsidies.' This is proven by quotations from,
the debates in the congress last week. When the
senate had up the amendments to prevent the
"roll-back" subsidies there were j these com
ments pr queries in the course of the debate:
: Murdock Utah): "May we have the assur
ance of the senator' from Missouri that It is not
his intention or purpose in any way to effect
the subsidies which now are being paid under
the copper lead and zinc subsidy programs?'
t Clark (Missouri) : "The senator may certainly
have the assurance. ....
Wherry (Nebraska) : "If the amendment shall
be agreed to, will it in any way affect the sub
sidy paid on sugar beets?" ,
George (Georgia): "Not at all. . . . .
Taft. (Ohio): '.'Only last week we voted a
$50,000,000 subsidy for school lunches, if you
please, although 50 per cent of the children
subsidized were perfectly able, to pay for their
own lunches.' . . . 1
It would seem that, according to the senate,
skunk cabbage by the name of a rose would
smell like a rose. . ; - i -
Fair Trial ' , ,
' Americans will take some satisfaction in the
decision of the federal circuit court of appeals .
in the seventh district holding that, six persons -convicted
of treason for harboring a German
spy did not have a fair trial and remanding the
case to a lower court for retrial. The' decision i
shows that even in time of war. constitutional
guarantees' hold when it comes to trial of per
sons accused of crime. None of Jhe nazi style
of ; purge; ' none of the Russian style' of "con
fessions" followed by swift execution. In the re-
trial the higher court's rulings will be respected
and guilt of the accused decided by the jury :
ln acordance therewith.' No .one has any sym
pathy with traitors; but the fundamental of a
"fair trial" must not be denied even to traitors.
: Eamon DeValera, for the past 11 yearst
premier of Eire (Ireland) lost his parliamentary
majority in last week's elections. ' His remains
the leading-party, in the Irish parliament, but
. whether he can remain as head of the state
awaits the meeting of the new parliament. Eire
has made progress under DeValera, who has re
strained the extremists. The rest of the world
w&ich has observed Ireland's troubles for years, '
hopes the country will not succumb to conten
tious factionalism now. '
' The president had a hard day-Friday. Both
houses of congress voted to override his veto
on the Connally-Smith labor bill. The lower.
house voted to kill his plan for subsidies on
foods. Too bad, when the war news gets more
favorable, that we face a serious breakdown on
the: home front, due in considerable degree to
the president's failure to tct promptly in con
trolling prices and wages.
Secretary "of Commerce Jesse Jones says by
the end of the year our synthetic rubber plants
will be producing at a rate sufficient to meet"
civilian needs as well as military needs. The
only problem then is to make present rubber
stretch a fevv'rnore 'n:r. thi. We "find ari A. card -helps.
- v - .
rat?or Strays Us; No Fear Shall
From First Statesman, March 23,
News Behind
The Neivs
of July celebra
By PAUL
wej may well
"firecrackers"
I Distribution
euctloa tn wbol
ing offered for
of the Chester
being that big
' . " v.
Ato
1831
Pay-as-you-go ; -' I
Good; morning. This Is July 1, the day you
start to pay as, you go. Everyone pays,; now;
v that is, jeveryone who works for wages. He will
'find his pay envelope .nicked, come pay day.
, But he should have the satisfaction that he is
meeting a current obligation out of a current
income. He will miss two thrills from the portion
withheld: the excitement of spending, and then
.the agbjiy a'year hence, of digging up money to
pay the! piper for his dance. "::t s
No, we will not undertake to .explain the
workings of the new income tax law. The papers '
have been full of articles on the subject but
1 we have avoided reading them. J Or rather we :
have read just enough to know what to expect.
For details consult your paymaster, whb will
refer you to the convenient little table ;which '
shows what "deduck applies in your case. You
don't get a chance to "take it or leave it." You
leave it. . . ;
Remember the worries about instalment ac
counts a few years back; and the stories of how
salaried folk - had made so many purchases on ,
time contracts that some of them would have
nothing left in their paychecks after the de
ductions were made? Well, life's getting just
like that again. At least that's the way the ones
who make out payrolls feel, to say nothing of '
those who get the slim, slimmer pay envelopes.
The latter class should have this consolation ;
however, in spite of all the "deducks" there still '
is more in the pay, envelopes of the nation than .
ever before. Too much, in fact, for the merchan-
dise on sale. So next fall the congress will start
work on a new tax measure, designed to drain
Off more of the excess spending power. A fed-
eral sales tax is the most simple and effective
device for this purpose; but no telling what kind'
of law we will get when the tax experts compro
mise with the politicians. ' ? f ;
l Our only advice is not to be discouraged now
that July 1. is here only three more days, till
you can celebrate "independence" day. ! !
MALLON
by Klnc reaturea Svndleata. : laa. Bmm.
or to part strictly prohibit.) - j
WASHINGTON, June SO Many stories are be
Mr. Roosevelt's sudden acceptance
Davis resignation, the most nonular
Czars Byrnes and Vinson were dis
pleased with little Czar Davis' seizure of 20,000,000
bushels of corn just before the
resignation announcement.
This one cannot possibly be
true, las the Davis resignation
letter) was' submitted June 18,
nearly two weeks before Its ac
ceptance. '.. -1!
This Is one time when the officially-furnished
excuse was
probably the dominant consid
eration. In the latter part of
May," Mr. Davis appeared be-
j Pmal MaUoa fore the senate food committee
and opposed the paying of food subsidies by the
government to processors, and, partly as ' a result '
of his strong influence, that pet white house pol
icy was ultimately defeated in congress just before
Mr. Roosevelt, belatedly, decided Davis had been
right when .he wanted to resign two weeks before.
'. But there is far more to it than that. Davis is a '
farm bloc man of long standing,an American farm
bureau federation-national grange man, as distinct
from , the competitive and more leftish Fanners
Union. His successor, the former congressman Mar
vin Jones, is more of a Fanners Union man (less
federation, less grange) especially as he is flanked
at the controls by tile "little cabinet" crowd in
cluding Harry Hopkins, Ben Cohen, Judge Rosen
man, as well as Mr. Roosevelt's other self, James
F. Byrnes. r -.-V- - '- . j : .
So the shift really signifies the. passing of food
controls from a farm man completely into the hands
'of the white house group. : --i ; ; j
- i You can see this further In the way congressional
.interest and demand for an over-all production
price singlehead controlled dwindled as soon as
Davis left office. It is likely to dwuvUe more, be
cause the farm bloc would just as soon have two or
three or more unsatisfactory little czars running the
show as now, as one big unsatisfactory overlord. .
There is another significant under-anele. Agri
culture Secretary Wickard ' never got along with
Davis. Although their differences'' did.-not reach
the point of an open clash, these were significant
and real.
. For one example, Wickard has been .building1
up the triple,. A committees, holding; conventions
around the country in a way which challenged, or
at least raised the eyebrows of the farm bureau f ed-f
.eration. Cooperation between ; the federation and
these, triple A committees, including the extension:
. service," did not run high in brotherly : love, : but
rather in a competitive spirit, , t v
, . The solid truth is Davis had an impossible job.
No one could achieve any degree of popular satis
faction, the food situation being what it must, be
this year. Any good production expansion program
would have to have been started six to twelve
months ago in order to meet the obvious demands.
: Even with whole hearted, enthusiastic unity at
the government controls, the job would be practi
. cally Impossible at this late date, and,, of course,
full unity on food has never existed here.- ' ' i ,.
' The whote dangerous problem is now entering'
Into a new phase of the tussle between the white
house and the farm bloc in congress, with the
president sternly standing ' against any F readjust- -ment
of prices, and congress just as strongly against "
the only apparent alternative, the payment of sub
sidies. In this situation, it is likely that the adminlstra
tion, if finally stalled on subsidies, will have to
raise prices somewhat to dispel the discouragement
on the farm and permit higher farm wages even
at the risk of further inflation.
Some truck drivers at a large defense pro j ect
in rural southern Maryland are reported to be
getting $100 a. week 'for a seven-day job, which
means little farm help can be kept in that area,a
situation which has generally similar national as-.
pects. ;;;-S;v-' L;...,-.:.-a f ; -?; r-t":'
It is difficult: to offer a substantial solution of .
these varied food difficulties, but if the administra
tion could do something to provide farm labor and
find materials for some new machinery, it would
do as much as seems possible at this late date to
stimulate current production., - .. U
WOULD H ttPFu" yr ,
ATO?r?OCT6
Hag of. Truce
YdixrJlav's Ka'dlSD IPcegiraimis
KSLSt TBTJKSOAT ISM Ka.
TM News. -' !- '
TS Riaa V Shlae.
:y.tae mm . -
t:4S Mornias Uoods.
, S AO Sextet from hunger.
S:30 Nw Brevities.
" SJ5 Tango Time.
S.-00 Pastor's Calls.
, t:lS Uncle Sam.
30 Marion County rarm Home
:-: Program.
t :45 Music
100 World in Review.
10:O5 A Song and Dance.
10:30 Music. j
11 K0 Swing. i
11:30 Hits of Yesteryear.
12 AO Oi ganalJtita.
is US News. -12
JO Hillbilly Serenade.
II .35 Mid-Day Matinea.
1 -00 Ijum and Abner.
lis Ray Noble's Orchestra, .
130 Milady's Melodies.
15 Melody Mart'
SAO Isle of Paradise.
1:15 US Army.
2:30 Music.
2:4 Broadway Band Wagon.
1 AO KSLM Concert Hour.
4 AO langworth String Orchestra
4:15 News.
430 Tea time Tunes.
SAO Galli Rini. Accordloa.
" 5 as Let 'a Reminiscav
530 Strings of Melody.
5 AO Tonight's Headlines.
' Sd5 War Commentary.
20 Evening Serenade.
Srt5 Popular Music. - , .
T AO News in Brief.
T AS Music. ; !
TOO Keystone Karavan.
SAO War Fronts in Review,
sao Mucte.
S5 Lawless Twenties.
Dnterpretinj
he War News'
By GLENN BABB , "
. AP War Analylst for The SUteamaa .
he general pattern of the
United Nations campaigns is
now strongly indicated. The
American landing on Rendova
Island in the! central Solomons
and Prime Minister Churchill's
cryptic reference to heavy fight
ing in the Mediterranean set the
seal on hints ; already gathering
as to the direction of the allies
next big moves.
The thrust into the . central
Solomons, announced - Wednes
day by the navy, shows the en
eral line of, the ? south Pacific
offensive for which the United
States navy and army have been
gathering striking power. It does
nott however, disclose its further
objectives and ultimate goals or
whether it -wiU reach as far as
RaSaul, the- chief Japanese base
in the islands above Australia,
or even beyond. All this doubt
less! depends on the quantity of
the enemy's counter action.
One thing is certain. The off
ensive, : of which the - Rendova
landing may be only a pre-
1 liminary diversion, is calculated
to make the Japanese stand and
fight another : of those devasta
ting batues of attrition in the
air and on land and sea such
as they lost on Guadalcanal and
New Guinea last winter and thus
: far have avoided in the Aleu
tians. The enmy must fight such
a battle or abandon prizes of
" great strategic importance.
. As for the Mediterranean the
' pathways, followed d a 1 ly and
nightly by the allied air forces
a c r o s s the : Mediterranean - to
Sicily, Sardinia, southern ' Italy
and: more recently to : Greece
mark the routes by. which migh
ty blows wM be delivered by
sea iand land "before the leaves :
of tut u m n faU, to ' quote
Churchill's speech at the Guild
hall. ,
., Meanwhile, with July at hand 1
and the second quarter of 1943 '
ended period so critical in
the battle of the Atlantic-the :
allies are able to see in the re
sults of that conflict a "victory
which Churchill ranked as no ;
less: notable than the triumph
: in Tunisia. This should be done,'
however, with due consideration
to Churchill's warning that "we
must not assume that this great
. - 7:-"
Next day's
conies' pag-e.
AO News.
:15 Guillermo Gale.
do Music -10
AO Serenade.
10 JO News, i
KOIN CBS THURSnAT AM Ka.
AO Northwest Farm Reporter. ' .
:19 Breakfast Bulletin.
JO Texas Rangers. .
S Kom Klock.
7:10 Aunt Jemima, i
- T:15 News. ! -
70 Dick Joy. News..
1:45 Ne3son Pringle. ' '
AO Consumer.- News.
:15 Valiant Lady.
:20 Stories America Loves. '
S:45 Aunt Jenny. :
AO Kate Smith Speaks. " i
:15Bis Sister.
9 SO Romance of Helen Treat. . "
S:45 Our Gal Sunday. - i -IS
AO Life Can Be BaautlfuL -10:15
Ma Perkins.- ,
10:30 Vie and Sade. "
10:45 The Goldbergs. ;
11 AO Young Dr. Malone. !
11:15 Joyce Jordan. .
1125-rWe Love and Learn. .
. 11H5 Newa i- - -12:15
Bob Andersen,' News, r
12 dO William Winter. News. :
12 H5 Bachelor's Children.
1 AO Home Front Reporter..
1-SO Uncle Sam.
1.45 Mountain Music.
SAO Newspaper of the Air.: , .
S 30 This Life Is Mine. i
2:45 Keep the Heme Fires Bufnins.
SAO News. i .
3:15 Traffle Safety. ' J
. Improvement wiU be maintained
' or; that bad patches do not tie
fahead and that; we must re
double our efforts an ingenuity."
More than. 10 U-boats were
- certainly destroyed in the month
- of; May,, Churchill: said. The
battle ended' "in the' complete
, defeat of the U-boat attack. And
although "the U-boats hive re
coiled to lick their wounds and
mourn their dead and the allied
- convoys are not undergoing ser
ious attacks at the present time,'
Hitler's submarine loss s for
June also have been most solid
and encouraging.' . ..
: An indication of these "solid
'- and - encouraging results was
' given Monday by Malcolm Mac
- : Donald, T British j, high ' cornmis-
sioner to Canada, who-, disclosed
that 1 14 submarines had been
: destroyed in the last fortnight,
indicating a continuation of the
May rate of one a day. There
- is convincing evidence, now that
the pace of kills definitely has
, passed Germany's ; replacement
capacity. Authoritative informa
.: tion . reaching London put the
' May U-boat output at 23, and
the curve is descending. under
me hammer blows of the British
and American ' air forces on the
factories and ports-sthat : make
and assemble the! submarines.
'Against toe waning fortunes
of the U-boats Is set the titanic
: rcord of the American shipbulld-
- ing industry, supplemented by :
the shipyards ; of Britain and
. Canada. The F total ' output for
. June, Churchill disclosed, was
: ' between seven and ten times the
allies shipping losses for the
month. We know that the
American output alone for May.
was 173 ships of 1,712,000 dead-
- weight tons and it is a safe as- -sumption
that the British and :
. Canadian' contribution brought
the total close to 2.C20.C0O tons.
. This whole shipping situation
probably is much more favorable -than
the estimates on which the
calculation of. the Casablanca
and Washington war councils
were based and may make pos- .
s lb 1 e an. advancement of the
schedules there arrans si for ti.e
- successive blows aiaisst Hitler's '
: beleauguered fortress.
. .-...
.-.- k
";. K- . . ..
- y
i :
l -::
i : :
2:30 Concert.
. 25 News. . - -
4 AO Raffles. .
4:15 News.
"4 do Easy Aces. "y
4:45 Tracer of Lost Persons.
8 AO Stop. 'Look and Listen.
5:13 Music. - -
30 Harry Flannery, News.
S:4S News.
S5 Cedi Brown. .
AO Major BoWea.
dO Stage Door Canteen.
7 AO The First Line.
TdO Talk. - -
. 7:45 John B. Kennedy.
.00 I Love a Mystery, f I
S:15 Harry James Orchestra.
. SdO Death Valley Days.
8d News.-
- SAO For Yon.5
S:l Gardening Thla Week.
dO Mayor of the Town. ., ,
, 10 AO Five Star Final.
10 J5 Wartime Women,
10 dO Air-Flo. -lOdO
HeUo Mora. '
10:45 Woody Herman.
11 dO Manny Strand Orchestra,
lids News.
UAO-4AO m. m. Music and, N
KCX BN THVaSDAT UN Ka,
. - s AO wa re up too. -
: d 5 National Farm & Home.
45 Western Agriculture. ,.'.,,
TAG excursions in Science. '
7:15 Music of Vienna.
TdO News.
. 7:45 Gane and Glenn. ' :
.- S AO Breaktast Club. J.
' AO My True Story. ; t
d0 Breakiast at SardTa.
1A0 Baukhage Talking.
10:15 The Gospel Singer.
, 1050 Christian Science Piogram.
u4-iiw jiaoy institute.
. 11 AO Woman's World.
11:15 The Mystery Chef. I M
'. 11-45 Your Hollywood. News. : !
- . IS AO Songs by Morton Downey. :
; U:15 News Headlines and High
lights. . , i
IS S0 Music ' " ' . " ! :
11-45 News. y ' ' ;
1A0 Blue Newsroom Review. : m
SAO What's Doing. Ladies. ! J
S dO Uncle Sam. t , 1
S:45 Music. : ' I -
1:65 Labor News.
SAO Clancy Calling.
S:15 Xneass With the News.
3:50 Club Matinee.
4 AO The Latest Word.
4 AS Those Good Old Days. ,
S4d0 News, -v '
.4:45 Archie Andrews.
SAO The Sea Hounds.
. ?5:15 Dick Tracy.
SdO Jack Armstronc.
S.-45v-Captaln Midnight.
AO Hop Harriganr
:15 News. -do
Spotlight Bands.
; -55 Sports. -:
7 AO Swing. -
7:15 GracM Fields.
TdO Red Ryder.
S AOEarl Godwin. Newa .'
:15 Lum and Abner. , :
dO Oregon On Guard.
, AO Wings to Victory.
, dO Newa. '
S-45 Down Memary Lane.
10A0 America's Town Meeting.
iim mm aaovma; wotkl . :j
11:15 Bal Tabarin Cafe- OrclMstrai
siao war News; Roundun.
SOW-TC THOTtSDAT
1 A0 Dawn PatreL j "
, . . Continued on page 1J) : j
VaBBBBBnBBBnSBSSBBmBsBBnnBSBBBBBB
Today 1 a Gordon
- ByXJXXJX L MADSIN
' Mrs. S. S. G. asks for infor
mation on . delphinium culture.
Says, she has seen them growing
this year for the first time and
wants to know if they are diffi
cult to grow. . ...
' . Answer: Not particularly diffi
cult to grow, but some care must
be taken in starting them if they
are to succeed welL Seeds should
be started as soon as ripe. They
should be started in flats.
." Then it is necessary to prepare
the soil well for planting. With
out doubt, good culture has more
to do with .getting fine delphin---
iums year alter year than is the
case in most perennials. The soU
should be dug deeply and well
prepared. Two feet Is. none too
deep. The soil should be well
area ted and enriched with bone
meaL Delphiniums do with
plenty of lime.
Set the- little plants ,twolX-et
. apart and make arrangemenui so
that they can be thoroughly wa
.tered while they are developing
their flower crop. :
' Care must be t a k e n in the
- spring when the plants start, as
slugs are very fond of the young
growth. Put some poison bait
around the plants In early spring
. or at least some sharp sand or
-ashes. ' ' ,,- .
"vThe WElamette valley Is a fa
vored spot for delphiniums i "i
they always attract the atttla
cl visitors here la early summer.
By rnAini tnxo??i:Y
- -Mom thinks BoWdys got
something!" Paul brcice to ex
citedly. -Ifs her hunch to go
23l and put -her the howr
-Oh. Mrs. Freund! -Ann was
"sSa different dog than
when you look at her - the old
Udy said. She ran gnarled
hand over Rowdy's back. -You
are to be congratulated, sne
shows fine care. Good strong
bone,,- she. bas a beaumul
smooth coat-and best of all, the
Rheingold head and neck. :?
-When Mom says that," cried
Paul with JubUance, "It's money
In the bankr i .
She felt Paul's arm around her
shoulder. -This means we go to
work, partner. Reary?
' Ready! she rejoined.
! The days flew; with June ap
' preaching to swiftly, and gusts
-of unseasonable summer weath- ;
er. "Is ! the Morris' and Essex
show always held on Decoration r
Day? Ann ventured. P
"Always," Paul told her. '
. I was hoping they could put
it off this year until next month.
.-Lord, no! Wed be wrecks if
this kept up much longer.
It was astonishing ; how l life
revolved around. Rowdy's Well
being for those weeks. Anything
you do intensively can become
thexenter of your universe, Ann
' discovered. That was ", why, : she
concluded, there, were so many
lopsided people in the world. I
must be careful,; she adjured ,
herself, "or-ril turn into one of
these doggy women with run 2
over heels and straggly hair.
Taken as a hobby dog business
- was first-rate, but as a profes-
aion. it was like holding on to .
something with your finger tips.
The day Rowdy got into a scrap
with the cat and had her ear
scratched was like a nightmare.
That ear gets Infected and flops
and we're finished, Paul pro
claimed ominously. ;
"Thank heavens, Carol con-,
tided to Ann. "he's so engrossed
in Rowdy that I can get away
with murder and he doesn't no
i Oce.. :v:i v,-' --:V:;
Carol's "murder consisted of
long hours in a steamer chair in
the sun, and bed at eight o'clock
each night "You look better,
Ann approved.
"Yah," old Mrs. Freund a
greed, "she looks better.
Paul said, "When our' ship
comes in, I'm going to send you
off to Atlantic Coty, young lady,
to rid you of that"eolL
It : was astonishing, too, how -one
.could tune in to another
kind of rhythm.; At first Ann
had thought, I can't live without
a telephone. Christopher had '
grumbled, too. "What the blazes
kind of an idea is this anyway?
he telegraphed furiously the
first evening. Ann had giggled;
The Safety ; a!vo ;
Letters from Statesman Readers 1 ' '
PKOTESTS VERDICT I V ler papers." wavins? his hanrf.
To the Editor: ; '
When I, R. B. Miller, took the
case up against one Rollie South
wick, I approached the district
attorney for advice and he and
I went to see the justice! of the
peace, Joe Felton. They decided
that ft was a criminal case, and
as it was a city case, they want
ed the city attorney to take the
case, The city attorney made the
, statement that the law. wouldn't
permit him on account of it be
ing a criminal case. The city at
torney said it was a case that
should, be taken care of, as It
might create a riot on the streets.
Such was the decision of the
court at that time, so I swore out
a warrant, which the justice
signed,: and had the said South- '
wick arrested for standing on the
corner s near me, pointing his
finger at me and hollering, "Hit-:
ler papers,", and when I arose
to. lay my papers down to toke
care of the situation, said South
wick beat it across the street,
hollering "Hitler papers." Now,
it was repeated three different
times. May IS, 22, and another.
time, when I , came out of the
Keeno Lunch with the bundle
of papers, said Southwick was
Passing by and turned to me,
sneeringly said, "Hitler papers.
Hitler papers." , '
When he said "Hitieriz'ed pa
pers, Hitlerized papers," he-was
calling a million and a half cit
izens of the United States "Hit
lerites." Southwick was arrested and '
brought to trial. There were four
witnesses that testified , to the
fact that Southwick did cross the
street, after standing and point
ing. to me and hollering. "Hit-
. -v you want to ex-
" . vV' V - P1" U the hope and
love in your heart,
- - r7" give to the on who
' ' r iV'S V .JC'?an ost to you l-i
1 . O "Sk. U- this worl.1 a Ti -.
: .P
this was aJJIrj injury to I -! -
And then, tlie next rr.:.. : ,
there'd been enclher wire, -y-ing
unexpectedly to the Cc::t.
For an Instant, the bottom ha 1
seemed to drop out cf every IMr r
' --All the lights n the worli v:-cnt
dark. I'm head over heels. Am
thought, feeling sick about it.
A few days later, .there v. r i
another wire from Los Ar.j:.:-,
and a few days after that, en
from San Francisco.
"I wonder what's happens! U
Wain," Paul said ca an avcrr :i
of twice a day. "Looks Uks hz
sore at us."
"Mr. Wain has a great mar.y
faults,", said Ann. "Eat he's not
the sort that goes in for Ulr.j
sore. Besides," she flared, "what
has he got to be sore about?"
."Plenty," Paul answered vAlix
satisfaction. It was one cf ths
days when " Rowdy was ea tl n z
' il- hnn and looking like a
million dollars.:
. (Toi be continued)
, (Continued rrom Page 1)
in 1943, anticipating that if
Roosevelt .was reelected and we
' got into war his following would
urge in 1944: "Don't changs
horses". Just as they are already
doing. The. country; went along
" with Roosevelt in 1940, and now.
ff we can reap the harvest of do
j mestic disorganization and dis
' cord. Willkie would have given
as competent and aggressive a
. foreign policy, and : could not
possibly have given as?ad an in
ternal administration. . - ..' .
t ; The public doesn't nave much
relish for "1 told you so"; but
1 can't resist putting , in this
-, two-bit's worth. The country got
just what it could expect: malad
ministration of the war on the
home front. ;
The main thing is the winning
of - the war in the shortest pos
sible time. It is poor patriotism
.to knife Roosevelt out of person
al malice. The country will have
a chance to express itself again
on the presidency, and probably
, on him as a candidate, next year.
Meantime we will have to' suffer
as best we can, hoping that by
some lucky accident an organiz
ing genius will appear who will
get and use authority to weld to
gether the contentious elements
' which divide their time fighting
the enemy and fighting among
themselves.
as he went across hollering "lilt
lerized papers."
. This has created a disturbance
on the street and the citizens of
today are greatly disturbed over
the, situation. And in this repre
sentation of the court, if the j
court did make this decision
which I have in question, as it !
leads you to a-political set up!
and in a just case of the four
witnesses that testified to the "
fact that he did go across the i
street waving his hands, holler
ing. "Hitlerized papers." Now.
then any court that will decide
a case like this in favor of the
defendant, in my -opinion, is that
he purges himself as a justice of
the peace.
To prove the defendant's hon
esty andLintegrity, he was asked
the question that, were . there
many on the corner when he
crossed the street, and he an
swered, "Three or four." I asked
the superintendent of the buses
regarding the number of peo
ple that - he transferred from
place to place, and he said his
average number was from 29 to
M, and his largest load was 40.
He takes these out on the quarter
bour, every 19 minutes, e bus
loads. That is about all the evi
dence that defendant could of
fer. '.
- Now I would like to go fur
tberwith this, as the defendant
attorney, George Rhoten, ' ques- i
Uoned me three times as to the
fact that I pointed my finc-r
at Southwick and called him
rat. I would not disgrace a rat
to any such way.
Now, I am always for jusUce
and hope this wCl be received
by the public in a rightful way.
R. H. Miller
worl.1
..iv.;t4
long to be treasured
and to reflect all that
you want it to mesa.
A