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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1943)
IEEE ' ' r r 1 , ' r- ! U- nJ, 4 " u w L Ey iiax lc::g ; "No Favor Sways Us: No Ttar Shall Avar, : From Fint . Statesman. March 2S, 1831 v - ; THE STATESMAN, PUDOSHING CO. A . CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher 1". . Member at The Associated Press - The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Congress in Wartime Congress Is in recess and roost of the senators and representatives have gone home, home" to ; rest, home to listen to what the people are say- ing, home to mend a few political fences,-home to tell people about what is going on in Wash- " ington. Returning congressmen are feeling a bit chesty, They smacked down the aiministration on some important matters. Irked over "rub-ber-stamp" : accusations, still I resentful : over ''bundles for f congressmen," legislators in the 1943 session have sought to be more positive, and have certainly succeeded- , ' . in the July "Atlantic-: "A' Senator Looks at ' .Congress." It is an excellent appraisal of the sta tus of our national law-making body. Even La Follette writes a bit on the defensive; but he ' doesn't stop with defending congress. He makes definite proposals for changes which he believes ' WOura uiltITC wa ciuciciicy, j . Iarouene s most important recommenaation is a revamping of committee organization, Now the senate has 33 standing and ten special com mittees, the house 45, standing and seven spe cial. This means, in the ease of the senate, that more than half the members serve on six or more" committees,' with the senator thinks, poor "results":" ' ; ; " ' . .; ". ' "This diffusion of energy and responsibility among a large number of groups, many ? with T. overlapping jurisdiction, is not conducive to Qe , formation of coherent and continuous legis lative.policy. Neither Is it conducive to devel oping a well-organized and continuing rela- . tionship with executive agencies admixustermg the laws:" . v The senator would reduce the number of com - mittees, and; he would staff .them adequately with experts. Then each senator would concen trate his energies on one or two committees until he would become t specially qualified in that field. He would also provide an. executive assistant far each senator, who would relieve the member of many of the calls for assistance by constituents, which has . become increasingly heavy; ... . To bring the executive and legislative into closer relationship LaFollette .proposes a joint legislative and executive council, composed of representation from the congress and the execu tive branch, iwho would meet regularly to con fer on legislative and administrative problems. One difficulty with this would be the jealousy . now existing 'between the branches: the con gress might ! object to recommendations from the council f dr fear the executive wasputting ; something jover; and the president might feel' the legislative members were trying" to run the r administrative departments, rXH&Zi " ''i''. ' , The other1 suggestion, requiring the attend ., ; ance of cabinet officers and heads of agencies before the congress for questioning at stated in tervals follows the plan of the British house of commons which holds the prime minister and his cabinet to strict accountability. Now t we aim at the same thing with our congressional investigating committees. Formal and regular appearance of. administrators might dignify the Interrogation and be less of a grid-iron quiz. With regard to complaints about "deterior ation of membership and leadership! in con gress, LaFollette quotes the observation of the French political scientist, Alexis de Tocque- vtfle, . who visited this country about a century 5u, uu xvaiuua. ioe . race ox American statesmen has evidently . dwindled most re markably in; the course of the last fifty years." War makes difficult the parliamentary pro cess, which is essentially deliberate and argu mentative. War calls for executive action, for decisions based on military demands. Civil laws often must yield out of military necessity. The law-making body therefore mkaes general and broad grants, of power to the executive, that the . war may be, organized and prosecuted most ef cficiently;and, provides with little questioning, the funds which the military says are needed. Public attention is absorbed in the war; so con gress postpones till the war is over consideration of many public questions. . .'-"' Thus left stranded, congress is apt to busy Itself with the conduct of the war. It did so in the civil war,- to Lincoln's great embarrassment, In this war the congress, while at times going too far in the direction of war management, has principally confined its activities to investiga . tions on the civilian front, especially in ' the fields of production, of organization, and of wartime controls. The Truman committee has done a very good job of inquiry, exposing waste and mismanagement. It fact it points a way for congress to function effectively in wartime, as a body to which the whole executive! depart ment must feel a responsibility. The people de r pend on congress to. act aa its representative .4.wujiu vi me, executive, ior dollars spent and for results of the: policies adopted. -r-f l- C'--:Y ; .vv -'r.: i. :Yd If senators and congressmen listen to public opinion they will find that the people want them to cooperate jfully in winning the war, and also to act as a continuing check agamst adminis trative weakness and waste. Courageous Guards . . ' . Sol Worden, acting yard captain, and Bert Dunham, guard at the state prison, acted with quickness, courage and firmness when two pri- " soners sought to escape from the prison. Wor . den refused the demands of the prisoners to -r ' open the gate or surrender his keys, though they were armed 1 with knives; and Dunham didn't hesitate to shoot, after calling out a command in spite of the risk of hitting Warden. Their con- duct showed quick appraisal of the situation and a coolness in meeting the crisis. It is - a contrast from what happened some weeks ago, when prisoners used one guard for hostage and bluffed another so they made their getaway. Worden, unfortunately, - was badly wounded by knives in the hands of the prisoners; but he has the great satisfaction of .having per formed his duty and met the test which every prison guard knows some day he may be called on to face. - m -. , -. There is, no substitute for rigid discipline in a prison, though that discipline does need to bo inhuman or unfair,' Nor cant this discipline be relaxed; because there are always men eager to . make a break, with any weapon at hand. . In apportioning the state school support fund of $5,000,000, the meticulous state 'department of education figured ; out the per-pupil-per-day figure to eight decimals, but our office mathematician deckled that wasn't enough, for it left undistributed, a little more T than two ten-thousandths of a" cent. 1 , si rs- C v i-; Twenty One Years of Ionkey Business9 . Premier Tojo is quoted as telling iiis executive ' council .that Japan and its . fellow-axians are "flying through all obstacles with final victory , Jn view." That one is a" fresh claim for "air power. . " , . - ' , " Nevis ' Boihiind i TTDiiQ Weivo ' : . . By PAUL MALLON . . (Dictribution br Ktac Veaturea Srndicate. Inc. Repro- vhelt c IB pmn rtrtctly problbited.) ID 3ad3 Pmsirairiuis WASHINGTON, July 1 Mr. Roosevelt's action in the Wallace-Jones controversy seemed offhand as if be had at long-last knocked a couple of officious heads together, but the subterranean implications were of far greater significance, j - t Mr. Roosevelt killed the Wallace global economic policy. He not only killed it, but he buried it with one paragraph of his executive order requiring the vice presi dent to get approval for any foreign step after August IS in writing fom "a majority oi the (Byrnes) war mobilization com mittee, not merely MobQizer Byrnes himself and even the : writing' would have to be filed with Secretary of State HulL .In effect, Mr. Roosevelt , passed temporary control over foreign planning to the ' much more conservative majority of the war mobilization ' committee, and gave the equally conservative Mr. Hull at least a prior knowledge of what is to be The new economic warfare director, Leo T. Crowley, is an able man. respected by all factions, but is also on the conservative side, as far as con- . servatism goes in the new deal. Fundamentally be is a banker by ' experience and practice. He wul function as such at the head of economic warfare, .not as a world reformer. a WJ:?:f iV.ri I AC?c- i' Thus passeth the Milo Perkins regime which or iginated the quart of milk a day theory for all cannibals, headhunters, and pygmies. Thus ariseth the post-war prospect of feeding on the basis of need rather than altered diets, and upon our ability ' to help reasonable rehabilitation rather man on a world WPA..-.; -. . 'J KSUS-reXSBAT ISM MM. I 10 News. TS RiM-n'ShlM. . T -JO New. . 7:45 Morn inf Mood. , S. -00 Cherry aty New. S:10Muaic. J0-Tmo Tim. Ml PuWiQUi -US Uad Smb. a Farm Hoot PrcnM. :4S Music 1041ft News. 10 .-OS A Song and A Dane. 11:30 Music. . Jl-00 News. " : 1IJ0 Hits of Tsteryr. 110 Orzaoaiities. - -12:15 News. 12 -20 HUlbbiny SereMde. 12 d Matinee. - 1 .-00 Lum 'a' Abner. . 1 JO Music. 2:00 Isle of Paradise. . . 2:1S Announcer Choice. - Next day's eomles page. On 12MtoS.M M 2 :4V Brood wit : XKSUt Cowcen He 4SO Meidcaa afaiiaabtt. 4:19 News. . 4 30w Teatuno Time. I3ta-Huw Trva. S:1S Valiant Lady. , S JO stories America Loves. S:44 Aunt Jenny. os-Kate Smitn Speak. . ' :1SSi Sister. - J 1 Romance of niUn Tiiail -45 Owr Gal Suaday. 100 Life Can Be BeauUfuL 10:15 Ma Perkins , 10:30 Vic and Sad. 10-45 The GoJdberx 113DO Younc Ur 11 35 -Joyce Jordan. 11 30 We Lve and 4 11 MS News. -' 12:15 Bob Anderson. New. . ; 12 JO William Winter. New. 7 1 12 M5 Bachelor' Children. 1 DO Home Front 'Reporter. 130 Uncle Sam. : 1:45 Mountain afuaic. . 2 Mi Newspaper of the Air. 2 JO This JMm la Mine. SMS Xeep tbe Home Fires Burnihg. 10 New. : 3:15 Soar. - ' mi KEX UN TUESDAY JIM Ke. , O.-Ote We're Up Too. 0:15 Victory Garden. ' - 0 JO National Farm and Borne 0:45 Western Agrictt-tur. - T0 life and the Lane. 1:15 Music of Vienna. IW-Breakfast Club. ' My True Story. JO Breakfast at SardT. . . 10- 00 Baukhagc Talking. 10:15 The Gospel Singer. 10 JO Andy and Vrsinia. 10.-45 Tha Baby InsUtntsv 11-O0 Wosnan s World, lias The Mystery Chef. 11J0 Ladie Be Seated. , 12- 00 Sons. . , 12:15 New. 12 JO Livestock Reporter. 12.-45 News 1 40 Blue Newsroom Btevu See Whaf Dome Ladie. 2JO Unci. Sam. Sas Stool Lookl M Toairhr Headline. 0 :15 War New itary. 4 :1S Sam Hayes. 43 "Ameno m Song. SJS Mother 5 JO Harry Melody Hour. Dad. S War Fronts ta Bevtew. S JO-Mwdc. ( . sOO Mews. " ''i' as Don ASM and BO Ore. OJO GaeatNybJL lOJSMews. AS CecU S JO Report a0 Stcv MerrUL. S:1S Kneaaa With tnoNews. . S JO Bhse Frolics. . : 40 George Hicks.''- - : -4 as Men. Maftime and Victory. 430 News. - " I., i 4 MS The Throe 8:00 The Sea to Of Mattoa. KOCC CBS Tt7KSDAT-4rTO AO Northwest Farm Re 005 Breakfast BaUetta. JO Texas Rasters. , MS XOOI Kmc. j 7:15 Wake Dp News. L 1J0 Dtek Joy. News. TM5 Nehwo PrinrAe. News. T JO Concres Speaks. TM5 Joba B. Kennedy. S40 I Lor A Mystery, a JS Harry James Orcbes JO Lights OwL SWudr Caoora. ' fl JS News. I JO MiUioa Oouar 10MO rtve Star Frnal. ' loao Wartime Women. 10 JO Air-Flo of Urn Air. 10 MS Music 11 11 1135 Mews 0 Hop Harrtgaa. su news. JO SpoUighi I ssa sports. TAO Music, "'-j - TJ0 Red Ryder . S .15 Lum and Al StNoah Webster Says t AO Talent Tune. JO News. - MS Dowa 1 10:15 Masie. 10 JO This Nation ml Ws .11 AO Ryes Aloft. 11 :15 Bal Tabartn Cam 4 11 JO-Wat News Rouadasv. Ke. flratterpoie'5in)g TCie War Wgivg By KIRKE L. SIMPSON AP War AaalyW far The Stat asms a Unless the allies need northern Italy . for air bases they might by-pass the peninsula and go ahead with invasion at, other ..points:; Italy is alread knocked out so far as both sides are con cerned; but if the allies take over they will have to feed the. populace. It would seem bread ' should go first to those for whom We are fight ing.' " -. . i ' . v. i ' Probablr'nhere are -a-good marry Italian--American serving in the army of .invasion who will take ttieii? opportunity to visit grandfather's native .vClije,. while on the ; island. And will they be received, especially if they have a: few--cigarettes!';: :i .- zy f: r t': "yjJ:, y r Thile picking out' military objectives for ; precision bombing in Rome does spare, the great relics of the ancient city, wouldn't it! be all right to drop one on the PaJazza' Venetian-one . Has Sir. Booscevelt heard the winds in the coun try lately? Is this the first step of a change of front . to make the government conform to popular pub lic opinion? ; " . Inner government officials think so. They know the argument between Messrs. Wallace and Jones ran deeper than the superficialities mentioned in .. public, and" really involved basic post-war policy. To them, it also confirms what they formerly sus- pectedjiamely that Mr. Wallace will not be on the fourth term ticket;'-?.;,"':': ; VVf'' V-"-:-; r u' What the president will need in the way of a running mate Heat year is a southern farm bloc democrat, who, can .bring, him quietude from the - restless, souui and support from organized farm tloc elements; . It seems very likely the center of post-war econo mies will now shift to Mr. Hull's department 'and to Ur: Xehman's food relief. Both have been func tioning on the subject, and Lehman will shortly seek a half billion dollars. The elimination of Wal- . lace raises the dignity of their efforts and cuts off a tangent which out-clamored them. It should also eliminate at least 50 per cent of the chaos en veloping the subject. ..The Wallace board of economic warfare has been accused, justly or unjustly, of having favored Great Britain to the detriment of all other world nations . in its stockpiling and world economic policies, Bri tain needs help less than other smaller nations in volved. Whether the. change will mean any alter ation in this Wallace design is not yet clear. Essentially, however, capitalism is as self-interested as human nature, in profit for self, not. only individually but nationally. You cant run capitalism on globaloney. If Mr. Roosevelt intends to accept these realizations, it will no doubt be evident in steps soon to come. - On the other side, the 1 president's action 'took away from Jesse Jones not only his war materials corpora tidn, ; but his pre-war export-import bank, which his adversaries in the government long had wished to release from his clutches. The conserv ative Mr.4 Jones is thus shorn of much power, henceforth to be used by 'more amenable and pli- able Roosevelt agents.; ;.-: '-b Unfortunately, no one believes the change wEl be followed through to the extent that the other government officials, holding four or more import ant positions on the average, "may be cut down to their main duties. It Is said that Interior Secret : tary Ickes, for instance, has so many" other jobs that he hires two secretaries for the special purpose ' .of keeping himself informed as to what they are. w jvw uLa.cn away irom wauace and Jones Caught between the devil' of Hiyerism and the . deep sea of all-out Anglo-American attack, the Italian segment of the Ill starred axis is creaking with ' portents of utter collapse. The American aerial attack on Rome capped an allied invasion of Sicily that Is sweeping like an irresistable flood over the big : Island outpost Strategic keys to the Catania plain are in allied hands. The fate of that area is sealed and with it that of : all Sicily and of the nearby " Italian -.nboot" itself from toe to heeL It has been patent for days, in " Rome: broadcasts . and; Italian -press comment that only fear of , the nazi overlords' is holding re volt in Italy in check, Italian propagandists preaching ; contin- J ued resistance hold outlno vie-' tory hope to the war sickened ! Italian people, only the plea that': there is no escape from war even " by surrender. German masters would still make Italy a battle ground, they assert. But the moment cannot be far distant when dread of the ter rific rolling air barrage j of the " allies will outweigh- even fear of nasi reprisals upon a weak ening war ally. That war the; psychology of the carefully : central Sicily from their south ern - bridgeheads. . They - are in a position : to widen and deepen their' penetration to the north coast of the island swiftly, split ting it in half. - Eastward, General Montgom ery's British veterans have, set foot on the Catania plain as welL . They are f reported closing : in westward on the '1 Gerblni . air. base and northward in the out-" skirts of the port of ratartia. Once that port falls, the British can sweep northwest around the inshore,, base of "Mount" Etna to widen the swathe which allied forces on the left and center are cutting toward the north coast. JVesterh Sicily, the certain ad vance base for Trench-American advance -.upon Sardinia, Corsica . and i continental France i itself, seems ripening to fall into allied hands almost without opposition ' once the allies complete - their drive across the center of ; the - island. That will expedite the hour when-Fighting , F rench troops from Africa join in the assault in more than ' token strength. That is likely to be strictly a French-American: af fair as far as ground forces are concerned, leaving the British in . eastern Sicily , to : spearhead the attack' on the Italian main-' KGW NBC TCKSOAT- ..-' 4 AO Dm Patrea.- - j--. - ; , J . SAS Labor News. ' 0 AO Every thin Goes. JO News Parade, f aOVLaaor News. T a News Head ha e At Hlshllgfata. f JO News Parade. T MS Sana Hayes SAO Stars of Today. ai ln Abbe Cavers the News. JO Boss Room. MS David Harass, SAO Open. Door. - as Larry South. : JO Mirth and Madw . 10 AO Music 10:15 News. 10 JO Gallant Heart. - . 10M5 For You Today. i 11 AO Llht of the World. 11:15 Lonely Women. 11 JO The Guiding LirhL 11 MS Hymn of Ail Chorehes. IS AO Story of Mary Marna. I 12:15 Ma Perkins. 12 J8 Pepper Young Family. , 11:45 Right to Happiness. 1. AO Backstage Wife. 1:15 SteUa Dallas. 1J0 Lorenzo Jones. 1:45 Young Wtdder Brown. SAO When a Giri Marries. 2:15 Portia Faces Life. .2 JO Jast Plate Bill. - S.-45 Front Pars FarreU. SAO Road of Lite. . S-15 Vic and Sad. - S JO Mttsic. , ' SMS Jady and Jane. . 4 AO Dr. Kate. - 4:15 News of the World. ,. 4 -JO " Romsnre. , : 4M5 H. V. Kaltenhoro.' ,. S. -00 The Personality Hour. 5 JO Horace Heidt Treasure Chest - SAO Battieof thebeves, , Chapter-2 CcsHaseJ lie seemed to think the state cf the world an adequate cause for retirement, and before long asked me - decently enough to meet the other colonists and to see their cottages. - We went through palms and hedse to the left toward the thatched roofs and came out, on a sand path, ..'Facing on this was a line of six cottages, and one alone across the path opposite the first one. A3 were surrounded by riots, of flowering plants, more or .dered and cared-for . than the rank growth and tangle of bloom I had already seen. -; J, As we approached the first dwelling I realized it was not ' the traditional grass hut of old Hawaii which I had expected, but a Tahitian birdcage" house. I paused in astonishment, sur veying it. It was built of bam boo slats tinder its thatched roof, with window holes and rolled shelter curtains. Moreover, ' deep lanai stretched across the front, roofed with palm fronds, floored with sand,, pillared with ---palm trunks, j ' : "A Mr. Budd remarked: 1 thought the houses Td seen In i Tahiti were i more adapted to'.' comfort than anything we could " devise. The . materials were at : j hand herav'too.v Someone ' stirred in a room - back of the shaded Uauu, voices came to as Indistinctly, and then , .a ' sputtering thudding sound, - ending with-a tinkle, proclaimed i a noiseless typewriter. "Electric refrigeration, too?" I asked dryly. r y -, - He Uughed. "The typewriter : . ' Is probably our most modern . note. Oil lamps and . oil cook- . : ; stoves serve us very weU," . From the i cottage m " woman j emerged hastily, calling out in a ; suppressed tone' as if wishing not to disturb someone inside, -Oh. Mr. Buddr She saw me, halted abruptly,- then came to- ward us across the clean-swept sand. A short woman, wearing : a sarong. That struck me as ; overdoing the simple life after - all,!' a cotton dress would have been just as comfortable and ;. certainly more typically Hawaii an, f She regarded me curiously . and I thought a trifle apprehen-. sively, as she said to Budd in a I still lowered voice: 1 "Branson's in a frenzy over the ' last lines well just skip the; swim today. "Of course, Budd responded. "Mrs. Delmar, Mr. HoyL He seems to be like us, Bessie-w' :, yearns for a Kanaka existence. She smiled at me perfunctor- - fly- not a real smile, but a mere stretching of the lips. She was rather like a cat with her round i face and sleepy yellow eyes, and v the mop of hair variegated from . orange to tan no doubt by th Ymwas extraordinarily like the markings of a brindle cat She ! began to say something, "You mean you want but her words ended in a scream as a devastating sound tore the air part-- . f "Herb!- jBudd exclaimed sharply. -.r 7 y - u-. ; - I whirled to see a plump, semi-bald man in bathing trunks holding a stick in one hand and .. in the other a silly-looking drum made of a bucket with a stretch of red rubber on it He looked as startled as we were and ducked when a roar came from -within thd house: ; f v ; "Bessie! j stop that noise and. ' come in here and type this! I caught a glimpse of a large man shaking a fistful of yellow' papers toward us. The catlwoman did not leap to bey. Zl.e drawleJ lo Hudd, "You notice I raada the racket?" .-and sauntered, irt-irx. - CudJ wss lc !.:.-- c; xizz'.czl.f ai we lai man. ", cn, iierb7 "Gosh! I didn't know it'd go off like that! You said to tzt 'era out at four." He Cirust out a thick arm to consult a wrist watch,. His ring of hair was red, his " fair skin was burned fiery red. and there was a smear of zinc , oxide paste on hi3 nose. , Budd grinned tolerantly "Herb, you're a marvel of ef-' : Cciency but I think I'd forget the drum. ' . Herb muttered,' wiltin," "It was just an idea." By this time several, people. . were shouting from their houses .down the path to know what was up. Herb shouted back that It was time for their swim, somehow regaining his own sense of importance. Then he fo cused on me shamlv. sucrIrfrm- ly, and I was sure he, too, was about to question my presence in Waimaka when he was dis tracted by a woman calling him from the next house. Budd said, "Webrousht Herb from Honolulu to supervise bur building and gardening, and he stayed on. He's very useful but he stin lives by his watch." Chanter fiiwm-m I SMS Norman Nesbltt. 0 AO GabrieJ-Heatter. 0:15 New. .., -.. , . I t AO-John B. Hushes, 7:19 Movie Parade.' ' .-00 Music. . 8M5 Sinfonietta, , . , AO New. - , ' :. : f 0:15 Manhattan. - i JO General Barrows. -0:45 Ray Heal. 10 AO Orchestra ' ' , 10:15 Treasury Star Parade.1 10 JO News. ... ' , 10:45 Music 1 1 AO Matinee. , ' - 11: piannea na execuiea , opmomg ljd itself, if that proves neces- - smafcaa sa, vu abVrUiC Tsaars In ali;!' 4k.i . . .... that would 1:0 right through the tauslta - ' " u,muua ii mr. xioose Its significance lies in the hint it gives that Washington - and London see a prospect of early : Italian collapse to pave the way for drives from the Sicilian ad vance base against the continent itself, not at some remote tune, but soon. With Sicily swept clear, of the foe, the allied road north westward to the coast of France would begin to open. To r the northeast, from footholds on the Italian 'mainland boot, the allies ' could launch a drive at the Creek peninsula' and : the Bal- V ' -sriZ. 0::y :- Araerican" troops which took, Caltanissetta,v geographical hub . of Sicily and vital road and rail communication center in the 7 AO Music. t - V J0 Best the Band. S AO Fred Waring in Pleasure Tlmo. S.15 Fleetwood Lawtoa. 1 -JO Johnny Present. 0 AO Jar. and Mrs. North, t JO Salute to Youth. 10 AO New Flashes. 10:15 Your Homo Town New. 10 JS Labor New. ' JO The Taylor Maids. -10:45 Music, . . '10:55 News. "' " ' . fi 11 AO Uncle Sam. 1 1 :1 5 BUtmoro Hotel Orch. 11 JO War News Roundup. U AO-S a. n Swing ShU t, KALM MTtS-TTJXSPaT 10 Ke. - 0:45 Uncle Saoa. - T AO News . " ,r-r 7:15 Texas Ranrer. ):"; m 7 JO Memory Timekeeper. 0 Haves of -Best 8 JO New.-" SMS Old Songs. ' t.-OO Boako Carter. :15 Woman's Side of the News JO US Marine Band. 10A0 New - ' 10:15 Stars of Today; ' 10 JO Thai sad That. 11 AO Buyer's Parade, 11J5-BU1 Hay Reads the Bible 11 jo concert can KOAC-TUESDAY S50 K. 10 AO News, i i-j -f- 10:19 Tbe Homemakers Hoar 11 AO Music mt tbe Masters: It AO News-i -11:15 Moan i Farsa Hour. 135 War Commentary. - " 1 JO Music. . . ... SJ0 Memory Book of Music SAO News. v-. . , S d 5 Adventures ta Bissarta. -SJO-rTb Concert HaiL 4 AO Treasury Star Parade. . 4 J 5 Echoes of Waxkiai. 4 JO Stories (or Boys and Glrla. SAO Swinging Down the lane. 5 JO Vespers SMS Its Oreron" War.: :15 News. . i JO Evening Farm Hour. - T JO Education tor Freedom. SAO Music, i AO Stop, .Look, Listen. mm .w MS Uncle A young woman had joined Herb, pulling a rubber cp over a fluff of thick black hair.' She was as brown as any Hawaiian ' girl, and except that she was too thin she, also, might have passed for native. I thought ' that until she came closer. Then she raised her eyes. They were " very hght grey, arresting in her dark face and there was a long faint scar on her cheek run ning from her chin well toward the right eye. 1 Turva, this - Is Mr. ' Hoyt, Budd began. "He dropped into Waimaka in a sampan." Then,' to me:-"JJiss Massic. ! "A sampan?" she queried un easily. It was' past understan ; ding, the ; reluctance they all evinced at admitting a stronger, . but at the time I laid it to the : reported criticism of their col ony , by the -plantation people. Turva Massic lighted a cigarette s she had brought . with her and proposed: "Let's go see his sam pan." She started off through a gap in the hedge and when Herb and Budd and I caught up with her on the beach she was exclajming with what seemed real enthusiasm, "What .a smart little craft! It must be fun to sail her. We've all grown so used to nothing but canoes." J W had come out lust whm the small plank outriggers lay - and now I surmised that they belonged to the colonists. I glanced along the curve of beach to I the heavy koawood canoes and ; fishnets. "There are Ha waiian fishermen here, too, aren't there?" j ; "Oh, yes." Budd waved to ward littered palm grove be yond where the canoes lay. . , "They- have a village over be hind that grove. Supply us with fish. None of us is an ardent , fisherman like yourelf." ; - "We raise chickens and vege table," Herb of fered. j Turva Massic wrinkled her nose at Jum, ' "It you'd only " learn to eat poi and breadfruit, we : wouldn't have to farm so hard." : :y:: - - - . ; Budd chuckled. "Turva is the only one of us who has honest ly gone native. Well, come along ' let's have that swim." , : To my surprise - he turned way from the quiet blue bay and led off through the hedges with Turva. . 1 . "Don't you swim, here in the Inlet?" I asked at his heels, j rNo, s no, we've got a pool," Herb sputtered behind me. "A damned shark lives in the bay - . here pet of the Hawaiian. Buins our distance swimming.", r "But sharks are harmless in Hawaii," I protested. "They'd never molest a living person." ! "So the Hawaiians tell us," Bud said over his shoulder, "but we dont care to risk It. Sinister looking devils, sharks bad in ternational reputations. It's for tunate we have the pool." I I had heard before of a fresh water pool formed by the stream from the waterfall, and." w came upon It as we started W the valley. It was ringed with cocoanut palms which leaned out to be reflected in the clear deep water. Slanting sun rays painted patches of golden light on the sandy bottom. Great' tawny butterflies glided lazily above the surface. !. (To be continued) ary, - There' are ' Immediate ' allied objectives at the lower end of the Italian boot, however, which could condition the next phase .of the' fight. Once the toe and heel and the Gulf of Taranto between them were taken by the allies. Italian forces garri soning Albania and Greece could " be virtually cut wr.lrora contact ums on the Farm Front with Italy by sea. And from the Italian boot heel it would . be easy for massed flights of big bombers to reach the Rumanian oil fields in sustained and deva stating attacks. Destruction j from the air of those Balkan oil sources would strike a more serious blow to the nazi war effort than any other Li hiding under? Catania plain, have not only de- discernible move the allies could bouched into that rolling central make quickly, and the attempt wit if ic. 1. , j, - - uwutinu lum iuim. ruuin? central maxe quicxxy, ana we sitaiii-i velt left Mr. Willkie holding the "one world" sack? galley but are half way across- Is definitelyto be expected soon. 1 AO New. 1 US Music. - v ' ' . IMS Music . J SheeUh Carter. , i S:15 Texas Ranger. 1:30 All Star Dance Parade : i 1:43 Wartime Women. 30 New. : J S. -00 Philip Keyne-Cordon. 3:15 Johnson Family. , ; ; SJ3 Overseas Report. . : - 3:45 Jerry Sears. ... - ! 4 AO Ray Hcnle. ! 4:15 Isle or Dreams. 4 JO Rainbow Rendezvous. 4.-45 News. - v - ; SAO Music . 5:15 Sooerman. SJ Ltck "Hood. - - - tJ r L 7t3 CiIf::rUn7Cn For Servk Ilea : For p44-tsmea For work or play youH ap preciate the, many advant ages of this outatandinj timekeener. It i V.'at w w - -' ww.a . wxa. 1 Shockproof, Dustproof. It is ; Non-Uagnetic. has a Lumi nous Dial, Sweep Second 'Uand. f ; Fully Gaaraateed : - . . Si W w r V aUs jjaaii a r '