Ki9 CZZZCll CTATESILTO Cetera. Orjsa: Ccdaj 1:27. C;V.5Ltr 4 Ktt PAGS FCU3 -1 r. n "N1T fVlfn sV firm m' UG V 4 K 'AVe Favor Stoayt Us; No Fear Shall Awa" ; From first Statesman, . March 23, 15 1 - V THE STATES3IAN PUBUSHESG CO. CHARLE3 A. S PRAGUE, Editor and Publisher ; ! ' ' , Member of The Associated Press ' ' The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise .credited In' this newspaper. Italy Invaded . ' Friday was a day of doom for Italy. 'Across the strait of Messina onto the mainland of It aly and Europe poured the :victoripus British ' Eighth army, eager to repeat on the soil of con tinental Europe the victories It had gained from El Alamein to Tunis and from Vittoria to Mes-; - gina. Canadians too, battle-trained and flushed with the Sicilian victory, were in the invading army. Italy, now, helpless in the grip of German overlords and poliee, faces now the swift and: ' overwhelming action of I the ' allied armies, .i The great American Seventh army was not mentioned in the dispatches covering the initial invasion, but there is a hint in other news that ! in rTer' tn sn imnnrfant rrticinh ' ' firMilrf it be that from the ports of norgk, Sicily the Americans will embark to land wet? up on the , ' "leg" of the peninsula, repeating on a bigger scale their maneuvers in Sicily i when they played leapfrog by. amphibious thrusts? We may not have long to wait to hear what the American portion of the task is. j The initial job is to crack the shell. Hitler's strength all 'round the rim of the. continent is lilr. ,n MD-clisth itm itmnffth i in" th Khpll- liM , .it .ai. in - - - O " If the allies can crack the shell successfully and establish secure; beachheads (and i supply depots, then the rest will be sure and not too difficult In Italy the real shell is at the Po river. The Germans in southern Italy dare not tarry - too long, because their, ways of escape are few. The- continuous blasting of rail and highway " communications endangers, their lines fof re " treat as well 'as supply. The bombing; of Bren ner pass, the sole avenue over the Alps into Germany must send chilk down the spines of the Germans as they contemplate the possibility of their armies being trapped in Horth Italy, unftbk to mum. under the merciless and un remitting pounding of allied artillery and bombers. . v '' . -j :.-'--: The war proceeds like a football game. The brief rest between Sicily and the invasion of Italy is the end of a "quarter." The great allied world which occupies the grandstand as intense partisans, will follow the ensuing action with deep ; interest, hoping for quick .touchdowns, yet knowing some "breaks" may go against us. Later Than Yon Think j . The .phrase ; has earmarks of an alarmist source, whether used perhaps originally by evangelists or in a Robert W. Service poem, or more recently by Max Lerner to warn ' of fas cism, or after that by insistent pre-Pearl Harbor advocates, of military preparedness. There is no rt intent here to be alarmist. It may be later in relation ;to the dawn of peace than you think; but who has the temerity to voice, as a doleful warning, the thought that the war may be oyeirsoon? I It's strangely true that some folks do dread "the peace that will follow this war, more than - the prospect of its indefinite continuation. That Is largely fear of the unknown and lacks sub- ' stance; Yet war-making with all its complexity is simpler and easier to grasp than the problems of the next peace. . " - J-!;.:K Solutions can be found for 'those problems but finding them will take time particularly since there is yet no agreement on fundamentals. No one has yet resolved even the disharmony among the "t our freedoms." Eleanor Roosevelt in New Zealand talked about "winning the peace" in terms of United States aid toward fuller, more abundant life "down t under. "Passing over our fears that the people there will resent her "maternalistic" tone -4 is that what "winning the- peace", means? r If so, it's a big job, since it must extend to the benighted Hottentots as well as the enlightened f Anzacs, i and we'd better be about it. . . As for international collaboration and its im plementation, open discussion how by! men in authority probably would endanger unity"" among the United Nations. Laymen should be studying the problem so there may be enlight- ... Anon tM i r T i "tri.tv f IKa .. wa.. aut, , wsaauv UiC VTa7 fcUIlVT -But what about domestic plans for cushion ing, the economic jolt that will follow the war? Even though none may foresee its precise na tureslump or inflation menace there should be planning for any eventuality. , J Members of congress, benefitted by a season of ear-to-the-ground listening, should be ready ; to tackle these problems when they reconvene. It will be high time. The war may go on for years There is no intent here to nourish mili- -; tary complacency. On the other hand.' it may " be"Iater than you think.-: ; ; To the extent that government may and must salve these problems, the duty is that of the con : gress. If solutions are not , forthcoming in time and from that source, the danger despite the fate of Mussolini and the comparable fate that awaits Hitler may after all be the one of which Lerner warned: fascism, not because anyone be- .neves m.ii, our oecause democracy will have drifted blindly into chaos. Punch-hole Checks ; Tor "centuries people have refused , to take money with a hole in it, though there are coun tries, we understand where coins r. Ar holes legitimately. But if you get a check on the treasury which ; is punched full I of holes (the check. We mean, not the treasury) don't burn it down. Just turn it in to your bank and youll get payment in full. ' It is this way: the treasury has begun to is ue its checks by the punch machine method. Up to a few months ago checks were drawn on the customary strip of thin safety paper, with the face i carrying the amount Impressed by a check-writer. Now thin cardboard is being used by several of the federal reserve banks, which are disbursing agencies, and each check has the correct data punched to it. IBM machines are used in the issuing of checks and then in the recording cf them.. The operation of issuing the checks is pretty Lift Slaughter Quotas - : The war food administration has , raised : the quota limits on butchering of meat for Septem ber and' October. There have also been general reductions in ration point requirements on meat. These changes 'will do much to j relieve the . tight meat situation, which 'has 'prevailed throughout the country for many months- They will not make any more meat, but they should help more people get meat: because they will help more meat animals to go to market. ' - - One 1 of the tightest situations has been ; the 'marketing of Oregon lambs. Lambs are a' crop, like apples; and they heed to be marketed when J they are prime. If let go they become ; stringy . young mutton.' There is a fine market; for Iamb,' v? especially in California; and Oregon growers j have for years turned their lambs off as soon as they ; attained a good weight. ; Under the slaughter, quota limit : it : was just impossible to get these lambs to market when they were ready to go. The meat packers couldn't handle them within their quot is. Finally an increase of 20,000 for. -Oregon packers : was allowed, but that was not adequate. The new action removing t al quota , limits will let the 300,000 Oregon ' lambs go to market as they should. These concessions have come- following per sistent "and strong representations by live stock and meat ; interests. Whatever selfish interest they may have had was overcome by the know ledge they had of practical meat growing and marketing, and the-facts they presented, were convincingly strong. Gene Howe of the Ama rillo, Texas, newspaper ran a page ad in his newspaper and then bought space to reproduce it in many other papers in an effort to get the meat that was backing up on the ranges into ' the slaughter pens. His appeal has borne' fruit. It is believed that these shifts in requirements will do away with much of the black market ac tivity. The more liberal point values will help, and it does seem there is plenty of meat on the hoof W provide for civilian needs, as well as government L requirements. This action is " re moving quota limits is experimental; but if it works, as it is' expected to, it will most cer tainly be continued. L Intcrprctinc tho By HAMILTON W. FARON : . ; AP War Analyst tor The Statesman ' - ' ' - New demands 'from the Italian people for an end to the war certainly will follow the allied invasion of Italy, bot there is no peace in sight S v, j . For even if Marshal Badoglio'a government -could negotiate a surrender, it would fall to pre vent' large-scale battles on Italian soil. At least 10 and maybe more German divisions are in Italy, -equipped and placed for bitter fisting. Hitler's forces may be expected to fight all the way up the boot to northern Italy. There is every indication that they will make a final stand to pre vent valuable air fields from falling Into allied bands. The nazis don't want thoss fields made a ' , means of bombuig himertomreached industrial sections of Germany. ' A canuiaign tha if 100 per cent - successful could bottle up the nazis on the plains of northern Italy, is under way with allied airplanes pouring . bombs onto Brenner pass and other escape routes through the Alps. Such a campaign, however, is hardly likely to ; , succeed wholly. It could at the most only delay ' the supplying of-nazi troops or possibly eventually handicap a retreat, because bomb damage to the passes bridges and roads could hardly be beyond repair by engineer troops. New invasion moves against the Italian boot ap pear logical, and plans for such thrusts may have prompted a decision to hold back American armies from the Messina crossing negotiated by British and Canadian troops. It seems reasonable that Am erican troops, if sent into the Italian mainland campaign, will move on to the western shores flanking all axis troops pressed from the south by the British and Canadians. - Sardinia and Corsica, both axis held, stand in , the way of Invasions well up the boot, but perhaps they could be successfully by-passed. They would :' be desirable to hold, but may not be worth the cost of capture. However, if the invasion thrusts should turn further northward to southern France, for example, Corsica at least would be the scene of landing oper ations to protect invasion fleets steaming in toward the French shore. Much attention also is being given to the pos sibility of further invasions through Crete, Greece and the Balkans. Consolidation of allied positions' along the Italian boot would ease the way for con trol of the Adriatic, where the Italian fleet may be biding. However, despite the outlook for ; invasion through the Balkans with its active underground providing much assistance, some strategists here believe the time Is wrong. The mountainous terri tory there would handicap operations in the ap proaching winter. Generally, it seems that the best time for a Balkans operation, although it remains possible at any time, would be In the spring month when there i more assurance of good weather. much one of punching keys; and for the account ing when the checks are paid they are merely put into the machine which makes the . compu tations automatically from 'the punchholes. , -, - The treasury-is the1 big: paymaster now, and by the end of the year it will be issuing, through the reserve banks, ten million of these punched cardboard checks a month. Too bad Salem didn't get the branch IBM factory for making these cardboard checks. We lost out to San Jose, being ' "too late," if not too little. In the state department the gentleman from Tennessee seems at last to have become the HuU. thing. Bend Bulletin! , . ! 4 . . ' That's the Hull of it! Medford Mail-Tribune. Both papers are wrong. The gentleman from Tennessee is not the Hull thing in the state de-f partment; he's the kernel, though not from Ken tucky. ' ; ' ; ; '- i . :r v"; h's -ri ; Well, girls, how do you like the cute cap Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt is wearing as she' makes the rounds as a Red Cross worker? . UIM-SATVKDAt UN .. . 7:00 News. - -Ri " ShiM. Nw. - 7:45 Morning Mood. :0O Cherry Oty Nwa. 8:1ft EmUHX Boy.- :3ft Tango Time. . , t :00 Pastor CaU. ' - - - 9:15 Music. - - - JO Popular Msna. lOft New. 10 A3 Jack r.';vivs-fn 10:3ft Gb Krups. 11:0ft New. - - HAS Campos rTrihimau 11 JO Hits of Yesteryear. 1S0 OrcaaaUtM. 13:1 ft News. UJft HUlbUly Serenade. 125 Matinee. . t vl.-OO Henry- King's Orchestra. : . 1 3ft-Milady's ' lielodies. 1:45 Harry Breuer's NoveJty Orek. S.-00 Isie of Paradise. .? . S:1S Sincerely Yours, ; S JO Orchestra. r - . S:45 Broadway Band Waeosu 30 KSLM Concert Hour 4:0 Harry HorUck's Tangos -1 . 4:1 News.' - . - - 4 JO Tea tune Tunes.- ?- ' S :0ft The Oleanders. " ' '. S:1S Lets Reminisce. S JO Violin. OO Toniehrs Headlines. - , 0:15 War News Commentary. 0-2O Evening -Serenade. 4:50 War Fronts In Revtew. 74)0 Weekend Jamboree. 7 JO Keystone Ksrsvan. -I SO News. S US Troubadours. 4:45 Music . - " , 'S-oft News.' lis Old Timers Dance. T :4S Johnny Mexzner's Orchestra. . 10:00 Serenade. '40 JO New. . , - 10$ RoU up lbs Roc I aiAlJC MBS SATTJKDAT -1330 K. , S.S At the . Console, 7 Aft News m 7:15 Texas Rangers., 7 JO Memory Timekeeper. - AO Haven of Rest. S-SO News. . :45 Old Song. 1 .-00 Bayer's Psrsd. ' . ? -a . 9:15 The Woman's Sid of the News JO Music . . :4& Marketing. . -10 0 News r 14:15 Stars of ' Today. - - 10 J4 This and That. -- 11 Journal Juniors. . -' , v 11 JO Concert Gems. ' - - , r . ISAft New- I--". 12:15 Concert. - ' - ' 12:45 On the rarrn rrent, ' 1 Aft Salvation Army. - 1 :ls Saratoga Handicap, -; , '1 Jft Brazilian Parade. JAft Nvy Bulletin Board. ' ' SAO I Hear America Singing . S:15 T:tas Rangers. SJft Hawaii Cails. 4:00 American Eagle Chib. -' ' 4 JO Music - - i 4:45 New. S.-00 Muse 4 Jft Music ' ' 5:45 Noi man Nesbitt. - ( O.-OO Chicago Theatre. - 7:00 Jobs B. Hughes. 7:15 Movie Parade. 7 JO Churchman's Saturday Night :0ft Music - AO News. - - :15 Music JO Music 14 Aft Orcnestrs. 1 Jft News. . 10:45 Music. 11 AO Saturday Night Band Wagon. 11 JO Black Castle. 12:45 Music KrX BN SATUKO AY 1144 K. AO Musical dock. 7 Aft Mirandy 9i Persimmon HoOer. . 7:15 Music - 7 Jft News ' 7:45 Andrinl Continentals. N SAO Breakfast Club.- AO Christian tfeiene Program. dS Music. Jft Breakfast at Sardl's. 10:15 National Farm and Home. 10:45 Music. , 11. Aft Music v 1130 Tommy Tucker. 12 AO Music . , .m v ' X 12:15 News. " 12 Jft George Hicks Reporting. 125 The Marshall. 1AO Saturday Concert 1:45 News. - ... . .. , - 2 AO Horace Heidt 2 Aft Korn Kobblers. 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Its archives hold the treasured past of the Goldaa West r -4 'T rv T""-. V - Next Cay's rregrams sr?ear ca eimics page. . 113S News. ' , ' 11 Jft Manny Strand Orcnestrs. Midnight to sjn. Music sad News, KGW NBC SATURDAY 4X4 K. 4 Aft Dawn PstraL -Aft Every thins Goes. 4 JO News Parade. -,--7:15 News. 7 JO Babe Ruth tn Person. . 7:45 &am Hayes. - . . 0 Organ Concert.' . - 4:15 James Abb Covers the Mesa ; JO Rose Room.'-- - 45 Vegetables for Victory. Aft Music Room. ... :15 Consunsex's Tim. Jft Music - t 10 AO Uncle Sam. " - - . 14-Jft All Out for Victory. , . ., 18:45 Wai Telescope. w - ' 11 AO Stars of Tomorrow. 12 Aft V -Atr reree Band.' 12 Jb News. f U:45 Visiting Nurse. " . - 1 AO MstlnesK ta Rhythm. . l:15Rsces. , lJft Minstrel Melodies. - .-2Aft Not tor Glory. X Jft Music. ' . r - 25 News. : S Aft News. . " ... 3 Aft Music1 " - 3Jft Art of Living. 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" - KALB MRS SUNDAY 1224 Ke. 8 Aft Wesley Radio League. 830 Central Church of Christ - 8:45 Little Show. ' . AO Detroit Bible Class. 9ft New. 4:45 Letters to My Son. 10 AO News. 1,0:15 Romance of tho Hl-Ways 10 JO Pucker Up - 10.45 News. -: 11 AO Pilgrim Hour. 12 Aft Concert. . . .. 12:15 News. 12 JO Rainbow. Rendezvous. 12:45 Music 1 Aft Lutheran Hour. 1 30 Young People's Chureh. S Aft Temple Baptist Church . SJO -Young People's Church. SAO Murder Clinic 830 Upton Close. 8:45 Music 4 4-45 News. SAO Mediation Board., v 4.-45 Gabriel Heatter. . . 4 Aft Old Fastened Revival Hour. . TAft John B Hughes. f :15 Music of tho Master. , ' Y:45 Rocking Horse Rhythms.- - SAO Hinsoa Memorial Church. - 4 AO News. :15 Voice of Prophecy. 8:45 Sunday Serenade. 10 Aft Old Fashioned Revival Hour. 11 Aft Answering You. 113ft Stars and. Stripes in Britain - . ": omss ". KCXtVr SUNDAY 1144 Ke. ':. Aft Soldiers of Prodttcttosv ' Jft African Trek. . AO Tho Quiet Hour. ' 30 Stars from tho Blue. 10 Aft This Is Official . 14 Jft The Kidoodler. 1445 Farm and War Fronts. . : 11 Aft Coast to Coast on a Bus 114S-Speaking of Clamour 12 Aft Those Good Old Days. 12:15 Hanson W. Baldwin. 12 JO Hot Copy. 1 Aft Sunday Vespers. 1 30 Serenade. 1.-45 Music 1 Aft Remember.' . 2 Jft Sneak Preview: , S Aft News. SAS -Here's to Hwnisrs, . 830 Music 4 AO Chaplain Jim. USA. 434 Be Alert. Mission Santa Barbara. Cossiier Rostov-on-Don. Captured fcy the Kaxia, tho first act of Reichminister Rosen borg and Coasral ZJackensca was to barn the museum books dating from tho 14ih century, steal tho precious paintings, - M V 'm PhD Degree . DR. PAUL W. ELLIS Paul V. Ellis Ph. D. Thesis - Paul Wi'Hlisv- son of Mrs. ,J. Lincoln Ellis, 2016 Trade street, has received ; the " degree of PhD from the faculty of political sci ence at Columbia university, ac cording to word received In Sa lem by relatives and friends. His - doctoral dissertation : was entitled "Effect of i Taxes upon Corporate Policy," and it has been published by the National Industrial Confer ence board. Lx. Ellis is now head of .me public finance department of this board, which la a research organization in the field of econo mics. He Is also serving as Instruc tor in university ' extension for . Columbia university. - Dr. Ellis is a native of Missouri. He received his AB degree at Wil lamette university in 1831, serv ing as a student assistant in -economics - his' senior year. He did : graduate work at the University of Oregon, where he received his.. MA degree with honors in 1933. At different timeshe wss em- ployed in Salem by Valley Motor and Willamette Grocery company, and was an auditor for the state tax commissiori. He was an in structor in St Helen's Hall Jun ior college one year, and during his time in-New York in advanced study he has been an instructor at the College of the City of New York. . His research in preparation for his dissertation included question naires to corporations as well as study of government reports. Nu- merous charts and sfrsnhssm tieswf f!frpTL to Illustrate the published text. A press release by the' National In dustrial Conference board at the time of the ' publication of Dr. EUis study summarized the find ings as follows: - i .r . "The present federal tax system by impeding, the accumu lation of reserves from earnings threatens the ability of many cor porations to survice post war .read justments. Upon the ability of cor porations to survive postwar read justments depends, their capacity to provide their share of employ ment in the period following the war, the board points out in mak ing public the results of its study based upon the actual experience of industrial managers. . ' "Most corporations depend, -as a matter of long established poli cy, the board adds, upon undistri buted profits for funds with which to expand facilities and set up contingency reserves. " . r Tf private - business is not al-' lowed to build reserves during the war period with which to meet reconversion expenses many small businesses will fail and many lar ger businesses will find it ex ceedingly difficult to hold their la bor organizations together during the critical period succeeding the cessation of lxrtfflties." . Aft Christian Science rrogram. -J5 Neighbors. 5 Jft Music 45 Drew Pearson. - 4A0 Oursyler Parsons St John. 4:11-Music - 4:44 Jimmio Fidler. . TAft Good Will Hour. Aft Roy Portesv . -4:15 Music Jft Ouut stlds. - Aft Inner Saactua Mysteries . Jft News Headlines :45 For AH Humanity. . 14 Aft University Explorer. : -14:15 Organ Reveries. 143ft Tho Quiet Hour. 11 AO Melody. 1134 War News Roundup.,. KOfN CBS SUNDAY 454 Ks. 0 New of tho World. 4:15 Organist. , . 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Oh Tax Printed Ey MAX LONG ' Charter ti Continued . fl!y -reason for being in the neigtborhood will be established at the proper lime," Budd said coldly. "ThafsTot important? "Hoi". Komako inquired gravely, then fell silenV study ing Budd and Herb and Thorn ton ia turn. I heard the doctor slosh out on the wet path on his way home. Chapter t ; There was a change I recog nized in Komako. He put his foot on a - chair, leaned ' forward and began in a conversational tone: This evening Hasty; and me speak to Mrs. Delmar. She is alive and okay. We walk five minutes up path and back while 'she go into bedroom to bind up knee. We see Misses Josephine on lanai, fixing for leak in roof. Husband not -there, or she not be doing that all alone. We see Miss Turva talking with Mary and going to take bath.- But we don't -see you r", he shouted suddenly, jabbing his big forefinger at ward Budd. "Not you " he pointed to jHerbyfiereeljr "and not you!" The last indication was Thorn ton. "Yet all three you men are close to this house. So close you come running u take gun from Hasty. What you planted there fort To watch us while murder er goes in and kills Mrs. Delmar with ' Hasty's knife so you can blame Hasty?".. -.' - This was the old powerful Ko mako whom I had seen on so many other occasions, and jthe . men were silent, glowering un easily at the big Hawaiian. Budd was the first to recover. "You ; have a remarkable capa city for friendship,- he said with . biting sarcasm, looking from ' Komako to me.. "But you can't protect. Hoyt much longer, Ko- maka?.n;:::!:t::';-;v' ? 1See 'irt."' Thornton assum ed -"- reasoning, - patient ' tone. "The circumstantial V evidence -against Hoyt on the' first murder, ' as we've pointed out, was plenty . damning.-. That occurred before you errivedV "Now he's ;been caught running out of Mrs. Del- mar's all in a . dither, and . his - - knife Is stuck in her back! Look, -feit tMnsr vou can do for - all of us, Is to lock him up. If you still refuse, well send for the deputy sheriff, much as- we hate haying; a mob down here. - Any other officer of the law will throw him in Jail instantly and . no fooling." j" f '-.'; ,- "Sure,1 I "can lock Hasty up, Komako' said firmly, "in cabin - on sampan. But for why? I know he not. doing murders. ' I know who (s. I Jutve, case bout ready for deputy, sheriff- when-1 send - for. hint!" j;.-'.. I realized that was only a gal " lant bluff Komako was putting ,up in my defense, but it served to set them back on .their heels for a moment. In the silence Ko mako settled : himself in a big chair-as if the interview ; were oyer.fl::j , - Then Herb began to bluster - agitatedly: Til .stand guard on Hoyt, so I will! If the Kanaka won't lock him up, I'll watch ev ery move he makes! jThe rest of : you can go, to bed and feel safe." Budd and Thornton were deep in a thoughtful inspection of the inscrutable Komako, wondering, no doubt. Just what he had un earthed. Budd came out of it and . said brusquely 'to Herb: V : i . 115 Paul Featherrtone Orcnestrs. 1135 News. Midnight to A0 a JB Music St News ROW NBC SUNRAY 424 KS.' .' -. 4 Aft Dawn Patre.' - -.-; 4 Aft News - 4:14 Commando Mary.. .: 434 Music , '7. -' li' v T AO Bible .J- ';! :-"-- : TJft Word snd Music v ' Aft Tho Church In Your Homo. I 30 News. . s - 4:45 Romance Trails. AO Commentator. :15 News. J4 That They Might Live. 10 Aft Rupert Hughes. - s 10:14 Labor tor Victory, 1 Jft Dinning Sisters. -10:45 Music - 11 AO Chicago Round Table. 11 JO John Charles Thomas. '' M Aft Washington Reports on Ra- tioning. - 18:14 Upton Close. CommenUtor. .;. 1839 Tho. Army Hour. 1 30 Land of tho Freo. ' 135 News. . 7 . . 8 AO Symphony Orchestra. - 830 News Headlines and Highlights -8:14 Catholic Hour. ' 8:45 Newsmakers 4 AO Those Wo Love. ' 434 Band Wagon. : 434 News. 'SJO One Manl Fsmily. S Music 835 Ned Calmer. 4 AO Manhstters Merry -Co-Round. 3ft American Album of Familiat . Music . . i Tao Hour of Chsrm. , T 30 Bob Crosby St Co. Aft Farrsgut Calling. 30 Stop St Go. - 19 AO New Flsshes. ' 10:15 Oursyler-Parsons-St John. 1030 Pacific Story. II Aft-St Francis Hotel Orchestra. 1130 Charles LcVere, Singer. 11.-45 News. UAft-lAO A JM. Swing Shift . rrZ' J -FINAL MAILING DATE F0H OVERSEA3 3 - v ... . - . ;. . ' , : : - "AH riht, stand nard. Come along, Thornton." ...r;. Without a backward glance at us,, they left, picking up their raincoats' on the lanai as they went.. . Komako said to Herb: "More better you stand guard out on path. '.You and them other fel . ' lows seem to like to walk in rain, looks like. Me and Hasty got cop work to "do in here, so you watch from outside, please" Herb's mouth dropped open in astonished resentment, but Ko mako waved him out with the butt of his old pistol. Herb went, grumbling audibly. " Komako looked at me and grinned, but, nothing seemed funny to me after finding out that i was my fish knife which ; ' had been used, to stab Mrs. Del- mar, and after Thornton's effi cient summing up of the position ."I was in. ,' "Not to worry!" Komako com manded. "Vfe going get evidence better than circumstancial evi dence like Thornton say against you. They all cover up for " He checked himself and got, up sud . denly, going out to the edge of the lanai. ' When he came back he ex plained: "I think maybe Herb is listening. But he Is out there on .path being guards rain pouring 'off his hat, and he has big stick In hand." He drew his chair closer ; to mine and ' went on where he had left oft "You see how they all cover up for some body? For Elaine, you think? But if it Is Elaine, . I hot mean ing : what . I say . about them watching us so murderer can do . .work-;- fNo, Elaine' ran out of her . room obviously on a wild unpre meditated impulse. . She was no more walking in her sleep than I am. But what were those three men skulking ' about for' on a "That's what I say . . . lots more criminals besides Polly Morgan in note book." t-j , In my extremity I began hunt- ing desperately about for some thing more tangible on which to hang our suspicions ,. '. . (To be continued) S5U:3 Jrf H(f (Continued from Page 1) the : fats' . and oils exported amounted to 13.2 per cent. The official report says . that: "Un til ' December, 1942, most lend lease exports of foodstuffs went to the United? Kingdom . . . In the last three months shipments of foods to the Soviet- Union have shown a sharp increase, and we may send more food to the Soviet Union than to Great Britain in 1943." .We Americans, all with full bellies, - ha ve no conception of the bitter struggle for subsist-" ence going on -Jn Russia. life there has always been hard; fa mine has never been far away, . and often right at hand. This week's TIME magazine contains the" following description of how restricted the diet of the average Russian Is: w "For In Russia today, the sharp pangs of hunger come as regu larly as the dawn. 1 "An average Russian, lives on less than two pounds of food a day, half of It in black bread. The balance is compounded of five ounces of potatoes, four of cabbage, three of cereals, two of meat or fish. Sugar Is rare, but s ter almost unobtainable. When Lend-Lease lard reached Mos- ; cow, the housewives thought it -too precious for cooking, used it as a bread spread." .WJien edible fats are so scarce that the Russian housewives use lard for spread on their bread it Is hardly conceivable that edible butter would be used by the Russian soldiers for boot-grease. I'm afraid Treasurer Scott has been victimized by rumor-mon-gers and gossipers, and given circulation to a report " wholly false, which helps breed ill-will between two nations that have now one purpose m common: the defeat of the nazl-fascist aggres sors. I think too that most Am ericans would rather furnish butter for boot grease for Rus sian soldiers than to have Amer ican boys bear the brunt of the German attack as the Russian soldiers have for over two years. 0FTP mmm'iammmmmmswmmmM.jMnmM issiiii mi mm