The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 08, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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Th OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon, Tuesday Homing, May 8, 1915
1 S. :. . .
Wo Tavor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe" ;
From First Statesman, March 23, 1851
THE STATESJ1AN PUBUSHUSC COIPANY
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor'tnd Publisher; ,
' , Member of the Associated Press - fl
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to th use for publication ' of aL
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
News of the Surrender
Monday was a weird day in newspaper circles.
. The Associated Press started the day with a fac-
. tual report of the signing of terms of uncondi
tional surrender by the German Col. Gen. Gus-
, tav Jodl. No other news service dispatched the
report) They remained silent, though as a rule
hews of this character is duplicated within a
' matter of seconds or minutes by other news ser
vices. (Then came, word through INS that the
Associated Press had been suspended from fur
ther filings from the European theatre of op
erations because of its earlier transmission of
! the news of the surrender. Later in the day this
1 suspension was lifted.
Evidently what happened was simply that
i Mr, Edward Kennedy, chief of the AP staff on
I the western front, obtained the news of the sur
! render, wrote his story, filed it with the censor,
1 and it was transmitted to this country without
j' interruption. Then SHAEF put the clamps on
j any reports as to the surrender. This cut UP and
i INS, out from getting any stories of their own
! across. Net until? today, Tuesday,, is formal an
1 nouncement to be made at the capitals of the
I three, great powers,, but the fact will be old
I news1 then, for the AP report is regarded as cor
rect. J ' :. ' I "
The generals must have been deferring to the
politicians, reserving announcement of victory
for the chiefs of. state. It seems absurd to try
to bottle up one of the biggest news stories of
all time for a period of 24 hours, the more so
when the German radio had already announced
that the German armies. were directed to sur
render unconditionally by Admiral' Doenitz,
acting head of the German government. Even
more absurd was to put the muffler on the other
agencies after the AP had broken the story.
That put them at a serious disadvantage and de
nied their clients news they were fully entitled
to have. To penalize the AP for its alertness
seems petty. ,
We await, of course, the full report on just
what happened at Reims and at Paris. It seems
certain that the Associated Press story was ac
curate in its details and was so complete it could
have1 been obtained only from official sources.
As it was about nine hours elapsed between the
signing of the surrender and receipt of the news
on this side. One would think that a story like
that would be flashed within a mere matter of
minutes. Of this we - may be sure,' there must
be great bitterness at supreme headquarters
over the way this news was handled. The bung
ling took some of the edge off of the great news,
caused considerable bewilderment, and robbed
the event of some of the enthusiasm which it
deserved. '-
, Army Plans !
On the eve of victory the war department
gives definite information jpri its manpower
needs for prosecution of the war with Japan. In
brief the army will be reduced by about two
million men to a total of nearly seven million
men who are deemed sufficient to crush Japan.
Those discharged will be those; in the older age
groups, those with fainilies and those with long
records of service. It will take a year to effect
these discharges. Thi immediate job is to rede
ploy the armies for service in the orient. Two
thirds of these men will e brought back to this
country and giverr furloughs before being ship-,
ped across the Pacific. ,The airforce already is
being diverted to the Pacific. I
Inthe war with Germany 'the armies of the
allies must have numbered over 12 million men.
Russia is said to have massed four million men
. for the assault on Berlin: Now for the Japanese
war we plan to use ?nly seven million men.
Does-this give any inkling of war plans in the
Pacific? For island fat jack; not as many men.
can be used. If the war is waged on broad front
in China and Manchuria thn armies of great
size would be required, if Japan concentrates
its principal forces there. : Since there is no
sign that Russia will enter ;the war in the far
east, the only ally that can be expected to fur
nish large armies is; China.' : So it may be the
plan if the fighting is carried to China on a
large scale, to build upjChinese armies.
With victory in Europe eyes turn to the Pa
cific. All this while qur country has been build
ing up strength there, probably using the Phil
ippines as a major base. Iwo Jima took out a .
thorn in the side of the B-29s raiding Japan.
Okinawa provides ah advance 'base which can
be used to attack shipping and other Japanese
islands. General MacArthur must be about ,
ready, for a major strike either on the China
coast or in one of th home islands of the enemy.
'Master Plan'
Some days ago The Statesman commented on
the need for tracing back the diabolical plot
which was executed in the tortures of the Ger
man prison and concentration camps' Now the
groups of editors who have been visiting these
camps on invitation of General Eisenhower have
issued a statement which says:
The conclusion is inescapable that the nazis
had a master plan ! for their political prison
camps. That policy of calculated and organized
brutality. The evidence we have seen is not a
mere assembling of j local or unassociated inci
dents. It is convincing proof that brutality was
the basic nazi system and method.
This brutality took different forms in differ
ent places and with different groups. The basic ;
pattern varied little.
Actual nazi methods ran the gamut from de
liberate starvation and routine beatings to sad
istic tortures .too horrible and too perverted to
be publicly described. Murder was common
' place.. "".-' -
The master plan had master planners. Who
were they, besides Hitler? Where was their bu
reau? What documents did they leave? Here
indeed is a f iejd for study in the psychology of
the authoritarian rnind. It needs scientific in
vestigation quite as much as the military de
velopments need experts in military history.
' MtllVlliThfe. AiX the Nazis are )
I m ill r iiilllll m''jTl'! i! ' ''ii Ii1 kot in cictEt., and .J
' f W f I
.V
...-ATH2FROHTL-
. Ambulanco Bouoht .
By Nw York lid
Put to Good Usag
Kenneth Dixon
CiatrOmted kv Wtmm rutin.
I fcr uiucwnt with The WaUaom But
Gunning for International Amity
News Behind the News
(Distribution
By PAUL MALLON j . .. '
by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction in whole
or te part strictly prohibited.) I ; .
4- is Z,
Does Not Choose to :Kun
Mayor Fiorelld LaGuardia surprised the peo
ple of Gotham by announcing himself out as a
candidate for, reelection. Rd had generally been
credited with intention tojlseek a fourth term.'
Indications were that the "tattle Flower" would
face a stiff fight if he had rujn. The old fusion of ;
parties behind him was ofjfj. General O'Dwyer
of Brooklyn, his opponent n the last race, was
credited with greater strength. Now "Butch"
bows himself out of the rafe, which was npjt.an
easy thing to do, cpnsiderilig his love of poli
tics, also the fact that he has made his living by
.office-holding." jij : (.-;',
" The peppery mayor wo makes all the .big
fires tried hard to land! a federal job and Roose
velt kept him dangling in: hopes for years. t Fi
nally blocked front gettihj; the assignmert o
head the civil government for Italy, LaGuardia
evidently gave up hopes of: a federal berth. ( His
attempted defiance, of the; curfew order cut the
last ties with Washihgton,fIowever he did have
a turn as director of , civilian defense a" job
which he botched Woefully '
One should not worry juch about the New
York' mayor, however. He has plenty of action
and plenty of color. H is almost certain to
breakout in a new place in politics. i
m
Shipyard Workers : .
It is estimated that 16,000 shipyard workers
have left the yards in the Portland area in the
last ten days, homeward bound. They want to
be early birds to get jobs in the old home town.
At the same time this hegira is taking place,
calls are going out for workers to return, to the
yards to do work to complete contracts' and on
ship repairing which now is providing jobs in
Portland yards.' Recruiting is extended to over
Oregon in an effort to build up a larger working
force. f; -'V:r '
. Surely there should be no letdown in essential
work. The long haul in the Pacific will require
lots of shipping, and the toll of craft by enemy
action and accidents is by no means small. Yet,
; aside from the importance of maintaining need
ed shipyards work, it is a good thing for Port
land to have the workers pull out.' There is no
substitute local work in sigh when the ship
yards fold. If these people can get out and find
jobs without impairing the war effort it is bet
ter for them and relieves Portland 6fa head
ache. '
Notables Freed . , . , "
The nazis didn't carry out all the executions
they were accused of. With the opening of pris-
on and detention camps who should turn up un
harmed but Kurt von Schuschnigg, ex-chancellor
of Austria, whose death was reported a few
days agofLt. Gen. Tadeusz Komorowski, the
', "General Bor..of.the Warsaw underground; Dr.
Hjalmar Schacht, ex-finance rninister for the
nazis; the Rev. Martin Niomuller, famous Luth
eran dissenter to the nazi ideology, Leon-Blum
Edourd Deladier and Paul Reynaud, former pre
miers of France. So extreme were the cruelties
of the Gerr-ans one wonders why these men
were spcrc J. Perhaps from fear of reprisals. -
Tip your hat to Sweden. Its government .an
nounced it had no condolences to offer on the
death of Hitler. Dublin papers please codv.: ,
From his speech promising blood and sweat
and toil and tears Prime lilinister Churchill has
never fed his people optimism. -t But the remark
in his Tuesday speech in the commons is a clas- .
sic for understatement, wljeri he said in reply to
a question that the war position in Europe-"is
definitely more satisfactory; that it was at this
time five years ago." Itfay, 1940, it is recalled,
was the time of the! blitz through the Low Coun
tries and France, when allied fortunes were at
the lowest ebb. 1 j
Interpreting .
The War I! News
By J. M. ROBERTS, Jr.'
, With or without benefit lof official London Moscow-Washington
V-E- day proclamations, the war in
Europe is over. - J iljl r
'It had degenerated Into! 'a rat-hunt in Germany
even before general unconditional surrender papers
' aingned in Reims made outlaws of nazis still bent .
on resistance anywhere. : :"':). '
How long it may take & kill or disarm the lait
sniper or run down Germans responsible for shock
ing, crimes against humanity is unpredictable. The
slate cannot be wiped clean for a new start in Ger
many until that grim mission also is accomplished.
The victors are so pledged; to that as they were to
bringing Nazi Germany jibjectly to its knees : in
surrender. There can be no mercy for the merciless.
. Nor can it be doubted that. every Allied and pos
sibly Russian agency for. depicting before Japanese
eyes the relentless retribution to be visited upon
Nazis responsible for the horrors found in Germany 1
will be re-focussed for that Service. There are ob
ject lesson values in that' which conceivably could:
affect' the duration of the; war against Japan.
Aside from that aspect, however, the German sur
render sets definitely in motion Russian-Allied ma
chinery long ago agreed upon not only, for occupa--tion
of Germany but' fori maintenance indefinitely1
of the meaiisfor'destroyfngjat its source the" first
, sign of a recurrence there of the war mania that;
led the nation to its doom, ' " '- ' -Current
reports from Allied air' centers' indicate
that the core of long range Russian-Allied plans for
dealing with conquered : ;Germany is air power.
Preparations for establishment of more or less per
manent air bases in and; around Germany that!
would keep every; nook i and corner of the reich j.
within hitting distance in ja matter of minutes rather
than hours are well underway. And with the ruins
of the doomed cities about them no German of this!
or the rising generation can doubt what that massed f
air power would mean for them If It ever became?
necessary to call it into action to stamp out recalci- ;
trance in Germany) : - f . a ; ' v - .-, ' . ;
As the situation; in Germany after her complete;
defeat has been long visualized by Washington au-K
thority, there should be po -disheartening prospect!
of years of service in Rhine or other strategic oc
cupation bridgeheads ccfefronting United Nations!
armies as after tne last war. Air power can take
over the watch on the Rhine in reverse, it is felt
The mere presence of the bombers at their assigned
bases should be sufficient.
SAN FRANCISCO, Maj
The four nations draft of
changes- to Dumbarton Oaks and
Yalta constant
ly reiterates
several hew
World freeing
ideals Tcul-tural,,-arace,,!
"language,") "re
ligionM and
(doubt it only
if you have not
read it) "sex."
j Off the jeye,
you might think raal Maiioa .
the big four are following the
happy habits, of national demo
cratic platforms and promising
all things to all men. The "cul
tural" angle was worked j in by
Nelson Rockefeller who has been
dispensing! culture to Latin Am
erica so skillfully the past few
years that his deas grew her
into a world program. The "race
' part of it is a plain and some-!
what political-sounding (appeal
for solution of- the Jewish prob
lem on a world basis. .What is
meant by freedom of "language"
I do not pretend to know as most
languages! are capable of being
used freely, and often have been
used too freely by nations. Like
race, "religion' is of course an
bid and basic American Concept
of an essential freedom. 4
The eradication of distinctions,
-between the sexes is a universal
ly accepted ideal. Its inclusion
probably refers to far corners of
the world like India, as I. believe
, the feminist movement in China
has made great progress and may
need many other helpful 'encour
agements than those which can
be provided by a world organiz
ation (I mean economic ! encour
jagement jand such thingsj)
Down deep in this document
however, are provisions Which
-open up Vast possibilities for ac
tion upon these matters! Under
the assembly of nations has been
placed an economic and social
council which no one had be
', lieved would amount to much. . A
similarly ' named committee at
' this conference, for instance, has
1 decided to go into such matters
only. in general terms and avoid
specific recommendations about
tariffs, trade, finance, etc ;
But the big four proposal en
' trusted to its permanent econora
! ie and .social council the new
: task r of , "making recommenda
tions for promoting respect for.
human rights and fundamental
freedoms." . It could presumably
even go into the Jewish situation ,
in Russia, ' or the .condition by
which the ' G r tek orthodox'
church has become the only slate
approved or allowed religion
and where I believe only one of-,
ficial in the entire Russian gov
ernment is a Jew. It. could go '
into race freedoms, religious
freedoms, language - freedoms
and sex.' ' ;' . '
Indeed it is , charged to estab
lish commissions for those pur
poses one committee ' on ' eco
nomic activity one on social ac- '
tivity, another on' culture, a
fourth -on ,the pepmotion of hu
man rights and committees on
"any other field within the com-'
petence (this is another new and
good word coming for the first,
time into international usage) of'
the commission." ' ; f
This means; a large permanent I
organization ; to del v .farther
afield, than the old league ever
cared or dared to go. It adds con-'
siderably to the structure of the
new setup at the bottom, and in 1
fact gives it ;a character beyond ; j
Dumbarton Oaks and Yalta. ;
Appropriations for these inves- j
tigations are to be provided by -the
assembly, but the big nations !
apparently thought these endeav- :
ora might get out of , hand and j
reserved for themselves, the right ;
to.-veto r appropriations, and, in i
effe to' limit them. ' 1
tl,Other rights are mentioned in
the "document but not .freedom i
. ot press which I think ought at ;
least' to be a free as sex, and;
.might well have a world com- '
mission looking after it. There ;
is the right of self-determination
of peoples" from the Atlantic!
charter. This ? will not however, ;
result ' in anyf commission , going j
into Russia or other nations, i l
assume, as , no commission has ;
been appointed for it In fact, I
Russia held one election, in my
recollection, j which : came out
about 98 or 99 per cent for the
one party allowed on the ballot,
and that one , may . last a . long 1
1 time. Thus .there appears to be
some conflict in the expressions
on the one hand' for "freedom for
all" and f$elt determination," on '
the other -! .;,:-;.;;-,. - .k
These I tiiink are the funda
mental changes from Dumbarton
and Yalta -although there are
others; They express many of
the. yearnings . of many people,
largely hopes without measures.
But I think there is a very good
chance much will be done in a
promotional way at least about
the added new freedoms of "cul
ture," language," and "sex";' as
Well as the old ones of religion
and race which we have long! es
tablished, f
The Literary
Guidepost
By W. G. ROGEZS
V WITH THE 7 AEF IN . GER
; MANY, May 4.-(Delayed HJF)
Side to kids attending Horace
Mann school
for boys In
New York city f
- - do you guys t '
remember how
you raised
enough dough
'to buy an 4 am
bulance for use
on the war
fronts over
seas? -i
Well, you
ought to feel
nrittT COOd
' about it today. This morning a
long cavalcade of ambulances,
trucks and jeeps rolled across the',
combat line, over No Mans land ;
gome 20 miles Into German ter- x
ritory. , Flying' flags of a tern-
porary truce it was bound for
Antengrabow prison to get more
than 1200 captured American
soldiers as well as thousands! of
other allied prisoners. v y
Ambulances of the 308th med
ical battalion were along to bring:
out the wounded. They needed ,
those ambulances badly, - - but .
even so it was slightly, unnerving
to sit in them and wonder what
would happen , if the Germans
decided to double cross us. j
But they didn't -- and allot
of men were brought out j
: The point is that the first am
bulance, driven by Pfc. Willie
Copper, Danville, Va carried a
little metal tag saying it. had
been donated by you boysj of
Horace Mann. . I ,
You might write something
about that,? .said Sgt Phil Pin
nis, of Foxcroft Maine. "Those
kids probably will be glad to
know their ambulance is doing
some good." 1
"Yeah - - tell them we really
needed it said Cpt John ling,
of Madison, Ind. "The last jone
" we got was shot up."
)
Ihis
GRIN AND BEAR IT
By Lichty
"THE BBST IS YET,'
erase (nrr; j
What a meandering book
is! There's a new subject on every
page, and of )course several in
every chapter,' and there are- al-
most more chapters than I can
count since they're numbered in
Roman numerals that reachj al
most to the limit of my Roman
numerology, j j
' " But : what j paths, often j Just
downright pleasant and often'
very thrilling,; Ernst picks for his
meandering! It's about carpenter
ing, cruising and bowling; about
deafness; left-handed robins and
the Inner: temperature of birds;
about J. Edgar Hoover, Mayor "I
am the law" Hague, correspond
ent Karl Marx of the New York
Tribune, Hey wood Broun, Edna
Ferber, Russell Leffingwell, Jud
ges Brandeis, Holmes, Cardozo,
and critics . . . including book
critics; about when are books and
plays obscene and about JErnst's
courageous and effective defense
from j the ' Corns tocks of Joyce's
"Ulysses" and Schnitzler's "Casa
nova's Homecoming" and other
.works. . ; : I : ; ! -
' "I am sure I know the; gang
who. did the job," he says Of the
murder of paymaster Parroenter,
but it was not in his opinion the
two men electrocuted for it: Sac
co and Vanzetti. I
; His next to last chapter is de-,
voted, with fateful timeliness, to
the Roosevelts: "Much of the past
IS years of my life has; been
colored and enriched by Franklin
and Eleanor Roosevelt" I "
! If Ernst talks to jurors the way
he writes for book reviewers, it's
no wonder he wins cases, j
"SHOTGCNNINQ IN THE ! LOWLANDS,-
ky Kay P. Holland
iBarac; flJS).
rohn Taintor Foote believes
''no other living creature knows
as ' much about ducks as Ray
Holland" . , . and this lis the
Holland ; he means. This; book,
tastefully illustrated, Is meat for
every hunter. . j
"DEAK ITTH," eai4y ay Nenaaa
" Eruu (Random Hat: Si).
-A BELL TOR ADANO, hy raal
Osaara (Kaopf; ft) . . a flramati
' saUoa af die aarel ay 3km Heaaey.
-1 REMEMBER MAMA - atay la twai
-acta kjr Jaka tm DiMca -(Bu.
- aaart, Brae; SS.S).
There is probably ,a moral of
iome kind in the antics of those
liberated Yanks as they rode the
trucks of the motor cavalcade
back through miles of German
territory to freedom. j
Some who had been prisoner
s:il .m- u
vvai OAwrw-i . fJ3i v'; : 1
e Ckx7va. foe.
"Hon. Spy report stupendotis moral victory! CJS. Navy spend mnch
; time and money, learn te identify wily Nippon battleship
. ma batUeship left to identify!"
Futids Ready
f""'. ;-;:";-". :;-'-!'; ;.
Fdr Training
Therapists
' A f ritical shortage of qualified
physical therapists which j endan
gers he proper care of infantile
paralysis Victims has caused the
national foundation for infantile
paralysis ; to appropriate f 167,
600 - for tha training ofthese vit
ally Reeded specialists, according
to Dr. Wi J. Stone, chairman of
Marion county chapter of the na
tional foundation. " ,
: Scholarship covering 1 tuition
fees, 'maintenance, and incidental
expenses based upon the needs of
the indivadual will be awarded to
qualified t persons -to approved
schools of physical therapy. 5 .
To; qualify , for a , scholarship
one must be a graduate nurse, or
a graduate of a school of physical
education, or have completed two
years-of college training including
courses in biology and other basic
sciences.
-.Complete information concern
ing these scholarships may be ob
tained from Eugene W. Hall, Ore
gon state representative of the na
tional foundation, 603 Park build
ing. Portland 3, -
(Continued from page !)
There will be no wild celebra
tions among the troops. These
men have seen too much death
and suffering." 1
Though our exultation be re
strained, our v gratitude should
. know no bounds. In the past five
and a half years our country and
the .world have passed through
deep . perils. , A fanatic monster,
. . heading the most hideous system
, ever conceived, by the human
mind, was on the point of con-
' quering the world. The bulldog
determination of the British, the
. infinite capacity of the Russians
for taking punishment without
breaking, the generous response
; of this country under the leader
ship of a president Mr. Roose
velt who was aware of the is
sues at stake, saved the World,
saved western culture as it has
been developed mrough the cen
turies. With firm conviction that
our armies fought in the ; right
and for the right there- was con
fidence, that the God of battles
would finally bless our cause. So
now our hearts should overflow
: in gratitude for peace borne on
wings of victory. j
The hearts of millions, are lift
ed that the risks of fighting in
Europe are ended. But n hun
dreds of thousands of homes the
war was over when the sad news
came of the death of loved ones.
We cannot forget them now, for
it was through their sacrifice
- that V-E day is possible. Nor can
we forget the men who came
back, with broken r bodies or
'. spent minds, victims ' of war's
fury- In their honor we stand in
silent salute, -and pray that a
v grateful nation will never forget
its obligation to them.
The crown of victory is not
without its thorns. Fascism and
the war swept Europe into revol
ution and ' on into chaos. The
countries of Europe face; a su
preme task in picking up the
threads of peaceful existence, re
forming their economic;; life,
' seeking political stability ! which
will give their peoples health
and hope. If the unity which pr
vailed in war can be preserved
in peace, Europe may get back to
settled order, and back on the
path of human progress. '
for nearly; two and a' half years
- leaned out and tossed cigarettes
to German kids. Others ' threw
them pieces of candy out of the
first K rations they had seen in
a year.-. '; H ?L" v"-
: - At the same time they shouted
profanity at almost all German
adults, whether .civilians or sol
diers. It ; didn't; seem to make
sense. - : V fl -; - - : .
"It's prObably ; the first time In
years they have been able to feel
like they are top dog again," said
one GI truck driver. "I guess
- they gotta do something to show
how good, they feeLwr
Maybe that was part of it - -but
it went deeper than that
" During one pause a German
'. soldier came up' and tried to sur
render. One erstwhile American
prisoner who bad been kicked
around considerably in the Ger
man prison camp hopped off the
truck and knocked the German
down. Then he got back on the
; truck. ' ,
From a half
dozen nearby
trucks from - men who had
also been kicked around plenty
by. the Germans for endless
' months - - came angry mutters.
"What the hell did you do that
for?" said one. .
"Cut it out j Jack. He didn't
do " nothing to ; you," said an-
' other. - r !! '
That was a cheap trick - -leave
the guy alone he's
through," was another.
t You probably could get any
kind of a moral you wanted to
out of that incident All I know
is that it left us with a "warm
feeling. We had expected bitter
viciousness out of these who had
"been, under the German heel.
Maybe they should have been
that way - - maybe not. But that
is what happened.
You folks back home who
found out about your boys be
ing liberated from ; Altengrabow
incidentally can give Pfc. Carl T.
Weber, of Rochester, NY,- and
Pfc. John L. Maloney, of Dun
kirk, NY, credit for a big assist.'
It was impossible to get the
names of all 1200 Americans for
the simple reason that they were
promptly loaded into trucks and
moved. It was necessary to climb
into a truck and get all . the
names possible as it rolled along
and then jump into another. One
correspondent could have gotten'
a. tenth of the names following
this procedure.
Carl and John pitched into the
job. They are members of the
83rd division which effected the
liberation. They were both for
mer neWspapenneh. Carl used to
work for the Rochester (NY)
Democrat and Chronicler John
used ; to work for the Buffalo
Evening News, the Dunkirk Eve
ning, Observer and the Associa
ted Press.. -M;."
Even the three of us working
together only got a b o u t 300
names.' But when I left the 3rd
command post tonight, Carl and
John were still working on noti
ces so the boys' folks back home
would get the good news as
quickly as possible.
Receip
ts
848,988,897.91
Cash receipts of the state treas
ury deportment, receipted and un
receipted, as of April SO, aggre
gated $48,888,8971, State Treas
urer Leslie M. Scott announced
here Monday. -
Unreceipted . receipts totaled
$,847,381.65.j
Cash receipts include:
General fund $30,224,949.80,
state land board $660,9573, in
dustrial accident commission $1,
900,531.98, board of higher edu
cation $1,206,300.12, state board of
control $48,710.06, state highway
commission $11,938,681.56, unem
ployment compensation commis
sion $169,425.97, veterans state aid
commission $365,927.19, vocation
al $655,214.06, public assistance
$429,070.74, 1 liquor control com
mission $88,330.00, miscellaneous
$164,065.22, state . school support
fund $85,073.44 and state elemen
tary school fund $1,050,641.64.
.Unemployment compe nsation -commission
trust funds deposited
with the federal ' ; treasury total
$67,187,000. ? Total bond invest
ments aggregate $36,092,086.88,
exclusive of bond investments
carried in cash accounts of $14,-059,334.61.
It is believed that repeated cold
infections may progressively in
ure the membranes in the middle
ear, and affect the transmission of
sound. . - . i i
STSVEIIS
Vv H OKI or TM t
. vJOlAMOND
Exqalsltely fashioned dia
moad combination. Dlae
whlte. Perfect
. Divided Payments
W 7
xoracruaaia jv- a
339 Court St
i-