The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 23, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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PAGE F0U3
Ths) OFXGON STATESMAN Scdem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, May 23, 1943
Wo Taror Stoav U; Wo Fear Shall Awtr
From First .Statesman. March 28, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COSIPANY
CHARLES A.SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher;
j ' Member of the Associated Press i r
Tae Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of aL
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.!
Hitler No Rug-Chewer
! The revelations of the activities of AdoM
Hitler as made by Gerhard Herrgesell, one of
his secretaries, are proving valuable in giving
what seems to be a fairly accurate picture of
Hitler himself in the war years. He does not
appear to have been the rug-chewing maniac
he has often been pictured as being. It is true
More Pounds of Meat
- Washington agencies hav finally done some
thing which may result in liore rrieat. An addi
tional premium is offered jjto cattle feeders to
induce them to feed range cattle and young
stuff so the critter will jfcarry taore pounds
when he goes down the chute at the packing
Dlant. Then the too of 30d lbs. for swine for
that the secretary says that he was exceedingly price support is removed. This wjill encourage .
gleeful when news came of Roosevelt's death, hog-raisers to feed their swine to larger size. ,
But the deaths of Mussolini and Hitler made
welcome news to their enemies. If Hitler was
a bit more demoniacal in his expressions of
glee it was because he was in more desperate
plight and had hopes that this event would give
an escape moh him and for Germany.
In one other respect j HerrgeseU's . comment
may reflect on Hitler's mental capacity. He says
that Hitler had a great I memory for details,
but often failed to coordinate them. That is
not an uncommon trait among people and does
not in itself reflect mental abnormality, though
These are very practical fimethods of getting
more meat in markets and more on dining
tables. There is an abundance of grain feed; in
fact the orders should have come earlier be
cause of the abundance ojf animal feed.
WFA or OPA apparently has - rjever taken a
practical view of the beef situation. They failed
to provide satisfactory differentials between
feeders and fmishedfeeefcattlej As long as
it was unprofitable ip feed tattle Off the range
feeders held off so the cofntry had not only
less meat but less meat of; the better, quality;
his secretary says it does account for some of The hew .differential is ajbelated recognition 'jfrgff f J1
his failures as a leader.
On the other hand Herrgesell testifies that
Hitler held the reins of control firmly in his
own hands up to April 22 when he concluded
that all was lost and decided to meet death in
Berlin. This would dispose of the series of tales
of Hitler's being deposed while Himmler ran
things, or of his withdrawing from control to
let the generals of the Wehrmacht take charge.
Hitler was boss from the beginning. He told
his generals that he brought on the war. He
must hve had capacity or his organization
would have collapsed long before it did. Von
Rundstedt was by no means critical of Hitler's
ability in the field of strategy. j
The picture we are getting through this sec
retary is one-sided, of course, but it appears to
. have plausibility, and if porrect certainly forces
a revision of our estimate of der Fuhrer as a
madman. His writings and speeches reveal a
literary incoherence but he had mental con
centration enough to lead a nation of 70,000,
000 astray and to enslave most of Europe.
of the important role the Seattle feeder plays
In maf nAi)ntfAn T4- vers 1 1f ! 4-k fr a Axf VVttnf'lia '
to notice effect of these two orders, but after gCt lor lodajr
that the meat situation should be visibly im
proved.
U IB :
, , . r. ' ; '
The Oregon Farmers Union contains an ar
ticle from James G. Patton, FU president, who
is one of the consultants at the San Francisco
conference. Patton says "We must learn to work
with Russia." That is correct. Russia is one
of the great powers Of the world whose bulk
lies across Europe and Asia and across the air
routes of the northern hemisphere. We must
learn to work with Russia. And the rule works
the other way round. Russia must learn to
work with the United States. There is ' wide
room for instruction in this art In both these
countries. h I
W&jb&SCS? :? A Behxryed by Hi.
- ' 4 . , 4 Own Big Mouth ,f
The Statesman has at hand a picture showing
Congressman Harris Ellsworth of Roseburg re
clining in "a new type chaise lounge developed
for postwar train travel by the Pullman-Standard
Car Manufacturing company." The caption
said the lounge was being previewed by govern
ment officials in Washington, and that cars fit
ted with them would be placed in service within
five months after the government lifts restric
tions on peacetime construction. We wouldn't
mind printing your picture, Harris, but the
lounge will have to wait. Right now the demand
is for pictures of everyone having a seat in cars-as-they-are;
of people having stoves, refriger
ators, automatic appliances, washing machines,
girdles, tricycles, mouth organs and diaper
dolls. OK, Harris? I
The supreme court's ruling thatj a state may
refuse to recognize a Nevada divolrce will start
tremors in many a heart. (For remarriages on
the assumption that a Nevada divorce decree
was valid anywhere have been almost as num-l
erous as the decrees. Nevada has made its
courts into divorce mills, to the discredit not'
only of the institution of iharriage but of our
system of jurisprudence. Nevada should reform;
its divorce laws so there may be
cast on Caesar's ex-wife, i
IN GERMANY-P)-The trou
ble With Dietrich Klagges was a
very! co mm on fF""l'
frailty. kY
He could not rr
keep hla big
mouih shut.
There he was
sitting pretty in
Bruiiswick. - As
a solid German
civilian who
1 wS
natufaUy hated YXt H
SL
au Nazis
said Iso himself
Kenneth Dixon
no suspicion'
The annual report of Hunt Brothers Packing
co., whose Salem branch is one of the important
units in the organization, reflects the stimulus
which has come through new management of
the company. In line with the increasingly
popular practice of corporations the report is
not merely a few pages of financial statistics
but one which supplies informative text and
picture material. The company's financial sta-
: tua shows improvement, with bank loans re
tired, .reference is made to the advertising pro
gram recently adopted which should result in
further stimulation for the company.'! business
as' a canner and packer of foods. Salem friends
; of the company are pleased to learn of its
. progress. !::.-..
A" graduate of old 'Willamette university med
ical school, and once a practicing physician
here, Dr. E. C. Dal ton, if hose death at St,
Helens occurred Wednesday, is better remem
bered for his work as member of the capitol
reconstruction commission which functioned
from 1935 to 1939 and carried th responsibili
ty of laying out a capitol plan and authorizing
construction of the capitol and; the! state library
Dr. Dalton was an intelligent, earnest member
of the commission.
Russians say -they have hunted through the
ruins in Berlin and haven't; found a body they
can identify as Adolf Hitlers.f Perhaps it would
speed their search if they looked
Braun s body. ;g
A man who says he was the f ir$t Lord Haw-
Haw is under arrest by the. British in Germany
wno seem to nave the last haw
that counts the most.! j j
first for Eva
haw, the one
Interpreting
The War Ketvo
By KXRKE L. SIMPSON
Associated Pre Wr Itnaljrst
A visit of President Truman
a conference with American
commanders seems conceivable in
progress of the war,
The time when major strategic
visioned at President Roosevelt's
meeting with American army,
to the Pacific foe
and British theater
often and vehemently he had
beenj given a routine check , and
had passed it with flying colors.
Then because he seemed like
a man with sense and because
he had an authoritative man
ner jabout him the allied mili
tary government made him a
local; administrator in Brunswick.
There were those who thought
that ithere was something faintly
familiar about that authorita
tive lair of his, but these are
busy times for the allied- mili
tary! j government so they passed
it by.
As the days went by Dietrich
Klagges gained new confidence
and jShis manner seemed almost
to have a touch of arrogance in
it. But it was not until the new
regufations for Brunswick's ci
vilian population were announc
ed that he became 'anything but
service toward the American ar
my.jk ' J
"Unfair! unreasonable!" he
fairly shouted in reial and angry
arrogance. "Surelyjyou cant do
this f to us good German peo-
PIe-'l .ill
Not content with that, he con
tinued to ; orate and Dietrich
Klagges is ; quite an orator. He
insisted that good anti-nazi Ger
mans such as he shouldn't be
made to suffer for I Nazi crimes.
He waxed j so eloquent that in
stead of firing himj -the officials
called in the 30th infantry divi
a sionj counter intelligence corps
to probe into his past.
The CIC boys discovered that
Dietrich Klagges was:
decisions pre
Pearl Harbor
A tanker was christened "Chemawa" and
launched at Portland Thursday., The name was
chosen to honor the Indian school at Chemawa,
, north of Salem. By inference it recognizes also
the part which Indians have played in this war.
They have entered military service on the same
basis 'as the Whites and have proved good sol
diers. On the reservations Klamath, Warm
Springs, IJmatilla, thej older Indians speak
with pride of how the young braves have gone
:to war. - ' .
Editorial Comment
FO A FCTT1T FOOD CZAE
By a large majority the senate committee on
agriculture has approved a subcommittee report major campaign against the Japanese are just over ar RTTV A lMFI
Which declares that the Office of Price Adminiatra- the horizon. 1-1 I I " f: VIAXL! AilsLF
navy and air chiefs
in the Pacific, must be real finned or brought up
to date cannot be distant IS II'-,'-
Many chapters in military history have been
written since that time both in Europe and on the
Pacific fronts. ' ; --;::.f " 1;' ; . j r v-' t
Now that gigantic realignment df military strength;
of the western allies i gathering force, the final
l i AAJi i m .
A known torturer and murder-!
er with the Riesberg slaughters! H
of 1938 specifically chalked up to; .
"his discredit. j '
Bit by, bit as the story camel
out partially through unwitting;
admissions by Klaggs and par-;
tially through testimony and rec-;
ords gathered by the ClCf-it be-
came increasingly apparent why
Dietrich had been; able jjto get!
such "good results" as admin
istrator. ' - - ' j "
His name alone apparently was
enough to spread fear and in-!
spire obedience from the average
German in these parts, i
According to reports civilians
literallyi refused to live within!
a block of his headquarters.!
Their complaint was too much
noise, i. . . j
Questioning , developed that;
"noise to which they referred;
consisted of the screams lof tor-;
tured people being "interrogated" ;
by Dietrich Klagges and (his co- ;
horts. ' j j
For some reason perhaps be-;
cause of the belated realization;
that he already had talked too l
much Dietrich had little to say
about the Riesberg j murders for;
which he is held responsible. But;
here again witnesses were wfll-l
ing to talk., ' . ' ; j
. It seems that one SS man was ;
killed on a street in Brunswick.!
His killer was hot immediately
apprehended but Klaggs prompt-1
ly executed a plan for punish-
ment which did not require the
presence of the guilty party.
He merely arrested all the men
living in that particular street -and
picked ten of them! at ran-
dom. These ten he had tortured
to death in public! j
. That is Dietrich Klagges self-
styled good German, Hitler hat
er and violent anti-nazi who
still would be the local pdmin
istrator for the Allied : military
government if he had on)y kept
his big mouth shut
LHJ
Tpmrmrs
(Continued, from page 1)
Blood Quota
Almost Met;
198 Donations
with 198 donations, the Salem
blood bank Tuesday was a quart
ghy the maniT""" possible contri
bution of 200 pints for use on Pa
cific battlefronts because some of
the 251 persons register ea iaueu
to keep their appointments, Red
Cross workers said. Tne response
was better than a week ago.
New gallon club members are
Catherine OTfeil, S55 Hazel ave.;
John Reid, 392 South High st;
Orpha Banks, 1670 North Church
st, Mabel Holt, Turner; Myrtle
BisseU, Dallas; Gerald Kelly, 1835
North 22nd st, Marjorie Aechli
mann, 342 North Church si; War
ren Shrake, 520 Monroe ave.; La
Mar Hobbs, 2390 Hayden ave, and
Mrs. Minnie B. Frank, route four,
box 77, Salem.
Giving for the ninth time were
Marearet Johnson, Salem; Carl F.
RempeL 1825 North Water st;
Bjarne Ericksen, 2415 South Cot
tage st; C. H. Bullis, 365 South
16th st; and Mrs. Myrtle David
son, Smart shop.
Tenth-time donors were A." L.
Lindbeck, 575 Rose st; Mrs. Don
ald Upjohn, 864 South Liberty st;
Mrs. A. L. McCafferty, 681
Thompson ave.; and Lorene Grif
fiths, 194 North 14th st
Mrs. A. L. Strayer, 589 Locust
st, donated blood for the 11th
time and Dr. F. D. Voigt 1274
South Liberty st, for the 12th
time. '
Foiindry Cost,.
Clinic Meeting
Set! for Portland
.1 -
W.pT. Rosebraugbvowner of the
ciwi rrav iron mill bearing his
name; and Harold A. Rosebraugh,
superuitenaem, are wnons
gon gray iron foundry executives
who will attend a foundry cost
ccouKting "clinic"- and wartime
pricing problem conference i
Portland Monday evening under
the siuspices of the Gray Iron
Founders', society, national associ
ation lot manufacturers of engin
eering gray Irons. r
Principal speaker will be Wil
liam L Caldwell of Washington,
DC, assistant to the executive vice
president of the national trade
group with which the W. W?
Rosebraugh Co. Is affiliated. J
WASHINGTON, D C. 4- Fifty
American Red Cross; men and 27
The man who had sworn Adolf ,nmm nnn, . nirin.u mv
the light of HiUlr in as a naturalized Ger- Tenth Army Hospital uut and
waul utws u vnuv setting up special Bed Crpsa in-
yeaifago. sUUations. - i f !
t U.. I 1 a
A 1 lieutenant general of the
Nazi; SS troops.
Nazi minister to the president
of the state of Brunswick.
A director of the
Volksfreundhaus.
A top ranking
since 1924.1
8- 1 -
notorious SS
Nazi bigwig
tion "has failed miserably to enforce price and
ration control regulations." Granted that., it has
failed whether "miserably ' or not is a matter
vOf literary taste. j
' Now the subcommittee i proposes that Congress
create a "supreme administrator" of all food con
trol agencies in the vernacular a food czar but
not that it leave everything to him. The subconv
mi ttee wants Congress to' instruct the czar about
cxaring, thus: Pay a subsidy to livestock feeders,
raise the support price of hogs, allow "a reasonable
margin of profit" to meat processors, limit lend- '
lease shipments of meat products to -our surplus,
order the czar to quit controlling foodstuffs as
they come into surplus supply but to promise not
to change livestock support or ceiling prices without
"adequate notice." J
One or two of the subcommittee's recommenda
tions seem to this newspaper to be good. If food
distribution and prices are -to be controlled one
agency should do it Certainly controls should be
removed from such commodities as actually come -Into
surplus supply. But the report says nothing
about the great help Congress could give OPA in
.holding - consumer prices down by removing .the
mechanisms of price support in 'wholesale food
stuffs markets. These have been established by the
farm bloc on the theory that they foster production.
Broad strategy doubtless wasl worked out long
before Mr. Truman took the loath as president
less than five weeks ago, but Jus active interest
ougui ieu nun away irom mej mainland ior the
first time as president lor a meeting face to face --with
the men who will 'strike tie fatal blows. I
Mr. Truman's frequent and dirf warnings against
the Japanese, no doubt giving ,tHb Tokyo war lords
more than vague ideas about; te wisdom of un
conditional surrender. Would! bje emphasized by
such a maneuver. 4 " ' I j v "
When Mr. Roosevelt visited pefrl Harbor nobody
could have forseen the total fofi apse of Germany
before mid-summer this year. jThf Pacific was
still a remote second ifrontlsl far as military'
priorities were concerned. I . j
It rates 100 per cent of the t$tal American war
effort now and decisions as to jst how that over
whelming force is to fo applied to produce the
quickest and least costlyctoyyi results cannot be
delayed. Ill - f
Navy, army and air force fog spokesmen have
not always seen eye to eye onihiw the job against
Japan could best be done, j I
That was what prompted rfjrident Roosevelt's
trip to Hawaii to discuss the fubject with such
front line commanders and Adjniral Nimitx . and
General MacArthur. Their dual cobmand' status
No Mallon Today!
There is ne column byj Paul
Mslloa today. His eolnm was
kmc by tne erne ef
ship. s..; ;-: I-
BEAR IT
But the theory means that the government shall rw out of that conference bui there are some
ntk nrirwa tiiffh fnr th nrimai-ir rtnrviuMa intimatinna ihst ha ,i4Ai rti ' n4 V
make prices high for the primary producers and
low for the ultimate consumers.
And there we have the principal ' reason why
OPA regulation has come so near complete failure.
That dual price theory squeezes the legitimate
processors and distributors out of . business and
leaves their "field for black marketers to occupy.
The Senate subcommittee, ' we think, has failed to
see that a food czar would be handicapped by this
price dualism quite as much as are OPA and WFA.
i Wall Street Journal
intimations that the sister services at home mar
not be completely in accord as lo procedure from
here on even so. q
3 i
; The only man who could settli any dispute once
and for all would be the commander in chief, f
. That he would attempt to dd
conversations .with the : top
field as weB as with the hig
so without personal
fcoeimanders in, the
est ranking service
ods since he came to power.
By! Lichty
lu't.:: h! .' : .f--l:r II ' - ' i' - y. ill"' ., If
: j Ji i jsijr- ; -i
5 1 m Lm
i .. i 1 1 i i- 1 1
by: 1 shipping us goods or sup
plying us with services in ex
change; 2 shipping us gold
(largely from new production
from mines); 3 by the proceeds
of loans or credits granted by the
United States.
What is the reasonable balance
to strike among these three so
that sufficient foreign trade may
be carried on to give us the best
rounded economy we can have?
Clearly it is wrong to cling to
1898 ideas without adjustment to
a 1945 world. Our policies as to
foreign trade need fresh formula
tion in terms of realities of today
and probabilities of tomorrow.
Our tariff policies will be af
fected certainly by the type of
economies set up by foreign na
tions. If they go in for economic
autarchy, with embargoes or
strict quotas on imports, then our
capacity to import . will be re
duced. If the nations can work
toward greater liberalization of
trade we should be prepared to
go along. .
Foreign trade is not an insur
ance of domestic prosperity;
rather it accompanies domestic
prosperity. Neither is importing
the bogey which many fear, be
cause when business is active we
can absorb a larger volume of
both domestic and of foreign
goods.
We hear a great deal ojf pro
test against continuation of lend
lease; and certainly it should stop
with the end of the war. We Can
sell goods abroad if we are will
ing to buy goods in exchange;
and there is a wide field of im
ports needed to supply our-complex
industries and to enrich our
living. j
The use of our newly-built
merchant marine after it gets
through beingpack-horse for the
army depends first on what the
volume of foreign commerce will
be and second on how heavily
this country wants to subsidize
its merchant marine..' As to the
first I think we should endeavor
to stimulate foreign! trade, not in
the sense of giving the USA away
either by easy loans or by abol
ishing tariffs, but by orderly ad
justment in the broad national
interest
ought to maintain a substantial
merchant marine both; as a
stimulus to trade and as a safe
guard against future wars. The
Liberty ships are too slow for
postwar competition unless they
are converted. We will do well
if we keep 25,000,000 tons afloat,
which is about half of the ton
nage we will have when the war
ends but over twice; as much as
we had when the War started.
Our country should; confer with
Britain, The Netherlands : and
Norway before deciding as to the
;. size 'r of our postwar merchant
J fleet because they are heavily de
f pendent on snipping for support
'of their economy, j: 1 1 1
These problems go to thej heart
of issues that will determinelthe
economic health of the world.
;- which Is fundamental to political
t health. Fine phrases drafted at
sian Francisco win butter no
parsnips in New York or in Ed
inburgh or in Oslo. .The country
r might with profit devote more at-
tention to what congress is do
1 ing on settling these economic
i questions, with strong : ursine
that bur statesmen be statesmen
not walking delegates for
Interests or spokesmen for
slogans.
Premiere for
War Bonds Is
Set for Monday
(War bond story also page 1.)
The State theatre premiere of
The Enchanted Cottage," war
time picture, will be held Mon
day night, with state employes
who have exceeded their bond
quotas as guests. Several other
bond premieres, both If or general
buyers and youngsters! are being
planned by Manager L eo Hender
son. -
Next week in the s:venth war
loan drive also will s art off the
series of retail store gatherings
under general directio i of Dr. E.
E. Boring, co-chairmai i, and S. L.
Stevens, retail chairman. The J.
C. Penney company w 11 start the
ball rolling with Miliar Mercan
tile, Woolworth's and Sears Roe
buck taking action wit lin a week.
War pictures will be si town and a
speaker wilt talk to employes of
these stores at special gatherings.
Portland General Electric com
pany became the fifth industrial
firm to go over the t?p by sub
scribing for $11,665 in bonds.
Chairman Dent Reed reported to-
A 1 i i a , i . . am
uu inausiriai purcnases oi i,
941 of which $84,641 was in E
bonds.
Reports to Office Manager
Lawrence Fisher boosted E bond
totals for Marion county to over
$465,000, while individuals have
purchased $177,000 additional
bonds.; Working against a county
quota : of $4,320,000, the county
committee still was not in sight
of the first million.
JANE BALL TO MARRY
HOLLYWOOD, May 22 -C -Movie
actress Jane Ball announced
today she will soon marry Monty
Proser, owner of the Copacabana,
New York City nightclub where
she formerly danced. .
Ccmrt Uphpls
Dismissal of
Tmck Case
The! state supreme court Tues
day affirmed an order of Circuit
Judgel George R.. Duncan, Marion
county, who dismissed a suit
brought by six motor companies in
whichj they sought to prevent the
public! utilities commissioner from
permitting the; Oregon-Nevada
Fast Freight, inc., to operate on the
Pacifil highway.
Plaintiff companies In the suit
included the Pierce Auto Freight
inc.; Consolidated Freight
inc; Bend-Portland Truck
Service, inc.; Southern Pacific
company; Pacific Motor Trucking
company, and Independent Truck
Line. The decision was written by
Justicf George Rossman.
Other opinions:
D. M. and ArmeUa Hackett vs.
C. F. and Clara V. Jones, reden-
dants, 'and Vera Ramsey, appellant
Appeal from Marion county. Suit
for foreclosure. Opinion by Chief
Justic Harry Belt Judge George
R. Ducan, reversed. Justice Per
cy R. Kelly dissented in part 1
State land board vs. estate of
John Gralewski and others, defen
dants, and Ida E. Welch and others,
appellants. Appeal from Multno
mah cpunty. Suit to recover funds
from estate of insane person. Opin
ion by: justice Halls. Lusk. Judge
Walter L. Tooze, affirmed.
General Spaatz
Urges Reaching of
Goal in War Bonds
! WASHINGTON. May 21.
A waf bond statement from Gen
eral qarl Spaatz,
e o mj m a n ding
general of the
US strategic air
forces! in Europe:
"We iave come
a long way to-
...... .J i
t a r y objectives, I 1
because millions I J
of men and SFAATZ
women and children pitched in to
fight Iproduce and ( pay for the
war. The 7th war loan goal is also
attainable through the individu
al waf bond buying of millions of
Americans.
1
BEAUTY SHOP MEETING
i PORTLAND, MaV 22 - (ff) - A
two-diy session of the Oregon
Association of Beauty Shop Own
ers and Operators Will open here
Sunday President parwin Jones
said tMay. State officers will be
elected. --"t
The Literary
By IT. O. Refers
"ELIZABETH IS MISSING," by Lil
lian d U Terr (Knopf: S3.S0).
Disinterred from the middle of
the 18th century, the story of the
disappearance of Elizabeth Can
ning, which has intrigued many
writers from Voltaire to Arthur
Machen, is set down again with
the facts "now first rightly hv
terpreted" and "the truth at last
made manifest" j
; The fateful heroine was by all
As to the second we . accounts a virturous girl who
aided her widowed mother to
eke out their existance by taking
work as a servant She was not
particularly good looking, xand
was subject to fits, but she was
diligent '
The night of Jan. 1, 1753, re
turning from her, aunt's to her
place of employment she van
ished. At the end of the month,
in rags, one ear bleeding copious-.
ly, her body withered and her
akin discolored, she reappeared;
at her mother's home. . -
Two ruffians seized her, she
. charged, and whisked her some.
, 10 miles out of London to a baw-'
dy house run by Mother Wells.
, This wicked woman tried to shift
fier from servant girl into a more
ancient profession but she spurn
ed the offer, so she said, and fled.
- The neighborhood, which like
; all of London prized virginity all
Guidepost
the rhore for constantly threaten
ing; it. took ud herf- cause enthu
siastically. Henry Fielding, novel-ist-magistrate,
believed Elizabeth
and Wrote a pamphlet in her be
half.! Mother Wells was con
demned to branding on the
thumb, and an aged, hideous
gypsf, to hanging.
Bui the Lord Mayor, who pre
sided! t the Old Bailey trial, had
his doubts. At his instigation, an
alibi J was established and the
gypsy freed. Elizabeth was con
victed of perjury and deported to
Amejica. She settled in Wethers
fieldj Comv was knarried to a
relative of Gov. Treat and passed
away) at an honorable age . . .
making no death-bed confession.
The facts are common knowl
edge. Miss de la Torre's solution
is her own, and ypu must read
the book to learn it However, it
makes sense, and d jiposes adroit
ly of some other conjectures.
It's' a naughty storr of the rfav
whenj men were men and women
were piaytiungs. Though the au
thor Isn't the only tractive wo
man Jin recent times who, mar
ried to a professor, has dug into
England's past to J bring up a,
rowdy story, this o he at least is
adult and worthy of your atten
tion. ' . -.. .
; and
I local
I dead
yuauuuet u ii a&juu&mu wuunj us oui m cnaracier - t , i t i
as President Truman has so fa Revealed his methi See? It's simple enee yea get the hang ef It Just relax the muscles
around the month, exhale and the result is a smile r
SAN rRANCISCO-0P)-Melvln
O. Hogcson, Long Beach, Calit,
a maritime service cook, cut open
chicken today and found a gold
t nugget in its gizzard. : For SO
years an unsuccessful prospector,
- Hogenson valued the nugget at
::$2.50v ; r; U
Tye panned for fold in many
a Montana stream,' Hogenson
admitted; "but I never thought
,Td find it aboard a ship." ! . .
Time
at ;;::
Shvens
For Him
L Tie Clasps
2. Key Chains
X. Watch Chains
C Money Clips
i. Boxtoa
BlUfolds
C Birthstone
Kings
7. Watches .
Diamond Kings
J The -
Best Buy
' ' , . a ; . i
War ' i
Bond ! "
329 Court
For Her
L BraeeleU
S. Lockets, v
.Crosses
2, Compacts
4. Dresser Seta
5. Earrinrs, Pins
. Birthstone ,
Kings
7. Watches
Diamond Kings