MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1942.
PAGE EIGHT
.rasa acchh
Chapter 18
Two New Alliea
JOYCE MURDOCK beard the
story through, allowing Delia
to tell it in her own way without
interruption. Upon opening the
door and teeing the wnite. tor
tured look on the girl'i face ahe
had known something was
wrong: now. she sat down and
' put an arm about Delia'i shoul
der. "Of all the rotten luck." she said.
"But I think you were marvelous
for not telling him you had the
envelope."
"Oh. I couldn't, Joyce. Not
then. I was so afraid and what
can we do?"
"Well think of something."
Tve got to give him the en
velope. It isn't me. but if the
police should find out Ward
actually was there"
"Delia." Joyce said, Interrupt
ing. "Don't you think maybe we
should tell Kent and see what he
aayi?"
Delia considered this, brushing
her hair back from her forehead.
"No." she said. "I'd still rather
not."
"Kent would never let you
down."
Even as she spoke Joyce real
ized that Delia's mind was made
up and that to argue now would
do no good. She sighed and
leaned back.
-All right, dear." she said, and
then an idea crept Into the cloudy
recesses of her mind. "If vou'd
rather not tell Kent, all right.
But we need help, and I think I
know someone."
"Who?"
"His name Is Fenner, He's a
private detective."
"Oh. no." Delia's eyes got round
and startled. "Not a detective."
"Yes a detective," Joyce said.
"He's worked with Kent before.
I know him well enough to go to
him and I know he can be trusted
implicitly. We needn't tell him
everything, and you needn't
worry about bis going to the
police."
She got up. Tm going to phone
him. You needn't actually agree
until you've seen him and talked
with him."
Fresh Ideaa
SHE picked up the telephone, re
membered she did not know
the number and replaced it. She
reached for the directory, found
what she wanted: then as she
was about to make the call, she
thought of something else and sat
quite still, a narrowness coming
bout her eyes.
"What is It?" Delia asked.
"What's the matter?"
"I Just thought of something."
Joyce went to the desk, found the
envelope and opened It. "We
should have a copy of these
things." she said.
"But why?"
"1 don't know. But we should.
How do we know what's going to
happen later or how important
the envelope may become? Why
not have these things photo
graphed? Then, if we lose them
well, who knows? Kent would
do it why shouldn t we?"
Delia ieaned forward. Inter
ested now. but skeptical.
"Can you do it?"
"No, but I'll get someone who
can. Someone from the paper."
"From the paper?" Delia said.
"But that will be just one more
person to know "
"It will be no such thing," Joyce
aid. "And will vou please stop
worrying? I realize the risk as
well at you do."
"Yes. but"
The one I have In mind won't
be able to read French. Im sure
nor Spanish either. He'll have no
idea what those papers say, and
even if he did you'd never have
to worry. Really. Delia, there are
some people you can trust."
She was telephoning before
Delia could add anything more.
Light, Speedy Engine
Perfected to Drive
Submarine Chasers
Washington, July 8. W)
After 23 years of efforts to per
fect light, high speed power
plant to drive submarine chas
ers, the navy proudly announced
today that new light weight
Diesel engine and variable pitch
marine propeller were at last In
full production.
Mass production of the sub
etsaser power plant was hailed
at the navy department as a tre
mendous forward step In the
campaign against predatory U
boats along the east coast.
The navy said that the engine
"la believed to be the lightest
ocean duty Diesel engine in the
world, occupying "about one-
third the space of the most suc
cessful previous Diesel engines
of the same horsepower.
"Because of the use of the
reversible propeller, there is no
necessity for reversing the en
gine or providing reversal
gears."
NYA WILL CLOSE
at tp nprinpft
.MA r rr r.YKalf Pound ol Susar
Washington, July 8 (V In
severe retrenchment to bring
Its activities into line with re
duced appropriations, the Na
tional Youth Administration an
nounced today it would close all
Its state offices. Their functions
will be taken over by 11 region
al offices.
Between S.000 and 10.000
employes will be dropped. NYA
Mid.
The regional offices include
.lac Asfeie.
by George
Harmon
Cox
and for the next minute or two
she talked rapidly and earnestly,
explaining what she wanted.
"He can't come for about an
hour," she said when she hung up.
"Somebody is out to dinner and
he has to stay in the office. Then
he'l' come right over. . . . And
that reminds me. We're going to
need dinner ourselves."
'Oh. I couldn't eat thing." ,
ucna saio.
'Nuts, said Joyce inelegantly.
Persuading Eddy
EDDY LACEY was blond, blue
eyed and freckled. He was not
more than twenty-one or two,
and when he had been told what
Joyce wanted him to do he looked
decidedly uncomfortable.
'I don't know " he said. "What's
the boss going to say?"
"Kent?" Joyce said. "He's not
going to find out, is he, Eddy?"
"You'd be surprised the things
he finds out"
"This is between us, though.
"Yeah, but I work for him."
"And I know how loyal you
are." Joyce said. "But this is
something personal. Kent isn't go
ing to Know anything anout it ana
if he should find out I'll tell him
I forced you to do it, and you
hadn't any choice."
Lacey grinned. "And that's no
lie."
Joyce handed him the two clip
pings and the copies of the mar
riage and divorce certificates.
"Did you bring the right sort of
attachment to we'll be able to
read these after you photograph
tnem?
Lacey said he had. "But that
photostat wont come up too
clear," he added. "The prints will
have to be blown up quite a Pit.
"That's all right When you've
made your exposures you can
develop and enlarge them right
here in Kent's darkroom."
"Oh oh." said Lacey.
"Now what?"
"Guys don't like other guys
fooling around with their dark
rooms." Trouble sobered him un
til, catching sight of the look on
Joyce's face, he shrugged and
grinned. "Okay. I might za well
give it the works."
For the next half hour Joyce
and Delia stood by while Eddy
Lacey unpacked his plate-case,
set up his camera and lights and
thumb-tacked the first clipping
to a bread-board Joyce had pur
loined from the kitchen. Except
for an occasional muttering
sound, Lacey worked silently,
and as soon as he had finished
with his camera, he took his
late to the darkroom down the
all
Joyce telephoned Jack Fenner
while Lacey was in the dark
room and after a brief and guard
ed explanation secured his con
sent to listen to the rest of her
story.
"Me 11 oe Dusy uniu nine
thirty," Joyce told Delia, "and I
said we could meet him at the
Copley."
"If only we didn't have to tell
him." Delia said. "If only"
"I know. But it's not goinf( to
be as bad as you think, darling.
And you'll like Jack. He's amus
ing in a hard-boiled sort of way,
and quite honest"
Soon Eddy had four, eleven by
fourteen, glossy white prints go
inc through the washer and when
Joyce saw them she knew they
would do.
"I used the biggest paper I
could find," Lacey said. 'I don't
know if they're good enough."
Oh, they are, tudy. And you re
1 darling.
"I gould easily be a chump, too,"
said Lacey.
Joyce brought out an oversized
blotting book from a cabinet and
put it on the table.
They ought to be ferrotyped,"
Lacey said.
"I know," Joyce said. "But this
will do. It will get them out of
the way and" she saw that the
negatives were dry "I'll take
care of the negatives."
To ba continued
FREED BY WPB
Washington. July 8 W)
The war production board re
vised restrictions on Inventories
today, freeing- hundreds of thou
sands of tons of copper, alum
inum, rubber, silk and other
critical war materials now idle
because of W'l'B regulations.
Officials said the new order
would release about 250.000
tons of copper and copper-base
alloys alone for free movement
into industrial channels, and
provide immediate relief for
hard pressed farms which have
much of their capital tied up In
froren Inventories.
WPB said it was Impossible
to estimate the total idle stocks
affected, but placed their value
at hundreds of millions" of dol
lars. Most Important change was
elimination of the necessity for
obtaining formal WPB permis
sion for transfers of Idle critical
materials. Companies now may
make sales without obtaining
approval from Washington.
For Boarding Places
Portland. July 8. Res
taurants, cafeterias and farmers
who board hired hands will be
allowed half a pound of sugar
a week for each rerson or one
pound of sugar for every 00
meals they expect to serve
Tins ruling was announced to
day for Institutions by the state
ratloner.
Closing- time tor Cla:f!ed Ads 9
a m Too late to Clasuly 13 Ju
p. nv
On the Radio Chains
STATIONS:
Chain affiliation and when
they are on the dial!
K ALL (MH) 1330, Portland.
Htx (SHOBlue) lltrO. Portland.
kO (NHl'-Hiue A MUSI 1310
Spokane; MiO (NBC-cMue) 81(1
Sin r'ranclaroi KiiW MiC-Kedl
tu. Portland; hlH (NHC-Blufl
1000. ftraltle; (NX (CBS) 10)0
Los Anflrs: KOA (SHC-Hedl 0
Denver: kOIN (CB (10, Port
land: HOMO ( NBC-Rrd t 50
Snllle; KPO (NBC-Bed) tm
ana Franclaro; KSL. (CBS) 1160.
Silt Laka Cur.
I line Known Is PSt "
Wednesday
B :00 p. m. H. V. Kaltenborn. KPO.
KOW, KOMO; Kelson Eddy, KNX,
KSL, KOIN; Flying Patrol, KEX,
KOO, KJR; Stars of Today, KOW;
Walte Rhythm. KPO.
6 30 p. m. Or. Christian, KSL: It
Happened In the Service. KOMO,
KOW; News. KOO; Harry W. Flan
nery. KNX. KOIN: Polk Musle from
Many Lands, KJR; Passing parade.
KPO.
S.-00 p. m. Shirley Tempi in Jun
ior Miss. KNX. KOIN; Those We
Love, KPO, KOW, KOMO: Basin
Street Chamber Music. KOO, KEX;
Serenade, KJR: Sports. KSL.
6:30 p. m. Goldman Band Con
cert, KOO. KJR; Mr. District Attor
ney, KPO, KOMO. KOW: News. KEX.
7:00 p. m. Ramona and Trio.
KOO, KJR. KEX: ABC Round table.
KOO. KEX: Orest Momenta In Musle.
KOIN, KSL. KNX: Kay Kveer's Musi
cal Quia, KPO, KOW, KOMO; Time
to Relax. KJR.
7:30 p. m- Lightning Jim. KOO.
KJR. KEX: Suspense, KNX, KOIN;
Army Recruiting. KSL.
8:00 p. m. uls Kids. KOO. KEX.
KJR: Amos "n" Andy, KVX. KOIN.
KSL; Point Sublime, KPO. KOW,
KOMO.
8:16 p. m. Olenn Miller's Orch..
KNX. KSL. KOIN.
8:30 p. m. Dr. Christian, KNX.
KOIN; Uncle Walter's Dog House.
KPO. KOW. KOMO: Manhattan at
Midnight, KOO, KJR, KEX; News.
KSL.
0:00 p. m. News. Here and Abroad
KOO: Organist, KNX: Down Mem
ory Lane, KEX: Most Honored Music.
KOW: Studio Party. KJR: Leon P
Drews. KOIN: Highlight Hour.
KOMO: Light and Mellow. KPO:
Sports KSL.
0:30 p. m. Teddy Powell's Orch.
KOMO. KOW: Over the Top. KOO:
News, KJR. KSL: Northwest Neigh
bors. KOIN: News. KNX; William
Winter. KNX; Oil the Record
KOMO.
10:00 p. m. Reporter News. KPO,
KOW, KOMO; Del Courtney's Orch..
KOO. KEX: News. KNX. KOIN"
Chamber Musle Society, KJR; Mas-
terworks of Music, KSL.
10:30 p. m. Freddv Martin's Oreh..
KOO. KJR: Sports, KNX. KSL: Har
ry Owens' Orch.. KPO. KOMO:
Brosdwsy Bandwagon. KEX: Moon
light Sonata. KOW; War Time Wom
en. KOIN.
11:00 p. m. Organ, KPO: Lud
Oluskina Orch, KOIN. KSL; This
Moving World, KEX: News. KOO.
KNX: mlk Music. KJR: Dance Orch..
KOW; News, KNX; Evening Rever
ies. KOMO,
DIFFICULT DECISIONS
VclCf "FROM TttWrtSfAiRS INFORM VC0 "nW HE ISN'f
60IN6 10 SPEAK AOfVN fcW SdPPER WilL BE READY1 IN
ESftCfLV OWF MlNUIt AND HE VJW$ VOU VOviH ON "flME
WrftJ VOUR HAN&S CLEAN VOOR ROOM PlCktD LP
- nniMitii,i ViHU&rrS
I Hi (.ipiiiii.h.i.jivii
ACROSS S3. Faatso aecurely
L Plspan Si. K.aro of tha
4. Pwarf or "a
tuniM treai 8S. Alolt
anj aliruba , th, ,g,
9. Wondering (ear 17. Y.-mi-f horae
II. Ancer 3. Long at. pa
II Ka;anee 40. Kn,l mart In a
H. Month mlntlral
It, Canftcltfta show
Island 41. Burden
IT. Kp.vh 41. Parti of a
I AitK-:a harne.a
IS lUl.tona 41. OM muili-st
2iV l..oka atlt1!!y Instrument
:2 M.iva ti.i.unly 4S. Olfactory orsaa
. unui oi wia 1 i'a
ra.i
iwacook 44.
S VarkI ot aatUa 44
1- HoMal a 6)
IS. Attendant ea M
KufVw trae
H. int
Ersraa tree
t'nknlt
rvwrv
Orpulant
KI-1 r.f aaaat
Individual
.:ialra
So filx-r
II Kt.-:amaUoa
IS. Nothing
I U 13 Y S V I4 I W '
1 i 7
1
- Tj 5
" 3 ;
X --
33" j3T " 5 37"
ii "3
3 t
Thursday
6:00 p. tn- Jim Baekua Show,
KSL: Maurice's Orch. KPO. KOW;
Plying Patrol. KEX, KOO, KJR: Stars
of Today, KOW; Afternoon Dances.
KNX; Eyes, of the World, KOIN;
Dance Orch, KOMO.
6:80 p. m National Committee en
Housing Emergency. KOW; Death
Vslley Days, KSL: Clete Roberta Re
ports. KOO, KEX; Harry W. Plan
ner. KNX, KOIN: Polk Musle from
Many Lands. KJR; Afternoon Dan
ce. KNX: Streamlined Palry Tales.
KOMO; The Parade. KPO.
6:00 p. m Ma)or Bowea original
imit.,ir Hmir KNX KSL KOIN:
Music Hall. KPO. KOMO. KOW: Let
ters to a Lieutenant. KEX, KJR;
Voice of Victory. KOO.
6:30 p. m.- Plfteen Minutes rrom
Broadway. KOO: News, KEX; Arm
chair Cruises, KJR.
7:00 p. m. HoWm Doln?. KPO".
KOMO. KOW: Rudy Vallee Show.
KEX. KOO, KJR; First Line, KNX.
KOIN. KSL.
7-an n m Talks. KSL. Red Ryder.
KOO. KJR: KEX: March of Time.
KPO. KOW. KOMO; Time out xor
Melody. K NX: Leon F. Drews. KOIH
a nn n m. Amos n' Andy. KNX.
KSL. KOIN: Fred Waring. KPO.
KOMO. KOW: Morgan Beatty. aoo.
KJR: Flowers for the Living. KEX.
a .in t mT.iim and Abner. KOO.
KJR. KEX: Olenn Miller's Orch..
KNX. KOIN. KSL; Moylan sisters
wrtur
8:80 p. m. Death Vslley Days.
KNX. KOIN; Post Toastlea Time,
KPO. KOW. KOMO: This Nation at
War. KOO. KJR. KEX.
9 00 p. m. United W Sing. KNX:
Down Memory Lane. KEX: Old Tim
ers. KJR; Compenv at Ease, KOIN;
Maudle's Diary. KSL.
9:30 p. m Freddy Martin's Orch..
KOO. KOW; Maudle's Diary. KNX.
KOIN: News, KJR. KSL. KEX.
10:00 p. m. America's Town Meet
ing of the Air. KOO, KJR: Reporter
News. KPO. KOMO. KOW: News.
KNX: On With the Dance. KEX: Five
Star Final. KOIN; Masterworks of
Music. KSL.
10:30 p. m. Lea Brown's Orch..
KNX. KSL; Csrl Kalash's Orch..
KOMO: Broadway Bandwagon, KEX;
MoorHUht Sonata, KOW: Sports.
KNX: War Time women. KOIN: Har
vesting for Victory. KPO.
11:00 p. m. Swing Tour Partner.
KPO. KOW: This Moving World.
KEX. KJR: News. KOO. KNX; Even
ing Reveries. KOMO; Dance Orch..
KOIN.
PERT GIRLS FINISH
GAS STATION CLASS
Portland. July B WP) To
morrow will be graduation day
for 17 pert young girls who are
about to become service station
attendants.
Their nine-day schooling In
company policies, accounting
and gas pumping will be follow
ed by 22 days of supervised
station work, and then they will
fill full-time station attendant
jobs.
Closing time for Classified Ads 9
a. m. Too late to Classify 12:30
p. m.
TJt CLUYA3 WILLIAMS
Solution Of Yesterday's Puaxls
DOWN
L Hindu daily
4. Tram of wCd
antmala
I. Pnumtrata
5. r.and aaundar
?. Al'PiK-atlon
a K'.i-.d ot oranrt
S. m!a warrtoi
10. Carry on
11. Optical orsana
!jrra
-1 Wclara
L)ut,-rt South
Afrt.-an laa-
suaca
24. RtitA- sultr
maat
S. Par
la vary fond a)
27. Sarvlrs or
cookl-.s
imp'amant
21. Sto-a In cor
tain san-aa
;0. Pi-ir-ira Into
water
31 Tim -trapSle
r-atrie
24. CM-actar OS
T-.a Lsat
Tara of
Tot pa It"
II Stem of the
hop
IT. r.xt-al body
19. aMa,-uUr.a
n ira
to. Kln.l of roc
S Ru-1. hat
t Copr
a. Daaira:
slang
IX Tr-J-.n
14. tamo's
ra
41 O a) anoar
fe .1
4T P.-k?r aaa
- r.-'l Me- ,M
it Ar---'n ua-
. SxAata
a rTa H dJoIsTe SJaWjJa
E, S 0 ?MR OjCRaS c
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tTBf &ioBa pTJ3aSi
ul 1 HiA wbIp'b cjAfeJJ
BtW RlOiXjflAjTIO 'mjSi
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stej e o.PTji ijo-Js
o,g.c;HTp:eaETsTl
SHIP'S ENGINEER
German Makes 3 Attempts
to Shake Hands With
Men From Ship Just Sunk
A Caribbean Port, July 8.
W) The chief engineer of a
medium-sized Norwegian cargo
ship torpedoed in the Caribbean
the afternoon of June 15 told
here of thrice spurning the ef
fort of a submarine commander
to shake hands with him.
(The incident followed the
sinking of his ship, which was
announced today by the navy
at Washington. The navy also
released a story of the shelling
of a small British tanker In the
Caribbean the night of June 17.
Twenty of the 21 men aboard
the tanker were rescued al
though two submarines poured
some eo shells Into their ship,
survivors said.)
13 Rescued
The chief engineer was one of
13 members of the 23-man crew
announced by naval authorities
as rescued from two life rafts
The 12 others are believed to
have gone down with the ship,
which sank in 30 seconds after
having been aln.ost broken in
half by a torpedo explosion
There was no previous warn
ing of a submarine's presence,
related the engineer, and the
ship sank so rapidly that those
of the crew who could simply
Jumped overboard. Thirteen
finally were assembled on the
two rafts.
The chief told this storyi
About five minutes after the
ship went down,- approximate'y
1 p. m., a submarine surfaced
about 300 yards away and its
commander, who spoke broken
English, asked for the captain of
the ship.
Skipper Young
Told that the officers were
killed, he asked the chief engi
neer aboard the submarine.
There the sub commander, a
dark complexioned, sunburned,
unshaven, and stockily built
man of about 23, wearing shorts
no shirt and a blue 'cap with
yellow insignia, talked to the
survivor on the after deck.
"I think this is a surprise for
you," said the submarine com
mander. "Anything can happen In
war," was the reply.
"I am sorry this had to hap
pen to you," continued the sub
marine officer. "I'll give you
two loaves of bread."
Here followed the presenta
tion of two loaves of dark
brown, hard bread, three meat
cans full of water and the sub
marine commander's attempt to
wish his victims a "happy voy
age." He extended his hand but the
chief did not take it,, merely
saying, "I thank you for your
bread and water."
Photo Plan Seen
The commander appeared to
become quite angry and walked
toward the conning tower but
came back again and asked the
chief to shake hands, with the
same result. A third try like
wise was rebuffed. (The chief
believes It probably was the
commander s purpose, for propa
ganda reasons, to have a hand
HAP HOPPER, Washington Correspondent Big Order
WMV VOU DiDN'T
WAir SDR BREAK
FT, HHP! BOVS
SHOULDN'T WALK.
INS ATCUND ON
IMPTV sraaiaoat
LIX ABNER The Beys In
v-vou KNOCKS.O our
MtBl & THE FIVE.
a- VOU WILL. 5
JB. WITX MC. Itb
HAKL VOU TXSL
WORLD'S C MAMMON I
THE NEBBS Who's StubbornT
itv ctaMEKS
AN THANK a
Ji TUr OOCrXCKXtK ) TMJirat ONVfTIN TKt f IW dOT VOU JOS- tN.. Vs. m jf (--
Y UKON C0RCHV, J LUXUV VHlO-auftH VKTOHA' I IB PlAINTINa TWf . r7 "TMt r SV L r.aaamaaaav I
KA BtNNV went! mroTIOORSMIPr ITS S I V-OUtTN VieiORIAtr ; 1 WHOlC II I f&j J "gjy.tT I
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WORL6 t " V
S s , .1 a al v 1 I
shaking photographed by one of
three other men oa the conning
tower.)
The chief asked the com
mander how far away they
were from the coast and the
commander replied, "go west to
the coast" The submarine then
went away In an easterly direc
tion. The men on the two rafts
were rescued by a naval vessel
the following afternoon.
French Grow Skinny
Or Limited Rations
Bern, Switzerland, July 8.
(IP) France has become a na
tion of thin men.
A Lyon dispatch today said
doctors estimated the French
people since the armistice of
June, 1940, had lost at least
440,000,000 pounds, or an aver
age of 11 pounds per person.
This Is due. they said, to lack
of meat, cheese, eggs and fats.
Before the war began the aver
age Frenchman ate 66 pounds of
bread or flour products monthly
as against half of that amount
now.
The meat, sugar and cheese
intake now Is 25 per cent of the
pre-war regime; butter and oil is
30 per cent and coffee 12 per
cent.
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS
.. ATV
U'WaNKIa-
PpV .IfXEDLl vTVPVJ AND
INDIANA MINISTER.,
ADP ile-sT rTi Wr.fa
V
VET M2.e CONTlNUAtLV
BEING MISTAKEN ,P0fc.
ONE ANOTHER-
fteCE AttC P02EHS OF
AMAZlVJG PAEAUe-Els IN
THEIB. LIVES AMD THE
HOBBY OF EACH IS
llAPERSONATlNC, THE
OTMBft.
-Tomorrow'
' W . . .
LOOK-ALIKES
Members of their central Indiana church association are constantly addressing Rev. Mr.
Yodar as "Rev. Mr. Steen," and vice versa and no wonder! Both are blue-eyed blonds of
tha same height and racial descent, and both wear glasses. They have held the same offices
In their church association. Both have seventeen letters In their full names. Both are married,
and each has three children and a dog. Both have played E flat alto horn In bands. Both have
studied voice, and today are accomplished singersl
f r Man tci pi- h - 1 rro.Tjc .n t"-- CT var----tcvB-MEBASaaivaaHmaflmtavBm
the Back Room
SrNCt VOU RC.
SO TO
CE.T THAT Pia
I WONT HOLQ IT
rofl Tt auction.
ir VOu U. STEP
into mv orriCE.
I1.L LL IT TO
VOU FOR
FIVE. COLLARS t
xotfe MAPes.1l 1 1 t6 cojbt tsld tv-e fSBirxxiaB .s T ia,o not. Ajejcr to u, rAve-t' " I
V NtA WAS I I Vx-"2Tr.PJS ?S-l F ENCLOWT -K5 TUtMOST NCXJOal SO SrvOOOStn
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Pre-war Steel
Just right for averycUy uaa is the home or for camp-fire cooking at
vacation time is thia handy, pre-war steal skillet currently offered as
a premium by a wall-known Pacific Coast cereal company. It a called a
"pre-war" ekillet because a limited supply was purchased la 1941,
many months before our entry into the war automatically eliminaiatl
any further manufacture of metal goods. Tha supply oaaaot be nplaceai.
LsJ-
.4
IN TUS 192-8 CjEMip NATiOMAU
STEEPLECHASE, fcNGlAND OKJLV
ONB HOB.SE TiPPEBARY TiAA
FIKVSHED WITHOUT A TALU.-THE
WINNER. H5 WAS A iOO TO i SWOT
ONLV 1 OTHER RiDEE. WfVS
ABtE TO REMOUNT AND FlKjlSri.
It... Ct
Edited by
s soon V tm- '"tir rtw
1 mu. OUT raOWLNTS IS
THIS BfCBPt I OONNA ill. TM
VOU CAN 1 HAJ3P1E& MOI-tCNTS
5TED INTO ) OT TaALOMEV
i Hl Nt-T LIFE. AN 9
KOOri AND 4M1RN r.'
TAKE. YOUP.
PrS
tMTS 1
Skillet Offered
byJOHNHIX
.Tub oldest ,
feam& wousb in tub
UNBUILT IM IbSO WAS
ptAsfefcEi) wiu, UAia.
AND SEASUEUeS...
TW&j;en,Aa PAVED
WITH TOMBSTONES.'
Umgham,Mass.
OP 41 BARTERS
IM1 sry rutletl tVaUar ftmcBfaU. trus.
Drew Pearson and Bob Allen
By Al Capp
run. son rr
By Heat
7
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