PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21,1943
SHJSARJ OF
THE WAVES
by ALLEN EPPES
Matt. 1 DaiWa miv Sraeluta. tea.
luu Esterbrook. New Tork
glamour girl, wan tine to do some
tblni worthwhile (or the war ef
fort, decides to Join the Waves.
She is being courted by Pierre
Dupre, a Fighting Frenchman,
and by Dick Craig, a young man
who has a Washington war Job.
However, she has fallen in love
with Harvey Rogers, Army Oyer,
gold has promised to wait for him
until the end of the war. After
he goes away, she goes to a Wave
training center In New England.
On the way there she meets and
makes friends with another
Wave, Louise Larsen. Mean
while, Pierre has been threatened
by two men who he Is sure are
Nazis Carl Cooper and bis
friend Hermann. They hint that,
unless Pierre gets Susan to show
him through her father's war
plant, harm may come to his
relatives In France. One evening,
a Frenchwoman, Madame Le
eouvreur, whom he has met
through Carl, Invites him to her
apartment. He goes, feeling that
he should warn her against CarL
However, soon after be gets there,
Carl and Hermann arrive. He
senses that he has been trapped.
CHAPTER XIX
few minutes, Madame
"Very well," said Hermann.
"But If you do so, you will novel
see the French village again."
"You mean you will "
"Exactly." said CarL "Now. let
us try to work calmly and with
complete understanding."
"Just what is it you wish me ta
do?" Pierre inquired.
"You are to get Into the Ester
brook factory," said Hermann.
"You are to learn as much as you
can of what plane attachments are
being manufactured there get
clear mental picture of the lay
out." i
"Then what?"
"You are to deliver such In
formation to Madame Lecouvreur,"
said CarL "You will receive further
orders afterwards."
PIERRE walked across the room,
and picked up his hat.
"Thank you very much, Ma
dame," he said, with all the bit
terness he could muster, "for the
pleasant evening spent In discuss
ing the old country- I Judge, how
ever, that your old country Is not
France, but Germany."
No one made any attempt to stop
him as he opened the door.
But Carl said. "Remember we
shall know at all times where you
Fr A few minutes. Madame w,3af S";,,
r , .,. .. Pierre md not answer. He closed
uo.uu.ivu. " u..o the aoor Denma rum, ana went
Carl and Hermann Into the down the stairs,
apartment. He spent a miserable week after
"Ah!" said CarL "I am glad 'S? e,7'"w&2
. r. a. . the streets that he was being
to see you, Pierre, my mend, shadowed. Several times he was
you remember Hermann, of tempted to go to Mr. Esterbrook for
course " advice, or even to the police. But
"Of ennnn gold Pierre. he '"P hesitating. Unless he could
UI course, fiaerre. be assured that Hermann, Carl and
The men tossed their hate and Madame Lecouvreur were all taken
eoats on a chair, and helped them- t the notnlng would be
selves to Madame's cigarettes. As Kamea.
Pierre watched them, he got the Perhans If he waited, bided his
Idea that they had been In the place .jjd "Jedta oedotag
many tones before and were com- aU that lhey demanded of him. he
V ZJ. fii. mn- could in the end bring about their
.. the. '""fLSL . capture, and not lose his own life
brook?" Carl Inquired when they or endanger tne Uves of his loved
weJ? S . XT w . ones back in France.
"M" Esterbrook is no longer to at the end of the
.."SES; JS? ?! "fter Carl had telephoned to ask
other matters." Pierre smiled at u h(J had ,ettrned yet when Susan
Madame, but rece ved no smilej? was coming home on a furlough.
return. "Of the old country, per- to her
haDS."
"She has gone to Florida, per
haps?" Madame asked.
"No," Pierre replied, "Miss Ester-
brook is now wave.
HIS letter reached her on a day
that she and Louise Larsen
were given "town liberty" In order
to go into the village to do some
. "And did you visit the factory 58h"Q- W"B
hm, h.fnr. k.r if.n.rtnt.j" necessary snoppuig.
with her before her departure?'
Carl asked.
"I did not"
Why?'
"Is it from a man?" asked Louise,
as they left the post office.
"Yes from Pierre." replied on-
. . gan. who had told Louise all about
1 am not wish TO Duwrcr mm h fh miltnr
feterbrook. She had man, thing. bhT0 i letter and read
nrikld Madame Lecouv- JtA. jjh. : urned 't to Its enve
iTXutZ? '.tthhswer,
FchTorWn 5 T '
she return for a furlough?" TL . . , . .
"I do not know." said Pierre. "Worrying about things at home.
-Then find out," Carl snapped. I suppose. Louise suggested.
"Why should I?" "Probably. He wants to know
"Because we demand It of yon." how soon I can get a furlough. He
said Hermann. "If you do not do seems very much Interested In
as you are told from now on. It will Dad's factory wants me to take
not go wen with you." him through it when I come home."
"Why should he be so Interested
ntEBRE looked about .at the m a factory?"
T three faces, and found them aD susan frowned. "I dont know.
rcnfriendly. It puzzles me. Perhaps it's because
"I can." be said, "ask for pro- Dad's turning out plane gadgets
teetlon If It becomes necessary." that are helping win France back
-I should advise you to do no her freedom."
each thing," said Carl, "If you wish -shhhhl" said Louise,
all to remain well with those tela- t. th mtt-?-
Uves back in the Tillage in the 8 Ule "alter?
sooth of France." There may be enemy agents
Pierre tried to hold onto his around," Louise said, with mock
calm. -Are yon trying to tell me solemnity.
that, If I do not obey your orders, "Silly!" Susan laughed, "dome
Jurat will come to those I've left on. let's be on our way."
behind?"
Carl nodded. "Yon have ft ta a (To be continued; "
Tjutsheu. as they say In America." (The characters in this serial an
"Then I shall report all three of fictitious
you at once." said Pierre.' cow. iu. n oramerci pubiuhtns om
On the Radio Chains
IttlONII
Chain aft. Jatloa and when laej
are on toe dlali
KALI (MBS) list, Portland;
KKX (NPS Blue 1180, Portland:
kUS (NBC-Blue MBS) 1510.
Spokanei IQO (NtHMUiM) SIS.
San rrsnrueot BOW (MiC-Kod)
StO, rertlsndi SJB (NBC-Blue)
1000, seattlei HNS. (CBS) 1070.
Loe Angstest ft OA (NBC-Red) ISO
Denver; KOIN (CBS) S70. Port
land; S.OMO (NBC-Red) SSO
SealUei KPO (NBC-Red) SSO
Sao FreniKwil KSL (CBS) USS.
Salt Law City.
tune Shown Is PVf T
Thundsy
6:00 p. m. Maxwell House Cone
Time. KOA; Terry and the Pirates,
KOO, KJR, KEX: News, KPO, KOMO;
Personality Hour. KQWj Beryl Wal
lace, KNX; stop. Look and Lift ten
squi; uusicaie, &au
6:30 p. m. Death Valley De.fi.
KSL: Aldrleh Family, KOA; Jack Arm
strong, KOO. KEX, KJR; Harry W
Fiannery, news, knx, KOIN; Day
Poster, KOW; fitorles of the Day,
KOMO; Musical Journal, KPO.
6:00 p. m. Major Bowes' Amateur
Hour. KNX. KSL KOIN: Kraft Mu
slo Hall, KPO, KOA. KOW. KOMO.
6:30 p. m. Arkansas Traveler, KPO.
KOMO, KOA. KOW; Victory Parade of
Spotlight Bands, KOO. KEX, KJR;
Dinah snore, KNX, ksl, koin.
7:00 p. m. Raymond Oram Swing,
news, KOO. KJR, KEX; Abbott and
Costello, KPO. KOA; The First Line.
KNX, KSL. KOIN.
' 7:30 p m. Red Ryder, KOO, KEX.
KJR: March of Time, KPO, KOA
KOW, KOMO; Wallace Sterling. KNX;
A Victory Coresge, KSL.
8:00 p m. Fred waring In Victory
Tune Time, KPO, KOA, KOW, KOMO;
Roy porter, news. KOO. KEX. KJR:
I Love a Mystery. KNX. KSL, KOIN
8:30 p. m. Death valley Days.
KNX, KOIN: Gertrude Lawrences
Ouest Rouse, KOO, KEX, KJR; Max
well House Coffee Time, KPO, KOW.
KOMO; News. KSL.
9:00 p. m. The Roma Show, KNX;
News, KSL: Wings to Victory, KOO,
KEX: Aldrleh Family KPO, KOW,
KOMO; Air Raid Wardens' Program
KJR; For You, KOIN.
0:80 p. m. These Are Americans,
KNX; Ellery Queen, KPO, KOW,
KOMO; News, KSL, KEX, KJR, KOA;
Mayor of the Townt KOIN.
10:00 p. m. Reporter News, KPO.
KOW, KOMO; America's Town Meet
ing of the Air. KJU, KEX: News, KNX.
KOA, KOIN: Muslo for- Romance.
KOO: Masterworks of Muslo, KSL.
10:30 p. m. Dance Orch., KOIN
KOW, KOMO; Nlte Club, KOO; Songs
Overseas, KNX; Sweetheart Swing
Time, KPO.
11:00 p. m. Organ music, KOW:
This Moving World, KEX. KJR; Dance
Orch., KOIN; . News, KOO, KNX,
KOMO.
N!EL R. ALLEN ON
Grants Pass, Oct. 21 (SplV-1-Niel
R. Allen, Grants Pass at
torney, was appointed a member
of the state governing board of
the state department of geology
and mineral Industries by Gov.
Earl Snell Tuesday, succeedit.g
the late Albert Burch of Med
ford. Burch, a mining engineer of
international reputation, had
served on the governing board
since the department's Inception.
Gov. Snell in making the ap
pointment stated Allen is well
qualified to serve in such a ca
pacity as he believes Allen has
the confidence of not only the
small miners but of the bigger
operators as well.
Other members of the board
are Sam H. Williston, Portland,
and W. H. Strayer, Baker.
'CHEEP, CHEEP'
Bangor, Me. (U.R) Writing to
a local farm journal, Frederick
B a 11 o r y commented, "Baby
chicks that soon will grow up
and lay expensively-bought eggs
have a lot of nerve saying
'Cheep, Cheep!" "
Friday
6:00 p. m. Kate Smith Hour, KSL:
Terry and the Pirates, KOO, KEX.
KJR; Cities Service Concert, KOA;
News, KPO. KOMO; The Personality
Hour, KOW; Beryl Walace, KNJ;
Fireside Harmonies, KOIN.
6:80 p. m. Harry W. Fiannery.
news, KNX, KOIN; Tour All-Time
Hit Parade, KOA; Jack Armstrong,
KOO. KJR, KEX; Day Foster, KOW;
Stories of the Day, KOMO; Right on
the Beat, KPO.
6:00 p. m. Hollywood Showcase,
KNX; Walts Time, KPO, KOA, KOMO,
KOW; News, KOO, KOIN; Hollywood
Theater, KSL.
6:30 p. m. That Brewster Boy,
KNX, KSL, KOIN; Victory Parade ot
Spotlight Bands, KOO, KEX, KJR,
people Are Funny, kpo, koa, sow.
komo. -
7:00 p. m. Garry Moore-Jimmy
Durante, KNX, KSL, KOIN; News
Analyst, KOO, KEX: Amos 'n' Andy
KPO KOA, KOW, KOMO: Plan Flnd-
7:30 p. m. BIU Stern's Sports
Newsreel, KPO, KOA, KOMO KOW:
Stage Door Canteen, KNX, KOIN
KSL: Freedom Speaks. KEX; SpeU
for Dough. KOO: Chris Qllaon. KJR
8:00 p. m. Fred Waring in victory
Tune Time, kfo, koa, komo:
Love a Mystery, KNX. KSL, KOIN:
Roy Porter, news, KOO. KEX, KJR
8:80 p. m. Tour All-Time Hit
Parade, KPO, KOW, KOMO; Play-
nouse, kna, ksl, koin; oang Bust
ers, KOO, KEX, KJR: Enlisted Men's
Muslo Program, KOA.
0:00 p. m. Furlough Pun. KPO.
KOMO, KOW; Meet Your Navy, KJR,
KEX; Kate Smith Hour, KNX, KOIN;
News, koa; Dance orch., kuu;
Sports, KSL.
9:30 p. m. Danch Orch., KOO,
KOW: News, KSL, KEX, KJR, KOA;
Highlight Hour, KOMO; Hollywood
Tneater, KPO.
10:00 p. m. Reporter News, KPO,
KOW, KOMO; News, KNX KOA
KOIN: Dance Time, KJR; Muslo for
Romance, KOO; Masterworks of Mu
sic. KSL.
10:30 p. m. Dance Orch., KNX.
KOIN; H. V. Kaltenborn, news,
KOMO, KPO; Eye witness News, KEX:
Mte Club, KGO; Gardening for Food,
KOW: Gospel Hour, KJR.
11:00 p. m. This Moving World.
KOO, KEX; Dance Orch., KOW;
News, KNX, KOMO, KGO; Folk Mu
slo, KJR.
Nazis Bomb Allied Merchantman
7f
2h
V
t a
BHBT ,M"n
. . m - ....sl ikaalt lanHinsrei Rnlprtln ItnlV. ft Nftll
bomb hit this Allied merchantman, blowing It wide oien. This wss
art of the heavy gnemy barrage thrown at AJlifi it ilsy their suris
olftla . 8lern
Reno, Nev Oct. 21 (U.R)
Nevada hunters have killed 412
buck and 224 doe since the open
ing of the deer season less than
two weeks ago, reports to the
state fish and game commission
showed today.
Skeet shooting was derived
from "clock-shooting" popular
between 1913 and 1920.
L
HELP RED ARMY
Heroic Efforts In Face Of Ar
tillery And Rockets Carry
Russians To Objective.
IN WINTER PEARS
By Ilya Ehrenburg
Soviet War Correspondent
(Written for the United Press)
With the Red Army on the
West Bank of the Dnieper at the
Kiev Front, Oct. 21 (U.R)
Guerillas, including girls carry
ing tommy guns, came out of
the woods like ghosts to help
the Red army break the Ger
mans Dnieper river line.
Before they could get to the
Dnieper Itself, the Red army
men had to fight their way across
other rivers where the Germans
were entrenched on the west
banks ready to fire artillery
and rockets at the Russian
troops. I saw the crossing of the
river Sozh near Gomel where
the girls with the tommy guns
and aged men guided the Red
army troops to the places where
the river could be forded.
Boats Salvaged
An old fisherman named Ko-
valenko quietly led the troops
to a place where seven boats had
been sunk in the shallow water
to hide them from the Germans
Two of the boats were raised
and used as ferries.
The Red army men also tore
gates off of hinges to make them
into rafts and tied empty barrels
together on which to float them
selves across the stream.
"The Sozh river is about ISO
yards wide there," a soldier told
me, "but under fire it seems to
be 500 yards."
Twenty-eight men made the
first crossing of the Sozh and
were charged with the duty of
holding the bridge-head. They
held it for three days. By the
time, reinforcements arrived
there were only seven survivors.
When the Russians were get
ting ready to try to force the
Dnieper north of Kiev, a lieuten
ant bawled through a mega
phone:: "Smolensk has been
captured." The sappers plunged
in to try to throw bridges across
the river. A bridge would go up
and then German artillery
would knock it down. But the
bridge always went up again.
Men were standing up to their
necks in Ice cold water driving
in poles to support the bridge.
There was no night time there,
for after dark the Germans fired
rockets that lighted up the scene.
Bridge Completed
But at last the bridge was up
and heavy artillery and tanks
began to cross. The Germans
fell into confusion when they
saw Red army troops on the west
bank. One German ran around
a village crying: "The Russians
are swarming like ants."
Colonel General Goth, com
mander of the German Fouth
Tank army who was entrusted
with the defense of Kiev, did
not believe that the Russians
would reach the Dnieper so soon
and he also did not believe they
would be able to cross the river.
Under -Officer Imber of the
Fourth German Tank division,
said, after he was captured:
"First we were told that the
defense wall was on the Desna
river. Then we were told that
there was a Dnieper river wall.
But it appears that no such wall
exists. The soldiers say the waH
retreats with us."
Captured German officers told
with indignation about how the
Red army had crossed the
Dnieper In some places without
putting up pontoon bridges. They
took the attitude that such action
was contrary to the regulations
of war.
But our troops are well across
the Dnieper now and tanks are
going around the German flanks
and dealing heavy blows in the
enemy's rear. The people of Kiev
can hear the roar of guns coming
closer.
Seattle, Oct. 21 Spl. Re
duction in the 1943-44 crop of
Bosc and Anjou pears will mean
a decrease in the season's total
winter pear supply, although an
increased ouantitv nf fAmipA nnri
Nelis pears will be available,
reports tne uregon-washlngton-California
Pear bureau.
The bureau estimates a total
Closing time for Classified ads S
am. Too late to Classify la 30
p. m.
.DIFFICULT DECISIONS
Bit CLUYAS WILLIAMS
1tMr)6 10 fiGURF. OUT WHETHER 1H BICVCLE6 BEL0N6
JLISK y!'5 BRD6 O-UB W WHICH CASE A
StEALfHV TLf)HKIN6 APPROACH VlAIHE BACK POOR- IS IHDlCftTED,
OR WHETHER THEV BELOMt 1b TOlENDS OF MM? VtoUrte
TAUfjHfER , WHICH WOULD MAKE (T SAFE 16 ENTER.
By THE TKONi POOR
Mi?.asii
euMta
viiuiam
crop of 2,530,000 boxes, as com
pared to last year's 3,617,415
boxes.' Sharpest reduction is in
the long-season Anjou pears,
which are estimated at 1,229,-
650 boxes, as against last sea
son's 2,165,620 boxes. Bosc
pears are expected to drop from
last year's 984,063 boxes to
652,332 boxes this season.
More Cornice pears by 62,449
boxes are predicted, however,
from October to February, 1943-
44. Also expected are 120,734
boxes more Wens pears avail
able January to June, 1944. The
Easter variety Is estimated at
18,500 boxes, about the same as
last year. No estimate is given
for Clairgreaus and miscella
neous varieties which totaled
3,311 boxes in 1942-43.
Ose Mall Tribune Want Ads.
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS bvJOHNHIX
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' A5?R 1 2 (TROUSERS OVER A CHAIR.) UKETHIS-7 . Y .USPPI, J
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