SERIAL STORY dlsdh Ccud&h, WAAC BY LORETTE COOPER NKA CRVICK, INC. rLUNGE TO EARTH CHAPTER XV rpo complicate matters, Rick was coming to, and the Jap prob ably would be in a few minutes. ' "Can you fly this plane?" Brit asked Beth. "Sorry. They made us every thing except flyers at Des Moines." "Then it's up to you to keep the folks in the back seat under con trol." Beth took care of Rick first. He was kicking around, and it was obvious that the captives' feet would have to be tied, as well as their hands. Brit turned the cabin lights on. Beth looked for something she could use to tie ankles together. Attached to the wall were three parachutes. Beth pulled one of thom apart and got a length of strong cord, borrowing Brit's knife to cut the material. Then she went to the Jap. She reasoned that it would be better to tie him immediately, then struggle with Rick, than to take a chance on having to fight both of them particularly since the Jap might know some tricks with his feet She put the cord around the Jap's ankles and made it secure. "Now it's your turn," she said to Rick. There was a firm set to her jaw. .,. CITE watched Rick carefully as she neared his feet This was going to be a problem. Then she saw its solution almost as soon as she recognized its dangers. She fastened one end of the cord firmly to the Jap's ankles. Then she formed a running loop in the bight of the cord. She started toward Rick. "Watch out," Brit warned. But there was no need to have any fears. Beth stepped quickly past Rick, and as he turned to try to trip and kick her viciously, she threw the running loop over his legs and pulled as hard as she could. She had the advantage, and in three seconds the helpless spy had been caught and dragged so that his ankles were tied to the Jap's. It was a matter of another few seconds to tie the knot securely. -Then Beth rolled the pair away from the center of the cabin and further lashed them to the side of Jhe plane. .; , She returned to the front. 1 "Good work, Beth," Brit said. "You seem equal to anything. I've never seen anyone cooler ... in tha face of danger or possible death." "A soldier has to face those things," Beth said, smiling. "Right," Brit answered. "You know, the way I've always looked at it is that when the end comes, It will be just like getting transfer orders. I've been transferred a dozen times in the Army. Some times to a better spot, sometimes to a worse. Only almost always to a better one. There's some thing final about a transfer it closes tha chapter of your life which was spent at the last post." He stopped a moment. Then he resumed. "I've always thought that my final transfer would be . that way final, closing a chapter or maybe even the book, and maybe sending me to a better post." "That's a good way to look at it, I think," Beth said. As she -spoke, she realized that she and Rick had a great many things in kinship as far as their attitudes toward life were concerned. "Fine time to talk of death," Brit laughed, "when we're staring it in the face." He switched off the cabin lights again so he could get a clearer view of the ocean. "There's the island, but it's a thou sand to one we'll never be able to come down on it." , JJETH looked down on the.island, dark and apparently lifeless. She knew that dark as it was, Brit was right He knew, as com mander of that island, that the tiny spot in the ocean bristled with hidden guns which would blast them down unless they could properly identify themselves. It had been daylight when Lita Dan ton's American-made Jap plane .had first landed, but now it was night "You can't get through with the radio?" she asked. "It was plenty of use to the lap, but none to me. Wrong fre juency." "There aren't any flares?" "Wouldn't do us any good. That would bring the guns into action." Beth remembered that there were two parachutes hanging on the cabin wall. "Brit," she said, "could you fly over the island lengthwise you know, so we went across it at its greatest length?" "Sure," he said. "Why?" As he asked, he swung the plane around so that they were approaching one end of the island. "Oh, I just wondered." She dared not tell Brit her plan. So she went back into the cabin and removed one of the para chutes. She got into the harness, and made doubly certain it was securely attached, "Goodby, Brit" she said. "Stay aloft as long as you can." He turned toward her. At first he did not understand what she was about to attempt When he did, it was too late. Lieut Beth Carter of the Women's Army Aux iliary Corps had opened the cabin door and plunged free of the plane. (To Be Continued) Cs ssSfer-i. r,,-i.;,.vs ..,r- si-- . , ir.'-5-.:?r.-. -o .-- 7556 by Alice Brooks Swallows circle around a clus ter of roses in these attractive round filet crochet doilies that you'll find so useful. Make them up in fine cotton for incidental purposes . . . make a large one in string for a centerpiece. Pattern 7556 contains instructions and charts for doilies; stitches; mate rials needed. To obtain this pattern send 11 cents in coin to The Herald and News, Household Arts Dept., Klamath Falls. Do not send this picture, but keep it and the num ber for reference. Be sure to wrap coin securely, as a loose coin often slips out of the envel ope. Requests for patterns should read, "Send pattern No. . .-, to . followed by your name and address. HOLD EVERYTHING! DR. PEEPER?" eyes Examined con, mi by wtA stawer. we. TcaTT" 0fr Just jgnure iv FUNNY BUSINESS Although most of the high ways in Martinique are excel lent, sugar plantations have the only railroads. Eventually tlie pain in the neck which Hitler has been to alt of us is going to boomerang. Pass the rope. The Colossus of Rhodes, erect ed in 280 B. C. and destroyed in 224 B, C, cost about $258,000. Gasoline curtailment has shrunk the 3,000,000 private-car licenses of pre-war Britain to 250,000. YOU DONT NEED CASH AT Sears-USE PURCHASE COUPONS You go to th Credit Offle just once to (ft a boob full of coupons . . , thrn voti spend the coupons Just ilk c.uh all through th store. There's so fuss or formal Ity, no signing sales slips. Small down payment And monthly repayments. TJsusi carrying charge. GET YOURS TODAY AT Your SEARS CREDIT Office Out Our Way By J. R. Williams Our Boarding Houia With Major Hoopla GIMME SOME MORE PRILLS" I'VE BROKEN! WHAT PO THEy KAKE 'EM OUT OF, SOPA. STRA.W5 TT ? NOT ONE THOUGHT OF ALL I nc. TOIL, BRAINS AN' CARS IT TOOK. TO MAKE THOSE FINE STEEL TOOLS wTUST BLAM.' GIMME SOME MORE.'" AM' NOT ONE THOUGHT WELL, VOL) CAN'T SAY MUCH. I DOUBT IF SOU EVBW CAST A THOUGHT ON TH' FORKFULS OF HAY IT TOOK. JUST SO VOU COULD STICK A FORK. IW A STEAK.' w I' WE'RE ALL DOING IT 2. IV . M. tfa . Pit. wt. aUPP0&B Mlb& FRfcNrteW DOES. KN0tf NOU GOT PINCMED IM BOOKIE RA.IO, POP.'-" 60 TO SEE HER,-wNM.K IN LAUGHING AND PRE TEND THE "SOKE'S ON NOD, LIKE GETTING CAUGHT IN A FOLD ING BED,' OM.MO.' I'DTRN TUB Muscular approach HER, A TREKVMENjT, LIKE A COP LECTURING 3AV- WALKER,' tHROVOINJG TO TUB t WEMT to see MADGE- AND SHE- WAVJED ME AWAV LIKE SPOILED FOOD -v ALL X COULD STICK IN THE DOOR. VMA9 MN N06E.' us 6 7, XI. 4W: The vine of the rattan palm is sometimes 1000 feet long, a rec ord in the plant world. The first electromagnet, an American Invention, was made in 1828. Britain had only 25 motor tor pedo boats when she entered the war in 1939. The antlers of the Maral, a Pedsian deer, always terminate in more than two tines. RETREW ED i ACCORD- i PLAM Red Ryder THIS CURIOUS WORLD y William Ferguson COPR. 1M3 BY NU SIRVtCE. INC T. M. RCQ. U. 8, PAT. OFF, RED, MX) IM54XTED) AMD WE INSULTED THE EOCTOC DY f Mr INTEU.I HIM JOIN US 3 " 1 X a -k. vi i -'tm .- Li ten TOni.ST S-TKAM- -LETS AND HIT THE TRAIL 7. I AA fi l HIN A. 11 rrt ' THAT BLASTBH WtSD AIN T A DUMB H PIGCiEHl-.O-- . TAK& CAKB OP .HOSSEft DOLX' STi'Sl I'VE GOT 12K tr VrJw I oust Line ai Freckles and His Friends JERRV IS MAO AT USD FOR TAKIMO LAWA AWAV FROM HIM .' HE SAID HE'D KUNCH LARDS NOSE ' r TK on 46ouf )r A MORON IS AOBE OF THAN ON' Seys AIRS. G.R HEFFELRN6ER, Sat FhncitiB, (Sitrfimm. WHISKERS DO GROW FASTER IN HOT WEATHER.... AS MOST MEN HAVE SUSPECTED. NEXT: What is a "hedge hog" defense? U. S. ARMY LEADER HORIZONTAL 1,5 Pictured V. S. Army man, Maj.- Gen. Bolivar 11 Lyric poems )2 Five and five 13 12 months 14 Half an em 15 Kind of cloth 17 Suffix 18 Ocean 20 Distant 21 Light brorrn 23 Novel 26 On account (abbr.) 27 Toward 28 Cleaning device 30 Virginia (abbr.) 31 Gape 33 Expunged 35 Sun gad 38 Jumbled type 37 Appears 40 Bitch 44 Either 45 Parent 48 Atmosphere 47 Ruthenium Answer to Previous Punle JCARjLOS AR R OYOL BARElDA LOlTEWhJ UPS PE A TUBE ATI To ZZEERii ot TEN pecan CARLOS A RE os Bt!TE b ARROvo AS A m Df) liRE.1 MIDDLE Vkl.U,J S T I NT S N O R E M ClAlBj" N I NTT H :REe5;a i rSegc ATT a ARAB'OGEEl PTll MramIso aeIroaei p i iMlsf t I5rfl IdIeInIsIeIrp (symbol) 48 Honey maker 50 Small dog 53 Ampere' (abbr.) 54 Grain' 55 Vice president (abbr.) 57 Incline 69 Palm lily 60 Behavior 62 Female sheep 63 Parts of' circles 65 He is com mander of U. S. troops 66 Stratunj VERTICAL 1 Therefore 2 Mental image 43 Color .3 Males 4 Bone lea (abbr.) 16 Cognomen 18 Distress signal 19 Dine 20 Enemy 22 Neither 24 First woman 25 Material for stuffing 27 Hike 29 Document 32 Exist 34 Iniquity 37 Cry 38 Before 39 Tree fluid 40 Domesticated 41 Tear 42 Weep 5 Wager 6 One 7 Kentucky (abbr.) 8 Born 9 Deserve 10 Railroad (abbr.) 12 Paving substance 15 South Amer 49 Wrong 51 We ' 52 Entreaty 53 Animal 54 Cereal gralr" 56 Vegetable 58 Possess 59 Attempt 60 Mother 61 Nova Scotia (abbr.) , 63 Rough lava 64 Senior (abbr. I'M not iwreuesreo! -WHAT DO L CARE IF LABDTAK6S LAMA DANCING A NO MAS GOOD TIME HMWPH r A Aftto all. TERB ARB PLENTY Of OTHER f BOYS IARO 'MEANS NO. , 1WIN& TO ME hwATS THE SPIRIT, HI UA Wm m U t f AT, Off. Wash .Tubbs A 6EC0WD BLA7ESI Y 1 HOPED COURSE. rr was wo, Except im BUT AREBAVEMOUSLV YCU ALL MUMOPIY KloHTf J V r I THIS IS aCtUS to BF A REAL CELEBRATION.. XSAYS LOOKl HE SAlC ME WAS TOO lTlREPTOCEie8RATf. AMOIUST LOOK ie en mm Boots and Her Buddies OHOtt'.WcSS.'sl XWtVNVilWSi LMM-I I Wb OMVV 'stem OEMS rX VOU KM 1rrNV4 VOO.,OKSIV.K6 Vk IS DNV . Id iJi nm i.,fii., on, irAr?i'tfnti'(iTil 'twmvir-. J.y. imr EM m 'dim Ar'TCVN RtNO SOOU VAN II 1 -r . writ mi M. . T. M. )M u, t wt. ct, Allep Oop I U 13 It I I IS ( I 17 16 l 10 -" mj n M& i . f r w w u i zT s Wm'dzJ'L. trirmis H XT"J fi W f" W wmmmn -r-rr tml 'iZjluL ttmvi mzrni . I I I I 1 I ' 1 I'' I" ' OKA.V, OSCAE, HERE THEV . COME, ..LET THEYLL ii y pnd .V &OODI 'SHI. -Ji SW VEH....MMD I'M IN IT UP TZf ' I V busted poon7 J m'TZ. Little Orphan Annio WE WERE TOO ) YES-NOW LATE TO BLOCK ALL THOSE THEM FROM THE NAZI RATTPAP- BUT PRISONERS ARE SAFE ARE HERB CKW- I REUbABfcDI AI ID HO O0OBT ALL Mr BOYS ARE IM THAT RATTRAP" ArD SALTS IS LOOSE again! H M M-BUT EVEI1 HE DOESM'T KHOW THESE PASSAGES-" BUT HE KNOWS ALL ABOUT THAT SECRET RADIO I WG MUST GET TO IT BEFORE H6 DOES" p NOT 1 SO FASTI HIM GET I V TO IT" J BUT HELL BE ABLE TO SEMO OUT WORD TO THEIR WHOLE SPY RING IN THIS COUNTRY" T 16 IT NOT EVIDENT. THAT ALREADY THEY KNOW? MAYBE IT IS OUST AS WELL- , IMG TO ! 2Z-J O By Frod Harmon By Blouor o By Crana By V. T. Hamlin o T. .5-- , 7 By Martin o By Harold Gray 'It's his afternoon oil' I"