| Show THE OGDEN FRIDAY EYENING AUGUST STANDARD-EXAMINE- R j 6-- ! 94 J 4--A It's Your Turn to Dance Hitler Merry Go -- Round - — PUBLISHING COMPANY the postoffioe at Ogden as second March according to Act of Congress United Press Associated 8 1S79 Member of The Presa NEA Service and A B C to The Aaaociated Press U exclusively entitled crednews all of dispatches the use tor republication In thia paper ited to It or sot otherwise credited sand also the local news — ' " SUBSCRIPTION PRICES 9J80 a year when paid 90c a month Carrier By be Must Mall— paid In advance 80o In advance By Idaho Nevada and Utah In a J3C0 year month a a L00 a month $12-0- 0 states All other Wyoming By War Moves Analyzed v -- By Drew Pearsen Major George Fielding Eliot Entered class natter " Ja New Policy Looms In OPA Chester Bowles advertising man who has 1ecome general manager under Prentiss Brown'in the office of price administration announces a policy of decentralization in the OPA It would harassed and heavy-lade- n more appear that state directors will receive this authority to deal with local problems the regional authority to be delegated from state direcoffices of the organization Most tors will be happy to have more authority and reThey have plenty of responsibility want is ceive plenty of criticism What they an opportunity to handle local problems as middlemen to locally not merely serve or uu- pass the problems along to regional tral offices for action We say most of them want this additional authority to accompany their responsibility but not all state directors are of this opinion nor all of the key personnel in the state offices A few believe that if authority is the pressure given to solve local problems for relaxation now neavy will be heavier and some of the weak sisters will yield These held on persons argue that) the line is being desome fronts in part due to the fact that cisions are made far from the scenes of the -- pressure Our opinion is that local administrators nntv to iron nnt local TJrODJ bUUlUU JUti C aui""' lems within the laws rules and regulations of the national organization and the reasonable interpretationlthereof These local OPA folks are on the firing line They know persons and local conditions If they can't exercise new authority with wisdom and coureviage their weaknesses will soon become dent and they can be removed On the other hand some wise policies and procedures may result from decentralization when many instead of a few have opportunity to work at solving the many problems of the OPA V Are Fathers Needed for War? rV laiuuo armArl — fnrres — —- in HOW can't do that to me" Smaller Cities Well Managed The city of Price in Carbon county recently voted to reduce the local tax levy from 17 mills to nothing thus making Price a tax-fre- e city insofar as local taxes are concerned Now comes Fillmore once the state capital with an announcement that the city has paid off its $30000 indebtedness and has reduced its local tax rate from 10 mills to 6 mills These are examples of sound municipal management In both instances the financial achievement has followed a period of extensive public improvements Both Price and Fillmore came out of the depression much improved by their sponsorship of projects during the unemployment period It is safe to predict that more examples of good administration will come to light from : j soundly officered by men and women who take the posts from a sense of duty and give much time drive and intelligence to municipal problems — It really isn't hard for a girl to detect an engagement ring in a fellow's voice - Don't let too much money go to your ! in head—put-iwar-bonds- should such an event take place it is natural that our thoughts should first turn to the Balkans the Aegean Islands and the eastern Mediterranean in general But there would also be very considerable results to be felt in the western w - — — — — now!" Marine Maverick MnvHrir the flirhtln Texan has waged int nf hattu in his lifp including one at the Argonne in 1918 when part of his shoulder was shot away and he was decorated lor gaiiantry rsui one battle he still fights Is that or tne irst aivision vs the U S marines Maury was a first lieutenant in the 28th Infantry in the Argonne and he says (with Texas poetic li- ccnsc) z "The U S army had a million men fighting in France The marines had about 5000 But to hear a marine talk you would think they did all the fighting and won the war" Life has become especially tough in the Maverick household in this war because Maury Maverick Jr has become a marine Writing back from the Solomon islands recently young Maverick boasted to his father: "I'm a first lieutenant now dad and I outrank you You were a first lieutenant but you were only in the army I'm a marine!" War Liberty League Officials here are crediting Alfred P Sloan chairman of General Motors with reviving the old Liberty league under another name He has just sent letter to a large number of businessa round-robi- n — men including some of his own automobile dealers — urging that they raise a fund of $1300000 to be spent for educating the American public on "the problems of industry" Since this fund Is for 1943 alone and since $1300000 is no small amount to spend on propaganda in any year administration leaders drew the natural deduction that it is chiefly another Liberty league war chest aimed at the New Deal other one-tiJoining Sloan in this appeal are men and including: leaguers Liberty G O P bosses J Howard Pew of Sun Oil one of the of Pennsylvania Colby Chester chairman of General Foods Ernest Weir chairman of National Steel A W Eames president of thff California Packing corporation and James S Adams president of Standard Brands They operate under the new name of "National Industrial Information committee" After attacking "the truly deplorable performance of government bureaucracy" and praising "the truly magnificent performance of American industry" Sloan in his letter proposes a propaganda campaign to educate the public on the problems of a Industry "We must not be too general " Sloan cautions "We must "not be too specific But we must get I do across as effectively as we can our story hope' you will see fit to send me a subscription representing your company's proportionate share of our 1943 goal of $1300000" Ambassadorial Suppression Spanish Ambassador Juan Cardenas has now outdistanced Mussolini's former puppet Ambassador de Martino in trying to suppress American freedom nf snpprh Anrt nresa Martino nersuaded Herbert Hoover to courtmartlal Gen Smedley Butler for telling how Mussolini ran over a cnua wimout turning back — though later the courtmartlal backfired nnr? TTnnvpr rtrnnned It like a hot notato Franco's Ambassador Cardenas however has now distinguisned himseir oy trying to suppress me movie "For Whom the Bell Tolls" the book "Ap-t'- a Child" a scathing criticism of Franco Tom Hamilton and also the speech of by Lieut his Ambassadorial colleague rrom Mexico wno am rlioH that TTra n nn Va n tr!tri nnH a TlUnnet- TVio rfinlnmotio rnms Is wondering whether Am bassador Cardenas will now demand suppression of Allan Chase's ngnting dook "u aiange: me axis secret Army In the Americas" They think that this time he won't have the nerve to do it m - elt T " Merry-Go-Rou- nd Out in Leo Crowley'a home town his neighbor Bill Evjue editor of the Madison Wis Capitol Times is saying: "Leo Crowley has led a charmed life in politics but his immunity to public critl cism is at an end" Neighbor Evjue has raised some questions which have puzzled a lot of people — con cerning Crowley's $75000 salary from Standard Gas and Electric while holding down three important Wonder if the Wright Aerojobs for Uncle Sam nautical advertisement trying to refute Truman committee charges of faulty engines wiu be deduct ed from income taxes If so the government will Henry Ickes cousin virtually pay for the ads Is Interior of the of waging a relentless secretary American to educate the public on the campaign variant name In case you pronunciation of his ICK-es S How not didn't know it it is worried Pan American Airways is over prospects e of losing its monopoly of all foreign U of-S Is indicated airlines by the fact that It secretly fered to give 49 per cent of its stock to the U S government Then with the other 51 per cent Pan-Awould control all U S- orelgn airlines Henry Wallace privately Intimates to friends that he has now found the Fifth Freedom: "Freedom from re-snonsibilitv without authoritv (Copyright 1943 "by United Feature Syndicate Inc) Ick-EE- one-tim- m -f SO THEY SAY O O The of the war will depend upon the length effort on the uninterrupted continuance of effort is all The home fighting fronts and here at onePresident Roosevelt - all-o- Mediterranean To begin with allied possession of northern Italy Corsica and Sardinia might very well open the way for an Invasion of southern France Frontier Terrain Historically France has not been successfully invaded from Italy since the davs of Julius Caesar The principal reason for this Is the configuration of the Alpine passes and of the frontier terrain in gen eral The passes tend w uivcrgc from Italy toward France If a large a passage army is trying to force of the mountains it must move in several columns since the numDer which can use a single pass is limited The columns by reason of this configuration of the passes would arrive in French territory at widely separated points out of and distance of each other with rough terrain and poor lateral nnmmiinications in between me mountanious zone on the French side of the frontier Is deep running clear back t the valley of the Rhone On the other hand on the Italian sMf f the frontier the mountains shelve off abruptly Into the broad valley of the Po and the plain of Lombardy This fact togetner wiu the convereence or tne passes toward Italy has always raemtatea the invasion of Italy from France an event which has frequently taken place both in ancient ana in mddern times But the strategy possible to modern combined operations takes less account of ground and distance than was possible to Hannibal Charles VIII or Napoleon Indeedo frontier extend-tthe Franco-Italia- n include the sea coast of south ern France seems to afford rather attractive possibilities to such a force as that now sup-nnrtt- on me does he know this? It is right that the military shall be under the jurisdiction" of the civilian in this nation and there can be no objecton to civilian questioning of military policies and actions Particularly does a United States senator kave the right to examine into policies relating to the war and its conduct If the'senator had said: "I am opposed to this policy because I do not believe that conditions require the induction of fathers but I shall not do anything about it until the men who are directing the war have had full he opportunity to justify the policy"— if obhad said that there could have been no jection When all is said and done we train men in the science of war so they will be ready to act for us in emergencies just as we train men in the science of medicine Tough as it sometimes seems when emergencies arise we must place ourselves in the hands and wisdom of these trained persons We ask questions for reassuring answers but we seldom go to the point of declaring "You t n!ont'i anti-inflati- at the same time it were eonse--- lf auences of the capitulation of Italy 1 anti-Roosev- Senator Wheeler of Montana is quite vig orous in "his criticism of the new induction program whereby men who were fathers calls prior to Pearl Harbor are in line for from to the service The impression gained is reading quotations from Senator Wheeler of that the nation does not need the services ai i iicsk In examining the possible WASHINGTON — One amusing' sidelight on conIn legislation gress was Its sudden loss of Interest administrafood war the of broadening the powers tor the minute Judge Marvin Jones their was named to the Job Farm blocers In both houses were clamoring for action on legislation giving the food administrator as well as the prosupervisory authority over prices commodities This farm of distribution duction and Davis secretly In league with was while Chester farm bloc efforts to rig price ceilings at Inflationary levels still held the job of South Representative Hampton P Fullmer committee Carolina chairman of the agriculture had the stage all set for the bill enlarging Davis's unsuccessful efpowers He even announced after that he was goforts to get White House approval a rule demand and committee ing before the rules to the house floor measure his to bring tv c ftier nrt of Pennsylvania avenue to drop his bill like a hot Fulmer caused however Davis and repotato The president abruptly fired placed him with Jones or Jones was Fulmer's predecessor as chairman In congress committee and everyone the agriculture miiv Via vara a a trill crVi hombre So the last thinz the fnr Jones a stalwart sup- fv policies to t tailor-mad- e for been had which have the powers diu Davis in the Fuimer a inrt tvioro mnv have been a Dersonal motive In Fulmer's case Friends say he never has quite forgiven Jones ior noiuing on to mo asmnuic after his ap mittee chairmanship for six months1940 In claims of court the to pointment T7irva nrifViHrew hn reauest for a rules' commit S v ofrtr onr? to himself — Mvrtle Beach — ICC utai before week a congress summer vacation C for a To capitoi newsmen ne uucneu vuuuucui recessed v a a — — — Tranmv 10 coueaxuesi ruinrrnpo riiir- sniri VI "What's the use of pressing for action on my bill ut -- The rats are beginning to leave the sinking ship One has left already — Eighth Air Force Chaplain Col Maurjce W Reynolds America Is facing a dangerous emergency on the home front The entire stabilization program Is threatoriAA r ca tVia tfivnsl nrafn rt Inflation ra la£ loose our domestic economy will be wrecked —JL F oi president William ureen There Is nd comnarf unn between the Americans In Sleilv and iha AmHana nf thr Tnnnthi asro They are at least 100 per cent better — British Gen r joarwa w i u Alexander — — —— " Moscow Dateline "War Win Last Three Weeks to Three Months" Chapter 5 Crowds were camped all around the station surrounded by shape- ess masses of belongings rolled in blankets when I arrived from my hotel On the lawns squatted the women their children : dashing around excitedly over the grass On the sidewalks in lonk queues leading to the ticket offices' were troops Around them stalked naval officers in white army officers in khaki The place was besieged I got out my ticket and dashed for the train waiting on the track I had never before been on a Russian train All my travels In the soviet union had been by plane or by car 'This was to be a rough Initiation into the mys- eries of the Russian railway ior six people were already standing with proprietary airs In the com partment to which I was assigned men There were two middle-age- d two women apparently their wives and two young men And there were only four bunks VOh ho here comes another one of ours" chortled a woman so I knew there was no mistake This was really my compartment I dropped my bags and lied oacK to the platform leaving to them the distribution of those four beds among seven persons Outside the baggageman who had caught up with me by then suzzested I go on a hunt ror oread but I refused to move away from that precious train He returned after a while with a glass of pink sodawater but no bread It had all been bought up by the crowd swarming around the station As the sun was setting the train pulled out without warning whistle or bell and I swung aboard The lone heavily laden train rat tled slowly over the rragiie single track skirtine the Black sea in the shadow of the great snow-cappe- d Caucasus mountains rising to the east I stood in the passageway and nrayed fervently that it would reached Moscow But there were many stoos to be made At station after station we halted to take on more passengers Most of them were rugged bronzed lit tie fellows mountaineers clutching a rifle In one hand a loar or bread in the other They went to war with a grin waving back at the little clusters of family and mends who had come to bid them farewell Behind them at the village stations musicians sat on the dirt path playing accordians From the towns they went off to the tunes rs of martial music blared from over the wooden plat forms Everywhere they went cheerfully In the purple nightfall the train began to pick up speed as it cleared the foothills of the Caucasus and the Black sea beaches already sur rounded by barbed wire and pa trolled by armed men swished by mysteriously It was time to go to loud-sDeake- Deo I walked down the passageway and there were my six roommates sitting on the bottom bunks They were waiting ror jme "You go there7 said one of the middle-age- d menwaving at the up per lert Dunic i climbed Into It took off my outer clothes slipped under the blanket and rolled close to the walL facing It and wonder ing how many more would sleep in this place hardly big enough for one There were thrashings and bump-In- gs and gigglings below and then the lights went out I was still alone in bed A hand my shoulder It was the tapped same middle-age-d man "You will be alone" he said I rolled over and saw through the gloom that he was into one lower bunk with getting his wife The other two young men were in the upper opposite me "That's democracy" the middle-age- d man said from his bed At the first stop the next morn-ta- g there was a rush from the train Being an abashed novice I waited In bed until the others had and then dressed By the I reached the passageway the train was under way again and the Passengers were gathered around a rortunate one who had found a jnorning newspaper He was read-ta- g the communique of June 23: ' t direction cf ShauJV Kaunas — — —— — Pegler's Fair HENRY C CASSIDY By r Vladimir- Korobinsk Volkovisk Volynsk Rava Russka and Brodsk In the Belostok and Brest di rections the Germans succeeded in capturing the cities of Brest Kol- no and Lorn ja Our territory?" someone asked incredulously "Of course our territory" It was not only in quest of the communique that the passengers had rushed off the train at the first stop They had gone foraging for food I had the unpleasant surprise of finding there was no diner on the train and that if I was to eat all in the incalcul able number of days before reaching Moscow It would have to be food I snatched from the station platforms between stops At the same time I had the pleasant sur prise of finding that the train was bowling along - beautifully as though there was no- war For two days it went that way Nonchalantly it puffed through the erain fields of the north Caucasus past the swampy shores or the sea of Azov beyond which the turrets of Taganrog rose in the distance like a mirage to the Don city or Rostov Past the still busy steel plants of the Donetz basin it rolled into the black earth region to vo ronezh Up the main line it steamed through Kursk Orel and Tula At each stop I dashed with the others for food Only once did I get any That r was toward the close of the second day when my middle-age- d compartment mate oni my inexperience taking pity guided me to the head of a queue and bought me a glorious caviar and tomato sandwich After dark on the second day the passengers began to stir excitedly We were nearing Moscow But perhaps it was being bombed and we would not be able to reach the city If we arrived there per the haps we would be locked in train for the night because or tne At least we would be enrfew because confined to the station there would be no automobiles to take us and our baggage home Quietly almost furtively the train rolled through the dark suburbs to the Kursk station We had arrived on nearetime schedule And in Mos row th most unexpected of all thlnes happened— nothing at all I went into a telephone booth and dialed the number of my as sistant Robert Magidof f A mir acle he answered In his usual noc turnal croaking voice that was as sweet to me then as the soprano of Lily Pons And miracle of miracles there was still gasoline Pavel the chauffeur had Enough By lanri-sea-a- Westbrook Pegler NW YORK Aug 6— There Is a disposition to eive Mayor La Guardia much more mredit than he deserves for the handling of the riot of a criminal element or negroes in Harlem and to withhold from the New York policemen who faced the mobs and won the vie tory with a minimum of bloodshed and damage just that proportion of the credit which is due them A correct proportion would be m ner rent for the mayor aViniit VUW MW 9909 and per cent for t£ie copv who are the best in th United States and probably the best In the world their virtues and the prob I lems considered Get Out of Hand In the first place one reason why the looters and bad men and women could get out of hand was that the authority of the police has been systematically under mined in Harlem during La Guardia's time in office If dur ing all these years the bad actors among the population of that colored neighborhood had been held to the same standard of conducts and law observance that is required of colored and white citizens alike in other sections of the city rioters would have been no more likely to break loose there than in say Mulberry Bend or Murray Hill If in one of these other regions an individual or a group of three or four step but of line or refuse to break it up at the cop's command he simply picks his man and locks him up and that is that In Harlem on the contrary the policemen have been victims of a special policy which has coddled the loafer and fancy-Da- n to the peril and embarrassment of the decent negroes who have to live with these ruction-eer- s and run the risk of assault — VM — — — ? and fights with them and share the bad name which they have given the largest negro center in the United States nv ir commanded by General Dwight D Eisenhower In the Mediterranean theatre Air Sea Superiority that we It must be remembered best posthe to make are trying sible use of our air and sea suthe periority to offset the fact that land forces a now available to us in this part of the world are numerically to those which the Germans could bring against us on any battlefield which could be efficiently served by the available German lines of communication uur oDjeci is therefore to bring about battles hv land in areas where the German communications are insufficient to enable them to employ their full the strength and thus to present alternaconstant Germans with the tive of wasting away their troops in driblets or giving us increasing of time and nosiuon advantages ominst the dav when we shall be able to meet them on more equal in-fer- ibr terms Tunisia was such a battleground and so is Sicily Southern Italy If the Germans might be another ano are aoie w seek to defend it n Rut southern France if the whole of Italy plus Sardinia and Cnrsira were in our hands might likewise afford us aaventageous conditions Wa rnnld use our air power ef etiviv hnth from northern Italy Corsica Corsica lies within 115 miles of the French coast a stretch of some 80 miles of which is within effective operating range of fighters based on Corsica The situation of the German army HAmnfinir to defend the Alpine passes would be sadly compromised and from lem later was confirmed by two able men then on the district at torneys staff who also said the communists of La Guardia's left wing in Harlem where Congressman Vito Marcantonio is a power and the mayor's political protege enioved snecial privileges and con trived to keen affairs in a touchy condition all the time by turning into a case of cossack persecution every altercation between a police man whether colored or wmie and any negro mischief maker Having helped stack the crates policy and barrels by his anti-co- p over a number of years the mayor then was aghast when the pile was touched off by a iracas De tween a policeman and two negroes whose little mishap should have been a routine entry But it was the cops operating under reduced to do the dangerprestige who hadstreets to save the ous work in the of rest the of the city and peace Tirntect the lives of the great Harlem majority of Negro Citizens The decent negro citizen knows that the name of Harlem has attracted there an element of bums arid thieves who were no good in their own home towns and are no better here and it was no compliment to the decent element when La Guardia put handcuffs on the policemen to hamper them in dealing with offenders who would be slapped down fast and locked up as a matter of routine if the law were faithfully and im Would partially enforced in Harlem La and they not been mobilized Guardia has seemed to believe that b rteht over ror me the industrious colto the Pavel brought the Ford ored would thank him for citizen sidewalk in the swooping dive he to the element of lenience a special loved to affect when picking up sexes who are of both climbed in them with passenger I neither an asset nor a credit T was hack on the job ' neeroes out to be to any community I have saidluckit turned was technically cor Guardia La that I saw the A couple of years ago I made verv eood thlff was no that In rect a of saying the mistake criticizing large start of the war from Sochi not number in the nevertheless New York race riot but of time-expirMoscow The morning after my was it rioters of the arrival I wrote a story of the policemen many of them relative- imagination cerreason and for this who nrnvinces at war of mobilization ly young fellows having just that of the negro press elements tain no 20 on hitch served force the their with out apparent carried years responsibility Even cannot escape on of the blackout installed effective- were putting in Roosevelt has mildly deplored pension according to their legal Mrs editorial ly of trains running promptly of policy of these papers this so at To went and industry working I my regret right agriculture is one of race which frankly wrote I their re far as to suggest-th- at top pitch "My impression" and of enIncitation and "was that the Soviets got off to a tirement then was I comparable to hatred negro in any desertion in the face of an noblement of every mnnth start even though law Later I was to learn that was emergency presented by a foreign ham with the De io Miac6i Known the first wartime description article enemy without first consulting a the subjectas a worthless bad man first opti- few harness cops land others of neighbors sent from Moscow the to the unfair It was grievously mistic story to relieve the monotony the rank and file to get their side York New conscientious and 1 got it however afew days later brave of the nedecent to the and predictions I saw It quoted in a large batch of letters from policemen the to handicap Harlem of I saw it policemen many of whom gave groes in Japanese papers was riot this and Harlem in spread across the first pages of their names In which the men law to that policy American newspapers uaer tne complained bitterly of humiliations due in no small part in hIVAI?GOES CALMLY TO WAR put upon them by La Guardia REMODELING? individual of public disparagements We Have tell my to impressions tried of I some of the experts who had policemen and In the discredit to their authority as cops in Harlem HISULATI0I1 predicted a short war They would and In troubles with union pickets not listen They had been wrong If they stayed on as many of them BOARD about the Germans reaching Mos said they would have been willing row in five days For on the fifth to under any mayor whose fairness communique said German they could count ' upon they ad day the v which penetrated the Vilno to take the risk of departmental tanks ROOFIIIG sector of Lithuania were cut off charges and dismissal with conPriced Right! t from their supporting imaniry ana loss of all their earned th red army counterattacKea in the sequent Priorities Necessary! fto pension "rights Lwow and Cernovitz sectors In old Treated Them Badly Tiona and Rumania But they still DUnTOu-UALIIG- H had insisted the war would last only They felt that La Guardia unwere and them treated badly three weeks to tnree moninsC Cas-sid- y LUMBER C03IPANY by Henry willing to serve longer under him (Copyright 1943 Mifflin Thone 8S61 2121 Lincoln Ave Co distrib and were standing on their rights Houghton conditions in HarTheir version-outed P3£ Act Jff eatuxca sleep-thicken- ed law-abidi- no-goo- ng ds law-abidi- ng neces-- aery to defend the coastline against amphibious attack Bombers Active Moreover our bombing squad! fN rons operating from bases In ttiAs plain of Lombardy could make the whole of the German communlca- tions In eastern France extremely -precarious The land forces we should require would be large than those at present being employed in Sicily but we would still have the advantage of compelling the Germans to come and fight us on a battleground of our own choosing under conditions favorable to us and unfavorable to them and we would have the support of the French underground organizations to aid our air force in the destruc- ion of the German communi cations (Y All this may be an attempt' tX' look rather far into the future taly has not yet capitulated we have not even concluded the con quest of Sicily But it does seem possible tnat given the right con- ditions the liberation of France may be commenced in the south rather than oh the channel coast as has been soi generally an I - ticipated 4 i Wartime Family Problems By Richard Hart Current Debts of Servicemen Not All Excused by Relief Act Tn mv business I W having a great deal of difficulty collect some ing money due me from ficers who are getting fair salariesL M "There seems writes Mr A J to be a current idea that the soldiers' and sailors' civil relief act even for current is an excuse-a- ll bills What steps can I take to bring these officers to task on some of their foolish expenditures for which they do not seem wui-in- g to pay?" is one of several Mr A J exasperated tradesmen who have asked this question recently And evidently the war department has been hearing some of these tales and hence the gentle reminder that has just been Issued a a j military posts' This memorandum our points that failure to pay just debts or the making of checks which are not covered by surncieni runas are violations of Articles of War 95 and 96 and will constitute the basis of discpljnary action against those violating the articles No Fortune First of all Mr A J C should not make the mistake of assuming that all officers get huge salaries As a matter of fact many or tnem have suffered drastic cuts In their incomes and they cannot spend i the manner to which they hh become accustomed Business should watch this tendency in the granting of credit The best j procedure to couevt ' these debts especially from an officer is the gentle but direct j approach reminding him that he is expected to conduct his private affairs In an honorable fashion The next step is still another letter suggesting recourse articles 59 and 96 After two such attempts In then the tradesman is justified mans to the writing full details commanding officer An officer never likes to be questioned bw his superiors on this as it :bafMJJ his standing so he usually settler the full bill or pays something on account long before the matter Is taken up officially One Interview with a stern C O usually brings immediate results n Ont Va The soldiers and sailors relief act despite many popular notions In some is far from an excuse-a- ll of the question! doubt cases of a serviceman's debts can be recovered by the court and at that time the serviceman or his lawyer must clearly demonstrate the mans inohiiitv tn nav And If it is pointed out that the man's debts are the result of extravagant living uit nH- will advise the creditor take recourse through war depart -ment channels If the man or fleer shows no disposition to settle up any part of his account But it Is always the better poj much credit cy not toj extend too in the beginning or to let these accounts krun over a long tim£ nave anv prooiem on vn write to Richardf a rviHart mind your nan care or this newspaper anvoinm will bring a personal reply tt A jiMi ed for-retireme- H-in- ch f Work rs Eat Hearty nrr J Tn three cafeterias and a dormltorfj mess hall Portland's hungry ship--- ' yard- - workers are served 32500 meals a day or 975000 meals a month Each cafeteria requires astaff of 1D0 persons to keep it operaflniy OMIlnrl the clock ' 1 WANTED i" Hclcr Readers Holer Testers Trc:!t Drivers Building fllfcndanls Apply UlaIiPovcr& LigLl Go Bfust Ilave a Certificate of Availability D |