v
CZC. 4
Tha OZTGOn CTATEdlAH. Scdta. Oregon, Sunday Morning, Tun II. It42
Wo Fflpor Swovi Ut; No Fetr Shall Awe
From rirst Statesman. Uarch 28, 1351
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SP HAGUE. President
Member otf The Associated Press
Th Associated Press in exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all
news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this newspaper.
Thoughts on Father's Day
Perfect objectivity, conceivably a desirable
quality in an editorial, cannot be achieved in
respect to every category of subject matter. On
today's subject for example, we confess to the
handicap of some degree of self -consciousness
which may in part be compensated by the ad
vantage ol first-hand knowledge.
And if our approach to the subject seems
tilted, be apprised that fatherhood is produc
tive of certain embarassments not peculiarly
limited to those fathers who must on occasion
iiscuss the matter in print.
A father's earliest if not his greatest diffi
culty, it seems to us, is. that of learning his
properly modest place in the scheme of things.
- He need? to learn with as little pain as possible,
gracefully to take a back seat and not get in the
way of the important members of the -family.
And then there is the matter of wisdom and
experience. Fathers have a terrible time get
ting it through their thick skulls that since
fatherhood is a confining occupation whose
persistent demands upon their time serve to
protect them from the rough realities of life,
It is perfectly understandable that their sons
in a few brief years pick up so much more
worldly knowledge-than they possess, and such
superior solutions to all the world's problems.
Father's day! Why should father have a
day? Let someone else answer. It's too much
for father. And right here you get a bit of
insidght into father psychology. Fathers feel
rather painfully that they have not been able
to contribute much to family life. Oh, such
minor items as food, shelter, clothing and dimes
for the movies; also, back in the pre-war days,
an automobile, tires and gasoline but of course
those days are gone. After all, a trust fund
could do as well, and much more reliably.
If they contribute much more than that, fathers
are scarcely aware of it. And if they do,
why naturally that is what Father's day is all
about.
As we. started out to say and as you readily
can see, this is an embarrassing subject par
ticularly in view of the fact that, believe it or
not, our children can read. There is however
one phase of fatherhood this particular writer
can discuss with the freedom of objectivity, due
to the fact that his son is somewhat below the
age of military service. A timely topic, too.
In all seriousness, it must be a momentous
experience to see one's son depart for training
camp or naval station. On such occasions fath
ers share with mothers certain somber thoughts
of the grim purpose for which the preliminary
training is undergone, and of the possible re
sults. But because of that quirk of father
psychology described above, it is our guess that
father's thoughts tend more to the question
of how his son will "take it," how well he will
perform in this, perhaps his first experience
in totally independent living and doing. Grave,
self-questioning thoughts what sort of ex
ample has this boy had before him, that one
might expect much of him in this critical test
of manhood?
Of course at such a time of parting, any dis
play of emotion in inhibited. But later when a
father learns, as nearly all "fathers of boys in
the service do, that his son is doing his part
well, is meeting the test with a little or much
to spare, has perhaps performed outstandingly
in a crisis; it is then that masculine tears-are
apt to be shed tears of humility and pride
and joy. A father what has he ever done,
what has he ever been able to do, to expect
- IMS? This is more than a father has a right to
expect. This is all that a father could ask.
Anniversary of a Riddle .
One year ago today the world still pondered
the great Russian riddle. Just where did the
- Union of Social Soviet Republics fit into the
war picture? For almost two years preponder
ant opinion had been that Russian and German
totalitarianism were off the same bolt of cloth
and there was some question as to whether the
'two Big Fellows had bothered to scissor them
part. This view, so logically promulgated by
the Rauschnigg school of political analysts and
so eagerly accepted by most Americans in their
ingrained hatred of both systems, had been
- strongly bolstered by the non-aggression pact
of 1939 and seemingly confirmed by Russia's
assault upon Finland a few months later.
One year ago today there was strong evidence
that this theory was poorly founded. Sharp dis
agreement between Hitler and Stalin was evi
dent but a firm Rauschnigg disciple might argue
that it was a shallow dispute involving only
personal jealousy and the form of collaboration.
One year ago tomorrow the original Russian
riddle was solved. In a disjointed, incompre
hensible dawn oration which aroused new
queries as to his sanity, Hitler summed up his
complaints against Stalin and then sent his war
machine crashing into soviet-held territory and
into the biggest and most destructive battle in
human history. A few sentences from Hitler's
address are pertinent today:
The march of the German armies has no
- , precedent . . . The task is to safeguard Europe
. and thus save alL I. have therefore today de
cided to five (he fate of the German people
and the reich and of Europe again into the
hands of our soldiers: -
Not that it makes any more sense than it did
a year ago, but you can see there the persuasive-.
ness to Hitler and to most of the world of
the record for invincibility that his armies had
been building. That myth has been pretty
well exploded.
Though the original Russian riddle was solved
a year ago tomorrow, a new one of comparable
magnitude was created. At the time it was
.phrased thus: How long could Russia hold out t
' . !No one outside of Russia had a serious suspicion
. then ' or for . some months thereafter, that it
should' have been phrased: Who will win
Germany or Russia?
Tied to with this riddle were several more.
What military power idid Russia actually pos
sess? Closely related to that, what actually
was the economic condition of Russia, so loom
Sly pictured theretofore? V And finally, what
thould be the attitude of America, hose
News Behind The News
By PAUL
H
X.
Naf
I
.A
Pal Malloa
I
hatred for communism was of longer standing
and averaged up pretty well in intensity with
their hatred of fascism?
The first two of these subsidiary riddles have
been unfolded to a large extent but not quite
to the point of serving to solve the primary
riddle as it is now worded. Russia has held out
for a year to what extent winter was an
ally is still a matter for debate. The third; our
relation to communism, is still pretty much in
its original obscurity even though today we
are actually and actively allied to Russia. For
some of us it is no riddle at all. For others
it still is a headache, one which throbs pain
fully on occasion as when the latest Harry
Bridges decision is periodically reversed. Our
own solution is: Forget it while we win the
war.
Can Russia hold out until another winter,
meanwhile barring Hitler's way to the Caucasus
oil wells? The world's fate hinges largely upon
the answer. Frankly, we are tired of guessing,
increasingly wary of predictions that the an
swer cannot long be delayed. It has seemed to
be "just around the corner" all these months.
All we know for sure is that the Russian Bear
js still fighting and that time is on his side
and ours.
MALLON
WASHINGTON, June 21 A letter to Private
Charles R. Holloman, school squadron flight
, field, Mississippi:
In our search for peace and justice in the post
war world, we are not con
fronted with a choice between
Utopias.
It is not a question of mak
ing a Heaven on earth by one
means or another rather it is
a problem of looking at the
world as it is and deciding
what we can do about it. Pri-
marily we must confine our-
selves in this, as we do in our
daily lives, to considering what
la likelv to work.
That is why I have objected
to unrestrained idealism of
some of our leaders. I am
afraid that they will erect a premature idealistic
state without a practical foundation and then it
will crash, as they all have before, and all our
hopes of peace and security will be thrown back
another 50 years. I
That is why I distrust the theory you suggest of
a world democratic state or union of democracies,
completely disarmed and ruled by an international
police force. If you will analyze it fairly you will
see it cannot work.
China has 457,000,000 people, which is much more
than anyone else and more man three times our
population. In a world democracy such as you
suggest, she would be the biggest force, the major
power, because she could outvote anyone. Next
would be India with 350,000,000 or more. A majori
ty of the1 population of the world is in Asia.
A democracy of the world would turn over to
Asia the control of the world, although our com
mon sense tells us such an idea is unthinkable.
They do not even want it or suggest it. Their
people have not come to the degree of education
where they can rule themselves very efficiently.
But to think of dismantling our own hard-won
superiority as a nation in favor of any foreign group
seems just as illogical to me. Just because they
might adopt the democratic system would be no
guarantee of our security.
Japan had, and still has, a democratic system,
modeled after Great Britain, with a prime minis
ter, a cabinet and an elected parliament called
the diet. But that system, we have found in this
war, if we did not know before, was secretly con
trolled by an empire clique, and therefore, it had
the effect of a dictatorship.
Even Hitler only nullified the power of the
reichstag, did not abolish it. Moscow dispatches
only today begin to speak of the supreme Soviet as
a parliament.
You cannot safely risk the future security of the
United States on the creation alone of a democracy
in Germany or Japan or elsewhere. You must
have something more, much more.
As to the international police force and the
question of whether it would work to keep unruly
nations in line, the practical point for consideration
is who will run the police force.
If some nation other than ours controls it, we
will not be satisfied. If we control it, other nations
will not be satisfied. If we go into it on the basis
of population, India and China would control it,
and I do not think that quite meets our announced
American demand for maintenance of our way of
life.
For myself, I do not care if you establish an in
ternational police force as long as my country has
the best army, navy and air force in the world,
a better one than the police force. Then I know
we will get a square deal, and have peace.
You say it will be expensive to maintain such
a large American force. Not as expensive as this
war. Not as expensive as Vice President Wallace's
plan to" revise the living ways and diet of the
world at our expense.
Not as expensive as any other plan now being
considered to lend our money after .the war for
the industralization of China, South America, India
so they can make things we formerly made for
them or could sell to them.
You say young men would not want to be drafted
and would not want to volunteer for such a large
force. You may thing so now, because pacifism
and impractical treaties before Pearl Harbor im
bued many of our people with the fallacious notion
that the defense of their country was not a sacred
duty. That feeling is passing. We know different
now and we can make that sacred duty an honor
able profession after this war. We have made the
first and greatest move in that direction by increas
ing the soldier's basic pay scale from $30 to $50 a
month with living and allowances for dependants
The $30 a month pay pittance of pacifist days dis
couraged young, men from entering upon arms
as a profession.
The new army, navy and air force will be the
best scientific training, ground in the world for
young men, because modern sciences now absorb
that field. It will be an army of peace and not of
conquest,: devoted to democracy, and not terri-
tonal aggrandizement.
I want all the same- things you want I think
they wiQ come some day when human beings
throughout the world are educated In the wisdom
of unselfishness.
But to bulwark ourselves against future catas
irophlesv it is essential that we face the world as it
. is, and -not as we' would like to have it
WARTIME
) TOOD
RATIONING
HORTAGS I y
Another Front That Frightens Hitler
(Sits for Breakfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Will be seeing you 6-21-42
about a hundred years
from now, if the chemists
are correct in their work:
S e
John Steven McGroarty, Cali
fornia's poet laureate, in his half
century old column of the Sun
day Los Angeles Times, for, his
issue of June 7 th, from his
"green Verdugo hills," had the
following, which will take two
Issues here:
"He was an old and well-beloved
friend we met on a day
which happened to be his birth
day. He had lived to be nearly
four-score years, showing little
evidence of the wear and tear of
so long a stretch of life, his smile
kindly, his eyes bright He stood
straight as a lordly pine in the
forests of his native New Eng
land. It was good to see him
like that and to feel the, firm,
honest grip of his strong hands.
S "a
"As we talked together it was
plain that while he was grate
ful for the long span of his days,
yet he would not murmur if
these soon were to come to an
end. He had made his bed and
is willing to lie upon it as he
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had made it whenever the good
Lord gave the word. He looked
at death as Cicero looked at it
which was that the less distant
it became the less he feared it
the way every brave and honest
man meets it.
"There was no real hope or
even a wish in his heart to pro
long his life for an additional
score, but he said he believes
that the time is coming when
the average man, and the aver
age woman as well, will live to
be 150 years instead of the Bib
lical three-score years and ten.
The chemists are working out
the formula which they feel will
be in full effect within the pres
ent generation, he said. He
knows the chemists and has un
limited faith in them.
a S S
"Well, there is no gainsaying
that chemists are the wonder
workers of the age. They are
ferreting out Nature's secrets at
a pace that would make the old
alchemists turn over in their
long-forgotten graves. The won
ders they already have per
formed are so many and so as
tounding that we can expect al
most anything from them, even
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that they ean prolong the span
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vitamins that we used to think
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of the theories concerning them.
Vitamins are to the fore again
and going strong and the bene
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actually have been proved,
through many experiments on
the smaller animals. The way it
is with the chemists and scient
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no theory until it has been
proved to be a fact
"a "a
"And so, now they say that
the man of tomorrow will live to
the age of 150 years, virtually
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lies down to pleasant dreams.'"
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tutor
, a.-a moth
By KIRKE L. SIMPSON
Wide World War Analyst
For The Statesman r
The European scene, clouded
by fresh uncertainties fav Russia
and North Africa, dominates the
war news this weekend. All ob
servers agree it is developments
to eastward that brought Prime
Minister Churchill again to the
United States to talk war strat
egy with President Roosevelt
Westward, however, he war
clouds have been lightened by
American air-naval successes in
the Coral Sea and the north Pac
ific, successes that put a crimp in
Japanese striking power against
any United Nation except China
and possibly Russia. Chinese
sources Insist that Japan Is now
preparing for a back-door inter
vention in the war in Europe by
attacking Siberia, probably in
July.
The Chungking- reasoning
on which that is based, a dif
ferentiated frara Chinese !a
formaitoa m te Japanese traop'
or plane movements, dees net
seem eeavlneing. Certainly the
outcome ef American-Japanese
air and sea clashes in the
North Pacific did Utile to help
mount a Nipponese attack on
Russia.
There and in the Coral Sea
Japanese strength in ships,
planes, skilled air crews and,
above all, plane carriers was
heavily whittled down. Those
are military elements on which
'Crime at
By EDITH BRISTOL
Chapter S6 (Continued)
"After she was asleep I went
through the crumpled pockets of
her uniform stuck in the folds
where she always carries her
fountain pen and her thermo
meter were slivers of broken
glass. ...
"Then I crept over the hill,
just as the sun was coming up,
looked all around the Durfee
place it was uncanny the way
those dogs kept en barking and
shining on the floor of the gar
age, were the rest of the sliver
ed fragments of glass ... if you
had found part of them, sheriff,
the broken bits might have
meant nothing to you. But if you
found them all, shining on the
cement floor of the garage, they
must lead you to the one person
around here who owns a clinic
al thermometer .... I spread
them all there for you to find."
Pauline paused for bream and
Allen filled the pause.
"The ink on the changed med
icine label was the same as that
in the pen," he said. "The anal
ysis proved that."
Pauline coutinued: "The rest
of the story I forced Florabelle
to admit when I confronted her
with all I knew. Durfee refused
to give her money. They quar
reled. He got into his car and she
shot him. Harry came and the
two of them disposed of the car
and the driver, as you know."
"But Estelle was there, too,"
Lance objected. "Where did she
fit in?"
"While the two of them were
away, disposing of the car, Est
elle came and waited. Florabelle
drove home. Harry went back to
Durfee's to see if every trace
was covered. He found her there.
Then Harry planted the gun and
hid some of the money in the car
trying to through suspicion on
another " ...
"He did," Lance agreed grimly
"That's where I came in."
Then about Estelle's death"
Allen held Pauline to the story,
but we could see she was fast
becoming exhausted. ,
70 Ray Gram Swine".
7:13 Hank K eerie In Town.
T:M "Lqim Ranger
:80 In the Gloaming.
830 Double a NeUunf.
aS0 News.
9:15 Manhatter
0U30 Pulton Lewis, ir.
9:49 Paneho and Orchestra.
10:00 Jtmmie Lunceford Orchestra.
10 M News. -10:45
Matty Halneck.
11 .-00 Ran Wilde Orchestra.
11 30 Jimmy Lunceford Orchestra.
'
KGW NBC MOfTDAT 429 Ke.
4:00 Music.
0 30 War News.
SO Sunrise Serenade.
30 Early Bards.
T News Headlines and BlgUlghta
1 -J Music of Vienna.
730 Re veil ie Roundup.
7MS Sam Hayes. '
SO Stars cat Today,
as-James Abbe. News.
30 Symphonic Swing.
40 Lotta Doyes "
840 David Harum.
-J5 Bachelor's Children.
30 NBC -
45 Organ Concert
10:00 Music by Miller.
10:15 Mews. - -
IS 30 Home keeper's Calendar. --10:45
Dr. Kate.
1130 Light of the World. .
11 -J 5 Arnold Grimm's Daughter.
1130 The Guiding Light
:il as Hymn of all Churches,
UK-Against the SJerm.
13:15 Ma Perkins.
M 30 Pepper Young's Family.
545-Right to Happiness.
10 Backstage Wife.
1 -J 5 Stella Xkalksa. .
-sae tmwiM Jones.
1 Young Winder Brawn.
a SO When a Girt itarriea -
-a Portia ssaees Ufa,
30 Hollywood New. tv
:S Vic Or Sadat. , . i
SAO The Bartons. '
S J 5 Music by Sbrednlk.
S35 i Maws -
130 Personality Bow '
: 4 30 Funny Money Man.
4:45 H. V. JCaltenborn.
a Stars of Today.
9,15 Cocktail Howe
30 Voice- of Firestone.
. 300 Before the Bombers
(22 fejfefe'
Tokyo must count heavily if it
is in fact plar-'ng a surprise
attack on Russ .
They weald be mere essen
tial in meeting possible Aaaer
kan. sue of the Alaska-Alea-tisn
Islands -Kamchatka alr
laaes westward te help Rus
sia er hammer Japan thaa
any base the 1 enemy has er
: eeald set up tn the western
, Aleutians for interception pur
poses. These fog-shroaded and
ftea weather-bound rocky
extensions of the western
hemisphere Could he bypassed
easily. The very conditions
that snake K difficult te blast
the Japanese off of them ne
less serve to make them ef
small value for interception
purposes.
But as for Chinese reports of
impending Japanese - Russian
hostilities, some other motive
for the" Midway and Aleutian
forays must be sought. The the
ory that Japan, wants to build
an air security zone around her
home area can and no doubt
does partially explain the far
flung Japanese effort to knock
out China or at least drive her
forces beyond easy bombing
reach of Japan. It seems improb
able, however, that Japan would
take on another adversary or Ig
nore the growing menace of
American - Australian forces
short of glittering opportunity
on imperative necessity.
Castaway'
"I dragged that out of her. She
merely changed the figure on the
label. By, that time she was get
ting an avenger complex."
"Only one thing more," Allen
demanded. "You said you were
responsible for Harry and Flora
belle being trapped in the wil
lows. What had you to do with
that?"
The smile on ' Pauline's face
was bitter but triumphant. "Too
many people were getting sus
picious, now. Harry had a trail
er hidden in one of the unused
machinery sheds at the quarry,
and was ready to skip to the
Mexican border."
"What stopped him?"
"1 stopped him. I convinced
Florabelle that the planet Mars
was threatening, mat they must
not start until monring. Harry
did not believe me, but she did.
and they waited, all night, In the
trees! Waited for their fate!"
Six months later, the tremen
dous furor over the Gallina
Valley flod had subsided, Lance'
Gregg was a hero, the crimes
at Castaway solved, Pauline
Dawson had passed beyond the
earthly spell of the stars, and a
new dam already under con
struction under Lance's direction
.... Public acclaim had assured
that
The next morning, the minist
er who looked like a boxer was
to drive down from the city. He
knew the road to Castaway by
heart now.
And he may drive down still
another time if I interpret cor- ,
rectly the glances between aunt ,
Martha and Sheriff Allen. I "
think now after so many years
of saying "No" she means to say
"Yes."
But tomorrow the clergyman
is to come early. For Lance
Gregg has reservations on the
"Lurlonia," sailing from San
Francisco at noon for Honolulu.
And because it will be a
honeymoon. Lance warns me:
"No blue diary, dear!"
THE END
035 Musical Interlude.
30 Dr LQ.
7:00 Contented Hour. ,
7 3e Cavalcade of America.
8 JO Jred Waring in Pleasure Tone.
8:15 Lum and Abnec
30 Hawthorne House
vOO The Telephone Hoar,
30 Your Mayor Speaks.
845 Music Salon.
10 DO News riasbea.
M:15 Your Heine Town Mews,
1035 Citizens Alert
M:SO Moonligttt Sonata
110 Jantsen Beach Orchestra.
1130 War News,
ltao-l e, nv Music.
KKX NBC MONO AT 1199 Ka.
90 Moments of Melody.
4:19 National Farm ana Home.
845 Western Agriculture.
70 Clark Dermis. Singer.
T:l 5 Breakfast Club.
4 Haven of Rest
30 Pages in Melody. .
45-Keep Fit Club with Patty Jean.
AO Meet Your Neighbor.
9:15 Woman's World.
30 Dsaakfast at SardTa.
104V Baukhage Talking.
19:15 Second Husband.
10 30 Amanda of Howeyaooon B1HT
19:45 John's Other Wtfe.
11 0 Just Plain BiO.
lias Between th Bookends.
1130 Stars of Today
J l sis-Keep Fit with ratty Jean.
12:45 News. Headlines and '
Highlights.
11:15 Prcacott Presents.
It 30 Market Reports.
1235 Mea of the Sea. w i
1145 News. '
' 1 i)0-Arthur Tracy .Street linger.
1:15 Club Matinee.
J 35 Mews. - -
: 40 Tba Quiet Boor. '
30- House tn the Country
f 45-Chaplain Jim.
40 Stars of Today,
' :15 News '.'v. , J ':
8:90 Be Glamorous.
35 Skiteh Hand erase,.
845 Bearing the Budget.
, 8 jo Wartime Periscope
Radio Program a Continued
Page 4, Section 2 ,