Ia OZLGOH CTAtnUIAIT. Cdzra Ora-jcL Cinadoy l lonsla?. February PAG3 en -'.,t ??Vi-v..i .. - - . - 1 By ANNE ROWE THE STATESR1AN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SFRAGUE. Editor and Publisher C ' ' , - Member of The Associated Press . The Associated Press is exclusively, entitled to the use for publication ot all " news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Pukka Sahib 1 , : Novel readers of decade ago may recall John Galsworthy "Flowering Wilderness. It was not a book to be remembered because it was particularly strong in plot, or style. But the clash which conventional novel-ending of happy marriage by ridicule, repealed the law creating pensions i one of more interest now than when it was for themselves, We do riot propose any bun- written. For it relates to the attitude of the dies for judges because, the pending pension .Englishman in his empire. Galsworthy con- bill it not primarily inspired by ; the v judges . vontinnal as alwavs. lets his heroine venture themselves. But the bill contains nice bundles , "Into the heroics df loyalty to ' character who Is discredited in Londo because he failed to maintain the imperial tradition in the Sudan, but it is because of love, whose fruit Is -finally denied her. vmMJ (W.i4.' nut WmHA ' disbeliever in religion, .captured by' Arabs, yields at. the pistol point and accepts the Mos . I 1 1 it. k.i1r. to London the papers, the men at clubs and the races scorn 3ilm as one who has betrayed Ws own people,, not because he has accepted ftn alien religion lut because he proved "yel low". To quote: "There's aU the difference In the world of I course between voluntarily swapping religions and doing It at the pistol point. "An Englishman who does that lets down the lot of us." ' 'YotrVe never beewhere England has to have a certain presume. For Englishmen in suchjparts of the world it's one for all and all ., . for-one.1 . ..: ; "In the East the Englishman . . . maintains ; himself against odds on the strength of the - Englishman's reputation. - If a single English man is found wanting down goes the stock of all those other isolated Englishmen." This fictional problem of Galsworthy's novel is the actual one of today, featured .recently in a literary interchange between the Oregonian and Mrs. Peart Buck.. The former's able re view of Mrs. Buck's recent book "American " Unity and Asia" drew a competent rejoinder . from Mrs. Buck. She decried the white man's attfride of racial superiority over the blacks, and the browns, while the Oregonian asserted: "What has been mistaken for a color antagon ism is primarily "a cultural and economic an tagonism. .. . .. .... . .". , The quotations from "Flowering Wilderness" reveal the British atitude toward the "hack ward' peoples . of its empire. Not by force alone, but by "prestige" have the British ruled the millions of people in India, the Sudani the Malay states, Borneo, and other parts of the . empire.' The conception of "pukka sahib! has ground both ways. Rigidly enforced by whip or swprdV by segregation in foreign compound, It imposed inferiority on the natives from South Africa to Singapore, an inferiority against which they now are rebelling. Taught too in literature such as. Kipling's "White Man's Bur den, in the evclusiveness of the inevitable British club in colonial capitals and over the .equally inevitable Scotch and soda, and taught in the customs of harracks and boudoir, the Idea of superiority has become ingrown, in Brit ish tradition. . It-will be easier- for commons . to ; adopt the Beveridge report than for the English to admit natives to their clubs and drop the prestige they feel has maintained their authority. I But the inferior, the backward peoples of arth are stirring. Education has reached them, or a few of them. The sting of race discrimina tion is sharp. War quickens the unrest and Japanese agents have fanned it with propa ganda. Racial equality may not be fully born In the present world, conflict, but if the allies Win they will, have .to move toward recogni tion of human worth without regard to color, Galsworthy let his man and woman be licked by British prejudice. The quickened conscience of Britons and Americans today must press for the day when, aa Burns wrote, men shall "brothers be, for a that." Bundles for Lawyers Here's . that, judges' pension bill again. It .. was vetoed the last session; but here it is, very . much alive, already through the lower house, and given a favorable committee report in the senate. The bill has been well . . - . .... in and out of. the. legislature me oui ajtong. WhatY wrong with judges pensions? i Nothing; but why begin with the state's highest paid public servants, the ones most secure in tenure of all public employes?.. If judges' pensions are coming, consider the defects of this bill: 1st. A man who has served only six years v n the bench can draw a pension of 1200 a month for the rest of his life, in case he is per manently incapacitated. For ' a payment mt $1080 a man might be able to draw $24,000 .from the pension fund (ten years disability! or more u ne clings to rife with tnma "Itirr cfo svi nv-ii)nAfi 2nd. A man could contribute $180 a year rf for 20 years and then by the chance of defeat T because, of some decision momentarily unpopu lar be retired from office and receive NO pen 'sion at all. Here is the' case of Judge McMahan in this county. We believe, if a judges pen sion system were in effect, the people would want him to receive a monthly stipend from , the fund if he had been a contributor to it over the term of years. Yet because he was de feated in the election he would not have been eligible under the terms pf the state bar-baked bill now before the" legislature. The defeated Judge JWMWM. money hack. , Tie" SS,:d? bait of such a : pension will sharpen the ears of judges-for the political groundswells. - i The bill reeks with discrimination. Not all the judges favor the measure, by any, means. . We recall jbipposi tion 'expressed by some of the judges two? years ago.;; The most of the pres sure then came from Multnomah county.: due to the local condition then existing. That has been remedied by time and by the enactment ;cf the "Judys' "pro tern" bilL. f No one has a higher regard for the judiciary - "No Fatw Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awf. rrom First Statesman, March 23, 1831 ' than the 'writer, and his respect for the, in tegrity of courts has been tested in rather hot fires. He believes in. a general retirement sys j tem for public this starting at character study in the end pre-, the chief male , w9i ' vfaran lobbied, lawyers district OPA announced Saturday. . J T-l 1 J! J i ! helping to push Persons who Editorial Comment From Other Papers the tenacity of THE PARITY One can hardly cost as in that of employes in Oregon and opposes the top with pensions lor juages. The Spokane Round-table last year startea m the famous "Bundles lor Congress" movement hat rnntrress. stung for lawyers who, see In a more rapia wnwvw of circuit and supreme judges opportunity for succession to the: honors, emoluments and the pensions of a judge. ;1 ( The little Foxes : If a 10 per cent reduction on 1943 income . taxes is all that the legislature can see, then' the cut might very well be abandoned. The confusion among taxpayers and? the. labor of, auditing and refunding are more, than the pro-.., posed cut is worth. Most of the refunds would amount to only a dollar or two. ' " j But this real reason why a. heavier reduc- , tion is not authorized is because there has been so much preliminary chiseling on tax receipts. . , There are bills in various stages of law-making calling foi ' J Cash discount up to S for prompt payment Increase la exemptions to S3 090 for men la military service ". " Credits for premiums on insurance Increase la offset on corporation excise tax from 0 to 75 of the personal property tax paid Exemptions for charity trusts (HB 176) A little bit here, and a little bit there and the tax excess is whittled down so the possible overall reduction has to be whittled too. If some of these chiseling bills could be eliminated a larger cut in the income tax applicable to aU classes could be made. Of the above items the only ones possessing much merit are exemptions for men in military service, though the sum seems still rather high, and for charity trusts. Yesterday we expressed opposition to the cash discount scheme. Credits for premiums on 'life insurance are a gnawing of benefit to special groups. Most objectionable is the easing of the bur den on corporations by allowing the greater offset of 75 of their personal property taxes. This is discriminatory as among classes of cor porations. Better to make an overall reduc tion in the rate or byf percentage than to play favorites. i'A large portion of the corporation excise tax is paid by non-resident corporations. .They are not unduly burdened for the privilege of operating in Oregon. Oil companies, mer chandising companies, concerns with high in ventories and little real property are the ones to benefit lay this type of. legislation. This bill ought not to pass. ; To sum up: by eliminating most of the piece meal bills it will be possible to make larger reductions in the income tax. Unless a larger cut than 10 per cent can be ordered for 1943, none should be ordered. The little foxes cf special group interest are eating away the vines of general and equitable , tax reduction. Baseball may be out for the duration on the league lots; but we see the youngsters play ing ball on the schoolgrounds -a sure sign that winter is "behind us. Players on one team stood petrified as a foul ball executed a neat para bola toward the tall-windowed schoolhouse. Luckily it hit the sidewalL and with a whoop and a holler the game was resumed. An exchange says: "A couple on the west coast were married by telephone. That's one tway to get along." Yes, the telephone company furnished the ring. No further applications will be accepted for war ration book one or two until March IS, the did not register at the schools during the period February 22-27 may apply to their local rationing board on March 15, the OPA stated, but not until then. The rationing boards need the two-week period to catch up on several phases of their work . . . the mailing out of fuel oil coupons, renewal of B and C mileage rations, and the mailing out of ration book two to persons who registered by February 27 and made their consumer declaration but did not receive book two because of the last-minute shortage. FORMULA consider the renewed battle over the farm parity formula without conflicting senti ments. Professional farmer spokesmen on the one side and provincial city-dwellers on the other may be able to see one argument as indisputably correct and the other as utterly wrong. But the matter ts much less simple than that. For many years' the farmers have been In the economic dumps. For the first time since World War I they now have a market for all they can raise, at excellent prices. But they are unable to get help to plant, cultivate and harvest, nor can they buy machinery. : , j Certainly the wages paid for labor constitute - Just as valid an element In the farmer's production "tTS the manufacturer or the merchant. which the farmer makes for his own Ions' day and that of members of his family. , y The only, method suggested by which we can" avoid the alternative of doing ; injustice - to "the farmer or of producing inflation Is a system of' subsidies, which would have to be paid out of taxes levied on farms, factory workers, and the generally unorganized white-collar classes which,' alone among Americans, already are taking a hard eco nomic beating . , - J Economic stabilization is no simple matter. ' ------- - Eugene Register-Guard. 1 I , trifei- A" ;rz?z - 'One Bright Spot in the KSLM SUNDAY 139 Ke. KX) Lang worth Foursome. S JO Gospel Broadcast. 9.-00 News In Brief. 9M Spiritual Interlude. 9:20 Organ. Harp. Violin Trio. 9 JO Popular Salute. 10:00 World In Review. 10:15 Mbonbeam Trio. 10:30 Hit Tune oi Tomorrow. 11 AO American Lutheran Church. 11:00 Lduurwortn String Quartette. 12:1S War Commentary. . 11 JO Golden Melody. 1:00 Young People's Church. 1 JO Romanoff String Ensemble. , 3:00 Isle of Paradise. 2:15 Voice of Restoration. 2 jo Vocal Varieties. 3100 Sunday Symphony. 5 JO "Boys' Town." 4-00 Skipper Henderson and Crew. 4:15 Modern Melody Trio. 4 JO Alex Klruloff Russian Orch. 5:00 Old Fashioned Revival Hour. 6:00 Tonihfi Headlines. S:15 Anita Boyer and Tomboyerc 6 JO Langworth Gypsy Orchestra. IM Shepherd of the Air. 7 JO Lan g worth Novelty and Salon Group. :0u First Presbyterian Church. 5 JO Westminster Players. t:00 Nw Summary. :15 Ocganalitiea. , JO Back Heme Hour. ? lOflO News. Mas Dream Tim. B1ALX MBS--aUNDAT 13M K. SOO Weaiey Radio Leacue. JO Central Church of Chrlrt :45 News. S. -00 Detroit Bible Class, t JO Safety Sonss. 95 Hymn Singer. 100 News. 10:15 Romance of the Hi-Ways. 10 :30 Canary Chorus. 10:45 News. 11 0 Pilgrim Hour.' 12.-00 Rev. Floyd Johnson. 12 JO News. 12:45 Gems of Melody. 1.-O0 Lutheran Hour. 1 JO Young People's Church. 2:09 Temple Baptist Church, 2:15 Upton Close. 2:30 Portland Bible Classes. S. -00 First Nighter. 3 JO Upton Close. 4:00 News. 4:15 Remember When. 4 JO Stars and Stripes In Britain. 5:00 American Forum. 8:45 Gabriel Hearter. 60 Old Fashioned Revival Hour. 70 Around the Clock. 7:15 John EmmeL , 7 JO This Is Our Enemy 80 Hinson Memorial Church. 90 News. 9:15 Voice of Prophecy. 5 Sunday Serenade. 100 Old Fashioned Revival Hour. 11.-00 Jan Garber Orchestra. 11:45 Musk. KCX BN SUNDAY 11M Kc AO Soldiers -o Production. JO Josef Mara is African Trek. 90 The Quiet Hour. 930 Stars from the Blue. 100 Horace Heidt Review. 10:55 New. , 110 Coast to Coast oa a Bus. 11 rl5 Speaking of Glamour. 12:15 Wake Up. America. 10 National Vespers. 1 JO Melody Makers. 2 0 Granpappy and His Pals. . 2 JO Musical Steelmakers. 20 News. 35 Free World Theatre. ' 3 JO Metropolitan Opera Auditions. 40 Chaplain Jim. USA. 4 JO Show of Yesterday and Today. 50 Christian Science Program. 0:15 Neighbors. 5:30 Edw. Tomlinson. Commentator 5:45 Drew Pearson. 60 The Green Hornet. 6 JO Inner Sanctum Mysteries. 70 Good Will Hour. 80 Earl Godwin. News. 8:15 Jimmie JTkUer. JO Quiz KkU. 90 Ambassador Hotel Orchestra. 9 JO News Headlines. 9:45 Dorothy Thompson. 100 University Explorer. 10:15 Organ Reveries. 10 JO The Quiet Hour. ' 110 Symphony of Melody. 11 JO War News Roundup. KOIN CBS SUNDAY 959 Kb 60 New of the World. 9:15 E. Power Biggs. 65 English Melodies. -70 Church of the Air. 7 JO Wings Over Jondan. ' 80 Warren Sweeney, New. 85 West Coast Church. 8 JO Invitation to Learning. 90 News. v 9:15 Voices m Song. 9 JO Salt Lake Tabernacle. 100 Church of the Air. 10 JO Baby Food Rationing. 110 Those We Love. 11 JO World News Today. 11:55 Aunt Jemima. 120 New York Philharmonic. 1J0 The Pause that Refreshes on the Air. S0 The Family Hour. 2 :45 William Shirer. News. 2:?0Sdwrd Murrow, New. 3:15 Dear John. 3 JO Sgt. Gene Autry. . 40 Commandos. 4 JO News. -. 80 Only Yesterday. r 5JO William Winter. News. 5:45 Phil Stearns. News. 5J5 Erk. Severeid. 60 Radio Readers Digest 6 JO Fred" Allen. 70 Take It or Leave It. 7 JO Report to the Nation, i - 80 Crime Doctor. 8:25 Dick Joy News. " 8 JO The Whistler. 90 William Winter. New. ' 30 Million Dollar' Club. - 100-Five Sta- Final. . . 10J 5 Wartime Women. 10 JO Air-Flo of the Air. 10 JO What's It All About. 11 0 Paul Martin Orchestra. 11 JO Mutry Marcellino Orchestra. ; 1135 News. - . . Midnight to 8 mjo, Music and News. KGWN11C SUNDAY ZI ate. 40 Dawn PatraL 8.-45 News. 7 .&.twm v: y - - Vi; S m , .- i i - -t -.C,' V t - ,V ,. I I t I Hi i ' -.ir-'fe ---- ' - . y?d0 " i is x- . yr T jtni N '. - T . Mn-.-fe' -I- :: -"'- ' yhf&' kjH rMitiV ' . r'fa'-'i rgVirtii ..,-r .v wiinniiiiiu 'imn-i r tn vf m i in -inn iM World' These schedules are . supplied by the respective stations. Asty varia cleats noted by Usteners are dee te changes made by the stations with oot notice to this newspaper. AU radio stations may be cat Xrem the air at any time In the interests of national defense. . 60 Sunrise Serenade. 70 National Radio Pulpit. 7 JO Words and Music 80 The Church in Your Home. 8:30 News. 8.-45 The Dinning Sisters. 9:00 Emma Otero. Singer. 9 JO That They Might Live. 10:00 People. 10:15 Labor for Victory. - 10 JO Fact Finders. 10.-45 Antonio and Maria. 11:00 Chicago Round Table. 11 JO John Charles Thomas. 130 Washington Reports on Ra tioning. 12:15 Upton Close. Commentator. 12J0 The Army Hour. - 1 JO Garden Talks. 1:43 Here Is Tomorrow. 20 NBC Symphony Orchestra. 3:00 News Headlines and Highlights 3:15 Catholic Hour. 3 :45 Newsmakers. 40 Jack Benny. 4 JO Band Wagon. 90 Charlie McCarthy. 5 JO One Man's Family. 60 Manhattan aserry-Ge-Round. 6 JO American Album Familiar Music. 7.-00 Hour of Charm. 7 JO Walter WlncheO. " 75 The Parker Family. 6.-00 The Great GUdersleeva. . 8 JO Symphony Hour. 9 JO Talent Time. 100 News Flashes. 10:15 Betty Martin. Singer. 10 JO Unlimited Horizons. 110 St. Francis Hotel Orchestra. 11 JO War Mews Roundup. 120-1 a jn. Swing Shift. KOAC SUNDAY 559 Ks. 60 Music. 100 Famous Choirs. 10 JO Organ Service. 110 Hour with the Masters. 12:09 Melodic Favorites. 10 Music. 20 The Rhythm Makers. 30 Sunday Concert Hour. 4 JO Modern Moods. 6:15 Orchestral Gems. 6 JO Song Parade. 80 Artists in Recital. JO Organ Nocturne. 100 Artist in Recital. 11 0 Favorite Melodies. KSLM MONDAY 1399 KC 7:00 News In Briet 7.-05 Rise 'n Shine. 7 JO News. 7:43 Morning- Moods. - s0 Freddy Nagel's Orchestra. 8:30 News Brevities. 855 Tango Time. 90 Pastor's Call. 9:15 Dickson's Melody Mustangs JO Popular Music. 9:45 Uncle Sam. 100 News. 105 A Song and a Dance. 10 JO Organ. Violin and Harp Trio. 110 Tommy Reynolds. Mai Hal let and Orchestra. . 11 JO Hits of Yesteryear. 120 Organelles, . 12:15 News. , - . -12:30 Hillbilly Serenade. . ' 12 J5 Willamette Valley Opinions. . 10 turn and Abner. - 1:15 WU1 Bradley's. ' " . , 1 :45 Spotlight on Rhythm V 80 ble-oC Paradise, v ., 2:15 BUI Roberts. - - . ' S-30 Langworth String Quartet. 3:45 Broadway Band Wagon. .. 30 KSLM Concert Hour. 4.-00 Guadalajara Trio. . - 4:15 News. 4 JO Tearime Tunes. 50 Jack Feeney. 9:15 Records of Hemmiscence. 60 Tonight's Headlines. , 6:15 War News Commentary. 6 20 Evening Serenade. 6:45 Popular Music 70 News in Brief. 75 Facts About Taxes. 7 JO Willamette Valley , Opinions. 7.-50 Mark Levant. Violin. . 80 War Fronts in Review. . " 90 News. 9:15 Neighborhood Call. 9:30 Szath Myrt Presents. 100 Let's Dance. 10 JO News. KALE MBS MONDAY 1339 Ke. :45 Good Morning Club. r ' 70 News. 7:15 Uncle Sam. 7 JO Memory Timekeeper. ' 80 Breakfast Club. 8:15 Breakfast Club. : 8 JO News. ; 8:45 What's New. ' 90 Boake Carter. ; 9:15 Woman's Side of the News. 9 JO Buyer's Parade. - - 9:45 US Naval Academy Band. 100 News. 10:15 Curtain Calls. - 10 JO This and That ... 110 Cedrie -Foster. . 11:15 BUI Hay Reads the Bible. - 11 JO Concert Gems. 12:25 On the Farm Front. 12 JO News.--" " ' . 10 News. : . ', 20 Sheelah Carter. 2:15 Texas Rangers. , 2. -45 Northwest News. 30 Philro Keyne-GordOBV. ' ,3:15 Wartime Women. 3J0 HeUo Again. - . . . 3:45 Stars of Today. , 40 Fulton Lewis. ,Jr, 4:15 Johnson Family. 4 JO News. w r - , i 4:45 Wings Over the West Coait. 5:15 Superman. 5:30 Norman Nesbitt. 5:45 Remember When. ; . . 6 0 Gabriel Heatter - 6:15 Movie Parade. ., i: 6J0 Meditation - - - 70 Faymona- Clapper. ; 7:15 Accordion and Guitar. 7 JO Lone Banger. ... - 3 80 San Quentln on the Air, 8:30 Double or Nothing. 90 News. 9:15 Salute to Heroes. 9 JO General Barrows. 9:45 Fulton Lewis. Jr. ' 100 Jerry Sears Orchestra, v 10:15 Treasury Star Parade. 10 JO News. - 105 Let's Learn to -Dance. , . 110 Lew Diamond Orchestra. 11J0 Snub Mosley Orchestra. KEXBN MONDAY U59 Ke. 90 Moments of Melody. - 9 as National Farm and Home. 6 -45 Western Agriculture. - 70 SmUin' Ed McOonnelL 75 Home Demonstration Agent. 7:15 Music f Vienna.- " 7:45 Gene and Glenn. . ' . , 80 Breakfast Club 8:45 Keep rit with. Patty Jean. ? 90 Meet Your Neighbor.... 9:15 Woman's World. 9 JO Breakfast at SardTs. 19.-00 Baukhage Talking. 10:15 Uncle Sam. 10 JO The Great Melody. -119 Jack Baker. Singer. 11 US Greet Moments in History. 11 JO James G. MacDonald. News. 11 :45 Keep Fit Chib with Patty Jean. 13:10 News. 12:15 Cote Glee Club. 12.-40 Market Reports. 12:45 News Headlines. . 10 Club Matinee. ; 1 JO Men of XandV Sea 1:55 News 20 The Baby mstitute. SOS Music ot Leu Bring. 2:45 Al -and Lee Reiser. 2J5 News. 30 Melodies, of Milady. 3:15 News. 3 JO The Gospel Singer. 49 ' Pages of Melody. 45 Organ Concert. 4:15 General Paul V. Ms lone. 4 JO Singing Strings. 4:45 News. 90 Terry and the Pirates. 5 :15 The See Hound. 9 JO Jack Armstrong. 5:45 Captain -Midnight. 60 Hop -Harrigan. 6:15 News -6:25 The Lion's Roar. 6:30 Spotlight Bands. 35 Little Known Facts. 70 Raymond Gram Swing. 7:15 Grade Fields. 7 JO Basin St. Chamber Music. 90 News. 9:15 Lum and Abner. .8 JO For All Humanity. 8:45 Golden Gate Quartet 90 Your Mayor Speaks. 9:15 Perm Hotel Orchestra. 9 JO News Headlines Ac Highlights. 9:45 Down Memory Lane. 10:15 Major Hoople. 10-40 Vital to Victory. 10:45 Joseph James. Singer. 11.-00 This Moving World. 11:15 Organ Concert. U.JO Wax News Roundup. KOTN CBS MONDAY S7S Ke." 60 Northwest Farm Reporter. 6:15 Breakiast. Bulletin. .. 20 Texas Rangers. 65 KOIN Kloek. 7:15 Wake Up News. - 7 JO Dick Joy. News. 7:45 Nelson Pringle. News. 80 Consumer News. 9:15 Valiant Lady. 9 JO Stories America Loves. 9:45 Aunt Jenny. 90 Kate Smith Speaks. - d5 Big Sister.-" - mt- - 9 JO Romance of Helen Trent. 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. 100 Life Can Be Beautiful. 10:15 Ma Perkins. . 19JO Vie and Sade. 10 5 The Goldberg. 110 Young Dr. Malone. 11 35 Joyce Jordan. 11 JO We Love and Learn. 11:45 News. 12:15 News. Bob Anderson. 12 JO William Winter. News. 11 ?45 Bachelor's Children, 10 OWI Uncle Sam. 1 JO American School of the Air. 20 Newspaper of the Air. 2 JO Your Monday Date. 2:45 Ben Bernie. 30 Meet Mr. EmmeL 3 JO Keep Working. 3:45 News. 40 Milton Charles. -4:15 Sam Hayes. . 4 JO Martha Mears. f . 90 Salute Our Allies. 5 JO Harry Flannery. . 8:45 News. 5:55 Cecil Brown. News. 60 Radio Theatre. 70 Screen Guild Players. 7 JO Blondie ; - 80 Four to Go. 8:15 Celling Unlimited. -' 8 JO Gay Nineties. 855 Dick Joy. News. 90 John B Kennedy. ' 9 JO Vox Pop. 100 Five Star Final. 10:15 Wartime Women. 10.20 Air-Flo of the Air. 10 JO The World Today. 10:45 Facts About the WAACs. 11 9 Benny Carter. 11:30 Manny Strand Orchestra. 11:53 News. - Midnight to. 6 am. Music and News. KGW NBC MONDAY 429 Ke. 4 0 Dawn Patrol. . 5:45 News. f. 5:55 labor News. 60 Sunrise Serenade. JO News Parade. . 6 J5 Labor News. ' 70 News Headlines. 7:15 News Parade. 7 JO Reveille Roundup. 7:45 -Sam Hayes. 80 Stars of Today. . 8 JO House Divided. - 8:45 David Harum. , - .9. -00 The O'Neills. ' 9:15 Everything Goes. 95 Knees With the News. 100 Funny Money Man. . 10 JO Homekeeper's Calendar. - 10:45 Dr. Kate 110 Light d the World. . - ll J6 The Guiding Liffht. 115 Hymns of AH Churches. 120 Story of Mary Uarlia. r 1245 Ma Perkins. . Chapter 23 contianed . - ..... My mind went -back to last; afternoon. Mrs. .Libby had 4eft before Stella's arrival. How naa SteBa found out about the rad ium?; rjs... -I didnt know she knew, I said as calmly as I could manage. "Oh, but she did," be assured me - in a confused way. "She talked about it at length, I thou ght, of course, she'd : heard it from youV ; Did she stop any place be-, fore going home? I asked, with out taking the trouble to deny his assumption. - 'v "She called on her aunt, Mrs. Iibby -to ten her what she'd found out, or thought she'd found he told me. -And she got -.. terrible row with, her." that was where she had learned about the radium, I thought with an unaccountable surge of relief. But; I only said: h? That's too bad." and hur ried on to join, the others. . . Again the picture had changed during my absence. ,C , '. The. Forrestall ; incursion had materialized, and the lawn- was filled with laughter and chatter i mostly produced by Alice For restaU. . .Ss s" ,--. -1 k The surprise at Curtis Avery's presence, was- patent, ; if short 'lived -expressed in additional .' giggles by Alice and a slight gri .mace by Amy, who .looked more ' sullen than ever nand , quickly forgotten oyer the introduction , of the hero of the moment: the fiance who was there when, need- ' ed, '"') ' . ' ; X have seldom' seen anyone so ' '1 utterly at variance with the men tal Image. T had nad of him in . . advance. Robert Jordan called Bobbie was a tall, gangling -i young, man of Indeterminate coloring . and features, . scarcely . older than Amy, and quite ob . viously overawed .- by- the .im- - pbrtance of his future relatives. . ' Everything about him pro-. ; claimed, loudly his birth" on the wrong side of the tracks, from : the- flamboyant ready-made .suit that weighed his .thin shoulders with -elephantine-, paddings, .to . the cringing elation, with which he . responded to the . smallest -friendly advance. Actually It was impossible , to . imagine him so very young,, a bit loutish and not too bright as the man with whom the sophisticated Amy had indulged ' In a winter of clandestine meet- - ings in an empty house. Al though, on the other hand, his abject devotion to her was dis tinct, and his one really redeem ing . trait .;:V ' - ' . -1 caught a glance from Aunt - Millie, saying plainer than words, &-Wi'4$&$it&&.ms& pererjthe man she's been meeting:, nod ded imperceptible agreement and then turned my attention to the various members of the For- Your Federal Income Tax No. 4f EXPENSES OF FAKMEKJS A farmer who operates a farm for profit is entitled to deduct from gross income as necessary expenses all amounts expended (other than those constituting capital expenditures) in the car rying on of the business of farm ing. The cost of feeding and raising livestock may be treated as an expense deduction insofar as such costs represent - actual' outlay, but not Including the value of farm produce grown upon the farm or the labor of the taxpayer.1 Also deductible Is the cost of seed, minor repairs to term buildings (other than the dwelling of the farmer), and small tools used up in the course of a short period. The cost of fuel and oil used for farm work, as well as re pairs and. maintenance of farm machinery, is deductible as a . business expense; but the cost 12 J0 Pepper Young's Family. 12:45 Right to Happiness. 10 Backstage Wife.' ' ' 1:15 Stella Dallas. 1 J0 Lorenzo Jones. e 1A5 Young Widder Brown. 20 When a Girt Marries. 2:15 Portia races Life. 2 JO Just Plain BilL 2:45 front Page rarrelL 30 Road of Life. 2:15 Vic and Sade., 2 JO Snow Village. 2:43 Judy and Jane. - 49 Tank Hemingway, ' News, 4:13 News of the World. 4 JO The Personality Hour. 8:15 H. V. Kaltenborn, 80 Eyes Aloft. JO Dr. L Q 70 Contented Hour. T JO Information Please. 80 Fred Waring in Pleasure Time. 8:15 News 8 JO Cavalcade of America. 99 The Telephone Hour. 9 JO Hawthorne House. 100 News Flashes. 10:15 Labor News. 10 JO Nova time. 10 JO Gardening for Food. 10.-45 Uncle Sam. 110 Your. Home Town News. 11:15 Hotel Biltmore Orchestra. 11 JO War News Roundup. , 120-2 man Swing Shift. KOAC MONDAY 459 Ke. 0 Music. . ' . 100 News. ' 19:15 The Homemakers Hour. 110 School of the Air. 11:20 Music of Gilbert and Sullivan. 120 News. 12:15 Noon Farm Hour. 10 Artist in Recital. -1:15 War Commentary. -140 Variety Time. 1 :45 Victory Front. 20 The Home Front 2:30 Memory Book of Music 20 News. 2:13 Treasury star Parade, 5 JO The Concert Hall. 40-Monitor News Roundup, -4:15 Walts Time. .. 4 JO Stories for Boys and Girls.' -, 80 On the Upbeat. 8:15 On the Campuses. 8 JO Vespers. 6:45 It's -Oregon's War. , . 8:15 News. " 1 8 JO Evening, Farm1 Hour,,, -TJO 4H dub Program. 8 0 Education. . s0 Forester tn Action. 915 Calling all Teachers. 9 JO News. . , 9:45 Uncle Sara. - 100 The. Hour of Great Music, . - 110 Favorite Melodies. U2-Sw1ag Goes -High Hal. ,; , . . restall family.- J. " ;.. Young Bobbie Jordan was painfully easy to read. A lad bewildered by his sudden for tune, be sat beside his fiancee, half cocky and half flustered, eating -her up with adoring glan ces mat were completely Ignored, although, I am sure. Amy was aware of thenu She sat; too stiffly erect for comfort, staring straight ; ahead, with a set ex pression' on her 'pretty face. And in spite of it perhaps because of her garden-partyish dress and large hat she seemed younger and less sure ' of herself : than usual, -v-. ; ' : ' ' " Conley Forrestall looked Just plain bored. with his wife's ex- uberance, and preoccupied with more importantand not very enjoyable matters. A few1 times I caught his eyes on me. And each time he glanced away with a quick frown. It gave me an u n e a s y feeling of Impending trouble, brought Aunt Millie's account of Inspector PettengilTs exhortation back to me: "111 run you both in, if you don't come dean. Was Conley r Forrestall . thinking of. that? i - : , - -1 was too engrossed with fhe Forrestall problem and my thou ghts, to notice i that: Dad . had Quietly gotten up and gene into . the house. I might not even have Itlwa AAkMa sWksta ' wtcrW4 BiBrFtW . vcro uuu vau97 avsm, iu mwm&j if Alice hadn't greeted his te appeamace In the most spectacu lar manner. . i J Her word-cascade stonned sud- denlr. In mid-splash. Her eyes goggled. Hff mouth remained a large ooen O for' an- instant Then . she rushed across the lawn with a delighted: "Gala! Gala darling! ' So wonderful to see you tip and abroad, after all these years!4 And there, on the terrace was Dad. leading Gala, lovely apd shining in a long, simple white dress, down the steps.-;. Aunt Millie, Allan an4 I ex changed dances that, said glee fully: "Good for him and good for her." Then, I avoided the repetition ol the Bobbie Jordan ' introductions by running past my latest, and most welcome,, guest Jnto the house, to inform Nettie and Mae of, the number of people-outside and ask them to be gin aerving tea. . And that is when I found out why Conley- Forrestall had -frowned. , . v Be wuhe lihray when 1 came back from the kitchen. Waiting for me. And he cut off .my-way to the terrace with an urgent:.,- . -' . "1 must talk with you, alone Mrs. Jollimar." . ' V So Bruce had told Conley For- ; restall. about me! '- 1 v I stared at him ' for a moment and then blurted out: TJfou've known aU along?" - . . . - f (To be continued) of farm machinery, equipment, and farm buildings represents a capital Investment and Is not an allowable deduction. The cost however, may be recovered by depreciation allowances. In the case of a farmer, the farm dwel ling is not depreciable, except such part of it as may be used directly in farming operations. The cost of gasoline, repairs and upkeep of an automobile if used wholly in connection with the taxpayer's farm operations, as well (as depreciation thereon, may be deducted, but if an auto mobile is used partly for busi ness and partly for pleasure or the convenience of the taxpayer or his family, the cost ot opera tion may be apportioned accord ing to the extent of the use for purposes of business and for pleasure or convenience, and the portion attributable to business will be deductible as a necess ary business expense. The cost of hired laborers and hired machines on a farm and the part of the board which is purchased for hired laborers are deductible. The value of pro ducts furnished by the farm and used in the board of hired laborers Is not a deductible ex pense. Rations purchased and furnished to laborers or share- croppers are deductible as a part of the labor expense. Amounts paid to persons engaged in household , work to tha extent that their services are used In boarding and otherwise caring for farm laborers are deductible. r but amounts paid.; for services of such employees engaged in caring lor the farmer's own household are not a deductible expense, Axaovrntm expended In the de velopement .of farms, orchards, and ranches prior to the time when the productive state Is reached may be regarded as in vestments of capital. The cost of planting trees, as well as the amounts expended by a farmer In the restoration of soil fertility preparatory to actual produc-' tion of crops and the- cost of liming soil to Increase produc tiveness over a period ofyears are capital expenditures; but the cost ' or commercial fertilizers, the' benefit of which Is of short duration:. and which have to be used every, year or so, even after a farm reaches the productive state, is deductible as an ex " Pense. ;.: -, ,r .,' : Amounts expended in pur chasing work, breeding, or dairy animals are regarded as lnvest- sncnis or. capital and may m depreciated unless such animali art Included in inventory.