TAGS TCZZ Tha CTTTXrOIT STATrTTTHIX, Ccdenxr Oregon. TCednaadcrr Morning. I lay 8, lt3 mi : 'i t J 4 1 IS 3 is; J V. '. ; i i I,' lib, II: ill i-.; T :- t il. Stfu? "Mo Favor Steayt Vn No Fear Shalt AwtT Frooi First Statesman, March 23 1351 THE STATES3IAN PUBLISHING CO. - CHARLES A. SPaAGUE, Editor and Publisher i Member t The Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use far publication of aO oewi dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. Arctic Seaway Dog-Fights, et al. A The Berlin dispatch relayed from Stockholm that, this summer the Russians would receive quantities of war materiel shipped by boat ."through the Arctic ocean from western Amer Ica may be a correct prediction. Late in 1941 the soviet ice-breaker "Krassin : arrived in Seattle harbor, having sailed' from the White sea over that route which lies north of the Eura sian continent. Depending on the season, boats can. sail through those waters for from three to four months ; each year. With ice-breakers -fRossia has 4 of them) the season may b lengthened. "r v ' " 7-1 . ; .! ' Before the war Russia was working diligent ly to open up the northern seaway.- From Kara sea, an arm of the Arctic lying at the end of the ..Ural mountain chain, to Bering strait weather stations were set up to observe and report the weather, with particular reference to the move ' ment of the ice-pack. Radio connects these sta tions with Moscow; and airlines serve the whole northern country. The fact is, that behind the screen of isola tion, vast development has taken place all through Soviet Asia. It is reported n part in a recent book under that title, - written by Ray mond Arthur Davies and Andrew J. Steiger. Highways are being completed, railroad lines are under construction. Mineral and agricultur al wealth r being developed. Once the prison .house for convicts and revolutionaries, Siberia is being colonised with the migration of thou sands,, some still under order of exile, others as . volunteers, from J districts of western Russia. For instance , the great German population of the Volga, who had been located there since the days of Catherine the Great, were trans planted as a measure of safety when the Ger man armies invaded Russia. Great rivers, flowing north into the Arctic, are the natural avenues of travel: the Ob, Yeni sei, Katanga, Lena, Kolyma; and the Amur flowing north into the Sea of Okhotsk, an arm of the Pacific ocean. Use of the northern Arc tic route makes the connection between Atlan tic ports of Murmansk and Archangel with ports at the mouths of these rivers. Thus, in -the book mentioned the writers report seeing ships in Igarka, at the mouth of the Yenisei river, one week out of Murmansk and eleven days from London. They also reported this ob servation at Igarka: "In the distance we could see Oregon timber carriers chugging up wooden roadways to lum ber yards and rolling down again with load after load of the finest Siberian larch and pine to fill the waiting ships." The use of this Arctice route will necessarily . be limited in wartime: there simply are not enough ships to spare many for this service, where they may be caught in ice and held until the following summed and the route to Vlad ivostok is still open. But the opening of the re sources of Soviet Asia offers opportunities for post-war commerce which we on the Pacific coast cannot ignore. With anything like decent relations with Soviet Russia there should be a marked expansion in trade between Soviet Asia and western United States. Unbalanced Teaching , In the day's news is the report of the winning of a prize -in an essay contest by a girl in a val ley high school. The contest was sponsored by a patriotic organization, as part of a national contest. Considered of themselves these contests are fruitful of good to all who take part in them. Usually the subjects are important .and the study required is profitable. But too much in trusion cripples the school program. A common practice when many good organ izations want to "educate" youth is to bring pressures on the school authorities to have spe cial courses provided in the subject, or to spon sor special contests. The danger is that the school program may become unbalanced by such outside meddling until the course becomes a hodge-podge, a mixture interrupted with spe cial events and competitions. Then the people stand off and criticise the schools for not doing thorough job of teaching history or mathe matics or English. How can they if the courses laid out by the teachers are interfered with from the outside. This is not to condemn essay contests or ora torical contests or special prizes. A certain num ber of these ' events are . stimulative. But we mean to say that the teaching staff should con trol and be free to reject proposals from the outside if they unbalance the curriculum or . give a warped emphasis or consume too much of student time and energy. ' ' We Can't hold teachers accountable if the gen eral public keeps butting in with suggestions of what to teach and how to teach it. ' " Salem has been spared the battle .that had been raging' in several other Oregon towns be : tween the dog-owners and the Victory-gardeners, with city councils the unwilling arbiters. " The dog may be man's best friend, but he sure ly has a lot of enemies of his own. When neigh borly wrath and patriotism combine the poor pooch is certainly in the doghouse. But when he looks about him, the dog-lovers are sure to speak up in bis behalf, notwithstanding the evi dence of ravaged radish, beds and scratched out beans. Maybe our Salem dogs are just , better behaved; or is it that our victory gardeners are more tolerant? i But there has been some local protest against China pheasants, who are more purposeful in their destruction than dogs. A dog doesn't care to bite an onion; but a China bird does love peas, and knows just how to dig them up. So far the fight against Chinas is confined to trick ery; perhaps like the Chinese people these birds fear there is some devil behind fluttering pa pers and colored rags. Lacking dog fights, and with China pheasant marauders protected by state law, Salem is re sorting to its own brand of trouble; a return engagement of the perennial nuisance battle over pintail machines. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLOW duettos tm whole or to Dart strictly prohrbned.1 Distribution by Base fa 9ur SgradBeat. In. Hsr WASHINGTON, May 3 Only a paltry paragraph or two heralded the news that k-h baa changed its policy and now favors the Hull reciprocal trade program. - At least, that portion- of business as represented by the national eggvfatirwi of manufacturers, and the United States fhnpwr of commerce, made such- an an nouncement through representa tives appearing before the house ways and means committee. The public appearance of the NAM was made after its board private ly agreed to reverse its policy of three years ago with very little dissent ; of members. The business experts did not say so, but apparently, they fi re Mane ured world trade must be dif ferent after the war. Our manufacturing produc tion capacity has been greatly expanded by the armaments program. The machines now used for weapons n be changed back to peace-time products much easier than they were changed to war. Replacement of one or two parts and tools are all that will be nec essary in many instances, they say, and a better machine tool industry exists to do the job. This extra production will have to be sold either in a greatly expanded American market (more peo ple able to have radios, bathtubs, refrigerators, etc.) or in a larger foreign market. The world will have little gold or goods with which to buy our surplus manufacturing production. It would be very foolish of us to "sell" these ex tensively on credit through any of the old or newly suggested devices. Actually, all we would be doing under such arrangements is to give our products away at expense of our people as a whole. As long as we export more than we import, we will naturally accumulate world debts which can not be paid, or gold which is of doubtful value. We already have too much of both. If we establish the Keynes or White systems of international payment, we will merely accumulate all the new international currency, "unites" or "bancor," which, apparently, is to have only the value which our government underwrites for it. In times of t international bankruptcy and post war conditions ' will approximate that the only way for us to get paid for our products is by im portation of goods. This line of reasoning has brought the business people here around to the idea that SO per cent re ductions of our tariffs, as provided in the Hull pro gram, may help our selling. The old fear of cheap foreign labor and foreign under-selling appears to have diminished. : . s . ; . And, inasmuch as labor has joined in approval through A. F. of L.'s Bill Green, it looks like Mr. Hull has gathered unexpected support , v . , ' : Hi S , "Our joint ask will be hard. But, for our part, we are proud of the company with which we march. No one flag, no one government, no one language unite the peoples of our great alli ance. We have one passport, freedom; one ob jective, victory, . total and ' unmistakable; and one purpose, a just and"; lasting peacesAn-' thonyEden.v ' . . . : r " Nebraska's new republican Senator Wherry was just about right when he said at Pittsburgh that Mr. Roosevelt is already nominated for the. fourth term. He is nominated as far as common interpre tation in Washington is concerned. - The generally accepted belief - in all political camps here is that the war probably will be on at that time and renomination will be arranged as a matter of course. Just now, the government officials like OWTs Elmer Davis are saying that the fourth term talk is "hot air" while the party wheel-horses, like Sen . ator Guffey and Governor Neeley are out making speeches presenting the fourth term notion as na tural and inevitable. . ; ' - -; - a , The pattern of the fourth term campaign Is, therefore, little different than the third, except in one particular. The exigencies of war seem to have led Mr. Roosevelt's personal officials (Ickes, et al) to refrain from participating openly in what the wheel-horses (Walker, et al) are openly promoting. . : Interior Secretary Ickes has decided not to make too much of a monument out of the Jackson Hole country, even with his presidential decree. He has announcea grazing can be continued and those who The Mother Irustinet Today tMw in Briaf Tg5 "a ShkM - Honing Moods. Staa Kenton Orchestra -3 Hew Brvvtttes 8:35 Tango Ttoaa 9 Mi Pastor" call S:J Uacl Sam. S -JO Popular Musis :4S Round-up. M-WtK to awtew 10:05 A Sons and a Dane GoepeU 1130 WUUmtta U Chanel 12 OrgmaUtiea 12:19 Mm 11:30 Hillbilly Serenada 11:35 Matinee, , 1:00 Meet the Grange. 1:15 Mai Ballet's Orchestra ld MUady's Melodies. 1:45 Spotlight on Rbjrthm. 1:0 Isle of Paradise X:1S US Marine 2 :45 Broadway Band Was on 3. -00 KSLM Concert Hour 4. -00 Th Aristocrats 4:15 News 4:30 Tea time Tunes 5:00 Fettpo Gil t Joaa Navarre 8:15 Let's Reminisce 5:3a Melodies, 6:00 Tonirhfs Headlines :15 War News Commentary ae . gyentng Serenada 4:45 Popular Masie T.-OO New t:ta Jay Burnett. TdO Keystone Kara vaa. 0 War rronts ia Bcvkw :10 interlud " S:15 Hollywood Round -un, S JO Treasury Star Parad :45 Three Sleepy Heads. t. -00 New S :15 American Lagioo Auxiliary. S:30 South American Salute. lO Lett Pane 10 a Mew Next day's comics page, appear est - John B. HUKbea 7:15 Music far Moderns 8 DO Take A Card. ' S JO Under Uve Stars. S.-OS News 9:15 Today's Top Tunes 9:30 General Barrows. 9:45 Fulton Leva, 10:15 Treasury Star Parad 10:30 News 1945 Music II 0 Shady Valley rolks. tHS Owe Gal 100 USm Can Be BeeuUnd loas Ma Parkin . 10 JO Vie and Sad 1:45 Tha Gotdbcres 11.-00 Younc Dr. Malon ll:15-Joya Jordaa 11J0 We Xova and Leara 11. -45 News 13.15 News 12 J6 William Winter, N H:43 ..bachelor's Chiklrem 1U5 Graea, VaUey. 1 JO Songs. S.-OO NewapeDer as 1 JO This Life ts Mia. 3.09 Treasury House. 3 JO Keep Workhic Keep Stefta a. aLAXX MBS WKONKSOAT 1339 K. 9:4S-Uncl Sam. 10 Around the Clock. T:15 Texas Bangers. T JO Memory Timekeeper :K Cheer Up Cans. S JO News 3:45 What's New 9:00 Boake Carter 9:15 The Woman's Sid of ths News JO Nary School of Music 100 News 10:15 Curtain CaOs 10:30 This and That ll0-Cedrie roster 11 US Bill Hay Reads the Bible 11J0 Concert Gems IS 0 Concert. Ida Music. , 30 Sheelah Carter 3:15 Texas Ranfers All Star Dance Parad. 3:45 Pat Neal St the News 30 Phillip Keyne-Gordon 3:15 Wartime Women 3:20 Hello Afain 3:45 Stars of Today 4 .-00 Pulton Lewis. 4:15 Masters : EnUrtaln. 4:30 Johnson ramily. 4.-45 News. 5:15 Supermen 5 JO Hl-way Patrol. 9:45 Norman Neabltt. 80 Gabriel Heatter . 6:15 Movie Parad JO Soldiers With Wlnas. KEX BN WCONES DAT 1199 S0 We re Up Too. 9:15 National Farm aad Horaa 6. -45 Western AsTictiiture SmiUn Ed MConaeB TS Home Demonstration Afeat 7:15 News. 7 JO News. 7. -45 Music at Vienna. r 90 Breakfast Club 90 Meet Your Neighbor. 9:15 Music. 9 30 Breakfast st Sardfa 10.-00 Baukhag Talking 19 US Tb Gospel Singar. . 19 JO Andy and Virginia. 10:43 Funny Money Man. 110 Woman's World. 11 J5 Science Byways ; 11 JO Lawson's Knights. 11:45 Year Hollywood New, . 13:15 New 12 JO Livestock Beporter. 12:45 News ; 10 Bhte Newsroom. 10 What's Doing. Ladies. 5 JO Unci Sam. 35 Labor New ' 30 Music 3:15 Kneass With the New 3 JO Club Matinee. 40 My True Story. 4 JO News. 4:45 Th Sea Hound. i Terry aad- tb Pirate 9:19 Dick Tracy. 9 JO Jack Armstrong 9:45 Captain Midnight 90 Hop Harris' an 9:15 News 9:35 Victor Borg. 6 JO SpoUight Bands 9:55 Little Known racts 70 Raymond Gram Swing 7:15 Grsci Fields 7 J5 Wings Over th World. 90 News 9:15 Lum and Abner 9 JO Manhattan at Midnight 9:00 John Freedom JO News 9:45 Down Memory Lane 10 JO Broadway Bandwagon 10.-45 Music. 110 This Moving World 11:15 Organ Concert 11 JO-War News , COIN CB9 WEDNESDAY 97 K6. 9 0 North west Farm Reporter 9 :15 Breakfast Bulletin . 90 Texas Rangers 9:45 KOIN aUock f 7:1S News - : ' 90 Consumer News 9:15 Valiant Lady . 9 JO Stories America Loves 9:45 Aunt Jenny 90 Kate Smith Speaks 9:15 Big Sister - ' 9 JO Romance of Helen Trent S:4S-Nws 40 Raffles. 4:15 Sans Hayes 4 JO Easy Aces 4:43 Tracer of Lost Persons 90 Ernie GUI Orchestra JO Harry riaanery 3:45 News 9 JS Cecil Brawn 9:00 Mayor of th Town, 9 JO MiMoa Berte. 70 Great Moments ha Muss ' 7 JO Heathman Concert. 901 Lov a Mystery. 9:15 Harry Jamas Orchestra 9 JO Or Christian 95 News 90 Sammy Kay Orchestra 9 JO Northwest Neighbors 100 Five Star Final 10:15 Wartime Women 10 JO Th World Today. 19 JO Air-Flo of th Air. 110 Benny Carter Orchestra. 11:30 Manny Strand Orchestra 11 .-55 News Midnight to ajn. Uuste aad News Dnterpreting The War Neivi By GLENN BABB ' AP War Analytst for The SUtesmaa, 'That.other labor leaders do not agree with homes in the region may keep them for life under the benevolent philanthropy of the new fed eral. landlord. - - . " v But this does not settle all the basic principles or difficulties of the" federal seizure by presidential order. . " The county government will lose close to $20,003 a year In taxes as a result of the president's action. Approximately 200 men have come from that re- - - ' , :- " - " t --tMo to aiM .the .war for their hones,' ooljr to find ; Meat rationing has done one thing, at least: -now that these homes are to be available only for It has put meat back onthe butcher's travst. For ufe, by executive decree. John L. Lewis Jn his claim ; that , the war Tabor: board breached the no strike" agreement is proven by the declaration; of Hiilip Murray, headaof CIO, in San Francisco, who said amid cheers of CIO representatives: Tm not. 'going 4oufcrrak my no-strike pact with the president of the. United States of America." . i - weeks there Were periodic shortages of meats. Some markets closed! for two or three days at a time. Now all shops stay open and appear to have a fair variety; and adequate' quantity of meats." Handling the pomt-cbupons is a nui . sance, but customers are able to get meat now. It now develops further that two congressional committees refused to let the government seize the area before Mr. Roosevelt chose to do it by fiat. As one citizen of the region has written: r ' ."Jackson Hole may be a monument to Mr. Ickes, but it's only a tombstone to me" and to everyone else who lives there. There Is welcome reassurance in the word from General Mac- Arthur's I headquarters that the heavy losses of the allied fighter squadrons battling the 51 -plane Japanese raiding' force over Dar-" win Sunday were due to weather and. not enemy action. It was a one-day fluke and there has been no basic! change in the relative ; merits of the air. forces in' the southwest' Pacific. This; is important because the qualitative - superiority of the i American, British and Australian . ; squadrons has been the main rea son for confidence that the Jap-' anese wiH not overrun Australia in the months or years that re . main before the Pacific war be comes the united nations main shorn . It justifies this Confidence- In . spite of the enemy's concentra 1 tions of nearly a quarter million men, strong warship flotillas and hundreds of thousands of tons of shipping in his island bases above Australia. r.;,;-:- y.-, In their raids on Oro bay, Mil ne bay and Darwin last month the "Japanese, using about 200 planes, had just about 49 per cent of these knocked out of action," an almost prohibitive rate, espe cially since allied -losses were light - , , - The . first announcement of Sunday's eavy losses for the British and Australian Spitfire units over Darwin, giving no rea son, raised fears that the Japan-. ese might have evolved some new wrinkle that could change the as-. pect of the war in that theatre : a new type'Tof fighter, new tac tics or the return of what Gen eral Kehney called their "first string tram. ' . But it appears now' that the' first team is not back and there is no reason to believe that the . . Japanese will be able to replace . the few, thousand picked, exper ienced and determined pilots who gave them command of the Pa cific skies in the first few months of the war and most of whom are now believed to be dead. The battle over Darwin is a reminder, however, that we are up against a tough and resource ful enemy who 'will . not be de terred by heavy losses from com ing again and again to attack. Although his strategy may, be fundamentally defensive, in the sense that his primary purpose is to hold the rich empire he al ready has seized rather than add new territories, he can be expec ted to throw heavy forces into -attacks intended to cut supply lines or knock out bases from which allied offensives . might, coma. ' . KGW NBC WKDNKSDAT 429 Ka, 4 .DO Dawn Patrol 945 Labor News - " 940 Everything Go. 9 JO News Parade. 95 Labor News 7:15 News 1 JO Reveille Roundup T:45 Sam Hayes . 9:09 Stars of Today 9J5 James Abbe Covers the News 9:45 Derid Harum 9.-00 The O'Neills 9 :15 Arden Commentator. 9:45 Kneass With the News 10 .-00 Mirth and Madness. 10 JO Homekeeper's Calendar 10:45 Art Baker. 11:00 Light of trie World 11:15 Lonely Women 11 JO The Guiding Urht 115 Hymns of All Churches II K)0 Story of Mary Marlin 11:15 Ma Perkins II JO Pepper Young's Family 11:45 Right to Happiness 1 .00 Backstage Wife lUS-SteUa Pallas 1 JO Lorenzo Jones 1:45 Young Widder Brown SAO When a Girl Marries 1:15 Portia Faces Ufa 5 JO Just Plain Bill 1:45 Front Page Farrell S.-00 Road ot Life :15 Vie and Sade 3 JO Snow VUlase S:45 Judy and Jane 4.-00 Dr. Kate. 4:15 News of the World 4 JO Frank Hemingway. 4:45 The Personality Hour. 5:15 H. V. Kaltenbom 5 JO Allan Sheppard. J 95 By the Way ' 9:00 Eddie Cantor 9 JO Mr. District Attorney , , Ti)0 Kay Kyser's Kollege 9 .00 Fred Waring in Pleasure' Tim . 9:15 Fleetwood Lawton 9 JO Tommy Dorsey Orchestra -90 Point Sublime 1 9 JO Scram by Amby. 19.-00 News Flashes. 19:19 Lefs Be Frank. , 10 JO Gardentng for rood 10 rt5 Uncle Sam 11.15 BUtmore Hotel Orchestra 11 JO War News Roundup 11.-00-S Swine Shift KOAC WCONESDAT-S9 . 10 DO News 10:15 The Homemakers Hour. , 110 School of the Afar lldO Muaie ec tbe Masters ' 11 .-00 News 11:15 Noon Farm Hour 10 Artists in Recital. . . 1:15 Today's War Commentary 140 Variety Time. - v. 10 Red Cross. 1 JO Memory Book of Mast 10 News 3 dS Concert Ban." ' 4 .-SO Book of the Week.' ' 4 -J 5 Plantation Revival 4 JO Stories for Boys and Girls . SAO Swing 5:15 On the Campuses 5 JO Evening Vespers " - . . " 9:45 U's Oregon war' 9:15 News 9 JO Evening Farm Hoar -1 JO School of Music. . 9 aw Business Hour. . 9 JO Higher Education tn - 90 Independent Colleges. s jo News 9:45 Unci Sam Ke. By FRANK MELONEY Chapter two (continued) .. : 1 Ann held one of the slippers In her hand; some tourist stop - ping for the night must have left . them. But no. They had .too re cently been"' near perfume, . too .. recently worn. As - she slipped them on, she tried to fit this touch of incongruous femininity in the sturdy- old-fashioned : bouse. - - K 'if iy-. ' i "l have to go back upstairs," Paul broke in on her thoughts. . . "MomTI take care of you until the .. storm lets up." He vanished be fore she could protest, j She rose restlessly, and went to the window, peering out into the darkness. She could see noth ing but a steel gray blur, hear nothing except a steady hissing roar as sleet drove against the wmdowpanes.'" v-..-i Mrs. Fruend moved to the sink with the pan of potatoes. 'Better , you stay here tonight,' she sug gested. . - . .. "Impossible," Ann was about, to reply, 1 have to get on to. ; Mew yorsV; But Mrs. Fruend was ahead of her. "Maybe it's . important for you to be some where? Maybe somebody wor ries about you?" she anticipated gently. Somebody worrying a b o u t . her? There was Tom, of course. But Tom wouldn't worry about her. He'd can her apartment, and If she weren't there, he'd call the next day, or rather he'd have his secretary remind him to calL There must be something won - derful about modern business. Ana reflected; it taught men how to put everything into compart ments, j That was it. She didnt ; belong m Tom's life, she belong ed in one of bis compartments, the one he labeled love. He did nt look Into it very often, satis fied that she was there, aad that, , presumably, be held the key to IL . : It was a little the same with Helen, who had for years con- -sddered . Ann in the f light of o ' duty rather, than a younger , sis ter. About once a week, she ex pected Ann to report her where abouts,; and her prevailing state of being; but inasmuch as they had, parted only this morning, after one of those family argu ments in which both sides get stiff-lipped and voices grow pre cise, it was fair to suppose that Helen wouldn't worry if she did 4S hear from Ann for a good bit over the allotted lapse Of time. I The argument had verged per ilously close to open bickering. It had had to do not only with Ann's refusal to marry Tom (of hom , Helen most whole-heartedly approved), but Helen; had also taken exception to Ann's de cision to rid herself of Broad fields to th first feasible buyer, lit passes my comprehension," 5elen had said, "how you can ring yourself to sell the farm. It's sacrilege to let ft go but of tha family. It was our home." She had stressed the "our", and her upper lip had grown straighter, thinner, longer mak ing her look like the dining room Jrtralt of Aunt Laura. "What youVe trying to say," nad countred tersely, "is it you wish Td keep the place - use- of the sentiment that have for it In that case. Shy dont you and Arthur buy, r ------ ' ' That's quite out of the ques tlon. Helen's attitude became that of dealing with a 12-year-younger sister, hot-headed and irresponsible. TTou must real ize," she bad explained patient ly, ihat Arthur and I nave es tablished our summers at Bar Harbor for far too many years .to change the pattern of out lives now. Besides, Father meant you . to have Broad fields as a kind of anchorage, and this impulse to be free of it and take a Job In New York Is Just a whinv" How untrue that was, but bow - futile to argue the point with Helen. Helen eouXdnt realize that sotnetimes you relinquished a thing because you loved it, not because you didnt love it. Ann had been little more than a baby when her father had bought the farm and moved his family there. His friends had called him a fool to give up his law practice. He had called them fools to keep theirs. In the yean that followed, when he had lei- j1 sure from the labors of raisins sheep and breeding horses and Towing crops, he wrote arti cles, elaborating his theories of Cmstitntlonal law, 'and in the - pine-panelled study that was li brary and farm office combined, he had written his biographical studies on the supreme court, with his desk piled high with a Jumble of legal volumes, breed ing records and soil samples. And , fa that same pine-panelled study, Ann and Helen and two aunts bad collected after his death to hear his wilL ;-;;. ; - To Helen, he left her mother Jewels and the house in Bar Har bor; a few, odds and ends of fam ily furniture to tha aunts and to Ann the farm and a block of Income-invested stocks. He left' her a letter, also, a very intimate . letter, in which he j told her of his love of the land, his faith in it, and his hope, that Broadfiekis I would always insure for her con tentment, keeh pleasure, and se curity.. :H For a while, his hope had come true. And then things began to .tumble. The stocks which had brought In an income of over two hundred m month ; dwindled in dividents to fifty; and, along with the debacle the market for her father's Morgan horses and pure bred sheep abruptly vanished. Now it was a struggle to feed livestock when there was scarce ly enough money to meet her own small bills at the grocer's. It was heartache, too, to see fields growing back Into brush, plant ing programs neglected, and breeding plans Interrupted. But Helen, who was not of the land, could not know an obligation to the land. She could only cling stubbornly to a tradition. Chapter three ... j - Come. ; You must eat some thing. It ,1a; dinner time,"; Ann stirred,' and brought her thoughts back Into the warm kitchen. "I really am hungry," she aknowledged. "Can VI help you?" The old lady shook her head and moved effortlessly from stove to table. "I see better than most people," she said. (To be continued) "he 'Safety 'Valve Letters from Statesman Readers Wartime, Tbday'G Gordon By LILLIE L. MADSEN ME. reports that she has been . ; sent some seeds which" are to be ' : "frozen before planting. As all heavy frosts are now. over, am at ' a loss as to how this should be handled." . . Answer: Use the refrigerator. . If the seeds are in a package, : tear off one corner and rdd a little water, fold over tightly and -put into the' freezing compart'-' ment of the refrigerator. Seeds can also be planted in a small COMMISSIONER REPLIES 4 TO j INSURANCE CRITICISM To the Editor: I The lead editorial in the April 30th edition of The Statesman deals with communications re ceived by the editor from read ers and gives prominence to a quotation from one correspon dent who states , that insurance men admit the truth of four pro positions he states. : ; - JTbm - first proposition begins ith a plain statement of fact that the accumulated legal re serve in a life insurance policy increasingly reduces the amount ' at risk, but -follows with ; the statement that "the. company's obligation is a drminjahjng one." The fact is that the company's obligation is not a diminitnt one. The company's liability un der the policy is constant, only the amount at risk under a poli cy with increasing legal reserves -14 a diminishing factor. j The second proposition also begins with a simple statement of fact that dividends on life In surance are premium over-char-" ges, but continues with a false statement that "these over-charges "are used primarily as a sales bait.'! The premium over-charges are used primarily to comply with the minimum provisions re quired in the premium to provide, for the factors Involved in the liability assumed under the con- tract. Inherent in the explanation of this provision Is a sales argu ment which Is secondary. U rj The third proposition states that the loan value on the policy shallow: box of damp soil and placed in, ; the compartment. . Leave the seeds in the refrigera- tor for about eight days. t , Mrav N. C wants to know when to prune her forsythia. . Answer: Prune now that the flowering season is over. Cut out "old growth at base and shorten back some of the newer growthv This wEl keep the bush shapely. Fortythias bloom best when they receive plenty of water during the summer season. . should not draw Interest when borrowed by the owner. Certain ly the original over-charge in the premium would have to be ma- terially increased If the owner of the policy were permitted to compel the company to withdraw its otherwise Invested funds which are earning interest and place them at his disposal with out interest, , since the Interest calculation reduces the original premium charge to approximate ly thirty to forty per cent on the average for long term contracts. The fourth proposition states , that the American Tables of Mor tality are false and their use Is a dishonest business practice which works to the disadvantage of the insured. First of all, the use of the American Experience Table of Mortality is prescribed by law as a mim-murr) measure of a life insurance company In the several states and, therefore, its use could not be attributed to dishonesty unless it Is Intended to charge the dishonesty to the several legislatures of the forty eight states. In the second place, the use of the Table does not work to the disadvantage of the insured. There are modern mor tality tables which more nearly reflect the current experience of the companies With respect to tha Incidence of death , at various ages. However, these modern mortality tables still reflect the fact that ultimately all the lives terminate. This obvious fact ac counts for the little realized fact that the premium derived from the modern mortality tables does not vary substantially from the premium derived from the Amer ican Experience Table of Mor tality. 7 The prominence which your oditorial of April 30th gives to the letter of your correspondent prompts these comments since it Is evident that the communica tion from the correspondent chal lenges the functioning of the state supervision of the insurance companies ' Yours sincerely, , Seth B. Thompson ;,' Insurance Commissioner. 2 -TP- I " Cm