PAGE F0U2 d OZZGCII CTATEZILUJ, Cclzra. Orgy'sau rr.-fy Ilcn. Jia 17, 1213 An THE STATESaiAN PUBLISHING CO. .. . CHARLES ! A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher . Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.. Seeing a Ghost j In the April 15th Issue of "Frontiersof De , rnocracy,' a publication of Jhe "progressive ed ucation" faction, is an article, evidently an ed itorial, on ''Shall we revive the Oregon school ; law?" It refers to the measure which the voters of Oregon approved at the polls back in the Ku Klux'Klan days following the first world war, requiring all children to attend the public schools. This law was declared unconstitutional by the US supreme court, but. this magazine "article says, The decision was, however, not uniformly convincing. With : the new attitude on the US supreme bench there is no certainty that the decision would now be against the Uw." It is true that there is "no certainty about -what the present supreme court may say about the constitution; but the recent trend of deci sions is most positively in favor of freedom of speech and religion. The "Frontiers', people can get no grains of comfort out of decisions in the cases relating to Jehovah's Witnesses. The .article goes on to cite three arguments In behalf of such a law, which would do away with private and parochial schopls-r-f irst, ; the "snobbishness" of private schools second, "The method of certain parochial schools is dogmatic authority, not shared inquiry;" third, public schools suffer because of the opposition of pri vate and public schools. The conclusion is: : "As one surveys these and other ascertain able factthe conviction grows that the existence of the private school and of the parochial school is, in the net, hurtful to the best interests of Am erican education, and American life, j A nation wide 'Oregon law to restrict education during these early years to the public school seems the answer. - j . Thus do ghosts of the past put in their ap pearance. But not in Oregon. Here there has been a feeling of regret over the burst of intol erance which culminated in the klan-sponsoredv school law. The reaction went so far in fact that the" legislature voted to permit public school buses to haul private school pupils, and to pro- . vide free textbooks to children attending such schools, under certain condiitons. j . j These progressive education people are es- sentially collectivism want to streamline educa tion and make children pawns of their own so cial and economic theories. They glorify the state at the. expense of the individual. Editor of this magazine is William H. Kil pa trick, long connected with Teachers college, and regarded as head ofthe progressive education movement, , On the board is Harold Rugg, another of the "advanced thinkers" in education of the Colum bia university crowd. There are many signs that reaction to their radicalism is setting in; so we have no fears that the country will go for any law to suppress private and parochial schools. The public school system needs defenders and . supporters; but there is still room for parental freedom in the instruction of youth.! S. P. in Service Last year the magazine "Fortune" gave the Southern Pacific a write-up, dealing particular ly with its financial progress as well as its war time operations. Last week's Saturday Evening Post contains a stirring description" of how this railroad is doing the. job, with particular, refer ence to the Sacramento division from Roseville, Cal., over the Sierra Nevada mountains to Sparks, Nev a distance of 137 miles, but de scribed as one of the "hottest stretches" on Am erican railroads today. The-title of ; the article by Frank J. Taylor is "Brother, Can You Spare a Locomotive?" which suggests the great prob lem of the railroad: tractive power. No other.line of railroad carries such a war load as the SP. Other roads carry more freight and passengers, the Pennsylvania, j and New York Central but none has had so great an ex pansion of business and been under the operat ing difficulties of the S. P. The area served by its. lines from New Orleans to Los Angeles, up the coast to San Francisco and Portland, and across from San Francisco to Ogden has become . a military zone of greatest importance. On its lines are some 60-odd military training camps and air ; bases; the great airplane factories of California, the shipbuilding plants ! from San Pedro to Portland; the great ports of embarka tion at Los Angeles harbor, San Francisco and Portland, all of which have added enormously to the railroad's normal load of fruits, vegeta bles, petroleum . products, lumber, ( manufac tures. . . j To do the job huge investments were made in new engines, boneyards were hunted for dis carded locomotives, - and as many as possible were borrowed from other roads. Train move ment was speeded up as much as possible on a system most of which was still single-track, New methods reduced the time loss for turn around, check-up, cleaning, boilers and .truing wheels and flanges. The road has lost over 12, 000 workers to the armwl forr.. anrl ram n in a hard pressed for workers for maintenance of way and rolling stock. ' ' While the SEP article -gives deserved praise for the Southern Pacific's record to date, it omits raisins a Question as to the future. The Pacific coast is the base for the expected I attack on . Japan; and the Southern Pacific as the princi pal Pacific coast railroad will have most of the " rail hauling to do. It is hard to see how it can handle more business, though the car loading reports show continued gains. The danger is that the plant will be so badly overloaded that it can't do the job. Listening to the pounding of wheels on the rails as trains, roll through Salem suggests "flat wheels." There is a limit to what the renovated engines can do, and to what the man-power of the system can do. We believe . -wWll ciak nrrar Ilia liivmrt .urfeiff, Is m much bigger hump even than the Sierra Neva das; but it will need plenty of cooperation from Shippers, from government agencies and from other railroads less burdened with traffic. ; The Southern Pacific is enlisted for the duration; but there is a limit to its own powers of endurance. I ., ' "Wo Favor Swaya Ut; No Fear Shall Aw i From rint Statesman, March 28, 1831 " News; Behind The News j By PAUL . ..- (Distribution v a. aac j MALLON by King Feature Syndicate In a. duct ion in whole or In part strictly prohibited.! News Behind Paul Mallorw r m WASHINGTON, June 28. Shed no tears forrj John I Lewi, the triple strike caller, who la sup posed tr have been put in his place again until , October 31. The place he was put into is neither uncomfortable nor. against his choice. . He and Interior' Secretary Ickes got their heads together . and adopted this course either at Ickes suggestions with : Lewis agreeing. ; or vice versa. They contrived a summer hiatus main ly as a cooling off period for the war labor board. ; 1 i. It has not become generally Paul Malloa ; known, but Mr. Ickes is involved in as deep and bitter a dispute with the board as , Mr. Lewis. Letters have passed between Enforce ment Officer Morse, of WLB, and' Ickes (or bis v right hand man, Abe Fortas) which are 10 degrees -hotten.than the unprecedented. summer Washing ton climate. -. ' ' t' ' ' -Their correspondence has reached such a de gree that many an Inside rail-sitter suspects either Ickes or the board will have to get out of town be- fore October 31, and the general assumption is that the one to travel will be the board. 1 1 Its members are literally fuming to an extent where they cannot talk without sputtering. . Their faces are pale, and they show signs of their war of nerves not only with Lewis but with Ickes. The mere fact that Ickes even talked with Lew is and thereby interfered with their dealings on the various coal strikes, would have been 'enough to make them run high, but when Ickes kept taking matters out of their hands and assuming to settle negotiations (even though he had an executive or der directing him to do so) he just about furnished the main basic reason why the coal strike situation is in its current quandary. So it may be reasonably said that Messrs. Lew is and Ickes really decided to let the problem go for four-and-a-half months to push, or let the board go on the rocks quietly in the interim. Nor will Mr. Lewis be scared much by FDR's request to congress for extension of the draft age limit to 65 in order to deal with the miners or oth er strikers. Congress probably will not pass it The idea of making millions of people of the. country subject to presidential draft at will, in or der to punish a few labor leaders, is not apt to have wide political appeal It looks like another of those administration proposals to ' avoid direct j action against the source of trouble, in favor of a circuit out route and indirect action against all of the peo ple for the sins of a few. I ? j i Most of the coal operators seemed to want to ' settle with Lewis without waiting four-and-a-half months for the outcome of these I ekes -Lewi po litical ramifications. Their actions suggest they may be scared on two counts. ; i j In the first place, if Lewis sues in court for por tal to portal pay and gets a judgment, he might be able to collect back wages for five years to 1938. A settlement would not go back so far. ' '' In the second place, Ickes is running their In- dustry and such an aggressive political character la apt to look under all their beds for whatever he can find now that he is in charge of their household. The war labor board has been on the verge of going either out of town or on the rocks several times lately, but, at the moment, seems sharply di vided as to its future course. ' r ; ... . Some board members want to drop, the whole Lewis coal strike proposition and get some sleep for the next few months. They were heartened by the fact that the president mentioned them in his draft message to congress, a reference which they inter preted as soothing their wounded prestige. Other members want to make Lewis sign the two-year contract Which they told him he must sign. They even want to force the president to force Lew is to sign the contract This latter group is not likely to get anywhere either at the White House or with Lewis. ' The matter, therefore, will probably drift But it is at least an even money bet that the war labord board will not be around here October 31. Editorial Comment From Other Papers NATIONAL WAK FUND : In 1942 the country saw In the USO the con- . solicitation of fund raising drives on behalf of rec- reation for members of the armed forces that had been carried on independently in the first world war. It was an application of the community chest idea wherein one collection of funds is made for the support of a group of approved agencies instead of having a number of separate drives. Now there is being organized a further consolidation or union on behalf of a nationally approved group of war relief -activities numbering 19 in all and including the USO. This is, In effect, a national community or war chest and bears the name. National war fund. With the National war fund organization in operation the participating agencies will cease their own fund raising efforts. The needs of the 19 for the remainder of 1943 and for all of 1944 have .been set at $123,000,000 and an allocation of this : total among them agreed upon. It is understood that when this fund is raised there will be no oth er national drive of any nature before 1945 other than that for the Red Cross which will remain on - an independent basis. - f J-r-- v The National War fund drive will be made in this coming fall. State quotas have not : yet been announced but one may guess that a quota of $123,- 000,000 for a national population of 130,000,000 will mean that state or county quotas will run at about one dollar per capita.' - Raising sums in excess of a county quota is not to be encouraged and if contributions do run over provision will be made in many counties to ; apply the balance on account of other causes for which local fund drives are ordinarily made, or for -a local community chest " -- . As the plan has been developed it is obvious that through this National war fund, contributions will be made by many counties to causes to which heretofore they have given no support - The oppor- ' tunity should be welcomed as one that more defin itely than ever unites the people of the country m ' the common cause of aiding our allies and winning the war. Bend Bulletin. A Great little Monk When fie Going 7a Good KSLJW SUNDAY 13M Km. S:00 Lanrwortn foursome. S.-00 Nawa ta Brief. t M Spiritual Interlude. O Organ. Harp. VloUa Trie. S:30 Gocpel. 10:00-World in Review. IS US Moonbeam Trio. 10 JO Hit Tunea of Tomorrow. 11 KX) American Lutheran Churftb. UW Sunset Trio. 12:15 War Commentary. 12 JO Golden Melody. 10 Young People s Church. 1 JO Music 3:00 Isle of Paradise. ? S:1S Voice of BeatoraUoav. 10 Vocal Varietiea. SAO KBS Sunday Symphony. 3 JO "Boys' Town." 40 Skipper Henderson and Crew. 4:15 Modern Melody Trio, 4 JO Alex KlrUloff Russian Orcfa. S. -00 Old Fashioned Revival Hour. 6:00 Tonlgbt's Headlines. -:15 Anita Boyer and TombojreraV 5 JO Del Courtney Orchestra. 70 Bob Hamilton's Qu to tones. T JO LaagworUi Novelty and Salea Group. An First Presbyterian, Church. 8:30 Music. 9:00 News Summary. ' - 9:15 Organaliues. : : 9 JO Back Home Hour. ? ' 100 News. 10:15 Dream Time. - KALX MBS SUNDAY 1330 KW S0 Wesley Radio League. S JO Central Church of Christ. 85 Rev. V. W. McCain. ' 9.-00 Detroit Bible Class. , 9 JO News. 9:45 Music. 100 News. 10:15 Romance of the Hl-Waya. 10 JO canary Chorus. 10:45 News. 110 Pilcrtm Hour. 12 DO Concert. -13:15 News. 13 JO Music. 10 Lutheran Hour. 1 JO Young People's Church. 3: 00 Temple Baptist Church. 2 JO Portland Bible Classes. 30 Murder Clinic. 3 JO Upton Close. 3:4 Voice of the Dairy Farmer. 40 Dr. Johnson. . 4 JO Melodies. 4- 45 News. 5 :00 American Forum. 5:45 Gabriel Heatter. 0:00 Old FascVoned Revival Hour. 70 John B Hughes. 7:15 Music of the Masters. 7:45 Rocking Horse Rhythm. . 5 80 Hinson Memorial Church.' ' 90 News. 9:15 Voice of Prophecy. 9:45 Sunday Serenade. 100 Old Fashioned Revival Hour. 11 0 Answering You. 11 JO Hancock Ensemble. KKX-BN SUNDAY lls Ka. 80 Soldiers of Production, 5 JO Ralph Walker. 8:45 African Trek. 90 The Quiet Hour. S JO Stars from the Blue. -100 This te Official. . 10J0 The Kldoodlers. 105 New. , 110 Coast to Coast ea Bus. l 11:45 Speaking of Glamour. 130 The Three Romeo. 12:15 Wake Up. America. 10 National Vespers. 1 JO Serenade. 15 News. - 20 Remember. 2 JO Musical Steelmakers. 30 News. 35 Here's to Romance. : 330 Free World Theatre. -40 Chaplain Jim. USA. 4 JO Serenade. 50 Christian Selene Program. 5-J5 Neighbors. JO Edw. Tomllnson, Commentator 9:45 Drew Pearson. 80 The Green Hornet 70-Good WU1 Hour. - 80 News. 8:15 Jimmle FIdler. 8 JO Quia Kids. 90 Inner Sanctum Mysteries. 9 JO News Headlines t. -45 For All Humanity. 100 University Explorer. 10:15 Organ Reveries. 10 JO The Quiet. Hour. - - 110 Melody. 11 JO War News Roundup. ' --, -- KOfN CBS SUNDAY-S4 K. S0 News of the World, , : ; ' , 8:45 English Melodies. 70 Church of the Air. : 7 JO Wings Over Jordan. 80 Warren Sweeney. News. 85 West Coast Church. 8 JO Invitation to Learning. 90 Salt Lake Tabernacle. 9 JO News. 100 Church of the Air. . 10 JO Trans-Atlantic Call. 110 Opera. 11 JO World News Today. 1155 Mufiet Show. s 120 Concert . 1 JO The Pause that Refreshes est the Air. S0 The Family Hour. :, : ' 25 William Shlrer. News. 30 Edward R. Murrow. Nt a:i uear John. 3 JO Sgt Gene Autry. 4 0 Commando. 4 -.30 Question of the Week. : 80 New. ' 8:15 Songs for Sunday. SJOWUltam Winter. News. 55 Music 155 Erit Severeld. . 80 Radio Readers Digest. 8 JO Fred Allen. 70 Take It or Leave It. 7 JO Man Benind the Gun. -80 Crime Doctor. . . 85 News. -. 8 JO Calling America. 90 William Winter. Na W-.15 News. 100 Five Star FUtaL , 10:15 Wartime Women. 10 30-Air -! oi th Air. Next day's pregraxaa appear eat cemics page. 110 Musie. HAS News. - ' Uidoicht to ajik Uusla and News. KGW-NBC SUNDAY 40 Dawn PatroL 80 News. 8:15 Commando Mary. 8:30 Music. 70 Bible 7 JO Words and Musie. 80 The Church In Your sjo News. 8:45 The Dinning Sisters. 8 0 Commentator. 9:15 Music. 9 JO That They Might Live. 100 Rupert Hughes. 10:15 Labor for Victory. IS JO We Believe. 110 Chicago Round Table.' 11 JO John Charles Thomaav- Monday's Radio Programs KSLM MONDAY 1399 2U. 70 News m Brief. -75 Rise V Shin. - 7 JO News. 75 Morning Moods. 80 Freddy Nagel's Orchestra. 85 Freddy Nagel's Orchestra. 8 JO News BreviUe. . . SJ5 Tango Time. 90 Pastor's CaU. 9:15 Uncle Sam. 9 JO Popular Musie. 100 World in Review. 10.-35 Music 110 Orchestra. 11 JO Hits of Yesteryear. 115 News. 13 0 Orgsnalities. - 13:15 News. 13:30 Hillbilly Serenade. v ' 13 J5 Matinee, i 10 Lum and Abner. 1:20 Wul Bradley's. 1 JO Music : 1 :45 Spotlight on Rhythm. ' 20 Isle of Paradise. 2;1S9-B1U Roberts. . 2 30 Langworth string Quartet - 2:45 Broadway Band Wagon. - 30 KSLM Concert Hour. .4 0 Guadalajara Trio. 4:15 News. 4 JO Teatime Tunes. , . 80 Music. 8:15 Records of Reminiscence. 5 JO Music. 80 Tonight's Headlines. 8:15 War News Commentary. ' 8 JO Evening Serenade. . 8:45 Popular Music 70 News in Briet 75 Music. 7 JO Keystone Karavan. ; 80 War Fronts in Review. . S JO Melody Mustangs. 8:45 Treasury Star Parade. k. . 90 News. - 9:15 Neighborhood CaU. 9:45 Srath Myri Presents. 100 Swing. - 10JO New. wuulx" arns Monday use sx.,-' S 5 Uncle Sam. 70 Around the Clock. 7:15 Texas Rangers. 7 JO Memory Timekeeper. 80 Shady Valley Folka.. ' 8 JO News. 8:45 What's New. 90 Boake Carter. - 9:15 Woman's Sid of the News. ' 9 JO Band. 100 New. " 10:15 Gardner Friend. 10 JO This and That. 11 0 Buyer Parade. 11:15 BUI Hay Read the Bible. 11 JO Concert Gems. 11:45 Rose Room. 120 Concert. 12 JO News. 125 On the Farm Front - 1 0 News. . 1:15 Music-"'" 1 JO Nobody's Children. V 2 0 Sheelah Carter. '.2:15 Texas Rangers. ' 2 JO All Star Dance Parade. 2:45 Wartime Women. 2:50 News. -V 30 Phillip Keyne-GordoBk S JO Overseas Report. 35 Stars of Today. 4 00 Fulton Lewi. 4:15 Isle of Dreams. 4 JO Quaker City. , . . . 45 News - 8:00 Concert 7 8:15 Superman. 8 JO Hi-way PatroL 8:45 Norman Nesbitt 80 Gabriel Heatter. 8:15 Movie Parade 8 JO Candlelight and SUver. 70 Clapper. --f 7:15 WalU Time " 7 JO Lone Ranger. - 80 Bulldog Drummond. 8 JO Double or Nothing. 90 News. 9:15 Salute to Heroes. 9 JO General Barrow. 95 Fulton Lewis. Jr. 100 Wings Over th West Coast 10 JO News. s. -105 Music. 11:45 Treasury Star Parade . KCX BN MONDAY 1120 Kai - 80 We're Up Too. . 8:15 National Farm and Home. " 85 Western Agriculture, ' 70 Smilin' Ed McConneO. 7 :05 Home Demonstration Agent 7:15 Musie of Vienna. . 7 J0 News. 75 Gene and Glenn. DO Breakfast Club. 9:00 My True Story. 9 :S0 Breakfast at SardTs. -100 Baukhage TaJrlng. . 10:15 Gospel Singer. l JO Andy and Virginia. 18:45 Baby InsUtutc . . . . . 130 Washington ttcporf am tioning. 11:15 Upton Close, Commentator. 13 JO The Army Hour. 1 JO Land ec ta Free. 15 News. : ' 1 0 Symphony Orchestra. 3:00 News Headlines and Highlights 8:15 Catholic. Hour. . 3:43 Newsmaker. t 40 Those We Love. 4 JO Band Wagon. 50 Paul Whitman, JO One Man's Family. 80 Manhattan Merry -Go-Round, 8 JO American Album Fsmuiar Music. ; 70 Hour of Charm. 7 JO Walter WincheO. 75 Music. : 80 The Great GUdersleev. 9 JO Stop and Go. 100 News Flashes. 10 JS We're In. 10 JO Unlimited Horizons. ll MO BV rrancis Hotel 11.-45 War News' Roundup. 120-2 a m. Swing Shift . , , . . . I .... . "; , 110 Woman's World. - . . 11US Mystery Chef. 11 JO Music. . ' 11:45 Your HoUywood News. 120 Songs by Morton Downey. 12:15 News Headlines and Highlights 12:45 News. 10 Blue Newsroom Review, , 20 What's Doing. Ladies. , 2:30 Uncle Sam. . 2:45 Harmony. 25 Labor News, i 30 Steve Merrill. 3:15 Knesss with the News. -3.30 Club Matinee. 40 The Latest Word. 4 5 Voice of the Coast Guard. - 4 JO News. 45 Archie Andrews. V 5 0 The Sea Hound, i 8:15 Dick Tracy. 5:30 Jack Armstrong. 8:45 Captain Midnight 8:00 Hop Harrison. 8:15 New 8 JO Spotlight Band. .8:55 Sports. 0 Music. T:15-Grsci Fields. 7 JO Music 80 News. , 8:15 Lum and Abner. 8 JO Greece Fights On.' ! 85 Your Mayor Speaks. 90 True or 'alse. v, 9 JO News Headlines & Highlights. - 9 :45 Down Memory Lane. 10 JO Broadway Bandwagon. . 105 Joseph James, Singer. 110 This Moving World. 11:15 Organ Concert 11 JO War News Roundup. KOIN CBS MONDAY 70 Bt. 64)0 Northwest Farm Reporter. 9:15 Breakfast Bulletin. - 8J0 Texas Rangers. 8:45 KOIN Klock, 7:15 Wake Up News. 7 JO Dick Joy. News. - 75 Nelson Pringte. New. 80 Consumer New. 8:15 Valiant Lady. 8 JO Stories America LovsaV 8:45 Aunt Jenny. 90 Kste Smith Speaks. 9:15 Big Sister. 9 JO Romance of Helen Trent -' 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. -: 100 Life Can Be Beautiful. 10:15 Ma Perkina. . . 10 JO Vie and Sad. , . 10:45 The Goldbergs. . 110 Young Dr. Melon. 11:15 Joyce Jordan. 11 JO We Love and Leara. : 115 News. 12 :15 News Bob Aadc 12 JO William Winter. N .125 Bachelor's Children. -10 Home Front Reporter.: 1 JO Uncle Sam. 1:45 Mountain Music 2 0 Newspaper of she 2 JO This Life Is Mine, 2:45 Keep the Home Fires Burning 30 News. 3:15 Today at The Duncans. 3 JO Songs. . . 3:45 The World Today. , 40 Raffles. 4:15 Sam Hayc.' ; 4 JO Dorothy Allen. ; 80 Concert. - 8:15 Harmonies. 8 JO Harry Flannery. " " 85 News. 8:55 Cecil Brown, News. " . 80 Radio Theatre. " , s' 70 Screen Guild Players. ' 7JO Blondie 801 Love A Mystery. 8:15 Ceiling Unlimited. -8:30Gay NineUes. 8:55 New. -. 901 Was There. 9 JO Vox Pop. j 100 Five Star FlnaL I ' 10:15 Wartime Women. . i 10 JO Air-Flo of the Air. 1 10:45 Music 11 Music . 11:55 News. " Midnight to 8 Anu Musie and New KGW NBC MONDAY 428 Ka. 40 Dawn Patrol. . 8.55 labor News. . , 80 Everything Goes. 8 JO New. 8 .55 Labor New. 70 News. - ; 7:15 News Headlines. - 7 JO Reveille 75 Sam Hayes. ' 80 Stars of Today. 8:15 New ... 8 JO Rose Room. , 85 David Harum. 90 Open Door. 9:15 Commentator, t JO Mirth and Madness. ' , 100 Music 10:15 News. L1J0 Gallant Heart By FRANK MELONEY Chapter tl Paul's jaw dropped. "Look, Rowdy lost yesterday." His voice went off to a croak. ."Wain's giving you the blue Tibbon was just to make you feel good, but not to put any wrong ideas in ' your head. "Air. Wain has a great deal to learn about women. He also has a great deal to learn' about dogs." "Nobody knows it all Paul argued. "He's a swell guy. Lay off him." - "He should lay off Rowdy. Rowdy's a swell-dog." , , "OJL, she's a swell dog. The Rheingold bloodline Is the finest : In the world, and X dont mean maybe. But Rowdy doesn't stand a chance at a show like the Mor ris and Essex. "Does Gretel?" . "Gretel has a good win behind her, SheTlJ probably take her class if there's not to much competition. he added gloomily. "You bred those dogs, didnt . you? Ann-asked sloVly. "And you're losing your nerve. Worse than that, you're losing faith in your own achievements. That's bad news. PauX" she finished gravely. "Honestly It Is." : , "Dont I know it?! he mum bled with grim lines of worry and strain settling into his round face. "If I don't make a couple of sales soon, IH have the sher iff on my heels. Over ninety pounds of food a day those pups eat And X cant cut down. I got : to keep em up in good shape, or my whole investment's shot" Ann was shocked into a new realization of the hazards of dog business. And then Paul started to talk about dogs, and she realized that here was no chance affiliation : with a casual livelihood. As well ask a musician to give, up his music or an artist to give up his art Paul lived, ate - and slept the profession he had inherited. Great, sonorous names rolled off his lips: Helgas and Thors and Odins and Ruprects. He was like" a Burke's Peerage of Dane gen ealogy. Ann pricked up her ears . as he mentioned a Rowena. "Any relation of this Row ena?" she asked . "Grandam in the sixth gener ation, and she figured again in some line breeding that my fath er was working on in the fifth and fourth generations," he ex plained glibly. "What was she like?" - "That was . a dog." His voice . quickened with enthusiasm. "One of my uncles bred her mo ther, in the old country and my father brought her over here." "You dont mean brought" her over before she was born?" Paul.nodded, "That's how. the old timers used to da -it- They weren't interested in the indiv idual dog, they were Interested in the bloodline, in what would some day happen. Well, anyway the boat was late, and the pups were born in Hoboken on the dock. The trip must have, been hard on the mother, because Rowena was the only one of the litter that lived, and the mother 105 Homekeeper's Calendar. 110 Light of the World. 11:15 Lonely Women. . 11 JO The Guiding Light 115 Hymns of All Churches. " - 11:00 Story of Mary Martin. 11:15 Ma Perkins. U JO Pepper Young's family. 12:45 Right to Happiness. 10 Backstage Wia. l:15-rSteUa Dallas. 1 JO Lorenzo Jones. 15 Young Widder Brown. S0 When a Girl Marries. : 2:15 Portia Faces Life. . 2 JO Just PIsin Bill. 25 Front Page FarreU. 2:00 Road "f Life. - 8:15 Vie and Sade. - 1 1 2 JO Snow VJlage. 8:45 Judy and Jan. 40 Dr. Kate. 4:15 News of the World. ' 4 JO Dinning Sisters. 80 The Personality Hour. - 4)0 Eyes Aloft. , JO Dr. L Q :. 70 Contented. Hour. ' 1 7 JO Information Pleas. 80 Fred Waring in Pleasure Tim. . 8 :15 Commentator. 8 JO Cavalcade of -America. 90 The Telephone Hour. 9 JO Hawthorne House. 100 News Flashes. 10:15 Home Town News. 10:25 Labor News. 10 JO Gardening for Food. 10:45 Kaltenbora. - 110 Uncle Sam. 11:15 Hotel Butmore Orchestra. 11 JO War News Roundup. -.U:00-2 a jo Swing Shut. , KOAC MONDAY-58 K. . 180 News, f . 10U5 The Homemakers Hour. 110 Musie of the Masters. . 1:00 News ; 12:15 Noon Farm Hour. 10 Recital. 1:15 War Commentary. 1 JO Musie. 20 The Home Front v . 2 -So Musie. ' 20 News. ' 8:15 Treasury Star Parade. ' ' 2 JO Concert HalL 40 Monitor News Roundup, 4:15 WalU. Time. 4 JO Stories for Boys and Girl. 80 On the Upbeat. 8 JO Vespers. V 80 It's Oregon's War. 8:15 News. JO Eventng Fsrm Hour.' 7 JO 4H Club Program. - 80 Musie That Lives. - 90 Music. ' . . - 9 JO News. -05 Uncle Sam "' ' 4 - . small deposltX ' . X wlU'bald any, V f ., - i.- :. - , ,- ., purchase. . . ' - ' ' ,. I ! . ...... died that night That was some .night," he mused. "I was Just a kid, and my , father sent me out to find a wet nurse that's a mother dog that had lost her -puppies." "Yes, I know. Dad had to do that once with a litter of set ters. And did you find one?" , He pointed to Rowdy's head on her shoulder. "She wouldn't be here If I hadnt" "And did Rowena the one that was born on the dock turn out to De anytnlngi : Paul shrugged with elaborate nonchalance. "Just a winner at the Garden, that's alL" "Oh." " Oh? What do you mean !bhI A winner at the Garden is something, let me tell you." "Is that all you can go?" Ann asked, still unimpressed. "Well, she could have licked the male winner and gone best of Winners." Paul admitted. "And in the dog world, that's like being a king; I mean that's the end of the line?" "That's far' enough to Matlsty anybody. Paul was adopting the when Jam" unravels to bis sister the mysteries of a ball game. "Then the Best of Winners goes fntA eomnetltifln with tK mii. bled Champions.' "And then what?- i Auats wixcrc hue ncai vi Winners usually gets licksd." - - (To be continued) (Continued from Page 1) not on old age pensions laws but on the smooth functioning of the economic , process: production, distribution consumption. 1 The faithlessness of nations Is so immemorial that fear of fu ture wars cannot be abolished merely by forming some new as sociation of nations. The world will have peace so long as lead ers of nations will keep the peace and God grant they may be more disposed to do so after ..this terrible ordeal of war, j Social groups need to forget the shadow fears,, the Imaginary dangers. President Rooie velt himself was an effective Instru ment in 1933 in giving the peo ple fresh hope. In the midst of depression. The people were succumbing- to outright vfear. . His Inaugural declaration, "the only thing we have to fear is fear It self," awoke the people, gave them renewed confidence, which was what they needed. But Pres ident Roosevelt with all his pow er was not able to keep the fear of war from becoming a reality, , In spite of the closing words In , his radio broadcast when the war broke out In September, 1939: "There will be no black out of peace In the United States."' i l . The shadow fears of child hood: of the dark, of a strange person, of an empty room, are foolish; and by wise Instruction parents enable children to over come such fears. But the fear of a hot stove which the c h J. 1 d learns through a burned finger Is real and genuine, and as long as he lives sets a proper barrier to his motions. So with society, the genuine fears of economic -disaster that may come through Inflation or' foolish policies of business or government; of plague that may come through neglect of quarantine restric tions; of war that may come through renascent caesarlsm, ought-not to be waved aside as foolish, but heeded, and made the basis for policies which will avert the dangers of which they warn.', i Freedom from fear can come only through freedom from dan ger and that seems reserved for heaven.' : - j . '1 A letter from Helen Hayes, anent this column's suggestion oi "a play on Mary Todd Lincoln, with Miss Hayes In the title role: "Thank you so much for unit. Ing me your column, and for that aJ ' a a m lues wnicn is not new to i and which, as you say, must i , in . me. be wrien: . "But you have started the ball rolling with that column, and now I shall probably be deluged with Mary Todd Lincoln scripts and will only have to choose from them." , Here's hoping some playwright will do a play worthy of the op portunity. ' :'' OF SIEBTlQe UQ3 HQS