FOUR
ROSF.BURG NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURC, OREGON. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1937.
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Sta-fievtrt Co.. Iua.
H ember of The Asvucliiled Prr
Ihe AHHOClated Press Is exclusive
ly entitled tc the ue (or republica
tion 0( all dowi dlnpatchea credited
to It or not otherwise credited In
thli paper and to all local newa
published herein. All right of re-
tub Ilea Uod of special dispatches
rein ar alto reserved.
0AKRI8 BwJBWORTH.
.Editor
ffntred a second class matter
May 17. 1920. at toe poit office at
Rose burg;, Orevon. under act of
March 3. 1171.
Represented By
fir jv Verk 21 Eaflt 40tn Street.
Chirearu 360 N. MlrhlKitn Ave.
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Detroit 31 J Hteplieniton lildif .. l.am
Anajelr 433 S. Spring Btreot. wh
ittle 603 Stewart Street, Portland
620 8. W. Sixth Street. Vancouver,
B, C 711 Hall Bid., HI. Louis
til N. Tenth Street, Atlanta Wt.
ftrant Bull din.
Subscription Hatea
Dally, per year by mail H.00
Dally,! months by mall 3. J
Bally. 3 uiomhs by mall 1.00
ally, by carrier per montn 60
Production Rivalry
nplllC mn'&piiiK.TH recently print-
eti a plcturo or a Ihiko Mx-mo-lored
Dying boat wltli whlrli
France i about to buIn trtuiH-At
lantie Hiirvey flights, and tho cup
tiona remurkml that the French
were ut lust entering the "rivalry"
for trannoeeanlc uir nor vice.
It occurfl to uh that this Is one
form of International rivalry
which n ull to tho gooil. In a day
when most International rivalry
fliida expression in new cruisers,
hlKh-Hpeed tanks, siiper-bomhinK
planes and intorl.ed Infantry di
vision!!, Jt l.s oxh-cmcly cmnrortliiK
to see nations competing tn
HtralKbt-out conimerclal servico.
Quicker communications, the
speedier transport of Roods and
people, tho conquering f the
space which separates nations
these aro things tho world needs
In ever-increasliiK quantities. The
moro competition we have In that
flold,., the better oft wo all ought
to be.
Public Lawbreaking
THKIlrJ has been a certain
amount of fine talk ubout In
ternational law, In connection with
tho activities of submarines in the
Mediterranean, but moHt of it ban
been Just talk. For the dismaying
but Inescapable fact of the matter
Is that today there Is no such
things as International law. It Is
Just timet hi ng that wo remember
from a former epoch.
The whole course of such pow
ers as Italy, (lernuiuy and Jlushia
In regard to the Spanish civil war
has utterly disregarded alt tenets
of international law. So, of coarse,
has tbo submarine campaign in the
Mediterranean. So, too, lias tho
war in China, where the New York
Times points out that the contend
ing armies are coldly refusing to
tako prisoners.
Wo might as well reeognUo the
fact that we aro living In an ago
of Internal ioual anarchy, not in
tcrmiftonnl law. II Is a hard fact
to buvo to swallow, but there Is
no wiwo in deluding ournelvcn
about it-
Hat-Checking Coata
F YOU like In think of yourself
and your fellow Americans as
a. sturdy and independent people,
consider the case of Ihe New York
gentleman, who. buying a new hat,
set out to keep track of the money
il would cost, him, in tips to lint
check girls In reaiuuruut.H, the
atres and night clubM.
In one inoul h, he discovered.
Ibis hat cost him exactly $:i--and
the hat cost only a dollar iu (he
first place!
Thu only difference between
thin New Yorker and the rest of us
that we don't get around quite
no mueh. When we do get around
we puy the hat check girl meekly
and w II bout llioimht of piolcst.
Yet the bat check racket In a petly
graft that only a completely
house-broken people would pul up
with. It crrlainly ought to be up
(o the proprietor of a place of puh
lie entertainment to give bis pa
trons a place lo put their bats.
and to t,ive It to them lor nothing. I
If we were half a. sturdily hide-
pendent as we like tn think we are, i
we would never put up with the ,
present s.teni.
Editorials on News
(Continued from pago 1.)
by the American people.
fOW MANY Americans wiiul In
Miilgrate to other countries In
onlcr to better theniSeU ex? I in
YOC want to leave this country
and go somewhere cIm-V Old your
father or your grandfather yi-arn
to LKAVE America and nt-iiiv i.
Europe?
0
I course not.
You know you art) better off
Id America than you would be
ANY WflKUE KLSti ON I2AKTJI.
Your father knew it. Your grand
father knew It. As a result, Ameri
cana have STAYED IN A.MEKICA
instead of going somewhere olsu,
while foreigners the world over
try to get to America.
In other words, democracy HAS
WOItKEIJ IIEUK.
THE slurry-eyed dreamers of the
N!.iiu r,...i ....I t,. ih'kt nr.-i
I'LE'S LIVES for lliem, as govern
ments do in Europe. It's a lot1 of
fun, you know, to run somebody
else's life. Hut they are shrewd
enough to know that before they
can get our consent to run our
lives lor us they must make us
dissaifsiicd with what wo have.
That Is why they keep telling us
that democracy HASN'T worked
hero.
LET'S be smart. Let's remember
f .....
1,1 IMU III'K tllltl UIU
hono.
Wo of Alw-rku I'OSHKHS A I,
ItKAOY the IiIeriisI anil the Juiciest
hone on iiirih. Lit's not ilrnu It In
Inn cri'i'k in it (oollxh H'fort lo k-
for otii'HolvoH tho old, dry, i;iinvfl-
off liono poKHotojcil ly tho ri'i-
inellliMl peoh-H of Km-oiL'.
LETTERS
to the Editor
Myrtle Creek, Oregon j
suid. iy, iy;t7.
Editor News-Iieview : Our Town-
send movement has Die support of
(..onmesHineii .lames W. Molt and
Walter M. Piorco as representa
tives from Oregon. As members of
congress and legislators they may
uivor mo enactment or the plan
into law and not favor putting the
plan into the constitullou. So It
would be proper lo have their
opinions on the mutter of the con
stitutional drive. Keller wrile
them. Tbo grant lug of pensions is
cnu.slilutional. Old soldiers get
pensions, government employes
get pensions, railroad employes get
pensions. I he pension feature of
ilie social security act. is also con
stitutional. Since a transaction is
a salt and a sale in a transact ion,
Hie transaction tax must needs be
const I tul ional. The amend ment
way proposed will require IdislateM
for ralillcatlon. A majority in con
gress can pass the bill for the
plan, and IT Ihe president vetoes
it, then two-thirds of the congress
can pass It over bis head. I'sunlly
it is a roundabout way to put u
measure into the constitution, bill
maybe the "nearest way to tbo
lire is the farthest way round."
It may be a favor tn certain can
didates to have the plan kept 4ur
iher In the offing. Itenpecifully,
A. W. FUEUEIUUK.
OFFICERS NAMED
FOR R. H. S. CLASSES
Wayne flown, senior; ("orrlnne
Perry, Junior, and llerschel Kyrd,
sophomore, were elected Monday
during the activity period as presi
dents of their respective classes.
The seniors chose for their offi
cers1 Andy Corn, vice president ;
I lei 1 1 K noli, secretary ; Gordon
Walker, treasurer; Harvey Kpp
stein, Hergcaiitat-arms; Ivan Mat-
field, yell leader, and Vivian Hart
ley, song leader.
The Junior cabinet consists of
Hob Pishmun, vice president; Vir
ginla Young, secretary ; Edgar
Lewis, treasurer; Knule Kershner,
sergeanl at-ai ins; Charles Church,
yell leader, and I (elores Cacy,
song leader.
Sophomore officers are Hill Hul-
ter, vice president; lb-leu White,
secretary ; Freda I bilker, treasur-
r; I At well Atierbui y, yell leader,
ind Hetty Whipple, song leader.
The ail visors Leroy Itlait,
Leonard Hi ley and Miss Kale Ilii-
chauati - spoke lo iheir classes.
urging I hem lo do their best lo
win the iulenhisM rivalry cup.
I'rlucipal ('. II. Heard also spoke
lo the sophomore class, concerning
pep and the ilvaliy cup.
( oni in it toes w ere appomleil In
arrange tor class si unls for l he
coining l!i Jinx.
PNF.UMONIA TAKES
LIFE OF L. F. LINN
Lloyd F. Linn, :'.:, died at the
count hospital here, hist niuht lid
Inwhm a long period of HI health.
I M ath resulted from pneumonia,
lie was born June , Umil', in New
ton loiinly. .MisMMtii. and had been
a resident ot I oui:las county tor
se ei al years. The body as re
umed In Ihe Hnsebuig I'ndertaU
Im; company, and tntermetii has
been arranged for 2 p. in. Thurs
I;'V. .
E)aUsH)cvotion8
The stun tot;il of our human
grumblings and coin plain nigs
would malic a mUhty he;n if
all were gathered in one pil..
Is there any w here hi all I be
wnild Home man who has io(
complained against, or an ii-m-!
Ihat has not been made HI In
our inmalituitc.' (itten we do it
carelessly and I hounhlh-sslv ,
bul we oiiuhl lo be on gtianl
more i han w e an- auainst a
bahtl I ha i may m i-asil- lake
the koimI tasie oil life's highest
and best i:ood. May we lea in
I rotn ihiv In to uilald om
Nelves against adding nuythim;
lo thai miiht t pile. Thou
has) ilotie us good and not evil
all our das, our tiod, bul so
iinn inn' I'ves have been closed
lo it all and w e have spoiled
Thy goodues by our careless
Ingratitude. Koi tti e us. we
pray Thee, for Jei-us ska. Amen.
OUT OUR WAY
SAV - DON'T MAKE ANV SUDDEN
-W MCVES ON THET HOSS,NER. STAJJT f .
HIM OFF QUICK, MER.PLT OR.fc HAND
ON H'M NO PLACE NER. SPUR. HIM, , '
A UER. WAVE YORE HAMP AT ANVBODV, s,
'4 ER. LET THE SADDLE SLIP. AM1 DON'T -yy-r ,
i .eof....iM.vit.i'Ta"' " ' RIDEKs" CR.AMP. . " . vjjiUjnMS
L M HCG. U &. PAT. Off. f, 1
the dark
BY HULBERT FOOTMBR
SYNOPSIS: Neill, a young fed
eral agent, finds bis beloved
Janet, a gun and I'rcscntt Ka li
ning's freshly shot body locked in
a cabin on Kaunlng's yacht at
Absalom's Harbor. Neill hides her
nearby iu a disused liner, then
Joins Mark Honuiger, local in
vestigator. When Neill learns
Janet didn't shoot the flashy
swindler, be suspects queer little
Eyater, who haled Fanning. Also
on band are Kettering, a Haiti
more lawyer, and Ira Hucklews,
a tough who mills Neil, While
Honuiger bads a search of the
dark ships, Neill breaks away,
gets Janet and they dodge the
searchers. Neill rejoins Honuiger.
Chapter ;il
Trouble on tho Yacht
Tho search of the four sbipj was
completed about midnight, and
Honuiger grimly conceded defeat.
That he was not satisfied became
clear when be left six deputies be
hind him to co-operate with Hick
el's men iu watching the decks
until morning. The rest, of the
parly started for Iho skiffs.
Keilering as usual was at band
to put In bis oar. "There's always
some darn fool who raises an
alarm." be said. "That guy was
scidng things at night!"
Honuiger disregarded this.
So Janet bad been saved. Hut for
how long? Neill couldn't afford to
relax at all. lie suddenly realized
he was pretty nearly dead beat.
There was a moment when he
and Keilering stood together on
ihe platform at the foot of the lad
der waiting lo get in a skiff. Ket
tering said softly:
"Congnitulaliona, Wheal Icy! I
don't know just how you worked
it, but it was neat!"
Neill said: "You're talking iu
riddles tonight, Mr. Kettering."
"I'on't be afraid," he laughed.
"I'm not going to give you away."
Neill was not ho sure of that.
They gol In iho sktlf.
Hack iu the village, Hottnigcr
asked Neill into his room to have
a drink before liirninir in.
Hnunfger bad one of the belter I
ronni.s on the second floor of the
hoiel. He threw nfr his coat, nud
vest and went lo the window with
a "Wool!" of salislaclioii. Iloiini
ger's stern air, Neill had learned,
w as only to warn off foots and
bores. When you were alone with
him, if be liked you, be could be
come very human.
"t 1 1 ami air down on this point,"
he said. "Orand for sleeping;"
"You don't lei anything get
under your tUn," paid Neill en
viously. "Life is ton short tor that." said
Honniger. "I was drarted for this
work. I'm doing my best with what
poor wilt. Ihe Lord gave me, and
when 1 meet with a trifling srt
back I'm not K"iug to let t east
me down. This case i.s a fascinat
ing problem. 1 have all Ihe lines
in my hand. I shan't fail to land
my fish."
The Beer Isn't Drunk
"l" nii Mill think there is
somebody on the ship:;.'" asked
Neill orthandedly.
"If He-re it's a g'md pbiep for
Mir'in to be." said Hounlcer with a
dry smile. "I rati put my hands on
them easily."
This had the effed nf a ebal
lencr in Nvni, oh. I don't know : he
ilnmghl. He saiih nothing.
Honnker looked nl him. full.
"You s.-em riMty Well tin kered
I'Mil." he said "oi shouldn't take
all ibis mi hard "
Neill ni.xhed Ihat he wouldn't
miiiiiI Ihe friendly note. He was
u. niiiK lo like ihe man loo much
"Mi, it Isn't the case." he said
Iu:ln1 , "That's a welcome dls
tractmu. . . . I'e gut prhate trou
id.i ."
"Woman trouble. I leckou. At
u.ivs is at your age."
"Well , . . jcn." salt! Neill with
ii w i y smile.
"Lord ' 1 ha e know w hat thai
w ;is in m tlnw," .said Hont.'ger
Minllm.. Tfu thankful It's over,
lle.tlly a man gels the best out of
women alter he lias passed 1.V It
may mt be flattering, but Ihcy
have confidence in yon then: they
open Hu h dear little hearts to uu.
! have three nieces up the ccusty
ships n-i I YOUTHS WIST ON
Mm-m&tiLi nnn r n rn td n
who keep me young. You must
come up and meet them when this
f.H over."
"Thanks," said Neill, "but my
bands are pretty full iu that line."
"Well, anyhow let's order up
some beer and drink lo them."
"That would be fine."
However, the beer was not des
tined to be drunk.
Forsythe had just been sent off
to the yacht to relieve Constable
Matllugly who bail been on guard
since ix. Suddenly through the
window they heard Eorsythe's
deep voice hailing the shore.
"Ho! Sergeant Wilson I"
Wilson answered from the store
next. door. "Hello?"
"Come out here, sir, and bring
Mr. Honniger;" ,
"All right."
The Yacht Guard Gone
Instantly Honniger wu the
stern public officer again. He
snatched up his coat ami he and
Neill ran downstairs. They met
Wilson coming from the store.
Some of the villagers, had been
aroused by tbo constable's hail,
and heads were sticking out of the
bedroom windows here and there.
As they went out on the wharf.
Virgil Longcope came running
tlown the hill behind the store,
slipping his suspenders over his
shoulders. He called to them to
wait for him.
Virgil's clerk, young Trueiuan,
was on the wharf. "Cosh! I hope
there ain't nothing wrong out
there." he said. "If there is, reck
on it's my fault."
"What do you mean?" asked
Honniger. "Come along with us."
Trueiuan explained while Wil
son plied t ho oars. "A bout nine
o'clock fellow called up ami asked
for Sergeant Wilson. I said ho
wouldn't be back until late. So the
fid low he said he was Constable
I'ennorlh Malioned at King's
(Ireeu, miles up the road."
"Was it 1'ennorlh's voice "
"I don't know thu man."
"Co ahead."
"Well, this fellow said he was
Ten north, be said a man driving
up the county from Cove Point bad
slopped by lo say Ihat as he come
around a turn in the Cove Point,
road he seen a couple jump out of
Ihe road into the bushes. Ami the
girl bad a pink dress and a black
wrap on. Ponnorth he said thai
Wilson had ordered him not on
any account to leave the King's
(J recti section, and be wanted to
know wliaL lo do. Well, I tried a
docu times to get Wilson on the
phone . . ."
"The phone is in Captain Hick
el's cabin and we wen searching
the .hips," put. in Wilson.
"So I think I'll go out to Ihe
yacht and tell Maltingly. Matting
ly and me. wo talked It over and
he said he'd belter lock up the
yacht and go up to the Cove road
on his motor bike, lie was all ev
ened jit the thoucht of nabbing
that pair singh-handed "
"I dare say!", said Wilson dryl.
"So 1 came ashore and at la
o'clock 1 shut up the store ami
weul home," Truemau went on. "I
called up the ships every little
while tn MI you, but there wa
no answer, and then . . . well, I
reckon I felt asleep."
As they drew near tho yacht,
Knisythe said from the deck:
"Matiiugly is gone."
"We know it," answered Wilson,
"What then?"
"The yacht hai b"en ransacked
from stem to stern, .sir."
"Ha!" said Hnntuger.
"You seem to be 'pleased about
it." said Wilson sorel.
"I suspected our man was not
far away, and now I know It."
Neill finds himself
place, tomorrow.
in il tight
NEW ENROLLMENT
FOR CCC DUE OCT. 1
WASHINGTON, Sept. 21 (Al'l
- About ti.'t.eiHi veterans of tbo
chlllan eonserva'ion corps, w huso
service v. as alvm to be terminat
ed, have received word that they
may re-enlist on Octob ?r 1. The
corps will enroll lOMU'O uew uicu
at thsl time.
By Williams
CHANTS PASS, Sept. 20 (A P)
Hob Faring and Cene Gayer of
Portland, who two weeks ago at
the firm suggestion of state police
abandoned a proposed boat ride
flown the Rogue in a small home
made craft, will try it again next
yea r.
Fariss letter here underlined
the words, "We will uso the same
boat."
"This time," ho wrote, "wo only
planned on the perils of tho river.
Next time we will be prepared for
meddlers as well."
Fariss declared the Itogue's dan
gers were "greatly exaggerated,"
tailed the action of state police on
instruction of the district attorney
"w holly unwarranted meddling
and said that after continuing the
trip on fool and alter conversation
with a party which went down the
river iu canoes, "we would not
hesitate to take even our seven
foot duckboat at tho present stage
of tho water."
State police, on the other hajid,
said they were informed that the
canoe trip took eight days instead
of a day ami a halt because of long
portages around danger spots, auu
that one man nearly lost his life.
STOLEN AUTOMOBILE
FOUND IN IDAHO
MEI'FOKO. ' Sept. 20. fAP)
The new auto belonging to Perry
A.hcrait, Medfonl dealer, stolen
on a ruse by an unidentified man
representing himself as a Jose
phine county deputy sheriff, has
been found abandoned at Nyssa,
Idaho, the state police were aiivis
ed. No trace was found of the im
personator, who is alleged to have
passed spurious checks at a Kogne
river camp ground, and at Mend.
The impostor represented to
Ashctaft be desired to buy a new
car. Ashcraft gave him permission
to try out the vehicle. On the sec
ond trial he tailed lo return.
ROAD SURFACING
CONTRACT IS LET
SALEM, Sept. 21. (AP - A
$;'.), iCij contract to surface Hi. 7
miles of the Siicti secondary
hi gnu ay north of Toledo was
awarded to the Mountain Slates
Construction Co., Eugene.
The contract also includes fur-
iit:;hiug of 5, 100 cubic yards of
crushed rock.
NEW BLUE BOOK IS
READY FOR MAILING
SALEM. Sept. 21.- (AIM --The
Wl.'IT-o Oregon blue book, a thor
ough 2si;-page examination of Old
Man Oregon, was distributed today.
On the cover is n picture or the
new eapitol, while I lie contents In
clude many new photographs. The
book is 1 pages larger than the
last edition.
MEIER ESTATE IS
VALUED AT $460,583
rOKTI.AMi, Sipl. in (AT)
I hp lal- Julius L. .Moirr. Pol thuxl
merchant mid former Kownnr nf
I Ireful, Iff I mi estate valued al
?ltiii.,VVt. iiiniial filed In eiieuit
mull Haiil.
For
Belter Radio
Service
Call
K. S. Parker
223 W. Douglas
Phone 341. R
DURING THE SUMMER
Closed Saturday afternoon ex
cept by Appointment.
GEORGE E. HOUCK
Physician and Surgeon
311 Medical Arts Bldg.
Office phone 115
Residence phone 272
by
Paul Jenkins '
IF YOU were listening (as I was)
to KRNR'a street Interviews
yesterday, you heard Mrs. Allie
Parmer Hill nit
she spoke a few P'
words to Doug
las county lis
teners, after
having been In
duced to leave
her lunch, or
dered In the
coffee shop of
the Umpqua ho
tel. Mru inn
1'. P. Parmer who came to Oregon
in W4U, engaging j:: farming there
after at Elktou, and later operating
rne hotel at Scottsburg for mmy
years. Her husband .was Junto
Hill, a sea cant a in who iinr i....
his life while negotiating tho Ump
qua bar.
Mrs. HIM was en route in svm
Fianclsco from Washougal, W(ish
"gum, wnere sue spends most nf
her time at the homo of a sister,
.Mrs. Perry, whose husband like
wise is a mariner, long retired.
I remember Mrs. Hill through a
great many yeaiH indeed, and be
cause of any number of kindnesses
extended to ie. Hut I remember
her particularly for a remark she
once mude. "Most people," she
said, "have some little Scotcby
trait in their make-up, some little
saving habit which persists
throughout their life, like hating
to throw away any wasto scraps
of lood, or wearing shoes just as
long as they w 111 hold together.
Mine," she continued, "is matches.
I can't bear to throw away or
wasto a match.
"It all harUens back to my child
hood. Matches then were, very
rare. We treasured them as you do
your stocks and bonds nowadays.
To conserve . matches, we always
kept our fireplace burning, of win
ter times, night and day and of
course one day the fire, untetided,
went out. Wo found there wasn't
a match in the house ami as a
result 1 had to trudge three miles
to a neighbor's and bring back a
bucket banked full of hot coals.
I never iorgot II!"
V
"Harry, our cook," Fern, Coffee
Shop waitress, said to me last
night as 1 sat ordering my supper,
"thinks up some odd names for
bis offerings sometimes."
The remark was occasioned
through my having displayed an
interest in some "veal steaks a la
Foch," "Have you any breaded
veal steaks. Fern?" I inquired.
"Yes, we have,'' she answered. "io
you want the fried egg 'lth
them?" "What fried egg.' I ask
ed." "Why, that's what the a la
Foch' means," she explained.
Well. 1 refused. The only French
ecir I had ever known by the name
of Foch was distinctly hard-boiled.
.
"I'll bo having me a halo before
long," a business man told ine
yesterday. "A! any rale, I'm in
line for a profit on a deal I turned
this morning.
KRNR PROGRAM
(1,500 Kilocycles)
4:00 The editor Views the News.
4:15 Chamber of Commerce Pro
gram. 4:30 Hoems From Ihe Tower
Room.
1:13 Kudy Vullcu und thu Yuir
kees.
5:lio (;uy I.onibardo.
5:30 Monitor's News Commen
tary. r. : IT. - N. V. Civic orchestra,
li: mi Organ .Mclixlicn.
6:15 Montmartre Dance Review
Starring; Arnhiem and Val-
cente.
G: l-ri KniRlils of tho Huad."
59.50
J
DUO-THERM
OIL-BURNING
CIRCULATING HEATER
The Duo-Therm give clean;
nilent, "Regulated" oil heat.
Turn the dial Ret a flood of
heat for cold weather or a little
for mild days.
With the patented dual-cham
ber burner and special "waste
stopper" it's the most econom
ical oil heater made. Three beau
tiful finishes eight models.
Radio Music Store
GnOSS A HARGtS
Phone 93 225 N. Jackson St,
-T
6:50 Newa Flashes.
7:0o-r-Hoosier Hot Shots.
7:15 L..A. Symphony.
7:311 Your C,ra,b Hag.
8:dO Sign Off.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22
7:00 "Early Hints."
7:30 News-Review Newscast.
7:45j, m. Judd Says "Good
Morning."
7:50 Alarm Clock Club.
8:15 Dixie Memories.
8:30 Clyde McCoy ami Orches
tra. 8:45 1 A. Dance Rand.
9:00 Operatic Echoes.
t:15 Morton iJowuy.
9:30OW1 Favorite Melodies.
10:00 Alma'a Style News.
lo:02 The Dictators.
10:15 Movie Gossip.
10:30 ''Radio Rendezvous," Copco.
10:45 Ilomemakers' Harmony.
11:15 Variety Show of the Air.
11:45 Sol Hoopii.
12:00 Hansen Memories.
12:15 "Singing Strings," Radio
Music.
12:30 American Family Robinson,
Red A White Stores.
12:45 News-Review of the Air.
1:00 What Douglas Co. Thinks
Today.
1:J10 Afternoon Dance Melodiej.
2:00 "World Hook Man."
2: OS Organ Interlude.
2: 15 Madrigal Singers.
2:30 Jack Shiikret.
2:50 News Flashes.
3:00 Phil Levanto and Orchestra.
3:30 The Children's Hour.
3:45 "Milk Time," Dairies of
Roseburg. .
4:00 The Editor Views the News.
4:15 Arthur Tracy. Street Singer.
4:3m Jimmy Lunceford.
5:00 "Melody Lane," with Wat
da Armour.
5:30 Monitor's News Commen
tary.
5:15 Victor Young and Orches
tra.
6:15 Montmartre Dance Review
Starring Arnhiem and Val
cente.
6:45 "Knights of the Road."
6:50 News Flashes.
7:00 Knickerbocker Svmpl.ony.
7:15 Paul WWtoman. "
7:30 Famous Homes of Famous
Americans.
7: 15 Your Orab Hag.
8:00 Sign Off.
TIIUI1SIIAV, SKPT. 23
7:(io-"Kiir!y mnls."
7:30 News-Review Newscast.
7:45 Alarm Clock Club.
8:1"' Vagabonds of the Trairies.
8:30 Full Gospel Church of the
Air, Rev. A. Harold Per-
sing.
8:. 15 Sol ririRht.
9: "0 The Cowhands.
!l::ill Ambrose, and Orchestra.
I): 15 Kddy Duehin.
10:00 Alma's Style News.
10:02 Mills ISios.
10:1a Orrillo Knapp.
10:30 "Radio Rendezvous," Copco
10:l"i Itonienialiers Harmon v.
11:15 Variety Show of the Air.
11:15 Violin Concert.
12:00 Noonday OrBHii Melodies.
12:15 Phil Harris, Denn-Ger-
retsen.
12:301,. ,. Symphony.
12:45 News-Review of the Air.
1:00 What Douglas Co. Thinks
l eaay.
1:30 Afternoon Dance Melodies.
2: tin ."World Book Man."
2:0S Chick Bullock and Orches
tra. 2:.".0 Hits from the Films.
2:50 News Flashes.
1:00 Doswell Sisters. .
:l:15 Gene Kardos.
3:30 the Children's Hour.
4:00 The Editor Views the News
4 : 1 I lick McDounoUKh.
4:30 Sheo Fields in Rippling
Rhythm.
5:00 Glen Gray and His Casa
Loma Orchestra.
5:30 Monitor's News Commen
tary.
5: l.'i Manhattan Concert Uand.
0:00 March Time.
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RADIO MUSIC STORE
GROSS AND HARGIS
Phone 93 225 N. Jkon St.
6:19 Montmartre Dance Review,
starring Arnhiem and Vat
cente. 6:45Knights of the Road."
6:60 Newt Flashes.
7:00 Girls of the Golden West.
7:15 KRNR Little Theater of
the Air. .
7:30 Your Grab Dag.
8:00 Sign Off.
CARD OF THANKS
Wo desire to express our appre
ciation to our muny friends for
their assistance and the beautiful
flowers sent during our recent
bereavement.
.Mrs. V. B. Wolcott,
Mr. Glenn E. Wolcott.
0
NOTICE
Regular meeting of American
Legion at 8:00 o'clock, September
21, at the Armory. All members
urged to bo present.
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Radio Music Store
GROSS AND HARGtS
phone 93 225 N. Jackson St.
BIG
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