. Bur v : ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. koSEBURG; OREGON. SAtURbAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1941. laaael Dully rH nadur br tb Hcvtwr of Tke Aaaoolated l'rraa ! The AaaoclRted Prana la exonalva Ijr nlltlfrt to the uae for ropubl lion or all nuwa dlapalchea credited to.-H or not otherwise credited In thla paper and .to all. local newa publlahed herein. All rlghta of to fubUcatlon . of apeclnl dlapatohea pel-eln are alao maerved. HARRIS EIXSWOHTH .....Editor v Entered ea Moond claaa matter May 17. 191'!), at the poat office at Reaeburg, Oregon, under act of March- 2. 118. .. Kan York 271 Mndlaon Ave. rbl imm ua N. Michigan Ave. San Praariaeo '.'20 Bueh Ftreet ue. ?nHi w. Drnrid BQU cvnrd l,o. Anarlen 133 8. Spring Street tattle 0 Stewart . nireet lead 680. S. W.. Sixth Ave. SI. iToul 411 N. Tenth Street. Represented by gubacrlplliin llatea Dally, per yeiir- by. mall Dally. S monlha by mall Dully. 3 montha by mail..... Dally, by currier per month. Dally, by currier per yeur. .. .icon . 2.60 . 1.2f . .65 . 7.0 Every atate. county, and -city official or board thai hanll public money iliould publleh at regular Inlervala an accounting of It. ahowlng-whore and how each dollar. la apenl., Thla la a fundamental principle of dciuo cratiQ. government. .. ... - IN thq terrific. 1Q. years just pass ed, the whole number of furms n the United States declined 3tl . per cent, from 6,288,648 to 6,096, fr. 789. At the same, time the aver . atte"holdlng Increased from 138 acres in 1910 to 174 acres today. That Is partly due to the fact " that the dust bowl which we have been Industriously creating In the . southwest lor many years has at , last , begun to take Its toll of blasted hopes and ruined home steads. All this means fewer of the kind of men who are solid pro prietors' standing with their, feet on their own land. Such men are the backbone of any country. To make It worse, experts now believe that with high-powered production methods, half as many farmers as labor today could produce all the food the country needs. .. , People living on the land have a value to the country far be yond the mere food they produce. They have a stability, a solldncss, shown by no other kind of peo ple. Thus every effort tq devise new ways of living oh the soil, or farm life not merely as a busi ness but as a way. of living, Is a contribution, to national stability, and deserves encouragement. The last of . the 2,000,000 sol diers who went from the United States to France during the world war arc only now, more than 20 years later, straggling home. Many American soldiers stayed . behind when the A. E. F, came home. They married French girls, and settled In Fails or In the little towns and villages they had come to know. At a rale of 100 a week the Tied Cross Is now moving them and their families to Lisbon on their way to the country most of them have not seen In 20 years, and w hich their wives and children have never seen. It Is a Inigie end lo 20 years of effort, to build a life In an other land to' which they have be come attached, lint of course the German conquest which wip ed out so many Frenchmen has wiped out, these Americans, too. Thus a thin trickle of good French blood Is being added to our national life, and welcome It Is, just as these veterans of the A. E. F. are welcome, though their homecoming has been so long delayed. Just as fragmenls id Ihe Dr. O. it. Hess, who , ,,,-( Iv I-rench, Norse, Dul ch and other moved Ji0l Mvrlle Creek lii populations temporarily under i Roseburg to he" associated in the nazl heel have organized as . medical practice Willi Dr. .;. h bodies of freemen In exile, so!Stpwn, lodny received orders now they are Joined by free Ital- to report for active service w ith lans in London, who are making !'ne u- 'my March 15. Dr. the beginning of a "Free Italy" j H,'ss' who holds a commission as movement. Liberty has been preserved br fore in this manner, not once, but many times. , Driven from her home, she does not (lie, hut takes up temporary quarters else where, waiting patiently the day when she can return to her liwn. This she will do, some day, in every one of the countries from wnicn sue nas wen tiriven by force. Internal or external. It Is especially appropriate to'Kobrrt Iji Duke, ot Camas Val see a "Freely Italy" movement, "'. at Mercy hospital, l-'eb. 21. for no country made a more gal- a, '" weighing nine pounds lnt .(riiooir. for national lnde.!! "',e unm. named, Frederick '" j i n-u. i... uenuencx UIIU Uli.-uuio. i in: ,m tor, Italy tossed away nearly 20 years ago in a moment of iosl war weakness and confusion; the former is now In danger from liie anticnl enemy across the Alps. 'Today,' as 100 years ago, there arc not lacking Italians ready to undertake the long and difficult struggle lor. freedom- For- a, long time Russian chil dren, not to say adults, have been deprived of the pleasure of rapt contemplation of the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Detective fiction was somehow considered beneath the dignity of Marxist mentality, and tnoso wno wanted to. regale themselves with the mysterious goings-on of late 19th century London had to do it by patronizing the Inevitable boot loggers, . who appear to have sprung up no less readily under socialism than under republican ism. ' Now the Soviet Union is once more allowing across Its borders those tales of Sherlock Holmes and others of the detective and ghostly cliques. . Possibly the thrillers provided by the public treason trials, and the exploits of the OGPU agents in foreign lands were expected to provide all the necessary thrills to Soviet youth. If so, it will be a relief to have them given an opportunity to turn to pulp-paper thrillers instead of the genuine article. Editorials on News (Continued from page 1.) their minds unreservedly aren't wholly and fixed on the sub- Jeqt. , , .. Their lives have been spent in the service of the profit system. Suddenly (quite unconsciously, one feels) their minds are else where. . AS you gaze at those tiny specks high up in the (tempor arily, at least) blue California sky, a small, quiet voice within your consciousness says with startling distinctness: .."You ought to be up there with them." THE voice continues: , W.l.t ll.Ullllj JWUl 1,11. III lUU American way of living has been your life. You have bought. You have sold. You have hired. You have fired. In your small way, you have BUILT. You and mil lions of others like you. "The aggregate of your efforts Is AMERICA. And because this aggregate is good, heller than anything the world has known before, your efforts have been tremendously worth while. 'Your buying, your selling, your hiring, your, firing, your building, your WORKING, have made this America what it Is and so they have been the most Im portant things in the world. You have had reason to bo proud of them. "But new days are coming. j DIFFERENT days. Those boys up there.ln the sky are prepar ing to meet the problems of these new days that are on the way." VOU struggle. You say: "We can't all be up there. It Ihe American way or life Is lo be saved, the American way of living must be CON TINUED, day by day. No matter what conies, II must GO ON. In every ham let, in every town, in every city, on every farm." And you arc right. But sllll the quirt voice re peals: "Your place is up there. This is a different world and II Is up there that ils work is to be done." 'THOSE people In the crowded bars have been hearing this same voice. Hence Hie brittle ness. These men of business you have been talking In have been I hearing It. Hence their abstrac j lion. I Suddenly II is all clear lo vou. Dr. O. R. Hess Ordered to Report for Army Service I captain In the "'"icai reserve I win ne a medical officer in the ! corps area service command at u- , . mi- nasi- nospuai ai f ort Lewis. He has been a member of the medical reserve for the last eight years ami nas had several iods of active duty. l-i'. VITAL STATISTICS BORN I.A DUKE To Mr. and Mrs. i vernon. lOIIILRINGIIAM -TuMi.and, Mrs. A. K Nolherlngham, of, Glendale, at Mercy hospital, Feb-! ruary 22, a daughter, weighing I six IHiunds and III ouiiiTs. I OUT OUR WAY ff. WELL, 1 SEE NEVER MIKJD X ZZ 7 SISTER'S BEEN) ' W THE WISE CRACKS.' ) i HERE WITH HER. - ! I YOU JUST LUG KIDS AGIW FEjR."- Y THOSE. RUGS rSW WMM- THE AFTERNOON) OUT TO THE rfOIfe ,fli W'W'SA HOWS THE ICE JWM V T. M PCG U ft PAT. OFF. B. P. W. C. -SOUTH WILLAMETTE DISTRICT CONFERENCE TO BE SUNDAY The South Willamette district conference of the Business and Professional Women's clubs will be held tonight and tomorrow at Eugene at the Osburn hotel. A number of Roseburg members plan to attend. The program In cludes: Registration, Osburn hotel lobby, 4 p. m. to 10:30 p. m. Saturday. Executive council dinner-Chinese tea room, Osburn hotel, 6:00 p. in., $1.00. Special program and refresh ments 8:3010:30 p. m. Satur day, grill room. Sunday Registration: Osburn hotel lobbv, 8:301:00 p. m. Parliamentary law drill, 9:00 a. m. Sunday Mrs. LaMoine Clark. Open forum, 10:00 a. m. . circuit court room, counly court house. Panel discussloi) from national federation's legislative kit, led by Miss Hilda Swenson, first vice-president and legislative chairman. Discussion topics: Merit System, Victor Morris, Eugene; Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act, Leone Jensen, Eugene; Women's Bu reau, Thelma Neaville, Eugene; Married Woman Worker, Belle I.ydick, Eugene; Federal Aid to Educational, Merle Stuart, Eu gene. Talk by Miss Rose Leibbrand, Hcppncr, international relations chairman, on "What Paicc Peace," followed by open dis cussion. Luncheon, main dining room Os burn hotel. 1:1X1 j). in. $1.11) (in cludes district taxi. Program: Address of welcome Mrs. Greta Buckingham, president, Eugene club. Response Miss Evangeline Phil bin, state president. Vocal solo Mis. Kmmeliene Roach. Introduction of Mis. M.-wio Ria sanovsky, author of "The Fam ily" I the prize novel of last year). Violin solo.- I Luncheon address: Women In Government, by Mrs. Genevieve j Turnipseeil. Group singing, led by Mrs. Char- I lene Edwards. I MRS. J. J. ROBERTSON ; HONORED AT CHARMING ! SHOWER PARTY TUESDAY I District N'ii. II of I ho Oregon 'Graduate Nurses association held a (leliglilful six thirty o'clock tur key dinner Tuesday evening at Riller's Back Forty on Ihe North rmp(ua honoring Mrs. J. .larvis Robertson. A lovely gill was presented to Mrs. Robertson from Miss Still sun, Miss Heart, Miss Rinella, Miss Mognn, Miss Ebelie, Miss Dolan. Miss Winther, Miss Ve blocker, Miss Chidesler, Miss Cochrane. Miss Hendry, Miss l-eiirstein. Miss Faucher. Miss Mi- Dormoti, Miss Tcrnlmll Mrs. C. C. I.iichterhanil. Mrs. ,1. A. Fill cher. Mrs. Arthur .loelson, Mrs. A. 11. Caey, Mrs. Hugh Ritchie, Jr., Mrs. Adeline I'owe. Mrs. ( i. T. Caiier. Mrs. Keiver, Mrs. J. G. I Kboi ne and Mrs. E. l.itchenwal ler. Visiting was enjoyed during Un pleasant evening hours. UMPQUA MINERAL CLUB HAS VERY INTERESTING MEETING The Uinpqiia Mineral club held its regular monthly meeting at Ihe chamber of commerce rooms on Friday. Feb. 1 llh. The present olliivrs wete leelecleil for Ibis c - - year, being only a few months since organizing. . A very interesting talk was giv en by Dr. C. II. Koentz ,on his visits to mineral collectors In California on a recent trip. Mrs. Leslie Roberts prepared a paper on "Erosion and Its Rela tion to Minerals." It was very In teresting to those present. Jack Wharton displayed a col lection of thin slabs of agate filled "thunder eggs" over an elec tric light that brought out the in teresting designs in each. Other members displayed some of their new specimens. LUTHERANS LEAGUE TO ' MEET NEXT TUESDAY St. Paul's Lutheran League will meet next Tuesday night for a topic study session at 7:30 o'clock at the home of Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Sylwester at' 1170 Military slreet. Members and friends are invited. The league was entertained by Rev. and Mrs. Sylwester and Stewart Baker at a very delight ful Valentine party last Tuesday evening at the Sylwester home. A mail box, containing Valentines, j was enjoyed and Valentine games and refreshments were enjoyed. About fourteen were present for the affair; B. P. W. C. TO MEET NEXT MONDAY NIGHT The Business and Professional Women's club will meet next Monday evening at 8 o'clock at the Roseburg Woman's clubhouse with Margaret Watkins, Edna Clemens and Amanda Anderson in charge. Reports on the South Willa mette district conference at Eu gene will be given. Rev. Perry Smith will be guest speaker of the evening. All members are urged to be present. SPORTS HORIZONTAL 1. 5 Pictured U. S. golfer. 1 1 Net weight of container. 13 Dyeing apparatus. 1 1 Frolic. lt Measure. 17 To analyze. 19 Axillary. "0 Consumers. 22 Farm basket. 23 Opposed to bottoms. 24 Sun. 26 Clips. JR Pile of cloth. Answer to AV; 41 Bedews. 48 Bell sound. 40 Sandpiper. 31 Wooden pin. .13 r rozen 34 Grand- water. 51 Undermines. 55 To tin. parental, S7 Persia. 31! Having a gait. S Notion. T! One lhat 50 She won Ihe menace. , 3!) Conclusion. 40 Small bodies of water. 4: Kll. 43 Unless: . women s - eolf title. 60 It is the time she has won a cham- . pionship. iHENRyLlST mm i pat Pn msAMPn PEE PERL 3 PiA:N'EL'EDU n5p d henry I rrAFJTl I it 7 IQ " i? 3 it it "" I " 1 14 I Is u 1 I 4j445 "TTJ STti 1 rt 55 t io TP" si si la I Tl 55 L 1 L T S5 pi Mini H-H 1 11., By Williams Cr-Rvrfi'-lJAMc, THE 4 H CLUB LEADERS HOLD ENJOYABLE MEETING AT J. M. BARTLEY HOME The 4-H club leaders of kose burg held its third meeting Thurs day afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. M. Bartley. These leaders have , organized to promote 4-H club work by helping new leaders backing 4-H summer school and assisting in any way to make It possible for more children to have the advantage of this work. The regular meetings are now scheduled for the second and fourth Thursdays of every month with the first meeting to be an afternoon affair and the second to be held in the evening. The club will meet next Thursday at seven o'clock at the home of Mrs. Donn Radabaugh In Laurelwood. Those enjoying the meeting with Mrs. Bartley included: Mrs. R. L. Matthews. Mrs. Donn Rada baugh, Mrs. Harold Bellows, Mrs. P. O. Ackley, Mrs. Carl'Roselund and Mrs. T. E. Shrum and Miss Shirley Shrum. PUBLIC INVITED TO BENEFIT CARD PARTY St. Joseph's Altar society has invited the public to attend a benefit card party .at the Catho lic schoolhouse next Tuesday eve ning at 8 o'clock. PHzes will be awarded for contract bridge, five-hundred and pinochle. A door prize will also be given and refreshments will be served. LADY LIONS TO MEET NEXT TUESDAY EVENING The Lady Lions will meet at 1 eight o'clock next Tuesday eve-j ning at the home of Mrs. H. Stuckey on Kane street with; Mrs. H. D. Palmer as joint hos-l tess. Members are requested to r attend the meeting prepared forP, '''V''" "r V ,i I boulder, and took a perfect sew log. i , , , STAR Previous Tunic 11 She is an excellent ! I M SONI I AMfOLQPJ golfer'1'50''''' I golfer. frENQG'R AS Pi 13 Fuel. lli Gaelic. . 18 Common to bclh sexes. 21 Anything steeped. 25 Myths. 27 To hawk. 29 Farewell! 30 To result 32 White flower. 35 Small stones. 38 Company (abbr.). 41 To. whirl. 44 Particle. 45 Long cut. i 47 Health sprinf 50 Being. 51 Thus. 52 Bustle.. 53 Writing tool. 84 Depressed. 56 Toward. T.Q.RYCau SAMOEBB RET A REVERS I ODE sac GBS'TOLA ehUteeH VERTICAL 1 Fence rails. 2 Bird of prey. 3 Lacerates. 4 To bark. 5 Speaks shortly. 6 Arscnious acid. 7 Electric tcrrii. 8 Gaiters, i 8 Farts of shafts. 10 Low tide. SERIAL STORY DUDE COLLEGE BY OREN ARNOLD : YESTERDAY: Andre is unus ually interested In the Mexican girl. Working wjth her, he de cides, will be a pleasure. If his plans succeed. . . . He buys a car, installs himself as a guest at a dude ranch. At a filling station he sees the Montoya girl again, overhears some story about Ron- ies bravery. m m m RONNIE GOES HUNTING CHAPTER VI Ronica Bailey felt that utter despair, born of terror, when danger Is all around you and nothing Is to be done. She had slipped off her horse and crept forward afoot In sheer adventure spirit and curiosity. She lacked even the pearl-handl ed pistol that stayed In her plane. So, she couldn't flee and she couldn't fight, and a hundred yards oft an American officer was battling with five desperate men. ijhe pecked out between two rocks. . Actually, she had a side view of the little battlefield. She could see all five of the aliens two of whom unmistakably were dead or wounded now. Suddenly she observed that Starr was no longer shooting. 'O-o-o-oh!" It, was almost a moan. "I wonder If he Is is dead!" Fury began to replace the fear that assailed her, because those aliens had shot at her once earli er in this day and she had done nothing to cause it. She decided now that she must go back for help. . Whatever had Mr. Starr meant, coming out here single handed anyway? She' crept back toward their horses. Her own had been tied near his. When she got there she saw the stock of the rifle in Starr's saddle scabbard. She remember ed he had worn two side arms, but "Oh! Oh, my goodness!" Ron ica Bailey murmtired. r Then Ronica did a characteris tic if foolhardy thing. She took the officer's gun, opened it part way to see that it was loaded, and started right back to the spot she had fled from. Even before she got there she j heard more shots. "All right!" she heard Starr yell, and was happy for it. "Come out of that with your hands up! Manos arriba!" , He mixed his commands in English and Spanish, but the tone, not the actual words, told Ronica of his desperation. Some how she knew he was bluffing, possibly hurt. She crept to a huge boulder then dropped to hands and knees and started crawling. She had the side view of the battlefield now, and by moving from rock to rock, she came within 50 yards j of the embattled men. The she i caused behind a rock about hip 'high. ' . "I c-can shoot from here!" She 'said it, and she was physically calmer than she imagined she could be. Muscles were tense. he nerveless aim a sharp bead right through the sights and on to the torso of a man dressed in dark clothing. Only Ihe poorest of shots could have missed. "No! No-no!" She murmured that, ton. Not aloud, hut to her- Iself. Try as she would, Ronica "a''( "' eould not thus shoot down any man! All at once she shoulod. "Mr. SI'n.w.il "MR. STARR! I'M HERE! YOU MEN -YOU UETTER DO WHAT HE SAYS!" Her words sounded inadequate, silly, she realized. Muscles had begun to tremble, and now she was too utterly frightened to speak with anything like the threat and menace she had meant to put into her voice. Instantly, somebody turned and shot at her. She didn't try again lo call out or aim closely. She Just shot back. The rifle thumped her should er. She sat back, astonished, and i !azed Ht the thing before she I thought to pump In a fresh shell, j Quickly then she raised up and , shot again. All jit once she heard voices I calling, and w hile she didn't tin-1 derstand the words, she did hear j .tarr. She peered over her rock i again to see three of the men I standing, nrms high. Theyj glanced first toward her and then toward Starr, w ho was com- Ing forward now with both pis-j tols drawn. j She saw him handcuff the men together, but when she heard him call nut lo her she was shak ing too much to answer. On the front porch of Ihe Rocking R ranch. Thomas I'. Bailey sat staring fondly at his I daughter. She had been home i less than pn hour, and the tap, strong-faced border patrol of lie rr had done most of the talking so far. I "Well. I'll lie eternally damn ed!" Mr. Bailey repeated himself often. "Ronnie, you'll get Into scrapes no mailer where I put - COPYRIGHT. 1940. NEA SERVICE. INC. you. I had thought .that out here" "Hold on, Mr. Bailey," Officer Starr interrupted. "If it hadn't been for her, I'd be a corpse, and no fooling! They thought I had big help. I admit I shouldn't have let her go along, but she said she could show me the right place, and well she just kept Insisting, and" "I know just how It is, Mr. Starr! I am her father, but I " Even Ronnie smiled then. "You'd think I was a terror," she said. "No, ma'am," Starr resumed. "But 1 am here to say this when ever you want anything from the U. S. border patrol any thing In the world, miss why you just whistle. And you, too, Mr. Bailey. As you know, we have a force of men guarding the line between the U. S. and Mex ico to catch aliens slipping in and narcotic smuggling and any criminals we can. And if it hadn't been for Miss Ronnie here " ."You say those were not Mexi cans, Mr. Starr?" Bailey asked. "No, sir. Japanese. Hadn't ex pected that. We don't catch many here." "And they weren't aliens, after all, but American born?" "Yes, sir. They had proof of that. Fingerprint records, pho tos, birth certificates, everything. All I can file against 'em is an unlawful weapon charge, and re sisting an officer, and they can plead misunderstanding and mis taken identity and all to that, even. But that don't make Miss Ronnie's help any less impor " "I know, I know, Mr. Starr. But see here, what would five men be doing out on the desert lhat way?" Mr. Bailey's face was intent now. He looked close ly at the officer. "Said they were hunting." "You believe that?" "Well, no sir. Nothing to hunt now. Especially with just pis tols." ' - - "Urn," 'Mr. Bailey meditated a moment. "Look hero, Mr. Starr, you appear to be a level headed man. And you are a federal oi ficer. 1-Ronnie, call Fabian to brin- out some refreshments, eh?" Ronica, slightly surprised, nev ertheless got up to obey. Fabian, the Mexican cook, would he in the rear somewhere, she knew. When she was gone, Mr. Bailey spoke again to the border pa trol man, but in lotw tone. Mr. Starr, do you know why I am out here? Besides my health, 1 mean?" "I have my ideas, sir. Noth ing otlieial yet, nut - wen. i know you manufacture bombing planes, and there's a new bomb sight, and " "Exactly, Starr! Now, sir about these men, do you suspect what I suspect?" Officer Starr nodded. Ronica was back on the porch. (To be continued) KRNR Mutual Broadcasting System 1500 Kilocycles REMAINING HOURS TODAY 1:00 4:30- First Offender, MBS. Hub Nichols' Hawaiian, MRS. 3:00 - Tho.Oreen Hornet, MILS. 5:30 - I-'reildv Martin's Orches tra. MRS. 0:00- Interlude. 6:05 News, Calif. Pacific Utili ties. Ii:10 - Dinner Music. 0:1") -V. V. W. Uanquet. MBS. (:3(l - John U. Hughes, MBS. 6:45 Answer Man, Van Dyke Cigars, M BS. 7:00 Dance Time. 7:30 -S)eech by Sen. Claude Pepper. MBS. S.OO-Hawaii Calls. MBS. 8:30- California Melodies, MBS. 9:00 Alka Seltzer News, Glen Hardy, MBS. 9:ir'-.Ian Garber's Orchestra, MBS. !):30- Freddy Mai-lin's Orchestra, ' M lis. ' 10:00- Sign off. - ' SUNDAY.' FEBRUARY 23 8:1X1 - Reviewing Stand. MBS. B:2r -A. P. Bulletins, MBS. 8:30- British News, MBS. 8:45--Vnico of Prophecy Choir, MBS. , 9:00 -Aivino Rev's Orchestra, MBS. 9:15 The Chaplain Speaks, Rv. Perry Smith. 9.30 - Haven of Rest, MB; 10:00 Alka Seltzer News, Glen Hardy, MBS. . Roseburg Undertaking Co. Ealabllshed 1901 M, E. RITTER, Manager Founded and Maintained on Efficient Service and Courtesy Phont 00 Licensed Lidy AMBULANCE SERVICE Oik and Kin. 8U. . Embilm.r 10:15 Romance of the Hi-Ways, Greyhound Lines, MBS. 10:30 36th Rotary Anniversary, MBS. 10:45 Canary Chorus, MBS. 11:00 Baptist Church Services. 12:00 Talk by Paul P. Harris, 12:30 Boy's Town. MBS. 1:00 Peter Quill, MBS. 1:30 Lutheran Laymen's Lea gue, MBS. 2:00 It's Wheeling Steel, MBS. 2:30 Santa Cruz Field Dog Trials, MBS. 3:00 Chicago Theatre of the Air, MBS. 4:00 Joseph Szigeti and Orches tra, MBS. 4:30 The Angelus Hour, Dr. C. A. Edwards. 5:00 American Forum of the Air, MBS. 5:45 Dorqthy Thompson, MBS. 6:00 Old Fashioned Revival Hour, MBS. 7:00 Concert Gems, Hansen Motor Co. 7:15 National Ice-Skating Speed Championships, MCS. 7:30 Gems rrom Gilbert & Sul- livin, MBS. 7:45 Varieties. 8:00 Freddy . Martin's Orches tra, MBS. 8:15 Rabbi Edgar Magnin, MBS 8:30 Hancock Ensemble, MBS. 9:00 Alka Seltzer News, Glen Hardy, MBS. 9:15 Shep Fields Orchestra, MBS. 9:30 Sign off. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24 G:45 Eye Opener. 7:00 News, Los Angeles Soap Co., MBS. 7:15 Stuff and Nonsense. 7:40 State and Local News. 7:45 j. M. Judd Says "Good Morning." 7:50-Rhapsody in Wax. 8:00 Haven of Rest, MBS. 8:30 News, MBS. 8:45 American School Forum, MBS. 9:00 Interlude. 9:05 Abram Ruvlnsky Ensem- ble, MBS. 9:15 Man About Town. , 9:30 Sunshine Sue and Her Rangers, MBS. .9:45 Keep Fit to Music, MBS. 10:00 Lady of Millions, Copco. 10:15 Chapel Moments, MBS. 10:30 Helen Hoklen, Gov't Girl ..... MBS. 10:45 Bachelor's" Children, Old , Dutch Cleanser, MBS. .' 11:00 Friendly Neighbors, Alka Seltzer, MBS. 11:15 Wheel of Fortune. 12:00 Luncheon Music. 12:15 Sport News, Truck Sales & Service Co., owned by L. R. Chambers, and the Dun ham Transfer Co. 12:35-Rhythm at Random. 12:35 Parkinson's Information Exchange. 12:40 Interlude. 12:45 News, Hansen Motor Co. 12:50 News-Review of the Air. 1:00 Henninger's Man on the Street. 1:15 Confessions of MBS. Corsair, 3:30 -The Bookworm, MBS. 1 :45 The Johnson Family, MBS. 2:00 -At Your Command. 2:30 The Plainsmen and Betty Jay, MBS. 2:45 -Let's Play Bridge, MBS. 3:00-A. P. Bulletins, MBS. 3:05 -Eugene Jelosnik's Orches tra, MBS. 3:30 - I.owry k'ohler, MBS. 3:45- Lest We Forget, MBS. 4:00 American Family Robin son. 4:15 Ma Perkins, Oxydol, MBS. 4:31)- Ned Jordan, MBS. 5: 00 -Can You Top Th? MBS. 5:30 - Dana-Time. 5:45 Cap't Midnight, Ovaltinc, MBS. Ii-.im Interlude. 6:05 News, Calif. Pacific Utili ties. (5:10 -Dinner Music. 0:15 Fulton Lewis, Jr., M US. 0:30 -John 11. Hughes, MBS. 0:45 Melodies Modern. 7:00 Raymond Gram Swing, White Owl Cigars, MBS. 7:15-Dance Melodies. 7:30-Lone Ranger, MBS. 8:00 In Chicago Tonite, MBS. 8:30 Double or Nothing, Feena- mint, MBS. 9:00 Alka Seltzer News, Glen Hardy. MBS. 9:15- U. S. Army Program. 9:30 Wake Up America, Ameri can Economic Foundation, MBS. 10:15 Sign off. lit at Home Mrs. E. O. Rickli and son, Jack, are both reported to be ill at ihoir home on Hamil ton avenue. .... . WEATHER STATISTICS By U. S. Weather Bureau Iumidily 4:30 p.m. yesterday 4'J"r 'Highest temperature yesterday 62 Lowest temperaiure last night 40 Precipitation for 21 hours 0 Precip. since first of month 2.17 Prccip. from Sept. 1, 1910 21.85 I )e(ieieney since Sept. 1,-19.10 .96 1 " -'"mmm9m!mm