PAGE FOUIl The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, June 13, 1937 7 'No Favor Stoays Us; No Fear Shall Awe", From First Statesman. March 28, 1851 Charles A. Spbagurv THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. - Charles A. Sprague. Pres. Sheldon P. Sackett, Secy. k . Member of the Associated PreM 4 ' Tfca Aaaoclated Presa U axdualvely entitled to tha us for publica tion f all news dispatches credited to It or not Ihrwl credited la thia prjjwt.. i - . Future of Small Business Man BUSINESS men, and young men contemplating a business career, ought to read the article by John1 Allen Murphy, "Can the Small Business in the June Harpers monthly. At ers are doleful about business when a few bier coroorations an analysis of the situation which will hearten the men wno want to be independent business operators, even if they do not build ud bis businesses of their own. I ! He paints the familiar side tions grow until they absorb most of trie business in panicu lar lines. Four meat packers handle 40 per cent of the bus iness, the remaining 60 per cent is divided among 1200 com panies. About 40 Der cent of electrical merchandise is made by two companies. One company produces about half the country s soap. There were 6,500 tanning 1933 there were 412. In 1900 ers of men's clothing employing 191,043 persons, with an an nual output worth $415,000,000. The 1925 census showed only 4,000 manufacturers in this field, employing 174,332 per sons, but the value of the output was more than a billion dol lars a year. In 1930 200 of the largest companies in the coun try, outside of banking, controlled about 49 per cent of the non-banking corporate wealth. trolled by some 300,000 smaller But the startling fact which very large number of the big small businesses comparatively a short time ago : "Men with ambition, Initiative, and enterprise have always hftpn inclined to eo into business for themselves. Men of this .type have been daring and resourceful enough to operate under their own steam and to create tneir own opportunities, i ney are too independent to lean on others for jobs. They prefer to take the chance of gaining the much larger rewards to be obtained in ; owning a business, to the security of a steady position, with its comparatively small income ... ( "Most of our big business men. regardless of their line of endeavor, rose from poverty. Usually it is poor men who start . businesses. Men who inherit wealth seldom launch enterprises. As a rule they are content to sit in as officers or directors in companies where their money Is Invested." Big corporations suffer from their size. They are not flexible like a small concern which can alter its policy in short order. The small business man manages his business personally, giving attention to its details. He can carry out his own ideas, and is constantly on the alert to develop new ideas. His authority is exerted directly, and not diluted through subordinates. Usually his labor relations are better because he picks his workers and knows them- personally. These are all factors making for the success of the small bus iness man. ' ' ' Murphy off ers this conclusion : "So the evidence is overwhelming that the small business man has a chance. His best chance, however, is to become a big' 'business man. If he is able to compete with the huge corpora tions through the originality or the daring or the efficiency of ' his methods he will not remain small long. . I "The opportunity today for the small man Is to exploit new Ideas. In fact, that has always been true. Most of the 1200 'ft leading companies started with a new Idea. soap, harvesters. automobiles, or whatever it was. There is little competition in - new-idea fields. Generally capita) Is not interested in ideas, at , least not until those ideas have produced physical properties on ; , which bankers can base their financing. The efficient small man with a sound idea for a business Inevitably become big. ' -! Murphy did not discus the political angle to the business problem; but surely the trend of new legislation is to boost the little man and hobble the other factor which the young well consider. Whether they like the curren weather or not,' Oregon farmers are not doing so badly. The bureau of agricultural economics said their Income in the first four months of 1937 was $21,091,000 as compared to $16,999,000 for the same period In 1938, and $12,126, 000 in 1934. The gain over last year was close to 25 per cent, where as for the nation it was 16 per cent. By the way. of that 121,091,000. livestock accounted for $13,656,000. well over half of the total. . Just IS years ago yesterday Samuel Gompers, then president of the American Federation of labor, said his organization had contrib uted most,, to the cause of armament limitation. True enough for the federation then and perhaps even now. but tt would be a difficult point to prove concerning the labor movement In general, in any one -f several eastern industrial cities ' What Comptroller O'Connor doubtless of great value to them, a luncheon earlier in the day was banks, and the nation itself, are A woman's hat blew off and skittered' down the sidewalk and an obliging newsboy retrieved it. Not so much opportunity for that type f politeness since so many peo?e went collegiate.; Editorial Comment From Other Papers s Harlow and Hoyden . The wires at noon today brought in the sudden story that Jean Harlow, whom some of the news room cynics called Jean "Harlot." was dead. What to be done with , the report ?-A banner headline was decided upon, not because Miss Harlow will be remembered for long, -but because she was prom inent, because her passing was sudden and sad and because she was a houseword to millions of American movie-goers. - The movies have done that to a few Individuals who have the "certain something" which brings them to tame. Obscure yesterday; known everywhere today, forgot ten tomorrow. Of such stuff was this blonde-haired Harlean Car: pentier, , She came from the. prosaic town of Kansas City from a pro aic family, this madcap of the films, whose life epitomized the comedy and tragedy of the films. Three times In her brief span of Ufe did she wed; an adolescent marriage at 16 which brought her wealth and a chance to fraternize with movie stars. A mesalUanc with Paul Bern, neurotic film pro ducer who paid with his life for 69 days of life with this actress; then an Ill-chosen liason to Hal Rosson, cameraman, a romance which did not last the year. Even as she lay dying her latest suitor, the veteran William Powell, hov ered about and rumor had it that m wedding there Impended; She was unstable, this girl, this strident, sexy, devil-may-care star of the depression decade. -Withal she had the charm of talent; one cannot dismiss her acting la - . Editor and Publisher Man Survive' which appears a time when the crepe hang prospects, and foresee the time will run all the business, with nmnlnvM Mr IMiirnhv offers of the picture, how corpora '. i . establishments in 1845 and in there were 28,014 manufactur The other 51 per cent was con concerns. Murphy brings out is that a corporations were themselves big corporation ; and that is an man entering business may today. told the Willamette seniors was but what he told a small group at vastly cheering that the nation's absolutely sound. "Hell's Angels" as unconsequen t'al. She was I the scheming shrewdness sf a designing woman personified in "Dinner at Eight." For an even better portrayal of that role. "Redheaded Woman" suffices. i The "stars" of Hollywood are so surrounded by press f gentry that a true picture of their char acter Is ; impossible.. One knows from the pictures In which she played that Harlow had verve, a certain courage In adversity and natural talent. The late actress fitted well to Hollywood's demand for a "type;" when she had achieved success In her role as hoyden and blonde vampire her place was assured as long as millions of avid movie fans Quested that particular role In its films. Coos Bay Times. Reunion of Students Is Held at Monmouth Home MONMOUTH, June 12. The sixth annual reunion of men and women students who made their home with the Misses Maggie and Alice Butler while attending Ore gon Normal school, was held Sun day at the Butler home. An ag gregation of 30 from various sec tions of the state: were reseat. A basket -dinner was served on the lawn.' : i These officers were named: Harold Cooper, Newberg, presi dent; Mrs. Lina Miller. BalUton. vice president; Mrs. A. Edmon ston, Carlton, secretary-treasurer and Mrs. W. J. Smith, Portland, social secretary, j Coehrans to Dakota JBILVERTON, June 12. Mr. and Mrs. William PlcRell, Rich ard PicKell, Ronny Olson and Wallace" Cochran have gone to Carthage. S.D., where Mr. and Mrs. PicKell and Ronny will vis it. Richard PicKell and Cocbran will attend summer school at the University ot Minnesota. Bits for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS People of Sheridan : -13-37 should study Oregon -history, and Associated Press might take a course: V Here is a dispatch that appear ed on June 4 and 5 in Oregon newspapers: "SHERIDAN, June 4. (Gen eral Phil Sheridan, who rounded up the Grand Ronde Indians and ended their warfare on the white settlers, will be honored tomor row when' this town, named for the general, holds a parade in his memory. "A pageant queen, to be more than 70 years old, will be named before; the parade." ; S The (JP) in the , parenthesis means Associated Press. The news matter about the pa rade honoring the man for whom the town or Sheridan was named no doubt originated in the city ot Sheridan; but it was put on the wires by an Associated Press em ployee. -That Is, by one working for the greatest non profit cooperative news agency in the world in all time. ; The person at Sheridan ought to know that Philip H. Sheridan did not attain the prominence making his name worthy to be borne by that city through round ing up the Grand Ronde Indians and ending their warfare on the white settlers. Why? ; V ! In the Irst place, because there were no Grand Ronde Indians to round up, therefore none to have their warfare on the -white set tlers ended. - I But he did accomplish things in his remarkable career that made him worthy to have his name given to the 17 towns and cities in that number of states of this nation that bear It. and to ninerm counties called. Sheri dan, besides lakes, rivers, etc.. etc - Sheridan received some of his most valuable training qualifying him to lead regiments, brigades, armies, while serving in Oregon, with headquarters at old Fort Yamhill, not far from the site of the town of Sheridan. And the services of highest val ue in that respect were la com manding men who were uaTdrng and guiding Indians. But they were Indians from all tribes in western Oregon, and from some of the tribes of northwestern Cal ifornia, and for a time, a scatter-, ing of those from the Klamath and Modoc countries. Grand Ronde was simply the name of the northernmost part of the Coast reservation. There was no Grand Ronde tribe ot Indians. m S "is Sheridan arrived at old Fort Yamhill, then called Hazen's camp, on April 25, 1856. and took full charge of the station, which really meant of the whole Coast reservation. Having been born March 6, 1831. the reader will see that he was then only 25, and he was only a second lieutenant in the regular army. A; pretty big Job for so young, a man, the average reader will say.j Well, people kept on saying that, clear up to the bat tle of the Opequon. Sept. 19, 1864, which he won when 33 years, 6 months and 13 days old. No one complained of his youth ful age after that; no- one but General Jubal A. Early, whose armies he licked. ' m There would be some excuse for the people of any other" Oregon town for ascribing the fame of Philip H. Sheridan to rounding up the "Grand Ronde Indians and ending their warfare on the white settlers." There is no good ex cuse for the people of Sheridan, Oregon. And there Is surely no good ex cuse for any Oregon employee of the great Associated Press. S ? Before they again "honor" the man after whom their town was named In pageantry and parade, the people pf Sheridan should take a course in Oregon history, with emphasis on the career of Philip H. Sheridan. And with especial attention to the part of his life work done in Oregon, with headquarters at old Fort Yamhill, near Sheridan, all that time, from April 25. 1866. to September 1. 1361. when he left to Join the Union forces at Jef ferson Barracks. Missouri. V They should, too, organize to support the movement, for mark ing the site of old Fort Yamhill, tor making It a national or state park, or both. It will be both when it becomes either. The "Sheridan house" still stands, in good repair, on its or iginal site. That Is, the house that was headquarters at Fort Yam hill; had quarters for the com manding officers. : And the Portland Associated Press reporters ought to take this course, too. It would do their service good, and they would find it well worth their time. They would he edified as well as enlightened. (Continued on Tuesday.) Re-Elect Johnson j To Teach Grades SCIO, June 12. Vincent John son was reelected to teach npper grades in Scio at a meeting 'Wed nesday of directors of district No. 95. Moathly salary was stated at 385. Veloris Crenshaw. Scio. and Iris Cutsforth, Monmouth, had prev iously been chosen by the board to instruct In the grades at a monthly salary of $80. A fourth teacher will not be hired fer the coming year, at In years past, unless arrangements are made to continue bus servke from outside districts. Busses transporting grade students have been operating at a loss to the S e I o district for several years past, according to board membeis .v. -v. o o I I june 14 v JzRs W t75l XVt'.Xmt On the By DOROTHY Our Pending Revolution in Government In the midst of the oppressive Washington heat, the present Congress is being urged to pass r" 1 v j without delay a series of bills, which, If they go through, will change radically the entire struc ture of govern ment In the United S t a t es. These bills are not Isolated measures, .but add up to a con- Dorotky Thmo 8istent - picture. And the picture is of a tremend ously centralized government, with a power and authority vest ed in the President, not far from equal to the power and authority vested in Mussolini or In Stalin. ' Powers which include legisla tion, backed up by the police au thority, are to be vested in com missions, and these commissions are to be responsible, not to Con gress, but to the Executive. Leg islation will be initiated, not In Congress, but in an executive secretariat and a national plan ning board, the latter, again, to be attached, not to the legisla tive branch of government, but to the President. States' Tights in all the most Important fields of activity are to be done away with. The Independence of the states Is to become the Independ ence of local Soviets, or of pre fectures. We are to turn the coun try into a sort of colonial empire under a high commissioner, and local governments will function by the will and grace of the cen tral executive. The executive will remain in one respect what It now is, but this condition of af fairs will be definitely legalized. We shall be ruled in the final In stance by an Invisible government ot an anonymous secretariat. ' : 1 1 ; am not exaggerating. Four bills which have been introduced in congress are aimed definitely at achieving these results. They a r profoundly revolutionary. And what gives the whole pro gram an atmosphere of awful frivoUty Is that we are. appar ently, to make a revolution with out even knowing it! We are not going to be asked to fight for principles of radical reorganiza tion demanded by the necessities of our Umes. Our children are not going to be able to say: "There stood our fathers, and in fall consciousness of their, historic role took his jrtep." Not at all! We are going to be cajoled Into revolution, with the pretense that It is all innocuous, and really not at all important. We are going to lope along like silly sheep, following the good shepherd to an unknown fold. Or are we? Or are we? e . . Four bills have been Intro duced. And Congress is asked to rush them .through, at a time of year when it is most difficult to arrange hearings,, when In large parts of the country the public interest is at the lowest ebb: when Senators and Representa tives are sweating and tired. Thus. In the hope of some vacation be fore the summer heat broils our representatives at their desks, are we asked quickly to make that rendezvous With destiny' which the ? Mident promised us last June. We are to keep that dale, without deliberation, without adequate hearings, without pub lic debate. If is possible that the people of the United States want to change r. t i T T-"r.T-.'..7TT A A Flag He Can Trust Record THOMPSON ' the system of government under which the nation has been living for a hundred and fifty years. It is possible that they may come to think that the times demand such changes J They have the right so to will and to act But it is impossible to believe that the people of the United States ac tually have the remotest idea of the true significance of the pro posals which are being made un der the general motif of "extend ing ' the frontiers of social prog ress." It is impossible that the people of the United States want to make a revolution.- But if we want one, then in heaven's name, let us make one in full conscious ness of what we are doing. If we wish to turn the Congress of the United States into a mere -sound ing board and rubber stamp. resting its traditional powers in commissions all held in the hands of the President, let us decide to do so after giving thought. Two revolutions in this country have been made by the people, and in struggle. Shall the third be not made, but merely tolerated? The bill for the reorganization of the executive department Is presented as a measure for Insur ing us a competent, disinterested civil service, something which public-minded citizens hare de manded for years. The bill, how ever, contains many things that have nothing to do with the civil service per se. It creates, first, an anonymous secretariat of six men "with a passion for anonymity," of powers mysterious, to fill a need unclarlfied. These men are to be a kind of privy court of Intimate advisers, responsible to no one except the President. The bill further creates a national planning board, which by its very nature will become the chief in strument of projecting legislation, and this board is also responsible, not to the legislative branch of government, but to the President. , The wages and hours bill Is presented as a measure of social justice. It creates a labor stand ards board, to be appointed by the President, of five men at sal aries of $10,000 a year each, and these five men are to hold the power of life and death over American Industry, both ' inter state and Intrastate. Congress will do no more than fix a gen eral objective. It will be op to these five men to , decide hours, rates of minimum pay and labor standards of all kinds, for all parts of the country, setting one standard here and another there, their edicts having the force ot law, and disobedience entailing fine and Imprisonment. The seemingly innocuous water and flood control plan, launched for the conservation of the na tion's resources, provides for the creation of seven regional au thorities covering the entire eountry, charged to project pro grams ot the : widest scope, in cluding conservation measures af fecting every farmer, water con trol leading into power develop ment, all programs eventually to be subject to Washington's ap proval, and co-ordinated through the President. It will be possible, through these authorities, to con trol agriculture completely. And the Supreme Court Is to be sufficiently enlarged to make It the Instrument of the Presi dent's majority, and for excellent reason The President must con trol the Supreme Court if this program Is to go through without constitutional amendment. Even a liberal majority, of men like Brandeis. Stone and Cardoso will not do. Because these men - are constitutionalists, still bellevinf In the rights of the states and in a Federal government of limited powers. To pass these measures one needs on the bench men who believe more la the President than they do In the Constitution. Whatever democratic govern ment may or may not be it is deliberate government. There is no legislative body in the world capable in a few weeks' time of formulating a measured judgment about changes so profound, or of hearing about them from their constituents in the country. Nor is the public asked to take time to consider. On the contrary other completely minor issues are thrown into the arena to swamp the headlines of the press and to deflect the attention ot Con gress such things as the new purge ot the rich, the economic royalists being Mr. Roosevelt's Jews and ; Trotskyists. Whenever the public attention needs to be diverted, arrest some priests for Immorality, or discover a sabo tage plot among the state engl neers, or get after the owners of yachts who hare Incorporated them! That's the modern tech nique, apparently, for treating the people as though they were en dowed with no sense or reason. "We face an even greater crisis than in 1932." said the President, in a speech exhorting support for the plan for reorganizing the Ju diciary. ( We do Indeed. And the ques tion before us, as American, is whether we are going to face It, or go grinning dumbly toward an uncertain fate, trusting the laws ot chance and the President. If we are going to face it we had better imitate' the' hunger1 and bonus marchers and stage a march on Washington with just one de mand: That Congress holds its historic power ot deliberation. and give this country time to con sider where it is going, and why. For It is possible to take steps which never again can be re traced. The processes of history are not always reversible. We can start a program which then will go on, under its own impetus, invested with police powers which the people cannot control. I can not recall a case in history where a popular body, having yielded its powers, .ever was able to recap ture them. Coleman of Salem Wins News Trophy MONMOUTH. June 12 Charles Coleman, Salem, a junior student at Oregon Normal, has been named the outstanding con tributor on the Lamron staff for the past year. His name will be engraved on the Lamron trophy, a silver loving cup. The Lamron is the student pub lication k sued bi-monthly at the Normal. The recipient of the award Is chosen by the editor of the Lamron and the department heads of the news staff with ap proval of the faculty committee on publication. The faculty com mute is Miss Helen Anderson, Miss Edna Mlngus and Dr. J. N. Carls. Scio Cutters Overflow Aa Heavy Shower Hits SCIO. June 12. Gutters in Scio overflowed Friday afternoon when a ten-minute tbunder-ehow-er struck this area. The driving rain was accompanied by mild weather. Some fear was felt that ripen ing strawberries and small grain might be damaged by the Intent downpour, but gardens, corn, hay and flax fields will be gicatly benefitted in the opinion of many farmers. S age of Salem Speculates By D. H. Simple Things Alas, for the things that were to be, Which came not as years went past! v ' ' Alas, tor things that were not to be,-. But which came both thick and fast! We thought we knew, but we did not know. Made boasts and could not make good, - . Serenely, we visioned fond plans rrow, . Their failures ne're understood. Determined, we, our own way to do. . As vanity said we should. And so our plans'went tar askew, As we might have known they . would.. Our troubles came through dom spurned. Through the false belief Cling, And we did not - know, nor wls- that ever learned. The truth of simple things. Contemplation' is a frame of mind especially adapted, for use while recovering from the kick of a friendly mule. Nature is nature. A gentleman, recently from the east, propounds - this query: "When, approximately, does the overcoat season begin in thia reg ion?" The query is much easier to answer than it would have beeu had he not used that nice woid "approximately," because that is the only way the overcoat season begins in this country. It is prob able that more weather begins "approximately" in, this region than In any other part of the United States. It is perhaps more. noticeable on 'Commercial street than else where in the city, but those auto truck trains certainly do monop olize the conversation while they are on the block. Every man has some character-4 lstlc that causes him to stand out from his fellows. Ed Culp, up on Crane creek, could work himself into the most violent temper over a rotten match stick of any man I ever knew. Of course, it is noth ing to inspire a merry laugh, the fact that a match head breaks off when being drawn across the landing, field of a man's trowseis and drops excitedly through a hole, like a Roman candle ball sinking, poetically beautiful. Into the darkness, but after all It is a little thing. Temper - does the person 'who suffers from a violent attack of it more harm' than it does' the spec tators, with the possible excep tion 'of cases in which it is di rected at defenseless people or animals. It .has been proven con clusively by chemical experiment that a spell of violent temper cre ates actual poison in the blood and is injurious in other respects. Still and it is a bit odd when we Radio KOIX STJHDAY 140 Kc. S :!0 Comict Brcakfaat clnft. 9:80 Imperial conference. 9:45 Poetic atriaff. 10 :0O St. Lonia Serenade. 10:80 Bible-drama. 11:00 Ererybodr'a mntie. 12 :0O- Spelling bee. 1:00 Old Sonia f the church. 1:80 Rainbow 'a End.. 2:00 Jee Penner, comedy. Z.-SO Rnbineff and Ilia Violia. S :0O Columbia Workahop. 8:80 Eyea ef the World. 3:45 Indian program. 4:00 Twin Start. 4:80 Laff parade. 5:00 Sander Erening Hour. S :0O Community aing. :80 Man to man aporta. 6:45 Singing Stringa. 7:15 Arnheim orch. 8:00 Deanne Dnrbia and Bobby Breea. 8:45 Charlie Hamp. 9:00 Fitipatrick orch. :80 Drews, organ. 10:00 Phantom violia. 10:15 Temple Square. CBS. 10:45 Carlton orch. 11:00 Door to the Moon. 11:80-18:00 Jarcen'e orch. sow atnrDAT- 129 . Kc. 8:00 Hour Glatt. 8:80 Chicago Round Table, tpeikers. 9:00 Rnnriae program. 9:80--Dreamt of Long Ago.' , 10:80 Thatcher Colt myateriea. It :0O Romance melodiea. 12:80 The World la Youra, drama. 1:00 Marion Talley. ainff. 2:30 A Tale ( Today. 8:00 Poaey ptayleta. 8:80 Songa for. You. 5:00 Manhattan , Merry-Go-R o a d , varied. 5:80 Album of Familiar Music S :00 Tone lopica. I 6:80 Hemlock tree. 1 " T:00 Jingle program, vocal. -1:15 Treasure Island,- Taried. 7:80 Jack Benny, comedy. 8:00 Frank Morgan, Judy Garland (ET). 8:13 Bererly H ilia orch. 8:80 One Man'a Family, drama, 9:00 Patting Parade. 9:30 SteTena orch. 10:15 Bridge to Dreamland, organ. 11:00 Eal Tabarin orch. ll:30-s Beaux Arts trio. To 12 Weather reports. ( XEX SUNDAY 1 1 SO Xc 8:00 Tabernacle, ainging erangelitta. 9:30 Our Neighbors, interview. 11:00 Baritone Balladier. 11:15 Cain 'a a repella choir. 11:30 Bible broadcast, - Dr. Brock. -12:0O National Vespers, aiag. 1 :00 CaWsry tabernacle. 1:80 Baseball. Portland Seattle. S:SO Robert Ripley, sing. 4:00 Baseball. S:00 Rippling Rhythm, varied. , 5:30 Walter Wiachell. comments, to. 8:45 Catholic Trnth society. - fl:00 Baseball resume. 6:15 American Federation of 111- aieiana. v 7:0O Jndy and the Bench, vocal. 7:15 Concert .Petite. 7:30 Stevens oreh. ' 8:15 Book chat. W. A, Montgomery. 9:00 Everybody sing. 10:00 Harringtoa'a mnaie. 10:30 Calvary tabernacle jubilee. 11 :15 Charles Banyan, organ. To 12 Weather and Plico reports.' K0TBT MONDAY 010 KC 9:15 Church hymns. 9:48 Who's who in nowa. 10:OO Big Sister. . 10:15 Aunt Jenny's stories. 10:30 Edwin C Hill. 11:45 Thia and that. "' 12:15 Pretty Kitty Kelly. 12.80 House Town sketches. i5!?""' tBr?uh a woman' eyes. 2:45--Shaw orch. 8 :00 Western homo hour. k 8:45 Swingtctte. TALMADGE think of it violent temper on the stage or screen is accorded laugh ter by the average audience. I have personally known two newspaper editors, .whose editor ials, especially in times of political agitation, fairly bristled with bad temper, who died in insane asy lums. Coincidence, perhaps. I wouldn't know. . Salem has buzzed during the past few days with talk aroused by the death at Hollywood, June 7. of Jean Harlow, who was born Harlean Carpentier in Kanso3 City, Kans., March 3, 1911. What ever may be said of her as an actress, and in that profession she was ' considerably above the av erage of Hollywood stars, she was a vibrant personality that made its influence felt not alone in moviedom, but the coifntry over, a fact that is amply testified to by the prominence given the ues of her death by the press. She is best remembered in Salem, I think, by two pictures. "Red Dust" in 1933 and "Dinner at Eight" in the same year. ' One of our best long distance sizer-up3 Informs me that the Town send plan wouldn't get 10 votes in the national house of representatives on secret ballot. This is the easiest argument to escape from I haVe met this week. By the Way- Jim Farley uses no tobacco, not does he indulge himself in alco holic drinks. Not merely fussy. Just smart . . . Leona Garrison has been here from Seattle this wftk . . . Edward wishes to 1 i v e in Austria. Wallie wishes to live iu America. Place your hets, ladie3 and gentlemen . . . Folks who motored to Stayton to view the Salem waterworks plant Sunday found it locked to visitors . . . Frederick March is laid up with an infected throat '. . . The residence built by the late Dr. W. II. Byrd In 1906 on the corner of Court and Church streets, property now owned by Frank Derby, is being moved to a new site on Cottage street at Marion . . . The mortal ity among trespassers on railroad property is estimated to be five times as great as that among rail road employes . . . Delayed per sonal item of interest; Al Adolph is back from California. LOST HORIZON" In one sense this film, which was shown at the Grand theatre last Wednesday and Thursday, seems to mark something like an eDOch In motion nlcture nroduc- tion. A, beautiful fancy has been understanding . made from a book into a scenario, and a direc tor, who seems . to - possess the magic touch, has carried on with the scenario without impairment of the original story. James Hil ton,' author - (who, by the way. wrote that charming little storv. Good Bye, Mr. Chips"), Robert (Turn to Page 6) Programs 4:30 Pacific Crest trail talk. 6:00 King orch. 6:30 Your neck of the wooda. 7:00 Scattergood Bsinfea. 7:15 Johnnie Carpenter, ting. 7:30 Pick and Pat, comedy. 8 :00 Heidt orch. 9:45 Five Star Final, drams. 10:00 Serenade. - . 10:15 White Firea. dram. 10:45 McElroy orch, 11:15 Gray orch 11:45-12:00 Black chapel. ' - KOW MOVDAY 620 Ke. - 7:30 Morning melodiea ET). 7:30 Petite muaieale (ET). 8:15Mary Merlin., drama. 8:83 Three Marahalla. o:e oiara oi lousy. 9:45 Just Plain Bill. 10:45 Women in the headlines. 12:00 Singin' Sam (ET). 12:30-FoUow the Moon. 1:00 Ray Towers, troubadour. 1:15 Marlowe and Lyon, piano da. 1:85 Ray Harricon. aaxopaoa. 8 :00 Shelley, organ. 8:15 Council of Churchea. 8:30 Midge Williams. 4:00 8tringtime. 4:30 Back Seat Driver. 4:45 Mag Day program. 4:50 Musical Interlude. 6:00 Contented hour.. 6:30 Burns and Allen, comedy. 7:00 Amea n' Andy. 7:15 Unci Eira. 8:00 Fibber McGeo and Molly, comedy 8:80 Vox Pop. 9 :00 Hawthorne House, drama. 9:30 Harringtoa'a music. i 10:15 Voire of Hawaii. 10:80 Biltmore oreh. 11 :00 Ambaasador orch. 11:30 Martin'a music. 12:00 Weather report. KEX MONDAY 1180 X. 7:00 Calvary tabernaelo. 7:45 Goepel atnger. 8:15 Grace and Scotty. 9:15 Neighbor Nell. 9:30 Xew World. 10:02 Crosscuts. 10:45 Glen Shellev, organ. 11:00 D. a navy band. 1:15 Forum luncheon. . 1 :80 Gentlemen of Rhythm. 1:45 Jackie Heller, sing. 2:00 D. 8. army band. 2:35 Clark Dennis, aing. t 2:45 Ranch Boy a. 8:00 Boy Scout jamboree. 8:05 Eddie Swartout. 8:45 Herrirk and Lansing. 4:00 Rod n go oreh. 4 :80 Martin'a music. 5:20 Good Times society. 5:30 Melodie airings. 6:00 Footlight memorie. 6:30 Melodie strings. 7 :00 Sports Graphic. -.T:l l,nm and Abner. comedy. 7:30 Eensoa concert. 8:15 Industry talk. 8:30 Stanford university program. 8:45 Breea oreh. 9:00 Homicide Squad, drama, 9:30 Wrestling. 11:15 Paul Carson. To 12 Weather and police, XOAO MOHDAY 550 Kc 9:00 Today'a programs. 9:03 Homemakera' hour. 10:0O Weather forerast. 10:30 Story hoar for adult. 11:15 Faeta and affair.-,. 13:15 Koon farm hour. 1:15 Variety. 3:00 Guarding your health. 2:80 Travel's vacation suggestions. 8:00 Homemakera' half hour. 4:00 Wo liaten to music. 4:80 Stories for boy and girl. 6:15 Sews. 6:45 Market and crop report. 7:00-7:45 4-H club program. Cr.. Unn. Klamath rountira; "Fair Plav." all-school play by Eunice Anderson. 8:15 Men of vision.