PAGE FOUH . 1 ': ' . -! J The OREGON STATESMAN. Ralcm, Oregon, Thursday Morning, November 11, 1937 H 1 k CCi.'-i.l t f . r : ji; - i !! w t i "Ao Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall Awe" i .- From First Statesman,; March ll, 1.SS1 V - Charles; A. Spragub i v . Editor ard Publisher I "THE STATESMAN Charles A. Sprague. Pre. :j Sheldon F. Sac Sett, Secy.. I Member of the Associated lrea 1 Tb AsaocUted Press is oxctusively entitled to Uw us tot publb ac tion of all nw dispHU'lw-a creU'ted to it or out Urwt credited ta this pwper. ! i ' s . ; i He Wanted Rest " t. Ramsey MacDonald! tired ex-premier of England, has found rest, as be termed it "the happiness." Death brought! it, unexpectedly, as he sailed for a five months' vacation trip in South America. ; j - As is the frequent case for the politically great, the denoument of iMacDonald's life was fraught with, sadness. Since! 1931 when he headed a national government in Eng land, a government urged upon him by the king to stem depression and unrest in Great Britain, MacDonald had been a man without a party. The Labor group, whose first and only premier he became, ostracized MacDonald because of his eolation with the Conservatives. The latter,! through the more; capable Baldwin, took control of the government and perpetuated- it j through Chamberlain. MacDonald became a figurehead. Poor health dogged hi3 last days and added to his unhappiness. ' j - ,.j :! : r , Yet MacDonald's life! was one of accomplishment and political success. Opposing the entrance of England in the war n 1914, he was charged with treason. In 1918, he lost his seat in the commons. Six years later he had regained suf ficient power to lead the Labor party to a victory and to scarei cpnservative England by becoming the (first Labor premier in its I history. His premiership was short lived;: a flirtation with J Russia scared Britain back to Conservatism and it was not until 1929j that MacDonald returned to the premiership. He was at the helm through the trying days, of the collapse of the pound, the breakup of the Versailles treaty and the world economic collapse. ;!..-- America remembers MacDonald most for his 1929 visit to this country, when the premier of Great Britain sat down on a log in the quiet of President Hoover's Rappidan camp and there discussed Anglo-American relations with; the presi dent. tMacDonald was a profound believer in peace, a leader in the ill-fated world economic conference in 1933 as well as in tha naval limitations meeting which preceded it. His heart must (have been saddened by the inability of the nations to peacefully compose their differences after the ghastly lesson of thd world war. : j v V 1 1 ijike most "radicals" jMacDonald was sobered with re sponsibility. His Labor government turned out to be only -mildly ; socialistic. Most of the reforms which his party sponsored have been continued by the Conservatives. While commoners asserted that) MacDonald had gone up-stage because, of the premiership, his characteristic j bent to the majority of British subjects was illustrated in his closing year by his refusal to accept an earldom. I j Handsome in appearance, gracious in manner, fervent in oratory, and a man ofj high character, MacDonald im pressed his nation and America by" his aims if not by his accomplishments. He rests now with the contentment of having done his best. Armistice Day Nineteen iyears ago Salem jubilantly celebrated two Armistices, the premature and the real, each with an out pouring of unrestrained gle which made the days and nights of .tin cans trailing behind honking cars, overjoyed crowds thronging the j streets, and hastily, formed parades, memor able in the city's history. !. I i The relief, from the tensions of war was spontaneous and irresistible. In; one year and one-half the United States had successfully stemmed the German advance, then crushed the retreating JHun and the Wilsonian ideals of the I "war to end war" and a world "safe for democracy" momentarily seemed accomplished. This city, in j company with citizens throughout the nation, wildly celebrated the'end of this most successful conflict. Behind the tinsel land the acclaim, and-the surcease fromj care, there was thej universal feeling that war must not, would not occur again. , . .! ; ' Successive Armistice day celebrations have tempered the sureness of victory of that first Armistice. The men who did not rest on Flanders' fields came home and now thread the middle-aged group ofj out citizens The United States spurned acceptance of thej Versailles treaty and made sepa rate peace with the belligerents. Disarmament plans failed. Democracy in Europe was thrust aside by the rise of new ideologies : fascism and communism. Defeated Germany, sup posedlyu crushed forever by the disaster of 1918, seeks a , new Per Tag when her lost colonies shall be" regained. The years since the Armistice has been a host of other disillusionments. Our Allies have dishonored their debts to the United States, debts incurred during and after the hos tilities.The Kellogg pact, the Locarno treaty, the Nine-Power pact,! the first and last of -which this nation joined, have been dishonored time and again. The. world trembles with the march of troops, either in full preparation for war, or en gaged in bloody controversies now shaking Spain and China. So the 19 years since the Armistice have i brought dis illusionment, bitter and profound. The United States no longer has confidence in! phrases and generalizations. It wants to avoid war, it heartily seeks world peace but realism has its day and sound, judgment saya the world's freedom fromj war is as! far off aswhen the nation entered the war to enid wars. No statesman no nation, no group, has a magic formula which the nations will embrace to end conflict. ,,. The need is for fair-dealings among nations, for respect to covenants, for international brotherhood. -That we all know. The fact is that the causes of war! remain: hatred, greed, misunderstanding, rivalry. Armistice day, instead of being celebrated as a timfof peace, an eternal cessation of hostilities, becomes only a pause before war breaks out anew. ! All Quiet Again on the Waterfront Portland, for the thifri time in four . years, faces com plete suspension of its water-borne commerce. Now, as here tofore, it is a controversy ! with the longshoremen which has precipitated this grave situation. This time, however, there is. no conflict bver hours, wages, working conditions. The fight centers entirely on a jurisdictional dispute and the in terpretation of I the longshoremen's agreement renewed Sep- temoer su, lasf. - . : . . . . , There is this further difference in the situation of tndav and Itherone which prevailed last November and in 1934 : the nation has suffered a definite slump in its economic recov ery. The worker cannot be 'assured that once the current fight is over a job still waits for him. The lumber market is thin and j purchasers will welcome an opportunity to get from under high-priced committments. . ;, : ; , ' lAs a consequence, longshore leaders are not able to en force a shutdown as handily as they did before. The belief grows among labor's ranks that the worker deprived of his job, unable to keep up hii rent, uncertain how the food bill will be paid, is the goat while the rival labor factions fight for power. The breakup 6f the present conflict must come from within labor's ranks; it must come from a refusal by unionized labor to be made the pawns of leaders jealousies. One has only tot discuss the) prevalent port warfare wth rank-and-file laborers to know? how-much they detest work stop page, no matter what their leaders may say. ) Moreover J the public too slowly but nevertheless surely, is realizing that it cannot tolerate continued tie-ups -in transportation. The maritime commission, making a com- prehensive report yesterday on the status of American ship ping, declares f maritime labor conditions " "deplorable" and states that government efforts to build a strong American fleet will fail sunless inter-union friction is reduced, crew PUBLISHING CO. , most elusive of all forms of Disillusionment: Bits Breakfast By R, J. HENDRICKS Beautiful, rich,' historic 11-11-37 Spring Valley, pioneers of - which were among progressive people of Oregon' early comers: -S ' (Concluding r from yesterday: ) Lieutenant Peel laid his findings before his great father, and this resulted in the settlement of the boundary question as quickly thereafter as it could be done. The agreement went to Washing ton In time for ratification June 15; 1846, , and for oyer 91 years the 3000 mUe international line has been without I a wall, fort or hostile ship -the longest line and the : longest time In all history. So the Gay house, in the divine ordering, of events, was a bethel, a, house of God, house of peace. How, the j divine ordering of eventsT You judge. Premier Peel resigned in that month of June. 1846, and came to his death about four yearsi laterk . from a fail when riding a horse. i George K. Gay had - several wires all Indian One. was the! girl Toupin, daughter or part Indian, born Marlenne of Jean Ban- tiste Toupin and the famous Dor ion Woman of history. Marienne's first husband wis XaTier Ger vais, son of j Joseph - Gervais, of the house of the final wolf meet ing, etc., etc., second a . Roda beaux, and third George Gay. There are numerous Gervais and Gay 'descendants. There was a Mary Ann. by George. Gay, and she married j Hiram B. Slmklns. and they became grandparents of Prof. Cleveland S.j Simkins of the University; of Tennessee, Mem Phis, j ... , ; Prof. Slmklns spent part of his vacation in Oregan in 1935, ac companied by h is i wife. Hi j " ; Hlstoriahs j have said George Gay's first wife was a daughter of Win. Johnson, who fought on 'Old Ironsides." jwho was high sheriff under; the provisional gov ernment, who brailt the first home on the site of Portland, west side. "The (first wife has been related to me as being one of Johnson's; slaves and an In dian, probably a jCobaway, who died after her first child," wrote Prof. Simkins In 1934. He said further: "In j 1846! a daughter of Johnson, Mary, came to live with Gay, after her father's death, and Geo. JC. Gay was made adminis trator, of her estate. In 1928 I had a? talk with her, and she con firmed this."! Prof. Simkins also wrote "There are two wives of Geo. K. Gay buried on the old Gay farm so ath and west of the old brick house . . . j. These two wives were purchased from a chief at the Grand Ronde reservation." J. Wlllard Gay, another great grandson of the Dorion Woman, thinks the secend! wife of George Gay was buried in the St Louis church, where thei Dorion Woman was buried, i it-.-- I Prof. Simkins thinks a number of bodies not mentioned in the foregoing were !buried on the Gay farm, and he thinks hf can locate their j resting places, or come very near to them. - He will no doubt tell the world in book form sonde of the things h? has on his mind. V V : . ; ; If George Gay's wife was a Cobaway, she wasj a sister or half sister to the wives of three other prominent early Oregon ptoneerar Solomon Smith, first public vhool t cher in Oregon. Joseph Oer als and Louis LSBonte. ..And an princesses. . for Cobaway was a noted Clatsop Indian chief. He had several wives. No we have had high history centering In Spring Valley and on three sides of it, south, north and west," not mentioning, Kethel tastitute and College on the west. that was consolidated with Mon mouth college, that became the chief of our statel normal schools, V . i Let's hear from the east or northeast side, across the beau tiful Willamette.! where. Oct. 6, 1834, landed - Jason Lee who came in answer to the Macedon ian call of the Indians, whose lit tle log house became the capital of; the U. S. government in this then no man's land; where was begun Protestant) Christian . civil ization in the westernmost west; where was established the pro visional government; where its laws were framed; where was founded 'Willamette university, first of its class! still living and on a permanent basis west oi the Mississippi; where was started the forces that extend the arc of the American . republic from the Rockies' snowy crests to the Pa cific sands. ' -, V V -' - : What about the "historical" church " la 'which was held ' the meeting - where j the foregoing facu were related? It is the old est standing church building of a? , kind or denomination on the west side of the 'Willamette river. 1 It was erected in 1858. bv the Cumberland Presbyterian denom ination, which was quite prom inent in early Oregon, but tt has always been largely a neighbor hood gathering place It has been, kept in good repair during all the nearly 80 intervening years, and is so today, j . , - Eight or 10 -(years - ago;Vthe Spring Valley Cemetery associa tion was formed,! to care for the God's acres surrounding the church -building. and took over the- ownership 1 and care oi tbe structure. Thus lit is guaranteed indefinitely continuing life. Jj-V:v. cThis. fori the reason that the cemetery association has built up an endowment fund, now amount ing to some 3000, the Income from which is to be devoted in perpetuity to the, care of the property. ,- i The Tesult is ' that the graves there, many of early Oregon pio neers, are well kept. Numerous efficiency increased and discipline restored. Creation of a mediation board similar to the railroad board set up in 1934, is urgently recommended. Such a board recognizes that all transportation is a public utility, and thai compulsory media tion must precede work stoppage. . . i J918 "Avoid . .Tj-W'' rt 'fz?2"2Jl: 'o1 'JAr:' '. L ' - 1 neat monuments are there, but only one grave site is left which has a curbi and; the agreement tor razing that one is; hoped for at an early! date.! 1 Vi The Zenia cemetery Is on a sightly knoll; It is planted to beautiful evergreen trees, and it is kept like! a fine lawn. mower is owned, and A power the result Is perennially veraant beauty and! loveliness.! This col umn will soon contain more about the history; of . the Zena church, and concerning the final resting places and records of the histor ic men andi women in! the ceme tery that surrounds it. Board of Review For Scouts Held Wednesday night the Boy Scout board of review . met at t the chamber of Commerce. There were 19 scouts up for advancement and 24 badges.,; These awards will be -presented at the! court of honor November 17 et the chamber of commerce. 1 At 'tbe V court Bob Pound Willi tell about his trip to the Jamboree at Washington, D. C, In Tolly. I j The Boy Scouts are urged to turn out for the Armistice day parade Thursday; In uniforms ana with flags ftt Merlon Square. The biggest turnout In years Is! ex pected. . . ;i ' I. --- .-4-;' Dr. B. If. Pound has called a committee meeting of the Cherry City . division of Boy SeOuts for Friday night. . November 1 2. At this time Clans will be made tor the fourthannual patrol leaders' conference to be held In Salem. North to Store NORTH HOWELL Lumber has been hauled for a new gro cery store! building at the four corners "near the North Howell grange hall and church. This is the first store for this; district. The tew?j storekeeper, H. Hamp ton of Can, by has purchased the one-acre tract of land from E. t. Fletcher o Portland and wilt sell I s and groceries. I This district has always need ed a country store and local peo ple welconiie this new venture. Gosslin Rumored After State Job Reports i were current here I this week hat W. L. Gosslin, pri vate secretary to Governor Charles 'Martin, jnay be a democratic candidate j-for " secre tary of state at the primary elec tion next May. " Gosslin swas reported to have been ctfensd the support ot sev er. 1 prominent members ot ! the state young democratic organiza tion. ' if - '. : ' Gosslin would neither confirm nor deny the report, i Ella Korjb Home Bought By Former Nebraskan SILVERTON Alfred Haugen, salesman rith Ej Sylvester real estate, reports the sale of the Mrs. E13a Korh home in Seottr Mills to Ekner N. Johnson, form erly of Niobrara, Nebraska, o Mr. Johiison was fortunate in finding work right away and has moved his family to. hia new home. : 1 ''.-.- -i.-,-t:- 3- Foreign Entanglements?' 1937 V STORIES OF L BUchelangelo's "Perhaps the , men of genius are the only true ; men," wrote Aldous Huxley, fin all the his tory ot the race there have been only a few thousand real men. And the rest of us what are we? Teachable animals. Without the real men we ; should have found out almost nothing at all . J '. There has been only one Buddha, -one Jesus,' o n 1 y one Bach that we know of, one Michelangelo." 1 . He was morose, sullen, quar relsome. He was afraid of the dark feared mortal Injury dreaded the ! future,; that might see an end to his gigantic dreams. An enormous .block ot marble had lain in the courtyard of Santa Maria ; deal Flore. It was to have been used for a statue of a prophet, but another sculp tor unable to carve the figure from it narrow, clumsy shape. had abandoned it. In the year 1502 it was given to Michelan gelo. He attacked It with char acteristic boldness and Indomi table energy. From It there emerged the David. After two years the whole of Florence was alive with the exciting news that the David was completed and waa magnificent beyond comparison. Michelangelo himself was allowed to choose its site. He chose the s t e p s of the Palazzo Vecefaio where It became! a symbol of the glory of Florence. ; r j His great . contemporary Leo nardo da Vinci was now In his fifty-second year, and on hia re turn to Florence he frequently met Michelangela who hated him for his quiet aloofness and made his aversion brutally and pub It :ly felt. Soderini placed them in-direct competition in the coun cil hall decorations. All Florence was divided into two factions. Nothing but the account remains, the two pictures' have long since, disappeared. Of this artistic bat tle of the century, Cellini said, "The cartoon of Michelangelo was placed in the palace of the Medici and that , of Leonardo In the hall of the pope. As long as they remained there they were the school of the ; world." "1 . In 1505, Pope Julius II called Michelangelo to Rome. These two proud violent men conceived the Idea that was to be tor both a monummf for posterity, and a tomb for Julias. Both - were filled ;ith gigantic ideas and their minds seethed with ambi tious projects. No more stagger ing a task could be invented than the monument of more than forty statues, some of tremend ous size. Michelangelo went to Carrara to choose the marble himself. Eight months later be returned to Rome followed by great boatloads of stone. He be gan his labors. ' Pope Secret Visitor ' ! . In order that he might visit him rriTately, the pope con structed a drawbridge from the Vatican, to Michelangelo's house. His interest was. a marV ot great favor and as such caused jealousy at I court. ' Bramente. the archi tect of St. Peter's influenced - Ju lius : against the monument, re minding him of the superstition; that it is bad lack tor a living man to build his tomb. . Michelangelo himself tells us, "The pope chanced his mind end when the boats arrived, from Car rara with the marble I had to pay the charge ot transport my self. I found nt y s e 1 f without money and greatly embarrassed. X urged the pope as strongly -as I eould to continue the construc tion Of the ( tomb. But he had me put out by a groom." - v r by Howard Simon i ::- I". h MICHELANGELO (SELF rOSTsUIT) I 14TMSM Michelangelo, furiously angry. fled toj Florence and nothing the pope could do would make htm return. Bramante'and his other rivals t the court of Julius thought that they could further discredit Michelangelo by forc ing- him to work at another el the pope's, favorite projects. They suggested to Julius that Michelangelo .paint a fresco on the ceilings acre of the Sistlne chapel. . They hoped, that his in er;.erience as a painter of fres coes would betray j him. This Gargantuan labor was begun In 1508. - ' ; Jail us was Irritated by the painter's slowness of execution and; there was constant friction between them. In the midst of an argument the pope strurk him with his staff and Michelangelo rushed home intending to leave Rome. The pope sent 500 ducats by way of apology and Michelan gelo f orgare him. In the next year Julius died. On the wall of the chapel. Michelangelo . had planned a painting of the Last Judgment Here be poured out the full measure of his troubled, angry soul. . Romain Rolland says of it. ."At whirlwind blows across this throng of giants. The same whirlwind which sweeps through space . the god who has created the sun and hurled It like a ball into the ether. There Is no es cape from the groaning tempest which surrounds " and . -deafens you. It la at once bestial and divine.' - . . . ' Sk'ndity Criticized Paul, a succeeding pope,' criti cized the nudity of the figures, but his criticism was not heeded by the painter. However, when the master of ceremonies dared to add his voice to the"! pope's he found himself unmistakably painted hi the Jower reaches of Hell with asses ears, and a ser pent twined around r hia middle. The pope, pleaded In rain for his official. Michelangelo replied. "Tour Holiness - may release a man ; from Purgatory . but not from the lower regions." The last years of his life were spent In virtual slavery lo the great works of his own conceiv ing, and bondage to the jealous pope, Clement III, who feared they would not' be .completed. Even his death . did not release him from . Rome. His faithful friends, in order to carry out his last ;wish to be burieo in Florence, had to steal his body and send it hidden in canvas sacking, to the city of his child hood, i . i ' The above painter Is among 4S great Masters represented whose pictures are offered la reproduction form by this news- Safety To thej Editor: ,- ' ' " It aeema rathef rade to criti cize a paper to which- One has so recently; subscribed, but that seems necessary la ; the! interests of truth and justice "The motto adopted by your publication 4in 1851 t-No favor sway us; no fear shall awe looks to le a bit out of place now that your present Betup (evidently Is irocommunis tic, judging from such garbled in formation as is set forth for our reading in Dorothy j Thome son s ON THE RECORD, her direct appeal throu gh clover j props gan da to welcome even more exhu berantly than we're ( done In the past Comrade Russia and her lovef0rf world rellglon-wrwklng Of course -thinking people equipped with brains (who also use. them) will see j readily that all Dorothy's meanderings point to on4 thing: At all! cost she must whitewash all! that is not pleasant, ill that was horrible and stocking, utterly abominable in thej Spanish lopsided war. And to do; this she simply spreads and l4y on very .thick all sorts of hooey; concerning the three new menaces to democracy : It aly, Germany, Japan,- ' O naturally it must! be made quite clear that poorj oln -suffering; Sister Russia has at heart all out separate good,; that she only infested Spain in order to bring order out of chaos, that she'd (very much enjoy j doing the same thing by us, I by an j body Juat for; practice, if only the op portunity were ripe. And the truth of the thing is--the , Reds a chance at really would jlike turning the U.S.A. topsy-turvy in just the same manner as - they have recked everything an ev ery place they ve so rar contact ed. M ! 1 - Butjwe go on and pn, taking in the same drlvle, swallowing' it all like so many good little chil dren their Castoria. Unfortunate ly Castoria really wasj good for us when we were I young, but Communism is decidedly not Those jwho have no religion, who don't give a hoot for anything outside of eating, sleeping, 'lov ing, making money for these items, naturally are indifferent also to the way the wind is blow ing in such strong gusts phd to them and for them j communism is an opiate which; they jenjoy taking: in quite large' doses.) ! But I for us who treasure a be lief, who like to remember j they 've been taught there I is a God, a good. Just, merciful; God! with Hia attributes,, thati we are not here today and gone tomorrow forever, fof us, I saj, there is scant iroom tor this usurper of our liberty. And it isn't Italy. Germany. Japan who ;may oring about a crisis ot ciTilization but mad Russia.! We should look to jit and try, at long last, to get ! the truth about j present dayi happenings here- and abroad and not accept misstatements ! any lldnger. . Af terall.l what function Is It which should he a news service most important achievement! If not un- 5 r f. paper4-4S Masters; oi ait ia original! colors. i - They of four, are divided into 1Z sets one set a week for only 39c and a ftifferentlvi numbered from this bewspaper. coupons Each week's set contains a lesson in Art Appreciation; and persons who bhtaln all 121 weekly sets will get a free collector's port folio. H -'. . "; J I CUo the first coupon on page 2 no El Copyright, 1937 Radio Programs KSXJt THtraSDAT 1S70 Xc T :30-t-8Biri lermgnetU. " 7 ;4fr Amrieu rsailr Hoblmoa. 8:00-4-Aady and VirgtaiJ MBS. :15--Biit Fradd Miller. ilBS. S:3--Tday tooM. I 8 i45-4-Sew. M - :00-l-Th Patter's CaU. :15-4-Frindly Cirri a. r :4S--Coral Strand. 10:0O Odditiea ia tha aews. 10:15 Martial rtrthm.) 10:3-rlilormatio Vurwa, UBS. 10:4S-f-Tb Marrfmakara, 31BS. 11 :0O Sewa. t j Il:is4-Tb variety thai. 11:45 Bcatriea Fairfax, MBS. H:00-rValaa parade. ." 1S:1S Kawa. - i .' I -It :JO Armistiea day prograaa, MBS. 1 :0--l;'aTnier'iIisfc4 1:15 Streamllna Swine, MBS. 1:30 Popalar aalata. i l:4S4-8iea ( Ufa. i . . S:SO-t-itaaa hich . Kagac, football. 6:30 Tha Frrsbaat Thaaf in Iowa. :4o Hits et today. ! :15-i-Th Pbaatom Pilot. MBS. :30 Frank Ball's aparta talk, MBA 6:45 Nwa. - f 7 04-Swistima. ; I 7:lS-f-Sanaala and kcyj board, MBS. 7 :30-4-Vocal variniea. t . 7 :4i-STA TINMAN OF THE A1S. - S:00 Harmoar kali. S:15 Nawa. - -I , 8:30 Sai Harea' football Ulk, MBS. S:S04-Moaical waraa. I . 9:00 Tha aaarapapar of tk air. MB. :li Bdb7 tiayia a MBS. : t:30--Wayaa Kraf'a MBS. I0:00-Gn1t William rk MBS 10:304-KtarcU Hoaflaad'a arrk MBS. ll:0O Kogw Earka'a ah MBS. 1:8V Frnk Sori' lorcb, MHS. ...... Tr . , - KOW THTJBSDAT 20 Xc 7:00-)-Jat Aboat Tima. 7 :SO-t-Kecping tima. 1 '-. 74 Xewa. . 1 S:00-H8Ura of today., j 8 :45-HUonpl ainjer. 9 :00-i-Happr Jack. :1S4-Cadcta qaaxtet. 1 ' 10 :0O ormvnm quart!. 19:15 Mra. M'ieca of Cabbaaa Patch. 10:30 Joha't Othrr-Wife. 10:4J Jo.t PUia BUI. ll.-OO-KBtandard arbeol broad ct. ,. 11:45 Mj-aterx cbrt f 1? :00-KPepper Yooag's Family. Iz:l4-Ha Pcrkina. 13:39 V and Sada. 1;S Tha O'KrUla. 1:00 Ray Towcra, traabadoor. .- 1:15 iuidia Light. I l:0-4-ftory of Mary Marlla. 1:45 Rcfrobmant tiaie, Stafia'-Saa. J -.00 Wife va. Secretary. 2:l5-hBtara of today. : 3 :30 Ilairl Warner. ' 2 :45 Cloria Gale. 3:1 5 lxa Winalov. . ; 3:30 Woaiaa'a maiiti of tba air. 4:O0 Lady of Milliona. ; 4:15 t'orktail boor. 4:20 ThTea Cbecra. 4:30 Newa. 4:45--Eaay Aeea.- ' 4:00 Rud Vallao. :0O Oood ifiri of 1338. 7:00 Maaieal hall. 1 - 8:00 Aaioa 'a Andy.! :15 Standard aympboay boar. t:l5 Vie Ardcrm orck. j 9:39 Onad Terrac cafa orek. 10:00 Nw flaahra. ( 10:15 Ricsrda and hia violia. 10:S0 Melody nraoira. 11:00 Ambaaaador hotel orck. 1 1 :30-jOlymre hotel anf h. 13 :00--Ytnr report. 1 oi-.,' XXI THTJXSDAT 1180 Ke. raw M luteal clock. 7:00 Family altar boar. Valve biased, ungarbled, truthful and accurate .service . . . . That's a darn good motto, though-ilf it's strictly followed. Were I a Bewspaper . publisher, regardless how unreliable andor prejudiced other papers, were, be cause of my own self-respect I'd see to ft I lived up to that motto 100 per cent. I close with best wishes. ! JOSEPH M. PORTAL. BEDAUX SYSTEM HERE To the Editor The Bedaut sy-1 tern, whose originator, Charles E. , Bedaux, was to have led thej Duke 1 and Duchess of Windsor on a tour ; of this country, is not to do won- I ders for. the American workman ! as pictured by some of our lead . ing editorials, but to do wonden ! for Charles E. Bedaux at the ex pense of American workmen. - The aim of the system is not te j make each operation more effi cient (only) but to make each op eration faster. j In accomplishing this, men from a department are picked.! whose Intelligences are above par. j These men. are taken to a! local ! jewelry store and' supplied with : brand new stop watches. Then! they are told to stand by and ' watch their companions at their various lines of work and record ! to a one tenth second thej exact1; time it takes for a single opera- tion. After extensive study aj speed j for a base is established. Then the ! employe is told that in the! eyent ! he can produce more than the ; base he shall receive a bonus. ; Now a bonus is commonly; known as something in excess of j one's regular pay. Rut in the cas ! of the Bedaux system (as has been j practiced locally) if the employe j produces, for example nine hoars ' work in eight hours, he would re ceive only a fraction of thei ninth ! hour's pay. In addition to his reg-; ular eight hours pay. It is the bal- ; ance of this ninth hour's pay, that pays for the installation of the system and to keep up the! beau tiful estates of Charles E. Bedaux. No scale as set up by tbe Be daux system was ever adopted by i any group of union men. All un- ion scales are warked out by union men who have spent much of their I life on the job. The local mills who have tried this system, have come to the i same conclusion (that did Hitler.! who realize that the backbone ot Mussolini and other great menj any country is labor) that the sys-i tern must go. As proven by an ex-1 act copy of a paragraph from thei written agreement by and between more than forty union locals, cov- ering upwards of fifteen thousand i men, and their employers, on thej Pacific coast. Quote: ; There will be no payment of: "Bedaux" or other labor or qual-j ity premiums or bonuses j in the! pulp and paper manufacturing de-j partments in any mill. I j A. W. BAKER High School Boys Are Pallbearers at Final Rite for Clinton Rebo ATJM.SVIL.LE The funefal ser-: vices for Clinton Rebo weM held; at the Christian. church Saturday morning with Rev. Henry Arhuse condacting the service. A duet; was sang by Rosella Lane and Raymond Lane, and a aolo by Miss Lane accompanied by Mrs.. Gny Gearhart. Pall bearers were high school boys. Committment: was made at the Butler; ceme tery, east of town. . 7i30 Beanet and Wolvertoa. 7 :45 Vieanema aaaemblo. S :00 Financial aerrice. 8:15 Hollywood Hi Hattera. S: 30 Christian Science prof ram. 8 :45-rOriKinalitie. : Home lMtitata.. 9:15 Georce Griff va. 10:00 Lost and fouad item. 1 0 : 02 Crosscnta. 10:iO New. 10:45--Clele D'Aotrey. orraait. 11:00 Strollers matinee. 11:30 Weaterm farm and borne. 13:30 Sewa. 13 :4S Market rejwrr-ta. 13:50 XBC program. 1:00 Clab matinee. ;00 Little variety thow. 1 :25 Finaneial and crain reprt. 3:39 Julana Peltelier, 3:45 Glaaa Hat Boom orrb. 3:00 Harry Korea orck. 1:30 Pre a Badio neara. :S5 8ong-a ot yesteryear. 1:40 Toay Ruaaell. aiaKer. 1:45 Trailiaj Alone. 4:00 Afternooa masieala. ; 4:15 Speaking ot aparta. 4:30 Saritt serenade. 4:45 Silent to KOB. 8.00 Land of the Whatsit. 8: 15 lia Schallert renews. 8:30 Concert ball ml the air. S:43 Sewa. . 9 rOO Viewneao aafctodiea. - :15 Sports by Bill Mock. :S0 Troc4dro reb. 10:00 tTptona ballroom orch. 10:iM Biltarara hotel orch. 11:00 News. r 11:15 Harea of rest. 11:30 Charles Bunvaa, eranUt 13:00 Weather and polieo reaorts. KOAC--THTJaSDAT 550 Xe, I 9:00 Today's protrama. 9:03 Tbe komemakers boor, Teaale Tel. 10:00 Weatker forecast. ' 1 : 15 Story boor for sdulta. 10:45 leHert Moore, violinist. 11 :00 Armiatu-4 day convocation. I2:0 Nes. 13:15 Koan farm hear. 1:15 Variety. : S ;00 Tba afternoon philosopher. Or H f ChUda. 1 -43 Garden rloV pro tram. , 3:15 American Red Crosa. lr45 Tba Monitor views tba aews. 4:1)0 Tha symphonic boor. 4:30 Stories for boy a and girls. 5:00 On the rampnaea. 5:45 Vespers, Dr. E. i. Harper. j 8.15 Xaws. ' ' . S:S0 Farm konr. 7:80 Radio shorthand contest. Prof, U T. Vance. 8:15 Torn mar not believe tt bt f "Some People Really lo See1 Phoau." Dr. L- F. Beck. 8:45 Fnrestera ia aetiao. hxltivn f aai, aaaaaaaJaaa,. ya) LISTEN TO ME KSLM 5:30 p.m. Monday Thru Friday - JOHNNY IAWRENCK 1 Yi:irn: