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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1937)
PAGE FOUR OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, December 21, 1937 v "No Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall Awe1:; From First Statesman. March 28. 1151 Charles A. Speagub . THE STATESMAN Charles A. Spraeue. Pres. , - Hrnilxr of the Ttf Aasuclxted ITw M a-scttmively mtttM to U its tot pub)l tln or sll nf i)iKiMii'brs crjllfd ' Store Picketing Courts have ruled that picketing under certain conditions w Mwful, the Noms-LaGuardia fit bids courts from enjoining picketing even in cases where the disputants do not state in the proximate relation of employer and employe. So it comes that unions may picket stores, factories and restaurants even when workers there are not members of unions and may not want to be mem bers. - ' !'." , - However, for an employer in interstate commerce in such a predicament to call his employes in and tell them to jt in the union would be an unfair labor practice as defined in the Wagner act and he would be subject , to citation by the na tional labor relations board.- The only instance where the employer can tell his employes to join a union is this: where a union has been certified by JLRB as the representative of his employes,, usually determined by an election or au iit, he ,cari require all employes to be members of that union. In the case of store picketing here, assuming the store is engaged in interstate commerce, and accepting the state ment that its employes are not members of the union and -do not want to be, then the picketing has for its purpose the coercion of the employer into performing an illegal act,"to wit, committing an unfair labor practice under thi lan guage of the Wagner act. The state supreme court has said that picketing to be allowed must be peaceful and for a lawful purpose. Es it a lawful purpose to force an employer to violate the Wagner act? If not, would not the picketing be subject to restraint by the court? j The underlying principle of the Norris-LaGuardia act and the Wagner act isjthe guarantee of the right of sjlf-or-ganization to employes. This principle is soundj To coer :e em ployes to join any organization is undemocratic and in viola ' tion of the spirit and the letter of legislation which organ ized labor acclaims as the "Magna Charta" of labor. Justice Black and Wire Tapping By a 7 to 2 decision the supreme court ruled that evidence obtained by tapping telephone wires could not be u;sed in federal criminal proceedings. In 1928 the court ruled in a 5 to 4 decision in a bootlegging case that a Washington state law insuring secrecy in telephone conversations did rot bar use of evidence gotten by listening in. The present decision is notexf ictly a reversal of that decision, because in the interval a new federal act forbids any sender to intercept any communication or divulge its con- The court rules that this tcuis well as others. The queer thing about this decision is that it is cbricur red in by Mr. Justice Black, who as Senator Black led the raid on telegraph messages to Washington and aided "n divul ging their contents. In his lobby investigation Blac con nived with the federal communications commission itself to seize all telegrams; coming to Washington after a certain date, go through them, and turn over to his committee copies of telegrams which he might use in his anti- utility pattle. There was turned over to a house member a copyvof a Hearst telegram dealing with a topic entirely foreign to the subject of Black's inquiry. The Black committee did not scruple to ; violate the fourth amendment to the constitution and apparently l ad the FCC itself violate the text of the act creating it. Yet j.s Jus tice Black he joins in the decision that congress has made it unlawful to use evidence "deemed inconsistent with ethical standards and destructive of personal liberty." j - Maybe the country should take heart from Black's con curring in the decision. It may indicate he intends to act a3 judge and not as prosecutor. Fehl to Hospital Judge Norton has ordered Earl H. Fehl committed to the state insane hospital. He acted on the certificate of three alienists from Portland who examined Fehl recently aid pro nounced him suffering from paranoia. The circuit cou rt jury impaneled in the case, an unusual proceeding, divided in its judgment. The presiding judge then acted on his own author, ity, which h ample under the statutes. - No right-thinking person would want Fehl railroaded to the asylum. If he is sane he deserves to be allowed his liberty. However his actions since his release raise doubts-as 'to his sanity, among those who do not know him personal y. His array of lawsuits with fantastic claims for damages, hi s claim to be the county judge of Jackson county despite the fact that the incumbent was duly elected by the people indicate that something must be wrong with the 'fellow. , 7 In view of the smouldering discord in Jackson county Judge Norton doubtless would have preferred not to commit Fehl. But he has a responsibility to the public. We kaow of no reason to doubt Judge Norton acted conscientiously and intelligently in making an extremely difficult deci sion. , Christmas A nazi newspaper asserts that Christmas is a German institution which the Christians borrowed without permis sion It is right as far as Weinachtsbaum (tree) and StL Nich olas (Santa Claus) are concerned. Other trimmings have dif ferent origins. The yule log and holly are English.' , Mistletoe has from antiquity been regarded as having magical proper- 1 m. i. TT 1 I Al t X 1 ' .f A 11, A ues. j. ne ancient nomans nau meir oaiiurnaua leapw "i latter part of December. Other peoples had festivals about the time of the winter solstice. . i ' Christians didn't -begin to celebrate the anniversary of Christ's birth until about 200 A. D. They may have; appro priated the festival day of pagans, and taken over many of " the pagan trimmings just as they did in other respects in the building up of the Christian religion. In some communities pagan saints were appropriated as Christian and accorded continued reverence. Boots of social custom and religion and moral code and economic activity go very, very deep in his tory. - - I Any $30 Cowboys in the House? Dusolina Giannini. Metropolitan soprano, on her return from Europe told reporters she reer, and if she could find the down." "Even though he might . a month, I would marry him," a man's food now. I m not one cookers. I cook what men like, thick fine vegetable soups and thick steaks and home-made bread." Tired of a career th& opera star said she yearned for home life. There ought to be men earning $30 a month or better who could give Miss Gianini some one to cook for. She doesn't say how good she is at cherry pie, but no doubt she can boil macaroni. , The Oregon State Motor association reports 1 that Oregon has "only 29 death to go" to make 19 S 7 equal 1936 in auto fatalities. Marion county has already reached the 193$ mark. 11. Here Is a challenge to all to drive with extra caution during the holidays. Spare Marion county another death this year; spare Oregon the 29 live which In 193 S were -sacrificed. I A they sat huddled in their orercoats on the armory platform the army engineers must hare felt they were .getting a cojd recep tion la Oregon. The warmth of the speakers soon orercam the de- I I m Im. Ml tatesmmi Editor ard Publisher PUBLISH (NG CO. - Sneldoa JT. Sackett. Secy. Associated Vrrmm to It or out ihrrwiaa crraiiM act and its state duplicate person no authorized by the - law applies to detectives as Origin was ready to abandon her ca right man, "marry and settle be only a cowboy earning $30 she is quoted. "And I cn cook of your dessert your fancy Bits for Breakfast y R. J. HENDRICKS Facts for Salem junior 12-2137 high students about the history of their city, and their district and their state: I . H W V (Continuing from Sunday:) The four patents to claims that made up Salem's townsite land were granted thus: To John B. and Helen C. McClane, December 18, I860; recorded January 28, 1861. To William H. and Chloe A. Willson, Feb. 14, 1862; recorded March 9, 1S64. To Josiah L. and Elizabeth W. Parrish, Sept. 30, 1865; recorded July 28, 1873. To David and Adelia J. Leslie, July 3, 1869; recorded Sept. 2, 1887. Helen C. Judson had been mar ried to J. B. McClane, and her parents, L. B. Judson and wife, had made over their claim rights to them. That claim comprised the northwest 640 acres; the Parrish claim the northeast 640; the Will son claim the central, and the Les lie claim the south 640 acres. Mrs. Adelia J. ieslie was a sister of L. B. Judson. Leslie was her third husband, she his second wife. I am instructed that the slogan for Book Week this year is "read ing as a magic highway to be fol lowed in youth and on into adult years;" that my talk should not be longer than 40 minutes, and that I ought to stress the adventurous side of Oregon history. I agree. Reading is the magic key that opens the golden treasure vaults of all accumulated , know ledge to youth and age; brevity is both the soul of wit and the sauce of wisdom, and the adventurous side of Oregon history is full of thrills for all who study it under standing and appreciatively. V V No major Indian war battle of the early pioneer days was waged in or near where Salem stands. Its Indian name,. Chemeketa, meant place of meeting, and it was, I think, a tribal city of ref uge, in which, by general agree ment, no hostile blow could be struck. Appropriate, was it not then, to have it named Salem, Hebrew for place of peace? . But men of the Salem district were engaged in all or nearly all the historic battles with the natives that were fought in every section of what are now the three states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, from the beginning days up to the capture of Captain Jack and his band in 1873. They were in the bloody engagements on the California trail in the '40s and early '50s, on the fields of the Cayuse war after the Whitman massacre; at Evans creek and thence in the 1853 peace meeting on Table Rock that by a miracle fell short of a massacre. They were at the battle of the Meadows, closing the so-called Rogue River war, and at the consequent surren der of doughty and merciless old Chief John. They were at Walla Walla, when Capt. Charles Ben- nett, a" leading Salem citizen, lost his life, along with Peopeomox mox, who was killed by a Marion county company. After the last named struggles in the war to stop covered wagon immigration and end the whole white race, com mencing in concert from the Mis souri river to the Pacific ocean, in 1855, they helped control the 6000 reds gathered on the Coast reser vation, beginning with the year 1856. We have Battle creek, flowing from the vicinity of the Sky Line orchard and Temple hill in a gen eral easterly direction to Mill creek above the town of Turner. A branch of that BaHtle creek cojmes near to where the 12th street extension joins the Pacific highway in Salem's southern subJ- urbs. The city's best families, in the horse and buggy days, drove out there and camped and picnick ed on its banks. That seemed long distance then; four or five miles Into the primeval woods. Now it is reached and passed in a few zooming, zipping seconds by feckless, reckless speedsters, each madly rushing to his next rendez vous with death. U 1 There are other Battle creeks In Oregon. That one commemorates a brush In June, 1846, between a party of Oregon Rangers, volun teer local militia, with a band of Indians from over the Cascades that had been stealing cattle. One Indian was killed, and peace was composed by gifts to his near rel atives, probably shirts or blank ets, or both. The battle that brought the lone fatality and gave the' stream Its name was nt in the Looney set tlement, near where the Pacific highway runs" toward Jefferson, b N Then there was the battle of the Abiqna. In 1848. The Whit man massacre, November 29, 1847, brought on the Cayuse war, taking most of the, able bodied men east of the Cascades in the early weeks of 1848. This gave a band of Klamaths coming 1 over the Santiam pass and joining a faction of the Molallas what they regarded as a good opportunity to raid the white settlements in the eastern part of Marion county. The Klamaths were led by their chief. Red Blanket, and his son. Young Chief Red Blanket. The bad Molallas were under Chief Coosta, hissed on by Crook ed Finger, a scurvy sub chief who was a sort of red racketeer. v s s Samuel Parker organized a militia company near the site of Salem. Parker's donation land claim was where the state peni tentiary is now. Capt. Allen J. Davy led a company in the Santiam- district near where Stay- ton stands; Capt. Dicky Miller had one out near where Silver ton Is now, and Ralph C. Geer led a band of brave men In his neighborhood, about 12 miles east of the site of Salem. Geer was grandfather of Horn er Davenport. Marion county boy who became in his prime the world's greatest cartoonist. He (Geer) wrote for historical rec ord an account of what has come to be known as the battle of the Abiqua, which is commem A Push on fe:m WV-f -JS m$m&? t ytJPAtx Sm On the By DOROTHY Respects to The London Times It is time, I think, that some one said a few harsh words on behalf of Anglo-American rela- """' u """VyWations. Many of ua r?- yhelieve that with ..." 'tithe state of the v-::? world what t is "Sriji today, it is high- lv dfisirah!,- that SisMii Oreat Rritain and VI the United States skftjwAJ u"Uiu u ii u e r- i vve are Doin in- ,v , v i voivea as inno-L..v,--v'.hJ cent bystander? Dorothy Tbompton and common vic tims in the Chinese-Japanese con flict; we are both anxious for peace, and "for the restoration of decent International relation ships. And, there is no basis for conflict .between the two nations, which 'together represent the greatest amount of population and power in the western world. If, however, we are to regard The Times, of London, as the mouthpiece of British opinion and policy and that is how the London Times would like us to regard it tnen tgere is a wide difference between! the American attitude toward the international scene, and the British attitude. The London Times is now con stantly stressing the desirability of joint Anglo-American repre sentations to Japan. But the United States finds it difficult to forget that in 1931, when our secretary of state, Mr. Stlmson, made overtures to Britain for a joint "demarch to Japan at the time of the invasion of Manchu ria, he was very coldly sn Jibbed 1 and with the whole hearted support of The London Times. Nor has the United States for gotten that Sir John Simon made a spirited defense of Japan be fore the League of Nations, lead ing the Japanese delegate, To- suke Matsuoka now the aH-pow- erful president of the South- Manchurlan railway to Ray that Sir John Simon has said In fif teen minutes what I have been trying to say for three mmths ' i - In those days The London Times, Sir John Simon, and the same little group, who are now of The Time's Inner coterie, wera pro-Japanese, favored the restor ation of the Anglo-Japanese al liance, and did not care if Japan Invaded Manchuria, for two rea sons: First, the. Japanese, they contended, would restore order in Manchuria, and open wider markets for British goods, with possible preferential treatment for Britain, and, second, in any event, the great British inter ests were centered around Shang hai and in the rich Yangtse val- ley.v-- The British demonstrated at that time that they were inter im, marker on that stream a few miles north of Silverton. V Captain Ceer gave the names of the men forming his company thus: William Parker, 1st lien tenant; James Harpole, 2nd lieutenant; William King, order ly sergeant, and the men: James Brown, S. D. Maxen, L. A. Byrd, Israel and Robert Shaw, King Hibbard, William Brisbin, Mr. Winchester, Port Gilliam, Wil liam, Thomas and George How ell, William Hendricks, Leander . Davis, Leo. Eoff, G. W. Hunt, James Williams, Thomas, J. w. and Henry Shrum, Elias Cox, Cy rus Smith, T. B.i Allen, Jacob Caplinger, Jack Warnock, " and others. ' "As brave a company of men as ever mustered." wrote Geer. They were prominent early day pioneers, among the founders of our commonwealth. (Continued tomorrow.) That Other Oar Would Help Record THOMPSON ested primarily in the protection of specifically British interests and not in the maintenance of international law and the sancti ty of treaties. Notice was served by the greatest naval power in the world that aggressors were free to act as they pleased as long as they did not Interfere with British Interests. The American attitude was quite different. From the view point of trade and investments in China we were, and are, far less concerned than the British. After the United Kingdom and Canada, Japan is the best cus tomer of the United States. Our investments in China are small. And while potentially the Chi nese market offers a considerable outlet for American goods, with in recent, years the United States has imported from China far more than! it has sold her. And, in standing for the Open Door in China, we were helping to main tain equality of opportunity for everybody. Therefore, in being willing to representations to Japan in 1931, we ran the risk of offending one of our best customers, in behalf of a principle. And that princi ple was clearly stated by Secre tary Stimson. It was, and is. that a peaceful and orderly world can exist only when treaties are respected, that peace in the mod ern world, is indivisible, and that wars, anywhere, may spread and eventually threaten the peace and prosperity of the Unit ed States. How sound that prin ciple is and it has been restated by the present state department is now being demonstrated, by the war in Spain and in China., The strongest feeling in the United States at present1 is for isolation. But it is safe to say that If this feeling is modified It wll only be upon the forego ing principle. The people of the United States might be willing to collaborate with th rest of the world for the purpose of maintaining international law. They will never be willing to collaborate, without principle, for the sake of maintaining the interests of the British Empire. And that brings us back to The London Times, and . the clique that It represents today. The Times has seen the Chinese Japanese conflict spread in the Yangtse valley, until it has be come a major disaster for Brit ain. Not only in terms of trade and Investments destroyed, but in, terms of the indispensable terms of Empire reputation and prestige. So now The London Times Is reaching out after American idealism, i But in its attitude toward the European situation,' The Times iEj exactly where It was in 1931, in the Manchurlan affair. , i ! That is to say: It is advocating a purely opportunistic policy and is showing itself cynkally pre pared to close its eyes to any aggrandizements that do not Im mediately affect the Empire. It supported the visit of Lord Hall fax to Hitler,' and shows itself willing to give away any colonies to Germany except the British colonies, and to close an eye to perman raids and incursions into Austria, Czechoslovakia, Po land, or Lithuania. In fact, it goes further, and actually says that the method of the coup oe mala has not been practiced by Germany in the last tew years, wholly without reason. So we find The Times in 1937 making exactly the same apolo by for the nse of force In inter national affairs that it made In 1931. It is prepared to come to terms with aggression for aJ price. - ' And, one might add, provided that one has - some sort of po litical sympathy for the possible aggressors. i There is no blinking the fact that most European countries to day are pretty badly split over the fascist issue. In all coun tries there are groups of "par lor whites" who have a certain sympathy for fascism and the ideas of the fascist powers, and this sympathy, without question. affects their attitude on foreign policy. The British cabinet, it self, js divided, into pro-German and pro-French factions, and the London Times has become the spokesman for the group to which Lord A s t o r and Lord Lothian belong, who engineered Halifax's visit to Hitler and Goering, almost over Anthony Eden's dead body. Lord Halifax had the doubtful satisfaction of hearing Mr. Hit ler re-annunciate the basic; ideas of foreign policy laid down in "Mein Kampf." It completely begs the ques tion to say that perhaps certain German demands, such as that for restoration of the colonies, may appeal to the International sense of justice. There is no considerable faction in Great (Turn to page 5) Ten Y A30 ears December 21, 1927 William Edward Hickman, dis charged employe of the Los An geles First National Trust and Savings bank, was declared to have been identified as slayer of Marian Parker, 12 year old Los Angeles school fclrl." George F. Vick, prominent au tomobile dealer, yesterday was elected president of chamber of commerce for year 1928. Harold Tomlinson represent ing the sophomore class, won the second interclass debates at Willamette university defeating Roy Currier, a freshman. "Twehty Years Ago December 21, 1917 Mrs. George H. Alden, wife of Dean Alden of Willamette uni versity has returned from Eu gene where she has been work ing in interest of Old People's Home. Dr. W. B. Morse has been named chairman of the medical advisory board to examine draft registrants in Salem district. Forty-one persons were killed and 39 injured when Louisville and Nashville passenger train crashed into rear of a Bardstrom Louisville and Springfield ac commodation train. The Statesman of the Air SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PROGRAM bjr the j Curtis Family on the "JUST THINK" PERIOD Tuesday Night 8:30 KSLM Radio Programs KSLM TUESDAY 1370 Ke. 7:15 iiewii. T:30 Snnriss STiBonftt. 7:45 AmMca i'aau'y R'ibiaoo. S :OU -SoaAnd. S:1S ThU Hide of Twenty. 8:30 Today's Tune. 8:45 Sew. 9;00 Tbs Pastor's CH. ? :1S Th Friendly Circle. 9: a Cmi Stroods. 10:00 Oddities in th Seiri. 10:15 West and Matey. 10:30 My r Kinpley, Astrologer. 10 :45 Hiti t Today. 11:00 Kewi. 11:15 The Variety J3how. : 11:45 Beatrice fairfax. 13:00 The Vain Parade 12:15 Xewi. it :3U Magic-ml Uonories. JS :45 KliraniE Cub. 1:15 Lucky Girt. . - 1:30 Popular Salute. 1:45 Frank Sortino'j Orehettrs. 2:00 The Johnson Family. S:15 Monitor Kew. 2r30 Kats on the Keys. 2:45 Spice of Life. 3:00 feminine Fancies. 8:80 Newa. 3:45 Chrislmaa Caroli. 4:00 Christmas Seals. 4:15 Lttigi Kouianelli's Orchestra. 4:30 Headline!. . 4:45 Radio Campus.. 5:OU Simmy Kaye's Orchestra. 5:30 The Freshest Thing in Town. 5:45 Swingtime. ;15 The Phantom Pilot. 6:30 Sports Bullsejes.. 6 :4; News 7:00 Wsltitime. 7 :30 The Witches Tales. 8:00 Harmony 11a U. :15 News. 8:30 The Statesman of the Air "Ju.t Think." special Christmas program, the Curtis family. 8:43 Musical Moments Revue. 9 :00 The Newspaper of the Air. 8:15 Wrestling Matches. 10:45 Popular Variety. 11:15 Paul Whiteman's Orchestra. - KOAC TUESDAY 550 Kc. -9:00 Today 'a Programs. 9 :03 The Homemakers' Hour Tessie Tel. 9:43 About Christmas Carols. 10:00 Weather Forecast. 10:15 Story Hour for Adults. 12 :00 News. 12:15 Noon farm Hour. 1:15 Variety. 2:00 Yon May Not Believe It But What Ii Called Mind Reading Is Chiefly Muscle' Beading Ir. Howard R. Taylor. Chairman, de partment of psychology, Univer sity of Oregon.' 2:45 Daughters of the American Kev olution. 3:15 Your Health. 3:15 The Monitor Views the News. 4:00 The Symphonic Hour. 4:30- Stories for Boys and Girls. 5:45 Vespers. 6:15 News. 6:30 Farm Hour. 8:15 A Writer Looks at Literature Alexander Hull. 8:45-9 Globe-Trotting with Oregonians. KGW TTTESDAY 620 Kc. :00 Just About Time. :30 Keeping time. :45 News. :00 Stars of today. :30 Jingletown Uazette, :4j Gospel ginger.. :30 Clarence Hayes. :45 Homemakers' exchange. :00 Toley and Glenn. :15 Mrs. Wiggs of Cabbage Patch. :30 John's Other Wife. :45 Just Plain Bill. :00 Fun in music. :30 General federation of women's clubs. :45 Mystery chef. :00 Pepper Young's Family. , :15 Ma Perkins. :SO Vic and Sade. . - :43 The O'Neills. :00 Ray Towers, troubadour. : 15 Guiding Light. :30 Story of Alary Marlin. :45 Refreshment time, Singin' Sam. :00 Wife vs. Secretary. :15 Bennett and Wolverton, :30 Hazel Warner, . :4ji Gloria Gale. :15 Rhythmaires. :30 Woman 's magazine of the air. :00 Iady of Millions. 15 Three Cheers. 30- News. :45 William Primrose, viola. :55 Cocktail hour. :00 Piano surprises. :15 Harmonica Hi Hats.' :30 Stars of today. :00 Alias Jitnmie Valentine. - :15 Beanx Arts trio. :30 Hollywood Mardi Gras. :30 Jimmy Fidler. :45 Vic Arden orch. :00 Amos 'n' Andy. :15 Vocal varieties. :30 Johnny presents. :00 Death Valley Bays. :3 Good Morning Tonight. - ; :00 News flashes. :15 Strin serenade. :30 Bal Tabarin -eafe orch. :00 Ambassador hotel orch. :30 Vogue ballroom 'orca. :00 WeathcT reports. KEX- TUESDAY 1180 Kc. :30 Musical clock. :00 Tamily altar hour, :30 I.arry Larson, brganist. :45 Viennese ensemble. :00 Financial service. :15 Portland breakfast club. :00 Home institute. :15 Fausto Alvarez. :30 Dr. Erock. :00 Lost and fonnd items. :02 Crosscuts. :30 N'ews. :4.t Rochester Civic orch. :00 Geographical travelogue. :15 Let's Talk It Over. :30 Western farm and home. :30 Xews. :45 Market reports; :50 U. S. marine band. :00 Club matinee. :20 As I See It. :S5 Club matinee. - :00 Jackie Heller. :10 lrma Olen. organist. :15 Don Winslow. :8o Financial and grain reports. :35 Harry Kogen orch. :45 Glass Hat Room orch. . :00 Science in the news. :15 Rakov'a orth. :30 -Presi Radio newa. . :33 Songs of yesteryear. AN OREGON DANK Wb My WHAT MORE SENSIBLE GIFT THAN A SAVINGS ACCOIJNT? Include Gift Sarin pi Account to esck f jwa yooax ten Uiis Christmas. It win be gratefully remembered f w W the bUnce erowl lnterM eaim Utes. Am ft reminder to wre, attractive Book Bank for borne string goes with h Gift Satinf Account t tkm Direct Branck of the atron United State National Bank. Ton cam atari these accoaata with aa little aa 1M. Resources 125 Million D. IV. Eyre, Manajfrr L. C. Smith, Asst. Slana-rr - Salem Branch oi the Ulnitod Slxitofl National Bqnb Bead Offiem, Portland, ifrmgo tana MPtu ttfci umi nuiAHt coaroaaiiow S:40 Kdward Carles. ' 8:45 Melody in time. 4 :00 Western education iorum. 4:30 Silent to KOB. 6:00 Land of the Whatsit. 8:15 Raymore ballroom orch. 8:80 Covered Wagon Day a, 9:00 Newa. , 9 : IS Ambassador hotel orch. :0 h ports by Bill Mock. 9:45 University explorer. 10:00 Meakht'i musical sews. 10:15 Wrrstliag bouts. 10:30 Uptown ballroom arch. 11:00 Newa. 11:15 Haven of rest. . 11:30 Cbarlea Kunjan, srgsniat. 12:00 Weather and police reporta. KOtN TUESDAY 940 Kc. :30 KOIX Klock, Ivan, Walter and Frankie. :45 Eye of the World. :O0 News. :15 This and That with Art Kirkham. :00 Sons of the Pioneers. :15 .dwin C. Hill. :30 Romance of Helen Trent. :4o Our Gal Sunday. :00 Betty and Bob. :15 Hymns of All Churches. : ;30 Arnold Grimm'a Daughter. :45 Hollywood in Person. :0O Big Sister. :13 Aunt Jenny 'a Real Lift Storiea. :30 American Home. . oo Milky Way, menu suggestions. :15 Colonel Jack Major. :30 Pop Concert. 7 8 8 9 9 9 9 10 10-: 10; 10 11 11 11 12: 12 12 12: 45 The Newlyweds. 00 Myrt and Marge. 1; 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 :15 Pretty Kitty Kelly. ;35 Story of Industry. :00 KOIN Kewa Service. :05 Studio. :30 Good Afternoon, Neighbors. -: 45 Hilltop House. :00 Doria Kerr, Songs. :15 Newspaper of the Air. :iO Judy and jane. :45 Newspaper of the Air. :15 Style Coats. ;30 Second Husband. 3 4: 4 5 5 :00 "Big Town" with Edward (i Robinson. :45 Melodie Strings. :00 Leon F. Drews, Organist. :15 Singing Strings. :30 Jack Oakie's College. :30 G eorge Jeaael and Will Oi bourne's Orchestra. :43 Little Show. :J(k Scattergood Baines. :15 Hollywood Screenscoops. :30 Al Jolson, Martha Kaye and Tart yakarkus. :00 Al Pearce and His Gang. 6 6 6 :,:o Classic strings. :00 Five Star Final. :15 Art of Conversation. :43 Jan Garber Orchestra. :00 Henry King Orchestra. :30 Sterling Young Orchestra. Huge Buck Deer Nearly Run Down DETROIT Mr. and Mrs. Earl Parker, returning from the Carl Westerbergs at Marion Forks Wednesday night met up with a Luge buck deer. Considerable damage was done to the Parker car but the deer seem unhurt as he left the scene of the accident in a hurry. , The A. Milne . Construction company has shut down the graveling crew and trucks cn the road until spring. The crusher is still operating. Walter Brinkmeyer, who has been Southern Pacific agent here for the past year and a half, has been transferred to Timber and Mr. Perse of Harrisburg Friday took over duties as agent here. -k ELLIOTT Hear a description of wrestling holds and the inside of the wres tling profession by the popular referee and wrestling instructor. Harry Elliott On the Kiwanis Club Broadcast Today 12:45 P. M. MBS KSLM 1370 Kc. SERVING OREGON prated by an appropriate D. A.