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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1938)
rPAGE SIX The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, January 21, 1938 " mum MM , "No' Favor Swaf Vs;,N'o Fear ShaU Awe" From first Statesman.! March 28. 1851 Charles A. Spbaofb THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Sprague. Pres. , r Sheldon r.-Sackett. Secy. Mi-iuber of the Aaot-tui-d V Tba Asaocialetl Press. Is ascUialvety wnlUWd m th mm Utt wtiWl tlon at ail newt diiMi. tu-a craditrd la M or ewt wuwwm cirdtlanl ta till pHVt V V" . - ;---(: .S ' j Grange Proposal . Interestine is me report from Turner whde the Pomona grange met Wednesday, it says that the resolution approving cooperation with othtr groups tor forming a public utility district didn't create at mucn discussion as one to makeun lawf ul the picketing of places where no labor dispute exists. The former resolution was passed, the latter referred to the committee on resolutions lor consiceration at the April meet- ing. - . : i '... 1 , The feet that the picketing resolutionwas introduced is a straw in the wmd stowing former reaction .to. picketing where no strike prevails, examples of which have occurred in Salem in late months. Tne 1933 state act copying the Jvoriis-i LaGuardia act spreads the definition of labor "dispute to in clude situations even wliere the "proximate-relation of em ployer and employe" does not exist That provision of the state law will have to be repealed or modified if the grange proposal is put into effect. If tee public gets irritated with too much picketing which it regards as unfair that is what will happen. I J ' - The course of the proposed resolution will be watched with interest. Without a doubt effort will be made, perhaps by grange higher-ups, to kill the resolution. Messrs. Gill and lompkins were renominated in the grange, and they maintain a close alliance witn organized labor. ; t Money in State Treasury State. Treasurer Holman prepares a chart every six months" showing the amount of casn in the state treasury. There' was so much cash on hand in 1937 the line nearly ran off his sheet. The total reached $ 16,000,000 on the first of May, the most money the state has ever had at one time, prob ably. As the year closed the total was over $12,000,000 or about a" million more than the year before. The money is of course all tagged. The big bulge in 1937 was in the general fund due to the increase in receipts from income taxes. All the excess goes to reduce the property taxes in 1938, so there is no free money for fresh spending. State highway funds are down several hundred thousand from a year ago. Other funds are up a little. : The greatest improvement has been in the general fund which iiad a deficiency of over two million dollars in early 1933. A year later it was "in the black," and from then on the graph is upward, with a total over, seven and a half millions at the end of 1937. t Credit for' the improvement in state fiscal condition should go to Gov. Meier who first held down expenses, to the legislature which held down appropriations, to Gov. Martin who discouraged easy spending,"and to Mr. Holman for wise handling of state funds. . j ! Republican Registration The Oregon Voter quotes law to warn republicans against perjuring themselves if they change registration ;to vote for Gov. Martin in the democratic primaries. "The law allows a person to change his registration "in good faith a member of said his allegiance. - r . For a republicanu to change his registration means that he is in good faith a member Roosevelt and Jim Farley, of Lewisvand AAA and NRA, of icits and the Warner act ahd prefersT,that company there is cans should bail him out. What has happened to put Jim .little while ago he was all set to maker. Also he was credited with York, ..which his control of the state machine should be able to pro mote. Now there is no mention of his leaving the cabinet (perhaps because of the cold wind blowing Jackson seems to be favored-for governor of New York. Credit Jim with political loyalty of the; old-fashioned kind. If his boss picks some one else Jim will not protest. And if he leaves the cabinet he will not kick over the stool when he departs. "Newsdom" a newspaper weekly we know nothing about, has picked Merle Chessman of the Astorian-Budget as "outstanding edi tor and journalistof the week." Those who know Chessman think he deserves a month, at least, or sixty days. Chessman has performed Tubman service for his community, is now back in Washington on the Tongue Point base business. And he is that rare specimen among editors, fearless in his editorial denunciation. He doesn't damn the sultan of Turkey;. be hits public enemies closer at home; and he pulls no punches" He is one of the ablest working editors in the state. Pinball machines beat a cat which has but nine lives. Walter Tooze. attorney for the pinballers, is now encouraging cities to license them for -"amusement" purposes aa '"novelty machines."- The catch is that the merchant may issue tokens which give the winner privi lege of further play. And when the cop gets by the front door the token may be used as a merchandise hickey. Moral reform will have to-gird on its sword again. 1 j T People credit Episcopal clergy with excellent appetites for meat and drink, as a rule. So when one of that: faith engages In a pro longed fast for the good of his soul It occasions some surprise. A Memphis reverend has gone 20 days without food, lost 100 pounds and claims to be subsisting on spiritual food. His fast ia aure to do two things: get his name In the paper and hi body in the cemetery if he keeps it up. Better be a live Baptist than a dead Episcopalian. Elbert Bede ls4 back again at ! the editor's chair,, this time as successor to A. C. Gage, deceased. Elbert will carry en the old Hugh- ' Hume tradition very completely. This will et Elbert's legs back in action Tinder the editor's 4esk and In exchange editorial columns. We Ye afraid his Arms will desert the Salem waitresses however In 1 favor el the Portland horsey set who are the Spectator's favorites. K la the tabulation, of federal expenses the lowest portion 110 cent out of very 4100- goes for the White-House. Don't be deceived. -That's tbejoost expensive part of. the federal establishment under Its present tenants. It accounts for most of the other big items. W. L Zinimerman; Dies, Grants Pass W. X, Zimmerman, 55,. former ly a Salem resident lor many years and a 30-year Southern Pa cific company , employe, died at his Grants Pass home Tuesday following several weeks' siege of Illness,-He retired from railway service a year ago when his health failed, having been station agent at Cascade Summit at that time. Funeral services were held Thurs day afternoon at Grants Pass. He' is survived by his widow, Grace Zimmerman, of Grants Pass? i a daughter,! Mrs. Joseph Wise - of Eugene; - a sister, Mrs. J. E. Terklns of Tort Wayne, Ind., and a brother, -Fred E. Zimmer man of Salem. East. Oregon Ski Meet , Postponed, Snow Scarce . PENDLETON, Jan. 20-Jpy-Tiie .Oregon Trail Ski club announced today the first eastern Oregon itatemaan Kditor ard Publisher on Picketin If on his declaration that he is party" to which he transfers ' - . ?' of the party of franklin D Madame Perkins and John L. TVA and the NLRB, of bigdef. Justice Black. If Gov. Martin no reason why true republi Farley out of the newspapers? A resign and take a Job at motor car ambitions to be governor of New down business lanes), and Robert Slalom and downhill ski tourna ment,, scheduled lor Jan. 23. had been postponed due to a lack of snow. ! Entries had been received from Oregon, Washington and Idaho. i - " i i . . i --- v v"-Y Cabell Leaves to r Fight Road Slash ; A protest : against President Roosevelt's - recommendation to congress that federal highway aid to states be. reduced in half will be made next week at a hearing of the house roads and highways committee by Henry F. Cabell, chairman .of the state highway commission and vice president of the National Association of High way Officials.- - .Cabell left . for Washington, "D. C s yesterday. Others who. will protest before the committee are C. II. Purcell, Sacramento, presi dent of the association, and Lacey V. - Murrow," Olympia," Wash.. president of the Western Associa tion of Highway Officials. The president recommended that the highway aid to states be cut during the fiscal year begin aing July f Bits for Breakfast By.R. J. HENDRICKS Jefferson has a 1-21-38 colorful history and natural advantages that-. make certain a great future: 1 : , (Continuing from yesterday:) The original plat of Jefferson was filed by Jacob Conser and James M. Bates, the owners of the donation land claims that joined there.- Or the'jsurvey was made and the plat drawn and fUed for them. How may we be sure of this? V v - Well, the map in the office of the county assessor of Marlon county shows that the original Jefferson townsite was tin the land claim of Jacob Conser. So does the map tn the office ol the county surveyor. They are both old maps, and ought to be correct. . But they are not. Again, how may we be certain of this? In the first place, Mrs. Julia A. Vaughn, only child of J. M. Bates, says so and she has lived on part of the property practically all of the nearly 90 years of her life. She can point out to any interested party a marker that shows the line be tween the Bates, and Conser do nation ' claim that marker be ing, in sight of and only a few rods from her front door. " V S V But there are records still more enduring. And they are duplicated records, so, that ONE fire would not wipe : them out. They are the . deed records Of J Marion county. One of them shows that J. M. Bates and Margaret Bates, man and wife, joint owners of the Bates donation land claim, on January 17, 1870. deeded to "the trustees . of the Methodist Epis copal church" of Jefferson a tract of land in the town of Jefferson in size 24 by two and a half chains, the said tract ad- Joining on the west the land deeded by Jacob Conser to the Jefferson Institute. That was a liberal sized tract 1584 by 165 xeet. . That land deeded to that church was in the original town of Jefferson, and it. or at least part of it, was used far the church building and the parson age, and is still so used; at least for the church building, which still stands, as originally built. The land was a gift from Mr. and Mrs. Bates. beverai more such deeds are on the deed record books'. One of Feb. 16, .1 8 5 9 , shows the sale by Bates and wife of six acres "in Jefferson" to S. B, Adams. And- another from Bates and wife to S. B. Adams of two and a fourth acres in Jefferson; the last named bear ing the same date, Feb. 16, 1859. - V Also, a deed - dated Jan. 5. 187, of 7396 square feet, "com mencing at the northwest cor ner of the Institute." to E. E. Parrish. That was In the orig inal town of Jefferson. Also a certain clincher Bates and wife sold to E. E. Parrish lot 2 in block 4, Jefferson, containing three-quarters of an acre. This deed was dated July 10, 1858. Lot 2, bloc k 4. was in the original town of Jefferson, with out a doubt. But, some will say, all those transactions were made before the original plat, of Jefferson was either filed or recorded. The filing date was June 16, 1866, the recording date July 31, 1871. But that was not at all strange' or unusual. In pioneer times, people who platted towns filed their plats when they got good and ready, and recorded them when it pleased them best. Does any one have a sugges tion as to how fo find out the exact date when the surveys were made, and the plat prepared, of the original town of Jefferson? Those dates are probably be yond recall, as well as the name of the surveyor and of the per son who made the plat. S S There are many Interesting and outstanding events in the history of Jefferson and vicin ity. One finds in a little book titled "Joaquin MUler's Poems,", in six volumes, of which volume one, containing Introduction and autqbiography, some paragraphs connect tnat genius with the en virons of Jefferson." l- Miller had told of his birth in a covered wagon pointed west; of his early days in In diana; of his mother raising and treating flax to the fiber stage and the yarn stage and fashioning the fleeces of her sheep to the spun stage, and then combining the two yarns. of wool and of flax, and weav ing It into cloth for use of the 1 family, and for sale to neighbors: of the .family getting the Ore gon fever; of their final start. "Yonder In the west lies the East; Yonder reaches .the road to India," later wrote Joaquin Mil ler. ... , ' The final start- was made. Wrote Miller in his book above mentioned: "On the 15th of May, 1852, we, 10 miles above SU Joe to avoid the multitude, . . . crossed the Missouri .Into the vast wild erness and" the .extraordinary march was commenced." A great . deal must be . omitted. Many, pages "further - on," Miller wrote:-.,. , ;.- v s "At The Dalles, . '. i papa went on . to aee' the 'officer ; in command of this military post, . . . to ask about the possibility of crossing" the Cascade moun tains, . , . at that late season of the year. Tbia kind officer sent a- yoke of strong, fat oxen and two soldiers to see us i. to the summit. His name, we were told, y e a-r s later, was Grant C a p t . V. S. Grant, afterward president. (That was quite pos sible. - - But Grant was not a captain yet. Not until the next year. "The death, of Col. Bliss of the adjutant general's depart- Who 1933 IfW "' ' Corr I'M Km hm SiwAafc kit. War On the By DOROTHY The Gronse Discovers a White House . Holding Company "If the. President is not care ful," said The Grouse, "he will be breaking up his own family." "What do you mean?" ''All . Holding C o mpanfes ought to go,' he says, shaking back his hair and beam ing. Just like that! Off with their heads! Off with their intermedi ate middles! Off Doretky Tbonpcsa with the tail whlch is only tour Inches long and wags the whole dog!'" Your metaphors are getting mixed, and what has it all got to do with the President's fam ily?" "I am prepared to maintain over tne conee, saia Tne Grouse, "If you are prepared to listen, that The White House Is a Parent Holding Company, rep resenting a- peculiarly pyramided structure, containing the most disparate elements, intimately af filiated with the Sixty American Families; a Family Holding Com pany, furthermore, which accord ing to Mr. Gardiner Means is peculiarly vicious. But it seems, to be prospering so I don't know why the President wants to break it up." "Whatever are you talking about?" ; "I am," said The Grouse, "talking, as always, entirely for my own amusement. But a Hold ing Company, my child, is a de vice which Wicked Big Business .," Ten Years A90 Jannary 21, 1028 Sixty-five 'classes In American ization are now being conducted in Oregon according to Charles A. Howard, state superintendent of public Instruction. Doris Loveland, Salem Junior at Oregon State college, has been named general chairman of Gio coso, the all women's annual fun fest. . Three classes at Salem high schoof will edit 'the Clarion for the next six weeks. Elolse White will be editor of seniors, - Julia Creech, juniors, and David Eyre, sophomores! Twenty Years Ago January 21r: 191 Dr. and Mrs. Frank Snedecor are in Birmingham, Ala., for the winter months. , Mrs. Annie Little?' Barry of Berkeley, Calif., a special work er for the YWCA war work council, visited. In Salem ; Satnr day. v State School Superintendent J. ' A. Churchill has Issued the 1918 Arbor day manual for Ore gon schools. The book is Illus trated with Oregon scenes. ment, on July 5. 1853, -promoted Grant td the captaincy of a com pany at Humboldt Bay, Cal ' reads a historical record. ' m S : ' . The Bits man has, accident ally, very recently, come across some Interesting Information. from two different sources, con cerning the place or places to which Grant went when he left Oregon, or rather Fort Van couver. This matter "will have attention of this column within a short time after the comple tion of the present series. (Continued tomorrow.) Rules the Air-Waves? ri(ta imam Record THOMPSON thought up at the end of the last century as a means of ac complishing many things, one of them being not to let the left hand know what the right hand is doing; another being to dis tribute the risks; another being to make much out of little. "Now take the Roosevelt fam ily. Take the President. The President is, in his own -words, which are not mine, 'The Head of the Nation.' ' He la also a gentleman farmer with an in terest' in two things agriculture and large scale -forestry, both of which are- directly Interested in the plans and programs of the Department of Agriculture which is an Operating Company of a Presidential Holding Company. As an agriculturist, a forester and a President, his Interests partly dovetail and partly com pete, which, if I understand the philosophy, Is extremely vicious. "There's Jimmie. He is a little Operating Company all by him self and a Holding Company In side' a Holding Company. The four-inch tail in this case is a ten-thousand dollar a year Job as liaison officer between his Par ent and the Cabinet, and I could not prove it. but my guess is that, what with this and that, the four-inch tail gives the chief velocity to his insurance busi ness in which, whether he is an officer or not, he has a direct or indirect control. "Then there are Elliot, and Anna, and Franklm who are brilliant illustrations of the risks-distribution idea. It looks to hie suspiciously like an inter locking directorate, between the New Deal and the Economic Roy alists, between Imperial Hearst . -in whose success Elliot and Anna hare an interest; Imperial dn Pont m whom Franklin Junior has an .interest; and the White House. "And, incidentally, Elliot, who heads up Mr. Hearst's radio sys tem, is undoubtedly regarded by Mr. Hearst as a kind of Holding Company for his interests in the Federal Communicatitns Com miBsiont Elliot is also Interested, I believe, In a Trade Association, a Richberg type of Holding Com pany, a Border-line case, where instead of financial control there is the price-conference type of 'community of Interests.',, "As for Eleanor, , she is whole Holding Company- in one person,, and still affiliated with the top company. In one slim person she combines a Press Syn dicate, from time to time a radio program: a school, one time and possibly now sdme manufacturing interests, an arils t-sponsormg project, and a venture in pub lishing. : H'But to continue, said The Grouse,- "the Syndicate for which Mrs. Roosevelt . writes Is a Hold' ing Company. "So you see that there is pyra mided up under the White House roof, interests in agriculture, publishing, radio, insurance, and even, I believe, in baking pow der, through Mamma. AH the operations enormously f militated by the fact that they are all under . the White House roof. Furthermore each Operating Company files a separate Dicome Tax return, and thus escapes what it would have to pay if. instead of being a Holding Com pany. It was a solid trust. And. according to Mr. Lundberg's mathematics, they must represent an enormous amount of owner ship" "Who is Mr. Lundberg?" "Mr. Lundberg is the author of Mr. Ickes' Protocol of the Elders ot Zion; He estimates your for tune by-multiplying your Income bv twenty." . "But that's nonsensical. That Implies that If you have an In come of 60,000 dollars a year you have a million dollars in the bank!' "Sure, it's nonsensical. But who am I to challenge the fig ures of a book praised and quoted by an official of His Majesty's Government? But if you add up the Income of each member of the Roosevelt family Land multiply the total by twenty. they'll end in. the class ot the four-inch tail. "Of course" suggested The Grouse, "I often think that the President in his more expansive moods is a 127 millionth of a tail, which, if" it 'does not wag' the whole economy, certainly waggles it. To waggle "means to wobble something while in. mo tion ; to shake -and you can waggle an economy so violently that not only Its false teeth but its good ones come out. . ,- "You see,"' concluded The Grouse, "the Idea- back ot the as sault on Holding Companies is that business ethics, are violated by one person or company com bining in himself conflicting In terests. You can't do one thing and have an Interest in some thing else, because the diversity will lead to conflict and inter fere with the purity of your trusteeship. "Now, that seems a reason able idea. So, I think the S.E.C. ought to try to segregate each member of 4he Roosevelt family. That would be a begin ning. But then, of course, it con sists of personalities who, in themselves, are multiple and di verse and full of conflicts, so each member ought to be cut up. There ought to be a Para graph 11 to force each within a stated time to separate that part of himself with one interest from that with another. Jimmie, for instance, ought to be cut Into at least two pieces. Poor Eleanor would have to be dissected in detail, particularly the press part of her ought to be cut off from the radio part "of her that is a fundamental . Presidential the ory. Carried to . its logical con clusion, you would have limbs all over the- White House. It would be a shambles. Star Route Bids Many, Jobs Scarce . ''Plenty of disappointments are in store for persons who have submitted bids for mail delivery on star routes, becanse there are only three routes and only, three persons can hope to get the Jobs, declares Postmaster H. R. Craw ford. 1 He says aa unbelievable num ber - of bids have been received tor the three routes, which in clude the Polk county loop, the SUverton-Scotts MiUs-ML" Angel and woodbum loop and the Breitenbush route. Bids must be In Washington, D. C, by Jan uary 25, .with the Job-in each case to go to lowest bidder who can furnish bond. Delivery under the new bids will start July 1. Chemical Society To Convene Here The Oregdn section of' the American Chemical society will meet in Salem Saturday, with a dinner at the Ar go at C: 15 p. m. The principal session will be held at 7:30 p. m. In the science building at Willamette university. Talks will Include "The Func tlon of Hops In Brewing, by D. E. Bullis ot the OSC. agricultural experiment station, and "Some Applications of the Microscope to Chemistry by Dr; "Francis T. Jones of Pacific university. : Dr. Jones is well qualified In this subject, having taken grad uate work under Drs. Charmot and Mason at Cornell. , j:- r .-.v. ' The painter Rubens, on one occasion, engaged in a corres pondence with an Englishman about some statuary the painter sought to acquire. Rubens of fered his own paintings instead of money, for, as he wrote in. explanation, "1 am no prince but one who lives oy the work of his hands." The reply came saying that the writer agreed in all things but one, and that the statement that he was no prince. He had found Rubens to bebbjth a prince of painters, the Eng lishman wrote, and a gallant gentleman. It was an opinion that waa echoed and reechoed throughout the life of the most productive and robustly splendid of Flemish painters. - Though it needed no further and material substantiation, he was. knighted by two kings, Philip of Spain and Charles I of England. , . He was born in the small town of Siegen in Westphalia In 1577. At the age of 13 he be came a p a g e to the Dowager Countess of Lalaing and so was introduced to court, where he tv as to spend so much of his life as ambassador, peacemaker and painter. Cool to Art Career He was not attracted by the life at court and returned to Antwerp where his mother had moved. To her he stated the cose for art but it was eooly received. At last after much earnest discussion she yielded and he was apprenticed to a painting master, then to a more accomplished one later, and a third. Rubens at 23 was tall and fair o! complexion, his hair was auburn and his face agreeable. often laughing, open and read able at a glance. He came to Venice. He had arely . had time to absorb its magnificence when a fellow lodger in amaze ment over the work that Rubens had brought with him, went posthaste to fetch the Duke of Mantua whom he knew well, so he too might see these marvels The duke was equally enchanted, and before he had left, had made Rubens a member of his entourage. Somehow he met Marie de Medici who was building her palace of the Luxembourg. Two galleries were given over to Ru bens. Upon the wall of one he was to paint the detailed saga of - her far from extraordinary life, and on the .walls of the Radio XSL2C FBXDAY 1370 Xc . 7:13 New. 7 :80 8nnri iertnonett. 7 :45 American familr Robinson. S: 00 The Merrymakers, MBS. 8 Today's tune. 9:00 The Pastor's Call. ;15 Th .r'ricDdly Circle. :43 W Ar kour. MBS. lO0 Oddities la the news. 10:15 Carson Robinson Buckcrool, MBS 10:30 Myra Kinfslcy, astrologer, MBS. 10:- Tn Voice ol Experience, Mob. ll:O0 Sews. 11:15 STATESMAN OF THE AIR Hone economic talk. Miss Msx in Bnrea. . 11:30 Unemployment compensation. 11:45 em trice rairiax, MBS. 12:00 The vain parade. 12:15 News. 12:30 Musical memories. 12:45 Streamline Swing, MBS. 1:00 Better business bnresu, MB3. 1:15 Black on white, MBS. 1:30 Popalar salute. 1 :54 Book-e-Wook, MBS. 2:00 The Johnson Family, MBS. 2:15 Rhnmba Rhythm. 2:30 Kats en the keys, MBS. 2:45 Monitor news. 3:00 Feminine Fancies, MBS. 3:15 Unemployment compensation. 3:30 News. 8:45 Harmon d Gram Swing, news, MBS. 4:00 Fulton Lewis, Washington. MBS. 4:15 Lawrence Welk's orch.. MBS. 4:30 Henry Weber's orch., MBS. 4:45 Radio campus, MBS. 5:00 King's trumpeters. MBS. 5:15 The Charioteers, MBS. 5:90 The Freshest Thing in Town. 5:45 Sslon melodies'. :15 The Phantom Pilot, MBS. 6:30 Sports BulUeyes, MBS. 6:45 Xswi. 7:00 The Broer Family at Home. 7 :30 Waluvime. 8:00 Organ recital, MBS. 8:15-Arthar Godfrey sings, MBS. 8:30 New. , 8:45 Melodic Musings, ' MBS. :00 Newspaper of the air, MBS. :15 Guy Lombardo'a arch., MBS. 9:30 HMS Pinafore opera, MBS. 10:00 Lawrence Welk's orch.. MBS.. 10:15 Onie Nelson 'a orch., MBS. 10:30 Say Keating' orch., MBS' 11:00 Kay Kyaer's orch, MBS. koac ram at 550 jcc :00 Today' program. :0 The faomemskers' hour. t:03 "Time Out." 10 :00 Weatber forecast. 10:10 Story hour for adults. 11:00 School of the air. 11:30 Maaie of the SBaetera. 11:00 News. 12:15 Farm hour. 1:15 Variety. t :00 Visiting the Horner masenm, Krs. Mary Bowman Hall, assistant cmrator. 3:45 The American scene. 3:15 Tear health. 8:45 The Meaiter view the news. 4 : OO The yarphoaie half hoar. 4:80 Stories lew boy and girls. " 5:00 On the campuses. t:45 Vespers, college stadeat groua, 6:15 News. r 6:30 Farm bear. 7:80 Cais-ersity. of Oregon. 8:15 Tho basines hoar. XEX KUDAT 1110 Kc 8:30 Musical clock. 7 :00 Tsauly altar hoar. 7 :0 Viennese ensemble. 8 :00 Norman Sherr. : 15 Josh Higgina. 8:30 Or. Brock. 9 :00 Time for thought. .9:15 Hint to housewives. 9:20 Lost and foand item. 9:28 Edward Gsmsge. 9:30 National farm and home. 18:80 Sew. 10:45 Horn institute. 11:00 Current erent. 11:15 Radio show, window. 11:80 Ray Hsrriagtoa. 11:45 U. a Dept. af Agriculture. 13 :00 Harmonica Hi Hat. -. . - ... .- . 12:15 Beaux Art trio. . 13:30 Kew. - 12:45 .Market report. 12:50 Talk by O. M. Plummet. 1:00 Little concert. 1:30 Club matinee. 1:00 Neighbor Kali, -i , 3:10 Iran Glen, organist. - ""' 3:15 Don Winslow. 3 :30 Finanei! and grais report 1. " 2:85 Eakor's orch. 2:45 Glass Hat Roam orch, - 3 :0O Education 4a th new. . 3:15 Did Toa Like Thatt 8:80 Press Radio news. - 3 :38 Jack Baker, tenor. . . 3 :45 Goia Places. 4 :00 Ariatioa news. 4:10 Musical interlude. .4:15 Pair at piano. .-" 4:80 Speed Gihson. 4:45 Silent to KOB. 8:00 Land of th Whatsit, STORIES OF minttvg mil by Howard Simon "i-'T.--- Wt V-T.I BCBEKS (SELF PORTRAIT) . IS77-1M other the career of her husband. Henry IV. Only her own life story was completed, with a wealth of mythological figures enlivening the dull proceedings. It was so stupendous an enter prise that with all Rubens' abil ity to work quickly. It took three years to finish. It was never completely paid - for.- The story goes, in fact, that Marie having come upon evil days, turned to Rubens in her adversity and bor rowed' money from him. In Paris where Rubens was attend ing to the installing ot the pan els ot Marie's life, he met the Duke of Buckingham. ' Ambassador of Peace The duke, with ambitions to reconcile the, kingdoms of Spain and England, looked upon Ru bens as a worthy ambassador of peace. He hoped even that he could dissuade the painter from his career in art and turn him permanently to diplomacy. With this in mind he offered him 100,000 florins as a sort of close-out price tor his collection of antique treasures and for what pictures remained in the studio. Rubens sold all that the duke- wished to buy, but before be delivered them, the statues had all been cast, and new pic tures had been painted by him to replace those, the duke had bought. The painter arrived in Eng land on his mission of peace. King Charles I of England who appreciated Rubens' superb tal ent, lavished gifts upon him valued at 10,000 crowns. When Rubens returned to (Continued on page 15) Programs 8:15 Lank and Abner. 8:8C C'hei Pare orch. 8:45 News. 9 :00 Ambassador hotel, orch. 0:13 The Night Watchman. 9:30 Sports by Bill Mock. 9:45 Raymere ballroom orch. 10:00 Rio Del Mar club ork. 10:30 Stetson . varieties. 10:35 Bilunora hotel orch. i 11:00 New. - 11:15 Charles Runysn, organist. 11:30 Clorer club orch. 12:00 Westher and Tjolice' reports. KOW FKXDAT 820 Xe. 7:00 Crosscuts. ; 7:30 Financial service. 7:45 News. 8:00 Margot of Castlewood. 8:15 Cabin at Crossroads. 8:30 Stars of today. 8:45 Gospel singer. 8:00 Happy Jack. 9:13 The O'Neills. :30 Clarence Hayes. 9 :45 Lotus Garden arch. 10:04 Carlile and London, pianos. 10:15 Mrs. Wiggs of Cabbage Patch. 10:30 John's Other Wife. 10:4.3 Just Plain Bill. 11:00 Grace and Eddie. 11:05 Mnsieal interlude. 11:10 Hollywood new flashes.. . 11:15 Stars of today. 11:30 How to be charming. 11:45 Kdna Fischer, pianist. 12:00 Pepper Young Fsmilr. 12:15 Ma Perkins. 12:30 Vie and Sad. : 12:43 The Guiding Light. 1:00 Refreshment time. t , 1:15 Story of Mary Martin. 1:30 Gloria Gale. 1:45 Hsiei Warner. , 2:00 Wife v. Secretary. 2:15 Curbstone quia. 3:30 Harry Kogea area. 3 :15 Rhythmaires. 3:30 Woman' magazine of the :r. 4:00 Lady ot Millions. 4:15 Dick Newton. 4130 Nw. . - 4:45 Easy Aee. , 5:00 Piano surprises. 8:15 Musical interlude. ! 5:20 Cocktail hoar. 5:30 Star af today. :Oft The World Goes Br. 1 US Via Ardea arch., and gue&ts. 8:30 Tommy Doraey and orch. 7:00 First. Kighter. 7:30 Jimmy Midler. 7 :4J Dorothy Thompson. 8 : 00 Amos 'a' Andy. 8:15-7-Lncl Earn' radio station. 8 JJ0 True atoriea. :00 Circu. I 10 :0O-r-New flashes. . 1:15 Glean Shelley, erganist. 10 :30 St. Francis hotel arch. -10:45 Bal Tabaria orch. . -11:00 Ambassador hotel .arch. Ili30 Cptowa ballroom arch. 12:00 Weather report. m m m KOHf FRIDAY f 4 0 Xe. :S0 JQock, Ivaa, Walter aai , rrankia. 7:55 Jelly time chaL ' 8;eO-i News. 8:15 This and That with Art Xirkhsm 9 :0a Mary . Margaret - MacBride, rada columnist. ;r5 Edwin C HilL 9:30 Roasaaea at Helea Treat. 9:43 Our Gal Sunday. 10:0 Betty aa Boa. 10:15 Betty Cracker. 18:80 Arnold Grimm' Daughter. . 10:45 HoUywoad ia poraoa. 11:00 Big Sister. - :i5A,,"t.J",' Nl B tarie aehool at th air. 12:00 -Stadia. ,j 12:15 KOIN aew aerric. 12:36 Studiw. 12:35 Ana Leaf, organist. 12:45 The Newlyweds. 1 :00 Mrrt nnd U.r 1:15 Pretty Kitty Kelly. 1:30 For o. ' 1 :45 Homemsker's Institute. JcOO KOIX new servica. ' :05 Stage Echoes. 2 -ao New through a woman's ere. - 3:45 Hilltop House, . 8:00 &ragtime. 8:15 In Laws. . 8:80Jndy and Jane. 3:45 -Newspaper af th air. 4:45 Eye of the world. 8:00 Hsmmersteia - musi 1 ball. 8:45 Charlie Chan. :SO Hollywood hotel. - 7:00 The songibop. ' 7 :45 Unfield college quartet. '8:00 Scattergood Bsines. 8:15 Around th World with Boake -' Carter. . , ' :30 Paul Whiteman' orcb. 9:00 Little show. - 9:14 Sterling Young orch. 9:30 Leon F. Drews, organist. :45 Sterling Young orch. . 10:00 Fir Stsr FinaL 10:15 What Would Toa Dot ' 10:45 Phil Harris arch. -1 11:00 Pasadena arch. 11:30 Henry King crcU .