pags roun Hi OREGON STATESMAN. Edna. Oravgotv WdnMdoy Mccnlng. Fa&ruarr 11. 1943 !i i te sou itatesmati "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall AvotT From first St teaman, March 2 S. 1861 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Sprague President ... Ilembri of th A mlrd Press The Associated Ptm la acluslvaly entitled to the nae for public all mm dispatches credited to It or eot otherwise credited to for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS Another Deadlock on the Western Front The St. Lawrence Seaway Story and romance of 2-14-4.0 one who waa perhaps the first white man to lire on what Is now Oregon soil: la "k (Continuing from yesterday:) That sketch reads: "Observing mat anring nls 10 years' resl- aence in the Tillage and within the walla of the fort, McLonghlln (Dr. John McLoughlin of the Hudson's Bay company) secured toe aervicee nf an IniAriMn One of the big: national issues soon to take the limelight teacher, one Solomon Smith, left is the St Lawrence Seaway, a $250,000,000 project primarily objectless by failure of wyeth's designed to extend n-ing roe into the Orm iaxes via me oi. xjawreiice raver, xiic auauiau u wusrcu was & g00(j one wherein were States governments were recently reported to have reached taught the English branches. agreement on details but tne necessary treaty must yet run deportment, ana morai- ii.. v a ,-mtn-r, AnvMo .mi 4Via ransdion t-qt I "j. It wm the heart and brain vue KBUuuemi u.uu. Wu61 .u '"- - i of tbe Oregon Territory, though Uament- I there were other places pulsa- Herbert Hoover once referred to the project as "non-po- tin i response to the efforts at 1:: V,, ; V. maonf nnnnnfrnvoroiil Ilia TrT-rl oro Ort Vancouver." TTi. v. v.i:.j rr,, - x ,, I That fancy wording, -but Biwuiwucucueu. mac w ucmcuuuuo utiwamvu num swure TWj loose, by one of Bancroft's sources in New iorK state, particularly in mew xoric v,uy writers. That school was not the ,n A T?ffalrt and frnm th cnal industrv in ceneral. Hrst In Oregon, and there was no w ' k ..ari i if AiJr' Vr,'r Oron Territory then, and there r ji iivj uuuui jrvu c gucoocu v ju v I wag no 0tner "pulsating In the Is also a power project, riere in tne nortnwest mere nas Deen j way of educational endeavor in controversy over some aspects of the Bonneville and Grand an the country draining into rvxn.Ao nrnif hut it Rniinfla nuMr tn us lor anvone to on- . -"lc "U"T" " opui WMArV ja wjw r-aw - - Tl r r pose the broad principle of hydroelectric power. Well, the coal industry is doing so. Fantastic as it may sound here, the coal people claim their product can be mined and transported and burned in steam generating plants to produce power more cheaply than falling water. The St. Lawrence project would but the teacher was John Bail,' develop over six million horsepower ; that would deprive the who arrived with the wyeth coal industry of market for more than 30 million tons of coal, of i. in November of provioea tne water powers were au uiuizeu iu replace sieoiu Howard Smith. power. t The school was opened Janu- But the coarindustry also contends that in opening the 18". t Fort Vancouver, St. Lawrence so .Great t Lakes region products might be ship- "eolBaiif .$ pea out, it wouia aisu ue openeu su wiaw twu xxuxu uicai iui- i conducting the school till March, j i i . li x i : ;n I i o j . . . Bin ana ciscwiieic, as wen as iuei un i-uiiii, ue Buipycu in. 1000, rraijueu, ana went tu urm American coal industry would lose the Canadian market be- the land he took up near - - j .Anfana wr.uli Present Buttevllle, below old vue w ""Y x Champoeg. Oregon. Solomon H. lose some of its domestic market. Smith took over the school from The opposition in New York and Buffalo is based oh loss the date when Bail gave it up, of railway commerce and shipping, and possibly loss of man- "dBt 1?!, 52.!! Uiocuuiug piouu iu uic uuuuic ncai uui, fuvvci krcuijs uic or I 1834 controverted topic that it is, much of their attack is likely to ' rVomiw) in Vi o 4 qtwiKo i lonrYiiorra Yxri't'Vi ronaiAiia fAfAvnnAA I KTC liouivu iu xAuuunx a.uuae aaauuo x vxt-x cuvt i Smith b&d f&ll6H 111 lOTO Wltll to the sins of the TVA. If the project should prove as help- the Indian wife of the baker at ful to the lireat iaKes area as its proponents claim, that Fort Vancouver, and they ran might tend somewhat to delay the development of the north- away together and went to the west, but only to a small degree because this region's com- nome. of Joseph Gervais. That merce suu inuusiry are tieu up wnn uie ueveiupmeni ux mar kets in the orient. So in the main we are merely interested spectators at the impending battle of the St. Lawrence. (California) line then. S S V The first school in the Oregon Country (the Pacific Northwest) wag taught at Fort Vancouver, -m h r J ;; mpcs f SiTf 66 BACK WML OF iMg - News Behind Today's News By PAUL MALLOW WASHINGTON, Feb. IS. The I Congress represents the youth of new dealers are drawing In a deep the country. breath preparatory to a new big blow for spending. Ijinghlla Cutrfe, the presi dent's most aebnlosw economist a; boat Uie oae who prepared the new deal defense figures of last week for him has worked oat new theory upon which to base a claim that business Is Kolas; to tbe dog stnleos the economizers la congress releat and cast millions more about the conn try. Martin Dies, the Texas chair man of the celebrated committee, must live right. Although criti cised more widely than any othr congressional investigation, his inquiry has lived to see: 1. Its bitterest critic, the Am erican Civil Liberties Union, has renovated itself, eliminating 'Sta linists." 2. Its second bitterest assail ant, the American League for His theory la that the deficit Peace and Democracy, recently government contribution to busi- announced it is disbanding. This ness is running only 9300.000,- 000 a month, $50,000,000 under last year. The figure Is based on what he calculates tbe govern ment spends for business above what ft takes in by taxes. With industrial production declining and revenues increasing, he con- eludes, "excess spending" Willi drop near aero, along about next is tne organization charged with being a communist front, and In which S00 government employes were shown to have been mem bers, an exposure causing tbe president to term the committee action "sordid procedure." 3. The administration. Its third bitterest critic, change Us warm friendliness for Russia to cold July or August in the midst or aispieasure, as evidenced In Mr. the presidential campaign. Hull's pigeonholing of Russian This contention will be bran- Ambassador Oumanskv and bv dished high, widely and hand- Mr. Roosevelt's speech to the someiy oy ine (jume-nenaeraon-1 yuuuis denouncing Russian ag- juccies spending scnooi in tne gresaion. coming weeks in hopes of revers ing the economizing trend. (Distributed b part mtnetlf prohibit.) r K If r.ltar.. a. .41. cat, lac., reproduction la whoia r la Four hundred modern fight ing planes have been slipped to the Finns the past few weeks by Great Britain, Italy, the United States and Sweden. They are about ready to take to the air. Ton will hear of them shortly. As the Finns only had 160 planes to start with (of which 60 were hydroplanes) their air re sistance strength to Russian bombing has been Increased S70 per cent. Most shipments came Machinists iruin ci-uaw ana naiy. ine Waited States sent 44, Sweden a w. t- 1.1 - . France sent none and thereby IT .'.Z; JTZTi " 1- I. Ul" hangs a revealing Inside story of I TC" uiwuvu, ricui; ia Bint jiuiu along with about 300. Lewis Insincere Says Union Head PORTLAND, Feb. U-(n-Ttae labor peace statement of John L. Lewis, CIO leader, "doesn't re flect alncerity," Harvey W. Brown, Washington, president of tbe Machinists International union. said today. ''One of the most effective ways meant, the runaways came In the fall of 1834 to a point some 12 miles by water below tbe site of Salem. Important things were happen "Red Earth" By Tom Gill The French government na tionalized tbe aviation in das try. Now the resch are an- nationalising the industry ma beet they can, trying to get It back under control of the man. afacturers giving them more profits bat it is like unscram bling a twice-scrambled omelet. and fill associates had been will ing to accept decisions arrived al through democratic procedure in the AFL convention he would have had a unified labor more ment." Brown said "any changes 01 Improvements" in the AFL "mum be made within, not from with out. There is no need to divide the labor movement to make such Unified Higher Education to Date Chapter 85 Fiercelv thn flrht worvf nn a. lng near the site of Salem dur- canyon toward the mine, the Ing the days when the runaway ririir n fan.r mA .i.i. couple were getting located. Ja- . rifl rjoneia- tnU'n,A Half way up he caught sight of The Mexican Bhook his head. She went toward the mine, seek ing you." "The mine! That's where the thick of the fighting has been." I hat ci onpo Thar hoi Kaon en nnnraohla in vatAnr iriiB .n. . i... . o.N,4.v,v. mvv-u a uwvwvwib ah xivTiib j ctti o i sue 01 nis mission neaaquariers, Aiisnn'a hooA a r 11 aj n? j - v , I , .l ti. i. " ocuuum tw; i wet; ii partisans 01 tne major insuiuuons Ol nigner eulication c w in Oregon. The bitter rivalry that once prevailed has nar- Xiter his first twi of inspection rowed down to the field of intercollegiate athletics and a few he was back from Fort van- other activities in which rivalry is wholly proper. It is true couver and a guest at the Gervais . . . . . . . . i i ii ii a ill ill' i i f ii i i rt ir una much that tne corvallis Gazette-Times and the Eugene Register- Jjuj. JX;fac I .narr? taVp n few nolrpa of ogfVi nf Viot- nn tha enKiiuf 1 0 13 spent me nigm ana oun- ,i ,t t.. -..-.j. - - ----- - j. . T, ; A J , , , day and Sunday night there,, and , u fcUO uutsiuo iu lonally but their criticism is distinctly of the type that even on Monday Oct. 6 landed at the m,ne he met R"8"11- automatic ine iascist government oi lcaiy permits. i ney grouse about mission site, two miles above, " details but they never suggest that the system inaugurated by and began building the first little statute in 1929, in actuality in 1932, ought to be abandoned. lfJe ll ""'rl an . . a i a a . 1 UU V M, t,X2 rrom ine stancpomt oi tneory likewise, there can be no Americas facinz the pacific ocean anruinfir with the PrincinJe of unified control in pontrssf tn westward the place where the th spnflxatinn nH thp rivnlrv whiVh nnno fir. ,'f, r.ir..ir.ol marker is found now 1 - j . . v.. WO iIlllWUai I . . I A 1 1 . . . s s The Indian woman Solomon H. Smith brought to the Gervais house in those fall days of 1834 was named Helen, and she was a battleground in the ways and means committee of the lee-is lature. That committee still has to deal with the problem of financing higher education, but it is just one problem repre sented by one spokesman, and not two or five, counting the normal schoote working at cross-purposes. Why the people daughter or chief cobaway oi uregon allowed sucn a condition to continue as long as it bailed comowooi by Lewis and did is one of the major mysteries. ciark) of the ciatsops, and the xt v i i ... ,. . . ,. , wire of Joseph Gervais was Mar- JNow the bookkeeping of the higher education system, as garet. her sister, or hair sister cuiiuimriz.fu in me repon oi vnancenor rlllier to tfie DOardJ Ior wooaway naa several wives), a copy of which has recently reached our desk, bears out the qult? the thlng with the Indians a a . ' J f fl ASA J AVfl flSt?n.Jil f ?e rf-SU,t?- ?nr t0, Uni" Solomon Smith opened a school atvabiuji uic ouiw iiwis ui nigner euucauon naa a peaK en- In the neighborhood of the Ger rollment of 9341 full-time students and cost $5,995,054 in the Uais house, attended by the Ger biennium when that peak was attained : in the last hi pnninm I vais children and other children anrnllmpnf rftso rnll 099 o train nt 1 Q nn . 1. l f the earliest settlers. That was I " It' question the first school rr1 vh a lu"1 a" v-uixciu. uieiiiuuiii is o,ui,W4, a de- in present Oregen crease or ?93,96U. e ii i . , . . I vofc io wwuisc mc unijr impuriaiu item in an evaiu- This writer believes that first anon oi an eaucationai system; quality oi instruction and the school in Oregon was located general value of the product items not definitely measur- cose to whwe tne r,Ter highway able mnst alsn ha rnnaiHeroH Vf ni-cava o.iiV. ;ai on the east side of the Willamette oi;irKiI :C-K;r- uriV.r';V:Lfr" t"ulVea Uorks and one branch turns west o ixit,iuuiili5 ure icvei ui pieparaxion OI iaCUlty on Its way to the Wheatland fer iitcmuers as ineasurea Dy acaaemic degrees, tne amount Of ry; so it was not far from the research carried on, the number of scholarly publications is- front line of the McGiiehrist lo- sued, the definite steps to improve campus environment and gferryvfal;m- rht tlTsi sess'?! living conditions, all point to a conclusion that the Oregon ift GiroS.? twTmnes system of higher education is maintaining and improving down the river from the first gtrueriu sianaaras. enrollment and legislative support indi- log nuse of tne mission; about cate that the parents and the taxpayers of Oregon incline to a.havf m.!It.!rom the. west front the m nnininn ot tne McGiiehrist place. Bonneville Bookkeeping C3nuiis ux ueiuaiiu running into tne nundreds of thousands ?r v of Kllowntt if mavKarhst onm -r,;A r At.: I 1 1. 1 , , . j ovm ioiucuwi vi mis region may anri oe a nit com used about the actual s Later, after closing that first school In present Oregon, Smith worked for the Lee mission, as In view of Administrator Paul J. Raver's recent rnnrt fl "f. VIZ' "A ht be?ame to congress which mentions an imminent "serious shortage of Methodists, jason Lee officiated power in the northwest," and in which are included various at the marriage of Solomon auu neien or riien on f eo. !37. and of Joseph Gervais MarcarAt Tan 91 nresent situ ntinn wit Vi ra UT,n. t I i Bpect tO Bonneville. 1840 with Its great reinforce- Accordinc to the rorvnrf o-ricfinrr j.i; meQt for the mission, and the eif 57 000 kilowitU and Krl8t min machinery to -1m J!IViL t W Power. Of this item more Will be be installed on the water power said presently. It is announced that an Arlriitinnni nnn m at ttm nnim wh.T, . - w - vaaw W a. V W JVJI" 1 uaaau V U as a owatt load irom rounlcipal, rural electrification and private ,nnlns ' saiem, -here the High enterprises may be counted upon when Bonnevillle has facil and tLibertT Greets of the present ities for delivrV. On ton of that. mrtJSFZZ ILii ".f Ad U. V. for.m B.ro?d- (t. j jl- , , . . . " i""'"0 I "n-r. " nen a prancn mission " IUKI WUtUliS SUU 1X1111 V1I1I1HI vnin TV o I- wna at,h l.l.i4 -I lt . , . . - -.---.. avwuuiii I vuMiuiiomju vfii vi t-ovjy piMua, awi an suuiuouai ioaa oi approximately 100,000 kilowatts and sponsors of public districts have applied for or signed' contracts ior around 4ZU,uuo kilowatts but none of these is ready to take power in the near future. Then there are addi taonal applications and inquiries for approximately 180,000 : wivnaiu, m Jf a11 tfese f ffures represented actual, immediate clamor for Bonneville power there would indeed be a "serious short- sc As a maneroi iact an or tne items beyond the first two ic ueciueuiy vague ana uncertain. Bonneville's present capacity is 86,400 kilowatts; the proposed addition of two more ceneratnra nurf via it,. availability of 25,000 kilowatts from Grand Coulee this com jni? Ansost win bring the total up to 219,400 kilowatts some- r ",.V ."n portnwesrs total capacity up to 1,677,000 kilowatts of which 45 per cent would be publicly owned. - ;As for Bonneville's existing contracts for 57,000 kilo watts, apparently 32,500 represents the Aluminum Company of America contract which will not call for delivery until 1943, the McMinnvine 1000 kilowatt contract which the voters of that city have not yet approved, and the 10,000 kilo watts on which Portland General Electric win take deHvery beginning in June. With a little substraction, one learns that onnerille at present, on the face of these figures; ia deliver ing 13,5,00 kilowatts of firm power. Have you seen Alison?" Doug las called. "Not a sign. We're all looking; for the Killer none of the boys have laid eyes on him. I set a guard at the mouth of the canyon. You don't suppose he's got away?" "He couldn't ' Douglas halt ed, remembering the existence of that other entrance. An empty victory if the Killer himself es caped. "Bob, take a dozen men and keep close watch over our herses. Without them neither the Killer nor his raiders will get very far." He watched Russell hurry away, then cocking his rifle, entered the mine. Doubtfully Douglas eye passed from one black passageway to an other unless the Killer had al reday fled he must be hiding down one of them, and If the parchment map could be trusted, the only other tunnel leading out from the mine was that narrow passageway half hidden behind the gun-racks. Laying aside the rifle, Douglas reloaded his automatic, then en tered the winding corridor. It was higher than the others, heavily timbered with oaken arches and dimly illuminated with yellowing lights. For a time it sloped sharp ly downward, then abruptly ended in a wall of timbers. Douglas ran his hands over the hewn surface. One beam seemed looser than the rest, and locking his hands about it, Douglas pull ed. No movement. He pushed with his shoulder, and slowly the tim ber turned, revealing a narrow opening near the wall. On hands and knees Douglas crawled through. Pitch-black here, but as he felt his way forward the air smelled fresher, and soon he caught a faint greenish illumina tion far ahead. Hurrying toward it, Douglas saw that the tunnel was narrowing until now it had become barely wide enough, for two men to pass, then suddenly the light strengthened, a current of wind fanned his cheek, and Douglas found himself standing before a dense clump of mesquite he had reached the secret en trance of the mine. Pushing back the mesquite that screened the low opening, Doug las looked out across the upper gulch almost opposite the point where he and his vaqueros had left their horses. Through the morning light he saw the animals tethered among the pines, and near them Russell stood guard with a dozen vaqueros. " Fine alkali dust lay outside the entrance, and bending low, Douglas looked for tracks. None, i No one could have passed that way since the rain ceased. In all probability the Killer was hiding still somewhere within the mine. A sound brought him suddenly upright. Just behind him. Just where the tmibers Jutted from the wall something faintly rustling, and before he could make a move the barrel of a revolver thrust against his side. Slowly Douglas' head turned, and a low gasp of surprise burst from his lips there, within arm's length the yellow face of a Chinese was grin ning down at him, and behind him, in the deeper shadow of the tunnel, three raiders waited with drawn guns. But far more menacing than the raiders' rifles or the revolver in the Killer's hand was the sense of almost physical nausea at sight of the leering face and the great misshapen shoulders beneath. That face, fixed and unchanging peeemed to bring the breath of death Into the darkened tunnel, and tall as Douglas was, the eyes that looked into his were Inches higher than his own. Neither sieht nor life cams frnm thn mv. tloneless eyes. They seemed In the the "nation, including Mr. Le ithefflSfAO aaoaafl V TL. 1 - Tnhn T.la , I .uu iuun WOO 10 simple: fTfact Too simple U : hive Uo to oa""'-' been sincere. Nothing could sound sweeter to the uninitiated than to nave Ar L. and CIO ret to gether in a hall and vote on peace. But those in touch with dusk of the mine shaft to be the empty eyes ot a dead man, and perhaps for the first time in his life Douglas felt the cold touch of formless fear. A rubber poncho stretching almost to the floor add ed to the ghostly strangeness of that hideous form it seemed not to belong to this world it seemed the creation of some mad and ghastly dream. So for a. silent second they stood there, then a voice asked quietly, "Looking for someone. Juan Douglas? Centralia Signs, Bonneville Power PORTLAND. Ore.. Feb. lt-(JFi is to be done about specific over- . V I niraiu. wash.. is, know scores of the most im portant technical Issues must be decided first, such things as what lapping unions, the building trades, laundry workers, seamen, etc. These necessary preliminary questions were being ironed out one by one In the peace confer ence when it broke up months ago with Mr. Lewis' withdrawal. contracted to buy 300 kilowatts or Bonneville prime power per year today, Bonneville Adminis trator Paul J. Raver announced. The contract becomes effective next fall when the Bonneville transmission line Is finished to Centralis. Centralia operates a 4 400 kilo watt generating plant on the NIs qually river. There waa no provision in the Most politicians laid low when the American Youth Congress was iuo liyu iiau uever moved. DUl vuu.cunuu. iasioiuii uiu UUl I f nntrirl fnr roan la rata. !... the voice was the voice of Paul know what to make of an organ- tralIa Bgreed to work toward a v v , t hweTer youn"f:1w"cl re: Price of S cents a kilowatt hour And now a hand reached ud fused to favor democratic Finland tnr th. fiP. ka k-. from out the poncho, and Douglas against dictatorial Russia, which the next SO a cent for ths next saw that great leering mask lifted met a friendly president of the 20o. half a cent for the next kOO unuea aunes wun ooos a n a 4nd three-fourths of a cent for ""n, ne amonianea mem aU over 1200. Rates now start at ui inn lauuie, nuu wuicu open. ly refused to exclude from Its ranks those who advocate dicta torship of the proletariat. some congressmen called It an from the Killer's shoulders, while from beneath it Bodlne himself smiled that same slow smile of amusement. For a second the ar tist waited, as if expecting some sign of amazement or fear, but Douglas made no move only his 6 Vs cents. Jackson Pioneer Dies eyes glowed more brightly as they appalling spectacle," in private of turned to race the man who for two years had terrorized the bor der as the Yellow Killer. "You once called me versatile. Jack Douglas," again the voice (Turn to Page 6) course. Others argued ardently In the cloakroom that It was time some valid grouping of the whole MEDFORD, Feb. lS--Per-ry Foster, 7, Jackaon county resident for 78 years, died yes terday. He crossed the plains youth of the cuntry should be or- from Missouri In 1867 with ganrzed to oiiset tne Impression that the left wing of the Youth an emigrant train of 3(0 ox-drawn wagons. Radio Programs Finn Runners Toe the Mark 18 miles below Astoria. Solomon smith and his wife became valu able helpers there. Mr. Minto properly called Sol omon smith tne "pioneer house Dunaer- of Clatsoo Plains Conditions on Clatsop Plains, around the branch mission under the general direction of Jason Lee, were pretty crude, by pres ent standards. But the Smiths, ccoraing to ineir ugnts, were above the average for their time and place. Their eon. Silas B., became well educated and pro gressive; a good writer and speaker. Mrs. Smith had Indian slaves; but so did her sister. Mrs. Jo seph Gervais, and that was cus tomary. -The writer hereof eonld show the reader, if oDDOrtnnitv of fered, the trail worn by the bare or moccaslned feet of the Gervais Indian slaves, in carrying water up the hUl from the historic spring to the historic Gervais house. (Concluded tomorrow) ftagmwssesooo:oosiwa .1- jaw. Hi Herbert Hoover, Talste Maki and Paave Norm! Get ready! Get setl Go! And as former President Herbert Hoover Dengsaway in New York, Finnish, track heroes Taisto KaU, center, and Faavo Nurml, get away on a transcontinental United State J00 10 help raise funds tor Finland's fight against Buaaia. Maid i the current Finnish distance champion, Nurml is his manager. KSXSf WEDNESDAY 1360 X. 0:30 Milkman Melodies. 7 :00 Te xai Ogden, 8inging Cowboy. 7:15 Hits and Encores. 7:30 Xw. 7:45 Hing- Sonf Time. 8:00 Breakfast Club. 8:30 Keep fit to Music 8:45 News. 9:00 Pastor's Call. :15 -Dick O'Herrea, Tenor. v:30 Ala fer kins. 9:45 Carters of Elm Street. 10:00 Let's Dance. 10:15 News. 10:30 Tune Tabloid. 10:45 Erwin Yeo, Orran. 11:00 Symphonic Gems. 11 :05 Popular Variety. 11:30 Willamette U. chapeL 11:45 Value Parade. 12:15 News. 12:30 Hillbilly Serenade. 12:35 Willamette Valley Opinions. 12:50 Popular Bslute. 1:05 Vesical Interlude. 1 :15 Interesting Facts. 1:30 Hialeah Park Baces. 1:45 Vocal Varieties. :00 Hit Parade ot Tomorrow. 2:15 A Song Is Bora. 2:80 Johnson Family. S:45 News. 3:00 Hal Tamer. Piano. 8:15 Weber Concert Orchestra. S:4& Streamline Swing. 4:00 Falto Xw1a, Jr. 4:15 Haven of Rest. 4:45 Tea Time Melodiaa. 5:00 Melody Mart. 5:80 Sundown Serenade. :45 Little Orphan Annie. . ,:00 Toaiffct'a Headlines. : 15 Dinner Hour Melodies. :30 News and Vlewa. S:45 Paging the Past. T:eo Work Wanted. T:15 TSia Is Magic. 7 :30 Lone Banter. S -00 News. S:1S Alvine Bey Orchestra. 8:30 Masical Interlude. 8:85 Mule by Faith. 8:45 GAB Anxiliary. . :0Q Newspaper ef tne Air. S:lZ?T2t Hoeglaad Orchestra. :I0 Old Tim Orchestra. 10:00 Nik Stuart Orchestra. 10:0 Bkinnay Ennls Orcheatra. 11:00 Toaaorrew'e News Teaixht, 11:15 Kin r, Sf Kkythm 11:90 FYeddv lhnn (Wk-i 11:4S Midnight Meladlee. e e aUn WTOrXSTX4Y--4e K. SHS Market Reports. OS KOIM KUekT T ISO Bee Qarred ReoerUaS. T:4 Tale tad Tea :1S News. S :S0 Cewaamer Rears. S:4 U, Child rea. ' -00 Kate Smith peaks. US When) Girl Marries. !:f? ef Hrlea Treat. :4 Oar Gal fta-a.- !0:OO Geldbvrgt. 10:15 life Can Ba nautihl ivteo igi te Hi rptnes IS : 4581 rgia-g Organist. cow tug anaier. !I:IS lent Jean. lt:S0 UI Begin. 11:45 My Sow mmA X. ll-.ee Society OlrU l:8e Maare. I3:4S Hscii' Bam. liee Kitty Keiry. 1:15 Myrt and Marge. 1:30 Hilltop House. 1 :4S Stepmother. 3:00 By Kathleen N orris. 3:15 Blue Interlude. 3:30 It Happened In Hollywood. 3 :45 Scattergood Bainea. 8:00 Lanny Koss. 3:15 Hdtla Hopper. 8:30 Joyce Jordan. 3:45 Today in Europe. 4:00 Newspaper. 4 :4i Kosdmsster. 5:00 Hello Agdin. 5:15 Dealer in Dreams. 5-30 Leon T. Drews. Organ. 5:45 Bob Garred importing. 8:00 8tar Theatre. 5:55 News. 7:00 Glenn Miller Orchestra. 7:15 Pabhe Affairs. 7:SO Barns and Alloa. 8:00 Amoe 'a' Andy. 8:15 Lam and Abnar. 8:30 Dr Christian. 8:00 Al Pearre end His Gang. 8:80 Baker Theatre. 10:00 Five Star rtcal. 10:15 Nigl.tcap Yarns. 10:30 Jan Garber Orchestra. 10:45 Nightcap Yarns. 1 1 :00 Vincent Lopes Orchestra. 11:80 Manay Strand Orchestra, a a a txoAO wzsaaaDAT m as, 8:00 Today's Programs. 8:08 The Hemeeaakera' Heac 8:08 Neighbor Ueyaolda. 18:00 Weather roreeaat. 10:15 Story Boar for Adalts. 10:55 School ef the Air. 11:80 School C Musis. IS .00 Newa. Is: IS farm Boar. lllS Variety. 3.-00 Ma Phi Epellea. Maale. 3:15 AAUW Stady CI ah. 3:45 Neighberheod New. 8:15 OS Aray Proa-ram. 3:45 Views of tbe Kewa. 4:00 Symphonic Half Hear. 4 80 B tor Us fer Beys cad Otrls. 5:00 Oa the Campoaea. 8:45- Veepera. 8:15 Kewa. 8:80 Farm Hear. 7 .45 The Ceaseaaere Far-Ban. 8 . CO Scaga ef Are by 8:80 Masie ef tk Masters. 8 .0 O80 Rewad Table. 8:30 Department ef Maale. :45 Adraacea ia Bieeeeaaiatry. XW WKSSrsaDAT 8X8 Ke. :S0 aaarise Serenade 7:00 News. T:15 Trail Blaiera. 7:80 Meaieal Clock. T: 45 Sam Bayee. SHrS Vieaacae Lfaimbte. 8: IS Stara ef Today. 0 :88 Against the Sterns. 8:45 Griding Light. 5 :S0 Arlington Time Signal. 8:00 Sura ef Today. 8:15 Deanlag Sisters. 8:80 Talks. Dr. W. B. Feels ec 8:45 M. aad Mr Shadow. 18:00 Modern Meala. Iwtle Ellen RaaJolpk. 10. SO Meet Mica Jalia. 18:45 Dr. Kate 11:00 Betty aad Bee, 11:15 Arnold Grimm's Daeghter. Iltse VaUaet Lady. 1 4S BeU Crocker. 18:Oe Rtan mt Marr MarHm. 18:18 Ma Perkia. 1:88 Peeper TagB faatlly. 13:43 Vie and Bade. 1:00 Floreatine Matinee. 1:15 Stella Dallea. 1:30 Stars ot Today. 1:45 Blue Plate Special 3:00 Girl Alone. 3:15 Midstream. 3:30 Hollywood Newt riashaa. 3:45 The O'Keilla. 3:00 News. 8:15 Shew Without a Varna. 8:80 Wemaa's Magaslae of the Air. 4:00 Easy Aces. 4.15 M. Keen, Tracer. 4:80 Etara ef Today. 4:45 Hotel Sutler Orchestra. 5:00 Pleasare Time. 8 : 15 Gateway to Musical Higfcwsys 5:45 Cocktail Hour. 8:00 Musical Soiree. 8:30 Hotly eo4 Playhouse. 7:00 Kay Kyaer'a College. 8:00 Melody Tine. 8:15 1 Love a MysUry. 8:00 Fred Alloa Show. 10:00 New Flashea. 10:15 Glea Shelley, Organist 10.80 Sir Frsacis Drake Orchestra. 11:00 News. 11:15 Bel Tabarla Orchestra. 11 ISO FlervMiae Garde as Orchestra, a a -a KXX WXDVBSDAT 1188 Kc 8:80 Masical Clock. 7:00 Family Alur Hew. 7:30 Trail Blatera. f :45 Baeiaees Parade. 8 : OO Ftaaaci al Bar viae. 8:15 Yeang Dr. Maleao. 8:30 Dr. Break. 8:58 Ariikgtam Tlaae Sir a el. 8:08 Bngeae Coaler. Teeer. 8:15 Patty Jean Health Club. t-88 National rarm aad Heeaa. 18:15 Heme laatitat. 10:8 Sown 18:48 Tare Bach the Clock. Ilrae Hataro Traila. 11-15 MaaieeJ Cbata. II :38 FaverHe Walt see. 11:45 Radio Shew Window. 13:00 Ovpeeaa ef Direree. 13:15 Newa. 13:45 Market Reperta. 13:50 Haaae FeUa FreUa, l.oe Tbe Wt Beac l:e Clae Maaae. 3 :0S Carbetoae )iia 3:15 Fiaa octal aad Orals Reruns 3 :o Leal aad Feaad. J:I1 otd Refraas. 3:30 Frank WaUaebe. 8.4 Affaire of Aatheay. -8:Ow Pertlaad ea Parade. 8:15 Hotel Kdleeci Orchestra. S :S5 Newa 3:re Si Baetera. 8:45 M'l Abate 4:08 Retweea the Book ends. 4:15 Hotel Biltaaere ttecaeatrs. 4:88 Peal Barron Orcheatra. 5:C0 Bad Bartam. 5:15 T-a Mis 8:M Problem Ceraer. S. 45 Reading la Fan. 8:0v Groea IleraeC 8.80 "porta PiaaL 8:45 Diaaor Coaaert. f:0O ate- Shield ate view. 7:80 Abe Borsoetta. Vkolialtt. 7:45 Newa. 8:00 Breesiaf Alwag. :S8-Qnlehaifrer. 8:00 Bryeed ReaewsaUs Deabt. 8:13 Boas Bayee. 8:80 Wreettiae Maleeee. 10:30 Feral Ambeaeador Orcheatra. II twa Taia Merlu World. 11 lH . Portland Police Roctavta. 11 il Pasl Cares a. Organtat.