I; 1; No Faror Strays Us: No Fear Shall Awe From 'First Statesman, March 21. 1S51 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. I CHARLES A. SPKAGUE, President .!mber of The AwiiH-iated Press Toe AseocUttcd Press U exclusively entitled t the use lor publication of alt news dispatches credited to it or sot other wise credited in paper. I Highway of a Hemisphere It is slightly intoxicntinj? to think that when Oregon completes modernization of the Pacific highway by ironinjr out its corkscrew effects between Eugene and Roseburg and revising the chronic curvature between Grants Pass and the California line that it will be making a major contribution to a highway which by 1915 is expected to stretch from Fair banks, Alaska, to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, via Vancouver, San Francisco, Mexico, D. F.,, Panama, Quito, Ecuador; Lima, Peru; Santiago, Chile; Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Rio, and ' Salem. Oregon. Highway 99 is, of course, the major north-south link between the Oregon and Wa2hinton north and the Califor nia south ; in this state it is paralleled by the artery extend ing from The Dalles to Weed, California, but in essence the two roads merely complement rather than conflict with one another. Together they form a portion of the great highway system which has had a vital force in linkine the Pacific slope within the national boundaries of the United States into a unified and closely interdependent empire. Now, however, that empire is on the verge of expansion through the medium of the Pan-American highway project ed only as late as 1923, and vifrorously advanced in practi- eal form only within the last latest date set for completion of the road, an unbroken mo tor highway will stretch for 13,500 miles from the Alaskan . tundra to the limpid waters of Pio to create an oil company's paradise and a profoundly significant link between the Am ericas in their most extreme portions. Perhaps the most amarinsr aspect of the highway is its revival of an international highway for the first time since the Appian way fell into disrenair and the Roman roads in Britain became grassy paths through the New Forest. Dur- ing the middle ages roads were merely scratches in the dirt, suitable for horsemen and rough wagons ; early modern times saw no improvement until the invention of the MacAdam asphalting technique; but even then it required the advent of the motor car to stimulate great national highway sys ' terns. In the meantime the stenm railroad had been turned from idea into a vast nexus of effective transportation me dium. . Yet with the Pan-American highway the idea of inter national roads, leading through many lands, past the homes of many kinds of people, from hot climate into temperate and cold, has come again alive, like the Roman links between the Capitaline and Britain, Dacia and the Upper Nile, the Pan-American highway has vast potentialities in terms of cultural, commercial, and national integration. One may well be humble and greatly honored that the tides of future traf- fie ploner its length will pass through one's native place. Unfortunate Vote Appeal Steady readers of this page need not be reminded that The Statesman has stood consistently for tolerance in general and against racial and religious intolerance in particular because they are not only dangerous but fundamentally silly. We, have defended the rights not only of influential minori ties! but of helpless minorities. We have felt since many of ou threaders have commended this policy and none have crit icised It that it was shared by the great majority" of Willam ette valley people. Certainly it is in harmony with the Con stitution of the United States, the Declaration of Indepen dence and true Christianity, i J It is both regrettable and amazing that a candidate for nomination to a public office within the gift of western Ore gon citizens has chosen to base his campaign upon a contrary principle. 1 Regrettable because it constitutes an appeal to race p re- judi lice and an incitement to any hope of solution, even of the false and baseless issue jichich it creates. V- Amazing because it is so transparently an adoption of the nazi device the "divide and conquer" device which has been more clearly recognized and more uniformly discredited .In this country than in Europe where it had its birth. ":' Prior to the outbreak of the war nothing which Adolf Hitler had done had aroused greater resentment in the United States than his treatment of the Jews; and baseless as his bogey of a "Jewish plot" identified with Russian communism was recognized to be from the beginning, it lost the last ves jj'ire 6f plausibility when he made his peace with the Soviet : Union just prior to the opening of hostilities. Against the excellent record of service to district and .nation offered by Congressman James W. Mott, this virtually unknown candidate, Kenneth Brown of Gervais. offers noth ing but an appeal to hatred. As a candidacy, it deserves to be ignored ; as an invitation to narrowness, injustice and per secution, it deserves universal condemnation. Significant Administration Defeat . . " " ' i ; House passage of the Logan-Walter bill represents a de feat, for the administration on just about as fundamental an issue as could ptssibly have been raised. The bill was de signed to impose uniformity of rules and facilitate judicial review of the acts of the quasi-independent government agen cies and commissions ; its passage was a blow to the bureau cratic system which has been synonymous with the new deal. If it becomes law it will check the growth of ; what has become recognized as "administrative law" - - the usurpation by these bureaus of congressional functions, the one feature of the deal which has most aroused fear of dictatorship, or more accurately, has had the appearance of the actuality of a series of littledictatorships, each operating within the lim its of its particular field. It is rather unnecessary to review the abuses of this pow er; the NLRB is perhaps the outstanding example but a re cent aggravated one was the ruling of the federal communi cations commission restricting the sale of i television sets o that all companies producing them would have an "even tart" though one through its own initiative has gotten ahead )f the field. ! A similar bill was passed in the senate last summer with Kit a dissenting vote but the administration managed to have it reconsidered. There is distinct possibility of a veto, miti gated by the overwhelming margin of the bill's passage in the house. Its fate is important, but almost equally important is this renewed, encouraging evidence of congressional inde o?ndence. '."..' ., m . '' 1 First PUD Condemnation Case j It was merely the fact that the federal court for western Washington is situated in Tacoma, rather thiin any deliber ate choice, that caused the first PUD condemnation suit in the northwest to be tried there which doei, not alter the fact that it was an ideal circumstance in the interests of jus tice., Tacoma being a placid, neutral isle within the rough tea of public power controversy; a community which already has public power and is able to view the isinie dispassion ately. - -' , .- . ; - ' PUD No. 1 of Cowlitz county sought1 til condemn the properties of the Washington Gas & Electric company in the Longview-Ryderwood district. The company claimed the property was worth $7,500,000; the PUD contended it wasn't worth much more than half that $3,850,000 to lie exact. A jury of six men and six women heard testimoty I or 12 weeks and 'then plied its own pencils, for more than 49 hours less time out fcr meals and aleepnd finally concluded that the four or five years. By 1945, the racial hatred without offering for: Breakfast Bt R J HRNiiKit KS Trip of the E. T. Estes 4-21-40 family across the plains J -In 1850,- written by one of them, then a girl about eight: "V (Continuing from yesterday:) Quoting farther the Lucinda Estes record of the trek of 1850: "My sketch -would be Incora 4Iete if I failed to mention the coyotes that infested 'the plains In Tast numbers. This is a gannt. slim animal of a shy disposition ueTer, approaching within gun shot of our wagons. As many as 40 or 50 would collect on some steep bluff overhanging the riTer. their thin forms barely defined against the evening sky, then their barking wonld commence and ' It would seem as It every coyote would be possessed of ten roices. Mark; Twain is the only person I ever heard of who could do this ; animal Justice. The Snake - river is a rough and tur bulent stream. Its .banks are in some places a hundred feet, high and nearly perpendicular. We were traveling along Its . banks one day land bad stopped for noon, driving our cattle down to water. They suddenly plunged In aad swam to an Island about 200 feet from .the shore. The green grass on it was the tempt ing bait, 1 It was a dangerous stream to venture into, on ac count of Its swift current and treacherous quicksands. Yet un assisted our father plunged in, swam to ;the island and suc ceeded in getting the cattle back to the shore In safety. ! V . "In some places on Snake river there were millions of crickets not tbej small Insect that so merrily singeth beneath our hearthstones, but crickets the size of a humming bird and black as ink. They lived on sagebrush, which was very abundant in many places along this river. "The Snake River Indians were a lazy. Indolent tribe, subsisting on roots and fish. They would catch salmon and sell to the im migrants, for they had learned thevalue of silver. Some trains ahead of j us had been kind enough to give the Indians little slips of paper on which would be written such words as 'buy fish of this Indian for his is honest'. i S (Here several pages are miss ing from the story of the journey across the I plains written by Lu cinda Esues Chris man. ) Her story stops, on account of the missing page, a little way on from Fort! Hall. That part of the 1850 Journey being described will be taken from that of the writer of this column in his book, "To EverJ Man." published in 1933 under the title of "Bethel and Aurora," partly because the Estes traid arrived at Fort Hall August 171 1850, and the Keil train reached that historic post on the morning of August 18, 1855. The record shows that the noon hour after leaving Fort HaU was spent by tjhe Keil colony people "on a clejar creek thick with speckled tirout," and that they found wild currants in great abundance,! and that "after their bounteous j noonday feast" they crossed the Portneuf river and found the stream so high- they blocked up their wagon beds to keep out jthe water, for which they had made preparations in their shops at Bethel and Nin eveh, Mo.; and that night they camped on j a small creek, where prowling bannock Indians - at tempted toj steal some of their horses, buc wero scared away by their ever ialert guards; and the next day j. the colony train "climbed B1 hill, crossed a sage brush plata - and made camp at a large spring a mile above the American Kails of the Snake; the following day pushed on 14 miles over a roragh and hilly road, camping where the bluffs close In to near the river." and. August 21st the road led down three miles to Beaver Dam creek,? fol lowed the river bottom, led over a ravine to a fiage plain; went over the plain to the head of an other ravinie, following ; it dowa Raft river, i Raft River camp was where the California route turned off. The colony train pushed on to Marshy Springs, a very dusty day of travel ; met Indians, but, as in all cases., with that charmed company, were not molested by them. . , ' , August 23 went down Uhe Marshy Spring branch and crossed; five miles .; further brought them to Goose creek; the next day to Pool Creek; they could hear the roar of Twin Falls, about two miles north; reached Rock Creek the next day. Their trek of the- J 7th brought them to - the . Warm Spring branch. The 28th, Salmon Falls creek was reached. ' Following the creek a mile, the 'company reached the (Snake) river- the next morning, and a like distance : brought them to where the water! pours out of a thousand springs and foams and tumbles Into the Snake; four miles on, the head of. Salmon Falls. - Dry Camp was reached at dark next dsy br Use colony train, and Uhe upper crossing of the Snake the following day and the colon- lata began the task of getting over the stream on the last day of August, by calking two wagon beds and tubing theni ..together, thus ferrying a wagon and its load at each .trip; slow, danger ous business but all over Sep tember 1, the most difficult part the swimming of the cattle. To a spring branch the 2nd, passing Hot Springs branch the 2d; noon ing the 4th at Barrel Creek; hard going the 6th and. 6th, but reached the Boise valley. Found black eared rabbits, prairie chick ens and quail; crossed Boise river on the ith. (Continued on Tuesday.) property was worth $6,011,556. Strange that there were no odd cents left over. ; ... Alt things considered this appears to be more & victory for the po-wer company than otherwise : the final valuation was closer to its figure than to the PUD figure. This means, among other things, that other comnanies sued similarly are likely to let the cases go to trial, rather than settle them oat of court; for it means also that in this case the jury conscien tiously weifrhedMhe evidence ?T-ea w- iwj wmnTif w4Vnw 4 V company attitude. ; 1 Horn e After Attack on German Warship ? 8 : ir i -- S' "-" ' . , ' 1 " " TbJs plctwre radioed from London to New York shows members of the crew of the British submarine Spearflsh, which British claimed "successfully attacked the nazt pocket battleship Admiral Scbeer, coring hits with "more thas one torpedo, rushing ashore after returning; to port somewhere ta England. r . h- j - I Chapter. BO "That's an unusual girl yoa have, senator, Delaney said, and the old senator, who could never quite remember that this nice little Lynn Perry of his wasn't Senator Scott's granddaughter, said: "Yes. A remarkable glrL But with her background there'd be little excuse for anything else. All the advantages, you know, and a fine family, fine American stock. Tes, Indeed, I knew her grand father well. Her father, too. I don't know what the young squirt did with all his money the girl hasn't a sou. I took her, just to help, at first "Well, any time you're tired of helping I can place her." "Ea? Who said I was tired. . . Nonsense, Delaney, nonsense!" Later, kind, fat Mr. Delaney tried to talk to Lynn abont her in teresting background. He asked a number of questions that she an swered In monosyllables. She was sick of bragging about Scotts, sick of pretending. "Oh, itl all a long while back, and .everything's dif ferent now. Why talk about U7 she said crossly. - Delaney told HlUiard that Lynn Perry was the first of the -new poor" he'd met, who wouldn't talk about past splendor If given a chance. ' - - ' HUliard met Lynn again the next Sunday at one of Emiue Rons' Sunday night suppers. "Oh, you know Lynn!" Emilia said. "Tes, Indeed met her at the senator's." Horace came along. "Talking about Lynn? She's mothers pet, yon know. We're all quite jealous of her." "Where did yeur mother first meet her?" Emilie asked. "I nev er have got that, bit of family his- The Safety Valve - La tiers from Statesman Readers AGAINST RACE PREJUDICE To the Editor: The other day pamphlet was put on my door put out by a man whose name is Brown and who seeks election for congressman from a certain con gressional district in Oregon. I read it . . and saw at once by its race hatred that it was a German . propaganda sheet, so burned It without further analys ing . It. But Sunday I went - to church and heard the young min ister talk on it and as it is def initely anti-Christian it opened my eyes to the danger so openly thrown out to every door- and young men and girls. . t had . not noticed the cut of the shirt he wore, but which Is a military cut, and down one side of pamphlet it was decorated with swords and under his nose nail mustache. Then his slo gan "peace at any price." wen for one do not want peace, if war comes, at any price, suppose the price would be a demand tor our girls and wives to turn over to : the concentration ''camps, or our 4 year older turned over to the military lords, taken away from homes and parents to learn nothing but drill to till? That would be his Idea ot peace at any price. : ' At the same time I learned there Is going on In our public school . grounds, men training la V military tactics. Who and why? Are oar city officials and gover- fnor "nasi" minded to allow such things ro unquestioned T Is America just another Rip Van Winkle and won't get up or wake ,up until an iron- heel ; is pressed on so hard she can not? . What is being done about It if anything, and who are the lead ers and men? - . ' . - I hope America awakes In time to this, and I hope this man Brown will find out Towp sendites are good Americans with our con er ess men clean .shaven ones who hold no race hatred in their platforms and we like plows better than swords. . : JESSIE STOVER, Towneend Club No. 3. and found in accordance with e .f? 4 fw m- ea 4-L kAw.AM 1 I - . , 1 r t ! "Sslf Made Girl" By Hazel Livingston ; tory straight. Horace paused In his cocktail shaking to think. "Oh, I think she went to the Darrett school, with Sara. Something like that." Ned HUliard permitted Horace to refill the glass. "Damn shame that a girl like that has to work for a living," he said. Linda put off her Christmas shopping, until It was almost too late. So funny to go walking through warm sunshine, to buy one's Christmas presents! But the garlands ot evergreens everywhere, the fragrant Christ mas trees, and bright bunches of holly and mistletoe made her feel Christmassy and happy, once she got started. As usual, she spent more than she should, partly be cause the San Francisco shops were so alluring, and partly be cause the letters from home made her conscious, almost ashamed, of her own affluence. "I just cannot understand why you left New York," Blanche had written, "although I must say that yoa seem to have landed on your feet. I cannot understand how you meet aU these people everywhere you go. Ton used to be such a shy kid and I never found you very friendly around here. Claudine says the same thing. A "She hasn't been so well, on ac count of her teeth. The dentist says she'll have to have them all out. I know she should but den tal plates are so- expensive and I feel I can't impose on any ot my friends for discounts, because I do feel that I did more than I should when I let the- doctor do Jean's mastoid in November. "I would hate to say what he usually charges. But he Insisted on doing it for nothing, for my cake, and you know he arranged for both Sue's and Patsy Anne's tonsils, besides all of Claudine's confinements. "I always feel I don't want my friends Imposed on, even if they say they do love to do things tor me. "But the main trouble is Delia and Lawrle and their boy. I know how you feel about them, though I do think it Is rather unkind of you, - and both Delia and Sonny have been through so much. "I really think that they ought to go to a warmer climate and I told Lawrle so, but he is so pig headed. I thought it would be nice if you'd write and tell Lawrle what the chances are In Califor nia. Well, I won't! Linda thought, irritably. But she wrote a check for Delia and tucked it into her Christmas card along with the Chinese silk pajamaa she'd al ready bought for her. , That would mean that she could not move into an apartment ot her own before the 18 th of January, Blossoms out T Com Gft&Sawer Waxfcixiston'a cherry blossoms are out. Tsrevinff that the real -spring U here. Has CoITower. the cherry hlaasom -queen, la the stroCezv 3 or more likely the first of Febru ary. The senator seemed to take it for granted that she'd just Stay on indefinitely and, since Mls4 Buck had been there for three years. It would probably be au right her to stay two or three months. But she did so want a place of her own. A place where she cold be alone! A place to which she could go when the day's work was over, and relax. Bread and milk on a tray if she felt like It. Ai room with a door with a lock on jit, and no Mrs. Burns poking her head in to say, "It's only me, dkarie." and then staying for two j hours. And no Miss Buck to come In at all hours and say things abftut the senator i and Sterling and every one else in the house Oh, to be alone! To be free I (To be continued.)! KSZJC SUS9AT 1960 Kc 8:00 News. 6:0 Hl Turner, FUnlat. 8:15 Cross Cobb try Sava. S:BO fttmma mt One :00 Sunday ikoniing Xaditsttom. :30 American wildiue. 9:45 Mire at Health. 10 :C0 Somnar JPrindla. Pianiat. 10:15 Romance of tba Highway. 10 :S0 Mozart Concerto.' 11:00 American Ltithrraa Church. ll:OQ On a Sunday Afternoon. 12:30 Haren ot Beat. l:0O Youns People'e Church., 1:80- Lutheran Hear. 2:00 Popular Salute. . !.: . 2:15 Salon Echoes , 3:80 Newspaper Centennial. 8:00 KFBI Judicatory Profraia. 3 :.0 Show et the Week. . 4:0O Bach Cantata. 4:30 Eddie Murphy Orchestra. 4:45 a ewa. 6:00 American Forum. :00 Old Fashioned Keri ml Hear. 7 :00 News. 7:05 Grift Williams Orchestral 7:30 Art Kassel Orehesrta. 8:00 Tonight' Headline. 8:15 Hita and Encore. 8:30 Lasy Bhapsody. 8:45 European .Viw Btoundup. S :00 News. 9:15 Popular Melodies. 1 9:30 Back Home Hoar. 10:00 Jimmy Grier Orchestra. 10:30 Leon Mojic Orchestra. 11:00 Sew. kq w srmrDAi ess aU. 8:00 HuadaT Simrtae pTurrami. 8:80 Mstai and Aasericea Xeatk, 9:VO Stery of Ait of Ue. 9:15 Julie Martina, guitarist.! :SO on lour Job. 10:00 Musi for Modern. 10:80 From Hollywood Today. I ll:O0 Stars of Ttday. 11:80 Chieuo Roaud Table. 13:00 Gateway to staaical Highways. 11:30 We we from Europe. 13:45 H. V Katteaborn. 1:00 Eye of the World. 1:15 Meaduw brook Club Orchestra. 1:80 Stars of Tomorrow. 2 .00 Garden Talks. 3:15 Doc Casta. 3:80 New. 1 :45--Campn Alusani Be porter. :oo uatboiie fieur. 8 :iO Bert the Bend. 4:00 Professor Pusxlewtt. 4:30 Band Ware 8:00 Charlie McCarthy. 5:30 One Man Family. 8:00 Manhattan Merry -Go-Konnd. - ! Anencst judos. 7:00 Hear of Charm. 7 ;80 Carnival 8:00 Might Editor 8:15 Iron Rich. 8:80 Jack Benay 9:00 Walter WUcholl. S: 15 Parker Family 9:301 Want o IMeore. 10 :00 Newa Flashes. 18:15 Bridre to Dreamland. 11:00 Bal Tsbarla Orchestra. 11 :S0 Florentine Gordon OtehOatrn. -'-.' i o o - o I . - : BXX TmiAT 118 KM. , 4 T:45 Maarcel Interlude. I 7:50 Ski Saow Reports. I 7:5ft Bones Weather nd KiWs. 8:00 Dr. Brock. 8:80 The Quiet Eoor. 9:00 Radio City Moaie Ball. 19:00 Pilsrimage o Poetry. 10:1 Sonis of th Sabbath. 10:38 AI Lee Reiser Orchestra. 11:00 Great Flays. I 12 :0O Proixr Housing Talk. :15 Foreig-n Policy Assodntioa. 13 :80 Tapnatajy Mnateal. 1:00 Family Alter Hour. 1:30 The World le Fear. 3 : 00 Edward Da vies. , Baritone. 3:15 Vineente Gomes, Guitarist. Z:l0 -SBC brrlng Symphoav. 8:00 Hotel Fdisen Orchestra. ) s:so iavnicsas ot JUtta. --40 Gill Freeente. . 4 :30 MarneHe Bloaaom. - -t 6:00 Musical Comedy 1 Bora. ft :30 Voice of Hawaii. 8:45 Dream Melodic. S :O0 Montgomery Book Chat. 8:30 Melodies of Milady. 8:45 Sports New A eel. t -7rOO Glen Harlbart Orehoatro. 7:15 Hotel Llneola Orchostrsw 7 : 30 Every body Sinjj. . 8 0 New. J 8:30 Dr j Broea. " " 9:00 St. i Fraaci Orrheetra. 9 : 15 Let Go to Yiotk, 9:30 Arabian KightS. 10:00 Musical Vignette. 10:80 Family altar floor " 11 ;O0 Portland Folic Beport. 11 :03 Char lee Ruaysii OrgnnUfJ JCOrs rrjHDAt 848 I H) West Coeet Chtmh I 8:30 Major Bowes I'hestre Family. - w:a est uao l k ix re acta. l:0O Charrfe of the Air. 10:8O Demotieer ro iietiom. 11:00 The Homo Balder. " 11 :15 ftalate -to Amerlen. 13 :00 .V. fork I'hii harmonic t :S0 FareuM of HepitSjonn. 3 K0 Pi eliing- Boelintr. 3 :30 Adventure of tar. Hens. , 8 -CO tter Theoaro. . 8:10 Melody Ranch, - a: t id JVeme. of 1 Csnreh. State Given new Foods Laboratory $25,000 Donation Is From Clatsop County to -. Fish Commission ASTORIA, April h e Oregon fish - commission accepted Friday from Clatsop county a $25, 900 roods industry labora tory. It was created here for ex perimentation .with froxen fish, fisheries byproducts, fruits and vegetablea, At ' ceremonies dedicating the laboratory as a state Institution, fish commission chairman John C. Veatch said "we have reached the stage where' salmon alone can no longer stand the strain of the Industry., ' , r He described the laboratory, whose operation will be financed by the commission, as the first step in a commission program for perfecting methods to utilise "vast -offshore -fisheries resourc es." ;: -:.. ..:-"..'-. 'iJ- - - Governor Sprague called the laboratory a step in sustaining the vastly important fishing in dustry, "which many people mis understand since their only know ledge comes from news "of legisla tive battles among sportsmen and commercial interests among re gions along the Columbia river." Chancellor Hunter ot the Ore gon system of higher educational institution accepted the labora tory, which will be supervised by the Oregon State college experi ment station. He styled the gift as "unique" since he "never be fore was handed a $25,000 pro perty, with money for . operation which 'did not-' cost the -general taxpayers I anything. The laboratory is equipped with freezing and processing equip ment. Its operation will be super vised by Dr. Earnest Wiegand, head, of the department of food industries? of Oregon State col lege. It was dedicated to "restore, reclaim and develop natural fish ery, fruit and vegetable resources "through i experimentation and research. Tick Serum Advised Ere Hills Trip; Death Noted! BAKER, April 20-iip)-A warni ing for persons planning trips Into eastern Oregon's hills to first obtain tick serum followed today the season's first spotted fever death. Harvey Phipps, Unity, died re cently of tick fever, a death cer tificate filed yesterday Indicated. Radio Programs 4:10 Kews. . 4:45 W liiam Wallae In RoeiuL 5 :00 Adventurers of Ellery Queen. i:S0 8o Fon Think Tom Know Mualet ' 8:55-nw. -, 8:00 Sunday Evecmg Hoar. 7:001 Woe Ther 8t00 Leon F. Drew. A, . 9:00 Baker Theater Player. ' 9; 30 Take It or Leave It. j-I0-.OO Five Star Pinal 10-15 Bobby Patera Orchestra. 10:30 Clara Bay Huttoa orchestra. . 10-fioNcw 11:00 Bay Noble Orehestr. ll:S0 Manny Strand Orchestra. i . .t . .- XaXM MOSTDAT 1360 K. 8:30 Milkman Melodies. 7:80 Now. "7:45 Sing Song Tim. ' 8:08 Breakfast Club. 8:15 Melody Mart. 8 :45 News. 9 :0O Pastor' Call. 9:15 Westemairea. 9:30 Ma Perkins. 9 :45 Carters of Elm Stree t 10:00 Let' Dnnca. . 10:15 Kews. - -10:30 Hits of Season Past. 10:45 Bachelor' Children. s 11:00 Oar Friendly Neighbors. ' 11:15 Women in th News. 11:20 Andy Ion Hawaiian. 11:30 Elbert LaSrheU at the Coniel. 11:45 Value Parade. 12:15 Newa. 13 :80--HillbiUy Serenade. " 13:35 Willamette Valley Opinion. 13:50 Popular Solato. 1:05 Musical Interlude. 1 :15 Interesting fr'scte. 1 :80 Dick Kuan Orehestr. 1:45 Hit and Encores. v 2:00 Pleasantdalo Folks. ) 3:15 David Harum. - 2:30 Johnson Family. , 3:45 News... 8:00 Maddsz Family and Bos. S :80 Julian Aiken. Singing Cowhoy. 3:45 Carol Leigh ton. Bailada. - 4:00 Fulton Lowit, Jr. 4:15 Haven of Best. 4:30 Vocal Varieties. - 4:45 Popular Saint. 5:00 OrganoUtie. with Johnny WeUe. 5:30 Saion eaooa, . 5:45 LUUe Orphaa Annie. 6:00 Tonright'a HeadJinea. 8:15 Dinner Hoar Melodie. 6:80 New and Views,. John B. Hugh. e: ragtag ta ast. 7 :00 Raymond Gram Swine. 7:15 Wonder of Vision. ; 7 ;30 Lone Banger. . S :00 News. 8:15 Popular Magic " 8:30 Paul Dresser Birthday Aanlrer- - nary. - 9:00 Newspaper of th Air. 9:15 Focal Varieties 9:80 American Legion Aaxiliary. 9:45 Bob Crosby Oreheetra. 10:00 George King Orchestra. 10:89 Zek Manners and Hi Gang. 11:00 New. 11:15 Chock roster Orchestra. 11:80 Andy Ion Hawaiian. , 1 11:45 Midnight Melodioa. O e KEX MONDAT 1130 Ks.' 8:80 Moaicai Clock. 7.-O0 Josh Uiggira. 7:15 Th Vagabond. ' 7:30 Trail Btasera. - 7:45 The Novelettes 8:00 Financial Service. 8:15 Vouag Dr. M alone. S:3U Dr Brocr . 9:00 Homo Institute. :1 Patty Jeao Health Club. v 9:80 National Farm ne4 Heme. 10:15 Craftsman of Song. le.SU f ewe. .: 10:45 Do Yoa Knew! 11:00 Great Momenta is History. 11:15 Muaicnl Chat; , 11:80 Mr. Hortifpor HartwelL -1L35 1'3 Kavy Baud. 11 :45 Badio Show Window. 13:00 Orpoano of Divoreo. 13:15- Honeymoon Hill. -11:30 Jebo'e Otbr Wif." 13:45 Just Plain BilU 1:00 Newel -.- -.v.- 1:15 Market teeperts. . v : v 1:30 The Quiet Hour. ' : 1:00 Curbstone Quia. 3:15 Kathleen Connolly 'Presents. 3:30 Frsah Watanabo. 3:45 Charles 8ear. - 8:00 Portland on Pared. -8:15 Mors amen Quartet. - 8:35 Associated Press awa. 8 :30 Gordon Giftord. - 8:45 Rocky Gordon. 4 :00 NationaJ Barn Daae. . ' 5.00 Bud Bartwn- 8:15- Tom Mia. 1 : 8:30 -Caprice. ., St45 Between the BooVeala. 6.-00 The Green Hornet. 8:30 Lesion of Bsfety. 8 r45 Portland Folieo- Scaoot. 7 :oo-Little Coaeert T :0 Quicksilver. 8:00 News. S-30 Little til Eollywood. 9:90 Tree or False. 9:80 Homicide .. 10:00 Wraetling Matche. . 19rS0 Charles Bradley VarletUa. tl:0 This Moving World.. 11:15 Portland Police lUoort. litis Fowl Cwrswo, Orranist. Public Relations Importance Told Social Workers Will Find Support Beneficial Ts ' Advice of Ingram PORTLAND, Ore., April ZO-iJP) Social workers "are humanitar ian by 'natural impulse" but of ten they "are not especially sen sitive to the outside public' K. C." Ingram of San Francisco said in an address today. : Ingram, assistant to the presi dent of the Southern Pacific rail way, urged delegates to the Ore gon conference on social work "to cultivate good public rela tions . . . for the purpose of smoothing their course and rally ing public (support for t h e 1 r cause." li ; "Good public relations begin by getting the other fellow's view point, by detaching oneself from his special Interest," he said. An objective analysis . of what 1 the public thinks is needed. I "Doing is more important than telling, Ingram added, "but tell ing is an essential pal t of any public relations program. Pub licity Is Important bit no insti tution which makes publicity its sole public relations effort will succeed v . . !) The conference was attended by 3 65 registered delegates. Klamath, jEugene Offer Many Jobs Klamath Falls- and Eugene challenged Portland's new job leadership f n last week's reports ' ' from 21 state employment offices -made to Director L. C Stoll. r 1 Portland held the top position . In total' placements 'with 223 against 159 for Eugene and 130 for Klamath Falls, but the latter district led In regular private in dustry jobs with 67." Eugene's 58 public placements was well ahead of any other district, while Med ford had the most casual jobs with -89. r ' v''' ! ,. V Spring tarm work, mainly in the valley hop fields and berry A patches showed a strong pick-up in Job activity. Most of the gain; from 875 new jobs the previous to 1160 was due to agricultural placements. The SalemofficeTe . ported first hop pick7ngreTerrals by sending registered! workers out on an early order j for 4000 pickers for August. stow MOHSXT 820 K. 6:30 Sunrise Strenade. 7:0O News. 7:15 Trail Blasera. , . 7:80 Maaical Clock. ' 7:45 8am Hsyes. '-1 8 :00 Viennese Ensemble. 8:15 Sura of Today i 8:30 Acaiost the 8tona. 8:45 Guiding Light. 9:00 Stars of Today. 9:15 Dinnine- Si stern. 9:30 Talk. Dr. . 8. Meadowcroft. 9;lSrU sad My Shadow, r 10:00 Modern Metis.' -i 10:30 Jack Duggsn. Tenor.! , 10:45 Dr. Kate. , -j , 11:00 Light of th World. I 11:15 Arnold Grimm' Dasghtsr. ' 11:80 Valiant Lady. I. . ", i I 11:45 Hyma of AU Charcho. ' 13 :00 Story of Mary Marlia. 13:15 Ma Parkin 13:80 Pepper Young family. 13:45 Vie and Bade. 1:00 Portia Blake Faces Life. 1:15 Stella Dl. 1:80 Star of Today. , ! - ., 1:45 Blue Plate Special i 3:00 Girl Alone, i , - ) .3:15 Midstream1 ' s 1 3:30 Hollywood New Flashes. 3:45 The O'Neill. 8:00 New. I ; 8:15 Mine to Cherish. ii 8:80 Woman's Magasino. ; 4:00 Paul Carson, Organlat. 4:15 Manneo and His Musie. 4:30 Stars of Today. 4:45 Cocktail Hoar. 1 ' ; V 8:30 Veiea. - 1 6:00 Dr I. Q. ' I 6:30 Aloe Templetoa Time. 7:00 Cce tented Hout. T -80 Senaatione an- Swing. 8:00 Fred. Waring Pleasure Tim. 8:30 Joe Dodge. 9:30 Hawthorn Hen. 1000 New Flashes. 10:15 Bin Moonlight. . ' ' 10:30 Uptown Ballroom Orehestr. ' 11:00 News. f - ';-.. 11 :15 Souvealra.' ; 11:30 Florentlno Garden Orchestra. XOnV MOKDAT 819 6:00 Market Beport. 6:05 Koio Klock. 7:80 Bob Garred Reporting. 7:45 Thi aad That. T 8:15 Headiiners . 8:80 -Consumer New. Ks. 9 :00 KaU Smith Speak. 8:15 When a Girl Marries. :0 Romance of Holes Treat. 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. , v 19:00 Tho Go bergs. 10:15 Life Caa Bo BeautlfoJ, 10:80 Right to Happiness. 10:45 Fletcher Valley. 11:00 Big- 8istr. , 11:15 Ann! Jenny. 11:80 Life Begin. ' 11:45 My Son and X. ; 13 U0 Society GtrL ' 13.30 News. - 13 :45 Siagia Saoa. . 1:00 Pretty Kitty Kl!y. 1 1:15 My rt and Marge. 1:80 Hilltop Houae. ; . :e Btepmothtr. 3 :0O By Kathleen Herri, v 8:15 My Children. 3:30Ii Happeeed la Hollywood. 8:45 Scattergood Balnea , . !:i5?eaJ' tt"PW Hollywood. 8:30 Joyce Jordan. - -8:45 The World Today. ' 4:09 Newspaper of tho Air. 6 .-Off Hello. Again 5:15 Dealer in Dream. ' 8:80 Shadow, , I ; Bol Grr4 aeoortlBF, 8:55 Newa. 6. OO Radio Theatre. - - 7:0 Guy L nbardo. 7:80 Blondie. - S.-90 Amo K Aedy. 8:15 Lenny Boss. - 6:55 New. ' - r ' 9:0 Tune Up Time. 9:80 Nortbweetora Neighbera. 10:00 Fiv Star FinaL 10:15 Bobby Peters Oreheetra. i 10:30 Interview Margo. W Osborne Orchestra. ' 10:55 Aew. . f U:00 Ray Noble Oreheetra. 11:30 Menny Strand Orchestra,' . ' o - KOAfJ JOSDAT 886 K. :0 Today Program. . 9:08 Homemahora Hoar. 1 :9? Keiglibor Reynold. 10:00 W-osther FocecMt. i2:Iirf,?r,.H""r for'Adslta.' 13:00 News. . , , 13 15 Farm Hoar. 1:15 Variety. 'VSrI Oors and te.t. J'f?" ",r1 Tonr Health. 8:15 feeing the Amenra. i JTo oHr Viewa the News. 4. CO frmpheule Half Hoar. 4-30 f tones f-r Roy aad Girl. J'Sf iB th C.mpafc St 45 Vespers. 6:00 Legioo of Safety. .6:1 5 N ew .. 6:80 Farm Hour 7:30 4 H Club Program. : ! WorM la ricview. o'iL? ta Tedsy-, Asw. 9:00 (mC Ru : v.u. rrteaitnral Adjustment Fro- H ' 1 - AJaiescwt T?.