The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 12, 1940, Page 4, Image 4

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    "V 4.. ,....
Bito for;
tt
'Build a Bettor Ret Trap . .
3e70 Behind Tc dao Mdm
stuau
' Vs" ' ::y: -' VEt PAUL tlALLOII :- p
"Wo Forw Stray I7t; No Fear ShaU'Aw"
From First Statesman. March IS. 1SII
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES 8PRAQCS. President :
Member of The Associated Press '
The Associated Press m exclusively entitled to tit use for
publication of all news dispatches credited to It or aot other
wise credited In this newspaper, j
r The Eartliqxiake
Exactly what the Balkans needed was a first-class, build
infir-ahatterincr, roins-creatinsr. proclamation-evoking, oil well
igniting earthquake. Wars, and rumors of wars were not
enough ; the coming of the "new order" from BerlinIn the
persons of a million or so members of the reichswehr, was
inadequate; the advance of -the Italians on the Greeks, and,
more recently, of the Greeks on the Italians, was again In-
sufficient; the immanence of a German-Russian deal to split
the whole peninsula; from the Dardanelles to the new borders
of Hungary, didn t quite fill the bill : there had to be an earth
quake to cap the crowning climax.
In the eyes of a Rumanian peasant, one supposes, this is
about what happened, especially if the .peasant was the sort
' of unprogressive peasant who preferred to mow and till his
forefathers fields, live without a bathtub, and watch his fam
ily grow up and out. Wars and new dictators and the Rus-
sians in the Dobruja were not enough : God had to send an
earthquake, too.
This brjngs up the central point of the whole earthquake
situation, at least the central point aside from the sympa
thies which naturally arise from the spectacle of the poor Ru
manians picking among the ruins of their buildings. Granted
that It wasn't any man's doings, not even Hitler's, (God for
bid him that power, too!), to have an earthquake, it must
. have come from some higher power. And if it came from
. thence, whom was it supposed to benefit?
Surely It could not be the Rumanians, unless poverty
and humility are good for the soul, as a number of people and
philosophers have said from time to time. Of a certainty it
could not be the Germans, though it must make them feel
prominent and of significance to stand as keepers-of-order in
the vicinity of broken apartment houses and ruined hospitals.
They have had so much practice keeping order in the past
that this experience will not be a burden.
Perhaps it is the Russians whom the earthquake was to
exalt those who have eradicated God from the churches,
and made the collective farm and the 327-foot six-inch statue
of Stalin the greatest of all gods. Perhaps but there are re
ports of catastrophic consequences of the phenomenon even
from beyond the Dneister in the Soviet lands; and this is a
peculiar form of benefit.
. There are, finally, the English but they are known to
bate human suffering, and to dislike casting it upon others,
even from the air; Hitler has said that this is not so, but he
has not spoken rightly. In spite of this it will be good for the
English to know that their enemies' oil wells are destroyed
and consumed, and that the gasoline on which the German
leader has fed his squadrons of death hawks these months
past stands in danger of being choked off. There is thus, in a
relative sense, good to some men in the workings of this prov
idence, a good which may comfort the Rumanian householder
as he inspects the torn foundations of his home, and which
may warm the hearts of the families of the 2000 "known"
dead.
By R. J. HENDRICKS
I Great . Men Who Were Wrong
Early Sunday morning when the week's last galleys of
major, news were supposed to be in type and final editions
everywhere- excepting a few in the Pacific states had gone
to press, over the almost Idle press wires clicked brief bulle
tins announcing that two notable men had breathed their last.
To The Statesman, which alone of Sunday papers in Oregon
conveyed the news to all of its readers, the first of these dis
patches had but to cross one state line ; the second crossed an
ocean and a continent. 1 .
Beyond the coincidence of. their almost simultaneous
deaths, Neville Chamberlain and Key Pittman may be asso-
ciated in a second generalization but it is a harsh one, to be
pointed out reluctantly and only from the compulsion of its
significance. They were great men who fell into error and
"thereby vastly affected the course of history ; nor was either's
' influence confined to his own country.
There the likeness ends and contrast begins. Chamber-
Lain s error was of the heart : he pursued sincerely, we believe,
. a false humanitarianisxn where harshness was required
though none can say that a bolden course would have averted
- world catastrophe. However that may be, Chamberlain died
for his country and, it must be feared, died of a broken heart,
crushed by a conviction or perhaps still in his mind only a
1 suspicion that he was responsible for his nation's and the
world's greatest catastrophe. What a weight for any man to
C carry across the great divide! And what a pity that he could
1 not be reassured, could not realize in his final hour of con
sciousness, that Englishmen and the friends of freedom ev
erywhere would after all honor him for his sincerity, his ear
nestness, ms good intentions and his valiant iignt even
though -he failed.
I Now in Nevada and in Washington, DC, Senator Key
Pittman Is honored and mourned, and there will be few to
comment upon the monumental error in which he played a
leading role the United States silver policy. In Nevada and
- throughout the silver belt, indeed. Senator Pittman will be
1 ronored for that leadership for his, unfortunately, is an
error which lives on, which has not been effectively refuted
and repudiated, though it caused financial chaos and suffer
Ing in China, made United States relations with some other
countries dificult and unwholesome and has been painfully
expensive to our own economy.
i If anything the comparison is favorable to Chamberlain,
for Pittman's course is susceptible to a wholly unfavorable
interpretation as to motives. - He may be viewed as one who
"grabbed what he could" for his constituents regardless of
. his own belief in the principles he espoused. Yet there re
mains a possibility that he actually believed In the silver pol
Icy which every recognized economist has repudiated. And
even If he did not, there remains for him the recognition that
achievement in other lines a career which began amid the
hurly-burly of the Alaska gold rush and ended with an over
whelming final endorsement from Nevada voters a week ago
today place him in a position of unique power In the na
tional government. - :
; In contemplation of these two careers,. coinciding and
contrasting as they do. Is posed a broader cruestion: the eval
uation of greatness, misled. Obviously great men can be
, wrong; just as obviously, a great man who Is wrong can do
vastly more harm than -a little, man who Is wrong. But just
- where are you going to place greatness, misled, in the scheme
or things 7 It ts clear that the greatness is modified by the
error,, the error by the greatness. You can pick It up from
, -. " : - ... , I - ;i 't:'
r The Red Cross and Wer ' -. '::.
. . ; t For three-quarters of a century virtually all dvllixed na
tions have been In agreement upon Just one aspect of war;
- the- relievin? of suffering caused In battle. The Geneva con
vention which set up the International Red Cross was held
in 1804 ; then suid there were established the agreements nea
tr&liziiiT hsrumitarian forces in war tones, theoretically Ixa-
- monizlr? then from attack. ".. ;;!.. .? : . - ,
In bold relief one sees the picture; In the dirk portion,
valiant men essaying in mass slaughter; In the liht. no less
valiant men and women rtskicj life to reduce its effect! ve
SS3. Tha mass slaughter goes on because nations cannot
r jree ; the mercy efforts are possible! because - nations can
asree.""- ' ' . 2 J --j.
TJ'm. - -- . . ' - ".
L'ut just now there is no help for it. 'Some day, perhaps. ;
TT.3 c "!y c-r.rrcte, useful fact to be noted at present Is that
t!.3 r ; .1 C. ever rc:u?y in pescetima to rdhrs distress!
...r.--t:vcr lis cius, Is ssrila enjrsjed in the activity for .which
How mar on rt ll-lt-4
erly Oregon aiatoir
straight? Tb maalaa .
of Chemtketa one mora: .
i
(Cootlauinr from yMtorday:)
la a letter on this verr subject.
the meaning of the name . Che
meketa. thla trrlter la admon
ished:
"I beg of 70a .'. to educjtte
the residents of Salem eren fur
ther than 70a cst already done.
on the true xneaalas of this
word." (Meaning the word Che-
tneketa.) i - ;
That admonishment, that kind
ly adTiee. In whith is coached an
appreciated compliment. Is scarce
ly needea. - r
The adnee na already oeen
followed persistently for years
and years, though not. girem ex
elasirely to "the residents ef Sa
lem for readers of thla news
paper are found la many sections
of Oregon, and in renous parts
of the United States, and la lands
far beyond the confines of thla
country. And the readers are not
all subscribers. They are fonnd
la rsrlons libraries of this state
for instance, where fllee of this
newspaper are kept, and. In some
of them, the historic matter pre
sented In this column Indexed.
This Is done without consultation
wits, the writer, and often without
his knowledge. At which he takes
no offence; oyer which he feels
complimented.
W
At the risk of blame (or re
dundancy, which fault is freely
confessed, there will be added the
gist of the matter In the article
In this column on October S, this
year, ' reduced to the smallest
space possible. It follows:
'This column has answered
that question (concerning the
meaning of Chemeketa) a good
many times. Chemeketa Is an In
dian name. It means place of
meeting. It was the first name of
the site of Salem. This writer
thinks it was a city of refuge, like
those so many of which Lewis
and Clark found on their journeys
in 1804-6-6.
s s
"This writer be Ilexes the p!sce
of meeting here was, specifically,
where the Salem paper mill now
stands, on the north side of South
Mill creek where that stream en- i
ters the Willamette river, or more
properly Willamette slouch.
"The earliest white comers to
the site of Salem found what ap
peared to De an extensive kitchen
midden there, with indications
that it had been used extensively
and for a long time, showing
signs mat shell rish had been
cooked and eaten thereor Just
eaten, in great quantities. . . .
S
"The Indian tribe from which
it (Chemeketa) was taken?" It
wss probably not the one (th
Willamette or Calapooia) that
was In this district when the
first whites came. How can we
surmise that? Well, any Indian
word that had the guttural or
grunt Ch or Che meant place,
and they are found, from Wash
ington to Texas, and from Cali
fornia to Maine, like Chemawa,
Champoeg, Chinook, Oregon. Che-
naiis ana Chelan. Washington.
Chepachet, New York and Rhode
Island, Cherokee, la a dosen
states, Chewalla. Tenn.. and Che-
weiah. Wash.. Chlcooee. Oeoreia
and Massachusetts, Chilcoot, CaU,
Chuckatuk. Ya.. and Chuckey,
Tenn. Oh, the list Is a long, long
uce.
"The tribe, or mixture of tribes
found here by our first white
comers was likely preceded by
dotens or scores of tribes back
of them, running clear to a tribe
of sun worshippers, no telling how
long ago. certain evidence of
which is found in the showing of
me pnanc temple about seven
mUes south of Salem, next south
of the Skyline orchard; located
where were caurht the alimoses
and the glories of the morning
uu as 11 smiled over Jefferson
and the Three Sisters and then
rose In full splendor as the morn
ing waxed.
S
"But how do we know that the
punt or the guttural represented
by our Ch or Che meant, to the
Indians ronnd here, place?M
(Concluded tomorrow.)
f : it r r 1 r i mi 1 - t " 11 i m mi ;. , ,
A TV. 5
wiBTmrnrnv i n-r . 1 1. I their dlsDatcnes wita tnac most
ham reason to beUevw from per-1 fatal letter on the typewriter. The
sonal experience that the trouble use of "reported." "rumored" and
MU . U UW r Wm Mi fiima vs,
this ' column, : as readers , will
know, but it la slipshod Journal
Ism, and It should never appear.
Then the adjnialstratlost com
plains the press frequently
writes arlfbly about irregulari
ties U WTAcrPWA, but the;
press never has charged the po-'
litical irregularities were more
than very small per cent. The
' aritninisfcmUosi wants to know
why doesn't th press sa y PS
per cent or 08 per cent of WPA
r rYA Is all riffht? The ob
jection Is entirely true and
vaUd, explainable only by the
. fact that reporter eetergeUcally
pnrsae news and a negative fact
' is rarely as important; te the
pnblle mind ' as aa affirmative
fact. -
Furthermore, the ad minis trs-
blowing up with
in the govern
ment' against the
press la as much
a m attar of
words as of fun
damentals. The
difficulty seems
at least pirtly
dne to the fact
that the admin
istration position
Is most o 1 1 n
stated by such a
firebrand as In
terior Secretary
1 1 e k e s , who al-
rasi na
ways says more then ha intends
I to mean, and the reply from the
press naturally comes In the same
rem.- -w ;
If ihm flMhnndi on Yynitt afdM
accurately represent the opposing Hon complained, some dispatches
viewpoints, the clash is funds- laid their authority to anonymous
mental and there can be no under- "official circles' when these were
standlnr. The nreaa la certainly I pure inventions of , the writer
not going to aUow Impairment of I True, but here as in the case of
Its freedom as long as that guar- WPA, SS per cent or it per cent
antes -is In the constitution and J or tne newspapers do not counten-
there la a Una of type left to fight hc rnng oy taeir writers and
witn. . iMeitner is me aaministra-i w w araragv.
Uon aoinr to aUow ouackerr lnfWri ters may be misinformed
the nress aa Ickea la always see-1 sometimes by some government
lng It. But. as I say, I have come employee who has insufficient au
to wonder . whether those really I thorlty to Judge the truth of what
are the alternatives. I'll tell youJn moat newsmen try
Today's Garden
By LJLLIB L. MADSEN
. . B. I have received a num
ber or inquiries recently for la
xormatioa on the treatment of
tnnps on gladiolus bulbs. For
tnose of you who have a few you
wish to store for next year, the
advice Is to place the conns la
paper bags. 100 to each ounce of
napntaaiine Hakes.
ror those of you who have
asked about large qusatitiet.
Quarantine laws, and shinninr
the conns from one state to sn-
otner, t advise your seeing the
county agent. He should hsve
material at hand which wonls
give Information concerning the
aiaie laws ana larger Quantities
treatment.
V C Tes, 1 know aU about
slugs eating crimson clover In
the fields. They did awsy with a
considerable acreage of mine. But
wnea it comes to the control,
that la something else. This is a
problem for your county agent
and the etste college experiment
department. Ro ten one dust has
been advised, and I have been
told that this will cost approxi
mately : 11.75 an acre for one
treatment. I have tried the dust
In the lawn aad it works effeo
tlvely, but I i have given the
lawn two treatments, tea days
apart. Abo. the rotenone dust
must be fresh.
O. M. Why doat yon treat
your sweet peas before yon plant
them? Soak them for at least 99
minutes la a solution ef obi taa.
spoonful of semeson to one aad a
third quarts of! water. In the ease
of treating your sweet peas with
semeson, remember the seeds
cannot be directly InoceUted af
terwards because the aatlsentte
la poisonous to aitrogen-fizln bae-
'Trial Without
By JAMES RONALD
Jury
Chapter IS Continued
"It is out of the Question for ma
to remsln under your root after
this insulting scene," said Miss Os
borne with tremendous dignity.
"If you will instruct Mlmms to
repack my bags and procure a
vehicle to convey them . to the
station, I shall leave at once."
"I don't think Miss Mlmms has
unpacked," replied Edith with all
the calmness she could muster.
"She felt faint at lunch aad Han
nah made her lie down. I under
stand she's asleep. There la no
train until four o'clock, so perhaps
until then " , .
"I can wait at the station.
"On the platform f The waiting
room's alwsys locked In the middle
I to Judge whether the authority
Justifies the news. Fakirs are pun
ished by loss of their Jobs, and
there have not been many men
tired for that cause In my experi
ence. '
Some press writers, editors
and publishers were politically
bitter, the ednalaastration con
tended. Tea, bnt there are bit
ter ones on both aides, in the
political camps as well as in
the press, bnt they are a small
minority. The adminLtraUo
complained reporters had to
write aa their publishers want.
Yes, in varying degrees,- some
not at all in my case not at all
as I had 235 publishers. Bat aa
all phases of political opinion
were represented by the press,
reporters cenerallr shoald be
able to find congenial company.
I came away convinced a mia-
the reason. Mr. Mclntyre had not bad occurred somewhere in
heard of the matter, said he would mT barring. No sufficient reason
investigate. After an absence of toT 11 was apparent. The items
some minutes he returned. In-1 wnicn were conceived to be in
formed me I . was to attend thla 1 accuracies were words, not im-
conference, but that afterward ijportant facta. ,
was . to see an authority who I xne news of the barring nat-
urauy got arouna tne washing
ton newspaper c 1 r e 1 e swiftly.
why;
Am attempt was made last
Friday by the IVhite Honse to
bar me from attending Presi
dent Roosevelt's press confer
ences, it was surprising move
to me, one which had never
been made against , anyone in
my. SO years of experience tm
Washington reporting. To me,
and I believe to every newsman,
it would appear offhand to be
an effort to deny access to news
wherever it may be found. It
might be interpreted logically
as a -suppressive example set ap
conspicuously before every
other news gatherer here. So I
asked why I was being! banned.
The newa had been- broken to
me by Mr. Sloan, chief of the
White House secret service, who
I carries out orders. I asked Secre
tary Marvin Mclntyre. whom I
have known f or many years, for
of tha day, you know. Let us be ivory thoughtful of her!"
reasonable, Octarla, Tha scene at I Ton are mv nwn n)....
lunch was ghastly. X shall never I blood, thoarht Ann; yt how t 1 wished to speak with me.
forgive myself for failing to stop abhor you! I despise yon so much Now It Is not possible for me. ."tTfJiV 1.wlt,r'
it as soon as it started. I am not that my eyes are burnlne in mv as a reporter to relate this con-1 Awa. . e - or tatement
apologising for my children; you head. I often wondered what It JwaaUon, but in the Interests of suSn't bii i U
practically foreed them to express was like to -sea red.- Now I 'JIa" d "tf all around. B S
umuiTM mi way tr. int i v... c 1.1. . 1 ana in view or tne raet tnat anma 1 . . - uuu
I do blame myself. Your train I with hatred of you lOBW incident, of th. case have ben "Jf,U0irmnC"e hftther th br
doe. not ,a for two oM mZ t. . V. .v.. I published. I feel free to try to I w Permnent or temporary.
we can ubmergV our difference. .Wme5 to cTore "in oTYhenT Sffi1 VTswooint.' toward 0 later I was
tocthat short period?- Ian encridlng wall, they glared at ffL?"0" Informed I Jad ' SiluUfi
V--. wati t .v.ll" C '. rrr'-'-'ltnis column and the press gener-1 "nterjireiea
s w-a-a ssaamaa w ai aaa. kusi 1 wvm wAgnss7 m. . . A.cgga Di a sn aTHB . 1 .n. 1 w uni ww at si inraniaii - wa i
living room." I Smouldering dark eyes. Bitter! I come to future nrealdcmtiai ru.
"M a staxa ana awtui spectre 1 age. voniemstuous yontn ... Thai Tha ton M. v. a ! conferences, a mistaka had been
w,i viuviii, iueu vm vi ui rrao was 11 as a sxy Diacx witnibeen taken as a result of "inac-l
""- ""ut" a.aita watcnea 1 crouas. iBunaerous, saning, that I curacies" in this column, not any
her go, then she reeled and I at any moment mlxht be rionad I Inaccuracy in nartlenlar. not nv
The Safety
Valve
From Statesman Readers
PEACE, SOLDIER, PEACK
Peace, soldier, peace.
Duty called you from our shore
To return home' never more.
Peace, soldier, peace.
Sleep, soldier, sleep:
As the dawns tread softly by
Poppy sheeted slumbering lie.
Sleep, soldier, sleep.
Dream, soldier, dream
In the solemn Interlude
Of a nstion's gratitude.
Dream, soldier, dream.
Rest, soldier, rest.
Msy your battle torn son!
Find calm refuge at the' goal.
Rest, koldler, rest.
DANIEL. B. 8TRALKT,
Chicago, Illinois.
ANSWKRKD
WALNUT QUERY
To the Kdltor:
Answering an Inquiry from
Mrs. Helen Blair of Monmouth la
reference to stamping ' walnut.
with a California machine, would
say the Salem Nut Growers Co-on
and affiliated associations, the
Lebanon Nut Growers, the Amity
Nat Growers, the Gaston Nut
Growers, tha Dundee Nut Grow
ers and tha Clark county Co-on
Nut G r o w e ro of Vancouver.
Wash., all mark their first qual
ity nuts in the Jumbo; larae aad
fancy else. The above association
owns and control, tha North Pa
cific Nut Growers Co-op who sell
the product.
We own our own walnut mark
ing machines but the California
machine has a greater capacity.
so great that we can afford to pay
tne royalty which is very small.
On car lot orders we n r 1 n t
whatever trademark the buyer
wisnes, out - our own patented
trademark la "Noi-pae." short for
North Pacific, and It goes out on
many shipment, to all part, of
tha USA. We are actually doing
something for the grower. And
every package that we shin has
Wregon" on It In conspicuous
prut.
We wish to thank Mrs. Blair
tor her patriotism for the Oregon
walnut, tha superior of which has
not ytt been produced.
THIS SALEM NUT GROWERS
CO-OP.
Mose p. Adams, Secretary.
tsrta. Inoculation can be obtained
by treating tha .sad with the
dust aad then inoculating dry soil
waica is Broadcast over the space
waere tne seed 1. sown. ;
- T. Tea.- tha asparagus fern
can ne grown from seed oulte
easHyv The plant, grown this way
are usually preferable te tka
larger ones which have been di
ne ea into small pieces.
it was originally created. And the American l&d - Cross' 'is'
again conducting its national Roll CaH. ft ne? rr to,.
ever in history. In Salem tha Roll Call was conducted in con
nection with th Community Chest campaign; elsewhere In
the Willamette valley it is being launched today. This Year
i new w cviucuiiB vl ceeo, 11 scarcely aeeras tnat taere
is necessity for an ?;erl U generosity, Whera human ccm
p&ssbn resides, thertvrU la response. - . ,
clutched st a chair tor support. I Jaggedly by flashes of lightning, mis-statement of fact, lint "gen-
t ne room seemed to revolve dls- "Yon are hardly Tory lively eral inaccuracy.' I have always
ally around. I mustn't faint ... I company, niece," said Mis. Os-1 strived to gain tor my column a I
sne thought, clinging desperately borne dryly. I reputation for accuracy. temoer-
to the chair. ... I musn't faint. I Ann stifled the dealra ta lanira. lateneas and fairness, and the box
stouten - it was inn i voice, 1 11 sne once started sne would aol?curt,a WU1CQ ana eaitors
tense and anxious. I on laughing wildly, hysterically. I nT eDt on m bad encouraged
Edith msnsred to raise her until the and of time, m 10 believe I had been succesa-
head and force a smile. "I have no doubt you would If?1.? ucaing to the facta. As
Here. It seems, waa a littla
inaccuracy on the Dart of the
White House anthorltfea
against the press.
I wonder how much of the
whole press-go veramea t sitna-
tkm is in the' sense fix.
"I'm aU right, child. For a mo- rather be reading a book."
msnt I felt giddy but I'm better
now. Don't hook so worried, wear.
It s nothing."
Tou'd better come and lie
down. I'm sorry about that horrid
scene, mother, but I couldn't help
it She was so cruel te daddy. Oh,
I'd ilka to kill her I"
"So would I! the word.
shuddered out of Edith's lip
"Heaven
To sit there
'Much rather." retorted Ann.
that is a very sensitive point with
me. I attempted to find out what
-Iani Tnol TsuVormei PravWd WI2L considered an "inaccuracy."
am not surprised. Pray read,! Tha admin iatrHnn .n..i.i
if you are so inclined.
Very well. I shall."
Do."
(To be continued)
The administration comnlalned
It does not like the use of such
phrases as "it is reported" and
it la said" in news dispatches and
Services Today
For Dr. Skiff
Funeral services for Dr. Mark.
S. Skiff, former Salem deatlst
who died In Portland Friday, will
do today k s p.m. from tha
conaTder theaT to beTnacTu7a"es f Iofl-Barrick eh.pei. Rev. Irv-
which they are. What most ie- l Tox.7l" "IcUte- Brt
porters really mean by such w11 bee IO' cemetery,
phrase. Is, "I p ar. onall y Dr Ski-T was one of the prom-
Gets Well Contract
WASHINGTON. Nor. 11-4V- I Tk,' w-. "Ju y " V'." .!'77l Jn.nt dyelnn-r. nf th- Hl
forgive me. so would I! ? wr dPrtanent awarded a se of 1t" Instead of "I" is lust hush Hot Springs resort.
hra an4 w a 1. COairSCl lO XV. J. DtntMr a mwhuilxl I Hi f mnrri-roA h. Id, wMa
- 1"' I T- IJ1 1 u V. . . t.U&. f - "
Rlnhn'i fmrm whlla S na company, roruana. Ure.. I adonted heMnu nnnrt.r. id, I Mra Ada V. Skiff Af Siln
on and on What am I saying? iodJtTTtor, Teep"w t a r well at j away from use of the first person I Mark Jr., of Portland, and sister.
Ann! We mustn't talk like this." I ao nauseum, ror iear or ruling pearl saiH of Io. Angeles.
You're upset, mother. Do come
and lie down."
"No, my dear, I'm perfectly aU
right. Besldee, I must find your
rainer.
On her way out to the garden
through the French windows,
Edith paused aad looked back
anxiously at her grim, scowling
aaugnter.
"Ann . . . yonr aunt's la the
living room. We can't let her sit
Radio Programs
XSLM TUESDAT lilt Ka.
f :S0 Milkman Kalodiee.
T:IS Nm
7 :4S Melody Lane.
s : ropuiar variety.
:4S Vocal Tariatlce. '
S : Paatofa CalL
t :lt Melodle Moods.
there alone. After all, she's going il "T
at four aad we shall probably I ! :i Popular Uuata.
nevsr see her again." Si! VfZSS "
"She can sit there alone till she u lis eif TavT
rots for all I care."
dear, we've got to be
polite."
"PoliteT Bah!
"For me, Ann."
Oh. all right."
Ana went into the living room
and dropped into a chair faelag
her aunt. Miss Osborne was sit
ting very straight, her back
arched, her head held high, her
hanas folded on her lap. The
heightened color of her thin
cheeks waa the only sign of emo
tion she displayed.
I presume your mother sent
you to keep me company. How
Lewis Successor?
rhIIUp sf array, CSO vice-chairman
(above), is relwded as possi
ble eweceeeor to John X Lewis
if the latter resigns aa presideat
ec tae Congress for Xaxlastrlal
Orgaaisatiosi because of Roose
velt's victory at tha polls, liar-
ray, ef rttiabnixh, '.like Lewis,
Is a farmer snlaer. " '
11 :t willanMtta rjMvMstty . Cnaeet,
xi:t vajua Parana.
iltlS Nawa.
II : Hillbilly Serenade,
litis Willamette Valley Oslnlaaa.
lltSS Klwanls Club.
Popular Moalc
1 :St Musical Munorlsa,
I : Bslam Art Caatar.
StlS Melody Mart.
1 :4S Ofindna Travalsv '
I tOO Maddox Family aad Xtoee.
1:J Tour Nalshbor.
IMS Carol LsiKhtoo. B!laiIa.'
4 :e Croasroads Troubader.
4tlS -Newa
4 tlS Teatime Melodise. .
5 Popularity Row.
S tIS Dinner Hour Melodies. "
ile Tonight's Headlines. ...
t5 Claude Cooper. Commentator.
7:00 Jack and Jill.
TtlS IntareatlnsT Facts.
1 tIS Business and National Del,
T :4S American ramUy . Robinson.
s ts Mews.
tIS Popular Mnsie.
tie George Lea Marks Presents.
ttS Popular Concert-
tOO Newa
stis Hita-er tne oar. -
tie Ooacart Oama.
14 :00 Popular Music
11:04 Newa
litis Melody lane. -
IOW-TTTgaSAT te Ka.
S:00 fturiia aereaede,
S:S0 TnuM Blaseta. - .: -
t :O0 Mm. . -
Tt4S Saat Hayas.'-
.tOO Stars ef Taday. ' -
tIS AralaH tae Sterw.
tIS Tae O'VetHa.
:43 Taae Tenailaa.
10:80 Br KetaJeea tferrla.
10:45 Dr Sake. -
11:00 Hjstn, ef aQ Oaaroaea. -
11:1S Araeld erfaam'S PaagSerSV
lltIO Talisat Lady.
llt4S Lisa ef Ika WerlA
11:00 Btary mt Mary Xarila.
litis Ma Persian.
IS :t0 Pepper Yeaaga ffaaulr.
13:44 Vie aad Sade. -
1:00 Backstay Wife,
1:1S SUUs Leilas..
1:0 Lereaae Jeaea. - '
1:45 T ease Widdae Brews.
1:00 Girl alaaa,
StlS Lone Jrorsay. v
1:10 The Gaidiaa- XJAk.
1 :4S LU Cm Ba SaaatOfaL
steo ho, tuas !
4:00 Rstberalioa Oasrtai.' r " ,
4:1S &mn ef Tedy. . - '
4:45 K. V.- KsUeasors,
s:ls Jaek aroMtraaa.
:0 Heraee Heidt'a Tcaaaara Chest.
:0eraeeday at Si.
:3S Fiaeer McQee aad Meor. "
7:90 to Base. ' . . -
T:0 Csel tar's Oacaaasa.
:0 Trad Wariar Plesiare Yiaaa,
:11 -dnukair Cralsaa. ....
: Jekasy Preaeata. : ' -
,; i'alaaa ilatet Orseisra
Taeae seSsdalas are am as Had ay the r
ssaettye rtetioaa Any varlattoaa acted
by uattaera axe daa te eaasges mad ky
tae ststtbas wttaaes aetice te tau aeva
sapes. -
1 :45 Beattarseed Bataee. '
S:ee Teaa Or. Maleaa.
S : Battla ef the 8ezea.
10:00 Mews riasBse.
10:10 Bat Tabaria Cafe Orcaestra.
11:00 Maws.
11 :1S St, Francis Hotel Orchaatrb.
TtTKSDAT 11SS Km.
S:S0 Masieal Claek.
T:0e Weetera arriealtare.
T :1S riaaaelal 8ervte.
T: 10 Breakfast Clab.
.: Jast Batwaaa rriaada, ,
8:45 DT.Braek.
:0O Dee SUrer Baya
S:S0 Mstfeaal Paraa aad Hoaaa.
10M0 News.
10:0 CaansUrly W Ua .
10:45 assaeiated Prase Kewa.
10:a Ladles la Ue H 41lsei. '
11:15 Oar HaU Hoar.
11 :0O Orphans ef Diverse.
U :M Aausas ef HeaayaMaa BOB.
11 :0 Jean's Other WUa.
11:45 Jast Flai a Bill.
.1:00 Mother ef Kin.
1:15 .Mew. .
1:10 Market aaperta,
1 :45 Corbeteae eeis.
1:00 Tke QaietHow.- u
1:30 Pavtiaaid aa Bavtew. f
1:15 Ireeaa Wicker. .
:1S Aeeoeiated Press Bews.
.:45 U'l Abaar.
dtlS Earepaaa Maws.
4:30 Ki4kleea CeeaaUy,
.6:10 Bad BartaaTV , .
5:45 Ten Mis.
S:o Joha B. Kaaaedy.
:I5 Bishev saa tae Oargayla
T:l Newa. - . . . :
T:30 Qveetiaa Baa. V '
S:00 lafaraatiaa Pleaaa. . - '
8:10 Ben Berai Masiaal Qala,
S.-ee Rsay Aeea. - . - ,
: Mr. naea. Traaer at Lee Penes
S: I. taa ed Old Dsn.
10:C0 Victor Hag Bestaarea OrckaaSra
iu :,v netar- iuiam vrcsastra,
ii:f rai atnag world.
11:15 Paal Canon, Orraaist.
11:45 Pertlaad Paaaa Immu. ' - 1
11 e Waa Maw Baaadaa.
BOO TTrXS9AT Ka,
8:00 Market Baperts.
:05 KOW Ziock. "
T:15 Hadl!aars. -1:30
Bak Oarred KapartUa, .
8:15 Ceasawer Vewa, .
S:30 JTka eoldkarta. -S:45
By KatkUaa Harris. -
:00 Ket bailtk gnaaka
:1J Wkss a 6irt Maniec. -t:S0
Aeaaasea f He tea VraaL ' '
:45 Oar Oal gaadsr. -
19:09 Ufs Caa rtt BtaaBfal '
18:1S Wemea la Wkita.
10:30 Kiaat t Happiaees. "
10:45 Msry La Xayi.
11:00 Bia Si rtar.
11:15 Smat Jnr'. -11:30
flateker VklUa.
11:45 kfy Sea sad L.
11:00 Hank Waaataa,
is:ia news.
13:30 Kate Hopklaa, -11:45
Biaffla' Saav :
ItOO Fartia Blak. '
1:15 Mm and Marge. ' . ,
1:30 EOltap Hoaaa.
1 :4 eupatetkar.
t:0O 4aieriaa Aekael - '
tie L.eJ agaia. -
StlO Jayea Jardaa.
3:45 Newspaper at tk Air.
4 :00 Second Wife. , '
4: IS We the Akbetta.
4:30 8cead Hasbaad.
5:00 Newspaper f tk At. '
S:1S The Werid Tedar.
5:30 First Kifkter.
S:S5 Elaaar Darts. Vewa.
S.-OO Larry Kaat Or ah as eta.
S:Se Professor tyaia. -
T:00 Ole MiUar Orekastra.
1 :45 Newt ef tk Wee. -
8:00 sjbos a Andy.
8:15 Laaay Base.
8:30 Caart at Mlssfac Hatra.
S:Oa w. tha Peaple.
:80 Baker Theatre Players.
10:00 tin Star PiaaL
10 tie Bb Crasby Oreheetra.
11:00 Heary Bssse Oreheakta.
11:55 News. .
a - a a
B-OAO TTXsUaDAT SSS Ka,
- 8:00 News.
0:15 Tha Hoateaaakara Baa.
10 0 Weather Pareeaak .
10:rS Story Hear far Aaait.
11:00 School at tk air.
11:10 Mas! af th Master,
HtOO Maws.
11:15 Paraa Hear.
1 :00 HaaBamakera Half Haas. .
1:45 Moalter Views ah Maws..
StlS Little Bad 8frhtaeaa,
-8:45 Nawfc.i -v ':' - . 1 --
4:io Stories for Boys aad Ctrl.
5:00 On the Cast paees. -
:45 Tespers. .
8:15 News. -
8:30 Paraa Boar.
f:0 Masi ef OearaesleTSkla.
T :45 OoasaBMr's Peraav : -
tOO Sebaal of Masla
S.-OO--OSO Baaad Table. -
:30-M30 Cadet Baad.
8:44 Bekool ef Heat Tae tend as.
- . a .,
"m BULB TTTEgDAT HO Ba
:I0 Meaaary Timekeeper. .
fcgewl-411 --V-8:45
Beyer's Parade.
S:00 This sad That.
8:45 Keen Pit tm. WuU
10:00 Joha B Harkea.
II :t.ii?t naa Vesiea,
10:45 Bachelor Cklldne, - :
11:00 rrieadlr Meirhaara. .i - ?
m.m. :i niae.a itAi.i
: uoneert
Ue, Oitflek
11:45 New.
i:oo Dan L BeboeL
1:00 Sssibiaa Iraran. !
StlO Kaws. .--'
: We. tk Weeaaa.
8:00 New.
8:30 Tbee TJeltad gtaaas. '
d.-OO rHA Talk.
4tl0 fitads et Tbae.
5:15 New.
sue fcfcaftae Parksr. r , ' .
:4S CaaUia Midike,
8:00 Pmltoa Lawia, ir.
8:30 Jaka B. HnhV ' ' '
8 :4S Sundown iraade. " " " 1 '
ltt " aha,
T:1S Jiami St!.
T:t Wytk VrU.tnma.
T:4S Seaeatiaaat Qaisaaa.
8.-00 Laff iey tiab,
StlO tawnaea W.xe Orehastra. .
l"ok Jargaa trktra -S.-OO
News. -
8:15 katckaa ta Kluk ui nrkita
8:10 Hal Kawp Orebaaar. .
Otoe Haree af Ba. . . 1 ' '
10:30 OmII Tauu at tWs Stm m '
1145 tail Harri Oaheeir.
Hill i M atria !' Onku.
.' - I
i V
I
i
U -
3
11 :45 Vt Uckiag Laar. -1 .!