7AC2 roun
Tit CION STATESMAN. Edam. Oregon, Soturdoy Morning, February 22, 1811
teflon
"No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Aue
From First Statesman, March 23, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President
j Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication" of ail
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise 'credited in this newspaper.
Liability
j i ; . !
' Back in the gloomy days of the Oregon legis
lature's 1933 special session, when drastic fi
tiaricialj measures were necessary, Rep. Otto K.
jpaiilusjon one occasion varied the usual state
Iment in conclusion of debate, somewhat as fol
lows: 1 I "
This Is a bad, bill that ought to pass."
1 Only in time of crisis!, and then rarely, is such
an observation justified. Incidentally, the lend
lease bill before congress probably is, in all
truth, a "bad bill thatj ought to pass." But a
bad bill with, good intentions is no such rarity.
It will be recalled that in objecting vigorously
to the traffic accident j liability bill, which was
up in the house early; this week, this column
conceded that its objective, encouraging the ex
tension of liability insurance, was good.
Since that time the bill has undergone an
operation and the objectionable features have
been removed. The substitute bill, passed by
ith house Friday, merely requires that drivers
and car owners involved in accidents shall ob
tain roof of responsibility" for the future. In
effect, it makes liability insurance compulsory
for all motorists who have had accidents but
since such insurance is advisable in any case,
it Is not a penalty. The present "safety re
sponsibility" law provides adequate penalties
for those motorists who are unable to satisfy
judgments found against them in the courts.
There are intimations that these penalties may
be made less drastic by providing a time limit
upon license suspensions.
I With its unjust features removed, the acci
dent liability bill is "a good bill and ought to
pass" because it will encourage more general in
surance coverage without making it compulsory
upon everyone. It remains to be noted that na
tionally ( in 1939, about 35 per cent of motor
vehicles have this insurance protection "for the
other fellow." In states Which have the safety
responsibility law, the average is 37 per cent;
in states which do not, it is 17 per cent.
a- Oregon's average is below that of the safety
responsibility law states; at the other end of
the picture are Massachusetts, the one state
where such insurance is compulsory, with ap
proximately 100 per cent. New Hampshire,
whose law was copied in the original accident
liability bill, stood at 58.2 per cent in 1939. The
persuasive effect of such laws is thus amply
demonstrated.
Big-Bad
'r
tmare
or committee to propose an entirely new law is
a decided rarity.
Having proposed to amend a law, individual
members or committees are forever discovering
a need to amend the proposed amendments; and
it is no rarity that they find it advisable to
amend the amendments to the amendments.
Within the past two weeks and we would
not have discovered this except that we have
no secretary and our bill filing was neglected
for two weeks 44 sets of amendments to sen
ate bills and 90 sets of amendments to house
bills have been adopted or offered for adoption.
And in some cases a set of amendments offered
t at one time covers as many as four printed
pages.
There appear to be more than the usual num
ber of amendments to bills at this legislative
session.. Here's hoping that when they get
through the laws will be correct.
It is characteristic of the human . race, es
pecially! the male fraction which is conscious
both of the potentialities and the limitations of
its muscles, to resent superior size and power.
Carry over into the automotive field that in
stinctive lesentment and you have the real rea
son for) defeat of the "big truck" oil in the
senate on Wednesday. It was human nature
and not the railroads that beat the trucks. '
Coupled with this quirk of nature which
makes "big-bad" a common alliterative phrase
was the! further circumstance that according to
a tradition which persists though it no longer
is valid, the motor truck on the highway is a
dangerous bully and its driver a boorish road
hog.
The truth is that today the truck driver is
the most cautious and considerate motorist on
the highways with the probable exception of
the busj driver and that the big freight truck
is less a menace than the passenger car.
There are about- one-tenth as many trucks
registered in Oregon j as there are passenger
'cars. Trucks figured jin only about 7 per cent
of the reported accidents in 1940, in 6.7 of the
accidents causing injury and in 7.6 per cent
of the accidents causing only property damage.
It is true that when a truck figures in an acci
dent the results are apt to be' rather devastat
ing; trucks were involved in 45 of the 421 fatal
accidents, or slightly over 10 per cent. But
these are the figures for all types of trucks ;Jhe
big common and contract carriers with their re
sponsible drivers and safety-promotion pro
grams doubtless have a better record.
The truck has outgrown its unfavorable repu
tatiorc, but it has not yet outlived it.
Nigh
cause they allegedly are coarse and "lowbrow"
and their humor is usually of the slapstick va
riety, has become an old story. A more recent
objection has been that most of them have no
humor at all. The comics survive all criticism,
presumably because they actually fill a need for
brief, lirfit diversion! which reauires no con
centration or mental! effort.
- But there is a -new development in the field
of comics which apparently has not received the
attention it deserves. R This is the booklet form
I presentation. unefDOOJUei cioseiy resemDies
" In fnrm tVia SiolrST-ww1 Irnnnrn tft hflVS HOW
middle aged. The comics, reduced -from news
- paper page size, are difficult to read and may
cause eye-strain.' : "
But the comics in them! They might prop
erly be styled "horror comics." It is difficult to
ee now . sensitive uimu, wuii vuuu a umiwu
ity to ! distinguish" between reality and fancy,
can pore over them before , bedtime and then
avoid nightmare.. ' C " ; J
' ' We are not squeamish about this "childish
"impression business. It will be noted that The
Statesman's comics have been carefully chosen
-not ne of them deals principally with crime
and violence. Yet we do. not criticize the gen
eral run of newspaper comics which do. But
this is TOmethmg eeisJmething that deserves
parents serious consideration. . J. ,
Amendments '
. Anyone who is curious as to how legislators
spend their time' is invited to come in and keep
our file of bills legislative bills, not the other
kind in order. The legislature has overlooked
assigning us a $5 sicretary.-xp?yV'-'y'::;-M'
Such a volunteer would discover, in the first
place, that at least 90 per cent perhaps 199
per cent is closer of the - bills are . proposed
amendments of existing law. , For a member
Gayda
"No one ever attributed to the people of the
United States a sense of chivalry, which it is
incapable of having, nor even a sense of honor,
which goes with such a tradition. But people
believed in commercial honesty in a country
which, devoid of the glory of thought, arts,
science, law, politics and arms, has shown Itself
capable only of c buying and selling. People
thought the United States held sacred deposits
received in trust. But the last phase of the capi
talistic regime is corrosion of the normal founda
tions of commerce. Each of the criminal actions
of the Anglo-Saxon world is a' sign of the end of
its civilization. Virginio Gayda, writing in II
Giornale d'ltalia.
All we have left, Virginio, is our sense of
humor, and you.
With all due respect to the legislative wise
cracks about barbers' conversation,- and even
recognizing that the raising of "professional"
standards is all the rage at this session we
still can't see what' a high school education has
to do with barbering ability.
News Behind
The News
By PAUL MALLON
(Distributed by King Feature Snydicate, Inc.. re
production in whole or in part strictly prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21 The shocking reversal
of such peace-loving isolationists as Senator Bailey
who are now "ready for war" has caused not a hair
to be raised or an eyebrow
lifted here.
A complete change in the
ways bf thought among politi
cal leaders Is coming to the sur
face. A reluctant recognition
of the inevitability, of the
Roosevelt charted course has
broken through all old stand
ard political lines and is rally
ing constantly increasing sup
port to his cause. The realiza
tion that we are in the midst of
a rushing torrent of events
which can be guided but not
diverted, has become the con
in all phases of government.
"
v ' t
MtassV:
real Halloa
trolling influence
executive and legislative.
If you' peer closely you will even see dispirited
futility seizing those who are fighting still with
their voices for the traditional American policy
of isolation and peace.
Frankly their fight has lacked the zip and punch
which can come only from hope of success. No
more than 17 men in the senate (which blocked
the league of nations) have yet shown up In an op
position meeting (79 remained, away.) In a single
day of debate, Senators Vandenberg, Nye and Clark
were able to complete their speeches. They would
have taken a week if it were - not for the invisible
pall of popular pressure which has ceaused them
to foreswear use of their greatest weapon of the
past, the filibuster.
Republican Leader McNary did not rush out
against the bill as did his ally, republican leader
Martin, in the house. Privately he hs indicated he
might vote for it, if it can be fixed a bit, though a
few of his friends doubt that he will. Another re
publican senator who has committed himself against
it has been heard to express the wish that he could
reverse himself. Another isolationist from the west
has been dismayed because he has received no more
than 1000 letters from the home folks, a fact which
leads him to believe they are not much excited
against the measure.
Seeing all this, the administration has become
adamant against making further concessions of any
importance. They have abandoned their efforts to
appease the opposition. They seem to have- all
the votes they need.
' But what does it mean? It seems simply the po
litical leaders of all stripe are coming faster now to
the belief that the country in a unity seldom seen
before wants to stop Hitler, whatever the cost.
Cloakroom stories have been going the rounds
suggesting that the administration has sweetened -the
proposal by airing the probability of leasing and
lending cotton and food under the bilL That is
true, but unimportant. Mr. Roosevelt has privately
assured congressmen he thinks the bill covers food.
Everyone agrees that, without it, the British would
curtail their purchases of cotton. But there cannot
be much cotton in the bill and the food which the
British will want is not politically significant
meat, cheese, dried fruits, not -wheat and corn.
Few in the senate or elsewhere agree unreserved
ly with the way Mr. Roosevelt has chosen to handle
the matter. There are those who feel that, while
his course was inevitable, he let the British crowd
him into too-free a commitment, that he did not
use his bargaining position, ta get more for this
country either as payment now or later in the peace,
that be acted late, that the program is not even now
well ' formulated, - etc, etc ' Those objections are
rapidly losing their strength in the senate in the -.face
of larger consideraia ;. . , ; X
This then is the big stride that is being taken ,
1 easier, swifter,: more unanimously with each pass- j
Ing day of congressional consideration.' It is the big I
' comment and after it is made all subsequent events, ";
: even war, must follow the adopted pattern. : As one
. old-time senator tries to explain it in the cloakroom: i
"It is like drinking. You swear up and down you 1
r are not going to drink too much before you take
. the first one, the second, the third.. After that,
your promise becomes unimportant.'
i& for-. V
Vic . . ,
-
By FRANCIS GERARD
i
Mighty Good Reading in These Days of Stress
gifts tfoir Breakifasft
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Historian Barry sends 2-22-41 at a former meeting.'
congratulations, giyes a
brief outline of history
of provisional government:
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Still quoting Barry: "Unless one
has the nine trustworthy rec
ords of May 2, 184S, it is very
difficult to know what-was-what.
McLoughlin, writing on
March 20, 1843, three days af
ter the meeting at Oregon City,
March 17th, 1843, stated that
the next meeting was to be on
May TWELVTH. Yet it was
held ten days before that time.
"My census for May, 1843, has
only names of 358 men. I have
no data for the number of wo
men and children. Of these 122
were French-speaking, or about
one-third.
"In the 'nine synoptical ac
counts. May 2, 1843, only 33
names are mentioned. None gives
the total number. There seems
to have been 102 on March 4,
1844, with a 52 to 50 vote. The
hoax injects that into the Cham
poeg meeting of the previous
year.
"One of "the trustworthy ac
counts of May 2, 1843, gives the
number who voted to organize
as five, another large, another
great, and another great Five
would be a large majority at
only a small meeting.
S S
"The minutes were written at
the time, by LeBreton. He wrote:
"At a public meeting of the
inhabitants of the Willamette
settlements held in accordance
with the call of the committee
Your Federal
Income Tax
DEDUCTION FOR INTEREST
Amounts paid or accrued with
in the taxable year 1940 as in
terest on indebtedness are de
ductible, with certain exceptions,
from gross income In determin
ing net income. Deductible items
Include interest on borrowed
money to defray personal ex
penses, and on money borrowed
for the purchase of real or per
sonal property. If a person owes
money on a lien or mortgage
note on his home, the amount
of the interest may be deducted.
Indebtedness, however, need not
be evidenced by lien, Judgment,
or mortgage to make the interest
on it deductible. Frequently in
debtedness is evidenced only by
a note.
Interest paid on indebtedness
incurred in the purchase of ob
ligations (other than obligations
of the United States issued after
September 24, 1917, and original
ly subscribed for by the taxpay-.
er), the interest upon which is
wholly exempt from Federal in
come tax, is not deductible.
Interest paid on behalf of an
other where there is no legal
obligation on the part of the
payor is not deductible by the
payor. In such cases the amount
is the same as a gift.
As interest paid is deductible,,
so interest received is taxable
(except Interest on obligations
of a State, Territory, or any
political subdivision thereof, or
the District of Columbia; or ob-
ligations of a corporation organ
ized under act of Congress, If
such corporation' is an instru
mentality of the United States;
or the obligations of the United
States or its possessions to the
extent provided in the acts au
thorizing the issue thereof). All
such amounts, inHning inter
est received on bank and savings
deposits, must be Included in the
taxpayer's return of gross In
come. .! -.
"a S "a
"Note. The committee was ap
pointed March 6, 1843, at the
second Wolf meeting; yet auth
orized merely to 'consider or
ganization. The meeting at Ore
gon City, March 17, 1843, au
thorized the committee to call
a public meeting McLoughlin
said on May TWELVTH. And
that Oregon City meeting agreed
to organize a loyal temporary
government until legal govern
ment should be established by
Congress.
"LeBreton continued: Tor the
purpose of taking steps to or
ganize themselves into a civil
community, and provide them
selves with the protection se
cured by the enforcement of
law and order.'
S "a
"Note. It seems amazing that
LeBreton did not state that the
purpose was to form a tempor
ary government, until the United
States extended jurisdiction.
Sometimes there may be 'A nig
ger in the woodpile.'
"Quote. Dr. I. L. Babcock
was ehosen chairman, and
Messrs. Gray, LeBreton and
WilLson, secretaries. The com
mittee made their report, which
was readand a motion was
made that it be accepted, which
was lost. Considerable confu
sion existing in consequence,
it was moved by Mr. LeBreton,
and seconded by Mr. Gray, that
the meeting divide, preparatory
to being counted, those in favor
of the objects of this meeting
taking the right, and those of
a contrary mind taking the left,
which being carried by accla
mation, and a great majority
being found in favor of argoni
zation, the greater part of the
dissenters withdrew.'
"a "a
"That broke up the mass
meeting.
"Apparently there was an
overwhelming rejection of the
report of the committee. The
minutes indicate that the line-up
vote was on the question wheth
er to organize a "Civil Commun
ity." 'Civic' might have been a
better word. 'A great majority
being found in favor of organi
zation,' presumably of the 'civil'
community.
m a
"There are certain features
that Involve many matters, too
extensive to be injected here.
A book might be written on the
various aspects of this petty
meeting, especially if there were
iA nigger in the woodpile.'
"Whether the majority were
two, or five, or great, or large,
is immaterial. A majority only
wished to organize. It was not
a community agreement. The
entire community agreed to or
ganize, on February 18, 1841.
The e n t ire English-speaking
portion of the community agreed
to organize July 5, 1843. .Yet
on May 2, 1843, only a majority
of what seems to have been a
small part of the settlers agreed
to organize.
W
- "While some settlers can or
ganize a compact among them
selves, as in the Mayflower
Compact, "The Watauga Com
pact excluded all other settlers.
' Goyernments derive their just
. powers by consent of. the gov
. erned. In no sense was this an
agreement by the whole com
munity; therefore the mere ag
.reement of this majority at a
-poorly attended meeting : could
" not create a government for the
whole community.
Yet If this majority vote to
organize had created a govern
'ment, the breaking up of the
mass meeting by many going
'away, would have left the 'gov
ernment merely 'a thing of
emptiness, with no laws, no
officers, and utterly and com
pletely intangible. While an ac
tive local government was ex
isting by authority of the en
tire community, as of Febru
ary 18; 1841.
S . -a
"When the mass meeting. May
2, 1843, broke up, some re
mained. It is immaterial how
many remained. That gathering
was not the mass meeting, which
had broken up. No authority
had been granted by the mass
meeting for anyone to do any
thing themselves. Not one was
a delegate, or representative of
anyone else. A suitable term
would be CAUCUS.
They agreed to call a gen
eral mass meeting, July 5, 1843.
That was within their power.
Whoever chose to go to it was
the business of such persons.
The American-speaking settlers
did a tend, and agreed in organi
zing a compact. The French
speaking settlers did not unite.
The call was for all. Yet only
two-thirds of the settlers com
plied with the call.
"The main actions of the Cau
cus, May 2, 1843, were:
"a
(1) A committee was appoint
ed to draft suggested laws for
acceptance by the mass meet
ing. That mass meeting, July 8,
1843, acted as the first law
making body in Oregon. Most
of the suggested laws were ac
cepted, and the committee dis
charged. (2) Sixteen officers were se
lected, to be 'duly initiated' July
5, 1843. That mass meeting elec
ted seven officers, and validated
fourteen of the sixteen, who took
oath, and were 'duly initiated.
(3) By formal resolution, the
old officers of 1841 were or
ganized as continuing in office
until July S, 1843."
(Concluded tomorrow)
, CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
la a moment Kloffef had
closed the door and crossed the
' room to kneel before the Rabbi
and take his, thin hands in his
, strong one. He bent forward and
the venerable man kissed him
on the forehead and on: the
1 cheek; Herman gently brushed
one of the phylacteries with his
lips. " -; - j
Quietly the old man released
his hands,"and stared and stared
as though . he could never fill
his eyes enough with the sight
of this young man whom - be
loved so welL j
"Ah, Hermann, Hermann. You
come so rarely ; now. No, no,
boy, there is no reproach in my
words, for I know well you come
when you can. And I know,' too,
that you would come more often .
if you could. I have been spared
longer than the normal lot of
man; that I have, been spared
for a purpose, I am assured. You,
my beloved, are a part of that
purpose, and I must fill my
heart when I may. .
. The aged- man broke off and
Hermann asked, "Are you well,
Rabbif ;
"WelL and more than weTL
he answered, "now that you are
here. But you cannot stay long,
that I know, and we have much
to speak of. So now you wOl
tell me, is all well with you?
Not with your mission, for of
that we will speak anon, but is
all .well with yourselfr
"Why should it not be, Rab
bi?" asked the other.
"My son, I! have not known
you for nearly forty .years with
out knowing your every mood
and look. What is ill with you?"
"Rabbi," replied Hermann
softly, "I love a woman."
"Is she married?" And as the
other shook .his ' head, "then
what ails youj Hermann? For it
is only right that you should
cling to a woman and that she
should cling to you."
"She is a goi a Christian."
"Even that is not impossible,"
declared the old man.
"She is an von Reinhold and a
niece of von Wallenfels."
The Rabbi looked startled. "A
Wallenf els!" he echoed.
"His niece," the other added.
"AH one, all one," replied the
eld man staring dimly across the I
room and speaking as though to '
himself. He turned to the man
at his side and said, Tate plays '
queer tricks and J&ls is one, that ;
you should love one who Is of i
the kind of those whom j you i
shW-. 5 V W
"Abhor!" cried the man catch-
fag up the word. "Yes . . . Hate! I
hate them and all their kind with
Jheir brutal self-ufCciency and -vile
treatment of "jaj people,
. 1 He broke off a ; moment bis ;
dark face working; then looked
up and said, "Did you hear of :
Rosa Schmidt, RaJbi? j I
? The old man shook his head.
Otosa Schmidt? No, my son. Of
Gretchen .and Hilda, you . have '
spoken, but never of Rosa." j I
. s A stem look appeared on Klof-
fer's face as he said, "No Rab4 ;
bi, Rosa was not; as Gretcheri
4nd Hilda. She was the wife of L
a friend, Jacob Schmidt, who had
a flat near mine in Vienna. Jac- i
ob . was killed by a storm troop
er who bit hizn,' a defenseless';
man, and when he lay; upon the .
ground broke bis; jaw with his i
boot. I did not see it don but i
Jacobs mother did and soon af- ;
- terwards she died? Rosa wa left ;
'alone, save for j Jacob's child '
which she was" parrying when '
they made our. people go down
upon "their faees fend clean! the
public streets. 'Rojsa ' was, kmong
them. She was xiear her' time.
Rabbi, and I.iJl stood ! and
Watched and did) nothing, for I
was following that ' path which
you had chosen for me. . . I was
already a Nazi, so that I might
report to -you anbt help my peo
pjle from inside ftheir enemies'
own ranks. ; i
I "It was a hot day, very hotjj
and they made lo$a go on scrub-!
bing the pavement while they
stood 'around and jeered. And,
When' she faltered, a husky fel
low, in a brown shirt, placed the
fiat of his foot on her back and
pushed so that she fell Upon her
face. The onlookers ' found this:
funny, even- when she weptJ
Well, Jacob's son Was born dead
and Rosa followed him within.
the -hour." : . t i
.(To be continued)
: 4 i
Radio Pirogiramnis
KSLBf SATCaDAT 13M Kc
6:30 Sunriae Salute.
7 JO News.
T:5 Popular Music
30 News.
t: 15 Tune Tabloid.
9.00 Pastor's Call. .
9:15 Popular Music
9:43 Melody Mart.
10. -00 The World This Morning.
10:1S Sine Song Time.
10 30 Popular Music.
11 .-00 Musical Horoscope.
11 JO Value Parade.
lSOS Noontime News. ,
1230 HUlbiUr Serenade.
IS Willamette Valley Opinions.
1230 Popular Music
l.-Ot) Swing School.
1 iX Hollywood Buckerooa. '
2 -00 News.
2 :10 Popular Music
3.-U0 Western Serenade
4:1 News.
430 Teatime Tunes."
4:45 Milady's Melodies.
5:00 Popularity Row.
5:20 Dinner Hour Melodies.
6:00 News.
6:15 War News Commentary.
30 Popular Music.
B 4o Interesting Facta.
T JO Europe Tonight.
135 OSC-Oregon Basketball Game.
:1S-News Tabloid.
8:30 Edwards OldUmers.
100 Hits of the Day.
1030 News
10:45 Lets Dance.
11 :15 Dream Time.
KG W SATURDAY S2 Kc
.-O0 Sunrise Serenade.
6:30 TraU Blazers.
7 O0 News.
7:45 Sara Hayes.
:00 Song Folks.
:15 Women's Clubs.
9 O0 Lincoln Highway.
S30 call to Youth.
10:45 News.
11 :00 Stars of Tomorrow.'
12 KM) News.
1:00 Campus Capers.
130 Boy, Girl and Band.
2 DO The World Is Yours.
3:15 News.
330 Religion In the News.
4:15 News.
4:45 H. V. Kaltenborn.
50 Hotel St. Francis Orchestra.
The Safety Valve
Letters from Statesman Readers
To the Editor:
I am writing this with the
hope of seeing justice done.
Our most worthy governor,
Mr. Charles A. Sprague, went
before the legislature and asked
them to pass a law lifting the
$30 Old Age Pension. Mr.
Sprague knows that prices are
higher than they were and that
there will be a lot of suffering
unless they do raise the Old Age
Assistance.
I have not seen that this
passed; but I see that a lot of
other bills have passed. Shortly
after the legislature' was in ses
sion there were bills put in to
raise the Old Age Pensions. At
first we heard of them quite
often; but now very seldom. It
was the same in the 1939 ses
sion, when they finally came
to a close and the pension bill
failed to pass, I heard one of the
legislators say, "I knew the bm.
wouldn't pass, but we didnt
want the old people to think we
had forgotten them. A very un
kind remark, I must say.
They give Old. Age Pensions
from about $22 to near $30 a
month, say an average of $27
per month. Take those who have
,to pay rent of $9 or $10 which
leaves $17 to $18 for food,
clothes, fuel, etc. In many cases
this Is for the husband and wife.
They can hardly get toothpaste
for their teeth.
.A pension of $27 per month
amounts to $324 a year. Now the
legislators want their pay raised
from $3 per day to,$J per day
for fifty days, for their expenses
the old people can have only
' $324. for their expenses for a
whole year.
Now I do believe their are
some legislators who want to.
do right by the old people, but
some are so selfish they do not
want to do anything'for m,
It is written in the Capital
Journal Saturday the 15th, Pro
. posals to Increase Old Age Pen
sion benefits not seriously con
sidered, in view of efforts to
keep taxes within their present
limits." I presume all the legis
lators pay taxes. So have 'a fot
of these old people paid taxes
and know what it & It is a lot
of these same old people who
have helped to build up this
beautiful state to where it is to
day. Now they can suffer want
while the officials live in lux
ury. ;
The unions want the laborer
to get $24 a week compensation
. while out of work.
X am m favor of paying our
legislators $3 a day for fifty
days or even sixty. I do not
think $3 a day is enough; nei
' ther is $27 a month enough for
the old people. They should have
at least. $40 a month for two.'
How can you expect the God of
all mercy to bless and prosper
a state that is so neglectful of
its Old people? Washington and
other states can find the way
to raise the extra money, for
their old people. A lot of these
old people would far -rather
work for what they get, but they
cannot get the work to do so.
5lO0 National Banv Dane.
Uncle Ezra, f
530 Grand Of Opry.
SAO Truth or Consequences,
a .30 Knickerbocker Playhouse
3S.O0 Victor Hugs Orchestra.
33 News.
H. -oo Hotel BUtmorf Orchestra.
11. -oo News.
UU5 Bal Tabarin Orchestra.
1 s
SIKX SATPIPAY-,U KC.
30 Musical ClpcK.
STrOO BreakfasV'Club.
SUO Our Barn. ;
SA) Amen Corner.'
930 National Fansv and Home
iOMO News.
lO:15 Charmingly We Live.
10 3o Luncheon at th Waldorl.
11 -O0 Metropolitan Opera.
2 am Entractc :
3:45 Curbstone Quiz.
1335 News. e
330 The Va&s Family.
3:45 News. . -
A VO Mescace bf Israel .
4430 America Sings.
3U5 Man and the World.
330 Bishop and the Gargoyle
.vo aong ot xcur.uxe.
6-30 John B. Kenned-.
" & 3S NBC Symphony Orchesl
sw-aewf.
M 0 News.
J8 30 Hotel Edison Orchestra.
a.-OO Sports Forum
:15 Hotel Pennsylvania Orchestra
s' :37 News.
10 .-00 Uptown Ballroom Orchestra.
1030 The Quiet Hour.
11:00 Paul Carson Organist.
12 .V0 War News Roundup.:
I " j
KOrX SATURDAY-4 Kc
60 NW Farm Reporter.
:15 KOIN KJocfc. :
7:15 News.
jJ-JS Consumer News.
IS 30 Cincinnati Conservatory.
S 0 Country Journal.
30 Sunshine Almanac
$0:00 Let's Pretend.
10 :3 Hello Agauiul
1130 Calling All Citizens.
120 NYA Orchestra.
1230 News.
11 :09 Dancing Party.
20 News.
3:00 Report to Nation.
330 News.
i3:45 The World Today.
14.-00 People's Plattorm. .
jS.-OO News. .f
iSU5 Traffic Safety.
530 Gay Nineties.
.55 Elmer Dan. News.
Kids Quizaroo. -;
:45 Saturday Night Serenade.
H 35 Good Guests.'
30 News.
S Marriage Club.
;S30 Leon F. Drews. Organist.
:S.-S Guy Lombardo Orchestra.
:S0 Hit Parade.: ;
.-45 Tonight's Best Buys.
10 .-00 tits Star Final.
10:13 Music to Remember.
10 30 Hal Howard Orchestra.
115 News.
kALK SATURDAY 1JS4 Kc
;i 30 Memory Timekeeper.;:
'tjw news.
; 00 String Along i With Us.
30 New.
.-45 Buyers Parade. j ; f
OO This and That. 5
fl -til Tk. Urvm.-..CU ha V.-.v
10 DO News.
10.45 BBC News.
11 30 Luncheon Concert.
i2:45 News: i
-2 .00 Sunshine Express.
230 News. i
',230 Dramas of Youth.
'4 3 The First Offender.
!&:15 News. t
i3 30 Freddy Martin Orchestra.
30 John B. Hughes. !
r 0:45 Answer Man.
.-70 Churchmans Saturday Night!
IT 30 Better Business Bureau.
1 5 Morton Gould Orchestra.
!:00 Hawaii CaUsTr g
;:OS New. 5 f
;t 30 Freddy Martin. Orchestra
10:00 Eddie Duchin. Orchestra. '
1030 News. I ,
0.45 Phil Harris Orchestra, f
KOACV-SATUKOAY 550 Kc.
S AO News. - ' i
J:15 Co-ed Hour. I
.30 Gallant American Women.
10 DO Weather Forecast. j
0:15 US Army Program. J
030 Junior Matinee. 1
ile The Votes of Industry.
aa.w rvews. . r
J2 :1S Tarm Hour.
20 Camera Club.! r
.2:45 MonOor Views the Hews.
3:13 Swindles to Suit.
3:15-News. s ,
j4 DO Symphonic Half Hour. ; -
4:30 Stones for Boys and Qlrls.
DO On the Campuses. V
,S. -45 Vespers. j
:15 News. '. j.
S 30 Farm Hour, f
sS:05 Basketball OSC T. TTsf O.
- -i
during the legislative session, must have help to keep them Siinday llidio Programs
xw is auj ior nny or say from suffering. - , Cm Paire 10 ' 5
perhaps seventy days; while MRS. IT IL BROWN. - ; ' T
' i