The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, March 21, 1941, Page 6, Image 6

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    i ; mnm MM I
: '. Xo, Favor Sways Ut? No Fear Shalt Awe'
From First Statesman, March 23, 18511
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for
publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited iji this newspaper.
Incentive
The patient is strong enough now to be told
tow sick he was. Actually, of course, he had a
tough idea all along, and the report was read
to him.not because his temporary convalescence
made him able to ; "take, if.' but in order that
he might know what he rnight safely do with
out suffering an immediate and serious relapse.
' Yes, the Pacific Northwest lumber industry
lias been sick. The federal survey directed by
President Dexter M. Keezer of Reed college
and presented by him at a. meeting of lumber
men and labor leaders, of that industry Mon
day in Olympia, reveals that over a 14-year
period its losses actually have exceeded its
ains. Some operators, sometimes, made money.
But counting in all operations for the entire
period from 1927 through 1940, the industry
lo3t money.
j Millions rot board' feet of timber toppled to
the ground and moved to tha mills; band saw
edgers, trimmers and gang saws whined, thou
sands Of men toiled, carloads and ship loads of
lumber were hauled away to build useful
things and the industry's operators were, at
the end of 14 years, worse of f than if they had
just shut down in 1927 and gone fishing.
In 1940 the industry made a little money. It
cost $12 to produce a thousand board feet of
logs, including $5 for 5.8 man-hours of labor,
and the logging operator averaged $1.07 profit.
It cost $17.12 to produce a thousand board feet
of. lumber, including $5.01 for 7.8 man-hours
of labor, and the sawmill operator averaged
$1.29 profit.
That is approximately a 7 per cent profit to
the sawmill operator. And that was in 1940
when prices had advanced 12 per cent over the
1935-39 average. Until late in the year, wages
had lagged behind prices, or the profit would
not have been so great. By December, sawmill
wages were up 15 per cent over the 1935-39
average.
Lumbering is outstandingly one of the indus
tries in which "venture capital" is required.
The risks are great, and that sort of capital de
mands that profits for successful operation shall
be commensurate with the risks. Why then did
lumber operators stay in business those who
did through the depression? Presumably be
cause that was their business.
There is not, for the moment, any moral in
this story. Oh, you can blame the depression
and the reciprocal trade agreements, but all the
remarks that might have been applied to them
have been knocked higher than a kite. Defense
industry demands lumber. The warring nations
need lumber, and buy it when they can get it.
After the war they will need lumber to re
build, and will buy it when they can pay for it.
After that ... , t
But it's good for the lumber industry to ;
know, and for loggers and sawmill workers to
know, and for the general public of the Pacific
Northwest -to know how sick the lumber indus
try has been. Mutual understanding will be
helpful in working out mutualerelationships for
the immediate future, and later on when the
patient shows signs of a relapse. Every living
soul in the northwest has a personal stake in
his state of health.
he had been a European
he wasn't instead 1 of an
tbry before he reached even the eminence of a
foot-note, I
Voltaire, for instance, in a twentieth Century
incarnation, might have, succeeded wilhwit,
plenty of common ense and a high appreciation
of the ridiculous where the Munich police, in
1923, failed utterly. Will Rogers micHt have
turned the trick, if
which we're glad
American genius.
At any rate, laughing Hitler out of the hall
of fame is not so jfantastic-as it sounds. Cer
tainly genuine hurhor has never been! a par
ticularly Prussian, or a particularly (jferman,
characteristic, except in certain portion of the
Rhineland and Austria, where most jl Ger
many's rulers notably do not hail from. Dr.
Goebbels pathetic j attempts to wring j! humor
out of the stolid factory workers of Berlin is
a case In point, I and Wednesday's fairy-tale
episode in Belgrade is even better proof.
'to:; the" 'Yugoslav capital, one of thef news
papers printed a faiiy tale: It was a very good
fairy tale, moreoveif, and one that had point,
so that it was cleai even to the monumental
stupidity of a Prussian commanding officer that
what was intended jwas not something to en
tertain children but iSatire, Humor, Irreverence
aimed at the holies of the holy, the German
reich. Even a FeldmjarschaZ could see that the
Wolf referred to wa Germany, and th0 weak,
sick, cringing Fox ncithing but Italy, theireich's
ally. I
The Germans, so tpe report goes, understood
the point of the article, and, in Victoria's lan
guage, were not aroused. They went to the
point of saying thatj "strong official protests"
would have been made, (about a faiiy tale,
mind you), had not fcrerman-Yugoslavian "ne
gotiations" already become extremely delicate.
This they said in all seriousness, never! realiz
ing that nothing they could possibly del would
make their own position any more ludicrous,
or that their officers fcould look quite so; utterly
ridiculous as when ftanding on their jdignity
ln the presence of an allegory about a lion, a
fox, a wolf and a rabbit, which mentioned
Great Germany not fat all. t
Well, maybe they vjould like to put Aesop on
the blacklist. If they !do. it onlv Droves! that a
regime which fears t,he teller of childfs tales
can hardly be, in th words of its owh press
agents, the great colossus of all time whfch will
moma tne future in its own image.
News Behind
The
By PAUL.
save democracy- , - , r hi
r I A Agra WWmMm
By FRANCIS GERARD-
Chapter 13, donthmed
When Siegfried Kloffer finlsh-
ed. Countess Adelheid leaned
1 back, staring Into the fire, her
white face set, her crimson nails
tapping the (arm of her chair. For
a full three minutes, not one
word was Ispoken and neither
moved. Siegfried felt as though
; he had received his death blow.
When he had seen Adelheid's
look of contempt, something In
him died, something that would
never be reborn. Though he had
known, in his heart of hearts,
that this woman could never be
for him, ye had the dream re
mained alive. . . . Now that was
ended. But there was more to
bis whirling thought than this.
There was something of Imme
diate imparl to be decided. Some
thing less spiritual and more
material, something urgent, im
mediate and ... grim! .
' Adelheid j von Beinhold had
his secret and it would not be
his for long, for she had Wallen
fels blood and she would go
straight to her uncle with the
story; Kloffer's work and tha
plan of Rabbi Ephraim's Coun
cil of Elders would be ruined.
Somehow she must not be al
lowed to communicate with her
' uncle. It wis vital that .". . , ' "
' Kloffer's mouth went dry with ; cared gun and caught her in his
the1" horror of his thought The ' arms as she crippled; then res
situation was clearly aet: The ed her gently on the sofa. De
Grafin von; Relnhold must not libera tely he placed his hand over
leave the flat! It would be lm- . hey hearty . She was quite, dead.
possible to keep her long as a ' For . a long minute ' he stared
prisoner, servants must grow ; down at that atillj white faqVnf
suspicious if refused entry to do then,' citunpling .up' upon' the
though her voice shook, there
was complete finality in her tone.
Siegfried nodded hopelessly
and stood for several moments
with his head bowed, unspeak
ing. Then he istralghtened him
self abruptly and squared his
shoulders.
"Well," he said "since your
mind is made up I will give you
something "to take to your uncle.
General von .WaUenfels."
Adelheid wrinkled her brows
as he lurched past her, walking
out of the room. She waited, ex
hausted by this ghastly Inter
view, for she had loved Sieg
fried and she bad , killed her
love quite deliberately ... the
wound was still there and would
be for a long time to come. .
. She did not look round when
she heard Kloffer come back
into the room. She heard him.
come up and stand behind her
and stm she did not turn.
Had the Countess done so she
would have seen that the man
looked as though he were dying
on his feet. She looked up when .
she heard his voice but still she
did not turn. " , !
"Adelheid mein Ilerz," he
whispered andshot her three
times through the heart.
. Siegfried dropped the , suen-
Just so We Don't Get Behind the Eight (Billion) Ball
io ir BreaErfrast
By R. J. HENDRICKS ' "
MALLQN
Dress-up
Unless Salem's downtown bottleneck is bro
ken through utilization of the present court
house square for retail purposes, the business
district in the "creeping" process characteristic
of such centers will divide and form two with an
"old town" between such is the warning ut
tered by some of the Ten-Year Planners.
Conceivably this might come to pass in an
other half-century or so, especially if Salem's
growth is to be rapid. But the evidence to date
is to the contrary. As we have pointed out more
fully heretofore, Salem's business center has
done some creeping but it has demonstrated an
individualistic tendency to double back upon
itself.
Ninety years ago wheri this newspaper was
born as you are due to be reminded next week
in greater detail Commercial street was thriv
ing but business already had a tendency to con
centrate at its State street intersection. State,
Court, Liberty, High, Chemeketa, Center and
even Ferry street have had their moments to a
greater or less degree but today, no matter how
you figure it, the exact business center is not
more than a block and a half from where it
was in 1851.
Just this morning, following the coincidence
of Spring Opening with the formal openings of
two handsome business structures, it is appro
priate fo take note of the ultra-modern tech
nique which has f facilitated this "doubling
back" tendency and made its continuation all
the .more probable. A considerable number of
rather venerable buildings, sound as to interior
but obsolescent in their exterior appearance,
, have been "dressed up" within the last two
years. Contemporaneously, some of the older
and less substantial buildings have been razed
and modern new edifices have replaced them.
Salem's business district has been brightened
and modernized to a remarkable degree.
Credit for enterprise, up-to-date ideas and
faith in their community and in its present
business icenter1 is. due to the property own
ers and lessees who have participated in this
rejuvenation program which has made the life
of the present retail district, insurable for an
extended period. Their example is to be com
mended.
r ; WASHINGTON, MarcTi 20y-The strangest con
' gressional hearing in many a legislative day was
the house appropriations subcommittee inquiry to
determine if Mr. Roosevelt s re
quest for $7,000,000,000! is jus
tified 1
Wr Secretary Stimson was
callejd to exude official admin
istration light on the Isubject.
He testified: "In the first place
the British submitted a confi
dential list some months ago
of tlieir requirements,"! but he
was hazy about it, conceding
ten minutes later the ist was
furnished "about a month ago
as 1 1 recall it." ji
Asked republican Rfp. Ta
ber: V Has a program ben laid
-out to get the things youl have in mind, or is it ex
pected that you wUl supplement it later?
Stimson: "That is subject, Mr. Taber, to so many
contingencies of war that it is almost impossible
to answer it exactly." !
Mr. Knudsen, the production boss, was called.
"We have a preliminary schedule;" he said, "we
have a sort of forecast Covering the $7,000,000,000,
but it is not in final forpa."
Rep. Cannon asked what credit this government
would get for the maljerials, and whether they
would be inventoried at! the cost of production.
Mr. Knudsen: "I havei't the faintest idea,"
Budget Director Smith! was called. He was asked
how the expenditure would be supervised! . "I do
not think that has been
Reprinting soma 3-21-41
matter from old files
of this column reaching
bade over eleven years:
U m
(Continuing from yesterday:)
"On the slab there is lettered:
This slab marks tha resting
place of Mrs. Elizabeth Gaines,
consort of John P. Gaines and
daughter of Archibald Kinkead
and Priscilla McBride; born at
Versailles, Kentucky, March
13th, 1819; died August 13, 1851.'
"Governor Gaines had stormy
times while he was chief execu
tive of the territory. Political
feelings ran high and deep.
There were "but three regularly
appointed governors while Ore
gon was a territory, but eight
terms were served.
"Joseph Lane was the first
governor, taking his seat and
declaring this a territory March
3, 1849. (That was Saturday.
There is a tradition that Gen
eral Lane arrived late at Oregon
City; late that evening, having
been delayed on the last leg of
bis trip by row boat up the Co
lumbia and Willamette rivers;
but that he was anxious to, make
the official announcement on a
week day while President Polk,
who appointed him, was in of
fice; for on Monday, tha 6th,.
Zachary Taylor was to take his
seat at Washington as President
of the United States; and that
the General hunted up a printer,
wrote the proclamation, and had
it printed, dated the third, Sat
urday; but that the task of set
ting the type and printing the
proclamation was not completed
before midnight. It was like the
Oregon legislature stopping the
clock before 12 Saturday night,
and going' on with legislation
during the early Sunday hours,
as has .been done; many, at least
several : times, to , the visual4
knowledge of this columnist)
"President Polk, who appoint-
hx unmm www
..-".
fern
FtuJ Malloa
Editorial Comments
From Other Papers
finally determined," said
Mr. Smith, "but it is my understanding there will
be some kind of a policy! committee, probably con
sisting of cabinet officers who wiU work at this
program in relation to their own.
Rep. Ludlow: "Where
vast transfer of material
will the records jof this
be kept? In your Office?"
we will have, but the original records will be kept
in the departments with some provision f r cen
tralizing summaries." I
After an hour or so jof this, the congressmen
gave up. "It was apparent that HiUer is not the
only one to be left in thej dark about what ii afoot.
The administration refrained so carefully, from'
tilting its hand that the congressional leader; found
it difficult to muster justifying material for the
open house debate. J
Sedate Chairman Wood rum of the house appro
priations committee solv the problem by ji avoid
ing the mundane matter of fighting implements
to the stars as follows: 1
"Oh freedom! Thou ar not as poets dreain,
"A fair young girl with light and delicatd limbs,
"And wavy tresses rusliing from the cap, etc., etc.,
But) ... "a bearded man armed to the teeth.'
That settled that!
POOR SPORTSMANSHIP
The treatment accorded the
Astoria high school basketball
players and their coach, follow
ing their championship victory
in the state tournament at Sa
lem, was one of the most rowdy
demonstrations that has ever fol
lowed in the wake of amateur
athletic games. It was a dis
graceful exhibition of poor
sportsmanship.
The fact that the Salem city
council and the school authori
ties of the capital city have tak
en immediate steps to investigate
the affair, indicates that there
Is stern disapnroval In official
circles there, and certainly no
one here would entertain a
thought that the actions of these
hoodlums reflects the attitude
of the good people of Salem. But
we suggest to the school author
ities . that they ascertain why
high school students were in the
rowdy mob downtown and to
the city fathers that they learn
. why their police waited two
hours before rescuing the be
leaguered champions and why
another .member of the force
quailed before the rioters and
left two Astorians to rely upon
their own resources to get away
from their abusers.
Willamette university started
this popular tournament and has
' lem has always been the host
tempted to take from the Fish
ermen their hard-earned prize,
which they had won fairly and
squarely from Salem in the de
ciding game of the state tourna
ment. There has been no little senti
ment throughout' the state in
favor of moving the official
state tournament out of Salem
to some other court, either at
Portland, Corvallis or Eugene.
This proposal had been based
primarily upon the lack of fa
cilities in Salem for handling
crowds. The Willamette univer
sity gymnasium balconies are
entirely inadequate for accom-
modation of the Jhrongs of spec
. tators who now flock to basket-ball
games and the growing in
; terest in this sport' promises to
! aggravate the situation more and
more each year.
Now the unsportsmanlike at
titude of Salem high school stu
dents becomes an additional
motive for transferring the tour
nament to some other point.
Salem's reputation for good
sportsmanship has never been
too savory. Time and again Sa
lem athletic teams and support-?
ed Lane, was a Democrat.
Gaines, a Whig, was appointed
by President Taylor (a Whig)
to succeed Lane. His tombstone
says (or Intimates), that he be
gan being Governor In Novem
ber, 1849, and his enemies said
ha began drawing his salary
then, but that Kintzllng JPrit
chettby virtue of his office as
secretary of state, held the office
of governor from June 18 to
August 18, 1850, Lane having
resigned to run for Delegate in
Congress to succeed Thurston,
first Delegate, the latter having
died on his way home to run
for reelection. , .
V m
"Gaines took office August 18,
1850, replacing Pritchett. Pierce
had been elected President, and
Lane, then Delegate in Congress,
had himself appointed Governor
of Oregon to replace Gaines, as
Gaines had replaced him.
"But Lane had been renomi
nated for Delegate in Congress,
and on his arrival from Wash
ington he took the office of Gov
ernor and served three days,
May 16 to 19, 1853, when he re
signed and George L. Curry,
Secretary, by virtue of his of
fice, became chief executive,
serving till December 2, 1853,
when John W. Davis was in
stalled, having been appointed
by President Pierce. (Oregon's
Congressman and Governor
Pierce's father was a first cousin
of President Pierce.) Davis re
signed to take effect August 1,
1854, and Curry again became
Governor ex officio.
v v
"He served as such till No
vember 1, 1854, when he was
appointed Governor by Presi
dent Pierce,' and held the place
till March 3, 1859 the last of
the territorial terms, giving way
to the first Governor elected by
the people, John Whiteaker;
Oregon having been admitted to
the Union as a state. Thus the
territory had eight terms, with
only three regular appointees in .
the Governor's office.
"Gaines upon his arrival found
warm receptions awaiting him.
He was a Whig and Oregon was
then Democratic Lane was a
popular idol, and his friends did
not relish the Whig Governor
foisted upon them. The Repub
lican party had not been born.
It was the people's party In
Oregon that gave the battle to
Lane.
V.
t TThe political enemies of Gov- '
ordinary housework.
Now, particularly now, on the
eve of the time when he would
strike, almost at zero hour, he
could not afford interference.
Adelheid j von Relnhold came
to her feet. She looked him
firmly in the face. ,
"I am going straight to Gen
eral von Wallenf els," she said.
"I will giyt you that time in
which to disappear.
To her astonishment, she saw
that his eyes were filled with
tears. .1
"You would do that for me?"
huskily, and added
ou are more gener-
IT
his1
esnair
he asked
strangely.
ous than
TheC
taw in
man in d
"I must !so, she murmured.
-Nol No!" he cried, his voice
almost hvstericaL 1 ,n
floor beside the sofa, he burled
his face in his hands. Not a
sound came from him, but his
whole body jerked at intervals
with the terrible tearless sobs of
utter inconsolable grief.
There was little wind that
night and the water in the broad
expanse of Sinclair's Bay moved
sluggishly in an oily swell as a
long, dark elliptical object' broke'
the surface. A fitful moon shone
palely on the rapidly, appearing
decks of the submarine. In a
top of her
tess shuddered as she
eyes the soul of a
few moments .the
' -a-
long, cigar-shaped hull appeared
moving, slowly through the wa-,
ter towards the . coast, her en
gines purring almost soundless
ly.' Gradually ! she decreased
speed. - Presently the mysterious
submarine was .motionless, save
for the slight rocking of her con-
was f oUowed ; immediately by a
was frightened, but she did not
move from where she stood and
he lowered his hands again,,
having raised them imploringly.
She could see that he was strug
gling to speak.
: "Adelheid," he said, UI realize
I have no right to ask this, but
can you consider remaining
silent about what you have
learned?" I
"Suent?! she repeated, as
though such- a course had never
occurred tj her. "How could I?
My duty to my people Is as plain
as evidently yours is to the
Jews." '
"Nothing I can say will per
suade youl not to tell General
von Wallenf els of this?"
"Nothing," she said and,
second and a third, and the lid
of the conning -tower rose upon
its hinges. The upper portion of
a man clad in a high-necked,
thick, white sweater appeared.
With a pair of night-glasses ha
scanned the bay, givinga more
careful scrutiny to the lights of
the coast guard station to the
south; Presently he ducked down
; out of sight; shortly after, the
conning-tower; began to erupt
.men. -: ; 1
Within a 'few " minutes the
busy figures had assembled a
collapsible dingy which was
lowered into the waters of Sin
clair's bay. '.
(To be continued)
CadlD Pirogirainn)s
ers nave oven. cnwnHiea in mix- s ernor Caine . mnmM hi
ups similar .to that which oc-y weak points; . . . they heaped
KOIN CBS FRIDAY Ml Ke.
6:00 NW Farm Reporter.
:is KOIN Klock.
7:1 New.
S :1S Consumer News.
8 JO The Goldbergs.
S:5 By Kathleen Norris.
9:00 KaU Smith Speaks.
t:15 Wheri a Girl Marries.
0 JO Romance of Helen Trent.
9:43 Our Gal Sunday.
10 AO life Can Be Beautiful.
10.19 Women In White.
' 10 JO Right to Happiness.
11:00 Big Sister.
11 dS Aunt ! Jenny.
11 JO Fletcher Wiley. ". .
11 :4S Home of the Brave.
12:00 Martha Webster.
12:19 News.
12 JO Kate i Hopkins.
12 :43 Woman of Courage.
. 1:00 Portia Blake.
1:15 Myrt and Marge.
1 JO Hilltop House.
1 :45 Stepmother. . - .
l.OO Singin Sam.
2 -.23 Hello Again.
2 :45 Scattergood Baines.
S .-00 Young Dr. Ma lone.
3:15 Hedda Hopper's Hollywood.
SUtO Joyce Jordan.
4:00 The Second Mrs. Burton.
4:19 We the Abbotts.
4 JO Nwb.
5 JO The World Today.
8:45 New.
6:00 Sensational Quis. .
S JO Playhouse.
7:00 Let Y Have Tun.
7 JO Al Pearce's Gang.
SUX) Amo n Andy.
8:15 lanngr Roes.
JO Johnny Presents.
9:00 Kate Smith.
10. DO Five Star Final.
10:45 Nightcap Yarns.
11 J0 Manny Strand Orchestra
11:85 News.
KGS KBC TKXO AT 429 K4 ;
city and has always .been repre- cuJred,ta SaJcm Saturday night ridicule upon his past military
S.-00 Sunrise Serenade.
II'.
Mr. Woodrum also settled the matter on where'
the $7,000,000,000 is to
with the formula in his
jcome from in accordance
Subcommittee hearings. In
his speech he asked himself: "How are wf going
to pay the bill' and he
not know. i
answered himself! "I do
.afano4;;-v .. -;V:. i.
tt has always been an open question whether
Hitler would ever have got anywhere at all,
touch less where he is now, jf people ten years
ago had laughed at him about twice as hard as
they did." Naturally conditions in 5ermany; in,
gay, 1930, were no laughing matter, even to the
most . humorously inclined individuals of the
relch or anywhere else.; Still, HiUerimself was
S3 preposterous then, and still is in so many
ways, that a thoroughly organized debunking
campaign might- have' laughed, him but of his.-;
sented by creditable teams who
have won the state .title oftener
than those' of any other high
school. Oddly enough, perhaps,
Astoria has beaten Salem the
only three times thy have
reached the finals together but
the defeated teams would be
the last to say they 'were not
beaten fairly."
Those : who were responsible
for the disorderliness and the
rough treatment accorded visit
ing . victors have done a dis
service to their community and
they need . disciplining for the
sake of its good name.- Astor-ian-Budget.
The treasury department recently ordered many
thousands of zinc address plates. These werjs to be"
of propaganda promoting
finance the defense pro-
used to address packages
sales of baby bonds to
gram. 1
The department was soon shocked to hear that
Mr. Knudsen's OPM declined to let them have their:
zinc plates. -; J j .
Reason: That much ziqc would supply 10 bomb
ers, and the , bombers sire more important than
address plates designed to sell bonds to raise the
money for purchase of tjie bombers. ' j
(Distributed by King Features Snydicate, Incf. re- ;
production la whole or in part saicuy prohibited. ' i
; OVERDEVELOPED SPLEEN
Salem Saturday night was the
scene of a miniature riot which
broke out after Astoria high
school had toppled the vaunted
Capital city, basketball team
from its pedestal in capturing
the state high school basketball
trophy, regarded by the Vikings
as their private property.
A mob of Salem rowdies as
sailed a small group of Astorians
in a Salem restaurant , and at-
Local controversies now and
( then could be ascribed to over
: exuberance of i youth and for-
given, but when enthusiasm gets
out of bounds at state tourna
ments such as that of last week
it is "- time something is done
about It. Albany Democrat
Herald. The -Safety
Valve
Letters from Statesman
Readers
DYNAMIC SPEAKER
To the Editor: Friends of the
west We have heard speeches, '
debates, discussions, c o n f er
ences, etc., without ending. But
if you really, sincerely, want to '
bear one f , America's most .
dynamic speakers, one of Amer- ;
lea's foremost American gentle-)
men, listen; in on KEX 3 p.m.
Sundays. I assure you, you shall
not be disappointed. This gen
tleman is the Most Reverent
Monsignor Fulton Sheen - of
Washington, DC '
MRS. M. DABNEY.
career, . . '. accused him of
everything dishonest, from
drawing his family stores from
the quartermaster's department
at Vancouver to raising the fig
ures . in auditing Cayuse war
claims, and spending the money
for political uses,' etc.
"J esse Applegate said Gover
nor Gaines assaulted A. Bush
In the street on two occasions;
once for accidentally jostling
him, and again for something
he said in The Statesman, of
which Mr. Bush was the founder
and then editor and owner. The 4
Statesman was a loyal Lane pa
per men, lined up with the
Democratic forces (though loyal '
JO Trail Blazers.
T:00 New.
7:45 Sam Hayes. - .
8.-00 Stars o Today. V
8:15 Against the Storm.
8:45 David Harum.
9 JO Voice of Experience.
9:45 Modern Meals.
10:15 Benny Walker's Kitchen.
1 0 JO Sophisticated Ladies.
105 Dr. Kate.
11900 Betty Crocker. .
11:1! Arnold Grimm's Daughter.
11 JO Valiant Lady. -
11:45 Ight of the World.
IS AO Story of Mary Marlin.
11:15 Ma Perkins.
12 JO Pepper Young's Family.
12:49 Vic and Sade.
1 sOO Backstage Wife.
1:15 BtetlS Dallas.
1 JO Lorenzo Jones.
1:45 Young Winder Brown.
SjOO Cirl Alone.
1:15 Lonei Journey. m
S JO The Guiding Light.
1:48 -Life Can Be Beautiful. ,
las Wews.
, 4 J5 Stare of Today.
B0 CocktaU Hour. .
S:15 Jack Armstrong.
4
to the Union cause and later in
favor of all the measures repre- sjo infotmation pieasa,
senxea oy me uncoin aammis- ia rreryntan's Thestre.
irauon.
"But the other side lampooned
the Lane adherents, too, most
bitterly.
''William L: Adams, in a
namnriUf eixrVi I r tss oTTsrf TT fT
SWMlWIUVSt T14MVU SM'4v W4SMVS - . . a
Populi,' made a notable contri- . li:?Bai Tab Orchestra
bution to what came to be known I xcsx nbc raioAr u9 JCe.
as the -Oregon style- . SSlk mur ,
tewnunued xomorrow.j -..- a financial service.
vicinH at TOeetiST.
1 dO Alee jTempieton Time.
' S-OO Fred! Waring Pleasure Time.
8:18 Armebtr Cruises.
8 jo Death Valley Days. 4
90 University Explorer.
918 Palladium Bulroom Orcbestra.
10K10 New Flashe.
10 JO St. Francis Bote! Orchestra.
110 News.
These schedules are supplied sy
the respective stations. Any varia
tions noted by listeners are due ta
changes made by lae statloas without
notice te this newspaper.
7 JO Breakfast Oub.
AO Amen Corner.
9 JO National Farm and Home. 1
10.00 News.
10 JO Charmingly We Live. V
10:49 Associated Press News.
11 ."00 Music Appreciation.
11 .-00 Orphans of Divorce.
lias Amanda of Honeymoon Htl
11 JO John's Other Wife.
11:45 Just Plain Bill.
1:00 Mother of Mine.
1:1 55 Market Reports.
1 :49 Curbstone Quiz.
10 The Quiet Hour.
3:09 Sam Cordon, Kibitzer.'
1:15 The Bartons.
3:30 The Munros.
4:19 European News.
4 JO America Sings.
5 A5 Tom Mix.
8. -00 When Evening Comes.
6 JO John B. Kennedy. - . ,
J5 Your Happy Birthday.
T AO Tight,
T:45 News.
.00 Hotel Edison Orchestra.
8 Je-Mtelirhlted Horizons. ..: t
9. -00 Gang Busters. , !
9:30 Skiing Time.
10.30 Broadway Bandwagon. :
11. DO This Moving World.
11:15 Florenune Gardens Orchestra.
1U7 Portland Police Reports.
UjOO War News Roundup, '
-. I
KALfc MBS FRIDAY U89 Ka,
8 JO Memory Timekeeper. 1
TrOO News.
8:00 Haven of Rest.
SJO News.
' 8:49 Buyer's Parade. -1
. 90 This and That: ia
? 9 JO The Woman's Side of the News
' 9.-45 Keep Fit to Musku 1
10. -00 John B. Hughes. ' .
Jo:-Bachelors Children. ;
110 Friendly Neighbors.
11:19 Concert Gems.
11 JO Philadelphia Symphony.
1 :19 News. -
1 JO Johnson TamUy. . ;
S.-00 American SchooL
1 J0 News. - i ",. Ti
3 .DO Your Portlsnd.
3:39 Down the Mississippi.
4 JO Castles in the Air.
8:19 News. n ' - , , .- ' 'i'-
9 JO Shatter Parker Circus.
S.-49 CapUln Midnight. -8:15
Fulton Lewu. jr. . '
JO John B. Hughes. .
- 70 Ray Gram Swing. . . .
- T:19 Jimmy Allen. : x . - ,
T JO Lone Ranger. "
8 .00 Mc Kinney and Company.
JO I Want a Divorce.
- 40 News.
JO Slumber Boat. - 1
10 DO Henry King Orchestra. '
10 Jo New.
U . DO Leon Monica Orcbestra.
KOAC FRIDAY Ke.
9:00 News.
9:15 The Homemakers Bour.
10 DO Weather Forecast. -10:15
Cavalcade of Drama.
11 JO Music of the Masters.
UDO News.
11:18 Farm Hour.
1 DO Club Woman's Half Hour.
3:45 Monitor Views the News. :
3:15 Homes on tha land.
5:45 News.
4 JO Stories for Boys and Girls.
5 DO On the Campuses i
8:45 Vespers.
8:15 News
JO Farm Hour.
1 .00 School of Forestry.
JO Excursions te Science. -
DO Library Log.
JO School of Secretarial Science.
' 9,15 Office of Dean of Men. -