y!: - - ' - ; F" it ' JJl :':' lV -4 ; jpNMt tSSt - "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Axof From First Statesman, March 28. 1851 esmaft THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES Ai SPRACUE. President I Member of ; The Associated Press v :-;--:i:;r :Z:';' The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to ft or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. C The Betrayal .-) That Italy, under Mussolini, has beenide U livered, bound, sagged and half-starved, into h the hands of the German dictator has been gen s' eral knowledge for many months. That, like-; wise, the country wider Mussolini . has been : going from bad to worse for as long as it has . been in the war has also been generally trur '; rent information. But what has caused this disintegration in fascism the political monu . ment to endure for the next nTiUenium -and the political social decay in all Italy have hot been ' fully explained; nor, certainly, has the political future of a country so desperately in need of peace, good will and assistance been fully ana ; , lyxed. 4 . . : I Certain studies have been made, however, ;- and among the best is the series of articles re cently published under the general title of "In side the Waf" by Saville Davis, European correspondent of the Christian Science: Monitor : nd long a resident in Italy. Of the presence of the Germans in Italy, he says: ' This means that today, for the first time since the war began, the Italian people are being brought face to face with their German overlords. Knowing the depth of their national pride, I have no doubt as to their reaction. From now on, the second great historic struggle for Italian national unity begins. I The earlier struggle the great Risorgimehto which swept downhe past century brought out H the best in the Italian people. It may now serve to renew their heroic past. This at least is the remaining hope of those Italian patriots whom I left behind in their dark est hours. They need that ray of hope!. Their , immediate outlook is black indeed. Davis finds that Mussolini has made the culminating error of his already spotted career by entering the war and surrendering himself to the reich. The fact itself is more important than questioning whether the duce, in doing so, was a militarist from the start, or merely an opportunist; it means that his regime, sooner or later, is doomed because of the very furies Mussolini has himself aroused. But the Italian people he finds to have little understanding of the political problem facing them, and little real prospect of finding a solution which will stop the present disin tegration. "It is important to understand, then, that a lot of Italians still have fascism deeply em bedded in their mentalities. So much so, that thejk cannot conceive of an alternative. Democracy, so the intellectuals among them Carolina, the navy's first battleship since 1923, $ went onto the official navy list. The army was perhaps 10 per cent prepared for combat; and in the proportion of its ac-1 complishment, it outclasses even the navy. Last 4 May there were 227,000 regulars, and 235,000 ; officers and men in the national guard, largely I without extensive training. The army announced i as of April 10, 1941, that it comprised 487,000 1 enlisted men and officers in the regular army; 286,000 in the. national guard; 38,000 in the of-jj ficers reserve corps, and 370,000 men called up 1 under the selective service act of last August. The total number of men is now 1,185,600, and the army's preparedness for battle is higher1, than at any time since the World war. f. As to the army's supply, that, too, is well ahead of 1940. The navy has received the bulk of the domestic airplane output reserved for home defenses; the army, however, has 4000 planes as compared with 2800 a year ago, and has 6180 officer pilots to fly them. A year agojj the army had 10 light and 18 medium-weight tanks; today the daily production of light tanks is six, and by midsummer will be 15. Five med- j ium tanks per working day will soon be achieved; the quality of the tanks themselves is superior to that of the tanks of any other nation. The army's supplies of combat cars, Garand j rifles, machine guns and powder are now fully, assured, either by new productive units brought ! into use as in the case of powder, or of old) iweapons rapidly augmented by newly manu-j factured equipment in the case of machine? guns. The major bottleneck, indeed, is artillery, both field and anti-aircraft. Production of both classes of items is still slow, and is not rising as J raipdly as might be hoped from the tenor off the daily news. J -Production of all kinds of war materials,:! -. . ... TT in brief, is far advanced over a year ago: the KJTS. army and the navy are both prepared to per- where Tabitha Brown found she I'll I1IF1MJ III II 11 11111-WD.MlMt . I . By BARRETT WILLOUGHBY Chapter 1 Continued Her small, bead, held proudly was " covered with short silky curls that glinted golden-auburn in the sun. Her. eyes were the kind Russian's call - "mermaid eyes" S clear gray-green under dark lashes that turned up a little at the ends. "Go on, lamb." The -Captain, who had turned to look at something out of the window, suddenly reached back - for his marine glasses and focus- , ed them on the waterfront. Sondra rose and looked , out. - There, on the wharf, a group of workingmen stood listening to - a tall woman whose' high-headed air and commanding gestures brought a cry of surprise from Sondra. A - Surely that cant be-" . She caught up her own glasses and brought the woman's figure close. White hair, dark arrogant face, rakish felt hat and tweeds in the latest mode. "But it is! Dynamite,' it's old Miss Jacque line Reynall. ;: She must -- have come in by plane last night. What in the world do you sup pose brought her home without a word of - warning, after two years In Florida?" - " The ' Captain . snapped "No concern of ours!" and shoved , the binoculars -back on the ta ble. "Come, let's have a look at what you've been writin'. Step lively, confound it! Step lively!" Der Fuehrer Has His Complex-"Me und Zeus!" Bits for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS form their alloted tasks in case of an actual emergency, and with some fair chance of being I successful. Only a breakdown, in the people now responsible for production, both factory owners.; and employes, can now prevent the final crea-,? tion of the largest military power in the worldl by this nation. . . 1 News Behind The News 1 By PAUL MALLON (Distributed by Xing Features Syndicate. Inc.. re production in whole or in part strictly prohibited-) nrictnvrinvM a :l ia a . ... i 1 , ... . .... . . . nnomiiuiun. niuu i n new uciuuc ?, nave rguea wun me iar into tne nignt, can 5 up scheme based on subcontracting is about j wujjr kiuw in a country wnere iiDerxy nas deep roots. In Italy, the government and the es tablished church have done the peoples' think-v ing for them, and told them how to think, for so long that their intellectual fibre is weak. '"Fascism genuinely tried to improve 1 the physical lot of the people, to be sure; and it accomplished some very remarkably things along this practical line. But it didn't j improve the people themselves, merely the physical surroundings, and this was fatal. '"Fascism gave more bread and social serv ices, low-cost housing, and electrified railroads. But it deliberately, for its own political purpose, stultified the ability of the people to think and become self-reliant. By habit, today, the bulk of Italians crave authority, and are compelled merely to hope that next time, the authority will not be militaristic and Germanophile, and undo everything by going to war. i "As for the Italian people, it will take much time for them to work their way through the rest of their modern inferno. .Passive resistance against the Germans may be a long, hard road, depending for its degree of success on the out come of the war. And even after the war, the Italians will have to go right on wrestling with their political salvation, overcoming their po litical backwardness, undoing the damage of 18 years of "abusing the mind and all its works." "Those who know the Italians and wrish them well can only remember that there was an end to the inferno. "WhentVergil led Dante finally to the end of this symbolic region, "We mounted up, he first and I second. Till through a round opening I saw some of The beauteous things which Heaven j Bears, and, thence we "came forth to see again the stars.' 1 Progress It has been nearly a year since, during the days of the French and British march to Calvary through northern France, the president sought to calm the." awakening fears of this nation by his soothing talk of an army," and a second navyj still "on order' The effect of the speech was not to allay fear, but rather to arouse the nation to a full sense of his sadly depleted defenses; and as surely as anything could be, it was the ftrst impetus given the American effort since to prepare itself for any encounter on the sea, on the land in the air. j In that eleven months there has been much travail, first in authorizing production, then in organizing it, and finally in getting it started in actual terms of foundries, forges, assembly lines and testing grounds. The problem Is not entirely solved by any manner of means ? but as the progress of events grows steadily more ominous it is comforting to know that a healthy , start, at the very least, has been made. The United States navy at the veiry outset ' last May was 80 per cent prepared for combat with a single enemy, or several enemies grouped '.:. f .-i -.v. r t llll !! 1IM i Paiil Halloa to be sprung. Messrs. Knudsen, Biggers and Mehor-s nay slipped off to Boston a few days ago to work? out a New England angle. A' sub-contracting o r g a n i zation started by the defense contract 5 service commissioner, Robert L. I Mehornay, is nearly completed. His 36 district offices will bej opened shortly in federal .re- serve and branch banks. Dis-f. trict managers (local business men all) are' being chosen fori these salaried jobs to work under 13 coordinators who will receive $1 a year. : The idea is! to cut every possible defensel contract down by sub-contracts! machine in the country is working 24 hous a day. It sounds good, yet a number of officials in, the defense commission and most of the war de- partment are against it, or but mildly interested.! That is, they are against forcing defense contract-! ors to make sub-contracts and believe that unlesst force is used there will be little sub-contracting.!; They contend convincingly that forced sub-contract- ing would break every contract they have, reliev- ing the defense manufacturer of personal responsi- bility for fulfillment of orders on time. In theirj view it would promote delay rather than speed. I 2 I The new dealers are going to stick to theirj argument against further increases in steel prices despite wage increases! until public . interest dies! . down at least. They figure this way: . I Net earnings of the steel industry last year? amounted to $281,000,000. The ten cents n hour TOuflV S GnrflCtl had a capital of one picayune: S S (Concluding from yesterday:) "One day, after having been comfortably established in the first residence for whites erected on the site of what was to be named Salem,' Grandma Tabitha Brown, taking stock of the scanty remnants of her belong ings salvaged from the flood waters of the Umpqua canyon, felt something hard in a glove finger. "This had worried her along the hungry way, and here under the- , welcome roof of her . new -home' she found" the bothersome thing was a picayune, a New Orleans coin, worth about six and a quarter cents. "That was her sole saved and available capital, and she used it to buy three needles. "Then she traded some of her old clothes to the Indian women, who, with their tribes, were quite numerously encamped on and around the site of Salem, for buckskin, and began making gloves, for men and women; ar ticles sorely needed. "Her little industrial and busi ness enterprise thrived. By the spring of 1847, she. had earned and saved, over $30, "That was her sole capital when she went to the site of For est Grove, where she opened a boarding school in a log house, that became the nucleus of Tual atin Academy, that grew into Pacific University. Soon she added another house, with the help of friends, and took care of the orphaned and half orphaned children from off the plains. She wrote', in 1854, when she was nearing 75, that she had: S " 'A white frame house, rented at $100 a year, eight other lots worth $150 each; eight cows and a number of young cattle; that she rented her cows 'for their ' milk and half their increase; that she had over $1100 cash due her; besides $400 she had devoted to Pacific University, and $100 she gave to the Academy three years before." She said: " 'This much I have been able to accumulate by my own in dustry, independent of my chil dren, since I drew six and a fourth cents from a finger of my glove.' " S "She was a remarkable wom an. Volumes might be added. One more outstanding thing: In 1855. t Col.,,T. B.Osrnelius, then a cap tain, was nlisting Company, D, Oregon Volunteers, to join ICol. J. W. Nesmith's regiment going to the Yakima Indian war. W. C. Painter, color bearer, wanted a flag. Grandma Brown, with the aid of her girls in her boarding school, made a flag, said to be the first American flag made in Oregon, with 21 stars upon the field, and it was carried in that Indian war, and several more, and was up to a late date the property of the family of Colonel W. C. Painter, Walla WaU. Wash. "Grandma Brown was the great grandmother of Mrs. A N. Bush, deceased, Salem, of Frank Hughes and Judge L. H. McMa han of Salem, and former State Senator Mary Strong Kinney of Astoria. S "Pr ingle creek, Pringle school district, Pringle schoolhouse, Pringle road, are among the names handed down from the Pringle family here, and this nomenclature extendi 1 to other parts of Oregon." So ends the report of the gist of the talk, about "Grandma" Brown. Pringle Falls, Deschutes county, on the Deschutes river, was named for Octavius M. Pringle, who went from Salem to become1 a settler there. .The falls had been called the Fish Trap, because the Indians from time immemorial fished there, lying on the ground and grasping the fish in the gills as they swam up through the shallow channels. The Pringle children were Vir gilia, heretofore mentioned; Al- bro, who married Mary Owens; Sarelia, married to Rev. C H. Northrup; Ella, married to Judge -C D. Young; Emma, married to John Hughes, Salem, and Octa vius, who married Emaline Craft Mr. Hughes, at the time of his death, in 1903, who had for many years beenj a leading grocer and a foremost 'resident of the capital city, was said to have . owned the then oldest business concern in Salem, excepting that of The Statesman newspaper. Members of the Salem Wom an's club started the Salem pub lic library; members of the Brey man families were instrumental in getting the site for; the build ing, but Mrs. A. N. Bush, who had been Lulu Hughes, was largely responsible for getting the money from tht Carnegie foundation that paid for the li brary building, and she gave much aid to many other worthy objects in her home city. CHAPTER TWO Dynamite had a way of turn ing crusty at the- mention of ' Miss Jacqueline's name that made Sondra lose patience with ; him. But by the time ahe re turned to' the.. window with the manuscript her temper was gone. She felt again that won dering anticipation of the un known which the advent of Miss Jacqueline never failed to arouse in her. Something was going to happen. Something always did . happen when that proud and arrogant spinster returned from her wanderings to her big white house on Tea Garden HilL Sondra realized, obscurely, that what really stirred, her was Miss- Jacqueline's connection with Jean Reynall, a slim, dark boy who had been the hero of her childhood. His father was Miss Jacqueline's foster son, . adopted in an era when maiden ladies did not go in for that sort - of thing. But with her custom ary disdain of public - opinion. Miss Jacqueline had come back from :- one of : her very early I cruises carrying the infant in her arms. She had reared him successfully, put him - through , Annapolis, and when he, a lieu- - tenant . commander, died ' soon' after the world war, she had brought home his orphaned son, Jean, 11 .years old. Sondra was only five at the time, yet she remembered vivid ly everything that had to do with Jean Reynall. Their first meeting occurred one morning on the snowy street In front of the old log cathedral of St Mi- chaeL She, was' on her way to kindergarten, with the fat Creole housekeeper Pol ena, going ahead' to sweep snow from her path, . when the , new . boy had over taken them, dragging a red sled. "Hello, little 'girl!" He had a friendly," eager voice. "Wont rou let me haul afoul to school?" J Pol ena, whirling on him with broom upraised, shouted: "Get away from us, you Reynall ras- cal! How dare you speak to an CMoore?" - . -' "Jean!" a crisp voice cut in. And there stood Miss Jacqueline, tall, silver-haired, wrapped in mink furs; 'her Japanese cook behind her. with a market bas ket "Come with me, Jean. Let this child proceed." . The boy raised his mittened . hand saluting authority, ?but stood his ground. Sondra flung herself flat oh the sled clutching its edges. "I won't proceed!" she yelled. -I want to ride with this boy." Indians and whites gath ered in a grinning circle about them. With each attempt Polena made to drag her , off, Sondra yelled ' and . kicked more vigor ously. Finally Miss . Jacqueline snapped, '"Stubborn brat Just like her old grandfather." And . turning, she swept arrogantly through the spectators, who re- , spectfully made way for her. (To be, continued) E3adio Pirosrainnis Kc. Editorial Comments From Other Papers . I increase, applied to the 603,000 employees of thejt industry on a 40-hour week basis would cost $125,- 424,000 a year not counting overtime. This meansl By LIIJLIS L. MADSEN M.G. Asks when to divide rougniy uie earnings of the steel industry would- .her chrysanthemums and cul be cut in half by the wage increases. tural directions. The new dealers have an idea the earnings! Divide at once. Take the strong cut will be even less because of expanded opera -j shoots from the outside and tions since the middle of last year.1 By taking the? plant. They must have rich last half 1940 earnings, they boost their earnings! ,'soil and constant feeding dur estimates for this year up to $360,000,000. On that; ing the growing period, basis they conclude the wage increase will cut Use a balanced fertilizer' In' earnings only $46,000,000 roughly one-seventh, jj feeding. A 6-10-4 Is considered But what the new dealers are overlooking en- a good combination for chry tirely is the tax increase shortly to be enacted byi santhemums. That is six parts congress. Some new deal senators have said; nitrogen, 10 parts phosphate and publicly this tax increase should be 100 per centi four parts potash. Do not ferti ln which case steel, coal and all the other industries lire when the plants are dry. in which wage increases recently have been ne-S Water them thoroughly a ne gotiated will find themselves again in the red (steel tie while before applying was in it 5 of the last 10 years.) j You have to test your soil to j g be sure you are applying the - Si right amount rvf fartiltM,- . One manufacturer "caught in this vise of ln- ply regularly to keep in healthy ; recommendations renewed creasing wages against an immovable i price ceil-f. condition. If -the nlanta r as follows:- too rank then you are feeding too much. Water a little more and stop feeding for a short time. ; j . . M.C.C--If you" will send-me a self -addressed envelope I will send you the name of a violet grower. I am not permitted to give the names, of commercial growers in this colunm. , GJ, Wants to know If : hr LET SALEM GIVE PROTECTION From Salem comes the news in a press dispatch that the state board of control has protested to the city of Salem against an oil company's plans to erect: a service station at Center and Capitol streets, adjacent to state property. Center street it. may be noted, is the second street north from Court on which the capitol faces while. Capitol, rurn ning north and south, borders the east side of the block on which the new state building is to be constructed. Putting it an other way .this service station location is two blocks north and one block east of the capitol. With that for an introduction let us quote from the second re port of the1 state capitol recon struction commission as follows: "The commission in its first report made certain recommen dations regarding the control of building in the vicinity of the capitol group. That portion of the report is repeated here and ing, has been complainirig the only alternative ef-i? fered him by the government's course is whether tot turn his business over to Hitler or Henderson." An-? other is insisting Mr. Roosevelt has ! amended his: promise that no one would make a profit out oft defense to read: "No one except labor unions, shall1 profit from-defense." . Even workers will pay ' portion of their increased earnings' to the govern-" ment in increased taxes, but the unions pay bom taxes. '. When defense money reaches them, it sticksJ public will have to py in case further enlargement of the pub lic grounds is desired. There is .no reason why private interest should be advantaged by these developments. There is every reason why the statej in the in-1 terest of all the people and of " the taxpayers whose contribu tions make these developments possible, should control them. The commission, therefore, rec ommends the enactment by the legislature, if it Is possible, and, if not, by the city of Salem, of regulations severely j restricting building development and pro perty use within at least 1500 feet in a northerly direction from Court street 1 and at least 500 feet to the east and the west of Summer street' " j " .. . We believe that the legislature . has ample authority to enact the building restrictions that were thus proposed. Such, at least is" the accepted law in another state ' of which we have knowledge. If it has failed to exercise its power . the Salem city council should give the state the protection It needs. Salem, certainly, should be proud of its capitol group and should want to preserve a pro per setting. Senate Joint resolu- ' tion No. 19 of the 1939 legislature proposed city action. t should, be 'r A dangerous threat to capitalism would be nre- sented by tins wage-price squeeze play" if the newl primroses will go to seed and if dealers were permanently serious. But it has al- the seed win r in a single ocean. Since that time it has become irujw been considered good temporary politics foc Just leave one of the flower 1 00 rvr cent ready for ha tile on th mrfrs statesmen to favor wage Increases and ODDOse orice atalka on shm fh. to.. j Increases, just as they favor government expendi-1; ther. Cut off the others at the hires and oppose taxes. The taxes usually corned base of the plantsTLet this seed along later, when public attention has been diverted ripen' thoroughly and p c kit from the cause. . just as the pods are ready to In my opinion an increase In the prices ofj burst Then sow the seed at steel, coal and other wage-increase ecjmmodities once. You should have plants wfll be coming before long. - -r - ready to bloom next sorln. , - 100 per cent ready for battle on the surfaos of the ocean, underneath it and in the fir above. The navy now comprises 324 ships ; of sorrvs 1,288,000 tons, in addition' to approximately 1?5) auxiliaries ranging from fast sea-going tankers . to mosquito boats. In the last year 25 destroy' ers were commissioned, and last week the North " The new capitol building and the other public buildings in the vicinity, if the group plan goes forward, will create a beau tiful public center in the city of Salem. These buildings wfll be taken. Bend Bulletin. the resort of many visitors to the ' - ' . . j city and they will house, dur- . . .--,'..- ing the day, large numbers of ' You cannot realize the effic- state employes. Such conditions iency of those panzer divisions always lead to the development . till you look at the 'map and re- of business opportunities in the alize that they have threaded vicinity and it Js to be expected their way through the 'eonso- that private business: will, wish nants ; in Zagreb. : Rjaauiavae. to take advantage of such oppor- Shkodarcv, Skoplje, Karvdlkzar A la tfi A a-k ! trinities here. On the other hand. the state should wish to control development in the vicinity, of this government headquarters so that the beauty and the dignity, of the setting may be preserved and.no values created that the and Duvrocknk. The only hope " the whites have is that the trac tors win bog down and get tangled up when they come to AmphilokJtrghia and Zakyn- thorpJc aV4 A - a . ous v ..unoryperuil. tab KSLM THURSDAY 1394 C 50 Sunrise - .Salute. 7:00 News in Brief. 7:05 Oldtime Music. 7 JO News. ' ' .,.- ) 1:45 Jerry Sears Orchestra. :30 Tabloid. 9:00 Pastor's Call. t:15 Jimmy- Lunceford'a Orchestra. 9:45 Melody Mart. 10. -00 The World This Morning. . 10J5 Today's Tribute. V 10:30 Women-' In the News. " " 10:39 Ths Homespun Trio. 11 .-00 Musical Horoscope. 1150 Prof. Robert Wilson. 11:4 Value Parade. 12 AO Market Reports. 13 .05 Ivan Ditmars at the Organ. 13:15 Noontime News. 1350 Hillbilly Serenade. 12:35 Willamette Valley Opinions. 12 :50 The Sonc Shop. 1 4M Popular Music. 1:15 Isle of Paradise. 150 Western Serernade. . : 1.-00 News. 2:15 US Army. 250 Henry King's Orchestra.! 30 Crossroad Troubador. 3:15 Concert Gems. 4:15 News. 450 Tea time Tunes. 4:45 MUady"s Melody. 50 Popularity Row. - '. S 50 Dinner Hour Melodies. , 60 Tonight's -Headlines. 6:15 War Commentary. 650 Freddy Nagel's Orchestra. 6:45 Harry Horlick's Orchestra. T AO News in Brief. T AS Interesting Facts. T:15 Town House Orchestra. 730 Talk of the Town. S:00 The World Tonight. , ' 6:15 Lud Gluskin'a Orchestra. 6 :45 Harry Owens . " Orchestra. AO News Tabloid. 9:15 Johnny Messner's Orchestra. 950 Public Forum. 10 AO Hits ,ot the Day. - f 1050 News. 10:45 Let's Dance. 11:15 Dream Time. - i KGW NBC THUstSDAV t Kc. 6 AO Sunrise Serenade. 650 Trad BUzers. 7.-00 News. 7:15 On the Mall. .7.-45 Sam Hayes.. , 8 .AO Stars of Today. 8:15 Against the Storm. 6:15 David Harum. 9.45-Me and My Shadow. 16:15 Between the Bookends. 105 Dr. Kate. 11 AO Light of the Wolrd. 11:15 Mystery Man. 1150 Valiant Lady. 11:45 Arnold Grimm's Daughter.. 12 AO Story of Mary Mariln. 12.15 Mi Perkins. 1250 Pepper- Young's funny. 125 Vic and Sad. 1 AO Backstage Wife. 1:14 Stella Dallas 150 Lorenzo Jones. 1 :45 Young Widder Browa. 2 AO Girl Alone. : 2:15 Lone Journy. 250 The Guiding Light 2:45 Life Can Be Beautiful. - 3:15 News. :l-SUrs of Today. 4:45 H. V. Kaltenborn. 6:15 Jack Armstrong. - 650 The Aldrich ramlly. 60 Music Hall. . 750 Intercity Quix. '6 AO-.Fred Waring Pleasure Tim. 650 Coffee Time. 6:15 Palladium Ballroom Orchestra. 950 Tommy Biggs, and Betty Lou. 100 News Flashes. 1050 Music by Woodbury. - - , 11. -0O News. 11:15 St. Francis Orchestra. '' . KCX NBC THUBlSDAr 116 Ke. . 60 Musical Clock. :. 70 Western Agricultura. 7 d.V Financial Serrice. . 750 Breakfast Club. . 9 AO Amen Corner. 9:15 Christian Science Program. 9:30 National Farm and Horn. MAO News. 1950- Charmingly We Utrm. 16 S Associated Press News. ' ' , 11 AO Current Events. 1150 US Marine Band. It AO Orphans of Diverca. - 13:15 Amanda of Herteyiuowi F'i " 1350 John's Other Wife. 12:45 Just Plain Bill. 10 Mother oi Mine. 1:15 Market Reports. ' - 150 Newn. .. , tS Curbxtone Quia. . S AO The Quiet Hour. 2 AO Ireen Wicker. haven't enough of the required consonants on the machiner use what you have. Nobody will know the difference and the names couldn't be worse. Exer cise m pronouncing these names Is what snakes the Balkans so tough and hardy. Corvallis Gazette-Times -..v. 4J These schedwles are sappUed ay the respective stations. Amy vaxia- (tons noted, hy nsteaers are das te changes saade by the staUoas wttheat aetiee t this awpaper. I I S:15 The Bartons. 3 JO The Munros. - , 4:15 Mr. Keen. Tracer. 450 Intermezzo. . ,0 Pot of Gold. 5:30 Drama Behind the Mews. S:45 Tom Mix. 650 News. 70 Rudy Valle. , 7:45 News. 60 American Challenge. 650 Portland BasebaU. 90 Easy Aces. 9:13 BasebaU. 10 AO Town Meeting. 110 This Moving World. lias Florentine Gardens Orchestra. . 1150 War News Roundup. - m m KOIN CBS THUKSD AT 976 m.w n y rarm Meponer. 6:15 KOIN Ktock. , , 7:15 News. 1 6:15 Consumer News. 650 The Goldbergs. 90 Kate Smith Speaks. - 1 9:15 When a Girl Marries. 950 Romance of Helen Trent. 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. 10.00 Life Can Be Beautiful 10:15 Women In White. 1050 Right to Happiness. 10:45 Mary Lee Taylor. 110 Big Sister. 11:15 Aunt Jenny. 1150 Fletcher Wiley. - 11:45 Home of the Brave. 120 Martha Webster. 12:15 News. 1250 Kate Hopkins. -12:45 Woman of Courage. - 1A0 Portia Blake. 1:15 Myrt and Marge. 150 Bess Johnson. 13 Stepmother. , I.-00 Singin Sam. i 250 Hello Again. ' 2:45 Scattergood Balnea. 30 Young Dr. Maione. 350 Joyce Jordan. 4 AO The Second Mrs. Burton, j 4:15 We the Abbotts. 450 Newspaper of the Air. SdS The World Today. S:5 News. 6 AO Major Bowes. 70 Glen Miller Orchestra. 7:15 Professor Quiz. '7.-45 News. 60 Amos, X Andy. 6:15 LtMil R 650 Ask It Basket. 90 City Desk. 950 Answer Auction. 10 AO Five Star FlnaL 1050 SUte Traffic. 10:45 Nightcap Yarns. 1150 Manny strand Orchestra. 1153 News. KOAC THURSDAY 456 Ks. 90 News. i 9:15 The Homemakers Hour. 160 Weather Forecast. 11 AO School of the Air. 1150 Music of the Masters. 120 News. 13:1S Farm Hour. - 2 AO Home Garden Hour. S AS Monitor Views the News. 3:15 I'm an American. " 3:45 News. ' 4.-00 Symphony Half Hour. 450 Stories for Boys and Girts. SAO On the Campuses. 6.-45 Vespers. -6:15 News. 650 Farm Hour. 7:30 University Theatre. 80 Campus Intel views. 9 AO OSC Round Table. 950 School. of Science. 9.-45 School of Physical Education. KALE MBS THURSDAY 1236 ! tvt 650 Memory Timekeeper. -I 70 News. 0-Good Morning Neighbor. , 650 News. . 6:45 Buyer's Parade. 9 AO This and That. IJft-Womm t Side eg the Mews. 95 Keep Fit to Music Is AO John B. Hughes. 1650 Helen Holden 10:45 ru Find My Way. 110 Friendly Neighbors. 1150 concert Gems. 125 News. 1 AO We Are Always Young. - 150 Johnson Family. 1 5 Symphony "'l v 3 AO American School. . 6 50 News. S5 Woody Wilson Orchestra. - 40 Sunshine Express. . 4:45 Journal Juniors. S:1J News. S50 Shaftee- Parker Ctrcue. SS CaotaiJt Midnight.. : 6:15 Fulton Lewis. Jr. -50 John B. Hughea. :45 Tfane for Musie. -T:15 Jimmy Allen. . T50 Wythe Williams. SAO Symphony How. - 1 90 News. 9:15 Gift of the Orient 9 53-Freddy Martin Orchestra. 9:41 Speaking c Sports. 1650 Nm i ; L i 10:49 Henry Kbif Orchestra.