The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 23, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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    Th f?r:??Or? CTATESMAIL Galea, Oregon, Yftdnttdar lioraing, April S3, 1311
"No
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. President
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use Cor publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
Departure
Once again the British imperial troops have
fought a delaying action with the rear guard as
they sought to escape to their ships. This time
the scene is Greece instead of Norway or France;
and this time, too, the retreat is conducted under
auspices somewhat different from the other oc
casion which is most analogous, that of Norway.
The British, for one thing, have given a
good account of themselves in the rocky gorges
of Greece and in the Pindus mountain highlands,.
They have met the Germans as they came, and
they have annihilated somewhat more than their
share. They have given good support to the
Greeks, and the Greeks no less good support to
them, in a campaign which has seemed inevit
ably foredoomed to defeat ever since the union
of the German and the Italian armies in south
Yugoslavia. The reichswehr has not had its
usual promenade, and its wounds will not heal
overnight. Still, there is no telling how many
of the Australians, the New Zealanders and the
English Midlanders who came to Greece to meet
the -enemy the real enemy will get back
again to Egypt.
The whole question of whether or not the
British were justified in the first place in send
ing an expeditionary force into the Hellenic
peninsula will ultimately turn, no doubt, on
exactly that point of whether or not the troops
can be got out in time to avoid another British
debacle.
As a moral question, of course, the whole
matter is easily solved: any decision except to
assist the Greeks and the Yugoslavs, once they
were aroused and reported to be ready, would
have been unthinkable. Both nations, in this
and other conflicts, have proved their ability
as fighters and their sympathy with the ulti
mate aims of the anti-German nations.
As a military matter, the thing was less
clear. The Italians had been subdued as far
west as Bengasi when General Wavell sent part
of the Army of the Nile to Greece, and the Duke
of Aosta's armies were being forced steadily
back in Ethiopia. But at the same time the Ger
man air force had begun to assert temporary
mastery of the Sicilian straight, and it soon
became evident that the Germans would not
permit the British to drive on through Tripoli
to make contact with General Weygand in
Tunis. The nazi high command was able to
implement its strategy, in the absence of the
British fleet in Grecian waters, by ferrying two
armored divisions across to Tripoli, with results
which are now well known.
v - The ultimate . consequence has been that
Britain has lost men if not prestige in Greece,
and the Germans have lost men and material
there, too. The British, however, have lost a
hard -won advantage in Africa, which is hardly
compensated for by the capture of Ethiopia. In
general, sound military judgment under the cir
cumstances, particularly with full knowledge
of the German ability to get to Africa, would
have dictated a more cautious Balkan policy,
though with the return of the troops fighting
in Ethiopia, Cyrenica may be reconquered. All
that one can finally say is that the game is not
yet fully played, and the war neither lost nor
won, by either side. -
Per Capita Taxes
Stand up and shout, you Marion county
taxpayers! John Siegmund, recently retired
from the office of county judge, has the de
served honor of leading the cheering section.
Per capita, property taxes for all purposes
in Marion county are the lowest in Oregon.
This is a fact not discoverable from ordinary
tax tables based upon millages, for the taxes in
mills here are not the lowest. One important
reason is that we Marion county people own
less taxable property, per capita, than the resi
dents of some other counties. For instance in
Jefferson county, not regarded as especially
prosperous, there is more than three times as
much taxable property per capita as in Marion.
It isn't that Jefferson has so much property, but
that it has so few people.
The fact of Marion county's pleasing posi
tion on the bottom rung of the per capita tax
ladder is disclosed in a table just prepared by
Oregon Business & Tax Research, Inc.; and how
long we have perched there is not apparent from
this table; we were, second from the bottom,
next to Benton county, back in 1930. Benton
still enjoys a lower per capita general county
levy, but Marion county's rock bottom school
tai gives us the honor.
Per capita property taxes in Marion county
mount to $23.79 as compared to the top figure
of $66.64 in Gilliam county, Washington county
is next to Marion at $25.63. Marion county's
general county tax is $3.43; Lane is at the bot
tom with $3.04 followed by Linn at $3.11 and
Benton at $3.15. Marion county's1 local levies
for education divide out to $12.62 per head as
compared to Morrow county's $33.1 j. Marion's
' nearest competitor in this respect is Lane at
. $13.78.
t Per capita property taxes for all purposes
in Oregon are substantially lower than they
were a decade ago; lower in every county 'ex
cept Curry. Substitution of the income j tax
for the state property tax explains this in part.:
Other factors are the increase in population and"
the completion of road systems to the point at
which expenditures for that purpose may be
reduced. But the major factor is reduction in
public debt and consequently in the cost of debt
service. That is the point of attack for any fu
ture reductions. Marion county has no debt
and no debt service, but many of its municipali
ties and school districts have. Paying off bonds,
and voting new ones only when it is absolutely
necessary, is the route to tax reduction and
almost the only one which goes very far in that
direction. -
Dr. Ernest C Moll, of the University of Ore
gon faculty, has received outstanding recogni
tion in his native Australia as a poet. Beyond
doubt the lionor was deservedV And yet the
question arises, would it .have been forthcoming
If he had stayed at home?
Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awtf
From First Statesman, March 23. 1831
News
The News
By PAUL MALLON
liA)lBMIeWie1eeaMI
An outstanding British shipping source here Is
flatly conceding the British have been fuddy
duddy" about protecting their shipments from us.
His good people, he says, are still trying to do this
the same way they did it in the last war. They
still put slow ships in with the fast ones, holding
down the speed of the entire convoy to the point
where it is vulnerable to the slow submarines. They
do not convoy all the way across. They have
worked out no adequate sea-air defense around Ire
land, although their bases are closer to the ship-,
ping lanes than the German bases in France. Trust
ing to luck, they have refused to concentrate suf
ficient forces of the -fleet to give their convoys
adequate protection.
Several moves to correct and perhaps cure the
problem could be taken short of American convoy
ing. By mistake, it has leaked out our navy has been,
experimenting in making auxiliary aircraft carriers
out of fast merchant ships to patrol sea skies. The
SS Morma email, a passenger-freight ship, is being
fitted with an overall landing deck. Such ships
could accompany convoys "end fight German bomb
ers on the spot.
The British could limit their convoys to ships
of the same slow speed, sending their faster ships
across Individually. They have plenty of freighters
capable of making 18 to 20 knots, whereas 15 is
tops for a sub. - Steering a zigzag course, these fast
freighters would be relatively free of danger from
anything except a sub which hapepned to come up
in the right position ready to fire. We know they
have such fast freighters because we sold them the
Exemplar and the Nightingale, and some others.
" " " Admiral Land, ciairman of the maritime com
mission, which is supplying the' British with ships,
publicly offered other remedies -: His suggested
best way to beat the submarine was to bomb their
construction and repair, stations continuously. He
offered "ameliorating influences, such as increase
of ships in the patrol, complete brans-Atlantic pro
tection, air patrols in the convoys. - i
Land frankly told the British we win only be
adding more fuel to their huge bonfire problem
, burning in the Atlantic by giving them more ships.
At the time he was suspected of propagandizing for
US convoying, but it is possible he may have been
trying politely to stir the British out of their stodgy
.naval ways, into
"Buy at Home" ' v
All the evidence that the public is likely
to get has been submitted in the case of the
Oregon Grange Bulletin, official publication of
the state grange which Is now being printed in
Seattle. In response to the rather general critic
ism of this patronage of out-of-state printers
sharp criticism in view of the grange's past ad
vocacy of the "use Oregon products" slogan
Master Ray Gill explained that the organization
had acquired membership in a cooperative print
ing establishment and an editorial in the Bulle
tin recently asserted that it expected to receive
a $1000 dividend as a result of this association.
Oregon printers have challenged this state
ment, insisting that a $1000 profit on this com
paratively small printing "job" was preposter
ous. But it is not likely that anyone outside
the grange will see the final figures and it now
develops that even they will never know the
actual amount of the saving, if any. For the
Roseburg printer who previously had the con
tract, and who had remained silent while the
controversy raged, has disclosed that he was not
asked to bid on a renewal. . He has indicated
however that loss of the contract saddened him,
not because of the small profit it had entailed
but because it became necessary to dismiss two'
printers.
It does not seem probable, in view of Seat
tle's high wage scale for printers, that the grange
will realize any saving. The opinion was ex
pressed here when the issue first arose, that the
change was made because of Master Gill's en
thusiasm for cooperative endeavor as opposed to
private enterprise for profit. Nothing has de
veloped since to change that opinion.
It remains to be pointed out however that
the Oregon Grange Bulletin solicits advertising
patronage from private enterprises in Oregon
which are operated with the hope of profit.
Thus there is a dual inconsistency here which
will be difficult to explain away.
PUD spokesmen in Washington state are
organizing a blitzkrieg against the Ickes ver
sion of the Pacific northwest power "authority"
measure. May their arms be victorious. If
we are to be forced into public ownership re
gardless of our wishes, the least we can demand
is home rule.
Behind
(Distributed by Kin features Syndicate. Inc.. re
production in whole or in pert strictly prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, April 22 A nazl sub sent to
the bottom of the Atlantic a few days back a Brit
ish ship loaded with $3,000,000 worth of our needed
strategic war material, rubber. This news was bad
enough to the official circle (it
did not get far outside) but
when the Germans got a ship
loaded with 3000 of our air
plane fuel pumps shortly there-,
after, the war department gen
erals wrung their hands col
lectively. Faced with one of
the worst shortages in this line,
all the generals can think of are
3000 of their priceless pumps
sitting on the bottom of the At
lantic. Generally unknown events,
such as these, are whetting the
Peel Mane current government interest in
convoying. That is the source of the greatest
pressure at the moment
Yet there is nothing like a preponderance of
official sentiment in favor of trying to leap across
that Rubicon- As Mr. Roosevelt said, most of those
who are shouting for convoying do not know "a
hills of beans" (his words) about the problem. The
more intimate the knowledge of officials here, the
less enthusiasm there is for hasty action.
Apparently there are many drastic steps the
British themselves should take first, whether or not
there is to be American convoying.
a more alert use of facilities they
I 55 '
nil .Wit
B. J-S SM. .1 j t W ... eW rZJ
And It's Still Thumbs
Bits ffoir BireaEtfasft
By R. J. HENDRICKS
"Linens for Oregon" 4-23-41
is a cry demanding
attention, and aid in
higher protective tariffs:
e "e "e
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Still quoting: . . . "Some or all
of these plants will no doubt
ultimately branch out into spec
ialty manufacturing, and take
on the growth and processing
of hemp..
"One of the many franchise
crops of the Willamette valley
is fiber flax. It is a chief one,
having all the favoring condi
tions of succes and permanency
the right combination and se
quence of soil, sunshine ; and
showers for the growth of the
finest fiber; soft water for ret
ting; long periods of summer
sunshine for drying and hold
ing the life,' the resiliency, the
spinability, of the fiber; near
sea level, thus freedom from
static or 'electricity' in spinning
the gossamer fine threads; fin
est and strongest of any vege
table fiber; absence of extreme
heat and cold, giving year
through factory conditions.
"e
"Thus we have a prime fran
chise crop for franchise fac
tories. In no other section of
the entire world may be grown
this franchise crop almost with
in eyeshot, within trucking dis
tance, of the factories, on 500,
000 acres of land meaning
Gives Views
GoL Cbarles A. Undbergfc .
In aa address prepared for a rally
tn the Price go Arena, OoL Charles
A. Lindbergh asserts that lt wul
be a tragedy to the woxld--a, trag
edy even to Germany if the Brit
ish empire collapses' and also
teHa his audience that the "war
eras lost" by the Ames "even be
fore it was declared." Lindbergh
said the TJ. S. Is able to defend
Itself against any foreign power.
The rally was sponsored by the
; America first Committee, op
sosed to U. S. participation in the
v
j
v ;
y i
up to Hitler's Horrors
100,000 acres a year with a five
year rotation.
"That will give a sure crop,
with proper husbandry, every
year, throughout the near and
far future, for it will guard
against rust, the ' only flax dis
ease we have.
"Flax is a miracle growth. In
70 to 90 days here it develops
a fiber to stand In the sails of
ships of the sea and wings of
the ships of the air against the
hurricane, and to outlast the
mummies of the pharaohs of
Egypt.
"It is found in the tombs of
the Valley of the Kings with an
Intricacy of weave modern man
cannot duplicate.
"This is the only place on
earth where can be produced
in such tonnage flax fiber equal
in fineness to the best ever
grown. .. . . Here, as in no other
section of the earth, we have
valuable by-products, including
the seed and linseed oil will
be in demand as long as. there
is rot or rust as long as any
wood or metal surface is to be
covered with paint against air
and water.'
"New by-products of flax are
being developed constantly. That
is a next to unlimited field for
expansion. An expert says Ore
gon should furnish ply goods of
flax and hemp fiber to top the
world's markets. ...
"e
"We can compete with our
flax against COTTON; to say
- nothing of our hemp. The aver
age of cotton fiber to the acre
Is 170 to 175. pounds. We pro
duce 180 pounds of fiber to the
ton, and two tons to the acre,
which means 360 pounds to the
acre. We can do It every year,
for 1000 years, or indefinitely,
with proper husbandry. There
is no boll weevil in flax no
public enemy number one of
flax excepting rust
"And that can be permanent
ly put off with rotation. And a
five year flax rotation will In
crease the yield of all the other '
four crops enough to justify it-
Today's Garden
By ULLI2C L. MADSEN
S.R.T. Wants to know if he
should put out his annuals now.
It seems a little early. The
snapdragons will do all right.
However, early May : is soon
enough.' Sometimes too many
cool nights retard the plants and
they do not gain from being set
' out early. This will depend a
little upon whether the plants
have been hardened at the flor
ists. If he sets them out In the
flats for a week or so before one
transplants them they will do
better. Usually the florists do
set out some of their annuals.
- To be really successful with
annuals you must keep them '
growing without a slowing-up
of any kind. The garden beds
should be dug deeply and pre-
, pared with a well-balanced fer
tilizer. It would be best to have
the beds prepared at least a
week before planting. N
CP. asks for the names of a ,
few low-growing annuals suit
able to plant in bare spots in the
-rock garden." iv.AV
Portulaca, Gfliavar, Fair Stars,
Virginia Stocks, silyssum all help
brighten, up the rock garden in
summer. ' , '
TJR. asks when to prune his
forsythia.
At once, forsythia, like nearly
all of our flowering shrubs,
should be pruned immediately
t after flowering. -. -- - -
self even if the flax brought
only cost. s
"Flax., growing will justify
provision for irrigating every
thirsty annual crop acre in the
Willamette valley, wtnUng the
length and breadth of this great
vale have the appearance of one
vast fertile field, orchard and
garden and rendering it the
richest section of like area in
the whole world; . . .
"Every successful flax thresh
ing, retting and scutching plant
in this valley will and should be
a possible nucleus of a specialty
factory making one or more of
the upwards of a hundred com
mercial articles fashioned from
flax fiber, shives, chaff, seeds,'
etc., etc . . .
"Dr. H. L. Deimel, who had.
factories In both England and
Germany making linen mesh
goods, on March 19, 1923, wrote
to Mrs. W. P. Lord, telling her
of his wish to establish a large
factory In the Willamette valley,
to supply his American cus
tomers. "That was near the end of
Mrs.' Lord's life, which came on
July 5, 1924. It is likely that,
had Mrs. Lord lived much long
er, the consummation of the en
terprise in Dr. Deimel's mind
would have come to fruition. . , .
V.
"In order to have flax yarn,
and a certain supply of it, and
a guaranteed certainty of such
a supply annually, there was
needed, first, a great flax grow
ing industry here, and large
spinning mills. Why? Because
Dr.. Deimel could use only fiber
of a lea (fineness) that, would
yield a product needed largely
in hospitals.
"His product must be very
soft very fine. And he wanted
a factory that would require
4000 people to run it a fac
tory which, "located at such a
city as Salem was then would,
directly and indirectly, soon
double Its population.' .
(Continued tomorrow.)
At the Circus
sirs. Cooserelt aad
. With his mother, Vraaksn. D
Roosevelt TO, grandson of the U.
& president, attends the circus In
New York and like other young
.sterg watches the proceedings
with popping eyes. The beys
mother Is the former Ethel du-
.. - -"-Pent. ; - - .
"Lever ..mrae BacCi"
By BARRETT WILLOUGHBY 1
- . '. : CHAPTER - S--
"And now what about me
catch, lad?" asked the captain,
after sampling his drink. His
voice-was friendly but a certain
wariness had come into his eyes.
Sondra settled herself to lis
ten. The 0Moore fleet was really
her property. On her grandfa
ther's retirement from his own
business two years ago, he had
. Invested the legacy left her by.
her parents in six herring sein
ers,1 which would remain under
his management until she was
25. She felt it was time that she
learned something of the busi
ness. ..
Kemp was saying, "Briefly,
sir, I want all the herring you
catch this season." .i ' :
"Ye mean all me surplus,
. don't ye?"
"No, I want to contract for
your entire season's catch. The
same sort of. contract you had
with John Bates last year. Bates .
is dead. Is there any reason why
you can't let me that is, my
firnv-have it?" '
"There's one reason, though
there may be none by this time
tomorrow, Starbuck. A new out
fitthe Baranov Packers have
taken over the Bates holdings. -They
have until II tomorrow
- mornin to exercise an optional
contract for the catch of me '
fleet." -
"The run is due to start any
day now, and so far not one of
the Baranov outfit Is on the
ground. They haven't even laid
a sill for a new cannery or land
ed a single machine on the dock.
Even if they do arrive tomor
row, they can't possibly get
ready in time to use a fraction
of your fleet's catch. To me it
looks as If they'd stood you up,
sir." -
"Damn it! That's had me fray
In me chafin gear these three
weeks past! I know they've op
ened a Seattle office, in charge
James Ford who signs himself
vice president But who's back
of 'em or what their plans are,
I've no more idea' than O 'Flah
erty's pig. Still, an option's
option, until it expires. .
"True, sir. But if it expires to
morrow, it leaves you without a
buyer on the eve of the herring
run. I'm the only other packer
in this district who can handle
Radio'" Pirograinnis
KSLM WEDNESDAY 139t Ke.
6 30 Sunrise- Salute.
7 :00 Newa in Brief.
7:05 Oldtlma Music.
T;45 Recorded Orchestras.
S0 Farm Talk. . - ."
The Esquires. : s .
: S-JO News.
; S. -45 Tune Tabloid.
' SM Pastor's Call.
: :15 Bert Hirscn Orchestra.
:45 Four Notes.
10:00 New.
10 :IS Today's Tribute.
1030 Women In the News.
10:39 Singing Strings.
10:45 Dr. R. T. Thompson.
11.-00 The Rhythm Five.
1130 Willamette University Chapel.
11:43 Value Parade.
UAO Market Reports.
11 .-OS Ivan Ditmars.
11:15 News. -
1130 Hillbilly Serenade.
1135 Willamette Valley Opinions.
1130 The Song Shop.
1410 Whol's Sophisticates.
1:15 Isle of Paradise.
130 Western Serenade.
140 News. -v
1:10 Music.
1:15 US Marines Talk.
130 Modern Melody Trio.
S. -00 Crossroads Troubador.
3:15 British Relief.
130 Concert Gems.
4 :15 Newa.
430 Tea Time Tunes.'
4:45 Singinf Saxophones. ,
50 Popularity Row.
5:30 Dinner Hour Melodies.
0 News. . ;
S:1S War Commentary.
30 Freddy Nasle Orchestra.
:45 Tommy Reynolds Orchestra.
7.-00 News in Brief. ,
7 :05 Interesting Facts.
7:15 Henry King Orchestra.
7:30 State Safety Program. '
7:45 Joan Brooks Songs.
8:O0 News.
8:15 Will Bradley Orchestra.
8:45 Wes McWain Piano.
0 News.
8:15 Shep Fields Orchestra.
30 Edwards Old timers.
10 AO Hits of the Day.
1030 News.
10.-45 Let's Dance,
lias Dream Time.
KJCX NBC WEDNESDAY 1188 Ke.
30 Musical Clock .
T 900 Western Agriculture.
fas Financial Service.
7 30 Breakfast Club.
. 8 AO Amen Corner.
30 National rarm and Home.
10 AO News. "
1030 Charmingly We Live.
10:45 Associated Press News. -
11 AO Nature Trails. .
1130 US Navy Band. -13
AO Orphans of Divorce.
11:15 Amanda of Honeymoon WSL .
U30-Joha's Other Wife.
12:45 Just Plain Bill.
1A0 Mother of Mine.
1:15 Market Reports.
1:30 New.
1:45 Curbstone Quiz.
1 AO The Quiet Hour.
SAO Sam Gordon, Kibitzer.
- 1:15 The Bartons.
130 The Munros.
4:15 Mr. Keen. Tracer. .
' 8:15 Tom Mix.
S30 Manhattan at Midnight.
- AO Roy Shield's Revue.
, 35 News. ;
T AO Author's Playhouse. ,
. 7:45 New.
SAO Qui Kids. . '
830 Portland Baseball. L
AO Casy Aces. - IV
as Baseball. . 1
loas Hotel BUtmore Orchestra '
11 AO-This Moving World.
11.15 Portland Police Reports.
1130 War News Roundup.
. KGW -NBC WKDNXSDAY-
. AO funrtee Serenade.
30 Trail Blazers.
3 AO News.
7:45 Sam Hayes.
AO Stars of Today.
; 8:15 Against the Storm.
830 Arthur Godfrey.
. 8:45 David Earum.
930 Voice of Experience;
SSModem Meals.
-10:15 Between the Bookends.
10:45 Dr. Kate. i
11 AO Light of the World. "
11:19 Mystery Man.
11 30 Valiant Lady.
11:45 Arnold Grimm's Oaughter.
MAO Story of Mary Marlln. -.- .
12:15 Ma Perkins. .
12 10 Pepper Young's Family.
11:45 Vic and Sane.
1A0 Backstage Wife.
1:15 Stella Dallas.
: 1 30 Lorenso Jones.
lass Yeans Winder Brown.
. 1A0 GirlAlone.
135 Lone Journey.
130 The Guiding Light. " ,
. 35 Life Can Be Beautiful. . .
" Sas News. -
40 Fred Wrrtng pleasure Tune.
4:J.-rSt.rs. Today.; . ;;
a catch as large as yours. But if
I make a contract with someone
'else, wont you find it er let
us say, embarrassing to go out
side this district to market your
herring?"
"Embarrassin?" The captain
jerked himself erect. "What d'ye
mean by that?" I?
"Well, sir, during, this past
week I've been to both Thomas
and Swanson trying to contract
' for their surplus. A couple of
years ago they would have
jumped at the chance to sell me
that surplus. This season, while
they didnt exactly refuse out
right, they stalled. They would
n't promise anything or fix a
price. I somehow got the idea
that they wouldn't sell to me at
any price. .
"I think you and Thomas and
Swanson have made a gentle
men's agreement. You've divid
ed these coastal waters into
' three parts, each to stick close
to his own district, neither fish
ing nor selling outside it. In a
worxing auiance wun your sea
going fleets, the r three of you '
. control the herring Industry. '
You have the rest of us at your '
mercy. We can either . buy your;
surplus at a fancy price, or
watr-h mir nlanta ctarwl iA1a Tint
supposing this Baranov; outfit
folds up on 'you tomorrow, leav-'
lng you to look for another mar- '
. ket? Suppose, meantime, that - Lr
the only large packer in this :
district of yours, .should have
co m u e vuicr arrangements lor
my fish? Wouldn't that gentle
men's agreement, binding you
not to sell outside your district,
prove rather embarrassing to
your operations? Of course. I'm ,:
only guessing, but " A lift of
his eyebrows completed the sen
tence. " '-
"Starbuck, I admit nothin', ye
understand, but 111 say this ye
are a good guesser. Ye've put
vruir rarHa rtin th taKlo mil a
will L I've agreed to furnish
Baranov Packers with all the
herring they can handle, provid
ed they fork over an advance of
thirty thousand dollars. To bind
the bargain, they must have a
representative here on or before
tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock,
with cash or a certified check
for that amount. So, until
then"
(To be continued)
These schedules are supplied ey
the respective stations. Any varia
tions noted by listeners are dee te
changes saade fey the stittens withes
notice te this newspaper.
-! .. ... ' f
430 Hollywood News Flashes.
4:45 News. '
8:15 Jack Armstrong.
6:45 Cocktail Hour. ,
8 AO Paul Martin's Music
T AO Kay Kysers KoUege.
SAO Tony Martin:
8:80 Plantation Party.
AO Eddie Cantor.
30 Mr. District Attorney.
18A0 News Flashes.
18 3 Hotel St. Francis Orchestra.
11 AO News.
11:18 Palace Hotel Orchestra.
KOAC WEDNESDAY 858 Ke.
AO News.
8:15 The Homeraakers Hour.
10A0 Weather Forecast
10:15 Excursions in Science.
11 AO School of the Air.
12 AO News.
11:15 Farm Hour.
1A0AAUW Study Ctub.
8:45 Feature Page. '
SAO US Navy.
3:15 Book of the Week.
3:45 News. -430
Stories for Boys and Girls.
8 AO On the Campuses.
8:45 Vespers.
8:15 News.
830 Farm Hour. .
130 Business Hour.
8:15 Deen Victor P. Morris. ,
830 Radio Workshop.
SAO OSC Round Table.
30 Department of Music.
. -45 School of Engineering. '
KOD4 CBS WEDNESDAY 874 Kc.
AO NW Farm Reporter.
:15 KOIN Klock.
1:15 News,
as Consumer News.
830 The Goldbergs.
8:45 Betty Crocker. ,
AO Kate Smith Speaks.
as When a Girt Marries.
30 Romance of Helen Trent.
8:45 Our Gal Sunday.
10 AO-Life Can Be Beautiful. .
18:15 Women In White.
1030 Right te Happiness.
11 AO Big Sister', i
11:15 Aunt Jenny.
1130 Fletcher Wiley.
11:45 Home cf the Brave. '
11 AO Martha Webster.
11:15 News. ,
1138 Kate Hopkins.
12:45 Woman of Courage.
1 AO Portia Blake.
1:15 My rt and Marge.
130 Bees Johnson..
1 5 Stepmother.
SAO Singin Sam.
330 Hello Again. '
1:45 Scattergood Balnea.
3 AO Young Dr. Malone. s
3:15 Hedda Hopper's Hollywood.
830 Joyce Jordan.
4 AO The Second Mrs. Burton.
4:15 We the Abbotts. i .
430 Mews. f
830 The World Today.
8:45 News.
8:15 Bill Henry.
30 Big Town.
AO Glen Miller Orchestra.
7:15 Public Affairs.
T 30 Adventures of Mr. Meek.
AO Amos a' Andy.
8:15 Lanny Ross. ,
830 Dr. Christian. .
835 News. I
AO Fred Allen.
14 AO rive Star Final.
18 JO Hal Howard Orchestra.
10:45 Nigh tcsp Yarns.
1130 Manny Strand Orchestra.
U 35 News.
.
rT l - MB 8 - WEPNE3 DAY-1H8 Sit.
30 Memory Timekeeper.
T AO News.
AO Haven of Rest.
30 News. '
8:45 Buyer's Parade. '
AO--This and That.
30 Women's Side of the Newa ,
10 AO John B. Hughes
1030 Helen Holden. -,
18:45 IT1 Find My Way.
11 AO Friendly Neighbors.
11 30-Concert Cents.
12:45 News. .
1 AO We Are Always Young.
1 30 Johnson Family.
1.00 American School.
S-se Mews. - - .-
3:45 As the Twig Is Beat.
3 AO News.
430 Symphony Hour.
S-15 Nm
830 Shatter Parker Circus.
85 Captain Midnight.
S:15 Fulton Lewis. Jr.
4.-45 Guy Lombardo Orchestra.
. 7:15 Jimmy Allen. .
... 130- Lone Ranger.
30 Northwest Salute. .
AO News.
' 8:18 Today's Top Tunes.
' SO Enchanted Garden.
10:34 News.
11 A Hemry fCtaS Orcleirtr - .. ...