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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 2, 1941)
PAG- C2Z Tb CZZGOI! CTATEC2.IAII. Calesn. Oregon. Friday Morning. Mar 2. 1SU , MVNMt MM Wo Faror SwayiUs; Fear Shall A.xcm From First Statesman, March S3, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING C CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. President ' i ' Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press li exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Glacial Erratics Not so very long ago as time is measured by geologists there was a. period of greater or lesser duration when Salem was more than 200 feet under water. Floating about 4on the sur face, on one pr more occasion were numerous i L ' i .i iisl. i , large lceuergs. ; ii was a ptauviiut, impressive sight, but if any man saw it he probably didn't appreciate it, for he belonged to the latter period of the Old Stone Age and his aesthetic sense was not highly developed. But the Willamette valley even then had a comparatively ', mild climate. As the icebergs melted, from some of them drorjoed lartre and small boulders of granite, quartzite, gniessj slate and basalt, rocks foreign to this region. They had been picked up hundreds of miles to the north as the Ice,, then In glacier .form, crept down from the north. - . For that was in the Pleistocene age when on four different occasions glaciers covered all of Canada and the northern portion of terri tory which our nation, in the last few moments ot geological time, has claimed. How far south the ice blanket extended is indicated by the names of the four glacial periods; Nebraskan, Kansan, Illinolan and Wisconsin. Here in the Pacific Northwest Ice covered part of eastern Washington but there were no glaciers In Oregon except in mountain valleys. Meltwater from these Oregon glaciers car ried rock, gravel and sand down Into the Wil lamette valley to form fills through which the streams had to cut their way In the inter-glacial . periods. Remaining portions of these fills con stitute a part of the natural soil variety of the valley. . J ' ' Dotted throughout the valley however in 249 definite locations there are, sometimes singly but more commonly inj groups, "erratic" stones which could not have come from the Cascades. The icebergs rafted them in. . We cannot here enter into a 'discussion of the evidence upon which any. portion of the story is based. Dr. Ira S. Allison of Oregon State college, now making special anthropologi cal studies under . auspices Of the Rockefeller Foundation, who made the first detailed study of glacial erractis in the Willamette valley, says they evidently came from the upper Columbia possibly from the general "vicinity, of Grand Coulee. The largest of the rocks, near Gaston, is 7x5 x4 plus feet no one has dug down to its base. Quite a' rock; and quite-an iceberg it took to bring inhere. ... But upon -what- waters did the- icebergs come to the Willamette valley? Down. the Co lumbia . . . but howdid they get up the Wil lamette? Geologistsdisagree. Some insist that there existed a "Willamette Sound comparable i to Puget Sound." Others contend there. was merely a temporary flood, or a series of floods, known in either case as. the "Spokane flood,' originating in the-8 Spokane glacial field and thrust back into the Willamette valley by ice lame In tha 1nwi PnlnmKii Tn .mr .imn water filled the valley to aproximately 400 feet above : sea level, as the distribution . of glacial erratics proves. Residents of Ankeny Bottom are reported as disappointed to find that their "mystery rock" is of glacial origin rather than a meteorite. .If they will but study, more intensively than we have been able to present it, the history of this peculiar granite stone and how it came to their familiar acres they will find it, we conceive, more intriguing than their tentative theory that t dropped from the skies. 1 . By a coincidence, the Salem chapter of the Geological Society of the Oregon Country had previously arranged, for Dr. Allison to speak here in Waller hall on the night of Thursday, May 15 oni this very, subject of glacial erratics. i Style "garbage dump" which the present In cinerator superseded. !? Their objections are not well taken how ever in view of the city government'! actual J proposal. The plan contemplates the estab lishment of a "sanitary fill la which the refuse ' will be covered with earth long before there is any possibility of its beaming obnoxious. It will be recognized that the city of Port land utilized this system to dispose of garbage and at the same time fill in canyons not in remote districts but in well-settled portions of the city itself. Some of its fills were unsatisfac-. tory because sawdust was used as l cover in stead 'of earth; but Portland's experience illustrates the practicality of the solution. Sa lem city officials have investigated fills in other cities which have proved wholly satisfactory, and have observed the methods followed. Neither Is objection to the route which will be used in hauling refuse to the disposal site well taken. It will be the responsibility of the city to see that vehicles making such deliveries are so- equipped that they will not lose por tions of their load on the way. I The incinerator has- been a Irather costly and unsatisfactory experiment, not through any fault of the method adopted but because the program was faulty in detail. The incinerator . itself has not been equal to the job, and its lo cation upon flat ground Was unfortunate. The city is now in position td profit by its experience and to adopt a solution of the garbage problem which will be satisfactory. A tax token revolution went into effect in Washington state on May 1. " The new tokens are green, of plastic material, and purchasers of goods must hand over 3 cents' worth on a dol lar transaction' The ' change from aluminum was made because ot thai commodity's Import ance in national defense.5 Presumably the old i tokens that can be rounded up will be made into warplanes. But citizens who have them in pos-" session, won't turn them Jn. They make excel lent washers, si ', i mmmmmmmmmmmmi i Civil Aviation ; a - - I For better or worse, not all American aero nautical ingenuity is going into' the production of military planes. That is clear With the report that one of the great aircraft manufacturing plants, the name of which is not disclosed, is at work on a $7,800,000 order for nine sub-strato- spnere airsnrps ior fan-American airways. The planes are for use on" the New York Europe flight, that is. if it is still being made commercially by late next summer when the planes are supposed to be delivered. They will , replace thej Clippers, which now spend nearly two days to make a complete crossing between LaGuardia field, and Lisbon, Portugal. V Thu chins "I'o w uvmuvU IV 11 14a SVC VI 1C UCVOUC" otd dream of a breakf ast-to-dinner, flight be- ' tween the old world and the new a reality. With a cruising speed of 250 miles per hour, and a : ' maximum well over 300 miles per hour, the planes are supposed to place London or Lisbon within 10 hours of Manhattan,' with the result f that round trips to Europe for a two-hour con ference may be made in a single day's time. Talk about Ariel and his forty minutes! The motive power for the planes will be ; supplied by four 2500 horsepower engines, each a full quarter larger than the largest military or commercial engine now in use, none of which exceeds 2000 horsepower. The craft's hulk will be larger than anything now built or building with the exception of the incredibly huge Doug las B-19 bomber Which first saw the light of day In California onlya week or two ago. It will dwarf the present Clipper planes, and also the huge Boeing mainliners now on daily commer cial flights within the United States,, with a gross weight of 56.000 pounds 43 tons, pulled by 10, 003 horses., ''t J4. -Nine such planes have , been ordered . for delivery in July, 1942J according to the Wall Etreet Journal. One trusts, withal haltingly, that their mission, wjll still be-a peaceful one; .When they are finally placed in service. Cavitary FiH ' ' ' Residents in the vicinity of property which Hie city c Salem contemplates acquiring for artsr disposal purposes may be pardoned i:? ril-Irj objection if it is their impression that It Is to be utilized in the manner of the old- If the Greek war had lasted a little longer, newspaper readers would have been able to com plete a comprehensive review of ancient history. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON . , . (Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc., re- ' production In whole or In part strictly prohibited.) t i WASHINGTON, May ; 1-Stalin's mystifying ban on arms shipments across his country has , been variously interpreted as a slap br a kiss for Hitler J It was recognized here as neither, but rather as another clumsy red imitation of clevecnazi double dealing in diplomacy. . The truth win be out. when Stalin shortly signs a commercial-treaty with his intimate enemy, Japan. The treaty will include an "equitable . alloca tion of freight car; space be tween Japan and Russia on the crowded Trans-Siberian rail way. The Japs arev shipping cotton,! rubber, minerals, soy beans, vegetable oils and food products (no "war materials") rani Maiion across Siberia to Germany, and the Russian treaty will give them more space.. , United States will not like this.' Yet the only places where Russia can get vitally needed metals, machinery, and small amounts of machine tools are the United States or 'Germany, and Germany can't afford to send much. Russia already is afraid her sellout' to Japan in the non-aggression pact -will cause the American government to cut her thin trans-Pacific lines of supplies from us. - - So the lumbering bear! of .the Kremlin, trying to imitate the tiger of Wilhelmstrasse, supplied an idle friendly gesture toward a hand that Is feeding it before again biting it. J1 ' . The ban can have no harmful effect on Ger many for many other reasons. Enough is the ex planation that Germany does not get any war ma terials from anyone through Russia and does not expect any. The step might stop an unimportant trickle from Germany td Japan or from Sweden to Persia, but this would not work against Hitler. Any time Hitler aays boo to Stalin, the bear will run and in the direction Hitler points. You can 'depend on that, no matter how many stupid diplomatic, gestures are contrived by the Kremlin to create a different impression. ? The nazis have been slipping reinforcements through the British sea lines to Africa, and are load ing up for a big direct blow at the Suez.. A counter on the job there has led authorities here- to believe the Germans are massing 25 divisions (200,000 men) and between 2000 and 3000 tanks in Libya. This would be in accord with the basis German strategy, of concentrating overwhelming numbers of men and equipment for a single point of attack. . The British have good defensive lines but their available men and equipment are strung out from Ethiopia to Crete. . Note: 300 of these nazl tanks in Libya are the best of the French. No one knows how Hitler got them. . FDR is energetically stopping speculation as to whether our patrols are 2,000 or 10,000-miles out He criticized his good friend Admiral Stark, chief of naval operations1 for saying 2,000 miles (Stark said 3,000 in an interview, before he made his speech), and his friend : La Guardia for saying 1,000 miles. Actual distance has probably become incidental. . The president announced, the patrol would roam the seven seas and. invade even war zones if necessary to defend the western hemis phere. In general aid to Britain anywhere is re garded by the administration as an ultimate de fense of the western hemisphere.: ' With- the' world as the announced limit, this .government-is obviously not going to let anyone find out exactly where the ships are, unless or until something happens to them. j FDR's labor mediation board 4s doing fairly well despite its failure to exert anything except indirect influence toward coal strike peace. Eleven strikes have been settled by . the board in its short history. One which is never mentioned and which . has not been settled is the Phelps-Dodge case. By BARRETT WTLLOUGHBY "Gordian KnoU !"-MCan ' Uncle Sam Untie Them-oiw its omEreaMa&k Tt . . . By R. J. HENDRICKS ' i j they are for the territory inside the city limits only. "What is going on j 5-2-41 in the world? or, rather, what in Salem ' around forty years ago? : . , 1 (Concluding from yesterday:) "The Salem Water Co (then owned by the Wallaces), hid its ' offices in the city; hall. Kansas was suffering a drought I The Old White Corner was one of the leading general merchandise stores then owned by j ' Jos. Meyers & Sons.. (That store was ; established in 1879 by theBreyi mans.) ; ""'!' .'" j ' ' -;"' "As before said, no automo biles were in Salem in 1901. : - W ". - jjl ' "The first automobile, to. be owned in Salem was the proper j tyf Otto J. Wilson, and he bought and brought it heresin : April, 1802. It was an Oldsmo- bile. . -; . ., ; "- t!; The next automobile to' be owned in Salem was a Rambler, manufactured by the people who made the then popular Rambler bicycle. That second automobile was bought and owned by George Graves. Mr. Graves, the T well known ocmmerclal traveler, who has been in that line more ' than 40 years, with headquar ters in Salem, says he bought his Rambler car just two days after Otto VJ. Wilson purchased' and ' brought to Salem his Oldsmobile. . - v y -!?r;; - "Both Wilson and .Graves are still young looking and active,. after all these years. Mr. Wilson Is the pioneer automobile dealer in Salem. The third automobile in Sa lem was perhaps one brought by Tred Wiggins, who became an automobile dealer,-and lives now in Seattle, with offices in Today's Garden By LILL1S L, MADSEN I. A. describes a rhododendron ; and wants to know its name. -I cannot be sure from.; your, description but my guess would ' be 'Pink PearL This is now In bloom and is one of the loveliest ; of the. pink rhododendrons. ' . M. B. also has a' rhododendron question. He planted his' four years ago but they bloom-very sparselyr He reports he Culti- - yates them thoroughly through out the summer to keep moisture in the ground. Should they be . in sun or shade? he asks. - ' - Possibly he is giving theal too much attention. Rhododendrons should not be cultivated during the summer. Their feeder roots ' are close to the surface and j :. should not be destroyed. Instead ; i mulch them rather heavily i, with 'ptat moss or leaf mold and then water . them thoroughly, once a i week. Do not sprinkle "but see to it that the water soaks to the - roots. Never let the rhododen drons go' into the winter . in a ; dry condition. Rhododendrons thrive best in semi-shade. They are lovely be neath high-branched evergreen treees or grouped beneath oak trees. ; " t, ' ' . R. P. asks if rhododendrons can be propagated, by cuttings. Tbia can be done but it is a slow process. Take a cutting of ' half-ripened wood,; with a? hell, ,keep It under glass, and if bot tom heat can be employed, it is to great advantage. - Chicago and New York, among his lines being nursery stock, In which he has long been prominent- " ' .1 S ' . "Then came, among the, next owners of automobiles in Salem, In the few first years of this cen tury,' John and Joe Graber, and Dr. W. B. Morse, and Joseph Albert, and his father, J. H. Al bert; (J H. Albert, being a banker, bought his first auto-, mobile secretly, because he thought a, banker owning such a fntraptiori might be considered unsafe to be in the banking line. The 4 banker, f J. H. Albert, had the car in the name of his soil' in-law, Fred Wiggins, who was then a Salem dealer In automo biles.) : . "Some prominent people in Salem, in those early days of automobile history, had -White steamers' and cars run with electric batteries. They imagined them safer than machines run with gasoline. ' ."Salem has grown - In many ways in the 40 years of the life of her woman's dub; in popula tion, among other ways. "The census for 1900 showed 4258 population. For! 1940 it tal lied 30,908. i The intervening' year gave these totals: For 1810, 14,094; for 1920, 1 17,679; for 1930, 26,266." This writer would luce to say, In reference to the population figures for Salem,: above, that. V V - t - Chapter Nine, Continued She knew a warming Instant of surrender. Then, furious with herself and with him, she jerked herself back and brought the flat of her hand smartly against his face. "And you may add that to you memoirs, slrP she cried, retreating one step up the stairs, so that her outraged gaze was nearly level with his eyes. "Your .manners,- like everything else about you, are abominable.' - He smiled at her, unabashed, one finger moving! across his slapped cheek. "Perhaps I had that coming. But it was worth. "Youll have more jcoming if X have to can Polena tq eject you." -Both his hands went up in mock surrender. "Til go. The mere mention of violence at the , hands of mine ancient enemy is ' enough to send me flying. But first, let me say this." He was suddenly grave and lyery much in earnest "Bumping Into a mysterious feud between your grandfather and my aunt has me somewhat stymied. The Cap tain's high-handed demands, and his absolute refusal to let me state my case, had me fighting mad for a- moment f m afraid I -was n't very' diplonatic. But there are some really5 important points about this situation that I want you, .particularly, to know. Let me tell you tonight, in the cupola. Will you go there about nine o'clock, so I can talk to you from the old place off shore?" j His eyes pleaded. She longed with an her heart to say "yes,, but a perverse loyalty to her frandfather held her silent, while he waited for her answer. Finally he turned an slowly de scended the short flight of steps. She stood watching him cross long, paneled reception room to the front door, and fought back a desire to call to him. Then the latch clicked behind him. He was gone. She leaned! against the bannister wendering jfrt the great sense of aloneness that assailed her. But she wondered more at her sudden rise ot, spirits when the door suddenly swung ; back again and ids lean, dark face ap peared in the opening. "Remem ber nine o'clock. He was smll- lng up at her. Tm depending on you. darling. - Chapter Ten ... When Sondra returned to the sitting room, where she expect ed to find her grandfather nurs ing a mighty rage, she -was sur prised to see him talking cheer fully into the : telephone to his crony, Tom Jarvis, president of the Merehanta tnii Fishermen e "bank. . . :&X- ' " -.; "Ho! Hoj! The Captain laughed into the telephone. "Ye should be askin what holiday I mean! Man dear, dont ye know lis the name day of the great Alex ander Baranov, first governor of the Russian fur colonies in Alas ka? . . Sure, tis no legal hol iday, but ye'd not be flyin In the face of tiered tradition,' would ye?, . . But 'tis your own. bank, man. Ye can close It when ye -like! And ye can " have the . Tanya, flagship of me fleet to take ye out there where the king salmon are that hungry they're leapin for the naked hook. . . . What's that? Ye can't? Listen, now, ye dumb Cornishmanr-" the Captain's Voice took on steelr rinff "i m villi ma friendship, and the Olloore ac count yell Oh; ye -get me, eh! ... Well thanks, Tom. . . Sure, me boy. Call on me any time ye have snakes of your own to kilt . ,r - :, ... ' " . . . He eased the Instrument back into its cradle and sat, grimly complacent a moment before he noticed Sondra's presence. "Ah, Sondy! Ye did well to show that young dock-walloper the door before I lost me temper entire ly' She felt faint surprise tt the genial heartiness of his tone. "Now, IH be havin another wee nip of the rum, darlin. ' Never mind the water this time.'' : (To be continued) Distributed by King Features Syndl- : caie, inc. Counting the population of her suburbs,' Salem li a city now of at least 40,000, instead of the 30, 903 given for the census returns Of 1940.; ' Andj counting West Salem and her rapidly growing suburban sections,5 the 50,000 mark is not very far off, in actuality, and surely In time; if ' not already firmly made. iv .-a , No four-corner section out of Salem, in the range ot her su--1 - burbs, has failed, in the past few years, to grow fast and continu ously, ; and the trend is for. a steady progress. Note the Chemawa four cor ners, for instance. In every di rection there has been and still is steady growth; farms without tenants and timber tracts have lately become thickly populated parts ot Salem's suburbs, i V Is In the Kaiser Bottom section, or any other suburban district around the capital city, the story Is the same, and the trend Inten sifying and its territory spread ing. , j . The next 40 years will see a vastly greater Salem. That space, of its future will likely show the capital of Oregon a city of 100,- , 000 people. In case of the full development of the Hax and lin en industries, a city with 400,000 people,' the size of Belfast chief -' est present linen metropolis of the world. - t jacflio 1 Programs Corinth Canal Taken by Germans. V The Corinth canal, vital waterway separating Peloponnesus from Oreece, has been taken by the German In their successful conquest of Greece. The canal, finished in 193, is four miles long and shortens -the route from the Adriatic sea to the port of Athens, a distance of ' 200 miles. The Nazis swept down into Peloponnesus (southern peninsula of Crece). after marching into Athens, Greek capital city. KSLSI ntrOAT 139 Ke. , 'w unrtM salute. 7 .-00 News in Brief. T.-05-Old Time Music. ! ? ao News. :4S Tb Esquires. 8: Hi News. S:45-Tune Tabloid, t -00 Pastor's Call. 9:15 Popular Music. -t:45 Four Notes. 10:00 The World This Mornin. 10:15 Prescription for Happiness. 10:30 Women In the Hews. 10-33-rSinging Strings., t 10 .-45 Dr. R. Franklin Thompson. " 11:00 Melodic Moods.-F , r v 11-30 Valua Parade, i I v - v f-'f 11:43 -Maxine Buren, Borne Economist. . I 11. OO Market Reports. I 115 Ivan Ditmars at the Organ. . 12:15 Noontime News.' i 12-30 HUlbUly Serenade, . U 5 Willamette Valley; Opinions. , 1S.-4S The Song Shop, i 10 Woody Herman's Orchestra. 1:1 Isle of Paradise. - 1-30 6pedal May Quean Broadcast " 1:44 Western Serenade, :00 News. " . . ,. j Sd5 VS Navy. S :30 Tony Pastor's Orchestra. SAO Crossroad Troubador. S.-19 British Belief Program. 3:30 US Bond Interview. 3:45 Concert Gems. j 4:1S News. j 4 JO Teatlme Tunes: ' 1 4:43 rats WaDer's Orchestra. I. -00 Popularity Kow. I 1-30 Dinner Hour Melodies. 0 Tonight's HeadUnea. . S :15 War Commentary j 5 30 Charlie Barnett s Orchestra. 45-Sterllnf Youngs prchestra. 7-00 News In Brief. T 7-4nterestinf Facts. - : I.-IS The Esqulrei. - j . T-30 Shep Fields Orchestra. t0 The World Tonight ,S:15 Kenny Baker's Orchestra. t -30 Wea McWain at Ihe Piano. S:45 News Tabloid. t M Salem-Wenatchee Baseball Game Play by Play. ?2:15 Jimmy Lunceiord Orchestra. .. 10:30 News. .- - f. . j f . - . . 10:49 Let's Dance,' - J 1 - lias Oream Time.- J " , - - .- . ... -, KGW NBC ITUDAT Cf Ke. w-ounrm zverenaae. ao Trail Blazers. 7:00 News. T -30 Novatime. 7:45 David Harum. ; S-00-Sara Hayes. S -30 Stars of Todar. .-00 Benny Walker's Kitchen :19 Bess Johnson. -T JO Ellen Randolph. ,) .-4S Dr. Kate. 1 100 Light of the World. 10:15 The Mystery Manj 100 Valiant Lady. f ' 10:4 Arnold Grimm's Daughter.- 11-00 Story of Mary. Mar lin. 11:19 Ma Perkins. ! 110 Pepper Young's FSmily. 11:43 Vic and Sade. i 13.-00 Backstage Wiffc ? 13:15 Stella Dallas. f ' 13 -30 Lorenzo Jones. 11:45 Young Wldder Brown. 1 "00 Home of the Brave. 1:15 PorUa Faces Life, i 16 Life Can Be Beautiful. 3:00 Tha Culdlng light; 2:1 Lone Journey. 330 Voice of txperienoa. - S.-4S News. S -30 Hollywood News Plashes. - 3:43 News. ' . j 4. -00 Stars of Today, i f 4:45 CockUU Hour. ' So Waltx Tuna. : i JO Uncle Walter's Doghouse. 6:00 Wings of Destiny.? -7.-0O Fred Waring Pleasure Time. T:15 Story Behind the Headlines. t-JO Death Valley Days, . 5. -OO Champions. :15 Armchair Cruises. ! 30 Palladium Ballroom Orchestri. . ISO Your Mayor Speaks. :15 Palace Hotel Orchestra. ao Frontiers of Industry. ' ; 10 0 News. - 10:15 This Is Tor You. t 10-30 Wtlshtre Bowl Orchestra. 11 AO News. 11:15 Bal Tabarin Cafe Orchestra, liao FlorenUn Gardens Orchestra. HS News. I . e . I KEX nbc riroAY 11H jce. - DO Musical Clock. to Western Agriculture. T:19 Breakfast Club, t Sao National Farm and Home. :1S Between the Bookxnds. 30 Art of Urine. j 100 News. ! I 10 JO Charmingly We Llya. 11 AO Orphans ot Divorce. 11:15 Amanda of Honeyanoon HilL 11 30 John s Other Wife ' ll:45-Just Plain Bill. 1 12.-00 Mother of Mine. 13:15 Market Reports. ! 1330 News. - J 10 Sidestreet Vignettes. 1 -30 Charles Dant's Music. . 1 MS Curbstone Quiz, t S0 The Quiet Hour.: 1 . aao WUt Sarer. - i 3:45 Gasoline Alley. ! 3 .-00 The Aristocrats. I 3:15 Radio Magic. I J JO H4rl Pennsylvania Orchestra. 4 US Guatemalan Rhumb Bind. "'.-').- : , i-r-'-- ;vv . Tkese schedules are rnpplled fey tha respective stations. Any varla tions noted by listeners arc dot to changes made by tha stations withes! aotice t this newspaper. 4-30 Ireene Wicker. . ,f i.w-iiw joariona, , - SK0 Buster Quiz.'-- i . v-r -30 Your Happy. Birthday. COO Romance and Rhythm. 6-30 Fantasy in Melody. 6:49 News. ' r . 7)0 Hotel Edison Orchestra. T 30 Ben Bern ie'S Army Gams'. ' w-muwia joaseoau. . - 10:19 Hotel BUtmora Orchestra. "T 10- 30 Behind tha Headlines. 11S)0 This Moving World. 11 US-Portland Police Reports. 11:1S Palladium Ballroom Orchestra. 11- 30 War News Roundup. - - KOIN CBS FmiDAT 7 Kc. Farm Reporter. :15 KOIN Mock. 7.-00 Buddy dark. 7a-Mews. 7:4 Consumer News. i S0 Kate Smith. :1S When a Girl Marries. S JO Romance of Helen Trent 8:4 Our Gal Sunday. 9. -00 Life Can Be Beautiful, :15 The Goldbergs. 30 Right to Happiness. f 1 10: flo Big Sister. 10:1 Aunt Jenny. 1030 Fletcher Wiley. , i 10- 4-Kate Hopkins. 110 Martha Webster. h 11- 30 Hello Again. . ; 11. -45 Woman of Courage. - ! 110-News. ll:l-Myrt and Marga. 1330 Bess Johnson. 12 :45 Stepmother. 1--0O Hymns of AU Churchaai " U5 Singln' Sam. r ISO-The O-Nella. I lt Scattergood Balnea.- ' . 30 Young Dr. Malonee 1:1 Hedda Hopper's Hollywood. 130 Joyce Jordan. 1:4 Tha World Today. 3.-00 The Second Mrs. Burton. 3:15 We the Abbotts. . . 330-News. 430-Eyes of the World.' 4-4 News, .,, S0 Buddy Malevffla Orchestra. JO Campbell Playhouse. . H)0 Hollywood Premier? 30 Al Pearce.- . , 70 Amos ' V Andy I 7:15 Lanny Ross. .-00 Kate Smith. : ' AO Leon F. Drews. 30 News: :4risiurig- as WtlrtJ I "l I 10. -00 Five Star Final. 10:15 Nightcap Yarns. 10 JO Portland Police. 10:45 Columbia Orchestra: 1130 Manny Strand Orchestra-. 11:55 News. - . J.. v KALE MBS FKIDAY 1U Ke. -30 Memory Timekeeper. 70 News. -00 Haven of Rest 30 News. -00 This and That 30 Helen Holden. -4 ru Find My Way. 100-John B. Hughes. 10:1 Voice of American Women. 10-30 Woman's Side of the News. 10:45 Buyer's Parade. 11:00 Friendly Neighbors. 1130 Concert Gems. 1330 Johnson Family. 13:43 Newa. 1-00 John B. Hughes. 1:45 The Bookworm. ,' 130 News. : - 3 0-Your Portland. 1 3:15 Hera's Morgan. i 330 Pop Concert 4 DO Sunshine Xxpreea. S:1S News. ; i SSO Shatter Parker's Circus. S -00 Ray CrSm Swing. :15-Fuiton Lewis. j . 30 John B. Hughes. w aonei Meetter. ' 7 U Jimmy Allen, 7 JO Lone Ranger. ; S:l McKinney and Company. S JO Los Angeles County Band. IM-Mewi. - - ,!iitcletl!00 Nobis Orchestra. 100 Ted Flo Rito. v-1030-NewS. 10:4 Leighton Noble Orchestra. 1130-Henry Khtg Orchestra. . Vos v ; " , :1S The Homemakera Hour. 100-Weather Forecast - V 10:15 Traf tic Safety Quis. . 110 School ot the Air. 11JO Music ot the Masters. 130 News. . - - -. 12:1 Farm Hour. 20 Club Women's Half Hour. 3:4 Monitor Views the News. 3:15 Books and the News. 3:45 News. 430 Stories for Boys and Girls. 0 On the Campuses. S Vespers. 0:15 News, t 30 Farm Hour. 8:30 Forestry Conference, 0 Library Log. :3a Secretarial Science. : Office of the Dean of Women