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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1941)
Ti CZTGCII CTATTd-IATl Cdsra. Ortega, fcziarday Men&ig, Mjt 3. lMV v:jzz rem - r j f 'i '" ...anaBiSMSMMaMSMMBMBSMSSSMISWSSMMWt" (S)rcfioniiiitatc0man i wwm MM ; ; No FowrlStcov 17; No Fear Shall Awe From First Statesman, March 28, 1831 ! THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO, ; CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. President " 1 . 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 In this newspaper. Babylon Call it Iraq; and you conjure tip a strictly modern picture of oil derricks in a setting of As iatic intrigue modified by the map-drawing v.- aftw War T Tt'e An rhscure Ull UVUt WIS! V " - T corner of the world, but you mark it as a mili tary objective, because of the oil. , But these are times in which man is search ing the records of the past for lamps to light up the future. So you look back a little way and call it Mesopotamia, a word the Greeks had for "between the rivers." The rivers are the Tigris and the Euphrates, which unite to form a swampy delta emptying into the Persian Gulf, silted now with the sands of time so that its an cient seaports are discovered far inland. Mention "Bagdad and you may draw upon your recollection of school literature and recent supplementary glimpses in the movies for a pic , ture 4f what it was like in the middle ages un der Arab rule; a colorful, mystic land made fer tile by the ancient irrigation canals until Gen ghis Khan laid them waste in 1298 and the land reverted to desert punctuated only by an occas ional oasis. ' I But if you turn the pages of, history back all the way you catch a vision of one of the most ancient civilizations. Look on the map for Mosul. About there stood Ninevah the great city of the region under Assyrian rule. But before that, UcMo h T(SiTViroto farther Anum n the delta region stood the ancient city of Babylon. Hillah, if you can find it on your map, is the approxi mate location. Babylon, capital of Babylonia, home of the Sumerians some 3000 years ago they are credited with the invention of cune iform writing and later of the Semites and then the Hittites prior to the Assyrian invasion when Babylon itself went into eclipse to be re stored by the Chaldeans about 609 BC. It was the capital of Chaldea when Nebuchadnezzar 1 brought the Children of Isreal there in captiv ity. :' l - I Babylonia was taken over by the Persians some 59 years later and, of course,, by Alexan der the Great some 300 years BC and by the Romans early in the Christian era. Much of hu man culture and 'science developed, and much human I blood was spilled from time to time, ' SumerJ Babylonia, Assyria, Mesopotamia all more or less the same little spot on the map called Aram in the bible and. Al Jazirah by the And now, because oil flows from the ground and through pipelines to Suez and Alexandria, blood is beginning to flow in Iraq, which is still the same country under a new name. Not much in the way of culture is likely to have itsbe ffinnlnora thr nnw And vet. as the mechanized armies mass there, one may be remlndedvby all that has gone before, that empires and their em - perors do not endure forever- Sooner br later : they falL ' ... ! , - .. culture, dignity and reserve. There is another legend that so affectionately did Bostonians re gard their newspaper that no one ever threw away a back copy. ; But Boston has changed and the Transcript has neglected to change in equal degree. The number' of Bostonians Who cling to the old tra ditions has dwindled, for early this year the Transcript's circulation, in a city of some 770,-, 000, had dropped to less than twice that of The Statesman. And on Wednesday the venerable newspaper was scheduled to give up the ghost. The old maxim about the better mousetrap doesn't seem to apply in this modern age. Seems as though you have to have salesmanship and "oomph" to get a following these days, in addi tion to or perhaps even regardless of quality. Socialism - i ; Down in Clatsop county they're arguing about a PUD. The election is next Tuesday. At a meeting sponsored, by the county League of Women Voters -at which both sides of the argument were presented, Attorney Al lan Smith of Portland who advocated retention of private ownership' "stopped the show by calling everyone who favored public power "so- cialists." - ,-. Subsequently he backed up and limited the nomenclature to tpublic power advocates con nected with the federal administrationinclud ing Morton Tompkins and Dr. Carl Thompson, who are on the job for the Bonneville adminis istration in the campaign. ' It's strange. Nobody objected when Dick Neuberger called the public power program "socialism' In a national magazine possibly Moral Courage There are few statesmen left in this world -who could have made the speech Mr. Chur chill made yesterday; there are few remain ing peoples whose leaders would still dare to address them in such terms. New York Her- Id Tribune. , : That Churchill dared to tell his people the whole unvarnished truth was to the Herald Tribune editor's mind the remarkable, the note worthy; point about the prime minister's report upon what had happened in Greece. J Things are moving rapidly for the United States, almost too rapidly for public awareness to keep pace even,if it were informed promptly and in straightforward language. There is evi dence of some concern over, failure of the ad ministration to take the public into its confi dence with frankness equal to that employed by Churchill. ' ' . "-i Out; navy is patrolling" thousands of miles from our shores. This is an accomplished fact; but news of it came piecemeal in a series of hints, not from the president originally but from Mayor LaGuardia of New York, Secretaries Hull end Knox and Admiral Land. : There is concern too over the use of the word "patrol" coupled with intimation that it means some material aid to Britain on the high seas, without admission that it amounts sub stantially to "convoy" o, if perchance it doesn't, a clear definition, of just what it does mean. ' When the "neutrality act" was amended at the opening of the war and again when the lend lease bill was enacted some weeks ago, there was full and free debate in congress. Some peo ple grew weary of the debate, inasmuch as in each case the outcome was apparent in advance. Yet the debate did help to clarify the situation, did satisfy some reluctant citizens that the dem- . ocratic processes had functioned and that the' decision was the nation's decision; ' j. v - : " But ; when a resolution proposing to forbid convoying of belligerents' merchant ships was brought before congress it was killed in com mittee so that the general membership has no opportunity for debate. Once again the outcome was apparent. The major decision has been made. The nation will do, though reluctantly, anything "short; of war that is necessary to keep Britain going. . v Yet it is unfortunate that congress was not permitted in this instance to proceed in the democratic way to affirm the decision. For as everyone knows, this may be the last decision. At any moment the initiative may be taken from the American people. One unfortunate incident may transfer the initiative to-the Old World aggressors. And if this decision was the, last, it is unfortunate for the sake of national unity that it could not be made by the proper agency, the people's representatives in congress.' ' : - f & By BARRETT WTLLOUGHBY " Si Bailing out as the Ship of State Flies on because Neuberger favored it. And no matter fSl'O1 fifkTA Qlr'VlmCtKr how we look at it, public power looks to us ex- 12)1 i II U IT lfi)irWrCUL4 II ClD iL actly like socialism and nothing else. someone can show lis the difference. Maybe By R. J. HENDRICKS i News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON (Distributed by Kin Feature Syndicate. Inc., re- . ; production In whole or In part strictly prohibited.) I WASHINGTON, May 2. You are not keeping up with the latest military facts if you let yourself become melancholy over Britain's prospective fate in the Mediterranean. A com plete revision of popular theo ries on the war is necessary as a result of recent breaks. The Mediterranean has been for centuries a vital lifeline of the British empire. Popular pessimism is "evident because they are about to lose It Cen sorship has foolishly concealed the truth that they lost it weeks agor Even the Suez has been of little use to the empire for f months because of mines laid from planes. No convoying Paul Manoa of British commercial shipping 1 has ' been attempted through the Mediterranean since the axis established bombing bases in Sicily. Conquest of Greece will merely give the nazis more bombing bases. The only thing now vital to the British jn that area is the large British naval base at Alexandria. H A substitute lifeline for Britain across the North Atlantic to the United States was established before the Mediterranean felL British tin, rubber, and oil shipments from the far east have been going-recently through: the Panama canal for tran shipment at New York across the new lifeline. The Germans will have to cut this one if they want a victory.- ( . Gibraltar has been regarded as the rock upon which the British empire is built. Developments in the I eastern Mediterranean have made it just an other rock. , " j The Germans will testify to this. For more than three months they have been ready to move through Spain to. take ; Gibraltar. It is not the friendly Spanish government that has been hold ing them back, but the military problem of sup plying their troops and the people of that starving country as well. Gibraltar war just not worth that COSt. : .' . I !if . War as it was fought. $' 5-3-4t between Union and Rebel . fighters compared with itht V Hitler blitzkriegs of i 9 4 1: ;.. y s r ? ',-: As has before been recorded In this column, Dr. L. E. Barrick , of Salem, who is Marion coun ty's coroner, has twice visited the Gettysburg battlefield, and plans a' third visit, to make a further first hand study of that historic and hallowed -vicinity, called "the Mecca of pilgrimage to all lovers of our Union and to tourists the most interesting place in America." . li Dr. Barrack brought, with hint on his last visit copy of "The Story of Gettysburg in Pictures and, of "The Blue and Gray," the -latter a history of the great bat tle that was the turning point of the Civil war. I j: f ' ' ' h .:. That battlefield has become a national park, managed and sup ported by the United States gov ernment, with many millions al ready invested by many! states and organizations, in !"many miles of avenues and driveways; imperishable monuments and tablets in granite and bronze, more than 500 in number, and more than 1000 markers ; . . to mark the spots where brave men died and the positions of vari ous units and armies' There is not, there cannot be, anything like it in America, or the world. It i , S M .:. : HI : Comparing the Hitler blitz kriegs (mass mechanized mur ders) of the present With the heroic acts and the feelings of civilized men engaged! in the Civil war, it is worth -while to copy an article from the "Blue and Gray" history mentioned above. The article was written by Capt T. J. Mackey of the Confederate Army near the time Whenever the nazis think they can feed fas- . . v. cist Spain, they will knock off Gibraltar as easily rf iv7e li 21 Tr"! Quality: : ' ; ' Legend has if that members of a certain sedate Eostoa household, havb" become par-. ties to a newsworthy eventvwere presently in formed by their butler that there awaited out- ' side "two reporters and a gentleman from the Trartscrt.".,-'..-; ' : '-'-vvv':"' ; FoundrJ in 1830, the Evening Transcript bccaix.2 r.mousas .Boston itself. It was a newspsicr strictly" in the Boston tradition of as they captured Italy.;: Dispel from your mind the common supposi tion that Hitler does not want Russia. The reds are likely to be next, if the invasion of England fails or Is not attempted. : Russia is the raw material storehouse of Europe and .Asia. Hitler has been conquering mostly empty breadbaskets so far. If he finds this is going to be a long war, he will arm himself for it by imposing German efficiency upon that treasure house of the world. - . The Germans seem very anxious to keep the United States out of the war until the nazi con quest is complete. No attack Hitler could devise would be less distasteful to the United States than Invasion of Russia. ' i The notion that Hitler will not fight on two fronts at the same time has also become dangerous. The German general staff held that view during this war only as long as Germany was a small country. Now Hitler as a world power has 260 di visions under arms (over 3,000,000 men). Armies rot unless used.:'You can do anything with a bay- onet except sit on It," is an old army saying. The only front on which his troops are now being used is a brief stretch in the Egyptian desert For the complete conquest of the Greeks, Yugoslavians, and British in the Balkans he used only 40 divisions, leaving 220 to fight elsewhere. Obviously he now has the strength to hold Britain with air and sea attacks while moving against Russia, seizing Gib raltar, and extending his conquests in the near east ' .-.'.--:" " - i i Another cliche thai must now.be doubted is' the one that ."Germany must win In 1941 or else". The conquests which the nazis have recently made and. those they can easily make will strengthen Hitler materially for a: long pulL - - Invasion of England is no doubra temptation' . to a military strategist but the risk . of failure is great and the psychological reaction would be dev astating to Hitler' successes so far. V 4 A better game would be to conquer Russia and the near east and then sue for peace, with some ' very sweet concessions to Britain and the United 'States Z . . 2 ?, , - By LILLUCL. MADSZN of the events, and afterward copied by McClure's Magazine. It reads: -' "- Though never a war. was fought with more earnestness than our own Civil war between the North and South, ' never a war was marked by more deeds of noble kindness between men, officers and privates, of the con tending sides, i Serving at the front during the entire war as a captain of engineers in the Con federate army, many such deeds came under , by own personal at tention, and many have been re lated to me by eye-witnesses. Here is one especially worthy of . record: ' V J"The advance of General Early's line of battle commenced early on the afternoon of 'July 1st The brigade commanded by Major General J. B. Gordon of Georgia was among those to at tack the Union right' The daring commander of that corps occu pied a position so far advanced beyond the main line of the Federal army that while it in vited attack, it placed him be yond the reach of ready support when the crisis of battle came to him in the rush of charging lines more extended than his own. The Confederate advance was steady, and it was bravely met by the Union troops, who for the first time found them selves engaged in a battle on the soil of the North, which until then had been virgin to the war. It was a far cry from Richmond to Gettysburg, yet Lee was in their front and they seemed re solved to welcome their South ern visitors with bloody hands to hospitable graves.' But the Fed-, era! flank rested in the air, and, being turned, the line was badly broken and, despite a bravely resolute defense against the well ordered attack of the Confederate veterans was forced to fall back. "General Gordon's brigade Was in motion at a double-quick to seize and hold the vantage ground in their front from which the opposing line had retreated, when GORDON saw lying direct-' lylnhis path the apparently dead body i of a Union officer. He checked his horse, and then ob served that. the officer was stm living. "He at once dismounted, and seeing the head of his wounded foeman was lying in a depres sion; in the ground, placed under it a nearby knapsack. While rais ing him at the shoulder for that purpose, he saw that the blood was; trickling from a bullet-hole in the back, and then knew that , the officer had been shot through the breast He then gave a drink ' from a flask of brandy and wa ter,!! and, as the man revived, ' said, while leaning over him, 1 am sorry to see you In this con dition. I am General Gordon. Please tell me who you are, I wish to aid you all I can. . "The answer came In feeble tones; Thank you. General, I am Brigadier General Barlow- of New York. You can do nothing for me; I am dying. Then, after a pause, he said, 'Yes, you can; my , wife is at either the head quarters of General Howard or Meade. If you survive the bat tle, please let her know I died doing: my duty. - . i j S ' . "General Gordon replied: Your message, if I live, shall surely be given to your wife. Can I .do nothing more for you?' After; a brief pause. General Bar ; low; replied: 'May God bless you, only one thing more. Feel In the breast pocket of my coat the left breast, and take out a pack of letters.' ; "As General Gordon unbut toned the blood-soaked coat and took out the packet the seem ingly; dying soldier said: Now please read one to me. They are from; my wife, and I wish that her words shall be the last X hear in this world.'" I (Concluded - tomorrow.) Chapter II eon tinned - All through dinner Sondra was divided between wondering what Jean Reynall . had. to tell her, and assuring herself that she didn't care enough about it to go to the cupola to find out Today had been the most event- ' fut the most disillusioning she had ever known; yet paradox- -ically, she felt a quickening of the current of life, a stirring an ticipation of something thrilling waiting for her in the, near fu ture. She wanted to be alone to think about this, but Liane, after dining in her room,, had come downstairs. Now, i languid and 'exotic in black velvet the older girl was trailing' Sondra from room l to J room, smoking and -chatting. ' v 2 : "Sitka, ever since I. can re member, has always been a dull hole, Sondra. Why, you, with , your money, ever came back beret to live is a mystery to me. After knowing life In the out side world, too. College, Europe. . Everything gay. . Certainly, there's never 'been a man in the place that either you or X would consider marrying. However, ' this Starbuck has distinct possi bilities. His manners are those ' of a real Southern gent; and he must have money, holding the position he does. I suppose you two are good pals both being . interested in historic stuff and all that?" ; "We're good friends, answer ed Sondra absently. The clock had just struck half past eight In half an hour Jean Reynall ; would be out there in the bay, talking across the water. The ' thought sent her moving rest lessly from the library into the spacious old drawing room. She was thoroughly annoyed when Uane tagged after her. "Who Is this other chap who comes to. the house?"' asked Iiiane. . . . "What, other chap?" Sondra - was at the old square piano sort- -ing music that had already been . sorted. "Dont try to hold out on me, darling. I saw. him leaving the house this afternoon taU, dark, white pull-over, and a high and mighty walk." That must have been Cap tain Jean Reynall." -, . Wot Miss Jacqueline's boy? What luck? We were in school here together, until Miss Jack sent him out to the States. But how come, Sondra? Arent your respective .families sort of Mon-tague-and-Capuletish?" LUnc rested her folded arms on the piano with the air v of one set . for a long chat Sondra answered shortly. "He came today to see Dynamite on business. ; He's superintendent of floating cannery , that's Just been moored to the Bates dock." "Um-m-m-m. I must run down tomorroW and renew our child hood friendship. ; The lad's a complete knockout But of course you never noticed that Honestly, darling, you might as well be in a cloister for all the Hey! Be careful. You've torn that sheet of music in two." It was true. Liane's patronizr ing tone, her frank admiration for Jean and what it implied, had irked Sondra beyond con trol. Moreover, it had resulted in a decision. She would go to the cupola now, come what may. "By the way, Sondra, didn't Kemp say he was coming over tonight to bring you a bronze plaque, or something?" "Good heavens!" thought Son dra, aghast She had forgotten that possibility. It was a quarter to nine,' He might arrive any moment "She must -get away at once. Liane's remark had given her an idea for escape. "Yes," she said aloud. TWould you mind waiting here to receive him, Liane?, I want to- run upstairs and do a few little things for for Dynamite .before.' he i goes ' to bed. : Here-Msitt in this easy chair. The late magazines tare there on the table. . . . There you are.! ; Sondra forced herself to walk from the room, but once out of Liane's sight she ran up the stairs as'; fast as her feet could carry her.v ' ; . r ;;', Alone in the cupola she stood looking out through the open ings, conscious of the scene of peace which the height, and space and sweep of country al ways brought her. ' This was the hour that had always : brought romance near to her, that lover she had , fashioned from dreams. Daring, Wise, gentle, strong. Capable of ' commanding dangerous men, yet yielding to one womanherself. Tonight she felt poignantly, . that never again could the magic of twilight bring back that dream. It had died today in the irony . and disillusionment of Jean ReynalTs return. The luminous dial of her wrist Watch gave her eight min utes to ; nine. Jean should be coming in sight now. She lean- ed forward tensely,; scanning the dim, shining water between the two islands. ; 7 The channel was empty. No thing moved there. (To be continued) Eadio IPrrogirainnis DJL Asks what the name of the plant is which blooms in rockeries in early spring and . is sometimes used in borders. Has large, rather thick leaves of light green and stems of pink flowers growing in clusters. M I imagine she is referring to the aaxifraga : stracheyi or S. bergenia. These are very good rock plants particularly for the Willamette valley. , They; should be planted so that they have partial shade in summer. Mrs.T.N. Asks what is a late blooming lilac, j . ;....;-. - At the Cooley gardens at SH verton they report that the Christopher Columbus Is one of the later blooming varieties. It is a lovely lilac in color and the trusses are very large. X noticed that it was very good early this week when I visited the gardens, while the Congo, the Mills and many. of-the other sorts were gone for some time, ? . TJLD. wants some 1 informa tion on the culture of what she terms "snake plant" From hef. description I take it she refers to Bowstring hemp (sansevier la). She says she was given a little round bulb of the plant and is quite interested in its growth. She planted-if at once in ordinary soil. !t I '- The root will start well in or dinary garden sou. The sansevi erias prefer a rather heavy soil. They will also bloom and are. "very attractive in blossom. These are nice for house culture as they demand little attentian and . keep right on growing.' a. Crowd Sees Indoor Redwood Forest KSLM SATURDAY 13M Ke. :30 Sunriae Salute. -7 JO News. 7:45 Ray Herbeck's Orchestra. 830-News. S:4S Tune Tabloid. t. -00 Pastor's Call. :1S Popular Music, t :45 Four Notes. 10.-00 The World This Morning. 10:15 Town House Orchestra. 10 JO Walts Time. , 11:00 Bob Hamilton's Trio. 11 JO Value Parade. 12:1 Noontime News. 13:30 Hillbilly Serenade. 1J -.35 Willamette Valley Opinions. -1250 The Song Shop. 1 KM Hollywood Buckeroos. 1 JO Two Kings and a Queen. S .-OO News. S:loSaturday Afternoon Varieties. Sw Western Serenade. - S JO Concert Gems. -4:15 News. . 4 JO Teatlme Tunes. . 4:45 The Four Belies. - SAO Popularity Row. S:30 Dinner Hour Melodies. . 4:00 Tonight's Headlines. 4:15 War Commentary. 420 Charlie Barnett's Orchestra. 445 Henry King's Orchestra. 7:15 Interesting racts. 7 JO The Tomboyers. 4:00 The World Tonight S:15 Salem-Tacoma Baseball Game. 1.1)0 News Tabloid. :l 5 Salem-Tacoma Baseball Came. 10 JO News. . 10.-45 Let's Dance, lias Dream Time. " ....-, : KGW NBC SATURDAY 424 Kc 440 Sunrise Serenade. 4 JO Trail Blazers. , 7:00 News. 7 JO Weekend Whimsy. tlM Sam Hayes. ' ' 4:15 From New England to You. 5 JO Call to Youth. ' 4:00 Lincoln Highway. . 4:45 News. 10:00 Read In. Writin and Rhythm, 10 JO Cordon Jenkins Orchestra, ) 11KK) Stars of Tomorrow. . IS AO News. H& Campus Capers. 12 JO Boy, Girl, and Band. . 1:00 The World Is Yours. -1 JO Curtis Institute of Music. 10 Glen Island Casino Orchestra. - 1:25 News. S 30 Religion in the News. S.-45 News. 1:45 H. V. Kaltenborn. 40 St. rrancis Hotel Orchestra. 4 JO Palladium Ballroom Orchestra. 1:00 National Bam Dance. 4:00 Uncle toa. 4 JO Grand Ol' Opry. Taete Ichedales art supplied y the respecUTO itsfli. Any varla Uom mmtti ky Itateaers are dae 0 changes ma4e fey the stations wttaeat aotict to Uut aewtpaper. 14 JO The Quiet Hour. U JO War News Roundup. - This Is net the depths ef a red weed forest, bat a view ef the California Spring Garden shew in Oakland, a redwood forest indoers, heralded . - as the most Impressive bloom display ever held In the west. Mere than 115.CS9 persons were expected U attend the four-day event, - ending slay i. Above, the falls ef the "XL&l&bew Torest" pictsred be hind the Cower displays. 7.-00 Truth or Conseque 7 JO Knickerbocker Playhouse. SM-News. 45 PaUce Hotel Orchestra. 4 JO Edgewater Beach Orchestra. 4 as News. r 00 Defense of America. -t JO Sir rrancis Drake Orchestra 100 News. 10:15 Hotel Bittmore Orchestra. 10 JO Uptown Ballroom Orchestra. 11 AO News. linSWUshire Bowl Orchestra. 11 JO FlorenUne Gardens Orchestra. HEX NBC SATURDAY 41H Kc 4 JO Musical Clock. TS Breakfast Club. . 4 JO National Farm and Home. 1 0 JO Luncheon at the Waldorf. ' 100 News. 10:15 Indiana Indlrt. 10 JO Charmingly We Live. 10:45 Hotel Lexington Orchestra. -11J0 Mustcof the Americas. 110 Club Matinee, -12 JO News. - 11.-45 Market Reports. 1:00 Curbstone Qui. 1 JO Sing Before Supper. 10 El Quco Spanish Revue. 2:25 News. 1 JO The Vass ramlly. 145 Edward Tomlinson. 10 Mtwsage ef Israel. 1 JO Uttle or HoUywood. 4t)0 Kiy Dee Triplets. ' 4:15 Man and the World. 4 JO The Bishop and the Gargoyle. 4:15 Tropical Moods. . 4:30 Summer Symphony. - 4:30 Hotel Edison Orchestra. ' 445 New. 7 JO Hotel BUtmore Orchestra. -00 News. 85 Hotel BOtmore Orchestra. :: Portland BaebaU. 10:1 Kir i rancis Urake Orchestra KOINCBS SATURDAY-474 Kc. 40 NW Farm Reporter. 4:15 KOD KOock. 7:15 News. 74S Consumer News. ' 80 Country Journal. 30 Highways to Health. 4:45 Jobs for National Defense. 40 Lets Pretend.. JO Sunshine Almanac 100 Brush Creek FoUica. 10. -45 Hello Again. 11. -00 Library of Congress Musicals. 120 News. ( 11:15 Matinee at Meadowbrook. 10 News.! 1 JO Derby Preview. 1 .53 News. 2.-00 Report to Nation. 20 People's Platform, JO Newspaper of the Air. , i :w -iTsmc safety. , i 4:55 News. 10 Kid's Ouluroa. 4J0 Mews, :45-aturday Night Serenade. :15-lubllc Affairs. f JO-Colden Gate Quartet. t.-00-Marriage Club. 7 J0 Duffy's Tavern. ' T AS News. 00 Hit Parade. 4:45 Jose Maraud Orchestra. ;3Q Mcwn - 8. -45 Tonight's Best Buy. ' 100 rive Star rinaL 10 JO Jerry Sears Orchestra. Hi?MnnT Strand Orchestra. 1135 News. '' i ' KALa-MBS SATUKOAY IS34 Kc. 4 JO Memory Timekeeper. 70 News. 40r-US Army Band.1 I. , :30-News, 0 This and That. , J J0 Helen Holden. ' nd My Way. 10:00 News. 2? Woman's Side of the News. 10. -45 Buyer's Parade. 11. -OO News. 11 JO Concert Gems. UHS-News. ltlS-Aroerlcan Lejioa NewsT 1 JO University Life .. ; 20 Sunshine game ess. ' ; 2:15 News. 2 JO Duluth Symphony. ' . : 10 Mrst Offender. 1 JO Treddy Martin Orchestra. , 40 The Green Hornet. 4 JO Hawaii Calls. S:lS-News. S JOChkago Bach Chorus. -: ; 40 Innocent Bystander. , t SO SUitabeth Wayne, CommesU ' tor. ,i T0 Gabriel Heatter. ., I 70S churchman's Saturday Night. 7S Better Business Bureau. : 80 Seaside Shindig. ttr-ttews. . - v 8:15 Leigh ton Noble Orchestra. 100 riesu Time, 10 J0 News. - 105 Letfhton Noble Orchestra. U JO Henry King Orchestra, f KOAC SATCXDAY-454 Ke. 40 News. 77- ' 4:15 Co-ed Hoar. - Gallant American Women. 100 Weather Forecast -..10:15 US Army Program. 10 JO-Junlor Matinee: - ' - . Jl ?-jyhat Educators Are Doing. 11-00 News, . 12:15 Farm Hoar. ' . 10 FF A Convention. 20 Camera Club. . 2:45 Monitor Views th New. . 2:15 Swindles to Suit. 1:45-News. 40 Symphonic Half Hoar. v 4 JO Stories for Boys and Girls. : ;. 40 On the Campuses. S:45-Vespers. . .'. :15-Ntwa. ! ' , ' ' ' 4 JO Farm Hour. - 7:45 Science News.: ' 40 Grand Opera. - 40 School of Agriculture. Sunday Radio Programs On Tr-s C 4 V