- ' : ; -.V.i ' :'l .- ... ..... Xl CZ2.Qn CTATCIJM Cdasa. Ortgoa. Sunday l-Iornlng, Hoy 11 1311 Ti w j ; , - : , ; . THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President - Member of The Associated Press v Tbe Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Young Blother, 1941 f -: She smiles, and you can just tell it's habitu al. Her carriage, is buoyant, her step brisk and sprightly (hough she carries a burden. She; wears just; what the smart young thing is wear ing this season don't ask a mere man to de scribe it. From head to foot she is as neat as a pin. She sis the picture of youth and health and vitality. She might be a co-ed. But she isn't. .j; - ' . - - -. x- j Thit burden she is carrying is a six-months-old baby, j I She is Young Mother, 1941. But she is not an idealized, imaginary character. We saw her in a State street restaurant Friday afternoon about 4 o'clock. Fortunately we didn't know her name, jso shell remain Young Mother, 1941. i i Todayj is Mother's day. Thinking of Mother's day as we have in the past, it's not possible, today, to escape the thought of mothers' anguish in a world at war. A year ago that was what j we talked about We could talk about it again, but most everything has been said. And there's not much that anyone can do to help.! I There ;is something, though, that the com munity can do about Young Mother, 1941. It can see to It that more young mothers are like her. Already there are a great many such young mothers. There didn't used to be. Motherhood was a drain upon Jiealth and vi tality; a physical sacrifice. For many it still is, but no longer is it necessary. Gains in pre-natal and post-natal care are reflected in the sharply reduced maternal and infant mortality death rates. The 1939 figures, latest available, were lowest in history; 40 ma ternal deatjhs for each 10,000 live births; 48 in fant deaths for each 1000 live births. Excellent progress, but not yet enough. Of the 9151 ma ternal deaths, 42 were due to infection. Pre ventable, in most cases. In the cities, 81 per cent of births occurred in hospitals; in rural areas, only 22 per cent. In cities, 98 per cent are attended by physicians; in rural areas, 17 percent are attended by mid wives or other non medical persons; among negroes, the figure is S3 per cent Maternity clinics, infant clinics arid pre-school clinics are on the increase. The Mar lon county health department provides these services; here the need is to persuade more families tot take advantage of them. But there are 2500 counties in the nation which offer no such services. i j This ii the new theme of Mother's day; bet ter motherhood. It subtracts nothing from the homage paid to mothers by the wearers of the I white and red carnations, but due to the efforts of the National Committee on the Observance of -i Mother's Dayk Inc., non-profit corporation cre ated this year, it adds a more practical objective. A statement issued by this agency and sponsored by outstanding maternal health authorities reads . in part: I Mother's day is no longer symbolized by the sweet, white-haired, resigned Whistler's Mother. The older; generation, is not forgotten, but now Mothers day is personified by a young mother with young children. Mother today is youth, freshness, and' gaiety, and happiness, and health. In her honor. Mother's day has become an occa sion of changing a lethargic public attention to an alert interest in the dissemination of scientific Information on the pre-natal care for mothers and on the health, education, and training of their Children . j. . If on Mother's, day the public can be aroused; to the vital importance of the job that mothers have to do, if mothers themselves can be moved to seek more information on the prob lem involved in their Job as mothers, and to use increasingly the health and educational facilities -offered in their respective communities, then Mother's day will be an increasingly important factor in the development of healthier, happier families throughout the coming years. No Special Session For reasons which seemed f icient at the time, the Oregon legislature has on several occasions been called into special session. The most recent occasion was the burning of the old capjitol and the need for its replacement; others that come to mind were the several "de pression" involving need for legislation to sup plement federal action upon - issues of relief, banking and prohibition repeal. . These were, or appeared then to be, real emergencies; and yet in most cases the public had cause to regret, and even to question, the' necessity. For it was long ago established that the business to come before such a session can not be limited, either through the governor's call or, in practice, by agreement among the members. Once let the legislature sit down in those upholstered chairs and it is there for "the duration." . ; ' ; i Now, less than 60 days after the close of Oregon's second longest regular legislative ses sion, there is agitation for a special session. What, is the "emergency" which prompts it? Why, it seems that; the state tax commission has done a revolutionary thing; it has told the Multnomah county assessor he must observe the law. It is true that some other counties are in- " volved U a minor degree, and that compliance with the order will make a substantial difference in the taxes which' home owners will have to pay in the next two years; claims as to the extent of this difference, if accurate, serve to ' illustrate the extent to which assessors have ignored the law. If for example , compliance will raise -the taxes of some home owners IS per cent and others 50 per cent, that is proof that even upon the same classes of property, assessment has not been uniform, -j All this is "a mess.' ; But to assume that a brief special session of the legislature could straighten it out, is to assume that there-is a simple and ready solution upon which the leg slators and the people are substantially in agree ment. It assumes further, in effect, that the practices cf past Multnomah county assessors -unquestionably have been right and that either; the law or the tax commission is indub. ly wrong.. v ' . . . None of these assumptions is correct. Sev eral upstate newspapers have expressed opin- "Wo Favor Sways Us; No Fear ShaH Aire from Tint Statesman. March 28, 1851 ; ion that the tax commission's ruling is proper, not merely from the standpoint of compliance with the law, but as a matter of justice and equity. . If they are; right, the proper procedure is to let the law take its course. But whether they are right or not, if any considerable num ber of legislators held the same view, it would take more than the special session limit of 20 days, at the speed of the recent regular session, to reach a decision.' l If there is need for changing the law, it should come up at; a regular session following deliberate study by an interim committee. In the meantime, if some property owners are in equitably taxed, it will not be for longer than one and one-half years. As for the special ses sion agitation, it may be traced to a -small but influential group of persons to whom politics is purely a game cot necessarily a venal game, but one that is played solely for the winning. Sadder still, the members of this group seem to have worked themselves into a "state of mind" in which they actually believe their own illogical arguments. J v Why Wolf Creek? A movement has been started in Clatsop county, its ; western! terminus, to change the name of the Wolf Creek highway to something more apropriate and more pleasing in its con notations. It is observed that the highway touch es Wolf Creek, which isn't much of a stream in the first place, only for a short distance; and it is further noted that there are a number of Wolf creeks in Oregon, one in the south being larger and better known. - It is our recollection that the name came into existence as a result of controversy over alternative routes and was originally adopted merely for convenience in distinguishing this one from the proposed Vernonia route. That the name has dung to the highway through the period of construction and early use, is just one of those things that happen without being planned. I Since the road does not adhere exclusively to any watercourse or valley, it would seem appropriate to give it a more general name. Of the several which have been suggested, Sunset highway strikes us as most acceptable. News Behind 1 - 1 - The News ' By PAUL v (Distributed by Ktnrf Features Syndicate.-Inc.. re- I production In wtaol ac in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, May 10-Congressman Cox said he wanted to freeze Mr. Stettinius in solid as director of defense priorities, but he froze him into a cube in the refrigerator of the army and navy ; . if-':.?' ' II Hl lill good and suf ' admirals and generals. - Where this strange sentence came from was ! something of a congressional mystery, as the board ' has had nothing to do with Mr. Stettinius before, j The sentence was not mentioned in the house debate. Some of Mr. Cox's friends say he got the whole idea from the Baruch report on war industries in 1918. Apparently he took too much of the old report, or ; the legislative drafting service did, when it drew up ; the amendment at his request. To correct the mistake house naval Chairman Vinson intends to go before a senate committee ask : ing it to thaw out tills part of the over-frozen Mr. : Stettinius. ' ; - . MALLON munitions control board. ) ' The Cox amendment was designed to give Mr. Stettinius an independent legal status whereas be has been function ing under the uncertainty of a retrievable presidential execu tive order. That was what Mr. Cox told the house when his amendment was unanimously adopted to the Vinson bill. - He did not need to tell the house a bigger and better rea son why this should be done. In the corridors nearly everyone rani ksjim had heard how the defense price cudgeler, Lon Henderson, had installed a man in the Stettinius division to take over half Use priori ties, dealing with Chilian needs. Another reason, true or not, was afloat, in the house before the vote implying that the president's man-Friday, Harry Hopkins, might be installed in Mr. Stettinius' posi tion before long. '.. So the unanimous decision of the house really represented a mild revolt against the continuance of unreserved presidential discretion in shifting the de fense setup. It was in fact a move to get back some power into the hands of congress by requiring any future presidential appointees to the priorities office to get senate approval (Mr. Hopkins probably could not get It) . - ,: Y ' ' ; . : . r: - ' But in working toward this laudable democratic purpose, the Cox amendment added a final sentence reading: "Such power (of Mr. Stettinius) shall be exercised by the director only after prior approval of such exercise by the Joint army and navy muni tlons boaroVr . -if . This would not only freeze Mr. Stettinius rheto rically but literally. His screaming associates in the priorities division immediately contended it would make him nothing more than an office boy for the A secret axis freight plane service has been started across the South Atlantic Reports picked up within this government indicate it operates from '' some African point near Dakar, with Italian planes carrying German products. The shipments are re stricted to valuable products of small bulk in the priarmaceutical and chemical lines. ! The axis is apparently working it for propa ganda effect in South America. Operations cannot be extensive, but the effect is about the same as when the kaiser sent ever dyes in large submarines, like the Deutschland to the United States before we enterd the last war. ' Admiral S. M. Robinson chief of the bureau of ships has told the house naval affairs committee ' steel wQl have to be rationed as strictly as alum inum. This is the first official confirmation of a . disputed prediction in this column February 23 that steel would be rationed' before July 15. The story appeared simultaneously with White House publica tion of the Gano Dunn report stating steel had plenty of capacity and its condition would be satisfactory indefinitely. it : 'High on a Windy Hill" By R. J. HENDRICKS The Finck Memorial V j 5-11-41 deserves attention in:. the Western Hemisphere music week deliberations: (Concluding from yesterday:) Some progress has been made in the project of a memorial for Henry T. Finck, the world's greatest musical critic, who spent the last 10 years of his life be fore entering Harvard Univer sity at Aurora, Oregon, i The commonwealth of Ore i gon, in the name of the state highway department, owns a lit tle piece of vacant property bor dering on the Pacific highway as it passes through the city of Au rora. B . . Through the efforts of the mu sic teachers of Salem, represent ed especially by Miss Mary E. Denton, an understanding has been reached that the tract named in the city of Aurora may be had in perpetuity, in case there shall be erected thereon .a suitable memorial. vK: Also, it is understood that the highway department, in case such .a memorial shall he pro vided, will erect directing mark ers on the highway north and south of Aurora, indicating to persons passing that, a certain distance ahead of them, is the memorial. This is very "generally . done in the states through which ran the Old Oregon Trail that was used in the covered wagon days by 350,000 pioneers who came to the Old Oregoti Country, . and left some 30,000 in unmarked graves along its course. S S It would be a fine thing, too, to have a library in Aurora, one specializing in books such as Henry T. Finck read, studied and wrote. Also, a restaurant like the pioneer one at Aurora and the most popular eating place at the annual state fairs, both kept by the Keil colony in all the later years before Dr. Kefl's death and its dissolution as an organization -with its property and; the usu fruct thereof held in common. It is not too much to hope that both hopes might be realized. If a proper appeal should be made to the music lovers of the whole United States, to say nothing of other countries, it would be re sultful, for many wealthy per- sons are included in that list, and even a small amount from every person who ought to be interested would make up a great ' sum. 'i : s v It is said that the people of Aurora would be glad to start a subscription for a suitable mem orial with a 150 beginning. This writer is. sure that much more than a like sum might be real ized in Salem. He will guaran- tee It. t " Prof. Clifford W. Kantaer or Seattle is chairman of a commit- tee of the musicians of Washing ton, Oregon and California, char- ged with furthering the project of a Finck memorial, and this writer believes he is favorable to Aurora as the proper place for It. ' " '" : " " ! Prof. Kantner is, as most Sa lem readers know, a native of Oregon and is familiar with the remarkable1 career of the great est musical critic and the author , of many: useful books, r t It would be nmfortunate if the project of a suitable Finck mem orial were taken up and finished with a small , or insignificant monument. ... V vw Some persons have suggested the Booth Circuit Rider mono' ment on the capitol grounds as a suitable sample of w h a t th e !- ' ' . .... - May Be a Nazi Dirge Finck name and his accomplish ments deserve. The Circuit Rider monument is reputed to have cost Hon. Rob ert A. Booth, son of his pioneer Oregon circuit rider father, as much as $35,000. II the Keil colony were a going concern, $35,000 would not seem a large sum to be given by it for . such a cause. It started with property valued at only $30, 802.75, mostly in wagons and cows and oxen and horses and tools, and a considerable num ber of its members empty handed. After working together 33 years, they had 23,500 acres of good land and the property of three "prosperous towns, Bethel and 'Nineveh, Missouri, and Au rora, Oregon; and they had lived well and done a great deal of charity work, and always after The Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Readers ' MOTHER'S DAT KEVEME Our Mother yes, our Father, .too, . Taught us in early youth To seek within God's sacred walls His all enduring Truth. j i - Mother, Father, Sisters, Broth- Eadwknew God's house of -prayer, .. " And walked together in His V ways Kept by our Shepherd's care. Though now earthly ties are -:-f severed, ; We shall not blindly grope We wm remain find solace in This Joyous Heavenly Hope: Within those shining sacred 1. " walls : Fairer than all others. We shall dwell forever Mother, Fathers, Sisters, Brothers. LEONE WHEELER, ' - ; Salem, Ore. : rOXJTICS AND DEFENSZ To the Editor: : Thank you, thank you for your editorial -isojauonist m yesterday's Statesman. It was frank and courageous, and cer tainly a relief from the fawning attitude of the editorial pages of Portland's two leading news papers, who have suddenly dis covered mat they love the new deal to distraction. : The proposed muzzling of the Wheelers and the Lindberghs of this generation would Just as. surely spell the defeat of democ racy as the victory of an Adolf Hitler in Europe. The present administration, which dealt out $S,0O0,0O0,000 of public money and gave sacred, promises to ' keep us out of this war in order to win the last election, now hurls -America" and Isola tionist" at all who don't want to jump unprepared Into this same way. They i are-, "copperheads,'" the "devil quoting scripture, to the president's own words, t We sympathize with one of your correspondents who was so disappointed in the first lady When she said the president had never promised to keep us out of war. But after aH, we should be amply " prepared for such a statement. We seem to remember a "covenanf v made with the people of the United States, in 1932 to balance the budget and reduce public expenditures 25 per cent, too. ; Many of the men who are now - fsolatinnists" they -were "war ; Tnongers' then pleaded for ade- the : first hard years, maintained a large cash surplus. S But the time is more than SS years past for help for a memor ial from that source directly. The final decree of dissolution was dated Jan zV 1833. Henry T. Finck died Oct 10, 1828, and Mrs. Finck, his widow, Septem ber 20, 1940, and there is no heir, unless a supported boy is such.. The indirect heirs of Henry T. Finck, however, ' are in reality numbered in many millions; in every person in the world who is a beneficiary of good music. And who is not? This column will be glad to re port further, soon and often, on the project for a Finck memor ial. -., The of tener the better, and the ! more frequently in proffers of rea) money, still the better. quate natkmSl defense during se ven years when it was common knowledge that the mad man of Europe was building the most powerful war machine ever" known to man, and that his fol lowers were meeting on Ameri can soil they still are, in fact some of them right in this com munity. Our government has spent billions lor one hair-brained scheme after another during these critical years, enough to have armed America; helped England, and given all Ameri cans employment and solid prosperity. Of course, such a wise policy would not have as sured the man who hates war a third term and the powers of a dictator, or his sons high posi tions in the army and navy, and his wife might have had to stay at home and care for her ailing husband, as good wives usually do. ! : : r . .. - But neither would we be an . ticipating a $100,000,000,000 debt and be headed right into a war for which we are so pitifully un prepared it would be humorous were it not so tragic. ; V. DICK. Silverton. Ore. , . VANITY AND BLINDNESS To the Editor: It appears that three or four thousand years ago the public sentiment in Palestine bad shaped itself to provide a myriad of "necessities" for "the better half of the nation. And then it appears that the Creator of the Universe suddenly ' took all these holdings away from , them, or else He allowed some Hitler to do it For the prophet Isaiah says: "In that day the Lord will " : take away the beauty of their anklets, and the cauls, and the ' : crescents, the pendants, and the bracelets, and the mufflers, ' the bead-tires, and the ankle chains, and the sashes, and (he ' perfume boxes, and the amu ' lets, the rings, and the nose- ' . jewels; the festival robes, and . the mantels, and the shawls, and 'the satchels, the handmir rors, and the fine linen, and . the turbans, and the veils.", 'That was not alL Tar more serious calamities settled down upon them. Is it, such afflictions and dis- tress mat now prevails cm the other continents? Can it happen here? The morale of this nation is ' sinking, WE need to hire a num ber of men and women to go around with three, four or five cigarettes in their mouths all on ". fire. Maybe that -would wake up; the masses to see the ridiculous- Lever By BARRETT WTUjODGIIBY (Chapter IS Continued) "Fair!' Jean's tone was one ' of suppressed, fury. "You trick your way out cf one Just con tract, and - repudiate , another. You offer me aid, but only on ruinous conditions; . and you threaten me with ruin if I re fuse. Tne devil with such fait methods! They do credit to your early training as a high-handed thief and seal pirate Belay!" A fist banged an ac companiment to Dynamite's, an gry roar. "I gave ye a fair chance and i ye flung it back into me .teeth. Now, ye insultin young fool, yeve got fa fish war on - your hands. A fish war d'ye know what that means? A fight .with no rules, and no quarter. Once in it, neither law nor luck win save ye." S "Save your breath,. OTJoore. You ; cant scare me with your fish war." . S: '. -." "But I can break ye and I will! i rn, block ye from buyin fish anywhere in Alaskan wat ers. Ill smash ye fiat, and take the Glory for'! "Before you do either youH know youVe j been in a fight, 0Moore. iW going to put up my pack aboard the Glory. What's more,!m collect, some how, a just payment on that con tract you refuse to honor. Good day, sir". ; j- - i Sondra had barely time to step aside before Jean strode through the door and slammed it behind him. She started forward, over taking him at the head of the stairs, v. "Jean! I I Words died at the sight of his blazing eyes, his white set face. . ' "Well?" he : demanded, harsh ly. "Is it necessary that you tell me, as well as show me how little regard yoti have for" He checked himself, and then, with the air of one grasping at a for lorn hope, went on eagerly. "But maybe you didn't go to the cupola last night, so you didnV hear me explain i "I went. I was there, Jean, but-" -'.H "That's enough!' She shrank from his cold vehemence. "Your, grandfather has just called me -a fooL I seem to have been one about you. But I've learned plenty; today about O'Moore tac tics, and O'Moore trickery . He brushed past her and went running down the stairs. Sondra turned and flung her- self into- the sitting room where her grandfather sat sliding, his small,! scarred hands over the model of the Glory. He grinned up at her from under the puck ish slant of bis white brows. I "Hah, darlin'l Ye missed the fireworks.. I've just sent the Reynall cubi scuddin off with , his boilers rumblin' and pitch fair boilin' from his deck seams. ii Kadlio Programs KSUt SUNDAY 1190 Kx. 80 Melodic Moods. JO Flowing Rhythm. M Waltz Tim. 9 JO Popular Concert. . 10 M Sunday Reveries. 11 .-OS American Lutheran Church. 12:00 Singing Strings, t 12:15 News Hilights. i 12 30 United Press on the Air. 12:45 The Song ShojK, 1.-00 Young People's Church. 13 Hawaiian Paradise. 2 0 Military Band. -2:30 Tony Pastor's Orchestra. 30 Western Serenade. 3 .30 Boys Town.; 4 AO Gypsy Orchestra. 4 -JO Concert Gems. 5 DO Variety Hall. 6 AO Tonight's Headlines. -8:15 Sacred Music. , ' ' 6:30 Ugh t Opera. 1 AO Preston Foster's Songs. 7 JO String Serenade. AO The World Tonight. j 8:15 The Quintones. S JO Cango Tim.- AO News. ' 9:15 OrganaliUes. JO Back Horns Hour. IS AO pream Time. i ! KGWKBC SUNDAY C2( Kx. AO Sunday Sunrise Program. J0-aeant of Art AO Sammy Ksye Orchestra. i a JO On Your Job. ; IS AO Stars o( Today. -10 JO Chicago Round Table. 11JS-H. VKaltenborn. j 11 JS Lee Cordon Orchestra. ! HAS Gateway to Musical Highways. uj oaraea Talk. 11 Charles Dant's Orchestra. IAS How rires. las News, t 1 JO Stars of Tomorrow. Sa-cathoUe Hour. i S JO-What's Your Idea. 18 Processor Puzzlewlt . 2 JO Band Wagon. 4 AO Charlie McCarthy. 4 JO One Man's Family. AO Manhattan Merry -Co-Round. 30 Album of Familiar Music. AO Hour of Charm. JO Deadline Dramas. 7 A5 Hotel McAlpln Orchestra. 1:15 Dear John. 1 JO Jack Benny. SAO Walter Wincheu. S. IS Parker Family. 5 JO Carnival. . ness of the fad how in full swing of smoking and drinking. Or else we need a Carrie Nation to let loose tn every ccenmunlty to do like the Son of God did when He cleansed the temple or when He, in dynamic1 expressions told the . Pharisees and Scribes and Law yers the things they most needed to be told, but which were the last things on earth they would listen to. i It was the higher tips" who were the lowest down in mind and heart. Blind leaders of the blind, who were, herding the masses swiftly to the awful abyss of the greatest tribulation,' such as has not been from the begin ning of the world, nor ever shall be.- '! ; ;- Instead of paying attention to what Jesus said they contrived to kiH him. "Dead men tell no tales." -Jesus died but He lives again,- and' His words echo now throughout r the world daily, in millions of times and places. Will the masses in this generation, in this nation now concentrate their atlenton on what He said? It is up to the individual. ; AUGUST MICKELSON, " ' ! Salem. Ore. s . Faith, Sondy, ye should have . seen the face of him when I tore up that villainous contract he thought he had me stuck with. "Cash or certified check says L And he helpless to get either With the bank closed!" He threw back his silvery head and roared with laughter. Sondra, saying nothing, re garded : him with mingled ad miration and disapproval. "Fit to be tied, be was, Sondy; and hoUerin foul tactics! As if I could help it if Jarvis de cided to . board the Tanya and go strip-fisbin on the birthday . of Alexander Baranov." - Sandra's innate honesty rose above her rage at TteynalL "But this isn't Baranov birthday. Dynamite." Then she pointed an accusing, finger at her exuberant grandsire. "Look here, Iamb! I just remembered I. heard you phoning Mr. Jarvis yesterday about : going fishing. Do you think ' that was quite well, ethical?" "Ethical be darned! Have they been ethical with me? Look down there at the thing they've made of the Glory! Do ye call that" He slumped . suddenly in his chair, his - violence' gone, and passed a hand wearily over his eyes. When he spoke again his j voice was husky with emotion. 1 "She's me old ship, Sondy. And she has a soul the soul of a fine high-strung woman. "Twonld tear the old heart out of me to leave her there, soiled and mis handled, the summer through. And I'd break some Command ments aye, and some heads rather than pile more shame on her with the catch of me nets." "I know how it is, lamb." In quick sympathy Sondra reach ed over and patted his shoulder, then her arm dropped listlessly. All at once she felt depressed and helpless;-caught up in an impossible situation. "But how will a fish war help? Won't they just , go ahead getting herring from some other "From where?" The frosty light had come back to the Cap tain's eyes. "From Swansnn or Thomas? No. From the few in- dependent boats scattered along the coast? No not after word . goes out that Dynamite Danny O'Moore wouldn't like it. Where 1 then and they with no fleet of their own?" "There's the Indian fleet. He snorted. "A bunch of leaky old crates! Not one dares stick its nose into anything rougher i than a millpond. Besides, the na tives never did learn how to fish herring by modern methods. And 'tis only when a big school : works into some sheltered gunk- hole that they're able to do any ,' thing with their out-of-date gear and methods." (To be continued) ' These .schedules are sappUed the resserUTS station. Any arta Uons aeced by listeners are Is chant ea aaade fey the staUsas wnheut notice to this newspaper. AO Night Editor. v. 8:15 Armchair Cruises. JO St. Frances Hotel Orchestra. ' M AO News. . 14:15 Bridge to Dreamland. 11 AO Hal Tabarin Cafe Orchestra. 11 JO Florentine Gardens Orchestra. KEX NBC SUNDAY 11J4 Kc. SAO Amen Corner. JO Radio City Music HalL JO African Trek. 10 AO American Pilgrimage. 10:15 Foreign Policy Association. 10 JO The Quiet Hour. 12 AO National Vespers. 12:30 Behind the Mike. 1 :00 Edgewater Beach Orchestra ' 1 JO Christian Science Program. . 15 Portland Baseball. 2 JO Frank Black Presents. ' SAO European News. ; 2 JO Music for Listening. 4 AO Star Spangled Theatre. 4 JO Song of the Strings - S JO Charles Dant's Music. ' S:45 BUI Stern Sports NewireeL I SAO Good Will Hour. 1 T AO Inner Sanctum Mysteries. i 1 JO Hotel Lexington Orchestra, i AO Hawthorne Temple Services, f S:15 News. 1:30 Hawthorne Temple Service. AO .Everybody Sing, j JO Book Chat. : 10 AO Palace Hotel Orchestra. ! 11 AO Portland PoHee Reports, i 11 AS Wllahire Bowl Orchestra. U 30 War News Roundup. . I EOIH CBS SUNDAY 71 Kc. AO Wert Coast Church. JO Salt Lake Tabernacle. AO Church eg the Air. ; It AO The Free Company. ; 14 JO News. 105 Speaking of Art -. 11 AO New York PhUnarmonie. 11 Jt The Pause That Be freshes. 2 AO Old Songs of the Church. Songs of tt dv Ranch. S JO Melody Rax SSS Dear tear atom. 2:1S N 1 JO William Wallace la Recital. 25 Dr. Knowledge. 4AO Cohianhia Workshop. 4A5 News. SAO Sunday Benlng Hour. AO Take it or Lear R. JO Helen Hayes Theatre. 7 AO Crime Doctor. T JO Shep Fields Orchestra. AO Dutch Uncles. JO Don't Be AO I Was Thar. JO Northwest Round Table. 10 AO Fire Star Final. 11 AO Manny strand Orchestra. 1125 News. o o aAtx aras sund a y i u$ Kc AO Mel Marvin Orchestra. JO Universe, of Melody. ; AO This Is Fart Dtz. It AO News. 14:15 Rontaaca of the Highways. 14Sn Pasco Treubadors. II AO ThO . .11 AO Mews. i 12 JO Swedish Baptist Temple. ; 1 AO Musical Steelmakers. . SAO Bulldog Drunwioad, i S.-4S--Cdrte roster. .. SAO Riale Classes. ; a JO Treasures of Song- 25 Wytho Williams. Commentator 4 AO Asnerican Forum. SAO Old Fashioned Revival. , AO Nobody's Children. JO For Your Information. . . 7 AO Gabriel Heetter. T JO Chfcrageland Concert., AO Hinsoa Memorial Church. M AO News. . .. :15 Music for Sunday. :45-Freddy Martin orchestra. 1 10 J0 News. . 105 Morton Could Orchestra. Monday Radio Prograrns Pe-eO This Section