The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 03, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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"No Favor nwayt U. No Fear Shall Ato
' From lint SUtesman, March XS, 1831
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. .
, CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. President
t Member of Ttja Associated rYei
The Associated Press Is exclusively! entitled to the use far publication of all
Dews dispatches credited to tt or not otherwise credited la this newspspec
i- .,(...4. .. .
September Rain and the Fair
Roadside and. pasture land had turned
brown, Jthe pale brown of the stubble field. Such
grass as had grown tall and matured, com
pleting its cycle by producing seed, was dead.
But the younger shoots at its base, though pale
y for lack of moisture, were not dead. They drank,
and over night the landscape, where the-mature
grass was not so thick as to hide it, regained
the Willamette valley's typical greenness. j
It rained. No one tried to put over the idea
that it was just an Oregon mist. Big wet rairi-
' I drops fell copiously. They soaked the earth, not
. just the surface dust but down to the tapered
root-ends, and after that they collected in pud-
. dies. They fell upon the just and the unjust, ;
upon the people who had thought' to bring rain
coats and those who had not f
They fell upon the people who had planned .
to attend the state fair on opening day, but
they didn't change those plans. They fell upon
; the people who had planned to pick beans, hops
and prunes, and sent those people also to the
fair. For they, fell, you see, upon the people of
western Oregon, who know rain. It isn't true
that they "don't know enough to come in out
of the rain," and It isn't true that they grow
webs between their toes. But it is true that they i
recognize rain for a friend, and know that there
Is no use in frowning if this , good and true
friend arrives at a moment that is inopportune.
It isn't true, as one might have imagined
when viewing for his first time a state fair
crowd on Monday, that western Oregon people
normally ignore the rain and go about business
or pleasure in blissful disregard of it. They
treat rain with due respect and plan their lives
to conform to its certain recurrence. Othjer
things being equal, they prefer to be under
shelter when it comes. On some state fair days
in the past they have stayed away in great nut i
bers because of rain.
But this day was different. It was a ho! i
day. And whether they 7 had planned in4ad- ,
ance to-spend it at the fair or to join in the
harvesting there was a feeling that this year
time was precious and ought to be put to the
- best possible use, rain or. shine. There were
some too who in recent state fair weeks had
time, but ,not much money. This year there
was a little money to spare, and they were
going to make sure of one day to spend and
enjoy it. '
So they went to the fair and sloshed around
in the rain and had a good time. And each fair
goer consciously or unconsciously paid tribute
to the rain, identifying it as a natural blessing
without which the fair would be a sorry spec
tacle, without which there could in truth be no
fair at all..
IJolI Weevil Year i
V In Coffee county, Alabama, ,i there is a ,
monument erected in 191 by grateful citizens '
"in profound appreciation Iqf the boll weevil and
what it has done as the herald of prosperity in
reducing the cotton crop and this increasing cot
ton prices. Cotton producers the ones- not
visited by the quarter-inch Mexican bug with
the -long nose and voracious appetite are ex
pected to lay a new wreath at the foot of the
monument this year. V j
IThe boll weevil's contribution in 1919 and
prior years was, in truth, a mere drop in the
bucket to what it accomplished subsequently.
Cotton acreage was not greatly reduced in 1921
: but the crop dwindled from over 13 million bales
to less than eight, of which 77 per cent, as com
: pared to around 45 per cent of the larger previ
' ous crops, was exported; and prices rose ac
cordingly. The little fellow went to bat again
from 1927 to 1932 but about that time growers
learned how to stop with , calcium arsenate. t
In those years his destruction varied, de
pending upon winter weather's severity, from
20 to 31 per cent of -the total crop; later, it
dwindled to 9 per cent. But this year the ar
senate hasn't seemed to work and in some sec
f tions the destruction, not observable until the
last few weeks, threatens to aprpoach 50 per
cent. Cotton prices have advanced $3 a bale.
In view of the cotton growers' plight in
recent years, It's almost certain that there will
be enough for those silk-substitute hose.
Untangling. Priorities
... Dilemma of the small manufacturer who
requires even a small quantity of a "vital de
fense material" in order to carry on his industry
was outlined here the other day. It should have
been made clear, if it was not that the con
fusion described represented perhaps the high
point of the industrial shock incident to the de
fense program's "shift into high gear." There
. Is evidence" now that confusion will presently
be mitigated though the handicaps to industry
: due to these materials' shortage may not.
- Director-General Knudsen of OPM has an
, pounced that his agency will soon be in position
: . . to tell manufacturers what materials they may
or may not have, for a month in , advance, but
he does not promise that the news will be pleas
ing. Yet in his announcement and in the White
' House statement issued in connection with the
reorganization of defense administrative agen
cies, .there are hints that defense industry too
will be" put on rations to some degree in the
light of urgent civilian need.
I But the brighter prospect for civilian sup
pliers lies in the hope that as order is brought
out of chaos, OPM will be able to say wherther a
- shortage actually exists, or merely appears to
. existjsecause of "forward buying" on the part
of army, navy and defense contractors. Inclu-
sion of both Knudsen and OPACS Administrat
or Leon Henderson on the new board headed by
Vice-President Wallace is encouraging, since
some of the confusion has resulted from their,
lack of official contact; sometimes they have
worked at cross-purposes. '.
; This promised! improvement will come none
too soon, for already civilian production is fall
ing off due to lack of essential materials and
even total national! production is beginning to
suffer. ; .' v - . ' -; .
i Marshal Petain heard news of the Laval as
sassination attempt "while attending a special
rendition in his honor of the first act of the
cnera Faust, In. which th ..aging Faust makes
a compact wiih the devil,", a news dispatch dis-,
closed. Fitting.
n I.---:-: . rllm 4--i - i
Splutterin J in the Face of Der Fuehrer Plans
News Behind
The News
. By PAUL MALLON "
(Distributed by Klnf features Syndicate, Inc., re
production la whole or in part strictly prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, Sept 2 Mr. Roosevelt exhibit
ed some dissatisfaction with the way defense pro
duction is going, when he shifted the directing
heads of OPM around. But there is greater dis-
i satisfaction over defense produc
tion inside OPM than has yet
reached Mr. Roosevelt, more than
his shift 'will cure.
A very loyal Roosevelt " clan.
knowing the facts as well as any
one, is just simply convinced "the
production schedule itself does not
measure up to the size of the task
of arming this army efficiently,
and supplying the, British. New
vigorous concepts are needed.
There must be rnore sub-contrac
tive, reorganization of procure
ment in the war department per
haps many other changes. This is
Bote tfoir BireaEtfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Kk.h m miiiiililiiMi il-. d
Paul Halloa
not an isolated viewpoint but a whole broad inner
conviction of a great number of defense 'sub-officials.
The main fault seems to be that our needs were
fixed by the war department, and ' the war de
partment is interested mainly in equipping the
'army, not in British aid. The two goals have not
' been fitted together. A long term production
schedule has been projected into the future, but
on a warped basis, which is either going to leave
our army or the British' short of what is required
at once. :
It would not be surprising if Mr. Roosevelt does
some more readjusting of the defense layout along
these lines shortly.
Take tanks Every time anyone says publicly
anything about the slowness with which our army
and the British are- getting American tanks, the
war department .comes up with some elegant fig
ures. They always say umpty-umph number of
tanks have been turned out and umpty-upm-umph
will be turned out next month.
But these are always light tanks. They are not'
the new heavy fighting models. They have long
been in production. The French campaign showed
the light tank is not an efficient fighting weapon
with which to face the nazis. The armor is too
thin. The Balkan campaign absolutely proved it
They are still good for reconnaisance and meeting
tanks of their own weight but they cannot even
stand against a .37 millimeter gun. Mass produc
tion of these tanks is not going to get " anybody
anywhere against nazi opposition.
The publicized production figure on this type of
. tank the only one we are getting in quantities
sounds' good, but does, not mean anything.
The medium size tank is What is needed, the 26
tooner, which will eventually weigh '.about 30
tons.
Wanted, De Loan, or 9-3-41
some one who can help
in giving facts concerning
"Oregon's oldest inhabitants
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Bashford, in his book, "The Ore
gon Missions," gave Francis Ri
vet and DeLoar as the men who
remained behind from the Lewis
and Clark exploring party.
Bashford also mentioned Philip
Degie, but this columnist be
lieves he fumbled on that one
Degie though he was generally
correct in his conclusions. But
Philip H. Rees included Philip
Degie (and left out DeLoar),
saying he got his list from "Rev.
B. Delorme, pastor at St Paul's
church," and that he (Degie)
.was born at Sorel, Canada, in
1739; died at St Paul Feb. 27,
1847, aged 108. The Rees "Philip
Degie" was perhaps the genuine
BapUste DeLoar. j
Any way, Baptiste Deloar was
the first of all settlers near the
site of Salem; his pioneer log
house was about a mile and a
half north of the north line of
the land of the; Oregon state
school for the deaf. It was about
a half mile below (north of) the
upper Willamette Astor fort,
erected in 1812-13; tns site of
which (fort) became the site of
the first Oregon Institute build
ing that was used in the trade
for the building that became
Oregon Institute's home on the
site of Salem, that by change of
name became Willamette Uni
versity. That (fort and first In
stitute) site becam (is now) oc
cupied by the headquarters
house of the Bush farms, in
charge of David Saucy, who lives
there with his family.
H
Col. J. W. Nesmith, in his fa
mous 1875 speech to the Oregon
i Historical Society, said that "for
The
Safety Valve
Letters from Statesman
Readers
GOING TO THE FAIK
' V . .
To the Editor: Are you going,
to the Fair? I am, and thousands
of other people are, too. What
fun it is to wander, carefree,
through the grpuids, to loiter
here and there, to smell ham-
British military officials have said, as a result burgers frying in . those bright-
many years he (DeLoar) enjoyed
the appellation of first settler."
Whether DeLoar erected his
house before or after the Astors
; built their upper Willamette fort
(1812-13) a half mile above, this
writer has never found out It
may have been before, and one
of the reasons for the location
near-by of the fort. They were
- both near Lake Labish, where
deer and elk and beavers were
then plentiful. Lake Labish was
then a real lake, with water in
it the year through.
S
Baptiste DeLoar took an In- ;
dian wife. It was 38 years be
fore a white wopian was avail
able. There grew up many De
Loar children. They were all, ev
idently, friendly; to the whites;
to the Americans. DeLoari
fought in all the Indian wsrs.
Three of them fought with the j
Oregon citizen soldiers in the 1
Cayuse war, after the Whitman .
massacre. On the muster roll
they were listed as Augustine ;
DeLard, J. Despore and Jos. '
Desport I
Two were enlisted in Col. J.
W. Nesmith's regiment on Oc--tober
13, 1855, as' Joshua and
William Deioy. One was signed
up in Capt Benjamin Hayden's
company Jan. 1, 1856, as John S.
Dole. Three were recorded for ;
October 13, 1855, in the com- :
pany of Narcisse A. Cornoyer, as :
Augustine DeLore and Basile :
and Antoine Delard. One, as E. i
F. DeLore, was signed up Feb.
20, 1856, in the company of Cap
tain Joseph Bruce, as shown on
the muster rolls. Shown in the i
same was the name A. Delor, for '
Aug. , 1853, in the company of ;
J. W. Nesmith. That was without
doubt for the campaign that end
ed by the agreement in the fam
ous meeting on Table Rock Sep- ;
tember 10, 1853, recording peace
terms, recorded In VS. Statutes
at Large, volume 10, page 1020;
the story rnaking up, one of the'
. high incidents of American his
tory, when General Joseph Lane '
'saved the lives of 11 of the very ;
prominent Oregon pioneers, by i
out talking 700 blood thirsty red !
men auxious for their butchery. I
In the story of the deaths and i
sufferings of the part of the 1846 j
covered wagon immigration that i
Problem Hit
By UARYSS BUTLEDGS . - ' j
Ashland Rejects Bonds f : f I
: One of the expensive things that people do
with the least ' squawking is -vote bonds for
school buildings This ought to be especially
true in Ashland, an education-minded and cul-
. ture-minded city. But the voters of Ashland
have just turned down, by a 4 to 1 margin, a
r $90,000 bond issue for replacement of a grade
school building. A remarkable thing about it la
the actual affirmative vote; only 112. You
would think the school board members and
their wives, the janitor, and his wife, and the
teachers in that school who happen to be Ash
land citizens, could have persuaded more voters
than that to turn out and favor the project! .
The turn-down was not the result of a tax
conscious economy: trend. ' The Ashland daily
Tidings opposed the bond issue, insisting that
more land be purchased to provide a full block
site, before anything was done about construc-
- Uon. The newspaper presented a well-prepared
case and apparently the jgreat majority of cit
izens were attracted to its view. The outcome
as. we sec. it is an evidence of intelligent dis
crimination on the part of the voters, made ef-
fective by dependable leadership which had a
voice and which enjoyed the public's confi
dence. . - . '
of the lessons of the Russian campaign, that any in
vasion of the continent will require 50,000 tanks
mostly mediums, some large.
Well, we produced about 50 of these mediums
last month, the first month of mass production. It
will be the end of 1942 before we produce 1,000
tanks' a month. How long will it take us to pro
duce, say, 40,000 mediums needed? Four years
at least on the present schedule.
First and right now, the British need heavy,
bombers. Mr. Roosevelt' has tried to throw all the
pressure possible into bomber production, but. it
will be June, 1943, before we are producing 500
' heavy bombers a month' under the;' existing OPM
schedule. We will only average 30 to 40 a month
for the remainder of the year under the existing
OPM schedule. The nazis are now producing 200 a
month according to' figures current in this govern
ment. The British have the men ready to fly these
ships. Their aviation school in Canada is the talk
of all who have seen It They have doubled their
flier-production schedule twice since the training
fields started.
' But with 30 to "0 big bombers a month (not all
of which they will get) they will only be able to
annoy the nazis, not to pay back the attacks on
London. ,
From what little of this I have been able to
gather here, the officials who made this program,
are spending most of their time trying to convince
Mr. Roosevelt they were right in all they have
done. --They are always trying to Justify them
selves and their actions, rather than devoting
their thought and energy to keeping up with an
ever changing war situation. They have limited
their goal to their former decisions. . :;, ,.;
It looks as if they will have to lift their frozen
vision, or officials with a wider vision will have to
'be brought in. i
lit booths decorated with red
and green peppers, and overseen
by white-gowned, white-capped
cooks. You just have to climb
upon a stool and eat 'em with a
cup of steaming coffee!
Manufacturers have contrib
uted their finest products. The
dairy and livestock industries
are represented in blue-ribboned
perfection, and from the var
ious counties growing apples,
fat pumpkins, big potatoes and
. 1 sheaves of wheat and . all the
other wealth, of their rich farm
lands are displayed in artistic
patters.
What gay entertainment the
grandstand offers! The spirited -
- band playing rhythmic -tunes!
Muscular acrobats buoyantly do
ing daring feats! Thoroughbred
steeds ? tensely ridden by lithe
jockeys! And those teams of
powerful, wonderfully groomed
draft horses which have become
. a tradition with their expert
drivers sitting , pompously atop
wagon seats and putting them
through their paces! .
At night comes the blaze of
floodlights on the buildings, on
the beds of brilliant flowers and
on the white fenced track. The
. amusement zone becomes a ka
leidoscope of color and twink
ling lights to attract not only
the ambient eyes of children but
the fancy of older folk -as well.
So once again well be going
to the fair. It's a great institu
tion and you don't want to miss
111 Howard Carl Ericson.
The problem of smoothing strained
United States-Japanese relations
Js la the hands of Admiral Kichi
saburo Nomura, Japan's ambassa
dor to the United States,, who Is
pictured above in the state de
partment a Washington as he
: awaited a conference with Secre
tary of State Cornell Hutt. HuQ
was believed to have told Nomura
that the United States Insists op
on its right to freedom of the seas
la dispatching Russian-aid mate
rials to Vladivostok despite Japa
aes protests.- !
came by way of the (South)
Umpqua vanyon, at least one
member of the DeLoar: family
looms in the lists of the rescuing
parties.
s s
We read from Bancroft's Ore
gon History, volume 1, page 564:
"There had been no flour among
them for eight weeks ... The
families' relieved at this point
were those of Crump, Butter
field, James Towns end, David
Townsend, J. Baker and Mrs.
Butterfield, widow. Those" who
rescued them' were Holt Owens,
Dusk ins and Patten . . . and the
two half-breeds, Baptiste Garda- -pie
and Q.eloar. The 20th (De
cember of 1846) all started once
more for the Willamette; the na
tives refusing to grant the use
of a canoe to cross the families
over the north fork of the Ump
qua which was too high to be
forded (it would be), except they
were paid by a gun belonging to
Delore. . . . The 1st of January
the snow was three feet deep in
places on the Calapooia moun-'
tains." 1
It is evident that Deloar's gun
was given for the use of a boat
to cross the North Umpqua five
miles north of the site of present
Roseburg, and at the site of what
became Gardiner, 'first j county
seat of Douglas county; and that
they crossed the Calapooia
mountains from present - Shoe
string valley, thence going past .
the site of present Cottage
Grove; on to the site of Eugene.
;
NOW. The writer is sure that
the inquiry for which this series
is published can be answered: as
to BazilL Rosa and Mary De
Loar, spelled in the instance cit
ed Delore. (The reader has not
' ed several other spellings.)
There must be people in the
St Paul, St Louis and other sec
tions of Marion county, and of
Polk county, who can give the
information. Please inform this
writer, or the Salem Abstract
Co. if you can help.
Today's Garden
By LTLLIE L. MADSEN
Mrs. S. I. L. writes , a note
calling attention to a number of
lovely plantings about commer
cial buildings. Thanks. I think
we should, all note these plant
: ings and mention them to the
. managers. ' The plantings give
travelers, a pleasant memory of
our state. . , '
Mrs. M. R. writes that a spot
formerly used as a dumping
ground on her lot has now been
cleaner. The place has sun all
day long, and while she eventu
ally wants to put a greenhouse
, there, she wants to plant some
" thing in the meanwhile. '
She doesn't say .whether she
plans to put the greenhouse in
next year , or at some f distant
date. She might sow seeds of sun
loving annuals such as colendu
las, i cosmos, gaillardia, petunia,
or nigella. Any of these may be
sown now. They will fill the spot
with a bright dash of color next
spring. If she wants to leave it
bare during the 'winter, bright
colored geraniums set . out next
spring after the frost-season Is
over, would also grow well there.
L.M.O. says "1 have a spot of
soil facing the west which I.
want to put into annuals next
spring. I want real bright or
' anges and feds. What shall I
plan to put in? We are just laying-out
a new lawn around
new house, and I am drawing a
map of It" , i. i.
- Answert You are lucky! X hope
you enjoy your new home and
garden a great deaP-which I am
sure you will. CailiopsieS and
nasturtiums; : African . marigold'
with red sage; zinnias, or. gail-
lardias bordered With French
marigolds all make' nice bright
gardens. j . . .
CHAFTES 14 -
. Mat Breantt gazed across at
David, and smiled, his dark eyes
mocking as his ebony stick was
returned to him. He slowly re
turned to bis lawyer and Fan
Rubley. A t t o r n e y Garrison's
hand went to his grey hair, bis
face youthful, impassive. He
seemed rather bored.. But Fan's
big blue ' eyes stared at David .
Farland with startled Interest,
Only she and Mat knew that an
other deadlier stick lay hidden
elsewhere. Mat never took' any
. unnecessary risks. ;
Breanu had been smooth, ca
ressing i since yesterday morn
ing when he had started to choke -her.:
Knowing too much, Fan
felt I helpless between this "big
shot" she loved with despair,
and the fine chiseled features of
Garrison, ; who : still bore - the
marks of the attack from his
mysterious assailant in Breanu's
library. Fan was sure the latter
was ; the . same blond man who
had j followed her through the
park. Neither Breanu nor Gar
rison had made any attempt to .
trace J him. t Why why? ran
through her, confused mind. s
Other witnesses were called.
They all seemed to "have it In"
for young "Farland. He was a
: busy-body, they declared. Whose
"gab" Involved decent folks. If
they hadn't respected Jane and
: Mrs.:: Rider, they ' might have
said more. :
Old Macklin, his eyes water
ing behind his spectacles, said'
he didnt know ; a durn thing,
until Jane's city feller 'started a
fight in the store with a man
and woman Macklin had never
seen before. What with his sight
failing, and his hearing not so
good, he wouldn't know what
happened.
He pointed an arthritic finger
at David. "He run after 'em like
mad, and Jane, she run, too.
The strangers didn't even take
the cheese they ordered," he
mumbled. "But if anyone thinks
I've to do with knives and Such,
m sue 'em."
"I never sail w David half
rose to his feet Jane pulled him
down. The sentiment of the
country people was against her
boy friend. ;
. Jo, the garage owner, was
rrmrl t&mn fiiratiffh. .What- l
the Idea ct dragging him and
his mechanic into this business?
Mr. Breantt and . the lady with
him in court today had squeezed
a car off the' road last Saturday.
But Mr. Breanu bad acted like
a prince, giving Dan White,
driver of the car, a hundred
bucks, way over the cost iof
damages! Then Jane's - young
man had butted in.
Color flooded Jane's cheeka
She kept her eyes lowered. s: -"No
harm meant to you,
Miss." The garage man gave heir
one of his rubbery grins.
"Can't you leave her out of
this?" David burst out and earn-.
ed another whack of the gaveL
Jo went on.4 Yes, he'd noticed
, something fall to the garage
floor. It might have been a com
pact Yes, there' had been a few
' words, he hadn't heard, between
' Mr. Breanu and Farland. Yes,
he'd say It was about 7:30 when
. Jane Rider and her boy friend
hurried away. Mr. Breanue and
the lady left a few moments be
fore, he thought
. The mechanic who had carried
two tins of . gasoline down the
road, to. fill up Jane's car, swore
' he had done his job quickly.
,- "It was pretty lonely there,"
he admitted, scratching his san
dy hair. "But I seen no one ex-
cept Miss Rider and Mr. Far
land as I was running back,
'thinking I might be needed. I
didn't stop when they called."
He hesitated, adding cautiously,
"Of 1 course, I couldn't swear
someone else mightn't have mon
keyed with the rumble seat I
didn't notice it"
They kept David until the last
He sprang-to his feet his eyes
their fighting blue. What had
he done, except to lend his ser
vices to troopers, detectives, re
porters? Why pick on him?
Jane dthought with inner dis
may, "If he only doesn't make .
it worse!" He was just an im
petuous boy caught up, as she
was, in a world to which they
didn't belong. The excitement
had gone to 'his head.
(To be continued)
KSLM WEDNESDAY, 13M Ke. ,
JO Sunrise Salute.
10 News In Brief.
1:05 Old tim Music
TdtfNews.
t :45 Bert Hlrach Orchestra.
80 Farm Talk.
1:15 Johnny M earner's Orchestra.
S JO News. ,
S:45 Mountain Tctaoes.
X Pastor'a CalL w I
:15-i-Popular Music. J
:4S-Four Notes.
10 TheWorld This Morning.
19:1S Preserlptlon tor Happiness.
10:30 Ha waiias Serenade.
llrOO-Melodic Moods.
11 Value Parade.
12 :00-f-Ivan IMtmars at the Orgaa.
11:1S Noontime News.
11 :30-i-Hlllbllly Serenade.
11:35 Willamette VaUey Opaions.
115 The Son Shop. ,
IdS Isle of Paradise. "
1:30 Western Serenade.
2. -OS Joe Green's Marimba. -
1:15 US Marines. '
2 JO Modem Melody Trio.
S.-00 Concert Gems.
4 ."00 Dairy Drams.
4:15 News.
4 M Teatime Tunes.
4:45 Emery Deutach Orchestra.
S0 Guadiajara Trio.
S:15 Popular Music.
5 -JO Dinner Hour Melodies. "
AO Tonight's Headlines. - .
0:15 War Commentary.'
30 String Serenade.
1. 00 News in Brief..
7 :OS Interesting Facts.
7:15 Tommy Reynolds Orchestra.
ISO Henry King's Orchestra,
M The World Tonight.
:15 Western Serenade.
r5 Tats Waller.
4)0 News. ,
0:15 Marion County Defense.
S30 Okttlmers Music.
10A0 Let a Dance.
10:30 News.
10:45 Music to Remember.
KEX NBC WEDNKSDAT 11M Ke.
M Ed's Op.
1X0 Western AgTlculture.
7:15 Breakfast Club.
8:00 Amen Corner; ;
8:30 NaUonal farm and Home.
0:15 Between tte Bookends. '
9 JO Common Sens.
100 News.
10 JO Charmingly We Live.
11 :00 Orphans of Divorce.
11:1 5 Amanda of Honeymoon HIH.
11 -JO John's Other Wife,
11:45 Just Plain Bill. .
UM-Mother of Mine.
13:15 Market Reports. - -IS
JO New. - . -
10 Richard Brooks.
1:15 Women's World.
1 :43 Curbstone Quix.
10 The Quiet Hour.
. 1 JO Lost and Found.
25 Wings on Watch, i
SAO Count Your Blessings.
2:15 Mr. Keen. Tracer. .-
2 JO Wife Saver.
2:45 Out of the Blue. '
4:15 Living Literature, i
4 JO Ireene Wicker.
45 The Bartons.
SAO Summer Serenade.
:15 Excursions in Science.
; SAO Authors Playhouse.
rtS-iNews.
' T AO Quiz Kids. '
- 7 JO Manhattan at Midnight
SAO Easy Aces.
8J0 Portland Baseball
10:30 Behind the Headlines.
10:50 Portland Police Reports.
11 AO Thia Movin World.
11:15 Paul Carson.
11 JO War News Roundup.
KGW NBO-WCONXSOAT 42t Ks.
SAO Sunrise Serenade. ;
JO The Early Bards.
it AO News.
7:15 Music of Vienna.
- 7 5 David Harum.
AO Sam Hayes.
:15 Stars f Today.
! t:45 Modern Meals, ,
AO Listen Ladies. - - , -
i :15 Bess Johnson. , i
' 9 30 Ellen Randolph.
45 Dr. Kate.
10 AO Light of the World.
It :1 5 The Mystery Man.
10 JO Valiant Lady. '
10:45 Arnold Grimm's Daughter.
11 AO Against the Storm.
11:15 Ma Perkins.
1130 Guidins Light ; ' ,
11:45 Vic and Bade. .
12 AO Backstage Wife.
M:l 5 Stella Dallas.
1 2 JO Lorenzo Jones. -
12 -45 Young Wktder Brewaw
, 1 AO Home ef the Brave.
; 1:15 Portia races Llie. r
i 1 JO We the Abbotts.
! 1.-45 Mary Marlin.
' ! 1 AO Pepper Young's ramUy.
i 2:15 Lont Journey. ,
11:45 News. - -li ; ft
2 AO Arthur Godfrey.
2:15 News of the World.
' 2 JO Hollywood News Flashes. .
'2.-45 News. - , .
! 4:45 cocktaQ Hour. ; . .
! 40 Stars of Teaay. '
I A0 Kay Kyser'a KoUeae. .
These schekttles xare isapatiei y
the resBecttve statteas. Any varia
tteas noted by llsteaers are dae
changes made by the statsons wtt- f
eat notice to this etwspaper.
TAO Tony Martin. -7:15
How Did You Meet
T JO Plantation Party.
AO Eddie Cantor. '
8:30 Mr. District Attorney.
:00 Fred Waring Pleasure Time.
JO The Five Edwards. n
10 AO News Flashes.
10:30 Palace Hotel Orchestra. .
11 AO News. '
11:15 Hotel Biltmore Orchestra,
11 JO Florentine Gardens Orchestra,
1155 News.
KODf CBS WEDNESDAY 919 Ke.
AO NW Farm Reporter.
:15 KOIN Klock.
7 AO Treat Time.
7:15 News.
7 :45 Consumer News.
AO Kate Smith.
US When a Girl Marries.
JO Romanes of Helen Trent
:4a Our Gal Sunday.
AO Life Can Be BeauufuL
J5 Woman in White.
JO Right to Happiness.
10 AO Big Sister.
10:15 Aunt Jenny.
10 JO Fletcher Wiley.
105 Kate Hopkins.
11 AO Martha Webster.
11 JO Hello Again.
115 Woman of Courage,""
12 AO News. ' ' ,
12:15 Myrt and Marge.
12 Js Bess Johnson. -12:45
Stepmother.
1A0 Betty Crocker.
IdS Singin Sam.
1 JO The O'Neills.
1:45 Scattergood Balnea.
SAO Meet the Missus.
2:15 Hedda Hopper's Hollywood.
2 JO Joyce Jordan.
2:45 The World Today.
3 AO The Second Mrs. Burtoav
2:15 Young Dr. Malone.
: 2 JO -News. j
455 Elmer Davta
AO Re id Tanner Orchestra.
S JO Big Town. !
AO-Glen Miller Orchestra..
:15 Public Affairs.
6:45 News.
7 AO Amos V Andy.
7:15 Lanny Ross.
f JO Dr. Christian.
75 News.
SAO Fred Allen.
AO News.
1:15 Leon F. Drews.
JO Baker Theatre.
10 AO Five Star Final.
10:15 Ray Noble Orchestra.
,11 JO Manny Strand Orchestra.
U 5 News. i
. : e
-1'
SL&IJK MBS WEDNESDAY-UN
JO Memory Timekeeper,
f AO News. - I ... - - -
AO Haven of Rest
JO News. i
AO This and That
JO-Helen Holdea.
:45 ru Find My Way.
10 AO News. '
10 JO Woman's side of the Mews.
105 Buyer's Parade.
11 JO Concert Gems.
IS JO Johnson Family.
125 New.
1A0 JohnvB. Hughes.
' 1 30 We Are Always Young.
SAO Captain Sally.
. a Jo News. - " -
2 AO Voice ef American
2:15 Here's Morgan.
4 AO Sunshine 11111 sag,
AO News.
S:15-Passlng parade.
JO Shatter Parker's Circus.
5:45 Captain Midnight
AO Ray Gram Swing. . ,
JO John B. Hughes, - ' -7
AO Gabriel Heatter. -
fd 5 Jimmy Allen.
T J7 Weather Report
7 JO Lone Ranger.
AO Music for Moderns.
JO Rose Festival Coronation.
. AO News.
:15 Fulton Lewis. ' J
AO Ted Flo Rite Orchestra.
1S:45 Leigh ton Noble Orchestra.
11 JO Henry KJng Orchestra, .
E0ACWEBJn:DAY-5 Ks, ;
AO-NtWS. ,
:15 The Horn era akerg Hoar. .
10 AO Weather Forecast
10:15 Excursions in Science. "
11 20 Music of the Masters,
11 AO News. , .- ....
12:15 Farm Hour. ...
SAO 4H Club Assembly.
3 100 US NavyrV .
2--i5-Book of the Week; .
2:45 News. " . '
4:30 Stories for Boys and Ctrl
SAO Dinner Concert
:15 News.
30 Farm Hour. "
7 AO 411 Summer chooL
7:45-rMusic of the Masters.
:30 Oregon on Parad.
JO Oeoartmeot al Muate
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