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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1941)
F&GZ roua Thm OZZGOIi CTATEMAn. Satan. Oregon. Tnursdar Mornirig. 5ptembr 18. ml Wq Favor sways V$, No Fear Shall Awe Tram First Statesman, March 28, 1S51 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusive! entitled to the use for publication el all news dispatches credited to tt or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Ten Years of World, War H Speaking of important events, as we were yesterday, and their tendency to fade in recol lection with the passage of time, just ten years ago today occurred the "Manchurian incident." And just what was it do you recall? While pausing to give your memory every chance to meet the test, may we observe that if it fails in this instance you are not to be blamed. Who could foresee that it was the beginning of a decade of aggression, a decade marked by progressive violation of the principles enun ciated in a series of peace and disarmament . conferences designed to avoid war's devasta tion? . Who could" recognize it actually as the . Sarajevo of World War II? ' Well, perhaps Henry L. Stlmson, then sec retary of state, now secretary of war, so recog nized it. Early in 1932 he proclaimed the doctrine of non-recognition, still maintained by government, and it is-of record that he . sought to persuade Britain to join the United States in more positive action against Japan. Britain declined Japan "got away with it" and presently Italy dared to copy, in Ethiopia, pan's example. Aggression followed aggres- sion until now the world is aflame and no nation feels secure. . Since September 18, 1931, there has been no peace in Manchuria. Despite the institution - of the "Manchukuo" government, Chinese -"bandits" have continued to wage war upon the invaders. They made conquest so futile there I that Japan was forced to invade China proper In search of the economic advantage she deemed : essential. The Japanese program intended to make of Manchuria a "land of justice and plenty" has in fact turned it into a '-'land of in justice and poverty." But what is more significant to us,1 since September 18, 1931, there has beeen no peace - m the world. Every year with the single ex- - ception of 1934, a new field of hostilities has opened up. In 1932 and 1933 other Chinese areas were attacked; in 1935 it was Ethiopia; ,1936, Spain; 1937, the major war in China; 1938, Austria and Czechoslovakia; 1939, Al bania, Poland, France, Britain; 1940, Finland, Norway, Denmark, The Netherlands, Belgium, Rumania, Greece; 1941 to date, Bulgaria, Yugo slavia, Russia, French Indo-China. . And it all started with the "Manchurian incident." But the "incident" never was really important. It may actually never have occurred that is, the provocative act which Japan seized upon as an excuse for aggression. If its exact nature still escapes you, the dispatch Which came through Japanese sources just ten years -ago may assist your memory t i An attempt by Chinese troops td destroy the South Manchurian railway bridge at Peytaying, suburb of Mukden, precipitated a clash between Chinese and Japanese soldiers at Mukden that resulted in a Japanese lieutenant and three soldiers being wounded. Practice Mobilization Several Russian fliers in flimsy "crates" loaded 'with explosives dived to their certain doom last Sunday irf order to destroy German transport ships. .They traded their lives dearly, exchanging them for hundreds of Germans lives but that doesn't alter the fact that they voluntarily made the supreme sacrifice. Their only chance to live was to fail in their mission. , -inspired by the cause for which they fought, soldiers have done those things before. American soldiers have served as ; "suicide troops" and it may be that they will do it again. Still, the very thought of it is a chal lenge. We don't think much of the Russians. Oh, It isn't the people. We haven't thought of the Russian people for a long time. We haven't been able to see them because we have so disliked their government, and particularly the economic , system that is a part of it. Last time we thought oi the Russians as people, we had a notion they were fine, making due allowance for their handicaps of illiteracy and ignorance which were'nt really their fault. ; I w ; Whatever, their shortcomings, here and there at any rate you'll find one willing to "give up his life for his friends";- willingness which on good authority we regard as praise worthy. . The United States is in this war too. If we weren't in it before, we have been now for, more than six days.' German U-boats may be keeping out of ange of our destroyers, may even have run to the cover of their base ports. We doubt it but if they have, it's still war. ; We know all this but we don't cpmprehend it. It hasn't sunk home. We go about our busi ness, some of us still argue about getting into the war as though we weren't already in it. We aren't fighting as civilians must fight in modern war.: We're asleep. Our government is fighting, our armed services are fighting, our defense industries and their workers are fighting. Our civil defense organization is fighting. Tonight this latter agency is staging a -practice mobilization. As its name implies, its primary purpose is to afford actual practice in some of the techniques which may be put to use in dead earnest in case of emergency. Just possibly, it may, have the effect of waking up some of the. rest of us, jarring us out of our complacency Nobody is asking us yet to ie "suicide, troops." ; But we could, without much sacrifice, manage to look a little more like a people at war. School Enrollment - 1 Albany has its new plywood mill in oper ation and is enjoying a stepping-up of activity in many lines. Many new dwellings have been erected and there are few vacancies. Albany is going ahead, will profit further from the cantonment if it is built. Its people would seem to have no worries about the community's im- -mediate future, nor doubt as to the recent substantial growth. It would seem kowever 1 that Albany la suffering from growing pains, one might even say a form of adolescence; for judging from comment in the Democrat-Herald, people there are rather disturbed about the drop in first day school enrollment. The editor takes com fort, though not invidiously,-in other Oregon cities' similar experience. The suggestion i made that reduction in the size of families is the explanation. Salem is one of the cities which had a first-day enrollment decrease. But Salem is not suffering from growing pains. There was no particular reason here to expect an increase; there were indeed rumors early in the summer that Salem was rapidly being depopulated as families departed for the scene of defense jobs. Those rumors were set at rest by a Statesman survey, but its figures may not have convinced everyone. It is recognized here, we believe, that two factors aside from the. school age popu lation of the district, affect school enrollment this fall. One is that in contrast to recent years when young people had only the choice of going to school or loafing, there is now a choice be tween school and gainful employment; defense jobs as well as jobs made available when older persons left for defense jobs or entered the armed services. Th other factor, affecting early enrollment, Is the prevalence of harvest work and the manner in which participation therein was pictured as a patriotic duty. Taking all this into account, the fact that Salem's school enrollment on the first day was down only 337, is good, news rather than bad. It confirms the findings of The Statesman's survey, that while some men and boys have gone away to defense jobs, in most cases their families have remained here and that others have come to take the jobs vacated. We predict that school enrollment will presently move ahead of last year's comparable figures. Even if it doesn't, we have no fear. Salem isn't blowing away in the defense wind. Tolerance was the Constitution day theme of the Oregonian editorial column. "Hate only hatred" tcs its plea. Hating hatred in the abstract is fine. But if a fellow decides to hate those who ' hate or preach hatred, he isn't greatly limiting the field within which he can do some "righteous" hating. Millikan Lifts 'Veil of Future Th life of man during the next few decades will be "powerfully" influenced by Industrial and - other scientific developments that are under way t the present time, Dr. Robert A. Millikan, eminent physicist and Nobel prize winner, wrote this week. Dr. Millikan's thoughts on the future was ex pressed in a statement to the Committee on Patents and Research of the National Association of Manufacturers, for which he acts as advisor on research matters. Drawing a broad, general picture of the prob- : able shape of things to come, Dr. Millikan, who is chairman of the Executive Council of the Cali fornia Institute of Technology and the author of numerous books and treatises on a variety of scientific subjects, spoke particularly of changes that might develop in the wake of today's ex tensive defense research. The post-war period, he said, probably will bring new developments in transportation and International communications as a result of the "enormous" progress in military aviation. ' He summed up his observations as follows: "1. It is obvious that the enormous develop ments in aeronautics for war purposes are going to react powerfully upon all the problems of transportation and international communication in the years succeeding the war. "2. The whole field of alloys is clearly moving forward at a very rapid rate, especially with ref erence to combining the maximum of lightness and strength, so that the field of metallic alloys Is going to modify greatly the industry of the coming decades. "3. The exceedingly rapid development that is taking place now in plastics, and the provision of sufficiently hard non-scratchable surfaces for such plastics is clearly going to have a large influence on transportation and on domestic life in a great variety of ways. "4. The notable advances being made right now in short wave radio and in the travel of radio waves through cylindrical conductors are certain to make the field of communications push out in new directions in the coming decades. "5. New and greatly improved means of ster ilization of drinking water, for example, have recently been developed, and the influence of such biochemical advances upon the maintenance of the health of th people of all countries is likely to be immeasurable. ' - v "8. The new knowledge of vitamins) already revolutionizing the eating habits of the world, and the fortification of common foods with suitable vitamins, bid fair very quickly to Increase, the health and the productivity of all kinds of workers. 7. The rapid rate at which micro-organic biochemistry is increasing our knowledge of drugs and so-called natural products. This new knowl edge is already finding many kinds of applica tions to human life. . "8. The new knowledge that has been gained through ' studies in the mechanics 1 of soil erosion and the transport of sediments such as those going on now on the campus of the California Institute are at the present time revolutionizing agriculture as applied to cultivation of hillsides, the transport of sediments through dams, etc. "9. The developments in long-range weather foresting are already having very great effects upon the handling of power systems, agriculture, and military operations.1 The science of meteor ology is in its infancy but it is growing up very rapidly with large new implications for the future of man. "10. New studies in immunology promise to have powerful repercussions in the field of public health." I - "The foregoing," Dr. Millikan wrote, "are merely a few of the fields in which I see advances being made on the campus at which X am located. Add them to the list of other equally important advances which are coming from other research centers, and the total volume of new developments, all of which react in some way or, other upon - human life, becomes most impressive." W )?y fir . sj By MARTSE RUTLEDGE SEVENS u This Means YOU! And Uncle Sam Doesn't Mean Mebbe Bits for Breakffast By R. J. HENDRICKS California's Admission 9-18-41 Day Tuesday, September 9th; Oregonians discovered their gold, broke state into Union: S S The regular .double column page long contribution of John Steven McGroarty, California's poet laureate, to the Los Angeles Times of September 7th is to be Today's Garden By LILXJE L. MADSEN M. P. writes that leaves are beginning to trickle down. Says she has never had a leaf com post heap and wants to know what she should save in the way of leaves. Says she has oak, wal nut and maple leaves. Answer: If she has rhododen drons, azaleas or laurels save the walnut and oak leaves to make a compost mulch for these, but don't use such a compost for the perennial border. It would be too acid. The maple leaves fur nish a good compost for any thing. Add grass clippings, too. K. J. asks where she can ob tain bulbs of trilliums and dogs tooth violets. Answer: - Send me a self -addressed envelope and IH send you the names of growers. S. D. asks when she should set out her peonies. Answer: At anytime now. Sep tember is considered the ideal peony planting time. Remem ber, peonies thrive best in a sunny location, at least, don't give them more than partial shade. Well drained ground is essential. It is wise to burn all old tops in the autumn. Cut the plants to the ground now and burn the "cuttings." -herein printed in full, beginning: "There are days on the calen dars of the year which Califor nians call their own. One of them is Admission Day. It will fall this year come Tuesday, next, Sept. 9. It will be celebrat ed as it has been for the past 91 years by native sons and daugh ters with passionate enthusiasm. Adopted sons and daughters who have grown to be as intense in their love for California as the natives themselves also will cele brate. Newcomers from the out lands will be wondering what it is all about. "Somebody will have to tell them. "The states of the outlands do not have Admission Day high jinks, any more than they don't have so much else that California has. But when they climb over the rim of the mother mountains" to slip through the mountain passes they become informed, enlightened and educated. S ' "The whole history of Cali fornia from its discovery is glamorous with romance. Think of Cabrillo, Sebastian Vizcaino, Sir Francis Drake and the mar iners who followed, sailing the uncharted waters of the Pacific, escaping the lurking dangers of rocks and shoals in little tubs of ships in which you would not care to venture today from the mainland to any of the Channel Islands. They were daring sail ormen who braved the storm, wind and tide to find and ex plore the Land of Heart's De sire. "Then the great Franciscan adventure of 1769 in which the mighty chain of vast mission es tablishments was builded be tween San Diego and Sonoma, a whole heathen race converted to Christianity, a useless race made useful in the world, a naked race clothed, a hungry race fed. S "Then came the great "Days of '49' when gold was discovered and the whole world set form to find the Golden Fleece. "The seven seas were crowded with ships, the plains and pra iries filled with dusty caravans braving the adventures of an unmapped continent and the" murderous assaults of savage tribes. S S "Now, the coming of the iron horse, east and west, bound to gether with steel bands the transcontinental railways. Snow capped mountain peaks and wide, deep ravines crossed and spanned, harbors opened to the argosies of the world, splendid cities rising like magic in the ancient wildernesses, orchards and vineyards basking ' In the sun, wonder upon wonder crowding fast upon one another until now, when California leaps to the forefront of civilization and calls the sons of men from the farthest corners of the earth to share the largess of her boundless wealth. "It may not be known gener ally that California came within a hair's breadth from being made into two states instead of one. Had that been done Its present poltical structure would be nothing like it is now." (Continued tomorrow.) Chapter! It, Continued . They talked a great deal and brilliantly, after that It ended, with Jane half convinced, in Mr. Givens saying, "Mr Giyens and I happen to know many things which perhaps, my dear, you dont know. We" consider Kurt Helm the right person to tell our people the truth. He has sourc es of Information." " Given backed her up. "In a nutshell. Miss Rider, my wife and I have had a great deal of experience, and if X may say so we're in touch with most alarming facts. We simply feel it our duty to tell these facts. Your friends your neighbors out here should know them." H Kurt interrupted. Oddly, Jane thought; of his voice which had subdued the big dog, Grouch. But there was also a tone of sincerity in it which made her lean forward. "If you" want to serve your country, now's the time," he said, as if he didnt care whether she did or not "You can have a : part time job here $15 a week, as a secretary. You'll ad dress envelopes, and help edit prospectuses possibly a month ly magazine. YouH aid us, -my dear " His' voice, grew warmer. "How? ! By interesting your friends in this movement to keep America safe. Will you? I swear he said, "it is not anti Semitic. We want only to save our country from what's hap pening in Europe. Are you with us?" - ; He was sincere. His eyes held hers. There flashed across Jane's mind an image of his burning the supposed propaganda pam phlet David had got from Carlie on the ferry. She thought she understood now. i a Jane made her decision. "If it isn't hate of any kind, 111 do what I can," she said. Where was Mattile Breanu go ing alone, so late at night? Da vid sat tensely beside the young newspaper man. Bill hadn't ex aggerated; his old bus might look like junk, but it certainly could go. Breanu raced ahead, the tail light an eye which didn't see. "He doesn't' know we're fol lowing," David said triumphant ly. Action was what he needed. He forgot how desperate he had felt yesterday, with his girl lost, his Job lost, his self-confidence sunk. He lit a cigarette; the match glimmered ; on his red hair, his eager face. He saw him self solving Carlie's murder, and then Jane back in his arms. Breanu crossed the George' Washington bridge, turned south then westward on the Fort Lee road. Bill drove carefully, keep ing his distance. As they ap proached Overpeck Creek, his face clouded. There was little traffic at this midnight hour. The September sky pressed down like a lid without holes ; fof. stars. " . ' He dimmed bis headlights. "A dead-men-tell-no-taies country, he remarked ' to' David, waving toward the dank meadows. A : sluggish breath of evil seemed to rise from their flat desolation. David gave' a last puff at his iy cigarette; ground it under his :' heeL Keyed op as he was, the road, the night, the big car ahead gave him that same penetrating . sense of danger he had felt on the ferry that fateful afternoon : he had run across unhappy Car lie Breanu. "We ought to go faster," he fretted. I His companion looked at him. "Listen, Buddy? There was a new solemn note to Bill's voice "You don't know these parts as X do. Cops stick together when they come out here. There's a lot of mean guys hiding In dumps along this dismal creek. We won't - lose Matt But Tm not putting our heads In any trap, either. ' "Yod know best,"; David con ceded a little sulkily. The brood ing silence 'got on his nerves. , Suddenly Bill stopped his mo tor. Somewhere west of the creek, an eerie blue light flared up; faded out "That's funnyl" : he muttered. ; "Oh, for the love of Pete, let's get on!" David urged. Chapter 29. . Bill was frowning. "During prohibition I prowled this ter rain for a story, he said abrupt ly. There was a creepy sort of roadhouse east of the creek. Bootleggers used it for head quarters. When the cast was clear, they used to " He broke . off, gripping David's arm. "By Glory! Their OK. signal was a blue light on a flagpole. A red light meant trouble.! Now, what devil's business goes on?" As if in answer, three sharp cracks of a motor horn ripped through the windless night Bre anu's sedan spurted forward along the gloomy stretch. Bill hummed into speed, "The son-of-a-gun knew we were follow ing him," ha grunted. "I don't like this." "Look out" David yelled. But it was too late. Two figures darted from a wooden heap of buildings. They shouted. Bill went faster. Then a shot from behind punctured the rear tire. David held on as the ear lurched crazily, almost toppling over. Bill yanked at the wheeL Another bullet maimed the sec ond rear tire. A final derisive blast from Breanu's car pierced the charged air. Then all was silent , (To be continued) Iadio Pirosiramnis S;:?::S 4 &gina, Irene and Jesefa Solzbaeher L to r.) an among the first to disembark from the Spanish freighter Nmvtmar, 43 days out of Seville. Bad food, filth, rats. ickiesj and overcrowding made the voyage a nightmare, according to the ref ogees, 7G9 of which arrived on the vessel boilt to accommodate 17 passengers. Six persons died daring the tojsjs, KSLM THURSDAY U9t Kc. 6 JO-Sunrise Salute. ' 7:00 News to Brief. 75 Old Favorites. 7 ;3Q ewt. 7:45 Henry King's Orchestra. 3U Mews. 8:45 Mid-Morn ine Salute. M Pastor's yCall. 9:19 Popular Music. 9:45 Melody Mart. 10:90 The World This Morning. 10:15 Prescription for Happiness. 10:30 Women in the News. 10:35 Tommy Tucker's Orchestra. 11:00 Melodic Moods. 11:30 Value Parade. 11:45 Lum and Abner. , 13 .-00 Ivan Ditmars, Organist. 12:15 Noontime News. 12:30 Hillbilly Serenade. 133S Willamette Valley Opinions. 12 :55 The Song Shop. 1:15 Isle of Paradise. 1:30 Western Serenade. 2:00 News in Bnef. 2:15 US Army. 2:30 Will Bradley's Orch 2:45 Vocal Varieties. 3 AO Concert Gems. 4:00 Popular Music 4:15 News. 4:30 Tea time Tunes. S. -00 Popularity Row. :30 Scattergood Baines. 5:43 Dinner Hour Melodies. S:00 Tonight's Headlines. :15 War Commentary. 620 String Serenade. i 7:00 News in Brief. 749 Interesting Facts. 7:15 Shep Fields Orchestra. 7 JO Talk of the Town. : g :00 World Headlines. S .-05 The . Rhythm Five. S:45 Broadway Bandwagon. 90 News Tabloid. 9:15 Marlon County Defense. :30 Mobilisation program. 10:00 Left Dance. 10 JO News. 10:45 Music to Remember. ; 1 SIGW NBC THURSDAY 29 Kc SAO Sunrise Serenade. i JO The Early Bards. T AO News. 7 :15 Music of Vienna. . 1:45 David Harura. SAO Sam Hayes. 8:15 Stars of Today. S .45 Skltch Henderson. Pianiit. 9 AO -Beverly Mahr, Singer. 9:15 Bese Johnson. 9 JO Ellen Randolph. 9:45 Dr. Kate. I . 10 AO-Ught of the World. I 10:15 The Mystery Man. 10 JO Valiant Lady. - ' 10:45 Arnold Grimm's Daughter 11 AO Against the Storm. ; 11:15 Ma Perkma. 1 11 JO The Guiding Ugfat. ! 1145 Vie and Sade. i 12 AO Backstage Wife. j 12:15 Stella Dallas. ! 12 JO Lorenzo Jones. 12:45 Young Widder Brown. - 1 AO Home of the Bravo. 15 Portia Faces Life. ; 1 J0 We the Abbotts. ! 1:45 Mary Martin f 2A0 Pepper Young's ramny. 2:15 Lone Journey. j 2J0 PhU Irwin. 2:45 News. " 3:00 Hotel Biltmore orchestra. : 3:15 News of the World 3 JO My Song and I 3:45 H. V. Kaltenbom ! 4:00 Stars of Today i . . 4:30 Ricardo's Rhapsodies.! s 45 So You W Going to College. 5:00 Kraft Music Hall - 0 Cugat Rhumba Revue JO Quia of Two Cities . 7 AO Fred Waring Pleasure Time : 7:15 Lum and Abner i 7:30 Coffee Time. SAO The AWrich Famfly . . : 30 Tommy Riggs and Betty Lou SAO Faithful Stradivari 9:15 Good Neighbors . J - 95 Musical Interlude ! 9:50 Your Home Town ! 10 AO News Flashes ; 10:15 Palladium Ballroom orchestra. IS JO Florentine Gardens orchestra, 11 AO Hotel Biltmore orchestra 1130-Hotei Sir Francis Drake orch. U25 New BniW , These scheiales ax seppUei ky the respective stations. Any varia tions note ay listeners are Sue tev, changes asade by the stations wttn at notice to this newspaner. KEX NBC THURSDAY 11M Kft. 4:00 The Quack of Dawn. lAOWestern Agriculture. 7:15 Amen Corner. 7 JO Breakfast aub. 8:15 Keep Fit Club. S JO National Farm and Homo. 9:15 Between the Book ends. 9 JO Christian Science Program. 10 AO-News. 10:15 Art Baker's Notebook. 10:30 Hollywood Headiinera 1045 Charmingly - We Uve. 11:00 Orphans of Divorce. 1103 Amanda of Honeymoon HOL liao-John's Other Wife ll-Just Plain Bill. 1235 Your Livestock Reporter. 12)30 News. . ' 12 MS Market Reports. 12:50 Household Hints. 12:55 News. ' 1. AO Richard Brooks. 1 :15 Chansonette. 1S30 Keep Fit Club. 145 Curbstone Qui. 2:00 The Quiet Hour. 2:30 Lost and Found Items. 2:45 Wings on Watch. 3:00 Count Your Blessings. 3515 Mr. Keen. Tracer. 3 :30 Intermezzo. 4 AO Novatime. 4:15 Women's World. ' 430 Ireene Wicker. 4145 The Bartons.- . SAO Gwen WUllams. Singer. .S:15 Voice of Prophecy. 3 JO News. AO Rudy VaDee Show. C30 -Indian Tales of Oregon. 145 News. , I AO Dance Orchestra. " TJ0 Clark Dennis. Tenor. 745 What Can I Dot ; SAO Easy Aces. C 3:13 Golf Interview. ' i JO Portland Baseball Game. 10:13 Dance Hour. 1945 Bal Tabarin Cafe Orchestra. 11 AO This Moving World. 11:15 Portland Police Reports. 11 30 War News Roundup. , SCOTN CBS THURSDAY 7 Ke. S JO Early Worm. AO WW Farm Reporter, iao KOIN Klock. f :15 News. 743 Consumer News. AO Kate Smith. .15 When A Girl Marries. JO Romance of Helen Trent . S 45 Our Gal Sunday. -SAO Life Can Be Beautiful 9:15 Woman in White. 9 JO Right to Happiness. 945 Mary Lee Taylor. 10 AO Bright Horizon. ; 1 -10:13 Aunt Jenny. i 1030-Fletcher Wiley. 1 , 10:45 Kate Hopkins, i 11 AO The Man I Married. . II JO Hello Again. -. 12A0 News. 12:15 Myrt and Marge. 12 JO Woman of. Courage. , 12:45 Stepmother. . ,1:00 Betty Crocker. 1 :15 Singin' Sam. 130 The CNeUla. '1:45 Ben Bernie SAO Knox i Manning News. - 2:13-Outdoors With Bob Edge ' 330 Joyce Jordan. 1:43 The World Today, f f SAO Second Mrs. Burton. 3:15 Young Dr. M alone. 3:30 Newspaper of the Air. 1 4:15 Here's Elmore, s . 430 News. - 455 Elmer Davis. . 3 AO Major Bowes. ' ' AO Glen Miller Orchestra , : : :1$ ProfesKor Quiz. 45 Leon F. Drews.' 7 AO Amos TT Andy.. 7:15 Lenny Ross. 7:39 Maudie's Diary.' AO Duffy's Tavern. : :30 Death Valley Days 9.-00 Paul Sullivan. News 9:15 Herbert Foote, Organ. 30 BUI Henry iA9-Five Star Final. V 10:15 Bob Crosby Orchestra. 1030-State Traffic. 10 :45 Defense Today. 11 AO Ken Stevens. 11 JO Mauoy Strand Orchestra. U S3 News. e . . KALE MBS THURSDAY 1333 Ke. JO Memory Timekeeper. 7A0 News. 8 AO Breakfast Club. 830 News, 8:45 Buyer's Parade. SAO John B. Hughes. 0:15 Helen Holden. 30 Front Page FarrelL 9:43 HI Find My Way. 10 AO News. 1030 This and That. 10:15 Woman's Side of the News 10 JO This and That. 11 AO News. 1330 Siesta. 12:4& News. 1A0 The Bookworm. 1 :1 5 Confessions et a Corsair. 130 Johnson Family. 145 Mutual Dons. 2 AO We're Always Young. 2:13 As the Twig is Bent 230 Hugh Brundage. 3 AO Voice of American Women 3:15 Here's Morgan. 330 Tennis Tournament. ' 4 AO Musical Express. 4 JO Journal Juniors. . 3 .DO News. 5:15 Shatter Parker's Circus. 8 JO Sinfonietta, AO Phil Stearns. , 6:30 Charles Arlington 8:45 Movie Parade. 7 AO Confidentially Yours. 7:15 Jimmy Allen. T -tt Weather Reports. . 730 Contact. SAO Symphony Hour. AO News. :15 Gift of the Orient. JO Fulton Lewis. Jr. 945 Dance Orchestra. 10 AO Slumber Boat.-. ; 10 JO News. . r 1045 Dance Orchestra. 1130 Clyde McCoy Orchestra. KOAC THURSDAY S59 Ke. M AO Weather Forecast. 10 AS News. . i 10:13 The Homemakers Hour, j 11 AO Excursions in Science. 12 AO News. 12:13 Farm Hour.' I 2 AO Home Garden Hour. 2:45 Monitor Views the News, j 3:13 Magic Casement I 243 News. - '! ' 4 JO Stories for Boys and Girls. ' 9:15 Eye Openers. . :1S News. 1 JO Farm Hour. ' i 3:00 Foresters in Action. 9 JO Cavalcade of Dramav . (mitt I aVii. AS V5Va UCUTS,