The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 04, 1941, Page 4, Image 4

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"No Favor sway U$, No Fear Shall Awe
From First Statesman, March 28, 1851.
K THE STATESMAN PUBUSHING CO.
- CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use lor publication of ell
news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise a edited in this newspaper.
Assessment Squabble Chap.. IV
From their vantage point safe behind two
inter-county boundaries viewing with fine de
tachment Multnomah's assessment ratio debate.
Inhabitants of the Salem vicinity have been
, privileged themselves to become assessors
assessing not real and personal property but the
extent to which intellectual honesty is preva
lent among ordinary human beings and its de
gree of resistance to the commercial instinct.
Humanity's imperfections in this respect
may in truth be traced throughout all the his
tory of taxation. "Why this is true, history also
I records. "Taxes," observes our handy but too-
i . miprinpt nvlrrwv1ia "are iicuallv rpsistpH hv
those who must pay them," Such resistance may
well be hereditary. Early taxation was often a
process of brutal, unjust and lawless extrac
tion. How many taxpayers, we wonder, recog
nize that taxes have been outstandingly the
means of man's release from oppression, of his
acquiring those civil and human rights whose
preciosity today'sevents serve anew to empha
size? In becoming such means, we grant that
their role has been that of irritant, even as now.
England's parliamentary system, the
French Revolution, the American Revolution
none of these would have come to pass, when
they did come to pass, had it not been for tax
ation and human resistance thereto.
.' Reverting to the subject of intellectual hon
esty, a childish departure therefrom is discern
ible in the circumstance that almost universal
ly, property is assessed at considerably less than
its "true value in cash" in open defiance of laws
equally universal. If there were any profit to
any taxpayer in this traditional practice, it
would be at -the expense of justice and of other
taxpayers. But to the sole end that men may
feel through ignorance or self-deception
that hereditary glow of satisfaction at somehow
beating the tax-collector, the practice persists.
Though the "true cash value" mandate may
be ignored with impunity, the law is with rea
son more unyielding in its insistence that prop
erty "shall be subject to assessment and tax
ation in equal and ratable proportion," that tax
ation "shall be uniform on the same class of
subjects" and that taxes "shall be levied and
collected under general laws operating uni
formly throughout the state."
-.Defender of Multnomah's recent assess
ment practices are wrong. Both law and com
mon, uncomplicated justice tell them they are
wrong and only their pocketbooks tell them
they are right. And now we -come to the fourth'
chapter of the controversy.
The first chapter- is a long one, extending
back more than 30 years during which the var
iable assessment ratio practice has prevailed.
Second chapter vrai the state tax commission's
ruling upon an appeal prepared by one Carey
Martin an attorney, but not Salem's veteran
attorney of that name. Oddly enough, Mr. Mar
tin lost his case but won his point; the commis
sion held that the assessment practice was ille
gal. . Third chapter was an instruction to the
Multnomah assessor bv the countv board of
I equalization, in effect to continue the condemn-
cu as&essmeni practice. I
' ' The tax commission has opened the fourth
chapter by declaring the equalization board's
order void and ordering the board to vacate it
and substitute one which, the commission in
sists, .will correct the inequities which had ac
companied the assessor's hasty attempt to com-
ply with the law as interpreted by the commis-
aion. :
i Now there is effort to label the commis
sion's act as a compromise.; It is asserted that
borne owner's; taxes will be increased no more
than 11 per cent rather than the 25 to 50 per
cent previously indicated. The relative accur
acy of either estimate may not readily be as--certained.
Several things are clear. True equal
ization cannot be effected in one sweeping or
der; it is a matter of individual adjustment for
each parcel of property. This year, at this late
after the light changed from green to amber.
The more conscientious in such event will en
deavor to mitigate the offense by . stopping
where they can, in such position as to impede
eithervehicular or pedestrian traffic. Or what
is worse, he may reverse (that rhymed; may
be we should start over and make this a poem
but never fear, we won't). He may shift into re-r
verse and try to rectify the error, to the actual
end and that others are twice rather than once
imperiled. . - ' . r
Now the chief of police and Earl Snell's
hired men may chide us and shout heresy, but
we have a conviction that when one has once
crossed the forbidden line the damage is done,
and that thebest thing to do is to keep going
cautiously, of course, and making a right turn
if the flow of traffic from the other direction
has already started. That solution, at any rate,
keeps one from looking so blamed conspicu
ous. Simple, isn't it? Editors have to figure out
answers for everything. But here's one who is
thankful there are no one-way streets in Sa
lem. We never yet have figured out what to do
after entering one of those from the wrong end.
Without fail, a dozen people will tell you you're
wrong, but nobody tells you what to do about it.
1
,1
S date.
no assessment can be revised upward;
downward revisions constitute the only avail
able means of smoothing out inequities. This
I, too is clear: The record for relative intellectual
ThftnMstv in this nMi- tmvpeHin a i all r tVia '
side of the tax commission.
1. 1
Quandary
I
: For how long have people in downtown Sa-
lem been governing' their perambulation and
their automotive progress by the alternating
t appearance ux. green, unoer iqa red ligms:
I seems incredible to those of us who have been
I here much longer, to whom the innovation still
i seems relatively new, but the truth is that this
has been stop-and-gbing on for a trifle over
I four years. It was about a week after the 1937
! state fair that the traffic lights were first oper
ated. ; ;.;::.- ., .
I Vividness of recollection varies as between
S different classes of experiences. Obedience to
the traffic lights involved a change of habit, the
development of a new habit; an experience -striking
enough , to be long remembered. Con-
troversy on the other hand is, in a democracy,
1 so, common an experience that last week's burn
ing issue and the debate that revolved about It
is already forgotten. Though institution of the
I traffic lights seems recent, one has the impres
sion that the argument pro and con over their
Installation was an occurrence of the long ago.
Resistance to the council's decision, it may
; faintly be recalled, did not die with its effectu
ation. There .was dire prophecy, in the face of
Immediate .benefits, that presently the public;
would be racing "to beat the lights" and that
serious accidents would; ensue. Nothing of the
sort happened. Unpleasant results, to the extent
of our observation, are limited to the circum
stance that some pedestrians still jaywalk in
mid-Mock, to the greater peril of life and limb,
and that some motorists steer clear of the light
controlled streets, resulting in undue conges
tion on those adjacent, particularly Ferry street.
In all these four years however, few mo
torists have learned to be nonchalant at such
moments as they discover themselves inadvert
ently to have over-driven a red light, or to have
rolled across the safety line just a iplit second
Hitler spoke for 65 minutes. Though the
fact was obscured by the bombast of his deliv
ery, his words when reduced to cold 'type are
defensive, in the nature of an alibi. He was an
swering someone, and our guess is that some
one is the German public. Of course, he said
Russia was "so stricken that she, never again
will rise up." We trust that is as true as the gen
eral run of his other statements, and no truer.
He did tell the truth in at least two instances.
He said that never since 1933 had he lost sight
of his goal and that it had all along included the
crushing of Bolshevism. And he said that "truth
will triumph." Which just goes to support the"
contention of those who insist he knows the
nazi cause is hopeless. , .
Stewart Views
Washington Scene
By CHARLES P. STEWART '
Due to Paul Mallon's illness, the Washington column
of Charles P. Stewart, widely-recognized new analyst, is
being substituted temporarily. The Statesman is pleased
to offer Mr. Stewarfs authoritative observations to its
readers, but hopes soon to be able to announce resumption
of the MaHon column.
Can a post-war depression be prevented?
Economist Leon Henderson of Uncle Sam's
new Supply Priorities and Allocation , Board says,
"Yes" provided we do our preventing in advance,
tight now, while the war's still raging, and the
Sump hasn't kit us?yet. If we dont have a boom ,
we shan't have the slump, he contends. That's why
he's trying so hard to hold down boom-time prices,
by discouraging buying all he can, on civilian con
sumerdom's part For One thing, he wants a mini
mum of civilian competition with defense, for our
Industrial products. Aside from that, though, he's
looking ahead to the post-war period.
Economist Adolf A. Berle, one of State Secret
tary Hull's assistants, maintains that there'll be no
slump if the right kind of peace is made finally
a peace so just and considerate of everybody that
the whole world will be too comfortable and happy
not to prosper, practically involuntarily.
As for unemployment, there'll be enough re
construction to be attended to, according to Adolf,
to make jobs fairly go a-begging.
""Phooey!" comments Executive Secretary Leo
M. Cherne of the Research Institute of America, a
private organization. "With the war still going on,
.before the end of this year we're going to have as
bad an unemployment problem on our hands as we
had In the midst of our last depression. Defense
priorities are being granted to big industrial con
cerns at such a rate that the little ones cant get
raw materials. They'll have to shut down, throwing
their workers out of jobs a good deal faster than
defense industry can absorb 'em."
Senator Joseph C. 0Mahoney of Wyoming,
chairman of a committee that has done more econ
omic investigating than any other group in con
gressional history, inclines to agree with Economist
Cherne.
Big Beys first
His account is that a few corking big companies
send to Washington spokesmen who, on the strength
of their vast size and influence, win priorities to the
exclusion of lesser and yet pretty good-sized ones,
which consequently may have to suspend and per
haps go bankrupt, leaving 'em still busted after the
war's ended. And whatll that do to post-war em
ployment? The senator has a bill pending in congress for
the creation of a government body to give ear to
these comparative industrial pewees' lamentations,
and regulate the situation.
Congressman Joseph W. Martin, minority
leader in the house of representatives, goes Senator
O'Mahoney one better. His forecast is that unem
ployment may develop to such proportions as, per
haps, to force a dictatorship. Joe Martin, to be sure,
isn't particularly an economist and he IS a Repub
lican. Still, he's quite a figure on Capitol Hill not
to be sneezed at. . -';.:-
The National Resources Planning Board and
Federal Works Agency seem to have a notion that
there's a possibility of a sufficient post-war slump
to make a cushion desirable, to put under it,
r Their scheme's to have a huge program of pub
lic Improvements planned in advance, ready to
start in on the minute unemployment begins to
manifest Itself. The other day the Planning Board
announced that, in co-operation with "the - Works
Agency, it has 51 cities in 19 states enlisted in this
piece of preparation, and it hopes to win more cit
ies and states in the near future. 3
Toward the end of the last war Herbert Hoo
ver evolved a similar idea, but never did much to
ward getting the necessary plans formulated. ,
-Leal Baking?
- True, a tremendous amount of public building
was done in Washington during depression years,
but it needed to be a lot more widely spread out
than that to make any considerable impression.
Subsequently mere was a deal of "leaf raking,' but
nobody regarded It as very sound economics.- ;
Today the economists, in short, are in a lot of
.disagreement
, . And maybe it's no wonder. -'
None of their past tinkering, in such emergen
, ties ax the present one, ever has proved efficacious.
Now they're trying numerous new kinds of exper
iments, but they ha vent been tried out yet. Whe
ther any of 'era will work, actually tested, natur
ally is a mere matter of theory.
There are about as many theories as there are
economists.
Kadi 5
, -1 . 1
"Beyond the Alps Lies Italy"
Bits for (Breakfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
When the Battle Creek 10-4-41
camp ground was a long
way outj and fashionable
place for high Salem society:
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Mr. Minto wrote in the little
book:
"During the five years preced
ing the surrender at Appomattox,
our neighborhood (called the
Pringle neighborhood') had met
on a, day appointed and taken
dinner-together at some pleasant
spot, sometimes chosen fox the
beauty of its surroundings or the
long-distance view, like that
from Prospect Hill, seven miles
southwest of Salem.
V
"But three of those meetings
were in a' beautiful, sheltered
spot on Battle creek, on the do-
. nation land claim of Mrs. Mar-
' tha A. Minto. ,
"The neighborhood had met
there on the 15th of May; 1865, in
rejoicing for the return of peace,
and there was recited the. fore
going parody." (That parody
was composed by Mr. Minto as
his contribution to the day's pro
ceedings. Martha Ann (Morri
son) Minto was his wife, and the
camp ground on Battle creek was
on her half of their joint dona
tion land claim of 640 acres.)
The parody was on "Johnny
Comes Marching Home, substi
tuting "The Johnny Rebs March
Home from Appomattox.' That
was a month and six days after
the surrender of Lee's army at
Apponmattox, which was on
April 9, 1865. The parody went
like this:
"Come ring the bells and fire
the guns, j
Hurrah! Hurrah'
Bring forth your! wives1 and little
- " ones, ! I
Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!
Hoist up the Flag and raise the
shout, j
The boys and girls must all turn
out, !
For we all feel gay, since the.
johnnies went marching
home. i
y
i
From Appomattox field they
went, j
' Hurrah! Hurrah!
With steeds and side-arms kindly
. sent; :
Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!
No more secession's husks they'll
eat..- 1
But milk and honey flour and
wheat; j ,
And well all feel gay, since the
Johnnies are marching home.
. s vv
In the Union Bouse the board
well spread.
Hurrah! Hurrah!
For there is plenty wine and
: " bread; j
. Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!
We'll kill the calf to crown the
feast.
Well freely kill the fatted beast.
As we all feel gay, since the
Johnnies went marching
home.
VV"-
And well havi no talk of East
or West;
Hurrah! Hurrah!
But honor those who fought the
best;
Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!
Well have no strife twbet Union
men.
But all be for the Union then,
And all feel gay, since the John
nies went marching home.
(Slowly) '
But well not forget the Boys in
;. Blue;
' JO no, Ah no,
Who gave their lives like heroes
true:
Ah no, Oh no, Ah no.
Well deck the graves of those
who fell,
No more to hear the Rebel yell.
But down to future ages tell
what caused our Nation's
woe.
S
That picnic of 1865, "in a beau
tiful, sheltered spot on Battle
creek, on the donation claim of
Mrs. Martha A. Minto," was
either on or not far from the
spot on the west side of the pres
ent Pacific highway where it
crosses over the same stream,
now hidden under a fill some
20 to 30 or more feet below the
surface of the road at that point;
the hidden stream being a few
yards north of the spot that is
under the flickering electric
light, kept in order to warn auto
mobile drivers to be careful, on
account of the meeting there of
Jhe highways from the north to
"fornvtne single Pacific highway,
leading on south.
In fact, three highways come
together near that point, includ
ing the one first built, extend
ing through the Sunnyside dis
trict. (Concluded tomorrow.)
SEVENS
By MARYSE RUTLEDGE r-
aim
, . TRMS Vat MMV ffVBffiTYMMS 4M TNaf .
Chapter 25, Contained
Breanu broke the silence.
"Have a cigar?" His brain
flashed In distant lightning, and
grumbled with far away thun
der. Many things were vividly
clear as before a storm. .
"Thanks." Kurt Helm accept
ed a' cigar.
"You knew my wife." Breanu
said harshly.
"Slightly. And so long ago!"
Kurt took time to light his
cigar. "I was of so little import
ance in her life," he murmured
as if absorbed in the savor of
his first whiff. "I hardly ex
pected you to recognize me,
Breanu." There was a touch of
insolence to his pronouncement
of the name.
"I never forget." Breanu's tone
tone was smooth, with guttural
undertones. He carefully crossed
his legs, and felt the broad head
ed shaggy pup nuzzle up to him.
"It was a great shock to me."
Kurt Helm strolled over to the
window.
"Yes?" Breanu crushed out
his cigar, all pleasure of the day
destroyed. In the quiet room he
faced an adversary, long sought.
He could have killed Kurt Helm
then and there, without further
questions. He got to his feet,
stocky and formidable, joining
Helm at the window.
- "I dont know what there was
between you and my wife, or
what you've been up to Since
her murder," he said. "Several
pretty queer things have hap
pened, though, and a blonde man
seems to have been mixed up in
them. Was it you?
Helm shrugged, denying noth
ing. - "I think -we must have a long
talk, Breanu continued slowly.
TU expect you at my office to
morrow morning." It was meant
as a command.
Kurt Helm swung around. IU
" be there,'"; toe snapped -
Neither rules nor persuasion
could t keep Bill Wright in the
hospital. Within ten days he was
out. his left arm in a sling. BUI
had done considerable thinking
while he" grinned at pre tty
nurses and chatted with doctors.
But he was mum to the ques
tioning detectives, most of whom
hef knew. BreanuV torpedoes,
who had waylaid him and Da
vid along the bleak Jersey mead
. pwland, were his affair,
Bill was a busy young man
that brilliant ' October morning
..when, reluctantly, the hospital
let him go. First he rang up
Greenwich, Connecticut. He said
to the voice at the other end of
the wire, "TeU. Mr. Swift that
my name doesn't matter. I think
I have a lead on who murdered
his daughter. I only want to ask
him two questions."
Arnold Swift came to the
'phone. His answers were brit
tle. The next step he studied
maps of New Jersey, and the
route Mat Breanu had taken
across Overpeck creek. Then,
from an FBI man he knew. Bui
obtained Information which had
nothing to do with Breanu.
Litter, he wandered in to see
a short-tempered editor who had
the European war on his mind.
"What's a murder when the
world's going to blazes?" this
seasoned veteran growled. "But
have it your own way. The job's
yours." Bill said thanks, and
spent an hour' in the paper's
morgue. From there he traveled
to lower Broadway. His arm
hurt; his brow was creased.
He sought out a withered
crone, of his varied acquaint
ance,' who sold papers next to
the building where MattHa Brea
nu had his "front" office. Sure
she knew "The Big Shot" With
a dollar from Bill Wright in her
claw, she croaked .scant i infor
mation. Only yesterday, she saw
Breanu get Into his car with a
slick blonde fellow. They seemed
chummy. It was unusual because
Breanu was always alone.
Bill's mind, whirled back to
the inquest, the witnesses. Some-thing-eomeone
eluded him. He
drove into the subway, making
- for Garrison's swanky apart
ment in Rio house.
Garrison was out But David
Tariand was there. "So you're
- around, again, he said drily; so
glad to see Bui that he could
have hugged him. "You old son-of--gun,
, I . almost ' sent ' you
Z flowers. I-;. --' - . ,J " - -. .
- "When you send me flowers,
111 be under the sod. Whafs
new?" Bill examined the hand
some surroundings, his Tips
jnirsed . for ? whistlev i "Nice
place" 'lryf:--
-YeahT ?David drawled.I
wish I knew, what I was doing in 1
- it. Tm supposed to be a sort of
secretary and strong-arm: man.
. But nothing goes on. Garrison's '
- a regular guy, and he has some'
cock-eyed idea I can help him.
, I dont get it" -. .
- "You war," Bill .comforted.
" 1" and he stopped short
' To be continued 4 1
KSIOS SATTjmDAY-i3$ SUV
:M Sunrise Salute. .1
7:30 News.
- T:45 Ths Esquires. . . . :. .
S: 30 News.
S:45 Mid-Morning Salute. T
9:00 Pastor's Cafl.
:15 Popular Music :
t: Mektdr Mart.
10:00 Ths World This Morning.
10: IS Frank Trombauer's Orch, .
10:30 Walts Ttmsw
ll:OS Melodic Moods. - -
11:30 Value Parade.
U: IS Noontime News.
U:3o-HMbuty Sereaade,
11:35 Willamette Valley OplafoaS.
l:00-Hollrwood Buckeroos..
1:30 Two Kings and a Queesu
1:00 Vocal Varieties.
1: IS Instrumental Novelties.
2:30-Joe Relchman's Orch.
2:45 Old Favorites. -
3:30 Concert Gems.
4:15 News.
4:30 Tea time Tunes.
S:00 Gene Krupa's Ores.
S:15-Popularlty Row.
. S:30 Scores Today. ,
8:45 Dinner Hour Melodies.
:O0 Tonight's Headlines. ,-
:15 War Commentary. ,
:S0 Strmf Serenade.
7:90 Interesting Facts.
7:15 Texas Troubadors.
7:30 Bob Hamilton's Trio. ;
8.00 World Headlines.
S:lS-John Kirov's Orch.
S:45 Joe Reichman's Orch.
00 News Tabloid.
:15 Popular Music :
:30 Okttbners Ores.
10:00 Let's Dance.
10:30 News.
10:45 Land of Dance.
KGW NBC ATUDAY Kb
:00 Sunrise Serenade
:30 early Bards.
7:00 Newm Headlines and High
lights. 7:15 Music of Vienna.
7:45 Sam Hayes.
8:00 Organ.
8:30 String Serenade
8:00 Consumer's Tips.
8:15 Bonnie Stuart. Singer.
8:30 News. .
8:45 Matinee in Rhythm.
10:00 Lincoln Highway.
10:30 America, the Free
11:00 Stars ot Tomorrow.
12:00 Nature Sketches.
11:15 Pa tti Chapin Singer.
12:30 Golden Melodies.
1:00 News.
1:02 Weekend Whimsy.
1:30 Boy. Girl and Band.
2:30 Piano Recital.
8:45 Desi Halban. Singer.
3:00 Piccadilly Hotel Trie
8:25 News.
3:30 Art of Living. .
3:45 Paul Douglas Sports. ' . -4:00
Here Comes the Band.
4:30 Rhythm ires.
4:45 H. V. Kaltenbom.
8:00 National Barn Dance
7:00 BUI Stern Sports NewsreeL
7:30 Grand OF Opry.
8 KM Truth or Consequences. -8:30
Knickerbocker Playhouse
8:00 Defense for America.
8:30 Edgewater Beach Hotel Orch.
8:55 Musical Interlude.
10:0010 o'clock News.
10:15 Uptown Ballroom Orch.
KBX NBC SATCKDAT 1188 Kb
S:00 Musical Clock.
7:00 California Agriculture. i
7:15 Breakfast Club.
8:00 Amen Corner Program.
S:30-Our Barn.
8:00 Reflections In Rhythm.
8:30 National Farm and Home
11:00 Hotel New Yorker Orch.
11:30 Hotel Lexington Orch.
12:00 Indiana Indigo.
12:30 Music of the Americas.
1:15 News Headlines and High
lights. 1:30 Market Reports.
1:35 Club Matinee.
2:00 Rose land Ballroom Orch.
8:30 Concert Musical e.
3:00 News.
8:00 Boy Meets Band.
5:30 Blltmore Hotel Orch. -8:00
Organ.
7:30 Sweet and Rhythmic.
7:45 News Headlines and High
lights. 8:00 Bishop and the Gargoyle.
8:30 Spin and Win With Fly nil.
8:00 Associated Press- News.
4 8:0S-rHatel Astor Orchv . i , , .
8:30 Moonlight Sonata.
10:30 The Quiet Hour.
11:30 War News Roundup.
KALE MB SATTJaOAT ICS Kc
830 Memory Timekeeper.
70 News.
7:15 Memory Timekeeper. '
8:05 John Agnew, organist.
8:15 The Junior Musical.
8:30 News.
8:45 Woman's Side of the News.
8:00 Buyer's Parade
8:15 Concert Gems.
8:30 This and That.
10:00 News.
10:15 World seriee
12:45 News.
1 :00 Luncheon concert.
1:30 Musical express
1:45 OSC-TT. of Wash, football.
8:00 News.
8:15 Gaslight Harmonies. ; "
5:30 Hawaii Calls.
6:30 Jerry Sears Presents.
6:45 Movie Parade
7:00 John B. Hughes.
7:15 Churchman's Saturday Night.
7:45 Weather report.
7:47 Better Business Bureau.
8:00 Freddy Martin Orch.
8:30 California Melodise
8:00 News.
8:15 Theatre of the Air.
8:45 Phil Stearns.
10:00 Theatre of the Air.
10:30 News.
10:45 Herbie Holmes Orch.
11:00 Otzie Nelson Orch.
11:30 Clyde McCoy Orch.
KOIN CBS SATURDAY SIS Kb
8:30 Early Worm.
8:00 Northwest Farm Reporter.
8:15 Breakfsit Bulletin.
6:20 Koin Klock.
7:15 Headline.
7:30 Bob Garred reporting.
7:45 Consumer News.
8:05 Burt Ives.
8:45 National Hillbilly.
8:00 Theatre.
9:45 William Winter, news.
10:00 Let's Pretend. -10:30
Voice of Broadway.
10:45 Hello Again. ,
11:00 Buffalo Presents.
11:30 Of Men and. Books. .i
f
to"
- . - . M.nJ - hw
Tkese seaasBiss mn -'j--iii
the respective stations.
changes ssade ST wu
Btnotic te this sswipapsr.
12:53 News. .
SMatins at Meadawtoroo.
' S:55-Sports News. .
J-00 Calling Pan-America, : -
3:30 Elmer Davis, news. .
" 8:45 News.
4.-00 Newspaper of the Air.
4:30 Columbia Concert.
S:00-Trafne Quia.
8:15 Bob Bradley.
8:30 News.
8:45 Sports Broadside
5:55 Elmer Davis, swt r.
8-00 Manqy Strand Orchestra.
845 Saturday Night - Serenade.
7:15 Public Affairs. .
7:30 Bob .Hannon.
t:4S Leon T. Drews.
8:09 Guy Lombsxdo Orchasira.
8 JO City Desk.
8:55 News.
8:00 Hit Parade
8:45 Tonight's Best Buys,
10:00 Five Star Final.
10.-80 World Today. ' ' - '
. 18:45 Defense Today. ,
11:00 Martha Mears. ' 1
11:30 Manny Strand Orchestra.
115-Mews. . 0 i. , .-:
SvOAC SATUBDAT-858 BU.
10:00 Weather Forecast.
10:05 News. ' .
10:15 Symphoni Concert.
11:15 Co-ed Hour.
12:00 News.
' 18:15 Farm Hour.
8:00 Camera Clubs.
8:45 Monitor Views the News.
r 8:00 Songs from the Hills..
8:15 Swindles to Suit.
' 8:45 Newe M j--- -i . -'
4:30 Stories for boys and asts.
6:00 On the Campusac ,
8:30 In Defense of America. .
8:45 Evening Vesper flcirica. '
6:15 News. ,
6:30 Farm Hour. .
7:30 Orand Opera Tonight.
8:15 Science News of the Week.
8:45 Seeing the Americas.
9:00-10:00 Music of t the 1 Mastars.
KSLM SUNDAY 1388 Bis.
8:00 Flowing Rhythm.
8:30 Melodic Moods. .
8:00 Voice of Tomorrow.
8:15 Symphonic Swing.
9:30 Popular Concert. .
10:00 Sunday Reveries.
11:00 American Lutheran Church.
12;00 Singing Strings.
12:30 News- Highlights. !
12:45 Song Shop.
1:00 Young People's Church,
1:30 Hawaiian Serenade
8:00 Marimba' Music
2:30 Jo Reichman's Orch.
3:00 Western Serenade
8:30 Boys Town.
4:00 Gypsy Orch. - !
4:30 Symphonic Swing.
8:00 Variety HalL
6:00 Tonight's Headlines.
6:15 Sacred Music
6:30 Operatic Arise
7:00 Eton Boys. -. . .
7:30 String Serenade
8:00 World Headlines.
8:15 Organ Trio. ;
. 8:30 Tango Time.
8:00 News Tabloid. - - !"
9:30 Back Home Hour,
10:00 Dream Time. v '
e
KGW NBC SUNDAY 428 Kb
80 News.
8)5 Rhapsodies of the Rockies.
- 8 JO Church in Your Home
8:00 Second Guessers.
830 Emma Otero, Singer.
10:00 Upton Close commentator.
10 JO The World Is Yours.
11:00 Sunday Down South,
lids Concert Petite..
It J0 Chicago Round Table
12:O0 1 8th Century Favorites.
12 :15 H. V. Kaltenborn. r -t . t:
1230 Sammy Kaye Orchestra.
12:45 News Headlines and HighllghQ
1:00 Home Fires.
1:15 Tony Wons Scrspbook.
1:30 Stars of Tomorrow.
2:00 Joe and MabeL
1:30 We're Five in the Family.
8 loo-Catholic Hour.
d am ureal uukiiiwii,
4:00 Jack Benny. -..
4:30 Band Wagon.,
5-00 Charlie McCarthy.
5:30 One Man's Family.
6 :00 Manhattan Merry -Go-RoundL
6 50 Album of Familiar Music
7:00 Hour of Charm.
7:30 Sherlock Holmes.
8:00 Carnival Symphony of MeU
ody.
8:15 Dear John. ' '
8:45 Armchair Cruiser..
. 8KW Walter Wincheli.
8:15 The Parker Family.
8:30 Quiz of Two Cltiee
10300 News Flashes.
10:15 Bridge to Dreamland.
11:00 Song of the Strings.
11:45 News Room.
KKX NBC SUNDAY 4188 K.
SAO Amen Corner Program.
6:30 Treasure Trails of Sons'
80 Radio City Music Halt
10 :30 Speaking of Glamour.
10:4 Matinee With Lyteu.
11:00 Wake Up. America.
12:00 Josef Marais African Trek.. .
12:30 Matinee with LytelL
10 Sunday Vespers.
130 Behind the Mike.
80 Ambassador East Hotel Oram.
30 Music for Listening. f
3:30 SUrs of Today.
4.-00 European Newe
430 Captain Flagg and Sgt. Quirt
5:00-Voice of Prophecy.
8:15-Book Chat.
5:30 Southerns ires.
5 :22 grandpsppy and His Pale
630 News Headlines 4k HlaUiahta.
7 AO Good WiU Hour. """,
80 Inner Sanctum Mysterieb
8:30 Jack Benny. ;
8:15 Eleanor Roosevelt.
630 Moonlight Sonata.
1030 Hawthorne Temple Serrlceb
11 30-War News Round UpT
'
KOIN -CBS SUNDAY 878 Kb
7:00 Church of the Air.
7:30 Wings Over Jordan.
8.-00 West Coast Church, t1 V
b!f rr..of-ConrM XusioaL
60 Music for Sunday.
Xr3).l. T-hernade
100 Church of the Air.
10:30 Yora Kipper.
110 Spirit of 41.
UIh; W.orld Taor
lJ5?olumbl FPhony OroTs.
10 News.
1:15 Waiter Grose
. 230 Pause That Refreshes.
S0-'amuy Hour.
1:45 William Shirer, Ntwa. '
8:00-Silver Theatre
330 Melody Ranch.
35 Dear Mom.
4:15-Wiinam Wallace
tJ-ColbU Workshop. . ;
IxTr" vie news.
Sunday Evening Hour.
'Tak. It orLeavalt. .
.( 7:30 Helen Hayes. -
80 Crime Doctor. .
. 8301 Was There " '
80-Leoo r. Drews.
2:itSHud,J Jhornhul Orchestra.
t:30 Baker Theatre ' -i .
180 Five SUr Final.
10:15 Cosmo Jonea.
yr 1030 Dick Aurandt Orchestra.
10:45-Marlne Corps.
"2-nly Strand Orchestra,
r
There was Be smile en Fetroleam
Ceordlnator Bareld Ickes face .
wheai he picked mv a earteen
lamp nlng his efforts te can
serve gasoline and ail : while
tesUfyteg Were spocUl sen
ate tarrestlrailag eeatnUttee la
WaaliiagtaB, : Entitled "Slightly
- Esnbamssed." the carteeai de
picted the cemmUtia as a gaae
line sUUea attendant . teUlag
. Ickes, "Why, llr.'lekes. we have
plenty of gaa." Ickes teli the
eeaaamittee It had "gravely haav
sUcspped' the eeaservatiea pro
grana. hy reporting ae shertags
. Jsi the east - t .
s.w-eviewing Stand, -
. '-nm. i
CtfJ Church of Chrisi.
830-Voice of Phrophccy Chair.
itiot6
"otewe3 Tomplb
:w
TsnM? Hoar.
IZtSSLEtQ Jaclb
805 torlal Church,
815 Voice of Prophecy.
i! IJytu Concert.
10 J News.
" l?:ih-pJ'cl McCoy Orchestra
U 0-6un. Wight at Cocou, r-v,