1 K if 1f ' . ' I f j, f "No Favor tiotyt Vt; No Fear Shall Awf i t ' .' from first SUteaman, March tS, 1851' THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. 'CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. President Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press U exclusively entitled to the use for publication ox all news dispatches credited to ft or not otherwise credited In this newspaper -a Ickes' Slapped Again Rigrjt on top of his embarrassment assum ing that as a uman being he is capable of feeling embarrassment over the gasoline ra tioning fiasco in the east, Harold Ickes has been dealt ja resounding blow on his western ex tremity in the vote whereby citizens of San Francisco rejected on Tuesday the eighth suc cessive proposal for establishment of public powerj distribution in the city. To the extent that it is valid to assume public opinion to be reasonably uniform regardless of geography, the decision of San Francisco voters is likewise a tremendous blow to the whole concept of public power; for this was an in stance in which every card in the deck was "stacked" in favor of public ownership. It ill goes back to the joint development, by the dty and the federal government, of the Hetchf Hetchy water and power system several in Brooklyn. He had the support of the demo cratic organization, p e 1 1 e d 4Ttoxmanyw in Gotham Tammany's unsavory record in mu nicipal management was his severest handicap. , LaGuardia has been a good mayor. ' He has provided, New York with its best and cleanest goi ernment in years. Quite properly the voters took that into account and reelected, him. Still, there is somecomf ort in the thought that even in our greatest 'cityi with its crosscurrents of poli tics and conflicting emotional appeals, a majori ty of citizens still recognize good government as the main issue. Hitler's Health - When John Cudahy, former United States ambassador to Belgium, finally got around to telling the press about his testimony before the senate foreign relations committee it had a vastly different sound from the version reported aL. rw. u:iu ft,, by interventionist committee members. They 71H"rn: "I;;.. ZUirZ r:r? d intimated that he considered Adolf Hitter ,a, m SV V V4 4i.4 a? SIAA l AAA VI V CIA AVfA, bade the city to deliver power to a private agency for resale. But since the people refused to vofe bonds for purchase or construction of distribution facilities, the city entered long ago into an "agency contract" with Pacific Gas & Electric company, which pays the city some thing Sin excess of two million dollars a year and otherwise proceeds after the fashion of any other private utility. Probably most interested partiejs will privately admit that the "agency contract" is a mere technical subterfuge to mask a violation of ( the act. 1 Whjpn Ickes became secretary of the interior he locked the situation over and decided that this was the case. He won a court fight in volving his authority to act, then won an in junction, a little over a year ago, to stop the present practice. The city sought them to lease the PGE facilities, but no deal that could be devisijd would satisfy both the company and Ickesi So a stay of the injunction was awarded on the conditions that the city would submit another bond proposal, that the city officials would support the measure actively and in good faithj keep all complicating issues off the ballot and refrain from any request for modification of the Raker act. It jwas intimated by Ickes, with the forced acquiescence of the city officials, that the fed eral J government would confiscate the Hetch Hetcjiy power system if the issue should fail and f the city continued its present arrange ment with PGE. There is some doubt as to the secretary's ability to carry out this threat, inas much as the city owns the generating facilities and most of the land on which they are situated. StilLthatyWas the threat, and it must have seemed a strong argument for approval of the bond issue. ' But the voters of San Francisco by a Sub stantial margin turned down, the bond authori zation measure, apparently preferring Ickes' wrati and his "worst" to an ill-conceived mu- - nicinal ownership plan. What Ickes can and will do about it remains to be seen. For the moment it is fair to assume that his dictatorial method and manner drew resentful "no" votes from; as many citizens as were won over by the confiscation threat and that San Franciscans prefer to buy back their own power through a wic!ked" private utility, rather than to en trusj management to a local bureaucracy. Casualty Lists v , When the casualty lists begin to appear, then a najjtion knows it is actually at war. In news papers of the United States the casualty lists hav begun to appear lists of our fighting men killcM or lost at sea. To date fatalities in the "Battle of the Atlantic" are said to number 122,with the Reuben James sinking accounting for jnore than 80 per cent of the total. American lives lost because of the, war far exceed that number. Another figure noted in the hews is 112 the number of persons killed in iviation accidents in the last two weeks. Some of these were civilian passengers on an airliner which crashed, but the majority were service fliers killed in line of duty. Since the military aviation training program was speeded up pie number has been greater; accounts of such fatalities have appeared in the newspapers almost dally. . The public should be slow to place' blame for (these tragedies; It needs to recognize that many more men are flying so that percentage of fatal accidents to hours flown may not have inexjeased at all- somewhere we have seen a statement that it has not, though it did not in clude figures. In the last two weeks weather has! been a factor, but the responsibility for sen fling men up in bad weather or for previous failure to train them to cope with such condi tions is not definitely placed. Whatever the answer to these questions may begone fad stands out! Americans are dying in this war. The casualty lists are appearing. At jthis "rate, presently every community will mourn a "victim Salem already mourns several though their' deaths .were, like many tothers, duej indirectly to the war.' And sooner Or later if events move in the direction they , are! going, sentiment to '."move in and settle, this j thing will be translated ' into decisive action.! As in 191?, the world situation will become intolera ble to Americans and they will set about right ing; it. M:H' -r'r:' i ' "a hice fellow with whom we could get along. Cudahy said he had described Hitler as "one xf the most disagreeable men I ever saw," and had made it plain that his conversation with Hitler four months ago was by no means a friendly chat. Perhaps more interesting is this remark of Cudahy's: t No. 1, as Hitler is known in German ... is not going to last forever. I am not a physi cian, but X never saw a man whq looked i so ill as he did when I saw him. He looked as if he had not slept for months he looked as though he had a malignant disease. To paraphrase a more able paragrapher, we trust it's nothing trivial. Cudahy's idea is to wait until "it" happens -and maybe we won't have to do anything. But "it" may happen sooner, certainly "it" won't happen any later, if we, to quote the president, "pull our own oar" in this struggle. At least among the dailies, The Statesman is the deepest newspaper in Oregon. Reference is not to this particular column, but to all the columns, and to their physical length. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON ' (Distribution by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro duction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 No one will be kicked out of the republican party including Mr. Willkie. True, some of the party right-handers in congress are biting their fingernails to the elbow because Mr. Willkie is developing into a Roosevelt war leader. A few like Repre sentative Dewey Short of Mis souri, Roy Woodruff of Michi gan and Harold Knutson of Minnesota are really serious about divesting their party of the Willkie war influence. But the party senators on the other side of the capitol and party , men generally are exhibiting no eagerness to take up the round 'robin rebellion move ment started in the house. A story is going around the republican cloak room that the original idea upon which Willkie acted (forcing repeal of the neutrality act) came from) Senator Bridges. He had the legislative draft ing service prepare a repealer bill for him more than a month ago, sold it to Senators Gurney and Austin. But three days before these republicans planned to come out with it, Mr. Willkie grabbed their ball and streaked down the field. Some per sonal dissatisfaction with Willkie, even on his own side of the interventionist fence, has been caused by this incident but it illustrates as well as any thing that republican interventionist sentiment runs far beyond Willkie. The break of Representative Halleck of Indiana, the man who nominated Willkie, also has a pri vate explanation. Two or. three factions of Indiana republicans have been scrambling for top positions against Willkie domination in his natal state, and the interventionist issue is caught in the scramble. The situation therefore has underlying aspects o personal differences and factional political jockey ing. All that the Willkie opposition really wants is to make sure he does not carry the party into the White House and drop it in Mr. Roosevelt's lap. They win be able to effect their "purpose? without , running anyone out The mere statement of open opposition may be as far as they need to a. Most leaders agree there is room in the party for I C-L . . d w&'y' A il If By FRANCIS GERARD 'FOR WHOM THE BELLS TOLL,, Bits for SreaEffast By R. J. HENDRICKS t. V - Paul MaUoa both sides of this question. Death of Msgr. Lane, 11-6-41 grandson of General Lane of the Mexican war, first governor of Oregon Territory: H S A news article in the Portland Journal of Tuesday last, Novem ber 4th, concerning, the passing of an outstanding member of the historical Lane family of Ore gon, recalls lasting memories. The matter in the news article reads: "Death Monday evening claimed the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Ar thur Lane, 69, pastor of All Saints Catholic church, a mem ber of the papal court, native of Oregon and grandson of the Today's Garden By LHUE L, MADSEN Mrs. B. asks 1) what to do with the perennial pea vines; (2) the michaelmas daisies since blooming; (3) chrysanthemums: should they be moved after grow ing in same bed for two years, she likes to keep them in same location which is the west side of garage; (4) what to do with two evergreens, one at each end of front porch, which have grown crooked at the top when they hit the wide cornices of the -porch? (Am I correct in this? I couldn't quite make out) Answer: You don't say wheth er or not you wish to keep your perennial pea vines at alL If you do, I would cut it back to the ground now. When it comes up in the spring, keep it under con trol. Pull up the additional vines that you do not want Cut the michaelmas daisies ; back, too. The tall scraggily looking stalks are anything but attractive in the .garden. (3) Some times chrysanthe mums will grow well for years in the same location. They do not seem greatly subject to di sease. Cutworms will gather about them, but these can be caught Aphids bother them no matter where they are, but these can be sprayed. Yours sounds like an ideal location for chry santhemums. Do you lift them - each spring, dig up the bed well and enrich? Do you lake off the strong shoots from the outside of the clumps and start new first territorial governor of Ore gon, following several weeks' illness in Providence hospital. "Archbishop Edward X). How ard will officiate at funeral serv ices in All Saints church, N. E. 39th and Glisan street, at 10 a. m. Thursday. Burial will be In Mount Calvary cemetery. The body will be at the church after f6 p. m. Wednesday and the office of the dead will be recitedaf S p. m. Wednesday. The body now is at Hennessey, Gbetsch & McGee chapel. "Monsignor Lane was born at Roseburg August 9, 1872, the son of Lafayette-Lane, congressman from Oregon from 1875 to 1877, legislator and, with Judge Mat threw P. Deady, the co-author of Deady and Lane's Code of Oregon.' His paternal grand father was General Joseph Lane, first territorial governor of Ore gon and a prominent figure in early Oregon history. "Monsignor Lane attended Mrs. Hay's private school at Roseburg, and public school there, where one of his instruc tors was Professor J. B. Horner, .who later served on the Oregon State College faculty many years. Monsignor Lane went to Mon treal with Archbishop Seghers when he was 11 years old and studied there 12 years in litera ture, history, the sciences, phi losophy and theology. "He became proficient in French and German, learned Italian and Spanish and to read Hebrew, Greek and Latin. At 22 he was summoned to Portland by Archbishop William H. Gross. He was ordained and assigned to the pioneer parish at St Louis, Or., where his knowledge of French stood him in good stead in the pulpit and parish work. S H Following three years in the St Louis parish, the young priest was assigned to Astoria where, within three years, he bunt a parish house and a church. "He later spent a year in Ari zona because of bis health and subsequently served at Walla Walla and Jacksonville, Or. In the later assignment Monsignor Lane also had charge of the churchy work at Ashland and Medford. From Jacksonville he went to Albany and served there more than '2 years. ' S "His appointment to All Saints church here came in February, 1928, and he had served there since. "In 1920 he was invested as the prothonotary apostolic with the title of 'Monsignor' on the 25th anniversary of his ordina tion to he priesthood. The late Archbishop Christie had recom mended the honor to the pope." (Concluded tomorrow.) CHAPTEZ 1 - ; I ; It was an unusually mild eve : ning for early spring when Am :brose Pennyf eather set. out for' his walk.. Before doing so be stood in the beamed and raftered : ball of bis trmfag little bouse -and stared ' contemplatively through the open, front ' door . ' while Hogbin, bis man. fussed f about . him with muffler, end r gloves Mr. Pennyf eather cast a humorous eye at bis servant's face and said, mildly, "All right, :all right, Hogbin, I'm seventy, not seven .. . s: Yes sir," agreed Hogbin, ' tucking in the muffler and " spreading , it out beneath the comfortable, double chin much as though it were a baby's bib. "Quite, sir. He cast a Tqtdck glance at the exquisite little grandfather clock which stood In a corner of the charming hall and added, "You have just time to. go through the village and take a turn about the wood." Time? echoed Mr. Penny feather, and went on with more , resolution in bis tone, "Now look jhereHogbin, I refuse to allow, you .to dictate to me in this manner." "Yes, sir,", replied Hogbin quite unmoved since he knew from the experience of more than twenty years thai he al ways got his way. "May re mind you that you must be back by six-thirty in time to dress? You're dining at the Hall to night, sir; His Lordship Is send ing his car for you at seven thirty." "Oh," said Mr. Pennyf eather penitentily, "I had forgotten." Then he beamed at bis servant and Hogbin smiled back. "I dont know what Fd do without you," said Jthe old gentleman. "Dont you go dying before me, Hogbin." "Very good, sir," replied the other dutifully. "I will endeavor to observe your wishes in the matter." Mr. Pennyf eather looked vaguely round the hall as though in search of something. "Aris totle," observed Hogbin, who had intercepted his master's look, "is, as usual, waiting by the gate. A creature of habit Aristotle, sir." "Like master, like dog, eh, Hogbin?" "I expect so, sir." Ambrose Pennyfeather wheez ed gently as he walked with ' majestic slowness down the path to the gate. He discovered Aris totle, a wire-haired terrier, near the gate in an attitude ' which clearly demonstrated both his earnest desire to pass into the greater world beyond and also his canine inability to wait any longer. Mr. Pennyfeather stood for a few moments at his garden gate and looked out over the scene spread for his delectation. Wey land was one of those old Eng lish villages which" had been passed over by the hand of time, and from where he stood Am brose Pennyfeather' could see nothing which struck any not of modernity. The village, built upon the slopes of two opposing bills; stood . with its thatched roofs; its beams and plaster and warm Elizabethan brick as it had stood, practically without change, for focr hundred years. ' ; lii. Pennyfeather imlstched the gate and swung it open, and Aristotle sallied forth barking and displaying a bristling fero city which threatened aU and sundry but which vanished into thin air as bis keen little nose was abruptly clapped to a fa- miliar, mile-post. . As he went slowly up the lane towards Wey land's Wood, Mr. Pennyfeather thought with great satisfaction of how pleas ant -was' his lot Though he had been a government official most of his life and chained to a desk in Whitehall he had been orig inally a countryman. Too timid to' embark upon the unchartered seas of matrimony, the even tenor of his existence had been undisturbed by any cataclysmic emotions anent the so-called weaker sex whose weakness had ever .reduced Ambrose Penny feather to a state of complete dither. That Is not to say he was a misogynist. He liked women, but not too much of them. ' With the exception of a niece, now married-, and in America, Mr. Pennyfeather was without kith or kin but he had his books and his music and a huge circle of friends. Then again he had Hogbin who had become bis alter ego and with whom he knew a relationship far exceeding that of master j and man, for there was a great liking between them. In the little village world of Weyland, Ambrose Pennyfeather played his part and no village committee ever appealed to him for subscriptions or prizes un availingly. He would dine, as this evening for instance, with Lord Lanchester up at the HalL where he could count on a bot tle of Romani-Conti but he would just as cheerfully, and did, have his evening meal at the Lanchester Arms with his old friend the village constable, and eat cheese and pickles and drink a pint of beer. It was getting dusk rapidly when Mr. Pennyfeather reached the hill, the top of which wore Weyland's Wood like a mantle. And on its summit stood Wey land Hall where he was to dine that night, a perfect specimen of the later Elizabethan manor house. Ambrose Pennyfeather p-in simply because he was happy and at that moment Aristotle growl- -ed.- (To be continued) Copyright by Francis Gerard. XMstributcd by Kin Feature Syndicate, Inc. Eiacflio Programs ! LaGuardia'ft Third Term S ;. . . Issues were numerous and. tangled in the ' Heir York mayoralty campaign. Incumbent : The house banking committee worked untQ 9 pjn. Saturday (an owlish hour as far as congress ffoes) to turn out the inantlv nml nriM MtJw ' ........... .UUUVl 1 , - g. ... Dm. mere was a reason. Two good new dealers ,UUT Ane uwers wiu grow on the committee were out of town. Representatives Ima11 8ame clumps are Kopplemann of Connecticut and Sacks, of Phila- le.ft to Tear after year.v For the delphia. In their absence, It was possible for the Di8ei bloom it is well to reset committee to adopt by a vote of 12 to 11, the farm tnem each year. "r e price amendment, which turned the legist (4) As I do not know what a price control device to a price inflation' medium. kind ot evergreen you have at If the Committee Chairman Stegall had waited nn- Tow front porch, it would be tu Monday, this vote might have been reversed. , The scuttling amendment Invited farm prices to go jumping twenty to thirty per cent above the parity level at which they now hover. It sponsors " such boost for not only cotton and wheat but for the processed finished products of these products bread and dothing, the-two main fundamentals of every day living. t - j- - . . Mr. Roosevelt indicated it was Canadian Prime .Minister MacKenzie King who caused him to can - In his congressional leaders for a huddle about re ' vising this price control legislation, but it may have been Dave Ginsberg, the Henderson assistant - difficult to advise as to its treat ment, but the trees sound en tirely too large for their location. You know what our landscape architects teU us: A tree out of place is a weed. AH real garden ers have a great deal of nerve when it comes to taking out - a shrub or ' tree that is out of place.' :; - ... -.;;--.:-r; " It is difficult for most of us to remove some overgrown shrub from crowded quarters, but tre- w. Muisoerxa annex, upon reaauuE ox what th ..quenuy n aoes mmrove our Fioh:llo LaGuardia, nominated by the republic-1 1 ouse hanktog committee did to the administration Places a great deaL People, as r . . .. . ii. i: t . -tlan could easilv have hm hMtd tn nii .v v vni bim( Mm - n .iimM .i . ans ana. conirasunKiv. oy me American ianor - " party, had the support of President Roosevelt, Vehddl Willkie and, the conservative New "Vork press. He has backed the president in his for eign policy but is credited with being slightly l - -2 interventionist man j un nimseu. xie nas By an equally slim sneak of 12 to 11 the com mittee declined a limitation on wages, while lim iting prices. Its inspiration for this action may have -been more political than economic. Certainly few non-political economists claim prices can be re. l gabby and, due to his civil defense and. ' stramea, unless wages are restrained. But the in--Canaiia'n "permanenf joint board ofde- , ttoidsU; who; rmvtnnj 'jvito-fhiim ia i eom- ectivities, something of an absentee .Srr25 L"WI r:;ycr in recent months. The democratic nominee, William O XJwyer, is a r;ooi man wilh a coci record. He was the district' attorney who trcke up ."llurderr.lnc follow true economics. They were trying to make a deal between farm and labor blocs Whereby both could get what they wanted,' higher prices and higher wages in what may now now" facetiously be called a "price control' bill, you suggest Mrs. B should al ways take into consideration the ultimate size of a tree or shrub before planting. ' - - Not knowing what direction you? house, faces . or what the rest of your plantings are, it .would be difficult to advise what to use to take the place of the la New York on a short vacation, two trees or shrubs. Would one Harlena. Dietrich poses for the ippn. - v:I-!.:r-' -" of the. aborvitaes . do, or fire thorn? You wouldn't have to have both trees alike, you know. The variation makes for Inter est in your planting. - ,v cameraman, very feminine in a strapless evening gown. he looks qoite different from the Uarlene who came into town wearing WVi and carrying a cane to seaport a - fractured a&ila. - K8LM THURSDAY 139 Ke. 6 JO Sunrise Salute. 7 .-00 News In Brief. 7K Old Farvorltea. 7 JO News. 7:45 Henry King's Orchestra. 8:30 News. 8:45 Mid-Morning MaUnee. 9:00 Pastor's Call. 9 as Popular Music. 9:4 Melody Mart. 10K)0 The World This MornlM 10:15 Prescription for Happiness. 1030 Women in the News. 10:35 Tommy Tucker's Orchestra. 11. -00 Melodic Moods. ' 11 JO WU Chapel. 11 :45 Lum and Abner. 12:00 Pres. Roosevelt Speech. 12:15 Noontime News. 12 JO Hillbilly Serenade. 12 J5 Willamette Valley Opinions. -12 55 The Song shop. 1:15 Isle of Paradise. 1 JO Western Serenade. 1:00 News Brevities: 2:05 Musical Miniatures. 1:15 US Army. 1 JO Will Bradley's Orchestra. 15 Vocal Varieties. 20 Concert Gems. 4 AO Popular Music. 4:15 News. 4 JO Tea time Tunes. 50 Popularity Row. 5 JO Cocktail Hour. SJ5 Dinner Hour Melodies. Tonight's Headline. :15 War Commentary. JO String Serenade. 70 News in Brief. . 75 Interesting Facts. 7J5 Shep field's Orchestra. 7 JO Jimmy Allen. 7.-45 Popular Music. 80 World Headlines. 85 Rhythmic firm. JO Popular Music. a5 World s Most Honored Music . AO-Mews Tabloid. 9:15 Oldttm Music. 9:45 Popular Music. 10:00 Let's DanceT -10 JO News. i 105 Popular Music ilJO-Music to Remember. -- . . - BZOW NBC TSTUKSDAT 20 Ka . Sunrts Serenade. JO Early Bards. : 70 News Headlines and HlatUifhta 7 US Must of VieoM '. 7H5-Sam Bayes. ' 80 Stars of Today. :1S Ship of Joy. AS David Harum. - 90 Women's World, as Th Bride Jatia. 9 J8 Mews. . .. .... iO Skitch Henderson. 100 Bererly Mahr. Sinccr. ' - 10 :1-Bess Johnson. - : , 10 JO Bachelor's Children, - . 109 Or. Kate. 110-Ught of th WoriiL lias Th Mystery Man. - 11 JO Valiant Lady. - 11 MS Arnold Grimm's Oaughter. . 120 Against th Storm. 12as Ma Perkins. . 12 JO The Guiding Ught. '-1245-Vie and SadeT - 1 AO Backstage Wife. -1:15 Stella Dallas. " ' 1 'TO Twfiiii Jones. lHS-Young Widder Brown. . 10 When a Girl Marries. -. v 105-Portta races LUsw 1 JO We. the Abbotts. v.--' 15 Story of Mary Marlia. ' So-Pepper Young's Jamily. -1:15 Lone Journey. . - 2 JO Phil IrwinT . 25 Three Suns Trio. " 40 Johnny Johnston, Slater. - ; 4 J 5 Richard BroosT 4 JO Dinner Music 4:45 K. V. Kaltenbora. Stars of Today. 5:15 Le Sweetland. SJ-RicaTdo's Rhapsodka. 0 Music HaU. ,r' 70 Cuzat Khumba Revua, 7 JO Frank ray. . ,. 80-fred Waring In Pleasv Tim OS Lum and Abner. These schedules are rapoUed hy the rsspectrve ttiilsnt. Any varla Uons noted by nittnsri are dae to changes saade by the stations wtta omt notice to this aewsnapor. 8 JO Coffee Tim. 0 Aldrich Family. 100 News Flashes. 10:15 Your Horn Town News. 10 JO Id Stoker's Music 105 University Explorer. 110 Etchings ia Brass. 11 JO Organ Rhythms. 115 News. v KXX THURSDAY 1124 Ke. 0-Quack of tho Dawn. 70 Western Agricultur. 7 a 5 Amen Corner. 7 JO Breakfast Club. . S as Viennese Known bio. JO What's News. 2:45 Keep Fit with Patty Jean. 90 Hollywood Headlines. 9:15 Christian Sdenco. JO National Farm and Homo. 10:15 Toley and Glenn. 10 JO News. 105 Charmingly We Lire, 110 Current Events. 11 JO Stars of Today. 11 5 Keep Fit Club. 120 Orphans of Divorce. lias Amanda of Honeymoon BUL ' 12 JO John's outer Wife. 123 Just Plain BUL 10 Your Livestock Reporter. las News Headlines and Highlights 1 JO Market Reports. , , 1 JO Household Hints. 1J6 Rose City Calendar. 15 Curbstone Quia. . 10 Tho Quiet Hour. 1 JO A House in th Country. 20 Between th Bosarenda. ' 2:15 News. 1 JO Preacott Presents. . A- . -40 Count Your rtlissinp '. . 4 U5 Mr. Keen. Tracer. . 4:45 Hotel Taft Orchestra. . . Adventur Storios as-Flying PatroL . i J0-News of th World. . ' ' 5 Tom Mix. Straight gbaoter. - as Th Bartons... - JO Intermesso. " , 95 Tales of tho Oregon Country. 70 Rudy Valla Show. - , 7 JO Hillman At Clapper. 75 Mews Beadltn andHlghUghto . -00 March of TUno JO Flowers for th Living. 5 Mary Bulloca. Pianist, ' w uzy- Aces. . . 9 JO Moonlight Sonata.' -.-100 America'a Town Maettna. 10 JO Bal Tabarto Caf Orchostra. -110 This Moving World. . . lias Hotel BUtmoro Orchostra. UJO War News Roundup. . v . KOtK THrrSSDAY 859- Ka. . - Northwest Farm Reporter. -- :15 Breakfast Bulletin. JO Koin KJock ' .' v 7a5 HeadUners. . - 7 JO Bob Carrod ReporUnf. - . 75 Consumer News. - 0 Good Morning Music ' JO Hymns of all Churchos. " Stories America Loves. . : ' - 90 Kat Smith Speaks. . 9 1 -Big Barter. r ' ' 9 JO Romanc of Helen Trent. 95-tOur Gal Sunday. , - - 100 Lifo Can Be BeoutlfuL , 10:15 Woman in Whit. . 10 JO Right to Happiness. :. 105 Mary Le Taylor. ; ' 110 Bright Horizon. , 1135 Aunt Jenny. - 11 JO Fletcher WiWley. 115 Kat Hopkins. .. . V 120 Man I Married. 11:15 Knox Manning. News. 12 JO Singing Sam. 125 Woman of Courag. - 1 . -00 Stepmother. 1U5 Myrt and Marge. .1 JO American School of the Air. 10 Hello Again. ..... 2 JO Tho O'liieills. r 25 Ben Berni. --. i - - - - 10 Joyce Jordan. , 3 as William Shirer. Na Newspaper of th Air. 4:15 Young Or. Malon. 4 JO Newspaper of th Air. 80 Eyes of th World. 5:15 State Traffic JO Leon F. Drews. 55 Bob Garrod. News. 35 Elmer Davis. News. AO Major Bowea. 70 Glenn Miller. 7:15 Bill Henry. News. 7 JO Whodunit. 20 Amos n Andy. 8:15 Lanny Ross. 8 JO Maudie's Diary. 0-Duffya Tavarn. JO Death Valley Days. -100 Five Star FinaLT 18:15 Air-Flo. 10 JO Dance Tim. 10 JO Th World Today. 10-Defena TodayT -WUbur Hatch Orchestra. llJO-Manny Strand Ore, 11 M Msws. atAXRTHTJRS DAY UN Ks. 7 Tto,rp-- 7.15 RFD. 7 JO Memory Tlmekoepor. 7 JS-Mlnlatur IdatodyV AO Buyer! Parade 8:15 Breakfast Club. JO News. 5 As th Twig Is Bon. Jlt"25? WornanVaVide oi th Mem .iasWS5w. 10:15 Helen Roldon. 10 JO Front Pag FarraJL ij5-rn TinAldrwT 11 0-StanUrd SchooL 11 JO Concert Gem. ll5-4iachoon Coneert. 12 JO New.. --19 Th Bookworm. !5J,?ohB Aaw- Orgaaiat, 1 JO Johnson Family. -T - 15 Boak ctZZT' - SS-??1- Iproeiatlo. ;.i-vom OC - lai News. . S9 aotta Cant "1 itory Serena agg Sahitoa. 4:15 Jimmy Allen. 30-Casey Jonos. Jr. -4 Orphan Anm . ".- Mews. - , JO Captain MwmyK J:? Horn Edltton. .... v.v-movm Parad. -.. ' 70-Mws Sx Vira. . 2:l-SpoUight Band., . ... sundrd Symphony. - J :Ut Orion. ..." 5 Phil Steorna! 100 Shimbez Boat. 10JNew 110 Leon Mo tea Orcheatrs. U JO-ctyd StcCo Onmostra. X0ACT1TXRSDAY-S E. 1? i ilomakers Bow.. Sfhool of th Air. WZt" 11J5 Farm Hour. 20-Hn Garter Hour. -Aftetiioon Rcvtew. . 2:45 News. " J-"Pops- Concert. " ' JTf!? BoT and Cbrls. . J-0 th Campuses. the Old inters. --fenmg Vesper Sorrtee. o1rCoocrt- ' JO Farm fTmrv - ' 7 JO Uni veri I w R.nU 1 iSihr Education Speaks. ' 0 Foresters in Aim as-lix-iiutof th Masters.