Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1941)
IU Q2EG0N STATESMAN Salem, Oregon. Judder Morning. Horember 11. 1941 "Wo THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President - Member of The Associated Press The Asaociated Presa ia exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to ft or not otherwise ci edited in this newspaper. Armistice Day Vision Westward the course of empire takes its way; The four first acts already past, A fifth shall close the drama with the day; Time's noblest offspring is the last. -Blshop George Empire had its beeinnine in coniriDuiea the beginnings of civilization; moVed on to Egypt, which contributed writing; to jGreece, which contributed philosophy; to Rome, which contributed law; to Spain, which ex ended man's earthly horizon almost to its ut mcst limits; to England, which contributed the human freedoms. Continuing its "westward wj y," empire is coming to reside in America anki what shall our contribution be? All this was the thesis of Dr. W. C. Giers bach, president of Pacific university, in his Sa lem chamber of commerce address on Monday. II had an answer but first, in order to dis pose of a personal matter, may we suggest that America's contribution consists of the luncheon club and its weekly speaker. "We was misquoted." We didn't tell Dr. G lersbach that he couldn't tell us anything new. Ah ex-newspaperman himself, he had ques tioned the newsworthiness of luncheon club spjeeches, whereat we observed that any speak er! or writer, eager but unable to present any new facts, was tempted to express opinions which, for better or worse, might be new. He knew all the time it was useless to cross swords with a newspaperman. But just to clinch the matter, may we observe that Bishop Berkeley died in 1733, And was the idea new with him? No; Samuel Daniel in 1599 posed the question: "What world? in 4he uniformed Occident may 'come refin'd'with the accents that are ours?" Now Samuel Daniel and Bishop Berkeley were talking about culture; the Berkeley quo tation is from a poem entitled "On the Pros pects of Planting Arts and Learning in Amer ica." But since there is no need to trace the de pendence of culture upon civilization, philos ophy, law, world horizons and the freedoms, their vision supplemented by the more recent observations of Dr. Giersbach, Herbert Hoover hd Harry Scherman becomes a suitable text for Armistice day, 1941. Though Daniel had the vision of American World leadership 342 years ago and Berkeley perhaps 200, Americans have been slow to catch it Their tardiness is due, in large part, to the events which Herbert Hoover has been review tog in the Saturday Evening Post under the ti Ue "First American Crusade." Historically, crusade" bears the connotation of futility. Hoover, we suspect, is setting up a case against m second crusade. But, in documenting the stu pid errors and failures of Woodrow Wilson at the peace table in 1919, he actually is assailing not the purpose of the "first crusade" but its bungling implementation. The purpose, time in Its cataclysmic way has proven sound. Wilson t failed and so here we are. If he had been suf ficiently realistic to play the ace that was in his hand an economic ace and win, we and the rst of the world wouldn't be in this hole. I Regardless of our disillusionment' since 1919, America is destined to lead the world not in the fashion of Babylon of Rome, nor in the way that Germany now proposes to lead, but in manner that will be an improvement on the leadership which the British empire has pro Tided. For such leadership America is adequate lj implemented with economic weapons and well fitted through possession of the social and political ideals here developed. t As for Americans' well-recognized reluc tance to assume such leadership, the necessity lor it is outlined in a little book just off the press, by Harry Scherman, author of "The Promises Men Live By" and other works titled with more obvious realism, including "Will We Have Inflation?" Scherman points out in this new volume, "The Last Best Hope of Earth," ' this earth's population has more than tripled in the last 200 years in the Age oi Steam; has frown from about 660 million to well over two billion. fiurp cruwulv i - .. g "law vi aiiipuriauon, in ternational exchange of goods made it possi lle; eliminated the famines and other factors wjhich previously retarded expansion of the hjiman family. Now what? Retention of this totem of exchange, measures further to free and extend it, are essential to survival of this greater population. And if. some cold material ist, like one of France's- last kings "does not see the necessity" for such survival well, people Wrfll fight for a long time before they starve. J . It Is Scherman's thesis that world unifica tion must proceed and that America must sup ply the leadership not Germany which is ea- U1C mauve, ne proceeds further to the argument that unification must extend to some adequately supported political machinery, the teps toward which are not yet wholly apparent Jf us 'oUow 9v3j to the point of accepting the necessity of a world living in peace, a world of free inert engaging in virtually free trade &ich a world America must help build, and la ter lustily in the. building for it is a tremendous j Thus-'Amistice -day oa this versary; becomes not a futile error but merely been slipping troops into Murmansk and trim fire AnlmHA - - AiwhaVSital t....u 41 wt.um ana error process-' Uie atcuc ocean, lee free at Snditioning America, and other nations Sincere- P16?? Pts. The diplomatic representations made seeking a formula for successful world livinff- ,je I?nns r01" London ad Washington lately together, for further and more skilled effort, ft61" get. 9" of e war) have prepared ward that desirable goal. Y ; I .- , . I ;,., '. .. I I Not in a dank "jungle" but in a swanky j suite at a first class hoteL San Jrancisco police i the other day picked up a. "vagrant" suspect onp Irving Vexler, better known as Waxey Gor t con. unce on s lume ne iwas ictogprn ofthebootr ; .-. British preparations suggest winter raids (not taers around New York Cityi SubsequenUy full sized invasions) are beplae?aSt ' 1 . "served time" for sliVht wmtAf W- v Kn.m,n xl-v-ZJST1 .a?ms? - . a vIv.ft .i.Wuavi . - ?vt tjwiui vuiuu..' iuc oniy other large , f:;;ottcn to pay Uncle Sam two and a half mil- ''scale prospects for new fighting have been opened i . lloa in income taxe in Ubyaandthe Caucasus. The British would find S I n - i . t- i. i... ' t little"' onnosiHrtn fmm 4). Tti:... i 1 . . . S ?!ore or less aft- - the nfenner mlht have been found in the 'jungles,' Waxey Was "floated." That is. he and a nal Were turnwi loose on the tmdertanding that . s iwmuis, xney wm acquire 16.7 m charge would be dissed if they, were else-" -of the total soviet oil supply (as ot 1833). Favor sway Us; No Fear Shall Awe From First Statesman, March 28, 1831 Berkeley. Bahvlon whirh Paul MaOoB losses showed force on his western front Consequently a certain sympathy with British hesitancy exists here in solid military quarters. Hitler himself did not dare invade England when he found the air too thick of spitfire. But the question is when will the nazi-British plane balance get much better? When will the time ever be riper? Hitter had over 10,000 planes when the war started. From then until the Russia campaign, his losses fell short of his new production In every month except one, September, 1940. Anglo-American production jointly may now exceed his in view of his losses in Russia, but not by a considerable margin. The nazis are supposed also to have had some thmgnke 25,000 tanks at the start of the conflict The British had something under 600, most of which were left at Dunkirk. Every time their machines have met the nazis, they have had to leave much behmd. Even if Hitler has lost the maximum in Russia the British have no reason to hope that they are yet superior in tanks. Our officials are fond of hoping that Stalin will . hang on hard another year and thus cut Hitler's military machine down to a more equitable size for an end of the war in 1942. One diplomatic officer here is now exuding an unbelievable confidence. He says (and rightly) the loss of the most skilled nazi troops in Russia is more important than the loss of material, because these picked fighters cannot be replaced. They rep resented the best of German manhood and long training. They had ben ness, coolness, physical fitness. Their absence since the early fighting is responsible for slow nazi nroa ress In the late stages. : a"" Predicts.hat by spring Germany will be in the throes of desperation, like a mortally wounded cobra. . Then, the fighting, he thinks, will turn to the more desperate measures of warfare (avoided so far) including all the inhuman devices of the chem ical laboratories, gases and germs. Hitler wffl be in duced as a last resort to try these on Britain and Russia, both of whom are supposed to be equally well prepared in this respect. . That js the final phase of the war which he en visages, y . The new fronts which Stalin its 23rd anni- to open are at the - ' ; iTLS ' ? ' T About. three - . Murmansk' SOUth hands. The British could sweep -'straight down it. Cm.fiSt lip the Fhms d then the Germans! . x.t V. HsZ?, mt; Pronrising diversion upon whkh the British could enter' for the relief of Len tagrad and Moscow, although winter is already dos- tog to upon that area. - " - -T- . . -- litUeoppositfon of a bum who eutrs across nonnern Africa, but the vital coming front is in the Caucasus. i -4 V. The nazis need the ofl fhm:rt thr, 4he , vagrancy - -mw w M 1 VIMS W Cl get into the foothills, they win acquire 16.7 per cent where in 24 hours. The boys didn't hop a freight; they traveled first class by airliner to Los An geles, where police didn't wait until they got settled in a hotel; they met the boys at the air-, port and made careful inquiry as to their plans for the few hours before their Chicago-bound plane was scheduled to leave. It's nice to know that the law is imperson al and impartial; that a big vag gets the same treatment as a little vag. To the natural ques tion as to what constitutes vagrancy in San Francisco and Los Angeles, we can provide no immediate answer nor to the other inevitable query as to what good is accomplished by "float ing" a bum, whether he be destitute or affluent. They are as dangerous in one locality as anoth er. But perhaps they are less dangerous if or dered to "keep moving." Ashland high school's football team upset a favored Medford eleven last Friday night. Medf ord was really supposed to be going places this year and according to the Mail Tribune, the defeat was "the greatest seismic shock the local sporting world has suffered since the San Fran cisco earthquake." What's more, the Downtown Quarterbacks or some of them blame the Mail Tribune! The newspaper, they indict, praised the gridmen so lavishly their heads swelled and when things began going against them on the field, they fell apart. Well, such things have happened, but if the M-T did unduly laud the players, it still is a question somewhat akin to that of acute alcoholism. Who's to blame, the fellow who makes the stuff or the one who is foolish enough to buy it? From here it looks as though Medford. folk are just learning the same lesson that was forced down the University of Oregon's throat a few weeks back: Football is an uncertain game. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Beoro duction In whole or In part stricUy prohibited.) Pro- WASHINGTON, Nov. lO.-Hitler's dare to the British just to try invading the continent caused no one here to start out in a rowboat yet. Britain has accumulated much war mater ial and trained a good army since Dunkirk (while saying very little about it). Her pro duction schedules are reported to be hitting unexpected heights. October was admitted ly a record. Yet the British generals do not hanker to, go across the, channel without complete su periority in the air. They raked the continent coast from Nor way to Brindisi to see how many nazi warbirds they could flush. Their nnnnxiHntw Hitler maintains a formlrlaMA aiv nether ends of his line. The Brit- rttm Tiima fa fourths of the railroad track from to Tnlncrra .Kit 1. t wiuiasus. x nc xiusn wouia zind from the Italians if they want to There fever Was an Armistice Againt Godliness! Bits ffor ESreaktfasi By R. J. HENDRICKS Some day a paved road 1141-41 will join Cape Horn with the Americas, and then on through Asia, Europe and Africa. S In the Rotarian for November, the journal for the International Rotary organization, which joins all the civilized countries of the world together into a bro therhood based on the ideals of the American systems of demo cracy and fellowship, an article appears on "That Highway to Alaska" that is interesting, both In what it tells and in what it visions. . It is the story of a man and wife, Alfred and Elma Milotte, who had dreamed of a journey over the Alaskan part of the In ternational ! Highway. It opens with these words: S "We had talked about it FOR YEARS. One day we up and did it: sold our shop and hit the trail the half-blazed trail be tween Alaska and the United States. ! "Where WE packed through muskeg, moose licks, and moun tain magnificence, YOU will some day bowl along on an un dulating ribbon of concrete. "The trip was a gamble. Some folks said jit was even worse. 'Anybody who'd sell a busy photo business just to spend a couple of years taking pictures of a road that Isn't there well i "But we hut our ears. In our five happy j years as Alaskans and as a Rqtary couple in Ketch ikan we'd heard so much about this proposed Alaska Interna tional Highway that we wanted to see for ourselves. ("It is to be a part of the Pan - American (meaning all American) pighway and already connects with the Trans-Cana-dian Highway) Many miles of it, we knew had only rarely been seen by white men; many had NEVER been photographed. Today's Garden By LUlilE L MADSEN The Kalmia, while it wfll grow and bloom here, does not seem quite happy H.CL. I have seen specimens valley but several fairly good in the Willamette none of them make the progress or give the bloom that they do elsewhere. The first year or two- they seem to dd quite well and then they taper off in bloom. Per haps it is the over-damp win- ' ters. I have asked a number of plant material experts and they -all reply that while they do not 'grow and bloom at their best here; they (the plant specialists) i do not know the real reason, " whether it is soil or ' weather conditions, jlf anyone does have a fine specimen a number of years old I would like to hear- - about -It J. - Delphinium seed s should be - planted in July or August, real- ' ly no later, than very early Sep- ! tember (MrsX.RJL). If it is put in the opeisfround now it mayi decays Of course, if you have facilities, you can, plants it to? ; doors to flats early during the winter and . then set - the plants ' out. to the spring. ' ' -' You will not have such very. good ' bloom the first year, but " you "should have some. I once? planted delphinium seed out of - doors to" early April and had little bloom in summer- a " w fe TS$ Our cameras strained for the chase. "And soon they were snap ping and growling at grizzly bears (which you can smell far ther than you can see), at herds of caribou, and at smiling Indi ans; at inching glaciers, at shiv ering poplar groves, and at tiny up-river towns and, ajl in all, at a 2200 mile long swath of beauty which alone would Jus tify the cost of the DREAM highway. ... "Ours was to be no breakneck dash from top of the trail to bottom, and it wasn't. When, just last August, we drove our car up the 830 miles of narrow ing road from Vancouver to Ha zelton, where the COMPLETED (completed from Vancouver, B.C.) trail ends, wj had covered all but two short links, and had used great parts of 25 months doing it "That lower end (Vancouver to Hazel ton) of the trip was child's play. Other parts weren't. Once, after days of lurching along on our horses, drying rain soaked clothes over the camp fire, and eating dried potatoes and moose-meat 'hamburgers,' we thumbed back in our diary to find that we hadn't had news of the outside world for 17 days. 'Oh for an international high way,' we groaned. S "k "But even the TRACKLESS SECTION has ONE landmark a wire a remnant of the Ill fated Collins Overland Tele graph which was to join the United States and Europe by way of Bering strait and Asia. "GOLD SEEKERS OF 1897 followed that line, strung to 1865-6, to Alaska. YOU WILL FOLLOW IT some day in your family car. The OLD TELE GRAPH TRAIL. S ' "When will the minning links of the highway be bunt? No one knows yet "Mushrooming army bases to Alaska and Canada may hasten it THIS MUCH WE KNOW: When' they unroll " that last northern mile of pavement a rich and glorious land will be gin to come into its own." S U That is the end of the Milotte article to the November Rotar ian; rather the end of the In troductory part Thereafter fol low the very interesting pic tures photoengravings from their photographs; and maps, with descriptive matter. The first of the descriptive matter v. fV?! 5 Hyworth present the Bowman. Challenge Cap to Captsia FrsBWia "Wing of the U. S. army team as the prtoTfaS vidual award at the National Horse showta New York. TtoaS team completely dominated the mlliUry Jumping- competition. John ' S. Wise, secretary of the show. Is seen with the two above." accompanying a map reads: "Up there at the top of the ' trail Is Fairbanks, the 'Golden Heart' of Alaska, a thriving lit tle city complete with a new Ro tary Club. Which of several routes the Highway shall take from it to White Horse isn't cer tain, so we forayed out in many directions, 'shooting (with their cameras) game, placer mines, sourdoughs, and scenery. "But it was in the long wfld stretch between Lake Atlin and Telegraph Creek that we paseed our tenderfoot days. "We'd learned how to saddle our horses and to bell them gainst bears, to throw a dia mond hitch on a pack, and to bake bannick' (a hot biscuit fried in moose grease) and so we bade our guide good-bye and shoved off alone." (Continued tomorrow.) The r Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Readers ARMISTICE DAT A round the shrine of Country's flag we kneel, R evulsed that dread barrage, blood, gas and steel M enace the world again with hideous knell I mperialistic, weird, world-war hell! a o ecure, uod, fruition of hope our T hat nations may no more war-pall aroDe. . . to I mbue their minds with visions of Thy love; C reate in. them ideals from above; E ndue their hearts with Friend ship's worth to prove. D ynamic strength, give every nation's soul A super-power to avert War's further tolL . . Y earn we for world-wide Brotherhood's high goal. H owbeit, should an enemy as sail, E ach loyal son would spring to quick defense R esist war-demons, nor let foe prevail; O ur pride as Patriots scorns a weak pretense! E ndemic fervor fuels Shin of State; S ublime the Freedom we dis seminate! Edna Scofleld. 1 6& Emm By FRANCIS GERARD Chapter S eontlnaed : ' "Rather like ' a Javanese but he speaks excellent English. He was a BallioL" Then, - after a 'pause, "By the way, Yves, dont expect a drink. He's a Moham medan and very strict" "Yes, teacher," said his broth er, turning as the door opened. He rose to his feet and smiled amiably as his sister-in-law came into the room. Angela Lanchester was a Call fornian by birth. Her wedding to the thirteenth earl was a real love match. Angela was attrac tive, indeed. Her almost Spanish black hair contrasted amazingly with her ivory pallor and her full, generous mouth was kind and gentle. Her slow mfle transfigured her face into some thing - more than mere beauty but . her greatest quality, per haps, was her serenity. In her simple, black dinner dress she looked cool and faint ly aloof until, crossing to the bed, her face was filled with warmth as -she looked down at her husband. "How are you feeling George darling?" she asked, her voice low-pitched with the faintest hint of a drawl. "I'm all right Angela. Did you want to see me about some thing?" Lady Lanchester nodded. "Norma wants to know if you've any letters for her." "As a matter of fact I have," replied the earL "I'd better give Yves a letter to take down with him tomorrow." Angela went out of the room and a few moments later re turned with Norma Hafley who was her husband's secretary. The latter seemed an entirely neutral sort of girl. Her hair, which she wore pulled back into a knot on her neck, was what is so often described as mouse color ed. Her clothes were neat but without distinction. She wore ecaDi tadio Programs KSLM TUESDAY 13M Kc S JO SunrlM Serenade. 7 .-00 Newt In Brief. 7:03 Oldtim Music. T JO Newt. 7:45 Campus Freshmen. 8:00 President Roosevelt. JO Newt. 8:45 Mid-Morninf Matinee. 9 .-00 Pastor s Call 8:15 Popular Muaie. 8:45 Melody Mart. 10. -OO The World This Moraine. 10:15 Prescription for Happiness. 10 JO Women In the News. 18 35 Latin-American Mime, 11 0 Melodic Moods. 11 JO WU Chapel. 11.45 Lum and Abner. H:??ivn Ditonars, Organist U :15 Noontirne News. 1 J JO Hillbilly Serenade. H:Sf"W"1mett VaUer Opinion. It Si The Sons Shop. 1:15 Musical Miniature. 1 JO Western Sarenad. JX-WU r. p.T 4:15 News. 4 JO Tea time Tune. 9 M Popularity Row. JO Cocktail Hour. 8JS My Nelshbor. 8 M Tonight's Headlines. 8:15 War Commentary. 2-ttrln . Serenade. 7:00 Newt fai Brief. 7taterstlnf facta. 7:15 Vincent Storey. 7 JO Jimmy AUen. 7:45-Braes Hata. 8.-00 World Headlines. 8 M Popular Music f iWorW'i. Mort Honored Musis. 8:00 Newt Tabloid. 8:15 Popular Music 8 J8 Marion County Defense. 8:45 Oldtlme Music 10:00 Let's Dance. 10 JO News. 10:45 Popular Music 11 AO Music to Remember. K01j--CBS TTESDAT 878 Ks. 8:15 Breakfast Bulletin. 8 JO Koin Kiock. 7:15 Headltners. Garred Reporting. 7:45 Consumer News. 1 tyes of the World. 8 JO Hymi of AH Churches. America LoS 8:00 Kate Smith Speaks. 8:15-Big Sister. 8-JO-Romanc. Helen Trent 8:45 Our Gal Sunday. JSiHi1 Cm Beautiful 10:15 Woman In White. 10 JO Right to Happiness. 11:15 Aunt Jenny. "w-ortgni ti onion. . - - . . W Tilt. . . . 1 JO ntr4iM n.i rvai 1 opsin. U-Man I Married. l JZJL Mnnil1. News. JJ JO SingtoV Sam. 12 45 Woman of Oeuru. 0-Stcpmother. l:lMyrt and Marge. 1 JO School of the Air. 80 Hello Again. 1.15-News. 1 JO The ONeta. 2:45 Ben Bernie. fOO Joyce Jordan. Voice of Broadway. JJO-Newipaper of the Air. 40-Second Mrs. Burton. 4 OS Young Dr. Melon. 4 JO Second Husband J:2M!,w,p,ler Air. 522S5,,trood Balnes. Siliian, Winters. News. Emer Deia. News. Leon F. Drew. 8:15-Portland Dutch Unci. . . to Nation. 7:08 Red Cross Ron CaJL . 8 Amos Andy. ' 8:15 Lenny RoasT : jSrSS; 1grm' - . 10:00 Fire Star JtnaL 18:15 Air-Flo. - - ; j Wao-Dance Time.' I 18 JO The World Today. - 18:45 Defense TdayV ' ! 11:00 Ken 8tevetMi!T 1. 11 JO Manny Strand Orch, . HAS News.. ; , -. : ' -.- - . i , ' - K BO TTTKSnAT 11S Ka. 7 O0 Western Agrtculturm. ; -:- 7-JS Anaea Corner rTarram. 1 VJS-Breakiast Club. - i 8:15 Viennese Ensemble. - 8 J8-Wher. NewT ' KP It dub wtth Patty Jten Jjj-HoUywood HeacUlners !ity R05" Party. . : .. 8 JO Nstional Farm and Bosne. . 11 JO (Stars of Today. - I 11:15 Amanda of Honeymeasi mw, ' 18 JO John's Other WUe. . , U: 45 Just PUin Bill. -.;-; 1A8 Your Lrrestock Reporter. 1U5 News Headline and Hiehllrlita 1 JO Market Report.. , un 1 :45 Curbstone Qva. - J -3- Houae la the Country. 1:45 Wayne Van Dtnn. . 80 Between the Bookend. IJ5 New. . S -M n PumhH r 1 1 - - ' 40 Count Your n"n -. -4a5 Mr. Keen. Tracer. 4 JO Star, of Today. i t" 4:45 Hotel Tart Orch. - . -10 Adrenture Stories. 8:15 Flying Patrol. ; SJO News of the World. :Tara Mix Straight Sbor i t 8 0 The Bartonn .:l-aollie Truitt Time. EDuDlba slightly tinted horn-rim m e d ' spectacles. "I hop you're better. Lord Lanchester," aha ' faint smile. . . said with "I hope so, too. Norma. The trouble is. I doot know. I feel all right X have to be told whe ther rm better or not" . Miss Hafley r seated herself upon an upright chair near the bed. She poised her pencil above her' notebook and waited fr Lord Lanchester to dictate. . . Though Yves Blaydes-Steele had spoken light-heartedly of his mission into Sussex, he took ft quite seriously and this, coupled with the tragic circumstances of Ambrose Pennyfeathers death, made him a sombre companion for Angela as they sat nesr the fire to the library. The big man sprawled inele gantly to his chair, his eyes glooming into the fire, a heavy cut-glass tumbler containing a wbisky-and-soda dangling In -his fingers. Lady Lanchester view ed her brother-in-law beneath her sweeping lashes. "A penny for your thoughts, ' Yves," she said. Blaydes-Steele's rather craggy face twisted into a wry smile as he said, "If you'd add a feather you'd get it" "Still thinking about him?" she asked. "I cant get the old boy out of my mind, Angela." "I know," replied his sister-in-law. "Neither can I. George says that If Inspector Rainblrd and his people cant get at the bottom of it, he's going to get hold of Colonel Stafford and call in Scotland Yard." She paused and regarded her finger nails for a moment and then, looking up, remarked rather hesitantly, "I wonder if we cant do better than that Yves?" (To Be Continued) 'These scheSmles are nppUeS by Amy earla are tm to tfce resMCttre ted kr res saaSs sy taa to (as ewspeper 8 JO Sympl.ny. . 7J0 Mllltons for Defense, 8 JO Information Pleas. 80 Easy Ace. 8:15 News Headlines and Highlight 8 JO Moonlight Sonata. 10O0 Sir rrancis Drake Orchestra. 10 JO Broadway Band Wagon. 11:00 Thia Moving World. 11 JO War NewsRoundun. KGW NBC TCE1DAT C8 Ke. 8 AO Sunns Serenade. SJO Early Bard. 7 AO News Headlines and Highlights 7:15 Music of Vienna. 7.-45 Sam Haye. 8 AO Stars of Today. 8:15 Ship of Joy. 8:45 Oarid Herum. 8 AO Women's World. 8:15 The Brio Julia. 8 JO News. 8:50 Ski tch Hendersoe. 18 AO Dyer and Bennett. 10 J 5 Bess Johnson. 10 JO Bachelor's Children. 18:45 Dr. Kate. 11 AO Light of the World. 11 US-The Mystery Man. 11 JO Valiant Lady. 11:45 Arnold Grimm's Daughter. UAO Against tn Storm. UJ5 Ma Perkins. 11 JO The Guiding light. U 45 Vic ancl side. 1 AO Backstage Wife. las Stella D0a. 1 JO Lorenso Jones. 15 Young W Wider Brow. JA8 When a Girt Man-tea. ' SOS Portia Face Ufe. JJO We. the Abbott. Story of Mary Marun. J AO Pepper Young's Family. 1:15 Lone Journey. 1 JO Phil Irwin. 8:45 Three Suns Trio. 4 AO Lee Sweetland Singer.' 4:15 Richard Brook. 4 JO Charles Dent's Muste. AO-Stars of Today. JO Horace Heidt. 8 AO Burns and AUen. JO ribber McGee nd MoQy. 7A0-Bob Hope 7 JO Red Skellon S. r -fr Waring in PI saws iTTTr" mna Anwer. JOlohnny Preaents. 8 AO Adventures of Thin t JO Battle n tK 18A0 Mews Flashes. "iiJ Xour Bop Town New. 10 35 Charles Danr Music. J--Out of Thl World. J, pp:f Jp" s Rangers. JJ OrKn Rhythm. 11 5 Interlude Before Midnight KAijrs TrxsnAT in k. JO Memory TlmelceeMr. 1 -on n 8A0-Breakfast 8 JO News. 7-f r-iLi.i.i dub. 8.-45 As the Twig Is Bent. iw-gonn b. Hugo.- iiit:5.?m,,,i Sid of the News. 8 JO This and That. 10 AO News. 10 o Helen Holdea. 10 JO Front page rtrrelL 10 45-m Ftnd My Way. J JAO-Buyei'. Parad J i Bet and BoC "-"Concert Oem. Ujtew? COC 1 AO The Bookworm. 1 JO Johnson Family. 445 Orphan Annie. I AO Jimmy AUen. 45 Jack Armstrong, . 8 AO Nm . T JO Han Edmon. nuft faraoe. i Cross BQ CaJL : SAO Romaneo la Ehytaav :15-jDtnneT en YoSl -- J The Shadow. AO-NewsT' .45 Symphony H.n, ia e s Morcan,. is 33 Around too Blot.- mwm isewa. Crosby Orch. , " JO Ted Woem Tarheel is " " KOAC TTSDAT 858 K. 10 A5 News. . .. . lSJS-rarm Hour. ,1 Hh"rte H11 Hour. - 145 Pan Amerieaa Meloifr ' v 2i?mnc"a Laton AuxTflarF. ;: ' sitwlw. : ' f i l-f0 ror Boys and otna. S SSrS?,0- Opuses. -. . 8J-Defens of Ameriea. . t l?8irNI!n "Ttew ' SJO Farm Roar. ".- , "JO School of Music 80 Meighborbood New. -8:15 School at Muaie. - - aJO-Musi HsO. ' -JPMWC of Cicholovskia.-85-18 AO Mao of Our Army.