V page four Hi OSEGOH; STATESMAN, Scdwn. Owgon. Sunday Morning. Noronbc 30..1S41 ' wmwiw MM V."' "JVo Favor tftcay Ui; No Fear Shall Awe From First Statesman, March 18, 1851 '"-'vl yji : .. '' r Br FRANCIS GERARD ' ' i ; - - - j THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES Ar SPRAGUE, President Member of The Associated Press 1 The' Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or -not otherwise credited in this newspaper. International Liars The fact that Chiang Kai-shek is dancing to the tune of Britain, America and communism at the expense of able-bodied and promising young- men in his resistance against Japan, is , only due to the desire of Britain and the United States to fish in troubled waters of East Asia by pitting East Asiatic peoples against one an- other and to grasp hegemony in. East Asia. This is the stock In trade of Britain and the United States. For the honor and pride of man kind we must purge this sort of practice from East Asia with a vengeance. Premier Tojo. Unfettered by responsibility, the Japanese press and radio on Saturday made stronger rep resentations against the United States than did the premier. Such declarations as "America has broken the peace" and "The United States alone Is responsible for what seems to be almost in evitable now" appeared in print and were heard over the air. There is no dodging the fact that what seems "almost inevitable" to Japanese policy-makers is war. " If, say 30 months ago, similar statements had emanated from comparable sources, the American people's reaction would have been a sort of stunned surprise. War was far from our thoughts then that is, war in which we might engage. In the interim, external events have conditioned our minds to the possibility of en gaging in a real war the formal kind. We are already engaging in the other kind, a fact con templation of which would then have been al most equally shocking. What the Japanese press and radio are say ing is a lie. What the' premier said is slicker and harder to pin down, but still it's a lie. That Chiang Kai-shek is still after four years opposing Japan may be due to British, Russian and American aid. That he fought in the first place was not due to any urging from them. His country was attacked. He and it re sisted. That is all there is to it. The United States is arrayed in this world wide struggle against a trio of accomplished international liars. If you say that Hitler and Mussolini are two of these, it is necessary to note that the third is in a slightly different cat egory; he is whoever happens to speak for Jap an. Actually, each of the three is more or less impersonal and collective. Even so, fundamentally there is no differ ence between an international liar and the or dinary cracker barrel variety of liar. He lies. You are at liberty to believe or to disbelieve in either case; and in either case you may or may not feel free to call him a liar to his face. Of course in the case of the international liar, there are a lot more people who don't feel free to do that. A liar is a liar. A lie is a lie. But there is something grandiose and terrifying about a liar who can't be called to his face. The same qua-, lities pertain to his lie. As for the liar who can be called, and his lie, they are merely ludicrous in a pitiful sort of way. Yet there is a fateful difference between the international liar and the cracker barrel liar. The international liar is surrounded by people who must pretend to believe "his lie. Presently through the influence of these "yes men" he begins to believe it himself. It doesn't seem possible and yet it seems to be so. Hitler said the British would surrender because France did and so he failed to invade when he had the chance. He has made a similar error in jud ging the effectiveness of his anti-comintern crusade. Now the Japanese international liar ap pears to have fallen into his own trap in the same fashion. Japan's recognized "authority on American affairs" recently listed about a dozen things that are wrong with the United States that its people are soft and expect the govern ment to support them, that they are divided, that their national leadership is muddled cer tainly half-truths if not full truths. But he adds up these partial truths and gets this answer: That if the United States gets into a war, it will fall apart at the first setback. That is a lie, and history proves it if each American's intuition doesn't immediately re ject it. In a war against Japan, started by Japan, the United States would not be divided. But be cause we do seem to be divided about a Euro pean war, and because we have let our isola tionists make more noise than their numbers warrant, and because the Japanese internation- al liar has manufactured from these details a lie and believes it himself it looks very much' as though we are going to have to fight a war. i If we have to fight, we'll fight. We'll be j united. But it will be all the better if we agree ! now, before the shooting starts, that we know ! the truth and are going to fight for the truth. As a free people, we are saddled with no interna tional liar whom we are forced to believe. by the cost of printing this largely useless staff. We are told; and nave no reason to doubt, that $27,000,000 is the annual cost of propaganda printed at taxpayer expense simply to tell' the taxpayers what a swell government the new deal is "giving", them! ' J Albany has had. since 1905 an ordinance forbidding the operation of. billiard tables and bowling alleys on Sunday. There has been how-, ever no ban on Sunday beer sale since the re peal of - prohibition. The city council has just concluded that it is conducive to more whole some conditions, to remove the ban, on billiards and bowling for the benefit of persons whose opportunity for: Sunday diversion is limited. In recent years the futility of legislating against forms of entertainment which are in themselves harmless, has come to be realized in most Am erican communities. . , 4 , aw Paul Halloa if Uncle Sam Wastes Paper Li some of the numerous and bulky gov-' , eminent publications which reach our desk it has been pointed out recently that there is a pa per shortage. Half a dozen of Oregon's news papers have pointed out that this same govern . - ment literature constitutes an outstanding" con tribution to the shortage and that most of it is sheer waste. ;'W: .;-. .! V ' ".The Roseburg News-Review's v comment perhaps is sufficient to cover this point: " Jt . What do we care," or what do you car, ;' about the numberjf cotton spindles In. New .England? Is a pageor two about the successful T; marketing of the soy bean crop worth curtail- ; .Ing national, defense? Which would be a bet- , ter use for a few sheets of good paper; wrap ping for bullets for Britain or as C "news' re- lease" about control of the, boll weevil? -. . ; ;v Heretofore The Statesman has said little on this subject, for the reasonthough it probably applies to the other newspapers as well that this paper is not wasted as far as we are con- Winston Churchill's 67th birthday will be Observed today. Possibly he will have scant time for celebrating It personally, but It ought to be decidedly a happier occasion that the similiar anniversary a yar ago when the battle of Brit ain" was a matter of repelling invasion and still quite indecisive, A British press release - de scribes the improvement in the country's po sition in the past year as "far beyond the ex pectation of reasonable men." News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON (Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Repro duction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 29.-Secretary Knox says lagging enlistments may force the navy to draft fighting seamen for the first time in all history. He implies the two destroyer losses frightened parents and presum ably also sons. The clique of admirals running his depart ment has hastened forward with corroborating excuses, saying they plan "more attract-1 ive advertising in the newspa pers" and "relaxation of health restrictions" upon volunteers. All officials seem able to blame their own failures on somebody far away, preferably an unidentified mass of peo ple who cannot answer. This new and saddest of all official commentaries on the lax spirit of American moth ers and sons has aroused some resentment within the navy Itself, where-down , underneath the top ranking clique, everyone has another" notion of who is chiefly responsible for the navy enlistment prob lem. Young American men generally want action when they go into the armed services of the coun try. They are not timid by nature. The ocean is the place they can get action now, but you would nev er know it from the secretive publicity policies of the navy admirals. The old seadogs have been try ing to keep their part in this war below decks with out letting the public know more than absolutely necessary. They will not tell of the great, defense job their own navy is doing in the air, on and un der the Atlantic. Old glories of sea-fighting and its heroic traditions, now daily being reenacted, are obliterated in meager navy news. The admirals sit on the lid on every event. If you protest this blindness, you will be in formed that they are at war and secrecy is neces sary. Not so in Britain. Even more at war than we, the British give their people full accounts of dra matic incidents and duties in which their navy is engaged. But when the survivors of the Reuben James came into New York the other day (weeks after the event) only the surviving petty officer was allowed to talk. He gave a dull restricted story which land ed far back in the newspapers. When the USS Kear ny crew reached Iceland, reporters got full stories from survivors but censors killed out the best parts. It has been the custom of the admirals in the past to fire the public relations staff whenever their own blunders caused public criticism torise. Three reorganizations of the navy public relations bureau have already been effected since the war began. There can be three more and the condition of the navy morale will never be improved until the ad mirals look into their own minds and discover that the cause of the failures lies with the secrecy re strictions they have imposed upon their public re lations officers. The trap which Nazi General Rommel laid for the British tanks at Sidi Rezegh might have ruined the Libyan campaign had the British fewer tank forces in reserve. Rommel selected a. large area south from Tobruk in. which he organized great, , concealed fields of fire, planted well with tank - mines and ambushed with artillery. The outnum bered German tanks led. the British into these soft spots in the German lines, where the artillery went to work on them with great destructive, success. . -It was a bad British blunder but it may delay the success of the campaign only a few days. - Paging Congress, Paging Congress, Paging '. . ! Sits for Breakfast By R." J. HENDRICKS , California woman wants 11-30-41 to know how Oregonians of pioneer days cooked, dressed, were housed, talked, lived, etc.: S V s (Continuing from yesterday:) "Description of the houses of that time?" is the third question. This would take a book. Largely, the pioneer houses Of the "French Prairie" section were very modest ones, some of them with dirt floors, but mostly, at first, with puncheon floors; that is, split logs with the flat upper surface made smooth with an adze or other tool. Good work manship made puncheon floors okeh; even good. dancing floors. After sawmills were conven ient, 'modern floors were made. There was in the early days much cedar in this district, ' which made good built-in and other conveniences. Cedar trees here 'are scarce now. All first windows came "around the Horn;" that is, the panes did. ALL small panes. When any one tells you of materials for pioneer houses here coming "around the Horn," excepting small window panes, smile in your sleeve. If you listen, you will frequently hear such fantastic stories. S Method of agriculture is fourth. It was at first mostly . kitchen gardening and - stock raising. The Hudson's Bay Com pany monopolized the live stock business in the "early 'days. But in 1836, at the instigation of W. A. Slacum, purser of the United States navy, who was sent on the order of President Andrew Jackson, who won the battle of New Orleans, to see how the Americans were being treated (especially the Lee missionaries, whose enterprise had been given his okeh) by the Hudson's Bay Company, long arm of the Brit ish government and Purser Slaeum suggested that pioneers be sent to Spanish California to buy cattle from the Catholic missionaries there, which was done, early in 1837. The cattle were bought at $3 a head, some 700 of them; the cost of driving them overland being about the same amount per head. This, with the cattle brought by the covered wagon trains, be ginning on a large scale with the one of 1843, soon brought the stock -business to great import anceprofitable, because,1 with native gsass to their bellies and In 1847 the Luellings (spelled in about a dozen ways) brought fruit trees in 'covered wagons across the. plains; and Oregon apples were soon selling at a dollar each to the miners in the boom days of the gold rush of "forty-nine," in California. This section was soon a fruit paradise, as it is yet, to those who know the game and work at it In the first years, no worms were in Oregon apples; not a worm in a million. Oregon be came the "country of big red apples," and was soon a fruit paradise; especially the section of which "French Prairie" was the center. S V ( The methods of agriculture in . this section in the early days was about? the same as in other pro gressive sections of the United States, and of the wide world. Hard work and intelligent me thods, brought high rewards. Later came what this col umnist is pleased to call "fran chise crops," like fiber flax and hemp and filberts and walnuts, etc. That is, crops that produce better than can be counted upon of Chinook, the trade language with the Indians, made up largely from the dialects of the different tribes, plus a smatter ing of the French from the hunt ers and trappers employed by the fur companies, and an idiom of a local community thrown In occasionally. Most early settlers understood the Chinook jargon, which did not have in total over 400 to 500 words. H S But there was heard here the nasal twang of the New Englan der, the drawl of the "deep South," and the lingo of most races and tribes the world over, because of the 350,000 people who took the long trafl, the 01d Oregon Trail," during the covered wagon days, from 1842 to 1869, when the golden spike linking the Union Pacific and Central Pacific lines was driven at Promontory Point at the north end of the Great Salt Lake in Utah for the 350,000 were from every section of the United States, and every corner of the globe. And they reo resented everr Chapter 12. Continued .; "When . Meredith drove away fronvWeyland HaH late that tuV. ternoon he left behind him a . ,very subdued " household, - The1 loss of the Sulungu necklace, -coming on top of the murder of' Pennyfeather, .was ' S hammer blow on their, already, raw nerves. They made no 'connec tion In their own minds between the two events, other than that they were both shocks follow ing one another- closely. As Sir ' John drove through the winding Suffolk lanes, . his was a melancholy mood for he confessed to . himself that he could see little daylight in the mystery surrounding either Am brose Pennyfeather's death or the disappearance of the neck lace. In the latter puzzle there was something to catch hold of, but not much. Meredith was thinking of that strange Interview between the Dwtn and the tatter's cousin which the former had described to him and Yves Blaydes-Steele the day before, . . . An inter esting character the little de ' Vassignac! Prompted, doubtless by curiosity, she had called, about a year previously, on the Dwan when he was staying at his Paris hotel. She had told him quite frankly that she had come merely to see what he looked like and she had told him, just as frankly, that she Intended to sit upon the throne of Sulungu. Buna Thalan had pointed out that, so long as he was alive, such a succession was unlikely, to which la Vassignac had re plied that she had no intention of allowing him to, live. Such a blunt warning pointed to the girl's Involvement . . . the more he thought about her, the more Interested the noted detective became. When he arrived at Rad field Place, Sir John asked Hobbs to fetch Sergeant Matthew Beef from his cottage which stood not a hundred yards from Mere dith's home. "'EUo," said ex-Detective Ser geant Beef, pushing round, red face round the corner of the door not five minutes later, and adding unnecessarily, "It's me, Sir John." "WelL come on in, man," said Meredith. "I refuse to conduct a conversation with an appar ently disembodied head. Sit down, Beef. I want to taik to you." "Some little thing gone wrong with the British Legion or the Parish Council?" suggested Beef. "No," said Meredith. "It's merely a matter of murder and theft" "Excuse me, Sir John, but regarding the theft, was any thing valuable stolen?" "Only a necklacej said Mere dith, "It's worth something over five hundred thousand pounds." Beef blinked. "Did you say five hundred or five thousand, sir?" "I said five hundred thou sand." And that made Beef blink thrice. -"WeUT said .Meredith, lean ing back in his chair, after de icrlbing known details sur- . rounding, first, the death bf Mr. Pennyfeather, and then the dis appearance of -' the Sulungu necklace. "What d'you think?" - The other , was in no hurry to reply. He pulled at his snub nose. "Well, Sir John," he said at length, "there are two things that stick out a mile and I ex pect they do to you. Ifs like this: With regard to the Penny feather takln' off, there's abso lutely nothing what you might describe as a lead. It leads straight up gainst a blank walL Because, If your facts are cor rect, the only possible known motive might m attributed to this man servant chapOgbln but, from what Tou tell me, we can rule him out" I don't think there's any doubt of that, Beef. I've seen the man and I'm prepared to accept his Innocence." "Now, what about the neck lace?" ; "At!" growled : Beef, TJeatTs a different story altogethet. X dont know much about this 'efe Countess deevassy-sometbing, but Fd like to know somthing more about this;, Miss Norma 'Alley as is' "secretary to His Lordship. A'cottrsi,; I may be wrongin' the .girl" 'I . Mere dith did not smile . . . "but what do they really know about hert Just check over what they told you." Meredith nodded. "J this 111 do Just that Anyway, I'm go ing to work on Miss Nottna Hailey. The question is, how to keep tabs on her without let ting the family up at Weyland Hall know I'm doing so." Beef said slowly, "Didnl you say -as 'ow she'd been recom mended by the oT Duchess of Stream'? WelL sir, what about Lady McAllister?" "Beet" said Meredith, 'you're an inspiration!" Sir John had a lengthy tele phone conversation that even ing with Sir Hector McAllister's wife in London. "Yes, John," said her voice towards the' close of their talk, "I quite understand. You can count on me not to rppear too inquisitive. Veronica Stream wont even guess, Bvfl what's it all about, John?" "I dont want to tell you," said Meredith frank!. "Oh, well," said Lady McAl lister, "I haven't been married to an Intelligence man for as long as I have without learn 'ing to control my curiosity. You shall have a report from me as soon as possible." It was the follow) ag afternoon that Katherine McAllister call ed on the Duchess of Stream. Stream House was an absolute mausdieum in mort ways than one. Most of the treat recep tion rooms were closed now and unusued. Their furniture, price less in its day, had been sold. (To be continued) in other sections of this country condition of life, from the weal" or of the world m S "Mannerisms of speech?" They were i conglomeration of all the rest of the United States, with the addition in the earlier years thy farmer from Missouri with his herds, to the black slave from Georgia or South Carolina serving his or her master or mis tress. (Continued on Tuesday.) ffiadio Pirograms Editorial Comment From Other Papers INVITING INDUSTRY Because Oregon is seemingly destined to be forever barred from the federal gravy bowl this state has been forced and it ap pears may continue to be forced to make its own way while its more favored sisters, Washing ton and California, continue to derive much of their sustenance from the national treasury. It is with pride, or should be, that Oregon has carved its own way through life's jungle thus far, without use of the political rewards which this and previous administrations have so gener ously distributed among other states but it is also with some disadavantages that Oregonians are carrying their own load. This state produces great ag ricultural surpluses. These sur pluses must now be shipped to excepting low taxes. Taxes can be lowered or adjusted to meet competition of adjoining states. Oregon also now has a por tion of Bonneville power to of fer industries, if and when a Bonneville administration can be procured which does not re gard private Industry as a foe of civilization. If the people of this state will awaken to their possibilities and means available for capitalizing on them, Oregon may continue to make its own way. Albany Democrat-Herald. KSLM SUNDAY UN Ke. OO Flowing- Rhrtnm 8 JO Melodic Moods. S.-00 Voles of Tomorrow. . 1 :1S Symphonic Swing. t :30 Popular Concert. 10 .-OO Sunday Reveries. 11 0 American Lutheran Church. 11 :00 Sinitaf Strino. 1130 News Hllifhts. U5i-Sofif Shop. 1 AO Deaconess Hospital. 1 JO Hawaiian Serenade. 3 OO Orfanalitias. 2:1S Vote of Restoration. t JO Marimba Melodies. S KM) Sweet Swlnc. S JO Boys Town. 4AO Gypsy Orchestra. 4 JO S ym phonic Swing. OO Variety HaO. OO Tonight's Headlines. . :1S Sacred Music JO Operatic AjUs. 1:00 Tea Boys. 7 JO String Serenade. S:0O News. S:1S Popular Music 5 JO Tango Time. tK0 News Tabloid. :1S Music at the Console, t JO Back Horns Hour. 10:00 Dream Time. e Envoy Home F American correspondents on the Libyan front are singing the praises of the American lank, but less conspicuous reports are coming through indi cating many defects were discovered in action. Most serious were the - rubber treads, merely rimmed wim steeL A tch to all-steel treads, for desert fighting at least, is likely. Rearrangement of the interior to afford greater fire vision and to provide outside markets. . where they .backs, the cattle almost literally , compete with home grown pro- supported - themselves on the yfductse that are not handicapped range the year thTotigh--becam by;traiisportation costs. as good as a grJd'mine, -. ' '-J;' . The result is lower profits, any, lor uregon proaucers on products which they cannot sell" in their home markets. . The solution of this problem Is the stimulation of industrial growth within . the state that : Oregon may provide, in a ,lar- get measure consumers for its ' own products. ; . : ' - V This; Is: a feat that is not so- Today's Garden By LLLLXE L. MADSEN Yes, Mrs. R. D, lilacs trans- plant better in late fall or winter than they do in spring. : Plant them only a very little deeper. an inch or so, than they -were T?Jr7Z , L, out roots. .Be iMuful to leave tw air- 2Tsl"a"Vkf ;r pockets around roots. growing before. Get the soil to easilr oerf ormed as mixht ar- - wash in icMnpactly , about the . Industrie, , . rule anrine" t..V. Vague noises from within the state department, denoting resentment of .any appeasement of Japan, have been heard throughout the whole Kurusu ne gotiations. Two authorities of the department's far eastern division have been transferred to Antigua ' and the Philippines lately and the head of the Chl ; nese lend-lease negotiations in OPM transferred to ! . - VS i M :j A't tvA uW it At fW u price comroi. wmaai oeniais nai ; mese snuu were way into bales of waste paper whKh arrsoU But vxt nexotia leaks" develop- and, we trust, used agam m various :lorrn though there is, of course, a necessary process at hani These ie th cf re-manufacture... ', ; ' determine! to stop such' a trend they could. - More serious is the dfepatch Of similar ma-.: v; state Seeiary'TBua.'sflmoaneed-' decision 'to terial , to other addresses where the salvage stand by our friends rather than to appease our en- routine is less efficient But even that is, topped emics, proved that these activities were needless. up where markets for znannf tured products already exist To ' attract indusnies inducements . must be offered .either in the You might also v scatter 1 form of raw materials available 4 around bushes already at an advantage over other aim- ' - liar sources; sutwicues-or attrac : tive , environment . ; . r' Excepting' a few Items such ' 4 as timber, .fish and agricultural products themselves. Oregon has. -Probably there is no need for Jncorporating fertilizer i in the soil, but some . bonemeal won't hurt, some : estaDushea. - Bonemeal zed to trees or shrubs now will do them quite a bit of good.' . -. :.v; - ,; - Clean all dead foliage around peonies, hollyhocks and deplhin lums and burn this. , Foliage on little to' offer in the way of raw these plants '-.li often diseased, materials.' This leaves subsidies and carries thed isease over win-and enviromental advantages as ter in the deadifoliage jput a - the state only alternatives, collar of sand around the del- . Subsidies are out of -the ques phiniumt plants to ? keep slugs I tion, on" a large scale In a stated from working on them all win- with relatively low population & plane CnaHv . was located safer :-" www wuiH t KUU UUOUtUU IBVUI tCS ' I ' 5 ' JO IflS MmX jL&Sta Returning from Moscow to report to President Roosevelt, Laarsnee A. Stctaharut, U. S. ambassador to Soviet Russia, Is shown ta Kew York after arrival toy Clipper plane. Stelnharut has been much bf the news lately, for be was aboard an airliner car." ? Max lm Iitrlnof , new V. 8. -m-' dor from Russia, that was report ed nusamg lor several days. The KOW NBC SUKOAT-2S Km. S0 News. S Sunday Down South. . JO Church to Your Home. SAO Second Guesaera. t JO Emma Oteeo, Singer. 10:OO Upton Oose. comments toe lJ0-The WorVdls Yours. 11:00 Sammy Kay Orchestra. 11:1ft Concert Petite. 11 JO Chicago Bound Table. 110 Bob Becker's Dog Chats. " H. V. KahesteraT 11 JO Radio Comments. 10 Stars of Tomorrow. lOO Opera Aodlttona. - . JO Uvtog Diary. V " " - v SOO World Honored Music J ' V SaaTho Great GUdsrslesTS. 1 4:00 Jack Benny. 4 JO Band Wagon, v 1 SOO-Charlie McCarthy. '.. v. iJO-Ooo Wan s Family. r-. Manhattan Merry -Oe-Round. ' 5?Ibunl p ramUiar Muste. . - - 0 Hour of Charm. '--tr.-t JO Sherlock Hnvs ' -0-Crmwal. 5 50 Beau Sotr Musicals, '--'...v:0f Walter WlBCheU. . - - - ! Tho Parker Family. ao Quht of Two OUea. , . la.-OO Mews riaahea. ' 1 8 J Bridge to Dreamland, - 11:00 Sons tho StrJnsa... U JO Bob 8trni. llft Interhide Before Mttgh, : B.-OO Amen Corner Program. ' S JO rtTue in Miniature. - tS The 9uet Hour. ' r. JO Radio r-ifv MW W.rt " M30-Speaklns of Clamour. r ' ' ' V European Situation., 11 OO Great Plays. 1?-W,k Up America:--.. ; ', --h 1O0 National Vespers. . - - ; , 130 Muiic Solon l?jrt,mhTor, Bote! Orch t -X30 Music SteelmalMra. - . , SO-Catholle Hour. ..' 3:30 Stars of Today, Taese sckedales are reppUed ay the iespecUe sUMsos. Any Tarta tisos net so by Hits nsrs are dne to cfcaagM mads ky Us tUttoas wito oot osttts to this newspaper. S .15 Eleanor Boooerert JO Highway NlsrA Express. 94 Edgewater Beach Hotel Orch. 10 O0 Palladium Ballroom Orchestra. It JO Amen Corner Program, 11O0 Bal Tabartn Cafe. 11 JO War News Hound Up. see KOrN CBS SUNDAY T7I Ka. :SO Wings Orer Jordan. 00 West Coast Church JO-Thu Land Wo Defend. S News. 00 Country Journal. JO Sen Lake Tabemaclo. Is OO Church of tho Air. 1 JO This is the Ute. 11 00 News. 11 -.11 Portland Art Museum. UOO New York Phllharmonie. 1JO Psuae That Kefrosbos. SOO Fsmuy Hour 15 WUllam Shiror. Ms eifrer TTteatro. a jo otesMiy Ban lis Dear Mom. 4-.1S William WaQaoa. 4 JO News. v 4:411 . Ksnlimg Xd MrConrtan. S:00 Columbia Workshop. I JO Castles to sho Air Aft Elmer Deris. News. SOO Sunday Ereadntf Hour. i w-ists u or bro T JO Helen Rim OO Crime Doctor. . News. JO i Was There. . 00 Leon t Drews. t:S0 Baker Theatre. lO0 Freo Star Final. ' las Cosmo Jonoa. IS JS Harrr 15 MerlBO Com. 11O0 Ken E terms Orchestra. 11 JO Manny Strand Orcnostra. U. 11 o e XAIX MBS SrirnAY WS Ka. ;:siKwrto'tt-d- STtral Ourvn of Christ. l.oorwV- Buct U-jRomaneo tho m-Waya. M JO Tho Hymn Singer. IS AS Canary Chorus. H.??-gHkte' .Ovpal iiiJfntr Melody. SrX. . 1 oo LvttMtn . Hour. ' - o - Air. . I JO-Biblo Oassos. : JOO Harem of Beat. - - . . SJO BuUOof Draastosd. ' ' 4 OOs-Symphonie Strtnrs. - -' 30 lanuuon o Waits, 4 Aft Around the Clock. ' W ' Americon Forum.' " H6 Normaa Thmn 5?WL'"htoo1 Kerrral TOO OabrUl ftiMtw TOS-Bands o iarado. if ep Xm KoUtng. " os-Hinaon Momorui Chorea. J JS-yoeo of Propaeerl eWenado. 4O0 European Kewa. T AST Pl" itS oad 8gt. Quirt , "oo-Symphony HaU. . S:1S Book Chat. ' V k i' ! Tune Tlroo. ' - ' SA Pearson or Allen. . , ' " UOO Sunday Kirht at riwMt roa-Crmndpsppr snd Hsi Psi 1 Crerof ' " V0"0"1 JO News Headllneo At Hiri-Thts " ' ' " . -Songs by Dmah Score. - TOO-Good Win Hour. IT--l T f ' O0 Inner Sanctum MystarUs.' ' "lOIlflay iladlO OXl'l - .- ? - . ' V. . it too Dear John. ;e 6, Section 3