The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 10, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

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    Th OUZGOIf STATESMAN. Cclem, Oregon. Scrtnrday Morning. January 10, 1842
"No Favor Sway$ Vs; No Fear Shall Awe"
, From first Statesman, March 28, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
j j CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President
! Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of aH
news difpetches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
Nature's Air Raid
In the first place it was! "very unusual"
weather. No foolin'. It was the first real "silver
thaw" we can call it that and still comply with
the weather censorship now that two days have
elapsed in a decade or thereabouts, one un
matched in severity ; in at least two decades.
Here in the Willameite valley's salubrious cli
mate, nature goes on a rampage so infrequently
that the newest lesson of her devastating power
always comes as a surprise.
Nature's blitzkrieg was at first so quiet
and unspectacular Just taindrops falling and
freezing as they .fell.; Yet if the bombers of our
foreign enemy had flown over the valley and
dropped any imaginable number of explosive
missiles, the damage could not possibly have
been so widespread and general. Oh, it would
have been more severe in spots, but it couldn't
have caused loss and inconvenience to so many
persons.
Rubber tires those precious rubber tires
spinning helplessly on sheet ice marked the
Initial effect of nature's onslaught. Like the
war, it hit us first in the legs. Transportation
suffered. But presently it struck in another ex
treniely vital spot. Electric power. Though it
: was the transmission of power that was dis
rupted, not generation, the effect on most in
iividuals was no less serious, temporarily, than
would have been the bombing of Bonneville.
Most Willamette valley residents experienced,
for a few hours or for many, a lesson in their
dependence upon that mysterious and elusive
Mtfity, electricity. Lights blacked out, cooking
ranges that wouldn't cook, water systems that
wouldn't work, clocks that wouldn't tick, radio
silenced. Back half a century to the coal oil
lamp and cooking on a wood fire if you hap-
Ened to have a lamp and a wood stove of some
id. Most people didn't. They had burned
their "horse and buggy" bridges behind them.
Defense against a lethal air raid would in
evitably produce its heroes persons who had
the stuff of heroes in them long before, lacking
only the outlet. Well, nature's air raids also
produced its heroes the persons who, in line
of duty, went out and repaired damage of one
' kind and another, at risk to life and limb in
many cases, and those who carried on their
regular duties in spite of unusual handicaps.
Our carrier boys, we think, are entitled to some
of the decorations if any are handed around.
"Poems (and telephone wires and roofs)
are made by fools like me, but' only God can
make a tree." The material damage to man
, made gadgets can be soon repaired. Maimed
trees whose beauty can be restored or dupli
cated only by the slow processes of nature her
self these casualties constitute the real tra
gedy of nature's blitzkrieg.
Education Speed-up
"Trousers baggy and our clothes are raggy
... garters are the things we; never wear . . .
Not that he looks much different, but the col
lege man of today is a far cry from the typical
"collegiate" : who inspired that song of yester
year. So they tell us, at any rate, and the ver
dict is not reversed by such limited association
with, present-day students as we enjoy. It
might be temporarily thrown for a loss if one
could look Jin on the Corvallis campus this
week but then, adult Oregonians who never
attended the state college have been a bit hys
terical since last Thursday, so what can you
expect of youth?
More serious-minded though he may already
be, the college student is due for a jolt com
parable to that experienced by the American
. public in general and from the same cause; a
ihift into high gear for the war effort. Higher
education is to be streamlined. He is going to be
turned out, a finished product, in three years
or less instead of four. Eliminating the summer
"vacation" should cut the time down that much
and other shortcuts are being considered.
Jack London acquired, so he related, the
equivalent of a high school education in six
weeks. It's more accurate, we suspect, to say
that he acquired in that time the bare essentials
to qualify for some higher courses he wanted to
take. And in like fashion, if this nation needs
certain specialists with training which now is
possessed by none but college graduates, intelli
gent youth can assimilate that training in
streamlined, forced-feeding ; fashion in much
less than four years. But what they get won't
be the equivalent of our traditional four-year
education and goodness knows that isn't much.
The average college graduate has just begun to
cratch the surface of scholarship.
Certainly; push them through to meet the
demand for trained men. But don't let them get
the notion that what they are getting is an edu
cation. Maybe they can go back for that later,
i or dig it out for themselves. But they won't be
getting it in all that rush. The mind is not a
, sponge, even if the brain does slightly resemble
one.
Forecasts of the economic impact of this war
may in some details be little more than guesses.
1 Agricultural communities in Oregon, for ex
ample, may suffer actual slumps or fail to par
ticipate in the generally increased activity and
; prosperity, as some of their people fear, or the
reverse may come to pass. One thing does seem
rather dear; coast communities normally de
pendent upon tourists and! weekend visitors
either, will suffer or will have to. find some
other source of income. There will be few
motor tourists, and valley residents will be dis
posed to save their tires tor more essential
driving. , i ' - f 'lt - - '. "M
Charley IJndbergh has offered his servi
ces to the army and W don't know why that
" too must be made a national issue. But by all
rr.eans the verdict should be such as to prevent
his being made a martyr. - ;
YaH Street Journal of all publications, is
the first, so far as; we have observed, to men
tion that because of the tire restrictions and
the stoppage of , automobile manufacture,
courtlnr win move back into the parlor."
&. in a i
Paul Mane,
Billions Talk ! .
Those billions j of dollars mentioned by
President Roosevelt; in his "state -of the union
and budget messages to congress this week are
going to work, going; to fight. They won't start
those particular billions working and fighting
until July. Other billions figured in an earlier
budget are doing the working and fighting now.
However, those more numerous billions
forthcoming after June 30 have already begun
to talk fluently. They speak, as someone said
of nature, "a various language" understandable
everywhere in the world. Their words were un
derstood in Berlin, in Tokyo, in Rome, perhaps
even in Vichy. They were understood in Lon
don, in Moscow, in Chungking, in Batavia, in
Manila.
They constituted a threat and a promise.
They must have been a blow to morale in some
capitals and among some peoples, a lift to mo
rale elsewhere. What they said was that the
most resourceful of all nations was preparing
to devote all its resources to the fight for free
dom and world security,
"Money talks," men used to say the
phrase didn't have an inspiring connotation.
But these billions ;are not exactly "money."
There just isn't that much money. These bil
lions are chiefly hours of human labor human
life dedicated to completion of a job.
News Behind
The News
By PAUL MALLON
(Distributed by Kin Feature Syndicate, Inc. Repro
duction In whole or in part strictly prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 9. Economists swooned
when Mr. Roosevelt's new deal relief debt reached
the giddy total of 140,000,000,000 a year or so back.
None flicked a whisker at his
war program to nearly treble it
at $UO,000,000,000. All know
it can be done now, and easily.
War has brought wholly
changed financial circumstances
to the treasury. It was one thing
to get a financially depressed na
tion to pay for what' seemed to
some an unjustified accumula
tion of debt years and a wholly
different matter to rally patriotic
support in an outraged coun
try for all-out financing.
There are 30,000,000 fami
lies in the United States. If
each family could purchase about $1350 of de
fense bonds on an average, the needed $40,
000,000,000 of our new debt will be financed. It is
now around $70,000,000,000. Some families would
be able to take far less, but others might make up
the deficit by purchasing more. The treasury has
foolishly put a $3750 limit on each individual's
annual purchase, but it is possible to buy one such
bond ior each member of the family husband,
wife, son, daughter and perhaps the treasury
will soon awaken and remove the limit
With the national income nearing the $120,
000,000,000 mark it is apparent $40,000,000,00 of
additional', debt can be raised one way or another,
withoutjpmch difficulty.
j..
Such a large debt does not now forecast even
tual economic disaster as it might have when our
struggling uncertain national income was around
$70,000,000,000 a few years back. All it means now
is that the treasury will have to raise about $2,500,
000,000 a year hereafter to pay interest. The debt
itself may never be paid off in any future yet fore
seeable. It will merely be refinanced and carried
indefinitely.
All the treasury will have to worry about,
therefore, is raising the annual interest. That
means, in effect, the future living standard of this
country can never be permitted to slip back intp
the kind of depression we had before, else the
treasury would have difficulty raising interest
money.
Such a debt thus imposes a greater obligation
on government to keep this country prosperous in
the post-war period when world markets will be
reopened.
" There is every likelihood that Russia will be
in war with Japan on the Far Eastern front In the
spring. Such a conflict would relieve the Jap pres
sure on Singapore, if the British can hold out that
long in Malaya.
The natural antagonism of Russia and Japan
dates back long before this war in ancient enmity.
Only the necessities of red concentration of every
effort against Hitler has prevented resumption of
their unended war.
Sooner than that may come favorable action
against the Japs in China. They sneaked out most
of their air force for use in their Malayan and
Philippine campaigns. As a result they can no lon
er scout the positions of the Chinese army.
As at Changsha, the Chinese will be able to
muster their strength at various points undetected.
The Japs still have over a million men In
China proper, and possibly 400,000 on the Siberian
frontier (they recently withdrew 100,000 from
there).
NOTE The British tried to. get! the Chinese; to
go after Changsha when Hongkong .was besieged,
in the hope that it would relieve Jap pressure on
the British stronghold. The Chinese replied in ef
fect that they would be slaughtered, because they
were inferior In equipment and air strength. iYet
when the Japs finally withdrew troops fibm
Changsha to finish their Hongkong drive, the Chin
ese rushed in and trapped the remaining force
(50,000 they say). I
A Joint British-Chinese pincers drive from
Burma and China upon the backs of the Japs In
Thailand and Indo-China is something General
Wavell nas in his sleeve.
To all outward, appearances, the Chinese and
British are merely bolding on the northern Malaya
front, and all authoritative information here sug
gests they -will continue defensive tactics indefin
itely. Jungles confront them and their air force Is
' not -strong.' ; . j ' - . ' q
Yet a brief dispatch out of Rangoon the other
day expressed British opinion that they could hold
. there. Unquestionably an offensive from that point
is too tempting si surprise to be overlooked. As
soon as the planes and equipment can be mustered,
and Chinese cooperation can be obtained, that blow
will fall. s. . w 4 - - . i. .' ' - ,
How!
"HmniQiraGdl
By FRANCIS GERARD
The Headache Will Come Later, (Hon.) Rat, And
Bits for Breakfast
By R, J. HENDRICKS
Before and after 1-10-42
Pearl Harbor; from
November 2 to December
28, a vast change came:
V S
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Quoting McGroarty further: "I
found him to be none too happy
concerning his own future and
the future of boys like himself.
He was not at all sure that the
plan of life he had hoped to pur
sue would ever be realized. He
said he did not discuss the mat
ter with his father and mother,
especially with his mother, who,
like all mothers, walks with a
troubled heart in these troubled
days. He was steeling himself to
face fearlessly whatever the fu
ture might hold and to spare his
parents as much as possible from
worry and heartbreak. He was
saddened rather than resentful
at the prospect which lay before
him and the youth of the land
In which he was born, which he
loves deeply and which he
stands ready to defend with his
life if his country were to be
invaded and attacked by a for
eign foe.
"All that disturbed him was
that the pleasant and happy plan
of life that he had cherished in
his heart like a sunny dream
will be upset and never realized.
S
"As my visit drew to a close
I felt thankful that I did not take
advantage of the traditional pri
vilege of an elder brother to lec
ture a younger. I recall the say
ing, 'Old men for counsel, young
men for war.' And here we were,
an elder and a younger brother,
together in a house where I was
well beloved. Of what avail
would have been any counsel of
mine to this boy, ripe for war,
Nvith its heritage of wounds,
disease and death? A boy at the
threshold of manhood who, if
the worst is to come, must do the
Your Federal
Income Tax
No, 5
FORMS FOR MAKING RE
TURNS Forms for filing returns of
income for 1941 have been sent
to persons who filed returns lrst
year. Failure to receive a form,
however, does not relieve a tax
payer of his obligation to file
his return and pay the tax on
time on or before March 16 if
: the return Is made on the calendar-year
basis, as is the case
, with most individuals. . :
Forms may be obtained upon
j request,' written or personal,
2 jfrom the, offices . of collectors
. and. from deputy collectors of
internal- revenue In the : larger
cities and towns.
A person should file his re
turn on Form 1040, unless his
gross Income for 1941 does not
. exceed $3000 and consists whol
; ly of salary, wages, or. other
: compensation for personal ser-
; vices, dividends, interest, ; rent,
annuities, or royalties, in which
; event he may elect to tue it on
Form 1040 A, a simplified form
- on which the tax may be read
ily ascertained by reference to-
: table contained In the form.
The refurn must be filed with
the collector of internal revenue
for the district in which the
; taxpayer has his legal residence
or principal place of business on -or
before midnight of March 18,
1842. The tax may be paid in
full at the time of filing the re
turn, or in four equal install
ments, due on or before March
18, June 15, September 15, and
' December-13. . . -: .. -, ., -
fighting and the dying, and not
I. I thought of so many men in
the seats of the mighty in our
own country whose heads are
gray with the years, clamoring
to send American boys out upon
death-ridden seas and alien bat
tlefields to do the fighting and
the dying in wars not of their
making. The very thought of it
sent a shudder through my heart
and left my soul bowed and
troubled as I realized how soon
this splendid boy might have to
part with all his happy dreams
and with love and life itself, for
what?"
Now follows the article of
Poet Laureate McGroarty in his
-column for the issue of Decem
ber 28:
S
"
"The way it came to pass that
I learned about the book and the
motion picture, entitled 'How
Green Was My Valley,' was that
there was a gathering of people
in a lodge room where Tudor
Williams, the famous Welsh
singer, was present. He had with
him the group of Welsh singers
whom he had trained and direct
ed for the songs that are sung
in the motion-picture produc
tion. "They are all Welsh-born,
these singers, as Tudor Williams
himself is Welsh-bom. They
sang in Welsh. Sons of old Gwa
lia, singing in the ancient tongue
of the land of their fathers, a
tongue older than the language
of the Greeks and from which
the Greeks took their alphabet;
Celts of that old race that
brought culture to the islands of
the narrow seas when the Sax
ons and Angles were wearing
bearskins for clothes. The Celts
who taught the first Saxon King
his letters.
"As I heard these wonderful
songsters my mind went back to
the old blue hills of Penn's
Woods where. I was born and
spent the unforgotten days of
Assassinated?
boyhood. There were coal mines
there, the miners being mostly
Welsh. And the memory came
back to me of a great day at one
of the Welsh feasts at which I
heard 5000 Welsh miners singing
the songs of their native Wales
as though in one voice like the
single tone of a great organ,
members of the singing race,
sons of Gwalia, to whom song Is
of the very essence ot fheir lives.
I grew up with them and loved
them, as they loved me.
"But the matter did not end
there. It had its reactions. The
next day when the rain that
came In the night had cleared
and vanished with the dawn, I
looked across my own valley
that lies between the Verdugos
and the lower ranges' of the Si-'
erra Madre. Every tree and
shrub washed clean i with the
rain. And I said, too, 'How green
is my valley.'
j
"There was a great peace In
my heart with all these olden
memories and that recent ex
perience with Tudor Williams
and his singers resting soothing
ly within me. But it did not last
long. A rude awakening came, a
harsh and startling awakening.
"It came the third night fol
lowing my happy visit with the
Welsh singers. There " was a
blackout' ordered. Our country
was at war with Japan."
(Concluded tomorrow.)
Chapter 27 con tinned
She looked at him vaguely and
said, "What was that, Nikki?"
He repeated the gist of what
he had said and she murmured, ,
"Oh, yes, of coursef in so ab
sent tone that .the: Prince felt
a sudden feeling of fear that
there" might yet be i a slip be
tween the cup and the lip. "
. : f '
The night was overcast, a pale
moon making but brief appear
ances. The age-old J yew trees,
which bordered the! path from
the lych-gate up to the Norman
porch of the little church, stir
red uneasily in a sudden gust
of wind as three men! made their
way through the darkness of the
cemetery. j
In the lead, Meredith spoke
softly over his shoulder. "Get
off the gravel, Beef! j Don't walk
on tiptoe! Move flat-footed!"
, "That's how I usually move,
sir," chuckled Beef hardly above
a whisper.
Yves Blaydes-Steele trod close
upon the heels of the other two,
staring about him at the ghostly
white headstones, !
"I think well do all right
here," said Sir John quietly.
"But what are we going to
see?" asked Yves, j
"Nothing, I hope," replied
Meredith. j
"But what are we; doing here
then?"
"To see that nobody else comes
Into the cemetery. By the way.
Beef," he went on, "you're quite
certain Rainbird Understands
what he and his fellows have
got to do?" I
"Quite sure, Sir John," replied
Beef. "The place is surrounded."
"Good," said Meredith: "In t
that ease, we may as well settle
down to wait." j
They sat on the! ground on
mackintoshes which Meredith
had brought with .him. "I call
this bloody dull!1 remarked
Yves, while grinding out the
butt of his third flag," when .
suddenly they heard footsteps
coming up the lane from the
village. They were not very
steady footsteps either and pres
ently the man, whoever he was,
burst Into raucous song.
"Good lord!" exclaimed Yves.
"That's WhisUecraft the black
smith, on one of jhs periodic
drunks." j
Whistlecraft began an octave
higher when a sudden crash cut
short his song. ; ?
"Blast the fellow!" breathed
Meredith. "He's climbed over
the cemetery wall and fallen on
his head."
The moon at this point came
out and they were; able to see
the huge figure of the unsteady
blacksmith lumbering to his feet
and start off towards the church.
Just then a new actor ap
peared on the scene in the shape
of a large, shaggy dog which
trotted quickly across the ceme
tery and suddenly stopped dead,
pricking up his ears. The dog
was quite near the cemetery
wall. To Meredith's horror, the
animal began sniffing the
ground, then, blew violently and
started to dig.
"Blast the dog!" exclaimed Sir
John. i
"What's the excitement?" ask
ed Yves. "I think it's rather fun
ny." Meredith was hesitating what
to do when Whistlecraft's glance
suddenly focussed on those ca
nine activities.-? To, oT boyT
roared the village blacksmith In
a resounding bellow.
The dog looked up, studied
the loud voiced j stranger, and
went on with his digging.
"Good dog! Good dog!" yelled
the : blacksmith. ( "Here, lemme
help you! :q : . - -
To Meredith's intense annoy
ance, Whistlecraft fell upon his
. m i.
with his hands as the dog was
doing with! his paws.
"Come on, Beef!" said Mere
dith rising! to his feet. "You deal
with the 4og; IH take Whistle
craft" ' ;i . . -
Yves watched his companions
as they advanced soft-footed on
the diggers.
"I say,"; said Meredith, tap
ping Whistlecraft on the shoul
der. ', j
"Eh?" asked the blacksmith,
looking up; as Sir John hit him
with knockout force on the an
gle of thej Jaw.
The dog growled but Beef
neatly , dropped the mackintosh
over him, and -picked , up the
snarling bundle.
The dog: was dropped over the
low cemetery wall and Beef
came bade to give Meredith a
hand In carrying the unconscious
blacksmith Into the porch of the
church where they deposited
him. . . ; .
"What did you want to inter
rupt them for?" asked Yves
when the : other two men were
back. "Really, they were funny;
Whistlecraft and the dog both
digging holes."
"I suppose Td better tell you."
said Meredith. "You see, old
man, they're not the only dig
gers near!: here tonight. Some
body else; Is digging and prob
ably has dug a much larger hole
already." ;
(To! Be Continued)
Copyright by Francis Grard.
Distributed by Kin Feature
Syndicate. Inc.
Today's Garden
By LILLIE L. MADSEN
D. P. asks if he can still plant
roses. He wants to add a few to
his rose garden and has been
studying catalogues with this In
view.
While prefer fall planting
of roses, roses can be added 'suc
cessfully to the garden up to
early March. Some have even
been planted successfully later
than that! Do not plant In freez
ing weather, however. The same
holds true of spraying.
Mrs. M.' C. R. reports that sh
left her tuberous begoniass out
of doors and wants to know If
thev are frozen or if she should
take them up when she can get
onto the ground again.
I Imagine they are frozen. If
they have withstool the recent
cold there would seem little ob
ject in taking them up now.
Why not; leave them In until
spring? We are not apt to have
. much colder weather than that
which we- have already had.
D. D. asks if cherry trees can
be grafted or only budded.
I see no reason why cherries
cannot be grafted. In fact I have
seen more cherry trees grafted
successfully than budded. Graft
ing is done in spring; budding
in late summer.
Sunday Radio
Page 6
Ca dio I Programs
- ' - ' i
- 'Ci
- i -S.'? x
? - " '!
: ': -.V .
X v.
'i '..v.
. :. ;
y
Berlin and Vichy lut announced
mod tbea dented that Ptem Pn
cheny minister of the interior In
the Vichy government, " and his
cabinet chief, Parmgaax, . have
been found dead alongside a rail
road track near Paris. : The de
nial said that only Paxingmox Is
dead , Pucheu ranked - aeeonc
only to "Vice Premier Admiral
Jean Carlan as pre-Geraua
- OCfTlborator, -'-
KSLM SATURDAY ISM Kc
:30 Rise N Shine.
1 :23 Russian Choir.
7:30 News.
7:45 Whispering Strings.
osu ixews.
AO-Pastor's Call.
9:15 Popular Music.
9:45 South American Music.
10 :00 Th World This Morning.
10:15 Music a la Carter.;
10 JO-Waltz Time.
11:00 Melodic Mood.
11:30 Valu Parade.
12 .-00 Lew White.
It :1 5 Noontime News.
M0 Hillbilly Serenade.
11:3-Willamette Valley Opinions.
1 KX) Hollywood Buckerooa,
1:30 Joe Relchman'a Orchestra.
1:45 Old Favorites.
J0 Vocal Varieties.
1:15 Gent Krupa.
J:45 Guadalajara Trio.;
30 Concert Genu.
4:15 News.
4:30 Teatime Tunes.
5:00 Popularity Row. i
5 JO Cocktail Hour.
60 Tonight's Headlines.
6:15 War Commentary.
20 String Serenade. !
70 Interesting racts. i
7:15 Western Serenade.
7 JO Bob Hamilton's Trio.
.-00 News.
:15 Jamboree.
.-00 News Tabloid.
8:15 Waikikl Reverie.
9 JO Edward's Old timers.
10 0 Wohl's Sophisticates.
10 JO News.
10.-45 The Number Is U1.
(
KGW NBC SATtnWAY 29 Ke.
AO-News.
H5 Sunrise Serenade.:
70 News.
7:15 Meat Curing Time.
730 Music of Vienna ;
T:45-i-Sam Hayes.
0 Ray Towers. Troubadoi
:1V-Ship ot Joy.
:S04-Strtng Serenade. !
.00 Bonnie Stuart. Singer.
:1 5 Consumer's Time.;
. S:30 News. -
t:45 Matinee la Rhythm.
l:0-JJncola Highway.
10:30 America, the fra. r;
11:00 Stars af Tomorrow.
11:00 Deienae and Your Dollar
11:15 Trora New England to V
13 JO Campua Capers, i
1:00 News. -!
1 :1 5 Tropical Park Races.
130 Week Xnd Whimsy. '
' 10 Design for Dancing
1:50 Doctors at Wrk.i .
. 10 Arcadia Ballroom Orchestra
S:2S News. , '
1 JO Religion la the News.
1:45 Three Suns Trie.
430 Emma Oterw. singer.
4:45 H. V. Kalteabern, .
SAO Paul Carson.
:O0 National Barn bane.
7:0 BUI Stern Sports NewaraaL
, 7J5 Joseph GaBlchie Orchestra.
:TtWCrand OT Opry.'
.-on Tnitn or consequent
i JO Knickerbocker Flayfc
. . .news.
tftS-Musie of the Americas.
JO-Best ot the Week.
10:0010 o'clock News.
10:15 Uptown Ballroom Oreh.
' 19.-45 Sport SetitHa. 1
11 AO Francis Werner, Violinist -.
11:15 Blue Moonlight -
11JO Neva. ,vl . i -
These schedules are suppBad fey
the respecUre stations. Asty raria
Uoas noted ky listeners are Sae to
change made by the- stations wlth
at notice to this newspaper.
All radio sUUobj may be cat from
the air at any timo la the Interests
t national defease. ;
K.EXNBS SATURDAY 11H Ke,
l.-00-MusicaI Clock, i .
70 California Agriculture.
7:15 Breakfast Qib;
0 Amen Corner, j
:30 Stars of Today.
AO Hollywood Hetdlineri,
AS Four Belles. ;
0:15 Troubador and the Lady.
JO National Farm and Horn.
10 JO Music by LavaL
10:4S-News.
11 AO Metropolitan Opera Company.
SAO News.
1:15 Glenn Miller. .
SAO Carlton Hotel j
325 News.
1:30 Report From Turkey.
S JS Jean CaTall.
3:45 Edward Tomlinsoa,
4 AO Message of Israel.
4 JO Uttle OT Hollywood.
SAO Hotel Sir Francis Drake Oreh.
30 Boy Meets Band.
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0:15 Four Polka Dots.
JO Frank Black Presents.
T AO Hemisphere Revue.
T -JO University Explorer.
75 News Headlines and HUlghta.
AO Bishop and the Gargoyle.
JO Spin and Win With riynn.
AO News.
A5 Palace Hote Orchestra.
30 The Edwards family.
10 JO The Quiet Hour.
11 AO BUtmore Hotel Orchestra,
ll :1 5 Pasadena And." Orchestra.
11 JO War New Roundup.
KA1X KBS SATCXnAT 1IM Ke.
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7 AO News. " i
7:15 Memory Timekeeper.
AO What's News.
as The Junior Musicale.
30 News.
5 US Army Band.
AO Buyer's Parade.
:1S Woman's Side of the New.
JO This and That
10 AO News.
10:15 Little Shew.
10 JO Colonial Orchestra.
11 0 Journal Jttalo:. -11
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13:45 Gypsy Caravan. - :
1230 News. -
11:45 Mcrarland Twins. ....
1 AO News. - -n . ,
1 AO Sunny Denham.
1 JO Blue Baron Orchestra.
15 News. ' .
SAO-gUniTerslty Life. . ,
SAO Anchors Awelgh, -
4 0 Invitation to Waltz. -'
4:15 News.
4 JO Royal Arch Gunnisoa, M ..
4.-45 Ray Noble Orchestra. --
JO California Meeodiea.
AO News. t j
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30 Morton Gould.
4:45 Movie Parade. '
7A0 News and Views
7:15 SpotHgt Bands.
7:45 Jerry Sears Presents.
AO Churchman's Saturday Bight
JO Radio Rodeo ; . t
AO News.
:15 Serenade.
JO Griff Williams.
10. -O0 Ray Noble Orchestra.
10:30 News.
105 Red : Norvo Orchestra.
11 AO Horace Heidt Orchestra.
11 30 Bob Crosby Orchestra.
!
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8:00 Northwest Farm Reporter.
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?20 Koln Klock.
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7 30 Bob! Carred Reporting.
7:45 Consumer News.
AO-News.
AS Kay: Thompson's Festival
JO Phil: Hanna. Songs.
:45 Pappy Cheshire's HWbtnte.
AO Theatre of Today.
90-Waltg Tim.
10 AO Let's Pretend.
1030 Voice of Broadway.
10:45 Hello Again.
11 AO News.
11 A3 Of Men and Books.
1130 Brush Creek Follies.
U0 Country Journal.
IS JO FOB Detroit.
10 Matinee at Meedowbrook.
15 News.
3 AO Cleveland Symphony Oreh.
SAO Catting Pan-America.
JO Elmer DaTis News.
a5 Newspaper of the Air.
30 American Festival. :
S.A Erwin Yeo.
:15 Traffie Quia.
30 News.
85 Bob Barred. News.
35 Elmer Davis.
AO Who. What Where At Why.
30 Anita Carol.
Saturday Night Serenade.
7 J5-PubUc Affairs.
730 Olga Coelko.
75 Leon F. Draws.
AO Guy LMnbardo Orchestra.
30 Hobby Looby.
SAO Hit1 Parade.
5 Tonlghrs Best Buy.
10 AO Five Star Final.
10:15 Bin Henry. ,
1030 World Today.
10:45-Defense Today.
11 AO-Martha Wears.
11 JO Manny Strand Orchestra.
11:55 Nana. . -, .
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10:15 Junior Matinee.
11:15 Coed Hour.
12:00 News.
11:15 Farm Hour.
1 AO Favorite Classics.
las Variety Time.
15 Organ Moods.
SAO Camera ClubeV '
1:15 Band Stand.
15 Monitor Views the Newt.
SAO Song From the HUla.
- S:15 Swindle to Suit -
1 JO Echoes Of Waikikt
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AO Dinner Concert
;.; :15 News. ,-, .ViV.. t: '
:30 Farm Hour.
7 JO Grand Opera Tonight
- 7A0 WSC vs. U of O. Baaketban.
30-Musle of the Masters. -.
. -45-10 AO-News