The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 07, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

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Tb OBEGOII STATESMAN Salem. Orecon. Saturday Morning, February 7 1912
MUHMt MM
tatemau
Wo Favor Strays Uf ; No Fear Shall Aire
From Flnt Statesman, March 28, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. S PRAGUE, President
Member of The Associated Press
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.
Price Control and Rationing
Last year, you remember, people were
worrying about America. Decadent, maybe.
Americans were living soft, comfortable lives;
had been coddled by government, promised
that government would protect and support
them. American youth . . . soft, no doubt of
thai, and probably selfish. Brought up in that
parasitic decade; never taught that they owed
their nation something. Chances were that they
couldn't take it, and wouldn't take it.
Pearl Harbor answered all that in an hour.
American youth could take it, and dish it
out too. America could take it, though perhaps
not as gracefully as American youth. On second
thoueht. maybe youth hadn't been so cozily
wrapped in cotton batting as some people
thought. Home and school and playground have
their own self -operating means of toughening
youth". Being young is a tough life at best. May
be Americans in general hadn't been living so
softly only some of them who happened to
be articulate and who judged others by them
selves and "told the world."
Americans are worried now about con
gress. Congress has grown soft. No question
about it. The president' took away all its re
sponsibility and air its initiative. Like America
and its youth, congress has to fight this war.
Can congress dish it out and take it?
Individual congressmen are not lacking in
physical courage. Possibly every one of them,
if he could get in, would be glad to enlist and
fight in the front lines. Trouble is, congress
needs a higher type of courage; the sort of
courage that is required of army officers; cour
age to shoulder responsibility, to be firm wheh
firmness is required. Moral courage.
Congress is not proud of itself just now. It
isn't that retirement thing; that's trifling. It's
the price control bill.
Congress was given the contract to build a
fort that would repel price inflation. It built a
blockhouse but, for lack of moral courage, left
two sides open because the enemies camped
on those two sides were too menacing. Congress
wasn't afraid of manufacturers nor of mer
chants, so it built stout walls against them. But
the farmers looked tough so congress just put
up a chicken-wire netting against them; labor
looked tougher so congress left that side en
tirely open.
The public, even when it saw the original
blueprints, wasn't much impressed with the po
tentialities of this blockhouse. It foresaw the
tremendous pressure that would be thrown
against it. But with two sides left open, the
public saw that it would afford no protection
whatever.
Still, there's some hope. The fort is weak,
but fortunately the president put a tough man
inside. Leon Henderson. Some of us don't like
some of his ideas, but we all concede that he's
tough and resourceful and ruthless. Fortun
ately again, after Henderson was put in there
to hold, the fort, Donald Nelson handed him
the very latest model weapon. The rationing
gun.
A tough man with a good gun . . . and
maybe, even if inflation does take the fort it
will be greatly weakened in the process.
Price control alone, even if adopted in the
blanket fashion that some commentators have
advocated, the freezing of all prices at the pre
i vailing figures on some selected date, would
solve neither the price problem nor the supply
problem. If it were possible for some merchants
to hoard and corner supplies, the results would
be (1) that many consumers wouldn't be able
to get their just share of those goods, and (2)
that certain favored consumers, "in the know"
and willing to pay, could get them on the boot
leg "black market."
With the power to requisition and manage
and ration" supply, which Henderson has ob-
lainea inrougn delegation or. powers actually
granted to Nelson, scarce goods can be made
available in limited amounts to all the public at
the ceiling price or slightly under it. Hender
son, though, had better move rapidly. He has
placed price ceilings on some 80-odd items. Ra
tioning has been limited so far to tires and
tubes; the new auto rationing rules are just
coming out and there is a sort of temporary,
voluntary rationing of sugar pending the real
thing.
If Henderson moves rapidly enough topre
vent a runaway it will be fine for the consumer.
With no ceiling on wages and no effective ceil
ing on farm products, it will be anything but
fine for the manufacturer, the wholesaler and
the retailer. They may be ground between the
upper and nether millstones. What about our
system of free enterprise? Only the shell left
for the duration. The shell will still be there to
facilitate its rebuilding when peace comes. At
least, that's what we can hope. Meanwhile,
chances are that even if he loses money, the
manufacturer won't be free to quit. He'll just
have to take it.
degree in which case a crop is guaranteed," come
drouth or freeze.
Bosh! Oh, maybe in Ohio one needs a col
lege degree to raise anything. But here In the
Willamette valley, vegetables are so eager to
grow that one can hardly restrain them from
coming up where they're not wanted. Raising
a garden is no trick at all if you'll just make
up your mind to do the necessary weeding.
Actually we doubt whether the professor
advice is sound, even for Ohioans. Everyone in
England is making gardens, these war years.
What the English can do, Americans much
closer to the soil, as a rule can do with equal
success. Besides, it's good healthful exercise.
"Scientific"; Gardening
- i '
If you were a university professor special
izing in a certain subject, naturally you would
fight any suggestion tfiat the thing you taught
could be picked up over night by any Tom,
Dick or Harry You would explain to anyone
willing to listen, that it was an extremely diffi
cult and technical business, to be mastered
only by : those with special predilections and
after long and exhaustive study.
: Editorials in a. number of newspapers, in
tended to discourage the raising of vegetables
by rank neophytes as likely to hamper the war
time food production ' effort ; by wasting seed,
puzzled us mightily ', , w - . ;
.Then i great light dawned. It seemed that
the original source of these warnings was Prof.
J. H. Boyd, specialist in vegetable, gardening .
at Ohio State f universal Doubtless ; it is his
theory that one must have at least a bachelor's
degree in order properly to plant carrot seed
and. have reasonable expectation that carrots
"will stow; One- really ought to have a master'
HI
Panl Halloa
Never did we expect to agree with Harold
Ickes. But his insistence upon limiting the acre
age purchased by any one individual or com
pany in the area to be irrigated with water
from Grand Coulee, makes sense both from
the liberal and the practical standpoint.
News Behind
The News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6. Each day over the
ether from Tokyo, Rome and Berlin comes the only
good fiction this war has so far produced the
axis propaganda broadcasts.
Where in American prose, for
instance, is there a match for
this squeaky mouse-like news
broadcast' by Tokyo:
"In a special message writ
ten for the benefit of his coun
trymen, an officer of the US
y3S7 I army who was captured by im-
5w J perial forces in the fierce battle
f or Kavangas bay declared: Sur-
S I render ' comrades of the Ameri-
. .lii 1 ran nrmv . . . and . . th TTS
is wish to heir vou tn nrav for a
free peace between the US and
Japan.' "
The US army here is wish to
know whereinhell the Japs found an American
who addresses troops, as "comrades."
But probably the best thing Tokyo has ever
done iii a literary way was its announcement that
Columbus did not discover America . . . the Japs
did!
"The cultural organization of the American
continent is proved to have been created by the
Asiatic racej" the Japanese have announced. "It
is said that;.Colurnbus discovered America but it
was not discovered for the first time by him. His
was the first time a European discovered the
American continent." People "of Japanese race"
advanced along .the shore of Alaska and North
America "as far as the coastline of Peru."
The same commentator offered an equally
puzzling and dim alteration in the history of the
American revolution by saying flatly this rebel
lion against England was "planned by Jews and
British pirates" (which should be enough to make
George Washington turn over in his grave, even at
this late date).
Italy, too, has newly discovered "the Jewish
issue." Its commentator tripped around the ancient
Italian lineage of Fiorello LaGuardia by an
nouncing he has "little Italian blood, and the soul
of a Jew."
Rome hews strangely to the line that Ameri
cans are "dumb, silly, foolish" and declares that
the collective naivete of the Americans "is greater
than their individual simplicity."
Mind you all this stuff is prepared for Ameri
can consumption exclusively, and represents the
axis effort to destroy American morale. If you
can think of anything less cleverly designed for
that purpose than the Jap claims that they are our
cultural forbears and the Italian denunciation of
us as stupid, you no doubt could sell it to Tokyo
and Rome.
Yet the most comforting of all to us is the
Berlin radio. It recently announced:
"Col. Knox cannot find peace even in his pri
vate bomb shelter. He tried yesterday to go away
for a weekend. He did not want to be there when
the congressional investigation against Kimmel be
gan. But he could not find peace. As soon as he ar
rived at his destination a Western Union arrived
with a telegram reading: 'Return immediately.
Must see you on urgent matter. (Signed) Frankie.'
Aside from the facts that Knox has no bomb
shelter, did not leave town, no congressional in
vestigation of Kimmel has yet been made and no
telegram was sent, the broadcast inadvertently as
sured us that Berlin's sources of information in
Washington are lousy or non-existent.
Berlin also made a feature of the "mysterious
disappearance of the Sultan of Johore." His family
was concerned. A few days later Berlin cleared
the mystery. The sultan had been found in Japan
ese lines and restored to his family. Ail the time
the sultan had been fighting with the British in
Singapore where he was recently interviewed and
photographed by American correspondents.
The nazis like this "mystery" method. They
announced America had a miracle weapon, "the
miniature airship." They even had the type num
ber "K-3" and said 100,000 would be built In a
year. A few days later they announced the United
States had hoaxed the world about that ship, that
there was no such ship as indeed there wasn't
They only failed, to say that they had concocted
the straw ship in order to destroy rt
Another all-too-obvious German trick is to
ascribe the rawest of its fictions to remote towns,
as in this:
"Stavanger, Norway: The Japanese Times and
Advertiser in Tokyo reports today that Admiral
Kimmel and General Short have been sentenced
, to death" for' Pearl Harbor.
Thus Berlin broadcasts a dispatch from Nor
way of what a newspaper in Tokyo is supposed to
know about what happened in Washington, where
as everyone to the US knew both Kimmel and
Short had not even been courtmartialed.
The axis nations have a law inflicting heavy
penalties, sometime death, for listening to foreign
broadcasts. They are afraid. .This country should
have a law requiring citizens to listen to the axis
broadcasts. Nothing could, better preserve for us
that equilibrium of national good humor and
amusement and at the same time make us want
- to fight " - ' "
o
of rp a w
fhrv UUD Irda U I
By PETER MUIR
The Minute Men of '42 Have Another Hour Their Job to Do
Bits for Breakfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Willamette University 2-7-42
was 100 years old Sunday
last; oldest institution of
its kind west of the Rockies:
"US".
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Quoting as promised from the
Bashford book: "President Fisk
(Wilbur Fisk of Wesleyan Uni
versity of Middletown, Connect
icut), wrote to Lee telling him
Your Federal
Income Tax
GAINS OR LOSSES;
CAPITAL ASSETS
The term "capital assets" is
defined as the property held by
the taxpayer (whether or not
connected with his trade or busi
ness), but does not include stock
in trade of the taxpayer or prop
erty of a kind which would prop
erly be included in the inventory
of the taxpayer if on hand at
the close of the taxable year, or
property held by the taxpayer
primarily for sale to customers
in the ordinary course of his
trade or business, or property,
used in the trade or business, of
a character which is subject to
the allowance for depreciation;
or an obligation of the United
States, its possessions, a state or
territory or political subdivision
thereof, or of the District of Co
lumbia, issued on or after March
1, 1941, on a discount basis and
payable without interest at a
fixed maturity date not exceed
ing one year from the date of
issue.
Capital gains and losses are
classified as "short-term" (ap
plicable to capital assets held for
18 months or less) and "long
term" (applicable to capital as
sets held for more than 18
months). Such gains and losses
are taken into consideration in
the percentages shown on the
return, based upon the period
of time during which the assets
were held.
Short-term capital losses are
allowable only to the extent of
short-term capital gains. How
ever, any net short-term capital
loss (not in excess of the net
income for the taxable year)
may be carried over" to the suc
ceeding year and applied against
the short-term capital gains not
already offset by short-term
capital losses in such year. The
carry-over is restricted to one
year.
In the case of a net long-term
capital gain or loss, an alterna
tive tax' is imposed with respect
to a gain if such tax is less than
the normal tax and surtax on
net income, and in the event of
a loss, such alternative tax is
imposed if greater than the nor
mal tax and surtax on net in
come. Where a taxpayer derives a
net long-term capital gain and
computes his tax under section
117 (c) (1) of the Internal Reve
nue Code, relating to alternative
taxes, the base for determining
the IS per cent limitation on the
charitable contributions deduc
tion provided by section 23 (o)
of the, code and the earned in
come credit provided by section
25 (a) (S) of the code is "net
income.
Where's taxpayer sustains
a net. long-term capital loss and
computes his tax under section
117 c) (2) of the code, the base
for determining the charitable
contributions deduction is "or
dinary net income" that is,
"net income plus the , amount
of the net long-term capital loss
- and. the base for determining
the earned income credit is "or
dinar? net income" as adjusted
for the charitable contributions
deduction - .
of the Indian cry for light (the
Flathead and Nez Perce Indians
who went to St. Louis seeking
the white man's Book of Hea
ven), and the young teacher ac
cepted : as providential the call
to become a missionary to the
Oregon Indians (Oregon Coun
try Indians), was admitted to
the New England Conference
and ordained. . . . During the
year Bishop Emory opened the
way for him, and he (Lee) visit
ed Washington and secured the
endorsement of President (An
drew) Jackson and the secre
taries of state and war, to found
a mission in the Oregon Coun
try." From that time on, Lee and
his mission had the protection
of Andrew Jackson. The Hud
son's Bay Company people, long
arm of the British government
in the Oregon Country, remem
bered Jackson and the Battle
of New Orleans.
Lee did not have to fight In
dians, partly because he was not
afraid of Indians. He went
among them utterly without
fear. He was probably never in
danger, from them, partly on
account of his lack of fear from
them, which they noted, and so
granted him a sort of charmed
life. He came nearest to danger
from Indians on the Umpqua,
perhaps, when he visited them
in August 1840, in company
with Gustavus Hines, seeking a
place for a branch mission on
the lower reaches of that river,
where, 12 years and a month
before, almost the entire party
under Jedidiah Smith had been
slaughtered.
Bashford, in telling of Jason
Lee's first overland trip to the
Oregon Country, in 1834, used
these words:
S V
"The mission group crossed
the plains wiuv a company of
some 70 men, largely hunters
and fur traders, 250 horses, and
some cattle taken by the mis
sionaries: One night when the
horses were stampeded and ev
ery one expected the Indian
warwhoop to sound, Jason Lee
led a few of the bravest men
in recapturing the animals; and
from that hour no man doubted
the courage any more than he
had previously doubted the
piety of the Methodist preacher.
'Looks as though he were Well
calculated to buffet the diffi
culties of a wild country, wrote
Townsend (the naturalist), one
of his fellow travelers."
Quoting Bashford further
along: "June 15, 1834, the trav
elers reached the summit of the
Rocky; mountains, soon after
passing which the missionaries
changed to a company under
Capt Thomas McKay (son of
Mrs. Dr. John McLoughlin), an
American hunter and trapper,
because Wyeth (Capt N. J.
Wyeth with his party on his
second trip proposing to estab
lish a trading post in competi
tion with the Hudson's Bay
Company) planned to stop and
erect a fort, which Wyeth nam
ed Fort HalL at the Junction of
the Oregon and Missouri with
the Canadian and Utah trails.
1 , V S
"When the Indians from the
Columbia River region, who
were 1 with Captain McKay,
learned that Lee was journeying
to the Oregon Country to teach
the Indians a knowledge of the
true God and how to worship
Him, they expressed great Joy,
and presented him with two
horses. . '
"Jason Lee secured permis
sion to preach to Captain Mc
Kay's men, as he had done to
Captain Wyeth'a, and preached
the first Protestant sermon west
of the Rocky mountains July
27, 1834, at the point where
Captain Wyeth built Fort Hall.
a
"The need of religion and the
slight impression of the sermon
alike are shown by the fact that
the company adjourned from
the sermon to a horse race, in
which one of the men was
thrown from his horse and kill
ed; and Jason Lee conducted
the first American Protestant
funeral service west of the
Rocky mountains on the next
day.
"Captain McKay's company
reached Fort Vancouver, on the
north bank of the Columbia
river and six miles from the
mouth of the Multnomah or
Willamette, September 16, 1834.
Here Jason Lee preached the
first Protestant sermon on the
Pacific coast September 28,
1834.
S "a
"December 14 Lee baptized
the first ingathering of his mis
sion, consisting, not of full
blooded Indians, but of four
adult members of the Hudson's
Bay company and 17 half-breed
children. This was the first in
gathering of Protestant converts
on the Pacific shore."
And Jason Lee was more than
(Chapter 7 (Contlnaed)
As he passed near the CO's
quarters, still deep in his
thoughts about the girl, he heard
the telephone ring loudly. It
rang three times, the signal for a
scramble. He hurried over to the
door and waited, at the same
time putting on his helmet With
this covering everything but bis
nose and eyes, he did not look so
young, because the eyes were
now serious. The other pilots
had heard the phone and were
streaming out of the mess hall,
and the ground crew of 24 men
busied themselves wheeling the
planes into take-off positions.
Hutch could hear fragments of
the conversation as the sharp,
dear, voice of the., CO repeated
the instructions be was receiv
ing. "You say Hastings? ... Do
you know how many? .... Be
tween 20 and 30 bombers. Good!
And defense? . . s Above the
clouds. Naturally you can't tell.
Very well. Sir. Good-bye."
He came out of the door and
found the American waiting
there. "Splendid," he said. "I'm
glad I found you here." He put
his hand on David's, shoulder and
they walked briskly across the
field where the other pilots were
already climbing into their cock
pits. "You will take Mac's job
as squadron leader. Now, listen
carefully. There are enemy
planes coming over in the direc
tion of Hastings, between 20 and
30 bombers that bur men have
spotted, but they can't tell whe
ther there are any Messer
schmitts or not because of the
clouds. The weather seems to be
worse down that way than it is
here. You know what to do,
don't you?"
"Yes, Sir."
"Fine." They had reached the
planes and the CO announced
his decision to appoint Hutchin
son as squadron leader. There
were general signs of approval,
but any vocal acclamation was
drowned out by the starting mo
tors. Chapter Eight
Hutch was warming up and
almost ready to start when he
saw a stocky young man in av
iator's uniform, his wings too
shiny and very new, come run
ning across the field towards
the CO. He guessed it must be
Wendy's brother, ' and he was
right Philip Bruce had just ar
rived and, seeing; the squadron
about to take off, had run as
hard as he could to report and
ask permission to join this flight.
"Why not?" the CO said.
"We're one plane short in the
Yellow Flight. That's the second
section, as you know, and the
leader can keep an eye on you."
He signaled Hatch to go ahead,
ordered another plane out of the
hangar at top speed, and yelled
a missionary to the Indians of
the Oregon Country. His com
ing was the fruitful answer to
the challenge of Resident Jef
ferson when he sent the Lewis
and Clark party across the con
tinent, hoping to start a move
ment to carry the lines of our
Republic to the shores of the
Pacific. :
(Continued tomorrow.)
at the head mechanic to fetch a
flying suit, helmet and para
chute. Philip was in full kit and in
his place, with motor roaring,
before the last plane left the
ground. He climbed hard to
catch the Yellow Flight Slowly
he passed the Green Flight, then
the Blue Flight was behind him,
and then he found his place,
with only the Red Flight, that
of the squadron leader, in front
of him. He could plainly see the
two other pilots in his flight, and
they made signs of welcome to
him, which, he answered.
He was getting the feel of
things when a voice came to him
over the radio-telephonel Is the
new man Bruce?" It was the
squadron leader's voice.
"Yes, Sir."
"Hutchinson speaking. Wel
come to the Hornets!"
The even dozen Spitfires, sep
arated Into four groups of three
each, turned slowly as they
climbed for as much altitude as
possible and headed in a south
westerly direction towards Has
tings on the English channel.
The cloud banks grew thicket
and thicker, and the air was
very rough. Hutch wondered if
he would be able to contact the
enemy in such weather. A
strong wind was blowing and
clouds scudded by at breathless
speed, at times hiding one flight
of the squadron from the other,
but somehow they managed to
hold their formation and con
tinue to climb.
Altitude gauges read 17,000
feet before they were in the
clear above the storm, and be
low them all they could see was
a vast carpet of clouds looking
soft and solid like something
you could fall into and enjoy.
It didn't seem possible that you
would go right on through to
earth.
Hutch strained his eyes ahead,
but could see nothing. Behind
him the Hornets came on in per
fect formation, moving up and
down slightly with the varying
air current'. He asked each man
in turn if everything was run
ning smoothly, and the answers
came back in the affirmative.
Here above the clouds there
was sun and, wishing to have it
at his back in case he sighted
the enemy. Hutch swung off di
rectly to the west With suffi
cient altitude and the sun at his
back he had no fears.
On the squadron droned, mile
after mile, and Hutch began to
feel uneasy. If he missed the en
emy on his first trip in command
that would be bad. He searched
in every direction, then banked
to get a better view below. There
they were just coming up
through the clouds. Five, six,
seven, eight, he counted, and
still coming out He could see
the huge black crosses plainly
on their wing tips, and recog
nized the planes as Heinkel
bombers. Nine, ten, eleven,
twelve, and still coming out . .
(To be continued)
Copyright by Peter Muir; Dis
tributed by King Features Syn
dicate, Inc.
Uad'io Programs
KSLM SATURDAY IMS Kc.
6:30 Rise "N" Shine.
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1:45 Castles in the Air.
8:15 Wohl's Sophisticates.
8 JO News.
8:35 Musical Horoscope.
9:00 Pastor s Call. -
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10:00 The World This Morning.
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11. -00 Bands on Parade.
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145 A La Carter.
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1 AS Week End Whimsy.
130 Air Youth of America.
1:45 Melodic Strings.
2 AO Doctors at Work.
2:30 In a Sentimental Mood.
2:45 Novatime.
SAO Arcadia Ballroom Orchestra.
8:25 News. -
3 JO Religion in the News.
8:43 Three Suns Trio.
430 Emma Otero, Stager.
4:45 H. V. Kaltenborn.
SAO Paul Carson.
830 Ed Stoker. - r
8:00 National Barn Dance.
7:00 BiU Stern Sports NewsreeL
1:15 Ink Spots.
7:30 Grand Ol Opry.
SAO Truth or Consequences.
830 Knickerbocker Play house.
AO News.
AS Music of the Americas.
30 Best of the Week.
10:0010 o'clock News.
10:15 Uptown Ballroom Orch.
10.-45 Hotel BUtmore Orchestra.
1035 News. 4
II AO Bal Tabarin Cafe Orchestra.
1130 News.
KSX NBS SATURDAY UN Kb.
- SAO Musical Oocs.
1 AO California Agriculture.
1:15 Breakfast dab.
SAO Amen Corner.
8 JO Stars of Today, .
AO Four Belles.
:15 Troubador and the Lady.
9 JO National Farm and Home,
10 Jo Music by Laval.
10:45 News.
11 AO Metropolitan Opera Company.
S AO News.
8:15 Glenn MUlsr.
, S 30 Savoy Ballroom Orchestra.
SAO Carlton Hotel Orchestra.
' S 23 New. ; -,
. 8 JO Report from ; rurkey.
S35-Jean CavsJl.
' 8:43 Edward Tomnnson.
4A0 Message of Israel.
430 Little Or Hollywood. - -
AO-Hotel Sir Francis Drake Orch.
JO-Ted Steele. .:
AO Green Hornet
.. C 30 Rocaeater Civic Orchestra. '
70 Believe It or Not.
730 University Explorer.
7:43 News Headlines and RUlghts. ,
SAO Florentine Gardens Orchestra. '
30 Spin and Win With riyna.
A3 Palace Hots Orchestra.
30 The-Edwards ramily.
10 AO Pasadena Aud. Orchestra. "
, 1030 The Quiet Hour.. :- . -
11 AO This Moving World.
11 :15 Organ.
1130 War News Roundup.
KOD4 CBS SATURDAY 819 KS.
AO Northwest Farm Reporter.
6:15 Breakfast Bulletin.
30 Koin Klocit
1:15 Headliners.
130 Bob Garred Reporting.
1:45 Let's Waltz.
8 AO Jans Endicott
8:15 Consumer News.
830 Lets Pretend.
9 AO Theatre of Today.
.30 Mid-Morning Melodies.
10 AO Serenade.
10:30 Adventures in Science.
10:45 Golden Gate, Quartet.
11 AO News.
11A5 Of Men and Books.
11:30 Brush Creek Follies.
12 AO Country Journal.
1230 William Winter, News.
12:45 FOB Detroit.
1 AO Matinee at Meadowbrook.
2:00 News.
2 :1S Cleveland Symphony Orch.
3 AO Calling Pan-America.
330 Elmer Da7ls News.
8:45 Newspaper of the Air.
430 Columbia Concert.
SAO Sports Story.
1:15 Traffic Quiz.
830 News.
5:45 Bob Garred. News.
5:55 Elmer Davis.
Who, What, Where A Why.
8 JO Erwin Yeo.
:4S Saturday Night Serenade.
1:15 What's The Answer
130 Gypsy Caravan.
7:45 Leon T. Drews.
SAO Guy Lombards Orchestra.
8 JO Hobby Looby.
8 AS News. .
AO Hit Parade.
:-Btu Henry, New.
10 AO Five Star Final
10:15 War Tims Women.
1030 Dance Time.
1030 Air Flo.
1030 World Today.
10:45 Defense Today.
11 AO-Martha Mean.
1130 Manny Strand Orchestra.
1135 News.
-KOAC
SATURDAY 830 KA.
10AS News.
10:15 Junior MHnee.
11:15 Coed HourT
12:00 News.
12:15 Farm Hour.
1 AO Favorite "i
J5-Vety TirneT
1:45 Organ Moods.
J :?0 Camera Clubs.
2:15 Band Stand.
2 Monitor Views the News.
:tf25' Jf0 th Hills.
Swindi,, to 8uit. -
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4 AO Artists In BeettaL
!:-cUt Defense.
:wErntngv vesper
. 5:?2SlnB Concert.
. sua news.
Farm Hour.
l9i r Tonight,
y Openers.
, 30 Orchestral Gems.
SS-Traffic Safety.
rTMJLsie..of masters.
:45-10AO News
Sunday Radio
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