PAGE F0U3 The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon. Thtrrsdar Monrfng. February 12, 1942 l ii im '- ..J' v-., "..-w;rv-"-i""" w "Wo F?or Suxiys Us; No Fear Shall Awe" from Hnt Statesman, March 23, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CJ2ARLES A. S PRAGUE, President Member of The Associated Presi , 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. Captain in a Storm " The world will little note, nor lone remem ber, what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain that this nation, x . under God, shall have a new birth of freedom and that government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth. Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. ; President Roosevelt's job is a soft snap. That is, in comparison to the one Abraham Lincoln had on his hands about the time that he de livered the Gettysburg address and throughout most of the followinff vear. 1884. True, the Civil war was a piffling affair in comparison to the onejiow going on. It is still recognized as the dawn of mechanized war, no matter how outlandish you may , consider its mechanization, but .it didn't cost Uncle Sam much more than a billion dollars in any year. That affords a rough idea of its scope. . But the problems! We thought last year, prior to" December 7, that the nation was rather hope lessly divided as to its relation to the war in Europe and its proper course. Debate seemed somewhat intense. But we hadn't seen anything to compare with the differences of opinion within the northern states as to the justification for the Civil war, the advisability of continuing it and kindred problems. Such Copperheads as Vallandigham were continually stumping the , country, condemning the war and Abe Lincoln; and then there were the Peace Democrats who didn't come right out and support the south, but Insisted all 'along that the south could and should be drawn back into the union on the old status quo with slavery restored. You know of course, that some men in his cabinet had that view; it may be news that some high-ranking officers in the army, at one time, held the same views and were striving for a hopeless stalemate rather than victory. Then there were a lot of other folk who wanted the north to win, wanted the union pre served and the slaves freed, but were forever dissatisfied with the war effort and the re sults not without reason, especially through the first two years when such generals as Mc Clellan were running the show and substituting alibis for action but these objectors were de cidedly vocal about it. Now think back to last summer when a mil lion American youth who had gone into the army without a struggle and almost without protest, were told they would have to stay in for more than a year. There was grumbling nd some talk of OHIO. We heard a lot ahnut poor morale and blamed it on the decadence of modern youth. But contrast that with the "morale" of northern troops in the Civil war. Oh. after they got hardened to it they did some real fighting. But as in the Revolutionary war, a great many of the volunteers went in on three months enlistments and lit out for home when their time was up. And when it came to "se lective service" you should have heard how the nation took it. "Skedaddlers" lit out for the tall timber to avoid service; men who had $300 y they could get hands on bought exemption ?ii . . . ... . nu some witn less Dougnt it on the side from draft boards. Pecuniary-minded men who weren't called signed up for the enlistment "bounty," or hired out as substitutes to well-to-do conscripts, then deserted and signed up under false names to collect all over again. To make it tougher, Lincoln had to run for reelection in 1864. The moneyed interests and -the old-line rvtlitifMane Vi iA : . i : - . ..a. UUUUk UIX1I 111 the first place, and after three years some folk mougnt ne was too radical, objecting particular- lV to the Fmanmnitinn DruilsM.ii.. .tk " . v-aiiiei nun, uuicrs ComDlained that he that the proclamation didn't go far enough. Be- - w v as li OllU bUC woj-ucpuxaiurs on me aemocratic side, it looked as though he didn't have a friend any where. He himself thought he would lose the ' atlAtftiii T C7 V. t 1 : i ii . w... ...an iiaun L jiicii tutnj inroiiEn "!.....: 1 Vi . . ... . . xrcvugut uu ii vram naan i presented him with, a few victories, he would have. After his assassination came the Lincoln" 1a(AMI TJT. ata. a a M m - - s". c was mariyr, ana in me ne had - been everything noble and good. Some of the same people who had called him a bumpkin and a demagogue and a teller of off - color stories were a mo ne his later idolators. He was just a hard-working, sincere fellow who did his best which included a lot; of serious mistakes. Paid your federal income-tax yet? Feeling hurt about it? Maybe it will help, to imagine you are in England. Supposing you are a single man with an income of $38 a week. You line up at the pay window on Saturday and draw $26. The other $12 you never see. John Bull already has it. But then if you earn $38 a week in England .'you are exceptional. The average is around $20. If that's what you earn, and you are single, youTl see $16; if married, the envelope will contain. $17.50. Of course if you get that much a week, have a wife and two school-age children, John will let you have all of it. Likewise you pay no income tax if, mar ried but childless, you earn only $12 a week; or if single, you earn only $9. Contrary to reports early Tuesday, the Nor mandie is not a total loss or at any rate the, navy, true to its tradition, refuses to admit' defeat. Anyway a good many millions of dol lars' worth of boat, out of the 60 millions she originally cost, have gone up in smoke or down into thelnud. A welder's torch started it, they say. But if it wasn't sabotage some mighty poor judgment was exercised, somehow. And if, it wasn't sabotage that wasn't the fault of axis agents in this country. Southern Oregon has lost a distinguished citizen in the death of Harry D. Norton, who served as circuit judge in Jackson and Jose phine counties for 12 years ending early in 1941. He was previously a member of the state legis lature. ' .' m It the contents of this column sometimes fail to make sense, we have an alibi. And if you have tried to work while one of those mocking bird air raid sirens was being tested, you know what that alibi is. News Behind The News . By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 No war authority here is trying to conceal his pessimism at the turn of affairs in the Far East. No official effort is being made to belittlehe" facts or smooth them over with self-beguiling expectations. The swift surprise visit of General Wavell to the Moulmem battlefront furnish ed an indication of what may come next The Japs have the troops and opportunity to focus their main attack, after Singa pore, upon the artery of our aid to China, the Burma road. On tHA CqIwMI W...M... I .1 f re only about 150 miles away. iiLV There is another road in J - v China for us from Dacca, India, V XlT. near Calcutta, but its condition is uncertain. The most recent evidence indicates it is still merely in a proposed state. Certainlv it i unfinihu4 it the Chinese must rely on it to any great extent for supplies from the outside world, their ability to continue forceful resistance to the Japs will im mediately be called into question. 1 Paul Malloa f bui ne cua save the union; did it by keeping . v-t 4 V. a r.4..1 . . - . - k wc.BuuKsic wuen most everyone else ae spaired and when even he didn't have much hope He never was over-confident but neither V did he ever give up. He always knew where he was headed; sometimes he lost his immediate bearings but he always guided the ship with a firm hand. - jj ' v Possibly right now, certainly in the days to come, we'll have need to draw upon Lincoln for strength. Things look black in the orient if we lose it all we've still got America and the oceans and the superior productive capacity." Contrast that with Lincoln, sitting there in v Washington with a nation seething in disagree- ment at his back and with only a few raw troops, at first, holding off a better-disciplined and more capably officered foe at his doorstep. -We can take a lot Of defeats without, ever be ing in a comparable, fix. If you get to feeling low, think of Lincoln. . Manufacturers of certain types of men's clothing here on the west coast are enjoying' a boom but of course like everyone else they also have their headaches. . The copper rivets they have used heretofore as reinforcement at strategic points, are no longer available. Yes, we meanovexsils and jumpers. - Few consider Australia within the scope of im mediate Jap plans, but there has been a difference of opinion evident as to how long the fighting band of MacArthur could hold out. From the standpoint'of permanency, Japan's eco nomic position is impossible, but from the stand point of getting raw materials to sustain her war effort, her position is largely one of organizing facilities. The one valid ray in the picture is that in the region she has acquired there is not an airplane, a munitions or a shipbuilding factory. She has not enjoyed the easy pickups of finished war materials that Hitler enjoyed in Europe. She will have to roll her own. These unguilded circumstances have encouraged people here to appreciate that our war energy is not half enough yet, that the appropriation of bil lions or the production of materials alone is not enough, that public apathy must cease, that every ounce of national energy is necessary. They are commenting bitterly about the popularity of Polly annas in our midst , The tendency to minimize both our setbacks and our problems is disappearing. Only a few weeks ago anyone who suggested that the whole Far East north of Australia and west of Hawaii might be lost (see column published December 29) until we could fight our way back to it, was thought to e unduly pessimistic to say the least i A phony optimism seized this country and prevailed until events began to prove "it false. We needed some "blood, sweat and tears'! In spiration which Churchill gave Britain after Dun kirk. The unsatisfactory events may furnish us with the impetus to do the" job. t The Australians have a sizeable army, much larg er than any the Japs can transport to their shores ; for a long time yet Their apprehensions are high, but their prospects appear the brightest of any in the Far East Adequate reinforcement of MacArthur would re- " quire not just a fw bombers or even replace mentsbut the transportation of an army com parable to the size of the Japanese army, half- . way around the world from our shores. Bombers and replacements would help his inspiring effort but could hardly alter his basic situation. ' Military men are inclined to agree Mac Arthur's ability to continue depends to some' extent on when the Japs reach the point where they are willing and able to press 24 hours a day with constantly fresh troops to wear down his inferior force, by sheer strength of numbers. Some are finding consolation In" the question of what the Japs now are going to do for the long run with their conquered territory. It Is true Japan I not going to be able to sell any ot her newly , acquired oil, fin or rubber j to the outside world, : that she cannot reach her axis partner as long as the United Nations are in control of the sea outside the Far Eastern area. Also she is short of the basic war material, iron. But Japan is operating on a war economy which ' does not depend on trade for the time being. , She -can get some iron, possibly enough, for a while, from Manchukuo, and there is a little on Luzon is land in the Philippines which might be developed. Rice, her basic food, is available in Indo-Cnina. " - The Artfat's Caption on Thia Was "Wolf Pack Its Ifor BrelaEdfastf By R. J. HENDRICKS 2-12-42 "We shall' win this war and in victory we shall not seek vengeance but the establishment of international order," hoped: w V The page of John Steven Mc Groarty, poet laureate of Cali fornia, in last Sunday's issue of the Los Angeles Times the page that has been continued for more than a generation, reads, in full: "Far and, away the most im portant utterance made by any one in authority in the present World War crisis is the state ment contained in a letter writ ten by President Roosevelt to Archbishop Edward Mooney of Detroit and recently made pub lic. The statement referred to is contained in the closing para graph of the letter and is as follows: " 'We shall win this war and in victory we shall seek not ven geance but the establishment of an international order in which the spirit of Christ shall rule the hearts of men and of na tions. " "In thus laying bare his heart and soul to the world, the Pre sident ascends to heights as far above any of his contemporaries in either the old world or the new as Mt. Everest is above the valley of the Dead Sea. It cov ers him with something like a supernatural glow. It clothes him in shining armor. "When the war is won and the slaughter ended, the chief seat at the peace table must be oc cupied by Franklin Roosevelt, and the prayers of the whole world to strengthen him there as the chief figure in the con clave to hold fast to this utter ance which he has now made shall be the predominating thought and spirit of the confer ence. There is no other hope for a lasting peace. Any other settlement imposed by the vic tors on the vanquished will lead only to future wars. oday's Garden By LILLEE L. MADSEN Mrs.f ATJF. writes that she had planned on setting out some flowering trees this spring but after seeing what darnage the ice storm did, she has changed her mind and wants to know it it is really worth while. She asks what kind of rather small lawn trees there are which flower welL : Don't let one sleet storm scare you out. Oregon has had such storms before and while they do take ah unpleasant toll we can look about us and see all the flowering trees which have wea thered other storms. Those trees answer the question as to the worth-whileness of any tree planting project. The dogwood a white one in particular is one of the best flowering trees in the Willamette valley.! There is scarcely any thing as lovely as the white dog wood in bloom in the spring. It will give a scattering of bloom again later in the season and the autumn coloring of its foliage. is good. ; , Planted against a background of evergreen trees it comes to its best but it also is good as a spe cimen. The magnolia trees, al ' most shrubby in growth, the hawthorns, which do very well here, the flowering cherries and the flowering crab apple trees are all lovely. The double flow ering peach you mention is love ly but you do have to give it a little extra care, just as you do your fruiting peach trees. " 'We shall win this war and in victory we shall seek not ven geance but the establishment of an international order in which the spirit of Christ shall rule the hearts of men and of na tions,' he said. "A Daniel come to judgment Yea, a greater than a Daniel. Pray God that he shall not swerve or permit others to sway him from his divine purpose. "It is the spirit of vengeance that has been the curse of the world for countless ages past Even men and nations profess ing to be guided by the teachings of Christ have kept in their hearts and souls the burning spirit of revenge for wrongs, real or imaginary, committed against them. An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth has been thejr soul thought. But Christ said through his; servant Paul: 'Vengeance is mine; I will re pay, saith the Lord. Therefore if thine enemy ' hunger, feed him; if he thirst give him drink; for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head' "Men since Christ wise men who have observed the caval cade of the centuries, saw also the futility of revenge. A man that studietlurevenge keeps bis own wounds green,' said Bacon. 'An act by which we make one friend and one enemy is a losing game; because revenge is a much stronger principle than grati tude, said another wise man." (Concluded tomorrow.) The i Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Your Federal Income Tax DEDUCTION FOK TAXES In general, taxes are deducti ble only ; by the person upon whom they are imposed. Taxes on real estate and per sonal property paid during the year 1941 are deductible. So called taxes which are assessed against local benefits, such as streets, sidewalks, drainage, and other like improvements, are not deductible but are to be ca pitalized, as they tend to in crease the value of the property and thus constitute cost of a permanent improvement The Federal income tax may not be deducted.1 Income tax, however, paid to the State by an individ ual on his incetne is an allow able deduction in his Federal income tax return. - Customs duties paid by a per son on articles imported for his own use are deductible Import or tariff duties paid to customs officers; j and business, - license, privilege, excise, and stamp taxes paid to internal revenue collectors are deductible . as taxes, -provided they are not' added to and made a part of the -expenses of the business or the ; cost of the articles of merchan dise with respect to which they are paid. In which case they cannot be deducted separately. . s a tax. The purchaser may not . deduct the Federal tax of 10 percent on - the retail , sale of -Jewelry, furs, and toilet prepa- i rations. The Federal tax of 1 cent for each 10 cents or frac tion thereof paid for admission , to any place is deductible, pro vided an account has been kept' -by the taxpayer of the amount paid. Taxes on club dues are de ductible by the member paying them.' As indfrVtnal tnav deduct - the tax on his telephone con versations, radio messages, tele grams, and cables and on the rent of Jus safe-deposit box Unemployment compensation contributions required - tmder a State ;law, if officially dassi- nea as taxes, are deductible as taxes land not as penses. : . . The excise taxes tmp employers by the social act, aS amended, are deductible. but vthe tax Imposed oa em ployes by that act is not de ductible. If an employer pays such tax for the employes,, the amoun t may be deducted by the employer as a business ex- pens,; and the employes are re quired to report as additional income in, their federal income tax returns, the amounts o the tax so paid for them. , v-V- license fees exacted Iry m state or city upon certain- busK t nessesj are deductible as taxes. Automobile license fees arc or- ' dinarily taxes and deductible Postage is not a tax and is not deductible. " . j . Federal estate 'and gift taxes -and - state inheritance, estate," legacy, or succession taxes are not deductible. The federal taxes 1 on automobiles, gasoline, cigarettes .' and liquor are Jta- ' posed; upon the manufacturer," -producer, or importer, and are 0 not deductible by the purchaser of consumer. Whether or not the -gasoline tax, the use tax,- or the . sales tax levied by a state may be deducted by the individual purchaser f depends ! upon the : term of the state law imposing " the tax; consequently, the right to the .v:iedackxV'. as l between v purchaser and seller, varies In the different spates. v ...V 3 ' ' ' us uamsnms mm WAKS Lexmcton. the Alamo, Custer's heroic stand ' Are written deep in history; and " now another band Of Asacrica's great Ughtaac men a later page will take; They gave their all for liberty, those gallant; beys 4 Wake. - 'v Thinking Qwir long thoughts, dreaming their dreams. Far oat est that barren sjk Were our boys in green, the US On a land that God forgot. Oat of fiie east came no warning - note v l ' As the yellow scum rode Making a hell of that lonely-fcle Where quiet asai peace had By PETER MUIR Chapter Centlaaed ' A log fire crackled gaily in the sitting room of The Downs, and the only other sound in the com fortable room was the clicking of the mistress , needles as the sock upon which she was work ing grew, with surprising rapid ity. Finally she broke the silence. "Did you notice any change in Wendy?! r, Lord Harrowsdale folded his paper and dropped jit to the floor before answering. ifNoT That is, nothing much. Seemed a bit less talkative, .more on the silent side, and ate less than usual. Must be the war, and the sights she is seeing hauling wounded out ol London. Rough job for a girL" . - "She's in love." ' "Nonsense!. Wendy is only a chad." The father could never reconcile himself to the fact that his children had grown. He al ways saw them running about under his feet and falling off their Shetland ponies. "Non sense' he- repeated. '"Time for my ride. He went out and off towards the stables, giving the ' matter no further' thought But it was the mother, with her woman's insight who was right As the train rumbled along towards London, through which she must pass to reach Watford, Wendy thought - of nothing and no onf except David Hutchinson. She' admitted frankly to herself; that it was love-at-Crstrsight as sure as It existed. The young American had hit the mark in her heart, leaving . a pleasant wound, and . : , ."v auc was ' enjoying , us picasauv throbbing sensation. ... Wendy did not think of him br his fam- ' 11 nam' Htit TtavM Tt mrm m . - a - - . .5, r.. nice name ana sue iucea lu in fact shm liked evertthfng ahnit tim fit 4nrm M f!ma libma ' the tousled hair, simplicity of nature, gay laugh, embarrass-' , ment, and above all bis courage.' This wad the kind of man she4 had always dreamed of marry- : Ing. SI. -.V rl: ; The thought : that 1940 was leap year came to Wendy and she smiled. Should she put the ; Hucauuui n kij uun m was era ry, topsy-turvy world anyway. nrim vt - iku nyiuu tUE acc '""f agjuni - She . determined to arrange that inrougn mil. what luck that her . brother, had been assigned to the same squadron! Where The Hor nets were stationed she. did not know. Flying fields were the most-secreted places in TfrgUnd. However, a letter would reach him. Something might be arran ged at The Downs, a weekend, or something. It would have to be handled with tact so that no one would suspect, especially David. She wondered how her motherland father would like the idea. They had hinted sever al times that- they would like her to marry the son of a , neigh bor, young Lord Leslie Gordon, but she knew that she eeuld never be in love with the chap. (to be continued) ffiadio IPirogMinnis KSUf THURSDAY UN Kc JO Rise N Shine. im News In Brief. 7 :0S Rise N Shin. 130 News. 7:45 Sunrise Salute. S:00-Shep fiekU Orchestra. 8 JO News Brevities. :35 Musical Horoscope. t0 Pastor's Call. as-sHoUywood Quartet 8:45 Bert Hirsch. Violinist. 16:00 Th World This Morning. 10:15 Gleb Ycllin. s 10 JO Women in the New. 10 J3 Spotlight on Rhythm. 110 Spanish-American Music. 11:30 W. U. ChapeL . 11M5 Uun & Abner. 2 110 Ivan Ditmara, Organist 12 -JS Noontime News. . 1J JO Hillbilly Serenade. UJ5 Willamette Valley Opinions. 1.-00 Tune Tabloid. - 1:15 Melody Mart. 1:30 Novelettes. 1:45 Isle of Paradise. 20 Fats Waller. 2:15 US Army. 2:30 Melodic Moods. SM Old Opera House. 4:10 Thia Thing Called Lova. 4:15 News. si 4 JO Teatime Timet. 8 i) Johnny tjoog Orchestra. 850 The Women, i 5 J5 Dinner Hour Melodies. 0 Tonight's Headlines. :15 War Commentary. 6 JO String Serenade. 10 News. - . -75 Interesting facta. 7 :15 Western Serenade. 7:45 Music a La Carter. 80 News. 8:30 Rainbow Harmony. 8:10 Some Like it Sweet 8:45 Speaking of Sports. 90 News Tabloid... 8:15 Milady's Melody. t JO Music of Today. 8:45 Timely Tunes. 10:00 Do You Danctr 10 JO News. 10 :45 Enie-Meenie-Minle-Mo. 110 Mews. . KALE-.THVBSOAsVS.M18 Ke. 8 JO Memory Timekeeper. 7:00 News. 7:15 Memory Timekeeper. 80 Buyer's Parade. 8:15 Breakfast Club. - 8 JO News. 8:45 As the Twig Is Bent 8:00 John B. Hughes. 8:15 The Woman's Side of the News. 8 JO This Si That 180 News. M:15 Helen Holden. 10 JO Front Page rarrelL M.-4S Mnste Shop. 11 DO Standard SdUMd. 11 JO Concert Gems. II laafhw 11:45 Camp Grant as Review. 115 News. 1M Mutual Goes Caning. 1 JO Johnson r amity. 15 Bnak Crtr : s 80 David CheaJda S:15 Take tt Xasy. 2u Mews. . 2:45 The Bookworm. 3 00 Johnny Rirhards. . 30 Hello Agam. 40 Tulton Lewis, jr. 4J5 News. 430 Sam Brewer. Egypt 445 Music DepreciatiaB. S0 Jimmy AOen. Sa5 Orphan Annie; S JO Captain MwHiiyt S 45 Jack Armstrong. 80 Voices in Song. -V ausPhU Stearns. JO Spotlight Bands. v . 0:43 Movie Parade Tj88 Ray Gram Swing. 1 0S-Horace Heidt 7 JO Your Defense Reporter. . 1:45 Evening Sonaa 0 Standard Sympnony. Tfeesa sehedslM ra nnnHaJ a the respecUva lUUons. Any varia mated ay Ustaaers are dna tm J3 Gift of the Orient 8 JO Pulton Lewis. .V . Del Courtney Orchestra. It Bob Crosay Orchestra. il jo News. MS Brad Hant Orchestra. 110 Sid Boa Orchestra. HJ0 Bob Crasby Orchestra. . . . koac tbtcksoav asa k. 300 Review of the Day. Mi5 Newa. 1015 Homemak ex's Hour. 1140 School the Air. tttt Music aS the r'-ft-rrs 18:15 rarm Hour. 10 FavorR Classics las Variety Time. 4 1 345 Melody Lansv S:15 U. & Army. tvoncertev caaages aaaaa ay the itaUoaa wtta- aooee tm tats aewspaper. All raaia stattou assy be eat (rasa the air at any thus ta the Interests ef national defease. 1 JO Market Reports. 1 JS Rose City Calendar. 135 New. 2300 The Quiet Hour. 1 JO A House in the Country. 15 Wayne Van Dyne. 3.-00 Between the Bookenda. 3:15 News. 3 JO String Time. 3:45 Traveling- Cook. 430O Chef Milam 4U5-Mr. Keen. Tracer. 4 JO Stars of Today. 4:45 US Marines. 5 .00 Adventure Stories 5:15 Flying PatroL 5 JO News of the World. 5:45 Tom Mix. Straight Shootae. 8:00 Secret City. S:15 Rollie Truitt Tuna. JO Intermezzo. 7 H)0 Rudy Vallee Show. 7:30 Fairytales. 7:45 News HeartHnes and Highlights 830O March pi Time 8 JO Flowers ton the Uvlna. 85 Faithful StradivarL 8.O0 Easy Aces. S as Glenn Shelley. Organist S JO Moonlight Sonata, 10.-00 America's Town Meeting. 11 300 This Moving WorkL ' 11:15 Organ. - 11 JO War News Roundup, t KOD4 THUSSDAT-S58 ate. 60 Northwest Farm Keportsr. 8:15 Breakfast Bulletin 820 Koin Klock 7:15 Head liners. 7 JO Bob Garred Reporting. 7:45 Nelson Pringle. S.-00-Jane Endicott 8:15 Consumer News. -8J0 Hymns of an Churches. 8:45 Stone America Lovce. 9:00 Kate Smith Speaks. 9:15 Bij sister. 8 JO Romance of Helen Trent -9gr Gal Sunday. , iif-F Cmn B Beautiful. Mas Woman In JTbita. 10JO Vic and Sade. 10:45 Mary Let Taylor. 11 rOO Bright Horizon. 11:15 Aunt Jenny. 11 JO Fletcher Wiley. 11:45 Rate Hopkins. 12390 Man I Married., -12:15 Knox Manning.! News. "y wuuam winter. New "-" Woman Of Courage. v oicptnoiaer. 1.15-Myrt and Marra 1: Scattergood Balnea. S3B8 Joyce Jordan. . Voice of Broadway. SJobMWSont. 4 3BO Second Mrs Burton. 4 J5 Young Dr. fVim J?-if5wPper of the AST. fr of n WorkL as Leon F. Drews. , . 5 JO BUI Henry. -B Garred. Mews. 52t5roer la. Newm. 43BO Major Bowea SJ0 Big Town. '-; r . 70 Glenn Mines. las The First Line. 7345-News. Amoa m Andy. 8:15 Lanny Ross. SJt MatJdia's JQiarv. . " 8.O0-Dufrjrs Tavern. SO30O Five Star final 18 as World Today. - , 1-Wr Tim. Wonvm. - 1 J5 Dance Time. i Mi:4 Air-Flo. ! 10H5 Defense Todar.i JlJJ-WUbur Hatch: r KOW-raMJ-TaTOS0AT- - 8 Jt Early nnh . 7:1S UwU u n. 1.-4S Sara ' Hayes. ' f??"!! Today. . , : 8:15 Symphonic Swine. AS David Hanaa. S1T1 Wnnm'i B.u v aii??? Busy W( wmi juver tMya. "Alwarys rathftsT wih They Met Csose codleas Cave blow far How ssad blood lor blood Ffcr faiarUut tfaryav ssad then . . . Concert. 41 fltoilsa for Bova and atra SJa Campus Swing. S JO-WlUi the Old Matters. :4S-&entaf Vesper fierrlca, ' com ei t Equipment gone and battle- ' S Jt HirtMP EAmUm Lk 8:15 "Lest We rorget" 8-30 Music mt the Masters. And trntaU hordes about, " ' . Ta the homeland carae Ciia fast - report; ; . The issue Is in doubt" , Where brave men meet and tales - are told ' ; A silent toast therll make To that fearless band in a lonely land, - t The US marines on Wake. , GEORGE W. BOLEY ,.- (Kenneth Boley, son q the "writer, was one ol the marines ". en VTsle inland when it was attacked and is now believed to be a prisoner of war.) . v KrX TBnKXDAT lis mm. -8 .DO Sunrise Serenade. 8:15 National Farm Ac Home. SA5 Waster AgrieuHura. 7300 Four Polka Dots. 7:15 Breakfast Club, as News. - ia ii ii iti hi a " 8r45 Kcra Fit With Patty Jeaav " 83DO Andrint Continentals. ---S:15 Christian Science Program. 8 JO Helen Hlett, News. . :45 Charmingly We Ltva. 10 390 New Show a Day 10:15 Breakfast at &ardia. 10:45 News. - 11 AO-Hotel Taft Orchestra. 11 J 5 Current Events. 11 JO Stars of Today. 11 :4S Keen Pit Ous. " 110 Orpoana f mvecta. 11:15 Amanda eg mrmooa srnn - 123 John's Other'; Vl'ua. :.'; v- T. UWas flaia L. J Voor Uvesrtock Repneter 105 Newa Beacmnes and highlights vBM"va2aaa arQCUaaVOQa 10 JO Bachelora PtilVtissi 10M5-Dr. Kate. Tumu 110 Light eg the World. ll-lS-The Mystery SiT 11 JO Valiant LadV 11345 Arnold Grimml Da w araj)aaBaaaa tMUBJT ePwBVBsV 12as-Ma Perkins. lJt Lorenzo Jonaa. - 145 Young Wldder Browa. Wn" a Girt Marries. 2:15-Partia faces Life. S Jt Wa. tha Abbot ta. ' - tory Mary Marttav t JL5 if Journey. 3J0 PhU irwinT S35 Three Sena Traa. - ! Uebtrt ' Oman's Angle. . . a 1 tx . m 5 JO Ricardo s Rhastotttaa. i5nTilkre Gang. ' S :1 1 i tjatm Mk A IflO-Aldrtch ramlly. :30 EUery Queen. 10:00 News Flaabca. 10:15 YmTRon. T. , a internioe. ;h"2:la:, Ter the West Coast 1131- I nhu'n in Tti a. 11: War JSiews Bountfae Time