The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 26, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

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Hi OREGON STATESMAN. Satan. Oregon. Sunday Meaning. April 23. 1942
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President
Member of .The Associated Pren
f 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.
Oregon's Peril
Yes, Tokyo has been bombed, and our oriental
enemy will strike back if he can at. cities on this
coast. We ought to prepare for that, physically
and mentally. But, taking into account the like
lihood of an air attack and its prospects of suc
cess, that is not Oregon's chief danger.
Our greatest peril is from within sabotage.
And the easiest target for sabotage in relation
to the amount of destruction possible, is Ore
gon's millions of acres of forest land. Getting
Into the forests won't be as simple a matter this
summer as it has been in the past but in view of
their extent, entering and setting fires will not
require a great deal of cleverness on the part
Of a determined enemy saboteur. That it "will
happen here" is almost a certainty and though
the season in which serious damage, can be done
Is still a few weeks away, it already has 'hap
pened' in southeastern states where incendiary
fires were raging over an extensive acreage this
weekend.
Well, we're not entirely helpless. Congress,
blind to the reality of this menace, unfortunate
ly has practiced one of its few economies in this
matter of forest protection, perhaps in the mis
taken belief that it is a "non-war" expendi
ture. "
But in partial compensation for congress'
oversight, cooperating agencies here have per
fected fire-prevention and fire-fighting ar
rangements which are expected to be much
more efficient than any provided in the past.
There is, in the first place, a "unified fire com-
mand" under which the facilities and manpower
of the state and federal forest departments, the
fire control associations and private operators
will be pooled and marshaled for the most ef
ficient service. The entire program has a single
directing hand. Information as to condition of
the forests, training and distribution of fire
fighters, the shifting of equipment to meet need
as it develops, all center in the state forester's
Office. In addition to paid fire protection forces,
the thousands of loggers employed in Oregon
forests are being trained and organized and
they are the best fire fighters obtainable.
Thus Oregon is better prepared for the nor
mal fire hazard than ever before. But in this
unprecedented emergency there also should be
. a large bodyof trained men for patrol and fire
fighting duty, and meeting this need was the
purpose of requests to congress for additional
funds. Unfortunately it got tangled up in poli
tics relating to continuation of the CCC and
was defeated.
There is something that civilians can do in
this matter. They may not be able to prevent
sabotage but they can at least, to offset it, cut
down on the incidence of fires due to careless
ness. The "Keep Oregon Green" educational pro
gram, so successful In 1941, is being intensi
fied; organization of the "Green Guards" among
existing groups of young people such as 4H,
Boy Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, is progressing
rapidly. Also there is another thing which a
great many civilians may be called upon td do
in an emergency. Situations may arise in which
they will be called upon to drop normal tasks
nd join fire-fighting crews. It would be a
good idea to keep in good physical condition
i, with this and other possible contingencies in
view.
Uncle Sam's Bounty
Eighty years ago men who had accurate
vision of the west's future growth and its trans
portation needs were extending ribbons of steel
across mountains and deserts to points on this
coast which could not yet supply traffic justify
ing the expenditure. Statesmen who shared that
vision helped them with a federal subsidy paid
in land, and assisted them in obtaining loans.
Uncle Sam was big-hearted to a degree which
prompted, then and later, considerable criticism.
But it wasn't exactly a one-way deal. The
railroads in their turn agreed to haul govern
ment's freight at reduced rates. That wasn't
much of a concession at the time, when gov
ernment's business was largely a simple matter
of preserving law and order. And even when
1 government went into many other lines of
business in the last decade it didn't amount to
a whole lot. Three years ago the railroads as a
whole sacrificed only about $10,000,000 on that
deal.
Now, as you are well aware, Uncle Sam is the
nation's biggest shipper. Civilian tonnage has
dropped; shipments for war purposes have
zoomed upward. As for the effects of this
change upon the railroads, no doubt you are
away ahead of us. The railroads are "enjoying"
.. a rushing business but they aren't getting the
revenue the interstate commerce commission
, concedes they should have.
. It's quite complicated, for some shipments are
considered "federal" and others for similar
purposes are not. But it is a headache for the
railroads. Congress is considering legislation
designed to relieve them of this burden on some
equitable basis. It's just another case in which
; Uncle Sam's "bounty" proves to have a "catch"
?' that makes it much less attractive than it first
appeared.
Dehydrated Foods
Shipping is scarce, so our gasoline supply is
curtailed. . But- the scarcity of shipping is hav
ing other results, some of which, are; of pri-
mary signifinace to this community. One; of
these is the trend to dehydration as a means
not only of preserving foods but of conserving
shipping space in their transportation.
Dehydration of milk and certain .fruits such
as prunes, apples and apricots-Is old stuff. But
now the principle- is being infinitely expanded.
Because someMdrying" has been done here In
the past Salem should be in position to keep
pace with the trend but it is essential to note
that methods also are being revolutionized. - r
1 The advantage? " Suppose you wanted to ship
27 million pounds of potatoes overseas. Just de
hydrate them and you have only three million
pounds and can save S3 per cent on shipping
'No Favor Sways Us; No Fear ShaU Atot
From First Statesman. March 28, 1831
f
. 5r
Paul Mallea
censor).
April 11
April 4
March 28
This may be
eggs is equal to three dozen eggs in the natural
state; a five-pound can of powdered chicken
or vegetable soup will make 25 gallons of soup
for the table. Do the boys ask for lemonade? .
Two 11 -ounce cans of dehydrated yellow lemon
crystals will make enough to serve 100 men.
In - addition to potatoes, vegetables to be
shipped in the dehydrated state include onions,
carrots, cabbage, beets, rutabagas and sweet
potatoes. This is a fast-moving development,
Wall Street Journal reports. A month ago no
meats had been dehydrated on a commercial
scale. Now beef, mutton and goat's meat are
being dried pork so far is a holdout, may never
be dehydrated successfully because of its high
fat content.
The new dehydration methods are complex
but the principle is simplicity itself. Most foods
contain a high percentage of water and water
is cheap most anywhere. Why ship water across
the water? Take it out at the source of manu
facture; when the food reaches its destination,
add water and serve. Strange that it took a
war to develop this sensible economy to its
currently feasible limits.
The current recidivation to the bicycle age is
a boon, one might suppose, to the long-suffering
pedestrian. A bicycle isn't likely to do as much
damage as an automobile, even if it does hit
one. However, there is one drawback. You
can hear an automobile coming; a bicycle ap
proaches silently without advance warning.
And some bicycle riders' judgment of distance
and timing is not quite equal to their venture
someness. News Behind
The Mews
By PAUL MALLON -
(Distribution by Kins Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro
duction In whole or in part strVjtly prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, April 25 Figures showing ex
actly how many gallons of gasoline are available
in. the eastern seaboard have been hard to find
since the rationing discussions began.
But the American Petroleum Institute, a private
organization of the oil indus
try, has some figures, usually
considered very accurate:
which indicate that Messrs.
Henderson and Ickes were not
only right when they repudiat
ed the published unofficial
statement from an official
in Henderson's office threaten
ins to limit motorists to 2
gallons but they were very,
very right. Nothing like that
kind of limitation seems justi
fied. The institute figures show
stocks were but little under
last year, and, Instead of de
clining in the last three weeks, have been increas
ing. Barrels of gas on hand in the critical area the
last available weeks to April 11: (These are two
weeks behind because one week is held up by the
This Year
17,035,000
17,519,000
Io,470,000
enough to justify
Last Year
20,633,000
20,422,000
20,495,000
rationing but
certainly not the kind the OPA official was talking
about
Furthermore, after all the talk that has gone
on for weeks and weeks about reversing those
three Pennsylvania pipelines so as to push fuel
oil into eastern states, little has been accomplished.
Two of the lines are still carrying gasoline west.
The Susquehanna line is still running west to
Altoona and the Tuscarora from Bayonne to Mid
land and not much has been done about changing
them. The third line from Philadelphia to Pitts
burgh is in the process of being changed over, but
the operation has not been completed
The eastern seaboard usually gets around 1,400,
000 barrels a day of all kinds of oil including gaso
line, light and heavy fuel. Of this amount about
600,000 is coming in tank cars, and 150,000 by pipe
lines other than the three mentioned.
The rationing question, therefore, rests with what
has been done to our tankers by Hitler and what
might be done with the tankers still afloat by
authorities here. If any considerable number of
them should be or have been diverted to other
purposes, the rationing figures would decrease ac
cordingly. If they had to be taken off entirely for
any purpose, drastic rationing might be necessary.
Mr. Roosevelt has created a White House cast of
fictional characters which he interviews in pri
vate, with results given to the public by him. "The
last two have been described only as "sweet young
things" but there was "a business man" before
them and "an economist,'' and so on back into
new deal years.
The tales of them are always told by FDR at
his press-conferences. They are always the straight
men in the conversation. They always ask him the
darndest questions and he devastates them with
his replies. -
The president often asks the newspapers to name
the authority " for their statements, but he has
adopted a contrary policy for bis growing gallery
of verbal straw men and young women (who so
far have been both young and sweet). If the
gallery gets any larger, someone Is going, to ask
him to fill in the other half of the program with
the names. .:. :
Biggest hearted , thing . Mr. Roosevelt ever did
for business in his life was the thing he has been
most criticized- lor locally the construction at a
cost of $800,000 of an information center, face
tiously known in the. Washington Post as "Mel
lett's madhouse' in honor of FDR's' informational
adviser. ' .... -.-.... -. - .... . .. ..,... .. . .m .i,,-,,
: The president did not want the poor business
men running around Washington Wearing out
shoes. He wanted to give him a centrally located
place to go and ask questions.
? It now develops- that this favor, which was not
specifically authorized by congress, came from
suggestion dropped by one of those unidentified
business men who came in to see him to complain
of aching feet
The trouble is the structure is just being com-
' a . at .
The Fleet' In'
Bits for .BireaEtfasft
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Two samples of 4-26-42
the work of Salem's
poet laureate, Wlnfleld
Taylor Rlgdon, gone before:
(Concluding from yesterday:)
As it appears below, Mr. Rlgdon
in 1927 wrote on a subject with
universal and everlasting appeal.
It is found beginning on page
147 of Truth In Pleasant
Rhymes,'' his book of that year:
The
Safety Valvo
Letters from Statesman
Readers -i
RECREATION CENTER
To the Editor: Soldier boys
are wandering up and down our
streets both day and night with
apparently no very satisfactory
place in which to pass their time
when on leave. The number will
doubtless increase with the com
pletion of the cantonment
Sons of Salem citizens are in
other localities in the nation and
abroad and it is certain that the
folks at home as well as the boys
are deeply appreciative of any
recreational facilities that are
furnished by local people that
add to the comfort and good
cheer of the boys.
The morale of the soldiers and
the citizenry must be maintained
if we expect to win this war. It
does not seem that Salem is do
ing its full part along this line.
Salem should have a recreation
al center for our soldier visitors.
The city owns an ideal loca
tion for such a building on the
block just back of the present
water commission office. Other
cities have met this need and Sa
lem can and should do likewise.
This is an ideal project on
which the city, churches, service
clubs and chamber of commerce
could and should put forth an
immediate and united effort
PERCY A. CUPPER
W. C. WINSLOW
ROY HARLAND
CARL T. POPE
CARLE ABRAMS
E. W. AC KLIN
E. G. KINGWELL
W. I. NEED HAM.
n
Ben are four of the latest types of Army uniforms in use by U. S.
.soldiers. SCaJ. Gen. Jrtnumd B. Gregory, quartermaster funeral of
the XT. S. Army, is fanpectiiuT-Jiniforms for, left to tight, tropical
WHAT IS DEATH?
O, what is death, that we should
fear its power?
Or even dread the pressure of
the arm
That bears us safely through the
final hour
And anchors soul beyond the
reach of harm.
Death is only the parting of the
ways;
An Angel pointing toward
eternal life;
The summing up of all our
earthly days;
The overthrow of all our fear
and strife.
It Is the terminus of this earthly
road, .
Where the conductor gives the
parting hand;
Where we will leave behind this
carnal load,
And start our journey to the
better land.
Tis but the chiming of the cur
few bells.
When toilsome day succumbs
to restful night
When sexton softly rings the
parting knells.
And joyful spirits take their
peaceful flight
Tis but an oasis in the desert
way
That separates our world from
blissful Heaven;
A prison-house for inanimate
clay
Until the resurrection word is
given.
Death is the silent place where
active brain
Will set the soul, its inmate
captive brain
Will set the soul, its inmate
captive, free;
Where solvent earth absorbs the
dross again
And holds it fast throughout
eternity.
Peaceful death! Thou are the si
lent usher,
At the closing hour of all .fit
ful dreams,
Where the great Angelic host
will muster,
And radiant lights of glory
ever gleam.
fern -
a
t
After the trial scenes of life have
passed;
The shady bowers and haunt
ing battles o'er;
The burning fever, racing pain
outcast
Through death well find life
forevermore.
When this poor tenement of mor
tal clay
Becomes too weak to freight
its carnal load.
Through kindness Death will
close the final day.
And take this body to Its last
abode.
Death has no sting and grave no
victory.
When we have tried to live
the life sublime;
When faith and trust adorn our
history.
And all our songs with Heav
en's anthems chime.
So pass along in peace, unto the
grave;
Unfearing, bid farewell to
friends on earth.
Trust in a power beyond the
tomb to save,
As carnal flesh gives away to
spirit birth.
Radio Programs
SIM SUNDAY MM Ke.
8 :0O Hit Tune of Tomorrow.
8:30 East Side Church of Christ
0 Shep fields Orchestra.
S:15 News Briefs.
t JO Levitow Salon Orchestra.
10:00 News.
10 :1S Moonbeam Trio.
10 JO A Bone I Bom.
11 ."OO American Lutheran Church.
11:00 Ivan Ditmars.
. 12 JO Jean Sevillier's Commentary.
U:9 The Argentines.
1:00 Young People's Church of Air.
130 Claude ThornhUl Orchestra.
S. -00 Alpine Troubadors.
S:15 Church of Christ.
2 JO Singing Strings.
2:45 Moody Bible Institute.
3 AO Sunday Symphony.
3 JO Boy's Town.
40 Musical College.
4 JO String Quartette.
1:00 Old Fashioned A viral.
S)0 Tonight's Headlines.
S:15 Shining Hour.
5 JO Magic Carpet
TOO Dinner Hour.
TJO Pancho'a Conga Orchestra.
SAO First Presbyterian Church.
r S.30 Alvino Ray Orchestra.
9 .-00 News.
t:15 Surf Riders.
JO Back Home Hour.
10:00 World In Review.
lOUS Dream Time.
KGW NBC SUNDAY 2t Ke,
4 AO Music.
5 JO War News. ,
SAO Music. I
80 Church m Tour Rome.
: 8 JO Music sad American Tooth,
SAO Sunday Down South.
30 Emma Otero. Singec.
10 AO Mews Digest.
:19rMusic for Neighbors.
10 JO World Is Tours.
11. -00 Garden Talks.
U JO Chicago Round Table.
1SAO Bote Becker'a Dog Chats.
U'js-H. V. Rjdtenbora,
12 JO The Army Hour.
1 JO Stars of Tomorrow.
SAO Porta of the Factfle
SJO Homo Tim.
S.-4S Symphony of Melody.
SAO Outs of Two Clttea. -
S JO News Headlines c Rllites.
S:S-ptoskClose.
4:0 JackBqmyV I
' 430 Band Wagon.
AO Char Be McCarthy.
SAO On Man's raaaily.
SAO Manhattan Mini Go ITihiihI
30 Album Of Familiar Husla,
t 8 Hour of Charm.
WO Walter WsBeheO.
.13 Paifcer Family.
- SAO Gtait OUttHlHwl, v
8 JO Beau Sotr Musteaia,
t0-Canuval t .
JO Log Cabin Farms Orchestra. ,
10A0 New Flashes.
14 a Bridge to Dreamland.
'11 AO Palace Hotel Orclra-
uat-wir news ho
UA0-S a. m.- Music
e
. SAO Ne
- 8 riS Recital period.
- I jo Revue m Muiiature.
AOQuiet Boor.
- JO Radio City Most HmXL : '
IS JO Speaking of Glamour.
10:45 Jack Owen. Singer. '
11A0 B4uTheatr Players. -
II 30 Showr of Yesterday A Today.
12 AO Waki Up America.
1 AO National Vespers.
1 JO to Hi Steps.
SAO Hollywood Theatre.
8 JO .Music SteeJmaksrs.
-. SAO CathoHe Horr .
'Mme aft
By EDITH BRISTOL
Chapter It Continued
So from her tears and prostations
from her tears and protestations
as the widow stormed up the
stairs from the sitting room to
her own suite, I assumed that
the attorney had made known to
her the provisions of the will and
I remembered what Martha had
said that first day that the
ranch came to her, unencum
bered. That the widow's legal
share was left carefully in trust!
The forenoon came to an end
and it was time for us to drive
to Gallina for the inquest Syd
ney drove his mother in his car
and Lance drove one of the lar
ger cars with the Sheriff beside
him and Martha Gregg beside
me on the back seat . Nobody
talked much an the way in to
the county seat Martha sat very
still, her brown hands folded in
her lap, and gazed off at the
rolling hills and I looked at
the hills part of the time and
part of the time at the strong
tanned neck of Lance Gregg,
sitting in front of me remem
bered how decent he had been
about the cameramen. And won
dered what he was thinking as
we neared the ordeal of the cor
oner's investigation.
It was my first visit to Gallina
and I had a blurred impression
of white houses built for the
most part in Spanish style, of
green gardens, of a wide plaza
in the center of the town, be
fore we turned into a side street
and came by a back way to the
courthouse.
I had dreaded the ordeal but
it was not as bad as I feared. I
was beginning to think things
never are. The coroner was a
fat, pudgy little man, dreadfully
impressed with his own import
ance at playing a role in a sen
sational murder ease. But he
treated us all as if we had been
made out of cut-glass, gave us
every possible consideration. All
arrangements had been made by
Allen to make the investigation
easy for us. And even the jury
and the Gallina people who
packed the small, hot courtroom
seemed more sympathetic than
curious.
One of the cameramen who
was at Castaway the day before
lifted his camera in my direction
just as we came in before I
could turn away Lance was be
side me. "Remember me?" Lance
said to the photographer. Tm
the chap you made a bargain
with yesterday."
The stocky little cameraman
with black hair only grinned
and looked smug. I understood
that grin better next day when
I found my face with every
one of the freckles showing
across the bridge of my nose
looking at me in a pose so life
like it was startling, from the
pink front page of an evening
paper. He got it after all, in
. spite of Lance!
Chapter IS
Very little .came out of the in
quest that I had not known be
fore and the one unexpected
and exciting moment of the af
ternoon didn't register with any
of us then. It did later.
Dr. Henry was the first wit
ness. Very briefly he told of be-
These schedules
Oh respectrv
(teas noted fey Usiiaars are due te
changes made fey the stations with.
tna air at any um tn
out notice to this newspaper.
All red stattaas saay a cut
of Hon ml defewo.
4:43 Excursions m Science.
I 00 Tommy Dorsey.
JO For Your Dancing Mood.
AO Music by White.
JO Oete Roberts Reports,
sis Songs oy Dmah Score.
1 AO Good Will Hour
SAO Inner Sanctum Mysteries.
It JO Wartime Women.
10-JO-Air-Flo. 7
10:43 Marine Corps.
11 AO Manny Strand Orchestra.
11 JO Organ.
HAS News.
UAO to 4A0 a. bu ttuste A News.
...
KA1X MBS S UNDAT 1330 Es.
8:00 Helew1ng Staoo,
JO Central Church of Christ.
:4S Voice of the field.
S:13 Gems of Melody.
S JO Owen Cunningham. Hawaii.
: Leslie Nichols. Cairo.
AO Frank Cuhel. Australia.
10 AO News.
10:15 Romance at the HI-Ways.
10 JO The Hymn Singer.
1049 Canary Chorus.
8:30 Jack Benny.
AO Grand pappy and his Pals.
JO News Headline St Hilites.
:4S University Explorer.
10 AO Palladium Ballroom Orchestra.
! JO-Ouiet Hour.
110 Tins Moving World,
lias Organ.
1130 War News Bound Up.
KOD1 CBS SUNDAY 78 Ks.
AO World Today.
T AO Church of the Air.
T:30 Wtnri Over Jordan.
AO West Coast Church.
S JO Invitation to I learning-
:13 Syncopation Piece.
JO Salt Lake Tabernacle.
10 AO-Church of the Air.
10 JO Wilson Ames. .
10:43 News.
11 AO Spirit Of '42.
M JO-Columbia Worshoo.
-u:
U AO Columbia Broad. Symnhony.
1 JO Pans That tenshes.
As Family Boor
1 S --4S William SMresj, Wests.
SJa Melody Ranch.
. da Public Affairs. :
f 438 Hiwa, -
4:4s William Wallace.
SAO World News.
S JO Ellison Whit Recital.
S:4S Knox Manning. .
SAS Eunet Davis. Mews, :
SAO Fred Allen,
v o 1A0 Tak It or Leave tt. '
I JO They Lre Forerse.
JS Dick Joy. News.
30 Baker .Theatre Players.
AO "What's en Your Mind."
38 Heathmaa. .
' sfCwT Qwwjawl f
- CONDUCTED BY
Gastovay'
ing called to Castaway by tele
phone, early in the morning;
Identified the body as mat of
Walter Gregg, told of Its pod.
tion in bed and with moderate
amount of technical .detail de
scribed the" death wounds a
gunshot fired through the head
from a thirty-two calibre revol
ver. Two other shots had been
fired, the doctor said.
"Describe them," ordered the
coroner.
"One passed over the head of
the bed and the bullet was bu
ried In "the wall; the other graz
ed the cheek of the victim and
was found in the pillow."
"Is there a possibility mat
these wounds might have been
self-inflicted?' asked the coro
ner. "Positively none," said the
doctor with emphasis. 'The bul
lets were fired from a distance
of twelve to fifteen feet that is
the width of the bedroom.'
Kobe's discovery of the body
of his employer was told In three
sentences, and the little brown
valet came through the question
ing very well, although his voice
quavered.
"Was there any money in the
room when you found the bo
dy?" "I saw no money," said the
boy.
Sheriff Allen was sworn and
told of the search of Gregg's
room. He described the finger
prints on the furniture among
them prints of Martha Gregg, of
Zstelle Gregg, of Lance and
Kobe; and, of course, many of
the dead man's fingers. Nothing
that might provide a clue to the
presence of any outsider was re
vealed by the fingerprints, or
anything else.
Worth Durf ee was next on the
stand. Again I had that haunting
feeling that he looked like some
body I knew but ,who? I
couldn't tell. It bothered me.
Durfee's testimony was practic
ally the same thing I had taken
down the afternoon before.
"You called on the deceased
the night before he was found
dead?
"I did."
"Please tell the Jury the rea
son for your visit and why you
called after the rest of the house
hold were in bed."
"I wished to discuss a com
promise settlement of a damage
suit that has been pending be
tween Walter Gregg and myself;
and I wished to avoid seeing
other members . of his house
hold." Durfee was composed and
self-oppressed and I was so in
tent on watching him that I did
not notice anyone else in the
courtroom.
"Will you please explain io
the Jury the nature of the case
and the settlement you wished
to effect?"
Durfee gave a skeletonized
statement of the long litigation
between himself and Walter
Gregg and ended as he had end
ed yesterday. "Nobody but the
lawyers was getting any good
out of our quarrel. So I wanted
it ended."
(To be continued)
10 AO Five Star Final.
10 :13 Cosmo Jonea.
11 AO Voices la Song. '
11:15 Melody.
1130 Strings In Bwmgtlm.
11 .-45 Hollywood Whispers.
Th Americas Speak.
IS JO Mews.
IS Repair for Defense
138 Young PeeoM'a cnurch of Air.
1A0 Swedish Tempi.
1 JO Bible Classes.
AO This Is War.
SJs -Lawrence Welks Orchestra.
4 AO News.
4:1S Rabbi Marnin.
4 JO NobodyTOuMrea.
SAO American Forum.
SMS Around the Clock.
AO Old Fashioned Revival Bee
T AO Ray Gram Swing.
T:13 The Coat Steps Out
TJO Keep Dm Moiling.
SAO Hinson Memorial Church.
AO News.
:1S Voice of Prophecy. .
-6unday Serenade.
MAS Duk EUtngton Orchestra.
10:43 Ted Weems Orchestra.
11 AO Jan Sarin Orchestra.
llJO-lohnny Richards Orchestra.
Monday Radio on
Page 4, Section 2
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