Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1942)
PAG2 PCTJ3 Hi OZTGOn STATEZMJUT, Safaau Oregon. V72nttday Homing, Apcfl 23. 1942 V Wo Taror Strays Ur; JITo Far Shan Awt .. From First SUtesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. - CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, 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 to this newspaper. Kazis 'Out of Form' -''y'P Apologiei voiced occasionally from this corner for-what has seemed to us too frequent t reference to the sport world for purposes f analogy, possibly hare really been superflu ous. If the world-famous philosopher is free to draw one of his principal theses from such a -parallel, surely an editor can do the same even if he did once keen box scores for a living. At the moment we are thinking of Oswald Spengler, viewed in some quarters as the philo sopher of nazism though he was ostracized eventually by the Hitler ring for having dared to speak respectfully, or at least temperately, of the Jews. Spengler chose a sport page phrase, in form," as descriptive strictly in the sport . page sense of a nation that was in fit condition to make history. As you must know, an athlete is "in form" when his muscles will obey his brain implicitly; and a football team is "in form" when it will execute perfectly the plays selected by its quarterback; and a horse is "in form" when he will expend utmost purposeful effort at the will of his jockey. Now you're way ahead of us. According to Spenlger, a nation is "in form" when it will pursue with totality of purpose the destiny charted by its leaders its "nobility" in that philosopher's vocabulary. Since 1933 Adolf Hit ler has been getting, the German people "in form," training them to do his bidding, but enthusiastically. Enthusiasm without personal freedom of direction that takes some training. Any athlete knows what it is to be "in form" and just what it means, either as an individual or as a- team, to get "out of form." - The athlete's muscles may ache, he may sprain an ankle or break a collar bone but if he's "in form" he keeps right on. His brain drives protesting muscles to do its bidding. But if his brain is fagged or his nerves frayed, his mus cles are useless there is nothing to give them dependable orders. It's the same with a team that is "out of form." The individuals may be in good physical condition but there is a lack of coordination for which the leader, either - the coach or the quarterback, is to blame. Germany just now is something of an enig ma. Hitler's speech on Sunday was not for for eign consumption exclusively it was made to the reichstag. One might otherwise suspect, and there is still a slight loophole for suspicion, that his damaging though indirect admissions that things are going badly in the war and in ternally, were put forth as a smoke screen to hide that long-expected great offensive. But if they' are to be taken at face value, 1 as they are being taken by most commentators, nothing is quite so apparent as that the German people are "out of form." There is still the de sire to win in this case the dread of reprisals when defeat comes. But there is not actually the will to win will translatable into action. And if Germany is. "out of form" we are assured by Spengler himself that not Germany but some other nation will head the world empire which he foresaw for this stage of western civilization. An inevitable question bothers us at this point. Is the United States of America "in form?" Some day we'll go into that more in - detail. Just today we are inclined to believe Uncle Sam is "in form" but not for war, or at any rate not yet. He is somewhat in the position of a star sprinter entered against his wishes, in the high hurdle race. Even so, he . may be able to beat a brain-fogged nazi over - t e last timber. Profits in Wartime Not -that it is likely to prove anything, but it may be interesting to take a look at the affairs of an established industry now engaged almost exclusively in war production. Take United States Steel partly because it was al ready engaged largely In war work throughout 1941 and partly because we have its annual report at hand. . Naturally in 1041, production was high; the corporation's highest in history. Voluntary ' censorship .deleted volume figures but sales .amounted to $1,623,400,000. That was almost double the gross income for 1939 which ap parently was a sort of marginal year in which the company paid no dividends on its common stock but did set aside a small sum for future needs. Sales in 1941 were up about 8766,000,000 from 1939. Now left see what became of that "aurplus. The corporation bought, naturally, almost twice as' much in materials and outside services; there went 302 million dollars. Its taxes were tripled, from 6? million to 191 ..million; there went 124 million more. Because of more intensified production, depreciation in creased one-third; 34 million. Wages took about 40 per cent more; ,234 million. Add those up and subtract a three million dollar drop in in terest paid on debt and you find that increased expenses took S91 million of the 766 million increase, leaving a net1 increase of 65 million. That amounts to almost .004 of the gross. -. " So much for a non-technical analysis. In bookkeeping terms the company reports that Ha net income was $116,171,073, which was T.02 per cent of the value of net assets. Average income for the five-year period 1937-41 was 4.59 per cent and for the ten-year period 1931 41 including four deficit years, 1.85 per cent. A comparison with 1929 showing percent age disposition of gross income is interesting. In that year 32.2 per cent went, for materials and services,' S per cent for taxes, 5.8 per cent for depreciation, 1.4 per Cent for interest, 67 Ji per cent for wages, salaries and pensions, 14.6 per cent to stockholders. 17J per cent "re tained for future needs." In the 1941 breakdown 27.5 per cent went for materials and services, 11JB per cent for taxes, 5.9 per cent for depre ciation, .4 per cent for interest, 3 J per cent for wages, 8 J per cent to stockholders, 7 A per cent "retained far future" needs." ' -. 4 In other word. the net income was less in 1941 than in that piping year of peace, 1929; tud if you think the stockholders received too "touch, it is interesting to note that Uncle Sam tnd local governments took more than they" did. ; Those cherry trees In Washington, DC, are - blooming the ones that weren't hacked down by irate xritizens early last Decemberand it is reported authoritatively that they are not ' Japanese, but Korean cherry trees. It seems "J that their ancestors grew in the Yang Jo valley ' of the Korean isthmus and were transplanted to -Tokyo by Nippon invaders many years ago. Just how many, we can't say, for the Nips have invaded Korea intermittently for 450 years. And we can't say, either, that the newly-publi-cized facts make us feel any better about those trees. They are Koreans Korean slaves, and ' a treacherous Japanese government sent them as a gift after it already was plotting our con quest. We attempt to be broad-minded; we have fought against racial discrimination and against unwarranted suspicion of persons of German, Italian and Japanese descent. But as for those particular cherry trees, we'd just as soon see them all chopped down. Fanl Halloa There's a buyer's market on subject-matter for editorials this year and the annual "weeks' don't get as much attention as they did in the past. One we have no intention of passing up even though mention is belated a day or so, is "Kindness to Animals Week." When people are being so unkind to each other, kindness to ani mals may seem anomalous but then, they are not our enemies. And it gives us a lift to read about the Lebanon city council. That's a busy, growing city. The aldermen must face a lot of big problems. But they were not too busy, at a recent meeting, to devote some time and at tention to the disposition of several orphan kittens. If a city government can do that, civilians can do no less. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, April 28 A purge of the nazi leadership is probably forecast by the Hitler speech. A guess is that either Himmler, overlord of the secret police, or Goebbels, '' """"n. 1 e propagandist, may go, to J o t I create a fresh political front at . . UVM... WSJ ..... gr. wvwm. ' " if ing one. Hitler spoke in a new calm, appealing tone when he asked the reichstag to give him the legal right to remove anyone from office, but the tone was hollow. He controls both the reichstag and the office holders. He already had the right he asks. The only excuse for him to mention the matter in such a way was to seek popular sup port for another bootkicking ouster from high nazi chairs. As pudgy Herr Goering seems to be in favor for the moment, it looks like Himmler or Goebbels has reason to feel uneasy. Der boss has shaken the army until all its top teeth have fallen out. and asked no one's authority. He fired Von Lieb from the Leningrad front. Von Beck from the center, Von Runstedt from the south (shifting him to France as a mere police man). Von Brauchitsch, the generalissimo (he went back only In an advisory capacity and not as head of the armies) and even Keitel, his right hand man. No one knows who replaced these generals. All that is known is that General Jodl Is now do ing Hitler's military brainwork. But the biggest point of the speech, a point evident in nearly every paragraph except one, was that Hitler himself Is on the defensive. Between the lines you could plainly read evi dence that he is enmeshing himself in a new type of defeat. Just as he offered the world a new type of war in the blitz. It is not a defeat in the field, a crushing blow from a lost battle, but a defeat based on the diminution of vitality in the bril liantly efficient German military machine and in moral stamina and industrial production. The speech cheered some officials here so much they now are convinced der fuehrer will be through by November. They expect he will not be able to defeat the Russians and will not get through Syria to oQ. That may be overly optimistic, but the tone he assumed "was certainly further evidence that the German nation as a whole is capable now of only a limited remaining effort, has only a dimin ished store of resources, both human and ma terial The tremendous pace of the military ma chine is gone. Everything in Germany has gone into the army, the best of the food, men and raw materials. Now the machinery is wearing down, manpower Is running out, unrest and its .problems confront him everywhere in occupied countries. As one official describes it, Germany now is like a piece of wood which still looks good on the outside but is full of termites underneath. British air spotters have noticed the German defensive trend on their front in many ways. Concrete air posts have been built in airfields where nazi bombers formerly took off to attack England. Thousands of concrete pill boxes have been constructed along the occupied stretch of v coast So many nazi troops have been removed from that area, all talk of Invasion of England has been forgotten. Field Marshal Goerings recent trip to Borne was for the purpose of drawing further to the limit of Italian manpower. Transportation diffi culties now are so great Germany has abandoned shipments of coal, iron and other materials to Italy. Nazi freight cars and locomotives are serv ing troops at the Russian front. How hard pressed is Rome, was evident in the recent decree subjecting all men between 18 and 85 to civilian labor service. Working time in many factories has been reduced 'due to insuffi cient electric power, so apparently the draft is to draw workers into Germany. Italy has fallen so low In the economic order she has added to her list of exports men. . . Germans are getting an average of only 2500 calories a day, Italians 1700, and as the soldiers : at the front need more than this to Mve and are getting it, the rations of those at home are hardly ' enough to sustain health. Italy is closer to starva tion than all the other countries in Europe except ' Greece and Belgium, ' t , v-x my .w-k .... ggr : - . $'ia j&?4f i?sv fVjgSss is ' .""2?. 'Colossus of Roads9 Bits for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS Our Yankee ingenuity 4-29-42 will easily out ersatz the Germans and the Japs and all the tribes of them: S Ersatz is a German word. It did not originally mean, in the German language, exactly what it now means in all languages and dialects. It meant, according to Adler's Dictionary of German and English, (the best author ity,) "reparation, compensation, amends; restitution, indefniflca 'tion"; an ersatzmann was a de puty, a substitute, mann being German for man. But Yankee ingenuity is cer tain to out ersatz the Germans, the Japs and all the peoples and tribes of the wide and round earth. S There are already in the mak ing ersatz substitutes for the rubber that has grown scarce in this country partly on account of the war conditions in the sec tions of the world influenced by the ambitious idiocies of the ov erlords of the Japs. The same goes-for the various substitutes that will answer as well as or better than the silks made by the Nipponese slaves, heretofore, in their sQk worm fields and their lower than slave labor factories making the arti cles of commerce depending upon them for their supplies. Our part of the world will be better off for the more pitiful plunge of the Japs into starker poverty and deeper degradation. S One hole in America's war effort lack of tung oil has Today's Garden By ULLIE L. MADSEN E. I. reports that her forsythia, which used to have good blooms on it, now has very inferior blooms and not so very many. She asks if pruning will help. Answer: Yes, cut out all the old wood. She could cut it to the ground this season or cut part of it off this year and more again next. Each year after blooming, the forsythias should be pruned. The old or weak branches should be removed, the plant should be given a balanced fertilizer, worked into the soiL Well de composed cow barn fertilizer is beneficial also. T. A. wants some easy method of gardening. He writes that it seems everyone has made gard ening so complicated. He had gardened since hewas a child and says he formerly enjoyed discussing gardening with friends but that they have become so technical in their expressions that he no longer really enjoys their conversation. And he won ders if all the new sprays and the new "names for things" are necessary. Answer Gardening is a sci ence. All science, even garden ; ing, has a technical side. The more one knows about a hobby the more one can really enjoy it. Why doesnt T. A who re ally seems to like gardening, study the subject from the tech nical angle also? That doesnt necessarily mean that he must learn all the families, the genii. or even the species. But the cor rect name for the plants he has might add to the interest. The spraying programs have become much more complicated because we have more insects and more diseases than we had some years ago. And unless we follow a ra ther rigid control program, dis eases and insects will continue to increase. . - been plugged by the persistent endeavor of a man who would n't take "no" for an answer. M. E. Marvin, once a self-made mil lionaire who had settled in Bra zil, believed that the oil-laden nut of the country's oiticica (oytee-seek-a) tree should be more than a botanical curiosity and shied away from no effort to prove it His successful quest through years of research, re buffs and debts is recounted in the April number of The Read er's Digest Oiticica oil today is used in paint linoleum, printers' inks and a dozen other products, re placing the tung oil which we used to import from China and Japan. Millions of oiticica trees grow wild in northern Brazil; many yield 500 to 2,000 pounds of nuts each, the kernels of which are 60 per cent oiL Bra zilians had tried to process the ofl, but failed. Marvin after 12 years finally devised a way, ac cording to the Digest article. "W When the last chemical prob lems had been solved it was found that the haphazard man ner in which the natives har vested the nuts also had an ad verse bearing on the. final pro duct In characteristic fashion Marvin leveled this added hur dle and then went to work erect ing storage warehouses, pressing plants and refineries, having in the end to persuade Getulio Var gas, Brazil's president, to author ize the Bank of Brazil to lend him funds when all other sources failed. Oiticica is now Zrazil's elev enth most important export The rush for the oil is increasing since the war cut off Oriental supplies, but Marvin's 1942 out put will go far toward filling our wartime paint demands, says the article. S When the time shall come for the representative of the nations of the world to sit around the peace table, which may arrive very soon, and must eventually have the participation of all the governments of our planet the outlook for such of them as rep resent the nations like Japan will have- gloomy outlooks. There will be a cry for jus tice around that peace table the justice that ought to be done but that will be hard to grant In full; more so to the unfortun ate people of Japan than to any of the others: due to the insane ambitious of the crazy cult around the mad mikado. S The world will need at that table men with clearer minds than had the sadly self overbur dened, desperately tired Presi dent Wilson at the last peace - table. It will need bigger men than some of the leaders of the United States Senate of that time. It will need the biggest, broadest, best living men to make the most important decisions of history up to date. 'Crime aft Castaway1 By EDITH BRISTOL (Chapter IS (Contused) I was restless and a little let down, too as people always are after excitement The tension of the week had piled up on all of us and I felt that a brisk walk would do me good. I wasn't go ing to stray too far from the ranch house, Tm. not a coward but I don't hunt for trouble. I struck out toward the edge of the cliff but kept well within sight and hearing distance of the house and had only walked a few minutes before Lance came riding down from the valley stables. He, too, must have wanted exercise and solitude after the tension of the past few days. He swung off his horse as he saw me, dropped the bridle over his arm and fell into step be side me. - Tm glad you are getting a bit of a change from that ghast ly" house,' he began. "I thought about asking you to ride but you had gone to your own room. You've been stuck to that type writer too much. "After aU," I smiled up at him. That's what rm here for." This was the first time Id ever talked to him ' alone. He was different, somehow. Less strain ed. Less self-conscious. The worried look faded from his hazel eyes as he smiled back at me. He could be fun. X realized. Away from all this trouble. Lance Gregg would be jolly and carefree and young. Tve been wanting to thank you," I went on "for the way you helped me out with the cameramen. I ap preciate it so much. , This trouble here at Casta- way is our bad luck, he said. "No need to drag you into it . Ifs hard enoush on aQ of "but ft s not your mystery. 7 Perhaps I should have let It rest there. Fd thanked him and that was enough. . Vbo knows t why I didn't? But his lean brown face looked so grim and unhappy for all his height and broad shoulders he seemed like a small boy with a trouble that's just too much to be endured. Whatever it was, I felt so sorry for him, I had to offer my help for whatever it was worth. "I know it's not my mystery," I agreed. "But your uncle aad your aunt and you, too have been so kind to me since I came to the ranch that I almost feel it is my affair. X wish I could help to solve it" T wish you could." Lance Gregg set his jaw. "Allen is doing his best I know. But I think he depends too much on finger prints and foot prints, tire marks and find ing the gun. That isn't what Tm looking for. That isnt what is going to find the murderer." -What Is?" "Motive. Something that's been going on here, perhaps for months, maybe for years. Allen's counting too much on tire tracks and in the rain that fell the night my uncle was killed there were no tire tracks." "He thinks the gun is the most important clue," I suggested. T know he does. As if the man who shot that gun was go ing to put it away where it could be found. Here's a ranch of 6000 acres. There" He waved to ward the ocean, its gray now changing to purple in the set, ting sun, There's the whole " Pacific ocean. Who's going to put a gun away when it's that easy to dispose of it? Ifs motive that will show who did it. If I could prove what" he broke off, looked at me square- ly and asked: . "Did yon hear Worth Diirfee say he left five thousand dollars with my uncle the night he called?- - ; (To be continued) ' - KSUC WKONXSOAT Ut Ka, C30-1UM IT Shine. T.-00News in Brief. T.-05 Wmm M Shtoa. T30 News. T4SYaur Gospel Program. S30 County Agent. SJS Hittut the HI Spots. S JO New BrevtUca. S35 Lew White. Organist. 9:00 Pastor's Can. :1&-Surf Riders. JO Castles la the Air. 10 World m Review. UM Morning Pick U IS 30 Women in the News, 103S Melody In Miniature. 1:40 Pot Pourri. 1:4S Dr. B. F. Thompson. 1140 Ruas Morgan Orchestra. .. 1130 WU ChapeL 11:00 Ivan XMtmars. " 11:15 News. U JO Hillbilly Serenade. , 12 33 Willamette Valley Opinion. 11 S Moonbeam Trio. 140 Radiating Rhythiuna, x 1 JS Tune Tabloid. 130 four Motes. 13 Sing Song Time. 1 :0O Melody Mart. 1:15 US Marines. . S JO Milady's Melodies. S:4S Isle of Paradise. 140 Old Opera-House. 440 Shining Hour. 4:15 News. 430 Tea time Tunes. 840 Here Comes the Band. 30 To the Ladies. S 35 Dinner Hour Muste. S 40 Tonight's Headlines. :1S News Analysts. 30 Evening Serenade. 140 News in Brief. 145 Interesting Facts. T:15 Lud Gluikin. 30 Willamette Valley Opinions. 140 Freddy Nagle Orchestra. 13S Geary for Senator. S 40 War Fronts on Review. S:10 Novelettes. 30 McWaln's Melange. M AS Sky Over Britain. 40 New :15 Eton Boys. 30 The Roundup. 1040 Let' Dance. 1030 News. 10.-45 String Serenade. 1140 Bert Hirsch Presents. 1130 News. - , , . KAIJE MBS WEDNESDAY 1330 K 30 Memory Timekeeper. 140 News. T:15 Memory Timekeeper. S 40 Breakfast Club. S 30 News. w S5 Mia Meade'i Children. 40 John B. Hughe, r 45 Woman's Side of the News. 30 This Si That 1040 News. 10:15 I'll Find My Way. 1030 New. 1035 Women Today. 10:45 Buyer's Parade. 1140 Cedric Foster. 11:15 Jolly Four. 1130 Concert Gems. 115 Luncheon Concert 11 JO New. 11:45 Lowry Kohler. 140 Mutual Goes Calling. 130 TBA. 1:49 John Sturges. 140 Jerry Sears Presents. 1U5 Take it Easy. 130 News. 1:43 Bookworm. 340 B. S Bercovld. Commentator. 3:15 Johnny Richards Orchestra. 3 :30 Hello Again. 440 News. 4:15 Johnson Family. 430 Musical Matinee. 4:45 Music Depreciation. 5:00 Captain Danger. 5:15 Jimmy Allen. 30 Captain SUonKht 55 Jack Armstrong. 840-Gsbriel Heatter. US-News. 30 Spotlight Bands. 5 Movie Parade. 140 News Si View. 7:15 Music for Moderns. 130 Lone Ranger. S 40 Wings Over the West Coast :15 Joe Relchman Orchestra. 30 Tune Up America. 940 New. as Today's Top Tunes. 30 Fulton Lewis, Jr. S:45 Hank Keene in Town. 1040 Jan Savitt Orchestra. 1030 News. 105 TBA. 1140 Lee Young Orchestra. 11:15 Duke Ellington Orchestra. 1130 Jan Savitt Orchestra. SOW-NBC WEDNESDAY CM K. 440 Music S 30 War News Roundup. 40 Sunrise Serenade. 30 Early Bards. 1 40 New Headline and IBghBghts. 1:15 Music of Vienna. 7 30 Reveille Roundup. 75 Sam Hayes. 40 Stars of Today. 8:15 Women' World. 30 Symphonic Swing. 8:40 Lotta Noyes. 8:45 David Hanun. 40 Bess Johnson. as Bachelor's Children. 30 Welcome. Neighbor. 1040 House Next Door. 10:15 News for Busy Women, 1030 Homekeepers Calendar. 105 Dr. Kate. 1140 Light of the World, .lias Arnold Crimm'i Daughter. 1130 The CuMling Light. 115 Hymns of All Churches. 1140 Against tite Storm, lias Ma Perkins. 1330 Pepper Young's Famflw. 11:45 Right to Happiness. 140 Backstage Wife. 1:15 Stella Dallas 130 Lorenzo Jones. 15 Young Wldder Brawn, 140 When a Girl Mantes. 1:15 Portia Face Life. 130 The Andersons. 1:45 Vic Ac Sad. 840 The Bartons. 1:15 US Navy Band. 135 New. S :30 Hollywood New Flashe. 1S Personality Hour. 45 Weekly Spectator. 1.40 Stan of Today. 8:15 Cocktail Hour. 30 It Happened in the Sendee. BUI Henry. 40 Eddie Cantor. 30 Mr. District Attorney. 740-Kay Kyser's Kouega. These schecales are svppoe , fcy Che respective stations, Any varta- Hons Besesi - ay uscenen are wmw- m efeaages saaSe ay tto tts air at any ttaae mmt ft tfcla m . AH radio stations saay ae a or national eerewte. . ... 840 Point Sublime. 830 Uncle Walter's Doghouse. 40 World's Most Honored Musle. 30 Fred Waring. - 5 Musical Interlude. 1040 News Flashes. 10:15 Time to Relax. 130-Moonlight Sonata. 1140 Organ lias Hotel BUtmore Orchestra. 1130 War News. 1140-140 a. nu Music. see KOIN CBSWKDNKSOAY TT K. - 40 Northwest Farm Reporter. :1S Breakfast Bulletin. 830 Koln JOoek. lasHeadliners. 130 Bob Gerred Reporting. 15 Nelson Pringle, New. 840 Victory Begins at Home. 8:15 Consumer News, 830 Valiant Lady. 85 Stories America Loves, 40-Kate Smith Speaks. 8:15 Big Sister. 30 Romance of Helen Treat 5 Our Gal Sunday. 1440Llf Can Be Beautiful. 1:15 Woman in Wntte, It 30 Vie St Sad. 105-Jane Xndlcott Reporter. 1140 Bright Horizon, lias Aunt Jenny. 1130 We Love & Learn. 11:45 The Goldbergs. 1140 Eyes of the World. 11:15 Knox Manning, News. 1130 Joyce Jordan. 11:45 Woman of Courage. 1 40 Stepmother. 1:15 SpoUifht on Asia. I JO American School of the Air. 40 News. S :15 CBS. 3 30 Nam the Tune. 135-Sing Along. 15 Scattergood Barnes. 140 Melodies. 3:13 Hedda Hopper's Hollywood, 830 Frank Parker. 15 News. 440 Second Mrs. Burton. 4:15 Young Dr. Makxte. 430 Newspaper of the Ah. 840 Nelson Eddy. 830 Harry Hennery 8:45 Bob Garred. News, 535 Elmer Davis, News. 40 Junior Mia. - 30 Ransom Sherman, 140 Glenn Miller. 1:15 Great Moments tat Musta. 7:45 CBS. 840 Amos n Andy. 8:15 Lanny Rom. 30 Dr. Christian. 35 Dick Joy. News. 40 That Brewster Boy. 30 Northwest Neighbors. 1040 Five Star "tnai. 10:15 World Today. 1030 War Time Women. 1035 Air Flo. 10:45-Stop, Look at Listen. 1140 Lud Ghtskin. 1130 Manny Strand. 11 :55 News. 1140-040 a. m Music and News. KSX WEDNXSD IT UM K. 40 New. 45 Moments of Melody. 4:15 National Farm Ac Home. 6:43 Western Agriculture. 140 Clark Dennis, Singer. 1:15 Clete Roberts Reports. 130 Breal.-;t Club. 840 Haven of Rest 35 Don Vining. 0:45 Keep Fit Club with Patty Jaa 40 Meet Your Neighbors. 9:13 Sharon Sings. JO Breakfast t Sardi's. 1040 Baukhase Talking. 10:15 Orphans of Divorce. 1030 Amanda of Honeymoon BIB. 10:45 John'! Other Wife. 1140 Just Plain Bill. 11:15 Nature Trails 1130 Stars of Today. 115 Keep Fit Club with Patty Jeam 1140 News Headlines and Highlight 11:15 Your Livestock Reporter. llJO-Market Reports. 1135 Musical Interlude. 11:40 Stella Unger. 11:45 New Headline A HUite. 140 Arthur .Tracy. Street Singer. 1:15 Club Matinee. 135 NeWs.J 140 The Quiet Hour. 830 A House in the Country. 1:45 Star of Today. 340 Guatemalian Rhumb Band, 8:15 News. 130-Four Polka Dots. 1:45 The Vagabonds. 440 Easy Ace. 4:15 Mr. Keen. Tracer. 430 News. 4:4S-Sylvia Itarlowa. 540 Flying PatroL :15 Secret City. 30 News. 5:45 Supper Syncopation. 840-BN. :1 5 Sport Time, Bill Mock. 830 Cab Calloway' Quizzical. 140 Baste St Chamber Musi. 130 New Analysis. , 15 Miracle of Faith.' 130-Jean Cavall 840-Quix Kids. j 830 Manhattan at Midnight, OO Dusty Records. 45 Hotel Syracuse Orchestra. 9:15 Lef Talk Over the News. 930 News Headlines and Highlights, 8:45 Edgewater Beach Hotel Orak, 45 New. 1040 Sir Prancia Drake Hotel Orokw 1030 Broadway Bandwagon. It :45 Palladium Ballroom. 1140 This Moving WorlaV II dJ Organ. 1130 War News Roundup. KOAC WEDNESDAY OH K. M40 Review of he Day. 1045 News. 18 :15 The Homatnakers Hour. 11 40 School of the Air. 11 40 Artist and Orchestra. 1340 News. I 13:13 Farm Hour. 1.40 Favorite Classics. 105 Variety Time. 1:45 Organ Nocturne. S 40 Music for Morale. 130 AATJW Half Hear. 140 String Ensemble (Continued on JPage 9) Rom where I sit... y Joe Marsh A iff weeka ago. I lad aeeaatonte . visit soate friends ef bum ta Ne Ivaska. Nshrasla certainly is a gnat State. I Ha Nebraska. I Vkm tkeae .easi cornfields tact seess te treteh free fcailise ts asihea. (Pleaty ef wheatSeUs fat Nebraska, texO e e e But the thing that interests me most about Nebraska right now la the very important social experi ment the beer pooplo started there several years ago. Tae beer peeele eigs Sfeprieterf ef retail siacea to eeadart tiMS seperly aad to obey tae Thw.sVj ask the pabSe generally to report law vklatJoBS to the artfaertttea, Taey sead warnings to earelaes re tailers and if rMirtlaas are net csmctoi they take tae case ey with tae alherhloa. NainzaBy the atlhoritiea aad the yablic have wel- as aa added f fee law Beer itself is naturally a 1 age ef aooderetlon. Tot, aQ toe aftea, pooplo are inclined ta blame bear wrongly for any misconduct ef the CBstoiBsr er the proprietor la place ttcensed to sell beer. ' e e Be, the brewers get torather to eae what they could ae aaeatthia. That program fat now everatfag ta saaay states a. jd with the Na-. tkm at war, brewing industry er gSTiiiatioia cooperate with. drU and military acthorkiss to assure fed cseditJoaa ia beer eatlets around the amy cassse aad naval their retailers ... ta feet, they're net alTsnret to centre! retailers. Cat the Tarewiay trndattry weraed eat a alaa ay which it t mutes wiOkUMnLIleasAheritiMtoe fTr rf ill m a has i naiTsrt irril 1 reflect ea the Uwat atolartly. Boraahow, to me, that's eawj&tT, tatpeitaat, pahlaspiritod effort, I doat know of asytUag TO fl ever baviagj beea triad befere. 11 people really help the brewers . wKk that program they'll be deiaj a treat thiag for the easstry. .'i : i