The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 16, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

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"No Favor Swayt V$; No Fear Shall Awe"
From First Statesman, March 28, 1831
THE STATESMAN PUBUSHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publJ cation of all
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
Hold Hearings in NW
Citizens of the Pacific Northwest, who have
been carrying on a squabble, not exactly friend
ly but at any rate a family squabble, for more
than a decade over the public power issue, may
find it a bit difficult to realize that congress,
away back there in Washington, DC, may by a
simple counting of noses congressmen's noses,
not ours take the matter- entirely , out of our
hands and settle it once and for all.
For more than two years the advocates of a
Columbia Power Authority have had bills cre
ating such an agency before congress but for
one reason or another they have lain dormant
except that occasionally a new bill would super
sede one previously introduced. But now the
most up-to-date of these measures, known as
the Bone-Smith bill and ostensibly differing
from its predecessors chiefly in its provision for
"revenue" bond issues, is the subject of an
extended hearing before a joint committee.
One might with slight mental exertion write
a book exclusively devoted to sensible reasons
why this measure should not be passed, and
why it should not even be considered at this
particular time. We are confident that a great
many persons who are wholly "sold" on public
power would gladly contribute chapters to such
book.
It is asserted for example that though the
administrator of the proposed CPA would
nominally be appointed by the president, a
point which suggests this is a compromise bill
drawn to placate two contending groups one of
which wanted interior department control, the
other an independent agency such as TV A,
actually it places the whole program in the lap
of Secretary Ickes and gives him more un
bridled power than any of the earlier bills. It
is a further interpretation of the text that the
"revenue" bonds actually would be federally
guaranteed, that congress is deprived of any
power to limit their issue, that actually it would
be possible for the money now being raised in
the war bond campaign to be invested in these
CPA bonds.
Yes, one might write a book. But of course
there is one outstanding objection to this bill
and its predecessors, whether they proposed a
TVA-like arrangement or Ickes control. The
objection is that they would take power matters
out of the hands of the various northwest com
munities and place them either in the hands of
the power-hungry secretary of the interior or,
less objectionably only in degree, in the hands
of a board over whose decisions the communi
ties would obviously have no control.
Already, you might say, this denial of home
rule is in effect with the mere introduction of
these bills. For behold, congress shall make the
decision not we of the affected region. Now
' 11 : u : l .:,.-, n
were are iwu yuinis wnu.u give use iu uccp
concern. In the first place as has been well
documented by the Gallup Institute and others,
congress though reputed always to have its
"ear to the ground" is currently rather deaf to
the desires of its grass-roots constituency and
disposed rather to listen to noisy, minority pres
sure groups. And a pressure group is what the
public power crowd is nothing else but.
In the second place we recall better say
confess having suggested here though the idea
was not ours originally, that perhaps the TVA's
existence was justified because the people of
Tennessee and Alabama regions where it holds
sway, were in the main backward, ignorant
folk without resources which would enable
them to finance power development even if
they had the gumption. Here the disturbing
question arises: Does congress in spite of the
contrary evidence observable in the mien and
deportment of Senator McNary and our other
representatives, vision the Pacific Northwest as
an equally backward region, populated by rude
lumberjacks, fishermen and hillbillies?
It seems quite possible that congress does
see such a picture and just barely possible that
it is a true picture. If we are ignorant hillbillies
the proper thing is to let congress decide for
us these difficult issues which we are unable to
comprehend.
At the minimum though, it would seem fair
and just that we ask congress, through the joint
committee, holding these hearings, to come out
here and see for itself. Particularly in view of
the fact that Bonneville funds and PUD funds
have financed the appearance of CPA advocates
before the committee, we modestly request that
the hearings be brought to the region involved
so that less fortunate interests have opportuni
ty to be heard and that since congress is pro
posing to deprive us of a voice in power de
cisions in future, it give ear just now to the
opinions here prevalent. Such opinions, for
example, as were expressed in the three dis
tricts in which PUD proposals were voted down
only a month ago.
to the gas-producer, to feed the stuff into the
cylinders.
Such is motoring in the land of the Anzaee.
As we have hinted heretofore, we Americans
don't yet know what "sacrifice" really means.
Charcoal-Power Autos
The invitation-command to "fill her up" isn't
often heard around service stations even here
in Oregon these days. Its substitute as a rule
is a timid inquiry: "May I have a gallon or
two?" But in Australia they still say nU her
up" or the colloquial equivalent. However,
what happens next you'd never in the world
suspect. !
On most automobiles "down under" there
has been superimposed at the rear a gadget
looking something like a moonshine still, if
your memory goes that far back. It's a charcoal
gas-producer. For approximately a dollar the
filling station man will chuck in 45 pounds of
charcoal. Having previously put some paper
and kindling in the bottom of the pot, you now
ight the fire from below. The burning char
coal produces carbon gas, which, uniting with
air and with steam from a water tank under
the top, makes carbon monoxide which is drawn
into the cylinders, compressed and ignited by
the spark. That 45-pound bag of charcoal will
take you about 57 or 60 miles, provided there
aren't -too many hills. The pickup quotient is'
low.
The gasoline ration runs from one to five
gallons a month but most motorists buy and
use whatever their allowance is, for it's needed
In starting unless there Is a blower attacked
They're talking about an army of eight
million, possibly ten. When it comes to money
the talk is in billions. But you can't talk that
way about men. There still are not many more
than two billion people in this world and less
than half of them are males. ,
. :y&: . ... y
Paul Mallon
There was one good thing about the weath
er we were having not so long ago. The Salem
Senators could almost get along with two
pitchers. One double header, then three days
of rain and the same old reliable chuckers
were ready to go again.
News Behind
The News
By PAUL MALLON
(Distribution by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro
duction la whole or In part strictly prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, June-15 Labor has a good
chance during this war to learn how government
ownership and operation work out
Certain experiments In socialism have been
thrust upon the government,
some experience has been ac
quired in the kind of "national
ization" which the British la
bor leftists strangely are com
ing to advocate as a post-war
system, and that some unthink
ing liberals in this country lean
toward also.
The government took over
and operated the Brewster Avi
ation company, turning it back
about three weeks ago to pri
vate management Before gov
ernment operation and after
ward, the union in that -plant
had a closed shop and a check-off.
But while the government was in control it
had nothing, not even the right to strike. When
the government took over the plant labor be
came the servant of the public and lost all its
rights, which could be restored only when those
workers became private employes again.
Earlier, in the Kearny shipbuilding plant strik
ing workers wanted a union of maintenance shop
(practically the same as closed) and foolish union
leaders urged the government to take over the
plant when they could not get their desires by
negotiation with the management
The government accepted their invitation, to
their regret. The navy ran the plant but without
the union of maintenance or any other shop, and
when the plant was turned back the union was
still without its objective. It would have been
against the law for the government to have done
otherwise.
The workers finally got their union shop through
the war labor board, after private management was
resumed.
This is not a situation peculiar to war, but is
the unbroken history of all government peace
time operation or ownership.
Take the cases of the TV A and the federal barge
line. These government-owned business enter
prises are typical peacetime experiments in the
socialist theory. Both have unions of employes,
but maintain an open shop, and the unions do
not have the right to strike.
TVA has about 37,000 employes and a majority
are members of some trade union, the largest being
the electrical workers. But these trade workers for
the government do not enjoy the same privileges
as private workers in the same trade employed
by private enterprise.
In government shipyards and arsenals, it is the
same. There is not much reason for a union.
Working wages must equal the prevailing wages
in private yards in the vicinity and therefore there
can be no collective bargaining, no strikes, no
closed shop.
Obviously then, labor should be assuming the
leadership against socialism of the nazi, com
munist, proposed British or American varieties.
Such a good friend of labor as Mr. Roosevelt
outlined the realities of the situation in a letter
to federal employes August 18, 1937 a letter which
could have been entitled:
"The Case Against Socialism."
He wrote:
"The very nature and purposes of government
make it impossible for administrative officials
to bind the employer in mutual discussions with
government employe organizations .
"Upon employes in the federal service rests the
obligation to serve the whole people, whose in
terests and welfare require orderliness and con
tinuity in the conduct of government activities.
This obligation is paramount"
Any union man who works for socialism then is
working to nullify his union and destroy his ex
isting rights. If you have been thinking that it
would be a good post war policy for "the govern
ment to own and operate, for instance, US Steel or
General Motors or North American Aviation, you
are really proposing to wipe out all the gains
labor has made under private management, and
deny it the right to strike or to demand pay in
creases as in Germany, Italy, Russia.
Could any more convincing proof be offered that
labor has been misled again in this instance; that
its real future depends upon maintenance of a
private profits system, and. that its real interests
require it to work for profits for management as
well as itself, because labor cannot milk a dry
cow?
The political truths of ibis evidence are proved
further by equally convincing economic truths.
US Steel, General Motors, and all other big or
little manufacturing businesses have no wealth
IS teCNOTiCID! S
Hiding It Under the Rug
IBitfcs for Breakfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Close to the place 6-16-42
where the Provisional
Government was founded
and Constitution outlined:
S V V
(The foregoing headline words
will seem familiar to old time
readers. They began this column
for the issue of Saturday, May
9, this year. Let's have the first
words that followed, quoting:
"This columnist, invited to ad
dress the Wheatland Social Club
'Crime at Castaway'
By EDITH BRISTOL
Chapter 34 Continued
"You go to the top of the
hills above the dam," he turned
to me. "Stick with the engi
neers I'm going to ride down
the valley and warn the people
in the low lands."
"I'm sticking with you,
Lance," I said.
Sometimes now I wake up at
night with a start ... I hear
the hum of a speeding motor
. . . and feel the throb of the
cylinders . . . the moon bursts
through the clouds and I hear
Lance say . . . "There's a Mexi
can family lives over there in
the willows . . ." and again we
are off on our ride down the
valley of the Gallina.
If Lance had not known the
valley, every inch of it, from
boyhood, he could never have
done it; if he had not covered
the road from Gallina to the
dam so many times that every
foot of it was familiar to him,
he could never have known, on
our desperate ride, where the
settlers lived, where to warn
the sleeping families.
But he did know!
"Nobody lives within the first
three miles," Lance bit off the
words crisply. "That's company
land . . . we needn't stop till
we reach the first road."
There were lights in the first
little house a rough wooden
building with young fruit trees
planted hopefully about it.
Lance swung his roadster into
the dooryard, leaned on the
horn and a man came to the
doorway. I could see his outline,
a dark silhouette in the yellow
of the lamplight
"The dam's going, Mike! Get
your things together! Make for
the hills as fast as you can!"
Mike stood dazed. "What's"
that you say?"
Two children, little tow
heads, came and thrust their
small bodies between their fath
er and ihe frame of the door.
"He says the dam Is going . . .
he says the dam is going . . .
They began to cry and I saw
a woman gather them into her
arms.
Lance swung his car around.
"Step on it, Mike! The water's
coming out from the east end
now!" We were off.
We watched every intersecting
road. Sometimes it was only a
rough trail through the sandy
floor of the valley. But no mat
ter how slight the roadway,
Lance turned in and swept like,
the night wind to the little house
at its end. Every shack and cab
in. Sometimes it was only a
canvas tent the same warning
Bounded as he blasted (in hi
aside from their ability to produce and a little . horn and yelled:
cash in the bank. If they cannot obtain employes "Hello, there, inside! The
to do the work or raw materials to make their dam is coin out! Get to hiah
proauco, or u iot any oiner reason sucn as national
depression their productivity is destroyed, their
value evaporates. Their naked plants are worth
only what some prospective purchaser may think
he can produce from them.
Thus, as our great production victory in this
war had shown us, the interests of labor are the
same as the management unity, productivity,
profits. The interests of government and the pub
lic are served by precisely the same purposes.
You will never find a responsible labor leader
who has not known this for a long time, and has
not practiced it except at such odd moments when
he was trying to squeeze some concessions out of ..enough for Lance to have rid-
Us company. den its full length. Every de-
ground as fast as you can!"
Sometimes a light flashed in
side the house before he fin
ished his warning; sometimes
we heard a scramble in the
darkness and the barking of
dogs followed as we sped away.
. The valley was narrow for the
first five or six miles, more
like a canyon between the Mils.
II the canyon had been wide,
if it had been thickly settled.
no night would have been long
tour from the main road took
time much time. I saw Lance
look at his wrist watch and bite
his lips. I knew he was wonder
ing whether we could keep
ahead of the flood that was on
the way.
Once he spoke of Walter
Gregg, sadness and bitterness
mingled: "If Uncle Walter had
lived until this night he would
have died of a broken heart."
He set his square chin. "This
was his work, this dam. He was
so proud of it He watched it
like a mother watches a child
as long is he was on the job.
It was only after he was hurt
that this could have happened
to it 111 build another one." He
said, after a few minutes as we
sped through the cool darkness:
"I'll build a dam with no Cra
ven around to destroy my
work!"
At the "Y" of the road there
was a little settlement.
"There's a telephone here,"
Lance said. "We can call for
help and see if the warning
came through from the power
house."
Lights twinkled in the little
houses of the settlement a ga
rage, a lunch counter, a few
cabins. Men were piling bed
ding and boxes on their auto
mobiles. Women were gather
ing up their household goods
children whimpered.
"No need to ask," Lance com
mented as we swung into the
settlement "They got the mes
sage." We stopped long enough to
get some gas, then drove on.
Now the moon came out Over
the top of the hills to the south,
its first pale beams mounted,
gilding the stark branches of the
sycamores, turning the sand of
the valley floor to snow. Short
black shadows lengthened into
longer lines as the moon climbed
higher above the hills. The stars
paled and went away. The white
ribbon of the valley highway
unrolled before us. There were
no houses here for several miles,
but off to the side of the can
yon we could see a cluster of
trees and a house.
Lance slackened speed, lifting
his foot from the throttle. I could
see he was measuring how
much time would it take to run
across to the house on the side
of the canyon?
"God help them!" he said.
"They've got to take their
chance. They're fairly high up.
The water may not come that
high. I've got to stick by the
folks on the floor of the valley."
Now we crossed the highway
that led into Gallina. We could
see no lights, but Lance waved
one hand in a general direction
off toward the north.
"Gallina is over there if the
message came through from the
power house there should be a
posse of men out by now, ready
to help although the Lord only
knows how you can stand off
a wall of water!'
From here on, the valley wid
ened perceptibly. There were
fewer houses. The roads that
branched from our main road
: were further apart We passed
a schoolhouse saw its white
tower shining in( the moonlight
(To.be continued)
on Thursday afternoon, May
7th, being entertained at the
home of Mrs. Eugene E. Wilson,
on the subject of the Oregon
Provisional Government spoke
substantially in the words that
follow:)
"Your invitation to talk on the
subject the Provisional Govern
ment, is appropriate, consider
ing your nearness to the site of
its founding, and it is attractive
to me, in that you say in your
written invitation: 'Possibly four
generations of George Gay's
descendants will be present' "
(Your columnist had with him
during his talk to the Wheatland
Social Club his beloved wife, as
acquaintances know was gener
ally the case the two not
dreaming that on the Sunday
afternoon following, May 10th,
their automobile in the regular
and orderly traffic on the Paci
fic highway near Woodburn, re
turning home from a visit to a
relative at Aurora, would be
struck by another car giving
Mrs. Hendricks mortal wounds
from which she passed to her
long sleep on June 2, and inflict
ing many wounds and bruises
upon the writer, whose hurts in
cluded a broken knee cap, which
has since confined him to his
living quarters. These lines from
his typewriter are still written in
a room at the home of his son
Paul; arranged so that new and
some regular old readers may
have the complete address given
to the Wheatland Social Club.
That part which the good ladies
heard, and was also used in this
column in the issues of Saturday
and Sunday, May 9 and 10, will
be given double quotation
marks, the balance of the series
without them, thus:)
m
" "The site of the founding of
the Oregon Provisional Govern
ment is just across the Willam
ette river from this house; or
rather on the east bank of the
'old' Willamette river, as the
early surveyors, including Jesse
Applegate, called it You will
understand; though this needs
explanation to some outsiders.
" 'The . explanation is that
when Jason Lee and his little
party of Methodist missionaries
visited for the second time the
spot on the east bank of the
'old' river, on Monday, October
6, 1834, when they had come
with the decision to locate there
where is NOW the monument
marking the spot and on that
day began cutting logs for their
first dwelling: their initial view
of the spot having been taken in
company with Joseph Gervais,
who was showing them the way,
going from his historic house,
two miles below. On Sunday,
Nov. 8, 1834, Jason Lee wrote
in his diary: "Five weeks tomor
row since we landed here, and
our house is not yet completed.
Four weeks our goods were shel
tered in our tent, the last of
which it rained most of the time;
and ourselves by a borrowed one
very small and inconvenient
Constantly employed; obliged to
retire early in the evening with
wet clothes to prevent being
drenched by the rain; ' good
health, though, far from being
comfortable in many respects.
We have labored bard during.
the week and walked two miles
on Sabbath and labored: hard to
instruct the few, who understand
us, Ja the things pertaining to
their ' spiritual, peace i l thank
God for the mercies shown us
collectively and for the blessings
SULM TUESDAY 13M Ke.
30 Rise ft Shin.
T AO News to Brief.
T A3 Rise N Shin.
7:30 News.
T5 Your Gospel Program.
S.-00 Jerry Bern23 Orchestra.
S -.30 News Brevities.
33 Music A la Carter,
8:00 New.
t:15 Harry Owens Orchestra.
30 Stan Kenton's Orchestra.
55 To the Ladies.
10.-00 World hi Review.
10 AS Musical College.
30 Women to the News
1035 Lud Gluskin's Orchestra.
11 .-00 Russ Morgan's Orchestra.
1130 Melodic Moods.
12:00 Ivan Ditroar.
13:15 News.
1330 Hillbilly Serenade.
1135 Willamette Valley Opinions.
1355 Interlude.
1:00 Lura and Abaer.
1:19 Tune Tabloid.
130 Four Notes.
1:45 Melody Mart
J DO Sing Song Time.
1:15 Salem Art Center.
S 30 Herb Jeffrey's Songs.
2:45 Isle of Paradise.
3.-00 Old Opera House.
4:00 Broadway Bandwagon.
4:15 News.
4:30 Tea time Tunes.
S0 Here Comes the Band.
530 Dinner Hour Music.
AO Tonight's Headlines.
a5 News Analysis.
30 Evening Serenade.
7:00 News m Brief. ,
7:05 Lud Gluskin's Orchestra.
730 Willamette Valley Opinions.
750 Russ Morgan's Orchestra,
S:O0 War Fronts in Review.
A3 Silver Strings.
S3ft Some Like it Sweet
1:45 Bible Quiz.
9:00 News.
:15 Popular Music
30 The Roundup.
10:00 Let's Dance.
IB 30 News.
10:45 Don Kirby's Orchestra.
1130 Bert Hirsch Presents.
1130 Last Minute News.
KOIN CBS TUKSDAT 878 Ke.
t.-OO Northwest Farm Reporter.
:15 Breakfast Bulletin.
30 Koln Ktock.
T:15 Wake Up News.
730 Bob Garred BeporUng.
7:45 Nelson Pringle News.
i:0O Consumer News.
:15 Fletcher Wiley.
30 Valiant Lady.
8:45 Stories America Loves.
8.-00 Kate Smith Speaks.
:15 Big Sister.
30 Romance of Helen Treat
9:43 Our Gal Sunday.
10 AO Life Can Be Beautiful.
10:15 Woman in White.
1030 Vic & Sade.
10.-45 Mary Lee Taylor.
11 AO Bright Horizon.
11:15 Aunt Jenny
1130 We Love Ac Learn.
11 :45 Goldbergs.
13 AO Columbia Ensemble.
13:15 Knox Manning. Mews.
13:30 Joyce Jordan
13:45 Woman of Courage.
1 AO Stepmother.
1:15 Sam Hayes.
130-Living History.
1:45 Take it Easy.
3 AO News.
2:15 Siesta.
2:30 William Winter.
2:45 Scattergood Barnes.
3:00 Melody Weavers.
3:15 Voice of Br dwy.
330 Newspaper of the Air.
3:45 News
4 AO Second Mrs. Burton.
4:15 Young Or Malone
4:30 American Melody Hour.
5:00 Newspaper of the Air.
5:15 America's Home Fronts.
530 Harry Flannery.
5:45 Bob Garred, News.
355 Elmer Davis, News.
6:00 Melodies.
6:15 State Traffic.
630 Cheers for the Camps.
.730 Talks.
7:45 Frazier Hunt
SAO Amos n Andy.
8:15 Glenn Miller.
830 Are You a Missing Heirf
AO Duffy's Tavern.
9:30 Raymond Scott.
9:55 Dave Lane. Songs.
10 AO Five Star Final.
10 IS World Today.
1030 Wartime Women.
1035 Air-Flo.
10:45 Spotlight on Victory.
11 AO AI Donahue Orchestra.
1130 Manny Strand Orchestra.
1155 News.
12.-00-6:00 s m. Music At News.
KOAC TTJESDAT 5t Ke.
10:00 Review of the Day.
10 A3 News.
10:15 The Homema leer's Hour.
11 AO Music of the Masters.
13 AO News.
12:15 Farm Hour.
1 AO Favorite Classics.
105 Variety Time.
1:45 Pan American Melody.
2 AO Book of the Week.
330 Seeing the Americas.
2:45 Sunshine Serenade.
caaages sade ay tae
at netSee to Uis
Att raato
at aw as aay i
af asfl Idefi
are
newspaper.
3:13 Americans . All Immigraata
336 Great Songs.
3.-45 News,
4 AO Beaver Boys Stat.
438 Stories for Beys and Girls.
5 AO With the Old Masters.
5:13 Excursions in Science.
30 Evening Vesper Service.
9.45 An Out to Win.
45 News.
30 Farm Hoar. ,
730 concert Hall.
7 :45 Beaver Boys State.
30 Monitor' Views the News.
AO Music of Czechoslovakia.
:30 Band Stand.
58-10A0 News.
KZX NBC TUESDAY UN Eft,
AO Moments at Melody.
8.-15 National Farm and FifEt
8:45 Western Agriculture.
T AO Clark Dennis. Singer.
' 7:15 Breakfast club.
S: 15 Helen Hiett. News.
30 Pages in Melody.
8:45 Keep Fit Club With Patty Jean
AO Children in War Time.
8:15 Jimmy Blair. Singer.
39 Breakfast at Sard! a.
18 AO Baukhage Talking.
1045 Second Husband.
1030 Amanda of Honeymoon HUL
10:45-John's Other Wife;
11:00 Just Plain BUI
11:15 Between the Bookends.
1130 Stars of Today.
11:45 Keep Fit With Patty Jean.
12 AO News Headlines and Highlights.
12:15 Prescott Presents.
1330 Market Reports.
1335 Men of the Sea.
12:45 News Headlines and Highlights
1 AO Club Matinee.
135 News
2 AO The Quiet Hour.
3:30 A House In the Country.
2:45 Chaplain Jim. USA.
AO Stars of Today.
S-JS Kneass With the News.
330 Stella Unger.
3 35 Southerns ires
2:45 Beating the Budget
5. -45 Wartime Periscope.
. 4A0 Easy Aces.
4:15 Mr. Keene. Tracer
4:30 Belen Ortega, Singer.
SAO Flying Patrol.
3:15 Secret City.
30 Oete Roberts. News.
5:45 News of the World.
AO Serenade for You.
30 James Abbe Covers the News.
-43 Novatime.
655 Rtraona gt Tune Twisters.
7 AO Counter Spy.
730 Red Ryder.
8:00 Air Base HI Jinks.
8:30 Information Please.
AO Down Memory Lane.
30 News Headlines and Highlights
9:45 Mellow Moods.
55 News.
10 AO Cugat Rhumba Revue.
10:30 Broadway Bandwagon.
10:45 Palladium Ballroom Orchestra.
11 AO This Moving World.
11:15 Organ Concert.
11:30 War News Roundup.
KGW Tuesday 628 Ke.
4 AO Mustt
530 War News.
6. -00 Sunrise Serenade.
30 Early Bards.
7 AO News Headlines and Highlights
7:15 Music of Vienna.
7:45 Sam Hayes.
8:00 Stars oi Today.
8:15 James Abbe.
8:30 Symphonic Swing.
8:40 Lotta Noyes.
:45 David Harum.
9:00 Bess Johnson.
9:15 Bachelor's Children.
9:30 Deep River Boys.
9:45 Musical Bouquet
10:00 Brad Reynolds, Singer.
10:15 News.
1030 Homekeeper's Calendar.
10:45 Dr. Kate.
11 AO Light of the World. .
11:15 Arnold Grimm's Daughttfc
1130-Guidmg Light
11-45 Hymns of all Churches.
12 AO Against the Storm.
13:15 Ma Perkins.
1230 Pepper Young's Family.
12:45 Right to Happiness.
1 AO Backstage Wife. .
1:15 Stella Dallas.
1 30 Lorenzo Jones.
1:45 Young Widder Brown. "
2 AO-When a Girl Marries.
2:15 Portia Faces Ufa.
1:30 Shall We Waltzf
3:45 Vic St Sade.
3 00 The Bartons.
3:15 Music by Schrednlk.
3:25 News
3 Personality Hour.
4:30 Funny Money Man.
4:45 Stars of Today.
5:00 Orchestra Solo.
Radio Programs Continued
On Page 8
SERVICE
FATHER'S DAY
I have enjoyed while laboring
with my hands.' "
(Continued tomorrow)
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Dad SOCKS by
INTERWOVEN
MAN'S SHOP
MOXLEY & HUNTINGTON
THE STORK OF STYLE. QUALITY AND VALUE
4W STATE STREET