M Favor Sways Vt; No Fear Shall v .
From First Statesman, March 28, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE; President
V Member oi Tha Associated Press
The Associated Press to exclusively entitled to the use for publication of an
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this newspaper.
FDR Cracks the Whip
Whoever has tackled the job of managing
large enterprise, no matter how absolute his au
thority may have been in theory, has at some
time been amazed at the number of things he
couldn't manage; the things that went on out
side his control and contrary, as likely as not, to
. his wishes. It's a distressing circumstance and
7 managers don't like to admit it. Some manage
to hide it. ' . '' '- j
But the manager of the biggest enterprise
on this hemisphere can't hide it. Just now he is
endeavoring to tighten his control. The results
will be Interesting.
The president of the United Statess head
; of "the government" the executive" branch.
Each of the departments headed by a cabinet
member state, war, navy, justice, interior and
the rest, as well as the inflated sub-departments
such as WPB and OP A, successors to such dino
saurs as WPA and NRA theoretically is right
under the president's thumb. It's amazing there
fore, the number and frequency of highly pub
licized squabbles which develop among those
departments and sub-departments.
Not only do they indulge in "jurisdiction
al' disputes and wrangle over conflicting inter
ests; they represent sharply variant fundamen-
tal viewpoints. The silk-hatted state department
has pursued policies which have brought down
upon its sharp condemnation from the nation's
liberals, who swear by FDR himself and Harold
Ickes; the justice department has clashed with
the labor department and the NLRB. Currently
Leon Henderson though a leftist, finds himself
compelled by the logic and circumstances of his
price control effort to cross sword with the new
deal advocates of higher and higher wages, and
he seems to have won a victory over a once-ob
structionist department of agriculture. In view
of these clashes of authority one has difficulty
counter ?rffi7y'- '
sis in a : rj r SMz (HrW'n
Don't Borrow Gloom
. - Exhortation has its proper place, whether it
Is wholly necessary or not, in wartime on "the
home front; and what a relief It is to encounter
a situation in which oratory has its basis
crisis which definitely is real, not subject
picion thatat was conjured up for political
feet or, perhaps, purely for the sake of oratory.
, It is proper to remind civilians of the need
for sacrifice, and to compare the puny sacrifices
asked of them with the hardships undergone by
fighting men in the fighting zones; -
. But as was pointed out in a "letter to the
editor" of a Minneapolis newspaper by Mrs. Lil
lian Johnson, mother of a young man in service,
there is too much repetition in this home-front
oratory of statements that the service men are
"giving up their lives."
In the first place it isn't justified. Some
soldiers and sailors are giving up their lives but
to date, war casualties have come nowhere near
matching civilian casualties. The great major
ity of men in service will come out whole unless
the war is infinitely prolonged. No one should
give them and their families the impression that
they are doomed when they enter the military
forces.
And in the second place, even though mil
itary service does involve rather heavy risk of
life and limb, there's no use harping on it. The
men in service seldom mention it. Exhorters on
the home front may find adequate examples of
deprivation on the service men's part without Stopped? ? ?
going into that. Friends and relatives writing to
service men are advised ta keep their letters
cheerful and to be cheerful.' There's no use
borrowing gloom. .
' .- - J.' Irs;.
- r i
... r. . . at
Mi
V
x
T
By JAMES HILTON :- - J
in determining what may be the opinions and
policies of the head man. ' j t
Such is the background for President Roose
velt's sharply-worded admonition, to depart
ments and sub-agencies issued on Wednesday,
the kernel of which is as follows:
Disagreements either as to fact or policy
should not be publicly aired, but are to be sub
mitted to me by the appropriate heads "of the -conflicting
agencies. The policy of the govern
ment should be announced by me as the respon
sible head thereof. Disagreements as to facts
can be resolved, if necessary, by investigations
and surveys directed by me. . . It is no solution
to a controverted question to argue it out in
public. . . v '
Excuse it please, Mr. President; public de
bate does help to solve public questions in a de
mocracy. That of course is not precisely the
point. Any. controversy which arises within the
executive department should be -settled within
that department It is not, as the president in
sists, the public's business until the policy is de
terminedand he is the responsible official who
should determine policy.-
If the president manages to get this thing
under control, watching the war effort's polit
ical convulsions will be much less interesting
but by way of compensation, it will be much less
confusing. And if we need entertainment, there's
always congress.
Modern Alexander
Tirv. i i ii -a
" IUV.UUUUUIV.O UIUCU UIUIUCI sum ill
the British Middle East command, the public
cannot know, for the general impression has
been that General Auchinleck was doing a job
superior, at least by contrast, to that turned in
before, he took direct command. Tor disclosure
ct the shakeup's significance we can afford to
wait, though presently we shall hazard a guess.
What is fairly apparent at the moment is
that the British have moved in there a regular
fire-eater of an offensive fighter. - Jr
General Sir Harold R. L. G. Alexander's
motto is reputed to be: "Attack, attack and at
tack again, even when you are on the defen
sive." He was the last man to leave Dunkirk and
equally stubborn about leaving Burma. But if-
you are worried because he was in command'
during those retreats, take a longer look.
It is recorded that in WorhLWar I, General
Alexander went over the top 30 times before hev
was wounded, and was the idol of Irish troops
he commanded; that he was a major at age 25 -and
a lieutenant colonel at 26, and won nunier-'
ous decorations in offensive warfare. Later on
he was probably. the only British colonel who;
ever won a mile race in regimental sports. And
before going to Burma he instituted the battle
training schools which turn out commandas.
Now for the guess: It makes, sense to assume
that an attack-minded commander was sent to
the middle east because the fighting there may
soon involve British participation in a counter
offensive not against Rommel but against von
Bock; in other words, one in support of the Reds
In the Caucasus. '
Newspaper service a la embattled England
Is being experienced by The Dalles folk. Some
thing broke loose on the daily Chronicle's press
the other day and before the power could be
shut off the machine was smashed beyond re- r
pair. It may be a month befqre a press can
be obtained and installed. Now the Chronicle-;
is being printed on an auxiliary press which
handles only two pages at a time; so the normal
eight-column, eight-page paper is reduced to :
seven columns, four pages. By squeezing the
type, essential news is being provided and the
Chronicle carries on. If we don't all come to
that it will be because the war isn't toa pro
longed and because we're lucky.
"Rationing of tools and power machinery
to the country's farmers" is predicted by Wall
Street Journal in view of the fact that the
farm equipment industry will be asked to re
duce volume still further probably to some
where between i 25 and 50 per-cent of 1940
volume. Farmers, in view of the difficulty they '
have had getting machinery this year, probably
figure the threatened "rationing" will be no
worse. , .
News Behind
The News
, By PAUL MALLON '
(Distribution bj Klnf reatures Syndicate, Inc. Repro
duction in wboa or In part strictly prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.-It may have sounded
a little strange when Production Director Donald
Nelson returned from his vacation, announcing he
was going to get tough about in
efficiencies in his organization
and then singled out for firing
first an employe who has told
the newspapers about the defi
ciencies in steel.
To an outsider it may have
seemed remarkable that Mr. Nel
son started improving his organ
ization by canning an employee
who told the public one thing
wrong, with it But that was not
exactly the situation.
The overall truth is the war
production board has been load
ed with a motley assortment of
some legitimate businessmen, some business hangers-on,
or what might be called "marginal business
men" (those unsuccessful men from commercial life
who have made a career out of government service
for the last few years) and a formidable array of
new deal social reformers, as well as expert, clear
headed, capable economists and officers from other
government departments.
The variety of interests represented by these
conflicting groups has inspired constant internal
turmoil. -l , f-r- '. .: , ;
One of the favorite tricks Of these marginal
businessmen, or reformers, is to concoct a personal
report setting forth his own views as to what is
wrong, and then to leak same to the newspapers as
a conclusion of the war production board, or at least
: a matter under study there.
This had to be stopped first, and Mr. Nelson's
initial choice of a victim was apparently a construc
tive effort to break up that practice, whether or not
it was properly applied in that case.
Next step will be to cleanse the. house of the
marginal businessmen and reformers, and put the
selection of personnel there on a non-political efficiency-rating
basis.
Some of them may be taken into the army and
.navy. WPB rolls contain an exceptionally ' large
number of single men without dependents, and mar
ried men with rich or working wives, and they are
in the age bracket of the lower thirties which makes
them suitable for practical military effort
Mr. Nelson is being criticized by the new deal
element, in and out of his organization, for not
straightening out his relations with the army and
navy with a clear-cut agreement as to authority. '
Actually he entered such an agreement in writ
ing last March 2. The memo then adopted by him
and army and navy authorities was not made pub
lic at that time, but he apparently told the Truman
Investigating committee-about it '
Under mis agreement memo, he gave the armed
services four powers: '
(1) Direct authority to work out production
schedules; .. ' :..
(2) Authority to renegotiate contracts; '
(3) Power over plant construction.
And (4) direction of purchasing procedure.
This left his. WPB with control over allocating
materials between military and non-military users,
but gave most other responsibility for fulfillment
nf the program to the army and navy. ,
If the argument now expands over who is to be
the "goat" for any failure to meet production sched
ules, this overlooked memo is likely to play an im
portant part 'VV --w'
Fortunately, however, the initial steps already
being taken as well as the popular comment are
veering away from that dangerous, delaying and
possibly disastrous trend of goat finding, and toward
a realistic solution of the actual problem which is
to locate the raw materials and get them to the right
places.
The Churchill -Stalin conversations were no
doubt concerned primarily with the problem of
British and; American supplies for Timosheqko's
Caucasus army now retreating Into the mountains.
While the problem of the second front is lively
in public discussions and in morale-building propa
ganda efforts, it is purely a military one not to be
decided by Churchill and Stalin. - .
But what Churchill could well have gone to
Moscow to talk about is how he and the Americans
might be able to sustain Timoshenko through the
winter if he will hold the top of the Caucasus.
There he would be cut off from Russia proper,
but accessible to the British, and to us via the Iran
rail line from the Persian gulf and by plane from
Egypt W could send not only materials, but troops.
Bits for IBireakvasft
By R. J. HENDRICKS
The boys at Oregon 8-22-42
state training school,
should be glad to have
their fine opportunities:
1i
Just a few days ago, four of
the students at the Oregon state
braining school at Woodburn ran
away. They are very foolish.
They shoujd be thankful, grate
ful for the opportunities afford
ed them there.
There was a period of four
years less two months, begin
ning ten months after the insti
tution, then called the Oregon
state reform school for boys, was
opened for the reception of stu
dents, when only six runaways
were experienced and all came
back to the institution but one;
and he offered to come back,
from the eastern state to which
he had gone.
And me attendance in the
period mentioned, ending May
1, 1897, was not far from double
the average in late years. In that
earlier period it was around 136
on the average, i
This columnist has personal
recollections of all the boys of
that period in the nineties. One
called not many weeks ago, who
worked -in the engine room in
those old days.
He now receives $500 a month
. salary as chief engineer on a
river steamboat and his son
draws $275 a. month as fireman
on. the same vessel. Of course
they both have their board and
lodging
There was Carroll Tichenor,
from Salem, 71st boy to be re
ceived at the old reform school.
After being discharged from the
school, he secured a place on
the Portland police force. He
was promoted; became captain
of police, his district centering
in the section surrounding the
Today's Garden
By LILLIE L MADSEN
1 Answers to questions on vege
table gardens:
- Beets, carrots and turnips for
winter growth should be planted
the last week in August or the
first in September. I always re
call that as a child my father,
who grew commercial seed, in
sisted that the turnips to be used
for the winter table should be in
the ground by September 6.
,In preparing the ground for late
summer and early autumn seed
ing, work it well. Then soak it
thoroughly, let it dry off some
what at the surface and soak it '
again. When it has become dry
enough to rake, then prepare it
for seeding. Do not water imme- ,
diately after, the seed has been
sown or you will form a heavy
crust on the top of the soil which
Is difficult for the seedlings to
penetrate. Jt is best to put a
, quarter of an inch of dust mulch
over the seed plantings. This will
retain moisture and prevent the
ground from cracking.
Cabbage and cauliflower can -.
be set out this month for winter
use. The seeds should have been
sown in July, but you might be
able to purchase some plants '
from the seed houses at this time.
It is surprising how well such
plants will thrive- even in hot V
weather. I have seen cabbage
and kale planted out from a
bucket of water in mid-July and -August
- and without . any addi
tional moisture pull through and
produce very good crops during
the winter. But such plants must
be well cultivated. Hoeing brings
moisture to the surface. -- '
Pick off some of the extra am--ount
of small tomatoes (L' T.). :
This will help the larger ones de
velop more rapidly.
Meier Sc Frank store; became
well acquainted with Julius
Meier, who was afterward made
governor of Oregon.
In performing his regular du
ties on his rounds as captain,
Carroll found that a competent
policeman-on his. beat was the
best placed 'person to promptly
find a case of deserving charity.
So he conceived the idea of the
Sunshine . Division; made Port
land the pioneer in that field for
the United States for the
world.
He "sold" the idea to the Ore-
gonian newspaper force. So it
was put over by the city of
Portland. The supplies for the
poor soon had a , building, be
longing to Portland; two build
ings; three and a force of peo
ple giving their help to repair
clothing to do everything-to
aid the needy and deserving. The
idea spread, all over the coun
try, all over the world. Salem
has a Sunshine Division.
A boy was held in the Mult
nomah county jail at Portland
six months for the opening of
the Oregon state reform school.
He became number one of the
list the first 400 of which this
columnist was acquainted. He
had commuted the crime of hav
ing his father die, and his moth
er left with more children than
she could support "
That boy commenced being an
engineer by working in the boil
er room of the old reform school.
He is now chief engineer of the
greatest hat works in the Unit
ed States, or in the world. ,
There is no sense in running
away from the Oregon state
training school, whose original
name was the Oregon state re
form school for boys. It was
originally established with the
Idea of having the reform school
for boys and for girls on the
same bract of land, one on one -knoll,
the other on the compan
ion knoll. That was not a good
idea, and was not pursued.
The boys committed to the
state, training school are, gener
ally, sent there with the Idea of
giving them opportunities to get
training in useful work, and the
schooling they need.
H
They should, each one, appre
ciate the kindness thus done
them; the opportunity in each
case to get started in useful liv
ing. That is the only life worth
living, and they will appreciate
this in future years, if they ob
serve the rules.
K v
If one of than, reading this
column, imagines he has been
imposed upon and is committed
to a hard lot, by having been
sent to the training school, he
is invited to read this column
tomorrow.
It will tell him what kind of
a life John Jacob Astor had, as
a boy and young man. It was
singularly hard one, yet he: be
came for his time the richest
man In the world, and was able
to do a great deal of good to bis
generation and for those to follow.
r Chapter 21, Continued ,
Suddenly the wind dropped,
- the curtains ceased flapping, the
- moonlight seemed to focus in a
stilled and breathless glare upon
, her face. It was not exactly a
beautiful face, buj-he knew at
the moment it held something
for him, touched a chord, some-
where, very -distantly. He said,
, smiling: U11 try to practice com.
r pany manners for a future oc- :
: casion." , .,, . "
"No, never do that Be your
self as you were in all those
letters. And if you'd rather have
the Cambridge life than run the
firm,, then give it up before it's
too late!";
"Now what are you talking
?: about?" r :; f-k
"You you because 'I'm al
ways thinking about you. You're
not happy you're, not real! But
those letters you wrote -were
real when you felt crushed and
hopeless and things had gone
wrong all day, and you used to
sit in your office when every
one had gone home : and type
them yourself, with all the mis-
- takes. . ' -
I suppose I'm being sentimen
tal The little college girl, treas- -uring
letters from the beloved
uncle who saved the family from
- ruin. . . But haven't you finished
that yet? Haven't you done
enough for us? You pulled the
firm through the worst years
now trade's improving. Chet
says so, so bow's your time to -get
free! Dont your realize that?
i You still hanker after the other
kind of life, don't you study,
books, all that sort of thing?
When I came in Just now and
saw you In the moonlight peer
ing along the shelves I could
have cried." !
"I don't see why. I was only
looking for the lights and hop
ing there was a detective novel I
hadn't read."
"But but don't you want
Cambridge any more?"
"I wonder, sometimes. If I do
... To grow old in a cultured
. groove, each year knowing more
and more about less and less, as
they say about those specialist
dons, till at last one's mental
equipment becomes an infinitely
long and narrow strip leading
nowhere in particular "
"Like the Polish Corridor!"
He laughed. "How do you
think, of such things?"
"My subconscious like yours
ingenious. But never mind
that what do you want to do?"
"You talk as if I'd been com
plaining. Tar from it I'm quita
satisfied to go on doing what I
am."
"Managing the firm,, increas- .
jfng the dividends, refloating, the
companies, a regular Knight of
, the- Prospectus, Savior of the
Mites of Widows. and Orph-
"Now . you're being sarcastic."
"Can't you think . of anything .
you've ever wanted passionate
ly and still would like?"'
He said after a pause: "Yes, I
can, but it's rather trivial. When
I was at school I had a great
ambition to paddle down the
Danube in a canoe, but my fath
er didn't approve of the idea and
. wouldn't let me have the money
for it"
"Oh, but that's not trivial
it's wonderful. And 1 you "can af
ford it now all right" -
"The money, perhaps, but not
the time."
"You ought to make the time."
He laughed. "If I can steal a
quiet fortnight at Portslade 111
be lucky this year." He took her
arm and led her towaMi
door, v "And now, I'm "afraid,
since I have to" leave so parlw In
the morning"
"I know. You want to look for
a book." , She suddenly took his
hand and pressed it over the
switch.
Chapter Twenty-Five
"Good night Uncle Charies,''
Kitty said and left the library.
As he went back to the shelves
he heard her footsteps fading
through the house no longer a
child, that was true, but she
still scampered like one. He
searched for a while without
finding anything he wanted to
read, i
'Nineteen twenty five was an
other improving year, the year
of Locarno, the false dawn, It
was a year perhaps typical of
the 20's In its wishfu optimism
backed by no growth of overtak
ing realism; another sixpence off
the income tax, another attempt
to harness a vague shape of
things to come with the even
vaguer shapes of things that had
wen. or me puduc would not
yet look squarely into that evil
face (publishers were still refus
ing "war books") and few also
were those who. feared the spec
ter might return. The England
hoped for by the majority of
Englishmen was a harking back
to certain frugalities of the past
(lower and lower income tax,
smaller and smaller government
expenditure) in order to enjoy
more and more the pleasures of
the present; the Europe they
dreamed of was a- continent in
which everybody placidly "saw
reason," while cultivating sum
mer schools, youth hostels, and
peasant-costume festivals in the
best tradition of Hampstead
Garden Suburb; in exchange for
which the city would make
loans, trade would thus be; en-
. iaa atui
further.
Mixed up with this almost
mystic materialism was the ea
ger, frightened idealism of the
Labour Party (both the eager
ness and me fright came to a
head a year later, in the General
Strike); the spread of the belief
thai the League of Nations nev
er would be much good but was
(Continued on Page 9)
Cadio (Programs
n.Li ij wniu i ii mm
.-
v4 if
One of the few Air Force gen
erals to fly his own planer Brig.
Gen. Edwin J. House, command
ing officer of the Jumy Air Torcea
fighter- command In the Carib
bean, is shown boarding his plane
after inspecting one of hi combat
milts at a West Indies base, -
---aiunja.x use kc.
-iom Ii Sbin.
70 News in Brief.
T:0S RJm H Shin.
7 JO News.
2S2SuGoel Pfoeram.
S-OO Tbm Eaton Boy.
S3 News Brevities.
:35 Gilbert tc Sullivan Musis.
f lOO-Pastor-B CalL
: 15 Music La Carter.
JO Popular Music.
100 World in Review.
1S Jack Teener. Jeoor.
130 Al Terry and Buckerooa.
11:00 Musical Horoscope.
1130 Hits of Yesteryear.
UtfO-Organalitiea.
133S News.
1130 Hillbilly Serenade.
1235 Willamette Valley Opinions.
1J:55 Interlude.
10 Melody Mart
1:15 Chuck roster's Orchestra.
1 JO Milady's Melodies.
lS Harry Brewer Orchestra.
: SrOS-Ble of Paradise,
S:15 Sincerely Yours.
2-JS Sing Song Time.
S-Tun Tabloid.
SAO Old Opera House.
4.-O0 Siaginf Strings.
4:15 News. .
4 30 Tea time Tunes.
4:4S-Meiodie Moods.
:00 Wohl Sophisticate.
S:15 Let's Reminisce.
M Sunset Trio.
AO Tomlght's Headlines.
8:15 War Commentary.
S20 Silver Strings.
SO News.
7 rot Sterling- Young's Orchestra.
7 30 Willamette Valley Opinions.
750 Five Novelettes
1:00 News. . i
8:15 Hollywood Quartette,
8 'Jo Week-end Jamboree.
9:08 News.
8:15 Old timer's Orchestra. '
9 AS Johnny MeasnerS Orchestra. .
10. DO Let's Dance.
1030 News.
10:45 Harry Hot-lick's Orchestra,
11:00 Popular Salute.
1130-Lait Minute News. --
. -
KAUt MBS SATUKOAVUM Ks.
8 -JO Memory Timekeeper.
70 News.
7:15 Memory Timekeeper.
80-Haven of Best.
5 JO News. -8:45
Old Songs.
0 Array-Navy House Party.
9:15 Woman's Side o the News.
90 This and That.
18.-00 News -10:15
Buyers Parade.
1030 Hello Again.
11. -00 journal Juntntn,
11 30 Concert Cents. -
11 S5 Luncheon Concert
123 New ,
11:5 Paul Decker Orchestra.
l.OO Brad Hunt Orcneatra.
1 :n Baseball Roundup.
130 Ray Kenney Orchestra.
1:4ft Saratoga Race Track.
Se Jimmy Dorsey Orcneatra.
10 Anchors Awetgh.-
3 30 Hawaii Calls.
40 All Star Parade.
430 ConfidentleUy yours. '
4.-45 Jan Savin Orchestra.
S0 Anterican Eagle Club. London.
830 California Melody.
80 Cbiearu Land Music festival. -
7.-00 John B. Hughes. -
7 J 5 Movie Parade
730 Churchman's Saturday Night.
8:00 George Duffy Orcneatra
. 90 New :, '
8 as Jan Savitt Orchestra.
930 Count Bassie Orchestra.
14:00 Kmc and PaneU Orcneatra, "
10:15 Henry King Orchestra,
x0t30 'flstwi
10:45 Bob Crosby Orchestra, T'
11. -00 Cab Calloway Orchestra. '
1130 Jan Savitt Orchestra,
KKT-NBC SATUK0AI-11M Ee.
4 OO Musical . Clock.
70 Andrini Continentals.
7 JS Breakfast Club.
8:15 Service Men's Bop.
30 Billy Moore iTio.
8:45 Stars of Today.
8a5 ChrisUaa Science Program. :
seae scaedmles are smaaUed ay
respective ttsti a. . Any vasan.
9 noted nv UstaSMn- an 4mm m,
ckanges vads ky the stations wtta
nt notice ta tots newspaper.
AH radi -stations aaav nt trmmm
w mmj warn sn lav
of national def ewe
. 30 National Farm and Homo.
100-Hotel Taft Orchestra
1030A1 At Lee Rcsser.
1045 Toy Town Tootera.
1130 News.
1135 Uttlo Doctor Hickory.
ll:5Recital Pertod
U AO News.
11:15 CAr Band. -1130
Market Reports.
1135 Patterns la Blue
ll:45-Newa. "
1 AO-Club Matineo.
135-News 1
1:00 Pnlind Ballroom Orchestra.
S30 Savoy BaUroosn Orchestra.
SAO Dinner Music Concert.
StTV News.
130-SteUa Unger.
335 Pun With Jesters."
35 Edward Tomussaa.
4 AO Musaaite of Israel.
!? Ambassador Hotel Orchestra,
8 AO-Little Blue PlayhousaT
dO-Swap Night
.SSirAboN
0r45 Nova time. :-7.-00
Tune Out TJmo,
730 Red Ryder.
SAO News. -. j;"
8:15 Gibbs Ac Finney.
S30 BUtmore Hotel Orchestra. -The
New Prescott Show.
30 News. ,
45 Palace Hotel Orchestra.
935 News.
10 AO Musical Steelmakers. .
10 J5 Vital to Victory.
1090 The Ouiet Hour.
11 AO This Movine WarM
11:15 Bal Tabarin Cafe Orchestra.
: U 30 War News Roundup.
m
.J;
XOTN CBS BATTJEDAY-9T9 la.
. SAO Northwest rarra Reporter.
5 Breakfast BuhetinT
30 Texas Rangers.
7:15 Wakeup News
730 Bob Garred fte porting.
I- Billy ChasnptonsT
AO-Consumer News.
8:15 Jackson Wheeler.
S ?.T,?,'iowky Serenade.
38 Let's Pretend.
9 AO Theatre- of Tedar
9 30 Mid -morning Melodiea. '
10 AO Country JournaT
1030 Adventure in Kmi-a
195-Symphonettes
"AO-Eighty Meek.
Ma Book,
lido Brush Creek roUiea.
is3tcitT Tri0'
1A0 Hallo from Hawaii.
135 Melody Time.
130 Tak4t Easy.
15-Newa.
ISt? Mowbrook,
' SA8 Traffic Quiz.
:l--Canjng Pan America. ; .
---Newspaper of the Atr.
490 Ray Noble OrehestraC
J??--Soldier With Wings.
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J3??.,i:ConCwt Orchestra.
A5 Prazler Hunt. v
8A0 Melody Time, " r
"JT- D2W,I Orchestra.
30 Dance Band, ,
35-News '
9 AO Hit Parade.'
,J: Wartime Women.
10:00-riv, star final
10:1 5-World Today
"0S Ports Headlines.
1035 Woody Herman.
I? Man Your Battle Stations.
11. AO-Martha Mears.
f?'!fnn' und Orchestra.
11 55 News..
110-8 A CBv-Musi News.
KGW NBC SATVKDAY 2t Ks.
4 AO Dawn SratroL
30 War News Roundup.
AO Satirise Serenade.
, 'TA0 News.
7:15 Music of Vienna.
7.-45 Sam Hayes.
5 0O Organ Concert.
:15 James Abbe, News.
830 America, the Free.
AO Music Room.
.15 Consumer Time.
930 Golden Melodies.
10 AO Whalcha Knww. Joe?
1030 All Out for Victory.
1045 News.
11 :0O Stars of Tomorrow.
12 AO Nature Sketches.
12--13 Charles Dant Orchestra.
1330 Campus Capers
13:SS News.
1 AO Pan-American Holiday
130 Smarty Party.
SAO Concert Orchestra.
30 Three Suns Trio.
1.-45 News.
J AO Arlington Park Races.
3:15 Joseph Gamccfiio Orchestra
JJS-Newa,
. 830 The Art of Uving.
3:43 Salon Orchestra.
4 AO Noah Webster Says
4d-Gubert Wales CornmenUtor.
War in the Air.
5:CO St- Prancta Hotel Orchestra.
55 Snorts SerhHa.
30 Velvet Music.
.-45 Bill Henry-
25itJm Bi Danca.
J Grant Park Orchestra.
sSovtSor?.
Tlte 0r
:-tory dramas by Olmstead.
HPUhty TUne.
A-Jantnen Beach Orchestra.
I j
ihf,MdeM AudUoriura Ore
"2? ?- rrancl Hotel Orchestra.
1035 News. j
11 AO Organ Concert I
?i-Hei BUtmore Orchestra,
i x Z39 riews ,
11A0-2 a. nw Swing Shift.
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"AC-TTODAY-S58 Ks.
lOOBevtew of the Day.
10AS News.
10 :15 Homemakers Hour.
I3rl5 ramj Hour.
.?f,wi Classics.
l:15-?Varlety Tim.
1:S Organ Moods
SAO Camera Clubs
.S:i5--Songs rrom the Hula.
SiSh-Ltte ta Khaki.-
1:4 Band Stand.
S:l Jreeaury Star Parade.
38 Sunshine Serenade.
. S:4S - News. .
Artists in Recital
30 Storia for Boys and Girls.
With the Old Masters.
S-JS Magic Casement i I '
3-5yning Vesper Service,
f 5 "It s Oregon's War"
aS News
30 farm Hour. -29
Summer Song PesUvaL
AO Traffxt Safety Quit.
" 5:15 Concert Halt ,
30 Monitor Views the News
-9 A3 Music of the Masters.:
t T5P-10 -out Kmh
Additional Radio
On Page 9
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Chariea K. rsOor,
Dtreetat
Old Hymns and
Gospel Preaching
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