PAGS F0U2 T C-ZSCIJ GT1UE2VU& Cdara. Orsss &rfsr&ry lTereJas, Jaa lSil 4 Wo Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Aio" , From First Statesman. March 28, 1851 '. THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher ' Member of The Associated Press Th Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use for publication of an news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Repass Vetoed Bill : 1 For once congress acted promptly and effec tively in overriding the president's" veto of the Connally-Smith war labor bill. The president's alternative of a bill to. draft strikers into: the army for war work, met a cool reception. Con gress had made up its mind when it passed its bill; the subsequent antics of John Lewis mere ly hardened congress in its purpose. i The bill does give definite statutory author ity to the war labor board, so even Lewis can not deny its powers. It bans strikes in war in dustries, requires a cooling off period Of 30 days before a strike vote may be taken, forbids unions to make campaign contributions, imposes pen alties on those ordering strikes. The act is lim ited to the duration of the war and six months thereafter, so is no permanent handicap to labor organizations and no permanent settlement to labor questions. This bill now becomes law. It is up to the . president to enforce it. He has stated positively that he will tolerate no stoppage of work in essential war industries. Yet several such stop pages have occurred, and are now occurring, in coal mines of the country. An immediate cure might be to warn strikers that unless they re turn -promptly to their jobs they will be barred from further employment in mining or other war industry. This, with freezing of union funds might be a cure for their recalcitrance. Lewis will probably bide his time. But tha war labor board, which has forced employers to sign contracts, is determined that Lewis will sign the contract the board has outlined. Ickes, who has the job of running the mines, and has clashed with the war labor board, comments that he could see no way to compel a private individual or group to sign a contract. He evi dently forgets that that compulsion was put on General Motors, U.S. Steel and Montgomery Ward. If it was lawful and proper for the em ployer group, it certainly is for the coal miners. The situation is by no means cleared up by the enactment of this anti-strike bill; After all ' you can't put a half -million men in jail, and if you do, and they are the coal miners, you don't get coal, Someone must yield in this im passe; and that some one must be John L. Lewis. Otherwise we would have an unelected dicta torship in this country. King of Spain? The kings fail to come back. History shows that rarely are dynasties restored which hold their thrones for any length of time. The Stuarts , were restored with James I in England, after Charles I had been beheaded; but the second James was chased out of the country and tha succession jumped to Mary, wife of .William of Orange, The Bourbon restoration afterNapo leon I was very short-lived. After the death of Czar Nicholas II Grand Duke Michael fluttered about in exile, hoping for the .counter revolu tion which might put him on the throne. It never came. , Otto of Austria, claimant to the throne, has lived in hopes, as did his mother for him, Em press Zita hopes that he might j mount the Hapsburg throne in Vienna. But Otto lives al most in poverty, waiting in vain for the call to power. King Carol of Rumania made one come back, but had to flee in the face of the nazis. Hungary is described as a monarchy, but is ruled by Admiral Horthy as regent. No king has been established in Buda Pesth since the fall of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Those royalists , who thought that Adolph Hitler might be plan ning the Hohenzollern restoration when he as cended to power in 1933, were mistaken! Hitler wanted no kaiser to divide authority with. So we do not take much alarm over the re ports that Don Juan; third son' of the late Al fonso XIII, will become king of Spain. Undoubt edly . there is a strong royalist party in Spain. But Franco, like Hitler, will not want to divide power or the spotlight; and the majority of the people of Spain probably would prefer a repub lican form of government that was the latest expression at the polls. J- '1 The king business has been unhealthy for a long time. World War I saw most' of the thrones of Europe topple and fall. And kings out of power lack horses and men to put thrones to gether again. J f ! The National Resources Planning Board was a ' Ion time dying before the Senate finished it off. At the beginning it was presumably concerned with mobilizing facts about the ; nation's I natural re sources. On occasion it even published material of that kind, but. ultimately, it seemed to weary of ores, water; soil, rivers and mountains, and it wan dered into the field of business,, finance and social security. It became a generalized busy-body, and when it did,' down came the axe. Raymond Holey In Wall Street Journal. .-. aaaaaassasssBsssasssssBsssssssssssssssi mm' With more than 3,000,000 civilian employes exclusive of the army and navy our federal gov ernment now has more persons on the taxpayers payroll than the combined total of all the employes of all the 48 states plus all the employes of all the country's county and municipal governments. And 55 per cent of those persons are not directly en- gaged in the war: effort. Senator Byrd in July issue of Reader's Digest. - j . . The Statesman's face was red one day last week because a prediction of fair weather was drowned before the papers were delivered. Edi- tor Alden of the Woodburn Independent says "that's what happens to newspaper prophecy, so to insure fair weather he predicted rain and ' see what he got, fair weather. The safest thing for a newspaper to say is "wiggle-waggle." It was recently pointed out that at the Office of Price Administration alone, the country's tax payers have been supporting' 2700 lawyers 500 of them in Washington to devise the regulations, 2200 of them throughout the1 country to see that they regulate. V" ' r K t '.V- " The British also have, a rationing and price ad- -ministration. It has worked for several years with astonishing success. Its legal staff totals, ten. Senator Eyrd in July issue of Reader's Digest. Future in Aviation - ...... .: -..--..'.,- - x$ ' E. Lee Talman, executive vice-president of Transcontinental Sc Western Air, gave soma rather practical ideas about aviation in the post war world in a recent interview in Los Angeles. He predicts: Vi.'V,'. - j ; - , ' :M - No cross-country sleeper planes. The new planes will make the trip in eight hours, so ; sleepers will not be needed, unless it would b for night-runs. Giant passenger planes will not be used much because they are uneconomical. Smaller planes, - in frequent service, will do the work better. Ships like present army transport planes will be used. . ' : J r f h Use of gliders for freight movement improb able. Cheaper to use cargo planes. 'Foe large cities there will heed to be nu merous airports; traffic will be too heavy for one. There will be a downtown depot, with heli copter or electric train or other service to and from the several airports. Air travel will not be a monoply. There will be plenty of need for surface transportation. This is a sensible chart of the future.' When the war ends, commercial aviation will pick up, not just where it left off, but much farther ad vanced, with more planes, more pilots, more air ports, greater public, interest. But the changes will be tied in closely with economics, and costs will limit the field or air transportation. By FRANK MELONEY Names make news: General Nathan Bedford Forest, great-grandson of the famous Confed erate cavalry raider, is missing after the Ameri can air raid over Kiel, when 24 planes failed return. Commander of army forces in Alaska is Gen. Simon Buckner, jr., descendant of an other famous general of the Confederate army. These names are proof of the national unity of our country. Generations carry on in the mili tary career, fighting now for a common country against a common foe. ; x - Mews Behind The News By PAUL MALLON ' Ditri button by King Features Syndicate. lac Repro duction In whole or in oar atrlctlT prohibited ) WASHINGTON, June 25 The race riots over the country (Beaumont, Los Angeles, Detroit, Mo bile) are being watched from Washington with tightly drawn, silent lips, but with much inner perturbation and comment. It has become customary for officials to. lecture' the hoodlums on both sides about law and order. and the necessity for being calm in strained emotional periods of wartime, but this does not seem to be doing much good. It does not even reach in the direction of the causes or cure of the tra gic, expanding condition. The ultra-radical New York newspaper PM, and the CIO publications, which either insti gated or sensationally backed a movement, at the start of tha war, to get the negroes full social and economic equality, swiftly, during the domestic upset contingent with the war effort, have taken the line since the riots that they are inspired by fascists. . - - i : They mourned for a negro mother whose boy was killed" by white hoodlums in Newark, ignor ing news from a Georgia camp about one white MP being killed and five white soldiers maimed; the same day, although aU these men also presuma--bly had mothers. One such edition of PM carried ten pages of ex citing (if not inciting) pictures depicting the bru-. tal, savage beatings of negroes, and only one pie ture of an injured white man. Their whole treat ment of this humiliating situation for both whites and negroes, holds the white hoodlums solely re sponsible. ' r ; ; One of their writers suggests that the cause of the trouble can be traced solely to rumors, another says an incidental altercation of white and. negro Inspired outbreaks, etc r Riots do not grow out of a rumor or many ru- 'Giant Powder J' VIA t tritium KSLM-t ATUBOA1 -UM txo wewa la Brief. 7:05 Riae V Shin. 7:4S Moraine Moods. SAO Eaton Boys. 833-Newt Brevities. SJS Tanfo Time. 9 Pa tor's CaJL -SUS-Music JO Popular Musis. 10 DO World tn Review. 10:05 Jack Feeney. 10 JO Gene Krupa. - 11 M Campus Freshmen. 11J0 Hits of Yesteryear. 12 0 Organelles. 12:15 News. 12 JO Hillbilly Serenade. 12 J9 Matinee. 1 AO Henry King's Orchestra. r 1 JO Milady's Melodies. 1:45 Harry Breuer's Novelty Oreh. 2 AO Isle of Paradise. -2:15 Sincerely Yours. 2 JO Orchestra. 2:45 Broadway Band Wacosv 3AO KSLM Concert Hour. 4 AO Harry H or lick's Tangos. 4:15 News. . . 4 JO Teatune Tunes. S:1S Let's Reminisce. . S JO Junior Church. :45 Violin. 6AO Tonihrs Headlines. :15 Wax News Commentary, 640 Evening Serenade. 6 JO War Fronts in Review. 7 AO Weekend Jamboree, 7 JO Keystone Karavan. SAO News. " i S:15 USO. . -S:45 Music AO News. ' :15 Old Timers Dene. :43 Johnny Mezznefs Orchestra, r 10 AO Serenade. 10 JO News. V , 10:45 RoU up the Rug. , Monday's prerraxas appear est cemies page. - AO Haven of Rest. 30 News. 8:45 Old Songs. AO Buyer's Parade. :15 The Woman's Side of the News :4S Red Cross Reporter. 10 AO News. 10:15 Stars of Today. . . 10 JO This and Thai j. 11 AO Journal Juniors. f 11JO Concert Gems. 12 AO Concert. -12 JO News. 12:45 On the farm Front. 1 :00 Salvation Army. 1:15 Music. . . 1 JO Brazilian Parade. SAO Navy Bulletin Board, 2:00 Around the Clock. 3:15 Texas Rangers. 3 JO Hawaii Calls. 4 AO American Eagle Club. 4 JO Swing. 4:45 News. 5 AO This Is the Hour. ; 8 JO Music. 5 :4S Norman Nesbltt. AO Chicago Theatre. ' 7 AO John B. Hughes. 7:15 Movie Parade. . 7 JO Churchman's Saturday Night. 8 AO Music. -SAO News. :15 Music. JO Music. 10 AO Orchestra. 10 JO News. 10:45 Music. 1045 Music. 11 AO Music , 1 1 JO Tommy Tucker. 12 AO Men of Land. Sea and Air. 12:15 News. , 12 JO Music -12:45 The MarshaUs. 1 AO Saturday Concert. 1S News. SAO Horace Heidt. 2:45 Sol Lewis. Country Editor. SAO Korn Kobblers. 8J5 News. S JO Message of Israel. , 4 AO Kid With A SUck. 4:15 Ambassador Hotel Orchestra. 4:45 Little Blue Playhouse, 8:15 Boston Concert. :15 Edw. Tomlinson. Commentator :30 Spotlight Bands. -7 AO John Gunther. 7:15 Men of the Merchant Marine 7:30 Red Ryder. 8:00 Roy Porter. News. 8:15 Country Editor. '- -v SJO Enough, an On Time AO Melody In the Night. SJO News Headlines. 85 The Polka Dots. 10 AO Bridge to Dreamland. - 10 JO The Quiet Hoar. 11 AO This Moving World. -p-11:15 Bal Tabarln Cafe Orchestra. 11 JO War News Roundup. 11 AO Saturday 11 JO Music. Night Band Wagon. Pasd Mane KALS MBS SATCRDAT till Esv :45 At the Console 7 AO Rainbow House 7U5 Texas Rangers. 7J0 Memory Timekeeper. KEX BN 8ATUXD4T 1198 Ka, AO Musical Clock. 7 AO The Cadets. 7:15 Mir andy of Persimmon Holler. T JO News. , SAO Breakfast Oub. AO Christian Science Program. :15 Music. 9 :30 Breakfast at Sardt's 18:15 National Farm and Home Dhterpreting r" . The War News By GLENN B ABB f AP War Aaalyist tor The StaUsmasi since it passed into enemy hands in the tragic spring of 1941. and it must have carried to Berlin ( dread reminders of Salonika's role in the last war. Salonika was the base for the armies that opened the back door to central Europe in 1918, win ning a victory that led directly The allies have begun knock ing at the back door of Hitler's fortress. More than 50 American Liberators ; roared across the . eastern Mediterranean Thursday and loosed more than 125 tons - of bombs on an airbase near Sa lonika. It was the first allied at- mors, or even isolated incidents, but out of a general . tack on this famous' Greek nort iiuauoo. xirsT you must nave an explosive general condition in which such sparks may Ignite. The riots do directly serve the cause of the ene mies of this country, but alert government agencies have come forward with no proof of a direct axis agent contact either with rumors or riots. No one seems to know tha true cause of most of them. In one place. It Is one thing; in another, another. But in all cases, it is a clash over the rights of negroes and, of course, the very same radical American sources who make these charges are the ones who are championing a reform of these rights to the fullest in the midst of war. ; Now no one is going to accomplish much good trying to talk common sense and truth in the midst of a swirling situation like this. Yet it will only make matters worse to blind the country to tha . truth of the condition. . Any minority group of a white color In this country, attempting aggressive action , to elbow its way to complete economic and social Justice In the midst of war, would run Into the same thing which - the radical negro movement has encountered. For instance, the white-collar workers have suf fered great economic setbacks from the war. Their taxes and prices have risen tremendously out of all comparison with their increase In wages. But if they attempted to get their right during war by a march on Washington, or by Mahatma Ghandi's sit-down tactics, or by shoving people off sidewalks or organizing belligerent meetings to demand that the president act in such and such a way in short, if they conducted themselves in a physically aggressive manner, they would run into the same physical opposition. v n ? i Any minority group of any color, in any country in the world during war, would encounter the same spirit Consider what would happen, for instance, to a pacifist group, radical members of which made revolutionary speer for their rights. It must be apparent, therefore, that the solution of these racial difficulties is not going to be found if the counsel of the radicals on both sides and their hoodlums is ' followed. A temperate course is de manded, not only, by one side but by moth. Such a course can be directed only by active tem perate leadership of negroes by negroes and of whites by whites. Wiser counsels -iust be made o prevail on both sides not just one. " , . favored in the speculation of tha day and there is no doubt that the United Nations are assemb ling great armies, air forces and fleets in the eastern Mediterranean......-; : J ' This may be only" part of tha world-wide war of nerves with which the allies are supplement ing their actual but hidden mili tary preparations. One prerequi site to successful invasion is that the enemy shall be compelled to -disperse his forces as widely as possible. If he -has to maintain some 75 divisions in the Balkans and the outlying Islands, as re ports from Turkey Indicate, that KOIN CBS SATURDAY US K4W AO Northwest rarra Reporter. :15-rBreakfast Bulletin. JO Texas Rangers. 5 KOIN Klock. 7:15 News. 7 JO Dick Jov. News. , S AO Consumer Newe 8:15 Jackson Wheeler. News. 8 JO fashions for Rations. AO Theatre of Today. JO Romantic Cycle 10 AO Country Journal. 10:30 Let's Pretend. 10:55 Melody Time 1 1 :05 Serenade. 11 JO Spirit of '4S. 12 AO News. 12:15 Music 12 JO William Winter. 12:45 FOB Detroit. 1 AO Report from London. 1:15 Music 1:30 Calling Pan-America. 2AO Newspaper of the Air. . 3 AO News. 8:15 People's Platform. . 3:45 News. 4 AO Music. - , 4 JO State Traffic. 45 Air-rio of the Air. . SAO Music. 8 JO Old 1 Chlsholm TrsO. -. 8:45 News. - 8J5 Eric Severeid, News. ' AO The WhisOer. .JO SPARS and WAVES. 5 Saturday Night Serenade 7:15 Heath man Conceit. SAO Thank to the Yanks. 8 JO Hobby Lobby. 8.-55 Newe 9 AO Hit Parade SS Don't You Believe It. MAO Five Star Final. 10:15 Soldiers of the Press. 19 JO Orchestra. 11 JO Manny Strand Orchestra,'' 11:85 Newe Midnight to ene Must and N and speedily to the debacle of means the thinning Of his lines tha German alliance. It was June 25 years ago this summer 'ithat these armies were prepared ' for the offensive ; which began Sept. 15 and led to the capitula tion of Bulgaria within a fort night Five weeks later Austria was knocked out; Germany fol lowed -within another week. In many respects the situation then was like today's, especially . in southeastern Europe. Germa ny's offensiveHbolt had been shot; central Europe was under siege. But the kaiser's armies had over run most of the TAsiiranff held : nearly all of Rumania and Ser bia (later to become Yugosla via) and had Bulgaria as an ally. There were some important dif ferences. Turkey was In the Ger-. man camp. Greece had not been conquered and afforded the allies a foothold on the continent. : i Today the allies snll ha ve to win their lodgment in the Bal kans. The German sweep -through Greece and the islands of the Aegean two years ago has made their task far more difn cult than in 1918. But new wea pons and new tactics, especially the airplane and the methods of amphibious warfare, have made it entirely possible to repeat the thrust at Germany ? from the southeast. In ' any case this is , one of the invasion routes most in Russia and the west. - : There is more to it than bluff, however. I Hitler must disperse Jis forces because he knows that the United Nations actually are building : up concentrations of t striking power at half a dozen : or mora points around his do main, each capable of delivering ' a -kjock-out blow.: Around the I eastern Mediterranean, In Egypt, . Syria and Cyprus, in Iraq and A Iran, are known to be Britain's 8th and 10th armies, the United States 9th air force and other . units, the Polish army of per- haps 100,000 men, units of the Fighting French. " Altogether there is good rea son for expecting an allied of . fensive in the eastern Mediter ranean in 1943. Strategy in that sea has two principal objectives, to clear it as the great west-to-east artery of the allies' global supply system and to blast south ' to-north Invasion pathways. In two areas these objectives coin cide, at t waist of the Medi terranean, "where Sicily, obvious Jly Is" marked for conquest, and ' ; In the east where the program of the United Nations demands early expulsion of the axis from4 Crete, the Dodecanese and - the Aegean - Islands and establish- fment of a bridgehead; probably somewhere near historic Salo nika. . . , SOW-NBC ATUKOAT 42 Kc 4A0 Oawn PatroL AO Xverrthtns' C JO News Parade tas News. 7 JO Nellie Revell Presents. 7:45 Sam Hares. SAO Orgaa Concert. 8:18 James Abbe Covers tha N JO Rose Room. 8-45 Vegetables for Victory. " . A0 Muaie Room. 9:15 Consumer's Time JO Mirth and Madness. - : ' 10 AO Uncle Sam. 10 JO All Out for Victory. 10:45 War Telescope ' 11 AO Stars of Tomorrow. . -12 AO US Air Fore Band. 12 JO Newe 12:45 Visiting Nurse. ' 1A0 Matinee tn Rhythm. ' 1 JO Minstrel Mektdiee 2 AO Doctors at War. 2J Trio. 25 News by Alex Drier. 8 AO Music ' 925 Newe 8 JO Art of Living. -2:45 Enjoy Yourselves. 4 AO For This We right. : ' 4 JO Noah Webster Saye ... 8 AO Sports Script. 8:15 That They Might Live. - :45 Louis P LechBcr. .AO National Barn Dance . 8 JO Can Too Top This? ' 7 AO Million Dollar Band, t 7 JO Grand Or Opry. - . SAO Truth or Conacquestcee SJO Abies Irtah Rose -SAO Treasury Song Parade 9:15 Oregoa to Congrese - J0 Mystery of the Month, 10 AO Newe 10:15 Pasadena Auditorium Orcb. 103 News. 11 AO Hotel Biltmore Orchestra. 11 JO Music. ll:45-News. - . UAO-2 jJn. Swing Shift. KOAC SATtrXnAT SSO KC ' 10 AO News 10:15 Homemakers Hour. 11 AO Music of the Masters. 12 AO Newe 12:15 Noon Farm Hour. 1 AO Artist's . Recital. 1:15 War Commentary. 1 JO Variety Time. ' 2. AO Books and Authors. 2 15 Modern Mood. 2 JO Memory Book of Muste. 8 AO News 8:15 Romance. SJO Concert HaH. 4 AO Trafiie Safety Quia. 4:15 The Band Stand. 4 JO Stories for Boys and Girls. ' 8 AO On tho Upbeat. - " Chapter 11 con tinned Paul drew to a stop and, with j some difficulty, they - poured . Eowdy bade into the rear seat She objected strenuously, but fi nally compromised on a position which .Involved the full weight of her head on Ann's shoulder. "This Is delightful," Ann said. ."I Just love having you breathe . down my neck." Paul chortled. "Ain't a Great Dane a load in a car?" he de manded with a trace of pride. "What did you mean," he went back, "you couldnt say?" ; . . "I don't follow. 'Couldn't say - what?"., -v.: v :' "You know. I said. It's great to be in love and you said, 'Couldn't say " ; " : "Oh. Well, that's it Couldn't ay. Never been." 1 "Yah, you never been," Paul jeered. "Don't make me laugh. It sticks out all over you. Over him too. Over, both of you. . You are a pair!" . . "You're all wrong. X happen to be engaged to be married to one . nice very nice Tom Barton. ; -'And Mr. Wain's wife Is appar . ently still In love with him." "That dame couldn't love any body but herself." Paul stated scornfully. "But she wants him back thafs a cinch." "What makes you say "that?" Ann asked quickly. . "What should you care? You are not In love with the guy." "You've got a most unpleasant disposition," Ann informed him coldly. . . ;:. ' . : " He laughed. "All right C all right You're Just like Carol. Curiosity? She's made out of it" ; Too seem to be rather in love yourself," Ann remarkeed. ' , ; "Am I denying it? Married a year and two months and worse than ever in loye." . um let you tell me later how wonderful Carol is. What about Mrs. Wain. Paul squared, himself for a good story. "She comes to ma yesterday at the show, see. Just when vm ready to go home. Poor Chris, she says, he's Just heartbroken about losing the ' Baron. I'd like to surprise him with a new stud. Could you help me locate one for him, Mr. Fre und?' " "Oh," said Ann In a small voice. "That does look like she means business." "Sure it does." , " "What did you tell her tell her?" "I wanted to tell her that there's a couple of things a man likes to buy for himself, and a Great Dane stud happens to be one of them." . "Only you didn't" ; "What was the sense?, There are no good studs now, anyway. With' Germany all messed up, there's none coming over. I Just said I'd keep my eye peeled and let it go at that" - "How about Wolfgang? Your Wolfgang." "Wolfgang? Now you're talk ing. Take it from me, the Baron wasnt as good as Wolfgang. The Baron threw plenty of monkeys In his day. But Wolfgang's never passed on a light eye or a roach fisHr- Ifnm fan hafa mrn htfai than Rheingold himself, and she ought to know. But who's going to believe ft? HowYe we going to prove it?" - , "WaitU ; Rowdy wins at the Morris and Eessex. That'll prove something, won't it?" V - "Oh, sure." . ;: , .'. "You think I'm fooling, but I'm not I entered her this morn ing in the American Bred class. It's too late to do anything about It The application's already In the mail." - "You're kidding." 1 "Stay in the middle of the road. I'm not kidding, Paul; I've entered her.", t (To be continued) CRT UCD CPOCS 8 JO Evening Vespers. 8:45 It's Oregon's War. - rlS News. 0:30 Evening -Farm Hour. -7 JO Music. AO Opera. ' :45 Excursions ta Science . . AO Music. . :.: . 9:30 News 9:45 Treasury Star Parade ' Sunday's Radio Programs msssKisasmmmmsMmmsmmmMKmmamwmmm KSLM SUNDAY 13M Ke - 8 AO Langwortb Foursome 8 JO Music. AO News In Brief. A5 Spiritual Interlude 830 Organ. Harp, Violin Trie. 8:30-OospeL 10 AO World tn Review. 10:15 Moonbeam Trio. 10:30 Hit Tunes of Tomorrow. 11 AO Americsn Lutheraxr Church. 12 AO Sunset Trie 12:15 War Commentary.. 12 JO Golden Melody. 1 AO Young People s Church. 1 JO Music. SAO Isle of Paradise. 8:15 Voice of Restoration. 2 JO Vocal Varieties. SAO KBS Sunday Symphony. 8 JO "Boys Town." , 4AO-M5kipper Henderson and Crew. 4:15 Modern Melody Trio. 4 JO Alex KlrUloff Russian Oreh. 5 AO Old Fashioned Revival Hour. AO Tonight's Headlines. 8:15 Anita Boyer and Tomboyere JO Del Courtney Orchestra. 7 AO Bob Hamilton's -Qutntonee 7 JO Langwortb Novelty and Salosr Croup. 8 Ao First Presbyterlaa Church. 8 JO Music. AO News Summary. :15 OrganaliUee JO Back Home ' Hour. . 10 AO Newe 18:15 Dream Time . KALX MBS SUNDAY ltM Ke SAO Wesley Radio League. SJO Central Church of Christ 8:45 Rev. V. W. McCain. 1 8 AO Detroit Bible Class. " .SO Newe ' -4S Muete. ' 10 AO Newe 10:15 Romance of the Hl-Waye 10 JO canary Chorue 15 Newe It AO Pilgrim Hour. U AO Concert. 12:15 Newe 12 JO Music. 1 AO Lutheran Hour. : 1 30 ' Young; People's Church. . SAO Temple Baptist Church. ' - 2:30 Portland Bible nasscr 8 AO Murder Clintc. SJO Upton Close 8 S Voice of Uie Dairy Farmer. - 4 AO Dr. Johnson, ' 4 JO Melodlee ' 4-45 Newe S AO American Fonuaw . 8:45 Gabriel Heatter. -, 8 AO Old Faarioned Revival Hour. . 7 AO John B Hughes. -7:15 Music of the Masters. y.: 7 H5 Rocking Horse Rhythm. 8 AO Hlnson, Memorial Church. -- 8 AO Newe 8:15 Voice of Prophecy. :45 Sunday Serenade 18 AO Old Fashioned Revival Hour. 11.M-Answs.ilng You. 11 JO Hancock Ensemble. KEXBN SUNDAY ltM Kl 8 AO Soldiers- of Production. SJO Ralph Walker. 8.-45 African Trek. 1 b AO The Quiet Hour. - JO stars trom the Blue : 1A0 This is Official. 10 JO The Kldoodlen. 18:45-News, v 11 AO Coast to Coast on a Bue - 11 MS Speaking of Glamour. 1 AO The Three Rosneoe 12:15 Wake Up. Amctica, 1 AO National Vespere 1 JO Serenade - - , 1:45 News. t AO Remember. " - 8 JO Musical Steelmakere 2A0 Newe . 8 AS Here's to Romance SJO Free World Theatre ' 4 AO Chaplain Jim, USA. . 4 :30 Serenade 5 ff1ftta Science Program. . 5:15 Neighbors. Kw Tomlinson. Commentator - 5:43 Drew Pearson. 8 AO The Green Hornet ' 7 AO-Good WU Hour. 8 AO Newe , 8:15 Jimmie Ftdler. ' SJO Qui Kids. ' , 8 AO Inner Sanctum Mysterlee JO News Headlines. : 5 For All Humanity. K.-&0 University Explorer. (Continued on Page 13) - (Continued trom Page 1) goods to sell. - The public too can live off its fat In the way of sheets, blan kets, furniture, clothing : for a considerable period.' But there must be some flow of essential household goods to keep civilian life going. AT farmer must be able to get pump repairs when needed. A newly married couple must be able to get some furni ture and kitchen ware to set ud housekeeping with. In spite of predictions of further reductions in goods for civilian consump tion If the record to date Is a sign there will probably be no real suffering for lack of essentials. After aU the -American mind is ingenious, and the old rule that necessity is the mother of inven tion still obtains. Manufacturer and wholesaler and retailer, are not just going to fold up for the duration. Wherever possible they will devise ways to carry oni and supply the public with goods, even If much of it Is "ersatz." Today's Garden By LILLIE L. MADSEN Si. L. N. asks when and how rasp- . berries should be started. Answer: Raspberries are usu ally started from suckers taken from old bushes in early spring - before growth starts. Suckers may also be dug up and planted during August Plants should be set four feet apart in rows, allow ing 6 to 8 feet between the rows. Before planting, the tops of tha ' - plants should be cut back. Set the plants three inches deeper i .' than they.were previously grow ing. , ; ,;. Cultivation of rasp berries should not be deeper than three Inches because of the ' shallow root growth. A fertile soil is necessary to start out with. Do ; not overfertilize as too much nitrogen is very apt to make tha canes week and they will bend over to the ground. . As to variety, there are ever- ; bearing ones and- the regular summer bearers. St. Regis is per haps the best known of the for- mer.-, ,. . '. Mrs. E. S. writes that she 'has a currant bush on her lot which she recently purchased. The cur- -rants did not turn red, she adds and wonder if they, are dis eased.;;. Answer: Not knowing mora than this about the situation, my guess would be that they were a white variety. There are such, you know, and these will remain ' white. They turn from the green color to a light cream. serving S slices of Master Bread at every meal gives plenty of ex tra Vim, Vigor and Vitality. m at Youn Gr.bcci's