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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1943)
PAGE FOUR The OREGON STATESMAN. SoIeu Orjon, Thursday Morning Dacembex 16, 1913 II t t i i t I if if "Wo Foror Sway Us; No Fear fihall Awe" - ' From First Statesman, March 23, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. PRAGUE. Editor and Publisher Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all newt dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. Land Purchases by Workers You do not hear much about it but real es tate is in the condition described as "active." A lot of property is changing hands. Consider able of this is city residence property. No long er is it possible to find a choice of desirable houses for rent. If a person is at all choosey he almost has to buy to get what he wants. Also there is a great deal of buying and sel ling of suburban property and small tracts. The buying comes from employed people who want t: salt away part of their earnings in a home of their own, especially with some land attached where they can grow -a garden and keep a cow, some pigs and chickens. They are looking ahead to the end of the war boom and wanting to secure their future by ownership of some land. The ambition is both reasonable and laudable, but it is not without some hazard. Lands bought on contract, as many of these places are, call . for continued regular payments which nor mally are made out of current income. So when the income stops it may not be possible to keep up the payments and then the equity may be lost. So it behooves those who enter such deals to speed up their payments and make their possessions secure by rducing their indebted ness to the point where they can obtain a long time mortgage loan if they so desire. We would hate to see workers lose their home equities in some postwar slump. Peremptory Summons Tuesday death came to two distinguished members of the Oregon bar I. H. Van Winkle, long attorney general for the state of Oreegn, and John F. Logan, a veteran member of tie bar of Multnomah county. A native of the Willamette valley, of pioneer stock, Mr. Van Winkle was truly an Oregonian. Through his long connection with Willamette university law school he contributed much In the training of young men for the law. As attorney general he was competent and dili gent in his duties. His knowledge of Oregon statutes and of their interpretations was most thorough. Few could excel him in opinions on applications of Oregon law; and his record in cases appealed to the supreme court will com part favorably with that of other practicing attorneys. John F. Logan was more than a very able attorney. He was a man of broad education and interests. He had an interest as well as an identification with the newspaper business. He long served as attorney for the Oregonian, was its dramatic? critic f6r a time, and often con tributed, editorial suggestions on historical or legal matters to that newspaper. For each, of these attorneys death came with peremptory summons, at the end of a day's work. The bailiff of a higher court has called them hence, but their life-work merits the simple tribute "well done." Timber From the Burn Although it is ten years since the great Tilla mook burn, loggers are still drawing timber-out of the area.-The second burn of 1939 by kil ling wood borers in the bark may have helped preserve the. logs for future harvesting. But it is the high' price for logs which has been the salvation of the burned timber. Even after sections were logged it was possible to go back and pick up logs that first were abandoned. The area has been combed for peelers for plywood mills. Now tie mills are going in for further sal vage. These are small operations which pick up usable sticks and work them up into rail road ties, for which there is good demand. So the owners of the timber are going to recover far more than they ever thought they would when they looked over the blackened forest land in the fall of 1933. The burn presents a challenging opportuni ty for reforestation for the postwar period. The state should take the lead in organizing the scientific restocking of the vast area for future timber supplies. The land is rugged, with very few pockets of tillable land, and is in a region of very heavy rainfall where tree growth is most rapid. Money expended on such an undertaking would be an investment, not boondoggling. Lumber by Water The current issue of The Timberman describes the use of the Columbia river in transporting about ften million feet of lumber upstream to Richland for use on an important government project. Because of the heavy burden on rail roard and trucks, barges are used to haul the lumber from St. Helens to Celilo. They could be moved on up the river were it not for lack of power! ul tugs to buck the stronger current abov Celilo. So at this point cargoes are shift ed to trucks for the final 150 mile haul. By assembling the lumber in "packages", it is handled conveniently by cranes from dock to barge and from barge to truck. It does take a good many trucks however to take the load from a single barge. With the building of the Umatilla dam there will be more slack water which will reduce the power requirement for upstream transportation. Our streams under proper improvement for navigation car be made suitable for handling ' of bulk commodities at low cost. In the present instance the Columbia serves to ease the load on rails and motor trucks. Railroad Strike Vote With the coal strike ended by government concession railway brotherhoods now attempt to force favorable action on wage increases for themselves by the strike method. The strike is a weapon which may be coercive in this in stance because- of the absolute necessity in wartime of keeping transportation going. The statement of the brotherhood presidents that in approving the strike ordered for December 29 they believe such action will rebound to the military success of the war defies logic. Trans portation is indispensable; but a strike would paralyze production and demoralize the war effort and damage the war cause worse than a military defeat. ? The necessities of the situation will force an adjustment, for a nation at war cannot tolerate a stoppage of its railroads. But it is most de plorable that orderly processes of wage adjust ment are defied and resort taken to the mass coercion of a strike.. Those people who say government does things so much better in Canada or Great Britain, especially when it comes to keeping labor in Its place, may ruminate-on the strike of Mont real's policemen, firemen and street jw6rkers. Municipal' workers in this country have not put on such an exhibition of contempt for the pub lic interest in time of war. In fact Iwe have had few such strikes since Cal Coolidge as gov ernor of Massachusetts, cracked down on the Boston police strike with the dictum" that no one has the right to strike against the public safety at any time. Municipal workers, too, are often the last ones- remembered when pay increases go round. " OWI follows up its distribution of Roosevelt buttons to thp Arabs with matchbooks bearing MacArthiir's picture to the Filipinos. Is OWI just keeping neutral on 1944? News Behind The News By -PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, December 14 German ability to maintain herself lately, and even fight back from her hopeless positions on the constant brink of disaster, has disturbed some set calculations of the war. Her counter attacks in Rus sia, especially in front of Kiev, have shown strong power in tanks and artillery. But the types of these weapons em ployed shows they were saved from easier German days when production was above need. Not many new type weapons were in evidence so the nazis are Paul MaUoB digging deeper into their last stores. , -v? -: The Russians thought it strange when they cap tured Kiev that so few buildings in the center of the town had been demolished by the retreating Germans. Only the industrial works on the out skirts had been wrecked with customary thorough ness. Now they know the 'Germans had even then planned this counter-attack to be launched when red fury was spent, and intended to occupy the buildings this winter themselves. It looks as if the Russians will hold all these counterattacks to limited objectives and fly again" into forward action as soon as the nazi strokes wane. This conclusion must be tempered by the fact that a penuine agreement for synchronization of military actions was reached at Teheran between the Russians, British and American military men whatever were the results of the meeting in non military lines. Russian blows, therefore may be restrained to match with our new Invasion. Berlin radio says there will be no Russian winter offensive until we are ready to invade, and it might possibly be right. But it is in German resistance to our air bomb ings that the somewhat altered military viewpoint is more apparent. American air generals, who were saying six months ago that Germany could be beat en by bombing alone and have been trying their excellent best to do it since then, now are talking of weakening her so much from the air as to make invasion easier (Gen. Arnold's remarks in Italy, Gen. LeMay'g interviews at San Francisco Sat urday). Our accounts of these bombings give us a warped expectation of their decisiveness. Seventeen nazi cities have been destroyed, six more can be with one more large scale attack ... thousand plane raids . . . 120 tons of bombs dropped per square mile per hour . . . what then is holding Germany up? You can find the answer in accounts of Swedish travellers to Berlin, who weathered the bombings and came out to Stockholm. When the raiders come, the Germans seek shelter. The raids seldom last more than an hour or two. Buildings are destroyed, say 10,000 persons killed, but, in p city of several million people spread out over 25 square miles or more, the effect is not de structive of city life, indeed sometimes is hardly known to most residents. The bulk of the people merely come up for air and go to bed. If we have good luck in precision bombing of a war plant, we may get 80 per cent destruction. With bad luck, we will destroy only 20 per cent. The average is somewhere between. In a month the plant we claim as destroyed again may be functioning. That is why we let up now and then, allowing the Germans to start destoration before we go in again. . j Then, too, some men like William Shirer, an excellent authority on Germany, placed too much confidence in the belief that inasmuch as Ger mans had been promised Immunity from bombing. .1 &x UicTncrf hopes 1 I fin w " " j -L - f , - glp 60 Acres Under Glass in State Willamette Valley ------- -- ' - "--. - . -i1 Has Most of Green Houses of Oregon Oregon has upwards of 60 acres of land under glass used in green house operations in 25 of the state's 36 counties, according to informa tion contained in a new extension circular,!; No. 418, "Greenhouse Management, by A. G. B.. Bou quet, vegetable crops specialist at Oregon State college. About 82 per cent of the total greenhouse area is in the Willamette valley. The size of individual green house operations range from back yard hobby greenhouses, now do ing their share in the victory gar den movement, to large operations of 50,000 to more s than 100,000 square feet. At the time the 1940 census was taken, Oregon had ap proximately 250 greenhouse oper ators. . . j . The new circular constitutes a fairly ; complete ituide house construction and joperation, ; with information in sites, types of j! construction, heating equipment, j and operation oi' the completed p plant. A section on sop mixtures contains information ! usable by anyone who grows sejedlingsj in doors, whether in actual green houses or not. Greenhouses containing flats Or pans of germinal maintained at 65 tn plans, I are when somewhat to green- J ng seed are! best ' i I i - i to 75 degree? un- developing i : well. lower! tempera-! tures may , be used, 'according to the author. h ; f! ; I .VK'j : f ; The circular also contains a ta ble which lists the most common-! ly used fertilizers, shewing ! -their action on the soil,'. whether acid orj alkaline, and giving the usual rates! of application. Other, sections deal with seed treatment,! seed' sowing,' transplanting plants, ' plant1 con-j tainers, applicaupnof vater,; crop! troubles and pest cont oL jfumiga- tion and ventilation; i. ji j g Copies are available at 'any exi ! . i i I I i i . 'if tension office. (Interpreting The War News By KIRKE L. SIMPSON: Copyright 1943 by the Associated Prew Tokyo Christmas Today's Eadio . Progirainnis KSLM THURSDAY 13M K. T :00 Newm. 7:05 Marion County Farm tc Rome Program. 7:15 Rise 'n' Shine. 7 :45 Morning Moods. 8 00 News. 8 :05 Program Parade. 8:10 Sextette from Hunger. 830 Tango Time. S.-00 Pastor's Calls. 9:15 It's the Truth. 9 .30 Orchestra. 10:00 News. 10:05 A Song and Dance. 10 JO Ration News 10:45 Breeskln's Salon Orchestra. 11:00 News. 11:05 Symphonic Swing. 1130 Hits of yesteryear. 11.00 Oianalitis. 12:15 News 12:30 Serenade. 12:35 Mid-day Matinee. 100 Luro and A oner. 1 :15 Ray Noble's Orchestra. 1 30 Milady's Melodies. 1 :4S Spotlight on Rhythm. 10 Isle of Paradise. 2:15 US Army 2:30 Keystone String Quartet. 2:45 Broadway Band Wagon. 3 00 KSLM Concert Hour. 4 :00 Laryiworth String Orchestra. 4:15 News. 4:30 Teatime Tunes. 5:00 Charles Magnate. 5:15 Let's Reminisce. 5:30 Strings of Melody. .00 Tonight's Headlines. 6:15 War Commentary. 6:20 Evening Serenade. 6 :45 Orchestra. 7:00 News in Brief 7:05 Henry King's Orchestra. 7:30 Keystone Karavan. 8:00 War Fronts In Review. 8:10 Donueers in Action. 8:15 Del Courtney's Orchestra. 8 :30 Mustangs. 8 45 Poland vs. HiUer. .9:00 News 9:15 Bernard Levitow's Salon Orch. 9 30 American Legion Auxiliary. 9:45 Between the Lines. 10 .00 Serenade. 10 :30 News 4:45 Tracer of Lost Persons. 5:00 Galen Drake. 5:15 Red's Gang. 5:30 Harry Flannery. News . 5:45 News. 5:55 Bill Henry. 6 :00 Major Bowes. 6 :30 Dinah Shore. 7:00 The First Line. 7:30 Here's to 1 omance. 8.00 I Love a Mystery. 8:15 Harry James Orchestra. 8:30 Death Valley Days 8:55 Joseph C. Harsch "Memory of the News. ' 9.-00 Music 9:15 Let's Waltz. - . 9:30 Mayor of the Town. Q 10 00 Five Star Final. 10 :15 Wartime " Women. 10:30 Chats About Dogs. 10:45 Hollywood Rhythmaires. 11:30 Henry Busse Orchestra. 11:45 Air-FLO of the Air. 11 55 News 1 2 00 Serenade. 12:30-6:00 a.m. Music and News. KEX BN THUKSDAT 1199 Re 6:00 Musical Clock. 6:15 National Farm & Home. 6:45 Western Agriculture. 7:00 Home Harmonies. 7:05 Song of A Dreamer. 7:if- News 7:30 James Abbe Observes. 7:45 The Hum bard Family. 00 Breakfast Club 9:00 My True Story. 9:30 Breakfast at Saxdi's. 10:00 News 10:15 Commentator. 10-30 Christian Science Program. 10:45 Baby InsUtute. 11- 00 Baukhage Talking. 11:15 The Mystery Chef. 11:45 Ladies Be Seated. 12 -00 Songs, by Morton Downey. 12:15 News Headlines and High light 12:30 Sergeant Toley and Glenn. 12:45 News 1 -00 Blue Newsroom Review. 2-00 What's Doing. Ladie. 2 :30 Voices in Harmony. 2:40 Labor News. 2:45 Gospel Singer. 3-00 Grace Elliott. 2:15 Kneass With the News 3:30 Blue rrolica. 4.-00 News. 4- 05 Marching to Victory. 4:15 Letters to Santa Clans. 430 Hop Hairigan. 4:45 Sea Hound. 5- 00 Terry and the Piratea. 5:15 Dick Tracy. 5:30 Jack Armstrong. 5:45 Captain Midnight. 6.-00 Schools at War. 6:30 Spotlight Bands. 6:55 Sports. 7-00 Raymond Gram Swing. 7:15 Listen to Lulu. 7:30 Red Ryder. 8:00 News. 8:15 Lum and Abner. 8:30 Music. 9:00 Inspector Hawks and Son. 9:15 Study Blues. 9:39 News. M 9.45 Art Baker. 10 :00 America's Town Meeting. 11:00 This Moving World. 1130 War News Roundup KOIN CBS THURSDAY S0 Kc. 6 DO Northwest Farm Reporter. 6 15 Breakfast Bulletin. 6 .20 Texas Rangers. 6.45 Koin Klock 7:10 Aunt Jemima. 7:15 News. 730 News. 7:45 Nelson Prlngle. 8 DO Consumer News. 8:15 Valiant Lady. 8 30 Stories America Loves. 8:45 Aunt Jenny. 9:00 Kate Smith Speaks. 9:15 Big Sister 9:30 Romance of Helen Trent 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. 10:00 Life Can Ba Beautifut 10:15 Ma Perkins 1030 Bernadin Flynn. 10:45 The Goldbergs 11.-00 Young Dr. Malona. 11:15 Joyce Jordan. 1130 We Love and Learn. 11:45 NtWi -12 DO Neighbors. 12:15 Boo Anderson. News. 12:30 William Winter. News. 12:45 Bachelor s Children. 1D0 Home Front Matinee.' - 1 25 According to the Record. 1 :30 Tales from Near and Far 2 DO Mary MarUn. 2:15 Newspaper of the Air. 2:45 American Women. 3:00 News. 3:15 State Traffic. 3:30 Carols. 3:45 World Today. - J:55 Chet Huntley. News 4 DO Stars of ToeaTT. 4:15 Bob. Anderson. News. 430 Tracer of Lost Persons. Today's Garden By f .11.1 .re L MADSEN ytP saxuoe TKDOjQCE . Gen. Patton may have been on the welcoming committee when the president 'visited Sicily, but it was Gen. Mark Clark who got the DSC Mrs. Y. S. asks If it is too late to plant primroses and tulip bulbs. According to Hoyle or who ever is considered his equiva lent in , garden authority, - It is too late. But if you happen to be a real gardener, do not let that frighten you. One of the finest beds of tulips that I saw last anrine-- T alwi mw Mn tiTsi-l they would wilt or overthrow their leaders when- Dedrick of Silverton calmly set-. uiey jot wsw oi it s i ' tnig out on New Year's day. They In truth, the bombings may have made the Ger- were really almost perfect In uiana mom resotuieiy angry, as was the effect of bombings In London and earlier in Spain. Now do not misunderstand me. Bombing stra tegy has proved itself outstanding new warfare, hai, hindered transportation and production to an unprecedented extent. Gen. Arnold now is in Italy arranging for a second bombing front; from there (the Russian end may take more time until we can furnish the bembers, as they do not now possess me ngnx , types of ships.) ; ; i This long promised three-way air attack finally may cause the German economic system to collapse and it may fall before although the nazis have long, practised necessarily a new defensive art of getting along with little, putting nothing and no thing together to get something they needed. It is apparent the emphasis here is shifting to the necessities of invasion. , j r , April. Primroses may also be planted even when in bloom. -, But they are a little nicer if - planted in August and not per ; mitted to dry out before ' tumn.' ' :' -;- '. . :: R. P. writes that he believes a weevil is attacking msaza leas and wants to know what to do. .' - x I don't . believe any weevils are working now.; But we have had some complaint of weavCs attacking U rhododendrons and azaleas in early spring. They may- be : controlled by sprink- ling poison apple pomace around and beneath the bushes. - - ! (Continued trom Page 1) There is still a widespread popular distrust of banks, so many people hold on to their currency. The fear of inflation may account for some of the hoarding, which is perfectly sil ly because as inflation comes the value of the dollar declines whe ther it is in currency or a bank deposit I heard recently, of a land transaction where the pur chaser paid several thousand dollars in silver money which he had hoarded for several-years. Some of this money gets back 'into circulation and its musty odor tells a story of hoarding. Great Britain also reports in crease in demand for banknotes, the reasons advanced being in creasing number of overseas troops who spend freely, a grow ing tendency of civilians to spend instead of save, and high er prices on non-essential items of merchandise. Consumption of beer and tobacco is increasing, and authorities there note the same tendency as? here for peo ple to carry too much currency in their pockets and purses. December is normally the peak month for money in cir culation, because of its use in Christmas shopping. . After the holidays the money pours back into banks and the volume in circulation shrinks to low levels In midsummer. As long as war provides high, payrolls and prices the money In circulation will remain In huge volume; but It Is: well to remember the adage- mat "what goes up must come down." Eventually there will be a recession and the ex cess currency will disappear, no one knowing where. During the depression some money theorists argued in favor of Increasing the volume of money In circulation. They were favorable to printing press mon ey to provide people with a ' spending medium. But money In circulation is a result rather than a cause of prosperity Now the people are dancing; the fiddler KGW NBC THURSDAY 4 Ke. 4 :00 Da wn Patrol. 5:55 Labor News. 6:00 Music From Manhattan. 6:30 News. 6:55 Labor News. 7:00 Journal ot Living. 7:15 News Headlines. 7 JO Charles Runyan, Organist. 7 :45 Sam Hayes. 8:00 Stars of Today. 8:15 James Abbe. New. 8:30 Robert St. John. 8 :45 David Harum 80 The Open Door. 8:15 Glenn SheUey. 8:30 Mirth Sc Madness. 10 00 School Program. 10:30 Kneass with the New. 10:45 Art Baker Notebook. 11:00 The Guiding Light. 11:15 Today's Children. 11 JO Light ol the World. 11 :43 Melodies of Home. 12:00 Women of America. 12:15 Mi Perkins. 12:30 Pepper Young's Family. , 12:45 Right to Happiness. , 1 Backstage Wile, ' 1 :15 Stella Dallas. 1 -JO Lorenzo Jones. 1:45 Young Widder Brown. 2 :00 When A Girl Marries. 2-15 Portia Faces Ufa. 2 JO Just Plain Bill. 2:45 Front Page FarreO. SAO Road of Life. 3:15 Vic and Sade 3:30 The Personality Hour. 40 Dr. Kate. 4:15 New ot the World. 4 JO Music. 4:40 Golden Gat Quartet. 4:45 Carl Kalash Orchestra. 5:00 OK for Release. 5:15 Dale Cross Orchestra. 5 JO Day Foster, Commentator. ( :45 Louis P. Lochner. 6 M Music HaU. 6:30 Bob Burns. ' 7 Ml Abbott and CosteUo. 7 JO March of Time. 8:00 Fred Waring tn Pleasure Time 8:15 Night Editor. -8:30 Coffee Tim.. IM-Aldrich Family. 8 JO FJUery 3uean. 100 News Flashes. 16:15 Your Home Town News. 1025 Labor News 16 JO Trio. 1645 Voice of A. Nation. 11 0 Hotel Biltmor Orchestra. 11 JO Trio. 11 5 News. 1202 a m, Swing Shift. - Unequaled in, its potential stra tegic impact upon the war in Eu rope by any conflict ' in Russia since Stalingrad, the - battle of the Kiev bulge Is racing through Its fifth week. , As at Stalingrad, where a year ago the nazi attack on Russia reached its high-water - mark, Russian and German official re ports from the Kiev bulge front do more to obscure the situation than to reveal significant battle trends. They leave no doubt, however, that the Kiev salient fight is the pivot upon which events are .turning in the east to shape the strategy pattern of the struggle on all European fronts next year, the year of decision in Russian-allied reckoning. Earlier Moscow intimations -that the massive German coun ter offensive west of Kiev had .been stalled prove premature. Russian surrender of the impor tant highway junction town of Radomysl on the west bank of the Teterev river represented a new dent in the soviet defensive line. It did not, however, imply a nazi break-through or even a critical defeat for red troops. Moscow announcement of the evacuation of Radomysl suggests retirement to the east bank of the Teterev river to secure the added protection of its waters and banks against nazi tanks. No Russian withdrawal from the Malin sector, 25 miles due north, is reported. At that point 12:00 News. 12:15 Concert. 12:45 On the Farm Front. 10 Harrison Wood. 1:15 All Star Dance Parade. 1 JO Let's Be 'Charming. 20 Ray Dady: 2:15 Texas Rangers. 2:30 Yours For a Song. 2:45 Wartime Women. 2:50 News. 3 0 Philip Keyne-Gordon. 3:15 Treasury Star Parade. 3 JO Music. 3 :45 Bible. 1 40 Fulton Lewis 4:15 Johnson Family. 4 :30 -Rainbow Rendezvous. ; 4:45 News. 50 Invitation to Romance. 5:15 Superman. 5 JO Showtime 5:43 Nesbitt ' Commentary. 60 Gabriel Heatter. 6:15 Grade Fields. 6 JO Song. 7 .-00 Raymond Clapper 7:15 Fulton Oursler. 7:30 TBA. 80 Music. 8:30 Human Adventure. 80 News. 8:15 Rex Miner. 8 JO Faces and Places In News. 9:45 Fulton Lewis. ; 1 0 0 Nocturne. 10 JO News 16:45 Rusa Smith Orchestra. 11 a Yankee House Party. 11 JO Babe Rhodes Orchestra. 11:45 Ray Frasetto Orchestra. soviet forces are stiM west i)f ihd Teterev and astride three converging soiithwafd en omsyL' i": Mi The impression is that the nazi thrust to Radomsyl & on a gerously narrow front and ously. open to tacks from the Inorti Unless the can promptly the Radomvsl - T d4nM obvii- Russiin flank at'- !e fpr- nazi comma n expand his! dent could come a trap for i his advance ces. It appears to have been yielded by, the Russ tans because it was more jmlners ble tj t4nc attack than positior s along the east bank of the Tet;rev. j The power massec by the na zis against the critical face1 of the Kiev bulge tends to confirm the impression that it i the Key to the whole Russian ront in the eyes 4of the German high com mand. London estimates 'that at - least one-third I of j i 11 nkzi ar mored forced jin! l:ussia have been concentrated in the attempt to retake Kiev ndtiuS linhinge the whole Russian ! ittack I front west of the Dnieper above Kiev. The German thrusts at Kiev must tend to defer the expects ' Russian winter offensive i rani paign farther north. Short oi in immediate and decisive break through in the ,vicin ity of Kiev, however, there Is em s small prospect that; the Ireiurgent nazi bulge offensive relieve pressure bend in time! to German retreat; on a there. icari materiajly jin I khe Dnieper avert a further wide front 1 KALE MBS THURSDAY 1X36 EC 6:45 Dave West. 7.-00 News. 1:15 Texas Ranger. 7:36 Memory Timekeeper. 80 Haven of Rest 8 JO News. 85 Market Melodies. 8:55 Strictly Personal. . . 6.-00 Boa Carter. 6:19 Woman's Sid of the Aews 8 JO Music -100 News 10:15 Stars of Today. 10 JO This Sc That. 110 Buyer' Parade. 11:15 Marketing. . " 11 Jo Concert . . ' 11:45 Melody Rendezvous. KOAC THURSDAY 556 Kc 166 News. 16-15 The Hotnemaers Hour 110 School of the Air. 11 JO Melodies for String. 11 JO Concert HaU. 120 News. 12:15 Farm Hour. 1 300 Ridin' the Rang. 1:15 U. P. Chronicle. : . 1 JO Variety Time. 10 Garden Hour. S JO Memory Book of Muslo 30 News. 3:15 Music 40 American Legion Auxiliary. 4:15 Latin American Neighbor. 4:30 Novatime. 4:45 Science News. 50 On the Upbeat. 5 JO Story Time. 5:45 News. 60 Farm Hour. 7 Jo University Hour. 8 JO Music . . 8 JO News. 8 45 Evening Meditations - 1 : .. ' h'-.-l i- II I VII :i inrernrers Micro rv Whil.f Hopjwn, j J Tuna inTcnfsht n j it Fofticnd-KVJJ i I Se4ittle-TcKonvi4KVI i 3 niirvi tttiaN fiVASvi niuni-fMOndsj through Friday. Thi world famous author, lecturier, jour nalist, traveler, professor brings you sa accurate, impact anal ysis of the day's crentsL : Monday is stm to pay IF3Q01T sis UaJuil Put a few drops of Va-tnooJ v? each nostril at the very nnttsniZie . or sneeze. Its qukk action helps prevent many colds Tmmmf developing. Follow ,m..-J urectJons --wrm r In- sakkr. : m-JTl- t Crcdii ts Usaid Harry If yea WMtjyew en grsvlag doae U tinse fer vavminas. : : Watchas. Di m Jewelry We will pack and mall your gift for you FREE! , : "l:..M ' WM SATUKDAT EVENINGS TTHTTL, O'CLOCK -J . 1 3" 1$ N1 1: