I I'M'':.'..: ' . : , . v.. - : . - . - PAGE FOUR CHARLES A. SPRAGLTE, Editor and Publisher : Member of the Associated Press 1 The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of ail 'news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. I Dewfcy-Bricker Press Round-up ' "! Judging by post-convention comment in the Oregon press the nomination of Dewey and Bricker as' the republican national ticket is accepted .with restricted praise. ' Comment 'for . the most part is restrained, but the lack of ex pression of approbation may be due to the lack of any element of suspense in the choice of Gov. Dewey. As the financial market reports ' 'say, the event was 'discounted, so obvious 'it was. No defection is noted among papers 'normally republican, though some indicate a "wait and see" attitude. As to the results in iNovember, few papers offer predictions. The Eugene Register-Guard confesses to having no Dewey-eyed optimism" but the Portland Ore Konian thinks "there are excellent chances that Mr. Roosevelt may presently find himself out . of the habit of being re-elected." :t The Dalles . Chronicle, staunch party; organ, sees in Gov, Dewey the. man we want for our nexfpresideni," It aayathai be 4,has proved his ability, his integrity and his capacity for high executive 'pOBition.,! Of the ticket it offers this opinion: "Unquestionably the present Jticket is the strongest that, the republicans could put ' forwardV IV-."-' 'U,:::::V-': The- stalwart Corvallis Gazette-Times ap ' proves the convention choice, .particularly as to Bricker, as Mr, Ingalls', paragraph attests: T There wfll,-ke -another advantage in electing the , repubUcan jUcket this year, Aould -anything Smv pen to Dewey there is a. qualified man to-take his , . place, .and he won't he lound out on ajnilk route. ' Mr. Bricker Is ace high and has proven himself a ,: good sport. V - ; -r . '' The internationalist republican Oregon Voter finds its doubts washed away in Gov. Dewey's, remarks anent the foreign policy plank and gives this dictum in its opening paragraph: "It will be better for winning the wark for win ning the peace, for, the. future' of our country and for the future of the world, if Dewey and Bricker are elected next November.1 , ; The Portland Oregonlan, which had leaned ' strongly Willkie-wards, lost no time mounting -the party ( bandwagon, and thinks a. changing of horses "could not but benefit, 'and greatly, the American - people." It aees in Dewey a l needed youthful vigor to overcome the dry rot in:Washmgton-Mthe dry rot of a too protracted incumbency; and in Bricker every xequlsitc qualifiqttkm ; V ; The Bend Bulletin likewise sees in Dewey's ; nomination' "a call to youth to take over and relieve a., tired country: of an aging and tired adminisjtratjjon,'. ;.and says the party knows... Dewey s V superb administrator; withVpasv sion for good government," The Roeebvpr JJewsr Review J say that Dewey and Bricker ? provide jf the republicans with two men; of vigor- end. courage," and notes that the "republican meet ing has shown harmony, unity and self-sacri- fice " . ;r :' -''i : C , The old Oregon City Enterprise is regaining under Walter W. R. May its old republican' vitality which won its distinction when the late Edward E. Brodie was its editor. and pub lisher. The Enterprise hails "Great Unity Re sults at Chicago," noting that in nominating Dewey i and Bricker .the convention ' "has achieved a party unity that will galvanize the party nationally into confidence and great ex- pectations.' - ;,; :Y, ' . The Astorian-Budget is an example of a "doubting; Thomas." It concludes its comment with this paragraph: The American people hope and soon, will show them a way essential unity of spirit and purpose in assuring peace and providing opportunity for prosperity in the future. Mr. Dewey may be that someone. v But he will have to. prove it -The Coos Bay Times, only daily in. Oregon -to support Roosevelt in 1940, is all set to plunk for Roosevelt and a fourth term. Editof Sackett drew on his quiver of arrows to shoot his long bow at ; the Hoover speech and the Warren speech. He finds in Dewey an to-win, aggressive politician, namic," with "many of the-attributes of a suc cessful republican candidate "a worker, a tire less worker, after the fashion of young aggress . ive men on the way up politically." It questions: ' "Will his youthful prof Qe placed between those of Winston Churchill and Josef . Stalin win the preponderence of American voters' support to himself as the national and international man-of-the-hour?" - '.The-Salem Capital Journal, which opposed Roosevelt for his third term, comments that "the: republicans "have nominated a I strong ticket for the coming campaign; both the can didates . are of presidential caliber and both have records of administrative ability in their respective states' But the Oregon Journal, an other paper of democratic faith which deserted the party candidate in 1940, is not impressed with Dewey, remarking: The next president of ; the United States, even - if the election: involves a fourth term, , must be 1 a world-figure standing upon a world-platform, ' firmly based upon the will, the understanding and the larger interests of America. Neither fijure nor platform of required dimensions has been offered convincingly to .the voter of the United States by the republicans in Chicago. ' ; In summary it appears that republican papers w ill" support the party ticket, some With real enthusiasm. That seems to reflect the attitude of party members as velL Democratic papers and party members are torn between two views, --the conservatives disliking both the Roosevelt administration and a fourth term, yet hesitat ing: Jn view of war conditions to turn to the republican ticket; the new deal and labor ele ment ci the party hot as horseradish for a fourth term and for Roosevelt and Wallace, especially Vallace. One dclrate to the Chicago convention :got his' nan 2 in the papcri Grant A. Ritter who kept hb cr.d' voted for I.:acArlhur, the lone L-.l..::ut-irr.cr.2 1C57 delegates. He '.resisted" prescur? t ir.-I:e- it imanimous, -and ; thereby i:-'l-s t:T:r:ry f;r ci scr.e sort, plus a s;tl::.li-c:-:cicnce. ; '. ' ' " ':'. ;: "Wo Toror Sioayi Us; No Fear Shall Atee : from first Statesman, March 23, 1851 TOE STATES51AN PUBLISHING COMPANY Death to Henriot "a candidate 'of someone, somehow ; or two at long intervals. Salem which has r to recapture their eaten out of his hand" for these many years hopes that he : UWU vv VI A mmM and waitresses serves it. Dnterproting - ThG War News r ambitious, oiit "small, but dy enemys program .an atlsr'r rrTTr-M !,,- Ti'-wat- Japan's island The Death of a Labor Leacler Dell Nickerson succeeded Ben. Osbourne as executive secretary of the ) state federation of labor back in 1938. When he took over organ ized labor was in ill repute in Oregon, as a re sult ( of the exposure of the work of the labor goons which sent several of them 'to the state penitentiary. NickersOn's immediate task was to rebuild organized labor In "self -respect and to regain for it public confidence. He did this without sacrifice to the legitimate interests of. labor unions. His sudden death last Thursday night Is therefore one to cause real grief among his associates' in the labor movement and among employers and the' public who knew him, and . he was ,. "Nick, to thousands of people. j . ' ' ' Big. and strong and forceful as was his pre decessor (Osbourne was an Iron moulder, Nick erson a carpenter), Nickerson was more friend ly and approachable, more j inclined to win by peaceful methods rather than by resort to the strike. In ' consequence Of this policy Oregon has been remarkably free from labor disputes for many years, this being pne state where the "no strike" pledge has been respected almost without deviation. j f- . With labor unions, as powerful aa they now are they need strong leadership, both to de fend labor's interest and to give unions a sound guidance. 'Nickerson proved such leader, whose place the federation will find hard to .fill. '::r:-:V'VA-:r- ' "V-K In days of quieter news the assassination of Philippe Henriot, minister of information in the Vichy government, .would have attracted at tention. Occurring on the day of nominations in Chicago and of a great battle about Caen in Normandy, the news of Henriotjs death, though well displayed, probably rated low in number ' of readers.: , V.;r- J ":;"-"-- , :viV His death occurred at the hands of the French underground. He had arrived in Paris only the day preceding. The underground must have known of his movements, jforf when they in vaded his quarters in Paris; three of them knocked on the door . of his second-floor bed room, and shot him when he opened the door. On the list of 100 Vichy officials and traitors to France; the name of Philippe Henriot was thus crossed off. Shudders must be running up and down. the spines of the 99 remaining,' and of the others who do not know whether they are on the list or not, ;. , 1, ' . ' Henriot dying in his pajamas is reminiscent' of Marat who was stabbed in -his bath by Char lotte Cofday in the troubled days of the French revolution. She went to the guillotine, proudly, to pay for her crime, but the assassins of Hen riot seem to have escaped, j Murder is the easy tool in times of political j tumult, and there , promises to be considerable blood-letting as France purges itself from j its evil leadership. 'I. Few indeed are the! businessmen who stay with one business for 45 years, yet that is the record of. Frank Meyers with The Spa restaur ant. Mortality in proprietorships of eating places is notorious, but for close on half ra century Frank has been identified with The Spa, . nearly all of that time ! as a proprietor. His record is further distinctive in that he has allowed himself very little !time.off iust a dav wUl enjoy a real vacation, free w-.. LZi -j i.. ttUVUTk - iaUUU aVIAAlV9 OX III . and fickle! customers. He de- i By ELTON C. FAY Associated Press siaif Writer j; (Substituting for Kirk I Simpson) J I saiaaaaaaBeaamaa ' Critical days iri the battle of Normandy mad Italy lie just ahead. They should disclose something of German strength in western France and reveal, nazi Intentions in Italy. ' . -:, ' " For the past week the British and the Germans in the Caen area have poured. men and machines into a battle of attack and counterattack where the issue is io see who wiH break. first. There is perhaps: the greatest concentration of armor in a single small area in this war. X 4 f ' General Sir Bernard Montgomery is forcing the fight, driving the- nazis into using, reserve troops as fast as they reach the area, seeking to get a decision before the Germans, entangled with explosive-blasted rafl and highway lines to the rear, can bring up more reserves. I , ' For their part, the Germans battle, not with the hope of driving the allies into the sear but to upset the offensive and prevent expansion of the Caen ;; salient ' : v',' V;v . r . ';'r ' : A week of war in Italy has brought the allies to a point where they soon will enter the outer zone of the so-called Pisa-Rinuni defensive system. There they, should begin "jto find evidence of whether the nazls intend to make a stand on that naturally defensible position or whether, warned by a sequence ot defeats in Italy and beset by mah- - power shortages on two other fronts, they will fall back to easily held positions in the rocky gateway of the Alps. . . . , ; i - : , - ! ; .In Russia, test of strength had its answer within the week. Demoralized Germans stumbled into Minsk, a crumbling nazi strong point, after a week in White Russia, Moscow said, brought the death or capture of 183,930 Hitler jsoldiers. In the Pacific, the war progressed slowly, satis factorily, but bloodily. American marine and army forces compressed an estimated 20,000 Japanese defenders of Saipan into the northern end of' the enemy island. To do that 9732 Americans fell in two weeks of fighting, 11474 of them; dead, tie heaviest casualty toll of all the Pacific battlefields. , The Japanese hacked deeptr into China in their two-fold endeavcr.to split free China and seize tie airfields from which Amerksm. fliers operate. In dicative of the fact that the latter aspect cf tie remains snort or luirument w 3 CI cf Formosa. : SEGOH STATECMAX jKSLM MBSSCNDAT 139 KM 10 Wesley League. -t - I SO Radio Btble Class. -f JO Lutheran Hour. " ,,r .110.-00 Glen Hardy. News. 10:15 Voice from SwithluHl, 10:30 Hookey HalL -1 11 0 American Lutheran Church. iijw-war commentary. ,1J:15 Voice of the rarmer. ' .11 -JO Dr. rioml Jnhnwui i 1 0 Symphonic Swine I " i u xoung rtopat's Churcn. 1M-Excursions and Science. 10 Local Toung People. 80 Winga of HeaUnf. 330 Foursquare Church. ! 4 AO-Old Fashloried Revival 9 o Mediation Board. S :43 Gabriel Heatter. 0 News. ' vl :1S OrchestraJ of Mexico. -JO California Melodies. - 1 T.-00 Cedric Foster. ' - , t US Tommy Tucker Tun. ' T30 Gleb YelllB Orchestra, r First Presbyterian CriurrTi f SJO-Sky Eiders. - - - t0 News. as Aasoa Weeks. I . ; t t JO News. ! t:45 Organ Musle. ! - ! . ; 10 AO Old Fashioned Revival. ! 11 AO Young People's Church. ; tllJ0-Sign Oft; . f ' ' KKX BN SCNDAT 11N ste. 1 a 00 Your War Job. ; S JO Dr. Ralph Walker J . i I M Sunday Song Service, f S.-OO-Builders of ruth, s J0 Message of Israel. -100 Joha B. Kennedy., j 30-.1 Memorable Musie.'! 10 -JO Sammy Kay Serenade J0J5 Leland Stow; News. i SI AO Chaplain im. USA- , : 1130 Serenade Tropical. - ! 13A0-Uf of Riley. i i i 1330 Hot Copy 1 i 1 AO Al Pearce'a Fua Valley. 1 30 World of Song, i ; f S:0O Mary Small Revue. i 130 Hot Copy, k . i I SAO Summer Hour. ' i 4 AO They Wanted Musie. ' 4:15 Voices to Harmony. .: j !4dO-Cy Witness News. . I : i 4:4-Musle by Al Sack. 1 I - SAO Christian bdenc ProgTaot r a :ia oersnaos. ; S 30 Walter Duranty. ) 5:4i Drew Pearson. . SAO Walter WlncheO. H:l-Basln SL Chamber1 atusle! , S Jimmle Fldter. i j lAO-Ustea. the Women, j 730 Look to the Future. $ 7:43 Shades of Blue I iS:lS Tanks in th Orient. j i S30 Quia atids. - t f AO Deadline Dram; t ! j 1 30 News Headimes and HJgnngbts i : roe au Humanrty.! 10A0 Untversity Explorer. lo:ia BH. t j 10 30 Builders of Faith, i , 11 AO Concert Hour. ROW NBC SUNDAY 42t Re 4 AO Dawn Patrol ', 6:15 Commando Mary. 630 String Quartet . AMERICA'S, i WAR PLANES WRIGHT FIELD, Ohio--(Tnis U one of a series of brief sket ches of American jwarplanesT produced under the supervision of the AAF materiel jcoinmand, which is charged with !the devel opment, pranrrement, production and inspection .of all army 'air, forces equipment Authoritative data on a different plane will ap- ' pear daily.) 4,iC ' . 1. 1-1 ;" -'- :TbeP-51'TItEs4ajig.yp "4 ilj-- i; r A versatile,' fast, and deadly fighter. Is .built with the Allison'' engine for low-altitude work and the Packard - Merlin eWgine for high altitude" fighter and escort jobs. One of the world's fastest lighters. Has been converted Into the A-36 fighter-bomber by (en gineers of the AAFj materiel command. f ' " '':-' X I - . t '-Description! -) Singlej.;-" engine fighter constructed as. a ! low I wing monoplane with single tail. .' Crew of ; onej pilot j Manufac tured by North American. Sunt , lar in appearance to Me-109S. Dimensions i Span: ( 37 feet ! Length: 32 feet,! 3 inches. Height: ;12 feet,. 2 inches. Tread width: -11 feet, 10' inches. Winz area: - t233 5 o.uare f eet. i Approxiniate iniaximum weight: 9500 pounds. ! ZTTl S'lnZZ ered: P-51A. iOne Allison V-1170 I liquid-cooled 1200 hp,' 12-cylin-jder engine. One Curtiss electric I ally;; controlled constant-speed ''propeller. ( , J i ; Performance: Rated at an sip proximate speed of 400 mites , per hour. Service ceiling ap- proximately 30,000 feel The tac i tical radius of action is 1250 j miles, as : fighter-bomber 400 miles as fighter.-- - f : ? I Power plant:? (2) Merlin-pOw-fered: P-51B. One Packardbullt Rolls Royce MMerlinw V-I650 en gine, 1520 hp. with 2-stagej 2 : speed supercharger. Curtiss elec . trically controlled 4-bladed pro J peller. , V - ' ' Performance: Rated sat a speed of over -40O miles per hour, er ; vice ceiling; over 40,000 feet. Th I tacucal radius of action Is over i 500 miles, as escort fighter.- Bomb load; 1000 pounds- r Armament: Four JO caliber guns in wings. ! t Protection:!, Pilot protected : front and rear with armor plate, i Plane equipped with ieak-proof - E tanks and buUet-proof glassy - - . i.j ! mm vm ' fed tefafc io l$vjtymu(l vi sTi W r balem. Dmbotl Sunderr T.iomlna. IttlT is ' i- - . 7 AO Highlights of th Bibl. ' . 130 Words and Music SAO Th Church in Your Home, " 830 World News Roundup. 1 :45 Carolyn GUbert, Songec , - 9:15 News in Advertising. 30 Stradivari - ! AO A Layman Views the News 10:15 Labor for Victory. 1030 Chicago Round Tab!. 11 AO Church in Action. .... ; 11-30 John Charles Thomas. 12-00 World News. 1230 Th Army Hour. - 130 Lands of th Ire. 1:55 News. " i- - i - ' '. , SAO NBC Symphony Orchestra SAO News Headlin and Highlights. S:15 Catholie Hour. ' '. - 3:4S Between the Line. 4AO AU Tim Hit Pared. 430 Band Wagon. 4-55 Tom Reddy. News. S AO-Grade Fields. ' S30 On Man's Family. S AO Manhattan Merry -Go-Round. ' 30 American Album of Familiar ' - ' Musie. - T AO Hew of Charm. 130 Bob. Crosby St Co. SAO Th. Great Gildcrsleev , i : S 30 Symphony Hour. . 30620 Tim. . . 10A0 News Flashes. - 10:15 The Eagles Speak. ' ' 1030 Th Pacific Story. 11 AO St. Francis Bote Orchestra' 1130 War News Roundup. , . U A0-S AO a .nv S wing Shift. KOC4-CBS SDKOAT- KM. SAO News of th World - Monday's Radio Programs KSXkf BTBS MONSAT 1391 at. S30 n tb Truth. S: News. , 1.-00 News. 7:15 Farm and Bom. 7 30 Handy Man. MS Todays Top Trades. S:0O Dr. Louis Talbot. SJO Mews. . '.r" S s4S Orchestra. S:00 Boak Carter. :15 Pastor's Call. . J0 Midland USA.' t:4S Th Amazing Jennifer Zogaa. lOM-Hardy. Masrs. l:lS-Jack Bercfa. 140-Lancheon wtth I-opes. , 10:4$ American Women's Jury -ll.-00-Clric roster, lias WalU Tun. , lldO Saryun Serenad. 115 Kellogg Musical library. Uao Orgs nail ties. U:1S News. 1J:30 Hillbilly Serenad.' 11JS National Varieties. 12:45 Smootbiea. 1-es InSsrlude, lOSLum a Ahncr. 1 las Music , 20 News. : V ' S5 Broadway Bandwagon. S.l-Aberden Band. 25 Radio Tour. . 2.-00 New. -' S AS Concert Hour. 2:43 Johnson Family.-. 4;00 Fulton Lewis, jr. 4:15 Merry Moomv 4 M World's Front Fag. i . 4:49 RouxM Dp Bevelers.! AO-News. I S.-1S Superman. J 5 JO Tom Mix. -'-'i : 6:45 Gordon Burke, AO Gabriel Heatter. H . as Screen Cast. . - JO Cot Glee Club. :. 1 AO War Commentary. 7:15 -Lowell Thomas. . 7 JO Loo Sanger. ' SAO Orchestra.. , SaS Orchestra.' ' ' i JO Point SubUm. r AO News. tUS Cecil Brown. - t30-Fuitoa Lewis, r. :45 Mueic. 10A0 Sherloch. Bolme. 10JO News , . . 10:45 Harmony Han. - v 11A0 Open House, UAO-Sign OH. f ' fLOtN CBS MONDAY K. . :55 Breaktast- Bulletin. V AO Northwest Fann Bepsrtcr, " i-iexas nangera. , t i :45-KOIN Klock. 7 as Headline -Heat.' --. 1 JO Bill Hayworth. News. 7:4S Nelson Prtngl. SAO Consumer News.: i SdS Valiant Lady. SJO-Iight of the World. - S:45 Aunt Jenay. ' . AO Kate Smith Speaks. ; S:1S Big Sister 1 $30 Bnmanc of Helen Trent :45 Our Gal Sunday. lOAO-Lini Can B BeauttrUL. 10:15 Ma Perkins. - 10 30 Bernadin Klrnn. 10:45 Th CotdDergs. llAOwPortia Faces Ufa. 11:15 Joyce Jordan. 11 JO Voung Doctor Malon 1149 Perry Mason. IS AO News. ll:15-Nelghbors. 1230 Bright Horizons. US Bachelor's Children. - 1 .-00 Broad way Matinee. I 125 Dorothy Fisher, Songs. 130-Mary Martin. . . 1 Afternoon Melodies. ' i 2 AO This Changing World. 2:15 Newspaper. 01 th Air. -S .-45 Wilderness Road. SAO News JJ5 Lyn Murray 3 JO Stars of Today. a.-49 Th World Today. 2S5 Harsch Meaamg of th New 4A0 Lady of th Press... ' 439 New. 4 JO The Colonel. 435 Organ mterhid.. SAO Galea Drakav . 9:19 Red' Oeng. S JO Harry Flahnery. News - ' j I 9:4 News.;: 4 ,,v .; . 5A5 Bill Henry. AO Radio Theatre. 7 AO Screen Guild Plavers. ; : 130 Thanks to th Yanks; SAO 1 Love-A Mystery. S 5 Date Lin. . , 30 Gay Minetie 35WaUac Sterttng. - A Adventures of BUT Lane " 4 AO Vex Pop i: 10 AO Fiv Star FlnaL -.! t 19:15 WarUm Women. 1030-Western Stars. f : 1030 Heathman Uelodles. II AO Gua Arnheim Orchestra. 1130 Air-ITo ot-tb Air. 1135-Manny Strand Cvcbestra. 1145 Organist, U:9fr3-News Mtdntght-SAO Slaw Must and Near BAC M0NDAT-55t K. ' 10AO-Nws 105 Th Hrwnamstisrs Boor - 11 AO Southland Singing. 11:15 Music Salon. 1120-CDnecrt Hall . .' v 12A0 slew ttAS Hoon Farm Hoar. -1A0 Ridin t th Rang. " 1:15 Treasury Salute 130 Variety Tim. SAO Horn - Economies . Specialists. -- FIAMIN& tOUAXCE. AOYCRTURE, ISTIIG'JE, PACE EYEXY ISO KENT OF y'lmm.m 9' PKEStSTID EVEST SUN BAY ' - . iv vicss ... a 1 1 h. k ' - - 6:15 E. Power Biggs. Organist : 6:45 New Voices in Song. -7A0 Church ot th Air. . 30 Wings Over Jordan. .: . : SAO Warren Sweeney, NtwS. , S. 05 Blue Jackets Choir. 30 Invitation to Learning, -' SAO Salt Lake Tabernad. S :30 Concert Pastelles. . -:45 News. 10 AO Church of th Auv 1030 Edward Murrow. . . 10:45 Studio. 11 AO Dangerously Yours. -. 1130 Worjd News Today. , " llSSongs of America. 12 AO Philharmonic Qrch Concert 130 The Pause That -Rfrshra. ' . 1.00 The Family Hour. . -25 WillUm Shlrer, News. . . J V Silver Theatre. ' S 30 America in the Air. 4 AO Concert Miniatures. ". 4.15 New' v. , , 430 Invasion News. " SAO Walter Pideon Show. " 5:30 William Wmtet, News. 8:45 Stars of Today ; 835 Ned Calmer." - -. . '- t SAO Radio Readers Digest f. " , 630 Fred Allen. . TAO Tak n or Lcav It i ' " : T3-Th .Whisuer. SAO Crlm Doctor. ' - - , -39 Song et th Week. ' , - S 30 Orchestra. - ft ' AO I Was 'Ther. ' , fa we Work for Wise. U AO-Five Star ilnal '' ' 2 JO Memory Book of Musi. SAO News. - 2 a 5 Music ot th Masters.- -4 AO Swing. 4 ao Treasury Songs Today. 4:15 Listen to Leibert. i 4 JO The Walts Lives On. 4.-45 Highlights of th Wkc AO On th Upbeat. 5 JO Story Tim S-45 It's Oregon's War.'- 'tt News. JO evening Tana Hour. 7 JO CH : Club Program. aAO Starry Ski. 19 A to Z in Norsltjr. JO Music :49 Evening MdlUuoea. ' MAO-SlgaOff. ! KOW NBC-MONUAT CM K. 4i00 Dawn PatroL 1 AO Mirth and Martnaai, . : eJS New Parad. 7A0-JouraaI of Ltving. ' 7:15 News Headlines and' mghllghta 7 JO Reveille Roundup. .- 7A9 Sam Hayea. SAO Stars -of Today4. :. US James -Abb Covert th NtirS. 130 Musie of Vktana. M5 David . Harum. - AO Personality Hour. 10:80 Sketches in Melody. ll:15-Ruth. Forbes. 10 JO News. ' 105 Art Baker's Notebook. 11 AO STb Guiding Light, i 5 11:15 Today's Children. : - i 11 JO Women in Whit. I t 11 -45 Hymns of All Church. II AO Woman of America. 12.15 Ma Perkins. -1230 Pepper Young's Famuy. 1245 Right to Happiness. IAS Backstage Wife- 1:1S Stella Dallas. t - 130 Lorenzo lone. 1 1 :45 Young Widder Brown. , 2 AO When A Girl Matrics. 2:15 We Love maa Learn. - ' 2 JO Just - Plata am. 1 2.-4 Front Pag FarrcO. 3 300 Road. ofLlf. - ; US-Vie and Sade, ! S JO B. tBoyntun. -i- S 45 lUmbUsg Rttdcc " 4 Dr. Kat. . - i 4:15 News 430 Vole of A Nation, i 4M54L V. Kaltenborn. I v SAO OK for Release. 1 OS Till Evening Comes. 30 Richard Crooks. - ' vv a song is jbom. 4 . .. 'imwuawm neas. ' 7 AO Contented Hour. j 7J0-Dr. HQ. , I . . AO-Mercer's Musie Shop. . ' OS rieetwooa Lswtoa. Commmts- , ,; tor 4 , '.- v.- : -U ; 30 Cavalead of America. ' AO The Telephone Hour .(Continued on page 6) IO :00 A3I. Grarid Parade, starting at Old High School Bldg i - and ending at Marian Square. - U:00 A.M. Patriotic cxcrdscff, Marion Square; j 12:00 Noon Barbecue and basket lunch. : 2:00 PJM. Children Costume Parade; begins at court house. 3:00 P3I. Army demonstration of training and use of carrier pigeons. : . . . . t; 3:30 P3I. CMdren'arace and sports, ' - 4:30 PJtl. Musical show. ' - j ; 7:30 P3I. Floor show. ! ; : 9:00 P3I. Awarding of autornobfle and other merchandise gifts to be given away. Grczd Edl rJ 2!m:ry ! IZzzizj. Jdy 3 miX to purchasfirs of S2x Wear Loan Bonds end Stamps and men In uni form. Camp Adair Orchestra. . - We T7UI De Opea All Day . .. T. ', Jiu mm - M '! fU) liO (Continued from Page 1) ' Now just what have these as sembled delegates to do? The an swer is, plenty. Consider that now virtually all trade is done r by governments. - Ours, is lend lease or reverse lend-lease. .Very little foreign trade is done ; on private account, and where it 'to'.; government clearance -is :; re quired for foreign, exchange and for shipping space. 6ut when the war to over governments. It is ' expected (and hoped), will re tire from foreign trade. Our gov ernment will not be shipping food and supplies to Great Bri tain and China "on tick." It will be pulling its troops back home, and so diminishing Its demands . on foreign sources for their pro visioning. . ! ' 1' "-. But just how can private business take over when gov ernments stop their interchange of goods? Foreign exchange to now pegged. What r a t e a will . prevail in the new world, when . old currencies may be washed out and new currencies are un- seasoned? What . credit terms will be i avatlabley cash in, ad- - vance, cash for draft with bQl - ' of lading attached, cash on de livery, credit for 60 or 120 days? What tariffs and quota limits will survive with ; many new , governments being set up in Eu rope? T . Here indeed to a conference which ought to go to the very . core of international economic relations. There to universal agreement mat . foreign trade should be encouraged, but uni versal fear also of free trade. Great Britain, traditionally a free trade country, went under an imperial preference system in pre-war . days. Now its econo my to gravely altered.-It is no longer rich as a creditor coun- try. Its overseas 1 investments have been greatly reduced and its current position is very weak because of the adverse balances which the dominions hold with London : banks - on account " of goods furnished. Britain's cur rent debt to India for instance is huge. Stability In foreign ex change iepends not on agree ments of monetary conferences as to exchange rates, but on the balance in - exchange of ' goods and services : among the coun- ' tries of the world; and maintain ing such a balance runs head on " into nationalistic policies.? ' . There will be-proposals at - Bretton Woods for an interna tional monetary fimdy to support the exchanges, for a world bank to supply credit ,to stricken countries. The fundamental question however to whether the ; nations are . ready toN maintain FOR m 08 Hy (By ccnuleey ol Strrena -J exchansai equilibrium by keep ing a balance . In taeir iraains. The conference can make pro posals, but judging from what has previously come out of our own treasury department on this subject I am skeptical or their practicality. . , ;f ' The hope of the world. lay. In the London economic conference in 1933. It was , broken when Pres. Boosevelt "recalled our delegates I and so scuttled the conference. The new conference takes up similar problems but ia a world more confused and in greater economic -disorder than in 1933.: I hope that this ,time the conference may yield some thing better than dead sea fruit whose seed are seeds of war. Practical Rclision -by Rev. John L. Knight, Jr, ; Counselor on Religtois Uf. -Wlllsmett mlversity. A young lad once asked me to' state in one sentence the purpose of the Christian life. So : far I have not been able to improve upon this definition: The Chris tian life is co-working with God. You may elaborate that as you please." In personal life, for ex ample, Christian living to co working with God in developing those qualities and potentialities which will make you the kind of person God would have you be. In our relationships with one an other. Christian living to devel oping those relationships of bro therhood which God would have exist between us. In the world at large, Christian living to co working with God in building the kind of world in which He . would have us live. . Of Rain Folk During June : The month of June brought an even one-half inch of. rainfall compared- with' the same month last year during which 225 inches of rain felt .The mean average for the month pf June, to L23. ; . June 1931, and the rainfall of 1943 hold a tie for the fourth wet test 'Jones, on - recoTd " with S J5 ' inches. The wettest June was that of 1937 when 4.61 inches fell. It to followed in ' order by 3J50 in 1894; " J.4r hi 1913; Z.70 in ;19U; 2.69 in 1920; and 2.50 in 1908.! ' Dry. Junes with the same - or less moisture than 1944 ' include 30 inch ia 1895;5 in . 1899; 21 In 1904; .19 in .1909; .16 in 1919; i03 ' in 1822; 2. in 1924; i,24 in 1926; ja in 1932; J4 in 1934; .36 in 1935; .03 in 1938; and .07 in 1940. - There was no rainfall re- GoIdbirafiEon & Son, JeWees) Onlyi Inch Ucr E:zi f:r Delivery ill Cicvcns Cz JTca TlckeU ira be cea IXIS ca Ecnd Co cad o'Jier mercliandlie vri'i Cie purclias) of any T I2x War Loan Cc&d. r rv