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Show -PROVO, UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 1949 Disagreement Does Not Excuse Bad Manners Britain's Foreign Minister Bevin wag the target of eggs and vegetables when he arrived ar-rived in this country to sign the North Atlantic At-lantic Treaty. They were thrown by members mem-bers of Jewish youth organizations who objected ob-jected to his handling of the Palestine situation. situ-ation. Britain's former Prime Minister Churchill, Church-ill, another visitor, was accused in the sen- Farewell Party We were reading the other day about a new television store in Englewood, N. J., which presented gifts to every purchaser of a new set on its opening day. Among the presents were two tickets to a Broadway show and dinner for four at a New York night club. "It was like the good old days," the story began. In a way it was. And the cash customers cus-tomers probably enjoyed the experience of being wooed again by a storekeeper after years of shortages and seller's markets. But the give-away was also a sign of the televised future. The theater and night club dividend was a sort of last fling as well as a sales inducement. It represented a gesture by the dealer that was confident as well as gracious. He could make it on the secure assumption as-sumption that neither theater nor night club would be much competition once the new set was installed. 4 From now on these suburbanites will be getting most such entertainment in the living liv-ing room. The bright lights of Broadway wil be summoned up by the flick of a switch, and without the attendant bother of traffic, traf-fic, parking, crowds and cover charges. This free night of entertainment for the new television owners may be only one of a series of last flings. With the spread of television networks Broadway might become be-come more a distribution center for entertainment enter-tainment than the glamorous Mecca of the lively arts. Perhaps people will become as little interested in where their entertainment entertain-ment originates as they now are in which packing plant processed their Sunday roast. Television must solve plenty of big problems prob-lems before it becomes a real competitor with the shadow, substance and sound shows. But there is plenty of evidence that the new medium, crude as it may be, is tightening up the family circle, and that video is becoming an important new member mem-ber of the old team of home and fireside. ate of bing a "cold-blooded propagandist" for war and was virtually called a liar to boot The charges were made by Senator Langer, who refused to accept Mr. Churchill's Church-ill's denial that he fought with Spain against the United States in 1898. "I never was wrong in my life," the self-assured statesman from North Dakota shouted, by way of proving his point, These and other similar instances have left us wondering whether a free citizen of this self-governing country owes a little of the same courtesy to a fcfuest of his country coun-try that he usually accords a guest in his own house. And we wonder whether courageous cour-ageous convictions, righteous anger or honest hon-est errors are a sufficient excuse for bad manners. - In our blessedly free country a citizen may be rude -within reason. Thew is no law against it. But the well-bred citizen, as an individual, usually tries to curb any impulse im-pulse to abuse the privilege. Most of us like to be well thought of. Most of us also realize real-ize that differences aren't settled nor wrongs righted by bad manners, however convinced or indignant we may be. Mr. Bevin, many of us believe, has not always acted justly or honestly toward Israel. But eggs and tomatoes aren't going to make him repent. Senator Langer, who has never been wrong, may not like Mr. Churchill. But hi'n calling him a war monger does not make it so and his calling him a liar does not threaten his eminent place in history. There is nothing to be done about all this, so it is useless to complain. But we still hope to see the day return when all Americans It Looks Good to Us, Winnie! Tax Redemptions Are Distributed Checks totaling $17,381.40 will Provo city schools will collect be sent out this week to various $iaio. Lowest collector on the list towns In Utah county as the first rr.i- ...in u - quarter apportionment of the tax i'Genola which will be sent a sale redemptions? according to check for $1.47. "? Maurice Bird, county treasurer, j The Alpine and Nebo ehool The totals for this year s first districts will receiv e $2348 and apportionment show an increase ' $2002 respectively, Mr. Bird de-of de-of $3,773.84 over the check values dared. sent out last year, Mr. Bird de-' clared. The largest apportionment check will go to the Utah county fund totaling $3358 and next in line is the state and state schools which will receive $2523, the figures fig-ures revealed. Provo city will receive re-ceive a check for $1673 and the 7MDGH7! I -;fesee'$a, I Minutia By RUTH LOUISE PARTRIDGE Having a morbid desire to read By FRANK C. ROBERTSON about things I couldn't eat even When an editor visits a writer if I could get them, which is un-jit is almost as newsworthy as the The Chopping Block 1 1 I S i A I IIS I - . . . . nun ronai a an aminonf nnri v;. ,n.. f : liKeiy in mese aavs. i win giveiclassic. man bites doe storv. Writ- ...... . v , i nil vilimvill iv. 1IICIIUI.V lUlflkll u- nil, ..-t.-.l.l hint I I . . . . ... . .. , ;, . vou for the lvtn centennial nint, ers are DODularlv suDoosed to guest With courtesy, even though they may a clpe for-and I quote: "NunLg' t?ik. to NeYork to disagree with him. rather than With eggs, Sighs. Warm a lump of butter see editors, where they grovel on 1 A 1,1 1 1 . I .. ... ... insults anu picKei lines. Only d Movie enough to drop from a spoon. mak mere Drop lumps of paste about size . vi, of walnut into not quite boiling ; wnter feeI lllie lard. When risen to four times or- a straw hat The Washington Merry-go-Round Drew Pearson Says: Big Business In Alaska Blocks Alaskan Governor In Senate WASHINGTON Looking through my confidential con-fidential list of lobbyists In the 80th congress the other day, I noticed the name of "Cap" Lathrop, with the following notation: "Richest man In Alaska; blocked Alaskan statehood to ave taxes. His senate stooge is Hugh Butler of Nebraska." The date of that entry in my files was June 5, 1948. Today, April, 1949, Cap Lathrop is still the man who pulls the wires that make Senator Butler talk, also the man who has been dominating domin-ating Alaskan matters before the senate interior affairs committee. For nine months that committee com-mittee has blocked confirmation of Dr. Ernest Gruening, best governor in Alaska's history, who, in a recent local election, got 80 per cent of Alaskan support. Testifying against him before the senate committee was Charlie Jones, an ex-U. S. Marshal, Mar-shal, who read a prepared statement as follows: 'The governor entices people into his luxurious luxu-rious mansion and beguiles them with food and drink . . Oh, hell," Charlie Jones interrupted himself, "That don't sound like me." "I take it you didn't write it then?" queried Chairman O'Mahoney of Wyoming. "Who did?" "Cap Lathrop's secretary," replied Jones. Senator Anderson of New Mexico, former secretary of agriculture, took up the cross-examination. cross-examination. "You say in this statement written for you," Anderson asked, "that the governor beguiled people with food and drink. Just how would you sy it in your own words?" "I'd say," replied Charlie Jones, "that he gave them a drink." Lathrop, who owns five Alaskan theatres and two newspapers. Is griped because Gruening induced the Alaskan legislature to impose a local income tax for the first time in history. Another witness against Gruening, Robert Hoops, asked the senate committee's permission to prepare a statement. "But," replied O'Mahoney, "We already have a statement from you. It was submitted by Mr. Lathrop." Lathrop hadn't even given Hoops a chance to read his statement. Meanwhile 41 Alaskans, vigorous proponents of Gruening, chartered their own special plane and flew to Washington. When they arrived. O'Mahoney gave only six of them five minutes each to testify a total of 30 minutes. However, Gruening's opponents, much fewer in number, testified practically all day. The RKO picture people have announced that Laraine Day (Mrs. Leo Durocher) has been signed to star in a movie called "I Married Mar-ried a Communist." We hope RKO understands under-stands thflt T.en manntrou iha nianfc H-.4- th,1 pdS- kASP; " IK4 he hS hd kTourbusrwTh Good 7 banTtZ with hSaseball ( ommissioner Chandler we'd hot or cold." Unquote. You know, Deg for a re hate to see Leo run afoul the Un-American dearie,. Ill bet that concoction is:newai Qf the Activities Committee. fit to eat- 1 wish somebody would. 0 r t gage stir up a batch of these so-called on njs home. Nun's sighs some Thursday, and is o m et i m e s 'invite me down. I would risk one, j think the believe me. I wonder where and ! writer is delib-how delib-how they got their name. "Nun's ierately kept Sighs" . . . H'm . . I wonder ifjwajting under the nuns sighed before or after tne cold, dis-eating dis-eating . . . Well, I guess we'll dainful yt o never know. J a handsome of- Jfine rpntinn the size of a walnut, a lump of the floor like a pup that wants sugar, a little lemon peel, a pinch jts belly tickled, as they beg for salt in a tumbler oi water, set on;a Done ,n the form of some edi-stove edi-stove in sauce pan of water, stir torial assignment or encourage-in encourage-in flour to a thick paste, continue ment. stirring until cooked. Leave in: while this isn't exactly true Pn uniu rem, wr m 'K there is an atmospnere in minylcall(d the ungodly hour of six look the part of what we are: a somewhat elderly and. we hope, benevolent looking old farmer who pounds out stuff on a typewriter type-writer with two fingers. Knowing Know-ing Miss Ellsworth as we do we didn't seriously consider the first alternative. She is a practical person per-son who can put on an apron and cook a fine meal as well as she can dish out interesting fiction fic-tion in her magazine. So, at what Miss Ellsworth BURGESS MEREDITH JOYCE REDMAN in" The Taming of the Shrew9' You'll njoy this hilarious comedy... frenh and entertaining enter-taining today an when Shakespeare Shakes-peare first penned it. Theatre Guild on the Air XOVO 7:30 P.M. presented oy UNITED STATES STEEL THESE GOOD SHOW'S ARE ALL ON KOVO TODAY 2:30 P. M. Vanishing Container 4 p. m. ic Horned Cattle 4:30 p m. fr mutual intirmountaik; NETWORK - .... k NICK CARTER The Mvstery of Death in the Dark (Copyright 1949 by the Bell Syndicate. Inc ) approval of CAB route and a "back pay" increase in-crease in a mail contract ... On Tuesday a caller at the White House was big-business mogul Floyd Odium, chairman of Consolidated vultee aircraft . Robertson Now I shall tell you about ist just to get him into that frame ; George Washington Bean wno of mind. fired off Provo s little six-pound (er pioneer cannon, to his sorrow Also on Tuesdav. the air " . l" " force canceled orders for 43 Boeing B-54 bomb- 1 wou,a UKe 10 K," i" Odlut's Sul ...nsouaaien vuuee . . . touis Johnson, new " ... ' .." . u.. . . u- : .7 n: , : V"?T, tn ,-. nH hr..h AnH thov a . f a. . . - i ill m in WaHL i oh.i. t j i j i w iiu . iji tiiiii? uvfi vtv i rw noon r snjii'K " - . . . secrevar oi national oetense, was director of t w-ii u,i-r . x,-. have bears that amble down on rp . , 9IIUU1U A J miwm mV IV" O Wlltl Visit IUl UJflL IVIJB, . ;. f"ui n how there was the cannon, and i Ellsworth in Naturally then, we were some what agog, when we received word that our favorite editor, Miss Fannv Ellsworth of RANCH ROMANCES magazine, was stop-;which 1aP fences and do damage in the morning, we met the lady at the Provo station and drove her up here for a country breakfast, break-fast, declining the generous offer of our friend Ray Scovil, who is about the finest chef in these here parts, to serve us all breakfast on the house. It was snowing, but Miss Ellsworth, Ells-worth, who is a hardy soul, quite unlike some -of the ladies who visit here and won't step away from the house for fear they'll turn an ankle on a rock, or get a run in their stockings, put on her folding overshoes and we tramped all over the place talking about fruit growing, and would you believe be-lieve it, deer. Miss Ellsworth and her husband. hus-band. Jack Davis, editor of Shell Progress, own a country place at Warwick, forty miles out of New York City, and they have a lot of fruit trees. Also, they have deer Radio Programs. Sunday. April 10 (The radio programs listed below are submitted by the radio stations who are responsible for their accuracy. In case of seeming inaccuracies or for further information call the respective re-spective radio stations.) KOVO 960 f:00 15 S30 :45 KDYL 1320 Muiical dor KCSU 1490 KSL 1160 7:00 Tone Tanestri'1 Wilrlwood Cnrch : Assembly of Gori i News 7:1 7.30 Ne Chariot Wheel. Carolina Calling) ? i R:fl0 Bible Class S:15 1:30 Prophecy 8:4J t:00 Back U God t:lS' :30 Funny pa per :4S Christian Science 18:00 Baptist 10. IS ' 10:30:1 utneran Hour 10.45 11:00' American Fork 11 IS 11:30 Ray Block 11:451 e i oo News 2: IS Ralph GinsburgJ 2-30 B Cunningham 1?:45 Rhythm 1:00 Radio Player 1:15 1:30 Juvenile Jury 1:45 Consolidated Vultee to save lung power bv iiMrtiiJi b a lew wi i- i -. ni, ; u rru: .. . one aay youria ueoist wariuiK- "Jm ' . "V; "ilJ l",e,,.y Ior .Treiton Bean and another bold soul i "oic !iirMUKifijiifis wni) nave 10 vane down what the solons say not for other senators who frequently don't care. what their colleagues say. Hardest senator to hear is Delaware's Whispering John Williams. Betty F Peiater of Wilmington, Del., an knowledge of cannon." The first any way answers the above description of an editor. edi-tor. It has been our Di-ivileee to named William Dayton procured j visit Miss Ellsworth in her home a hatful of powder from some; a number of times, as well as in emmigrants and they decided to her office, but, well, an editor is demonstrate what the cannon an editor, and a writer's bread could do, as Dayton had "some I and butter. And in his native 2:00 Mvsterv Huse 2:15 2:30 Detective Story ?:4.i 3:00 Shadow 1.15 ex-wac with good war record, was fired the other day from a small clerkship. She had refused re-fused to contribute $15 to a Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner. So the Democrats fired her . . . Credit the Columbus. Ga., Ledger and the citizens citi-zens of Columbus for unmasking the Ku Klux Klan. They passed an ordinance banning masks except on Christmas and Hallowe'en characters. . . . Colorado's Senator Ed Johnson got his toughest election opposition from the Denver Post. On Johnson's office wall today hangs a framed letter of Christmas greetings from Post Publisher Palmer Hoyt. BENZEDRINE DOPE The manufacturers of benzedrine recently tried to sidetrack Congressman George Grant of Alabama and his bill to require a doctor's prescription pre-scription for benzedrine. Grant's bill followed a story in this column on how prison inmates, water-front bums, and high-school kids were using benzedrine inhalers for dope. The manufacturers Smith. Kline and French Laboratories of Philadelphia promptly sent two officials to see Grant. They promised to stop selling benzedrine inhalers in Alabama, also showed how they were treating the benzedrine chemically so it couldn't be used for dope. Stopping the sale of benzedrine inhalers in Alabama, Grant replied, wouldn't do the rest of the country any good. He is willing to see what the laboratories' chemists can do, but meanwhile. Grant is still pushing his bill- shot came off allright, but the second one exploded prematurely or something. The cannon was sitting sit-ting up on a platform or bastion, and the explosion blew the two men clear off the thing and halfj way to the gate of the fort, Dayton Day-ton was killed outright, and Bean had a badly mangled hand to show for the excitement. He was in danger of bleeding to death, and something had to be done. There was a doctor at Center- ville, named Blake. At 8 p. m. that evening of August 30, 1849, "Hout Conover started from the fort after that doctor, horseback. He was back with his man at 4 p. m. the next day, a journey of 120 miles in 20 hours over very rough country indeed, a feat which makes Paul Revere's little gallop of ten miles over civilized roads look pretty feeble. Dr. Blake amputated George Bean's hand and forearm, and saved his life. Handicapped as he now was physically. Bean turned to school teaching, and did a fine job of it from all I can learn, thus his loss was the community's gain. I would like to have more details of this early experience in surgery. surg-ery. Who assisted? Did they get their property. So. had I been trying to impress Miss Ellsworth, I would have failed miserably. Published in the same offices as RANCH ROMANCES by the samel ;3 " "asr. house is the well and favorably! known FIELD AND STREAM I ITs ' magazine, so I was talking to no; 4:30 Ntc carter neophyte of the great outdoors 1 Here to Vets I K Power Biggs J :Ncw w-tner rwi t I Drake Choir Li Paul Frio St Paul s Choir Radio Pulpit Music House Church of Atr t jChild'r Theater J Errand ol Mercy Funnies Novatlme RecoVenture Ernie Lee Chapel in Sky News , Music with Meals Newsmakers J Churcn ot i F.ddie LeMar TuDemacle i.holt Golden i Melodies I News Weather Vour Own Musi.- News Melody Religious Serviei Eternal Light Eddy Howard Learning f .. ... . J Norman Cloutier Velvet Strings Peoples Platform Curt Massev Round Table New Albums New Dennis Day Flmo Roper Livin 1949 Rhvthm bv Rose Symphonette Jack Benny Thaater Commentary You Are There Melody Time Picnic Party Philharmonic. ) Mans Family Rene Snvard Diana Lnnr Quii Kids Sunday Serenade Curtain Call Modern Moods ; Skyway to Stars Rohert Merrill Curtain Call j Choralters ,; 4:45 haunts m u'titr mav lnrtlr siuit a lot different from the way he! Wnen w returned to the house; .oo Falcon appears to an editor When he is we iaKca wrum ior mwui m- 5:30 Mav.jr ot Town all dressed up so to speak in hisl,een minutes, and our guest was! 5:45 Johnny Desmond town clothes a" editor. After a couple of hours I s:oo Wayne King What to do? Should we borrow Robertsons ears ceased to burns is1 e, a pair of; from a verbal slapping, and wei ,:4S, Harvest of Stars Newman Broadway a horse and saddle chaps and a sixgun, and really put on the dog, or should we Just News Weather Dinah Shore Melodie? Horace Heidt Harris-Fa. ve Fred Allen Show! Henry Morgan Svmphony Sa!or I Hour of Start Music Memoirs Ozzie. Harriet Concert the patient drunk with whiskey to kill the pain? as was usual in these cases? I suppose someone's kitchen table served for operating operat-ing pit, and I presume the wound was cauterized with a hot iron. It would be interesting to know. As for the little cannon, it blew itself to pieces, though I can't be sure at this writing whether it was at this time or later. A lovely visit with Beulah Keeler McCallister this afternoon (Thursday.) Her father, Joseph B. Keeler was instrumental in having the bell put in the BYU. It was from the old tabernacle, sure enough, and Brother Keeler was in the stake presidency at the time the bell was removed from the tower of the old tabernacle. taber-nacle. So long, folks. See you tonight to-night (Sunday) at the NEW tabernacle. tian( Jtn 4 " AIAit f Vl A rac r f on . wr. w,, lu "J".' 7:00Svmrhon Hal extremely busy day. j j is Miss Ellsworth's own writing,! 7:30Theaiei Guiia - V. A n t i rl f iim t. ' 1.45 Wliril iaiivj. iiinr ovvdi ji'iit her job as editor and assistant publisher, is of the slick paper variety for such magazines as The AMERICAN. For so young a woman to be a veteran editor of twenty years experience seems almost al-most incredible, but I was around when she became an editor at io:is Cottage Meeting S:00 S:I.S S:30 Under Arrest B:45 9:00 Concert Hour :15i :30BYU Present. S:45 10:00 Favorites 12:001 12:151 about, if memory serves, the ripe old age of twenty-two. This was the lady editor's first trip to the West, and she was properly impressed with Utah's rugged scenery, even though half the mountain tops were cut offij;;' Dy tne ciouas mat nung over i2:45i them all day. Miss Ellsworth was not, however, like one western magazine editor who visited a writing friend of mine at Free-port, Free-port, Illinois. Gulping in the fresh air and gazing off into space h gushed. "Now at last, thank God, I see the West." 10:30 Symphony 0:45 Theater A I burr ot Mi nt. Hour Krokowsky Sammy Kav ?portltte Vour Henl'li My Srrennrie j Jack Benny j j Amos n Andy t i Sam Snade i Lum "n Abner ; Helen Hayes rj Out Mis Brooktt Take or I sv tt I Runn anrt Mlon Leo F.rdody .terry t nlonn Who Said That KCSL Reports Concert Hall 'Hall ot Memories LDS Church Martin and Lewis Theater Hour C .larnian Mr Hour ot j Music bv Martin : Episcopal Church ! Bp D G Hunt ' Lewis Williams Erna Sack Sundis Session Symphonies Catholic Hour 11:00 Tone Tapestries News Weather 11:15' Mary A Merce. II:30Orch. iCaprino Sisters 11 45 IN CAPITOL CLOAKROOMS I COLD WAR OF COCKTAILS "I Fellow travelers of Bevin and Gromyko are telling how, on the liner Queen Mary, the two diplomats indulged in a cold war of cocktails. Foreign Secretary Bevin's right-hand man, Hector McNeil, whipped up a cocktail party about halfway between Southampton and New York, inviting all the other foreign ministers aboard- plus Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister -Gromyko. Gromyko accepted but did not show. Two days later, Bevin himself staged a cocktail party. This time, Gromyko didn't show either. But the reason was different. He wasn't invited. MERRY-GO-ROUND I Bill Boyle, Truman's former secretary, now with the Democratic national committee, became director of Colonial Airlines in 1B45, collected a $15,000 legal fee in 1947. In 1948, Colonial got Ohio's silver-crested Senator Bricker hasn't given up his yen to run for president. He is maneuvering to run for governor of Ohio in 1950 as a step toward the G.O.P. nomination in 1952. (Bricker's recent stooging for the real-estate real-estate lobby won't help him any.) . . . It was Rudolph Hecht, president of the Mississippi shipping company, who arranged for Delesseps Morrison, mayor of New Orleans, to visit Dictator Dic-tator Peron of Argentina. Mrs. Morrison came back with a big ruby from Senor Peron and the mayor tame back with a burning passion to have Truman visit Argentina . . . Bartley Crum, whom Truman sent to Palestine as one of the U. S. commissioners, has joined the law firm of Franklin Roosevelt, Jr., and Charlie Poletti, ex-Lt. Governor of New York . . . George Killion, head of the American President steamship steam-ship lines, has been offered the chairmanship of the federal communications commission . . . Arthur Goldberg, counsel for the CIO, was asked the other day whether he had seen Secretary of Labor Maurice Tobin recently "haven't seen him for weeks," glibly replied Goldberg. "How come I saw him leave your office just ten minutes ago?" Goldberg was asked. The CIO lawyer admitted that he had lied. 1 ZV The BecMc Beas Koeter Sewee C1b L .. I - j- f" toej Seretca la wssito Ice fries. 1 V Rooter Is cereals rMr-cUaastas sewers eatd drada. thoroughly. Yea, A'XmI k 1 Rote-Reotef'i sharp, flexible stool ct- Jvb9ll 7 BB4 blao'os are important lo yewthey . fV4 f I eJiattaate the rortsWni roddina; arn if h.iJ&J-jm J Q 1J ey wk Interior ognipaeonl e used. ' V Don u wissmiiier x: r News Music You Want Claude Sweeten Tanernarlo. f;h 111 News Sympnonette 'emple Saiure Kalnrow Bridge Pages trom Opafa News Svmphony Hall MONDAY, APRIL 11 :00ISun Up Frolic Old Corral :1S 30 :45 News " 7:00 Editor s Diary 7:15Craftsmen 7:311 Newf News Weather 7:45 Ray's Ranch In Tune S:00' Hemimrway- Fred Wrini 8:15 Musical Clock 8:30 By Jensen Roao tt L.it 8:45 Time to Sing Brightri Day :00John Nesbitt Dr Paul t.-lS'Perry Como Love and wurt :30 Gabriel Heater Jack Bercb t:45 Dick Haymes Lore Law ton ie1o"Kate Smith What's'New 10:15 Kate Smith Holy Week 10 30 Womar. s Pag'' Emerson Smith 10:45l; Time . 11 OOCedrir rosier 11:15 Time tt.SO'Sereneae Friend ot Your II:4S!Now. News Weather 12:00 Queen (or o Day Double or I;1S l2:30:Happ? Cans Today's Children H:4i Light f World l:New Life Can Be 1:15 Birthday Club Ma Perkins l:3tjMarlne Band Pepper Your.. 1:4S .applnesr l:00!Woman "page Backstage Wfe :irEddie Hrrward ctella Delia. J:30 Lorenzo Jones :43 Guest Star Wtdder Brown S OOiNews Girl Marries S:ls;Cousin Rap Porna races uite J:30 Random Records Just Plain Bill 3:45 Front Farro'1 4:00 Tea Time Tunes :IS!) Hemlnrway News WeUiei 4:30 Remember? Aunt alary 4 " Music 5:15 Superman :J0 :4SlToaa Newa Weather The Stars Sing cl v .anonnosn Marine Band Wake Up Uve New Highlime. High Time Coronettes Variety parade Serenade Your Own Music Lady of House Market Basket Tony Martin Meditations Accent on Melod New Albums Noontime Farm Freddie Martin Commentary Rhythmic Age Pipes i Melodv Ken Wright Meet the Band America Plays Classics Platter Party News ,.; lamboree : urn Roundup 1 News j llair Clark .', Pot i uck Parte News '', Friendlv Time r) Newt Margaret Master Arthur God trey Grand Slam -' Rosemary ? Wendy Warren Aunt lenny t, Heler Trent Our Oal Sunday Bis Sisters Ma Pe-kina Dr Malone Guiding Li got News Farming rrienoiv i Reminisceneo News Margaret Whiting Arthur Godfrey Robert Q Lewis Hint Hunt ?! Winner Take 411 Meet the Missus Hilltop House Perrv Meon n 2nd Mrs Burtee David Harum ? News r- Makes You Tick Norah Drake Herb Shrlner Story Princess . New. 1 . Club S Ed m. |