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Show PrtbVO, UTAk CbUNTV', UlAH, SUNDAY, i DECEMBER 11. 1949 Chungking Fall Symbolizes Ghiha's Decline The fall of Chungking was morf than just another defeat in the unbroken series of reverses that began for the Chinese Nationalists Na-tionalists in -Manchuria last year. Its loss meant the toppling of the capital that above all symbolized Chinese resistance of Jap anese invasion in World War II. In other words, the Chinese Communists havei achieved what the Japs never did. i Whether the Japs might have captured Chungking had the not become preoccupied preoccu-pied in other theaters of battle is some- - thing we can never know. But the fact is 1 they didn't get it: ' Americans hatching the Chinese phase of World War H marveled that Chungking, - deep in theinterior, could serve effectively as a rallying point for the beleaguered Chinese Chi-nese forces. But the city seemed a stout bastion that held the nation together. That it nowhas passed into Communist hands so easily is an event that to most of us must appear to put the final seal on the Nationalists Nation-alists crushing failure. Throughout the steady' onrush of Red forces in China the firm friends of the Nationalist Na-tionalist government) have insisted that there was still hope. They have told uTthe , . Communists could be contained short of complete victory, that they could be repelled repell-ed from Important areas of the country. In their minds has been the idea that the westernmost sectors of China would be the locale for this resistance. Mountains and deserts and-impa'ssable roadswere factors they counted on to bar the Beds' path to this territory. And. of course, Chungking, in the heart of this "inaccessible" ' land. 4 would as in .World War II be the focus of Nationalist strength. So has gone! the argument. Whoever may have been impressed by such notions, it is clear the Chinese Communists Com-munists were not among them. They, have surged past the insurmountable barriers and marched into the city that was to lead the brave fight. With Chungking's fall it becomes thoroughly thor-oughly evident that , the real will to resist has long since disappeared in Nationalist quarters. Many observers have been saying say-ing this was so, but the outspoken friends of non-Communist China insisted otherwise. The latter knew that mountains and deserts were not enough to dissuade the Reds. They knew determined military forces had to block their path at some point along the routes to western China. We know now how far they missed the mark in gauging the temper of Nationalist forces. And we know, too, that whatever shortcomings, short-comings, may be charged to the State Department De-partment for its policy or lack of policy in China, itNlid correctly measure the very slim prospects of the Nationalists fighting back effectively. The Nationalist government fled to Chengtu. But Chengtu had little chance to become the Chungking of this struggle.' Within a few days,x Nationalist officials were reported fleeing from there. The Radio Give-Away The Case of Ezra Pound Pretty Skinny, Isn't He? - ' t 1 , ...-XI Observers of the radio networks report that the give-away; program, for a year or two the subject of lively discussions of morality and legitimacy, is heading toward a natural end. People, it seems, no longer hold the hour of the give-away program - sacred, and listen to it with bated breath and one hand on the telephone. It can be believed, without" undue strain, that this report may be true. r If the give-away program should be ended end-ed by simple lack of public interest, that would take care of the matter for those V radio listeners who have found it distaste ful and wished thatt something more desirable desir-able ouccplied its allotted radio time. Those ' whoNiave questioned the, morality of the near-gambling basis and the subtle bribery of the giant basket of prizes would probably ; wish that 'this question might have been . settled; It isx indicated that the Federal i Communications Commission , would continue con-tinue to, seek a court decision on the legal standing of the give-away, ' But tjie radio industry; would have missed : a chance to show its own mettle, if the giveaway give-away should just die awayThe give-away program has been maintained, over the ob-, ob-, jections of its critics, on the argtiment that the radio industryWill give to the listening public anything to which it will Isten. There are many who still hope that the industry some day may lift its standards above thaK leveW :;; VJ ': ;v." -" Ezra Pound, the eccentric American poet, whoescaped a trial for treason by being adjudged insane, may not have been out of his mind at all. A forthcoming paper by Dr. Frederick Wertham, in the American Journal of Psychotherapy, says that Pound's belief in fascism is not proof that ne was insane. He-never snowed symptoms sucn as delusions which would indicate any tning amiss with his mental powers, clai Dr. Wertham. Pound's commitment tn asylum simply because of the novelty , of his iaeas, ii sucn were the case, mighl con stitute a dangerous precedent. Commitment to a mental '. cause of the unpopular nature ideas is an action repugnant Americans. If there is any this having happened in Pou hearing should be granted. Meanwhile cynics will find it easy to believe, be-lieve, that the authorities were influenced by the strangeness anduriintelligibility of Pound's, prize-winningpoetry. Vacation Variety n tal be-uman's o all good ssibility of case, a re- Woshinqton Merry-ao-Round Oscar Chapman Learns Wet Washington; Rus By Drew Pearson . . ' . WASHINGTON Colorado Is a dry state; at leaat atmospherically speaking, but not half so dry as its own son, Oscar Chapman, the j new Secretary of Interior. 7 : Washington, on the other hand, ls v4t. From the 12-noon 'martini to the 12-o'clock nightcap there is a constant round of wetness; "The ambassador am-bassador of Argentina requests the pleasure of your company. . . .'j "The American Aeronautical association Invites you to be present . ." i . . . S "The Secretary of theTreasury and Mrs. Snyder, etc. . . So it goes; . The white-engraved cards come in the mail and by hand, to the office and to the home, and no man in public life caii "regret" them all. A hostess covets a cabinet member as a bobby-soxer bobby-soxer covets a crooner's autograph. If he ac- cepted half the bidshe could reduce himself to a happy state of alcoholic incompetence in a fortnight.: . , . But Oscar Chapman, by secret methods of his own, has discovered how to be dry, yet sociable. In short, he has lived through 16 years of Washington Wash-ington wining and dining without taking a drink. Or rather, he takes a drink every time, but never drinks it. That's his secret. . Caught red-handed in his deceDtion. ChaDman confessed: "Well, I do it this way. At a cocktail party for Instance, I never refuse a drink. I take the glass and Just hold it in my hand. Then, . when the waiter comes around with more, I pretend pre-tend I've just had, u refill. "If it's a state dinner, with toasts for the auest of honor, I put the glass to my lips like everyone every-one else, but the champagne stays in the glass,'? Then with a sad shake of his head, the Secre tary of the Interior laments: VI hate to think of all the liquor that has been poured out uselessly for me!" Renorfa frmi Tfow Woof' iri- .i . t -j i we nisi. President - Truman is in the pink slacks, that is. WMle members of his staff cavort in old I denini or tattered duck trousers', the presidentblossoms out in spring's most delicateplors. Oh, for technicolor news-reels! news-reels! - 1 : s owtoStdv Dry In May Be Deported at to that selj I CZARIST URANIUM KING I ' One by-product of the congressional investigation investiga-tion of alleged secrets sent to Russia in 1943-44 is a demand for the deportation of one of the leading uranium magnates of the world, who was given permission to ship uranium to Russia in May, 1943. He is Boris Pregel, a Czavist Russian who has lived in exile in France and the United States for' the past 32 years. As a result of recent publicity, the immigration bureau of the justice department ' has been considering a clamor that Pregel be deported. , . - However, close examination of the facta; on file at the justice department would indicate that Pregel maybe a victim of public hysteria and also, perhaps, of competition from American commercial forces. The uranium shipment which he sent to Russia, according to the testimony of Lieut. Gen. Leslie Groves, had the official O. K. of the Manhattan project. The. license number was 1643180, given - by the U. S. government to Chematar, 40 Ex ' fan change Place, New York'eity, the official purchasing pur-chasing agent of the Soviet government, for 500 pounds of black uranium oxide and 500 pounds of uranium nitrate. The fact that a Czarist Russian was time the only private individual able uranium is in Itself an interesting story. 7 Pregel, whose wife was from a wealthy Russian Rus-sian family, fled from Moscow in 1917, Just ahead of the Bolshevik purge. Living in France, he in- , vested money in the Belgian uranium trust and was one of the first experts to predict that unlocking un-locking the secret of the atom wouldnot only decide the outcome of the war, but the future control of the world, ' In an interview with the Miami News, Jan. 12, 1941, Pregel made exactly this prediction. I SUPPLIED URANIUM TO U. S. Long before the war, Pregel, a multimillionaire, multimillion-aire, had become the sole sales agent of the Belgian uranium strust, and came to this country permanently in 1940 after the Nazis overran France. He then organized the Canadian radium and- uranium corporation and acquired an interest in-terest in the Fort Hope uranium mines in Canada.- Late in 1941, he became the sole sales agent for Canadian uranium and when the United States first began to experiment with the idea of splitting the atom, it was Pregel who delivered the first shipment of uranium to Columbia University Uni-versity five tons on June 7, 1941, even before Pearl Harbor. Pregel got in wrong With the British because 'he opposed shipments of uranium to England, and Winston Churchill at one time was on the war path against him. More recently he has been in competition with the vanadium corporation in Colorado and New Mexico. He now has been in cmpetition with the Vanadium Corporation in Colorado and New Mexico. He now has his own Caribou mine in Colorado where he produces pitchblende and uranium. American inteaests have been trying to block him. Pregel is a member of the French legion of honor and is one of only three Americans to receive re-ceive an honorary membership in the French Doctors of Engineers, the other two being Dwight Eisenhower and HerbertHoover. " , - The justice department's deportation maneuver is based upon the contention that PregeTs passport pass-port was not in order when he arrived here as" refugee from France in 1940. 1 FRENCH COMMUNIST PURGE ( Maurice Thorez, the French Communist leader, is worried over reports that he will be purged by Moscow. A prediction by this commentator was picked up by the news agencies and cabled to the French newspapers. Following this, Moscow Mos-cow invited Jacques Duclos, the No. 2 French Communist, to attend the Comlnform meeting In Hungary last week while Thorez stayed home, which has, caused TJjotez to ask his Russian friends what is wrong. Th Chopping Block By FRANK C. ROBERTSON should ask me but I should That bad boy of the columnists, 'worry all the time lest in a lapse Mr. Rjobert Ruark, came recently! of memory the governor should was wi - - well, anyway to U d and entertained and flat tened by publicity hungry busi- ss and big-shot newspapermen, nd went away proving himself to be in every sense a man with a keen sense of a proper news story. v There must have been heart break in manv quarters over Mr. his 'mouth to Kuark s aDys-socialism ana cast his vote for Rutherford B Hayes for president. The gover nor's political philosophy dates right back to that era. onpesaid in print that he dated backto the days of McKinley. but I was wrong: he goes much 7 farther back than that 7 Every time the governor opens v.- 1 cry the f? 8mal silence he goes back justanother notch p - " ' over Utah's in-in progress. He is completely and out against eiiare state dustrial possi- blissfully unaware of the changes billties. and the which the complexities of the purity an d machine age have brought to our greatness of' its civilization. Apparently he be-institutions. be-institutions. iieves that all a young fellow who Mr. Ruark wants to be a farmer needs to do rVmae to write is cet him an ox-team and so fZZ: frv about just two'out an file on a government " . V.-- ' I men, whom; homestead, he" undoubtedly But when it comes -to being an considered the administrator that is another m o s t n e w s-jstory. He has shaken up the dry worthy people, hones in state government as in the stat e.ythey have never been shaken be- une was per fore. He has organized much haps the best needed economies; , he battled valiantly and consistently against Robertson hated man In the state: the other a convict. j Let us deal, as did Mr. Ruark,1 with the convict first. 1 have never met Mr. Robert MQCoy, the life-timer who is slafedfor freedom free-dom next year, nor have I invested in-vested any money In his inventions, inven-tions, yet I have heard considerable consider-able about him; more especially from an old i friend, ' Dr. Ellis Kackley, of Sipd Springs,4 Idaho, now deceased, Robert McCoy is admitted by all to be w. mechanical genius, with the fire. and eccentricity commaafd men of that type. In trying to get funds to develop his ideas he got into trouble and killeda man while .trying to escape the law. He was sentenced to life imprisonment. Unfortun stely for him the man he had killed was a prominent member Of the business community, so that McCoy's every effort to obtain ob-tain freedom met the stiffest kind of opposition. Then Dr. Kackley entered the scene. A great humanitarian Dr. Kackley believed strongly that McCoy was no criminal at heart, but a thwarted genius who needed need-ed only the opportunity to be come a useful citizen. I'm sorry Ruark did not hear about this After years .of pleading McCoy was paroled to Dr. Kackley, and for a time was a useful citizen. But he slipped a cog somewhere and landed back in the peniten tiary. I'm sure however, that Kackley never lost faith in the man. Paroled again, McCoy broke what seems to be the letter rather than, the spirit of the law and was again sent back. That he won the confidence of the warden and other prison officials seems proved by the fact that they are now associated with him1 in business. busi-ness. A remarkable man, this McCoy. There is no reason to suppose that he will go . bad again. So, if he is worthy to be released ffuly 1st there can. be no sense in not releasing re-leasing him now. A man of fifty doesn't change his character i in six months. 1 It's a little odd that the other man Ruark wrote of should have just broken into print with an attack on McCoy. "Keep the rascal there till the last day of his sentence has expired," says Governor J. Bracken Lee. That's a not unexpected atti all manner of pressure groups, and he is that rara avis of a poll tician a man who consistently tries to keep his campaign promises. He is not dismayed by the fear of making enemies, and that alone sets him apart from most other public officials. Oh the whole I think Robert Ruark has a good nose for ne Minutia Q's and A's ,ewi. Q: What ' is considered the worst forest fire in American history?, his-tory?, A: The Peshtigo fire in Wisconsin Wiscon-sin in October, 1871 when 1,280,-000 1,280,-000 acres were burned over; homes, towns, and: settlements were swept, away and 1500 per sons perished. Q: Which American college boasts of a skyscraper building? A: "Cathedral of Learning," the new University of Pittsburgh, has the only skyscraper college building build-ing in the world. It is 42 stories high, of Gothic architecture. Q: How should an American llag that is in such a condition it is no longer a fitting emblem to display, be destroyed? A; It should be destroyed as a whole, privately, preferably by burning or by some method lacking lack-ing in any suggestion of irrever-ance. irrever-ance. or disrespect. Once News Now History . FVom the Files off' The Proto Herald . 10 Years Ago DEC. H, 1939 An influenza epidrai- hit Pro vo, and a survey of the schools showed about 900 s idents, or a fourth of the enrollment, absent. No serious cases were reported . . . 800 people attended the dedicatory dedi-catory rites for the First ward chapel . . . The BYU basketball team showed flashes of form but lost to the Cougar alumni, 52-56, in the season's opener. Playing for the Cougars were Allen, Gun-nell, Gun-nell, Welmer, Cannon, Nielsen, Snedaker, Overly,. D. Gardner, and M. Gardner . . Finland sought to enlist material aid of the world against Soviet Russia. Dispatches said the Finns had struck back suddenly on the' central cen-tral front where Russian troops were trying to cut Finland in. two by driving toward the Swedish frontier. 20 Years Ago DEC, 11, 1929 . ' J. P. McGuire, Provo postmaster, post-master, was speaker at the Ki- wanis club meeting . Four thousand Provd school kids pre pared to participate in the Christmas Christ-mas parade . . . A full page of letters to Santa Claus was published, pub-lished, signers of some of the letters being Ruth Wood, Richard Blumenthal, Dolores Eggertsen, Wayne Startup, Qulnn Hatch, Ruth. Richmond, Patsy Peterson, Harold Bandley, Albert Done, and Lamar Eggertsen : . . A front page editorial asked Provoans to approve a $225,000 bond issue Jor two new junior high schools at a bond election scheduled 10 days hence ... By RUTH LOUISE PARTRIDGE SO, I finally went down ' into the cellar, here at THE LAST RESORT RE-SORT and pulled and hauled and struggled and wore myself out getting the hose ur to water the rock pile that passes for a lot around hare, so that my fall plantings wouldn't dry up and die. And that blankety-blank oie sun just kept blazing away until I got the hose attached, the water turned on, the nozzle point ed, and then AND THEN it: went into hiding and hasn't shone since. I am very discouraged There- ought to be tome way I can turn my genius for going against the weather in to- some account: Oh well v A charming chit from ve miaht- have-been - mayor - of Mapleton, wwch dlcwt fool me bit. am going fo-eopy it for ycu.ell to read and ponder over. But first, leave us 'escribe the thing, and you will . understand the feeling oi on- what s-the-use that over came me when-1 opened it. : nave been thinking for a long time that thr first million I make I will get me some stationery complete with heading THE LAST RESORT etc. and etc . sooo nere ccmes tne letter from Maple ion says springvuie on the heading with Frank C. (for Clever) Robertson and the ad dress on one side, O. A. Robert (son and phone number on the other, and in between a hand some pair of hombres on horseback horse-back with western reentry in the background and sagebrush in the foreground and a cloud or two, and au this on tne very best bond Gosh! The letter says, and quote :xT3ear Ruth:, Your col umn yesterday was good. I mean but good! Don't fail o send it tor Mr. Godfrey. It'll, mean more publicity for you than you could get in a. lifetime of honest work. And now I know that you should have a program of your own. The female Godfrey. AND you wouldn t suffer from the comnari. son, you thwarted, neuronic, woman, wo-man, you. Incidentally, you might ray a word of prayer for STUDENTS RUN BU8DYE8S CLEVELAND. O. (U.ft Hich school students InjCleveland learn . free enterprise through their own companies, xney nave 25 of them under Junior Achievement, Inc., and they operate as full-fledged businesses. They have Issued and sold stock and elected officers. They do their - own production work and sell their products. me since laid myself wide open f yesterday .to tne attack! of the Farm Bureau Federation Best ' wishes, Frank.". Well there you have it and our Frank has It too, for what did Ruthie do but sit down and send HIM a letter and enclosed was an. extra column. and the air mall postage, also an unsubtle hint that Mr. Robertson either put or shut up, and send Ithe! thing himself. Don't look 4 ! . a. mm x ar . j now, out :i t,. ooirey job (which is very unlikely) I will be glad to give Frank Robertson Rob-ertson the usual 10 per cent. This will instantly uo away with any fear he may have as to making a living under the displeasure of the "Farnv Bureau Federation." If we get the Godfrey spot. Frank will be financially able to farm. Weil, really, I have heard 11117 conversations in my time, hat thii is the silliest. This is what cornea of staying up all night. Won't be able, to' go C the fine concert tonight (ThMrsday) and so it goes. I should have stood in bed. You know, the more I think about Frank Robertson and his farm. the madder I get. Here he is, a successful-writer, and with a farm BESIDES! A lot he knows about Les Miserables! Don't think I'll give him 10 per cent. Five oughta do him. Five per cent and he can keep me in fresh vegetables too . . .jl'U have to think this whole thing through. And who ig he to talk about a "lifetime of HONEST HON-EST worlr'V I never did run for mayor after all. H'm .. Flattery Flat-tery will get him nowhere. Not anymore, that is . . ; I should ask for my airmail stamp back, too. Yeah . . . So .long folks. Dont forget those Christmas things for the State Hospital here, and the Training School atx American Fork. Radio Programs, Sunday, Dec. 11 v (Tha radio prograau listed below are submitted by the radlc stations who are responsible for their accuracy. In case of seeming inaccuracies or for farther infonnation call the respective re-spective radio stations.) " : Rootin' around1 Don tude by our governor, who sel-ly,,,,.,! get prompt; eoWttout Mrvlc ROOTER Serviceman. With his elec tric ROTU - KUUILK machine he ll quickly raror-kleen that clocsed ewer, or drain . . . remove re-move even , the moet dom hesitates to express an when vou-call your local rotoI opinion on any suoject, and wno, despite the fact that in private life he is a mild and friendly gentleman, likes to appear hard-boiled. hard-boiled. ' Ruark. could hardly have failed fail-ed to write about our colorful governor. All the world loves a fighting man, and J. Bracken Is a grand fighter. Personally, I love the man. I think he is about the best governor the state ever W.J . J MM ....... i . reelection tomorrow I think I'd I take the atump for him if he I stubborn stnppasea. Just look for ROTO-ROOT-ER. general aection, teleohone book. Phone 872J ' s DON L. WISSMILLER Free Estimate - Prompt Service Ai advertised In Better Homes Ji Gardens and American Horn KOYO Ml :! ;1S :3d1 43 f:60!Klder Michaux t:lS, 7:0 New f:45C. CavaUero S:0lBible Claaa 8:15 . S:SlPropbey S:8 to :0Bacfe t:15' iSttlHvmna of D9 :4S (Christian Science ie:aoBaptist It: IS' l:3)l.utbraa 16 45 Bout U:0 11:15 11:301 11:45 American Fork Sunday Music Harmonies 12:0 12:15 12:30 12:45 News - ., Music ' ' " Bill Cuanlnabain Fabulous Four 1:00 1:15 1:30 1:45 Family Theater Electrio Hour 2:00!Mystery 2:15 2:lUarUn 2:45 House 3:001Tb Shadow :1S 3:30Detctlve Story 1:45 - t 4:00JRoy Btoff era :is 4:30 J 4:4Sl Nleh Carta 5:0iralcoi 5:15' 5:30lTh Saint 5:45IJohnny DeetBond S:00 :1S S:30 S:45 Wayne Kiag news PlayhouM RELAX WHILE YOU LISTEN TO THESE WONDERFUL SUNDAY EVENING SHOWS J . 8:00 P. M. "Let George Do It" presents 'Too Near the Sky" 8:30 P. M. MGM THEATRE OF THE AIR presents ANN SOUTHERN In 'Three Loves Has Nancy 9:30 P. M. Local Trade News .9:45 P. M. 'Americans Speak Up' There's Always A Good Shew ;". on . J 7:00 t:15i 1 :30 Uonte CrUto ,T:45i S:00jLet George do It l:15( 8.10 3 Loves S:45t 0:00! 8:151 :30Nwe :45lAmerclnas Speak 10:00 Dreamland -10:15 ' 10:30Opera Concert ia:i ll:00lOrchatra 11:151 11:30 Freddie Martla ll:45INewa 12:001 12:15 12:30 12:45 KDYV Musical Clock Wildweod Church Here's to Vets News Weather Cameos of Music Radio Pulpit Freedom Story Nova time Ernie Leo Siaglnt ChurcB of All Golden Melodies Newe, Weather Portraits Eternal Ugh Memorable Music Round rable Symphony 1 Man's family Quts Uds - Living 1849 Forum Radio Playhouse Harvest of Stars Dinah Shore News. Weather Hollywood Can Phil Harris Sam Spade Theater Guild Album Take or Leave It Bob Crosby - Selene Editor Peacha Hasan Hour os Symphonies Catholic Hens News Weather Mary A Meroa Tex Williams News Mual Vou Wani KCSU 1419 . Assembly of sermons m News Without End Music House Child's Theater Funnies Chap! to Sky Three Buna Your Own Music Ubt Xavler Cugat Eddie Howard Oypsy Strings Colli na Drlfgsj Sunday Serenade New ; Jack Smith Sammy Kay Ren Savard Piano Pathways Kay Kyser Modern Coooert Bing Crosby Guy Lombardo Sunday Salon Paul Weston - Concert Hour News Devotional Hour X5L net News . . Chariot Whaela Carouno Calling World Ne Bla. Orsaniat Trinity Choir Church of Air News ...... Tabernael Chest Newii Religious Servlee Invitation People, Platform NWS? - - People Stand " Chorallars Syncopation Phllharmonla Symphony Muale ' Sammy Kay Symphonatt Hour of Stats Our Mlm Broa Jack Flaa Sportllt Al Nrwmts Erna Sack . , Mantovani KCSU R epoetins Hall of Memories Theater Hour Stardust Operettas Great Walts , Musi Amerloa Organ Moods Rainbow Bridge News Good Night Jack Amos n AaoyJ' Bergen-McCartc Bad Skelton CorleaaArcheT Horaos KMI Contented Hot Conaert KaB L&l Coorci Religious Tabernael STHaeXJ Nws"- - r Symphonwtto Tempi Squat Pare From rapera Symphony ear Symphony HaB News, OooqolgO MONDAY, DECEMBER 12 S:00Say With Music :13 0:30!Sun-Up froll . J45J l:oo :15 1:30 1:45! Robert Hurleigh ! Craftsmen Nw Jamboree S:O0lF Hemingway S:15 Songs for You S:30 Requests S:45IBy Jensen :00:Marvin Miller 9:15 Gordon Owen :30 Design for Yon 0:451 l:00Kat Smith 10:l5!Lanny Ross 10:30 Woman's Pag 1:45 Tim ; ll:00Heattr MaUbag liasiHarvey Harding 11:30 jSerenade ll:45lSongs of Times By Jensen Cedrie Foster Queen for Day 12:00 12:15 12:30 12:451 l:00Nw 1:15 Ladies rair l:30 Paula Ston l:4s!Bob Eberly 2:00 2:15 2:30 2:451 Voice of Army Make BeUeve THI 1.000 WATT VOICI M CSNTIAL UTAH 3:00!Crordon Owen 3:lSrrank Sinatra 3:30Top Tunes 5:45 4:00 1 Barrymor-4:15 Barrymor-4:15 V Heminrway 4:30iRmmbr 4:4 5 1 Merry Go Bound 5:00!Story Princes" 5:15Fun Lady 5:30!Tom Mia 5:45 , Old Corral New. Weatha Swing Partner . Sunshine Sonrs OasUaht Gaieties Marrlaea for rwo Linger Awmi Lor and Learn Novatlme Jack Berch Lore . Lawton ' Newe, Weather Varieties Emerson uuta Turkey Time Let's Take IS Double or Today's Children UIH of woriq LUe Can Be Road of ' Life ' Pepper Youn Japptnear Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Lorenxo Jones Widder Brown Girl Marries Portia Face uu Just Plain BUI Front Terrell Travelers Aunt Mar Dr. Paul Wemi4 Secret News Weather Easy Rhythm News -. J - Eddie Duchin Top of Morning News High Time Varieties Rhythms Lady of Hons Meditations Market Basket Pe7 Lee Your Own . Muale Perry Como Car of Baby Noontime Farm Freddie Martin News - Sunset and Vine Matinee Melodies Meet the Band Tin Pan Alley New Classic Platter Party Roger Gal Dinah Shor Buddy Clark Variety Time Newa Jamber Farm News Harry dark Potlucfe Party N Frlendlv Tim Ni Margaret Master Arthur Godfrey Grand Rosemary Wendy W arras) Aunt Jenny Helen Trent ' Our Gal Sunday oif wiwn , i Ma Per kin ? Dr Malon Qulding Light c New -Farming . Friendly Arthur Godfrey ' - Hollywood 'Letter Tun Tim . Garry Moore" Allen Jensen ' Hilltop Hous , Perry Mason 2nd Mrs BurtOB David Harum - New ; Brighter Day 1 , Norab Drak t Curt Massey Make Ball a v Newe I Club IS ' Edward Murrew N |